Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Sept. 4, 1832, edition 1 / Page 4
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DELAYS. Shun delars, they breed remorse; Take thy time, while time is lent thee; Creeping snails have weakest force, Fly their fault, lest thou repent thee. -Good is best when soonest wrought, Xing'ring labors come to nought. Hoist up sail while gale doth last, Tide and wind stay no man's pleasure: Seek uot time when time is past, Sober speed is wisdom's leisure. After wits are dearly bought, Let thy fore-wit guide thy thought. Time wears all his locks before, Take thou hold upon his forehead; When he flies, he turns no more, And behind his scalp is naked. Works adjourn M have many stays; Long demurs breed new delays. Seek thy salve while sore is green, Fester'd wounds ask deeper lancing; After-cures are seldom seen, Often sought, scarce ever chancing. Time and place give best advice, Out of season, out of price. BEAUTY'S GRAVE. Tread softly, stranger! o'er this ground Which no rude footsteps should impress; With tender pity gaze around, Let sadness all thy soul possess. Tread softly! lest thou crush the flowers That o'er this turf are taught to wave; Transplanted from their native bowers To shed their sweets o'er 'Beauty's Grave And stranger, let your melting heart Mark well this fresh and verdant sod! And ere you from the scene depart, 0! let your soul commune with God. Thus lade the fragile buds of earth, Thus fade the lovely and the brave! Come here ye thoughtless sons of mirth, And pause awhile o'er 'Beauty's Grave.' Sweet withered rose! may thy pale doom Call tears into the virgin's "eye! Oh may the prospect of this tomb Remind her, 'all that live must die!' And warn her in the days of youth, To think of Him who being gave, And bid her seek the wavsof truth. Like her who sleeps in 'Beauty's Grave ! continued from the first page.) Nothing is more obvious to those who look through the whole scheme, in all its bearings, than that the manufacturing States would not consent to an entire re peal of the federal taxes, viewed in the light of a mere question of pecuniary gain, and without reference to the fiscal wants of the Government. Their whole course evinces, what is undoubtedly the fact, that they have a proprietary "inte rest in the taxes, instead of feeling them as a burthen. As a necessary conse quence of this state of things, the produc tions and the property of the planting States, are absolutely subject to the con trol of an irresponsible and despotic ma jority, who have converted the whole fis cal operations of the Government, into the mere means of levying contributions from the industry of those States, to nou rish and sustain the rival industry of the manufacturing States. Thn right of property, in the plantations of .w vUU.,io in uju uiujoriiy wno exercise this irresponsible power of exaction, and those who vainly imagine they are the proprietors, are in truth mere stewards, receiving just such proportion of the an nual income, as this proprietary govern ment, the majority, may choose to allow them. The natural effpnf nf ti,;a , - who U.IIU11IU- lous action of the Government, is that jcciubss extravagance in the appropria tion of the public money for every pur pose, whether constitutional or unconsti tutional, by which thn iMior. fn. (Tfaca linn Knn I . . Boo ..u3 uuun cuaracienzed for several years past, and never to a more alarming extent, than during the present session, lnis has been strikingly exemplified by the establishment of a grand pension sys tem, embracing all the volunteers and militia who served six months during the revolutionary war, without any regard to their pecuniary circumstances, and in volving the annual expenditure of several millions of dollars; by new and extrava gant appropriations for internal improve ments of a mere local nature, to nn extent altogether without example; by an at tempt, successful in one branch of the le gislature, and evidently destined -to suc ceed in both to distribute annually among the States three millions of the public revenue: and, finally by an aggregate in crease of the appropriations of the pre sent session beyond the estimates of the Treasury, and beyond the ordinary ex penditures of the Government, of not less than live millions of dollars. No one can witness the" proceedings of Congress on these appropriations, without perceiv ing indications not to be mistaken, that the Federal Government has degenerated into a mere political engine for regulating the labor and distributing the wealth of the country, upon the most arbitrary prin ciples, and by levying the most oppres sive exactions on one portion of the Uni on, to be bestowed in prolific bounties on another. Already have the principles consecrated by our ancestors in the revo lutionary struggle, undergone a radical change, and a largo majority of the peo ple of this Union actually regard taxation as a public blessing. It has even become a proverb among them, that it would be wise and beneficial to retain the duties though the money should be thrown into the ocean. All this is the natural and inevitable result of a system which prac tically exempts those who impose the taxes from all responsibility to those who pay them, and which not only exempts the governing majority from all participa tion in the burthens of taxation, but actu ally confers upon that majority bounties proportioned to the burthens it imposes upon the proscribed and subject minority. The undersigned have presented this brief exposition of the actual condition of your vital interests and your sacred rights, that you may decide for yourselves what course it is expedient to pursue in this great emergency, to rescue those inte rests from impending ruin and to vindi cate those rights from unconstitutional violation. They will not pretend to sug gest the appropriate remedy, but, after expressing their solemn and deliberate conviction that the protecting system must now be regarded as the settled po licy of the country, and that all hope of reliet from Congress is irrecoverably gone, they leave it with you, tho sove reign power ol the State, to determine whether the rights and the liberties which you received as a precious inheritance trom an illustrious ancestry shall be tamely surrendered without a struggle, or trans mitted undiminished to your posterity. ROBERT Y. HAYNE, " STEPHEN D. MILLER, GEORGE McDUFFIE, WARREN R. DAVIS, JOHN M. FELDER, JOHN K. GRIFFIN, W. T. NUCKOLLS, ROB'T V. BARNWELL. Religion. A considerable revival has been progressing for some time in the upper part of this county, and larcre addi tions have already been made to several or the Daptist churches. Fifty-six per sons were baptised at Connaritsy on Monday last. Windsor Herald. Measles. We learn that the measles has made great and fatal ravages in Marblehead, Mass. According to ac counts it has occasioned a mortality equal relatively to that arising from the Cholera in New York. No less than sixty children have died within the last two months. Great Mortality. In the Bellevue Alms House in New York, containing, at the time the Cholera made its appear ance among us, about 1650 inmates, there have been 300 deaths; which is in the proportion of 1 to 5 of the whole population. In the Sing Sing State Pri son, containing a month ago about 882 inmates, there have been 100 deaths; or rather more than 1 to 9 of the whole po pulation. At the County Poor House in Poughkeepsie, containing at the com mencement of the disease about 220 in mates, 71, or nearly one4hird of the whole number, have died. N. Y. Paper. Cure for Corns. Easy shoes, and fre quently bathing the feet in lukewarm wa ter, with a little salt or pot ashes in it. 33. P SffAS3HE';& , Booksellers, Stationers, And Blank Book Manufacturers, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. May 1, 1S32. . 32 SQOIblSS (BCD. Commission Merchants, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. ESPECTFULLY offer their services to their friends and the public generally, and hope by strict attention to business to merit a share of patronage. May 03o o2asm3p&j9 MERCHANT TAILOR, HAS just received from New York a part of his Spring Supply of Goods in his line of business, viz: Superfine blue, black, brown c invisible preen Cloths. Fine blue and brown Camblets, for thin coats and pantaloons, Black bombazeen, do. do. Fancy striped Drills for pantaloors, latest fashion, Fancy Velvets and Silks, for vesting, White and fancy Marseilles, do. Fine linen shirt bosoms, linen collars, Fancy silk and velvet tenuant Stocks, &c. These goods will be sold very low for cash, or on a short credit to punctual customers. He also has on hand a few fine HATS, which he will sell at New York cost. Tarboro', April 13, 1S32. Millinery, Qc. IMIE Subscriber informs her friends and the public, that she has just received her Spring Supply of articles in her line of business, viz: Pattern Silk and Satin-straw bonnets, Leghorn, Dunstable, and Navarino do. Elegant hair puffs and curls, Head dresses, ornaments, &c. Satins, Silks and Florences, An assortment of wreaths and flowers, Gauze and crape shawls and handk'fs, A great variety of ribbons, &c. &c The Subscriber still carries on the Millinery & Mantua-making business, in all its variety. Q. C. HOWARD. May 5, 1S32. I). B. GummingS) Surgeon Dentist and OCULIST, EGS leave respectfully to announce to the citi zens of Tarborough and vicinity, that he will return to this place at August Court, when, he hopes, that the success which has at tended his operations hitherto, will satisfy the public of his capability and skill in lus profession, and that the public patronage extended to him (for which he returns his sincere thanks) will not be withheld. (jpHis charges are very moderate and the poor attended gratis. July 20, 1832. 48 B Regimental Muster. nnilE Officers and non commissioned Officers attached to the 21st regiment, 5th brigade, North Carolina militia, are hereby ordered to ap pear in Tarborough, on Wednesday, 26th Sep tember next, for an Officer muster, by the hour of 10 o'clock, equipped as the law directs. Also, the Officers and non-commissioned offi cers, together with the privates attachedto said Regiment, are hereby ordered to appear on Thursday, the 27th, at Tarborough, for a GENERAL REVIEW, by the hour of 11 o' clock, armed and equipped as the law directs. B. H. BELL, Col Com. Aug. 27, 1832. i PAKEN up and committed to the jail of Ed-e-A combe county, on the 21st insi. one nero BOY, about 18 or 19 years of age, dark com plexion, stout and well made, and says he be longs to Mrs. Sarah Coffield, of this county, and was hired the present year by a Mr. Bradford, near infield, from whom he ran away about four weeks since. The owner is requested to come and prove his property, pay charges and take him away, or he will be dealt with as the law directs. a o, ,o C WWDHOM, Jailer. Aug. 24, 1332. i Gins and Fanning Mills. rjiHE Subscriber, respectfully informs the pub lic, that he continues to manufacture at his shop in Tarborough, near the bridge, Gins and Fanning Mills, Of the latest and most approved construction. He will make his work, as heretofore, in the best manner and as expeditiously as possible Persons will please apply to Mr. Benj. M." Jackson, in my absence. x JOHN WILSON. Tarboro', Nov. 28, 1831. 15 Constables Blanks for Sale, AT THIS OFflCE. I have Received A Consignment of 94? Craies of Earthenware, By the late arrivals of ship Madison, Capt. Wood, and Anacreon, Capt. Lenox, from iL verpool, viz: 20 Crates assorted white 7are 20 colored 15 blue and green edge plates, 10 white chambers, 3 painted ditto, 2 ,1 printed ewers and basons, 1 white ewers, 0 white hand basons, 3 colored bowls, 5 ,, ,, pitchers, 2 painted tea cups and saucers. 1 ,, soup tureens, assorted. The above are entitled to debenture, and wijj be sold as low as an' Importer can sell them ic the U. States. flso, in Store, Dinner setts complete, light blue, black, browfv green and pink, First quality China tea setts, white & goldj Second do. do. in great variety. And an assortment of Glassware. W. K. MJ1 CKINDEU. Norfolk, Va. 2Gth June, 1832. " JDrs. Hall fy Potts, TTAVING associated themselves in the Prac tice of Medicine, fyc. offer their professional services to their friends and the public generally. They may be found at all times at their office, recently occupied by Dr. Potts. 49 July 30. PROSPECTUS OF THE d5reenl)tllc patriot, A weekly neivspaper, to be printed in Green villc, N. Carolina, BY SHOWN. rrHE common benefit of the press, and its ac knowledged advantages in all societies, leaves no room for an apology, in offering to the public, another periodical. We believe a thorough acquaintance with all and every principle of our government and insti tutions necessary, to appreciate, properly, their real value, and inestimable worth; and an inti mate knowledge of the acts, and course pursued, by the servants of the people, to prevent delu sion by those who aspire to the highest offices of our country otherwise, we render ourselves splendid slaves and blind partizans of ambitious demagogues and petty tyrants, that will, at some future day, rob us of our liberties and there is no channel by which it may be so easily obtain ed, as through that of a newspaper. The election of a successor to Andrew Jackson, as President of the United States, being a subject pregnant with every interest an American must feel for the perpetuation.of the institutions of his country, the columns of the PATRIOT will, at all times, be open to cool and dispassionate com munication, either against or in favor of the pre sent incumbent. In publishing the PATRIOT, it will be the untiring exertions of its conductor to give the benefit of its columns to all classes, retaining to himself the privilege of iude-inr the personal bearing of every communication, and ns consequent acceptation or rejection never promulging any thing tending to personal invec tive and party malignity. The Tariff we believe to be unconstitutional; and if it were not, it is certainly -an unwise, impolitic, and oppressive course of legislation, that we could not sanction; therefore, will main tain a firm, but respectful opposition. In the selections attention will be paid to pro cure the earliest news both foreign and domes tic; not overlooking any thing relative to im provements in Medical Jurisprudence, Husband ry, and the Mechanic Arts and Sciences. TERMS.-Thz PATRIOT will be printed on a royal sheet, at three dollars per annum, pay able half yearly in advance. Aug. 1832. Notice JOURNEYMAN PRINTER, of steady habltS, Will find rpmilnr omnlAirmnn : ' t--" WUIJJIUJIUlClll 111 iccnvuie, rill county, JN. U. Aug. 1832. PHOPOSLiSf For publishing by Subscription, A CONCISE HISTORY OF THE Kehukee Baptist Association, From its original rise to the present time. BY ELDER JOSEPH BIGGS, Under the supervision of a Committee appoint ed bv the Kp.hitlwe. .Aa&nfint-im. Kj . - w v 'vuuvtullUd HPHIS work will be divided into two parts A Part 1st, will contain the History of the .niiuncc xiaautiuuun irom us nrst organization until the year 1803, as compiled by Elders Burkitt and Read, (omitting such parts of it as are considered superfluous.) Part 2d will embrace a continuation of the History of the As sociation, until the present period, by Elder Joseph Biggs, &c. CONDITIONS. The work will be printed on good paper, with a Sffif "fake about 300 pages, duod ho ue d fc?l?P!d.t0 subscribers, neatly bound Sid Per smlecopy,or glOper dozen. ICfPersotis hnJrf , tjjuuti paper will please retain them until the 1st Oct. next, a, .hen send them to Elder Joseph Biggs, "uwfff onor, to ueo. Howard, Ihrborc? C. from either of ihr A o,. pcrs can be had, nov. 7. 1831. -.
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 4, 1832, edition 1
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