S0iitan. • 'J'liQ powers grunted wider the C'onstitutwn^ bciii§ derivedyroJti the J^eople of the Xjnis-ed States^ TTiciy }}e j'esufti&.l by thcrTij whenei er perverted to their injury or upprcssion.'^—Aludison, VOLUx\IK 2,s K.niTED, AN’D PUIiLISilED WEEKNV, liV T K It MS : Th'-: “ M.dd -nburf' Jf/Tcrsfjrtiaa'’ is publisi;. i v.f ukly, ai ■'irit J> :’l rs and P['’y CenJ^, if pniJ in advance *, or 'I'hrce ' , J II't prud b' for'. the exjjiration of tmhee months 'III tl>-'f:inr of subbfriliini'. Any pcraon who will procure i -'rib' Ttj riii 1 bf- i;m; rc-poasiblc for their subsfripiions, .. li v ‘- ;i copy »jf the pap^ r ‘fr.iti.s ;—or, a club of ten sub- . .. rr ru:iy have th»t paper one year fur Ticcnty Dollars in \ ■ p'i’ -r wll thf HubHcribcr owes any , ;iif hr js f;i jj'iy;—and a failure to notify the Editor \v f /'I..''' nunu‘ at 1 n.st month before the expira- •! ,f fh- ’ ui' }!Hid lur, Will be considered a new engagement. *: _:in;il S>; r ;-f rn will not be alliwcd to discontinue the ■. • r b( fiji* ^h(, : \; !ra; i»:i ih- year without paying for ; 11 y‘-;ir I-' -, r\\..! b-'e ul'p';!!L.u>ly rmd correctly inscrt- t / /a.'/ " j'^T Mpirir;'tor til!-first insertion, and 7'icen- e }';r ' ;u-Ii except Court and other , ial adv rtis.-iii-u?s, whieh wiil be charged ticcnty-Jiteper ii hi-li' r than the al: ;ve rat- H. (owin:^ to the delay, gene- ■ ;i'i'*iit upon 'i>llc('ti,)ij.s). A liberal discount will be lu ;>.• thu * wiio a.'l Vi.rtise by the year. Advc-rtisenients sent i -r ^ 'U, must be marked with the number of inser- ■IlH ■■r they w.ll be- publidhed until forbid and char' Jir' ■■ ; ti -■.jrdiu;:';j. f, \ Lett rs to the KditMr. unl ess containing money in sums 1 / -re I‘' ilhirti, or over, must eume free of i)ostage, or the ■ ui'un^ ]>aid at the otVieo here will {>e eharged to the writerj 1 ev; ry lUbtance, and collected a.-j other acctjuuts. ru I s C I] L f. A X V . J- ,.Li*AfiO:\(>K IS LIFE. ScftCfrd) re n .t -I ni'-i'c f -.lish not.'iai afloat in the I'li'j Ui'* iij'j llii* i' i--: occupation (hat f^iv(’S ■ le; C l ( i irrtii On*; nccM[ntion, as the ■ vans -i a livin^r^” as tlie phrase govs, is Cl = ly lii^'h arii crc’ditublu as aiiother, provided I u U b'‘ lion )Mble, au i iu a'Tord ince vviih the • i\vs-f i.)d atil man. I'hu in:in who holds the harnui'Ts the iron, or driv'ejj iijs peg^ to sup- I U’ his family with tho hecoi^aries of life, is not a ‘. ‘ it below tl';; on ■ who ineasurt-s l.tj>e behind the ;in! r, inyNtilies liHV at lh'‘ bir, or presides over ...- u’.'•]]■> o,‘ the nation. is a vulg’ar and = r.ii -ujj. f--clin.r abroad in :li.- cfjinninnity on this * I '1. {' itlu‘is inu>t (dU'Mie their sons for one of ■A li it i. ctii d the ‘•{earned pr()fessioas.'’ Daugh- ji must marry a lawyer, :i doctor, a clergyman, r I til'rchiiit. Horror! the ;^oocl lady would as n t‘ ■ !. i' marrying her datjghtcr to a Winneba- ^ i, ;; t.-' a h Mindv, in Initrioui^, an I honest n>echan- 1* Wr.y, t’fiL* tiiuilv would bo dishonored! — \ . no! 'File bu'^iiiii^ of a carpenter, a black- iii:i, • r a farm;‘r. ii not so rcspeclable as that of having not- s, drawing solidity from the desk, ped- iiiig r )l'en Wi)od piils, or selling bnufl or tobacco. \nd yet the dutiea of ail the leanu d professions, as vt 11 as ihe-sf, of HI' rchants. are performed for the r i re jj>(! >}ia! a 6h>-:*m.ilaT waxes his thread and ■ f rum r ril.mis his [)Olaltjes, viz; to obtain a liv- -'iill a Set of miserable, upslart fools, who are t uiiiv'fisally I-mv bred pe>ple themselves— ! . ide who h'we Im i^wn 1;^* i;j a ditch, endeavor to th in sncjity artilicial disiinctions which the}’ =p!* *viil rh va‘.e them above the common mass ii.tin wiii.di they were talii-n. and to give them an importance which innate honestv could not com- iiiii ! Libor is labor; honest labor is honest la- ' r; hunesty and honorable labor is the same, w'heth r j'Tf irmed by the king or the beggar. anJ it is j ' honorable in the one a.^ in the oLhcr. It is ”u. that all men by habit and taste are not permit- 1 lo {iiirsuo the same vocation, and there are natu- 1 Jivi^i >ns, not distinctions, as the word is com- :.MnIy us-d. crtated bv harmony and taste. This 1.=' 1! should be. and lits us for the discharge of all > r' pi '-'aliar duties that devolve upon us as members s ‘ ety, B-ittosay becuuse a u: T.i p^TforniS any Civ. n duty, \ujw('ver humble, thouirh necessary, de- frades or renders him less meritoriotis than his iK'ighli r who performs anotlier dut}’, yet not more !ii'hlully, !s to siy we still ailhcre to trie monarchi- '.:;1 j^rincij l: s of tho old world. i ■■ t th * fi'Jii r . dn'i!- his son to so’ne honorable al tig, and il ht; has predilections to any particular ^ j'-in s:>. a.' - ftt {j is the case, let him follow it, if it V' issiM'’- it i:' th:' m:m that ennobh stho business, i ' ‘ I U'tiii: ns that ennoldes the man: and not n i ailionght u[Kin the distinctions in occupations, 'i. : ii ji' and hf)ne«t. that fools have attempted to ij, I. t childitn be taught to be honorable, n* St, ahd nnii„!;', to set a proper value upon the riches (d til-' world, which is al best but a bubble, owti in;.) e,\i^ten‘•e to-d:iy ?o burst to-morrow; and CHARLOTTE, N. C., NOVEMBER 29, 1842. S NUMBER 88 Mililary.—John Dudley, of Deerfield, N. H., a respectable and proper man, with a pretty good opinion of himself, was honored with the commis sion of captain in the militia. He was an old bache lor, and had an old maid for a housekeeper, and till ed his ground like an honest man. Ho was ac- quaint(d with Governor Wentworth, and frequent ly called upon him when at Portsmouth, that he might tell his neifrhbors how'^ thick he was with his Excellency. To a Id to his importaBce, he once invit(^d the Governor to call upon hnn at Deerfield, on his way into the country, and the Governor pro mised to do so. The captain expected the visit sometime in a certain week, and kept near his house, busily employed. as‘usual. One very warm day, his house-keeper came puf fing into the tield, to inform him that a grand car- riag*^, which must be the Governor’s, was at a lit tle distance. The captain ran into the house, and had hardly time to slip on his military red coat and cocked hat, ere his Excellency drove up. With his trusty sword in hand, Capt. Dudley ran into the street, and assuming a true captain iike strut, paid a martiil salute to his Excellency, who, on behold ing him, burst out into a hearty laugh. This rath er discomposed the man of the sword ; but he was put to immediate flight by the followmg speech of the Governor: Capt. Dudley, I am glad to see you ; but think your appearance as a military man would be somewhat improved, if you would add to your uniform a pair of brceches —an article which the good captain, in his haste to pay his res pects to the Governor, had entirely forgotten I — Boston Journal. ‘ ■ un■J■''l^^•u) 1 tliat the on!v true and real distinctions in S 'Chty arc tlmse of vntue and vice, and the only ■ and en lurinjr riclns are an iiilellcci dulv culti- lafiucnce Woman.—In the ordinary course of tho world, in that intercourse of flattery and false hood where cveiy one deceives and is deceived, where all appear under a borrowed form; profess friendship th(*y do n^t feel, and bestow praises only to bo praised in return; men bowahe lowest to those they despise me>st. But he who lives retired from this scene of delusion e.tpects no compliments from others, bestow’sthem only where they arc deserved. All the insidious grimaces of public life are nothing compared wiih the inspiring smiles of frienship which smooth the ruirged road, and all our toils. Of what value are all the babblings and vain boastings of society, to that domestic felicity which we experience in the company of an amiable wo man whose charms aw'aken the dormant faculties of the soul, and lill the m’nd with finer energies; whose smiles prompt our enterprises, and whose as sistance insures success ; who mspires us W'ith con genial greatness and sublimity, who with judicious penetration, weighs and examines onr thoughts, our actions, our whole character ; who observes all our foibles, warns us with sincerity of their coni«e- (juences, and reforms us w'ith gentleness and afft-c- tion ; who by tender conimunication of their thoughts and observations conveys new instructions to our minds; and bv' pouring the w’arm and generous feelings of heart into otir bosoms, animates us in cessantly to the exercise of ev’ery virtue, and com pletes the polished perfection of our character by the soft allurenients. In such an intercourse, all that is virtuous and noble in human nature, is pre served W'ith in the breast, and every evil propensity dies aw'av.—merma7i. /I Temperance .4/iecf/o^e.—The Washingtonians are driving a noble bnslness among the old soakers of this city. On Thursday evening the church in Poydras street, was literally crammed, and njany hard drmkerc?, we have no doubt, was laken out ot the gutter. Among a great many pleasant anecdotes related by ths speakers, w’as one defining the un pleasant position of a certain Deacon who wanted to he temperate without signing the pledge. He had been importuned to that ell’ect until he became po outraged that he arose, and before ihe temper ance society, delivered a speech in tavor of moder ate drinkin^^. He was allowed to proceed, and at its termination, he seized hisliatand walked down the aisle with great dignity. There was present an old toper, who, at that moinotit, was abouc as full as he could well be and being mightly tickled at the Deacon’s speech, he staggered frorn hie seat, and tippe the I)eacon on his siioulder, exclaimed, “I say—hie—Dcucon, themes nujseutimcnts ! I’ll stand by you—hie—old leller, in them ’ere doctrines! So let'’s go out and liquor The Deacon, finding tha his “moderate drinking” doctrines placed hmi in such diegraceinl tellovvship, went back and signed the pledge!—X. O. Jeffersonian. The Jhlhrifcs, Tent. The following is the de scription of the big tent,” which the IVIillerites have erected at Albany, N. Y., where they intend to reside until the end of the world, to take place, as they say, on the 23d of April, 1843. “ The first object that meets your view’, is the great tent, or markee,” 110 feet in diameter, covering an area of nearly half an acre. It is supported in the centre by a pole 100 feet high, and around the sides It is open around the bottom, ^.akts or uprights . to let the air circulate freely within, and can be if . cid xti .'ns so.ioo.ed. and a heart that knows no -j’j around so as to make it tight, should the weather prove unfavorable. It cost $700, and is said to bo the b* st spi cimen in the tent making hne in the United States. Every part of the work about it is really beautiful. The interior is fitted up with rude benches or seats without backs. The ground is covered with straw, to protect the feet from the damp. It is said that 3,000 persons can be comfortably seated, but that 2,500 only have been accommodated under it.—Phil. Saturday Courier. From tlie Globe. Messrs. Blair &- Rives: Let me be permitted, through your columns, to invite attention, in a brief way, to the great inducements held out by a late Act of Congress to settlement in Florida. That Act grants, in fee simple, a quarter section of land to every head of a family, or single man over eigh teen years of age, who will settle in Florida, south of the ninth township, prior to the 4th of August, 1843; and the only material condition is, continued residence for five years, and occupation and cultiva tion of five acres for four years of that time. Nothing can be more attractive than the olTer of such terms for settlements such a country as Flot' ida. By means of its provisions, a freehold and home is at once obtained without price, and large families may be enabled, bv emigration, “to set up in the world ” at once all their male members over I which afford the most lujcuriant pasturage, and which will never be appropriated to any exclusive j use. I have 9oen the rich maiden cane grass reach- ing-tv> the backs of cattle on Payne’s prairie, and have had in view at one moment several tliousiad head of stock grazing upon it. An inexhaustible and profitable market for our cattle is afforded by our propinquity to Cuba and other West India is- landc, where they may be carried on the hoof, or the meal jerked before shipment. A large jerking establishment was commenced before the Indian hostilities broke out, from which several cargots of tasajo, or jerked beef, were shipped to Cuba. It was (bund that the process of jerking could be prac tised as successfully in Florida as in any part of South America, New Orleans will also afioid a large market for live stock of all descriptions. The lumber trade will also afford profitable em than is necessary to prerent them from ruimirg wild—furnishing abundance of meat, butter, mdk, wool, hides, &c., for domestic and farming pur; c. .ff. He makes his own cotton and wool, and mr.y wti V-^ his own cloths at home. The palm (which is everywhere in the forest) furnishes the best mater in'; for hats that can be ustd in that climato. In short, he will need to buy nothing but his coffee and and the last of these can be produced cheap! in any quantity upon the coast. 1 need add no more than assurance to emi of every hospitable attention and assist those who have preceded them in this !^1 mise, and a cordial invitation to all wbo ter their condition, the poor not 1 to come and cast their lot with us. • u 1 * II -1 f.rr.oin . u 1 ploy‘ncnt to a great number of emigrants In the WAmi^o’ eighteen, and all their lemaie members, too, w’ho * • • r ,1, » ^ . u l.~- Tlie Y. Chronii-le tells some good Vungs. Aui ■niroihers there was one the other day I It an In h p;\ir at ihe police ollice. The wife I t 1 l.rougiit l\itio ihe otiice for thrashing her, w-hen > I j'T tlie it'tiluenr'e ot' whiskey. Pat tried his elo- {ueuc’C in all manner of ways to prevent her pnsh- .jiiT her romjilaint, but in vain. Siie was inexorable. 1*' tidd her of her loneliness—she was deaf. He pic- ired his hardships in a prison—she was untuoved. H. promised reform -but she wouldn’t notice him. lie begged Jier to let him otV, just that time—but she was impatient to make the oath of complaint. e magistrate was aIo imj)atient, and ordered the 'V man to begin. Pat begged one moment more, ■ »d throwing all his cunning into a last desperate *’ rt, remarked that if she was lesolved to send him nia> kwelTs she mu^t prepare for the consequences, then were lots of pretty girls m prison there, his triggered Judy. She turned and twisted and t»'d about and begired to know if the ’Squire *' ■ In't put Pat m a cell by himself; but his Wor- ■' H}*, fc-nufiing the joke, said, if sent, Pat must be put anion? the girls. This settled the matter, and the r >od woman turned and marched, although the I* ming rogue heijged her to make haste and kiss b's .k. The idea of the girls was more than she J ■ fe^^iid.—liirhmoml Star. J '*■ rstand your lather is dead,” said a man •- -I'tle boy as he entered the house. “ Youre r: VV| Ij, ;5 ; Jrii - 1 Justice.—A notice wms recently posted up, in the town ofPittsford. N. Y., calling a public meeting of young men on the subsequent Friday evening, for the declared purpose of “ doing justice to Henry Clay.” A few ilays previous to the proposed meet ing, a patriotic son of the Emerald Isle dropped in to the shop of a wliole hog ” Whig, and thus de livered himself: --An” so, auld chip, your next President ii going to be hung next Friday, I see!” “What do you n«ean?” cries Marble,in high dud geon. ‘‘Mane, sure enough !” exclaims Pat, ‘‘Didn’t I just spy a notice on yonder post, that there w’as to be a meeting next Friday to 'do justice to Henry Clay?^ and liow' can tliey do that without hanging him ? Hang him they must, shure!” Hochestcr Advertiser. .4 True Tei^t.—Nothing, says a late writer, sets so wide a mark between a vulgar and a noble soul, as the reverential love of womanhood. A man who ’ out m t\vh*T room, as I always sneering at woman, is generally a coarse will make haste to convert their clever lovers to good husbands. The operation of the Act is limited to two hund red thousand acres; and as there is much room for choice in locations, and there is already evidence of much intended emigration, it behoves those who contemplate removal to lose ?io time in reaching there. Thu first comer will of course bo best ser ved. To the' weiilthy Planter, Florida is eminently inviting ; because the fertility wf its soil, and the richness and varie-ty of its staple productions, aflbrd better return upon investments thaa-jnay be found elsewhere in the South. But to the poor and the moderate in circum&taocfSj it is, beyond compari son, the paradise of earth. There are no freezing winters to provide against by close houses, maga zines of supplies for embargoed and shivering fami lies, tending and feeding of stock, «&c. So far from this, the climate may w^ell be likened to the North ern Spring extended through the year. The means of subsistence are obtained with less labor, and labor is more productive, and industry more quickly blessed with accumulation and plenty, than is conceivable to the inhabitant of a less fortunate region. The forests preserve a perpetual verdure; all descriptions of stock range the open woods throughout the year, revelling in abundance of pas turage ; gardens are filled with a never-ending va riety of flower and vegetable during every month; fish and fruits abound everywhere almost to sur feit; the soil is easily tilled, and the harvests are so abundant, so rich, so various, and the climate so agreeable to labor, that little is left to be desired in the circle of physical wants. And where but in Florida cun such blessings be enjoyed, with the addition of the political and moral advantages which American free government and social ad vancement bestow’ ? The most advisable time for removal w’ould be in tho months of November aa I December. Those who reach there in those months would have am ple lime to prepare ground for cultivation and be assured of good crops. The principal productions to which the country is adapted are. Sugar, Cotton, Tobacco, Oranges, and other fruits, the Mulberry, Grape, &c.; Corn, Rice, &c. The production of S’lgar is from one to three hogsheads per acre; ai:d of Cotton from one to two thousand pounds. A bale to the acre of black seed (sea island) Cotton has beon produced upon pine land in the Suwannee region. The profitableness of these staples may be estimated from the fiict that General Clinch, from his plantation, (Lang Syne, in Alachua county,) worked by between fifty and sixty hands, received, for two or three years before it was destroyed by the Indians, a nett annual in come of tw'enty thousand dollars. Nor is the pro duction of Sugar confined to large planters. Every farmer, however small his means, has his field of Sugar cane, which is manufactured by himself, with wooden mills of domestic construction, and large pots of the ordinary manufacture. 'Ihe Tobacco produced in Florida is similar to that of Cuba, and is manufactured into Cigars of the most admired quality. Its production requires no capital, and light labor, and is very profitable. The orange tree requires very little attention; and a grove, south of the indicated line, once in bearing, is an established fortune of certain and per manent income. The tree is indigenous every where upon the peninsula. Groves, of miles in ex tent, of the bitter-sweet and sour orange, are found in ail parts of it. From a grove of the cultivated Orange, situated upon the St. John’s river, and cov ering only ao acre and a quarter, a yield of ^1.700 | in a season has been realized. A single tree in St. Augustine has been known to yield six thousand oranges. The ^rroves at i>t. Augtistine and its vi cinity were cut dowm to the ground by the unpre cedented frost of 1S35; but are rapidly recovering their former beauty and value. In the region of j country now offered for settlement, no injury was i produced by that frost, nor are the trees ever afi'ect | ed. A couple of trees of the sweet orange, grow -1 ing at Pilaklaka, (the residence of Micanopy, ! head chief of the Seminoles. about thirty miles souih of the line.) were found in full vigor and bearing by the army in 1836; and the lime, lemon, guava, cit ron, pomeo-ranate, fig, cocoa-nut, pine-apple, and other West India fruits, grow luxuriantly along the peninsula. Peaches, melons, plums, and other fruits common to northern latitudes, also thrive, and great ly excel the more northern production in flavor and richness. The mulberry grows with wonderful luxuriance, and in most parts of Florida preserves its foliage throughout the year. Experiments in successful progress, prove that the silk-worm is less subject to diseases, and that the crop of cocoons can be more o.^ten repeated in the season than in any other part of the United States. Indigo may also be produced with great profit. A large quantity was annually exported from t lori- da while a British colonv. Corn grows finely. The average production per acre is from 20 to 25 bushels. As much as 40 bu shels has been gathered from the acre. One of the most profitable sources of income (to the poor man especiallly) will be the stock business. Cattle thrive wonderfully. A stock of cattle run ning in the woods at laige, and only driven home to b'e milked, doubles in three years, as a regular calculation The increase is sometimes greater. There are extensive praires and ranges of pine land. vicinity of the coast and water courses there is an inexhaustible supply of the finest pine timber in America. There need be no limit to the quantity of sawed lumber exported to the West Indies and Atlantic and Gulf cities. The Florida lumber commands in market, I am informed, a higher price than any other. A ^rodt mistake exists^^^ipect to the health and climate of Florida, Tnere^re particular lo calities which have been found unheathy, as is the case in every other part of the world ; but the pe ninsula of Florida is a healthy country, and of mild^ temperature. I resided fof'Several years in the neigh borhood of Micanopy—a village a few miles north of the Indian boundary line—and I never knew of' a case of fever, (n^ vcr of the West ai Di* herctofol ernor ofj solved oj of the to privi gon boy;^ seek repos^ himselt Slashei Credll Th# vm Thoncytti Cort !iwxne old *coon,” iif October lart, State. Co^jfia retires iful and disgraced ” ” goea to Aehland to ^ ineering toils, and amuse ^ with the '• mill boy of ih^ ^4re requested to exercise ifce ” until they receive that " iast beef.”—Dover Gazette. , e common ague iginating; settlemV 'dont was informed that, there was no exam pi in the summer occasion^ growing out of exposuj they are not more frequeril in the South and Southwest, and tal, in consequence of the constant sea-breezes which waft across the greater proportion of children live throj gerous periods of infancy than in any the United States. The best proofs, how^ such subjects are afforded by practical and actua tests. Fortunately, the late valuable puhlicafion 6 Dr. Lawaon, the Surgeon General of the United States army, upon medical statistics, affords details of a conclusive character. Dr. Lawson furnishes a table exhibiting the ra tio of mortality,all causes, in the army in Florida during the years 1836, 1837, 1838. and 1839. It appears that, with a mean strength of 10,- 476 lijen, there were 644 deaths, or 6 1-10 per cent. This-includes deaths in battlCy?iViA from wounds and casualties generally; and it should Ije borne in mind that the exposures of an army in the field are very trying to health. Dr. Lawson thus remarks upon the table to which I have referred: “ The ratio (of mortality) of the troops in Florida (6 1-10 per cent.) varies little from the general ave rage of troops serving in the South in time of peace —a fact established by the result of statistical inqui ries. It w'ill be seen that this ratio is lower than that of the 4th infantry, on an average of ten years. As an evidence that no extraordinary mortality has been experienced in Florida, it is found that the ave rage of the last three years, taking all the regiinenti in the army, is 4 8-10 per cent.; and that although more than one-third of the actual strength of the ar ray served 111 Florida in 1838, yet the mortality of the whole army is only 4 2-10 per cent.—a ratio lower than the mean oi ten years.” From the data contained in an abstract exhibiting the strength of each regiment in the army, and the deaths in each for a period of ten years, I gather the following striking facts, to wit: The mortality in the 1st regiment of dragoons garrisoned at Forts Gibson, Desmoines, and Lea- venw'orlh, is 6 3-19 per cent.: while that of the 2d ling,—By a law of Congress, approv- iT, 1842, it is made incumbent in all pay or to the Treasury, whether made in the itates or in foreign countries, where it be- aecessary to compute the value of the pound ^^erling, that it shall be deemed eqtial to four dol^n ti^s and eighty’four cents, and the same rule shall applied in appraising meichandize imported, e the value is by the invoice in pounds sterling, of the foimer law, inconsistent with ns, is repealed.—Lyford's Com. Jour. ibrated dandies was in company s other evening, and observ^ )odle. He advanced and beg- larking that she ought to bav&j ■iiim as she had shown to a V I never kissed my dog while 7|ie fellow look the hint and A Xice Y( Tenn., critic tashions, saj of ordinary s canes. Rings, chauli^fclnt er yet captivated a won Gentlemen who exhibit much labor at the toilet, tion by the retl-icting pc That’s a sensible ;jirl. ^ypung lady in Memphis. 1*8 modes of dress and nev«r worn by men li^ows alone carry )ins of gold, nev- "CQiumon intellect. J^ir evidence of in high estima- jiemale sex. F A withering rebuke.—A Ohio preaching in a neii observed two young ladies ping suddenly in his discoal ly at them, he said: “ I obf in the congregation earnestly^ _ tion, and as it is not a mark of tri more than one to speak at a time ii remain silent for a abort time to give them SW BfT- portunity to finish their discourse, when I will re sume mine.” The w'orthy minister, after standing in silence a raoment or two, resumed his subject. AT y. Ku'prcss. War.—Voltaire thus expresses himself on war: -"A hundred thousand mad animals, whose heads arp covered with hats, advance to kill or to be killed by a like number of their fellow mortals covered with t'ubans By this procedure they want, at regiment of dragoons, serving altogether in Ea^t i ^f Florida, was only 5 1-10 per cent. The average of deaths in the 3d regiment of ar tillery, from 1829 to 1835, stationed along the coast of New England, was 21 ; while the average of deaths in the same regiment, serving in Florida, from 1835 to 1838, including casualties of war, waanot more than 24. In the 4th regiment of artillery the average of deaths from 1829 to 1835, while stationed mostly at Forts Columbus, Delaware, McHenry, and Se ven, was IS 3 7; wfiile in the same regiment, serv ing in Florida duiing 1836, 1837, and 1838, the average of deaths was only 1'2 2 3 The foregoing facts are stjfficient to establifch the healthfulness of the peninsula. It is a remarkable peculiarity of the climate of Florida that it has neither the frigidity of the North ern loin'cr nor the intensity of the Northern sum' mer. 'I'hu extremes of temperature are happily modified. ']'he foliowin^r data, gathered from the meteoro- of them have any claim, shall belong to a certain man whom they call Sulian or to another whom thej^^ call Czar, neither of them ever saw or ever wiil see the spot so furiously contended for ; and very few of those creatures w'ho are thus mutaally butchering each other ever behel 1 the animal for whom tliey cut each other’s throats! Froris time immemorial this has been the way of mankind al most all over the earth. Wiiat an exccss of mad ness is this and how deservedly might a Supreme Being crush to atoms this eartlily ball, the bloody nest of such ridiculous murderers!” logical tables of Dr. Law'son, will ilhistrate it: C ‘ an temp. II.' hcist degree in 1329. 92 03 100 93 A curt fur the Tooth-Ache.—The editor of the National Forum has communicated to the publivJ an ” infallible ” cure for the Tooth-Ache. The remedy is simple, and its effect said to be almost immediate, it is this :—Take equal parts of alum and common sail, pulverise and mi.^ them; wet a small piece of cotton, and cause the mixed powder to adhere: th^n place it in the hollow tooth. A sensation of coIJness will be experienced which will giadually suUide, and w'ith it the tormeni ->1' the tuoih ache. 101 97 QJ Fort Snelling, 15.31 Eastport, (Alaine) 4:^,97 F't Howard, {Green bay) 14,93 Kosion harbor, 46,24 Council iihiflh, 50,50 New York harbor, 53 Tarr.pa. ( Florida.) 72,80 Upon this subject Dr. Lawson remarks : ‘•Although the wintrr at Fort Snelling is 47 deg. 73 min. colder than at Tampa Bay, the sunin.er at the latter place is only 8 deg. 2i min. warmer, Al though the mean annual temperature of Pet.te Co quille is nearly 2 deg. lower than that of Augusta, j jK-soiutioi^s will ?>or.ia, ncarl'y 8 deg. and .ha. of For. G,l,.on wards ol 10 tJegr. lower than at Tampa Lay, yet, in i STATE TEMPERA-\CE CONVENTION. A meeting of the M^ca^jers of the State Tempe rance Socitty, at Udleigh, 3rd Nov. 1842, Res.jhed, That a siafo Temperance Convention he l;eli ia this City, on Friday 3 o’clock P. M. IGih Dec ne.Yt. and that all the Societies in this State be afRctionately and earnestly requested to sen I deleg.it* s to the same. Resolved, That the Editors in our State, friendly to the cause, be respectfully requeste.d to give these h the following Address, one or two tneir respective papers. all, the mean summer temperature is higfier. In tlie j T- o tne Oificers and ^lembers of al* the T. emper- ihe mercury rises higher in every ance Societies in North Carolina : Brethren and ~ fellow laborer." in an enterprize, so full of incalcula ble blessings to a numerous class of the family of summer season, other portion ot the United Stales, and even in Can ada, than it does along the coast ot Florida. In six years’ observation at Key West it was never known to rise above 90 degrees.” No condition can be more independent and happy than that of the Florida farmer. With a ff^w' weeks’ labor in the course of the year, he supplies his crib with abundant store of gram and roots, tie makes man, We, in conformity to the above Resolutions, do cordially invite you to send on some of your most efficient Members as Delegates to the Convention, for the object of promoting the best success of the rreat and good cause in which we all take such a are his own sugar and molasses, and may make his owti | jiTieresL Dtleirates from other States Ilis table may be supplied, | resnectfully invited to the Convention. HILL. ^’huirrnan rum if he lequires it. llis taoie may do .uppucu, , at all seasons, with the finest fiih and game, the | choicest garden stuffs, and tlie rarest fruits. Ilib she»:p. hoirs, '3a(tic. goats require no more care WAI Vrii.L. Plck. Secretary