Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / April 26, 1848, edition 1 / Page 1
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J r. ffiUfl " . - J ! i :i in Sv- a., ;,leWaaJ- fca4 !n 4 .' yiyg ' '.W...J. ' ,'i.-.JL" 15'NIOX. TIIE CONSTITUTION IN Ii TELlWS.THE GUARDIANS O F,U U R tl B ERT V". , , Ao. 1-127. . Hi? i r -:OT fin h":mlf lll: I ' , .kO Ji 1 ' '. nCMAIMXO ia lU Petit O&reai UULC.I g:t.C.,ath UdjefApttl. lM.j wlurfe if mi ukce Liu tt(r aaiU,wul iw , eurt a tae frual rx O.Tr kJ korrk , AiHMTf ' Mcf BwftM. .' ... -v,.i E - - lfi"8tauMtth Fatp.t Mr. inhr ' (liirWMilW. ' . i . -"- o t)U Outkw. . Ho A F. PU, . TkiHitM 8. Pir, , . Rirri Pstunon, ' trot PvtmJi & otltrr. . , UJ Jrv mil, . En lorii.t. t(tbrr t tetter Lkitil pMU ' Vtttren UmA.""- " ' raMr WT airy rtjre ltae a ttul a ttrf , mreneauK nou 04 rrnrnrorn uw pUeied far settral jrrsrt, trlcclin thetrtd ifroa iu OiiTn-ulty ml oi rwwUanrf bat in oSWt ll.t hhor i n!o ror tiJira'jlr inrrratftL Tl.ffe are mfir 'l'.U lu nUnl 4ons eimLrkHit rowtd ura. wlk!i I hare I SjmUril---piti 1i)nre "wkirli. ih.I tnw' m t tim Mr Krii t nwi-1k amfl 1 nTjanlMl for tnral Mr. i.H-iir tli i from it ililTirtillT and v rtaMnUl la beiJ earfi rear in the wT ooeftb- Mn any omrr Known nfr r ry iw ht cu, ana wrura jtkm S aarwr aiTi h l!ie labor itf luStl w grraier anJ no maa can fcotk niait taw and nubbin a TiH it Urgt oitri. DftIe I find by" ie lu eipcriiDrritlKat' i flofvfy p!aoitl fit-U vi'l not Stand t draught Drar ai lone ?M Ct!J pUnUt) wider part. Errry fi4iK require in uuc praiioniun m ido tinner eer arquire.- TLer rtaNr aoalitr ttu! eoluiaUa of I&0 land linff o aatiovt nt:rtmm riot lhtol . ' ...... '! . -. . t ..... t tbtMt8, Van tt VMid vlteo l en riUJij it, l!te rom i alto tt iettt leAbr Fruaa ib A !; CulUvjtor. Cullure of Xaiiia Corn at tie NotUl Epitor or ms Ci'LTicatok :It must ear of corn "to full perfection, anl ofrourve ihe greater rlie tlraft upoil ile toil fnr mor iul proI tare. ' In pun!;n on j srala ri eight lo tmelve pc re, fl.ert fore, J 'pi far. more nntwiihranJinF aij in (a tor i4 1 .v.- f rpare lietirfen the there bat LrenVi murli i tiamoniwui in the W; their 011 WiuaW1, of pmiliar OfWioalMr iul tUorca;.ttir a ft.... . earlier ia rtoeninir. Ai (ma h. ae dlSoii tbnrt ani ft etrw.and nattnflal bait to nd doubled rami eSalki.-tHrt oie fetIoi, ill mie or lm diSerem from thoae lure from Ae rarib in order "to carry iht Ut onld eeoi to an Urrrr ta Masinj vt tle ret of Spam.. Thw U bo doobt orer Uie field, bige-propona of te Uftbeir beinj srt-rat Gzif men. Hit uliaproJufe Imt ears mttin tlie tlie Ubit of e ootemlin with anperW nam- be apparent H eer one. that the 22rr hadng e fcrun4 by r!oe plantmr. to aw rslue of Ue Cora crop U tismeiire in! Prerf nl l!,e f fe . M?y C. Faitertt ' 3t4y riiaiart f. S. rmtanJ. A I'ew Nnrjr I'wmjiK ' u Jaaira M. CtiUiaia, . Jl , .. Lieut U.:n(U, , ; Samurl Holt. Wiiruin ft. HoUrn VilUm florn.'' ChJj Ifiekc ; '' i -I i J CathariM Joorn, -Joita W, Jane, Brnjmi Janet, (I. W. Jfr-, -If mrr L Sonn, WiUun JfflTrrTt. ' DaU KinoT, . - J Rtr, 1 ' William See,' 8 P42fVwlrtl. f iilltrtt Slmyhorn, AWiamW Stiaia, Tboaiai O. fJuuiiun,. AHn HtIm, ' C!iUalcl tj manda, Abratn Humnr. . FftfJcriit Built). , T . , . t!alk-tt Tfiminr Km hunt F. Tbatnpton, - DaU TurW, . W. Thmn(Mfi. ' Jinel',T"intioa. . W. . . JohV.ilUre,5 llairis WilLerMn, . DariJ Wi!!Lmt, Jihn !-VHitrr, Joha Wood, . , 1). R. WaUon. i : tlua country and a almost e ery eitilivn 1 tor of the oil tbrotighout U it variety of 1 r r .1 - aonv i a pmwer w mm crop o 9 f reaier ot Mttcin. it beromet mutfr of im portance tbt it thotild be minjzed to the i beat lraqtif et ; I lnow of no belter way lo arme ta tlm Ufirrd rrauli than the prsc (tialcsperieKreof auccetsfid ora tro- 1 era, made public tlmnigh tlie colunuia f.f ' I the asnculturul ircM. nemar all learn ' I fomethins frinii one aooilier ; indeed I lie - er ImJ a bired iiinneen,in my lire, how ever ignorant, that land not a way. of bit I own of doing omeiliinf (root wbtch I ob j laiiH'd a new and profitable idea.. Thexe coiiKi derations ruil be tny ajK!ogy for ' mi- appareut eiottin in the frequent uie of lite personal, pronoun io lhi coustdera j lion. ..---.. ' k ...... ", i r I do notcspert to adi any tiling new in infurnialion, upon uiy preceut eubject, ' which has been o oficn mid so ablv han- tltol by othcra before me, bat timply lo ecti' of dronglji," It it" of conuidcrable importance to tiate etrait row! both wvi, the'nte of Hie hnre and r6H)rator beinj much more eflerti due caa than in crook ea row no farmer hating a pari of Ironrst pri two Ugclhrr, uerjly-four 10 twctt"Biebera hne gicra thenr peruiwir noiiont no incbei in lengths mane of the aingle ar :the auhject f military eucre and flory. ill measure kiartors or auieea tochea long. Of onme no Ltnd of corn cm pro- TIict attaeri 00 ahame 10 a retreat or etca to a fliehi: but Uie antcnitt$ whorop dace to anc estcnl. two raw upon a aulkv Vne Ufane w ay the- ate of lbi length, uulesathe laad andetdiira-tbealcn. aooner'or !-ier rind tbemaelrea tion.aie boUi good, U to be liopcd 'ecrcetoumy nu usen. . r ngM ta a pan uiert ia - a gKd uo comjng.; w ben no W meir tarticn to lt'ee ine enemy, ano lertire in ind will be pUnteiwiih, llti I aiuriant' inflict heatf Iom at little to ihemtclfea, iitiaiata b j beeida,Jgraja dial ia not rntd,,or imido gK4, by 'upon" all 5 eeraMorir - their aim. They ! Jot w irupritfe,jiheiber:d mariajjemeitt of iw proprietor, care nothing IWr lha cmpiy honor of flume of av the aurtior;" i efriVlAg(T4ibowa ia the Cathedral abroad. Here the tnai U en Ihely perloraied in nuiral onrn!. and rccoroes awdibte to errry Ccro'ee, bow ever pUeed ia il.t femotrat put of tho chrcit.whefcaa itl eaase mad Lad bee read, the emtmla would aot Juito lm wiled fee jood die preciacta of the choir, Those ONtora wl o art heaid in large ar rrotliea Bioat dtatincdy, and at the greater distance.4 are ibM who, by rnodulnn the eoice, render it more musical. . Lood peaLers arraeldoia beard to adraotage. ilaika'c foiee i aaid to hero been a wt f tony rry. which tended, aa pisck aa the forroai.tr of hi diacoorae ia the hoore of Common, to end U membera to thetr dinner, fhathata'a lowit whiper wa dtatinrtly beard; bt middls tonea vera tweet; fjrh.Tnd beaotifully Taried,', aaya a writer, derrribing tlte orator; when ho raised bn voice to it bighest piwn, me wae completely filled wiin toe To round, and the euect wm awitti. wulica to gaze all atimmcr at ao nnsiglitJy I A my eoinmunicaiion , aircauy- loo iepinji nrt vm "f ""'"-" , . ' ' j ,1 , V- L.A ..im.. an bbjea a. crooked corn row.orxe loug. I will .y.,,odaural present of the ;whieh they hare all'day - foajrUV They mg. and then I Bl" tlH...meithegSteof.uhrra. ; . ' FH"" iokIc of .hoaiiof the ropj could Kardlr be m Ie to ndcrmnd rt rf. ln planting the corn, which hMlrnjmnetowlmijto- auch a ;procccdm "they t:,le ArNwa inn.nrela'aenl r veittrr it Well and if 1 slwuM. mv reiu.'.rk will f howlhe tnueb ereatnr credit when .hey ihin tlie f I ben tlie honso tonl before him, still l a h-.i i,,!!. I-t.5t.tla. iMsuttofaoiii ortii-lnrMnata bii.-li cnemv'a tanka without safleiin lliem- w dignitiea. ana wonaeriui at was m dS he rUZiil haie iusu-.a.'ed. ? . ..' 7 ,-er Aud ifthey cf:rn run .way. , hey fSM eighttowcUe incite, rqtwreinVncbhilL s .r , 1 F..U0M1U00K. are ecr rely ta return la Ue fcay. Tl-y ''' ' t! X,lTi Ir iS Thiemay appcnrasmMlnnttertoaome. BrauleborU, V,, le. 11. 1S.7. , (are born with a natu ral a pt.tgde for the JXS'Z ; f.rt it.Vi ntnn.1 .lm. iti fpccics of fihtir. lor which their htm finer eren. than am. words, 1 nn -u. irulr ititimlvlff BrfllPr. Uian the orator. . Copcrr ear heavicr.'and th.-ie will be more stalks bearing two rood can. than if the common practice of tumbling the corn into' ,the hill 'hfi' Hf W STATE UF NORTH-CAROUNAi 'v oaaxoc corwrv." n 'f 1 Court of Pleas' and Quarter Sessions, muld better afford to pay a man two doi lars a day to plant cord in tne way I hare j TVtruilliiiriiMru. ui.iii inc. iiiiiiiiiimi planted in'the eommnn way,' Tlie com Jshow hv what process I hire Iwen rue ' eortreu at nasi mrre incites tieep 111 ccisful in r-iMog mu.Hi larger crops qv dy'and gravelly oi!s rr two reasons, com to tie acre tiwn wouU be considered f n u,is .cc,ion " !nf """"T iy nave laie spring irosto, wnirn nip vor com fcflcr it ti up; and if Hvercd hni slightly, tlte vitality of the "tender plant is often destroyed "by 'freezing down to the roots, whereas, if covered three inches deep, no permanent injury is done; A rain, we sometimes have dry Weather hout planting time, and if the earth dries aa average yiel J ia litis section, jd least. The average yield 01 my corn crop, on Perit calline for anv of the abave fct. lwc t aciw anoowiy. uas noi w tera. wifl pkto ny t-y are aJvrtid. so low aa sixty bushels per acre lu ten - JAMES M. I'AI.MKR, r. at. jjrs, wh.lc in more, favorable aeaon A pti! I. 8Sw,andonmy beUaiiib,it.HriUcomep to ... ,,. . .. ,,. . , , eighty or ninety bushels per acre. . ii i proper also to atate, tln.l some of tlie fields would not cut five hundred pouuds of hay ; to tlie acre ten years ai;o. . rVf-rU L.TUeland intended for corn is always IT iori!rrrd bv the roart, that WaAer, aliea' varying with the fertility of the soil, late U hl falUnorderto that perfect pulve- mm. the Hrroml HT the Jan vis. TueaJ.v, """on r,Uie so.l, whteh the frost of win U atwgiied for ihit Mirpoe. " tcr contributes so essentially, to. secure. And the Clerk is directed to puUiah tbi order 'l'h plowing is performed with great rare ia tb UilUbormiRft Recorder. ' , . t VikI prerision. -No baulks no crooked - 1 . . -- 1 a it t 1. -r L r ' -a W IIUCW. 4MrlH AliUHWI, tn ut ...u VUUfl, at office, the fourth Mond4-of February, A. D. ' JOSEPH A I.LISON, c. c. c. Mitch 31. , , St or imperfect turned furrows are at all al loweil, but the wlnile soil to tlte required depth i fumed over. I have Iteen trou-i bled to.liud plows lha( do good work in I ALIi, .11 ."SV elo No2, a cut and description which is I given m the Arra number,. vok-iy.. 01, j Uie Cultivator... tnma a pcrfec furrow eight, nine or ten inches deep. , . -. i The heaps of compost manure are made 1Q4Q ' ' THPORTERS OP DRY GOODS, Pcterabunr. Virginia. WE ba reeeived hy the Packet STaps, . OXFORD. : .ASH BURTON, and' : ' ; . . HOTTIMil'ER, Our nsiial Importatbns of . " Foreign goods, Which, ad Jed to the Arrival by the vtriou r ek-hoonera front ' tip on this land ii) Angust or. after, beds being plowed up to re.ive them. .These heaps, arc raised at convenient, distances 10 butd into the cart in the spring, and ! . f . .. . 1. - J 1 ...ttt. ttt.UIUAnnmn CpiCaU VU U.e ia.UI mat tvuiwin; of travel, ami contain thirty or forty loads Car hi which. U the quantity usually ap plied to lift acre. - Thirty-five or forty bushels is called a load., in the spiing the manure i hud on the land in small ! Iieaps ! ; the row of heaps about four.pa- ddwn to tlte corn after it has sprouted, it may not come up n all, if il does it w ill be a lone lime about it. and at lite end of iw mwhm-mm wh-w wr o -rtyw owe f its that planted deeper. The seed is plant ed dry. I have tried a variety of steeps for seed com, but have settled down to the impression that it is as well planted dry as any other way- The most eifcctnal scare crow" I have ever found, is a line of white twine strung around the field, and supported br long stakes. ; '' ' 1 In writ king, the corn after iris op, the main dependence is wpon the hurse and cultivator' The construction of many of the cultivators hi ne is faulty.' The up per 'part of the tooth is so Vhort, and the fiame .work in cohseqnence. is brought so near the ground, that the implement goes bobbing about over the top of the weeds, and clogging up with vcry impediment it meets, the weeds of" course are not cut off or rooted up in a thorough or desirable manner, although I grant they arc some what mangled. Ira future communica tion I rnay give a drawing and description of a cultivator mnde-at my suggestion, by an ingenious blacksmith in tins place, w hich is not Ii .We io the above objections. At weeding' timia the horse and cultivator pass through the rows both ways, pertecl- -! Ji 7!T 77-? .y-n.sjoic mipRwc. , I know where, by life's way-side, .V There is a rryatal spring, '- Where stHttclinie I ait down and aigb, But ou'ncr ait and ring. ' ' None tarry there a long a I, Or there oi often be f , ' ," For it to none doc outwar! flow , , iAs it flows cut lo nie.' ., M r In the dryent days of iumraer -! . lu current sweep along ; '. ; -The winter briagi wo ice to freeze ' Ttw omwiNv T lttioiig." - ' And like a good thought of the soul 1 mountainous land is adapted.-' We have ibceo greatly amused and interested, when j rambling in their country, by watching a i Pivoriie , game frequemly plat ed upon J Sundays and oilier holidays. I lie boys i . ... - - War and its Effects. Thornae Car. lyle, in Ujs Sartor ltesartus,",eay: ' ... 1 .. .itiiv 1,1 inntinf in nnoiiieiai lariFuape. ictlworiiiageameeiaianappoinieii puiv - --- - , ";r' ' ? ' and engage in askiimUh; lurf and clods" tbe,nrt tmpoit of wart ;Tomy know. Lof earth, often atones, being substituted , Udge. for examPref there dwell and toil m .for bullet. The spirit rand .skill Uh e British ullage of Domdrtidge aomo whirh the Ms carry u the mork encoun-l Utooiaml aouls. Front these, by eer- Iter, the wild yells called forth br each! .uf natural enemies of ihe French. there fiunctuation of the fight. th fierceness oi; uecraaiirrfy . selecto.l during the ! their iuvenilc faces, when, after a well-Firnrh war. some thirty able-bodied men; directed volley, one side rus her forwatd to Danidmdge. at her own expense, lias ' ' w . . . .... .....I t..l .1 I tl.ami aha liia nl ihe charge, armed wuhihelii;ibanjl)oo-sau'-Mi ai.u ..ui ...c..., .... ..-, ... like stems of the Indian corn, their white without sorrow, fed thorn up to manhood, lips, airongly .reca'l the weave, anotiier.ouiu,anm.wr bloody encounters m ; tue wenKesi can ia.t.i um.rr ..... .7 have so ofien distin-i avoirdupois. eeennrics,Biiiiu . 'l'l..a...nntiiB.'Wt:eiltltg and ewcailim ilirjr Vr elc-rtctl. It irry day but deeper grow. Instead of growing leu. Ask you where, by life' wy-ide, ; . Oa what enchanted ground, . Tbi crystal apring, to wect4ind tare, - Is ever to be found t ' Look down into my hearty ij luve. 3 white I trace tlie'outwan - ! teeth firmly ret; and a barbarous R-isque J e' en trained to crafts, ap that ope can oath upon their moie earnest and whirh their fathers ... I. A.I (llAHt Bfllt.A which sometimes become rather serious Pressed, tit red, and sh.pped away at the ' qucsandoftcn icriuinate inTfcwbrokeii f orwy bnfy urik foudi of pain, and fed heads, are encouraged by the older people,, tncre until wanted, Ami now to inai and compose the sole military education of . eame '.P01 ,n ,he ouin ' Pa,n ar llur a race, who do Kot fight the worse because " similar French artisans from a French they are unacquainted with ihe drill ser-j Domdnnlge in lik manner wending, till igeanl, and, with the very rudiments 01 ,' ic"S", 't mumw (u.s iv scientiuc .warlare,' t lie tenacity , wiui i.n j.p.H.u.., -..u :. .!' And , -Tou may heboid the rise, tward flow, which these mountaineers adhere io ihe Wonting thirty; each with a gun in his lunges of iheir ancestors, .even whcntltey ''ud. Straightway the word File" s are unfitted to the contiiry.ana disadvanta-; g'n. diey blow he souls out of one T" . - " ccotis to thciBeselvcs, is -very remarkable. . When iii ihe ninth century,, the Ficnch ' TCinna MrkrtniiDrk.il Cnr a linrl tinil ft nnrtl ., ..... Tim BASQUES.. . , --1 " , , , 01 tne uasque provinces, iney pruoenuy In looking over a recent number or the ' ai,slaincj from interference with Hie pri Pagtlerroiy pe, we mei .with an account of f y. and CH?,om9 cf the inbabitaitts. and a singular people, ihe Dasques, whose xj.,)e1 l)ie whoe o( Spaill was finany homes are, in the monntt.ni fastnesses of - nil()f, in. t :,fiom under Ferdinand ihe Pyrenees. Though, ihe history of ,he Catli.Jic, the Dasques retained, their mtjc .uuiiiatirci9 c rcptiblicati forms. Kvery Uasque H more so remote a period as200 years before the or Uis nohb Thc genealogical pride, christian era, yet iheir origin rennius lad pVovc-ihially attrilmted to. Spaniards, is in obscurity,, t. s ttu; J oui-hcrnded hv that of these' mountaineers. t -C eW'io. numuer, litefe uwnirr, ui"hem number of loads, Iy pulverizing and mellowing the soil, and 1.. c' i....,i t..;,, iJ,-, ! renucrinff the tattor 01 weeding wiui tnc I IIC tU.II .9 " EW YORK AND BOoy, ; H. placed In iaaof tlUttyle.of - . h- o Mpetiilioll by.king worked up clse to the hills each way. . Miiivrtrnn . launui net art it u'-V;I. GOODS. ,;j ' .: AH of which We are ansiou sell at uch price a will i induce purcbaneta to call on ua again. ' . . . , . : VKX.U M IT.WA1NF. & Co. IMPORTERS AXD JOBBERS, s " 1r Eust tidt Sywmort ttrref. " March 5.'t--y-'.;''"7 - St-Sw Petenhnrgj Vtbi March 20, 1848. E, & F.James & Co, d - ARE KOW RECEIVIKO, v' From Doton, Kew Tork and i i . fc Philadelphia. ; Their Spring Supply of S triple find Fancy, Foreign -' and D.-nncsttc iDRV GOODS, MUCH VARIED and QUITE EXTENSIVE. HAVING ftarchftNcd many of these Goods at A41rtiotV.aB.tl f fmnnrtra. .tut nlliprwiyn. at leu than the Wit of Importation, they are pre pared to olTcr great inducement to both Town nd Country Dealers, and auch a cannot fail to ptcaie. ;' ( ' 1 ' - . .Anchor" brand Bolting Cloths, Cotton and Hffinpf Beiue .Twino, Murshall'a Patent Soine Thread, and Rod. Turkey Cotton, at all time on nana. , r v T Jtr r-. ... vx V U. hear logbihcr. than by following the more hoe comparatively lights ; The com 1 common practice of making large, heaps gin w-orked both ways with the h .. :.t. and cultivator at ihe second hoeing. , The harrow going iwice in a place, is freble Stalks are pulled out, leaving four started as soou as ihe workmen commence! to six stand.ng in a h,ll, and a broad flat spreading Ihe manure, in order, thai it made."5 I find it cheaper for me. so r.,i,i Ka ;mmn.i;...t tnrnnratoil with far as labor is concerned, to earth up a lit- thufoil, witlioutthe loss of its valuable de than to hoe perrectlyjevcl, and the hills ! properties by evaporation; and also to Ui-; being nv,de broad and flat, it is for any ; lorse the ainnuiret ulinm n i'hnrroai burner or a .1.- . 11 t. ..:.ti.i.. k.. " ... . -. .te.vyc.urii i jreuees arc ,im. m.i...r r roetet.r xviU hold, hlinsell as good and llicir tcotirage and energy; and from the ;anr;clU a gentleman s the best duke in j remotest , periods of their - history, have l)e j,, Certainly there is no conntry made themselves respected and even fear- vj,ere sue It-equality, exists amongst all ed. Hannibal treated them with consider- rra.ge!!j ail equality, "however,.,rathcr alion, and was kiiowu to alter his pmpo- pipayj,,, than disagreeing ' in its resojts. aed line vi march to avoid, ihe fierce at- TJ,e (Jenrtaiflhj of the Irs fortunate of the tacks of this handful of mountaineer. The people tovrf3s those whdin wealth and Roman proconsuls, souttht iheir alliance. lufatiou'ljlarV above them, is "remoie Cssar, against whom, and under Pom- from insolence a.nd bintality, as ,ii is frqni payVbanuers, they arrayed themselves, rrin.jng ?e'rvililV..IThe'poores( peasant, wsa unable to. Bubdue ihcm. After the lijjing his paU of maize, 'answers the fall of. Rome, the men of the Pyrenees Vnestion of lUe'rirh proprietor, who drives were attacked in turn by Vandals.. lHihs 1... rnrria Dast bis eottiurc. with ihe and Franks; their houses were destroyed. their lands laid waste, but they tliemselvcs. poration, and also to oi-, "'b u.. . ;iuiaiiainauic in iiieirun.uiii.iu?, unnuu.HBu vide and pulverize the soil above ihejiod,- in,"g n uiscovvr, rqiMt.y ..w... A CtX9g9 0 oaruarians, ovemowpu same frank courtesy and matily assurance, with which he wojild.' acknovvledge 1 the greeting or interrogatory .of a fellow-laborer. .. . . . ... . . 4 , . USEFUL HIXTS TO PUBLIC SPEAKERS. . It is a curious fact in'the history of sound that the loudest noises ? always E. t. March 35. St 1! THE thorough bred hnwe, Monterey, Bircd by imported Flatterer, dam by Marion, will atand the entuing season t .Gov. Graham plan lation, fiv milo north of HilUborongli, and per form aervirts at the low rate of six dollars Insur ance, and five dollars the season; - ' C. IIIIJ.. so that the plow afterwards may be used the corn. ' ; . Gaul and Spam; conquercis and coiiqncr- in a liht lurrow without disturbing it.! ' I never hoe but twice. Having plowed .efl amalgamated, and divided the territory (Jreat fniprovemenls have been made in the land previonrto autumn, nothing green amongst them; still the Pyrcneans contin harrows bv constructing them in two 'started up before the winter set in, and ihe tied unmixed in race, ami undisturbed in ' . 1 1. -1 t.:.... rmof ;ii,i0i1;-iiaU frllvin(r. ihe prassitheip f:iKini.4s. The rniiouished Goth tyaflM COllllGPICd lOfJ V I tl C i Willi 1 1 It 1 1 n?w aiti v. - c - a , , - , Uie play up or down, upon the hinges of roots were killed." In the spring the land 1 retreated before the warlike and cne roa.-h-! perish on the spot where they are pro- euher half enables the harrow to adjust was well hairowetf and plowed Hbovc tne ;mg Saracen,' and tlie crescent, stamiarti j uiiceu. wuerea hm.ni.-i . n. itself to the surface of the land in all pla- sod ; theie weie no seeds of weeds in the . fluttered amongst the niouulains of aioith- heard at a great distance, 1 nus, U we eT; d wheS? sn.ol of uneven1; it manure, it being well fermented compost, Spain. It found no firm footing, and japproach T will always hug down close, and "keep-and thus the work o the season was - bearers retrace the, difminfr " No farmer who has ever used great -measure none ociore me mi we,auwing. u w 1111 utet ounce j ..-. .-... -r - , uigging. Howniitr w uw. v S, , ... - t u .1, J vim.irb.He ind. but more distinctly the organs and warrlnra nf Charles Martcl. , But of all ! other musical instroments -which are nUved for their amusement. II aiemn-t violin, a real Amalli. be played by - - t - - e snoiher, and instead of sixty brisk, useful craftsmen, die world ha sixty dead car casses, which il must bury and anon shed tears .for. ,IIad these men any quarrel? Busy as Satan ia, not the smallest. I hey lived far enough apart, were the entires! strangers nay, in so wide a. universe, there was even, unconsciously, by com merce, some helpfulness between them. How, then? . Simpleton, their governors had fallen out, and, instead of shooting one another, had the cunning to make the poor blockhcad-t shoot." Bishop Warburton said. "I look- upon war as the blackest mischief ever breathed from hell upon the fair (ace of creation." Dr. Jortin tejla us that war is " no- better than robbery and murder." Our Reformer, Wiekliffe, exclaims, Lord, what honor to a knight that he kills many men? The hangman killeth many more, and with a belter title. Better, were it for men to he butchers of beasts 1 luit butchers of. iheir brethren." Lord Brougham, in a speech at Liverpool, branded .war" as '.'the greatest curse of the human race, and iho greatest crime, because it involves, every other crime witht ,11 its execrable nanie.' ". V tihotit one for nlanted. A fter the second hocirig the corn ir. .r.... .i, o. nr mi;nW Whnn tim' Iims the entire occn nation of. the ground, harrowing is completed, the plow with a no further trouble being experienced from tlie historical fights that have taken place sharp point, and a roller on the beam weeds of any kind.' Thc thorough work- j in the Pyrenees, there is not one whose glided to ihe proper depth, covers ' the ingofthe land before planting, and also tradiuonhas been so well preserved as.the ly north and south as the shape and stir- the fore part ol Uie season witn great ra face of Uie field w-m admit, and also east piditywhich is of essential importance, and west; the rows being ihree and a half particularly nivour northern latitudes feet apart each way." 1 prefer this" dis- There is no variety of com, that is neither lance lo plaining nearer. In my earlier improved or deteriorated by the manner farming operations; I used to plant corn . in which the seed is . selected. As soon considerably' nearer both ways, of course as ihe earliest ears are thoroughly gla2ed, growing a greater number of. stalks and I go over the field, acleetirtg those for seed that are early and vigorous, and from as to moibturcrprobably; a lew more bush- stalks prodttrinj tw-o'good ears. The corn ' fcrnicd of a corner. of France and another , merotis instances, connect them with, his exploits. , j - i: 'i ' . . .The Basques are brave, intelligent and proud simple, but high-minded. They liave ever shown a strong repugnance . to foreign influence and habits; and have clung to old customs and to their singular language. Mt is curious to behold half-a million ofinenwhose narrow territory is The Doom of oar World. The North British Review, says ." What this change is to be, we dare not even conjee, lure, but we see in tlie heavens themselves some traces oi destructive elements and some indications of their , power. The fragments of broken planets -the descent of meteoric stones upon our giooe ne wheeling comet wielding theif loose ma terials at the solar surface- the volcanic erupiions of our Qwn.satelite-rthe ap pearance of new stars and the disappear ance of others, are all foreshadowed of that impending convulsion to which the system of the world doomed. .Thus placed on a planet wide 1 is to be burnt up, and under heavens whmu.are to melt away, thus . .. --- i , . - ... j the treading as u were on tne cemeteries, aim I J ...I . ... MO I1. side of a modern fiddle, the latter win oweiung on mausoleums onormcr ui.u, sound much louder of the two; but the let us learn the lessons of humanity and i.,;tiia..t. tAnn of ihe Amati will ,be wisdom, if we have not already been heard at a distance the other cannot reach. Dr. Young, on the authority ol Derham, states that af Gibraltar, the human voice mav be heard at a creater distance than 9 nV other animal. Thus, when the cot tager in the woods, or in the open plain, wishes to call her husband, who is working at it distance, she does not shout but pitch es her voice to a musical key, which she "knows fronrhsbit? and by that means rea:hes his ear. The loudest roar of thelarg e.et Hon eould not Penetrate so far. " This taught ia tlie school of revelation.., 4 -Trp,e Politeness Never, ridicule, or point the finger ef scorn t a person be cause he is less wealthy than yourself. Many -a great man ami brilliant ge nius have been the victims of poverty, while accident has raised simpletons and ' even idiots to stations of affluence and pow er. iT he trot principle is .to -treat every person jieith . proper respect, no matter '"whether he be rich or poor. . ', . 1
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 26, 1848, edition 1
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