i ( i t ii ia1aikiij l i i t i t i . J : 'iio J J i J J'i JJ ' V. V " V" -I v n 1 NO. 41. VOL. I. 7 . rtixTiB aa rvausiSD, rtivt TviwaT, Bi BLN'CIIAM & WHITE. ---, ! t f .1.1 Til- lie aubscription price of - Wtms Cuotim If 77lre Dollars per annum, payable hah srly in advance. flNo paper will be. discontinued A 1 iJl arrearages ...... ...I. I imLu i11vi-t!nn rf Ilw jilitm. , '. - .Whoever will becomo responsible for .the payment of ADTtBTiiBMKKT will bo inserted, an-' the. niatomary. crms. 1 Persons sending in AdvermentJ, must nrifv th ntimLr of tWi thev wish them inserted, or ' i V'' thev will be' continued till ordered out,' and charged ac- tordingiy. - tV J'tY"-'- No advertisement inserted untfl it has been paid for, or its payment aisumcd by some person in this town, or iu vicinity.V;; (TfAU letter! to the editor! must be pott-paid, or they will not be attended to. FflllE eubsc'nbc'r.Js now opening, atfliii Store in Salit JL" but tf, a general and wtll selected assortment of I Dry Goods y ''yJIardAVarcand . ' Affdiri net- i Tn.t Mrclvnl rllrrrt from Nw-Yorlc nd PhiladclouiJU and laid in at prides' at Will enable him to sell remark ably low. His Cuttcxnars tod the puidic, are respect fully invited to cull tnd, examine for themselves AH .JciiKls of Countrf Prod iico received in iehaner' la27 ..J 1 ' " J. MURPHY. TLSTUfOXJES IV FM'OUJt Of THE JllBLE, t. ... T CELIBiTK0 fMAIiCTIKS. The celebrated air William Joneii at the end of bis' Biblei wrote the following wordi : a I hare" reeularlr and attenm dri peruaea-thesfe Ho1lJcjiptawtiwR?tf volume ilnuependcmijr ot us mrine origin; con taint more true sublimity, more exquisite beau- .l7iJ?or.e.PV!r m.PralHy niQre important lastory, and finer strains of poetry and eloquence, than can be collected from all other books, in whater er age or language they may have been written. The unstrained application of them to events which took place long after the publication, is a solid ground for belief that they are genuine pro ductions and consequently inspired."- Mr. Addison, speaking of the superior perfec tions of the sacred volume to every human work, says, the great and glotious truths which it dis covers to us, arc, compared with those which we elsewhere acquire, as the creator contrasted with his works. tk Hid Cicero," says he, " lived to see all that christi mity has brought to light, how would he who so fondly hoped for S m mort jUt y I have lavished out all the force of eloquence in those noblest of contemplations the resurrec tion, and the judgment that will follow it : How had his breast glowed with pleasure, when AgrkutuTa. JSTMROES AND LWD. NOTICE. There will be sold on 1 haraduy, the 24th day of Hay hext at tUe Court-Mouse in SafiKbun-, two Ae y yOtn? Ll.KUES ad two nundrea urrts yi , . . . . . t ami ULat vakinitiv inintr the bn.N of the whole compass of futurity, revealed in these Jol.ii Weant, Alex. Lony, sen. and others, at a tix-dit of ! pajjes, lay open to his iew! How would he twelve months, the propertv of Ada.n Srote, .k-reaHed. I .ntrrpf, w:,h the force of Hphtnintr, into iaMw j " I J the afTcctions of his hearers, upon those glorious F.7.1I V ALLEMONu .1dm' r. 6w42 LIXCOLN I ON. K. C. themes, which, when enlarged on by a skilful christian orator, make us break-out into the same T;1E public are hen by respectfully informed, that the j expressions, as those of the two disciples who v""-- - - : mci our Diviour aucr nc urusu uvm uwau ai uvo irjsmcss, wmcn ne wiu proseeuxe, in ain's vnnis ...u:u i. l t. . : ' ... .v.- Die nnt nur hearts burn within us, while nc talked with us by the way, and while he opened unto us the scriptures ?" The learned Mr. Locke, (after demonstrating the truth of the holy scriptures in various ways,) - a f in a letter to a lncnd, branches, in a manner superior tajO?. executed in tliis part of the state. 3 45 . . THOS. DEWS. N. B. Ftmeralt performed at the' 'shortest notice. V TWm Ckbrtel jTJ NOW in full health and vigor, will thus expressed himself, ilail ! first of Arts, source of domestic ease Pride of lle land, and patron oi ue seas. OVERSEERS. So far from having a ayatem of agriculture among us, very few have ever taken the trouble to discover or provide any basis for one-- Had Archimedes proposed to move the earth without any thing for himself or his mechanism to stand onT,ra architect.. erect a city whhputa foun. dation, such projects would have been equivalent to ours for erecting a system of agriculture up on the basis of the improvement of the land Of what avail is any rotation of crops, the best contrived implements of husbandry, or the most perfect use of those implements, applied to a harrrn anil ? Could a physician correctly call the administration of i ,l0w poison, a system of medicine, because he used the best constructed lancets, caudle cups, syringes and clister pipes in killing his patient ? It is absurd "to i talk of a system of agriculture, without having discovered, that every such sys tem good for any thing, must be bottomed upon fertility. Before, therefore, we launch into any sy stem, we must learn how to enrich our lands. The soil of the United States upon the Atlantic Ocean is naturally thin, and exceedingly impov- eiished. It produces however good crops, when made rich, almost under any species ot cuitiva- . .a . r ...f.U fx tion. To make it ncn, tnereiore, uuKiu thefiriiobiect of our efforts, as without, effect- ine tbi., all othr srwiUura b)cctn Uoeficial culture! Those of twenty one years are found by experience to be too ihort for improvement. most ine practice oi ninnj mm 7 by a ihare of the trop, to lay out au ius anui ana industry in killing land, and as little as possiuie in imnrovinj? it, luetreated by the circumstances ... v , - - .n.t f .ttlmn' a wilderneis amontr .t ... L.L.it'iiK 1A fAmmtmnpila . .. ' w r . - mmm Mas v mm muv m m m m mm . . . me Tiions leamnir-oi man 4i iw ! A I I . f 01 ignorance aou uaruam j . Unless this custom is abollsbed, the attempt IU IVI UUW UUI lamia, iivvmiv..- r ...i.t...i!n.rnwi.H ftnm tn atat. and overseers from plantation to plantation, It cannot be accomplished. Impoverishment will proceed, distress will follow, and famine will I . I ft tm m If. MrVtl tffll,rA close me scene, n i www wiwm both employers and overseers, by gradually di- miDiihiogJheJncomepfjhepne it.M viaam. ,,rth nihir. Wapea in money would. on the contrary, correspond with a system of gradual improvement, by which the condition of both parties would be annually bettered, and skill in improving, not a murderous industry in destroying land, would soon become a recom mendation to business, and a thermometer of 11 - . i 11 . n I . a. i . lauiacc,,;W,n?seasonatmy8taDiefmaaiyui7,u.u . - . , :u Study the holv senn- n - m . DAIfilM rlM- I J 4 tures, especially the New Testament ; for there dollars the season? seven dol IIUU.lwv v" ----- J th. ..i.rl- lonn And twentv doliirt for insurance ; mas i s sa- awi'i . . - 1 which will be demanded as aoon as theJare :s disrov. i . contained lJie wor(js 0f ctcrnal life. The rcd to he with faal. or tie propertv iransicrrtu. mc ... . r . . ... r . :., aeaWwiD commence the first 'day of March, and end , Bible has God for its author, salvation for its end, the first of August. .. Fiftv cents to the fn-oom, in ever' instance.- 1 MICHAEL BROWN. February 9. 1821.-38150 and truth for its matter, without nny mixture of error. .. Similar testimonies in favour of the Bible DR SCR! PTION. Napoleon is a beautiful sotcI, ten m afi(incei ;n thc immortal H.icon, Lord yean old thi. .pr.ntf, sixteen ha:uls ioMiach 1.1 sir I.aa, Nrwton, who pOsSCUCl M iuuyu,A;nri , ... n .m A.,..ii..hf Himtiftn-. And nosscssei is much po and activity as any 'jorse on the continent; and as a race-: wrolc to prove the excrlltr.ee of thc scriptures ; Impso stfqnflsa iinriV aled. II. D. CIWI o t-uiii - " PEDIGHEE. Sky Scraper, the sire of Napoleon, was got by Col, Holmes's famous imported horse Dare Devil, ulin u na Kr.'ft 1V the Duke of Grafton, and trot bv Muff- net, out of ILbt' ; Ilebcw as got by Chrysolite, out of an I in Mr. Boyle, who instituted mcati3 to elucidate their truth ; in Mr. West, who wrote a treatise on thc subject of the resurrection ; in lord George i&Z : Ly.Uc.on, ,vho,c iUM.ri, rank uxoivd splen v ivv . r 11 ivArt itfhn ua irot bv Obscuntv : bis jrrandam by Cvlar ; his grandam by t&t: imported liorse Partner. " " , , OSvar.tv, Celar and Partner, were all fine bred horsesi descended'fr.'n the best blood in England. Slov and Kasv, the-dam oi ftapoison, was gui vj "it .. . 111 S1 A. L.. . Fearnought, out of Col. Bird's famous imported mare T.-:ntur Tli nhnvp adicrreef of Camilla, was riven by , Gem AVade Hampton, of 8. Carolina, who bred herjb Ocn. Gunn, of Philadelpbia.. " ;j .- - , Signed, :-rv JNO. ALLSTONv-w- PERFORMANCE. I do hereby certify, that Napoleon has fun four races, all of which he has beat with great ae th&laat over the SalisbuiyiurtV beating JJwndtl ir Dniid, Singleton's bav horse, and Jones's colt ; Branch's an( singleton's horse tic distanced. He has never been . brought to thc turf since and I do recommend him as a pure Pud "gettefr '' '",,,,wJOHN!MTHOMPSC)Nx STATE OF NORTH-CATtOElNA, RutHERFoRD couxrr: rl OURT of Pleas and Quarter Sessions for the second D. 1821....Abel Hill vt. Fred erick F: Alley iOriginal attachment levied on a negro of the court, that the defendant, is not an inhabitant of this state, it is ordered rh at publication be made in th6 M'estern Carolinian for three months, for the defendant to come in, answer, plcatUor demur to tlus attaenment, or judgment will be entered by default, and the prop erty levied oir be condemned for pavment of said debt. :--:p--v..-'.-'-r:-- -:::-iSA"ACT CRATONyC" ' Test. Roase, Jttornev fur Plaintiff. U J5rn36. dor from his talents, and who has done essential servto the christian cause by his admirable ........ work on thevconversion of St. Paul ; all these, it iviii icbseryed, were; Laymen, and therefore cannot fauwtf for might Bemadded those of a Milton,' a Hale, a Johnson, a Cowper, a Bryant, a Beattie, a turn- berlahd---Laymen alsombst eminently: distini guished for their learning and ;-scic J''jkao. deemed all: their learning, an science, oi imic wonht Compared with what they derived from the book oLUod. Notice. ON the 1st of April, was taken, on the road between the Poplar Camp and Salem, four Horses, of the frvtlnn-'incr rWrrintinn 'nn a d.irk ha v. .vl three of them vnvnnii..v...... . m. , ... i liirht Kav rolor : two of them nace. one of them is '15"" "J- , i -v - , - somewhat hurt bv "a portmanteau ;. no other particular flesh marks. I will give a nancisome reward w any one vim rr.turn the horses, and secure the thief, or give information to me in Orange county, on.Atlamahce, near .IiHtrc lnrrwh 's. fV to .lonn I.. HlllTll. MUm. IN. ly. 0 ... - . that, 1 gtt the hotscs and thief. The jerson supposed STATE OF FRMCE. We were yesterday favored with the London Morn. ing Chronicle, containing the following accounts from Paris. It is somewhat surprizing, considering thc date of this paper, that the article subjoined has not before fouml its way into the prints of this country. It is not yet too late to be interesting. Vu. Intel, PARIS, tea. 1. The explosion, au Chataux, and that of yes terday, a te Tre$oriet form part of a system whicb must soon terminate, either in the most abject and disgusting slavery, or in an insurrec tion similar to-those - of Spain and Naples. Tk. to nnt b ntrU nervm of eood Ulth, Who inC U ll t J ' I iivmjm m...f,. t - . .". - ";.-.r fir InJid 1 1, nnl rHin ihat lhM XPlO0f WhJcll ftUrt to ourselves r ur vvuhui ..." j c flhH) forone.crkhcd,. impoverished. whicn now ensiaTe France ; laws by which the The disposition of our soil and climate to re- blo0j of lhc ea(ijnjr Libercaux may be instantly i t....t i i....:r..n., ;u tii-lnd in the k.;n nmwr. The hirth of the Duke of Bor- warn nusuunury uuunniuuj, a - - m iuiu jv. w. - - r iT r hi great returns bestowed upon bad culture, by the deaux has redoubled the audacity oflhe pavilion it 1 n,)nM frrtilitv dos Marsan,( that is the party of the Compte d Artos,) very moderate degree of natural fertility, pos ecllom has plven back l0 tho sessed by the former." The climate is beyond chambtr all the blood-thirsty Deputies of 1815 our power, but the productiveness of the soil as the King governs, he does not push on without the help of art, is an encouragement for fast enough for the Ultras ; they want to have . . . L i. i th Minktrv entirely to themselves, and to take .o recollect hov, .mp-ousl, we .. n,8,c rf , rf oppo5iiion) h iU rnlfirafinn nf a DeilV SO DrOWtlOUS. UUll . ., , TJ,. n.y la nnf nnlv l.w y . . to inumiuaic mc . this deity has a rival demon called ignorance, perfgcly enslaved, but licentious. The constU It a -.vllahle i the fu. lor wnose worsnio uic &iac aimca uw v. . IUUUII(II papia v....w. -t . ..... . . . .MiiUii !m nf the Draheuux Blanc Quotidicnne 8cc an estau usneu cnurcn, wim miimiir . , j j r du ciauii3v v , .. -nmt ahuse. and demands of ven- .rcn. f-H. rlni hd. and naid to sUDDreSSevc- r . . . . i.L u.v.ovv. 7 , . . gcance and blooa equal in norror to mose oi mo ry effort for introducing the worship of its divine nramous Marat. Afouc hards infest every public . r. 1 ii x n r r mn art i i . I . a t n 1 m .nam r rr 1 m If vmt . ... ..... ... . . . . u.. I .. .! iUa Tmirnola. vm i i iv I at that bribed by agriculturalists, not to improve uui pay anrowiu iu m-.-,,w .....7 u .u i ik o cKon. ftf th cron one of the spies of the Court, brought forward to impoverish their land, by a share of the crop one c Sefitcmbri.cur. The "or one year ; an ingenious contrivance tor pia- mnnP,ant aubiect of all. 'which now occu .; iti land in thrvr state under an annual rack - . .,mi. tiniinn. nr rather urivate. for there ""b""!""' " - . ... 77' r . .. rent, and a. removing tenanti- The farm, irpm ns no longer any thing puuuc, is tne process; . . ..r.'.-,i .i.ni ic cnr. I which is before the Chamber of Peers. This several graa-uionaxo m. -f rniracr. or. rather, a render to the transient arerveer, whose sa tnrMd ,in, r.ronortion as he can impoverish i .n,t A k rtrndH to several ... . . ..1 - m.A Mv. .U.l . .. . . . I wLl.L lM.....A..k.W AV. ine land.r i ne greatest annual crop,nu mu i garrisons oi r ranee, anu w mwi w - ... . . i L . .i. ft.L A none lat Whatever most udicial culture, advances nis interest, anu pioaeu on uic um u u6 -- '..;,ku.i,;;ku .Kr ;and the fees of these may be thought of this plot, it is at leastcertain. .aMWfMt ni.iMiniiMi.iwi p mii r ,., . , ,. t-r,- i i l" jt wan it tiiitaar awt n I ntr 'TaT I he excellent Dr. Watts, (in his advice to a vouni :man,)says '':WhateTtjaumrcjBmsta ces may be in this world, value the DiUlc, as your best treasure ; and, whatever may bejyottrem ployment, look upon religion as your best bust taoiwjrjxe Bible contains :. eternal life: in:it, and; Religion is the only way fopyou to become pos sessed of it." Dr. Samuel Johnson, in his last illness, called a.young gentleman, who sat up with him during; the night, to his-bed side, and addressed lura in these words : " Young man, attend to the advice of one who has possessed a certain degree o fame in the world, and who will shortly appear before his Maker. Head the Bible every day o) your life pleasure: The most exquisitef as well as the .most innocent of. all enjoyments, are such as cost ...... , . ,- - . i v...rfOTii)ffH'Jtitrir wir,inff .... r ,l r. I mat spies anu Bfrn'w ...Y.-I land doctors are much higher for kUling than Tor at ieasl onc 0f them, direct CUnng. li is tuiiuuuii iui u """"' Connexion Willi mars i mu uiwiu,uum ui seer, after a few years, to quit a farm on account Seventy-five individuals, principally officers, have ,d frequent ch.rige of these mnerant manager, "JJSiSS whatem! I. to trr the ce. r.rafflmlMire. each stnvintr to extract the rem r..ri. . ,.r i.Am arlnnwleiltred b' - ' o , . i ne rcers nave muav --.. Rt otwfertility deft by-his predecessor, combine theirinc6mpetencei and rewlved- fo the future . . : with 6tir agricultural ignorance, to form the com- not to be involved in such difficulties. It is bet- . '' .1 .-ll.i. nm.attl intu. fnip . . ple.es, .m oferisnm mS2XJVJ i ihoulaVbe:elivere4;-to,-tbe. aiibiUypftwerr,,, I mean riot to speak disrespectfully of overM. - .. - and the cours 'assizes, as thev i . . - I vuuuv.ii w . seers ; they are as good as other people i nor is I arc no administered. , - it their fault if their employ ers have made their The court ordered a previous examination oy Ilea,,,, and aufcH-enc. London the in TTZ erishment of half a coriUnent. I he most wmcn UJI aftcr the conient 0f a committee of k lanrt r.mvield. and seldom or never improve- r-r. nrtrhr-ino- mnrft or le&s detained have been mentwith a vicw. to future profit, is a point of set at liberty ; ten hayd fled, and one charged V . I . i .' . 1 iA C . mm, M m 1 Y tTllCTAfl V S common consent and mutual need between the agriculturist and his overseer ;,and they gener ally unite in emptying the cup of fertility to the dregs. with contumacy. Fifty-five remain m custody i , on these '.'tHe ; committee of Five have made a re port, by the medium of lastorct. On r-jthe? other hand, M. Ravex was appointed Frocureur Aenerar on tne yi v . . . ... j n.lnr f tKe Chamber . i f.t, -t- rA w.,hpr T,",c ,nrverf in TnrlAnd trom expe"enucv out, oemff anuoinrea rrciuw ------ . .

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