Newspapers / Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 16, 1829, edition 1 / Page 4
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JBL returned from the North, ith M good 1 ortront tf -a wws ever nlTcred fur sale In this place i lit Stmt Irr is of the Utrit importations, end the s rot fituionaMe and efc-gtnt kinds to be had In ' any f the Northern Cities I elrgsnt Gold -torrr W plain Do. 4 fcc fer A ml In T-rVTT"" few dyi,1je will rwir a wji elegant aort. ... . BieAt of Jiiditarm G'oWi. Also, all kind of & Ttr.WarCtr tonitBlTy on hant,"or md1o r,M MWHO ofwUicft wo! bo!J lowct than auxU.goodi r ever ditpotrd of Before in tni place. , The putlic are respectfully invited to call ni ejumine tneae goooai loeir rici.ncss nrjmx, end ohea pnesa, cannot fall of pleasing those who wwh to buy. AB kindi of fTWrAM Htpatrtd, snd warranted lb krep tiiM 1 the shop U two door below the cjHirUioustotMain-veet. IWBT.ni jsjxs. .UHebm: Marth 90. 1929.' - N. B. I have recently emi Joyed antcelht workman, wbo will infutorebeeoneisirtly iamy Rhopi aothat tboae disposed to fatronUe me, in my bnc oibOftncn, need bt uoaer no sppre hension, In eoMequeoce of my occasional b . - B. WYNNE. cUnCiV Stage Line ""! itill in operation, from Uncolnton, N. C to Besn' Station, Tenneseeei wbH.11 i tli shortest roQte from Italeigh f Knoivillr, aa will fully appear 00 examination oT the foUowing distances, viji . ' Yrora Raleir to Salisbury, - 1?0 miles. i'rom thence to Morpnton, 80 - . . Jromihence.to.Aville, M -Ynm tittnc to.Warm V prmj V.i:" 3 1 i? """ From thence to Newport, " ' 25 - luaiUtoKewportbcretbU. - ... . line rnttnrcU tbe other. 318 Trtvellert from the amith of Raleifrh, a it J in the ncijjhborhooj of Fayettevilie will find It much the preferable ami ahortert route for them to travel to KnoxiHr, or that Kction of eoun try. That pan of Ibis fine from Arhrille to Warn Sprinn, paaaei ofer new tnl elecant Turnpike Road, runninr the. whole diaUncc on tbe bluff of tbe river, affiirding to the traveller the O'Ott romantic, pictHrctque ana plcaaing tew Imarinabte. ' . The i'lfre Cnet from Columbia, 8.C- and Fay- etteville, N. C. interMet thia une at Linoolntont the line from Aaeuata, Geo. intenecti it at Ah Till 1 ami tbe line from Lexington, Kentucky. inleraectt it at Newport. Thui it will be aten that (kcibtiea are afforded for travcDrra to reach any lection of the United State 1 and the tfub. scriber honei wch manifest ailvantages, will afcure hi line tbe auppod of a discriminating public. SAMUEL NEWLAND. Mrrantiu A. C JM-wvfA 25, 1829. 3mtr5 1 ",ilittt11j flt,,,i WAOWNERS, Driving to FayelteciUc, BTITrXt frnd it to their wdvantage, ta slop at f T..tbe - H r Tard. where every con- nr n npny'LUI for Man and Hone.to make them comfurtabie, at tTifliffT'Wrr'i irr;r "f 111 cenu a. day and night, for the privilege f the Yard, tbe use of good house, fire, water, and shelter. Attached to tbe Yard, are a Grocery and PrqWkion Store, Dread Shop and Confec ttonar, and Tlfouse Tor Hoarders and Lodger is 4 plain, cheap, . wholewinfc and comfort, jftle atyle. " Fdifiin7rjrnrtt'i. -09- -- -'IVOsVeluTi ' TV son iu ma counuei of Rowan and Cabarrui t commencing the week in Salisbury, ou Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednes days! in the town of Con. ennl tin T1iiim1at.a Vr. -r-.eAVi dava.and Saturdays. The eaion will commence the 1st of March, and end 1st Augeet.-Twelve Dollars will be charged Tor the season, payable bv ten dullara before the les son expire! j Eight Dollar tbe leap 1 andTwen ty Dollar to insure. For Pedigree and descrip. tKja of Aeronaatj e bandbiUa STEPHEN -L.FERRANDf CHARLES L. BOWERS. 12A, 1829. 54.;jlit Jtuf.) N. B. Great care will be taken to gitre ger.er. a) attraction i but we'eannot be ftable for orr JenU. Graiu will be furnfthed, at the market price, 40 marc ent from a distance. . , fox Sale, ON moderate term,fot eath or on a credit, .-4 for approved paper, a new. Well madei-rj(.mTboie who wisb lQ iupily them. ieTvesfrttrmlrTTrelircHri-l would do well to apply soon, aa it believed so favorable an opportunity to procure one, will npt soon otler again. EDWARD CRESS. Salhhtrv. Feb. 7m, 1829. 54 State ? .VsnA-Caresno. Mecklenburg cswiry - - SUPERIOR Court of. Law, May term, 1829 : Berry Steward vs. Hariett Steward i peti tion for divorce. ... In this case, Ordered by the court, that publication be made for three month i Hi Western Carolinaw and. Ydkii end Ci- wkJeHirluelyaMt4bsfleft be ana appear at me next supenor court to be held for the county pf Mecklenburg, at' the Court-Uoase iti Charlotte, on the 6tb Mbhdav atfiec JCb fourth Monday in September ne'xt 'ftrtd plead or answer to tbe plantilPe petition, or the same will Be Beard exparte. Witness Saml. Henderson, Clerk of our said Court, ft ofRte, tbe 7tb Monday aner the 4th in March, 1829. . Smt83 SAMU HENDERSON, e. m.i. c. tiiatt tf A'mk-Cartlind, Meckltnburr count .- SurttuuK court ot Law, May term, 18:29 1 Robert Bieham va Mary Bieham i petition for divorce, ' Ordered by court, that publication be nude for three months successively in the Weslern.Carolinian-.aod Raleieh Star, that the defendent be and appear at tbe next superior court of law to be held for the County of Meek lenbqrg, at the court-house in Charlotte, on the 6th Monday after the 4th Monday In September next, Snd plead or answer to the plantiirs peti tion, or the wrne will be heard exparte. Wit VaaSamL Henderson. Clerk of aaid Court, at office, the 7th Monday after tbe 4th in March. 129. 4mt83 SAai. HENDEJRSON, evay. ik n .Motley WanttA. W JOTICF. I hereby prn, that the Notd nJ i 1 Il'mk Arro,,i,is due Kiia AHemong, previ out to ttie I H1I1 May lst, have been aig"ed to mr, as TfuMff, for collection, c All pe.s indebted lo bim are hereby requested to call and py tbe me before the lt of July next, as thoM unpaid o that dsy wiU be Indiscrimin. aiely placed In the liandi of an ofHcer for eoL lection." 1 He aiiuatkm of bjl busincs will admit of no further indulgence. . 4AML. REEVEV Truttft. . --.. WAS but received, and opened at Li Store J M. in Safisbury, a large tad baadsoene asaort vent of Sprint ami Summer GOODS; a m m .1 Wl .' Sll'-. Alo.t.rocene,iiaruwarr,vauery,ria.ea..ar, 1I.H ami Hatter.' Trimming Crock trf. awd assort ment of Doliin Cloths, bboe. Bonneta, f"-vj and every article iimtry - i',rff- used fur in stores. ' Hi stock of rood has been purchased entire. ly for tatk t and be U determined to sell them as low a can be bad in the place, for eaik, or to Eunctual customer on a liort credit. T!ie pub. c are respectfully invited to call, examine, and Judre utr tnemaelrra. themaelr 70 ViktftA)oro, oca(em. THE second eetaion in thia Academy win commence on MomUy, the 29th of June neat, under the personal superintendence wf the' subscriber. Instruction will be giveo in all tbe branches usually taught in Academic. The School nut be expected ta be permanent. rlr, JHttet Ce. K C. .1 25, 1M9. ; aVtetots for 8dc V71LL be aotd, on the 4th day of July next, at Moektvilte, three likefy two Girl snd one Hoy. belonging to lb estate of Thomas MaxweJL dee'd. A credit wilt be airewed, and other terms made known on' tbe dav of tab .JOHN MAXWELL. JJm'r. rVIIE examination will lake place on Vondy JL and Tueadav tbe 1st and 2d day of June. Tbe exercise will be resumed on Thursday the loth of July. WM. J. B1NU1IAM, Principal Mail 2&A. 1829. 3t71 Ysstalc ot Mur Johnston. THE Subscribers, Executors of the last win . and testament of Mary Johnston, late of Rowan county, dee'd. request all persons bav. ing claim against' said"ette to"presertt them lerally authenticated, within the time prescribed byJaw, of . Ills. notice iy be plead In bar of their recovery t and all person indcotedj'are desired to make payment immediately. TIIOMASCKAIUE. TKATTHJ Zrr't. .1 2&h 1828. smtri - UonRjanAliptsjTji HE subscriber offers for sale his House and Lot in the town-of bambry'Mhey-wtuled meaiawy east m tne uourt-uoue, and are eli- BMM-.Hnmn-r; . uJji; I of bwiMsr4- Their immediate ticinity l tbe 1 1 . .1 . w Court .House. (being next to the corner) renders them valua ble fur public business. One of them i now occupied as a Haute Entertainment, with ft good run of custom i and i spacious and eon. venient. ' The other i an extensive range of building, occupied at thia time by one family only, but could be made to accommodate two families, beside room for Store or Mechanics' shops. A great bargain can be had in the?e premisei, as they will be old for about one-balf their real valuer-Alao, - . A Valuable "Plantation, Only about one mile from the Court f House, and in tight of Town. There are 373 acrea belonging to the t ract ; with a due proportion of good: Mea dow land, an Orchard of 200 bearinr Apple trees, besides upwards of 200 young trees i as also a Peach Orchard, and many other Fruit treer. "Also, a large and convenient Dwel ling House, on an elevated and beautiful situa tion, in full view oT town with a good Kitchen ami all other necessary out house, with never failing Springs of good water. These premises will also be sold very low, and On accommoda ting terma. " Any person desirous of viewinr the above ETOP.?!lf o41earoiogjurthcr.,particular, will please apply to the subscriber on the premise 4t-Jifted SaUibury, June 2d, 1829. . 3t7S -ft-REBUS; Cut the name of that runs from Etna's side, And let three fourth be only applied, Td jW with The half of the oldest Statr,- -As old as it's good, as it' great. What horse have done tbe race to win. Add to a fiah save a part of its fin a , Bpell them and put them together to find -BoththevRftme of ibe sweet gl I've-deBiga'd. VWUW v-'oseAa. '- Myriad of creature (each too nicelr smalL Bare sense to reach,) for their inspection call. In animalcules, germs, seeds and flower, . - Live, in their perfect shapes, the little powers, Vast trees lie pictured in their slenderest grains i Armies one watery globule contains. Someso minute, that to their fine extreme, The mite vast leviathan will seem ' Tljat yet, of organs, functions, sense partake, Equal with animal of Urgett make, - . In curiou limb and clothing they surpass, By far the eomelieit of the bulky mass. Dovbl Qu(itt.h tlr, Newcomb, of Williamstown, (Mais.) has a larcei heal thy and thrifty Umb, yeaned tbe present season, which has two heads, two mouths, four eyes, four ers? and bleats with both mouU at 'once!.:. ... , '? . ' '..:;J ' ' 1 1 ' in,,'- - n 1, 1 - 7"..Z B Eld Ci ION. ' Ike tnow fH4 f!t where walerk gVAe, l-rth's tiess urea fade away, They rest time resistless tiJe, . ""' AnJ cotlire while they stsy ' Uiii Joj thA from religion flow, ' I At u4 that gild tie pighif Amid Ibe Arkeet gloom of wo, - -8'iine foib with etet light. ' fteligion'a y bo cloud obtcurt S7r ' " ' 'Hut o'er fit Christiasi soul - It ahed arlllnce calm and pure, Tof sataiund hu&JtStfTt'x: "'llle brt My break 0th torrrwli troke 1 ,, n-i l llm lt iKrtIL . Ul diamomb shining wbew tbey'r broke, bat ray wifl Tight it atiU. , lion tii venen com riiit. . . . . . I'" ' n' Here you may reap ' how to art bair.' ' Bcncaih i waab to snake the akie fair.' Here ' bow to make white oak broom, There ' tafe war to use perfume i 1 Oa t'other aide blacking fur hoe,' . IL-rc ' a receipt to cure ft bruise ' Here what lo do when you feel faint,' Below ft ew receipt for paint ' There see 'Low. to cure a pimple.' ' ' 4 The belt node to grace ft dimple i' ' A oilxture of allspiee and mace.' Hdw to catch breath whilst you lace ' 1 How to look wbea you'd like to sing,1 The best posture to show a ring i . ' A recti pt to clean white kid glove,' Here ' how to tell when man lovej' Huw to egle and ho to glance,', i -.Tp get a partner ft e dance r ' - But ptpirg at the wot! fjockirg,' I got ft lap lh-WMfi hoiLUi ... r..t, Andmy poor r.o'e ai rnvftjo hlety'-' , For retdisg what f ttcml.! not read. " oicas. , , NEW SONG. - Fortune' fion tbe heart may wring, But the huI can fate despite j Sorrow hath it piercing ating, " " Yet superior to its darts, - Noblo-itindaMi virtuou heajls,.. . tove tbe illi of life caa rise. Ah, let Iove,lenignsnf trolling, Cast around iu magic spell, Then shall joy, each care beguiling, - In thia bowmfoodly dwell i.ll..." While my heart, tbo' death be nigb. Tyrant power shall still defy l .2 Universal Epitaph, Ye sympathetic souls yes, heave that tigb i For though Fm dead, 1 did'nt roeau to die I MISCELLANY. EVERY JIMJV d FARMER, " ""The cultivation ot ilre.ekrth h ton genial to the nature of mankind t -and a venr hrre- Drooortion. of men, dure rrtg some Ker-rtbeir-4ives,. eilfieT " - i .---. t do, or have deilred,' to become farmer, Peitdi;Mh0cho,"H tries, are bred, to the culture of the soil, and Inake it their tote pursuit "IT rT: others wbo Tttire iror oxtet1fcTof "rriaTtlie veYltonr.rjf;a professional, or thelurmous of ipunT lie life, to rural quiet and undisturbed cultivation of a few acres of laud. - The mercnani, wnose joum nas oewi speni oenina me counter, wnose pnmeoi.. .uu u,U)( 6v v"' - tween the ledger and the strong box, between the hopes of gain and the fears of loss, having It length realised a plum, retires from the crowded city and the anxieties of trade, to the pure air of the Country, and the peaceful wltTvatloolif lawyer, having acquired wealth and profession al fame abandons his causestfor a more tempting cause; the pursuit of agri culture, or mingles with his profes sional labors the exercise of the spade and the plough. In like manner the physician and the divine; the curers of physical and moral diseases, con sult theirown health and quiet, and find a balm !STliSSnSlni6'iy snatchTfig a leVmTrslirffmtlTally xifprofessional duty,- to apply them to the grateful pUf iutlsortiUrag-thr earth. Why should we mention the statesman and tbe warriari JXheyjoo are inclined to become farmers the one leaving the field of ambition, the other the ' jrvest of laurels, both seek a spil more congenial to the best feel iihi" in nf man in1 iK Mer MTifr like Cincindatu, at the-plough A . ." . . ... - I I' Even the mariner, the adventurous son of Neptune, whose heme has been for many';; year's, professionally -and practically, on ( Vrte deep who has sailed to all lands and visited every sea, bringing with him the rarities of every country and the products -of every clime -purchases a home on the land, transports exotics into his native soil, and prefers, that bis last rest should be the, rural church' yard with his "kindred, to finding a bed in the bosom- of the deep, - The mechanic too is smit with the love of farming, and exchanges the; dust of the shop for the furrows of the field, and confined air of crojvjerrafifj the free atmos phere oi tlie hei'venl, aaJ the noiic of machinery for ruutic of lirds. Nor is this, the prevailing love cf agriculture, hich sooner or later in life discovers itself, to L'c wondered at, whether we consider it at Implant cd in our nature, or whether it be the result of reason and experience. If it be innnte, it .Ii mcrely-kepi down for a while by the eorrossing pursuits of wealth, the calls cfamllticro, or the strife cf glory. But these bein satia ted Or disappointed, the rninJ let free; Tcturos to hi dative disjres, amf applies iti'rcmalnlflg; energica to their neaccfulrfatfiCationEut reason and experience may; well i:piofmjhtYr bare- in- bringing w large i portion mKfVrwmwwhn4tHblt mankind Ultimately to the cultivation of the earth, Who, that values his activity, dig nity and independence, would nor pre fer ro be lord of a few acrea of land, with nobody's humours to coostiU but his own, and nobody to please but his Maker, to the cringing, the fawning and lying, that are apt to enter ao largely ,, into. political, - professional, mercantile and mechanic life I ' If any man on ean can emphatically aay, ask no favors," it is the firmer. Skilful ntl honest labor is all that the earth requires a due return do favors dearly bought with the surrender of - " 'mm ' m at indeptndeiicc, or honor, ot truth, and of a.ll.t! c .nuble and. manly jfeeitDjgs j no truckling for office j no fawning for popularity no lying for gain. No man rcan aay ''of- (arming, u I have served a faithless master f 1 have sac rificed honor, and conscience, and in dependence of mind, and what have I gained? Among farmers there are no deserted Woolseys, and no Belissrious lives a reproach to agricultural pur s'uTti: The 'thortiwnrtrf -the - field never siog todeceive, the flowers of the mesd never bloom to hide a de formity, and nature never smiles to betray. 'Berkshire American j H Comfiarotivc Labor of Women and Mem The following is an ei;ict of a letter from a highly respectable and intelligent Lady of New Jersey, to the writer of the Easays ou the Public Cbaru'es of Philadelphia. Now, indeed, you are on the right road j this is the true political econo my of which we have all hcta sq long in search, and on which such volumes have -been written.. IThis .. is .the true phiIoopher's stone.frpmjwhicrr eure gold -will-spt inp, I -have-ftU-along been persuaded that men never had a richt understanding -of: tbelnoure'of the" difficwtlewhiursurronnd their . .. ... attempts at reformatiftn. ' They never discovered where the pressure lay. -,. . , .rln consemtence ot tnis pnorance. nos. the busttrandnr-rr:- I .:zxxtXA .4 yuan, iniauu tttnuuuiu, uu uuuin oT reruge Jbavc 'tec chanty after charity has sprunop-as palliative. Give woman bread, clo thing and shelter enough for her chil d and -ww u (umcd wurksk0p$, and your houses of refuge Wiu be converted wto schools. " Whatever of waste and indolence appears in the females of the upper classes, certatrjL.it is that, these vices are not the besetting sin of the poor. Poor women are alwaya frugal aod in dustrious 1 I have observed them very narrowly, jod 1 "can. ''witV.'eurjfideTicej say, that they are Jar more muuslrh ous and moral than mat of their own class. Of ten families, caeh one only able to afford one room as a shelter, eight of the women shall he frugal , industrious, and orderly, exhibiting the strongest solicitude for the welfare of their children, while sis of the mem jmU be-MQIit JM !J32 cnciim- cordincr to my estimate and Mrs." X; '' ' " " '"1 '.T f'"-' WS'-T- will agree with me the difference be tween the two scXes is aa eigiitfasHeould-cover. The rcmauning . . . . ... . 0 I . . i . . j four. I do not know whether in coun- try towns-iJtevenithe ,ouotryjN self," the disproportion be not more glaring. Two things produce this in feriority in the male poor,. The most .1.'::. i- L ...... i.u fr"? tshirh thev enenrl their evening, nar.1 1 - t -i - .-,--.-.'.-;., 1 "t''t ticniaTlr iner long evenrng5m wnrtjerjn and the raVy six! ' 8816 . ; and tne otner is me uisrespeci in wmcn they are brought up to show to wo men." A drunken, laiy7 selfish man of this class will always feel that he is master, let bis wife be ever so much superior, and, inferior as be thinks her,' he exacts as much of her as if she were his equal. Many men, rich as well as poor, hare this same base sentiment with respect to women have beard many sensible humane men reason in this way, when conten ding" for higher ' wages for men: 'That men are obliged to labor out of doors in hot suns and in storms, sub jected toalJ rJtje evils that viscissitude of weather creiici,'' - This i$ all very true, hut still they live longer, and arc not subject to so many tiett disease ' as women are, And farther, 'that men cannot labor in the evening, as they are exhausted with the hard U bor of the day.' U summer this ex cuse may appear plausible 1 tilt is not , this the case t(tf. with auch' wcimen f Is it not as great labor to stand at at wash tu6 and ironing table all day, and then sew and attend to household du-.;' ' ties in the evenings ? 1 whitewash. clean paint and scrub, and, worse lhau til nine in the niehtat her needle. wiirV." may be lhrf"-&r JmruSdtBirtmBz rocs to be3Trwea'ryis bcr htishandr"" but altho' she may and does feel equal fatigue, is her sleep as sound as his? . I csn answer the men, that few wp ' roi, having young children, know"1 what a good night's rest Is. ' It Is to ' this cause that we reist look for the haggard and broken looks of so many females of the poorer classes. Bui to return to the roaiapViot'of my argu ment, seeing that women labor equal ly with the men that their life is df no longer duration showing an equal ity of suffering that their necessities re ss great (for 1 will not allow that the clothing of a poor woman', proper ly clad, is of less cost than a mana) and that they are fifty per cent mores moral And industrious than the men they are fully entitled to an equslity of wage sViM i 4oCohitt C hi na, that the wages of women are equal toT the men's j but there the women d all the bard labor. No rule, you know can be laid down n a guttle unless ic work botli wavs ; one prominent rea son assigned for the disproportion of men' wages is JUbatjjheyJiave, fami- lies to support. Has nbt a woman, a widow, a familylg Support ? and if she labors two-thirds of twenty.four hours, is she not entitled la as much as will support herself and children ? . You hive struck out a new path, and will soon get at ihe root of the ev ii. 1 do not know a greater service that you can render the country, than to rat& the price of female labor. The very moment a woman has in her power, to feed, and educate her children, that 'RxtTaoMmarrfiOopn the 10th.. inst. cow, the property of Jane l'ot Ter, an elderly maiden. iadyoSevP cinity of Shelby villei lied at the un 'COffl mon " Hgr of "sibout ihirty--yars.: lo the spring of 1 806, t.he was put into a close pen for the purpose oi weaning her second and list clf, (at whkh-timet:stf x or-" wea year 1 Z ddj)- where ehew g ."II watered for 23 ycarsv giving milk II the richest kind every day during the whole time. She was at all times welt and hearty, and was milked the day before she died. 6he never was out ' of her pen hut once, and then not out of the enclosure of the farm, hiving been scared by. the discharge .of a gun near the pen in which she was kept. A large number of the oldest and most respectable citizens in this county can attest the truth ol thistitmeRt, should any person be disposed to doubt it. The nest of an Ostrich, found in South Africa, by Mr. Broadbent, 4 Missionary : The eggs were forty-two in number, including the two whicK had been taken away before, and wero arranged with great apparent exact- neasr-Sixteen were arranged jcbse n-kwl mww . a Km its a fcfrih ltitnftr aUU J IS iHV9V nw tiiivu . sm.vt." when tve arrived; they were as many . . iklT. s-Va .vlvik mmifm V 1 t Is ft "- tweniy-six were puccu ia a 1,11.1c, about three or four feet from those in th"mldd1eTheeggf which wereior the circle, we found to be quit? fresh, At wMch I cxprcss'd my surprise. Th Hottentots informed, me that these had'rf been .tovided'by t the rfrstrkh ffgarnsnirmatcning 01 mowio-wi. Middlt, uheh shc'wduTdDftaii tlrff; 9 one after "another",' and gtve "thtnr to her vounir ones for food, and that by the time they were disposed pfia t his mariner, the yojung ostriches would be able to go abroad with their mother, and provide for them such things as the- desert afforded.. I have yeen largsj flocks of these creatures in Suth Africa. The fact which have just. Stated, relative to the preservation of 8 quantity of eggs for the. subsistence of the young ones immediately after, thy are hatched, affords as striking ari illustratmn of a superintending, Provi dence, perhaps, as the whole circle of. natural bistprv. , - 1 t 1 t ...e t V r L P si ol ti h li tr F Hi J CI til tt bl
Western Carolinian (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 16, 1829, edition 1
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