RAtEIGIIREGISTER; 1inaB)BkBaBBBK. - v---'v - - - mwt ,-TT- - .V? '; '2 r J Si Owr cr iJbr pitas ,af fair delightful peace, iPwarfd Jy psrtyrage te-lioe Uks brother." ; WILLIAM A. GRAHAM. : : ; it A leig h. ; n. c.: ; ' . v i- -V Tuesday, February; 10, 1846, "i flCT Snow fell onSandsy tight ad yesterday, thYdepth of twoiaches. The Northern Mail tia Rail Read, had not arrived yeaterday evening whan our Paper went to Press, n Jtj''-.":.:. f CT B- B. SerreV Esq." waa electsd by the Commis wenerm, on Salurday p't laat, Clerk of thsCorpora tioo lor the present year. -, lj . ' , .- 'J:. . ", -. . Y . - ET His Excellency, Gov. GaHi, haa appointed f Arourrvs C Jt inlcy rq. iiarssTiue, va., iw o . a ComisonMfor' ihe State ofVirnla to take ackaewledement of proof of Ded, &c. to be used in North Carolina. See Advertisement. : BT Persons in .want of good ;Watcho, w31 find it to their advantage, to read the Advertisement of Mr. AixiW, of New York, in this paper. " '5 r ,-- j tM '-, K,-V-' - : ' r v ' .? ; i , NEGOTIATIONS RENEWED. It will be aeon by onr Congrosatonal diary, that Mr. IftCEasoix,' Chairman of the Honso Committee of Foreign Relatiooa, has been forced o admit, with oyi .dent ralactanea, that a.corretpondvuce has been open- ed between Mr. Pakuthaji and the Secretary of Stale, upon the Oregon. Question.-. And thio too, notwilh standi og the President baa had n Resolution before him for tea dayW calling for this very Correspondence. . VALUABLE PATRONS. ' A Snbscribef to the Rboistul haa jnst remitted to iVM his'thuty-Sfth year's subscription It having com- , inenced, when we a wnining achool-boy, wun-oar .sxtehfil and ahininr mornin? face. were 41 creeping ;nwillingry to school. And wo haro mnay Ptrons mJl m s kiaat nf K vi V an BDT liat. Sntne - Wl kUU w m . w - ""1 " " of the oldest and most repectable citizens of the Stat, "many of whom during a seriesof years, have never ' , ceased to cheer as with their countenance and support; and who,-wo presume, will continue to bid welcome to a visiter as familiar as the faces of their children, whilst it bolus last to tne doctrines in morale ana pol itics, which it has ever been the humble endeavor of it Proprietors to inculcate. Our friends, like dia monds of the parsst water, love law and order, peace and tranquility, and are firm anpportera of the Consti- ' tunoo-' ;They aio old-fashioned too, and cling to their political Iostitutions, and will do nothing to endanger their continuance." .Have wo not reason to be proud . ... -- - 01 our riirauii aua may we dm exciaim uiai eccentric genius,' John Rxsdolto--- Iltd mer man tuck constituent V ' . r - f ... n ST It is it a ted that Texas U divided into 35 conn ties.' Galveston is the largest atyjand Houston the next. . Austin,, the seat of goyernment has a popu lation of 100, and Washington . about the same number. San Antonio is the oldest j town in the State, with a population of 1,500.' . O" The quantity of Cranberries, sold at Faseuil Hall market daring the past season, wo are inforro- . od, amounted to about eight thousand hmehtls, which at three dollars a bushel the average price at which they were sold," amounted to $24,000. How much . sugar. will be consumed, in cooking this exceedingly .acid fruit, we have no means of judging. I , '-t, i ; , S...rT . 1 ., f ... r'VT Tho Bible Society-have a call at Washlng- Ion. 7 On," Friday, "Mr. Hock, while addressing tho House of. Representatives, enforced his remarks with the following passage, which be referred to the Holy Bible, without designating chapter or verse : I ." And while the lamp holds out to burn, The vilest sinner may retorn. ST The National Intelli geneer says t Of the ulti mate fate of tho propositiens relative to the Oregon qoesiioa depending in either House of Congress, va riant and discordant opinions are, we observe, express ed in the newspapers published out of this city, both editorially . and by their Washington 'correspondents. It is not possible certainly to predict what will be the specific action of Congress a poo it." . But, whatever may be the final action of the House of Representa tives in the ease, wo 'now feel entire confidence that ' the Senate will give its sanction to no measure in re lation to Oregon,' which would stand in the; way of a peaceful and honorable adjustment of the difference existing. between tho Governments of. this country and Great Britain, on this aabjeet. ST The Bank question has become an absorbing one in Ohio, and tho question Bank or no Bank," ta tossed to 'and fro like a shuttlecock the. Whigs manfully defending the simple, safe and efficient aye ' tern recently adopted after math labor and careby . the Legislature bf tho Slate, while tho Loeefoceo are j ' as obstinately the other way, ax the most enthusiastic admirer of the hard money" system and the Sun ' Treasury could desire.' The whole Slate is stirred by 4 this conUst, and It seems to excite more attention and : be mora the aabjeet at heart, than the t choice of a f-Gorernor for tho ensuing term.-r; ' 'Y - ;.!' . .IT A fire occurred at tBilUrlca," near Bfl, on Saturday jmevnipg, which destrefed property to the .; amount of 640,000. Tho' property coosumod con--aistod of saw mill occnukd by lr. Wflsoaf a large floor mniebwnod by Messrs. Geoe Rsundy"ot"Co., ifoci.;;:.' jj : :r -m -i ..i, !T!irrrT' ". r -a .i J3j H 'm ojsdersts4 that Col. John W. TissATts, of tho present Hooao of Repreoeutatives, from Koo tncky, sa earrdicJils for the cotmnaad mt ho now Regiment of Mounted RiSemea whieh'Cotf gross has ttsrnnsr - ' . ' .- w wisa p -"w mrm 1 " 1 " "aj. F of auceesa. V.W.Ui: U ;:-j ' ? V, . f " f-r"V- -": a : ' . - HISTORICAL FACTS. Z ptrrtng (he ten. or fwelve yf ar of the nxiftence of Iht'tite Bank the United Slatetjit enjoyed a'con dilion ctjpniperihr; beyond that of any other known institution of a aimilar kind. The internal Excbaa gea were transacted with a regularity,' and a cheap pesa before unknown, and tho business of the Gov ernment, with a degree of safety and accuracy, that the best friends of the Bank, of the Nation,' could hardly have expected. In 1832, for Instance, ' we find on reference to a document In our possession, that the, , domestic Exchanges of this vast country were conducted,' to the amount of 243 millions of dollars, kt from one-f fib to'oiu-2eenia of one per cent. This would bo incredible, were it not a matter of re oordVj Snch continued to be the case, nntil 'tbo pros tration of tht Bank wai effected, through tho perso- rering hostility . of Gen. JjicKsoit ; ; v ; ,r t ? f : J During this same period of .prosperity; tho paper issues Of the Suto Banks were kept within bounds balance were not permitted to accumulate, and the whole currency waa in as good a state as could rea aonably bo expected. Our paper was, every where, convertible Into cash "without dtfficnlty. ; The finan ces of the Government entrusted, to the Bank were managed with a cheapness and facility, that left no thing to be desired. Nor is it to be denied by any man, who has a character to lose, that the Notes of the Bank wore, tor aeveral years, preferred to Gold and Silver " During thirteen years, under Mr. Bid- lLs administration, 350 millions of the public mo ney were transferred to and, from' all parts of the Colon, tottiotrf the lose one cent ! : Soon after Gen. Jackson's election to the Presiden cy, it seems . to have been determined to control the Bank of the United States, and bend it to the, party purposes of the Administration." The first open at tempt waa in June 1827, to effect the removal of Mr MAsbsPreeident or the Branch Bank at Portsmouth, N. IL, because he was not friendly to Gen. Jackson's Administration. . This hostility waa again manifested in the President s Message of that year, and renewed attacks were made upon. the Institution in each suc ceeding yeari peneveringiy backed by the whole pow er and patronage of the Government, until the renew al of its Charter was finally prevented. Gen. Jack son withdrew from the Bank; the Depositee to the credit of tho Public Treasury, against the opinion of a majority of bis Cabinet.' - Without precedent, and without constitutional authority, he took the money nnder his own command. ' He deposited enormous sums in various local Banks, increasing through this means, the influence and patronage of tho Executive -I-and thus furnished positive proof, that however ig norant or despotic an European Monarch may be, he cannot be more so than a Republican President. ,j Who will bo bold enough to deny these historical facta?- V.J RE-ANNEXATION pF ALEXANDRIA TO i : j VIRGINIA. - , jx On Wednesday, both Houses 'of the Virginia Le gislature auspeaded their rules for the purpose of passing (and unanimously, too, in both Houses.) an act of retrocession, aceeptiug by the State of Vir ginia the Cavnty ef Alexandria in the District ef Columbia, when the same ahall be receded by the Congress of the United Stales." - The Act, thus promptly and cordially passed, is entitled, an act accepting by the State of Virginia the county of Alexandria in the' District' of Colum bia, when tho same ahall be receded by tho Congress of the United States. ' ' . 4 After a Preamble, setting forth the history of the original cession to the General Government, &.C, the enacting clause is as follows: ' "z?e it therefore enacted by the General Attem bly, that,, so soon as the Congresa of the United States shall, by law, re-cede to the Commonwealth of Virginia the said county ef Alexandria, and relin-Hnqub-h their exclusive jurisdiction, as well of terri tory as of persons residiug, or to reside, therein, the same shall be re-annexed to the said Commonwealth, and constitute a portion thereof, subject to such re servations sud provisioua respecting the public pro perty of the United States, as Congress may enact in their act of re-cession." ' THE NEXT PRESIDENCY. , I We see that a statement is going the rounds of the papers, that sundry Whig Senators and other leading Whigs, have had a dinner, at which, in a merry and patriotic mood. Gen. Scott was proposed and agreed upon as the Whig candidate for the next Presiden cy ! The statement is prononneed by good authori ty, to be a sheer piece of nonsense. The friends of General Scott are more discreet than to bring him, or to have him brought forward in this way. He may be the candidate of our party, and so may John My'Lean, or many others. . Tho people, composing tho great Whig party, will attend to the matter! There is time enough for that yet. 1 It should be suf ficient for our opponents to quarrel, deride, dictate and ostracise, among themselves -let . tho Whigs hava none of it !- r i O The United States Gazette, from which we copy tho subjoined remarks upon the late decision by the House of Representatives in the case of the con tested election from Florida, describes in few but true words the effect of that decision : j " The loss of a single ; rote : pn'tbo House is of little consequence one way or, tho other but the violation of right by the legislative authorities of this nation Ka geat evil one that will be quoted as a precedent one, perhaps, that has been cited and acted on aa a precedent. The wrong to the New Jersey members has net been forgotten. The 4 great wrong of admitting to seals in Congress roem- bers steeled contrary to the laws of Congress must continue to operate deleteriously. And wo are now beginning to learn tbat any question, whatever may be its bearings, whatever may be itsmerits, can be carried in Congress by an appeal to party. This is a sad state of tilings, the worse that it seems to bo getting strength by repetition." i ' - tT Mr. D.' Olmsted, Jr., eon of Prof. Olmsted, of Yale College, died of consumption a few days since, at Jacksonville, Fa., whither be had recently gone for the benefit of his health. We understand tbat this is the third or fourth member of the Professor's family that has fallen a victim to this fatal malady, and the community cannot but sympathise with him in tho tone which ho has thus recently suffered. : JT C.T. Sjjuaxx, the keeper ef a hotel at Cov IngtopLouislana, was killed on the. 23d ulu by J. M-lKiaxLAMO. Tho . deceased - charged ' Kirklaod with the ruin of his daughter; und sought to take hie life.'Errklaadahot him," an'd 'immediately 'surren "dered himself, protesting that ho acted in sel-de- r: Ht ' : i in ,i mm '"ITT The repoTt of tho afialfl of tho Bank' of Mas sachusetts recently made to the' LegWatore sboirrs a proportion of 1 dollar io specie to 7 74100 of depoo kon and circulation, and 1 dollar of. total eb casota to 2 .75-103 of total eash liabilities, ahowiog rather a greater expansion than the New York Blanks, aocor Uag to tho. into rotoron. , j r i '., ; ; ' - , r - vroi , rttk, luinnT . Mx-Gales i I was sQTnucb; -grained at the intel-' ligenca myself, th I cahnot withstand the tempta tion of availing myself of yoar colnmnsto- csmmuni cate the fact lo your , numerous readers, that within the last two or three weeks; vpvoards of oni hundred of the Young Gentlemen connected with the Univer sity of this Stale, at Chapel Hill, have signed the Total AbaUneaco 'Pledge, and have thus : publicly avowed to the world, their determination to w touch not, and taste not' that great arch" destroyer of hn man hopes and happiness Alcohol! For one, sir, I heartily rejoice at this manifestation of, tho local aatioo of proper senlimeuts and prindplea at this .the bead fountain of Literature and. Science in tho good old North State and I can but1 hail this favorable omen as tho harbinger of still increasing prosperity and usefulness of this beloved and venerable Institu tion. While, the pure principles of Temperance and good order prevail, no fear need be entertained that such tumultuous riots and instances of insubordination as have disgraced other distinguished Seats of Learn log, will ever arise there. .Nor can it but be regard ed, by those who have Sons or Wards at our Uuiver sity, as an assurance that they-are surrouuded by ad atmosphere purely temperate and moral, and are, therefore, the more likely :to imbibe the sacred prin ciples of virtue and sobriety, an adherence to which, will surely result in their moral . and intellectual, ad vancement through all future life. Aiid in more ma ture years, wheu these grutleirien shall annually as semble, at the Commencements of their Alma mater, to pay their devotions at the sbriue of their youthful aspirations for Literary worth. aud renown, this Class of the Alumni, should they remain firm to the prin ciples which , they have espoused,, will have fewer wrinkles of care and sorrow, 'and less sighs of grief, than any which have preceded it. ' So may it be ! -' CLAUDIAN. -r A, Maji .with 145 Childscn ! The Worcester Shield, published at Snow Hill, Maryland, gives the following account of an extraordinary man, now liv ing in Somerset couuty : ; " There ia at this time, In a neighborhood in Som erset county, Md., a gentleman named Nelson, in his 91st year; who haa 145 children, grand-children and great-graud-children now living withiu the sound of his voice. Io his own language, " be cau stand at his door on a calm morning, and make every one hear him without exception." . He further says, rea soning front what has occurred, " if his life is spared 5 years longer, he will have 200 instead of 145 col laterals, immediately . around him." He yet retains the vigor and activity of youth is fund of sporting, and often amuses himself by hauling the seiue and sometimes stands for hours waist deep in the water, without experiencing any bad effect from it. He lost his wife about three winters ago, with whom he had lived iu happy wedlock 59 years. -' It has been 20 years siuce he had any sicknrts, and 40 years since he has required a physician for himself. He is quite a monument of Antiquity, being perfectly .familiar with the scenes of the Revolution, during which time, he was engaged in the then profitable business of oystering; and supplied Gen. Washington's table with oysters at Mouut Vernon, uulil his death. He hat frequently been in his house, aud received the money for the cargo from the great man's own hand. He says it was his custom never to buy less than fifty bushels, part of which his' neighbors would get from him. Hillsborough, Feb 5. Thk Pestte5TIAKT. The Editor of the Ra leigh Independent, who is himeelf in favor of a Penitentiary, says that he. ia satisfied from the tone of the Presii of the State, and the silence obse'ved on the subject at the various meetings lately held, that the public ruind ia settled down in opposition to a Penitentiary. We confess that we are surprised at this conclusion, as well aa at the strange premises taken by the Editor from which he derives it. It is our opinion that a ma jnrity of the Presses in the State are in favor of the measure ; but with one consent they seem to have determined tbat the question 6hall be freely discussed pro and con, and that no partisan bias ahall be given to it; and the People, we infer, acquiesce in the vidom of this course, and hence they have not thought proper to express an opin ion on the question in their public meetings Nevertheless, the subject is occupying the minds of the people, and they are preparing- them eelvca for intelligent action when the time for voting shall arrive; and as the weight of argu ment is evidently in favor of the measure, we think the people 'will so decide. The "tone of the pr'ss," therefore, as well aa " the silence observed on the subject at the various (political) meetings lately held," we view in a very dif ferrnt light to that in which the editor, of the In dependeut sees it we think the in decidedly fa vorable to a Penitentiary. Though the Editors of the pipers in the State observe so much silence on the subject, their col umns do not. Many well-written communica tions have appeared, which have been exten sively copied ; and in this way the question can be placed before the people, with lees danger of its being mixed up with exciting political top ics. Recorder: GEN. JACKSON ON THE TARIFF. Gen. Jackson said, in a letter dated Washington, April 26. 1824i ' I will ask, what is the real situation of the agri culturists? Where has the American farmer a market for his surplus produce 1 ' Except for Cotton, he has neither a foreign or a home market. Does not this clearly prove, then, where there is no market, either at home or abroad, that there ia too much labor em ployed in agriculture ? : Common sense at once points out the remedy. Take from Agriculture in the United States six hundred thousand men, women and children, and you will at once give a market for more breadstafiSi than all Europe now furnishes us. In abort sir, we hate been too long subject to the new policy of British merchants. It is time we should become a little more Americanized, and. instead of feeding the paupers and laborers of England, feed our own, or else in a short time by continuing onr present policy we should be rendered paupers ourselves. It is therefore my opinion that a careful aud judicious tariff is much wanted to pay our national debt, and to afford us the means of tbat defence withia our selves on which the safety of our country depends; and last, though not least, give a proper direction o our labor, which must prove beneficial to the happi ness, independence, and. wealth of the community.'' From the llaliax (N. C.) Republican. . ) . . .. Wkldow, Jan. 27, 1846. Mr. Webb : ' " . . Through the colorrma of your Paper, it affords roe pleasure to inform those interested that jbe Draw in Petersburg Bridge accrosa the Roanoke is now complete and all wishing to' bring their Boats to Weldoti will . meet with neither delay or obstruction at tho Bridge The width of Draw at Base, from Pier to Pier, ' ia fifty feet, and at Top thirty feet.. J T ' ' ! " In communicating this" fact. It is but justice to ay to MrSam'L Furd, the able Superintendabt of the work, that he haa done justice to the Com. pany and eredit to himself in the building of tho Dra..'. The draw waa opened to-day in presence of several gentlemen, and the '' ease which 120 feet of Bridge weighing 84.000 ibsV Was moved, pleased and astonished all. who witnessed it ' At. the request of Mr Ford, several of the. gentlemen, individually,' moved the Whole with JRtle or no effort ' ' -'' '"'' ry v .". f.-s-t,iw.i-.. If otff frfenda- (Jowfi the .KiTer will vijwt us with their Boats, we pnnnise then! no detent um at tb? Bridge, and a hearty reception on their arrivalal UTT-Tho New drleafle Tropic' of the 2Bth nlt says that Jpusaojt, theLoco candidate fjr Governor, Is undoubtedly elected: , JThe districts heard . from u"u m. iuajuiuy,v iwul uvv. .uo ajovos wui ure majority in ine jjouisiona uegiainium ! H 5 tANdNYMOUS ' The Boston Transcript copies an article frdm this paper, on the, subject of ailoaymoas letter writing, and appends this commehl i- " Few persons ; have suffi cient mastery over their own feelings, aa at once to scout at the content of sucli letters, and to pass them by disregarded. ; Thio mind " too prone o give some credence to tho insiunSlioUs. thus conveyed, and dili gently to set to work to suspect the author. I a this way the innocent becomes the accused person, friend ship is brokeB, and love perhaps turned insensibly iuto hate.''' This is certainty a fearful consequence, add one. of the worst features of anonymous letter-writing. ;-' " " 3 , . From the Highland Messenger. : -i jWlUG MEETING INC-orf. ! j r Oo the evening of Saturday, the 24th dltixno. after a short notlcei a respectable meeting of the Whigs of Macon assembled at the Court House m Franklin.' "- ' ; f '. ' :. Jacob Siler, Esq., having been calW;to the Chair; and ' J. Y. Hicks appointed Secretarythe Chair, on motion, explained the object of the meeting in a few appropriate remarks, to be to respond to the action of the Whig State Conven tion, held on the lxih ultimo, nominating our present Governor, William A.' Graham, for 're elcctron ; whereuppri, Dry H G. Woodfin offered he following resolutions, the adoption of which he enforced in a short, eloquent and impressive speech, viz: , ti .... . . . . , - Whescas, a Convention haa been held in Raleigh ' by the Wbigsof North Carolina, for the purpose of selecting a .suitable. candidate for the office of Gov- j ernor for two years after the subsisting term of the ! present incumbent; and whereas the Whigs of Ma con County were unrepresented in said Convention, owing to the inclemency of the weather aud the great distance from this County to Raleigh ; and whereas, we have' Teamed the result of tho Convention with j feelings of cordial' approbation ; therefore - j Resolved, That it is our duty at this early day, to respond to the voice of our Whig brethren throughout the State, in language that cannot be misunderstood, attiring them of our co-operation in support ol the judicious nomination they have made. Resolved. That we have the fullest confidence in the capacity, integrity and patriotism of his Excel lency, WILLIAM A. GRAHAM ; that we fully approve of his administration ; that we believe the honor and interest of the Stale will be promoted by his re-election, and that we will exert ourselves in the use of all honorable and fair means to effect it. Resolved, That the strenuous exertions, and early preparations of the Democratic party, to deprive the Stale of the services of a" faultless Executive, during his Constitutional eligibility, upon the grounds of party feeling alone, call aloud upon every Whig in the good old North State to be on his guard, and to sustain with undaunted firmness not ouly the princi ples for which we contend, but also the man who has proved hirnxelf not iiu worthy the high trust and con fidence . reposed in him. Resolved, That the Hon. William A. Graham be respectfully requested to visit Macou county during the approaching" canvass. Resolved, That the 'State is deeply concerned in the policy hitherto adopted by Whig legislation, in matters both of a local and general character, and that it is our duty to make all laudable efforts to se cure the election of a Whig Senator for this District, aft well as a Whig Representative for this County, to the ensuing Legislature. , . Resslved, That the proceedings of this meeting be forwarded to the Highland Messenger by the Chair man and Secretary, for publication. After Dr. Woodfin look his seat, on motion of N. 11. Palmer, the resolutions were again read separately and unanimously adopted. " JACOB SILER, Ch'n. J. Y. Hicks, Sec. , LONG FACED PEOPLE. 'We find the following .remarks in Willis's Mirror. If they serve to shorten the length of 8me lugubrious visagp, or impart a bright and cheerful air to some sad and sallow face, they will well fill the space they occupy : j ' Why are we Americans (as a nation) so grave a people! Walk the streets aud a large major ity of the persona you meet are alike solemn and sallow. They look as if they had just risen from he perusal of ' Blair's Grave," or the " Elegy." In vain nature smiles upon them. They return it nottheir eyes court the ground their faces are filled with untimely wrinkles their gait is rapid and awkward their features gaunt and spectral ; their voices husky and uncomfortable, and their conversation quite unembroidered with wit or humor. Follow these people to their homes still all is murky they bend frowning ty over the newspapers they neither dance nor sing, nor frolic they drive all gaiety from . their wives and children, and make their domestic life as dull and senseless as one of Lillo'a tragedies. Why is this! Is life a heavier burden, a rcore desperate struggle here than elsewhere? . Are we cursed with a dismal 'climate or sterile soil 1 Have we no business to do, or is our labor with out reward ? Gratitude forbids that we should say so. Nature haa been most bounteous to us ; she as given us a land as full of beauty and grandeur, as it is of all the elements of wealth. Fairer skies never canopied mortals. Our lakes are seas ; our rivers run their thousand leagues unwearied: our waterfalls sing their ceasless song in the for e8tj our mountains are worthy of the vallies they protect ; the rainbow hues of autumn are our pe. culiar boon ; the earth yields us a hundred fold we blush when wc gather in returns so dispro portionate to our labors. Our ancestors, tco, have been most liberal lo us. They ' have given us a good government and a good name. We are also blessed with minds naturally active and inventive, and kept in perpetual play by the freedom of our institutions. No other nation has such a mass of intellect in constant employment. s . Why, then, are we so unhappy, thus surround edby all the' materials of happiness ? " Is not he simple truth this I we pervert our powers and abuse oar privileges ; we place our affections up on the wrong'object we utterly mistake the true prizes of life we passs by nature, art, love, friend ship, faith, and bow the knee to mammon j we i dolize it; we ereet costly temples to its honor, and on its altera we sacrifice health, character, ourr -viewsj our 'children.'' To be rich, or id be thought rich, is,' with too many of ' us, the' sole, eVclueiVe, all-engrossing object of our lives.- Thus the heaft contracts, the .affections droop Slid. wither; no tears water them, do smiles warm tjiein.' Home become a dreary place it loses its Sabbaths and r its holidays. - The muses and the graces abandon it. Its songs and its festiv ities, its hymns and its prayers depart from iL joVe and faith flee affrighted from its threshhold. gullenuess, frowns, Uaots, reproaches, these are its inmates. . Its fireside becomes one constant seene of jealousy, conspiracy, and strife, till at last , we almost long for death, to break up and de stroys placer tar depraved and penrerted."1" I We will not dwell" upon'su glotrmya pkfture, bat simply ask hr-wealth, worth such fearful sac rifice! What honest 'heart eaa hesitate in" its irepJrif -'v -ft'-. . . :. i: z :4 irfi -W- a The rtew Havtfrr Cooler-: Jett ofTth fbl- owing funny story about the origin of' adver .Ut0g'fi, ??t.l$ i t-- i-i'-Jr.l 4 It was tne celestial; empire, some three or iour tnousana . years oeioro otnef , parts or tne globe were , made, and during the reign of Tie Longj or that of hie son Long Cue we-have for gotten which, that advertising came in fashion. A scarcity of the tea cropr for which the Em peror w as held ' responsible, because, as it .was said, he consulted bis own comfort more than the welfare of fats people, in not knocking . bis bead hard and often enough when he prayed for sea sonable weather, bad produced a rebellion T a distant portion of his realm. - : i f ; Sacrifices for the purpose of' quelling this bad beeb offered in vain sow's ears and dog's' tails by the cord, cumbered the t temples x; thousands of Josses had been smoked black' with expiatory fires of fustier but still the insurrection gathered impetu?, and finally'threatened to overcloud the supreme'glory of the brother of the sun1 and moon. His majesty, finding that his rods were boey- ing themselves about someihing beside bis per plexities, and having fruitlessly issued vast num bers of special edicts of unusual size and masnifi- cence, concluded it best to look to affairs himself, and collecting his most frightful troop, went forth to meet and punish his unloyal subjects. ,c . Upon his second day's march towards the dis trict where it was expected that the rebels would runaway from the sight of bis arms, the emperor was seized with a violent thirst, which bis phy sicians informed htm could ouly be assuaged' by copious draughts of 'Bohea. . His majesty, with that decision of character for which he was sO pre-eminently celebrated, immediately ordered a halt, and had a superb pavilion erf cted under a tree, which bis valiant soldiers' had decorated with paper flags and artificial flowers, to make rude nature acceptable to the eyes of their sove reign, as well as to astonish the world with its magnificence. " ;x .: The emperor's thirst increasing every moment, as soon as he entered the lent he roared like a lion for his -remedial beverage. This with the expedition usual to those who anticipate capital punishment for remissness of duty, bad been al ready prepared, and all that was wanting to save them from execution was a vessel to serve it in. Here, however, they were in a painful dilern ma: the bearer of the Emperor's silver teapot had on the journey lost this indispensable utensil, and to set any other before him was not only blasphemous, but absolutely impossible. Discovering the cause of delay, the monarch, blending authority with clemency, caused bis careless servant to be decapitated ie the most merciful and agreeable manner, and then send ing for a number of his chief officers, command, ed them upon the penalty of sudden death, a cay tastrophe equally unpleasant to Christians or Chinese, to bring the said tea pot. into bis pre sence, whether it could be found or not, in the course of the succeeding day. Now the army (says the grandiloquent histo rian) amonnted to over five hundred thousand men, beside camp followers, and to have gone to each individual for the -purpose of inquiring whether he had stolen or found the tea pot, was an undertaking calculated to dishearten the most indefatigable. An old tiger-eatef, with a cue as large and long as a ship's cable, finally bethought himself of . an expedient, which had the happy effect of prolonging the lives of himself and brother dignitaries.,. He had several hundred pictures drawn, re presenting a man returning the lost tea pot to the Emperor, and receiving the reward of his hon esty, a button 'and a peacock's feather; while beneath was portrayed a thief running off with the vessel, and pursued by , a grim executioner with an uplifted and vicious looking meat-axe. These pictures were hung up on different poles, and tho army marched by in companies to look ait them while, at the same time, they were in formed that they Would be kept marching in view of these drawings, without meat or sleep, until the tea-pot was restored to the thirsty Emperor. Whether through the influences of fatigue, fear, or the hopes of lucre, the historian does not say but the utensil was soon conveyed to the imperial pavilion, and in a few hours after, the rebels were cut to atoms, v " When the story was told by the soldiers on their return home, many tradesmen supposing that tea-pots were to be more fashionable than ever, had boards embellished with these articles, and that there might be " no mistake, bad tbe. name painted underneath. These were placed in front of their shops, and hence came signs and posters. ' . : ' ' - The custom once instituted became universal, and was carried by travellers tootber parts of the world ; and when newspapers 'were iri vented, they -were seized upon as important, agents for multiplying, and scattering these business re ferences and: guides, which ' were ' subsequently called advertisements Advertising has aow become so necessary to the prosperity of all branches of mercantile and industrial pursuits, that Robinson Crusoe in bis garments of goat skins, would be less an object of curiosity, than a business .man who does not publish ius goods in the columns of a public print. . r - ' ' - ' r : - Of tbe beiifficlal efftctixA advertising, our du ty to tbe community compels us to speak more pointedly on another occasion. ; ; - I? ' PRICES CUlTItEZfl', Raleigh, N Ct Feh 10, 1846. per bbl. ' $5 00 a 5 50 ; GO - 65 "- 0 a 65 7 Oil a iB 00 8 00 a 9 00 15 to SO 5 00 a 5 50 .- 5 00 a 6 00 ' Corn, , ' j Mealj " ; -I BaOonr -t ; . 'Lard, ' Butter, -i ; -.;.' Cettoo, i--Vv-' i. Tobacco leaf i L Rice butJhtl ; ' - . -t i ' hundred. - do. ' per iht ., do :do.--. ; u WUmingtoUi tt. C Fehr 6t .. Flonf :i Corn, -.' I - . f Bacon, Hams i.. Middlings Shoulders, ; ' -Wcatern, " Lard, , ' -M.-Rice, . v j'A r.LaTerpoolSalt, perbb1.: ' ,6 50 a 7 00 a . 70 a 10 per lb. . . , . , .10 a per lb. -rV 7-- ' ' 9 s. r lb. 4 ' i per ib. -'-- "; -7 a por 'lb n';V?'"584 a -9 per hundred. , u4 50 a 4 62 .: Mck.;:; 1 25 a 1 35 .r :.rV?- par bbW'1" -:''525 a 5 SO ' vfe- UbosllJft??CC3sH70:' Corn, . Baeod, Lard, :V-..Ie.- Butter-,- -Cotton.- "? r4lbi7 -ifu'le Tsbasco.IsaJ , ?. 4 ruifeiCATIOIt isa settledcreed'rin correct medical ' judsprunlenceVXhat imless b blcod H keptree reWfmpdrittee.ibe mhole tfs tern must inevitably become, diseased. When I be blood becomes tcloir'ood.,f,i.lr" U. throngh the veins and arteries with a clugisrx-fno tiort-we mar rest assured thst mirk DAM. tarlf S. ItM concomitant train of evils, is about inonmo , tu ; utmost care and greatest precaution are therefore necessary fend'- the system should be closely watched. - Those who irnflrall B r . uicui- selves with mild and aperient physic, should give ' preierence- to sucn as are ot a strictly vegeta ble nature.' Brandroth VptrpfshTa - irniva.t Pills appear to be the n tii versaV favorite, as they are composed entirelr ef thd Vecrefcables am) OOerate SO ef7etrlllrt9ntnr -tltaawmtmL. ' purifying the, blood and removing all undue bili ary awtelioM:.'' TtT The ahoifs PSftd iu if''tLtwa'l;-2.If tn every County of the State, and by WILL i FECK There u.Derhsns. no disease with w'.IaK try is afiected, which sweeps off annually so many rcii. uesuujcf ui iua. niiman racav Consumption-. Dy afier day, year alter year, tho insatiate monster hurries its the hortal nf enA ahMs4 yviuMHi silent tomb fresh added victims to its coBquesu Na waia oi tie is sacreu irom its Dligming innuence. No use is exemot from ha deatbtlealin? ahufta. Tkn old, die middle aged and the. yoans;. aQ alike, arc loou lor mis common enemy oi mankind I no whits) haired Datriarcb. whose lite of temner&nc has tiered his system iinpervious to tbe -attacks o( other ills a ttd wtiose stood deeds rrehared him far ihu n. joymeht of life's cSim evening, iinds consnmptloie fastening uo langs upon pis vital, and tearing him frem a world, ever, bright to minds which cau look complacently dn days wrl) spent. - Is there no h!lo for the afflicted i tin of the dangers which beset os in onr changeable and utw tuuic i r ww a iuiuk . lucre may ue. ADu II IUO stlemtions sf i!iom who arm ar leaat ntlitarf tr marm - city, may be believed, t hero is a preventive and a re- Wistsr's Balsam -of WHd3CLerrir is offered 4a at suffering world ss such. $ It : needs riot tbe adven titious aids, ot a long -string m fictitious ; certificates to pive it nnlnr ii.lv. ... lis ifn. vain .rut i.ii.. cellence are sufficient io entiila it to the coufidence of the puWic,' and, .f . v ; . Vs Wtir on to lame': . , ' : . the name hi its inventor, as a benefactor of his spe cies. " ' . - " ' ' ' :' " o For sale br wiLiKTAnis. rTAVxtrnhnjL CO., wholesale add retail, Raleigh, N. C ' ' In Ouilford. on the 3d, Mr. Thomas F. Hoskins tm Miss Anna Macy. s. .., gtgkWLWMwWuWkWmWuXWkWky '""; Heir Windsor. Gertie, on the 21 t nit.. In thm fiSiVj year of his age, William L. Gray, a highly respecta- In Jefferson countv. virsinia. Mrs.'fm?r P. TmM. only eurvivingysister of Mrs. Madison. This amiable and excellent lady had in early life married George' S. Washington, nephew and one of the heirs of Gn era! Washington. Alter tbe death of Mr. Washing ton sne oecame united, tn marriage with tne Hon. Ti Todd, of Kentucky, one of the. Judges ofh Supreme, uourt oi tno uoiiea aiaies. , ' - - . - Fire Company, TjHfi requisite number of Citiiens having Volutt- IJU teered as members of the Raleigh, Fire Com pany," they are requested to assemble ui tho Tawtt Hall, on Saiurday afternoon neit,' the Hth: instant at 3 o'clock, for.the purpose of organization. '. ' . ' ' naieign, reo , iso. . J33 Noticed 4 ii no. v c seen appoiniea oy. M is Jiceilgncy, VH- U liam A. . Graham, Governor of the State of Nortbi Carolina, a Commissioner for the State of Virginia wilt full power to take the acknowledgement or proof of any Deed, Mortgage, or other conveyance of lands, tenement or hereditaments, lying or being- in thio State, snthto lake the private examination ef married women, parlies thereto, in the manner now. required by. Law, or any other writing, under seal to be used in this State ; and to administer an oath or aflirma tion to any persont who shall bejsWilliog Or desirous ; to make such oath or ar3rmation before me andt to : take depositions and examine witnesses' under SOT. 'mm rr , trr t. ! , - " ' .. - commission or commissions emanating from any of ihe Courts of the Stated Elating' lo any cause de- pending or to Im brought in any of said Coorta. Any? business under said, commission which the publu may desire, shall have my strict : aud faithful attend ttou ; and I reduest that those who mat have ' busi ness with me, will make h convenient ot to call on Wednesdajs. : ' '-- ' - AUGUSTUS C.TlShZY. '. Clsrksville, Febrnfcry 1 84 fl. 1 ' v r 12 8 1 i fTntti Mercantile Copartnership heretofore exist II ine betwoeo JAMES McKEJ880N t &. mON. has been dissolved by mutusl coo sent. The Store a( Morganton, from Jfebruary 1, 1846, will be eon tinued by Jaxks McKessojt , And tbe Stores a Gold Hill, in Burke County at Val'dor. .Bracket- to Wn and MiUersvllle, in McDowell County, Will be continued by Wititair. F. McKsssojr. U . .. Tbe Mining Copartnership between the same parties is also dissdlved. except that the Mtae, long known as too. WUkmsott Mint" vi sUll Joint pro rrty, and Uopertted M such. ' ' - ' ' 3 It is very desirable, that those who are indebted to the tste Firm, should eloso their aecoUnU immodisto lyby IfoteoCMhv -5 V-t - - r JAMSS McKESSOIV 5c SOJT. ;Morganten,ll'ebrI,!t846. : r k tf jtKK oi about the 18th jbf'Utfi Derembef, tslfett J up on the Plantation ef Alexander Mcknight. in the Codnly of Franklin, and State of North Csto lina, abobt three miles west of Louisburg, bhe dark brown Mare, about five; year old,, about four feet eight inches high,' valued at thirty dollars, the bwnsr is requested to call prove property and pay Charges) sccordln a, to LawV-;; ? y s . . 'V' 'r ' -'-;.. -w--' ' -firniRVvrfijfiw?Vf -'..3t:."i''. 1 1 1 toATHHtcl ; , vtB E largest and mmtt splendid sssortmeat of Watches in the City, is to be found at the subscriber's, ; 'as he Is constantly receiving aH.oescripttoDS ef CaOLls aiid sxiVEri WATCnES of the newest stjles, from the manufacturers ia England; France, and Switzerland, be is enabled to Xf!er a lager assortment and at mucbr less prices, at ; Belai than any other house in America.- Gold: VVctchso ss W as 9 to S5 Dollars uutb.-&&A ' Waicbes and Jewelry exchanged ot boogi't, ,' .': n All-WatcTies watrsnted to keep good time OT the money returned.:. Watches end Jewelry repaired in the bsst mknnef sod wsrrsntrd,l)yths best workmen, ajtd-much ItfWei thsh t shy other plies. OolJ shd Silver iPenciJsvi Celdi CheiAV Hjs, a ' Lsilies , Bracelets. PJnsand -Sterling Silver Cpopns; t'.ltU cepsr.orks4fcf.iH'yVif7' j .i. .U'.-i'-;.r'"-S.-0; C.ALLI5.V,, v r-It3portir W,.VYtcbes srjd Jewt!iy - : . -' ':v v; - f " VihotuaU end Est: .7. - riTaiiiWia. e1sierewrir7n:. ZT" tohTittt, Watches iMem i. T - '1 -t