Newspapers / The Carolina Republican (Lincolnton, … / April 24, 1849, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of The Carolina Republican (Lincolnton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
-3s' f. 4 '- J ; r JOB (PRINTING, r '!'.. XABOLIXA REPUBLICAN. Neatly ellcoted.at this office, on .Kvr.TTTS and on V1 derate terms8 - - DITOTtD TO SrcuLtrs, , Hand-Bill; vf ' .Sale-Rills,- , J' ' JLabels, " -And all kinds '-bt Ta'JUri. Eisnliai, Jnicaltarf, Untitle taJ Horse-Bilk,, . Cardi, ' v 7. .ASK NOTHINO THaT IS NOT JUOBTSUBMlT TO NOTniNO THA.T fS moyO,, Jachson. Blank Deeds, VOLUiVXE J, LINCQLNTON, N , APRIL 24, 1849, NUMBER 20. County. nd Superior .Court and Jua- . tasxRAnrs .and, Constable's Blanks. . ... . . . - ' . f i. ... . - - 4 v . ' ' - j-v . - - v II I 1. II 4 1 .1 ' I I IA I I . I II l I -I I I t I '- I I ' . WO E Tit V ATI OLD HATTS LOVE EONO. rr tiioma noon. ; Tnosx eye that wrre to bright, lore, Hare now a dimmer ahioe; JJat whit they've lost in light, lore, Wa what they gav to mint. And viHl those orb reflect, lore, The beams of former boor ; Thai ripened 11 m j joj, lorr, AeJ tinted all sir fowrra, "Ue kcla wer bro-wn to ar, lore, - Tf-rtlfccnr are tanked to rrf T1 jrtn wfrfvot with of, lore, Hr UWa5 It-cgt-r alarelore, ' H gUJn pkiw c aoon ; " Ufli Tre arca th wcrU look Cwr, lore, Wtca tHfcreil bjr the soooo. Lat trcwr wu fair to ae, lore, JVat looks akadd liow ; IXat (br cq it bore ibe care, lore, - Tbal fpoilt a bennj trow. jAfid t!u0;h DO bstJpCT tbcTf, loTT, Tbo glcM it bad of jore ; jCilll mmorj looks aod lou, lore, Wkcre br Waurtd brfnre. To or Rlcharxl'a-SiayJnf rV ca&oot grre oar ladr rradtrs a better artat imn a icw vi inuiun . inimiume a a v prortTta, mhtca arrcarca m his, iw rJcUnl'a Almanac between 1733 aod 17S3 Tbf j are replete with rbJIopf hj tod in Urn c- Uoo.a iMCt wLxh u fuilr ' proved br their popularity eTfrjwhere tbroobout our coun try, at the time of their publication. Tbey were aLo rr printed in Ko gland, translated three time into the French language and coee into roordero GreeV. Ed. Lit. Am. Som rrow mad by talTinj much to lnrw; IJut who prow mad by studjing pid to grow ? An eg aJ better t.v-an a ben tomorrow. Law, like cob-webs cakXei small fie, Ureal otvea break through before your eyea. If frxle lead the Tan, beggary bntg up the rear. - - ... , - - ... . Keep thy ihop and thy ahop will keep thee. God heals and th doctor takes the fee, lie that would lire in peace and ean, . Ma imh pak all ha knows nor judge all be sees. , lie that can trarel well afoot, keeps a g-vfcl horse. The WTTit wheel of the cart makes the cost noise. .. yrfg in u uh bWlf will! bart riralC A gainst diseases here, the sUongrst fence, la th d' j cire Tirture, Abstineooa r Tart words make no friends ; a spoonful of bvoey will catch morn lies than a gallon of Tiafor. Drire thy bn.inesa or it will drire thoe. Beware of littU- expexwes; a small leak will sink a great ship. An ounce of wit that's bought. It worth a pound that's taught. A ploughman on bis legs. is higher than a gentleman on his knees. MmI kiaf and mad bulls are not to be held by treaties and fa iWmL What maintains one tcw would bring up two children. . A ejoh's a monster; bead pough but no brains. .Jiotbicg Is humbler than ambilioo when it is about to climb. ..The discontented man finds no eay chair. "When" prosperity was well mounted she ,!et go the bridle, and soon came tumbling out of lha saddle. The matter's eyes will do more work than bctb bis hands. A rk&af of fortne hurts a wise man no nore thA a cbanev in the moon. A ! friend and a shadow attend only - 7&l.ih sua shines. finish deep while sTagaMs slcep. ;-.Tew rUl UnrUMU and keep. If yoa would not be forgottoo as snon as yoti are deail and rotten, either write things wcrth reading or do omcthing worth writ- tag- ; ; ' Nothbg' dries sooner than a tear. Scarlet,, auk and Telret Late pat oat the kitchen fire... - , The nt mistake in public buLtness Is the e'r. z into it. ' idle man i tv. deril'a hireling; , '.rTtrj is r--. .ose diet and wages , . . and dicr c. - KIcr and. bears often worry their keep- en.- , . He's. a fl her. rbo makes the doctor bis . - Vre take a wife till thou bast a bouao to it hrin. 'i. - Lm-e well whip well. - Jlaag-r nerer saw bad bread. ,, Grtas talkers, little doers. A rich roug U Lke a fat bog- ' " Who nersr does good till as dead as cxaks -3Lt.i aad men . eat Tl j poor have none. ncli too mccL- notirh cot one. the other The rest alwavs sar and do as ther ought If tou wouM keep your secret irom an encmr. lei I it not 10 a ineoo. Old boys hare their playthings as well as ' - . . . young ones: tne djnerence is onir in iue , . price. a t If a man could bare his wisoes ne rould double his troutJea. W 0 M A X. Vomin is like the rose which buds and blooms ou the parterre of life. In the cradle, when a sweet boa, tne Ira- grsnce of auection nus me iuiwjiuhc tr r .1 around and about her. When the rrattlc of infancr is heard from her lip and her tiailer irradiats tin eyes of parental anccuon uw iragranco increases. As thw bud derelopea is beauties to the eye, tr 1 - r and the knit b'mbe allow her to fly about the domestic circle tl joy of her parents is ecstatic Thcro follows the development of heart, linking the bud to the bosom whence ells maternal affection. Mind quickly d ere lopes its native ener- Ses, ana me ncaveniy spars wnicn anines e mortal frame add new charms to the cherished object of affection. ' The tide of lite flows on, and in its spring new beauties cluster around the loved one, and in a few summers raoro she is sen at ik lr pkdgtug' her afTection to one whose manly worth has won her pare and guiltless heart. The early hearth is left but not forsaken, for maternal love has matured her afTection not simply for the poor return which many an earthly flower yields ftr anxious care. Her hearts is imbued with nature which refuses to lire without that pure atmosphere which so far has warmed her being, and canted her latent beauties to expand snd at tract the admiration of the manly youth, who claims bcror his bride. Her wealth is guileless ami confiding heart, and the gntle current, along whose unruQed banks she has hitherto called the sweetest flowers, glides still by her feet without a murmur. Her happiness is complete, for religious faith illumes the present and gilds the fu ture, while memory reviews the past with out a pang from duties neglected or affec tion J not acknowledged. Youth and beauty attend her steps all her days are pleasant, while peaceful con tentment makes her heart exult as .Hope in the vista beckons her on to joys in scenes yet to be realised. Bat such happiness, like all things which Jaruke of earth, is subject to the stroke of eath. The destroyer of man's happiness re- -pot iot the young, tLa brantiful, or the Plied. Too often in this world tney seem use the flowers of Nature, wliich delight the eye, to be more subjected to the scythe of the Destroyer. LDirrs Newton OP THE HUMAN' MIND. was one dav aked. why lie stepped forward when he was so inclined; . i . i- i l: i i r and Irom wnat cause ois arm auu uia uw oUvcd his will f He honestly replied, that he knew nothing about the mater. Uat at least, ud they to him, you who are ao well acquainted with the gravitation of planets, Will Wll Mt lT' uwy lura one wnj nmr . , . . :i i u:. : than anomer i iicwwo uu iiuwcu uis ig norance. Those who teach that the ocean was salted for fear it should corrupt, and Ibf Mh tides were created to conduct our ships into port, were a little ashamed when told that the Mediteranean has port vl no tides. Mu- ehemdrock himself has fallen into th error. Who has ever been able to determine pre cisely, how a billet of wood is changed into red hot cliarcoal, and Dy woai mccyanwm umc is heated by cold water ? The first motion in the hart of animals is that accounted for ? Has it been exactly discovered how the buisness of generation U rrnwHl ? Has any one divined the earn of sensation, ideas, and memory ? Wc know no more of the essence of matter than the children who touch its superficies. Who will instruct us in the mechanism by which the grain of corn, which we cast into the earth disposes itself to produce a stalk surmounted with an ear; or why the sun produces an apple on one tree and ashesnut on the next to t? Many doctors have said, what know I not? 'MonUme said, what know 1 1 If the admiring eye of Nature's sweetest flower could shield from harm the full blown rose, iU leaves would never wither its frarranc never die. if friends could detain the blooming mat- ron in a inhere where her virtues bloom but to perish, many would live to have their old age irradiated by the lustre of wcUspcnt years. Bat death most come. Beaaty, it is true, belongs to youth, but qot to youth alone. ; The matron who is the cynosure . of the happy circle, the charm which lores to domes tio hardiness the hosr band and the father, has beauty too. . Ilerbeart is the centre of human' affce tiosi Her smile tee reward i of human 4 !" half censure what they practice, half Lractice what they censure. NAMES. : : ' The origin of names is traceable net only to the tnale or profession of 'the 'family 8 founders,' but also to their bodily prculari- ties, qualities, accomplishments or defocts, and the degree of respectability in." which they were held remarkable incidents which have happened to particular persons, are also frequently recorded in their surnames. Uut from the earliest times it was necessary to distinguish one from another, .which coul only be done by pointing out personal qualities, or place of residence. Thus, Mr. Ughtfoot, 3Ir. Golightly, Mr. Swift, JIr.llop- rcr. .Mr. Ambler and Air. jumper arew their names from the bodily agility of 'the first bearers, and Messrs. Heavy sidV Saun tcr, Onslow, and WaddQllXromthe contrary oualtty. The rains, the Akmheads the Vileinsidcs, the Anguishes and IleadaKea, ..... . . .. . w . owe their appellations to the dolorous sen sations of their ancestors whilst the Wilds, Sanguines, the Joys, the Merrys and the Bucks, announce their descent from a set of happy, thoughtless sinners of the earnest ages. A Beautiful Extract Labor. Why, a . man or idleness, la Dor rocxed you m the cradle, and has nourished your pampered life. Without it, the woven silks and wool upon your back would be in the silk-worm's nest, and the fleeces in the shepherd's fold. t-or the meanest thing that ministers to hu man want, save the air or heaven, tuan is indebted to toil and even the air, by God's wise ordination is breath with, la bor, i It is only the drones who toil not, who infest the hive of the active Tike masses of corrup tion and decay. The lords of the earth ore workingmen who can build or cast down at their will, and who retort the sneer of ie 'soft handed,' by pointing to their trophies, wherever art, science, civilisation and hu- manity are known. Work on man of toil! Thy royalty is yet .to be acknowledged, as : 1 ' 1..1 1 1 .II r I lanor rises on warn to tne nignsst throne or i power. i .... ' Westrrn enterprise. It is a source of won der and astonishment, if not of surprise, to behold the gigantic strides which the West is making in the groat improvements of the day. Among the most important and na tional undertakings in which her citizens have embarked is the building of a railroad from Cincinnati to St. Louis an undertak ing which, judging from the spirit which characterizes those more immediately inter ested, is destined to succed at no very dis tant time. On the 24th of February last a tremendous meeting of .the citizens of Illi- nois was held in lucniand county, or that State, for the purpose of consulting as to the proper coarse to adopt in regard to the " Ohio and Mississippi railroad." The com mittee appointed ror - lUn tmruux icuuitcd stronr resolutions and an address, setting forth thepracticability and utility of the project. They recommended that the road chould commence at Cincinnati, and, rnn- ning through Indiana and Illinois, terminate for the present at St. Louis. But in one of their resolutions the idea of continuing it further is advanced. It says, "a project of a railroad irom C IjOuis to uaniornia is a matter of immediate consequence to the weatem States and to the whole country, and we believe it practicable, probable, and de manded by the necessities of our Califor nia brethern and the best interests of the American people," The report adopted proceeds to calculate the chances for the succss of the enterprise. The road, it is supposed, can be made at a cost of about five millions of dollars, and with a subscription of three millions to commence with, its successls considered beyond contin gency.. It is proposed to raise this three millions as follows : from the city of Cincin nati, one million ; from the county of Hamil ton, one half million ; Indiana and Illinois, about a half million each; and the city of St. Louis, a half million. That these sums can be raised there seems to be little or no doubt. On last Saturday vote of the citi zens of Cincinnati was taken as to whether that city would subscribe the million of dol lars a?kcd as its proportion and the proposi tion was carried by an immence majority. Should this enterprise succeed, and the road be completed through, even to St. Louis, it will present a maginificent specta cle. A man may then Leave Cincinnati after breakfast in the morning and take tea in St. Louis tte same evening." Thus pas sing, in one day, over an amount of territory which has often reqired twenty days' -hard travel and now, by our best' steamboats, .re quires not less than three or four. Keutuchy Yeoman, A party of wags in, London, having hon ored real Jonathan, asked him what kind of a country America was replied : 'Sir, every thing in America is on a grand scale. Our mountains are stupendous; oar rivers aredeep our plains are interminable, and our forests have no beginning, our trees tower to the akies, our miles are twice, as long as yours, our inls sweeter nor jelly; nd then, (here he toox a piece or money uut ui uia poejtei ana budit . on the table) just look at our"-dol lars!. " -v r - . : " " ' , j - ,. Many ; people drop a tear at the sigh of distress pence. . i " . f r V! : who would do better to drop a aix- TITE WEATHER AND THE ! CROPS. Mutable as April eenerallv is. this month has proved more so than ever before in our time. Seasonable when it first approached, it changed to mid-summer almost in a day: ' and then, changing again, on Sunday last we had ice, and on Monday the lbth, at ten o'clock, A. M. the temperature wa3 forty- three degrees Fahrenheit just eleven above freezing. The 9th of April, 1845. there was a similar change, destroying fruit of all Kinas, save the Diaet bery and thestrwDerry, both of which are indigenous and generally grow in places somewhat sheltered from the blast.. Six days later than the same period in 1845, though -vegetation has not made father progress than it had then, we . experi ence" "thirty degrees Fahrenheit, and the weather much colder than 'it has t been in this region for thirty-odd years. On Sunday last we had snow. It was a novel., sight the snowflakes insinuating themselves among the bloming trees, and falling upon clover and trreen erass. W learn that the frost on Sunday night has in all probability destroyed all the fruit: and judging from past experience, we should say there was little from Raleiegh to the mountains, and none at all from this place Northward to Canada, where we suppose vegetation, is yet too dormant to be. serious ly affected by any frost. We have seen it stated that the peach and plum buds were killed in the New England States, b' germi nating during the unusually mild days in December last. A friend just in from the country informs us that the forests are black and withered, as the result of Sunday night's rost. . : , We learn that the crops of Wheat in this and the neiffhborinff Counties were ooking extremely well, but we fear that they have been seriously injured. ; Added to this, the season has been very dry here for sjme time past ; and unless we have rain soon, Oats and Corn, with vegetation gen- erally, must suffer materially on that ac- . T- T r. T J count. icaieign oianaara. An Unlrnoicn City broxight to light. The Courrier des tats Unis states that an ancient city has been accidentally discovered in Asia Minor, situated on the borders of the old kingdoms of Pontus, Cappadocia and Galatia. Seven temples and about two hun dred house have been found, although in a partially ruined condition. Dr. Brunner. who has visited these structures, has not, as yet, been able to find any inscription, or bas relief, that could fornish the least traces to the name or histroy of this city, situated in the midst of extensive excavations which no traveller has been known 'ere now to visit. Patrirule. Mr. John Knepley, ' a very respectable and much esteemed citizen of Harrisburg Pa. was killed by his own son, Davia; On rut? 1 Itrr "iuti The - son, ? pears, has been for some time afflicted with insanity, but not to such a degree that con finement was necessary. The son and father were both in a room together, when the for mer, without any visible provocation, picked up a loaded gun and fired it at hk father. The ball took effect, and he fefifiistantly dead. The painful occurrece has produced much distress among the friends and acquain tance of the deceased Tiead the ATettpaper$. John H- Pren tice, in his recent valedictory on retiring from the Editorial chair, which he had filled for forty-two years, gives the follwing good advice: . " No man should be without a well-conducted newspaper. Unless he reads one, he is not upon an equal footing, with his fellow-man who enjoys such advantage, and. is disregardful of his duty to his family, in not affording them an opportunity of acquir ing a knowledge of what is passing in the world, at the cheapest possible teaching. Show me a family without a newspapers, and I venture to say that there will be mani fest in that family a want of amenity of manners and indications of ignorance, most strikingly in contrast with the neighbor who allows himself such a rational indul gence. Young men especially should read newspapers. , If I were a boy, even of twelve years, I would read a newspapers weekly, though I had to work by torch light to earn money enough to pay for it. The boy who reads well, will learn to think and analyze, and if so, he will be almost sure to make a man of himself, hating vicious in dulgence, which reading is calculated to be get a distaste for." Baltimore Schools. The whole "number of public schools in Baltimore is twenty-six, of which one male and two female .are high schools, twenty-one are grammer, schools, and three primary schools. The whole number of scholars is about seven thousand; the number of teachers ninety-nine-of whom thirty-six are females and sijty-three males. The cost of sustaining the schools in 1848 was $60,000 of which 18,937 was received as tuition fees from scholars, and the residue from the school levy and other sources. The estimated expenses of the present year are about $68,000. The steamer Herman has arived ; at New York, having left Southampton on the even ing of the 26th March, with one hundred and twenty passengers, . A RARE BIRD. Mr. Alexander Mitchell, an old and res pectable Whig of Eaton, Ohio being urged by some of his political friends to apply for the post onice in that place, declined the proposition and published his reasons in the following communication in the Eaton Reg ister : . A, " Consistency Forever. I strndersand that many of my friends wish to recommend me for Postmaster in Eaton. Home . have solicited me on the subject. Although I feci greatfuL for their kindness and good intention, I' cannot consent to have any pretensions for that office. It is a nice little office, and I should like well to have it, if it could be- obtained tcith honor and cotiMsten? ty. If there was a vacancy by death or resignation, or otherwise, I would like to fill the place. But as a consistent Whig, I am still opposed to party proscriptions. In 1840 the whigs mivertaUy cried out against proscription, tin-panning and gerry taander- ing as the most abommble things on earth. And they denounced the saying, "to the victors belong the spoils' as a vile locofoco principle. Now all these things to we ap pear as vile and abominable as ever. They seem worse in tlie whigs than in the others; as vice is more odious in a professor of reli gion than in a common sinner. Consistency always compels me to oppose these anti-republican things in every party. I was opposed to the proscription of Isaac Stevens, for his political opinions. And the same consistency requires me to oppose the removal of the present incumbent for the same cause. 1 Jsnow of no complaint against him, only his political opinions. If I was more poor and needy than I am, and if the office .was ten times as good as it is, and it was certain that it eould be obtain ed, under present circumstances, as a man of principle, I could not consent to have it. And it is very uncertain whether I could be successful. But some tell me that the re moval is certain, and that I may as well have the place as ay other. This is like the boy stealing appels. He concluded that as other boys were about stealing them he might a irell heve them. In the Bhameful squabbles about tne Post office, some years ago, I stood aloof, and kept my hands clean, .and I feel deter mined n.)t to dirty them now. I supported Gen. Taylor, because he was not an ultra Whig, and proposed being the President, not of a party, but of the whole people. And I fondly hope his administration will not be disgraced by political intolerance and pro scription. ALEX; MITCHELL. LATE FROM MEXICO. By the arrival here yesterday of the schoo ner Water Witch, Captain Brown, from Vera Cruz the 3d instant, we have received files of papers from the city of Mexico to the 27th, ultimo, and the Vera Cruz Arco-Iris to the 2d instant, both dates inclusive. Don Francisco de Arrangoiz has been ap pointed Minister of Finance, in room of Senor Penay Cuevas, who has resigned. The pa pers at the capital speak in high terms of the abilities of Senor Arrongois, who brings to the performance of his duties the fruits of observations made during many years resi dence in foreign countries. The gentleman is well known in this city, where he was a long time Consul, The Arco-Iris of the 2d instant, contains an account, taken from the Guardia Nation al, of a convention agreed on between the Government of Guatamala and the General of the insurgent army, Don Valentin Cruz, by which peace is restored to that hitherto distracted Republic. The latter appears to have dictated terms to the Government, which, however, seem moderate. The Re public was to be fo'rtwith reorganised on the' basis of a fair representation. : The date of the convention'is the 28th of January. In reference to the partial insurrection in the Southern part of the District of Mexico, it is stated that the insurgents had been met and routed by the Government troops under Gen. Alvarez. It is, however, believ ed by many that it will yet give Herrera's Administration much trouble before it is perfectly extinguished. Snake-Bites and Iodine. -Dr. Withmire (in the N. West Med and Surg. Journal for January,) recommends the tincture of iodine as a cure for the bites of venomous reptiles in man and beast, which he says he has used with success in the bites rattlesnakes, copper-heads. &c ' It puts an end to the swel ling and pain , in from twelve to -sixteen hours. . He paints the bitten part over the whole spelling with tbree or four coats of the tincture twice a day,, renewing the ap plication, when the swelling extends, ' which it often does at first application, if made while tile wound is fresh ' ' If your sister, while tenderly engaged in a tender conversation, witn her tender sweet heart, asks yon to bring a glass of water from an adjoining room, you can start on the er rand, but you need not return- You will not be missed, that's certain; we've seen that tried, . Don't forget this little boys.. Qnanddry. A baker with both arms in the dough up to the elbows, and a flea? in the leg of his: trowsers. Depressing Case of Ifydrcphobiar---A letter "from a friend at Newberrytown, in this county, . states that on : the 6th insfc, Mr. (lonrade t immermaly residing neat Kister's Tavern in that township, was at tacked 'with hydrophobia, and suffered all the horrible torture of that terrible disease. During one of the paroxysms he succeeded m releasing tumseii irom uie , corus wiui which his arms had been secured, and cast-. ing his attladants from him seized a razor and put an end to his existence by cutting his. throat. He leaves a wife and child to mourn his death. Dr Oren, of NeweSrry town, Dr. Deam of Cumberland were the at tending physicians. ;. , - i, .u York (Pa.) Republican, 2faafi.-TheJ existing state of. affairs in ' this uneasy Island , is darkly though some what yagufely described as .follows, by the BostonTrveller: ',U ;-t ' The following is an extract from a latter received ii this city, dated Aux Cayes, , March 10 i h:-Tf v: rL". 11 The monopoly law is in operation, which a death! blow to American, commerce; is there is a complete stagnation to all busi-. ness. "Anothfef revoloa is expected shortly . to break out. The lives of foreigners -have been publicly threatened.. One of the black generals, who has great influence among the black race, openly declares that in a tew days L the bloody work of .murder and assassiona- tion will take place, and that he shall com- mence thisltime, with the foreigners ISeyCr ral assassinations have been' made during the last fey days, by order of the Govern- ment. The state or the country .is truiy alarming; the greatest anxiety reigns in ; every hear4 each one apprehending his life and property to be in danger." I .: A , Other letters speak also ot muraersana assassinaticHs, and of the extreme anxiety of . foreigners ifor their personaf safety. It is difficult to iaccount for the alleged hostility to foreigners ; but it is said they are suspect-r ed of secret opposition to the Government. The recognition by England and France of, the Dominican Republic, is also supposed to have increased the dislike of the Haytiena to n . i ' 1 .. - ' i ' : ..... ' . f'j. 1 . ... ' AN ODD ANSWER " Hallo, there," said a farmer to an Irishman busily engaged at one of his cherry trees, " by what right do 'you take those cherries f" -" In faith, my friend," said he, " by my rigbt aUaUU OUXTJ i v mm Item for Gardener. In Dr. Munson's address before tbe New Hampshire Horti cultural Society occurs the following passage on grafting. We commend it to our Lind ley & Co., as worthy of a fair experiment : "The cherry has, with us, generally been considered jdifficult to be engrafted except in Ffhrnnrv ;'But this is an' error.. " If 'the. scions are taken off any time in March, and inserted any time in April, within three weeks afterwards, I find they are as certain of growing; ;as the apple, graft. , The cherry ', has been latterly successfully engrafted up on tlje wild cherry. In Switzerland the T pear tree is said to be successfully engraft. -ed on to the mountain oak, a' tree of the ' same natural order, in soil where the oak thrives, but the pear would not. We, have the lilac growing well, both engrafted , and bedded in the common oak, and it gives a tree without suckors and very thrifty?' I ; ' : Ireland-j-A bold system .of policy has ' been recommended by Sir Robert Peel for the renovalion" of Ireland. The Retails aro not given with sufficient minuteness to ena ble one to form a definite idea of the mode and manner in which the system is to bo enforced ; but it may be safelysaid that if the means jbr its application by the gorvern ' ment are ait all commensurate Jfith the com prehensive design of the policy, it is as, mas- -terly as it its bold. I Mv'iXS 2, Sit Robert's plan for the rehef orjjeland waa introduced in a speech in the House of. Commons. r He assumed that mere pallia tive measures had been tried long enough long enough) to demonstrate their own ineffi ciency in view of any permanent ameliora- , tion of the evils under which Ireland suffer ed. The remedy ho proposed was the intro duction of new proprietors, who would enter with capital upon the cultivation! of the land, ' with new feelings, and inspiring nevPeOnfi- dence into .society ; in Ireland. He would ( not propose to gain such an advantage by . any yiolatiaii df the rights of property. But he thought it would be possible for th Gov- ernment, with) the sanctionof the House to v devise the means-whereby it might be gained without such yiolatfon. ; , , George Ljttle has been appointed May. shall for the, state of . Noth Carolina in tho place of Wesley Jones remoM t Will tieiVir6tah.Jcxplain there was ani other cause for. this removal than a politfeial oner-pJVeicoer Rcpub, held on Friday vs&i e ver the dead body, of a negro, discovered in the lower edgeof; thia District, near ' the vLexington line. . Tho ' ;' Jury, in identifying the body, found it to be - that - jTpi Applhig, the slave of Ma ' !n ti Posey, eharged withe'mnide-?of Hr?U'J Posey, who, as our . readers recollect, waa. J'k found dead jumonthpr six weeks since, with - - i. 'irij-i: .o..-1-s : wains . pi ; tiouo ua uct inrrsvu. . h . a" '-! TO L ' 'I . 3 '1: 4 i. . - 1' i r . ' - .. .; ." ,) , . - - - . J 1 LP fJ , " - , , ' 4
The Carolina Republican (Lincolnton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 24, 1849, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75