Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Aug. 31, 1853, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, 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
From the Washington Republic. THE "SATANIC PRESS" AND THE "NIG GER ORGAN." I? We are mui'ti concerned to see these modej of morality falling together by tho ears instead of illustrating in their outward walk and con versations those maxims to whieh they ostensi bly pay such "respect.. ',".''. Wo' advert to their controversy Cur the purpose of recording uum protest against either tf these journals ho rug: regarded as. exponents either of j a. I .........I.-. . .1? ..,.,,.;..... A0 ' the manners or morals of rhe American press. Tlio Immediate caus6,of the controversy seems to hav Uqen this ;. some geutlemeriat aJ3can dinavian tfadiepiu thought proper tocpitfplj nient tho. American press io.v the, nauio.of. the NeW York HerqU, and thereoon Mr. Peter Mao Grawtcr, who4e ; tpor fe$$im$hkt Crated .at the ctljrei bv.the failureof iis fUx. and we mat add, bis wooi'theory, and who -was re ceatlv ridiculed in ihiO'NaHotihl Dhhociat undor an allegorical, wrap per 'so very thrri that all readi-w ly recognise ykf mstmguisueu. rpwiantnropisr t wno insula uio uuiuauiijtcaiuiuuu hiu vuiumuo of ia''trg4ji the affront Jnered to'fhf Dress in the inwt indjnaut manner:. Whether Mr. MacGrawler, 9je haseonypuhaod tfitb , the colored brothe,towp aspirei to gdif ( ' a navvjsjjapcr uy.tumsi4iK.ean3iuij aoisatiauuc tairf it is. that a haebesea-editiNL of hi Buraldt oowuJe.rsUw44r'bwte,!f4de of ttto-.Athuiiic, and havioggot theroageby aJ,,eic COuisa-through time, and discovered the accurate caicuiaiiou oi- nis vu pnrjcunc ' rilitti he opens his Lattery-with the charge 'of Judje Noah iii 1611, usfolbws ;; . finding hitusoj unmalested flils peaCea' ble commuuitjV cither, by peinal violence",5 hf the censure of the press,- or by the.8rQiig,hH4 ottne law. ue fovea buuui uuuer uis ui assailing Go rej nmentt Congress, jneii io,- high tationsrmen in business,. puHio institutions the character and creditof the nation rcligioa, private reputation,femal'e character, insqtutiun, .la, euqrts judges, and .fevery supject every I man; every pl:iee or .ttiing, -a , waiciue ;?ou4a, level, bis shattd." i ' V, '''1.fc 'To this flatteriHg character IrMcGrawler Toluafeers the follo'.viwgcompjimentary certifi cate ; !' - : '' j' i - 'He came to, this country some twenty, year ago, and immediately took the first tank through the daily press es a moral Thug. He attacked the timed, the gentle tho generous, anithe for givingi No ioaocence or courtesy : was i proof against his brutality. No amouitt -of forgive nnsa or forbearance softehed him. No exteot of public service, fio simplicity or purity of private . lifs, no siugte-souled devotion ,io a greas 4aqa ever eo&en'ed jiis ruffianism. lie li?ed op de . famation. sFahder. obloquy, beastlines8-lies. Of course such conduct could not go unftoojuged4 even 4n New lork. It ho xiad lived turtner South,-he wpald have been simply beatea to death or shot. Here he was simply horsewhip ped. .- Seven times iaho public streets of this citywas Bennett liorsewhlpped. Horsewhipped in open day, aiul the lash wejl laid on his moral Jy scrofulous back. -Thia does not inciude'sun dry kicking out of hotels" wbich he received, or the crushing ceremony-of a'cdmpany leaving the table when'jho ventured, to sit down among them." :- p ': ': - " ; The Sataaio (defenders were, it .seems, like Copenhagen taken by surprise, when this terri ble bomb exploded amongst them.and him whom Mr; MacGrawler - regard as the ; Beelzebub of the concern being absent, the residuary demons take counsel altogether, andbaving made up the following compound of combustibles, they hurl it at the head of their assailant, who will doubt less reply with a broadside from the Asineum : 'The particular assault of our Fourierite phi losophera upon Mr. Bennett just now is in keep ins with the sort of manly courage and decency which have ever characterised the Tribune. Mr. Bennett is now absent in Europe, and if we recollect aright the Tribune has en several pre .vioos occasions .availed itself of his absence for an exhibition of its intrepidity. Greely is a bold f man at a long distance, while face ,to face he disarms hostility from his lack-lustre expression and appearance of dirt and imbecility. In Con gress he cowered like a spaniel before the cross examination of indignant members; but safely back in New York he was fearless as a lion and fierce as a tige; Daily issue of the Herald fifty thousand!" ! These arc ferocious phrases and portend dan gerous results.! But tho Satanic camp seems to consider itself under no obligation to meet the gallant ' MacGrawler in open combat. They trust to the natural strength of their defences, and content themselves, like the Mexican revo lutionists, with shooting round a corner, and shouting out uifier every discharge with great animation. Their war-cry, chosen to dispirit the enemy, is MTbe circulation of the Herald is 50,000!" , They thereby either intimate that their ammunition is not to be exhausted, or im itate the philosopher in Horace who consoles himself under popular odium by contemplating the uSteif v' in arcam. Into this controversy we ' mav not eiitosr 1 but if the disputants tell the truth of each other the grand jury of Now York did not ha.il perioral iw duties by adjourning without including them both in the same indict ment with the city fathers. We avuil ourselves of this occasion to state the following 'inhuman ciiormity lately perpe- trated by t 11C J.I The citv oi. New 1 Or- leans was founded upon a commerce in great nart the product ot free-labor,. It has been visi ted by a scourge 'which rivals the plagues, of Venice, or t JUonuon, or oi Smyrna. -Its sons and daughters' are" braving the pestilence and devoting their time and means aud lives to the care of the sick and the sopnlchre of tho dead, without regard to state, creed, or clime. Men, having human: hearts, are everywhere sending to this scene bi sacriike aud sulieriiig sympathy aid relief. The Triluhn notes the mortality to philoso- ftbize on thelerrors of annexation., It deduces rom the goluis. and tears of New -Orleans the doctrine, thai if ' we attempt to extend the area , of Slavery, w e Khali extend uie area of war and '' pestilence." It warns the workingmen of the Korth and West they thouid resist this tropical annexation M'i:h swamps and slavery;" and jo cosely illustrates the consequences by cuts re pccsetftiug alavc .carpenter and ; blacksmiths offered for sale, and intimates that hereafter we may anticipate! lawyers, doctors, and merchants offered in like (manner. The connexion we do nofboweve p4seive. aa it wanders off into ren- eral declamation; but the maliguity of selecting the visitation oi a oreauiui mortality tor an un feeling and unfounded intimation that such are' the conacquenaos of annexation of slave territo ry, is worthy of all comlemnauou ; it certainly never emanated from a heart that would relieve woe or resent indignity. In the meantime will no aspiring demon arise who. in the absence or' the Lncifer of the Satanic Press, will pome' forward and peril himself in an issue with tho Czar of Niggerilom t Adopting the Socratic method of our Satanic contemporary, wo may ask, shall the parties re sort to the streets1 of New York after the next rain and, with' the assent of the fathers, throw mud ad nauseam ? Or shall we order a black omnibus, and coffins for two, to Bladensbur ? We can place a pair of Derringer's and a copy of Millengen's History of Duelling at their dis posal. The book contains the best code for ad justing an affair of honor in any manner, from a cow-skin to a; ca&non. It also, contains three choice precedents of duels fought by clergymen; these are calculated to quiet the scruples of pious and peaceful MacGrawler. '". We note also a new edition of Sir Jonah Barrington, in wbich the code of "Irish fire-eaters" is copied as be queathed by the father of the author. ' Let u hear. Shall we send the tools and the autnomiea ? . ooau we oruer me ncaree ana tn sarcophagi ? Shall We lose onr tihiloaonhnr w mvImoK . Ot- .11 j ! .1 i " "i . 1 V " ' ' the proverbs and the noberbs V Shall we lose our Satanic contemporaries, who bring us tee news from the uttermost parts of the earth, be side a great deal which has no assignable ori gin T Shall wci await the return of tho Satanic chief, who is .now 'abroad on his walk, and who , - - 1 r ."'n-uw ua no ! irom ms antecedent wo loar would, adexcmplu magnt magislr rosfeea4 pfVfoocking hi pistol," much rather.'eock hi tail ?" i$'i& - What -Bay the . reorese'ntative imps I .What fays the ammander of all the "euffeesia-Iiastri fly, what saya Col. Wobp, tfto great; JJiew x or k ui(,uuilU in 1U mailers ui lire uuhw, ujwb i" moral proposition.? Qugnt a circulation of fifty thousand, only limited by . the ' incapacity of American : genius o print a larger number, to fijjfat on-equaltcrmsA smaller circulation ? Wuatsav UolOnet. Webu? , ertously, if editors cannot differ like gentle- man tlmii clw.nl.l mt tiffmA tlifl ' Trim:!.! spntl- men, thev should not offnd the moral senti meut ef the country and degrade the American press by quarrelling like blackguards. REMEMBRANCE OF THE SABBATH. i memory 10 a uurao ui uioooiiig, o iii ii.umMi i cither a jrtilbus or a vicious past. Despite of j human rvlt u fulfals its functions, painting i upon thelelicate canvass of the brain bright I and lovely images before which the heart glows-'; with Happiness, or suetcning gnastiy pnanioms ; that "hire hours of agony in moments, and wiu k not vanish. 1 . Metbory may be a beautiful er a hideous gut, ' .' i . i . a calm eve oi neaveniy siara winning uunn boos into our breasts, or a heavy night of tem- Dostsadashin; from our vision the clear sky wbiol. we must behold or else despond. It is 'the clorioas moonlight dancing o er tho wase .op waters on wmeu our iuo-uir. imca, ui threatening Uiunder-cloud pregnant with des tr action and ffl-owinff in wrath. ; JBy -tha holy light of memory men have traced rolde'n oath whose bes-inninir without end is bliss, and whose radiant arch is eternity. By its baleful beams have men turned iroin tae pursuitftrue happiness, and followed seem ing pleasure until, igiitit fatutis like, it has led theaf into noisome pools whence arise exhala tions pestiferous and fatal. , aiemory xs ine crucioie oi me miuu m wmuu ouf purpose is exposed to the tire of affliction. Dross may float at first upon the surface, but the'heaf of the flame and the infusion of purer 'material will etheria'.ize the grosser ingredients fancTthe immaculate ore will renvain. That ore f is'virtuous resolution, and it will not become mingled again with the earthly substance that destroyits lustre. Memory is of the past and of the future too, w a much as it yields to that future the hues of the past and forms its outline. Circumstan- j'ces fill up the prescribed boundaries, aud bring out in strong reliet tne delicate tints wtuoh flicker from what has been. Our recollections regulate our life, and he who remembers well and rightly cannot easily go astray. His thoughts being turned so often into the by-gone, acquire a dirjetion they do not.vary from when permitted to waudvr into the future. Early lessons, gentle teachings, holy coun sels, stored faithfully in the memory, and oft referred to in after years, arc a faithful guide to conduct. Their quiet beauty and their pure wisdom steal with their undying brightness e ven through the heavy folds of custom, and par tially' illume the yet untravelled caverns of time. Remembrance is drowned in the excitement and bustle of the world. Hurried on by a thousand mundane novelties, occupied in cha sing shadows that eludu constantly our eager grasp, dazzled by the prospect of ever-retreating happiness, and by ambitious longing, we turn not to the expanding pathway which fol lows backward to our cradle. Did we oftener recall the peaceful home, the simple socg, the smilingchildren, the guileless sport, which were once our only joy, and that little joy was paradise, wo should be oh, how much happier! Innocence would then come back to us in the beau'.e ub forms of childhood, and vice and temptation would retreat before their conquering serenity. We would live a gain the true life of contentment, and a lot rarely granted to man's weak waywardness would be ours. Bui we must think, we must remember some times. Early nature, now and then, resumes her pristino sway ; her yoke is easy, for it is twined with the flowers of youth, whose fra grance doth not all decay, even though their petals droop and pale. Occasions come, and positions are feltj and scenes present themselv es, when memory rushes irresistibly upon the mind, and carries it into almost forgotten realms. Bitter things may bo tasted in those realms, and odious sights be visible. Tears and trem bling may result from this sudden retrospect ; but there will be some gleam in the darkness a gleam that will afford comfort and exhibit dangers hidden before, or concealed by exterior attraction. Days will and do come for nature created such days when we have the strength, the will, and the courage to look back. Such days are the Sabbath ; days for reflectjion, memory, and refjrm. They cannot unbar their windows of light too often, sinco the light is soothing to the heart and balm to the troubled conscience. The coming of the Sabbath should be a sacred and a happy period ; its each return should find tho worlding stronger, nobler, purer, ad vanced a pace nearer unto Heaven. Sweet Sabbath, ye approach like an univer sal deliverer into the land of bondage, and strike off the chains in which the spirit is bound. Ye restore the freedom to think of the past and of the future, of God and goodness, and, afford the golden hour to practice one to obtain the other. Sabbaths should be white days in our existence, and no deed of ours should spot their purity. They should be passed meekly and happily, and remembered with holiness, not as different periods, but as one pure whole. League memory with the Sabbath, and when the mind treads reverently by the tomb of bu ried years, there will be found flowers blossom ing above the graves. There will be no mourn ers above the sepulchred ashes ; but happy fa ces and fair forms will be gathered about the burial-places, the faces and forms of the minis ters of time, and they will smile to think that those beneath the ground were kindly cherish ed by the pilgrim who walks amid the past to obtain strength for tho future. That pilgrim will be yourself, reader, if you "remember the Sabbath to keep it holy," and you will move with joy by those dear graves, until an angel shall meet you. there aud kiss your brow with immortality, and bear you emparadised in her 'transparent arms upward, where the stars live and whore your soul s home shines. Littlx IIeathcx. A certain Sunday school teacher was in the practice of taking up a col lection in his juvenile class for missionary ob jects every Sunday; and hisbox received scores of pennies which might otherwise have found their way to the drawers of the confectioner and toy-man. He was not a little suprised, however. 'one Sunday, to find a bank bill crushed in a- mong the weight ol copper. lie was not long in finding it to be of a broken bank ; and on asking the class who put it.thcre, the donor was soon pointed out by his classmates, who had seen him deposit it, and thought it a very benevolent gift.. "Didn't you know that this bill w-as good for nothing ?" said the teacher. "Yes, answer ed the boy." "Then what did you put it in the box for?" "I didn't s'poso the little heathen would know the difference, and so it would hn just as good for them.--Knickerbocker. !'. : : ! Flogoep. A scene transpired in this city this forenoon that is all the talk. A married lady of respectable character had been insulted by a person who wears pants. The knowledge of this insult coming to the ears of the husband and another relative, it was agreed to take sum mary teageance on the delinquent. Tlje lady was armed with a raw-hide and the narti. went to the place where the guilty one was do T m.. . . . ' , U1"J was a ins business. 1 he husband and tha rlAt;v. then- seised and held him, and the lady admins istered a severe cowbiding. The affair was witnessed by a large company. It is the latest application of women's rights and won't be vert Tjooular with that cbuiK nf r)Qi;v., But the people said amen. t : MJiifumhiiM nh; 1, ; k " '. w; UVUI HVU. .v BLACK. AND WHITE. SumSBY IJf TIIS SoUTHBKW STATES. BT A CaS- olinian', is the title of a pamphlet, whose clear 'and forcible reasoning, and calm; manly dignity of tone demands the respect otevery weii-wisu-er to our Union, and of every profound thinker in the land. Its perfection as to style, alone would render j its perusal a pleasure to the classical reader, i men j they shall rise from its pages with a more while its elevated views of life and the deep en- j tolerant spirit, and with a deeper love for their thusiaam that breathes throughout its pages, I bretBrcn in the &outh. National Democrat. tempered by that spirit of charity and respect j ; piTTt rr vv TtT? OP. iTPn for the feelings and opinions of others, which ; HIE SABBATH BL ABROGATED? every where characterizes the christian gentle- j W? have received an official copy of the man, must have us effeeu on the most su-1 German petition to the Newark (N. J.) Com oerticial mont Council, presented some time since, Q6- The elegant co.u tesV of its larguago may ! maM. viual peal of those laws which well put to the blush the authors of those viru-! forbid ' Sabbath tippling and Sabbath dose lent vituperations whieh aradailv vomited forth wtjP?. thGr with the reply and refusal of bv the fanatical Dresses in the .North. I In glancing at this much debated subject of slavery, we shall do no more than touch on some points of difference between Northern and SoutheriT domestic institutions which seem to have been overlooked by our zealous reformers, probably because in the language of our author, " To preach distant reform is very cheap phil anthropy, the cheaper in proportion to the dis tance. The feeling of self-satisfaction exists without the necessity of personal sacrifice." It is no longer a question of doubt as to the only means, or at least the speediest means by which the African race can be intellectually elevated are precisely those which God in his wisdom has permitted to be used in the South ern States, and which Northern fanatics so bit terly deplore fanatics, who would shun the bed-side of a poor siek negro and conide- them selves degraded by attendance on them, while tho fairest and loveliest of Southern women would be found watching over them, comforting them with kind words and attending t their wants with a solitude no white servant ever experienced in this same loving land Of the North. Any one who has ever been on a plantation must have been struck with the differentitreat ment received by the slaves from their owners, and that shown towards the domestics, either whito or black, in tho North. Tho cold indifference the hard, unsj-mpa-thiz'mg manner of the Northern employer, who, by intemperate languag?, (languagu which, if heard by the very fanatic who uses it without scruple in the North, on a plantation, would have been published from Maine to Louisiana,) endeavors to grind out of the poor emigrant the work in one day which a Southern negro would not think of doing in two. for a miserably pit tance scarcely sufficient to put the daily bread in the mouths of his starving family; this, we any, contrasts strongly and strangely with the Southern owner, who cares for his slave in sick ness and in health, and frequently lavishes up on him the attentions of a father to a petted child. Very different, too, is the manner of the Southern mistress to her house-servants, brought up from infancy in the arms of her negro nurse, whoso kindness she repays in .her old age by the fond attentions of a daughter to her mother. Very different, we say, to the Northern lady, whose servants are with her to-day and gone to-morrow, of whose habits she knows nothing, aud whose honesty she is continually suspect ing. Ever on the watch to detect faults and even crimes, there is not the slightest sympathy between them, and not unfrequently have we known the most violent abolitionist in theory the most exacting tyrant in practice. Without doubt the system of domestic service, as pursued in the Northern States, is a social evil, the injurious effects of whioh is everywhere felt throughout the " length and breadth of the land." The fact of the Irish population, from whom the principal part of Northern domestics are derived, being Roman Catholics, and their em ployers Protestants, produces at once a feeling of distrust, and, in many cases, of absolute en mity between servant and mistress. Excepting in a few noble instances the mis tress takes no interest whatever in the religious exercises or the intellectual development of her help as the Northern term is and not unfre quently keeps them from the mass which she considers an idolatry fur months, without the slightest compunction. And thus, hundreds of sewing-girls who on their anival in the States, were modest and honest creatures, ready and willing to work and relying with a perfect "faith, on their devotional observances to keep them from evil, are brought ficst from compulsion and then from indifference to negiect their religious duties, until at last arriving easily and swiftly at crime, they are driven to swell the fstering population of criminal vagrants. Then thous ands of dollars are spent to reclaim these miser- ables, when a few kind words of advice, and an earnest encouragement of their spiritual duties j an countries, where the practical recognition of in the first place would have been all that was j the Sabbath is a thing almost unknown, with required. j especial reference to r rauce under her Reign O philanthropic women of the North, bow lit-! of Terror, before which was swept from cxis tle do you guess, in your burning aeal for the tence every vestige of R ;'.igioi:, Virtu.-, llanpi- iv um, u. iuc ocuci oigus nuu heart-burnings which your roof covers in, in the j uigm auu ijuv, iiiiio uu juu guess jiow mucti i of shrinking sensitiveness is hidden under ap- parent stolidity how much of real, generous and warm hearted devotion is chil.ed and re pressed by your haughty indifference. Surely ! there is a heavy responsibility resting upon you, ; which you will uot bo die more apt to see, by ' cultivating only that philanthropy, which, in ' the words of our author, " leaves all untouched ' most abundant harvests at home, for distant ' I fields, where there is moro to minister to a ro- ' j mantic sentiment." Let us contrast this state of j ! thiugs with that in tho bcuijktud South. Says j , the work before us" Already docs the teach-! ' in": ol tho fcltive rank with rim al-iv.t,.l.l..v i . , . . , .. : - : to his dutv to his ,.!itlirti - n,l nn ,.t svlemn sense of responsibility are conspicuous everywhere. 11 wo inav lud.m hv tHk rhiir.-hn- ., . . j .. . .' ? "" ms culture than j can possibly fall to the lot of those who are born ! to the heritage of toil, that begins with earliest i childhood, aud endure not onl V through the sueiiiim oi iue, out uutii us latest sanris mw e ,i i ' ----- c, suujci-18. ins report concludes as loliows : of the negro, oy tho number of cultivated men ; -If tbo German can claim his 'wine and beer ; and women who are bending to the task of tho ; saloon,-; rcstaurantc, &c,' for his gratification, : simplest instruction, or oy the number of slaves. ! ,.,! ' r-..,.r m- ,, ..eZ.. . .. ..., tnat are rismu everv d:iv Uiv ihn ininit n-.iriiir .i . ... i - . ii.. .. . . . . who are constant -and eager 'attendants upon ; government,' the Spaniard may, on account of I ! a w r?MCS Ti su"?;l'-suho,K ajr not j his native peculiarities, daims'for his well-be- doubt that the labor of the mueh-piued African ns th Lull and cock fwht. ,,,., t.l.l... ,.., 1 i is relieved Lv l.ir moro ol reh':i , . T . i-i .77 uajiuuo , nun mu wu yuu;u nave intfO shaken out. Justas much is the condition of duced among us all that is depraved aud cor the Southern slave above that of the Northern runt of European customs, that w,...M - .v "" u .epi at nome uy j us not only as immoral and defective as any of their parents clothed cherished and cared for, j the European nations, but we should haw con is to that of another thrown out on the streets I centrated here all that is vitiating and demoiaN 2t l Pll 4 V S6ek tfheiflca.d -as circum ! iiS ong the whole combined. WhiTo we stances shall best suggest. That it is nnihl a.. - , we a;Z r:yrl:'a f lUS. COUncU . 01 J"' r j : . . , .r first rromptinss. is oossible. we h ,7 lather tnr 1 .1 . - ' J' ""'i also, we say, that it is very rare even in the ! wnite race, and that it has never been, known nf ! th Afrinn Th r tueaKn0WD V , the African. The inferiority of the neo-ro ad- u.kuvv., iuumu wLiieu uas long since ceased to be cntested; it follows that they must ever be as children in intellect to the whites and ever require their fostering care and unfail ing support not to lead the wretched, abandon ed and vagrant life of nearly all the negroes in tho North who have not at least one-thiid whito blood in their veins, and even these, though less slothful than the pure African, are seldom known to make more than 4 comfortable living or to have any aspirations beyond the wearing of finery and the shirking of hari labor; Granting that the African slave has suffered been tortured if you will it must be acknow ledged that on an average they enjoy blessings far above thatbf any other class of laborersln the world, and every day tends towards the amelioration of their condition, as every hour the slaveholder, becomes ' more solemnly im pressed with the thought, "that where the spirit Christian love is infused, there the outward form of slavery not only loses its terrors, but becomes capable of generating great virtues." In conclusion, we would say, let every man who would think dispassionately and wisely on thr .nVl, th fi.rf i, vwiue, ma may are best adapted for our government, and wo look back to the teachings of an honest-hearted 4 r !i .1 ,loJIUt, our mr.,u . ; v.?.j . earIea ! adopted? fellow citizens generally, but on v his this i,-great cause of. disturbance between the North and the South, threatening to bring de struction on the most glorious land in the world, .and sowing seeds of discord between brothers, whose fathers have ; poured out their blood to bequeath to them a heritage of peace, take this pamphlet; and sit down calmly to its perusal ; andriif they are intelligent and unprejudiced the s ummon Council. Some weeks since, as mostjjreaders will remember, there was no lit-, tie excitement among the Gormans of New Jer sey op, this subject ; an excitement manifested particularly against the Common Council, un der the couvictiou that the enforcement of the Sunday laws against their large beer shops and ;dance houses was 'tyrannical," "despot ic," illiberal," etc. Mass meetings were held, at which these sentiments were elaborated and apprved, and, altogher, a state of feeling su pervened among that class of residents which was emiijbus of trouble. The argument in fa vor of keeping said dance houses and grog shops open on the : Sabbath was mainly enibojlied in the following: resolutfon, passed at ouft of their indignation meetings, and incor porated in their memorial to the Common Council : "l&solced, That we (tho German citizens of the city of Newark); regard it as against the spirit of our institutions and as subversive of the principle of freedom and eqaality, to en deavor, by the intervention of the police, to prevent or to fetter the free use of those things which nature and civilization have developed and sanctioned nay, properly speaking, made necessary to the duo development of the race." A declaration of '.his sort offered a wide held of discussion ; but the Newark Common Coun cil, upt interpreting tho enforcement of laws on the statute hookas at all "subversive" of the "spirit" of American iustitutiuus, or of the most ultra il notions of German liberty aud equality, even,jWent on rigidly to enforce the observance of thtS enactment in question. ; meanwhile, how ever, i turning over the German memorial in questjou to tlie consideration of a special com mitted, who, in duo time, reported that in their opinion the German petition .was one of "a ve ry novel character," and "is the Jirst that was ever resented to either State or Municipal au thorities, by any portion of our foreign born citizeas, to nave the laws altered or their exe cution abated, on account of previously formed habits' in their native land." As the issues in volved just as intimately affect other commu nities whero the Gorman element is as eonspio- puous $s in our sister city, in .Now Jersey, wo quote this interesting report at length : "We know of no reason why our 'adopted fellows citizens' should claim any immunities whichf arc denied, and have been since tho foundation of our government, to our native born people. Our laws grant to those who emigrate hither from foreign countries the same frights and privileges and tho same free dom aud iiberty enjoyed by others ; and upuu such liberal terms (of whioh our German born citizens were fully aware before they become such) 'As are granted by no other nation what ever. "The Committee agree fully with the peti tioners that Sunday is the only day of rest for the 'laborious man ;' and they also believe that this day belongs, of right, not only to the labo ring njao, but to all men granted and estab lishedby God himself for the ;good of the race,' and tfiiat our laws founded on the Divine law guarantee to all this day in wiich to worship God according to the dictates of conscience. They shave examined the bill of rights of all the Sfatos of this Union, and hud the day is not set apart for any other purpose, and no works of secular character (works of necessity excepted) or games and pastimes inconsistent with the sacred observanee of tho day should be allywed. Your committee cannot conceive of any?. good reason why those who have come among? us with other habits should claim, un der any pretext whatever, to have set aside the usages; that have been in force for near two hundred years ; particularly when this system has proved conductive to the happiness of our people in perpetuating tho blessings of a free government and tho 'progress of the race' in virtue and intelligence." The; committee go on to quote from history to snow me condition oi tno masses m r.urope- iicss, uud liberty, itiat state ul things tiie committee say, found its necessary termination in despotism; aud they couciulo soc.i would bo theiresult here, if the same unrestrained li cense jihould be given to tho passions of men uuscJiiA)lod iu the eieaie.-its ef s.-il' ooiuro!, and regardJess of a due subservience to religious principles. The ; committee next rehear.-e sundry inci dents illustrative of the growing tendency to immortality, in such of our largo eitie a? have a large resident foreign population, as evidence of a litjjcesshy for tho uuro stringent execution of tho fiiws iu that respect ; and ih.-y trust that the day is far distant when wo shall change the "ouiiud of tho church-going bell" for bands ! . i i i . . , . " . 0i uiu.--$o nun reeiry, uua mo services ' ... . -,. jf pray- j the serlice of God for tho plays aud uptimes, ! ..u..-ri i .. j . . . . . ' oucu iis vru utuiueu o uesoois to tiicir euslav i fandangos ; and the Frenchman, fo opmentjof tho race,' the theatre, tho ball-room, and snch other lilaee.N :is licensed in : I'mi, sr.. ....,.;..,. ,i .v. 'ratification : ..eu; . i r, - . uu uui (jjuui mr uur iiiswiuuous periocti Dint v. we do claim, as Americans, to know what laws ....u ,i . i . ... . ,. . . :""a?rS? 01 tuo beuum8nls moodted in we memorial. "We make L k 'that ar, Hi.l t u.:. V r rT . ueir application, and we freely extend to the natu ralized eitizen all the benefits and rights enjoy ed by our native citizens ; and it is presumed that the foreigner comes among us voluntarily, and when he assumes the duties of citizenship,' a 'decenj; respect for the opinions' of the peo ple of his adopted country should induce him to conform to the laws until such time, at least as he can inform himself what are their practi cal workings," and until he is capable of propo sing better. Then follows a series of resolutions incorpo rating the final conclusions of the committee setting forth that the demands of the Germans are of jsucb a character , as to call forth a prompt,iclear, and .unequivocal refusal on the part of the city authorities to entertain a propo sition so immoral in its tendency, and so de structive to the peace and good order of the community. The Cty Marshal was accordingly directed to enforce strictly and rigorously the laws and ordinanoes for the preservation and tranquility of the Sabbath, ad for the suppression of the traffic in, intoxicating liquors. The report and resolutions were adopted by a unanimous vote of the Common Council. Fom the New York Tribune. ' -UEE AT THE FIVE- POINTS. : " , Hft ? W.0-PENNT MARRIAGE. ( K "Mr. Pease; we want to be married.' Want Ho ps married what for?" t -: ' "Why ywi see, we don't think it is right for us to be lilting together this way iny .onger, and we have been talking over the; matter to day and you see " "Yes, yes, I see you have been talking over the matter! over the bottle and have come to a sort of drunken conclusion to get married.--. When tu get sober you will both repent of it, probably.'" "No, sir, wo are not very drunk how, not so drunk But I what we can think, and we don't think we ate doing right we are not doing as we were brought up to do by pious; parents. Wo have been reading the good things you have done for just such poor wutcasts'as .we are and we want you to try and do something for us." "Read ! Can you read ? Do you read the Bible?" ; "Well clot much lately, but we read the newspapers and sometimes we read something good in them. How can we read; she Bible when we are drunk?" "Do you think getting married will keep you i from getting drunk : i "Yos, for we are going to take the pledge i too and we shall keep it dopend upon that. "Suppose you take the pledge and try that first, and if you cau keep it till you can wash some of the' dirt away, and get some clothes on, then I will marry you. "No: tnat won't do. 1 shall get to trunaing what a poor dirty, miserable wretch I am, and how I am living with this woman, who is not a bad woman by nature, and then I will drink, aud then slue will drink oh, cursed rum ! and what is to prevent us? But if we were marri ed, my wife, yes, Mr. Pease, my wife would say, 'Thomas, she would not say 'Tom you dirty brute,, dou't be tempted;' and who knows but wo might.be somebody yet somebody that our own mother would not bo ashamed of." Hero tho, woman, who had been silent and rather moody, burst into a violent flood of tears, crying "Mother, mother, I know not whether she is alive or not, aud dare not inquire ; but if we were married and reformed, I wouLd make her happy unco more." "I could no longer stand the appeal," said .Mr. 1'., "atijd determined to give them a trial. I have matried a good many poort wretched looking couples,- but none that looked quite so much so as this. The man was hatless and shoeless, without coat or vest, with long hair and beard grimed with dirt, llo was by trade a bricklayer, one of the best in the city. She wore the list remains of a silk bonnet, and something that might pass for shoes, and an old, very old dross, ouco a rich merino, appa rently without any Under garments." "And vout name is Thomas Thomas what?" "Elting, sir. Thomas Elting, a good true name and true man', that is, shall be if you marry us." "Well, well. I am going to marry you." "Are you,? There, Mag, I told you so." "Don't cqill me -Mag. if I am going to be married, I will be by my right name, the one my mother gave me." "Not Mag. Well, I never knew that." "Now, Thomas, hold your tongue, you talk too much. What is your name 1" "Matilda.'; Must I tell the other ? Ye3, I will, and I; never will disgrace it. I don't think I shouild ever been so bad if I had kept it. That bad witman who fiist tempted mo to ruin, made me take a false name. It is a bad thing for a girl tol give up her name, unless for that of a good husband. Matilda Fraley. Nobody kuows mo by that name in this bad city. "Very wel, Matilda and Thomas, take each by the right hand, and look at me, for I am uow going bo unite you in the holy bonds of marriage by God's ordinance. Do you think you are sufficiently sober to comprehend its so lemnity." "Yes, sir. "Marriage being one of God's holy ordinan ces, qannot kept in sin, misery, filth and drunkounessi. Thomas, will you take Matilda to be your lawful, true, only wedded wife ?" "Yes, sir." "You promise that you will live with her, in sickness as well as health, and nourish, protect and comfort her as your true and faithful wife ; that you will be to her a true aud faithful hus band ; that you will not get drunk, and will clothe yourself and keep clean." J "So I will," j I Never mind answering until I get through, j ; You promise to abstain totally from every kind j j of drink that intoxicates, and treat this woman ! kindly, affectionately, and love her as a hus ; band should love his wedded wife. Now all of this, will yoa, here before me as the servant of ' the Most High here in the sight of God in i Heaven, most faithfully promise, if I give you j ' this woman to be your wedded wife?" ; "Yes, I will." "And you, Matilda, on your part, will you promise tho same, aud be a true wife to this ' man ' "I will try, sir." "But do v-tu promise all this faithfully?" ; ; "Yes, si I will." "Then I pronounce you man and wife." i "Now, Tboma-s" says the new wifu, after I J had made out the certificate and given it to 1 her, with an injunction to keep it safely "now pay Mr. Peruse, and let us go home and break the bottle." Thomas felt first in tho right hand pocket, then tho left, then back to tho i ! right, then ne examined the watch fob. ' ; "Why, where is it!" says she, "you had two ' dollars this morning !" I "Yes, I know it, but I have only got twj cents this evening. There, Mr. Pease, take : them, it is alii I have got in the world: what ; more can I ive V Sure enough, what could he do more? I j took them aud prayed over them, that in part ing with the last penny, this couple might have parted with a vice, a wicked, foolish practice which might have reducod them to such a de gree of poverty and wretchedness, that the monster power of rum could hardly send its victims lower. 1 So Tom and Mag were transferred into Mr. aud Mrs. Elting, and having grown somewhat more sober while in tho house, scorned to fully understand their now position, and all the ob ligations they had taken upon themselves. For a few days I thought occasionally of thisf two-penny marriage, and then it become ab sorbed with a thousand other scenes of wretch edness which I have witnessed since I have lived in this center of city misery. Time wore on and I married many other couples often those who came in their carriages and left a golden mirriage fee a delicate way of giving to the needy but among all I had never per formed the rite for a couple quite so low as that of this two-penny fee, aud 1 resolved I never would again.; At length, however, I had a call for a full match to them, which I refused. "Why do you come to me to be married, my friend," said; I to the man? You are both too poor to live sieparate, aud besides you are both horrible drunkards, I know you are.'' "That is j ust what we want to get married for, and take the pledge." "Take thatt first." "No, we must take all together, nothing else will save us.' "Will that I" ''It did one of my friends." "Well, then, go and bring that friend here ; let me hear and sea how much it. saved -him, and, then I wall make up mind what to do ; if I can do you ahy good I want to do it. (' "My friend is at work he has got a good job and several hands working for him and is making money, nd , won't quit till j night Shall I come this evening? , ! "Yes, I will stay at home and wait for jou.j I little expected to see Mm again,! but about 8 o'clock the iservant said that a man and his girl, with a gentleman and lady were waiting in the reception room. I told him to ask the la dy and gentleman up to the parlor nd sit a moment while I sent the candidates for marri age away, being determined never to unite ano ther drunken couple; not dreaming that there waiany sympathy "between the "parties But they would not come op; 'theywaated to see that coaawi-'Miyn'v found the squalidly, xre tehed pair "In company wkh a. tte'jdM3barg.'taao,OK- be wore a fine black co4t;Tilt te3t, gold wateKehaii clean white shift anil cravat, pi?Ii8hed.ca!tskin bqota; and his wife was just aa'neaTaad tidily dressed as anybody's wife, and1 her face beam ed with intelligence, and the way in which she clung to the arm of her husband, as she seem ed to shrink from my sight, told that she was a loving as well as pretty wife. "This couple' says the gentleman, "have come to bo married :" -"Yes, I kuowi it but I have refused. Look at them ; do they like fit subjects for such a holy ordinance;? God never intended those whom ho created in his own image should live in matrimony ike this man and woman. I cannot marry thm." "Cannot ! Why not? You married us when we were worse-off moro dirty worse clothed and more intoxicated." The woman shrunk back a little more out of sight. I saw she trembled violently, and put a clean cambric handkerchief up to her eyes. What could it mean ? Married when they were worse off!; Who were they "Have you forgotten us?" said the woman taking my hands in hers, and dropping on her knees, "have you forgotten drunken Tom and Mag? Wo have not forgotten you but pray for you every day." "If you have forgotten them, you have not forgotten tho two-penny marriage. No wonder you did not know us. 'I told Matilda she need not be afraid or ashamed if you did know her. But I knew you would not. How could you? We were in rags aud dirt then. Look at us now. All your work, Sir. AH the blessing of that pledge and that marriage and that good advice you gave us. Look at this uitof clothes, and her dress all Matilda's work, every stitch of it. Come and look at our house, as neat as she is. Everything ia it to make a comforta ble home; and oh,Sir, there is a cradle i'i oar bed-room. Five hundred dollars already in bank, and I shall add as much more next week when 1 finish my job. So much for one year of a tober life, and a faithful, honest good wife. Now, this man is 'as good a workman as I am, only he is bound down with tlio galling fetters of drunkenness, and living with this woman just as I did. Now, he thinks that he can re forms just as well as mo; but he thinks he must have taken the pledge of the same man, and his first effort sanctified with the same blessing, aud then with a good resolution, and Matilda and me to watch over them, I do believe they will succeed.'' So they did. ; So may others by the same means. I married them, and as I shook hands with Mr. Elting,! at parting he left two coins in my hand, with the simple remark that there was another two-penny marriage fee. I was in hopes that it might have been a couple of dol lars this time but I said nothing, and we part ed with a mutual God bless you. When I went up stairs I tossed the coins into my wife's lap, with the remark "two pennies again, my dear." "Two pennies:! Why husband, they are ea gles real golden eaglas. What a deal of good they will do. What blessings have followed that act." "And will follow the present, if the pledge is faithfully kept. Truly, this is a good result of a Two-Penny Marriage." Some thirty years sinco there lived in Mont pelier, Yerinont.a family of the following des cription : The husband and wife a son and his wifo, tho husband aud his eight children, five sons aud three daughters the husband's father and mother. The ages of the four patriarchs average over eighty years each total age of the grand parents three hundred and twenty two. All the members of this family sat togeth er at the sam e table and worshipped at the same altar. Its head was one of the officers of the town at its organization, in March, 1791, and is now living at the advanced age of 8'J, in October next ; and so vigorous in mental and physical power as to labor daily in his fine fruit nursery, and travel on foot, twice in the week, a mile or more, t6 attend meetings for religious worshtp. We doubt whether a parallel to this extraordinary and prosperous family can be found in the Union. PETER W. HINT ON, Commission and Forwarding Merchant. NO 1, 2 & 3, ROTIIEKY'S WHARF. NORFOLK, VA. Particular attention paid to the sale of Flour, Cotton, Tobacco, and other Produce. Advances made on consignments. Strict attention paid to forwarding and receiv ing Merchandise. I References. Muj. C. L. Hinton, Wake Co., .X. C, Wm riummer, Esq., Warrenton, Warren Co., N. C. P. V,r. HINTON, Rothcry's Wharf. Norfolk Va. May 6th, 18o3. 38 CLO T II I N G Foil TUE FALL OF 1853. 1)URC HASEK s of Clothing arc informed that we are manufacturing tho Largest Assortment of Ciothiug (at wholesale ouly) suitable for the Country-Tradcto be found iu the States. 22L-We do business on the- ONE I'illCE SYSTEM. Orders promptly, filled. An examination of our stock is solicited. HAN FORD & BROTHER, 23 Park Uow, (opposite the Astor louse, N. Y. N. B. We are the largest manufacturers of OILED CLOTHING in the country RUIIBER CLOTHING at the low est market rates. ; . June 14, 1853 S5 w3m 49 Circular. THE scholars in the Female Academy at Salem, N. C, having ialroadr, thus early "in the ses sion, Teachcd as high a number as we can at pres ent accommodate, and applications for admission still continuing to multiply, it becomes my duty to inform the public that I Hhall hereafter poeilioely decline to receive an$ other, scholars than those who have secured placei by prci'i-us application I would, therefore, request Parents and others, wishing to place their daughters, relatives or wards under our care, uot to set out with them for Salem, without having made previous application in wri ting, and then to await sikch vacancies as may oc cur, of which timelv notice will be given them. ROBERT DE SCH WEINITZ, Principal. August 5, 1853. ' 4W (54 $50 REWARD. T) AN AW AY FROM MESSRS MOSS & CO, W) Clarksville, Va., in: March, 1852, a Negro Mau, named HENRY, the property of lane G. Sumner, aged about 23. ; He is about 5 feet G in ches high, of dark complexion, with a bushy head, and has in one of his eyes a yellow speck. He was arrested at Mintonsville, some time during the last year, and committed to Jail, but. escaped the same night. jlle is probably passing for a freeman, as he had done before, in Hertford or Gates county, N. Ci, where he has been, for seve ral years, hired out; I will give the above reward for the said negro, if delivered to me at this place, on or before the 1st of October, or $25 if commit ted to Jail in this State, so that I get him again LEWJS M. ! JIGGITTS, Guardian. Oxford, N. C , Aag. 16. '53. ,: .. 6w 67 Haywood & Scott ARE now opening ia Col Roulhac's new build ing, on Fayetteville St., next door above T. R. Fentress' clothing establishment: ; A fresh Stock of 3rug3, Medicines and Chemi cals. Sunrical Instruments. TJl.lTlfO Oila nvA T)wa I Staffs, Window? Glss arid Glassware, Varnishes ana rutty, faint JSrusnee, Fine Perfumery and Fancy articles, bestjTooth and Hair Brushes, Ex cellent Cigars, Tobacco !and Snuff, Garden and .Field Seeds, &c, &cL i . All of which are offered to their friends and the public upon as favorable terms as can be procured in this market. i. Mr. Scott will devote particular attention to putting up prescriptions for Physicians and Fami lies, at all hours of the day or night, and none but the purest articles will be used. August 2nd, 1853. 6m-63 The Road to Healt Ifil.i HOLLO V AY' a PTr tTT CURE of a disordered Live- tion. "b-J l) s-r i- r . . . . oj a ijcuer jrom Mr. U. W. , 7 Prescott St.. Liverpool. Jut'.! i'.r. To Professor Hollow at f Sir; Your Pills and Ointment !ia.-c t i highest on our sale list of Proprietary '"v for some years. A customer, to wh. r """V for any enquiries, desires me to let v0i l-'"' particulars of her case. he ba.l i"et. " : for years with a disordered liver, urid i, i" tion. On the last oceasion, howtver, the ' of the attack was so alarming, ainj'tiiC ;Vif tion set iiyo severely, that doubts ' wci lainea or ner not Being able to be:ir un ' fortunately she was.induced to try ,,ii'r she-informs me that after the firt "u-i i ceuiug uuae, sue uau great relief. , to take them, and although she u-". 1 : ,i i 1 5 . ,. ,. :;Sij noxes, sue is now m the e"J0.vmei,t o!'"nrZ V r.- 1 r 1 T r,i1l 1,-,,.. u;.r.t ... V. .... 1 . V i il '. urn uie. noove, irom me seventy ,, ; the xpeedy cure, I think, speaks :mi, your astonishing Pills. y - 'I'.'.u' .lit ttl UIIJ CUOE. UJ Jil' J tun' Van Dianan'x La i I. Copy of a Letter inserted' in the Hn!.i:r; r. er of the 1st March, 1851, by M), 'r j Manraret McConnifran. 19 tv.J ,..-. ' c i',r.. at New Town, had been suffering fro , ft Rbeuniatic Fever for upwards of two J'""' which had entirely deprived her of the use limbs. During this period she was under tht of the most eminent medical men in Hoburt t"" and by them Iter case was considered A friend prevailed upon her to try Hollow' -'''1' ebrated Pills, whioh she consented to do""- an incredibly short space of time thev f't,! perfect cure. Ctcti Cure of a Pain and Tightness in tht Cbst Stomach of a Person 81 ,1,. t,fa' a From Messrs. Thcw Son, Proprietors ol j Advertiser, who can vouch for the. folio ain'i 1' ', ' Aug. 2d, 1851. To Professor Holloway : Sir I desire to beartestimony to the r'Mi fects of Holloway's Pills. For some years I fered severely from a pain and tightness in jj, jtomach, which was also acconipanfed bv a s' ness of breath, that prevented me from walkin bout. I am 81 years of age, and notwithsuui'j my advanced stats of life, these Pills have so lieved me, that I am desirous that others slioli be made acquainted with their virtues. I mtj rendered by their means, comparatively active can take exercise without inconvenience or pm which I could not do before. ( Signed) HENRY COE, North st , Lynn, X,jrfoj These Cdebrateil Pills are Wonderfully Efa cum in the following Complaints: " Ague, Asthma, Bilious Complaints, B!otcbe the skin, Bowel Complaints, Colics, Comtioitin of the Bowels, Consumption, Debility, hr.r Dysentery, Eryaipolas, Female Irregukrhies vers of all kin ds, Fits, Gout, Headache, h . tion, Inflammation, Jaundice, Liver Compim Secondary Symptoms, Lumbago, Piles, Rbeaim. tism, Retention of Urine, ScrofmVor King's M Sore Throats, Stone and Gravel, Tic Pouloumn Tumors. Ulcers, Venereal Affections, Worms of tf kinds, Weakness from whatever cause, ic, it Sold at the establishment of Professor Hou. way, 244. Strand, (near Temple Bar,) Load, and by all respectable Druggists and dealers 9 Medicines throughout the British Empire, andtj those of the United States, in pots and boxes, 37 j cents, 87 cents, and $1 50 each, wholesale,' the principal Drug houses in the Union, amjb Messrs. A. B. & D. SANDS, New York; Mr.J. HORSEY, S4 Maiden Lane. New York. . And by Messrs. S. B. & J. A. EVANS, Wilnuj ton; and by P. F. PESCUD, Raleigh. There is a considerable saving by taliDg til larger sizes. N. B. Directions -for the guidance of pstienll in every disorder are affixed to each box. March. 11, 1858. 22 LIVER COMPLAINT. DYSPEPSrA, JAUNDICE, CHRONIC, or SEE vous ability, disease of the Kidnevs, andii diseases arising from a di sordered Liver or Stomaci, such as, constipation, inward Piles, fullness, blood to the head, acidity of the stomach, Nanis, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fullness, or W in the Stomach, Sour eructations, sinking or fiai ing at the Pitt of -the Stomach, Swimming of is Head, Hurried and difficult Breathing, Flutterjj at the Heart, Choking, or Suffocating Seusac when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, U or Webs before the Sight, Fever and Dull Fia i the Head, Deficiency of Persoiration, YelloTMsrfi the Skin and Eyes, Pain in tie Side, Back, (."ins, Limbs, &c, Sudden Flushes of Heat, BuruiMij the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil. aaJ jrs Depression of Spirits ; can be effectually cured. fci DR. llOOFLAXD'S CeleLrated German prepared by Da. C. M. Jacksox, Nt. l-l', Street, Philadelphia. Their pou er ever the above diseases is n equalled by any other preparation States, as the cures attezt, in mawi en cj-cM f.lC Z'lS ar.a or Jul physicians had failed. These Bitters are worthy the attention of watt Possessing great virtues iii the rectification of & eases of the Liver and lesser glands, exercising most searching powers in weaknesses and affect ot the digestive organs, they arc witliul, safe, t tain, and pleasant. READ AND BE CONVINCED. The 'Philadelphia Saturday Gazette' savsef DR. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BlTI'iiUs It is seldom that wo recommend whutisten Patent Medicines to the confidence and piitro of our readers ; and, therefore, when we rw mend Dr. Hoofland's German Bitters, we wlii" be distinctly understood that we arc not jaiai of the nostrums of the day, that are noised for a brief period aud theu forgotten after tie;" done their guilty race of mischief, but oi' s uieJit long established, universally prized, and wind' met tlie hearty approval 01 the faculty ltsea. 'Scott's Weekt-y' Kiurl. An mist. ''.I "Dr. Uoofland s German Bitters Mi.-iniifacSBBilf Dr. Jackson, are now recommended by bonw of most prominent members of the faculty, as tide of much efficacv in case of female weals As such is the case, we would advise ail aiutkoi obtain a bottle and thus save themselves much s ness. Persons of debilitated constitutions wifi tliese Bitters advantageous to their heajti know from experience the salutary cITmi tbtf have upon weak systems." J. G. Moore. Esn.. of the Dailv News, said, . XI tober 31st: "Da. Hoofland's German Bittkbs. trying this renowned medicine for a stubborn 9 ease of the bowels, and can with truth testify its efficacy. We have taken the contents & 1 bottles, and we have derived more benefit :rw experiment than we derived previously fh,B J of allopathic treatment at the hands of our physicians." Hon. C. D. Hineline, Mayor of the City of f den, N. J., says: rf "Hooflakd's Gebmas Bittebs. We many flattering notices of this medicine, source from which they came induced ns w inquiry respecting its merits. From ifl81 i . : . 1 ... . ., e it specific in its action upon diseases of j exerts upon nervous prostration is renfly V : t i j i ,t, ,,,.rves. I""' ing them into a state of repose, making s-cl'P freshing. 11 VlllO 1UCU1,U1C T. Uu lauic are satisfied there would be less sickness thecal xne stomaco, liver uu mnoua 'j3"1 majority of read and imaginary diseases tima. Have them in ahealthy condition, aad ) -ou ( defiance to epidenucs generally. This cx" nary medicine wo would advise our tm're(jr are at all indispoued, to give a trial n ,r Ji mend itself. It should, be in every uu-r .i j: .1,. an.!, i.vi.ioncC t!- v Liiei lueuicuie cu i' vnuw For sale wholesale and retail at the GERMAN MEDICINE STOl'.t- No. 120 ARCH Street, one aoor '-" .1 I nuafleip ma, auu uy icojKuwiuiv " ; 1 out the country. And for.taU "'fnrCXt Kalcigb, N. C. ' June 3,13 "V. 4- ;-.
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 31, 1853, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75