Newspapers / The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, … / Oct. 20, 1841, edition 1 / Page 1
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. . 1 7" . - . . . . : """ ... .... T" " " . i ; , . - I . " 7 THOMAS J. LKMAY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. .''.;'' TEMttS. SoswsieTisWtke.s dollars pet eeeam- hal ia aivaaea. .... idler wHfcoatthe Stats wlllssre- ,.,iJ i aythe wa " eaaoeat ! year'a Mrintioa in advenes ,r RATES OF ADVERTISINU. rlir lHHn(Ml eMhil6 tlaat thia art ,M firel iascrtlon, dollor( each saleeqiMii) iiMrtkM, lentj.6"" -Tin a.!vartiejeU ol Clerkaanil Sheriffa will leharga i per eeM hir.herian.1 a nWiletlon S H ptr will be f reglr pri ea for sdvertiaei a hy the veer. ., (CJ- Letters ta lK K lilore T be no.l-pai.1. SEA US' PICTORIAL ILLUSTRATIONS or THB BIBLE AND VIEWS IX THE HOLT LAND WITH MM. AKD IWTCBISTtHO I.STfEa-PSESS DESCRIPTIONS CHIEFLY EXPLANATORY OK THK EiroBAViiros and of numerous passages connected Milh THI Geography, Natural History 4 AntiquilU, - THK KOLLOWINU WORK H AS BKKN COMPILED FROM THE LONDON PICTORIAL ED II E8 Hi 23 , WHICH IELL IN TH1 COUNTRY FOR ' $18 f Qi5 per Copy! Ery mn. Woman and child in Ihe llnii n 8ialea. who p.Mmra a Siblr will ur-y furniah thrmaeUca with lha followinj Ufiutiful aarira of Script ara lllualrationa. 200 Pictorial Illnalralions OF THK B1BLK, AND VIEWS IN THE HOLY LAND. Niw; cir. i teL roticTiai. Fnr Anndreil fafe$, 8 VO. Fina Paper, Hand tomrly Boaml, f rict dtltart. Tha uib- arj-iber reapeetfu!ly iniia4 th atlention of Clrrny. men, Taachera of 8abbth tVhoola, Hrada of Fam iliea, and Bonkiiellera, throughout tha UnilrdHtdra, to tha above Naw, Cheap, ani Hdrndidljr llludral e,l W.Kk. Pukliahad and for aale. at No. I S3, Naan Hirart New York City. ta hitura are bet trr dtiined by lha title; . ... ... . TWO HBNDRED MCTORIAt Iltl'tJTRATIONS .'rjii'i.rr'pttMicRiFTCRiit8...". ooxaiariiis or Views in til? Holy Lnnd, Together with many of lha mnat reairkhla oh jeeta mentioned in tha Old and New Tealamenla, rpprenewmg aaered hratorieal arenti eopieir from celebrated picturea, principally by lha old maa ler tha Land'cape Scene, taken from oripmnl klohe mde on lha arxit, with full and inter eating letler-Preaa deaeriptiona, deanlml to an eiplanatioo of the objecla mentioned in tha aa ered tail. On elimination ihia will ba found a eery pleas ant and profliable buok. especially for the peru'cnl of Yocho Piorii, abounding in (he moat valuable infitrmalion, collected with great ear, flom the beat and lateai aoureaa, It may, eery properly, fca d i'gnateil a common plara book fur eer thing val uable, relating to ORIENTAL MANNERS, CUeJ. TO(S, e. dee. and enmpriaea within itaelf a compute library tf rtliyitut and vrful knwt fljre. A volume like the prevent, hi far auperl.ir In tha cammnn Aftnoala it will tievtrbemt f dale. G ta beautnully printed In new long .primer typ' -handomelv bound in mualin. gilt,, and Jet lered; and i. decidedly, the betl and cheapen pub licatitn (for tha price,) ever iemedfrtm the Amer- rrT A liberal diaeoant made to whoteaam pur- chaarra. rJ- Peraona in the country, wiahing to act aa amenta, may obtain all tha neceaaary information. lV addreaaing their lettera to I he aubecriber, No,- 132, Kaaaaa Hlreet, New York City. ROBERT HEARS, Publieher. V . r - . clergymen, Superintendent" and Teachera nf Sabbath Hchoola, (J3" Agentaol Religiou' Newa. apera. and Periodicala. Jj Poatmaalera, &. Book-.-llera, throughout the country, ara respectfully re q'jeaiej to act aa our aeenta. t7" .Va letter -mill be taken rem the tffice tin leu pttt paid. To Pnbllvlicrs of Papers throncli ont the United Stairs. . ,Vwter ar Magazine; copying tha -h ie entire, without any alteration or aliridgemeirt (including ihia niHiee.) and giving it 12 ixuna ix- nanovt. shall receive a ropy of tha rork (wA yct tt their infcr,) by vending direct In tha Publisher- Domestic Sport. Ditl you ever cairh n flea! not you you don'l kn iw how wr I noiihet but tltcy catch usdon'tUievf Wlicn you Teel them biting the calf of your leg, just ahotrt ettinrtW''"t'ine TO" yoar hand tlnwnaqutiou liifn yoii iiiiM whers you iliink lie 1 1 give the hair on your legs a mart puII-7-nmi you havn'l got him swear a little nnJ all the time the vagabond was sitting on your knee, lookin? on lauehiris til you up you bounce in a fury, deter mined , to nurJcr the a.!ll: . 1 1 .1 A 1. . ' ' ! 'nan, ami nnu tne nea buuh quietly 111 ihp middle of the. bet! rubbing lua claws and preiending not to aee you down goes your open hand and-yrMieatcha l.ndrulol'eltfet and see him laughing and capering on the pillow, and ainpinj "Yon can't come the giraffe over me." "Hit one of your size," &c This doti'i provoke you bit ohf nor You make one more grab, and he. is on your arm, and in a jifley he is down your sleeve and digging away in the small of your back. Now jam your back agiipst the bed post, tear an inch or two of your shut off comes that gaiment, and before it's ovei your head, you feel him again on your leg. Give your self one thundering slap; say a naughty word and then give it up quietly, having made up your mind that a flea is invincible. ' -1, ; " ". " "FtnnanU . Ilttppincst at Home. To be happv, at home is the ultimate result of all ambition the end in which every enterprize auxl labor tends, and of which every desire prompts the proeecuUon, It is indeed at home tht eve ry man must be known, by those who would make a just estimate of his virtiie or felicity for smiles and embroidery are alike occasion and the mind ja often dressed for show in Painted lionog a!d fictitious benevolence. ) North Carolina VOL.XXXII , THE IIOOZIER Sc. THE YANKEE, for. What multitudes by I.UrmperanccU We were greatly amused, not long since, Vet how little it is feared!" See that moth at'a dialogue we heard between a Powneast-: which flies incessantly round the candle it er and Hoozier from the west. They were consumed!. Man of pleaiurt, behold respectively cracking up their own localities, own imafctj Temperanet i the best and running down their own opponents. f'c- The life of a mania a fever, in At length says the Hoosier: whlcl cry coJd R followed by-oUiers Whyonrlandiasoiich why, ye never jl"8ly h01- The man who is pointed at seed any thing so larnal rich in vour nfe; with the finger never dies of disease. The why, how d'ye suppose we make our can- medicine that doth not cause the patient to dies eh?' r . l.slecp, never cures him. When a family Don?t know,' says the Yankee. j rise early in the tnorning,. you must eon- 'We dip 'em in the mud puddles,' says 'chide that. the house is well precernetl. the Hoosier. " .1 ,,e noUr i leeP before miduight is worth Yes,' replied the Yankee, and I guess j tw after N. Y. Tribune. there's so much mud in your digifins that, AUTUMN there isu't many places where a man could ! The le gun of 9 onlnore iwt.th tuuMibtwl rdUawI w -mtlnf ttptStt th-lntuMai1t 16soin- 6f The heaid of a man travelling in yftur country , wetter worj. j, is , ritKlj ; ,he higt0. all day long, iu the road where the mud was ry 0rtime, which always crowds the reflec so deep lhat you could til diskiver a glimpse in? miaA wilh mtkny fi-lfu, recollecUons. It of his legs for hours togedier. - - ig nnxt that n,lnret wjln ner bc complete, Well, now. just tell us, Mr. Yankee, if it ,nd her labors finished, pauses to contem isafact what they do say about the rough- pUte herself in the return ol year.. She n?ss of your roads down east- They do (lM prepnrej . banquet, and Deciy, her only say there are so many stones in Uie roads, guMU The la8t ,,, lnat iwue over and the wagons do jolt up and down so all tleae ends of the earth, beheld a spectacle firedly, that the only way the people ever the most sublime in tho history of nations, grind out Plaster Pans is by loading the A thousaud loVelv banners, emblazoned big piece into a wagon, and just driving at wj,h the mottons 'of the free, gloriously a moJerate trot over one of your roads; and gtreained in the breath of autumn, as he went that hall' amtle's driving will nuke it all in- panting on his way to the abyss of the past, to powder. .,a .The groves were peopled, and from their There's no dmibt but we can-touch dry balmy shades came forth the-voice ortruth land occasionally on our roads. But then, anj patriotism; and from the consecrated if there are some stuns in the roads, the beigha of Bunker Hill, to the sounding traveller is never way-laid, and blood la- brnks of the mighty Missnsippi, echoes in ken by musquitoes as big as oysters- thc mountains and vales rejoice! Even the I'll tell you,, what, stranger, they do say dead were numbered and praised. Hope, there are hull counties down east where the iike , Mf(0t ttept form to beMf j, her stones aravsrMhick that they have to shar- Xotc)u am lived contented among the clouds pen lheheep noses, so that they can get of distress. Battle grounds werri visited in them beVarer -'.the rocks. tp ea( grass, igr . of other days. The People, like the deed, I heard one say whoonco Uavelled ocea,j; wj,en the wltids strike their harps trhough your couutry tliat he once saw a ..upoi bpgom, poured themsel ves in orisons whole field of men antl boys standing on the for a-romtse. But noWrOh how ehan rocks, each on 'em letting a sheep down by jj ji0Dei M 8ne wantlered on her deso the hind leg in among Ihs ocks to feed. liUe wav jet fall her torch( alMj dealh extin. And in another place-'he! 'saw the farmerj giJ jt shooting the grain in among the rocks This autumn, shines upon the graves of to iane root ana grow- . Wal now, sti anger, suppose you tell us about your own country; you're the only man l ever see from the west that did'ntdie of fever n'airur: let's seo if you know as much about the -vest as you seem to know iiuuni o w . Well, old Yankee, I'lf just tell ybu all a- bout it. If a farmer in -our country plants his ground with corn and takes first rate care on it, he'll gel a hundred bushels to the acre; and if he don t plant at all, he'll get fifty.' I'lie beets grows so large that it takes three yoke of oxen to pnll up a full sized one; and then it leaves a hole so large that I once know a -of Avexliildren who.sU. tumbled into a beet hole once helore it got evening, on the day subsequent to tiie cora fillcd up, and the earth caved in upon them ,nencetnent, when a ftiend took me up the and they all perished. - Muskingum soma miles, to see a lady whom The trees grow so large that I once knew, he deeined worthy of notice. She was the a man who commenced cutting one down, daughter or a Fienchman. who had been a and when he had cut away on one s.de for teacher o( that tongue till he purchased a v.".t-i j, J- - look round the tree, and whep he got round '-Snll.Aaa aa.U ha 1X11 nfl it artani ttliikSMk mhn IHI MJtllCaV CilVtO 1IO IWUMU m UMII SUMC WMM had been cutting at it for three weeks and had gen, about two years since, a new fash they d never heard one another s axe. ioned (lres at a ball. On her return, she .1 have heard tclU yet I somewhat doubt , lcce of Aarcoal am, d ,he JreM lhat story, tha theOhto parsnip, have me- 0 thc wUte waU, of h 1O0m. tune, grown clean hrough the earth. & been Her mo0! . . WM dfaid pulled hrough by the people on tother side. lhat hn j 1 rf Wal, now,' says the Yankee, I rather Vpon ,his nint ,he weul 6ft, and actually goess as how you ve told enough, stranger, imintej the walls of her room with hUloricat for the present How'd you like to trade for 4irawm-f - which were literally charcoal some clocks to sell out. west! sketches." Never use 'em we keep time altogether Fro ' narco.i .k. nroceeded untutored to with pumpkin vines. You know they grow tust five feet an hour, and that s an inch a minute. Don't use clocks nfell. - It's no use, old Yankee, we can't trade, no how.' The Yankee gave up beat, ami suddenly cleared out MEDICAL ADVICE OF THE CHI NESE. TEMPERANCE, &c Be j i rtnous; govern strain your appetite, stfBJiorretr food, cmvy4i-iWd?oi fiiml avi.ll t ia drt- fnn ir'nwl '., vlro Do not eat to satiety.' ' IBreakfast beUmes: it is not wholesome to . go out fasting. , You i.V. . ,ii ;. -ft" v--- b , " fied: so shmtld it be with thyself. Make . f i . hearty meal atiout noon, ana eat plain meat onlyt avoid salt km! tainted mears-those . ... . . whflFoat Wiem rMterfiiaMrww-somptexions and slow pulse, and are full of corn.p ed i miinors.- Suppef teime let your meat oi neither too much nor too 1 little cooked. Sleep not omil two hours f- J n.. I,,. ,.. ...k iH.ii VCl CntlllXt 'aaillS Jl arena litnw tearand Ww momlirwi afterwanls. Be rery rery moderate irrlheiise of all pleasures of sense; for all excess weak ens the spirits. Walk not too long at once; a l-ir,jl iuii fnv k.mvai in nenk nAaltneA. nnf tin longer than necessary. In Winter keep not4. yourself loo hot, nor in summer too cold. Iimnedialely . after you awake, rub your breast where the heart lies with the palm of your hand. Avoid a stream or '-draught of wind as uou would rrw Nomine rnil of a warm bath or after hard labor, do not expose your body to eold. If in the spring j there snouiu te two or thiee hot days, do not be in haste to put off your winter clothes. It is unwholesome to fan yourself during perspiration. Wssh your mouth with luke srarm water before von go, to rest and rub the soles of your feet warm. . When you lie down vbanish all thought Wash youi face and hands after every meat Not one in ten thousand dies by poison; yet the bare mention of it strikes with hor- - i --.. i . . - iiTtin n i 1 1 . i inn i.ii n n. - n I , t n rw mi. -Powerful in moral, in intellectual, and in physical resources the land of our sires, and the RALEIGH N; thousands, who loved and admired the beau- ty of the last. Priends are on tho opposite side of the valley of Death. Some are re joicing, and soiiie are bitterly weeping over thc change thnt one year has wrought. Tears flowing, gmies gleaming. Time is dumb, he cannot bdchk: dui ne wnu3B a nanu inn iooi may read. ....... " Holly Springs (3ft.) Gazette. As Extraordinary Oirl. A letter from Marietta, (0.) in tho Cincinnati Chronicle of tho 11th inst., gives tho following account of a remarkable Vottnir female artist in the vicinity of that town: jtn OritfitiulGenhuh wasjuftlcasanl mau larm near mis piacs, niu titrnrtu his thoughts from the fields of the mind to the .. J . ..... fipld nf (nrtt: : It tmnm thnt Hia" tiniitTr.tir oil and w,cn i W18 lhcre had vered the walls' of the hall and parlor with most curious and unique works of genius. On one side of the hall, opposite the parlor door, she had drawn another door, half open; and from the opening, herself, large as life, peeping into tho hall. Looking through the room door at this piece, the figure seemed antually alive. On anotherside she had seated at his hand tn' watchnhe" 4aughingrnfao.--In--antrther Vw0 Pin,ld Elopement In this she represented the window and part of the - , , . . ci -i t i room oi a lau y s apartment, one nnu agreeu ,0PS! b,I when her lover arrived badJ mrkAntA(l. Nli alfiaVl. faritH ntiA ffwit Art (hA r . r?. : r?-' ".""::; '""V wmuow a,.., nee.ia .ng. . -too . oU ! Inntinit In vrltli m nialnl in him hoail. ihrMlan. I , -r"i"r ,n to h.mself instantly if she did 1 y wild ' ot ?" 'We for the P0il of poet or of painter, In such .scene, where gciuiie, vivified, breaks the clods of na- fciullB v -'v't- Fw'u is not merely a ocauunu luca, dui a iruui that ' (" Many a gem ofjntrest ray serene, T'' drlt- (r?'!Trt Full manv a flower is bota to blush nnsesa. And waste its sweetness on lha desert air." It is not literally true, bowsvsr, that Miss Martini "unaeen," nnd there ate those here who take an interest in her progress. In my optrilon7s!ieira subje. for tha patronsgs of a oentleman in CinoinnrU, whose eneourage- mom of rtie arts already conferred honor on hs i uie aoa iwmmj. ( To be -tremblingly alive to gentle impres sions and yet to bo able to preserve, when the prosecution of design deserves it, an immovable heart, amidst the roost imperious causes of subduing emotion. Is pet haps not an impossible constitution of mind, but it must be the rarest endowment of rramani-tv."- Foster, - paintctl the interior ol a room, antl. ...ya .- .... - -. flllTlT fl "MMnfrai444 tll im. XI lilt; v"tu 7,flt lauiui i.,rti,i;ii- iru. C. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1811 - The Contradictory Coujtle.u I do be. i lieve," ha. said, taking the spoon Out of his glass and tossing it on tho table, '- that of all , thc o'lsiiiialo, positive, wrong-headed crou- tures mat ever was born, yon are the niont ty. ;.'Une day, a ranting lecturer nn aholi so, Charlotte." " tionism, made his appeflnincw in the village "Certainly, certainly, have it your own where she lived, and dclivemd a lecture upon way, pray. You see how much 1 contra lift abolitionism. The whole town went crazy you," rejoined ihe lad v. all the old women and a!l the young Women " Of course, vou didn't contradict me at eominunced the wiir--agiii8t tho South and dinnertime : oh, uo ! not you 1" sars the gemieman. " Yes, I did," says the lady. . "Oh .you did f cries ihe gentleman; "you adsnit that ?" -i. " If you call thai contradiction, 1 do," the lady answers ; "and I say again, Edward, that when you jw. wrong I will contradict you; 1 wuiwt yaufilaye "Not my slave!" repeats the gentleman bitterly ; " and you still mean to say that in Blackburns' new house there are not more, than fourteen doors, including the door of the wine cellar 1" " I mean to say," retorts thc lady be ting the time with her hair-brush on tho palm ot her hand, "lhat iu lhat house there are four teen doors, and no more." . " Well, then," "cries the gentleman, rising in despair, and pacing the room with rapid strides, "this is enough to destroy a man's intellect and drive luro mail 1" By-und-by t v. genilymau comes too a little, and passinjr his hanJ accross his forehead, finally re-st-ts himself in his former chair. There is a long silence, and this time the lady begins. 1 appealed to Mr. Jenkins, who sat next to me on the sofa, in the drawing-room du ring tea .' Morgan, you mean, interrupts the gen-. tlcman. . , I do not mean any thing of tho kind,' answers the lady. " - . - 'Nowr hy all tliat is" aggravating ami im possible to bear!' cries the gentleman, clench ing his hands and - looking upward in agony 'she is going to insist upon, it that Morgan is Jenkins!' 'Do you take mo to be a perfect f.iol!' exclaims the lady ; 'do you suppose I donT kVio w "oiid from the other? Do'yu suppose that I don't know that tho man with the blue coat was Mr- Jenkins V 'Jenkins in a blue coat ! cries the gentle man with a groan; 'Jenkins inabluo coatl a man who would suffer death rather than wcai any thing but brown!' 'Do yoadare to charge me with telling an nn.trn.thJV demands jhe lady, hunting into tears.- -j; ,;- -..- - . 'I charge, yoit, ma'am, retorts the gentle man starting iip, 'with being a contradiction, a monster of aggravation, a a a-Jenkius in a blue coat i What have I done that I should be doomed to bear sueh porpRtual torments. Sketches of Your. Couplet. YnirAtimVArtfr Conscience as we all know, "may be lis tened to or disregarded; and in this habit has great influence. The following story, from the Juvenile Miscellany, illustrates this. "A lady who found it difficult to awake so catly as she desired in the" morning, pur chased an alarm watch. This kind of watch is so contilved aa to strike with a very loud whtzzino- noise at anv timS the owner nleas- o - t ' cs. The lady placed tho watch at the head of the bed, and, at the appointed time, she found herseir effectually aroused by the loud rattling sound. She immediately obeyed the summons, and felt the .better all day for her early rising. This continued for sever- l weeks. The alarm watch faithfully per formed it office and was so distinetly'Aearrf so long as it was promptly obcyeu. But after a time the lady grew tired of early ris ing, and, when awakenetl hy the noisy mon itor, merely turned herself and slept again. In a few days, the watch ceased to arouse her from slumber. It spoke just as loudly as ever, but she did not hear it because she acquired the habit of disobeying it. Find ing that she might just as well be without an alarm watch, she formed the resolution, that if she ever heard the sound again, she would jump up instantly,- and she would never al low herself to tlisobev'- tJw friendly . waru- bey its dictates, even to the most trifling par ticulars, we often hear its voice clear and strong. But if we - allow ourselves to do what we fear is not, quite right we shall grow mots ami more sleepy until the voice t0f eonaeiGnoa has no lonr tnv oower - - - Mutation ' -nm . I" it J'trtWlM MlUCtUVm. A REPENTANT SINNER. "- Away ' down East somewhere in the vi cinity of Goshen C?ore it may be,' although we do-hot remember the precise locality there snrouted into existence a verv rouirh strrenfairiiftWpTrrsmf day , after he had arrived "at years of discre tion, he "made tracks" tor the region of the South. In the gttorse of much less than a quarter of a century, lie found himself in a highly flourishing condition. Being blessed with a stoat pair of lungs and a vciy plea sing demeanor, he had secured nn auction eer s appointment, in course of time, and had managed to transact a first rate business. After- long abseTterTroM Hif lative feglori. he found it convenient to visit the friends of his eaaly dayi. Time had worked sad chan ges. During his absence, the new tangled doctrine of abolitionism had been introduced, and he found himself assailed, by s multitude of persons, very snxious to gsin information in regard to the South. lie was persecuted with all sorts of enquiries, and, on more than one occasion, was obliged to enter the lists in defence of Southern institutions. Soon after his arrival at his early home, he called to see an old antiquated aunt. She was the home of our affections NO. AZ devoted disciple of every thing new. When the days rtf'anti-masoHry commenced, she was an anti-mason; nay, she was even the secretary of 8r,'l'inale Anti-.Masonic Socio- us institutions '.here tvas not a petticoat m tho region that failed to stand aghast at the very idea ol slavery. -Au association was ortrahizod forthwith, -and the old lady; of whom we speak, was elected as its Presiden It was after this occurrence that our New Orleans auctioneer . called upon her. He reached our h is hand, btrt, to fir ijtter astrm Islim Jlit, the old" Tally" rewseil ta'touihTt. "I understand, John, said she, solemnly, that you are an auctioneer in the South, and thutyou have sold slaves. Touch not pitch, lest yo be Utfi!ed,is the aduMMiition." i ho auctioneer was puzzled, and was iusl ahut turning.to leave thn bouse iu scoru, v. hen the old lady spoke again. Is the story true-John! ' asked she. Why, to tell the truili atint,' said John, "I have sold slaves at auction, but it is an absolute fact that I never sold one in my life without crying." Is it possibio! exclaimed the old wo man, lilunir Her spectacles to her lorelioad. lhat you have so much sensibility! ' Well there's my hand' John 'there shall he joy in heaven over ono sinner that repouleth, more man over ninety and nine persons which need no reepentance." The old lady and the auctioneer were great menus altcrwartls. LADIES' LIFE PUESKUVEII3 ri ----A friend of oui'S Inke "a N "suggestion which, may be .considered, by soirw f mr fair readers, as a tittle imurrtinent. He u gjjeits that their ' ihtstlti, Totirnum at Bishops bo made of India Rubber and iulUted at the ordinary life-preserveri are, and, thus being always provided, lliry will i. i ir-i.;-.. .- V tie u nu iiauger, if -inis ugjesnn is rp proven, we suppose tiist ncrenlier we may be able to estimate the rare which each lady takes of her self by Ihe dimensions of her lite preserver. W. r. tribune. , A Sister shot by Aef bro ker. A few days since a must fatal and lamentable accident' occurred in Brady town ship. Clearfield " etuty,: Pennsyl vaniarSirh-thej family ef a Mr, frestilcr, 'The ton fired J at a bird which sat on the. corner of the house; high off the ground. Tim ball struck the end of one of the house-lofis.s glanced from thence to the.Tence, and then strut k the .girl who was in the gardcrl. The ball entered theright, stile," passing immediately-through theharfatitl -rotlgcd against the skin on the left tide mmm I- AN OLD ACCOU P. A considerable" excitement va created in Philadelphia on Saturday evening by the arrest of in individual that has' been re siding in Philadelphia (or some years past, his associated with the most respectable 1 . ..... . j. r society, ami. na nan ine reputation ot us ing rjuite wealthy, by the. name of Fitch, a dentist of some celebrity. It appears that he was arrested upon a warrant issued up on the requisition of the Governor of Penn sylvania and ihe Governor of Connecti cut, a ''standing chaiged with the crime of forgery, and having lied from the jut- lice "of the "State f Cunneciicut" Ihe charge is fur the forgers of title psprrt to certain tanm in Vermont, some tigtilecn yetn since. The (correspondent' of the Journal of Commerce nys, In reference to this inat- 'er. , Thtrj is but little if any grounds for the accusation, and so welt satisfied were all the officers who had the matter in charge, that Ihey united in Ihe conclusion not to speak of it. And the sheriff who came af ter h m went on alone, l-ayins Mr. F. lo frrrjet his fwsureThe lacts,' a tliey are ttsted ty thns- who pretend to know. )ueUnt.MOtf had left wiil him a deed executed accor ding lo form,' for tract tf land in Ver mont, which be wal to hand to a person named, on that third person paying to him seventy-five dollars.Snd not a large turn at has hero, intimated. The money wtt paid, and Jhs deed,- which wssSTtcrwanls ascer faineii to be a forgery deliwied. The mat settl. d ti the satislaction of all the parties rsncerned at the time. The ratling of it up at (his moment hit ni,ly ihe tendency (jJitvn B ier7 .Uiafrinl..heijyhotepDr..iLJ9WAr.d.ji his bait are from among the most re i per ta ble persons in the city, who speak freely their entire confidence of his innocence. Mr.'F. It a dentisf.rrsidet in Chesnuf 8t lad 1i reported lo be worth glOO.OOO.". , I Vug in tht Eat RocenUy in Baltimore a colored man was seen by a phjysician, sp parenily in pain; and wiien He enquired into the cause, fount) a bug had entered and re mained in the ear. He immediately procur ed sweet oil caused the man to lie down on the pavement,' and filled the ear with oil. In a short time " the bug being unable to breathe was lorced to the surface .ind thus removed. ' The intense agony suffered, wss shewn by this Tact that ths man nn alhlelie I L. .1-- I '. L' lauorer worn ne oug was laa-en away, oe- came insensible, and temained so for sqtiar- tcr of an hour, and was restored by the an- plication of stimulating frictions. " From Ihe N."Y. Amrriaan .THE SYRACUSE CONVENTION. tt We ropy with -entire spprohatmn anil,' eoneurrence Address ailcpted at this Convention, ami annex a letter lr. m the Albany Evening Journal reporting ihe cl. ing acere. .' We have not been abV In obtain a npy , of Ihe Resolutions, but learn thai they are in harmony with the addrM, avQuling any nomination or c wmiunent fur ihe Prrsi- WHIG STATE CONVENTION. . tWretplndenc if . -''. Evening Journal. SyaAcvMt, THVNtDAT, Oct. T. The Convention re-assembled in the Congregational Vhnn h at 9 Mtk,, A. M. when the Committee on the Addreaa and Kesolutiuna repor'eif. .The Address having been read by the Hon. D- U . Bar- . . . - . 'Mr. John A. King. ' of Queenf, rote, and, in a most pnwei ful speech, sapporteil its siioptMiti. 'nie Cnen'inna and, a latge audience, were must highly .ratified, and wre enchained for more than half an . hour by jus spell of the orator, save, when involuntary burtls ofapplsuac ! brnks forth. Mr. Alvah Worden, of .Onlario,' neit, rose and warmly seconded the adoption nf tlie,,Adilresa, and hesrtily responded to the ' remark f the gentleman frmti Queens, urging tiB iti the grest Whij pjriy to stand Address, ant rnnclu.lrd by desiring that the document mirjht be placed in every hall and hamlet ol the Slate ami Nmion Tltt, Address was adop'ed by acclaraa Hon. - " - T, : " Mr, D.vid Gishsm. of Krw Totk rtrsp and rvs.d the resolutions nmpnsod by ihe committee, and supported their adoption in an an tm'ed speech, . . , . Mr. J. fj. lleynolds, of New York, se conded their adoption, and paid a high en Indium on the talents and services uf the Hon. N P. Tallmad'c and on lite devo-, lion and untiring zeal f the Whig mem.' bera of Congress of this Slate geuertlly, at. the recent extra e'uin.. ,'" Mr. D D.' 'Barnard, of Albany, then' rose and said that after what .had fallen from the gentleman from New .York he hnrdly knew how to express himself for. the generous manner in which the conduct of the New York meinbTt of Congress . had been no'iced sod dwelt 'ipon. He, s.tid tlwtaine and all .Jiad 'only performed - - i.tlKic4tiiyiMVhig;tinj-ei iu. do -less they dare not have dune.. lla , inen went into a his'etr of the measures nf, the extra sessions of Congress, aad cm mented severely upoit the exercise of thej veto power, eundemntng its abuse. , lie argued that the oaly jcue, wayJoasjU-tha-pi irtcipleit of a part in power to g , bark and tee what ihey promised before , otitaining it and affirmed that tlie'tneas- ...! .1 . ... I 1 ' ure twice, vetoed was the prominent meas ure of relti'f promised hy , the .Whigit a t sound and unifonrt national currency, to j. be moulded ami foruved in a law for the I CU-todv. safe keeninar and diahursment nf .1.. ...1 : .. jluc ..puumninrinev, numetuati'ij on, lite-' peal of the Sub-Treasury law, v. hih wai i at expected to be r pealed by .the people who ; placed the Whigs in power, and ihis'new.' fabfic fred ovrits grave,, , That Preii deh.t; Tylel khr-w this. HegsVe the po. , IVtical history jf the Pretidi nt, deriveit' f from hit votei gnd speeches, and referred ". to hi C dui seiii. t h . II T4 islwrg Cutvve lion, and read hit answer to the mtetroga-,. toriei addrested lo him from Henrico, , He. Mr. B., gave the history of the first t and second Bank bilii introduced and car. , ried through at the exra session, psrticu- s Itrly the second. , framed as it was. with. " the express intention,!'! meet in cvry res- , pect ths President's peculiar notions. He . " theTreTpnd the "presiht iitostioti "of "iiur fisra! affairs, and showed that the public , monies were unw where they were when General Jackson seized them and Presi. dent Tyler doing at Gen, Jackson did; controlling their custody and showed from President T' formerffcbes I ha I v he had most itrongly condemned, such W stafe i oT things at that time, calling Cen. s , Jarksnn for to doing "every Wfi a KtngP 4 He observed lhat (he mind of man has . as" yet but devised three wayt for keeping j ihe public money, iiopuunc man would .' now dare Jo place the fund of the nstion in Southern. State Banks no Whig would t go for re-establishing the Sub-Tnamry' j snd that there is nn other alternative, "but ,f the creation of a National Institution, pro- ' perly constructed and guarded, to meet the ,, wants nf the nation and people, Jle said , the public monies cannot remain tcfierg-i , a-aiitfj?Sor aobmft lo it-and Mr. Tyler, when he has , Z'l' : had ttmefot ftytecUon, tsTll not desire it, ,L Ju Jgtngm'llirTenor' CfcT""lfc've'iii ;LW-"U-'J""" Bsrnard spoke an hour or more, and cloa, ed by remarking, 'J there has been any common benefit, to the country in what , - ' has been already done by the Whigs, or , ' any confidence rreated as to what they .) may yet-accomplish,, we mast maintain?, , iiurselve. relying upon an intelligent peo-v , '. pie, or eve ry. yestigewilj.be repealed. ---- That "war-cry it on the wihtf -and should" " our opponents auccerd, rluohrd with vic ' ory, ihey will glut , themsel vet witlisav. A-ituaeMv4 gSvjt.. aagai -aB1akv--Stflan tiaa a. t ' even for a moment in their nsthwsv in pwwervAniTthen will fali most murtdAl ly the strong pillars that now support n , protect public virtue and. freedom.. .fervt' venily pray that our happy country may, f,, not be visited by io direful a calamity. ", i ne resolutions were unsnimouaiy a1 dopted, 1 , , The Convention ws then further and - ahly addressed by Mr, Duer ol.Oswegn, Mr. Martindsle if Geneee, Mr Clark of -Jefferson, and Mr. Reynold of N York. ihe fatter gentleman paying a handsome tribute tn the public Preis. , . . "l Mr, .Filmore of Brie, was filled for. and nobly responded to the call, holding fast the convention and sudiencs for some -; time by an outpuurin ' .,- g of eloquent patriot , t ism. Hon. N. P. Tattmadg was loedly call- ed fur, hut had a few moment! previously left the huuic. , sr A -,a
The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 20, 1841, edition 1
1
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