Newspapers / Iredell Express (Statesville, N.C.) / March 11, 1859, edition 1 / Page 4
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3 I ! 7 r 4 . V J : t f iJoetrg. My e Daughter Sleepi - BT C B. 8TTARI. Soa U thy pillow, my darllnz. oean thee In lumber to-nirit. Swmjbs thy dreams, till the mornlig f aiM.thee to ililrer delight j 1 My precious, my Innocent darling, ! My lorlng, bit beautiful one. God keep thoe from sickness and sorrow, TUilus's little Journey la done. VWhat jrere the tight of the morrow! If them ehonldrt not waken again wiwt tmt a olpid and a tempest, Ana taaneee, and anguish, and raanf The cttrli on thy brow ire our snnijhiM ; The pight of thine eye uf onr Joy; Tbe emile on thy lip bring, ns tfsdiew, i Ana pleasure nnnilxed with alloy. EnivN the ingcl, my darling, j Wu wstfch tbre In waking and sleep, And Obdjn hie Infinite goodness, j ' ; The iway thy footsteps will keetp; : TendeBly, lovingly bending, Shield hfr, good'angrin, to-night;: Eweetbe her elmnber, till morning ; WakiSt hbr to dearer delight. amusment antr njtructiort.' Friendship in Prosperity. One of the hardest tri s of those 1 wHo fall from affluence and- honor to Ii I x poverty md obscurity, is the discovery that the attachment of so many in whom Jhey confided, was t pretence, -a mask to gain their own ends, or was a miserable shallowness. Sometimes, doubtlesk it is with regrerthat these . frivolousj flowers of the wbrld desert those urkm whom t.h . - i - J uui tv ? TKj t7oJ-V: 7u ---I- L fSS t fJt6,;rr ine iavontes ot lortuno. tri orathpr na irifra onrl Urv,k t i Ni- V ' ... guts anc climb by Ins aid, linerer withi tne sunshine, but scatter at the aD- u . . , a tree iT uZr' n HI f t0 a iree in summer Aveatlipr.? huf i mn off at tU breath of winter j I Likp ens settl4d down for a ba?imiff. and ' suddenly scared bva noisei ly at the nrt sound ot calamity those sup'erficiil earthlings are.st)f cks in the But a true friend sits in the centre, aim is tiiiere at all times. Une need only reveals him morA r osely to us. Prosperity and Adversit are both i revealeri the difference biing, that in ine. lormer our friends know them. But notwithstanding th greediness prevalent among men, there is a vas? deal more ot estdem and fel-'low-ycarhings than is ever outwardly BiiUWII. rri. i jluviv iiru more cxamn es ot ltnndnlfpLr fr I- V1 i unadulterated attention mhrp dnnrlo f; silent Wo nd mn I n,,,ll,r "J 7 a brini tPV?' Z unZwn ft S,dcS1re1V!es before unknown... Benevolent impulses, where privacv TnaotsXpeCt 1 pr vacy enacts many, scents of beauU - ful wonder and the plaudi Plorida and (Cuba .j. . - ,a W C find the followinL'-Cnrnrniinir'n ti on in the Charleston Mercury of a re - cent date : Vast SUITIS liave boon snot on nf ui mu jurciiase 01 uuha. Won f r-k w 4 L .1 y 4 those millions snflfWtn LTPMmtn Khipcanafl across the neninhuln. of Flnr. Ida at sobne hieh point, snv lPtwopn the- dthJand 30th' decrees of latitndp? it so, the n Cuba would io longer be - the key to the Gulf of MoiiVn.-- "Flnr. Via would then be, from tl position, a barnerfto pvpw nnti ATI rllf Ml An-vi a and backbd fey a continent, would for - pver neutralize Cuba as d stratagetic point. Eurdpe gave us jFlorida and Lousiana, and presented -no hostile ul 'v timatum when we annexed Texas. .Then wo acquired a northern province from Mciico, and the President riow proposes an' armed occupation of ano ther northern province,' and still no caveat is uttered. But touch Cuba, and Eng land and France clutch us with the vengeance of a hily vow and well they may. Give us Cuba, and the Gulf is ours. Give us the . Gulf ii . it' " ;and the wealth of Asia falls at our feet, i i iiurope has surveyed iith a more philosophic eye than we, the wastes Which sep irate our Atlantic from our ' Pacific Stktesi -She views with com posure theproject(of arailjoad connec tion with the Pacific, and England .has even insinuated thai she might junite her Atlantic and Pacific posses sions by a rail road through Canada evidently to? withdraw c3r attention from other modes of connection, and confirm us; in such an undertaking - j well aware) that the immense distance, the uninhabitable , tory, and f 50,000 Indians, will make , . i,i cawuus uiorou-niare lor a ; ping at times to rock it on the side :: .century to come. Mexicc we can ne-f walk. When the baby cried shestuf . -jver absorb hence the coijiparitive in-1 fed its mouth with and old stocking ;difference bf Europe to our acquisiti- and sung " Barbara Allen," The ol3- .v, ytuMw America, men, is me prize wnicn .confers on the victor !we commerce of Asia and the, maste- ry of the scas-and tbat is the price J TCfl -i r -n ' ana makjn wry faces. The shop- U.ar-; 1EurPcT Pol!cy are j deeper, mistaking his meaning, had i If' Ti 3y here PrPs?d de- given him a mixture of sal-soda and f nf K 17 16 eiWr. f ?uba' water, and it tasted strongly of soap. Cfi s operation of unit- But he'd " hearn tell of sod! and wa ngthe Gullfof Mexic. with the At-ter, an he was boun to giv it a fair Jaatift through pur own territory. f trial. Some "town feller" came in jbuch a praect, if carried out, would , and called for lemonade with a " fly Confer mor'p npnfifc mra-rr i 'Af V ii. ja . L '.r u" K?WD t e Par,W 8cheme of . LX-" nT, a"wouia,fn;arone Cut V A?lU9V?TlD sncn acanal, with the policy which woul follow its uuiupieuon, would open wide field , x xr ' t i " ; Z 1 wwum fhfwn.U TS mart in V v i .a 4 tne koutll, it Would , 'Ofler Cuba, shorn of her importance Europe, and to the PaeificStates H would open, through Tehs, the on- ; uv. CAP VAA vrect communication by water, in time , nine. a me canal oracticah ft i AVmilrl tho --. , v rsuiw narrani tne undertping on The Last Romance.- - f"'-A-.- Quite, a romance in real life, says the Detroit Advertiser, was brought to a happy termination in that city on the 9th inst. Seventeen years ago, a JNew lork iass, Idvely and sweet six oat, v.a i uwamc cuaujuieu u uicuiuai student, and the pair exchanged vows of loVft RTlrl ptpmsl fiflpllt.V. Twftrara fta owjwuiii at x in is, uie loving 8iu- dent domiciled himself in one of the most renowned colleges of Madrid, and i false charge. . It is no answer in any applied himself to sober study. , His forum to ay she only repeated the letters to the fair damsel he loved were charge as she heard jit. If a story frequent, but no fond remembrances was false and slanderous, she must re came in reply, j peat it at her peril. There is safety His epistles were intercepted and ; in no other rule. Often the origin of never reached the fair one, while her slander cannot, be trace. Hewhogives words of love, intended for his delec-1 it circulation cives it its nnwpr of mis- tation, met with the same misfortune. The poor student, thwarted in his love, thrpTV. nn Ilia tn1Ira finA f nr turn Inner v... " " -v Vn.rs fonrsprl thrnnnrri Pnrnnp (spaIt. jf - o - ins to whelm his disappointment in the 3 f L capitals. In the mean time the vouns I 1, mi a lady, who was equally unhappy, re- moved to Detroit with her mother. At the end of his two years' piWim a twrt or0' ;i;t - ' -' -.AO age, the student returned to America, but the idol of his heart 'had left the scene of her betrothal, and, almost broken-hearted, he turned his steps to Cuba; but the spirit of unrest pursued hi him, and Texas and Mexico beheld to drown i memory by excitement. A months since, by one of those i - singular occurrences whicn sometimes -flil i. r i: . L ii ij J- iiuaiu tiittL me iauv was 111 ij.iciup-an. and quickly he wended his way thither a.,1 , J . X After a few weeks of diligent search, the anxious Jovertound his Dulcinia at Tpsilanti, and the meeting which en sued the twain havinc been separated 1 gft o 1 ; een years- is described as "affect ing in the extreme." The tribulations of the now mature lovers were over, onJ rrt ln-i OtW ln ... 1 J ; fn twu aA ,.r bonds wedlock. Who savs this is n prosaic age: Terrible Scene Burning of a Bride I Miss Susan Shuck, daughter of Jno. Shuck, Esq., was to have been marri ed at Lebanon, (Ky., on Monday last, ft W T i mrtu r ' to Air John 1 nomas, at 12 o clonk. : i tj., r .. A. .i , ut l 1LW 111 nus pour to me time Ai . 4. ne ccrcmo5 W3S woe pertorined,licr dress. accidentally caught on fire, and i the wedding dX, which was of thin ; material, was instantly in a blaze, and tue V0UM ladv was Zallv hnrn. ! Her sister, Mrs. Burr Harrison, in j her cfforts to Bave her. .fir hor ' ! yww, un il LAlCiJO V VJil U1UI C O" 1 verely burned. There is but little f hone of hor vonftrpvr it ia fnnvaA T' I .VV.V,.J A l.J i till. U. . ' I 1. . Rhiirrlr nnrl ntlior : ily, who also tried to relieve the young -n iArr ? hurnpfl Imf- not sprinnlTr 1 ... ' a i was terrioie Deyona all expression "of , frni'n tKo v. -xixv iiuv .rtio oo,uij uiiiul ' i. - l 1 . i 1 . 1 1 l-r fmm nr lioirl Afti. 1 her couch, suffering the most intense ' nrmn? tlip morrio nr.s, ; performed. f - - - - ' ' A Family Opposed to Newspapers, The mnn that didn't take the nan- ersj was in town yesterday.. He fetch ed his whole family in a two-horse wagon. He still believed -that Gen. Taylor was President, and wanted to know if the " Knmkatkians" had tak en Cuba, and if so, where they had taken it. He had sold his corn for thirty cents a bushel the price be ing fifty-five ;but on going to depos it the money, they told him it was mostly counterfeit. The only hard money he had was sdme three cent pieces, and these some sharper, had "run on him" for half-dimes. One of the boys went to a . black-smith'sr Ishop to be measured for a pair of shoes, and another mistook the market-house for a church. After hanging his hat on a meat-hook, he piously ,took a seat on a butcher's stall, and listened to an auctioneer whom he took to be a preacher, He left before " mectin' was out, and had no great opinion of the " sarmint." ' One of the girls took a lot of " seed onions to the post.office to trade them ior a letter, tone had a babv. whirh she carried in a " sugar-trough " stop est boy had two " coon-skins," and was on a. "bust." When last seen. he had called for a crW of nda.ro.: ter," and stood soaking ginger-bread .M-ucieupuii our soapea inend turned Ms-" "back and quietly wiped ! several tlies mt his drink. . . He approached the old gentleman and tried to get him to "subscribe," but he would not listen to it. He was '"ppueu io -internal improvements, !and he thought "larnin" was a wick-1 ed invention and a " wPTatinn." TJnno ! of his family ever learned to read, but one boy. and he "teached Sfihool a. while, and then went to studying di- ftrrp firm XVw. xi - . tixn ucii. iiaiKHr. rnp nmrmsror mmPrt tho Toftl -A it.i.:. ! vxwiu vuuitu at ijxoune. r the 18th ultimo, Legal-Eflect -rfepeatiiig"ear-STiy " " .A ;'. " , fv In the last volume 6f Gray "Massa chusetts Supreme Court Reports there is a not ceable decision. It seems that a -woman uttered la, islander of another, nueu Bueu.JUr 41, uer ueieuue waa uiai. j she only repeated what was currently ' rannrtoA of olio :tttA ' n n malis cnarge affamst ine piamun ; to destroy her reputation. It was a ; chief. It is the successive repititions ; that do the work. A falsehood often i ranaotorl nafo .n Vn ln1!niTnl A wnn jvttivu gtw w uc utiit xi. Luu.ii pannnt coir fTiot-a in a cvfrtiir Imh1i j vuuu wiivit w a ovuij in uituio- ! tion that A. noisoned! his wifp. or "R. -" wwv.b.. vmvuvu j uig niiVj VA ! and. when called non .t .nr. i 7 ' v. . . "There was such a report in circulati- on : I but repeated what T hftard. nA i x,nA k : i n if," for two verv plain reasonsthat the repitition of the story must, in the nature of things give it currency ; and the repetition, without the expression . ' I - -r The dan- oi disbelief, will connrm it. ger is an obvious one, and long since pointed out ; and it is, that bad men may give currency to slanderous re ports, and then find in that currency their own protection from just conse quences of a repetition. Turpentine and its Uses. There are several hundred stills for the manufacture of spirits of turpen tine in the State of North Carolina alone, while the States bordering on the Gulf of Mexico are all more or less engaged in it. The uses of rosin and turpentine seem to increase with every development of inventive talent. In . x- i painting, in printing, in soap making, i j irl- i: Pi- fe' auu esueuiaiiv in iiP-Miinf?. its use seems to be almost universal. It forms an , x , . - ,' important element in many chemical operations, and it.is estimated, in a communication to the London Society of Arts, that from two to three hun- 1 1.1 1 1 11 . area tnousana dollars worth is con sumed annually in the American India rubber manufactories. From seven teen thousand to twenty-two thousand tons have been imported into England annually for many years past, and almost exclusively froni the United States'. Spirits of turpentine is ob tained, by distilling With water the semi-fluid sap or pitch which exudes from incisions made in the wood of various species of pine; the product left after distillation is a resinous sol id, popularly termed resin or rosin. Camphene, which is extensively used in lamps as a substitute for oil, is spirits oi turpentine punned by. re j peated distilla tions. Burning fluid is , a solution ot rcct 1 rectified turnentine or camphene in alcohol, the tendencv of the turpentine to smoke being dimin ished by the addition of alcohol. Camphene and burning fluid, although highly inflammable, are not of them selves explosive ; a mixture, hoAvever, of the vapor of these liquids with at mospheric air is highly explosive, and, igniting at a distance, at the approach of the slightest spark or flame, is apt to communicate fire to the. liquids themselves. Burning fluid, being much ! more volatile than camphene, is much j more dangerous. Oil Of turpentine is extensively used as a solvent for resins in the manufacture of varnish, and in the preparation of paints ; also to some extent in medicine. )' ' - " f Climate of California. A writer in the California Magazine thus discourses of the climate of that country : "A, railroad about one hundred and eighty miles long, run ning nearly due east from Oakland through Stockton and Sonora. nnd near the Mammoth grove of Miraposa and the Yo Semite valley, to the sum mit of the Sierra Nevada would ena ble the people' near the line to place themselves, every summer's day, in any tolerable degree of eitheV heat or oold. Eighteen miles west of Oak land lies the beach of the Pacific, where a chill breeze blows without ceasing ; and going eastward, a , traveler would gradually get into a warmer clime, until in Stockton he would find the thermomter. .about, 100 degrees most of the summer noons; and going still iurtner, he would gradually rise into the almost freezing comb of Sierra. A branch road running southward to ron xouma, would enable the travel er tc enjoy almost as great a variety oi enmate, in. a winters day, as could be found in the other during the sum- m or 9 AAA l, A Toilet Poisons. If ladies who are accustomed to use the advertised cosmetics of the day were aware of the ingredients of which maiv Ui luese-aias to Deauty are composed, they would think twice be- tore they applied them' The basis of nearly all the powders warranted to impart brilliancy to the complexion is preparation of lead in other words uc.y poison, vreari White and "Lily White" are very pretty names, but the Stuff itself ?a but the stutT itself is eminently dele terious. - lhe samemay be said of seven-eighths of the liquid "beauti fiers." All of them, including ven the most harmless,, are suppressive in the operation. When applied to an irritated surface thfey inevitably drive ka nfl.n...:. li. " mounuai,uiar j!ifus, wnicn ua- ture is endeaTrjring to throw off in a legitimateayr-The resulrlrthat internal and dangerous inflammation is not unfrequently substituted for a harmless?rash. i Vew of s the popular hair washes and. Hair dyes" are mocu ous. - A larire uronortioiiof -the for- O r. r i. a !iv a! : j t mei; are iuipregXiatea Wltu canxnanaes, ; and all the latter contain sugar of lead ! nr tiltroto f : ... VntV - " toahinn ioomuu, a,ic cueaia, auu ueueptiuus. Their ultimate effect, if used regularly for any considerable length of time, is to pucker and wither the skin, spoil its iexture. and nroduce an aDnearanee of premature old age. All dry and bemi-soiia cosmetics, clog up tnepores j and check the .natural evaporation from the surface, if they do nothing j worse.' Avoid them all. The best! beautifier8 of the complexion are air, ! exercise, pure water, and unmedicated soap. If these fail, the skill and ex- nmm . ' J i j ciicutc u t goou pnysician may per- Via-no An. o.il:-- j i j uao viu owiuemmg ior ciouueu love lines?." . uuvd. ! A T??. aamst "e. I miTM (fod' who lvest Srace t0 I l.ue uuuluie o sometmng, also; tor the proud man : make me humble and ob.ient; take from me the. spirit of f- uunin,ijc) aiuuiuuu aiiu selt-nattery, confidence and craietv: teach me to think well and to Pirnnnnd f11 PS8 mJ praise, to excuse his errors, to give Thee thanks' for his graces, to rejoice in all the good that he receives, and ever to believe and speak better things of him than myself. 0 teach to love to be concealed, and little esteemed, let me be truly hum bled, and heartily ashamed of my sin and folly; teach me to bear reproach es evenly, for I have deserved them: to refuse all honors done unto me, be- cause i have not deserved them ; to return all to Thee, for it h Thine on ly,, to suffer reprooff thankfully ; to a mend all my faults speedily. And do J-nou invest my soul with the humble ' . v J , ,r " "UUU1L ! robe of my meek Master and Savior. lhou invest my soul with the humble ! t r , T . . , Jesus: and when l havp hnmhltr r.Q tiently, charitably,, and diligently ser- ved Thee, change this fusion into irlo ry my folly to perfect. knowledge, my weakness and dishonor to the strength and beauties pf the Son of God? Jeremy Taylor. Butter and Butter-Making. Secretary Flint's last Report to the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture contains some excellent remarks on this subject, by W. S. Lincoln, Chair man of the Dairy Committee : Good cows, sweet feed, and pure water, are the first of all requisites to the manufacture of good butter. Good cows, that proper color and right con sistency be secured sweet feed and pure water, that no flavor be imparted to the milk which' would render the butter unpalatable. Dependent, how ever, as is the quality of the article manufactured upon the cow and : the goodness of the food, a proper degree oi care and skill on the nart of tho dairy-woman is of much greater conse quence. Care that all the utensils of the dairy are kept dry and sweet; that the milk-room is well ventilated, of a proper temperature, free from damp ness and the unpleasant smell gener ated by moisture ; that the cream is not allowed to stand too longuponthe milk, nor after it is skimmed; be churn ed at a proper temperature, the oper ation neither being hurried undiilvnor carried too far; that it should be salted with the nicest salt obtainable not in jured by the addition of sugar or salt peter; and that all the buttermilk be properly and effectually removed. Butter is judged by its color, aro ma, taste, and consistency.- Its color should be a delicate pale straw not approaching white, and yet, perhaps, that is better than the deep orange tint, almost always sure indication of extraneous coloring matter. The pe culiar smell always giving off by the nicest butter is easily recognized. The better' the quality the more delicate this aroma, ' while as the aualitv de generates, about in the same propor tion does the smell vary till it becomes positively offensive. This fragrance is uepenaent very much on the process of manufacture. Orange eountv da irv. maids make "Orange county butter" whenever tney ioilow the same pro cesses. The taste of . the hnt.t.pr will betray any inattention to the proper care, of either the milk, cream, or th vessels in which they are kept. So is the addition of any foreign matter, such as impure or too much or to little salt, sugar, or coloring matter. A certain amount of salt is necessary to bring out the true flavor of butter in its greatest delicacy. In texture or i consistency a crreater differen rA WAS i Q " w presented than upon any other point; ; m me lots examined by tne Commit tee. Some waxy, leaving no mark upon the knife after being thrust into a lump, with hardly enough moisture to dim its brightness, while oth r lota were soft, leaving greasy streaks upon me uiaue, ana targe drops ot an opa que liquid; oozing from the newly cut ! surfacf. Tli. .;.t r .Ul,.. . Z: ;ffn , 7 . ael 01 fc,.."-" inc 9uic uiuivatiuu ui an imperfect, if not bad process of mak ing. The utmost moisture wtidislioulti be found in thorouffh-worked bnttpris a very slight dew, and it should be of sucn nrm, waxy consistency, as to slice ' IjUUiSUlLCUljT. BH llf Hllfff rlmm hnrlw a:, : v v: nf a. Vn."fQ KU A xt v u 0 i of aknife blade. , No butter is properly made unless it will bear these tests. L,, - "I " ' : '. Xbe JslaSSaRhnspfQ. TanriQlntnio liao refused to abolish canital nunishmpnf an indicatmn W A;; r: in;nWVr mg m that State. T ICAIOTlJABFOiriJ i w - - r b h MONTHS. S ,,p 55 2 . ma . g S lis: :S g : o & : 3 S S ih j: . CO 4 H H fa CO January, 1 i ! 2 3 4 5 0 7 18 " 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 February, i 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 '-9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 120 : 27 28 March, 1 2 3 4 5- .i 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ! " 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 !26 ' j 127 28 29 30 31 April, ; ' 1 I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 j 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 :1G 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 . i 24 25 26 27 28. 29 30 May, 1 2 3 4 5 6. 7 8 9 10 11 12 .13 14 15 16 17- 18 19 20 i21 22 23 24 25 26 27 128 29 30 31 I June, 1 8 15 22 29 o 9 16 23 30 i 4 ill !18 !25 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 7 14 21 28 10 17 24 July, 1 8 15 22 29 i'2 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 31 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 7 14 21 28 August, 1 8 15 22 29 2 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 31 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 0 13 20 :27 7 14 21 28 September, 1 8 15 22 29 o 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 7 14 21 28 October, 2 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 31 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 i 14 21 28 29 November, 1 8 15 22 29 2 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 6 13 20 27 7 14 21 28 December, 1 8 15 22 29 2 . 9 16 23 30 3 10 17 24 31 4 11 18 25 5 2 19 26 6 13' 20 27 7 14 21 28 ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. EASTERN MAIL I Arrives daily at (5h. 45ra. P. M. Departs daily at Oh. lorn. A. M. WESTERN MAIL Arrives .Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fri days, at 6 P. M. Departs same days at 6 A. M. SOUTHERN MAIL Ajrrives Wednesdays and Saturdays, at 4 P. M. " ; Departs Tuesdays and Fridays, at 6 A. M. HAMPTON VILLE MAIL, via Bethany Church ' . Arrives Tuesdays, at 5 P. M. Departs AVednesdays, at 7 A. M. HAMPTON VILLE MAIL, via-Liberty Hill Arrives Fridays, at 7 P. ;.M. Departs Saturdays, at 7 A. M. WILKSBOROUGH MAIL Arrives Fridays, at 6 P. M. Departs Saturdays, at 6 A. M. . MOUNT ULLA MAIL ; Arrives Saturdays, at 5 P. M. Departs same day, at 7 A-. M. TAYLORSVILLE MAIL Arrives Mondays and Wednesdays, at . 6 ; p. m; ' Departs Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 7 A. M. . , ' LEXINGTON MAIL, via Mocksville Arrives Tuesdays, at 12 M. Departs Thursdays, at 1 P. M. R. F. SIMONTON, P. M. tibertisements. Valuable Land FOU SALE On South Yadkin, seven miles North of the town ol Suuesville, re(Jell county, N. ( I also offer, my tract of 200 acm more or less, formerly known as the lands of James Baley , together with the elegant buildings such as Dwelllihg Houses, Kitchen, Nogroe house., Barns, Shops, &c. I would say to those who wish to purchase Land, that ithey would do well to rail and view my possessions, before purchas ing elsewhere. HAMILTON CROUCH, 26 S2tf Liberty Hill. . c. J Nov', Printing Press AND Materials FOR SALE CHEAP. IIavinr mirvnlivl finr wifV. Prees and Types, xve offer for sale, the Press ! and Types on which the " Asheboro' Bnlle-! a new anaiypeaon which the Asheboro'iBuUe-! tin was printed, having no further use for I "icm. luev wouin np wi n. nv nnn wnnii ) be very suitable for issuing a medium Bheet. . .-. . - - - " . E. B. DRAKE & SON Dec. 17, 1858. 3-tf: Harness Making; TTT TH 1 TT T T T" r V, a 14 U . Keep coniUntlr on hand, at their mann. factor, in O L 1 N, . large assortment of Harness. Bridles. Collars, and everything else, usually kept in a H&raetm establishment. We earnestly invite all persons wishing to purcnasegooxi Dargains to give ua a call be b fore bovine else where. Bv close annlira- l,on nd promptitude in business, we hone to ,hare iiibPernl patronage from , gen! enu public. : Ordere attended to nrommiv with beitoess arid dispatchl . We have da rtnaita.? nf Hmmma. KiatoKwit!. i k I nr vVoodward: Uberty All J with A. Feimsten County ture, with Eccles & co. : Joneaville. ,wilhTh0'T - Maxwell. ; L f ortw i.. m. . 1 ... zzzz VaaIualiIe"PIaDflition FOR SALE! I Tha aubtcriher affera for 8le tfirf t lantation od improvements where be now reir It ie Io caled just below the mouh of Liletyreek, io Catawbs countj, oesr Iewia1 Fenrj the Cm containing 515 aures, io of wh re in coitivatipn end aboot 50 acres or tiiie good Creek .nd Branch Bottom, Th. :mp,ement. art rnmfnrfahU Lot? DweHinff. vSrit ft e ' narn. .-sianirc ana aiaiia mr ,u uciu m uoriei. . . . .Wii ' UOW tnedi, sou goou r encea. ner e ia the place a good G RIST MILL runpg a of Burr and a pair of common Slcnesj The W. N. C. Railroad passes through the ; farm and the Depot is located npon it. ! It is thn.ost val uable farm in this section of tne State'.? Tliere are also on the plaice largfjorchards ot peach and apple trees of the bet quality, and good spring? of water 'abour4tf Will be sold for Cash or exchong foir Neg roes. Oct 15 '46if A. Hillsboro' Recorder, Fayettevirie f 4serer & Wades oro' Argus Will please, copyill forbid, Second Editibh,tJ REVISED AND E SPARGED. S. J. SlatesvUle, JV. Q, 1 now openiny; and offering 5e largest and finest Stock ol - Confectionery and Tancyoods Ever offered in Slatesville j: alsr, lgood as sortment ot JKWKLiy, wrwcj he sells very low ioi Cash. .. ; ' ! Oysters, ' ; : . Havi,g accepted the Agency o$ie of the largest Kish and Oysur .Hoiiselin Portss .moqih, he is-prepared to turnishj Karnilies with g-oc-d freiph Oysters, three tini a week, in any uanttt) . from a qdart to ihi callans. s S J. RliKERT. Dec. 3, 1858.: ltf i U - . RAIL ROAD N0TJ(! Country MeVcIinfe Kew. Cheap, and ILcdi tious Itouie fori 1 Freight for the Interior qfW. C. 8 15 " T EKCH ANTS and olhers aboupurcha. 22 ITXing their Fall and Winter StMfijlies, are rt-quesieu io nonce, mat oy trie cnplelion oi tho A'orlh Eastern Kail (toad if.rn Char lesion, S. C ; to Cheraw, the ad vawtes of a CHKAP and KXI'EDl 7 10US Kite from the Seaboard has been opened to rCem. ' . All freight c(MJsigned to the cfVoT the Agent ot the North Eastern Kail 'ad will be forwarded FHEEOF CO.vllSSlll'y.i No charge will be made for:' orage at Cheraw All gools will be taken re of in the Company's Warehouse until st for A schedule of charges ior transportation of freight will be rour.d at the Post fice. S. S. sdLOM$YS, 3?ff ' ' Eu-j'tiinSup't. Mountain Scenry. 1 ! m, i a . : ... vj Ui Mtciununu aauuua ana Western South Carola. , OV .IIESfnv w nnr Av ii m jl . ju j j v mj ju, vr WORK upon the Scenery f ihe Blue Ride and its fellow! ranges;4' Mquh tains will Xe published early in J?iuary. . The Tollowimr will be its contents : - Chap. I. Introduction;! '- Chap. II. Ashevillc. j . . Chap. III. Routes to j-each ASeville the Swa,nanoa Gap Road, j . ! Chap. IV. The Hickory Nut Gp Road. Chap. V. The Routes from Soiiiii flnrnli- na Salem Gap and Jtonea Gap, 'PVt liock, HehdersonVille, Caesar's 4IIead, Whiteside 31ountain, and Cashier's Valley.; Chap. VI. A Route via Wilfcfborough and Lenoir; the Valley! of the-jfadkih ; Wilksborough ; Happv IVallev riLehoir'; Hi'bri'ten, &c. " I " ' ' . Chap. VII. Morgantoti andib $rround ings; the Piedmont Springs ; IlAyks Bill and Table Rock. ' . V ' Chap. VIIL Lin ille Falls ; thGinger-c-ke Rock ; North Cove and the Cj&e. Chap. IX. The Vicinity of Aheyille ; the WJiite Sulphur; the1 Mil'lionfBprings: Pleasant Drives. j : - - Cliap. X. The Black Mountn the Mountain House; Journal of a.Paj&y. Chap. XI. The Mountain; tSe Bald Mount. j , ;- Chap. XII. The Frencli Broad Mvera'nd the Warm Springs. " R Chap. XIII. Pleasant Country topping Places ; Carson's, on the Catawba ; arris's, at Chimney Rock; Sherillls, atr llicjbry Nut Gap ; Penland'B, at Flat Rock, ontfoe Riv er, in Yancey j Alexander and ABaird's, on the French Broad ; Alexander' on the Swananoa. ' : ; ' y-4 Chap. XIV. The Western unties ; Haywood, Jackson, Macon, and i (liefokee ; Pigeon River; Franklin ; a Win&r Trip: Valley River; the Nantihala ; Cfaftbkec In dians, -j: Chap XV. Productions of the Tfcst, Ag riculturarand' Mineral ; Wild FWH; Tree Growth; Wild Animals and llcptil j. Appendix. The Pilot Mountain iSalem : Piedmont Springs, in Stokes: ShoccBprings; Kittrell's Springs ; Letters of Dr. Cijriety on Mountains of North Carolina. .. . The work will contain four viewsff Moun tain tcenery and a Map of that se'00 of country, showing all Roada. StaSV Lines, Stopping Places. Xoted Places. It will be got up in the best stvM of the ' an,, aim ouiu m w cenia a copy ; w'aen sent by mail 00 cents. ! " :ts .' Persons wishing copies will addre W. L. POMEROY, Raleigh, N. C. M A liberal diseoun't to those taking a num ber of copies for sale or tlisbibutieni tJT. A nnl tel3' VverT a number ot AdveJUsemenQ- of IIo- JTLX 7"? f. "j i. wr uraett,iaeaiai- j - .. .is - .Inn 14. 1BSO Atr ; 2 5 ' IJOFFLIN'S 1 Cloth ing Eni porliim, MANSION HQUSEj CDRKll, ; Where the best assortment of xtjeady Blade Clothing is at all times jo be ob tained, at low prices. , My Stock consists of If Coats, PantSy Vejstgr. Ovcoats, Drawers, Under Clotting of every description, $Boots, Shoes, Mats, Caps$c. , Mansion House Corner, $alisburiN. C. JanV7, 1859 5-6m 1 ?B - . , PAY YOUR PREACHER, ' ' s ' . All who have not paid will please cfill and Day the money that was due &n.thdsdfti of July last. -' j 'i - r House & Lot for Sale The subscriber offers for sale a Douse and Lotj in. Stutestille, neat the Female College'. The lot con tains two acres of ground, the im- prpvements : nave &i Den put up within the last three years, and tfae yard there is' a Well of ex- "i i'piiuii i wwfxw" it wi i nurviri n Am - . a jpon k - - - - a pair , ' . . . reasoDaHa . ' ma. Possession can be given, at ady time. J. A. DAVIS. Oct. lat 44if WILSON & NEWHARD, WATCH-MAKERS 1 roas of locatins in this healtv and thririnol1 STATES VILLE, Nj C. KEEP, constantly pn hard a large assortment f Watches n& Jewelry f n kinds. ; . Clocks, Watches and Jewelry iof every sort, repaired ii tbe beat manner and j on. the most reasonable terms. I , August 2Sth, 1858. j New H. N. MALCOLM, Practical Marble Cutter, Salisbury, iV". C.y . ' Respecllully informs the public that he has opened a ! MAKBIE YARD, Opposite the Mansion Hotel, Where Jie'is p.epared to fill all orders with dispatch, for MONUMENTS, HEAD . STONES, TABLE-TOPS, and all kind of work n the Marble Line, of either JMs POUTED ITALIAN or j A IVi RE IMTfl 4 B B CI. Having made arrangements hy which he can procure the Imported Itajlia Makdlk at reduced prices, he can fill 'all orders for -Monument, &c , at' reasonable) rates. He wculd be haDDV to harrt all desirous of dealinii in hi linM in nail on,i rr - -"' v wmib U.1III ee specimens of Marble, hear nrirR. an.i judge tor themselves. j Having had an experience of 25 years in' the buemess, he will-give his personal at tention to putting upHloiiumefits, &o i November 5, 1858 49tf . UUU Lru zJ Li-j Ji 1 ry HE subscribers are preparpd to. furnish JL to order anything in the line of head Atones, tombItabIes ttlLAUlUil f i or r urnuure ,viarrje, and Warrant Katiw i ,action. 0a nr ' , ! i,,uc,!i I EKMS Cash nn delivprt. GRA Y, BRY4N & Co, ' Salisbiity, N. C. STATESVILLE Male Academy, j: B. ANDREWS, PiJixcjpal. i The Second Session of this T ll irni ir.n w 1 . villi commence on WEDNESDAY JUT. ' ARY 5, 185U. " j" ' The Apademic Year will be dirided into two , Sessions, of 21 Weeks each. I Pupils chain ed litni date of entrance. RATES" OF; TUITION. S Ordinary Englisli brandies, pci Sea., 8.00 Higher . 12U( Classical Department, . . ' ljjO Tactics and Drill careftillv attended to without extra charjre. Dec. 24, 1858. 4-tf ' - t ' 5 ' THE j Ghickering &SonV 31 Prize BBEDAiTlAliOS. r jiHE b'ubfcriber, Agent forlL sale of the A above namej justly celebrated Pianos, inlorms the public respectfully! that he nar.' aniens every Jnsirnmeiit. Felons wishing to purchase the F I A NO, by addressing him, will be sent a pamphlet, with U -different styles, and prices marked. ' j Pianos Tuned and Repaired. Address, -4 T. A. E. IjOHNSTrnr Nor. 3. 185. ' U'ni... v r P. S. To Mr. B. wis the only and first pre mium for his Pianos at th N Uf s.o. t;! awaided. - fv -'iaiv a an (50-Jy New Fall and Winter 7 T. II. McROKIE, Keepectfullv infornm the Citi'n of IroH.ti and the public generally, thath has receiv j:i and now offers lor pale, orf (he most rea sonable terms, a ?ery larg- and wdl assort ed stock of ' I G OO DS fimhJs. .1 u .A 5 ig almost every article ke . e. .wwy mruuie sepi in an extenbive x Retail Store. Bee wax, Tallowy Dried Erdit, Tow Lin-' en, Linaey Goh, Ka? Cooniry ."rodoce", &c-, taken in exchange for Goods. ! Thankful Tor tha liberal patronage receive ; ed, particularly from CASH Customers, ; It will be my effort to hold out inducements ( to uch costomers, and thereby! enlarce .rny eura. WI'IS, 1099. 46tt 4-- Notice. j We have Land, Wagqnsi HorseSj juuies, . iugies, ivarnages, Shingles, &c.-, &6., WHICirjWE WISH Td SELL. '. Also, j TTe haye a great many unsettled Ac-. counts and JNotes AVTiich we wish to be closed bv CASH, or otherwise, SOON, or they will! be found iu tthe hands of an officer for collection, i FEIiLSTER & FEJMSTER. 9 Ike. 10,1858. 2-tf I Dec. 17, 1858v Smos i , T ; . I
Iredell Express (Statesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 11, 1859, edition 1
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