I 1 4- ! 1 1 I 3 ,r -f ' I. r ir- i'L ! 'i '.:,r ' I, , I" Uhl am ..t I ft" ti f i "i 3 ! if.. H1 -I from tie Albaif Cuilicator. J WT1IAAW0UNT OF THE LA I 1 XL-OI . ll ! t- r f. .'.. . . i K . ( '. ' Didjvm to Gaftta Show go! ! j 4 VliiVkickinz. nDtpushiog and gormg , CattlP in priu th pe ns in s row 41 j V n And rfl trC ogs, there, f BOor,nK j A;i I' there sheep ioe ; .cm W'ther. onJ lambs-7,W.- wine sre'nt invent far' I know,). ' ' Length of Cor Roots. Jl a proof of the importance of deep plowing, Ellsworth meriliojns the following fact. jThere are now in the Na tional" Gallery, corn , roots talcep fropi one sifJe of a hill of corn laid bare by a freshet, sixty days after planting;'some of the larger roots vhicb,! covered jWitn. lateral ; branching roo were more than four leet long, i The aggrega length of all the roots in the hill, fine and coarse, were estimated at over 8000 feet. oi te "t- or,, (iuek,; (W m pen. ar - . i l j nil MxrinA " I f. Tha'i taff too. dir trial of atreneth. 1 ; Witi hawing and e ing and acoldin, i J.iai tn iti-iiffh a rrt stnne foot's Irneth- t iMw t haw buck ! why don't ye ! gee odin t Thea ifo? plowing ney give a reward, j ' And fufe aa a aqui rel that burrows, j -! Off aiart the plow, cat through the green sward. A turning the flickft of lurrows. r.Andlthen air, in a loom that, they've got, : J liere a an " ocean oi noiem uikj'iujt u, i ; TIrVs blanket', afad siockinn. and what not-r t Thlt the1 folka in t eir houses have made, f .1 ThereybnnneU, both of ft raw and of grass, l And cJoth tooMof uoolen and linen, 1 i' AM! there's yarn, n nd there's tliread, pmo)fh as g '. Thai gait for themselves have been ppinnihg. Tlerj hats, and there's shoes, and there's lea the t, And there'a I can t tell half now, 1 tear Got! a prize gee hb ! altogether ! I'd go to the iow twict a year. DISHOP I1IiVAINTE-AGAlN-PAREiTSj j,- j v- ! I Again : The total disuse 6ardeni spirits onihe part of trents, is tie only planof afe iy i bringing p their children. t Hor manyj ar the (parents whose Hires are cursed jwitbj childrenj who, here it nolthat nof rurkard( hath any inheritance in the kmgdon ofOpd," they would ; be j'relieved tp? bear were deati !-p But how were those children tmnedlll Atif hu ilmrp rnmintLntr comvaniovs : uu that vile Richness of Milk.Thc Boston Cultivator, i dram-shop !" iUe parent .oud s'aijtwdr.;; But cv..iU. i(m,vn-s usually gvc milk so j what first inclined their way fo uat house ot rich, that 7 quarts will often yield a pound of butter; and that of other covstt requires nine teen or twenty quarts rnous cow. Blossom, re pound of butter. ThefTrnlk from the 4a quired 19 quarts for Fruit Trees Good Cultivation. AVe have often spoken of ihe value of giving young tres, good mellow cultivation. The Boston Cultiva tor sayS that V. Flanders, of Woburn, set out : seduction ? By what avenue did evil associates first effect a lodgment in those children's hearts? How many parents must turn and look at home for an answer ! l They have not been intempe-! rate ; but while the tastes and habits ;of their children were forming, they used to drfjik mod erately of ardent spirits. The decanter con taining it had an honored place on the sideboard and on the table. It was treated respectfully, as a fountain of strength to the feeblf, of re- asp S a vounir orchard six years ago, on good rich j freshment to the weary j.and as penecuy saw J r. . . . . . ...i. -j : kUAM:n - -fV nffr.r It in k friend. land, and has since given it good but ecpnorni- i wikuukuiuhi.... w . t t --- v ' .O.u!tivation.hv tilliU and cronninir. The ! was a debt of hospitality. Thus the whole trees are now from four to six inches in diamp: j weight of parental example was employed in In ' J I LET. i I? Mk. 3Brlcultur.U ter. -Some of the trees have already yielded nearly a barrel of fruit. I From the A bany N. Y.) Cultivator. pit FROM MU. riORSFODiTIJK impressing those children with a favorable idea of the pleasure, the benefit, and the security, (not to speak of the necessity,) of the use of Cultivation of Orchards. At a, late agricul- j ardent spirits. : Thus the parents presented the tural meeting at the State House, Boston, Mr. j decanter of strong drink to their children, wild Porter, of Danvers, stated that a few years ago, ' a recommendation as forcible as if every day he had an old orchard of four or five acres, ! they had encircled it with a chaplet of roses, which had not been plowed for thirty year's, ; and pronounced an oralion in its praise, which his neighbors said was worthless. le I And what consequences were to be eipected? plowed lit, manured it well, and took off a good j Children who fever the'ir parents will honor crop of oats. He pursued the same course the j what their parents delight to honor. It Was not two following years. The third year, he had to be supposed that those clfildren would do else seven tons of oats, cut before ripe for fbddor, i than imitate the, high example! before them. . I i a i ri - i . t I 1 ' 1 l nntu ia 11 ar utAi lrl I li A vr t rT t ra t it d i f nA f m. On, ia ibo ,rrt Mirnlii- nf. labor here ner- ! and twq Hundred ana eighty mrreis oi appies. , "' ntting an amount at care and cultivation, 'wniqn, this city have established a pies Wr Anastatic 'workand that they will imrhe'diately reproduce J Home copiously illustrated English works, which j could hot otherwise be published njhls coun-. tryf rbe advantages of this system pfer the old one of types and engravings, are too palpa. bid to need enumeratingli But jit will produce; 'revolution in the system of publishing in this country,' greater than can be efle.cted. in "any other, because it must inevitably lead to the en." Kctment of some kind of inlertiationalcopy-rigbt .law. y", ... With the aid f an Anastatic press, every book-seller will hereafter be bis own publisher, and the most costly work costly on the score of illustrations or beauty of typemay be re-f produced in ten minutes or less, and there will be no necessity for striking any more copies than will meet an immediate demand. If a customer should call for a new work, the book, seller may tell him to wait a few minutes while he prints it for him. The saving in labor, cap. ital, and machinery will be almost incalculable, and booTSs will have hardly any value beyond the worth of the paper on which they are print ed, except that which the copy-right will give them. Not only will every bookseller be his own printer and publisher, but every library may print its own books, that is supposing that CULTU IE OF (J RAPES,; (jiekskn, May 1,11846,; Trt KKR t am quite, satisfied of two ad- vantages Jwssessed by the wine-growihg coun tries of Europe over the lands of our northern states, in relation to the culture of the.grape. ! "THji if if Wvr rnli finne. wrt1 member; it muSt.be done to a moment, on shan't be able to todch it-T-and made hot - andl some nice rfavy. Confound these parties 1 could any thing be more stu pid ?-fiVhjle Martin was sleeping on one side rirme, there wris Bernard on the oth er, who'did nothing jbut bore me about his horses, and his: wines, and his pictures, till I wished them all at old Harry I think I shall have done with partics. J La(fy.. I . am sure, my dear, they are no pleasure to me ; and, if they were, I pay dear j enough for jjt; for you generally come! home in an ill humour and your health and your pdeket too suffer for it. Yourjarf bill came to more than ninety pounds,' besides your expenses at Chelten-ham--andthe next thing, 1 suppose, will be a Voyage to Madeira, or Lisbon and then What will bec6me of us ? ' Gent. What, do i ou grudge me the ne- IMPORTANT i notciiitissS v N conseq'jcnrf c f . these wheels t ire cessaries of life ? It is I that am the suf- ferer-7- U i! Lady. Not entirely so : I am sure I feel the effects of it, and so do the servants. Yourjtemper is so) entirely changed, that the poor children .are afraid to go near you. You make very body about you miserable; and you know Smith lost his cause from your riot being able to attend at the lait assizes!' which will be nearly of them in diCWf n: : have soil about ( J K which are in full r n 1 county. , When jro;,". the raloe of the t.'.-'., far exceed the inl-! s- ; (many of whom ae r- ence and practical s--. . this improTemcnt. more easily k-; t i:i gether,han the ou:r... one-third of the wa!-r, there is a head stove, ed lb more than Uc 'J ' " The price of an inJ. is 80. . We refer, an:cr some of whom lud tl more, and from niany t ficates highly afjrc.- Uheir saws, with Ibis i and even as hig!i as I. , bead of water. 1 FATrrriTjLLE. A. Graham, j ; CC3IEISI4XD. Col. Alex. MircLi- Christopher Munrtr, Alexander lil! ia r:. -Col. A: S. M'ei.l, Farqahard Situli, New York Mirror. mmmid t. nWmff K mil itaI rnnrp than ! llliitR to acauire a fondness for stronff drink. milling an amount oil care aud cultivation, wniQn, j . i"u,""bi mv b ,.; . , .. f r c With ftilstinff wine brices. could not be afforded I eight barrels a year, it may oe proper loauu, ; uc, ,u.u ou. - r.- ------ -r CI IS. ' i i that although sown crops .with manure, do well ffAoojiier is palpatio from the fact tbatjthefifst -fr full jg: own orchards, hoed crops, only, jo ! as potatoes, Dee is, and lurneps, win answer tor v agriculturists in general in our country. frost In this region iBth oft October. m i i of country occurred on t The wcalher of the summer young irees. - season la remarkably uniform not suraassins-1 t, r r l . r- jy,nne,!nor yci oi ine worst Kinu put yee irom suddeniand extreme changes. j ; ! (Of the first reasim : Iii Nov., 1844, I saw peasants carrying hods of earlh up the steeps o the Rhino vintage to manure the soil about i the roots of the vines. The amount of this a j bor, wlUn it is remembered that square miles by the lousand aru lo be enriched in this wajy, and that each root is not more than a foot aid a half perhaps in iriiher direction from its fel- q ;. low, is immense, iariy in .-prii oi tasi yvur, I saw them at work removing the leaves ad rubbish tlcing the vines to the stakes, and pre paring them to tako advantage of the genial ib- Stronig Woien.--Henry Colman says, the most remarkable instance of strength and en durance is perhaps to be found in the fish wo men of Edinburgh, who attend market from a what their Darents used. . In ailittte while the ------ t flower would become, grateful. They would learn to think of it, contrive ways, of obtaining it, and he very accessible to the snares of those who use it to excess. Thus easily would they slide into the pit. And thus the history of the decline, and fall, and death of multitudes must commence, not at the dram-shop, but at the ta bles of parents ; ; not with describing the influ- n .1 t J j P a copy can nrst ne oorrowea to pni .n .. tht Tua of hjm and his famiy Twodays A work on cottage architecture printed by the q J Anastatic process has a re ady been puM.'bed j h j dined at QU were ,aM by Carey 6c Hart of Philadelphia, to which we ; J n Kf t.i' u i shall allude further in a day or two. Geni- I s as much concerned at i u as uny uouy couiu oe ; anu i minK i naa j reason to be so, for I lost three hundred i pounds myself-but who can help illnessf j Is it not a visitation of Providence ? I am j sure nobody can live more temperately than I do do you ever see me drunk T j AinH as regular as clock-work T Indeed, my dear, if you cannot talk more ration- John ! why don't you bring the brandy and wa ter and see if the chop is ready. If I am not better in the morning, I am sure 1 shaU hpt be able to attend my appoint ment in the city, j j " There vil always be a few ready to re distance of more than two miles on foot. Their ence ot seductive companions,; but with a la load of fnh, in baskets, slung upon their bacM, ! mentation over the examples of inconsiderate often weighs 150 lbs., and has been known to parents, who furnished those companions with wei"h 00 lbs. They stop to rest but once on iheir strongest j argument, and ; wreathed their r their arrival are found crying j cup of death with a garland of honor. ftuencisS of spring -4-. . i: : - roer season, every .j . Through the whole sum- walk past vintages, found j any means bad looking. some kind of labdr. going forward. In Sept.! 1 . !.!'. .'1- t '.-L-J J .. J . it: . : . u,e outer, orancneK were croppeo, to tnrow ioe Tomato Pickles. Take Tomatoes t wo-thi flood of sap Into the fruit. In October and N ripe, (when they begin to turn a little red,) prick ;.Yfmuer,tnegrapesweregainered,juice.express- them with a fork put tbofn ih a gtrong ,jrinef cd, and disposed in casks tor fermentation. and ietjthem rernain eight days ; then put them ipThoi labor bestowed upon this single depart- j in wea vinegar to remain 24 hours ; remove v ment of ogticullure has vastly exceeded all; I them from hig- put Ul5m in 8tone jars . badcojeeived. 1 and to i peck of Tomatoes add a bottle of mui.' , 'j!(OT tte second reason : notwithstanding the j tard aij ounce of ove8t and an ounce of black juys pvponcm oi irosi, u .. computea tnai pepper groun(t laying alternately a layer of to- uui uiiv jcir in uve can uo caicuiatea unon as the road, and after their arrival are found crying j cup .their fish in all parts of the town.' " How ma- j Such consequences must be looked for wher nyt" asks Colman, "d'f the Chestnut-street, or ! ever parental example is expected to be held in Washirigton-streetj, or Broadway belles, would I reverence among children. A father may ven it require to lift even one of these loads from : ture to the brink of a precipice, and stand with the ground 7" He says these women are neat ' out giddiness upop the margin of the torrent that in appearance, of fair complexions, and not by rushes by and plunges into a deep abyss: but I; "IV- .1 f' tnktful: 'If with this in, five the peasantry, accustomed to ihe sim frlest fare, Can barbly live, how could the effort I to cultitate extenlively be. profitable wilh us, where! the chancis of success are so reduced ! by thojeontingene es of sunshine and rain, and yrherojabor is so expensive ? I ! ! How tho effort may bo rewarded in the states ( farther! south, I ain unable to say. Perhaps uj. tho I eastern and southern slopes of hills in some parts of Virginia, the climate would not i r-'l objectionable. Respectfully yours,; I E. N. HoRSFORD. will he trust his child to occupy the same posi tion ? But if the child sec him there, is there no danger that when the parent's eye is away he too will venture, and go and play upon the frightful verge, and be amused with the bubbles as they dance along the side of the cataract, and at last become giddy, and drawn in with the rush of the tide ? Entire abstinence from the drink of drunkards is the parent's only plan in training up their children. . I i Again : The total disuse of ardent spirits is MOUNT ARARAT. Ararat is a vast mountain, of immense height, surrounded by perpetual snows, and ribbed with eternal ice. Many attempts have been made to ascend it, and failed. But Professor Parrott succeeded; and, engaged, in the delight and I ally, you had better, go fobbed. glory of ascending this most ancient of hills, and looking down on the strange regions of the Caucasus, he thus spake of it : 'I passed forward through a projecting mound of snow, and behold ! before my eyes, now in toxicated with joy, lay the extreme cone, the j ceive the hims Gf experience, and to them nignesi pinnacle oi Ararat, aim a last etiort i on)y can this scene be useful. Bentley. was required of us to ascend a tract of ice by I ' ' means of steps ; and that accomplished, about a quarter past three o'clock, on the 9th of Oct. t&29, we stood on the top of Ararat. " What I first aimed at and enjoyed was rest ; I spread out my cloak and sat dow on it. I found myself on a pretty, vaulted, nearly cruci- form surface of about two hundred paces in cir cuit, which at the margin sloped off precipitous ly on every side, but particularly toward the southeast and northeast. Formed of eternal ice, without rock or stone to intercept its con. uity, it was the austere, silvery head of Old Ararat." matoes and spices. Then nour on strong vine. uncertainty, one chance j gar colj and theywill be found to be deiciousj essential to the beneficial influence of the exam The brjne should be prepared by boiling and ; v' ine lt mlraie upon sociciy at large, putting in as much salt as will dissolve, thet ; IIowever nove ihe- assertion to some, it can sufleredl to cool. For any kind of pickles it is : be easi1 shown the example of all who use j best when prepared in this way. j araent; pP,nt3 except as they use prescribed .1 rr. , , ; rneaic"13 in the scale ot intemperance. As Anothcr.-Tk iho small round tomatoes, far as it, infl!ience extends, it helps directly to let them lay ,n weak vinegar two or three days ; ! fill up the ranks of lhe internt)erate. am annu. prepare the best vinegar by-putting in 9 to lflnK o Li,;,.u ..r - - . ' ...aw iwuiivu U IIIU1 IIUUC i 1 1 1 I 1 1 It . 1 1 I Lr 1 1 L H I 1 1 1 I . , i . r . Practice in the English Groceries. An ex- j grogseller, of London, lets out some secrets of j lhe craft, in a series of letters in the Boston ; Traveller. He says : j First, all drippings of glasses and measures j having contained wine or spirits are carefully ' j collected in a zinc stand, kept for that purpose. ; j This stand is regularly emptied out every morn- j I ing, or oftener if necessary, and put away into ; bottles, to be afterwards made into cordials and compounds by the admixture of syrups and olh er ingredients. Some establishments calculate to pay theii servants' wages from these dripp- I ings. Second, all drippings of ale, beer or any f other article that will not mix with the spirits, are collected in a zinc trough, in which is a pipe j to convey it down ioto the waste butt in the j cellar ; this to be afterwards mixed with beer, , as required. then ; NEW AND FRESH Patent j Medicines, For Sale at J. II. Ennls' Cheap Drug? Store. PETERS Vegetable Ant.-BiI.ious Pilla, In 25 and 50 ct. boxes. Brandreth'8 Anti-Billious Pills. Spencers' Vegetable : do. Allabase's health j do. j Chinese Blood Pills. Ague Sc Fever Pill certain- cure, or no paj. Thompson's celebrated Eye Warter. Sandaf Sar?aparilla---the best preparation now in use. Comstock's Extract of Sarsaparilla. Wistar's Balsoni of Wild Cherry a care for all coughs onld. Consumption, ic. Gray's Invaluable Ointment for cuts, bums, sprains, bruises, ic.' ' Fpohn's Head-Ache Remedy a certain cure for nerv ous head-ache, j Hull's Cough Ijozenges. Dr. Pcrry s Vermifuge, or Dead Shot a certain cure for Worms. j Comstock's Vermifuge for do. Rowan's Tonic Mixture for chills and ague and fever. Dr. Mc.Muns' Elixer of Opium said to be abetter preparation of Opium than laudanum or para gone. Beniard'9 Cholera Syrup a cure for Summer com- plaints i Swainis' Panacea. Ilenrj's Calcine Magnesia a mild and pleasant ope- neint. i, English and Classical School. JONESVILLE ACADEMY. John AIcDanu l, John Evans,' 1 J.W.HoweHp Blade. Gen. James cKar. Robert Melvia, S. Jtf. Richardson, Tomas C. Sui'th, Isaac Wrigbtj John Smith, . ' J , SAitrsorf. G.T. BarksJi!e, Patrick Murifij, John II. Spearn.cr, ' Hardf Roya! James Murphy, Charles Ilenr, - ; O.xslov. Robert AmanL Thomas IlcKier, i Besides man j-o:l.fr . Wiui such a ietcn i feel justified in loflWr : They will sell iaJh iJ.. terms. Tbey ato k. r; of wheels, (Tarj jnp i:i ? ter,) in this plac, WW.. bern and alo;for f :'. ! counly. Thef iaati.. i : from paying an4 per5 Agents for the rut c: NOTICE TQ HILL ployraent acquiint j : Wljeels, as - Ve auw ; - , business in different , AU : A. A. FayeUetillL Jar: . TO EDITORS. A -, Carolina who w) l r -' send the paper, s-l.ali I io appose oi as.ne r.ia v , cadiiis CAr. : Cheapest land :,, ! Manufucloru i JOHN J. II No. 42, Mjarkct ffflAKBS p'jasure i JL North Cirolini -. rangements to jneet t!. to sell his very WujTri' r at the extremely lw and will warrapt the ufactured in th L'nitrJ ; ; SUPE1UOII at very reducel pric -. dozen bottles ptuked. v. Fruits and Nqts, ic , willYneet witlij proi.ip t ' I j llll'I March 27, 134C 1; cloves, allspice, pepper, -cinnamon, and such into a hopeless eternity. Can this be true ? i ' iMniiv r'nn v 1 . We;hav4 before spoken of the value of Indian yum iu supporting tne animal system, and nave TJie tea plant in France. Th alluded to ?tK s8tonittK',n r.r. f ,ii ! des Debats states that the exnprimpnts '-I- WUnUlxtetusL the culture of the ' - . ! : Lj.Wl whkwstJ. i, ..-. Lt i Lfa P,ant in t ranee tad fully succeeded "I ...... w.aw.a. uipiii-11 r Mil .'11 I I 1 II 1 ' 1 I m I . . . sniPPo Aa nna mov. finm l. u- t ' wrt . i ii 1 : Suppose all the rising generation, in imitation well. When entirely cold, put in the tomatoes ! c tvr- ti i ,1 , j . c- i . , .r . J. , 1 , of their elders, should commence the moderate and it there is sufficient body to the vinegar r , . . . - , . , 4 :i, , . 3 ' u0ar. use of strong drink. They are thus attracted jour pickles will never require any farther trou-1 - . . . j ki ' U - , , .. , M . J, m,lucr irou' ; into the current of the stream which Is setting ble, provided they are kept from the air. 1 m ,i , , r i- : , r silently, smoothly powerfully, toward the roar ing whirlpool. ; But now ihey are urged by those whose example they hdve thus far followed, to go no farther. " Beware ! (they cry) the tide is strong; do like us ; drop the ancho, ply the ounl4,;tbat tho Mexicans are in the habit of, uung jcorn after the corn l The tea plant has been found to thrive as oar'" Ah ! b"1 now tneir ?nflence fails. It GOOD LIVING. A DOMESTIC SCENE. Gent. I wish, my dear, youL would not keep the carriage an hour always at the door, when we go to a part. Lady. Surely, my dear, it could not have waited half so long: and that was owing to the unusual length of our rub ber. Gent. I feel exceedingly unwell this evening; my head acbes confoundedly, and my stomach is very uneasy. i Lady. You know, my dear, Mr. Aber nethy told you, that after such a severe fit : you ought to be very carelul and moder ate in your living. Gent. Mr. Abernethv is a fool. Can nm ? IIROM the liberal patronage heretofore received from the public, the permanency and character of th School at this place arc now well established. The un dersigned would inforrp those who are desirous of plac ing their sons under bus supervision, that the Fourth Session of the School WILL COMMENCE ON MONDAY TIIE 21th Aiizutt. I. SHJEB' s coppervaiu: By the ir; rune suBscni: i i JL' business: in ?!( ' inform hia frit nd r TUITION" varies from ,$5 00 to 12 50 per session of live months. . nt five dollars per month, and in the country at four, in- J prepared to eiecute t eluding all incidental expends. i the bove bne5, v WILLIAM L. VAN EATON, pledges himvf that i Principal. ny other sh in ti Joneiville. Aug. 3d, 184'. Jeniton to h.f b-:-.:. I ; ' least of public pat re: c r. . i FALL AND WINTER FASHIONS SWiu nJ tfAr o irr I where, as my prices . r or ioOc7. in a l imilar wav li -a J ! WeH m An?ers as at Hyeres, under the was strong enough to persuade! the thoughtless j anybody be more moderate than I r . , . 1 18 8ld la1 warmest climate of Provence ; which is into danger ; hut now it is perfectly impotent to j You would have me live upon wate rn it arcKed, it will keep'.weet a j considered a fact without example in the keep them from ruin. They have none of the el, I suppose. The rich pudding, i n anv climate " Thnm. P.i J.. ; V.Ic.,... - , . . i . ...... ' 1 .. i . n i , . At the old TaJloriiig IMaIlislimcnt ! water-gru- indeed, Belcour made me eat not have sat quite easy j .1 i i .1 u: t I rhey yield 1 souP anu lIie sull"ul, anu ciiickku utiu But where must we ! ... , , t sausages; or, ii is possiuie, ine names i eat before dinner might not perfectly a- aMtSicinundci.ke.aioun.cyofmanvdai, every precaution. Between '"" ?"P' emicea inem u,.o the.; ee vilh me, for I had by no means a atU.l.r,6, townee, vuLeX niU' lvhichThe0?- he h of Fe. of r )-' "P'e of, prudent dMeff. Such, ; ooA appetite when 1 sat down to dinner. i-L Li.u UL n i. :, , , . . ; . 1 . ' . ulc.,llne cbmate appears too cold and unquestionably, was the influence by which a i Ijulu. And then, vou know, voti eat so KSI TVW,X1 I Z?,d andJhernng plains of Algeria, great portion of hose now iutempe ate were ! many cakes, and such a, quantity of al-up-ti lit sugar, itnd sometimes a small quantitf ; there may be seectpdtUnrm.innCtU L . -.i . T ' !. -l...-:- ItlUllUo, aim i aisiuc, uuu ui aiigt, ailti uin- HORACE H. BEARD, , might IT AS JUST RECEIVED OF MR. F. on the Mahax. the aLauailsaaB SixiLpasaa hardness of iie tirr.' i House Gufterin t notice. I j OldPewteKCcr;- isxen in excrjin. March 19ifc, llC.- r hiv: mildly. .hI n ..... :r l:. u i..-1 . I OI thp tpn nlnnt 1 Th ovn; m . .1 ' ryr, ... sjs ii uia - supply naa ia$t. r; Mcma maw, j down, anrt nerUh. l f I .i-.u. : i. ! in A ?pri. navft nnt hnpn ncnnotn . ' t vu it wuum uu uuuui iiavo rema nea iwam . o -.v.... uUv.v,,.,wlul , m ., . : mWwcek.lonJer." He states that-L" Wl,i th Plants vvere killed by the heat, not. ; ---r tne prime cause ot h,s destruction 7 . M , 7 .- ." . T" witnstand l 31' . , ? U -....1T ..ri ,,,v.reu I" i"o oi UIC i sppcc. wiia a uag ttus hlled, tied to his S Ul" wnere, l)y choosing good soils and faaaie, ho consklers himself to be well provtd- sites, mere could be no doubt Y .vjivn looo. When he reaches a stream, he puis.nan a nanuiul of this corn n a cun.'nd 1 tilllnrr It ti'itlt . & I ,; ....... vc,t urs u lo me.. lne Sllfrar and drink.it off; or, if he gets a fire, he heats iuo water ana sttrs in the corn. For manv ; J...f" J ' . i 7 f i wccf . uurtng t. journey irom the north of Mex. lco 1 lh.e t9n& .'to tome hardens ind great fatigue, I lived, and with truth I mav sav fattened on thik preparation of conn i. At break fastj mt the ha t of the mid-day, and at thejset. 1 tingf of the tun, my cup of hot water wai on the fire, the pbrched corn-mcal with its and ipice was but the tea plant might be cultivated with success. r CHILLS AND -FEYER. Somebody rnmmnn!xi.0 r...v ... . . first drawn into the snares of death. It is not, as many suppose, the odiou3 exam ple of those already under the dominion of in temperate habitsj by which others are seduced : the operation of such disgusting precedents is rather on the side of entire abstinence from the means of their debasement. But it is to the honor given the degrading cup, by those who ner. Union, the following simple remedy for a ve ; Can drink without what is considered excess. sugar troub esome fall disease. It is at pa, lent and agreeable ; jwhether it be efficacious or not, must be ascertained by experiment : : Remedy for Chills and Fever or Fever and AgueWl'ake one pint of sweet milk and one arge laiilo spoonful of Ground ninr. r;,&j - . O ; CO' Gent. How could I have got down Bul cour's insufferable wine, that tasted of the cork, like the fag-bottle at a tavern din ner, without eating something ? Ladu. And I am sure you drank a glass nf Mnrlpirn. with PVerv mnnthfiil nlmnst " m. at dinner ; for L observed you. Sibj? Gent. Why howr could .one swallow USf-jaS for the FALL $ WINTER of ltJ46, which far excells any thing of the kind heretofore pub lished. He still carries on the TAILORING BI SINESS in all its various branches, a't his old stand, where he is ev er ready to meet and accommodate his old and new cus tomers with fashionable cutting and making of garments, not to be surpassed by any in the Southern country. Punc tuality, despatch and faithful work as has been, always shall be his aim-and object. Thankful for past encour agement, he hopes to merit its continuance. N. B. The subscriber has in his employ a workman who cannot be surpawd either North or South. Oct. 2, 1846 tf23 II. II. BEARD. T1TCC 1-1 ID hereu f -is this dav ! Books sre inp he Li:. -authorised toisetdr t!. Salisbury, for IT, Valuable ; Lands for Sale, rASItlO.AI I : H. RESPEfirEULLV and the puL'... : carry on the ibo e 1 . . pied by A!soroc-k .f. ' patronage hefretofvrc to business ti merit : i public that h.1 oik in The ver v 1 we must ascribe, in a great degree, the first j suca iU-dressed things, half cold too, with ction of all who receive the ultimate ware ! out drinking ? I can't ebneeive what s- that seduction ojf intemperance. at DUt Into it. and tn n mlnnta J i I thorniiohlv .h,t k..t.J . i r .. . .... , . : , ; ........w u . -e-jt 1 rcr ine nre an warm inyj repast wis. prepared. I; thought nothing as ll!cau drunk, when the cbill tomes on or' t .rt.tU k mvJ .ML.i.i ..Jr. if commences. Renent ib a . ! www.u m.viu uivau.o ui iiuurisiijiiir. i can- I it ---r--. uuie or twice, i BY virtue of a decree of the Court of Eo,ni: j f ' , tyr I w ill expose to sale at the court i A A , uuiy, on monaayot -ovemoer n ..i court the follnwincr ,r.. ,.t ploy.as Cutter. - - vs JSl. TT XCD 9 belonging to the heirs of John Hartman, decM. One tract, called the N ice town tract, adjoining the lands of Wm. A. Walton, anil othrm. Another tract. ralUJ th I lean- notj irelato the mode, y which the Mexicans parcn the 'corn, for I ne ver sa w it done. iiThe jjgrijidinjz of H tvas jtn the stpne so codstariily -described by ill Irareire'rs who ment ion the! corn caket of Mexico, called toriillars,tK ilg wells in autumn, while the 'springs lire owf and yoti will lie- less jlikelyjlb wajit :fir 1-ntr. .! " uTcessa-yt and the cure will be effected N P. 1 the ftVfitpm Ka fnci!,.. mar K ' . r, Ul a pent! HI h llh I7 inor?eSf PPe it proper, v lor I10 abTe prescription. ! JTUU the most accessible, the cheapest, the most efficacious and the speediest reLlVin prevalence of that diseased do rtvif .k?Vf or fft f.iVnlcl, . A.. .l " ? makes me feel so unwell this evening; these flatulencies will certainly kill me. ANASTATIC PRINTING. f Since, we first saw a specimen of Anastatic nrlnlini m a t A hsH A HiikVil L. . . 1 : ' . . ' . : i r f ua! r w Wl luo UUI plaining, anU the doctors say, disorders are One tract called the Wise tract, and another called the mate success of the invention. For some rea- ! verv Drevalent now.- Whatrarul have? ! Wt5Itract,adjoioinigeachother,andihelandsof Geortr It must be the easterly wind that we have Moyer tract, adjoining the lands of Christopher Lyerlr bad tor these three days, that atlects me ; , "" "ining indeed, most ot my acquaintances are com- ; 3X j Al P. Alsobrtok wi.l oy.as Cutter. SaIibQry,lTth r : 1 - ) Doct.! Sui: TJAVE aS son or other, it! has not comei into such General I John, make a tumbler of brand v id wa- ! St'?' fmhart d hrs conuiniog together 154 .... J ... -. , . . " x.O. use as we anticipated, but thai it rriust supercede ! ter make it strong, and put grnger e nougn in iu i nave not the leasi appe iyu .M im me anove recine. w , . f"E Hermit tx SociE-m VV ashington, D. C, Sept. 2i; 1846, . : 1 t the art of the wood en?ravei and the stereotv per, we have riot the leak ddubt. j fWithin the ast few days we liive seen specirnfens of print-l ing by the lAntstatic proccsi execute4 in.tbi? city and in! PhjladeJpInhicK wefe as perfect ranscipsfjhVrigin could be .wvw y rruecuon in a,mirrof. J! We are happy to hear that , Messrs. WnVy Putnara of On trlt torlirhtnintT ik. m r A Ar f . -. ana otners, containing Eighty-seven and a half ACRES, - P . t ' - -w 1 a tlte W nai can 1 have T - . ' owned formed bs Philin Eamb.rt :a . . . J:.- Ladl. There is ham, and, I believe, ing ibe other tract aligned the widow of John Hartman some chicken Gen' -Why, do yoii think I have the sto mach of a" ploughman, that I can eat stich insipid things ! Is there nothing ''else 1 ' j t - Lady. There is a loin of pork ; perhaps ' you could relish a chop, tiicely done ? 1 . - ! - ajoirunj umstopber Lyer Iy, oantatning 52 Acres. y ' , a twii oi iwejvs mcnins will be Rtren ; bond and good security required - X7f. CALDn'ELL.6..t. : - Oqtober 2, 1 4 6-low 23 Printers fee $5 5a U'V..V. ' ALL KINDS OP BLANKS - f Jfeatiy priaVcd and for salcat this , Office.; ' profe.4-ion, the public. lr. Sj-. dence next door to Dr. Whitehead i sion Hotel or !at ih 1: 1 1 January 2 15 13. THE slbriL large! Hoc!; will sell lot er ti ". Western crth C i 1 July 10, lb 10- " ! ' : ..; spin: BBLS ? Iri:s . a for sale ty 1 S-2l:slvrytAJZu , r: i'l1:"-. . 1 1 r: