Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 30, 1852, edition 1 / Page 1
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'f .$-r i 5'lSVilVo DoLtARS payable in SrMffe i aSUccTwd Dollars idJTCiJi 8fsH siLnlSnn. Coartordera iNni!iWi??TH: n me executed bv K'T.itjlH tpe counties of Row- Place, ' i ft W IT- 1 . ..JitVU'jim 'lm Chambers, and bow the tux UlVU b ital it n SSfiaisllie d ace ia very neauny etnas mWmiM&mk g4od Barn ahd other fi(WSufeP ' s Uonr pairAt- T J Ifrl1 'Af ih,l miat nrnfitnhlA on th ifl lies Affthiin four rniles of fcVXl m&mfrto of' Salisbury.-aerms, i m$: iCIIAfel B ERS, Trustee. lfiWflniheblaCe, will sfiowi the Wfi?T LUiMr 6wf t'exainine them. '( - vifcWOXEMENT. ohed Sto Saturday Ahe r . kj., i rusiee. Sljerp,f BulTic Handkcrcjiicts. in Embroid- ... which he uw duced rent .u WlLMISOTON, N. C. rl&ilMuW MpJintESTO; HEAD AJTD 'kifftfil fl'E'e oi" rt0'8' and if dam-';i-;.iverv.irfoatju8 expense. . aitlhlphov enuimerated articles left !iilii1'P',B WM' be attended to fHTiRRESSBORQUGH T i MJ ffgp4ff(E COMPANY. MJMin&slce 'oa the rnutual plan is but a jp&airsof v cohlpied- wib a joint Btock cqmpa ny. f4mpio'tei li&ca.Ni ln' lhe -Westerrtipart of i Ht:ibWesifyery; mlanyjof which are in the daiHtlmly'frfefrdm debt ; have made I JamdDii'nilriav a viry Urge amount in cash 4M!,:-nl jt,mereiorej cviiwueuuy tp-ecom- aBTir"'n!S U1" wowing wiiicer N;'iCFiiPre'sWent. : I j 1 lMiftiiliji Attqrhejf. 1 ' ij litR; A,ttrfrf and Treurer. , ft iua( a. jji uf weueraii! Ageiu. 5 W-'i: ;lli?iti('rl n sr 1 i'Ln nr Shjfin-.;?.iFifn)3, J. M, Garrett, !;Dr. D. anp, Jr. .iMtMiueiiunu, y, Wte Jr.Mnr?, or(jre.en6bero' ; Dr. S. (i Ml .fril'.-JafiSstown ; IF. Elliott, Guilford f.I WiHli;Wiunirfeion r'DrJ Ci Watkins; Caro aifftiaU OeiWgehnJiShaTrri Salisbury ; Jno. ;iif,rite j. j. 'afSilSjrMl -Urn'iVBiBrins, Cliarloi'te : J. X. Jack- 5,ffilslrifi U;li, ISliiot. Uecltir rails. I I -if PETER ADAMS. Secretary tf3tt 1 Assortment. Wm!9UiiMpw fe?eiy.ing Irom Nev York ' IMtdelbftiaa-neir, Fall wihd Wi-nter stock of :kfelrhpil1irhH-alu'! Inrtflt find finpnt tf nsllweif irtllif oiUvtir?fL arid for vantlv and - - -r r j z I , :5- V J ' l! wNrl'IIe' lower, Jhe same article that f&rarijtjfter pfabej : 0ur stock consists F'fMulHjVfg-J Hp " H1!' .jHrine' i ' :! P f prjtel ttltcahinieres,, j y ammca $ Knntd?dl h EMwtem& de lains Irf if'anghams,! : ricajfinied dtl lainsl I tor cnuaren, Mlldnfec4y .' : -I : I K"re'nouid tefns, j . J I &ffttpiis.fin;d Jnseriings, y.!f!lmftotetni nd bands, I wfderea cpfars,i:hiniesett8;sand sleeves, kst' i sr-wwvune anacneap. J-E I ff .r iffflfe men'i, Wear. !ti &7:ttlms renlvlapcy cassiroeres, iSboffi!9 nd boys, .N.OaEIordV&llstvle Hats. fcWWHl &ncy en cravats, k'PMil: lM f': Andirons and Fend- sware, Groceries, a variety of ajti ided to jus, and n the past, to .- -w wliCTttlaA:- i ' : T fer,LriW:snr? P"d accommodate our kpHi-l f24 Pit! F0UW)RY VI nm,$WV of Horse Powera le and mm ' Mife Machines, Edge rryj'-ii .dL aU sit thft Court MJtinirdavJlhe 18ih December I ; .JTM""" , n ' I., i . tux. CWI lOiu v ;psire, fief in Da vidsqn coun- S S Br9:vHWPlanfationSI 0" the ? -',4! i enf S Lj&iifcihn of it consistinff of river If I : . : I MM l. ' i ''hi S-iJ v vr ktw . : : b i - 1 'i ! I 1 ; 1 . - s i ; .:. ' ' ' ' ' .. i' " lHr-n: ; ! 'i v-- V -.: -S;-i : v. f i;-;.s.";-- ' ! H f. 1 . ; .. -I '. Editor 4. Proprietor ? V ! " f "'4""i..oc 0. Itiw.Uwri. ' -PP- : f "l1 ' 1 -- "fS -'J I- "ftffT"f-. ' i VOLUME 1X-NUMBER34. ' : t-1 SALISBURY, Ni C., jTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1852. I ;! 1000 A YEAR! H ANTED to evWy Conty.ohhe? United States lo men o good addrp.m rwv,i JL.. of frttiri 5525 to &um pwuu cap- offered as,to enable ihem omkiirVt "SLSll ? day profit. i 1 mfkf frT f 10 WTTtod to The Books Dtibl : J I Inn character, exfr-mv wxn tbeif wheTeverWyary oflbreJ ;aoa "ge saW tor further particulars, addresspostage paid,) I?- - . t DANIELS. & GjETZ, XT. i Successors to W. A. Ueary & Co No, 138 North Sernn.l Sf.l PW:i-X!r... ' 2lt30 VALUABLE TAVERN And j Lots for Sale in Statesvillle. TTXAVING determined to leave Ithis place, I ofTe my i avern and JUots lor sale, nl of is;nK Tnt raniS . An.. - - -. ! .1 iiaiii, xuy priaui wiamng 10 purcnase wouu w give me a Call SOOn. 03 t. 1l M at a rA price. If a sale should not ibe I effected. T ni thehi publicly on the 1st day of, Jannarv me vButi nouse in oiaiesvuie, tor the term of one year or longer so as lo accommodate the renter, 8c. 1 r it -,. . . .. : - ... . ' -t XT ,epft J. F.- HARBIN. Nov. 25, 1852. 6w30 PaU fit Winter Trade, ; AT THp ' ; j , SIGN OF THE RED FLAG, 41 oatt&bury, Oct. m.,!1852J HE subscriber having met withjsdm'e d'sappoinli ment in receiving his goods, owing to detention on the South Carolina Railroad, takes this method of informing his friends and the public generally, that he IS NOW HECEIVhXG l A large and beautiful Stock SUITABLE FOR THE TRADE. which, when opened, will comprise the most Attractive Assortment he has yet offered, amongr which are- Plain and figured Dress Silks, of the newest styles; , Extra rich de Laias, and Cashmeres $ Monslin de Laing at 124 ets. per yard; English, French, and German Blerinoes; Bombazines, Alpaecas, and Canton Cloths ; Frenrh, English and Anierlcaa Prints ; Linen Cambric & Lawn Handk'fs, from 12 ets. to $13 ; Embroidered Sleeies, Collars, CnfTs and Capes ; Blonroiag Collars, Cn(& and SleeTes ; Swiss and Cambric Trimlngs, Bands and Fienncings ; Thread and Bobin Laces, Edgings and Insertings ; ; I Rich Bonnet and Neck Ribbons. silk and !cotton Hose, Kid Gloves, long and short, Mohair' Mitts, Cloths, ' Cassi meres. Vest in gs, Table! DamaskjS Napkins, Towells, Damask' .Table Cloths, Sheetings, Long Cloths, &c. &c. Also, A Splendid Lot qfil 4 READY MADE CLOTHING, all of which will be sold at unusually foifr prices, at the sign of the RED FLAG. y J m ;E. MYERS. Sept. 30, 1852. i jj 22 JOElTiaSLVAN, Saddle and llaruess Jlaimfactur opposite W. Murphy d Co., Salisbury, N. C- W AVlNGpermahently located myspli in the il own business.!! Having worked in some of the best shops in JLJL ot Salisbury, I now oner my seryipo iuc auyC the State and also in the Northern cities 1 tdinK i can nlease alt Who may favor me with a j call. Repairing done at sKort notice. Prices moderate.- Country pro duce taken in exchange for work. January 15, 1852. ly37 J! COWAN'S VEGETABLE LlfllONTMPTIC, OR FRIEND OF THE HUMAN FAMILY, i t S OFFERING FROM ' ; DTSRASED KIDNEYS. ninJdrrand Kidneys, Weakness : of the Loins, yc f is for sale atihe Davie Ho .-1 : Ti.teV; t ir. Jt. uamDoeus, in rcucn , 4 ...o ....... n j -A , tTj. . at the Drug Store, in Charlotte ; ano; at, me kjutvu .nborriber is General Agent for the sale of the Medicine, in this State, ofhoimlany quantity maV be obtained by addres-sinhim at Salisbury, N. or calling: at his house, 10 miles Wfofiih8ijMe. T..1 1 8 ei . i-n ulyli$,l852. h - ; .-IK S 1 ntt t-ii 1 ott A AT ntirili1' FKESH AJNi) OJtlUlOJi. STOCK OF NEW GOODS. Maxwell & Are receiving and ojpeningkhetr stock of i Fall and Winter UOods. Z onsisUntihe asqal variety offForeign. Do mestic.and Ladies' Fancy O 'u COOlLliG STOVES, HATS. BONJS Y ro SHOES. Cllliy I'ftASSi AND CROCKERY WARtjm- TIONERYand WHIMS' 1 . ,.L .i l t;it thefattention and Cheap! to "01." I? hemselves to nse r. will be uieir motto . . s ; f SalisDury, wwt,n TTAVING permsnenur-u -n noblic. Can t XX his professional ".".W.;T ! . i FALL 1 Will UKWTLKMKNiS AND LADIES' lnpj SHOES. I ! raiHE subscribers have oft hand, tnd are constantly X manufapioring, GentUmen's Boots, shoes and gai ters, and Ladles' uhoes of every variety, i Oar stock o children's shoes is la r?e and ha nclanm. - I ,wo of lhe aterial and workmanship, will bes sold lowforwJ.oronortfrerflUdponc- . --.wv. inpuuiu; uuuc in neat manner, ana on jBhort notice. .; j I j All kinds of country produce and dry and green bides, taken in exchange for work. Cash will be paid for BEEF CATTLE. ii; RYMER & MO WRY, Hj Opposite Wm. Murphy & Cos Store. April 15, 1852. ; r -r ily50 I rlonlora Pmn; : ' 1 DAVIE HOTEL, MOCKS VILLE, County; North Carolina. rTTIHE undersigned having purchased the above nam- would extend accommo lord in their patronage happy and satisfied while i they take Bfuivu t isuui oil niiu ilia v lavur.uini w nil their "ease in his Inn." i H. R. AUSTIN. May 4 1852. ly I THE NEW NORTH CAROLINA FORM BOOK ! ! 1 -;- ; . 5 : - i - Hr C. H. WILEY, ; Containing Forms of all ihose Legal Instruments im portant to be known by the people of North Carolina, and designed also for theJ use of Justices of the Peace, Sheriffs, Clerks, Constables, Coroners, &,c, for sale at the Book btoreof J. H. Eoniss. Price &l.r Persons forwardng SI will receive the Form Book free of Postage. ; . Salisbury, Nov. 18, 1852. i ; 29 if NEW FALL WINTER BOODS FOR ! 1852. TT1 HE subscribers arenow receiving and opening JL one ot the largest and most .desirable stock of Fall and Winter Goods ever o fie red in this market. consisting ot DRY GOODS, Hardware, Crockery, Boots, Shoes, Hats, iteaay juaae uioimng, jjrussels tyree ply unuingruin o ) wings, mo ana ' -1 7 r' T.. . LMee,-Iaoaf ana ixrown Sugar stiaisws, Leather, White Lead. Sperm arid other fjaudics, isanis: icope, NovaScotia Grindstones. TANNERS OIL, Hats and Caps, BLASTING POWDER, Blankets' and Kerseys, CLOVER AND GRASS SEED, Window Glass, Saddlery, Blacksmith Topis, &c.i, &,c We invite all who visitiihis place to buy ; Goods at XVJiolesah or Retail, to give us a call before buying. We have adopted the cash system, and will offer great er inducements to cash buyers than has ever been of fered in Western North Carolina. ; Our motto is short profits and quick sales. Salisbury, Oct. 7, 1852. ; tf23 FALL AND WINTER H. H. BEARD & SON, Fashionable Tailors and Clothiers, TTf AVE just received a most siipurb stock of Fall JJl and Wintei Ready Jladc Clotliing, coats. Di-ess and Frock Coats, Pants and Vests. Also a beautilul assortment olUoys and (. hfldren's.Glothing. Qenlia Dressing Gowns, Heavy Double Overcoats, Fnnev Pants and Vests ; hne Shirts, Uollars and wra vats i Susbenders, Drawers, etc. ; and Pocket Hand kerchiefs of a superior quality, and almost every other article belonging to a Clothing Store 3 together with a superior lot of Cloths, UaSSintereS, I estingS, UVCrCOat- , . . . . mars, &c, i n which thev will sell as cheap 9 can, be boughiin any Southern market, and will be made up to order, in a superior style, and with the best trimmings tneortn- ern markets could anoru. j ney nave isu,ifcU . T-- r . mi : L.i.- ; A their! Fall and Winter Fasliloiis lor 185J2 a lid '53, and are ready to pat up work m the latest fashions. . iN . A ayiura ucaio, 'T"! ' r t;csi T:nc Thimhlua unit NpArflps kpnl ioi oaic. i . .y . . The undersiened respectfully iovite their friends and the public to call and examine their stoca. j n. n. uCiAai',' ; JAMES B. BEARD. Sept. 161852. 22tfol.8 PLANK ROAD. A. 'Taylorsville Plank Road Company, held at Gra A T a motiner of the Director ot the bahspury and ham's Store, September 34th, it was; ordered! that tne Treasurer charge tnteres on all Instalmmentsnow in arrears, unless paid within thirty days Irom tins date and that the Treasurer charge interest on all insfal- ments which maybe called forliereafter, if said instal- ments remain unpaid moxe man mirty uays. f It wasfuriher ordered, thai the Trtasarer be requir- ed to make collections ofback instalments remaining nMnvi Charter. UupaiMf 11a vvw -r w - .i.t J nnrAannf (h the DroVlS lOOS Ot the UOm 1 1 Li. JJLiAlylvmitt, rresi. Salisbury t Sept. 2i 1852. ! if 2 CLOTHING Hopkins &, Pairohild, No. 230 Baltimore' Street, BALTIMORE, KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A LARGE ASSORTMENT pF READY MAVK ! (S!Lf IH j of alii qualities, to which; they invite the attention o til B-H i it i . i -. m -m. n . i iBiii-iina i iiv viiiii wm i a n r Ais an i i i iirr m m i ivhi i w h ir i n vnnr i r rvvr i inform the Public, thai he in nbw nVen.r.J i. with lihl. irirl P,i-. ...k. enough to have burned ont his xt-mfinMn ""' ' " )', ' . i.lcome , .he .ravelUng coi,y. and ,3 I VTL: ! " vea ago. Xvbile be waS aSee St vour '.'.J'. tlM V81""1?' a"d f datehiseuesisiBa manneeouaUoanvLfinH. ,,,c""lcaa" "u " verge oi per- j . . . , . . sr. . if. eoster, trom tne momehl when Lj this section of North Carolina. NoeTertion. .isK.W wfth "fTk- 1 uwor an" lo?ave knapped him into the thai letter, acted with th k.t h. .li ..."K " UUU6C" vm : country.' Then WPntlnnskr.ritv hnt , 7 TH' V ' . weHaWMM( "r ' vunu unu ay cxcid considerable surprise I : f n If . I I xv,e qnveuuiu a; ut tug jlu:, .yfho told you that he was dead V they Carriage Irimmings, (a large stock.) Sole :nnn:Ppfi , GOODS. HOUSE 1 h aeaiers. . May 20 1852. 1 13 DE LAINS, DE LAINS f NoTembef25, 1852. 1 Ej MYERS, has just; received by Express direct from New York, ai small lot of rich, ill wool, De Lains ; also, another jot of Velvet Ribbons. Don't forzetS the sign of the Rcd! Flag. k : i : E. MYBRS. A STRANGE STORY; A 'remarkable circjumslancfc is related by Airs. Catharine Crowe, in the M ight siae ol rvatore," as having occurred aft. Odessa, in 1842. Ari'old blind rnan narxr ed Michael, had for niany years been ac customed Jo get his living by seating him self every; morning on abeam in one of the timber yards, with a wooden bowl at his feet, into which .the passengers cast their alms. This long continued; practice had made; him well known to the inhabi tants, and as he jwaii believed to have been a soldier, his ! blindness was attribu ted to thel wounds he had received ia bat tle. For his own Dart he SDoke little, and never contradicted this oninion. One ... . . . man tooK her home and adopted her, and frnm that tim inlctor1 nf cin;n ; iU timber yard, he went about the streets in her company, asking alms at the doors of houses. The child called him father and (they were extremely happy together. But when they had pursued this mode of life for five years, a theft having been committed in a house they had visited in the mornjng, Pavvleska was suspected and arrested, and the blind man was left once more alone. But, instead of resum ing his former habits, he now disappeared altogether, and this circumstance causing suspicion to extend k:o him, the girl was orougni oeiore me rrtagtsiraie tone inter rogated with regard to his probable place of concealment. is f ' Do you know where Michael is? in quired the! magistrate. 'He is dead T replied she, shedding a torrent of tears. ; Ii ' As the girl had been shut up for three ",,M?""U days, without any means of obtaining in formation 1 from without, this answer, to- eelheP w!u her unftjned distress, natur- ' Nobody.' ' Then how can you know it V I saw him killed. ' But you have never been out of prison. 1 But I saw it nevertheless?'; But how was thai possible V Explain what you mean.' ;: 1 1 cannot. All I can say is, I saw him killed.' i : When Was he killed, and how V It was the night I Was arrested.' 'That cannot be i he was alive when you were seized. . Yes, he was ; he jwas killed one hour after that ; they stabbed hitn with a knife. Where were you then 7 I can't tell, butjl saw it The confidence with which the girl as serted what seemed. to her hearers impos sible and absurd disposed them o ima gine that she waS really insane, or pre tended to be so ; so leaving Michael aside, thev proceeded td interrogate her about the robbery, asking her if She Was guilty. (J, 110 ! She answered. Then howl came the property to be found about you. I don t know ; I saw nothing but the murder.' i Rut tKnr ia nn prnund for sunnosinp; I - .w 0- 0 MichaeL is dead ; his body has not as yet been found.' It is till the aqueduct. nJ (J0ryou knOW.Who slew him V v wAmAn. Mir.Kkftl was j. to. it. .. - - - - , . , warning very siuwi) nun 1 was vaftC.. from ujrn. A woman came Dehinq him with lnrirft kitchen knife : but he beard - to-- : . . I I .rniinH nrl hn lhf Wn . . A. . rr 1 ; man flung a piece 01-gray Stun over nis head; and struck him repeatedly with a knife. The gray stuff was much stained with blood. Michael fell at the eighth blow, and the woman dragged the body to the aqueduct, and let it fall in without even lifting the stuff that stuck to hislace.' As it was very easy to verify thesp latter asserli0QSf they dispatc nM;uiu" i- J ha .Si. spot, and there the body spatcbed people to the was found, with a piece of Stuff over his head, exactly as she had descriheclv ttui wnen iney nau , . u-h aSKea ucr uuw 4 ' OOIV aDSWCr, I UUit I. rlut vou know who killed him?' Not exactly; it is the samewoman that out out his eies : but perhaps he will tell me her narae-to-riight, and if he does I will tell you. f Who do you mean by he V Why, Michael; to be sure-' During the whole of the following night, without allowing her Ito suspect their in tention, they watchedj her ; and it was ob served she never lay down, but sat upon her bed in a sort of lethargic slumber. Her body was quite motionless, except at inter vals4wben this repose was interrupted by nervous sbocks.wbieb pervaded her whole frame. ';- '. . f- - , On the ensuing day, the moment she was brought before the Judge she declar ed that she was now able to tell the name of the assassin. 1 i . ; t .... But stay said the magistrate i4did he never tell you whin he was alive how he i - lost his sight f No; but the morning before I was ar rested he promised me to do so ; and that caused his death.' ! . How could that be V ' Last night Michael came to me, and pointed to the man bidden behind the scaf fold on which he and I had been sitting. He showed me the man listening to us, when he said, I'll tell all about that to n;ght and the man ' Do you know the name of this man?' ' It is Luck ; he Went afterwards to a broad street that leads down to the harbor, and he entered the third house on the right.' What is the name of the street V 1 don't know ; but the house is one sto ry lower than the adjoining ones. Luck told Catherine what he had heard, arid she nroDosed to assassinate Michnpl Catherine put a piece of plate into my pocket, that I might be arrested; then she hid herself behind the aqueduct to wait for Michael, and she killed him. But since you say all this, why did you keep the plate ? Why did'nt you give in formation V But I did not see It then. Michael showed it to me last night. But what should induce Catherine to do this?' Michael was ier husband and she had forsaken him to come to Odessa to marry again. One night, fifteen years ago, she saw Michael, who had come to see her. She slipped hastily in the house, and Mi chael, who thought she had not seen him, lay down at the door to watch : but he fell asleep, and then Luck burned out his eyes, and carried him to a distance. And is it Michael vvho told you this7' Yes; he came very pale, and covered with blood, and he took me by the hand and showed me all with bis fingers.' Upon this Luck and Catharine were arrested, and it was ascertained that she had actually been married to Michael in the year 1810, at Kherson. They at first denied the accusation, but Pawleska in sisted, and they subsequently confessed the crime. When they communicated the circumstance of the confession to Pawles ka, she said, I was told it last night.' The affair naturally excited great interest and people around the neighborhood has tened into the city to learn the sentence! Rowdism and Crime in the Northern Cities. There probably never has been, in any country, so much crime, and such perfect impunity of crime, as now exist in the cities of New York, Philadelphia, Bal timore, and probably others. We have occasionally referred to evidences of this state of things. In New York, on one day, less than a fortnight ago, four men were sentenced to death ; four others were under conviction awaiting sentence at the same time ; and in three days after, three murders were committed, and seven men were stabbed, it is supposed fatally ! ' But Baltimore is at present worse than all in violation of the laws. The follow ing is the latest incident : Baltimore, Dec. 14. Daring Robbery at Baltimore. Mr. Hooper C. Hicks, the Collector of the Cus toms at Vienna, in Dorchester county, Maryland, whilst passing along Lombard street, near South, at half-past five o'clock this evening, had a rope thrown around his neck, and was dragged into an alley by three men, and robbed of three thou sand dollars five-hundred in gold, twelve hundred in Baltimore notes, and a draft for fourteen hundred on New York,,and his watch. At the instant be was assail ed a handful of lime was thrown into bis mouth and eyes, strangling and blinding him. The robbers escaped before he could recover and give an alarm. His pockets were all cut open and the flesh grazed with the knife. And thisoccurred shortly after five o'clock in the afternoon, before dark ! The Baltimore Sun, alluding to this and other crimes, says, There is a manifest inefficiency in the administration of the laics; and a venal concern for personal popularity furnishes the only solution of the disgraceful truths that force them selves upon our notice. Two facts alone, recorded in our paper of Monday morn ing, prove the utter recklessness of the mob spirit which infests the city. On Sat urday night it thrust itself within the very walls of the court house, and with Insolent vociferation flung its contempt fnto the very teeth of the appointed officers of the law. In another case a juror was assault ed in the streets on account of verdict ren dered." - ; The National Intelligencer strikes at the root of the matter in the following re marks : It is not by accident that the Courts and Officers of Justice are inefficient, and the laws consequently unexecuted and trampled upon. The real evil consists in subjecting the Judges and Officers of all the Courts of the State to periodical popu lar election. In one of those phrenzies which sometimes seize ppon a whole com munity, industriously drugged -with the most pernicious notions of what ia some- ----- - r--m'jjf- rn ai reconciliation, ana aeciared several times called "progress" but v. hic'i experience teaches us is always : gress downwards, such as is now t plified in the Qity of Baltirnorn t!. of Maryland was induced, n year ( agcj under the idea of "reform," to c its Constitution so as to subject the a; ment of the Judicial Officjers cf t! to the periodical universal j suilr; the People. Behold the corisequcr: : dieted; by all fee wise he oi the: : now already realized, as ijsUulJy r;c' leded by those; who assisjted to Lri; afllictTve curse upon the tate.anJ eyes seem to'bet not yet felly cp : the fact thAt the onlv efipptiv r the evils under which they cry a! to restore the independence ijT tficJuJ, the proteclion'of life and liberty, a: only reliable palladium of nil V. ngni whatever. Great Britain and the Un itcd States . coming tribute was incidental! j paid to i: morr of Mr. Wcbte, Lj-th Earl cl M bury, in tho Oritiah : House of Lord?, evening of. the 2Gib ull., in the course c remarks of his, in reply tcmn. intcrr froth Lord WharncHflV, resplfcling the negotiation. We duote : if r j Thi negotiation has been hut jnt ' and Mr. Webster, before hisjdeath, 1 estly entered inta bur proposkl lor co;. ' the negotiations on a largo and wide f. ! would include all the disputed ouestL before bis death to Mr. Crarrjpton, that i earnestly desired that our trad shou'. l ! lablished on a more thorough basis, ar. J t personal causes of disunion between tl great countries should be removed. We met the same spirit from Con. Perry, who was ordered br the. Americ ernrnent to watch over the ntert tect the property of the American Xl who were exercising their righii not t. shores hut around our coast. ! j ' ' We must, for many causes, regret t!.r uf that great statetman. II o i died at a : when his death was peculiarly; to bo re - for it interrupted the negotiation we ha j ' with America ;?and I have yetno oHicid! ligence of any person beingjapppointcJ 1 reed hitn. From Mr. Filhnpre ; we La ceived the same assurance of good s the expression of a. most anxious rfesir these questions should be self led on no : basis, but on the broadest possible tieii." Mr. Webster's Opinion ofllCossuth. lessor Felton, in an article in! the WLi view, gives an interesting account of a c aation be bad with Mr. Wetsler a few before his death. In this conversation, i lowing; was the language which j Mr. V held towards the great Hungarian orut patriot Kossuth : He spoke of Kossuth's e oquence w I miration of its beauty and ingenuity. II his nenius wonderful and bis resource ordinary, but that ho was ralfaer an en:' possessed with the idea that he ivas lor: a mission to fulfil, than a statesman ; t! political ideas were not well defined, m r nor consistent ; that ; he waslduublless cere! lover of his country, but jwas a poet : than a sound reasoner on ttfTiirs cf ei i' the condition of the world." i TEETH, j j Healthy teeth depend mairjly on her.! gestion, and on cleanly habits as rear teeth. They must, of course be con H: the purposes for whieh ihey la're desinc they are employed for the pujrpose of cr nuts, biting thread, unscrewing needle or turning the stopper. of a pnjellin I.' the mouth is used as a kind; iof portal.! tool chest, in which a pair oft$ci$sor?, a a vice, a cotk-sciew, or any pliher inir may b fcuud at the time of npedr-tht'ii and irretrievable injury will eventually I lo the enamel of lhe lerlh. which no ness of digestion nor cleanliness of l: avail to remedy. ' CURE FOR CridUP:. Dr. Fisher, of Boston, relates in a late ber of the Medical Journal, a lease in v. '. severe attack of croup was cured by the catioh of sponges wrung out fjhqt wa'er : ihroal, together with water5 Jreatrnent, he describes as follows : I ' Soon afier making the first applied sponges lo the throat, I .wrapiejd )th cfn! woolen! blanket, wrung out in warm wai "s substitute for a warm batht and gate i drops of the wine of antimony in a little -ened water, which w'as swallowed wi:!. cultyi fl persevered in the ppljcutiuri ( hot moit sponges fur an hour, ivljen i!, was so much relieved that 1 ventured tne 44 These applications were iotitiuupJ i! ; the night, and in the mornjn the chi. we II.' It will never do to trifle with this f:r disease. Ibe quicker the remedies ar plied the better. Instead ol auiirhouy, we recommend small quantities of alum en every ten or fiJieeu minutes until il. i vomits., f NEW CURE FOR FEvIeR Sc ACL The Hutsville (Texa?) Item, says : We had a call this weieH from Mr Berry, of Grimes county, thwe, u: stand is about to publish iypT in derson. From among ot herein! err items of information weglaned frc::. perhaps the following remedy for c!-i worth printing : Take a iaw e--, I in a tumbler,cover With vinegar, nn I altogether an hour or two before lv i time of calling. Mr, D. says he li. lit tried for years, and never ijrt t failnre It may seem a bard iloc i is not half so bad as that villainous Fi invention, quinine. - , xfraraJrance.During the past, wcr and paitfeswere gWn in Now York, at fiamondrnd emeralds we re; worn woitL 000 onjihe person. Thousand idollar C, were npt uncommon. I Dinner parties r r ken of.fwhere ladies appear in cloaks ei ered wjith pearls. T! 4 j - i : . It;' i- .-. -hi : i BJ, .W4.connty, N.i;C. in Brica-nouse. 1 June 10, 1852. tip. fiQ'ii-i..:
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 30, 1852, edition 1
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