T-s TVW A - q ", hole Vo. 7s 2 Tf? Tarbovough I'rcss, BY GEOIWE IIOWAUP, ! h publi-lieii weekly ;it Two D, liars and Fifty Cents per year, if paid in advance or, Time j ,r.at the expiration of the subscription year, j For a"J PerioJ ,ess a year, T.oenh.fivc ( per mouth. Subscribers are at liberty to (ijcnntinue at anytime, ona'viiir notice thereof anJ paying arrears those resiilinV at a distance nMist invariably; pay in advance, or give a resivju- si!t!f reference in this vicinity. " Aiiveriiseiiients not exceediunr a square will bo . insi rti.d at One Dollar the first insertion, iv.nl -2'i conts lor every continuance, bonder al verli.se , ropnts in like proportion. Court Onlers and Jn jjnl advertisements 25 per cent, hij'ier. Ad vertisements must be marked the numb-r of in s,'r:ijns required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the" FMitor must be post 'paid or they may not be attended to. Doctor Wbsi. EVAAIs' SOOTHING SYRUP For children 'i'eelhin PREPARED BY HIMSELF. To .Mothers and .Nurses. finil passage of the Teeth through the gums produces troublesome and dan gerous symptoms. It is known by moth ers that there is great nutation in ihe mouth and gums during this process. Tin .urns swell, the secretion of saliva is in creased, the child is seized with (Veqieni a-nJ suddeti fits ol crying, watchins, start ing in the sleep, and spasms of peculiar parts, the child shrieks with extreme vio lence, and thrusts its finders into its month. If these precursory symptoms are not spee dily alleviated, spasmodic convulsions uni versally supervene, and soon cause the dissuliition of the infant. If mothers who liave their little babes nfilicicd with these distressing symptoms, would apply I Jr. William Evans's Celebrated Soothing Synip, which has preserved hundreds of infants when thought past recovery, from being suddenly attacked with that fatal malady, convulsions. This infallible remedy has preserved hundreds of Children, when thought past recovery, from convulsions. As soon as the Syrup is robbed on the gums, the child will recover. This preparation is so in nnrent, so efficacious, and so pleasant, that tin (hild will refuse to let its gums be rubbed with it. When infants are at the age of four months, though there is no ap pearance of teeth, one bottle of the Syrup should be used on the gums, to open the nores. Parents should never be without the Syrup in the nursery w here (here are vnimn children: for ifa child wakes ii, the niht with paio in the ., the Syrup inrmediaiel ' gives ease by open "ig t'ue pores and healing the gums; there by preventing fouvulsiiuis. Fevers. Jcc. To the Ayeut of Dr. Evans' Soothing Syrup: Dear Sir The great benefit n'Turilt-d to my suffering infant by your Smithing Syrup, in a case of protracted ati l painful dentition, must convince every feeling parent how essential an eatlv ap plifation of such an invaluable medicine is to relieve infant misery and torture, My "ifjiit, while teething, experienced such .scute sufferings, that it was attacked with coiivulsions. and mv wife ami familv sun- I posed that death would soon release the ! babe from anguish till we procured a bot tle of your Syrup; which as soon as ap plied to the gums a wonderful ehange w as produced, am! after a few applications the child displayed obvious relief, and by con- tinniiifT i i f,. ;..r. lMl . . . i , . . j uir t iiiiu nas completely recovered, still no recurrence of thai awful complaint ''as since occurred; the teeth are emaua daily and the child enjoys perfect health. giveyon my cheerful permission ,to uvke this acknow ledgmeut public, and WH gladly give atty inform ilion on this Clr''imstaiire. 1 hen children begin to be in pain with their teeth, shooting in their gums, put a "tie of the Syrup in a lea spoon, and '"ill) the firmer let the child's gums Ire ; rubbed for two or three minutes, three JlT.es a day. It m,,sl not pUt to ihe ! breast iuvnediately, for the milk would ;'die the syrup 1T too soon. When the ;lee,!) arp.i't enrning through their gums, mothers should immediately apply the sy :'"p; H will prevent the cliildren having a I fVer undergoing that painful opera I ,,0, f lancing the gnms, which always t makes the tooth much harder to come through, a(j sametimps causes death. Rewavc 0j- Co:nitcrrcif s. t fC'iution He particular in purcha vlR 1? o!,u',l, h nl 100 Chatham St., I tew Y ,,, i. , r i N 'r from the UKQULMl AG Pi NTS. J- M. UkDMONI), .r, , r;,.n ii. r l arboro . I.O. tloWAlU), ) , M. llusstiu, Elizabeth City. Tarbarongh, (BY AUTHORITY".) L WVS OF THE UNITED STATES PASSED AT Till SECOND SKSSIOX OF THE TWKNi r-six r CONGHESS. PltlVATK No. 1.1 AN AC P making lemp rarv provision far lunatics in the District of Columbia. he it enacted fnj the Senate and oj heprcsen latins aU he United Stale.? J America in Congress assembled, That the marshal for the District of Columbia be, and he is hereby, authorized to send to tl.elnnatic asylum, in Baltimore, all such unatic persons as are now confined in the j iils of Washington and Alexandria conn ties, and all such as may hereafter be com mitted as lunatics, who are pmpers, by or der of the circuit or criminal courts, thev !eing paupers of the Slid District ofColuni bia, and their support, being leg dly char- g 'ante thereto; and that he pay I he expan ses of their r emoval, and of their mainten nice in said asylum, and bo allowed for I lie same in the settlement of his account at the Treasury of the United Slates: Pro vided, seid expenses shall not exceed, in the whole, the sum of three thousand dol lars per annum. Sr:c. 2. And he it further enacted. Thai this act shall continue in force untii the fourth day of March, in Hie year one thousand eiht luindred and forty-three, and no longer. R. M. T. II UN KER, Speaker of the louse of Representatives. RII. M. JOHNSON, Vice President of I he United Slates, and President of the Senate. ArrnovKD, February 2d, IS 11. M.'VAN BU REN. From the Globe, Feb. .0. Arrival of General Harrison. The j President elect arrived in the city about eleven o clock to-day. General Harrison and his friends, before the election, insisted strongly upon the propriety of abstinence fr om all arrogance and ostentation on the part of a Republican President. The ordinary ornamental fur niture cf his dwelling, not surpassing that of wealthy citizens, was not. to bo tolerated, an(1 1 resident V an Boron was openly charg-d by the National Intelligencer with v" ;iU,1S 1 "c, "ecormn oi us station, in tepivioji lo mi iiiiei i oiiioi ies ui ins iei- low-citiZ'-ns, as bringing the power ol his place into the discussions of the people. 1 1 was looked upon as arrogating an influ ence over the public mind, to stale his o pinions, even when called for by the let ters of his opponents, as throwing his great office into the scale. His modest respons es, strictly confined to the question pro pounded, and in no instance making an al lusion the most 'emote to the rival candi date, were denounced by the National In telligencer. General Harrison Ins, in all things, al- ready ialsiiieu the professions ol Ior-cabin plainness simplicity, and modesty, that were made to win the confi ience of the yeomanry of this country. He set. of! from Cincinnati with a speech full of ego lism, addressed to the gathering throng of that city: lie embarked in a splendid steamer lilted up for the occasion; he was escorted by a military array, and a'temlcd by a band of music; the firing of cannon, and other martial and civic ostentation, was gotten up by his Federal friends where ever he stopped, to feed his vanity. lie went out of his way even to Pittsburgh to extend, what his flattering organs called by the fine name given to the journey ings' of royalty, " progress." Wherever he went, he made speeches, and in that at Dultimore did not hesitate to impute cor ruption in no very indirect terms to the Administration whose place he is cal ed upon to supply. Anil even here, where he has come to be inaugurated, he repairs in a solemn march with a prodigious retinue to the City Hall, to make a display, by way of heralding his own Presidential honors in advance. I low different this from the course of the real hero the brave and magnanimous Jackson! He left the Hermitage without a speech-making display passed on quiet ly by the nearest route to Wahington, s'aying over night at Rockvillc, within ten miles of the city, and while the citizens were preparing an escort for him, he has tened his journey early in the morning, and surprised the people, and presented himself at Gadsby's as a private cilizen, without Ihe inhering of cannon, of bells, of flags, of processions, or City Hall recep tion Amidst all this ceremonious, paradeful progress, there were, however, sad signs (Edgecombe County, JV. C.J Saturday, February -o, 1841 ...u: r. t .t. . . . fr7hT . . . ,, - t :ie journals iricnujy to lnm announced an eartnquakeat his setting out, and the wpiOMjn oi tne oanics welcomed him in ijailimorc. rrom lia tltnorp bp hrnmr u wiih him a s tow- storm, and no sooner bad w.w.,,.. lie put hi f ot on the Pennsylvania Aven ue, ihan the robbing commenced, and a multitude h ul their pockets picked in the course of five minuies. These indications presage that the Piesident elect is not like- ly to make times better for all in making them better for rogues, he must make i hem worse for honest men The General's arrival was signalized With another omen, which we could not ..-.1.1 . , . u;ij usueiaung wun inose noiiced oy us iou ruining in oi me new year tne fall of the scroll from the talons of the ei gle in the Senate chamber, bearing the motto of the Union, E phiribus nnitm; and ol the hand of the Goddess of Liberty, in front of the Capitol, bearing in it the Constitution of the United States. The unfortunate accident which occurred !o-day, and blended itself with these, was the breaking of the cord which, stretched across the avenue, bote all the fl igs of the Slates which voted for Harrison. They were separated about the centre, and fell Xorh and South; and when we saw them, tarnished and draggled in the mire, som awkward members of ihe Tippecanoe Club were busied in the effort to bind them to gether again with the rotten rope. This looks something like Stale Bank ruptcy. i as the Federalists say, the isMiingof Treasury Hills is an evidence of the bankruptcy of the Federal Treasury, the following Resolutions and Acts passed by the last Whig Legislature of this State, seem to squint at the total bankruptcy of the State Treasury. A resolution authorizing the Public Treasurer to borrow a sum not exceeding S70.000, to defray the expenses of the State from this time until the 1st of No vember, 1S42!! We ask why is this? That the taxes paid by the people into the Treasur y, should not be sufficient to de fray the ordinary expenses of the State, as they used to be? Perhaps the. follow ing acts and resolutions passed by the same legislature, will furnish the answer: An act for the relief of the Wilmington Railroad, pledging the faith of the Slate for S300,000. An act for the Relief of the Raleigh and Gaston Railroad, granting to it the faith of the State for 300,000. About 31 j000 more appropriated to the purposes of building and furnishing th ;t splendid log-cabin, the Sta?c House, which has already cost the State half a million of dollars, and which our present log-cabin Governor, so highly commend ed for its princely magnificence, in his inaugural address. Th? sum of SdOOO to furnish and repair the Governor's House, for the reception of our economical log-cabin Governor. The sum of S4S, to pay a servant to wait in t lie Governor's office. This is new. An entering wedge, and indirectly in creasing the Governor s salary. We are informed that all former Governors have furnished their own servants; and, with as much propriety, the State might hire all the Governor's servants. Re member we were promised economy, and reform, and this establishes a prece dent, a principle, which will lead in time, to a vast expense. A resolution to pay George E. Padger S2 500 for a fee, and S500 to Gov. Swain, for the same. A resolution to loon Wafce Forest College Sl0,000. All thislouks like cci.tndiz ingthe people's money at the seat of Government in corporations. One more reform Legislature, and we are Bank rupts. Fayelleville Car. Population of North Carolina. The late Census of this State compared with thatofUSSO, presents some serious facts to the people of North Carolina. It shows that our State in ten years has hardly in creased her population at all; in fact, her slave population has actually decreased. This is the effect of emigration. The fol-lowiti"- is a comparative view of the pe riodsviz: 1840 and 1830: White. Free Negroes. Slaves. 1S40, 4S4,172 22,752 246,186 1S30, 472, 433 19,752 247,402 11.739 1S40, total, 1830, 3,177 753,110 73S,470 276 dec. In In 14,640 increase. According to the rate at which popula tion incieascs in the United States, North Carolina, in the last ten years, ought to have gained at least three hundred thou .!....t!.,i for population in this country . . -oi vmm hut insir-ird r.f! doubles useu m j- v this, we have guneu i-,o u, aim we have decreased in siae5 s,b. uur in- crease in slaves, according to the usual ra - . .. P- coition o. i wuc niiuuieu in)uani:, out instead ol this, we have lost. Taking the usual Ikims for calculation. North ( arolma in the course of the Lt! Men i-e.irsmiut urn nt ..t .t- , v.....-v.,.t III lilt? countries a population eq ial in iis increase to three hundred thousand souN; the pro portion of negroes in this number equals, say one hundred thousand; these at an average of S200 each, would be worth new twenty millions of dollars. The slaves vet j remaining in N. Carolina, at the lowest f estimatem.iv b v-.ii.r.! -..t. x le.asi. fifiv millions ol dollars. It is now very certain that N. Carolina, under the new appointment, if the la io should be increased, will hise two or thru members of Congress. If the ratio be fix ed on the basis of 60.000. ass me ihink it -1 1 1 1 - ... . . ... win, k. Carolina will then be entitle. 1 to 10 members only; thus losing three from her presentnumber of 13. The young and growing Siale of Mis sissippi, which now has only two mem bers, will be entitled to four orfive. Salisbury Carolinian. Is it a Dream. The St. Louis Era no tices the esiabiisinnent of a Type Foundry, in St. Louis, and recommends it strongly to the Printers of Missouri, Illinois, J.av;. and Wisconsin. The printets of Iowa and Wisconsin! By and by wohall hear of type foundries on ihe banks of Yellow Stone and at the foot of the Rocky Moun tains. Phi lad. sJmer. The St. Louis New Era republishes tin above paragr aph, and significantly adds " Dream?" Why so, sir? Have wt not in the settlements which you have enu merated, nearly a milli.m of inhabitants and villages, towns and cities, growing up with rapidity which astonishes even the natives, accustomed as they are to changes of all kinds? The two Slates and Territo ries in question can furnish, we gucfS, some seventy or eighty printing offices and some very extorsive one too. By the time the new appointment of represen tation is made to take effect, Iowa and Wisconsin will be knocking zl Ihe door of Congr ess for admission into the Union, as independent States adding four to the number of Senators, and giving to each a Representative in Congress. Missouri has now a population which will entitle her to six Representatives in the next Con gress; and Illinois will noi be satisfied with less than eight or ten. The establishment in question is no 'dream;" and others, e qually useful and far more extensive, are daily rearing among us. Naval Apprentices. We have heard with great pleasure that Wm R. Thomas, an apprentice on board of the United States ship Delaware, a native of North Caiolina, jusi 1 6 years of age, has received for merit, to wit: excellence in good conduct, talent,; as his blessed master. and qualification, an acting appointment! St .lames the great. This Apostle was in the United States Navy, with the pr o-; beheaded at Jerusalem, mise that if, afu r six months' service, St. James, the less. This Apostle was his commanding officer shall repoit favora-; thrown from a pinnacle, or wing of the bly in ngard to him, his appointment Temple, and then beaten to death with a shall be confirmed; and also thai an ap-j fuller's club. prentice Irom each of the other schools h.is ' St. Phil ip This Apostle was hanged for liKe reasons received a similar appoint (up against a pillar at Hecrapolisin Phrygia. n.enl. j St. Bartholomew. This apostle was We have befor e expressed the opinion , fla ed alive by the command ol a barbarous that the naval apprenticeship s stem was a. king. happy conception, and that the present! St. Andrew.- This Apostle was bound Secretary of the Navy was entitled to much : to a cross, where he preached to the peo credit for reducing it to practice, and we ! pie till he expired. now bear willing testimony to the Repub- St. Thomas. This apostle was run lican spirit is well as patriotism which have thro' the body with a lance, at Coromand induced that officer to try the expei iment, , el, in the East Indies. besides making sailors, boatswains and pel-j St. .lude. This Apostle was shot to ty officers of the apptentices, of placing ' death w ith arrows. some of the meritorious of them in the line i St. Simeon--Zealot. This Apostle of promotion to the Very highest giade in their country s service. Let men see that education, moral con-; duel, assiduity, self discipline and self d-- niah the ..onigunto others as they would ! they should do unio them," are to be made! the criter ia both by Government and sucie- ty at large, of civil, social and poliiica! ele vation, and the path of virtue would be oftener trod, ami the men of our Republic would more generally hold up their heads and feel and act like freemen. We trust that the example of the Navy Department will be extended to Mhci branches of the public service, and thai the offices and patronage, ot Gov eminent may be more justly and .quilly distributed than heretofore. Norfolk Beacon. Promotion. We understand that Al fred Daily of Cambridge, fourteen years of age, an apprentice boy on board the recei ving ship Columbus, at this station, has re ceived an acting Midshipuau's appoint ment, he t : -4 V i 1? been reported! io t!",C r cretary of the. Navy, by Captain Smiih, as the most distinguished and meritorious ap prentice in the ship. Mercantile Journal. Law's Patent Stave Dresser whose operations we witnessed yesterday, is a . curiosity worth examination. In ns con- p - metioe.. unlike, most patents, simnhcitv. ; - -V' . ' ',--7 '.swcDgui mm ecuni..j To. XriljCo machinery about it. By one set of convex and concave planes the stave is dussed out of the rough rived block, with the convex air' concave surfa ces suited to the roundness of the cask, and by another set of planes of d iff. rent consir notion, the true bevel and taper are gtven more perfect than can be nossibly done by hand. Through this machine, and by both sets ;f planes a stave is driven by a single rev olution of a steam engine, and thrown out complete. One w hich will perform a hun dred revolutions per minute will produce a hundred siaws complete, and with ihe attendance of two actue men, from twenty-five to thirty thousand pet day can be made. Wiih the aid of this machine, floor bar-' tels i-aii, at lea-t. be rontrneti il :i shiMirifr chcapcr per bamd, ami much tighter and more perfect ihan in the common way. Pork barrels from twenty -five to fifty per cent cheaper, and larger ctsks in ihe same ratio. v e insert this extended notice because, we consider Mr. Law's patent may be isehil to ihe public, and we hope the pro prietor may reap the full reward of his in genuity. All who w is,!) to purchase rights or ex amine the cmiosity, are referred to 103 Murray street, w here they can see the ma chine operate. Wun. American Ingenuity The Nashville Whig thus describes a new bucket-making n aehine which is in operation in that city: ' flu invention may be said to be one of the innumerable results of the discovery of steam power. Its operation is curious enough to one not thoroughly versed in the science of mechanics. The material used is principally red and white cedar. The whole process from the rough block up, of sawing, grooving, turning and finishing is conducted by steam machinery. The manual force required to turn out five or six hundred buckets a month is only about four hands." Fate of the Apostles. St. Matthew. This Apostle and Evangelist is supposed to have suffered marty rdom, or was slain with a sword at a city in Ethiopia. St. Mark. This Evangelist was drag ged through the streets of Alexandria, in Egypt, until he expired. St. Luke This Evangelist was hung upon an olive tree in Greece. St. John This Apostle and Evangelist was put into a caldron of boiling oil at Rome and escaped death. He afterwards died a natural death at Ephcsus, in Asia. St. Peter. This Apostle was crucified at Rome, with his head downwards, by his own request, thinking himself unwor- i thy to die in the same posture and manner j was crucified in Persia. M. Marinas. Ibis Apostle was first stored and then beheaded, Barnabas. This Apostle of ihe gentiles stoned to death b the Jews, at Salonis. Paul This Apostle was beheaded, ! (supposed to have been) at Rome by the tyrant Nero. The Jews. It is staled that within the last five years the number cf Jeus in the Holy Land, has increased from 2,000 to upwards of 40,000 and that it is still in creasing The Loudon Society, for the conversion of ihe Jews, have established a mission at Jerusalem an have built a cboieh upon Mount Zion. They have tiansbted ihebook of common prayer into Hebrew, and have a missionary, who is a converted Jew st.it ioned there and thus alter a period of 1800 years, the Psalmsof David in Hcbiew arc again sung by a He brew Christian Church on Mount Zion, win ic they were first set to music by their inspiiC -Jlhor, li e 'swectsingerof Israel,' 3000 years ago. Singular Escape. vessel was re opmlv p ;7o,i near the Scillv Islands so suddenly that it did not fill with water, the internal air being co. nneo, m.u .... ec uie.i and a hoy wnonc. m "c.c in and lemameu o u ;..MWufc iuuu, ; rA nftnrward3 rescued.