jrinfp JTo. 89. Tarborough, (Edgecombe County, A". V.) Saturday November 0, i8H Vol. XVII JVb. 43. Ti Tarbovoagh I'rcss, BY OEOItiiE HOWAliP, published weekly at Two Dollars ami Fifty Or', per Year if paid in advance or Three Ihlhr at the : expiration of the subscription yeart For an) period less than a year, 'Twenty-five f per month. Subscribers are at liberty to continue ;it anytime, on "jjivimr notice thereof fm pavinir arrears those residing at a distance, must iii variably pay in advance, or give a respon ilile reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will hr parted at One Dollar the first insertion, and 2" rents tor every continuance. Longer advertise ments in like proportion. Court Orders and Ju dicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. Ad vertisements must be marked the number of in sertions required, or tltey will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post paii'l or they may not be attended t o. Kecoitimeinlecl ly I Sir Faculty. Drs. J IlarrclPs CELCBUATKD PREPARED 31KDICIXES. THESE NKW AND PLEASANT llkM 1)1 KS COMPRISE Their Alterative Evtrart of Sanaparilla and Blood Hoot. This S 1 valuable rem .-(ly in the cure of scrotul ; , or king's white swelling, p : t i 1 1 in the bones, ulcerous sores, emptions ol the skin, rheumatism, syphilitic and mer curial affections, debility, and all disease-. ariin; from impurities of the blond, of impaired constitutions from loop; habits ol excessive dissipation. Price $1 per boule. Their Improved Extract of Sarsaparilla and Cubtbs For tlie cure of chronic diseases of the mucous membrane, such as dysentery, leuchorrhea. gleets, strictures, hermorrhoi dal affections, but especially lor gnnonhea in all its stages, catarrhs of mucous surfa ce?, more particularly the lunes Kidneys. k their appendages. Price. $1 per bottle Their Concentrated Extract cfUuchx and Uva Ursi. For curing diseased urinary organs, such as gravel, morbid irritation and chronic inflammation of the kidneys, ure ters, bladder and urethra: also, diseases of the prostrate gland, loss of tone in pas sing urine, cutaneous affections and rheu matism. Price 1 25 per bottle. 77fir Febrifuge or Camomile Tonic For the cure of all debilities, loss of ap petite, but especially for Fever and Ague for which it lias been more particularly prepared. This medicine is so compoun ded as to meet litis troublesome disease in all its stages, and its ingredients so powerfully concentrated as to produce an effectual cure of the most obstinate cases by taking a few doses. Price 1 per bottle. Their Jlnti spasmodic or Camphorated Cordial. Designed to cure excessive vomitttng, diarrhea, cholera morbus, Asiatic cholera, pain in the stomach, cramps, hysterics, colics, hypocondria, spasms, convulsions and muttering delirium in the low forms of bilious fever. It is a fine substitute fur paregoric. Price 75 cents per bottle. Their Cough Mixture of Carrageen Moss and Squills. For the cure of diseased Lungs, cbron c affections of the stomach and bowels, nd all diseases produced by-sudden chan ges in temperature. Price 75 cents per battle. Their A nti bilious Tomato Pills. These pills combine the extract of To mato and Slippery Elm, with several of 'lie most approved remedies of the Mate fa Medica, and if taken according to . the directions, will cure all diseases within the 'each of human means. As a cathartic lliey are copious and free; as an aperient they are mild and certain; as a tonic they arf prompt and invigorating; as an altera ''Ve they are superior to calomel or any lner Known remedy, and as a purifier of 'e Dlood, they are unequalled m the his lor' of medicines. Price 50 cents per box. Their Superfine Tooth Powder. For curing and hardening the gums. i Clean"g, preserving and keeping white J. leell,i and for sweetening the breath, J 1 50 cents per box. he above preparations are offered to tne public generally and Physicians espe Cauy, not as nostrums, or panaceas, but asneat a"d convenient preparations made j"l slricl,y scientific principles. They con ."""'he active virtues of their respective 'redietiis, in a concentrated form, and 111 o all in remnvimr il'wp:se that such Hedic lies can possibly effect. Since their invent i. , "jr UlUMJieU Vli inn n v . . '"g diseases have been restored by their aiscendent virtues; anil the great and de able reward of health still awaits those . 0 avail themselves of their use accord 5 to prescribed directions. They are 0r sale at the office of GEO. UOW JIM), Agent. Inn niinu nHI'.i...! ta. nroo. FOU THE TAKBOKO PKKSS. TO "Fare thee well," my fond coquette, Thine were gilded smiles most bright, To betray the lieart ami let, It settle in a "starless nijjht." Had I. siren, never heard. That soft voice in accents flow, I had liv'd and uothinjr fear'd From this youthful beauty's glowi Had I, vixen, lovM thee less, I mijrht yet be happy still; This heart might e'en seek redress, 'Neath thy cruel wanton will. llul the heart that is decreed, To confide in a false sijrh; Must live on in misery bleed Sink from earth away and die. Once I fondly deem'd thee all, lvartli or lu-aven could bestow, On this lonely heart to call, lis being herefrom gtief or woei And those eyes once fondly beam'd, On my heart a lovely light, I thought it love I only dream'd Mis'ry woke me to the blight. Did that young heart never feel, One pulsation truly heat? Was that specious ready zeal, All a fiction, all deceit Say, h w could these eyes of fire, lieu m a lervid flame on me, And that heart feel no desire, And no truth of soul in thee? Ah, 1 once could trace a tear, On that seraph cheek of thine; Uut, alas! there's nought to cheer, iNow this lonely heart of mine. But farewell, the hours are grie, Which were dear to ne and thee; And they speed so swiftly on, LiuL to leave their ioi?ery. Yes, farewell, a long farewell, W e must never meet again; But this lieart can never tell, How sore the grief, how deep the pain "Fare thee well," I now resign, All the hope I have in thee, And this heart, shall ne'er repine, Bright or dark its destiny. "No! this heart shall never grieve, O'er a few bright happy years; But it shall beat on and live. Thro' this lonely "vale of tears." JUVENO. (3 We find the following, in the last Halifax Advocate. The "candidate" allu ded to was the late Auses Sniccr. E-q. an individual as much noted for peculiarity of language aim eccentricity u. manner, as t . . r f r goodness of heart, soundness of intei- j ovv cj,jzens w hich I shall conversate upon lec t, and usefulness to society. The read-i is the tariff prosinority. The congress vo er will bear in mind, that he did not adopt 1 cality has been dispolitic enough to tax the , . 4- r -.- i- nrosinorities ol euglish commodities so as the prevalent practice of writing out his l"""'""" v h 1 , , ...... to exhibit the big ships from cucumnaviga- speech at length for publication; th.s, no ' tjng l)e $ea m orJer t0 keep foreign com. doubt, was done with additions, embellish-1 merce away from our country and the de ments, &.c. by one of his damnM good 1 suit of this dipolitic loquacity of congress natured friends." Enfield, Oct. 19M, 1S41 Mr. Webb: iir: In my travels in Edgecombe. I fell in with a gentleman who I had in his possession a Manuscript copy of r. ' r- a speech delivered by a candidate lor the legislature in that county in 1824. The gentleman referred to was kind enough to entrust me with this Literary i t lie, for a short time; and as I think its publication, would introduce a decided im provement in the political literature of times, 1 have enclosed it to you, with the request that it may appear in the next num ber of the Advocate. 1 am sir, with great respect, T. L. B. G. A speech delivered by a new candidate of Edgecombe county on the Sth day of June lb4 in the town of T. at a general muster, who on that day declared himself, and after swiging the joyful contents of two or three bumpers of the good old ap ple jck, ascended the piazza bench of the tavern and harangued the people in the following outlandish stuff, (to wit!) Fellow citizens did you ever peruse a Almanac. Fellow citizens the first and the most important subject which 1 shall conversate upon is the election subject. I have got upon this bench Fellow citi izens with the 'disqualified object of contu sing into your minds and coinblustificating you all into an idea that I am standing up here as a candidate for your suffrages to represent you the next general assembly in the house of commons at Roll'. The question is, will you debet me or will you not. If you will you may all depend upon it there shant be nothing wanting on my tallents to capitulate satisfactory all your in teiest placed in such a circumstance and consequence. Fellow citizens, you all know ine excessively well, you aim ignor- ant of my flucntial talents and circum stance, you all know excessively well that I am a very fat liable hard working man, and has seen a heap of the ups and downs of the world and know right smart about human nature and politics too, and to con vince you Fellow citizens that 1 do appre hend something about politics, I will re connotc several numbers that is factor i ously Mipernoxious to the capitulation and Utitude of our degenerating State and citizens. Fellow citizens the first number which I shall conversale upon is the Bank prosinority; the banking constitution Fel low citizens is a very excessive capilula i igevil to the rising luminary of our noc turnal velicity, because the banks has issu ed a heap of paper money on you all, Fellow citizens and it has appreciated mightily and this appreciation of the bank money Fellow citizens is the physical cause of the scarcity of money and I assure you is the moral cause of the scarcity of money and assure is the moral cause of thes ocular hard times, and Fellow citizens should it circumstantiate with your infer nal feelings and revolving; wishes to delect me to the house ol commons, I assure you will do all that my talents convocates to disnolily the rising dumfrigated prosinor ity of the bank convolution and render the whole a coilatual mass of ruined nonenti ties and have no other species of money in circulation but the good old specie itself (that is the silver,) in the second number Fellow citizens which 1 shall conversale upon is the prosinority of infernal im provemens and internal navigation which I think would be excessively adducive to he luture displosion of our commerce with foreign countries, therefore I think it would be extremely dispedient for the house of commons next general assembly to op proximate three or four hundied dollars for the circumnavigation of Tar River, Fishing Creek and Toisnot, which 1 think would greatly viciliate the passage of our llai bottom boats, from Washington, New hern a no" the other foreign countries and consequently immaterially diminish the extorting prices of merchandising prossi norilies, and render larmers more able to purchase the proximatinsr commodities which you are obliged to have under any voxcillating circumstance whatever, such as salt, iron, sugar, coffee, &c. The third number Fellow citizens which 1 shall conversate upon is the magistrate prosinority. I think Fellow citizens that the squires of the peace is placed in a very excessive and quitical consequence because they have no pay for their services. I think Fellow citizens that the house of commons ought to approximate 50 cents for every judgment the squires give to the constables which would be a very solici- toU9 circumstance to conduce the squires to be more intentive to the wanantings to . ;mI,rmen,s. The fourth number Fel- will be a civil evolution, that is a civil war among the norrard convocalities and us, which will lead to a very serious circum stance for when we get to war with our own infernal circumlocution the british will ... r be politic enough to take the advantage oi our quitical consequence and rush in upon us with all the ferocity, of their contamina ting force of big ships, cannon muskets and british and make us object slaves, again like they did before the rising prox imity of the old revolutionary war there fore Fellow citizens should it ratify with your external sensibilities to send me to the house of commons next general assem bly I will use all my energetic influence & talents to discompublicatethe dessimolition of the tariff prosinority and have it dis molified and repealed in order to prevent the serious circumstan of another evolution- ary war. The fifth number Fellow cilizens which 1 shall conversate upon is the Presidential prosinority. Fellow cilizens I think Mr. Crawford ought to be the next President, because he is a very circumstantiated man in politics and deplomaticable locutions, he has been in public consequences for a great many years and has performed the diame trical task of a statesman with great impo tence and circumstantial evidences, there fore I tnink Mr. Crawford is better disqual ified for your next President than any oth er man in the United States of America or No. Carolina either and I think it the duty of all my citizens to vote for him for his de tection will disquivocally redound more to the complicated interest of you all than any man of my political acquaintance, there fore should it invalidate with your vocal principles and infernal duplicity to send me to the house of commons next general assembly, 1 vrill do all that my luminous capacity prognosticates to delect Mr. Craw ford and exterminate him on the next pres idential chair. The sixth number Fellow citizens which 1 shall conyersate upon is the canal prosinority Fellow citizens I am excessively much in favor of. and I think the house of commons has been discom phatically blind in not ceinghe indubita ble consequence and benefit that would viciously df geiv r ite from cuting canals all over conetoe which would collaterally render the culti va.ivati on of the unfertili zed des3rt into a delicious inhabitable con tinent, which circumstance would in a vao degree demolish all the diabolieated invi cissitudes attending the complexified in conveniences of the people who dishabit ii and render comple paradise of demoniacal angels who would lmdiy change the voli cious convocality of their velicitous & con vulsificated happiness for heaven ilsif, these things Fellow citizens I see as p'ain as I now see the nocturnal rays of ihe sun shine and Fellow citizens should it discom port with your eonvulsified wishes and superanuated desires to delect me to the house of commons the nex' general assem bly I will show you in what I can discom publicate the infernal prosinorities of con etoe and render it a collateral volution of fertilized land. Having convcrsated Fel low cilizens on all the most impotent num bers and prosinoritios I will now conclude by simplifying to you all that I wish your luture beatiitude to be as luminating as the evolving sun, but I am afraid you will misapply your physical judgements and de lect some other person to the house of commons who will know nothing about the conviniality of politics and lead your rights and privileges astray like a lost sheep. 1 have no mote politics to corn er -"ate upon at this time Fellow cilizens but will tell you a groat deal more on some other circumstance when we meet again O! Fellow citizens there is one very impo tent prossinority I like to have forgot tha' is the Sheriff prossinority. 1 think Fel low citizens the house of commons onht to abstract and literavate the sheriff vocali ty in such a consequence as to curtailate the venal durability of one shetiff in office that another may come in under the like circumstance and consequence, this circum located measure Fellow citizens would pre vent the awful consequence and conveniali ty of lucrated eruption in the sheriff pros sinority and deparchment, therefore Fel low citizens should the reconoted fluxibil ties of your superficial sensualities ruminate so far as to send me to the house of com mons the next general assembly, I will use all the mentalities of my magnanimous tal ents and influence to disnolify the durabil ity of one sheriff in office and erect another in his vocality and attitude immediately. (JThe United States Treasury Depart ment having found much difficulty in dis posing of the six per cent, loan, have come to the resolution of issuing certificates for sums as low as $500, in order that men of small capital may be partakers of the bless ing of a national debt. The scheme has been tried both by the State and city of New York without success. New York Herald. (J Money is said to be very plenty in New York, notwithstanding that the banks pay specie. Suspensions seem in the end to make money scarcer than it would be if specie payments were adhered to. for they produce a want of confidence and check importations of specie Irom other part, and increase of paper brings no relief, for it falls in value in proportion to its abun dance, and capital is no plentier than it was before. Pennsylvanian. The Case of Dr. Filch. The Hart ford Patriot pays: "We gave some parti piil irs in our last, of the an est of Dr. Fitch of Philadelphia, who was brought to Con necticut by virtue ot a requisition granted by Gov. Ellsworth, to answer to the charge of forgery. The examination took place before a Court ol Inquiry at Uanbury last week, and the result was, a total failure on the part of his accusers to establish even Ka cli.rhtoet mptpvt fnr this outrapreous proceeding against an innocent and virtu ous citizen. It appears by the Philadel phia papers, and also by a private letter, which we have seen, from Dr. Fitch him self, that he has returned to his family and friends in that city; where it is saidj the treatment he has received has aroused the indignation of all who are at all acquainted with the facts. JThe German clergyman of Boston who went about marrying himself to the girls has been found guilty officii things, and ordered into the penitentiary. Another Bank Explosion. An explo sion took place in the Morris Canal bank ing Company, located at Jersey City, last Kriday . A committee of investigation discovered that E. K. Diddle, the President, and E Lord, the Vice President of that concern, had loaned their friends or themselves 31SO,000 of the funds ol the bnk, to es tablish or improve certain iron works in Danville and Wilkesbarre besides various other financial operations. The directors called upon those two financiers to resign" last week. This Mr. Diddle- wt Old not do, hu s'ormed and threatened, and called the ij.vestioation illegal. The directors stuck to their text and turned both the gentlemen' out of office on Fnd y. While these financial movements Were g'dng un in Jersey City and Danville-, opened a splendid and fashionable house up town in Waver lev Place, we believe furnished it for SS,000, the rent $1200 per annum. Here he was living like a prince and financier till last week, when the explosion in the bank took place; He has now sold off part of his furniture, and has gone to Danville or St. Louis to look alter certain matters there; New Yvrk tieraid. fT Hie Dank of the United States is a bout to give up the fthost. Its stock was offer ed to day at and none vvere found bf sullicieiit nerv e to touch it at that. It is now below Vicksburg, which is about as iovv as it can get, without passing entirely out of existence. Now that institution is clean gone, the sticklers for our present rotten banking system are fast dwindling away, and from the tone of some of them, one would almost be led to believe that tiiey had ever warred against banks and banking, and that the only friends these institutions ever had were the Lodos. New York Het uld, Oct. 13, Trial of 12 men for Murder. Tfie correspoudent of the Illinois Free Trader gives an account of the trial of the persons charged with the murder of the Driskalls, John and W illiam, from which the Editor of the Era has made the following extracts One hundred and twelve men Were in dicted for the muider, and one hundred pleaded not guilty, and were put upon tri al. The very fact of the great confusion occasioned by so many names in the in dictment, left the accused without any evi dence to contend against. The two or three fiisi witnesses, whose names wer endorsed upon the indictment, (and by the law s of this State none, except those whose nanus are endorsed, can be called to prove the substantitive part of the accusation, on ly knew some of the preparatory steps ta ken, which led to the supposed offence. 'I he case was submitted to the jury, who, without leaving their seats, rendered a ver dict of net guilty. This verdict was given partially from a want of evidence, and from what the jury considered the absolute necessity of the case. The writer says the laws could not protect the community, where the banditti committed their many enormities the occasion was too urgent to wait for their uncertain amendment and adaptation to the emergency individually they could not protect themselves mob law they repudiated they therefore re sorted to a counter organization, ordained new rules of evidence, and a new mode of proceeding, such, and such only, as in their judgement were effectual to protect them. There may be those who are dis posed to cavil, perhaps to condemn. The judgments and perceptions of such would be essentially invigorated, could they have dwelt for a short time here, and suffered the murder of their friends, the burning of their dwellings, and the plunder of their property ; and when they called on the latY to redress these wrongs, to see those whom they knew to be perpetrators, escape with impunity (jplt is stated in the Macon Messenger that at the recent election in Georgia, at young man of the name of Broach was shot through the head by a Mr. Pierce, and in stantly killed. Another man named White who was struck over the head about the same time, with a stick, has since died. Supposed murder. The body of si youfig woman, named Mary Austin, was found in the woods in Shaftsbury, Ver mont, a week or two since, and suspicions hav ing since arisen that she Was murdered four individuals have been arrested for ex amination in regard to their knowledge of the matter. New Sofa Stuffing An extraordina ry and ingenious escape was made from the Slate Piion at Concord, N. H., a fev days since, by one of the Convicts. He worked in a shop as a cabinet-maker and upholsterer, and having orders for a large sofa, he made it with a false bottom and stuffed it with some very light material; In the space formed between the top and bottom, he contrived to introduce his bod at the time when the wagoner came tu lake awav the piece offurniture. Hewaf quite a small man, and his weight was not sufficient to produce any suspicions in me mind of the driver. The sofa, thus loaded, was accordingly stowed away in the baz- g.ige wagon, and our hero made his escape. The Professions. D is calculated that iiicic are in the United States 14,012 Law yers, H,680 Clergymen, and 10,32 Phy sicians, exclusive of quacks.