ESo Whole JW. 84S. Tarhorough, (Edgecombe County, JY C.J baturday Jane 4, 1842. voLxrnixo 22. J7ic Tarborough JPrcss, BY fiEOHOE HOWARD, Is published weekly at Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per year, if paid in advance or Three Do liars at the expiration of the subscription year. For an) period less than a year, Twenty-five C'nts per month. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at any time, on jrivinr, notice thereof and paying arrears those residing at a distance, must invariably pay in advance, or give a respon sible reference in this vicinity. Advertisements not exceeding a square will be inserted at One Dollar the first insertion, and 2;j cents for every continuance. Longer advertise- mpr.ts in like proportion. Court urners auu ju dicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. Ad 0rt;CptnPiits must be marked the number of in sertions required, or they will be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid or they may not be attended to. FOR THE TAKBORO PKESS Written for a certain Lady's Jilhum. There is a bright seraphic form. That heaven's hand has made for me; A fair this lonely heart can charm, If I that dear fair one could see. Oh, Heaven! I should love too well, Could I that fair creation see; My heart too big with joy would swell, To find such being made for mei But there is such an one on earth. And of hei name and face I've heard; I love her for her truth and worth, Her name my fate is in the vord KASSELAS, HOME. When 'mid the world's vain, empty pomp. It is our mournful lot to roam How fondly cherished is the thought Of those dear friends we've left at home. Remembrance clings around the spot Tho' far in manhood's age we rove, "Where first we saw a father's smile, Where first we knew a mother's love. E'en tho a cottage thatched with straw, The dwelling be which gave us birth, And crumbling be its lonely walls, Yet 'tis the dearest spot on earth. 'Twas there in childhood's pleasant hours, With thoughtless joy we "hailed each morn,' When time presented only flowers, But treacherously kept back the thorn. A brother's and a sister's love To feel, 'twas there our happy lot; Which yet in gentlest accents speak The magic words, "Forget me not." From the Globe. Always the same The parallel is be coming perfect between the Federalism of 179S and the Whigism of 1S42. The Federalists increased the public ex penditures. So have the Whigs. The Federalists increased the public debt. So have the Whigs. The Federalists increased the people's taxes. So have the Whigs. The Federalists increased the navy. So have the Whigs The Federalists increased the army. The Whigs proposed to add several re giments to the army, and one thousand men to the marine corps. The Federalists employed the army to overawe and control the people in the ex ercise of their rights. So have the Whigs. The Federalists passed a bankrupt law. So have the Whigs. The Federalists treated the Declaration of Independence as a bundle of absirac tions, not to be regarded in practice. So do the Whigs. If they have not. passed an alien law, it is not from any liking for emigrants from op pressed Europe. If they have not passed a sedition law, they have introduced new and unheard-of measurses to prevent ellective debate in the House of Representatives. What could more effectively show the identity between the Federalism of 1798 and the Whigism of 1842? The object and intentions of the Demo crats is To reduce the public expenditures. To pay off the public debt. To reduce the people's taxes. To reduce the navy to the limit of 1S41. To prevent an increase of the army. To employ the army and navy only for the public defence. To repeal the bankrupt law. To treat emigrants from Europe as men and brothers, entitled to the rights of men. To allow full scope to discussion of pub lic measures and the acts of public men. To maintain in practice as well as theo ry the pure and glorious principles of the declaration of Independence. JGen. Burleson, now Vice-President ollcxas,isa native of North Carolina, and early emigrated to Tennessee, return ed to North Carolina, m irried and resided there 12 years, participated in the battles of the Creek war, emigrated to Missouri, thence agiin to Tennessee, was elected Colonel of the Militia in each of those States re moved in 1330 to Texas, settled on the Colorado and was chosen Geteral of the Volunteers who in the Fall of 1835 besieged Gen. Cos at San Antonio. Raleigh II esc. Divorces It is a singular faetjhat there are perhaps, more applications for Divorces. m i omecticut, the "land of steady habits," as it is called, than in any other Si ate of tin Un ion. It is accounted fur on the ground that the facility of obtaining a divorce, encourages gross violations of the marriage vow, as the readiest means of securing the desired result. The number at the present Session is very large, though the committer on that subject state, that the applicants are fewer than usual. One of the success ful applicants, just made, was from Daniel Matthews, to br; divorced from his wife emanth;i! Mr. McCurdy, Cha irrnati of th3 Committee, read several Letters from the lady, addressed to her new lover, from one of which we copy the following touch ingly sentimental Postscript : "Canaan is my native place, Norfolk is my station, Hut I will marry the man I love, In spite of my relation." ib. Dath from carelessness. Mr. Isaac Smith, a citizen of this County, descended into a Well, in Chatham, a few days since, for the purpose of cleaning it out, and was shortly after discovered at its bottom, without motion. He was drawn up to the mouth of the Well, hut died in a few min utes, owing, no doubt, to the foulness of the air. 1 low often mut people be told, that the presence of foul air may be accurately tested by simply letting down intoa Well a lighted candle, and ;hal no one should dare to go into one, without such experi ment? If the air is unwholesome, the candle will burn very feebly, or at once go out, and death will certainly be the fate of him who exposes himself in such an atmos phere. But if the candle burns freely, then no danger need be apprehended from a descent. ib. J2 banditti exposed. A man named John L. Scott, was, a few weeks ago. by his own confession, convicted of horse stealing, before the Circuit Court of Dale county, Alabama. He subsequently made some confessions, by which it appears that there has for some time existed a Company of robbers, who spread over a large part of Alabama and Georgia,, committing acts ol theft, robbery, and sometimes cool blooded murder. The names of fourteen persons connected with the gang are given in the Southern Shield, but these are not suppo sed to be all. Among the ruffians is one named Allen McLean, livingon Pea River, a Justice of the Peace! Also a Doctor living in Dale county, name not known. These men call themselves "Murrelites," in honor of the distingut.-died ruffian of that name, whose ciimes created so much indignation some few years ago. Hal. Stand. Death by Lightning. There were three persons, two young men and a young woman, camping out under a tree, six miles from town, on the Augusta Road. They were named Hutchison, and were faom Emanuel county. One of them, a lad, who was lying with his hand touching the tree, was killed instantaneously, the fluid enter ing on the back of the head, singing the hair and making a furrow across. The female was in the cart; she is very much scorched and yesterday morning was insen sible, and in a very dangerous situation. The other young man, who was also lying on the ground, was struck on the top of the shoulder, the fluid running all over the left side and completely excoriating him, and then passing to the right thigh and down the right leg. He is not in so dangerous a situation as the woman. The tree was a hollow one. Their dog had crept into the hollow to sleep. He was killed as he lay. He evidently had not moved a limb. The fluid must have descended on the inside of the tree, as there were no marks externally. There were no marks on the ground. The accident occurred between 10 and 11 o' clock on Saturday night. Savannah Georgian. (JpM. Jolivet, in the Chamber of Dep uties of France, in censuring English phi lanthropy, stated that a traffic a thousand times more odious than the Afrcan slave trade, is now going on in India. This is it, tr.,(riP nf infants of every color and of l IIL tlUUJV v mf every caste. The laws there authorize the selling of children by their fathers ami mothers; and each year millions of desert ed children arc sold to perpetual slavery. Index. Florida a State. The Star says the committee appointed by the State Conycn lion hive decided to issue immediately writs for the election of State officers. ib. Strange Occurrence. Some weeks since an old gig was sent to Mr. Samuel M. Gover, auctioneer, to be sold. On Wednesday last it was knocked off to an individual for the small sum of S2 50 Subsequently the purchaser disposed of the gig to Mr. Moody. On removing the lining on Friday, Mr. M. discovered a pocket book, which, on being opened, was found to contain a number of current H ink Notes, amounting in all to the sum of S750. As fir as the former owners of the g'g have been traced, no one seems to have any knowledge of the existence of the money in its hiding place. American. Assassination of Ex-Gov. Boggs The St. Louis Era, of the 11th, contains the following particulars respecting the de liberate assassination of ex-Gov. Boggs, ol Missouri: '-Foul Deed. The steamer Thames, just from Missouri river, brought us a handbill, offering a reward of S500 for the person who assassinated Lilburn W. Boggs, late Governor of this State, at Independence, on the night of the 6ih inst. Gov. Boggs, it is staled, in a written memorandum, was not dead, hut mortally wounded. Since the above was written, we have re ceived a note from the clerk of the Thames, giving the following particulars: Gov. Boggs was shot by some villains on Friday, 6th, in the evening, while in a room in his own house, in Indepen dence. His son, a boy, hearing a report, ran into the room, and found the Governor sitting in his chair, with his jaw fallen down and his head leaning back. On discover ing the injury done his father, he gave the alarm. Fool tracks were found in the gar den, below the pistol picked up, supposed j to have been overloaded, and thrown from the hand of the scoundrel who fired it. 4Three buckshot, of a heavy load, took effect: one going through his mouth, one into the brain, and another probably in or near the brain all going in at the back part of the neck and head. The Governor was still alive on the morning of the 7th; but no hopes of his recovery by his friends, and but slight hopes from his physicians. "A man was suspected, and the sheriff most probably has possession of him by this time. "The pistol was one of a pair stolen some days previous from a baker in Inde pendence, and the legal authorities have the description of the other." Bankruptcy. It will be remembered thai Judge Betts recently decided in the matter of Kasson, that the jewelry of a bankrupt's wife, if belonging to her before her marriage, do not vest in the assignee, but may be held by her. On the other hand, the last number of the Law Report er, (for May,) contains the original opin ion of Judge Story, in which he goes into the subject at length, and rules among oth er things, that the husband becomes enti tled to all the personal property belonging to his wife at the time of marriage, unless his martial right is excluded by some ex press or implied trust; and his creditors may take it in execution for satisfaction of their debts; so that, ordinarily, all the wife's jewelry must pass to creditors, in case of the bankruptcy ol the husband. JV. Y. Evening Post. fl Rogue caught. On Saturday, the 14t h inst., a complaint was made to the chief marshal of this town, that a man call ing himself Hiram Wilson, and pretend ing that he was a native of Orange county, and recently from Cherokee county, North Carolina, had picked the pocket of Mr. Washam, a partner of Mr. Cox, (negro traders,) of his wallet, containing about 41, and stolen from him a dirk. South Carolinian. Jl she Devil. On Monday, the town of Lynn, Mass., was in a state of great ex citement, occasioned bT the murder ot a fine little boy of that town, by a female de mon who kept a school there. On Satur day, the lit tie fellow came home and com plained that the mistress had whipped him severely; but his complaints were not alar ming, and nothing more was thought ol :ne matter. At night he retired to bed with a little brother, who, on waking in the mor ning, found him dead. On examination, his body, limbs, and head were found much bruised and swollen; and it was very evi dent that his death had been produced by congestion of the brain, occasioned by the treatment he had received from the wo man; who, it turned out upon investiga tion, hung him up by the heels, and beat him for a long time and with great vio lence with rulers! The wretch was imme diately secured, to be dealt with as her in humanity deserves. Liberation of the American prisoners in Mexico. The Southern mail of yes- teday, brought intelligence of the arrival of Gen. Thompson in me city oi luexico, anu the prompt relese of the American priso ners. Bait. Sun. Mexico. The British steamer "Tevi ot," arrived at Havana from Vera Cruz, on the 29th ult. bring the news that the elections in Mexico had gone entirely for Bustemeute. In consequence of which Gen. Santa Ana had ordered 5.000 men to tha' capital. Butemente was to have sail ed for England on the 1st of May. The Invasion of Mexico. The Texas Consul at New Orleans, in a letter publish ed in the Bee, says: "Officially, I am au thorized to say, a rigorous invasion of Mex ico will be commenced in a short time, and can ied out to its fullest extent. " Mr. V,m 2. indt acquitted. We learn that the Ecclesiastical Tribunal, which had the case of Mr. Van Zandt under consider ation, has acquitted that personage of the crime (seducing a young lady of his con gregation) for which his connexion with Grace church was severed, and of which he was convicted by the Circuit Court in Ro chester. The Ecclesiastical Court is thus in con flict with the civil tribunal; and what the upshot may be it is difficult to determine Rochester N. Y. Post. Large Ox. Edward A. Smith. Esq. of Long Island, N. Y. has r used an Ox. said to be the largest ever seen in the United Stales. He is 6 feet 2 inches high, 13 feet 4 inches in length, 9 feet 11 inches small est girt, and weighs over 4000 pounds. He is not 6 years old. Breach of Promise. A v'oung woman, named Lydia S. Smith, has recovered 3300 of Samuel Blanchard, of Unity, N H., because he said he would marry her and didn't do it but made a mistake and married another. Sun. (J!pEvery body has heard of Collins' Axes, made on the Farmington river, in Connecticut. The Marietta Gazette states that this manufacture employs 100 men, who make 500 axes per day. Each axe passes through 13 hands. The first shop you enter contains two ponderous ma chines where the iron is cut into bais of the proper size, the head formed and the eye punched. In two minutes from the commencement of this process, it is ready for the next shop, where the steel is put in. From 12 to 14 ounces of steel are used in each one. They then pass successively in to the hammering, tempering, and grind ing shops. In this last one each axe piss es through four hands the first stone be ing very coarse and the last very fine. They then go to the polishing shop, then to the finisher, and the whole time em ployed from the first heating of the bar to the last finishing, is two hours. Natchez Free Trader. Engines of IVar. The New York Sun, after noticing the destructive shell in vented by Dr. Alexander Jones, and the floating battery proposed by Mr. Stevens, as very tfl'edive engines in war, adds Scarcely a week passes but we receive information of some new warlike inven tion. We know ol a cannon in this city, that throws 120 balls per minute with the greatest regularity and precision, indepen dent of the direct action oi sieim or gun powder. We know of a submarine ma chine, which can be propelled with the greatest facility and made to remain sub merged any length ol time. And finally, we know of an invention at once the most magnificent of the age, in comparison with which Jones's shell, or Stevens's battery, would blush fiom very shame of merciful ness. It is to apply electricity in warfare, and however novel and preposterous the idea, it has been examined by several mag nates of science, who have unhesitatingly declared it to be based on strict philosophi cal principles, and decidedly the most im portant discovery in modern limes for pur poses of warfare. 1 he inventor, whose name we are not at liberty to disclose, has been engaged for several years in perfect ing this noble project, and if experiment and philosophy are at all to be depended on, we may fondly anticipate, that the pe riod is not far distant when, as a conse quence, the term war will be ejected from our language. We have given the subject this notice, not only trom a sense ol the obligation resting on us to chronicle all im portant inventions, out also to inspire with full confidence those who erroneously ima gine that we are unable to cope with the hist nations of the earth. From a late English Paper. Statistics of ilistressThc propheciea Earthquake. The alarm which man foolish persons at present entertain of an jDoroachine earthquake, which it is feareo will swallow up the metropolis, is founded on the following ancient prophecies, one professing to be pronounced in the year 1203, the other by Dr. Dee, the astrolo ger, in 159S. There is nothing particular ly alarming in the coincidence of the as signed peri.ul of the earthquake, for the knowledge of the preceding prophecy would of course form the foundation of the second: "In eighteen hundred and forty-two, Four iliings the sun shall view; London's rich and famous 'town Hungry earth shall swallow down; Storm a id rain in trance shall be, Till every river runs a sea; S'iiiii shall he rent in twain, So say I, the Monk of Dree, In the year twelve hundred and three." Har'e:an Collection. (I3riti.-h Museum) 1006, folio 319. "The Lord have mercy on ynu all. Prepare yourselves for dreadful fall Of house and land and human soul The measure of your sins is full. "In the year one, eight, and forty-two, Of the year that is so new, lu the third mouth, of that sixteen, It may he a day or two between. "Perhaps you'll soon be stiffand cold, Dear Christian, be not stout and hold; The mighty kingly proud will see This comes to pass, as my name's Dee." 150S. MS. in the Hritish Museum. Ji second Universal Deluge. A new theory of medicine has been discovered in Germany. It is the application of water for every complaint, chronic or acute. This theory is in the full tide we mean no pun of succes-ful experiment. The founder of it is a peasant who one day had two of his ribs broken, and who cured hims If in the incredibly short period of welve days, by ihe use of wet bandages and draughts of water! Princes and prin eesses, judges, divines, scholars, and even doctors of medicine, are among his patients and followers. The current of his popu arity is fast running all over Germany. Never before have we fully understood the physical dogma, that water will find its own level. Hut now it is level to the humblest capacity. This is no joke, but sober earnest. According to the system, water is the sovereign remedy provided by nature for every malady of the animal frame. The system is called Hydropa thy, and is washing away the dissoluble fabrics of Ahopalhy and Homcepathy by its onward flood of truth. Water alone is to remove all imaginable complaints. Quere hydrophobia?) Water .for pre entation, alleviation and cure; in sick ness and in hedth; for better for worse; for richer, fur poorer; for fevers and for colds; for repletion and depletion; for mental aberration, local inflammation, coun ter irritation, aod suspended animation; for broken sleep and broken bones; for pains, sprains, chilblains and crack brains. Water, only water for every ache and ail ment. Water ex'ernally, internally and eternally for all the ills that flerh is heir to, and m my more that fishes share too! This practice will undoubtedly soon be in troduced into the Uni'ed States. Hasten, therefore, oh, Drandrcth! hasten, Pease, and all ye Indian Vegetable and Life men! Sell out your pills and your patents whilo you may, before the German Water system under mines your towering quackeries, and you behold them dissolve like the baseless fabric of a vision, and leave not a wreck behind! North Jimtrican. Petrified Rain. In Huugry there wag a shower of meteoric stones instead of rain a few weeks sir. re. To convince himself of the truth of this phenomena, a German Philosopher visited the spot and examined for himself. He says millions of little peb bles, unlike any that can be found on the earth, may be seen through a large district of country. It seems to us these are silent messengers sent to give us some idea of the world above us. A Lesson J or Scolding wives "And I dare s.y you have scolded your wife of ten, Newman.'' said 1 once. Old New man looked down, and the wife took up the reply. "Never to signify; and if he has, I deserved it. "And I dare say, if the truth were told, you have scolded him quite as often." "Nay," said the old wo man, with a beauty of kindness which all the poetrv in the world cannot excel, "how can a wife scold her good man, who has been working for her little ones all thy day? It may be for a man to be peevish, lor it is he who bears the crosses of the world; but who should make him forget them but his own wife? And she had best, for h-r own sake; for nobody can scold much wh-n the scolding is all on one -ide." Bulwer's Student. Better than none. A poor married woman was telling a lady, on the wrong side of fifty, of some domestic troubles, which she in great part attributed to tho regularities of her husband. " Well," said die old maid, "you brought these Iroublea on yourself; I told you not to marry him. I was sure that lie wouiu uoi mae you a ood husband." "He is not a good one, to oesure, madam," replied the poor woman, -but he is a power better than none." Q is