Whole JVV 871. Tnrhornvsrb. (Edgecombe County , JV. V.J balurduy, November 13, it43. Vol. XVill JVo 45. The Ta thorough Prcss BY GEORGE HOWARD, Is published weekly at Two Dollars and Fifty Cents per year, if paid in advance or Three Dollars at the expiration of the subscription yean For anj period less than a year. Twenty-five Cents per mouth. Subscribers are at liberty to discontinue at any time, on giving 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 25 cents for every continuance. Longer advertise ments in like proportion. .CourtJQrtfilA and Ju dicial advertisements '25 per cent, higher. Ad vertisements must be marked the number of in sertions required, or theywill be continued until otherwise ordered and charged accordingly. Letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid or they may not be attended 10. FOR THE TAKBOItO PRESS. WOMAN. Daughters of beauty, choice of beings made. Much praised, much blamed, much loved, but fairer far, Than aught beheld, than aught imagined else. Pollok. Hail, lorely woman! brightest star, Heaven's hand has sent us here; Thou art a gem too precious far, For earth a prize for man too dean Would that I thy worth could tell. The beauty of thy heart could show; My numbers in thy praise should swell, For thee my verse should overflow. With youth and beauty sparkling o'er Her sunny brow angelic form. What man on earth would ask for more. To add to life a better charm. Upon her fair and tender cheek. In living freshness blush the rose; To the heart of man more sweet, Than that which in the garden grows. And in her eye there is a beam, From man's heart can drive dull care; And like the magic of some dream, Restore sweet hope and comfort therei Woman! ah, thy heart's a prize, That no earthly wealth can buy; The only boon, from yonder skies. For which man brooks his destiny Yes, within thy heart's a spell, Which makes us hug the chains of life; Which makes us love on earth to dwell. And e'en endure the din of strife Woman! lovely, harmless thing, How could we exist without thee; For thee we to existence cling, For thee we bear its niiseryt Within man's heart no rankling care, Can spring when lovely woman's by; Let woman enter where'er we are, And all our gloomy visions fly. Whether amid the raging sea. The princely hall or desert lone. If woman's there, where'er we be, A magic o'er the heart is thrown. Woman! thy fund aud geulle heart, 'Is a beauty, and a mystery;" Lovely, gentle, as thou art," Life's an empty dream without thee. When innocence and virtue n ild, with beauty empire o'er thee hold; Sweet is then thy sunny smile, "As holy incense o'er the souli" Thou art a beauty and delight. And to the soul of man divine; For where he wants thy holy light. He sinks beneath his noble kind. Woman! heaven made thfe fair For man to him was given, His good, his ill, his hopes to share, And to direct his soul to heaven. Her bosom, softer than the down, Upon the tender cygnet's breast; Oh, like the healing balm 'tis found, To the soul of man distrest Yes, when man's heart is wrapp'd in gloom, All one desolated pile; what care his dying hopes relume. The light from gentle woman's smile. Woman! what a sacrifice, Is thy tender heart to man; For thy faith a fatal price, It is thine too oft to scan. Woman! we can tell thy worth, No better than this much to say; There is no real joy on earth, when thy lovely light's away. Beauty, virtue, goodness, all, All are thine still men asperse Thy angel name aud miscall Thy sweetness beauty, "man's worst curse.'' He does not woman understand, (Nor deserves her worth to know,) who thinks that tender creature can Prove a traitress to her vow. Why is lovely woman fair, And all beauty to her given why to man's heart is she most dear, If not the richest gift from heaven Who has heaven kindly bound, In sympathy to the sex; who when dangers o'er her frown. Steps in her tender frame protects And when her young and tender brow, Is wrung by rude misfortune's hand, who should minister to her wo? Heaven answers it is man. But I tell it with ablush, woman'i guardian, man, is seen The fairest flowerg of earth to crush, Blasting woman like her fiend. Yes, the man that can betray woman's fond confiding breast. Deny him, heaven, the light of day, Deny his bosom peace or rest. Should these verses be considered too hyper bolical, 1 have to say in extenuation of my crime, that I have an illustrious precedent as Pollok him selfnot to say many others. I choose Pollok for an example, from the circumstance of his hav ing been an enthusiastic divine at the time he wrote the "Course of Time," and inconsequence the last man from whom we should have expected to have heard "Daughters of beauty, ' fairer far Than aught beheld, than aught imagined else; Fairer and dearer than all else most dear When found sufficient bliss, &c." If the subject of woman then did lure the devoted Pollok off the track of his rp.licrions liplihoratiniu so far, it may not at all be wondered at, if as insia- : c . i ! . " iiiuudiu anu irreligious a worm as myselt may be found wandering in the labyrinths of female eulu gium. More especially, when the fact is taken into consideration that 1 am one of those whn deem it impossible for man to commit extrava gance in tne praise ot temale pertection. IV, E. J. S. From the Fayetteville Carolinian. j Mr. Calhoun and the Glob?. ThJ Ma lisonian charges the Globe with being hostile to Mr Calhoun as the candidate fur he Presidency. After giving a denial ol of the assertion, the Globe says: . 44 As to Mr. Oalhou n, we think that our paper has long since shewn, that with us, "by gones are by-gones." We did, in former times, say some pretty hard thing of him; and we are afraid, in return, as hard things were said of us. Hut we have long since sat down in the same council house, and smoked the calumet the Indian pipe ot peacej together. Uur war- hatchets are unbuued, only to wet them to the eyes in the blood of our common ene mies; and, should a national convention ap point him our great chief, we will follow his war-path and fight in his shade as long as a foe to the great democratic tribe re mains to darken our skies with the smoke of his wigwam, or leave his track upon the leaves of our hunting grounds." That is a very pretty paragraph very pretty; but we doubt not that Mr. Blair deeply regrets the circumstances which called it forth; and we regret as much as he can, that any of the Democratic Editors should let passion and political prejudice carry them so far beyond the bounds of propriety, as to "auy some pretty hard things" of their political opponent. In the first place it is morally wrong; aud in the second place, it often leids to embar rassment, and gives our opponents rich jokes to crack at our expense; as in the present case, between the Globe and Mr. Calhoun. It is one of the worst things a political editor can do; for in the course of time and change, we know not whit may turn up If we difft r to-day, we may agree to-morrow. Then if we have called no hard names, how easy the te union. Then, instead of any ing off from each oihcr it would be a pleasure to embrace. But such is the error of partiznnism. Not an editor but what has fallen into this error old aud young whigand democrat and a grievous error it is. But let it be no more. Let us live like brothers; and when one diflers from another, point out his errors and convince him by arguments; aud do not, by saying 4ome pretty hard things" about him, drive him still farther off from us, and thus, perhaps, forever close the door to re-union with us. " Them's my sentiments," Messrs. Edi tors. Jlnimul Magnetism. This is the name given to an influence, supposed to be exer cised by one individual on another, thro means of a fluid or emanation, or merely a s'tong volition, by which the patient is thrown into a profound slumber, and while in that state, appears to see clearly and to describe objects accurately, though the eyes are bandaged so closely as to pre vent the possibility of deception in the matter. The subject is, at this time, ex citing quite a sens.ttion in various parts of the country; particularly in Virginia, where an animated controversy is kept up in the papers, between those who b lieve in. the doctrine, and those who do not. As. at present advised, we are inclined to con sider the whole affiir a humbug; but our opinion may be changed when we have an opportunity of witnessing some of the wondeiful effects which are said to be pro duced by the magnetic influence. The ac count which we publish in another p un of this paper, of experiments recently made by Dr. McCabe, who is spoken of as a lit erary and scientific gentleman, is, certain ly both interesting and wonderful, and we commend it to the reader's attention. There are more things in heaven and arth, than are dreamed of in our philoso phy," and there may be something in An .limal Magnetism, whether produced by sympathy, imagination, imitation or cre dulity, or all combined, we will not now, Venture ah opinion. Raleigh Reg. Electro-Magnetism. We perceive by some of our Northern exchange papers, aim learn trom other sources, that Edectro- Magnetism is at this time a favorite sub-! jeei lor popular lectures both in this coun-jty try and in Europe; that it is in tact, acqui-j ing high reputation with medical men as a remedial agent in the treatment of disea ses of the nervous system. Norfolk Bea. Result of Galvanism. Mr. William I J W! I i . . v . i. omgieion Drought to our otnee this mor- iw.j cents, aim sold to dealers on arrival ning a copper die, on which is engraven here, at four rents a quart. The road earn the seal of the St. Louis Mechanics' lnsti-.ediu ihe whoiu, during the month, $10, lute. The impression is most distinct and 18OO, of which 56.600 was received fo very beautiful but so far there is nothing j freight, and JS4,00 for paeng rs. The wonderful in the description. It is only i jni'k produced, at h df a cent a quart, J5464. when it is understood that the work was: performed in Jive days at an expense of jive dollars by galvanism, whereas it would by the manual method, have taken four months, and cost Jive hundred dolla-s The process was carried on under the eye of M. Lewis Clark, President of the Insti tute, and being the result of the first at tempt of the kind in this place, is highly gratifying St. Louis Bulletin. (JA German journal gives the follow ing account of what it designates as one of those wonders in which electrical chemis try is so fertile. A pupil of Berzelius, who was occupy ing himself in Sweden with galvanic gil ding, having used in his apparatus the skin of a sheep, on which there was some of the wool remaining, perceived that they be came partially covered with the gold. Struck with the incident, he followed up he idea it suggested, and in time produ ced an entire golden fleece, preserving the wool in its original state as to texture and flexibility. Living in a village, the young stvan showed the wonderful production to his neighbors, but the fanatical and igno rant peasants, regarding him as a practiser of the black art, attacked his laboratory, broke all his utensils to pieces, and com pelled him to fly without his fleece to Up sal, where he was received with kindness and consideration by the members of the University, who, by a subscription, not on ly supplied him with the means of subsis tence, but established a new laboratory for him, and aided him in applying his new discovery to the manufacture of woollen cloth. We may therefore expect to have shortly cloths of gold, silver, and platina, which will entirely supercede our gold lace and embroidery. .1 Curiosity. The Fayetteville Caro linian says: Some days ago we came aeross j an old black man, from over the river, I who his the appearance of a negro gradu ally turning white. His hands and face ihave large spots, resembling the skin of a i white person, and we learn from him that ; his body is spotted in the same way; some bring as large as the two open hands. We j asked him several questions concerning it, jand learned that sometime previous to the iappearanoe of the spots (which appeared i gradually,) he was bitten in the foot by a Ismail snake, to which he attributes the ap i pea ranee of the white spots. j Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. The Baltimore American of the 3d inst. an nounces the completion of the Baltimore land Ohio Railroad as far westward as Cum berland, in Maryland, a consummation of which the State of Maryland, and especial ly those citizens who have had the control and direction of the enterprise, have just reason to be proud. It says: The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was completed to Cumberland yesterday even ing, making an unbroken line of one hun dred and seventy-eight miles. This mor ning at seven o'clock, the President and Directors, are to leave this city for the pur pose of passing over, for the first time, the entire road to Cumberland. The trip thi ther will be made in nine to ten hours. On Saturday next, the road will be regu larly used for the conveyance of passen gers, and on Monday for merchandise. A long stride westward is thus taken, and Wheeling is now brought within some thirty hours, and Cumberland within ten hours of Baltimore. Noble and daring exploit. In Vicks burg, not long since, a number of children were playing on the verge of a pond, whn one of them fell into the Water. The hild was rapidly sinking, when a lad na med Randolph jumped in with his clothes on, saved the child, and succeeded in bear ing him to shore. The parents of the child sent him SlOO, which he declined accept ing, saying that he considered the pleasure of saving the life of his playmate a suffi cient reward. Rijle Match. A great Rifle Match has ately been determined, between Capt. Llovd. of New York, and two renowned Swiss marksmen, Frederick Geannel, and! I'ierrc Henry Montandon, of the town of Locle. The match was managed as a com pletely national one, to determine theeom paratiye excejieuce of Ihe American and Swiss riflemen: or rather our countryman assumed, by shooting against two at once. (both of whom he as to bat, or lose the wager) thai we hive greatly the sup nori with the weapon. The issue coufirm- ed h s boast. Milk The E rie railroad brought ti the eiiy of New York 93.000 quarts o I miiK, during the month .ot September ' 'he milk is bought in Orange count v at t . . . . J. 1 ' weight ol the milk was 93 tuns. fl Slave Case. Considerable excite ment was created in Boston on Wednesday his-, on account of the arrest of a fugitive ! slave, the property of James B. Crav. f Norfolk, Va ; theoha'ge agdnt him wa roubing his master. An attempt at rescue was m de by several colored peison with fome white men, hut they did not succeed. A writ of habeas corpus was sued out b t'e Supreme Court, and he was brought j betore tWe n, but after examination thev remanded hiir. to the custody of the offi cers of the police court. Bait. Sun. The Boston Slave Case The Boston Bee of Monday says: The slave G. org now in jail under charge of Mr. Wilson, as the agent of Mr. Gray", on Saturday last expressed his uesite to return to Norfolk with his master, if his wife could be p.r mailed to accompany him. He savs thai ; he wis seduced away from Noifolk b fals: repr. seniations f the comfort of th free negroes at the North; and told hu, if hv could once get o Boston he would bea free man, and i expected like a while per son at the South. He got here safe, and with money; but the negroes here have stripped him ufllu latter article, and, when taken, not a cent was found upon him. Another Vicim. It is New York Tribune, that staled in the on Tuesday night, Charles Pool and John May, pain ters by trade, went out, and about 1 i o' clock returned home intoxicated, and reti red to their chambers in the third story of the house. Soon after, May was seen to lall out of the third story window upon the side walk, thereby fracturing his skull, and otherwise so seriously injuring himself that he was left insensible, aud being conveyed to the hospital, he died. Parricide. The Jackson (Mo) Advo cate of the Sth inst. contains an account of the horrid murder of Mr. John Byrd. of that vicinity, by his wn son. The reason assigned by the boy, a lad of about 15 yeais of age, was ''alleged ill-treatment, and the refusal of his father to permit him to have the use of a gun," for which it seemed h ' had always entertained a parti cular desire. He was committed to jail. JJThet e is now exhibiting at the fair of the American Institute, New York, a sm di India rubber boat, no larger than an ordinary valice, and weighing only fifteen pounds. It is intended for t vo persons, & will support a dead weight ol i,ouu pounds. The beauties of Li ligation. On? whole week of the Iat t'Tm of the Court for thi county, was occupied in the trial of two actions, one -of which had employed tne Uourt and embarrassed othr.ca?-es in Court nearly a week at a former term, and at both trials the damage recovered was but 14 60. while Ihe costs now amount to a bout $2100. It was a case of flo xage, and came from the generally quiet and peacea ble town of Dunbarton. Now while more than $2000 have been expended by the parties where the damages were not aboye 14 60, this case has been to the county and to other litigants an expanse of more than 555000, as many cas. s which would otherwise have been settled during th four days it occupied the Court, have bet n postponed to the March term, after de tainingthe parties here to the close of the Court. The other ca9e was, that of ihe Slate vs Dr. John Kenton of this town, lor a riot on the night of the 4th of July last, which, after two days' trial, resulted in'a verdict of guilty, when the fine will no.t be more than 10, with a cost of at least 500. Both of these cases might have been ad justed in ten minutes by the parlies inter ested, and saved a great amount ol ex pense to individuals and to the public V e say not who is most to blame for such litigation, but certain it is. this is a foolish way of spending time and money, and no one but lawyers profit by it. A. Cour. Sentence of Sarah Wednesday last, at N w Freeman. On Haven, Chiel Justice Williams pronounced sentence ol diat.h on this unhappy woman, convicted before the Superior Court of Connecticut,, of destroying her child by throwing it into a vault. She is to be hung on the lSth day of June next. The following is an ex tract from the Sentence, which was solemn and impressive: The separation of the soul and body, so wonderfully united, when effected by hu man means, is always calculated to make 'he stoutest heart to tremble. Murder in its Jeat offensive form, indicates dreadful depravity. But what must be the thought of the de pravity, which in a Christian land would lead a mother to detroy her first-born child, when opening its eyes upon this new world, and looking for assistance from her who gave it birth! The brute beast will watch round its off spring, and assumes unwonted courage in its defence; hut you have not only aban doned your infant child, but have placed it where you knew it must perish by a most loathsome death. In doing this, you have violated the laws of the State, as well as the laws of God, and that holy lav of love which he hasim pl'ittted deep in a mother hert For the sake qf concealing your guilt in one offence, you have, as is too common, fallen into another Jar mor- black and sin fui; a crime for which the law demands your life: blood for blood, so it is written. Snarl of Governors, ,' and -Governors in a Snal. Governor K'uig sent Gover nor Arnold to.Governor,Hubbard. to take Gov D irr; but Gov. Jjubbard told Gov Arnold to tell Gov. King, that he, Gor. ernor (iubb.ird, would not deliver to him (Governor Arnold) Gov rnor Dorr, for the! gratification of Governor King; as he. Go vernor Hubbard, did not think that he, Governor King, was a Gov -rnor after all and therefore had no right to send a Gover nor for a Governor. Providence Herald. (T The New York Express sayn that the ingenuity and skill of rogues of the : present time, is unprecedented. A new method of making money has recently been devised that is, by taking six one hundred, fifty, twenty, ten, or five dollar bills, and so cutting them up as to make seven bills, thus. gaining ene in six. The Banks of that city have paid these appa rently mutilated biUs. buUhev have multi plied so fast that lately they have determin ed to pay them no longer. This is the on ly method to put a stop to it. (pTherc Is a great deal of counterfeit Uui ed States coin in circulation, of all the small denominations, and it is very difficult to det ct it. As-. to cents, they are manu factured and sold by the keg just like nails. The priva'ely manufactured cents are worth just as much as those made by the Government, but in silver coin the free trade plan gets in too much copper. N. y. Jour. Com. Edit) irds the Forger. The New York Chronicle says that Mori roe- Edwards at tempted to cheat his lawyer, by showing him a forged letter of credit on a house in Now Orleans. Another Diabolical' Outrage. New York has been the scene df another most f0,,i and diabolical outrage. A few days ago, a widow lady, some thirty years of age, perfectly respectable in character, ar rived at Harlem from West Point, in search of her sister. After an unsuccess ful search there, she started, after dark, (accompanied by two respectable young m-n, to lYiannarxansvnie, anu wnneon me road, they were overtaken by two fiends in human shape, who, with rlub, knocked the two young men senseless to the ground, and then seized and drazzed on the hem- less woman,. violated her person in the most brutal manaer, and robbed her of a bout Si 5, all the money she had. The young men succeeded in getting back to Har!em,-lToih much injured. Their un fortunate victim, the woman, wa found, af ter two or three days' search, at a house to which she had been able to crawl, where he was afforded a shelter and a bed, and where she is still confined by her injuries. The villains, though known, are still at luge It1 s a fact Western paper says, that young ladies who are accustomed to read news papers, ae always observed to possess winning ways, most amiable dispo sitions, inv'riably niake good wir.es and alwaxssel. ct good husbands.. A truer thing was never said. - Spicy Pun. -The following toast was given at a dinner in the. nutmeg-producing M.te of Connecticut: The Nutmeg State. Where shall ve find tgruterV Some wags having fond a fellow drunk, placed him fia coffin with the lid unfastened and placed it in a grave yard; the fumes of .he ljqour having. worn off, and his body being somewhat confined, he threw, off the lid and looking round observed,; nell, if I am not riz firrt, 1 am d-ly belaud.