Newspapers / The Pee Dee Star … / Aug. 5, 1854, edition 1 / Page 1
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Si - A i '.fV k i : i ' I V it, 4 x I FRA1IC. II. PAUL, PUBLISHER. " gjest; -rob" to "wi : .grt nll:thc wis tbaii ntmsvsf at h ibs, foraiiqi'Dfe (Sab's, an jErutiV." TEBUS ;C2.00, III ADVAITCE. Tolume I. f - Number ;13;;; i 4 I THE PEE DEE STAR, . ' is PCBU3UED WEEKLY,' BY - v : - . , '; ' " FRANCIS! M. PAUL;. . ; "S ' E D I T O R A-N D;P B O P R I E T O R, " At Two Dollars, payable- inadVaxce ; Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if .pai'l within six montiis; ana rnree jJouars n noi ,pam mi the. end of the subscription jear.r CSfSubr scription when paid Within thrpe months after receiv!n? the first 'number: will be con-' - sidereu in advance rea in oavance.. - No 'paper sent out of the ? State, Unless )ncy accompanies thorderexcept to aj the money known resDtinsible name Anf nersott genJinrr 'ns fire subscribers and .Ten'Dollard, will be. entitled to One' copy gratis. No paper discontinued, until all arrearages are - TERMS OF ADVERTISING.:: ADVERTisEMkxTs'w ill -be inserted fit One - Vol lar per 'square, sixteen lin,e3),lbT tKe tirstweek. alid Twenty-five. Cents" ibr every, coi.tinuancc, The following deduitlors'Svill Le; mac" ii favor of standing1 adYchistments' V 'V . One tqpKtoj-' - 33.50 - v'. - ?5'.C0 -.,-.- - $9.66" Two .06 --' ... --io.ro - r,- - - 16X0 Three - f 9.0 - - 14.C0 -r- - '1?.00- Ilalfcolumn.f- - - - r - 22X0 - V- . '.SO.COr - One L 1 - - -' 30.00 - -.r 45X0 66.00.; i Business cards of five Jines,or" lessy inserted one year for Five Dollars. y' .';; 'i'i ' 1 Advertisers are .requested, to mai'K ne nnm 3 deiked -on each' adverUse-j they-..wiU bVinsed-until br. oer oi jnsemons meut : .otherwise hA. and eii&rcred-aceordifliffl 'A- Announcing candidates for 'office Thiee Dol lars.v:i ;,'; ;:;..l-.,';v:;Ci'VJJ-:l. ''V-'.-t an,. " A : What. I- Liva :for;v i; : r ' . ,' ; -: BIT C. LV BANKS. '. ' t; . I live. for tHo3eho; love'-me' feS t Whose i hearts are. kind ! arid triie ;1 For the heaven that miles bove me, ' And ayiats myspirit .tod'j " ;. -. ., vy, Fdr all buraaa ties that bind me .: For tasks by "God assigned me--; , For the bright hopes left behind me, ; And the, good that I can do.. I live "to learn: their story . , T - v I Who've "iulTered'. io- my sake-' Ti emiilitto thdir glory,;; - : f -l)--X And follow in their wkke " ' , t Bardsv p atriots, martyrs, sages, y Theioble'bf alV ages,; i ..-':. ';-f;4r t Whose: deeds crowd history's pages, 4 And tlmV i great' volume make. 'fil I live to hold communion ; V'; ; With all that is divine- j .ToTeel thereXis Union, is ! s v 3 'Twixt nature'a heart; atid mine--v. To profit by affliction;. Reap truths frqni fields; of fiction, i;. Grow wiser from conyiction; -' And fulfil eacii grand design. And every wrong. thing righted;V'7! " ' 1 ne wnoie worm guuu ue-Hg u . As Iden was of oWl kit -.- -r -,. -'.-:.'.-':-': ,x,- :I live fot those who love mc r. For those who kuow" ine.true-r . For the .hevciTthat suilcs ;abQye"'nie ' ; And awaits' niy spirit; tOo.: j ;? For the .cause that Tacks assistance, For the wrpng jthatt'needs resistance,- . For. the future in the distance, ' And the, good that' l4T , Jn"' ' Love's Philosophy. ' -- SllELLEY. " v".." The fountains mingleCl1 the river, And ths river with the ocean ; ;" r The wiudlof heaven mix forever , ' Witla stringeiemptibn;: . . , Nothing" in the world ;is.ingle - -All things by-a lawdiyihe, ' Iu eaolf other's -beiiigmiuglo, ,; -. ' Why' nof I vilh thlue ? .'' . : .. i Z ; J See the.mountaius kiss high heaven, And the waves tla3p one anotner i ; No leaf or flower would be forgiven If it disdaiu'd to kiss its brother.! And the1 sunlight clasps the earth, And the mpon-beams kiss the sea : What are all th'jse ki3ti lgs worth, " If thou.kis3 not' me? - 4'r " v ",; She dwelt among". the untrodden ways Beside the springs 'of Dove,,; ;' ;-. r, ;; A maid whom'there wa Bone to praise ;; And ery ;few to .lovei . ;:tyXj A'-v ?'. A violet by a mossy stone;.( , - y. .;'.;. .. , nan niQdenrom ine eye 1 . , tv ' V iWOBDsWoRTn.;" Pretty Good Idea, rAri eastern paper r places the following as a sort of motto oyer . 4 "."!' J4 .C-.-i-V . nis advertising columns :r j -; .--: Here plant your dixies and pi uck youT t a It pitnt I live to hail that-season , j -r -T: -v - ill :Siftd- ;ininaore'toid.rfe Nexf, I offer you a! pair of wtL-. ,v,it ii;,r;ii5 v espeeially rfbr San Francisco, ; kndOtalonetagold Tvrw f a mflJ, united. , - v ; ; f grades; and nails to -Insure RAZOR- STROP EDIVIYUS v V - TihL reporter of the San' Francisco News furnishes that paper witk the followbs; re port of a speech" made by a California auc tioneer-t- 4 Xadies and gentlemen, , I i p ow- ha ve "4h'e - ; "t- vr-"T - nonor ot putting ; up a finejpocket" han kerchief, 'a yard wide1, aT ydrd long, ai id- and almost a jard thick ; or.e-ha f cotton, and 'tother half cotton top bcautitully printed with stars and stripes on one str(pes and stars i o'u 'tother j side, and the it-will -wipe tears-irom ine eyes so comptete v as to beiicf ,j . t , : Lu i , ri. J ... f coast ajad conquered his houses and .-f land .deatu to dentairueuesi-and juiakcs poutica'as't kV i,U"-W "'--n s M. i m ; , , -n ' .. i r -i byfthe sea. J3ut now, m his old ase.-his "" r,u"''i: W ". wfw..vv wunin nablff it- tO hiH flirf. hnrl - riorur ViaoI never ; need u-. -i ...: "v' '. tr . o i . - .-" " : wusiiiuir .. jiumt' ,t une-uoi lar ; rseveniv- ceu ts r one bit; Nobody . tva n ts it ?-oh ! i " r . i v thankyou.sir ! h . 'X : ' - " ' " j iqxty gen'tlemen,for. the Udiea worit be 1 "S tf 'S V - - 7 w: ";g"V v., kecn edged Sheffield ifazbr ; jl)ran spanki n n,eW tiioJigttarrjigh day4k'htyi6r.'gas-' iikiim snarp enousn 10 snave aiawrer. or cut Va disagreeable acquaintance, or poor relation j j handle of buck-hornj, with all the rivets but the two "at the ends of pure gold. Who will Vive two' "dollars ? dneVdollar ? half a; gollar ?,f ,)Yhy;.: dirty-faced reprobates, with not room enough on your faces for a Chinese v imarf to kiss, I'm offering yon a bargain ait Kalf a dollar! Well, I wili throw; iii j thia str , at half , a dollar 1-razor and.strop--a r scent patent;; two rubs upon it will sharpen the city at torney . all for,v. piece of qapTweeter - thanz-jroses ; I hithers. better than a school master : and strong enough to wash; out all the. stains fronia Calitomia J politician's character, all ibr jfUurlbits ! whyy-you; have only to put this soap and razor-stropunder jour pillow, at tiight, to clean shaved ; won't any fboly, give ; two pits, tnen,.ior tne lot it l jtnew l would sell 'em. ; . 0e,Jaiesimd geptlenren, I offer three just' as you're a mind to call them. - Knit by a machine made on purpose out of cot ton, jwool : .the man that buys these will be enabled to 'walk" until; he gets tired ahtf -provided his boots are largo enough needn't have r. an y . voriis.; mu legs are . as long as the s against, tne i n corporation, and as. thick as the heads of the' members of tlie;J-jegisl4ture j 'wa$ts them at madam, .half ( boots, :m?.de with '-heels to -Ileadly ;ainst being carried off by a landslide ; Ugs .wide e nough.to carry .two reyolvers "ind;a sbowie knife,' and the uppers of the t very best horse leather.' A man in these boots can' move about as easy as the State' Capital; who i says twenty dollars f . All the tax;. payers ougjit to buy a pair to kick the councils with -and they will be found of assistance in kicking the: bucket; especially if somebody 1 should kick at being kicked-f-ten dollars 1 tor iers, uppers and -soles ! while souls and iiseraDJe souis at tnat, arqunrigiug iwenry thousand- dollars Sin Sacramento ! ten dol lars ! ten dollaTs ! -gone at ten dollars ! - ext is .something , ithat . yoja ought, to have,; gentlemen, a lot of good gallowses soineti:ncs called suspenders. I kiiow.that soafyr of you will after a while be furnished at.tne piaie s expense, uuv)uu uau ir , which one, so buy wlien theM are cheap 5: all that dcferve hanging -are hot supplied wStljt gallowi1 if.;sa,;there;r;.w6aldpbe BiJy to ui;ike laws, cOude;iim;rimiBals oi hsn culovits.' until a new elecstion ; made r;s.:--.X:i'4r Sii A b a I f h. rl ol 1 ar f tit h'hk 'ppi i of pure gumjelastic stretcnes iiKeajuagetect 1 cunscience, anayiasi f ..o.r5H Vt111u- r" Tq3ice nolaer will Steal ; DueKies oi.vpure 3 iron, sand; warranted to hold s ) tight that ' J-noraan's'wife canrob himpfhi.' reechj'ite.U 1 in short as; i n short; as ; strong. .as perfect, as efleetuai, laud as bona fide :.as the prdmdncc against I Chinese shoos on -Dupont street gonc. at twenty-hve'cents. ? -. i ; Laconic, but;True. A fneud of ours writ! nop to a Democraticmerhbej of v6u j ress, prppounuea j-ne.quesuyu i h?, tie;news, Politically; Kebrascajiyr and Con- grcssiouauY s ia -v ... ... " ' . .. . ' . I I . i sponso;. l ;;- i Things politically," v.Look quite critically; I Because; isebraically They areao.T; .y ' it. A ..M-V.rt II. .h rriil A A4 II IT " . Will be jong sessionally ti nut-shelli . , . ... Hope and Hemory. r' i An; old poem of the North tells of a brave bpy, who in his;;earlier"days found, .his" mo ther's cottage, too narrow, mourned at tend ing the goats on the mountain side ,and felt his heart swell in him" like a i brook from the melting of . the. snow, when he saw a ship shoot .Jike. an arrow into the Day. lie ran from hi :. mother " and tbejdayft; at Lord Boliugbroke's, unless he' was iroats. Tlic Vikinsr ' taiek bim on bnnri? uM tliflrr The wind swelled the sails, i He saw the luH-top sink into the blue depf aud t.ateVEhe table. Agentleman treated Dr. John riotously glad. He took his: fatherssword in hand, and swore to conquer him houses . and land" Kvtbn sn . ;-TTjs !-. iu o V;i-;i: jii j, 11 4. Tir.j::L Afj IaI.A in TlWnt . !. .k . . e in' i-SV7nnt,llim lla.n- WAOrnicw f-i hinV ....j i t u JJili lie dreams of the goats : all day the kids uiHaL. mr nun. hp pntfti-a ur Kq enters a bark ) sails for the Scandinayian coast, and goes . -t " . V A VV4 O . MM . III. to the very spot, too narrow for his child hood, and eats again the barken bread vpf Sweden; and dr nks its bitter- beer ; bars ins torehead to the storm : sits on the'roefis and there he dies. . ; - j vi,: - r jf Bury; me not, I pray thee, in Egypt,? said old Jacob but I will lie with my fathers y bury me in their burying place. " . The scholar becomes an antiquary; he likes not yonng men unless he knew! their grand fathers before. The young woman looks, in the newspaper for, the marriages1, ithe ,old man for the deaths. The young man eye" looks ' forward; the world is "all uciuiK liiui, iv were vo cnoose. it is a nara world j he does not know it ; he wor' ks lit- tie, and hopes much. The middle asrecF man looks round at the present ; he has found out that .it is a hard world ; he hopes less, and works more. , . j The old man looks Sack on the fields he has trod ; this is the tree I planted this is mv ftuitstpn. jin Via Iattao Tiic n)A jcati do2. staff and friend: ; tn lands wbArA tl,A v5n0 j SGen an.oH mfln f-aU uxr old arm chair, his dog. couched at his feet m me gtjmai sun. i.ne autumn -wind played with the otd's venerable hairs ; a- ifeov him on the wall, purpling in the sunt light, hang the full clusters of the grape ripening ana maturing ye more. , The two ware just alike ; the wind stirred thi vine leaves "'l 'thipy fV'll t!wi' n 14 man's hair, and ' it whitened yet indre. Both . ivere. waiting; fr the spirit. in them to be fully ripe I'Thej young man looki forward, the old man looks back;"; How long the shadows 1 lie in die setting "sun the steeple a mile Song, reaching across the plain, as the sun stretches out the hills in ( grotesque1 dimensions. So are the event v ui e, in mii uiu, man h memory. Pleasure: Blessed be the hand that preparesa - pleasure' for a child ! for there1 is no saying .when and where it- may again1 bloom. forth. J)oes not almost- everybody remember some kind-hearted man who showed him a kindness in the quiet days of lis ehildbood ? wThe writeir of this re'4 iWf r.lbif at. f K?a mnmnt. W a Kot-aI J footed lad, standing at 'the wooden fence of a poor little garden in his native villageJ with longin eyes ho gazed on flowers which were blooming there quietly in the bright! n ess of a Sunday morning. The possessor! came forth from his little5 cottage be was a wookl-cutter by trjde--aiid spent the whole week at his workin the woods. He -was come into his garden to gather. flowers' to stick into his coat when he went to church j He saw the. boy, and breaking off the most beautiful of . his carnations- it was streak ed ith read - and hiteand avelt to him. Neither the giver not the .receiver1 spoke a word ; and with boundless, steps' the j boy ran home ; . and , nowK . here pit VU6t i oil paper .The carnatiohhai long since j wit .hrokU . XX - . v tfTJ ts .erolcf .:, :i . r( How TO Enuguten niM.f A bashfu Yokel, was paying his addresses to a gay lass of the country, who had long despaired of bringi ng things to a Crisis. ;; Y pel called; one' day, when she was aloneat home. 'Af ter feettling the merits of the weather, IVliss said. : looking slvlv into his face, - 1 dream j ed bf ybu-last "night.-?':-:' 1 Did you?; why; now V1 " .' f Yes,' I dreamed you" kissed me !" i Why'now ! - what did you dream "jour mother saidU'--:':-'-- SlighdawnetionYokei'siri A irefctl v somethi nsf Was heard to crack 4 "perliaps kelshiparidi-perhaps -ttot iratpin alwu distance from; home, after sormany ilS?J ,-?".aS? . " - .- -V 4 vears. tne ieenng or grautuae wnieu agua-i -r - q-v. v - ,. o ' .. i' i ' I Mnvrarrtsj at Pirrnrw vparsriT sicrw. t tipsis rtn. tHA".KVaftt nf ""that bovl Pxm-esses itself resenxea jwuunsiumauuxm auuuu Tv v- - 7 ir - -- --- 7 r . r 4- .W&tfy &c4 ; What Ifotable lien ate and Drunks . , ; in., ivonaeict, an ancient writer on nshes, was fo fond of figs that bedied in 1505 "of a Surfeit, occasioned by eating tliem. to ex cess. In a letter to a friend, Dr. Parr con fesses his love' of "hot boiled lobsters with a profusion' of shrimp sauce. J Popey who was.,an epicure would Jie'in.bed ,for when lie arose instantly and canie down to son to "new honey and clouted cream, of which he" ate so largely that his entertainer became alarmed. . All his life-time Jz. Jonnson had a voracious attachment for a ieg of mutton. " At my aunt Fords," says he, I ate so much of a boiled leg of mut- ton, that she used to talk of it. -'MyoW - .J ----- -k'. I. i'-'-;' r - f ther.' who was affected by little things told - . . . . 5:... t -LjuMirJ me senousiy main wouiu uaruiy ue lorgoi tenV' Dryden," writing in 1659 to a lady, declining her invitation to a handsome sup per, says---" If beggars might be choosers, la phtne. of honest bacon would please my apperite more tnanaa tne marrow puaaings, for I like them better plain, having-a very vulgar stomach." ' ' ' ' " ' ' r "X Dr. George Fordyce contended, that, . as one meal a day was- enough for a lion, : it ought to suffice for a man.. " Accordingly, for more than twenty years the. Doctor used to eat only a dinner in the whole course of the day. . This solitary meal he took reg ularly at four o'clock, at Dolly's'chop house. A pound and a half of rump' steak, half a broiled chicken, a plate of fish, ' a bottle of port, a quarter of a pint of brandy, and a tankard of strong ale, satisfied the doctor's moderate wants till four o'clock the next day, and regularly engaged one hour and a half of his time. Dinner over; he returned to his home in jEssex street, Strand, to de liver his six o'clock lecture on anatomy and chcjinistry: . ''N.-;. 'x: ;'-::-r 1 - - - v t; . gress. He lives a long way from the Cap Baron Mosores, who lived nearly to the i itoL'l There aTescoes of tals 'ihintr age of ninety, used to go home one day in every weck without any dinner, eating only a round of dry toast at tea. Aristotle, like a trot poet, .seems io have literaUy. fegstduni on faucy. Few could live more frugally. In one of his poems he says of himself. j lf that he was a fit person to have lived in the world when aeorns were the. food, of men." When Bolingbroke invited Swift to dine with him. he talked of the" dishes he would offpr. & A fe: fbr,-'oBr';Jfffi! 6d f fare,': saia.' SWtif,. Wsi'm n , iiuijum iaXf$he shrieks M-iBFii'iutiM jjsZAL Company Mlitoa Was loud Ot -ii gla&S Or j water and a pipe,"" Amodefri poet who was j asked by a kuly fashion " hajt Cne'Twouldi j like." for dinner, answered, " Peppeniiint cordial and black pudding' . - . f ' '. f tisfient half your xlaysj" the spiderif she is Lindley Murray. It is not generally vi " irv 1, x, , :i' uf known, says the Lebanon. Advertiser, tbatfti.o vnnr fU,ra A! Tuocn' i0,. Lindley Mmay was an Amer within the present limits of Lebanon coun, ty. He was born m the year 1745, on the V Swatara, in East Hanover; township, their Lancaster, now Lebanon county.; Hisfath ther was a miller, and followed j that occu pation when Lindley was born but after wards devoted his attention . to mercantile pursuits, and amassed a consiaeraoie lor- tune by trading to the.West Indies. ; Lind ley was the eldest of twelve children, and when about seven years of age,was sent to Philadelphia, that he might have the ben efit of a better education than .could be had at Swatara. He studied law in New York, arid at the age twenty-two was called to the bar, where he gained for himself the rep utationpfan "honest lawyer,' His'j'Crram mar of the English I Language;''!, was com posed i u. England, in 1794, and published in the spring of 1795, many; -millions of ) copies of which have been sold He re sided in England forty -two years; most of wbieh tmie he wasan invalid.. He composed many worKS pesiaes ms grammar, lie uieu "la He leit legacies to a number 0t erelatiye&j . r.- . . , - -T the f '3 v".- i ft'v - - jt:r'" - - s residue of his property, after , the de- - p, -r. v V 11 ,i v ise of ;his,wife, 4 (aNew Y ork; lafe . i ; , -"a -; tt" - U v -rv?- i beloved and affectionate .Hannah;:. who .had beenlhis ..companioh -forr year,); should be devoted to piou andbe nevoleht uses. He was a Quaker, . and in terred in the burying ground of. that, sect, in the city of York, farfrom frieudtralaa fatherland. , . ,; ;.U;.' .;i;.-4 v.-,;, '"''. A G ood: ExcriANGk- A 'London paper states that; a lady was recently travelling in en on?the rohlW an omninus aion?Biae a iasaiotuuHY uress-i :-. - - v v i-y j "y"- r. ed man,-who had on his-finger .a splendid i : , , ' z A r - " ol t iPp tJ .? nifft :teonturmnfliotoe" she -? ntts$e. "ber l ; ." .if tv.. vf --.",;l- x--i BKfSJwwg ouSain ; .if ka.-.iiS thri the omnibus. -Aeweler , Valued it at 4(?iiblai3ks were oniyiM ''B'V, . v iGen, Sam Houston (at Home. We copy a sketch' of Gen." Sam Houston at home, from the Texas correspondeat of the Times : . . ". i ' !. v "" ' Traveling the entire territory of Texas except a smalt part of Eastern Terxas, one hears but little about old Sani, but what is highly denunciatory, .but when the tvotes are ;taken he don't lack friends. I would wager .that he could hardly be elected con stable," judging from' hearing people talk. You know the result when the trial comes". After, all there are probable few but what have a sort of pride in the estimation .in which the hero of "San Jacinto is held at a distance. He now 'lives in the town of Independence- twelve miles from the Rio Kttf TYlil. JVJrvr0 - I fl 1 It f AtAt1 Ah AO VtltT - till msnea When at home, sitting in . the i . ; ; , ,. - - ; 1 - irj t MiJ --i with the ease of an old English gentleman,! 1.1 !S - i? , pv .- .f i"1.""3 VL i wu"ei6-uiau, reiainmg ! some of the habits 'of the Cherokee. IIe i i- ii 1 iit. , :'i v. -:4-hj.v - t. . , ( vaiK8 vvitn pea. ire professing t ntterly.despise their:maligni-M. ty, j He has only enough ,sl ser- imes ; nomuij, una a church member wjth plain habits, and is j a gOpd mother. They are bbth frugal to a i de; :ree They Javie six - children, nin d health, five girls andnfBo goo of whom has had a shoe on its foot during ( last wmter ahd, ches: Mrs-? ma'dases'.the" FarmTah3? In ) structs the children; Though" having no particular way ot making money and hay ing been poor a few years ago, h e Has hus; banded some twelve his pay and mileage thousand dollars from as a Senator in Con- his credit dfenestnsa mit effect other iuen not old Sam. He sports a huge mustaehe. drinks no whiskey. the other sex. He reads his papers and writes letters on a pine table in the galle- ry" ;:7i. -,.;:: V,: , J Creeping Things. tLet me; put a spi-i i aer into any iady-8 nandi; vsne is agnast. ,n-:STOJiesnrieiiS; laenasiv sri:rninsr;t.t,uaa- - coffee ; dinner, ditto.with greens ; supper, whom HtUe better:can fce d than that he . -: ditto wahct greeny - .; , ranked "amon the most emment'iports. " ' ' "I judge his wife an intelligent woman, men of the .dav'f lived, it Vsaid: toweew ' ' mc,,,iMe: sueiriis.ptiruapfei SjUOCAeusax; xrus- .wioapcox aoiiiuiucut iiteiVi--. sels laces;4ind thoii a shop with fed curtain, oppo-. most exquisieamr liphgy vthe spider fiatWM.ithhe that she gueSsed f ; a jliui ut juvi worse uauu!sas siiev"v .j.-.ir g"v w gc ouiucwiiug .. runs over them jilst show your crotchet j t .intaibiism shutv &hen you shrie1s:;ather. fHaveyou rfh;wQand,jm ? dear ,ad ig that your web? Ifl were big! ffh y 'w;- wiii reas on dron vou and cry out at you. Let; me spend a day. with ( and wishing to- see the; proprietor ;a-b6uta;:" v ? you and bring my work; I have four little ' small, bill, chose tqappeal from thedecis--bags of. thread such litiie bags r In ev- l ion of the servant, who informed him faid-i H ery bag there are mofe than 1000 -holes-such tiny, tiny hohig ! r Out WL each " hole an upper"iadt;.-:;?;. "'f-tH-;'"' thread runs, and all the threads more than I 4000 thread I spirt together as they run, and when they are spun they make but i one thread of t,he web I weave. I have aniens ber of my family who is herself no bigger than a grain of sand. Imagine - what a slenderi web she makes, aud,:thattoo each i thread is made of 4000 or 5000 little holes. Would. you drop her, too, crying out about her delicacy. A pretty thing, indeed, , for ybu to plume-yourself on. delicacy, and scream at us." Having made such a speech, j we may suppose that the indignant creature (fastens a rope round one of the rough points of the lady's hand, and lets her down light ly on the floor. Coming down stairs is nhisv; and ciunisv rc6mPared ith such way of loconiotidn'. i';' J " ; 1 I v : The creeping things, we scorn are mirac - v i i r; 1 w ; - " i " any oriuoiu ciouii or auj iuj .sn.otuu '"autj - ""j"Lvdnet counted OiLmuseles-n; ausmgw ( . , t, - - ' : (caterpillar, and these are a small part only Hivonet counted 404Lmuseles -in; av. single of its works. - Hookb found 14,000 mirrors ( t --r .4'-.i;--- - - iri.the !eye-gf aT)luebpt l3,Et)f separate bits that go to provide tKH lUing out Hie aui oi ureui uiug: iu u uaip. '. ' -I-.-, - . " 1-" v mw - -.lmr ... -.L r : .Tl r - TTTl f . ATRIFLIIJQ iyMISTAKE. JL. ; UA nit- wood being m Buffalo, awaiting . the. arrival ofsomiinachiM natch ' to the following: . purport : "Thei . ; ' 3yron and Uary Chacrth.;;; : i Graced Greenwood; in her late'v visit to i' v England,' paid a risit to NeVstead "Ahby the' well-known residence of- Lord Byron. In speaking of the eveht,: she beautifully and touchingly ' alludes to the love "off the poet for Mary Chaworth : - . - . I'- " Strangely sorrowful, almost agonising; : ly regretful, were the, thoughts which swept-, ' over my mind, wave after Wave, and shook" my hcartlike a tempest, as I stood in the place where the young poet passed many ' hours of silent thought! it may be of lone ly wretchedness: I newer before so deeply , felt how passing mourrjful was the storyof 1 V Byron's" first and; onlylove. That;Ma 2 Chaworth returhed the passion ; of ! her young poet lover I have hot a doubt ; but like the jyiohtagues and Capulets; the bouses of Cha- -worth arid Byroti- were at feud: . Mary had ' r i uv vue sireugiu aim irutn oiui not the "strength! and truth of Juliet; and so' they were parted a. sensatiooc by farmojre; j i:l-W '"Al ' Peous forher, and more fatav,to mm, than .iarmorej , jhimthaiiM " nWfc ov';,l iWfi;ifc,;:iU rrur 0i , k ' r appy love. This, not -Shakspeare s,f was . Might shedt haVe tur0 b the Vdivinity of a pure love and Mafv bestowed her hand unon a man of wild tears over the words which have link- : - d her namA in sormwfnt imTOWj.liv wibV - hef jover1 arid died in i trokeheMteiSness last while he, grown; reckles resaess : ana defiant, the' verv 'core t of hia ' heart' anu .uistrusiing ana aespismg . nis Drotner, ' swept" ou his glorious shameful,;; and sor rowful career, till the shadows deepened, and the long night closed itii & "Your, old? Kentucky home ! yoiit poor soul you," said- Mrs; Partington,' f aat she thrust her night-cap out off the winoW: awaj almost into the midnight to catch the notes of a song' an individual was singing in & -dismal Voice, near her dwelling. I wish to- my heart you was there, where your friends could take keer 6fyou, ancidd for you. It is a terrible thing to Vein dipiresV away off among strangers particularly" wberr you aint acquainted with any of ? em ; but ."'don't think it looks well for. a manto wake vf .-wuois?.ueguuoiuwa. ai, imuaiguwiiu ,?J.w"!Te? wooden mantehclockhat ticked sleepily iitr 1 liW AQTrilw-fitW Wort tfn ..i,a- ' the Kentnekv hom:vX - : ;r-";- V , . , - " Presenting a Bili A visitor calling r - at the house of Mr, (Hden SwillnwsrnW My dear, is ypur father; honie?'; - . uauuiu Auary say, sir r inquirea tne; : young. Jadyi-rti; -u. ;;; C :'rS ; 0hr she,says ho aint? at i home,, but i lv don't believe, her.'" -X.i' , ' Ur. ; ' ;Is;youx;;narmejBilr.tli; :;v Cvfi'lr ; " Well yes;" :saidthe mariyf thecailri me that.- , . Theiihe's not' at home ; ; 1 heard him: tell Mary that'if air bill ; cahiie neref ef ; C ; member that he was 0' X -53! ; " AprofessieTial gentleman of our acquaint- . ; " ance has hanging, in his room a fine large-; :. colored engraving of the head of a quadru-rj. . . ped vulgarly known as a jackass. T Not long. V ;.i ;nce a friend of his ;drop'pedf inand'Wp'T ;. ug before; the picturdi"gad intetlr upbnX ii iur a. iuw Luuiueuws, auu. vuea sung, ouv, aurupviy, auu, as ue imagiuea, , very wit' : tily;:y 5-;rf vv-'Hi.; Jy-r'v-.Xx ' f'HaHoDoctor- . Oh,f ji4- repli ; hat:is--simplya!lokingglasl : T Tbe ahxiomf i nolrer'sudclenly' dis-; " j iSSKGHAis- genU j plahtetjo caisogu, mice m a touauguai vuie&eilS IQTif-- 7f T'y eara af to reay!him4hnce hisVut year.Ythe pf eseht,):he fin 75 cents apiece-as: soph: as they u.meaK xiia aggregate re-? K alcmeilUbeLO wonldlookaif - they; were notYr allth theyjictjtout ' t .A OLLARS, That'sthe story ina 7 -. 4 J. " 1 i ... v r .. .. .J,.- v. - ' , "' t J-"i-" . . it." .".-. ; ' ' - ' . . - -::x Xit:
The Pee Dee Star (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1854, edition 1
1
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