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so 11.1 A th ALEIG. TPT JLIYIJUJ of th h( H mm V i PCMJSHED WEEKLY BY CII. C. RABOTEAU, EDITOR 1B 7B0FRIETGJL TERMS: $2 50 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OR $3 00 IF PAYMENT IS DELAYED SIX MOXTUS.' VOL IL RALEIGH, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1849. NO 40. "I 1AT So b TERMS, " Tkk Ttrt-Kins Timm will be went te, Subscribers inrtTwn rnllar and a half pet annum, if paid in ad winra. Tkree Dollars will be charge.!, if payment in delayed ml mtaths. These Terms willbe vana. 't,ty adhered t. n lDTERTISEflEXTS. For every Sixteen linen, r It tt, One Dollar (or the fSrrt, and Tfweirty-five Cent for each subsequent in 'frtiiv Conrt Ordeis, &e. will b r-Jinreed 25 per !". higher; fl a nuwunaWe deduction will be made tho wha advertise jy the year. JT letters (m business, and all Commnnieations ,iitiide for publication, miwt he addressed to the fyiditar, and pA paid. h. i tl . ill-nature Vgets ill-nature. Tlie good will of the roughest ami most profane boatman on out Western water, may bo gained by a few words kindly spoken, and he win remain yourriend to the end of the voyage; and all (his may be done withovl ny undue, familiarity on your part, -or lowering yourself to his level. This remark is the result of experience as weft as" observation. POETRY. trhe following lines are from the pen of i. II. Car ,t penler, a geatleman whe cotnes from we don't know where, and is encased in wedon'tknew what-, but should be extremely happy to know more of itim, if the following excellent Lines ex press his candid opinion: .., Don1 tell me of To-morrow V Give me the man who'll say, 1 That, when a good deed's to be done, V Let's do the deed to-day: i We may all command the present If we act and never wa.t ; j But repentance is the phantom Of the past, that coiaes too late ! i Don't tell me of To-morrow ! i There's much to do to-day, , That can never be accomplished ( If we threw the hours away; , Every moment has its duty ; Who the future can foretell T Thpn why put offtill to-morrow What to-day can do as well I Don't tclt me of To-morrow! If we look upon the past, How much, that we have left to do We canned do at last ! To-day! it is the only time For all on this frail earth -, It takes an age to form a life A moment gives it birth. MISCELLANY.. ;v. KINDNESS. ; So much has been said and written on the pow er of kindness, that a writeratthe present day who should suppose that he could add any thing new or original except by way of illustration to what lias b:.i?ftm advanced, might justly be deemed f resumptnous ; and yet, while there is so much un- fcindness in the world,- if may not be amisa occa tonally to repeat ideas which are well known, but, nnhpp?!y ton seldom acted npon. The object of the present article, is not so hutch to dwell npon the duty as the effect of kindness; not so much lit echo the voice of religion and reason, as to show the policy of uniformly acting on the principle of thinking, feeling, and acting kindly towards all with whom we ceme in cen'act thus appealing mainly to self-interest. "Yon can catch more flies with a single drop of molasses than with a whole gallon of vinegar." If we wish eur passage through life to be smooth and pleasant, it is abso lutely essential that we be considerate of the feel lags of ethers, and that we treat those npoo whom we depend for the comforts and conveniences we enjoy, with respect and kindness. ' The effects of kindness are two folu ; first upon the recipient and then npon the giver. An employ er who speaks and acts kindly to those engaged in his service, will have his work done cheerfully and well, and he will dorive much happiness from the consciousness of acting rightly, and will escape the thousand petty annoyances which those daily encounter who act en the opposite principle. The man who begins in the morning by cursing bis servant, and hurling the boot-jack at his head, and kicking the dog or cat out of the way, will most assuredly pass the day displeased with hmv aelf and all around him. "Curses, like chickens, always come home to roaet." Some persons appear from their actions, to think it beneath their dignity to speak kindly to those who are in an iufertor station. Certainly, they iiave but a very imperfect knowledge aa to where in tlie trne dignity of man consists, and until their f ride is diminished or their knowledge increased, they must be permitted to fume and fret, and make jthe mselvea miserable. They arete be found in al jnost all the hotels, and on all travelling tliorbugh- f fares, grumbling and finding fault, with (perhaps I- fursing) all tlioe to whom they are obliged to be indebted it assistance or favors. The whole race p( dViwu, boatmen and wuilers,seem to have cots fjined in a conspiracy to annoy this class of the community, and render them aa uncomfortable as rossiulc. . ... -. ' ... No ene who has travailed much can hare failed io observe another class of persons, nut so owner. I u as it nbotfld be, but. sufficiently so to attract j police. 'Che persons in question are thus who , Qpym to be evr Ma-goodJuinwr with every body j About them, whose wants are promptly and pleas , antly itUmidtd to, and who past over hundreds of ' inilee, -their countenances ossuHioti by frowns, and j tlirlr-jn'iiiiK-rs unruffled by -veaatios. How is it ; tli;ik,''.v escape the impositions and aenoyanees pf which ilhent complain i -Wherein lie their e jentt U i'iieation thly iu the fact tliat tiiey are 1 ajoderite in the amount of service they require, j and kind in tlwir m in-r of djmindiuj it. Kind- o brgete kiiidveu ; ajt ii if not Ue twft that MONSTER. Some weeks or perhaps months since I gave yoq the particulars of the wounding and arrest of a ser geant of the 74th Regiment of the French army, etati jned at Paris. The man's name was Bertrand, and yeu may recollect that he waa charged with digging np the graves of young females buried in the cemetery of Mount Parnasse, and with the com mission of tlie mast horrible and unheard of acts upon their lifeless bodies. Every attempt to arrest this monster, you may furtlier recollect, proved un availing for a long, time, owing to his surprising strength and agility ; but at length a spring gun, loaded with slugs and placed npon a newly made grave, fortunately exploded while he was in the act of committing one of his atrocious desecrations, wounding him so badly that he was finally arres ted and secared.: By the last Paris papers I see that he has recently been tried, his wounds having so far healed that he was brought into coart. He is described as a young man with a singularly mild expression of countenance. ' He answered alt questions and otherwise conducted himself before the court with the greatest calmness. As aa ac count of his trial may not be uninteresting, I send you an abridged report. After the indictment was read, the prisoner unhesitatingly admitted his guilt, and said that he had first committed aviolation of a cemetery at Blere, near Tours, in February, 1847; next at the cemetery of Pere La Chaise ; in July and August in the cemetery of Mont Parnasse ; in August at die cemetery ol Ivry ; in September and December in Mont Parnasse. When he had dug tlie bodies from the graves he hacked them in the most frightful minner, cutting off the fiesh, separa ting the limbs, in some case ripping up the bowels, and taking oat the liver. Sometimes, he said, he mutilated aa many as from tea to fifteen corpses in a night, and afterwards buried them again. His only motive, he declared, was to gratify a sort of rage which he felt, and which he could not possi bly control. He generally employed his sabre or hi knife to multilate the bodies. He dug open the the grave with his bands, or with any Instrument that fell in his way ; sometimes his bands wen covered with blood, but he felt no pain till tlie day after. The marks of teeth appeared on one corpse, but he denied that he ever made use of his teeth. His rage for destruciioo did not, ha uaid, extend to the living ; it waa exclusively confined to the dead. He knew that traps were set for hint and that he rwked his life by going into tlie cemeteries, but when the rage took him he could not resist. His malady came on once a fortnight atd commenced by headaches. Since he had been in the hospital he had not felt any renewal of his frightful desires. 'Some of my comrades died by my side,' said he, 'and having seen them die, I am now cured, and I am afraid of a corpse.' Dr. Marchal (de Calvi,) surgeon major at the military hospital of the Val-de-Grace, who attended tlie prisoner when he was brought in wcumled, read a full confession, which Bertrand bad made to him, and bad authorised him to make public. In this he declared, that, at an early age he had been afflicted with a sort of mad ness, but it but it did not cause him to commit any excess. He, however, was accustomed to go to the darkest wood, and sometimes pass whole days in a state of profound sadness. It was only the 23d or 35th Febnary, 1C 17, that hi malady broke out: having entered a cemetery with a comrade, he saw a grave only partially filled up. This gave him what be called dark idea ; his heart beat violently he wa no longer himself. He subsequently returned to the cemetery, dug up the body, and beat it furiously with a spade. He then buried the body again. When be had done this) he fell into a cold perspiration, and notwithstanding it was raining violently be went and lay down in a wood, where he .remained senseless for several hoars. He was seized in the same way after hi other violation in cemeteries; at first had only multilated women's bodies but aubssquently a new and horrible passion with respect te them seized him. Dr. Marchal declared that in his opinion the prisoner had been afflicted with a dreadful mono mania, which made him not responsible for bis acts. 'I believe, added the witness, 'that Bertrand was under th empire of a power which dominated' him In the aaeient times it would have been cal led a demon and which drove him in spite of him self, to commtt act of which oar science offon no example.1 , The witness furtliersaid that Bertrand, after seeing tome people die, laid, 'I am cured now t I have seen men die !' . After beating the prisoner' counsel, who argued that after the evi dence of the medical man be ought to be acquitted, the coBrt-wartial declared him guilty of a violation of tomb, and condemned hjovto a year': imprison ment, the maximum of the punishment fixed by Jaw. KeuUW$ Letter from Paris. THE SECRET FOUND OUT. The following is an extract from an address, delivered on the occasion of a banner presentation hy Miss Reese, to a Division-ofthe Sons of Tem perance in Georgia: ' " '' '' " As a lady, I might complain, that by your or ganization, yon exclude us from the secret of your Order. You group yourselves togetheryou talk, you plan you act. No listening ear of woman is there to catch the words which fall from your lips no prying eye to mark your deeds, all is se cret, as yon think. But in spite of yon the secret will out, and we ladies know it, "You talk and plan but we see the young man, who just now by his devotion te his cup was wreck ing all of hope for eternity, mingling in your asso ciation, safe from the ruin which betides him. The greyheaded father looks upon his son thns saved, and a smile, radiant with the light of joy plays brightly on the old man's face. "We see the husband, who stood trembling up on the very verge of the volcano another step or two and the fearful plunge had been taken re treating from his perilous position and seeking' safety in the association of your Order, and then the wife, whose aching heart has long endured in silence the intensity of its grief stands np with the mountain pressure gone, and anon links her affec tions to her sobered husband. These are your deeds you dry up the tears of grief; you hush the sighs of the broken hearted ; you stop, the prodigal it. his career you give light for darkness, hope for despair ; and roll upon the bosom of society a steam which has healing in its waters. This is your secret," y THE STYLE MUDDY. A fledgling lawyer, named P. P. Lowe, deliver ed au Oration before the astounded citizens of Day ton, Ohio, on the Fourth of July, which must have opened their eyes not a little. The author, not sat isfied with flinging the thing at the ears of his friends, publii bes it for the gratification of the en tire world, including the States of Edgecombe and Buncombe.' In speaking of himself, the succinct orator says, that "he grew with the sprig, and sprouted with nature's first attitude." But he does not tell us what nature's first attitude was, ' And speaking of the Indians, he thus clearly defines their present condition : "The Indians, they are gone, going, and are still to go, (it is to be lamented,) as the migratory sub jects ol power to the place stipulated in the com pact, which sayeth not the violation wa a legal one, or that the liquidated price was a compensa tory one, or that tlie eviction defyeth continual claim. And H is to be equally feared that the in herent indolence of their nature forbids a hope of their ever being introduced into the folio of civiliza tion. However they seem happy in their lambent pathway of attenuation, they invoke their A red us ky, whiff the camulet of peace, and on de novo ous ter, (!!!) they mingle their dithyrambio requiem with the upland breeze that Bifts itself through the rush and supplejack of the woods ; and as an ex halation of an inheritance abated, the sanctity ef the lawn has gone forth in its putrifaction, to with draw from their eye the humid inrtain of anguish by urging the Sun-worshippers to humiliation un der tho vine and fig-tree of promise, a tlie future safeguard to become joint heirs of an inheritance under a Bare and invariable law dispenser !" Here he is supposed to "bust" his "veskit," and in the following terrific euloium upon Gen. Wash ington, he tears his linen all into ribbons, "sick" is the effect of his eloquence : '.. "His maxims bound from the oriental to the oe cidenta1 shores, and from the arctic to the antare- tie circle. The Epithalamiura of territorial acqni sition has become a proverbial song; the redolent breeze wafts its pennants on the surface of all wa- ten ; precepts allowing not eqnal privilege to the true, gentle and alheous wretch; hi country know no evil of sin ; for these probities of character, hall we not aay, Washington, O Washington, peace be to thy name and dust that lie in the val ley of the dead." This style ha been confined hitherto to lunatic asylums. Our reader now see it "redemption thence." If a man ha nothing to say, it is the best style in the world in which to say it. It there fore commends itself to the attention and study of people of the "meanest capacity." Anybody may acquire it. ID Mr. Partington (out West) says she "deems it beyond the most olfactory doubt, that the celory a contagious disease," but she "don't think it' ketchin ; for, who ever heard of any- one ketchin the diarrho-a Dr. Cartwhite says that it' caused by a ceufection of the dysentry glands, and ranger ment of the mulberry article ; that there aiot no premonitory simtim at all. , "la old times," remarked Mr. Ordway,"when I wa t gal, the women-folk ased to wear brocade and other heavy fabrics, worth something. Now, they wear a parcel of French stuff, just like fin- V." . "The reason," interrupted Bern us, "i that they wuh to catch (he sparks. : EXTRAORDINARY AFFAIR. A few days ago Mr.Wm.Weisser, of the firm of Woisscr & Co. doing a large business at 91 Wall street, preferred a complaint before J ustice Lath rop charging his bookeepet,a Gorman named llas lin, with forging his earners checks for a large a mount on the North Rer Bank. Mr. Haalin was brought from Ithaca n this charge on Tuesday, and now dies in the tombs but on Wednesday night the coroner was suddenly summoned to a house of ill-fame 76 Mercer street, under the following circumstances: Mr. W: had gone to the house in the evening with a friend, and about nine o'clock proceeded np stairs with a girl called Blanche Ap- pleton ; on reaching the second landing he said he could go no furtlier, fell down, and before assis tance could be procured, had expired. The Coro ner was called, and on holding an inquest it was discovered that he had burst a blood vessel which overflowing the chest had produced suffocation. This melancholy affair produced a great excite ment in the neighborhood, and the body was remov ed to his late residence a splendid mansion in Madison Avenue. Mr, W. leaves a wife, who is represented to be a remarkably handsome woman of about 30 years of age. He bad no children. Mr. W.'s age was about 38. He was a shipping merchant, and doing a large business. In his pocket, among other articles were found a large number of forged checks on the N. R. Bank for a m'nts from $15 upwards, the largest being $1,423, and Ihs jn-oes amount over $20,000. Many rumors were afloat during tlie night in the neighb&i hood of the house. Some were under the impression that the deceased had been murdered, and others that he had fallen in a fight about a givl. His mistress, Blanche Appleton, was sworn before the Coroner, and the above were substanti ally the facts elicited. Dr. Say re it appears was called in, but was too late to render any service. ,V. Y. Express. POLITICAL. GEX. "Jo PBHtnus," exclaimed Mrs. Partington; I'm glad on't, I alien thought be would it better business than moping over bis looses, and h piast be just the sort of man to print in such bet weath lr, if Jje.' m patient a he's eaUqla A Good RErirT.- "Why do yon not hold up your head as I do T" iry. jirsd an aristocratic law yer cf a laboring frrmor. HSquire," replied tlie fanner, "look at that field of grain; all the valua ble bead hang down like mine, while those that wye nobbing lu thoig, aUid nprigbt like roars. TAYLOR AND THE MANUFAC TURERS. . PirrsBt'itG, August 20tli."" " - A deputation from the manufacturing houses of this county and Allegheny city wailed upon tlie President this morning, to state in brief terms the depression they were labouring under jn oonse qnence of tlie present .ruinous tariff ruin jus so far as the iron and peal interests are concerned. They assured the President that something like four-fifths of the iron houses of the county had fai led within the past year and a half, and those which" still avoided such a fate, did so at a ruinous sacrifice. The President replied that the suBject of the tar iff 'ead engaged his earliest attention and that he was thankfnl to receive all Information" bearing upon that important matter. The Secretary of A ROD FOR GOSSIPS. The following paragraph, which we- find float ing iu the newspapers, lays it on the gossips with an unsparing band : "The slanderous woman poisons the atmosphere of an entire neighborhood, and blasts the sanctities of a thousand homes with a single breath. From a woman of this class nothing i sacred. She fat tens on calumny and upon slaughtered reputations She is the Ghoul of Eastern story, transferred from the Arabian Nights to the .circle of the fireside. She never asserts anything she merely hints and supposes, and whispers what "they say." Every neighborhood in the city is infested with some crea ture of this sort; and in country town they very often are afflicted with two or three of these Ghoul women. One i enough to set a hundred families by the ears ; two can break up a church ; three are sufficient for any kir.d of mischief, from the se parating of the husband from hi wife, to blasting the fame of a stainless girl. A pure woman is simply an angel embodied in human shape va slanderous woman is something worse than the Cholera certainly as infectious as the Yellow Fever." . y There is more truth than poetry in the above. Pass it round. Preserve it; and whenever you hear one of these veteran gossips, with a furtive mile, beginning their "they say," read the above tloud. Unhappily, there are male as well as fe male gossips ; but, with a little) alteration, the above will apply to both. THE NEW YORK 'DEMOCRACY. The Now York papers are crowded with tlie proceedings of the two Conventions of Hunkers and barnburners, which met to form a more perfect union. The following summary presents the points of difference. It rafer to the action of the Hun ker division : Mr. Walworth, from the committee on confer ence, reported that the committee had made a prop osition to the Free Soil committee, that to effect a Unioa they would recommend its Convention to a- dopt the following resolutions : 1st, That all questions which have hitherto clivi ded the party be waived entirely oft the organiza tion of the Union Convention. Sd. That they agree to adopt such resolutions as 'he Treasury had been engaged in collecting in- have utually been passed at the Democratic Con- formation, and the Executive would be prepared ventions previous to the division in the party. 'O recommend to Congress such improvements ii 3d. That the sujbect of slavery be dropped, 'e present ystem as would encourage air tlie leaving every man to the enjoyment of his individ-1 great interests of the country, and at the same ual rpinion. time ensure stability. He believed there were cer- i wo nours aiterwaru, a reply was received irom ' itie which required protection ; out as tnis the Chairman of the Free Soil committee, saying government was m the first instance organized by that they waive the question of the regularity of mutual concessions and compromises, he trusted the organization, adhere to the established Demo- 'he same spirit would yet prevail, ai'd that the peo- cratic principles, and if the two Conventions can j pie of the country would be willing to meet each agree upon the subject of slavery, they desire to u- other half-way in all measures of the general wel- nue ur ene organization, tie remincea tne com- iuwuy m ui unu was wuai was renin mittee that the Free Soil Convention had submit- red and that could never be effected by ruining any ted two other propositions relating to the power and interested. The Executive would be prepared to dnty of Congress respecting slavery in the District cooperate cordially in any amelioration of the of Columbia, and also in the territories, and reques- present system. .. I TT lr , , . .... tea me opinion ot tne Hunker uonrentien. expresseu nimseii nigniy pieasea with hie Mr. Walworth replied that there could be no I visit to Pennsylvania. It was truly a great State. difference of opinion with regard to the two first nd possessed elements within itself which must resolutions, respecting the power of Congress over ensure its prosperity. Tho plough and the anvil slavery in the District of Columbia and tlie Terri- were lestined, here at all events to go hand is tories. In regard to the third resolution, he rec- hand. Their interests were the same j and what- ommended its adoption by the Convention, as he be- ever the Executive ceuld do to further the firosper- lieved the people of the North were opposed to the i'y nd greatness, not pn'y of this State ut of th introduction of slavery into territory now free, but whole Union, would be done. He requested the he could not consent to make that a question of Committee to put their views on paper and for- party test, or incorporate it into the Democratic ward both himself and the Secretary of the Treaa. party of the State. - ury copy. Phi. Ledger The negotiations were kept up a day longer, but tho FroeSoilers refused to accede to tlie proposition of the Hunkers. They said, as was admitted by Chancellor Walworth, there was no difference in principles between the two factions that both held From (he Pittsburg Gazette . The Washington Union, and other Locofoco pa pers, are now engaged in the very respectable busi. ness of holding the President of the United States that slavery should be aboliihed in the District of UP to Hule, by publishing caricatures of his re. Colombia and shenld be excluded from the territo- mwks at me aiaen m places of reception along the ries, and that it would be dastardly in them Iodise- route of his northern visit. Cer.eral Taylor doe vow their winciDles. not ProfeM tobe public speaker, much less aa The Hunkers, however, refused to make slavery oraror- nls nw na 'P61 ln wPnd mil- part of the "Democratic platform," and the two "" ''". nd all his associations have irnfit- Conventions adjourned simdie. ' ' l nlm puBJicspeaing. Some men.also, who The onlv noint in these nroceediuirs that merit Dle n'e, profound thinkers, and possessed anv particular consideration. U the avowal bv (he of immenBe 8torM knowledge, are wholly ona - n-. .i , ... Hankers, or Cass party, that they agree in princi- ule to Pres' "leraseives graceiuiiy or even iuteU JUDGE FORM AN It is not for us to write the eulogy of this distin guished citizen ; but we may be permitted to pay our tribute of respect to the memory of one so wor thy the respect of all. One of the most distinguish' ing features ol his character was his liberality. He was emphatically a public spirited man hence he done much for others and but little for himself. As the prime mover in the great undertaking ef Die Ene canal in the Stat of New York, of which State ho was a native, and the leading part be took in many other scheme of improvement, will make bis name remembered and revered there. He came to this State as agent for a company in New York hicb. owned large quantities of land in this sec tion. Still bis mind was engaged in works of pro gress the public good wa hi chief aim; and to bim our village 1 indebted for many of the advan tage it enjey and many of tne improvement it has received. He was in the full career of bis nsefulness when h was suddenly prostrated by a paralytic stroke which rendered him almost helpless. Nothing but hi indomitable energy ha kept bim alive for ma ny years, an object of tender solicitude on the part of kindred and friends. A faith I ul wife has watched over hint with all the anxiety of woman's affection, and smoothed, as far as possible, his passage to the grave. May be rest in peace U-lUount. Banner, THE LAW OF PRECEDENCE AT COURT, There is but ene person who has the privilege of preceding the Queen, not only at the coronation, bat on all state occasions, and be, from hi eleva ted position, is entitled, not merely to sit above her majesty, bat also to turn his back upon her; and, moreover, is allowed to keep his bat on all tlie white in tlie royal presence. Who can bt be T iigibly in public. How unjust and cruel, hen. te lake advantage of the old soldier, and hold him up to ridicule, because he has not the natual 'and acquired graces of oratory. If he cannot make a public speech, he can defend the honor of his coun try, either in the field or cabinet: and Mr. Secre tary Marcy found him more thau a match in Jhe DISSOLUTION OF THE UNION. wof letters carried on during the Mexicancara- From the address of Dr. George W.-Bethnne, P1- 1 e ability to speak in public, gracefuMy lately delivered at Cambridge. rMasa. we extract lna eloquently, m a taculty to beburhty prized. ' " ' t... !. t ... ... ' - ' tlie following paragraph; om K, 7 o means tu tngnest a flian aa do-. "Sap, for one melanch.lv moment, that this "e"'nX DeceMar 10 ,accM!"n M: PP pie with the Free Soilers. They swallow the cam el and strain at the gnat. They are ready to sac rifice the South, but they do no think it politic to let the South know the fact. - These are the nat' ural allies" and to our thinking, they are more dangerous than open enemle. Rich. Whig, beautiful economy of exchange were broken up ; that the Western valleys were shut out from the sea by adverse Governments ; that those on the coast were hemmed into their own narrow limit by hostile fort along the mountain ridges j that between tne North and and the South there were neither commercial nor moral sympathy, that at at every State line passports were demanded and a discharge of executive duties. Many persons have tlie faculty of public speaking, who possess scarce ly any other, and are of little use to themselves or the community. ADVICE GRATIS INDEPENDENCE. ' A friend who came upon the Patchin a few day since, told a good 'joke ef Ca-pt. W. The worthy Cartain, observicir a tall Vi,lis alninir nn ti. .-:- I . . I . i. f j ! .1-1 ' - o - - u -w,ra u.um no, annua .ro,n oe.umg ine wit, iwtliti Of his body projecting over uvn.uH.cuu., nnconcemed manner, remarked to him: "Friend- the multipncahon uf armies ; the Cain-like exter- 10,, ,h,l .,op fof yoB minatinf wars, tlie overthrow 0r law by military Jafmthmn lled . VVel, , fc f . ? ' l rtfelnM ttA nlta. r1l lt.n I M.1ru l 1 . . ' wm 1M,U Ul , tw fateft your darned old btat any way! yKtyum b mniiv aiKl trcapeticu U1V aura I . . - i - , catastrophe, moral and national death I Oh that JT A coloeed clergyman, preaching eecentlv to those who, for any reason, talk lightly of dissolving a black audience at -th South, said ; J t'pose; this Union, would consider the immensely greater indeed I 'peot, da-td reason de Lord made ,m evils such a rupture would inevitable cause, the brack men waa 'caaae be e all be white men an awful guiir it woald bring npon themselves ! Tote he pot to de brack man, and he bad mat Whatever may te ctnt or words, no lorer of law him brack. But dat don't make no odds, my bred- conw ever auwie the torcn ot ncb incendiarism, I ren ; the Lord look a'ter brack man too. Don't d no lover of peace provoke such fratricidal slaugh- Scripture say dat two prrer4iwk am sold for ter, no lover.of freeJomjilot.for such general sla- a fsrdep.and dat not sne pb 'wn shall fall 'pon de 1 1 1 i i ! very, no lover 01 uoa ana man undermine Hie emi- groana watou) dcrr larder 1 den, my trri uu, w 1 mime ugui m uu, iKuuiug uv i rou, 11 jir pruueuiy raaef care so much Tor a spar ine worm sucn origin poimse ot a universal btotn- Iret-hiwic, when you can buv two ob lem for a &r. erhood. NVere tt possible that an American woaib j dap, bow berry much more lis care for yon, dat is couia oe so cursea as to or.ng umn o oiaboticai I sra'th sis or seven hundred d 'liars i' piece t" ; If uiviiii, uu uio luaiiguaui wwni" eoum v t Mai argument ln a colored TUO!t!itur,. t a saccesstui, a Joua, bttet, ,peven-compeUing cry 1 never saw a colored iiHquitur. Kiit,UejW;li would go np from all th earth, swelled by gener ler Magaxine , y. , , 1 ;.. - , u ation after generation. nntu the .final fites shall 1 K.. 'r ,1 -j.-.y ' i . have swept to hell all trace of human crime. :-i Jl .7 " n anno. 'Anathema! anathema t AniTKCxi, I Marana.- Tatbee Mthew's Seal. The ptie seal of the Rev. Theobald Maihew renresfnts a fountain , 1 r . As the reader .will never guess, we do not mind I bunting from iw, with the following motto : ; telling him 4 i the Stat Ceacluaaa ! rPiiBeV j. -Drink from the bubbling fountain dji nk ft free; Pocket sArror if Etuette, ' tiKfotktnmMtmpm.n wicTi last wiDferjhe mauler informed a little rHr) that Sunday wa tlte.fi.-xt day of te week, and in- quifuj pf i.9r!'w.atdKV ia i;ot)day f ".lt wj,. ing day, sir," ahe aiwerei - ' ; ' ' " ' A I J9VBT.r-lJ' y, tob, vouve Uja-la Canton, hav'ut you J" ' Ye." - . '., ; "Well, can yoiteneak CUlnx 1" ' . 'Y-e-, a Utile. ; tu.t is, I ft VJen ("- .
Raleigh Times [1847-1852] (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 7, 1849, edition 1
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