V ""If- r a : f V 1 13- "OURS ARE THE PLANS OF FAItt DELIGHTFUL ; PEACE, UN'WARP'd BY PARTY RAGE, TO LIVE LIKE BROTHERS" VOLUiMK XXXI V. TUESDAY,. AXjtf &T 27, 1833. i'- .j . i ' y- J. ... j NO, 42 TUTS. WVaUlS 'vm IS rtT:sI.lSlIEI EVERT TUESOAr, "'"Ry Jos&.rti Gales '& Sou, Iiahifsh North-Carolina TERMS. TnR Doti ns pra n no m;ojte half in advance Those who do not.either at the time of sub scribing, or subsequently, gtve notice oftheir wish to have the Paper discontinued at the ex-1 p ' ration" of their year,will be presumed as de siring its continuance until countermanded. AD V E R TISE M E XT S, Nt exceeding sixteen lines, will be inserted tLrct timet fora Dqllar; and twenty,?fivecents for each 'HiiSseqitent publication r those of greater length, in the same proportion. IF the number of insertio-ns be"not; marked on them they will be continued until ordered Out, an&iC.harged accordingly. t INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT MKET1 -A t L 1 Pursuant to notice previously given, a large concourse or the citizen ol the town, county and adjoining counties,, convened at the Court Hou-eirMhis place, on Tues day even'mglast ; William Gaston, Est, was' called, to the Chair, and James ,VY. Bryan, Esq. elected Secretary. The Chairman, in an animated, and spirit-stir- Ting address, after explaining the object of the meeting, deplored the present con- dition of North-Carolina, & drew acheef less parallel between the present depress ed situation of this section of the State and what it was only twenty three Vears ago. ' He reminded the meeting that no progress for the last thirty years, in public improvement, physical or morale had been made, and that other States were aggrandizing themselves at oar Expense ; Virginia on the north, and South-Carolina on the south, were tapping the springs of bar prosperity, and when all should be accomplished for their good, then we should be scorned and derided, or tak;n into humb'e keeping. lie called upon them to use mutual forbearance to wards parh other in their expressions and t expectations 5 all classes to join in the vork ; the rich and the poor to contribute according to their ability ; to let a spirit of harmony, and union prevail, and thus, by ka long pull, a strong pull, and a pull altogether," the great work might be ac complislvcd, and the evils under which we labour, remedied. The Chairman then addressed the jpegting upon the plan of Internal Improvement, which was about to be submitted to them ; assured them that al though ,'it contemplated an improve ment of the Neuse River, &c. that the projectjif a Rail -Road was by no means abandoned ; that it alter the survey and examination which the Resolutions con templated, of 'he River, it shuuid be found that the Neuse was not susceptible of steam boat navigation, the plan would be abandoned ; but that it deserved at hast an experiment, as it was a natural channel running through the heart of the country, capable of being improved at a much less expense than would be neces sary for the construction of a Rail-Road, and would not require frequent and ex tensive repairs. He informed the meet5- ing, that previous to the introduclion'of steam boats on the Cape rear river, ,the freight of a bale of Cotton from Fayette viile to Wilmington, was one dollir, but upon inquiry, he touna that it was now reduced to fifteen cents. lie then allu ded louur means of communication with the ocean, and gave a cheering account of the success! ul progress of the opera tions at Ocsacocke The following rtrff.utions were then in troduced' by Mi .John Washington, anil alter " ; being discussed, and having the blanks filled by inverting the names , of the , gentlemen therein mentioned, were unan imously .adopted: 1 Itenohedi That as a part of the people of North-Carolina, we a"e 'out prepared to admit their inability to improv; the phsic;-l and it-orul condition nf t!cir roimiry, that we sire (Utermin. ed and r-ady t makeecTJeeriioii in mir pow er, u. d lh:tt wf eafntstfy coi jure oi.r letlovv-cit-izens to j.iit tjeir exfrtians vvit!i our-, to i ;ise Hp within the S'"aie j;od marts of 'tnitnc, and T.tovide, thie means of cheap and convenient transom tat-ion tot'em. 2. liestlv< That tlw oper:tiirna now in pro-Ktc-s - Ocracocke liar having sdivadv furnislieil to this port a channel of naviprntmii, exceedinj; hy o -ietiot in dejjth tliut winch ws lately in use ft'vt high assuiaf.ic-' lhal the impedimei ts which h:.o heretofore .obstructed our communicition wif.l' the ocean, may th'is He Tectn-Hy teniAved aid that th rel'Te the Iteprvseiit t'ive in Cn frress from this District in particular, and the lit-presenta'.iveH from h State in Conpress g -11 r IIy, he rcqiiestt d to use their influence and cjuit.'ms to nrie on the prosecution of these "pf f;1 ions w i h inn eased . energy, as pregnant lUnnost iinrxntant conseui iices to this setiioi) t N. rtl.Caiolina. o. Hcto'vn Thut tor the purpose of facilitating tlit C'.rrnn.-umcini.Hi betut-en Njwhern and llie ieivor, we believe that our h".rts should be u rvcted in the first place to the improvement of tiieKr.t thoniuglifares of N t ire, our rivers St . ma" tiioi.t.,rv i,tre .ms NVe have come to t'.is Concliip.', firsi becMUNe at all events and vitatetr i.ther m;tes yiiimately adopted, the remoY.I of the-.-bstrue- oonio n ivigat.q,, Ir t,et. W tU r COurses, cjinnot b,;tbe immediale'y as well as permanently ben 2 toIal1 r"s'"htiK' in tliir neighbourhood, & " t lend to the giowth and improvement of our 'iur.o.im-.rke. Stcoirdlv, because there is - J j t? .tnh:sbduy th;i the river Neuse may h-"'-'.trt-a fit, (or bteam bt iiavigation to a point above W tyt-s,iom,' -it un expense bearing no comparison to that of Railway, and a conveni ent ransportatinn by means of stf am boats, has manv decided advantages over all olh,-s; and thirdly, because If it shou'd be found that the Veuse cannot he m ide navigable for steam bonts as high as we behevt the intermediate distance between the head of steam boat navigation, and the Railway from the VVest, may b- provided for by a Uniway "f comparatively small cst. 4. licsolvftd, That it be earnestly recommend ed to the tJounty Comts of Craven, Lenoir, Wayne, Johnston, (ireene, Pitt and Jones, to proceed immediately to the exercise of all the powers confided to them by law, for working upon the riversand principal streams running through their respectiveXouniies, and causing to the full extetitof all the means in their power the logs and other bars in theni, to be taken a way and remove !. 1 5. Resolved, That Wm. Gastion, J hn Wash ington, John Hi' Bryan, Wm. Iloliister. Jnn. M. Bryan, John T.' Lane and James C. Cole, bea. Committee; to be called the Craven Committee of Navjgaiion, whose duty it shall be to cause the yfver NVuse, to be examined r.o far up as fynesborn or SmithfiId. if they shall deem it expedient, :"' fats the Content ney, as far up as Snow hill or t n:pnsbnrg, if deemed advisable,) 'to ascertain what are the principal impediments to the navigation of said rivers, and to apply the funds which may bi raised, as her-iivilter pro posed, in such way as may best effect such ex amination ar.d remove such impediments antl that they have the power of appointing their Treasurer. 6 Resolved, That a subscription be forthwith opened lo enable the said Commissioners to per form the duties 'confided to them and that Jno. M. Itoberts, Joh,n I Pssteur, Thus. Wats-m, Ino. T. Lane. Kred. P. X'tham and John B. 1) iws m be appointed a Committee to invite subscriptions from our fejlow-citjz ?ns not attending this meet ing, t. be paid over to said Treasurer: 7. Rcsofo&f, That copies of th-. se resdutions be transmitted forthwith to the committee of Correspondence;, appointed by the late Conven tion for the counties of l,enoir, Wayne, John ston, Greene,, Pitt and Jones, and that they be requesied to hay corresponding exertions made in their several Counties. 8. Resolved, That the citizens of Lenoir, Wayne, Johnston,; Greene, Piti, and J nes be invited to send delegates to meet delegates from this county in a district Convention, to be held a K'mston, on the third Monday of September next, in order to confer freely together and to bring about concert of action on this subject f common interest and that John If. Bryan, John Washington, Gl S. A'tmore, John M. Bryan, John B. lJa soni, W. C. Stanly be tite delegates to represent this county in the said Convention. 7itsolred, , That when this : meeting a'i jdnrns. it will adjourn subject to the call ot the Clitu'". Messrs.' John H. Bryan and Manly, ad dressed the meeting upon the great im portance of doing something now, for the Internal Improvement of the State that the spirit was abroad, and unless New- I-bern now; sustained herself, (for much was expected I rom her, and they had a right to expect much trom her) we must in truth and fact give up the ship." They spoke much in detail, upon the great internal resources of the State, her vast products,, the great spirit of emigra tion which had been produced.bv her "de pressed condition, the languishing state f her commerce, and the apathy of her citizens. I hey wished it distinctl v un- derstootl, that the Resolutions did not contemplate, the abandonment of a Rail road -that the route lately surveyed by the Engineer, passed' through all the towns on the Neuse, and if a good and available cnmmunication by means of Steamboats could be obtained from New bern to either of those towns, or to any in termediate plaee, it was deemed most ad visable in our present situation, to bein the Rail-road there ; if however, upon examination, this plan should be found to b impracticable, then their sole reliance would be upon the construction of a R.il rnad ; that no deiiuite atuon could be had upon the matter, until the sitting of the district Convention at Kinston on the third " Monday of September next, to which place, they trusted the counties enumerated, would send full delegations. On motion of Mr. W. C. Stanly : Resolved. That t he proceedings f this meet ing be published in the newspapers of this town. .'"'; On motion of Mr. Edward Stanly, Resolved, That the thanks of this meeting Se tendered to the Chairman, for the jble and im partial manner, iu winch he has presi. led over S im Croukshank proved that he had at ginning moderately at first, and increas least one title to the character lie had as- ling fhxercile by degrees, until thehea umvu -ne wuiuny uuuuieu wall me dyspepsia. lie grew pale and wan ; his cheek bones, which had even been a most prominent part of his face, seemed to pro ject farther than ever: Ids under lip, which was naturally one of the rather pendent sort, now hung most lackadaisically down, and his calliper legs, which w'cre never the least noticeable part of his person, be gan to bow out if possible farther than fi ver. Sam,' said the wondering neighbors, what the torment ails you ? You look for all the world as ghastly and wo begone as a December ghost.' I I've got the dispepsery replied Sam. . The dipepscry !' said farmer Whip pletrce, with a look of contempt. 'what (nought that be ?' What mourht it b.' ?' returned Sam Why, if you i! n't know what the dis pepsery is, you're no gentleman.' I. hope not, in all conscience,' replied the farmer, . 4 mt I should like to know what sort of a thing this is you call the dispensery.' ' Why, it is a kind of a sort of com plaint.' 1 Umph ! so it appears.' It's a kind of a sort of a as it were a queer feeling, which I never felt in ail my life, until I become a gentleman.' It's a right down gentleman's com plaint then. But what is it tike ?' Like! why, it's .ike to make a noto my of me, if I dont get better of it soon.' 4 You'd make a monstrous pretty noto my, would'nt you ? But how does your gentility complaint feel ?' Whv, it makes me eA all over som- bercholy and down-in-the-mouth like, as if I'd lost all my friends. In short, Mr. VVhippletree, it's a kind of a sort of an anecfation of the stomach and indigestible noggins, as it were.' This eomplaint is in your noggin I've no doubt,' said the farmer, pointing to his head at least it began there, but I can cure your stomach for you, -if that's all you want.' Good !' exclaimed Sam, can you cure it though? i'oo my soul, eI'd give any body the promise 01 a thousand dollars 111 a minute that would free me from this dreadful dispepsery. It's the only draw back, as it were, to my gentility.' I'll cure you of both, your gentility and your dispepsery too, if you'll follow my advice.' Could'nt think of it no how at all,' returned Sam, pulling up hTs fal-e collar about his ears I like the life of a gen- tlaman all out, if I could only get rid of the plaguey dispepsery.' 4 Go to work, you lazy varmtint. To work I Oh no, Mr. Whippletree, I could'nt think of that could'nt 'pon my soul. Any thing else that you'd pre scribe, in reason, I'll take. Bat as for work, I've put my veto 'pon that long a- rro. ' e? at all. i"s deliberations. On motion of Mr. M. E. Ma!!y, Revived, That the thanks of this meeting be tender, d to the Secretary, for the impartial hi. inner in which he has di.-churged the duties confided to him. The meeting then adjourned subject to the call of the Ch airman. - NewOern Spectator. S A M C RO O K S H AN K OH TlfR MEDICATED AXE. Sam Crooksiiank was his mother's pride and his father's grief.. Having no taste either (or study 'or work, he commenced the character of gentleman. How well this character set' upon him, the honest people t the neighborhood in which he resided can best, tell ; and they aver, in the homely language of the place that it fitted hi tii' like a shirt n a hoe-hamlle.' But the condition of a gentleman, how ever desirable it may in several re spects, is not entirely free fro o miseries and vexations. ; It' is expensive, without being profitable 5 and is apt to produce envy without gaining respect. At least, such is the case inr a country where the people mostly get their living by the sweat of their brow, or by some actrve business or profession. But among other troubles which gentility bring, is that very pre valent disease, coiled Dyspepsia. 4 Then I give you up, for one of the Devil's incurables', returned the farmer, and left him. Sam resorted to a variety of means to cure his complaint. He ate largely of mustard, cayenne, pepper, horse-radish, and other sharp ami powerful condiments pushing them to such an extent, that his mouth burnt like fire and his eyes wa tered again.' At the same time he fed enormously on beef, cabbage, &. turnips, antl topped ofFw'nh an apple-tlumpling. He also added a little whiskey to his meals, by way of corrective to the sad condition of his stomach. But itall would not do. The strong condiments and the whiskey, although they helped him to the destruction of no small quantity of beef,4 cabbage, and other matters, did not in the least aid his stomach in converting those things into good chyle, for the sup port and .no'urishment- of his gentlemanly person. On the contrary, they rather tended, in the end, to render his com plaint worse and worse. He next had recourse to all the root doctors and doctresses, within fifty miles. He took likewise al,l the patent medicines he could hear of the panaceas, ihe cat It -olicons, and the infallible specifics. He even took a newspaper for the sole pur pose of reading the advertisements of new aid important medicines, and the certih cates of wonderful cures done and per formed through the agency thereof. But after all, poor Sam 44 Gentleman Sam" as th Neighbors called him had the dys pepsia as bad as ever. But though he most heartily hated aU study and from his soul esche ed reading in general, he accidentally derived one advantage" from taking a newspaper. In looking, as usual,, for infallible cures, his eye chanced to meet with the following recipe, from a paper down East : k Take 1 07.. camphor, 1 oz. Myrrh pulverize and mix them together. Then bore a hole in the upper part of an axe helve, sufficient to contain the mix ture, which put in and stop close. When this has stood 24 hours in a warm place, it is fit for use." Such was the .substance of the Eastern recipe. But the manner of using it Sam did not so much admire. It was no other than this naineiy,, to get up ev:rv mor ning before the sun, aul use t'ae axe be- produced b.y his hands should dissolve the mixture within the helve 3 which, oozing through the wood, should enter the pores of the skin, and so diffuse itself throtighh;4 whole frame, adding new life and vigor to his enervated constitution. 4 A murrain take the tSjrk!' said Sam. if it 'twain't for that. T shnuMrnt mind taking lhe nedicine at all.' Ile debatfed wiih himself for some days what to ieshlve upon. Thou'gh he dislik ed the tftodr of taking it, he had full faith in the me Hfcine. as he had in all sorts of recipes. Kis father advised him by all meani, to tjjke'it ; aad so, likewise, did farmer WhVppletree, and the rest of his acquaintance! The neighbors wished, above all things, to see 'Gentleman Sam' brought to labor again. D I could 0:1 1 y git the inrgrediences, into the pores of my hand without chop ping for it,' said Sam, 4 I shouldn't care. Bat howsomever, work, or no work, I must take if, for I'm persuaded it's the j .-oughly cured. He wniY uiing uimi ii cure me.' He accordingly prepared him an axe strictly in the manner prescribed, not omitting to set it'in a. warm place twenty four hours, before using. His father took care that tlit? instrument should be well ground ; and, that there should be no lack of materials to work upon, assigned him an acre of-the primitive forest, .thickly covered wifji oaks, beeches and maples, to be cut ilou n antl wi ought- into fire wood. I , Comfenjn it !' said Sam. as be reach ed the thick and Ipfty wood, . this is a pretty business for a gentleman ? By jumping, Joseph, it's a good week's work to cut. dowri one of these frees, to sav no thing of dipping and splitting it up. And then yhat the deuce has the ingredi e ices in tje axe-helve to do with the chopping, I should like to know. But, howsome'veivas 1 said afore, that's nkhir here nor. -'there, it's so set down in the newsprint, and there's uo disputing what that says.' Sam nowpU-Hed oftl)is gentleman's coat, and (ell to. He worked according to the recipe, with a due degree of moderation at first ; nevertheless, he soon got out of breath, and was obliged to slack away. in- order to recover his wind. H took spe cial are, however, not to let go of his axe for a minute, lest the handle should cool, and thereby he should lose the ben efit of what he had already done. Besides getting out of breath, his hands began to get sore, and numerous blisters were seen elevating the skin like pulTpastc. 4 Consarnjf itall,' said Sam, as he sat down 0:1. a nz to rest 'this is a hard medicine. 1VI rather take three bushels of the.biltrrst roots and yarbs that ever grew. This work will kill me, assure as I live, tl may as well die with the dispepsery, as to be cut olTin the prime of my days &y chopping these infernal big trees. I'll fgive it up for a bad job. I never can ehdare these bloody blisters ; besides I, am so tired I can scarcely stand on my feet, let alone pegging-pegging, into the trees like a rotten red-headed woodpecker'-' Guod bye to the chopping I say. ' '' ' " As Sam" said' this, he shouldered his axe, and was about quitting the wood, when a deep 'voice came, as it were from a hollow tree 'close bt sido him S-a-m ! S-a-m ! stir not an inch, if you, the Devil will have you for certain. Work two hours more yto day, and to morrow "be here bright and early.' 4 What I? exclaimed Sam, 'if the trees begin to talk, it's time to look about me.' With that he turned back and fell to chopping aain. He continued until his hands were nearly worn out, and his strength sojexhausted that he could stand it no longer;, when he again shouldered his axe, a4 without being farther molest 44 YOUR BtfLL GORED MY OX ' I cant smell the Camphire and the mnr rer,oozing through, as the newspaper said: I' o sure I've net the axe-helve nearly red l Judse Augustine S. Clayton of Qeor- hot every da v for a month, and vet I can'tigia whose violent opposition to the re- perceive the ingrediences come through chartering. of the U S. Bank, was only The po'ecary must1 be a cheating I exceeded by the universality with which - Bli . . . .. .. he nnn'ited curnjpt motives to the pnncu- un. 111 Li ie aiucies. Full of this idea, he went to scold the apothecary for putting him,on with bad medicines, when the latter threw his pesfle atVis head, and called him a fool for his pains. . j But though Sam could not perceive bv any outward 3!gnsthat the. Une Heine had come through the axe-helve ; yet, inas much as he daily grew better bv handling the instrument, he finally concluded that, the virtue of the remedy had insensibly entered the pores of his hand, and with out his knowledge diffused itself over the whole system. He did not, however, relax his endeav ors, nor lay aside the medicated axe, un til his acre of. woodland was completely cnoppeo, ana nis, dyspepsia, most tho- was also cured of his gentlemanly pretentions ; and is now one of the most iudustrious young men in the neighborhood. . ' There is one thing, however, which appears lo him not a little mysterious, antl that is the voice from the hollow tree. But some of his neighbors are thought-to he wiser on that subject titan he ; and it is shrewdly suspected that Jack Whipple tree, a waggish son of the farmer above mentioned, knows more about the voice than lie who heard it. M AHOM ETr AN SER vl 0. " Father of all ! in every age, In ev'ry clime adored, j Ey saiut, by savage, anjd By sage, Jehovah, Jove, or Lbrd " Pope. God alone is immortal ! Ibrafwm and SoUmaix have slept with their fathers ; Cadijah the first born of faith i Aiesha the beloved j Omar the meek ; Omri the benevolent ; the companions of the Apos tle, and the sent of God himself all died; but Goi'i most high, God most holy, liveth for ever. Infinities are to him a the nu merals of arithmetic to the sons of tfdam: Tne earth shall vanish before the decrees of his eternal destiny ; but he liveth and reizneth for ever. God alone is omniscient ! Michael. whose wings are full of eyes, is blind be fore him : The dark night is unto hTm as the rays of the morning ; for he noticeth the creeping of the small pismire, in the dark night, uponthe black stones and ap- prehendeth the motion of an atom in the open air. God alone is omnipresent He touch- eth the immensity of space as a point : He moveth in the depth of the ocean, and Atlas is hidden by the sole ot his loot He brealheth fragrant odours to cheer the blessed in paradise, and enliveneth the pallid flame 'in the profoundest hell. God alone is omnipotent! He thought, and worlds were created: He frowneth, and they disolv into smoke: He 9mileih, and the torments of the damned are sus nended. The thunuerings of Herman are the wltisperings of his voice the rustling of his attire causeth lightning ami earth quake 5 and with the shadow of his gar- ment he blotteth out the sun. Gnr at.one is MEucrvcL.' When he made h:s immutable decrees in eterna wisdom, he tempered the miseries of the race of I smart, in the fountain of pity- When he laid! the foundations of the world, he cast a look of benevolence in to the ahyses of futurity, and the adaman tine p-llars of justice were softened by the beamings ot his eyes. riE uroppeu a tear upon the embryo miseries of unborn man, and that tear, falling through the immeas urable lapses of tim , shall quench the "lowiti"- flames of the bottomless pitt ed by the Irpice from the tree, dragged He sent his prophet into the world to en himself hnjne. He slent soundly that lighten the darkness of the tribes, and pal advocate' of the renewal of thai -charter, ,-'h had, at any time been acco'mmo dated by ihat Bank with loans, has found it necessary to come out m the public pa pers, to vindicate himself from a charge. industriously circulated against htm. of having been bought up bv the Bank, fuh, ded upon precisely the same specie oF ; evidence upon which he relied to fix that same charge upon others to wit, that the R ink had loaned him a large sum ;f mo ney. Judge Clayton, .ifter giving a detail of the circumstance which .rendered an. application to,the Bank necessary, asserts that he is innocent of a'i v corrupt bargain ing with that institution- that when he made the application for the Juan, it :wa accompanied with no intimation that his opinion had undergone, any chang 'and that he is still as decidedly opposed iti it as lie has ever been The Judg mat he taught two things by his own (faise 1st, that those against whom he has preferred the charge of corruption may be as inno cent as himself, against whom others made c? the same rharge, deduced from the saute facts and 2dly, that the Bank will ac commodate its enemies as readily as its friends, ir. the regular course of business, provided it have substantial 8ecjrty for the safety of its funds. We hope lei may learn a lesson of charity fromJtliia ,cir cumstance a virtue in which h !setnaf sadly deficient Lynchbiirg Virg.i Office of Commissioner in Etjuity Georgia, Richmond County. Between Grace Rowell, Complainant, t . ai.d Valentine Walker and Go. L. Twigg, jsUrviy. ing Livecut'.M-s or Kdward If weIT, deceased 9 Vdentine Walker and Ge)rtfe L. Twiggs, F.xecutors,of Howell R. Marshall, deceased, Mary Rowel!. J2tz 1 bcli Foreman, Nov-. Row ell, Miily Kdjve.ll, Sarah UoWelh Benjmin R.iwell, Hannah Rowell, i-ggv Riiwell, Wil liam liowell and Edwar I Rowell, (children of William R iwell,) Klizt Williamson, Catharine Rowell, Sarah Rowell, Rn lolplt Rowel!, Ma ry Rowell, Dorcas Rowel!, Jire Uoweil (chil dren of Benjamin Rowell) M .ry Davids, Ben jamin Strange, P.tsey Ifemao, Randolph S' range, Edw .rd SJt range, . Hubbard S'ranfje, (children oT Ch..rhite Strange( formerly (mar-' lottt- Rowell) EMz'beth Sibley, Mary West brook, R . becea Jackson (children of Of njaoun Miishall and Nancy Rowell j Lucv Bill, John St inly, James Stanly, Jun. John Horton aod Eliz'betli Morton, his wife. Jesse Westbroolc.. and liis wife, Susannah Westhrook, William Coombs and his wife, Winifred C'jombs ot Natli:niiel Sjanly (children of Winifred West bruok,) Defendants. r Bill for Discovert, cd Relief. night, not i cing troubled in the least with dyspeptic dream. His hands the next day were terribly sore, and he was lame in almost every joint ; but his appetite was greatly ; improved, ami he was able to eat his. meat without either pepper or mustard. .' He would , fainy however, have declined going to the wood ; but the deep voice wns stnl riftgin m his ears, and the Uu- il seemed,; in his heated imagination, ready to ci-jtch him. He once more, there fore, took his. medicated axe and repaired to the forest. He continued longer than! the day before ; but so sore were his hands that every stroke he struck gave him severe pain j and he was once or twice on the point of giving the matter up, when the same deep voice from the hollow tree airam warned him of the danger of such a cotirse. In short, Sam Crookshank repaired to the wood daily working longer and hard er each :day than he did the day before, sleeping soundly at night, and eating his meals-with constantly increasing appe tite. "His hands by tjegrees became hard ened to work,and his whole frame so strengthened that he could labor from morning to night without feeling half as much fatigue as he endured the first day from a single hour's work. Bnt what a plague is the reason. said he, applying his tioe to the axe-hclve, t hath prepared the pavilion of the Houris, for the renose of the true believers. God alone is just! He chains the la tent cause to the distant event, and binds them both immutably fast to the fitness of things. He decreed the.-- unbeliever to wander amid the whirlwind fof error, and suited his soul to future torment. He promulgated the ineffable creed ; and the; germs of countless sou's of believers,! which existed in the contemplation of the Deity, expand at the sound.' His justice refresheth the faithful, while the damned spirits confess it in despair. God alone is one! Ibrahim the faith ful knew it j Moses declared it amidst the thundering Sinai ; Jesus pronounced it ; and the messenger of God, the sword of h'15 vengeance, filled the world with that immutable truth. Sirelv there is one God immortal, OMNISCIENT, OMNIPRESENT, OMMPOlKr. most merciful and just, and Mahomet is his Apostle Lift up your hands to the ejernal, and nronounce the inett'ab'e, adorable creed: THERE IS ONE GOD, AND vlAHOM TIS HIS PROPHET. ; - j H AD LOOK'S For sale by i. OALJiS & SO JN this case, the Court having decreed to the' Complainant orte moiety oft'ie Estate 'of the' I'est itor, and that auditors he unpointed-to" set tle the several sums flue the reiduary"legMtees, umler the fourth claus- ot the Will, which is 111 the following words: f My will and desire is, that my Executors do sell all the rest .'(Ot? rvui iue of my e.tatf , whether real or pevsonaT,- al hut the proceels of the same be equ illy divided -hare and share alike between and ailong all the children of mylha f brothers and sisters, to whom. I give thesime to them amtTlheir heirs forever." , k - . , NOTICE is therefore srUtn, that "aM persqas int rested under said cl titse, in the Teslator Will, are required to pn duce b--fre me cvi " dence of their interest aod of their identity as children of the half brothers: rd sisters, of the testator, on or before Ihe first Muid ty in Janua ry next, at 0. hrch lime, tlie Audi ors will pro ceed to settle and determine upon their rights according to tne decree. ",'.,. SAMUEL M. JACKSON1, , Master iniquity, July 2tJ. ' ; ,.S9ttfan. WAKE- Foil EST LA.rD i ; FOR SALE. rHIE !4rfbscribf-r being desirous to move to v the West, offers for salf. his Pfuit.tion whereon he now 1 ves, situated jo the Ciu ilj of Wake, tw lve miles noMti of lt-1-igh, on the Powell Road, leading from Raleigh to Lfewis 'm5, and on the waters of Neuse River; withirj 600 yard- of Wake-Forest Pleasant Grove Aca demy. Tois Tract of La-.d contains F-jiir Hundred aod Twenty-seven Verts, w'tj a 'wo story Dwelling Uo ise, tnd other Ou' houses. -lie ha-, one ottier Tract, within one inihs of the FU of Neuse.. near the FdlsR.d, that con tains 183 Acre, with a small D elling-Housa and some other Oo-Uouses ; Sna as to the situ-. ;.tion lor Healtii; and Soeieiy in this Wighbor- ho 1, it is interior to no.ie, l'erson Wishing to purchase are invited to cwnir an 1 view the; lands, as ihere will be a bargain sold so .n . WM. Ik DUNN. August 20. 1S33. ,41 Ti the Members and Frien-ils, of the North-Carolina Institute of Education. " THB Fun-Is 01 the Institute navirg been ex hausted bv the l'ublica;'onsof die lat year, it is particulany veqieste !, that those mdrhted foT a vear a Snoscnpiion win rorwaru.ne amxmnc as soon as possible, post paid, to tne Sobscrirter a Chapel-Dill. Ihe numner cl members not being sulhcient to metray toe expenses 91 ihe publications of the pr:eni year, aiiy persona . . . . -. x " 1 m iriendly to th onjects 01 lire iinu:ui-?, wmw lid those objects 1 y ecoming m m -rs, which. thv can do by lorw tnlin-; t the T. eaurer art annu.d contributO f ot Une JMJar. By order of 'he Ex-rutive tonmitec, WALTKR A. NORWOOD, Treas. Angust 18, l&iTy- 3. ud.t rs fnemlly to tne c -use f K.tui;a througfmut the SuetJtre leqatsted to tn ert the above a few tirnes "BLANKS OF ALL KINDS a For Siale at tinVOScc Hi m J; , ) . 3 -m. I I . ! 4 4ft '1 it l ; 7. . !' -1 J t 7 1 )