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XII REE IIOL.li ARS Pe Annum ? 0E nALF Ii ADVAIVCE. C -Onr.are the plans of fair delightful peace, umrarpd toy party rage, to liFe like brothers." TUESDAY, JVOVEMBJEJR 1886. IS PUBLlskED EVERY TUESDAY, Ry Joseph dales Son. TERMS. ' THnspomM per annumone half in advance Those who do not, either at the time of subscribing or subsequently, give notice of their wish to have he Paper discontinued at the expiration of the year, will be presumed as desiring Us continuance Until countermanded. ADVERTISEMENTS, Kot exceeding sixteen ttnet, will be inserted three timet for a Dollar ; and twenty-five cents for each subsequent publication : those of greater lensth.in proportion. If the number of insertions be not marked on them, they will be continued until or. , Jered out and charged accordingly. , sma LL MATTERS. pajr something for Jts gratification ; and no idea of agricultural comfort can be for med, in which some or all of these things, do not make part. ; Wealth is composed of parts of dollars the longest life of se condshappiness of single t sensations and the prosperity of the farmer very much depends on the strict observance of small matters.. Dr. Franklin's advice was to take care of the pence, and the pounds, as a matter of course, would take care of themselves. I . G. 5 vottmiE XXXVlll. " fllOTIIER . - V, From the Oennesee Farmer. These are the very things about which Farmers in general are far too negligent. The great things are allowed to engross (he whole time and care, while the impor tant'fact, thalt every thing great is com nnspil nf narts. is wholly tiverlnokpd. If r. .1 - j. . , t. .lla ft Halle Vr frl 1 ft e t lima if .ri n.w I t K . the parts are taken care or, the whole is a .u. mc safe? but a neglect of items frequently "mention of being absent only about a causes serious or total loss. It is the fortnight,- but so many splendid views nHect of small matters in farming, that presented themselves to me that I was makes such.ao annual - reduction in the compelled to go on, from one magnifi- nrofits of the farm ; and more asricultu- cent scene to another, until the present Scenery of Aorth-Carolina. - We copy J he following Letter from the Greensboro-Patriot, to the Editor of which it was addressed by Mr. A. S. Waugh, formerly of this City a gentle man of fine literary tasterand acknowl edged merit as an Artist : Rethania, Stokes co. N. C. 7 October SOA, 1836. My D'eau Sir : I am now on my way home, having prolonged my visit far be yond my greatest expectations. When I in this place, on the 9th of Frbuary, 1781, after he had crossed the Shallow Ford. And I have also likenesses of some Rev olutionary heroes, such as GenJ Lenoir, &c. and in the course of ray tour I have collected a goodly number of Anecdotes past far be from you the reproach connected with the Revolutionary history the suspicion of such a desradin oi me oiaie. in a future letter, l will give you some extracts from my journal. I am, with sincere regard, Your iriend, ALFRED S. WAUGH. C. N. B. EVANS, Greinsboroitgh. P. S. I have several specimens Marble with me. The following Extract is the Peroration of Mr. Adams's Eulogy on Mr. Ma di sc : ' This Constitution, my Countrymen, is the great result of the North American Revolution. This is the giant stride in the improvement of the condition of the oors and our indolent repose ? No, my fellow citizens far be from us far be from' you, for he who now addresses 'you has but a few short days before he shall i. i .. . rf .... . ue caneu io join tne multitudes ot ages or con trast. You too have the snlpmn ilutv to perform, of improving the condition of your species, by improving your own. Not in the great and strong wind of a revolution, which rent the mountains and brake in pieces the rocks before the of Lord for the Lord is not in the wind- not in the earthquake of a revolutionary war, marching to the onset between the battle field andlhe scaffoldfor the Lord is not in theearthquake not in the fire of civil dissention in war between the members and the head in nullification of the laws of the Union by the forcible resistance of one refractory State-for the WehVJake, what do you ask ?" " Whv, only three-quarters, Gineral. ' Three d ds .I'll not pay it." " But stop a bit, Gineral, it is'nt much considering all the trouble, I don't ax for the skinning alone, but then such a work as, I had to catch . him ! was Roney alive !' Aye, Gineral alive and kicking ; and a pretty hot chase I had to give him round the field, before I got a chance to knock him down." 4What, you infernal scoundrel, did you kill him ?' exclaimed the veteran, bursting with rage. Yes Sir j you know I could not skin him alive !" " You diabolical villain, I'll kill you." O ! don't Gineral, " cried Jake, ef fecting a retreat ; ; there's'. no law, as far as I know, agin killing your horse, though it mought be murder if you kill me. Besides you know, I always obey military orders.' J . V.I . Limn, ls noi in ine nre ; anu that hre was never kindled bv vour fathers ! "Vn ! it human race,ns urn mated ima period of is in the still small voice that succeeded less man onenunured years, ut the sign- the whirlwind, the earthquake and the ers ot the Address to George the Third fire. The voice that stills the raging of in tne congress ot 1774 ot the signers the waves and the tumults of the neonle of the Declaration of Independence in that spoke the words of peace of har- D. Garland, of Newark, publishes in the 1776 of the signers 67 the Articles of monv of ITninn. Anil fr tW vmrft Oailv Advertiser of that citv. the follow- . i --j ...... -"'v., i -rf - . .: . . uonieueration in 171, and ot the signers ! of ihe Federal and.National Constitution A Deed of Noble Daring. Mr. James ralists fail of securing competence in con sequence of this fault than any other, or perhaps all others put together. A few kernels of chess, or a litUe smut in your seed wheat J are small matters of them selves, but the influence they exercise on the crop is generally a serious affair ; yet too many deem their presence so small a matter,, that an hour or two of fanning and liming is considered as thrown away. A shingle from the roof of the barn is a small matter, so small that many farmers think it unworthy of notice; yet that shingle opens a place through which the rain falls on the wheat or the hay, and moment. I scarcely know how to make an apo logy for ray absence1 from my friends. I will only say, in my own behalf, that I have been spell-bound, and hope to prove it by the drawings I have! made of the most glorious scenery ever presented to the eye of mortal man. I know very well, when I shall have the pleasure of seeing you, that you will readily acquit me of the charge of neglect. My sketch-book now contains upwards of 50 views, never before delineated by any one and I feel not a little pleased at the idea of' being the first artist to portray orth-Carolina?s splendid but unknown beauties. may you and. your children's children ng account oi tne rescue or nis only son "to the last syllable of reconlprl time." during the recent' conflagration : of Government under which we live, with fix your eyes upon the memory, and list- My son, a boy of eleven years, led by enjoyments never before allotted to man, en with your ears to the life of James curiositv or bovish hardihood, ascended not one remains in ine lanu oi me living. Madison; The last survivor of them all was he, to honor whose memory we are here assem bled at once with mourning and with joy. We reverse the order of sentiment, and reflection of the ancient Persian King we look back on the century gone by we look around with anxious and eager eye for one of that illustrious host of pa triots and heroes, under whose guidance the Revolution of American Independ ence was begun, continued and complet ed. We look around in vain. To them this crowded theatre, full of human life, toTthe second story of a wooden building in the rear of, I believe, a trunkmaker's shop, in Market street, the roof of the building at the time being nearly destroy i .in r rr Trwir r . i 4 ea. anu one ena in tne namei. some oi AMERICAN CHURCH HISTORY. - rr m t t a does sumc.en uamage in me mow io Wi".-. F' f ... ftln . maturity of manhood, theparkling eyes tor a Montana snmgie?, ana tne expense.. . :"r i,""iy 1I of beau v. and the srev hairs of reverend ...... ..... r , i r : .l u - r u tne senuicnre. vve tninK or this ana Rav. iii ii iB i in i ji iiiiwr iiiu u ticu iiuiri uic itiu i j ' of Yellow Mountain, of a chain of hills: how short human ,ife 1 But then, then. knocked off the gate, a hole made under the fence by the pigs, are also among the small matters that too many farmers pass by as unworthy of notice. Yet when he gets up some fine morning, and finds his herds pasturing in his wheat, occasioning the loss of some half a dozen head when he sees some unlucky stroller in thehigh way take advantage of the defect in his gate and demolish the remainder and when he finds that his pigs have destroy ed half an acre of, potatoes, and made a feast of his garden vegetables, then he begins to think .five minutes spent in pre venting such accidents, springing from pure carelessness, would be better than a week spent, in remedying or regretting them. ; The man who never nays atten which for true grandeur is not excelled by the famous scenery of Switzerland it self. As soon as I reached its top, I was surprised to'find a barren of great extent, from which the whole horizon could be seen basking in the warm rays of an Au tumnal sun. this elevated spot alone (I am told it is upwards of 6,000 feet) and now declare that it is not in the power of man to paint or describe its sublimity. For a long time my faculties were stupified with a mazement. On every hand, wheresoever I turned, I saw one unbroken chain of Mountains, like an Ocean suddenly con gealed after a violent storm each curl and itnnressive Clenrvmen of the Eniscn . lue oystanuers to.u tne ooy to come uown, n t'.hnrrh nm rvnrah tnnwn tnlk. " ,,c 'I",U"CJ ...... .u. IWprrv k I,;. ..PAnknUnn i ,u atelv attempted it, but the flame had Ecclesiastir-I HUtnrv nf tha IT. s.n,a reached the stairs, and he pushed back to wannm..n;iir,nt,!.nn .Amm;Be:n.hhe window; the garret floor had now ed brthe rich Vestrv of Trinifv Church, burnt through, and the fire was falling to go to England for the purpose of ex- aroQnd and uPon ,Hm ploring the vast manuscript collections "The people now beckoned to him to ii , . . t r ., iconic n mis puuirci, in me iiurants J " r' .vmnvi ou.inti.io in all its stagey . of existence, full of the of lhe Bishop of London-formerly spirt- terrified at his situation, nearly suffocated glowing exultation of youth, of the steady tuai heaij ofPa (he coi0ieiin North by the smoke and flames, he sunk down America the Archbishop of Canterbury, the flooj. At-this moment a young and of the Society for propagating the mar sprang through the crowd, and rush Gospel in foreign parts. He sailed for ed up the burning stairs to rescue him. this purpose, last Spring, and returned The moment lie reached the top the stairs not long since, having been laboriously fell,. leaving no egress but a leap from a and diligently engaged in his researches, second story window among the burning all the time. His mission has been most brands beneath. Nothing daunted, he successful. The Churchman says, that caught up my. son, and sprang from the the result of his labors has been even blazing building unhurt, bearing with him more imnortant than ha rniihl hnva pt. the object ol his noble eflorts I With the - , . w I - ...... we turn back our thoughts again, to the true modesty ol his daring spirit, the preserver oi my child u .appeared from I nf ill. at.ai. Irasnlnn 1 1 C T irO oe al f K O tion to small matters, is precisely one of . t " i?.f' . ti, -T rnmmiinil of sAmf micntv mao'ir.ian. ine those who suffers most from unruly cat tle and horses, who spends the most mo ney in paying, and the most time in re pairing dam ages, and who will, unless he turns over a new leaf, most assuredly find that the whole cannot.be greater than the parts, and that he is running on a rock which has been the ruin of thousands. . There are other small matters not so intimately connected perhaps with success in farming as those we have hinted above, yet which are equally, and perhaps more scene over which the falling curtain has but now closed upon the drama of the day. From the saddening thought that theyare.no more, we call for comfort t ,r .u.iii.. i ... uHw u.e .ucn.u.j uM.nauMcjr verC, anu 1eJ h .Re fc ,ecnred a trea I had made my way up to Pur I"" Iea.? ' joy, mat they xvere 8Ure of historical informationi and that - . 1 A K A A n mJjnAMn A. . I T J 1 1 . K wu. . .crS. - c wuajinii iaiin- treasure of such magnitude as to cause the crowd, and not, until last evening, tul subjects ol their sovereign, Jirst meet- mocn wonfler how he could HUrnvpr and could I learn his name. And it was then ingwith nrmbutrespectlul remonstrance obtain it in the short iimp hpha dvotPil with admiration that I learned my son is to the work. He kent fortv rlerks con- the filth fellow-being he has been the in- stantly employed in transcribing, and has brought back with him, eighteen folio vol umes, closely filled with fair copies of the old and valuable letters found in these repositories, possessing for his subject a being is Henry Moore, of Ferry street." very peculiar interest. J hese letters are for the most part, from the several mis- cietv above mentionl.. furniahin. frnm f the Ohio river between Maysvtlle and sky sun was beaming from an unclouded a calmness of the most ba ness, lav like a rich mantle on the bosom of creation -and the soft sighing of the wind, as it swept mildly past me, sound ed like the first breathing of an anthem, arising in silent adoration to kiss the new born day. ' Is there a man with soul so dead' who could look on what then lay before me, and not feel true Religion burninz within him ? I believe not : for the approach of usurpation upon their rights. We see them, fearless in their fortitude, and confident in the righteous ness ol their cause, bid defiance to the arm of power, and declare themselves independent States. We see them, wa ging for seven years a war of desolation and glory, in most unequal contest with their own unnatural stepmother, the mis- ss of the seas, till, under the sign ma- strument, in the hands of a gracious Provi dence, of saving from a violent death. " If there is an individual possessed of the noble and lofty attributes of man, that A Grave above Groflnd. On the bank FRESH GROCERIES, 4v THE Suhsefiber retpectfully informs hU friend and the public generally, : that he has received a large and welt selected assort ment GROCERIES, winch comprises every article usually kept in a Grocery Store. His assortment consists, itr part, of the following- article : . Cogmnc, Ap ple, Peach, Champaigne and Rasberry Brand n Jamaica Itum ' pure Holland Gin s Cherry . Bounce Old J?ye Whiskey ; . Country do t Madeira," Port, Canary, Tenenffe, Sherry Ma laga, Muscatel, and Champaigne Wiliest Per- . feet Love j Noyeau and Cinnamon Cordial Loaf, Lump and Grown Sugar) Rio, Laguira, and Java Coffee t Fresh Rice j Allspice j Pep- ' per ami GT.ound Ginger , Table Salt , Imperial and Hyson Tea ; Soap i Sperm an'd TalloW Candles ; Anchovies, Olives and Pickles, with a general ' assortment of West . Inxlia Sauett r Canton Ginger, Syrup of Hoses, Raspberry St- Lemon Syrup, Raisins, Currants, Almonds, Pecan Nuts; and Fresh Prunes together with many other articles too tedious to, mention. I also have on hand a choice article in the way , of Tobacco and Segars, and 1 would particu, larly invite those persons, who like an.articlo No. 1, to give me a call. G. W. LIGON. . P. s. My atltis Establishment yill be open oh the 10th November. I shall not' maVe many promises, but if any one will call and see me, I will say, I think they will not leave dissatisfied. Members of the ensuing ' Legislature and Strangers visiting the pity, are informed Moan Jugs, Decanters, &q. free of charge during their stay, and will have thm filled with good stuff. Give me a call. G. W. (C" Just received, a quantity of GOSHEN BUTT Kit. Raleigh, Oft. 26, 1836. 1 4w Fashionable Merchant Tailor, BEGS .leave to jnformhW friends, and the Public, that he has jusr returned from the Northern Markets, where he laid in A MOST ELEGANT SUtPLY OF THE jYEWEST SHADES OF , Broqdcloih.8, Pantaloon Stuffs VESTING , &c. And, as he has in his employ workmen of ability and experience, lie will be enabled, out of the best materials, to execute all orders with prompt ness and despatch. Gentlemen will please call and look over his assortment before purchasing, as all he asks to insure a &ale is a fair examination. Cj Country orders thankfully re'eeived and; punctually and faithfully attended to.. Raleigh, Nov. 1, 1836: 52 Valuable Tjcact of Land for sal, In Warren Coimjy f- lURSU ANT to an Order of the Court of E- qiMtv for the County of Warren made at October Term, 1836, upnnthe petition of the Heir at Law of Marmuduke Johnson, decerned, I shall expose to Public Sale, at the Coutr House, ill the Town of Warrenton, on the 30th day of December next, on a. credit of twelve months, " - tres was acKno all, we see flheir King, their independence tim to t:me. Ihft hv tftr ftf thpip- vprn, Wheeling, there is a cast iron co&n, sop 1 i a i . a. : m r w - - w , edged and last and best of I them toilins in war and ry or th parishes. There are, also, numerous let- in Ifprc in thA OovrT" A roUttclinnc fxF Pan. rxatkna In fnrm snil nornolnila o TTninn I i n i - jjvul w Willi u v. rvi li'iw.vv v 11 V I , under forms of terburv and Bishnns of London, from r.o- . . . i j i government lntricateiyii-:-! Gnvprnnra. but skilfully adjusted, so as to secure to gentlemen of influencV; giving informa- i..c...Sc. .ca iimiiicii ifustcmj vuc ,j..i.c- t,on ot the ecclesiastical condition of this less blessings of inseparable Liberty and country front a very early, period, and LllW ' not tinlrpniipntl v nrntonfi nrr iUrt tVis tnr. STI 1 a 1 yei wnicn are eqnauy, ann pernaps more Ieavens high majesty'is there shown in meiruays on earth are enuea, ana ratlve of important events in its civil his indispensable to the rea comon or me awfu In the south arose the V,e,r centu7 ,has, ,not. passed away. torj. Among the writers are names of farmer. The mode of life which a man leads in his familythe manner in which the articles he provides for the use of his family are disposed of the training and education of his children and the taste he acquires and cultivates, may be num bered among these. Separately they re too generally considered of little conse quence, yet united as their influence is, and must be, to be right in these things is very important. ; The appearance of the farm dwelling, the skill shown in Dlanninsr, and the taste . " Black or Mount Mitchell, as it is now very properly called towering above all others, like a lone Island smiling at the impatience of the waves. I sat down and filled eighteen pages of my sketch book with this grand natural Phenomena. Hm. 4kn t!mn T int tn7n iha enn Vinrl retired, and I found my friends somewhat ments-but not without a charge of cor. .larmpd at mv delav. Next momins we responaeni auiy mcumoent upon -v - o all made the ascent: but this day was not as favorable for observation, and one of the party loudly complained of the parti- Their portion of the blessings which they hote John LockerBurkitt, the Exposi- A. I t - I .l i 1 I I " I . . I iiius lauurcu iu itecure, iney nave enjoy ed and transmitted to us their posteri ty. We enjoy them as an inheritance-r won, not by our toils watered, not by our tears saddened not by the shedding of any blood of ours the gift of Heaven through their sufferings and their achieve- in embellishing, are often ranked among ' b mountain-. as small matters of the farmer. loo iL J . fi -.. :u ac incumbent upon our selves. And what, my friends and fellow-citizens, what 19 that duty of bur own ? Is it to remonstrate to the adder's ear of tor, George Whitefield, and nearly all the Colonial Governors. Many private gentlemen likewise furnished him with manuscript letters and documents of im portance. Dr. Hawks experienced the kindest reception possible from all the Clergy whom he met, who did every thing in their powerjlo facilitate his researches. OBETIIfO ORDIIIS. AN AtTTHIHTIC AKECBOT. ported by, pillars, about two feet above the surface of the earth with the following inscription: v ".K, r- ln memory of Andrew Ellison, who departed this life January IS?, 1824." The deceased was an eccentric, but for tunate man. He was one of the first set tiers in the western country, and hewed down the woods with his own hand. He left about two hundred thousand dollars to his widow, on condition she burled him according to his direction; she is required to move the cothn to any place in which she may take up her abode. By marrying again she forfeits the whole estate. A TRACT OF LAND; lying in the County aforesaid, about one mUe South of Warrenton, containing about one thou sand acres, bejonging to the said ltifst it pe ing the Land allotted to the late Mrs. Jane John son, widow of the said Marmaduke, as tier dow er. Said Land has on it a good Dwelling Hotas e and necessary Outhouses. Bond, with approved security, will be required f the purchaser- , JAMR8 MAXWKLL, C M. E. -Warrenton, November 7, 1836. 1 6t Pr. adv. $3 SULPHATK QUININE. A Large Supply of Augtutt t'Detm'dre SulphaU Quinine manufactured at Nogtnt iutMaint, near Pan. Just received, and for sate by WILLIAMS, HAYWOOD &CO. the many seem to imagine, that the farmer thev would not take off their night caps . . .. .! j i raised tnemseives oniy Many years ago, there lived in tern Pennsylvania, General Wes- a I Kn nnrlc hfirl I. I - 1 i L 1 1. . W... . Ia f noDusiness w.ui any u....s uUc about half war. and plough and the hoe-that it is or no con- - ,en(id Theatrical sequence whether his laste, anu nis mo- . . uir . :t I lalll llitil Idiscu uii. yellow rays pf the sun gilding his various ridges. The hu man mind cannot , conceive any thing more gorgeous than this, and this very circumstance, added to the taunts oi my r.:nlo ono oft mt in nnril the folluwine K:i. .u ...n mi tr; J - I ''" r...w.. ,, D 3..a. u.ey a c We.. ur u.-,u,o. u.cu, .. . the Black Mountains win iiieir cunuuci ue juuicioub ur liijurt ous. , a King beyond the Atlantic wave, and claim from him the restoration of viola- i a -vt t ?t m .i. i: .i m i i i i im. ipii nirniK r ik n r in spvit i iir i p tne BiacK looKeu iiKerv.-. . , . . ..T ... . Ln AnH i,a cwi; o l nt kindred and or n oort. with the neon e "U,,,6S v. i ou. scene wuu uie cur- , 1 1 ;m1,.,rt0 nrl amn A Sister's Love. There is no purer feeling kindled upon the altars of human affections than a sister's pure uncontain inated lr.ve for her brother. Unlike all other affections : so disconnected from ShrSe nsliality, so feminine in itsdevel- opemenl ! so dignified, and yet, withal, I e i H.T .. . i. : .ii Revolutionary worthv who had' done the ? ,onV'. h oevoieu " TI Ik ih. H UUllIIllS: IB.l SUUUICW II. IIC WOIIII ral and intellectual qualities are proper ly cultivated "and trained, forgetting that in lhe farming population resides the uo- vernment that they in reality make and unmake Governors and Presidents and wo an run rr ? the precious name of Britons and be no brooked n6 contradiction of his word, or more the countrymen of Shakespeare ami disobedience of his onlers. Ploughing Planting a tree for ornament or for use a rosebush for fragrance and its beau ty the lilac and the snowball for their agreeable appearance the bed of straw- berriesjbr the gratification the palate 'Mhe training the .clematis or the bitter sweet over the windows, to temper the light and refresh the mind by their vivid green and wavingToliage, are alt ranked among the small matters by many farmers, and the few minutes required to accom plish all this, is deemed by such, time thrown away. On the contrary, vre think those very things of great consequence every tree and shrub planted adds to the. value of the farm, for there are few wen so insensible to natural beauty as Proud monarch of a cloud clapp'd race Why hide from us your royal face And be but seldom seen? W hy do you thus in sullen mood Around you dash' the vap'ry flood As if you ne'er had been! Why o'er your sides the screen let fall Why shroud yourself in mystic pall, And hide your height from view? Is it that conscious of your size , You lift your head above the skies To bid the world adieu? Or that you fear the painter's art Might from you take in whole orpart. x our glories newiy mown, That thus from pubhc gaze you nee, And show yourself Xo none' but me, From top of yellow Roan? On Saturday last. I made a drawing - rf Stato srmf sprvirp wiuv " - v ...... I i . - r. nr. . tnav revolve, anu us revolutions enect changes in the fortunes, in the character. and in the dispositions of her brother ; vet if he want, whose hand will so readi- (irmn nFS .,k:niar And UlSOUeUldlCC III HIS UruerS. llOUllinS J " . . , . . ......v... ... , , . I I v cwp in lus ndvornrv. IN pt r tn - . . . r r- t . v i m inAfatfrkitie 14 tnr rna rtr lha r r r c a a I t - . - 7 ' w Milton, 01 rxewian ana L,ocne, 01 unai- -".. -11l(!I.. unauencliable love a aister'i ii ham and Brke ? " Or, more and worae, eHSveft. and unmanageable; where. unquenchable tore, . ter . . ... . ji. 1 nnnn ip tpcrv ITinrinnntiic strurlr him an iprc-euiiucuu ii icsia u cXLIUSiweiy Oil is it tojneet meir countrymen in ine ueau- r ..r'H 7 Z rl r die tie of consanguinity for its sustenance: l .nnfl; r a oan voar'o war ? Nn. TIOICnttT U lC UCMU, tllitl IIIC ailimai .iT . . . 7. . . f .j vV..a.v w. .v.. o . . ,,.-,- mm . . . ,i . r.- . it is so whollv uivcsteu . ot nassion. and W a a I I A. I A i A . .. K iL 1 I IHI I I I 1 f. I CS!I 211. III! ITT l lffll SPP I V il J I 1S Ji me iasi anu me greatest oi mc u- ;r J" - -"V - Unrinffs from such a deen recess in the ties fulfilled by them ? Is it to iay the ' sPr,l hr bosom lhat whenr foundations of the fairest ffovernment stretched on the ground, his I'age was iuman uosom, inat wnen a gister once loundations oi tne direst government ' , to reorretan(1 s.irrpnrna?h bnf fntl,J deeply: regards her brother, and the miehtiest nation that ever float- changed to regret, anu sen reproacn , out -J. r. ... . ed on the tide of time? No. These aw- knowing nothing better to be done, he ful and solemn duties were allotted to disengaged the harness, anu went to nis them ; and by them they were faithfulry house. He sent for a fellow who did performed. What then is our duty ? - odd jbs about the neighborhood, to go t- (A nra. .h-rtth a im. into the field, where he would find the nmP thp. inheritance which ther have horse, and skin him left us won by their toils watered by I "s hide to the tanner's. i their tears saddened but fertilized byf What i Roney dead !" inquired the their blood r Are we the'sons ol wormy man tliat affection is blended with her exis lence, and the lamp that nourishes it ex pires only with that of existence. hott be willing In purchaaing a firm, to) of the Head Quarters of Lord Cornwall is 'between their more than Herculean la sires, and in the onward1 march of time have they achieved in the career, of hu-Isiness !" exefaimed' the General, "with man improvement so much, Onlyt that characteristic violence 5 go do as I bid our posterity and theirs may blush for the contrast between their unexampled energies an tr oar nerveless impotence r t . ..: : . you, ana never asK me questions.' Ttie man accordingly went to co his business, and after a considerable time returned for his pay. A Mathematician's idea of Honor. A luiumiiii, auu taiwt: iijraauaie 01 camoriuffe cave another ine lie, and a challenge followed. The ma thematical tutor of theL College, the late Mr V. -r, heard of the disputed and sent for the youth, who told him he must fight. Why f " said the mathematician. He gave me the lie77 very, well, le him prove it; if he proves it, you did lie. and if he does tiot prove it he lies.' Why snouia you snoot one another Jei nim ' Dead or aliv, what's that your bu prope it r spjLEjvnin NEW STORE ! ! BERIAH IIJPin? R ES PECTFULLY informs hisfriend and the public generally, that he has opened his new WATCH, JEWELRY, SILVER WARE, AND 'PERFUMERY STORE, At No. 1 0, raycttcTille Street, With a most magnificent and extensive assort ment of GOODS, which he will sell at N E W Y Q R K P BU C E S ", ? The assortment consists in part of Superior lo!d and Silver Watches, rich Jewelry, Silver . uonee ana rea sens, surer uining ana iiessert Forks, Plated Ware, and Briitsnia do. Mantle- aftd Aitral Lamps. Plated k Japanned Waiters, fine Guns, with and without cases, do. Pislolav Walking Canes, Whips, Rogers Razors and Knives, Guitars,' Flutes,' Acordions, and Music Boxes, Fancy & Toilet Boxes, Etc. Perfumery in abundance, among which he has the genuig Francois Marie Farina Cologne tatcr- and a great vatiety of otherfajrjc)es. i , Having endeavored to erect an establishment worthy; the Capital of the State, he "soticits the continuance of the very liberal and extensive patronage he has ever enjoyed, hoping "by fci unremitted exertion still to merit it. . ' , QCj Clocks and Watches re paired io 2 sepe rior manner Gold and Silver.manoJaetured to order. - - - ' is' 'V- .J r Raleigh, Notember 14, 1835. -1 - V t JOB PJBIlINCHr- WITH NEATHESt kVt WATCU.i - 1 Li
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 22, 1836, edition 1
1
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