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Oars are the plans of fair delightful peace, niiirarp'd by party rage, to live like brothers." MOITOAY, JANUARY 1838. 8DITORS AND PROPRIETORS. : per annum one TERMS. &uicniFTidji, three dollars hftlf in advance.. IQjT Persona residing without ihe Slate will be required to pay the -waotK amount of the year xiWriptioa in advance. - , RATES OF ADVERTISING. ; For 'every" 16 line (this size type) first insertion one dollar; each sulweqttent insertion," 25 cents. Court Orders and Judicial Advertisements wilt be charged 25 per bent, higher ; and a deduction f ;33t per cent will bet, made from the -regular ices, for advertisers by the year, j CI,rTE to. th'o Editors must be post-paid. i n FOR the register. Gentlemen : I have no great anxiety to trouble tlie public with my opinions, oit Sub jects about which each thinks himself better intoitneu man ms neignuor. e iru(ujs, ' that in tins age of improvement? with such a variety f sources for information -when the Press is scatteriwg it productions over every section of the country and, when the fountains of knowledge can be visited with so much facility:;and cheapness ; it is presumption in one to 'claim the privilege 'of advising on any subject. Advice be comes dictation, and warning, with whate ver degree of modesty it is given, is un heeded, because necessarily savouring of vanity or arrogance. Ihe more im the subject, the greater the offence which is committed by him who advises, and the mure galling the insult to those to whom it is addressed. T'he acknowledgment of any tvitcm of principles for the moral and phy sical government of the world, is regarded by many, as a tyrannical abridgment of per gonal liberty ; and the recognition of any rule of faith is looked upon as a blind and servile submission to superstition. 1 ruth J in to be followed, candor to bo exercised. only so far as they are compatible with the gratincution ol the passions anu tne accom plishments of thoselends which will con duce most to the personal aggrandizement. If one is obedient to law, he is timid and servile. If he regards with deference the wisdom of experience, he becomes a blind imitator. Novelty and paradox are the insitmia of genius ; and he, who admires what time has made sacred, and experience has proved to be good, is either destitute if tte, r devoid of sense. Thus, with all the improvement which we boast of ha ving made,, each one is still his own instruc tor each one anxious to be regarded a pi - i . ! i? - I 1 r s uneer in ins own peculiar uepanmeni. in I our desire to imnrove the are. we fonret to improve ourselves, .and in our search for new springs of Knowledge, pas! by, with out drinking from those whose waters have been the delight of many ages. In Science, the Works of Newtok, Bacon and Des cartes are too old to be read, and the track riments which arc making, the draught which is to inspire one with perpetual youth, wilt soon bexliscovered. Once, we moved by mere animal force then was called in the extraordinary power of Steamy and how we would fain mount up with Eagle's wings. Once, there existeil but one set of. rulers and one set of lawgivers ; now, every man has an inalienable right to govern and each struts the Soloic and Lvcumgu?. Once, Clergymen delivered Sermons ; note, no thing short of a course of Lectures will sa- i. 1 . a t . . a tisiy tneir zeal. 4uues, too, in oitien times, were wont to give Opinions f now, each thinks himself! called upon to deliver a voluminous argument, in fear,r Torsooth, he may nofbe tho't learned. Now I am op posed to your new (angled means of accom plishing ends. I like old doctrines old fashions-and antique ways. For this rea son. I am resolved to be plain and candid, but i trust no one will become offended at what I shall say, for it will be of no use, inasmuch as 1 am determined to speak ex actly what 1 think, r.. In my next, tlen, I wiiait it j, vj nit, in mun "S do things. J DELTA. with you. Air that I asked of " Hygeia-" was for him to have laid before the public that portion of Frost's 44 well attested facts" which '' satisfied him of the fact." In conclusion, 1 would like to know what exalts the testimony of men, who have re ceived 44 25 dollar" Diplomas, over that of men of intelligence and reputation, who have pursued a course of studies sanctioned by the wise and Xhe good. To be honest, is it necessary that men should be ignorant, and become Doctors, instanter, at $25 per head? And must an intelligent Court, and an up right Jury, and unimpeachable evidence, be all prostrated and disgraced, by patriotic integrity and talent. I have no disposition to prolong this con troversy -and should the Editors of the Re gister insert this Communication. I promise it shall be the last on this subject from me. METALLICUS. t. SALEM COTTON FACTORY. It will be seen from an advertisement in RICHARD CRAWFORD, THE FORCJER. A STORY OF CONTINUED CRIME. FOR THE REGISTER. Fere Ubenttr homines id quod voluni credunt i Messrs. Epitors : It seems thai the great It is not, perhaps, generally known, that this individual, who has recently been sen tenced at Louisville for a forgery, under the assumed name of A. C. Woods, upon Forsyth & Co. was, (or some months last Spring, a resident of our city. The fol lowing facts respecting Crawford we learn irom a gentleman mitted into the institution by Mr. Parker, iiuu uuu istti UU(lJUlimcu TV1U1 iroui bovhood. Under what nretprt T)iflro nior. 4- Aw 4ki 1L.. 1 1 ' ' 1 ' - . - ": pu u-ua, uim uus estaoiisnment ed, or now he acted immediately after ob has got into operation, and like every thing taining admission, must be matter of con else about that straight forward, ondriv jecture. It appears, however, that Mr. tng, patns-taking village, with every pros-. Parker was killed at his desk by a blow pect of success. The style of the building , with the hammer used in cancelling notes is, we learn, the very best : the machinery j paid. perfect, and the operations, (in-doors and He was struck on the top of the head, out,) just such as it ought to be.-. Their : and the hammer buried to the handie in his cniet machinist, we learn, is ,a gentleman j brain. At this instant it is supposed picks who gained his experience from an employ- commenced his search for money, as a ment in England, and who for. several drawer, in whifth hank nnff arA noiiollv years discharged an irapprtant trust in a kept, was found oartlv drawn out. when i v . i . I " A. J ' a m "nS "! advocate of Thomsinism Hygeia,") vill! ,,om,a nuemau who had with nun a per ?tlnotbe convinced, 4thoie arSe from the "? lTT rlpad." but that thft author nf MfiLillirns i ' iau.o ... u.c uiaic ui i orK. an 4 M. D," but let that pass. M I Does 44 Hygeiaj really thinkr that tlie public mind can be operated upon, by Certi ficates of interested individuals, so far, as to set aside the verdict of an intelligent Jury ? 44 Hygeia," Messrs. Editors, conveys the idea, that the trial 4 in extenso" should be ! placed before the His education has been good, and his man tiers are accomplished, and those of a man accustomed to retined society. In person, he is finely formed, dark complexion, dark eyes, black hair, and his age cannot be tar from thirty. His first debut upon the stage of the world, was at New Orleans, where lor some tune he transacted an extensive public, 44 thattheymaybush and fi,lauy WOUnd up his con- arrive at iust conclusions upon the subject. But it may be asked, why, in all eases, the decision of a Jury satisfies the public mind, except in the dase bf a' Thomsonian Doctor who appeals from a Jury to the people a plan as fatal to the interests and good order of society, as the jThomsonian system of Medicine, is, to the lives of the community. But, says 44 Hygeia," 44 I have looked into the whole caseL as published, and never was more satisfied jof any thing, than I am of the fact that the mere opinion of four or five M.Ds, were suffered by the Court and Jury, to preponderate against a mass of well attested facts ! .'" What a charge ! A ichole Court and twelve Jurymen accused of swearing falsely ! And who is it that makes this declaration? large establishment there. He has for six or seven years been at the head of one of the principal Northern Factories, and is be lieved to be eminently qualified to manage such a concern. He is expected to give his attention to this establishment for seve ral years to come. They have received al ready the apparatus for running 1000 spin dles, most of which is already going ; to which we learn will be added next, spring and summer, 36 power looms. It is the in tention of the Company from time to time, to order on machinery until the - whole space of the building is occupied, which will contain 75 looms, and 2,500 spindles. In a community like that of Salem, where the motto of their illustrious ancestor, Aldobrand Oldenbuck, is still their faithful rule of action, 'Kunst macht gunst,' with their habits of industry, economy and care, such an institution must .prosper. It has our best wishes. Salisbury tFalchman Translation . ' Skill wins favor." WATCH NIGHT. An individual, who! declared in the Register of the 11th Dee., Which was several weeks before the trial of Frost came on) 44 that wife in the city of New York, Lobelia, mven in tbe doses that Dr. Frost anil extravagant course ol me , T- - - , w cernsT by swindling a New York gentleman who had furnished him with capital, out ot the sum of 880,000 ! He then left New Orleans, with the intention ol returning to his native State. On his way up the Mis sissippi, in the steamer Chief Justice Mar shall, he met with Miss S, a very beautiful and accomplished girl, daughter of one of the first families in the State of Virginia. A mutual attachment ensued between them, and on reaching Wheeling, they became husband and wife, much against the will of her father. The next thing we hear of Crawford, he defrauded a gentleman of Richmond, Va. by the name of Swan of 84,000, by means of a forged Bill of Lading. The interval between the forgery of the bill, and its pe riod of payment and the consequent de tection, was passed by Crawford with his in a wild He was administered it to Mr. French, was a safe. and for many affections of the cbest, the ve- Dver which they passed is too beaten to de- ry best of all emetics." liglnttlte eye or improve the head of him This, Messrs. Ipditors, solves the whole WIm "witnesses witn 'ecstacy the mighty the Court in condemning Dr. Frost, con- wKwders of his own century. The wise demned 44 Hygeial' also. But 44 Hygeia" man of antiquity is but the urchin of the has 44 looked into the whole case," & who present ae : and where, in days past, one dares to have the presumption bard would have sung, this, our time, can his honor ? afford lb forget its thousands, despite all 1 I think, friendt4 Hygeia," that the pub- are afforded, to give lie is not to be smiled in this way. They . i , w m the facilities which fame to any who may wish its acquisition Who reads Homer, Milton and Shakes 'peare, since Willis, Bryant, and a host fv of other stars of eqval magnitude have i , spread their bright lustre around ? Is-this reauire more evidence, than the assertion of an advocate of the Thomsonian practice, whose real name is unknown. But, says 44 Hygeia," have I Jiot given the rjublie six Certificates ? True. But not the age of improvement, and who would from wnat sourceidid they eome ? Why, tliinlf of :ulliprinr tn flip stjil. stnhpr flcir. trines of those who have immortalized their names, merely by following the dull direc tions of nature ? -We must have something new-something which besoeaks orisnnali ( ty. ' However absurd the doctrine howe i , . I- t ver mean anu unnnnciDie uie one wno from learned and, intelligent practitioners of the Thomsoniaii, practice, to be sure ! - Ah, friend 44 Hygeia," they will not answer. The public, the people, understand human nature too well, to be duped in this manner. Where is the man to be found, who will condemn himself or family ? Can friend advances it, it is greeted witfi joyous wel- L, TWpi" jnt out onP. ? Nav. even the come, provided there is the least probabi- condemned culprit persists in his innocence lity it will change that order of thing which now exists. We change, and imagitie our selves advancing. Deluded with the idea, that we ourselves know much, we have readily concluded that those who have gone before us knew nothing. . How then can any one anticipate a charitable reception of Ins advice r Whoever attempts it, is apt to hae his vanity mortified by the little attention which will be given hrm. But, there is nothing more true, than that he is most likely to need instruction who is most apt to reject it, and that there is no better way of finding out the guilty, than by char ging all. Nnw. I rwit rcith lliP nlihlir to hp in tRe least alarmpd. I have, no intention to text ? (that of defending Dr. Frost.) What become its monitor. Gotl forbid that I should assistance do these certificates render the incur the responsibility ! I should receive publicmmd 44 m arriving at just conclusions no thnnka fnr 4nvn!iin&. twnvptfPi irnnil mio-lit I I Where are the e vidences spoken of in 44Dr. mnn in Unkt . riiv kn ' rv0!t Frosts Card' & " Hveeia s Coramunica - -J J . . - r I . ttn 'l -1 "CI unt tne present age to the last. How! then, can it be expected, that Thomsonian Doctors will not do it ? The Certificates, Messrs. Editors, which 4 Hygeia" has laid before the public, as evidences of the fefficacy of his doated and lovely system, are no more than what we can see daily in the papers, attached to other nostrums. Where is the medicine, no matter how deleterious and poisonous its qualities, that has not dozens of certifi cates, speaking ak. loudly m their favor as those of friend 4f Hygeia s i But this is not all, concerning the Certificates. How ill-timed and gratuitous they are. ? What induced friend 44 Hveeia" to fly from his arrested at length at Wheeling for the for gery, but the matter was compromised by a note to Swan from Crawford, for the sum forged, with a responsible endoter. At the instance ol his father-in-law, however, he was immediately arrested ou behalf of the State, and lodged in prison to await his trial. By the assistance of the friend who had endorsed for him, he released himself, and escaped to this city. Here, by a tis sue of deceptions, he contrived to establish . . .... . lumsett in the othce ot Dr. , as clerk, for which capacity he is said to be preem inently qualified. He boarded at the City Hotel, and was well known to many of out most resnectable citizens. While here, a reward of 8100 was offered for his detec tion by the civil authorities of Wheeling, and his wife's jather 3 and the police offi cers came on to St. Louis to apprehend him. He became aware of the tact, and went from the city for a few days, till the police l ad returned to Wheeling, leaving behind him a note, that it would be im possible to find him. He was. for some weeks after this, employed on business in the country, for Dr. , but nmrily de- Most of our readers are acquainted with the custom described in the subjoined article, from the St Louis Bulletin, of keeping 44watch night." The services in the Church es generally commence at nine o'elock, and continue until the New Year comes in. With the Editor of the Bulletin, we say that it is a "beautiful custom;' and no man, religious or otherwise, can but feel asolemn reverence, at the still hour of midnight when having his feet, as it were, on the re ceding year, and eras pin?, with hope, at the dawn of the new : 44Tiie New Year On the evening p last Sabbath, we passed a few hours at the Methodist Episcopal Church in this city. It was the last night in the year 'the watch night" and the house was thronged to overflowing. Whatever may be our faith in the mere ceremonials of Religion, we can not but believe it a beautiful custom, which Mr. Julian, the Treasurer, arrived, and knocked at the door of the building. Dicks opened the door, admitted Julian, shut the door again, and commenced an attack upon him with the hammer with which Parker had been killed. Julian, unapprized of what had occurred, parried the blows aimed at him, and begged Dicks to pause, assuring him that he was mistaken. Dicks continu ed his assault, making blow after blow, un- iu mr. juuan naa an opportunity to seize the hammer, when in struggling with his adversary Julian fell, but not without wrest ing the hammer from '-Dicks. Deprived of the hammer, Dicks began to feel for his pistol, i he aim of Dicks was seen, and as Julian rose from the floor, he discovered Parker lying dead in the room. Suddenly Julian raised a chair, threw it at Dicks, and thus gained time to rush out of the door, and gave the alarm to some two or three persons in the immediate neighbor hood. At this moment, Dicks, finding detection was inevitable, raised his pistol to the side of his head, and shot himself. Mr. Julian, though badly wounded on the head and face, is not considered danger ous. Parker was cutoff in the prime of life, leaving an interesting wife and three children, the former in a state of mind that beggars description. The cause of all this is gambling! Dicks, having lost every thing at the gaming table, was driven by desperation to commit tne dreadtui crime of murder. For years he had been an hon est and respectable clerk in Louisville, but, overcome by the infatuating vice, that prov ed his ruin, he acted dishonestly, and found it impossible to obtain employment. His sad end is already told. POLITICS AND THE ARMY. The following extract of a letter from a a member of the State penate of North Ca rolina, to his friend? in Washington, is given in the Madisordan, as from one Who is high- ly qualified to judge of the matters of which it treats : 44 1 need not tell you that, North Carolina, goes out and out against the Sub Treasury project. . Gabble and prate as some of the . would be manufacturers of public, opinion among us may, the fact is too notorious for concealment or contradiction, that our peo ple are wearied to death, with these suici dal experiments upon the business and mo netary concenuuof the cjbuntry."' 44 Any thing before quartering a pack of Vampires upon us, as Sub Treasurers, to plunder the citizens and afterwards the Go- ; vernment,. and render for equivalent, the obsequious services of political gladiators all over the country, and put up or put down, as the smile or frown of power might indi cate.' i New Mine. A very rich Mine of Gold, both vein and surface, has lately been, dis covered on the land of Samuel W. Rodgers, a few miles distant from the Harris Mine. We saw. a specimen, which We consider the finest we have seen in this neighbor hood. As an evidence of its richness, we state upon the authority of the person who exhibited to us the specimen, that a pound of Gold waa extracted from a rock aboutlhe size of a small child s head. 1 1 his is a fine opportunity, for Miners to'Mnvest their capital to advantage and reap a handsome increase. Charlotte Journal, JOHN COPE was committed to tha Jail of Rowan County on -27th ultimo, charged with the murder of John Briggs. The unfortunate affair took place- few miles west of Salisbury. Briggs's death was produced by a stab . in the breast, of . which he died instantly. Cope has said in Jail, that he never had an angry word with any person, except when he was drinking I The trial of John Wilson, late Speaker jof. th Arkansas House of Representatives, for the parder of Mj. J. J. Anthony, a member of that Houfa, w&s commenced at Little Rock on the 13th, before Justices lirown. Fuller and Hawkinalind ec atinued till the 16th. Messrs. Fuller end Hawkicp deei lfd it to be a bailable case, Mr. Brown dissenting. The amount of bail required was $10,000, The Secretary of War, Mr. Poinsett, has issued a Bulletin respecting certain a buses in the army, from which the two fol lowing paragraphs are extracts : 44I have learnt, with regret, that an officer, well of mv wisdom. 4 has Otte cnarartpriutlr Ifr muv hp rpfiiip- a. A ' . "lent, ad no doubt is, in the eyesol many. 1 mean tne desire which prevails to do eve rj thing m a new way. I do honestly be lieve mat 11 one wished to snv from A to C. tion? Why deprive the public of the ad van tages which Hygeia, derived (or pretends to have derived) from the evidences given at Frost's trial, oj the part of Frost which enabled him to 44 satisfy himself of the facts ?" Was it, Messrs. Editors, that they camped, taking with him a quantity otsto- T II I- . rf-V ' . " a len jeweuery anu money. arriving ai Louisville, he perpetrated the lorgery 011 1 ner elevated upon an eminence in the has been adopted by this sect, of bidding high m command, extended, on a late oc farewell to the year that is departing even casion, to an othcer in charge of, them, an on the threshold, and of ushering in with a order to lend certain field pieces for the song of welcome the year which is about to celebration of a party triumph. The can- commence. It is a good thing thus to re- non belonging to government were made view the occurrences of by gone time to for the defence of the country, in aime of recall the events, afflictive, or grateful, war ; and their only legitimate use, in time which have visited us in its lapse to think of peace, is for instruction, and the celebra- of the beings who have departed from our turn ot national triumphs, or national lesti midst, and to remember that we too, are vals ; all orders to apply them to party kindred to the dust. purposes, of any description whatsoever, It is a good thing to fling forward the are improper,aud ought not to be obeyed. by glance into the dim mists of futurity ; and officers in charge of them. 1 ou wdl there- though from their wide involving shadows lore, cause tne regulation to De re-puDlished. we may gather up nothing of the destinies and direct mat nnaii in no case, os departed which await us. vet we rhav form resolu- from. j tions and purposes, which to some extent, 44The Department condemns all interfer if observed, may constitute themselves the ence, on the part of the officers of the Army, arbiters of our fate. It is a good thing to with the party politics which, from the associate the recurrence of these land marks nature of our institutions, so often agitate in time, with the service of our Maker, and the country. If they take an active part in the duties which we owe both to him and political strife, passions and prejudices will to our fellows. In the life of every man it be enlisted for or against them, and their is necessary, that at times he pause and condition become dependent upon the suc- ponder upon his way and at no period cess or defeat of a party; engendering a can this duty more readily be . accomplished state of feeling fatal to the standing as well than at the close and the commencement of as to the discipline, of the Army ; but these an era in his existence, when he is in a man efforts will be unavailing, unless seconded mo- Ihv the conduct, ffood sense, and proper Within the last ten years; Pennsylvania has expended about 23 millions of dollars, in prosecuting her great system of public improvements, by rail-roads, canals, tun nels, turnpikes, slack water navigation, &e. The disbursement of this sum, from Uie State Treasury, is estimated to have increas ed the value of property jn that State to the amount of more than one hun(fcejljniBion$ of dollars. Who shall say then, public funds, applied to the completion of these Works, is not a good investment ? Tooth Ache. The following is said to be a curean infallible one, some persons , think: 4tTo a table-spoonfuil of, any kind of spirits, add the same quanty7 Jf sharp vinegar, and a tea-sponfull of common table salt. Mix them well iogether hold the liquid in the mouth so that it can enter the cavity or hollow in the tooth. If will giv almost instantaneous relief without any : - r ti increase ui juu. Forsyth & Co. and with the money purch- notonous routine of ordinary life, and feeling df the officers." ased an elegant carriage and horses, and may cast backwards his eye along the path- n 1? . ...:'.. ...1... I 11 1 1 : 1 Ji a. went on to vvneeung, 10 visit iu wue, wno way ne nas oeen pu.rsu.ing, aim may ucieui was residing with her father. A re- the inequalities of his course the green, ward of S500 was offered for his detection, beautiful verdure of happiness and the and he had been at Wheeling but a short spots which have been blasted by the sor time, when he was anesteu, llis young roxv of bereavement,or the desolation ot nu wife, notwithstanding his Crimes, his de- maTi passion. ception and neglect ot herself, and the bit- We could not but meditate upon topics mn tQ break out mto usual fe8tiv re- ter naireu 01 ner lamer, was aevou uy ai- hke mese ttnon the occasion 01 wnicn we nortooa r,1It 9t thi innntn- sirs the tached to her husband, and at the peritKl ot speak, and as we glanced around upon the f Advprtispr the worthv and count- his arrest, was in a snuauon pecuuauy dense multitude assembled, we could noti Mna Antn AomAA , rtipmn nrnmise ! d , .. : -. o '. 1 . . .. . 1 . i I instead or taicing the well known track by were too lengtny, and tnarnue courtesy 10 Urrut and pass by Z. If thereare two ways of was it, that they were too precious for the doing anv thinkr. he Would certalnlw tlf that which is most directlv onDospil tn hi one which is nlain and well known. Thpn jis a constant and increasing desire for pa- rQlt P ; 1 1 i 1 '.. vt 1 : j. ' .uc lor loonsn adventure.. Tor sausneu with the way which Teonle have lived ever since the flood, we are deeply Anxious to invent some new diet and from the expe- public eye t Suifely it must have been the latteT idea that 4 predominated' ' oyer the mind of friend " Hygeia :" for his consci ence permitted htm to lengthen his. commu nication one-foiirth more than what it would have been, if he had left out his worthless Certificates. With the length of his com munication I have nothing to do that tests delicate and interesting. Her teelmirs on the occasion may not be conceived. Crawford was carried to Louisville, and his trial came before the Circuit Court on the 4th December. The evidence is said to have been conclusive as to his guilt, and his own confessions tended to the same re sult. The forged check and bill were pro duced at the bar. The case semed a hone- less one, yet his Counsel, Robertson and Thurston, wrought up fur him a defence so ingenious, and appealed sopowerlully and successfully to the natural feeling3 of the jury, that though they could not but declare the prisoner Guilty, they sentenc ed him to only nve years imprisonment. instead often, as his crime demanded, and as every one who listened to the testimony anticipated. It is said the counsel for the prisoner have obtained time to file a rplea tor a new iriai. ana a uiu -oi errors in ar rest of judgment, St. Louis Bulletin, When admirers fall away, and flatterers To make leeches bite.TWn important object, we perceive with Very great pleasuie to have been effected by Dr. Elden. Smalt holes are cut in a piece of blotting paper corresponding to the places - ou the skin to which it is. desired the leeches shall be attaclied. This being moistened 'and applied, the leeches crawl about until they come to the holes in the paper, when they immediately take hold. Education of Females. -Since there is . a season when the youthful must cease to be young, and the beautiful to excite admi- . A niKyhtPr nf the Orani tfl State was to ration, to learn how to grow old gracefully. have been married on Thanksgiving day to perhaps, one of the rarest and . most va- an M. D. from Massachusetts. The parson maoic T wwumicu. was ready, the bridegroom had come, the And, it must oe coniessea, it is a most se- guests were waiting and aU were restrain- vere mat to uiose women 10 lay aown oeau- mg tneir minn uii me Knoi was ueu, rcau y " " " , . " . , , v - . 0 . . . v I is fnr thi anhfr pnsnn nf IiTp that Annratinn should lav up its rich resources. However disregarded they may have been, they will be wanted now. but perceive, that many a bosom there was from hig fair Qne lhat she woui(j attend no ' busy with the past, and the future, and that, n PVPnintr-mePtino-s: With an indeoen- become mute. me. mind .will be driven to whatever the motive whicn had gatnered pnpe w hich became a woman, she refused retire into itself, and if it find no entertain. them to the spot, the present tnen surely was not in their thoughts. I he services ot the occasion were concluded bv the celebra tion of that touching ceremony, the Euchar it- and at midniffht. after ushering in the - -7 - - o ' New Year, the assembly-broke up . I ... ... ... . ! - T I . - to nromise or to sacrance - ner privileges ment at nome, uw De anven uac. asm upon so trivial a point, which so e:irageLthe I upon the world with increasing force Yet, . lover, that he bid ner a nnai adieu, ana ae- iorgeuing tnis, ao we nuvsreui w buumw parted in a coach which stood at the door, our daughters exclusively tor tne .transient She js better without than wltn a man wno period 01 youtn. jlio we boi eoucaw wcu cared so little about her as to enact such a for a crowd and not tor themselves 1 iox npttt- atipmnt at tvrannv at such a time. It show and not for use t for time and not for 8PPms that the Dair had been in the habit, eternity. Hannah Moore. through their courtship, of attending even ing meetings together. A poor tool must me ntimber of Militia reported to Con- Advertiser contains the details of an attempt .the doctor oe cenam, out we giory ui u n in 183 waa 1,333,091.; The Bum- HORRIBLE AFFAIR. J j ; A sliD from the office of the iSuisvilie t to rob the Mechanics' Saving Institution of that place, which ended in murder and suicide. ) The Treasurer, H. S. Julian, had gone to dinner, leaving the first clerk, O. M. Parker, in the bank. After the Treasurer left; it seems C l Arexdex E. Dicks was ad- shire. N. Y. Sun, ber in North Carolina is 64,415. A man seeing an oyster - vender p ass by called out; Give me i pound of oysters. We sell oysters by measure, not by weight, replied the xther, WeU,1 said, be,, give me a yard or them t An'old lady, who lately died in Wake field England, has left her dog $150 yer for life Old Jotrler may live "oVy cheap1 for the rest oi hit5 ' r : . ' . .-. - . . , .- . . - - - - - ' f mtwm mtmm
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Jan. 29, 1838, edition 1
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