i. The folio w ing Petition to the Legislature, to. favor of a Lunatic Asy lum, is in circula- lion in thU county for' signatures, ' Is - not the subject of sufficient importaticfe;tV elicit similar movements in other Muntiesi? 'Hillsboro'Jtecorder. '! 5 AHSKMtfLt orNRTU CaROUSA We the undersigned, citizen df Orange county, moved by the unanimous recom mendation of the Justices, at the August Court (or the. county aforesaid, andby the . : settled convictions of bur own minds as to the propriety of the measure, would ap proach your honorable body as , petitioners to favor of the erection of a Lunatic Asylum m-the State bf North Carolina. ; " . -. In this enlightened airef whenthe'public mind of every civilized nation, subdued and 1 characterized by the benign influences ot our holy religion,' is deeply engaged in schemes of publje and private beneficence; when the number and splendor of national institutions for the relief of human suffering is n a great degree the criterion by which national greatness is estimated; it might be deemed justly offensive to the moral feeling f your honorable body to urge, by elaborate argument, the propriety of legislative mea sure in belralf of that portion of the human fanjmy, which, beyond all others, is afflict ed in a manper'most! to be deplored, and whose situation at -the same time is least susceptible of alleviation frorn individual ex ertion. Your petitioners will abstain, there fore, from such a course, arid confine them- selves to a very few observations on the subject. ' ' . . i There is no calamity to which human na tur is exposed, so deplorable in its charac ter and consequences, as that which reduces man to the pitiable condition of the lunatic. " Deprived of reason, he is shut out from aU thejsourc.es of moral enjoy ment, and is dead to every purpose of usefulness ; with pas sions unrestrained by the influences of in? telfetrt, he is at once an object of the deep est (distress to relatives and friends, and of alar'm to all within his reach; a prey to the extravagant fancies of a disordered brain, iie finds no comfort, from within, and from without universal avoidance. A condition so hopeless, so terrible, and so utterly wrejtched, must excite the sympathy, and should enlist iu its behalf the beneficent ex ertion of every feeling heart. In dthcrcoun trics and in other States that sympathy and thatj exertion have had their influence, and much has been done by public authority for its alleviation; but in North Carolina noth- ing,j literally nothing ! Here the lunatic, without the aid of medical treatment and ap proved scientific methods of relief, without security "even; against doing or receiving harm, is left to wearjut,a wretched exis tence in hopeless misery. If heTias proper ty.to support 'him, he is, nevertheless, a 1 source of constant and, painful anxiety to his friends; a perpetual watch must be'kept over him, and the household of which he is a melmber, is harrassed with alternate hopes and fears and ceaseless vigils, till exhausted by the incessant demands upon its patient indulgence it, is forced to adopt a rigorous and pften times unadvisable coifrse of treat men towards the unconscious offender. As under happy circumstances the, moral feel ing is the source of our greatest enjoyment, SO Under thnSP rf th- nnnnito fhx-anlfr it T wm-w vm y s m W W J ft 1 is the-source of our deepest distress. The misery inflicted by the constant presence of a deranged son or daughter, or brother or sister, the pain of witnessing daily a spec tacle isq revolting.Ust keep the feelings perpetually on the rack, and banish tKe'last -vestiffe pf happiness from the domicile of .the unfortunate family) whose lot it 'is to have within its bosom a maniacal relative. The (hapless condition of such families, no less tjhan that of the junatics themselves, it seems to your petitioners, claims the com passionate consideration of your honorable . bodyt and calls for the irfeasure of relief whicjt an Asvlum would afford. With regard to that portion of insane per sons in whose condition a destitution of pro perty is superadded to a destitution of rea? son, their lotjsif possible, still more me Aancholv and more deserving the favorable J - , r consideratioivof your honorable body. For him there is no care, no protection, no com1 fort, but such as the inadequate means of the poor house supply; no lesser restraints than chains, and a- dungeon. Debarred of I . w . - - exercise, of the very air andlighfof heaven, so necessary to that state pf health which alone can afford the slightest prospect of curej without:crime.and without fault, (for neither can.be imputed to the maniac.) day after day and jy ear after year, he dras out " a wretched existence in the loathsome at mnnliftR ni a nnntrnr. Yunr nplitinnprn would represent that this is no faney sketch of human misery; occurrences within the limits of their own county show its reality, and facts identical and of daily observation ,,havq forced this subject upon their conside ration. There are at this moment three per sons of this description confined at the poor- house ot Urange Uounty, two of whom, af ter al long and close confinement in the dun- ,! geonis of the common jail, have lately been j re moved to rooms prepared for their recep tion by the wardens of the poor. Besides these, there are others in the county, whose cases are less violent, but who are neverthe less fit subjects for a mad house. Your pe titioners are not prepared to state the wants of other counties in this respect; for the sake ' of humanity It is to be hoped that they are not so great; but ifr in proportion to thejr population, they are as great, thii aggregate of al the counties would show jni amount ! of suffering truly appalling, and would jus tify, j in the opinion of your petitioners, a largt" expenditure fof its relief. Experience ha proved how much human exertion is capable of achieving, when, aid ed by science, it is exclusively, directed to the attainment of any particular object; and if th6e laboring under mental derangement werf congregated at a public asylum, under thcire atment of competent hyficians, whose LUNAT I C ASLU M sole attention should oe directed to that par ticular branch of disease, we mightreasona- Diy calculate on ine enure cure m iuanv.auu a great improvemen t in the condition of all. The statistics of similar institutions are not within Tthe reach of your, petitioners, anu they eanoVtnerefbre, refer , specifically to the haoDV results" which have followed their establishment in other Statesr but it is an universally admitted fact, that a great ame lioration of the condition of lunatics has uni formlv been the consequence. Your petitioners earnestly pray, that your honorable body will institute proper mea sures for establishing an Asylum within the State, on a scale commensurate witn its wants. Such an institution is not of sec tional, but of general interest, and it con cerns deeply the honor and christian char acter of the" State to provide it. Considera tions of benevolence towards the afflicted, the high obligations of christian charity, and a just regard for the dignity of the State, have impelled your petitioners (a3 members of the community of North Carolina, sen sibly alive to, and in part responsible for, whatever may affect her standing,) to the duty of doing all in their power to throw from her the reproach of indifference to the sufferings of our fellow men; and they trust they have accomplished that duty in thus bringing the subject to the notice of your honorable body. And your petitioners will ever pray, &c. An Important Discovery The Teeth. Waldic;, of Philadelphia, notices a discos very of no little importance to such as are troubled with bad teeth. He says : 'Some time since. Doctor Caldwell, now a practising dentist at No. 68 South Sixth street, had a favorite horse which had be come incapable of eating his oats, and on investigation a carious tooth indicated the difficulty to result probably from tooth -ache Extraction was the remedy of course; poor horse wa3 tripped up by tying his feet together as custom prescribes, his gum was lanced as we poor humanities have tod often witnessed, and jpaif of pinchers were applied as we have also experienced; even a mallet and chisel failed of their effect.- The tooth was intractable; no effort would withdraw it from its socket. The gum tu-i mefied and on examining it carefully, the doctor perceived a ligament at the neck of the tooth, and without much thinking of thei effect he cut it; the tooth immediately fell out, or was extricated with a slight effort of the thumb and figer. ' f "This led the operatorto reflection, and the hint was obtained which confers upon' suffering humanity a benefit, which may be esteemed by the sufferer, second only to the discoveries of Jenner, or the circulation of the blood ! Subsequent experiments have fully proven that the human teeth are also retained so powerfully in their sockets by a ligament, and it is the breaking of this which requires so much manual force; and this, when cut, which gives not so much pain as lancing the gums, loosens the tooth, and it may immediately be extracted with out pain with the fingers ! A physician of our acquaintance, whose name we are at li berty to mention if requested, has had the operation of extracting a large molar, treble fanged tooth in this way without pain, and so gratified was he by the fact, that he in vestigated the anatomy of the parts and ex tracted all the teeth of a dead subject in the j.- A- . V same way, ana with no moreaimculty than above related.. He is a witness not to be impeached, who, with many others, have already been benefited by this great anato mical discovery." DO NOT BE AVARICIOUS. It is astonishing to contemplate the evil and dangerous results arising from a spirit of avarice, and we see these dangers ampli fied in the" case of Benjamin Rath bun; sent to the State Prison for the crime of forgery. The West had no citizen more enterprising, Jbut it was a rash, injudicious, inexpedient enterprise, Which in staiving to grasp too much lost, every thing. Mr. Rath bun was ready for any speculation buy lots build houses establish steam boats run a line of stages, erect hotels, and thus shackle himself with every kind of operation in stocks, rail roads, canals, manufactories, buildings, &c. &c. Having originally but little capital of his own possessing, it is true, a strong mind and active habits, he plunged into a vortex of difficulties.; the panic found him short of money, and he resorted to forgery, not from a natural viciousness of character or a love of crime, but to sustain himself and his credit, intending, there is no doubt, to take up these forged drafs when in funds.4 It is thus that crime engrafts itself insensibly on injudicious arid unwise projects; men get excited ny ambition and spurred on by avarice, and the issue frequently is, that fraud is called in with the hope of averting calamity. Let us be content with our lot -contentment is a blessing, and1, let every nrau confine himself to the pursuit that ed ucation, habit and inclination have qualified- him for. 1 ry hrst'to get a living, thsn to improve it, finally to make and lay bymo ney. Let uo man suppose that fortunes can be made in a day. iV. York Star. t) . Galvanism. -The European correspon dent of the Worcester Spy writes : Apro pos to galvanism; A fact of no inconside rable importance has recently been demon strated by a French physician. It is this : that Jhe two surfaces of the human tongue are always in opposite slates, of electricity, the upper being, if I remember right, ccf-tro-negative, and'the under electropositive. This fact is of great importstice itt the phy siologist, and it may be the means of even tually enabling us to1 arrive at some positive knowledge m reganf to animal magnetism -at the power of detnoristrating whether inaipresem normy nas, in reality, a local habitation" as well as u a-Tihlne,." FltOM AtBANlT DAILY APVEBTlSfi. . The ub-Vreasury We have repeat edly endeavoVed tolmpre6S upon mir read ers the .all-iriportant fact, that when the novel policy o the proposed sub-Treasury scheme was first advauced, it was met with signal opposition by Mr. Van. Buren and his friends. They now support it, with out there being auy visible reason for such a complete and toal abandonment of. prin ciple, except that he proposed project is well adapted to give increased strength arid permanence to the party in power; at the expense, rt may be aded, of our republican theory of government and to the great peril of popular liberty. Amongf the propositions once sedulous lyjtnaintaind, but now discarded by Mr. Van Bureh and his friends, was the superi or safety nd efficacy of the State Banking Institutions, over individuals, as the fiscal agents of the General Government. Upon this pointy we cite two extracts from the re port of Levi Woodbury, Secretary of the Treasury! made to Congress in December, 1834. j "It is gratifying to reflect,'! said Mr. Se cretary Woodbury, that thecredit given by the Government, whether to bank paper or bank agents, has been accompanied by smaller losses in the experience under the system of State banks in this country at their worst periods, and under their sever est calamities, than any otherjdnil of cred it the Government has ever given in rela tion to its pecuniary transactions. Hence, unless the States and the United Stales should both deem it proper gradually, and in the endjentirely, to dispense with the paper system, and which event is not anti cipated, the Government cannot escape-occasional Ipsses from 'that quarter; and can never hope to escape all losses from banks as fiscal agents, except by the em ployment in their place of other and indi vidual ageijts, who will probably be fouud less responsible, safe, convenient, and eco nomical." . . It will be seen, from the above extract, that Mr. Woodbury is, or was until it be came his interest to profess a change of his opinions the decided sustamer oi the su periority of State bank agencies. Unfortunately for his. present reputation for consistency, he was not content to refer only onfce tb the subject, but in another part of the same; report, by way of showing his zeal in the cause, enforced his opinions by referring tojfacts and documentary proof. We present this extract also to the read- er, as a still turther condemnation ot the gross insincerity of the Administration, in its pretence to a patriotic motive, when it began to lay its plans for compassing the custody of die public money. Mr. Woodbury says that it is a ' singu lar fact in praise of this description of pub lic debtors, the selected banks, that there is not now due on deposites, from. the whole of them which have;ever stopped payment, from the establishment of the Constitution to the present moment, a sum much beyond what is due to the United States from one mercantile firm that stopped payment in 1825 or 1826, and of whom ample securi ty was required and supposed to be taken under the responsibility of an oath. lf we include the Ivhole present dues to the Gov ernment, frorii discredited banks, at all times and of all kinds, whether as depositories or not, and embrace even counterteit mils, and every other species of unavailable funds in the Treasury, they will not exceed what ts due from two such firms.1 We learn from the Natchez Courier that the United States Bank has purchased of the Commissioners of the State of Missis sippi, the Union Bank Bonds of that State, to the ainourit of five millions of dollars, which are to? be paid for in the following manner, viz I - - $1,000,0013 in New York or Philadelphia in cash down. ! $500,000 jn Louisville, 60 days after 1st of November. ; i $500,000 Hn New Orleans, same date. $1,500,000 in Natchez, in Mississippi currency, iniDecember. $1,500,000 in New York or Philadel phia, 60 days after 1st of January. In reference to this important transaction, the Courier says : " Most sircerely do we congratulate the State of Mississippi upon this timely and advantageous! negotiation. Nothing in the range of, probability could have been so sig nally beneficial to the citizens of our State, particularly those of the interior, as this arrangement.; It will enable the Union Bank forthwith to commence discounting which she will no doubt do, as wjB under stand is the intention, at the rate "of about a million andfa half a month, until she will have loaned to' our citizens about seven and a half millions. This w ill afford great re lief to those ho are compelled topay mo ney to the Marshal and Sheriffs at the Fall terms of the Cjiourts ; and thus save immense amounts of piroperty from sacrifice under the hammer fit will immediately, revive our currency and resuscitate the depressed con dition of all the monetary affairs of the State; whereas, if the negotiation had . not been made with Mr. Biddle, it could not have been made oi? this side of the Atlantic. And even if the Commissioners had been sue-: cessful in Efarope, the relief would have come too late for those who need assistance this Fail." ,j - The great London and Birmingham Rail Rpad (England) was . to be opened complete between the. two cities, September 17. Travelling by the Railroad has been face-, tiously and comprehensively described by a ffentlemarfjpf Stamford, who lately availed t himself of that means of .transit : "All risht! off youtart4; -you putyour. head 6ut of the carriage window to look .at the country, get your eyes full of dustand, before -you ran jget them clean, you're in London V "? iHAMECESS AYO WAL.;V;U For the first time, that we have seen, the apostacy of Mr. Calhoun and the Calhoun party in South Carolina, is avowed and justified.; The Washihgtion Chronicle!- says: ' ' '' t " The attitude presented by South Caro lina, in this great contest, is ' truly a noble one, ;r Perhaps no State was .- so - generally opposed to' the present Administration or felt itself more aggrieved by those of the same party, who were lately at the head of affairs. The distrust was general, the dis like almost universal. No sooner, however, did the Administration determine upon a policy, eminently Republican and favorable to the rights of the States, than South Caro lina, forgetting her griefs, and solicitous for principles alone, generously came forward, and gave the Administration a support, more cordial, zealous and unanimous; than any other State of the Union." South Carolina, then, is to give this "Usurper" ! ! and the " Royalists," a "cor dial and zealous support" ! Well, be it so. We are content. But we are not done yet. To show the lengths to which they are going in South Carolina, we may quote the following from the Columbia, (S. C.) Carolinian : " Does Mr. A. not know that the peo ple re-elected Jackson to the Presidency in return for: the noble act? (carrying off the public deposites.) This was ample proof of their approval of the measure, notwith standing that a corrupt Senate tried and condemned him for it; which deed the peo ple expunged from their records, in farther proof of their approval of his course." Thus do they justify the Expunging. It is in reference to these and such like matters that the Columbia S. C. Telescope, thus indignantly and eloquently speaks : "The history of politics presents us with nothing equal to this this gross and pal pable tergiversation this sorrowful and shimeful sycophancy. All that South Caro lina heretofore contended for, is abandoned: all tbat she reprobatod is adopted : all that won for her honor and consideration and moral power, is renounced. The new con verts v Van Burenism would tear from her history the last ten years. And not con tent with attempting to sully her now, and blast her for the future, they seek to humil iate her by a retrospective degradation. They claim to support and approve all measures of the Administration, past, pres ent, and to come." The Editor of the Salisbury Watchman, tells the following excellent story, We suppose " Jake," is one of those who en tertain an antipathy to the "tarnal feather als." "Shortly previous to the last Presidential election, the Editor of this paper went to the "Hatter's shop," seven miles off, and made a speech in fivor of the Whig candi date, Judge While. As soon as he was done, an old friend of his took him one side, and the following dialogue took place. 4 Jones.' says our friend : We don't want to know any thing about these men you have been talkin about, and we don't know how about votin for 'epw 'Spose you come out yourself every man of us will go for you down this way. 4 Why, Jake, I am too poor a man to bear the expenses of electioneering on such a grand scale ; my pocket would give out before I had treated one half of the nation.' 4Ah, that indeed !' said our friend, and he seemed puzzled ; he kept repeating, 4that indeed 4that indeed,' At length starting from his reverie, he says,- lvell Jones, since you can t (fjer for President, 1 spose you come out for sheriff.'' The influence of woman is excellent wherever it is exerted. It is no flattery to call the other sex " die fairest and best por tion of creation." The late election in Philadelphja eity is said to have been one of the most quiet and orderly ever held and as a reason for this it is stated that numbers of females came out to look at the "lords of-creation" exercising their prerog ative. Their presence quelled every thing like riot or disorder. Men could not wran gle and disgrace themselves under the very eyes of their wives and daughters. Alex. Gazette. Murder. -A most awful murder was committed in this county on the . night of the 3d inst. Mrs. Tempy Shaw, wife of Mr. James Shaw, shother husband thioifgh the heart, and he expired instantly. We have not been able to learn the particulars; but understand that they had jived disagree ably togetherfor some time; This is the second murder we have had, to record this year committed by Females, in this county. We forbear comment, as the matter will no doubt undergo Judicial investigation." Mrs. Shaw has not been committed to jail yetfor the offence. It is supposea that shehas "cut out." -Roanoke Advocated . loiieepaneiu irom oemg overgrown with weeds they must be plucked up when they are young ; so when the seed of dis- content have taken root in the heart, tneyl must be eradicated;, if peace of mind be in tended to be cherished. "The bud of disat isfaction will ripen into the frut of danger and trouble, unless it be destroyed. A Wholesome decision. At thef late terra of the Superior Court for Hartfod L-ounty, khsha Kinsbury recovered of Hezekiah Allen $1000 damages and costs, the plaintiff claiming thatt-he defendant had sold to him a qurrtercJ$eefvhich was un sound and unwholesome, knowing the ani- mai to De diseased at tlie4 time it slaughtered. was Mosi Hdrriblekt murder, of the most inst nature r was committed upon the bodies of Mr. -William Baxter and two of his children, a sod and daughter, on the 1st insti near Pendleton, S. C, by a negro man,...v"MrijL was a native,, and respect tabWtvCoC this county, and was re turning -from Alabama, the " time of his death Arriving near Pendleton he. pitch ed Jiis tents for the night, and, at the hour of midnight, when all were asleep, the in fernal monster sought this opportunity of carryirigT into effect his diabolical purpose From the appearance of the Wounds, in flicted, it is supposed that they were killed with an axe, the head of the Father, when found, being nearly splif ni two. The mur derer was a negro man, whom ike deceas ed" had purchased, a short time previous, in Georgia, in which. direction he was seen returning the day after the murder was com mitted, do hope that this vile mis creant may be shortly apprehended, and made to atone for his crime by the most severe penalties in the; power of -the law. No punishment could be too severe for. such a being. Rutherfordton Gazette. mOM THE CU.MBKRt.AND ClTILlAlf . Rattlesnakes. We are informed that recently, whilst Mr. D. Mattingly and wife were on a whortleberry excursion near Sung Run, in the Allegany Glades, in this coun ty, they killed eighty at one time, and wounded four that escaped. This is pretty well, considering too, that a lady should have participated in the fun of snake killing. She must be admitted to possesss less fear than is usually attributed to her sex. The very dry and hot season, we are told, is supposed to be the cause ot so many mak ing their appearance during the summer and fall. s Bio Hon . The Cincinnati News giveg an account of a large hog belonging to Mr J. W. Bell, of Fayette county, Indiana. Dimensions as follows.- Feet. Inches. Length from end of snout to end of tail 8 Height - - - 4 Circumference of the arm - - I Girth - - - 6 Knee ... - - 0 Hoof - . - - - - - 0 Throat - - - - 4 Tail - ... 0 Length and breadth of ear- - Length of tusks - - - 0 9 2 2 9 11 104 0 8 14 by 9 8 , fully fat- Supposed weight 1,400 pounds. The hog would have weighed, wheu tened, it is supposed, 2,000 pounds. It is reported that the Van Burenites have gained a mkmber of Congress in Vermont, and that he is AN ABOLITIONIST. The Friends of the South in New York, viz : the Van Buren men, are preparing to fire 500 guns at the result! And this is Southern party. Macon Messenger. the COMMUNICATIONS. FOTl THE REG J9TR. Messrs. Editors: In your last number I perceive you claim a draft upon my potato bank, for having proved the Sub-Treasury project to be a great Government Bank." Before redeemingmy promissory obligation, I wish to make a few enquiries, the answer, to which will enable me the better to judge of the validity of your arguments and the correctness of your conclusions. The ar gument upon which you rely mostly for establishing your position, and which is the only one that shows any semblance of a Bank, is this that the Secretary of the Treasury is em powered by the Sub-Treasu ry system to issue notes founded upon a specie basis. I wish to know if it is contemplated in the Sub-Treasury plan to issue promissory notes ? and whether you have not confound ed the issue of Treasury notes, which is only a temporary measure, with the plan of the Sub-Treasury. So far as my informa tion extends, it assures me that the issuing of promissory notes forms no feature of the project. The bill, however, is not-before me, and if, as you assert, this is one ofcthe powers, I wish you to point out the specific article which gives it? But should this power be incorporated in the bill, even then the Sub-Treasury would not deserve the ap pellation of a Bank, for then we might say that there was already established a Gov ernment Bank, by the bill which authorised the issuing of Treasury notes. And u ith equal propriety might we call every indi vidual a banker, who gives his note to an other individual, since both are promises to nay at certain times. Indeed, the two ca ses ar so analogous, that I can perceive no difference, and to show this more fully let us suppose an example. A, in considera tion of services done by B, gives B his note payable one day after date. This note may be changed from person to person, as is every days practice, or it may be collect ed forthwith., No one who would not risk his reputation for sanity would declare this to be a banking operation. The process of the Treasury is exactly similar. The Se cretary owing C a debt in Raleigh, sends him a note payable on demand. C can transfer this note to whomsoever he pleases, or demand specie of the Secretary. There is still another striking analogy: the givers of these notes, A and the Secretary, pay in terest upon them. But, say you, this is suing aud liquidating process greatly re sembles a banking operation, Slo we might say the issuing and liquidating of notes among individuals resembled a banking pro cess. But why is this issuing, &c. not a banking; process ? Because the Sub-Treas ury has so few of the marks of a Bank, that were you to collect all the parts, combine Lall the shades, and embody all the tints of it that resemble a Bank, they would not even form the skeleton of a single prominent Bank feature. ' What then is a Bank? Political ecomv mists tell us they differ in different coun tries. We all know that the Bauks of this country are Banks of discount and deposit. They are corporate bodies, com posed gen erally of individuals, who have throwa to gether their stocks for the purpose bf ipetj ulatipn i iv lending money. They areem- powered to issue three or more doll notes bearing interest, for every sineuV11 lar in specie, which ' are desi,i e.f. u'" culatmsr me'dium. Thev rpr1iiQ .i. Clr for the safe keepim? 'of which tu,, ' with interest upon the notes b?sej upa,lJ these deposites for rddem ption . T hPSo PP stitUting the characteristics of a Ba C 'V hiayjudge what similarity there U . ; Sub-Treasury The; prime object of n ' )'. ' is speculation ; that of the Sub-Tre ili to manage the fiscal Jafiairs or the G0 menu The Banks issue their . notes as circulating itfediunV receiving interest V the same: the Suh-Trfiasnrv. if xr,v ,'r .u i v ' "raw the lreasury notes a part of it, issues notes in payment bflthe Government due, al ways paying interest for so doing. $ - that it is the interest! of the one to flood ! countiy with its notes, and of the other redeem its notes as soon as possible. gin there are so many vast differences hpt,, 4. " Cell" the two insiitutions, even after admitting fof argument's sake, that the Secretary ca' issue promissory notes, you must sho some greater likeness between the Sut Treasury and a Bank, before they will aD. pear to my understanding as one anl th same, and before yon can take a draft of yellow yams from my bank. POTATO CUSTARD. FOR THE REGISTER i THE SILK; CULTURE. M essrs. Editors: Pelow, are two ot three1 short,- but interesting articles, which I havf. cuiieu trom a tew ot your exchange paperj in the last eioht or inn Hns. rplntivo .l - - 3 J - 1 '-""'"V VU Hgr new and beautiful branch of Agricultural ia. dustry and thrift, named at the head of this article. The rewards of the Silk culture by means of the Chinese Mulberry, aresa astonishingly great, as to awaken public at tention in every part! of the Union. The fact3 disclosed in these artides, and many pthers of a similar character, to be met with in several of the States and in our own, leave no room for doubt, that the day is near at hand, when Silk, will be the great staple, and source of public and private wealth of North-Carolina as our climate, soil, habits .and insulated condition, all, all, eminentlv favor it: and what is more, it will afford the most delightful of all employments to our people, and certain comfort and inde pendence to the very poorest of them as the old, infirm,,and even -the very children, can do far more than support themselves the whole year, by a few weeks labor, by rais ing the Chinese Mulberry, or by making Silk. The patriotic apd public spirited few, who first embarked in (this enterprise, in this State, and brought it before our last Le- gislature, as worthy of Legislative encoiir. agement, deserve the lasting thauks of their fellow-citizens. The Mulberry Mnia, or the fever for speculating in the Moms Multicaulis, ap pears to be increasing all over the counirv. We hear of the intention of many of cur friends to enter into this cultivation induced we fear by the large profits that have beea derived from the sale of slips ; - would it not be more prudent to confine their ar rangements and calculations, to the feeding of the worms, and production of silk, for which our soil and climate are admirably adapted? The Bucks County (Pa.) Intel ligencer, says that one hundred pounds of the foliage of the mulberry upon which the worms are fed, will make, one pound ohilk and fourteen thousand cuttings of the Chinese mulberry will grdw upon an acte of land, yielding at thelsecond year's growth, two pounds of leaves each, or twenty-eight thousand pounds altogether, which will jive two hundred and eighty pounds of Silk, which, at $4 per pmind, will amouut to $1120, and deducting 300 for labor, will leave a nett profit of $820, upon one acre of land. Boston paper. . Morus Multicaulis. At the great saTe of these trees in Baltimore, one hundred and twenty thousand were sold, at 20 a 22s cts nerfoot height. The trees are measured from six inches below the ground to the end of the topmost bojugh. They were all of the growth of this' season, and measure on an average about five teet. Terms one third cash and two thirds on delivery of ths trees, which is to talte place immediately after the first frost. Buds are sellinir & 3 cts each. The buds are- delivered on twigs, and from 30 to. 50 bods are obtain from each tree. The tiees, trimmed of thtir iwiffs, sold at the auction foif 13 cts each. Many individuals havje realized pretty for tunes from a small outlay, and some who a year ago invested so much as a fevr thou sand dollars, have real ized. fifty and a hun dred thousand in retujrnr and some much more. Nothing in all mathematics is plain er, than if you plant luds this year at t cents each, and the buds bejeome trees next year, as they probably will, bearing fify buds eacb, or (to leavp plenty of margin, guard against all possible disappointments say twenty buds, andjeach bud should seii at the, same price wliich the present bud costs', that the businjess will yield a very great profit. There & an old rule abont n such cases.. The Dutchman found the vai Yankees found the worth of a merino buck- - - iV. Y. Journal Commerce. TV- OuUIm. Af IVlkKamntnn tnld UlUlUiS 1LJ UlViUUUO 14 Y J . aur.iDuian lor u cau. urat ,i oecome so vaiuame inai me ugm umOi thenrt. -Tbid. ! i,iU ine vicmiiy ouue vy o . propagation of the ftlorus Multicaulis prosecuting, ty several gentlenueD, greai vigoT : ana-1 is. prooauii; j. twelve montns, not iariromv"V will be for sale here. . AGRit;" X1 HI be made to ht next Genera' a If bl for n Act to incorporate . ifae nia Firt- Company, and Iso to ine? Town of BrtTvmu, SUlujs County, w 5i Oct. i. 1833. f, i