Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / Oct. 8, 1841, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 1' i ' - j'l . ' f .k " &. , & i tj-i - j - . " . .- -' i. ! - .' . vj.j f- - .- i . ' w.. v s:. Is I Hi- . . I ' T AS-- : L ' . - ' i , !::" i --wo .' -: " ' : 'vv r;"-V rr. ' i" fl . .1. 7'-..-,' . ' .?-.., i.,.,.; ;,, .,.- ;.;,,., ; ...; i , "Our' are tke piansofi fair, delightful pe'ate "'Urtioarp'd by party ragi,'to live liht fyvthers" 1.: FHtlav, Octolier S, t S 11. WAKE SUPERIOR COURT. i -; ' ' - ' v - . -From unavoidable causes, Judge Dick did pot reach "the City until Mon lay hiyht,i :The- Court wasopened i .- '' "cvi. Tueslay, aud;' hs ibe.enjkince wholly occupied in : itieVrial of Statecauses. ' Itjs doubtful whether a Ci- J I, . Vil suit will come -ttr iHieanpg? dartag the week.' 1 o- ay ' set itpart, we learnvior tue mat 01 j asieh i t interest to some, to'leaaj ' fthat the two Postmaitert, charged jn the recent Qfli i cialjcommunicjfttorl irpirl the; President to the "Acting -1 Posimaster-Generail witli abusing their. Offices for jx I litical purposes, arehbotl Whigs,, and the , complaint ; against thefn was preferred by political opponents, i 3" The new Exchange Hotel at Richmond, Vir gtnia, is worthy of a!l the Newspaper praise bestowed ? nnnrt 'if X I 1 JC5? IIenhv CtAYj homeward bound, jneets every : where the most heart -felt arid -enthusiast greetings. -I1 Does our friend of ihe Ratl-eigh Register - evince his usual good taste iu using vdio term " Whiggery," as descriptive of the principle pi the vumg party r 4 ue leiriiimate word, wd think, is. VVhiggism," the word i ' Whieery" lieing used by our opponents in a sort of allatedly derisive, way., vvumingion unromae. . We stand corrected, and, will not again sin in this way. We endeavored at the moment of using the' - i word u Wlwggery-," -to think of some othr applicable term, but could not.- Edit. Reg.. V PRINCETON iCOLLEGE. The annual Exercises of the College of New Jersey were celebrated at Princeton, on 'tlie 30th ult. and -"were'tinusually spirited; and' interesting. The-Honor ; a.ry Degree of LL. T). wa3 conferred on the Hon ' Joseph C.Hdrnblower, or Newark, CbiefJustice of the Supreme Court of New; Jersey ; and also on the lion. David L. Swain, President of the University of this State.' '! 'fa. . . . (0- It issaid, that when the Hon. Dixon H. Lewis of Alabama got between Messrs. Stanly and Wise dTuing their rencontre,in the House of Representatives they could not hear'each other's voice, round the hug' mass of mortality that separated them. The most vi - J .;.jfolu passion would vanish-before a man could wal round Mr. Lewis. ; J - SUN FLOWER-SEGARS.: U . . p 0C- It may "be. rrtatter ol V vjfVtnd that ftae trright Smoke (thn JrijChurch without l f",.onenaing. 41 may jop an yerj irue,-uuv d suuum V ? jgratljr prefer one of S. Tucker's Regalias. A STRONG FACT. -v. : Many bf the Loco.Foco Journals profess to attach - great importauce to the fact mat Gen. Washinctton hesitated long before jie coiild bring his mind to sign rttiehill for establishing, the first Bank of the United I States, ttence, they say, the conclusion is irresistible that he repudiated the constitutionality of the measure, and only Submitted With reluctance .to bard and dire necessity. But the circumstance is entirely lost sight rof, thatat tliat time, there had been ho action by the ; ii Supreme Court: of the ; United States. Who. can H believe, ia view of VVaswigtok' character, that he V-' -i' worild havetfoubted fpr a moment, as to the propriety Rant- Kill Cnnsrimtional niies- !i . , T , ' i , . , A-4 - . . tion then, as now, been put to rest by this august tn - ,.. EXECUTION. . On Friday last, the -sentence of the law was execu led at Norfolk, "Va, upon the slave , John, for an at "temTrt to murder two white ladies. He made a full- confession under the gallows, to the immense crowd which surrounded him, prefacing it with the following emphatic; warning : p You see : roe here, and will tell you what broMghtrr he-re.: it was RUM !" -And . he concluded his .'simple Etatjpment of the particulars of ,his crime, by admonishing the colored people to take warning from his example, to- avoid the fpui fiend al cohol, and all violation of the law's. " I j CURIOUS COINCIDENCE. ! The " Globe" thinks it remarkable that the same letters which spell vote also spell Veto. To which a warenlipsi tfiafir. iWnnnllv Wonderful that . the five . , . - 1- -- :- -; -1 y . ------ - Jepgh pf the 'Globe, epell b'ogfc ' ' : h At the MfercKantsExcliariff'i.iNew tLirdl ; camrtt)CS3tvier "Ore 'Mhbedptf.5rfr, Tweighl ri'g 1 ,200 ou.nceii ibfi" prodact tot th'e Wsrlbi pgW Mioe SnJbividsononntyi!;ih this State. The ores of Lead and Silver are , 'verv.abundant, the veins ha-i :; wiug been proved frprn the depth of ,160 feet "up to the ; aarface. -'": '.' '."''! ' ; K : -k ' ".".' "t ttO i tie new larut went into o Deration on tnis nav A;', jweekvv A large number of V-essels looked for at vari- K:9$Totts, have been detained by strong Westerly winds t -'r -Cf 5jtneif.4vlerchandize" will now be subject to leclu i -': sPosed by the Revenue Lafer of the last session.; iY,4 -i i. '' iv. MARYLAND. .. . ; ... r ; The Election, for Governor,- and Members; of the H 8??-Legi3latUre, took place 'on Wednesday iii this Pi :iH f .ffyst fWf&jretorMj.'rVe cahnot allow onr- clwe9howeyer,4o doubt of the success of 'the Whigs P'4AMpU shout theS tate.:i '; tX&H. ?; : . ; ' '? i':" ': -1' r vf ilhe;Bunker Hilt battle. ' :Vl.f ?iel?111 WrsVl who recently died at i ? ; ;nVening Journai says : ' ' - V--' WviHHi 1 V t ?irears of AilCblo.ii'jtbe' price'of our free. I y ; ; dom,rid;if thtsganant foenVsirbo;' achieved fr but jqfeWjj but 'very iiewjar" left famprig us-They have rrr -? ;;(,gp)iei,:and be4ueathed to us the blood-bought treasure" UU confidently aigerted at Washlliston. tliat Secretaryship of WarjJiasr been offered to Judge &emckr, of Iew York, vho now fills tie .CEce of secretary of State. r FRANKLIN'S PRINTLNTG PRESS. - r JLe New York 'Gommerciai Adveitiset states that through tlieexenians of Mr. John B. Murray, of New Dcai.Frintit Press at which the Philosopher Fbuk, lw, then a poor Printer, worked on liis first visit to 'Londohhas been placed at IVIr. Murray disposal and will be Sito : this country. A letter has been ad- dressed to Mr- John Vaugban, the President of the Philosophical Society in Philadelphia, of which Frank- in was the founder, offering that Society the possession of this valuable relic. HARD: MONEY CURRENCY. Capt. Shockley, of the; Brig Peri, arrived at New Bedford from tlibj WestercHslands, reports that a dis- tress&g drought prevailed thtoughout the Island, arid much sHtfering existed, particularly among the poorer classes.; "The hard cu rrencyr system, wjth wliich Fay- ai is messeu, enauies tnei lacorer to eain atiotit ten , ,; 1 3 ! . cents a day, upon which he is obliged tci live. We corqmend riiis evidence of the operation of the hard money srstem to! the consideration of the'i laborers of .1:1 A . . TEMPERANCE ' ! . eelfa strict Femperanca man, in some advice, which he gives'to the 1 advocates' of the cause through the National Intelligencer, sayg: ' Merj, must be persua ded, not drrven. i HAtility must not be unnecessarUy excited Those who do trot come in most le treated with kindness, and left to the workings of their own conscience ; which, if not stifled by passion, will gen erally, be effectual. It is that still small voice,wbis pered to the soul, that is effecting the great reform. Let itiot e browned in the voice of the angry pas sions. It is 7$ell to be arderitin a good cause, but the ardor itself may become intemperate." Cj Upwards of a thousand .names of substantial and respectiable citizens of Philadelphia, among whom are Merchants of the first standing, have been signed to the call for a meeting to renew their expression of confident in Bela Badger, whose nomination by the President of the United State's, as Naval Officer of the Port of Philadelphia wasVejected by the Senate. Mr. Badger 'has been accused of agency in the alleged frauds in sending on voters from Philadelphia to the elections in New York commonly. called ''pipe-laying." CONNECTICUT. The Whig State Central Committee i of this excel lent Whig Statej have published a very kind, concilia' tory and able address to the Whigs of the State of which the following is the concluding paragraph : " And, finally; Whigs of Con necticut,; let us be true to ourselves, and abandon notour principles and forsake .each otlier, even though disappointed in the conduct of 1.1: - our puuiic iuncnonaaes, aien are as noming in com parison with bur country and her noble jnstitutions- these, and these alone, are worthy ofthe best efforts of freejpent Let us stand around them with grappled hands, and permit neither friend or foe yj. mar their Beauty or destroy their usefulness.". WHIG ORGANIZATION. We like .the spirit andione of the subjoined Resol'u 'Jhp'fipt&ki0k rhceting by tTie Whigs of Boston : Hmt-rtMchg-iBaoUoaaot to U-Political ease w vineh mayjpxperience froiri the recklessness of political ene Hfvv5agvw --.ufc, vvuTci uppuaiLiuu iiicy a mies or the faithlessness qf:some who have formerly professed to&be friends, they will steadfastly adhere to the piiriciples,hyt which they have ever bejsn governed, Aud will continue united in The bands of nolitaJ bro therhood,' unl they see dieir Country redeemed from 1 me uepius 01 uisirjss anu emoarrassmem uywuicu n was involved 'by? the oppressive and ruinous reigns of Jackson and Van BrJren. Resolved, Tl it is tfie intention oflthe Whigs of Boston to use their utrpofet exertions to maintain the supremacy, of order and good government and to sup press the traitorous efforts of Ioco Focoism 3nd.Agra-riauism---atid that it is their firm detertfiiuation to car ry out the principles for which they fought so strenu ously in the great Revolution of. the'last year, which resulted in the election of that immortal Chieftain, William Henry Harrison. 4 ' , rfj" Iq a Sermon on the death of "William He$ Ht Harrisost, delivered by the Rey.ACOB F. Price, the following incident connected -with puc-Revolution- xary history is mentionedio illustrater how deep .j - J . J ' . , . , 1 , . were the pious sentiments of the patriot-fathers who signed the ' Declaration of fntlepenHence : " On the everjmemorable 4th July, 1776, when that bandof enlightetied patriots and sages, called the Con tinental Congress,-with sad hearts and dejeeted coun-- tenances, were deliberating on the: Declaration or American Independence, they reached, a foifit pending these deliberations when all hearts Were faint, and all countenances deeply sad, and it was feared by many that the decision won Id. be against that instrument. The destiny of the nation being in even balances, the slightest influence would have thrown our fate either way. We had reached the point that was to decide our destiny for weal or for woe. Ai that solemn, awful yet gloriously Werftful. crisis, that patriot, sage statesman, philosopher, and we trust, Christian, Ben jamin Franklin, rose in his place and moved " tftai we have prayer' The motion was carried without a dissenting voice, Dr. John Wilherspoon, a Scotch Presbyterian clergyman, who was a member of that- Congress, was called upon to. otter! up the prayer. While that prayer.wis offered, ap, American Indepen dence was born. Tjiese noble men rose from their beaded knees, and igne3 in solemn silence the Decla ration that sealed our Independence and made us a NEW GRfST M1LU 4 Mr. J11P.M Mason, of this City, has invented a Grist MiTtl, to be worked by a balance-lever, and is capable of being accomodate4 to hand ur horse power.. The model, which we! have seen, fully illustrates tlie in-, vention; and .the v invention itself is ingenious and promises valuable advantages to such as may desire to avail themselves jof itf Farmers andj planters, whose possessions are e? tenlive, and , who reside at sme dis tance from Water Mil's,' will undoubtedly derive (the inost substantial benefits from Mr. Mason's invention, should it fulfil onr expectations ; and indeed, there are titLei when evenj Water Mills fail, in some sections, during which all classes would le agreeably relievl and accommodated by the possession and use of this New Grist MilL ! ' - v.';:1: " . . We hope 'such substantial encouragement will be oTtended to Mr. Masort. as will enable him to put his lavention into full and successfuS operation. Star. ": y ''y. .' I' .' 1" ' vKOBRESSb jWiiiGaEBTV The f. Western -Whig 6anoerpubSisHed :at ;LincolntQnlt. X3. has been ascorJunued for want of patronage, ji - i . .- j , , ;., . ----- o w . . - .v, ThcExtra Standard, published at RalefghvN. CM has 1 ii! .! .L-- 1 J "e t C- nnnn i- - - Since writing thq above, w see the 4 Bah- tier has been revived and is likelo live? arid firihtSwianv a battle sore.,' iand Todoubi gain many a jedhquest. :-nSut-ivJrat of thi Extra 1 fHighlund:iUikeSigtr. . ?OR THE BEGISTER. THE DEW-DROP." j BY JAMES MACKAY, A. 31. How pure how bright is the tiny thin It beams where the birds of the morning sifi ; Tls like a tear from an Angel's eye, Or a pearl flung down Xroa die vtfrnal sky, . As it weds the fiowerson the grassy lawn.- In the" silver cup rjf thei daisy' it lies - On the breast of the primrose in love ft sighs ; On a pathway of smiles it shall glide to the sun, In a chariot of incense its course shall be run, To return again on a sunset ray, And relate .to its darling the sports of the day. The emblem of virtue, unsullied it seems The emblem of beauty we see in our dreams; 'Tisa pledge of faith, by. die breeze to be given, With holy vows to the clnuds of heaven. Oh! who can tell but the fairies keep Their nightly watch where the dew-drops sleep ! When the rose-buds blow to unfold each charm ; When, the air is rich, and the green earth warm ; :.'Tis then that the dew-drop shines most bright, 'Tis ther that it rivals the diamond's light, -As it bidsJarewell to the suuny scune, - ; .. .ndwferw into ai where its bower has been. Some of the Locofoco papers bein to think they have carried their game of deception towards Mr. Ty ler far enough : and they are now" speaking out, as all pf'them.will do soon. The N. Y. Evening Post has the following : " Mr. Tyler and hit Cabinet. It is not bur busi ness to defend Mr. Tyler. He is a Whig in grain; was elected as such, surrounded himself by a Whig Cabinet, has removed thousands of Democrats from office, and has approved of the repeal of the sub-treasury. He has, therefore, no claims upon us." The leading. Iocofoco Journal in Alabama thus dis courses : "The President has approved the distribution bill. We hope those Democrats, who are so ready to take him up for his Bank Veto will find sufficient reason for dropping him hi his approval of this iniquitous measure. It certainly destroys all chance for him with the Democratic party, while his Bank Veto had al ready kilfed him with the Whigs." Naval Accident. The French Corvette L'Anrirer, Capt. Gamier, of 16 guns, dropped down to Hampton Roads yesterday morning. JSorfolk Beacon. IticnMoxD Superior Court.- We learn that at ihe above Court, last, week, Judge Bearson presiding-, the trial of Edmund D. Martin and CoL Thomas Waddill, lor the murder bf young May,-took placeand re sulted in a verdict of Guihv, Martin of Mur der, and Waddill of Manslaughter. The Judge sentenced Martin to be hanged on Friday the 29th inst. (but an appeal was taken to the Suprerhe Court, which suspends the sentence for six months,) and Waddill to be branded in the hand, which sentence was carried into execution. The trial occupied Thursday and Friday, and the Jury were out 22 hours, until Saturday. For the State Solicitor Strange ; for the prisoners, Messrs. T6qmer,,Ecclcs, Little, Kelly and Giles. The triad had- been removed from Anson couaty. Fhvettevilte Observer. eft t ir -4 -t r.i We learn thai on Thurs day, the 23d uh. the wife of Mr. James Braddy, of Martin county ,'came to her death in a veryisudden and shocking manner. Mr. Braddy had shot a beef whith a double barrelled gun, vvheo his wife took the gun to carry into the house ; and on entering the house in stooping down for some purpose, it brought her head near the muzzle of the gun, the breech of which striking the floor at the same time, the other barrel went off and the contents passed through the head of Mrs. Braddy. She died in a few hours, never speaking nor moving, having left five small children ; and would probably have given birth-to another child in a few weeks, hud it not been for the above sad accident. '' Press. PUBLIC LANDS. . The able and luminous Speech of Mr. Bayuer will comnuutd attention. The sub ject is one of the most important, which has engaged the deliberations of the country. For the disposition made of it by the Whig partys during the last session of Congress, that party entitled itself to the gratitude of the country. Jf it had achieved no other one resultfor that, it should recei ve the thanks of the American--People. It was the most thoroughly State Rights measure, which has been adopted by Congress within the la$t 20- years. Richmond Whig. Nutmegs. A correspondent wishes to caution the public through the medium of our paper, against the deleterious effects of a too free use of Nutmeg. He says ; " Having recently purchased the article, I look' a broken one and put it into my pocket, and in the course of six hours, I had eaten about half of one. Soon after, I felt a dizziness, and an unaccountable de rangement of intellect transient biss of memory yet a perfect consciousness of alt that I satd. or did. I be came remarkably loquacious and seemed to be neither in this world nor the other felt Iwppy and free from dnv pain -I was truly "in ah ah inuescnb.ibie state. I felt as I have supposed one.might feel, that had been magnetized. My friends were- greatly alarmed, and the doctor was sent for, post .haste. Bleeding was proposed but, as I thought I knew at least as much as. any one, I was not willing to be bled After keeping them laughing and crying till about l'l o clock at night, I retired to bed, without arry thing having been done for me. I awoke in the morning, and was as well as usual, having never been sick a day in my life. Since this occurrence, several cases have come to my knowl edge in which persons having eaten of nutmeg, were affected the same as I had been. Jlad I eateri a very little more I bave no doubt it would hive proved fatal, as I learn it has been, in other cases." Whig fkeliito. In all the Whig meet- mgs v 7 1'of the ings which have been held, in consequence resignation of the late Cabinet, there does not appear to have been one voice rai sed in justification of Mr. Tyler's treatment of those gentlemen. Among all. the Whig papfefS-ite have seen or heard of, Ihe Madi sonian is" the only one, and in all our inter- course with members, of our party, we have not met with one, who justifies trim. Fayetteville Observer. ' . Archimedes being asked Who was the jnasteT of Sparta t The laws, said ; he, and next them, the magistrates. - 4 J Si oulab BfiiDQE,The following U prt of k escriptiortv giveu in. the Boston Tran serip , ffXhe splendid exhibition and fair Th&thxhibition the Fair of the Mechanic rastJtewas opened this day at 12 o'clock, and ap pearanWtnliicatethai Jit will jar excel either pf, the pTTi08iie At this early stage ii : is impossible to IwfbjrB&li It occupies thfir(ybolef Faneuil and Cjuincy Hallst they being tpoflected fcy a bridg4 extended from the second story bf the one to ttie ott&l ThUtHidge, or more proper ly it might be called a tunnel, is itself a great curiosity It' is of a cylindrical - form, ninety feet in length and tsn feet in diameter. If is composed of narrow strips if ,board,Vrossing each other angularly,! like lattice ork, and Resembling open basket Work. These are riveti d together, and the bridge, notwithstanding its ength,,will easily sustain the weight of any number pf persons who cmild be crowded inti it. It was in dented by Mr. Isaiah Rogers, Architect, for which in- vntion he, secured a patent more than a year aga, and Jit isj now for the first time exhibited. An experiment was! made with it before it was put up, by placing the end$ on two abutments, and a weight of three thousand pounds being placed in the centre, did not settle it a quarter of an inch. It is one of the most ingenious pices of mechanism at the present exhibition. OT" The Enquirer, and the few other Lo calFoco prints, which were so indiar-nant whien Mr. Ogle exhibited catalogues of the urmiure in the President's house, applyig to him 4 h e iib&t d en r ad in bit hf si f ef h mfr --5. . ' 1 o thd atfticJes used at the funeral of ,the iflus- triousf narrison, and wrtch were, as they ought to have been, paid for hy, the public for if members of Congress, trying at Wash- ingtoit, are buried at the"" public expense, whv should not an American President , be J entitled to tlie same melancholy honoi ? let ae these sensitive gentlemen parading crape?, coffins, hearses, scarfs, winding sheets, and all the gloomy appendages of the grave) before the people, with thefr pri ces annexed, for the purposes of creating political capital. Surely, if Mr. Ogle was a scullion, thev are hyenas the onlv animal that prowls among the tombs ? Lynchburg Virginian. 0!?" The Enquirer asks, 44 Is tliere one Southern State which will consent to strike the shield pf the Veto power from the hands of a Southern President, -and thus deprive us of'lTpe of the great weapons to- save us from tdije attacks of the Abolitionists I" To which'we reply, that, when the veto be- comesf;our only sl)ield of defence, the con stitution itself will not be in existence. Whenever the Abolitionists are strong enough to command a majority in both Houses of Congress, in which event only can this 44 shield" be used, the Union will be dissolv ed. For lhat purpose, therefore, it can never'! be exerted and for all other objects, it is more often it sword than a shield resisting the people's will, instead of maintaining the people's rights. Lynch. Yirg. IXCIDEXT OF A WllALlXG Voi'AGE. The Messrs. Appleton have published a hand some- volume with this title, illustrated (not very much embellished) by a number of lithographic engravings. The author is a son of Professor Oltustcad, of Yale College, and irntfJiSf id n ; ulr. at th$i l4i st,i iJUilStLar: yoyhgCHwJBan made a ttiree years vo age in a Ketv London whaling Ship to' the. Paci fic for'th benefit of his health ; and he lias really mde out a very graphic and interest ing volume from his adventures. He sailed with Cait. Nathaniel Richards, in tlie good Ship North America not as a foremast hand, like youad Dana, but as a Passenger, under the aus ices of his uncle, the owner of the Ship, ai4 with all the prestige of College honors tibon him. He seem nevertheless, to nave entered into me spirit Ol Hie voyage, and to likve ehioved it verv much. His de- r. t'..i r . i I ------ " - J J an ri nt irn nrp hp l:irp sav. f;iithl'nl nrul snmfi r . i - i 'rni .i c i I of.thera-are very vivid. Ihe style of his book is ood, and considering the freshness of the tlie author from College, is remark a- hlV sublhted and judicious.' Even an old r, , - , i- ,, : i, i i Salt would see but little 'college learning in it, to hfid fault with ; While the more literary he had one, it has never come to the writer's knowl reader will" admire it for the general ability edge. He has left a disconsolate mother and a large of the composition, as well as quiet quaint- ncss-Q&'s0!ne,of J-ts descriptions. The Hartford Patriot is not far from right when it declares th main political question among the Whigs to be, "whether lohn Tvler or Henry Cluy is Presi dent of the U. S." Madisonian. This is pleasant andonciliafory espe cially from the " official ortran." No true Wlug couia propose or enaorse sucn a sen- ttmetlt. I his sort of gatne might as well be stnnned at OuCe. -Alexandria Gazette. " . , r -1 .1 II n.iviiccs. m ou.ivu.- tng country to a degree never perhaps known before. Nor is the epidemic confined to thia sjprtion : we learn that it is rao-ino in the MMWinffmiint;rsrflYivifte,in and Rmvan. The deaths that occur are very-few, consider ing the uncommon prevalence of the disease. The cause of u'nhealthfulncss must be more general) than the mill-ponds thoughoiit the COUJUrVi.-riO which it was.-uisi... aiiijuutru through fche, local i n fluencpf a fdul rwrd is nbJ;doybt extremely deleterious,- aiMin c alartnuig. Our village has so far escaped admirably . Greensborough ratrtot. la cortsequenee of the sickness of all our tunda tbft rtiihl if.atinn of our" naoer has been , r-r. . . v unavoidably postponed from the regular day .1 v T. of publication until thy tunc. . We regret IQ say, wnUSt on mis suojeci, mai our town, for: the last two or three weeks, has been ttnustiallrVickly, afid that we do not remem- feef wheniso many of our citizens have been " , r . ir M severe anitcveu wuu u.i.ou..W. JoHM;LoeA3fi of Gu.lford, received the higb ffear that the excessive rams, and the conse- egt nQmber of voteRfor said office of Brigadier Gene- quent stagnatron of water in our cellars and loiplaoes, have produced this unsual sick- n&kL-Nenbern Spectator. , V : .;; VIr.ie 19 dubbed with the title of Mr. rfeqairemcnt of the eleventh Section of the seventy rifh,Tin -VThalVnot ont of the wav. third Chanter of the Revised Statutes, that the said - S " T Yesj andMr.: Profl5t of la. is dubbed with the title ot Like-wise. That's in the way. Picayune. - Yes, and Mr: Mallory of Va. should be called Wat'tcise. That's by the way. MR. LNGEfcSOLL'S lOd DAY EXPOSE. A letter from G. J. Inerso!l of Philadel phia (the mah who has siiid if he had lived during the Mine of thfe Revolution, he should havk been . Tory) lo hrs.consiit uents, is heralded forth-ia the Globe as l a brief but comprehensive and pointed hiatorv L9C'Ab.ehtUilrp4gJ)f 'Federalism, which nave just come to a clo?e or rather CaUisfrb phe,, AH Mr. Ingersoll'i feelings and bpin ions, are Locofoco. Hisj letter is an artful attempt so to arrange the Legislative and other incidents of the last'One hund ted days; so to pervert many of the feets and causes of those incidents so to color and distort, and place before the people, the measures of the Whigs since the opening of Congress, as to create alarm, even among the Whigs, in the hope of aiding in the dismemberment of the party. and jii promoting his own selfish vieVs, and of facilitating the destructive course of Locofocoisih He pretends to re gard the difficulties among the Whis"'4 in evitablc, resulting from the organization of a V ice Royalty over, the .President, ind the unrelentiog ptirsuit of I' frly purposes,'? y PresKtcnt, of course, and exults in the diffi cullies among the 1 -Whigs, which he" affects to, regard a ; sealing their doom 44 while a compact minority btooJ fast upon the rozk of tljeir well known principles, merely await ing", eventuality.'' The letter is, no" doubt, got up and publishetl in tlie hope of opera ting upon Whigs, and facilitating a dissolu tion of the party It remains for the Whigs themselves, to say whether this insidious ef fort of their worst j enemyi shall yield them the fruit anticipated. We are quite sure that no genuine Whig will listen to the ma chinations of Charles J. lngersoll, for a sin gle instant. Cincinnati Gazette. A r r . . I .i I i 1 removals in tins btate this den of Loco ro coism tnucli to the disappointment of the Whig party, who have been proscribed for the last 12 years. Petitions have gone for ward for the rauKivUl of our Postmaster, and the District Attorney, noiie of which, as yet, have been acted upon. Tlj,s has produced more dissatisfaction with or friends thau the Vetoes, as the President, in his address, said that an inteiference in elections by 'Of fice holders, openly or covertly, should be a sufficient cause of removal. The Whigs of this City now call. upon the President to ful fil this pledge, as good, or better men may be found in the Whig ranks to fill these res ponsible and valuable offices; and 1 he re moval of these pro;iritnt Locos would serve as i rebuke ;to the- self-confidence, exulta tion, arrogance and insolence that have been exhibited in the ranks of Loco-Focoism since the reception of the : -Vetoes:. Mobile Chronicle. In Pendleton, c. (J. Moritraville Patton, .sq. to Miss Maria L. Haukeit ol Fianklin couuty, Georgia. In tliis City, at the reeidence of Mr. James McKim nion, on Wednesday nioriiin. ut 1 o'clock, Dr. Ar thur Nelson, aged about 50 a native of Frederick town, Maryland, and eldest son of the late gallant Gen. Roger Nelson. Dr. N. was formerly a Surgeon in the U. S. Arm, but; had been connected with the Post Office Department for many years, and was, at the time of his-death, a travelling. Post Ornoe Agent. Duriij'i his residence in this City, he acquired that. . i-.i- general respect ana ewceui to which ins exemplary conduct and gentlemanly dc,ortmeiii justly entitled In Warren counrr, on the 23d ultimo, very iuh!en- , R V1S1 .to lns r,i,tln,. Mr. Wiiiin, J. Ridley, eldest sou of the late Dr. James. D. Riuley.nl Wake Forest, in the 24 th year of his age. Tlie writer f tl,is commumcation has been acquainted with ri.e deceased during his hie, andean truly say that no An poS5essed a ner heart and fewer enemies-it circle oi relations ana irienus io lament uis ueain. . In the vicinity of Fayetiteville, on Wednesday last, John W. Iluske, Bsq. Attorney at Law, aged 82 years. It is long since the seeds ol that fatal disease, Con sumption, had takea root in his system, from which neither medicine, hp travel, nor the hoies and pray ers of family nd friends were able to eradicate them But he was ripe lor Heaven ; and Heaven has taken its own lu very early manhood, he became a com municant of the Episcopal Church, and has since " walked worthy ot his high vocation Riclmrd y. Cromanie, aged about 27 years. He had been a professor of Religion and a memler of the Presbyterian Church for the last hve years. He lias I 1 r. 1 . : , .f i.. M ...1.1 : .-. leu a iar2c Circle ui iiienua miu iciauuua iu inuuiii iiitii lUS?, UUl lliuoill liui 13 uiW3t vmiuui I"' a. iyi I t . . ! . - ...,..... nn ra . ei i t li -.it t 1 iM.l (Vw they are weji assured from the evjtlence lie Iclt behind that he has met a .rich reward in the skies. At Hilliardston, Nash county, James II. son of Mr. Jonas J. Carr, of Sparta, Louisville, Ky, on tiie 17th ol June last, Mrs. Eliza Fox, aed 5! years, consort of the late Lark' Fox, Esq- formerly pf North Carolina, after a litigf.r- in illness ol 12 months, whieu sue bore with Clins- tiaa fortitude-. ( At Mobile, on the! 22d inst. Henry Ward. Printer, a v,- :,,. rtf Priotlim nnitf T I l(TPrl SklMlt All V(fl f. i ... . .e.Mr. 1 J Tl.iighbolibo4f-ite deWasectbas lst one oit mbst valuable meo disposition. OFFICE OF ADJUTANT GENERAL, RiLEisu, October 6, 1841. Whereas vacancies have recently occurred in the l , ... . . . . . r:.,in 01 iaJor "e "l ''v " u 7 . Brigadier General of the Eighth Brigade of North-Ca- a - tf fiJ which bEleclions have been held and accor(rnT to Act of Assembly, in such cases made and provided. And it appearing from the return of votes made to me, that Sisrcfct A. Daito, of Rockiris- nam, receiveu me m?ae nu, . fice of Maior GeneraL and is duly elected thereto, ami raif aBj l3 juiy elected thereto, I have officially mad known the same to His Excellency, Johjc M. Moae HKad, Governor of the State, who has issued Com I o .1 A T..lV A.Aa inmmiuiniuil as' MaiOr nnoral of ihe Ninth Division, and that the said John jf. ftoaan is duly commiasioued as Brigadier General of the Eiahth Brigade of North-Carolina Militia, and as sucn, an uincers auu ouwihi.mb ituuv. j 1 it rr 1 .1 1 ! - . A ...itmul li v IP It! them their ready obedience. ROBERT W. HAYWOOD, ; ' Adjutant Gen"l. to hoHJ up IViddiirTyleptsSul &f- c.uamitv 01. v mil contro. 1 lie oraura nib h i . . - " .. .. . j - ' i ' 1 r Tirr 1 t. ilUSE AWD LOT Thn SiifWrlW -S 4bi HOUSE rt'n l.nr ?TIfe Stliai-triV itimSAn ' Uourt of P!e nd 4;irfef tSessioim pf Wake ComV ty, qualifiod as Admiifitrat.r on the'EsUte 'of Eli- -aleli Sihiibr decpUf drf herehv gl vci ' ftotice to ail th se wbo' have claims against the E?a,te, Krpfesrti't lb4m withiij Uie time jrescribed by law; or tblsiiotko will le pleadin baf of feeovry. - " . J.N O. H. JONES, Adra'r. Wte County, October 7, If 41. 81 6t OOKS, BOOKS, COOK.Jat ccived at the North Carolina iiookstai'. Fayi legate Street.. Raleigh; N. C. ' T - The 'JVken and Atlantic Souvenir, far 1342, cm- IwllisHed with beautiful Eagraviug: . , Hallani Iueritare i if Europe. ; liuckinghioi'a Travel ui America. , ; Democracy in America, by octjiievDla,? in .. vol. A ii iv edition. - .-.:: iril-., venient Bwelling, for amall familj, eligibl situate . ; ' ?sft n aqu1etneighboA.ixJ;atidivifact;rpdsscsse thj '-t' ' ' tfUvaiitagesofkaifo7ubleresidfenceA . . - tJ ' J.D. ROtSTfin!; ' i October 7j. 184 C - u ; -8? m'T Ino.leBt.s vr Ti vel in Cli1 ral A , trtcriciv Umis, v R- JiJS ttWL 'IN KALEIG1. -Ann PulUana Mm & JjllterS respcctfujly announce W ihe public, tbat nutwithstandins; they haye befiri greatly embarrassed and distressed by " thV beavy .wes they sustained by the late destruction oi tlieir forrarr stand and other properly, by fire thev have been enabled t,o fit up their .large and commoilt oua building immediately in the .rear 'of the Cape Fear Bank, as a Hotel, where thpy are' prepared toaccom. modate Travellers and others in as agreeable and com-. fortiTile a nfenner, and upon as reasonable ierm. as can be prscurld at any Public House in the City. They will entertain.. 1st, Transient Visiters', and take good care of their hordes: " . j- -' 2dlyj Heguhir Boarders by the month or year, to lodue either in or' out of their home : 3dly, Families, who can be furnished with rooms ciuy iiiiuu lirccbtiUV III uuiuiuibicr iu uicir COU1' and satisfaction. Th-. ir house is pleasantly and conveniently situated being but little more than a hundred yards east ol the Court House, and sufficiently near the heart of bu siness. Their Table shall always be supplied with tbo ltet the market affords their SUhlet wilb an abun dance of Provender and trusty Ostlers every neces sary attention from themselves and servants ohall at all times he given ; and they flatter themselves, from the agreeableness bf their location; the extent of thir accommodations, a"nd their long ex per ence, they will ' be a hie to please all who may favor them with their custom. They avail themselves of this occasion to offer their sincere thanks to the public, for the abtanlial evi- derice of partiality and kinkness which they have re ceived for a series of years at their hand, and earnest ly' to solicit a .eqritinuation of that favor,, in this their time of greatest need when struggling against the waves of misfortune, and when their fate is suspend ed upon it. , Raleigh, Oct. 5, 1841. St cow3t UST received at the EdffeVTOrtll SdlOOl. a large supply of new and fashionable MtTSIti,' coiisititinj of " '- Songs for Piano and Guitar, English, French r Hiid Italian . . , , - ' . Marches . " Waltzes . . Cotillions and Quadrilles Dinces Variaiion, Overtures, Duetts, &c. 6ic. &'e. Otto Torp's and Hunter's Musical I nstuctors Bu row's Musical Primer A liheml discount will be made to Teachers and other whole-ale purchasers, Apply to D. P.' WEIR. Ore. usbmough, N. U. October 1, 1841 81 11 lite Edg-CWOrlh School, Greensboro' iV (.; An assortment of PIANOS just received from a cele brated Northern Manufacturer, which in point of. tone and finish, cannot be excelled. f Those wishing to purchase a good and fashionable Instrument, would do well to examine them. They will be sold at the PUiladebhi retail 400. " ''T D, P. WEIR. Orcenslwo', N. C. October 1. 81 rTTVIE present Session of the Ettsreworth Schoot will close ou Thursday the 2 1 t ot October. The Winter Sesion .will commence on Tuesday the 1 1th of November, and continue five months. It is desirable that our pupils should be present at the beginnius, or as early in the Session as possible. D. 1 . WE1K. Grrcns:oro Oct. 1. 81 BLANKS, FOR SALE AT THE RALEIGH REGISTER ' AND KOKTU-CAKOLINA. OAZETTUi QfflCR. lerUs; of Courts. AttcuTHcn r JSUc j med that laree ttitton hav jost been madi" to lia.S and ConsiilDICW, are nereoy; in Superior Court flanks; VVrits, Executions, Jory and IWitbesi Tickets, Pros- ecution Bonds, Ua Sas, Indictment, v enmuoni CiX ,maC Capias', Sd. Fa'i. to revive Judgment De dimasses, Subpcenas, &c &c. County Court Blanks. . , Writs, Executions,, Subpoenas, Jury and Witne Ticket Prosecution Bonds, Ua. a s indictments, (Ruad, Assault and Battery and AffrayO Yen. Exp's., CapiasV 8ci. Fa's, to revive Judgment; Dedimvuses, Koad Orders, Guardian. Bonds, Ap prentices Indentures, Marriage, Licences, 8ci. Fa's, for Forfeited Recognizance, Notices to Guardians, Bastardy Bonds. Sci. Fa's, against Heirs, Adminis tration Bonds, Appeal Bonds, Appcarance'Benda, &C. &C. V . Miscellaneous : Constables WarranW. Do.Ca. 8a. Bonds. Aitath, , ments; Deeds ol st, mm 01 ohj, muhin. Deedsof Conveyance, Fortbcomin? Bonds, Sherut Bail Bonds, Deeds for Land sold for Trnxea, WnW of Ejectment, Insolvent Debtors Petition and Oath, various kinds of Equity Blanks, Bank Checks, &c., Raleigh Register. Oitice, ? i ' May 28, 1841. 5 rrj Orden for any kind of B t ah k. not mentioned in the"" alve list, vrtllbe execuUd With; the utmost despatch and neatnesB. v L ; V - - 5. " v ffiZS5Sa5ftr..;.AN 4. af, i-1 ft 2i 4 - t ii i I n 1 t T 1 f L i -ft r 5 iV.-i'-'nv-;"'-,,v''' .iri' , . V... 4- I- i 4 Ml- r. .lit r i - - y.
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 8, 1841, edition 1
3
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