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the western carolinian the pow ems not to the tmiten states by the by it to the > s;o the states , oh ro nn i'kiii'lk — amendments in the comtilution articlt v 13 austin & c f fisher ) i hit r and proprietor s salisbury jv c septe 27 1839 < no xv of vol xx i wliolr no i oos i'liu.ms of he began by dilating on ihe oimei.se commercial importance of a punctual delivery of letters thoncu ho insisted on the heavy responsibility of lie captain with the promise of an early return pricket from holyhead ; and ho was rule ing into u congratulation on the line less of the weather when the original thought it tune to cut luui short " my dear sir you'll eicuse me the case is no body's but my own voir aro a regular pussenger vou havo a right to bu in this packet you have a right to go lo holyhead or liverpool or to uib rulier or lo llie world's end if — you — like hut / choose lo he in dublin what right have i to be here then not — one — atom ! i've no right to be ui this vessel ; and the captain there knoevs it i've no right stamping lo bo on tins deck 1 have no inoru right to bu tossing nt sea waving ins arms up and down than the pigeon house " it is a vei y uupluusunl s iu.it 1 allow sir tor i am this night ndvertised at your — no not nt yodr theatre — al the theatre of leicester for steady lhc hunker and it so happens thru there is not a druss fur the character which is highly complimentary to your people independent ofthe want of elicct from a bad dress i am truly morn - lied to do discredit to so respectable a body as yours in fact part of my own family were origi nally of your profession my dear sir ami ibis is an 11 mm mil reason why i am anxious to do ull possible honor to tho revered society uf friends — iu short my worthy sir without your assistance i shall como bofore all the gentry uf leicester in a dieas very degrading to the proverbial neatness of your sect will you lend mo one of your suits ? ', i t ou and 1 are ofa size and iu so doing you will at once show the liberality of your character and i keep up ihu respectability of the udi ruble body of , people so deservedly esteemed by all the world uml by none more than charles incledon sam slick himself with lus " soft sawder und " humnn natiir could not have dor.o it belter nud ' ihe ellect was proportionate the chymisl lo ibo i surprise of matthews melted by thu eloquent ap j '• peal lo lhc honor of bis sect not only lent a suit i of clothes bul yielded to the persuasions of the singer to be put 111 a private corner ! tu be nn un seen witness ofthe maimer in which tho stage up hold his persuasions thai he was charmed with { steady there is no doubi tor he readily confessed 1 1 tbia lo incledon on his reluming lie suit of clothes j i — life of mattheirs again fixed his eyes upon mo " sir i'll trouble ou — fur tho pickles repealed lv nftei 1 nine " well there they are replied i wishing lo sue what he would do — " sir ure yon a gentleman — as a gentleman i ask y,.u aa u gentleman for them ere pickles it wus impossible lo resist this appeal so 1 rose noil helped hint 1 wbi ee convinced 1h.1t his vision wns somehow .... ihe inverted and to prove it when be nske.l me for lhc suit which wus eeill in h.s reach i re veil 1 farther od " thank ye sir said he sprawling i over llie luble alter it the circumstance absorb ' as it was was really a subject for tha investigation j of dr hrcevster false delicai \ . ti.e wester . carolinian is published every i'm i.tv at two dollars per annum 1 paid in advance or two doners and fifty cents if not paid before thc ex piration of throe months nn paper will be discontinued until all arrearages _ rt . paid unless at thn discretion of the editors ; nnd a failure to notify the editors of n wish to discontinue i i end of a year will be considered as a new en • i anient advertisements evill be roiispiciioi.sly nnd correctly ted nt one dollar per squsre for the lirst insertion ami "". cuts tor each cout.uunuco court and ju.hc.nl advertisements will be chsrged 2fi p.-r cent more than the above prices a deduction ol '•'•'■!_ p«t cenl from • ■„■regular prices will be made to early advert rs advertisements sent in ii.r p blicnt un must line ll.e number ol t imos marked on them or they ee 11 ba inser ■nil forbid and charged f.r accordingly letters addressed to th editors n busutess must be ', unit paid nr ihey evill not be attended to the most r.-r likable ira.ts in the chur kcter of ibe aiiiericun women is u.e.r extreme i ml sluiosl excessive modesty it has been nu luced by captain mary ult and almost ull foreigners leem have travelled among us mrs trollope levhose book cannot be so desiltute of trulh und justice no some huvo pretended since it has roach ed the fourth american edition i.e alludes to tins point ui me character ol our country women und aba illustrates it with suinn vury laughable ex amples i'be conversation between a gentleman una u lady about a shirt evhich she gives us in one uf her chapters 11 which the ge.ilie.niin tries ull his skill 10 muke thu ludy confess whnl sort uf [; it garment she is mukiug ; and thu ludy on her ' pail doubles every wuy uses ull her ingenuity j uud results ul last to downright liilsohood lu avoid ! p 1.11111 ana so indecent a word us shin is very [ amusing unit is continued by almusl daily ex-pen 1 ence an ainenenn told mo ono day that a company hud been working nl a coal 11110 in .... eastern suite which prnvo'l to be of a very bad quality ; ihey had sent some lo an influential person us 0 present requesting him to givu his opinion of il as that would be important to them after a cer tain time he forwarded to ihem a cerliliculc couched in such terms as these ; " i do hereby certify hint 1 have tried lho coal sent to me by the company at — — , and it is my decided opinion that when thc general conflagration f the world shall take place any man who will lake bis position on ihul coal mine will cortainly bo the last man who will be burnt c.ipluiii lo the sloul passenger bul us i huve ll.e nro is more btrd.m a « inconvenience be hanged " exclaimed tho od w\w ' " v t " 0,,a " ll00d ' i day iu u pass at lusl " ll is no inconvenience viih 1 1 iiiii i i man whether abstract or real sir !— not llio — smallest .' bul uml makes no d.ller divu.u or vulgnr vested or eonleste.l civil or uu euce as to my being here it's llial ami ihul civil common r imcomnaoo imve been so frequent alone i dispute all right to ! " ly discussed lhat one would suppose there was " well but tuy deur good sir expostulated ihe nothing new i in fell or expressed on the subject pompous man admitting tho justice ol your pre i wus agreeably surprised therefore during a lale uiises uie hardship is confessedly without remedy passage from lielaiid to huur tho rights of nn in *> l'u be sure it is i said the cuplain every dividual asserted in so very novel n niniiner as tn i„ch ul it all 1 can bay is that tho gentleman's si.ru worthy of record the injured parly was passage shall be no expense to him an involuntary felloev passenger and tho first ihankee ol course nol suid llio original glance a i him af he leisurely nsernded the cabin wilh a snoor " i've no nghl to put my hund in slurs bespoke him an original his face figure my pocket nol that 1 mind expense but u's ray gait and gestures were all more or less eccentric riglil 1 stand up tor and i dely you both to prove eel without riny apparent affectation of singularity that 1 have any riglil or any shadow ofa right to h.s manner was perfectly earnest nnd business be in your company ! i'll toll you what skipper — like though qunint on reaching ihe deck his but belore ho could tiuish the sentence lie turned first movement wus toward the gnngway bul a mo suddenly pale made a most grotesque wry face and ment sufficed to acquaint him wilh lhe state of lhe rushed forward lo the bow ofthe vessel the cap case the lettor-hags having lienn detained an tain exchanged a significant smile with the stout hour beyond the usual lime of departuro the steam gentleman but belore they had quite spoken their hail been put on ut a gallop nnd her majesty's mail minds ol llie absent character lee came scrambling packet iho uuebre had already accomplished back to thc pinnacle upon which he rested wilh some hundred fathoms on ber course this unto both hands while lie thrust his working visage ward event however scemod rather to surprise within a loot or two ol lhe skipper's face than annoy our original who quietly stepped up lo " there skipper ! now misler what d'ye call ! the eapluin with the air of demanding what was w |, ttt do you buih say to thut 1 what right have 1 merely n mutter of course to bo sick — as sick us a dog i've no right to be " hallo skipper ! olf she goes eh but you must squeamish i i'm ot a passenger i've no right to turn about my buy uml let me get out gu tumbling over ropes aud pails aud what not lo " lei you gel out ?" echoed the astonished skip the ship's head 1 per nnd ugiiin repeating it with ihe musicians cull » bul my good sir began ihe pompous man a srurcaln " lei — you — get — nul ?" " don't sir me sir i you took your own pas exactly so i'm going ashore sage vou have a right to be sick you have a " i'm rather afraid you aro not sir said the riglil lo go lo ihe side every rive minutes you'vo skipper looking dec.de.lly serious unless you a right to die of it bul it's the reverse with me allude lo llio oihir si.lo i've uo right ofthe sort " tlie other siilo exclnimod the oeldily invol " u certainly nol sir said the pomposity of untarily turning lo england " poo ! pno ! non fended in his turn " you are indubitably lhe best sense man ; i only came to look at your acco.nmo judge of your own privileges i only beg to be ni dations i'.r not going across with you ; i'm not lowed lo remark thai whore i felt 1 had so little upon my word 1 nghl 1 should hesitate to intrude myself so " i musl beg your pardon sir said the captain saying he bowed very formally and commenced quite solemnly " bul it is my firm opinion thai his retreat lo the cabin while the skipper pretend you ore going across !" ed to examine the compass very minutely in fact " poo ! p ! ..!! gammon ; i tell you i am go our or ig m i | w d mel with a choko pear the fal ing back lu dublin man's answer was too much tbr bim being framed " upon my word then said tho skipper rather on a principle clean contrary to his own peculiar briskly " you must swim buck like a grampus or system of logic the more he tried to unravel us borrow a pair of wings from ihe gulls meaning the more it got entangled he did'nt the man at llie helm grinned bis hroa.losl at \^ b h without knowing evhy ; and he quite disa what ho thought a good joke of his officer's while greed with it though ignorant of its pur|iort he the orig.uul turned round parodied a hyena's laugh looked up al lhe funnel and at the deck and down at the fellow and then returned to lhe charge lne companion stairs and then wound up all by a cine come skipper it's quite as far out as i | 011 , ana k,*of the head as mysterious as lord bur care for ; if you want in treat me to a sail !" leigh's at lhe astonished man at he wheel his " treat you to a sail ?" roared the indignant offi lmlk j seemed made up he buttoned his coat up cer " zounds sir i am in earnest — as much in t0 , he vur y chin as if to secure bimselt to linn-urll earliest us ver i was in my lile ant \ never opened his lips again till the vessel '• so much lhe belter answered ihe original ; touched lhe quay at holyhead the captain then " i'm or joking myself and havo no right lo be attempted a final apology but it was interrupted in joked upon the middle joke or no joke said iho enptain all i " enough said sir quile enough if you've on know is ihis the u.l bags nro on board and ifs j j oiie y 0ur duty you've no right to beg pardon inure than my post is evorth lo pul back anf j i e ,.„ right lo ask it all i mean to say is " eh ? whal ? how i exclaimed the ld.lv wilh | iere am i ( j holyhead instead of dublin i don't a lort of nervous dance ; " you astonish me ! do care w ;, al [>,„• hit fellow says who don't understand do you really mean to say i'm obliged to go his own rights i stick to all i said before i hnve — whether i've a right or not v no right so be up in the moon have 1 ? of course " i du indeed sir ijdj'.n sorry for it hut it can't j , lol an d i ve „,, mor8 right to stand on this quay he helped ; my orders are positive tho moment j t (, a „ 1 nav e to be up iu the moon ! " tho mail i on hoard i most cast oil • indeed well—but you know evhy why j incledon am t1i1-t quaker thai s your duly not mine i have no right lo be ... ., east ii ! i have no right lo be here at all ! i have one night when matthews and incledon joined no right t be seen any where except in merrion i the leicester company in passing through they square i j agreed to perform in ibo musical pioco of lhe ' qua i'he captain was bothered he shrugged up his : ker incledon to play " s'e«dy it was not un shoulders then gave a low whistle then plunged ■til his name was in the playbills that lie discov his hands , n his pockels then gave a loud order to ored lhe liarenness ol the wardrobe it did not con ii i.,,ls to do something somewhere or other tan a fragment of the quaker costume incledon bi..1 ii !>..„,,„ to walk short turns on the deck always excitable wss now wretched an attempt to his captive in lhc mean lii.i.r made hasty si rules patch up a dress made him more miserable still towards the stern as if intending lo leap over at last as lie and matthews were lounging up the hoard ; bul be suddenly stopped short and took a principal ireel incledon caught sight of a portly bewildered k at tbe reeling enn-t the ori quaker standing at the door ofa chvmist s shop ginal wr w.es visibly increasing in length charles my dear boy nd iiicledim winking , breadth and depth every minute and he again his eyes his habit when peculiarly pleased do confiontcd ihe captain ><*■«*'« •■■"-' ttuaker there ? what a dress he has " w,||,ski|,|s'r vou've tbougbl belter of it i've on jusl my size 1 ve a good mind charles lo no right in the world have 1 ? you will turn her ask him lo loan it lo me for lo-mght absurd ! round ."• i win matthews " vou could not think of such a totally impossible sir quite out of my thing " my dear boy said incledon only con | power sidnr what a comfort it would lie to me instead of i " very well very well very well indeed !" that trumpery suit from the wardrobe i'll go in , r.ginal'a temper was gelling up as wel as and ask bim ; ho looks likes good natured creature the sea accordingly in he walked inquired of obadiah i jl mind air i protest ; i proles against for some quack medicines and after some small , i"u sir and against the ship and ihe ocean sir purchases he began in h.s blandest manner to ad and every tin ! i'm gelling farther and farther dress lhe quaker on the real ob'oct which he had and farther mt hut remember i have no right .' in view " my dear and respected sir the man you will take lhe consequences i have no right j started allow tne to explain to ynu how i am j '">*••'. lipped ask the crown lawyers if you ! situated and grant me a patient hearing i ne , think fit quaker looked patience itselc biid malthewa curi at.e it denoiiiicomcnl lhc speaker began to ! nus to hear lhe result took hia seat in iho shop pae up :..„! tvii like ibe eapluin but at the op ; " my doar sir continued iclcdon ' i am one ot a p"hi side of ihe deck he was on lho ls.il how , class or mun of whom of course your vf ever as w.-ll t lhe online and esrerv ume dial he tenets cannot allow you to know milch in i act i passed near tlie man lhat fce considered as his s.rj nm ofthe theatrical profession-charles lne cdon h i ... . gave veut io llie inward feeling ; ofthe theatre royal covcnl garden first ballad in a jerk of the head uccnrrepaiiied wilh a short singer in england piglike grunt now and then it broke out in this was uttered with great emphasis and volu r.k bul alwrees uie four monosyllables this h.liiy in his own r culisr dialect hint of cornwall had w.il a moat emphatic fall of the i the quaker slarted back and looked al matthews r,-li \ . l„-t it occurred to a stout pomp 1 as if doubting thc sanity of the person biidreseiiig i looking ( mr«onage to interpose as a mediator turn incledon rfflwmed : " pray sir i am an ac m i s c e l l a n e o i is . this excessive prudery iliougli certainly alio yelliirr less b inieevullliy and less dangeruus ilu ihu oppus.ie extreme is still ridiculous enough unu lion uiiorrupts without uny sulhcienl reason l.e easy how ol conversuiio ll is nol however peculiar lo llio americans os ihu following siory will snow vv hen iho young queen of philip iv of spain i s ou her wuy to madrid there lor ihe lirst lime to heboid a hiisl.nud whom slur hud married eeitli uu t uver having seen him she pass through a lillle town in spun tumo.is f.r us manufacture uf gloves a d stockings the magistrates ol llio place thought they could not belter express their joy on bo arrival ul their new queen than by presenting her wuh a samplu of ihoso inniiuliic lures fur which their town was so celebrated — tho major dotno who conducted thu princess roceived tho gloves vory graciously ; hut when the stockings wure presented he hung ihem away with greut indigiiultun und severely reprimanded the n.ae.suieios for having been guilly of the egre gious iiidecoruin and indecency ul olicriug such a present know said he that a queen of spain hat no lege the young quuen win al this ume understood lm spanish language bul imperfectly and who hud often been frightened with alories of spanish jealousy imagined that evhuu she arrived el madrid they would immediately cut her logs oil ; jusl as the chinese render their womuu crip ples to keep them ut home ami preserve ilium from being exposed lo temptation as tbe young queen was altogether too fund of motion to bo willing lo part with her legs she fell v a crying and begged thu major domo lo conduct her back to germany protesting mr.si ssriously that she never could endure lhc operation il was not without great difficulty and after many tedious explanations thai ner attendant could ap pease her philip iv is said never in his life io have laughed heartily bul once ; and that wus when this story of his new wifo was first told him — boston atlas right and verification of as ancient prophecy tbe following prophecy is snid to have been de livered by a british bard iu the time of william the norman and preserved by some of the monk ish annalists viz : that no more than three mun archs in direct succession should ever again reign over these kingdoms without some violent inter ruption : from the democratic review ' the battle field by william ili i.b.n bbyant once this soft turf this rivulet's sands were trampled by a hurrying croevd and sery hearts and armed bauds encountered in tbo battle cloud ah 1 never shall the land fnr/et how gushed tlie life-blood of her brave — gushed warm wilh hope and valor yet upon tbe soil they fought to save now all is calm and fresh and still alone the chirp of flitting bird and talk of children on the hill and bell of wandering kine sre heard no solemn host goes trsiling by i'be black-mouthed gun and staggering evain men atari not at the battle cry oh bo it never heard again ! soon rested those who fought — but thou who minglest in tho harder strife fur truths which men receive nol noev thy warfare only ends with life a friendless warfare 1 lingering long th rough weary day and weary year a wild and mnny-wcapoiied throng hang on thy front and flank and rear yet nerve thy spirit to the proof and blench not al thy chosen lot ths timid good may stand aloof tlie ssge may frown — yel faint thou not ! nor heed the shaft too surely cast the hissing stinging bolt of scorn ; for with thy side shall dwell at laat tbe victory of endurance born truth crushed to earth shall rise again , the eternal years of god aro hers but error wounded writhes with pain and dies among its worshippers yea though thou lie upon thc dust when those who helped thee flee in fear die full of hope and manly trust like those who fell in battle here another hand thy sword shall wield another hand thc standard wave till from the trumpet's mouth is pealed the blast of triumph o'er thy grsve ! 1 william ho norman 2 william rufus 3 henry thc first interrupted by the usurpation of stephen 1 henry the second 2 k.i levari the first 3 kit ward lhe second interrupted by the abdication end murder of edward the second 1 1-tilwurii the third 2 kiehard the second interrupted by the deposition of that monarch 1 henry the fourth 2 henry thu fifth 3 henry the sixth interrupted by the restoration of the house of york 1 edward the fourth 2 edward the fifth 3 kiehard the third interrupted by tho usurpation of henry rich inond henry the sovonth ihe i'di il'rd ihe si 1 1 1 k interrupted by the election of lady june grey 1 mary l-tli/.abclh wa loreign king james of scotland called in to assume the crown 1 james the first 2 charles the first interrupted by the deposition of lhat monarch and thi establishment of another form of govern ment in the person of oliver cromwell 1 charles the second 2 james ihe second interrupted by the abdication of lhat king and the election of a foreigner 1 william tbe third 2 anne interrupted by the parliamentary appointment ofa foreigner 1 george the first 2 george the second 3 george ihe third interrupted by the unfortunate incapacity of that sovereign and a parliamentary appoint mom for ex ercising thu sovereignly in tho person of the prince regent • 1 george the fourth 2 william the fourth 3 victoria ihe first whom may god bless but what is to bo the next interruption ? — liverpool courier agricultural rotation of crop — the following principles are luid down by cbaptal for a rotation uf crops : 1 all plants exhaust thn soil they are par tially supp.u led by tho earth the juices from which constitute an important part of llieir nourishment 2 all plains do not exhaust the soil equally air and water help to nourish thorn ; ditlbrenl kinds of plants require the same nourishment in different degrees 3 plants of different kinds do not exhaust lhe soil in the samo manner plants with spindled or lap rouls draw nourishment from layers of soil in contact wilh the lower part of tho toot ; while those whose roots are spread near the surface exhaust only that part of the soil 4 all plants do not restore to tbe soil either lhe same quantity or thu ssme quality of manure — the grains exhaust a soil the most ami repair lhe injury ihe least while some leguminous plants restore to lho soil a great portion of lhe juices ihey receive from it 5 all plants do not foul the soil equally — plants aro said lo foul when they pr.uiu.iu or per mit the growth of woods plants which buve not large leaves filled tu cuver the ground foul lho soil beautiful extract the boston mercantile journal selects the fol lowing from the foreign review for april 1439 as one of the finest passages in tho whole range nf knglish literature the subject treated of is lhe benefit of printing " when tamerlane had finished building his pyramids of seventy thousand human skulls and was seen standing at the gate of damascus glit tering wilh steel with his b-it:le-axu on his shoul der till fierce hosts filed to new victories and car nage lhat a pale looker might have fancied thai nature was in her death-throes for havoc and despair hurl taken possession of the earth and tho aun of manhood seemed selling in seas nf blood yet it might be ou that very gala day of tamer lane a lillle boy was playing nine pins in the streets of meniz whose history was more impor tant io them than twenty tamerlanes ? the tar tar khan with ins shaggy demons ol ihe wilder ness passed away like ihe whirlwind io be forgot ten forever — and thai german artisan has wrought a benefit which is yet immeasurably expending itself and will continue to expand through all countries and all lime what are tho conquests and expedilions of the whole corporations of cap tains from wsltor tho pennyless lo napoleon bo naparte compared with the moveable types of jo hannes faust asiatic proverbs that which a mun suffers for ihis world fills his heart wilh darkness but that which he sutlers for the other fills it with light he who is worthy of being called a man it un shaken in adversity humble in prosperity active and bold in danger and il he be not learned haa at least a love for learning men often give themselves much trouble to suc ceed in an ll'.iir from which thoy derive only vex ation in the end from the above principles the following conclu sions have been drawn 1 that however we.l prepared s soil may be it cannot nourish a long succession of crops with out becoming exhausted 2 each harvest impoverishes lhe soil to a cer tain extent lebjeuding upon lhe degree of nourish ment which it restores lu thn earth the cnlt.vu ho is a freemen who desires nothing ; and he is a slave who expects lhat which he wishes the advice ofa wiso man is lo he considered as a prediction the man who is governed by his passions is in a worse state than the most miserable slave livo not on credit and you shall live at liberty when the boui is ready lo depart what avails il whether a man die on a throne ar in the dual 7 envy has no rest he who has least wisdom hss most vanity life is s sort of sloop from which wo awake nut bul in death the lifo of man is a path that leads lo death the heart of the fool is iu his mouth and tho tongue of the wise man is in his heart anecdote on of spindle r*\up roots ought to succeed hat of running nnd superficial roots 3 it is necessary lo uvoid returning too soon lo lhe cultivation of th same or analogous kinds olj ve^i-iulil.s in lhe i anu mul ibbbbb^»^^^w capt marryat gives the following account of a scene which wns enacted by a man who appears to have been a good deal " wore for liquor ul the ta ble of a public bouse in upper canada he sat down opposite to me at the same table it appeared as if his vision trus inverted by the quantity of liquor he had taken every thing close to bun on the tsble he considered uui of his reach whilst every thing at a distance he attempted to lay hold of he sal up as erect as he could balan cing himself so as nol tu appear corned and fixing his eyes upon me said " sir i'll trouble you for some fried hsin now the ham was in the dish nexl lo him and altogether out of my reach i told | him so " sir said lie again " ns a gentleman i ask you to give mo some of thai fried ham amused wilh the curious demand i rose from my chair went round to him and helped hnn shall 1 i give .. polaloe said i ihe potatoes being at my end of the table and not wishing lo nan again j»no sir replied he i can help myself to them ho made a dash al them but did not reach ihom then made another and another till he l'.,l his balance and lay down upon his plate ihis time ho gained the potatoes helped himself i and commenced eating aftar a few minutes ho ytzt-yiy unwise to allow two kinds of plants which admit of a ready growth of weeds among ihem to be raised ill succession i 5 i'h ho plants thut derive their principal sup port front lhe soil should nol lie sown excepting who line soil is sufliciuiilly provided wilh manure 0 when the soil exhibits symptoms of exhaus tion fro successive harvest lhe cultivation of those plants which restore mosl lo lhe soil should bu resorted lo tht yankee farmer he who runs wilh a slack rein guided only by hope encounters the last moment of l.le and lulls the mosl perfect pleasures in this world aro al ways mingled with some bitterness the twin or okra cotton home interesting particulars res|»ecticj this new species of potion as is det.nle.1 in a letter from a plainer is publish ed in ibe suva i georgian the discovery nf ii nppcurs to b.ivi been entirely accidental a gentleman of augusta alabama n foev years ago bought some petit gih£.moed in a field sown wuh llus send a single stalk was observed without limbs nnd having greut numbers of bolls adhe ring immediately lo the slock or in clusters on ve ry short limbs from those seeds ll.e variety has been propagated lo 1s87 ihe seed sold as high lln who considers consequences wilh loo much attention is ordinarily a man of nn courage twu things are inseparable from lying many promises and many excuses you cannot keep y.ur own secret — whst cause then have you in complain if another to whom you havo declared it should reveal 1 a rich man who is nol liberal resembles a tree eiiheul fruit
Object Description
Title | Western Carolinian |
Masthead | Western Carolinian |
Date | 1839-09-27 |
Month | 09 |
Day | 27 |
Year | 1839 |
Volume | 20 |
Issue | No.15-Whole No.1005 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | B. Austin and C. F. Fisher |
Date Digital | 2009-04-13 |
Publisher | B. Austin and C. F. Fisher |
Place |
United States North Carolina Rowan County Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The September 27, 1839 issue of the Western Carolinian a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601575817 |
Description
Title | Western Carolinian |
Masthead | Western Carolinian |
Date | 1839-09-27 |
Month | 09 |
Day | 27 |
Year | 1839 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archival image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 2105649 Bytes |
FileName | sawc05_18390927-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 4/13/2009 11:27:34 AM |
Publisher | Krider & Bingham |
Place |
United States North Carolina Rowan County Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of The Western Carolinian a historic newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText | the western carolinian the pow ems not to the tmiten states by the by it to the > s;o the states , oh ro nn i'kiii'lk — amendments in the comtilution articlt v 13 austin & c f fisher ) i hit r and proprietor s salisbury jv c septe 27 1839 < no xv of vol xx i wliolr no i oos i'liu.ms of he began by dilating on ihe oimei.se commercial importance of a punctual delivery of letters thoncu ho insisted on the heavy responsibility of lie captain with the promise of an early return pricket from holyhead ; and ho was rule ing into u congratulation on the line less of the weather when the original thought it tune to cut luui short " my dear sir you'll eicuse me the case is no body's but my own voir aro a regular pussenger vou havo a right to bu in this packet you have a right to go lo holyhead or liverpool or to uib rulier or lo llie world's end if — you — like hut / choose lo he in dublin what right have i to be here then not — one — atom ! i've no right to be ui this vessel ; and the captain there knoevs it i've no right stamping lo bo on tins deck 1 have no inoru right to bu tossing nt sea waving ins arms up and down than the pigeon house " it is a vei y uupluusunl s iu.it 1 allow sir tor i am this night ndvertised at your — no not nt yodr theatre — al the theatre of leicester for steady lhc hunker and it so happens thru there is not a druss fur the character which is highly complimentary to your people independent ofthe want of elicct from a bad dress i am truly morn - lied to do discredit to so respectable a body as yours in fact part of my own family were origi nally of your profession my dear sir ami ibis is an 11 mm mil reason why i am anxious to do ull possible honor to tho revered society uf friends — iu short my worthy sir without your assistance i shall como bofore all the gentry uf leicester in a dieas very degrading to the proverbial neatness of your sect will you lend mo one of your suits ? ', i t ou and 1 are ofa size and iu so doing you will at once show the liberality of your character and i keep up ihu respectability of the udi ruble body of , people so deservedly esteemed by all the world uml by none more than charles incledon sam slick himself with lus " soft sawder und " humnn natiir could not have dor.o it belter nud ' ihe ellect was proportionate the chymisl lo ibo i surprise of matthews melted by thu eloquent ap j '• peal lo lhc honor of bis sect not only lent a suit i of clothes bul yielded to the persuasions of the singer to be put 111 a private corner ! tu be nn un seen witness ofthe maimer in which tho stage up hold his persuasions thai he was charmed with { steady there is no doubi tor he readily confessed 1 1 tbia lo incledon on his reluming lie suit of clothes j i — life of mattheirs again fixed his eyes upon mo " sir i'll trouble ou — fur tho pickles repealed lv nftei 1 nine " well there they are replied i wishing lo sue what he would do — " sir ure yon a gentleman — as a gentleman i ask y,.u aa u gentleman for them ere pickles it wus impossible lo resist this appeal so 1 rose noil helped hint 1 wbi ee convinced 1h.1t his vision wns somehow .... ihe inverted and to prove it when be nske.l me for lhc suit which wus eeill in h.s reach i re veil 1 farther od " thank ye sir said he sprawling i over llie luble alter it the circumstance absorb ' as it was was really a subject for tha investigation j of dr hrcevster false delicai \ . ti.e wester . carolinian is published every i'm i.tv at two dollars per annum 1 paid in advance or two doners and fifty cents if not paid before thc ex piration of throe months nn paper will be discontinued until all arrearages _ rt . paid unless at thn discretion of the editors ; nnd a failure to notify the editors of n wish to discontinue i i end of a year will be considered as a new en • i anient advertisements evill be roiispiciioi.sly nnd correctly ted nt one dollar per squsre for the lirst insertion ami "". cuts tor each cout.uunuco court and ju.hc.nl advertisements will be chsrged 2fi p.-r cent more than the above prices a deduction ol '•'•'■!_ p«t cenl from • ■„■regular prices will be made to early advert rs advertisements sent in ii.r p blicnt un must line ll.e number ol t imos marked on them or they ee 11 ba inser ■nil forbid and charged f.r accordingly letters addressed to th editors n busutess must be ', unit paid nr ihey evill not be attended to the most r.-r likable ira.ts in the chur kcter of ibe aiiiericun women is u.e.r extreme i ml sluiosl excessive modesty it has been nu luced by captain mary ult and almost ull foreigners leem have travelled among us mrs trollope levhose book cannot be so desiltute of trulh und justice no some huvo pretended since it has roach ed the fourth american edition i.e alludes to tins point ui me character ol our country women und aba illustrates it with suinn vury laughable ex amples i'be conversation between a gentleman una u lady about a shirt evhich she gives us in one uf her chapters 11 which the ge.ilie.niin tries ull his skill 10 muke thu ludy confess whnl sort uf [; it garment she is mukiug ; and thu ludy on her ' pail doubles every wuy uses ull her ingenuity j uud results ul last to downright liilsohood lu avoid ! p 1.11111 ana so indecent a word us shin is very [ amusing unit is continued by almusl daily ex-pen 1 ence an ainenenn told mo ono day that a company hud been working nl a coal 11110 in .... eastern suite which prnvo'l to be of a very bad quality ; ihey had sent some lo an influential person us 0 present requesting him to givu his opinion of il as that would be important to them after a cer tain time he forwarded to ihem a cerliliculc couched in such terms as these ; " i do hereby certify hint 1 have tried lho coal sent to me by the company at — — , and it is my decided opinion that when thc general conflagration f the world shall take place any man who will lake bis position on ihul coal mine will cortainly bo the last man who will be burnt c.ipluiii lo the sloul passenger bul us i huve ll.e nro is more btrd.m a « inconvenience be hanged " exclaimed tho od w\w ' " v t " 0,,a " ll00d ' i day iu u pass at lusl " ll is no inconvenience viih 1 1 iiiii i i man whether abstract or real sir !— not llio — smallest .' bul uml makes no d.ller divu.u or vulgnr vested or eonleste.l civil or uu euce as to my being here it's llial ami ihul civil common r imcomnaoo imve been so frequent alone i dispute all right to ! " ly discussed lhat one would suppose there was " well but tuy deur good sir expostulated ihe nothing new i in fell or expressed on the subject pompous man admitting tho justice ol your pre i wus agreeably surprised therefore during a lale uiises uie hardship is confessedly without remedy passage from lielaiid to huur tho rights of nn in *> l'u be sure it is i said the cuplain every dividual asserted in so very novel n niniiner as tn i„ch ul it all 1 can bay is that tho gentleman's si.ru worthy of record the injured parly was passage shall be no expense to him an involuntary felloev passenger and tho first ihankee ol course nol suid llio original glance a i him af he leisurely nsernded the cabin wilh a snoor " i've no nghl to put my hund in slurs bespoke him an original his face figure my pocket nol that 1 mind expense but u's ray gait and gestures were all more or less eccentric riglil 1 stand up tor and i dely you both to prove eel without riny apparent affectation of singularity that 1 have any riglil or any shadow ofa right to h.s manner was perfectly earnest nnd business be in your company ! i'll toll you what skipper — like though qunint on reaching ihe deck his but belore ho could tiuish the sentence lie turned first movement wus toward the gnngway bul a mo suddenly pale made a most grotesque wry face and ment sufficed to acquaint him wilh lhe state of lhe rushed forward lo the bow ofthe vessel the cap case the lettor-hags having lienn detained an tain exchanged a significant smile with the stout hour beyond the usual lime of departuro the steam gentleman but belore they had quite spoken their hail been put on ut a gallop nnd her majesty's mail minds ol llie absent character lee came scrambling packet iho uuebre had already accomplished back to thc pinnacle upon which he rested wilh some hundred fathoms on ber course this unto both hands while lie thrust his working visage ward event however scemod rather to surprise within a loot or two ol lhe skipper's face than annoy our original who quietly stepped up lo " there skipper ! now misler what d'ye call ! the eapluin with the air of demanding what was w |, ttt do you buih say to thut 1 what right have 1 merely n mutter of course to bo sick — as sick us a dog i've no right to be " hallo skipper ! olf she goes eh but you must squeamish i i'm ot a passenger i've no right to turn about my buy uml let me get out gu tumbling over ropes aud pails aud what not lo " lei you gel out ?" echoed the astonished skip the ship's head 1 per nnd ugiiin repeating it with ihe musicians cull » bul my good sir began ihe pompous man a srurcaln " lei — you — get — nul ?" " don't sir me sir i you took your own pas exactly so i'm going ashore sage vou have a right to be sick you have a " i'm rather afraid you aro not sir said the riglil lo go lo ihe side every rive minutes you'vo skipper looking dec.de.lly serious unless you a right to die of it bul it's the reverse with me allude lo llio oihir si.lo i've uo right ofthe sort " tlie other siilo exclnimod the oeldily invol " u certainly nol sir said the pomposity of untarily turning lo england " poo ! pno ! non fended in his turn " you are indubitably lhe best sense man ; i only came to look at your acco.nmo judge of your own privileges i only beg to be ni dations i'.r not going across with you ; i'm not lowed lo remark thai whore i felt 1 had so little upon my word 1 nghl 1 should hesitate to intrude myself so " i musl beg your pardon sir said the captain saying he bowed very formally and commenced quite solemnly " bul it is my firm opinion thai his retreat lo the cabin while the skipper pretend you ore going across !" ed to examine the compass very minutely in fact " poo ! p ! ..!! gammon ; i tell you i am go our or ig m i | w d mel with a choko pear the fal ing back lu dublin man's answer was too much tbr bim being framed " upon my word then said tho skipper rather on a principle clean contrary to his own peculiar briskly " you must swim buck like a grampus or system of logic the more he tried to unravel us borrow a pair of wings from ihe gulls meaning the more it got entangled he did'nt the man at llie helm grinned bis hroa.losl at \^ b h without knowing evhy ; and he quite disa what ho thought a good joke of his officer's while greed with it though ignorant of its pur|iort he the orig.uul turned round parodied a hyena's laugh looked up al lhe funnel and at the deck and down at the fellow and then returned to lhe charge lne companion stairs and then wound up all by a cine come skipper it's quite as far out as i | 011 , ana k,*of the head as mysterious as lord bur care for ; if you want in treat me to a sail !" leigh's at lhe astonished man at he wheel his " treat you to a sail ?" roared the indignant offi lmlk j seemed made up he buttoned his coat up cer " zounds sir i am in earnest — as much in t0 , he vur y chin as if to secure bimselt to linn-urll earliest us ver i was in my lile ant \ never opened his lips again till the vessel '• so much lhe belter answered ihe original ; touched lhe quay at holyhead the captain then " i'm or joking myself and havo no right lo be attempted a final apology but it was interrupted in joked upon the middle joke or no joke said iho enptain all i " enough said sir quile enough if you've on know is ihis the u.l bags nro on board and ifs j j oiie y 0ur duty you've no right to beg pardon inure than my post is evorth lo pul back anf j i e ,.„ right lo ask it all i mean to say is " eh ? whal ? how i exclaimed the ld.lv wilh | iere am i ( j holyhead instead of dublin i don't a lort of nervous dance ; " you astonish me ! do care w ;, al [>,„• hit fellow says who don't understand do you really mean to say i'm obliged to go his own rights i stick to all i said before i hnve — whether i've a right or not v no right so be up in the moon have 1 ? of course " i du indeed sir ijdj'.n sorry for it hut it can't j , lol an d i ve „,, mor8 right to stand on this quay he helped ; my orders are positive tho moment j t (, a „ 1 nav e to be up iu the moon ! " tho mail i on hoard i most cast oil • indeed well—but you know evhy why j incledon am t1i1-t quaker thai s your duly not mine i have no right lo be ... ., east ii ! i have no right lo be here at all ! i have one night when matthews and incledon joined no right t be seen any where except in merrion i the leicester company in passing through they square i j agreed to perform in ibo musical pioco of lhe ' qua i'he captain was bothered he shrugged up his : ker incledon to play " s'e«dy it was not un shoulders then gave a low whistle then plunged ■til his name was in the playbills that lie discov his hands , n his pockels then gave a loud order to ored lhe liarenness ol the wardrobe it did not con ii i.,,ls to do something somewhere or other tan a fragment of the quaker costume incledon bi..1 ii !>..„,,„ to walk short turns on the deck always excitable wss now wretched an attempt to his captive in lhc mean lii.i.r made hasty si rules patch up a dress made him more miserable still towards the stern as if intending lo leap over at last as lie and matthews were lounging up the hoard ; bul be suddenly stopped short and took a principal ireel incledon caught sight of a portly bewildered k at tbe reeling enn-t the ori quaker standing at the door ofa chvmist s shop ginal wr w.es visibly increasing in length charles my dear boy nd iiicledim winking , breadth and depth every minute and he again his eyes his habit when peculiarly pleased do confiontcd ihe captain ><*■«*'« •■■"-' ttuaker there ? what a dress he has " w,||,ski|,|s'r vou've tbougbl belter of it i've on jusl my size 1 ve a good mind charles lo no right in the world have 1 ? you will turn her ask him lo loan it lo me for lo-mght absurd ! round ."• i win matthews " vou could not think of such a totally impossible sir quite out of my thing " my dear boy said incledon only con | power sidnr what a comfort it would lie to me instead of i " very well very well very well indeed !" that trumpery suit from the wardrobe i'll go in , r.ginal'a temper was gelling up as wel as and ask bim ; ho looks likes good natured creature the sea accordingly in he walked inquired of obadiah i jl mind air i protest ; i proles against for some quack medicines and after some small , i"u sir and against the ship and ihe ocean sir purchases he began in h.s blandest manner to ad and every tin ! i'm gelling farther and farther dress lhe quaker on the real ob'oct which he had and farther mt hut remember i have no right .' in view " my dear and respected sir the man you will take lhe consequences i have no right j started allow tne to explain to ynu how i am j '">*••'. lipped ask the crown lawyers if you ! situated and grant me a patient hearing i ne , think fit quaker looked patience itselc biid malthewa curi at.e it denoiiiicomcnl lhc speaker began to ! nus to hear lhe result took hia seat in iho shop pae up :..„! tvii like ibe eapluin but at the op ; " my doar sir continued iclcdon ' i am one ot a p"hi side of ihe deck he was on lho ls.il how , class or mun of whom of course your vf ever as w.-ll t lhe online and esrerv ume dial he tenets cannot allow you to know milch in i act i passed near tlie man lhat fce considered as his s.rj nm ofthe theatrical profession-charles lne cdon h i ... . gave veut io llie inward feeling ; ofthe theatre royal covcnl garden first ballad in a jerk of the head uccnrrepaiiied wilh a short singer in england piglike grunt now and then it broke out in this was uttered with great emphasis and volu r.k bul alwrees uie four monosyllables this h.liiy in his own r culisr dialect hint of cornwall had w.il a moat emphatic fall of the i the quaker slarted back and looked al matthews r,-li \ . l„-t it occurred to a stout pomp 1 as if doubting thc sanity of the person biidreseiiig i looking ( mr«onage to interpose as a mediator turn incledon rfflwmed : " pray sir i am an ac m i s c e l l a n e o i is . this excessive prudery iliougli certainly alio yelliirr less b inieevullliy and less dangeruus ilu ihu oppus.ie extreme is still ridiculous enough unu lion uiiorrupts without uny sulhcienl reason l.e easy how ol conversuiio ll is nol however peculiar lo llio americans os ihu following siory will snow vv hen iho young queen of philip iv of spain i s ou her wuy to madrid there lor ihe lirst lime to heboid a hiisl.nud whom slur hud married eeitli uu t uver having seen him she pass through a lillle town in spun tumo.is f.r us manufacture uf gloves a d stockings the magistrates ol llio place thought they could not belter express their joy on bo arrival ul their new queen than by presenting her wuh a samplu of ihoso inniiuliic lures fur which their town was so celebrated — tho major dotno who conducted thu princess roceived tho gloves vory graciously ; hut when the stockings wure presented he hung ihem away with greut indigiiultun und severely reprimanded the n.ae.suieios for having been guilly of the egre gious iiidecoruin and indecency ul olicriug such a present know said he that a queen of spain hat no lege the young quuen win al this ume understood lm spanish language bul imperfectly and who hud often been frightened with alories of spanish jealousy imagined that evhuu she arrived el madrid they would immediately cut her logs oil ; jusl as the chinese render their womuu crip ples to keep them ut home ami preserve ilium from being exposed lo temptation as tbe young queen was altogether too fund of motion to bo willing lo part with her legs she fell v a crying and begged thu major domo lo conduct her back to germany protesting mr.si ssriously that she never could endure lhc operation il was not without great difficulty and after many tedious explanations thai ner attendant could ap pease her philip iv is said never in his life io have laughed heartily bul once ; and that wus when this story of his new wifo was first told him — boston atlas right and verification of as ancient prophecy tbe following prophecy is snid to have been de livered by a british bard iu the time of william the norman and preserved by some of the monk ish annalists viz : that no more than three mun archs in direct succession should ever again reign over these kingdoms without some violent inter ruption : from the democratic review ' the battle field by william ili i.b.n bbyant once this soft turf this rivulet's sands were trampled by a hurrying croevd and sery hearts and armed bauds encountered in tbo battle cloud ah 1 never shall the land fnr/et how gushed tlie life-blood of her brave — gushed warm wilh hope and valor yet upon tbe soil they fought to save now all is calm and fresh and still alone the chirp of flitting bird and talk of children on the hill and bell of wandering kine sre heard no solemn host goes trsiling by i'be black-mouthed gun and staggering evain men atari not at the battle cry oh bo it never heard again ! soon rested those who fought — but thou who minglest in tho harder strife fur truths which men receive nol noev thy warfare only ends with life a friendless warfare 1 lingering long th rough weary day and weary year a wild and mnny-wcapoiied throng hang on thy front and flank and rear yet nerve thy spirit to the proof and blench not al thy chosen lot ths timid good may stand aloof tlie ssge may frown — yel faint thou not ! nor heed the shaft too surely cast the hissing stinging bolt of scorn ; for with thy side shall dwell at laat tbe victory of endurance born truth crushed to earth shall rise again , the eternal years of god aro hers but error wounded writhes with pain and dies among its worshippers yea though thou lie upon thc dust when those who helped thee flee in fear die full of hope and manly trust like those who fell in battle here another hand thy sword shall wield another hand thc standard wave till from the trumpet's mouth is pealed the blast of triumph o'er thy grsve ! 1 william ho norman 2 william rufus 3 henry thc first interrupted by the usurpation of stephen 1 henry the second 2 k.i levari the first 3 kit ward lhe second interrupted by the abdication end murder of edward the second 1 1-tilwurii the third 2 kiehard the second interrupted by the deposition of that monarch 1 henry the fourth 2 henry thu fifth 3 henry the sixth interrupted by the restoration of the house of york 1 edward the fourth 2 edward the fifth 3 kiehard the third interrupted by tho usurpation of henry rich inond henry the sovonth ihe i'di il'rd ihe si 1 1 1 k interrupted by the election of lady june grey 1 mary l-tli/.abclh wa loreign king james of scotland called in to assume the crown 1 james the first 2 charles the first interrupted by the deposition of lhat monarch and thi establishment of another form of govern ment in the person of oliver cromwell 1 charles the second 2 james ihe second interrupted by the abdication of lhat king and the election of a foreigner 1 william tbe third 2 anne interrupted by the parliamentary appointment ofa foreigner 1 george the first 2 george the second 3 george ihe third interrupted by the unfortunate incapacity of that sovereign and a parliamentary appoint mom for ex ercising thu sovereignly in tho person of the prince regent • 1 george the fourth 2 william the fourth 3 victoria ihe first whom may god bless but what is to bo the next interruption ? — liverpool courier agricultural rotation of crop — the following principles are luid down by cbaptal for a rotation uf crops : 1 all plants exhaust thn soil they are par tially supp.u led by tho earth the juices from which constitute an important part of llieir nourishment 2 all plains do not exhaust the soil equally air and water help to nourish thorn ; ditlbrenl kinds of plants require the same nourishment in different degrees 3 plants of different kinds do not exhaust lhe soil in the samo manner plants with spindled or lap rouls draw nourishment from layers of soil in contact wilh the lower part of tho toot ; while those whose roots are spread near the surface exhaust only that part of the soil 4 all plants do not restore to tbe soil either lhe same quantity or thu ssme quality of manure — the grains exhaust a soil the most ami repair lhe injury ihe least while some leguminous plants restore to lho soil a great portion of lhe juices ihey receive from it 5 all plants do not foul the soil equally — plants aro said lo foul when they pr.uiu.iu or per mit the growth of woods plants which buve not large leaves filled tu cuver the ground foul lho soil beautiful extract the boston mercantile journal selects the fol lowing from the foreign review for april 1439 as one of the finest passages in tho whole range nf knglish literature the subject treated of is lhe benefit of printing " when tamerlane had finished building his pyramids of seventy thousand human skulls and was seen standing at the gate of damascus glit tering wilh steel with his b-it:le-axu on his shoul der till fierce hosts filed to new victories and car nage lhat a pale looker might have fancied thai nature was in her death-throes for havoc and despair hurl taken possession of the earth and tho aun of manhood seemed selling in seas nf blood yet it might be ou that very gala day of tamer lane a lillle boy was playing nine pins in the streets of meniz whose history was more impor tant io them than twenty tamerlanes ? the tar tar khan with ins shaggy demons ol ihe wilder ness passed away like ihe whirlwind io be forgot ten forever — and thai german artisan has wrought a benefit which is yet immeasurably expending itself and will continue to expand through all countries and all lime what are tho conquests and expedilions of the whole corporations of cap tains from wsltor tho pennyless lo napoleon bo naparte compared with the moveable types of jo hannes faust asiatic proverbs that which a mun suffers for ihis world fills his heart wilh darkness but that which he sutlers for the other fills it with light he who is worthy of being called a man it un shaken in adversity humble in prosperity active and bold in danger and il he be not learned haa at least a love for learning men often give themselves much trouble to suc ceed in an ll'.iir from which thoy derive only vex ation in the end from the above principles the following conclu sions have been drawn 1 that however we.l prepared s soil may be it cannot nourish a long succession of crops with out becoming exhausted 2 each harvest impoverishes lhe soil to a cer tain extent lebjeuding upon lhe degree of nourish ment which it restores lu thn earth the cnlt.vu ho is a freemen who desires nothing ; and he is a slave who expects lhat which he wishes the advice ofa wiso man is lo he considered as a prediction the man who is governed by his passions is in a worse state than the most miserable slave livo not on credit and you shall live at liberty when the boui is ready lo depart what avails il whether a man die on a throne ar in the dual 7 envy has no rest he who has least wisdom hss most vanity life is s sort of sloop from which wo awake nut bul in death the lifo of man is a path that leads lo death the heart of the fool is iu his mouth and tho tongue of the wise man is in his heart anecdote on of spindle r*\up roots ought to succeed hat of running nnd superficial roots 3 it is necessary lo uvoid returning too soon lo lhe cultivation of th same or analogous kinds olj ve^i-iulil.s in lhe i anu mul ibbbbb^»^^^w capt marryat gives the following account of a scene which wns enacted by a man who appears to have been a good deal " wore for liquor ul the ta ble of a public bouse in upper canada he sat down opposite to me at the same table it appeared as if his vision trus inverted by the quantity of liquor he had taken every thing close to bun on the tsble he considered uui of his reach whilst every thing at a distance he attempted to lay hold of he sal up as erect as he could balan cing himself so as nol tu appear corned and fixing his eyes upon me said " sir i'll trouble you for some fried hsin now the ham was in the dish nexl lo him and altogether out of my reach i told | him so " sir said lie again " ns a gentleman i ask you to give mo some of thai fried ham amused wilh the curious demand i rose from my chair went round to him and helped hnn shall 1 i give .. polaloe said i ihe potatoes being at my end of the table and not wishing lo nan again j»no sir replied he i can help myself to them ho made a dash al them but did not reach ihom then made another and another till he l'.,l his balance and lay down upon his plate ihis time ho gained the potatoes helped himself i and commenced eating aftar a few minutes ho ytzt-yiy unwise to allow two kinds of plants which admit of a ready growth of weeds among ihem to be raised ill succession i 5 i'h ho plants thut derive their principal sup port front lhe soil should nol lie sown excepting who line soil is sufliciuiilly provided wilh manure 0 when the soil exhibits symptoms of exhaus tion fro successive harvest lhe cultivation of those plants which restore mosl lo lhe soil should bu resorted lo tht yankee farmer he who runs wilh a slack rein guided only by hope encounters the last moment of l.le and lulls the mosl perfect pleasures in this world aro al ways mingled with some bitterness the twin or okra cotton home interesting particulars res|»ecticj this new species of potion as is det.nle.1 in a letter from a plainer is publish ed in ibe suva i georgian the discovery nf ii nppcurs to b.ivi been entirely accidental a gentleman of augusta alabama n foev years ago bought some petit gih£.moed in a field sown wuh llus send a single stalk was observed without limbs nnd having greut numbers of bolls adhe ring immediately lo the slock or in clusters on ve ry short limbs from those seeds ll.e variety has been propagated lo 1s87 ihe seed sold as high lln who considers consequences wilh loo much attention is ordinarily a man of nn courage twu things are inseparable from lying many promises and many excuses you cannot keep y.ur own secret — whst cause then have you in complain if another to whom you havo declared it should reveal 1 a rich man who is nol liberal resembles a tree eiiheul fruit |