* I
farmers' gazette
PRIMAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 89.18!
We now have a rain falling which it
hoped, will render the river boat able.
Mr. Tiiomus W. Prgaea ia about to r
vivo the Camdrn Journal. It will favor tl
Administration, but will not oppoae sta
hanSu. I' will lond ita support to the Tci
pcraucc cause, mid contain acluctions *
trio 6'j'"jcct of Agriculture.
Tt>o aWitioniste, who in Now York, ha
organised themselves into a regular p
litical party, not obtaining a eatisfa
tory answer from either the Whig or V;
Huron candidate* to represent the city in ti
State Senate, started one of their own numb
and mustered two Hundred votes for him.
Gen. Charles F. Morccr, long a moat rc
pec'ab'c? member of Coneresa from Virein
h.is been elected the Cashier of a bank
Florida, sitd, the National Intelligencer aa;
that bA has aigui&cd liie intention of acccpti
tno appointment. He will tlicrofbre rest
Iris aeat in Congroaa during the winter.
More than a thousand groaa of button* l
manufactured daily at Haydonville, Man.
Two hundred women are employed in mar
tvturir'j them.
The i ity nothoritics of Doaton hate paaa
an ordinance to punish poraona who forget
disregard propriety ao far aa to amoko cigi
m the at recta of that oity. A man waa I
i ently arraigned for amoking in the etreet, I
it appeared that ho amnked not a cigar, bu
pipe. Ho waa thereupon acquitted.
. ^
Trmperanct Meeting* in different part*
the state have requested Judge
Albert Rhctt, the Rev. Or. fea|^HH
e.hera to addreas the |LegielatOMl^Hl
subject of abolinhing the licenae law*.- ^
< VNenl and Mr. Rbott have consented te
to, t: the reapectiac houses, or either of tlx
ahou'.d grant the privilege.
Imi-outuu Live Stock.?Meeare. Gourd
Mitheson d* Oe. of Charleston advertise
.ib*, hlooih d horsea and cattlo now on t
way from England to this country. If u
they will provo a valuable acquisiti
' the atuto ; otherwise they will prove in
r.Otlv. liv .liiiWin'f *n nnfimnkU
mo loitida ot those wlio rosy own and i
themselves and their progeny. Tho advi
'.aenicnt is nut as particular as it should bo
regard to tho stock of the cattle, and their {
r.'y of blood.
Some raig -hi'vous simpletons, out of sp<
enr *ged an lophant chained to a tree r*
1'jrt Dcp?sifw Md-, and one of tbcm i
;.r > tching the animal was seized in its txv
and dashed to a considerable distance, havi
h*s body it tho same timo pierced throe
with the tUik of the beast, which caused i
m^diato dt tth.
1'abtv Tactics in tub Tkuhbssbb Li
i"'Latcrn.?The majority of both housesbci
suppor era of the Adimuistratioii party, r
oleiiona wore proposed instructing the 8ei
torn, atul requesting the Representatives
'.'ongreds from that state to vote againsi
national bank?for the sub-treasury?agai
? a hill to secure the freedom of election!
r against the distribution of the proceed* of<
public lands?and. frnsrally, to support I
loading measures of the present admicist
tiun.
Mr. Anderson, of the Whig part y, moved
?ii amendment, to etrike out the resoluti
relating to the aub^lreasury, and insert ai
Muhstitt'to the following being the language
li'jv. 1'olk whilst iti Congress, when B
<IorJou of Virginia, in 1634, proposed t
r. ?b-treasury scheme for keeping and disbu
ing the revenue, vn:
Resolved, That a corporation is much i
f.'-r than any individual agent, however I
sponsible he may be, because it consists of
association of individuals who have thro'
together their aggregate wealth, and who i
b' und in their corporate character to the i
tent of thoir whole capita) slock for the dep
? ' (?; and that it is the opinion of this Gene
Assembly that the heaviest security wh
then .oat wealthy individual could give wo
not make public depositee safe at the potnl
largo collect ions."
i'o avoid a direct vote nnon thi?
ft motion was made to lay it on the tat
which prevailed. Mr. Anderson then pro]
Med another cubstitute, and adopting the Is
gtago of Gen. Jackson, in hia annual oieeaa
to (.'ongrcya in 1836 aa follow*, viz : KeaoU
that "we have confidence in the ability a
capacity of she State Banka to perioral all t
duties of fiscal agent* for the Government'
This waa also, on motion, laid on the tal
to a day beyond the acseion. Mr. Anders
then moved still anotlier aubatitutc, adopti
ho language of the Waahington (tlobe,
relation to a a.jh.treasury, when Mr. Gordoi
project, above reforred to, waa brought forwai
vie : Resolved that the Independent Treaeu
is disorganizing and re* okitionary, and eu
vcraive of tho fundamental principle# of o
government, and of ita entire practice frc
17811 down to this day ; and that it ia
palpable at the sun that the effect of the acber
would be to bring the public treaeury mu
nearer the actual custody and control of t
l'rceident, and expose it to be plundered bj
hundred hands, where one uoder the la
system could not reach it. In such evoni, i
enculd feel that the people had jtaet cause I
alarm and ought to give their inoet watcM
attention to such an effort to enlarge executi
power and put into its hands tho mean# ofct
nipt ion."
This was also disposed of by laying it on tJ
Th's ia tho Itut of tho procopdingj
irnmi.
the matter which we lave wen. Tlte original
resolutions were doubtless afterwards adop~
ted.
19. - '
? Tub Cask or tub AMIstad.?This case
ia was to be tried in New Haven, at a court
which commenced its session on tho 19th.
iust. but was put off till tho 7th, of January,
*" owing to the si cknees of the interpreter.
The Baltimore American states that nott#
withstanding the Richmond and Fredericks.
n burgh railroad company hare repeatedly pub.
?n lielicd their rule to receive no powder for
transportation, it is still sometimes smuggled
into their freight cars. On the I5th. instant
re an explosion took place of powder thus smug.
>0" gled, which caused tho death of ono of the
c* hands. I fit is murder, in the eye of the law,
M jo cause death by carelessly letting fall a
heavy body iu a street or other place of public
*r resort; ought not death by such an explosion to
be punished as murder ? Tho Kghteet punuhment
which ouffht to bo orevided for stmuv.
ia, fling powder into a railroad ear, whether
in explosion occurred or not, ia confinement for
pa, life in a Penitentiary at hard labor. The crime
ng indicates eo great recklessness of hnman Ifo
go that the author of it is unfit to lire in society.
AouicoLTUueL CoavcNTioN?\Vc |earn
ire verbally from a gentleman who left Columbia
en Wednesday morning that this body met on
iU. Monday eveningU^^etectod Col. F. H. Elmore
Prceidoay^flMtoMUKau Presidents
whomi Gen.
or AUston.
the aUBIM|^1 qihderstana
petition Agri|P?
cultural PrafauuimNiHHH^JMhA^
V College and l y of
y the state. The <* *?wtiheut much
A? debate, decided egfcllf^^^^bpner of tltese
"* propositions; the lattMMlbe-eesnfl discus.
!B sion, and a motion to mymon tka table was
lost; which would iedW^b argue favorin,
ably to its adoption. It W48fljj#g*a' strongly
for opposed. If it should ?a$(A&BMMtf the Con.
he vention or tho Legislating MHhuid be glad
*U to sec the reasons pubfieha^LjOtt ifuntena on
blc they might be anemaiHL ^ Another
ju- recommendation of the eeum&pe WUU the
on establishment of an agrfcmfctlM/.ynpcr in
we Columbia. The Copventioil ?e nucr
merously attended. U.
10 Wm. C. Martin mcinbnc of
Representatives from St. Vmo
elected Clerk of tbe senate is pMiPwok
?rt# Warley deceased. ? <
Bar The mcssago of Gov. Noble, in the prece*
ink co'umn*? contains much to commend,
with but little that u objectionable.
ing _
igh Epidemic in St. Augustine.?An epidemic
im- has prevailed in St. Augustine, whicft some
consider Yellow Fever of a tndd type, and
others are at a loss to classify. A St. Augustine
paper states i hat it originated wi ha family jut t
m? from Charleston where tho lcllow Fev*i
PS**
prevailed at the time, and gradually spread,
first in the neigliborltood of that family, and
>n afterwards throughout the town. Aftliough it
a attcakcd natives tho attacks ?*?W, snd
all recovered. The deaths were confined to
1 persons from the north, and mostly to these
^ who hsd resided at the south only a short
time. The whole number of cases is staled
r*" at 700, the number of deaths at 50.
as The Flour Mill of Dr. Foutkes, near Greens,
ion botough, N. C. was lately consumed by fire,
l a with nearly 2700 bualiola of ? ??? t^v?
i of estimated at more than ?10,000. The fire
Jr i* supposed to have been produced by the
;be friction of one of the spindles which had run
rs* without intermission for several days and
nights.
The Mississippi election has terminated in
ro" favor of the Administration party. Gov. Mc
** Nutt has been re elected by a few thousand
majority, Messrs. Brown and Thomson have
lre been elected to Congress, and it is supposed
that a majority of both branches of the
**' Legislature is "Democratic,"
ich There is now no doubt that Marcus Morton
uld has a plurality ol a few hundred votes in
> of Massachusetts; but it is still ooubtful whether
has a majority of the whole number cast
ion which ia necessary to an election of any
>le, officer in that state. If ho has not, the election
po- devolves on the Legislature. What the
in* political compaction of that body will be is still
ge doubtful. Several of the counties failed to
od make an election on the first trial. In these
nd new ballotinga were to take place last Mondiy
he on the result of which the preponderaueo ol
" strength m both brandies of the Legislature
>1* depends.
Qg _ '
Are the Abolitionists Whios oa Van
Buben ??Let the following conclusion of a
'tn long editorial in the Eraancin.-ifnr on ?i.? ...i.
1 " ject of the Whig National Convention soon
to be held in llarrisburg. Anawer, "But when
the question is proposed naked, whether they
[the Abolitionists] will choose the puppet of
ur s avcry, in Martin V in Bursn, or slavery itset!,
,m in Henry Clay, they will choose neither.
M We stated last week that the Abolitionists
ne were represented to have voted generally tor
Mr. Morton as a candidate for Governor of Mas.
sachusetts. Further information does not con'
* firrm this statement. The abolition papers,
* and we suppose, of course, the abolition party,
ro seem to prefer Everett to his opponent, and
we think for good reason. The abolitionists
^ before the election put to the candidates the
v# following questions ;
1st. Are you in f.ivor of the immediate abo
htion, by law, of slavery in ti>e District of
b* Columbia, and of the slave traffic between tho
in Statef of thia Union ?
- -
-ii 111 iiggggg?
2J. At* you opposed to the admission into
ike UruOn or any new Slate*, the Co ostitis* to*
a*d Government of which tolerate doeseetic
slavery f
Gov. Evertett* after lOrte introductory remarks
answer* 441 respond to both of your in- I
quiries in thflgafflrmative." I
This the orgs* of the abolitionists pronoun- <
ces "quite satisfactory" but it pronounces the 1
answer of Mr. Morton "evasive and unsatisfactory."
- '
Onna, on Alverado Cottor.-?\Vo maks
the following extract from an advertisement ;
in the Columbia papers ottering for ealc the (
teed of thie cotton. i
Dr. J. H. Taylor from little more than 1-4
of the stand be ought to havo had, gathered i
upward* of 1,200 lb*, per acre. The following j
ia an extract of a letter, from Dr Tayimn
You must observe, I had not mere than 1-4 |
of a stand, and planted, too, at ft feet, instead
of 3 ; and yetl will make about 1,200 lb", per 1
acre. 1 believe it capable, on the same land, 1
of yielding 5,000 lbs. planted at 0 feet in dou-. 1
ble rowa. If I live another year I will try a i
hundred acres that way." Mr. F. M. Gilmer |
of Montgomery, Alabama, from aa bad a stand |
Eithersd 1,400 lbs to the acre. Mr. C. T. ,
i Ungates, of Bibb Co. Alabima, from 1-4 of
aa acre, gathered 1,060 lbs, and expected
200 Ihs, more. Mr. Aldridge, who first culti- ,
vated this Cotton, it is said, raised 3,000 lbs,
Eacre, this year, and refused 280,000 for j
crop of30 seres. Dr. J. II. Taylor, from ,i
22,000 lbs of Seed Cotton, ginned l'J bales, of .
000 lbs, average; or 35 lbs of clean, to 100 of
the Seed Cotton. Jesse P. Taylor, well
known here, weighed 425 lbs of Petit Gul? and '
the same of Okra, in the Seed, and ginned |
each; the result was 124 lbs of ginned Petit |
Gul( or 29 lbs to tho 100, and of Okra 156 lbs,
or 36 2-3 to each 100 lbs. of Seed Cotton. The
taple is decidedly finer.'*
> The price of the seed here offered for sale
' is 9100 per bushel, 920 per gallon, and 95
per quart; which arc stated to be the Alabama
prices.
Socth Westbtn Rail Road Bank.?The
stockholders of this institution met in Charles*
ton on the 19th, inst. and continued in cession
two days. Among the proceedings reported
| in the Charleston Courier i* the following.
In the course of the reading of these pre-,
ccedinge, Col. Memrping?r proposed that the
documents before the meeting, with the excep- "
tion of the general statement of the affairs of
,U- l? --- o._i. t- i-iJ ? - >
me Htuiuci u<siin, iiu miu on me taoie, will)
the view of rcfering them to a Committee to
report thereon, at an adjourned meeting, which
wu agreed to.
Towards the close of the proceeding* is the
following item.
Dr. Ervin offered a resolution that the Di- 1
rectors of the Bank be instructed to -establish
t a Branch in North Carolina a* early a* it may
be practicable.
What further was done in the premises the .
report saith not.
The suspension of specie payments 4?y the
directors was disapproved, and a speedy return
, to cash payments enjoined.
A committee was appointed on the subject'
of making application to the Legislature for
! amendments of the charter, among them that
1 tho charter be extended for the term of
' twenty years, upon condition that the company
complete the road to Columbia with one track in
' three years. "
James Rose has been elected President of
1 the Bank.
I
Ltnchino in Noriii Cakocin*.?The
following appears aa editorial in the Salisbury
Carolinian of the 22d. in*t. and may therefore,
we presume be relied on as true.
Lynchino.?On Wednesday night the 13th
inst., six white men, some of whom were painted
and one colored person cn'ered the house
] of Mr. Nathan Lanbeth, Davidson County/
N. C., aeiz d hia person, dragged him some
' distance from the house, there gagged him,
I and inflicted oh his body se\*eral hundred blows
I with sticks. Four of the party becoming
| somewhat alarmed at the conseawnrrs, fleit,
; while the other two remained and renewed the
1 beating, until Lambeth became uwcnsible and'
fainted.
In this situation the party left him, but, af.
ter coming too, he with great difficulty reached '
the house, and on Thursday night died. It
is stated by the Physician who attended htm,
that he was scarred and lacerated from his
neck to his heels, and that there was the appearance
of several blows having been inflicted
on his stomach and abdomen, the latter of
which, no doubt w is the cause of his death.
The circumstances that led to tins glaring
offence were these ; A Mr. John Uow, who
had formerly resided in that neighborho >d, but
1 lately returned from Missouri on business, had
> deposited with Mr. John Leo b'tween eight
' and nine hundred dollars in specie, for safe
keening. This money was- taken frorh'the
desk of Mr. Lee, on Sunday night, the 3rd;
inst.
' Suspicion having rested on a negro roan of
i Lee, he was taken unexamined, and confessed
I that he, in connection with Lambeth tho per"
ton lynched, had taken the money, and the
greater portion of it was then in Lambeth's
possession. This confession of the negro, no
doubt, led to the deed which followed. The
' two persons who were more directly concern*
ed in this transaction, it is said, hove fled. Aa
this matter will, no doubt, undergo a legal investigation
and as the parties implicated are'
of very respectable standing, we refrain from
making any comments on this outrage ol all
law, crdor, and civil liberty.
Since the above was in type, we learn that
two of the individuals alluded to above, John
Gosh and I,cc Whar on have fled, and, no
doubt, are on their way home to Missouri.
North Carolina will prove recreant to the
character which she boars among those who
l i.? - * - -
- vn iici uvu iur regara lo law and good artier,
unless she shall faithfully pursue the autbors
of bo rcfarious an outrage, and rigidly
enforce her laws against them if they can be
apprehended an?f convicted. Kvery man in
the state ie interested in bringing thent to justice.
Whose life is safe, if the unbridled fe.
rocity of bloodliouuds in human shape ie to be
indulged and gratified in tliif way, and with
impunity ? However ga.Jty the inurder>
otl individual m ly have been, bis executioners,
were not tho proper judges of his case. Let
snch men be allowed to judge and execute and
tlie best members of society mav eeun bo tbci?
victime.
* ' V *
Ti'WPH IV frpMUt Whig <l>>i*M ?f.
7&nfls?<X9fbi!atcgr*. . <*
Peftdmg the bill to inonwan tUfc^nrisdiclion
iff Justices of the P?*ara* the other-fay,
the BepiMmtativc lruiti Tiptoe,'.* member
*e undcrstiod, of the pr-ttifbgging fifcternl.
ty thus delivered himself*' **Wr.' Speaker;
If I disposed to Iqtbiitt bntbc benefit
^filiM breed of dogs to wtiieh'T belong, I
nOold vote lor the postage of this bill f - *
Agitn?By way of amendment to a pro.
position to dosfc an expensive setsioa of the
Geociral Assembly at tin 'early day, the
same .Representative moved?"That this
General Assembly will adjourn thse dk
ahen th?y g?t ready and nor before, any 1
thing in Bill Totnef $ resolution to the con- 1
limp mbetiiIt ilanding,"
A gain?3ff srday morning, the propo '
sii ion to adjoort* being under coneMtratioo, 1
a ino'ion was mode to rwfcr the member 1
from Tipton to the Committee on the Li 1
nolle Assylum, whereupon that paragon of
iet% moved a reference of the senior member
from Wilson and the junior member
from Maury to the Committee on Froposi*ons
dpi Grievances t
.! jprom the Georgetown Union.
PtelTee. Nov: \% 1*39. * .
At a meeting ot fher Planter's' Cbth. 'mi r
Deo Di e, convened on the fith ipst^i'tTSu^
Idtioo having passed, that the club be fcposidervd
an Agricultural Club, and a petition
lo the Legislature, for the Incorporation of
the tame, - being signed by the members .
present, the following gentlemen were appointed
by the chair; a committee to dnm
a Constitution with by Laws, for the rejru.
lotion of said club. Committee Hon. It.
F. W. Allston, Col. Josh, J. Ward. S. C.
Ford, Gsqr. Majr. W. H. Trapier, Col.
Thos. G. Carr, and Hon. K. TA He riot.
The Hon. G. T. Meriot, d*. cliuing the
appointment.
Or. J. R. Spsrkmsn, was appointed to
auppiy tuts vncMnry. uo motion, Col. B.
F. 'Hunt, was added to the committee, as
also J. II. AUfton -Esq. Chairman of the
meeting, to act as chairman of the commit*
The followiqg gentlemen were then appended
Delegates.to the, Agricultural con'
vontion to be hold in Columbia, in November
inst, '
Delegates for Prince George IVynaw,
Hon. R. F. W. Allston, Col. A. H. Bclin,
7'hos. G. Carr, and J. H. K*ad. jr.
For All-Sain'f Parish.?Hon. E. T. He.
riot, and Col. Jos. Alston.
- Extract from the Mihijttes, of the Planters
Club, on Pee Dee. i
i . J. R. SPARKAN,Secretary.
?' From the Georgia Sentinel and Herald.
IMMENSE PRODUCTION FROM TEXAS COTTON
" SEED.
is. Macon, Oct. 23, 1839.
Gen'. Hamilton?Sir-: I have carefully
dul'.ivated the Tcxaq Cotton Sef.l whiih
you wero kind enough to prcscqi to m'?.
A#d l herewith a statement of tho
nHsult of its production for this season as far
ad it hiu bejen picked out.
1 measured off three acres, which I bad
pjeked ov?r five timet und the following is
itte result of each of tin pickings :
l^t ncn% 238. 456.604, 618.909, 2975 lbs.
2ki acre. 442.506. 596. ?24. Bill ->oot ?
afJ acre, 2?7,867.1178,942,038, 3712 '
'fhv tliird acre was in a state of high j
dulyvstinn, and will yet yield from 800, u?
1,000 lbs. more. Tiie laud'of tho 1st and
*4<1 acres was somewhat worm, hut will yield
?00 -O 700 lb* more to t?? acre.
, When all is gathered and weighed, I will
inte you, and give you the total amount
ptodgesd on each sore. .
Your obedient servant,
|,4 ClURUfes COLLINS.
" The members of the) -Editorial ConvenHon,
of North Carolina,-should ut once ?*n?
force the robs whictr they-established, and
pledged thenftclve* to abide by in honour
arid good faith, or they should publickly
l-reclaim that tl ose rules are no longer their
gutdtf. Besid<*s an unmanly devia.ion from
the prices established, to which some of
them hove selfishly submitted, a few of them
disgraco-the press of the State by the b<llings-ate
and ungontlcmunly terms in
winch they conduct editorial disputation. ?
We will not particularise, at present as all
our contemporaries in the Suite are m well
acquainted with the facts allu led to as wc
are ; but we ntpectfully call on those who
are members of the Convention either to-enforce
their rules, and decline all connexion
wi ll those who liuvu violated them or to
proclaim those rules u dead letter. - We are I
- ady nay anxious, to strike from our ex .'
change l?*t every paper that hat violated its'
promise, end deals in vulgar personalities;
and we will do so in a very short tone, even
iC unsupported by another member of the
Convention. The press of the State is
wesjc enough to be modest and humble, and
f to this weakness (a weakness of circumstances
; not a natural deficiency) wo have
the audacity to add slang and m alignant vul
gafity, our fraternity will be, not only a disgrace,
hut a curse to honest, ?c1 meaning
North Carolina?Should others have been
less observant of the causes that have called
forth these remarks, we have those causes
"on file/' and we will republish them if
called for : not in our columns of course, but
in private circular to Editors.
Newbern Spectator.
The attitude of Missouri and Iowa continues
to be rntlicr threatening. Apprc.
ItbQpiom are felt of n serious collision. The
St Louis Bulletin of tho 3lst ultimo, says
Wo mentioned in Monday's paper that
nn attempt had b?*en made by an armed
force from Jotoa to imprison the Stv riff of
Clark county while engaged in his official
duties ;and that General Willock hod ant
m despatch If ?ha Governor for orders. Wc
now )?am from thajMfersonian that' directiotievhave
becnfivan to Gun. Wihock to
canso 4* sheriff to he provided with n force
suffiossat to aaablo him to dieohaygfe his do.
ties, -to i^vojiund and doliVr'ovsr to
tlm civiljutfhyrVy uN- person's wlio may bfc
futins' in oypn reftftanac to the 1 uvs, to be
dcu't will: gMh? ":?? ducts'
# ..
t*im loisniei i HHWMw?
KBv ir itino Crnnrt or th Mamaw
or WroauNo.?Aa Indiana papas ghmb ?
Ut the seek eOsgommg by ihe Eolawsw*
wnaHfot im^^anT old at the time of the
nmemei^ JPtmWlotJj hid iljjli 1 the
several disWt* uf the l?e??fe sri* *e
fioeiicy of a native. Site is now a mh?
and has two daughters living with her at a
place called the "Deal Mao a Y#bge.*?
die mother and daughters are trhrjr much
respected, own a oeciion of land, aed ate
very well off in hereon, cattle, Mdt, he.
One of tho daughters boa be?d UudWed, bat
has lom Iter husband c ood the otlx* itmar.
ried to a half breed named flroililcte. One of
the most noble looking'Indian* of the tribe.
It is-stated that tlteir Louad is the abode of
baapiiality end kt..d?y?s, and atiut none of
them have the Icnstot tiroeo associate with
tl?? whiles, or to vis!: the ectrncs of civilize*
tioe. ''
Another pan ifu I lesson, on tins greet dec*
ger of lep ring small children alone, even
for e moment near a fire, is uffordcd'in a
recent occurence, at ColumUa, Pa. A
smell child, belonging to 'he upper Suburb
of that town, was left by its ?no'??er alone,
playing. while she went into an upper apart,
meet of the dwelling. Returning in e few
moments, she found its clothes on firel
and before it eould be rescued, tho child
was so dreadfully burnt, as to cause its
death in a f< w hours.
When politics are the subject in agitation,
every body is nody to send e Jbtter
to ine primer ; out no one secrns willing to
scribble a line for the press when our own
state affair*, of the utmost importance to
every citizen is the subject of enquiry.
N. C. Standard.
canijcc sacac:rv.
On Wednesday last two children, residing
in Barley's lane, Leicester* were left
by their parents at home to prepare dinner,
and while one of them was arranging
the pot hooks?the other at the same time
blowing the fire?i s pinafore became ig?
nited, and in a moment all its clothes were
in a hi izc. A bull-terrier dog, a groat fa v.
orite with the child, seeing the imminent
danger of ns pet, flew to its assistance, and
at the hazard of burning its#mouth, succeeded
in tearing the clothes from, the child,
who. though much injureJ, is, we believe
out of dttng-T.
a v n n a s i .
Importance of a vote.?Gen. Root eras
elected lo the New York Senate, by tteo
majority. This clow canvass shows the
necessity of every ci ixen voting,
RtU. Rog.
Tenon Loan.?The New Orleans papers
stato that the Texan loan of $5,000,000
has been negotiated in England, at 8 pi
cent, interest per annum, payable annually
redeemable in 30 years.
Michigan.?Tims Whigs have eleetet
Therr Candida.Cs for Governor and Lieuten
ant Governor by something over 1000 mn
jority Both Branches oS the legislature
arc also Whig.
Price of FucJ.?~New York Gazette
states that in sotn>* of the yard* in that cry
the enornmds price of $14 50 and $15
the chaldron is asked for Liverpool coal.
Hogs, in numbers, are selling at Peoria
and oilier places. in llhnoir, at two dollars
and a half a hundred.
The library of the Ilcrrsnl University
contains 50,700 volumes, and by the treasurer**
r port, the funds amount to
$670,059 34, exclusive of all buildings and
lands appropriated to the use of the Uni.
versify. fibr?rv. pictures, apparatus, furniture,
dec. $22*3 89*2 71 of which is loft lor
tie* unreneived use of ibe college.
$6,000 lias been appropriated (or a geological
survey of Vermont Slate.
An American has paient. d in England,
and in several othc countries of Europe, an
invention for making bioud or im row woollen
cloths, without spinning or weaving.
Arrrti of S'ave Trader!.?We regret
to Icnrn that three gentlemen of this city,
occupying respectable positions in society,
were arrested and held to bu9 on Saturday
upon a charge of bring concerned in fitting
out vessels designed to be employed in the
slave trade.?Bah. Chron.
cucittu' rufc? iVHRExr.
Fam.iT. Novem er 29.
aiticlu. rita | u. | $ c.
(twl in market, lb t S a 0 7
Bacon from wagon*, lb ii a 12
by retail, lb 14 a 15
Butter lb 15 a 25
Boeawaa lb 20 a 93
bagging yard 18 a 25
Bale rape lb 10 a 12|
i'oftce lb !?{ 5 15
Cotton, lb 9 a 10
Corn bu?h 75 a 80 1
Flour, Country, acaroe brl 4 75 a 5 25
Fsathers fin wagon* lb 40 a 45
Fodder, 100 the 87| a 1
Claa*, window 8*10, 5'll\ 3 95 a 3 374
, .? 10*12, 50ft 3 50 a 3 75
Hides, green lb 5 a
- drv ?
Iron lOOlba 5 50 a ft 50
Iodic? lb 75 a 2 50
Lime cask 4 a 4 50
Lard lb 121 m |5
Leather, sola lb 22 a 25
Lead, bar \b 10 a
Ifgwood . Ib 10 a 1ft
' v n P'' ? ? 50
? . N. O. c?l 50 a ?1
Nails, cut, assorted lb 7| a
, wrought lb 1ft a re
bush Ml : i
Oil, currier* gal 75 % .j
' IW . gat 1 25 a
, Itasccd Kal J jo | 105
Paints, white lead keg 3 25 a 4 50
8k?*. brown lb 6 a 12
Pork tOOlba 7 <% %
Rice lOOIha 5 mjt ft. ?r
. jz ,is : J
gMsss: .. TTlMP*
T^.Catmvk ib is a M
J^llow * fr ft ill I
Tea ,imperial Ib 1 * t Sri
~r-. byaon lb I % XJ$S
Tcstieco. M.u.ut'actur^d lb JQ 4
V ?'r : dMlsS ^t"'id
. . ^"SSiC A 1 * .1- -t-lWIl
CBAitBSTOy. - _
B*Zglnf. Hemp, 1? ? S3
Bole Rope. lb d II J-S)
Baeoo ttame. tt> 10 a 14
8Uoo!iW lb 7 IS a S
Sides, lb 8 *3
B attar. CoAm, prime, Jb 25
Brlcka, Cfcirlcrlon, let quel?J 12 ?
da. Northern 0 a 19
Coflec. Inferior to fair, Ik 9 1.3 a U
Good fair to pdtae, lb II 14 ? fci
I CUoioogreen Cum ft 1M to 12)
Porto Iuco, !b II 1.9 a LS US
But, lb 11 1-9 a 1.3 **
Cotton, Op ord. ft. inf. lb 8 9)
MiddWtonudAioc fair lb 9 a 9*
Fair to ielta fair lbM al<% m
Good Fair Jb lefa I0j 9
, Choice lb 10| a 1 i ?
i FaKHrttiuga.aov. M?4a4S3 1
! Marttatafc. Hot, bU UN?H<4 da.
No. 2. bbi 11 00 a 12 00
do. No. S. bM 7 00 a T SO . 1
Flour. 0*lt.I2. B.aap. bbl a ,
Philadelphia and Thjiak, M *
Cerni, bbl a * ,
Com. hoah 45 a 98 \ "';*
Snm,fig, 100 lb 1.00 ?
s oo . V;.
Xolaatoa, Cuba gel a
NtoiMtaa*, Mi #
Smt HlWHt. f|l ?
MTsyerm. a in tor etr'd fal I 3$ t
yommor atniaad. gal. 00 a 95
Ltnoeod, gai 80 a 09
TaMtoK bU 19 a 15
Net. Koaa, bblMt ? ? 91 M
Prima, Wd It 00 a II 09 ?.
Moor. Baatoa. bM a
l> Rioe, Inferior to food, IfO Ibo 0 00 % 0 Off
Fair to prima, OWaOUl .
Choice, a
i Sogar. Murueia io.fb 7 a 10
Porto Rico a?d. St. Croia. lb 7ia lM
Hereon, white, lb IU a 19) *
' da. brown lb 7) a#
I Lootainoa. lb 64 a t)
. tea? lb 15a A .
Lamp, ft li a ' 'i. ..
' Salt, Lir. cntm, nek 4huafti 1 62| ?-.t
> Fine. aeck 4 boob a
Turk* I aland, bosh 45 a
Eoufh Sice.?Abaft 6686 I ad 11 fco^\tt:~e
l liave'boen sold at 80 a 83 aft. per kftaL
Grain. -The neMpU of Gn ift* CUT
hare here SOUS baalida North QM*MM,*fc > ?
bee* aold withia the Mtf* of ft
vis: <0 or about 65 eta. per buafeal, aaaoidi. - j
quality. About 75SCbeahala MniftMda?> *.. ,
ginia Oato have come to Wad, and been tak r ?t
B^-ThS'tperafioM kttko ootid* 1... .
' been to a fair eatoot. The ft Upliftqaftau.
, rire a correct at ate of the Marin*. MOM Id 4
14; 8hoaldera 7 a 8 / and Mm * j| ft ;? *
lb. Ala* of Jewle brought Bf aft. par ft.
Lard?Wa bare ? win ia Mtiftft * f
port. Several lota Wasftam km baa* *c ..
19 and 12|, principally, bovaaaor, alt th* f "V
1 quotation.
fklt?The auHnt for tkia article ia ?r
advance. Livarpnal See boaM Mlftf 4bv?
cond handa at S| par aedk. Wa cqftat
| quote Turk* Island, 45 aaiftfft
A TTENTiOM
iv
CherawBcatCpmpaiiyNu I
YOU irt lunky ordered to bo tndtMi^
Um market Sqoafa en Sotmdof tt-.-.
inet. at 10 o'clock, A. W. ?no>d and c^eij < . the
Uw direct*, for Company dtiX
By order of W. !> Ha&SV. Chpt
b r: PEUUES. O - . ?
Noretnbor 29th, 1639.
3 3 *
Cheese.
M AA Caeka Choree, just received at-.,
iff fox talc by
D. WALLPV'
November 26th, 1839.
Jj F'
Bonnetts & Hoods. 9
JU8T iniliii a? foroate, oaowour*'
La A?and Mfcw IBooda, aba, W. .. ..
Straw aad Tuaettt BoaoutU. let eat paf.u:. .
1). MALLCV
November 96th, 1839.
a e
. . Nolio^^
qpUEeapaiMoMp of J. T?ill ~*
inako a final close of Omit bu**n3RhW"
all person* having doomoAi ag^Soat Sham, *>
refloat them for payment or settlwew.
JOSHUA LAZARA.
J. HOSES.
Che raw, 27th Nov. 1839.
k 3 ??
Strayed.
PROM the attbflcribotfl aUnttfbto tt. V .
Wflflh. MaeBerourh bictnet ?
day liiffhexlflt Nov. 1883, a chcsuui iot?. t
nacio, 3 yaata old. tolarafclo wo!1, grown, . .
fr-ga?ha* bcco wfCBfldflwna ; no oShee C.S
; MP* w*i be paid for her apptohaoaion av. >*.
livery, Any inforjnaUun may ha ditoolt jp
\ BcwetUvale.
^ ^* ***?>< H
s ff
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