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* * . . 1 , . .'i A ' ' ' *'* ~ * $m,iurrsi> tiMg*1ttt,? * <il-JtJE) (SMWB&W.<&W1FM1BWI18I3HR* ^IWB*?????? ?i?? VOLUME VI. CHbRAW.SOPTH-f-AKOLINA, WEDNESDAY. juNfe 7, 1841. NUMBER 3? By M* MAC L?AX? t ? , c Tihmw -?Published weekly at three dollars a q year; with an addition, when not paid within t three months, of twenty per cent per annum. , Tiro new subscribers mny take the paper at * fire dollars in advance; and ten at twenty. t Four subscribers, not receiving their papers c in town, may pay a year's subscription with ton g dollars, in advance. A year's subscription always due in advance. J Papers not discontinued to solvent subscribers * in arrears. a Advertisements not exceeding 16 lines inserted a or one dollar the first time, and fifty cents each |( ubsequont time. For insertions at interval* of two weeks 75 cents after the first, and a dollar if the intervals are longer. Payment due in 8 advance for advertisements. When the number v of insertions is not marked on the copy, the R advertisement will be inserted, and charged til trdered out. CF The postage must be paid on lctfers to the p editor on the bdsiness of the office. If as?? ?? a ? * P **?? An nrnnvrr TV tUUT AT. I RTK A fftfiVfimiVlSi vr Iran* iu m n & SangertUlCy May 8, 1841. e Ml Edss?In conformity to my promis? last spring, that I would let you know t the result of the experiment I recornmend- ^ ed to prevent the destruction of wheat by e the weevil?viz: sowing Rye with Wheat. I forward this communication. ^ I sowed two quarts of rye to a bushel t( . of wheat, the rye blossomed a few days ^ before the wheat, and I observed the fly on it busily employed as soon as it was in ^ blow: and found to my satisfaction that ^ when the wheat came into blow they still ^ committed their depredations on the rye. t| The rye by branching, keeps up a supply in a proper state for them to work on un til they finish their business for the sea- "L son. The last week of their work the Jj, weather was very calm, and the flies were j extremely busy on the rye, but very seldom te be seen on the wheat. The result n was the rye was a total failure, for, take c a handful of heads as they come, and you 0 would not find more than one kernel to n seven or eight heads. The wheat was n not damaged scarcely any. 1 should not ^ think there was more than two kernels missing in a head by the weevil. I found 0 in some instances more man irnny eggs j in with one kernel of rye, so many gener- t| ally that there was not enough for them ^ to subsist upon, and they of consequence all died. Now, Mr. Edes, I think it much (j easier to bait them to their own destruc tion than to drive them with skunks, bedghogs, pr even Loafer s long nines. " J. LEACH. I Piscataquis Herald. Destructive Corn Worm?We ex. ceedingly regret to learn, that a most de tractive worm has made its appearance 1 among the corn in the county of North, umberland, Va. A valued friend writes a as, MI am writing now in a great hurry, ti or I would give a full description of a mast r< destructive worm now in my corn?It d has eat entirely up, as clean as this paper, t! tieo hundred thousand hills of my corn, a Ci great deal of which had been wed out." t> a We learn that a similar visitation to ? that vieinitv was made about twenty tl ~ / w years ago, and these who remember its tl appearance at that time, term it the Pal tl ma Worm. We hope our friend will em- " brace the earliest leisure moment to give 0 us a description (and drawing if practica- tT ble) of this intruder, together with such fi other particulars of its habits, character, # and the extent of its operations, as may w lie in his power.?Amer. Farmer. w st Fit Peoof and rust proof Wheat.? g J. B. Gray. Esq. near Fredericksburg, pi Va., gives in the last Southern Planter a ai description of a kind of wheat which is tl termed "fy'J>roof" introduced into that ai county by the Hon. Jno. Taliaferro. He tl ays; fie u Whether, in the abstract, or practical, a! ly, the opinion of several farmers, for two ei or three seasons, authorise the opinion d that it is Jly:proofy and in one case, the or. st dinary wheat of the conntry was entirely tl cut to pieces by the fly, whilst this s( wheat, immediately alongside, escaped n ?- ?-i? .1 aiiogemer. a 44 Of its productiveness, last season, at tl least three bushels were made for one of w the common varieties of the country. It n has the largest grain I have ever seen, and fi is a red bearded wheat; from which it is p argued by a miller, with whom I have si just conversed, that it will not make super fine flour. It admits of being sown as fl soon as the 15th of September. My pre- b aent crop is so luxuriant, that, a month h past, I was advised to mow or graze it, o notwithstanding a heavy harrow had been passed over it." d Mr. Taliaferro has furnished the fol- d lowing history of the wheat described, in " a letter to Mr. Gray. The latter gen- t - ii * tleman, id communicating tne same to c the editor of the Planter, under date of I 3d inst. says?u Up to this date there is t no appearance of fly in my crop, whilst I an adjoining field is materially injured by a that insect." I HAOLEY.May 22,1811. t Dear Sir,?Your note, desiring a history 3 of the wheat you had of us last fall, is re- 1 ceived, and I regret that my information I in regard to its origin, does not enable 1 roe to give such an account of it as may I t>e satisfactory to you, or to your agricul- < tural friend in Richmond. In a con versa, c tioo with my friend, Dr. A. Naudaine, t United States Senator from Delaware, t ' - about five years since, 00 agricultural, opics, I mentioned the ruinous ravage* :ommitted by the Hessian fly on our crops 1 >f wheat in Virginia, whereupon he in- s ormed me that the farmers in Delaware * lad for some years cultivated a species of t rhe it entirely exempt from the ravages h >f that insect; and he kindly offered to l end me a specimen of it for trial. Ac- I :ordingly five years since he sent me a d raction over two bushels' of this wheat, b .nd we now have the fifth crop of it, and a i remarkable fine one it is, without the r east injury from Hessian fly, or rust, two t ormidable adversaries to wheat. During a II this time our other descriptions of a rheat, injuxta position in the same field, o nd often on very superior land, as well d s that of our neighbors, have been seri* e usly injured both by fly and rust. Such a i my experience in regard to this wheat, d nd such is the result in ail cases where it c as been tested hy many to whom we o ave furnished it the last two years ior r xperiment. A few facts in relation to his wheat will satisfy any farmer why it e scapes the Hessian fly necessarily, and r rhy it is more exempt from rust and rot, f han any other winter wheat. It will be g aund by all wha try it, to possess more b nergy of root than any other known a 'heat. So that if seeded, as it ought to 9 e.betweeen the 15th and 25th of Sep. n ember, though the fly will attack and cut J AT the fall shoots, its energy of root is uch as to leavethat uninjured. And in lie spring, owing to this energy of root, b he growth is more vigorous and rapid ? han any other winter wheat, so that by * he 15th of April, a few days before the A pring fly begins to hatch, the ground. t< >int of this wheat becomes hard and sa. ? less, and consequently free from the e pring ravages of the fly. This wheat g ipens about one week earlier than any b ther winter species, and is, therefore. ^ lore exempt from rust and rot. All I c ould learn of Dr. Naudine as to the origin 0 f this wheat was, that it came from Ger- P fiany, but by whom it was introduced b ato Delaware he could not inform me. n ill who cultivate this wheat should not r mit to sow it between tha 15th and 25th c f September?in all that month will do. f t should be seeded thick, because if thin, 11 k* nnAAmmon tar ai ?hf r?f fh#? head will I " ,.v ear much of it down. And it should ot be harvested till fully ripe, for if cut in le milk state, the grain assumes a dark v nd unsightly aspect. Unless we could v et rid of the Hessian fly, I have never 8 nown so desirable a species of wheat as v lis. v I am, dear sir, faithfully yours, J. B. Gray, Etq. Jons Taliaferro. '' b the rose-bug. e *o the Editorof the American Farmer : q This little insect wherever it is known r tall is known to be extremely destruc- f ve to some other flowers as well as the \ )se, and is sometimes so numerous a9 to % estroy all the early cherries, the hautboys, j ie grapes, and sometimes the more deli- r ate varieties of the peach. Many years t ige I have often loU al these fruits ex- j ept some of the varieties of the peach by r lese destructive insects. Of iate years ley have done me little or no injury, and ley are nearly extirpated from ray prem- r ' 9 . .i i ' ies?they are only to be seen at tne places ^ f their destruction?these are Linden ees when in blossom. When these trees rst begin to blossom about my yard and ? arden, at one ot them over a hard naked alk, I was surprised to find the rose bug, hich had been vastly numerous and de- tj ructive for many years before, dead in ^ rcat quantities under it?as many as a int or quart might be swept up under it t a time dead. My first impression was, iat the bugs died about the linden tree ^ fter depositing their eggs and terminating ^ ieir natural career, but such is not the icf, and I now speak with confidence fter several years observation and ezperi. nee when I say, the hlossom of this tree estroys them, and will extirpate or nearly ti > the race from its immediate vicinity, on t! le farm on which they grow. This fact f sems to be out of the ordinary course of s ature, for we are taught to believe that ti II animals in a natural state are led by f 1 it 4 ie wise instinct of nature to avoid mar, o 'hich will poison or dostroy them. In h ishing into the enjoyment of the delicious t agrance and honey of this flower, they t recipitate themselves on their own de. o Auction. b I state the fact% for the information of r orists and fruiterers, and hope that those n etter skilled in philosophy and natural o istory, may solve the seeming heterodoxy I f it. On visiting Mr. George Law's resi. If ence at the west end of your town some } ays since, which may well be styled the c 1 multum in parvo" of good and pretty f hings, I could but ask the question why t 'Ur brother farmers should send to New s England for pigs, when they may find all p he European improved varieties in Mr. I -#aw's possession, bred with great care, r ind which may be bought at prices much I ower than the prices at the north ? Is a 1 hing better in proportion to the distance f fou go after it, and the risk of its loss you t un in transporting it?or is an animal r >red in Europe and costing thirty guineas, 1 vith the cost of transportation added? * >etter than the same animal bred in this t jountry f om the same parents at a cost I >f twenty dollars ? This is another pro- ( >h?ra which I will thank you, Mr. Editor, ) o solve. T. E. i Populari Grotty 18/fc June* 1841, i i Disease in Oats called " Sedoino.' 4 There is a disease by which oats ari ometimes extensively affected, callei Sedging the oats heard well, and con inue for some time apparently to thrive >ut soon get into a bushy state, and th< eaves become broad, like flags or 'sedge. Jpon examining the roots, they are founi liseased and full of tubercles, which, upoi ieing opened, contain a redish powde nd animalcule ;?the plants, incapabli ?f bringing their seed to perfection, con inue some time in this state and then di< way, reducing the crop, both in quantit] ,nd quality, to almost nothing. Potati >ats are more liable than others to thi lisease, and early crops have been attack d, while thosa of very inferior quality nd cut green, have escaped. Were i liscovery to be made of the cause am ure of the disease, it would confer ai bligation on the farming interest t< ? - 1 ? nane u Known. Note.?In our experience of this dis ase in oats, we have a!way* observed it ocurrence on the same portion of th< ieid ; and believing it from this circum tance to be a local affection, we have y local draining, succeeded in effecting , perfect cure. The presence of the in ects we conceive to be the effect, an< lot the cause of the disease.?Ed. Ag rour. Chinese silk Cotton.?We hav< ad left with us a specimen of thi lew species of Cotton, which w< rould be pleased to show ou riends. For fineness and beauty of tex ure, and length of staple, it is, withou xception.the most superiorjarticle we hav< ver seen. Specimens of the plant, to ;ether with the cotton in the seed an< oil, are to be seen at Messrs. Anderson Valker & Co's. It differs from th< oramon cotton and the Okra cottoi oth, in having no large branches?th< ilant growing in a straight stem, with tin tolls growing in clusters around it, gener illy five in a cluster. It matures, also norc rapidly than common cotton, am onsequentlyjshould not be planted earlie han the 12th or 20th of May. We deen t eminently worth a trial in this latitude ?.Memphis En. Patent Shingle Cutter.?Whei re called attention to this machine las reek, we had not then seen it; we hav< ince taken occasion to examine it am ritneas its performance. It is indee< ery simple in its construction, but is onlj he more valuable on that account, sinci f wnnirM nn ffrwif mpphininl skill tl '~v? ? ? o-? uild one and put in complete operation ither by water, horse, or hand power The shingles which it turns out, are supe ior to any drawn by hand, and are fi or use as they come from the machine Vith horse or water power, we suppose i vould easily cut twenty or thirty thousam n a day. By lengthening the blade, i night be made to cut staves for barrels o ubs with the same facility. The follow ng certificates furnished us by Mr, Tor ance, confirm what we have said of it The right for the county is for sale. I do hereby certify that I have pur hastd of Messrs. Torrance one of D. C icMillen & Go's. Patent machines fo utting Shingles?have applied watei ower to it?have had it in operation foi everal weeks, and have found that i erformed all that was promised of it. I jlfils the recommendations given it bj he said Torrance. It will cut one hun red shingles per minute, and as perfec s is desirable. Obestbs Wilson. Charltstovm Va. 1841. The Clerk of Kenawa County certifies 3 the good character of Mr, Orestes Wil on. on cattle. Messrs. Editors?Having spent aom< ime this spring in Gennesee county foi lie purpose of purchasing cattle for th< Eastern Market, and seeing an ardent de ire prevailing among a considerable por ion of your intelligent and enterprising armers of improving their present stock: f cattle, I propose giving some genera lints upon that subject?more especial!) o those, however, who breed for the Eas ern market. For steers and working xen, I prefer the Devons to any othei reed ; as their fine horns and beautifu ed color, united with their quick, gracefu notions, give those of tho same weight >ver other breeds, a price varying fron 110 to 840 per pair more. For cows, the Durhams stand unrival ed for their superior milking qualities ret when we consider their color am :oarseness of flesh and the quantity n bod consumed, they are not so mucl he Holderness, or a cross of the Durban md Devon and Holderness, which sui full AA M>aI| lurcuoacis gcuciany iuii as wcu n? mi Durham. I have frequently sold a cherrj ed cow when driving, for full as much ai ' could a Durham, where the blood of th< Devon was evidently to be seen, from th< ine color and horns taking the fancy o he purchaser. But I would not by an; neans wish to be understood to rank tb Devon or Holderness in the same clas vith the Durham, but would either advis he cross, or the pure Durhams for cows would also suggest the evil which result rom the too frequent practice of many o rour farmers in overieeaing tneir ouuso >ure bloods, of either kind mentioned vith grain, dec. 4tc. in order to make j * great show to their neighbors, in the sise ? of the animal, and also in publishing the 1 weight, at 7,12 and 18 months old, which . is proof sufficient that they are not proper , animals for sires. More especially where s this practice has been persevered in for ' some two or three generations. Itisgenj erally known that the offspring of healthy 3 men. who live and wade in luxury, hand m ' r down to their posterity a curse which * will follow them through life, and which * cannot be easily shaken off; and most B certainly whore two or three generations f follow the practice of their ancestors, 0 their bodily powers sinking into numer* s ous complaints incident to the human family. So with the brute creation. J And, depend upon it, if you rear calves j from bulls that have had their digestive , organs distended, the same will be band* 3 ded down, and if not fed with the stme bountiful hand, such stock will sink into * comparative insignificance. s It would be much better for those rais 5 ing stock to seek that their bulls should * be fed well; that is, have as much good ' hay as they wish to eat, and kept as the ? old saying is, "heart whole." A few j roots in winter, say given as often as once a week, would be advantageous per. ' J haps, and advisable, as in winter all ani* mals like a change from dry hay, making 9 them most " hearty." s I noticed a small stock of very fine s Devons in Sheldon, in this country; also r a fine Deyon bull, near Le Roy; also * a fine herd ofDurhams, the property of * Mr. Remsen, near Alexander, and the 8 i ery Devon bull, Red Jacket, near Batavis * the property of a Mr. Cone, lately from Connecticut. ^ All the above named cattle I would particularly recommend to the farmers of B Gennesee county, as they have not, I B think, been over-fed, any cf them suffi. . ciently to injure their stock. Mr. Cone >f assured me that he had let his bull run j with his other stock, none of which had r any food but hay and straw, ii This is the best way to produce * fine stock. For what farmer is there that can feed and nurse his whole stock ? and what farmer is there that t wishes any stock of the kinds mentioned, B but that will improve his old stock, on 4 the same keep ? Rest assured that good j blood improved your stock, but great leea j to particular animals should be condome nod. a The Devens have proved themselves to i, the particular favorable attention of the * farmers generally, (excepting, however, * those who keep dairies,) for hardy con. * stitution, standing the long winters, and * keeping, as well as any other stock on the J feed. Yours, , An Eastern Drover. r New Gennesee Fanner. From the Farmers* Rsgister. * CRUSHED CORN MEAL?FBEDINO HORSES? PRESERVING BACON. Since my former article, in relation to crushed corn meal, was communicated to * the Register, I have been informed by the r highly intelligent iron-master, therein at. r luded to, that he kept his mule teams, of r six each, fat last summer, though hard at work every day, on a daily allowance of one bushel of crushed corn meal, and the 1 same quantity of bran, mixed thoroughly together and fed with cut straw?with a moderate quantity of clover hay in the rack. With corn at 371-2 and bran at 10 cents a bushel, this mode of feeding 3 would reduce the cost of a six* mule team to lest than thirty cents a day, or * . ?? j five cents a mule, exclusive 01 nay ana the straw mixed with.the meal. A sincalculation will show every farmer ) how much he could gain every year, by r adopting this economical mode of feeding ? his work horses; dc ubtless enough in a life, time to buy a respectable farm for his . sons. r I was also informed by this gentleman 3 who is one of the best farmers and mana| gersl ever knew, that he fattened twenty r bullocks last fall on crushed corn meal, at . much less cost than he could have fatr tened in any other way. He is decidedly \ of opinion that he saves more money by ] crushing and grinding his corn, than by ) any other economical process practised on , his extensive estate; and I know no one in i whose sound practical judgment I have j grater confidence. As ray sheet is not full, I would add a word on another subject* A respectable | neighbor informs me that he has preserved f his bacon for twenty years, without the i loss of a single piece, white, washing each i joint, on the fleshy side and at the end of t of the hock early in the spring, before the 5 fly depositee its eggs. He gives the pie. f ces a thick coat of ordinary white-wasb, s with the common brush, then hangs them b up in bis smoke-house, where they remain s until taken down for use. The white, f wash does not impair the flavor of the Y meat, or injure it in any way, in the slight, e est degree. Ploughbot. s Rockbridge, Fix., March 17, 1841 L Cure fob Mubbain.?Thomiui Fors syth, of Chatham, Canada, gives the following recipe for the cure of Murrain, f which, he says, in nine cases out of ten, has proved successful. The person from I whom he obtained it has cum a great many cattle in hia vicinity, for which he charged 91 per head, and asked 910 for the recipe: Recbip*.?Give 112 oz. pearlash, dissolved in 2 qts of iron.water, (from blacksmith's trough.) If not better in 5 hours, give 1-2 an oz, more in 1 qt. water. The water should be warm. Give no drink but warm water, for two days. Give warm mash to eat itew steamer. Considerable excitement has been ereated among scientific men in France, by a series of experiments performed by tbe ilfarquis de Jouffroy, with the view of ira. provement in steam navigation. This gentleman haviog concieved a plan for gettingrid of the inconveniences of the ordinary steam paddles, has been for some time working out hiitheory, and has only very recently brought it into practice.^The apparatus of M. de Jouffroy, consists of two pairs of articulated duck's feet, placed either at the sidefe or stern of a vessel, having an alternative motion, so as to open, in order to give the impulsion, and close again precisely the same as the foot of the duck. M.de Jouffroy's first experiment was made in the canoe of the raisin A* In Folia. Sr. James, near the ?""") ? ? - -?, - Bois de Boulogne, with the model of a frigate, made on a scale of 1 foot to 37 feet, and ?o constructed that the common paddles or his improvement might be used at will. With the common paddle, they performed a distance of 130 feet in seven minutes; the paddles having performed. 130 revolutions: at this the propelling was completely exhausted. The common paddles were then taken off, and the duck's-foot paddles submitted. With 180 oscillations of these paddles, the , vessels performed, in the same space of time, a distance of 158 feet; but what was the most remarkable was the fact, that instead of stopping short when the clock-work, which in both cases put the machinery in motion, had rundown the impulsion communicated to the vessel by the steady and undeserved motion of the i duck's-foot was sufficient to keep the vessel moving 150 feet more. This experiment was in both cases against the wind. With the wind the vessel performed with the common paddles 160 feet in eight minutes, the paddles giving 182 resolutions: the impelling power having ceased, the vessel scarcely moved. When the new paddles were put on, the distance performed in the same length of time was 230 feet; and the clock-work having run down, the vessel so far from stopping performed in eight minutes a farther distance of 160 feet. The report on these experiments by the Committee of the Institute composed of practical knowledge is highly favorable; In their opinion, the experiments on a small scale are sufficiently conclusive to induce them to recommend to the French government, in strong terms, the addopting of M. de a JoufTroy's principle, which wu allowed by many scientific gentlemen present to be superior in many respects, to that of the Archimedean screw, which has been found so valuable in getting rid of the strain upon the vessel and the Agitation of the water, which is so destructive in canals and so dangers in river navigation. Another advantage i?, that M. de Jouffroy's principle may be adapted to vessels of any construction.?N. Y. Standard. pobtbr's patent anchor. The longstanding objection to the anchor at present in use is its having, when in the ground one arm, which is not only useless, but frequently mischievous. It is well known that the only reason for having an anchor made with two fixed i arms, according to the plan of the present day, is to insure one taking the ground on whichever side it may fall: and the crther immediately presents a dangerous projection, which in a crowded anchorage becomes a hidden peril, frequently doing incalculable injury to the ships and boat, and only found out when two late to be remedied. The patent anchor invented by Afr. Porter differs from that in common use by the arms being movable: they fit into jaws formed in the head of the shank, and secured with a pin or pivot on which they move in byone direction: this means, when inuse one arm is brought quite down upon the shank; thus removing a great source of danger to shipping and also lessening considerably the strain or leverage on the shank. A further advantage presents itself in the improved construction which the patent anchor admits of. The arms and shank of a comraon anchor being made in seperate peices, and then welded to the crown; the - * ^ risk, in the hour of peril, of taiiure irom one unsound weld, is great. But ill the patent anchor, the shank and arm* being made apart, the latter can be laid up with bare extending from pea to pea, thereby securing the full strength of the metal. It issaid to cant and bite quickly in the roost stubborn ground. The advantages in stowing, from the arms taking apart from the shank, are strikingly evident. Numerous trials made by an experienced marine surveyor* Capt. Danbam, It N. . ' t ' fully bare out all that we have stated in regard to the advantages of this anchor over that in common use; with this addition, that the same effect is produced at one-taentieth less weight. Each arm has upon it a small projection or tooth that serves to bring the fluke, should it lie close to the shank, into a position for entering the ground. From a personal inspection of this anchor, and a perusal of certificates of its efficiency, from officers of the highest rank in H. M. navy, in which its general adoption is confidently expected, we have no hesitation in reCommending it to the profession. For steam vessels it appears to be peculiarly fitted, as also for floating lighthouse*, breakwaters, and piers. Brown, Lennox, & Co. of Billiter square, are agents for the sale of this patent anchort and they will give every information to inquiring5 parties relative thereto.?-Lomiwi Survey* " or, d^c. Legislature of South Cvroima* ik the house op bekressmt\t|vss, December 11,1821. The special Committee, to whom were referred the resolution from the see* cral States of Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Jersey, Vermont, and Illinois, beg leave to Report, That they have had the same under consideration, and bod, that the State of Pennsylvania, by iu resolution has proposed an amendment to the Con* stitution in the words following, to wit i ThatM Congress shall make no law to ? rect or incorporate any bank or other mo* nied institution, except within the district of Columbia; and every bank, or other monied institution which shall be estab* ? | lished by the authority ofCongrem,ahall together with ite [branchee and offices of discount and deposits, be confined to the District of Columbia;" in which that State requests the concurrence of her ais* ter States ; That the Statee of Ohio and Illinois have concurred with Penosylvan* ia in the proposed amendment; and that the Stetes of New-Jersey and Vermont have disagreed thereto. Your Committee are unanimously of opinion, that as Co* grtss is constitutionally vested milk tie right to incorporate, a bank, it would be unwise and impolitic to restrict its opera* tions within such narrow limita as the District of Columbia. They apprfbeod no danger from the exercise of the powers which the people of the United Statee have confided to Congress; hut believe that in the exercise of these power* that body will render them subservient to tho great purposes of our national compact. Your Committee therefore beg leave to recommend to this House the folio wing resolutions: Reso'ved, That the Legislature of the State of South Carolina do not concur in the amendment of the Constitutionefthe United States, proposed by Pennsylvania intha following words s? * Congress shall make no law to erect or incorporate toy bank or other monied institution, except within the District of Columbia;, and every bank, or other monied institution which shall be established Jby the authority of Congress, shall together with its branch* J #\f WlMAHAt AMil O lliu viutca vi uisuiHui ?uu u?]wwi?f be confined to the District of Columbia^ Resolved, That the Governor of this State be requested to transmit copies of the foregoing resolution to the executives of the several States, with a request that they lay the same before the legislatures thereof. Resolved, That the House do sgrse to ' the report. Ordered, That it be sent to ' the Seoate for concurrence. By order of ike House, R. ANDERSON, C.H.R. IN THE SENATE. December 12, 1821. Resolved, That this House do concur with the House of Representatives in the foregoing report. Ordered, That the re* port be returned to the House of Repre sentatives. By order of the Senate, WAT. D. MARTIN, C. a LA KGB flOBftCRirriO*. At a meeting of members of the Church sf England, held in London on the 7tb of April, for the purpose of establishibg and perpetua. ting a fund for the promotion of religion in the PnUniv ?Hji nihtrpiMmna imAllfltnH OrilWU VVIUUIW1 v w .. . to the large cum of one handled and forty thousand dollars. Among the subscriber* we perceive the names of the Queen Dowager, for ten thousand dollars; the Archbishop of Canterbury for five thousand dollars; Bishop of London, for five thousand dollars. Arcbbishop of Armagh, twenty five hundred dollars; Bishop of Durham, fifteen hundred and seventy five dollars. Bishop of Winchester, fiU men hundred dollars; Bishop of Rwgpr, one thousand do'lars; Bishop of St. Asaph, one thousand dollars; Bisbop of Lhadofg one thousand dollars; Dean of Chichester, one thousand dollars; Dean of Wectn>nsterr one thousand dollars; Bishop of Salisbury, five hundred dollars; John Gladstone A Sow, five thousand dollars; Af irquis of Cholmondefy, tvrenty.five hundred dollars Thomas Uyt?* twenty-fife hundred dollars; John Hardy* twelve hundred and fifty dollars, and man?of five hundred, two hundred and fifty, and other large sums. This is doing things en a Urge scale. biiti naosu. We were favored yesterday, with a plate of ripe poaches from the excellent and smueftl . or heard of Mr. Francis Michel?the first, we ' believe of the season. A bowl of Hack Cfcflf* lies domed an aeccpuWea^mp^ggr . . ' v?