Farmers' gazette, and Cheraw advertiser. (Cheraw, S.C.) 1839-1843, November 29, 1839, Image 6
1 * .11 '
L. Fa It mbs?'gazette.
fttn>AY tymrnw. itotimiM m. i?
We new lnw a rein fitting which it it
hoped, will render the river bootable.
Mr. Tlmmes W. Prgen ie about to revive
the Camdan JuOsmal* h will favor the
Administration, but witt not oppose elate
bank*. it will lend ita aopporl to the Temperance
cause, and cootaiu selections on
trie 6ui>jcct of Agriculture.
The abo'itioniets, who in New York, have
organised theowelvee into a regular political
patty, not obtaining a satisfactory
answer from either the Whig or Van
Burcn candidate* to represent the city in the
State Senate, alerted one of their own wsmbar
and mustered two hundred voles lot hen.
Gen. Charles F. Mercer, long a most respectable
member of Coogreaa from Virginia,
ius bean elected the Cashier of a bank in
Florida, and, the National IntoUigeocer cays,
that be has signified hie intentioo of accepting
the appointment. Me w&l therefore resign
bis scat in Congreae during the winter.
More than a thoutand gross of buttons are
manufactured daily at Hay den villa, Maes. ?
Tien hnmWd urn man EM amnlavmt - ??
fscturing them. j
The city authorities of Boston have paawd
an ordinance to punish persons who forget or
disregard propriety so for ai to smoke cigars
in the streets of that city. A man waa recently
arraigned for smoking in the street, bi^
it appeared that he smoked not a cigar, bat a
* pipe. Ho waa thereupon acquitted. ^
- m v
Temperance Meetings in iliflbioul JWlfrkt
the state have requested Judge OdNfiflSMrj
Albert Rhett, tlvc Rev. Or.
others to address the |l <syidstWHBByJ
subject of abolishing the license laws^-^jj |B?
< VNenl and Mr. Rhett have coosenteSgb^fc
so, if the respective houses or either of tbam
should grant the privilege.
Inru&TaD Livs Stops.?-Messrs. Gourdin,
Matheson k QK'tif Charleston advertise for
vale, Wood.-d homes and cattle now oo the
way from England to this country. If wett
elected, they will prove a valuable acquisition
to the state; otherwise they will prove ir^ur.ous,
by eiaking an unfavorable impreesioa
oo the m'mdv ot those who may own nod see
themselves and their progeny. The ndvor'
jemcnt is not as particular as it should be in
regard to tho stock of the cattle* and their pa.
ri'y of blood.
Some nus. hovous simpleton* out of sport,
itiiraivkil an olnr>Konl nksina.1 Ia n ^ 1
w.H ? UM?ywp? nwppw w MW HOW
Port Depuaite Md., tod one of them ap>
j.r ??chu?g the animal wm seized in its trunk
a:id dashed to a considerable distance, baring
hit body at the same timo pierced throufb
with thetu&k of tlie beast, which caused un*
mediate death.
Pktti Tactics ?n m Tmiiimib Lm>
i*x.atvrs.?'The majority of both houses being
support-re of the Administration party, resolutions
were proposed instructing the Sena*
tors, and re>juestii]g tl?c Representatives in
Congress from that state to vote against a J
national bank?for the sub-treasury?against
abttt to gecuro the freedom of elections?
against the distribution of the procssds run
public lands and, generally, to support the
leading measures of the present administra*
tion.
Mr. Anderson, of the Whig party, moved as
an amendment, to strike out the resolution
relating to the eub-'ireasury, and insert as a
aubatitute the following being tbe language of
Gov. Polk whilst in Gongrsss, when Mr
Gordon of Virginia, in 1634, proposed tbe
a ib-trcatmry scheme for keeping and disburs*
ng the revenue, viz:
"Resolved, That a corporation it much ta.
trt than aojr individual agent, however responsible
he may be, becaueo it consists of aa
association of iudividuala who hava thrown
together their aggregate weahh, and who are
bound in their corporate character to the axtent
of thoir whole capital etock for the depeeitot;
and that it it the opinion of tkia General
Assembly that the heaviost security which
themoet wealthy individual could give would
riot make public depoeitee safe at the point of
large collectione."
To avoid a direct vote upon thie resolution
a motion was made to lay H on the table,
which prevailed. Air. Anderson then proponed
another substitute, and adopting the language
of Gen. Jackson* in hie annoal m see age
to Congress in 1890 aa follows, vis ; Resolved
that "wc have conftdenc# in the ability and
capacity of the State Banks to perform all the
duties of fiscal agenta for the GovennnenC"
This was also, on motion, laid on tbo table
to a day beyond the session. Air. Anderson
?l _1 _^:i* al ? -
non iiiuvru mi inouwr suosuiute, *'KyttfTg
'ho language o# the Washington Globe, io
relation to a sub-treasury, when Mr. Gordon's
project, above referred to, was brought forward;
viz; Resolved that the Independent Treasury
is "disorganizing and revolutionary, and sob*
versive of tho fundamental principles of our
government, and of ita entire practice from
1799 down to this day; and that it is as
palpable as the eunthat the effect of the scheme
would bo te bring the pubbc treasury much
nearer the set'!*! custody and central of tho
President, and expose k to be plundered by a
hundred hands, where owe under the late
system could not reach it. In such ere am, we
nould feel that tho people bad just canes for
alarm and ought to give their most ipiil
attention to such an effort to enlarge executive
power and put into its hands tho rueano of cor
ruption."
This was also disposed of by laying it on the
' IP
tbo matter which we have mm. The original
mulutioni vm doubtkjfi iftarwudi adop
tod. * .u t - i
- - ) "
Tut Caii 9? tbs abmtas.?Tfab eats
was to be tried in New Hives eft a eeort ,
which commenced he ieeeiun on the 19th.
ha*. bet wee pet off (31 tho 7th, ofJaoeery,
ewisi to the ei cheese of the interpreter.
The Baltimore American statse that notwithstanding
the Ricboeeed tad FMnieka
bovfh railroad company haws repeatedly pebHohod
their rule to receive no powder far
transportation, it is still sometimes omoggwd
into their freight ears. On the 15th. instant
an explosion took place of powder thee am eg.
gled, which caused the {eath of one of the
hands. If it ia (border, in the eye ef the law,
go catMo death by carelessly letting fan e
heavy body in a street or other place ef public
resort; ought not death bysneb an explosion to
be punished as murder f The lightest pan*
ishmeot which ought to bo provided far emuggKng
powder infte a railroad ear, whether
explosion occurred or not, is cooftoement far
Hill Penitentiary at hard labor. The crime
indicates no great rockltee aoos of bnu life
that the anther of it ie unfit to live is society.
Aauoftmu. Ceavimoi.-Wo (earn
verbally from a gentleman who left Colombia
n Wednesday morning that thie body met on
Monday cvenm^tfAMAHfedCol. F. H. Eh
whom Gen.
W.
petition
Mbe etate. tuoch
debate, decidd^ r4PHP^^HMnte of these
proposition!; the lolMjp^^Bmlme discus,
aion, aod a motioQ iftffiMjHK f|e table tree
loot; which would dodSBMmguo favor*
ably to ite adoption. Strongly
opposed. If it ehonld qE^^HBpJhe Can.
r ration or the Lcgislatftok bo glad
to see tho reasons pub)hf|m|H^ tfnntenable
they might be aiaBI^BpfjMtttor
recommendation of tbo rndBM tho
ootablishrocpt of an
Columbia. The CorveatfiUHj^HKfr no- I
merously attended. i ; wr ' <
Wa El Martin
Representatives from 8t.'wjjHnVMff'BifM
elected Clerk of the senatetSjH^PBBk
Warley deceased. ^
The meaaago of Gov. Noble, in the piece*
ding column*, contains much to commend*
with but little that is objectionable.
Ep*Jewiic in St. Aug us ting.?An epidemic
has prevailed in St. Augustine, whicfi some
consider Yellow Fever of a mild type* and
others are at a loss to classify. A St. Augustine
paper statos ibat it originated with a family just
from Charleston where the \e3ow Fenr
prevailed at the time* and gradually spread*
first in the neighborhood of that family, sod
afterwards throughout the town. Although it
attcaked natives tho attache vers mil* and
all recovered. The deaths were confined to
pnsons from the north, and mostly to those
who hsd resided at the south only a abort
time. The whole number of esses is stated
at 790t the number of deaths at SO.
i
The Flour Mill of Dr. Foutfces, near Greeneborough,
N. C. was lately consumed by fire,
with nearly 9700 bushels of wheat. Loss
estimated at more than 910400. The fire
I is supposed to havo been produced by the
friction of one of the spindles which bad rue
without intermission for several days and
nights.
The Mississippi election has terminated in
favor of the Administration party. Gov. Mc
Nutt has been re-elected by a few thousand
majority, Messrs. Brown and Thomson have
been elected to Congress, and it is supposed
that a majority of both branches sf the
Legislature is "Democratic,"
Tborc now no doubt that Marcus Morton
has a plurality ot a low hundred vote* in
Massachusetts; but itiaatill doubtful whether
haa a majority of the wliole number caet
which is neceeeary to an lection of. any
officer in that elate. If he has not, the election
devolves on the Legislature. What the
political complectKM of that body will be is still
doubtful Several of the counties failed to
I make ao election on tho first trial la tbeso*
new ballotings were to take place last Monday
on tho result of which the preponderaueo of |
strength in both branches of the Legislature
depends.
Ann tub Abolitionists Wmoe on Van
Bobbn !?Let tho following conclusion of a
long editorial in the Emancipator, on the subject
of the Whig Nat tonal Convention soon
to be held in Harrieburg. Answer, MBut whon
the OUCetiun is nrnnti?il, ?L- *l-? - -
w I r?-w ??nVU| WHCUIOT IROJ
[the Abolitionists) wiM ehooee (he puppet of
a very, in Martin Van Buren, or rlavery itselt,
in Henry Clay, they wilt ehooee noiihor."
We elated Let week that the Abolitionieta
were represented to have voted generally for
Mr. Morton ae a candidate for Governor of Mae.
eachueetta Further tnfcrrsstior. wi n?
ftrrtn ibie statement. The abolition paper*,
and wc auppoeo, of eooree, the abolition party,
eeem to prefer Everett to hie opponent, and
we think for good reason. The aboUtienists
before the eloction put to the candidates tits
following questions ;
1st. Are you in favor of tha immediate aba
lition, by law, of elavery In the District of
Columbia, and of the alave traffic between the
States of thia Union?
*1
I ""
3d. Am you opposed to lb* into |
the Umtn efany ?w8te<**,the MKlaH?
wiOMMMat of whnjtteiMaas JuniiHn 1
Gov. Erevfott, after NMe irjtridoctocy w Mti
'MWHI ? I respond to bath of your inquiries
io UMgnMrmativo." ,
This the w|m ?f the abolitionist* proootinccf^fRtoMiMMterjTlMllt
nwwrM the,
unrw of Mr. Mortoa hjvmito ud onset!*factory"
______
Onu, ? ALTtitAM Conw.?W? Mkt
lb# following extract from an adrertiaement
in the Colombia paper* oftirrisg for *ale the
aood sf tins cotton.
"Dr. I. H. Taylor from little more than 1-4
e# the itud be ought to hare had, fathered
upwards of I?00 lbs. par aero. The following,
in an extract of a letter, truci Or Teptar*
You moot obeerre, ( bad net merWthaa 1-4
of a stand, and planted, too, at A foot, instead
eft; and yet 1 will make abeot 1,900 lb*, per
acre. | beiiereit capable, on the eatne land,
efyieMiaf (MM Ibe. planted atfi foot in dooble
row*. If I Kro another year I will try a
hundred acree that way." Mr. P. M. GOmtr
?f Mootgmnery, Alabama, from a* bad a Stand
gathered 1,400 lbe to the acre. Mr. C. T.
BilBriba, of Bibb Co. Alab .ma, Cram 1-4 of
aa acre, gathered 14)60 lbs, and expected
900 Ibe, more. Mr . Aldridge. who firm eulti.
mted-thieCutten.it ie raid, rained *009)1*1
Eaere, thie year, and refueed ttOuOBO for
crop of30 acree. Dr. 1. H. Taylor, from.
9*000 Ibe ef Send Cotton, ginned IT bale#, of
900Ibe, ererage ,* or 30 lbe of clean, to 100 of
the Seed Cotton. Jeaae P. Tartar, wet
known hare, weighed 429 Ibe of Pet it Oak and
the same of Okra, in the Seed, and ginadd
each; the reeoll was 194 lbe of ginned Petit
Quit or 20 lb* to the 100, and of Okra 196 lbs,
or S6 ZS to each 100 lbe. of 8oed Cotton. The
Maple is decidedly finer.'*
The price of the eeed here oflbrod for eale
ie S100 per bosket, #20 per gaDoo, and SO
per quart; which areetatod to be the Alabama
'BCsOOSn
_ *"
Sooth Wear era Rata Roan Sans.?The
stockholders of this institution met m Charlestoo
on the 19th, inst. and coo tinned In session
twodays. Among the proceedings reported
< t. r>, i?4? n ? -
h ihv viwmwH vowwr w un loinvaf.
In the coarse of the reading of these pre.,
coedings, Col. MeuupinfiTf proposed that the
documents before the meeting, with the excep-'
tion of the general statement of the affairs of
the Mother Bank, be Uid on the table, with
the view of refining them to a Committee to
report thereon, at an adjourned meeting, which
was agreed to.
Towards the close of the proceedings is the
following item.
Dr. Ervin offered a resolution that the Directors
of the Bank be instructed to -establish
a Branch in North Carolina as eariy as it may
bo practicable.
What farther was done in the premises the
report enhh not.
The suspension of specie payiuenis hy the
directors was disapproved, and a speedy return
to cash payments enjoined.
A committee was appointed on the snbjnefc
of making application to the Legislators for
amendments of the charter, among them that
the charter be extended for ?k? r?n?
twenty yearn, upon conditio* thmt the company
campkte the road to Columbia with am track in
throe years.
James Hose has been elected President of
the Bank. ..
Lfmanio i?i Nona Caaoema?'The
following appears as editorial in the Salisbury
Carolinian of the 22d. in<t. and Bay theirs fere,
we prseame be relied on as true.
Lynch i.?o.?On Wednesday night the 19th
inst., sue white men, some of w(pun were paintcd
and ooe colored person entered the house'
of Mr. Nathan Lambeth, Davidson Ceuntyj1
N. Cseis d his person, dragged ham some \
distance from the boose, there gagged him,,
and inflicted on Imw body several honored blows
| with sticks. Pour of (he party becoming
somewhat alarmed at the eoosson^nces, fled,
1 while the other two remained and renewed the
beating, until Lambeth became insensible and*
fainted.
In this situation the party left him, hot, it
ter coming too, he with great difficulty reached
the bouse, and on Thursday night died. |i
is stated by the Physician who attended bun.
that he wee 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 abdotpen, the latter of
which, no doubt was the cause of his death.
The circumstances that led to this glaring
ode nee were these .* A Mr. John Goes, who
had fcrmerty resided in tbet neighbor ho <d, but
lately returned from Missouri on business, had
deposited with Mr. John Loe between, eight
and nine hundred dollars in specie, fer. safe
keeping. This money was* taken (mA'ik
deofc of Mr. Lee, on Sunday night, the 3rd
Suspicion having rested on a negro man
L?e,oe was taken up, examined, and confessed
that be, in connection with Lambeth the pet*
son lynched, bad 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 doed which followed. The
two persons who were more directly ooocerned
in this transaction, it is said, bene fled. As
this matter will, no doubt, undergo a legal investigation
snd as the partice implicated are
of very respectable standing, we refrain from
making any comments on this outrage of all
law, crdor, and civil liberty.
8ince the above was in type, wo learn tint
two of the individuals alluded to above, John
Goes and Lee Whar.on have fled, and, an
doubt, are on their way home to Missouri.
North Carolina will prors recreant to the
character which she bc^ts among tboM-wko
know her beet for regard to law and good: *
dor, unless she shall faithfully pursue the authors
of so rofarinus an outrage, and ngtdiy
enforce her laws against them if they rsn bo
ssd caavicwd. Every men m
the state is interested in bringing thrift to joo
] uc?- wnooe hf* ? safe, if its uabrtdUd
rocity of kloodbouu4? in humoa *)wp? is to ho
indulged in4 gratified in thic w?irk*J ?j?h
impunity ? Howrrnr gsiXy tho mordefod
individual may knee boon, bd wtopuliwii.
worn not tho proper judge* W hp cue. Lot,
nek awn bo aiiourod to jvigt and axeuto, ami
tho boot mwufroro of 9oc**!j ft^sevs bs ibcir
victims.
. * . '"SiflH
. -
I i0MMMPI frtfci' InNF^MriVVflfr
l^gpp^ll^^llg^lgiN j
from T,^thejCowKohfe on 2?*B?
I b*f from Wilson and (He junior mawifcnr
from Btaonr to tfce ConniMe oo firqnit
'dln^n 4
i m&MM ^n? unnwncf 11
Dee IH-? oiriwd en vWj
IdtiTHi having pawed, that the dub' be hjpb.
eiderid an Agrfceienaf Club, lud a pHira
4P Iht LifiilMwi1, for the Incorporation of
foe ?arae?-bdef signed for the niliWl
preterit, foe fbttoviag pBtfeaw ?fo J#'
(MHfodbf focWr; a committee tofoll
a Constitution with by Law*, for the rfo.
Intion of said dub. Committee Roe. ft.
P. W. AQstoo. Col. Josh, J. Wad. a (5.
Port. Beqr. Majr* W. H. Trader, Cot
Thoa. Oi Carr. aad Hon. E. TA Heriot.
- The Hen. E..T. Heriot, deleting foe
w, I. a Bpsifcmaa, me appointed to
supply the vacancy. Oa motion, Col. B.
F. Iimt, wee added to the,committee, as
dee J* H. Attftoo Esq. Chairman of the
meeting, to act as chfiitaao of the commit:
The following gen{fopep tgiffoil ep
-pointed Relegates, to foe, KjtvCuhiirn\ cocg
-roituon to be bold ip Columbia, in Novem.
bor inst. . . * "
Dolegates for Prince George Wynetr,
Hon. R. P. W. A listen,Cbl. A. H. Bdie,
JTbos. O. Carr, and J. H. ft*ad.jr.
. For All Saio i Parish.?Boo. E. T. He*
riot, and Col. Jos. Afoa. ..
.-Extract Item the M ibiffof, of the Planters
Ch^ on Pec " Dee. . .
, . J.fL 8PARKtfAH.Secretary.
From the Georgia G?aUa?l and Hsryld.
iMMKNea paooocnott nod tsxax oottck
*' STsC*o?. as. iw?.
G?C Wiwflhp., tii : t liMfi carefully
dultivated ikr Teas* CoUop ^1 whifch
fqu ?Mu kial' ffwuj^. (o present to ?n>\
i M* I k<*?wUt+*+**>* statement of tho
ndsult W4to priwloctio;) for (his mmobs Cat
bepn p^ked out..
. ?I measured off three acres, wfiich I had
fked over five limnund the following ia
result sjf each of. tb?\ pickings :
am4H0.#fe004? 618.900,2$75 lbs.
ar'ie*M9-*06. 5$6.?04. 831. 2091 *
&u*t*?7,?67.1178,94% 688,5712 *6pe
third acre was in a state of high
duhnrbtlott, abd *m yet yield hom tKX>, u?
1,668 lbs. more. TUs Jaqd, of ifie 1st and
,64 acres was aomewhipworm, hut will yield
6(W vp TOO lb* more to t'?e acre,
j Wb?m all is fathered and weighed, 1 ?rt9
4*rt? yen? end. fine yonthe total amoam
produced on each sops. .
11Totar obetQeot server.*,
.iia.-.,,- . criARuaacotLiwa
" TU. waul mof ffc, 1 tirUl
iuHi,of North Carolina,-should at ooee enforce
the roles-which" tb*y established^ and
pkxtged tlrutWhwi to-abide by in hoooor
arid good faith, or they should publickly
fmhim that those rules are no loafer then
guide. Besides so unmanly deviation Irons
the prices established* to which some of
them have selfishly submitted, a Jbw of them
disgrace-the press of the State by |he- bik
Itngsgate and angentkwtaaljr terms ia
. which ibey cooduct editorial disputation.?
We wit! not pertteulariee, at present gg nil
our contemporaries in the State are as well
acquainted with the fads all tried to as we
aru i but we respecifiiBy call oe those who
!sre members of the Cunvention cither tocoforee
their rules, and decline sU connexion
i Illiwv "?W IMTU TIUKimi mum OT IO
proclaim those rain a deed letter. - Ww are
' rt*?4y nay noxious, to' strrka from our ex.'
' .ehoqg* list every papetftMkt Hat vMstdl its'
> promise, sod deals in vulgar personalities;
^od've wffldo so in a very short ttme, even
iC unsupported by another numln r of tin
Convention. The press of the Stsio is
nrepjt enough to be modest sod bomMe, and
if to this wrukoeee (a weakness of circumstances
; not a natural deftciency) we Have
t he audacity to add sUng aad makgnera vul
gafity. our fraternity Will be, not otdy a dm.
grace, but a curse to Hooeet, weU r?wnie?
North Carolina?Should others -have been
less observant of the causes that have celled
forth thess remarks, We have those asases
"on fibs" ami we will re-publish them if
called for: not in our oolumos of course, hut
in private circular to Bditors.
.. r Newborn Spectator. I
The attitodo of Maswri and lows continues
to ba rather threatening. ApprohlMiaaw
ere fob of s serious opjlision. The
St Louts Bulletin of lbs 31st oHmim, says t?
Wo mentioned in Monday's paper thnt
no attempt ha<i b^ra made hj an" erased
lonw from imm v> mq*wm in? ?o?r?n of
CUrk co??^wl>4. ?nf?fod * U? fecial
dalle* *es^ ^ s*ff!
tflmHuva Gm* W?i-ock"to
^sim y?1ih?
*? ** ?' ***> fivmmtm m tfm Uw% 10 ?t
dealt tvdh-at tb? ?**.apnea,- , v
it '
-
wiece catted itu pL^I Mwr
tie' motftr ami AtagbMa
(baftflfcfc,nrto 3t Aeacfetwe ofeiaUata.
lie*. /^Hf
Y . ?y? ??
Cmwbw* nam* iwd,,ie iBowMft*
weft nrniitua, at Cuhwubia, P?. A
?mU Mi, helanging to 'he upper suburb
:af faUft, wt left by ha uuxtric *loa*?
4l*yb* MiAi want in* an upper apart
- j _ _w an 4 4LA.
meat of Ike <1 wcfrng. Returning u> ft law
amef ahe fouodim clothe* on Srel
a*J beforb it aawU be reacts*-*!. (be ob&J
tabs eo dreadfully but 0% ai ftp cumb u*
death in ft fcftr boore.
[ - -When pobtcs ere the subject in ftzitalion,
every body ? rtady to send ft fenr
to the fitter j but no one eecvne vifil| to'
cribble Boa for the press often oo^von
atftte afBura, of the ulineal importance to
every citizen is (he eubiect of cmaeiryf
N. C. Standard.
came* afteneiTT.
Oo Wednesday laaf two children. nA
ding in Buriry'a Une, Leicester^ mat lei
by their parunu at home It, prey^e (he dinner,
and while one of them way arranging
the pot hook*?the other at (ha aaaaa tunc
blowing tlw fire?ra pioftfbra beoamt if
Mtl. ml in a mnmsnl all ?? ~ 1
in a hkua, A boll-terrier dog, a grant U*
oritc wklt :ho child, scuiog the iuiiiil?)
danger of tt? pet, 4hiw toil* Miiiuwc^ N
at the hazard of burning as.mooth, saooaod
od in leering 1U0 clothes front; the eUa
who, though much injured, Mr we bsiicvi
oat of deognrs
17 m a a a v .
Imporimmc* of a wft. Gen. Root wa
elected to the New York Senate, by ant
majority. This cloee eaeeam shows the
occmiiy of every crixea voting.
R?*L Rag.
Tme* Lean.?'The New OHeene gape*
tale that the Texan loan of IftjQQftjMI
haa been negotiated in' England, at ft pq
east* interest per annum, payable eopawly
redeemable in SO year*.
Mickfgmm?Ti?e Whigs have eW-W
i their candrd*.&s for Ootiunm and Lieuten
ant Governor by laninb lag over 1600 am
jnrity Both Bnecbf ft Oho legisfauun
are viae Wfng.
Price of Fuel,?New York Qaaatn
fata* that iii soma of Hw yards in that cry
the enormotfs price of $14 fiO and 911
the chaldron is asked for Liverpool coaL
Hogs, in numbers, are veiling at Peoria
and other places, iu Illinois, at two dollar*
and a half a hundred.
The library of the Harvard University
contains 56,700 volumes, and by the mmsureA
r port, dm foods amount to
$070,059 34, exclusive of all boiMhtft and
lands appropriated to the use of the Cmvemity,
library, pictures, apparatus, fornL
ten*, 4m. $238,892 fl of which is left for
the onreceived use of ihccoQrga.
? ,tT.-r.w.f for t
jofiail wiftcy of Vermont 8m?c
An Amtican baa patenb-d in Ea^md,
and in aevernl otlier countries of Europe, an
ioVeotmn far making brondarmirtv woollen
cloth*. without spinning or wmjrimg.
Arrrot of Shne Tnutero.?>We regrtt
to lenrn that three gentlemen of wm cdy,
occupying respectable pus if tone In society,
were arrested and held to bad on Saturday
upon a charge of bring concerned in fitting
out reniel? de?igord to be employed in the
slave trade.?Baft. dree.
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by retail. b 14 I IS
Bauer lb 15 a 25
Beeewaa lb 30 a 99
Bagging yard II S
Bam Rope lb it a 13*
Coffee lb tfi| a 14
CoTToa, 2b fi a 20
Corn barb 74 a fiti
Floor, Country, aearee brl 4 74 a 4 9S
KeaSliet* fin atagena lb 44 a 44 \
Fodder. lOOtba fiT* nl
Giaaa, window BxlO, 50ft 4 44 a S 374
, ^ 10s)3? 30ft 3 56 a 3 75
Hidea. rraaa lb 4 a
? ? wry lb 10 a
iron 1Mb* 4 44 a Mi
Indigo lb ? a 3 SO
Lima cuk 4 a 4 40
lord f' lb tfim a W
Loathar, tola ^F-|k ?" a 25
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