The journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1839-1843, October 11, 1842, Image 1

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    VOL. VII, No. 40.]
PUBUSEED ST
THEODORE H, CREMER,
TERUEL
The "Jouttzt At." will be published every
Wednesday morning, at twodollars a year,
if paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid
within six months, two dollars and a half.
No subscription received for a shorter pe
riod than six months, nor any Raper discon
tinued till all arrearages' are paid.
Advertisements not exceeding one square,
will be inserted three times fan• one dollar,
and for every subsequent insertion twenty
five cents. If no definite orders are given as
to thetime an advertisement is to he continu
ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and
charged accordingly.'
POETZT.
THE MOTHER'S SMILE.
DT J. 11. CARPENTiII
There are clouds that must o'ershade us,
There are griefs that all must know,
There are sorrows that have made us
Feel the tide of human wo ;
But the deepest—darkest sorrow,
Though it sere the heart awhile,
Hope's cheering rays may borrow
From a mother's welcome smile! •
There arc clays in youth that greet us
With a ray too bright to lost,
There are cares of age to greet us,
When those sunny days are past;
Hut the past scenes hover o'er us,
And give back the heart awhile,
All that memory can restore us,
In a mother's welcome smile!
There are scenes mid sunny places
On which mem`ry laves to dwel,
There are many happy faces
Who Ii: ve known Ind loved us well ;
But 'mid j.l or.'mid,dejection, *
Tere is liothitig can beguile,
c4ii Show the f and affection
Ufa motherTiOlcome smile!
1/L1C1ZELL.6.7.130170.
lORS.IIEIMe GIRL.
" They parted as all lovers part,
She with her wronged and broken heart;
But he rejoicing, he is free,
Bounds like the captive frum his chains;
And wilfully believing she
Huth found her liberty."
If there is any act which deserves deep
and bitter condemnation, it is that of tri
fling with the inestimable gift of woman's
affection. The female heart may be com
pared to a delicate harp; over which the
breathing of early affections wander, until
each tender chord is awakened to tones of
ineffable sweetness. It is the music of the
soul which is thus called forth mu-ac
sweeter than the fall of fountains or the
song of Howl in the Moslem's Paradise.
But wo fur the delicate fashioning of that
harp, if a chain pass over the love which
first called forth its hidden harmonies.—
Let neglect and cold unkindness sweep
over its delicate strings, and they break
one after another•—slowly, perhaps. but
surely. Unvisited and unrequited by the
light of love, the soul-like melody will be
hushed in the wick u bosom--like the
mysterious harmony of the statue, before
the coining of the sunrise. I have been
wandering among the graves. 1 love at all
times to do so. I feel a meiancholy not
unallied to pleasure in communicating
with the resting place of those who have
gone before me—to gu forth alone among
the thronged tombstimes; rising from every
grassy undulation like ghostly sentinels
oldie departed. And when I kneel above
the narrow mansion of one whom I have
known and loved in life, I feel strange assu
rance that the spirit of the sleeper is near the
—a viewless and ministering angel. It is
beautiful philosophy, which has found its
way unsought for and mysteriously into
the silence of my heart; mid if it only be
a dream—the um cal image of fancy—
pray God that I may never awake from the
beautiful
'I have been this evening by the grave
of EMILY. It is a plain white tombstone,
half hidden by the flowers, and you may
read its epitaph, in the clear moonlight,.
which falls upon it like the smiles of an
angel, through the opening in the drooping
Winches. Emily was beautiful—the fair
est of village maidens. I think I see
her now, as she looked when the loved one
—the idol of her affections approached
with his smile of conscious triumph and
love. She had seen but eighteen summers,
end her whole being seemed woven of the
dream of her first passion. The object of her
love was a proud wayward being; whose
haughty spirit never relaxed from its ha
bitual sternness, save when he found him
self lb the presence of the young snit
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beautiful creature, who had trusted her
all on the venture of her vow," and who
loved with all the eat neatness of a pure
and devoted heart. Nature had not de
prived his of the advantage of outward
grace and beauty ; and it was the abiding
consciousness of this, which gaie to his
intercourse with society a character of
pride and sternness. lle felt himself in
sonic degree removed front Its fellow men
by a partial fashioning of human na
ture; and he scorned to see a near tans
ity. His mind was of an exalted bearing,
and prodigal of beauty. The flowers of
poetry were in his imagination a perpetual
blossoming; and it was to this intellec
tual bounty that Emily knelt down—
hearing to the altar of her idol the flowers
of her affection—even as the dark eyed
daughters of the ancient Gheber spread
out their offerings front the Gardena of the
east upon the altar of the sun. . .
There is a surpassing strength in a love
like that of Emily's—it bath nothing
gross, nor low, nor earthly, in itsaspiring
It hath its source in the deep fountains of
the human hi•art —and is such as this re
deenied and sanctified from the earth
might feel for one another in the far land
of spirits. Alas! that such love should tie
unrequit..d, or tut neil back in :oldness or
darkness upon the crushed heart of its
giver!
They parted—Emil, and her lover; out
not before they had vowed eternal con
stancy to each other. The one retired to
the quiet of her home—to dream over
again the scenes of her early passion, to
count with untiring eagerness the hours of
separation ; and to weep over the long in
terval of hope deferred." The other
, went out with a strong heart to mingle
' with the world, girded with pride and im
pelled forward by ambition. He found
the world curd, and callous, and selfish:
his own spirit insensibly took the hue of
those around him. He shut his eves upon
the pact; it was too pure and mildly beau
tiful tor the sterner gaze of hie manhood.
He forgot the passion of his boyhood, all
beautiful and lovely as it was; he turned not
back to the young and lovely, and devoted
irl, wilo had poured out to him, in the
confining earnestniii , s of woman's confi
dence, the wealth of her affection. lit
came riot .back to fulfil the vow which he
hail pli thted.
:3( 1. and pai , folly the knowledge of
h,r lover's infidelity came over the sensi
tive heart of Emily. She sought for a
trine to shut out the horrible suspicion
from her mind. She hall doubted the evi
dence of her own senses—she could not
believe that he was a traitor—for her mem
ory had treasured every token ef offer tint:
every impassioned word, and every en
dearing smile of his tenderness. But the
truth came at last ; the doubtful spectre
which had lon_ haunted her, and from
which she had turned away, as if it were
a sin to look upon it, now stood before
her, a dreadful and unescapable vision of
reality. There was one burst of passion
ate tears, an overflow of the fountain of
affliction which quenches the la-t ray of,
hope in the desolate bosom ; and she was,
calm ; for the struggle was over, and she
gazed steadily and with awful confi- I
Bence, as one whose hopes are not o(
earth, upon the dark valley of death,
whose shadow was around her.
It was a beautiful evening of summer,
that I saw her for the last time. The sun
was just setting behind a long line of beau
tiful and undulating hills, touching their
tall summits with a radiance like the haloi
which circles the dazzling brow of an an- ,
gel—and alt nature had put on the garni
tare of greenness and blossom. As t ap
proached the quiet and secluded dwelling
of the once happy Emily, I found the door
of the little parlor thrown open, and a fe
male voice or sweetness which could
hardly belong to earth, stole out upon the
sommee air. It was the -breathing of an
:Mohan lute to the gentlest visitation of
the zephyr. Inviduntarily 1 paused to
listen—and these words—l never shall
forget them—came upon my ear like the
low melancholy music which we sometimes
hear in dreams:
"On—no I do not fear t.► die,
For hope and faith are bold;
/it'd life is hut a w,:ariness—
And earth is strangely cold—
In t iew of death's pale satude
My spirit h th not mourned—
'Tis kinder than forgotten love.
Or friendship unrestrained!
And could I pass the shadowed land
In rapture all the while
-1 If one who is now far away
Were nertr me with a !urine.
It seems a dreary Wog to dit
Forgotten and alone—
' Unheeded by our dearest love—
The smiles and tears of one!
Oh! plant my grave with pleasant flowers,
The fairest of the fair—
The very flowers he loved to twine
At twilight in my hair—
Perchance he may visit them,
And hhecl above my bier
The holiest dew of funeral flowers—
Affections kindest tear!"
1► was the vice of Emily--it WaA her
"ONE COUNTRY,: ONE CONSTITUIIION, ONE DESTINY."
HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA;-.TUESDAY,OCTOI3ER ii, 1842
last song. She was leaning on the sofa as
I entered the apartment—her thin white ,
hand resting on her Nrehead. She arose!
and welcomed me with a melancholy I
smile. It played over her features for a
moment, flushed tier cheek with a slight
and sudden glow—and then passed away,
leaving in its stead the wittiness and
mournful beauty , of the dying. It bath
been said that death is terrible to look
upon. But to the stricken Emily the
presence of the destroyer was like the
ministration of au angel of light and holi•
ness. She was passit.g off to the land of
spirits like the meeting of a sudded cloud
in the blue sky of !leaven. Stealing from
existence like the last strain of ocean
music when it dies away slowly and sweet
ly Upon the moon• lit waters.
A few days after, I stood by the grave
of Emily. The villagers had gathered
together one and till to pay the last trib,
toe of respect and affection to, the lovely
sleeper. They mourned her 'fist; with a
deep, sincere lamentation (fiat one so
yonng and lovely should yield herself up
to melancholy, and perish in the spring
time of her existence. But they knew not
the hidden arrow that rankled in her bo
som—the slow withering of the heart.—
She had borne the calamity in silence—in
the uitcomplaining quietude of one who
fdt that th;:N are wows which may nut
for .ymthy Ar afflictions which, like
the canker enticel*d in the heart of ~o me
fair blos , utti are discovered only by the
untimelY decay of 01,4 victim.
Autumn.
W e ore now in the autumn of the year '
—the season II . olden hues and lading
verdure. Nature's chill breath is imper.
ceptibly passing overleaf, plant, and flow
er, and imputing to them all the tincture
of approaching decay. The green carpet'
of creation is being superseded by one of '
yellow or more motley color, and all around
and about us tells of the perishable nature
of things. It is a season pregnant %lid'
reflection, fur it admonishes us that decay
is an inherent principle of Nature.
.It
bids those of us who have not yet entered
the " sear and yellow leaf" of tri:Pre,
pare ourselves for that periorloWnitiba.nd
our resources fur it, as the farmer does his
harvest gathering, that we may look back
on life's summer with a quiet glow of sat
isfaction, such as an autumnal evening's
sun imparts to a landscape.
To those who have already passed the
rubicon of middle life, it tells us that the
advent of file's winter is last approaching.
Like an index to some particular passage
of a book, it points to the termination of
liP. O O journey —to death and to the grave:
Autumn is a chaste and gentle season ;
it has not the cold frigidity of winter about
it; it has not the empietry of spring, nor
the fire and passion of summer. Like
true friendship, it brings a soothing balm
to the mind, without operating in fiery ac
tion on the passions. Its winds are mild
as a mother's voice ; its suns shine on the
world calmly as a father smiles on his be.
loved family. We would that an autumn
breeze should sing our requiem—we seek
no sweeter music:—Picayune.
If there is any one among us who
needs prweeting—that is, ,t ho need a mo
ney to procure his daily bread—the pau
per laws are open to hiird"
In this shameful sneer (ruin a Locofuco
address, recently put forth in Ohio, we
have a volume of comment upon that par
ty's pretension to democracy and friend
ship to the poor. On all occasions, and to
all places, but with 'note blustering pro
fessions on the eve of elections, we find
them pleading to the poor, but nowhere
and at no time have they ever been found
pleading for them. Affecting love for all,
they show pity for none, and flatter only
to deceive. Where is the law, the meas
ure, the institution, founded by lascofoco
ism for the benefit of the pour? Who
can !mint to a solitary act ever achieved
by tlni; clamorous spirit to feed the hungry
or clothe the naked I Echo answers, who?
But this is not the worst evidence of the
hypocrisy of its pretensions. It not only
does nothing itself for the p: or, but with
a species of fiendish malignity blackens
the motives of those who do. If they can.
nut close the hand of the giver, they would
at least embitter the gilt in the mouth cf
the receivers. Hence their never-fsiling,
bitter, anti rancorous opposition to any
and every measure, no matter what, devi
sed by the V bugs to diffuse the means of'
uniieNal prosperity and happiness. When
the %%lugs show an noxious desire to de.
v ale a ll c la.oses of men to an equality of.
privilege and enjoyment, and adopt a poi-'
icy to aflisrd honorable and remunerating
employment to all, thereby enabling every'
titan to maintain his family and train his
children for higher bles4ogs and enjoy
moots, these men, who so rolane the
name of democracy, sneeringly turn sport
us with the insolent taunt that the pauper
lows are open to them! Shocking us the
ivitiowt. to, nothing mere than
have been expected from a party whose
wjole career is a history of grasping,
heartless ambition, and whose animating
battle-cry is , . the spoils of victory:" And
there is enough in the melancholy history
of its ceeasional triumphs to rouse every
friend of the country into active exertion
1 whOnever and wherever its all, vements are
`neon. Therefore it is that 4111 scope
I should be given to the warm, • vehement,
,unsuborned feelings of the heart, whenev
er we approach those schemes of profligate
ambition which threaten the social and
political order of the nation, and which
i i
awaken terror while they k: r,fle indigna•
than in the mind o eve'i fleeting man
in it.-IYetnark Daily eraser.
•
Sale of Sl i tl to gitig to
c't •
• The Seciary of the Commonwealth
. 11114 aclyertisod that in foaetlience to the
. .
DOtYIII.B TAX Law of the ',lit Legisla-
Aare, lie will oiler the following Stocks be
langing to the State, at Public Sale at the
Philadelphia Exchange, on the 23rd of
November next:—
3/'5O shares of stock in the Bank of Pen'
,yivania!
5433 do in the Philadelphia Bank.
008, du in the Farinev's& Mechanic's
- 9110 do in the Columbia Bank 4^
Biridge Co.
25 . 00 du in the Union Canal Co.
1400 do in the Penns) Ivania & Ohio
Oiinal Co.
'SOO do in the Chesapak & Delaware,
Cana I COO% pally.
t©'o do in the Schuylkill Navigation Co.
7..0,ea do in the Bt istol Steam Trans
iitittat ion Co.
' On the 28:h of the same month the fol
liirtivg; atrium , . a great variety of Turnpike,
k !.,,., 0 aii,loNavigation Stocks, will be
- Sol t die State House in Harrisburg:
• ,li. ,
a 7-; of stock in the Codurus Nav
i 'Ca.
07 0 in the Wrightsville, York &
;1 tag Roil Road Company.
IN
T i i i i i ,,n tl i i: i t t !ual ; a 2 e d ITi o n ipny.
a i, a a tid York
00 do in the York and Gettysburg
Turnpike Road Company.
100 do in the Hanover and Carlisle
Turnpike Road Company.
408 do in the York Haven & Harris•
burg Bridge Turnpike Road Company.
Among the mass Stocks thus to be
disposed of is some o the most productive
property of the Commonwealth, while
others are either wholly valueless or their
capacity to yield a profit has not been de•
veloped. The whole scheme is a specu
lation, and was got up with that object.—
It is only another plan of the Loco Foco
Party to plunder the Commonwe a lth.—
Every man of co mmon sense knows that
this is no time to sell Stocks to advantage.
Many corporations to which the State is
concerned have suffered under the disad
vantages of the times—others are just be
gintrig to recover, as in the case of some
of the Philadelphia Batiks, and at any
rate money is so scarce and confidence in
Stocks so low, that few bona fide biddet s
will come forward. This is just the time
for the political leeches to suck her pro
' perty out of the Commonwealth. State
.Stock at par and certificates of indebted
ness issued to Domestic Creditors by the
Auditor (general will'be received in pay•
ment, and these boing already in the
hands of the pets of the administration or
they being able to purchase them of the
necessitous holders at a heavy discount,
they can grab these stocks at a merely
nominal expense to themselves. The
Whigs made every effort to prevent this
wanton waste of the public property, but
party and greedy borers were tot. strong for
them, and the Loco For vs succeeded in at
the same time fastening a DOUBLE TAX on
the People, and ,;iving away the desirable
possessions of the State to their partizans
for a mere song. They first bled the
Treasury of all its money, and they now
rob the Commonwealth of all her visible
property:—York Republican.
OSAGE WHEAT.- A letter in the Pitts
burg Chronicle speaks of a very valuable
kind of wheat called Osage, or many-head•
ed %%heat, originally procured from the
Osage Indians. Mr. Kelly, a practical
farmer of Jackson county, Ohia, has had
'such experience of its hardy and prolific
qualities that he thinks it will yield two
hundred bushels to the acre. From fitly
to eighty heads have sprung up from a
single grain which he planted, each head
containing from one hundred to one hund
red and severity seeds.
REROLA of T 1 r TZ EVottiTtox.--There
ate in the United States just one hundred
soldiers of the Revolution on the pension
list over one hundred years of age. The
oldest incn on the list is 11/CILIKI
of Union county, Pennsylvania, who is in
Ids 115th evil-.
'lice rtiicholiz, , ou Court.
'i'bis magnifies:tit t• Star Chaittlict`'
Court, has been and is one of Governor
Porter's favitree schemes to make Alice*
for his partizans and give employment 'u
I,..litical lusters. A greater nuts in:, has
sever been entailed by locurocotain on the
farmers of our state, tor it is calculated to
produce vexatious law suits and unsettle
land titles ; and many persons who have
for years considerett themselves is firth a
fine farm for the support el their lamilies,
may suddenly Soil themselves under the
harrow of this inquisitorial court and be
subjecte, to the et i•itt , sl ineoevenience.—
A ft instance ot t. is has occur' ed in Beaver
county, o here the greatest excitement
prevail, in Lutis , quetite of the claim set
up by the heirs of John Nicholson to over
one lot Inked thousand acres of land in that
county! The Argus says a number ef
handbills %sere recto ed in Beaver, Iron
Harrisburg. etritattettg lists of lands in
v, esters - Loom its, to be sold at the Ex•
eletn4e lloi el; in Pittsburg, on Wednes•
d a y the 24th of (),!,,b, t, as the property
of John Nicholson, and 110 little surprise
tlarm was wilt essed to lint, embraced
mg it nom two to flute burdred tracts
leaver county, (Alban; hundred ;tete,
eh together exceedits4 oic !utn:le-ed thou
sand acres of the best lan s in the county,
etahracing near a forth part of its territo
rial limits. And this s:irprise and alarm
was, as a natural consequence, the grea
ter, from the bet that THIS ADVEII.
I'ISKNIENT TO SELL IS THE FIRST
IN . FINIATION I'HAT JOHN MC II
OLSON EVER. Il.th CLAIM TO A
SINGLE TItACI' OF LAND IN THE
COUNTY—the many hundreds, now : 1-
most thousands, of pens tins in possession
not dreaming of insecurity front that or
any oilier quarter.
In consequence of this unexpected fiesetense of Ao'ill
claim, a uteettne of those interested is to J .- C. C'ora was taken'
'he held at Darlitepot, on the 23t1 inst., to .„L ~,-,. ; ,„ ( 1 .1%.,.„,i,-„.,. of p
concerte measures for mutual safety and I isties'i , lay imitating to reeeivt
pr .tection.
He made a few rifilkai li,,,.iii
The Erie Gazette of the 15 , 11 also says,
Sided in his firmer decla . ra
' our comm wit unity has been thrti . into .
! killed Ail,f - vots in self-deb,
great commotion by thin receipt from the I-
not thisri , fore euilt of ott
Keystone office at Harrisburg, of ails cr- ii Esr . u,.!. ~,, ap . prapriatr
tisemetitt, olfering most it the twat of „hi ch !„ ,
~.. , ~,,,
,i 5. .,,. i .,
Erie ceunty fun side at Pittsburg on the . ' • '• .! f.•. - ~,.1 ,h e si
24th of o,.toaer next, by the Nicholson ( , „., ~.,.;,:, „„ 0„„1 I," ~.i.
Land Commissamers. The te, eiet til ti, ~,.. ..• i ; 1.,... ~ay of :,..0,,,,,,,i,,
advt.! tisements wits the first intimation 1 „.i 5 „,,,,. „„i„,l „ t h,, „ ith „,
our citizens ever L'd, that their lands lta.l slislitest apparent emotion.-
been claimed, or were is on) way etubsr- i t ;„ .
rased by tlke Nicholson title. The secret
has been well kept by the Governor and' A new WAY TO MARK See
his Star C h Court-. nothing wis sof- periment of leaking sugar It
beret, to transpire until after our lands had has been tried with success
been decreed for sale by this secret tribe- sylvatiia and Ohio. N\ e .
nal, and actually advertised. I%e are one 'gentleman who careh
still entirely in Its dark. There is no the full growth mid devele
report—no statement—nu publict.tion of stalks for the sake of the sul
the ground or priociple on whics this yield. %Viten the small ear
Court Of one eye has decreed and inijudged ! their appearance, lie lopped
the matter. I to leave all the strength of
The advertisement contains the whole ( into flue stalk, ohich thereb
entire county north of the old state line, !grow to a greater height
with the t xception of levin's reverse, 31111 source iil .
aaricult!tral seialll
the Erie reservation, and a large numbed is expected from it, it will f
n 1 tracts smith of the old state hue. %N hat, to the farmers of the West
the people should do is in every inan's ,joice to find that their sup
mouth, and in order to some conceit id', stalks can be tip - nett to so est
action, a meeting is called at the Court' It seems that in many par
I House 011 Saturth.y the 24th nist a I they are making molasses, a
That there is iniquity somewhere no one i stalks.—Journal of (ovum
questions--whether it lies with the Geyer
nor, er his one eyed court sr where, time
Imay develop:, It would seem ai tie, that the
Governor was bound in duty to the eitie
1 zees, whose t iglu s were sot ply involved,
to have made noise public not.ce of this
(matter, in (weer that the persons interes•
tell mirlit know that their 11011W4 were in
' jeopardy, before the,' were put into judg
ment and decree of sales by a tribunal,
which we hope will not toes disgrace the
State
The commissioners of this inquisition
give umoiire that they are ready to ei:lnpro
mise mitt term, is Mit made {mown.
Whether the tribute is in fta/iu or goods
--or a sort of b!,:ck tier 'he exam
ple of the 1 elan, ('h,l Robbers' is all
to the ml t k."
ow. : , do , „; should arouse the pt
/Ada of rh , s to a tle;erniitaul re.si,tuuee
to loenfosein at the pull., it this OUT-
RA ; P:01114 AN I) UNP tIIALEI.I) ROB
BEEO bliCil is l'orterisso—such, the
cuncinct of tho,e oho continually piofe;s
to be tri..mis of the Fas to..r am] Working
man: What li)pucrisy 1--they would sell
every farm in the state to fill the Treasu
ry, that lo,ofocoi,an may a:;tritt rob it!
Ao rIDRKT AND Rzsrum•—•A lady step
ped ovelooisad on Thursday, from the Fer
ry boat New Jasey, in the slip at New
Turk, and was saved from imminent dan
ger of drowning iiy the prompt and sue
,Tertimis „r &1... at, a
hand tin board the boat, who sprung into
the water and rescued her.
It to VS:linafed that the revenue hill just
passed will give employtnent to at least
250,000 persons, - atid the means of eon).
fortit'ult livelihood to Owl 1,000,000.
*AIMS°
~,
[IV Ito Tx. No
A Word to Lurioriai
The prnf , •ss t
friend, and 111.iny of yt.o heti,
Hut, tell us candidly, what ha
foryou or for the country 1 "c
propose to do 1 !lave they
position to foster American
the contrary, are they not to
nun low , wages 1 • This is (licit
in Congress, though they ma:
ently to your faces. We avi
col•uco manufacturer of the cot
adelphia—a man very active
tial that party—declared, nt
that we should never hare
again until wages were red
slander(' of Europe, and we
but " hard money:" When
down to that standard, lam
all the money they earn h
to get, we are quite sure.
What would you think of
you to labor at the European
Look at the average, rates
countries, given below, and
Average prices per week
loom weavers in Europe, i,
weavers of silk, cotton, in
erc., in all their varieties,
board, rent, fuel, lights, &c.
Great Britain, Ss. 0
France, 75. 0
;34itzerland,
Belgium, Cs. 0
Austria, St. o
st ,xonv,
Q 3. 0
Theseare the average pi
entploed in weaving. 'V hi
wade out from a riliort tf.o
appointed by the British Par'
aeatiga e the subject, and w
llWatiSnf acquiring correct if
U. S. C.:Kt:Tette.
AN'e were presented a I
with a bottle of beautiful, e
flavored molasses, manula
ctirosta'ks, by Mr. James 13
dolph township, in this coo:
very much like strained bon,
taste, is altogether preferabl ,
manufactured horn the sup
boon has four amen of c
planted expressly fur the pi:
it into tnolasse..
he expects to commence the
in a few days. lle has cons
chine or mill for gt t o
.which runs with o horse,
We of producing, from one h
bundled and fifty gallons
'he cornstalk per day. lii
s , A with his first experimen
corn, ha thinks, had not attu
age. Out of three gallons c
it came from the mill, he In
pints - of molasses.-- Tipp?cc
BOSTON AND f
The two celebrated and
rapid nags now on the tui
loco and contend for a he
the Camden and Phi!adel
the rot meeting, in o,tobel
mar of the courAe, mho is
Mr. Gilbork , ,, to announce
a puroc of $2OOO, with the
,entrieF,
uF 11 .
NA' nt,;ori ‘Vt.bh has been in
York, " for leaving the S'a'
giving or recrivinA.a•chall
been hklil to b,il in t!,e f
ai,,,wrr the charge at tho C
s..”,nns. he Colond p
end waii dischglicd I!t:tn