Vincennes Gazette, Volume 4, Number 4, Vincennes, Knox County, 28 June 1834 — Page 1
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VOLUME 4. I 9IACEJYJE& IJYDUHVAi JITJVE 28, 1834. JYITJ1IBER 4
THE
VINCENNES GAZETTE, It Pu'dishcd evert SaluTci'ty, Traii 2 50, if paid dnrine the yror. SI 00. if paid in advance. 5 i 00, if not paij durinr the rear, Pm,.r, Wr for lix1n,,M;t'"- ,. f4, 1 rvpers discontinued ordv at the option of the 1-uU.fhor whilrt nrrr-araer.'are due. i fO-.VtvfutuPTm-nt making one ?q:arc orb-s Kill he inortcd three times for onr dollar, nnd ; twcnty-flvecenti fur every subsequent inseition ;! lonccr advertisements in the same ratio. I, Advertisements otil without orders, wi 1 in ! fill c , he inserted until forbid, and charged accnrdincl y. Such article? of f rodiTCc, ns are used in a family, will be received in payment for snhcriotions, at the market price, delivered in Via cennes. From the .Methodist Correspondent . APPLi: TRFES. A the orchard h to the husbandman n source of profit, it is worthy of hi parti cular attention. Iv taking pains in the selection of tree6, he can have a good !
quality of fruit, lor about the same ex ! untouched by the woims. The poles pense as an inferior kind ; the products of wet e ash, hickory and maple. lie has the orchard will then not onlv' he mote fricre had his timber for rails and oihet desirable to the consumer, but more pro ! purpose , rut at thai season of the ear, titahle to the owner. J and I h ive also successfully tried the cxI makiog selection, three con-i lera-! pot imt tit tions should be attended to. lt. h the! We did not clearly understand at the
apple a goo.i hearer? "I. I it a good : Leepei ? 3 1. lias it a good fl n or i A deficiency in any of these qualities, .
renders it comparatively worthless; and ' xplauation. This we have just received that which uaiics these qualities to the j ami ate pleased to lay it before our reagre Uest extent, may be if yarded asthcideis: l et kind of fruit. j "Tbe hoop poles left in the woods were Experience show, that trcci that do j preserved ft em becoming oucited or w ot m well in one latilu le or situation, will not) eaten, in consequence of having been cut do so well when removed to another. We j IjIc in lite Spring, at the period when the f!oul l therefore endeavor to ascertain J sap is el aboiated in the lull grown leaf, what kind is suited to the climate where) A sawyer told me that logs cut when the we wish to cultivate them. No man pro-j batk first begins to peal, w ill soon become bibly in the valley of the Mukingtim, ifi rofffri, while others cut only a few has taken more pains to cultivate the or weeks later, will remain sound in similar chard than the late John Matthews. He j situations. A-h, hickory , and maple, when procured grafts from every part of the cut at the wrong time, ate very liable to United Slates wdi ere he could hear of fruit be woim eaten.' Genes see Farmer. that was well recommended; a conidera-j Ide portion of which turned out to be j Commencing business too cart.--Lel hardly so good as the common ft nil; pro-; 1000 young men, at the age of 30 ears bably because removed f rom the climate enter into business, w ilh a giv en amount of or Swil to which it was adapted. The re-; capital, all acquired by their own hard ult of his expet ience w as, that the New- ; eai n 1 1 ; , and let them pursue their busiton Pi pin was the mo.-t profitable apple in ness 30 ears faithfully; lht is till they the orchard: it is a first rate bearer, a first ate CO years of age. Let 1 000 more late keeper, and has a tolerable flavor. commence at the age of 20, with three Were we at tliM date to choose for an limes the amount of capital possessed by orchard, our experience and obsei vali on j the former, but fit the same time either would" lead us to select the Uomanite, inherited , or loaned by t heir fr iends, and Newton Pipin, and Uockramain these ! let them pursue their calling till they are houl l make the greater portion of it; 60 years of age or a period of 40 years, they all keep late in the season. The We will suppose the natural talents, capalalter was brought by Gov. Worthington j city for doing business, and outgoes in from Washington City, to Ohio, nnd it is j fact, every thing the same in both cases, gaid to be the best apple that could be Now it requires no gift of prophecy to procured for exportation to the West In- foretell with certainty, that at 60 years
riia Island. One peculiarity of this tree
is, it does not bud until the leaves of oth- I who began at 30 and depended solely upcri are neatly full grown; this prevents j on their own exertions, will lie men ol the fiuit from being killed in the pring j wealth, than of those who began at 20 by late frosts, w hich is the way it is usual- I with three times their capital, ly destroyed in this country. The reason of these results is found in Some eight years ago, when there was ; the very nature of things. liut 1 am sus nearlv an entire failure of the apnle cronj tained by facts. Go into any city in the
in the west, we calculated on John Grouse, i Sen. an experienced farmer, near Chilli cothe, who had probably fifty or one hun-' ilrcl nl' tbp l?nrL r.-.mains in Ids orchard:
from these he had, that year of scarcity, find the far greater part began lile with plenty of apples. He informed us that j nothing, and have had no resources whatthey tent from the seat of government to! ever but their own heads and hands; and him for fruit. lie 6lated he should be ; in no city is this fact more sti ikingly veriglad he had no other kind in the orcUard,! tied than in P,oston. On the other hand, except a few trees for passing use . j if ou make a list of those who fail in buA short time since, we saw in the neigh-! sinews fiomyear to year, and learn their borhood of Hillsborough, Ohio, a kind of j history, you will find that a very large fruit called the "Never Fuil,"fiom the proportion of their number lelied on infact that the trees were annual bearers.- hetiiances, credit or some kind of foreign On examination we found them to be the j aid in early life; and not a few began ve-
llockramain. A few of the graft! of this tree are growing in this vicinity. vr .1...... .m. The Celebrated Marshall eatd that "attendance and attention will make any rrs m iirri T? man a farmer.11 He was brought up to commerce and did not give any nttenti.in to farming until a mature peiiod of lite.
He then took a worn out faun of 300 acres the coffee will be much more pure and delicate, near London. In t hree months he dismis- ' Holland, where coffee is the universal beveled his bailiff, and Performed, bv the aid ''S '- lower classes, the sugar cannot be
of study and practice, I lie uuties oi msbe , IMixilie ,iie most beautiful white re-
.. . . -. . . i . i i nffirp lnmlf Hp Unit mintllPh of i t S operations, and published thoe from 17 H to 1777. He was acknowledged to be tupeiior to mos mer. Arthur up to commerce of the agriculture of the best farmers in that country was a j retired tailor. The leason why tho?e who have been brought up to other pro fessions often make excellent farmer, is, that they have a real taste for agriculture. and enter it with a zeal to which those: who have been brought up to it from in-j funcv are -tranrei . liakevvcU's ad v ice I . . . r . . to V oiinij farmers .i "to free what others - . . are doing,1' or in othei words to tead whdt olhei ? arc doiiig. rai.SCKVATION OF IK. It is well known that the common Wil ting ink, commonly made of vinegar or water for the liquid, causes the ink to mother, drv. and of course becoming thi'-k s'd unfit for u?e unless often mixed
t of hi contemporary far- r , ....... ... .v ,nme imtnKs careiessiy making up meir stances he has been punished severely mr ms armed will) tiie Lioeny
Von,-, too, was brought ! ,a'HV "VJ '1' ri, by accident invented gunpow- temerity, bathe seems not at all to ' . -d! o fo, lh to meet
. Ml -lc Melon, in US View moans naturallv excite (hem to seelc tor ticls, "c i " muui iu uiuiiiusu , --------- - ,.".,; n( ihn "in auaciv w iui in.ii i.jij;
of Middlesex, save one i couibunng what is cheap, ami what is bet . tiaroaruies or war. air Isaac INeivion s . . , .: ....pin )V ho dpuvz from i-.i-t mignty t sbnc lie has r
tip. Having occasion lately to make me of feme strong salt brine for n certain purple, iitu! placing (he vessel containing the brine near my inkstand, the tho't 'occurred to me, that it would prevent the
molhenng and drying up of the ink. Ac 'rnrdinelv I mixed ?ome of the hrinp with the inky natter, nnd found, upon a fair . , J .. , , ' , . trial, my anticipation realized. It keep? the inky compound entirely free arid open, consequently the pen clean, which is a Tr.at desideratum with all who have ue ,..:n im fy yourself. jY. E. Farmer. . .... J Best time fur culling timler . The hest time for cutting limber involves an inquiry of deep interest to farmers. Last summer we received the following notice of this subject in a letter fiom a valued cor I espomlent : " Some years ago, a German on the To liirkon, cut hoop poles late in the spring, and a bundle was accidentally left in the woods Iving on the ground. It remained there a ) ear or two before it was discov rr'd, and llien to his surprise, found to he time w nether tbe hoop poles were pre ; served by Ui'ig n the ground, or Ly icing cut at t'at teasa ; and we wrote for an of age, a far greater portion of the i000j United States, and learn the histoiy of the men who are engaged inactive anu profitable business, and are thriving in the world, and mv word for it. V'OU will j ry young. Young Man s Guide. Makhiz Coffee. In making: coffee, much care - 1 . . . fis rt'ouiMtt in i-xtrart the wlio e streiirtn ana r.avourot me nerry ; ana, moreover, it is veiy erroneous and most expensive, lo sweeten it 1 with moist or raw sugar .Many persons im.i- . ' ' " ' , trit ,i;lf ,.' Iltity ! Hr w,n add more swe en; nur.it uperimeni ne ma oe, u win ue iohiiu . , . r in weight of I'i'fliied SUet ness, and the flavour of i 100 rtuiici . ami ine noatmen on me can:i is iihv : fi :iril itii t:i r wi t h 1 Imir rnlF.'f. whib on such t heir ' ciistoms'and taste, they pride themn Ues highly, I ' squire but lutle thou?ht to acquiesce in th.s A 3IOST IMPORTANT DISCOVERY. A lew weeks si nee, being belated in the afternoon about doing an errand at a few miles distant, I resolved to attend to - . i . i i i . it eany in tne morning, i awnne, anu hastened from my bed, and immediately l;eai d the clock strike. I counted four; I . i i.i t. - : . . . i. . sure, inougm i, ueie i sonm mi-iane li was broad day, and but four o lock. 1 could not account for it. lint 1 saddled my horre and trotted oil It was actually a liiht as the evening is after sunset. 'fhe air was cool, refreshing, enlivening , It teamed a matter of enchantment. I j did my business. My clottuli old Dobbin eemed to enter into the lile of the jaunt 1 and I arrived home to my breakfa-t lull of
" .. .... - .- , nr. t..Ki..i, wis ,ir, ,..u .! ,u i ,a ir:i nio ill liow fine, aner nn iiopei uuui n . ... , i. ...:.i. iu.,i
... . " . . . .. ii . r , - i iw n v r. 1 s t u wiiu iuv va. .v,i . . . .
health nnd humor. The first time I saw my minister, who by the way is a college learned man. I asked him what could be
I. ".! , I I I . .. uie iiifHning oi una uncui"iii"n nijiii j ing. He smiled, nnd told me it was the 1
ordinary course of things; that it was justjarHl either id intolerable. Your man of
as light four houra after midnight, as it
was four hours before midnight. ThisiVia concition or objection were
was a matter for sober consideration. I resolved to see and prove for mytelf. I arose every morning punctually at four, went into my field, looked about me, and found it light enough to work. The thought struck me, that a couple of hours labor before breakfast, would amount to a creat deal IT.-iT. icmb I nmar full doilcr I have followed it up ever since; mv fields " AW 1. W I H I It V I I..'ll.( never looked belter. Never had 1 eo fine i.i.k i ; : iicrciiiii mm c'iiiie, nuu my w i y ence seems improved. My wife enters with her whole heart into this family revolution. My boys are ambitious whoi shall in the moininjr be the one to give
w the birds that play about, they ate as lively and musical. My three gills too, though they were always affectionate and dutiful, used to be rather pnle anil languid; but since their eaily hours, their eyes are as lovely as the dews of the morning, and thvir cheeks brighter than the blossoms of the field . Our breakfast ! table is adorned with clean dishes, and sweet milk, butter and cream, and the
the first call to the others; they skip to made a equate bnBe, on whic h it stood. I the field; and though they cannotyZr withrAh!' said Ins rivals, m we had broken j
cheerful welcome which we give each J world,1 said he, Ms round, and by sailing oilier is sweeter than all the rest. Thejdue West, 1 mu-t reach the Indies. Give cows themrelves, which go to pasture anj'oe the means 1 If th earth jj like a globe hour and a half eatlier than they used to''ou na hut that ?'w;is an insurmount-
go, seem to enter into the family improve inent, and enjoy this hour and a halt more than the remaining part of the day: and my w ife even insists that they actually give more milk than foi merly : but for this I only have her word, and she sticks to it. One thing more, which I did not mention, as it is a family affair; but as it is the best of all, 1 will hint it lor the encour agement of other gills. My Sarah, the obiett daughter, was eighteen six months ago, and though, as 1 said, one of the bett hearted of young persons, was thin featured, and never seemed to get along, as to prospects, in so promising a way as some others. Put these mornings have made her appear half a dozen years young er, and six limes as handsome : and, between ourselves, neighbor Day's son, one of the most steady, industrious, manly sons which a farmer could wish, and has to-day asked me a question which I think is lo end in something. Since my practice of early rising, have made another discovery. I used to see some farms in good order, fences in repair, cattle gentle and sleek, and pas. lures safe, rich, and flourishing; others with fences decayed, cattle poor and wan dering; the family, at the tun an hour or two high in the morning, half dressed, calling out, "The cattle in the field! Shooboy! Shooboyl Whose are they? Plague on 'em! Drive 'em to pound!'1 The discovery which I have made is, that the former are generally famine that lise at four, the latter those that sleep and snore two hours later. Now what J have eeen, I have seen; what I know, I know; and if any body don't believe, that to 6leep from C or 9 o'clock to 4, is as long a from 1 1 or 1? l o'clock to 7; that the day light is just about as early in the morning, as it is late at night, and that the morning is cooler than the day; then I say, let him try aud see, and know for himself. RESULT OF ACCIDENT. Many of the most important discoveries in the field of science have been the result of accident. Two little boys of a spectacle maker in Holland, while their father was at dinner, chanced to look at a distant steeple, two eye glasses placed before one another. They found the steeple brought much nearer lo the shop windows. They told their father on his return : and the . . i. .i i r i c 1 1 co ins lance leu (ii in iu h count) ui periments, w hich ended in the telescope Some Shipwrecked sailors once collected , i.i some seaweeds on the sand, and made a i i ,jre to xvarm their shivering fingers, and!n . . mpl VVhon fhp firp went out they fo'und that the alkali of the PivPid had rnmbinPrf with lb fi;ind. and formed glags: the basis of all our discoveries in astronomy, and absolutely ne cessary to our enjoyment. In the days when every astrologer.and every chemial pvas seeking after the philosopher's etone, most important discoveries concerning light and gravitation are the result of accident. His theory and experiments on of a child; and on gravitation by the fall it . . . . . ot an apple as he sat in the orchard. And it was by hastily scratching on a J J . . -tone a memorandum of some articles brought him from the washerwoman's, the idea of lithography fint presented itself to the miud of Schenfelder. Jim. Bap. Magazine . An ingenious Vankee has contrived to copy a bank. note oo a stone, and then li thograph the notes to any quantity by ,. - - , , j chemical process. It is impossible to de tect ihem from the orijinal
IF.
Vl'U . I I H I II rilttV llfUl' . II VI that vvliKli stsinds at ibi Uh ..f .k;. uJ3 inonos iiaioe is . IIHMnrillil: ' If i it'. T.I i f . . -I - . c 0-.-,-... ... .miuiiion lor a 1" "omife, or an excuse, for an omission. '1 would make headway in the world, noj eipr I nally in his path. Like the lad who delermiueu never to trust tnmseU in the) water till he had learned to swim, the! wight who is always in the subjunctive! mode, would venture upon enterpnzes if he Tereuieof success. And as fortune. blind as the is, seldom favors those who lackeneriTV. nnvptlv and ill snrrese . I ' " ' " - - . .- - - .. . , re almost mvai iably conjoint to the fate j .. . I t,ie ,n:ui corjo.net. oa . That is a canity tinrv tni.i ri.,,i...a ..i,i .u t mj ws wi -v uniuimin tutu tujgg - Alter intfiectual essays on the I,al1 ot diveis i ersons at table with nim to nrake an egg stand on one end. Columbus by tlightlj breaking the shell -lm . . I the ey-g, w e could have dene ill1 If the 'thought had occurred to them, I hey might; but they probably sati-fied themselves that a round base would not ltm a slable foundation, and gave up the point wilh, 'rit was square, it would stand as it i it u ill wot.' Columbus went u step farther, r,(l y removing the if, accomplished what they had deemed impossible. So with his voyage of discovery. 'The able ol j .cli'ji) in the e es ot" (hose to w horn he applied. Coiund us however did i.ol suffer if to lay an embargo on his enterprize, and by overcoming the ifs of the ignorant and timorous immortalized himself, and discovered a new wot Id. 'We need not, however, go back lo fhe days of Columbus for instances. We meet men of ifs every day. A new direction for enter prize is opened ; a few weight the ifs, pro and con ; adventure, and are successful the tardy ones then follow in their wake, eaily enough to perceive that while removing the ifs, their predecessors have also 'removed the deposiies' and reaped the first fruits; but too late
themseive. lo do anything but discover . ?t.lu,t.r jM the Barque Nai.di, of Li verool. Sho that if the market had not been pre sup- (sailed from ibis island in the Thames, Captain plied, they might have done wonders'.' i Kigmaick-n, u an attendant to the lady of J. We wonderhow such a wonder ever , Sa,,Siiii.etti; Ksq., who became bound to pay ... . , , , fi lier owner J.100 incase Diana should taUc adgamed admittance into the vocabulary of v;nitflce of ,,t. lh(iry f,nowe(j to all who one the Yankees. A nation who carry ice ; j,iacetheir feet on "British ground, and claim to Calcutta, double Cape Horn in a Pink! her freedom. Her faithful conduct to ihe lady Stern Schooner Manufacture nutmegs of, who hired her, was such as to induce Mr. S. ... , J Al ., , !tooflrh?r her freedom ; and ho stated that h of domestic 5roa7A--cross the allantic woulJ pay hf;p 11istress the 10o, as well as rain an open boat and establish agencies ward hrr for her services, on condition of roand Commercial Houses in every corner maining" with her in England. Diana refused of the habitable globe, would hardly be '.these generous offers, declaring that the misery , , . , , . ., , ,. :nnd distress which she bad witnessed alarmed be f upppose.l to acknowledge the leg.ti- ( nnd ,hat she ferred JaraH10a, wilh .uvemacy of such a part ot speech as the con-1 rv hIld ,,lentv, to EnUnd with poverty and
junction if. If is, we believe often used to cover a ruse than to speak the honest doubti cf the uuive.eal Vankee Nation. From the Philadcljihia Gazette. TIIE FIREMAN'S DOC. We remembrr having noticed some time since, in a London paper nn account of a dog in ijiiiiuoii, hiio rnnnnesieu iiiucu p;iriininy mr Iiremen, and was invariably present at all tires His name was Tyke; and his customary home was one of the recesses of Blacktriar's Bridge. tie died last Eiimmer, li om some injuries receivi i i . . ji. . an ..-I co oy Dciug tt.rown into me i ipihu-s, oy some - mucreant, in sneer w antonness or xmscniei. nother Uogr, of a character somevhat similar, is spoken of in a lalo London paper. A successor to Tyk has started up in a dosj which has attached himself to the firemen of the London United establishment, and which from the circumstances under which he came to them, has been not unhappily named Chance. He fust presented himself at the Watling street station house, and was then in a half starved condition; and although repeatedly driven aw;iy he constantly returned. The men at last took com passion on mm, arm aumiueu mm as one oi their body. Like his predecessor, his affection I- 1 1 I - appears to ne general, anu tie win, wnnoui any apparent cause, chanj-e his anode from one to another of the different stations of the establishment. He is extremely eager to follow them to a fire; and no sooner hears the noi e oi the drawing out of an engine than he displays uncommon anxiety to follow it, though, from the dangerous manner in which he ruhes into ?, fi i c .,r.. lllC llllLrv uiac Ul n nit,) tin nini uiu . j ci-vaii. im in till rll;ir. if nnsiblp. bi fnro starlillS'.- ! 11m tnkei no not ire nf the men or oi."il!CS beloturS to any of the other offices. When once ! ne ?ul x? A nre' rlc w'" 5 bon' ,,s P'S is raisad, rush into the jet of water, and ap pears to luxurate in rollins; himself about in itHe will then go and take his stand Hi near ns possible to the flank of one oi the engines,; j1" I fw!lrds ,-e!iress of tllu anu ii a means oi access lo me unnmn uuuu m I I .1.11 rush iu and mount . i uiiwards tearless ol the names, in smerai m 1 ... lo .:0;4t vv ue t1L. flfe was ragiis? all around him. At last he missed his footing and fell into the cellar, whence he was rescued with consid U I III' the b! lZ(Jf anj hurnt (li3 tn0uth and f.ce ttvei-e-y. A few months hack tho man procured mm a brass collar, on which the following was eu- ! .1 . i5ra4CU "Stop me not, but let me josr, For I am the fire establishment dog, Shortly after, at a fire in Spitallkl Js, the do WHS lost, and is supposed to have been stolen, for on his return, about three weeks afterwards, he was in u lean condition, and the colter was missing He is a large dog, somewhat between the black-tanned tarner, aud the pointer breed The firemen, as may b supposed under the ciratcumstanceg are m,lch aar.he,l to him Two
i ; ' . . , . . , must ne uuniJeii iiin : nwi in one ivsen u - or three year siaee a dog btlongedtoa mem!' , f .
btr of tb resolution hotine Coaipaiij, man lest-.
ed n similar partiality for firemen, nnd usually s accompanied his mnMer to fires. Y have nlto
at-1-""1 ,,::5 ,er nres. v e nave heard of a dog who?!; attachment to the Ni neary no'je tompony, a no; ;i little sinfrnlar .mil extraordinary, it it smd, tlmt on henrin an alarm of fire, he imrnediali ly hastens to tha Hose houses and barks furiously until the arrival of a member. He has been known to seize th rope witfi his mouth, nnd ntterupt to assist in jf!ra!ng tiie carnage to a Pre. To Young Arithmeticians. If-) 1 lade- of grass grow on a square inch, what number of blade9 of grass would a meadow of six acres contain? There ar cotton fields to be found in ome of thtt southern Mates, containing 3000 acres. J'MT "'"r'! " re planteu fmr foul ui jrl i t r. . . , I . . l . lkra w , ,r - "'. "")' fiaiKU would a held ol 3000 aciet conta in ? To ounf J'attiralsts --If you wish to prepare skeletons of birds, or other small J animals, says me e.utor ot the Zcienfjic 1 racfs, pirn on tne reamers, men give the bird its natural position fn a bit of rwf iiuiliu, 1 1 y (neons oi niicg riii"u-iy ui ranged, and place it in the neighboi hood of ant hills. Those industrious little am mals will soon cler.n the bones and prepare the skeleton lor you. Fossil Shells At n distance of 100 miles from the sea, in France, is a bed of shells, 27 miles long, and twenty feet ia depth. Humboldt found shells on the Andes, 14,120 feet above the kvel of lha sea . Giant Data. The largest bats known in the woild aie found iu the island cf Java. Some of them have bodies a foot long, and wings which meafcute, when ex. tended, five feet. Large Trtt. A Silk Cotton Tree, tH the Island of St. Thomas, in the West In dies, is 34 J feet in circumfer ence. Musical Kile. It is 6aid that if we leave. i laige round hole over the back' bone of a common paper kile, and stretch some strings across it, in the manner of an Eolean harp, it will give, in an audible manner, while floating in the air a hove, the sweet tones of that instrument'..4 Morsel for the Sluti Slavery Folkt. Diana, u slave belonging to Mrs T. Cieogbegnu, of s;iiniicli Tnun. :i rri i'tfl nil ?utnn!:iv. ill n nai. j ffeedom ; and that her own country was th ! be.t, tnougii tmsiano was i tie grainiest, , S- lh 'literally Rewarded, and paid for 1 dv. and declares she is now happy in being peri mitted to return to her native country, and to (resume hr situation in her mistress's houte. J "WhHt think ye of this, ye Ant's Slavery men? IT. not til vnup vLTIr-lioiI Plltliill. nnil t!lf BtaTTj ,risl, .e motk pi.il.inthropists!! Leave ut ; loeotirst.ive3f arui Jamaica would still prosper." Emancipated J'ezro. We are indebted in bo nld frieiul in 1 he O ilnnia 1 Office, for a pic ! t(ro of uh;lt nn eni;, ricipnted neero may be, J five vosrs ierice. Aiaj. poor Q,ia?hie: his dress j , j "adamantine," with the only excepticn, i J 7 . . . 1 1 the plantain is substituted for the tig leave, Awith which our first pan parents decorated them selves in Paradise; ami from the mad career which is now in progress by Stanley i: Co , wa aie afr.iid the predictions of the artiste will soou be verified that the emancipated slave will b reduced to a walking skeleton, endeavoring to catch butterflies as bis only food. The picture will be seen to-morrow, it lh store of .Mr. Ralph Turiibull, in a Yacca Frame, fur the consideration of Methodic preachers and other mock philanthropists. Q-iasbie's ap pearance is pitiable; he holds in his hand an . jempty bottle, which used to contain turn; but at 1 110 M, wjj )e , ultivated five years hence. b ,mist co without his dram, his cl oliiins, and all the other comforts which are now supplied to him by his owner. The people of England knoi not what they dol they rob the proprietor, they injure the slaves; and, finally, will rui themselves from their folly and bigotry.1 "Give me but the Liberty of the presi and I will give lo the. Minister a venal House cf Peers I will give him a corrupt and servile House of Commons I wiil give him a full ewinp of the pnttonage of his rlTice I will give him tha whole IiojI of ministerial influence t w ill ive him nil the power that place i - . ...,u.lBO .Kn,;.. I tt,"iei "P"" 1 . I-""-""" I n n ,1 r. wo rpiiilnnrp nnil vol siuu uoj i i . - , v.... j.t . . . . ii r o i me rresi, i him undismayed; htier engine the aised; COl IV'" shake it dow n from it? height of corruptjon ail( bury it beneath the ruin of tha hblJse8 jt uas meant to shelter. Sheridan. A Recipe for r.-mlcing Bet . -Boil ten ounces Hops in three and a half pails of water one hour, or until the leaves settle at the bottom of the keitie. Then strain it into a twenty gallon cak, in which, must liift be put quart? and one pint of good thick m dasbes. Fill it up with cold water. Add one pint of Brewer' veast. Holl ii over and shake it well. Let il remain in the cellar twenty-four hours with the bung out; after winch it . i i . j . : i . . i . . : t
