Vincennes Gazette, Volume 4, Number 5, Vincennes, Knox County, 5 July 1834 — Page 1

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EMM "ijrciijywii&i zjtfiiAJii Jirisir 5, 1034.

Trir. VINC n M I-t r; g GAZETTE, . I'ii)ish( ! n rni Saturday, - I' I . t . - r i .... '.... 1 k . ?

Terms f 2 o), if ini, darinc: Ibe year. On. it'junil in ad vancc. ' 5 00, if not paid during the your. . 1 2o, fur six i)i ' 1 1 1 h-. Papers discontinued onl at tlm option of tlje publisher while arre.tnere- nrc tine. ' "rl7 A 'I ver f moment- making one ;nn re or less will be inserted three limes for one dollar, and t wenty-live cents for everv siih.-eipifiit insertion ; 1 oilT'T advcrli-emeiits in tho same ratio. Ivert iements se.it without orders, will in nil v. --, I,.; iiis-iled until forbid, ami charged ;i;eor.linLrI v. Sneh article of produce, n an: ucd in a family, will he received in payment for ?ubFeripti.is, at the maiket price, delivered in in i ( re s.

From the Genesee Farmer. n:cr: posts.

fn n late number of the Farmer. I re-

For this will prevent waste, and the shor ter the grass i-, the sweeter it be, and the more lender and agreeable to tlieir

commended the cult ivn t inn of the locuf. ipabife. believing it to be the most valuable tim-j "I suppose that one ncre of rich land her for fence posts. Sinre 1 penned tint j in clover, will support twenty or more article, 1 have reflected much on the sub- sw ioo , large and small together, through ject, an.l have been led to the conclusion, 'be fummer, and brirg them well forwaid that by the use of strong alkalies. spvpt.-iI in their srrowtb. but llev should have

kinds of timber abounding in our country

ma) be rendered durable in the ground.

An intelligent larnaer o! Cayuga county,

iings in their noses to present their rooting out the clover. "It has been proved by many trials,

informed me, that when be entered on (that bogs in such a pasture, may be kept bis farm, about thirty years arrn, there M" cood plight without any other food.

borne say they may be halt lattened." Ohio Fanner.

From Hansard's Science of floriculture.

OX jrAV."IAKI(". Having observed that in a season when there was no rain whatever, and the hay bad been made with rapidity, and carted w ithin a short time alter it had been cut, that a gi rater quantity was destroyed and injured, by being overheated and burnt, than in a catching irregular season; that when hay bad not heated in the stack it was frequently mouldy; that as hay lost its native utcen color and approached a crown, it lost its nutritive qualities: and that altogether, the making of bay, as usually conducted, was a very precarious and leasing operation: I determined on trying to arrange a system on some more regutar and certain principles, in which I succeeded; and by adopting a certain and regular course of operation, was enabled to make my bay of a uniform good quality ; n:ul, let the w eather be as it might, at a regular expense of labor. And considering such a process not only of importance, i'.s it ensures, a more perfect quality; but as it ail'ords a more certain protection against the injuries usually consequent on the uncertainty of the weather, and over-heating in the stack; and it thus remotes two great causes of anxiety, it

rnay be well worth the public attention

stood on it a building w hich had been used

as a potashery, and against which lay a large quantity of (cached ashes. On re moving it, within a few years, he found that one of the posts, on the side next (he arhes. was of bassxi'ood, and , to use his own expression, as sound as when put in. In building our fine packet ships, the spaces between the timb er, and ceiling, and outer planks, are filled with salt, it having been ascertained to render the wood imperishable. In article, page, 01 of 1st vol. of the Farmer, it is stated that "the Shakers at Union village have been in the habit of making oak posts as dura

ble as locusts, by a very simple and easy j

lame Ikes That bees may be so tamed as not to hurt peisons to whom they are accustomed, I have, by many instances, heard exemplified, but most remarkably in the fo lowing account: A gentleman residing at Perry, St. Edmunds, could do with impunity any thing he liked with his bees: be knew every one of them; could distinguished earh bee from hi3 fellow, as a shepherd is said to individualize bis sheep by the physiognomy of each; and, if he wanted to show a particular bee to a friend, he would have the hive to wich it

. . -. ." . . .11 I . A ' . I t I. It .1

process. 1 his is merely to bore a hole m i neiongeu uirenci out into ; nuui, ion uie that part of the post, which will he just j insects about with bis bands, like so many

peas, and unharmed, select irom them the

one required? This feat he has often

hi me suriace or rne earm, wan sucn a

ope ns will carry it pist below the sur

f... 1 CM It ... Id. ..li '

I.H t, (HIM 111! ll run. With the exception of the red cedar, which is found on the islands and shores of our lakes, we have no timber that wilt remain sound in the ground many y ears, unless measures are taken to neutralize the acid contained in the wood, in the part buried in the earth. It appears, by the above statements, that the ley of wood ashes, and salt, have that effect ; and we have reason to believe that lime would answer the same purpose. Hut which will answer best can only be obtained by experiment. Query Does not the ley, salt, and lime, drive out and occupy the place of the natural moiture? I believe it to be a fact well established, that sea

soned posts are more durable than green

In the first place, as to the state of the r,ne3 antj conclude the reason i, that . . . .... t

there is much less of the acid remaining

I will now propose to the readers of

the Farmer, that those ol us who have

e the

weather, it generally happens at this season of the year that there are three, or four days rain and tbreo or four days

Jrv; Uieremre, on nejrinmni; u cui ""- leisure ami opportunity. shouM ma

grass, as it h well known that during wet weather grass may be cut, and suffered to remain in the swarth for several days without injury; and it being desirable, where bands are plenty, to have a good quantity, or so much aa will complete a ftack iti a day, in the same state of lor wardness; I should prefer beginning to cut during the rainy weather: however, be this as it may, the swards should not be opened but on a certain tine day: and w hen this is done, the grass should be well shaken opart and equally spread over the ground. As soon as the upper surface is dry, turn it well over; and in this

been ieeo to perform.

to neutralize the acid. Or, if this be at

tended with too much trouble, set one third with leached ashes, to within six inches of the surface, then strong asheslet one third have salt applied, ns done by the Shakers, and the other surface to be set with lime from the surface to the. depth of six inches, for it is at the surface

operation, srreat care should be taken to nf the ground that posts decay. Iy such

open and spread any cocks that may not j experiment, in addition to the benefit to

Curious Fart The Shaddock contains generally thirty-two seed, two nf which cnly will reproduce J-liaddoeks; nnd these two it is impossible to di-tiiiLriii-h; the rest will yield some sweet orange?, others hitter ones, olliera Again forbidden fruit, and in -hort all the varieties of the orange, hut until the trees are actualy in hearing, no one ran jj-iiess what the fruit is likely to prove; Hnd even 1 lien the seeds which produce Shaddocks, iilthongh taken from a tree remaikahle for the excellence of its fruits, will frequently yield only tuch as are scarcely eatable. Lttcis's Journal. hiiiww ii i ill mwm m w mmmm 'lh a i t : i? t c a i i i ;si i i;nts . Gkorok Washington- was born 11th February old style 1732. He lived at Mount Vernon, Fairfax county, Virginia; was elected President of the United States in 1789 at the age of years, and died December l'lth, 1799, G7 years of age. Jonx Adams was born IGth October, 1735 He lived at Quincy, Norfolk counlv. Mnes:rhn:plf s v:.s plprfpd President

following experiment: 1 rocure sound oau, ! nf ,he ,r Sa(eg in n91 attheage of C2; chesnut, or white cedar posts, and when; amJ (,ie(, Ju, 4th? 1)0o nl G c'cockj p. they are well seasoned, divide them into! M a,most 91 year3 of n?e three parts. Of that part to be put in , Thomas Jkfffrson was born in Chestbe ground, let one third be in strong Icy,; tPrfield conntv, o(1 A;;r.,, ,7 13 Ue lived one-third in a ftronsr brine, and one twird . ;jt !lontjceii0; Albemarle county, Virginia; in lime water, a sufficient length of timej u a5 elected President of the United States

Females zvantol i the West. The cor-ry F.adie, while asleep in bed was delibrespondent of the IS' . Y. American, w ho erately shot at by a ncro named Aaron wnfj-j Imm Galena, says: with a musket c barged with buckshot and' I he number ol males in proportion to bullets lie r-eived four wounds in the female-n the frontiers, is at least two to face ; one of which, it was ex, .ectrd, would one; and g.rls ot h,pPn, (i m,K,it j Vfi ,1)0f;i T)fi

... oi ou are aiiKe snap- narrowly ffcaped death before, beinoped up with avidity hy the disconsolate tired upon while sitting at his firr. The bachelors. In the mines, a few yearsjnegro has been n ppr rhende d, tried, and since their eyes were so seldom cheered sentenced to be bung. On his trial hu with he sight ot the better part of crea- acknowledged that other negroes were lion, that 1 was told by an old borderer, concerned in the rutre "he bad travelled twenty miles, only to get a look at a petticoat, where it was ru j yr.l. ros'T'ON mo red that there was actually one in the! n c' serving in your useful paper a neighbor hood jfew (las since, n notice, respecting the What a tine market is here for nnmar-1 rp"!'C;.l appearance of the Locu-ts, 1

neu iK.MALirv: we marvel that somej"'" """"ru l" !il4t; u uie louowing exVankee, who is up to trade, does not ex-it,act 'prn the memorandum book of tin port a cargo or two of eastern girls to'1'1' r','Zf;n. lfvv no more, born in the year the valley of the Mississippi. Art icles j 1 7-3 ' 1 "",! "bo was very precise in notwhich are not perfectly saleable among j in ,,nvvn remarkable occurrences, the fastidious bachelors of this maiket",! "Mn.v 1 lu 1719, 1 arrived from Loncould be most readily "snapped up" in the'l'!o" '" ',"l' MjHilla, Captain Iluddcn.

far Vcst. We do not know nf any thing in the present hard times, w hich holds out a greater chance for speculation. J". Y. Transcript.

From the Comtnercial Advertiser. FJIO.H I,II!!-:itIA. Those who feel an interest in the cause

of African colonization will be gratified of June.

in perusing the extract of a letter which

'he Lor usts were here in abundance.

J7Cd Locusts came njrain. 1783 Locusts came ngain. K:uO Locusts came again . 1017 Locusts came acain. Thus hae 1 known this extraonlinary insert appear four times in Pennsylvania, always coming about the middle of May,

and disappearing about the 25th or (3th

They neither cat the leaves of the

we subjoin from an emigrant who went ! treea, vr the fr-iit nor have they ever in-

out to Monrovia in the last voyage of thejjured the grain; they perforate the bark Jupiter. Jlis name is Beverly Wu.soxjof the tender shoot of various trees, inand he is vouched for by the Editors ofljecl their long worm like eggs, and then

have been divided in the first opening. -

This beinf done, commence raking into

ourselves, we should have the pleasing

reflection that we have rendered one to

.!. . ...t.1 i. ., i

winu-rows, in u:ne uiui iiiu nuie. may "cni,e counnv ;iv iiiiyc.

1 should bo sorry it the above suggestion should divert the attention of any of

our farmers from the cultivation of the

made into small cocks before nijrbt. The

second day these cocks mint remain untouched; let the 'itathcr he xiet or dry: the third day. if the weather be certain and fine, throw the cocks open, but if the weather be wet or threatening, they may remain another day, or until the weather is certain to be fine for the day. The cocks thoubl then be thrown, according to the crop, into beds of two or three, rows; and after three or four hours1 exposure, turned over; and taking time to gather the whole into wind-rows and cocks before night, let this operation commence according! v, and none be left open, the day after this," which in fine weather will be the

fourth; tho cocks tnust again remain un-

thither, ilis report, therefore, may be

in 1701, at the age of 50 years, and died j received as the testimony of an honest

July 4th, 182G, at 1 o clock. V. M. lie and impartial witness

the Norfolk Herald as a man well known

to many of the citizens of that borough, and a man of correct moral deportment and industrious habits. Ilis testimony in the judgment of every impartial man, must far outweigh the jaundiced misrepresentations of that equivocal witness whom the immediate abolitionists thought proper, a short time since, to bring upon the arena of the Chatham-street Chapel. Though comfortably situated here, say the editors referred to, and partaking of the prejudice which so unaccountably prevails among the colored population against the colony, Wilson, nevertheless, hail the good sense to discern that a lasting home and a foundation of future peace and in

dependence for his family w ere on'y io be j

found on the shores cf Liberia; and with a view of satisfying himself respecting the actual condition and circumstances cl the country, of which he bad heard so

many contradictory accounts, lie deter- !,' ?irv, bad ptn-n'h of Tnd sufficient it, hum nu

mined to visit and moire ir himsvll, hi- r.-i'r-. r;---J:i!' :un vi

tending, if he liked it, to move bis larnily

die away." Da il-j A dvertiser .

J'try AJlictinj A'cics. By the Boston Atlas we hear the melancholy intelligence of the almost total annihilation of the companies of the IJ. States troops stationed at Fort Mitchell, in Alabama, by the cholera. All but fifteen were dead, and cf those, seven were sick. The disease attacked all indiscriminately, temperate and intemperate, officers and men Lieutenants By rant, Allen, Giabam and Cloud were among its victims. The information is stated to be official, and re ctivtd by the commandir officer at fortress Monroe and vet it is remarkable

that it should have been first made public at Boston .

Iitcrextivg fart. A tVw years ago, n very worthy laboring roan, in this town, who hnd been so ntiMrtiinate ." ? to acquire a habit of drink m.;

tint ber.npjaiff cor j.iced ol its lUlf'OUs teiiUcn

i locust, my only object in penning this be

ins to inform them how to supply themselves with durable posts until their locusts shall have obtained a proper size. Several writers for the Farmer have

asserted that posts last rouch longer if the

was Co years ot nge.

James Madison was born in 17C5. He lived at Monfpelicr, Orange county, Virginia; wa? elected President of the United States in 1C09, at the age of 53 years, lie still lives in the enjoyment of good health, at Montpelier, in the TGth year of his age. James Monroe was born 17G7. lie lived in London county, Virginia; was elected President of the United States in 1 817, aged .09 years. He died in New York, July lib, 1831, at the age of 73. John Quincy Adams was born July 11, 17G7. He lives at Quincy, Norfolk county, Massachusetts; was elected President of the United States, 9th February, 1825, by the House of Representatives, at the age of 58 years.

Andrew Jackson was born in boutn

end which was upwards when grow ing be ; parotjna ;n i7G5. He Jived in Nashville,

put in the ground. 1 consider this worthy of further experiment. ONTARIO.

Tennessee; was elected President of the United States in 1820, at the age of G5, and le-elected in 1832.

Hi:! I iiiiir. I ''.nil n wooden biv n;ii!e. n ith it

a hole iii the lid, and labelled "Jiot, into w hit h lie every dny dropped as much money as he bad been in the habit of spending for lioi'i. The box was nevt r opened till very, .rertn'ly , when ou counting the ?inn, it wits found to bo no h 53 r-'ueunt than r?iC hundred and cii-Jity dollars, with a part of which he purchased a v'ood hoiiselot, a i i I the n niciiuler w ill gotow nn's putting a neat fid comfortable hnn;c upon it.- -ifuch examples nrc above all prni.-c. Sa'-m Gazelle. Fr!r-jrrdimrj;. While certain persons in tho employ ot Major lute, of Guernsey, in Ohio, were lately engaged in qiiarryuig stone lor the repair of the .atiennl Roa.1, on the hill we;' of Cambridge, they found, in a petrified slate, which Is t-upjiosed to have been the body of an ludifiti chil i, hie!., perhap- centuries Hi'o, was deposited in th.it spot. This extraordinary specimen ol ancie:;t reiiiiills wn- found imbedded in a un?s of solid lo' k, urn! has the appear-

1 ' - . .,...1.

of their dwellings have stone basement:""1" V"e . ' soluuya IU'' , , . i i - i I lorm , yet haviiu the t!neral outlines of tho

stories, anci are wniiewasneu lusuicauu,, , Th mnterial of which it ii com-

i ...

in

The letter is dated Monrovia, March 1.

The emigrants that went out in the Jupiter, had all had the fever, of which four had died, viz: One woman of 75, two children under 12, and the wife of the Rev. Mr. Wright. The rest were ell convalescent. "1 am not prepared (says the writer) to tell you much about the distant parts of Africa et this time; p.s far as 1 have seen, I am well pleased. Monrovia is improving very fast; the town contains two hundred and twenty houses, besides stores and other building; there are about ten ware houses built of stone, and a number

out: some are neatly finished.

"There are many vessels on the coast,; the same cavity was also fonnd a. ?Uia!l row .!;,!, n.a n,l.nmin iii 1lmnli'f v.lnt apppaf lo have been Indian bcuda

everyday. We have also many foreign!

posed appears to be u specb of Iime-stune

the same cavity w; -f what appear to I

'.malted together. Gveniuy Times.

HOT SI'KIXliS OF ARKANSAS.

A writer in the Little Rock Gazette,

r i .i ) f : lo v i: u swi x r:. At this season of the year when the far

mer is about sowing grass seed, we should ; gives the following description of the hot

touched, T)r not he opened, nhcther the xcca- jIOpress it upon bis mind not to over look ; springs of Arkansas:

thtr he zcetordry. On the lifth, or the the great value of clover. t you wish The springs are about live miles in a next day, these cocks will only require to (o f0SV jrrass seed in an orchard, by all I direct line from the Washita river, and be opened for an hour or two, when they ,neans jet it be clover. It is not only ! about a quarter of a degree north of the will be fit for the stack. The novelty of j more congenial to the growth of the Louisiana line. They break out of the this mode consists only in suffeiing lhe;trces tharother grasses, but will in con- j side of a mountain, are very numerous hay to remain in the cock the second ami ! nection w ith the apples very near ly fat-; anil abundant in water; indeed they burst third, or alternate days; and at first eight: en your j10gSj without the assistance of j out every where in the sides and bottom it may appear that so much time in liae1,,.,..,, The clover will keep the hogs in of a pretty rocky creek, into which they weather must be lost, but this is not the; healthy and thriving condition until ap-'all run. It is said that they are seventy case. Whilst the hav remains in cocks,' je3 are perfectly ripe, after which, if in number. They are so numerous, and n sliMit fermentation,' or what is termed yonr apples are of the r ight sort, very I their heat so great, that after two or three sweating, will take place; and in consc- j iue jf xuy gniiu will be required. A ! weeks of dry weather, the creek becomes rmenceVter it has been opened on the ! cixeui t ours informs us that he threw a too hot to bathe in opposite the springs.

ib rd and htth days, it will prove m ne , nn.,ni,i v ol clover fiay to ins voung siock : arm uauiia num ... t.b..... i

iut as forward as "if it had been worked i0,rs, while the snow covered the ground ter of a mile

I

l I I. -.l.r.--v,y--i riv 11 I I .

every iiy. vnu iinrtiuu" ing from thi, are obviou-ly the follow ing: by shortning t!ie time of open exposure, the color of the hay is more peifectly t . I ..,.,.-.ilnnlll7 ilia ri'l'lllTV-

ireservea, an i (,uu:i'',ruiij ",v- 'i

the fermentations, or sweating, wlncti

take place in the cock-, prove so much to have diminished that principle, or inclination, as to prevent its heating inj-n ious1 the stack; and the whole operation

..t mh1.ii,.'. wheibei it t .kes four days or

, ubt, lequues thiee d i . - labor only ; an ti... b'.v l.fin" Iflt m ii; it state every nigh

. w!Kh it iithe lea.t p-.u-ly exposed to .. . ..t ibe weather, and in which

uie. i'M ' ,t may rennin for a day or two in uncer .i .. Iilnl in in ri.uu eVKOsUlC

t.un weainer, nn"i .- j much painful anxiety, and useless atleu ilai.ee of laborers, ate obviated.

below, where the water is

and they ate it very readily. His bay bearable . I he exact temperature we

was well cured and well salted, lie is could not ascertain; oui u t xceeus iw ri.-. i tbnt hmr iii n hard seaice i of Fahrenheit's thermometer. I should

IJI lilt U ...... ..- j, - ,

winter m'mbt be measurably kept on this judge the warmest spring to nave a tern-

food. Deane, in his INew Lnglarul I ar- peratnre oi i . i ntuiuu prisons u.

mer. has the followintr remarks: recognise the degrees ot neat ty the tact,

"The ho pasture ehould be so near to that the water win reamiy scaiu uie riair

vessels here. The harbor has cot been

dear since I arrived. "We have fruit in abundance, and the varieties loo numerous for me to mention at this time. "We have also, horses, cattle, hogs, sheep, goats, jacks, and all kinds of poultry that we have at home. "The fish are very fine; I have seen

mul-

Bnlticd Chntern. Wo saw a day or two since the neck of a common pint rum bottlo found in an oy?tir bed in our harbor, und in which a number of erratic Ojtters had taken up their lodging?. They had evidently introduced themselves when quite young, and so Fimcdy nestled themselves to the iuner'sui face, and become f firmly attached to their unnatural abode, that it was impossible to extricate them without actual! breaking the bottlo. In this pjdicainei.t they died. They mist have lived lhe;e a long time. The condition of ihefe stupid oysters fitly illustrates the hi;torv of tiie tinnier. is in-

them weigh ICG pounds. Forge

lets and sunfish are very plenty

"I have been

quainted with

jrood as any in America.

"We have xxo Sablath Schools in Mow ; i,i(,(:ty-r.;ne ca-'rs out of a hundred tnc rou?h rm.m. nnd .-in rvprv dav school for male ; baa 1 of deatii alone can dissolve the connexion

and female runils. I have seen at the

een told by some who are ac- 1 trodurc d to the bottle in early life Micks awny r ,i ,, .i a i ,! :. n'at its content year after-year becomes nioro th farming, that the land is n;;"1 11 j. , . ., . .t' nnd li.oi e ceuii-nted to it, it i-at la-i me ptr-

KKinent n!o,!e el' his unnatural appetite: lit

Methodist Sabbath Scliool about one hun

dred children. We have also Sabbath Schools at Grand Rassa. about 100 miles

-nnd he dies tlnpid a? the oyste r. Portsmouth Journal.

7 .V ( vfi, i fn -rt out of Dad Company. ea-

ter a v a weU-dre.-sed, well -behave.! sailor

the natives.

w

A fricn.l tned and not found wautir.g.is cath gic.it fcacn!ii-e to rttdiu.

the dwelling house, that it may not ne

troublesome to carry the wash to the

swine; and yet so lar oil that the people

may not be stunned with their noise. And a warm cot imi4 be made in some convenient part of their pasture, for them

to lodge in. "To prepare a pasture for them, let the rrroend be broken up, tilled, and manured, .... -

md then laid down Willi clover, for swine aie more fond of this gras- than of any other which our country produces. Let the quantity of land be so pmpoi tinned to the number of swine that they may keep the grass liom lumiing up to seed

from bogs. I believe they are the warmest waters known, except those of Hecla, in Iceland. The water retains its heat for a great length of time; let into a bath at night it is of a right temperatur e to

bathe in, in the morning. It is used either by bathing in the water or by ex

posing the body to the steam which arises

1 1 om it when contineu, and lor this pur

pose, some rude contiivances are raised over two or three of the principal springs, thev have produced extraordinary cures in rheumatism, paralysis, liver complaints; ob?t motions, and chronic disorders, ol every kind .

r t itai,i.,,r (,!.I,Ip1I- i.. i i.,r i;.,a.,i- i-alled at Mr. IlacUftt

IIUIll lUUIUViltdl lllllisuilig uiui -v.. . v. .. -w. . , ,j .ni-uLtu .7 " 1 " . . . , II and have established three others amongje.no.- and -,-ted to -ll,!1: :

III'Mlir ti Wllnll'lllIHA IIV ..t-v, - . - . I I, i i i- r i c

pinaies,

putliit;

keep

is sent

to the Uridewell ior a w eek. Port. Journal.

'K naiiwca. , isnid he I h ive been in l'ort-mouui i.wr "Since I arrived, we have purchased j to.(!av? Utcri surrounded by merry shi land on the Junk river, which is good forjfl,,j have been drunk nil the time. Do .arming, an.l the W,r ,US h'ttVS ofr" 'fiw

rvcllfiit fish and oysters

"We have a number oi tlitlereni irioesj

to visit us from the interior: I have seen them from us far as Arabia. 1 have also seen the Mahomedan priests in the colony ; they read and write, and are anxious to converse on the scriptures. They ask many interesting questions. 'I believe this bids fair for a good country. We only want means for the people who are sent here unprepared for farniincr or any thing: else. I have seen

the sugar cane and coffee tree both very thriving.'"

Attempt to Murder. A daring attempt

Who can live without a newspaper? What man will content himself with such ignorance. Letter, far better, live on one meal a day, or live on the cheapest and homiiestof food. Talk of expense? What expense is it? It is the cheapest book you can buy, for there is ia ll more: reading matter than can be purchased in any book for double the sum. A father of a family who does nut give his children a newspaper, is guilty of sin towards them, for be keeps them ignorant. He takes away stimulus that will create an

appetite for i c.idmg. lor tuJy , a stimuli"

atmurder was made in Wilkinson county, j that will mala thtui Letter i bolars and

(Ja. A genutleman by the name ul Ih n btttcr Uiwii