Western Times, Volume 2, Number 3, Richmond, Wayne County, 19 September 1829 — Page 2

0

? IT I una

letters f, om thr .Kzt.m by J. S. Lmcr- alliance with misery. She had now. son. r.sn. 8ro .Vfr York, she said, but one hope left; nnd if that ' ...-....lit .1 1.1.

The Washington City Chronicle ha a'Miotild tail she Iiau oniy aeaui 10 i-a.

to. It is a mtiancnoiy renctiiuii nn

ciitical notice of a hook of the above title.

this in but oi c instance from thousand-,

, , a. ,, , , I UUI 17 1 . .lie. .1 V v. ....... j Jo.lgin from the following extracts . thoe i jf ? :,ggrnvn,cil a. letter would pay well tor the t.me of rea- (fn 0f Sclo. Th- mhabdmfrthem. The author describe in vivid jtmts were the mot delicate, i fined.

oor the horrid scenes to which he wasaHn( luxurious of the East, nnd it is cal nitne. while he tarried in the XgeaiHes, cul tied that from thirty to fifty thousand biit other writer have con'irmeil u in the 'fell durii.R the three days' massacre. behefth.it he ha, not painted too highly, j The remnant of its population are now fugitive over the provinces of libera io the extract . lied Greece; and though but lour yean--it w a oil the evening of the third d SMlf c lhcy cond llo:ist of dv frorn the arrival oil.? ut ad- k, iol ttion of what is asserted by

ini'HUHi i i-iiMiM i..r Pliiinli,tlirt in seven centimes no

. . ..........

U'S t.. fi- i.. ;. i: i. t;i.,

beinz w h live d to tell the t li

en, d the ilur s tint roe from the bor-,, -n , . .,s wallJeil,- BIM, t,c8

Mag rn.n,.o,ur ineir ...e.m;, , ow u .. d

1 1.-11...

earn Mlrncc oi iwuigoi, uic ui

in th'

tiut deilhcream of their butchered

that have disgraced the name of their rriinlri.1'

tonmen, while a few iUiig wreieheV. . ... ' .,1- He thu h'tcribei a Turkish remctrv, urn! Uie cldv purKd by th'ir intimate mur-'-p.,.,,,,.. tixlv -rurk cei.trnUil wiiti that of tUdrer,toli them hut ton tiuly of their European : .mpndiij file. A one id" the mo-t ; 'Oui return was through the Turk-'n,v)r(-irit n the val'e. th ir family iih cemetery, which is situated nearly w h anvng 'he tirt m irked out for mar-jai th" top ,f the hill; it is innrked by J.r nnd erethev h id n moment to 'peculiar neatness rather than by sn-.it

ment;thc feeling of national honor, dis qiist at political corruption the care o popular liberty, contempt of artifice, oi hatred of oppression. Hut provided the topic were animating and effective, he cared little whether it were on on vrhich a wife patriot could honestly

dilate; a vuar prejudice ccrvta m? turn as well as an ancient and useful pilvilege; he countenanced every pre vailing delubn; and hurried the nation to war.net 'i a necessary evil, hut an honorable choirr. Above all, he loved to nurse the popular jealousy of France: and it w as upon his means of gratify in! this feelinp, that he seemed to build his hones of future power. Ever ready

to be the mouth piece of the cry or rl imorof the hour, he could be as inconistent as the multitude itself; in hi eailv davs, when reproar lied w ith hi? chance of opinion, he plcadr d h'i9 honest conviction of trior; after he had acquirrd authority, he factd down his accusers with a eh-irc of his eye and the

hardihood of hi denial. Nor although he assumed a tone of virtue superior to his ace, was he more scrupulous than

others in political intrigue; but his oh

ed to advance hi9 head quaitcrs to Kamabat, and, taking the eea line, to attack Aussein Pacha in his camp before

Hie N. Voik Journal of Commerce has j Dourga6, and from thence, after defeat-

roriEiGN.

lin-.k ol precvi',on,a piny oi ui mm iem ,h;hi . ; 1" j- . wa hi ,.t.r ,nfctead vf bartering

tii ..a..i . - i t j m ki nil1 ii I I rr v

n l.liMr h ct the ho'l-e. hich atl irded . each at th

b it few resources for refuge or conceal- jbaned tomb, produce an f ll t of mel nv.,,t. !;.ncholy sdnc r.iid rcpo.-e, ma. h mnre

Fnrn a rd ol imperfect s"curitv -atVoetoiK than the c u

the diracted Phnine was an involun- d frippery decrratioi i oi Pere la C ry witnrM to tlo mur b r of hei mis- .Chaise, or the "toiit d utn and aoima tr SJe si?er. acw'rav ifed hv every in- l-d burrf ol Westmu ster nnd banta ij t and in-liii'iit ij c-te.i by brutali- Croicr. It is in the spotJ that one r. and crim-, while her frx-.tic nv-thcr feel truly in the rr.-t, where all around nx tSSpd upon the lifeb- coipte of reic H-C till:ies oi death, ::tid th-

h-r viohited off-princ. bitiated with onlv cuidv o!i-ft to allure the eye, an

p' rider, the nvnter b-ft the bonis in the .. - I. . C I" l n I- . I . ilm In.

'ire 'i oi i.i r iuM r y ii. ii ii n "'in cuv. v i, r'.'i. .m.vh. - - -

i .i .1 . l iv... .iiiieeu

I III I ( I l Me 1 1 1 III L! "lilt II iuh iij ii" ;

his coniciei.ee for a huge salary or a

h.ire of public t5strona5ei "imed at

IT.'V, IHU II .11". . , .1 f C dv monumcuts Mdlv,dcd Pwc.r ",r f,,I,ic of a a,'

orator, to ne the tear oi ever) cauai. and the admiration of a vrhole people. Ilussctl.

received, by the Ship Kotnan, Liverpool pa pei s to the 20th July, find London dales to the evening of the 27lh. Wc copy an extract from that paper. the east. LoN-nov, July 27 half-past 7 o'rlock. Hy the arrival of the regular Tuikey mail, letters were this morning received from Constantinople to the 25th, and from Smyrna to the 20th ult. They bung r.o intelligence of a political nature which has not been anticipated

by the previous arrivals frc.m Germany and Constantinople. The English schr. .Mary was, cn the Uth, stopped by some Russian cru:?els off the Dardanlies, whilst on tier way from Smyrna to Constantinople. A part of her car go being found to consist of rice, ehe was strict of all her goods. The vefsel

herself would have been tent down to

Ecipa, to be disposed of as might have

been thought fit, had it not luckily hap-j

pened that one of the vitaihes ot me new British Embassy was, with his family, proceeding in her to the Turkish capital. On that account Rlore the

Mr.rrijze. Tlx rs is one circum

if.t;wu e, one event oi human Hie, and

that In to means o; a trivial nature

ing him, to descend on the right through

the plains to Adrianoplc. x heie move meuts arc remarkably easy on pap'-r, but not equally 6o in execution. If Hussein Pacha has with him, os it a stated, an army of 60,000 men, his defeat is by no means a matter of certainty: and even should he be put to flight, vast mountains etill remain to be crossed before the Russians can reach the plains mountains impassable to human feet, and gorges where a few bold soldiers may arrest a whole army. Letters from Constantinople havo been received to the 25th ult. The Sultan had purchased the Hylton Joilliffe steamer equadrons, sailed from Smyrna, and were cruising off Terdos. The latter had been joined these by the Irish frigate. Three loaded shipe had received the Sultan's special permission to proceed to the Black Sea, but the passage continued close, unless tospecial oidT.

The N. Y. Journal of Commerce acknowledges the receipt of a Pamphlet,

was allowed to proceed; and shortly ar- ' from a London conesponcW nt, entitled, rived at Constantinople without farther 'iTwenty-tour letters from Laborers in A interruption. The public audiences of' nierica.to their Friends in England ;M with

Mr. liordon, ol the vamacan, ana ie;wme rem:irksbv the publisher. Beni-imia

Sultan, were shortly to take place, and

his arrival, w ith that of the I rench Am bassador, was geterallv and joyfully looked upon by all classes of the inhab

itants as the sine forerunner ot a gen

Iv c;uulv o'.'i-'Ct to allure the eve, are - --- . .nanTs as ;ne suie loreruimyr oi 1 calm chtdh n heaven and the tlit- oyer wl,:ch the in:l;rr.cc of l ortu , cra pacification. Provisions continued i r?en, whereto hum of ths t.erJr'P0 5 cenndered supreme. It s to aho.Jud in the Turkish capital, bcini

uti t linn i iiii c? J v

il.vr tKt norriMv...! fr(l WAttMlMIT With I f 1 1 1 11 I V II P. IlJ . AC U"V

p irty of demon already at tho thresh- ers which spring above some earlier li d l. Too l ite to rem'm her place of tenant of the tomb. iefi:c death witli all iti acgiavatt-di -Thc?e scenes, too, nffrd another !i'ir-r, eem-d now inevitable, till on ' pi oof of the superior gentleness of heart

lhe mTnnt h adapted an exp'-dient. S .e ib w towards tho heip of lauchter,

and I. rvant afloction of woman. It m

seldom they are visited by men, ai d 1

I : I I II . . 1 I.I.

m -irr-d herself with the Mill o zing never remember to have entered one .i....' b. Md of her m..th,r. and tilling oo her'tl.em without .ceii.g son,, sorrowing fc-M1 ,he hn htc' upksainvcd

f. e be5,dehcr,she lav mot.onl-, a-Imde seated by the green mound or 1 oi u.scrct.or, , ,mc proiccut-u j a. t ki .t, .i.nii.VA.i t,in,, 'Craduallv nnd stcadilv throucu tho

Smith, Esq. "They were obtained by sending out two pereons in opposite directions, w ith orders to call at any cottage w here

they had reason to think that letters had been recently received f.om America.'

The first 24 met w ith, compose the Pamph-

chielly supplied from the Turkish Asi jft. They are mostly hlleJ with encomi

ums on cur country and cur people, and

ipeawa the falsehood and abuse that

has so often fallen from the pens of Put-

h "travellers," who have written tor

traded under the most apparently un- rnIlf'iIU,rMt ' t0 be uch a? tolmrnrv- We notice that several of those

promise abundant harvests in all the 'letters are w ritten from the western parte

productions ot Asia Minor, both lor the ,, the I mtfd States, two in patticular ircra

exigencies of the country and the pur poses of foreign trade. On Thursday despatches from Mr.Gor-

don, to ConsfM.tinople, weie received

crept from her hiding place to t.ike a

Ivt farewell of her butchered p-went. 'stately waflntfofthe finerel cypres; s, ' - - - ' I " -" ;atic ports ot the Black Sea, by mcan

and ilv for refuge to the mountains, alcne disturb the solitary griel ot ine o. - - ot small coasting vessels againsi me ... . . . . . i-r- i precautions can assure a man agatr.s. a ., f i i. nn n.n. lr,.r

c ip hid scarcely dropped a le.ar ov r . mowrneia w ;:o n tT'iim mi in, .i "iv . . . u.iYmni.un ui ihh ..... 7. . 7 U .i ....! ; i....i. .,.-...iin termagant wife, or a woman agatnt . , ... n . tUn i..lfl m.iri.mn for-

. . i. i - i.. v. .i i ,,. r faithless hll-b-i d: while UPtoJi. con-' . . 'vun .ih-P t

near io iier. a no miif a sieu luwiiiujaou, i jv.i., . . J1P ..... v. , -

favorable ausmces. sometimes afford

very edifying i samples of conjugal feli city. A ten years' courhip will not prevent quarrels in tin honey moon, while an affection sown suddenly at a b.ill, and of which the harvest follows

n ,1 1 I I I III II 1 1 ' I II r llll II ni.TikCIKl F Ml 11. I

-T'lr-Turk enters th apartment,! once hved and still dc irly berthed 'grammar of Love, and w hen culy inial but. ti d,t. their errand a-.t.c.p a'ed. ! hej,- to w horn she fancied slc had al- 'hd for, a "-ati imonial degree, have w, ro ac lindnMrtion, w her. one of thern' ready hadf, an et. rnal farewell; the advanced in the most decorous manner, iwrceivWi br, haut ?parkl,2 or, the I precepts of her rel.Vmn debarring her at.d a !cr the most approved method, to I n,.. ..i ... Lmmhrni. rfn reunion i.. another of Hymen, C upid and Miner

II I HI I lllirili'i IllllllltU l" in t un. iiv.i. .mi - . , , .. .. .... . . . .i ...i. nrpfppilit." ihim hand in hainl. and

it. He lifted thf anpirentU lili-l- woilil witn those on whom uie poriai? ...... . ,

hi I. an I itt"Tin''-d t ) dr w it

h id . how -vr. h. en to dearly

i. . . . ..- ..rK -h,.,l i,. th.. ipiei.iy oi ccnarauuaving

uT.U..,,. m.c.tl,, T.nti nr.. !he;",w" :n oriuai auiri, and a me a m

at the Foreign office. They are dated

the -Cth ef June. M. (lordon, and (leneral Guilleminot, arrived on the IVUh. but did not land till the 20lh, when they verc received by the people and the authorities with every demon slration of regard at;d joy. 'I 1.0 two ambassadors had sent in their notes to state that they were in readiness to negociate upon the affairs of Greece, ar.d they were waiting for a reply.

The Brussels (iazftl- of the 1st instant

off;

.

' ' 1 7 I . I 1 . I I. I'll

- . . .. V'f , i nl rT 1 J Hi' .i f I T?.. I It. M 7 . ...

it i the c"!' of her d.i.cevi hu,b uid, tmet I kn race ol men in the world:, l" 1 ",4 o ( " : !9tntca thr.t the i.mpeior of Hus-.a hatl . htl m r.ed inl ,t ,ow o. Iv ti.' their oval head, archil- l r -, y. ttv i'' UirKscarc y h ill .ay in theiit an cxtraordiarj cnVl,v to Con h- withdraw f omthe ho-rr with an ve, a nd a ,niiin? noses, their lof: v lig- tct I:S 1,1e ni .uve at hatlledore !i,.ir)tin ,Ci lo jciver an ulnmaturri t. i'X r: ThTirk. hwev,r. m . le hut ures and .fil.-lv mien, are all setoff to ,;,Ild sh;ittler..tic, gihoped oil the next Sultan, and to make him sensible of t ii kw.,,k. Mft.ra.a.n twi.Ma h- full aUat:t .Uc by their ample rnbe. and .ornuu to (irt'.na (,,ern, beer, married iu; m..,faur 1S pl,.ttd d lieitehaod .n very da-rtM-i to hc u-ncrful turbands; all U ea:C and pro if, hlaikfnnlh, and thrown two whol- q nnnoncc to lim thrtt lht; plTte,ifit I.;, l W ,fo Mftr'ir.ii ahnnf n TurL" tl ero are no an '.famillCt into hyMertCS, Wio have after- t), 1n t1w .Vm..,lt Xm tv-:fl

I MH 'IP I 'II- L"ll ''-' , VII'-. ...w.. w. - -

fro'Ti i I'dl .and rorrvne-nced lu ina t tT th tV"h from the fner. 'Phis wa th' ltt crnet'b.p cuul i remember. It w iTidn'n:ht when -he awt.k'- from the ewoon ito which her aor.v and her ef

fort loconrod it had throw n her ; when

i i i.i .i it ...i

desorstiamht lines in his features cr!w;,rt P;,s"eu ine,r J0Ul" 1Ke lirue i-Moniin all we find the pure curve 0f. Jove-, their n nturer y ears hke the ten

matily beauty and majestic gi ace

"It h inconceivable what a miserable

figure an Englishman or a European is

derest of friend?, nnd their age like Di;-

bv and Joan. These strange anomalies arc not to

he-ide him; hisblark unmeaning hat, be denied ; but they afford little encour

lav, ctld v.d h. t.iimh.'d. urroun-! h irlopiiti pantaloon, and hard collared. iagcnient to imprudence, since misery

l i

d- 1 bv tho cl Utd stream-' of her lastloved friend. 'Ne eitv now armed her with entx z ; notim wa left f r tonideratu'n. atid day woul-l soon b? brcakitig. She

r '. tdl fi'r.t with terror, and the lo-

n'-h- of f e h uie hid hern secured;

d "posing of the mot pcrUh'e ahut her person, fchf took her way to the moun tain. Shr poittted out to us the chll where 'he had long lain conce ded, and tho distant track by whichshc had gained it, through a path at every step im p- ld by the dead or d) ing remains of her countrymen. Bv the time he imagined the tid of terror had flowed past, whn she no I iigcr obered from her lofty refuge th dailv puruitj. and murder of the immortal Sciot, and when he saw the Ottoman fleet bail from the IWbor be

ef hi 1. How tia pot where the vain- heard flings contempt on the effem.nate all f - I I 1 ft ff

tr light cut coat, (which will one day may and often dues follow it, and there

puzzle those of posterity who shall he n. undoubtedly, r.o misery equal tojfrom Prussia is to support the utKiuarici in costume.) contract so vil .self r proach. If we cannot ensure 6uc-!gpnla(ions in Aict Lieut nan

lainou-ly w ith the picturesquv head- ic-, we may at least deserve it. JV. 1.

dress, ample trowr rs, and floating pe-

h'se el the Ottoman, while his glossy

chin of the. clipped and docked Euro

pean. His arms, "for in the Eit all

arm," usually consist of a pair of su yerbly chased pistols stuck in a silken sash: a yataghan, with a jewelled handle; a larger and more clumpy knife, t elbd a hanjar, a scimitar, swinging in a scabbard covered with green or crimson velvet, (as the owner, being an Emir or otherwise, is entitled to carry it,) and .ruamcnted with bosses of gold. The

latter i, in general, the most important and valuable portion of his arm, or e-

cu of his property. I have seen some

' lades which were valued at 200 or

reath it crimson pennon, now doubly1. :iu0 dollars, many are said to be worth

tinged with blood, the descended with

her fuci'ive companions to the opposite hor el the island. Here, after wait ing many n tedious day, she succeeded in getting on board an Austrian vessel, the master of which engaged to land her at Hy dra, in return for the quantity of jewels and gold she had been able to reserve.

4,She reached the ishnd in safety,

where she had now remvitv d for nearly two y-ars, hul, findi ig or fancying hei

various benefactors to be weary of their

ch'irgp, he ws r w going to seek, e

vet in the 1 nd of hor nemiei, a rela

tive who hd bee.n living at Smyrna,

but vhom she knew not if she should

Mill ri id surviving, or fallen by the it

bio of their common enemy. "11 -rule wis toll wi'h the calm C'imp isure ofoft repe-it'd 'ind long contm;d itcd grief; she hcd o teir in it-reliti-ui; she scarcely heaved a Mgii oy-r tier now; h- seemed, you. g as he was, to have ulready made ktr

1 1 pie that sum, and all retain the name

.f OamatrtH. though it is by no mean.

likely that they have been manufacturd th re. The twisting and interming

I. rig ol fho fibres of the metal arc con-

idered as the tests of excellence, but I

have never seen any possessed of the

perfume faid to be incorporated with the steel in the real Damascus sabres."

Lord Chatham. He was a man endowed w.th qu titties to captivate a na

tion, and subdue a popular assembly. B dd and unhesitating in the part he

wa to take upon every public question,

he was master of a loud and harmoni ous voire, a commanding eye, and ui?

mailed energy, but at the same time

Dovlestow. Bucks County, August 24. Painful Occurrence- On Monday alternonn last, Mrs. Margaret Funk.

wife of 1 icob Funk, of Hill town, and

only daughter cf Christian Ilaldeinan of New Britain, attempted to drive a

boar pig which was m the road into

an adjoining field, when it turned upon and attacked her with much fury. Il ia thought the jumped back and en

dcavored to avoid it; but her foot

caught agair.tt something and she fell;

the hog sprang upon her nnd in an in

stant thrust his tusk into her abdomen.

broke one of the main arteries and

mangled her in such a manner that ehi

died in a few minutes. Her husband1

was a near spectator at the time, but before hc could get to her relief the fa lal work had been accomplished. Mrs.

I unk was about 28 years of age, and

wag much respected in the neighbor

hood. She has left a husband and two children, and a large circle of relatives and friend to lament her sudden and

melancholy death.

No sooner had wc written the above

than it became our painful duty to no

tice the sudden departure of Mrs.

Hiale, wife of John Hiale, Eeq. of I) 'yleetown township. It appears that on Friday morning last, Mrs. Kiale went

to the spring near the house, nnd that

in stooping down to get at the water.

imagination which flashed from him with brilliant splendor, and was gone ere any one could pronounce that the

speaker was fanciful or digressive. Up .ui every important subject, hc appeal cd to some common and inspiring, eenti

propiiety of language, and a light of Ue was seized with a dizziness in the

head, and fell head foremost into the water. Mrs. Riale wag about 50 years of age, was the mother of several chil dren,and wag deservedly esteemed and respected by all who had the pleasure

j of her acquaintance. ntWi'ge ncer.

find in the Emperor a friend to the Divan as ardent as he has hitherto been an enemy; that hc will art in all Ids nla

j lions with the -grcatef-t precision; that

the Porte must not reckon upon other auxiliaries, ?ior draw favorable inferences from the inaction of some States

It is added that an extraordinary envoy

se re pre

int Genera'

Muffling hasiust left Burlington upon a

secret commission, with travelling com

panion. They appear both to cjped to make a voyage by sea.

1 he r rench papers contain a letter

from Constantinople, dated the 23d ult.

which states that, instead of having returned toShumla with only 600 horses.

after the battle of the 1 lib, the Ginnd

Vizier had brought back with him 0000 cavalry and 12,000 infantry, in good order. The same letter says that the joy of the Turks nt the arrival ol the ambassadors had caused the disaster of their arm on the Uth to be wholly forgotten. They expected the imme 'ate renewal of the former friendly re lations with England and France, and

the Kei? LUcndi himself is said to have

expressed sentiments of a moirt pacificnature. Accounts from Bucharest to the 2Hlh ult. state that the reserve, under (leneral Lclstay, hab received orders to join

the army on the Danube. It consists of

.30.000 men of all the am.;. General Dienitsch is said to be preparing to pass ihe Balkan The French papers of Saturday, and the Algememe Zcinug, of the 20th, as-

sert, that great movements were about

taking place in the Russian army

I hen account?, however, nre some

what Contradictory. According to the French statement., the scifce of Shutnla

wag to be undertaken ny a force of

thirty battalions of infantry nnd five re

giments of cavalry, notwithstanding which tho capture of the place was not expected before the close of the present year. According to the tit-man account, troops had already been pushed as far as Eski-Stamboul, (which the Russians occupied for a shoit period lat campaign,) and Count Dicbiu h intend-

Dear born Co. Indiana lor one of which

we here make a place

Aurora, l) nrborn co. (Ind ) June li, 1823. You will recollect that I started w th

my wife and four children in the brig

Wellington for St. Johns, ISew Brui-s-w'uk, where we arriv d June 1 5th, 1819. after losing one of our maU-s by lightning and one seaman; there we remained till March, 1120. iNow ia Brunswick the w inter is tco severe t prr fit much by farming. I determir d to leave it at allhnzii'd. I tht rcf rc with my wife got a hand bleigh, in which I placed the children, and drew thra on the ice up the St. J hu's R ivcr ab.-ut 3C0 miles. Mary and myself walking, drawing the children alter a?. u must a ho recollect that 100 mil s ef t'-' was not settled, beit g all wood. Ue arrived at the head ol St J hn's rucr. We travelled on in the san e manner acro?s snow nt d ice to the great r vt r S. Lawrence, about 1 CO miles belov Quebec; there we found the country a-

b ng the bat k thickly settled. I h .en built myself a light wag.n, and had "ll ur family provisioned do ring the tin's of making the w agon for "I thank ycu; ihe good people, who wer Finch Canadians, wishing us very n itch to fay with them. In this wgon our child' i

were drawn by n.y Pelf fr upward tf

400 miles to Kingston, at the mouth of the lake Ontario. There (as every other place) we met with uncommon kindness; a gentleman quite a stranger, not only sent us by the steam boat free of all expense, to Fort George, but put six or seven dollars in our pock- ts besides. From Fort George we crossed into the United States, and passed tl.e summer at Geneva, Ontario county? New York State. Hearing a more to vorable account of the State of Indiar.a, I once more started on a ramble, at.i

travelling across the State of New York, 4

I came to O'Lean's Point on the Allegany river, which river, a very rapid orf(

I came down in a flat boat to Piitgl urg1.

here I staid two days, and rassnr on

after being detained by head winds and the water being very low, larded

at Aurora, situated in the mouth of Ho gun Creek. Here I found myself s stranger, without friendj, acquait.tances, utensils of any kind, or mcw' having 6pent our last dollar a day cr two before: added to which, myself ar.i all our family were caught by illness for 6 or 3 weeks, without the power of doing any thing. But no sooner was our situation known, than wc had plenty provisions brought to us, and as cur strength recovered I obtained work a digging, $c. My wife took in 6ei'? and by degrees we have worked it that I have 2 cows, 2 calves, 6 pigs, and die calf eipected in August. James is no

at school, and I intend to send two m the winter. I h-ve joined with a farmer in cropping: that is, I received one hall of the produce, and had the team fourd me. -I now am working for an English gentleman, named Harris, who is building in Aurora, and owns four quartet sections up the Creek. Much good land can be bought not distant fc-i 1 dv-

bv 1 cu'i

1 J f,!l l Wa; c;inl On ,.ip -A aire, an 1 vvnl cflic f fhe cr ;i V poit: fcnv !h ciei b'oo C-5 Ol It i vntn flesh em Iorg bret b avi rrue irnn er.t.i fine t bis tret, pro! t-b- : the i Ce:d st t rent disTe trad who exit with inli( Y take we w Bib! and or ! for r ubj vvha vho ttriln n wer ancc bum trou thei huh Ugly ever evil pose the how that bun HV2i the that the 1 and tent Mat nnd cr o aid of e m-v:

1