Newspaper Page Text
THE MUSEUM.
TOijolcsale Price Current
BAVAXJSTAH, Aug. 8.
g eta. g ct*.
COTTON sea-island per pound 24 30
upland do 10J 12
Selections, prime 13 14
UfOE 100 Ibt 2f 3
TOBACCO geofgi*leaf lb 44 5$
cavendish Ist qua! 30 35
richtnond 12 16
t’LOUU country barrel 7} 8
richih ptiila. and bait. 7j 8
Alexandria 7f 8
CORN bushel 90 95
BACON lb 10 11
BEEF no. 1 barrel 950 10 50
no. 2 6£ 7
ÜBS tV AX 1,1 33 34
OARDS northern 1000 It 12 dull
pitch pine 10 12
tANDY cognac 4th prf gal 140 1 60
peach none
fjEAD navy ‘ bit 2 250
pilot 350 4
TTF.R Ist quality lb none
2d quality “ 10 12
4 IjI.ES georgia mould lb 20 23
northern do 14 15
spermaceti 40 42
TINGS ,b 4 4
~ESE best 11 12
CHOCOLATE boston no. 1 lb 22 no sale 4
COFFEE best green £9 30
2d and 3d qualities 28 29
DUCK russia Ist quality bolt 22
2d quality 20
J 3d quality 14
raven* 12
C.fN Hand gal 90 95
country 40 41
GINGER race lb ‘ no sale
IKON russia and swedes cwt 450 5
I.AUI) lb 9 10
CHAI) bar lb 8 8$
MACKEREL boston no. I bbl 9 9J 9
no. 2 6 50 7 6
no. 3 4 75 5 4
MOLASSES gallon 34 36
NAILS cut assorted lb 7j 8
wrought 12 14
NUTMEGS ,b 3
OIL, sweet’ \2 but 7$ I 8
sperm I 25 I 1 50
fish 60 I 75
TAPER wrapping ream 56 63
PEPPER lb 22 21
PIMENTO 28 30
PORK prime bbl ll 11J
mess 15 15 50
POUTER tendon doze g 250 325
POWDER d.ipont keg] f J 7
clielmsford 7
RAISINS muscatel fresh box 3$
hloom do 3
RANGING TIMBER 1000 4 6
UCM Jamaica 4th proof gal 100 15
west-indie 2d and 3d 65 70
irew-england 36 40
SALMON no. I W>/ 18
SALT livel-pool ground bushel 50 55
Cadiz
turks island 50 none
SEGAItS Spanish box 1-6 17
SIIAU-Cunuecticut mes* bbl none
north-carolina none
SHINGLES 1000 250 4
SHOT assorted lb 9 9j
SOAP turpentine lb 3 10
STAVES Vu- 1000 16 20
red oak 12
STEEL get®an _ 100 lbs 17
blistered . _7 ~ 12 13
SUGAR havanu white 100 lbs j 4 15
brown 8J • 9
muscovado j 94, | 10}
new-orleans 9j 11
loaf lb 13 24
lump rather dull 16 17
TALLOW lb 16 17
TEA hyson lb 85 95
WHISKEY gul 36 38
WINE madeira gal 2SO 275
teneriffe 1 10 125
STOCKS.
United States Bank _ none
lank State of Georgia 80, sale dividend off
Planters* Rank 76a 77
Uauen do 56 no sales
Ream.; Boat Company, 265 dividend, off
tnsuianca do Mosaics
‘from the Moble Commercial Register lßlh ult.
SHIP WRECKS.
The brig Hero, Capt. Janies B. Giffud,
■rom Stfvkuntth for this port was cast away
luring the late gale on Horn Island, on the
fwroiog of the lOtli inst. Vessel and car
ai consisting of hay anjjJ. bricks; totally lost
srew sawd themselves in her long boat.
We have examined her log book, from
extract the following particulars,
tailed from Savannah June 2G—-10th day
ut, commenced makiug water, leaking in
> short time after, two or more spells per
tour —9th iust. 10 miles east of Mobile
\iiat the gale commenced; hauled off shore,
wading<S. S. W. carried m> her until all
ails were split; and after drifting fur twen
v four hours, went on shore between 3
ad 4 o'lock, A. M. on the 10th, 30 miles
-et of Mobile Point, where she bilged,all
and* succeeding in getting on shore, with
small part of their wearing apparel on
y. Tli - captain and crew reached the city
u a long- mat, on the 12th inst. Thefor
jer and a part of the crew, took passage in
le bug Joseph, Cept Holdtidge. which
ailed for New-York un the 24th inst.
American fFhdlemen.— lnformation has
teen recently received at Nantucket, from
tie Pacific Ocean —the account s*ate* that
he fleet f American whalemen in that
ia, have been pretty successful this sea
in, There were. 74 vessels completing
eir cargoes, and had then from 100 to
300 barrels oil each, amounting to 44.240
irrelsl ‘rhis valuable branch of trade is
irried on entirely from the New England
lies, the worth of which to this country
incalculable as a field for raising the har
jst and most expert seamen, iadepen
>nt of its value in a commercial point of
sw.
Baltimore Morning Chronicle.
The London Literary Gazette ufterta that i
Mr Wilson, Professor of Moral Philosophy in
the city of Edinburgh, is the author of those in
teresting tales, entitled •*Lights and Shadow oj
Scotish Life,” one of which follows below. Mr.
W- is also the author of “The dig of the Pla
gue,” a poem.
From “Lights and Shadows of Scotish Life.”
T/IE HEAD STOjVE.
The coffin was let down to the bottom af the
grave,, the plaAks removed from the heaped
up brink, the first rattling clod had struck their
knell, the shovelling was over, and the long,
broad, skillfully cut pieces of turf were aptly
joined together, and trimly laid by the beating
spade, so that the newest mound in the church
v.ird was scarcely distinguishable from those
that were grown over by the'undisturbed griss
and daisies of a luxuriant spring. The burial
was soon'over; and the party with one consen
ting motion, having uncovered their heads in
decent reverence of the place and occasion,
were beginning to separate and about to leave
the church yard. Here some acquaintances,
from distant parts of the parish, who had not
had an opportunity of addressing each other in
the house that had belonged to the deceased,
nor in course of the few hundred yards that the
little procession had to move over from his bed
to his grave, were shaking hands quietly but
cheerfully, and enquiring after the welfare of
each other’s families. —There, a small knot of
neighbours were speaking without exaggera
tion of the respectable character which the de
ceased had borne and mentioning the little in
cidents Ol his life, some of them si i remote as to
be known only to the grey headed persons of
tbe groupe While a few yards furthei removed
from the spot, were standing together, parties
who'discuased ordinary concerns, altogether un
connected with the funerw l , such as the state of
the markets the promise of the season, or
change of tenants; biit still with a sobriety of
manner and voice, that was : nsensib!y produced
by th- influence of the simple ceremony now
dost and, by the quiet graves around, and the sha
dow of the spire and grey walls of the house of
God-
Two men yet stood together at the head of the
grave, with countenances of sincere but unpas
sioned grits. They were Brothers, the <ml>
sens of him who had been buried. And there
was something in their situation that naturally
kept the eyes of maney directed upon them,
for a longer time, and more intently, than would
have been the case, had there been nothing
more observable about them than the common
symptoms of a common sorrows But these two
Brothers, who were now standing at the head
of their father’s grave, had for some years been
totally estranged from each other, and the only
words that had passed between them, during all
that time, had been uttered within a few days,
past, during the necessary preparations for the
old man.s funeral ,
No deep and deadly quarrel was between
these Brothers, and neither of them could dis
tinctly tell the cause of this unnatural estrange
ment. Perhaps dim jealousies of their father’s
favour—selfish thoughts that will sometimes
force themselves into poor men’s hearts, respec
ting temporal expectations—unaccommodating
manners on both sides—taunting words that
mean little when uttered, but which rankle and
tester in remembrance—imagined opposition
of interests, that, duly considered would have
been found one and the same—these, and many
other caurses, slight when single, but strong
when rising up together in one baneful band;
had gradually infected their hearts, till at last
they who in youth had been seldom separate
and truly attached, now met at market, and mis
erable to say, at church, with dark and averted
faces, like different clausmen during a feud.
Surely, if any tiling could have softened
their hearts towards each other, it must have
been to stand silently, side by side, while the
earth, stones, and clods, were falling down up
on their father’s coflin. And doubtless their
hearts were so softened. But pride, though it
can not prevent the holy affections of nature
from being felt, may prevent them from being
shown; and these two Brothers stood there to
gether, determined not to let each other know
the mutual tenderness that, in spite of them,
was gushing up in their hearts, and teaching
them the unc.onfessed folly and wickedness of
their causeless quarrel.
A Head Stone had been prepared, and a per
son came forward to plant it The elder Broth
er directed him how to place it—a plain stone,
with a sand glass, skull and cross bones, chissel
led not rudely, and a few words inscribed The
younger Brother regarded the operation with
a troubled eye, and said loudly enough to be
heard by several of the bystanders, “William,
this was not kind in you—you should have told
me of this I loved my fathei as well as yoti
could love him. Y>*u were the elder, and, it
’ may be, the favourite sou; hut I had a right in
nature to have joined you in ordering this Head
Stone, had I not?”
During these words, the stone was sinking in ■
to the earth, and many persons who were on
their way from the grave returned For a
while the elder Brother said nothing, for he
had a consciousness in his heart that he ought
to have consulted bis father’s Son in designing 1
this last becoming mark of affection and res
pect to his memory; so the stone was planted
in silence, and now stood erect, decently and
simply among the other unostentatious memo
riais of the humble dead
The inscription merely gave the name and
age of the deceased, and that the stone had!
been erected “by his affec’ionate sons ” The
sight of these words seemed to soften the dis
pleasure of the angry man, and he said some
what more mildly, “yes we were his sffection-
and since my name is on the stone, I
am satisfied, brother. We have not drawn to
gether kindly of late years, and perhaps never
may; but 1 acknowledge and respect your
worth; and here before our own friends, and
before the friunds of our father, with my foot
above his head, I express my willingnes to be
on better and other terms with you, and if we
cannot command love in our hearts, let us at
least brother, bar out all unkindness.'*
The minister who had attended the funeral,
and had something intrusted to him to say pub
licly before he left the churchyard, now came
forward and asked the elder brother, why he
spoke not regarding this matter. He saw that
there was something of 9 cold and sullen pride
rising up in his heart, for not easily may a man
hope to dismiss from the chamber of his heart
even the vilest guest, if once cherished there.
With a solemn and most severe air, he looked
upon the relenting man, and then changing his
countenance into serenity, said gently,
Behold how good a thing it is,
And how becoming well,
Together such as brethren are,
In unity to dwell.
The time, the place, and this beautiful ex
pression of a natural sentiment, quite overcamc
a heart in which many kind, even if not warm,
affections dwelt; and the man thus ap
pealed to, bowed down liis head and wept
“Give me your hand brother,” and i* was given
v/hila a munnnr of satisfaction arose from — ;
present, and pH hearts felt kindlier and mote i
humanely toward* each other. i
As the brothers stood fervently, but compo
sedly grasping each other’s hands in the httle
hollow that fey between the grave of their mo- !
trier, long since dead, and of their father, whose
shroud was haply not yet still from the tall ot
dust to dust, the minister stood beside tnem
with a pleasahteountenance, and said, “I must
fulfil the promise I made to your lather on
his death bed- 1 must read to you a few words
which he wrote at an hour when his tongue
denied its office. I must not say that you did
your duty to your old father; for did he not of
ten beseech you, apart from one another to be
reconciled for your own sakes as Christians, for
hi* sake, and for the sake of the mother who
bare vou, and Stephen that died that you might
be born? When the palsy struck him for the
last time, you. were both absent, nor was it
your fault that yon were not beside the old man
when he died. As long as sense continued
with nim here, did he think of you two, and of
you two alone Tears were in his eyes; I saw
them there, and on his cheek too, when no
breath came from his lips. But ot this no more.
He died with this paper in his hand; and he
made me know that I was to read it to you over
his grave. I now obey him.
•• My sons, if you will let my bones lie quiet
in the grave, near the dust of your mother, de
part not from my burial till, in the name of God
and Christ, you promise to love one another as
you used to do Dear boys, receive my bles
sings.”
Some turned their heads away to hide the
tears that needed not to be bidden—and when
‘the Brothers had released each other from a
long and sobbing embrace, many went up to
them and, in a single word or two, expressed
■ their joy at this perfect reconcilement. The
Brothers themselves walked away from the
church yard, arm in arm with the Minister, to
the Manse. On the following Sabbath, they
were sitting with their families in the same
pew, and, it was observed that they read
together off the same Bible when the ministtr
gave out the text, and that they sang together,
taking hold of the same psalm book. The same
psalm was sung, (given out at their own re
quest,) of whi chime verse had been repeated at
tiieir father’s grave; a larger sum than usual
was on that Saßath found in the plate for the
poor, for Love and Charity are sisters. And
ever after, both during the peace and the trou
bles of this life, the hearts of the Brothers were
as one, and in nothing were they divided.
Extract of a leter from a marine officer on board
the United States’ship Franklin 74, to his
friend in Philadelphia, dated
Valparaiso, April 30,1822.
*• Valparaiso has inereasad considerably
since von were here; it now contains about
ten thousand inhabitants, and has become
quite a commercial place. 1 presume the
number of vessels in (he harbuur will aver
age sixty for the last three months, and
they are coming and going almost every
day. One great inconvenience they still
labor under is, that the custom house is
kept in Santiago, which is the cause of a
great deal of trouble and delay to the mer
chants. It generally takes a weak or ten
days to have a vessel cleared out.
A letter was received here a few days
since saying that Lord Cochrane had cap*
tured the Spanish frigate Vengauza in the
harbor of Guayaquil. Thu circumstances
appear to be these : The commander of the
Vengaoza knew that Cochrane had been
in pursuit of him for some time. When
he came 08'Gu/aquit, he hoisted a flag of
truce. During the armistice he capitula
ted by giving up his ship, for which the
government was to make him some small
remuneration. When Cochrane came off
the harbor, and found the conditi ns under
which she was given up, he said, **if the
commaodef of the frigate had done his du
ty to his government the ship must have
been a prize to him, and he would not Jbe
done out of her through treachery.”—
He demanded her of the governor, who
refused to give up. The ship at this time
wag stripped; her sails and rigging all on
shore. Cochrane sent his boats in and took
possession of her, landed his men, and car
ried off the sails and rigging, in defiance
of the governor and his fo= V*. This will
be a subject to be set'led hereafter by the
governments of Chili and Peru. Cochrane
has hoisted his flags on board the prize
and is now cruising in her. lie is expected
here in about a month.
The British frigate Doris arrived here
yesterday from Rio. I ler commander, cap
tain*Giaham, died on the passage. He
was buried to-day on shore. The funeral
was large and splendid. All the officers
that could be spared from our squadron
attended ; the marines of the Franklin and
Doris formed the guard, and although the
marine officer of the Doris is seventeen
years a first lieutenant; I had the honor
to command. The governor, all the Chil
ian officers, and the governor's guards, at
tended also. v
We shall sail in a few days to the
southward, and will probaly touch at all the
ports of any notice on our way down the
coast. It is said we shall not return in
less than six months to this port, which is
our head quarters.”
CROPS.
Augusta, August l.—-The Farmer’s
prospects in the upper country, are very
discouraging; although, gene* ally speak
ing, anticipated evils are rarely found
in the end to be commensurate with the
reality.
The Wheat Harvest has yielded so poor
a produce, that many persons say that it
will be difficult to get seed next year.
The crop of Indian corn is somewhat bet
ter, and promises a great return; but in
very many piacss, apprehensions are en
tertained that enough will not be raised for
ordinary consumption.
The Cotton looks better than either of
the foregoing, but as if it were ordained 1
tnat misfortune should never visit us sin- 1
gle handed, tbe Rot has commenced its ra- ’
wtgfes, and already threatens very serious]’
mischief to the Plant.
These failures in the different crops are
generally attributed to the unequal propor
tions in the present season, of wet and dry
weather. We are disposed to think, how
ever, that the disease in the Cotton, has
been as much induced by careless culture,
as by any other cause; nod that our Pl* n ’
ters would consult their real interests much
more truly, if they would til! fewer acres
and devote an undivided attention to the
quality of the produce. Rain ami u rciugot
are merely secondary to the exertions ol
the Husbandman; and if the roots of a ten
der plant are wounded l>y An unskillful ue
of the Hoe, or of the Plough, U must follow
as a matter of course, tiiat lit# heat am
moisture will generate decumpos’tion, and
this in vegetable physiology, is only Another
name for Disease— Chron.
Washington, (Go-) July 26.
Last night a man by the name of James
Vineyard was shot in attempting to rob the
stable of Osborne Stone of a’ horse. His
wound is considered mortal by the physici
an who was called to attend him. This
man being ort the point of death, made a full
confession of Ins past life, and particularly
of whatjjroughf him in this part of Georgia.
From his confession and other corroborat
| ing circumstances, we are enabled to lay
before the community, the outlines of a
deep laid plot to defraud and rob the citi
zens of their goods and chattels.
It appears that a society has bean form
ed of counterfeiters and horse stealers
which embraces the states ot Kentucky,
Tennessee, Alabama. Georgia, Worth and
South Carolina. This society has agents
in these states which pass the counterfeit
notes and sell the horses stolep. This
James Vineyard, who is dying, was brand
ed and whipped in Huntsville, for horse
stealing, broke jain 4th of April last, and
bended his steps towards Georgia. He
arrived a few days ago in this place, on
foot, with a man by the name ot Henderson,
who Vineyard says, is his uncle. Hender
son who calls himself Smith, and some
times Owen, came to this place on horse
back at the same time. This Henderson
started yeulerdav at 12 o’clock tor Augus
ta. He has in his possession above S4G.*
000 dollars of counterfeit money; he rides
a fine bay horse, With a good saddle, hol
sters, and martingale, lie is ast mt ath
letic man, about 40 years of age. Yester
day afternoon two of the same gang left
this place for Augusta; one whose name is
Robert Cressup, is about 5 feet 10 inches
high, stout made, black hair and eyes; he
wore a black surtnut coat. The other by
the name of John Allsap, is about the mid
dle size, dark hair and eyes he was dress
ed in mixed homespun cloth.
The intention of these gentlemen it ap
pears, is to go to Augusta, Savannah and
Charleston, where th-y have associates, to
pass their counterfeit notes anil to sell the
stolen horses their comrades are to bring to
them from Tennessee and Georgia. Thete
is a connection between them and the in
dividuals lately detected at Tuscaloosa;
an account of which was inserted in this
paper a few weeks ago- This is all we car,
say at present should any thing more trans
pire, we shall hasten to inform the public
of it.*
The citizens of Augusta, Savannah, and
Charlestown must be o;, the alert.
Two deputy sheriffs of this county, are
in prusuit of Henderson, Cressup and
Allsop.— flashing JSetos.
The Treaty of Ghent.*— The Editor of
the Boston Daily Ativmisei doubts wheth
er the decision of the Emperor Alexander,
in relation to certain slaves caj tured and
carried away by the British during theiatc
war, hns been correctly intei preted by our
Gove, nmeut, and also, whether it is as fa
vorable to us as has been supposed. Mr.
Hale furnishes what he cooceievs to be a
more correct translation of the Emperor’s,
opinion, and after stating the circumstan
ces under which this controversy has aris
en, and the construction put upon the dis
puted section of the treaty by the respect
tive parties, arrives at the conclusion that
(he Emperor has decided against our claim,
in relation to all slaves carried away from
places which at the time of the exchange of
ratifications were not in possession of the
enemy < and in ou>- favor in relation to such
as were carried away from places which
then remained in possession of the British,
although ut that time they had been trans
ported on board the vessels within those
waters—but ill relation to probably the
most numerous class, those which were or
iginally taken from the first described pla
ces, and subsequently to tbe ratification of
the treaty, carried away from places of the
other description—we do not perceive that
there is any decision. —New Fork Com.
Advertiser.
Failures at Boston •—The Salem Register
of the 24th inst. says, that failures contin
ue to take place almost daily at Boston,
some of them persons extensively engaged
in Commerce. We are informed that
withio the last two months, there have been
more than eighty failures in that city.
The embarrassment, distress and alarm,
which such a state of things must necessa
rily produce, are indeed a serious calam
ity.
On the same subject, the .Boston 2?ven
ing Gazette remarks—“ We hear the a
mount of debts for which different individ-i
ual merchants in this city have failed, du-*
ring the last two, months, does not fall!
short o£J hree millions of Hollars. n
rE GERMAN CCms>(iK K -- 5 .
July a), i&jo.
.The case of the Greeks atti acts great „ t ,
tention in Germany; and the attempt,
many distinguished liberati to excite utli#
sympathy, have been successful.
We have received a letter from a Ger.
man gentleman, who has opportunities i
forming plausible conjectures, and her.
marks s ’* Russia will probably not cum
mence the war against Uie Tuiks until r
ward the end ot this year; and, in prows
of time , Austria will make coimm,.
cause with Russia. For, severs! years w M
probably pass away before the very dijjiiy
expulsion of the Tmks from Europe cm
be cotnplished.”
Much is written in Germany, on th
subject of l'ell'-w Fever. The medic,
gendeman are desirous of procuring ,
much Information as possible from th
United States -* In Germany there a;
cuiitugionisls anti arUi-contagionisti, B
well as in America,
Lady Morgan's Florence Macarty hi
(ie'cn translated into German, by 15. f. 1
Hon Halem, and published at Leiprg, b
HinJ.ck*- A Leipzig, Review, (widen tu
just bfie-tf received) is msatirical upon hi
Ladyship, a’bd give her but bUW credits
invention or original xuihorgliip.
Count Franz ■>' yn Erbach, a ciiatingyj,:
cd antiquary, and promoter of the tiue lr(
has made some valuable additions tj j,
extensive museum. Ai’uongothrse bet,
received a scroll of papyri's, which is run
feet long, and but little injured, it p [(
sent* some hieroglyphics wt.icli have c,
been noticed before, and are considered |
be of great moment. Another curiosity;
a fragment of an ancient Egyptian pm
rus . easily to be deciphered. Count Vo
Eb Dash has also received an Egypt#
mummy, preserved in an unusual tnenne
and position. The box or coffin is high)
ornamented with h e oglypiiics. A tit
tailed report on those interesting actiqui
ies will soon be publihed.
Andrea Maffei, the Italian translator!
Gesslyr’s Idyls has furnished tor akt
tiomber of the llihl. Ital. a specimen j
Klopstock’s Mesaiah, in Italian. Mat
has selected Abbadona’s address beljr
Satan’s throne.—
•’ la,ich hasse, dich Satan dish hassici
Verruchtet.”
Dr. I, Pit. Krebs is the author of a d/m
nual of logical B'bliograpHy. This wor
makes’ the Philo philologist acquaint,
with every publication of moment that ms
be serviceable to him. We have receive
the prospectus of a” Georgraphic-statist
tal Pocket Dictionary,” which promise* l
furnish a concise view of all the slibjeil
under this head* Counsellor & Dri Ati
baiter, of Frankfort, is the authoi; Schwa
and Goetz; of Manheim, are the publi-her
The type and paper to be very gaud, prit
moderate.
Little Foils (JV. Y) July 17—-Ti
works connected with the aqueduct
this place, are rapidly progressing. 7!
arch throWn over the M<-havvk siren
farms a sublime appearance; it is 70ft
at the base ;a smaller one is yet to be bui
on each side of it. Tne labor requiri
for these operations is vaso but it is ci
ried on with energy, and will soon
completed.
Laige quantities of western goods to
tinuc to crowd the bank* of the canal.-
Employment is consequently given to
great number of waggons, in transport
to Albany. A few day since nearly for
might be seen standing loading for the jou
ney, at a time; and in one day, we are Ml
140 were loaded, at or near this place.
The Jlarvest. —It is sourceof muchgr
tification that the harvest is nearly 1
gathered,*and that the crops of wheat an
rye are plentiful, and housed in good orde
The crops or flax, oats and barley, own
to the dry weather in the fore part of tl
season, are but middling—the same rental
applies to ha/. Indian corn, which proi
ised not long since but an indifferent ert
since late rains, has assumed : a promiiit
character; and from appearances, the bn
bandman will be blessed with an abut
dant crop. [Newburgh MiroU’
Sen Serpent.-—We have been assured t
a gentleman In whose testimony we pi* l
the utmost reliance, that he had a full 1”
perfect view, every way, and for a consu
erable length of time, atNahant, (Mas:
of the SEA SERPENT, which answri
the description, in all respects, alreat
given, of this remarkable marine animal -
Its length, to all appearance, was about,
feet, and it raised 7 or 8 feet, above “
water. A§ a corroboration of the abor
we copy the following article from the no
ton Evening Gazette of Wednesday.
Com. Advertiser .
The Sett Serpent.— Several gentle® 1
at Nabant, on Sunday last, had a
viewof this celebrated mobsterofthe i)l
whose periodical return is now ascertain?
Sjn.ce which he has been seen every day I
different individuals of the highest r
tabiiity. He was observed this moruii
very distinctly; and we hear a letter”
been received in town diacribiog hiH
pearance.
Vermont.-—lt is now reported that tti6!
lis to be a contested election in VerP’.o
| which has not been the case fur gevei
j years. There is a kind of rebellion again
the caucus nominations. “Vs e think (
the Bennington Gazette) it may be tru
said that there never was more division
the state as to candidates generally, th;
&t this day.-—Alb. Reg. h