RECORDER. | V Vol. 1. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1820. Js*o. 23. IIILLS no ROUGH, N. c. ri'RLISIIKU v?.?lt BY DENNIS HKAHTT, AT TIIBKK DOl.LAUS A YK\R, PWAULE HALF VtAKLV 1M ADVANCE. Thusc who do not (five notice of their *ish tvi havt their paper discontinued at the expi j?tii>n of their year, will be presumed an dc vrnjc its continuance until countermanded. Whoever will guarantee the pa\ men" of nine papers, shall receive a tenth prat is \dvcrtisemcnts not exceeding fourteen lines Skill he inserted three times for one u.lhr, and twentv tive cents tor each continuance. Subscriptions received bv the printer, and :iv ?< of the post -masters in the state. All liters upon business relative to the pa ->er n.u5t hi-, p?s'.-puid ?,* Uemlemen of leisure, who possess h ; ,'e it ;? htcrv* pursuits, arc invited to favoi.. ?. j with communications. LIST OF IXT'iT.RS Jit iiHiirunT at the /'ost Office in I/lUs borough, .V. C. July 1. 1S20. A. \!r? A' tii ? !'? \?uir? wr*c C Batl^cr, 3 Mrs FraJici ? ilarioti Ah alnni H'lUtr, Levi IJrixt'iit, S Mods'*, f*i unl Bo?w?-II, Friscilla Hi a<1l?*s , W.lham li.uck.ti). C. Sa?mi?l Child*. 1' .1 r. i John Cluii'll?rt< John Campbrll, 2. Mar) Crahtrrc, J?mcs < ov ?ii, A. CT r C^lvm CUri. 2 N ?iic\ i arn-11. **? Uj4rr>m Ca'ef, A'xliTvm ' Icn.cnt, B .tU^ ?aijt, r . i> <;-? i\? ??!!, Houhcn ? lankn, J~hn ? ufTin.,", Archi!>i?l I * :*!)? rce, Duni"vn i airer-to, -2. John fcc Win. I* l)ick??>n, j.. ?. I)uiin?e?n, ?*? . viJick L>.sbun?. E. Bliwhrih ??t'n, II I t.llis. Barrjws La?tray. r .T?tt>c? Frr eland, W pi' ?m Fat.ckl I auc^M, lt,ch.?r?l F"* < Thomas W n Urn, llrni am in //rater, William //?mu, Nathaniel //.irrn, Charles //ollon, Ahel Jk. rn, fV.tcr? //ayden, Tlr?>mm //ardenun, Calv'in //atrli, //ardy //urdle? William //oil. J Willy Jones, The Jailor, //arriot Joiner. K. .V Mi s in Krllv, 2. William !\ rltland. I.. *'ar\ I.ovvf'.r, ?'"tin Long, Tunc* Cap* T Ix't.r.p, 'J, V/arry La w <# Abraiia^n 1 -aw ?, Mnabrth I.ackcv, ( W Hldfl-ld l-e\%ib, Jamc> Laphlic. M. ?!t IRT9 M ]!er?!c/T)V<>] \\ liln* t' st anj>um, 1 1 ? M'Kmnia, I-fvi Ms oll?,mt Andrew M'HPKim, %\ illiam M'Kf ?, M'Cullough, M ?hin, Mattlicw \l*(/awlyt Marx M*f jLinm, Mr* M'Ch'rlv. 7/fi.ry ^IiilholI'm, Mi |)^ , N. Nancy \'< *>ton. (>. lUrnahu < ?Tarr*ll, M>l>cit Qgdcn. ?* . '* I ti nut'! / 4* id Ha\ , Jam?-? 7/uinnV| Dill) Hue, John /f. I?ar.!?, Charles W'.untrcr, Sarah U g., Dr M .1 UcroMetff 2. Jacob It if, J*mc? 11 y/ogcrs. S. I.tm.in Smith, ?. Wn>. A. Sharp & Co //ot >?*rx Sira'tjfC, J'aisey S'.cphcn*. r. Jt.t.c* Thumps ?n, I ? tidtn Tu?l< r, P.hia I tii iK-r# Jnsrph I li >mprt, Josiah Turner, 4. William I'a\ ! ir, .tfar\ l"a\l>>r, Knnrh TiMiiitps >r>, /fnht !t W Th >:n,ods, ' Fr.inrM \ Ward, If' >hrrt W^ynr, Walter Wood*, .I/.ii* W'>r'!i'?ni? J'iarph Whi'e, I lioma* W.lhams, ?V n Wilson, John WiWon, Caloh Wilson, //arnion Warren, J.imiK Wilson, John T. W. *i, /Vrirk ft W .niton, Thomas WiUmi, \\ ill. am Wade. n. L. took, r.M. II IHborough, July I. 22 ? TO PR INT KKS. HB iubjrribcr bring about to publish a A.* p?per at Fmcaslle, Botetourt county, Virginia, to be railed " The Herald of the Valley request* bis brother editors generally to e* r'?Hiij(e with lurn, and tljose in particular who rxclitPgtil with him nrliffl he publitlicl the \ irginia Reformer anf the count*-\, adapted to ttic culture <>l" all kinds of grain, cotton and tobacco, on which is a Onmt irtablc dwelling house, with other useful out houses; a merchant mill and disul lery in ^ood order; a young orchard of from t reive to thirteen hundred apple and peach trees, u| choice fruit, just beginning to bear. The situation is pleasant and healthy, in a good and respectable neighbourhood, near to one of '.he best schools in the s'.a'.e, under the ? are of the Ktv Wm. Bingham, whose clia racter is well and generally known. I w ill sell at a lair price, and the payments shall be as accommodating to the purchaser as possible, 'loose who wuth to po-.sess an eligible, pica sain, and profitable stsnd for business, would do well to come ami view -.hejpremnes^ten to Ca??cd court bouse ?) ol i ii Campbell. V II The purchaser can have a thrifty Stock Ol c:,ul-,K.gs and sheep, wit), all the tar ing utensils, ? ousehold and kitchen lur n. ure, the crop of corn, wheat and fodder, or am part thereof. ?? June 6th, ld2J- 19? 3w Police \s given, THAT at th<- Lst Mn :crm of ll.c nvif of I'lras mid Q lartcr ~rssions, he! ! I >r tlic QbUnty of Orange, letter. of administi.iii m on 'lie personal en ate of \V II
  • ons indebted to ?a.d estate, are requested to make pay mmt; j???d those' having claim* against the sj nr, a^r hereby notified to present them with.n the ? im'* prescribed by law, otherwise t'.iis notice will be pleaded in bar of .1 recovery. Davitl Yurhrough. Hillsborough, June 1 1320. 19-3* DISSOLUTION. *"1"M1F. copartnership of Wm. Huntington &. 1 Co. was this dux dissolved by mutual content All persons indebted to said concern are requested to call on either of the subscri l?i rs 44 > earlv as possible, and close their rc sjm cttVe accounts ; as they are resolved to It *\ e their accounts closed i>y bonds or other Will Huntington, John Van Hook, jr. Hillsborough* June 6th, HJO. WVVW (T7* The business will be continued by Wrn Huntington, who lias on hand a handsome as sortment of Watch?, Jtirrlrij. Silver Ware, if v. which he will *cll very l.>w for cash, or on a cr. Jit to those whose punctuality c.?n be reli ed on. Watches, (m thirty -fur to eight v -five gallons, vrhich he v ill warrar.r equal to any made in the United States. Per son* uishit'g tn purchase wdl phase call .?t Ins shon m liilUbomugh street, and judge for themselves. 4 lie expects to k?-ep on hand a rons^an* sup ply of .*? I IM.s, and of material*, whicb v ill enable bun to esecute any order ^ith which hi* friends mat favour him. ,Mu}j lt>, Itff). |5? 6w I TOftT 0?FICfc. ' *? | -"HE subscriber t*k?.s tins luethoJ of in 1. forming the public generally, tliat there will oe nu more credit given at the post office f- 20? 3w TraveWer^fe Ann. A. MASON 8c Wx CLIFTON, H\ VlXO purchased tbat sieli knov n sta'.d in Hillsborough front Messrs. Ilinton 5c Bnme of Pctersburgh, formerlv the property pf Mr. Henry I'hompson, inform their friends and the publir generally, that they are now prt-parrd to ar Commodate* as in .-ds, liquors, free ? and will I ke?-(- good a table as tli?4CQuntry will afford. The\ pe also provided with gixnl stables, and will '!?'?> keep the best provender. They S"!'C> a share of the patronage of the public ^ir C'. II n will always g' i to please aid give entire sa tisfaction. I II INSor u^b, N. C. ? pri 1 0, 1 S?0. tf-10 - \Li*on Hall Iji%lc Hnlcl . A. MASON, WISHES to inform 1<* former customers and the public federally, that he has no ?r!v finished his hous -t so that he is now itble t accommodate as f?:.nv as inay honour hia with 'heir company. His house is large, ha.ing sever. comfortably ro.ima winch have fire places *? Ives in reading the newspapers in his hall-?o;r., where he keeps files of papers from ali^st every part of the United States. mm ? ^ ^ -| V " O. > * fmftrn l>. HE\RTT Proposes publishing by subscription THE PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES or THE Convention of ? Yorlh Carolina On ihe adoption of the Constitution of the United States; TOGETHER WITH The Declaration ol Rights and Consti tution of the State. TO WHICH IS PHPrtXED The Constitution ol the United States. rpilF former edition of this work having 1. oecome so scarce as to render it difficult to procure a cop^ , it has been' suggested to the publisher that a new edition would be acceptable to the public; he has accordingly submitted the proposal for their patronage, and will commence '.he publication as soon as ?.lie number of subset ibe: s shall be such a< to limtify the undertaking The debates of the North Carolina Convention on the adoption of ?lie constitution of the United States, must certainly excite sufficient interest to prevent their becoming ex* met; it is therefore pre sumed ttiat the proposed edition will be ex tensively patronised throughout the statu. ? CONDITIONS. The work will be compr scd in a duodecimo volume ot a'?o?it three bundled pages, neatly printed on fine paper. The price to subscribers will be one dollar and lift j cents, handsomely bound and let tered. It will bo put to pro-* as soon as three hun dred subscribers are obtained. Subscription* received at this officc, and at most of the post-oiliees in the state. To the Benevolent and Ha mane. JOHN DZIKK AN SKY, a young man from Wosenbcrg, in the kingdom ol Prussia, ' ami a cloth milker by trade, left Amsterdam in August, 1813. on board a vessel bound to N'urtli America. I Vis brother, Joseph l>zie? kan?ky, now living in Itoscnberg, not having received the smallest information of either his arrival, or where he might have settled him self, is extremely anxious to be apprized w he ther bis brother John is yet alive, and in what part of the United States lie might be sojourn ing. He begs, therefore, the aid of the ciVi renn of the United States should any have a knowledge of said John Dziekansky.or should this advertisement come to the immediate hearing of the person himself, to inform, with out delay, the subscriber, living in the city of Washington, where he will hear particulars much to his satisfaction. Any information respecting the above namrd person will l>c Mi.wikl'tillv Teceived, and A lasting obligation conferred on a much distressed brother. Frederick Cana. Printer* throughout the United States will pli***e to nid a favouring hand to the above advertisement by giving it a few insertions in their papers. , F. C. ">Vaihingtvo Ci'y, .'unc fi. 2p? ??n agricultural. The following article from a pract ical farmer deserves particular attention. A HINT T?l CORN- PLANTER*. Dr. Moore, of Maryland, who has . written a treatise on agriculture, as serts that agriculture is more followed and less understood, than any other me chanical brunch in the U. ^tates. lie says, if good ground Is cultivated in a proper manner every person may plant two hills of corn for one he does now, on tiie same ground ? and the corn will ne equally as good, which is a dou ble crop. He further says, the general average depth of corn ground, as bro ken up and planted, is about three and a half to lour inches; and that one week's hot sun, after the g->und be comes droughty, will dry the ground and scorch the corn, so as to stop its growth. IJut to plough up your ground eight inches detp, your coin will stand growing a three week's drought, and if you plough twelve or fourteen inches deep, it will grow every day during a six or seven week's drought. I have made an experiment, and I think with success, and have saved a large portion of the labour of deep ploughing, and gained some its of advan tages. I break up aod strike out my corn ground in the old usual way ? the furrow 1 plant in, I run a single coulter ten or eleven inches deep in the centre of the furrow, and plant o.\ ?hat mark. ? When my corn is up, I run a barstiear one round in each corn row, and make my coulter plough follow in the same lurrow as deep as formerly. Thus every corn row has t iiee coulter furiows, four tenor fifteen inches deep around the whole. The Doctor asserts, that corn roots run no deeper than you break and cul tivate your ground, and this gives pas ture for the roots. With this small ad di*i,on ot labour in a corn ctop, such a dry summer as last was, this plan will give a third, fourth or fifth more corn. Attention ought always to be paid in laying by corn the last ploughing, never to plough eveiy row, but every other one, throughout the field in dry weather, tf.en turn and plough up those left. But do not act the fool, and cut a!! the roots the same day, and stop the grow ill of your corn, as there is net a doubt but 1 100,000 barrels of corn are destroyed 1 row.' dry scu~~ tn aban doned them. His dwelling in Rome is sufficiently handsome, and he has often small parties in the evening for musi'* or dancing: two of his daughters play and sing prettily, and express a partia lity for Scotch music, especially that published by Mr. George Thompson, of Edinburgh; one of their favourite aiis is, " Scots tvha hae wi* Wallace bled." His eldest daughter, (the fruit of his first marriage.) was married to a Roman no bleman. Her uncle had, at one period, design ed her to become the spouse of Ferdi nand, the present king of Spain, but afterwards alfeicd his plan, thinking ? that something more was necessary to secure the full dcpendcr.ce of Spuin up on his own power. 1 he mother of Napoleon, formerly dignified by ihe title of Madame Mere, resides, together with her brother Car dinal Fcsche, in the Pallazzo Falcone. She lived in seclusion, and .was even said to have bccome a devoree. Only one of her former ladiej gf honor re-, mains with her; she occupies, however, a full suit of apartments, very handsome * ly furnished, and with a greater atten tion to comfort than is usual in Italian houses. She affects none of the reserve of Lucien on certain subjects, but speaks w ith tears in her eyes of the cx-emperor, displays the feelings of a mother in her language respecting him, and laments that he has not written to any of his fa mily si::ce his being at St. Helena, fond ly cherished the hope, (which appears 10 prevail among the adherents of Buo nz^arte,) that the English government tvould finally set him at liberty, and ge lerally concludes with* some strong en :omiumson the character of the English ueimi. with the generosity of which she Madame arn.jajnted. verv tine woman; at tie ?*?... , hern i .."if" she l??Us wtll.throu^f. - aiu her toilette; her manners are even dignified, She appears a queen, and refuses, as do hei daughters, those no tices of the vulgar manners of the ladies of the Buonaparte family, which were so easily accredited in Britain. In on*.*, of the rooms in Lucien's palacc is a bust of Nicooio Buonaparte, the father, which exhibits s countenance of remai li able expression; finer, indeed, than that of Xapoleon, or any of the family* The following article expresses the unani mous opinion of the legislature ot one of the states on a subject which has excited much interest throughout the union. It is written in so lucid a st)lc,that we believe even those who do not subs* ribe to the opinion, will be gratified tvNh its perusal STATE OI- NEW HAMPSHIRE. In General Court, June 16, 1 8-0. The committee to whom was referred a preamble and certain resolutions of the legislature of the slate ot Virgi nia, on the subject of a proposed re striction of slavery, communicatee} by his excellency the governor, ' KEPORT, That the committee has not deemed it necessary to inquire whether it would have been txpedient for the legislature, at the present time, to ovpress its opin ion on this important svfcjoct, if it hal not been thereto speedily invited. K it the legislature of tK state ol V irginia has seen fit to address 'o the le^'sla ure* of the different s^tc- ol the Union cer tain resolutions together will) tt?e rea sons on which /hey are foumt4Tt; giving a constructing to important provision* ?.i the constitirtion of ths Unit eel states, and definl/g the powers of ?ongie?s. The f?r^canng to express an opinion, when thh* appealed to, ^night be taken lor tu^MUieiCcncc in the constror'iofi tonrflidt d for. '-Alter lu^'-rt *"tully examined ihe r-'? ? uionsi, and the reasoning offered in ^icir support, with all that attention to " hu h they are cruised, as well on ac e source whence rt- account of of toe subject to ij "ic conu.iii.tee is ol