Newspapers / The Durham Recorder (Durham, … / Sept. 6, 1820, edition 1 / Page 1
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HILLSBOROUGH RECORDER. Vo\.l. , * .. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1820. x?. ac HILLS DO HOUGH, N. C. PVDL1SIIF.D WEEKLY | BY DENNIS flEARTT, at three dollars a year, payable ll\Lr YEARLY IN ADVANCE. Those who do not give notice of their wish to have their psper discontinued at the expi ration of their year, will he presumed at de siring its continuance until countermanded. Whoever will guarantee the payment of nine j*pers, shall receive a tenth gratis. Advertisement* not exceeding fourteen lines wilt he inserted three times for one dollar, and iventy-five cents for each continuance. Subscriptions received by the printer, and jjiosi of the post .masters in the state. All letters upon business relative to the pi per miiHt he post-paid. ?/ ticntlemen of leisure, who possess a tss?<" literary pursuits, are invited to f?tv?,ur us with conituunicaUons. i Ten UviWvws Yle^OTtV. Ra>* away from the subscriber, on the 10t'? of July last, a negro man named SAM, t\?er?t\ iour or twenty-five years olil, 11 -ar ?ix l?-et high, stout ni:?Je, of a black com plection, aivl very likelv. It is sopposrd lie k lurking i?: the neighbourhood of Alexander It irljiicl, near Hillsborough, as In has a wife then*; ? r pmhaMy Ik- may undertake to pass as a fre?* man, as be ha* been trying to pro cure a free p is* The aliove ftw?rd will he t, \r'\ to a??v person who n?av sporeln ml said n?-.;r'> Mid deltvei him to me, ot cmtfini* him n i'iil so tii.ii 1 get h.m again, if M m this rot'nt*, or twenty dolUr* it taken out of the eount) Lewis ftlutcliins. . Oiange county, N. <* *itg. 3 27 ? 1'or ide, at the houw forov-Hv occupied as the !Utok, the follow rip VALUABLE MKMCLYES. TIZ. LEP.*s KLTXlU. a ?overeij.Ti reir<? lv fir colds oUdnate coughs, r vntr'is, as'h ' man, ?ore throats, and approaciiuig consump tions ASTHMATIC TILLS, which f~\c imuK.li ale relief in all a?thma?, difficulty of breath, inf. Sic AROMATIC PILLS, for female complaint* INDIAN VEGETABLE SPK'IKIC, ?n ex cellent r-ptedy (or certain complaints Mihilioua Pills. Fever and Ague Urops, . By Water, *Tooth Powder, Worm-destroying I/izengej, T..oth ache lirops, < >rn I'lintec, ' Tooth-ache KM'*. Xh( i jMiie Vila, ft/si*?rut??e r.lls. 11 '.ihirtijk, J j j?, 9. 27? tf WsD<D3? MAtlVU.VV. ' I "MI P. subscriber lus in complete opera 1. t>on, at A. |> MurphjN iT.ills, on ih?> in this coanty. a pu r of machine* for carding wool into mil* I'lie machine. aie in-" . ?i?d the card* of a superior quality* it 4 necessary tfnt wool brought to these machines should be fiwd f.nm hurs and other I ird suhilanres, as they injure the Cards It ?S??iili! al*<? be washed clean of difl, a?d one pound of clean grease ahouM lie added to ? very ten or twelve pounds of wool. A auffi < enry of tow or linen sheets (not woollen) klr.uM br brought to put the rolls in. ** Merit* i wool can he c?rdc I, if timsc who I av?- it \i ,11 prepare it in the following man <"?1 Take ram or river w^ter, b'nl it, to which idc'. an equal ipian'.ity of col 1 urine; s'ir the v.oil in thisOffcd the grra->e is extra'-* <1 from tlie hody of tl?e wool and riv s to th** ??p, then ?ui ?? it on*, rinse it ?n rlc.tr watrr, Jr> it, and ?t ready for carding. The sanv: prepara t.->n will do for the next and antf-din^ par. * II#- II Xhc a!)ovc <1 ructions r .n:,ot he at* te i led to (which is hea* \ '?h the w > >| well ?n a s'rong soip s'id*. Work c.inn..t he well 'lone u:i!css the?e directions are observed* The uhsntire of a never faiheg stream a ill t iiahle mo t<> uccimiiiiim(1 ?te ail hIm may fa\our me with tiieir custom. ' .<t.n?*r* from a distance shall me ? with dispatch, and ev< ry exertion will He used to lia?e tlie v?oik wi ll J jne and expeditiously Snniut'l S. ( In*, (or. Aug ?. 26? ov MUW\A^ VN<) I K <?!' It i-ul vn Kob?'rt K.vnn and John Kimctir, fur i lie s im of twcnM Mirce JdlLm or thrr?- idioutii, with llritry Whitted %'i'nc*. The said not** draw* twelve n?.nitl>* after date, aod d*ted wnic tune n? f-Ybruary, ) ft I si I forewarn all p<r?>ns from tr^'ling I r note, *s I have rrct:ivcd full luUafaction for the <??nir from said K?ton. \\ iu. \\ liittcri, sen. July Jf,. S 25?5 NKW POST OPflCK. A N'F.W POS I' OFKKJK in ?ptabUahrd at i;oc!iran'? Level, Orange county, Nonh 'ftrolma. I)ic nit- mion will be paid to the ?4'iticu of tl. ? oflh e by Win. landman, F, *W. July 1 1. tf N O T I C K. nt'HIN'l mv absence from th?* stAlf, which will he for the ?p*ec of t<vo ?r tnree month*, tlvr duties of my offier an County Hurv? vor, for Ortngc county, M. IJ. will he tttindiil to by Mr. Joseph \ Wuid*, oi llilla. borough, vi im it authorised '.o attend to the ^4-.i?e. Iln^li M ulliollnit. <*>;angc county, July ?>l. 23 N O T 1 C E. I HAVE on haiyl, at my black -smith's shop, six miles south-east of Hillsborough, five or six WAGGON S, well finished off for the road, which 1 will sell low for cash, m n a short credit tc tliose v. hose punctuality r ? te ..lied on. Wm, N. Pratt. Orange county, Aug. 14. 28 ? 3w rcy The editor of the Raleigh Register is requested to give tlie above three insertions, and forward his acc>unt to this office. NOT1C K. RAN away from the subscriber on Friday evening last, an apprentice by the name oi JOHN TOLI.VR. Had on when he went away a shin and pair of trousers, and a wool hat; he is about fourteen year* of age, and has dark blue eyes. This is to forewarn ail pei sons f:om harbouring or employing him, as I ho v. ill be dealt with according to law. avid Kiggs. Orange county, Aug. 10 28? 3w TWO good AHI.CH CUIt'S, which were raised in tuwn. Inquire* of the Printer. Julv 2i TraveWer^sir^Iii. A. MASON k Wm , H AVING purchased that wi ll know n star^ujl tfi Hillsborough from Mesam. llinton lira me ot I'ctersburgh, formerly the properly of Mr Henry T hompson, inform their friends and the public generally, that they arc now prepared to accommodate as many as may ho nour th?*m with their company They arc pro \idcd with good beds, liquors, See. and will keep as good a table as the country will afford. 1 hey ire also provided with good stable*, and w ill always keep the best of pro vend**"- They solicit a share of the patronage of ' ih** . Mr CI i ft n will alwavs give his pcrtdna! ser vices, aiulfiled^cs himself to tV?e public . tv do all in Ins |>ower to please and/f'vr entire Sa tisfaction. ? ? llill?boroUgL?*.C. vpf.l 10, 1820 tf-10 ? Mui.on Hull Eagle Hotel, 4A. m.^on, WISIIF.S to inform ins turmrr customers and the public generally, that lie has ne*rl\ finished ii.? hous , so il.at he is now able to MCC->tn<o date as nijiiy as may honour lum M itli their company. II t s house 19 large, having seven comfortable rooms which have tire places m them, stumble for families, or travelling gentlemen wmlung -ucli. ilehaspro vided good beds, liquor-, Stc and will ke< p as go ?l a table as the ne-ghboorhood v. ill afford. He is also provided with g<>od stables, and will ,l\va\ s keep th; bejt provepder. The situation ot he j> ace is pli??ylt, and very hyalthv Gentlemen w.slu.ig to Visit Inm with trw-.r faint: e?, during the summer season, can be accoimnoila'c ! <?n moderate terms. I he k?*i | it ?.l this establishment pledges himself to tiie public to do all in Ins power to please and give entire satisfaction. (?cntlcmcn who call can amuse themselves in reading the newspaper* in hi* hall-Toon., w here he keeps files o? pap? rs from almost every ; art of the United States. Mason Hall, ' Nnrr row.tv, X (*. ? Feb. 'Jf., 1 (iJU. jj 4 ? Gn? i). iif.au i r Proposes publishing by subscription i h r. proceed inus and debates or t fi t Convention of . Yovlh Carolina On the adoption of the Constitution of the Dailcil Stales, together with The Declaration ol Rights anil Consti tution of ihr St:?te. TO WHICH IS I'REriXEO Tiic Constitution ol t tic United States. ^IllIK former edition of this work having JL become so scarce as to render it difficult to procure a Copy, it ha# been misruled to Uie publisher that a new edition would be acceptable to the public; he has accordingly submitted the proposal for their patronage, and will commence the publication as soon as the number of subscribers shall be such as to ju?t t|y the undertaking. The debates of the North Carolina Cuim ntion on the adoption of the constitution ol the United states, must certainly excite sufficient interest to prevent ihcir becoming ex* met; it is therefore pre sumed that the proposed edition will he vx* tsnsively patronised throughout the state. CONDITIONS. The work will be comprised in a duodecimo volume of aboMt three hundred pages, neatly printed on fine paper. The price to subscribers will be one dollar and fifty ccntx, handsomely bound and let tered It will be put to press as soon as three hun dred subscribers are obtained. Subscriptions recoived at this office, and at ?io*t of the post-offices in the state. NOTICE. ALL persons indebted to James S. Smith Si Co or to James S. Smith, are request ed to settle their accounts, as he can give no further Indulgence. J. S. Smith. Hillsborough, June 20. 20? tf WutoA Economy POTATOES. Hanover, (s. h.) July 16. To have tarty potaio< >, *et slicks by those plants which first blossom, and preserve their roots for the following year. To have good potatoes, let them ripen. There is no greater mistake than that this vegetable will do well though planted iate. There is nearly as much differ ence between a green aud ripe potatoe as between a green and ripe apple. But potatoes require a long season to riptn. Thry should be planted as soon as the ground is open, and dug early before the fall rains. Wnat are called solid or juicy pota toes arc green potatoes. When per fectly ripe they aie dry and mealy; unless they have been exposed to soak ing rains late in the season. No pains should be taken to clean them before putting them into the cellar; the more dry earth adheres to them the safer they will be duiing the winter. But keep them as secure from too much warmth as you do from frosts. In ploughing and hoeing disturb the ground as little as possi! le, making it your sole object to keep down all other \egetabies, which take the strength of the soil from the plants. When ripe and mealy the potatoe is oije of the most nutritious of all vegeta bles, but when green and heavy it is in digestible and unwholesome. Irish po tatoes are always mea.y, and tiie Irish of the poorer class, a robust and hardy racv, make them their principal food. We have a blue potatoe which i? always viealv, because it is a spccics that ripens early, and therefore does not suffer lik< the white and yellow potatoe, fiom being late in the season. ON FRUIT TREES, &c. The following is from the Catskill, (>i. Y.) Recorder, but will apply with more force to the greater part of all the southern states. It is a nutter of surprise with us that ou.- farmers, with all the advantages of a near and certain market, have so pcr severingly neglected the cultivation ?>t fruit. J In passing the old orchards of our country, one is ar.ru ck with the de cayed state of the tree9, the want of taste in their original selection, and of sub sequent attention to their external ap pearance and position. Some of tne new orchards arc happily an exception to all this; though we cannot as yet make boa-;t of our fruit, ci.hcr as to quantity, <1 ality, or variety. There can be no doubt but the growth of fruit-trees i* a profitable, as well hs a beautiful relief to a monotonous fu- id and torest land scape. The Poughkeepsie Herald states thai Mr. Joseph Wardell, ol Washing ton, Dutchess county, sold at the New York market, during the months of May and June, the produce of ten apple trt es, for the almost incredible sum of three huudicd dollal'- ? they wcie of a spccies called Summer Russets, ar.d the trees altogether occupied less than one quar ter of an acrc ol ground. In truth, with this tact before them, we hope our farmers will turn their attention to a more ncral and improved orcharding. We can give them no better advice than the dying admonition of the laird of Dumbeidikcs, to his son: " Ji>ck, when ye hac nacthing else to do, ye may be aye sticking in a tree; it will be growing, J'jck} when ye're ilctfiing." KEEPING HORSES. Every gentleman, who is obliged by his health or his business to keep a horsj, complains of tiic enormous ex pense inc lined by it. If allowed to eat and waste as much as he chooses, a home will consume from four to five tons of hay in a year besides the neces sary grain. Ilut it is asserted on actual experiment, that ten pounds of good hay, with two quarts of corn a day, arc enough to keep a common horse in fine order. Ten pounds of hay a day arc 3650 pounds, little more than a ton arid a half a year; anil two quarts of corn per day are about twenty-three bushel a year. Call hay jtver. dollars a ton, and corn four shillings a bushel, and you make the annual expense of feeding a horse twenty six or seven dollars, about halt as much as ii commonly costs. To keep a horse in the cheapest and healthiest manner, let him stand on green turf, dug up pictty thick, and placed on the floor of his stable: let him be carefully and faithfully curried every day. This is of more impotance than is sometimes imagined. It opens the pores and preserves a healthful state of the skin, on which, in horses as well as in men, depend* as much as on almost any thing else the proper and healthy operation of the various animal func tions. Although the inferior animals arc not like men, ?uhject to unnatural appetites, on account of unnatural stimulants re reived into the sumach, they unques tionably often consume more food than is necessary to maintain their vigor and spirit. This surplus it is economy to ascertain and retrench. Corn is cheaper than oats for horses, because there is more heart in a quantity of the sante price. It is better to be given two or three times a day in small messes; and to be given dry, that the mastication of it may keep the mouth in a healthy state. To measure hay the tare of a basket may be taken, and the hay vriven Iromit in small quantities through the day, but chiefly at night. A horse that is not used should be fed with corn but sparingly. It should oc casionally be salted. It is not perhaps generally considered that horses arc as much subject to cold and fevers as men. They should, there fore, be uted with great tenderness anri delicacy, and often w ashed in cold waur. I The pulse generally indicates the health of a hors<-. It may be felt about an inch back of the eye, and in health beats ; aboui 35 strokes a minute. The great secret in making horses look well and do well, :s attention to them. Men who are t^o great getille men to look to their horses, must be too great gentlemen to ride good ones. In using horses it is beiter to drive briskly and stop often, than to drive even slow by long slaves. Dartmouth Hcrulil ? From the New York Commercial Advertiser. | memoir or the of ENGLAND. ?(Continued ^ It was now that the advisers of the princess began to change the tune of her letters, and from tin* plaintive to burst forth into the indignant. Her royal bigness auswered the letters of the king, communicating the circum stances last alluded to, on the 12th of February, 1807, intimating her de sign to represent to him, in another letter, the various grounds on which she felt the hardships of her case; ? which was done in a letter dated the 1 6th of February, in a most able manner. At the close of the letter there was a threat of ?? an appeal to to the public," unless the princess j should be speedily received at court, and also allowed some suitable esta blishment ill some one of the rov al palaces, if not in Carl ton-house. ? To this letter she received no an swer, and on the 5th of March, she wrote again to the king to say, that unless her requests were granted, the publication would not be withheld be yond the next Monday, which would have been on the 9th of March. 1 807. The publication, or, as it was after wards called, " The Book," did not appear; but in fifteen days from that time, Mr. Perceval was chancellor of the exchequer! The publication being thus for a time effectually checked, the Whig ministry, including the friends of the prince, went out of of fice, and there was no longer any ob stacle to the receiving the princess at court; and, accordingly, on the 21st of April, 1807, minutes were laid be fore the king, as a prelude to that step, in which the council declared as follows: ** After the most deliberate consi deration of the evidence which has been brought before the commission ers, and ol the previous examinations, as well as of the answer anil obser vations which have been submitted to your majesty upon them, they (the cabinet) feel it necessary to de clare their decided concurrence in the clear and unanimous opinion of the commissioners, confirmed by that of all your majesty's late confidential servants, that the two main charges alleged against her royal highness of pregnancy and delivery are com pletely disproved; and they further submit to your majesty, their unani mous opinion that all the other par ticulars of conduct brought in accu sation against her royal highness to which the character of criminality can be ascribed, are either satisfac torilv contradicted, or rest upon evi dence of such a nature, and which w as given under such circumstances* as render it, in the judgment of your majesty's confidential servants, un deserving of credit. Your majesty's confidential servants, therefore, con curring in that part of the opinion of your late servants, as slated in their minute of the 5?h of January, that i there is no longer any necessity for your majesty being advised to decline receiving the princess into your roy al presence, humbly sul>init to your majesty, that it is essentially neces sary, in justice to her royal highness, and for the honor and interest of your majesty's illustrious family, that her royal highness the princess of Wales, should be admitted with as little de lay as possible into your majesty's royal presence; and that she should be received in a manner due to her rank and station in >*ur majesty's court and family." Among the ministers sanctioning this minute, were lord ?ldon, lord Camden, lord Westmoreland, the duke of Portland, earl Hathur<t. vis - count lord Castlereagh, bird Mus grave, Mr. Canning, &c. There was a separate minute, in which the council declined interfer ing, as to the assignment of apart ments to the princess, in one of th^ royal palaces, this being a subjerc purely of a private and domestic na ture. Thus ended the matter at that time. The princess was restored to her si tuation at court, with a reputation perfectly unsullied, although it had been so basely attacked, an'1 to this period it may fairly be alle^< d, that if the death of the king had ta ken place, there was nottiingM^iis tice which could have deprttftU Iter royal highness of all thosrf-iaKraud dignities belonging to tbe;'^e^h of England. What may ^JfcVe since transpired to chan^pUoT character of her claims, futurcajj^overics may posMibly unfold. It is proper in this place to stale, that the detail* respecting *? the de licate investigation," which we ha\e just concluded, were, although ready { tor publication, suddenly withdrawn from the public eye. ? Three copies only, il is suppostd, escaped the vi gilance of those v\ hose interest it was to suppress them, and for these the most extravagant prices were offer ed. Intense curiosity was excitcj only to be disappointed, and the Country at large remained ignorant of thecharges which had been brought against the princess, and which, in the absence of truth, were distorted in the most shameful manner. Up to this time Mr. Perceval may hare been said to have acted in the most honorable matiner towards his illustrious client ? he had cleared lu^ of every imputation; he had restored her to the court; he had replaced her in a palace (she had obtained apart ments in Kensington palace,) and had done all that her mosc sanguine wishes could have anticipated. ? From his subsequent conduct, how ever. it would seem that lie had acted under a different feeling. ? When the regency came to be established in the person of the prince; when the hus bauil caino to be exalted to the rank, the splendor, and power of a king, the princess was still left in her for mer comparatively obscure and pe nurious state, llis conduct on this occasion excited at the time a consi derable degree of animadversion* Ho had relieved the princess from the consequences of a foul calumny; b;it her husband being now exalted, her non-exaltation operated vsitb regard to her character, in nearly the same way as her exclusion from court had formerly operated. Hop royal highness was again ex posed to tlio malevolent shafts of time-serving malice; lint still she, preserved a dignified silenre, and would probably have remained in rc ! tirement, were not her ma ernal feelings deeply wnunded by the in creasing restraints which were daily imposed upon her intercourse with i her daughter. At length her indig nation burst forth. She could no longer exist in silence under the re iterated charges which were prefer red against her, and under the mor tification of being almost exposed to her daughter's contempt. She wrote a letter to the prince regent, charac terized by considerable force and eloquence* in which she challenged a full public disclosure of every thing connected with the investigation of 1806. Hlie emphatically said in this letter. that while she did not ven ture to intrude Iter feeling- as a mo ther upon h?M royal highness'* no lice, she must be allowed to say, that in the eyes of an observing and jea lous world, this reparation of a daughter from her mother would on ly admit of one construction ? ? con struction latal to the mother's ri-pu tation." This loiter ? as sent back
The Durham Recorder (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 6, 1820, edition 1
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