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'«\ w m, , ^v< \I -••<ji^*?ii» * ANjGELS CALL. \H»rkl Hiey whisper—Angels »ay, Bister spirit^ come nway!\ Come!, mortal, come! enjoy the wsJ Of saints in pare delight; . Enjoy the raptures of th'e blest, In never-fading light. Come! mortal, come ? there is no joy Which shall endure- ort earth ; Come op on High!' yen; tongue employ In themes of glorious mirth. Yes,, mortal, \come! Ihe Heavens are wide, And offered free to all! <* Come! and repose near th* Saviour's side— Vl'istb&sWessedgospelkcall' -•••< ..•-.«. , ter into rest—enjoy ihe peace, ^ The blessing of a God*1 [ . For pain and wo thereover cease,' - And 4eatb's anfeeling rod. , Naught slmll disturb or make afraid. In Zion's holy hilt. \ Naught shall there enter,\ God hath said, That mars the heavenly thrill. Come! mortal, come! the ope'ning skies Unveil the ascending way ; .And bids thjr. fainting spirit riso Into celestial day f What is on earth that has a charm - Like Heaven, God's dwelling, place ? This thought will all your fears disarm— \ J there shall see his face .'\ Come! mortal, come .' nscend the way— 'Tis Chrifl the sanctified '. Bright cherubs meet thee, singing, say— * HFor yon the Saviour died.\ Come •' come! all things are ready now, - la Christ the heavenly king ; Come to his throne! and hnmbly bow, And help his love to sing. In lofty numbers tune your lyre, And sound his praise abroad.; In living, bright, all-glorious fire, Sing the glory of your God ! Geneva, June 9, 1833. VIOLA. THE HUMAN DISSOLUTION OF NATURE. It is appointed to all men once to die.\ [Concluded from last week's Gazette ] quiescent in regard to what'might move it to wonder, or terror\ is to be nakedly sensi- tive to the MORAL QUALITY of what jt be- holds. The notions of fight and wrong—of good and evil;—the emotions of love • or hatred—of joy or sorrow—of complacency or compunction which here take turns for a moment, or for an hour, with a thousand divers affections, and so are always abated, and very quickly diverted* shall there hold undisputed empire—shall be countervailed by no rival, no antagonist power. Human nature, thus reduced to its most simple ele- ment, shall exist in one mood only—that of *att intense 'consc'iou'sness of its wn moral condition! The whole economy of revealed religion hinges on the doctrine that the commixture of good and evil we see around us, belongs to the present state alone; and shall quite disappear in the next. That is to say, that the abhorrent principles which here, by a sort of violence, are held iu combination, shall, when the temporary purpose of their union is accomplished, divide,*to right and left, and with irresistible avulsion fly. off to opposite quarters.\ If so it is only natural to suppose that each new comer upon' that re- gion of separate elements shall pass, as if by a physical necessity, tg the side he is, allied to, whether for the better or the worse. \The sphere that encircles whatever is holy, and that which embraces all evil, must draw to themselves, severally, all particles of kindred quality. Nothing can there float at large; but must fall in upon its proper centre—and so abide. But an absolute partition of human spirits, like this, may seem not to bear analogy with the present order of things, wherein no such conspicuous distinction oilers itself to out- perceptions, as might be made the ground of a classification so simple. What soul is so base as to retain no particle of goodness? or what so pure, as to be free wholly from alloy ? The Scriptures solve this difficulty; and while they affirm, in the most positive manner, the future division tff the good and evil, indicate plainly the rule on which it „, i shall proceed. If merits and defects, virtues, These well known facts are all we need ; and viceSi were in lhe i nstance of ea ch hu- now have to do with; nor are we obliged to descend beneath the surface, ; the occult conformation of human nature. , . , . , — • - o I man spirit, to be summed up and balanced, descend beneath the surface, as if to explore (thc supposition is absurd) and the fate of ine occult comormation ot Human nature, ( each t0 De determined according to the pre- Instead o doing so, we must note another , pom lerance of good or evil, it must happen remarkable difiereuce between the Moral and in innumerable' cases that a decision so mo- Imaginative emotions, resulting from their j mentous wou i d , ura U p on an incalculably • connexion severally with die body. It is this mimlte excess of the preponderating qua- —that, wlien both are in activity together, the •• latter, in consequence, as it seems, of their stronger affinity with animal life, almost al- ways, and very quickly, prevail over the former, and expel them from the soul: the moral fades, and the imaginative brightens. Nothing-is more frequent than such com Jity. The scriptural doctrine of two states— good and evil, can never be conceived of as the issue of the human system, without ad- mitting some rule far more absolute and sim- ple than that of a balance of merits. No controversy can arise concerning this neces Wolcott—her husband is named in the an-' ecdote—her brother, the Hon. Oliver Wol- cott, Sen.; her son, the Hon. Roger Gris- wold, and heAphew, the Hon. Oliver Wol- cott, the younger, who died in this city a few days since. One of her uncles, the Hon. Erastus Wolcott, was Lieutentant Go- vernor of that state, and the late Alexander Wolcott, Esq. who was nominated by Presi- dent Madison fo be a Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States, was also her nephew. A great number of the collateral members of the two families held honorable and responsible, offices, and were distinguish-' for superior abilities and attainments.]— Commercial Advertiser. The Ruling Passion strong in Death. —To- bacco chewing is the most indelible (if that expression may be allowed) habit that mor- tals ever contract. The editor of the Che- nango Telegraph, in giving an account of the execution of George Denison, who suf- fered at Norwich, on the 19f3is ultimo, says that while standing upon the 'fatal drop, and during tjre exhortation of the Clergyman, \the prisoner asked for.(in a whisper) the Tobacco Box of the of the Deputy Sheriff, from which he coolly* took a quid, deposited it in his mouth, and returned the Box:\ In ten minutes he was launched into Eternity! We witnessed a similar incident in this city. On the morning of the day that Hamilton, who shot Major Birdsalf, was to be executed, the Clergy passed two hours, in solemn ex- ercise with him. After they-left the cell, Hamilton gave some directions about his gallows wardrobe. As the keeper was lea- ving to execute his commission, he asked H. if he wanted any thing else. H. replied, \you may get me a paper of Tobacco.\ —Af- ter a moment's reflection, he added, S Stop, perhaps I Jiave enough,\ and rising on his el- bow, drew a part of a paper from under the pillow of his pallet, and measuring in his mind, the quantity of Tobacco by the few hours he had to live, calmly remarked, \ this tcill last me.\ binations.-—the structure of the visible world, , sarv raIe \- of . human j7. it i t b in all its parts, produces them. Impressions of grandeur or beauty, of sublimity, of pow- er, of destructive force, or of malignant vi- olence, are conveyed often by the very same objects, or on the same occasions, which excite either the gentler affections of love, said that it possesses, or not, that affection to God which, when freed from the embar- rassments that here surround us, will spring up towards its object—will break away, exu- lant, from every defilement; and connect the created to the uncreated Spirit, between ing intimately combines itself with the se- cond; so that to sever the two is almost , gratitude, or pity; or the more stern senti- , w }, ic h a real alliance had already taken place, ments of rectitude and truth. In such in- Has then the soul, at the moment when its stances, ordinarily, the hist species of feel- active powC is are broken up, and when it is launched upon the several elements of good | and evil, been quickened towards the Moral impracticable—as a giant closely grasps him ! Perfections of the Supreme Being ? Has. it whom be is about to throw to the earth and , vet entertained, or not, the rudiment of crash. But when in combination, the better j i ove , 0 r lovaltv, and of submission to the dement is apt to merge, or disappear.— \ divinp fi<)Vt .rnii,ent ? Is it affiliated to God; Hence arises the fatal facility therewith i ( ; r i-s i t estrnnged and in rebellion ? Does it imaginative spirits pass over from the solid \ abhor the contamination of its present state ? ground of piety and virtue, to the illusory n ns i t sv ,„ pat hy with the worship that en- region of enthusiastic excitement. It is not . c j rc .i c s t \h e throne of the Most High; or is true that the religious and virtuous affections | i t destitute both of the emotions, and of the the coast, .would be'of infinite value in im- proving the natives 1 .\ Progress of the cause. —The legislatures of fourteen states have passed resolutions distinctly approving of the scheme of colo- nfeingthe free colored population, and most of them recommending the objects of the Society. Eleven of those states have in- structed their Senators and requested their Representatives in Congress to promote, in the general government, measures for remov- ing such free persons of color as are desir- ous of emigrating to Africa. _. Jtta^ylajicLand.Virginia.have. each.,,, during^ the last year, passed laws making an annual appropnation..in aid of Colonization. The receipts of the Society' up to June 20, 1832, amounted to*$155,912 52. trjviojr- no USJE, SOUTH WATERLOO. HE subscriber having taken the well known TAVERN STAND, formerly kept by Ste- phen Watkins, Esq., and lately by Mr. F. Rice, begs leave to inform the public, that h e is ready to wait upon all those who may please to favor him with a call. His Table will he furnished with the best the sea- sons and markets afford; his Bar will also be supplied with the best of Liquors; his Sta- bles large and convenient; his Beds clean and comfortable. He therefore hopes, by a strict and ready attention to the wants of his customers, to merit and receive a share of public patronage. I. W. NEWKIRK. Waterloo, April 1, 1833. 46 have to make head only against animal de- sires, nr malignant paasiuiis, for Ibey must also maintain their ground in opposition to the more insidious encroachments of ima- ginative impressions; and these, intimately- mingled as they are with all our feelings (to subserve an important purpose,) give no warning of inimical intention. If we would duly appreciate the advan- tage or power, possessed by imaginative emo- tions, in consequence of their close alliance with the animal frame, we must reflect upon what not seldom takes place in sleep, when the voluntary functions being suspended, and the Susceptibility of the nervous svstem greatly diminished, images of sublimity or terror, such as, while waking, the mind dares not dwell upon, pass in still pomp before the mental vision. Through the hushed palace of fancy a vast or threatening pageant moves on—powerl—ss and innoxious. Or if some faint excitement accompanies the dream, it is incomparably less than would be produced by the same spectacle, attended by the same impression of reality, in a waking hour. In presence of the most appalling ideal objects, the spirit—conscious, yet quirscent, and as if it knew itself to be a secure spectator of the scene,'looks on, or even takes its sp> in freakish mood, with fantastic or ludicrouj conceptions; and seems to enjoy a J pastime —now with laughable absurdities, now with gigantic horrors I Thus it appears that the Imagination, though not a whit less active during sleep than at other times (perhaps more so,) has lost then, by the quiescence of the animal functions, its power of domineering over the system. In truth, we ought here to admire die beneficent contrivance which has so blended the human frame as that, when the controlling faculty of reason is suspended, the liability to perilous agitation from ideal objects is also in abeyance. If it were other- wise, our dreams would be our masters;— nay, the most cruel tyrants; and we should be liable to start from sleep to madness. And now let it be supposed (we advance merely an hypothesis) that it is an indispen- sable part of the education of the spirit, with a view to its ultimate destiny, to bring I habits, of grateful and joyous adoration ? I What is the conception which, indivi- j dually, we entertain of future felicity ? Is 1 God the desired centre and fountain of the j happiness we think of; or does the mind I draw its idea of Heaven (if at all it thinks of | Heaven) with atheistic perversity, from those j elements of pleasure which the present life ; affords! Is the soul alive to God or not? • The answer to. these questions must discrim- ; inate spirit from spirit, when each, in its mo- . ral element only enters the world where I moral elements are parted. I Every one might then readily imagine the state into which the dissolution of the body must plunge him, by conceiving of himself as stript of all faculties, and all emotions, but those that belong to the moral senti- ments; and as so confronted with the unsul- lied brightness of the Divine Majesty. To die, is to come—denuded of all but con- science—into the open presence.of the HOLY ONE. COLONIZATION—LIBERIA—SLAVE TRADE. Extract from the Address of the Colonization Society re- cently formed by'the Young Men of Ithaca. • Origin of the Society. —The subject of African colonization was agitated as long ago as 1787, by the late Dr. Thornton, of Wash- ington, and in 1789 by the venerable Dr. Hop- kins of Rhode Island, but their efforts fail- ed. The subject was seriously considered in the Virginia Legislature during the ad- ministration of Mr. Jefferson. As far back as 1611, Mr. Jefferson said he had \long ago made up his mind on the subject of coloni- zation, and that he had ever thought that the most desirable measure which could be adopted for gradually drawing off this part of our population.\ In ltfltl, the legisla- ture of Virginia passed a resolution \\by a large majority, requesting the general Go- vernment to aid in obtaining a territory in Africa, or elsewhere, to serve as an asylum for such persons of color as Were then free or might thereafter°be emancipated. In De- cember of the same year, the American Co- lonization Society was formed. Founding of the Colony. —The first set- tlers arrived at the Colony of Liberia (land of the freed) in June, 1822. The tract of country under the colonial jurisdiction, has been obtained by fair purchase from time to time from the natives, and extends from 150 to 200 miles along the coast, and indefinitely into the interior. Fertility and Agriculture. —In their ad- dress, the colonists say, \A mnrp fo«*Uo o«n, and a more productive country, so far as it is cultivated, there is not, we believe, on the face of the earth.\ Dr . Randall says, \that the land on both sides of Stockton Creek is equal in every respect to the best on die southern rivers of the United States.\ Mr. Ashmun thus enumerates the animals and products of the country: Horses, cattle, sheep, goats, swine, ducks, geese, chickens, and guinea fowls, in abundance; fish in the greatest plenty; plantains, bananas, vines, 1 lemons, oranges, tamarinds, mangoes, cash- ew, prunes, guava, pine apple, grape, cher- ry, and a species of peach; sweet potato, cassada, yams, cocoa, ground nuts, arrow root, egg plant, okra, every variety of beans and peas, cucumbers and melons, pumpkins, &.c. &c. ; rice, Indian corn, Guinea corn, millet, pepper, excellent coffee, sugar, cotton and indigo. Indeed, sugar, cotton, coffee, and indigo, grow wild. Climate and Health. —In the early years of the colony, want of good houses, the great fatigues and dangers of the settlers, the discouragements they met with, their ignor- ance of the proper mode of living, and of the best remedies, aided the other causes of sickness, arfd produced great mortality.— But those times are past and forgotten. For FOR S,1E,JE. T HE GRIST MILL, formerly owned by M. Allen, situate in the village of Dresden, county of Yates. The building is 44 by 32 feet, 2^ stories high, jvith two run of Bun-stones, and the necessary machinery for doing good work, and all in the best or- der—and has a large share of custom work. Terms of sale, reasonable. Apply to the subscriber. II. II. BOGERT, Agent. Geneva,--Feb. 5, 1833. 34tf HE subscriber wishes to purchase a small FARM, from GO to 100 Acres, with some Improvements, for which h e Offers in part payment a Brick Bwelling-House and Lot in Water-street, near the head of the cimal. A. COWLES. Geneva, Feb. 20, 1833. 37tf 'Dwelling and Siore-Howse. HE subscriber offers for sale a valuable HOUSE and STORE-HOUb'E, situate in the village of Geneva, on the east side of Water-street, at present occupied by C. Shekell, Esq. Terms reasonable, &C. H. H. BOGERT. Geneva, Jan. 2?, 1833. 32tf Valtiable Prober tutor Sale. fW^¥HS-fhfe^smnj Brick Block JL of Buildings, situated on the corner of Water and Castle- streets, consisting of a STORE and TWO DWELLING-HOUSES. The Store is now occupied by William Milford Sf Co., and may be considered one of the best STA.VDS for mercantile business in this village. The Dwelling-Houses are well fin- ished and convenient, and the property will be Sold cheap and Oil accommodatin g terms. Apply to' rnvin OHICPITII, ,•« jtwiftcotr/, ur WM. MILFORD, on the premises. Geneva, March 27, 1833. 41 FOR SAIJEJ, OR TO LET. T HE DWELLING-HOUSE, together with the Garden and Orchard, now occupied bv the subscriber. Possession given immediately. WM. TILLMAN. Geneva, Feb. 18, 1833. 3(i Far Sale- THBASHJLIW MACHINES, AND HORSE POWERS. T HE subscribers having purchased the exclusive right of Manufacturing the much approved Pprtablc ^^ashing Ma- chines, and Horse Powers, of T.D. BDR- RAJ-L'S Patent, of the town of Potter, Yates Co., have made arrangements to manufac- ture said Machines and Horse Powers atthe village of Rushville, in tlfe town-of Potter, where.any person disposed to purchase said Machines and Horse Powers, can get any informafion, f thje,y wje.h v by. agpl.icatip.^ta^iy:, agent, ftTr.\JoTw M. Capron t (who will be at the Factory at all times.) They me decidedly-the best article of the kind now in tise, and said Capron will be en- abled to satisfy any person who applies, by exhibiting the Machines and Horse Powers to that effect. They are very compact, weighing.only about 1700 lbs., and can ea- sily be removed from barn to barn, on a common two horse wagon. They can be placed iu a field and prepared for thrashing in the space of one hour. Also, if any person wishes to purchase a Right- of any State, County, or Town, for manufacturing said Machines and Horse Powers, said John M. Capron is authorized by the Patentee to effect such sales. We*shall have for exhibition and Sale at all times, at our Hard-Ware Store, at Gene- va, flie above Machines and Horse Powers. DE GRAFF & TOWNSEND. Geneva, April 29, 1833. 46tf CJE^EVA STAGE-OFFICE, GENEVA HOTEL. OR Ithaca, Qwego, Montrose, Milford, Newton, Morris,town, Newark? Jersey City, and New-York. Also, for Binghampton, Mount Pleasant, Bloomiugburgh, and Newburgh. Also, for Green, Bainbridge, Unadilla, Franklin, Delhi, Waterville, Windham, Cai- roj and Cattskill. Through to New-York in three days, via Catskill or Newburgh. ffJI^ Passengers travelling from the West to New-York, will find the New-York Line, via Ithaca, 100'miles shorter from Geneva, than via Albany. C. L. GRANT & CO. Proprietors, Ithaca. February 4, 1833. *ljr34 FOR 8JULE. ~ T HE HOUSE,' LOT, and Blacksmith's SHOP, for- merly owned and occupied by William Elliott, situated in the village of Geneva, on the corner of Water and Tillman-streets. The Lot extends fifty- feet on Water-street, and 138 feet on Till- man-street. The House is of brick, and nearly new. The Shop is one of the most eligible stands for the Blacksmithing busi- ness our village affords. The property will be sohl at its lowest cash value ; one-fourth of the purchase money down, the residue to be secured by bond and mortgage, payable in four years, with annual interest. .The ti- tle will be warranted, and possession given immediately. G. J. GROSVENOR. Geneva, Sept. 5, 1832. 12 Imposition Avoided I HTWISLL'S ORIGINAL OPO- DELDOC— one bottle of which con- tains more than three times,Jhe strength of the hard kind. Externally applipd, it is con- sidered infallible iu bruises, sprains, gout, rheumatism, cramps, numbness^ weakness or stiffness of the neck or joints', chilblains, tooth and car-ache, chapped hands, stings of 'insects, vegetable poisons, &c. Taken in- ternally, it is useful in jaundice, colic, head- ache, flatulence, hysterical affections, pains in the stomach, occasione(^y.ex,t/ae^er|.ioj}, < 'Kc.,'*cotigIis unattended by feverrasthmas, &,c. Sic. N. B. Beware of imitations of every de- scription^ especially of those bearing ficfitiqus names, comprising half my real' name, as Whiti-man's, Whit-ney's, }Vhit-ing's, and about fifty others, all of which can only be forced into the market at reduced prices, and under the impression of the consumer that it is the genuine article. \ Prudence in all cases is a desirable virtue, but the saving of a few cents in a • Vial of medicine, is pitiful\ economy, and may lead to worse conse- quences than the loss of money.\ OJ\ Country Dealers, purchasing this preparation, at wholesale prices, will obtain more, profit on the sale, than on any of the imitations, besides having the satisfaction of selling to their customers the genuine article.. Tests of the only true kind— 1st. See that the certificate of the late Dr.'Samuel L. Mitchell, L.L.D., of the city of New-York, is on die inside direction paper. 2d. That my name is stamped on the bottle. 3d. That the retail price is not less than thirty-seven cents a bottle. All others are but base imitations, little better than whiskey or N . E. ram. J. P. WHITWELL. Sold by all the principal Druggists in the United States, who also keep for sale the VOLATILE AROMATIC SNUFF: For many years celebrated in cases of ca- tarrh, headache, dizziness, dimness of eye- sight, drowsiness, lowness of spirits, hypo- chondria, nervous weakness, &c.~ It is most fragrant and grateful to the smell, being com- posed principally of roots and aromatic herbs. It is absolutely nececessary for those who watch with or visit the sick, being an excel- lent prevention of contagion. Recommend- ed by Dr. Waterhouse, late Professor of the Theory and Practice of Physic in Harvard University. Price 50 cents and 2 5 cents. (Cf* The above valuable articles are for saleat the Bookstore of J. BOGKRT, Main- street, Geneva. Geneva, Oct. 31, 18a3. (6m20) \Estate of S»-\\ HAINES, late of the t--.ii or Seneca, in the county of Ontario, deceased, will exhibit such claims, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscribers or ei- ther of them, at either of their respective dwelling houses in the said town of Seneca, on or before the twenty-eighth day of Sep- tember next, at 12 o'clock at noon.—Dated March 25, 1833. DAVID CLARK, *b'm4 E. HALL, Executors. Office of Commissi of JLoans: ONTARIO COUNTY, SS D EFAULT having been made in thg- payment of the Interest due on the Mortgages of William Jackaivay, Joseph Hall Isaac Morse, Reuben Gilbert, Samuel Wright Joseph Parker, jr. William Bishop— to us as Commissioners of Loans for t% County of Ontario: The following described Tracts of LAND will be sold at Public Vendue, at the Court-house in Canandaigua, on the third Tuesday (the seventeenth day) of September jiejt,:at,2 o,;clock, p. •m.' r .viz:^''\' v ~^\ r ' 100 Acres in Palmyra, being lot No. 27 j n township No. 12, second range, and mort- gaged by William Jackaway, for 3 0 dollars. 22 Acres, being part\oT lot No. 81,\in town- ship No. 10, first range, and mortgaged by Joseph Hall, of Phelps, for 80 dollars. • 25 Acres, being the northerly half of lot No. 81, in township No. 10, third range, and mortgaged by Isaac Morse, of Canandaigua, for 74 dollars. 50 Acrel>feejng part of lot No. 35, in town- ship No. 8,Tou«h range, and mortgaged by Reuben Gilbert, foT Bristol, fpr_60 dollars. 14 1 Acres in-5Blobmneld, being parts of lots No. 27 and 28, in township No. I0-, fourth range, and mortgaged by Samuel Wright, for 60 dollars. , 30 Acres in Bloomfield, being part, of ftt No. 28, in township No.. 10, fo.urth range, I and mortgaged by Joseph Parker, jr., for 54 dollars. '65 Acres in Victor, being west of lots No. 33 and 34, and ,-tdjoining David Carpenter's . land, mortgaged by William Bishop, for 20ft dollars. - 3 Acres in Phelps, being the north-east corner of lot No. 81, and Mortgaged by Jo- seph Hall, for 75 dollars. A. WARNER, ? Commissioners \ N. AYRAULT, S of Loans. Geneva, May 28, 1833^ \ Vegetable Rheumatic Mt&ops OR SURE REMEDY. ANY articles are before the public, as a cure for that most obstinate and tor- menting disease the Rheumatism, anrl from close observation, we are led to believe they have to a very great extent, failed to produce that desirable result; and may it not be at- tributed to the fact that articles said to cure this troublesome disorder, are also recom- mended to* cure almost every disease with which our frail bodies are attacked, and in their preparation diat object is kept in view, viz : to have the medicine a cure for all dis- eases. The Vegetable Rheumatic Drops are of- fered to the public as a sure remedy far Chron- ic and I«iUmw^r^* mm f am ; ana i,H I1D ^, fis-Kfiffwii where a perfect cure was not effected, we are justified in declaring it a valuable medicine for diat painful disease, and for no other is it recommended. A few from the many testimonials of its efficacy are given below : Messrs. O. & S. Crosby\cc Co.—Gentle- men : I feel happy in having it in my power I to state to you the good effect your Vegeta- ble Rheumatic Drops, or Sure Remedy, had in restoring me from a sick bed. In the month of April last, I was so afflicted with the Inflammatory Rheumatism that I was A LL persons having claims against the I confined to my bed. I was entirely unable Prom Iho Hartford Weeltly Review. \WELL IT'S TIME YOU HAD.\ Miss Sarah Ann Webster of Philadelphia, lately communicated to the editor of the Philadelphia Gazette, the fact of her marriage with Mr. Jonathan S. Paul, a gentleman of! the last five years (as stated in the address of that city. On the publication of the notice, j the colonists in 1827) not one person in forty- Mr. Paul immediately made a public state- , f rom the middle and southern states has died ment that no such marriage had, or was like- f r0 m change of climate. | ly to take place. We suppose Miss Web- j Under date of the 28th of April, 1832, Dr. ster was actuated by the same mothes as j Mechlin writes, \Among fhe emigrants by ' Miss Ursula W r olcntt, but her efforts were j the Malador, Criterion, Orion, James Per- not crowned with the same success. Be- | kins, Margaret Mercer, and Crawford, the tween the Wolcott and Griswold families, . number of deaths will not average quite 4 -*! valuable Farm ; ITUATE in the town of Jer- sey, county of Steuben, call- ed the \Benson Farm,\ about 7 miles west of the Head of Seneca Lake, containing 118 acres of the first qual- ity of Land, about 60 acres of which is un- ?| ,. . .„ ._.„ der good improvement and well fenced, and i marc \ lb ' lw '- i - the residue well timbered. O n the premises I are a comfortable Log House and a large j Frame Barn. Title indisputable; and will be sold low, for part in hand, and the residue on a credit. Possession can be had on tin- first of March next. Apply to the subscri- bers. BOGERT & GROSVENOR. i Geneva, Feb. 18, 1833. 3(>tf Estate of FRANCIS HARFORD, late of : to help myself. I could not so much as turn the town of Seneca, in the county of Onta- j myself in bed, and it was with the greatest rio, deceased, will exhibit such claims, with 1 difficulty that 1 could be moved in iti I the vouchers thereof to the subscribers, or ! tried various kinds of medicine, and was atten- either of them, at either of their respective I ded by a skilful physician, but all to no ef- dwelling houses, in the said town of Seneca, ! feet, until I made use of your Sure Remedy, on or before the twenty-first day of Septem-| which when applied as directed, gave me her next, at 12 o'clock at noon. Dated two of the most ancient and respectable families in Connecticut, there existed a re- mote relationship. Ursula Wolcott, after- wards the wife of the first Govcnor Griswold, was a lady of superior intellect and accom- plishments, and, perhaps, unequalled in the state for sagacity and shrewdness. Not- withstanding the superiority of her endow- ments, and the shining excellence of her character, she remained unmarried until abont the age of thirty. Finding it at length indispensably necessary to turn her it, if we might so speak, within and among ' attention to matrimony, or become in fact, the stupendous inner movements of the uni- — L -*-'-- -' u - verse; or^to afford it a full view of objects, personages, and actions, the merest glimpse of which, constituted as we are of matter and mind, would dissever the frail structure of nature; or would at least so excite die imagination as to overpower entirely the mo- ral sense. But it is this very sense of good and evil—this moral perception, and the tranquil affection attaching thereto, jhat are to be brought into .activity, and to be em- what she already was in name,'an old-maid, she remarked to her friends that she had come to the conclusion of spending a few weeks at Lyme, for the purpose of courting her cousin Matthew. On her arrival at Lyme, she found her cousin Matthew, who was also considered an old bachelor, more disposed to devote his attention to his Coke and Littleton, than to his cousin Ursula; but she was determined at all events to bring him to the point. She - ployed' upon -the amazing scenes of the I occasionally would meet him in the hall, or INTERIOR WORLD. *' J ~ c '~~ By our alliance with matter we are detain- ed on the surface of things; and are conver- sant only with semblances, and with effects. • But it remains for~us, perhaps, to beconie conversant with substances, and causes: we must go and contemplate the deep secrets of God's empire. We must be led up and down among the works, and gaze upon the reason of things. And yet this intuition is to produce its whole effect, undisturbed and on the stairs, and after carelessly passing him, turn round, and eagerly inquire, \ what's that you\said?\ to which he would i'eply, that he had'nt said any thing. Alter several unsuccessful attempts to make him under- stand, she niet him one day on the stairs, and after making the usual inquiry, and re- ceiving the usual answer, she hastily replied, \well I think its time you had.\ Matthew could not avoid taking the hint, and a short time after, they became one of the most .unmixed, upon the faculties which consti- i happy and respectable couples in Connecti- tnte man a moral and responsible being.— I cut.\ m These factdties, therefore, are d> hfe set at large from their affinity*-with all those inter- mediate sentiments which, in the present state, form the amalgam of mind and mat- ter. The separate spirit is then (on this sup- position) to be thrown upon the play of its AFFECTIONS, whether these be benign or malign—pure or depraved; and it is more- over to be thrown up>oti diem in presence of objects of the most stupendous magnitude. In place of the measured and mingled emo- tions of the present life, there are to be en- eoUntered in the next .stage of pur existence, •xcfiSiitaents of overwhelming force; anil all of one quality. And amid them the soul— i [For fhe accuracy of that part of the fore- going anecdote which is presented for amuse- ment, we do not vouch. That Mrs. Gris- wold was a lady of superior intellect, and of great sagacity is unquestionable—and that talents and genius are not Unfrequenjtly trans- missible from generation to generation, may be. inferred 7 from the fact' that she formed a link of connection between the two families mentioned, which, between the years 1754 and ffiifi\ furnished five out of eleven Go- vernors of that state, who bore to her the respective relations of father, husband, broth- er, son, and nephew. They were all distin- guished for unbending integrity and exalted talents. Her father was the Hon. Roger per cent.\ For emigrants from the wide ex- tent of southern country, the climate may be pronounced salubrious. Comnurce. —In 1820 the exports of Afri- can products amounted to $G0,000. In 1831 forty-six vessels, twenty-one of which were American, visited the colony in the course of the year, and the amount of exports was $88,911. Slave trade. — Its cliaracter and extent. — Influence of the Colony in suppressing it. — The cruelties attending this trade, are proba- bly greater now than at any former period.— The slave ships are now crowded to excess, and the mortality is dreadful. In 1816, the African institution ascertained that one ves- sel, of 180 tons, took 530 slaves; of which, 120 died on the passage to Tortolo. Anoth- er, of 272 tons, received 642 slaves, and lost 140. Another vessel lost 200, out of 600.— Another f)(5, out of 500. Another of 120 tons, took on board 600 slaves; and though when captured, she had sailed but eighty leagues, she had lost 30, and many others were in a dying state. Dr. Philip, a distinguished missionary at the Cape of Good Hope, estimates the num- ber annually exported, at 100,000. In 1823, i Mr. Ashmun wrote from the colony that at j least 2000 slaves were annually exported from i Capes Mount and Montserado. In 1824 the I African institution reports 120,000, as the j number exported from the coast, and pre- sents a detailed list Of the names of 218 ^es- I sels, believed to be engaged m the trade du- I ring that year. In 1827, 125 vessels sailed from Cuba to Africa, for slaves. Within the I last eleven years, 322,526 slaves have been imported into the single port of Rio Janeiro; that is, an average of 29,320 annually.\ Some have estimated the whale number of slaves exported from Africa, since the or- igin of this trade, at nearly 20,000,000. A late English officer, who had been some time on the African coast, mentions the sub- ject : \Nothing has tended more to suppress the slave trade in this quarter than the con- stant intercourse and communication of the natives with these industrious 'colonists.— Wherever the influence of this colony ex- tends, the slave trade has been abandoned by the natives, and the peaceful pursuits'of legitimate commerce established in its place. A few colonies of this kind scattered along W OOLCARDER.DYER.& CLOTH DRESSER, at the Red Mills, 0 „ the South side of the River, half-way hi- tmen Waterloo and Seneca Falls. {rjp= All Onods in the above line received and promptly attended to at N . ATRAI'LT'\. in Geneva. PRICES For Black, London-Brown. London-Smoke, light and dark Olives, light and dark Snuff, Navy, patent & fancy Blues light and dark Cinnamon, Orange,\ Bottle- Green, domviit.tlie very best manner, at tiro shillings per yard. Compound Indigo and Bottle-Grcen, two shillings and sis pence. Light, common and dark Drab, one shilling and ten pence. Horfte colors, such as Gray. Blue, Brown, &c, done from six pence to fifteen pence. Cloth but once sheared, or not sheared, the price will be lower in pro- portion. Women's Press'd- Cloth and Flannels. — Red, Claret, Crimson, Red-Brown, London- Brown, &c., one shilling and six pence per , yard. Black, Navy, Patent and Fancy Blue, i Snuff Brown, &c'., one shilling and four i pence. All kinds of Fancy Dying of Corer- l lets, Carpels, S,-r.; and all business in the | above line attended to with the strictest fidel- ' ity at N . AYRAULT'S, in Geneva. Sept. 18, 18412. 15 ' 2E1TNA INSURANCE COMPANY, JJHA Hartford, Connecticut —(CAPITAL, $200,000, icith liberty to increase the srrmt in half a million of dollars) —Offer to Insure Dwelling-IIouscs, Stores, Mills, Manufacto- ries, Distilleries, Bams, Ships and Vessels while in port or on the stocks, Goods, anil every other species -of insurable personal property, against Loss or damage by FIRE, at as low rates of Premium as any similar institution in good standing. The JETS'A | Insimmce Company was incorporated in 1810, and the reputation it has acquired for prompt- ness and liberality in the adjustment and payment of losses, requires no additional pledge, to entitle it t o a liberal share of-pub- 4ic patronage. Persons wishing to be Insured, will please apply to the subscriber, who has been ap- j pointed AGENT, with full power to receive i Proposals and issue Policies, without the de- ! lay necessarily attendant on an application to the Office. JOHN L. DON. Geneva, Feb. 27, 1833. . 37 FOR SAfcE, S LIP No. 29, eligibly situated on the South side of the Episcopal Church. Terms reasonable. Inquire at this office. ( Geneva, Mav 30, 1832. 0~rf JOSEPH FULTON, WHITNEY SQUIRE, Executors of the last Will of the said Francis Harfbrd, deceased. (Gm40) DR. THOMAS WHITE'S Vegetable Toothache JDrops, rH^HE only specific ever offered to the public, from which a permanent and radical cure may be obtained of that disa- greeable pain, the Toothache, with all its attendant evils ; such as fracturina; the jaw j immediate relief. Within a short time after I commenced using it, I was able to ride out and attend to my usual business. I can cheerfully recommend it to the public as being a good medicine for Rheumatic com- plaints, as it has been a number of months and I have had no return. AARON HOLDRIDGE. Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 1, 1832. Messrs. Crosby's & Co.—I was afflicted for several months with the Rheumatism ; and having used every remedy recommended by the most eminent physicians within my reach without success, I at length procured a bot- tle of your Rheumatic Drops, or Sure Rem- in extracting of the teeth, which often proves - more painful than the toothache itself; and ' ed - v \ and m , ade , ,he application as directed, cold pacing frt»m the decayed fpefh tr> the jaw, thence to the head, producing a rhcu- j matic affection, with many other unpleasant : effects ; such as a disagreeable breath, bad , 'aste in the mouth, &c. &c, all of which ire produced from foul or decayed teeth. I •mi liappy to have it in my power to offer to i the world a remedy, that will not only re- ! move the pain nine times out often, if prop- (rly applied, but preserve the teeth from fur- '• ther decay, and arrest the disease in such as | are decayed and have not commenced aching, ' restoring thein to health and usefulness. CERTIFICATES. Philadelphia, Sept. 12, 1820. Mr, Thomas White—1 have the pleasure to inform you, that, agreeably to your re- quest, I have been using your Toothache Drops in my practice for some time past, and I must acknowledge that I find them far superior to any thing I have ever yet known for that purpose. You are - entirely safe in and before I had used one half of it, a per- fect cure was effected; and to my knowledge the same bottle cured two of my neighbors. It is now about two years since I used your medicine, and I have not been troubled with the Rheumatism since, RODNEY SPALDING. .Vcrrion, Marion co. O. May 20, 1832. _. The above Drops may be had at the Drug Store of the subscriber, in Seneca-St. II. H. MERRELL. Geneva, May 6, IBM. *12:47 FOR SALE OR EXCHAI¥€JE for JLands iu *JfIicMgan. HE well known Stand, for iffiTlfflf ™ mercantile business, in the town of Sodus, and county of AVayne, owned and occupied by PETER ESTERLET. It is situated on the great Ridge Road, running from Oswego to Rochester—four miles from Sodus Corner recommending them to cure nine times out j —nine miles from Sodus Bay—six miles of ten; for from the success that I have had. I believe your recommendation falls short of! their merits. ' I am well convinced that it will cure most • rases of Toothache when it is timely and properly applied. I am not able to say much it this time as to its preservative properties; J '•tit what I have seen of your teeth that have long been cured and preserved from decaying, j . nd from a few weeks experience, I am deci- , dedly of the opinion that it will have a very lieneficial effect in preserving the teeth ; and ' recommend it, hoping that it may prove a Messing to humanity, and advantageous to yourself. \ With respect, I remain yours, &c. * WM. I. A. BIRKEY, Surgeon Dentist. Baltimore, July 7, 1829. Some time last May, D^ Thomas Wliite left with me some of his Vegetable Tooth- ailieDrops,and requested me to use it in m.y pr;ctice—I accordingly did recommend it to Mx\of my friends, and some of thoru had heen cmnplaining of the toothache for more than tliree months ; and out of the six it had perfectly cured five. I am now fully convin- ced of its salutary effect, not only curing the toothache, but prevents teeth from further decaying. J. II. WINCHESTER, M. D. (£/\ The above article mav he had at the Drug-Stores of W. W. CARTER* in Main,Street, and of II. H. MERRELL, in Seneca-Street. Geneva, May fi. 1833. *l_y47 from Pulteneyville—on the corucr of the ridge road and the road passing on the town line between Sodus and Williamson—con- taining about eight and a half Acres of Laud. There are. on the premises an orchard, con- taining about one hundred bearing apple Trees, and a suitable number of other fruit Trees; two dwelling Houses, a Store, asmalj Bam, and a patent cider Mill, where, t^ ere were nine hundred barrels of Cide? ij^dp the past year. There is also on t nP lot a very great convenience for a r 1 , annrr y and Distillery, or either of the m . \ n \ H h ery adjoiningjthe premises, m good * hs an ^ at preserit occupied n v t]ie subscriber, can be bought on very reasonable terms. I he abc.ve, property is not surpassed in point of location for business by any in this section of country, and will be offered a givat bargain, in exchange for Lands in Mich- igan, if application is made soon ; or it will be sold remarkably low for cash; or on a short and approved credit. For further particulars inquire of therSTib- scriber on the premises. PETER ESTERLY. Sodus, June, 1831. 50 20,000 SSaishels Wheat. HE Highest Price in Cash will be paid for 20,000 bushels of good Merchant- able WHEAT, delivered at my Store-House at the foot of Seneca-street. N. AYRAULT. Geneva, Jan. 30. £33 D EFAULT having been made in -the J payment of the moneys secured to be | paid by an Indenture of Mortgage, bearing f date the twenty-sixth day of May^one thou- sand eight hundred and twenty-four, exeeu» ted by Richard G. Cuyler, then of the town of Phelps, in the county of Ontario, sines deceased, to Glen'Cuyler, then of the town of Ledyard, in the county of Cayuga, since deceased, upon \ All that certain tract or parcel of Land, situate, lying and being m the said county of Ontario, and is known and distinguished by being\ a part of Lot number twenty-five, in Township number eleven, in said county, is bounded as follows,, to wit:—Beginning on the south line of tha Highway leading from the village of Vienna to Elijah Edmonston, and at the northwardly corner of Harwood Bannister's land—thence south-eastwardly, on the line of. said Har- wood'S land, two chains and forty-six links, | to said Harwood's east comer; thence south fifty-six degrees west, on the south line of I said Harwood's land, two chains and twenty- five links, to the south corner of Samuel Howe's land; thence south seventy-nine de- grees and thirty minutes west, on the south line of said Howe's land, five chains and eighty-seven links, to the east line of Isaa: Dean's land ; thence south, on said Dearfi cast line, two chains and seventy-four links; thence north seventy-nine degrees and thirty minutes east, parallel to said Howe's souti line, six chains and seventy-five links; thencb north, and parallel to said Dean's east line, | two chains and eighty-nine links; thence north fifty-six degrees east, one chain and fifty-eight links; thence north forty-nine de- grees east, two chains and ninety-two links; thence north thirteen degrees west, to the south line of said highway ;\ thence west- wardly, along the south line of said high- way, to the place of beginning, contain^ two acres one quarter and thirty-nine rodi of land, be the same more or less.\ Which said Mortgage was given to secure the whole or a part of the consideration money agreed to be given by the said Richard G. Cuyler, since deceased, for the lands and premises therein described—and was-duly recorded in the Clerk's Office of the county of Ontario, on the twenty-first day of September, one thousand eight hundred and twenty-four, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon, in Liberlthlr- teen of Mortgages, at folio two hundred and five ; and on which said Mortgage there is now due for principal and interest the sum of one thousand four hundred and twenty- two dollars and thirty-eight cents'.^—No*-, therefore, pursuant to law, and b y virtue of a power of sale contained in said Mortgage, (and duly recorded therewith at the time and place aforesaid,) the aforesaid described Prem- ises will he sold at Public Vendue, at the Vi- enna House, now kept by Thomas A. Dillon, in the village ojg Vienna, in the county of Ontario, on the tenth day of July, one thou- sand eight hundred and thirty-three, between the hours of ten and twelve o'clock in the forcnopn of that day. Dated January eight, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three. CORNELIUS CUYLER & ELEAZER BURNHAM, .. __ Executors of Sfc. of Glen Cuyler, rfec'rf. DAVID WRIGHT, Attorney. 6ni30 W HEREAS 'George Reitz, of Geneva, in the County of Ontario, and State of New-York, by a n Indenture of Mortgage hearing date the tenth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand, eight hun- dred and twenty-eight, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of the county of Ontario, in Xaber seventeen, of Mortgages, at folio twenty, did Mortgage to Abraham Dox, \ ALL that certain tract, piece or parcel of Land, situate, lying and being on the east side of Main-Street, and north of Washing- ton-Street, being a part of Lots number six- teen and seventeen, in the village of Geneva,, in the county of Ontario, ana Bounded on the north by a lot owned by William Hort- sen; on the east by an alley; on the soutft by a lot belonging to the heirs of David Nagr lee, deceased, and on the west by Mian- Street :\ And whereas Default has Been made in the condition of the said IndJentnre- of Mortgage, and there is claimed to: be-due- thereon, at the time of the first publieatiiMJi of this Notice, the sum of Eleven hundred and seven '.'ollars and twenty-two cents— Now, therefore, NOTICE^ is hereby given-, that L y v j rtUe of a p 0W ev *of sale, » sai( * 'I'.mnture of mortgage contained\ and 1 i'tt pursuance of the Statute in such case made, ar.u provided, the above described premises will be sold at Public Auction, at the Hotel kept by Silas Hemenway, in the Village, of Geneva, on the fourth day of November next % at ten o'clock in the forenoon. Dated Itfay 8, 1833. ABRAHAM DOX. N. B. KIPPER, Atl'y. 6m47 BOLTON'S IMPROVED CASTTKONT Clover'Seed Mutter, For Hulling and Cleaning Clover-Seed. OEL L. RANSOM, respectfully in- forms the public, that h e is the Builder and Vender of the above named PATENT. Persons who are interested in the raising of Clover-Seed, will find this to be one of the most durable and labor-saving Machines yet introduced to the public. The plan is sim- ple, and the Machine is composed of the - best materials. For any further evidence of, its utility, he would request the .examina- tion of one now building at the Pap$r-Muli Waterloo,. where ij. may be seen after the first of October. fly BRICK, of a good quality, for sale at tlie residence of the subscriber, on the. Lake road. J. L. RANSOM* Geneva, August 13, 1832. 09tf Shortest noi 'it 1 *