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KINDERHOOK HERALD. “ a U l B VERUM ATQUE j^ECENS, CURO E T feOGO,” __________ KINDERHOOK, N. Y. FRIDAY, JUNE Ip, 182 ^ VOE. I.] [No. 2, If PUBIilSHED WEEKLY. P.. VAN SCHAACK, Jr. ' EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR ; THOS. S. RANNEY, , . PRINTER. T E R M S OF T H E H E R A L D . THE Herald will be issued from the office at iwo dollars per a7imimy payable h alf yearly. Papers will not be discontinued imtil all arrearages shall have been paid, except at the discretion of the editor. Advertisements inserted upon the usual terms, and those which are sent without orders, will be inserted until forbid. 0 3 ^ Letters to the editor must be post paid. BAIN & BIR G E ’S tondevlftook Lottery Ofdce. What mortal so deaf to tlie whispers of JF/opc, Through |he drear waste o f want forever to grope ^ folly most rash, to live pinmg and poor, [door. When FORTUNE, “ kind Dame,” tliroweth open her Thirty Thousand D o llars. JVew-York State LITERATURE LOTTERY, Class Ko. 1, lor 1S25. ^OTTTLL be drawn on the 20th July next, and finish- ▼ T ed in a few minutes. OOnumbers—9 ballots to ;jbo drawn. J. B. YATES, and A. McINTYKE, Managers. HIGHEST PRIZE, BO« 0 OO B o lls. SCHEME. 1 o f $30,000 is $30,000 1 do 15,000 15,000 1 do 10,000 10,000 ' 1 do 5,737 5,737 ^0 do 1,000 20,000 *50 do 500 15,000 30 do 200 6,000 51^ do 100 5,100 51 do- 50 2,550 1734 do 22 38,148 11475 do U •126,225 13,395 prizes, 20,825 blanS^s, tn? Price of tickets. $•9. Shares in proportion, the above office, where have Tickets to be had at m •recently been sold, and the cash advanced for the «.ame, 1 prize of 2,000 noUars, 2 ;prizes of $200,1 of together with a great numbor ot smaller prizes, frr* Prize tickets in former classes o f the Literature Lottery, and o f all others under tlm management o f Yates'and McIntyre, will he received in payment for tickets. Kindyrhooh, May 30th, €825. ., a l t f A L I S T O F l e t t e r ? Memuming in ihe Post Office a t J^derhook, N . Y., June 1st, 1825, B . Henry Gatr^t Buigert, AntimasBiockeTray, Beiijamm Barton. John M. Blunt, c . Electus Chaihberland, 1 Maty Aim Clapp, Jarvie Clow, |- Abraham L Cole. F. John Folansbee; j Augustus Fjdler. Thomas Hare, Jr; 1 Job S. Hawkins, Samuel Hull, | Nicholas Hoose. IViiliain Johnson. M . • Millard, j EaraMnnbitt, P . Peter Philip, ‘Henry Palmetnr, | Peter Philij Walter Pugsley, Iw HnghPauI. as I. I. 'thctoas I, Roots/ B- Adny Smith, I, Crorsham Sahaon. tA h t y m , mtwmMAieap H a g a n , David Vosburgh, Hannah Voebnrgh. I Whitharwax, ( Ahraham Wilds. I/.,VAN mCK4t.PosuM asttr. LIVERY STABLE. Horses and Carriages, ?|niO be had at the Hotel, for any pa^t o f the coun- JL try,by applying to the subscriber. P. I. LEWIS. Kinderhook, June 1,1825. n ltf William Kip, Watc\i-Maker, SWveYsmitk aud ^ 3 e \N e W e r ,. ONTINUES his business in the village o f Kinder- V y hooJfc, next door north o f Lewis’Hotel, where ho has on hand and keeps constantly for sale, a variety o f WA TCHES and JE WEEK Y, which ho will soli on reasonable terms. WATCHES and CLOCKS, repaired in the best maimer. [0=* All orders will be thankfully received and punctually executed, and every attention given to bu- n lt f siness. Kinderhook, June 1*/, 1825. The Sloop Chatham, C. Crooke, Master, T ^ I L L sail forJVeic-Ibrk, ▼ T from StuyvesantLand ing, on the following Thurs days in each montii during tlio present season, at 2 o' clock, P. M. viz; Juno 2d, 16th, 30th, July 14th, 28th, 'August 11th, ^5th, Septem ber 8th, 22d, October 6tli, 20th, and November 3d, 17th. The above sloop has oxcollcnt accommodations, and will carry Freight and Passengers on the most reasona ble terms. The subscriber continues, as heretofore, to pay cash for COUNTRY PRODUCE, and keeps constantly on hand, for sale, Nona Scotia Piaster, Grind Stones, Salt, Pish, and other heavy articles usually sold at landing places, which he is enabled to sell at the lowest prices. ^ He^ias also made arrangements for a constant sup- W E S T E R N GROUND PL A S T E R , fresh from the Mills, which he flatters himself he will be enabled to dispose o f to Farmers, at a less price than the Nova Scotia, and which, experienco* has pro ved to he equally as good, if not belter* Troy Line of STEAM-BOATS. THE public arc informed that the TROY LINE of STEaM -RO aTS, *^|EITILL touch at the subicriber’s TPTiarf, for the ▼ V purpose o f rcceiwng and landing Passengers, in passingboth to Now-York and Albany. ABEL S. PETERS. Stuyvesant, 1st Jane, 1825. N. B. In consequence of ill health, the imdorsigned wishes to dispose o f his property and husincBS at the aforesaid Landing. The terms will be moderate, and an extended term o f payment given i f required. Pos session may bd had on tho closing of the river. Itf ^ A. S. P. To Farmers. n p iH E subscribers have erected a HAY PRESS in X. the village o f Kinderhook, and will pteyeash and tho highest prite for the first quality o f HAY, to be delivefed at tho above mentioned Hay Press, , ' CHARLES WHITING ic do. . Kinderhook, 2d June, 1825, ‘ n l t f TO LET, ON REASONABLE TERMS, A BUILDING in tltis village, suitable for a Man A iwtmker^sShop* D. V. SCHAACK. Kinderhook, Juno l#f,18*5. n ltf Wilcoltsop. ^ Van Sckaack, ATTORNIES AT LAW, TpTAVE their oflSee tho first door north of Peter • O . Van Bnren’s Store, in “ ................ . ’ hook. Kinderhook* Jimdtst, 1825. rillafoof Kinder- nltf New Spring Goods; B A I N Sf B I R G E , TTTAVE just received from New-York, a gchoVal X X and well selected assortment o f the most fa shionable. Yaac’^ and Staple DRY GOODS. Also, a variety of choice LIQUORS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE and CROCKERY, which they offer for sale aP tho lowest prices, for CASH, COUNTRY PRODUCE, or approved credit. Kinderhook, May 30lh, 1825. n i t \ Valuable Property FOR SALE. A GRI^T-MILL and SAW -bllLL, with ten acres j C j L of l a n d , lying in the town of Chatham, for merly occupied by Daniel Staats. The mills are in good repair. A STORE, DOCK, DWELLING-HOUSE, BARN p d other out-houscs, with ffleen acres of LAND, -ly ing at Stuyvesant Landing—called the bliddle Dock, formerly occupied by Arent Pruyn. ONE HUNDRED ACRES of LAND, lying three and one h a lf miles nortli o f t)io village o f Kinderhook. Two thirds o f said lot covered with heav;y pine timber. heav yellow A STORE, DOCK, DWELLING-HOUSE, and out-housos, in the town of Schodack, w ithers acres of LAND, formerly occupied by James B. Van Dcr- pool. Also, aJiTsl rate FARM, lying one and an h alf miles east o f tho village of Kinderhook, containing ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY ACRES OF L A N D ; for ty acres o f which is well timbered. The said farm is in good fence, and under good cultivation, with a good bam and dwelling-house. The whole o f the above property will be sold on reasonable terms, and payments made easy to the pur chasers. Apply to Henry Van Vleck «fe Co. In the village of Kinderhook, WHO have for sale a general assortment o f Groceries, Dry Goods, Hard and Stone Ware^ Crockery, Iron, Steel, Nails, &c. at their NEW STORE, at the c o ^ er o f Grand Street and the Albany Avenue, in said*village, which they will sell as low as can bo purchased north of tlie city o f New-York. Patent Cast Iron PLOUGHS, of approved patterns, for sale at reduced prices, Kinderhook, June lit, W25. n ltf TO MILLERS; TO BE SOLD BY PRIVATE CONTRACT, A Grist-aMWl &L SaN^-MiU, together with a Dwelling Home adjoining—and also , 'SEVEN ACRES OF LAND, / “KN which is a productive ORCHARD. The above property is situated in tho town of Stuyvesant, about one mile north of the landing, on a never faU- ing stream o f water, and in a populous neighborhood. As there are no other mills wilMn several miles, tho purchaser may make the situation profitable. Likewise to bo sold in connexion with the above MILLS, or soparatoly, as the purchaser may elect, TWENTY ACRES OF LAND, well timbered witli white oak, &c. and only lying half a mile from the Mill Lot. The above was the property o f the late Jacob Claw, deceased, and will bo sold on accommodating terms. Application may bo mado to either of the subscribers. JOHN M. CLAW, EDW A R D W. BAYLY, J. P. BEEKblAN, Kii^iiUors^ Kinderhook, June . n lt f X X J X J D i fflH E anbscriber is appointed AGENT and SUR- X VEYORforthe YuViott Y’lre Insurance Company, in the city o f NeW-York. The business of this company will be, ^conducted with fairhessamd liberality, and the ine^ moderate premiums charged. The capital is ampii, and the directors are responsible and candid men. \ L. VAN [From Rryiiges’ Recollections of Foreign Travels.] The six yeairs I passed in Parliament, 1812 to 1818 ,—^though not wilhput their mortificar tions, were, perhaps altogether, the most satis- ■ factory of my life. They opened iha.. new, points, of view to me, and oepupied me practi cally in a manner not inconsistent with my for mer pursuits and habits of 'mind. What first and most struck me in the House of Commons, was the extreme rarity, not only of great and eloquent speakers, hut even of moderately good ones, and the number of those whose delivery was not only had but. execrar ble. Canning was the only one who could b e ' said to speak with a polished eloquence; and he.did not then speak often, and his speeches were at that time much studied. Of the other speakers who took the lead, where the matter, was good there were many natural Or technical defects: the accent was national, provincial} professional, or inelegant; or the voice was' bad, or the language clumsy. Three of the most extraordinary have gone to their graves, by one singular and lamented destiny. Whit bread improved as a speaker, to the last: ha was a man o f strong head, always well inform.- ed, generally ingenious, sometimes subtle, occa sionally eloquent, but not natuifally o f a delicate taste and classical .^sensibility. He was almost always tod violent, and sometimes tumid: his person was coarse and tingracefuU’and Ms voice seldom melodious j and the whole o f his manner betrayed too much o f labour and art. He be gan too high, and soon ran himself out of breath. Sir Samuel Romilly was a very effective speak er on the topics which he handled: he was a most acute reasoner,--^f extraordinary pene tration and subtlety,—^ivith occasional appeals to sentiment’, and addresses to the heart; but still his manner was strictly professional, (which is never a popular manner in Parliament,) and it had also somethingof a purjtan tone, which, with a grave, worn, pallid, puritanic visage and attitude, took off from the impression of a per fect orator, though it never operated to dimin ish the great attention and respect with whicli he was heard. The veneration for bis charac ter, the admiration o f him as a profound law yer, the confidence in the inte^ity of his prin ciples, and his enlightened, as well as conscien tious study of the principles o f the constitution of his country, procured for all he said the most submissive attention; and they who thought Mm in politics a stern and bigoted republican. Whose opinions were uncongenial to the mixed government of Great Britain, and^therefore dissented toio corde Irom Ms positions, deduo\ tions, and general yjews of legislation and of state, never dared* to treat lightly whatever came from Ms lipsi He had a cold reserved manner, which repelled inUma'cy and ftimiiiari- ty ; and therefore, whatever he did, he did by his ovni sole strength. Lord Castlereagh belonged to a very different Order, and was cast in a very opposite mould. He'had a prepossessing air, and was, in manner, by far the most perfect gentleman I have ever seen. He had led an active and stormy life ; and Ms abilities were at last tried beyond their strength, and beyond the strength of any mind He was, in general; not a gobd speaker; some times even a bad o n e : but once or twice I bavo heard Mm, in the department of strength and manliness, speak better than any other man in the House. I attribute, therefore, his general habit of conftision mainly to a want of self-con- \ fidence; for the times o f success to wliich I al lude were on his first return from the continent in the summer of 1814, on concluding tho peace, when be tvas greeted on bis entry into tbe House by the universal cheers of all par ties. This of course elevated Ms spirits, and he then spake with the most unembarrassed fluency and vigour. He was not a popular mi nister ; and! firmly believe that this conviction hung in common a heavy weight upon Ms fa culties. His abilities were .Unquestionably# most ignorantly and absurdly under-rated; and when once accident makes man a butt for the witlings who pander for his opponents, it spreads a contagion tlirough the light heads and hearts of the populace, which it is difficult to resist. __ An epigrammatist, having got Ms cue, goes ori hammering Ms brains, year after year, upon one slrmg ; and if he can but have his jest and his point, and the applause o f ingenuity for a cle- * vet distich, cares not for truth or justice or how many poisoned daggers he fixes in the heart of another. Eord Castlereagh was laborious and well-informed r perhaps'he was not quick enough to master aU the various points which forced themselves upon his attention; and b e had not that sort of convenient ingenuity wMch enables a man to skim the surface in such a manner as to disguise Igqorance. He was apt sometimes to penetrate a little, when he bad neither strength to go through nor to extricate hunseu. He had iuui a great rise; but yet in no degree such as many of'thoseun whona none of the odium which attended him iefi.* 1 neYer met With a man o f less haughty aad mcafe coik' fcfliatory manners than Castlereagh. X have encountered* and I suppose most person# have eneounteri^, ufotij thmlung tbemselve# ^eat, who have a |^ a r e d as if they could not SCO one, l i i f one was covered with aninvisiid# cloak, and Was to them m U ono did not # i$ t ; aofofty Wore their mptiti* tmd a o h ^ cat- riod their noeeaiRchm i and y e t t h ^ wete