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Kl]Sri>ERHO®K HERA3L0. EUBLISIIED WEEKLY.' V. VAN SiCHAACK, .Tun. MitorandFroptietQn T. S. RANNfiY, F r i n i e r . i ■ > TEvam o f m k d i ^ R A L D . ' THE Heral# trill b<? issUe^ irom Hies o^ffice at two ddllars per anreiLAi, payable half yearly. Papera will not bo discontiiiuod until all arrearages shall have been paid, except a t the discretion, o f tlie .ejlltor. ^ , Advertisements inserted upon the usual terras, and those which are sent without orders, will he inserted until forbid.. OIj’ Letters to the edttor must be post paid. lO ^ H E R E A S Cornelius Earl, and Mary his wife, of T T the town of Now-Lebahon, in tlie cormty of Co- , of tl] thereon, did, by indenture of Mortgage, bearing date tlie thirteenth day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and nineteen, mortgage to the said Thomas Hoag, am . those three pieces and New-Canaan, and described in the said indenture of mortgage, as folloT<rs: The first of the said three pie ces and parcels of land, being butted and bounded as follows, v iz: Beginning at the south-west corner of the first mentioned piece or parcel of land licreby convey ed, adjoining the land of Calvin Herrick, formerly Na than Herrick’s, thence running northerly by Richard ‘Johnson and Jonathan W att’s land, as the fence now thence Her- tt; hearman’s land, formerly Richard Crego’s, to a Stake nd stones; thence southerly s bnoni Shearman’s land to a thence southerly by John Kirbey’s land, formerly Daniel Stranahan’s, to a stake and stones; t’ westerly by William Pratt’s land, and Calvin rick’s land, to the first mentioned boimds and place of beginning : Likewise all that other piece and par cel of land being the second piece of land hereby con veyed, butted and bounded as follows: lying on the. north side of the road leading from Edward Wheeler's to George Crego’s ; heginning at the south-west cor ner of said piece of land ; thence running nortJi Jonathan Watt’s land to a stake and stones; easterly by the lands formerly owned by Ira Pratt, now owned by Cornelius Earl, party of the fir: southerly by said George Crego’s lane above mentioned; tlienee westerly by said road highway to the first mentioned bounds and place of beginning: Jlso, ail that other piece and pared of land being the third piece, butted and bounded fol lows : beginning at tlie south-west corner of said piece of land at a stSke and stones; tlience ninning nor therly by Nathan Wheeler’s landto a stake andstones; thence easterly by said Nathan Wheclcf's land to a stake and stones; thence southerly by George Cre- go's land to a stake and stones; thence westerly to ■Sm first mentioned bounds and place of heginning: which said three pieces and parcels of land above de scribed, are estimated to contain tliirty acres of land, ?>e the same more or less, and were conveyed by Oba- diah P ratt and Lydia P ratt his wife, unto the said Cor nelius Earl, by a warranlee deed bearing date the eleventh day of January, in tlie year of our Lord one ihousand eight hundred and six: Ijikewise all that piece and parcel ofland, situate lying and being m the town of New-Lebanon aforesaid, bptted and bounded ns follows: beginning at tlie south-east corner of said piece of land hereby conveyed, at a stake .and stones standing on said cornea* of land, and on the line of land formerly owned by .Richard Crego, now owned by George Crego; from thence northerly on the lino of o’s land to a stake and stones; from : at the ■nee con tinuing the same course on the line of said Nathan Whceler’s.Iand to a stake and stones; thcncc ronth- wcsterly on the line of George Franklin's land to a stake and stones* thence easterly on tlicline of said George’s land to a stake and stones; tlieftcO Southerly ©n the line of §aid George’s landto a stake and stom Crego s rtgage and in pursuance of nade and provided, the said veral mortgaged premises will be exposed for sale at tained in statute in such case m: public vendue or auction, at the house of the subsca*i- ber iftthe town of Chathdim, on the third day of Feb ruary next, at two ©’’clock in the afternoon of that day. Dated at Chatham, this twenty-eighth day of June, J 825. nStds . ' THOMAS HOAG. MELVILLE s a l v e : fT lH lS salve in almost every instance in which it has i been used, has proved an effectual cure for many pains and disorders to which the human frame is sub ject ;—such as pain in the- breast, side and back, to gether with tooth ache, ague, frozen feet, chilblains, corns, &c. &e. For proof of which the public are re ferred to the salve itself, and to the cettifipatesof those who have e::^eTienced its salutary cflfects. Directions for using will accompany each roll. The price of a roll i*5 50 cents—half a roll 25 cents—quarter roll 121-2 The salve is left for sale at present, with J. P- Beek- man, Kinderhoolt—James Mellen, Hudson—^Mancius & Co. Albany—Gales & Co. Troy— J. B. Myndeeseg Schenectady—Judds, Litchfield (Conn.)—CrOsweH & Co, Cattskill and J* C. Morrison, N- York, Druggists. C E R tIFIC A tllS. Hudson 1825.—I do hereby certify that I have had up^dn in my side for nearly a year and that by apply- ing a plaster of your salve for one day and two nights, I found it an easy cure. YourS, &c. DANIEL CURTISS. jiueruoQK;, — i o o ’ -------- *** ** bpin: .. r^su r e answer the end for which it was desi*«ied. . REUBEPl'EALlHON. Hudson, 182.5.—This is fo certify, that I hare been troubled with corns on my feet for several years, which gave me SO much pain that it was witli difficulty! co.uld wdar shoes. By applying plaster made Of‘ the se/ve speedy cufe wa* efiacted. * > Mrs. C. VAN ALEN.^ qORRJJCTEP WEEKLY, Aug. 22, 1825. highest price ASHES» Pot, per ton |105 00 Pearl, “ lOYSO CANDLES, Dipt, per lb. Mould « Sperm “ COTTON, Upland per lb. Louisiana “ Tennessee “ Alabama FLOUR, N. Y. superfine prbl 5 00 Western do 4 75 Rye flour £50 Indian meal in lids 13 00 do in bl per bl 2 75 FURS, Beaver N. per lb 6 25 do S. « 2 50 do W. “ 5 00 Raccoon N & S skin 35 Muskrat N & S per lb 50 Martin, Canada “ 65 do N W « ' Bear N & S “ Red Fox “ ; Mink, north “ do south “ Otter, north “ t do south 5 GRAIN, N. wheat per bush Western do “ ■; Rye “ N. corn, new ycl. do white, N Southern do pr bush 45 Oats 82 HEMP, Russia, clean, ton 195 00 Amor, dew rot “ 140 00 HIDES, Buenosi Ayres, per lb 19 West India “ 15 S. A. horse hides, pie. 96 HOPS, First sort, per Ib. Second! sort “ highestpricc IRON, • * Pig, Eng. per ton 75 00 Amer. Pig ‘* 60 00 Coimtfybar 100 00 Russian old. sable 115 Op do new gable 110 00' Swedes 115 00 English as’d 115 00 Sheet, cwt 9 00 Hoop, Amor, c w t\ 0 75 Eng, do. “ 9 50 LEATHER, Sole, oak tan’d porlb 29 db hemlock “ 26 Upper dressed side 3 00 Undressed “ 2 37 LUMBER, N R pine boards Mft 18 00 Alb. pine do piece 19 Plank, yellow Mft Scantling pine “ do oak “ Oak timber, sq. ft Shingles, best M do common “ Pipe staves “ Hhd.doW.oak« Bbl do do “ Heading do “ Hoops PROVISIONS, Beef moss perbl Pork, mess 3000 1500 2000 20 350 150 5300 4000 2600 4300 2800 Cargo Butter Lard “ 10 Cbeeso “ 10 SEEDS, Clover seed, new lb Flax, cl’n, ck.7bush WOOL, 3Icrino, 1st qual. lb. 02 Mixed “ 50 Common “ 38 Pulled, Spinning “ 44 Amcr. Hatters “ 60 (tr FOR SALE, ^ m i l A T VALUABLE PllOPEHTY, con- 1 sisting of a MILL, DWELLING HOUSE, and outhou^-e.^, together witli SIX A.CRES OF LAND, of which Abner Mallery lately di ed seized. The above mentioned property L situated in the tov,*n of Kinderhook, in the county c f Cohnnbia, about one mile e;ist o f the village of Kinderhook, at a flourishing place, called Vallitie, (or Millville,) on a never-failing stream of water. ^ The dwelling house is a hirgc, commodious, new', Hvo story building, and, together with the o u t h o u s e s , in good repair. The land is en c l o sed by a good board fence, and in a high state of cultivation. In the Mill House is a run of sioncs for grind ing plaster, and corn. Two carding and one picking machine, and all the apparatus requi site for fulling, dressing and dying cloth. Two patent shearing machines, and a large brass ket tle set in a furnace. The situation of this property is very eligi ble, being about 6 miles from Stuyvesant Landing, surrounded by a populous country, possessing a great command of w'atcr power, and may with little expense l>c converted into a manufacturingestabh’shment of any description. The terms of payment will be made easy to the purchasers, and a good title given. Apply to HENRY VAN VLECK, or JOHN PENOYAR, in the ioXi^n of Kinderhook ; or to ■ MARCUS D. MALLERY, in the iozen o f Southhury, Meu.'- Haven county, Connecticut. Kinderhook, 18th June, 1825. n4tf 05- NOTICE. ..£0 FMIHB public are respectfully informed, that B the business heretofore conducted by E- benezer Crocker, at Chatham 4 Corners, will in future be carried on by the subscribers, as co partners in trade, under the firm o f ’ Crocker & Angell, who h’vo just received from Ncw’-Y<3rk, A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OF SEaSOJS'RBLE GOODS, CONSISTING OP Dry .Groods, Groceries, of all kinds, Crockery, Glass, Hollow and Hardware. Also, a choice selection of Drugs Medi- aud C l u e s . which will he sold cheap cash, or country produce of almost every kind. EBENEZEB, CROCKER, DANIEL M. ANGELL, Chatham, 18th July, 1825. n7tf DEEDS 4- MORTGAGES, for sale at this office. From the London Keic Monildy M aiasim/or May. THE PATIHOT BEFORg HlS JiXECDTIO<|I, 'nillm fit rlftfifirirm nrn nnfwr*. ajiisu oiucojr uictiUE laxo axine l Jianjis oi D ctoi - «u.ndtho Soveiith. He had fought »ind bled in placing that ungrateful despot on the throne, and no charge was over made against him, other tlian that of aiding and abetting Constitiutipnal party in restoring to bis unliappy country a place among nations Y/orthy of her former renoWn. Tho sen- timonts herein expressed were his own, and were delivered justbefore h?s execution, dr, as he called it, the “ crown of his triumph,”] The clock hath told the parting hour, • The last that jt shall tell to me, Ero, disonliirall’d from lawless pow'or, I soar into eternity. Tho.se massy walls, this clanking eliain— The strength of man thatkefeps me hcrej In one .short hour shall act in vain— Mind is beyond his petty sphere. It lives whore tyrants cannot go — In realms of liberty and light; Their utmost malice ends below, And leads Ip freedom infinite. I greet thee, death! not one weak fear Siiall pale my brov/ or shake my limb ; t will not shariio the freeman’s bier, Or on it leave a stain for him. Dauntless I ’ll die as mansliould die, For freedom .and tlie unborn world; There’s even joy thus manfully To meet the bolts Oppression hurl’d. I would not linger life in ch.ains, Tiiougli life to me, to all, is dear ; I would not court the slave who reigns O’er Spain, for lengthen’d slavery here. I could not brcatlic the bright blue air, And brook that all in nature fai) TJie glorious heaven, the rich sun sec, The breezes, all save man, be Bhould I, whom death now sets at rest. Repine to leave a few short years. In bondage passed, till age oppress’d, And dotage closed ascene of tears ? Tfljo envies not the patriot’s doom ? Ho has a joy in doing well; Jli.s name shall echo from the tomb Tlic oppressor’s fear and freedom’s spell. To him the scaffold is a throne, Jlis fate a trumpet of appeal To hondaged nations, tliat shall own His name a pledge, hie blood a seal. FROM CROI.y’s AUOKUOF THE WORLD. The weeper raised the v eil; a ruby lip First dawn'd ; then glowed the young cheek's deeper Yet delicate ac roses when they dip Their odorou.s blossoms in the morning dew. Then beam’d tlie eyes, twin stars of living blue, Half shaded by the eavh of glovsy hair, That turn'd to golden as the light wind threw Their dusters in the western golden glare, yet was her blue eye dhn.for tears were standing He looked upon her, and her hurried q W s at his look dropp'd instant on the y c t was her blue eye dhn.for tears were standing tbefc- dropp'd instant on thogroimd; But o’er her cheek of beauty rush’d a blaze, Hor bosom heaved iLovo its silken bound As if the soul had felt some sudden wound, lie looked again, the cheek was deadly pale; Tho bo.som sunl: with one long sigh profound; Yet still one lily hand upheld her veil. And ono still press’d her hea-rt, that sigh told all its tale. % Kt J ’i J . - : Beauty, what art tliou, that tliy slightest gaze Can nntko the rpjrit from the centra roll. Its whole long coprre, a sad and shadowy ma^c Thou midnight or thou noon tide of the soul; Ono glorious vision lighting up the whole Of tho wide world ; or one deep wild desire. By day and night consuming sad and sole: Till hope, pride, genius, nay, tjll love’s own ^ e , Desert the weary lieart, a cold and mouldering pyre. From the Stanford J^exu'S—an English Journal. A C o n t r a s t . — John Quincy Adams, Pres ident of the United State.s, is the son of the second President that ever ruled over America, the wellkno^vn and peaceful successor of Wash ington, the Numa of the United States; and if we may judge from the principles which he has taken the first occasion o f testifying, he is well worthy of tlie honor which such an elevation confers. The manly plainness and simplicity of the form of his inauguration, deserve notice.— Think of the childish ceremonies, the idle pa geantry, the ridiculous mummeries, the holy oil, the feathers, furs, and frippery o f a coronation in Europe, as contrasted with this dignified scene! At Washington, in the Capitol, Mr. Adams, in a plain suit of black, ascends the Speaker’s chair, pronounces the address to his fellow citizens, walks to the table of the Judges, and On a volume of the laws of the United States, reads his. oath of oIEce, * and thus the magistrate of a mighty State is installed,— 'Look on this picture and then on that.’ I f as Englishmen, w e blush at the comp^ismfi in one respect, we feel tlie glow o f exultatitmSh.anoth er, at the thought m the superior wisdom and truer g r eatn^ of that i^untry, which owes ut rate* it« birth to omrf. America is the child of England, and is, perhaps, destinedtoperpet- uat© the memory of its parent, who should feel nothing like envy and jealousy at the endow ments oflts illustrious' offspring, andstill less exhibit any thing like derision at theimperfee- ___ _ ^ tions of her incipient constitution and policy , u e hud o f grdatcbnsum|rti6n jn the country^ whilst hoi'o we arc submmitting to such thin^‘ ^ * ' ^ * it loy «; k of and an 4normdfis id^eati/Mf stud oaf neipibQUrs, the Irish, to mtlitary jc^^and religious persecu tion. We oven ought to beg o f the Americar^ to' forgive our haiigbt^ aps of superiority; to forget while they contempkte with; just, pride, their well organized navy, that Mr. Canning ever talked of their /lew ^ frigates and bits of striped bunting f he has mqre occasion thah they to regret this piece o f flippancy. It was one of those unlucky jokes of his wMch so often- fly back into bis face, tilf be baa been r6ady^ We dare 'say, a hundred times, aimOst to bite off his tongue for haying uttered Jt,, It is high time for that. Right Ho»: Gbntleman to 'ay a,-^ side his ancient situation o f jester, and think more of cultivating the „statesrnah4ike qualities which he certainly possesses in no pfdinary de^ ■ ... - An. Irishman comparing his watch by St. Paul’s, and bursting into a fit o f laughter, wds asked what he laughed at. . He replied, ‘ and how can I help it 7 whenhere is my little watch, that was made by Paddy Q’FIafierty on, Or- mondquay, and which, cost ine-only five guin eas, has heat your big London clock there a hour and a quarter since yesterday morning. A gentleman in a stage coach, passing thro’ the city of B—, and observing a hapdsoine edi fice, inquired of the driver What building it was 7 Xhe driver, replied, it is tb© Unitarian Church. Unitarian 1 said the gentleman—and what is that t I don’t know, said Jehu, but I believe it is an opposition line t ' Dull authors will measme our judgment not by our abilities, but by their own conceit. To admireiheir vapidity, is tp hay© superior taste ; to despise it, is to have none.-^Lucon. From file Baltimore American Farmer, Directions for malting street, dear, Cider, that shall retain its fine vinous Jfavmr, and keep good fo r a long time in casks, like vdne. It is o f importance in making xider, that the mill, the press, and all the materials be sweet and clean, 'and the straw clear from must. To make good cider the fruit shoMd be ripe (but not rotten) and when the apples are ground, if the juice is left in the^ pummibe twenty-four Hours, the cider will be richer, softer, and higher coloured; if the fruit is all o f the same kind, it is generally thought that the cider will be better; as the fermentation will certainly be more regular, which is of importance, l%e gathering and grinding of the apples, and press ing out of the juice, is d mere* manual labour, performed with very little skill in the Operation; but here the great art of thaking good cider commences; for as soon as the juice is pressed out nature begins to work a w'ondcrful change in it. The juice of the fruit, if left to itself will undergo three distinct ferinentations, all of which change the quality and nature of this fluid. The first is the vinous; the second the acid, which makes it hard and prepares it for vinegar, by the third it hecomesputrid. The first fermentation is the only one the juice of apples should undergo, to make good cider. It is this operation that sep'arates the juice from the filth, and leaves it a clcaf, sWeet, and vinous Kq or. To preserve it in this state is the grand secret; this is done by fumigating it with sulphur, which chocks any further fermentation, and preserves it in its fine vinous state. It is to ^ wished that all cider makers would make a trial o f this method; it is attended with ho expense, and but little trouble, and will have the desired eflect. I would recommend that the juice as it corned' proper fermentatioir, and the person attending may with chrrectness ascertain when this fer mentation ceases; this is o f great importance and must be particularly attended to. The fermentation is attended with a hissing noise, bubbles risihg to the surface and there forming a soft spungy crust over the liquor. When this cfhst begins to crack, and white froth ap-« pear's in the cracks level with the surfiice of tho head, the fermentation is about stopping. At this time the liquor is in a fine, genuine* clear state, and must be drawn, off immediately into clean casks, and this is the time, to fumigate it with sulphur. To do this take d strip of can vass or rag/ about bro inches broad and twelve long, dip this into melted sulphur, and when a few pails of worked cider are put into the cask, set this match on fire arid holdit jn the cask, till it is consumedf then bung fhe cask and shake it,’ that the liquor may Incorporate with ^ nd-re- tain the fumes ; after this fiUthq cask and bung it The cider should be racked off again’ the latter part of February or first of March; and if not aa clear as you wish if, put in isin glass to fine it, and stir it well; then put the,, cask in a cool place, where it ^rill not be distor- ^bed, for the fining to settle. Cider prepared Jn this manner will keep sweet for years. , , It is certainly of great imporfance to the pe<> pie of America to cultivate the fifUit that is ndtmaUo the soft of thOir conntiYj and fon^^ the most orthe fruif\which the soil ptofeces, ipeciallv* when its produce is an article of vm* J ^ -J, i