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! V E R M-a-N T TEL E G R A PH. 11 . 1-1 - afmiecK the right to discuss Vco&d at, y that portion of the ;" ; Tft iV'tin2 wttb- tie -taoV Wanton Jl ;nsethe rights they., denied ; to others. any portion of the press that refused, to en ter upon this crusade .against the liberties .of Weitizens. and Tentured ttr dissanf from the course that was set on foot-if they re commended moderation, or tentured on the slightest rebuke of those who n were busy In ceneoeting schemes of violence, they were called by the mo?t opprobrious and unpopu lar names,', f, J -.. f j ' f .The churches, too,' seemed 'paralized. But their previous deportment' to the aboli tionists bad made them powerless ' in this crisis. Of the thirty, provided for as many thousand of the population of Cincinnati-- it the 4th Pf esby tenan Church in the Tillage of Fult6n be excluded-th.re was not .one f f that would permit the advocate of liberty, the friend of the slare, to utter a word in his bebslf. From this cause, when the spirit of J nUruI besran to risethey had no power to r - - . - Q . . , ' " to lay it. iiut tney nan in ineir own oosonis many of the instigators of disorder. Instan ces were by no means rare, 'of members of churches openly and resentfully declaring, that force ought to be used for putting down tk abolitionists wess and eren, since the I deed was done to which such language in i dicated, they bare been heard to say. they I1 would aid in renewing the Tiolence should I it be agsin set up. Of the' thirteen, who maae vp mi Durici iiuuw vvuuuiucct Kiorr were members of different churches and two -of them MimmM or tbb gospel. Yt$j-tVQ ministers of the gospel, and six ' members ef churches, for, whom no plea -can be urged on the ground of constitutional rights came, as tne representatives or an hnrfal meeting,. and holding oTerus the tenors of a mob at their Icattwewetufcea1 absolutely discontinuance of our paper. No ground was taken as to the manner and spirit ia which the paper was conducted k was to be discontinued, because slavery uas discussed in it. and "because the south mas displeased that such ft discussion shouldbe entertained here. t What efficien cy ean the church put forth in favor of peace end right and order and safety, when such are the materials of which it is composed ? What, it may be asked, has been the ef fectofthis violence on the nasi of Me popzt 'latio. throughout the country f Most happy. There has been almost a univer sal condemnation of tho mobocratfc pro ceeding. Especially his the weight of puunc sentiment iauen on those who de- served it the Market House Committee without whose connection with the dis orderly of the city, there would, it is thought have teen no mob. The people are anxious to hear on the subject of slavery they eagerly read the anti-slavery pa- Tr i ani if. we mistake not. thev r fa i'. '-osinn'mffto aee the utter incomes ihilitv J -of southern slavery with the continuance I j northern liberty. The outrage on the a miaaiuiujui uji vicn ii ana tue cause I ?. -1 : Kl .1. . . . u espamoa.a ceieoruy tuaxii never weula otherwise have obtained.' -Xt has made bo!itioaisti by the thous and, where the kpapcr by it3rown unaided efficiency was making them by efi&na even those Mho professed not to beieZiiMAiss,have en in their contributions for the restab luhrrient ofthi ptes. ' r 4VUL the outrage, e rejuwd - ;Wf VnoTnot we trust.not.f AfUr .such. a verdict of condemnation as the country not even excepting: a portion cf the South au pronouncea po, ian monstrous in srurrettbxr against the very elements of its rovernmenL it b scarcely to he Dresumed. - blinded as the arisfoirsijr-aje-b tin in Jflacnce of alaye-hollicsr . nabobiam, that , ihera will be any altera pt to Tepeat tucn an. act of parTicide. But what if they do 7 u trill tmly show their mfattnt ron, pros- trate their abusej mfloenoe, and make our freemen of the North more and more hate tha :syitimm of the South," whealhey find it can. ffrow, only on the ruins of the press irf the darkness and silence of des- potum en the grave of their own liber Uea. , Bui the enemies of the law will adopt a new cortethey will hereafter operate privately, and the maonatcs will not be seentheir aim will bet against the persons of abolitionists. This is now the . course.r We fear it not. Threats of per aonal violence, to ourself especially, nf e?uure and deportation are common as the air we breathe; nor hare they been withheld, which contemplated a still more disgraceful if not more fatal violence. What infatuation has possessed itself of a rawguiueu aristocracy i as li wnen we number amonir theadvocates of liberty and law thoussnda of th firrpt knrt thm PurJl es, the loftiest intellects ot the ! land our poor labors would be missed I I Has there ever been known a cause in I which much was to bo periled, more wori I thy of the utmost hazard than this 1 Law has been prostrated tiolence emit over f its downfall; the. Constitution lies indis 1 honorable dest, 'whilst bloody treason V flourishes over it. Men are struck dumb, l and speech is useless for the reformation of abuses that threaten to load with I the letters of the slave, themselves and their children.. H this is here almost upon us, now .nd aha! f it be .said,; xir a and ,ir0'i,I,L B0K0R hould not be haz . arded, that the cokstitutiok and law jand LiataT may be restored .to their I iw wirD.. r meir mild sceptre i without a riTai -No r this must be done 1 y. thostCwho would, rather 5 themselves . A , m r - - - - - i i it crt-iucii mail ii o or our eoun- , try, glorious as has Deen ner hope, is rone forever; ''Sf?.' V --c'y- a ,,Tna Stave .Tiunt. tThe jasV jaurrii I beroftheEdmbargh Kevew. eootains an I unusually interesting article unon th shve trade In 1831. ar Convention was concluded T between France - and, Great I Britain for the more effectual suppression I of the stive trade, in furtherance of which J otject the contractinc: parties mutually agreed to the right of searching each oth J er s' Vessels t to.; ascertain if theV were powers W. agree to the terms of the con vention.; These overtures " herve accord lngl;beeti' made. . Denmark and.Saf dinia taye settt in their prompt adhesion to 'the rrinctples of the corrvention. From Austria Netherlands and Sweden, no an swer mi been returned, but strange as it may selra, from no nation "whatever has a direct negativ been received save from the UfrtTto States ! The land of the free I 1 The country that first declared the slave trade to be piracy 1 O, tell It not in CdL''tfampshire Gazette. UCLIOIOUS SUMMARY. NoHTji-SpaiNOFiELC, Oct. 3, 1830. Dear Brother Murray ; . God is again risking his people in this )lace with, a season ot revival. Some ew among us have been bowing in pray er for months. God has heard their cries. The church as. a body has been greatly revived, and a precious number have been brought to hope in the mercy of God thro' Christ. Twenty-five have been baptized, and one has been received by the church who had brenaptised by a Methodist minister. The work seems to be pro gressing still. Pray for us that we may not grieve .the spirit, that he may con- tintre-wifh us till matthtides more shall embrace Christ. It is no more than just forme to say,, that the labors ot brother and -sister Walden have been greatly blessed of God among us, in a protracted meeting. Yours in haste. union maybe corrsistetrtly formed be tween that and-the Baptist General Con- yention. Christian Jyatchman. DtSIC NATION or MlSStOKAfttES. At Haverhill, Mass., on the eyenin of Sept, 5, religious services were held in the First Baptist Meetinz-house, preliminary to the departure of Rev. Charles R Kel- IaM, of Irasburgh, Vt.t and Mrs Elrzabeth Pearson Kellam, of Missionaries of the Board of the Western Creeks, Indian Territory. GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. f From Zkm Heiald. PAUTIlEn FB03I LOWELLt DkaK Br. Bbowic. As I am writing on business, I will lost say a word about the woTk of God in ihis place. is still going forward. Foity-eight were receiv ed on probation night betore last, making in the whole ninety-two who have been received within- the last month, not in eluding thoss who have joined by cer tihcate. Numbers have been converted. who have not yet joined the society, an J many are still seeking. Sixty or Seventy were forward for prater last evening, and a number were blessed. Th girls here, to the number of about 1000, had a "(urn ow'day bvfore yester day, in consequenco of the raising of the price ot ooara wnicn exira sum tney thought the companies ought to yay. We have feared that this circumstance might retard the work of God, btt we have re oWed to improve it to the best advantage, and as hundreds are now at liberty, we have appointed another Protracted Meet- tng to commence this evenmir. We ask the prayers of all Christians, that nothing majfTmpedethe work. Yours. Ac. U. Scott. Lowell, Oct. 3, 1836. From tha Nstv Yarlc Eranjelut. First PaEsarrxBiATr Cuvkch is Wisconsin TxftiTaT. The AJtoa Qberver contains the followmg letter ' DEBitera, July 13, 1836.' - Mr Lotejoy I have this day witnes sed the ceremony of laying the corner stone of the first Presbyterian church in the Wisconsin Territory; and you will probably be- wfili fettrrr tTraT-we have here, neither an organized church, nor a minister of the gospel, and not more than 15 professors of our denomina tion. But through the goodness of a kind providence, we have laid the foundation of a house to be dedicated to his name. No prophet of Israel was there, to call up on the name of the Most High; no priest of the Lord to bless the offerings of the people; no minister of God to pronounce his benediction upon his children. But he was there who said 'them that honor me I will honor;" and I do not recollect that I ever felt more solemn, upon any public occasion, or a sweeter reliance up on the divine promise that M Where I re cord my name, I will come unto them and bless them." There were more than 203 persons present, many of them ladies. The service was opened by singing, " Where shall we go to seek and find." directed by a layman; prtyer offered to tha throne of grace by a Baptist brother, and an address delivered by a physician, and closed by sfnging the doxology ; and all passed off much to the satisfaction of all concerned. The Spa of Vermont. This medi cinal spring is situated in the town of Ularendon. three and a half miles south of West Rutland village. According to the analysis, in one gallon of water contain ing 235 cubic inches, 9,63 inches are ni trogen, and 46,16 inches carbonic acid. The amount of saline matter is only 5,76 grains, so that, leaving out the nitrogen and carbonic acid cases, the water is the purest in the world. Nearly all springs and well waters have a large portion of saline matter some 10 per cent. The analysis shows this water to contain but one ten thousandth part of the saline mat ter. The purest river water does not ap proach to this purity. Consequently the water is perfectly transparent and without taste. Besides the gases thus held in solution, gpas fn great quantity exists tn a free state, bubbling qp continually from- the spring as at Saratoga. Thb gas is almost whol ly nitrogen; being in 100 cub,ic inches 98,45 nitrogen. 1,05 carbonic acid, 0,05 saline matter. The above facta show the Clarendon Spring to be most remarkable. No spring exists in the United States at all ljke it, as ye: discovered, and its curative properties in saltrheum, cutaneous diseases, disor ders of the blood, &c, are so demonstra ble from facts, that its importance must soon become extensively knov.n. The proprietors are now taking measures to provide accommoJtions for visitors at the spring, and lines of stages. Vt. Chron. 1 Post OrtricV Dla1 tMNT.-r-By an authentic statement from the Treasurer's office it appeared that the funds of this De partment remaining in the. bank on the 1st of last month were as follows, viz : Whole amount in bank, $388,319 1 1 Warrants issued and not paid, 58,757 78 The Oberlin Institute. We HnJ from a long letter in the Connecticut Ob server, that this institution is in a prosper ous condition. Arthur Tafpan, Esq. of this city, furnished twenty thousand dollais toward its foundation one half as a loan, the other as a donation. There are about three hundred students, includ ing fifty young ladies. M At the tables in the dining hall, there are about four young men to one younj lady, and these are seated, usually, on one side of the ta ble, two or thr together at regular inter vals." All the grossness and vulgarity, (says the letter before us) so often witnes sed in college commons, is here excluded, and if some new comers happened to man ifest a .disposition to coarseness, when placed beyond the immediate eyes of the young ladies, the stationing of one or two of the mast discreet near them, never fail ed at once to suppress it." Te ev- C. GFioney, formerly of this city isnow engaged in this institution. Freedom of discussion and education bestowed without distinction df color, nte the principles adopted by ih Oberlin college. New York Spectator. Disposable funds on hand $329,561 33 This amount is rapidly increasing, and will continue to increase, for some months, before arrangements can be perfected for its judicious expenditure. Indeed so un expectedly rapid has been the redemption of this Department from its embarrass ments, that no one apprehended the neces sity of making preparations in time to ab sorb the surplus revenue which would re main after the accomplishment of that ob ject We learn that the increase in the reven ues of the Department continues. For the quarter ending on the 30th of June last, they exceeded the revenue of the corres ponding quarter of last year seventeen per cent.' Globe. RosslK Lead Mines in St. Law rence County. G. H, Holden, Esq. of Charlotte, showed us a tube about 3 feet lon and en inch or more in diameter, made from lead taken from this newly dis covered mine. The mine has been traced 15 miles, varying in width from 6 inches to two feet, lying in a fissure of rock in a solid mass. One vein leads across the St. Lawrence iirto Canada. The mine is a 36 u re e bflwexirau stable wealth,- and is re garded by Geologists asananemaly in the mineral kingdom. The uncovered vein of Galena extends from the top to the base of Cole Hill a distance of about 70 feet, re sembling a stream of melted lead. Friends in Virginia. The Virginia yearly meeting of Friends was held this year at Scmerton, Nansemond county. The Philadelphia 'Friend,' ot June 11, contains an account of the meeting, from which we copy the following : The subject of slavery, as also the pro tection of the Indian race, yet remaining ?!i that section of the country, engaged the attention of the meeting with much earnestness and concern, and although the way did not open for much action therein at the time, yet it was gratifying to dis cover toat a lively interest was evmceu, and if Friends in Virginia continue faith ful in pleading the cause of the oppressed Africans and their descendants, good faith (fruits?) may confidently be looked for. SUMMARY. Ob U aapecUd in tU fell. Mtssiowaay to China. Rev. I. J. Roberts, sailed from this norton Saturdiv last, injbebip Merchant, for Singapore. His p!ace of destination is Bankok. Mr It. intends, for the present, to associate with the missionaries of the Baptist Board, until he has acquired some knowledge of the language, and then to employ himself chiefly, in distributing books. iiotwuo5urauing me .Missionary tsoara ft It themselves compelled to decline an of ficial connection wkh Mr ft. and the Rob ert's Fund Society, neither Mr R. nor the Board cherish Vtovrard each other any thing but the kJnJesT feelings and good r2ac- JWe1 were -happy to learn from jur iiooens niraseiij .wnom.we vuntea in company "with the Assistant .Secretary of thf Board, an hqnr or two btrfore he sail ed, tha this was the case on his partJ .anJ he assured us that he" Ibelievea that the same friendliness of feelingr existed on the part f the Board: The Board we are certain w3l be ready to render 'Mr Rob erts any assistance irf theirjpower and t;will cenainly be in their power to aid u jnj very wrisfdeTahly.5 "From a commu nication ia another column it wiH be seen that the American Tract Society hare ap propriated m the trse of Mr R. $(000, to be? paid thfou trh the Batrtisi Board. vj cherish the hope that? the Roberts' Poland. The Emperor of Russia has aimed another blow at Polish liberty. An ordinance has been issued by him, which declares that the autumnal recruitment in Poland and Polish provinces, shall be to the extent of two in five hundred, and in the empire one in five hundred. The peasantry of several villages of the Pala tinate of Lublin have been induced, either by the-promises or threats ot the govern ment, to renounce the Latin for the Greek Church, and Russian priests have taken hhe place of the Roman Catholic clergy. In Russia, the Sovereign is not only the head of the Empire politically, but the head oi the Church. A cood profit. It appears by the re port of the Vermont Mutual insurance Company, which has been in operation six year and a half, that they have insur ed nearly $11,000,000 of property. Their losses during this time have been $39,000, and the cost of insuring the same amount of property in the ordinary com panies at the usual rates ould have amounted to 8435,772 17! From this dfeduct the actual losses, $39,000, and it shows that a Mutual Insurance Company in six years and a half, has saved to the insured, upwards of$396,000!! Judos Shaw's Decision. The Bos ton Gazette of Wednesday, in speaking of the late slave case, (C ommonwealth vs. Aves) says, ' We understand that meas ures are in a state of forwardness to carry this casa into the Supreme Court of the United States. Eminent counsel have been engaged by Mr Slater, the owner of the female slave, who is now in the custo dy of Ellis Gray L jring.1 Stolen Money Found. ft will be recollected that some two or three weeks since, the steamboat Rhode Island, on her passage from New-York to Provi dence, was robbed of $39,000 in foreign gold, belonging to the Fulton Bank of Boston. No trace of it could be discover ed until last night, when the Engineer of the steamboat in drawing some oil from a large can in which it was held, found the faucet stopped, and on opening the can to discover the cause, found in it the bag containing the whole of the gold, sewed up securely in another bag. The xrold man naa no uouot oeen ueposuea in tne oil can covered his senses, rid. ex pressed iQCv derunlt?.teun(' an opportunity tor its The tunnel of the Harlem Railroad, six miles from the City of New-York, is one of the greatest works of excavation ever attempted in this country. It is cut through solid rock, six hundred feet, with an arch ten feet high. Thirteen months have been spent in getting the excavation through, the laborers working niffht and day. All this has been done, and some $800,000 expended on the road, merely to construct a railway of some ten or twelve miles, to convey passengers to Haerlem for pleasure. The object seems wholly inadequate to the expense, hot the stock will unquestionably be productive. In process of time, Harlem will fill up with the shops and residences of mechan ics, men of business, and others, who can hold an easy communication with the city. The Schuylkill Tunnel, the next large excavation under ground, is four hundred feet long andten high, and cost the labor of eight months, working night and day. Boston Press. Cure for the Cholera. The foU lowing statement, if true, may be invalua ble in the treatment of the cholera :-Two men employed in extracting salt from the lakes in the neighborhood ofSalzbufh were attacked by the disease, and left by their medical attendant as incurable. Their bodies had become completely black, when the overseer undertook to cure them. He heated a quantity ot wa ter from one of the salt lakes to a very high degree and nlaced one of th A" men jn the bath, keeping up the heat Aiier oeingm nan an, hour the lightfui -were his sensations. ITnnn th! the other sufferer was nut into a similar bath. By degrees their bodies turned from black to purple, (hen to red. ml at the end of three hours they assumed their natural color, and the men were free from the disease. It may be believed, ihat the pores, being opened bv the heat, absorbed the saline particles, which mingled with the blood and liquefied it. This corres ponds with the known effects of salt upon coagulated blood. N. Y. Express. THE BttllK Of rf.CIt cfJBCKKD. Every Land Office in Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri, is closed fcr the. present, on account of the heavy securities required of the Lnd, Offices under the new Act of. Congress. This,, while it lasts, will greatl y check the drain of spei cic to toe yvesi as no lands can - be par The cholera is abating at Charleston, S. Carolina. The Legislature of the new State of Ar kansas convened at Little Hock on the 12 ult. Samuel C. Roane. President of the Senate John Wilson, Speaker of the House James S. Conway, Governor elect. It is now stated that Everett. is elected to Congress from the 3d district' in "this State, by a majority of from 40 to 50 votes. The City Hall in New-York has a uevr bell weighing 6,000 pounds, A coal mine has been discovered in Illi nois, ten miles above ths .mouth of the Illi nois river another on the- Kentucky river above Frankfort. Fifteen thousand dollars have been sub scribed in the city of New-York, for the purposes of the American Board of Foreign Missions, since the lae anniversary of that body. The New-York Express speak' of an in strument an English invention and pat ented by which soundings may be had without slackening sail. President Jackson has rtturned to Wash ington. The Wheat crop in the talley of the Con necticut River is said to 1e good. According to the New-York Spectator, of October 5th, the number of doss killed in that city sincathe opening of the campaign is 8037. , It is stated in the BuiTilcr Spectator, ac cording to a letter from Cincinnati, Mr. Bir- ney re-coramences the publication of the Philanthropist with the addition of 1003 subscribers. Snow commenced falling this morning at four o'clock. It ii now at nine o'clock, near ly three inches in depth. We are requested to repeat IhS notice that the New-York Stale Aati-Slavery So ciety will hold it 1 anmoal meeting at Utica, commencing on the 19th inst. the same dav with the meeting of tha Vermont State Society, at Montpelier, The breach between Canada and Eng land is constantly widening. Affirmation is now used instead of Cus tom House oaths in England. The King of France has appointed Ed ward Pontais to be Minister Plenipoten tiary to the United States. There is a story that th re has been an ineffectual attempt to rescue Santa Anna. The Vermont Chroni:le says that the notorious JOHN H. SLACK, exposed as an impostor by George B. Ide, in an article copied from the Christian Watch man some months since, has lately appear ed in Proctorsville and Woodstock, soli citing contributions for a Seminary in Montreal. It is said that a spider has eight eyes. WEEKLY RECEIPTS. Vt. Anti-Slavery Society. A Special meeting of this Society will be holden at Montpelier, on Wednesday the 19th day of October next, commencing at OtyS q'clcck, P. M. in the Free Church and continuing by adjournment through the evening of that day. Addresses maybe expected from one or more of the Agents of the American Anti-Slavery Society. Member of Anti-Slavery Societies, And others, of both sexes, are cordially invited to attend. By vote of the Executive Committee C. L. KNAPP, Rec. Secretory. Montpelier, Sept. 17, 1836. td- The Secretaries of the sererat town anti-slavery societies in this State are specially requested to forward to the subscriber by their Representatives the names of the officers and the number of members in their Societies, respectively. C. L. KNAPP. removal Jour, of Com. Great Steam Ship. A steam ship is now constructing at Bristol, Englano, intended to ply between that place and America. Her length will be about the same as that of a first rate man-of-war, viz. length of keel, 20i feet; of deck, 212 feet 6 inches; length from tafTrail to the fore part of the figure head, 230 fet 6 incnes; earthen, 1200 tons. Britain can boast of bernir the first to set the examnle of building steam vessels of this class for trading purposes. "Marble -ft ia said that a bed of ser pentine marble has lately been discovered at Lvtrn field, V which is .susceptible of a beautiful rjotish. and is easily trotkel.-. ne Aran btar. says that tire prescctera- pTiaors ottoe quarry have rc;ut;d ntfL. A LIST OF LETTERS j EMAINING in the Post Office, at Moriah,N. Y. Oct 1, 1836. Allen Geo. W. 2 Bourk Edmund Baker William Bartlett James Block Thomas Brown Elijah BlmGeo. H. Bullard Isaac Jr. Brown Jude Chub Adams Chase Stephen Cook Augustus Clark E. C. Davis Amos Dresser Silas Dowd John Estee Henry C. Estee Orson K. Freeman Melinda Middleton John or Samuel Mason Hezekiah Mc Lyman Alex'd -Moor John Meacham Wro. Olcott Lucius 2 -Potter John Jr.2 Pratt Chas Jr. . Parmenter Elizabeth Ripley I. W. Jtace Fanny . Stephens Ford & Co. Sharp Abram Slanton Oliver Stimson tlirara Sherman Amos D. Stimson Lindsay Spencer Joseph Farrell Christopher Suttcn Hannah Grant Rev. Wm. 2 Sprasue Darius C. Gleason Chancy Hall Elizabeth Hadaway LoU Hall Polly Hall Seneca Hines Silas Hodgkins Phineas Hendee Anna Isbell Rev. Bishop Spencer Joroath B. Thomas KtttSel Travis W. A. Tweedie Wm, Tarbell Dan'l 2 Ward WTilliam F. Wheelock Belinda Whitney Benja. Walston William John Perkins Daniel Rowley Gerry Rom Milton Joslio E. Mitchell Jesse Willey John Lorrimer S. Richards D. P. Willey James Jenne $2jBfr N. Colby 1,50 60 W. White 1,00 l.0 Dea. Shaw 1,00 2,00 Ashley 1,60 2,001.. Kinney 1,60 l,OJ. Packer 2.00 1,50 . Lairabeo 2,00 l.&O D.LamarJ 2,00 1,60 S. Goiiford 1,04 1,60 David Rowley 60 Johnson Thos. W. 2 Wheelock Geo.1. Johnson Wm. B. Wheelock Geo. W Littel Horatio Webb Nathan L. Larraway Peter 3 N. S. STORRS, P. 3L "FT ETTERS remaining in the Pds JJlJ Office Brandon, Vt. Oct 1st, 1836, Ames, Elijah Hoyt, Wm A Arnold, Caleb Jr. Howard, Tirntithy Arnold, Wm Hack, Jasonr" Bragg, Mrs Betsey Jackson, Nathan Jr Burrows, Caleb Beal, John Cutlef, Elijah Dewey, Mrs Sally Douglass, Sarah Ellis, Moses 2 Ellis, Moses Jr Ford Adonijah Pla&stt Charlei lFox,WmB Flint, Nathan Gates, Luther F Grotan, Roger Grav. Warren Nathaniel Johnson, Alonzo Kent, Wm Kinsman, Lydia KptchamRehecca M Leavitt, John K Newtcft, Rufus, -Potter, Dtm Sawyer, ttotace Thomas, Chester Thomas, Eber or Terry, Daniel Ward, Wm s White, Sabra G DIED) In Salisbury, 29th tilt, Titus Bcckwith, agl 24 years. Printers in New Hampshire and New York, are requested, lie. At Greenbush, Attust2Sd. Thomas Gray of Albany, aged 64 years. NOTICES. The Board of the Vt. Br. of the N. Bap. Ed. Society will meet at Windsor, Wednesday evening, l$ih inst. at 6 o'clock. HADLEY PUOUTKK, Sec.protem Rutland, October 10th, 1836. ITV" The Baptist Ministers of' the Barre Association are requested ro meet at West Roxbury on the lit Wednesday of Novem ber, tor the purpose oi lormmg a minisienai contereoce. liv iequeitt)i ftrernren, L. KIMBALL. East Bethel, Oct. 1836 P. S. It is contemplated that one or more descons will be ordained at the above named time and place. L. Eu Baptist ConvEimoit or Vermont. The next annual session of this body will be held at the Baptist meeting-house in Windsor, commencing on the 3d Wednes day in October at 10 o'clock A. M. ? The Board of the Convention will ram at 6 o'clock the preceding evening at he house ot Br. I. P. Skinner. Missionaries f the Board, and churches to which appropriations have been voted, and which wish to receive them, are by stand ing rules of the Board, reottired tor make their Reports to tbe Corresponding Secreta ry j at least two weeks previous W the meet ing of the Board. This is made -necessary to their receiving an order on the Treasury. It is hoped all will comply "With this regula tion. ' WILLARD KIMBALL, Cor. Sect Brandon, Sept. 21st 1836. ' Walton's Dail? Jot?fcit.-E Walton'and Son propose to publish; dur ing the ensuing session of the Legislature a Da1l Par air embracmg' ir fall the proceeding of .both Jbraachea of the Le gislature ; half sheet, small imperial; tour mlirot rm i1nttVil t Vi mi-rm rt tVi 1nt VA9trS daHyyrico Cl. ThaVc,tcimsn and btsil azcti Trill ba ppuhea tnnrugu Grants OOflHEN. Boynton, Amos Copley, Harvey WOLCOTT li. KEELER, P. M; THIS is to certify that I have relin quished to my two sons, Moses Colburn Johnson and'Moses Pollard John son, their time during their minority. I shall claim none ot their earnings, nor pav anv debts of their contracting after this date. EBENEZER JOHNS! Rrandon. Mav 26. 1835. 2! LEFT HANDKD NOTICE. WHEN merchants advertise goods for sale, or mechanics notify the public of their intention of carrying ou business, they generally give people to understand that they shall trade very lcw and perhaps go a 44 yeg lower' than their neighbors. Now, as 1 am left handed, I shall go the other way. Considering tiio rise in stock, and most kitfds of produce, I feel it my duty to go a " shade higher" than formerly, on many articles of work, and think it fair play to notify my custom ers accordingly. To shoe a horte round with new, heavy shoes, then wait a year and take one bushel ot corn to cancel the charge, don't " talk iurkey1 to me. 240 lbs. or hay costs about twice the amount ndw that it did five or six years-ago, and marly other articles bear a price nearly or Quite in that nronortiou Believing it also to be aft incorrect prmci pie to shoe, all horses at tbeame price, I shall, irorn ana after the first day of October next, vary the prices as near as may be according to the cost of shoeing. My cast price will be for shoeing a horse round with new shoes, from one dollar to one dollar and twenty-five cents, and my charging Pces from one dollar and twenty-five to one dol lar and fifty cents. As most kinds of produce may be readiiy turned to cash, I would say to those who have light work done an(f make prompt pay m produce that the above alteration will not mite n ally affect them. I " onld. say also to my "long tailed " customers who pay at all, that it will be for their interest to " toe up in season. . . - When stock and produce comes oown, my prices for ready pay shall come down tno. Gentlemen may ibc-de whether the too. uenuemen may above ia a correct vr.n and I trill abidif the d.ci? slaye ships, within certain ' geographical iirans I, ana ot course it tney were to una b sis vers,1 to the right of capture. ,t -.v-T.' w -r-? -mu i;u m, -yr;r3ierrawruion.wi re-enned. - V ; " - ; . 1 - lat CZaQ.Ifr.-J'. - r ; - ? tiJIA-j: r r:, T-j --. .. : I c ttw. r-t. ,24. 1SJ n to act upon BUc'csnUh.