^.3jJU g jaJfc.t*WU^i «-MiJ 



* i>M ( ui- " JLi^&v ' .-^ u*^ ' L.j.i>- u- — rr" 



64 



(£;i)e ianncrjJgon tl)lg bbitor. 



The four ocl»;.'eiii..ian levoliitioiiary pension- 

 ers of our acqimiiiuuice in llie town of Concord 

 huvo eacl. survived the lust winter, wo find on 

 inquiry since our return frotn a more southern 

 winter residence. Col. Carter, confined during 

 Ihe cold weather to his room with severe indis- 

 ,>osition, comes out bright tlie present sining : 

 Friend HutchiNS we met in the street, us active 

 as n young man of fifty years: Capt. Davis, at 

 llie extreme line of the town, we are told contin- 

 ues to enjoy sound sleep as when he workc.I 

 upon the farm ; hut six monlhs has made a sad 

 change in tlie health of the veteran Soldier 

 ll^Y.NES, upon whom we called a fortnight .since. 

 lie has become not only entirely blind, but a 

 cancerous humor commencing ill the month near 

 the region of the wound which laid him seven- 

 ty-nine years ago as a dead man upon tlie field 

 at Saratoga, and extending through the head— is 

 fast completing his work on earili. The mind 

 and recollection of |.ast events yet remains to 

 this miracle of tenacity to human life. But he 

 cannot long conlinue to live liere. The annual 

 pension of less than a hundred dollars which he 

 has received by the addition since 1818 leaves 

 him and his aged widow but a scanty support. 

 Why should not the charity which seeks for un- 

 known objects abroad, turn to the few <hiys, per- 

 haps hours, which remain to the man to whom 

 we are so much indebted ? The veteran has re- 

 sided forty years on the easterly line of the town 

 about five miles out of the village: be seems to 

 l>e as little known to the new generation which 

 has grown up as the man who lives a thousand 

 miles .lislant. Soldier Waynes can hardly be ex- 

 pected to survive his eighty-seventh birth day, 

 which will be on the 4th of July next. 



Inquiring for our aged fem.de friend, Mrs. 

 Sarah Farmer, the widow of two revolntioiuny 

 soldiers, of her son whom, we met in the street, 

 we were surprised to be toh" that she died nt his 

 residence in Pembroke on the JOlh of March, 

 five days after drawing her last pension. This 

 lady wus ninety-five years of age. She had bee:i 

 entirely blind many years, during a portion of 

 which she amused herself with knitting .several 

 bun.lred pairs of stockings. When we saw her 

 last fall, she seemed to lament nolhing but that 

 she wus 110 longer able to do her accustomed 

 work. Blind and decrepid as she was, she con- 

 tinned to dress and undress her.«elf almost to the 

 latest hour of her life. Through the winter .she 

 was much the same as she had been li)r years- 

 cheerful, palieni, and ready to im'et the change 

 which awaited her. She dropped away sudden- 

 ly at last without signs of any distress. Older 

 than the recollection of any other per.son living 

 in the State, she was born in Mlchfiehl in the 

 year l/.W. Leaving that place prior to the rev- 

 olution, she remembered not Judge Thornton 

 and the other men of the, revolution in that 

 neighborhood: ihe beanliful intervale farm of 

 the Thorntons at the Frrry, she only ncollected 

 as the-seal of i\Ir. Lntwiche, a t.ny wluise es- 

 tates were confiscated to iIk; Stale cd' New 

 llampshiiv, and who left the country with the 

 f;;w other royalists who took ground with Great 

 liritain in 177.5. 



On SalurdMy, .April 21, his eighty-linnih anni- 

 versary birth day, ilio venerable Maj. Timothy 

 Chandler invited to and met at a timiily eiitir- 

 lainiiient several of his Irieiuls. 'I'his aged gen- 

 llcinan, horn and rained here, an ingeniouHclock- 

 m.-iker and mccliaiiic, who has well perliirined 

 his part low;irils llio prosperity and growth ol 

 the town, recollects many things of its eurly his- 



tory anil population which are destined to be 

 fnrever forgotten. Feeble in body and nearly 

 blind, his mind in the events that are |iast re- 

 ,,,ins it wonted activity. His aged consort and 

 only wife, of the numerous .M.bot family con- 

 nexion in the town, at nearly the same age, is 

 l,..Ks infirm than her husband. Maj. Chandler is 

 not a revolutionary iicmsioner, although from 

 boyhood to the present day he has cheerfully 

 contributed his means and supported the princi- 

 ples of the men who fought and bled for the 

 country in all our wars. 



371 cpiifs. Fnll hnuml in clolh nn.l Icttnred, (Hi cenu. T\\<- 

 nsfi.!! .li.cuunl to Bookaelkrs, Agents, Counlry Merchants anJ 



'ranmrv flirnugllout the Unil.d Sut« may r«(i«- the worli 

 throdgh the .Mails. The po.lage on each copy «;ill "e ^°:""' 

 7 cents, lly r.-iiiillini- 82 free of postage we will send »" f,. 

 rofits of the work done up in paper covers, or Uiree cpiea lor 



* Connlrv Merchants visilinc any of the Cilies can procure 

 the wnrklrcnn UookselUrs for lho^^e who may wish u. ohlam 

 il. Please send on voicr orders, .^dd^ess, „ ... . 



OREIiLliV t .Mellt.ItATII, PiildisherB, 



Trilmne Buildings, .New \orB. 

 April K!. 1840. ^m 



Seldom is the season as forward in the iiiteri 

 or of New Ilarniishire as it was on thel.30ili day of 

 April 1846. The deep snow of winter disappear- 

 td without rain, and the last month baa been un- 

 commonly ilry. Peach and- plum trees have been 

 in bloom several ilays. The early peas in Deac. 

 Gaiilt's garden stand in rows from four to six in- 

 ches high. xA fine raih the last night of the 

 month adils new brilliancy to tiie grass and grain 

 field.s. On the second day of May the Editor of 

 the Visitor will have nearly one hnndred hn.shels 

 of potatoes planted upon nine acres of well pre- 

 pared, subsoiled grounil, manured with lime com- 

 post for the third season. He believes that early 

 planting is the best preventive of the potato rot, 

 and he knows that lime and salt in a compost 

 heap diive out ihe worms. The first jilanted po- 

 tatoes are already (!\lay 1) coining out of the 

 ground. It will.be soon enough to plant Indian 

 corn here from the lOih to the 20lh May. 



BUIGHTOM MARKET— .M'>^OAV,ApIil 27, 1S46. 



Lilrpnrted for Uic Daily Advertiser t Patriot. 1 

 At Markit, .'.'.0 Beef Cattle, 25 pairs U'orkinj! Oxen. 30 Cows 

 and Calre.-, 21)0 Sheep, and Swine. lOO Deef Caule un- 



^''pJicEs ifci/C'illfe.— Price* have further declined, and we 



rednceour qu..talio.is-Kstm S3 75; first tpialily S-^ ^U i sec- 

 onil $5 iffi S5 -ib ; third $4 25 ® S5. A yoke or two were sold 

 (ur a triHe above our quotations. 



Unrkiiiir O/fn.— Sfili, S71I, SP5, S*', J^nd Sta^)- 



C./r. avd Cilefs.-Sates at 830,82.5, S2C, §-28 and §32. 



S,m,'r.-I.ols to peddle at 4ic and b'^c- tot to close at 4 and 

 5c; old Hogs, 33, 4 and 4Jc. At retail from 5 to 6U-. 



CONCORD ■WHOLESALE 



CASH PRICES CURRENT. 



For West India Goons & Grocebies, Fluke, Gbai-i, Piio 



DLCE, IboS t SrEEl., Pl.ASIER, SaLI, l.l.ME, tC. &C. 



Corrected weekly for Hill's N. II. Patriot byGlbMOKEfc 

 CLAPP, at the Depot -Store, Concord, .^. 11. 



April 30, 184G. 





Arrival of Podltrt from America.— On 

 Sunday the America, 500 tons, arrived in St. 

 Katheiine Docks, Liverpool, from Boston, with 

 twentv-fivecasesturkies, geese, and ca|)on.s; al- 

 so, six- boxes red reindeer of superior fpiality.-- 

 Thev were packed in ice to preseiA-e them. VVe 

 helieve this is to be the first importaiion ot the 

 ^\ni\.^H'Umei''s Liverpool Times, .Qpnl 10. 



From the Albany Cultiv.ator. 

 Cure for wou.NDii i.n Horses.— Take one gill 

 „f inrpeiitiiie, two gills of whiskey, and one egg. 

 i-ieat the eg" well, and mix the three together.- 

 It should be applied with a feather or swabtwice 

 •I day It kce|is a wound healthy, and prevents 

 ilsh"ealinK too rapidly. For its efticacy 1 can 



I J. B. O. 



voncli. 



A pia machine tended by a single girl at the VVater- 

 hury fietory in Connecticut, does the work ol 300 

 persons by the process. Each day they iiu.aidacture 

 8 000 QUO of pins. This article will soon be ciporlcd. 



Ch \.RiTy . — Noiseless die snow comes down. You 

 may see il, feel it, hut never hoar it. It is like true 

 charity. 



Seeds ! Seeds ! 



S Pf F.IinS GRASS, Clover, Red T..|., I'oal .Meadow, Peas, 

 S B ll.-an.s Seed Corn, t..>ns Oiaupe. and While I arret, 

 TuM.ep Sprm. Wh.al, and Ml k.uds of G.rd.n and Flower 



«-"». "' "■■■ ■'■■■'"■ ""' "■^'""'■"^VcU^iKu'^'u^X. 



April 9, ISir.. ^ 



HAVE YOU A COW? 



TlinKE CrtPIKlS FOB. $1- 



A TKEATl^U D.N' 



M 1 L C H C O W S , 



WMUItKHV the Oualilvand au.inlilyid' Milk which any 

 Cow will give may 'he accural, ly defrmiued by ob- 

 s. rviu" Ni.tu.al Marks or KM. rnni ludi.-.au.us alone; the 

 l-uslh ..r time sir. will conliuue to cive .Milk, &.C. «tc. 

 liV M. FRAN<;lS GHKNON, 



uF LinuUBNE, FBA:*eK. 



rr,maUlt,l for tUe F./c.ucr..' Mrnnj, fr.m Ihr Prmch, bij N. P. 



■i'Bur, /;..'/., '»lc ('. S. C'en.sul 1.' /'.lenna. 



With Inlrodnctorv Remarks and (il.servatioiis on the 



COW A.vn TIIK DAIKV, 



IIY JOIISI S. SICIKM'-K, 



i;niTon of the farmers' i,iiirarv. 



Illustrated Willi numerous Kniiravings. 



50" Price for sinslo copies, neatly done up in paper covers 



ASHES, Pots, 451 



Pearls ''i 



ALU.Vl, * 



BUt.MSrONE, Roll 3 



Siilpliur, J 



CA.MPIIOR. Refined,.... ;a 



C.V.VDLES, Mould, 10 



Sperm, '^ 



COFFEE, St. D.uninso,....6 



Porto Rico, -i 



Porto Cabello, 



Old Government Java,. 



COPPERAS, • •;; 



FISH, Bank, P quintal, ..2,. J 



P"!l'Jck, 2,.,0 



Bay, 3,00 



Old Uuu, -Il-"" 



No. I Salmon, lf> bbl, 14,110 



No. 1 Shad, 0»-hbl, 12,00 



Ton's Si. Sounds, S*bbl, ti,00 



ll.l!.Fins,rliW> 9.IW 



FIjOII H , Genesee 6,25 



Fancy brand, "i™ 



Ohio, Akron, 7)=0 



Spauldinp, extra, 7,50 



1. II Beach, '.™ 



FRUIT. Figs, ••;;; 



Raisins, blue mark, 7,o0 



Bl.ack mark o.-w 



l)o.\, liunch, 2,oO 



Fl 'STICK, Cuba,!:* ton, 30,00 



Tampu-o; 22,."» 



(;rouud, lr>- hund l,'o 



GLUE, Russian best, 1' 



American, ••" 



GRAI.V. Oats, 50 cents IP bu 



Corn, 87.idodolm 



Rye, B74dadobu 



li.-ans 75 W 1,7.1 



p,.,,.^^ ' 50 'III 7o 



0RINl)S'i'ONES,lst.iunl- 

 ilv, finished, ll»l.uud. 2,2.1 



no. do. unfinished, 1,.>0 



UERi[ING,r I'o^. ^■"- ''-^^ 



S,a|.-.l, '■' 



INIIICO, lleu2al,.l,IOfil 1,.J 

 Spanish lloat,... 1,00 rnU,.'iO 



.Manilla, 7ortlil,-35 



IRO.V, Old Sable, 5 



English, ;}, 



Bunk?, reliued, 'ij 



.Enslish, sheet, ....••!> 



Russia, do '''" '?i 



Old Sable nail rods, .ij 



Norwegian do '', 



Common d» ji 



English hoop, J 



.American d( "^ 



Shoe Shapes,. 'Vtil 'I 



Sweiles, shoe shapes, 4, 



LEATHER. New Vork 

 .s„|.. Leather, Light, 14 Wlfi 



lio. Ileavv 13.U<815 



LI Ml', Tliomaston, first 



quality 1.5? 



Cannl..u,do !>&> 



LOGWOOD, SI. llomin- 



Co,l;»ton,. 2-2,00 



Cauipeachy, 97,00 



Gr.iuud, li'- hund 1,75 



.MACKEREL, No. I, V* . 



bid ii."o 



^j,, .. 7,110 



N,,::!;;;; 5,00 



MOLASSES, Havana, ...25 



Suriuam 2.1 



Triui.la.l ';'; 



rorloRno ->2 



Su'jar House, '^* 



NMI.S. lloslonlronCo's 



bran.l *\ 



olil Col.mv di ''} 



\V..vmouth Iron Co 4S 



Mai.l.u, ■,.•,•■' 



pi,\sTr.i!,ii'-t -M; 



Do. crouuil l^i"" 



PR.ivisiii.NS. ''"'I' I'.';- „ 



Ira clear I1H.UI, lb,™ 



Connnon Jo I'lOU 



Extra Mess 12,00 



Common do ♦ 10,01) 



Butter, rtb, lOrriiU 



Clieese, new milch,.. .7 (ft 6 



Four meal, SiSG 



Dried apple, best, 4.ia5 



Lard, northern, 10 



Do. southern, 9 



Turkeys t Chickens, besl,8 



Goslins, best ;••■•* 



Round Hogs, 4;ia6 



REDWOOD, ground, V 



hund 2,73 



Nicaragua, ^ t<m, 35,00 



RICE, I?- hund. best, 4,oO 



ROSI.N, r bid 2.50 



SALA;R ATUS, first qU8lity,4 

 SALT, St. Ubcs, (P- I'I'd. 3,.51 



j Cadi/. 3,50 



I Bonaires, 4,00 



Turks Island, 4,00 



Liverpool, 3,50 



Do. fine, VVonhingston 



brand, tf> bag 2,00 



Do. ntller brands, !,•.> 



SALTPETRE, crude, 8 



Do. le lined -S 



SEED. Clover, northern, .12J 



Do. southern, 10 



Herds srass, ^ hn 2,2.i 



SIIEF.ri.VGS, prime t» yd ..at 

 IIIXGLES. first .luatily, 



No.-l, pine, V* .M 3,00 



do. do. do. spruce, 2,00 



SlllRTl.NGS, tl*yard, 6.i 



SHOT, assorted, 5i 



SHOVELS, cast steel, (?• 



do/. lO,"" 



Steel poinl.-il do 9,00 



Iron do. best, ^,J> 



Do. ctmimon, t>,.*0 



SOAP, Castile, ID 



White Soap, best 8 



Brown, No. I, ^ 



Family, ** 



Extra, f> 



SPICES. Cassia, in mats, S3 



I>o. pround, 25 



Cloves, 33 



Ginger, pure, ^ 



Macc,»>m '.UO 



,50 

 .11 

 .12 

 .11 

 .12 



n 



Nutn>egs, best, 



Pimento, whole, .. 



Do. (.round, 



Pepper, ivlnde, 



Do. itround, 



STEEL, Swedes, best 



Sanderson, Brothers & 



Co. cast sleel, 18 



.lessop&Son, do 17 



German, oest, 12ft 



Do. comnnm, tj* 



Coach spring, best, 9t 



SUG.VKS. Drown Hava- 

 na, ver>. best, 10 



Do. do. prime, " 



Do. do. fair, --o 



Double refill. East B. loaf,l2J 



Do. do. crushed ^'~i 



Do. do. powdered, 13 



Common loaf, " 



Port.. Rico, lust, ......... I" J 



Purified .^luscovado do ...SJ 



TAR, V> bid 3,00 



TE.VS. Gunp*>wder, best 



quality, \l*lh, 75 



Imperiai, do W 



Hyson, do f.0 



Hvson Skin, do 30 



Ycning llvson, common, .35 



Do. d,i. fair -"^ 



Do. d... p(Mid, ■'"' 



Do. do. best ■>.. 



Toll \CCO, common ken,. .0 



Good ilo '» 



Couuu.m box, ■" 



G,.,.d Vy 



Honey Dew, do. best .is 

 Cavendish, 25 ffl .171 



