296 



RIISCEl^LANY. 



From the Nashville Herald. 



^'^^^' ENGLAND FARr>iEIl. 



ions, stars, sliowiiien, lecturers, teachers, ami liold- 

 ersfoith ;— but tbey are birds of passage ; tbey 

 pocket our cash, and then are otF by the first 

 steamer. We are fleeced by all the charlatanry, 

 and necromancy, and impudence, and craf\, and 

 knavery, and cockncyism, which can muster the 

 locomotive ability to teach this most giillil)le, trop- 

 ical, polar, non-descri])t and uniformly variable 

 territory of ours— whereof, Nashville is and ever 



LETTER FROM A TENNESSEE SCHOOL- 

 MASTER. 

 The present winter will long be remembered on 

 nccoiint of the intense, and hitherto unparalleled, 



^:S'^-11;^l'::^"have^L;'Lir'::;::;|.vinbe:th^ splendid, go.den, august, tnunificent, 

 us, and have played such fantastic tricks with our 

 Italian atmosphere tliat a Russian or a Norwegian 

 miglit here have fancied hiiuself some twenty de- 

 gre^es north of his accustomed latitude. We have, 

 indeed, had winter and summer in delightful con- 

 tact. One day oppressively hot ; the next as cold 

 as if the sun had been instantaneously annihilated. 

 Wliat think you, courteous Bostoiiian, of twenty 

 degrees below zero, liere in Nashville, forty miles 

 nearer the equator than sidtry Algiers? Tlie 

 2oth of January was die coldest average day we 

 ever experienced anywhere. We were nearly 

 frozen in riding a quarter of a mile on horseback. 

 And our juvenile greekiings looked so, that we 

 could not find in our hearts to scold litem for not 

 tlireadin;: the mazes of Euclid or Euripides. By 

 the way— Old Nick- was a fool, or lie would have 

 made Job a sclioohiw.stir ; and then, if he had not 



refined, literary, freezing and boiling metropolis. 



A PEDAGOGUE. 



HISTORY OF GEORGIA. 



The Charleston Evening Post, gives tlic follow- 

 ing information on this subject : — 



"" The first newspaper publislied in Charleston 

 was comnu^iced in the same year that Geu. Ogle- 

 thorpe established his settlement, 17.32, and that its 

 numbers contain a connected account of events in 

 the early history of Georgia. Files of this paper 

 were obtjiincd 'by Mr Beujamiu Elliot, from the 



March 28, 1832. 



Stallions. 



THE following Horses are for sale or to let, the enstl- 

 ini; seison,— if not parleil with, they will slaiul for Mares 

 »t the farm of A. Dty, at Lodi, Bergen Co. Mew Jer.-ey, 

 near Kewark brid{;e, under the care of Hosea Woithiu"- 



tl)B. 



>ATH KiLi.BH — ctiesnut; five years old; sire, Amer- 

 ic.i lirli|>se ; dam, Hyaciiitli, a paic thorough bied mart- 

 uf lie Eiuslish race breed, whose pi-digrce is verified up 

 10 ilie orioiital hiirpcs, more ihan a hundred years; his 

 C(ilts are leiiiatkable for ihcir size and bono. 



iN AVARiNO — blood-bay ; four years old ; sire, Sir Har- 

 r\|: dam, Hyaciuth. 



SIarpinus — beautiful blood-bay; upwards of sixteen 

 hinds higli ; sire, Ha-nbletonian ; dam, Mcssenijcr Mare; 

 a treat tiotlei, and liis colls large and fine, well calcula- 

 t(|l for coach boises— for one pair of them, only 2 and 3 

 yiars old, $-100 was refused. 



" ]Thfi above horses will stand at $15, and the marc war- 

 j-iitpd with foal. If paid by the 1st of November, 1832, 

 .42,50 will je taken. 



Jerry Leghorn — cream color; sixteen hands high 

 iVe years dd ; sire, imported horse Leghorn; dam, a 

 Icfiiincc Ware. This breed of horses has proved great 

 Ijaveller.s, iiid valuable as ro.idstcrs and for farming hor- 

 fs. Stanls at g.S, and the mare warranted with Ibal — 

 f paid by the 1st of November, 1832, $6 will be taken. 

 Bulls. 



triumphed, we are no conjurors. 



Th.tt our winters are gradually becoming mild- 

 er, and that our climate is ameliorating, we utter- 

 ly disbelieve. The clearing of our dense forests 

 will render the seasons more inclement and un- 

 certain. Our own experience satisfies us that the ; 

 cold is greater on tliis side of the mouutaius, than j 

 in the corresponding jiarallels of latitude along 

 the. Atlantic coast. Tennessee is most unfortu- 

 nately situated. It is liable to all possible changes; 

 to late frosts in spring, and to early frosts in au- 

 tumn ; to blasting heats by day and to chilling 

 damps by nights ; to every form and type of the 

 torrid and frigid zones, at all times and seasons. — 

 Nothing hero ever reaches perfection. We have 

 no good fruits ; no good melons ; no good sweet 

 potatoes, (nor Irish either) ; no good wheat, beef, 

 mutton, fish, fowl, or venison ; no good garden 

 vegetables ; no good butter, cheese, nor pumpkin 

 pies ;— nothing but cotton, tobacco, corn, whiskey, 

 negroes and swine, and these not worth the grov,- 

 in^. Everything degenerates in Tennessee. Doc- 

 tors are miide by guess, (anatomical dissection is a 

 penitentiary offence) ; lawyers by magic ; parsons 

 by inspiration ; legislators by grog ; merchants by 

 mammon; farmers by necessity; editors and school- 

 masters by St Nicholas, to do penance for the sins 

 of their youth ; mechanics are too cunning to lit* 

 ^ amongst us. We cannot naturalize a shoemaker 

 " or a tailor. We import our ploughs and saddle- 

 bags. We send to England or Barbary for our 

 horses, and to Mexico for our asses, (a work of 

 supererogation in all conscience). We get our 

 notions from the Yankees ; our fashions from trav- 

 elling milliners and pedlars ; our flints, clocks and 

 nutmegs from Connecticut. Our colleges and 

 schools are like fires kindled upon icebergs, their 

 lio-ht is scarcely visible before they are extinguished. 

 All the. world here is migratory, and fitful, and 

 chaotic, like the climate. We have players, buf- 

 foons, jugglers, rope-dancers, harlequins, giants, 

 pigmies, caravans of wild beasts, circus-riders, fid- 

 dlers, tumblers, fire-eaters, steam-doctors, picture- 

 venders, tooth-makers, panaceists; all sorts of 



descendants of Justice Lamboll, and are deposited, TWO Bulls of the imporie.l short horned Durham breed 

 in the Charleston Library. The first newspaper ((-p^ sale, or to let the ensuing season. Knquiie of A. 

 published in Georgia was established in 17li;}, ed-'ucy, Nc. 27, Nassau street, New York. 



ited by James Johnston, probably a descen.lant oil MarcH4,1932. 3^ 



one of the first sehlers, as the first Anglo-Amcri 

 can female born in Georgia, was named Johnston, 

 It is worthy of remark, tliat at the end of the fir 



century from the settlement of that State, the po| 

 ulation of Georgia was .louble that ofthepop^ 

 lati(m of the whole United States, at the end of tl 

 same period after the first settlement." 



The Horticultural Cnrden of the late Andre 

 I'arnientier, is ollcred for Sale. 



TIIK repulation ol Ibis establishment 

 not confined to the vicinity of New Yo' 

 but is well known throughout the Unid 

 Stales, and difl'erent parts of Kurope. lis 

 situated two miles from the city of Nv 

 York, at Brooklyn, Long Idand, at Ihe juiiciionofe 

 Jamaica and Klalbush Roads, and contains 24 acres. 



The Grounds arc in a very high slate of cultivati, 

 and laid out with judgment and taste. The siluati<i< 

 very healthy and the view very extensive, comnianig 

 the bay, the cily, &c. The Garden is enclosed a 

 pointed stone (ence, and inside of that is a hawirn 

 hed"e. The Nursery contains a fine and exlensivol- 

 Icct-on of Fruit, Forest, and Ornamental 'I rees ; a, a 

 splenilid colleclioi; of Roses and Herbaceous Plan — 

 ilie object of the lale proprietor having always bei to 

 collect every new variety. 



On the premises are a Dwelling House, two Labrs" 

 Houses, seven Cisterns, and a never-failing Pump «x- 

 eellent water; four Green and Hot Houses, conting 

 a rich variety of rare exotics. 



Tlic advantages lo be derived by any persorlio 

 wishes to engage in the occupation of Gardening, the 

 purchase of this property, are very great; the bucss 

 already secured is very extensive, and the pros|t ol 

 increased encourageineut is such as to warrant (be- 

 lief that the purchase of the property will amply pay 

 the enterprise of thp one who may engage the 

 business. 



Terms will bo made known by applying to Jlr'AR- 

 MFNTiER, on the premises. 



N. B. — Any orders sent to Mrs P. will be piptly 

 and carefully executed. 6t 



Feb. 16. 



Evergreens, Silver Firs, etc. 



THE subscriber being engaged in the Seed Incss, 

 would be happy to receive orders for Forest Trecceds 

 and Evergreens from Maine, and being agent U. K. 

 Kussell, lioslon, and Prince & Sons, Flushin,N. \'. 

 orders sent through them or otherwise, will be 'mled 

 to without delay. Paiticular directions for takinp and 

 packing is requested. WM. MN. 



Augusta, Me. March 14. 6t 



A list of Mr Mann's prices for Evergreens, Scan be 

 seen at the New England Faimer office. 



Flooring Boards, &c, 



OF iard Southern Pine, or Eastern White Pine, fur- 

 nished to order, ready planed (by sleani power) and 

 Imigufd or grooved, cf any required dimensions. (Quality 

 goml,and price lower than they can be elsewhere had. 



Apdy to E. CDPELAND, ja, 65, Broad street. 



Ammiinitioc. 



Or" Ihe best quality ai.n lorrest prieen, for sporting 



conitanily for sale at L'OPELAND'S POWDEKSTORE 

 6 . Ihoail Street. ' 



S.\i. If the quality is not found satisfactory, it nray 

 b; returned, and Ihe money will be ub'mieu Jan. 1 



Buckthorns, 



Gentlemen in want of ibis valuable plant for lire 

 fences, can have young quicks about 3^ feet high, for $3 

 per hundred, and plants 2i feet high, for .•J'2,50 per hun- 

 dred, by leaving th"ir orders at Ihe olhce of the New 

 England Fanner. They arc raised in the vicinity of 

 Boston, are in the very finest order, and will be well 

 packed. A small chaige will be added for height. 



March 14. 



Farm to Let 



A first rate farm ol about 120 acres, well proportioned 

 in mowing, lill.ige and pasturing. It is capable of main- 

 taining 30 head of cattle, and is well calculated for ,•» 

 Milk Farm, for which purpose it has been used a num- 

 ber ol years. There is also one of the best orchards in 

 the State— a good dwelling house, and three good barns. 

 For teinis apply at 56, Commercial st. 4t* March 14. 



Bees for Sale. 



FOR Sale by Emarson Wheeler, Brighton, about a 

 dozen Swarms of Bees in Be.rd's Patent Hives, from 

 8 lo 15 each, including the hive.-,. 

 March 14. 4t* 



Fresh White Mulberry Seed. 



JUST received at J. IJ. Russell's Seed Store, Nos. 51 

 & 52 North Market Street— 



A small supply of Iresh and genuine White Mulberry 

 Seed, warranted the growth ot the past si-asoi., from 

 one of the grealesl Mulberry orchards in Mansfield, Con- 

 ncelicut. Short directions for its culture accompany the 

 seed. 



Published every Wednesday Evening, at «;3 per annum> 

 payable at the end of the ycif — but those who pay witbin 

 SL\ty da\s Irom the time of subscribing, are entillrd to a 

 deduction ol fifty cents. 



0° No paper wiil be sent to a dista: 

 being made in advance. 



Printed for J. B. Russell, by 1. R. Bdtts — by whrm 

 all descriptions of Printing cnn be executed to meet the 

 wishes of customers. Orders for Printing recciveil by J. K 

 Ri'ssELL, at the Agricultural Warehouse, JMo. 32, 'North 

 Market Street. 



itnout payment 



