248 



NFlW ENGLAND FARMER. 



Feb. 23, n 



2m;xscei.i.akxes. 



Ffom the Etonian. 



quested " to send home by these ships a hundred : the pi«Ker, and down again, and make • hes 

 pounds weight of the best tay that you can get." | cliarming at the harp, and she is J^/itsic/iedJf 

 The use and value of tea in England at a very ear- j form her that Tamerlane succeeded Charle^ ^ 



as the Emperor of China, and that Julius Ca;* A] 



ly period after its introduction, appears from a bill j as the Emperor of China, and that Julius Caiali A] 

 If ever man died of love, it xvas Edward Morton. I of Thomas Garaway, in the Exchange-alley, Lon- '■ feated Cromwell on the banks of the Macqi; 

 The lady to whom he became early attached was don, in which, after enumerating the q\ialites and ' river in Nova Zembla, and she is completeljT) 

 married to another. Morton was present at the beneficial effects of tea, he concludes in these ' iorificd. Tell her that Chimborazo is a gre| 

 marriage, and wag tiever seen to smile afterwards, words ; — "And to the end that all persons of emi- j lake in Siberia, and that the Po is a burningii 

 The lady, it is said, was unhappy in her union and nence and quality, gentlemen and others who have ; tain in Arabia Felix, and let her give a 

 did not survive it many months. Morton died at i occasion for tea in leaf, may be supplied — These ] two on the globe, and point out the longitude 

 Corfu. A portrait of the lady was found in his i are lo give notice, that the said Thomas Garaway , Arctic Circle and the latitude of the Equat 



possession, wrapped up in the following lines : 



I saw thee wediled, Ihou didst go 



Within the sacred aisle. 

 Thy yoang cheek in a blushing glow. 



Betwixt a tear and smile. 

 Thy heart was glad in maiden glee, 

 But he, it loved so fervently, 



Was faithless all the while ; 

 I hate him for the vow he spoke — 

 1 hate him for the vow he broke. 



I hid the love that could not die, 

 Its doubts, and hopes, and fears. 



And buried all my misery 

 In secresy and tears ; 



And days passed on, and thou didst prove 



The pang of unreL|Uited love. 

 E'en in thy early years ; 



And thou didst die so fair and good ! 



In silence and in solitude 1 



While thdu wert living I did hide 



Affection's secret pains ; 

 I'd not have shocked thy modest pride 



For all the world contains ; 

 But thou hast perished, and the fire, 

 That often checked, could ne'er e.\pire, 



.4gain unhidden reigns : 

 It is no crime to speak my vow. 

 For ah ! thou canst not hear it now. 



Thou slecps't beneath Ihy lowly stone 



That dark and dreamless sltep ; 

 tnd he, thy loved and chosen one, 



Why goes he not to wetp.' 

 He does not kneel where I have knelt. 

 He cannot feel what I have felt. 



The anguish still and deep ; 

 The painful thoughts of what has been 

 The canker-worm that is not seen I 



But I — as o'er the dark blue wave, 



Unconsciously I ride. 

 My thoughts are hovering o'er thy grave, 



My soul is by thy side, 

 There is one voice that wails thee yet. 

 One heart that cannot e'er forget 



The visions that have died ; 

 And aye thy form is buried there 

 V doubt — an anguish — a despair ! 



hath tea to sell, from 16 to 50 shillings the pound." , she is Gcographicd. Make her waltz for threi 



in the week with a French valet out of plai 



From the Palladium. she is Altiludinixtd. The other accompli; 



— ; may be obtained for money, without any e; 



The Florida Surveyors speak discouragingly of j on her part. So much for " heddication." i 

 a Ship Canal across the Country, except at St. Jo- 1 rLondon Sunday Tiiil''' 



seph's or Tampe Day. ' 



f?A^ N1- H I N i^E^ FiU S 



The Citizens of Hudson, N. Y. have purchased 

 two| Turnpike Roads and a Bridge, connected 1 

 with that place, and made them free. , The entire new mode of pressure which the 



mu I 1 . r»T 1 11 I. e -y v.-n ''■'"^'^ qualities of this instrument obtai 



The Legislature of Maryland has before it a bill pUcation to the disease of Hernia or Rupture, a; 

 to establish an Inspection of Poplar Boards, wbic h consequent well known frequent cures accomi 

 provides for three qualities. by its use, even on the most aged sufferers, (ngitht 



. . the saf. ty, ease and comfort, with which" 



A gentleman who has taken considerable pains has, to the highest gratification of ihe in 

 to ascertain the quantity of Snow which has fallen mred the encomiums of the most scientifH 

 this winter, states the whole depth to be sixty-one men of our own country, ^s well las its acknow 

 inches. I Greenfield paper.] superority by Pir Astley Cooper, of London. A* 



■- patentee may further add, that Trusses of his inW a 



The Greenfield paper asks if it is not the duty are now manufactured and sold iu London, i 

 of Snrveyors of Highways, to see that snow is American Truss. This, it is conceived he may- 

 levelled, and the roads kept in as good repair as ^^" J"^' source of national and professional gn 

 possible in winter? 



From Ihe experiments which the patentee has 

 for two years past, on ajfd persons for the c 

 rupture, he is authorized to announce to the 

 the gratifying result, (hat almost every persot 

 has strictly followed his instructions relative to 

 casional increase of presure, with auxiliary mean 

 uniformly experienced a partial closing of the I 

 within a few weeks, and what is still more plea 

 add is that its efficacy has been fully and strlkin: 

 monstrated in accomplishing perfect cures on ] 

 at the advanced age of from 60 lo 75 years, amli 

 sally on youth. 



The following are a few of the cures effected 

 above Truss. 

 . . . , , Isaac Bull, Hartford, aged 82 years ; cured i 



take up all destitute children begging in the than one year, Aug. 6 1824 

 streets, and bind them out as apprentices ; and 



they have more applications for such children as 8 months. July l.'!24. 

 apprentices than they can supply. i ,^'', Br^tol, Onedia, aged 65, cured in two 



^^ J' i-i- J I after havuig been ruptured 30 years. 



An American Gentleman, who has just published j Deacon Benjamin Maltby, Conn, aged 65 ct 

 his Tour through Europe, says — " All the sublime Uix month 



A Mr Wadsworth, an Englisfl woollen inanufac- { 

 turer, has established a factory at Poughkeepsie ; 

 from which specimens of Broad Cloth, equal to any 

 imported, have recently been produced. 



In the indulgence of any unfavourable feelings 

 towards this country, on account of our Manufac- • 

 uring Establishments, the British should consider ; 

 that they were, perhaps, introduced by English- , 

 men, and many Englishmen are probably now con- 

 cerned in them. } 



The authorities in Baltimore are authorii-.ed to : 



Thomas Hath, Carpenter, New York, cured in 



compositions of Haydn, Mozart, Weber and Rossi- 

 Use of Tea. — Bitero, an eminent Italian writer, ! ni. never touched my heart like Yankee Doodle." 



is the first European author who mentions the ex- 1 



istence and use of /ea ; "The Chinese," says he, j Recipe for finishing a yoxing lady. — Take a 



• have an herb, out of which they press a delicate 

 juice, which serves them for drink instead of wine; 

 it also preserves their health, and frees them froiiv 

 all those evils which the immoderate use of wine 

 produces. In the year 1000, the Dutch introduc- 

 ed it into Europe, who exchanged it with tlie 

 Chinese for dried sage, at the rate of four pounds 

 of tea for one pound of sage. When it could not 

 be procured in exchange, it was purchased at 



daughter of a cheese-monger, a tallow chandler, 

 or any other tradesman, who has some money but 

 not much information, and if she be an only child, 

 so much the better for your purpose. — Stuff her 

 with plum cake, and praise her till she be nine, 

 then teach her the horn book, and let her practice 

 for three or four years at such reading as may be 

 selected for her by Mary, the maid of all work — 

 the said Mary taking especial care that Miss is her 

 or lOd. per pound, and sold at Pans for 311, and 1 <^°"fi''^n' '" ^1' her little matters in the sweet- 



sometimes 10(J li\ros. An act of parliament, pas- 'learting Hue. When she enters her thirteenth ifo'^n'^hose who apply them, 

 sed in 10t30,iOTposed a duty of eight pence on each 'year, send her to Miss DiddlefidgBt's " Establish ' ^ " 



Dr. Nash, Fairfield, (Conn.) aged 40, rujiturei 

 his infancy up, cured in 12 months. 



T. Smith, Deerfield, aged 78, cured in less 

 years. 



William M. Cheevcr, Whitesboro,' aged 40, 

 in 10 months. 



Josepe House, Westminister (U. C.) aged 45, 

 in less thau one year, after being ruptured 25 ye: 



Hon. Matthew McXair, Oswego, aged more tl 

 cured in one year. "It is now more than one 

 since I discoiitini?ed the use of it J''ly 26, 1B24. 



In the application of (his instrument in di 

 cases of the disease, a difference of adaptation 

 cessary, in respect to form, size and pn ssure an > 

 neglect of these indispensable requisitions is th \ 

 cause of its failure, where auy means of (he kii ' 

 practicable ; a careful observance of which is ' 



EBF.NEZFR \MGHT, ^ipolheai 



gallon of the liquor made from tea or cofi'ee, and mcnt," to he finished. Here she must read a little, Milk-street opposite Federal street, has just rccer 

 officers attended twice a d,-iy to take an account and spell some ; but avoid every thi.ig like gram- large assortment of the above Trusses. { 



of the quantity made. Tlie first order of the East 

 India Compaay to their agents for the importation 

 af tea was in the year 1017, wlien they were re- 



mar as a vulgarity and a plague. Put her un to Lv^^,!, , .• , j i^-.,„ ... tv,„„„ii i;., „, i 



o J i" c . Uji^^r^rublisrhed every l^idav at three Uoliars pc ) 



" ipooly-ti'oo parky woo play tail,' and she isLun,^ payable at the end of the year— but thosi I 



Frenched. Strum her up six octaves and a half of pay within sixty days from the time of subscribin i 



ejtitlcd to a deduction of Fifty Cents 



