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r" is older than the seventeenth century. "The Old Woman Tossed in a Blanket" is of the reign of James II., to which monarch it is supposed to allude. _Salem Gazette._ * * * * * Some British opinions of Benedict Arnold. "The good whigs of America," says a late paper, "may be assured, that the infamous BENEDICT ARNOLD'S mansion is the very next to TYBURN,--a well chosen habitation for such an abandoned traitor: A step or two conveys him to that fatal spot, where the most guilty of all the miserable beings who have ever suffered, was perfectly innocent compared with him.--He lives despised by the nobility and gentry, and execrated by the people at large--countenanced by none excepting their Britannic and Satanic Majesties, and such of their adherents, respectively, who are looking for promotion under their royal masters." By a gentleman from the southward we learn that it is expected Congress will fix their permanent residence at Philadelphia. _Salem Gazette,_ Feb. 26, 1784. * * * * * NEW-YORK, November 16. By very recent accounts from St. John, Nova-Scotia, we are informed that _Benedict Arnold_, having attempted to JOCKY some of the inhabitants out of their property, but being detected, and the people being much exasperated, offered to deliver him up to the Americans for ten dollars; but alas! before the bargain was firmly agreed on, he made his escape to Halifax, and there got protection from the populace. We are informed that Benedict Arnold lately sailed from New-Brunswick for London. It is said that his residence in America, even among the provincial Loyalists, was rather uncomfortable; he therefore wisely preferred being enveloped in the atmosphere of London to residing on a continent which had been the theatre of his traitorous acts, and consequently the occasion of more frequent reflections on the infamy of his crimes. _Massachusetts Gazette,_ November, 1786. * * * * * Receipt for apple-pudding, in 1788, with the apple and the pudding left out. _For the_ HERALD _of_ FREEDOM. HOW TO MAKE AN APPLE PUDDING.
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