Newspaper Page Text
3M£X30EXiX*ANXj3U3 «
ISSdBLITY OP PARIS.
The city ef Peris exerts upon al!
Fiance ths mest extensive influence.
This capital is the ccutre of impulse
to the whole country; the focus from
which influences, good or bad, salu
tary or hurtful, are diffused through
the cilios and villages of thirty-two
the most memorable acts of Jesus
Christ! In another print are seoii a-
gents of (he government with a n t
in their hand, to whom are applied
the weighty and solutmi wolds, which
transformed the humble fisherman of
the lake of Genesarelh into Apostles
of tho Gospel: “l will make you fish
ers of men;” au odious comparrisou
between the first messengers of the
Epictetus, the celebrated Stoic | mar.y reprimands, forbade him even
Philosopher, was bun a slave, and
spent many years of his lifu in servi
tude. This was the fact also with
jEaup, Publius Syrus, aud Ter
race.
The Abbe Hauy, who died in Paris,
a few years since, celebrated for his
wiitiags and dttscovtrtes in Chrystnl-
oftaphy, attained his distinguished el-
Christinn fat.li and vile spies living iujeutiou iu spite of every disadvantage
millions of people. It has been P'®' tho filthiest and most infamous places of Urth.
said, that Paris is at once the head j j n p ar ; 8 ,. l n a third print the snblime
ami tM heart of Pi’** 11 -*- , * iat 3 CB I*' i pictuio of the Holy Supper by Leon-
itnl should exert such an influence | anl dt y inci is puredied in a revolting
over a largo country, is always a manuer . a pipture of liberty occupies
misfortune; and it if particularly so lhfl c|mM . e al the picturo and the sub- a shoo make r\ He contrived to keep
for the country in respect to religion j (iel js i,idicatod by the inscription: j himself at Coly*»w, chiefly by teacb-
The people of Paris arc almost uni-: ..Verily, one of you shall betray me.” mg some of his younger fellow stu-
vcrsally irreligious. 1 rupiuty has And those abominable pioductieus of! dents, while al sjme lime he in,
» inckieumo, one of the most dis
tinguished writers on classical auti-
quilios and the liu* arts, that modern
times liuvi! produced, was tile sen ot
there distilled for sixty years bar
most active and subtle poisons, there j t .^ s ot a j| p ajls »
materialism has opened schools and j . s s,«p S at e not af, aid to exhibit
nnnirftlled the courts of justice; th«:e 1 <) \v il.ufiM. imtnmm nriiils!
j iuipiety are publicly wxpvsed to the
And (lie owners *f
t iu
open d.'V those impious prints
Is there another country boaring
the ii.une of Chrisiion, m which any tiler’s trad
controlled the courts of just
especially a defec ivo system ot rdu-
cation--! mean teaching ih« people
to read without putting into their xYu ],| ( Jar« tlus to cas*t contempt
hands good books-—has produced the
most deplorable fruits Bsk men who
ore the best informed, what is
tho religion of the Parisians? What
is their faith, their hope? The xeply
is .Mho people of Paris have no rt>-
lioiou; they have no faith except mi
upun the Gospel Histoiy, and *um he
the Saviour Imuself the "oject of
caiucat i.e! No; this ufamy has bm-u
reserved ter iIk B-rsians of'he m*it»-
teeu n ceutury.; Fumt' lias set the
ex.uiiple ef prat ana i ions passing all
tliH bounds of impiety hiitiertokn >un!
the subject ol political l>berl.y, and j j ( j s gu) .|>tisiii^ tliai such a people
no hope but in the things ot jyhould plunge into avi-iy excess ol
world.” I here arc, no doubt, cx vice, that tin y should <*• intuit Iriglit-
cept ons,* but they are rare, mere j j U | L .,i| Ue g, Ul< ij cause tin streets of
specks in tho vast ocean of infidelity, j £> „ j # t ly q ow v *iih biwoii? Are ut
and materialism. What a prospect j ^esc* the proper trui s of 1
for France, when you consider that
$ very poll l i c pi ° ^ u uh'f F } UWgmatos
In Parris!
It will seem incredible to your
read* rs what prejudices exist in the
capital against every tliini that has
any relation to religion. While the
cholera nimbus \vr.s making the hi st
frightful ravages, a religious man of
distinguished learning w rote *n arti
cle containing some allusions to Pruv-
dence; twoor throe observations sini-
ip]y expressed upon the interposi
tions of God in tiie afloiis ol the
wo'Id. This article was sent to ohm
of the mas' moderate and mast, wide
ly circulated journals of the capital*
with a request that it might he pub
lished. The committee of publica
tion examined the article, but jelos-
ed to insert it, and when asked the
reason by the author, they replied:
JuurTirliele is good, well written nap
p'd v conceived, it contains just senti
ments, but wa cannot publish it, ee-
CAUSE VUIl SUB RCRIB ERS WILL CALL
US BIGOTS. ENTHUSIASTS. ANdJeSU-
ists! To such a state of things,
Masses. Editors, have we arrived in
the capital of France. Ar, editor o
a journal dares not print tho mime of
G*d. nor speak of Providence in his
pages, last ki9 readers should charge
him iv:th hi«rolrv and iwsuitisui! Could
part, sup|iorled Us poor lather at a
hospital.
Aiaigio. an ItaSau Puot, of the six-
towmh century, |f considerable g*-u
guuius and leuni'eg. followed his la-
b ai'ksaiilh, till he
old.
ol
w.«s eighteen y
t
B uedici tia.'duum, one of the
I turned m«u
worked tor man
trade, Mul ol <
the course ot hi
etuboia'e w-o«k.
ot the Aucien's!
The cwlehijted
Gelti, whou tiol.pi
av sixteenth c ntury
ye. rs ai bis father’s
shoemaker; and in
life puh ish,id a very
on i he Skoeiu iking
proper
~“Gf>c more fact will show iu what
extent religion tus been uradio
fimulhe hearts eflb* Fr-indi people.
A Imge body ot infl ii utiai men, con-
sisliug of pnors ul Fraumr, depatins,
aud men oi loaruing, .in* MSsueialen
iu a ftuh icatiou of .i penulai jounul,
enti|!k-d, ' Journal of usejul kaowl
edge.” This work, wL-i.'h aj>p«-a,s
once a month, aud costs bui fa ir
francs a year, has been circulated cx
triusiveiy llnoughout Franco, a.nl
uow reckuns seventy thousand sub
subscribers. The enterprise cer
tainly deserves the approbation of al!
enlightened men. It is a poweilal
means oi diffusing light and knowl
edge omong the people, who arc still
very ignorant in some provinces of
this country. Every subject is intro
diiced into this jtumal except reli
gion! God IS excluded. The <J c-
'iiiib ol the imuiuialily of the soul is
not unco uiculiout d. It contains re -
thing rcspeciiog eleruity; uolbinj < x-
ctjii ihal which relates lo ibo mere
umporal welfare of inau!
1 wish I could relate to you lac Is
less painful, but I must declare the
tHiiii. Should I havu any tiling more
consoling to communicate I shall ho
i witu eagoarnuss, and I hope this
will he the caso wtion I come la
speak of Fieneb Prolesiauiism.—
rtius far I liave pointed you partiej-
laiiy to the inligiuus slate ol Paris,
and oi the laigc tuwus. Nothing eau
he nmigiuod more deploruble. Allei
havii-.i* employed the sliougRSi cx
till fall sh»rtofthc
Italian writer,
t!'(* high diguitv
oi tvousul of i lie Pi .*i"■ ■ u»iac Aeudt*my,
still cuiilcmud *, w a'k at his oiigiu. l
oiV S 'Vs:i) °i as line Vni of a ceinuiou
mci banic, mi used wh*u a lilt! hoy
to open a book, aud insisted upon hi*
confining himself to his loom for lh<
whole day. He was finally banisha.
from his lathei’s house, and compel
led"to seek his fortune abroad. He
•contrived lo maintain himself for a
while in a neighboring town, with a
poor widow', by working at his trade,
devoting his spare moiuerts to his fa
vorite employment of reuding, when
ever t>« could borrow* a book, lit his
twculy-fiflii or tweuty-sixth year, ht
went to London, without ft letter ot
recuumendatinn, and with scare ely
any thing in his pockol. except ;•
manuscript treaties *f his own en Flux
i»ns, ruoie valunbie than .my pre
ceding tiaulise on tho subject in tun-
guug*.
I he grnat Sir William Jones n*»
m mast asioni-hmg .'Xanipm oi appli
cation tw study, m bpilr. ol all difli-
iUt.'iins. > 1 is '.Jiixiai was, never to
iiKglo^.t any opportunity of improve-
uiiiw whieli prescruod itself It was
u fixed principle with him never to
neglect piseeming ton successful
teiraimitiiH wimi he had once tirlih-
uratoly undertaken.
William Hutton, author of the
Histniy of BiiHiiugham, Fellow o!
the Antiquriah Society, &c. was the
sou of a urking wool comb hi* ;<t Der
by. My poor inolheisais Hutton.
How is it with the publisher?
. ,ys cash for the pspei be prints
,rt—cash for wages—far house
nd all the raatmguncias of his bu
'mss; he lira out of His money, not I
veoks or months, but for yoars,
less he prassos for payasent. At 1
iniv price to which compelion has re*
incecl newspapers, how is it possibhk
*r any one to conduct a business of
Vis sort, Without payments be mndb
n advance, Or at least with regultri-
, , and at reosonabla intervals.
' There are those jvho suppose that
'xsnupeis yield a large profit; we
v« **ven known Boaio good people,
he suppose that the publishers of^
i-em can afford to fUrnjsh them gra*
tuoasly, tharefore they outer trouble
their heads about payirg for theas.
gome poi sons arc evea offended if an
Account is presented to them, as tha’
it wtis intended to pick their packets.
JVht. ht.
ouai AcV Kjb'tfarrived, sliv has suffer-
nd itiHin, iviliiu leaf, lu tako her
shura.’ From bis seventh lo ins
sn%' u'i» «x^i*mpurauvuus voraos | lourUeoth year he worked m a silk
„ _ I ittiil -—and vias then bound as an a >
pi..mien io a blocking »\c-.vt'i in Not-
uugluilll
J .rti. b F rsustii), tlie celebrated
nb >ui me «iHr *
fins fa:Inc u- Hujdu, the grout
iimsical oujnposcr, *vaa a wIihoI-
iviiglit, and filbid also tbw b iiublo oc-
f a n&toiiy while bis mothwr wruei w*® HbiiOiioin> y i» one of HU'
him with bigotry and josuitisui
you have imagined in America that
infidelity had made such progress?
And observe, it was not done by no
obscure journal, or scirrilaus paper,
intended for the .laveru and dram-shop,
hut by a journal which circulalos a- j «,j css;o..s, nr
along'the most enlightened classes of [ trul ^»
the community, «and what is justly re
garded as one of the most respecta
ble in France! Such a journal is a-
f, a id of offmidiug its subscribers, by
saying that God interposes in the af
fairs of the world! This unhappy
word Jesuist, does immense evil; it is
<!render! like ill# plague, and many
dure unt bvoiv their relisjious sent:
,„ C1 ,„ ,or »<ui» oi oonig railed Jcswsts.
The Jesuists have done morn miury , - .... .... .
to r-l.gH.ua Ilian Volloire aoj nil 111- “ olJ '“I 1,1 ? ) ea ’
hCJ.i fhllnwi-hcr. to-otlur. TU., V **» ““ d
trafficked in religion, they oiadi* it a
trade, an instrument of avarice and
ambition,
„V V. Observer's Correspondent.
ft ELF MADE MEN.
From the Quarto ly Hrg'utc.r
'file late Protessor il^-nco, oi Gat
tingfii, •« ws ouo ot iho grealust clas
sical scholars oi bis own or of any
Bite. lie Bjer Cl'dvd the q>-«at Jonu
Malbius Goiaor as Professor oi Eio-
ci irnro at Gotlingcu, an otli c, ivhivu
i i 1 - - • ° ,
VVUH.1)
atl ijc-
tious of his lectuics, he placed him
self nuariy at ttie head «f the ck-.s-
. ^.rrisical scholars of his ago Yet thu
lust thirty-two or tbiny-thrm- y*iais
cupaium
.vus ai liio saiUC tuuc u servant in I
lilt: irsiablislinionol »d a mrigtihoriu;. .
.mi ij 1 mall.
fbc iallin* ot John Opie, th*
greai Laglish portrail painter, was a
W.nLiMf, oui p-ulor in Coi uwall. Opiv
vv s i ( .ut*d na.ii lb# bottom ol *a savv-
p.t, acre b« was employed in cut
ling ,uod, iu lb« I’i'otrssoi9tiip ol
Poinliag, in i.o Royal Acado-
rny.
Tim parniitv of Custalio, the oIh-
g.-ui L.ini tie Asia, or ol ih# Piblo,
were poor j)eusi<,i s, who livid among
Lilts tnouulaius ol Dauphiny.
nii Juhu Piithuu'., bishop ot
»• orccsiei, obiaiunc l.is oducauois i»y
walking on tool to Oxf .id, aud girttiog
(iiupl yaieni, iu the (irst iustutirc, us
uksis'.dut m the kiicbeu of Exetor
College.
the lather of Iuigo Jou«s, the
great architect, was a cloth-worker;
ami he ljimsoli' also, was designed
o.igma.ly for a mechanical employ
ment.
Sir Ediuuud Saunders, chiuf justice
of the King’s Beurb, IU tbs# reign of
Cliarlos II, who ori^iua-tiy uu errand
boy at ilie- Inns ol court.
Linnaeus, the iilusirious founder of
the science ol liaUny was fur some
lime, apprenticed lo a shoe-ma
ker.
The iumous IV* Johnson worked
for sume time as a b. ickluycr or rna
son, 'and lot not tin m blush,’ says
I tho bisioiiau Fuller, ‘that have, but
| thgso that have nut, a lawful calling,
llo helped in the bidding of the new
strucluio af Iiinrolrf tun, when hav
ing a trow ell io bis hand, he had a
Cook iu his pocket. 7
Dr. (s*ac Maddox, who, in the
reign of Georg# II., bee nu? bishop,
first ci St. Asaph, and afterwards of
Worcester, ami who wiqIA an able
defence of the doctrine anil discipline
ot the Church oi England 1 , !os' both
his parents at an early age, cud was
placed, in lue first instance, by his
o\v» ar*.
D<ie&# DJI .A h'Cft RX 0 3 eitt«'JlT ftT.UA
0*IiZW0“4.T nr R*V*»# DM.R rrCae-wa
fscxA h.(srjt o»y-ah«fT, zorz 0*10 o»«rw-
JIT, »*>MET Sh»eXP4.tfT. CCrV»4 «*•!»
•>1111WJ1T O’AW'RZ *i O’tO'.lCalT. ■MV*-
Z <»Xk eiUMOso^ Llrh R^ Ct» *IrJt TC»-
Jiq>«R *IP<i I-A44W- •'O'T’JIT.
l KMCs 4BXh>% (Alrh RJi GWR JIVA *lr#loV-
jioxyrn n?-a^ ,ie&.p tcc.a^-ti# o»*i.A4-
uiei# than once, with one iuiact uponjtfr. ywor tb m da(V
hei knee, ami a tew name ban^injg,^-)d’lilx^^'T DlJoi-p-o»ir-nj> i*4t; 0*-
1k>TA#PT (th» T«r<>i:a M7.ua
J#*7. J0*S'ff4T, 9>PStJ. RW*I f0*!i®avr*
C»h>liZ Rj» Oil *AI“V\ (KXh 0*TP
T , ?0 5 tJ.-7i4T Un nS'QtiJlT DWoTP
II! T‘i. DVO-Z (MiLctT. JC0T1U 0“.’l*V-RtfT
o*v-urt. yw to o»#ced" TVtfJid'r,
tr.TT ,»Xh 0“?PT ctr# O-leO-BVT zor D-
lr«XL4 T.S^Aer.'lT T,S,to»t<fcivT ^\V0
I)J1* y i' *V* ThT» DlnTT <*XI» A'7P «(.*
fisji*#* z«v M rypiR'.i 0“KJ\4T wtrovr yn-
i pr» IIP t»sJ2 RtfT, e<rtw«z
kt; dsiiz yrv oV:X»» p-xaiR-a-
T.
DIitV-e^'t.I-A^ n#OD«y. At 9A\df
Z*V* Dtf T I-it'rt.I Jl-4 Sh<L.
pj*tfjut. Kdty-vH^yii TarpiRAJt orasp-
&r*y. t,*r^ nz^r^Eo-v* mi rtMSD-
sry, O'Oi'itr.r-mv-otyh rfc%ji jid ro-s-
»\oiyz %<v* (Pdt’jic <vr:®cr-A
ryth Tismm. ©-a fTPK GyuajiA.
0 5 T , An.!fyt«Z0- WPJ1 8A,<R yWh4-IAA^*V»
ipAirni.TVBrp rtvc5,i>5, svciyz o*sy
r,z AA^y otv ryivc?-^ kr ajbp
TRto-lry Tyi.h o-t.cr.va.f’a G«yz o-ojc
oo-t, o.^ir j T50-!TT, Dff ryhtrjitP''
•v* pr iiaji-it Tcrxyn hEC*«»ua4WJl
■ryp-crK ir.z t,tv- .’Sxaliprp^.l T«t.4Ay-
c> 5 Pivy.i»*yii t«tp i*!?,
c.syk ji4«v KKoyyT, kp^at, Eh<ayii
ter ry^fle-^ *y y n* EG.t,aiGEoie*i
uol fncs being leiuittcd, as had been ! Rtt^o-T ojt*v M z lezy# 1 thz^oy *r-
donc in ilie c.-.sus of Newton snri ] ftfrAvosfl TyRh Gh4Ayx>R sipXw dbla.
mobi. ii riiarkablft insUmces of sell-
eiincall-in,, which the Iherary world
h s s<-cn. Ills lather was in ihc
h.nuule conuraou ef a Uay-labor-
ei.
At the age of seven or eight, yeung
Furgusou actually discovered two ol
the most important elomentary truths
in ijwi tunics—the lever, am! the
wi'fccl and axel. IIa afterwards iiit
upon nthrtis, without teacher or book,
and with no tool but a simple tinning
laibe, and a little knife. While he
was (ceding his flock, in the employ
ment ol'a neigliboi ing farmer, he used
to busy himself making models of
I iiulU, epinning wheels, Sto. (Inill)2
i tiie day, and in studying the sluts at
! night-
Before his death, he was elected a
Fellow of the ffayai Society; tho us
0r>«.fr, *ayz ^i.o^Pdvto- t,w'-,tyh aj»'-
tspotsji.j sr.z Tyi*Gr.9*v»
MJ RA.4 vax.4 T uLO-tcTI-J?..! 1)4 t»t4A.
Thomas ^imsoii. Gc#rgo HI. wi.o,
wit uu a buy, ivjs o*;c asionally among
tin.* audilcrs fit iiis public lecture?,
boon oftur Ins accession lo the tin one,} &
gave him a pension ol !i ty pounds perl laviTiiiVoc# Rivwa^-oir (wye e>tfc-
aouuin iVurn the privy purse. j
FAYING DEBTS.
It is a fact, we believe, that news
paper debts are held by a largo ma
jority of those who contract them ot
io^erioi ohligationjo almost, any olh-
— , . I inst itiiriy-ivvo or iniriy-Mirce y**ajs i'<av...u, m mdi hhimm
aims art ! of his lil'«, he speul in almost im ea- J tV»«nd» with a pastry cook.
avows religious sentimculs
journals of Paris, which are read by
one or two millions of Frenchmen,
cannot speak ef God, or allude tu any
doctrine of religion, except in terms
ot nwckery and reproach!
* Another fact will illustrate with
equal clearness tho irreligious spirit
of France. There are in Paris many
print shops and stalls, where pictures
and fiiigraviwgs of «very kind are ex-
exposed for snle. The proprietors
of these shops of course exhibit such
prints oiily as will please the public
taste. And what do you suppose is
The character of these engravings?
In many of them Christianity is treat-
pd with marked contempt. One print
represents a political personage (oil
ing up ft hill, bcariug ail enormous
sunt struggle with the must nt-pres | - bia-c Milnor, Dean of Carlis-
poveity. His father was u pour I ■•’i "bo filled the chair which Isaac
cross: intended ns a parody of ope off week
weaver with a large family. Iloiu
soys ‘llial liu lias often seen his moth
er return home ot Saturday encning,
from an unsuccessful effort tu sell ue
goods, which his lather had manufac
tured, weeping & wringing tier hands,’
He entered tho Uuivorsily of Lcip-
sic with but four shillings in his pock
et, aud iiolliing to depend upon bul
the small assistance which lie miglu
receive from his good father, a par
simonious old gentleman, who scarce
ly ever wrote to him, excopt to in
veigh against his indolence—often ac
tually addrossiug his U:tms on the
outside To Mr. Heine, Idler, Leip-
sic ’ During 11 this while lie allow
ed himself only two nights’ sleep in a
Newton h id occupied at Cambridge,
that ol Lucasian Professor of Mathe-
uiaii‘ s, was originally a weaver;—as
was also bis brother Joseph, the well
known author of llie Church ilislo-
ry.
Of the sain# trade, in his yoioger
days, was Dr. Joseph While, fio-
fessor of A: abic at Oxford.
Thomas S imon, a very aulo Eu-
glisb MaUioinatician, preLssor ol
Mathematics at Woolwich Readonly,
and fellow of the Royal Society, was
the soil of .a weaver After having
acquired a very slight acquaintance
with reading, lie was placed in tho
shop with his father. Instead of giv
ing any encouiagument to his son’s'
loudness for reading, the father, alter Hay; a profit received day by day.
(sznr 5 sr;t<<?y* it-Kir 1 * eiry Jdvseo-.# jd-
titTBw TF.T. ,ihVV*yz (VIi.TT-T (PE-
ocr.s ■qr.rf t>»/usr..i i c,,s y viv,?..( saqscx,'
vi.) Tcvyz f.tC’ nyjiT-e .jya-
rtc-51-..i.ia dtiCO* ;y,T.T-9 ®*«
zp»« ny.'.ajT iutvAA irv'tyi, j,si tgsp-
tfSE sizrr* jiktra.i bSh-ft-T*. o j «r..u?yh
er. It is rw( ifit los (rue, ib.n upon « vy y owy-v wn.n ryh
every p ijaciple oi inmness and m th# <Rai-vki; sgiiF./sj,?. ‘ir. !;•>?$ t<oxpj®wi.
strictest riglil, ih*y are of as high ; -* »^y^*i<4-- ww.i>ii irVoSmivcs jmiji-
obligatiou us dobls oi any description <«.)‘V , M'y!* lime sa.) o-ii-ics. >-* -xrrA
Club#. Tyi>h O (T’.A,! 1 0 OT.O-R O-MverOH" PR
A man pays cash for his daily fond j &zt<i° jtsyjists* do*
and (l*> h'Hi, mm alt lor mechanic j moju ►y^tfy’' h* ax, a a fhWh4*i. &-
works, fie pay interest in advance, •v.^yu m y troon .amtty aa
upou his bank debts, or his crcdii is' - 1 * rru-z t.ir i r «v> i nono-r^.i ajup je4-
dishtnorod. -So far Irorn paying iuj^o®.(#A^ chmjgi neio—
advance, many of our friends think j 1b<R,E Kt'«»yii Go-y oeir’-n yw EhpR
they acl iibter.> 1 ly if they pay lo llicii j i«gp<*.t»it v <>*-i sz^yr-v^z (T>hE«r-
nevvspapers at the end of the year;! G<«y«)yh rern o»u-^
mid men who plume themselves upon
their punctuality and scrupulously
hkiiast dealing in other respects, will
let limit newspapers accounts run for
(mo, two, three ov more years', if
uol called upou, until the amount of
lhe account produces almost an ina
bility to pay it, and not unfrequcntly
u doubt of its accuracy.
Now, why should a man pay his
butcher er his bake, hi* tavlor or
his shoemaker, or his landlord, mire
willingly than lio pay. nio puuiisnoi
of a newspaper to ivhioh he is a sub
scriber? 'l'he butcher and the ba
ker turn over their money perhaps
fifty times in tho year. The money
received to day is laid out for cattle,
or a fresh supply of. flour, bwforo tn«
(he mid of the week, which is sold
out again the week following. A
profit of tent per cent, upon ihuir sales
may therefore bo a profit of 600 per
cent per anuum upon their ii.ist out
hr»ot-. o*ry<n>yh (re,.! g<*y tctr thu*
,s<«Ur3> n<r osor-ejtae\aA.
TW® O s Iu*V(lt*I.
fll^Nlast June 7t!i, vffichael '" iters
” end Juhnsun Furemun were appoint
ed as executors of the estate of George
Waters deceased in Ahmohee District, al
ter giving necessary bonds, required by
law of the ext eutor.
Therefore all persons indebted to" the*
said estate art required by law to com«
forward and make payments within 12
months from the l6thof.Juno. Also all
persons having claims against the estate
are required to come lbriwd and irrsen
their claims withiif the ah ve mention**
time.
• MICHAEL WATERS,
JOHNSON FORE JIMS’
f. 1 I
"11TE fcSa^’S pe9o®o» r anirg
▼ » tor antro o hfa a due ac b Har-
nage for nine dollars seventy fi e cent
."■wen by Nimrod R- Wlieofo r t , .| B D
Wheeler the J5 Deo 1827—As we have
)nce pa (1 smd uoie we ur< drtern ned net
to pay it agninApril 1,8'b UiS‘J
N. B. &. 11. D. WHEELER.
44—il5‘