The constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 1823-1832, April 17, 1832, Image 1

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Art. 7. All the locations authorized by. fchis treaty, with « he exception of that to Benjamin Marshall, shall be made in can-' fortuity with the lines of me surveys ; and the Creeks relit quUlt ail claim for improve ments. | Art. 8. An additional annul j of twelve thousand dollars shall be paid to the Cieeks , far the term of tive years, and thereafter the , said annuity shall be teiiuced to tea thous- , and dollars, and shall lie paid lor the term ( of fifteen years. All the annuities due to . the Creeks shall be paid in such manner as the tribe may dii ect. Art. 6. Forthe purpose of paying certain 1 debts due by the Creeks, and io relieve ‘ them in their present dis tossed condition, the sum «i one handled thousand dollars 1 shall be paid to the Creek tribe, as soon may 1 be, alter (he ratification hereof, to he applied 1 to the payment of their just debts, and then to their own relief, and to be distributed as i they may direct, and which shall be in con sideration iif all improvements. Art. 10. The sum of six cen thousand dollars shall be allowed as a compensation to ihe delegation sent to this place, and lor ihe payment of their exp.uses, -and of (he claims against them. Art. 11. The following claims shall be paid by the U. States! i For ferries, bridges and causeways, three thousand dollars; provided that the same shall become the properly of the U. Slates. For the payment ot cer aio judgments ob tained against the chiefs, eight thousand five hundred and seventy di Mars. For losses for which they suppose the U. States responsible, seven thousand seven hundred and ten dollars. For the payment ot improvements under the treaty of 1829 one thousand dollars. The three following annuities shall be paid for life : To Tuske-hcw-haw Cusetaw, two hun deed dollars. To the Blind Usher King, one hundred dollars. To Neah Micco, one hundred dollars. There snail be paid the sum of fifteen dol lars far each person who has emigrated with out expense to the U. States, but the whole sum allowed under this provtsiotf shall not exceed fourteen hundred dollars. There shall be divided among the persons who sufioied in consequence of being pre vented (ram emigrating, three thousand dol lars. The land hereby ceded shall remain as a fund from which all ihe foregoing payments except those in the ninth and tenth articles, shall be paid. Art. 12. The United Slates are desir ous that toe Creeks should remove to the country west of the .Mississippi, and join their countrymen there, and, fur this pur pose, it is agreed that as fast as the Creeks are prepared to emigrate, they shall bo removed at the expense of the U. States, and shall receive subsistence while upon the journey, and for one year after their ar rival at their new homes. Provided, how ever, that this article shall not be constru ed so as to compel any Creek Indian to emigrate, but they shall be free to go or stay, as they please. Art. 13. There shell also be given to each emigrating warrior a rifle, moulds, wiper and ammunition, and to each family one blaukot. Three thousand dollars, to be expended as the President may diiect, shall be allowed, for the term of twenty years, for teaching their children. As soon as half their people emigrate, one blacksmith shall bo allowed them, anti another when two thuds’emigrate, together with one ton of iron and two hundred weight of steel annually for each blacksmith. These black smiths shall be supported for twenty years. Art. 14. The Creek country west of the Mississippi shall be solemnly guaranteed to the Creek Indians, nor shall any Btate or Territory ever have a right to pass laws for the government of such Indians, but they shall be allowed to govern ihemselves, so far as may be compatible wilh the general jurisdiction which Congress may think pro per to exercise over them. And the United Statas will also defend them from the un just hostilities of other Indians, and will also, as soon as the boundaries of the Creek country West of the Mississippi are ascer tained, cause a patent or grant to be exe cuted to the Creek tribe, agreeably to the third section of the act of Congress of May 2d, 1830, entitled 11 An act to provide fur an exchange of land-, with the Indians re siding in any of the States or Territories, and for their removal West of the Missis sippi.” Art. 15. This treaty shall be obligatory on the contracting parties, as soon as the same shall be ratified by the United Slates. In testimony whereof, the said Lewis Cass, and the undersigned Chiefs of the said tribe, have hereunto set their hands, at the City of Washington, this 24th day of March, A. 1). 1832, LEW. CASS. Opolhlenolo, Tuchebatcheehadgc, Efiematl't, 'J'uchebatche Micco, i A Tomack Micco, W illiam McQilvery, ■Benjamin Marshall. fn the presence of Samuel Bell, William il. King, John- Tipton, William Wilkins, ! C. C. Clay, J. Speight, Sami. W. Mardis, ! J. C. [sacks, John Crowell, I, A. t Benjamin Marshall, "1 1 Thomas Carr, Lint era relers, John 11. Brodnax, J " (I I ( (INSTITUTIONALIST, g .■aiaUSTJI: r . TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1832. OH the Weather ! the weather ! We have j ( now arrived at the Kill of April, and have had bat ! f two genuine spring days as yet —Saturday was a t delightfully bright and mild sunny day—-on Sunday ‘ it was hazy but pleasant,’till at night, when there was a slight shower, and yesterday, the squadrons of old d-tolus u ere careering in our atmosphere — as though they had been asleep all through their j legitimate month, and were making up (or lost I time. We have fell their influence through and 1 through our thin frame, & fee! much better diipos- ed to fold our hands to our bosoms—than to write An old friend of ours, in the course of bis busi- s ness, sold an Almanac to a countryman —who, we J suppose, valued such a piece of furniture as n.uch ( on account of its weather-wisdom as any thing else ; ( but, alas ! after a few months, our chapman comes 1 down again in a (it of indignation, and complains 1 that 11 that ere almanac wau’t no account”—that it “ hadn’t told the weather right wonsl.”—lt was during the period when Napoleon was “ Lord of the ascendant.” "Oh” said our friend " Ihe rea- ] son must be that Buonaparte has turned every thing i upside down—even the weather.” We know not 1 whether this reasoning satisfied clod —but we up- ' prebend as good reasons might be given far the , failure of the weather column in the almanacs of 1832.—1 t has been a remarkable year—and will, , probably be still more so—our own country bus i been several times on the eve of a political con vulsion— and we know not what may occur before • the dissolution of the congeries of moral discord at Washington. J Then in the physical world “ The Cholera”! cries one ; " the Cholera” another ; “ Is it conta gious ?” “ Yes” says one big wig—“ nonsense” iscreams another—" Don’t live high” —“ Indulge * your appetite”! "None are afflicted but poor folks, and they are generally half starved. ” Again the Comet—or, as a poor hod carrier from the sod calls it, “the Comick—bimen its ugly fa a lures” ! Ob, ’tis no wonder ! such and so many t ' causes coinciding, dial our mouths are carried back out of their proper seasons; winter into autumn, 8 and spring into winter. Ws lookup, the oilier day ” the Smuggler” by |Mr. Banim —author of " Tales of the O'Hara Fain a'ily,” and “ the Denounced.” We commenced it s 'with very sanguine expectations of gra.ifioation.— V\ e have not been disappointed. Mr. Banim has fully sustained the character which his former works . gained for him—though the style and characters > are entirely different, from those of liis other Tales s 1 the scene being removed from his native island to - | England. 8 j There are some passages of the most intense and - thrilling intar«at, a«J wm ,ra sure our readeis wul > be amply repaid by the perusal of il. t ' ' Savarrab, April X 4. FIRE Between 10 and 11 o’clock last night -a fire suddenly burst fiom tne large wooden Coaon )! Warehouse of Mr. Joseph Uauabl, on ilie Bay, r corner of Abercorn street, which in a short lime I enveloped every pan of u, together with lid bales 'of Cotton stored wiiliin it. By ihe exeniu.na of die ®|Fire Company and citizens, however, ihe neighbor . ing ware house* of Mr. Joseph Gumming were sav y ed. The loss, as we leanil lasi night, is about SJJ,. e 000, of which j>27,000 is insured, principally in I Augusta. i | >The budding, it is said, was fired by an incendi ’ »ry—and the large mass of Couon (1100 bales; s was still burning when our paper went to press, 1 without any immediate danger however to proper -1 ,ty in its vicinity, (_ Georgian. 1 - i ' . 1 Since our last publication we have learnt that the - Cotton destroyed on Friday night in Mr. Ganahl’s . Warehouse, amounted to one thousand and iifiy . two bales, valued at the present prices, at about j 1634,000, of which $20,000 was insured, as follows . r Augusta Insurance Company, SIO,OOO ; Howard’s Insurance Company New York, 80,000 ; Farmer’s Insurance Company, New York, SIO,OOO. The f Cotton was owned principally in Augusta. So ra I pid was the progress of the flames that only ten I bales were saved from the building. Ibid. i Paterson, ( N. J ] April 4.—On Thursday night a fire broke out in ihe book bindery of Mr J. S. J Noble, in Van Houten street, and in a few minutes I the building in which the fire first appeared, and ■ those adjoining it on both sides, were in flames, i . Five buildings were consumed, three dwellings, the , book store and bindery, and a store not occupied. , I'be whole of Mr. Noble’s extensive and valuable circulating library consumed. I Rail Roads in France.—V he Messager des Cham ’ bres says, “We are much occupied at Paris with Kail Roads. Besides the road from Paris to Pon toise, the contract lor which has just been granted ’ to Messrs. Henry, Maft’et and L)e Busby, the com . panics have projected the making of rail roads from Paris to Lyons, and from Slrasburg to Paris. It is said that Sir Henry Parnell has proposed a railway from Calais to Paris. Should a similar communica tion be established between London and Dover, from sixteen to seventeen hours would then suffice for the journey from Paris to London." ( Honourable Conduct. —We heard, before that Mr. 1 i Pr ‘°f» one of the managers of the Park Theatre, and late manager of the Drury Lane Theatre in Lon- 1 don, leu this city for that, between two and three I months ago, that the object of his voyage was the .lonorable one alluded to in the following paragraph. [iV. Y. Eve. Rost. j ! Z he London Observer states that the bankruptcy of .4r. Price, instead of exciting commiseration, was magnified by certain of hi* creditors into a crime, and they were not wanting in their invectives against him. as a man destitute of honest principles; but Mr. Price, though armed with the Lord Chan-1 cellor’s certificate, immediately on his arrival last' week from New-York, (in twenty.three days,; dis-' charged every debt, amounting to several thousand pounds I The Unknoui Pcnchn -An in-lividu-il It-,* du ring ’.he last six'o" seven yoats, offered Ills ,ei-vicesj «s a teacher, gratuitously, ami has conducted s-’lm ih in different par-s "ft he United 'stales, w mre Uia niters have been accepted, in u very able manner, always concealing bis nanie. yesterday’s mail brought us the advertisement headed "pro Lonu publico," wit it tbe cash inclosed to pay for its inset iion. VV; would wish some friends to pour chil dren liete would attend to this offer, as we have a great desire to see among ns an indii dual who ha-, excited so much t "losity, and so unostentatiously conferred benevolent actions on the rising gem ra tion. Aloutcuil Commit, I A New York Editor truly remarks —“A war - growing out of* disposition in any government of Europe, to support lion Miguel upon the throne ol Portugal, would he a most disreputable, ns well as unprofitable affair. Portugal, at) now governed, is not good for any thing, either to herself, or any other .European nation. Sure there is nothing in the character of the usurper, that ought to excite sympathy or compassion in any government, or even in the feelings of any individual. It he can be. un throned, and the nation fall into belter hands, (worse there is. no danger of) it would be advan tageous to the people, and to other nations with which they may have political or commercial rela tions." Singular cure of Dropsy. A pei-snn in Glocesler, j who, for several years, has been afflicted with Ns‘| cites, and for which the operation of I aracenhsis has been performed several times within the last twelve months, has had large quantities of. a thick oily finid evacuated at each operation. At 'he last operation, thirty pints were evacuated \ and what , was still more remarkable, it exhaled the strong odor of mnsk. It was drawn by Dr. Perkham, of Pawtuxet, who has made a chemical examination of the finid, to ascertain its nature and composition. What the result is we have not learned. . ' [Providence Journal. COMMERCIAL. I - • LTVEUPO jL, February 29. The demand for Colton last week was on a limited scale, the sales only tracking 10,140 bales, including 240 Sea Island at 10 to 15 ; 10 Stained 6i ; 5170 Uplands 5J 7 1-8 (20 at 7J 3 8 ; ) 1320 Orleans 5J 5 5-8 to 6 5-8. With the exception of 300 bales for export, the business done was confined to con sumers, who in tha early part of the week, purclias -1 ed on rather more favorable terms, but suhsc - quenlly, the market became more steady, and any - previous decline was regained j the import du ring the week was 20,2 0 hales. The sales of Cotton for the past four dais, are about 16,000 ' bales, with an advance 'in prices of fully 1-3 per lb. but a coi responding improvement not hav ing taken place yesterday, in the Manchester mar r ket, ours has had less animation to day ; about 1500 of the foregoing are on speculation. t HAVRE, March 1. COTTON. —We have had during the last terl days, a steady demand for Cottons, at full prices, J lor all descriptions of United Slates short staples, s The sales comprise 6234 bales, u» follow? 2099 s bales of Louisianaa' 84 > 106. ( his'last price for a choice lot of 52 B.j) 3848 B. Uplands, Mobile, Alabama or Tennessee, a 74 to 92, and 267 U. * Pernambuco, at 101 to 107 i the whole duty paid. Imports—lo73s bales, (exclusive of the outgo of 1 the Henry Lee. »N otAftft to MockVvuUVtv ». BAPK STATE OP GEORGIA, ? Savannah, 7th April, 18.i2. 5 AN Election for sin Directors on the part of the Steckho tiers in this Tank will be h -Id in the Hanking House in Savannah, in MONDAY ; the 7th day of Miy next, to serve for (we ; ve 1 months from (but date. The poll will be open -1 vd at 10 A, U, and close at 2 o’clock, P M, A. Porter, Cashier. ’ April 14 4 87 t ■ Cowrt of lowuuim Vleas,? March Term, 1632. [T appearing to the Court, by the return of the Sher.ff, that the (o lowing Special Jurors have been duty summoned to rttcod this C< urt, and have made default, Ordered, That they he 'ach ftaed in ihe Mini of twenty Dollars, unless > uflicient excuse be fled with the Clerk oh oath, s at or before the first day of ihe next Term, to . wit;—W, G. Crtmes, John Madden and Anno t iain U. Woolsey. And that the followr g Petit Jurors also, be i >ng summoned and making default. Or deed i That they e»ch be fined in ihe t urn of Ten Dot , -lars, unles- like excuse be rendered, to wit • 'A'illiam Eve, M W. Sm-fll, John Fudge, lien)*- , nin Anshy, Aden Cr>dg and George Summers. Extract from the Minutes. Win. Jackson, Clerk, Arril 17 87 OJ* Notice.—Mr. William i Thompson, is my authorized Attorney, during my absence hum the Slate. JNO. CRANE. Augusta, April 11, 1832 3t 86 JNUIICEI TIME Copartnership heretofore existing be . tween the Subscribers, under the firm o' i lohw Edoah & Co. in Augusta Georgia, is this day dissolved by mutual consent. Jeremiah Kyle, John Edgar. New York, March 2?, 1P32- 3«lm Et\ga¥ j attend to the u settled business of the I ** f irm, and requests all persons indebted ( to it, to make early payment—he will aiso con jtinue the business on hia own account, April 13 3t 86 Clerks Office, Inferior Court, 977/ APRIL, 1832. RUBER T H. REID, Esq p.s Guardian of a per j am of color called Augustus Bedenfield*, J I about 20 years of age, makes application for •.. » 'Certificate of Freedom to issue in terms of thi j act of the General Assembty passed in 1826 j all person* interested will lake notice that th- ! sune will issue Ircrn and after the 83,f instant { unless good cause be shewn to the contrary, James M’Laws Clerk. ; AprP 10, IRJ2 S*t 85 Kook vuu\ Job Vi'lnting* Neatly e.vecuieti at ana 30,000 doll it ps, IVjjf To-A\tvvt o\N ’s> A\aU, Will he received the dvaiciut.f the Ne\v-York Consolulnted LOTTERY, Class No. 10, for I 83 c 2. Result m nit- known ut BEE fits’ UlUcc ut Eight o’clock, IV M. 00 Numbers—9 Drawn Oillois. SCHEME. 1 Prize of 20 000 Dollar*. I do of G,OOO Dollars. ) do of 2,300 Dollars. 1 do of 2 270 Dollars. 1(> do of !l 000 Dollars. 10 do of 500 Dollars, 20 tlo of 250 Dollars. j 40 do of 100 Dollars. 51 do of 50 Dollars. 51 do of 40 Dollars, 51 do of 30 Dollars. 51 do of 25 Dollars. 102 do of 20 D dial s, 1530 do of 10 I) dlais. 11475 do of 3 Dollars, l ickuls £5, Halves iV2 50, Quarters St 25 WwrC VHWcu'A I‘r’vz.ft lAat. DRAWN NUMBERS rtf' THE New-York Consolidated LOTTERY, Class. No. 9, fur 1832. 30, 38, So, »7, IE 51, 37, 35, Lowest Prize $lO. UNION AN Alt 3- a® v jvJP 1 _a. Tj i 5 Class, No. 7. 15, % 17, if, 58. 00, 23, 51, Yf, Lowest Prize SSff. Prizes Cashed and ICT* Prompt attention paid to ordets nt bibiubs 9 YwiAxmatfc VXVvec,, No. 241, Broad-Street, 1 |C/“ Address W. P, Beers. ’ April 17 It j —T HAY. f 5Q Buiadlfts i\i si qutiAii^ DAY, LANDING THIS HAY. tOti SALE Bf W. B. Guieu. | April 17 87 notick! f RNOUOHT and commifted to the Jail,of Co l-W funtbia county, on tlie 1 Jtli ln»t. a Negro Man who says his name is IvA AC—-that he ia one of the public roSd hand t, belonging to the State if Georgia, and lianuway from die road about two miles above Lexington, Oglethorpe county. He ia shout twenty fivo years old, dark—of nod . d*e fixe—and no peremvab’e murk about him. Had on when committed, »n old blue broadcloth ( coat and pantaloona. Ihe "Wner, manager, over , »ecr or trustee is notified to apply, prove, pay ( expenses and take him away, J nines Fleming, Jailor c. c. s April 17 x gy I ( E. ■ Y'ke Augwsta let, left kluutift, J 3 NOW OPEN FOR THE DELIVERY OF IOE. Ihe price for the present season is four cents per pound, fur all quantities over one pou.td, and tor a single pound five cents. ICE will be pui up in S»w Dust, and sent Into i the Country an i all orders punctually attended r •<>. IGL TICK RTS may be hud of the Subacri ber or at Ihe ICE HOUSE. 'The hours for delivery on Sunday from 6 to 8 c * A* M, and from to i»u '<sct dminr , the week, 6 J. S. Beers, Sec'ry. April 13 m it 8b NOTICE. PROPOSALS will be received until the fi'-s’ .») U&y next, for altering the. Arch oft' eTi-ea yterian Church and plaatering the same-—Also r or painting the wood wo-lc of Ikj interior of tl„- B'Biding. A plan cf the improvements may he seen on application to Ji. A. He ill, Secretary. Hoard Trustees, C. C, April 6 P 4 CONGRESsJ VV VTEII. j SPANISH SBGAKS, and r i Fresh supply of CONGRESS WATER. I tOR SALE UY W. f*. Beers, I * Nt, 241, Broad-street, March 5 75 | 1\ otice. i i I.L persons having demands against the Es ■. tate of Benjamin Scgar, late ’<> Burke conn- « j y, dt ceased, are rr ques'cd to fender th, in in i I enm of ih law, and a II those wiio know them, i ;e!ve« it Jsbted to said Es'ale, are r quested tc | I uske iiutuedtale payment without doray. \’i m. Rolling, Jidm’r. Marsh 6 U t 75 £ <O. JPo aWMPSffIB* - | 15HICK S JOHIS, NO. 203 Ilmjust received from New- Va>k, i CIJUD ASbUIVI'MIiNT OK SI’UINO & S VMM I K JUrtf j!l huh h • tvtll <1 t/u.se of at very low /‘Vices . ■ C'r.ih or i.p/irovod acreplaiicet in i>wi, V I/, ■ ! 9 I ill I's Mich VluJii.i* uiul Crape Shawls, In . k.k jffill' variety ' Krn.e* p.-i r-il t'otton St' cTcinof'j (a new artic!- ) I) )li.ck «mj white do d > very cheep •' ‘I I’ltid and airipe white Muslin, (' ‘I Minor snd cuu nun Colton Cunbricj, vc y Che ,/>. '■•dies i‘iimols and Silk U.„!n\ liar, in grc»* v.t --! V Cl.in and colored F.'ripc French Ginghamt. Bug’ish Mu in Gingh ims, « new article t 4, 0 4. i’lind Leno Mndins, for Uumj ictu Nc - I’Avihion Gun ai, a largo assortment >0 I'icc s 3 .ft undressed Irish Linens, some vc i fine and very cheap | Bed Ticking and b’us, stripe Homespun, white Sateen .leans, sos Cot setts j I hide 1 -1 itii ii.ii Diaperfnr fced spreads I'-4, 8 4 and 9 4 Cable Diaper," Damask palternc it bale stout mixt slomespun for negro wear I c is;; A 4 Wa'thum bleached Sheetings prefer cd to thr Ir'uh Shirting for cheapness Mi ne twilled pin keen, for 1> y'a summer wc; Blue si.d.yeHow lirnt chop India Nankeens t Case tupermr long Cloth Cotton Shirting, n ter Ute style of the English, but cheaper 5 Bale* aisoitecl brown Shirtings, at reduced pliers I r-asc dark French and Irish Linen Drillin'- White French and English do di a V* ry beautiful article Black French Bombasine & marble coi’d Socks Ajmgc assortment cf white Cotton Fringes El>*in flobbinel I,; ce, and Edging and inserting A complete assortment of rich Thread Laces u"d edgings and Insertions Bcng.l Snipes and Surtucher Ginghams, ties style Side Rod HhcH Combs, in great variety And capecling to receive through the summer a COJf.ST./IA’T SUPPLY 0» SEASONABLE ROODS. April 13 fifi •Augusta and ay anna* \ DAILY STAGE LINE, | .UK Savannah Daily Stage Lino la in complete n. order, and no w running regularly— leaving Augusta every evening, at half past nine o’clock, nod arriving in Savannat’ every evening at eleven u cltm.k- -and leav tig Savannah every afternoon, j<t three o’clock, and arriving in Augusta every ja'ternoon at five o’clock—thnn travelling over » distance of one hundred and hir’y three miles, hi lenr f ine than any oilier line at the South, the Stages sic good and comfortable,. and ihe driers rteady sod experienced, the horses ceMeiit, »rd in fine order, and (he accommodt t ons on me road, such «s cannot feil to give saf iafaction. TLo Fate through, is Ten Dollars, considerably leas than on any .southern line. W iHit*ra Shannon, , Proprietor, (O' The iWdledgeville Federal Onion. Rtvan. n«lj Republic*!), ChMrlruton Mercury, ind Mkcoo Advertiser, will give (he above lour weekly in . sertions, and (orward (heir accounts. . April 6 84 ! STRA YED OH HTULIvV, From the subscriber, on Thursday night 29th March, OXE SOB.UEL B.OABB, Vbont nine years old, with a blaze in his face, 2 bind feet while. Any information rcspcclbg sa.d H irse will be thankfully received, at,d the informer will be handsomely rewarded. Charles Moore, Jugwa Anril o, 18:52 33 SiiiEaJßa 9 M&. 3? A FINE PLANTATION, ! JN SCUIVLM COUNTY, Containing one hundred and fifty ! ', Cre!i, ly ' rfr imm ' | Jta'e’y . n the Savanrah It ad. about seventy miles from Augusts, sr.d fi ty fr<m Ssvint,ah—known a» ti e place foimcnj oernpi. ;ed •-) Hr. Solomona, It hwH a pood Dwdlirff, .Slorc, Kitchen, llarres aidSiable ard reveral 'Thrr out houses. The situation istual'hy sod agreeable for a family, The water good and the [neighbourhood rr aprcmble. It is 'also a gred j Bsnd for » Btore.—Persons desirouo of punhas -1 g, Will do well to call, or those at a distance, to address their viners imn 4 liately, u> Samuel M. Jackson, , .. Jiugusia. Got. ! April 13, 1832 9t 86 | (vf.L hvHB ,1 A, J offer ton county. I VV.iiiam U. Young, applies for I °1 Administrelioa on the Batata <sl Eiizsbelb Young, deceased. I ’Jl*ese are thmefoie to die and admonish all ,aiid singular, the ki;;dred and credi’ois of said ■ decessed, to be and appear »i my cfh te within | 'he ‘’me prescribed by taw, to file their objection* , (if any they nave) to shew cause why said Let hers should not be granted. ! Hiven under my ha-d at Office, this *olh day of February, J%32 i 7 Y* -*• E. Bothwcll, CVk. Hurke county. i vV U ’,:“ E , A ? nc y applies for Letter* u I. j- Administration, or the Ealale ct Isaac 1 f.ardin, deceased. Jhesuare therefore to rile and admonish all and singular, the kim’ixd and creduors of th« said deceased, to he a,-d app ..rat my office, with, in the tune prescribed by i»w, to file their obiec lions, (if any they have) to «hew cauat vtbv sai>) Letters sh uid rof be granted. Given under n.y hand at office in Vrync)br,»„> this "i«lh dey of Mirth, 1852, rtt bJ John (i. Uajuly, Cl’k,'