Newspaper Page Text
understand the character of this amalgama
tion.—He significantly hints that it “might
be more readily sanctioned by the Federal
ists, if they were sure that the circumstances
cf their having been such, would bcforgol-
tm or disregarded in the distribution ofpa-
thcre in all theland,that has a wife, & sister,
or a daughter, that could be pleased to see
Mrs. Jackson (Mrs. Roberts that was) pre
siding in the drawing room at Washington?
goods shop by one of theSN^ uhcdnsclOhable
superstructures mounted uptin Bit? head of
a damsel who stood upon the walk in front
of the door. Shop-keepers are advised to
t row.age. To sacri nee both their ascendancy
and individuality where they happen to pre
dominate, in order to benefit an administra
tion continuing to proscribe them would no
doubt, be very magnanimous, and worthy of
thorn, supposing them to be actuated only
by love of country ; but the effort requires
tiic conviction that the national weal would be
promoted.”—He is clear forgiving the Fede
ralists their proper share of “ the loaves and
fishes,” but has no idea of any inordinate sa-
cpfires ot their ascendancy and individuali-
t 'or the benefit of an Administration which
c o} tin lies to proscribe them. We fear, there-
foie that t**c National Journal wdl in vain
attempt to sooth Mr. Walsh by any
general appeals to his patriotism ; by telling
him how much the national weal is tobe pro-
ip* nioted by “breaking down a'combination,
pregnant with evil, which has been entered
into against the exist ins: Chief Magistrate”
—or how much it is to he promoted by “ the
desirable attitude in which this amalgama
tion would place our institutions, in the es
timation of the friends of republican systems
in other nations ; and to the great example
of patriotism which, by such an act, we
ve should exhibit to future America.” Mr.
IV. w ill ask perhaps in return, that some re
spect be paid to this as well as to other na
tions ; and to the present as well as to future
dimeric a—and that he has no idea of mag
nanimously supporting an administration
which so magnanimously showers down all
its patronage upon such persons as Mr.
Binns and leaves the more unworthy friends
of the administration to be “ actuated only
t y love of country.” “ non nobis tantas
componere liti s !” We leave them to manage
their ow n affairs in their own way ; while we
turn for one moment to the Proclamation
Speech of Mr. Webster at Boston.
We beg our readers to peruse this Speech
with attention. We shall not animadvert
upon the great apprehensions which it con
veys of the perilous state of the administra
tion. That feeling is written >n every line.
But we beg leave to notice one or two spe-
f ial remarks only, which the Orator has ur
ged by way of enlisting the prejudices of his
^bearers against the good peop’e of Virginia.
^PHe significantly points to the circumstance,
that “ during the whole period, now near
8 forty* years, in which the present govern-
^rnent had existed, Virginia had never once
given her yote for fea-effice of President, to
any but a native of her own state.” It is by
this remark, Mr. Webster
thatijje could not put by the claims of such
men a? Washington, Jqfieiison, Madison.
Monroe and Crawford, in oVder to support
such gentlemen as Messi-ei. hSphn and John
Q. Adams, we must plead; guilty to the
charge ; and we pjAoutefctves upon our
country for our safe^leliverance. But if
Massachusetts would present to her country
such worthy citizens as have graced the
annals of America, like Samuel Adams and
John Hancock, the remark of Mr. Webster
would no longer carry with it any reproach
la truth we hope at the very next election
to weaken the imputation—by giving our
vote to some one who is not a native of our
own State. The only regret is, that it can
not fall upon a citizen of Massachusetts.
Mr. W. states also as a curious circum
stance, that “ those who supported not ihe
highest but the lowest candidate,” now
“ moft loudly” complain of Air. Adams’s
being elected, though “ he was not the lead
ing candidate before the people.” We must
set Air. W. right ; it is not the friends of
Mr. Crawford, but of General Jackson, who
make the loudest complaints on this sub
ject.—The great mass of the former have
certainly never dwelt upon, the objection.
It is the very circumstance, which he denies
that constitutes the insuperable exception to
Mr. Adams—for, it is not true, th&t he has
not “ experienced the common candoi/ of
''being judged by his acts.” It is his'acts
which condemn him, wesay it boldly, in-the
c’'cs of Virginia. By these, has she tried
him. lie has been.,weighed im/(lie- sickle
and found wanting—and his "kingdom will
be taken from him. Not all tire arts of tin
Orator, nor all the exertions of the Coali
tjon and the Amalgamation can preserve his
tottering power,
There is pollution in the touch, there is per- i open both of their folding doors, lest by fail
dition in the example of a profligate woman: j ing to do so they shut out trade from those
“ her ways lead down to the chamber of who cannot enter under full sad, as it is al-
death, and her steps take hold on hellways disagreeable to lower the peake, or
and shall we,^stand*ng in a watch tower to take in a reef when making for port.—Alb.
warn our countrymen of approaching dan- Dai. Jldv.
ger, shall we seal our lips in silence, in re- ■ ’ > .v
spect to this personage and her paramour, Honesty.—A gentleman from the country,
great and powerful as he is. and cantivaling; while walking through Broadway yesterday
as he renders himself with his “bandanna morning,-in baking out his handkerchief,
handkerchief,” his “ frock coat,” his arnia- j dropped his pocket-book in the street. Un-
ble condescensions, and the fascin tions of conscious of his loss, he walked rapidly
his bar-room and public table talk ? Shall along, and was surprised a few minutes af-
we be accused of injustice or indelicacy,! ter. to feel someone pulling his coat, and
because we do not join shouting, “ Great J calling, “ Stop, sir, stop! here is something
is Diana ” and because we lay before our! von dropped.” He turned, and saw a very
readers a copy of the records and statutes ; little girl, of eight or nirnj years of age, hold
of Virginia. Away with th»s squeamish
ness, this mistaken magnanimity; it is
treachery to the country. A man to be
magnanimous must be so at his own expense,
and not at that of others, and least of all. at
the expense of the constitution, the laws
and the moral sense of the republic. We
hope we are flexible to reason and to hu
manity, but upon all great public questions
we do avow, and will ever show, that neither
friends nor foes, nor pistols, nor rifles, nor
thunder, nor lightning, shall ever make ns
give way the breadth of one hair. The
terror of Jackson’s name, and his daggers
and triggers may have frightened the man
agers of a Nashville assembly, and com
pelled themto “admit” his spouse amongst
ing in her hand his pocket book, (which con
tained several hundred dollars) and almost
breathless with running ifter h : m. He made
a suitable acknowledgement for her honesty,
but forgot, in the hurry o? the momenf,to ask
her name. We should be pleased'to learn
it.—JYfor. Chronicle.
boat Perseverance, Captain Hastings, which
had been some time in Greece, had done
considerable sendee. Another steam boat,
the Enterprise, was nearly ready to sail from
England for Greece, to join the Persever
ance. She was tried on the 20th March,
and made a trip to the Nore, running a dis
tance of nearly 50 miles, in five heurs and a
half.
The National Assembly had quitted Egina
for Cranidi, as being a place more central
for the deputies. Miaulis had gone in the
frigate “ Greece,” with some other vessels
and four fire ships, to annoy the Turks in
their contemplated attack on Samos.
The Athenian.
The piece by * Evelina,’ who we presume, occa
sionally wears a pair of blue cassimere pantaloons,
is deferred till next week—perhaps longer!
FOREIGN.
The arrivals at New York furnish Lon
don papers to jhe 4th of April, from which
the following are extracts.
The health of Air. Canning, as also that
of Lord Liverpool was improving, and the
business in Parliament proceeding with all
the celerity practicable under the accumu-
modest women; it shall, however, go hard, j lated difficulties, that have lately presented
but he shall meet a firmer resistance before
he fights her and his own way into the Presi-
themselves. The intelligence from Portu
gal is not of the satisfactory character that
dental mansion. It shall not be accomplish- could be desired; still the constitutional
ed without a “ note of remonstrance which party had not lost any of its advantages, the
shall reach every log-hut beyond the moun- enemy offering no further opposition than
tain.”—lb. ' \ . .. - -
Southern Road.—The Hon. James Clark,
a member of Congress from Kentucky, in
an address to his constituents, at the close
of the late session, remarks, that “ Assu
rances have jecn given by the proper de
partment, that competent engineers will be
shortly detailed to make a survey ” of the
Great National Alail Road from Zanesville,
through Lancaster and Chilhcothe, in Ohio
to Alaysville, Paris, and. Lexington. Ky.
thence to Vashvihe, in Tennessee, and con
necting t^. sa\ne with the contemplated Na
tional Roao. from the Citv of Washington,
to New urns. And adds, that it is his
most' sangifine belief, that the day is near
at hand when the General Government will
nitke the necessary appropriations for com
means to say, I dieting the same.—Lancaster Gazette.
the troublesome annoyance of Guerilla
parties. Sir William Clinton still remained
at Ooimbia. but a reinforcement of cavalry
and infantry having been sent him he has
probably before this, advanced further into
the country. With our present information
it is difficult to offer any opinion upon the
state of affairs.
In a London paper of 28th Alareh, it is
said that the correspondence had closed be
tween Air. Canning and Air. Gallatin. The
Times says', the last letter of Air. Canning
shuts the door upon all negotiations for the
present on the trade of America with the
British colonies.
England and Russia are stated to be de
Mr. Editor,—In turning over a file of a periodical
.of a couple of years standing, I met with the follow
ing version of a celebrated Soliloquy, which pleased
me so much, that I offer it for insertion by you.
SOLILOQUY.
Farewell, a long farewell, to all gallanting!
This is the lever’s state; to-day he sees a mcid,
Arrayed in blushing beauty; to-morrow wool her,
And bears her pleasing image in remembrance;
The third day conies a beau, a fairer beau,
And when he thinks, poor easy fool, full surely
His marriage is approaching, blasts his hopes—
And then he raves as I do. I have ventured,
Like little moths that flit around the candle,
These many summers in the fields of beauty,
But far beyond discretion. The haughty girls
AH proved deceitful, and now have left me, v ^
Weary and worn with pleading, to the mj^y
Of a vile world, that will for ever jeering .
Deceit and beauty of the sex, I hate you—
I feel my heart grown callous. Oh!. how wretched
Is that blind gull who hangs on ladies. favours;
There is betwixt that goal he would aspire to,
The state of matrimony, and his. failure,
More pangs, and fears, than rogues or gamesters
feel;
And when he fails, his lot is final-—
Never to love again.
between vicious and virtuous pleasures—
teach youth that this Rubicon must not be
passed—but strain it not so tightly as to in
clude all of those sources of felicity that
may be condemned by the aged, but which
arc not in themselves sinful—and are there
none of this class ? Who can deny their ex
istence? The anchorite shut up in the
gloom of his cell—the hermit, self-con
demned to pass the miserable remnant of
his life debarred from all social intercourse—'
the misanthrope whom past misfortunes
have soured, or the wretch whose con
science whips him for undivulged crimes
may attempt it, but these are not the in
dividuals to appeal to. They have nothing
in common with their fellow-men; the one
would swell mole-hills to mountains, venial
errors to damning sins; the other, knowing
his own villainy from the stings of his in
ward monitor, depicts all mankind in his
own likeness, and his perverted vision casts
the gloom and ihe agonies of Hell over-all
nature. Their judgments ^
out of the question, and cannot, bo £e*eived J
Odi profanum vulgus %: et twees i
Spotless imaginations, purer
elevated minds than the9'e w|
dences and judges in our cast
not to commit ourseli
their decisiohs-l
prescribe, wiH nol
perfect. To fetich
We shall proceed
rate the enjoyments
at the presnt time we have <
the wav the brambles and
our course, and commenced
route on which to travel more easil
pleasantly.
ON the 8th inst. near Lawreneeville
I county, by the Rev. John S. Wilson,
I Hutchins, to Miss Ann Fowler.
FOR THE ATHENIAN.
THE COLLEGI AN—No. IIL
After a tolerably long relaxation Yrom our I
literary endeavours, (and what Collegian]
needs not a vacation, nay, ardently desires
it,*) we agqin assume the pen, and take up j
the subject, but faintly sketched in our last.
In what consist the pleasures of man, and
m what general classes can they be ar
ranged? They are all Embraced in two
divisions: those of the senses, and those of |
the intellect.—In the early part of our exist-1
ATTENTION! t
ence, jvith feelings alivfefe the slightest im
cidedly in favour of the emancipation oppressions of nature—senses not yet dulled
n * Kv iho nnnrnju'K nf vnnrc nnA Konrlo nn.
Greece.
The influence of the English in Portugal
I is mentioned as becoming unpopular.
There is some opposition to the appoint
ment of Air. Canning as first minister.
.Business in parliament has been suspended
by the approach of yean?, apd hearts un
disciplined by the sober trials of life* We|
are enchanted by the former, and borne
down their current in a degree too impetuous
for us to resist—and allowing as to possess
the rare power of successful resistance, how
St. Augustine, April 18.—General Ber
nard and Capt. Poussin, who arrived in this
city a few days ago, having completed the] until the new formation of the ministry isl few of us arc to be found willing to use the
completed, j ,.
:nrred at
COLL
4 PPEAR
Room,'
ciaely.—By order
May 18th, 1927
GEORGIA, FRANKLIN COUNT **
COURT OF ORDINARY, MAY TERM, 1827.
Henry Hardin, vs. Thomas Payne, Joseph Dunlap, and
James H. Little, Executors of Asa Ayres, deceased.
examination of Ihe.. inland navigat on be
tween St. Alary’s harbour and the River
St. John, have taken a view of our harbour.
They left Augustine on the 16th inst. to
proceed to the examination of the country
between the Atlantic andIKe Gulf of Atexi-
\ riot had occurred at an election in Car-1
lisle. The military were ordered out, and
fired upon, and killed and wounded several 1
persons.
The whole country around Bremen, as
volition necessary to offer it. But let ma- ‘ffTPON the petition of Henry Hardin^stating that
. v. •. . . , . , , I wj no is in possession of a bona, given by Asa
turitv come on : its amiroach is rtRsnrnnteri 1 . . .• * 1 -j.
They are accompanied by Lieutenants far as could he seen, was under water, pro-
Swift, Cornfield, and Huger, of the Brigade.
Lieut. Col. PeiTault, Topographical Ejigi
neer. The several routes of canal survey
ed and level! eft,by this Brigade, will be ex
amined in succession, beginning by the route
whyeh would connect St. Alary’s or St.
John’s harbour with Appalachicola Bay.
We understand that the surveys and level
lings, intrusted 1o Ihe Brigade under the
command of Lieutenant Colonel Perrault,
are completed and will enable General Ber
nard triform an opinion on the contempla-
ceeding from the melting snow.
A conspiracy in favour of Don Carlos, the
brother of Ferdinand, is said to have been
detected in Spain.
The Count de Beaurepaire, French
Charge d’Affaires at Aladrid, presented to
the King on the 16th March, the Alarquis
de Alonstier’s letters of recal. It is remark
ed that, this is the first Ambassador of France
that has quitted Spain without obtaining the
order of the Golden Fleece.
The Count de Lamoignon, and Duke de
turity come on ; its approach is designated
at once by the fading of the external picture,
and by a gradual intermixture of those en
joyments that spring from within, and which
at last entirely engross the whole mind.—
Nature appears then to point out by this
uniform and general process, the pleasures
that belong to all ages, and indicates by this
law of our constitution, when we can de
light in the varied ones before us.
May we not at the same time say that a
real obedience to this natural law, a law
founded on our organization, and therefore
springing from the great source of all things,
is a duty on us ? and that an attempt to en
graft on the elastic feelings of youth, the
Ayres to him, said Hardin, on the thirty-first day of
October, eighteen hundred and twcnty-Uvo, for one
thousand dollars, conditioned to be void if the said
Asa should make good and sufficient titles to Lot of
Land number one hundred and forty-eight, in the
ninth district of Monroe county, on or before the
first day of April then next; and it being stated and
made appear to the court that said Hardin has paid
the consideration money, and that said Asa/ depart
ed this life before making titles, and a copy of the
Bond being filed in the Clerk’s office of this,fcourt,—
It is on motion, Ordered, That the said/(Thomas
Payne, Joseph Dunlap, and Janies H.. bittrA execu
tors of said Asa Ayres, do shew cause, on the first
Monday in September next, why they should not be
directed to make titles to said ’and, described in said
bond, to said Henry Hardin, in terms of the statute
in such case made and provided. And it is further
ordered, that a copy of this rule be published in one ;
of the public Gazettes of this state, once a month
sober habits and cautious demeanour of for three months before the sitting of said court, in
ted connexion, across the Peninsula of I Larochefoucalt Liancourt, Peers of France,
Florida, between the Atlantic and the Gulf lately died in France. . ,
of Mexico.
JVfrs. Jackson.—The female character
shrinks, with the instinctivencss of the sen
piiive plant from the rude intrusions of a pub
lie pnper; but, when the recesses of the do
mestic hearth have been interrupted, and the
qualifications of a public candidate have
been attacked through the fame of a Lady ;
4vhen the most violent assaults have been
made, in the administration prints, upon the
character of Gen. Jackson and wife, it be
comes essential to the cause of female deli
cacy, and of public justice itself, to lay the
defence before the people. Our readers
have scarce any conception of the very
coarse terms, in which AT rs. J. has been
mentioned. We shall in the course of the
next week lay before our readers the article
from the Cincinnati Gazette, which contains
the proceedings of the Divorce, from the
Records of Mercer Court—but in the mean
time, we lay before them certain documents
which have been published in Kentucky in
her vindication. How can we help having
some little feeling on the occasion, when we
see such papers as the Boston Journal hold
ing forth in the following style upon this
matter:
“ We are as much opposed as any of our
brethren can be, to attacks upon private
character or private transactions, when they
have no necessary connexion with the pub
lie interest and general weal; but who is
Lehigh County.—We do not believe that
ther/e is a single county in this common
wealth where less crimes are committed,
than in our small hut populous county. Our
prison has had no tenants for nearly nine
months—with the exception of a few poor
debtors and the jailor. All the doors and
locks are ready to admit visitors, and open
for their departure, whenever they choose
to come or go. For several terms past
there has not been a single jury trial, for any
criminal case ; and, at the approaching term
we have heard of but one single case of as
sault and battery, that is to be tried, and
that will probably be settled, before the irial
comes on. Indeed, the inhabitants of this
county have reason to be proud of these
facts, which we Consider completely demon
strative of their virtue, honesty, and intelli
gence.—Lehigh Herald.
It is asserted that Sir W. Clinton fell back
from Coimbra tp the line of Zezere.
apathetic age is fruitless ? The bow, when
loosened from its bended state, flies back to ]
its former position, and will not the current I
of early desires overleap, in a short while,
the barrier raised against its progress, and J
Mr. Canning intimated in the House of run more rapidly and more furiously down
Commons on the 30th of March, that his
Majesty had signified to the friends of Lord
Liverpool, that he could not longer delay
appointing a new premier.
London, 27th March.—The general meet
ing of operatives convened last Tuesday at
Birmingham, adopted the following resolu
tions :
That the members of this meeting are of
opinion, that, after a long and painful strug
gle, they have ascertained that no talents,
industry and frugality could secure them
from distress, and the humiliation of having
recourse for relief to parish assistance,
which assistance has now been reduced to
the lowest point that will maintain life.
That the meeting views with alarm the
strange anomaly of a people naked and dy
ing with hunger in a country abounding in
subsistence and articles of clothing—that it
is of opinion that the great proportion of la
bourers in manufactories as well as in agri
culture are really dying of hunger, and that
its natural channel.
Youth, withdrawn from its natural sphere,
may, in many instances, he found to per
severe in the path of sobriety of conduct
and restrained sympathy; but it has always
appeared to me to resemble a hot-house
plant, which, however fair to the eye, and
fragrant to the smell, is still divested of its
beauty and more striking odours, and .bears
hut a feehle existence, liable at all times to
blast, and to all those accidents to which un-
patural delicacy exposes it.—Permitted to
bloom in the full enjoyment of sun and air,
i?s juices become more properly elaborated,
anu though its mature state may be more
slow in its approach, yet its fruit is not only
more lasting, hut at the same time, more
perfect., A young man may overcome the
flow of high spirits; he may approximate to
A poor Pensioner robbed.—Jacob Smith,
a Revolutionary Pensioner, came to this ci
ty on the 17th inst. On the followingThurs-
day, he drew his pension, the whole of I their employers are on the brink of ruin, and
which, excepting a small part paid for a Bi- still that no adequate remedy is applied to
hie that he had purchased, he carried .with
him to his lodgings. On the same night he
was robbed, by a fellow lodger, of his pen
sion money, who escaped without detection.
Thus riflecl of the pittance generously be
stowed by his country to sooth the thorny
path of aged poverty, and stripped of his last
dollar, Smith was obliged to apply to the
bookseller of whom he purchased his Bible,
to receive the book hack, and return him his
money, as he could not otherwise subsist.
This request was readily acceded to.—Bos.
Patriot.
Iiadies > Hats.—It is perceived that the
belles of the city are reviving the fashions
of immoderately large hats, which com
pletely puts at fault the gaze of gallants. A
this disastrous state of things.
r JFhat the meeting ascribes the distress
thus prevalent among the whole manufac
turing interest of England, to the arbitrary
alteratioqs in the currency, which causinga
perpetual variation in the value of agricul
tural and other products, and a violation of
contracts, takes all stability from the em
ployment of the productive classes, and
causes Toduction jn their salaries
Greece.—The information concerning
Greece is of considerable interest. Lord
Cochrane has at last sailed for Greece from
St. Tropez, in the beginning of March, in a
brig, the purchase fitting out, and arming of
which cost260,000francs, or about $50,000.
He was furnished liesides with 355,000
francs to pay the crew and troops under his
command, it being thought necessary,' for
September next.
A true copv from the minutes of said Court. J&f Or* \
m3m—20
- NQTICE
M Y Wife, Nancy Orr, did, on the night of the
7th inst. leave my bed and board without any
provocation, and I do hereby forwarn any person
from harbouring her or trading with her on my ac
count, as I am determined not to pay any of her
dealings or contracts of any kind; and of this all
persons are apprised.
JOHN ORR, Sen’r.
May 18th, 1827.
T 1
THE ARIEL.
And Ladies* Literary Gazette.
HE first number of the Ariel will he published
on Saturday the 5th of May inst and issued
regularly every other Saturday thereafter. Each
nnmber will contain eight large quarto pages, prin
ted on fine paper, with entirely new type, and occa
sionally embellished with beautiful and appropriate
engravings, at the. very low rate of One doUtrper an
num.
The Ariel is intended to be an agreeable and in
teresting companion for the Ladies, devoted to Littr-
containing a s/nopsis of all that
the sedateness of mature!- years, and hei! ?'“SaLadt*; and the tile-
may yield himself up plastic in the hands of rary wor id, with a summary of news. Original Es-
others, but this state is an unnatural one.' says, choice Tates, select pieces of Poetry, sketches
Constraint sits heavy on him, and he too \ of female character, and other pleasing matter will
J - - - occupy its pages.
No labour or cxpcncewillbe spared to make it a
leap and valuable visitor in the hands of every Iite*
Are there no proofs to j rary lady. Measures hate been taken to secure the
• . • • - 1 ! Locf '
often appears only to submit to this external
force, and is disposed to rebel whenever an j cheap s
opportunity occurs. Are there no Droofs to '• rary la<
be found of this disposition in -cry day:
life? Few, very few persons have arrived k ,. n> The Editor is determined to make it accepta-
at manhood without having to remark the j blc to the Ladies; the uncommonly low priodfct
greater aptitude to excess, apparent in the A* 1 **? 11 i j* is published, One Hollar yearly, must place
offspring of rigid parents, who, making no rt 7fiufficfoat y p a?ro^S is extended, the Ariel wilL
allowances for the exuberance Of youthful be issued weekly, At the end of three months. '
passions and sympathies, have prescribed i Onc thousaod names are already placed upon our
and compolled a forced compliance -«■,TOa
It will be born m ; mMsl bSW p^ aud addressed to Ellwood Walter,
friend, who is an admirer of angelic features,
tells us that the other day he was completely j the preservation of harmony, that he should
blockaded from entering a fashionable diy j be able to maintain bis crew^ . The steam
A
their puritanical notions.
mind, that I allude not at all to those youths . 7i7Mm£et street, Philadelphia, who is Agent for
who have been changed “from death to ; tk¥Editor,
life.” AVjltt them all natme has undergone' .
a chi
of this \v?
Any person who will procure six subscribers, and
Timri ;: a V‘ U '';r Um ' remit the money, shall receive a copy gratis, for one
they delight not m th e "*' 1, ’ : c3§Srenr. Editors are politely requested to insert this *•
—I speak only of tlios- who Jew times.
have not experienced this being “horn
again,” This aptitude to excess is to be |
laid to one sole cause, a refusal of paticipa- j
tioii in those light but innpeent£njoyap»nts y j,
which are invested with such strong charms )
to the youthful eye. Let the line be drawn j
Subscriptions re-cer
■ May 2, 1827.
i • v FOR SALE* /*
Jk N .excellent second hand cloeo CARRfAG^,
CM. with good IIARN F.SS.—Enquire at this Office,
Athens, March 30.—tif