Indiana Palladium, Volume 3, Number 2, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 20 January 1827 — Page 4
MISCELLANY.
THE JiPPdRd T10JV Twas silence all: the rising moon With clouds had veil'd her light; The clock struck twelve, when lo! I flaw A verj chilling sight. Pale as a snow ball was its face, Like icicles its hair; For mantle, it appeared to Ufa A sheet of ice to wear Tbo seldom given to alarm; Indeed Til out dissemble, My teeth all chatlet'd in my head, And every jjiot did trtoible. At last I cried, 4Pray who nre you, And whither do you go?' Rethought the phantom thus replied "My Dame is Sally Snow: My father's name i9 Northern Wind, My mother's name was Water: Old Parson Winter married them, And I'm their hopeful daughter. I had a lover Jack) Frost, My dad the match condemns: I've ran from home to night, to meet My lover cn the Thames!" J stop'd Miss Snow in her discourse, This answer just to cast in ' lI hope if Jack and ycu unite, Your union won't be lasting: 13fsid-s if you should marry him, You never should do well, 0L1! For I know Jackey Frost to be, A very slippery fellow." She sat her down before the re My wonder now increases For she I took to be a Maid, Nov tumbled into pieces. For J air, thin air " did Fhmlel's ghost, His form at cock crow barter; But vhitl saw and now describe, Dissolved itself to Water! -asg' From ike London Monthly Magazine STAUENBACH, THE SHARP SHOOTER. After the battle of Ausierlitz the Austrian army was virtually disbanded. The regiments were left without pay in consequence of the general breaking up of the Austrian finance, the public spirit was extinguished by the result of so Jnany u .-.successful wars; Napoleon's genius seemed to have gained the final
ascendency ; and the general feeling throughout the Continent was, that all efforts for Independence were hopeless. But in the midst of this national despair there were some gallant spirits left, as if to keep up the remembrance of the old national glory, and, be ready for the time of retribution. Among the disbanded troops was a regiment of sharp-shooters, rhieliv raised among the range of Coniinthian Alps. They were ordered borne to their native place, and some Frencn officers, with a commissary general, were sent t attend them at Laybach and see the measure completed. .The country in the neighborhood of Layhach is remarkably hilly, and the regiment was compelled to scatter a good deal. .The men fell into groupes, and,!
as they became les?immediately within sight of their mas ters, murmurs arose at the journey, and the insult of being thus driven home by French commissaries. As a party was thus taking a turn of the .mountain road, where they had halted without much fear of their officers before their eyes, the rear company of the regiment, commanded bv Lt. Col. Stauen-
turn to France. This formidable document was signed by 'the King of the Mountains.'
This billet produced singular excitement in the city. The French commander instantly ordered a meeting of the authorities, and in the civil and military council, his Majesty of the Mountains was declared a public enemy, and a reward of the adequate number of dollars was offered for him dead or alive. This was probably an unwilling measure on the part of the grave members of Carniola,
but they knew the activity of Napol-;
eon's vengeance too well to talk of hesit
visions. Finally as the best alternative, it was determined to make use of the old man as a guide to the haunt of the insurgeant chief. This, however, he positively refused to be, under illty pleas of ignorance, feebleness, and fear; he was at last induced to give way, was seated on a baggage mule, and with a bayonet at his backwas marched out with the troops. The peasantry hung their heads with no very measured expression of wrath at the
question unless they rolled themselves be neither Tryie?e i . .; daw n the scarped precipice, where none good incarnation of t but a dead man could ever reach the olent prince of the power of the air to bottom; to stand where they were was he touched by neither ball nor riaionet, impossible, for the bullets were raking and, in the fighting time to ifnd hi their exposed columns in all directions, mountain spirit to the liberation of the The Colonel had now found out his empire. ; error, and with a few desperate men At length the aggressions France made a rush to the summit ; the lire grad- compelled Austria to try the charters of ually paused on both sides from the ex-j war again. On the first order to tv
eessue darkness, and he made good his troops, Lt. Col. Stauenbach appeared at footing; but out of his five hundred not jthe court of Vienna with the offer of a
hoary traitor; but as the French neverjabove tilt v could be gathered around ' regiment of three thousand ed aip ?hoot-
1-jcondescend to know any language but'him the rest had been either shot or;er! A deputation of his companions in u- their own, all this was lost upon them, scattered ihrough the forest. With that'their mountain costume, long bearded
tion ; with the populace it was altogetheriNight fell the expedition proceeded jtifty, however be made the bold stand, -and with buskins and caps of wolf and a different affair, and their rejoicing at and the old man and his ass were put inland the firing began to be vivid a:aiu, hare hides, attended him. Tbe o'ler
the defiance was all but treason to the front of the column, watched by half a when he felt himself suddenly grasped , was gladly received. He waa nl.iced a-
supremacy of the conquerer. The 4King;dozen Chasseurs as the advance of the by the neck. The grasp was that of a the head of nis kFree corps,' and di-tii.V-
of the Mountains' was an effective name,
and the habitual taste of the German for
whole. Uriant and he was in a moment draped uished himself bv his r4 tn;ir!.. J.L .- ii,...
The mountain range that overhangs away among the rocks, until betwccnjry in the campaign of Warayon. Ai thf
forest wonders found its supreme indul- the Idrian jfine country i though not el-: exhaustion and surprise, he fainted. I battle of Lcipsic he was a general nicer
evited, remarkably rugged. Short,: When he opened hi eye he found with the Fife corps' in his .division ; the sharp descents, and heights where every Ihimself in a hut with two or three long mountaineers .f Carniola, and their
gence in inventing attributes and adven
tures tor this mysterious monarch.
Var,and ofall kinds insurrectionary war
rock seemed pointed for the express pur-
is fitted to take hold upon the popular im-ipose of repulsion, make it an extremely
agination. Its secrecy, its sudden ex-jarduous business to work one s way thro'
i . , - I .. i i , . ....
plosions its sudden extinctions in one
bearded w ild Jookinir li ores, warmintr Stauenbach. w ill he Ion." rcmrnliTt i m
themselvesover a stove. Beside the bed Germany and her enemies.
on wmen ne lav, mere was sunn: a e
quarter, to spring up like a conflagration
in another even the personal intrepidity, intelligence, and dexterity required in its solitary and hazardous enterprises, throw a romantic and superstitious interest about it, that gives a powerful impulse to the imagination. The 'King of the Mountains, had none of the establish
ed indolence of the throne; he seemed i
even to have the faculty of being every where at once. The arrival of the cou-
iriers soon ceased totally, or occurred only
by permission of his invisible majesty: and then the letters were generally open and accompanied by remarks, sometimes burlesque and sarcastic, and sometimes conveying intelligence of the most disastrous nature from France. The peasants brought provisions to the city under the passport of his Majesty; the traders and travellers were compelled to advertise in the Lay bach Zictung before they set out, their route, with a declaration that they weie not going to France; in short, his majesty's determination to ex
tinguish all intercourse with the land of tyranny, was expressed with the most diplomaticdistinctness and absence of ceremony. The French authorities, however, now set themselves actively to resist the public feeling; and, as their first step, order
ed the printer of the Zictung to jail, with
COUNSELLOR AT LAW. JPce on ft out Street, i mc.r.n.u i tt.r , I.'itel.
it in the day time what mut it be in the 'handsome, athletic young man, in the liitfht! To ftdd to its diffliLilhes. one of uniform of a Yarer the f.!nml lhnncht
those storms, so common and so violent in 'that he had seen the face before, and en-
i i : - ciiroroiin it. tfwv .-lit . i ... .. i m... . . I r i-n i. i i i . : r
...u. cnumt. i.j luc i-i.uin ui unuiiiii) ijuiuu iiuu wiicsi: nanus ne nau lanen.i k uui practice in ti e counties of PlMmcame on. The whole expediiion, the 'Better hands than a Frenchman's, JL JL ihun dud Butler, and in tie District and 'general camp, pioneers all, weredrench- was the rough answer; 'for if we had c:rcuit courts of the Uniud fetalis l-r the ed in a mornenf, and after a faint st rug-; fallen into theirs, we should have been Ihstnel of Olio; also in the rounii of Dar-
le logo on, the whole scatteied them- shot, you are now among the free hunt- uorn' anJ m the Supreme court of the ctate
ia.
A. (1 who are you' said the prisoner.;
'.vi' ! whv 1 am fill things turn, said
the Yager, laughing. Yesterday 1 was
selves under the pine trees, th.it cover ,er of Carniol
every spot where a root can cling. The Colonel, fearful of loosing his guide, now
ordered him to be doubly watched; hut;
he was already makim' his ItarLu MV l.i a Pniic riti?i'fi of ! ivharh.ritipjiHinjT flu.
the Clump where the Colonel had taken Vuder of Colonel de Talmont to shoulder his stand. my musket and mount guard in honor The storm had now risen to a pitch of of Napoleon ; this morning I am the King fury that made the shelter of the forest jof the Mountains,! wish you joy at your
i of Indiana.
dpril 15, 1825
15
a declaration, that the first merchant,
or traveller suspected of compromising 'the banditti,' should follow the printer. This had its effect a few days and the advertisements were stopped. But a Bolognese jeweller who had come to the fair of Idria, and after lingering impatiently for some weeks in the city, was anxious to realize his produce on the other side of the Tyrol, had not left Lay-
bach half a German mile, when he was met by a party of armed 'peasantry,' who ordered him back. They took nothing from him, and when he offered them money, refused it, stating that they were paid by their own 'sovereign,' and ordered merely to prevent any man's going through his territory without his passport. Some other attempts had the
same result; until at length the French commandant determined to take the field against the unseen usurper, lie gathered about 500 troops of different arms and called out the Burgher-guard
to make up his army. But the citizens had long since settled their minds upon
the point, ana they one and all.discov
more perilous than even the open air; the
trees were torn up by the root hugebranches were flying about, to the i.. finite peril of every one who cam' in their way sheets of gravel, and lighter stones from the sides of the limstone cliffs, hiled the air; and when to this were added thunder, that absolutely deafened the ear, and dashes that hurst like "sheik
w hatever
from rock to reck- &nlitiii.r
, -i -------
they touched, if may be believed, that the French wished th-vmselvcs far enough from Idria. It was now between twelve and one; the troops had been out four hours, asd as no simptoms of the insurgents appeared, and every soul was luumily Uivd, the order was given to .return. Toe u hole corps was instantly en route with gladdened hearts, but even thi had now become no trival mutter. The road had enough before, was now ten times worse; the ascents were now so slippery as to be almost inaccessible: the th'sri-ras iv;k
arrival in my dominions, Colonel !'
kSo, I am to thank your majesty for
last night's work; I wonder you did not shoot me at once If I had caught you
it would have gene hard with vour king-
ship'' "Why, then, to tell you the truth, you were spared for the sake of a little piece of service that you did to a friend ot mine.' The Yager started up, and throwing a cloak over his shoulders, came forward tottering towards the bed. 'Ah, by Jove, our old guide! That infernal old rogue I suspected him, once or twice, but the rascal seemed so deorepid, there was no use in killing him; a pistol shot would have hurried him out of this world. Yes, 1 could have sworn that he was mortally wounded b the tm fire. .All a ruse then?
"All,' said the Yager, '.ill was fictitious but the generosity of Colonel de Tal
mont, that would let even an old peasant
COU.NSLLLOR AT LAW, awrencebuj gn, h, .laa wl fhihtu)iy atlemi to pr fission! t usu.tsa ir.iwu J u.-nis
it . t
-ic. uwiiimitniiili. :(,uns n ii
: i iis Gift it on Feb. 25, 28:C.
Uiik
oti nun,
l b l t'Ui -o el li 0.4-
o f.
O'ii r HIS JiOt Mn.l,i S it.liS.iO li , .2 i.bof Lawi'entel.utgh nj Deal bom roLin), In ,tiij, nj o ta sc ji B'Otie cont.'iy, Ky a ti Hnni tou .ty, tJn. Uesidtncc l.ui i.ctbuij,'l, t M . liuar's II tei. Uflke oa tii't aUtt i L.'iuw Lvrtn(.tCuit,l:lMy 11 1J6 91- f
aCTORH, J. BOWSLS
1 1 UI. S t. jj Ltll OB l. , . V Cl lU ii. , . l zciiS LA'.-4iCLbu.ti .tiid i'i vit-iul), to
n t iice PHYSIC, SURGKRY, AND MIDWIFIKV. ny c0o .n the iti.e or hi pi oh 03. .n vv . us pu .ctu.tliy atttnavd 10. dfi.r on H.tih & iCct-
upposmc the liudiuuj Pfimiiiir Ciiut.
October i'8, 18 6 42tf
but so many precipic es, plunpin them I had gone into the city to see what
you were about. I threw myself in the way of your patrol, said he. Cornel and became your guide. I had intended as soon as I had brought you thoroughly
info many torrents, its very rivulet had
swelled into a furious stream. The T .-. . . U .. .-. K i .. j i 1
j-ii.iLj nver naa mis nignr many a knapsack and pouch carried down its flood from the tributary streams of the hills. In two hours more if would be morning and the storm had at length began to subside. But fighting was altogether out
of the question, in the present dihpid
bac!i,overtookthem,nndthcsilteradovn(ered so manv nersonal reasons for oh
invitea me omers to arniK. jLiscipnue had been nearly at an end for some days .before, and Stauenbach made no objection, lie had orobably been meditating "something of what followed, for, on the glass being presented to him, he drank
'the health ofour father, the Emperor, and better davs to our country.' The toast was received with shouts. What was subsequently done to rouse the sharpshooters is not known, but it may be tolerably conceived from the fact, that the colonel and staff were the only part of the regiment that entered Laybach with the Frenchmen; what had hecome of Slauenbach and the other ofliceis no one could tell. Inquiry was sent on foot by the French authorities who were then pervading every corner of the Austrian territory: but nothing could be ascertained, further, than that the whole regiment had anticipated Napoiean's1 orders, and had suddenly disap
peared. In r. few days, however, reports were brought into La) bach, occasional fires having been seen in the mountains that edge the valley of the Saave; and one morning dispatches, regularly forwarded to the French c.Giiimisary-in-chief did
not arrive. I his produced some di-
turbance in the city , and no slight alarm
among the gentlemen of the French staff, who immediately dispatched a courier
to Moravia for an additional force, of
French troops. The courier set out at night, to prevent accidents; but his precaution was unlucky, for the next day he was set down blindfolded, within a short distance of Lay bach, with a note declaring 'war against the French,1 and informing 'the French stafT that if they chose to remain in Laybachthey might, but not a man of them should ever re-j
jecting to a mountain campaign thatM. le Colonel de Tahnout was, at last, with infinite indignation, obliged to compromise the afiair, and leave the whole of (he
gallant Burgher-guard for the defence of) had disappeared, and was in another, .1 !,! Is.. - 7
followed by sueceSMve lights. Toe Colonel w as an old soldier, and had h aroe.i
ted state of the 'grand armv,"1 of Lay-
bach. I hey were now toiling in their slow way along the verge, of the hollow in which the Quicksilver Mines lie, and
which from its shape and perpetual vapor, put the traveller in mind of the boiler of a steam engine; but howe ver pietui-
73jut; uji me ee 01 me tourist, a moiv vexatious route for a drenched anio could not have been found in all Germ.iOn a sudden, fhe old guide pointed to something that thro' that fog looked hue the light in a cottage. In a moment i.
Jchn Columbia, vs. Elizabeth D. Jones, cn.
znjant, unci heir at iuw of John Junes, a'ec'u, cV John Mteay her Guardian.
i-uVc lialTU tl Jl'til
hat riit a iu me tlck"s 1 fTLe uf he f . .r.
born Circuit Uuurt his pcUi 'U, pr)ua 2, ;d court to ppoiiii commij.aiontt to ci-nvij ret tute tbtrtio Gtsr.rK't-d tu l.im. 10 1 uooly the fores,ici Ltiat.cib U Jnu -nc J .aa It.ecl), her gu.rdun, wlm arc n Ot el-i.u ;Og ..a fcoi 1 petition, lliil ..licj be al, pp a. o It. I U.c Judtres ol sail cur., on Hi-
into mischief to make my escape, and'nest u-im f sid ci.tm, 10 U Uodu -i. iLt la take command cf mv niountaineei J. -"nUy iu Ani il lit x , in Uie town 1 1 L wrtntts
the gates and ditches.
The Colonel was a bold fellow, r vieu
moustache, who had served from the time: his first lessons in the mountain battle of
my.
Bat you watched me too well 1 had then nothing for it, but to pretend to be wounded in the first fire. The manoeuvre succeeded tolerablv, but, upon
my honor, when I caught a glimpse of
vou, turning round to examine me, I expected to have found the business settled by the point cf your sabre. I was agreeably disappointed to find your canteen at my mouth, and from that moment I wished to be of what service I could to
! I I
-u Know the iet.
rif'i! showed me where you stood; and as the only chai.re of saving ou, took the liberty of making a dash atyourneck; it was no time for ceremony, and I was lucky enough in carrying ou otf without heiusj touched.myself. This is my place
Cornel, and here you may command.
'-urgh, tlun bud tin i t 10 rr.oke aiiiiU tr 10 said rse
uiion, or that liu a id ccurt vviit pu.cceu tu tG llierton in their absence. C. li. Dunn, tty. JAMF.S DILL, ( ik. Her. S 9, IS: 6
(Kr jVQ'IICE.cq
fl. l,L, pc.rS'n a rt licit !)) , iH. ihasii'ir uf Joi n Ktii.n
U I . i
said the Colonel. 'Mystery is a source of the sublime, answered the Yaot. ''That must remain a secret till better times. : in a few days tint Colonel was sent to Lavbach. lie found the greater nart of
dicrou.s;and he promised the civic coun-j knocked down cluse to the Colonel, and his'expedition there before him, for the cil that, before twelve hours were over, among them the old guide. De Tab! random firing ofa nirht attack produced
inej snouiu see me-roDoer witn a ropeimont was proverbially brave, and cared i little besides terror. The dispersion oft4 J L m I lilt;
lounu nis necn. r or me purpose ot not unrr about tnvinp- or taLmo- Hai h tiu. f
i , o o o o ii wi'ujj iiom iui iiuu uvu v ui j 1 1 'i v i ti t Iv-I-L! t:
ofMortau's march into Swabia, and was! the Bri.sgua. The troops were instantly
a soldier all over. I he idea that his 'closed up, and ordered to staiul to their communications should be intercepted'arms but the order had been s.caicel
by a 'mountain thief, a pedler, and a goat given, when a shower of shot was poured hunter,' was at once intolerable and lu-jin upon the position some men were
i a . .i.ifci pur-
ui joi n itn.p ,1 li i.doipti i.,w;-
1.1 1 h llr'UT. fl. I I.ltlltl . ...... . 1 1 ... J
luib Militr, for tlai i int tiottai 6 ki.ti u.wfi a sk ctiiis, timed 25 t otji:. lksi,Ur .1 u, ot Caleb A Cfttii, mho 6s gned iu ha.tl Ucn.j. i-y nie: Al&o m note of h.nd gjj me tui ia nty iinf dniLvrti thirlv.Ki v-r . .1 r-
i fie flashinjr of the b Oct Ust, Jruwn in ivor a i-id k.t a 0 a
the said no'.ts were Irnutluk ot Ij onuun u, nd J n ticttriained not to tiuiu cavil coraptUtii by law, JOHN 13. CRAFT. Rising Sun, Dec. 16. 1 86. ji.
RE.iL ES T.1TE FOR 6.1 LE.
TIIKbUPSi lllBKR.i!ei8fwrb,n.Sln e.. tin. in)f ol ; I .( i t S in Ilp .!... i .....
A i XI v ! :f i i hi i . 'i. 1 1 :i r vi n tt i r :i 1 1 V1 ! i.i'.rt.. . . .
" ' v -"- - j w 5 ' 1911U41C on r.iiu ii;w oaoristrett
und V i e btrtet
A LSD 330 acrts of LAM) in K ; u couu-y tyirgon iU- ro.d tiom liiaii g Sun to V. rtwiL ar.a ibnut 20 niit-cs Iron L-Virer.ceLusgti. ' ALJ- 0 he South tti'st quirur ot . ctioi 3. Town 7 Ki-jrt:2, Wtal in Dearborn cuuu..
,o uic o m ii wts qirvt-r ol st cu. o .34.
Tiie peasant swallowed it with '.Mllieul., , exaggerated strieb of the multitude and
and dropped back on the ground. I he. tiring had suddenly ceased, or was hept up only by the French ilankei-, w!u
ieiuv it tf the eneni. De Tahnont
on:i i -iurneti witn his corns to r ranee.
:(;li
t out a random iir"; now a, d th.-n
without knowing on which iv ihe a-
sailants were to be .lotind.
'V:
nospitih;',. iim it laired dilierenth
le v, oidjwiiti his ?uccesor3: his Maiestv contin-
i vi r rn rnm rlptf enrnricn tlwi jvurwlif! ah'; l,nl l,i li.wi l.,,..,,. Ii.. ..I i I.'. i.'ll l.i i i .. .
iiwiv. ..ihih.iu t u't'"',M t.uuii,ii'jui iic imu uuiii.uiiij )nui nun Mm, ioa i nit iiao orouut oome neitlier arniJ-, was to wait for night to fall. Aboutihe stooped down to give tlui d int: tnananiunitioi:, nor baMe. But in default
seven in me evening, a patrol wiucn had ja drought ol w ine out of his canteen, ol ttie5f , they had brought abundance of
been ordered to search the market peasants as they passed out of the gates, (for the honest Carniolaus were strongly sus
pected of carrying on the correspondence, of the disaffected within and without,) brought in an old seller of eggs, in whose basket they had found some gunpowder. This was of course contraband of war, and the peasant was
brought to head quarters. A further search discovered a letter to the 'Moun
tain King.' He was extremely decreped, and so deaf, that he could scarcely be made to understand that a court martial was about to be heM upon him. His Carniolan jargon was equally lost
upon the Colonel. To shoot him, how ever required some consideration. Trial
was impossible with a man destitute of
all faculty of explanation of understanding; his age rendered him harmless, and cruelty might have irritated the country
people, (who had crowded hack on his
owi. , ttireo Wt-s. m sv,.srrUi.d tu" ALSO tht K.n tuif Utb. Nordi tt qJar ttr el btction 13, To a o 3, Hai gr 3, U t , d tAtuiy ui.eurts in the North Wst,,, , '
boulh Wts quarter cf secii n . 5 j 7
o, tst, .o in hw. 12. i land tn. y
I he two last ra ntion-d tracts musl be soli itiinitdiatcly to cLse a concern CiCOGC H. l;UNN. Januarys, 1827,
RAGS! RAGS!
He fou .d the passes open and the KingjHnIC 'ftbest pi ice. in CASH or writing i Hie Mountains true lo the laws of the! 'T iVtn fjr cl and fctton , i).,. a:ir.....,i. A15 at this crrlcc.
was again given to move, and me coi-,ued ihr-w under of Corniola. and the hoi
uinti began to pass down the sharp dc-jror t;fihe French for years. He continclivity above the village of Idi hi j but! u.thy surprised and defeated the corps this deelivityisseven hundred feet In tiiejio.it attempted to beat up his quarters, plumbline; and it may be imagined ihailuotil the idea was utterly abandoned in
m utter darkness it was not the eah M path in the world for a drenched and harrassed part) of foieigner?. They had not descended half a hundred feet when a riile flashed lull in the
Colonel's
face ;
and this signal was foi-'
lowed by a rapid running tire, that seemed to circle the whole valley. The column feebly attempted to recover the high ground, but the balls came in iowr;
from the ridge ; to make their wa down
seizure,) and deprived the cily of its prc-!to the village was as much cut' of the
dep iir. His last exploit was cutting oil the rear division and the whole ol" the t'argage ofa French Marshall moving on to Italy. Who the Mountain King was, nuiiudy knew he had a hundred histo
ries, he was alternately supposed to be Holer, who had escaped from Mantua; Suinfoit the famous Austrian General of Light troops, w hose body had not been found after the battle of AusterlitZ; and a multitude of others. The countrv
people, bswevcr, fairly Ltlkved him to!
TERMS OF PUBLICA J(j F
Tllv. 1'iUiDirM is piu'r,: vw . klv on s-npr royal p,ptr. ux Tl REE DOLLARS U i "um hr.ged by tht pMmein of 1 U O lityl.I MtS in advance, oe by pay,, g 1 U(H)(,LlAijs & Hi,.. .t hLM b at the txpiiatlon of S.x mmtU Post-Ofhce . or by the raa.t writ., must Ly , carnajre otherwise it will Le clu&d on .Lei? ADVERTISEMEXTS Containing 12 lines, three i,erti r8 or!cSs,r,n& dollar, twu.u hve cents forth .dditi,,) ,n. Hertion-Urgcr advertistmiLts in iht s,mc noportion. u The CASH must arcrmpeny advertisemen 8 - jbcrw,se ihey will be f uobshed until pa.d tt the ciptnse of the advert Scr. " VLvter to the editors rt ust he nost-ruiiJ, o;Lcrwic itey will uji bs muuded tz. V
