Vincennes Gazette, Volume 13, Number 51, Vincennes, Knox County, 25 May 1844 — Page 2
r 1 YCfi J.YI X1 . Saturday, May IS ll. Whig- Principles . Aehlasp, Sept- 13, 1842. Dear Sir.- I received your favor, cooirn.uiicating the patriotic purposes and views of the young men of Philadelphia, and I take pleasure in complhnee with your request, in stating wme of the principal objects which I suppose, engage the common desire an J the coirmon exertion of the Whig party to bring about, in the Government of the United Writes. These are 1. A sound yaiiotial Currency regulated by the will and authority of the Nation. 2. An Adequate Ktvenue, with fair Protecticn to American Industry. 3. Just restraints iii the Executive po-xrr, emtricing a further restriction on the exercise of the veto. 4. A faithful aJministra'ion of the pul lie domain, vith an equiuHi? Zi-r ihvthm of the proceed of the sales of it a.nong all the States. 5. An honest and economical ahninisiration of he Genera! Government, leaving puMic otlict-rs perfect freedom of thought and of the riht of suffrage but suitable restrains against improper intei ferine in elections. 0. An ammendment of the t 'cistHution, limiting the incumbent of the Presidential utlice to a tingle term. These objects attained, I think that we should cease to be afflicted w ith bad administration ot the Government. I am respectfully. Your friend and nh't servant. HCMiY CLAY. Ma. Jacou ri' ATTO.N . Xomf mttor.s cT the 'Xaltcnr.i ?c hi a (To: Fa A'resiacni, H E H R Y b L A Y Toi Vice President, THEODORE FRELIKGHUVSEH. OF .t r.v. Senatorial Electors. HENRY S. LANE, of Montgomery Co. JOSEPH 0. .MARSHALL, of Jefferson. District Electors. 1st Hist. John A. Breckenridge, cf Warrick ; 2 i James Co-l.fi?. of Fioyd ; 3.1 " John A. Ma;on. of Franklin ; 4th " Samuel W. IVrker, of Fayette ; I'm 1 1 Hugh O'Neal, cf Marion ; ' C.th " George G. Dunn, of Lawrence ; 7Ui " Richard W. Thompson, of Vigo; 8i'i " A. L. Hoim-s of C-tstoil. Vth ' Horace P. liiudie, of Cass ; 10t!i L. G. Thompson, of Allen ; fiazcttc Office Rrmovnl. We are at last able to inform our patrons and friend3 that we have moved the (Azet:e Uthce to tho new builutni ad joining our residence on Seconl street, where we will be pleased ; see f,nv Riid all who may givo us a cail. We would here st.ite that if our pitnstion be too re mole from the buHOf-ss part of the town, for any peron having work to do, they ran have it promptly attend d to, by leaving it with Mr- Samutfl R. Greenhow at th Post Office. We have been requested bv me J or tiiiee individuals to put tuetr cr m the I ou Mice wtien we move l. Those per. -us' n.unes we have forgotten, but if they will bo kind enough t ttllus a'sofun 1 time, we will comply with their request, as well a all others wishing their papers boxed. This week we will be excused for the lack of our usual quantity of editorial, when we say tht our time has btEti -almost entirely occupied in getting our office ready forYnoving in, added to some little fixing preparatory to going to Tippecanoe. FinsEei riNo At-jpokney. Our readers can see by reference to the candidates' department, that our esteemed 3nd worthy citizen Frederick A. Thomas, Eq., is a candidate fur Prosecutor for the Seventh Judicial Circuit. This duty has been imposed upon the people by legislative enactment. Wo will not say it is right or wrong of that the people can judge. But we will say, elect Mr. Thomas we hive no doubt but that general satisfaction would bo the result of his election. An Englishman and a Yankee fought a duel in a dark room lately. The Yankee, not w ishing to havo blood on his hands, fired his pistol up tho chimney, and to bi horror down came the F.nglishman ! A machine called the Revertor, has bee invented, by winch a person m bed in the remotest corner of the house, can unlock and lock the principal, or any door, without getting from between the sheets ! A telescope, the weight of which is four ton, is making, under tire direction of the Karl of Kossa. The calico printers in the north of l.r.glaivl are on a strike for wage.
Tor the Vincennes Gazette.
Ti.ne on whose arbitrary wing, The aiying hours la or fly. Whose tardy winter, fleeting spring, But drag or drive us on to die. " Brnoy. Few and Heeting are the days of our Like the gaudy butterfly, we Hit from flower toflowerof fancied pleasures, in i'..e Lr Irlit summer of youth we are bora to blossom as the rose, and flourish as the flowers of Eden, for a short season but as w. pioeeed on life's highway, we gradully fade before the scorching rays of care are blighted by the frosts of affliction and fail victims to death's unerrin? darts. Of this wo are daily re minded bv all the transitory contents of j earth. To day, as it were, we behold the rosy, infant, sporting in the sunshine an 1 gayety of childhood, with joy'a tinruffled sea. around him to-morrow he is grappling with the cares and turmoils of the world and in a few short years, he bids farewell to all terrestrial scenes, and slumbers in the dust. Oft we behold in the vernal sky the cfoM.ttngfcd rainbow, 6trctched as a token of Clod's mercy to man or, as my en-t-hnnied fancy would depict it, as a crevice in the vail that is drawn between earth and glory, to enable us to behold for a moment, a f m in I symbol of its transcendent beauty and brightness. Rut ere we can give names to the evenescent hues that are mingling there, they pas from our vision away, and leave a murky cloud behind. The fragrant flowers .at l.'ioni, and dew-drops, blush as kissed by the sliming on the plain, when tho earth is ciothed it) her fair raiment of verdure, fad as the things of a mctnenl, to give place to the Hoomv season of winter. 'Tistliu with m.n a few bhort jear? Trim) thildhood, when hu biightest J.iy I? spent in this dark world of tuiirs, He pisses, like the bow, away. " And God hath wieiy ordained it so. For whon tosse i by the boisterous waves of time, and hourly in danger of being ship wrecked on bars of disease, or drawn uit the vortex of desp-.ir, it 13 a source of sweet consolation to know that death will hrinz us deliverance. Tits weary pil grim upon the stormy shores cf time, hooks forward to death with fond anticipa-ti'-n of a peaceful repose "when life and its troubles are o'er" he loo. vS upon it as the harbinger of a season of quiet when ' the weary shall rest from their labors." lie feels that in this world h-i has noabid--ing city but that his homo is " beyond the glittering starry sky. " Then death is disarmed of all his terrors, and he can ask in triumph. "Oh death, where is thy P tin ? Oh grave, where is thy victory !' Yii.cenne-, May 17, 1814. Tho Now Postage Bill. The Intcllitiencer publishes a synopsis of Mr. Merrick's bill for the red action of Postage, with all its amendments, as it finally passed the Senate. It is n w before the House of Representatives. As it is a milter of general and deep public interest, we condense its provisions as follows. The successive sections provide, 1. Thai the postage shall be on single letters unier miles thrte cents; ovej 30 and under 100 fu:c cents; over 101) aiJ undur .'500 ten cents ; over 30.) fifteen cts.; for double letters double these rales, &c; and for every additional quarter of an ounce, over an ounce, single postage shall bo charged; drop letters shall be charged two cents, 3td advertised letters the cost of advertising in addition to the postage. 2. That newspapers of less than 1,U0J square inches shall go to the subscriber under thirty miles, free ; over 30 and under 100 miles one-half cent each, and over 10') one cent; all newspapers over that size are to be charged as magazines and pamphlets. 3. That all handbills, circulars, tc, printed or otherwise, and unsealed, shall be charged t;c cents for any distance; pamphlets, magazines, oic. two and a ha'f cents for each copy of less than one ounce in weight and under 100 miles, and five cents lor over Qt) miles; and one cent additional for each additional ounce, i. l nat me i osi iuasmi jcncidi shall have authority to secure tho conveyance cf the mail over heavy routes at a rate equal to that at which it is now transporteii. That the iormer set is re po; That all officers cf the Gov ernment having the franking privilege shall keep a strict account of all postage charged upon letters relating to the business in their offices, and that these sums shall be paid quarterly out of the contingent fund of the department to which they may be attached; and that Postmasters throughout tho Union may frank lettere, packacre?, fcc, relating strictly to the business of tS.c Post Olnce Department and no others. 7. That the provisions of the oi l law concerning the franking privilege shall continue in force, except that Members of Congress are restricted to a period within 30 (lavs b ith before and after each session of Congress. 8. That members shall havo free stamps furnished to them. equal to five a day t'irongti the session, an 1 thai the excels of postage over these frank' is to bo co.lected. 9. i hat the cstiHishmeni of private expresses for the conveyacne of mailable matter be prohibitel under penalty ol S1--0 lor eacli otfence : and the remaining sections define and extend this prohibition to owners of steamboat-, railroads, Arc, define mailable ina'.;?r and make provision for detection and punishment of offenders against this hw, ;. I' Cour. Enq. The Wabash is still riling.
Protection against Liffttning". Ever' year a great many valuable lives and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of property ire destroyed by lightning in this country. We have often lelt surprised, that, in the face of these tacts, people generally take so hule care to guard themselves and their propertyagaint this desliuctive agent. A centnryago.it was necessary to feel resigned to losses sustained from this source, but, within that time, Franklin has discovered and made known to the world an infliiablo protector against lightning. A good lightning-rod never yet failed to protect persons and properly against lightning. For a very few dollars, a person may insure ids house against lightning as long as he Uvea, himself and family with the house included. It is not every one who knows how to construct those conductors, and, in the hope that scrnti may be induced to
protect themseives, we vv.: give mreclions tor their construction, which, if toliowed, will b- found infalliabie under all circumstances. A rod half an inch in diameter is ol sufficient thickness, though larger ones ate generally used. No vessel at sea was ev er injured by lightning when she had hec conductor up; and the conductors of ves sels are never thicker than No. I wire. A g od conductor will protect a space two feet all round for every foot of elevation that is, if two chimneys of the same height are twenty feet a part,-a conductor on ou3 running ten feet above it will protect both. The rods should be well joined together a: the place of their connection, and terminate at the top in a point tipped with gold, jplatina or silver. The bottom should be run out from thu house six or eight feet, and be buried in tho ground at a depth where tiio ground is ?1ways moist. The whole length of the rod, with the exception of ihe upper point, should be covered with a thickecat of black paint to preventrust. A conductor mr.de agreeably to our direction will never fail to protect a building, and can be constructed at an expense of a few dol Mr'. Tuere is one fact, that, of iteif, is suf ficient to show that a good metallic conductor affords infallibls protection. In the records of the British and American naies, there are many instances of vessels struck and much injured by the electric fluid. In all such cases the vessels were unsupplied with conductors, or their conductors were not put up when the storm approached. Ships at sea are very liable to destruction from lightning, and hence, thty almost unirersally carry conductors made of wire, and whenever these conductors are resorted to they always protect. Now. since conductors made of ironwire never fail to protect ships amid the awful storms of the tropics, noone should doubt that a gool rod will protect, his house and barn on land. We hope to see rods more universally introduced, then we sh all hear of fewer instances of the loss of life and property. Tha cheapest insurance a man can place upon his property is a good Franklin lightning-rod, as it csts but little at first, and never needs repair or substitution. Lou. Jour. -eflew Bathing in the Dead Se t. The correspondent of the New York American gives the following notice of a visit to the standing problem in the natural history of the Holy Land. The. gentlemen of the party determined to test the .buoyancy of the water by personal expencuce -vThev state that where the water was 5 feerep, they w ere so buoyed up '.hat they could omv touch the boltom -with their 1 toes. Advarrejngto where me weter was six inches deeper1their feet wero.suddenly taken from unu!erNUiem, and they were thrown in a horizontal "position upon the water. They could not maintain a perpendicular position without using some effort. They then swam to where the water was extremely deep, and endeavored to sink, which they found impossible even with some effort, to do. They could walk in water equally as well as on the land, with their heads entirely above the surface. They found they could sit and converse as easy as on a divan. A strong breeze came from the south, and with it a heavy swell. They described the sen sation produced by this riding on the sea, without a vessel or plank under them, as very singular. One of them had never before ventured beyond his depth in wa ter, while here he was enabled without the least sense of danger to go any distance from the land. They became convinced that what has been said respecting the great specilio gravity and buoyancy of the water of the Dead sea is entirely correct. Worth of Widows. 'Rich Widders are about yet (said Nicky Nollekins to his friend Bunkers,) though they are snap ped up so fast. Rich widders, Billy, are 'special evidence.' sent here like rafts to picii up deserving cnaps wnen mey can 1 swim no longer. When you've bin down twy'st Billy, and are jist off again, then comes the widder floatin along. Why splatterdocks is nothin to it; and a widder is the best of all life-preservers when man is almost swamped and 8inkin' like you and me. Well. I'm not particular, not I (replied Bi'lv,) nor never was. I'd take a widder, for my part, if she's got the mint-drops, and never asks no questions. I m not proud, never was harrvstocratic I drinks with every body, and smokes all the cifjar3 they give me. What's the use of bein' stuck up, stiffy? It's my principle that other folks are nearly as good as me, if they're not constables nor Aldermen, I can t stand them sort. No Billy,' said Nollekins with an en couraging smile. Billyr such indiwidooals as them, don't know5 human nalur.
Great Literary and Eeligicus Cariosity. We know of no literary annunciation more interesting than the one below. It comes in such a shape, through Bishop Doane and the Rev. C Fc?-er, that we are not permitted to doubt the accuracy cf the account, so far as it is here 31 v,i. If the manuscripts, prove to be what they are here stated, it vail make a literary era as interesting as the deciphering of the Egyptian Monuments. Curious research s in Arabia. The Right Rev. Bishop Doane of New Jersey, has communicated the following interesting particulars to the ediwr of the Newark Daily Advertiser: Dear Sir The following is an extract from a letter from my excellent correspondent, the Rev. Charles Foster, to whom the admirable Bishop Jedd dedicates one of his books as his 'daily companion and own familiar friend.' lie was the Bishop's chaplain, and has since been his biographer, lie is the author of 'Mahomedanism Unveiled,' one of the most ingenious and remarkable productions of tiie age, tind of a most profoundly learned critical work on the Epistle id the Hebrews.
lie has iust completed (his investigations 0:1 the Buljeci began in 1839) The' His torical Geography of Arabia; a copy of which I hope to receive by the next steam1 1 1 1 J If er. Aieanwlilie l cannot ciony myseu me pleasure of commending to yout .readers the very curious and interesting statement contained in the passage which follows from a letter received by the Sheridan. It is not too much to speak of it as one of the most wonderful discoveries of the age fruitful in strange results. Very respectfully, your friend, "G. W. DOANE. Riverside, April ISth, 1841. A Voice from the Patriarchal Age. 4 As your copy of the 'Historical Geography of Arabia' will. I trust, soon float across the Atlantic, 1 should leave it to tell its own story, were it not for one result so beyond all human calculation and therefore so likely to get abroad on the wings of rumor, that 1 do not like it should first reach you in a newspaper paragraph or from any other than my own pen. The result alluded to is the discovery or rather recovery of the long lost Hamyartic tongue, and in it of inscriptions (perhaps the oldest monuments in the world,) containing a full confession of the Patriarchal Faith, and anticipated Gospel. These wonderful remains of Arabian antiquity belong to a period of the world, to reach which all the internal evidences oblige us to ascend 3500 years, or within 50Q years of the Flood. For they are records of the lost tribe of Ad, the immediate descendants of bhem and Noah; a people of Arabia who perished utterly, not only long prior to all profane history, but before the books of Moses was written. The unknown inscriptions were publnhod in Wellsted's Travels in Arabia, the author of which work discovered them on the coast of Hadramant in 1834. Copies were forthwith transmitted to Germany, to Professors Gesenius and Rodiger, who, it appears, have been at work on them for years, as it turns out without deciphering a single word. 'Their existence first became known to me last summer when my publisher sent mo down Wei'sted s book, on the chance of its containing materials jfor my work. After examining the unknown characters closely, I had laid the inscriptions aside as altogether undecypherable, at least to me, when it pleased Providence, in a way the most unlooked for, sudden and unexpected, to put the right key into my hands found it wtthout a dream ot looking lor it, in the Mdnumenta Vetustivia Arabia' of II. Scfiultens. At the first glance I thought I detected in one of these monu ments an Arabic version of the longest of .Mr. Wellsted's inscriptions ; and of this good guess I relinquished not my grasp until conjecture had been converted into demonstrative proof. 1 he results are the recovery of the Hamyartic alphabet ami ... anguage, and of such a testimony as Job desired, xix. M6-Z1. 4 How wonderful are the ways of Provi dence ! But for Schulten s incidental pubication of two short Arabic poems, these evidences of revealed truth, contemporary with Jacob and Joseph, might have re mained u mystery to the end cf time inowing whence alone it comes, I feel lonored at once and humbled by my own success, to have thus so completely sue ceeded where the first orienta'3 in Europe lave entirely failed, brings to mind in a ower sense the saying of St. Paul, I Cor inthians t. 26. Lor details and vouchers you will await the arrival of your copy on the Delaware. Murrell. A late Nashville Whig says the notorious Murrell, who has been con fined in thepenitentiaryfor the bstlOyears, was, we understand, discharged last week, and immediately 'made tracks' for Arkan sas. At Nashville a year or two ago, in com pany with the late venerable Gen. Wm. Carroll, we visited the Penitentiary near Nashville, and for the first lime saw this 'scourcs of the West. Murrell was men in delicate health, and we were informed by the keeper that he had conducted himself in a very gentlemanly manner scarcly even alluding to his former course life: but at all times expressing the great est desire to tn trood and reform. This Murrell pretends to be an uneducated man, but he has the very cenius of vilt lainy, and not one tithe of more' or physical fear. Let him be looked to in Arkansas. A French ;woman and a negro main who were foua'd living guiltily together in Maryland, lie, according to law, been sold for fsven years into slavery.
A Rich Joke. A Whig lady of Quincy, Illinois, has practiced a glorious Joke upon the locofoco editor ofthe Herald cf that city. She sent him the following verses, whereupon Thompson (such is "the Editor's name,) burst forth over the lines in the following rhapsodical strain: "The following patriotic lines, received from a fair correspondent in this city, we take pleasure m placing in the columns of the Herald. With justice- and the fair on our side, our "cause must triumph-" The editor it is said passed several very happy days after the eppearance of the poem, when a friend casually t ri-syllable-ed in his ear the word 'acrostic'.' thereupon Thompson opened his eyes and saw DEMOCRATS RALLY! J oin one and all, ye gullant souls, A s to theLreeze our ftas: unrolls,C orne on with pulse and purpose high, K indlin? the fire of Victory.
A s pr.vria f.ra in glowing wreath, S cathes the dry herbs on which it breathes; 8 o cur fujl ranks, armed head and heel, . T hronp eager at the battle peal. II urrah! hurrah! we ll win tho prize,O ur men are Lcl.I, our leader wise, M ark how our waving banners rise. P eiish the craven who wouIJ yield S uch honors upon such a field. O n with the flag! no rest, no pause; r ever give up our gallant cause. The magic power of the compass nee dle, says the .Magazine of Science, may be entirely destroyed or changed by being touched with the juicd of an onion. Don't believe it ! He is my friend who"'frankly tells me of my faults ut he is my worst enemy who tells them to others. AtiiiHl Election. Ivno't:)nty WhiS Ticket. For Representative, DANIEL G. McCLURC. For Clerk. WM. R. McCORD. For Sheriff, ISAAC MASS. For Treasurer, JAMES JOHNSON. Fur Associate Judges, CHARLES POLKE, THOMAS IJISIIOP. For Commissioner, SAMUEL B.MISON, For Coroner, WILLIAM BRUCE. We are authorized to announce John Benefiel as a candidate for Representative, at the ensuing August election. We are authorized to announce Seneca Almy as a candidate for Sheriff at the August election. W are authorized to announce Mr. Thomas V. Wiltixma as a candidate foi Sheriff at the approaching August erection. We are authorized to announce John Emison as a candidate for Sheriff, at the August election, ensuing. We are authorized to annoute Jacob Harper as a candidate for Sheriff at the ensuing August election. We are authorized to announce Henry Wyantas a candidate for Associate Judge, at the approaching August election. We are authorized to announce John Purcell as a candidate for Clerk at the approJung August election. - We are authorized to announce Martin Robinsou as a candidate for Clerk at the ensuing August election. We are authorized to announce John S. Sawyer as a candidate for County Treasurer, at the ensuing August elec tion. We are authorized to announce Wash ington Lullie as a candidate wr VvierK, at the approaching August election. We are authorized to announce Edwin M. Jones as a candidate for County Commissioner, at the coming August election. We are requested to announce Frederick J. Myers, as a candidate for the office of Associate Judge, at the ensuing August election. Mr. Caddington : You will please announce Mr. M. L. Edaon, as a candidate for Coroner, at the coming August election. In Rsking this favor. I am induced to think I am asking no more than what will be granted, when 1 tell you I am willing to pay for it. Mr. Edson is a gentleman every way qualified, and has promised to serve if elected. May 21, 1844. We are authorized to announce John Barekman as a candidate for Sheriff at the approaching August election. We are authorized to announce Frederick A. Thomas as a candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, for the seventh Judicial Circuit.
Tyler Suspenders ! Mr. Dadcock in Krrii.- r?9pn Palladium advertises 7''-
ler suspenders, and adds with perfect gray uv : . '"They shift three different v.ys and change sides just as eesy at No. 5 Mar b e LS ock, by A. C. BADCOCi;. A flat boat deeply laden, it is said, drifts fn,.Qr iVion fi lirrhtRr one : many boats lash ed together drift faster thnn a single one ; a single boat dr.ils luster man u ran, aim a boat drifts faster at night than in the daytime. . St. IjOUis Caz. S TEAM BOAT UEGISTF.K. A K R I V A L S May 17 Forest from ports above Monticello from do IS Sarah from Lafayette '20 Ocean from Ev3nsvil!e 22 Ocean from Terre Haute DEFAK TURKS. May 17 Forest for Mouth Wabash Monticello for Evansvih'e 18 Sarah for do 20 Ocean for Terre Haute 2'2 Ocean for Evansville. Locofoco Elcctorial Ticket. Sexatoiiiai. Elf.ctoks. HOWARD, of Parke county. REED, of Clark. T. A J. G. Dist. District Electors. Wm. A. Bowles, of Orango. Elijah IVewl.md, of Washington. J. W. Johnson, of Franklin, y. E. Perkins, of W avne. W. W. Wick, of Marion. Paiis C. Dunning, of Monroe. xustin M. Pu"tt, of Parke. Henery W. EI?vrorth, of Tippecanoe. Charles W. Cathcart, of Laporte. Lucir.n P. Ferry of Aik-n. 1st 2d 3d 4 th 5 th Gth 7th cm !Uh 10th SJaic of Indiana, a? Gibson Counlt. 5 in thi:gip,son probate court. May term, A. D. 111. 1 hosras Re!! tor of the estate of Charles j i C ?. . rnahaii. deceased, vs. The heirs of the Charles C. .Manahan, ceased. A pplicatiou for the sale cf real estate. aid deJ rgtHE said Thomas Bell, having filed his memorial, suggesting the insufficiency of the persona! estate of the deceased to pay his debts, and praying an order of this court for the sale of ihe real estate, and it appearing to the satisfaction of the court that the heirs of the said Charles C. Manaban, deceased, are not residents of the State of Indiana, it is therefore ordered, that notice of the pendency of said memorial be given by causing a copy of this order to be inserted three weeks successive ly in the Vincennes fizetle, a weekly newspaper published in Vincennes, in the county of Knox, (there being no newspaper published in the county of Gibson) before the 12th day of August next, that the said unknown heirs may be warned to appear in this court, at the next August term thereof, to be holden at the Courthouse in Princeton, on the second Monday in August next, to shew cause, if an? thev can, why the said real e$ieto'6halI not be sold and made assets for the discharge of the said debts. And, on motion, this mat ter is continued to the next term of this court. Copy. Attest: J. R. MONTGOMERY, Clerk. May 35"51 -St Administrator's JSale. N O T ICE is hereby given that we will expose to sale, at public auc tion, on Saturday the 15th day of June next, at the late residence of Samuel Carrulhers, deceased, all the personal property of the said deceased, consisting of Horses, Farmitig Ulensfts, Household and Kitchen Furniture, oiie If 'heat Fan, also a lot of Corn, JVheal and Hay, growing, 6,c-. A credit of twelve months will be given on all sums of three dollars and upwards, the purchaser giving his noto with approved security, all sums under three dollars cash in hand. GABRIEL FOREMAN . G. W. POTTER AdnTr. May22d,184 1. 51 3r. Administrator's Sale OF eal instate. PURSUANT of an order from the Probate court of Knox county, I will offer for sale nt Col. Clarks Hotel, on Saturday, Juno 15th, 1844, all the right, title, and interest, which Alexis LeRoy hod at the time of his death, to the following described property in the Borough of Vincennet, viz.: Lot No. -494, 373,418470,26,295, 319, 352, 401, 473. 478, and 481, and al so one undivided third part of 71 feet of lot No. 15, on the last mentioned piece or parcel of a lot is a IKAJ1L IIUUS1The other two-thirds belonging to J. Somes. Also the following lots in Harrison's addition to tho town of Vincennes, viz.: Lots No. 125 and 12G. TERMS OF SALE A CREDIT of six 3nd twelve months. Bond with security and mortgages on the premises required. J . sujiw, Adm r. May 2?d, 1844.-.51-4t.
t i 1 uj JiiyJIJ'
