Newspapers / The Journal (Salisbury, N.C.) / Aug. 28, 1827, edition 1 / Page 3
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Upr.n ihc salijert of oppnintn.nits (i) oHiCr, Uc v otil'l cut it oir ;»ncl caKt it into fire. 'I'lsat it lie slioiiM c\( i tiec'l cted I’rrsidcnt, it would he witliout solicitntioii and wifliout it'.trig'ue tip- ^;1» liis part, '1 h:it he would tlien fr> into ofFicc viLCtJy I’rec and untruinmollcd, and would l»e Jtft at perfect liberty to fill the offices of the government with the men whom at the time he believed to be the ablest and best in the coun try. 1 told him that his answer to my question was s*ich a one ns 1 oxpected to receive, if he an swered it at all, and that I had not snujfht to ob tain it for njy own satisfaction, i then asked him if I were at lilierty to repeat his answer He said I was perfectly at liberty to do so to any person I thoug'lit proper. I need scarcely remark that I afterwards availed myself of the privilejre. 1'he conversation upon this topic liere ended; and in all our intercourse since, ■whether personally, or in the course of our cor respondence, flen. Jackson has never once ad verted to the subject, prior to the date of his letter to Mr. Heverley. I do not recollect that Gen. Jackson told me T might repeat his answer to Mr. Clay and his friends; thouph I should be sorry to say he did not. The whole conversation bvinff upon the public street, it might have cscaped my obser- vation. A few remarks, and I trust I sliall have done with this disagreeable business for ever. 1 called upon Gen. Jackson on the occasion which I have mentioned, soleiy as his friend, \ipon my indidvidual responsibility, and not as the agent of Mr. Clay, or any other person. I never have been the political friend of Mr. Clay since he became a candidate for the office of President, as you very well know. Until 1 saw Gen. Jackson’s letter to Mr. IJeverley of the 5th ult., and at the same time was informed by a letter from the editor of the United States 'lelcgraph that I was the person to whom he nlhnlcd, the conception never oncc enteieil my mind, that he believed me to have been the a- gent (.f Mr. Clay or of his friends ; or that I had intended to propose to him terms of any kind from them, or that he could have supposed me to be capable of expressing the ‘ opinion that it was right to fight such intriguers with their own weapons.’ Such a supposition, had 1 en tertained it, would have rendered me exceed ingly unhappy, as there is no man upon earth whose good opinion 1 more valued than that of Gen. Ja' kson. He could not, I think, have re- ccivfd this impression until after Mr. Clay and Ills frieivls had actually elected Mr. Adanis Fre- pldent, and Mr. Adams had appointed Mr. Clay Secretary of State. After these events had transpired, it may be readily conjectured in wliat manner my communication might have led liini into the mistake. I deeply deplore that such has been its efltct. I owe it to my own character to make anoth er obst-rvation. Had I ever known, or even suspected, that'General Jackson believed I had be. n sent to him by Mr. Clay or his friends, I should have immediately corrected his errone ous impression, and thus prevented the neces- filty for this most unpleasant explanation. When the editor of the United States Telegraph, on the 12th October last, asked me by letter for infomation upon this subject, I promptly in formed him by the returning mail, on the 16th of that month, that I had no authority from Mr. Clay or his friends to propose any terms to Gen. Jackson in relation to their votes, nor did I ever make any such proposition ; and that 1 trusted I would be as incapable of becoming a messenger upon stich an occasion, as it w.is known Gen. Jackson would be to receive such a message. 1 have deemed it necessary to make this stntement, in order to remove any miscon ception which may have been occasioned by the publication in the Telegraph of my letter to the editor, dated the 11th ult. AVith another remark I shall close this com- munic.'ition. Before I held the conversation with Gen. Jackson, which 1 detailrd, 1 called Hpon Major Eaton, and requested him to ask Gen. Jackson, whether he had ever declared or intimated that he would appoint Mr. Adams Secretary of State, and expressed a desire that the General should say, if consistMit with the truth, that he did not intend to appoint him to ♦hat office. 1 believed that such a declaration would have a happy influence upon the election, and I endeavored to convince him that such would be its effect. 1'he conversation was not so full as that with Gen. Jackson. The Major politely declined to comply aith my request, and advised me to propound my question to the (General himself, as 1 possessed a full share of his conf dence. JAMES BUCHANAN. Lancaster, 8th August,-1827. A GOOD JOKE. . Montpelier^ (Vt.) July 16.—We learn by a respectable gentleman from Stan- stcad, L. C. that the citizens of that place, on I’uesday last, raised a pole for the purpose of elevating a flag early the next Tnorninp, beaiinj^ upon it j figure of the “ British Lion.”—All tilings were put in readiness for raising the flag with- cut delay the next day. The ne:^t morn ing came, but to the utter astonishment of his majesty’s loyal subjects, it was found that a large flag-was waving inahe air at the top of the pole bearing upon it the American Eagle, which wa's so fixed that it could not be lowered except by taking down the nolc, or by asr.vnding to the tup of it.—The latter method being adopted, the flag was wrested from its proud eminence and consumed with fire and brimstone by the enraged loyalists. The author of the juke has not been dis- I I KSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1827 covered Fat. A singular incident is related in Poul- son’s 1). Advertiser, which is said to have occurred «n board a sloop on the 4th inst, A dog struck by lightning and ap- pu'ently killed, was thrown overboard, "hen it inNinediately recovered, swam to the vessel, and was taken on board. ^ here it soon bccame torpid, was again tlirown into the river, resuscitated, swam '0 the shore and was seen to run briskly ’‘p the street. If the application of cold J^ater is a specific against the effects of ••y;htnitig, ills a fact that should be ge- ^ei'aliy promulgated. Salem fin the thunder storm of July, 1822, a genilcman was struck by lightning in his ■'oie_it) State street in this town, fje •^y ''etiseless and apparently lifeless sev- n.inuies, 'I'he application of cold • ■‘'i’’.’ biui the cn'cct-uf restoring him.] Portsmouth xV. ii Adv. ELECTION liE'lUKNS. The following completes the returns of m'em- bers to the next General Assembly, with the exception of seven counties, viz : Brunsw ick, Chowan, Columbus, Gates, Haywood, North- ampton and Perquinions, which I’emain to be heard from. Jhhc—Alexander B. M’Millan, senate ; An derson Mitchell and Zachariah Baker, commons. Tor Congres.s, .Williams 464, Mushat 246. Montgomery—Edmund Deberry, senate ; Jas. Allen and James M. Liliey, commons. liutherford—WxTXyw Shuford, senate ; D. Gold andJ. Green, commons. I'or Congress, Car son 1320, Vance 554. Randolph—Alex. Gray, senate i Hugh Walk er and John B. 'I'roy, commons. Jinxon Joseph Pickett, senate; Clement Marshall and Alexander Little, commons. Burhe—Merritt Burgin, senate ; David New- land and Joseph Neele, commons. Moort—Alexander M’Neill, senate ; Gideon Seawell and William Wadsworth, commons. Buncombe—\\Xvji\\ A. M’Dowell, .senate j John Ch-iyton and James Allen, commons. For Con* gress, Vance 1193, Carson 661. Wilkes—Edmund Jones, senate; Nathaniel Gordon and Malachi Robards, commons. For Congress, Williams 915, Mushat 465. C/ia/Aam—Joseph Ramsay, senate ; Nathaniel G. Smith and Nathan A. Stcdman, conimons. Hurry Dobson, senate ; Ephraim Houge and William Douglass, commons. Camden—Willis Wilson, senate ; Thos. Do zier and 'I'honias Tillet, commons. Pasquotank—John L. Bailey, senate ; John Pool and Wm. L Hardy, commons. Caswell—B. Yancey, senate ; C. D. Donoho and J. E. Lewis, commons. Bladen—Jnhn Owen, senate ; John T. Gil- mour and J. J. M’Millan, commons. iSampxon—Hardy Hoyall, senate ; D. Under- w'ood and ——— Boykin, commons. Duplin—Andrew Hurst, senate; Danl. Glis- son and Joseph Gill&spie, commons. Ncto-Hanover—'1 hos. Devane, senate ; W'ln. W. Jones and John Kerr, commons. Town of Wilmington, Joseph A. Hill. ^/c/77Jonf/—Erasmus Love, senate ; Ccorge Thomas and A. M’Nair, commons. Granville Mr. Tuttnall, senate ; Messrs. Glasgow and Taylor, commons. Beaufort—J. O. K. Williams, senate; W’m. A. Blount and Thos. W. Blackledge, commons. Bonkingham—Mr. Ikoadnax, senate ; Thoa. Settle and James Barnet, commons. Onslow—Edvtard Ward, senate ; Frederick Foy and Edward Willinnis, ccnmions. Martin—Joseph W’illiams, senate; Gabriel Stewart and Jesse (hooper, commons. Hyde—Benjamin Sanderson, senate; John B. Jasper and W’allace Styron, comriions. IVashingtoii Samuel Davenport, senate ; Wm. A, I.ozman a:nd A. N. Vail, commons. Tyrrell—F. Davenport, senate ; Daniel Bate man and John Beasley, commons. Hertford—David O. Askew, senate; B. J. Montgomery and John H. Wheelel*, commons. Carteret—Nathan Fuller, senate, Otway Burns and David Borden, common.^. Jonex—Risdeu M’Daniel, senate ; Enoch Foy and O’Bryan Cox, commons. ’■T. LO’JIS, J'JI.Y 18.. Tilililary.—T!»e military expedition, for the Upper Mississijjpi, left this place on Sunday last. It consists of the whole of the Sixth Infantry, and six companies of the First. The superior ofTicers are, Hrevet lirigadierGeneral Atkinson, Col. Morgan, and the Major.s Ketchum and Karney. It moved in three steam boats, with several keels in tow. The promptitude of this movement is justly and universally applauded, and (iljlluicti linu lel^iIoLS In compar.y. Tiiey passed to the place of execution with as much sang froid as if they were “ specta tors and not actors in the dismal scene.’ — When the platoon, which consisted of about thirty men fired, but one man fell, and he was only slightly wounded ; it re quired three or lour rounds to bring down two more, and the last victim stood twenty shots before he fell, calmly smok ing his cigar. If such indiflTerence of life cannot be called bravery, it is the strong- The following, w e believe, (says the last Ra leigh Register,) is a correct list of our Mem bers for the next Congress. * t^denton District, I.emuel Sawyer. Halifax, Edgecombe, Newbern, Wilmington, Fayetteville, Warren, Raleigh, Caswell, Salisbury, Mecklenburg, Burke, Surry, "Willis Alston. Dr. 1 homas Hall. John H. Bryan. Gabriel Holmes. John Culpeper. Daniel Turner. Daniel L. Barringer. August. H. Shepiieni. John Long. Henry W'. Conner. Samuel I’. Carson. Lewis Williims. From the U. S. Philadelphia Gazette. In oar columns will be found the re ply of the Hon. James Buchanan, to the charge of having conveyed certain pro posals to General Jackson, relating to the formation of his cabinet, should the latter gentleman be elected President. These charges, iheir origin, progress, and denial, we have given to our readers. This denial, on the part of >lr. Buchan an, of any participation in a matter so di rectly referred to him, will have a ten dency to repress certain exultations, in which Editorsof a satiguine temperature and unchastened zeal, have indulged. However General Jackson may have been deceived in his apprehension of Mr. Buchanan’s “question,” (which he so strangely consn u( tid into a corrupt pro posal,) the charge of corruption, so con fidently made against Mr. Adams and Mr. Clay, now fulls to the ground ; how much of what was leatiing upon it will be buried in its ruins, it remains for time to show ; but tb.e reaction of pulilic sen timent will be w eaker than usual, if whai is commonly termed the ojjposition par ty is not found to have sutVerrd materially (Vom the explanation of Mr. liuchanan. From the Democratic Pre ss. Mf. Buc/ntndn'n Letter.—We had the only copy of this letter which was iii I’hiiadelphia, on Friday. Early on Sa turday tnorning we put up a few bills, stating that the letter of Mr. Biichanati, in reply to Cieneral Andrew Juckson, woiiUI be published in this paper at 1 o’clock P. M. it would be difticult to convey to persons at a distance a correct idea of the sensation wliich this notice produced. Tiie city was like a liive ol bees.—'I’he .Administration men seemed laden with honey, while t t,e Jack'^on men were darling their stings wi all directions, j I'he substance of the leaer was noised a-1 broad, and the impatience of all parlies to real it, became very great. Wf seen tiotbing hke it since of ■ the tiews of peace in 131; whatever maybe the ulterior military | est instance of passive forlitude ever dis- operations among the hostile Indians, it ' is certain ihat there are objects to be ac- complished, by the appearance and pres ence of this force on the Upper Missis sippi, which w ill fully justify the step which General Atkinson has taken. With respect to the rause.'i of the late outrages on the Upper Mississippi, v»e are glad to have it in our power to say, that they have no foundation in any thing done by our citizens to these Indians. The murder of the fatni’y at Prairie du Chitn^ the attack on the boat in the Mis- sissippi,and the hostiledemonstratinns at the Fever Mines, are all unprovoked ag gressions, without the semblance of rea son to justify them. They grow out of the permanent spirit of hostility which pervades the principal part of the Win nebago tribe, and which has prevented them from ever making a treaty of peace and friendship with the United States. They are the only Indians within our limits who have refused to make such a treaty, and have always been our open enemies in every war, and insiduous ones in peace, and will continue so until chas tised into good behavior. Amer. Advertiser. DETROIT INDIANS. The following account of the Winne- bagoes, the Indian nation whose hostile acts have induced the movement of the troops under Gen. Atkinson, is given in the Michigan Herald : to be found in some of the later numbers ihe name by which this nation is of the London Matrazine. known by their neighbors is Win-nee played.” From the New-York Enquirer. i;eneral chuuch. “ Subscriber” inquires who is the Gen. Church, now cotnmanding the land forces of the Greeks ?—Sir Richard Church is an ofBcer who has greatly dis- tipguisht'd himself durintj the war of England with France. He raised a re giment in the Ionian Islands, known by the name of the Greek Light Infarxtry.— After the peace of 1815 he entered into the service of the King of Naples, and was appointed governor general of the eastern j)rovinces of the kingdom. He was subsequently appointed to the com mand of the Neapolitan forct's in Sicily, and was present at the revolution in Paler mo. wheiice he escaped at great personal hazard. The popular party afterwards imprisoned him in the castle of Naples, He was liberated when the affairs of the Carbonari look a disastrous turn. Gen. Church has been, from that period to the present, out of employ. He is regarded as an oflicer of great sagacitv, enterprise and courage. It is fiowever somewhat curiou‘, to see a person distinguished for his aiiachment to the cause of Neapolitan despotism, now commanding the free spirits of Greece, (ien. Church ie of Irish family. I'here is a very interesting account of his adventures and escape from Sicily, during the troubles of 1S20, baa-gaa ; but that by which they distin- guisli themselves is Hoa-trhung-ger-ia, or the PioHing Fish. They inhaliit the country upoi. the Fox, Ouisconsin, and Hock rivers. More than half of them oc cupy the latter river, which empties into the Mississippi 150 miles below the mouth of ihe Ouisconsin. 'I’hey also have a village of about 18 lodges, 70 miles above Prairie du Chien. Tiiey are divi ded into nine tribes, whose names are ta ken from animals and birds, which, ac cording to their traditions, were sent with them by the Great Spirit to the earth, and transfonned into Indians, w ith the power and capacity to govern : they are the Bear, Wolf, Thunder, Snake, Devil, Elk, Grey Hawk, Eagle, Hawk— of these tribes, the eldest chief of the thunder tribe is the most powerful. The Winnebagoes are generally acknowledged to be proud, independent, brave, sensi tive, warlike, and industrious peoj)le, compared with the surrounding nations. They have had litie connexion w ith the wliites, and seem to desire an entire sep aration from them. They pretetid that they never were subdued in war. They commit frequent aggressions upon their neighbors, and not unfrequentiy upon the traders and others who pass through their countr). Commanding, as they do, the pass between the Fox and Ouis consin river.s, they have it in their power to inierruj)t the comniunication between the lakes and the Mississippi. So sensi ble are they of this power, that it is com mon for them to boast that they have the key of the country. The number of war riors is estimated hy themselves \.o be from 3 to 40t'U ; those who are well acquainted with them say, they can at any time col lect a force of 6 or 700 warriors. I'he appearance of the men are very prepos sessing, they are generally large, well formed, of a heatlily appearance, and have a peculiar air, formation, of person and features, l)y which they can be dis- lin;julshed readily from the Menomnies. They , are in fact unreclaimed and indo mitable savages, and unite in their char acter the extremes of savage virtues and vices. A correspondent at Port-au-Prince, whose letter, by the way, did not come so easily as we could have wished; s^nd^ us the following account of the conspira cy and execution of the persons implica ted in the recent affair al iiayii. “ PoitT AU-PiiiNrT, 12th July, 1R27. “A dangerous conspiracy, as it was called, though i believe nothing more than a determination to renions'.rale a- gaiiist Fiance, in which a number were concerned from Generals down to Ser- grants, was discovered^a few days ago. 'I'he government determined to punish in a m(>st exemplary manner, with a view of detering others from a similar course of conduct, arrested four subaltern ofli- cers, the highest in rank only 3 captain, and after giving them a mock trial, in w hich counsel was refused to be heard in their behalf, condemned and executed them in one day, I should have sai ! murdered them. Never having witness ed an execution I determined to see this, and if the concln* t there exhibited merits the appellation of bravery, never was this virtue more stronrly displa\rd. The rciidemned v, nt to the ;^-n,uiid smoking their cigars, without ljeiii;r tieil or hav- it;jj Ic’. ».tr''W-'; t|,, if V, . Atrocious Tlllaini/.—On the 1st instant, a robbery of a most flagrant character took place upon the turnpike from Bos ton to Providence. A young man from the Eastward, trav elling towards Providence, had been in company on that morning wiih three emigrants from Liverpool, recently land ed at Boston, and breakfasted with them at Summer’s Tavern, between Dedham and Walpole. I;i compassion of their poverty, he paid the reckoning, and pur chased of one of them a watch. Two of them went on before, and hid themselves by the road-side J and the third, watch ing his opportunity, struck the young man with a cane. He warded off the blow, and got possession of the cane, when the others sprang from the bushes, knocked him down, and beat him until he counterfeited death, when they robbed him of Si50 in bills, the watch, and his clothing, and rolled him itito the bushes. His screams were heard by persons in the neighborhood, and a pursuit was imme diately begun with horses. One of the villains who was seen in Walpole village, has probably been taken ; the others went towards Providence, as is supposed. The young man soon recovered suflkient strength to walk to the nearest house, al though on his arrival, he was evidently deranged from the blows on his'head. A most appalling occurrence has taken place at Hamburg in this state. A man by the name of Martin has been beaten and mangled in such a savage and in human manner as to cause his death, and Mr. Henry Shultz—Mr. Shultz the found er of Hamburg is now in Edgefield jail as one of the murderers! It is a most unhappy business. C/ieraw Spectator. We r«*gret to state that several cases of yellow fever have made their appearance in Charleston, a melancholy fact which the board of health have officially an nounced tu their fellow* citizen.**. Tht' Charleston papers yet received have not mentioned but three cases. i/j. Five men died suddenly in Philadelphia on .Vlondav last, from drinkingcold water. Several also died in New York from the same cause, duiing the late hot weather, and two others in James City. A person in Philadelphia, on Sunday morning, fitiditig liitiiself overcome with the beat, sat down uj)on the steps of an auriKJii store in I'ront street, and in a few minutes expired, lie had just arrived in the city. POIITI.AM), (.M.\IM\) .ll'LV 27. S))0u\—~Ou 1 huisday lust, we Mt*re vis ited in ihis\icinity by a cold rain storm. We have been told that al the distance of twenty-four miles, in the town of New (iloucest»‘r, the atmosphere presented the novel aspect, fur the season, of being fil led with snow, none of which, however, retained its form long enougli to reach the earth. • J^fdtnmoth Hi)g.—A sloop arrived at Luilington, \ t. a lew days since, with a ^rgo of 115 live hogs, from Whitehall, for the Montrejj market. The two lar gest weighed 21 yd lbs. ’i’he largest is of the gl ass ted br» td, 5 years old, weighs IMH lbs. measurer-8 i-‘j a-et in length anr -irfbs c 10 inchf’s. The other vs rf tlie r.yfi.‘Iv! lirccd, 2 1-2 years old, weighs 1010 lbs. measures 6 1-2 feet, and girths 6 feet 7 inches. The last men tioned hog has gained for about three ni*»iiths past 3 ibs. per day. Improved travelling.—The Ordinary mode of travelling is so much improved, that a gentleman from Boston, after a delay of transacting business in New- York, reached Philadelphia, a distance of 266 miles, in 36 hours ; and all this done, without fatigue or inconveni#*ncp, by the aid of steam navigation. If Dr. Fraiiklin could return to life as he wished and wit ness this performance, what a difTerence: he would find between it and the voyagers and journeys between the two place"> made in his tim«, when the mail was car ried from Boston to Philadelphia once a fortnight. Aaron Burr.—^\ recent letter from Georgetown, S. C. mentions, that Col. Aaron Burr was then in that place, his appearance indicating the last extremity of old age. He is probably on the verge of three score. Florida.—It appears that this new Ici'- ritory, as it becomes better known, is found to possess advantages over some of the adjacent countries. A writer in the Richmond Compiler says, that many eir- ter^)rising persons from Alabama have emigrated thither, attracted by the pros pect of health and wealth. A town is to be laid oft'next Autumn on a high bluff on the Appalachicola, eight miles belovr the junction of the Chattahoochie and Flint rivers, which will command much trade ; a fine site and a good supply o(* water from three springs. The oppositr. si ore will afford room for plantations on the low grounds, a mile and a half wide.^ 'I'he climate has been healthy during the four years that the place has been inhab ited, and the heat of summer is much mi tigated by the sea breezes, which begin at 8, A. M. and generally keep the ther mometer down at 80 degrees. Alligator^ and musquitoes are found in abundance. There are oysters on the coast, and an a- bundance of wild fowl and fish in the nu merous ponds and springs; and tho neighborhood is well supplied with liv ing water, formed by streams which rise in the back country, afterwards striking; in the crevices of the rocks, 8c reappear ing^ below. The largest lake is four milcjs from Tallahasse. It is thirty miles long eight miles wide, and, like the others, has a running outlet. V.xec.ulor’s ^a\e. AGin'EAlU.E to the laat will and testaii'enls of John Dinkins, sen. deceased, will b« ofliercd at public sale, on Wednesday, the 12th of September next, at the late residence of Mrs. Mary Dinkins, deceased, all the residue of said estate, viz :—one small tract of land, sev eral likely negroes, horses, hogs, cows, houses hold and kitchen furniture, £.c. Terms of sal^ will be made known on the day of sale. JAS. DINKINS, Surviving Ex'or. August 22, 1827.—3t47 ^S\ate oil .Vorih-CavuUna, Rutherford County, Court of Pleaa and Quarter Sessions^ July Scs» sions, 1827. Robert H. Burton Pascal ColVms and I Partition of James Hryant Sc [ wife Susannah. J IT appearing to the sati.sfaction of the CouK. that James Hryant and wife Susannah aro not inhabitants of this State : Ordered, there fore, that publication be made in the C.i1awl)a Journal for .lix weeks, that James Bry.ant and wife Susannah be and appear before the Justi ces of our next Court of Pleas and Uuartcr Sessions, to be hoId«n for tiu county of Ruth erford, at the Court-House in Rutherforflt»n, on the .3d Monday after the 4th Moncay in Sep tember next, and plead, answer or deiiuir, or judgmtMit will be entered up against them ex- parte, and made iinal accordingly. Witness, Isaac Cruton, Clerk of our said Court, at oflice, the '2d Monday of Juh . 1827. ISAAC CRATON, C. V. fitjO—pr. adv. f2 62] I II WE for sale a number ol Cotton Ma- chiiu'S, manufactured by Samuel Porter; anfl from present arringenieiit a constant sup* ply will be kv-pt on baud, so that anv person wanting a Machine will not be tlisappointed. Samuel ^'orter is known as a supi rior \v(ric- man, and from his recent attention to business all orders will receive punctual aiti ntion. WM. DAVIDSON'. August 15, 1«27.—5t4H To YaTwicvs. rll.WE purchased from Mr. Hundlcv, of \ irgiuia, IiIn noted .I.Vt'K, and will contin ue to stand Iiiin at my plantation. 'I bi fall sea- hon will e.onnnence the first of September and eiul the last of November. WM. DAVIDSON. Auirust 15, 1827.—5t48. VViVV By the su!)scriber, at Public Auction, cm I uisdaj of the next T'ounty Court, to pav the costs of repair, ten or twelve Watches, left; with tiie late .lonas Cohen, to be repaired. Tbo owners of these watches were publ-cly notified, s(.nietinu- (lelore the death of said Cohen, to call and take; them away, and pay the chargis on tin in, or they would be sold at auction ; .md Ir.ving failed to do .so, the watches wdl posi- tiveh be sold on the above mentioned day, un» less |)reviov\sIy taken awav and the cost of re- pairs settled. ' BENJ. COIIKN. Aug. 10, 18C7—2t44 for OlUcf of tht; JowrnrT
The Journal (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Aug. 28, 1827, edition 1
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