{ title: 'The Elizabethtown post and gazette. (Elizabethtown, N.Y.) 1879-1884, February 07, 1884, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1884-02-07/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1884-02-07/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1884-02-07/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn92061912/1884-02-07/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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pp IHC&5DAY. FEB. 7, 1 . _•* - inr >L~. relief of Fitz John .,- .ivroJittsu bv Gen. Slocam i••...- :'_e =eet.ag of Congress, 1? , -«<-: - -_-s Hjase of Repre- *.i '? :- .i.e 1st inst. The bill - --- _.~ : . :.{.^sc^Lcp, and to *• < .it :: CjJoneJ, in the , „•..- ».-_, '\-ctral Porter was \'I. :-J:-.-.:*. jf Volurrtee: -i--—3 -t wrpa through the -umpaig:: under Mc- i^i was, unqnes- - : J . Lit aad amoflg the - -. . .-•; Ci^d^QS who com- ;_ . i_- : \.zct tLroagh those - - ' rr^'.ic battle. He •:_ - :_e iast terrible - ^ . IT* Tsrc Hdl. when the r.e r» L --, liteioaaied, con- - .'zi, were forced to - _ .- sritrcrricnmenta of i'r^:-'erred IJ the cjinmand of . ; - -'--.- :_icr:r. and mortification ^.-.- --z: upon the defeat of tbat • ::---.-:;; ^-nerai at the second : : ?.-.:: ierranded a victim; and; •-- :.. k-:- i devotion of Porter . _..- ...;•- •.••.uamajjder, the friend : ..L-.ra-.;:.r. cf hi? schooldays v : : : = ic^ivs life, together with :_..i r -..: :_.-.: ^e was the most illus- ;; ..-.- .: ;%- ii'i-uiemiats of that gen- er. : :_:ed Lim out as the one to ,•- ?.. .ridjc-.:. He was accused of ^.j-.:.ed:cLCL- c; orders and disloy- ' iirv ^cci a court martial ordered by -*•\-*?- and composed of officers -_...:;.Lj.- under the sting and dis- _.y _; defeat, and who. moulding :•:::?• m accordance with pojralar :: r:j . pronounced against him and _-. \vis dismissed the service^dis- ;'ra^ci,ised, and disgraced. Years a/ter. a conrt of review was called, and. among other showing ttcdujg to disprove any intentional disobedience of orders, it was fully snl plainly shown that if he could, and had he, literally obeyed the or- der which was alleged to bare been sent, but the receipt of which in 5act time that it was possible for him to move his command was dis- pated, and we believe disproved, the army of Pope would have been annihilated; and disaster, compared to which the defeat of the 2d Ball otherwise beoome victims of th< dread and inSfclacable disease. It is to b« hoped the Hospil will be bailt or established f HOSPITAL IS T A scheme if no j£, ing towards the ea Sinitaiy settlement near Saraoi Lake, for the benefit of those sui feriog from palmonaryjiiseasee wh cannot afford the usual life in hotels or cam pa. The plan is to bay farm near Saranac .Lake, enlarge th farm house by the addition of a ail ting-room and dining-room, an< build and furnish fifteen cheap cot tages for patients, so that the in mates can' live separately, meeting only for meals and, when they choose, for social intercourse. Pa- tients will be charged three dollar a week, which will include boarc and physician s fees. Dr. E. JL Trudeau and Dr. C. F. Wicker, of New York, will be the physicians in charge. Half of the sum necessary is already subscribed.—[Saratoga r ournal. Wendell Phillips died in Bosto >n the evening of the 2d inst. Jlens' jndgments will long diffc s to the good the great agitato: thieved in his life long labor to ex ite and antagonize the passiorii lanldnd. At the time be begar his work of agitation the publ opinion of the whole country, evei in the Slave States, was very sen si b!y, even rapidly, developing a sen timent agaioet the institution ( slavery- In the Northern Stat* where, so far from being profitabli slave labor \cost more than it cam< to,\ slavery was abolished by law and in the Southern States,althougl it was profitable, tbe \spirit of tin age\ bad influenced their most pat- riotic and enlightened citizens k cast about for some way by whic! tbe country could, eventually, b purified from ac iastitnfcipn BO aJiei to enlightened republicanism, an* so hostile to advancing civilization. They organized the Liberian Be public and aided in many ways th emigration of the negro to its geni al protection and its enfranchising laws. They raised funds by which freedmen were aided and invited tc seek its*shores. It was no unusual event, indeed it was of frequent oc currenoe, for men owning slaves t< manumit them by will and provide them means, out of the estate, tc transport then} to Liberia. Thi ^u ^\\Ju^jronfc o f popular opinion was d ra was a v:ctory, would have be- c &Qyf . i n ^ ^ ^ fauen the country. Dunns the isolation from his army peers, comrades and friends and from the associations and priv- ileges of citizenship, to which he was condemned more by fortuitous opinion than By grave .and consid- erate justice—a pariah among his associates and companions—he has seen himself passed in rank, in op- portunity for distinction and in j f honor. He has been in the world bat not «t4t And now, that tardy justice prom ises to restore him to citizenship, and to remove the cloud that has darkened the proud hopes of a man most happily endowed with a chiv- alric courage and rare ability for command, it can only restore him to his rank at that time. Hundreds of his then juniors and subordinates : have been passed by him, enriched in rank, in honor and rewards, while twenty-two years have been strick- en from his life; and, like one arisen from the dead, be steps into the place he then held, while all old as- sociates, equals and friends are more than a generation before him. The vote in the Hoase was 184 to 78—a proud vote, if it could only wipe out the ineffaceable sense of tbe great injustice. The bill now goes to the Senate, where it is an- nounced Senator Logan will oppose •it; but which it is boped will pass it, as one similar was passed at the last session of that body. The Saratoga Journal puts forth the following with an ex cathedra air and we cannot question its truth fulness. Indeed, the N. Y. Tribune has a more extended notice of the same scheme—or more properly, ! sanitary enterprise. The elevated i : plateau around the Saranac Lakes, i ; billowed with eminences mostly cov \ j ered with timber, a little too steep '. and rocky to be denominated hills „ and quite too unimportant and irreg- ular in 'range 1 and outline to bo termed mountains, has become quite a resort for persons suffering in certain stages, or with oertain forms, of pulmonary disease through the winter months, and even for tho whole year. The benefits of a res- idence there has been well attested' Those lakes lie very nearly l,(S0O feet above tide, and no malarious influences has ever been found to pervade or taint the clear and oqrm ble atmosphere of the region. Pr TrndeatJ, a physician who had ac- quired ft good degree of eminence in New York beforo ho had expo rienced the beneficial eff«ot of tho climate, baa for several years made his residence there. So far as jior aonal experience and a highly -rtf telligent study and investigation <>f its influences can catablioh Iho vnluo of«the atmosphere to tunny of tlio«« Buffering with woaknoso or (liscMMio of the lungs, tho Dootor givtm rnunt trustworthy ovidonoo. That ho in interesting himself about tho flutftb- tbe proposed iauiU f eridenoe tb*t ft w}», dly flowing tion, Christianity and personal free dom. But when northern people began to arouse northern sentiment by impassioned appeals for the south ern slaves, because they found it a popular cry with the sympathetic natures of the masses; and dema- gogues sought pnblic favor and of fiee by picturing the horrorB, imag- inary as well as real, of slavery; and Phillips, and others, endowed with extraordinary powers of oratory, and of imagination in picturing the possible scenes of suffering in tho slave and of tyranny and vice in the master; and Wendell Phillips words of burning vituperation, of which he above all contemporary men was a master, denounced the Constitution of his country as \n covenant with death and a Icaguo with hell,\ tbe current of Bouthorn feeling and sympathy waB changed and they began to antagonize the spirit that seemed dotorminod, in spite of remonstrance, in opposition to rights under the common oonati tution and in defiance of the dan- gers to which thoy woro told their pereistance in their teachings and inflammatory appeals expoaod tho whole soutlifera people. Emigration to Liberia and emancipation wholly ceased. The South folt itself com- pelled to rest itself on their rigbtw under tbe constitution so much con teinnod and disregarded by north abolitionists; and finally to stand out in armed defence of thoir guaranteed institutions and ngniu&t the wordy assaults and political machinations of their northern fol- !ow-citizens. The million of livos that went prematurely down to the grave in ,be groat war of tho robollion woro JBO many pacrificoe to tho innovating, intemperate, impatient, fanatical and destroying proclivities of WonrtMl Phillips, and tho ftinftticH who gathered under tlio banner ho up hold. Tho providunooa of tho Al- mighty WOH too Blow for th«ir buruiDg r.oal, and thoy runhly al tempted to ban tun, or tiHmiino th«» execution of, bin will, nmi HB ti r« suit tho blood of n million mtirlyrit to tho war, Uk» thai of Al>ul t rriw nlond from tho ground. But Uio tfroat fitfitiitor won him self u muiio mid u plnoo in tlio un in doubt a* to the propriety of his ' ~~ kturjg 4>y Congress. The strong \ \'whfoh has been taken by re in the matter will coa* | genera! conviction tbat the I? justice at whioh Gen. knocked so long jshotdd novr.—Argus. In the self-styled friends of civil service reform in Republican news- papers would be less vague when asked for facts, .their misrepresent- ation and abuse could be attributed merely to bad mannrera, and not to bad morals. \Sot/ their evasions, when requested to supply! definite information, are so gross j that the conviction- %» enforced that jthey re- gard jruculency and falsehood as the best ageijciesf to help on their cause.' A cause receiving such sup- ports needs better friends than it has. The \civil service reform ques- tion wjll bav9 to to«et the test of Facts, whether its advocates prefer ;hat it, should or not. Facts which ire making t, profound impression )n the people are such as these: The Republican upholders of civil service reform are for it, only when it operated to keep in placje those Republicans whose appointment to and conduct in -office outrage the principle* of the reform itself. They waive the principle whenever its ap >Hcati6n would retire Republican poilsmen from placfe. They favor he principle whenever it would op- erate to keep or put Democrats out if office. No Republican reformer >r newspaper holds any Republican >fficial to the principle, ©r has aught iut abuse for any Democrat who ibserves it. ' There has been, with- lut protest or opposition from any Republican advocate of the reform, total suspension of us much of le law as issments lommitteea. Those assessment! n vogue in every federal depi -prohibits campaign as for Republican political g y p ment again—and thoy aro excused o the fact that the money is to be ed to buy votes against tho Dom icratie party. In federal politien n 'e Democracy ontlawH him from my chance under the reform, arid n tan's Republicanism roliovoH him 'rom any obligation to tho roform. Moreover, the. Republican nowspa- iers, whioh make thorn special 'ordmongers for the reform, con inually support its Republican vi- 'lators, and continually traduce its )emocratio observers. It ia, thoro ire certain that thoy uso the advo cacy of reform only as a device to Insure a life tenure for Republican , ipoilsmen in place, as tho favoritos id agents of the rotton rings whioh sontrol the Republican organizn- lon. Theso aro facts as evident the course of tho rivorn md the trend of the mountftinH.— .8 facts, they have wrought on tho ank and file of both partios a eon iction avorso to tho roform, riH a ing which makoB only an unnoodod ddition to the hypocrisy of politico, ^ e Republican nowBpnporB, which >rvert a requoet for a conHideni- ion of the facts into an oppoHition tho priociplo itself, are HH ingeir iU8 as the gentry at fairB, who mine hue and cry againHt Hellorw who eclino to tako their pay in counter lit coin.— Arqu». can Condenser\ by which title was known from the advocate '' piotaresc(|ien«w l til^ H and realism in special articled _ He was in faot the Father of the special article in daily journalism. It was in getting the such a graphio andfeli of this kind that, in- ill health, he started on the night investigation of the Hudson River wharves of the great city which caused his death. Such sketches used always to-Jbe in magazines or weekly papers. Dick ens himself, the master of the special article never ventured to insert one in a daily paper. It was to make room for \such articleB that Doctor Wood boiled down the less nteresting matter. In carrying out this hobby, the Doctor did more than any one else to encour- age the employment of \space\ |jnen, and tbe old style of salaried roporter has had many a growl at him for it. At one time, no one could apply for work to tbe Doctor without being given a chance to write a special article, which if good, often led to moro permanent arrangements. The Sun grow famous for them, then other papers took np the idea, tbe Sundav edi- tions of tlio daily papers followed, and after n while, the space men on tho right aide of city oditorH turned up their nonos ut regular 6ftlarie«. Tho good limos didu't luat. Pub- lahora miulo their salaried mon /ork liardcr nnd had fewer of thorn, and then raided on tho allowances for outsido nfattor HO tbat now a- !nyH reporting i« not nncb a bo nan/.ii aH it, wan for a year or two. i'oor Dor. Wood in bin IUMI ilayn wftH n \Hpiioo\ iniii), .an d di d i)f>!, make a fortnno ut il^U o WUH not, as many auppoHo, tho Founder of tho PrOHH Club. Jn foot, ho didn't bolong to it till itn reorganization from the old journalistic fraternity which drank boor and played domi- nooH in ft bar room ovor n ginmill. But ho wan docidodly n^ninHt tho exclusive and would bo arifttocrulio. tondoncios of nmny of tho now members who cftmo in whon tlio club got olooinoHvuary r.arpolH, HIOVOH, oliandolmre, .to., rtnd whon Hiiva/(«> atlacliH wero nuulo on uri- Imppy originnl momberH wlio woro somnlimiiH holihxl in t.hoir ilun«, hn Htrovo har.1 to «'»»> tht»Ho nunitU'd, un.l wlion ])o fnilod in thai, paid tho (lutm liiniH(.'lf. If (ivory man lio (^nvo work to, or ^ruf, wc/rk for, or lent monoy to, which ho nov«r «nw ag/iin woro to jrivo ff> to \\\n widow Hho would 1)0 vory oomforUil^ly oft' Wbo down *>wi»-in other pursuits, especially among real estate owners, and loudly cracks the whip of the Journal of\ rfc. Thf bumptious |ltp- 1 probably ihink'be'tfcer oHi. Another inefci ation^ where many countrymen often los.6 money, aa well as refutation (Billy ' in Hester street), has been t ftKily „ 8uppre8B«d. The vilastii of mai^y very vile dons, by some paltry eubterfnge, acquiesce^ id most dis- gracefully by some of the, qverpaid Oadio, we cannot boaetof here by way of JuetioeB (!) this unlicensed den of iniquity ha$ been 1 retailing alleged \table beer,\ luadej so they swear, of sugar and water. A jury, with more sense than usual, con- victed the bediamonded boBB of the shanty, and he lingers behind the bars of tho Tomba—hie own bar ia closed. Fast and furioup, no donbt, will bo the fight between the lawyers. These gentlemen seem to be mak- ing a great deal of money, lately, by long drawn-onfc eloquence. Accord- ing to 8omo accounts, ex-Senator Oonkling in making BOOJO where about $150,000 a year by spoken words. Two other distinguished HpoakerB, Bangs and Choate, have been (for eutiefaotory fees) strum- ming on gewgagfl and burling bot- tled wind about tbat almost inter- minabio figbt, about tho alleged Cypriote collootion of curios, be- twoon Fonardont and \Oohwal\ Di CoHnolu. Knrugoil dovotoow to nrt .-.an K «t. ; up H.>mo vory undignifuKl toinpofilH.i» Loapottt Hwniotimefl. Art in itH hOHt nnpoot, ploawant, graoioiiH, and aUraoting, i« dls p.uyod in tho Huporb Loan Collec- tion of PicturoH, in Brooklyn, for tho bonofH of tlio podoHtal for Bwrtholdi'H groat Htatno of Liberty, Enli«htonin^ Uio World. Tho Inhibition ha« boon highly anoooHH- f»l, HVMI moro HO Limn tho ono in Now York. Ft wflro to bo wishod, howovor, FUiljHoriptioriH would drop in with Hiu-h livoliuoHH OH to do awftr with iho nccoHiiity for thenr and niuiilnr Hpnrn to lib«:rnlity. Our iipfilhy in certainly not <;rodit- able, and nlmoHt juHtifioB ft scan ially, till tho .«Kin K tho p 3h for goiu of th Tho Hpooiul Commitloo ew York Chamber of Comn i the Proaervation of the Ad ick ForoHts, compr: Morris K. Jenup, (Samuel D. B/ih >ok, D. Willis JftinoH, < mith, CornolitiH N. H amphroy« nnd Thoman H (!<><! inf(ton. Tlioy hfivo isnnod tin m\ •OBH to tlio pooplo of thin SU(,n n ,vor of adding io tho landw whi' vo alroady 'lnpHod to t)m Sldte ose forming Mio wal.orHhodn of o IlndHon, Molmwk aixl Ula«-k vors, propoHod l-o )>n /wvjnirod a \act to authori/.u I.I )nt of tl m.\ Tho hill Ii $5(MU)IH). 'W* •dbly of tho nood of f.>n /ation nnd, nmilu from th Uio bill fuvoro.l, wliitrli H r for tho wiwdoni of Mm irormd tho Uovornor, 11w w tho OoimiKToo (!lianil)f«r • worfnlly foil nn ]>i>)mlf .roHt which m i-onrndnd f<. » utniimt important-... Ar, dill tho • !Vt) nn tlir wit in 1 (in. fnl iH f ouii I: rywli olil n Ii /» Iirot. Ih.-r- lo h i a, Vt!<i 11 mi t «t orn 'KK H )OHi int •rrn. n tl laiiffhablo nin<; whirl mi tho t <>.r wonoh ndvunomg rand, and .Lmoo hy , or ItiHf«:nri Hint tlio nn -hnnr.a o.ai i if) »lro< in dn th i<> Hfioor fit (i n •icnturo of now HOOD )IH, whwrfi i tantrum miigmlion mip P ort«d :>oly m^} itightHmdn o K ftll in- nl. KAMI. GBOVEB. - Attornoyb, idroBS, Port and Btete W. C/ HATHAWAY, ONE-PRICED CLOTHIER, Of Port Henry, 1¥. Y., nnln of IIIH and d<motm< lountry Ho .Itmpi :l(i th e COTlHUtlltlOH lawn of that country . but they toctotl ill be d ftiHUirail hi question for ^pnoratiott vrlutth«r hin life nn«l in* t«lontn conlritmluri nu>rn to «»**It tho Iionor nn<l gnmtnoaH of hia ,«ounLrY, orl » the Mil>v»r»ion of I U IAWH nnd dorofritiion of it« libortion AM at'<m*oi|i)»nl. <>f tho torriblo war aud iU IK'.UIIII), lx.tli IIAVO boon aa sailed nnd both IIAVO anfTorod Tho I'M* Johu I'or lor hill WM OH«fll t in th<i HOUBO, T<t«t4»rtUy, by voifl of 1H4 toib. Tbi« ii« mal t l U> W Tlio panHago •rt«r bill l>y tl: jiiHtico whicli uatoro tlio lUii! it of thoao \ id wrong. itod for it will nor in lnntorv. •ftinBt it carnc<l tl that tliov would Lioo bgaiuHt n politioi boonnno ho IH nn in,t is l>ft«ono«« of tho nun ,nt kind Much credit >a llm friondn nf \hv hill; Ii >1 credit in duo t o Hint. ;Ii«r rind fruthfi n. Hioriiji). for Jim Inr ,w«,l In ,,mnn fc .in K 11. id Iho hourl ho put in I. ca<-y. Hit rnrly |»etnwi K fi t.y H.o 3*«n»to in l>rolml>ln nnd rthnnld m.t 1,« long doU 3 .Hl T,, do r. K l,t «lUH-kU IB to do it twico Ar,;i.* ARET RFXSO'3 ESTATE. \' ! TO CREDITORS.-By order < [B A. SMITH, Esquire, Burroga inty of Essex, notice is heret uant to the statuta in such etu^ ipersonBhavina claims against .•et Keleo late of Minerva in eaid r , deceased, that they are required to same with the. vouchers thereof •••-'-•-- J !ie 6 Administrator Ac, >rll next tod Wth.' tned sol Administrator 4c., I at his dwelling house in lid on or before the 2ist. ilay Of THOMAS KELSO. Admijistratoi Plersons, i '• K - X - F * oim-aus & Cos WAY ' :j Plaintiffs Atl persons having ciaimi 11 *,« AFFORD £ B , vbethfx)wn, Rosanna A. Kar«oant, MoOollom and Alanson M. Lewis. in Lewis: Elb-abeth Ferris, rosid at Amita. OasB county and 8tat le next of kin of Henry Lewii Hind OreetinK: Poter Ferris haH lately applied >unty of Easex for abethtown. doep to Personal Efltato only, and each of you are therefore cjtoa quired to appear heforo our said flur- . at his office in Elizabothtown, f n bald y.ontha 10th day of March next, at icn oclock In the forenoon, and attend the probate of nald Will. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, wo have caused tho seal of office of our Raid Hurrostate to be hereunto affixed. L-3.J WitnesH, Franks A. Smith, Esquire. HurroKate. at EUzaOiotbtown. in said county of Essex, thie lith day of Jan - unry. in tho year one thousand eight hundred, nnd oierhty four. FRANCIS A. SMITH, Surrogate Ornaro.luteo ed, lhat the> AT Y. BT3PREME Ei ELk COURT.-COUNTT A. Wheeler, rind Marlon National BanV H. Ad C Eunion E, L<v;icwoo(!, Car oil no P Potter \>JI A. Klcc, Laura W. Fowler and Edward Whwler plr.intifTs, ajjalnst Cyrus Butler •\ Ho W. Butler, his wife; Tho First .1 BanV of Orwell,well, Gnor«ee H.. Adi .„, H.Adams. Willli 'hltnoy, Charles K.I Buasell. Marfo. L. Roy< Parker, defendants. nee of a judgment and do^ree . and Rale, da!y granted in tl .„ ...od action, and entered In ESR( inty Clerk's Offlce on the 24th day of N. iber. 18S3, tho undersiKned, \ \ • • - - W jr Georg H Adams, illiam N.Stmng.Tamos K. Lawyer OeorKe W oy< - —'\ - \ In pursu foreclosure said judsrme auction, at th UiA Valley He mmed. imed. will sell a seof tho hotel k In the villa f E e N *. pa described In M*iijud(? creo. afl follnwB, vb.; \All that tract or l f ld itt I th town of Sch: ib d — . - ™. In the village of Elizabeth- town, county of Rwex. New York, on the 12th day of Tanuary. 1W*. at 10 o'clock A.M.. the premlBoa described In M*ifijud(?mentand de- ce o afl fll w b \All th t tt ll at public hotel known as llage of Elizabeth- w Yok the 12th .M.. th (?men eo. afl follnwB, vb.; All that tract l of land situate In tho town of S EHBOX county, Now York, described ML ... Iowa: Ilein« narts of lota Nos. fii and C5 in tho Paradox Trftct.h^innlngat a cedar post beinK on the w>»flt el<Ie of tho mill lot west of Rttw mill formerly ownod tind oocuDid b John Roth, nnd now 11«80) occupied b Horicon Iron Company, and ru.nning \W\; thence Boutborlv alonif'\tSo^aiTfone forty rods and twenty links to the centre of tho fane running from tho cemetery to Syl- vanus Stewart's; thence northerly alone said lane and said rail fence to the pasture id b Oin Harrs, January 6th 1876 d t lik th ink fc ;nd stoi January 6th. 181 inty links: then^,^ 0 as it winds 1 thirty llnki nohh'trom a e ^A\ for*y-(lvo rods and ly aloiiffthoBOuth Hno^fN Wheeler's twelve aoro lot thirty-four mdn and twenty-onn KrikHtoth0DO8tmarkfld'\W.\ the cla.'e of boKlnnina. supposed tr> oontatn ton aer-m o' land, nnd belnK n portion of the south divi^ (on of raid lot number sixty-four and a nor Mon of the north part of lot number .sixty live In said Paradox Tnv>t \ \Also all that other pif^e of land situato ii sal.J town or 8chroon,nn.l being a Dart of tht middle division of lot number sixty-four in tho Paradox Trafrt.particularly bounded and doHorihnd. as followH: Beginning at a maple froo (It being tho nnrth-w«t corner of the lot), ihon^o south fifty rods • thonfo w^t thirty-three rods and flfto^n links\ to the Paradox Creak; theiido northerly al -—'-OH It wlndr \ - •\— ' \ to all persons having \la Wakefiold. late of Sorth SSJ£ jounty, d jxhibitthi . YORK.-Byth»Gr,i« J -.pondont: T ' ' \ 'xfErStu? ty. till in tbe Slat Btraight both indiv fcoc <>! Lucy Sti'?kn' iuall nru. CHatottOiiu. \I -.. : neatN«irll*-vl Y. Wls^tBia:B6>| ine at Flint, Genese* County, HlAiwl