MO: TAOSE, - 1,'4, JULY 18; 1.877. 0 THE' COMING 'PASTOR) s i torwanted—tme to please thepeople: Our chiircy, expensive and designed with Embellished with a. mortgage and a Gothic steeple— _,_ pulpit,tieWS and treasury to till. ' in r Odetii SairiPson, kept in strength by prac -•, . • A. mertal giant„so to speak, we ask,, Who shall our burdens lighten, for the fact p, To lifl a.mortgage is no weals man's taSk. • A mall "draw"---lart artist, plainer speaking,' Who ,frames with skill his soft-toned moJeru T 4 pletutie:i.the taste of those . who, pleasure. , Settipg, , , Bestloia little in our dillihioned pews. kilt:4llin Hunt in style; not harsh as Tor , ;-- ner: 'With fiamed-hucd tints and daubs of color garish; No dazzling light S—a softly shaded burner: Best suits the sense of our pathetic parish. . No, clank of chains, no brimstime fumes for ' sinners, - No ruirged path Way over hills uneven,' No weary race- where but few 'are winners, ; The road is easier, now-a-day, to , heaven; For, from a depot planned 'by modern sci- We take our places or our sleeping cars To Paradise direct—in calm, supreme defi ance / • Of• old-time stages (with their jolts, and jars) And old•fashiened laws. - • Such must our pastor, be-rand such, in brief, his preaching; • - Well read in Hegel, Figuier, Renaii, Strauss, He cannot fail to please, and if his teaching A hint of Brama or of Buddah shows, That's better still—Men will not weary of it, • For dootrines new, whether of priest or Sage, . 31 Are indications of a coming Profit, Fortelling for our church a golden age. • —Frank B. Converse.. LOVE IN A COFFIN. " YSTS'I Oh, Rex, how good Yok-are,! - Such 'beauties, too ! Bevel' my life had .so lovely a gift." Nora.Vansittart was holding the love ly, purplish-yiolet gems beside her own pale, perfect beauty. Her husband .watched her smilingly. He had looked forward to this hour for a longtime. , If Norah had a , weakness, it" was for amethysts, and these were the genuine Oriental gems, transparent as water, and flashing with that vioiet blue light so dear to the heait of the connoisseur. "Never mind, sir," she ran on with, 4 tender gayety, "wait and see if I don't surplise you as mtichi - as .you have sur prised:me." Little, did either think how prophetic the 'careless words were destined to prove. * * * * _* "The face of 'a young goddess, eyes like a thirst of sunshine," foim like a Grecian 'statue. That woman looks too proud to flirt," said Thomas .Dent, as Nora Van nittait's violet robe' and purple amethysts, • flashed by. him. ."Handsome, isn't she ?" said Felix Travers.. "Dresses well, too. But then she got that of her mother ; she was an . actress, you know. But with her beau ty, I would , not like. to Rex Vansitt art. “whi "Because, knowing a that. I do, and with, Rex's jealous temper at back; I should have a murder _on my hands,.l am afraid. If he, ever does find her out there'll be. trciuble.". "Travers." • - - Felix started- Tiolently:! . , It was Rex Vansittares voice. :, "Great Heavens I What if he hasover heard me," be , thought. , _ to "I've got 'something ART you," said Rex. • ' " And as Travers sauntered out to where Vansittart was lounging against the bal cony railing; he decided that his friend had been too far away to have heard his unlucky speech. The nexenioment - be .read his mistake in Rex's ashen face and gleaming eyes, but he affected unconsciousness. "Something to show me," he question ed, lightly." What is it—the moon ?" Rex was , breathing 'heavily wheil he spoke, after's moment's pause, it was in a constrained, husky voice : "What were you saying just now about my wife?" , 'Your wife ?" - "Theard you, Travers—l-heard enough, at any Tate—and I called' you out here for the,rest. What do you mean by your inginuations?" he continued, setting his teeth' hard, as Travers hesitated. "I'm just in the humor to hear them, and cram them down your throat afterwards," he added to himself. "I was only jesting," stammered Tra vers, hear the jest," said mayßex,.fierce ,"Yon take :your ,choice of tell /144ns what you mean, and proving it, or of fighting me with Out." • Traver 4 turned pale. He was a 'horri ble coward—a man.-ihat Rex . Vansittart despised too much ,to -listen to in cool mouzintj - 'lTora had refused him when she was ,siora - Oonvers. Perhaps, that was the '.'seeret of his bitterness towards her. - 011" a nothing," ke,said,;"not worth re, peating; but I don't want to quarrel, with you. People -- little - about Mrs. Vansittart „.and, Jr.avana. Of _course it s not Jug "Of course," 'Sneered - Rex, hie fees 'be coming *degree whiter. "What started it '" ' . "Well, von know they always liked each 'other;" Travere said, with an air of charming cander, "ththigh riebody,tho't there was anything . between_ them before you Were naarried. But now, - -you see, it is different. Married women can't be thick_ with gentlemen without people -calling it flirting." "What do you mean by .. thick?" 'de manded Rei,- in a smothered Tome. speaking So low that Travers was deceiv ed by his seeming calmness, and went on carelessly : . "Oh, being together "often, having him at the -house every day, riding out to gether, and so on. Mrs. Vansittart would have - been very lonely during your ab sence if - it had not been for Percy Kay aria." , • • "Confound him I" muttered Rex. "Nora knows how I hate him. Can you prove what you , say ?" he aslred,, turning stern ly upon Travers.' "Oh ! prove?" said Travers, with a ' shrug of his high shoulders. "It is not 'Serious enough for that. But ask - any.- body-your own sister, for - that. She stayed with Mrs. Vansittart all the time that you were gone." , Lucy Vansittart was dancing in the, room beyocd at that very moment. He went to the ovindow and called her dur ing a pause in the dance, - Travers watched him , with 'an un pleasant. smile.. "Lucy," said Rex, "how often was Percy Kavana at the house while I was up in London ?" Lucy looked frightened. "How can I tell ?", she- said pettishly. "I suppose Nora has a right _to receive whom she chooses." "That is not the question ; was he there often ?" 'Lucy hesitated. "What do you call often ?" ' "Was he there every day ?" - "Oh dear, no; not more than five or six times in the week." ' "Humph! said . Rex, turning away. Lucy looked after him anxiously, "What a fool I was to say that; and there's Felix Travers. 'Of course he told him." . Nora Vansittart wondered a little at her husband's silence as they rode home that evening. • . • But Lucy, in her terror lest something should be said about Silvana; talked in cessantly. - She had tried in vaiu.to find her sister iniaw in the crowded rooms, so as to warn her before they started, of what Rex had discovered, and ,now there was no change. "however, Nora will know better what to say than I should," she thotight. Rex never spoke till he was alone with his wife in her dressing room. Nora had told her maid,not to wait for her, and she slowly undid her purplish black braids herself. - • She watched her husband furtively. "He's heard something, and he's_Jeal ohs. He looks too black, to be easily mollified," sue thought, wondering what she could say in the absense of that ex planation which she knew she could not give him. • ' • "You've' been fooling with Percy Kay aria againi" Rex said at last,his lips white, his eyes flames, 'I told you what to ex- Peet if you ever , did ..that. Perhaps you thought I did not mean it." Nora threw back her hair; her betted ful face•turning stony all at once.- She would, :note. have explained new, while he spoke in that voice. if, she had been at liberty to do so. Anger froze her, where it burned him. "On the ccontrary,"she resumed, con temptuously ; "you said you would never forgive me aslong as you lived. Has my hour come ?" While she spoke she undid the ame thysts on her white throat, and put them in - their satin case with steady hands. Her calmness drove Rex more: mad than. he was before. "Oh, what a fool I have, been, he said bitterly, "I was warned againtit you— everybody warned me—but I would not listen, and I've got my, pay. You don't fool with Kanava any_ more under pay roof. Go •to . your lover, unp rincipled daughter of a Nile mother--",' • . A cry of 'horror 'broke from Nors'e lipi as she turned and confronted him. "Be still," she said, "that is quite enough' to make: me' hate you the rest. of my life. We are done with each other from this hour.; Leave me." , Rex shrank a little at the effect of his brutal - words. But he was too nearly insane with rage to recall theni.: , "I. will leave you," he - said savagely ; "don't let me find you here when I come back." . He Went out, demi:nil% the door after him. Nora sat listening' and growintharder every moment. • Lucy Vanifittart had. waited up to hear the result. . - She' ran to ‘ her sister-in-law's room now, wild with anxiety, . "Oh, Nora,, what did he say," cried she. "He said' words that I shall never for give him tor. What ,he said 'of Ine ; 'l might, but of her--never." "Did you- tell him all ?"" wailed LitioY, in. agony. "I told him nothing," said Nora stern ly: "I should not:: have s aid so in any after promising you. But he did ,not ask me to. tell him. He 'Eate.me no ehanee. ( 2 ,. He- :condemned-;:me entirely 'Without„, a, hearing t shigi, leaver his -house_to:niiht,,He t,9ld, me LO, go,_ Lucy, rein't g 6 too itopti:for - • "You shan't go, you never shall. I will `tell him everything myself. Anyway, he can't alter. matters now lietween me and Percy." - - 4 1 shall go Lucy You *need not tell him any sooner for this. It is-too.; late for anything to change me. hate.him, I think, to-night more than ever loved him-and that' would be hard indeed. You know, how, I loved him." NOIII I B - voice faltered at the.last wordq, and Lucy burst into convulsive weep ing. . "Diet Lucy; it is - not your fault. :.It must have come, to this sometime. , He could never have trusted me wholly from the first, and it' would have ,come oat about some I oneelse if not abort.. Kav ana. I want you t o give him > thi3 one message from me, _Lucy. He said he didn't want to find me here when he came back: He shan't. Tell him . he_ shall never look upon my: living face again up. on earth." . , Rex Vansittart made. his appearance at his' own house the next day about noon. elle had spent the night , it his club, and came home enough cal med and ashamed to be willing to ask now the explanation he':was in , too great a rage to seek the night before. - 1:14 was startled ,rather rudely out of bis,calmness to , find :that his wife had taken him at his cruel word and gone. But he tried to brave it out. . "She'll come back," he' said; "she won't go far." "She won't, Rex," said his sister ; "she, never. Will, . She told- me to tell you you should never look upon her living face again this world, if you let her, Rex. Go after her, brother." 'Beg her to come back ti I shall die, for it is all my fault.'! "I shan't go after her,", said Rex, sul lenly. "kdare say - she has gone to Say an& - "Oh, Rex, hOw can you ?" 'How could she ? She knew _how I hated' him, and she had hint. here con• latently while II was . gone. The whole town is laughing at me, and 'gossiping about her. "Oh, no, no, Rex—dear Rex ; tell you—l must tell now. Percy Ka yana came to eee me; We were married secretly three, months *ago. We were trying to keep it a secret till he is of gage, because of 'his, guardian and some trouble .about his property, and I knew you would not like it, being a secret marriage.,Be sides, you had always hated , poor ercy so." Rex Varisittart looked as if he were go ingto faint. "Did Nora know ?" he asked. "Yes. That is why she let him come. You were to be told everything in anoth er month. We thought you would not hear of Percy's coming." Rex groaned. "I only hated him because I was jeal ous of Nora's liking for "him. And it was all for you. I hope Heaven will punish ,ine as I deserve. Did she tell you what I said to her ?" "She said you had "told her to leave your house." -; "I did, madniati that I was. I said worse than that; too. I slandered her dead mother, and I don't deserve either her forgiveness or Heaven's for my bra tali ty: ‘4O after her, Rex,'and make her come back." • - "I will go - after her, but I know before hand that it .will be fruitless. She will keep her word: She will never let me look upon her. face - again. She is capa ble of destroying herself rather than break her wora. I deserve to lose , her and I have lost her." * * * !Three years passed: . ' Rex Vansittart has spent them in seek ing for his last wife; journeying contin many, following the faintest. clue un- • -weariedly, but never coming upOn even a tifice of her that he‘was sure of. He had never known an hour's peace since he had lost her. .Sorrow, .remorse and anxiety had alter ed him fearfully in that time. He bad - grown haggard and prema-; turely old. . He was at home for the:first time since lsiOra"B flight had left that hothe desolate.' He Was here by accident only, :.detained by some buginess matters pertaining to his sister Lucy's property for which be •was a trustee. Lucy and her hushand Tercy. Kavana: had long ,since publicly teknowledged their marriage, and were very ' . happy, with but the one cloud—the ,mystery of Nora's fate. • It was horrible suffering for Rex'Van sittart to be here alone in- the- home to which he bad brought his wife so long , ago, and from which his cruelty had driven her.- But worse was to come. . 1 4 He had not even &servant in the house with him,: and so, when the long unused door-bell clanged ,unexpectedih he went and opened-the door , himself. "A package for. i'on, sir," said a man who stood there; "Shall we bring it in here ?" • "For me ? .What ? lam not expect. - ing anythin,g,". said, Rex, wondering why the man: looked at him so oddly. , • "It's addreseed to, you," said the man. "Are you sure you are not expecting any thing—any news from any one who is sick, or dead ?" He dropped hid voice:. •. , Ilex's heart ,gave,.. one_ ,unutterably frightened throb and ?teed, still, The - Man' turned in very pad,'' from , his - ghastly % siiffering • looke, Istid'wentto superintend , the 'bringing - in Of the mys terious package. ~,; ; .=c 4-•""Ile eusDects how_ it . is," the uuan 4 sand I'm 'afraid be suspects right.' ' • • - * ; Four men slowly I and: reverently brought in the package and- set it down in the-Wide hall• - -; , _ It was a large.box. - "Not thtre Motioned Rex, with his ashy lips. Not a sound canie. The men obeyed, :and bore their bur den into the room byond: The _room had never he_an - used till now since Nora had left it:' Setting the box down, the men . stood back, but did not oiler. to go. Rex had come to himself. - Leaving the room for a moment,. he re, turned with the needful tools, and pro needed with an iron 4nd to unscrew the rosewood lid. - He had not a doubt :of what was un derneath, he told . himielf. • But till he' had - seen it, there Must be an awful suspenge. - . ... - • One by one hi 3 remlved the screws, the men lookingun. ' , i i He never ,knew they I were there. . \ His eyes beheld nothing but the large , box. • , • ' Screw after screw he removed with a steady hand, till the last was out and the lid lifted.. ' _ He had guessed truely. ~ • He had found hie wife at last. • He remembered her words. *, ' - "NeVer again shall he, look upon my living face." , Involuntarily the -men .drew near to look also. ~ He was, unconscious of them, and nev er spoke or moved. - More beautiful, if possible, than .in life, she lay there, and upon .her marble throat glittered the pure amethysts he had given her. That she had suffered, too, the'silver threads among the silky locks, attested. But suffering bad only chiseled her ChiSsical features to a purer loveliness. She might have been. sleeping and dreaming of happiness and him,sa peace fully she looked, so sweet and forgiving was the expression of the white face. • "She doesn't look as if shef was dead," muttered one oti the men. !I Nobody noticed him, and *he mea t nothing by it himself. But the loner he looked, the stranger the ad wom n looked to him, and suddenl y without\a word to any one, be slipped out and went to the nearest medical man hecould find. He charmed to be one high in the ranks of that brotherhood, and one who, curi ously enough, had made" a special study of the • various 'strange phenomena of suspended animation. .He knew Rex Vansittart, moreover, and his unhappy story. , . - Rex never noticed him till he, put his hand On the seemingly . dead woman's marble face. . Then he looked pp. ."Don't," he said. - • * "Mr. Van sittart," said the - doctor, slow ly, afraid of , the possible effect of ' his words upon tha t overwrought mind, "your wife *doesn't look to me ass ,if she was dead." . - "Rex looked up,and.a visible trembling ran throup,h him. , "rsuspect," the kind and ' excited phy sician went on, "that this. is only a wOn 'derfal trance. If there are any women in 'the bailie, call - them l and have abed made ready. at once. You hack better send for your sister, too." , Rex only stared, with the perspiration coming out in great drops - on his white face, till the doctor reached for his hand, and, drew. it against Nera's pearly cheek. ,The cheek was warm. ' . ' , : - "Oh, doctor 1" cried poor Rei , _ "it can't be true, can it ?" •, ,- - Of the men, one ran for Lin Kama, another, brought his wife •who was an ex perienced nurse. _ - . ' * ' Nora Vansittart AveS not dead, but in a trance. But 'she -wonldl-Probably have' been buried alive had it not been for the longing - which had seized her when she supposed herself dying, to have her bedy , sent to her . husband. , • She had-' made those ;b out ler pro mise to comply with 'her wish. ' But it was weeks,before they dared tell her where she was, 'or permit her hail band to see her. , "We were both -wicked—l .as•mtich as you," she said, when Rex - came at last with an entreaty for forgiveness of the past. "Heaven has - - ptinished us- and forgiven us. Let us forgive each other." i •" * * • * ,- * . ~ Happy again in each other's love, and forgetting and forgivine the bitter past, Res and Nora after awhile mingled in society, Rex never deserting the aide of thewoman 4 who was now dearer to him than ,his life. , - - It was one beautiful starlight night when, oppressed with- the - warmth,of 030 very room in which Rex had overh eard the' conversation that fired 'palette brain almost to madness; Iransittert led his wife down into the cool garden, and towards a little vine-covered arbor. As they were *about to entei the lat liced bowers, Travers approached them. "What, Yaneittart I" he Cried, "once more reconciled? Permit me. to con* gratulate.you both." s s- s Rex turned and confronted him, hig haid clenched, his eyes blazing.' "Sir!" he cried; "I look 'upon your 'congratulations as, an insult,alike to my. self and myliife.l Bat for yourenvious nature, and your slanOrous, tonguel had never onceydoubted;Ahis woman's - - fair fame—never embitterid - piers of her life and my own. _ Go your ways, and re- Inember theethe - sings from ,the grass is,,lees, to befeared -, .than ,the whose flititte:r i eei*9oB. and. base in. ainationi on a - cause jealous husband to forget his manhood, and pain the heart that lovea him alone. , • Begone - thou worse than viper!" With bowed..head Travers had - listened to these svords, atl'd now abashed and de ; graded, he.turned and waikedfrom the spot without, a - word: . - As he moved away, Rex clasped hii clinging;trembling wife to his heart. "Wow," he said, "but for that ma 'g' words_neither , 'of . us would have suffered`. as we have done. But sorrow softens the heart. and makes us appreciate blessings' . we oft, without suffering, ,ignore. has been 4 bitter leason, but out, of these bitters we will cull the sweets of our fe. ture' lives, will we not, my own, my peer., less wife ?" ' - SSIGNEE'S SALE. BEAL ESTATE. In pursulnee of au order of the Court of Common pleas, of Susquehanna county, the under signed, assignee of Hiram Akerly, will sell at public venclue, on the premises, on Wednesday, August Bth, 1877, at one o'clock p. m., the follnwing described lot of land, All that certain tract 'of land situate hi, the township of' Springville, county of Susqiiehau sui.State of Pennsj lvania, bounded on the north by lands of D. M. Button and A. Batton, east by lands of A. Button and DI. Pars, south by lands of H. Shafer and I.,Button and west ay :ands of R. Squires and G. W Pletchpr ; containing 106 acres, more or less., with - the appurtenances, house, barn, orchard e.c. TERMS :—Two hundred dollars on day of sale, gm 'on final confirmation, and the balance in two.equal an nual•pa}ments. to date from final confirm:olm, with ,interest. THEODORE BUSH, June 11,187'7. ' 28-32 Assignee. A SSIGNEE'S SALE REAL. ESTATE. Ib pursuance of an order, of ; the Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna. county, to him di. reeled, the undersigurd. assignee of Peter Bunts, for the benefit of creditors will on Saturday the 9th day of August A. D. 1877, at 2 o'clock p. m., on the premises expose to public sale the following piece, parcel or lot of land, situate, lying and being in the township of Liberty, county of Susquehaana and State of Pennsyl vania, 'sounded and described as follows. to wit: Be ginning et a . post and stones at corner of la4.tbs at Thomas Van Loin and P. W. Gaige; thence south 86 degrees east along the lands 'of said Gaige 135 X rods, thence south 8 degrees west 59% rods to post and stones thence north 86 degrees west 1:35X rods to post and stones, thence north 87' east along lands of Thomas Van Loan 59% rods to the place of beginning, contain ing fifty aeres of land. more or less. It being the north half of lot No. 42 deeded by Theron Thompson to Mar tha W. Washburn, and being the same piece of land conveyed by Jeremiah Guile to the said Peter Bunts by a deed dated June 18, 1878 which deed is of record in Book 48 on Page 125 &c. Improvements.—One dwelling how. good barn and stable,ont houses, young orchard, and about fifty acres under cultivation, well watered and a good place for a farm. To be sold, how ever, subject to a certain mortgage first lien upon the premises, which mortgage was given to Jeremiah Guile to Simpson and is recorded . in Book 8 on Page 197 ite., on which there is still due and unpaid about four hun dred dollars with interest thereon for about one year. TERMS OF SALE :—One hundred &liars \upon the property being struck down, $250 on final conhrmation of sale, one half of the balance in six months from final confirmation, and the balance in one year from final confirmation, with interest from confirma tion. Unpaid purchase money to be secured upon the premises. D. SUMMERS. July 11.187'7. -28-82 Assignee of Peter Bunts. A SSIGNEE 41 0 1 ESTATii. 3Peristaxi.a3. X2rcarkerty. In pursuance of an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Susquehanna county, the under 'signed, assignee of Sewell Wilmarth, will sell at pub lic vendee, on the premises, Saturday August 11, 1877, at 10 o'clock a. m., the follo!Ing descriecd lot of laud, All that certain lot of land, ' situate in the township of Harford, in the county of Susquehanna, State of Pennsylvania, boymded on the north by lands of W. H. Wilmarth and Robert Breed, east by a public highway, south by land of R. D. Brewster and Robert Bi eed, and west by the D. L: do W. Railroad. contain. ing 65 acres, more or less, well watered and fenced, two good orchards, : sugar oachard and small hurt, good' house, two frame barns, and other out-buildings—a very de.afrable property. 1. ERRS OF - SS:LE •.—Two hundred dollks on day of sale, $3OO on Anal confirmation, and the balance in two equal annual payments, to date from final COrifirillatias with interest. Also, at the same time and I:dace, all the PERSONAL PROPERTY `Of Sewell Willmarth remaining unsold, to' wit : A quantity of hay, oats, and straw,. farming tools of every , description, sugar tools, nonsehoid furniture, etc., etc. TERMS :—All sums of $5 and less, cash ; over $5, six months' crenit, with interest. , D. P. TIFFANY. t Ass i gnee s. 28-42 W. M. WILMARTH, SSIGNEE'S SALE REAL ESTATE. Pursuant to an Oder . of the Court 4,, ) l Common Pleas'of Susquelimma County, Pennsylvanik Will be sold at public sale On the premises now ocoa pied byllichrd Stack, and hereafter described as lot N0.,1, in the Borough of Great Bend, in said county on Thursday the 9th day of August, 1.877, at t o'clobk p. ta„ tho following described real estate, to wit : itirst .piece t , situate in the 13orough•of king Bend, bourted and described, viz : , Bounded on the north by lands of J. , H. Mapes and H, P. Ewan, east by lands of Williams, on the south by Church street and on the west by lands of Wm. 'looker, con taining AC. of an acre, more or less, htvlag thereon one good two story frame , house, barn; and good location. Second piece, situate in said Borough, bounded and described as follows. viz : Bounded en the north by lands of James Hendrickson and --- Bpearback on the east by Washington street t on the south by Catholich Church lot, and on the west by Frentlin street, containing on.)half alracre, more or tees. . • • Thirct piece, situate in said Borough, bounded and described" as follows, : Bounded on ,the. north by - lands of David Thomas on the east 14 Joseph Doylet estate; on the South by Main street, an on the west by , lands of Isaac heck how's• estate, coy taming about X an acre of land, and bearing thereon! frame barn. Said land is well located in the business part of the borough and is valuable for business pla• poses.. TERMS OP - SALE i—lat piece, oloo,eo down on del of tale,sloo,oo On final conikmation and balance in one year from Anal confirmation with interest from day of mile. and piece, $lOO.OO down, $4100,00 on final confir mation and balance in one year thereatterwith Internet from day of eak. ad piece, $175,00 down, s2oo.o o __ on ,final , confirmatlon and balance in one year from raw 'count:math:ololllh interest from day of sale. GALIN NNWltlin thoslßllee of - A. P. STEPHENS,,, Stack. Great Bend, July 14 18??. - 29-41 TO Vi r il i nf ri l lstAT 601SiCERN. f s • ~• , . • Thelitbilor*lMpleitilii tato,itolice, that the note 01 r 5 ItivenJune FIT, IV .1877, :in favor of Win. Ralston by :nth A. Davie of Dimock, endorsed by ,0. Debt Will not be paid for want Or value receives 8 .6. DAVIS. . July 2, 1817. --OF to wit : -OF z , 4,,51, -0E -AND to wit: -t4o'-.