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mii t® ■ - - ,-1-' -**' - .____ ♦‘Faitce qu’iltaut, arrive ce qu’i\ \*ourra’v mil* aaaaa mmasmWi susiPiMsaiBiLa ^ ism* Haw siaaiaas wm0 ©==no» gsm tfor Woslon. if A The packet jj'iiwns11 FOR V.i.\, Capt Mar ton, Will have di p»ich- For freight or passage app.» 10 the master on board, at Centrai wharf, or to W. FtltVl.K V CO. Ytyr ttnsVon. ijr*- The picket schooner VELOCITY. Ryder, .y^master, will have despatch. For freight or pa.v>atre apply to the master in board, at C ntrul wharf, Irtu W FOWLS ft Co. £e\\'m\tev for $a\«. ; ^ v- We are authorised to sell a SCII )ONER, of '* 94 to 100 tons, just completing at Yeocomi co, ao 1 can be delivered early next m until; the car pen s’ work neatly done and the veasel painted. Shu may be riyg-d by the purchaser. For further particulars inquire of an; >J C.F.O. JOHNSON & Co_ •V. Ya. (Uvni. IL*5 *' received by the schooner Fornax, 8 hlids. of N. K Kura. For sale bv aug 27 EDW’i) 1UINGKUFIKLD. V VI 1.1 >t of Soap, of excellent quality, just re ceived by the Fornax, and for sale by tg 27 BDW'Q. UAINGERF1ELD. aV. Vi Hum Cordage. iii IJIIIJS, New England Kuna ] I ) 4- Coils Maniiia Cordage landing from schr. Fornax, for sale hy MUg z7 W. FOWl.E & Co. ^ nue* Wiordau, BOOKSELLER ST.ITIOSER. H\S tne h mor to infortn his fellow citizens that he hast, ken the Store, corner of King and Royal Greets, lately occupied by Harm vIaktix, deceased. t he llook an 1 Stationary business will be continued u its various branches; and a share of public patron «ge is respectfully solicited 7* N w Publicitioni in Science and literature re ilarly received. W \v\\ fc tiliud. i ; »} J XMIS pure J White Lead of superior qtiidi | " 100 do No 1 y ty, just received am) for sale by aug.* S. VI. & S. 11 J ANN KY. %u\wV OU. JO) BASKBTS Bordeaux Salad Oil, stamped but I ties, just received and for sale by aug S3 NVU. II. M'l.LKK. NV\u*e Leai\. J j v/\ KFG-5 so peri or White Lead, ground in Oil, |Ulr from the manfactor . of George Uliler, Phila delphia, warranted pure Just received and lor sale bv aug 21 J ^ W 11. IK WIN. Wio Voffee. (■)< | BAGS Green Kio, represented to be of superior * quality, just received and for sale by aug *.) Sr MKSSKItSMlUl \n(t>n\uv\'um \mauv*i\ 4 GK.N ILKM VN called two or three weeks since at Mr. John iluoe’a,in Prince William Count), who ecognixed a child living there wiio is supposed to have been stoien from her parcivts two or three years ago. Tl»e above named gentleman stated to the ser vants that he was about removing from the Upvet Country to Alexandria- if he lias done so, he will con ter a favor, and -erve the Cause of humanity, by calling at the Office of BKUNAItl) HOOK. Alexandra, August 20, 18J2 (Jj* rhe Kditor* of the Washingt >n an 1 Winchester papers, >na> serve the cause of humanity by giving the above a lew insertions U iuac <$• LviV i‘or dale or Vlen\ - I he su bscriber offers for safe or rent Iris Iiorst: A* HALF ACHE LO'J, ; at the intersection of Washington and rosio i sAs ai to streets, in which he now resides «»< 1 -laatt S'. DM If Nil I IKK. du*ur aiu\ Vinegar. i5) BBXRS white Havana Sugar v l liitd* pickling Xioeg.r. For sale by aug 18 W. II. MILI.F.B_ j iittvimcnw \u vv uarue»s. 111 ' VK far vile a light new Bimuche, with plated | h .rnras complete; also a Carriage ami Harness, with s.-veral tii^s and Harness, lo.v far cash, if applies far iwnKrtciy SKU; WHITE. SV Y\ltUl,* I,1 (TURK at the tVhaif or down the UivAr. pnrehas * e lSy GKO. JOHNSON Co. aug 17 - \S__' *HHvmt it; \ ur faY V v»b ac c n. U* BOXES Manufactured Tobacco, Id's to the lb. * just received ami fur sale by 11 _ J. & W. H IHVV1N. V\ \nea. » HALF pipes > ,, .... - j . f * . > Port \V ine *i 5 quarter covks > '<* d i <l«i French Madeira do -T,:s* r ‘ceivcd an J for sa;e by WfH f? HKSSSISVTlf. Sugar And bYatcU. •^A 1»RLS. double r fined Sugar 5/1 / 2t) boirs best quality Starch 15 bsrrelj d.» do l an.ling this day, fronn sl^op Miller, for sale by fI4 \ c; CAIBNQVH & Co. V i\U^ Mala. Ill HOZRN F.ntrv M<u, of superior quality, just > I received and for sale by an? U "S. MF.SSF.HSMirn. •YYY Y X n t» \\ anl ev\. I'VISH t0 purchase thrm from the age of 13 to 25 ▼ •Mrs. Persons having such to sell, shall have ca*h, an 1 the highest nriees, by applying to the sub * '-•her. Prstt street. Baltimore, near the intersection "l1,1 * “ Wail U<>ad with the Washington City Hoad. Li heralcommissions will be paid to those who will aid ipurc saing for the subscriber. , 11—«f Austin avoqlfqi k. ftyetin VYYV s>T TIEKCES superior Fill strained Spertn Oil, recei* ved and for sale by *’'Sl WN. D. NUTT. ALEXANDRIA GAZETTE. L I T E It A 11 V. [Fromthe National Gazette.1 We received and read, last week, the number of the London Quarterly Review, for July. It contains some able scientific and political arti cles. The literary are not of the best descrip tion-excepting perhaps ths first—on the new volumes of Diderot’s correspondence ami works. The career and character of that writer are trac ed and criticised with sound sense ami consider able effect. The article on American Ornitholo gy is learned and curious, but very ambitious in the style. A full tribute of honor is paid to the labours of Wilson and Audubon. The review er takes care to tell that lie is not sure that ei ther of those Ormtholgists was a native of Ame rica. Audubon is of Louisiana by birth. The reviewer observes also that lie cannot agree with Charles Lucien Bonaparte in the opinion that our worthy fellow citizen, Mr. A Lawson, is *» the first ornithological engraver of our age.”_ M. Bonaparte is high authority, and the review er assigns no reason for his dissent, unless it be conveyed in bis intimation that Mr. Lawson en graves “too laboriously,” and is guilty of a “high and minutely finished filling up of the plates.” It appears that there is no region out of Europe, of which so ample and correct an or nithological knowledge has been obtained, as of the United States. At the end of the article on Todd’s Life of Cranmcr% there is an elaborate plea for the Established Church of England, against which, says the reviewer—Infidels, Ca tholics, Dissenters, Whigs, It idicals, are all com bined. In the article on Mrs. Somerville’s Me chanism of the Heavens, we find the subjoined acknowledgment of the merits of Dr. Row ditch’s translation of Laplace's Mecanique Celeste. “ W e must not stop without saying something of Mr. How-ditch's performance; though what we do say must be short. The idea of undertaking a translation of the whole ‘Mecanujue Celeste,’ accompanied throughout with a copious running commentary, is one which savours, at first sight of the gigantesque, and is certainly one which, from what we had hitherto had reason to conceive of the popularity and diffusion of mathematical knowledge on the opposite shoress of the Atlan tic, we should never expected to have found ori ginated—or, at least, carried into execution, in that quarier. The first volume only has as yet leached us; and when we consider the great dif ficulty of printing works of this nature, to sav nothing of the heavy and probably unremnnerat cd expense, we are not surprised at the delay of the second. Meanwhile the part actually completed (which contains the first two books of Laplace's work) is, with few and slight exceptions, just what we could have wished to see—an exact and careful translation into very good English—exceedingly well printed, and accompanied with notes ap pended to each page, which leave no step in the text of moment uusupplied, and hardlv any ma terial difficulty cither of conception or reasoning unelucidated. To the studenf of ‘Cglesiiul Me chanism’ such a work must be invaluable, and we sinceielv hope'that the success of this volume, which seems thrown out to try the feeling of the public, birth American and Uiitish, will be such 9i to iniliim flip :innp»r:in.-i> nf tlw* spniiol. Should this unfortunately not be the case, we shall deeply lament that the liberal offer of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, to print the whole at tluir expense, was not accept ed. He that as it may, tt is impossible to re gard Jlie appearance of such a work, even in its present incomplete state, as otherwise than high ly creditable to American science, and as the harbinger of future achievements in the loftiest fields of intellectual prowess. Here at least, is an arena on which we may contend viith an em ul ition unembittered by rivalry. • Whatever,’ says Delambre, ‘be the state of political rela tions, the sciences ought to form, among those who cultivate them, a republic essentially at peace within i’self,’—a sentimtnt applicable, doubtless, to all, hut pre eminently so to that calm, dispassionate pursuit of truth which forms the very essence ol the abstract sciences.” The second volume is a tnore splendid trophy than the first. It is not to be apprehended that Dr. Buwditch will even hesitate about printing the sequel. This great monument will be whol ly raised by himself TFrom the Philadelphia Gazette ] The celebrated Professor Wilson, well known as a writer of great talents, and a>! Editor of Blackwood's Magazine, made the tour of ihe Cumberland lakes in the Spring of the present year, and ha9 given a description of his adven tires, under the title of “ Christopher at the Lakes.” These sketches arc drawn with a mas terly pencil, though sometimes exaggerated and inflated in style. This is the chief fault of Pro fessor Wilson;—but so numerous are the exam pie? of mystification cud redundancy in the Ed inburgh Review, that the errors of a magazine iu this respect, may well be overlooked. The fancy of the said Christopher has been acknow ledged by Byron, and by the Quarterly just men tioned, to be singularly luxuriant;—he is capti vated by the Beautiful in nature and as for the Sublime, he declares his love for •* the irresisti ble glory which takes the imagination by storin.” Such gifts in the decline of life, arc worth an em pire. We take one or two extracts from the last “ flight” of the satd Chiistopher among the Cumberland mountains. He has reached the house of a rural friend whom he has not seen for many long years, since an ancient visit to the same spot. The following description of his ap pearance, as he sits in the porch of his friend’s door looking it^p the garden, will be taken as rather burlesque, and is unquestionably over drawn;— <• The brown mugs keep moving to and fro on their domiciliary visits; and the household, some of whom have never seen u? till this bless J I moment, contrive pretences for coming out. lad, I lassie, bairn to look at us, and retire smirking; i wc never denied that our outward man is a little queer; and now even less common place than or ! dinary, for our not having been shaved since we i left Edinburgh on Monday morning, and ’tis now i Saturday ten o’clock, A. M., and a redder beard ' than ours, has not curled In Jove or ire since Bar ! barossn: to sav nothing of our having forgot to put on our linen shirt (no gentleman any more j than pedlar, wears a neckcloth on an excursion) : and that like Hamlet Prince of Denmark, we I have on worsted stockings by no means of the ; same color, one being wholly bluish and the other ' tartan, and both from the "circumstances of our breeches beiii" unbuttoned at the knees, (we are faithful (o shorts) “ somewhat declined into the vale of years” one of them (the Highland hose) binding our shoe, which is no great matter, ns its brother is sadly down at tin.* heel, for sake of a blister; while to rrown all, we ate conscious that no person of any age or sex whatever could look for our pcricrnnrntn, without “ mentally ex claiming,” as they say in novels, “ V\ hat a shocking bad hat!”—the roof of our tile being entirely oil', and tiie rim shaped, like a scoop fur running waters.” Tlie subjoined picture is that of a wrestling match between the Professor and another old ac quaintance, a dweller among the hills, whom he found in his rambles. The contest of strength, it seems, took place tn the presence of sundry rustics, named*Toes, Jonathan, &c. The de i scription of the struggle is graphic; and the clos ing word will he deemed by sportsmen as very expressivu of the *• final fall” of a fat, oilv man, in a trial of the kind: “ A sudden thought strikes us—Vickars for the sake of old lang syne, let us trv a fall. There ts a small difference in our age.*, and you are the heavier chap by a stone. Come, don’t be so fractious in taking hold. Is tu ready Mac?— Confound you, ye old sinner, that was a chip: ! he chipped us Toes; he chipped us Jonathan; and we maun wrestle it over again. There, can* nie Coombcrland — t lie re boonic Scotland 1 There Mac thou hadst it light over the hip. A'el!, mayhap thou’lt feel us next time. Me has got hold of the waistbaind of nur brccks—Jonathan — whew—oo—there we goo, looping like a lock on us with that meat bin muckle daft heel of thine j behind our calve, arid we find we maun go dooti, —there—squthh!n [From the London Court Journal.'] Sir Walter Scoit. — It has been been beau tifully said, that “ One touch of nature m kcs the whole world kin." But if this lie true, what must all the world — nod especially all the British world—feel towards Walter Scott,at this anxious crisis of his earthly fate? In fact, the. whole world does feel towards him, in his mortal sickness, a9 towards a •« Father, brother, lover, kindrrd, f iend." It is a strictly personal sentiment with which we regard him at the present moment, and nothing but that delicacy which prevails in such cases in respectable English life, could have prevented that feeling from being evinced, during his recent sojourn in town, in a way that would have been unprecedented in the history of human sympathy. We have deemed it necessary to advert to this sentiment,as an excuse for what we are tempted to add in connection wiih.this painfully interesting topic, and which we should otherwise have deem ed an impertinent obtrusion of mere personal feeling into the pages of a public journal. We have experienced more delight than we may ven ture to express, at learning the departure of Wal ter Scott for his native land, and the consequent I probability—nav certainty—(for he cannot die i till he reach * it !) — ><f his again reposing beneath ! that beloved roof, which, from all that we have hoard and Seen.—is the prime favorite with him, among all his numerous * works’—his ‘ Romance in brick #n:» mortar,’—as some French traveller prettily enough designated it We' some time ngo saw reason to anticipate the painful possibility of his breathing his last breath in a foreign skvj-and when this fear was averted bv his return among ourselves, it was but changed into cue scarcely less painful—that of his closing his eyes, not in London merely—a place which he must have loved less than any other in which he had sojourned during his earth |y pilgrimage—but in a public hotel there, in a public street, situated in the very heart and pres* of public business and pleasure. It is a common enough thing in London, to see the equipag cs of the gay and wealthy, roll silently over the straw that indicates the perchance mortal sick ness of som 2 one near at hand, who was but a few days or hours before the luxurious occupant of one of those brilliant vehicles, the very sound of which would now be almost death to them;— and there is nothing anomalous in this sight;— but it was a strange and a melancholy one in con nection with Walter Srott—it doubled the me lancholy feelings which his condition excited, and it took away from them that sentiment of submission to the necessities of our mortal fate, which is inherent in the human mind. It wa-“ necessary” that Scottahould die— the feeling that he was mortal lik^urselve* re doubled that ennobling sympathy and relationship which wo felt with him; but it was r.ot necessary that he should die at a melancholy distance from j his own beloved home and country—-his Iasi ■ words to fall unregarded upon the ears of stran | gers and mercenaries, as they passed heedlessly j by the door of bis death-chamber; and the last of fices to be performed on his person, by the hands of perhaps strangers to his very name. I «*ast of all was it necessary that his last looks should rest on objects alien to his habits and re collections, and 1 all up associations at variance with all his early tastes and feelings, and conse quently those which would linger with him the latest.* Even the wounded deer goes home to his native glen to die, and nothtng but the last mortal pang can stop it in its progress till it reach os thete; then, and not till then, it lies down to die. And thus has it happily been with our il lustrious compatriot. He will now lie down Sr* ..n.L,.. jkiim oik/if_tustli twinn Knt kic men kindred and friends about him (for the meanest of his servants must be his * friend’) with none but familiar objects in his sight, and he will die, not merely uncomplaining, hut happy—crowned with the fullness of his present glory, and secure in the greatness of his alter fame, as it it were an j actual possession.! To \Uu\. jftft T' at extensive BAKK HOUSE, (three ovens) | S t' h.witli u commodious Dwelling, larg*-, open Lot and » uod Yard, lately occupied by Samuel Miller, . , ALSO, Tlie three story BitIGK WAHF.HOUSE, on ■H^die strand between Jonathan Janney on the i bi <u.. mid Josiali II- Davison the North, with the pri vilege of the south side of the adjoining w hart. . . . ALSO. The SHOP on Prince street, opposite James B*i**l Vorris*. and formerly oe.cupied by him as a gro eery sioie It i9 a giunl situation for business. Possession ot any of the above property may he hod imme li itely, and to good tenants the rent would be moderate. Apply to 7mo 14 UOBKItT II. MIM Elh • JiAiu CvuAUvv. (LATE FROM BALTIMORE,) {> KSPL.G IT’ULI.Y informs his friends and the pub .li lie generally, that he intends carrying on the DYING BUSINESS, opposite A- Newton's Hotel, in the house lately occu pied I)v Samuel Isaacs, where he will die Ladies’ and Gentlemen’* Garments *f - very description in the best maun r; cleanse, bleau!;, and curl Fringes of Merino nml C i-dim -re Shaw! ; also Leghorn Bonnets of every description) also Crape* and Silas of eve ry description; Gauze Shaw’s, Si k Hose, Uonibazines, Sic. jiinc 16—d3:n Fur I'IWO NEGRO GIRLS, not tube removed out of . the District Inquire of tiie Printer _ rilWO Tobacco Notes, vie: Is. No. 5.17 urn! 5.18 At K tiie expiration of ten d«)sfri*m this date, appbea. turn will be made to the fi.rm *r Inspector, 'I homes Swann, Jr f->r a renewal of these notes, provided tIi»*y Hre not found nr pro luce.l by some o'.her person i ilber to myself or Ur. Swann. ang 8 JOS1ATI H- DAVIS. ‘ Vjftluluitia Vt inp. PIPES Caledonia Red Wine, of Suptiiot quality, just received and tor fide by huj, 7 S. MKSSKRSMITH. Herrings. SOD "J5 !j» *<2L \ Fot by 8;hmo4 S M h S/ H JANNKY. Vjrti*fringe um\ Harness. VCARRI *GE aud Harness in good repair for sale low by GKO Will I K W ho h is cc nstantly on hand, gigs and carriages, with harness complete; for sa'e at reduced price*. A'so, < one plain, neat Sulkey, with harnes*._tog 3 Bwcm\, F iour, VVVvske^, . j a g w a iwia LBS. prime Bacon, cured by the! li/vfj* W *1/ subscribers J30 bbls superfine family Fiour, best Shenan- j doah brands 100 lihds and 170 bbls Pennsylvania Rye Whis- , key 120 chests, half chests and boxes Gunpowder. Imperial, llyson, Young 11) son, and Sou-, chong Teas, all of late importations and 1 fine qua ilies 2 half pipes superior Port Wine 6 do pale and brown Sherry jy 14 SAMUKL U. LARMOUR 8< Co-, \*wYt Wine & I'ognnc BtivnAj. YFRY fine old Port and Cognac Brandv in pipes, for sale hvA. C CAZENOVK & Co. JOB PRINTING Neatlv and expeditiously executed at this office l>fge\&n \]i ivmftl Vegetable MEDICINES 'INHERE is no complaint to which the human frair.p 1 is subject, but is designed to t'cach mun wisdom} hat is, to «sstire him that no Disease comes upon him itv chance. The Asiatic cholera, or any disease, by whatsoever nam* it may be known, either in its t.-ri s'in, progress duration, or t< rmiration, is sent by the appointment of one Supreme First Cause, who is won lerful in counsel and excellent in w'orkirg, and whose ilghtecumess, mercy, goodness, and truth, will not permit him to do an art of injustice to any of liia crca urcH] his kindness and his tender mercies arc to he j» en over all his works If we are sick his goodness lias provided a multiplicity cf medicinal herbs, plants, and gums, to preserve health and to afford relief to the afflicted, and also to effect cures in all oas< s of disease, >f curable, without the aid of poisonous mercurial, mi neral, or chemical substances, dug from ihe bowels of the earth, to which the body is approachii g with ra pid stride# Right reason will condemn the use of de leterious drugs or medicines, because tbev promote the dissolution of the body, which is in part composed ol flesh and blood. Shall we, then, persevere in the use of calomel, &c,, and hence commit sii act of sui cide upon ourselves, and so make the cure worse than the disease> Surely not. HEALTH SECURED, By the use of MORRISON'S Snlutanf J r gelublc Universal Medicines, prepared at the Hritish College of Health, I. mion, which have obtain ed the approbation and re omoK-ndatior. of some thousands ol cures, in all diseases under all their varied i forms anil names, ss flie llygeion conviction is, that man is subject tonne only real Disease, that is, TO ! THE IMPURITY UE THE B/.OOH, -which sis., appears evident, when we consider that 111.HOI) is the LIFE of every living creature, and that, as disease is generated by an iin|>ur<« state of this vital principle, ao, in like manner, w hen the cause that produced it is removed, health, s'rength, and all its concomitant blessings, must be the n suit. To effect this most de sirable end, the«e Medicines (under the biessi' g of Heavv.nl hav • been found fully equal to ibe task, both in England and America. Extract of a letter received by the subscriber from a gentleman in England. *' 1 believe the Medicine has not only restored me, by the Divine blessing, from severe illness, to health ait't activity, but mv wife also from an alarniinr bilious attack, which continued many months, in which time she brought offquarts of bile, and whose recovery w.is not expected by those who knew her, and had seen her duri.ig her illness. Vet, through the blessing of God upon tbe means, without the use of any other medi cine, Morrison’s Pills were rendered effectual to her recovery, and she is now gaining flesh daily, to the surprise of thirtie who hud seen her at the worst, in conclusion, upon this subject, lean say, that if the Hot al College of Physicians were to offer me thi ir aid, in all cases of di«ea e. frerly, with Morrison'* IMIs in my possession. 1 would thaukfuPy decline their aid, and trust to my own resource"*.” 1 lie original mat be seen at my house. VVM. POMEROY, Alexandria, Sole .'fgent fur the iJiitrirt of Columbia and its vicinity. liy whom the Pills are sold in packets ot one, two, and three dollars each, and the Powders at 37$ cents Iierbnx, with printed directions; and also by the fol owiug Sub-Agents; It. W. I'olkinhorn, between 9tlt and 10th streets, Pennsylvania Avenue; John Sti linn, Navy Yard, Washington; and Thomas C. Wright, Georgetown; of whom alone can the Medicines be warranted genuine. Ily appointment of llr. ff S. Mont, II. P. M., M It C. II , Brooklyn, New York, the sole importer of these Medicines. Morrisonia, or the Family Adviser, price $2 7 >; Prac tical Pioofs, ellustrated b\ nmm rolls cases of <ure. se cond amt third editions, price 25 and 07) cents; to be luJ ns above. Al'xandiis, August IR, 1832—6rn *VoUt6. 'pi IF, co partnership heretofore existing under the 5L liim of Chamberlain F.dson, is this day dissolv ed by mutual consent. Ih-se having claims again* t the lirm, will pr<sent them to Rilas I), Ed.son; at.d those indebted will male immediate pa-nuut to him, or either of us. LINCOLN Cll AMIIKULAIN, aug 16 SILAS L) KIISON. SiUia D. Yidaon Urn L continue the business at the Store occupied by Chamberlain & Kd*on, opposite the Me chan ics Bank, am! oft era for *ule a gc.eral a sortu.ent of BOOTS AND SHOES, At prices that cannot fail to pie »e purchasers N. B A few c«9es Straw Unmet*, on consignment, and will be sold low. aug 16 Cash Cur •fegrotft UT K wish to purchase one hundred and fifty hktly Negroes, of both sexes, from 12 to 2.S years of age, field hands} also mechanics of evr ry description. l’er»on* wishing to sell watt Id do well tc give ns a call, as we are determined to give a higher price for slave*.-, than any purchasers who are 01 may htreallcr be in this market, and no certificates required Any communication* promptly attended to. We can at all times lie lound at ourrcsidcncc west end Duke street, Alexandria, 1) C. June2 FRANKLIN U AltMFIFt.l). District of Columbia, County of Alexandria, Set. Aimiil Tkum, 1832. Thomas M. White, Complainant, 'j Loui. U ,1c >»' CUAKCERt. Rea, Defendants, J THF. llefendan*, Louis Mazuro, not having entered his appearance, and g ven security according to the statute and the rules ot this Court,arid it appeal ing to the satisfaction of the Court that the said Louis Fa zuro is not an inhabitant of the District of Columbia, on the motion of the complainant, by his couneel, it is (Jr dered. That the absent Defendant, Ixiuis Mazuro, do ap pear here on or before the first day of the next Kovembt r Term of this Court, and answer the bill of the com plainant, and give security for performing the decrees of this Court; and that the resident Defendant, James M. Me Rea, do not pay away or seorete the debts by him owing to, or the money, estate, of efli.-ets, in his hands, belonging to the said absent Defendant, l.ouis Mazuro, until the further order and. decile of this Court; and that a copy of this order be furfnwith pub lished in the Alexandria I’henix tiazette fur t« o months successively, and that anotlier be posted at the front door of the Court Douse of said County, 'lest: may 25-2m Bl)M. I. LEE, C C.