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Delinquent Subscribers

Delinquent Subscribers image
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
November
Year
1843
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

We have a class of this description on our books. We have furnished them the Signal regularly for a considerable time, as good as we could make it, typographically, intellectually, and otherwise. No pains have been spared, on our part to render it what it should be. We have done our duty, and many of our friends have appreciated our labors, and promptly remitted to us our dues! These have our thanks. But to our Delinquent SübscitiBEits we have a proposition to make. Many of you are indebíed to us from two and a half to five dollars, including the present volume. Now if such will send US, free of ex pense, f our dollars or or before the time of our State Anniversary, (Jan. 9th) it shall answer in full for twoyears. But ifwesendan agent to collect the amount due us, it is but reasonablethat we should expect the full amount according to our terms. Now, friends, what say you? Shall the funds be forth coming and we enabled thereby to cancel our debts that weigh heavüy upon us, or shall we be left to labor and suiFer on, cmbarrassed and crij-pied in our enterprise for the want of the stnnll sumswhich you are in (tDlJTY BODND TO 8END US? A word to the wise is suiïïcient. We wait your response. {L The Cincinnati Gazette says of Mr. Clay: "Never lived there any statesman in any land whose spirit breathed forth a warmer love of freedom, or whose life has exerted, and is exerting a surer, sfeadier influence in favor 'of the emancipatio?i of alivien." That will do. Hear him ín the Senate of the United States: "I would contiue tooppose axy scheme whatever of emancipation, whether jradual or immediate."

Article

Subjects
Signal of Liberty
Old News