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Whosoever shall desire to be entertained as a gentleman's chaplain, tutor, secretary, steward, &c. or shall be capable of preferment, espe cially youth, of what degree soever, may have such directions and furtherance as may very much tend to their advancement; or whosoever shall need any such servant, of what quality or condition soever, or any that would be set a work in their faculties, &c. they may be sufficiently accommodated to their desires. Or if they need any that are expert and excellent in teaching musick, short-writing, &c. or any artist what soever, or masters of bodily exercise, as dancing, fencing, &c. they may have such that will, according to the dispensations God hath conferred upon them, endeavour to ingratiate themselves to their esteems, and some of the same qualifications, that will occasionally evidence their willingness by their industrious observancy to conform themselves as domestick, that are men of known trust, government, and integrity.

Whosoever shall have suits in law to commence, or shall happen into any kind of litigious controversies, discordances, and competitions, of what nature soever, or shall be prisoners, &c. they may have their doubts explained, matter of fact stated, substantially proposed, and me thodically digested with seasonable directions upon easy terms, without retarding or remora's, and with the contribution of the concurrent opinions and free advice of the most candid and ingenuous judgments, that will stand by them in their just rights, and may happily address them unto some that shall, without partiality, resume the pursuit of the business for them by right, or else as referendaries, &c. make an amiable and an amicable composition and transaction of the matter for their best advantage with their adversary in their behalf.

Whosoever shall have debtors, that skulk and are latent in any part of England, Ireland, &c. they may have such real and pertinent courses observed and pursued for their discovery, and for recovery of their debts, whereby they may be made willing, if able, for all conscionable performances.

Whosoever shall need an agent or sollicitor, and shall desire the common intelligence of publick state-affairs, and other communicable occurrences, may have all honest and faithful services performed, with what respective credentials and considerable obligements, shall be necessarily required, in reference and order to such employments.

Whosoever shall be minded to undertake an office, or place of present benefit, and shall desire to be negotiated in any such condition, may be severally advertised very much tending to their future content and satisfaction. And such that will part with an office or place of benefit for present profit, they may find, by address, how to compass their desires; and those that shall be able to give intelligence of any such office, &c. which may happen by the sickness or death of any officer, or by misdemeanors, being themselves not capable to execute the same, upon their discovery, they may be sufficiently considered and rewarded therefore, Or if any man, living remote, shall be able to discover any material thing obvious to his observation, which may be advantageous to the publick, or to himself, not being able to repair to London, to advance his design; upon intimation thereof, by letters or otherwise, he may have all

prevalent advantages, effectually pursued, to promote the execution thereof, without putting himself to the charge of a great journey at adventure; and a condign recompence procured out of the benefit, which thence may accrue to the publick, or otherwise, with as much reality, and sincerity, as if he himself were present, and able to prosecute the same. Whosoever shall be so instrumental to their own happiness, and future content, to avoid the pernicious effects of ignorance in their children, and season their tender years, by endeavouring the right framing of their studiss to the ready attainment of virtue and knowledge, during their flexibility (according to the order of duty, and the talent committed to them, whereof they must be accountable) may, in cases of such importance and concernment, have such excellent designs illustrated unto them, and such observable inferences for their educations, that those parents, that are truly generous and careful of their children's good, cannot but exceedingly approve thereof, and very much incline thereunto. See,

Whosoever shall be inclinable to travel into any part beyond the seas, may happily, by address, enjoy the blessings of such unanimous consociation, as may most nearly be consistent with his disposition, so that by a candid and sympathetical participation and complacency in all occurrences, and by the intercourse of mutual friendship and correspondency, their affections may be so firmly tied together in bonds of unity, and so intirely woven within one another, that they may rationate, consult, and co-operate jointly in their travels, and the one may, by their amicable coherency and combination, meliorate, improve, and be helpful unto the other in their abilities; and may further, by men of worth, knowledge, and experience, be respectively intelligenced, instructed, and advertised of the manner and condition of travelling into what part soever, how to steer his course with cautiousness and circumspection, and to order and deport himself in his peregrinations for matter of expences, and to discover and decline all false representations, and how likewise to regulate and associate himself with such sort of people as he shall obviate and be conversant with, and may be furnished with gold for silver upon all occasions, and be recruited and supplied with all conveniences, wheresoever he shall come.

Whosoever shall be desirous to travel into Ireland, Scotland, or any place of England, may, by entering their names, and the time they intend to take their journey, consort themselves with company suitable to their minds, and so pass in a coach together part of the way at an easy charge; or may be directed how to convenience themselves with horses to their desire, either by such as are to be returned by the carriers, or otherwise; or may know where to have horses at reasonable rates; or, if they will buy horses for their present occasion, they may have notice where to fit themselves, either from gentlemen or merchants here in the city, with such warranty and content, as may be fully satisfactory to their expectation.

Whosoever shall have relation to Virginia, the Barbadoes, New England, or any other country inhabited with English, or shall have cause to send into any of those places, or would inhabit, or transplant himself into those parts, he may have all intelligence and expedients, with as

much conveniency as may be. And such here in England, that shall have means fall unto them in any of these countries, or any there that shall have the like in any part of England, and would have commodities transported from the one unto the other, or any other reciprocal negotiation, or intercourse of friendship, of what importance soever. And so likewise into any other country, as France, Spain, the Low Countries, &c. by their address and application, according to their particular ends and concernments completely expedited; and what equitable offices christianity and humanity may afford, they may assuredly enjoy with all faithfulness and serenity. Cum multis aliis.

END OF VOL. SIX.

Plummer and Brewis, Printers, Love-lane, Eastcheap.

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Britons,laws of. subverted and restored, &c.216 Curriers, the duty of.
Broghil, lord, account of
Brown's Old Pharisee.

.496
..344

Bruce, King Robert, his chequered life. 261
Bullen, Anne of, severe remark on ...514
Burleigh, lord treasurer, favours Bodley.
Butchers, account of their duty, &c. 123,124,126

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Danish Intruders, of Teutonick race
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Davidis, Franciscus, dies in prison
Deacon, John. Account of Naylor, &c. 424
Declaration against Stuarts, the Protector's 420
Desborough, Colonel, an account of.. .490
Designing recommended
- 144
Devereux, Sir Walter, created Earl of Essex · 7
Dieppe, Charles II. lands at....... 255
Directory, a character in drama,. ... 81, 88
Disborough, a Quaker, some account of ⚫ 437
Discovery, ship, burnt at Jamaica • ... 387
Dissenting Ministers, Vindication of . . . 129
Domingo, St. English proceedings there. 379
Domitius, his sudden death

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Champerty, what it is

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Drunkenness condemned

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Charles the Great erected schools with
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Cheshire cavaliers blamed

Cheynell, head of St. John's, Oxford... 135
Chidley, Samuel, on punishing theft. .. 272
Children punished for their fathers... 521
Chmelrica, Synod of, opposer of Socinus in 368
Church, what done by rebels for

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Dutton and Wilks, how treated by Presby-

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Committee for regulating Law, Proposals

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Commons, House of, curious address to . 45
-Speech in .... .532
Commonwealth, what makes a happy one 160
Conqueror, Name of, detested.

Conquest of England, not defensible

-, laws altered after it

Conscience, cases of, resolved

New, treatment of Quakers there 435
English subjects, rebels services for ⚫ ... 41
A member of Teutonick nation・・・ 92
Plain, the author of⚫
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Rule of faulty ones. £19

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Consistory, of Presbyters, in the Drama.
Constable, on his duty...

Conventicles, if lawful to frequent them 311
Cooper, colonel, an account of... • 500
Coopers, the duty of.

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Corbett's Speech in the House of Commons. 36
appointed University Orator at

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Essex, Robert, Earl of, his life and death. 5
Countess of, seeks a divorce
.9

Colonel Charles, mortally wounded 17
Earl of, officiously injures Sir T.

Bodley

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Eustathius, name of, its abuse

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Cordwainers, the duty of

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Cornish, his advancement at Oxford.

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Exchange, an accident there.
Exeter, King halts at, for provisions
Sir T. Bodley born at
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Coroner, the duty.
Corruption of English Laws.

Covenant, Articles of solemn League and
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Council of Jews, Narrative of

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Cracovia, treatment of Socinus at...
Cromwell, Lady, and Queen Fairfax 136, 139
Lord General, Speech in 1653 . 331
Salaries, &c. of his council. .460
Oliver, dissolves late parliament 485
his complaint ofinjustice, 55
Richard, an account of
Crying Sin, a cry against
Cuckows, cannibals, described. . . . . . 137

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FAIRFAX. Sir Thomas,commander in chief 34

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and his army, an account of · 185
Queen, and Lady Cromwell. 136, 130
Falshood, conquered by truth
Faulconbridge, Lord, an account of.
Felonies, publick or private, nature of
Felony, misprision of...
Fiennes, commissioner, an account of
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Fish, on regulations about.
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Fleetwood, lieut. gen. account of.. · ·400
Florence, court of, Socinus 12 years there. 201

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