Newspaper Page Text
* <imi:!{trarnr*j f.iles
Cr. t ’ofd"* <ht 2 th A.’ “-/) r*> t, H’ 11.1.
hi SOLD, ot BU Hi. 1C /tUC
7ION, ur tht jlore of the fubfiriltr , in
. f'i 1,1 ii hi Jquare,
Q> HvDRY article* of Ili.uf. h ilj and
Kitchen lurni’ue
Nome hai.ufixne I*(iitta
One old Si'lkey ; one C-i 1
‘lnrce Hort.s. four Cowr
Three C*i v<, three Yearling*
Or * i<i hue large Oc-u
Jjty- ral volumes c;f hocks
And fome eiean Cotton, being psrt of
the ydtluDul cltatc ot Tuomaa liiniih,
i e :ea(e<l.
By order rs I 1 c /dmi-.ifr fa i.
Levy Abrahams, Auct’r.
July 14 9*
A. SC Ktß NK K 6c Cos.
RE c I*ECTFUf.T.Y liit. rm h?.r furr.!:;
. amt tl.e jiutilin general, th*t t; .
hav: received tier nu* late ,<t .'* liom :l.
York, acoinptct: ailuitißent 0 1
110015, SHOES and SUP
PL-.RS,
A ; l Warranted to be of t lie- i>**’ .'.Jit/,
\* hicli tlify cfu-r at reduced j>rk<* . at tfeii
it., on the liii)) o{) J : .L.c she i. . u'A*:g’
July
ABNER WLIIB.
Ts f\S Rr.rtvm my tip i-hk, CA.'.TOi-;,
* fkvJ.Vl U-V*'. UK \, A CO *! I* It ."F A.**
UIAOUM Ot 11: it- MOl I t AlllO.’. A..
Jlot/t , Sliot;s and s'iippers,
WARRANTED OF THE rJHSt QUA 111 It 5.
Which lie offers for fab at very reduced
juices, at hU lion*, comer .{ St. Julian ai.d
Whitaker Lkreets, July 3 VO
WANTED.
AN A |']>rt ntirr la the Printin'* Bu
liiicls, vnll be taken at tins oflice ;
a lau ot about 1 6, that tan bring good
recoininendation, none othti aj>-
pi,-, July 8
OLD RAGS,
TTTII.t, I.e think fully rec ivtd at the
VV I'OOK HOUSE, in th. city, tter
being gn at call for them.
Moses Sliei’tall, o. r.
*py 2] 79
JOHN BOLTON, sur. ) Ciunta
•vs. > Superior
WILLIAM NORRIS, ) Court ,
V/ arch I crm , i 8 6,
Ui’ON tne petition oi’ John
Bold’, lurviving copart
n r of Robert 6c John Bolton
praying the foredolure of the I.
Cpiityof Redemption on the fol
lowing prcmills, mortgaged t*>
tile iaul Robert & John Bolton
lor the fuin ot eleven hundred
and lorry fix dollars, payable the
lifth of January 1802, and
ailo for the further lum of ele
ven hundred and forty fix dol
lars ana interest payable the
fifth of November ißo’, to wit,
tlte following lots and parrs of
lots in the town of St. Mary’s.—
Ail that wharf lot containing
50 feet 0.1 St. Mary’s flreet and
running 150 feet well to Jud
10,Ls water lot, and fioin St. Ma
ry’s llreet to the river too feet
and along the river ico feet.—
The lame being the front of lo:
No. four in the plan of laid
town.—Alio part of laid lot
No. four beginning at Ready
llreet running well on the St.
Mary’s llreet to J 1 Tor’s lot &
on Ready llreet 200 feet north
to Divine Young’s lot or line &
i 50 well on laid Young’s line to
Judion’s lot wuh the building*
and improvements thereon.—
Alio lot No. (43) futty thre
containing four acres then oc
cupied by Peter W. Green, wth
the buildings and improvements
thereon, and on motion of Mr
btites attorney for the petitioner,
Dis Qidtiid by the court
thsc the principal interefl and
colls upon tlx: taid mortgaged
prcmtles be paid into court with
in twelve months from this date
and unlds the Line be lo paid
the equity of redemption Ihal!
thenceforth b.’ foretdoled and o
tner proceedings take place pur
luant to the •.& of afi'embly ir
lucb calc made an-1 provided :
And. it is fattier erdeted is
puriuanceof the laid ad that this
rule be published in one o: the
public gajtrttes ol this llate a
lead once in every month until
the time appointed for payment,
orlVrved on the mortgager or his
lpecial agent or attorney t at
fix months previous 10 the
the laid money is orderec
j ;UO piaiu mi,) co.irt as aforclaid
viouflf T from the mtn
challiletw? Aiar.b, 1806.
and fiog u;jt£frs, r. s. f . c.
drurkentufs* 00.
the man’s cone
’ - •
’ Htn. * l • \
‘ruin the N. vi Toth “ Ev rang Eojl.*’
INTEREST IN GEXTK A r T
He Ufa 1, May 3 \ft, 1806
** St o . —You can hardy con
■.rive the pleafo e which 1 fed in
oeirg reitaied from the nrn 11
unhappy fiiuation in v.hich 1
i-vtr w .s placed ■, but thand Gr*d,
han at liberty thus far, anc
Iran write now without reflraint.
The tale I am about to relate ; s
not of the pi.afantefl. kind ■, bur
vid, I trufl, afford you fonr.e
I'tisfadiwn irik iowing the parti
tolars and hearing of my lafety,
although thr c ireumHances under
‘winch it was tranladted mutt fill
. 1 the n iwb of every American
with honrfi indignation. 1c is
lurely no f nail dilappointment to
Ibe captured unlawfully againlt
Va lour c/., e£h,tions, wichin three
jhours f..d of you; rr.ueh wifil’d
‘tor port ; thus in an inllant to
j'oe bjaflcci in the joyful expedla
}cion or j i ing our families and
ft.ends , lu h has been my calc
uid wilj I fear be the caie of
nwny oth is, tinlefs our govern
m.-niu ’ >jvts prompt and vigorous
1 rncalußs. lit the news of the
ptoce< dings ,n New-York, every
ollicer w.s a Lap ain Uobadil,
aid would del toy his twenty
■ ihoufes, after tlut twenty more,
■ until th* whole <b?y was battere.:
down uolela their officers, vd:o
were proem mg fuj plies returned
m for which they waited five days
at anchor near the Hook, and
them made every preparation fo*
proceeding to town with the
Ihipr ; they however, thought it
ncfl prudetir fir'l to fe id a flag
-1 truce by (he ff fl lieutenme to
he co'ntnander of th-; Fort cn
Governors Island, fearing to
land at i!i * city, to know the
ieaii>n of their detention', of
which l was i nformed, and re
turned the following evening on
ooai.l ; the foraging gentlemen
arrived in the night wnhout the
intended I’uppl'es—thanks to the
j gentl rnuin wh > intercepted them
and the next day made la l for
Halifax, vvlure we arrived on
Friday, the 10th of May. During
aur paflbge, several v die is were
overhauled and two men preflrd
from each ; one in • articular,
afrtr heaving to, was fired at fix
-iir.es, wi ll direift ons each time
0 fit - upon her; and by wa- of
oon'j eolation wc are told, if un
jufdy robbed, will be indemnified
for our Idle's. For my part, 1
rxpcCt Jtdreis or.ly in the united
determinations of our citizens to
ll’pport their natural rights and
poiiith the cruel invaders of our
national liberty and laws. Re
jinunftrance is only fubj;£ling
ourl'elves tc further infuit, as ah
experience plainly lhewn,and
she Iconjr i: is abandoned and
j sriore energetic mealures adopted,’
iri-.e l-;oner will our flag be re
j fpt die-1 ..nil oar c.t'zcns [ ermitted
] u> trade unmolested and in peace.
1 aft* grieved to lee so many
Atiicricau veflcls lying here, f.-mc
cu. demned, others waiting their
trial, and new ones coming in
every day. On Sunday, the 15th
iiiitauc, arrival the brig Romu
lus, captain M‘Danil, of New
'l ork from Havanna, lent in by
tlie i aaar frigate. 1 nere is alio
tying here the brig Mars, loaded
wn.fi Mahogany, belonging to
Samuel Burling, of New York, I
lately tiied and cleared after a
tliong contention on tiie part u!
lie capiois, iliai beef and pork,
pa: t ot h:r outward bound cargo,
came under the denomination 01
coturaUand ot war ; they howevei
condemned the claimants in the
. c:ls and damages, and they arc
permitted to depart wuh tnen
allH almoll a wreck, through,
the nuico. dufl of the captors.
The Ih ip Joh a dc Franu,, ot
Charlelton, has _a!!o Dccn tried
part of her cargo condemned, the
omaindcr with the ship laid over
•or further proof, private ven
tures not excepted. TANARUS; e brig
Ranger, of Wucalfet, since cm
arrival, has aifo been condemned
•or fi..viiig on board a few poles
Winch thty l'aivl would make
royal-yards ; the three mailed
Toner Him ot o’ N v -York, I*
? waiting her rial; the ffitp ij
Aurora was iib • and on Monday, ;
lie rgth s:id iierrir.l commences |
n t weniy-oncdaYrom that date, j
sailed from thiswt on 6jnday, j
he 19th inllar, the Squirrel
flooo of war, ti cru.zc off New-
York, r.nc: the Leander on th e
2 2d for the f, micruiiii.g ground^
:t is fa id. Wh ita terrible pity it
is tii t two or tlree frigates ca n
not tie fp.ired frm tlie Itrvice to
ri /e theie ruffia.s fr: m our (hers•
itighr, indeed, alw.r tiie double
pu pole of bringing Whitby to
juliice, who, it ferns, cannot be
drought rliereto >y die common
ouile of law. ,t is more than
prcibabic he will ot con fine him-
Itif to tlie limits prefenbed by
our government ■, bat as usual,
commit his depredations in the
wateis, and witliin the jurifdic
ion of die HtiiieJ States, thereby
affording a ft, opportunity to
* a tack anti tring him to juflice,
I al: hough byknuncommon course
jof iaw. There is another arnva.
lately, the brig Hannah, captain
Ropes, cf Salem from Leghorn,
lent in bv the Leinder. This
brig \t as loaded with sugars,
bound to Naples, and was bourd
<l on her outward bound pas
sage by a British frigate, and
on examination found that her
lugirs v,e e imported into the
[United States by two other
j veflds, for which reason flic was
1 [ ermitted to pals. On her arrival
;in tne Mediterranean, lhe was
J infontitd by a man of war brig
| that flu could aot enter Naples ;
Ihc ihen went nco Leghorn, dil
chnrged her cargo, and when
returning hom: wuh a consider
able qumtity of fpccie, the
proceeds of th .t cargo, was fell
jin by tiiai galant commander,
Whitby, and was lent in for
.11 judication for the very reason
that induced the others to lev her
pals. The condemnation of
vclLls here is so little regarded,
that it Haoft becomes a matter
of cou:fe from their being sent
in, and the captors are so well
aware of his that they im
media: ely begin 10 calculate the
amount of pr je money accruing
to each trotn the sale of the
vcffcLio caj tued. Indeed, fome
of die officers of the Leander
• anc eh the money of the Aurora
aiready in ther poflfcffion before
tneir arrival in Halifax.
“ I iie day ollowing my ar
-1 rival hrre, 1 vas permitted to
cave the mar of war, which
-vas much to ny fatisfaflion ; I
ffioitiy after Vif.ted our (hip and
rouiid to my gr;ut lurprile, that
ail tny fruit wis stolen, which
consisted of Onnges, Pine Ap
ples and Cocoa Nuts.
Give my :efpeCls to Mr.
fairchiid, and til your Brother
that tne Britift. have deprived
me of the means of supplying him
with the Cocoi Nuts which 1
promifrd. if you please, inform
my family that I am in good
Health—Adieu.
“ l am, devr Sir,
Your humble Lrvant, See.
JOHN M‘EVERS.
“ Mr. Juh.v M'Lure.”
IRELAND.
The following circular letter ha* been
JaddrdLd by the celebrated Dr. Mac
j Nea. ‘. to such of hu countryiiKn in the
j United States, who, from the fmiatua
.during the honorable Itruggle for liberty
-and independence, attempted by unnap-
I py lrel iud, are supposed molt capable of
! supplying him with tacts relative thereto.
J As it may be in the power of tome of
| our reader* to give fu.h information to
j the doftor, who might not otherwise lee
i liu letter, wc lay it befo-e them with a
j hope that a work, so much wanted in j
j the United States a* a history of thej
ifutienngs and the (buggies ol the lrifui
! nation, by one of its mod illuilriou*
champions, will receive ample encourage
incut. Alex. Lxf t.
Sit,
BEING now engaged, a* far a* my
icilure will permit, in preparing an ac
j count ot Irilh affairs, tor the iatl thirty
, years, I iifk to acquaint with my delign
ihofc who feel any mtrrtll in luch a work
that they may communicate to me, u
they pic ale, the fads and docuraruts
ih;y pofftfs, winch tneir avocations o;
faiety may not allow ihemfelvcs to make
public.
la fpcakiag of individual* yet a’.ivc, or
cf il.oic d.-pi-i 1 la'.dy- whl'll 1 nrtlm- j
iu record th ir a£kioi and motives in
Inch colours of app au.e or cenlu.t, E b
msy Iligmatife vie; cr cnsblazcn v.tje,
(tdl it 1* by the iwrit of impartiality to
all concerned, that I an moil ambitious
lof dUlinguifhiag my performance. 1
write in a country where I have rotting
10 Ear, and nothing to hope, from any
power or party in Europe •. th; mtereft
of truth is that alone for which my
thought* c; n now revert to tin p*
ind as far as I already know, er tha be
r.ble to afccrlain it, friends aul foes lia
meet with equal candor.
This Ipirit of sincerity proir.pli tfl the
acknowledgement, that L Ihould i:d en
gage in my present undertaking imlefs
£ thought when honellly executed, it
would redound to the honor of a c.ontry
which will be ever dear to me ; ot fiends
*hom I (liallever cle ilh ; of a c;nfe l
never will abandon : and all of whi;h, ti
virtue cculd insure fucccfs, had found
another fate than what tiny now .xperi
cnce in the lots of liberty, and tie tx
tin&iun of independence.
Though the history of the prod to
vU.ich 1 now confine myft'f, bem.il im
poitant to Irilh reader.-, yet it is not to
tlum alone that it oifers fubjea* if fym
pathy, inftruftive leffor.s, and tlemc* of
meditation. The firft fptclachit pre
ftuta, is a generous and gallant people
niming at the btft acquifi.ion so which
a r.auon ian contend ; but from jealousy
;nd disunion, losing a great opportunity,
! and the noblcft prize. The corrupting,
i disuniting, debiliat ng ir.tc'fcrence of a
, foreign enemy, blindly ceened a friend.
is at length univerfaby Ht ; the con
’ fcquences are generally deplored ; an
earnest altcurpt is rnadi to r-.drtfs the
evil—and again the foreign foe labor*
with fucct fsful invetency to reduce the
patriot by the bigot, ind after immola
ting what was good aid expofiug what
was vile, appropriates, wish stern in
difference, the profits oftheir animosities.
Public spirit, unrivalled eloquence,
military ardor, integrity and pat rich fin,
will balance the stain </ venality, the
- bsfenels of treason, the prcilitution of
talents, the al j- tl furrehder of national
- rights ; and still upheld the Irilh cha
racter as great and good, amid't the
vitiating taints that /tube inroads on
it, from a foreign ft.orc.
We (hall fee fortitude worthy of the
jmoft heroic ages; fidelity that would
honor the moft virtuous ; benevolence of
intention, with philosophy and design,
that would ensure the greateil bit flings ;
and by the fide of these, an auc itiiy in
the commiflicn of a crime, a maturity
in corruption, a confunimatenefs in
villainy, which will exhibit this un
common people frequently wile or
wicked, but never little—v.hich will lhcw
it to be whatever it is with energy j
and prove the noble materials it poll!fits
for forming an indepmdent Hate, it
it should ever emerge from the ilavery
that produces its wortl vices, and be left
to folter the fpleadid qualities that he
longs to its own nature.
Os ail that cffeft, elevate or improve
the heart and inform the judgment,
examples may be feund in the history of
theie thirty years. An Irishman of any
party may well be desirous that trans
adtions which, after all, gave a high idea
of his country, ihould not be loft to
it* fame. Though the conciufioo com
memorates no triumph to dwell on with
pride or exultation, it poftlffes the
intereff of tragedy and inltiudfs by its
eatadrophe-
William Jamvs Mac Nsteh.
New-Turk, 18c 6.
FROM A LONDON PAPER.
Mifchitfs and Dangers of Impeachment,
If the following curious arguments
against. Parliam. ntary proceedings were
to be admitted as unanfwerabie, every
miniileriai delinquent might go on with
impunity ; and refponfibiiity would be
come an empty found. The ltory,
however, is fufficiently entertaining to
merit a place in the paper.
Lord Carnarvon, in the reign of Char
les the Second, was a man who never
Ipoke but once in the House of Peers.
One day at dinner with the Duke of
Buckingham, where the glass circulated
very freely, he made a ccnliderablc bet,
that he would in an import; at debate,
which was to come on that very evening
in the Upper House, on the fubjscf ot
a proposed impeachment of the Earl of
Danba, an ancestor of the present Duke
of Leeds.
The wager was confirmed by half-pint
bumper* ot burgundy, and the parties
repaired to the fcenc of action but
the debate had commenced before their
arrival. ihe m-.i.e Lord, however,
catching the Chancellor’s eye, soon af
ter a Peer iat down, who had concluded
with a Latin quotation, began thus ;
, ** 1 underttanj little of I.atm, my
j Lords, but a good deal ot Engitjh, ana
| a little ot Er.gUJb ktjlory; fivui which
I have learned the rmlchiel* of such
precautions as these, and the ill fate of
aii proftcutor*.
“ 1 could bring many ii.lhnces, and
those very aucicnt ; but 1 fliail go no
further back, ray Lords, than
Elizabeth’s reign, at which time the
Earl ot Essex was run down by Sir
Walter llaleigh ; aad your Lordihip- all
know what became of Sir Walter Ka
leigh.
•• Lord Eicon ran down Sir Walter
Raleigh; and your Lordih-p all know
what became of Lord Bacon.
Ihe Duxe ul Lucuirjham ran
lawn Lord Bacon : and your Lord Hi u
all knew v.hat happen;-i to him.
i’ TL T. 1 r.f Stiffnd tin denct
the 1/cke of Liu. kirn hair ; and your
I.croiii'ps all k .vw what eccau.e cf
Lari cf Staff, rd.
“ Sir i.airv Yar-e ran down to:
Eari < f Stafford ; and what became <>f
Sir .Harry Vans, your Loiclhips ail
knew.
“ CL?r.cellor Hyde rr.n down Sir
Har-y Vi ce ; cost ►!.?.: became of
Ciianctilor Kyde jour Leitiihps ‘ all
know.
“ Sir Thoms* C(born, now Earl cf
D. nby, ran down the Chancellor ; but
what wiii htcome ol the Ea.-l cf Dauby,
your LcdUups belt ca.: tell.”
Upon this very unexpected harrangue
the Duke of Buckingham f;.i<l—“ The
man’o inspired ! I have lull my money !
mV claret ha* and one tlie lufiiict. !”
*-. —■ ——am
ALGIERS, March to.
At this moment the cries of death
are rtlbutfding from different quarters of
this'eity- The prime rnimtlcr, the mat
ter of the hotfe, the secretary or state,
the chief iUp.iHoi of lßves and four
other persons l.aye been ffiangUd.
LONDON. i Vla y 9- ~
His Swecifh rrajefty, X'onhy of hi*
gnat anceeior, Guitavas, tollowca
up his acts of vigor and decihem ‘ i S 3ln . :l;
I P.-ufiia by a ipirited dccicratiuH, U I
| which he defies the power, wlii.ll he
diDitls the iranrers a’rd dup'hiiy of the
cc-art of Berlin. Jfe tracts -he conduct
of tfat court iron the lormaiion of
the “ ccaliticn againlt .he ufurpatiq,.*
of Napoleon Bonaparte,” to t).,.- late
attack upon the Swcdilh tiooppin Luen
turg, which has rut “ t'.,e Bit fcsl to
the real iyltem of the pruffian cabinet.”
Ih:* manly dr-iaraticn will, in all
ptobability, be Cunfiderecf a. a dtcLoion
of war by Pru£s;-, an! though She
cannot reply to it 1 lit by aims, genera!
Kalnuth will be ordtreu to oler Swc-dith
Pomerania wnhout loss of lirue. It will
ifiotd piu.fuie, however, to our leaders
to kiov., ilia: the fpiritt-J monarch of
Sweden wiii be supported not only by
this country, hut by another monarch
equally generous and gallant w-J) hi ii
feli, ajid equally ar.ima'.ed cy a detcfta.ion
of tyram.y ► i treachery -s perfunified
by Boiiaparte and the t’ri i’iaß govern
ment. The Sw-eddh -Je.kiu'ion ipeaks of
tiie three aliird conus ot Pctt.iburgli,
Stocftauiia aft Loudon,
May u.
YeittrJay we ruceived the Paris paper#
to the .t h iaftant. The Monitcur of
the proceeding day c-bfcrt;#, that “ pof
ftffion of thr mouth* of the Cattaro by
the Ruffians having prevented the return
cf die grand army, the great fellivat
app V> ii ted fer the m nth of Mry, is ne
cessarily ccftponed until the sbfence of
the grand at my is no longtr requilkc.
W c however mink, (contmuts the eoicor)
that this delay cannot well continue
longer than fix v-.eeks.”—A letter from
Rotterdam, of the Blh, bkewife reached
us yeftevday, states, this fettival is poit
pon.d till September.
Lords Elgin and Yarmouth, and fonts
other Ei.giiffi gentlemen hid, cn tbc
30th ult. arr.'c i at Paris, preparatory,
as was supposed, to their liberation.
Ti e accounts in tiirfe ijmual* in.fn
Naples are io the 15th April, at which
at vvhi-.h period Gacta coutiniH-d to
mike a refoiute deitine. Joseph Bona
parte hud left Naples with a large retinue,
to join tlie army of Meff-na in Calabria,
wheie ti.e hy-l peasantry greatly annoy
the French, cut <ft tlie ir fn-all parties,
and hold their puffs so Itronglv watched
as nearly to fulper.d all communication
between them. It is mentioned in one
of the Pans papers, that a party of
twenty-one officers and three Isdies,
ventured beyond the gatts ot one of the
towns, was fired on by the Calabrians,
and killed aft except one, who recovered
the garrilon, although tcvereiy wounded.
The preparations Gr the attack of
Sicily was continued with activity.
The deciee appointed Joseph Bona
parte king of the Two Sicilies, was
received a: Naples or. the lith April,
and forwarded to him in Ctdybiia. Ic
was reported at Naples on tlie 14th,
that an infurre&ion had t-ken place at
BaLtm , ami that the king and qw cn
had tied to Mafli’ia. Another report
still let's probable, mentions that the
Ruffian troop3 in the Seven lflatids, had
on the io.hof March, received orders
to return home.
The French troops in Dalmatia cn the
14th uit. according to letters from Vcn-.
ice of that cate amounted to 40cr 45,00a
and were advancing to occupy Eutrinto,
Pre-vefz, and other places to the fouth
warJ,
The moft rigorous mrafurrs have been
adopted toprev.ni the introduction into
Italy of all mnciiamfixea prohibited in
France, and particularly th'.le tranfinit.
ted from Swi zeriand, which are found lt>
be chi_fly- Engldh.
Ihe Jiu'iiat ae Pau* Uya, that tie
feizu e ot Buiwan t)giou is cot. yet con
firmed ; but that multitude of iiifingcnta
d3iiy inundate the frontiers ot Prd’aurgis,
and that ionic decline tvenla muff
ihortly oeci r in tbs Turkish prov.m.s.
Louia Bouoparte, ti.e inteuded king
of Holisiij, is now dangeraufly ill
Baris.
Emator Eeruharnois. brotber-ia-k-v
to midaiiu Emapa ie, and uncle to the
viceroy of Italy, it i; laid, it tc be chief
of the rj ivrne Republic.
Tlie : .nch - .. Spai ;-rds have fix
sq a. . j at i;u ; mmri; , that under
Jcroaie du.i tparte audadniiial Guiilaurae,
c. ni1...:.’ at ti.e Vctefau of eighty
5’ 1 > i-oaimyeo:, tigmy iour, M;j (tic,
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