The Augusta chronicle and gazette of the state. (Augusta [Ga.]) 1789-1806, November 23, 1805, Image 1

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K SATURDAY, Nsvemier %%, ilO£. AUGUSTA CHRONICLE, AND GAZETTE OF THE STATE. _• » FREE D.O M of yua PRESS and TRIAL bt JUR If > laui, b.imaiw ikvxolat*. CtKfiitutien ts Georgia, I II ■ 1 " • * ~ ■ ■ I X lII* ’ I" ' ll * ll — 1 . ■ . - -I !■ I ■ .1- -T -~T - 1 ~ ' -* " *■ - ' ~ ‘ ----- - -- - -.- , --- .... ' * r - —» - • AUGUSTA: Printed by D. DRISCOL, near the market; [3 Dolls, per Annum — - . - _ .. administrators sale. On the Jfrfl day of January, 1806, at the house of the Subscribers, , WIL L BE SOL D, • On a Crtdit of f tuelve Months, All the Horses, Cattle, Hogs, Sheep* and Goat*; Aifo all the the Hoefe bold and Kitchen Furniture, Plantation Utenfil*, &c. Cite. belonging to the eftat* of George LOOl, late of Richmond County, deceased ; The Sale t* continue from day to day until it it completed.— The parcha i’en will be required to give their notea or bonds with approved ftcurity. > ALSO. ‘ Will be Rented at the time and place aforefaid, the' PLANTATION on which the Subscribers ref«dc.—All the Ne groes cf the Estate of the said deceased, will be at the aforeftated time and place, hired eut for one yen* to the bidders, 'WILLIAM HART, Adm’r, ELIZABETH HART, Adm'x, November :6. (31.) PUBLIC SALSr On the Second MONDAY im December next, Will be Sold in South Carolina, at the Plantation of the late Giorgb Miller, dec. to the Highefl Bidder ; All the Pcrfonal Property of said decM. CONSIST I NO OF NEGROES, NORSES, CATTLE, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, PLANTATION TOOLS, (3c . (3 w . Aad an Excellent Fiat ofoaehunder and ten Hogftieads burthen, built of Mulberry and neatly new. Tcitna •• For all Aims of Ten Dollars and under, cash*-and for all funis above Ten Dollars, twelve months credit, the purchaser giving bond and ap proved security. JOHN MILLER, \ 9 , AUGUSTUS MOORE, | Sx r/# November 2. ( ts) NOTICE. ~ ALL perfoas having demands against the estate of the late Georgs Miller, of S. Carolina, dec. are requested to render in their accounts properly attested as the law d Lefts---and all persons indebted to said ailate are hereby informed, that unle& payment is made to one of the fubfcribeis, on or before the firft of January next, profccutions agninft them will then bs immediately commenced. lOHN MILLER, AUGUSTUS MOORE, Executors, tlSober 2(5, (ts) VNOT I C E ALL pnifons indebted to the Estate of Gecrgo Loto, late of Richmond coun ty deceased, are requeued to make imme diate payment, and thofs who have ac counts against the said estate, are hereby required to render them to the Administra tors for fettiement.-—Thofe who stand in debted are also informed, that a recourse el.ft be had to law to recover the debts that are due, without payments are made within a (hort time. WILLIAM HART, Aim’r, ELIZABETH HART, Adm'x. Novembsr 16. • _____ (3*o NOTICE. ’ 1 T AN ccafequence of a n a miser of tickets of the Chailefton Esft Bay Street Lottery, Fill remaining unfold, the drawing is un avoidably poftooned until January next; therefore ail those who wjfh to become adventurers- may ftiil have an, opportunity of purohafing tickets from the fubfciibcr, ia Broad-street. JOHN WILLSON. Augu/la, October iz. (8t) $3- ALL persons indebted to the late trm of William H. Jape dJ Co. or to the estate of Andrew Innes, de eeafed, by bond cr note, are cnce more called on for immediate fettiement; no farther indulgence can be give*.—Thofe indebted to either of the chore mentioned firms oa open account, are requested to liquidate the (acne previous to the 6t& d S y of September next.—After that date, fairs will be commenced against Selin, qaentt without difenmiaation. JAMES BEG OS, ddm’r, y ,ui / I S* ts) LATE FOREIGN NEWS. J Xtcewed fer the Jh\p Isabella, Capt. Greine, from Liverpool. IMPORTANT STATE PAPER. PARIS, September 11* M. Backer, Charge de'Affairs ofhislm perial Majesty at Ratifoan, Has received orders to pfefent to the Diet the following Note ; “ Under the present circumstances of as. fair;-, when the movements of the House of Austria menace the continent with a new war, his Imperial Majesty the Emperor of the French,-King of Italy, judges it expe dient to make known, in a trank and solemn declaration, the lentiments by which he it animated, in order to enable kis cotempo rancs and posterity to judge, with a true knowledge of the case, in the event of a war taking place, who has been the ag. greflbr, “I 1 i 8 with this view, that the under fired Charge de'Affairs' of his Imperial Majesty the Emperor of the French, to the German Diet, hat received orders to pie fest a faithfi) exposition of the principles by which his Imperial Majesty the Empe ror, hat been uniformly actuated in kis conduct towards Austria. Every thing which that power has done contrary to the fpitk and letter of the treaties, the Emperor has hitherto permit ted. He has not complained of the imme diate extension of territory on the right fide of the Pave, against the acqutfition of Lin den, against all the acquisitions made by him in Suabia, and which, fubfequentiy to the treaty •fLuncrille, have materially al tsred the relative situation of the neighbour ing flares in the interior of Germany ; a. gainft these, in fine, which continued at the present moment the fubjeft ct negociaticn with different princes, to the per fed know ledge of all Germany j he has not complain ed ot the debt of Venice not having been difeharged, coatrary to the fpir’t and-letter of the treaties of Campo Formio, and of Lu neville; he has not complained of the deni, al ol jutico experienced at Vienna by his fubjeds of Milan and Mantua, none of | whom, notwitlrftanding the formal ftipula tiens, have been paid their demands; nei ther has he complained of the partiality with which Austria hai recognifed the right, which England ft* monftraufly arrogates to herfclf; and when the neutrality of the Au strian flag was so ofteo violated'to the inju ry of Prance, he was not provoked by this condud of the court of Vienna to make any cotnplaiet, thus making a facriflcc to his love of peace, in praferving filcnce epoa the fubjed. “ r Fhe Emperor has eracunted Switzer land, rendered tranquil and happy by his ad of insdiration; he has not kept in Italy a greater number of troops than is indifpen fibly necefiary to maintain the politic* which they oecupy to the extremity ofthepeni*. fula, in er-dcr to proted the commerce of the Levant, and to insure himfelf an objed of compensation, which njey determine Eng land to evacuate Malta, and Russia to eva cuate Corf* j he has not upon the Rhine, and interior of his Empire, any more troops than arc indifpcafibly ®eceffary to garrison the different places, “ Engaged entirely in the operations of a war which he has not provoked, which he fuftakis as much for the iatereft of Europe as for his own, end in which hil principal end it the re-c*iabli(hniipi of the equilibrium of commerce and the equal right of all flags upon the sea, he has united ail his forces in the camps upon the borders of the ocean, far diftatit from the Austrian frontiers ; he has employed all the rcfourccs of his Em pire to conftrud fleets, to form his marine, to improve his ports ; a*d it is at the fame mement when hcrepofes with entire eonfi dence upon the execution of treaties which have re-eftahlifhed the peace of the conti nent, that Aeftria rises from her state of repose, oiganifes her forces upon the war cftebhfhment, fends an army into the States ol Italy, euablifties another equally confid erahieiothe Tyrol; it is at this moment that (he makes new levies of cavalry, that (he forms magazines, that (he (Lengthens her fortiucarions, that (he terrifies by her preparation* ‘he people of Bavaria, of S«a bin, and of S .vxj stria nd, and difeovers an evideat intention of making a diverfioa so obviously favourable to England, and more injarioully hostile towards France than would be a direA campa’gn, and aa open GEORGIA, «.- v . ' declaration of war. In these grave cir camftances, the Emperor of the French has deemed it his duty to invite the Caurt of Vienna to retain to a proper sense of its tru« interaftg. All the expedients which an ardent love of peace could suggest hav* been resorted to with avidity, and several times renewed. lue Court ot Vienna has made high profeffions of its refpedl for the treaties which exist between it and France ; but its military preparation* have developed her in tentions, at the fame time that her declara tions have become mpre pacific. Austria has declared that flic has nohaftile intention against the states of his Majesty the Em peror of the Preach. Against whom, then are her preparations directed ? Arc they a. gainft the Swiss ? Are they against Bava ria ? V'ill they, in the end, he direfted against the Germanic Empire itfelf f ** Eh* Majesty the Emperor of the French has oharged the anderfigned to makeknown, that he will conjtder as a formal declaration of wardirected againji himfelf aJlaggref. ftons f 'hich may be attempted again!} the Germ aa. Body, and efpc dally against Bav et na* “ His Majesty the Emperor of the French •will nc-verfperaie theintenJhofhisEm/ire from thfe es the Princes of Germany who are attached to him, b Any injury which thpy may sustain, an y dangers by which they may be menaced, can never be indifferent te him, orforoiga from his lively folici. tude. “ Parfuaded that the Princes and States of the German Empire are penetrated with the fame sentiments, the underfilled, in the name of the Emperor of the French, invites the Diet to untie with him in pref fiag by every consideration of justice and res for, the Emperor of Austria not to ex pose for any longer penoi the present gene ration to incalculable calamities, to spare the bicVod of a multitude of men, doomed to perilli the viftims of a war, the objeft of which is foreign to Germany, which at the moment of-ts breaking out is everv where the fubjeft of enquiry and doubt, and whose real motives cannot he avowed. “ The alarms of the coutineat will not be allayed, until the Emperor of Austria, yielding to the just and periling reprefenta. tioas of Germany, fliall cease his hostile preparations, fhali not keep in Saubia and in the Tyrol more troops than are neceflary for garrisoning the places, and fliall r»p!ace his army on the peace eftabliflnucut. Was it not understood, fines the conventions entered into in consequence of the treaty of Lnnevilic, that the Auftnan armies could not pass tht territories of Upper Austria, without committing aciual hoftiliry ? \y«s not Austria fepfible at that period, that France being then engaged in a foreign war, having withdrawn her troops from Subia, and Having put a flop t<% the movements which It could make by means of the corps the had in Switzerland, it was not just to oppose to such marks of confidence precau tions truly aggrefiivc ? The circumstances beiug the fame at present on the part of France, why are meafure* of Austria so different ? Why does she keep sixty battal ions in the Tyrol and Suabia, whilst the forces of France are collefted at a distance for an expedition against England ? if There exists no difference at this mo. m«at biiweea the Swiss republic and the German empire; no difference between Bavaria and Austria; end, if any credit is to be given to the declarations of tbs court of' Vienna, there exists none between it and franco. For what unknown objects then has the court of Vienna affcmblcd so many troops ? “ It can have but one plausible objeft j th*t is to keep France in a Prate of indeci. fio«, to place her inaftate of inactivity &, in word, to a r raft her progrtfs cn the eve ofa dvcifive effort. But this cbjcfl can only be attained fora time. France has been deceived ; flic is no longer so. She has been obliged to her enterprises ; fho fijll deters them ; fne wait* the «lf#cl of thafe tcmonftranccs ; flic waits the cfleft of the repte&ntations of the Germanic Diet. But when evary effort fhali be fruitlefsly made to bnng Austria to the adoption either of a fincerc peace, »r of an undisguised and open Loftiliiy, his majesty the emparor of the French will fulfil all the duties imposed o» him by bis power ; he will direst hia efforts to every qaarrar in which France (halt be rreraoed. Providence haa bellowed on him fufScicat ftmagihco contend against England with (Vol. XX. No. 99$ one hand, and with th« other to defend honour of hi* standards and the rights his allies. {t Should the Diet adopt the courfc which the underfilled lias orders to point out to it; should it fucoccd in representing to tho view of tho emperor of Austria ike real foliation in which thefc movements, made perhaps without reflexion, ordered perhaps without any hodiie intention, and ftlely in fcfcnfequcnce cf foreign influence, have placed the Continent j should it fucoccd in persuading this sovereign, individually humane and just, that he has ho enemies, that his frontiers are Hot threatened, that France had it in her power to deprive him for ever of one half of his hereditary fiates, if file had extended her wlflief bevond what had been eftabliflsed at Campo Formio and. Luneville ; that by his dispositions, whirls even they are. fully developed, aftcA France even in the centre of her aftion, he interfere!), without advantage to his ftatts, and without honour to his policy, in a quarrel which is foreign to him. Tho Dist will have defcrvtd wall of Germany, of Switzerland, of Italy, of France, of all Europe, with the exception of a Angle na tion the enemy of the general tranquility, and which has founded its profjierity on the hope and the design, ardently and per fcveringly maintained, of perpetuating tbtf difeord, the troubles, apd the divifipns of the Continent.—The undersigned, Jcc. (Signed) “ SACHER,” SPEECH Os M. Sehennttelpenntncky the on opening the extraordinary fitting of the Bata vian States. “ High and Mightt Lords, , (t have thought proper to fummun your high migh Untiles, in an nxtraoidiuary manner, in order to propose to your a(Pvn biy fomc fubjefts, the expediting of which 1 conceive to he of urgent importance to tho interest of the ftatc. ** A number of oidtnanctss, which aro plahned pursuant to the general taxation, decreed by your high mightineifes, will be proposed, in this extraordinary fitting, for the deliberation of your high rpightineft es. In the planning of them, I have prin cipally endeavoured to obtain this end, that, on the one hand, ia tho limitations con tained therein, tha force may be found, W’hich can ensure the execution of the laws decreed, and thereby the receipt of the tax es fixed by your high mightinefles; and, on the other hand, that care b# taken at tho fame time to remove, as much as pofnble, aH fuparflnous impediments, and all vexa tion of the good inhabitants, that the raid ing of the money due to the state may be less dif,agreeable and opprefiive. Your high mightinefTes arsfervftblc how elofely those fuhjefts are connected with the finances of •ur country, and this notion is fofiicient for your high migluineflcs to perceive the impor tance thereof* The wisdom; zeal, and care for tha welfare of rhe country, which, in the preceding session, have charafterifcd the daliberations of your high raightineffes - are > «y guarantee, that the affairs, *n which your high mightinefTes will hav« to deliberate in the present fefiton, will ba likewise confiatred with a gravity propor tioned to their tender concern* ** I was de/irous, high and mighty lords, to be able, on your present meeting, to make fomo communication to you, from >vhicli your high rnightinifies might con ceive foEiC solid hype of a speedy peace ; yet, gloomy as is rhe political profpeft ac tnis moment, w« have no reason to difpair of a more fortunate turn; and then, per haps, a firmer peace may make an agreeable amends for its tardy approach. Such a peace v.e may promise to ourselves, under lu* divine the genius cf our pow erful ally ; and your high mightinefli * wi'l, no doubt, be glad to hear of me, at a like present, that I have receiv ed from him daringihe cotirfe of my admin istration, repeated proofs of efieem and friend.liip, at.d themoft solemn affursnccs of good.wiik towards the republic—a dif pofidun, which 1 shall endeavour to pre serve and to faftcr, by a constant fidelity to our engagements, Oa the* internal focal ion of the re ppbht, I conceit;, that we, on the preftne circmflanto, have every reason to bt fatif ' fod* The present ordtr of things, it i a very fhorr time, afLuaed a degree of I authority and permanency which, in other j human infiitutiers, is generally a cor,ft-