Newspaper Page Text
7 u
In the Ski? Hope, from Liverpool to this Port, by
W. DIXON and CO.
And now opening at Taylor and Miller’s Store,
A VARIETY of ENGLISH GOODS, immediately
from the Manufafturers, confiding of the following
articles, which will be fold, (wbolefale on|y) on very Ipw
terms, for calh or produce, via.
Superfine broad cloths;
Flannels, duffils, and baizes;
Dimities, muflinets, and nankeens;
Cotton fliirtings and fhectings,
Plain and tambored muslins;
Printed calicoes, broad,and narrow;
Printed (bawls and handkcrcliiefs, ,
Cambric muslins, ,
Fullicats and romal handkerchiefs.
Cotton stripes and checks,
White tapes and small wares,
Silk and gingham umbrellas, and para^ls;
Sewing fdk, twill, and silk handkerchiefs.
FOR S A I.
A Trunk of Books;
A few Calks Linseed Oil.
Apply to
ISAAC MINIS and CO.
SKALED PROPOSALS
WILL be received by the fubferiber, at his residence
in this city, until the 2Cth instant, for fiipplying
the following articles of clothing for the service f the Un
ited States, viz. >
70 coats,
70 veils,
140 pair of woollen overalls,
140 pair linen ditto,
180 fliirts,
280 pair ftioes,
70 flocks of black leather with clasps,
70 blankets, .
70 hats.
All the articles mull be made of materials equally good,
and conformably to patterns which will be filrnifhed. Pay
ment will be made on receipt of the articles.
‘January 9, 1799* JACKSON.
“wanted immediately,
A MAN who has a family, and is well ac
quainted with the taking care of flock, to reside on the
Jlland of Great Waffaw. A person of this description,
who can be well recommended* will meet with literal en
couragement, by applying to S. WALL.
Jan. 9.
N oT?C E.
r I “'HE (iibfcriber hereby forbids all persons giving any
A credit on his account without a written order from
him. . . SAM. KINGSLEY.
Jan. 9, 1799.
RAN AWAY from on board the irhoonef George
Clinton, — Montgomery , Mate of said schooner,
had on when he went away blue jacket and trowfers and a
white hat, .and carried with him a bundle; lie is about 5 feet
9 inches high, pitted with the smallpox, wears his hair
loose. Five Dollars reward will be paid for his apprehension,
and al l Mailers of vessels are forbid harboring him or taking
him off the (late. Wm. Wilkie.
N. B. He is very artful, and will endeavor to make his
escape if taken. Jon. 9*
tvvknTy dollars
SHALL be paid to any person who will lodge in the
gaol of Savannah, the Negro woman FANNY, who
ran away in the month of June lad, and has teen long
ad vert i fed; (he has been so ftllly deferited that a repetition
is confldered unneceflary, particularly as she is generally
known in and about the city. The fame reward will be
paid on fatisfuftorv proof that she has been carried off by
any mailer of a vessel, or other.pevfon, provided such person,
or any one concerned in her removal, can he come at.
JAMES JONES.
Bclvidere, Bryan county , Jan. 3, 1799.
• Estate of Jacob V\ aid burger, Esq.
MR. Mil ledge, one of the executors named in the will
of Jacob Waldbnrger, Esq. haviag now qualified,
letters teflamentary have ifiued including him as an acting
-executor. If therefore there are any claims or.demands
againfl the cflate vet unexhibited or unfatisfied, alj persons
so circumflanced arc now, for the fall time, called upon to
exhibit them to’ one of the fubferiters immediately for
settlement. Such persons as are indebted to the eflate are
notified, that the executors do not feel themselves jollified
in giving longer indulgence than the fu ll of May next.
John Morel, ft
John Mill edge, >Afting Executors.
? James Jones, J
Savannah. Jan. 3, 1799.
NOT I C A.
Al.l. persons having any demands againfl the F.Ar.te
oi \\ illiam Baker fen. Hl'q. of Liberty’ county, de-
CralVd, are hereby reqiteflrd to lend them in, attt(led ac
cording to law, to-
Axv B.yxkr, Rxenstrix,
Joseph Stevens, Acing Executor.
Dxentbcr 20. 179*1.
PALLADIUM Or kNOYVLEDGip*
O H 1’ H K
CAROL.IN A airt GEOKGI A A I.MAN AC,
For the Year of our Lord 1-99.
A few Lit faie at the kVv.it.itg Oihce in Broughton street.
the United States f,r Credits ” the Books Ts tic *
Treasury may be presented fr Allowance.
BR it enabled, bv die Senate and H'Uife of Rcprefcnta
tives pf the United States of America, in Corg'efs af
ferabled, That all credits on the books of the I real dry of
the United States, for ttanfaftions during the late war,
which, according to the conrfe of the and reafury, have hi
therto been difeharged, by HTuin-r certificates of registered
debt, ftiall be forever barred and precluded from settlement,
or allowance, unless claimed by the proper creditors, or
their legal Aprefentatives, on of before the firfl day of
March in the year oncthoufand fevcu hundred and ninety
nine; Andthe Secretary of the Treasury is hereby required
to cause this acl to te published in one or more of the ;>us
- papers of each state.
Jonathan Dayton, Speaker of the
House of Representatives.
Theodore Sedgwick, President of
the Senate pro tempore.
Approved, July 9, 1798,
John Adams, President of the United States. .
TREASURY DEPARI MEN TANARUS,
June 27, 1798.
N’OTICF. IS HEREBY GIVEN, That, by virtue of
an aft, passed during the present feflaon of Congress,
so much of the act entitled, “ An AB making further
Provfion for the Support cf Public Credit, and for the
Redemption of the Public Debt.” p tiled the third day of
March, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-five, as
bat* from settlement or allowance Certificates, commonly
called Loan Office and Final Settlement Certificates, and
Indents of Interefl, is suspended until the twelfth day of
June, which will be in the year one thousand seven hund
red and ninety-nine.
I’hat, on the liquidation and settlement of the said Cer
tificates, and Indents of Interefl, at -the Treafurv, the
Creditors will te entitled to receive Certificates of Funded -
Three per Cent. Stock equal to the amount of the said In
dents, and the arrearages of interefl due on their said Cer
tificates prior to the firfl day of January, one thousand seven
hundred and ninety-one.
That the principal sums of the said Loan Office and
Final Settlement Certificates, with the interefl thereon,
since the firfl day of January, one thousand seven hundred
and ninety-one, will be dilcharged, after liquidation at the
Treafurv, by the payment of interefl, and reimbursement
of principal, equal to the sums which would have been
payable thereon if the said Certificates had teen fubferibed,
pursuant to the afts making provision for the debts of the
United States contra died during the late war, and by tlie
payment of other sums, equal to the market value of the
remaining Stock, which would have bten created by such
fubferiptions as aforefaid, which market value will be deter
mined by the Comptroller of the Treasury.
OLIVER WOLCOi i, Secretary of the Treasury.
Philadelphia , June 30 th, 1798.
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant
to the aft of Congress, passed on the 12 th day of June,
1798, entitled, “ An AB refpißitig Loan Office and Final
Settlement Certificates, Indents of Interefl , and the
Unfunded or Registered Debt credited in the Beoks of
the Treasury
ill, That, on the application of the Creditors refpeftive
ly, or their legal attornies, at any time after the lad day
of December in tlie present year, tlie principal funs of
the unfunded or registered debt of the United States, cre
dited on the books of the Treafury* or Commissioners of
Loans, will te requburled at the Treasury of the United
States.
ad, That interefl upon the unfunded or registered debts
aforefaid will ce-Te from and after the last day of Decem
ber in the present year.
3d, That the Creditors refpeftively will be entitled, on
requisition, to receive from the proper officers of the Trea
sury certificates of funded three per cent, flock equal to the
arrearages of interefl due on the debts aforefaid prior to the
Ift day of January, 1791.
By order of the Board of Commissioners of the Sinking
Fund,
EDWARD JONES, Secretary.
PARIS , OBober 15.
CITIZEN Talot, Reprefentatrve of the People, dur
ing a fraternal banquet, lately held in celebration of
the reunion of Ancient Belgium with the French Republic,
gave the following toast: “ To the French grenadier whe
fha 11 firfl plant the tricolored standard on the tower of-
Weftininfler.*
-A party of Raquifitionmen arrested at Bourdeaux set out
from that commune on the 7th inst. cfcorted by a detach
ment of foldierv.
It is laid that, notwithstanding the opnofition of the
Ruffians, the Ruffian army continues its march into Bo
temia and Hungary, and from thence to the Rhine.—
What will the Court of Berlin do under ttefe circum
stances.
The Ccrrefpvidance of this day contains the following
letter from Malta, dated the 21st Fruftidor, (7 th of Sep -
tember.)
- The Sicilian \Wrs have teen renewed, and French
blood has teen Hied by the murderous poniards of the in
habitants of - tins town. It was on the dav corresponding
with Sunday, preceding the 2th Fruftidor, (2d Septem
ber) that the infurreftion broke out, after the Vespers, at
the lignal given by tlie toclin, and by two guns fired in tlie
old Cttv. _ ;—:
“ IVc have no intelligence of the fate of the ga ‘Ton of
the ilhn 1 of Gozo, cofnjiofl'd of 350 men, nor of that of
the old city, which contifled of 100 men; much fear is
entertained cf their having fallen under tf-’ poniards of the
affafhns. The tnfui-gents have rendered themselves masters
of fev.cTal batteries which command several lauding nlaces
and of a powder msH. „ ’
“ On tlie actii Fruftidor, (6 th September) the pea Ants
have numerous partisans among the inhabitants. * Tv
French force coniifts of fome frigates and gun ! >ats,
ktep tlie sea open, and render them invincible if the ports
of Sicily fliould be early enough fljut againfl the EnVlifl,
fleets.” , ,
October t 6. A letter from Toulouse c” the 7th infl.
advises, that in several cantons of that department tlie
Requifitioiimen fly'into the forefls, take with them p iov i
lions, arms, and ammunition, entrench themselves, and
remain there until the troops sent to the diifefenicom
munes to arrest them have marched off.,
London, October 9. , The intercepted letters from
Gen. Buonaparte, and the officers ind privates of his army
are so voluminous tbit notone half of them will ever reach
this country. A large trunk full of them was received at
the Secretary of Suite’s Qffice on Saturday from Conflan
tinople, among which is a letter.from Gen. Buonaparte to
his brother, reprefeming his situation as extremely critical
from the diminution of his army by difeafts, by the battles
he is continually obliged to fight, by the detachments re
quired to preserve the cliain of communication between
Cairo, Rosetta, and Alexandria, and by the garrilons of
t’nefe towns. Among other obfervatiohs he writes, that
his pojition was such that be could neither advance nor
retreat.
Another Ruffian squadron, confiding of 5 fail of the
line and 1 frigate, failed from Elfmeiir-on the 29th ult.
for England, in company with 3 English ships of war and
about 50 merchantmen.
OBober 15. On the 26th_jif September a particular
agent of the French Republic took out of the hands of the
Royal Bank at Berlin, where it had teen deposited for
150,000 German crowns, the famous large diamond called
the Regent*
Admiral, now Baron Nelson of the Nile, is the son of
the Rev. Mr. Nelson, Reftor of .Burfibani Thorpe, near
Holkotn in Norfolk, and is said to be related to the Wal
pole family. Admiral Nelson entered early .into the ser
vice, was a Lieutenant in 1777, ar d a Pofl Captain in
1779a .
All the firfl Lieutenants who served ill the aftion of the
Nile are promoted to the rank of Commanders in the Navy.
OBober 2*. Sir William Scott is appointed Judge of
the High Court of Admiralty, on the resignation of Sir
James Marriott, and Dr. Nicholl, hit Majesty’s Advocate
General, vice Sir William Scott.
Accounts have been received at the Admiralty of the
Leander, of 50 gunh,- having been carried into Corfu by a
French line of battle ftiip.
OBeber 21. On the 19th ult. a corps of French troop*
entered the canton of Glams. The fomenters of the late
troubles in Underwalden, &c. are to be transported to
Cayenne.
TJ>e accounts refpefting Buonaparte, received through
the German papers, represent his further progress to be
opposed by obstacles infurmountabie; that he is in want of
provisions, his army dispirited, and surrounded by several
formidable oolumns under the orders of Muflapha Bey.
Gen. Strader, the Commander in chief of the. Army of
the Empire, has ordered the whole train of artillery removed
to Braunau to join him withunt delay at Friedbourg, and
20,000 Austrians have received orders to advance towards
Ulm.
The Court of Common Council has resolved that a sword
of the value of 200 guineas be presented to Rear Admiral
Nelson; that the freedom of the City cf London te pre
Tented to Capt. Berry in a gold box of too guineas value;
and that the thanks of the Court be given to all the other
officers, seamen, and marines, Tor the undaunted bravery
and steady conduft which they exhibited on the ever me
morable Ift of August last.
Policies of insurance are now opened to return 20 guinea*
on receiving 5 if Buonaparte ever returns to France.
.It is abated that the wife of Buonaparte has found con*
folation fi r the abfi nce of the General.
It is said to have appeared by Buonaparte’s di(patches
that he charged the French Republic 2,0001. per week for
the support of his table.
The Paris papers to the 13th state, that Buonaparte had
left a garrison of 6000 men in Cairo, and after having de
feated the Arabs in fevcral aftions had taken Suez on the
Red Sea; that he added 15,000 Arabian cavalry and seve
ral thousand Mamaluke infantry to his army; that he pof*
felted himfelf of Syria; and that the Grand Signtor and the
Divan bad expressed the higbeft gratification at bis fuc*
cefs. So much for the Paris accounts of Buonaparte.
Intelligence from Constantinople of the 2d ult. states
that Buonaparte, who on the 2d of August was at Cairo
with 6000 men, had been attacked in his camp by the A
rabs, whom he defeated with confidcrable loss on both
sides. -V-
On the 18th ult. and the three preceding days the Ruf
fian a; * i y which is to cooperate with Auflria againfl Franc*
passed the Bog, and took pofl in Western Gallicia.
It is dated from Vienna that Russia had covenanted to
aid Auflria with 100,000 men in the contest expefted to
be immediately renewed with France, and that 60,000 of
these troops had aftually arrived in Bohemia. The accounts
add, that Prussia is about to augment the anny of neutra
lity with 20,000 more troops.
Gen. Mack has failed from Trieste for Naples; he is ac
companied bv Count Marine Diedrichflien.
His Majesty’s ship Jason, of 38 guns, in pursuit of*
French convoy, on the 13 th,-was loft on a fimken rock
between Brest and Cape du Raz* Capt. Stirling, with the
officers and crew, (except 6 men who reached Falmouth in
a fix oared cutter) got to the shore, where they were made
prisoners by a body of French fiddlers.
We are happy to state tlie fafe arrival at Lisbon of the
leander of 50 guns, fuppoftd to have been captured on her
passage from the Nile.
The following intelligence has been received by the Lis
bon mail: “ A trailfport W? j h arrived from the fleet undef
Admiral Lord St. Vincent in 5 days brings intelligence,
that 3 of the French (hips of the line, after being 15 days m
pcfTdlion of the Engli 111, had funk, in consequence of tte
damage which they had sustained. It is added toe, tta
-150 of the tranfpo!ts have teen taken, and the greatrt
part of the others burnt. We are allured too that the