Georgia & Carolina gazette. (Petersburg, Ga.) 1805-18??, June 15, 1805, Image 1

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Georgia & Carolina Gazette. O Vol.ume i.l TER M S OF THE 1 GEORGIA CAROLINA / GAZETTE. i. Price to Subscribers, three dollars per annum,, half‘in ad vance., 2; Adv’crdferments for the fi, C G'fertion feventy-five cents : r Iq-Mir, and fifty cents for c vh ‘continuation. B. Gentlemen who have /. A obliging as to obtain Sub 's ft r this Paper, will con ■ additional favor by for v .• aft atement of the names i ’ t: . B ors as soon as conveni- CTOR 8188 “ T V. JESTS those who pvre ji • n, to call and pay or V f their accounts without X cL ; :i \ notifies those who n c T*y him hereafter, that i-. ;*■ :■ case he will demand a r ■: •: at a convenient ’ ■ i.'. .irately after his fer v: ■ j . rendered* having de t ro close nis accounts t a ‘Nc/.e-3cck only. I /• ft f 1805. 0O ii CE. r . ~ 2 pari ncr alp of Oliver JA i'Vl:YTft & SHALER HIL LYi'R. ‘ear.ng defolved by rr . ;d - it ias become sc Autelv r,■-•ccilarv that their b -OKS be closed : . T hose therefore who are xn cV: :-T. rc the firm of Whyte c: ycr cr to Oliver Whyte -are f; licked to come forward & fere;e their accounts by mak i; . • -yrnent or giving their •nc •'3, I‘he bufmefscf the Store will be continued as usual by SHALER HILLYER. Teterjburr, June 8, 1805. N 6 T I C E, r ■: \ii S■) bfcfb? ~ will give A for good WHEAT, <Je livered ar. .hi 3 MG, one dollar and twenty-five cents per Bulb 'd-—hr h'iS his v! G fixed with :* good ok.reen, Fan, and Fine and Sec .ml Cloths—will be thankful for f uftom in that way, which will be attended to with the greared; attention. H. SMITH. Milford, tth'*une, 1805. “'GEORGIA; Elbert County. \ 7HEA KA 3 Jane MdCune, V V ‘Thomas AT (dune and Mo ses Hay net. lave applied to me for Letters of Admin: r it ion on the Est ate cf ‘• \P Cune, late cf (As Bounty , die eased. : ‘ B a th ref eto cite an.: ..T-ndj ad -•■■ ■: fr the l •’ 1"■ ■rs of jdid de- Ct ed. to be : ni appear at the r- ; . 0- dinary, to be I > ?; ■ !>vd County, to jh: ‘■ c (if any they have ) •a I 7... rers should not be 1 ty y ,-r 1* p ‘ G::rn under my hand this J b dav of June, 1805. W:: ..'.I . G 4 IIBOT H AM, c. c. o. PETERSBURG;—f -Printfp by. BURKE & M'DONNELL. BOSTON, May 15. An arrival here from France, has brought papers to the 30th March —several days later than j before received. We do not fine), after a ha fly perusal of them, they contain any general information of much incereib— The press in France, it rrmlt he recollected, is under find: guardianship. Thojgh barren of general e vents, taefe papers are full to oversowing of accounts of the in-comings, and out-goings, the promenades, hunting excurli ons, &c. of the members which compose the new dynasty of France. All the titles of the moft ancient governments of Europe, are in full use; and we find whole firings of Para graphs respecting his majesty the emperor and king, her ma jesty the emprels, their imperial highnesses the princes and prin ctfles of the Bonapartes j their highnefTes the princes of the imperial family i their excellen cies the miniller; 6tc. &c. &c. —forming a linking contrail with the fanfculotiinss of the early days of the revolution. Paragraphs in the Paris pa pers shew, that Ruftia and ETance were ftdl at enmity. It is afiferced ihac the R ulfi m troops which have lately arrived at Corfu, did not pals through-the canal of Conitantinople, but inarched through Maldavia. ‘Plie Erencii emperor is about to assume anew title—that of Napoleon the great, We find in a Paris paper of the 30th March, an adverufe menc of the miniller of general police, preferring the manner m which the French refugees from the French colonies should apply for the luccor ordered for them by the emperor. Gen. Brune, the late mir.ifler of France at Conllantinopie, had arrived at Parts; and the misunderstanding between ihe Ottoman Porte and France fliii continued. The captain of the vefiel from France verbally reports, that the Brell fleet had put to lea—and put back again. London dates, to the 2cd March, have been received, via. New-York—the ltate that the Britifli channel fleet under loid Gardner, had retained the block ade of Lrefl; that all the China and India Ihtps had been detain ed to carry troops to India that the secret expeditios, which was believed to be defeined lor the Mediterranean, was to com prize four troops of light dra goons, nine regiments of the line, oefides artillery, engineers, &c. gen. Craig to command in chief, having with him generals Stuart, Campbell, &c. It is expected they Will co-operate With the Ruffian troops in the S A T U R D A Ty Jume 15, 1805. Adriatic :—That Prufiia had ac quainted Sweden, if the latter concluded a tabfidiary treaty with England, that the former would occupy Swedifli Pome rania. Sweden replied, that as an independant power lhft lhould make what treaties Ihe pleased; and should any foreign troops enter he; territories, they would be treated as enemies; and she should claim the alii fiance of Kuflia. —n. ■ ■ —• STOCK3RIDGE, (Mass.) April 27. Extra ordinary Phenomenon. Gn ‘L.tiefday the 9th inll. the inhabitants ot the nortii part of Aiford, ,vere alarmed by a found fomewhac relembling thunder, but much more interne than any ever experienced in this part of the country. Those having a prospect, and immediately turn ing their eyes the direction from whence the noise appeared to proceed* were astonished to behold a volume of fire to ap pearance, 8 or 10 feet in diam eter, iiTuing dire&ly from the earth, and to the height as was luppoled of 150 feet* accompa nied with vail quantities of fmnke equal to that proceeding from a large building on fire.— Constant luccefHons of fire and v - fmokc of this description conti nued for the space of 10 or 15 minutes. The cattle and other herds of the adjoining fields were thrown into the greatell amaze ment and confirmation. The family of Mr. J. Biofs, on whole land the phenomenon happened, accompanied by a great number who had afTembied at a call so extraordinary, immediately re paired to the place from whence the fire iflued, but found contra ry to their expectations, that no eruption at all of the earth had taken place, but that the com mon rubbish scattered around had been conveyed to a great distance.—Let the curious de termine the cause. NEW-YORK, May 2. Capt. Williams from Cape Francois, informs us, that on the 19th of April, about 40 miles to the northward on the Mona Paflage, an engagement took place between the French privateer, formerly the Lilly (loop of war, and the British sloop of war Reynard, which continued an hour and a half, and terminated with the blowing up of the Lilly. Her crew consist ed of 160 men ; of whom 60 v/ere killed during the adion, 60 perilhed with the vefiel, and 40 were preserved. Capt. W. confirms the account that the return of Deflaiines and Chris tophe to the Cape, with a part of their army ; but their return, it was reported, was in conie qutnee of their expecting a vi- fit at the Cape from the Roche fort squadron. NORFOLK, May 6, 1805. From the captain of the Tickler, of Baltimore, who flopped here on his way from Bermuda, to land passengers, we learn that the fliip Manhat tan of New-York (from Bata via) was cleared the 20th uic. The captain had appealed for damages. ‘ The brig Nancy would not be put on trial until proofs of rhe neutrality of her property should have'had time ro arrive from America—[The secretary of the marine infuranre company, failed from hence, with these proofs, 17th ult.]— Bermuda was (hut against Ame ricans; but it was expe&ed it would (oon be opened again. The captain of the Tartar fri gate imprefied (at St. George’s) all the crew of the Tickler, in cluding the mate; with much difficulty the mate was got back, but none of the others. Capt. Maxwell threatened that where ver he met an American vefiel at sea, on board of which there was an Irifhtnan, an Englishman or a Scotchman, he would take every foul from on board of her and fend her adrift; that tach was the hefi mode of pu nching the abuse of prote&ions. As we have a Jaw providing for the punishment of such outrage, when the perpetrator of it fhali come within our jurifdi&ion, we hold it the duty of every cap tain, against whom it has been or may be committed, to en ter his protefi against it imme diately on his arrival in port, and to forward it, with tach circumstantial proof as may be within his power, to the office of state. And this we earneitly recommend to them not to ne gledt. 1 —*s4* ■— ALEXANDRIA; May 7. Prize Ram.* Tuefdav lafi being the day announced for the shew of lambs, at Arlington, the estate of Mr. Cuftis in this vicinity : the premium was ad - judged to a lamb bred by Col. Thomas L. Lee, of London.— This beautiful animal, of one year old, is certainly a prodigy of -his race, his great size, his high form and remarkable fleece, do great credit to the flock from whence he came, and is a fink ing icftance of what perfection in she race of ufeful animals may be obtained by care and manage ment. We are told it is the intenrion of his present propri etor, to cross him with fome fine ewes of the Mount Vernon improved breed, and also fome bred from an imported ram, a present from Rufiell, Esq. to the late General Waihington. This lamb pofilftes the gre^t [Number 2,