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Thdollars per annum.'] PUBLISHED ( weekly) BY JOHN K. M. CHARLTON. [Payable half yearly.
\ ()i ,iJ .vIE I.j
v i-Tru-vStr.-uor’s Sale.
Will be sold a* pubic Auction, at the
house of Wilts mi Richardson , in
Oglethorpe county , on the 24 th of
fune next ,
The household and kitchen fur
niture of Clement K Harrison, of
Columbia county, deed.
Terms of Sale made known on
Che day/
MAT. J. WILLI\MS, Sen.
Administrator.
May 1, 1815.
\d'Ti’ ! iistratm’s Sale.
WILL BE SOLD, on the firft
Tuesday in July next, at the court
house in Wilkes county, all the
REAL ESTATE of Hannah Hen
derson, dec. lying on the waters of
Long creek, in Wilkes county. —
Twelve months credit will be given,
bond with approved security will be
required.
Hannah Henderson,
Administratrix.
May 1,1815. 18 tds
A dmimstrator’s Sale.
Will be sold, on the firft
Tuesday in June next, at the court
house in the town of Wafnington ;
one Tract of Land, lying part in
Wilkes and part •in Oglethorpe
county, being the Real Estate of
Solomon Patton, dcc’d—fold for
the benefit of the heirs and credit
ors of said dec.
Cdr.stopher Orr, Ad’mr.
March 31 ft, 1815. (tds)
£s* The cause of die dissolution
of co-partnership between Robt.
Chivers and myfelf is rafeality and
illegal proceedings by Robert Chi
vers. Also,, Ido hereby forwarn
any person or persons whatsoever,
from paying him any money on
the Book of Harrison and Chivers
for the year 1814
THEOD’K HARRISON.
April 25, 1815 —rm 17th
id- tico.
WILL be let to the lowed bid
der on the firft Tuesday in July
next in Washington Wilkes county,
the building of a Brick Court house
for said county—The plan and
terms will be made known on that
day and may be seen at any time
by applying to William Sanfom.
Bv order of the court.
•JNO. HALIDAY, Clk.
May 10, 1815. —l9 8t
IVA TCH-MAKER &
JEWELER
The fubferiber respectfully in
forms the public, that he has com
menced the above business in this
place—and from his long experi
ence, added to his natural genius,
he flatters himself that he can give
general fatisfaction to those that
may favor him with their cus
tom. All work committed to his
charge shall be immediately atten
ded to, and the workmanship not
excelled by any part of the world
J. ANTHONY.
Washington. April 7. [rm iwiew
AN APPRENTICeT
Wanted at this Office.
THE FRIEND AND MONITOR.
WASHINGTON , (Geo.) FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1815.
Final Notice.
We will attend at the house of
Levi H. Echols in Washington, on
the three firft days of the Superior
court of Wilkes county, to collect
the ballance of taxes due for 1814
and to receive the lift of tax returns
for the present year. All persons
failing to attend and make payment
or give in may exped the rigor of
the law to be enforced on’them.
THOS. ANDERSON,
T. C.
THOS. M‘LAUGHLIN,
R. T. R.
May 9, 1815. —19 31
LOOK HERE!
Thomas W. Sims, takes the li
berty of informing his friends, and
the public in general, that he lias
commenced the Mercantile Business
in the town of Washington.—HE
purposes felling low for ca(h, and
flatters himfelf by keeping up a
good afiortment of those articles
mod beneficial to the country peo
ple, and by the strictest attention to
bufinels and disposition to oblige,
to merit a portion of that patronage ,
that has b.een heretofore so liberally
bestowed on others.
April 28 1815— —qf-tf.
Mdm <ny Furniture for Sale.
ONE Side Board,
1 Set Dining Tables,
1 Pair Card Tables.
Will be fold low for cafii—en
quire at this office.
*9.3*
The much admired Stallion
RELf AIR.
The property of Mr Richard
Hankerfon of Barnwell diftried
South Carolina, will stand the en
suing Spring Sealon at my Planta
tion in Wilkes county Georgia,
thirteen miles from Washington, on
the main road leading to Peterf
burgh and one mile and a half be
low Mallory’s Store, and will be
let to mares at the reduced price of
twenty dollars the season, payable
the firft day of January next, which
may be difeharged by the payment
of fifteen dollars within the season
—twelve dollars the {ingle leap,
paid down—thirty-five dollars to
insure a mare to be with foal, pay
able as soon as it is afeertained she is
with foal or disposed of, and fifty
cents tg the Groom in every in
stance. The season will commence
the firft day of March next, and
expire the twentieth of June. —
Mares sent from a distance can be
fed with corn and fodder at the
market price—servants sent with
the mares will be boarded gratis—
every attention will be paid to
mares left with the horse, and the
greatest care taken to prevent acci
dents or escapes, but no responsi
bility for either. It has been ac
knowledged by the best of judges
that Bellair is one of the fineft and
moft powerful horses on the conti
nent, and his colts are ranked a
rnong the fineft quarter horses ii
the world.
GEORGE D. TAYLOR.
Washington, April 31, 181 5. —ts 15
VIRTUE, LIBERTY, AND SCIENCE.
(further translations.)
Paris, March 25.
Declaration of his majesty the empe
ror of the French , to the French
and particularly to the Parisians.
After an abdication, the circum
stances of which you are acquaint
ed with ; after a treaty, all the
articles of which have been viola
ted ; after having seen my retreat
penetrated by numerous assassins,
all sent by the Bourbons ; after
having seen the French ministers
intriguing at Vienna, to wrest from
me the affylum to which I was re
duced, and to take from my wife
and son the dates which had been
guaranteed to them; from that
son, whose birth inspired you with
lb lively a joy, and who ought to
have been to all the sovereigns a
facial pledge : all these attempts
made in violation of plighted faith,
have restored me to my throne and
to my liberty.
Frenchmen ! Soon shall Ibe in
my capitol, I come surrounded by
my brave brethren in arms—after
having delivered our provinces of
the fouth,and rny good city of Ly
ons, from the reign of fanaticifm,
which is that of the Bourbons.—
Fifteen days have enabled me to
unite these faithful warriors, the
honor of France; and before the
• 30th of this month, your happy
emperor, the sovereign of your
choice, will put to flight those floth
ful princes, who wiffi render you
, tributary to foreigners, h the con
tempt of Europe. France shall still
be the happiest country in the world.
The French shall still be the great
nation. Paris shall again become
the queen of cities, as well as the
feat of science and arts.
In concert with you, I will take
measures, in order that the state
may be governed constitutionally,
and that a wife liberty may never
degenerate into licentiousness.
I will mitigate to the fatisfa&ion
ail, those imposts became odious,
which the Bourbons gave you
their princely word they / would a
boliffi, under the title of Droits
Rcunis , and which they have re-es
tablished under the title of inch ed
imposition.
Property shall be without dif
tindion restored and sacred, as well
as individual liberty.
The general tranquility shall be
constantly the object of my efforts;
commerce, our flourifhing manu
faduries, and agriculture, which
under my reign attained so high a
prosperity, shall be relieved from
the enormous imposts with which
an ephemeral government have
burthened them.
Every thing shall be restored to
order, and the dissipation of the fi
nances of the state to gratify the
luxury of the court, shall be imme
diately repressed.
No vengeance ; it is far from
my heart; the Burbons have feta
price on my head,, and I pardon
them. If they fall into my power,
I will proted them; I will deliver
, them to their allies if they wish it,
or to that foreign country where
their chief has already reigned
nineteen years, and where he may
continue his glorious reign. To
this my vengeance is limired.
Be calm, Parisians, and you, na
tional guards of that noble city—
you who have already rendered
. such great Cervices—you who, but
for treason, would have been ena
bled to defend it for fome hours
longer, against those allies who
were ready to fly from France—
continue to proted property and
civil liberty ; then you will have
; deserved well of your country and
of your emperor.
From my Imperial General Head-
Quarters, Burgoin , March 8,
” 1815.
NAPOLEON.
Countersigned, “The General of
Bivifion, Bortrand, Marshal of
the Palace, exerciling the func
tions of Secretary of State.
( Hear th< of U r side)
From France. —Yesterday arrived
at this port, the Spaniffi ship Louisa,
from Bordeaux, in 29 days from
! the liver.
Paflenger, Mr. Thomas W. C.
Moore, of this city, who has favor
; ed the editors of the Mercantile
Adverrifer with Bordeaux papers of
the 27th of March, and the foilw
ing important translations:
DECLARATION
Sent to his Royal Highness the
Duke of Angouleme, by the count
D’Osmaud, Ambassador from
France at Turin.
The powers which signed the
1 treaty at Paris, convened in general
Congress at Vienna, having been
informed of the invafton of Napo
leon, and of his entry, sword in
hand, into France, owe to their
own dignity, and to the interests of
social order, a foletnn declaration
of the sentiment whiqfi that event
has caused them to entertain. In
thus breaking the convention w hich
eftabliffied him at fheiiland of Elba,
Bonaparte destroys the only legal
title to which his existence could
lay claim. In re appearing in
France with projects to disturb &
confufe, he has deprived himfelf of
the protection of the laws, and has
manifefted in the” face of the uni
verse, that there can be no fafety
in having a peace or truce with him.
The powers declare in confequenee,
that Napoleon Bonaparte has placed
himself cut of all civil and social re
lations ; [ln other words, an objsft
of affaffiuation j and. that as the ene
my and disturber of the vepose of the
world he is delivered up to the vin
dictive public. I’hey declare at
the fame time, that, firmly resolved
to maintain involate the treaty of
Paris, of the 30th of May, 1814,
the dispositions fandtioned by that
treaty , and all those which they
(hall yet agree upon to complete
and consolidate it, they will employ
all their means and unite all their
efforts, in order that the general
peace, the object/>f all the views of
Europe, and constant end of their
labors, be not disturbed anew; and
in order to guarantee it from all
attemp’s which shall threaten to
re-plunge the people in the diibr*
[Number 20.