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T ! i **- dollars per annum.']
* OoUME I.j
T/a> . • ucli admired Stallion
’ >EL< AI x.
Ihe property of Mr. Richard
Hankerfon of Barnwell diftricCt
South Carolina, will itand the en
fumg Spring Seaion at my Planta
tion i vVilkts county Georgia,
thi-.cen miles from x aihington, 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 fVafen, payable
the firft day oi januai y next, which
mav be discharged by the payment
of fifteen dollars within the-featon
twelve dollars the single leap,
paid down—thirty five dollars to
injure a mare to be with loa.l, pay
able as soon as it is afeertained she is
with foal or disposed of, and fifty
cents to the Groom in every in
ftanet I'he season will commence
the firft day of March n xt, and
expire the twentieth of June. —
Mares lent from a distance can be
fed w;:h corn and fodder at the
market price—servants lent with
the ..ures will be boarded gratis—
ev-vy attention will be paid to
marts left with the horse, and the
gieaieltcare taken to prevent acci
dents or escapes, but no responsi
bility for cither. It has been ac
knowledgcd by the beff of judges
that Bel lair is one or the lined and
mots powerful horles on the conti
nent, and his colts are ranked a
mong the fiueft quarter horses ii
the world.
GEORGED TAYLOR.
[1 ashingion April 3 1, 181.5. —ti i 5
WILL be F t to the lowed bid
der on the fir ft: fuefday in July
next in Washington Vilkes county,
the i uilding of a Brick Court heufe
for fail county—-The plan and
terms will be made known on that
day and may be seen at any time
by applying to William Sanfom.
B order of the court.
JNO. HALID AY Clk.
May ic, 1815 -: 9 8t
il hi i CD Mi KEN &
J: WMi H
The fubferiber respedfully in
forms the public, that he has coin
nier.ced 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 fatisfadion to those that
may favor him with their cus
tom All work committed to his
charge fhafl be immediately atten
ded to, and the workman {hip not
excelled by any part of the world
J ANTHONY.
Washington, April 7- [rm Iwi 2W
AN APPRLNTTCE,
J Feinted at this 0 flier.
ijr Axvl jIS !
For sale at tins OFFICE. *
THE FRIEND AND MONITOR.
PUBLISHED (weekly) BY JOHN K. Ivl. CHARLTON.
WASHINGTON, (Geo.) FRIDAY, JUNE I<>, 1815.
Administratrix's Sale.
WILL BE SOLD, on the firft
Tucfday in July next, at the court
house in Wilkes county, all the
REAL ES LATE 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 11 t nUrson,
Administratrix.
May 1 • t-S 15. 18 tds
N otiee.
ALL persons indebted to tb.e es
tate of Andrew Creighton, deed,
are hereby requested to come and
fettle the fame with the fubfcribc-r;
and those to whom the t state is m
debti and, will present their accounts
properly attested for settlement.
CHRISTOPHER ORR.
JONATHAN ORR.
Executors.
Wilkes ccunt\\ 1
A” a o c 224 1
may 26, 1815.3
MTIifAFINDISIAG.
Abraham Simons & George
Rudd’-11, refpedfully inform
their friends and the pubiic in gen
ial, that they have commenced bu
finds in the house formerly occu
p ed by v|csfiac R biulon, opposite
the Pott Office, to be conducted
under the firm of George Rud
deli. & Cos. where they purpole
to keep a supply of dry goods and
groceries, such as they deem suitable
to thole who rnay favor them with
their cuftotii, which they will fell
low for cash.
Washington , )
jure 2, 1815.5 22
Administrators Sale.
WILL BE SOLD, on the fir ft
Tue Lay in July next, at the court
house in Wilkes county, all the
REAL ESTATE of Joliah Hen
derson & Thomas Henderson, dec.
lying on the waters of Long creek,
in Wiikes county. 12 months
credit will be given ; bond with
approved security will be required.
John Heard, Adm'r.
May 1, 1815. 18—rds
For sa e at this Office , the
fold, wing BLA NKS :—
Warrants of Appraifement,
Letters of Administration,
Do. Teftimentary,
Do. Guardianship,
Administrator’s Bonds,
Constables do.
Collectors and other Deeds,
Marriage Licence’s,
Subpoenaes, Executions, Justices
Warrants, Fi-fa*s, Guardian’s
Bonds, Indentures, Ca-fa’s and
Commission of Interrogatories.
May 12.
VIRTUE, LIBERTY, AND SCIENCE.
From, the London Courier , Nov 17-
XVe have received the following
letter from Bordeaux. It is, vve
regret to hate, little more than a
counter part of letters received
from other parts of France :
Bordeaux , October 26-
I have read your observations on
the articles occafionaliy inserted in
the French journals, and the an
fwesr thereto by the Journal tie
Paris. Sir, the tiuth of things
ought to be made known to our
countrymen; notwithstanding all
vve have done for France, vve are
calumniated by the people, and the
democrats of the United States of
America are more refpe&ed than
we. There is not a Frenchman
but who willies success to the Ame
rican arms and deftrudion to curs.
Their exultation on the late partial
fuccefles of these men at Fort Erie,
Plattfburgh and Baltimore was ex
travagant. I was a vvitnels to a
I'cetic the other evening at the thea
tre of this city, which will finny
you, in a strong point of view, the
It ate of the public opinion here.
It was the evening of the day that
vve received here the news of the
deft ruction of Washington. In the
tragedy performed were fe.veral a
prdTions against the English nation,
luch ai eternal haired to the English.
f hefes exprdiians were encored a
gain and again by the audience, &
to add to the lcene, the pit cried cut,
Dozen with the English—they arc
base—God save the Americans—God
save the brave Americans , was re
peated from all parts of the heufe.
Ihe authorities treat us with the
greatelt rigor, whereas the Ameri
cans are treated with lenity and ’
great hofpitaiity. It is difficult for
an Engii man to get any footing
j in a French family, and were it not
for a rew English and irifh houses
dtablifheu here, vve fhoald have no
society ; whereas the Americans
are care tied wherever they go.
Our relpeciable consul is fcarctly
noticed Dy the French authorities,
while the American consul is lead
ed by them, and he can wear his
uniform in the ffreets, while Bntifh
officers dare fcarctly be seen in the
public walks with their uniform on
for fear of being intuited. These
are fads, fir, which ought to be
known at home.
P. S. A great party in this coun.
ry expresses a vyifh to lee Napole
on’s continental system again put
in force against us, by the common
content of the powers of the conti
nent. Something pointed againit
us is expeded from the congress at
Vienna, i Hey calculate much on
the tuppoled intimacy betweeu the
emperor Alexander and the prince
of Benevent, ano they tell you fre- |
quently that Alexander did not live ‘
at Talleyrand's hotel at Paris for \
nothing, that thole great perlona
ges have arranged together all
the affairs of Europe, and that
France and Rullia (falle, of course,
the report mult be relative to the :
latter) are hereafter to be united in
forcing us into a maritime lyffem of *
; their own brooding,
o
[Payable half yearly.
Boston, May 10.
Bonaparte is said to have lent the
duke of Vicenza, (Caulincourt) to
the Congress of allied inonarchs in
Vienna on a million. Some parks
accounts fay he carries the resolu
tion of Napoleon to ratify, and
give surety for fulfilling the trea
ty of Paris, accompanied by a rc
queft that the allies woulJ not in
terfere in the internal affairs oi
France. Other accounts fay, the
negociation relates solely to the em
prels Maria Louisa, and her son,
whom Bonaparte demands may bo
permitted to return to Paris. The
empress has not been crowned.—
Napoleon promised to do it after
his return from Saxony, the last:
campaign; but found himfelf too
bui’y to attend to it. He has now
notified that her coronation shall
take place on May day. Since this
promise her father has declared
Bonparte an out law. No men
tion is made in the last Paris paper
of this interesting female; and at
the last date Caulincourt was cer
tainly at Paris. Cent inch
A French paper of the 12th
March, mentions, that the arch
detchefs Maria Louiia [Napoleon's
bride] had renounced the title of
Empress.— lb.
—**•- - -
If the allies fhbuhl perceive
France united heart and hand in.
support of Napoleon; that he has
learr.t wildom from adversity, and
that his ambition is tempered by
moderation ; they may abandon
the imbecile Bourbons, and leave
the troubled world a “ breathing
time of peace.”
In cale of war, we presume an
immense activity will be given to
our growing and ex ten five com
merce, lubjeCt, however, to be
vexed with the veils incident to a
ffate of the moft vindictive hostili
ties. But if the splendid issue of
the recent war has convinced Eu
rope, that whenever our resources
are fully developed by able states
men, our Olive will be courted, &
our arrow feared. Hence we in
fer, that the neutrality of the new’
world will be more refpeCted than
it was during the recent conflicts
of the old.
Boston Gazette.
No one surely can blame Bona
parte for wishing to regain so splen
did a throne as that of France* If
the reiumption is a violation of en
gagements made vvirh the fovere
reigos of Europe, we presume it is
their and his business, not ours
Let them mannage their own affairs
their own way, fay we; and if
they appeal to the {’words, we may
also fay, God prosper the right.
The French people have had a
recent.fampie of the governing ta
lents of a Bourbon and Corsican
ruler ; and it certainly cannot be
unworthy an American citizen to
hope they have a fair opportunity
of choosing which of them to serve.
If th y prefer Emperor Strok to
king Log— tho’ we may smile at
their folly, we have no right to
cushion their privilege.
[Number 23.