Newspapers / The Wilmington Gazette (Wilmington, … / May 23, 1809, edition 1 / Page 1
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1 rs y THE-WILMIN&TON, GAZETTE.' ' V: at - Wilmington, N a Tuesday, Iat 23, 1809. 13tu Year. Hi " 'Numets 646 r ajr "MMMMMHMHMMaMMM''W-i' 1 ajwMae TTj1 " ' """" " ' " .- . p . .;.. - ,. . . h .sit...'' ' f T - 1 t ;? t ' ntGIMENt At ORDERS. THE Officers commanding companies id Ihe first of lower ftatiallioo of the New Hanover County Militia, are rc. ested to f ' r H t Wt r r neet te " s "d a . .... j the Sf th instant, in order for inspection and :' filling up the detachment of thirty-six men, i being the additional quota ol the corps provided by Law. The ConfcnissioneoOfn- cert ire further required to appear at the 'Court-House in fVilmington, completely ar "V wed and equipped on the day immediately !' i ' ' t.i. i-n fit..: preceding the epove, ww roua ov mcir cum. Denies complete. ' The Cavalry and Artillery ") K companies will parade with the battalion. : . Bt order oftha Colonel Commandant, p) -VBLUDWORTH, tt Major N. -. !Saj?l2. -HI ; " v V- ' ' PROPOSALS 'It. IT 1Q VPstlLttrtrt. And M. K ' : W.-Vabritf fibtrf. Breadvoj, JVe.rrjl, for publishing - ' . . tHE BRITISH ESSAYISTS, V- , - wit. - 1 - , fwlCfl HtStOBICAL AO BtOCKJtrBTCAl t ALEX AND ER CHALMERS, A. M.j ".i ' CONTAIN lAUTMti ' rtcTTa, " . .. CUAtB'tMl .. ,v lMttta, . .. ;-;ADf Toaa Wot io, , lBSi .- -- iMqat Oaiiivia, :. . . . i Ml TbawwkOwllfct iaimrdi'ttiyjfJM ? :: abtifitnt witk M tdiiaa it l1Bef "' '", Staiit of '. '' !. k Uttou4 M AontM fapwIU o mmi, wiihtakaitfat mw type, til oa y . Wlir.. a;.J. SaaiMraO. al PhiMelhit Tk. knlamM M . (halt tota Vot ibbbribn io str IwtaH t oti totoino, --ytyibUoo delivery. ftikfcriolli ...l. (.n.l. ii m dollar it tcaM, srovi application b ta W1" th wmk ' ul ' r,fc CONTRACT. : .WILL be put up at Public Auction to the, foweu bidder before the school house in Smithville, on Thursday the Gfteenh -' (' 'June, 'it the' ,"!" f ,r ' time and place, plans of said building trill be produced and termsmade khown,' -, . ' ' ' ;1J order ot the Commissioners ''-rl1r: - JOHN. CQNYERS, Clerk. iSmithville, 29th April, 1809,", , n LIVERY STABLES.) rTHE subscriber has established a set of Ki Liverr Stables, ok the went tide ot Se- con4 street, for the accommodation of those gentlemen travelling through or resiling in tnit town, wno may be disposed to avail themselves of this establishment. T Every kiiiu oigrsiu Bna,iorage(necetary lornorset; anau dc auunaanuy provided ana taitntuiiy given, and all due attention paid to then! by the hosier. The stabler are. quite dry; shall be tept clean, and f each stall shall be lurnisnea wup utter every evemne. i W Jt. WILLKINGS. '; -irirt!3 . rT." -i ' ia"I Sheaftonc, Gc4d is PASiiaa, . " - . 4 M'CtcofM, . ": . Oil A Podrib, r iSOISOtS't LSTTtSSy Dsoioits Da, ; , - by L) itutoa. ' TO RENT, t That commodious slated Bricli House in Front-Street- a)td corner of EwanS nes who a tuxenen to eacn, etc. 1 . , February T. JOHN M.RTIK. MR. F. J. BEL ANGER, Has the Honor of informing the parents and guardians of young ladle and gen iemen, who are-desirous to learn to speak and write the French language, that having concluded to remain Some tim longer in Wilmineton. he will be haDDv to devote a part of his time to that kinaol inttructioW He also purposes to teach Latin Grammar. "His terms may be known by applvino; at bis nouse. : , l April II. tvablaoa dalivery. - ' ' M ', , 4h. ThU tdiiioo will b pabUlk! probabtf lo 6 o.an,, (ertitnlyot nccdiai fiif voia.) 4 akfcripiloB wlU b ittPivt for soy Of boe " strtlio fcU U raerivoe .Twt Mpumkcf , 6th Aaf pra Ufcfibiag lb (a copies, Bwll hate ' Subscription ttcthed at thii Office THE goods lately composing the asso rtment of Thomas Wright will tor a short time remain in his p6ssessi(jri,to be disposed of at re duced prices!,for prompt payjneit only. Wm. 1UUHARDSON. Apm n.; i;"::u:::LX Just received froni Philadelphia, . nd for sale wader the direction of Robert ' V. Brown.' ' V i Ton Iron, t & square bar . ; Hhds. Whisky, . do W est India Rum, do. .Molauev,, ' do. Sugar, - - . Barrel Prime Beel, r ; ' . v 1 Barrel Butter, , 1 . t ' - ' 40 Kegs Crsckers, j ' ' I J Barrels ship and PiTat Bread, : )0 Burrclt. and U half do. Floar, j0 Boxes Rauins, . v t Bat rel Confectionary, -f Box Rock Candy, 1 .; Barrel Almonds, ; ' .... .. . - .1 1 t I J Boxes Figs, Cxk Porter, . PipsGin, S Pipes v ine, I Cask Tin Wire, I Dcten Chairs. " May 9. - . 7 3w. 10 4? A few l'XGlJls. 10 by IJkiby 4o . &rgt Whue ueao, . , lo Pieces Nnkeos, do" Rhesms of Wrapping Pspef. - BURGWIN U OIUNIE. ; . - FOR SALE, . ' TO boxes Brown Sugar, . - )o do. V hits do ' 6 hhd. Muscovado Sugar, , "-'ItO bbls. best green CoITex,' S pipes tb proff do, do. Ubo Wine, 1 - -4 40 hhds. Molasses, ' ' ' 2i Tierces do. ' '.. . nhls. . do. II keg Virginia Mamtacture4 ToUeco, TO RENT, w ;' AMD polTi: ffion given Immediatefy that commodious-Houle fa -Orange Street, lately occupied by Mr. Joho MscAuflao. rorerms apply to Fc5 4i. ; ru. HATTR1DGE. AS ihe subscriber intend to leavt the state for a tew weeks, be has left bis busioesi ae respects Boyks and Accounts in charge of f eier MatweU, Kq; Ur adiutment, at the counting-houe aU'ning my dwelling houu. . UEORGE CAMERON. April 11. . i; :... ;....? 11 ) pieces Russia Duck, t do. Ravens dp. 0 botes Soap, . i do. Chocolate, ' ' J00O bushels Turk's Island Salt, ( - 4 Trunks Callicoes assorted, . . ' 3oooibs.Codrib, . -.'''v.. 1100 M. fe i inch Board, , ; . . TOOO M. Shingles, ' . . S00 R. O. bhd. Staves. ' ' . HANSON tXLLT, . April 4. ' ' An elegant Sit all Sword, sjrltk a pair of handsome F.naulets. may be sirchastd oa tt7 low terms by eppljlng at p TAKEN UP,' and now in my otsetsion, an African man, about twenty-five years of age, five fceteiht or nine inches btgh. spare made, has on a pair of pUiaTblue truwsars.a blanket.fctommon blue negrocapt be can scarcely be . understood, from which 1 infer that he has been bat a short time in this country t be tsys bl name is WILL, that hi masters name Is Pee, (bciig now dusd,) by signs he conveys the ides bis mat ter planted cotton and corn, and that he bad a cottoo machine. The owner of said ne gro irequetcd to come forward, prove his property and take him away, reasons to be) assigned lo the -owner, why the subscriber nas not committed the said negro to iJ. y ' . JACOB LEONARD. Brunswick County, January 17. " tf. RUN-AWAY't Mulatto Boy nsmed GEORGE, belonglngw the subscri ber As U Is probable that be is gone to Wilmington, all matters ol vessels sad other persons sre csutloncd, at tbe peril of the law, which snail be stnctiy cniorced agstnsttnera, not, to harbour or carry 'him swir. Aay person who snail deliver the said boy to Messrs. John Muche!!, at Wilmington or Duncan McRa of Fay clteville, shall be enti tled ta I handsome reward. WILLIAM DUFFY. Cbstbsm Court'House. HPAKkN UP by theAibfcriberontha 1 ill MiKh 1 8 jo, on ihe Sound near WTnington, N.C. and committed to jail. a Mulatto fellow who lays his nameJi RAVIS, and belon lo Mr.John Jeffy, Union county, 5. j. on U.lklnei Uretk. The owner ts tequeflej to coma forward, prove' propeity. pay c barrel, , and tako Mot awivJ ' t THOMAS IEMNIHGS. . Match 7, , . t tf( From the Boston CentineU ' THE ANALYSIS ' .. , Of our PubUe Diplomatic Dhpatchcu 1 ;-. - ;y'iNo.'xi.;:fA.V;'" t"t., ';.-, Lefrtf ttr The first ahd the most natural inquiry is, why this important letter was suppressed .it contains no secrets nothing of t confiden tial fiature no proposals' which the state of our negotiation required to be concealed. ' Os .the most careful perusal ol it, we can discern no possible motive for withholding it from the public eye, except this, that it con tains irrefragable proots of tne insincerity and hypocrisy whh which the negociation' With, Great-Britain was conducted ; it fur nishcs.lso, conclusive evidenceof the un- faifiess with whjch former negociation had bees' conducted, and the VeUounded ieolousy of lie British government, lent the same syiom of misrepresentation should be again puriued. yyl. . V?;-; IhiJ letter of September 23d, 1808, from Mn Canning to Mr. Pinckney, covered Ihe ICttr of the same date from. that minister, whfcb has been published, and intended to pVevcnt a repetition of that course of mis representation which bad beta-adopted on foriier occasions. -' . - O . , ' ! i(je lrom the documents wuicn tne govern lent had seen' fit to publish, he was left to pnjecture from tbe force of hi own reason kg the tiaturt of the real communications nicn ware suppressca,;.ana ine jouewwg hargesmade by him, aretow unejuhocallj stablisSed. " " , J- ''-r-i .r'x !'' ' Firtt. That tbe documents published, were m perfect fragments of the true state of the legociation, and ' probably gave the fairest fide of it. This letter of Mr. Canning sup KMrta this charge.- r rv;-,. v Secondly. That Mr, Pinckney was never uthoriied to propoae to Great-Britain, the epeal of the embargo unconditionally, as the ion.ideration for Ihe rescinding the Orders p Council. The author of ihe Analysis luted expressly in mi sixtn numoer, mat r. Pinckney was only authorised fe eft. purer! tht , expectation, -that the President WUUIU, WI'Ul rHVuv time, givw rjn. jo the authority Vested in him, as to the us ension of the embargo. .' : -i - ( . Mr. Canning now tellr Mr. Pinckney that W fxvp did state that he was auiftotWd, but Impliedly admitted that ht was not, and sim ply proposed as " of himself, that if Great. Britain would repeal the Orders, the PresI siient might repeal the embargo." I; Mr. Pinckney. aa invited to correct tbia statement, If not true but as he has not done it, we must presume the British minister to be correct, especially aa our government suppressed ihit letter pf Mr. Canning. '-' ' Thirdly. This letter proves thst if Great-' Britain had acctded to Mr. Pincknry'a offer the government tf the United States was at liberty while Great-Britain would have been bound. It would have been in the power of Mr. Jefferson, slier Great-Britain bad hum. bled herself by repealing ' her Orders, to have refused to agree to tbe tmuthoriud promises of bis minKter, as be had done in the case of the British treaty, and to have represented that his' wise and strong mea sures had brought her to his feet. . Great-Britain perceived the perfidy, and escaped the snare which an unprincipled and Intriguing polity had prepared foe, her. . fourthly. This letter proves to what a state of degradation tbe fle and insincere con duct of our cabinet ha reduced our nation thst fereigo governments esq no longer trust the declarations or verbal assurances of our ministers. ' '. Though Mr. Canning acquits Mr. Pinck ney personally of having been Instrumental in tbe gross misrepresentations of former dis cussions, yet he does it by transferring the charge to our own cabinet. .' , ' Yet these are the men who talk of the un just and dishonorable view of Great-Britain, and of her refusal to treat with us on any s qtiilable terms, . . , " 'V " rrotnthe whole of this important letter, which we corjurc our fcllow-cititens to ex amine with attention, it is proved, thst Mr. Jenerson ntver did as be Da stated, oner to Great-Britain to repeal the embargo if she would rescind her Orders that he always left hinoself sloop hole from which be might. as is a. former . case, escape, and that this want of posilPM atwamit n a conclusive point with Great-Driutn In refusing to listen to tbe terms.' , Lastly, U, appears from tbe confession of Mr. Pinckney to Mr, Canning, that the Bri ll h Orders did not lit FACT form any part of the eonsideratiotis for laving the embargo, .the volumes of equivocation and falsehood of its supporters to the contrary not with standing. . ' ' '- Ft em the( Washington) Monitor. ' . The World's great jubilee is at length ar- rived, wbet too hearts of suffering ' people will be glad bf the certain prospects of pe ace ' Old England and America arc once more united, and likely to be settled in the" solid. Landsef frt'eudship forlagsa- aniiot genera tions to come. And what is to prevent it f Nothing in the consideration of human events- t for all things Jiecesary aft anticipated. It. 1 is ineir iniercsi w oe uuucu auu witcucvcr iu y. teres! is tbe cement between nation and na. tion, or man with man, the . conuexion will, -be lasting. Mentor" has been held up ss ft partiian ) an enemy to the liberties of Ame rfca a. tool ol the present administration, and an avowed agent of France! Tbee con' jucture are formed in the wild fsncy of ima gination,' while the passions were inflamed ; -snd prejudice presided - Facts prove other wise, and that he is a real American, an" i-ld patriot, and binder the influence of no man of , set of men. i It is true he ha long known th virtues f VVasbiwotox snd.-sn AtAHf,1 ; a JsrvKBSoU and a Madisoii, but he is'not ; personally acqUajnted wiih either. He e?ei' " ate at their tables, or solicited office of emo lument.. He Hands erect. A firm patrigV . guided purely, from principle and tbe love of - country; He bails with heart, felt satiafao ' tion. the ltq. propittpus .events, ' as lastinglf ravoruble- o-that-country nrhipn gate r im biith, aml iw tnf pei hianenr felicity of the' world at large. -And why f Because, at tbia great event two; of the, most potent powers) on earth are broughfloto union," and thereby the peace and happiness of tbejworld will speedily be settled on sure and lasting founi dations. .America and England unittd in re ciprocal iuieresj must give peace to the work! . for all the powers upon the earth will not bo able to infYrupt tbeir harmony or-anttj -their intetirse.- If they become Uni fue, and essentially united in the bonds of friend ship, as it is their interest so to .do i what c France with all her inland gigantic power . Russia, or the feeble nations of Europe, re s do ? Why, nothing. And if these two unhid powers, England and the United States, arc disposed to aid the oppressed people of South. America, to break eff their chains and to cast off their task-masters, and become a free and independent nation, who now i lo pre vent? They possess the omnipotence in spite of all the stratagems of the -intriguing Naw poleoft. . ( - A SILVER SPOON, ; Found between the Brick house and Judge lonre's plantation. The owner by-proving property, paying (bribe adver tisement and giving a small gratuity lo tht finder.mty bare it by applyine- at thia office. Shallow patod ooJitklans f Sodre front tbeir own narrow. minds, and self inietenej . motives, and in a lump, condemn both meo and measures, but tba steps pursued by the . government ot the United States, under Pro-. - -'-vidence, have been tb efficient . means of bringing about the present happy change Those vultures who live by prey,' by -carnage and by death, will endeavor to keep tip s the war whoop j (U so soot aswiy spm$ receives its death wound, their eonsequencc is gone smd their interest fs destroyed. No wonder then, under their various specious pretences, they still shew the pirit bf faction and try to divide the people of 'America bf a wrong censtruction f events as relating to their government , But every good citizen will now let the nick names of federal and; democrat desctod peaceably to the tomb, on .". the eventful circumstance that have restored barmony betwixt "England' and America) and of course, also will-bo obliterated the odious appellation of .whig and tory. : Wei axe now all Englishmen t ail Americana j wo have mad frienda upon honorable principl s " .and to tbe mutual interest and happiness of both countries. - May the ties be lasting lasting, 1 pray, as the existence of the world. : and as the sun in bis meridian splendor l Msy tbey who attempt to destroy the union, : fostered, by besven, be considered aTihcw really ought, by all good men, as the only enemies to their country, and the liberties and happiness or tbeir fellow beings, in all quarters of tbe globe where freedom Is ac knowledged to have aa existence. Tbe grand secret then, for both nations to con ' tinue in lasting barmony is to form commrr ; cial treat ie and regulations, on the biosd bal of equity and reciprocity, and, in no one instance ever to interfere wills the goem meat or internal concerns of the other. ' :' MENTOR. A Democratic Volunteer caught U , ' The following incident, to wLUb doiena were cye-wltaetaes, occurred during the last week on the Oswegstchie road. Mr, G a ' C n 'of Rudaad, who, was travelling with bis sleigh and horsesiowtrd Ordcnsbureh on hi lawful busir.ea, supposing that, la " land of fiberty, every cilixen enioved tbe . privilege of pursuing bis ordioary avocltiont without interruptioa or disturbance, and in. what manner he deemed best, arrived st the place where the brave volunteer militia under tbe command of CapU Ala Harm, and M mj iMher Dr. and tjcputv collector, Italae Matscy, ere statlnned. ills sleigh was co vered witk e blanket, nailed down areun4 the box, under which Iwe empty ea,k were (laced. On coming ep to the militia, Dn, tasvey atopped him, and . Mr. Serjeant, Timothy lamlin, who bravely volunteered kl service In tbe work 'of thunder, ciger te teirtby U4 ile1(k, and no doubt u;t(lii p 4-3- i . . . . ,.:'H i J "4 i . i i if j ia - 9 -)
The Wilmington Gazette (Wilmington, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 23, 1809, edition 1
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