Newspapers / The Raleigh Minerva (Raleigh, … / June 17, 1800, edition 1 / Page 2
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. The ijthNumb-r cf the $th Jan.. ftatei, , that fir Sidney Smith has difpa'tched to captain Stiles com manding olF Alexandria, -paflporta for the men of let-" tern, tlteattilts, and the wounded 5 and it alfo. points out the neceffiry precautions 1 that were to lender thcrn uicftil. Number i6f of I2ih Jan. announce, that in con feq jcncc of a letter fiom Gen-K!cber of the 6th Jan. (tait letter don not aj.pea.a scleral confcrce was iiild whh the rniniftets of tht Porte, at" which he at tended. The refult as, tha.t the Grand Vixier de c.ared the Porte could not break the engagements con. tracked by their alliance. Sir Sidney Smith in confeq-ience preflcd General Klebcr to,aecpt the only, offer thatremained. jog a Convention to evacuate the Ottoman dominions by thgFrench army, with their arms arfd baggage, with all the honours of war. 1 ' He accented the proportion made to evacuate Egypt, and to tranfport his army in ycflels furnifhed by the'porte. But in return, he ftipulates that the Porte fUall withdraw itfelf fiom the trifle alliance. The difcttflion of this.elaufe may be referred to a ne- .ttn:ith;hch ; PIefcttntlftWtf."'. ally charged, or which would be better, by an Envoy from the Viaier, and a French General Officer. General Kleher, fuithcr demanded a fufpenfion of arms," guaranteed by hoftages on both fides. LONDON, April 24. It is laid that the Expedition to the Mediterranean is WenpTaud it Is aUYmentiofterif that General Sir Charles Stuart is going out to tWceed Eail Bal carrcs, as Commander in Chief of Jamaica ; and he is to take with him a number of Troops from Gibraltar and Minorca, which are to be re-pkeed by the Troops now embarked here. - r The Monitcur. has pubhfhed an Analyfis of J ltty 1 . 1 f H . . A Papers, 1 dative to tne vapuuiauon i gypc nu in which tne :bcr is -1 f we- m y -gi vgcrc dit tol h cJLsltesM, c r-a,:nnrJe. the recovery ot EsrVDt will not lo advantageous to the Portt as that Power flatrer i) itWf. Far from bein able to '"carry into ,exccuti on"frecIy"'the :nr.Ta-n---of:GovPnmethich;:it had formed for that part 'of its Empire, it feems that the Beys wifh to obtain poffdlioa of their ancient author The chief conful, who no longer ta.ks of going to Dion, flill continues to mAeVlLthe rrititar"rprepara-" tiorls uhich are in his per, and he indemnifies him Ifelf fcr the difficulty which he ftiidsm procuring Sol dim, and particularly nroncy, by a multitude of Ads .'.. nrAintrtcen both Military .and Civil. He has "ihind the anciently Kern of Commands in Tortreflcs, feral Bernadotte. has been appointed, in the place" of General Brunc, commandr in Chief rtf the Army of the"WclKThe Chief Conful probably intended, by this nomination, either to gain, hjm over to his party, or to remove him from Pan's. The Provinces of the . Weft are not the only parts irf which the fpirit of attive oppofition to the prefent government : manife'fts "itfelf: The difhirbancee which broke out in the beginning of this year in the South are not yet terminated. . jAprii'2 2 In the two Houfes f Parliament, laft night the three firft RefoUttions of the Union were moved and a greed lo. The fourth refolution relative to the Repre sentation will be moved in the Houfc of Commons th:s eveniog. Probably the fifth, re pe&ing the Church, will alfo be moved.' . The fixth Article which relates to Commerce, is likely, to give Uri 1 Jl. good deal of difcufiion. nine heouAtioiisMu Dolitentfs of Sir Sidney Smith to General Kiel .... . ' i'. . U A I TncrchpTai1ed: it appears that the AaSrJcn GcTcrnment h eodea vod. to foothe .the refentmentofahe emperor Jaul, by-offering to furrender to him the fortrefs of Ancona aad its dependencies. , ' rv Sir Home'" Popham is dated in tfce'Monireur, to have failed altogether in his million to St. Peterfburgh ; and in another' journal, under the article Berlin, it is added, that the Ruffian troops inj Guernfey aod Jer fey sat alfo to be withdrawn? ' ' April 30. ' ' . A London Morning paper gives the . following as a private letter from " : - . ': . Paris, dpri 14. " It cannot be unknown to Buonaparte, that. he ha3 an opponent truly republican, in his bi other Lucien the'Miniller of the'lnteriofFwhofe'bffi with bold MarfaUtifti as thdfe of Fuuche art with Ja zobinr. It is publicly-known thst-Locien having pre fentcd a lift of perfons for Prfec?lrto the Firft Conful, the latter found It fo Jacobinical that he thretf it into the fire, Lucien immediately threw his portfolio at his bt other's head, and -fet out for SenTtet, where he tcsaained fot feireral days The Conful wtQte to himM he -fhould be", difmiffied fronts his office. 'Duriflg the reign of Robefpiere, Lucien was the keeper of a Ma gaiine, near Marfeilles, amd was d violent a Jacobin, that he wai impriforicd as a Tcrrorift after the 9th -Thertnidor. -- T.:-- - Bernadotte is alfo known to be one of the mod determined enemies of Buonaparte, and has ju!t rcfii fed to ferve under his command in the A rmy of Re Icrve. In a late converfation, he addrciTed.him in the following language : I, am refolved not to aft under an. Ufuipcr ; you may be the tyrant of thofe who will Itoop to it, but' you ihallnot be mine, while I wear a fword by my fide Bernadotte maks no oiiHculty of telling this itory to his acquiHafance-. As long as pla Ccs i remain "lo be"givc'Vw"yV"lhc"Republicans"and'the" .initocrats will bt enthufirfltic in favor of Buonaparte ; "b"ut-whc'n tKey' are 'rpoTeafTthe' I'pirit. of parfy and" the pafltons of diffcyent faflioos will break but Sieves procures as much as he can the adroTfTion Tn The Hamhurg'i Mail has at hngtli re fJfcstated'Mar fhal S'JWARROW, and rcftored him to the good graccs- of the Emperor Paul, of which it had deprived him.'' In confirmation of this intlUffenccti.W.e,. are. afrtired,' that Count Woronzow .lias received letters whTeh po ' fitiveiy affert, 'that this celebrated wai nor was in a fairway of recovery orTthe 2 2d of March "; tbathshad ' previouflyV Tven to that date, difpitched two couriers in fucceflbn to Peteribarg and tint he would loorr be able to pay hf refpefts to' the Emp:rar in perfoj. The reinforcement of the French army in Italy feems" to be one oT the Drincloil obiefls of the Republicans It ij -their, intentiorj to penetrate"uitoTtaIy,by wayof . . Rwifi A Iris unH thi .Valteliup to make a diverfio'n in the rear of the Auftrians, and to give vent to General . MafTena. General Morc.au is to penetrate into Suabia at the fame time, and it is even thought that the firft Conful, with the army of referve,-wi'Jl march from Dijon to Italy, to eftabliih the principal theatre of war in that quarter!. ' . . April 23. r: 5- St George's day Holiday at the Exchequer, Stamp, Excife and culloms. v . " ' Yeftcrdav eveniaff we received. by exprefs, -Paris to the Tribunate, of-men who are inimical to Buona parte. " LeYters from D jon ilate that there is not a (in gle fxaaVin the Military Chclt, and that want of fpe tie occafions great confufion.' ; . -General Vial who held a command under Buona pa rte;in ltalyratfd-n the EgypTiff Expeditiorrrras the fon of a decayed mechanic in a fmall market town in Noifolk, and a few years ago was Set jeatTtTn a Re giment of Dragoons, from 'vhich and his. country he . fled with a furo of money he had obtained for a draft otr the Agent of the Corps, -to which he had totged his Captain's name, whild on the recruiting fervice in his O-....-,. jgOO f"UVn to land iafe in Flandefs, he entered iato the fervice of the French Republic, where hisaddrefs foon procured him advancement to the rank of'General of Brigade. His name net having appeared cf late, it may be prefumed that be has met the fate he merited, and that his head may haTC been one of thofe, which; arter the defeat before Aeie, graced the turrets of the Grand Sigri or's Seiaglio. " ' The new Pope has been if quired to revive, the order of the Jefuits, the abolition of which is represented I as ope of the chief caufes of the French Revolution. But fuch a revival has , been rendered unneceflary by that very event for it" produced, the Order jif ths Jtcohim, who are diftirfguifhed by all the artifice ufualiy impu ted to the Jefuits, united with a degree of cruelty of whichthc molt bigotted followers of Ltyala were iu'eaX pable ' ' K. ' : - A..;' SAVANNAH, : May 30, v-. - ' From TallahafTe, in - the Creek natiwn, we .have ad vice that information had been recently received there that Bowles, with 00 of the Scmindla Indians." had intrenched themfelye? within gun (hoLo:,the fort at 1 1 oF the ffarnfori ;, and' that fords thetft of p:ying to yo iheir unfeigned refpeft, and of giving you a Velcorne to the City, (which by the it of the union, has become the Metfoyolisi of the United States: - We have long anticipated this day. Wei confiaer this, your firft vifit, to Columbia, as a high gratifica tion, andjook forward whith latifaft ion,, to the pe riod when w: ftiall behold, you-Sir, c pening the con grefs in this edifice, the Cffp.itol of our country. - IV! cannor be iaCco&We I 4,blfSjv yhich Pro vidence has been .pleajel to"' beilow, in, a ' patticiilar manner, on this fitualion ; in the enjoyments of wh'cb, we have the felicity of knowing that our govemmeut . is on the point of participating. In offering our gratulations on your arriii!, wej )i'n inlivimea that y ou may fpend among 113 the cverrtg of a long, as you have fpent, in othet places, the mora- .in g i.an. Jifef i? I .an d h 0 n ou r able 1 1 fe. City of Wafhington, June 5th, 1 800. The following is the Prefiuent's anfwer. 7 the inhabitants -of the City ef Wajlingttn. if welcome to the city anc pawicuwrty un piai.t. a. congratulate you on the bleffings, wLich Providence has been "pleafed to beftow, in a particular manner, on this fituation, and efpccially on its deftination to be the permaneiit-ffat.cf.gQvernmeri .: May the future councils of this auguft temple be forever governed by truth and liberty, friendihip, 'virtue and faith, which as they arc the m reives., the chief good and principal blelBtigs of htiin nature can never Tail, to infurc the union, fafcty, prbfpeiity and glory of America. . JOHN ADAMS. . City of Wafliington'. . . At the Capitol, June 51I1, 1800. An entettainmer.t was given to the Prcfident cf the United tatt. by the "citizens of George-Town, on iftci St. Marc's and killed they had (topped up the riser. Appalachicola,7by-faU 1 1 rig iree5 acroisu, 10 prevent luccors ociug camcii in the fort. That the Indians, werc.in general well difpo fed to the JUnited States ; the men wfre employed in cultivating their lands, and the women irj fpinnihg,.. weaving, Stc. arid that col. Hawkins was to have a meeting with the chiefs, ' the end of this month at Tucktbatchee, epncerninj the line, which has been run as 'far the jChatahonchie. ; jf From Pe" Tacola we alfo learn-that a party cfthe Se rninola Indians, infligated by Bowles,, had lately com mitted fome depredations within thejnrifdiftioh of that place but had, hen driven off by 2 J men fent by the Spanifii governor againft therrL; and that a fchooner from New Providence, laden with Indian goods, am munitionj and two long 4 2-pounders, ,had been taken by the Spaniards ; 'a merchant named Hunter, and 27 of the crew efcaped. " . ': - journals to the 20th inft, inclufive.- - The. campaign on the Rhine is yet confined to fkirmifhcs.betwecn the ad : ; vanccd pods of the.rcfpetive armies. The Auliriaoi " HanrT7edr"on ttie J fliot, in theirturo -into Manheitti. A parley enfued, and thus enJed the affair. Gen. Kray fottifies him ; . ftlf very Itronglyin the Brifgau . v "S-'-- GEORGE-TOWN. Tune 10. Oo Tburfday latt, the following addrefs was prefect ed to ht Prefident, in the chamber of the Houfe of Repfefentativcs, at the Capitol, City of Wafhington, U 7 the President of the. United Statist .... Sir, - .v" : ':V.-.': The inhabitants of the City, of Walhjngton rejoice irrthc--opportanitY-which yourprefejtee Jhi-JjIfL.. "FridaytaftTTlrTItoighHnVTaverr A numerous company fat down to dinner "wlYichT I. The United Statet, 2. Public grstitude May it evcrbt the reward of the firni and dittinguiflied Patriot. ; . 3. Congiefs May there be no competition among the members except that which will prompt;them how they lull beft promote the prosperity of thtii couotiy. r-TlnrState ofMarylanik -r- , w-..--. V5, The State of Mafrachufctts Our elder Hller in the catife .cf Freedom May fhs, continue to be the nurfe of patiiots and , Heroes. v. 6. "The "Xy of Wifhington " May the virtues and talents oi the United States.be there forever dif played for the prefervation and perfeciiorf of our coun iry,M: .. ." .... . ... -l-'-- 7. The memory oforr tate departed friend George Wafhington may the citizens of America ever keep ia vitw his laft political advice. , . 8. May the fpiiit that achieved our independence watch over and perpf-tuate the prefent conftitution and govern met t of the United Mates. 0. The rights of hostility- May they cxclufively be conferred on the virtuous ftranger who vifits out country with honefl intention. ; 10. To all nations at wsr, peace, and to alinatbjJS.; at peace profperity. ' I I. Our treaties with foreign powers May they be' obferved. with good fauirand vindicated with firm-" nefti. . - , ... . , 12. Public fpiritwhile it roufes us againft foreign hofli! I . The tiiumph lit v and coi'.fufion. . .".. rv . 1 ... 1 4. Th Navy. 3 nd'the' Army ofthc United States. 15. May the zeal, promptitude and dift ipliVe of the . militia, fupercede if poflible' the ncceffify of regulars. . 16. The agriculture, manufaclures and commerce of the. . United States. 'f r"' ',;.. 1" ; 'Ti: 17.- Tjhe fair daughters ot "THnericaMjtheTF fmiles excite deedirbXwcrth ,a'nd!. jrewafdjthcmc- -- , .. By the PkusiDRNU GQrge-Twn May Its profperity equal the ardent lenterpfize of its inliabitaints, and the felicity of their fitiiation. . ' stfter the Pnfuk'nt had retired. J 0 H N A D A M 5 T b e , 1 a 1 y , the uniform, the (leady and unfhaken friei?')if his country. ' ; . The -utmntl hirmony f n4 .conviviality prevailed at this, ehteitiiinment, which was given, to the Chief, MagiiUafe of the Nation, as a tetlirnony of refpel for , his-office, gratitude for h;s numerous and important 1" ft rvicesnd veneration for his tuiinent taleptVand vir tues. ' - " ' ;-;' '" i illy i may it fecure -n againtt foreign intrigue, t. The tiiumphorreligiwn and order, over infidc ... . RICHMOND, June 7. , v , Judge Chafe, when about to pafs fentence on Mr. Callender, obferved, that his offence agairi it the Iawe : was great, -and that it was aggravated by its having been wilfully committed. He "told. Mr. Callender, that he feemed to be a man ofjCacnc information, and by no means-deftitute of good underftanding that; with thefe, he muft have known that Mr. Adams was Tfarftrrtcfel'viffj him ; that it was a fact generally.known, and of which. " Nit . Callender could hot plead ignorance, that the A merican people had repeatedly confined thejr moft im ' portaat concerns and cleared iatcreils to Mr. Ad ami - I ,1 J "J A 1 5 li- fr
The Raleigh Minerva (Raleigh, N.C.)
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June 17, 1800, edition 1
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