Newspapers / The Raleigh Minerva (Raleigh, … / Sept. 14, 1809, edition 1 / Page 3
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tftt taken Jix:r.:- ""v r. x. 'f 70v6 men, and an immse i;A 4.nd some Tiondf ed onrrded lie f .nitK In VWbria and the suburb fv r. ...nt Q.77whundi!d t manv- i P,c r T pried to St. Fouen, Enns, and as fer ns tj-ioo were taken; Several Jmndreds Ee floated downthe Danube; and are , thrown upon its shorts ; manyimet death 1" he Isla,Kl okL.uDau,anu since f L has fallen in' the smaller" arms of 'Lomradcs to everlasting oblivion, have 1 trUilrie. The barling of the sufferers I Vet over, and pestilential airis wafted lL theatre ofdeath." , V v L following are the lata accounts, rrony Rii Wirihihottld bo he ckseVand e -Elbe should be optnAmenftp TesseUmiJht ten proceei direct ,1b: jftamMire; otherwise which have nude so mucK noise in four hours. The" .first i$ copi- 6 in iventV paper. W c leave our readers 10 juage (ft out own parts, tnat we act tnem aown tbelate verbal reports from Heligoland , r ' Jnaeiendcnt American. sauimorej vept. 5. WITS AVO IMPORTANT FROM JfcUROBE. kvcniftg arrived at this, "pott the brig.: Jiesiok, in 33 aay,s trom me. isianu 01 'Denmark, which place. ha lelt on the gv. . Wc have been favoured with a k Copenhagen papers down to the 15tlv from whicn we shall give translations to jit. MCZiCR-iniorm inai ne r.aa reau inc Eh bulletin givjrjg an account of a very engagement between the, emparor Na- aa&the Archduke Charles. The French j the Danube on three bridges whicr previously completed, and commenced ifljagcment on the,2d of July. Thsi bat continued four . days successively. The Mike Charles was badly wounded, and with 40,000 men into Bohemia, leaving KO Austrian on the field jjf battle, le Wi stated their own ' loss to be compari- trifling. On the 3th July an armistice (included for four wecks? and Bonaparte n possession ,f all the strong horns in ria. It was not known, where the era- of Austria was. -The Russians occupied Jjt part of Qallicia, but had not formed a ion wun tne r rencn. , , : few English ships ot war with 100 troops bard took possession of Cuxhaven the f day the battle commenced between the ittv md VHtrimi, and ai there was no beh trooW in the neighborhood, were still p5on, from whence tney carried' on a s9uSbnDg iraae wun me conuncnu ; fcjpt. had not heard any thing of the i English expedition sailing, or its desti- e Dapith government appears very Illy towards American vessels arriving f mtb Danish portsj but their privateers efy American, veuel tney eomo across, ier bound to Danish ports or not. Their pteers men in cpnjunction with corrupt i are complett prrates, over whom tho praent exercises very little control. st privateers generallvQunLfrQmQne;: ? guns, and with a smalj. force are jsasily nt of 100 Amenean vessels, so called,-v iph Russia 98 had been condemned, iielaca sailed, from this poit immediate h 0e raising fif theernbaf go andaiTiv-r 'Tonnineea the becrinnmc of Mav from Pice, sh'e'proceedi ?P Sylt. In conse p of raising the buoysonly tw Ameri- unvaa sate at lonningenwitnout g-et-Mhorc, and several were Josb BAt,TiMORE)"epteraber 5? S TFB SEWS FXOM DKNJfJZlt. wVrntelligjence is brought Jjy the Inca Iland of S vU,' which she left on Julv. of the total 6vSirthrow of the' i... ' . . ttr, . ----- Fll"ts uoon the Danuber ln-a series of ao I1 from the 2d to the ;8th . July j that the fMuke Charles solicited a , cessation of i which' was granted on his delivering up fortresses in his power ; and rumour adds f was wounded. An intelligent passen n.te.Inca, from whom we have our in jjtion, says he teaJ the .Bulletins and iTstice, and further states that'urivate Nations and paragraph information had Med , such terras of pface as would leave Itmpcror Francis nothing but Hungary, r Ppposed to this statement Is the letter of I'a we have , been politely furnished with I lowing extract bV a ' respectable. irier- Fof this-chy Hadan. armistice take if on the 8th July, in consequence of pre r battlnTmnmehcing' oh the 2d, it is jiM ithat they "should be regarded at 1 pburjh on the 2 1st as mere rumourt and : ; ;- v. Ui,g icariii, inav rcpun wet v.vu ' Previous to the Inca's departure, which d jihe whole affair,. and' gave a signal ?l 10 Austria. . , . pe account of the defeat of the Arch- 'J' equally and strongly opposed the ,v-c of n rfp-n1rr fit sf Pnnonliaitrf n napirfi they hmst go to Tpnning. .. there are French Custom House pflKers cm the VVeser," Jahde .andjitBast Frjeslandi JjVhat steps' theJDnicK gwernmept:,wilj take tespecting American U vessels is not.yet fftermuied. 1 - ' f' 10 oajrauinee prospects seem to be va nished. His reported that the Austrians, af. feifts defeated re compelled q sign an 1 armistice very disadyantageovs.totheinn, and it that French iroops are march ing towards the' Coast in ordeT to prevenirthe Bwtish from carrying op a trade. ' 'In Consequence of these reports the price of American and "VVest Iudi produce have risen considerably. " . v A trade" to Tonning tnight not whh stand ing, be catried on ; and advise you to do so provided he British do 'pot prent you from .f hX ,' ii:f;::;::r!:r:::;;jii:t3c .The following article b contained in letter" frorn .Stpke, near Plymouth :-4'lsend you the following intelligence, having arrived'af Yealin River, (a pdrt a few miles to ihejfast , ward of this place,) jthis morning On the I9"th; off Cock harbor, I was boarded by his majes-r ty's bip Seiqe. captain Atkins, with her prize" the El Cassamero, of 28 guns and 180 men from Buenos Ayres, .bound to any port in France, having on board an immense quantity' of Specie, sent by Limers for the use'.of the Spanish government under Joseph Bpfiaparte. There were also on board a Spanish nobleman and two gentlemen, as priscners ; these per-; sons were sent out by the.Qeneral Junta , of Ivfadrid, , they having become popular jin' the province of Buenos Ayres i,iniers finding his consequence on the decline, and, he being decidedly in the French interest had them seized in the middle of the night, in their beds, and sent upwards of 30, miles down the river, in a boat on board the Cassamero. Liniers' aid de-camp and secretary, are also on board, being charged with dispatches for king Jo-! seph. N' " party spirit runs high at Buenos Ayres ; the principal people are for their being inde pendent ; the lower order for king Ferdinand ; while Liniers, and the principal officers of the revenue, art for Bonaparte. The revenue and taxesvwerc all collecterfat Buenos Ayres, and intended to be shipped, they say for Spain, for the use of the patriots, but would be or dered to France, as this ship was. The cap tain and officers are French, crew Spaniards' ; ANSWER , To Mi? Owenson'a Rate Kearney . . Q yes I htvtfaeenthis Kaie Kearnev, ' Who livei near the lake of Killarnty ! Fr ra her love-beaming ye - What mortal can flv, Unsubda!Uby the pbnee of Kate KiarnsyJ -For that eye, jo seducinly rn'anjog, ' v . Asuri meo mi chief $he's tlreamiH$ ' ipd I teel 'tis in vain to fLy from the chain That binds rae tu lovely K.A teKbah.ney At er, when I've met this Kate Kbarne, Qu th owar-mantled banks ofKHlam y, ' ' ' . " ilr smiles would impart ? Thrilling joy to my hearty A IffMfd on this chajmmg Kate Kearney; Oi the bnkt of K.Uainey nj;iinng, . - My boiom to rapture resigning, I've felt the kecu smart of ljye's fatal dart, And InfraTd iRe 1 warffi s ! ghof K i i e vrrr ".th July, received by the editor of the ! great an event being known at the capital," TP AVT ITtn ' KCt Of a letter fmrri Mr. T TTVnn Mnl. H' dated Hamburgh, July 2 V 1 8Q9. r V w s reported here, that an English ex " Tho Secretaries pf State and of the Trea sury, have returned to the Federal City, Mr. Erskine, tha British minister, arrivtd on the 4th irist. NJr. Jackson, the new Euyoy has arrivsd.at fJporgetavn, , On the 4th, subscriptions were opened for rtha stock f a Bank at Washington City, and the whole of the shares (say 25,000, at 40 dollars each, bsine a million) were subscribad Ueforat o'loek. Ai - :'l;i"y 'V ' '" - . GsoxGRfowiti Sep. 9. v Mr7 Jackson -This gentleman arrived-iri town last eveaing, and took up his lodgings at Mr Crawford's Union Hotel. Mr. JACKSON, the new British minister, has at longth arrived. Ha.will land this day at Annapolis, at which city the frigate is sup posed to have arrived this morning. It of right should have been no question " whether oup gowrtment will receive ' Mr. Jackson ?" But as tltie ridiculous gasconade and barbavous denunciations of some men amongst u$," who deserve not to possess press and tjrpeg, have confused honest citizens, we will :' staLs the ca3e. ' The direction given by the - president to Secretary Smith were, that on tlie arrival of the new minister Mr. Smith would repair i mm edi a tely to Wash i n gt on ," to recti ve hi n . There canbe no" doubt but that the Secretary of Stat e will treat the envoy with all proper re spect. v If Mr. J. has no very important com munication to offer at once, & can conveniently proceed in ordinary, business without the" pre sident, then it is Mr. Madison's wish that he my not be sent for : But if Mr. Jackson deem it essential, if his businesse" urgWt, Tn that case, Mr. Smith will dispatch a messengir jto the President who will repair to the seat of go vernment; so that no attempt, we are assured, will be made to eat or to mangle the new en-Toy-trneither will any . desire or threats tempt our government to degrade' the country in this instance, y ' ; - - . For bur own part, we have nrver conceal ed our opinion that some expliafctio.i ws due '&ut$iliili. Fed. , Gazette. A" additional circumstancesf. inay ,bc vucaioine impenect accounts aireaay puo lished, cohcenungibe late great, battfe on theS Danube." -f " h.. Mr. Henry Freundt, ; a" passenger . in '.the brig lnca, say V tliatbout ihe 24thpf July tbe: French , amSassador at Hamburgh com municated The Tevent "to the senate ef that cily, "iv4i r naa iaiujcuiaiciy puuusncu n r rencn and German, in" alternate hages-vhioh lie' read lrlthe isjand of.hylt j.that ht also saw the details" in the, JDu'tch papers, which yere iengthy ; that on the French side, no generals of note wert killed, but W the' Austrians seyeral fell, tyhflse names he cannot recollect ; that previous to the battle, three bridges of an .extfiaordiriary kind .were constructed, and rapidly "finished, by' sailors from ., Boulogne ; and the Archduke's retreat at the had of 40)00 men, was permitted in consequence of deji veri.Rg various strong holds on the Da nube J .but he has no recollection of seeing in the acpounta that were published, thatPnnce Ciiarles was wounced. i he . EutawT was.,to sail two days after ilie Inca ; and he has no doubt of all the details, which are very iengthy, being 'received by her. Thes battes ,were fought near the ground on vvhich those of the 2ist-ind,J2d'of May were fou jjht-the Arch- 4oke having fortified his camp in the strongest . manner. , , , Mr.' Cheethat)i introduces the president's proclamatiqrvjMo his paper, (the American Citizen) with the, following pointed and ap propriate remarks : : ' vH' u Again we o , inflicted wit,h the king's evij ; I mean the evil pf Ahe " illustrious Jef ferson." The ruin of the nation,. already nait ccrIeatecl is to be entire. I wish, how ever, to be understood as passing no' pensure prj Mr. Madison. In issuing "the proclama tion, possibly he has done what his duty re quired. A long train of his , predecessor's measures, equally conspicuous in fqlly and , destruction, has involved both Mr. Madison ai'd.the nation in a complication of embarrass merits &mischifcfs,rorn vvhuh Iknow iiot how or when it will extricate itsitlf. But extricate itself it must. We cannotbear these things. We ought not to. bear them.' Ditestable pre judice and more, detestable malignity ought not to"be nourishtd at the nation's exptiice. The remedy is the question. War, for which we are not prepared, ind which isnotneces ary, wpuld .tiiment the evil ; perhaps' demo ishthe government- We must negotiate. Wc must go back to the maxims and tinjes of Washington, v To a Jeff .rsonian depar ture from tliesev maxims, may he fairly as cribed all that we have suffered and are tosuf. fer, Sinister chief's of pany and humUe par tisans of selfish chiefsmay rave ; but ihe illa tion, wbicK nqiust feel, will think ; will act. Highly, Interesting General Tjurreaui tha French minister; visited the seat nf govern ment, during the sitting of the late cabinet council X The object of his visit was for some time unknown ; but nobody doubted that some great national affair called him thither. The secret is' now out. Monsieur Turreau did not go to Washington to declare war, C-hampagny-like, against England for the United States- "noT To propose; tir.t otif deTnocrats, a coni ess of the nations to put tlonn the naval power of (iveat Briu.in : Hut Monsiejiir Turrean went to 'ashii)gicnr for the:puvpbse of informing our Secretary of tatet which (as-we '"are as sured in the Independent American) he for mally and 'gravely did in an official note, that ' - the Vice Queen of Jtaly was safety ddiver ed of a daugner I " .' ., Balance. HARTFORD, September S. Our Country. Vlv. Jay, the negociator of the commercial treaty with England, was-denounced on that accpiint, from Georgia to New Hampshire. 1 He was charged with the crime of bribery v!iy as accused of being bought with Britixh XZold ; h was burnt in effigy; every effort was made io blacken .and to blast his character. President Washingtdn was al so denounced for having ratified the treaty. Tongues and fjens were sharpened against him. The Philadelphia Aurora, thc? Boston Chroniclte, and some other papers, poured forth the overflowings of their gall upon hira.. The treaty, it was predicted by the self styled patHotSj would ruip Jthe country. It went, however, into operation ; and ts beneficial ef-f$cti'coQfouhded-its' enemies' ' andj.more than answered the expectations of hoewho had been its, advocates. Its fruits: were, the sur render of the ' Western, posts to th,e" United Statss, the extinguishment ybf a calamitous war with the Indians, arid the consequent security of our frontier setthmen'ts, the' payment of millions, on th.e parLof Engjand, as compensation to those of pur citizen? who had suffered from illegal captures, and 'tHe flourishing condition of our commerce beyond all former exanrple. During the existence of that treaty, from first to" last, all the wheels af business were in lively niotion. Our fish eries were productive, our shippers, our mer chants, and our traders, increased their ci pitals, pur farmers found "Yeady markets for the produce of tljeir farms andouir. mecha. nics had plenty of business and"good wages. Industrioys-people of all descriptions found Enough to do,' and had sufficieht encourage jment fsJT industry and enterprise. : ; The treaty was limited as to (fiiratiohvand expired by its own limitations. There was a disposition on the part of the British goe vernrnent, as it has been said, to isiiew Ut 1' part ofir; wn amihistra Several reasons mieht be Vssitriedbuioiieea. son duly is sffiiient tQ account for ihisbitck,- jaiuuM..vur .nu existing au mini sira lion,, -our rlitwal leaders had ,beeh .ihe'leader pf those hosts of rafen pver The whprt coiiriiryi who, in the first instance, .condemned; th j treaty apdiliGeitsX author.. They wtil iLuvvf tha were they .to renjw that'trealy, they woufd incur the charge of inconsistency . This was tmpujgh';''Uey'; Ict'tlV 'rtV ; ex pire ; and things almost qyei ippe haye bee.n ceiner on from bad .to worse. -f ; '-..' j Year' after, year passed awa in fruitless neV nkdev. both nf tkt-m hltrh in hc confie!eTnr of he President, made; a' new fommefcial travynwith tl.e British ministry 1 ' a treaty which they thought would; provV adf atuagt. ous; to this country. ' It was made under sin gular advantages ;'the Fox party,! who werq the' most friendly to the United States, bViitg then, in power That treaty wasj , iVijt xAti . for ratification ; but it was not' ratiQed 'it was not even laid before the $epate,-whic a cuoiiiupoiiai orancn. 01 ine ireaiy power ; it was sent back withrfui ce ' i Had Mr. Jav's treaty been renewedA the treaty of Munrpe and PlnkneV fif aV tf I in jujsj utcn luuncu, now (uncreni miiit have been the condition of this country 1 4 ln stead of embargo and npnnttrcmrxsjc, instead oour piesent tmbariasse?d and impoverished circumstances, our trade might have continu ed to flourish even to this daj ; we might have been pow, perhap?. as prosperous as w5 are in fact perplexed and depressed ' -: " " " ' . CVti.C Couranf.. At his. plantation in this county, on the, 10th, after a short but pamful illriesn, Mr. William Turner, formerly'f Bertie county, broher in law of Governor Stone. H 'has 'left a wl and two children to lament his death. At West Hartford, Connecticut, "Mr. 'Simepn lit id engaged 64He was an active olticer inj the Quarter Masters department during the; revolutionary war. ") Of thp dysentery, o.rt Tuesday night last, Bcrjumin, the infant ibn of the Editor of the Minerva.'. State or N. Cakolina, Rowan county, m. August oe; sions. 1809. ' Joseph Cowan, Isaac Cowan, Sally Cowan, Priscilla Cowan, and Polly Cowan, Heirs of the estate of Isaac Cowan, dec ' ;" ' ifs." ' . ' j Georgt Cowan. tettiori for the divisiop of the real ami pttsonal estate of the said V 1 Isaac Ciwan, deceased. ; , It appearing to the courf? that Geo gt- Cowan, one dj the heirs of I aac Cowan, dec. is nut an inhabitant ti ihit Stale, it i oidered that . ublUafion,i'pr ihie wetk ba rniuiein the RaleigU Min rva, liiai ihe' 'aid jeorge;Covrafi appear at theCouit of Pia a;id Qjrttt Seisioin to ba iuldcn t T the said c, umy'if Rowan, at ihe Court-heuso in Salibutji on' the first Monday in ISovftnbfr nxi, a!)4. there shgsg cause if any he haih, why an oicier shall not be ? made tor tfe division and d strtbmiou of ihtstae of thlfet, aid Isaac' Coyarj, agreeably to law. ' ' ' - JOHN GILES, 'c. State o Rowan t Nij Carohna, 7 Aug ' County. ust Sessions, 1809. John : .Fulton,. V Original attachment ; execul- Paid Nesbit, 1 ed, .and.. levied on sundry vs, . boKs, c. in the lianas at . AT.. Osborn.J George Bitz,.'Constable. It appearing to the court ti.it the defendant, A. L. bopn. not an iiihabaatit ol this Kate j iJjt is o dfred that publication for three weeks be-made iiufie Raleigh rjjner-ya,- iht" th-aid -A.-'-Li-0-boru the dSiVidaaty-apear ii$ potm of-Pieai and- -Quai.jonJe4)d,f 9 f- th Said County ofRowan,' at the Couii-houe in &aliiburyc on the fr st Monday in Sovtmber next, a: A enter his ple to the said 8uit,-,orjudgmeot will b.e taken according'to ihff plaintiffs titmand. ' ' ' . 'y ' . .... JOHN GILES, c c. Stats of N. Carolina, s. August Ses Rawan County. . y sions,' 1B09, David Nesbit S Original attachment, ex . . v. Icutednd levied on sundry AdlaiL.Osborn Hxwks, 8ccl in the hrnds, of "jL . 1L J George Bit?, Constable. It appearing to the C un .'hat Adlaj Oiborj, 1 he de fendant, is not an inhabitant of this state it is rxderedthat publicaiion for three weejiJ be made in ihe Raleigh jMinec ya, that he said Adlaj L. t)sWri, the defendanr, appt-atjt at th Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessi'n tj-fee h olden f.r the aid county Tpltj wan, ,at the Cou t-house in, Salis bury on 'ne fi st Monday in November nexr, and entei Ins plea to the said suit, or judgment will be taken according; to the plantitj i aeaiano, JOHS GILES, c. c. v. The stibscribtr having tialtfied at.JToVen3y ber term of Wake county court, 1807, as ild Tninistiator cf Robert Page, reqiveiiti all per ons having claims aair,iBt sid estate "to pre lent theiflt lairns within lie time limitfed by aw, otherwise this notice will be plead in bar 'rrarecoverjfo"'." .. w r ; v LEWIS PAGE, AdmW . ' August 24, 1809. . 99 3w. r -RAN-AWAY ,., . - FROM tb subscriber, on the 1 atb of Jure, a negro man, named TOM, aliout 26 years old, near 6 fret hif;h, branded on each cheek with fhe letters OG ; has one of his ears crop-, ed, and scan on the bottom of his feet. His countenance is pleading. A reasonable re ward will be paiU-to apy- person jdtliverip. said negro to rtie subscriber living in the vip peFend of Cumberland countyor if secur edinJi.il. ' ' " August 1?. CADER COLENS. : Mi thcii'5
The Raleigh Minerva (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Sept. 14, 1809, edition 1
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