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J ' 7. : 90, 1 "Vo l. II. t. .!-'U.','-.4, ,l 5 ' -r. FRES FEE. I T GALES has juft received a fi I .F: Supply .9(vimUhr frel fce lells a heretotorew 3V Sv,r. u He his alfo jood Vi;iUV c. Nelof ae HYSON. t TC k n A BA rKt: ' Uft" ' Ttnf. 3f. hi Papen anr v ?T Perfona wha are indebyft to xhtUpUt ar hereby reueftedj J jcome; Jrward; and iake Payment if ndc to wh?m he is in VrATE OF. NO J Carolina. Samptn CuJ 'Ongtaaft Attachait. IIarby Stivesi. Sam j, ! - 'I."" MOnjiaal Aftachmeat. 1 Sams.- ' Vv i-'F- iMnERED the Court, that the Debt due frdm t(t(KUi Nolton, at iA.nm ta Adt ot Aliemblv. reauKint M j Merlons to come forward and replevy wuhin 'tbJe limited Time! who feel themlelvei ite. jVefted. 7i; HOLMES, C. C Par trier flap dijolvtd OrTE Parthcrlhip . Jubwitmg. oe- tween KoikT and Fr X EM AM C E ' u . was rfflc-lved on the 1 ith of this In- 6nt. mtXual Cnfetit: The Bufinef iiill in tuiJe. becarried 08 in the Name of fcoWr Creiflvaw. who wiil ; fettle all the Con I iihis of jtfc f'J l'artaer&ip. j Thc rhr U nhrn or Creditors el the: laJd irmf wll herebjf take Notice, that they iuft apply t the fi Robert CrenfliaWf tor detlieHaeiiK RtJBLK T (.KtWanAW. FREEMAN CRENSHAW. ffkt Cuntj, June to, 1801. j A Nou loJU T OSTfome Days ago, a Note for .OneHundred'- Dollars, on Demand, drawn biir.eon licldon. Merchant, inFay ettevills in favour of William Jonej, ot ohnftorf County, payable in Salt, Iron, BUckfrfith's Tools. r any other Articla in his Sto . , Anypsrfon having found the fame, are de.lreio reftore itto thS laid William Jones ; au l alPerlons are hereby forewarned fjom trkiiTi with the laid Nte, if offered byan othert'erlon beUde tne Uia vv uium joacs. 7Jr- ic, !9t SHERIFF' SALES. Onflc IJl Stturday in Augvfii thefolhiuing tnds ivtU ts fold t Dnphn yaKrt.tioufe, tbc Waxes J the 2 tars 1799, 1799, ana i8o, I - : IVE Hundred -and forty Acres on Rockfiih, the Property of William ampbell. ' ! 540 Acres, Eaft Side of the North-tatt, at he Indian Graves, luppoied to belong to flil lair or Samuel lohnfton. ' 456 Acret, on the Weft Side the North I Ea.t, oppofite the above Owners- ' 2801 Acres, on botli Sides theHeadBranch ofth North -Eaft, joining liarfield, Glif. Ion's and Grady's Line, lame Owners. ' 2a Acres, on Peifimon, ioininf Souther- and ad Rot'edgc's Lines, the Property of Jhn nurgwiu. ; 330 Acres on rloc1th, joining Jacob Bo ey's Linoi; the Property of John Burgwin. 150 Acres, on Stewart's Creek, on the Road to the. Old Court-Houfc, the Properly 0 tne lame. leoAcres, on Cowhole Goftien, joining Gible's Lines, the fame Property. 200 Acrs on Maxwell, joining John Thully's Line, the fajne Property. 200 Acres, joining Brice's Lines on Lime flone, the Property of John PoUon. 1 81 Acres, ioininr facob Brown's I. in. ,i ' . o. : J ' 77 - . . 1 - -1 Tl - J- t' I. m r I. : isicinc rropcrty 01 jonn onns, aeccaieo. I ' 30b Acres, joining Nathaniel M'Canne's v -I.inei, including Maxwell Swamp, the Pro ?erty of George Hooper. 50 Acres,; joining Samuel Sandhn's Lines, the Property of Francis Shackleford. ; too Acres, joining Henry Fountain's, cn Muddy Crctk, th Propertyf William VVal T.ce. j 100 Acres, joining ShuSeld and Picket's Line;, the Property of James Lockhart, dc i4fed. j . 100 A cres, on the Eait Side the North. al jrining Twiliy and Ho'ufton's Lines, Jate the iPtsperty of James Lockhart, de cealed. f '. i , . ' ' ' 320 Acres, joining: Janes Kenan, Lewis Thomas,' and Lemuel Grey's Lines, the rpcrty o-f . Johnfton.. 3 20 Acr ts, joining the above, Tate the Pro perty of Jbies Spiller, decealed:' loo Acr jt, on the Weftern Side the Bea ver DamoflLirneftbne on both Sides the maiq Road t Newbern, the Property of Samuel Chapman. 1. ; 93 Acre, lying! in the upper End of Holiyihelter,1 Pocolon; io-ning New-Hanover Cojnty, the Property o Robert C. Johnftont , No Letter, r Order, flull ftbp a Sale of tnee Laj4 Cafh only. 'i . Hi;ua M'CAN'NE, Sheriff. H COF "by his Garnilhment, bexondemnea aaa maoe iubjeato th Plaintiff'fc Recovery j-'and that It beairertifed in Cales't State Gaiette, ac. Intelligence from Evjhdpc.T X-l'.felT,, , - ,f.'.i : SWEBENi c .On the j tgth inft. the Englifh ap pea red olF t he entrance of t Hi harbtfur, and Jfent a frtte with a flag' of truce and a letter in the Engl i (h 1 angua ge to the; Governor, of vhicK the folio wing afc the con- tents. ; v. .. - itthptil, lUi. - " The Danilh Court having been induced tp conclude an artniftice,' by which the un f of t u n ate d i f pjii tes between the pburtjS of Den mafic and St. James! have been' accom modated, and as I am direfted to re- !j quire an explicit declaration .from the Court of bvTeden' relative to its intention to adhere to or aban don the hoftile mea Cures Which it has taken in conjunftion with Ri- fia, againft the v rights' and interefts of Great-Britain, I hWe t He h on fir to tranfmit to your Excellency this: letter, that I may receive in anfwer a declaration of the Court of Swe den, with refpect to this important object, and (hall conduct my fujure operations according to this an fwer, which I expect to receive in jorty-eight hours, j u I have the honor to br; HYDE PARKER, Commander in Chief of the Bruifh fleet in the Baltic. ' - - t - - :f ' ' Vite -Admiral Cro'nfledt, w.ho now has the command here, by or der of his Swedifh Majefty, who was then at Malmo, immediately returned a provifionary anfwer,: to the following purport : " That as otlv a militarv officer he could not undettake to anfwer a cjucuion wmcnqio not come wun in the particular circle of his duty ; b'ut that his Swedifh Majefty had declared,' that he ihould loon be at Carlfcrona, and tfiat he would then notify to the Admiral his relolu tion' i Yeftcrday afternoon, his Majefty arrived here, and caufed the fol lowing anfwer to be tranfmitted to Admiral Parker, by Vicc-Admiral Cronftedt: f '' " Admiral, . The King, fny mailer, has commanded me to communicate to you the following official anfwer to receive from you, on the ib'h mil. . " Convinced that vour Excel lency is ptrfe&ly fenfible of the importance and lacred nature oi promiles, when once made, his M- jeily conceives that the following explicit declaration cannot but be expected by your Excellency, that is, that his Swedilh Majefty will not, for a moment, fail to fulfil, with fidelity and hncerity, the en gagements he has entered into with his allies,; and that, without any reference to the particular inter vention of another power, under whatever name it may be called, ana tne ettects or wnicn can never be extended to the common inteiefls of the hitherto neutral powers. " This 16 the firm unalterable re folutjon of his Majefty. '.. Equally induced by inclination and by duty, to conlrder the affairs of his hncere allies as his own, his awediih Majelty, however, : will not refufe to liften to equitable Dro- ppfals for accommodating the pre- ient diipute, made by deputies,, fur- nilhed with proper authority, on the part of the King of Great- Britain, to the united Northern Powers. C. O. CRONSTEDT, Adjutant-General to his SwedHh Majefty ; tor the Fleet, and Commander in Chief af Carlfcrona. CarIfcrKu Afrit ijt ligr."' ENGLAND. From ths London Gazelle, April. By difpatches received from Lord Eglin, dated Conlt3ntinople, March 31', it appears that his'Lordlhip hady received letters f rom Lord Keit h. it3tng, that, the army under the command of Sir Ril ph Ab ercrmbie. effected a landing on the 8th inft. oh the feninfula of Aboukir, under a very heavy fire, from cannon, mor tars and mu&jcitfl- the 'cjhemy. hav ing w uhdrftwd. the w hole j gar r i fon mi from " .AtcicantJrWj and , tnany de- racninenis irow nc vituiuy . io wp polejthem';' thatj after mVkjiighe nrwSiry preparations on the athi ibth 'iid. t ith thev army dyanced 'thfttjitt WiihvemilcsW Alexahdna ;: they there top.f .po' fitldii wit fea , trf d thereft; fu p ported; y the Ike Madiciwherei Sirydney! Smit hiK his corrimirid ofiboatsrlcecpifig up 4Acomn)unicuon7iwun tne narj ti vesl .and'iopoiyinff "Ifeftifniy f-witfi frefli pfovifiohi ahd watr ; that on l tne jgtn, at icven n tn,e mprninjg, the encrny mae. an. attack, ad were repulHcd withflbU'aDOiitlelevfn in the mean tijftie, the marine : hid bee n di femba rk ed . and attacked by larijd the Cafl:lcT6f Aboukfr,1 the only ptfit in that pehinfula oclfUpied py the enemy'; .tnatJ'On thttht funfet: " when ihc velfil which brought his intelligence ws under weigh, the troops pnfhor and the gUti vcffels wereinrowigr(hoti anri (heljf into Aboukir, and at the fame moment, a firinc waft heard r ' - 1 towards Alexandria, which appear ed frb'm the Ifoudrtsyaht to be a ge neral attack.' The Grand Vizier had marched forward (from Jaffa, on the 25th February, havingaccording to Ma jor Holloway's letters to Lord Eg- nn, received a conhderable rein forcement. . i Difpatches have been received from India, that part of the forces deftined to aft on the South-Eafterh fide ofvEgypt, departed from Bom bay, Dec. 28; and the other part was to tail from Irincomale in Ja nuaty. ' . j A Lt. CpL Dickfon, Majfr Ogle, Major Vigoreux ; and Lt. Warren (only Ton of the Admiral) have been killed in the actions in Egypt, pre vious to March 14 ' ' 1 Lieut. Col. JLi lkine loll a leg. London Gaiette Extraordinary. Downingf-ftreet, May 3, jSei. 1 ', The following copy of a letter from lieut. General Sir f Ralph Abercrombie, K. B. to thejEarlofl Eglin,! together with difpatches from hi Jbordlhip to his Royal Highnefs the Duke of York and Lord HaWkefbury, and a letter from Coldnel Anftruther, I to Col. Brownrigg, of which the following are extracts, have been this, day re ceived. 'j Copy of a letter from Sir Ralph Abcr- cromby, to the Earl of Eslin. dated . amp oetore Alexandria. 10th March, 1001. My Lord, On the 1 ft inft. the flee in fight of Alexandria; on arrived the ad it anchored in Aboukir Bay 5 the wea ther did not admit any debarkation before the 8th : on that dav- it was happily effefted,' under the mod trying circumftances. The boats had nearly a mile to row, and were toriome time Under the fife of fif teen pieces of artillery, and the muf- 9etry ot 2,500 men; ft ill the in ticpiuity ot the trobps overcame every difficulty. Wc took eight pieces ot caniion. On the 9th, the remainder f the army wasiahded. maiChfn ltrrATrA tn .tti.v. , .... 'II 1 . .. VVH. Lll WW iiiiiii 1 10. witnin iwn e"' ;V . nitA.umw, aiiu one league of the enemy, who were ad vantageoufly ported on a ridge, wth iiicir ngnr co tne canal ot Alexan dna, and their left to the fea. : On the 13th, we moved forward to attack the enemy, and to turn their left. They did not, how ever, .wait, but came down and at tacked us. The aaioh WaS warm i but thenemwere forcepV under eUi; f Atexndja. ' Colonel ; . . 1 . pi on. he has lolt a oa:" - - e "-r'-i e wen. hjs rein ment gained - great credit,! but fuf fered leverely. No officer of. rank s Killed : or aangerouily wounded. cxcuic mis lcrawi, written on ray knee. R. ABERCROMBIE. fcxttaft (of a Utter from the Earl of $ ' t " X ?Jrt f M W??ftl,4Mr0n the i2thi yeraga?n jhartrhed plAprittmi. 77 As Colonel Anflruther's letter to tne whillvacepmm 1 6th of daich. I take the liberty o adding.to your Royal Highnefs, that Mert&haviijgi witlil zood cavalry, joined .the5 corps at .Alexandria, at- iacxeq! or Kaiph Abercrompie on the'miftl, V The aflauit was y igoremvj . griftir li6fihoifhoTjt Sir! K1pK AbercreSmbieV Gcnerral Nibore and: .Sir Sidney SmltV had been wounded ij'ghtly, and C?1. Erikme had loft a limb; : Colonel Faset ap- 'pear to have had a flight wound, ttfcfrd Keiths laft letter fays all the wbWnded are " furprizinely wclL cpnfidering they, are all by cannon pt" grape fhot.' J. may -add that my JanilTary; who left Rhodes on the 7th. mentions, that ilbme of the .troops who came there firfiL or had beerrleft fick were already fo well as to nave lauea irom inence to join the army ' :- . b , - ' Nothing could have been more brilliant, than our operations appear to have been. ! j' ExtraEl of a Utter frtm Lord Eglin to Lord Hawkejbury dated. Lon- jtantinople, April 4, 1001 I have the happinefs of informing your Lordlhip, that I have this mo ment received an exorels from Rhodet, dated 27th March, with a feries of private accounts, of the fuccefsful progrefs ef Sir Ralph Abercrombie's armv. It appears that Menou inuft have let out from' Cairo, on the hrft in telligence of Sir Ralph Abcrcrom bie's landing. f Meanwhile our army had advanced (under circumftances far too honorable for the Bntilh arms, jor me to attempt relating n the imperfect details I poflefs) and had taken poll within three miles of Alexandria, wTi ere they had pre pared againit an attack from Menou, who with two thoufand cavalry having formed a junction with the garnlcn of Alexandria, came again ft our army on the stilt. in this action we have to regret about five hundred men killed and wounded ; while th enemy pofi- tively loft two thoufand men killed and wounded, andi five hundred taken prifoners Oh the preceding Wednefday. Abot'kir Caftle Cur- renrlered, and theritilh andTur kifh flags were flying there. ExtraEl of a letter from Col, Auftru- ther to Col. Brownrigg, dated Camp, near Alexandria. 16A March. 1001. The fleet failed from Marmavie on the 2ad February, and anchored in Aboukir Bay on j the id March. From that day, the 7th, the wea. ther was fo boifterous and the fwell fo great, that it was imprafti- came to anemcarK mis circum- ftance gave the enemy full leifure to collect troops and artillery, and to make every neceiiary preparation to oppole us. 1 he whole infantry of the garrilbn of Alexandria,! 300 cavalry, and 14 of 15 pieces of can non, were placed on a ipacc of lit tle more than two miles, from nar the caftle of Aboukir, the only pod in that peninlula occupied by the enemy ; that on the i4trt at luniet, when the defcent was made.: No thing, 1 belieVe, ever excecced the boldnefs and perfevetanee .with wHirVi tVi' bmtt ironti-iiirl tii in. r ...... r. f , j ,j of bullets, fhells and grape jitvery difchargc was ahfwered- by a fhout irom nc leamen, ana au leensea tp. tally infanfible of danger The re- r . V . "r ' . r r ierve on tne rignx lormea as ir en the parade, and in a ! moment car ried a height nearly equal to and very much like to that rCarnper- ned uown. .ji nc icix the cavalry, the- were charged by moment they got out of the boats drove every tjiinibefere thenj; and the COurkf tKree: quattsfoi an hoi4ri the ertemV as Comp etely neaien. wn tne beaten, whh" the lofs of half: his ar tillery. After a dela'pf wp or three hours, in prderp di (embark, ammunition, anc a part of Gerieral Copte's brigade,; which had not been lb tided, the .74 r dpi y ? adyaiicecLfabou t four miles, ;Whdrp we remaihtd till the 12th ; the lajnding of proyiltons and ftores heihf much imoeded bv boiiteroua weatnery : about- five miles, Conftantlyt fkir- mifhrng with $visjttiTJot ihenemyw;M received t .re- t Wo taif twgaoes pfi inrorccincnc pi i(i fitnt ry arutohe JregimchtfJ cyth' from V.almi We Tt'alfH-Jfnr Jfflitt . huht about three miles from enemy Ypofition, -'which feemedand prpvea very advantageous.! -fj jftixi morning,' the arnfy moyed 'J to attack the riglit of jtj marchingv by lines from the left the refervc . coyefing the raovcment,and movinir. parallel wim tne urtt ftre As the) ; columns advanced into the plain,. the enemy attacked the heads, of ii both, with all his cavalry,'; fup-- ported by a conhderable b;ody of in fantry and ten or twelv jyiiccef of l cannon. Xiiis attack "was; re pulled by the advanced guard (the 90th and 92d) both ef which behaved nioft rioblvi The hrft line theh formed two lines to the front of march, the flanks of which were p rot e&ed by the ' refervej add continued to ad vance in that manner, w'hilft the fecond line continuing ftill in co lumn (excepting the fii ft brigade of ; it; turned the Enemy's nght and forced him to quit his pofition. The army followed in the order above Hated, and Sir Ralph Abercrombie had given orders for renewing the attack on the heights clofe to the town, to Which the enemy retreat ed ; but onexamining them with at- ; tention, it Was thought that they were under the guns of the forts. and could not probably be kept if carried; the .army took up in the evening the ground which the ene my had quitted. ( The force mf the enemy oppofed to us appeared about 50CO infantry, 6eo cavalry, and a large proportion of artillery ; the ground being par ticularly favourable to the two laft. The movements although under a tonftant casnonade, were tiegular and! accurate j The General! in this laft adtion-had his horle fhot under him . The pofition we occupy is good ; it cuts off the communication be tween Alexandria and the Nile, ex cepting through; the Defart. Our fupplies are conveyed by"means of the Lake with cafe and fecurity. The communication5 which havei? aken place between hi. Otto and our bevernmcnt. have nven rife. w - y no doubt to much conjefture and r 1 . 1 - " - peculation, ut it is now reported in tne Dcit informed circus, that they are nearly at an end, upon ihe fubjeft at ieaft pf negeciatiom. : . It is very confidently faid, that the terms propofed by the Chief Conful, are humiliating and difad- vantageous to this country, that they cannot be entertair ed frr a; mo ment. He requires, it is whifpeted, as proofs of our fmcerity, prelimi nary to nerociation, the cefiion.of Malta to. Ruffia, of Gibraltar! and Minorca to Spain, and of the Cape of Good Hope to the Dutch. There is not an Englilhman, wc are c,;cer- tain, wnoiepiosm does not bpu at the bare mcation of fuch a prop o fition ! We do not yet learn that the em bargo in Ruffia on Engl. fh veflels is removed. r' 'way 4. " j'";' Lrd St. Helen's lets off this day for Yarmouth, there tombarlc7oa board the Latona frigate, for St.- -I reteriburgh. His Lordlhip will be accompanied by a Ion f Count 7 Worbnrow. It is believed that hit Lordfhip ' is furnifhed with full powers to accommodate the- mifun- derftanding with Sweden and Den mark, as well as Ruffia. v r ! In the packet which brought over the mail, Capt. Brodie arrived Wth j -difpatches from Admiral Paaker, an-7 nouncing his return to Copenhaen9 and we underiiand, the adjuilroeht 7. of the preliminaries f our diffe rences with Ruffia and Sweden, ;" ..The. fafts corroporati vbf t he re turn of ! a fsvourabledifpofition of -the Northern f Powers towards thie country; are f very ilrong. v .The Prince of HfJe has given notice to theHamburghefs, that the Daoef were to evacuate tnar.uy sn cou rfe of; the pre feht weki The -Cairlfcrona article is of confiderable importance. Srtd, the return of Sir-, Hyde Parkerf to CppenhJ? J fl-r -.f ttiaf'"-the term'-r-on m which the matter! in difpute are'ta -nt 4e fettled are well uncieriif oa u -r aUfparties,; , a ' 'Y'- We.laa fSht.receivd-P-; ; m&jhii it whiclihough- : 1 j - uninteresting - tpf xoafiderablC impprian,;- t 1 . m it! 4 "1, 1 r 1 if 'I - ft .. '3 1 ill m "jT'.-W j . 'vt 3 m -1 .1 '.V f ' : V t 5 .l 1 1- "T i K.rte$H.j7I - i . . : :
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
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July 7, 1801, edition 1
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