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The Edinburgh Evening Courant

09/06/1814

Printer / Publisher: David Ramsay and Son 
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 16070
No Pages: 4
 
 
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The Edinburgh Evening Courant

Date of Article: 09/06/1814
Printer / Publisher: David Ramsay and Son 
Address: Courant Office, High Street, Edinburgh
Volume Number:     Issue Number: 16070
No Pages: 4
Sourced from Dealer? No
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THURSDAY\ JUNE 9. 1814. [ PRICE J V . / A T 1 . E 1 T H , F O R H A M B U R G H ; i & L The A N N A , A If j f f i E ^ Captain WOODS, J j Now taking in goods, and expecte/ to sail \ hls week. / For freight RtpliLto . .... *. fat WAIirfTandCO/ 39. Mitchell Street, / LtiI « , June7.1814. THE - CALEDONIAN HORTICULTURAL- | , - \ /| SOCIETY. V L - ' | i * l r p H F , O U A R T E R L Y M E E T i N G / iiTto she h L be fold OU Tuesday the Hth inst. in th./ Physl- jWher clans Hall, George Street, at one o'clock, wWn sr ve- usual Til COMMUNICATIONS will be read, ufe PRE- * MIU MS awarded for, . The best MELON f Tlie best six forced PEACHES, with names X T'ie best six forced APPLES, with names four The best si* heads of CAULIFLO WER he m The best six TULIPS Fo The best six RANUNCULUSES verei I , The best six ANEMONIES. Bair. Articles intended for competition must be lodged Brur with Mr Smith, at the Physicians Hall, before twelve o'clock on the above day, and accompanied with a motto, and corresponding sealed letter. T The C O M M I ' p ^ E fdryPRIZES meets at twelve » J o ' c l o c k . / m ^ C J j I e/*< L] C~ i4- t • , his ( EDINBURGH, J u n e 6. 1 8 1 4 . / / f , M°' ~"~ ll~ iaTUll ' L1NE. N CU A li' A I'l T f B A V eafj EDINBURO/, June havi TH E general Court of Proprietors of tlje VM- e'eg tish 1 , inen Company, at their meeting hel/ this P day, having ordered a HALF YEAR'S DIVIDEND thei pn the Company's Stock, to be paid at MIDSUM- WC MF. R, NOTICE is hereby given to the Proprietors to Pan call for the same, at the Company's Office here, on FRIDAY the 24th current; arid, in order to settle said DI- _ . • tdeiul, no Transfer of Stock will be made, from Friday EX { he 10th to Wednesday the 23d current, both days inclusive. - T s F O R T U N E ' S . T O N F I N E T A V E R U V " j h V DIVIDENDS} to Whitsunday m l ^ • now payable. CX'./' a te Certificates of the lives of the nominees wiM be re- p ro ^ Apijy tojjenry JarJiue and' biaucisWilscbT writers jf1 ™ / • T ' ~. T TO TUP. , Gri FREEHOLDERS OF THE COUNTY OF PERTH. « r A G? NTI- EMBN, LONDON, 2fith M a y 1 8 1 4 ^ , T a period when there is no prorog^ fof a aPr dissolution of Parliament, I W t have An thought of obtruding myself on yout^ Tice,- had 1 not " e been apprehensive that silencejAffrly part, after the letters addressed co you b y - U f i LYNEo0c; ii** a'nd Sir P A T R I C K MURRAY, mkbiTbe interpreted into a rc- Unquishment of my h o u ^ f being again/ fchosen your representative. J r , . ' I think it th^ flore necessary to, State, as I now beg leave to dojiflist respectfully, buf most explicitly, that when ai^ lcction may occur, I shall certainly solicit > ouritVour, trusting that, by a continuance ot your triymlship and support, I shall be replaced in this dist" i nf gbuai s& h isittuoitfync VWhichM I hafw nrow Athe thonoour pt o 1 Gentlemen, i Your most obedient, and obliged humble servant/ JAMES DRUMMOND. * j ' WANTED TO BORROW, / ^ f / fo] ON E T H O U S A N D POUNDgJ& tdfliV? on the most unexceptionable personal s/ ennty ; _ the interest paid twice in the year, free of property taxA. pply toTrancis l'raser, writer.., J. Drummon* d Street, J Edinburgh. ' al • cl | , NOTICE. £ T HE- Suhsctiber C E A S E D to be * P A R T - NER " f Ithe Commercial Banking Csmpany of Scotland on the 2d day of December 1813. HUGH BROWN. Bf. ITH, June 7.1814. Dun. MacDonald, witness. Archd. Campbell, witness. . TO THE PUBLIC. , ' WH E R E A S several P e r s o n s J i a « r j ? H a t e 1 taken the liberty of Fhjiwtr md Fowrfng upon the Loch of WOODMILN ^- riNDORES Q f f h f parish A, WU,* ik1 c l B t y ^ fi( u) T tk. « p r o ^ y af Qeetrge Simson, Esq. tu?- hereby gives notice- rthat any pe. son who sbalVin'time coming, FISH ocTOWI. upou that Joch, withodt a license, In writing from him, will be / prosecuted according^ ® , law; and all former Ih: uis£ s/? NOTICE. S PERSONS having claims on th£ jW'a( ud-'" Mrs JEAN WILSON, lately residing at Cowirate- hcad, are requested to lodge the same at tye chaflte. fcers o l / f e s . Iflfelis an'J k'ABmsSII1, ^ S.'^' u/ ii SueetJ t within a fortnight from this date, when ber funds wifl . be divided in terms of her settlement. 1 Not to be repeated. < EDINBURGH, e t h J u n e 1814. • TO PRESERVE THE TEETH A N D ^ J j t f V j BU T L E R ' S celebrated V E G E / V b M ; TOOTH POWDER, with conlidtncif recom- j mended to the use of the public, as the nftst Jlicacious . Preparation, for preserving the Teeth in a s# ind state, ! even to old age, and producing a pe « rly whit^ ess, with- ] out impairing the enamel. It imparts a firmness and , beautiful redness to the Gums, to the Breath the most 1 delectable sweetness, and, if used constantly, as directed, will prevent the Toothacb, by removing its cause j ( the Scurvy in the GumsS) o. ld Pbryi. c e 2s. 9d. the | box. • Tt. HPOT'F; Ull. IUU. llouth Bridge,^ , Baxter, Moncrieff, Smith, Raeburn, Mandersti/, Spenoe> 1 Urquhart, and Robertson, ' Edinburgh; Baxter, M'Doiiald, M'Bryde, Glasgow; and most me- ' dicine venders aud perfumers. ^ ^ i T ^ ^ / W T U N R OSS- SHIRE FOR SAl^- Z , ' To be° S0LD by pbittc roup, within the hnu/ e Henderson, vintner in Kinross, upon. Friday thet^ th day of JulyTsM, at two o'clock afternoon, / r p H E S E parts of the Lands of W E S T i X COLDRAtN, lying in the parish of Tull/ ebole. i and shire of Kinross, whis. li belonged to the deceased William Blackwood, porrioner there, consisting of ; acres 3 roods 8 falls, Scots measure, according plan and measurement thereof, made \ Mr John : ' rell, land- surveyor. These lands are mostly of a south exposure, are all enclosed and properly subdivided, far the greater part of excellent quality, containing infield laud of two farms, ? nd are capable of considerable improvement, for which purpose lime may be had, at a moderate expence, from Roscobie or Gask, distant only about five miles. The lands pay two third parts of the followlr. g public burdens, viz.:— Feu duty 51. 6s. 8d. Scots— cess 11. 2s. Sterling-- minister's stipend 2 bolls 3 firlots 2 pecks of meal and bear, and 16s. 4d. Sterling in money, and schoolmaster's salary fls. 9d. Sterling. There is a good mansion- house, with offices, and also some young wood, in a thriving condition, on the lands. As ail encouragement, the sum of 20001. Sterling will L / be allowed to remain for several years, on security on " the lauds, if the purchaser is so inclined For farther particulars amliMijflajiiay be mode to TVIfRHIltft Fill !>!• « , w T1' ci in Kuuossl who is in possession of the title- deeds and plan oytlie lands; or to Mr John Blackwood, who resides in tne mansion- house on the farm; or Mr Lothian, portioner, Coldrain, either of whon^ wil^ Wwr/ fhe grounds. AT LEITH, 00R LONDON/"*//* WsA The Edinburgh and 1 . eith Shipping (£ glmiiur) Smack ^ j 7 WeHZ MATCHLESS, / WI L L I AM HUTTON master/ sails on Friday the 10th June, at six o'clock evemngi^.. ' RUBILRt LII'lDl'. l. L, ManagerTy K Edin. and I . eith Shipping Co.' s Office, LIITH, f V June 8.1814. r ^ T FOR LEGHORN AND NAPLES, The fine new Biig A L L I E S , ^ — — " / 4 W. B. FowLRWHSster, / d Burden per register 21( 1 tojj » (< tf5a is in every respect a / most Superior vessel^ JiWfe will commence loading on Monday next, ajjiHte dispatched immediately, if sufii- . cent freight>> ff£ ri • I For ftptSer particulars, of freight,& r. appjyjy „ 1 ' M U l t S iCL'iH"& SON. ^ ~ Mjf. i'rtn June 3. 1814. ' MR S F A L C O N E R takes the liberty of j T informing her Friends and the Public, that she has Movr. n to No. 43. T H I S T L E STREET,! rX1[ where she continues to teach the PIANO- FORTE, as j J^ usual. fi IHA'I f - BOARD AND EDUCATION^ ' j" 1' Per TH E reverend J A M E S F E R G U S S O N , No.' 4 Musselburgh, has excellent, accommodation for jin So four young Gentlemen as Boarders, to which number rer ir he means to limit himself. Til For particulars application may be made to the re- BON verend Mr Moodie, Inverosk ; the reverend Principal derat Baird, and the reverend Drs Grant, Macknight, and M 1 Brunfon, Edinburgh; or to Mr F. himself. that J DRAWING AND PAIN l'ING. vVH A M E S F R A S E R begs to inform the No- also, Hpit/ ind Gentry of Edinburgh, that he will open ' his CiiASflES, for DRAWING and PAINTING, on W Monday the 13th June. "* wJ J. F. has resolved to admit only two or three into - each class, in order that those who study under him may have every opportunity of advancing in that useful and . elegant accomplishment. is P. S.— TMisc Ladies, who honour J. FRASER with m 3 their attendance, may have a knowledge of JAPAN I- WORK, if required, and other Branches of ornamental — [ a„ PainMtini lgn. ' s S q u a r e , EDINBURG- H .— - d, en y EXAMINATION OF MR ANDREW'SfiCHOOL. ^ E d i n b u r g h , J u / e J 5 . / S M_ _ "" iT57" E, the Subscribers, having rfftrn/<'< rtTi- the! V T public examination of the Pupils of Mr JOHN cuti ANDREW, Hanover Street, are happy to Jrtifyotir ^ unqualified anprohation of his abilities atKl/ success as a teacher of English. Various passages of / oetry and HO prose were read and rccited on this occasiof, with dis- ~- jinct. articulation, attention to correct pronunciation, r , ^ nd to the inflections of the voice suitable in every re- I _ spect to the nature of the subjects. ' Fhe exercises in * Grammar were performed with promptitude, and ac- by J, curacy, and evinced the great attention of the teacher totJiis important department of education. The exer- '- er .-" ffses in Geography were equally entitled to our entire ™ ii a approbation, and the whole plan of tuition, which M r : _ I Andrew has adopted, appears to us to be well arranged, A,< , t the proficiency of his pupils affording ample proofs pf l e his abilities and diligence. '" e : r ( Signed) WILLIAM RITCHIE, Minister and l- Professor of Divinity, e- DAVID RI TCHIE, Minister and Professor of Logic. : g GEORGE DUNBAR, Professor of at Greek. J - it ANDREW THOMSON, Minister. HI ur JAMES GRAY, of the Hich School. drs- LUKE FRASER, of the High School, t 0 Emeritus. ' , . , . , 1. , . ~^ rfrrT^ rt| ' l IlltU'lS. Writer to tluj alll I U 4 " bignet/ tin / JOHN GfBSON, Writer to tbe Signet. cu GEO. FUL TON, late teacher ill Edinburgh. ini Jf*- Mr ANDREW continues his public Classes, as le! f formerly, for ENGLISH and GEOGRAPHY. ^ • f f No. 55. HANOVER STREET. ty; — ^ rty CHING'S PATENT WORM LOZENTjaS T^ AR E patronised by the first nobleme* ifi/ lkp ; kingdom, as well as by the folh> wirfj^ » rM « f- iT able ladies, who have given this medicine tothef- ' 1 wn | children, and also to the poor of their respectiv/ neigh- i _ bourlioods, with unparallelled success. I f- " t Her Grace the Duchess of Leeds. f o t Her Grace the Duchess of Rutland. „ The right honourable the Countess of Darnley. tj The right honourable Lady Caroline Cape!. u l'lie right honourable Lady Elizabeth Spencer. The right honourable the Cs'ountess of Shaftesbury. The right honourable the Countess of Mountnorris. j The right honourable the Countess of Cork. ^ / , Xbe- right hopourable Lady Lucy Bridgeman. | " t c And many other ladles of the first rank and character, too numerous to insert, pon soi. N HV '" . 15. HI'II I T , No- i o a ' s o u VH i i H i o n i v j ' so,", BAXTER, MANDERSTON, MONCRIEFF, SMITH! andj • RAEBCRN, E d i n b u r g h ; ' j" I be And most medicine venders in every town In the ^ is£ s/ j kingdom. | J ? THE MOST PROMINENT TRAIT OF BEAUTY ib IS A FINE HEAD OF HAIR ; I fafC7 To obtain which is especially recommended |. ow- T J O W L A N D ' s M A C A S S A R OTL; under> ABii J_ V the august patronage of their Royal FUghny^ s • eetJ t |, e pril l c,! 9s of Wales, Duchess of York, a n / a r f e of c wiH Sussex, his Serene Highness the Duke of ifciffiswick, his Excellency the Duke del Infantado, ba^ ieir espe- j cial authority granted to the proprietoOTfalso, by the Navy and Army, the Faculty, and m y f J the Nobility. I —- The virtues of this Oil, extractafffryi a tree in the y* island of Macassar, in the EasyRidiey are far beyond , L / f eulogium, for eradicating albfmpuryes of the human < hair, preventing it falling or t i l l i ng grey to the :? m" latest period of life; strejfgtheninrfthe weakest hair, . c l o u s and producing a luxuriajngrowth f n the baldest places, ! also an illimitable napral curl, f \ i renders tbe hair, i j either natural or aynicial, beiiurffully soft and glossy, a n and is pleasant in application ; ofomotes the growth of most ^ fhiskers, eyeby( vs, nnistachoS, & c. This Oil is per- r e c t " fectly innoxioii^ and may witji safety be applied to the : aus<" hair of the yqrfngest infant, arid the beneficial effects are fully explained in " Rowland's Treatise on the Hair," worthy thirattention of every family. As this book is pirated, and the oil counterfeited, it is necessary to ob- ? noe> serve, t| lat each genuine bottle is signed on the outside " label jii red ink, A. Rmolatid and Sin, in their own m e . writing, price 3s. fid. Ids. fid. and ll. Is. per bottle, and wholesale and retail by the proprietors, A. Rowland and ' ' Son, ' Kfrivy StTffiC," Hanan CVOTJffcfl, Londoi » ; and, by / _ fheir appointment, by their • Ma\ vd\ t agerfts in L011- 3 / ; , > t l , and by Mrs E. R a e b u ^ Njtrfy Ib^ hyuMr J. rJ*-' Urquhart, 40. George Str> ef; M r l feiftufeT^ S^ Ross, " C. Genible, D. Robertson, H. Urquhiurt, Smith, Muggerland, perfumers, and Mr Allen, chemist, Edin- E R burgh; Milne, Reid, I . eith ; M'Bryde, perfumer,! bole. 67. Argyll Street, and Mr Walker, Glasgow ; ' Fait, In- j - ased verness; limes, Dundee ; Laing, Anderson, Aberdeen ; I f 140 and M'Leod and M'Curry, Greenock; and by all the to a perfumers and medicine venders in every town in Scot- Bir- land, and the whole empire. outh Also, ROWLAND'S ESSENCE of TYRE; or, I. u- , and pp- RiAL DYE, for changing red or grey hair, whiskers, ; the eyebrows, 5cc. to a permanent browu or black— 7s. fid ider- per bottle. Y he Likewise, ROWLAND'S ALSANA EXTRACT; J ' or, Abyssinian Botanical Specific for the Teeth and pWO Gums, a beautiful preparation, extracted from Abyssi- ,' nian herbs. It immediately relieves the tootliach, and sters r e n < j e r s to the teeth ar. d gums incomparable beauty.— • Sold at 10s. fid. per buttle, or in powder at ' 2s. 9d. anel with Is. Cd. pI er box, dutv: included, c o n " FARMS TO 1. E T. , will FARMS UPON THF. ESTATE OF t. F. CKIE,/ tN ' y on THE COUNTY OF STIRLING. To be LET, for such number of years as maybe^ fjreed je t 0 upon, entry at Martinmas n f po « - T T P P E R BIELD. contiiininjf^ Sout J S Scots j o r to VJ acres of dryfield. JT / bouse LOWER BIELD, about> TScots acre/ chiefly of Co1' 1- kerse. S / ' These two farms ar^ Situated about tfn miies and aj ; half westward of StWTng, and three eaaffroin Kippen , / * Being separated ( UPlly by the turnpike wad leading from' Stirling to Dunrfrarton, the two togcyier would form a ' very compagt'and eligible farm. f / ALSO, / Thc pirm of DAMSIDE, containing about 4- 1 Scots acrf,< i kt- rse land. The leases of some adjoining lands expire at Mar- [ Cr' > tinmas 1815. ( The overseer, at Leckie, will shew the farms; ffid offers may he given in to the proprietor ; or t. qrMr ' T.' Bfymai, writer, ljtlriinp> . / 1 TO BE SOLD, / By public roup, on Wednesday the 29th day of / line 1814, at two o'clock afternoon, in the RoyaOix*" > ect change Coffeehouse, Edinburgh, ' suffi- T H E L a n d s o f I N V E R A i y > ? r R A N , ly. JL ing ill the parish of Killitu^ ifuicounlf of Perth. The lands are very beautifjjHy situatey upon Loch . Dochart, about six milesWim Tyndruaf They con- ^ sist of upwards of 13QflOkots acres, J p of which are arable, and the remainder pasture oLffe best quality.— p By a small outla/ The arable landycould be much ini creased. jr / f - There is a good deal of wood and some young plan- ^ ^ tations r> n the lands. ' The dwelling- house is neat and 0 sail commodious. The highroad from Stirling to Tyndrtim, & c. runs through the lands for about a mile, and the post parses near the house, three times a week. W For further particulars apply to_ Claud Russel, Esq. 63. Northumberland Street; or to Veils. IJaltlpbelFaiid C113i) n, W.^' JEdinburgh. TO STRAW- HAT MANUFACTURER^,- ( NEW MILLINERS, & c. & c. X hp TH E T R A D E maybe s u p t d i e d ^ t l / t he celebrated WHALE- FIN PLAIT foritADIES JHA'I'S, of the most, delicate and transparent fvhiteness, \ j No. 43. Prlrice's Street, who are appointed sole agents p o B t in Scotland by the inventor, and tbe only manufacru- f r om , rer in I. ondon. Tliey have received several Bags Of WHALE- thy 1 BONE, UNPLATTED, which they can sell on mo- their derate terms. pnin M. and H. most, respectfully inform their friends TI that they have at pi- e- sent a very large and most complete assortment of SPLI T S TRAWS, BLACK and WHITE CHIPS, of tbe most fashionable shapes ;— . also, a variety of beautiful FLOWERS, WREAI'FIS, , ' TRIMMINGS, & c. & c. ,. pv 1 Wholesale dealers will be supplied on tbe best terms. EDINBURGH, J u n e ' 7 . 1814. q4 > — 1 ... ' . ' 1— ——— — , CELEBRATION OF PEACE. iVfff,'!!." U ' N Li / 1 MILITARY At< D A, t( Tiri£ lAL ^ VltE-) PORKM* 1fE* S, | 125. Canongate, Edinbufgh^'^ ' g^ REsT> F. CTFur. i. Y intinvjtpXfo their friends and the public in gej » rfal, that, from, the great . demand for Fire- workii « rpresent, it will \ yk necessary for those who are biffiiied to celebrate tlie RKSTO- ' P. ATION of PJj^ CE by private exhihVons of FIR E- V WORKS, tpifive as early notice as - possible, so that ; their orders may be punctually and expeditiously ex « - ^ : cuted. r N. B— Private exhibitions from 101. to 1001. each. Tfi d HOUSE IN MAlTLAND STREE T FOR SALE- r j To be Soi. D by private bargain^ j i t I !: T H A T H O U S E , in M A I ' M . A ' N I ) m<: n 3 STREET, EDINBURGH, at present Jssessed Or .. by Mrs Morley. > r It is extremely well laid out, and is In excellent orr_ der, in every respect. There is back ground, & c. & c. ()., -(. Ftnryac Martinmas next, or sooner, if required. (. if j j '"'• fnr^ wr pTlr" i . ^ p - . i ^ - . i ^ n maybe nude to! J-, Alexander Pearson, W. S/ Vork Place, who is authori- 3f sed to conclude a sale, and/ who will give directions for shewing the h ® use. ' ._ : a 1 ' d TO BE LET, / 60 I AND ENTERED TO IMMEDIA TELY, Rent moderate, * f ji' of n p H A T Lodging or Dwellin^+ fouse, enter cu I ing by Dickson's Close, q » » f! 5e south srae of th< HIGH STREET of Edinbujgir first close Widow Nid- m dry Street, being the thifll'ftorey of the giyat tenement tn ' 1, at head of said clojeypffil fronting the High Street:. th ' The house consJ* fs^ of six fire- rooms, JSesides kitchen h? and other cmymiiences. The whale underwent a thorough rj^ iir within the last year, and is perfectly - et. clean, a^ rfrree from smoke. / n- At^ tvery trilling expence the house might be divided - p into two separate dwellings, which would considerably a s lesssen all taxes and public burdens. Application for the key, and viewing the house, to be made at the house opposite,^ n same flat; . auiiJ- ii- fur- _ ther particulars, to Ad. Smith, at" Kir Guthrie's7l?> J jAfgyk Oqmn^ . • b kp I / GREEN TREE LEITH. i nf- iTo be SOLD by public roup, in the Royaj^ Je- rThangc wn I Coffeehouse, Edinburgh, on Wedjyweraythe 15 th of c 5I1- 1 June, at two o'clock, T H A T e x t e n s i t w ^ p R O P E R T Y , at the ! 1 GREEN T B # ? r LEITH, possoss'ed by Alex- f ander BennetjJI^ holsterer, consisting'of a house of three lloors,/ tvith cellars below, which have a separate a wide dyof lo the street, and of a large yard, with a cart gateway. Further particulars may be learned.^, i^> pIicatlon to : l s ' MeS^' D. Iliomsoh'anil k. rfeml'iig, WTS/ 8. Frederick Street. / ter, SUMMER QUARTERS. - J ! s To LF. T, for one or more years, / / , r p H E Hotue and Garden of G I L f c j p R ' P oH a n j i JL. GRANGE, situated about five miles f r / m Edinjburgb, and one from Dalkeith, consisting If dining- 1 , ' room, drawing- room, four bed- rooms, kitchen, scul- j ' lery, and servants rooms. h j i'he garden is well stocked with fruit trees and' t -|. y i bushes, all iu excellent condition. | The house has been lately put in a complete state of j repair, and, if it will suit the convenience of a tenant,; I a threfi.-. staUed stable and coach house will be let alongst del* ywrli the premises. jarff Further particulars mw lie known hy inquiring at % of tbe ho-. iSe, or aKMel'ville Burd, W. SlNo. 2. Terrace. spe- fax; £ . ^ W r y , & C i - o t e r T T l Against tneiafhi of Martinmas next, l ^ f f , / i lity. r p H E exten/ ve B R E W E R Y in tK^ sea- pBft | 1 i town qf BORROWS TOUNNESS ( tc/ wbich ' o n t ' there is a genteel dwelling- house attached), / as prcsently possessed by Mess. John and Charles GrTeve. tne The Brewery consists of a brew- house, store- house, r ' and cellars, with the necessary utensils, jier inventory ; as also of a malt barn and kill, with granaries and loft, l r ' all on an extensive scale. This is a most eligible situation for a scientific and in- o t dustrious brewer, both from the advantages to be derived from a principal sea- port, & c. and from tbe cir- ' t l l e cumstance of no other brewery being nearer to it than s. ar,(; Linlithgow ( nearly four miles distant), and the rent a'r '. moderate. Apply to Miss Walkingsbaw, tbe proprietor, at^ ' ? ,' Snabhri near Borrowstoinmess. nr to) TMr~ T1: iomas t s l u e Cowan1 ot the Customs, iSorrowStSunness. / own jf 1 and BANKS OF TFIF. RIVER MOUSE. and ' f 0 f, e SOLD by private bargain, betwixt and the 12tl>. / ' y day of August first, either ill one, two, or^ more . Ir'l" Lots> ioss, T W O E N C L O S E D F I E L D S , consisting , and JL altogether of seven acres^ ffa a or thereby, idin-. of good '. and, situated in tJxOieighb^ Urhoda of the mer, | town of Lanark, upon th^ ficturesque banks of the rit, In- 1 ver Mouse, near its junction with Clyde, and com ken; lmanding a view ojiffie celebrated^ and much admired 1 the scenery of Cartlafld Craigs. / Scot- ' The great CTydesdale road fprtni Carlisle to Glasgow, by Lanark,- ywill materially eilbance the value and local jM. advantages of the pn^ nises. kers Part of the price will be allowed to remain in the s. fid' hands of the purchaser, or purchasers, for a considerable term of years. c - | . . I-' or particulars apply to^. tTr LlllllllllJ'br tn Mr Douand Edinburgh; or to Mr Lamb, writer, Lalyssi- n a r k ' f ' a n d I. ANDS IN THE DISTRICT OF COWAL, t y a '~ ARGYLLSHIRE. F o r SALE, TH E Lands and Farm of B L A I R B p * t f l E , lying in the parish of Inverchaolin^ » feven miles , tN frjjI » - D\ inooii, three from Rothsay, a « ratweiity from Z-^"- Greenock. ^ These lands extend to about Scots acres, form one side of the valley of Glentofe, have a south east ex- , posure, and, from the dry s^ Knid nature of the pasture, icots! constitute one of the nisif'valuable sheep farms in that part o^ the country. / fly of The lands are let Jo an opulent tenant at 1501. per annum, on a lease/ current for six years from Whitsunand a | day first, at the e* piry of which a great increase of rent ppen i will he obtain^ ef. froml The post a/ rives three times a- week at Dunoon, and > rm a there are regular markets at Rothsay and Greenock i'or all kinds of stock. Anew road is forming from Dunoon to the property. Scots The lands abound with moor game, - and a fine trouting stream forms one of the boundaries of the property, Mar- 011 the banks of which there are many romantic situations for a villa. ; J'. id A considerable part of the price may remain for some fMr years in the hands of a purchaser; and for further par- / ticulars apply to Walter Turbet, writer, Greenock; or - T " to John Kermack, W. S. Edinburgh. / fine ~ TO~ BE LET, ~ l^ Ji^" and entered upon at Michaelmas next, for such number of years as shall be agreed on, , ly- n P H R E E valuable and highlyJpprRveable ' erth. J_ FARMS, from 300 to 400 agK< « ? ch, about 45 Loch miles north west of London ' con- Two of the farms are inpsftarable, but having the -. h are greatest quantity in g r ^ ^ a s dairy farms. The* othe- i ' ty— has the greater prooprnon of its lartd under cultiva'jnn : h ill-, The lands arejjftithe free, are in the neighbourhood : of good markptTowns, and within three miles of a naplan-- vigable cauafto the metropolis. it and. To au> opulent tenant, two of the farm3 might hi frum, joined. id the| The house, barns, and offices are weli situated, niu 1 are, or will be made lit for the accotnmodation of th. tenants. - • - „ B and, Ijor particulars inquire of MS » TCemi> beH and Cla ion, W, S'.' tlS1. ! C Ar, WC\ t* S"? mi> ttS, EdinBuJ- rii. JANCY TRIMMING AND CHEAJPll/ AeE WAREHOUSE, Jll 7 Ho. 69. PRINCE'S SiTREET. I f J j V i ' l l i e S UW An i T T E A l m o s t r e s w c t f i l y in- \ T - timate to their friends And the public, tfat they I have now on hand, for imm/ diate sale, the finest and , most extensive Show of I. ACE ever seen in this metropolis. As the goods are all entirely fresh manufactured, from the best and most expensive French thread, Ladles, in want of such articles, will find them well worthy their particular attention, not only on account of their lowness in price, but their superior excellence in point of quality. They have always on hand, an extensive variety of every article connected with the HABERDASHERY, I. INENDRAPERY, SILKMERCERY, and HOSIERY LINE, & c. Several hundred pieces of best INDIA NANKEENS under the usual prices. G.- and P. have just received, a beautiful assortment of RICH FANCY TRIMMINGS, FROGS, TASSELS, BUTTONS, & c. Country orders pointedly executed. An APPRENTICE wanted. SALE OF AN EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF s FISHING MATERIALS OF'ALL KINDS, FARM STOCK, AND HOUSEHOLD y FURNITURE, / " VALUE OF FIVE THOUSAND POU&* S AT It LEAST. .- jf ,. BY WARRANT OF THE SHERIFF OF C/ 1^ I1NESS. for behoof of Creditor^ / Thote will be Sold by public ronnAt C/. rrnjOn the 20th day of J u n y f t l 4 , I / ^ T H E whole F A R M S'POCKatfd H O U S E ' 1. HOLD FURNITUHoi 011 tlieJ Mains, at IS D months credit, / I d On the 21st and 22d eif^ the same me^ iith, and at the ymie place, j r" Twenty- one Boat^ lfi2 Nets, 1400 Barrels, 11, OCX c- Oak Staves, inoo Mpe Staves, 400 Bubhels of Salt, anc lothwr Fishing MaT- riats lying there. ^ And, at Wicyhnd STAXIGO, on the 23d and 24t! / days of the same month, The revt rsfon of a Lease of two Red Herring Houses _ a Dwellingyb . use, and Shadesi and Ground, of whicl / 60 years to run, two small Sloops, 1000 Barrels - H ,00!> Oik Staves, . WOO Bushels Salt, of which 7001 great, salt, and other Materialvfyjkig there. All th fishing nijja^ ials at six fl"^ 1 st ; r- c u r i t y V ( J0~- i/ O ( t~> h< Ae: ttfe whole must be sold off without reserve, i ft- must be worth the attention of all intending adver • nt. tu'rers in the herring fishing on the eoast ofGaithr^ s this'-' season. , f f l / l en The sale will begin each day precisely it 10 o clock, . a THURSO, 2 4 t h M a y 1814. tly ..- , r IMPROVF. D SHORT- HORNED CA'JTLE. To be Soi. n by auction, on the premises, at C< JT: 3' y THORNS FARM, Gibside, near Newcastle- upoij- Tyn on Monday 27th June 1814, > A BftVT 4 0 C 0 . W S, H E I i l BULI. S, of the improved T e e ^ ^ n e r , o r shor horned tireed of cattle, orighiall^ romJne stock of tl — late' Mr John Thompson q^ fjirliii^ ton Hall, ne; .. WyrdifFe", in tbe county oMfork, andcrossed by Mes ige Colling's bulls Cupi- L^ ylesby, jrfnd Marske. ' TI ; 0f cows and heifers beidg now in c^ t fo the latter bull, to Mr Robert Wulling's bull, Miner. It is presumi , that no- stock^ patever in . the north ot England ba sold at Id^ ir^ r pS/^ s to thy biitcher/ jt two-^ free, ai 1 ( l> In tne meanWnt^ iie aboyT stock m ^ b e view^^ e _ atc application to the hind at Cutt ' Thorns farm. w r t May 24.1814. TIMBER AND OAK BARK FOR SALE. To be SOLD by public roup, at VALLEYFIF. LD, i n j parish of Culross, upon Friday the 17thJjwiFTtr . at eleven o'clock, GHF. Hundred large J f i f g C H T R EE ' i .0 l. arpi' lull lUl'. te>. Jin 200'" Smaller OAK TJdlES. . ir!,.. 20 toffi Tons ofr< TAK BARK, icul-! ' The timb. r> i< of excellent quality,- well worth ' j attention o£> Ship- builders; and the harbours of Culr and i anil ' Tor^- nnrn, where it can be shipped at small 1 j pence^ are within a quarter of a mile of Valleyfield. te of] Thejoniberandbarks^ lWieshewii by William Ho; iant, i Vall.- yftid farm. ngst — y V r t tttM c/ ttO'tHr} G! L<—. * V / SMAI. l. PROPERTY IN PEEBLES- SHIRE ig at FOR SALE. l c e - To be SOLD' b y private bargain, " x / T? ORTT; T\ VO Scots acres, or^ IW"*? 5y, of { . - JL CROFTS of LINTON^ WfiJg nearly conti * t^" ous to the village together^ ffh the HOl^ ffiS there port au , ls presently posses^ ifo)' Robert Sgmtrville. bich The lauds are of^' lJce'lIent quality, add, being bou pre- ed on the soutJroy the water of Lyne, are well ca! lated for a vffla. The lease is redeemable for a mi ausc, rate sum. - ory ; Mr Somerville, the tenant, will point out the 1 loft, miscs, and for particulars apply to lieo'rge Bro' Bd'odMAiniiilUtJeJ Edinburgh, who is empowere. id In- conclude a sale. / April 19. 181 e de- > e cir- LANDS OF WINKSTON, & c. than (-„ be SOLD by roup, within the Royal Exchange ( rent f,; eroom, Edinburgh, on Wednesday the fctb . 1814, betwixt the hours of two and three afterno. T H E LANDS of W I N K S T O N , a/ d oth JL near Peebles, situated within a mile it th where there are excellent schools and madce- ufani both sides of the turnpike road to Edinbuw^ 12tjj_ ,— This property contains 278 acres, or tj# Vehy, me rttfyee unimproved. The soil is excellent, jf<\ the meae improvement at hand, as, besides tlu^? j/ inity to Peel • there is plenty of lime on the laud* / hey afford ir excellent situations for buildiaf w/ th a comman. rehy, water for every purpose, the VeliHe/ ton, Wiaksron, t the Windylaws burns being th/^ bouipary in three di ri" tions. The communicaj/ on wjfh Edinburgh is a n d f r e4u e u t , "" el ' he distance / onvenient for any mred of business, who is dc^ rous alfo country residence, plentiful county aneUfligible i/ eighbourhood ' gow, Access may be bad to abo/ it 58 acies, now mostl local gi- ass, at Martinnfcs first, a: ld to the remainder at Ji tinmas 1815, w>! en the Ica/ fes expire, in the There is a VMerable mrmsiorv- house on the" p'ropi suler- a n ( j fuli. grovrn planting of considerable value. The hinelS are partly enclosed ; the teitids are va Don- , in, i exhausted; they afford a freehold qualities , i. a- ( which will be either sold or reserved, as may s and the payment of the price will be made conver to a purchaser-. "> ' The boundaries will he shewn by appplying al house of Winkston, and the proprietor in Edinbu ^^-" jJohn Young, writer to the signet there; or Mr b P l E , r-' y Bartram or Mr Macgowan, writers, Peebles, miles g i v " t h e nee/ ssary inforthation to intendingpurcha form n ,0|<', theTands will be let on a nineteen ^ st ex_ lease, and proposals may be lodged, as above, bet I... ' and Lammas next, which, if not accepted, shall be - bat1 < i!!"± C t d J o C ^ tL I. per ABBO TRULE. itsun- r P H I S valuable Estate, lying in the pari f rent X. of Southdean, Hohkirk, and Jedbur^ Wn- l burghshire, is still FOR SALE bv I'Rij^ wrfMRGAi 1, and It consists of 2545 acres, of w f i i j o l f n 111 < ni. 11 1 w • k for Its rental is 19751. pei^ gg^ Pfii It apssesses e 1 Du- thing that can maly^ WpTlcsirable resj( j? iice, and I: vote ill the couo » nlr Jr trout- PrinteiiMfficuIars will be delivered bv Mess. C perty, stoun ajrtT Ve- itch, W. S. Edinburgh ; Mr Bell of situa-; lace, " by Jedburgh ; or Mesj. Thomson and W I writers in Jedburgh ; and either the proprietor, at some botruie, or TVTiTsV. CriUIIgqUll^ ffJ" V i.' lhjlf> rill trea r par- and conclude a bargain. * o r The steward at Abhotrule wiil shew tbe ground — r— THE LANDS OF HAYFIELD AND SMITHYHlLLi J TO BE LET, / j tl, FOR SUCH A NUMBER OF TEARS AS MAY IE AC) R eable __ " o. n. ^ aut 45 f | ^ H E S E Lands lie in the immediate n< i V bourboeid of Damhead, on the great road ig Edinburgh to Perth, by Kinross, and consist of i otlu- r 90 a. res arable, and several acres in pasture, ra'ion. j e The soil is good, and lime at no great distance, irhood are well sheltered and watered, tke water Farg rui f a na- , through the middle of them, on which there is a fa a thrashing- mill, or auv other kind of machinery, ght be! greater part is enslos/ d/ Bnd has hegK in pastur^ fe . last seven years. / / XU^ lc ' V + l c ^ l . .1, and They are distlnt fmm Perth nine miles, and of Hie.'| Kinross only six miles. < M A ' fs, 1, i Offers taken in by Mr Smipson/ tWpAtJrfeti id Cb'Tiayfield, by Kinross, to the 1 - 2th August 1S14. ! Entry at Martinmas 1814. This day is published, price Is. 6 d . * 7 / / L ^ TH E I N F L U E N C E of L E A R N MNC V f T I RELIGION; ?. Sermon, preached l* fo/ e tfie A / Society in Scotland ( incorporated by royal / t a r a r ) for \ 1.. 1 propagating Christian Knowledge, at their am/ versafy drerse meeting, in the High Church of Edinburgh, ciT Thurt-! 1S09, day, June 3. 1813. ( Lord By DAVID DICKSON, A. M. | 2. . One of thc Ministers of St Cuthbert's. iverno To which is sidfioined, the Scheme of the- Society's 1 establishment fof/ the yeai^. from 1st May 1813 to 111 May 1814 JVfe EdinburglT: Printed by TV. Balfour, Merchant Court.; ) a m e, Sold by W . ' CREECH, J- O. GI. E, W. WHYTE, W. B L A C K ' | ' : ~ WOOD, a n d O L i p i i A N f , WAUGH, a n d INNES. | Dr R This day ^ published, j In four volumes 8vn. ( with near 10C » copplrplbtfesL' 4_ price 31. 3s. boards, fl / \ L / exe'cv THF. SECOND EDITION OF / / I Ol'igi RECREATIONS in MATHEMATICS1 ^ ' . and NATURAL PHILOSOPHY; containing a imusing dissertations and inquiries concerning a variety ™ if subjects the most remarkable and proper to excite ^. .- urioslty and attention to the whole range of the ma- - hematical and philosophical sciences; the whole ill a ,, . . pleasing and easy manner, and adapted to the compre- 1 hor. sion of all who are in the least iniuated in those - sciences. First composed by M. Ozanam, of the Royal Acadc- t . my of Sciences, £ tc. lately re- composed, and greatly ,, enlarged, in a new edition, by the celebrated M. Mon- pr n; tucla, and now translated into English, and improved with many additions and observations. 1 , ' By CHARLES HUTTON, LL. D. and F. R. S. 1 . Emeritus X'rofessor of Mathematics in the Royal Mili- ft, tary Academy, Woolwich, . By y I. ondon : Printed for TllNU. VIA'ir, I'lUtti'l, UtT. VJJ 10. Ui'. vl l?,' Jlltl JPaternoster Row. IS""*] HOUSES IN TAIN TO BE SOLD, nal.) NOTICE TO CREDITORS. PAR ' There is to be SOLD bypublic roup, on Wednawfay the J 29th day of June 1814, at two o'clock afti- rnoon, and within the ball of the ho^ rc / irer- menh tioned, if not previously disposed^^ nTy/ livate bar- , ( gain, JT / M r p H A T woll- frequentcd^ INN, iff the burgh Sco, I1 1 of TAIN, lately oceii^ Pil by Joh# Ross, vintner, 2. consisting of a large puyK room, hjJnly finished, 36 bef. v feet by 16, two parlouj* eiglit beel- roMtis, kitchen, and 3. e cellars, with two stJ( Rs, two shadi^ or carriages, and fron several other conrfiiiences; tbe yiole slated and in . good rapair; an^ to which acces/ may be bad imme- the, " diately. / / js As the sa^ r JOHN Ross has lately executed a trust! i s conveyane^^ f his heritable andmioveable property, for | i, behoof <) Jrhis Credito^, in fjV. iur of Bailie Donald; Ross, ipgrchant in/^ rffrand'Alexanile'r ' 1 avlor. write? j * . "* ' lll'Plfj/ llI' triislees request that, all those who havei -- clainre against the said John Ross, and who have not!.. as yet acceeled to the trust, will forthwith apply at the!''' 0, r- wiflting chamber of the saiel Alexander'Taylor, where! 1 e jb » < tR.' d" oritccession lies for subscription ; and that I d they will lodge their claims, and oarais of verity there-; P 1 on, with the'said Alexander I ayl/ i/ toprevent any un- f tf necessary delay iu the winding ujiJiL^ njcoutern. ^ TAIN, 25th May 1 8 1 ^ j / j ^ V C ^ ' h j t ^ I"'' a r CAPITAL FARM IN EAST LQTHIAN I8 "' he TO J ' E T" o r To be LET on lease, for 19 years^ and entered toj#< Kli e ( j j Whitsunday 1815 as to the hoiuts and grass- aiirtftoj '] V( 1 the arable land at tbe separation of the crqafT ( roa lid T H E Farm of B A L G O N E B^ riW/ S, con-' r. f t \ 2_ sisting of 450 English acreSjM( pesen^ possess- Jli e'd'hy Mr Ge- orge Weir; is siu^ Rd in tWe parish of Pas North Berwick, and shire of^ ffeldingtoqf seven miles . * 1 distant from Haddington^ lRtwo mile^ rom the port _ of North Berwick. / , e !" d\ Jiar. m - is all ^^ flosed and suhfiivided, and the . J ^ - ^ r r r T w . - l l kuviw^ Jro be- of the first Quality. There is . - ^ a good steadin^ Kfarm houses, and a rock of excellent 0 1 limestone hr^ lStely been discovered in tbe lands, which, by means oF- i level now carried up, can be wrought to « — i, iS. the dept. jr'of 30 fe- et.. ... ,„,.,, [ • ^. CSjThiilV to'. tTThn" ami Alexander Smitlr;' Argyll SquareJEdinburgh, between and the 1st of Au- di. gust next. J | — the George Watt, farm servant at Sheriffhall, will show - oss the farm. 1 H e x " VALUABLE ESTATE IN MID LOTHIAN ' J FOR SALE. :" To be SOLD by private bargain, 0', TH E Lands and Estate of E A S T c f c A I G S ^ ^ Jying in the parish of Corstorpliine,- and wip^ m. w , - trrflr miles of the city of Edinburgh, ' lifie t i ^ p i k e ( road* from Edinburgh to iAMlithgow pa^ es. jrffuig the south side of the lands, and is their south Iqjmdary, and 1la the turnpike road from Edinburgh to Quefinsferry passes | _ within a short distance on the nortIiL « o which there | : on> is an easy communication by good cpffw roads. j , The lands are all enclosed, ancL^ uhpivided into dif- l, n ferent parks, and the whole we^ e hi^ ily improved, at a great expence, and laid dow^ in gmss about 15 years e" ago. The lands have sinc^ aeen l< dryearly for pasture only. y t r There is a good gardep stockedipvith fruit trees, and Y; n' a considerable quantit^ Cf thrivin# wood, on the estate, £ ^ t 0 as well as a commo^ pus mansi^- house and offices.— 3 The mansion- house^ in good rAair, and fit to accom- a: modate a genteel^ piily, and th^ urchaser may enter to 3 the natural poiiseyon of both thep. nds and mansion- house ti immediately, jplie situation jp most delightful, com- „ 011 > ^ mSPanjitKh tmofg F aonr jnJs, itaenndsi vien tevriveewn ifncgf tghreo ucnodass t too f thFei fneo, rtthhe, dy [ ta^ T and also aiiJextensive view do the south. A more de- v sirable pychase for a residence, or tor feuing out in ^ on' diiferentyallotments for villas, has seldom occurred so near th# metropolis of Scotland. ti ) S t j Fheyfa'nds will be shewn by Hugh Roger, ground 1S 0 j stewa/ d, at East Craigs, and application may be made r bless t o G e o r ^ S t e w a r t> Jl^ l- t h r T m< rrirffir1 iUi H m m v lanv " earLondon ; or to^ Anurew Paterson, writer, 6. Fortn c ^ ()| SWeW^ vho will shew the title- deeds, plan, and meaand s u r e r r ^ n t o t estate, and give what further informa- t ^ rec tion may be required. v e a s v N. B.— If the estate should not be sold, the mansionmar h° use » w' 1' 1 the park in front thereof, and the office- t jn a houses and garden, will be let for one year, from Whit- \ Sunday next. a ly in — FOR SALE, 7j ESTATE OF I. OMGITJRMACUS, s e r t y BERWlCKSIilRE^ x^ / ^ H H H I S E S T A T E k ^ f i e S o y / i n theH . lued J[ course of tbe ensuiu^ fuminer. Parlrfculars will s " I"' 1 appear in a future adj( « « <! seme- nt. / "")> In the meantin^ pplication maybe.' hiade to Abx- l i e n'jander Low. Jt^ TGordonbank, by Grce'iilaw; oi* A'icli'I-' l fiiCT I'eUHWT mff'TH'liylf WJII.' U'. ll.) No. IS. South 1 Fredsfick Street, Edinburgh, / l ^ s r ) c i^ ur-' William Wilson, the grieVy^ y? l^^ ™ ( h^^ tate. c • SOT." " E S T A T E IN BERWICKSHIRE/ FOR ^ f ^ f y ' y b(! Upset price reduced to 12,00!'/. I j 4 / - j I ' Fo be SOLD by public, roup, within the Roya^ i/: li » ri; ' years Coffeehouse, Edinburgh, upon WedneOTliy * ieC9th . wixt day of June 1814, at two o'clock afternoon,/ | r con- r p H E L a n d s a n d F a r m s o f W O R M F R L A W , ! ' J L ill the parish of Eccles, as presently possessed by Mr James Marjoribunks, containing ' 261 English ]. acres, or thereby, according to a plan made out by Mr . shes Je^ mJJlackaelder, in which is included neai ly live acres , ^ ' • • o f roads: ' This farm is situated about five miles east x from Kelso, and three miles south from Greenlaw, and . oiid. : ' i e proposed railway from Berwick to Kelso will run . , ve,. y near it. It is all enclosed, and the sofl is excellent, it 1 las a ' s under lease, current for 14 years from Martinmas . 1813, at the rent of 6441. to a most substantial tenant. : Iran- The lands hold of tbe Crown, and the public burdens i f Pa- a r e trifling. ' ood The farm will be shewn by John Cuninghame, mi- • Ab- 8 o n , a t Eccles; and for further nartipiij- ire : ipn|| c. ui< m' it for may be made to/ Gilison and Oliphant, W. S./ Ediu. •. burgh; or Mr Douglas Ainslie, at Cairnb. i/ k, by! j. Dimse. i ii'ARM ON THE ESTATE OF NOftTM y i 4 5 1-< y « -,(*. RW1CK. y \ c . ' / JjTo be LET for lftffears, and entered to inin. Wiiy'- l-. Tas V-^ to the fallow afid grass, and at the sep„ rationpf crop EED 1814 from the ground, as to the arable l. nd, T H E Farm of G L E G H O R N I E , lying in ? igh- JL the parish of North Berwick, and county of tf. idfrom i dirgton, and consisting of about 206 acres of land of about the finest quality. ' This farm is situated about two miles j from the port of North Berwick, nine nules from the They! market town i f Haddington, and iu the immediate nning | neighbourhood of lime. ill for Andrew Bain, overseer at North Berwick- house,' The Jvill shew the farm, and also a plan thereof, ir rth _ Proposals for a iease-. nay he given in to" IWllllukl ~ S* .1 o. lricH, writer in Had. lingion,/ vlio will inform as to fronj'any farther particulars t! i « r may be required. The .- rX farm J6iill.. be let whenever an adequate rent is otTere. l1 t( f< ky a.' respectable tenant, a- rel who will have an oppor- ' tuiiity of treating for an additional quantity of laud in i1816. I j ' '- Cjurt rs. « d. / Lp 5 T H E P A M P H L E T E E R , N o J vC jL I ( to be continued occasionally), containing/ I 1.- P^ enorts on the Trade in Wool and WoolltJis, ad- I i drersea to tlie Wool Meetings at Lewes, in thtf years f I : 1S09, 181Q, i s i l , and Ig, 3, by the President, John v fl ( Lord Sheffield. I 2. A Letter to Thomas Hope, Esq. Flereditary G'o- . vernor and Director of the British Institution, on the l'nsuiltciency of { he existing establishments for promoting . I the fine arts; attempting to show the cause of the de- f I " cline of pure taste in the bi'anch of architecture, and I ; with some hints towards its better encouragement. By • lames F. lmes, architect. ( Original.) I 3. A Review of First Principles of Bishop Berkeley, M jDrReid, and Professor Stewart. With an indication III of other principles. By John Feam, Esq. author of an ! Essay on Consciousness, ^ 4. Ntrrativeof the Crucifixion of Matthew Lovat, executed by bis own hands at Venice in July 1805.—> IOriginally communicated to the public by Caisir Ruggieri, M. D. professor of clinical surgery at Venice, ih k I , a letter to a medical friend. ( Now first translated into ' I ; English. With a wood cut. 1 5. A series of Letters on the Political and Financial State of the Nation, at the commencement of the year I I 1814; addressed to the Earl of Liverpool. By Francis f I Percival Eliot, Esq. under the signature of Falkland. 6. Observations on. Medical Reform. By a member of the University of Oxford. ( Original.) 7. On Bonaparte and the Bourbons, and the necessi- . ty of rallying around our legitimate princes, for the safety of France and Europe. Translated from the I j French of F. A. De Chateaubriand. I 8. An. Appeal to the Legislature for the repeal of the act regulating the marriage of the Royal Family. I ( Original.) — !>. A Short Sketch of a Short Trip to Parl3 in 1788; I By R. Valpy, D. D. F. A. S. N It). Reflections on the Letters of Conciliator, on the : question of Catholic Emancipation, contained in No. V. - 1 By the right revtoend Bis hyp Miliier, D. D. ( Origt- - J ^ ^ " T o f i d o n , n T ^ f f f b ) ' ( ^ A ^ V - m ^ c h ) . ; RODWS'LL; BLACK, PARRY, and Co.; and all other booksellers. e : —• GROUND NEAR EDINBURGH. T o L E T o r SELL, • 1. T H E P A R K immediatehr^ yKt of J L CRAIGLEITH- IIOUSE, consjs « * ffg or a b o u t 12 1 Scot s acres. f r, 2. ' The small PARK enstoF'the Hous/, eontaining 6 betwixt four and five Sco^ fcres— and, / d 3. The PARK imrue^ iately east of l/ t 2. containing d from four and a ha^ fto five Scots acre/ " This proptjffy ^ s situated about t^' o miles north of the city, pflthe road by Stockbridge to tbe Ferry. It is well " Sdauied for VILLAS, having a fine southern ^ j exposure, jtj: d a beaprlRil picturesque view of tke city. For p a / j f c ^ s a ^ ^ ^ Caugnt Office. ;. i SALE OF LANDS IN THE CfcONTY 0E. / „ t| LINLITHGOW./ J T f f i f / f lejTo be SOLD by public roup, within the Royal atcftaifee.' . r e i Coffeehouse in Edinburgh, upon Wednesday the Mth ) l t ; day of July 1314, at oiie o clock afternoon, ufflesa e_! previously disposed of by private bargain, n- T H E Lands of W H I T E H I L L , RIDX DOCHHILL. andLITTLE RIDDOCHHILL, parts of the Barony of BLACKBURN, containing 376 — acres, whereof 225 are arable. I - ALSO, ! JHtTLands nf MOSSHALL, LATCHBRAE, and ^* TlEDHEUGH, containing 153 acres, all arable, to. ' 1 liese lands lie on the line of the south Glasgow froad, immediately adjoining to, and comprehending'a i n J part of the village of Blackburn. The lands are well s's_ situated for letting and feuing. The water of Almond of PASST, S through them. There is a very thriving cotton manufactory on tbe lands. They are partly out of leas,., and the tacks of the remainder are of moderate endurance. Ile I As these lands lie contiguous, being separated only • is the w a t t : r o f Almond, they will be exposed in one ? nt i^ 1 purchasers incline. pj, For further particulars application may be made to --' Robert '"' i'sfi •""••" I"'"" in Edinburgh, or toTVle*-' t 0 .' Slider Dallas, W. S. J JJ>!;-- Mr William llaTO, at rjxtlgats, the { « Mq.* ui(, ir « directions for shewing the lands. ow! FARM1N FIFE. ^ J,, • T H E Set of the L A N D S of C O M M f t f l , i s advertised for the ' 21st Mai^ jhSvini; been un- | avoidably postponed, the r o u p a i f ^ E R E MPTORIL Y i PROCEED upon Monda^ ffiel3th Juie 181*, at 12 ; o'ehxek" noon, within diiTiouse of James Loyr, vintner J'• S^ i! jI « I ilTiur( iti. slaniI. j t r F ' W " r t h > i < f f f ^ u h " application mff be made to the | Mr A. Barclay, the presc/ t tenant, will shew the a l u j | lands. > ssesi EDINBURGH, M a y 28. 1814. i t ' r e j VALUABLE ESTA TE IN FIFE FOR SALE, dif- V). c SOLD by public roup, within the Royal Exchange [ a t Coffeehouse of Edinburgh, on Wednesday the 6th Ea'rs day of July next, if not previously sold by private lure bargain, s T H E Lands and Estate- of N O R T E H ' nd and A SOU TH KINALDIE, lying in the raphes of rate, Denino and Cameron, within three miles a0Fthe city of s-— St Andrew's, and seven of the townsj^ fAnstruther o m - and Crail. They contain 63! acres i^ Co/ s and 9 falls, : r t 0 Scots measure. A great part nf t ^ r e s t / r e consists- of ouse hne rich land, capable of produeffit any crop, and the ; o m - other part is susceptible of ga^ t imprivement; and, . the as the whole has been in pasufn- e for a/' r.- ar number of > rth, years, the purchaser, who Umv enter aI Martinmas first, , - de- v/ iII derive much adv^ ffage upon/ breaking up the.' at in grounds. ' There are i^ nvards of w acres of thriving so plantations upon t h ^ s t a t e , whicl/ are now of considerable value. / j lund Th, » lands boli^ hf the crown, ap: d, with the superionade r11y of some olwr lards in the neighbourhood, which ( Abu wh' be sold ajeiig with the esta/ e, afford two freehold | qualification The teinds are'valued, and within'a ilea- mere trifiyfif being exhausted by the stipends payable rma- to the ministers; and the whole public burdens are very nyulenue. sioii* if p/ rch is- ers incline, the estate will be divided into ffiee- two lots, one of which will consist of that part of the . rhit- huuL of South Kinaldie, amounting to 139 acres 2 roods and 38 falls, lying upon the south and south- west of ihe property ; aud the other lot will comprehend North J^ ie. ul. lie, and the whole other parts of thc estate, measiiring 491 acres 3 roods and 15 falls. ______ , Jiaj^ M » i « nJ-> anii'ulars apply to Mess. Wemyss ainel the Walker, W. y 55. George Street, Edinburgh, who will will shew a eorrc/ t plan of the estate. U » x- SALE OF LANDS IN FIFE. rasr" THE LANDS of E A S T B A L I . O , i a. outh L the parish of Falkland, lying on the soutliirf^ ciivitv of the l. ommonds, having a fine slopincjroBjrrn '. exposure, and a beailtiful and extensive^ jl^ < J the — Frith of Forth and adjacent rich couM^ y; The lands consist of about 240 acres of a gotui^ iid, moafly deep J. loamy soil, very improvable, a^ jpflwnich c a n j p done ac vZz no great expence, ubundanci^^ nimestone b# ng on the | lands, and coal in the iiM^ diate neighborhood. A I right of pasturag.', Scc^ rFr several thowiiid acres of xrr I commonty ad'] oininjpwe lands is at preynt a very con- L ' j siderable advant^ ffo the property ; apd on a division iS « ee i o t ^ l" 5 comnou^ T, a great additional / roperty must be S'*!"; acquired. Jro- ui is now making friyn Falkland to the ' M r 1 southwar^ Tvvhich is to go through the lauds, which acres wj u be, of essential service thereto. e a i ' i T'he proprietor being determined to sell, the price , and w i U be moderate, and part of it may remain in the 1 u n purchaser's hands, if he so inclines. l t For particulars $ apply to Mr Wilson, at Ballo, Hie nmas; proprietor ; Mr Kelty, at Falkland Wood ; or Mr Rei4 tin. ; lt ParbrpattfjjiRber of whom iia-. poiyjnto conclud^ fiy r d e , , s . private bjjjfelnj f J t A / I V / , raj.: ~ GREAT FORKe T BRECKNUCkT / a'ion! SO/' l'fl WALES, liiliii- j - j> 0 g0 L D j by auction, at the Castle Inn, In the town ' ° T| of Brecon, in the month of August 1814, on a< day, I of which due notice will be given, J • I T H E great Forest of B R E C K N O C J ^ o n - ^ < X taiuing above 41,000 acres of oiu^ cSute land, > 11 M . with all tie Mines, Minerals, FossjW* f^ yl) ther sub- c r oP stances, the right of soil, and otb^ KtgbtsJnil interests | therein, and royalties ove- rj^' same, Ij^ ngiiig to his g jyiajes- y in right of his c& jni. Jr Had-; i'he lands consist ojf/ uge tracts, #> me of them fit nd of forVnclosure and^ jdvation, and thjfothers proper for sheep walks, pla « Kioiis, See. Thyf lie near the Swann the sea and Neatb^ wig. ibie canals, aon within a few miles idiate ofthetowe^ ff Brecon, and wil^ be divided into lots, of abou^ rfPoo acres each, for tfle ciffivenieiict; of purlouse, chasi'j^ Tire herbage of the forest is subject to he depastured ntiakl by/ llie cattle actually lev iny- anil coucha . t o-\ certain as to' adjacerit t'armsJon plviiim/ ot^> e_ sD. stoir. ary herbage The money. J ^ J \ ^ tf^ flere. l Printed particulars aud conditions of the sala will ippor- goon be ready for delivery, at the office of the Com aid in inissioners ot his Majesty's woods, forests, and 1- a. revenue s, Whit , hall Place, R S 2 5 E *> IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT. H O U S E OF C O M M O N S , FRIDAY, JUNE 3. T h e following ii said to be an accurate sketch of the proceedings of the House, after strangers were excluded:— Mr METHUEN—" I rise, in consequence of a notice given on a former night, to call the attention of the House to the letters we have just heard from the chair, a subject, the importance of which must be generally acknowledged, however liable I may be to the imputation of preflumption in bringing it forward, unequal as I feel myself to so delicate and arduous a task. Without detaining the House by any unnecessary preamble, trusting to the case itself to make amends for the want of abilities, under which I am conscious of labouring, and hoping t i n t , without any long protestations of my motives, credit may be given me for the purity of them, desirous and endeavouring not to say any thing offensive to any one person whatever* at the same time, feeling it my undoubted right, as a member of this House, to state any fact, or give any opinion necessary to do justice to my subject, I shall proceed to read, in the first place, such parts of her Royal Highness's letter as are most important; and, in the second,, to make my own comments upon them. [ Here the letter was read, and next an extract from the minutes of council.] Upon this, Sir, the King declared his conviction of her Royal Highness's innocence, and to this point, in particular, I wish to call the attention of the House, for, after such an opinion, given from such a quarter, out of common respect for his Majesty, she had a right to expect a very different treatment, and indeed a cordial reception at court. Her royal father, the Duke of Brunswick, falling, as it must be remembered, and'lamented that he did fall, at the battle oPJena, a short time before his death of glory, wrote a letter to his daughter, assuring her of his thorough conviction of her innocence, and another to his Majesty, recommending her to his protection, arid begging him to be the defender of her injured honour; and, Sir, if this illustrious hero has still in death the power to know the destinies of a child he so dearly loved in life, must his indignant, spirit witness her the victim of sorrow, degraded, insulted, neglected, and deserted, without the splendour, without the respect, without even the degree of attention due to her rank and situation, without one tender solace of domestic happiness as a wife or as a mother to cheer the dull gloom of her retirement, • without the possibility of vindicating her character, which has been to wantonly and mysteriously attacked ? 1 could wish, Sir, that at a time when the peace of Europe is settling, that of England might have been confirmed, ar, d that r o unhallowed difference might have intruded itself on the presence of Imperial and Royal vi Cllleaxues would have been eager in their advice ^ T h e herald representing the King at Arms of to conciliate and o calm ; to proclaim the inno d c e ' cence they had so often declared ; but the reverse is- the case. The ri^ ht honourable gentleman, ajt he fctiows the King cannot contradict h i n v h i s veott& ed to throw out an insinuation, as if, in the assertion m'ade of the complete approbation, the affectionate attachment of the King, was not well grounded. The King cannot speak— and he quotes the King, to wound through his side the Princess of Wales. This is of a piece with the whole of their proceedings. I will not reseat what a noble Lord, who, be it remembered, is not a party to this advice, said on a former debate on this subject— nor the testimony given by all, o f t h e Princess's entire innocence. I maintain the King thought her so, and the Princess is so convinced. He proved he thought so by his kindness and cordial reception. When the King was well no man could have dared t » deny it. The right honourable gentleman durst not have done i t ; but if he questions the right of the Princess of Wales to appear where the King placed her, it is to be hoped that, she will, notwithstanding the moderation she has evinced, accept the advice to appear at Court, and then let us see who will advise that admittance be refused to her. As to stirring the question— I ask who has stirred it ? Is it the person who vindicates her own innocence from unjust and foul aspersions ? Who follows the example 6et her by the Prince Regent himself, in publishing to the wot Id that affected honour and character; or is it those who directed this cruel outrage, this unprovoked indignity, that has occasioned this affront? Has she complained that her near relations have been prevented from visiting her— that it has been intimated to all, that to visit her was to exclude them from the Court ? To all the in juries she has patiently borne, she has submitted in silence. Where does the burden rest of agitating the question ? Upon those who have planned and advised this indignity. One would have thought, if ever there was a period when it was an object to represent the Royal Family as united, this was now that period. The people maintain that family, not only for state and shew, but for their examples of moral and domestic virtues; what the King so uniformly shewed, and what have endeared him to his people more than any other circumstance of his reign. Let it not then be said that the Emperor of Russia finds one person whom the law does not protect, who is exposed to outrage and insult; and that person in the wife of the Prince Regent— that for one subject of the Crown there is no redress. Now, Sir, if the right honourable gentleman has not a doubt of the Princess of Wales having a right to appear at Court, the use of which she has consented at present to wave, I have only to add, that if she finds not protection in this House, the last refuge of t h e destitute and oppressed, it is to be hoped she will be advised to The possession of these isles shall b: replaced under the caXise to be sold, all that shall bel irg to it by the above 6. The Functionaries of the city of Paris, on horseback, between two rows of national guards, viz. T he Baron de Chabrol, Prefect of'the Department of the Seine, followed by the Secretary General of the Prefecture, the Mayors and Adjuncts of the city of Paris, the Members of the General and Municipal Councils, the Commissaries of Police and River Inspectors, & c. The whole was closed by a detachment of the national guards. The cavalcade proceeded successively to the Place du Catousel, the Place du Palais Bourbon, the Place du Palais Luxemburg, the Place Maubert, the Place du la Bastille, the Gate St Denis, the Place Vendome, and lastly, returned to the Place of the Hotel de Ville. At each of these stations, the herald representing the king at arms of France, made the following proclamation :— " Inhabitants of Paris!— Peace has just been concluded between France, Austria, Prussia, England, and Prussia. The treaty which cements it was signed on the 30th May. " An honourable peace, which secures in a stable manner, the repose of Europe and yours, could only have been given you by your kings. Give full scope to your joy on learning this blessing, same form as at the period of the treaty of Luneville. 6. In the department of the Boubs, the frontiers shall be drawn so as to commence above l. a Ranconniere, near the Lcell, and follow the crest of the Jura between Cerneaux Pequignot and the village of Fontenelles, so far as that summit of the Jura which lies about seven or eight miles to the north- west of the village of La Brevine, where it will turn back within the ancient limits of France. 7. In the department ofthe Leman, the frontiers between the French territory, the Pais de Vaud, and the different portions of the territory of Geneva ( which stated stipulations, within the period of three months after the division has been effected- In future, the port of Antwerp shall be solely a port of commerce. Article XVI. The high contracting parties, wishing to placO, and cause to be placed in entire oblivion the divisions which have agitated Europe, declare and promise, that, in the countries restored and ceded hy the present treaty, no individual, of whatever class or condition, shall be prevented, harassed, or disturbed, ill his person or property, under any pretext, or for his attachment either to any of the contracting parties, or to shall make a part of Switzerland), remain as they were] governments which have ceased to exist, or for any before the incorporation of Geneva with France. But the canton of Erangy, that of St Julien ( with exception of that part lying to the' north of a line to be drawn from the point where the river of La I. aire enters near Chancey into the Genevese territory, along the borders of Sesseguin, I, aconex, and Sesenouve, which shall remain without the limits of France), the canton ofRegnier ( with exception of that portion which lies eastward of a line following the borders of the Muraz, Bussy, Pers, and Cornier, which shall be without the French limits), and the Canton of La P. oche ( with exception of the places named l. a Roche and Armanay with their districts) shall rest with France. The frontier shall follow the limits of those different cantons and the lines separating those portions which France retains from those which she gives up. 8. In the department of Mont Blanc, France shall which alreadyt rea. l izes a p' art of that ha. p p. i ne. ss tw. h. ich o, lb/, tna inn llhtho e subprefHec.. t ul rHe noefr ,, Cf- ih amSbt ePrlyP IT( wP idth'A neixircneVp-. • itors, to quench the flame of enthusiasm, and assert her rigHt, and, however reluctantly, to Check the full tide of gratitude flowing towards dare the advisers o f t h e Regent directly to exethose to whom, under Providence, we are so signally indebted. Under all circumstances, her Royal Highness, to use her own words, is entitled to be found guilty, or treated as innocent. She has a right to claim this, which is the common birth- right of the English ; she has a right to claim it as a subject, a fellow- creature, as the wife of the Prince Regent, and as the mother of our future Queeri. I shall now beg leave to tlv. nk. il. v- Kou. » ior its indulgence, hoping the right honourable gentleman, though he refused to answer my question on a former occasion, will make some attempt to justify the case of which I complain ; and I call upon him or any other gentleman, in or out of this House, if they know any thing against her Royal Highness, to come forward and declare it. She is willing, if proved guilty, to be considered so ; but if not, • he has a right to be treated as innocent. I now beg leave to move the address :— " That an humble address be presented to his Royal Highness the Prince Regent, to pray his Royal Highness that he will be graciously pleased to acquaint this House by whose advice his Royal Highness was induced to form the " fixed and unalterable determination never to meet her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales upon any occasion, either in private or public," as communicated by his Royal Highness to her Majesty, together with the reasons submitted to his Royal Highness, upon which such advice was founded." Mr MARTIN seconded the motion. Mr BATIIURST paid a tribute to the motives of the mover, but he had urged no argument to induce the House of Commoas to agree to the motion. Out of all the papei s that are now before the House, he had used only the letter from the Princess of Wales to the Regent; surely it " was not for the letter that the Ministers were to be responsible. The main object of the motion was to know why the Princess of Waies was prevented being at Court ? Will Parliament call upon the Regent to declare who advised him not to See the Princess? The honourable gentleman indulged himself in speeches about liberty, as if it were a question where liberty was connected. As for the charges of guilt, they were irresistibly refuted at a former period. In other periods of our history dissentions were carried on between different members of the royal family, to a greater excess than at present, and yet Parliament was not called on to interfere. He . concluded by opposing the motion. Mr WHITEHEAD.— The speech of the right honourable gentleman in defence of the advice hehas given, has been like the advice itself— special, minute, wavering— assuming ar ght— a right t o exclude, and acting as if he were conscious the party - advised had no such right. Sir, I maintain that a great indignity, a harsh disgrace, a cruel and unmerited punishment, has been inflicted on'an innocent person, on a subject o f t he Crown— who was by that Crown protected as long ar. it had moral and mental life and energy to protect her. At one time the right honourable gentleman shrunk frora the con. est— he divestetf himself of allresponsbiiity—- he was ashamed ot his own act And deed— of the advice that he has given. The Sovereign and Crown was lelt by him to trample upon any subject— to gratify its own .. unadvised - and unconfirmed vindictive resentm^ ts. Yet at the end of hit, epetcli he lets us know that the Sovereign powet did not act for i- self. That there were advisers , •— that he could name them, could give them up , if the House should call upon him so to do. Let them come forth ! He has treated this as being only an exclusion from- an assembly— from a fete, but a positive exclu- ion the advisers dared not warrant-— that was a proceeding too manly, i t was - in affront to be operated through the Queen, consort ot that Monarch, who, when the King had the- use of his faculties, had command ed her to rese- ve the princess ot Wales' at her Court, as the symbol of her entire innocence— oi her complete icquittal. - This reception continued till the King's indisposition; arid then the Re-.'- ent was advised to employ - the Queen, his mother, to banish the; Princess of Wales from Court. Could fhi » advice have been risked had t h e - R i n g mentally existed? Oh, no!— He should have thought that gentleman and his cute their intentions, Mr STEWART WORTLEY could not vote for the motion, because it was not proved that there had been any right infringed; but he should be very sorty if by any vote of his he should be supposed to sanction a proceeding that carried with it great and a grievous hardship.- He would ask if the Court was to be considered as a common assembly ? and is it fit that one peison should be there excluded, mer. ely at the will of another, for reasons of which he alone is to judge ? Mr PONSONBY could not vote for the motion, which he considered as singularly unparliamentary and unprecedented. Though he felt this as to the motion, yet no one lamented more than himself the letter sent, by the Queen to the Princess of Wales. He had hoped that he had contributed to settle for ever, last year, this calamitous and disgraceful subject. All that has however followed, on the part of the Princess, was most natural. Is there a man, having the feelings of a man, who would not feel for a woman in distress ? Though he objected to the motion, yet he saw a course, which, if followed, he would give it his support. There is a general opinion that this subject ought to be put at rest, and if the honourable gentleman would prepare a question, agreeable to parliamentary forms, to put ah end to the discussion, he, for one, would support him. Mr ELLIOT felt compelled to vote against, the motion ; yet anxious that his vote should not be misunderstood or misconstiued into any approbation of the advice given to the R e g e n t ; he condemned it as most cruel to one illustrious person and most injurious to the other. Mr WYNNE objected to the motion, and would not be a party to any pledge to support any future proposition upon the subject. He regretted and disapproved all that has passed, but did not see how the House could interfere. Mr METHUEN proposed to Mr Ponsonby to shape some motion for him to attain the object proposed. Mr TIERNEY.— There is nothing more fair than the proposition of the honourable gentleman, and he trusted that the right honourable gentleman, seeing what is the feeling of the House with respect to his colleagues, so that, before the next drawing- room, some sound advisers shall have found their way to the Regent, to induce him to withdraw the prohibition ; if not, he should think it a disgrace to the House of Commons to separate without doing something, after the letter addressed to the Speaker, whicli had been this day read. Mr METHUEN' rose again and said, that he trusted that the recommendation of the right honourable gentleman would be attended to, and in the persuasion that something effectual would be done, he would consent to with diaw his present niotion, with the understanding that he would bring the question forward again, in some shape which the experience of the t ight honourable gentleman and his friends might suggest, as more eligible than the present, if the necessity of the ca6e should unhappily disappoint his hopes, and compel the interference of parliament. FRENCH PAPERS. Paris, June 1. The neace was yesterday announced to tbe inhabitants of Paris. T h e Matquis of Dreux- BreZc, Grand Master of the Ceremonies of France, gave oiders, in presence of the Municipal Body, to the herald repteseniing the king at arms of France to proclaim it. The cavalcade was formed in the square of the Hotel de Ville, whence it set out in the following o r d e r :— awaits us under the paternal government of the Prince whom Providence has restored to us."— Vive le Roi ! Vive les Bourbons ! Crowds of people every where pressed around the cavalcade ; never were the testimonies of public joy more universal ; and the incessant shouts of Vive It Roi! Vive les Bourbons! proved, that the satisfaction of the Parisians for an event so fortunate could only be equalled by their love to their Sovereiga. TREATY OF PEACE. IN THE NAME OE THE MOST HOLY AND UNDIVIDED TRINITY. His Majesty the King of France and Navarre, on the one part, and his Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, and his allies on the other, being animated by an _- qual wish to put an end to the long agitations of Europe, and to the calamities of nations, by a solid peace, founded on a just distribution of force between the powers, and containing in its stipulations the guarantee of its duration ; and his Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, and his allies, no longer wishing to exact from France, at the present moment, when being replaced under the paternal government of.. her Kings, she thus offers to Europe a pledge of security and stability, conditions and guarantees which they had to' demand with regret under her late government; their said Majesties have appointed plenipotentiaries to discuss, conclude, and sign a treaty of peace and friendship ; that is to say :— His Majesty the King of France and Navarre, M. Charles MauriceTalleyrand Perigorde, Prince of BeneVento, Grand Eagle of the Legion of Honour, Grand Cross of the order of Leopold of Austria; Knight of the order of St Andrew of Russia, ot the orders of the Black and Red Eagle of Prussia, & c. his Minister and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs ; and his Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, M. M. Prince Clement Wencesla's. Lothaire, of Metternich Winneburgh Ochsenlrausen, Knight of the Golden Fleece, Grand Cross of the order cf St Stephen, Grand Eagle o f t h e Legion of Honour, Knight of the Russian orders of St Andrew, St Alexander Neusky, and St Anne, o f t h e 1st class, Knight Grand Cross o f t h e Prussian orders of the Black tion of the cantons de l'Hospital, St Pierre d'Abigny, La Rocette and Montmelian,) the subprefecture ot Annecy ( with exception of that part of the canton of Faverges, situated to the east of a line passing between Oureehaise and Marlens on the French side, and Marthod and Ugino on the opposite side, and which then follows the crest of rhe mountains to the Iror. tiers of the canton of Thones.) This line, with the limits of the afore- named cantons, shall constitute the new frontier on. this side. On the side of the Pyrenees, the frontiers remain as they were, between the two kingdoms of France and Spain, on the 1st of January 1792. There shall be appointed on the part of both, a mutual commission to arrange their final demarcation France renounces all claims of sovereignty, supremacy, and possession, over all the countries, districts, towns, and places whatsoever, situated without the aboye stated frontier. The principality of Monaco is rep- laced in the same situation as on the 1st of January 1792, The allied Courts assure to France the possession of the principality of Avignon, the Venaissin, the county of Montbeliard, and all the enclosed districts once belonging to Germany, comprised within the above indicated frontier, which had been incorporated with France before or after the 1st of January 1792. The powers preserve mutually the full ripht to fortify whatevir point of their states they may judge fitting lor their safety. To avoid all injury to private property, and to protect, on the most liberal principles, the possessions of individuals domiciliated on the frontiers, there shall he named, by each of the states adjoining to France, com missioners, to proceed jointly with French commissioners, to the demarcation of their respective boundaries.: So soon as the office of these commissioners shall be completed, instruments shall be diawu up, signed by them, and posts erected to murk the mutual limits. Article IV. To secure the communication of the town of Geneva with the other parts of the- Swiss territory on the Lake, France consents, ti- at the roads by Versoy shall he common to the two countries. The respective Governments will have an amicable understanding on the means of preventing smuggling, the regulation of the posts, and the maintenance of the road. Article V. The navigation > of the Rhine, from the point where it becomes navigable to tbe sea and hack, shall be free, so as to be interdicted to no person. Principles shall be laid down at a future Congress, for the collection ot the duties by the states on the Banks, in the manner most equal and favourable to the commerce of all nations, other cause, unless for debts contracted to individuals, or for acts posterior to the present treaty. Article XVII. In all the countries, which mayor shall change masters, as well in virtue ofthe present treaty as of arrangements to be made in consequence thereof, the inhabitants, both natives and foreigners, of what ever class or condition, shall be allowed a space of six years, reckoning from the exchange of the ratifications, in order to dispose, it they think proper, of their property, whether acquired before or during the present war, and to retire to whatever country they please. Article XV III. The allied powers, wishing to give his most Christian Majesty a new proof of their desire to cause to disappear as much as lies in their power, the consequences of the period of calamity so happily terminated by the present peace, renounce in toto, the sums which the Government had to re- demand of France, by reason of any contracts, supplies, or ad rigord, Prince of Banevent ful supta); and for Russia, by M. M. Count Rasomouffsky, privy counsellor of bis Majesty the Emperor of all the Russias, Knight of th « Orders of St Andrew, St Alexander Newsky, Grand* Cross of that of St. Wolodimir of the first class; and Charles Robert Count Nesselrodc, privy counsellor of his said Majesty, Chamberlain, Secretary of State, Knight of the Order ot St Alexander Newsky, Grami Cross of that ot St. Wolodimir of the second class. Grand Cross of the Order of Leopold of Austria, of that of tbe Red liagle of Prussia, of the Polar Star of Sweden, and of the Golden Eagle of Wurtemberg. The treaty between France and Great Britain : For France, hy M. Charles Miurice Talleyrand Perigord, Prince of Benevent ( ut supra) ; And for Great Britain, by the right honourable Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh, Privy Counsellor of his Majesty tbe King of the united kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Member of his Parliament,' Colonel of the regiment of Londonderry Militia, and his principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, & c, George Gordon, Earl of Aberdeen, Viscount Formartin, Lord Haddo, Tarvis, and Kellie, & c. one of the 16 Scots Peers, Knight ofthe most ancient order of the Thistle, and his Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to his Imperial, Royal, and Apostolic Majesty; William Shaw Catheatt, Viscnuflt Cathcart, Baron Cathcart and Greenock,' Counsellor of his said Majesty, Knight of the order of the Thistle, and of several vances whatsoever, made to the French Government in Russian orders, General in his. - armies, and his Ambasthe different wars which have taken place since 1792 j sador Extraordinary and I" ' His most Christian Majesty, on his side, every claim which he might make on the allied powers on similar grounds. In execution of this article, the high contracting parties engage mutually to give up all titles, bonds, and documents, relating to debts which they have reciprocally renounced. Article XIX. ' The French Government engages tn cause to be liquidated and paid all sums which it shall find itself bound in duty to pay in countries beyond its territories, in virtue of contracts or other formal engagements entered into between individuals or private establishments, and the French authorities, both for supplies and legal obligations. Article Xj£. The high contracting powers, immediately after the exchange of the ratifications of the present treaty, will appoint commissaries to regulate and effectuate the execution of the whole of the measures contained in articles XVIII. and XIX. These commissaries shall tmploy themselves in the examination ofthe claims mentioned in the preceding article, of the liquidation of the su. ms claimed, and of the mode which the French Government shall propose for paying them. T hey shall also be charged with the giving up of the titles, obligations, and documents, relative to fhe debts which the high contracting powers mutually renounce, in such way that the ratification of the result of their labours shall complete this reciprocal renunciation Article XXI. The debts specially hypothecated in their origin on the countries which cease to belong to France, or contracted for their paternal administration, shall remain a charge on these same countries. An account shall in consequence be kept for the French Government, commencing with the 22d December 1813, of such of those debts as have been converted into inscriptions in the great book of the public debt of France. The titles of all such as have not been prepared for the inscription, nor have been yet inscribed, . shall be given up to the governments of the respective countries. Statements of all these debts shall be drawn up by a mixed commission. - Article XXII. The French Government, on its side," shall remain charged with the repayment of nil the sums paid by the subjects of the above- mentioned countries into the French chests, whether under the head cautionments, deposits, or- consignmehts. In like manner French subjects, servants of the said countries, who have paid sums under the head of cautionments, deposits or consignments, into their respective treasuries, shall be faithfully reimbursed. Articles XXIII. The titulars of places subjected to ca » tionment, who have not the handling ofthe money, ' Extraordinary renounces j the Emperor of Russia. Plenipotentiary to his Majesty It shall also be inquired and ascertained at the same j shall he repaid with interest, until the full payment Congress, in what mode, for the purposes of more fa- I Paris, by fifths and annually, commencing from the cile communication, and rendering nations continually | date of the present p- eaty. less strangers to each other, this disposition may be ex- With regard to those who are accountable, the paytended to all rivers that in their navigable course sepa- I ment shall take plare, at the latest, six months after the rate or traverse different states. j presentation of their accounts, the case of malversation Articles VI. Holland, placed under the sovereignty alone excepted. A copy of the last account shall be of the House of Orange, shall receive ail increase of; transmitted to the government of their country, to and Red Eagle, Grand Cross of the order o f ' f c territory. The title, and the exercise of its sovereignty cannot, under any circumstance, belong to a Prince wearing, or designated to wear, a foreign crown. ' The German states shall be independent, and united serve it for information, and as a starting point. Article XXIV. The judicial deposits and consignments made into the chest of the sinking fund, in execution of the law of the 28th Nivolse, year 13 ( 18th of January 1805), and which belong. to the inhabitants of - . Independent Switzerland shall continue under its the countries which France ceaSes to possess, shall he St Joseph of WurtzbUrg, Knight ot t h f o r a e i j o w j i government. Italy, without the limits of the - restore. d within a year, dating from the exchange of the of St Hube r t , of Bftvaria, of Wat of tjie & oldlcotMitries, lwh! ch i shall return to A* u- s— tri- a , shall ' b e com- Eagle ofWurtemberg, and many others , Clum- ^ i f m l & S o f Malta and it, dependencies berlain, actual Privy Counsellor, Minister of to his State, of Conferences, and for Foreign Affairs, of his Imperial, Royal, and Apostolic Majesty ; and Count John Philippe de Stadion Thannhausen and Warthausen, Knight of the Golden Fleece, grind cross of the order of St Stephen, Knight of the Russian oiders of St Andrew, St Alex anderNeusky, and St Anne of the first class, Grand Cross of the Prussian orders of the Black and Red Eagle, Chamberlain, Privy Counsellor, Minister of State and Conferences to his Imperial, Royal, and Apostolic Majesty ; who after exchanging their full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed upon the following articles :— Article I. There shall be, reckoning from this date, peace and friendship between his Majesty the King of France and Navarre, on the one part, and his Majesty the Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, and his allies, on the other part, their hehs and successors, their respective states and subjects in perpetuity. The high contracting parties shall apply all their cares to maintain, not only between themselves, hut also as far as depends oti them between all the states of Europe, the good agreement and understanding so necessary to its repot- e. Article II. The kingdom of France preserves the integrity of its limits, Jiuch as they existed at the period of the 1st of January 1792. It shall receive besides an shall belong, in full possession and sovereignty Britannic Majesty. Article VIII. His Britannic Majesty, stipulating for ratifications of the present treaty, int ® the hands of the authorities of the said countries, with the exception of such deposits and consignments as French subjects are interested in ; in which case, they shall remain in the chest of the sinking fund, not to be restored but on proofs resulting from the decisions of the competent himself and his allies, engages to restore to his most j authorities. Christian Majesty, within periods afterwards to be fix- ArticleXXV. The funds deposited by the communes ed, the colonies, fisheries, factories, and establishments! and public establishments in tiie chest of service and in of every kind which France possessed on the 1st of Ja-! the chest of the sinking fund, or any other government nuary 1792, in the sea or on the continents of America, j chest, shall be repaid to them by fifths from year to Africa, and Asia, with the exception, nevertheless, of year, reckoning from the date of the present treaty, the islands of Tobago, St Lticia, and the Isle of France j with the deduction of advances which shall have been and its dependencies, namely, Rodrigue and the Sechcl- made to them, and saving the regular claims made les, all which his most Christian Majesty cedes, in full property and sovereignty, to his Britannic Majesty, as also that part of St Domingo ceded to France, by the peace, of Basle, and which his most Christian Majesty retrocedes to his Catholic Majesty, in full property and sovereign t- y. Article IX. His Majesty the King of Sweden and Norway, in consequence of arrangements entered into with his allies, and for the execution of the preceding article, consents that the island of Gu- adaloupe he restored to his most Christian Majesty, and cedes all the rights which he might have to that island. Article X. His most faithful Majesty, in consequence of arrangements entered into with his allies, engages to restore to his most Christian Majesty, within a perind hereafter fixed, French Guyana, such as it was on the 1st of January 1792- The effect of the above stipulation being to revive the dispute existing at that period as to limits, it is agreed that the said dispute should be terminated by an amicable arrangement, under the mediation of his Britannic Majesty. Article XI. The fortresses and forts existing In the colonies to be restored to his most Christian Majesty, in t . - _ — T V J -\ r . • • And the honourable Charles William Stewart, Knight ofthe most honourable order of the Bath, Member of his Parliament, Knight of the Prussian orders of the Black and Red Eagle, and of many others, and his Envoy Extraordinary, and Minister Plenipotentiary tu his Majesty the King of Prussia. The treaty between France and Prussia :— For France, by C. M. Talleyrand Perigorde, Prince of Benevent fuf supra.) And for Prussia by M M. Charles Augustus Baron Hardenherg, Chancellor of State to his Majesty the King of Prussia, Knight of the orders of the Black and Re'd Eagle, and of many other orders, and Charles Wtl - liam Baron Homboldt, Minister of Sta'e of his". s. ii< l Majesty, and Envoy Extraordinary jind.. Minister Plenipotentiary to his imperial, Royal, and Apostolic M » , jesty. With the following additional a r t i c l e s ;— 1 ARTICLE ADDITIONAL TO THE TREATY WITH RUSSIA. " 1 lie duchy of Warsaw having heen under the administration of a provisional couucil, established by Russia, ever since that country was occupied by her arms, the two high contracting parties have agreed to appoint immediately a special commission, composed on botU sides of an equal number, of commissaries, who shall be charged with the examination and liquidation of their I'ttspefti've claims, and all the arrangements relative thereto. The present additional article shall have the same, force and effect, as if inserted verbatim in the patent treaty of this date. It shall be ratified, and the ratifications exchanged at the same time. In testimony whereof, the respective plenipotentiaries have signed the same, and affixed thereto the seal of their arms. Done at Paris, this 50th day of May 1814. ( 1- S.) The Prince of BENKVF. NT. ( I - S ) ANDREW Count RASUMOUFFSKY. . ( L. S.) CHAs. ROBERT Count NESSEl. RODi.', ARTICLES ADDITIONAL TO THE TREATY WITlf GREAT BRITAIN. Article I. His most Christian Majesty, participating without reserve in all the sentiments of his Britannic Majesty, relative to a species of commerce, which is equally repugnant to the principles of natural justice, and the lights of the times in which we live, engages to unite, at a future congress, all his efforts to those of his Britannic Majesty, in order to cause all the powers of Christendom to proclaim the abolition of tbe slave trade, in such manner that the said trade may cease universally, as it shall cease definitively, and in i ll events, on the part of France, within a period of five years, and that besides, pending the duration of th. s period no trader in slaves shall be at liberty to import or sell them elsewhere, but in the colonies of the state to which he belongs. Article II. The British Government and the French Government will- immediately appoint commissaries to liquidate their respective expences for the maintenance of prisoners of war, for the purpose of coming to an arrangement on the manner of paying off the balance which shall be found in favour of either of tbe two powers. Article TIL The prisoners of war respectively shall be bound to discharge, before their departure from the place of their detention, the private debts which they may have there contrasted, or at leasl to give satisfactory security. Article IV. There shall be on both sides, immediately after the ratification of the present treaty, a removal of the sequestration which, since the year 1792, may have been placed on the funds, revenues, debts, and all other effects whatever of the high contracting powers, or af their subjects. The same commissaries mentioned in article 2.. « haIJ employ themselves in the examination and liquidation of the claims of his Biitannic Majesty upon the French Government, for the value of property, moveable or immoveable, unduly confiscated by the French authorities, as well as for the total or partial loss of their debts or other property, unduly detained under ^ equestratwn since the year 1792. , France engages to treat in this respect the subjects of England with the same justice that the subjects' of France have experienced in England ; and the English augmentation of territory comprised within the line of jvirtue of articles VIII. IX. and X. shall be given up in the state in which they shall be at the time of the signature of the present treaty. Article XII. His Britannic Majesty engages to cause the subjects of his most Christian Majesty t*> enjoy, in regard to commerce and the security of their persons and properties, within the limits of the British sove reignty on the continent of India, the same facilities, privileges, and protection, which are at present granted to the most favoured nations. On his side, bis most Christian Majesty having nothing more at heart than the perpetuity of the peace betwt- en the two Crowns ol France and England, and wishing to contribute, as much as in him lies, to remove henceforward such points of contract between the two nations as might one day alti r a good mutual understanding, engages not to erect any work of fortification in tiie establishments to be restored to him, and which are situated within the limits of British sovereignty on the demarcation fixed by the following article : Article III. On the side of Belgium, Germany, and Italy, tbe ancient frontier, such as it existed on the Jst January 1792, shall- be re- established, the same commencing from the North Sea. between Dunkirk and Newport, even unto the Mediterranean between Cagnes and Nice, with the following rectifications.— 1, In tbe department of leniappes, the cantons of Dot » r, Merbes- le- C'hateau, Beaumont, and Cliimay, shall remain to France; the line of demarcation, where it touches the canton of Donr, shall pass between that canton and those of Boussu and Paturage, as well as, farther on, between that of Merbes- le- Chateau, and those of Binch and Thuin. 2. In the department of the Sambre and Meuse, the cantons of Valcourt, Florennes, Beauraing, and Gedume, shall belong to France; the demarcation, upon reach ing this department, shall follow the line which sepa rates the fore- mentioned cantons from the department continent of India, and to place in those establishments - r i i - * . i.— u Qpjy t j, e n u m 5 e r uf troops necessary for the maintenance ot the police. Article XIII. As to the French right of fishery on of Jemappes, and from the rest of that of the Sambre and Meuse. 3. In the department of the Moselle, the new demarcation where it differs from the old, shall be formed by | the grand bank of Newfoundland, on the coasts of the a line to be drawn from Perle. as far as Fremersdorf, or by that which separates the canton of Tholey from Uie rest of the department of the Moselle. 4. In the department of the Sarre, rhe cantons of Saarbruck and Arnwal, shall remain to France, as well isle of. that name and the adjacent isles, and in the Gulph of St Lawrence, every thing shall be restored to the same footing as in 179* 2. Article XIV. The colonies, factories, and establishments to be restored to his most Christian Majesty by upon thesf funds by creditors of the said communes and public establishments. Article XXyi. Dating from the 1st of January 1814, the French Government ceases to be charged with the payment of any pension, civil, military, or eeclcsiastical, pension of retirement, or half pay, to any individual, who is no longer a French subject. Article XXVII. The national domains acquired for a valuable consideration by French subjects, in the ci- „ , , . . . ° devant departments of Belgium, the left bank ofthe Government wishing, on us p a r t t o concur in this new Rhine and of the Alps, without the ancient limits of '" timony that the allied powers have given to his most France, are and remain guaranteed to the purchasers. ^ h ™ " ™ Majesty, of their desire to remove entirely Article XXVIII. The abolition of the droits d'au- t,?. e consequences of the epoch of misfortune, so liapbaine, detraction, and others of the same nature, in the P" y terminated by the pres. nt peace engages on us countries which reciprocally stipulated it with France, SK! e. ( a \ s 0 0 n « complete justice shall be done to it » or which had been antecedently annexed to it, is expressly confirmed. Article XXIX. The French Government engages to cause to be restored the obligations and other titles which shall have been seized in the provinces occupied hy the French armies or administrations, and in cases where restitution cannot be made, these obligations and titles are and remain annihilated. Article XXX The sums which shall be due for all works of public utility not yet terminated, or terminated posterior to the 31st of December 1812, on the subjects), to renounce the whole amount of the excess which may be found in its favour, relative to the maintenance of the prisoners of war, so that the ratification of the result of the labours of the undersigned commissioners, and the payment of the sums, as also the restitution of the eflecss which shall be adjudged to belong to the subjects of his Britannic Majesty, shall render i' « renunciation complete. Article V. The two high contracting powers, desirous to establish the most amicable relations between their respective subjects, reserve to themselves a pro- Rhiiie, and in the departments detached from France ! n? i s e t 0 come to an understanding and arrangement as by the present treaty, shall pass to the charge of future! s? 911. a s possible, on their commercial interests, with as that part of the canton of J. ebach which is situated to his Britannic Majesty or his allies, shall be given up, tbe south of a line to be drawn along the confines of the : y[ z. those in the seas of the north, or in the seas and on villages of Herchcnbach, Uebtchosen, Hillsbach, andjthe continents of America and Africa, within three Hall ( leaving those different places, . without the French I montfts, and those beyond the Cape of Good Hope frontier) to the point where, taken from. Querselle, | within six months, after the ratification ofthe present ( which belongs to France) the line which separates, treatv. the cantons of Arnwal and Otweiler, reaches that which I Article XV. The high contracting parties having reseparates those of Arnwal and Lebach; the frontier on { served to themselves, by the 4th article of the eonver.- this side shall be formed by the line above marked out, and then by that which separates the canton of Amwal from that of Bliescastel. 5. The fortress of Landau having prior to tbe year 1792, formed an insulated point in Germany, France retains beyond her frontiers a part of the departments of Mont Tonnerre and the Lower Rhine, in order to join the fortress of Landau and its district to the rest of the kingdom. Tbe new demarcation proceeding from the point where, at Obersteinbach ( which remains without tbe French frontier), the frontier enters the department of the Moselle, and that of Mont Tonnerre, joins the department of the Lower Rhine, shall follow the line which separates the cantons of Weissenburgh and Bergzabern ( on the side of France) from'the cantons of Pirmasens, Dalm, and Anweiler ( on the side of Germany) fo tbe point where these limits, near the village of Wohnersheim, touch the ancient district of the fortress of . Landau. Of this district, which remains as it was in 1792, the new frontier shall follow the arm of the river Queich, which, in leaving this district near Queicheim ( which rests with France), passes near the villages of Merienheim, Kniltelsheini, and Bclheim 1. A de- aebment of horse national guards. ( also remaining French) to the Rhine, which thence 9. Twelve companies selected from the 12 legions of] continues the boundary^ between France and Germany. foot, national guards. | As to the Rhine, the Thalveg, or course ot the river, 3.' A detachment of sappers and firemen of the city! 6ball form the boundary ; th. e changes, however, which of Paris. : may occur in the course of the river, shall have no 4 The Heralds at Arms on horseback. ! c l K c t o n t ! l e r r oPt ' r tyo f the isles which are found there. tion of April 25, the regulation in tbe present definitive treaty of peace, of tbe fate of the arsenals and vessels of war, armed and not armed, which are in maritime fortresses, surrendered by France in execution of article Zd. of the said convention, it is agreed that the said vessels and ships of war, armed and not armed, as also the naval artillery, the naval stores, and all the materials of construction and armament, shall be divided bepossessors of the territory, and shall be liquidated by the commission charged with the liquidation of the debts of the districts. Article XXXI. All archieves, charts, plans, and documents whatsoever, belonging to the countries ceded, and connected with their administration, shall be faithfull) restored at the same time with the countries,-^ or, if that be impracticable, within a period not more than six months after the surrender of the said countries. This stipulation is applicable to archieves, charts, and plans, which may have been carried off, in countries for the moment occupied by the different armies. Article XXXII. Within a period of two months, all the powers, who have b. en engaged oil both sides in the present war, shall send plenipotentiaries to Vienna, in order to regulate, in a general congress, the arrangements necessary for completing the dispositions of the present treaty. Article XXXUI. The present treaty shall be ratified, and the ratifications exchanged within a fortnight, or sooner, if practicable. in testimony whereof, the respective plenipotentiaries have signed the same, and affixed thereto the seal of their arms. Done at Paris, this 30th of May, in the year of our Lord 1814. ( L. S.) Signed) The Prince of BENEVENT. ( i - S.) - The Prince of ME'ITERNICH. J. P. Count STADION. the intention of encouraging and augmenting the prosperity of their respective states. The present additional articles shall have the same force and validity, as if they had been inserted in those words in the treaty of this day. They shall be ratified, and the ratifications shall be exchanged at tlie same time. In faith of which, the respective plenipotentiaries have sailed them, and affixed the seal of their arms. Done at Paris, the 30th of May, in the year of gra; e, 1814. ( Signed) The Prince of BENEVEN 1'. ( Signed) CASTLEREAGH. ( Signed) ABERDEEN. ( Signed) CATHCART. ( Signed) CHARLES STEWART, l. ieutenant- General. ( L. S.) ADDITIONAL ARTICLE. The high contracting parties, wishing to efface all traces of the u:. fortunate events which have weighed heavily on their people, have agreed explicitly to annul the effects of the treaties of 1S0S and 1809, in as far as . they are not already actually annulled by the present treaty. In consequence of this declaration, his most Christian Majesty engages that tlje decrees Issue.! against French, or reputed French subjects, being, or having been in the service of his Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty, shall remain without effect, as well as the tween France and the country where the fortresses are judgments which may have been passed in execution of situated, in the proportion of two- thirds to France, and j those decrees. one- third to the powers to whom such fortresses shall i Tbe present additional article shall have the same appertain. j force and effect as if it had been inserted in the patent ' The vessels and ships which are building, and which [ treaty of this date. It shall be ratified, and the ratifishall not be ready for launching in six weeks after the cation shall be exchanged at the same time. In test!- treaty, shall be considered as materials, and as! mony whereof, the respective plenipotentiaries have vided ill the proportion above assigned, after i signed it, and affixed thereto the seal of their arms. Done at Paris, this 30th May 1814. ( Signed) ( L. S.) The Prince of BENEVENT. ( L. S.) The Prince of METTERNICH. ( L. S.) Count STADION. The same day, at the same time and place, the same treaty of definitive peace was concluded— betweenFrance and Russia; betweenFrar; ce and Great Britian ; between France and Pruspresent such divided being taken to pieces. Commissaries shall be mutually appointed to arrange the division, and draw up a statement ' thereof, and passports shall be given by the allied powers, to secure the return to France of the French workmen, seamen'; and agents. The vessels and arsenals existing in the maritime fortresses which shall have fallen into the power of tho allies, anterior to the 23d of April, are not included in the above stipulations, nor the vessels and arsenalsi s ; 3 . ancJ gio- ned fwleeht ich belonged to Holland, and in particular the Texeli ",!-,, ' ° , rl" k" The French Government bir. ds itself to withdraw, or ADDITIONAL ARTICLE OF THE TREATY WITH' PRUSSIA. Although the treaty of peace concluded at Bade, the 5 th of April 1795; that of Tilsit, ofthe 9th July 1807; ' the convention of Paris, of the 20th of September 180R, ^ as well as all the conventions and acts whatsoever, concluded since the peace of Baile between Prussia and France, are already, In fact, annulled by the present treaty, the high contracting parties have judged it, nevertheless, proper to declare again exprc- Ssly, that the said treaties cease to be obligatory, both in the articles that are expressed and those that are secret; and that they mutually renounce every right, and disengage themselves of every obligation which might result from them. His most Christian Majesty promises, that the decrets issued against French, or reputed French subjects, being or having been ill the service of his Prussian Majesty, shall remain without effect; as also the - judgments which have been given in the execution of those decrees. t T he present additional article shall have the same force and validity as if it had been inserted in those words in the treaty of this day. It shall be ratili<- it,- » i: J the- ratifications'shall be exchanged at the s.^. etime — In faith of which the respective plenipotentiaries havti signed it, and affixed the seal of their arms. Done at Paris, the 30th of May, in the year of our I. ord 1814. The Prince of EENEVENT, CHARLES AUGUSTUS, Baron of HARDENBURGI- 1. CHARLESWILI. IAM, Baron de HUMBOLDT* The treaty between France and Russia : For France, by M. Charles Maurice Talleyrand Pe- LONDON JUNE 6. Lord and Lady CASTLEREAGH, with thei suit, arrived in town on Saturday. His Lord-/' ship left General BLUCIIER at Boulogne, wh/> preferred remaining there, in order to accompany the King of PRUSSIA to England, ^ , AEIUVAL OP THE FMPEROR OF RUSSIA AND KIN'G OF PRUSSIA. Half past 12 o'clock. T h e telegraph has just announced the following :— « The Emperor of RUSSIA, King of PRUSSIA, with their 6uits, landed at Dover this morning, and are expected in town in a few hours." T h e general illumination for peace is to take place on the day of its being proclaimed, when a grand procession of heralds, & c. will attend, as on former occasions, and at which, it is most probable, the Emperor of RUSSIA and the Kin? of PRUSSIA will appear. A day of thanksgiving will also be appointed. On Saturday, Princess CHARLOTTE visited the Princess of WALES, at Connaught- house. The Archduchess MARIA LOUISA arrived at the Palace of Schoenbrun, near Vienna, on the 20th of May. The Archduke CHARLES, and the other members of the Imperial family, were in readiness to receive her. On Saturday morning the Clinker, Captain TULLIDGE, arrived at Portsmouth from Bourdeaux, whence she sailed on Saturday se'ennight. By her we learn, that the first division of the British army, intended for America, had embarked on board the ships of war in the Garonne, and was to sail on Tuesday last. The regiments were 5th, 27th, 28th, 40th, 44th ( 2 d battalion,) ' 57th light infantry, 58th, 60th ( 5 t h battalion rifle,) 87th ( 2d battalion,) 80th; 88th, and artillery, amounting, in the whole, to about 8000 men, under the command of Generals KEMPT, ROSS, and ROBINSON. The ship they embarked in ( which have no doubt since sailled) were The Royal Oak, Rear- Admiral Malcolm, Captain JI. Dix; Ajax, Captain Otway; Warspite, Lord James O'Brien; Rippon, Sir Christopher Cole ; Vengeur, Captain Ricketts; York, Captain Schomberg ( of the line, with their lower- deck guns out); Dictator, Diadem, Traave, Weser, and Thames, armee en flute; Menelaus, Pactolus, Thais, and Lightning frigates; Rover, Dispatch, and Royalist sloops of war | the De vastation and Meteor bombs. The troops embarked in the highest spirits | their superior state of discipline and courage in the field has long been the admiration of their • Own officers. Viscount KEITH superintended their embarkation himself. His flag was fly. ing in the Podargus sloop, lying it Bourdeaux. Sir HARRY NEALE was also in the Garonne. The Queen Charlotte and Boyne were in Basque Roads. The second division of the army, which would comprise 600 cavalry, was to commence embarking on the lst day of June. This division, also, it was expected, would consist of 8000 men. They were at Bourdeaux, all in readiness to embark. Nearly 1800 recruits, volunteers, and recovered convalescents, for the regiments now on their passage to North America, will embark at Portsmouth in a few days, direct for Long principal features are already known to our readers. France returns to the limits she possessed on the lst of January 1792, with some small accession of territory on the side of Belgium and Savoy. She is to have Chamberi and Annecy, together with Avignon, theVenaissin, and Montbeliard. Holland is to receive an increase of territory, but the sovereignty of Holland is never to pass to a prince possessing a foreign crown. This stipulation has evidently arisen from the intended union of the Hereditary Prince of ORANGE with the Princess CHAP. LOTTE of WALES. Should there be issue male of that marriage, the eldest son is thus excluded from the sovereignty of Holland. The states of Germany are to be independent, and to be united by a federal bond. Switzerland remains independent, and Geneva is to be incorporated with her. Italy, with the exception of the states that return to the Austrian dominion, is to be composed of sovereign states. Malta is ceded to Britain, as well as Tobago, St Lucie, the Isle of France and its dependencies ( Rodriga and the Sechelles.) France recovers the Isle of Bourbon, Martinique, and Guadaloupe, upon which the King of SWEDEN consents to abandon his claims. Portugal consents to the cession to France of French Guiana. The Newfoundland fisheries are to be on the same footing in which they were in 1792. Antwerp is to be only a commercial port.— The navigation of the Rhine is to be f r e e . ^ - Two- thirds of the Antwerp and Flushing fleets are to be given up to France. At the expiration of two months a Congress is to be held at Vienna to fix the arrangements which are to complete the dispositions of the present treaties, settle the fate of Belgium, Italy, and Germany. Commercial arrangements for the benefit of the two countries are promised, and France engages to unite her efforts at the Congress with ours, for a general abolition of the slave trade, France, in the meanwhile, is permitted to carry on this traffic for five years. This permission is equivalent to a total renewal, and renders of no avail all that has been done by the friends of humanity to put an end lo this odious traffic. Nothing is said of the Cape of Good Hope. I t would appear, that we are to make our arrangements with Holland by a separate treaty. Such are the principal stipulations of these treaties. They are certainly highly honourable to France, and evince the liberal spirit which tive of the citizens, the most amifiable deportment of the town towards the troops that are to be received within its walls, among whom will be found many of our own children. " In receiving this compliance oh the part of tlie city, the Senate will not neglect its own duties; it will adopt every means for the pnblic repose and happiness, and will not only attend to the internal interest, hat will endeavour to make such exterior arrangements as may conduce to our liberty and independence.. The Senate expects the re- establishment of the ancient constitution, but should it undergo any change, the great principle of its Government will not be varied, but will remain uninfringed and unchanged. " With these views, the Senate implores the protection of Heaven, and trusts that Providence will crown all their labours for the happiness and prosperity of the city. " Hamburgh, May 26. 1814." We have a mail this afternoon from the Braiils, with letters from Rio Janeiro to the 8th April. One of them contains the following paragraph, which will excite no smalt indignation, at the time when we are treating for the utter extinction of that most nefarious traffic the slave trade:— " Rio Janeiro, April 5. BRIDGE OVF. R TIIE E r e s , NEAR CARLISLE.— Friday the key stone of this much wanted and most beautiful fabric was put into the first arch, and the next morning it was closed. The weight of stone upon the ccnt: es is above 800 ronsj ' t /',. AGMCUL 7 UliAL IthFOIiT. HIGH COURT OF JUST,' CURT. . • Monday, as stated in our last, came on the trial of Granville Sharp Pattison, lecturer on anatomy; Andrew Russel, lecturer on surgery; and' Robert' Mu'nro and John Maclean, both students of anafortw, all o f ' G l a s g d w , charged with violating the sepulchres of ' he dead. The indictment states — " That you the said Granville Sharp Pattison, Andrew. Russel, Robert Munro, and Jqhn. MT. ean, are all anil, each, or one or other nf you, guilty of the said crime, in so far as, Janet M'Gregor, wife of Walter M'Allaster, merchant in Glasgow, having died on the 8th, or on some other day of the montli'of- December. 1813, and having been buried on the 15th, or on sqnie other day of the said month, ill the North- west churchyard, or burying groHnd adjoining to the said church, in the city of Glasgow, you the said Granville Sharp: o r barley. Pattison, Andrew Rusjcl, Robert Munro, and Johni Oats, in general, preserve a tolerable appearance, when M'Lean, did, all and each, nr one or other of you, on the backward state of the weather is considered. . MIDDLE WARD OF LANARKSHIRE. • The weather, throughout this month, has been for the most part arid and cold, with prevailing northeasterly Winds, accompanied with frostin the mornings, sometimes so severe as to product; ice of some thickness. Wheat has, in consequence of the severity of the winter, and subsequent unfavourable weather, suffered much ; and in many instances the farmer has been obliged to plough it down and sow it of new with oats the said thirteenth day of December 1813, or on one or other of the days of that month, or of November immediately preceding, or of January immediately following, in company with one or more persons, your accomplices, to the prosecutor unknown jie'rhier! f f y j mnrninirt Mall, and c o l 4 4 . G E O R G E S^ A F EW CO/ LES or 1 ) O S A N N E ; Of, a F A T H : LABOURS I. OST. By the Author of the " Countess and Gertrude." *,* A new Catalogue of W. W. and Co.' s Circulating Library has been lately published, containing all the new and popular works of merit; and since thit period of its publication there has been added to the library, " Patronage," " T h e Wanderers," " O'Donneli," & c. 8tc. One concern. EDINBURGH^ 8th June. " It is much to be wondered at, that the philantliro- proceed to the said church- yard or burying ground, and pists on your side are either not apprised, or continue j did, then and there, wickedly and feloniously raise up to be silent, as if they knew nothing of 15 British ves- : and take out of ths coffin and grave the dead body of sels at least, under British colours, having carried on, the said Janet M'Cregor, and did carry away the same from Mozambique, from the lst January to the 26th to the house or apartments in College Street, in the October last year, the slave tra ' e. They brought in j city of Glasgow, then occupied by one or other or both IS cargoes, which amounted to 3000 slaves that were declared to be destined for the isle of France." A Lisbon mail has reached us, completing our sets of Gazetas de I. isboa, but the mouth of the Tagus is so of you the said Granville Sharp Pattison and Andrew Russell, as lecture and dissecting rooms : And the said grave having been discovered to have been opened, and the body to have been a missing, the next day thereafter, and a suspicion having arisen that the body was far from the present scene of operations, whether civil, deposited in the said lecture and dissecting rooms, a Potatoes have beeij planted under very favourable circumstances, and to greater extent than could be expected from the present reduced prices of that useful article In. the market. Grass of till kinds is uncommonly backward for the period of the season, especially ryegrass, which has been materially hurt by the severe storm in winter. Many extensive farmers have found it expedient to plough it down and re- crop. Seldom has there been so great and general appearance for a crop of fruit as on the banks of the Clyde Just arrived per Mail, THE NAVY L I S T FOR Published by authority of the Lords' sioners of the Admiralty. Printed forTflTHN ' MUUKATT ImtlkseTreForthe* A?. miralty and Board of Longitude,'- SO. Albemarie4kfc London; and WILLIAM BLACKWOOD, 64. South Bridge/ Street, Edinburgh. This day is published, By WILLIAM BLACKWOOD, Hardsomely printed in one volume Svo. Price 9s. boards, THE PARADISE OF COQUETTE^ A POEM. IN NINE PARTS. Printed forlUUH W11TRI5AV, Albemarle StrenTTj this season; but it is too justly apprehended that itSnJand WILLIAM BLACKWOO n, South Bridge S t r e et they have sustained very material injury from the late Edinburgh, frosts. Hamilton, June 2. 1814. military, or political, that we discover nothing in these journals worth extracting. Our monied men are preparing for the loan, which, it is supposed, will amount to 26,000,0001. or 28,900,0001. The only lists at present determined upon are those of BARING a n d Co. a n d RICARDO, BARNES, a n d C o .; the latter for the Stock Exchange Report says Ro- BARTS, CURTIS, and Co. will be bidders. The public funds closed this evening as follows :— Red. Ann. 66}— Consols, shut— Ditto for the opening, 68 $— Omnium, —• warrant was applied for and obtained to search the same: And you the said Granville Sharp Pattison, Robert Munro, and John M'Lean, conscious of your guilt, being within the said lecture and dissecting rooms, on the said next day thereafter, when the officers of justice arrived to search for the said body, did refuse them admission for the space of nearly half an hour, J . Island or Rhode Island, which are to be taken has guided the councils of the allies. This is maimmediate possession of as depots, from whence expeditions will proceed against all the principal sea- ports, for the purpose of destroying the American merchant shipping. I t is stated to be in contemplation to augment the household troops, consisting of the life guards and the foot guards, instead of reducing them to a lower establishment. LOAN FOR THE PRESENT YEAR.— Saturday afternoon, the following communication was made public from the Bank of England :— Treasury Chambers, June 4.1814. GENTLEMEN— il beg to inform you, and to request you will make it known, in the usual manner, that Lord L I V E R P O O L and I shall be ready to see any gentleman who may be desirous of contracting for a further loan for the service of the present year, on Wednesday 1 morning next, at eleven o'clock, in order to inform them of the amount which will be wanted, and to fix the time and manner of bidding; and I hope it will be convenient to you, or one of you, to meet those gentle men here at that hour.— 1 have, & c. N. VANSITTART. To the Governor and Deputy- Governor of the Bank. CORN EXCHANGE— JUNK 6. We had this day a tolerable supply of Wheat, and some quantity remained over from Friday's market.— There was but little doing in this article in the early part of the day, but towards noon there was a pretty lively demand, and fine samples were mostly cleared off at about last Monday's priees.— Rye is not at all in demand.— Barley was plentiful last week, and about 2s. per quarter cheaper, but the demand was better this morning, and not many fresh arrivals; hence sales were made at Is. per quarter below this day se'ennight. — Malt i » quito an unsaleable article ; the price is therefore entirely nominal.— Pease are cheaper, but beans « ell at about same terms.— The arrival of oats has been pretty large; hence the prices have declined Is. per quarter; some few fine samples have reached our last quotation. Rapeseed is at a nominal price Ship flour is cheaper, about 2s. per sack. Return price of grain on board ship as under. Wheat, 50s. to Fine, G2s. to White, 54s. to Fine, 70s. to Superfine,.. — s. to Rye, 22s. to Barley, 28s. to Fine 33s. to Malt 65s. to Norfolk,... — s. to Hog Pease, 38s. to Fine...., — s. to king peace in its true 6ense and meaning, for to render a treaty solid and lasting, it should be mutually beneficial, and be sanctioned by the free will of all the contracting parties, T h e King of FRANCE has conferred the cross of the military order of St Louis upon the Marshals of France, who are enumerated with their foreign titles. DAVOUST appears to be the only one who has incurred the displeasure of the new Government ; his name is omitted. By the same decree, the Lieutenant- Generals of the army are made knights of tnat order. T h e Emperor of AUSTRIA left Paris on the the 3d, and the last columns of the allied troops began their march. " In giving up the post of Governor of Paris, General SACKEN wrote a letter to General DESSOLLES, in which he expresses his sense ef the friendly relations that have subsisted between the national guard of Paris and the allied troops. Bremen mails have arrived, with papers to the l s t inst. The CROWN PRINCE embarked at Travemunde on the 29th of May, for Sweden. The regiment of Royal Swedes embarked at Travemunde at the same time. The determination of the British Government against the independence of Norway was known at Christiana, and is said to have depressed the hopes of the patriots, House of Lords, June 6. APPEALS, & C. Counsel were farther and finally heard on the case of Agnew t> Agnew.— Judgment postponed. The final consideration of the case of Smith u. M- Niel was postponed till to- morrow. The LORD CHANCELLOR proceeded to take a view of the case of Ht- pburn v. Cunningham, on which, after having delivered his opinions at some length, conclu ded bv moving a judgment tending partly to remit, and partly to reverse that of the Court of Session, which was agreed to by the House. Several petitions were presented against the com laws by Lord DARLINGTON and other peers. A message from the Commons brought up the Scots creditors bill, some private bills, and an application for the minutes of evidence before the Helstone election committee. Lord ST ANHOPEpresentedseveral petitions against the alterations in the corn laws. In doing so, his Lordship expressed the great pleasure he had in performing this part of his duty, as lie conceived that ^ there never was a more rash or injurious measure. TREATY OF PEACE. Lord LIVERPOOL laid this document on the table, and moved that the House be summoned to take it into consideration on Thursday se'ennight. Lord Git k n v i l l r expressed his disappointment at the ineffective article regarding the nefarious traffic in slaves, which he had hoped all nations would have joined to abolish. Lord LIVERPOOL admitted, that all had not been obtained that was desirable, but the subject might be conveniently resumed, when the merits of the treaty were discussed. His Lordship's motion was agreed to.— Adjourned. LE1TH SHIPPING. ARRIVED.— JuneS. Janet, Duncan, from Hull— Lord Melville, Haliburton, London. 7. Jeanie, Turcan, Bremen. 8. Rose, Guthrie, Arbroath— Fox, Hossie, Stilling— Gipsy, Kincaid, Dundee— Leith, Greenock ; all with goods. C L E A R E D OUT— June 6. Enterprize, Strachan, for Hamburgh, goods— John and Jean, Good, Ayr, do.— S T A T E L O T T E R Y . TICKETS and SHARES, warranted drawn, will continur nn nlr, nt >_/ ANDREW SIEVWRIGHT'S, 102. South Bridge, Maclean, t' 11 Saturday evening, where advice of the last day of drawing will arrive on Monday morning. though armed with a legal warrant, during which time j E l i z a b e t l , a n d A n n > P r i m r o s e j Banff, bark— Nancy, i you were occupied in mangling and disfiguring the said ; Morison, Stirling, goods— Diamond, Kelson, Glasgow, dead body in a horrid and disgusting manner, for the! do— Hazard, Smitli, Inverness, do— Ann and Isabella, purpose of concealment; in which state it was there- - - —- - — after found and identified in the said lecture and dissec'ing rooms." T o the indictment the pannel J pleaded Sot Guilty, and no objections were stated to its relevancy. Mr CLERK, one of the counsel for the pannels, craved the Court to make use of the powers conferred upon them by the act 1694, and order the Court- house to be cleared, that the trial might proceed with shut doors, as several circumstances of a very delicate nature, improper to be laid before the public, would be brought forward in evidence. The Court ( with the exception of Lord Pier. Mason, Thurso, do. 7. Venus, Holmes, Woolwich, stores— Newcastle, Robertson, Thurso, goods— D me, Clark, Dundee, do— Hamlierry, . Hewisnn, Bremen, do.— ilitccleuch, Tod, London, do.— Pilot, Sanderson, London, do.— Rose, Paterson, Glasgow, deals. 8. Sir Joseph Banks, Flett, Kirkwall, goods— Pilgrim, Smith, Glasgow, do.— Martin, Ntcol, and Lord Wellington, Nisbet, London, do.— Grace, Graham, St Petersburgb, do.— Jonge Bastiaan, Weil, Rotterdam, do.— Eliza, Hay, Berwick, do.— Ann Dalrymple, Henderson, London, stones. A( RAW SUGARS FOR SALE. To be SOLD by public auction, within Mr Janu can's Sale- room, Leith, on Thursday the 16tl June 1814, at 12 o'clock noon, ] 71 R O M 100 to 120 hogsheads and tierces jbf - B. P. MUSCOVADO SUGARS, lying in Leifh, in bond, or duties paid. . Apply to " JUHm YOUNG and CO. Asents, Edin> " Uurgfilor to JAMES DUNCAN, Leith. EDINBURGH, June 9. 1314. ' HITTFILA'NLI TLHL! LEL! F U i ' T C O T L A N DT G E N E R A L M E E T I N G of t h i sS in terms of the charter, is to be/ Monday the 4th day of July r. ext, at t w e / t /' clock noon. The meeting to be in the Hall o / t h / Royal College of Physicians, George'Strcet, whertjit is remand ) were of opinion, that the request of the; quested that all the Members then in Town will pannels counsel could not be complied with, asl^ t s ' . n d precisely at the hour as, besides the ordinary L inr\* - ii I . . , tbusiness, there will be a ballot for the admission ot the act 1694 specially ordered all criminal trials n e w Members, and, by the rules of the Society, no balto proceed wi h open doors, and onlv allowed lot can commence until at least twenty members are the Court to proceed with shut doors in cases of| Pr e s e f l t - S A L E F F W O O D A T F 1 S H F . R R O W. To be SOLD by public roup, on Friday the 1 7 / 1814, at eleven o'clock forenoon, upon th<£_ and within the premises of Mess. Robert andl Mitchell, AV E R Y considerable quantity o f M E M E L TIMBER, part of which is cut up. ALSO, About 700 feet of QUEBEC OAK TIMBER, cut into flooring batter, s. The whole of thtf timbe ing sewcrtid fromA larg/ gentleHanMF tha/ Jirne j " adultery and the like," ar. d there was nothing in this case that could warrant them to exclude the lieges, although their Lordships individually expressed their earnest wish and desire that as it; le publicity as possible should be given to it, b y newspaper editors tir others, as the full publication would only tend to eh > ck the public mind. In deference, therefore, to the injunctions of the Court, as well from a conviction that no possible benefit can result from any publication relative to unavoidable appearances in an anatomical school, we abstain from all notice of the House of Commons, June 6. Petitions against the corn laws were presented from Exeter, Newcastle, Canterbury, Southwark, Rochester, Surry, Margate, Liverpool, and from 30 other places Ihat from Liverpool was signed by 22,000 people. They were read and laid on the table. Mr COKE from Norfolk, presented a petition in favour of the corn bills. At this moment Lord Castlereagh entered the House, when he was hailed on all sides, and took his seat amid loud acclamations. Sir WM. CURTIS presented a petition from the clock and watch makers ot London, praying that foreign artists might be prevented from putting the names of eminent English artists to their clocks and watches, & c. Read and laid on the table, after some observations f r om Sir J. NEWPORT, M r ROSE, M r BARHAM, & c. Mr W. SMITH presented a petition, signed by 12,000 people of Norwich, against the corn laws, which he said was couched in terms moderate and respectful. Laid on the table. Lord MILTON presented another from Leeds, signed by 20,000 persons, which he said had not been handed1 about for signatures. Other petitions were presented of the same nature. TREATY o r PEACE. Lord CASTLEREAGH presented a copy of the treaty of peace and amity between France and Great Britain. —( Loud cheering.) Mr WILBERFORCE was happy in the termination of the war, but he was grievously disappointed that on the restoration of the captured colonies to France, the condition was not exacted for the abolition of the slave trade. He suggested the propriety of requiring there s'gnation of the slave trade in the Dutch colonies before these possessions should be delivered up to the Prince of the Netherlands.— Left sitting. tenor of the evidence which was adduced for the prosecution, or in exculpation on this trial, which lasted from 10 o'clock on Monday, until after three o'clock next morning. T h e SOLICITOR- GENERAL charged the jury By order of the Directors, L E V / I S G O R D O N , D e p / S e c. EDINBURGH, J u n e 9. 1814. NOTICE. AG E N E R A L M E E T I N G o f t h e P A R T N E R S of the CALEDONIAN INSURANCE COMPANY is to be held within Macewen's > . w Rooms, Royal Exchange, on Thursday the 7th day of July, at eleven o'clock' forenoon, for the purpose of electing Directors for the ensuing year, in terms of the contract of copartnery. H. D. D I C K I E , Secretary. EDINBURGH, June 6.1814. f s of excellent quality, he- • Stock in October AM,- io/ M\ 4fh¥ f7ln WANTS A SITUATION, APERSON regularly bred to general mercantile business, and who has had considerable experience therein, wishes to be employed as a Clerk. , Salary not a primary objecr, other circumstances favourable. Ample reference will be given as to character, & c. TO BE SOLD, TH A T Villa in the parish of Polmont/ ed HAY PARK, as possessed by M i / bertson, 21 miles from Edinburgh, and threei kirk, within a respectable distance of the high" ing trom Edinburgh to Falkirk, and of thevil! hgec_ Pohnont, where four stage coaches and two mail coaches pass and repass daily. The house, which has been lately built and neatly finished, consists of a dining- room, drawing- room, and four bed- rooms, kitchen, and pertinents, in the east wing; cow- house, washing- house, & c. in the west wine. The grounds cons', t of two Scots acres, with a neat shrubbery in front; an excellent spring well, which gives superabundance of water in the greatest drought: garden. & c. ^ Apply to Francis Eraser, writer! 7. Drummond, 55s. 0d White do.. 46s. to 54s. 0d 67s. 0d Boilers 58s. to 60s. 0d 64s. Od SmallBeans36s. to 40s. od 77s. Od Fine, 43s. to 44 » . Cd — s. Od TickBear. s 34s. to 38s. 0d 36s. 0d Fine, 39s. to 40s. 0d 32s. 0d Feed Oats, 18s. to 21 s. Od 34s. 0d Fine, 23s. to S5 « . 0d 70s. 0d Polands,... 18s. to 22s. 0d 72s. Od Fine, 24s. to 2Ss. 0d 42s. 0d Potato do. 25s. to 27s. Od 43s. 0d Fine, — s. to 29s. 0d SEEDS. Red Clover ( foreign) per cwt 60s. to 72s. Ditto English 40s. to 84s. White ditto 56s. to 110s. Ryegrass, per quarter 20s. to 52s. Turnip, white, per bushel J8s. to 20s. Red and green, ditto 21s. to 26s. Trefoil, per cwt 8s. to 36s. PRICE OF FLOUR. Plneflour, p. sack, fiOs. to 65s I Bran, per qr.. 9s to lOs. Od Seconds 55s. to 60s I Fine Pollard, 14s to 22s. 0d W A N T E D , To fill the situation of H O U S E K E E P E R in a CycntV 1 amily, in the vicin ty of Glasgow^ " testo bequalilied for the situation, which is J U1UI1J ^ 444 lilt. t ILIU l. J V' 4 VV j A AP E R S O N who can produce undcuMed t timonials as to general character, and| ts to ere II By the arrival of Quebec gazettes and Montrtal papers to the 2d of April, and likewise Halifax and American to a late date, we learn that the campaign commenced in both the Cart adas nearly at the same period. A small British force, commanded by Captain STEWART, had attacked the enemy at Longwood, near Delaware Town. The latter were very superior in number ; but although the attack did not in the first instance succeed, the enemy soon after found it expedient to abandon the position. Our loss in this affair was, Captain JOHNSON, Royal Scots, Lieutenant P. GIIAME, 89th, and 12 men killed ; Captain B A SEEN, 89th ; Lieutenant M'DONALD, Royal Scots, 5 serjeants, and 4 2 rank and file wounded. Bank Stock 3 per C. Red 65J, 66^ 3 per C. Consols — 4 per Cent 81J J STOCK EXCHANGE. India Bonds 7 8 prem. Exch. Bills 2 5 prem. Omnium — Consols far July.. 67|, 68J E D I N B U R G H E V E N I N G C O U R A N T • I ) On the 5th June, in York Place, the Lady of ADAM SCOTT ELLIOT, Esq. of Arkleton, of a daughter. On the 29th May, at Berwick, Mrs Major THOMPSON, of a daughter. Married on the lst June, at St John's Church, Newcastle, ALEXANDER ALLAN, Esq. l. r, uder, to ELIZA JEMIMA, youngest daughter of the late James, and niece of William Moffat, Esq. of Wimbledon, Surry. Died at Dalkeith, on the 3d June, Miss JACKSON. Through the different stages of a severe and lingering illness she displayed a fortitude and resignation seldom exampled, and whose loss will be severely felt by her numerous friends and acquaintances. Died on the 30th May, Mr JAMES CULBERT, merchant, North Berwick. Died at Leith Walk, on the 4th June, WILLIAM, eldest son of Mr John Patterson, Edinburgh Foundry, aged seven. Died at Craighead, on the lst June, Mr JOHN BURNET, aged 80, late farmer at Abbey of Haddington. Died on the 4th June, Miss SUSAN CUNJNGHAME, youngest daughter of the late Mr Cumnghame, Port Glasgow. on the part of the Crown. He admitted that ^ ^ " e r s ^ l d r e s a e d W. P. Courant Office, will be duthere was no evidence tending to inculpate M r , l v 3 U e ' ' " '"' M'Lean ; but contended, in the course of an in- j genious speech, that the other three pannels were guilty of the o iler. ee charged, various parts of Mrs M'Allaster's body having been found in the j anatomical school of Mr P. utison, with which ; the other two pannels were, from the circumstantial evidence in the case, so connected as to render them all guilty actois, or art and part, in the eye of the law. Mr COCKBURN contravertcd the Solicitor- General's argument, and contended that no part of the evidence fixed upon Muss. Russel or Monro the slightest suspicion of being concerned in the only ofFence charged, viz. raising and carrying off th-; body in question ; and Mr CLERK, as counsel for Mr Pattison, in a very elaborate speech, combated the conclusions of the public prosecutor against his client. T h e LORD JUSTICE CLERK addressed the jury, and directed them to return their verdict at two o'clock next day. On Tuesday the jury returned their verdict, all in one voice finding Andrew Russel and John Maclean not guilty, and the libel not pro- •^ vanviile Sharp Pattison and Robert Street, Edinburgh. SUBJECTS IN DUNFERMLINE FOR s; To be SOLD, within the house of Daniel M'L vintner, Dunfermline, upon Friday the 29t/ d^ July 1814, at three o'clock afternoon, / AL L and whole that Dwelling- house, 4akehotise, and Oven, lying on the north side of th » MAYGATE STREET, Dunfermline . ALSO, All and whole that Garden, consisting of 16 fails, or thereby, enclosed within a stone wall, lying on the west side of the NEWROW STREET of Dunfermline, which several subjects belonged to the deceased George Meldrum, baker in Dunfermline The title- deeds may be seen in the hands of David £ [^ tenhousey writer in Dunfermline, to whom, or to 1 George Meldpbm, bukefAa Dyhfermline, in5, DECREE OF ADJUDICATION OVER St IN FALKIRK, FOR SALE, To be SOLD, within the House of John T h o m s / i A ' t / J ner in Falkirk, upon Wednesday the 29) fi / ay/ Bf June current, betwixt the hocra of one^ m/ three o'clock afternoon. I long, With n p H E Accumulate Sum of L . 215 Sterling A secured by a decree of adjudication at the instanc: of the trustee upon the sequestrated estate of the Merof the best chant Banking Company of Stirling, over subjects lying at the west end of the town of Falkirk, helonging to David Morrison, Carter there. For forthfr parti ™ , j lars apply to ^ BBOTSfln SKd Paterson, Writers to tUS y. r x „-, signet] 18. South Frederick Street, Edinburgh, or Jamea Comiferpanes, Marseilles Qijilts, and Rugs for ser- Russef, Writer in Falkirk. Bed and Table Linen, AND SO L I C I T the attention of their Fi the Public to their present eittefisiv/ ment of BED AND TABL consistipjfjf Tablecloths, from 1J v^ ro to seven yary or without Napkins tojfiit. Sheetings, of all brfffth! and qualities. 7- 8ths and 4- 4tJj » Holiands and Lii fabrics. I. onglawnj^ Tnd French Cambrics., Cotton SHirtiiigs and Muslins. / Kucki^ fack and Diaper Towellings, all kinds, ven against L* r Mur. ro. Af er an admonition from the LORD JUSTICE CLERK, as to their future conduct, they were assoilzied siihpliciter, and dismissed trom the bar. vantybeds. ith, Whitney, and Rose Blankets, & c. A quantity oj 9 Hths, 5- 4tits, and S- iths SHEETINGS, short lengths, to be sold very cheap. Russia Warehouse, 170 HIGH STREET, May 13. 1S14. L O N D O N A N D E D I N B U R G H A P P A R EL W A R E H O U S E , 4 7 IA NO. 2 3 . PRINCE'S STREET. / ^ ^ 7TVID T H O M P S O l ^ b e g s leave t / i n f o rm mers ar June 2, 1814. , a , I y, ! B his respectable customers and the pwblic, that I lie pupils of Mr ANDREW were piiWtcl/ ef - " he can supply them with COATS of the best quality, amined on Friday last, in CORRI'S tfo' 0t/ s, » 1rSotnmon colours, blacks, blues, and scarlets excepted, presence ot a very numerous and respcjbtaUe " i T ^ ^ l l i L ^ ! ! 0 ^ ] : ? - ^ m o n c y - L A N D S I N A R G Y L L S H I R E F O R SALFC, To be SOLD by private hargain, J / ; „ TH E Lands of A C H I C H O I S E , l y l h gL the parish of Kilmichael in Glasrie, and shir* o Argyll, consisting of about 346 acres or thereby. Tle » lands are highly capable of improvement, and as f h e are not let on lease, a purchaser may have immedjat entry. . For particulars Wilson, vV, '" Died on the Ist of June, at Logie manse, ROBERT A sketch of the debate which took pr lace in Cof" C5 o° nNe y^ hiMll. 0 N D ' 5 e c o n d 5 o n o l Mr James Edmond, Died at Longleford, M r s KING, much and deservedly respected. She was well known to those who visited Cheviot. company. Silver medals, inscribed witly^" T he Reward of M e r i t " were presented to slveral of the pupils. The first medal to Maste* HENRY DAVID INGLIS, Queen Street, dux of the boys; to Miss ELIZA SCOTT, Burntsfield Links, of the ladies English class; and to Miss CHRISTIAN ORR, Elder Sj- beet, of the ladies geography class. / T h e ejt.' min.' itipt/ jAss; tJbpcWlud with an ADDRESVDE& MRL? BY MA,? T£ R RNVRFVSO AVID INGLIS. We observe in a precedm, 9L£ a|' umn, that Mr A N D R E W continues his public classes as formerly. ,,, the House of Commons on Friday, after strangers were excluded, is given in our preceding columns. Square, Edin deeds, and a plan of the lands. Other Articles very cheap. THURSDAY JUNE 9. 1 HE KING,, Windsor Castle, Jure 4. The KING'S health has been uninterruptedly good, and his MA I ESTY has been very tranquil throughout the last month, although his MAJESTY'S disorder continues without any st nsible alteration. HENRY HALFORD. W. HEBERDEN. M. BA1LL1E. R. WILLIS. Paris papers to the 4th instant were received on Monday. The Moniteur of the 2d, contains a copy of the definitive treaty of peace concluded a Paris, on the 30th ult. between France and the allied powers. The treaties being r. early similar, the Moniteur only publishes that signed by the French and Austrian pienipoten tiaries, subjoining, however, the additional articles relniing- to the whole of the allies. Thei P R I V A T E CORRESPONDENCE. London, June 6. By the German mails of to- day, we have papers from Hamburgh to the 2Sth ult. and letters as late as to the lst inst. On the 31st of last month, and not before, the whole of the French garrison had quitted that city, which was in the possession of the Russian forces, under the command of General Count B E N N I N G S E N .— The Senate had resumed its functions; and, as the first act of its authority, issued the following PROCLAMATION. " Great events have transpired within the last few months, and all happily terminating in the public gnod. The Senate of the city, which is to be liberated from the French troops, in recommencing its labours and its functions, announces publicly its return to its duties, and calls upon the citizens to assemble to- morrnw, to take into consideration. what should be done in the new posture of affairs. In giving this invitation it would remind the inhabitants, that it is only by the union of all, in tbe patriotic feeling, that, order can be at once re- established, and that tbe tranquill ty of the place can be preserved. " Let, then, every individual, for the gracious purposes of the moment, forget what he has lost and what he has suffered, and receive the valiant strangers who are at the gates ( the Russians) as friends and deliverers; let him avoid every tiling which may tend in any degree to interfere with the general harmony, and let him conform to the regulations which the Senate is preparing for his observance. » ' The Senate confidently expects, as the reprcscnta- I t is now generally understood, that Parliament will postpone the further consideration of the corn laws till next Session. The attention of the public to this important subject was first seriously excited by the resolutions of a respectable incorporation of this city, and owing to their spirited exertions, petitions from every quarter of the kingdom, with upwards of two millions of signatures, h;-. ve already been presented against the intended alterations. The Nightingale sloop of war will sail from Leith Roads, with a convoy for Elsineur, first fair wind. The Apelles sloop of war and Ernest gunbrig sailed from Sheerness on Saturday last for Leith. T h e Neptune, HUTTON, from Leith, arrived at Lisbon on the 14th May. The smacks Trusty and Swift arrived at London on the 5th, and the Queen Charlotte on the b'th instant. The Montague, STORY, arrived at Hull from Le th, on the 4th instant. Yesterday 400 prisoners of war from Valley field, embarked at Lei'. h, on their return to their ! native count! y. The subscription for the mausoleum, over the remains of our Scottish Bard, is proceeding with great spirit, in various parts of the country, and so strong is the genera! feeling in favour of the measure, that, wherever it has found an active advocate, respectable sums have been obtained. The treasurer last week received 321. Os. 6d. from Huddersfield, by the hands of Mr JOHN HANNAH. Amongst the list of subscribers in that quarter is a lady, the first of the sex that has ] paid this tribute to the genius of BURNS. On Saturday afternoon, a boy, in John Street, Glasgow, was dangerously hurt by the wadding fired from a small cannon entering the lower part of his belly. Price of new potatoes in Edinburgh market this morning, 2s. 6d. per pint. DUMFRIES, June 7 East winds continue to prevail, and are attended, during the absence of the sun, with severe frost. On the morning of Wednesday last, there was ice on all the ponds in this neighbourhood as thick as a half- crown piece ; but on Thursday a considerable quantity of rain tell. More moisture, however, and more genial warmth, are absolutely requisite to save the cropsj particularly the hay, The potatoes and fruit have suffered severely. A Liverpool paper says-^" It is a most extraordinary circumstance at this port, and we believe unexampled in the memory of man, that we have UNION HOTEL, ST * TYJFCGEP ' I " , I T ' M ' G R E G O R I with nyfcetrgrati- XJL tude for former favours, bega^ WSve most respectfully to inform the NohiiyvaiwGentry/ frequenters of this Hotel, and the Pu& lfc at large, iliat he has taken the above large and^ r^ ry commodious premises, which is now fitted tm- ffi a very genteel. manner. Families of any nuinUerrnay be accommodated with suits of rooms, as wgBas single gentlemen. The situation of this hoteLiSquiet and respectable. A. M'Oregor trusts, from his long experience in this line in Edinburgh, and the most unremitted attention i^ usiness, to merit a share of the public favour. ' 2d June 1814. w ivelveLi^ tf/, scarcely had a week of westerly winds during the r ! nine muntt NOTICE. A T . M I T C H E L B , begs leavei fullv to acquaint hiI friends and / l e Aiublic, that at Whitsunday last he MOVED to the/' AVERN, at the head of tbe O L D F I S H M A R K E T CLOSE, lately occupied by M r PRIOR. M. MITCHELL is determined to pay the strictest attention to the business; and as he is resolved to keep every article in the line ol the best quality, and at moderate prices, he hopes to merit a share of the public favour. DINNERS, & c. upon the shortest notice, to" FISH and OYSTERS of every description, of the best quality, in their proper season. O L D F I S H M A R K E T CLOSE, June 7.1814. T O T H E H E R I T O R S , T I T U L A R S , A N M E N O F T H E T E I N D 3 OF P A R I S H OB F O R F A R . NO T I C E is hereby given to all concerned, that the Reverend Mr JOHN BRU( IB., minister of the parish of Forfar, has raised - a process of augmentation, modification, and locality of Ids stipend, which " led in tlwf^' cjrid Court, on Wed/ esjla- Novt V A L U A B L E F A R M S I N T H / 7 k u 7° l e t 7 : re win be LET, in thrfcfcurse of the ensui/ g n of June and July, / / / \ Variety of Fafms, of different si? es I id de- X V scriptions, in t h e I S L A N D of A R R AI These farms being well adapted either for raising crops or reading stock, are highly deserving the attention © f enterprising farmers from the mainland of Scotland, to whom every reasonable encouragement will be given. For further particulars, application may be made, either personal'y or by letter, ttmnDert thrown, or Robert Bauchop, at Arran Castle, by Saltcoats. ^ U T R A N C A S ^ E , May 31. I S J ^ fp LANDS, COAL, AND FEU- DUTIES, F O R S A L E. E remaining L O T S of the sequestrate! estate of ALEXANDER LOW, Esq. lying in th parish of Kettle, and county of Fife, will be exposi " public roup and sale, within the Royal Exchange " Go feeroom, Edinburgh, on Wednesday the y<*| f Jur 1814, between the hours of two and three afternoon,! very reduced upset prices. 1. That part of the Lands of BUB^ TUffiK, calle MACKHIMRICK, consisting of Jffacres dSd 2 rood of good improveable land, lyin^ flittle to file south i the house of Annfield. Thrfupset prUfeof this It will not exceed 18 years Mfrchase of tjfe rent whi< has been offered. If mon^ fgreeable to purchasers, ih lot will be divided in t j 2. The FEU- DUTJBS and CASUALTIES of SI PERIOR1TY, pav^ Ie by the feuaof of the Coaltow of Burnturk, am^ mling to something more than 1 yearly. The un « t price will not fxceed 1501. so th a purchaser w> fl receive 71 per etift. besides occasion advantages f, Tom the casualties. The Xvhole of the MAIN COAL of BUR] TURK, srfid other minerals, with a powerful steam- e gine erected thereon. The coal an,, engine will 1 sold either together or separately, at so low a price must tempt any person wishing such property to 1 come the purchaser, 4. An OLD HOUSE, in the Coaltown of Burntu with half an acre of ground in the immediate neig bourhood, either together or separately. The fi> 1°- f) ffijfi r'li^ iPtti1,1"* of roup are in the bar of' WilHamwalker, W. Itf 21. Forth Street, Edinburg the trustee, to whom apflfieation may be made for & i information required. ^ Tf> FOR LONDON. The London and Edinburgh Shipp Company's S P R I G H T L Y , JAMES SUTHERLAND M a s t e r, sails for Miller's Wharf, oil Friday ( to- morrow), a( o'clock evening. — « —, R U Ut.- I! K t'CK'," Manage! London and F. dinr. Shit, ping Co's. Office, 7 . Leith, June 9, 1814. 7 AT LEITH, FOE THF. LEITH ANT BERWICK WHARF, LONDON. The Olu Shipping Company's new Smack: L O R D M E L V I L L E , WJLLIAM HALIBURTON M a s t v r , a nd O C E A N , WILLIAM NISBET, sen. M a s t er The former sails to- morrow, ; it six o'clock eveni and the latter on Tuesday first, at ning_ o'^ » r- lr TarnllULACK, Manager; Old Shipping Company s Office, Lni'H, June 9 J8H, 1 FROM THE LONDON GAZETTE. QUEEN'S HOUSE, JUNE 1. 1814'. This day Count St Martin D ' A g l i e , Mini- » tev Plenipotentiary from his Majesty the King of Sardinia, Monsieur de Pfeffel, Envoy Extraordinary ." id Minister Plenipotentiary from his Majesty the King of Bavaria, and Count de Beroidingen, General Major, Aide- de- Camp General, Chambei lain, and Envsv Extraordinary and Minister plenipotentiary from his Majesty the King of Wurtemberg, had their first private audiences of her Majesty ; to which they were respectively introduced by the Earl of Morton, her'Majesty's Lord Chamberlain, and conducted by Robert Chester, Esq. Assistant Master of the Ceremonies. [ This Gazette contains a grant by his Majesty'sroyal license and authority to the Duke of Wellington, that he and his descendants Bray bear, as a lasting memorial of his glorious and transcendent achievements, an honourable augmentation to the arms of Wellesley, that rt to say, in the dexter quarter an escutcheon charged with the crosses of St George, St Andrew, and St Patrick, conjoined, being the uniou badge of the united kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, without the imperial crown, to be borne by him and his descendants upon tbe family arms of Wellesley and Cowley quarterly, and in the chief point of the shield Also the Prioce Regent's commission to Lieutenant- Colonel Lyon, of the 97th foot, to accept and wear the insignia of the Swedish order of the Sword.] land, who were at the head of it, have been ar-] WHITE'S FETE. rested by order of the Prince. The republican; The fete to be given in Burlington gardens, party, headed by an ecclesiastic and an apothe- by the members of WHITE'S club, is fixed for cary of Christiana, which wished to give the the 13th ; it will be of the grandest description executive power to six directors, while the Diet — the number of tickets issued amounts to 2400 ; should hold the legislative power, has also fallen, every member had four at five guineas each, but MR A'EA'X. BANKRUPTS. Samuel Trent, Yeovil, Somersetshire, miller William and George Shaw, Septon, Yorkshire, clothiers Moses Moody, Cheltenham, cabinet maker and builder Ric'iard Tanner, Birmingham, upholsterer _ David Jones, Newport, Monmouthshire, shopkeeper James Lande, Tokenhouse Yard, merchant Thomas Edwards and Richard Branthwaite, Pill Gwenlly, Monmouthshire, coal merchants Marmaduke Knowles, Bolton, manufacturer John Gibbs, Stilton, victualler William Tatham, Liverpool, broke> John Ward, Sculcoates, Yorkshire, merchant John Messenger, Loughborough, victualler James James, Haverfordwest, shopkeeper Richard Townsend, Liverpool, merchant Thomas Nock, Birmingham, factor Samuel Marshall, Stockport cotton manufacturer Henry Green, Great Weldon, Northamptonshire James Bridges, Bristol, brushmaker John Manning, I. oddiswell, Devonshire, butcher Henry Goodwyn, Oxford, cordwainer Isaac Isaac, Plymouth, slopseller John Barrett, Plymouth Dock, victualler William Hardaker, Middle Shitlington, Yorkshire, shopkeeper John Pratt, Banbury, Oxfordshire, innholder ' John Cole, jun. Bath, music and musical instrument seller. COMMISSIONS SUPERSEDED. Thomas Philipps and John Philipps jun. MilfiK- d, merchants Richard Winniatt, Bristol, corn- factor and mealman. AVERAGE PRICES OF BUITISHCORNPF. il QUARTER. r o t ENGLAND AND WAI. BS, MAT 28. Wheat. | Rye. I Hurley. | Oats. I Beans. I Tease, j Bin. 71 0 I 45 9 I 36 9 j 25 5 I 44 7 j 48 1 | 0 0 Oatmeal, per bull uf 140 lbs. Avoirdupois, 32s. 6d. AVERAGE PRICE OF SUGAR, G. mp> I'eri from the returns made in lite weelcendine June 1. is 66s. 51. per fwt. es. elusive of importation duty. FRENCH PAPERS. Paris, May 30. The Empress- Josephine, who is just dead, was bom in Martinique, June 9, 1763; she was consequently about 51 years of age. Her original name, as it is well known, was Tacher de la Pagerie. She went to France, where she married the Count Beauharnois, member of the Constituent Assembly, Marshal de Camp of the armies, and Minister at War, who perished on the scaffold in 1793. Madame de Beauharnois and immediately the whole Diet united in favour of Prince Christian. In the second article of the constitution, the Prince is recognised as he reditary King of Norway, under the title of Christian I. and the Crown is rendered hereditary in his family. His first ordinance has been for the abolition of the use of the rattan and of flogging, in the Norwegian army, considering that corporal punishments are unworthy of a free nation. In virtue of this constitution, in framing which Professor Sventrup is, said to have had a considerable share, the legislative power is placed in the hands of an assembly, the members of which are chosen from among the persons of property. Although the news from Sweden continues to announce that England has declared against Norway, it, is said in Norway that there are proofs to the contrary. Not only have 10,000 tons of meal arrived at Bergen from Scotland, and many ships at Christiana from Holland, loaded with provisions ; but, according to the statements current in the last- mention ed town, even- Carsten Anker was received in i very amicable manner in London, where a subscription was opened for the purpose of providing grain and other provisions lor Norway. It is added that Carsten Anker is gone to Paris, to have an interview with Lord Castlereagh. According to some accounts the Diet ot Norway has already separated ; according to others, the new King is to close the s ^ i o n on the 19th ot May. I t is understood that Ligjtenant- General D e Waltersdorff will be appointed to represent his Majesty at the Court ot Louis X V I I I . AMERICA. PROCEEDINGS IN CONGRESS. A message was received from the President of the Uni ed States, which was read by the Speaker :— " ip the House of Representatives of the United States. " I transmit to the House of Representatives a report ofvthe Secretary of State, complying with their rewlution of the 13th instant. " JAMES MADISON." « • April 16. 1814." " The Secretary of State, to whom was referred the resolution of the House of Representatives of the 13th instant, requesting information touching our relations with France, has the honour to submit to the President an extract of the letter from the minister plenipotentiary of the United States at Paris, which contains the latest and the only material information received by tins department on that subject. All of which is respectfully submitted. « JAMES MONROE." " Department of State, April 16. 1S14." MR CRAWFORD TO THE SECRETARY OF STATE. [ EXTRACT.] " Paris, January 16. 1814. " On the 29th ult. I had an interview with the minister of exterior relations, who informed me that he had made to the Emperor a detailed report of the negotiation, and that he would inform me of his Majesty's decision the moment it should be made known to him. His conversation during this interview was as conciliatory ill as it was found that the expence would exceed the amount of the receipts, by above 2000 guineas, an additional hundred tickets were divided among the members at 20 guineas each. The whole expence will, it is supposed, exceed 12,0001. Decor:: lions of the Ball- room— The roof is a right angle, covered with oiled canvass, and lined with white muslin in flutes ; the sides are likewise of muslin ( a rose colour,) ornamented with draperies of white. The building is supported by twenty fluted columns, surmounted by Tui k' ' s cap ; the fluted pillars are produced by white muslin placed in folds. There is a double platform ( lengthwise) on each side, on them are tiers for the accommodation of that proportion of the company who do not dance. Ottoman seats are provided. All the draperies will be enlivened by festoons of natural and artificial flowers ; devices and mottoes, composed of roses ( red arid white,)' will be suspended in the air. An orchestra, upon a grand scale, will be erected at the north end. No provision is here made for the illustrious party expected to honour the scene with their presence. This does not arise from neglect, but correspondently with the known laste of the Emperor of Russia and King of Prussia, who dislike any thing bordering on state etiquette. The Royal Promenade and Supper Room— This apartment will be hung with royal purple " cloth, and the platform Covered with the same materia! ; the deling is of white muslin, and at the upper end, elevated about six inches, will appear the supper table, at the back of which will be placed a sideboard, with tiers of shelves, and massy plate, resembling the celebrated display exhibited in the Egyptian gallery in Vauxhall Gardens, at the Vittoria fete last summer. The sides of this room will be enlivened by a panoramic view of Dover Castle, and an extent of marine scenery, in which appear the Royal Charlotte and the Jason frigate, together with other appropriate objects. The dimensions of the royal table are 32 by 24. The great Supper Room— Tables will here be placed lengthwise, and a promenade walk down the centre, for 1600 persons. [ Of this gentleman, who has attained so much theatrical celebrity, the following biographical sketch may not be, uninteresting.} Many idle siories have been'in circulation concerning this gentleman's family— lew or none of them are deserving of attention. There is but little to tell ^ the constitution The real character of ths revolution in Spain does not yet appear tt> be perfectly determined. I t seems that, both at Seville and at Madrid, the people no sooner heard of the King's oppo. sition to the Cortes than they declared for' the former, and everywhere exclaimed, " D o w n with Up with the inquisition !" FETE AT NIDDRY CASTLE. On Thursday the 31st ult. the tenants of At Earl of HOPETOUN and Lord NIUDRY, in W e st Lothian, anxious to shew their attachment to a family so highly distinguished, by its virtues as well as by its rank, met at Niddry Castle, to hail the accession of the right . honourable Si. JOHN HOPE, K. B. to the peerage, by the title of Lord Niddry. A temporary awnino- was erected in the garden, where a company of ( 53 intelligent part of the nation, retard it in conformity to the prejudices of the weak or the passions of the wicked, and triumph in the moral depression of a people. The Princess CHARLOTTE of WALES was not presented on attending the Queen's drawingroom on Thursday. In the case of Princesses, the ceremony is not necessaiy. T I I E PRINCESS CHARLOTTE'S CARRIAGE.— Her Royal Highness drove a new carriage on drawingbonfire was riiade on an eminence immediately adjoining the castle, and a hogshead of . the beststrong ale given to the people in the neighbour hood. T h e health of the Earl of HOPETOUN, the L o r d . of the. Manor , the venerable friend an<£ on this score The Moses Kean, so well known in j This, however, though another proof of the folly the metropolis as a mimic and ventriloquist—( per- r , r . • , 1 baps be carried the art of the latter to a higher per- i o t . ! " " S g ' ^ S Sl v e premature liberty to an unfection than it ever before or since reached)— was ; enlightened and slavish nation, oilers no apology f Q r„ . v wi , his uncle. His father wasau architect, and a man of; for the crime of those apparently inteiested; sat down to an excellent dinner, and a lar considerable talent; he was distinguished at Ci. ach- I priests and nobles, who sacrifice public principles ' " ' ' '' mak. er, s Hall, and, at oth. er of , the deb, a ting; clu> b s of!, t_ o private ; in„ t. e„ re„ s. t s, andj • i nstead> ot- caus• i ny ' t, h e that clay, as an eloquent speaker, and a sound rea- 1 , c .. . ' . . b srtner. Mr Kean's mother was a natnral daughter | m a r c h o t poetical and legislative arrangement of the also well known George Saville Carey. * It is: to keep pace with the illumination of the more certainly true, that this gentleman has had the benefit of instruction at Eton School ; he continued there, we understand, for more than three years. The circumstances of his family, however, rendered him familiar with the stage from his very earliest life ; and those who maintain' that the bias of genius is to be traced to habits arising from accident, rather than from an innate disposition, may cite Mr Kean as a corroboration of their theory. His debut took place at a verv tender age indeed,— when he vvas not more than three years old. Of course, he did nut then play Richard or Shylock, the parts in which be has now gained so high a name, and done so much for the theatre that has-. been fortunate! Thursday, launched purposely for th enough to secure him. His first appearance before j r 0 0 m . This vehicle may vie with any in Europe an audience was as a sleeping Cupid, in" Cymon.— r ' , , J , n , , - , . 1 - Whether the plaudits Master Kiak received in this! f o r t a s t c a n d The hammer- cloth, of character fixed his youthtui sotil, we cannot say; but \ sc. arlet and gold, is festooned, and the royal arms when he arrived at the maturer age of six years, we with an union wreath1; embroidered on white safind him acting a far more important part',— no less tin, in a superlative style. The arms are finely so than that of one of the pages to Falstaff, at Drury j j j , h r { , ^ , j ^ Lane. He was remarked at this time, by the per- • , , . j, , . ' formers, to be a child of uncommon abilities, and in- 1W I t h b r a s s '' a I s e c l ornaments, added greatly to fluenced probably by the specimens of mimicry j the general effect produced by this superb equiwhich he had observed in his uncle, he was in the'page, habit of delivering various speeches, from Richard, i. ear, & c. in the manner of the most admired actors. We are glad to see, that he has been able so utterly to get rid of this dangerous habit, that not only does he imitate no man, but his great merit consists in his having struck out a perfectly original style. It was after this that he was luckily able to get placed at that seminary to which we have already alluded ; but while lie was still a . youth— in fact a mere boy— he returned t'o the stage, and performed in various subordinate parts at the Haymarket. A pleasing story is told of him, which shews that he does not; as Garrick did, feel ashamed in the recollectiori'of the humble station fronvwhich his talents had raised him. Just after he had retired from off the stage, in one of the scenes of Richard, and while the thundering applause of the house was rushing after him like an overwhelming torrent, he saw one of the very inferior performers', dressed as a menial in the play of which he was the hero. " Do you remember me, my friend ?" said Kean. The poor man Herein covers will be laid: startled at the question. " No, Sir, 1 apprehend I The. roof is of white muslin, ' cannot claim the honour of having ever been known and the sides of the same colour; the decorations, t 0 y 0 l j ^ ^ ^ { much the same style as the ball- room. C o m - , l . i e P" r t 0 herself was long in prison ; aad in 1797 wasja s could be ; and his expressions, though sti mai ried to Bon. Tpaite. All those to whom she! Ken « r a l> Emitted that indemnity was determined was known, either in adversity or during her upon. elevation, do equal justice to the kindness of her deposition. Dr Poyntrr, Catholic Bishop of London, Vicar Apostolic, yesterday conferred the^ sacrameot of conlii nation in the convent of English ladies in the Rue St Victor, at Paris. Paris, May 31. BULLETIN OF THE HEALTH OF MONSIEUR. " The state of Monsieur continuing to ameliorate in all respects, we think it would be superfluous to give any further bulletins. « HALLE, GUERIN, P. ELIZEE. " Mav SO. 1814— 10 o'clock in the evening." This day at five o'clock numerous discharges of attilerv announced t o the capital the signature of the treaty of peace, concluded with Austria, Russia, England, and Prussia. This nfews has spreadi tt he most rli velty j o y ; andJ this ( f" i. r- s„ t. senti- rors,• wnicr na | w; ma s rme sesn; o ns i nu m. was instantiy confounded with that ofpu- ' e £ e n l r a 1 ' , The address of the senator Count Segur to the inhabitants of the 18th military division of the empire, published in the Moniteur of the 15th instant, stated that his Majesty was going to place himself at the head of hii troops. Knowing that I should not be able to advance a single step in the negotiation during his absence, unless he should, before his departure from Paris, decide upon the classes of cases for which indemnity should be made, I determined to address a note to the Duke of Vicenza, with a view to impress more strongly upon his mind the necessity of an immediate decision. " T h e day on which [ intended to present this note, I was informed that the Duke of Vicenza had set out from Paris at four o'clock, A. M. for the head quarters of the two Emperors, which was then said to be in Switzerland. Paris that day was, " You mistake. Don't you recoliect when , at the Haymarket, that ia little boy bore up vour train? I was that little municating with this room there is an avenue, boy." The story of the man who claimed to be a leading into the j brother actor with Garrick, addressing him thus, Small Supper Room— This apartment forms:" w b e*° >' ou played Hamlet, I played the cock," is a part of the sub- division in the centie room ; Pr e c ' S t ' l y , h e t e v e r s e o f t h i s' it is at the rear of the royal table, and accomnio-! ™ R F " ™ ADOP T C D ' ^ E profession of an actor, . . __ ' „-,, and . accepted of various provincial engagements. He dations will be provided tor 500. 1 he arrange-: played in different parts of England and Ireland, but ments, in fitting, are afac simile to the last, never in the metropolis of the latter country, ^ t From the extended list of invitations, there are length he became one of the common company that 400 still unprovided with seats ; but as the draw- 1 w e a t , F^ , e t e r ' Teignmouth,' Dorchester, & c and f „ , . . now his abilities, having become exposed to the obing- rooms in Burlington- house, it is supposed, | s e r v a t i o n o f ? o o d judgc 5 S) e x c i t c d £ , e r e l t j and at- Ytfill be allotted to accommodate them^ this diffi- tracted attention. culty may he got over. . | Soon after the present Drury I. ane theatre wa- Other Regulations— The carriages will en-' opened, Mr Kean addressed the committee, requests ter at the western gate, and pass out at the: an engagement but he was informed the esta. eastern one. , i,, o pr" e vent th, e p1o ssi. b.. i. l. i ty ofr ' bi e ! blishment was filled up' . Mi HOSKINS, master in the royal navy, and commanding the Sir Francis Drake store- ship, now at Portsmouth, has contrived an out- rigger for the support of the top- gallant mast of a ship, to which is fixed a back- stay, called by sailors, " Hoskin's flying back- stay, which can be shifted to answer any point of sailing in an instant of time, without sending a man off the deck. It has been proved to answer every requisite purpose ; gives more support to the mast than all the other rigging, and the weight of all attached to the improvement does not excecdthe common back- stay. An engraver at Somer's Town, named WILKINS, died, a few days since, in consequence of having fractured his skull, in the following, manner : — H e was drinking tea, and, according to his usual practice, when seated, was balancing himself upon the hinder feet of the chair, when he lost his equilibrium, fell backward, and struck his head against a marble slab. He was taken up in a state of insensibility, and survived only four days. „ benefactor of all his dependents, and may it* continuance long, render premature the account of his demise, so industriously circulated in the English newspapers, was given with the loudest acclamations. Baron Niddry, and long may he enjoy his well- earned honours. The Family of Hope, and long may the county of West L. othian enjoy good Hopes. I. ady Niddry and Family, and may the descendant* of the family always live as truly in the hearts of the tenantry as at present. l. ady Ann Hope, the Earl's only surviving'dausliter. and prosperity to her family. The company sat to a late hour, and nothing could exceed the conviviality of the party, owing much to the exertions and attention of M. r KIEII, the preses, and the reverend Mr RITCHIE, croupier. MARAH2& R01 NBURGIl, JUNE 3. I here were 68>; sheep and lambs in the Gratsmartet Sheep sold at 3Gs. Od. to 40s. lambs, tr'om Hsl6d. to 17,' I here were also 84 black cattle it, the market: tat ' cattle brought from lOs. Od. to 12s. 0d. pir* tone, smiting Beet, per lb. Os. Td. toOs. 9d Mutton,.... Os. 9d. Os. lOd Veal, Os. 7d. 0s. ! Kl Pork, Os. 8d. Os. 9d Lamb, p. qr. 4s. Od. 6s. Od Tallow, p. stl4s. Od. 16s. Od Hides, 9s. ( Id. 10s. Od Sheep skips, 3d. 0d. to4s. 04 Quartern loat, jnd Potatoes, p. peck, s. 74 tf'eigh- horsse, luesday. Butter..... Is. ' 6d. Os. Od Salt, p. st. 24s. Od. — s. od Do. p. lb.... ls. 6J. Qs. Oil prev Our actor was thus, for the time,- disappointed in MARRIED On the 28th May, at Sunderland, Mr FREDERICK BROWN, to Miss SOPHIA DE CAMF, youngest sister of Mrs Charles Kemble, and both of the Sunderland theatre. Calfsk. p. lb Os. Od. is. Od] Eggs, p. doz..' ."."... o » ". 10( J Mealmarket, Tuesday, Oatmeal, 480bolls | Pease& BarleymeaI, 63bol' « , First, p. boll, 11. H. 6d Peasemeal, p. b. 01.16s. Od Se<". ond, 11. i9. 0 d Perpeck, is. o j ™ rd„. 1.1. Os. 6d 1 Barleymeal, p. b. 01.15s. Si first, p. peck,... is. Sd Perpeck i3. ad DALKEITH, June 6.- 385 bolls of oatmeal. ® Seec8ot. n'Vd 220lss.. OOdd | I TPheirrPde,. c. k. 1, 9 » . 6d. toOli,.. od I. iiTti, June 4. FLAX— During the week, has been pretty much in demand, although the sales have not been extensive. Riga Drujana Rakitzer at 90s. cash ; Dutch 105s. to 125s. - Newry. a small parcel of inferior sold at 73s. TALLOW— Sales but limited. 94s. to 95s. Inferior ,90s. E D I N B U R G H N E W S C O N T I N U E D. admission of improper company, another pair of h i s w i ! i h t o t r e l d t h e L o n d o n s t a g e ] i n a ' m o r e e x a l t . , , n d D a s s ed gates will be erected in the Court- yard, and ed walk than he had before occupied. Still he went v a covered way for the company, through which on, increasing the admiration, and adding to the numonlv they can gain access. Earl of Y? r . : ber of his friends, and at length Dr Drury, of Teign- „ ' , rv ° . IT . A/ r [-. y , t . mouth, addressed, Pascoe Grenfel , Esq. M. P. stamouth, Sir George Warrender, Mr I reemJntle,; t i th'e e x l r a o r d S i ^ e r i t s t l u t , ; e r e \ n a m a n t l e r and Sir George 1 albot, have undertaken to ex- lost, for want of a fit opportunity to show t h i - amine the tickets at the different doors. At, selves, and urging the gentleman to whom he wrote, The Edinburgh new jail bill was read a third time and passed, in the House of Commons, on the lst inst. The new bankrupt bill was read a third time in the House of Commons, on Wednesday se'en- Pu' blic gratitude for a benefit which so happily signalises the fe- establishment of the house of Bourbon upon the throne of France. . W e hope we shall be authorised to publish the text of the treaty in our number of to- morrow— Moniteur. " MINISTRY OF WAR. " Two hundred pieces of cannon shall be fired in e t f fy city and fortified place throughout the kingdom, in celebration of the signature of. peace. , ( Signed) <• DUPONT. His Majesty the Emperor of Russia dined this day at the palace of the Thuilleries. Their Majesties the Empgror of Austria and King of Prussia dined there yesterday, The allied troops, which are at Paris, began to march off this day., A mess. nger from the Pope has just arrived at Paris. His Royal Highness the Duke of Clarence arrived this day at Boulogne. Paris, June I. The convocation of the Legislative Body, ordered for the 31st of May, has been postponed to the 4th of June. I t appears certain that the allied sovereigns will leave this capital before the end of the week. Madrid, May 19. T h e Cardinal de Bourbon has been sent to Toledo, the proper place of his residence. He is Archbishop of Toledo. M. Luyando, Minister of State of the late ItegenSy, has been restored to his functions at a Captain of frigate. He has set out for the place of his destination. Good harmony is re- establishing in every part 1 of this vast monarchy, and we. already enjoy a perfect tranquillity. There is no appearance of the slightest opposition in any part, of Spain. Copenhagen, Mav 15. Some changes of importance have taken place ^ ^ ^ H3, ooo" dolUa here within these few days. 1 ne iving has de- • clared the Council of State permanent. M. D e Raas, Minister of Justice, and M. De Moestling, Minister of the Finances, have been declared members of the Council of State. All affairs of importance are for the future to be discussed and determined in this Council. The King has reserved to himself only the right of granting pardons and promotions ; and the differences and etiquette regarding the court and the theatre. According to the intelligence from Norway, the Swedish party is completely suppressed— T h e Bishop of Bauiri, and the preacher Wergcthat the Emperor would set out immediately for Metz, where his army of reserve h is been forming ever since he crossed the Rhine. " This circumstance induccd me to believe that the note would not produce any good effect. I therefore determined not to present it. The Emperor is still in Paris, and I regret extremely that I did not adhere to my first determination, notwithstanding the absence of the Minister of Foreign Relations. From the situation of affairs here, it is impossible to fort- see the delays to which this perplexing business is subject. In the first arid only interview which I had with the Duke of Bassano, he said expressly, that the obstacles which his absence had thrown in the way of the negotiation should not occur again ; two months have not elapsed before the same obstacles are presented." T h e message was laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. RETALIATION FOR THE TORPEDO ATTEMPT ON THE LA HOGUE. Extract of a letter from Middletown, Connecticut, dated April 9 . — " Six British barges, containing 300 men, entered the port of Pettipagne yesterday morning, about four o'clock, and burnt about 26 vessels, many of them ships worth from 15,000 to 20,000 dollars, were all burnt to the water's edge. They gave out, that that if the inhabitants made any resistance, they would burn the town ; of course they were not opposed. The property destroyed was owned in New York, Middletown, Hartford, & c.— T h e British force came from a frigate and a brig, and remained on shore all day unmolested. It is supposed the number did not exceed 150. About 1000 men had collected on both sides the river, intending to surprise them as they returned ; but the British, having waited until dark, passed unobserved." The value of the vessels thus destroyed is L O N D O N . It is a coincidence worthy of remark, that'the Princess C H A R L O T T E entered into public life the day on which peace between England and France was ratified. ' It has been thought requisite to adopt a new mode of instruction in teaching soldiers to fire ball, and traversing rests will be furnished by the Ordnance to regiments for that purpose ; marksmen being particularly necessary in America. the first they will tear off a corner; at the second the seal; and at the third the ticket v/ ill be given in. On Thursday night, the Princess of WALES appeared in a private box at Covent Garden Theatre, and was receive1?! with loud plaudits by the audience. With the exception of Colonel CAMPBELL, who sailed with BONAPARTE from Frejus to Elba, ail the commissioners of the allied Sovereigns, who accompanied him from Fontainbleau to the coast, are now in London. We understand that among the curiosities belonging to BONAPARTE, which it was judged expedient to transmit to the respective courts of the allies, there is a s'ngular correspondence, in cypher, on the subject of recent events, between BONAPARTE, MURAT King of Naples, and the Crown Prince of SWEDEN. Lord AUCKLAND'S sudden dissolution was occasioned by a disease which the faculty term angina pectoris, or ossification of the vessels of the h e a r t ; by his Lordship's death a pension of 20001. per annum falls to the public, and government have the auditorship of Greenwich hospital at their disposal. Lady PILKINGTON'S elopement from her seat at Mill Green, in Essex, which made so much noise for a few days in that county, terminated, it seems, in nothing more than an excursion in a chaise and four, to a neighbouring church, with her Yorkshire Apothecary, on whom she has bestowed her hand and immense fortune.— Morning Herald. Tuesday night the bible printing- office at Shacklewell, belonging to Mess. STRACAN and Co. King's printers, was broke open and several hundred bibles and testaments, in sheets, stolen therefrom. The city of Antwerp has requested the King of FRANCE to return the fine pictures of RUBEVS, which were stolen from their city by BONA- ' to contribute his assistance in the laudable effort of removing them to a more enlarged sphere Of exertion. Mr Grenfell spoke to Mr Whitbrc- ad, and such interest soon accomplished what the unsupported solicitations of Mr Kean failed to effect. Mr Arnold was deputed to go down- to Exeter, and make his observations Of the young candidate for a London engagement. The manager arrived, went to the theatre, and certainly had sufficiently varied specimeus afforded him of Mr Kean's abilities, for that night he performed Alexander the Great, he danced in the ballet, and was Harlequin in the farce. Considering that he is pronounced to be the best Harlequin that ever juluped on the boards, and that he sings so well, that in Braham's part, in the Opera in the Devil's Bridge, he is regularly encored three times in one of songs,— we are surprised that, Mr Arnold's report led to our actor's engagement as I a tragedian. This circumstance shews a sign of soundness in the taste of those who conduct this theatre, which we should be happy to see more frequently evinced. While on the subject of Mr Kean's versatility, we may remark, that, fur his benefit at Exeter, he played Shylock in the Merchant of Venice, and Apollo in Midas. Mr Arnold was sufficiently Satisfied with Mr Kean's performances in tragedy, ballet, and pantomime, to engage him at a salary of eight pounds aweek. / But previously, Mr K. had been in treaty with Mr Elliston, ro act at some one of his numerous theatres. Mr Elliston, we believe, spoke of the possibility of giving as much as two pounds a week to a man who could do every thing, but wished to take a little time to deliberate, before he made so momentous a proposal. While he hesitated, Mr Arnold stepped in, and Mr Elliston saved his two pounds a week, and lost Mr Kean. It is said, that as the treaty had gone a certain length, Mr Elliston claimed a pecuniary compensation, in the shape of a weekly payment, fro; n the gentleman whom he had almost hired. Mr Kean's first attempt, in consequence of his engagement at Drury L. ane, was the part of Shyhick. He gave satisfaction to the few who saw him, but few, indeed, at that time, thought of going to this theatre. His merits, however", became more and more buzzed about, and his first performance of Richard the Third was to a full house, and drew forth applause as unusual as the talents that excited it. Mr Kean's age is twenty- four and a half years— his height five feet five inches. Pie was married at On the lst inst. there was laid before the presbytery of Ayr, a royal presentation in favour of the reverend R O B E R T A U L D , to be Minister of the first charge of that parish. The presbytery sustained the presentation, and accordingly translated Mr A U L D from the second to the first charge. The treasurer of the reverend Mr BROWN'S congregation, Dalkeith, has transmitted to the Good yellow candle ^ In ASHES and TOBACCO— Nothing of consequence SUGAR and COFFEE— Have been partially inquired for, and were saleable at London prices. Holders, however, will not submit to, these rates, and only some trifling quantities of sugar have been sold to grocers a\ t irregular prices. GLASGOW, J u n e 4. COTTON— The sales amount to 700 packages, which were taken entirely by the trade to supply immediate wants, at a declension of about, id. Bowed Georgia 40, at 2s. 5d. to es. 4d. Maranham, 25, at 2s. 6d. Demerara 7, at 2s. Sd. Pernambucco 386, at 2s. 7d. to 2s. 8d. Guadaloupe SO, at 2s. 4d/ Laguira 100, at 22Jd. Of SUGAR, CorrEK, RUM, PIMENTO, and B r * - WOODS— 1' here have been no sales. POTASHES and TOBACCO— Are also unsaleable. TAI. LOW— IS selling at 90s. GRAIN— Is steady at former prices. LIVERPOOL, June 4. CorrEE— The holders of coffee are now confident ot a rise in prices taking place. About 93 casks and 750 bags were sold. Ordinary Jamaica, at 85s. Middling, at 95s. . . _ COTTON— Has been flat. The sales do not exceed treasurer of the Lunatic Asy1 lum, the sum of 261. 3s. lOd. New Orl, eI salnasn, d 45G, e oartS 2i sa .. 3d. to a2t s. 3 4s. d . 7d. P ctrccollected for that institution A warehouse in Brunswick Street, Glasgow, of a back apartment, and that he then opeoetl the back door for the admission of the robbers. They forced open and rummaged a desk, leaving the papers scattered on the floor ; but, no goods being in the place, they fortunately did not discover any tiling worth stealing except a few coppers and a number of keys, which are the only articles taken away, A little past two o'clock, on Saturday morning, the servant girl of a publican who lives opposite the Barracks, Glasgowj hearing some person enter the back window of her master's bouse, informed the band of the 71st regiment, passing towards the barracks gate at the time, of the fellow's entrance ; who, on going into the house, discovered him secreted in a coal closet. During his short stay in the house, he had only taken the money drawer from the bar, and laid it on the floor. He is a man that had been occasionally employed as a waiter in the house. On the 26th ultimo, a young woman, who had the appearance of a servant, went into the shop of Mrs SIMPSON, dressmaker in Kelso, and said, that Mrs LOGAN of Hassendean Mains had sent her for a quantity of lace, which was given her with some hesitation, Mrs SIMPSON observing to her, that she ought to have brought a written note from Mrs LOGAN. On the same evening, she returned with a note, apparently signed by Mrs LOGAN, for other articles, namely, gloves, muslin, sarsnet, Sic. which were immediately given her. On the day following, the note was PARTE. All other placet should imitate the E X - I ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ S ^ o v ^ discovered to be a forgery, but a very good imi- - • ' Thev^ have had two ! tation of Mrs L O G A N S handwriting. Every innambucco, 350, at 2s. 5d. to 2s. 6d. Maranham 1200, at 2s. sad. to 2s. 4d. Bahia, 420, at 2s. 2d. to , , • . „ . . • , , 2s' 3 l f Demerara, 15, at 2s. 5d. St Domingo, 10, at was bioken into between Saturday night and is. sd. M « nday morning. It is supposed that a boy DYEWOODS— Several parcels of logwood have been had been let down through the sky- light window to 1? 8h1a. t Ca ± amc Jp. ei an ce hvyi n l, opgr iwc coso' . d , J aant ! 2a0l1c. a to'o 2g2w1o. od, at 171. GRAIN— Is flat. In Po I'ASIIES— There is nothing doing. RUM— Some few parcels have been sold. Jamaica 16 O P. at 5s. 6d. Leeward nill, at 4s. SUGAR— Of yellow Havannah 120 boxes were sold, at a public sale, at 105s. In TOBACCO— Some small sales have been made, at an advance in prices. Maryland coloured, at 13d. to 18d. ample of Antwerp. husband's fame and prosperity. GREAT PEDESTRIAN FEAT The match to children, one of whom died at an early age. Windsor from Bow Church, and to return, was decided on Thursday. A gentleman made a bet of 100 to 3 0 that a man could not be found in a fortnight to go from Bow Church, Cheapside, to Windsor, to go a mile out of Windsor, and return, and then proceed back to Bow Church in eight hours, a distance of 5 2 miles. The public were unacquainted who the backers against time would start for this great peiformance, but Rainer was selected. He started at twelve on Wednesday night, from Bow Church, by St Paul's clock, and when it was known Rainer was at work, betting got fgom even to any odds on him. He reached Hyde Park Corner in 22 minutes, and did seven and a half miles in the hour. This was about his pace to Windsor He was much distressed at half the distance,, but he recovered, and travelled well back. He j DORFF, for 1700 guineas, and not t o the Empearrived at Hyde Park Corner gate, on his re- ror of AUSTRIA, as stated in a form- r paper, turn, at a quarter past seven, having neatly t h r e e T h e Count also offered Lord FOLEY 2 0 0 0 guimiles to perform in three quarters of an hour. The night was unpropitious, misty, and foggy, and on the arrival of the pedestrian at Piccadilly he was overcome by the haziness of the weather. He walked under a degree of embarrassment until he got through St Paul's Church- yard, when he made a start, and ran in, and won by four minutes and a half. He chal- Jlcuged all the world at any thing above a mile. jquiry is now making to detect the impostor, and it is expected, from the particular attention paid to her person and dress, by one of the young women in the shop, that she will speedily be discovered. The jobbers in lean stock, at several fairs, have driven their cattle from place to place, without being able to find purchasers, owing to a prudent forecast in the graziers, who are apprehensive of a further reduction in the price of meat. The following recipe is offered to the notice of the public, as a cheap and efficacious remedy in scurvy, and other cutaneous affections, bv a surgeon, who has successfully used it among his patients for more than twenty years:— Take dandelion ( roots and tops), water cresses, and spruce fir tops, of each two pounds. Boil them in five quarts of water, to thre « quarts. Strain it into bottles, of which take half a pint every morning, one hour before breakfast. On the Ist inst. a small wherry sailed from Lochgilphead, with 13 men and one woman, for Silvercraigs, on Lochfine, for bark for their nets. On their passage the sails suddenly backed, weeks ago, has had its day, and a fill almost sh L e immediately went to the bottom, a„ d equal to it has now commenced. France i s | a l ! hoard perished. Five of the men u is found to be glutted with sugar and c o f f e e . — i ' a , d ' lv r e d w ' t h i n a Lochgilphead, and Some of our speculators hare returned, without ! h a v e le, f t J " " d o w 3 a n d ' c h i l d r c a t 0 la » e n t thdr selling an ounce. . untimely 1 A Spanish schooner, recaptured by the Ringdove in February last, and ordsred for Jamaica, foundered soon after in a heavy gale, by which accident Lieutenant FLEMING, Mr J. K. SIIERER, midshipman, and three seamen, unfortunately perished. The farmers throughout the kingdom are not likely to experience so heavy a loss as was supposed, from the low price of provisions, as all kinds of laboureis wages have been reduced nearly a third in most parts of the kingdom, and the example is becoming general ; and also the price of timber has fallen nearly a fourth, which will give encouragement to all improvements. His Grace the Duke of RUTLAND has sold Grimalkin, by Chance, to Count TRAUTMANS neas for Soothsayer, by Sorcerer, which his Lord' ship refused. The great rise of prices which took place in every article of colonial produce, about six loss. SEQUESTRATIONS.. EXAMINATIONS, DIVIDENDS, & C. MATHEW SMITH, bleacher, Causeyetid, near Paisley, to be examined in the Sheriff- clerk's office, Paisley, I7th June and Ist July, ari2. Creditors of the deceased ROBERT LITTLE, ironmonger, Glasgow, meet in the office of i. awrie and Morrison, writers there, loth June, at 2, Creditors of JOHN GI. AS SANDEMAN, merchant Glasgow, meet in the office of William Gordon Mack writer there, 16th June, at 12. Creditors of DUNCA- I SANDERS, grocer, Edinburgh, meet in John's Coffeehouse there, 23d June, at 2 Creditors of R O B E R T CLARK, writer and coachmaker, Perth, meet in the George inn there, 20th June, at 12. * Creditors of the late ROBERT M'LACHLAN, bookseller, Dumfries, meet in Nairn's Coffeehouse there-. 18th June, at 12. C r e d i t o r s of JAMES T A I T , » NDTAIT a n d THOMSON, late manufacturers. Paisley, will receive a dividend from the trustee, 1st July. F A R M S I N W I G T O N S H I R E T O L E T. There will be LET, in the course of next Jbar, TH E following F A R M S on the E l a t e of DUNSKEY, for such number of year/ as ma be agreed upon:— IN THE PARISH OF STONNYKIRK, If about At present possessed acres. North Port of Spittal... J. and C. Dryn, William, £ jNl'J| Eubt) in, >- 550 and T . South ditto J. WallacdPP. MfKelvie'si heiryitDorijfen, C. Wi- (. 583 thagfand HJCochran... \ Bormore P. a i ^ A . Witjjfcr 141 Barnchalloch Aj^ d J. PatdFson 203 Awhirk J^ l'Willian*! 210 IN P O R J J R T R I C K PA/ ISH. Crailoch \ Mii. M'Bry^ P and J. Mac- _ Wllliai High Tibbert.,..^ r... W. and J/ Melroy Challoch HilL.^ r. A. Tho/ son, W. M'Neillie, # d A. Campbell... The entry^ Ffhe above wil/ be at Whitsunday 1815, as to g r a s ^ n d s , and Marfinmas 1815, as to arabltr land. f r The fjpns are mostly arable, and capable of verygreat improvement, being well situate for markets and", for lin^ f. Those in the parish of Stonnykirk are withtwo and three miles of the town of Portpatrick, and the others within two and three miles of the town of Stranraer, at which ports grain can be exported, ami lime imported with facility. It is proposed to divide the lands differently from what they are at present, in such' a manner as to suit, the views of intending offerers. Every encouragemer r will be given to' tenants of skill and capital, and the proprietor wjll lay out « dequate sums in building housi » and offices, < ijd making roads anpl fences atijtdbjg to'the Further'informstwr received b* y applying'to the proprietor, or to Mr Ronald, his factor, who will shew the lands to intending offerers, DUNSKEY, M a y 3. 1814. 28 » - 15S- 8* Printed and published by DAVID RAMSXY & SON, at the Courant Office, High Street, Edinburgh, every Monday, Thursday , and Saturday.
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