4
m. 1 , - M : VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It i3, l8o 5' NUMBER 2145. NOTICE. Mr. bAXON.ivi'l!attend at ftKKJS, fromthesist to the s$th of NOVEMBER ipst. to receive tlie Renis dueto the Right Hon. Earl CpsrtiiCHAM, and at S i x M i t r s R l D O E , from the 5th to the 8th of D e - CEM.B'KR, for the Meelick .Rents. Such Tenants, as neglecfj to Pay the last MARCrtand MAY Rent?; on the abpye'Oays, Mr. DA:LON will compel io F.iy .the Year's Rent. Fountain, Nov. iz, 1803. REWARD; . - i'lf We, whose Names are hereunto subscribed, in o.rderto bring to punishment the Villain o'r Villains who houghed Mr. MICHAEL CiiLLi NAN'S Sheep, 011, the lands of Ballinacraggv,. on the Night of the Z5fh ult. do hereby offer the Rewards., to our names affixed, 'for discovering and prosecutingconviction witliin-SixCalendar Months, Jl'je Person or Persons who perpetrated said Felony. • 9th Nov. 1805. Sir E<l.O'Brien, Bart. 50' Mr. Thady Kelly P PI H k Mr. Mich;; Cullinan -»o James Cr^agifi, Esq. to Corn. O'Brien, Esq. 10 John Colpoyse, Esq. J Mr. Tim. Donahue 10 Arithony Colpoyse, Esq. S Mr. Deris Cullinan S Mr. Pat. Daly j' Wm. Foley, Esq. j Rt.Rev.DrO'ShaghhesyS Mr. James Tymens 5 M r . W m . Kellv 3 David Power, Esq. S Mr. James Donahde • 5 Mr. James Haly Mr. Michael.Halv Mi. Michacl Cotfy Mat. Canny, Esq. Denis Canny, Esq. Andrew Perry j Esq. 5 Mr. Mi cha el'S pe 11 iss y. 5 Pat. M'Mahoh., Esq. 2 Tho. M'Mahon, E5q. £ Mr. James Perry 3 Mr. Bryan MaJoiie s Mr, Mat. Kenrty 2 Mr. David Kent)/ * Mr John Catiil .'(.. * hy the fiord Lieuteniiil and Coiincil of ir'eliindj A P R O' C L A M A T if) M. HARDWlCKg. . . W HEREAS'by an M pafled in,die 44th year of'Ks Majefty's Reign; cci,tled, lS An Act for 'sft&fi to- rn g and-riiaiotajni.ng s pTtniajent additional force to be raifed. in' Irelanp, fof'th'e deface of th'e realm, and to provide tor augmenting his Maje^y's renulnr orccsr'' the Lord L. ieutenant and Privy Cpuiicil of Ireland arj -mbo- mctf'tt! caufc th' number of .men which ilia 11 be mj'difiie to be raifed for frippiyiog the vacancies in fuVh additional fpr.ee tint thai': have 2iifea on or before the'ill day of S-rptcmb r, 1.^04, 8} reafort of Eolillm'eiii.,-ftqatti,tie-, frtiori, or other Cafpalty," am! Iliall alio from nmt ia within ttt; ds's afte, th- ill dajot; point e" each iu, Ceefting jea'r, caufe tlie nutiihel oi Wen nq1ii .-RDI17 .be ririlYd ii^ . a' h I'ucce. yi ar, oi ilr. luppl, iiijj ihe V'a- can'-ie* sr.lifi| Flora futh Eii'lifttaent, Death, Lirfc.tiuti, 0 , o'fherCalbalty, winch flujl have anleh In the ci'JiirVe of the preceding year in the feveral Giiuiit.'es iii Iriiilutij to bfc appgrurtiie.i aillonp fuch Counties according. to'the :-cl- .ps ti.ve original qtrolas of Meii 1 equiret! to be railed i n ,fi( •. K .efpe&ive Co untiei, under ah Ad of (Vrl-rnptilr (n|f- e.i 1.1 t:,e 43d Yflr of llib M:,jelly, enutitd; " All ..Ait iii.rujibla Bii Maj- liy more r.4citmlly to raife and a(TaltS- blc iii lfcUrvd afi adciiional riiilitary forte for tile belter rtc.-;tv c and feiurity of the United Kingdom, and fbi ii,c inr.re.vi,!.oruir^'.jirO.fe.cutiorr of the War.^ . Aisd whereas it appears,to US, irs.ll returns, m^dr io . p jrfui'iic'e'o'f tlie faid Ii. il-mentioncd Aftj by ttic. Deputy' tn,pcd>..|' General ol" ih= Ar'niy ol Refen'e, iliat 'inr^ T.r.-oni'and gcveii Hundred, and Thiily-ode iil'eri is (He- nurtilier requilite to be railed for l/piitying i| ie V'ananc'es Ifiat liave ai ifen in luch Addit1iin.1l Forf.-, ou orbetdre th- til'xiay of September^ l i i J j : • . Now We the Lord Lieut, natit and Coune.il or f'rela/iH do, : n; purlnamc of the Act al'orefaid,. hereby lilt, .vil'di, .and dedlsie the. Number iwhijih the undbrmentiourd Ciiiiri- ties arid Cities liiali lefpcaiveJv'i'urnil'h towards Fiippj. ihg' .tbe aiumbei of Men retjil'ire.l lb till the Va.inCiea ar'ore- .i'lid, .to be as foilowsj making- in the, whole Tlirie Thou- fand Si'veri Hundred sjtf fifteen Meu, viz. C-i'Htiel. Antrim Aimagh- Cailow Cavan Chie- Cork; Cor!; Gity Dpflegal Down - !.)ubi:n,C:ty - Ilnblin County Fermaivagli Galwaj/ Ker. y Kildare,. j - -Kilkenny - Ring'is County - Leitviip - Limerick County Lime'rickCity Londonderry Longford Louth. T o w n o f Drogheda Miyo Me.ath ' . - Monaghan - ftiH en's County - Rolcpmmon Sligo - • Tipperary Tyrone - ' Waterford Weftmeath ' Wexford : . Widtlow No. ado aSo . 2iu . 210 112 '57° 200 & 280 .. 210 ; 210 .3 5 ^ : 280 210 280 »8o • • 210 . 280 i 1'd; -350 210. 21.0 1 °5- 500 2,So 280 . .2.10 280 210 35o 350 280 210 350 2lo slyi'orlhnmcnt, 104 4680-10,000 4(180.10,000 35 10-10,000 5510-10,006 3510-10,000 667*0-10,000 4680-10,000 . 5850-10,000 •5675-10,000' 46SO-IO,OOOI 3 j 1 o-10,000 3510-10,000 58 50-10,000 46 So-10',000 35 10-ib,bob - 46S0-10,000 4680-10,000 3510-10,006 4680-10,000 351.0-10,00:11 3850-10,006 3510-10,000 35-10 10,000 4755"' t>oo 5500-10,000 ' ' 4680-10,000 4680-10-000 3510-10,000 4680-10,000 35 IO-I C , QOO 5850-1.0,000 5850-10,000 4680 -i0,000 35ta-tV,ooo 5 8 5 0 1 0 , 0 0 0 35 10-1 0,000 104 •7.* 7S 78 2 l a 104 .<•30 158 104 .78 I 30 104 78 104 104 |(>4 130 7.« ' 73- 39 i8rt 104 104 \ 78 104 130 130 J04 78 130 ie,ooo 3715 Given «t the Coflncil Chamber in Dublin, the 5 th Day of October, 1805. b Kedefdale, C, Arran. FraDltfore. C I.onc ] Man L- Mafon. M. Fitzgerald, ' Ifaac Cor y 8 S L, Pirlons. Standifli O'Cridy. G. EilSTRICT OF ENNIS. fj* To be Sold, by Inch, of Candle, at the Dis- tillery of Kilkishen, on Monday the i8th of Nov. instant, at 'thehour of 12 o'clock in the noon, a)!' the Household .Furniture, Corn, Hay, Horses', and other Articks ^eized on said premises for Fines in- curred, aDd arrears of Excise dire to the Crown.— Excise-Office, EniiisJ' xith Nov.. 1805. ' THQ. O'GRACiY, Surveyor-Gen. Terms—- CASH. In the matter of Robert} NOTICE Creagh, Esq; a lunatic. Lis hereby given lo the : : - i - ) different Tenants of said Lunatic's Estate.'!, that I shall attend at the House of DENIS LAWLER; Emit*, on TutiRSDAYand FEI- i>ay, the 14th and ijtfi of froviiwuER instant, for the purpose of Receiving their Renis and Arrears, : when .and where they are requested to meet mc. Dated'this 4th day of November, 1805. WM. CROKER, (sp.j Receiver app6inted in said matter. Fejtham Watson a Francis Drew, Esq. Jair.es Drew a . Same, 1 ; .'"• John Sm';ih and Jo- nathan SmitH <2 Sarnej Paul Ham a Sanle. Geo. Wheeler, a Same. The above S A L E Ins'.ant, '.;.., TO BE SOLD, g j " By Auction, on Tuesday the isth day of November in- stant, At the Defendant's House at Dj-fcwsboroughj in-the Coun- ty, of Clare, by virtue of the W'rits ; of Fieri .Facias in these Causes, to,me directed, all the Defendant's Household Furni- •ture, dnd some Cows arid Horses: * , ' Dated ihii 6th day Sf NO- vemberji.i.gos,.^ . T; STUD'DERT, Juij! SlierlflFj . The above Sdle to eomnierice at one o'clock on said day. is idjouwed to Friday the 2zd •November if, 1805. Atblbnr, Relfaltj Cork; Dublin. l f .iiu:ski!!cni Limerit k. Me wry. Wateirlotd. By ite lord JMtiffanl General'aid Geiterai Governor of Ireland. PROCLAMATION Ear far doling Deserters from His Majestys Regit lair Forces. ' HARDWiCXE. HERK AS II. lias I jctji Icprefeiited io The kivb, • 1 „„ ..'M'^'M 1 ;? , l N s LV-ferteis trom His Malcll^-a IvSp.iillf Lund Forces, who l i . f e in. dlli.ed.lo ret,, n ,0 Ihcfr IX'ty by *rf Offer of His Male,! ft Oucoo. Par<t->u, ill,;' that, luch an inllit&e b' H^s Rov.l Gkliu ncy .1 bay> a dife Infjuedee opori the-r fmUre Be 'aviotlr ; H,r. has bfen plealgd to Sra -.at.-HU F i i t PARDOW to all DE- |KRTERS from His RiotiL.iR LXKD J-one wlw )j„n inncnder themfelve's, on or before the 24th Da^ of Dici.«atR ne«, to any of His" Maje.itj's Civ,! Mie.f- to the Commanding Officer of apy «5.Kf"Aiit v to an 1 eff tj>$' Sujfenint-ndihg l-.'eld OrTicetr.nf t|, e Recruiting S :;vice in ,1, , '-Stations are .mentioned in t! ? r...a:g,l. bcu or, o. to the Deputy ifl'ljpector^.GcueiaJ of the Reeituilvng Service' In Oubiih. Such Dele, tersj if Able-Bodied Men ,„.)fitfor Service ? I r , ? l '"i' ti:i! lt ' •« His Majelfy-may be ' ah, 1< K C '°', n ] m *' a <\ V sben fo placed, Ih ,11 not be I,able to be, claimed by any other Corps to which they may loinieily have belonged. ' • w',>' °r lV " cr , actually fervidg ;„ any of,His Ma- SK R V ,Cif" ,W,US ' 15 10 RUR ' CN ' LCR ,1M ' RCU 4 Deferters ferviug in other Corps (Militia and Arnlv of, Relerve excepted) aire to.cbntinue there i„.upon decla in K themfelv, 8 to tbetr reactive .Commanding Orficers, who .are 0 report t|, t crcumlfance tc the Under Secretary for he Military Department, and the Adjutant General id Dubltn ; and theyrfialtnotbe liable, ai any future time" to be claimed by the Raiment, in which they forlnerlv erved: But tlus Cla'ufe ,'s hot to eiten'd to hfled by the Corps r.ifing Recruits fo. General Seivice- which Deferters ye onl/ to be emitjed to .their Pardon tfmWW^ raCh > "ii."* transr'ered roa^d. • may -pleafe lo com- . The Magiflrite, to whom any Peierier fem Hit Ma-" jelty, Regular Forces may fnrrender himfei'f, i 5 ut ho- r zed and required to certify the Day oa whieh'f„ch De- fer,erfurrendered himfelf, which Certificate -is to C od£ nue ,ri Force until the Arrival of the Dderter .t the Head Quarters Of- the neareft Military Port, provided he proceed at the Rate o! Ten,Mi!e f . D.y, unlefs pre! Vested by S.ck.Hs, to be certified by lome 4 d i S Officer commanding at fuch Milit.ry Poll. ^ Up Soldier, who may, defert «fer thele His MajeifVe gracious Intentions are made Public, .hall • be Tntll2d' tu the above Pardon,, but be proceeded .gainlt- with he • Son T ° rmer Proclimation of iiis Majedy's f ^ r ^ A r U ^ ^ i n dtlertedj.- be iriciudid And it is to be clearly underlW ihat Pai-t^n i, not.to extend to any Deferter from His Majerty' fe' FSrf' L a^Vd- Ar "' , ' t or Add itiona* 1 tore- , hat all Soldiers', who lhall have inlilled for Ge- neral Service from the faid Forces- all nJ Tl r , r ' By His Excellency's Command, - A: L O N G. T O BE S E T, From tfe First bay of May next, For such TERM of YEARS dr LIVES ad Shall be agreed on, The FA RM and. LANDS of GURTTVOHW Containing about i6oA. 3R. 38P. Situate on tlie Road between CRUSHEEN and Tu&« BER , in the COUNTY of GALWAY, . Proposals, in writing; to be received fay. THECJ. BUTLER, Esq; Fishmoyne, Borlsoleigh; and J. O'DONNELL, Esq. Ennis. *** Resident Tenants will be encouraged. - ( c ) November 6, i^oj. TO B E S E T , From the Twenty.fifth Day of March next, For such TJ.RM of YEARS or LIVES as shall be .. agreed upon, VlL Two Slale ani 0ne Tile HOUSE, with the Offices and Garden thereunto annexed, now tenanted by Mr. FRANCIS A. ENGLAND , and his Undertenants, situate near the Corn Market, Mill- street, Ennis, t0 be rece 'Ved by JOH& UDONNELL, Esq; Ennis, who will close with the fust solvent Bidders. Noveiriber 6, i8bj. TO BE .LET,' From Ihe z$th Day i f March ftexb, . About TWENTY. ACRES of excellent Fattening and Meadow GROUND, part of the Demesne of C L O N E Y , a complete convenience for the Fairs of Quin and SpanciJhill, being about one mile,distant from each. PROPOSALS to be made to B U R T O N BIN DON, Esq; Cloney. _ *** Several Thousands oi' remarkably fine ASH T R E E S , two, three, four, and five years old, to fee i>old at Clbriey, on reasonable terms.—Apply as (3P-) .November J, I'BOJ. above. Rebellion, are cAdtkvo.uring to efcape J ilftice by drpa, t- ing fronvlreland . Now we the Lord Lieutenant, being defirbtisto bring »a fuch offenders to fpttdt I'tjniflimcnt, do, by and w.tb the Advice of his Majefty's moil Hi.-.-iourafl,: Privy COUI B cil. fl rift',,y forbid any Perfen vWionifncver to depart from Ireland. Without having obtained a Paffp'oft for that pur- (lofe figned: by oui-Chief Secretary, or tl-e Under Secre, tary for tHi Civil Department, or cither «f tb<-m, or l.y fome Period autborifed by ad Inftrume.-.t fabferibed by therrij or either df them,- to lign.fuch Pafl'jjoi ts. And we do hereby It,iaiy command - ill Mafieri and Commanders of all Shi arid Velfeja departing from Ire- land, that they do not, ufipn any act-ount wfatfotver, take on board their V, Ifels, fthen departing from Iielarid, any Perlon not having fuchvEaffport. as Sforcfajd, % Ve and except the pei-.fons aa-aally employed .to navigate fuch Veffels refpefl-ively. And y/e do furtbei colnrnartd all MittiiVrates', Officcrii of the Revenue, aad all Officers Civil and M liuiy, and all other his Majefty's SuhjeQ% to ufc their iitmoit EiJ. deavoiirs to prev.-nt the d-parture o: any Peifobs' from Ireland not having fuch PifTpo, ts as iifo-eiaid. Given at the Cofincil Chsrnber 1n Dublin, the 28th D a y o f J u l y , 1803. Redsf.'ale, C. ' Tyr-.-w!y Menrv Ring. . Cii'iis. Dublin. j; BeresfrilM. D, baton he! . WMI-TUANII H'. ,E. Fox. S. Hamilton; Droftbeda. . Her. Lan»rifhe. Mali. Fitz-Oert!d; Anoelky.,. M. Smith. SfanHilh O'Grady. Mui-kerry. ' GOD lave the fclNG. A General Meeting-of the GOVERNORS and DIPUTY GOVERNORS 0 f the COUNTY of CLA R j; is requested at the Court-House of ENNIS, on THURSDAY the 14th inStant. Signed by order, Nov. 1805. D. FINUCANE, C. G. M. By the Lord Lteiitenaht General and General Governor of Irtlaiid,' t , A PROCLAMATION. .HAKBWICKI5: W HLit.l-AS His Majefty's S., ;ire doth it ibis Time require a Ipeedy .Supply o: Seamen and Seafanni- Men to m f n His Majefty's Fleet which is now fitting out. We do by H,s Majefty's Command direct ,„d require all •'. M.aglrtrites in this Part of His Majelty's Uflited iC^ngdom called Ireladd,- to ufe their, bell Endeavours to caule all fdeh Seamen dr Seafaring Men. fit for Hi's Ma- Jelty sSeivice, as may be, oiet with, to lie taken uti, and fent on to'arc any of His Majeity's Ships or Veffels in' the Ports, of dn the Coalt of ti, laipi, or (ij auy of His Ma- lesty s Sea Officers who may be employed to raife 'M- n Shore for His Majv-(f y ;s Fleets .cc'brdinc as the 1','aces where Itiefi Ships or'Vefteh, or fdeh Sei OiW 5TOay bt- rt-fpectively (lationed Dull be df.ireft. An i 'or ,th'e I- n.- CORK, R OV. coarag'eriliint of the .Perfons wha(h>ll be entruded y/jd, ! White per bag .of 20 sto/.e, the Care bf,conducting fiirh Sr»rr,-« vj - ' Xeiu Oats per barrel; 33 si. iih Barley per barrel, 36 stone. Beef per lb. Potatoes, per weighty 21 lb. Pt>rk, pet- civt By the'Lord. Lieutenant atitJ Council of Irelaad, A PIUjfclLAMATlGN, „.CAMD!-N. : T^HEREAS ithath been reprefedtell.to UK, that divers Vr Artificers, Mahufaaurers, Seamen and Seafaring Men,; His Majeffy'sSubjeas Have been ftdhced to erribaik' on Bcjird.dive.rs Foreign Ships and Veffels, for. (be i'urpofe of ijlli.Uiug this Kiagdom, and go ng ;ibio Pa. ts. beyom" Che Sca'^, contrary to the Liws.afld Statutes of the Realm. % , i v -he.Lord Lieutenant, alii Council, do hereby or. d'. r find direct, that 110 Foreign Ship or Veflc.l be.permiti ted to fail from any Port of this Kingdptri, until an A<- coiint fhall be delivered to the princliial Oificc'r of ftich. Port, duly attefled, on the Oath of the MaSer or.Cofe minder of fuch Ship or Veffels, or 011 Ins AfSrafttion, if] a Ciuslfcer, of ail Perfons on Board.ftich Ship b r V e f f r l , , except the Crew as reported on tier Arrival in this Kirig^ dom ; Tuch Account fpecifying the Harnes, the Ages^ and the Trade and Occupations of all inch Perfons, arid whether fuct Perfons, of'afly of (fern, are, or is His. Majefty's Subjects or Subjefr, which Account (Hill be tranfmiued to.tbeClerk of His Ma jellyPrivy-'Council. Anthaif any filch Ship o'r Wlfel ihall have 011 PJOard ani Pe, Ion; being his Majefty's Subjeft, and an Artificer of: M a n u i a f l u r e r ..'fir S i a m a r i , or Seafaring Man, going ^ of K'n-Majefty's Dominions into Parts beyond the Sea.- contrary to the LaWs arid Statfites' oi this R-ealiii, except the Crew fo reported as aforefaid, fuch Ship or VdT, [ 11,all. not be permitted to .fail wii'i.any filth P..tfor., bit..), his Ma-el! y\< Subj..-a, on Board a.-aforefaid; .till lpcUai Permiftion lhall be giv.inifor the Piifpole. And the Cmrinif!ibn«rs of his Majefty's Revenue are to give the neceffa- y directions herein actordiiigly. Given-at che,Council Chamber in Dublin, the fills', day of April, 1795. - Fitigibbon. C. P.ortarlingten ' H. I.ahgriche Charles C=fWel Di|jon ' '• H . T - Clemmta William Tuam Carelt.-n Denis Browne. VVaterfdrd , Mountjoy .' G O D S a v e the KING. MARKET. PRICES. , ' - - »f" liuiiuicn wi the Care bl conducting f'iich Seam-n and Soaf-a.ing M,: they will oe paid l,» the Captaili dr Commandei S11 p 01 velfel, or Sea Officer employed" on Shore as a'or-- f«id, refpectively, a Reward of TVV E N T Y SHILI.l S r GS for each Seaman or Scafarinc Man fid lor His Maj. fty\ Service, and S speuce a Mile, for\very Mile thty may bave travelled; not exceedine Twentv Miles in the time Gounti.s, and; Forty Miles in the Inland Court-s And We do hereby further dire/tand require the fa d C - Vil Magiftraiei to give all pplfiblc Countenance and Alfil'- cance th the Oftic.efs of His Majesty's Ships and Veffels 01 to the Sea Officet« of Hii Majeayis Ships and Veffels' or to the Sea Officers who mij- be employed to raife Men' on;Shrire, inimpreffing or otherviiife procuring Men for HIB Majesty's Fleeti Given-a, t His Majefty's Cafl-le of Dubliri, tile i5th Dav of March, tBoj. ' ' By His Excellefic;', Corcmandj A. MARSDEN. COD Save the KING. By th'e "Lord Liei.tenantand Co'iiricifof Irelaiid, A VROCLAMATION, 'HARDWlCK.it, W HEREAS bj u A a pa-ffed-in the Tvventy-lirft ^dd , 14 A Twenty:fccond year of his Majcftj.'s reign, enti. for the better fecuring the Liberty of the ysjea, and •iommcnly ca'lled the Habeas Corpus Aa is provided., that.it fTi.11 and may he laWfu! to add for : the. Chief governor and'Governors for (he T i m e being- and; Privy Council of Ireland, to fufpend the faid' during fuch time onlj> as there ft,all be an aaual hivafion or Rebellicn ih Ireland or Great Britain, arid that no Judge or Jiiliee of Peace lhall bail of try any Perlon or Ftfforis chjrgid frith being concerned inTuch Iuvaliofl or Rebellion' Without ad Order from the Lieutenant, or Lord Deputy ami Privy Council of Ireland for the Time being, Sgned by Six of the faid Privy Council^ any Law; Statute ot Ufiige to the contrary id any wife notwi.thllafld'ng. And whereas a daring Rebellion hath aaually broken out in Ireland, and it hath become advisable to fufpend the Operatioii of the laid Aa during the Continuance Hereof: N o w w e th> Lord Lieatenant and Council do by this onrProclamittin declare, That the faid be, and the same 16 hereby Amended, df which all Judges, luftices of Hie Peace, «£.fl others are required to tike Notice. And wlier/'t! there is reafon to apprehend that Itveral Ptrfons, ch«iged with having been concerned in the f a i i Full BoUnds. Coatsei Prick of Butter. s8j. ad. to.30.-. oi. S z o — 55 o o — 00 6 0 06 5 — 06 o — 36 o bo 6 o 3+ f To ihe Merchants—94s. i)2j. 845. To the Country — So To the Merchant— 86 To the Country — 80 7.8 84 '7 s . 1 o. 76 _.;.'-• R WATERFORD, Pifki per cwti Butter> first quality j Second quality, Third quality, { Tallotir, per civt. Bere, per barrely Malt, per ditto} . . Oats, per ditto, Fresh Butter, per lb., Beef, per ditto, Mutton, per ditto, Wheat, per batt el^ Barley, per ditto j NOV. 7. 31$ . od:—,4is. 0 0 dd. 87 . od:—,4is. 0 0 6 0 0 Q 77 0 0 O 0 —; 0 O 15 0 0 O 35 6 . ^ . - 0 , 6 10 0 11 0 1 6 0 ' 0 0 3i - 0 .4. 0 4 0 S 26 0 28 0 16 0 0 » LIMERICK, per stone; , J? ape seed, per barrel of 16 i f . Neix) Oats, per stone, English Barley, per stonej, Bere, per stone, , Beef per lb. Mutton, per ditto. Veal, per ditto, Pork, per C-w't, Whiskey.—(Wholesale,) Rough Tallow, per stone Salt, per cwt. . Flour, per cwt. Mould candle's,per lb. in boxeSf Dipped dittoj per ditto, Soap, per stone, Butter, in Firkins, per cwt. Casks, NOV, 12. is. (yd. to is. to/. .37 0 1 o o o o 34 8 8 9 47 0 — c 10 — o 1 — o 10 o 4f - o 4 i — o 6 — 0 0 ~ 3S 6 - 9 3 — 9 o — o O 29 O I l f — o o 10J o • J 0 — 0 84s. ?os. «4s„ 8? 7S 73 ® o a U Si s s o o Q 9 o o o . o-'

m1 VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It l8o ... · Given «t th e Coflnci Chambel ir Dublinn th 5e,th Day o Octoberf 1805, b . Kedefdale,C, Arran FraDltfore. C I.on]c

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Page 1: m1 VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It l8o ... · Given «t th e Coflnci Chambel ir Dublinn th 5e,th Day o Octoberf 1805, b . Kedefdale,C, Arran FraDltfore. C I.on]c

m . 1 , -M :

VOLUME X X I I . JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It i 3 , l 8 o 5 ' NUMBER 2145.

N O T I C E .

Mr. bAXON.ivi'l!attend at ftKKJS, f r o m t h e s i s t to the s$th of NOVEMBER ipst. to receive tlie Renis dueto the Right Hon. Earl Cpsrt i iCHAM, and at S i x M i t r s R l D O E , from the 5th to the 8th of D e -CEM.B'KR, for the Meelick .Rents. Such Tenants, as neglecfj to Pay the last MARCrtand MAY Rent?; on the abpye'Oays, Mr. DA:LON will compel io F.iy .the Year's Rent. Fountain, Nov. i z , 1803 .

REWARD; . -

i ' l f We, whose Names are hereunto subscribed, in o.rderto bring to punishment the Villain o'r Villains who houghed Mr. MICHAEL CiiLLiNAN'S Sheep, 011, the lands of Ballinacraggv,. on the Night of the Z5fh ult. do hereby offer the Rewards., to our names affixed, 'for discovering and prosecutingconvict ion witliin-SixCalendar Months, Jl'je Person or Persons who perpetrated said Felony. • 9th Nov. 1805. Sir E<l.O'Brien, Bart. 50' Mr. Thady Kel ly

P

P I

H k

Mr. Mich;; Cullinan -»o James Cr^agifi, Esq. t o Corn. O'Brien, Esq. 10 John Colpoyse, Esq. J Mr . Tim. Donahue 10 Arithony Colpoyse, Esq. S Mr. Deris Cullinan S Mr. Pat. Daly j' Wm. Foley, Esq. j Rt .Rev.DrO'ShaghhesyS Mr. James Tymens 5 M r . W m . K e l l v 3 David Power, Esq. S Mr. James Donahde • 5

Mr. James Haly Mr. Michael.Halv Mi . Michacl Cotfy Mat. Canny, Esq. Denis Canny, Esq. Andrew Perry j Esq. 5 Mr. Mi cha el'S pe 11 iss y. 5 Pat. M'Mahoh., Esq. 2 Tho. M'Mahon, E5q. £ Mr. James Perry 3 Mr. Bryan MaJoiie s Mr, Mat. Kenrty 2 Mr. David Kent)/ * M r John Catiil .'(.. *

h y the f iord L i e u t e n i i i l and Coi inci l of i r 'e l i indj

A P R O' C L A M A T i f ) M .

H A R D W l C K g . . .

WHEREAS'by an M pafled in,die 44th year of'Ks Majefty's Reign; cci,tled, lS An Act for 'sft&fi to-

rn g and-riiaiotajni.ng s pTtniajent additional force to be raifed. in' Irelanp, fof'th'e deface of th'e realm, and to provide tor augmenting his Maje^y's renulnr orccsr'' the Lord L. ieutenant and Privy Cpuiicil of Ireland arj -mbo-mctf'tt! caufc th' number of .men which ilia 11 be mj'difiie to be raifed for frippiyiog the vacancies in fuVh additional fpr.ee tint thai': have 2iifea on or before the'ill day of S-rptcmb r, 1. 04, 8} reafort of Eolillm'eiii.,- ftqatti, tie-, frtiori, or other Cafpalty," am! Iliall alio from nmt ia

within ttt; ds's afte, th- ill dajot; point e" each iu, Ceefting jea'r, caufe tlie nutiihel oi Wen nq1ii.-RDI17.be ririlYd ii . a' h I'ucce. yi ar, oi ilr. luppl, iiijj ihe V'a-can'-ie* sr.lifi| Flora futh Eii'lifttaent, Death, Lirfc.tiuti, 0, o'fherCalbalty, winch flujl have anleh In the ci'JiirVe of the preceding year in the feveral Giiuiit.'es iii Iriiilutij to bfc appgrurtiie.i aillonp fuch Counties according. to'the :-cl-.ps ti.ve original qtrolas of Meii 1 equiret! to be railed in ,fi( •. K .efpe&ive Co untiei, under ah Ad of (Vrl-rnptilr (n|f-e.i 1.1 t:,e 43d Yflr of llib M:,jelly, enutitd; " All ..Ait iii.rujibla Bii Maj- liy more r.4citmlly to raife and a(TaltS-blc iii lfcUrvd afi adciiional riiilitary forte for tile belter rtc.-;tv c and feiurity of the Uni ted Kingdom, and fbi ii,c inr.re.vi,!.oruir '.jirO.fe.cutiorr of the War. .

Aisd whereas it appears , to US, i rs . l l returns, m ^ d r io . p jrfui ' i ic 'e 'o'f t l ie faid Ii. i l -ment ioncd A f t j by ttic. D e p u t y '

tn,pcd>..|' G e n e r a l ol" ih= Ar 'niy ol R e f e n ' e , i l iat ' i n r ^ T.r.-oni'and g c v e i i Hundred, and T h i i l y - o d e iil'eri is (He-nurtilier requil i te to be railed for l / p i i t y i n g i | i e V'ananc'es I f iat l i a v e ai ifen in luch Addit1iin.1l F o r f . - , ou o r b e t d r e th-ti l 'x iay of September^ l i i J j :

• . N o w W e the L o r d L i e u t , natit and Coune.il or f'rela/iH d o , :n; p u r l n a m c of the A c t al'orefaid,. hereby lilt, .vil'di,

.and d e d l s i e the. N u m b e r iwhijih the undbrment iourd Ciiiiri-ties arid Cit ies liiali l e fpca ive Jv ' i 'urn i l 'h towards Fiippj. ihg'

.tbe a iumbei of M e n retjil'ire.l lb till the V a . i n C i e a ar'ore-. i ' l id , .to be as f o i l o w s j making- in the, w h o l e T l i r i e T h o u -fand Si 'veri H u n d r e d s j t f fifteen M e u , v iz .

C-i'Htiel. A n t r i m A i m a g h -C a i l o w C a v a n C h i e -C o r k ; Cor ! ; G i ty D p f l e g a l D o w n -! . )ubi :n ,C : ty -I l n b l i n C o u n t y Fermaivagl i G a l w a j / K e r . y K i l d a r e , . j -- K i l k e n n y -R ing ' i s C o u n t y -Le i tv i ip -L i m e r i c k C o u n t y L i m e ' r i c k C i t y L o n d o n d e r r y L o n g f o r d L o u t h . T o w n of D r o g h e d a M i y o Me.ath ' . -M o n a g h a n -ftiH en ' s C o u n t y -R o l c p m m o n S l i g o -

• T i p p e r a r y T y r o n e - ' W a t e r f o r d W e f t m e a t h ' W e x f o r d : . W i d t l o w

No. ado aSo

. 2iu . 210 112 '57° 200 & 280

.. 210 ; 210

.3 5 : 280

210 280 »8o • • 210

. 280 i 1'd;

-350 210. 21.0 1 °5-500 2,So 280 . .2.10 280 210 35o 350 280 210 350 2lo

slyi'orlhnmcnt, 104 4680-10,000

4(180.10,000 35 10-10,000 5510-10,006 3510-10,000 667*0-10,000 4680-10,000 . 5850-10,000 •5675-10,000' 4 6 S O - I O , O O O I 3 j 1 o-10,000 3510-10,000 58 50-10,000 46 So-10',000 35 10-ib,bob -46S0-10,000 4 6 8 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 3510-10,006 4680-10,000 351.0-10,00:11 3850-10,006 3510-10,000 35-10 10,000 4755"' t>oo 5 5 0 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 ' ' 4 6 8 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 4 6 8 0 - 1 0 - 0 0 0 3 5 1 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 4 6 8 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 35 IO-I C,QOO 5 8 5 0 - 1 . 0 , 0 0 0 5 8 5 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0 4 6 8 0 - i 0 , 0 0 0 35ta-tV,ooo 5 8 5 0 1 0 ,000 3 5 1 0 - 1 0 , 0 0 0

104 •7.* 7S 78

2 l a 104 .<•30 158 104 .78 7«

I 30 104 78

104 104 |(>4

130 7.«

' 73-39

i8rt 104 104

\ 78 • 104

130 130 J04 78

130

i e , o o o 3 7 1 5

G i v e n «t the Co f lnc i l C h a m b e r i n D u b l i n , the 5 t h D a y of O c t o b e r , 1 8 0 5 . b

K e d e f d a l e , C , A r r a n . FraDlt fore . C I .onc ] Man L-M a f o n . M . F i t z g e r a l d , ' I f a a c C o r y 8

S

L , P i r l o n s . Standif l i O ' C r i d y . G .

E i l S T R I C T OF E N N I S . f j * To be Sold, by Inch, of Candle, at the Dis-

tillery of Kilkishen, on Monday the i8th of Nov. instant, at 'thehour of 12 o'clock in the noon, a)!' the Household .Furniture, Corn, Hay, Horses', and other Articks ^eized on said premises for Fines in-curred, aDd arrears of Excise dire to the Crown.— Excise-Office, EniiisJ' xith Nov.. 1805.

• ' THQ. O ' G R A C i Y , Surveyor-Gen. Terms—-CASH.

In the matter of Robert} N O T I C E Creagh, Esq; a lunatic. L i s hereby given lo the

: : - i - ) different Tenants of said Lunatic's Estate.'!, that I shall attend at the House of DENIS LAWLER; Emit*, on Tut iRSDAYand F E I -i>ay , the 14th and i j t f i of froviiwuER instant, for the purpose of Receiving their Renis and Arrears,

: when .and where they are requested to meet mc. Dated'this 4th day o f November, 1805.

WM. C R O K E R , (sp. j Receiver app6inted in said matter.

Fejtham Watson a

Francis Drew, E s q .

Jair.es Drew a .

S a m e , • 1 ; . ' " •

John Sm';ih and J o -nathan SmitH

<2 Sarnej —

Paul Ham a Sanle.

Geo. Wheeler, a Same.

The above S A L E Ins'.ant,

' . ; . . , T O B E SOLD, g j " By Auction, on Tuesday

the isth day of November in-stant, At the Defendant's House at Dj-fcwsboroughj in-the Coun-ty, of Clare, by virtue of the W'rits;of Fieri .Facias in these Causes, to,me directed, all the Defendant's Household Furni-

•ture, dnd some Cows arid Horses: * , '

Dated ihii 6th day Sf NO-vemberji.i.gos,.^ .

T ; S T U D ' D E R T , Jui j ! SlierlflFj .

The above Sdle to eomnierice at one o'clock on said day.

is idjouwed to Friday the 2zd •November i f , 1805.

A t b l b n r , R e l f a l t j Cork; Dubl in . l f . i iu:ski! !cni L i m e r i t k . Me w r y . W a t e i r l o t d .

By ite lord JMtiffanl General'aid Geiterai Governor of Ireland.

P R O C L A M A T I O N Ear far doling Deserters from His Majestys

Regit lair Forces. ' HARDWiCXE.

HERKAS II. lias Ijctji Icprefeiited io The kivb, • 1 „„ .. 'M'^'M 1;? ,lNs LV-ferteis trom His Malcll -a IvSp.iillf Lund Forces, who l i . f e in. dlli.ed.lo ret,, n ,0 Ihcfr IX'ty by *rf Offer of His Male,! f t Oucoo. Par<t->u, ill,;' that, luch an inllit&e b' H s Rov.l Gkliu ncy .1 bay> a dife Infjuedee opori the-r fmUre Be 'aviotlr ; H,r. has bfen plealgd to

Sra-.at.-HU Fiit PARDOW to all DE-|KRTERS from His RiotiL.iR LXKD J-one wlw )j„n inncnder themfelve's, on or before the 24th Da of Dici.«atR ne«, to any of His" Maje.itj's Civ,! Mie.f-

to the Commanding Officer of apy «5.Kf"Aiitv to an 1 eff tj>$' Sujfenint-ndihg l-.'eld OrTicetr.nf t|,e Recruiting S :;vice in

,1, , ' - S t a t i o n s are .mentioned in t! ? r...a:g,l. bcu or, o. to the Deputy ifl'ljpector .GcueiaJ of the Reeituilvng Service' In Oubiih.

Such Dele, tersj if Able-Bodied Men ,„.) fit for Service ? I r,?l'"i'ti:i! lt' •« His Majelfy-may

be ' ah, 1<K C'°',n]m*'a<\ V sben fo placed, Ih ,11 not be I,able to be, claimed by any other Corps to which they may loinieily have belonged. ' • w',>' °r lV"cr, actually fervidg ;„ any of,His Ma-SK R V ,C i f " , W , U S ' 15 10 RUR'CN'LCR ,1M 'RCU 4

Deferters ferviug in other Corps (Militia and Arnlv of, Relerve excepted) aire to.cbntinue there i„.upon decla inK themfelv,8 to tbetr reactive .Commanding Orficers, who

.are 0 report t|,t crcumlfance tc the Under Secretary for he Military Department, and the Adjutant General id

Dubltn ;and they rfialtnot be liable, ai any future time" to be claimed by the Raiment, in which they forlnerlv erved: But tlus Cla'ufe ,'s hot to eiten'd to

hfled by the Corps r.ifing Recruits fo. General Seivice-which Deferters ye onl/ to be emitjed to .their Pardon t f m W W ^ raCh> "ii."* transr'ered roa^d. • may -pleafe lo com-. The Magiflrite, to whom any Peierier fem Hit Ma-"

je l ty , Regular Forces may fnrrender himfei'f, i5 utho-r zed and required to certify the Day oa whieh'f„ch De-fer,erfurrendered himfelf, which Certificate -is to Cod£ nue ,ri Force until the Arrival of the Dderter .t the Head Quarters Of- the neareft Military Port, provided he proceed at the Rate o! Ten,Mi!ef . D.y, unlefs pre! Vested by S.ck.Hs, to be certified by lome 4 d i S Officer commanding at fuch Milit.ry Poll. ^

Up Soldier, who may, defert «fer thele His MajeifVe gracious Intentions are made Public, .hall • be Tntll2d' tu the above Pardon,, but be proceeded .gainlt- with he •

S o n T °rmer Proclimation of iiis Majedy's f ^ r ^ A r U ^ ^ i n dtlertedj.- be iriciudid

And it is to be clearly underlW ihat Pai-t n i, not.to extend to any Deferter from His Majerty' fe'

FSr f ' L a^Vd- Ar"','t or Add itiona*1

tore- , hat all Soldiers', who lhall have inlilled for Ge-neral Service from the faid Forces- all nJ Tl r , r '

By His Excellency's Command,

- A : L O N G.

T O B E S E T , From tfe First bay of May next,

F o r such T E R M o f Y E A R S dr L I V E S ad Shall be agreed on,

The FARM and. LANDS of GURTTVOHW Containing about i 6 o A . 3 R . 3 8 P .

Situate on tlie Road between C R U S H E E N and Tu&« B E R , in t h e C O U N T Y o f G A L W A Y ,

. Proposals, in writing; to be received fay. THECJ. B U T L E R , Esq; Fishmoyne, Borlsoleigh; and J . O ' D O N N E L L , Esq. Ennis.

* * * Resident Tenants will be encouraged. -( c ) November 6, i ^ o j .

T O B E S E T , From the Twenty.fifth Day of March next,

For such TJ.RM of YEARS or LIVES as shall be • .. agreed upon,

VlL Two Slale ani 0ne Tile HOUSE, with the Offices and Garden thereunto annexed, now tenanted by Mr. FRANCIS A . ENGLAND , and his Undertenants, situate near the Corn Market, Mill-street, Ennis,

t 0 b e r e c e 'Ved by J O H & U D O N N E L L , Esq; Ennis, who will close with the fust solvent Bidders.

Noveiriber 6, i 8 b j .

T O B E . L E T , ' From Ihe z$th Day i f March ftexb,

. About T W E N T Y . A C R E S of excellent Fattening and Meadow G R O U N D , part of the Demesne of C L O N E Y , a complete convenience for the Fairs of Quin and SpanciJhill, being about one mile,distant from each.

P R O P O S A L S to be made to B U R T O N BIN DON, Esq; Cloney. _ * * * Several Thousands oi' remarkably fine A S H T R E E S , two, three, four, and five years old, to fee

i>old at Clbriey, on reasonable terms.—Apply as (3P-) .November J , I'BOJ. above.

R e b e l l i o n , are cAdtkvo.uring to e f c a p e J i l ftice by drpa , t -ing f r o n v l r e l a n d .

N o w w e the L o r d L i e u t e n a n t , being d e f i r b t i s t o br ing » a f u c h of fenders to f p t t d t I ' t jn i f l imcnt , d o , by and w . t b the A d v i c e o f his M a j e f t y ' s moil Hi.-.-iourafl,: P r i v y COUI B c i l . fl rift',,y forbid any P e r f e n vWionifncver to depart f r o m I re land. Without h a v i n g obtained a Pa f fp 'o f t f o r that p u r -(lofe figned: by o u i - C h i e f S e c r e t a r y , or tl-e Under S e c r e , t a r y f o r tHi C i v i l D e p a r t m e n t , or c i t h e r « f tb<-m, or l.y f o m e Per iod autbor i fed by ad Inftrume.-.t f a b f e r i b e d by therrij or e i t h e r df them,- to l ign. fuch Pafl'jjoi ts.

A n d w e do hereby It,iaiy c o m m a n d - i l l M a f i e r i and C o m m a n d e r s of a l l Shi arid V e l f e j a depar t ing f r o m I re -l a n d , that they do not, ufipn any act-ount w f a t f o t v e r , t a k e on board their V , Ifels, fthen depart ing f r o m I ie lar id , any P e r l o n not h a v i n g fuchvEaffport . as S f o r c f a j d , % Ve and except the pei-.fons a a - a a l l y e m p l o y e d .to n a v i g a t e f u c h V e f f e l s r e fpe f l - i ve ly .

A n d y/e do f u r t b e i colnrnartd all MittiiVrates' , Off iccri i of the R e v e n u e , aad all Of f i cer s C iv i l and M l i u i y , and al l other his M a j e f t y ' s S u h j e Q % to u f c their i itmoit E i J . d e a v o i i r s to prev.-nt the d - p a r t u r e o: any P e i f o b s ' f r o m I re land not h a v i n g fuch Pi fTpo, ts as i i fo-eiaid.

G i v e n at the Cof inc i l Chsrnber 1n D u b l i n , the 28th D a y of J u l y , 1 8 0 3 .

R e d s f . ' a l e , C . ' Tyr- . -w!y Menrv R i n g . . Cii'iis. D u b l i n . j ; Beresfr i lM. D , b a t o n he! . WMI-TUANII H'. ,E. F o x . S . H a m i l t o n ; D r o f t b e d a . . H e r . L a n » r i f h e . M a l i . F i t z - O e r t ! d ; A n o e l k y . , . M . S m i t h . SfanHilh O ' G r a d y . Mui-kerry . ' G O D l a v e the fclNG.

A General Meeting-of the G O V E R N O R S a n d D I P U T Y G O V E R N O R S 0 f t h e C O U N T Y o f CLA R j; is requested at the Court-House of ENNIS, on THURSDAY the 14th inStant.

Signed by order, Nov. 1805. D. F I N U C A N E , C. G. M .

B y the Lord Lte i i tenaht G e n e r a l and G e n e r a l G o v e r n o r of I r t la i id , '

t , A P R O C L A M A T I O N . . H A K B W I C K I 5 : WH L i t . l - A S His M a j e f t y ' s S . , ; i re doth it ib i s T i m e

r e q u i r e a Ipeedy .Supply o: S e a m e n and S e a f a n n i -Men to m f n His M a j e f t y ' s F l e e t which is n o w fitting o u t . W e do by H,s M a j e f t y ' s C o m m a n d direct , „ d r e q u i r e a l l •'. M.aglr tr i tes in this P a r t o f H i s M a j e l t y ' s Ufl i ted

iC^ngdom cal led I re ladd,- to ufe their, bell E n d e a v o u r s to c a u l e a l l fdeh S e a m e n dr S e a f a r i n g M e n . fit for Hi's M a -J e l t y s S e i v i c e , as m a y be, oiet w i t h , to lie taken uti, and fent on t o ' a r c any of His M a j e i t y ' s Ships or V e f f e l s in' the P o r t s , of dn the C o a l t of t i , laipi, o r (ij a u y of H i s M a -les ty s Sea Of f icers w h o m a y be e m p l o y e d to ra i fe 'M- n

S h o r e for H i s Majv - ( f y ; s F l e e t s . cc 'brdinc as the 1','aces w h e r e Itiefi S h i p s o r ' V e f t e h , or fdeh S e i O i W 5 T O a y b t -rt- fpect ively (lationed Dul l be d f . i r e f t . A n i ' o r ,th'e I-n .- C O R K , R O V . coarag'eriliint of the .Perfons w h a ( h > l l be e n t r u d e d y/jd, ! White per bag .of 20 sto/.e, the C a r e b f , c o n d u c t i n g f i i rh Sr»rr , -« v j - ' Xeiu Oats per barrel; 33 si.

iih Barley per barrel, 36 stone. Beef per lb. Potatoes, per weighty 21 lb. Pt>rk, pet- civt

B y t h e ' L o r d . L i e u t e n a n t atitJ C o u n c i l of I r e l a a d ,

A P I U j f c l L A M A T l G N , „ . C A M D ! - N . :

T ^ H E R E A S i t h a t h been repre fedte l l . to UK, that d i v e r s V r A r t i f i c e r s , M a h u f a a u r e r s , S e a m e n and S e a f a r i n g

M e n , ; H i s M a j e f f y ' s S u b j e a s Have been f t d h c e d to erribaik' on Bcj i rd .dive .rs F o r e i g n Sh ips and V e f f e l s , for. (be i ' u r p o f e of ijlli.Uiug this K i a g d o m , and g o ng ; ib io P a . ts. beyom" Che Sca'^, contrary to the L i w s . a f l d S t a t u t e s of the R e a l m .

% , iv-he.Lord L ieutenant , a l i i C o u n c i l , do hereby or. d'. r find d i r e c t , that 110 F o r e i g n S h i p or Vef lc . l be .permit i ted to f a i l f r o m any P o r t o f this K i n g d p t r i , unti l an A < -coi int fhall be de l i ve red to the pr incl i ia l Oificc'r of f t i ch . P o r t , du ly a t t e f l e d , on the O a t h of the M a S e r o r . C o f e m i n d e r of f u c h S h i p or V e f f e l s , or 011 Ins A f S r a f t t i o n , i f ] a Ciuslfcer, o f a i l P e r f o n s on B o a r d . f t i c h S h i p br V e f f r l , , e x c e p t the C r e w as reported on t ier A r r i v a l in this K i r ig^ dom ; Tuch A c c o u n t f p e c i f y i n g t h e H a r n e s , t h e A g e s ^ and the T r a d e and O c c u p a t i o n s of a l l inch P e r f o n s , arid w h e t h e r f u c t P e r f o n s , o f ' a f l y of ( f e r n , a r e , or is H i s . M a j e f t y ' s S u b j e c t s or S u b j e f r , w h i c h A c c o u n t (Hill be t r a n f m i u e d t o . t b e C l e r k of His M a j e l l y P r i v y - ' C o u n c i l . Anthai f any f i lch S h i p o'r W l f e l ihall h a v e 011 P J Oard a n i P e , Ion; b e i n g his M a j e f t y ' s S u b j e f t , and an Ar t i f i ce r of : M a n u i a f l u r e r ..'fir S i a m a r i , o r S e a f a r i n g M a n , go ing ^ of K ' n - M a j e f t y ' s D o m i n i o n s into P a r t s b e y o n d the Sea.-contrary to the L a W s arid S t a t f i t e s ' oi this R-eali i i , e x c e p t the C r e w fo reported as a f o r e f a i d , fuch Ship or V d T , [ 11,all. not be permit ted to .fail w i i ' i . a n y f i l th P. . t for . , b i t . . ) , his Ma-e l ! y\< S u b j . . - a , on B o a r d a . - a f o r e f a i d ; .till l p c U a i Permift ion lhall be g iv . in i for the P i i f p o l e .

A n d the C m r i n i f ! i b n « r s of h i s M a j e f t y ' s R e v e n u e a r e to g i v e the neceffa- y d i rec t ions herein a c t o r d i i i g l y .

G i v e n - a t c h e , C o u n c i l C h a m b e r in D u b l i n , the f i l l s ' , d a y of A p r i l , 1 7 9 5 . -

F i t i g i b b o n . C . P .or tar l ingten ' H . I . a h g r i c h e C h a r l e s C=fWel D i | j o n ' '• H . T - C l e m m t a W i l l i a m T u a m Care l t . -n Denis B r o w n e . VVaterfdrd , M o u n t j o y .'

G O D S a v e the K I N G .

MARKET. PRICES.

, ' - - » f " liuiiuicn wi the C a r e bl conduct ing f'iich S e a m - n and S o a f - a . i n g M , : they w i l l oe paid l,» the Capta i l i dr C o m m a n d e i S11 p 01 v e l f e l , or S e a Of f i ce r employed" on Shore as a ' o r - -f« id , r e f p e c t i v e l y , a R e w a r d of TVV E N T Y S H I L I . l SrGS f o r each S e a m a n or S c a f a r i n c M a n fid lor His M a j . fty\ S e r v i c e , and S s p e u c e a Mile, f o r \ v e r y Mi le t h t y may b a v e t r a v e l l e d ; not e x c e e d i n e T w e n t v Mi les in the t ime G o u n t i . s , and ; F o r t y M i l e s in the Inland C o u r t - s And W e do hereby f u r t h e r d i r e / t a n d requi re the fa d C -Vil M a g i f t r a i e i to g ive all pplfiblc C o u n t e n a n c e and Alfil'-cance th the Oftic.efs of H i s M a j e s t y ' s S h i p s and V e f f e l s 01 to the Sea Of f icet« of H i i M a j e a y i s Ships and V e f f e l s ' or to the S e a Off icers w h o mi j - be e m p l o y e d to raife Men' o n ; S h r i r e , i n i m p r e f f i n g or otherviiife procur ing M e n for HIB M a j e s t y ' s F l e e t i

G iven-a , t H i s M a j e f t y ' s Cafl-le of Dublir i , tile i 5 t h D a v of M a r c h , t B o j . '

' B y His E x c e l l e f i c ; ' , C o r c m a n d j A . M A R S D E N .

C O D S a v e the K I N G .

B y th'e " L o r d L i e i . t e n a n t a n d C o ' i i r i c i f o f I re la i id ,

A VROCLAMATION, ' H A R D W l C K . i t ,

WH E R E A S bj u A a pa-ffed-in the T v v e n t y - l i r f t ^dd , 1 4 A T w e n t y : f c c o n d y e a r of his M a j c f t j . ' s r e ign , e n t i .

f o r t h e better f e c u r i n g the L i b e r t y of the y s j e a , and • i o m m c n l y ca'lled t h e H a b e a s C o r p u s A a

is provided. , that . i t fTi.11 and m a y he laWfu! to add for : the. C h i e f g o v e r n o r a n d ' G o v e r n o r s for (he T i m e being-and; P r i v y C o u n c i l of I re land , to f u f p e n d the fa id ' dur ing fuch t ime onlj> as there ft,all be an a a u a l h i v a f i o n or R e b e l l i c n ih I re land or G r e a t B r i t a i n , arid that no J u d g e or J i i l i e e of P e a c e lhall bai l of try any P e r l o n or F t f f o r i s c h j r g i d frith being concerned inTuch Iuval iof l or Rebe l l ion ' Without ad O r d e r f r o m the L i e u t e n a n t , or L o r d D e p u t y a m i P r i v y C o u n c i l o f I re land for the T i m e be ing , S g n e d by S i x of the fa id P r i v y Counci l^ any L a w ; S t a t u t e ot Uf i ige to the c o n t r a r y i d a n y w i f e notwi . th l l a f ld 'ng .

A n d w h e r e a s a dar ing R e b e l l i o n hath a a u a l l y b r o k e n o u t in I r e l a n d , and it hath b e c o m e a d v i s a b l e to f u f p e n d the Operat io i i o f the la id A a d u r i n g the C o n t i n u a n c e H e r e o f :

N o w w e th> L o r d L i e a t e n a n t and C o u n c i l do by this o n r P r o c l a m i t t i n d e c l a r e , T h a t the faid b e , and the s a m e 16 h e r e b y A m e n d e d , df w h i c h all J u d g e s , l u f t i c e s of Hie P e a c e , «£.fl o thers a re r e q u i r e d to t i k e N o t i c e .

A n d wl ier/ ' t ! t h e r e is r e a f o n to apprehend that I t v e r a l P t r f o n s , c h « i g e d w i t h h a v i n g been concerned in the f a i i

Full BoUnds.

Coatsei

Prick of Butter.

s8j. ad. to.30.-. oi. • Sz o — 55 o

o — 00 6 0 — 0 6 5 — 0 6 o — 36 o

bo 6 o

3+

f To ihe Merchants—94s. i)2j. 845. To the Country — So To the Merchant— 86 To the Country — 80

7.8

84 '7 s .

1 o. 76

_.;.'-• R W A T E R F O R D , Pifki per cwti Butter> first quality j Second quality, Third quality, { Tallotir, per civt. Bere, per barrely Malt, per ditto} .

. Oats, per ditto, Fresh Butter, per lb., Beef, per ditto, Mutton, per ditto, Wheat, per batt el^ Barley, per ditto j

N O V . 7. 31$ . od:—,4is.

0 — 0 dd.

87 . od:—,4is.

0 — 0 6 8« 0 — 0 Q 77 0 — 0 O

0 —; 0 O 1 5 0 — 0 O

35 6 . ^ . - 0 , 6 10 0 — 1 1 0 1 6 — 0 ' 0 0 3i - 0 .4. 0 4 — 0 S

26 0 — 28 0 16 0 — 0 »

L I M E R I C K , per stone; ,

J? ape seed, per barrel of 16 i f . Neix) Oats, per stone, English Barley, per stone j, Bere, per stone, , Beef per lb. Mutton, per ditto. Veal, per ditto, Pork, per C-w't, Whiskey.—(Wholesale,) Rough Tallow, per stone Salt, per cwt. . Flour, per cwt. Mould candle's,per lb. in boxeSf Dipped dittoj per ditto, Soap, per stone, Butter, in Firkins, per cwt.

Casks,

NOV, 12. is. (yd. to is. to/ .

.37 0 1 o o o o

34 8 8 9

47

0 — c 10 — o 1 — o

10 o 4f - o 4 i — o 6 — 0 0 ~ 3S 6 - 9

3 — 9 o — o O 29

O I l f — o o 10J o • J 0 — 0

8 4 s . ?os. «4s„ 8? 7S 73

® o a

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s s o o Q 9 o o o . o-'

Page 2: m1 VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It l8o ... · Given «t th e Coflnci Chambel ir Dublinn th 5e,th Day o Octoberf 1805, b . Kedefdale,C, Arran FraDltfore. C I.on]c

F R O M T H E F R E N C H T A P E R S .

CAPITULATION OF ULMP

©ccupi£d by the troops of His Majesty the E i/iperof off'.Austria-arid the-King of Htingarj, to the arms of Kis Majesty the EmpewT of France and King of Italy. " ' We A L E X . B E R T H I S R . , Mai's'-S-SAL o f the

Eramre, and Field Marshal Baron M A c k j have agreed upon die -following-arti-

cles •:— ' 1 ; Article r. The City of Ulm shall be sur-

rendered tinbe French Army, with all the Magazines and Artillery.'

Answer,: T h e half of the field artillery shall bt retained by the Austrian troops'.— '

' IJvefused..,' . ,: .'• , -.---, .'•-.- j-2. The garrison shall march out, with all

The honours of war; and after filing off, lay down their arras. The Field Officeis ,shall .be sent, on their parole.of honour, to A us-, trta, and the soldiers and subalterns shall be sent into France, where they shall remain until they arcexchanged.

Ans. The whole shall besentinto Austria, under condition of not setving-.against Ft ance until they are exchanged. .Refused..

3. The Officers and Soldiers "shill retain all the effects belonging to them.

Ans. Also the regimental, chests,— Agreed, to, :

4. The sick and wounded Austrians shall be treated in the same manner as the French sick a,rid wounded. ;

Ans.; We knowtlie generosity and hum a; nicy of. the French.

5. if, nevertheless, there should appear by noon, -of the 3d Brum aire, 14th year,-(2,5th Oct. 1805) an ar.my capable, of rais-

ing the blockade of Ulm, the gar-risen ;of this fortress shall Irs that case be re;lea led front the present. capitulation, and at liberty to act.as.it may think fit,

; Ans. If the blockade of Ulm -should be raised by :ap. Austrian or Russian army before t wel ve at midnight of the 2,5th of October, on whatever side, or. at -whatever gate it shall happen to be, the garrison, shall freely depart with their arms, artillery, arad caval-ry, to join the troops which may have rais •ed-'the blockade. Agreed to.

6', One of the gates of Ulixi (thai of Stut gard). shall, be.givea.. up to she French army at seven o'clock to-morrow's as also quarters

•sttflkii-m for the accommodation oif one bri--igsde,—'Ans,.--Yes. - . :

7. That the French snny shali be put in' possession of the gtasld bridge over the Da-nube, and also'-have a tree cotijjmunieation between both banks,

Ans. The bridge iS'burnt down, but all - possible-- means, shall- betaken to rebuild it,

8. .The service shall be ay.;regulated . as to f-preveat'any disturbance;, and to maintain the. ! best-understanding.

A ns. The Freuch. and Austrian discipline afford the firmest guarantee in this respect.

-9. All the cavalry, artillery, and waggon: •hoise.s, belonging 10: the Emperor of Aus-tria and King of Hungary, shall be given up to tbe French army, . - . - . „

jo, The iss, id , 3d, A".h, .and oth Ar-ticles, shall not'-be carfied"into execution un til it piease tira Commander in Chief of the Austrian troops-i provided nevertheless, that tire period,execariun shri-l not.be Utcr than, twelve atjioori of the :25-th October, 1805': And, .if by that .tjme an army should make its appearar.ee In sufficient force to raise ihe blockade, the'.Garrison shall, conformably .to Arc, 5. be at liberty to 'act as it may think proper.

Done in Duplicate at Ulm, 25th Venog-miaire, 14th Year, ,(-1,7th Oct 1805).

fSigned) Marshal B E R T H 1 E R . :

-. Lieut. Gen. M A C K , ADDITIONAL CAPITULATION R E L A T I Y E

.TO--TEE. S U R R E N D E R OF U L M . Marshal BERTH 1 ER, Major General of

the French army, being empowered by -ihe EMPEROR'S command, gives'his word ot honour, . -

1st. That the Austrian army is this day on the other side of the Inn, and that Marshal Bernadotte, with his army, has taken a po sition between Munich' and the Inn.

2.3', That Maishai Lasnes, with his corps, is pursuing Prince Ferdinand, and was yes-terday at Aalen.

3d. That Prince Murat, with his corps, was yesterday at Nurdlingen ; that the Lieut. Generals Werneck, Bailley, Hohenzollern, and seven other Generals, have capitulated ast the village of Trotzel'fingen.

4th. That Marshal'Soult is posted between Ulm and-Bregenz, observing the way to the T y r o l ; that there is, consequently, ao pos sibiiity of succour arriving before Ulm.-

Lieut. General and Quarter-Master-Gen. MACK, giving credit to the above dee'lira-lion, is ready to evacuate Ulm to-rnoxiow, on the following conditions ':

That the whole corps of Marshal Ney, consisting of 12 .regiments .01 iaf&hUy, and

4, vifgifjieiits of horse, shall nof iSjb.it.the.city. cfnnon, _ waggon^ ' 'caissons,, , and '' a-i'jns j and Messieurs the Officers shall enjoy

che Astae advantages asjiiose granted to the Officers of cavalry.—Agreed to. '

4. Messieurs the Officers oi' cavalry, ar-tillery," and iniari'tiry, made prisoners, and comprised in the present capitulation, shall

•j be' at liberty to return home, oh giving a '• written parole of honour, not toserve against-

the armies.of his Majesty theEmperor and King, - and-those of his allies, until they shall' have been exchanged, 01 until the conclusion of a peace, should an exchange not take place.—His Royal Highness Prince

.: Murat is requested to grant this condition, : wdiich is submitted tor his approbation.

Done at Head-quarters, at Bopsingen, 18th of-October, 1805.

. (Signed) L O C A T E L L I , Major. Gen. : pf Brigade, F A U C O N U E T .

1 , - p , - - - - ^ — ••-— • — j-J

oi Ulm and its environs, at the distance.of to leagues, before die 25th-October «it midnight, sue -period: when the capitalatiori is to expire. , The Marshal BE RTHiER..and Baton 'Von

MACK agree on the above inserted articles. Consequently, the whole Austrian, army

shall defile to moi'ro.w;. at' three for 'the af-ternoon, before the Eoiperoi- ::of" the •FRENCH, wiih - all the' hrihou "rs:" of war ;• they shall lay down their arms, amct the Officers, who shall keep'their .arms,: shall,

. recei ve passports to go-by the two roads of. Kemptcn°torAustria, and of Bregenta to the Tyrol . '

Done in Duplicate at Elchingen. the-l 91b • Oct. 1805,, (27-Vendemiaire, year 34.)

(Signed) - The Marshal E E R T R I E R , '-"-. ;.'• 'The Lieut.-Gen. M A C K .

| C A P I T U L A T I O N OF G E N E R A L - W E R N E C K , It has been agreed upon betweenMarshal,

She General of division, l i s ^ l l j a R i>, Chief df Genera! staff of his 'Royal Highness .Prince. MBR*T , .Marshal,of,'the' Empire-, and Lieutenant of his Majesty the Emperor of the FR-EN c h ,'• p .d K i n g of I T L Y , and Marshal the Lieut, Genera) WERNECK, Commaudes- and Chamberlain in the ser--vice of "his Majesty the Emperor of GER-MANY, the, Commander of a division; of the army, -

J , That the body of troops under the or-ders .of M. the Lieutenant-General WER-f s c K., shall lay, down their ^'ms, become prisoners, of war, and be sent into France.

*. That Messjeuvsthe General and Sub-, altera Officers shall "be prisoners of war on 1 parole, and be sent into Austria. They en-

gage not to serve again,ri the French armies, or those of the allies of his'Majesty the Em per or and King NAPOLEON, until they shall have been exchanged.

3. That the horses belonging to the ca-valry; the artillery, \vith the carriages, cais sons and ammunition, shall be surrendered to the French army.1

4- Ali the regiments, battalions, squa-drons, or detachments, separated from the body of troops under'the orders of M. the Lieutenant-Geberal. WERNECK , shall lay down their arms, and become prisoners of war, subject to, the 2d, 3d, and 4th articles,—Observation of General WER-NECK :-—" I understand this article as ap plying, to such troops, as belong to ihe body under my own command."

5;. Aii the horSe and equipages belonging to Messieurs the General and subaltern Officers.shail be left in their possession,' • 6. All the French prisoners of war at Trot-elftngen,. or other places occupied by the uoops under the command of M. the Lieut. Gen. WERNECK, shall be imme-diately set at liberty.

Tictei.'i ngeri, 27th Venclemiaire, 1.4th year, 19th Oct. 1805.

(Signed) . B E L L I ARD, General of Division and Chief

• of the General Staff. '•-• (Signed), W E R N E C K ,

' Lieutenant General and Comman-dant of a body of troops.

C A P I T U L A T I O N Of the Escort of, thi Heavy Baggage of tlie Austrian

/ '"''-.' , Army, : \ K This" day/ being the', ,26th Vendemiaire',

Tftfi year (,iOtt&ber 18), the Brigadier Ge he,rat FA u to-sntT/tn ie o f the Comman-dants of tfie L%ion of Honour, and Com niaiid4.it of the Chasseurs of the 13th and i-Atb regiments ol the 5th division of the

Gi',and '.French Army. A n d ' M r . LOCA-T,E'LI. / J Major of 11 Ohenloiie'S reginieiit of diagoons, have "concluded the subjoined Capitulation, in .consequence- of a summons sent by VJ. the General FAUCONNET , to the said M, LOCATELLI , to'cause the corps, of cavalry .appointed, under his command, to escort the heavy baggage of the Austrian army, and lay down their arms:—

Art. 1 , All the hussars and light hoise, which compose the detachment'escorting the artillery and baggage of ihe'.Austiian army, are prisoners of war, and shall be conducted into France. They shall therefore lay down their arms, and deliver up their horses to the.regiments under the orders of M. j h e General FOXJCONNET.—Agreed 10.

2. Messieurs she Officers shall retain the horses on which they were mounted at the time the corps was taken; Each of them shall also have the privilege of retaining a valet in his service, and their e<T - . equipage shall be preserved. The soldiers shall re-tain their effects. One valet shall be allowed for the Major, and for cadi of the-Messieurs the Captains,, and one for every W o Lieute-nants or Sub Lieutenants.

3- All the petty detachments of infantry and artillery, turned in flank bythe French troops,, and closely pressed by the cavalry under M. the General Fauconnet, ai-e also prisoners o'f war, and shall surrender

to the prejudice of. d»e general crass of the army.

^ 4,. There shall, forthwith be appointed a Treasurer and a Director-General,, who shali account monthly to a military Council of Administration, for the produce and' contributions levied j a statement of which,

with iis.repartition shall be printed. 5, The p4y of the army shall be regular-

ly advanced from the funds of oar Imperial-Treasury.

6. Our Minister at War is charged with the execution of the present decree.

(Signed) NAPOLEON. ,

P R O C L A M A T I O N AND D E C R E E S , Issued by the Emperor.

"' Soldiers of the Grand Army, "" In a fortnight we have finished a cam-

paign: We have accomplished our purpose. •We have expelled the troops of the House of Austria from Bavaria, and re-established ouv ally in the sovereignty of his States.—-That army, which, with equal ostentation arid' imprudence, had posted iueif on our frontiers, i§ annihilated. But what, does this signify to-England ? Her purpose is ac» complished. We are no lodger at Boulogne, andthe amount of her subsidy willjheie'by-be neither increased nor diminished.

" Of j 00,000 men who composed tha'f. army, 60,000 are prisoners j they will go to take place'of our .conscripts in the labours of our fieldsy- Tvyo hundred pieces of can» non (their whole park), 90 stand of colours, and all their Generals, are in our hands; there have not escaped of this army 15,000 men. Soldiers, I had announced to you a great battle ; but thanks to the bad com'bina-tions of the enemy, I have been able to ob-tain the same success, without running any risk; and,"whatis unexampled in the his» toiy of nations, so important a result has not diminished our force by more than 1500 men,

" Soldiers, you owe this success to your unbounded confidence in your Emperor ; to your patience in supporting fatigues and pri-vations of every description, and to your singular intrepidity.

" But we will not' stop here. You are impatient to commence a second campaign. We are about 10 make that Russian army/ which the gold of England has transported from the extremities of the Universe, under-go the same fate,

" In this contest is more particulaily im-plicated the honour of the infantry. It is this which -will a second time- decide the question, already resolved in Switzerland and Holland—whether the French infantry be the second .or the -first in Europe ? Here there are no Generals in combating whom I can have any glory to acquire, All my care shall be to obtain the victory with the least possible effusion of blood-—my. soldiers are my-children.

Given at my Imperial Camp of Elchingen, 29th Vendemiaire, year 14 (Oct. 2 1 . )

•NAPOLEON,EMPEFTOR OF T H E F R E N C H , ' K I N G . OF I T A L Y ,

<e Taking into consideration that the Grand Army has, by its courage and zeai, obtained results which were not to be ex-pected buf from a complete campaign ; and being desirous of giving" it a proof of our Imperial satisfaction, have decreed, and hereby decree as follows :—-

" Art. x. The month of Yendeuriaivf-. 14th, year, shall be accounted as one cam-paign, in fa vour of all the soldiers compos • ing the Grand Army. This month shall be so estimated in all the accounts relative to the valuation of pension's, and those which respect military services.

" Given at my Imperial Camp at Elchin gen, October 2 1 . (Signed) " N A P O L E O N . " :

N A P O L E O N , E M P E R O R OF T H E F R E N C H , , AND K I N G . OF I T A L Y .

We have decreed, and do hereby decree as follows 1—

Art. i f Possession shali be forthwith tak-en of all the estates in Suabia belonging to the House of Austria. *

2. The military contribution which shall be levied thereon, together with the pjo-dnceof the ordinary contiibutionsj shall be entirely.appropriated tothearmy. All the magazines taken from the enemy, those of the artillery and provisions excepned, shall likewise become its property." Every indi* vicinal shall share in the said contribution, in, proportion to bis rank.

3. Ali contributions levied by individuals, and all articles taken out df the enemy's magazines, shall be restored to the geneui mass, k being improper that-any person should: avail himself of the laws of war,

A D D R E S S OF T H E E M P E R O R TO HIS S O L D I E R S .

' T h e evening before the surrender of Ulm, the EMPEROR, issued the following Pro-, clamation : —

..Soldiers, a month ago we were en-camped on the shores of the ocean opposite to Engl and,; but an impious league compelled us to fly towards the Rhine.

It is but a fortnight,since we passed that river, ahd the,Alps of Wefiemberg, the N'ecker, the Danube, and the Lech ; those celeb 1 a ted barriers of Germany have not retarded our mtjrch a day, an hour, or an instant. Indignation against a Prince whom, we have-twice re seated on his throne, wli.^ri it depended entirely on our pleasure to irtm-I him from it, supplied us with wings. Tlie enemy's army, deceived by our manoeuvres, and the rapidity of out movetnetr.s, iscora-pletely turned. It now'fights only for its safety., It would gladly embrace an oppor-.'

• turtity of escaping,and returning iiome; but it is now to.o late. The fortifications which if erected, at a great expence, .along the liter, expecting that we should advance'through the passes of the .Black Forest, are become useless, since we have approached by the plains,of Bavaria, -

ct Srildiers, but, for the army which is now in lyoiit of you, 'we should this day have been in London; we should have avenged our-selves for sh; centuries of insults, and.-restored the freedom of the seas.

" But beaVin mind, to-morrow, that you are fighting a'gainst the allies of England; that you jiave m avenge yourselves on a per-jured Prince, whose own letters breathed nothing but peace, at the moment when he was marching his army against our al ly ; who thought us cowardly enough to sup-pose,. that we would lamely witness his pas-sage of the Inn, his entry into Munich, and his aggression upon the Elector of BA VAK; A; He thought we. were occupied elsewhere; let him, for the third and last time, learn, that we know how to.be piesent in every place where the country has enemies to combat. . , Soldiers,- to morrow will be an .bea-

ched times move celebrated than tbe day of Marengo. _ I have placed the enemy in the. same position,

£t -Recollect that ihe most remote posterity will remark the conduct of each of vou on this memorable day. -Your' progeny, Sv© hundred years hence, who may place thern-sel ves under those eagles around which we rally, will know in detail every thing that your'respective corps ihail atchieve to An ar-row, and the manner in which your courage shall confer on them eternal .celebrity. This will constitute tbeperpetual subject of their conversation ; and, from age to age, you will be held up to the admiration-of futuie ge» neratioiis. : •••:-;,.

" '-Soldiers, if t wished only to conquer the en.etnv-, I should --riot- have thought ne-cessary to make an appeal ,to your courage, and your attachment to the country and to my person ; but merely to conquei him is doing nothing worthy eiihei-of you or your EM-PEROR. It is necessary that not a man of the enemy's army-shalLescape.;, that that Gc-» vernment which has violated ail its engage-ments, shall first learn its catastrophe by youir arrival underthe walls of Vienna; and that, on receiving this fatal intelligence, its con-science,s if it listens to the voite. of conscience, shall tell it, that it has betrayed both, its so= lemn promises of peace, and the first of the du'ties. bequeathed by its. ancestors, with the power of forming the rarripart against the erupiioiis, of the Cossacks,

f f Soldiers, who h.avfc been engaged in.the • affairs;of Wertibgen .and Guntzburg, .1 a m . satisfied with you r conduct. Every corps in the- army will .emulate you, and I shall be able to say to ray people— 1fYour Emperor and yo-Ur army" have done their duty/ Per= for-im,''y-ou.is, and the 200,000 Conscripts whotii I have summoned will hasten, bv forced marches, to -reinforce our second line, f',:'

(Signed) " N A P O L E O N . " By order of the Eropeior and KljJg; t.he Major-Generai of the Grand

B E R T H I E R , " -

Page 3: m1 VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It l8o ... · Given «t th e Coflnci Chambel ir Dublinn th 5e,th Day o Octoberf 1805, b . Kedefdale,C, Arran FraDltfore. C I.on]c

S U N D A Y ' S MAIL ,

LOMDON,. tUESDAY.NOV. Some more D'uitch Papers arrived last

night, but jnot of aJlater date than those w hich arrived tiiie night fbefore, Some Hamburgh Papers ai.s|o arri ved' to the 2:6th. They jus-tify the cojnfident- hope we have- expressed, with respect to Prussia. 1 The Prussian troops foil-in three armies, which are on their inarch ; .j>ne in Lo wer Saxony, under the Duke of IJBRONSW-J, C'K.'J. a second in Anspach under Piiiuce HOMENLOIIE ; and a third ia Westphalia, under the Prince of HESSE. The Prussian force'will be strengthened by the .accession of the troops of Saxony and H e s s e . Strong Notes have been presented by the Prussian Miinister.tp the French Ani-hassad'oi-art Berlin, upon the subject of the violation of the Anspach territory.

An a.Ttiele in the Dutch Papers states, that the'-Archduke FFRDIMAH D effected die es -cape of several thousand of his troops,, and that he lost only twenty thre'eout of his fitly pieces of cannon. Another division of the Austrian army is stated to have effected its retreat to the Tyrol . .

BONA PARTE has demanded troops from Spain—Eight thousand Spaniards a re accord-ingly to be sent to Italy, under the command of G e n , O ' F A R J & E L L ,

MOMDAY'S M A I L .

G L O R I O U S V I C T O R Y O V E R T H E

C 0 M B IN E'D. FL 8 & TS.

D E A T H OF L O R D N E L S O N .

F R O M T H E LONDON G A Z E T T E .

It has been stated in several of die Papers, that Parliament will meet for the dispatch of. business, onthe 7th of J miliary, We have reason to believe that it will not meet tilf

jabout'the 14th,—Coufier-.

Wc ar.e shocked to find in one of the sninnr French papers-(the Gazette'de France), an account of the death of die unfortunate Capt. WRIGHT , which there is reason to suspect was something in the manner of that of Ge neral PTCHEG.RU. The article is as follows —we make no comments on it. : - -

" Ca.pt. WRIGHT , ofthe English Navy, a prisoner in the Temple, who had disern-;

"barked on the French coast GEORGES, and his accomplices, has put ,an end to his exist ence in prison, after having read in the JVlmiteur the account of the destruction of trie Austrian army,"

Another Paper, the fournal-de Paris, o^ •the 29th ult, says— - . V ; •'

" Theday before yesterday Mr. WR I'GHT, ,ihe English Officer who lastyear disembark ed the assassins of England on the coast of Britanny, add wasrim-pnsoned in the Tern -pie, alusv having read the 'Bulletins of ihe M:i*ntepr. and uttered much abuse against the Austrians, and particularly against Ge~ iieraLMA,c k , cut his.illioat with a razor."

. The following tetter has been sent by the. L A P E R U L A MB A Ss A DO R to the Edito 1 of. a respectable Morning Paper : —

Si a,-.—I shall be obliged to you to correct a statement in your Paper of Friday, No-vember jst, in which, speaking of the causes of the late events qn the Continent, is men -• lionedas a circumstance contributing to thero,

• " The tardy advance, of, the Russians, whose arrival is a full month behind the time it was ex •

•peeled " Upon thisstaiement I beg to pb seive, and to request yo.ur publicity, that it is completely the reverse of the, state oi the case, which is, that the Russians are full twelve days earlier at their post than they had promised, or could have been expected • and that nothing but the most extraordinary -and unprecedented'exertions could have el-fected this promptitude.

You are at liberty so insert this Note if yon':think it.theiest means'of answering, the desired object of my request to you.-—I am, Sir, your humble Servant,

L O U I S Count S T A R H E M B E F . G . Nov. 1st, Portland-flace,

Admiralty-Office, Nov. &• Dispatches, of which t|ie following are copies, were j

received at. the Admiralty this day, at one o'clock ; a m. from V ice^Admiral Callingvyood, Corn man-der in Chief of His Majesty'? ships and 'Vessels'off j Cadiz s (The first of T h e s e dispatches," detailing

the proceedings of his Majesty's squadron.on the day of action, and that preceding it, has already been communicated to tbe. public in a Supplement to th'e.BjsN 1 s CHRON i C-I.E.)

G E N E R A L ORDERS. BuryMtiiy Oct, l£ioii'

The ever 10 be lamented death of Lord Viscount Nelson, Duke of Bronte, the Commander in Chief, who fell in the action of t h e s t . i n the arms of victory, coveted with glory, whose memory .will be ever dear to the British Navy, and the British Nation, whose zeal for.the honour of his King, and for the interests of his Countr y, will be ever held up as a shilling example for a British seaman—leaves to me a duty to return my thanks to the Right Hon, Rear Admiral, the Captains, Officers, Seamen, and detachments of Royai Marines serving.on board his" Ma-jesty's pqtij:Iion now under my Command, fur their conduct on ..that,day ; but where cai;.I find language Jo express my sentiments of the valour and skill which were displayed bv thei,officers', the seamen, and marines in the battle with the -enemy,' where e very in-dividual appeared an hero, on whom tb.e glory of -his Country depended; the attack was irresistible, ami tbe issue of it adds to the page of Naval Annals, a brilliant in» stance of what Britons can cio, when their King and their Country need their service.

To the .Right Hon. Rear Adm Uht Earl vof- .Nortbesk, to the Captains, Officers, and Seamen, and to the Officers, n'on commis-sioned Officers, and Privates of the-Royal Marines, I beg to give my sincere and hearty thanks for- their highly ma itorious conduct, both in the action, and in their Zealand ac-tivity in bringing the captured ship's out from the perilous--situation, in which they were, after their surrender, among the shoals of Trafalgar, in boisterous weather.'

'Anil I desire ihr.t -hff respective Captains will be pleased to .communicate to the OlTi cers, Seamen, and Royal Marines, this pub-lic testimony of :hy high approbation of their conduct, and my thanks for it,

C . C O L L I N G W O O D . To the iiight lien Rear'" Admiral the

Earl of Xorthesk, arid the respec- ....„-. time Captains and Commanders. - -

General FLOYD;,, who had the command in Ireland, adinterim since the promotion of Lord CATIIC A SI to the- Russia.-; Embassy , is returning to England to join the British-Staff' embarking for the Continent.

The First.Division of the Expedition is fe-i511 detained in the Downs by contrary winds. .-.'•• - • f

The Second Division, which is in readi-ness for embarkation, and only waits, the arrival of the transports at Ramsgate, "will

Royal Sovereign, in tow by the Neptune; foot on the 23d tbe gale increased, -and the sea ran so high that many of them broke the tow rope, and drifted far' to leeward before

.they were got hold of again, and some of them, taking advantage in tire dark and bois-terous night,-got before the wind, and have . perhaps, drifted upon the shore and stink ; on the afternoon of that day the remnant of the Combined Fleet, ten sail of ships, who had not been much engaged stood up to leeward of my shattered and strangled charge as if meaning to attack them, wiiich obliged me to collect a force out of the least injured ships, and form to leeward for their defence : all-this retarded, the progress of the hulks, and the bad weather continuing, determin-ed me to destroy all the leewardmost that could be cleared of the Meh, considering that keeping possession of the . ships' was a matter of little consequence compared with the. chance of their falling again , into the hands of the enemy, but even this was an ar-duous task in the high sea which was run-ning j. i hope, however, it has been accom-plished to a considerable extent ; I entrusted it to skilful officers, who would- spare no pains to execute what was possible. The Captains of the Prince and Neptune cleared the Trinidad and sunk her. Captains Hope, Bayntun, and Malcolm, who joined the fleet this moment from Gibraltar, had the charge of destroying four others.—The Redo.utable sunk astern of the Swiftsure, while in tow. The Santa Anna, I have no doubt, is sunk, as her side was almost entire-ly beat in j and such is the shattered condi-tion of the whole of them, that unless the weather moderates, I doubt whether I shall be able to carry a ship of them into port. I hope their Lordships will approve of what I (having only in consideration the desti ne , tion of the enemy's fleet) have thought a measure of absolute necessity.

Ihavetaken Admiral Viileneuve .into this ship—Vice Admiial Don Aliva is dead.

'Whenever the temper of the weather will permit, and I can spare a frigate f fo r there were only four in the action with the ,Beet, Euryalus, Sirius, Phoebe, and Naiad : the Melpomene joined the 22d, and the Eury dice 4nd Scout, the 2 3 d J , I shall collect the other Flag Officers, and send them to Eng land, with their flags, (if they do not all go to the bottom), to be laid at his Majesty's feet.

There were 4000 troops embarked, under Gen. Containing who was taken with Adm. Viileneuve tu ihe Bucentaure. I s m , &c.

C. COLLINGWOOD.

- G E N E R A L ORDER, The Almighty God, .whose., arm is

strength, 'having of his great mercy been pleased to crown the exertion of his Majes-ty's fleet with su.ccc.ss, in giving them a com-plex victory aver their enemies, on thezist of this 'monthand that all praise and thanks-giving may be offered up.to the Throne of Grace id; the great benefits to our country and:to mankind,

I have thought proper that adaysihould-be appointed of general humiliation before God, and thanksgiving for this his merciful good-ness, imploring "forgiveness of sins, a con-tinuation of his Divine Mercy- and his con-stant aid to lis in the defence of our country's liberties and laws, without which the utmost efforts of -man are naught, ahd direct there-fore that , be appointed for that holy purpose.

Given on board the Euryalus, oS Cape Trafalgar, ' 22,d Oct. 1805."

C. C O L L I N G W O O D , To the respective Captains and Commanders.

N. "B. The fleet having been dispersed by a gale o'f wind, no day has yet been able to be appointed, for the above purpose,

SIR, Euryalus, off Cadiz, Oct. 34S> J®0|» In my letter o,f the 22d, I detailed to yoe,

for the information of my Lords Commis-sioners of the Admiralty, the proceedings of his Majesty's squadron 011 the day of the ac-

i tion, and that preceding it, .since which-1 u , . . . . - , - . , have had a continued series, of misfortunes,

comprise the 5th, 43d, 91st, and ; b u t t h e y a r e o f a k i n d , h a i * h p r a d e n c £ regiments together with others, the num- 1 c 6 u l d not-possibly prbvid,e.agaiJ , o r » v foers of which have not been mentioned; skill prevent andItlw:3d l a g o o n Guards, 8th 9th, 28th, f On'the aid in the moining a strong south: 30th, 36m, and 89th regiments fiom Ire- • • & • land, ii'anspom being in readiness at Cork for-riidx-sorrveyance to Bremen. • ' The.prie'e of dollars,'has; advanced four yence pei ounce, in consequence of the e;x-sensi vt: Texniftaacesto jie made in"-specie to' Ihe Co funlf is .

erly wind blew, with squally weather^ whicli, however, did not prevent the acti-vity of the officers arid seamen of such ships •its. were, manageable from getting hold of many of the'prizes (thirteen 01 fourteen), and sowing them off to the westward, where I ordered them 10 rersdexuous sound- ihe

- IONDON, WEDNESDAY, NOV.-6. The wind having changed yesterday to a

favourable point, the expedition, consisting of the Coldstream, ihe 3d Guards, the 4th, or King's own, the 14th, and 23d Regi-ments, the 95th Rifle Corps, the Germ&n Legion, and the Artillery, sailed from the Downs yesterday afternoon.

Intelligence is just received from Bremen, dated the 29th of October, that the King of PRUSSIA had marched a part of his army, into Hanover^—driven out the French troops, and re-established the former Hanoverian Government. . . The Emperor of RUSSIA is arrived at

Potsdam. The. route of the Russian troops assembled

on the borders of the Black Sea, is changed. They-will not be transported, as formerly by water, but permitted to march through Wallachia-aad' Moldavia to the coasts of the

' Adriatic. The Forte has obtained tbe welcome intel-

ligence fliat the Ottoman troops, had obtained a-complete "victory over the Beys at Cairo. According to the barbarous practice in Tut'-

' key, the heads of seyen of the leaders, ! among -which was said to be that of EL FI

BEY, were publicly hung up on-the Se-raglio. • . . . . Sosae letters, from Holland, of the -v:2d

inst-,-. were- yesterday received. In one of these the rumour is repeated of a numerous PrBSsian army having joined the Russian and Austrian-Forces. -

The, French, immediately after the.sur-render of MA OK, began to file off in great:, force toWa'fdsthe Inn and the Tyrol,

-The - Abbe DE; LA MA ft RE was on Fri-day last, conveyed from town to Harwich,' where he was pat on board- a ship bound to one of the posts of the North of Germany, having'been sent out of the country under the Alien Act. - :.

Sir -DAVID DUNBAS,:it is said, is,to | have the same command in the military de-I paitment during the absence of his -Royal | Highness the Commander in Chief, should j it take place, which was possessed by S i r '

WM. FAWCETT, when the'Commander-ita Chief was on the Continent last war.

D E A T H O F L O R D N E L S O N . ,

A victory purchased with the loss of such a life, is so hardly earned,, that we ar e per-suaded not a Qiari in the kingdom would have consented to have paid so dear a'price.for it. How many tears have been this day shed to his memory !—No two men accosted each other in the streets without expressing more grief at the death of Lord NEI.S'ON than joy at the victory, which his Lordship has be-queathed as his dying inheri:ance.~'Gallant, generous, and high, spirited !—What a man have we lost!—'-how excellent in the choice, how skilful in the combination of his means! —-how clear in the disposition of his force .! -—how prompt, yet how judicious in his de> cisions !••—• how cool in the hour of danger-1 —how intrepid, yet how collected.on tbe day of battle !—how moderate and magnanimous in the moment of victory }

It was his constant wish that the mahnerof his death should be worthy of his iit'e.— Could his wish have been more amply ful-filled ? With an inferior force he br ings -the enemy to action—and 27 saii of the line., op-posed to 33 sail, succeed in taking and des-troying 20 ! v ;' ..

It will aggravate, if any thing can aggra» vate, the sorrow, so universally ielt for his Lordship's death, that he did not live to know; the final result of the battle. He was killed about the middle of it by a m'usquet ball fired from tbe tops of the ship he was engaged with, and thought 10 be aimed, at him,—C.apt, HARDY had repeatedly asked him, from the beginning of the action, tp change his coat, on which'he wore the stars. ' of the different Orders, but he would not take the time to do it. As soon as he le-ceived the fatal : wound, he sunk into the arms of one of the Officers near him—but he never lost his recollection—he lived about ap hour, perfectly calm and composed, giv-ing his- orders with all that calmness and precision which had so eminently distin-guished birr, through life. The intelligence 0/ tae Sanlhsima Trinidada, the Admiral's flag,ship, having struck, was-communicated t<s.him j ust before he died--he appeared ion-, vuised with joy l , ,

Sucfr was the death of this, great- man J—• The accounts from, the 'fleet are full of the manifestations of the deepest sorrow amongst the crews of every one of our ships as soon as theirirreparable loss was known. Ought there not to be occasions in which the usual etiquette or general mourning for none but Royal Blood should be departed from ? Surely this is one of those occasions, and we hope that a general mourning will be ordered.

The. last Order Lord NELSON gave be-fore the action commenced, was by Tele-' g;-aph--'-c< England expects every man to do his duty,"

i'his brilliant and decisive victory, gained by an inferior force, was gained on the day on wiiich General MACK was negociating the surrender of his army withemt risking a battle,'

We have since learnt, that three daysafter ihe action, thirteen sail of the French and Spanish line.came out ofthe harbour, thinks ing that out fleet might have been dispersed in the heavy gale, besides being mauled in the action—Upon eleven of ours, however, bearing down upon them, they returned to port immediately.-

The metropolis was overwhelmed yester-day .with tbe thickest fog that has been known for many years. -During the morning it vtas uncommonly heavy, but towards night in-creased to such an alarming degree, that the utmost danger ,from accidents was apprehend-ed. It extended for seveiaT miles round town, in consequence the several stages ar-rived later than usual, not being able to trace their road : men with torches were obliged to walk before them into town, and to light them to the inns. Innumerable, were the dif-ficulties occasioned by the stoppages in the streets, Petsons.running agsinsteach other/ and carriages and horsemen in the same pre-dicament; T o add to the horrors of the scene, in many parts of the town the shop-keepers closed their shops, and the glimmer-ing lights, which otherwise^ might have served to guide the bewildered passengers, we're.of course dispensed- with. ,We have not. heard of any serious accidents, but are afraid the accounts from the country will bring some by tlie next mails. The coaches-

"fcould only move with a jpoot pace,, and, to avoid running against each, other, there was a continuing hall'owiBgpui; this- with the screams of others who conceived them-selves in danger of being run over, present-pel altogether a terrific scene j at continued two hours. , .

T h e ' q u a n t i t y o f . p e p p e r d e s t r o y e d b y L r » N o i s , , at Be -ncoolen, i s - n o w a sce r t a ined t o

. . amounted t o n e a r l y 4 0 3 Eons.

Page 4: m1 VOLUME XXII. JV E D N E S D A T, N 0 V E M B E It l8o ... · Given «t th e Coflnci Chambel ir Dublinn th 5e,th Day o Octoberf 1805, b . Kedefdale,C, Arran FraDltfore. C I.on]c

. C r Thjs D A Y ' S M A I L .

I M P O R T A N T S T A T E PAPER*

Nt)te transmitted by theJS'aren Be Ha'rdenber'g to M. Duroc and M. I.afcrest'.

" 3 l i e K i w c has comnianUed me to com-municate. what follows to, his Excellency M a r s h a l D U R O C , and to M . L A F O R E S T , ' Envoy Bxtraoidiriary and Minister Plenipo-tentiary of his Majesty the EMPEROR of the F R E N C H :

" His MAJESTY is uncer a in whether he ought to be more surprised at the outrages which the French armies have taken the li-berty of committing in iiis Provinces, or, at the extraordinary arguments by which it is attempted at this day to justify them. Prussia had declared her neutrality ; but adhering io fhe.last to her prior engagements, all the advantages of •w'hi.eh henceforth would be in favour ol France, she made sacrifices to them which might have endangered her dearest interests. This invariable integrity, ibis, connection, which, without being in ihe least degree expensive to France, pro-

• ducciil to hef an invaiuoble degree of secu-rity on many essential points,-—-•!low has it be.en repaid ? Justly jealous of that consi-deration which is no less due to his power than to his quality, the 'KING has read with

, sensations which he has in. vain endeavoured to suppress, the justificatory dispatch com-municated by tlie French Ambassador to his Cabinet.

" A justification is attempted upon the authority of the practice of t'he last wars, and the siinilaiity'of circumstances; as if the exceptions w hich weie then admitted had not been founded hpon positive acts, which have been since annulled by the-peace ; as if the EMPEROR -ever-took those acts into his con-sideration, when he took possession of the country of Hanover, of a country that had been so'long placed.under the -protection of Prussia,! But ignorance of our intentions is pleaded, as if the intention did not exist in the,nature of the transaction, so long as the contrary is not stipulated ! As if the solemn protestations of the authorities of the Pro-vince, and of the Minister of His MA J ESTY to his Highness the Elector of BAVARIA, had not sufficiently made known what was by no means necessaiy, and that I myself,. with the map in my hand, in the conferences which I had. with their Excellencies M\ D U R O C and M . D E L A F O R E S T , had not declared that no troops whatever should pass 'Itrough the Margmviates, pointing out to them, attire same time, the route of, com-munication that Bavaria had stipulated lor' herself as the only one in which the march

' ,.of the troops was not likely to meet with any obstruction ! It has been said, that in matieis of such importance, a positive explanation should take place, as if that were a duty in-cumbent,on tjiePower which reposed in con-fidence on theiaith. of a piinciple, and not

upon that which, intended' to subvert it. • In.short, a pretext is made of facts which have never had any other foundation than in false reports ; and in imputing outrages to ihe Austrians,. which they have never com-mitted, the observation of his MA JE'STY is only directed to fhe contrast which their Conduct offers to that of the French ai r/'iics.

" T h e K m c could have even drawn from this contiast conclusions of the EMPE-ROR. He will confine himself to the..ie flection, that his IMPERIAL. MA JESTY had at least his' reasons tor considering the positive engagements which existed between iiiiri and Prussia as of no importance in his eyes, under the-present circumstances; and that he himself was consequently on- the point o f sacrificing every thing to adhere to his engagements. , He considers himself at this day absolved From all obligations ante-cedent to the present time. Thus restored to that state/of things, in which , he has no other duty than that of his own safety and the maxims of common justite, the KING will not the.less evince th ;t he is,always ani-mated by the same principles.

" To see, Europe participate in that peace, in which he aspires to maintain 'his own sub-jects; is his only wish : to contribute, by all the means in his power, to re establish it upon a solid basis, and to apply to this great work his active mediation, and his unremit-ting endeavours, shall be his chief duty.

" But, impeded on eveiy side in these his noble intentions, the KIN G can no longer entrust to other hands than his own the care of providing for the safety of his people,— Without obligations for the futu re,, arid also without assurances, he ,finds- himself com-pelled;'to order :bis armies io occupy those positions which are indispensibly necessa- y for the protection of the State.' .

" Entreating their Excellencies M. DU-R o c and M . DE LAFOREST to transmit these observations to iiis IMPERIAL MA-

j'fe.sT V,. i ha»e to as? tore tii'em fcf my iiigh consideration.

( S i g n e d ) H A R D E N B E R b . " tc Berlin, \$tk October, 1&05..

"WSSfiB*— BERLIN, OCT. 26.

Our political system appears to have ex-perienced a complete alteration, in the course of the last fortnight. Th® KING has given leave to the Russians to march through his dominions wheresoever they please s. and the armies wbich were asst-mbled to.prev.-c.ht them, will no'lv bC.sfeht upon a different desti-nation. An artny; consisting ot Silfesiah and Frarlcanian regiments, and reidforcc'd by 24,0,00 Saxon troops, . ision its inarch to Fianconia, under the command of Prince HO'HENLOHE, to cover that province and Saxony against any attack. The second •a 1 my is Assembling at HiklesHeim, under the Duke of BRU M SW I C JFC. The third airny, consistirig ot the Wes'.phaiian regiments, and 20,000 Hessians, commanded'By the Elector of HESSE, Will be posted on the Rhine. Meanwhile a fourth archy, under General MoLLENt 'oRF, w ill remain' in tlie Mar* graviateof Bfanderiburgb.

1 " .LEI p s i c , OCT. ii, A division of 20,000 men-, of the sebond

Russian army, is arrived ahead]' in Bo-hemia.

The head quarters of the Prussian army, which will be commanded by Prince Hcf-i-iEN L O H K , will be established ii Erfurt. Independent of this army, and that of Lower Saxoiiy and Westphalia, which make a to-tal of 130,000 men, and ^hich vt ill he join-ed by the armies of the Electors of HESSE and of SAXONY, there will remain a large fourth army near Berlin, and in Branden-burgh, under the command of the King of .P R U S S I A , and Field Marshal V O N M O L L E N D O R F F .

M E O K L E N B D R C H , O C T . 2 4 . The van ot the Russian army, consisting

of 100 Cossacs and 140 Cuirassiers, will arrive at Boitzcnburgh in a day or two.— T h e first column of Russians, consisting of 2000 infantry, will arrjve there on the 26th, and the second column, of 1800 men, on the 27th. They have eighteen pieces of cannon, and are commanded by General O S T E R M A N N .

' F R A N K F O R T ; O C T . i i . An anide in a newspaper, dated C-assel,

says, that immediately on the ariivul of a Couriei from Berlin.;-the Hessian army was put in, the looting of war, ami was to join a Piussian corps. It is added, that Mr; TAYLOR, the English Minister, had rc-teurned t o , C a s s , h a v i n g received an ex-press order fiom his Court to cont.inue rheie. Another newspaper says, that a corps of 1 iLissian troops,, consisting of 50,000 men, were assembling on the Vistula; that 50,000 Russians' had joined at Grodno; and an equal number in ibeen.viions of Warsaw.

H A M B U R G H , O C T . 2 5 . According , to intelligence received at

Fries,, by a' ship fiom Venice, the Aich-duke CHARLES had au-irked the Ficnch at Verona, taken possession ol the city of

•Verona, and made a coi ps of. 4000 French troops prisoners.

, ibxijfrN, FkibAi, tiiv. h • Yesterday we received French jotirnals ib

the 31 s't ult. and Dutch to the 4th instant; A, letter from Berlin, dated the 22d of

October, M a t e s , that oh the ifiih of the same motnh, an escort bf 600 Frehch in-fantry, and 800 cavalry, was attacked by 6000 A uatrian cavalry between Nordlingen and, Dinktlsbilil, and weife beat by the s.u-petior foice, with .the loss, of 50 pieces bf < artilleryand 100 ammunition waggons.

Tht" Smtgard Gazette ot October 17 , states, that an enterprize undertaken .by the French under General NEY on the nth of October, in the afternoon, on the left bank of the Dahube, between Uim anc} Alpeck; had not succeeded, and that on the 13th the Austrians had carried off a considerable quantity of stores belonging to the Fiench army.

Government are extiemely ahxiousfor this next dispatches from Admiral COLLING-WOOD ; but it is generally supposed that, he found it necessary to destroy the greater part ot his prizes. It is said that eight of the prizes had already been sunk, and that the Admiral had ordered the men to be with-drawn from nearly all the lest, and their masts and liggirigto be cut away, preparato-ry to sinking them. , Admiral DUCKWORTH is supposed to have joined Admiral COLLINCWOOD, . Dispatches were received this morning frbm our fleet off Brest—-the late gales had dispersed it, but it had received no damage, and all the ships had rejoined when the dis-patches w e-ie sent off.

Lord CATHCART is expected to leave th is cbuntry oh his Embassy in about a fort-night.

Loid HAR,KINGTON intends setting off for Ireland to be Commander in Chief, in the room of Lord CATHCART, on the 20th instant.

» - - „

€ n n i 0 Cf t ror r i c l r *

we s(ipjp6>.;t will Bejoiried / b f the Russians,-anil tlifc British now on.tHs.-ir passage to is higlilj? Jifbbab'le that one of the Pruss&fc will invade Holland. French troops a J i ^ h q r t l / e F petted ttJ be sirntinto the Re^ublicVonjits .delt j fcci ' , It is will, sensations of tlie deepek ihnoi^ 'L l

•elignatidn that we have 4'opied frank & fift^ pers of the 6th, some extracts fromI, r&^jtg.jjfif* giving an atcoiint of •' ' ' ' " ---•-"-> W R I G H T , in the T e m p i . asserted to have happened w

suicide; The Journal de Petrissajiil, that afier pc-' i uiing the account of the det'iat of tjhe Atfiiria'ns i „ the Moniteur, he cut his throat with', a razor. The event being mentioned in several of |the French Pa-pers, we are mortified to say that welcannot ,se£aoy reason lo doubt'the fact, that his rhrofet w a ^ i i f t » j ? n tut with a .razor ; but wis are well ii Was hot by hiirself.—What man ca,n! e so wlea®i,n to believe that a Briton, aod more espfeciall'yJfe'Caf-tain pf a man of war, could be so p'Jj.IIam'woiis or so silly as to put himself to death, mertU; on account of the Austrians having been defeated,s or from, sen-sations excited by perusing the ridxulo&s vi&oufina bf the "Mohiteilr.

WEDNESDAY [NOVEMBER 1 3 , 1805.

LONDON, THURSDAY, NOV. 7. 1 he prevdiem lepoit has been, that the

.force that had sailed .from the Downs is bound to Hanover. We may now howe-ver'state, ai the statement cannot now- be detrimental t 0 l f i e u bj ( V l l ) [ (|-i(. Expedition, lhai we have !ca?p to believe.is destined for Boulogne. it is known to Gove:muent that the whole force in thai place does not exceed -4000 then. The transpoit, it is believed, will, land the troops as near , the town as they possible can, and no doubt is entertained lhat thfy ,will cany the place. Sir Sidney Smith is. at the Bame time to. keep the. batte.ies em-ployed, and to attempt deatroving pan of the shipping. I „ the e v e f : £ o { 3UCECSSj t ) lP

whole must be annihilated. The attack, we believe, was intended to be made last ntght.—iS/a,'-,

Admiral COLLING WOOD'S conduct has obtained the fullest approbation ; and-last night dispatches were sent off to Plymouth, to be 101 wnded to him by the Acasta, con-taming a Commission, which appoints him 10 the command ot the ships Iii the Mediter-ranean with thesame powers as Lord NEL-SON had.

There are now.ten sail of the line ready to replace immediately any ot the disabled ships and-orders we, e dispatched by the Telegraph yesterday morning, for them to put to sea without loss of time. We are most anxjous

r ihe,next dispatches from Admiral COL-L I N G WOOD.

. The remains. 0 f Lord NELSON are to be brought to England, that his. Lordship may have the honour of a public funeral in. this country.

On Sunday and Monday last, we received London Papers of the Jth and 6th instant, from the latter of which we immediately communicated the Official details of a most decisive Victory obtained by our Squadron off Cadiz over the Combined Fleets of France and Spain. The enemy's farce consisted of 33 ships of the line, 4 frigates, and 2 brigs, and the British P J k t of .2,7 sail ot the line, 4 frigates, and? imal] vessels. The engagement took place on the 2 rat ult. and terminated by 19 Ships of the Enemy's line striking their colours, and being taken possession of, exclusive of one which blew up.

Lord KEXSOK'S ship being closely engaged with the enemy, a musket shot from the top wounded him in the breast; and deprived him of his most valuable life.

The departed feio has gloriously fulfilled the hopes of his Sovereign and his Cotintrv, and in the hour of his death has converted to sorrow the joy of the Philistinesj

While treachery and siipineness,- upon the Conti-nent, gave to B o N A P A E T j a n easy course of victory and strengthen fools in their worship of Fortune ' while weak minds, affefcted by these events, sunk al-most to despondency, and talked of courage but in the accents of despair, the anger 6't the British Lion Wis not asleep; his thunders were vindicating the national glory, and sounding dismay from' the shores of Spain to the banks of the Danube. Upon the */ery day, perhaps the very hour, in which B O N A P A R T E was vaunting his successes to a captive Army—in that moment his boasted/fortunes were playing truant to him, and the better genius of the Immortal N s r s O N , and the valour of the British and Irish tars; were annihilating the Fleets ot France and Spain.

It is not in the hasty sketch of newspaper observa-tion that either the fame or the importance of this un-expected victory can be expressed. Its fame will spread over the universe, maintaining the military honours of the British name, enhcarteningour allies, and determining our hitherto-wavering and unsettled friends; but its importance is in a peculiar degree re-lative to this member of the united empire.° That the Cadiz Fleet was destined for this country, under the supposed idea of our greater vulnerability, and to create such a diversion as might prevent the sailing of our expeditions, can scarcely be doubted. But

! the question of invasiop is now at rest—the disasters of a continental campaign MAY be retrieved by the successes of the next—but to replace T W I N T Y S H I T S O F T H E . L I N E , is the labour of years.

The enemy will perhaps call that a victory, which has released them from the terror of Lord N E L S O N ' S name—but let them recollect that any one of the gal-lant Admirals that remain to us, is sufficient to beat any, and all theirs combined together.

The accounts received in London, on Wednesday, from the Continent, are of a most favourable- and cheering nature—-Prussia i s C O M M I T T E E , W I T H THE A I M S , and has adopted a system of conduct decisive of herdetermination to make common cause against France. E v e r anxious to gratify our nume-rous subscribers, and fellah-townsmen in general, We informed them, in the Supplement on Mondav,' that a Prussian force had entered Hanover, and re-established the former Government.

The advanced guard of the Russian troops entered Boitzenburgh on the Elbe, on the 3 7 th ult, the Prus-sians entered the Electorate of Hanover the next day.

One, Prussian army, reinforced by 4 4 , 0 0 0 Saxons, and_20,ooo Hessians is to cover the frontier of Fran-conia ; a second has proceeded to Heldesheim, a third, js to march to the Rhine, and a 4th is to re-main in Brandenburgh, The Duke of BRUNS-WICK commands the army in t o w e r Saxony, which

London journals „ f the 7th -and 8th inst. hirivt.i it OVR OrrnCE tjiis morning.

Everyday almost brings additional i'n'.elligertce in confirmation of the decisive change 'which has tak,-,! place in the sentiments and system of the Prussian Cabinet. We have, in a preceding column, laid fore our Readers, an important note transmitted on the 14th of last monthy by Baron H A K B I M I E G to the French Minister L A P O R - E S T and the French Emissary Du ROC. It aIfords' t he. strongest proof of the displeasureof his P R U S S I A N M A J E S T Y at the impudent coniempl shewn by B o n A P ; m for the Prussian neutrality. Cautiously as this Note is in some respects .worded, it shews t ha t all hope's of an, amicable adjustment of the differences between Prus-sia and France are.at an end. -Indeed the former has ' placed th'fit point beyond the possibility of a doubr, by having entered into a treaty of Offensive and De-fensive Alliance with Austria and Sweden, to which it is supposed Denmark will akede. Government is said to have received a copy of that Treaty on Thurs-day, last. The Prussian armies are already on their march. The Emperor o? RUSSIA has been to Ber-lin. Upwards Of one-hundred thousand Russians and Austrians were assembled on the Inn, where-a Second Russian army of sixty thousand men were daily expected to join them. The Emperor of GER -MANY was also marching at the!head of another army.

It gives us great pleasure" to be able to announce that intelligence has also been received by the Ham-burgh Mail, of. the ArchdUke-CHARi.Es.ha vihg Ob-tained a victory over the French in-ltalv. The Arch-duke is stated to have attacked fhe French at Verona, taken possession of the place, and made 4000 of the enemy prisoners.

Accounts received in Lo'hdon by French Pspers io t h e j i s t ult. and Dutch to the 4th inst, mention that some successes attended the Austrian arms in Germa-ny, and . that a French escort were defeated on the 18th ult. niar Nordlingen, with the loss of 50 pieces of cannon and io0 ammunition waggons. --

The prospect of atfairs upon the Continent beqins again therefore to brighten ; the brilliant Victory gained by our flee', will no inu'bt infuse additional spirits, and animation in'.o the alliance. M'e ha«J-strong hbpei that the disasias bought upon the Aus-trian army by the imbecility of :,nt man, will be re-mediedi and that the Usurper'irH! at length be checked and rebuked in his ambitious career.

At a Cabinet Council held in London on Thursdsv last, a General Thanksgiving-was oroerta for the kre^ decisive Victory; it is to take place on the 4th-of next month. • .

The first division of the Expedition sailed from England in thegfttrnbon of the 5th. The Star, o f the 7 t h says, that they have reason to believe it is destined against Boulogne, and that the attack would:; be made on Wednesday, night last'.—W.e hope io l e ' able to announce, in ou.r publication of Saturday, the total destruction of the Boulogne flotilla-.' . Since the construction of the ,;bove paragraph, u e

have great pleasure in learning,'.'that several Letters were received io to'wn from. Dublin, mentioning that ' intelligence arrived in lhat City, b'v Express,' which states, THAT THE EXPEDITION AGAINST BOU-LOGNE HAS : cbiyrfr .ETSIV S I ' C C I I P S B THE

I F J . O ' V I R.I.A H A S 3 B E N DESTROYS,"', A N D T H E B A ! T T E R I E 5 D E M O L I S H E D . .

Theaccountof fhe defeat of the Combined Fltcf. received hereon Monday last, produced sensations of enthusiastic jov in all descriptions of persons. Never was loyalty more conspicuous—-never was gratitude mofe generally exerted, nor more feeling-y evinced : —Whilst every breast exulted in the success with which Providence was-pleased to bless the Arms of our Gracious King—every heart throbbed with real

_ anguish for the loss of the brave, the gallant N E L S O . V . At night the town was brilliantly illuminated, and while the manes of N E I , S O N were recollected with mixed anguish and reverence, the defeat of our United ' Enemies was rejoiced at with all the energy of true I loyalty and praiseworthy patriotism.

3s there a man, who thft great triumph hears, And with his transports does not mingle tears ! For, flip' Britannia's Hag victorious flies, Who can refrain from grief when NEESO-N dies I! Streldh'd on his deck amid surrounding fires, More Phcenix-like the gallant Chief expires ; Cover'd with trophies, let his ashes rest, His memory lives in every loyal'breast, His dirge our groan's, his monument our praise ; And whilst each tongue this grateful tribute pays,

. Hissoul ascends toHeav'n in glory's brightest blaze

For a few .days past, the PROVOST has been ex-tremely vigilant : he seized a great number of false weights and measures, and corrected many abuses which had been suffered to exist in the horough. The Market J u r y attended on those occasions, and exerted.themselves with great impartiality and can-dour

ize. J

— M A R K I E B — A few days ago, 'Wm, Phillips,, of Mount FM-

lips, co. Tipperary, Esq; to Miss Catharine Goin-, daughter to the lale- James Going, of.Beliisle, in fhis County, Esq. '

i '-NNlt.—PR 1 y n v ' l v F . " P A R S 0 K