door or window, which reaches to the floor of the centre room. They danced in the dining room adjoining the conservatory. The- Prince invited a numerous evening party at t&\ o'clock, in addition to the ju¬ venile party, their parents and relatives. Hamburgh* June 1 !. Our Correfpondent in London has com¬ municated to us the following interefling and authentic intelligence:—"The Sove¬ reigns united at the Congrefa of Atx la- Cbaptlle had refolvcd feroufly to call up¬ on the Bavbary States to renounce the fys- tem of piracy which they had hitherto fol- lowed, and to adopt the principles receiv¬ ed in Europe. It was at the fame time agreed that England and France, in the name of the Allied Powers, fhould take upon themfelves the coficlufion of the af- faii." We learn with pleafure that over. tures on this fubjeft have already been made, from which a favourable Vcfult is expeded. We hope to be fhortly enahled to give more extenfive details on this fub- jt£. Stockholm, jutoe 4, The negotiations carried on in London, under the direction of the great European Powers, for the liquidation of the public debt of Norway, according to the 5th Ar¬ ticle of the Treaty of Kiel, are happily terminated, and the inflniment diawn up to this end by the Plenipotentiaries of thofe powers, arrived here lali Sunday, and was immediately laid before his Ma- jefty for his approbation. It is laid that it ia conformable both to the interefts of the High Contracting Powers, and to the promifes made by the Mediating Powers, and that it has been already acceded to by hta Irlajefty. According to this arrange¬ ment, Denmark will indeed receive a fmall- tr fum than it had calculated upon ob¬ taining ; but, on the other hand, will have the advantage of a guaranteed payment by iufialments, at (hotter intervals; where¬ fore nobody doubts but that it will he im¬ mediately ratified by the Court of Copen¬ hagen. The country fuffers feverely by the con¬ tinued drought, and the farmer looks with apprehenfion to the confequences which ma ft enfue, unlefs we foon have a refrefh- ing rain. \. » ♦ c • Extracts from London and Paris paper* to the 18th June, received by the ship Nia.rod-, Center, 49 days from Havre. London", .June 16. . Yesterday, the hon. C. BagoUuas in¬ troduced to the regent, upon his arrival from America. The third reading of the frreign enlist¬ ment bill, is further postponed to Mon¬ day next. The Kieg of the Netherlands has in¬ terdicted all the Popish processions ex¬ cept two, the one to take place on Ihe Sunday after Corpus Christ! Day, and the other to he lelt to ihe choice of the Bishops. He lias also interdicted all fantastical dresses, &c. on those occa¬ sions, as productive of scandal to reli¬ gion, and disorder to the public peace. _ A very highly respectable house in the Dutch trade stopped payment yesterday morning------From the high credit the Iioase holds, and the surprise it lias evi¬ dently caus* d, it is impossible to antici¬ pate the result.. The let tern from Ham¬ burgh also notice the failure of Messrs. Ellieott and Co. whose accounts were said to be rather reusid< iable. AVcouuis worevoi 1 ivedyeMcrdtn. U\ it the Carlisle wearers, on Thursday la>t, returned lo their employment, after hav¬ ing diminished their demands 1 . a cuf. They have certainly* conducted themselves »ith great moderntica, considering their t>nmber, which arr.ouuted on some occa¬ sions to uct less than two thousand. London, June 17. The Persian ambassador opened his residence in Cherles-strect on Tuesday 'evening, with a grand assembly. The interior wa* brilliantly illuminated, par¬ ticularly In those parts where the whole length portraits of the royal family of Persia appeared. The sovereign in his robes of office, occupies the principal sit¬ uation in z J-rectrjg crrt%nig room, encir¬ cled by a canopy of lichcashmire shawls. In the banquet ling room was a similar picture of the heir apparent. The apart¬ ments displaced all the costly luxury of eastern splendour. I'he kind of throne was feOTithed with t!ie Oioit precious pems in diamonds and pearls. The fair Circassian retired to rest at 10 o'clock, before the aniral of the company. The ambassador received the guests with the most polished demeanor, and accommo¬ dated them with sherbet and liquors pe¬ culiar to the Persian court. From the London Observer* DUELS IN GIBRALTAR. It wa» lately mentioned that feveral du¬ els had taken place between the officers of the 641ft regiment and the officers of the Uni-ed States fquadron which had touched at Gibraltar. The following details of thefe affairs are copied from the « Dublin journal : On Monday evening, the 22d of March, Mr. Taylor, the captain of an American merchant veffd, was returning to his lodg¬ ings from the theatre, at about half pafl II o'clock, and when within four doors of his houfe, he waj (lopped by a (entry i"r not having a h'ght (it is the crdcr of the governor that no perfun Diall wolk vithout carrying a light after 10 o'clock). Captain Tayloi being detained above half an hour, became impatient, and ran to¬ wards the door of his lodgings, which was r.ut more than ten yards dirlant. The do >r was fart, and the fenlry feizcd him 5 he i7»* brought to the main gtlard* when Capt Johnfto!), of the 641b, after hearing the fctitty'i (lory, which was fomewhat emhclliihed at the expenfe of the Ameri¬ can, ordered Captain Taylor to be com¬ mitted to the crib. After remaining fome time, the American afked for pen, ink and paper, which were refufed. Several re fpeftable merchants interfered, 3nd Capt. Taylor being at lad releafed, demanded Capt. Johnflon's addrefs, which he declin¬ ed giving, on the ground, that he did not confider the Amciican of fufficicnt rank to entitle him to a meeting. Capt. Tay¬ lor waited two days endeavouring lo ob¬ tain a meeting, when, being under a bond for 5000 dollars to fail by a fpecifk day, he was obliged to leave Gibraltar. A few days afterwards, a frigate, a floop, and a brig of war, belonging to the U. States, caTe down the Mediterranean. When the oflicersoftlie fquadron hadheard of the man - ner in which Capt. Taylor had been treated, they drew lots which of them hVndd fight Captain J. of the 64th, and it fell to the lot of Mr. Bourne, who had a meeting and was wounded, but not dangcroi.fiy, in the groin. The matter, as far as I apt. Taylor was concerned, would have retted here 5 but a new caufe of offence occurred, which led to other duels. Mr. Humphrys, Fird Lieutenant of the American frigate, was goirg off from the Ragged Staff, aboutten o'clockonthe night of the 30th of March. lie required the feneant of the guard to lower the bridge, who faid he would alk the officer's permis- fion (Kftfign Nutt). Mr. Humphrys, in the mean time, remained at the ouifide of the dcor, and overheard Mr. N'utt fay, "fend the Yankee in, and let us have a look at him." Of this Mr. Kumphrys took no notice, as it was not addreffed to him. When he entered the guard room, he found Mr. Nutt lying liretched on the couch, and he faid to the Amciican officer, 11 *"o you want to go down." Mr. Hum¬ phrys replied, " when a gentleman (peaks to me, 1 wifh him to addrefs me on his legs." Mr. Nutt hereupon immediately jumped up, and faid, " by heavens, fir, you are drunk," which, r.f cotvrfc, offend¬ ed Mr. Humphry*, and he sliced for his name, which Air. Nutt refufed to give. Mr. Humphrys then faid, "that can be caiily found ; but as 1 am obliged to fail to-morrow morning for America, you (hall hear from a friend of mine.'* The frigate United States accordingly failed the fol¬ lowing morning, and Mr. Montgomery, Surgeon of the Krie floop of war, with the Lieutenant of that veffel, went to Mr. Nutt's quarters to demand an explanation, which hr* would not give. He was then challenged by the lurgeon, but he refufed to meet him. The Ameiicans then went to the mefs-room of the 64th, to poll Kn- fign Nutt. T hey were received by a num¬ ber of the officers, who laughed at them, which fo irritated the Americans, that they offered to fight any officer of the 64th regiment. A dead Jilence enfued \ The Americans, receiving no reply, called the whole regiment a fet of poltroons, on which Captain Frith ftepped forward for the honour of the regitr-ent, and faid, he would meet cither of the Americans to morrow morning, on the neutral ground, at five o'clock, which accordingly took place, and Captain Frith received Dofloi Montgomery's ball in the hip. The Go¬ vernor of the Fort now ordered that no officer fhould go outlidc the barrier gate, and Captain Ballard, of the Krie, ordered that no officer fhould Wave the fln'p. But Mv. Stockton, fiili Lieutenant, who was Mr. Bourne'a lecond, challenged Captain Jwhnflon, of the 64th, fur ufing force op¬ probrious language (after the duel) to Mr. Bourne. They met on the rock at St. Michael's cave, and after exchanging one fhot without efLd, thry were interrupted by a party of foldiera fun to feize them. The Eiic failed over to Algezir.v-, where flic remained for fome days, and thus end ed thefe difputes* From the New York Mercantile Adver¬ tiser. The (bllowjfigariitlv *i> extracted from the lav! Number of tl.c Quarter!\ Sevlcir, Imsi repi b* fished in this city b^ Mes^r-. Kirk .!i Merceiu* 'file './ivcrjmol Courier iu extractii^ the nr;ir!e, recommend it a1- a siibjecl of transcendent *nn- portance, and admirably CHiculateJ u« alla> iliv* exfrovagaui fears wi:irii many well meaning, bin ii;cun*irlcr;ue, iin^li Imien entertain uiti* respect (o the provable marriirne gnpreraacyor lite Uuiied Soto, and the comequenl declen¬ sion of the naval superiority winch tireat Bn- uiiM at present enjoys:— Comparison between the British and A- merican Ka?jf» "The fucccfs-iul manner in which Ame¬ rica fitted out a few fnips of war during the late contelr, may have induced fome per Tons to give credit to her extravagant boafts, and to fappofe that fhe will, at no remote period, become a great naval pow¬ er, and perhaps, difpute with us our fupe* riority on the ocean. This tcpic meiits fome attention. The formation of a navy mull oepend on the quantity of commer¬ cial fhipping, in which failois can be pre¬ viously trained in the knowledge and prac¬ tice of theii profefiion. America at pre* fent has an abundant fnpply of tailors, but that abundance is unnatural, arid principally owing to caufes which have now ceafed to exiil, and they have become burthenfome rather ihan beneficial to the community. The extenfive war, which for more than twenty years raged in Europe, and in which all the naval powers were in turn involved, railed the mercantile navy of A- meiica to a height which it would never have other Wife attained, and which it will never reach again. At a very early peri¬ od of that war, the colonies of the ene¬ mies of England could neither tranfmit their productions to the mother country, nor receive the neceflary fuppliesbut thro1 neutrals; and America in that chaiadcr enjoyed zilmoft the whole carrying trade of continental Europe. The fiiherics were in theii hands; and in out iflands they were allowed to trade to a greater extent than perhaps Was politic even at that period. All this gave a wonderful impulfe to the American fhipping and in- created its tonnage from 700,000 t-.*ns, the amount in 1 792,to 1,350,000, the amount when the war with England commenced. "The alteration of cireumflances has already diminifhed, and will yet more di- minifh the mercantile navy of America. The rate of pay iu American fhips in time of peace mult be regulated, not by the wages of labour w.rh;n the Hates, but by the wages which o:her nations pay to their failors ; if it were olherwiie, the freight of goods by American fhips would be much higher (tlM by thofc of other countries. In a period of peace the Americans hav- no advantages in ?nc carrying trade, fince they ciu neither build, vidtna!, nor navi- gate (hips cheaper than the nations of Eu¬ rope. 4* O'.'r northern philofophers have re- ccntlv difcivered, (imong other rapid ad¬ vance" which the Ihiitcd States have made, that their foieign commerce has increalcd, ^nid that already their mercantile navy is within a few tlmui'.nd tons of our own ; and have grounded upon this notable dis¬ covery the ' proph'cy,' " that in two or three years they l?uft overtake and out- flrip us.M* We b-Wfi dated the tonnage of the merchant ft'ps of America at 1-350,000 tros ; but Mr. Pitkin, an acute (larillical writer and a mem¬ ber of Coogref*, observes, that of this amount only i 250 ceo were a&tiaUy na- vigated, which employed about 62,000 men. This was th* higheft point to which the mercantile navy ever role. Since the return of Europe *o a ftate of peace, it has rapidly declined* The foreign ton¬ nage h3s tetn reduced lialh and the do- rr.ellie, which inelu ;cs the fitberies, fenfi- biy di»nrni&cd.y " Whilfl the men anttk navy of Ameii- ca has been lhn« dwindling down to that natural (late which its limited capital and fmall furnltis of ptodufftiuna will fappoft, that of Great Britain lias increalcd with with unexampled rapidity. In the year 1811, it amounted 10 2,474.774 tons; and employed 162,547 men and hoys to navi¬ gate it : within the leveu years v. Inch have fince cbpfed, a great aceelaon has taken place, and the tonnage now amounts to 2,783,940, navigated by 170)82-0 men. Whilft America, in the moll flouriflling Hate of her commerce, could only draw (applied for a fighting n;ivy fiom 62,000 men, we have 17^,000 fiom which to ob¬ tain the requifite recruits, without taking into our calculation the numerous mari¬ time inhabitants who are employed in the fmaller tiafl, which are uurffgHiered ; i\\ the fifhing boats wliich furround every part of our coall ; and in the. boats barges, and lighters, which conduct'the commer¬ cial lading from the fea to the interior. l< A a the deficiency of fea mm, 2nd of the power to obtain the fervice of luch as they have, for the nivy, is an obfiacle to any formidable inert tfe of the maritime power of America, financial reafons will alio be found equally to "Lfltuct a great or rapid p'.^g efs. The aunuil average expenfc of in inuiiilig the naval f.>rcc of Great Bfitatft* during a war, may be taken at 8 or ro ooo,cCO fterlingi To create fuch a force, to accumulate Roies of ail kinds fufficict.t :o keep it up to its high (tandard, to conftruC arier.al-, dockv, and machinery, and fontficatinna for ftp de* fence, mutt f.»r exee-d an) fi.n winch any government in the United Sia:e9 would venture to fubmit to the coriJidcration ot Congrtfs. Our navy i« already created, end national feeling-, as well as the con¬ viction of its boundleffl fei vices to ourfeWes and the \vhoie eivtlized woi!d, during twenty years of tiemcndcu* ard fearful confliit, will fupport the Britifh nation in the nectlfary xpenfe of maintaining its foperioi'ity ; but the cifiance between creating and ;:pf?o!ding fuch an implement of attack and dcfci.ee is Lrwnenfe. u B«t further, if the matitime popula¬ tion and the finances of America (hnuld improve fo as to enable them to form a navy, local circurnftance* of a very im¬ portant nature would prevent it. The (liores of the United State* are nearly e qu:ii to the whole extent of coall which Great Britain prefents to the fea. Oo the mbfl extended pait of that line, viz. from the Capes of Virginia to the fouthcrnrnolt boundary, there is no pnrt in which a (hip of the line, or even one of the larger clafs of frigates, can be received ; in fad the whole foutherncoafl of America is deftitutc of har¬ bours, for the u'vers on which Charleston and Savannah are built have bars which, except at fpring tides, preclude the en¬ trance of ever, the fmallest frigates. The great rivers Chcfapt-r.ke and Delaware, though capable of admitting large fhips, afford no fecurity against a fupenor naval force. New-York* Newport in Rhode* Ifland, and Boston, though tolerable har¬ bours, may be enfiiy blockaded, and the fhips that rendezvous there be rendered ufelcfs, whilst a fmall naval force might fcour every haibour and river to the fonth- ward of them. A country fo extended as America would find difficulties in forming a naval force, which 3re not experienced in Great Britain. In a cafe of great emer¬ gency the whole of our naval population might be concentrated at any ©ne point, fo 3s in fix or eight days, if it were neces¬ sary, to man a larger fleet than was ever yet equipped ; but if America had an equal fleet in the only ports which will admit it, fo Jong a period must elapfc before her ma¬ ritime population could be collected, even if the power of imprtfimeiii Were »xercifed that the whole might be very leifurcly de- Btroj-ed before the hands could be biought together to man them." Kin£, member tot MassacMwetiff, tl*ut in Jant.- ary 1817, more than fu«!f the shipping, which had prosecuted foreign commerce, wa»« * dic- maeilpd at (lie wharves, and literally cnrnpeUe.] to seek employ in foreign countries. Their snip carpenters destitute of employ are obliged, far a living, to go into the British "province* of New- Brunswick and Nova Scotia there t'» cut timber, for the sftetorarry liian miIfn ient to encourage »s to hope that ip ihe ne.-vt edition of the journal just mentioned. fur * nithin a few thoosand tons of our own,' we thall Uc directed to read—within a fewmillion/* • royal navy of England, and »o buil'i ves- er.rrv it lo Great-Britain.* This i^ more : HMI u* Ediwhtirph W"vi»*n\Ni» LIV. p. i:i7." 41 r It appear from the declaration of Mr. From the London Cinner> June 11. Letters from Gustavuslhc fourth, ex-king of Sweden. We have had the honor of receiving the following communication from tua majefly the late king of Sweden, and we fubmit it to the public, according to his requert. It is written in Engliih, and exactly in the form we now prefent it The private, and family circur^Uance.% to which it relates, we think it becoming in us to leave without cotr.mert. It 1; well known that the fori of Guftavus IV bus refufed to make a formal abdication of all his future claims to the hereditary throne of Ins family. From what fpecific motiees he has afted, wc know not : but we think an impoita't light is thrown upon them, in the following document from the pen of the king. We refer, particularly, to the third condition inpofed upon the deceafed queen of Sweden, when confiding to her caie the education of her children* We (hall only further ohferve, that hi* mr.jirty has rel^iquifhcd his former title of count Gottorp, and now ftyles himlclf, colonel Guftafsson, which lignature h annexed to the following (latcmcot, w Mart)' journals having infcrted arltcWs concerning prince Guflavus, fon ot Gus- tavue Adolphus the fourth, (Guilafsson.) former ktrrg of Sweden, it is neceffary to explain what has been laid refpefling this VOOUg prince, and the public ought no longer to be ignorant of all the unlawful and utijufiifiable tranfaevtions of the lali three years. •* It is time to make known that fecret intrigues were employed to feparate the prince from his father, to whom he owes not only the attachment and refpeft that nature infpire us with for our parents, who had made over to him a great part of the confiderable property devolved on him from his mother of blelTed memory, the defunft queen of Sweden, and the remain¬ der of which be divided among his other children : 4i Prince Guftavus's father, who, In the year 1S12. was fepaiated from the qieen, his confort, gave her, as the mother of his children, the moll unequivocal proof cf his confidence, by tru'.ting to her majefty, not only the education of the princefs, but that cf prince GufhtvUS alfo How¬ ever, under thiee conditions, viz :—1st, t!iat their education iT.ould be confor- mable to the religion in which they were born. 2d, to the rank they hold in the world : Rod 3d. to the dotted they may one day be called upon to fulfil. 44 The queen afterward? received a new mark fS confidence from her former con- fort, by hlfl giving up to her the admin- ifiration of the above mentioned inheri¬ tance, re'iuquifhed in favour of hid children, which was paid by the Swcdifh govern menr, and placed at the difpofal of hcr majelly. " but 1 turn that moment f/u Ue ntd refolvedto a&abfdlutcly contrary to the tenor of Lhe conditions preferibeM to her, exactly rn the fame manner as her fon. who agreeable to fuch, was on his coming of &g€i (i e ) at feveutecn, to prefent hiut- fclfto his father, and concert w'tir him a& to his future dellii.y, but abfolutely rcfttfed fo doing at the time, declaring bimfe.f in a- pab-C ; and rejected the importunities of his father, hta friend, and bcncfa&oi. Infliga- ted by his royal mother, he pet Tided in dls- ubeying the repeated orders of his Trie, alleging as a teafon that he had promifed his mother upon his honor, not to leave her until he! had attained his 21ft year. A lingular example of a young prince, I who, refuting his majority, a«fls with the i difobedfence that a Ion might the more readily do il he were of age. It would be revolting and contrary to nature, to charge this once fo virtuous and fo obedi¬ ent a fon entirely with fuch an offence: it would be even unjuft to fay, before it could be evidently proved, that the queen mother of this prince had nflcd only from herfelf ; yet it mull be known, that flu- bellowed her confidence, and ftill more, committed ihe charge and education of her fon, with which (he alone was entrufled, into the hands of a Calvinid, of a repub¬ lican, and (tranger 1 who moreover, pos- fifles no acknowledged title that could diilinguifh or iccommeud him in any way for the fituaticn of prince Guflavus's governor. 41 Let nobody allege the name of the famous Laharpe on the fide of that of the emperor Alexander, to prove a paradox; for Laharpe was but Alexander's teacher, and not his governor. Let no one abufe any more the name of the emperor Alex¬ ander, by reprefenlfng it in the family diffentious, as it cannot appear confonant wich the dignity that characterizes a great fovcreign. " It has been faid in the Gazettes lately, that the emperor of Ruflia had appointed prince Gullavus governor of one of his provinces ; at another time, that he was going to England, with the emperor's permiffi<m,to finifh his (ludie$9and to be allowed by him £2000 fterling for the expenfes of his ' removal, which would indicate that the prince had not a fufficien- cy to provide for it himfelf. " Let us, therefore, put a (top to fo many weakly grounded novelties, and tndeavour, at lead, todcvelopc the truth, and not believe it poffible that the emper¬ or Alexander would carry dilfirnulationfo far as not to give any advice at all to prince Guftavus's father of his good intentions towards his fon, while he is ir» painful anxiety fot the termination of the fame fon's difobedienee." The above article is fent to the editor of the Courier, with the requeft that he will infert it in his Journal. (Signed) G. A. GUSTAFSSON.. Bade, June 1,1819. From fhe Boston Bct/ty Adoirliscr^ of August io. We have rcecivi d from par eorres- poiujout. 1 lali lax papers to the 801-fa ult. On the evening oi the 81*1, William UoMte, Ivq. merchant, of Halifax, died of r. wound rewired in a duo} fought that morning with Itii hard John Uniaek% L<q. a h.tiri>ter at Ir.w. arid son of the attorney general of the province. On the follow iugr^nvinS} vtctwmtfa inquest was had on the body of the deceased, when the facts of :he cvre v.ere proved. The supreme court crdeild the grand jury to be rrmiuoucd on the follouiug Monday, and a i*}*zrie pointing to the case was delir-or-^d In tin* court. The remains of Mr1. Bawie were interred on Friday, nnd a v'_y prcflt concourseof people followed him to the ^iave. The (riai of the par'irs eone-rncd in the duel being somewhat remarkable, we publish it at.length, with the exception of some pare of the evidence, as reported in the llaufaA papers. IIa-mfax, Tune30. , On Tuesday, bills of indictment were presented by lhe grand jury of the coun¬ ty Hf 0^ Pti4*f^**' K- *l -*£• ,l,'t -x'^»,i>/-* John CJuiacke* Esq- 'U'* y« ttng^r, a bar¬ rister at law, and I'M ward M*Swiney« I^-q. a merchant, both of this (oMn^char¬ ging them with the murder of Win. Bow*. ie, F/sq. a merchant, a ho of thUtoun ; a bill was, at (he same time, preferred against Stephen \V. Dcblois, Esq. char¬ ging him with a misdemeanor. The court assembled on fhe following day ;—the hon. Ilichaidjohn Uniaeker his majesty's attorney general, soon after entered the court with his son, who was accompanied by Mr. McSw iney, and sur¬ rendered him up to the laws of his coun¬ try—and ftle prisoners immediately' took their stations at the bur. The prisoners being arraigned, and. pleading not guilty, the jurors wore call¬ ed, and twelve iiiipa^Micili'd after several had been challenged who wrre on the trial which led to the inelancholy event that had occurred. Mr. J. I. Chipman and Mr. W. HilL theu rose, and requested fhe permissioa of the Court to he allowed to act as coun¬ sel for the prisoners on their trial—which request the court acquiesced in. S.G. W. Archibald, Esq. lung's Coun¬ sel, then opened the case to the Jury, and in a clear, liberal, perspicuous and very* able mtfnner, detailed the circum-j Stances which related to it—explained the laws which pressed upon it—and drew a distinction between the taking of a life, under the Influence 01 iTIce *ind depra¬ vity of mind, and the taking of a life in a duel, where the conduct of th:* parties is proved to have been fairnnd hcniorable —in the latter iu-tance, he asserted,* verdict of murd' r hail never been found- IX'. \Ti«HTn«;> •-. ..*... —1.' ■!»*.', v» lac pa sites ; wa. nairtMlb; Mr Ma v. "us. i-y, on the moniiisg t.f !l.'» *'l I • n month) to attct.d a p ,• 1 - • r ,e .North Farm, w\o I •} ded in a <luel—U • ., :he u-cnnd, di«i 1 u r - " . .,- 1 »« t-i-d Ihe rig.it sdrab-.v , -• .;c.q through <;»l> intevtines, und t.j J •;>• readied the 0|rpo«itP suhue. If' - soon joined by Dr. Almoo, and they re¬ lieved each other durtu^ ili;- day in their attendance 0 »on Mr. Bowie, ttirb h'«. un¬ derstood had expired about ten minute^ before 8 o'clock. lie ua. confident ;hat Mr. Bowie's death resulted from the wound. Dr. Almon was summoned to attewl the deceased. On his way to the Northr Farm, he met Mr. M'Swiney, who ear^ ried him out in his gi^;, and detailed the particulars of the meeting u hich bad ta¬ ken place between Mr. Bowie and Mr. UniacLe. lie saw Mr. M'Swiney take leave of Mr. Bowie by shaking fits hand — heard no expression of blame nr satis- faction at his conduct fall from Mr. B. The deceased continued sensible until the agonies of death became excessive. un. John Pietzer, a soldier in his majesty COlh rrgl. deposed, that ho was employ¬ ed at the North l'\irm ; between 4 and'5. o'clock on the morning cf tlie 21st insf. he distinctly her. id four reports of pistols, and soon after errant of >orr.v- persmi iu pain—(hat Dr. Deb'.nh came, with a hur¬ ried pace, towards him, and desired his assignee—he followed him, saw a gen¬ tleman lying on the ground, apparently suffering severely from a wound, and as- ststed in conveying him to the hou>e. He saw Mr. M'Swiney set oft' iu a gig, and return with Dr.Mr.cke«y. Mr. Uui- aekc, greatly agitated, walked away to¬ wards town. [A part of thetestiraooy is here omit¬ ted.] Mr. Archibald then rose, and stated to fhe court, that the evidence on the part of the crown had been gone through with. The court then informed the prison¬ ers they were at liberty to entrr upon (h^ir defence, and to offer evidence in their behalf. Mr. Uniacke then addressed fhe court Hid jury, and, in ft stylo, at one© honora¬ ble to bis feelingsandabilities, lamented, most sincerely, the sad occurrence which.