;GAZ Voi. II.] KINGSTON, (UPPER CANADA,) TUESDAY, MAT $, 1812. [No. 25 • j ;;n' ASSORTMENT OF Cloths &Caflimcres, AJ^nou-u^Tca for fate hy the fubfcrih- r;r.:Mr. Wx. Swofi 11 ton's Inn,on the SiailKjfoJvablt't^rm* for C.ifh. ' Browbeat, Whitehead & Son. ,v:■.,-/.•.•-, >"• ig> iSrgi__________ 9 * A few barrels excellent Newcaftle Salmon, for Kile by CVmilNG & HAMILTON. ]r\\\.\ 0. lOtf Frclh Goods ! BAHTLET has received a V Cl*fl U*<- u.iu. Will i-v u« Dry Goods) Liquors & s J Groceries, Crockery & J lard 1Fa re, w'-'dl'^ will fill, vvVwftfak1 of letallj n-t his &4&* ti&W for C.i!h, or s-nt kind cf pTO- c :. —A!h for tale, Board? and Plank, & = v r P.:r:ds Flour of a U;p. rior quality for t-ii.- .if,. *$* Cr 1 |v. d for Prodnos ?.nu advanced c: jssppery « tiU^ne ' i"..v fat*. Ki%;mt DiT. 3, loll. 3«r H Land for Sale. THE foHoAVing valuable Lots *rf Land ir. 'he tov.rihip of lrrcdcrick(burgh, at£ cftc-d for tele by the labia :her, viz, Lo; utrnccr f:::, in the iirfl Concefuon additior.il. Lot a«!iibtt twenty-five, in the fourth Co&ceiltc'Oi RICHARD CARTWRIGHT- $■;. ?, i3ii. 3tf fatkisnahts Hats §gf Trimmings. - THE fuSfcsibera have opened and ROW ■ ffcr for fale, fitiEt doer to Rcbert Wi&uh Hoi,!, AX ELEGANT ASSORTMENT 0/ t& Moft Fajhhnablc Hats & c: Hammings; *'Wrh i]\rv are dvterminrj to frll on the t>', iVr Cu.a, Country Pu+thwej or approved ^SMITH & LUTTLRWGRTH. ]\\ R. 0ii E*// n?fit;j Dreffcd on { :*nj-i -.'.v.—^} Caih paid forj-'ur & A"-"-'r' ^ Dxcwur^ 1811. 5// new" books. JUST received from Montreal, anJ fjf fuiv at the Gazette Office : Ad4tS01 \ Works—M'Fmland's View of Hcrdici—Life of jnfeph-----Aihe's Tva- n':—Scalane in England—Ira and ifa- bclhi (i nrj.' n&ael—Character of Georcje %q —Powy's French SpclUng-boak—French Vocabulary------Child's Spelling-book—-— Wgrlls diiplaycd—Porteus's Evidences of the CU:iil;an Religion—C>bles—Tttf aments ^Watts' Pfalms and Hymns—.Pfaltcrs— Asitpcan Cookery—Cluldict/s books—Ca- nE fubferiber having obtained Letters of Admiiriftration for the EftaTe of T ................_....... J*«fe-Doctor Jons Gamclk of Iviaglton, **erfcd, req:;el\s all thofe who have any ®«3 0u the foid Eftaie, to render their ac- J«R3i properly artefted, on or before w->^.t Ci June next, in order that fomc at- J^Ter.t may be made with thc:n : And all -c'da Llizabeth Gamble, Jit lm \n}ftratrix. !r3=-Loft, A SMALL Red Morocco POCKET r»OOK, with feveral memorandumij \\\ pencil, of no ufe but to the owner. Who¬ ever Jus Found h and will deliver it to the Editor will receive two dollars rewa'd. For* Sale'* AVERY goodfpan oUJORSKS, fit for fafjriing work.—For particulars inquire ot the lublcriher. . CHRISTIANA TRUMP. KlngQon, rgth Apiil, 1S12. 22 Mhlk t SHERIFFS SALE. W^-il,] TJY vi. toe of three iowU; j fl J WriU otjfai faciast ilfued out rif His Mijcity's Court of King's Bench, at the fuit of Laurtncc Herchracr and John Khby,. of the town' of Kmgfton, nit rchants, and Nictlolas Ha^ermau of the towr.fhlp of Adolphuftown', Efquire, againu thr lands and tenements nf James Gerolomy of the townli)ip of Maryfburuh, yeomcni, to me directed ; t have fei/,ed and Xzkhn in c:;- ecution, as belonging to tb.c fcid Ja t'cn Ge¬ rolomy, the well half »>f lot number (cveri- rcen, in the firll cone'flion nftlns towi.flnpof Maryfb'^r^h, containing by ;:dmeafv:ien'e'it one hundred aercs, be the fame more or lek, together wiih a log ho life ih^-'con fercftea. I do hereby trKc notice, that the above men- tioued lot of Land, with the building and ?ppuvtenanees thereOfltO belonging* will Le lold and a.'judged to the higbcft bidder, at my office iu the town of Kingllon, on the Lvcwiecutli day of Ma eh ext, at chr hrxr (jften (5f the clock in the forenoon, at which time and place the conditions of fale will be made known. CHARLES STUART, Shmf. And every ptrfon or perfon< hiving claims on the above defcribed lot of land or prtmi- frtj by mortgage rir btlicr right or incum- brancr, are hereby advtiiifed to give notice to tli-fdd Shcilf, at his office in the town of KingPion, previous to the fale theic<:f- TAKE NOTICE" ALL perfonsindebted to the Subicribcr either in notca 01 baud or bod; ac- conru?;, are requcfled to call r»hd make a fet- tVirient with liim on or before the fir it of May enfuing, or in cafe of failure ih<.i» p.otc^ and accounts* will be put into the bands of an attorney, and a profeeutum commenced againil them wi'ihfm? further notice JAMES PERROT. ,?-'^FOPw-B*-5 GEOGRAPHY, To Clothiers. T;HE fubfcribei* informs ihe Clotlliera that he erects Machines for Shearing CloU:; the utility of them are fuch that thry r.re woithy every workmnn's notice ; a buy twelve years old cm tend them. They pei form the work of Shearing in a neat man¬ ner, and will (hear iixty yards in one bout; they arc not liable to cut the Cloth, or to get out of repair* The price ot them is oik; hundred doltars; there wi:l be a reduction to thofe that pay the calh down. Thofe Clothiers who wifh to purchafe Machines, will apply to the fubferiber, in the town of Hope, plftricfc of New Callle, and Province cf Upper Canada. ELIJAH HIGLEY. Hope, March 11,1812. j8 %m 4 Boxes Garden Seed-i taifed at Lebanon, State of NcwYork, for fale at the Store of JOHN MACAULAY. Kingston, March 3, 1S12. 16 Take Notice. ALL thofe indebted to the fubferiber are r?quefted to call and make payment immediately, or they will be filed without further notice ; and all thofe who hold notes or accounts ate c'-iired to bring them for¬ ward. RICHARD SMITH. F/oruary 17, iB 12,______________2\tf Cadi paid for clean Cotton Sc Linen RAGS at this Office.____________________ Webfter's Spelling-Books, For/ale ai this Office. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Letter of the Prince Regent to Mr. Perceval, dated Carbon Houfe, London, Fed. 4. , The Prince of" Wales coniiders the moment to be arrived which calls tor his decilioh with reipect to the perfons to be employed by him in the adminiltration of the Executive Government of the country, according to the powers veiled in him by the Bill palled by the two Houles of Parliament, and now on the point ot receiving the lamftion of the Great Seal. The Prince feels it incumbent upon him, at the prcfent juncture, to communicate to Mr. Perceval his intention not to remove from their ftations thofe whom he finds there, as his Majelly's official fer- vants. At the fame time, the prince Owes it to the truth and iincerity of character, which hetrufts, will appear in every action Of his life, in whatever iituation placed, ex¬ plicitly to declare that the irrcfvuU blc impu!fc of filial duty and affec¬ tion to his beloved and •jiTUctcd fa¬ ther, leads him to" dread that any act of the Reeerit might, in the 'hiallcil degree*, have the efted of i&erfering wii ti& f£typ$& trite* Sovereign's recovery.:—This con- fideracion alone dictates the decif- ion nd\v communicated to Mr. Perceval. . Having thus performed an act of indifpeniable duty,frorn a juft fenfe of what is due to his own cbnlif- tency Sc hc«10Ur) the Prince has only to add, that among the rxiany bldiinsjs to be derived from his m'-jeity's reftoration to health, and to the perfonai excrdfe of his P.oy» al functions, U will not, in the. Prince's eUirnation, be ttie Iftafb, that that rnoft fortunate event will at once refcuc him from a Iituation of unexampled ejnbarraflkierit, and put an end to a Rate of affairs, ill cSMsssS, i\\? if?a\\>, tfe>ifilfijUiitlhc intcixfts of the United Kingdom in tills awful and perilous crifis, and moil difficult to be reconciled to the genuine principles of the Britifh Conftitution. The Prince Regent's letter, to his Brother the DidcofTork. " My Deareft Brother—As the redactions on the excrcife of the Royal authority will fliortly expire, when I mull make fny arrange* ments for the future adminlftl'a- tion of the powers with which I am veiled, I think it right to com¬ municate thofe fentiments which I was withheld from exprefling at an earlier period of the feflion, by my warmcil defire, that the expec¬ ted motion on the affairs of Ireland might undergo the deliberate dil- cuilion of Parliament, unmixed •with any other confideration. " I think it hardly necellary to call your rccollecf ion to the recent circumftances under which I aliii- med the authority delegated to me by Parliament. At a moment of unexampled difficulty and danger, I was calledupontomakeafeleclion of perfons to whom I fhculdentruft functions of the Executive Gov- ernment. My fenfe of duty to our Royal Father folelydecidcd that c com admitted of no doubt or hefitatinn- I truft T acted in that refpecf as the- genuine reprefentative of the au- guft Perfon whofe functions I was appointed todifcharge ; and 1 have the fatisfaction of knowing, that fuch was the opinion of perfons, for whofe judgment and honora¬ ble feelings I entertain the higheit refpect in various inftances, as you well know. When the law of the laft feffion left me at full liberty, i waved any perfonai gratification, in order that his Majeily might relume on his restoration t) health, every power and prerogative be¬ longing to his crown. 1 certainly am the laft perfon in the kingdom to whom it can be permitted to defpair of our Royal Father's re¬ covery. A new era is now arrived, and I cannot but reflect with fat •• isfaction on the events which have diftinguifhed the fhort period of my reftricted Regency. Inftead of fullering in the lofs of her poilef- fiotis, by the gigantic force which has been employed againfUhcm, Great-Britain has added moil im¬ portant acquifitions to her em¬ pire.—The national faith" has been preferved inviolable towards our altars ; and if character is itrength, as applied to a nation, the increakd and increafing reputation of his M. jetty's arms will ihew to the nations of the Continent how much they may achieve when an¬ imated by a glorious fpirit ofrelif- tance to a foreign yoke. In the critical fituation of the war in the pemnfula, I lhall be mod anxtouV to avoid any mcafure which can lead my allies to fuppofethat I mean to depart from the prefent fyflem* Perfevcrance alone can achieve the great object in cmciVion ; and I cannot withhold my approbation from thofe who have honorably diitinguiihed thcmfclves in fupporr of.U. Ihave^p^prcdilecrKnis to indulge—no refentmentsto gratify -no objects to attain, but, "fuch as are common toi the whole empire. If fuch is the leading principle of my conduct—-and I can appeal to the paft as evidence of what the future will be—I flatter myfelfl f hall meet with the fupport of Par¬ liament, and of a candid and en¬ lightened nation. Having made the communication of my fenti¬ ments in this new and extraordin¬ ary crifis of our affairs, 1 cannot conclude without exprefling the gratification I (hould feel if fomc of thofe perfons with whom the early habits of my public life were formed, would ftrcngthen my hands, and constitute a part of my government. With fuch fupport, and aided by a vigorous and uni¬ ted adminiltration, formed on the molt liberal bafi.s, I mall look with additional confidence to aprofper- ous iflue of the molt arduous con- tell in which Great Britain was ever engaged. You are authorifed to communicate thefe fentiments to Lord Grey, who, I have no doubt, .will make them known to Lord Grenville. "I am always, my deareft Fred¬ erick, your ever affectionate Broth¬ s' cr hoice ; and every private feeling '(Signed) GEORGE, P. V avev/ay to consecrations which ^'Curlm^'Houfe, Feb. 15, 18*2. y