The New Hampshire Gazette Newspaper, April 23, 1762, Page 1

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wtld —r2rs * PRIDAY, "AniL) 23, 1762 55 NewsHampfhire s T omiaining ithe Frefbeft. Advices, PR AN ECE. AILLES, (1= Miles. Wept: of Paris, where ffand. . Eminence,, in the middle of a Plain, farreunded with Hills at-an, ;fé(nbl_c Diftances) o Becgmber 14.. ) &..of Spain, on the 15th of Auguft 1761, un- .« @erihe denpmination of & tamilyConven; . tion, the ratficstion of which: wereex- , changed onm the Bth of Seprember follaw- ed agiecable totheintention of theicMajeftics. ! ile ifl’ mh ‘been_thought proper to. publith the following faithful.abfRra&k ofiit. .. . .. . .. The preamble fets forth the motives for; concluding this treaty, and. the object of it. 'The motives are the kies of blood between the twoKings,and the [entiments they cntertain of each other. The obje&t of it is to give {tability and permanencytothole duties which na- urally flow {rom affinity and friend(hip ;and to eftablith 8 folemn and lafting monument: of that reciprocs! inter eft which ought to bz the bafisof the defites of the two Monarchs, and of the profperity of theirRoyalFamilies. The ‘Trgo]té it felf contains twenty sight Articles. 1.. Both Kings will, for the future, look upon every ‘power as their enemy, that become the enemy of either. ‘ 2. Their Majefties dominions in whatever part of the world they be fitu ated ; but they expreflly ftipulate that this guaranty fhall ‘extend -only to thofe dominions- refpetively cf which the two crowns fhall be in pofleffion the moment they jp are at peace withall the world. . 3 Bhe two Kings extend their guaranty to the King\dg-thg T wo: Sicilies and the Infant Duke of Par- _ma, on condition thefe twoPrinces guaranty the domin- " ions of their moft Chriftian and Catholic Majefties. . .4« Tho’ this mutusl inviolsble guaranty is.to Jappofed with all the forces of the two Kings, their ‘Misjcfties havethought proper to fix the ficcours which are o be furnifhed. 5, 6, 7. Thelearticles determine the quality and guantity of thefe firft fuccours. which the Power requi- ted engages to furnih to the'Power requiring. Thefe fuccouis confift of {hips and frigates of war,and of land torces, both horle and foot. Their numberis determi ficd, and the pofts to which: they arg to.repair. o -g ‘Iheswars in which France fhall be involved in tonlequence Gfishatr engagements by - the treaties of Weitphalis, or. other alliances sawith the princes and Rtites of Germany and the North,are excepted from the calgs in which Spein is bound to furnifh (uccours to France, unlels fome maritime. powers take part in tholcamars, or Frarice be attscked by land in her owpn g Ae Potentate réqiiiried my-fend one or more laries, to fee whether.the potentate required hath bled the ftipulated fuccours within the limited time. . to. 11, The Potentate required thall be at liberty o nike only one reprefentation on the ule to be made ok the fuccoes furnifhed to the Potentate reqairing. "I'his however is to:be underftood obly in cales where #n 'eriterpnizais to-be carried into immediate exXccution; gaJd not of ordinary cafes, where the Power that is to futnifli che (dceours is obliged only to hold them ia peadinefs iy that part of kis deminions which the Power péquiring fhall sppoint.ee ; > 12, 13 The demafid of fuccours fhall be held d fuTficien; praof, on one hand, ot the necefliy of recei- ying them ; and on the-other, of the obligaticn to give them. Th:furnilhing of them .thall not there‘ore; be gvaded undsr apy pretext ; and witholkentering into any dilenflion, the ftipulated number .of {ipsflipd. lend Eorces, fhall shree montha sficr -requifiion, ¥e €on §- dered as belonging to the Pocentate requiring.. . 14. 5. The charges of the faid thips. and troops fhuil be defrayed by the Power to.which they. are {ent, andsthe Power, wibich fends. them, fhail hold. resdy pther fhips to replace thofe which may be loft by ag citents of the {eas orof war ; and 2l o the necedlary. ce- cruits.and reparasions for the lend forces: | 16. The fucconrs above ftipulaied {hall be confi: dered as the leaft that either of the two Monserchs (hall e at liberty to fumifh to the other ; but as it is their intention that: & war declared againt cither. fhall be re; garded as perfonal by the otber ;' they sgree ¢nemy or epemies, they . wilh wagesit Joindly whole forces ; and that in fu‘cb cales they nto a_particular convrafion fuited to circumft dord . ances,. angd fettle as well the reéfpective and reciprocal efforts o be 'made, 23 their.pdfizicfl snd ififlituy plans of pperations _ . s which fhall be execated by common cenfesit and- per- {16m this very Ci feft:agreement. . 9 Lewis X1V, King of | France, upen an ¢ o0 femt . Lreaty of Kriendfhip, and. Usion (o which the King concluded withtheKing own ;. to ‘campenfate their re reciprocally guaranty: all their 55 ¢he natives. X S "’;,h;\ o - tiges, and to st as if the two one and the fame Power. F 19: 2o.. " The Kiag of §prin contraéts for the Kiog: A whiat might placethe “ 17.:18: . "Ehe twto Powers reciprocally and formally: ate certainiy many k:-ci‘.‘*(; ~and jasicious Perfons ‘in ngage, not:to liften to, ner to.make any ipropofals of the Law, whbo, for vant ot ¢ peace, to their commion enemies; but by muiual con« =lfo “through waant of For ; and dn time ok peace, as well a8 in time of wer,_ into Prallice. 'If fome MetH onfider theinterefts of the allied Crowns as their, put the Cales of fufeh diftreflegsE étive lofles and advan- with & reafonable Fund for cgq{g anarclies formed only a Decifion, and a juft Compen T ) out of what was recovered, thixmiightbe ‘equally bene ; ficial to both Pariies. Bit the bringiig chis Methed 1 W ek Ofinee i Pirex 3 " wasfirlt Pubih’ds \ZET TE 3 1IN ;(';ce we dmy he® 2, e : R A ilance, are unsbie ‘tc tecover [Better Ciicumfances; There! ioer Quulitics, and perhaps find 1t difficult 10 come. aould be fallen upon, o tors into their Hande g ng on their-Ceules to fecured to them dfithe T wo-Sicilies, the Lngegementeob.this treaty; and intoUfe muft depend upoa wiferlieads, shdvthefe who promifes tacaufe it to be/ratified by that Prince : pro-. vided that the propertion of the fuccours to be furnith- ed by his Sicihan Majefty; fhould be fettled inpropor- tion to his- power.. “Fhe three Monarchs engsge to fupport, on all occafions, the: dignity and rights -of their houfe, and thofe of all thePrinces defcended from it. 21. z2. - No other Power but thole of the auguft houfe of Bourbon fhall be:inferted, or admitted, to ac- cede to the prefent treaty.. Their refpeftive fubjects and dominions thall - participate in the connexions and advantages fettled between the fovereigns, and fhall not do-or undertake any thing contrary to the good under- flanding fubfifting between them. . L 23. The Droit d’Aubaine fhall be abolifhed in fa- vour of the fubjets of their Catholic and Sicilian Ma- jefties, who thall enjoy in France the fame priviledges in Spain and the two Sicilies; as the natural born fub: je&s of thole two Monerchies. i 24, 'The {ubjeéls of the threeSovereigns fhall enjoy, vileges and exemptions, as the nmiives, _ 25. Notice fhall be given to the powers, with whoin'thé three: contralliig . Monarchs have slready concluded or jhall hereafter, conclude,. treaties of com:- merce, that the trestment of the Frenchin Spain; and be the two Sicilies; of the Spaniards-in Krance, and the Mr, Whigefield, two Sicilies, and of the Sicilians in! France: and Spain; fhall not -be.cited nor ferve as asprecedent; it being the intention of their moft Chriftian, Catholic, and Si- cilian Majefties, that na other nation thall pasticipate i the advanteges of their refpctive: fubje@s. 26. The contrelling parties fhall reciprocally.dif- clofe to each other their aliiances-and . negociations, ef- p:cially when they have reference to their common in- - tetelts ; snd their minilters-at sl the foreign cour:s of Eurape, fh:ll live in the greaelt harmony . and mutu- al confidence. 3 : 27. This srticle contains only a fipuletion con- cerning the ceremonial to be obferved beiween the Minifters of Franceand Spain, nith ‘regard to prece: dence at toreign courts. ‘ 28. This contains a-promife to rati'y the treaty. Suchis, in [ubftance, the treaty in queftion. No feparate or fecret article- is added to it. The flipuls- tions of it cannot prejudice any other power. The objzét of the reciprocal gusranty is only thofe-domini- onz of- which the contraciing powers fhail be in pofiefli- on at the epoch of a general pesce. In fhore;. all the conditions and claufes of this treaty, in which England is neither nanied nor even defigned, have not e leaft canneltion wich the origin, the cbjed; or the events of the prefentwar. . 3 B QN ‘D O'N. «There cannotbe any Thing more melsncholy than to {ce, as we frequenty do, in cur News Papers, Ad- veriilements to requeft charitable Contributions; 1o fup port indigent Per{ons in' the Purfuit of Juftice. ‘In the better Times-of Rame, the noble Orators employed this Eloquence:in Favour of their Clients gratis. "By Degrees Prefents were introduced, yet then it was after the Caule was-determined : At length they were de- mandedibefore Hand, end fo they became Fees; and though Lawswere made to reftore the old, and to forbid thesnew Praflice ; yet it prevailed in the End, in Ipite of &ll.that could be'done to pre vent it, . With us the Law has-been always a Profeflion, andMen muft live by their Profe{fion 5 and yet the Poor hive certain- ly-a Right to Juftice. ; . Henry the Seventh, a very wife and prudent Prince, endcavoured to remedy this Evil by a Law, which ena- bled the/Indigent to faek Juftice without Expence, by- fuing in-Forma Pauperis. He did il more, he turned . : , thatwhen the Savoy into an Hofpital, for their Recepti - they happen to be both engiged 1n War againft thefange they é-m,e—:u: of the (?ount e Y il w%ch their gt. Wekminifter); will .enter for their Support. How this Poundat:on came to ry.to profecute their Suits he endowed that Holpi:al plentifully Dégay, is not my Bufinefs tgRhqulire... L0 .ol e Some Thing of the Kind fecms (o be fiill neceffary, The French fhall likewife be trested | their refpetive dominions in Europe, the fame pri- . have angre Power than hisg, who recommesds it ;and who secommends i; only from a Principle of publick < Maefiricht, Dec. 21. 'This Morning, about five min2 nutes paft two, the magszines of powder nesr the Bruf< fels Gate blew up with a moft terrible noife.... The guard of the magazine, confifting of eleven foldiers, were all killed. “The houfe of the Princels of Hefle Philipftal was. very much fhatiered, and her Highnels buried under the ruins. The houfe of Baron Salis, thas was neaier the magazine, was quitedeftroyed, and not one of the femily efcaped excepe the coschman. About 18 perfons perifhed by this difafter, which was occafi+ onéd by & Cannonier- plundering- the magszine in the night. [ ke absve Place is garrifoned by the Dutch.] Leghorn, Fan. 1. We hear from the State of the Garrifons, that Spanith Engineers and Commiflaries are arrived there tovifit the Fortrefles, and put them in s proper Pofture of detence; .. -, T it t, oy o Ol D O o ‘ Fan. 15. A private letter from. the Hague, Coiberg coft the Ruflians 12,000 men. &5 : . Some private letters from Paris fay. that the Spaniards declared war againft Great: Britain, the a4th ule, .On the 13th of January died the Wife of -the Rev. fi)'rs, thag . January rath; at Garraway’s - Coffee: Honfe, 100 Tors bt Logwood faldifrom. 23£.-to 23£« 15/. per Ton'x The.uiual price - was about.gf per,Ton. .+ John Dawfon, Bi{q; - who died laft Wiedne{day - at Vauxhall, wes taken fo fuddenly ill, that he hed but juft time ta scquaint s friend of his grest fecret how . to make plate glals. He died wosth 100,000 L. According to private letters from:Silefia; the Baron and prieft finding their confpiracy diicovered affembled their accomplices, . feized two Priflian Generals, and carried to the head quarters of Gen, Laudohn. . =, The Hudfon’s bay company it’s faid, have .this yesr imported three times the quantity of turs, that they ufed to do. ; o ; A vellel fram Louilbourg with 1900 -quintals of fifk’ is taken and carried.into Bourdeaux. . ; By'letters from Copftantinople we are informed that Muly Muftapha-Agay fiuft phyfician to the grand Seigr nor, viewing with conceinithe vaft haveck made inthat metropolis by the plsgue, had- colleted a quantiiy of landabie matter fiom fome peflilential etupticns ; and tried the cffets of inoculation on feveral perfons, of whom [ome were perfeétly recovered, and others ing feir way. Thismay juitly be look’d npon as the grea- telt and moit valuable difcovery of moderns ; a8 many thoufand lives will be thergby annuaily faved. .Fangary 23, It is faid her Majefty intends fhortly to go to Bath. . _The Departure of the Grand Expedition we are well affured ftands fixed for the very Beginning of mext Month,and the Reafon of fo diftant a Day is owing folely, to the Recal of General Conway, snd fome of our moft able Engineersfrom Germany, who are to go with the, Expedition ; but cannot well arrive before that Time..; "T'his great naval Armsment is fuppofed 1o be deflined agsinft Manilla, the chief of the Phillipine liland, in Afia, fubjett to the Spapiards....Sir Pierce Breit snd Captain Dennis were with Admiral Anfon in bisVoyage round the World: . .. The Cologiies which the Spaniarcs are now inPofle- fion of in the different Quarters of the World, sre, . In Africa ; the Towns pf Oran, Ceuts, and Mefal- quiver, on the Coalt of Barbary ; and theCanary lflends in the Atlantick Ocean. . In Afia ; the Iflands of St. Lazarus, thePhilipines,and Ladrones. - The greateft Part of South- America, viz. Perv, Para- guay, Tucummanis; with theLand of Mageliin andChiliv | . In North- America ; Mexico, New. Mexico, Cslifor- nin, Part of Florida, and the I{land of Cuba Part _of_.Hl- . fpaniola, Porto Rico, ' the Caribee I{lands, Trinidad, Margariths, Roco, Olchilla, Bil_!lll, and Lucsyon. Re———— [ et e 4 et v . e e e - o

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