India Gazette (Newspaper) - May 24, 1790, London, Middlesex TRADE OF Queen of the better to has juit a dated the 27th of May that all merchandize coming from the Malabar and remaining years upon p ly on exportation by any power that which are fent to Brazil in private be exempt from duties on and coming from Goa and which pay the ordinary to have ten per drawback oil their being V the daughter of the has Mr. an Irith only They through on their way to Scot * young Lady found fome difficulty to get the lover having been waiting in a from ten o'clock to three in the Such a prize could not be a matter of trifling as the though of a had no fortune of ' his Old Mr. Hornby as the young took French leave of he Aall do the fame by It to be hoped the parties will be One of the ladies who was coming home in the lives with one of Caffre to whom has borne children The Dutch at the ordered & body of four hundred men to the reitue of the remaining but as the Caffre territories are hundred miles little hopes are entertained of His Serene the Duke of is making great alterations in his houfe in one in which is a great novelty in this that of communicating with of the principal that the company in rooms can pafs to their carriages without going through any The of Orleans is of the re for fine liberality of and affection Mr. Bowes has detainers him for thirty The report of his being liberated from the King's Bench from a man of the fame name his The of the Ruffian having been from the Seven Towers in July is de of foundation j although his enlarge -ment much to have been the of the A young gentleman of fome rank was lately flopped in his carriage in on an intimation being given by one of the that it was the de in male He was taken to the hotel de where he was and 0% a view of his he was fuffered to has a ridicule on his and he now by no other appellation la A new theatre is of the winter in under the management of Captain the author of excellent dramatic Church Preferments in Laft June the Rev. Mr. only fon to the of and in his was ordained a Deacon on - A on On the Saturday he was of St. Patrick's a of 400I. a On the Monday in was in the St. worth 670I, a his favour by Dr. the A poor fellow in fome time was taken up for Healing a boiled leg of and was caught eating it. When he was put to Lord of what he The a continued his how came you to the the fame fays the eat my way to it. An accident happened lately near which their provincial paper in the following morning a farmer near this place got up out of his and going through the accidentally fell down bead upon the faff by which his neck was and he before he It is lot of whether real or to be attended by A little while fince it was the fate of Richard the to be by a young man well known for his attachment to the at a country On Lord Stanley's entrance in the Fourth the Tyrant How Lord what's the The given it a a nan at the door fays you owe him a and who he won't go away till he gets Fr or it the London Evening 24. It is to fee the enlightened of the age producing mildly this what hardly be effected among our neighbours by a general The proprietors or Highland in are giving up the of their tenants of their We may judge of the nature as they are not properly than emphatically called in by that this of feudal is among the very of that have been by the National of proprietors of Highland who the begin to find the voluntary of tenants highly conducive to their The now at liberty to work for are improving their land very Mr. Campbell of who has entirely in the of has thereby the rent of that together with the wealth of it's A morning Paper an naval officer is now in and will be brought to His offence is for ferving the of Ruffia without leave from the The above gentleman had the command of a Ruffian with of intended to capture the when they failed out of our being given to the a man of war was ordered the Ruffian privateer was and all the found on board were brought on Jan. 1790. The of which lately threatened fo much danger to the tranquillity of that part of according to laft are now happily indeed the taking by the National by the of their feem to be peace every and in will be attended with which are to be expected from the united efforts of fo many wife and labouring for the good of the Count has ill repaid the and of his Sardinian who him every the on the behaved with the he not only was not punctual in his attendance at but when behaved with a kind of indifference that marked an ungrateful and uncultivated He is entirely gone from At Turin the Count was in the royal the Genealogy of the Dukes of and the beautiful of the but he no approbation of In the grand metropolitan he faw nothing to In the library there was nothing worth his And in the when he was to look at fome elegant he turned on his faying Je pas le and walked off. M. Necker loft a friend in M. Le This gentleman had fled from France to the of M. near he had every comfort of an but leading him to the city he was on his ' From Vienna weare allured that the important at the mouth of the has fallen into of the - the Grand alarmed at rapid of the Imperial and particularly of the even the winter could not fent to Prince to to about a That the Baron de Ton formerly Internuncio from his Imperial at has been in all hafte to in to aft with Prince Potemkin relating to the and to fign the Preliminaries on behalf of the as foon as they have been agreed It is this tendency to a that made Baron de Herbert return from Coblentz to of with his Count de to negotiate an accommodation with the This Nobleman at the breaking out of the the Emperor's at in which it is faid he is going to be fent back to that to negotiate The Patriotic Committee at Ghent is all recruits are fent for and all civil and military are by At the new Patriotic confine to their and leave to the care of the tranquillity of the None but lodgers are permitted to remain in the after nine o'clock at As the of the corporations was one of the grievances they are now every where to their immunities and M ny not will be by this and A forgery has been detected in Paris National Guard on the 8th the houfe of M. in the Rue da there found one D' a gentleman in and pretending to live on his own The thing the guards was a of of a recent date from which country he to be in In a of drawers were found about twenty containing different bills and with the in ready to be forged there was a good that as a Over the boxes were bottles with a label on each of bearing the of ingredients the name of the or of the a large with the proper the different kinds of ink were fo prepared as to imitate the firm of An engraver was the who detected M. de he was to have him with a plate for taking off the d' About the fame time M. de an who did not live far like wife and orders were immediately fent to one concerned about two years ago in the affair of- Tourton j at the latter's houfe waj a piece well-contrived for its property and it is a curious with a a velvet and a board of very on which all the letters in made of The board was in the form of a of one and fitted trial was and the letters perfectly with the note A prodigious number of found in the apartments of the three and the flock fell very much by the on the next On the 16th and were publicly examined before of Marin having In The boxes found in their contained and for engraving the words Their trial is to come on and they are to be allowed Another capital forgery has been The two have been taken up for forging the notes of the loan of 1787. Upon being they made a full of the FALSE D ICE. A late detection of dice being a common topic of it is a matter of fome wonder that a true of the and the mode in which the deception is not On enquiry they were found to be as On one Two - Two On the other Two Two ' Two With dice it is to what at hazard is ailed Crabs that is j or ace and the latter the cafter always called for his and he could neither throw or let his chance be what it was Aire to and and who were in the of lalways took the The method made ufe of with dice we are happy in having it in our power to make as it may prevent the young and unwary from being taken in The dice being concealed in the left the cafter takes the with the fair dice in in his right hand and in the aft of making fair dice in his and unperceived the box empty to his into which he lets fall which he immediately begins to calls his main and throws away and having won his he repeats it as often as he judges he then catches the in the the empty box into which he lets fall the fair and then throws till he throws the fame by which artifice the cafter DUEL OF THE PRINCE DE The of the Prince de Conde's meeting an officer of his in the we are happy to have in our power to relate in fince it that when a Prince of the Blood is in of honour in France is not fuch a as. in The Prince in a violent the officer a the other with his be did not quit then fenfe of He every and on all public was before his The other took the apprehending he to He accordingly what were his and what his He had to claim a reparation of bis I will give it faid the follow The and the touched the point that of. his and dropped his My faid have to fight it is am Wow you gave me no longer rankles in my heart is fully was immediately received again into the under of the met with a very rapid It is to under fuch in a common the death of one of the parties muft inevitably r * ' GENERAL Copy of a Letter from GENERAL PAOLI to his friend COUNT on the late of in in to the Ifland of originally in Dec. 8th, 1789* My Dear It is now at and I have as yet received no letters from I by means of the Gazettes fent me by M * * * that in of a decree of the National has become a province of - our can no longer be fet up to auction I By a latter decree of the fame our fellow are permitted honorably to return to their native I that this met with a warm from that party which I is attached to the and who in particular made the efforts to exclude me from the general If you have an I that you would return thanks in to generous while debating on the of our of. our caufe with zeal and The mention the Comte de Mirabeau and M. as the among them a I flatter that our nation will by a it's gratitude to and it's attachment to the free the and will alfo declare of the of the National As to regards - you in with our give the that neither npr any whom I am able to take any in to this great ' From that moment when my native has recovered it's all my and if my here gives any I retire to corner of the and bury in eternal I ought to renounce idea of my as I perceive that would only fion and pretext to the to interpret my words and actions to the of our My gratitude for the favourable reception I have experienced in this be I never will aft again ft but I on the other give my to any enterprise by any other which might trouble the peace and the freedom of my - v Whatever may be the hand that gives liberty to my I it with all the of zeal and have had but too much of wars and it now appears that rivers of blood will by peace we have nothing more to all and be that my do ample to your I dear &c &c s War Duhlin Letters Patent have been under the great feal of this and appointing the Right Honourable Lieutenant General William er in Chief of his forces in this and the Commander in Chief of his faid forces for the time together with the Right Honourable James William Adjutant General of this kingdom the Honourable George Frederick and the Henry to be and * 1 of all his barracks in this