WANTED,
... WANTED, A French Governess ; Lady who can teach the anguage grammatically, and speak it fluently. Alarisian would pieftrrcd, also Protestant. Apply to No. 18, Mary-street. Hours of application from 12 till three. ...
... WANTED, A French Governess ; Lady who can teach the anguage grammatically, and speak it fluently. Alarisian would pieftrrcd, also Protestant. Apply to No. 18, Mary-street. Hours of application from 12 till three. ...
... of Spain is at present in any immediate danger, yet all the letteis from different quarters of the Peninsula continue to speak of things as in a most disorganiEed state. Accounts from Catalonia and Valencia mention that the mountains were filled with ...
... Perhaps it is wise at this particular juncture not-to agitate the measure contemplation, but to let the people, generally speaking, have a little repose from any regulations that affect an important article of subsistence, after the suffering they have ...
... did she use to acquire every grace*Twas good humour alone that enlivened her face; Pure Nature had leave in her actions to speak ; The spirit of youth gave the blush to her cheek ; And her looks, uninstructed, her thoughts would impart—- Tor her eyes only ...
... directed to M. It, 9, Uume-sueet, shall be respectfully attended te. Young Man, aged 23, a native Lausanne, in Switzerland, who speaks Krensh and English, wishes tor a situation as Valet to a single Gentleman; he is accustomed to travel, and has good characters ...
... resisted, and have agreed to pay 7.10,000 dollars quarterly ; this they cannot comply with. There are letters from Lima, which speak strong terms of the tottering power of the Spaniards. The negroes say their friend San Martin will soon be with them ; many ...
... Saunders’s News-Letter, will be respectfully attended to. 27 A Man, aged .'3, a native of Lausanne,in v#iv LX zerland, who speaks Frencii and English, wishes for situation as Valet to a tingle Gentleman; k acctm toined to travel, and has good characters ...
... that the wi- dow Bancal, being condemned to death, was not an ordiriary witness. Bancal was not permitted to be sworn to speak the truth ; she did not raise that hand which seemed still to be stained with the blood of the unfortunate Fualdes. The President—“ ...
... your children, we should not have been in this difficulty. Two or three days after being condemned, 1 entreated Bastide to speak to Jausion of M. son. was so alarmed at this conversation, that I thought some misfortune would happen to him. Having learned ...
... tinia. I place great dependence on the produce of literary labours great and general and it that about more particularly to speak, and to make you. Sir, a distinct proposition. . First, I must beg you to read in Register, which I now send home, a letter ...
... whom his Lordship intends educating and bringing with the same care and affection as if they wert his own. The Dutch papers speak of a very dense fog that enveloped many parts of the Low Countries the 22d. It is lemarkable that it comroenfced about the ...
... sphere of my proper functions. Of the manner in which the duties attached t* office will be fulfilled, it becomes not me t» speak in the language profession. But I may be allowed to observe, that in the successful discharge of them are involved, considerations ...