-- » £2 ' -k -« J* „ * f A *". . - * '" *k ". ' ' ' " , ■'" 1 « * > * * ' EVENING A D VERT I S E R. [No. ti6 of Vol. V.] Monday, April 28, 1794. [Whole No. 512.] The following Certifi es of the funded tW F ' Cent Slock t»ber laft,while at anchor in the road of tha< Itl&ndy forcibly entered and carried of by JOHN DUNHAM, JOHN MURRAY, r. roan by t e name of DODGE, and one other name unknown.— This yeflei was fold |oM. A. Mar;in, by ty'i.liam M'Neill, who came to B"na Vista in her, from Madeira.— She was built in the County of Matthews, state of Virginia, and was registered at New- York, the 16ft* April, 1793—'Her name wj p in'ed.on her Item—Her dimenfians as sot - Inxr-.: feet 6 inches keel, 16 fe-1 6 inch be ,m, hold 6 feet 2 inches, lier burthen 54 tors. At the time of their enteiing the vessel, there was a black man on board by the name of B.>lthazer,wh'om t*hey carried off John Dunham was mate of the vetfe] undei" Capt. MfN-iw, prior to the sale of her, a'ncj the oflier persons were mariners. Dunham is a married man, and has a family at Nan tucker. 'The of the vessel confided of the sol lowing article.^.—2 cases containing 74 pieces ; caf? Wi ne-Glalfes ; 1 bale containing p pieces 3*oadch)th; j do. 9 d». 79 pieces Cotton, (need.e worked)-—33 <10. do inferior, 2 of Sal 1; fae had feveii small arms and some pifVf>ls. If any person can give any information of this ve'TeljOr any part of the property,To that it Can be recovered, or t he offenders brought 04 jyOice, they are requested to inform Messrs. Anthony and Son, Philadelphia ; Mjr r ay and MuiMFORD, New-York ; Clark and Nightingale, Providence; or Head and Amort, Bolton. March 17. dtw. ESSENCE For the Tooth-Ache, Prepared and fold ly Dr. Lee, Golden- Square, London. THE pub'ic is offered one of the mofl efficacious and fafe medicines that ever ap pealed, for that most excruciating pain, the Tooth-Ache—the numerous itiftui;c«s of its happy effe&s, in relieving the affli&ed, have now brought it i®to u liverfal estimation ; it not only relieves the tooth-ache, but is of the vitmoft service in curing the SCURVY in the Gums, in preventi ig the disagreeable fmel] that is produced from unsound teeth, & wili occasion a Jweet breath ; it I kewife prevent: the teeth from decaying, and will be found a general preserver of the Tbctk and Gum-, Sold in Philadelphia only at PeynteWs Stationary Store, No. 2i, Second ftrtet. Apnl 24. tutli&s 3W .*' • * For Amsterdam, T_. The new fact-failing, copper bottomed SHIP iH ADRIAN A, mm—SZ. K. Fitzpatrick, Matter. BUILT of live oak and cedar and was in tended for a Liverpool Trader, wiH fall with all convenient speed. For freight or passage, having excellent accommodations, apply on board at Walnut street wharf, or to THOS. & JOHN ZETLAND- N. B. will bk. A lift of the Interments in the Buria! ground? in the city of Philadelphia, Northen: Liberties, and D.ftrift of Souihwark, with a meteorological account of the weather. A Turn nn y of donations in cash andprov i (ions, received from sundry persons and pla ces, f(jr the us of the poor and affltfted. April 2. d£w Just Imported, In the Ship Apollo, Capt. Fitzpatrick, from Amsterdam, and now landing on Walnut-ftieet wharf, viz. GIN in pipes, Afeth, J''i >794. The Contributors are desired f 1 attend the Election, to be held at ih Hospital on the stu day of .the s'h Month xt,at 3 o'clock in the afternoon ;to choose •> velve Managsrs and a Triasvrer, for the enfumg year: ' By order of a board of Managers. Samuel Coates, clerk. CONGRESS. House of Reprefentatroes. Thursday, April 24. In committee of the whole house on the bill to suspend the importation of certain goods, wares, and merchandize; after some difcufiion, Mr. Parker the Chairman repotted, that the committee had, had the billundercjnfideration, andmadeanam nd mcnt thereto, which was twice read, and agreed to by the house. The biil was then further amended, and on the queltion, that thefaid bill, togU i- ' er with the amendments, be engioffed and read a third tim«. It was resolved in the affirmative— Yeas j7 —Nays 34. Those who voted in tht affirmative, are Meflrs. Armilrong, Bailey, Baldwin, Beatty, Blount, Cadwalader, Carnes, Chr'ftie, Claiborne, Clark, Coles, Dear born, Dent, Findley, Giles, Gillefpie, Cil man, Gregg, Griffin, Grove, Hancock, Harrilon, Hartley, Heath, Hunter, Ir vine, Locke, Lyman, Macon, Madison, M' Dowell, Mebane, Montgomery, Moore, P. Muhlenberg, Murray, Neville, New. Nicholas, O r,Page,Parker, Pickens, Pres ton, Ruthertord, Scott, Sherburne, Smi lie, Israel Smith, Samuel Smith, Sprigg, TreadweU, Venable, Walker, Williams, Winn, and Wutfton. Those who voted in the negative, ate, Messrs- Ames, Shearjafhub Bourne, Ben jamin Bourne, Cobb, Coffin, Coit, Dex ter, Forrell, Foster, Gilbert, Gle. n, Gor don, Hcifter, Hillhoufe, Hjndman, Kit tera, Latimer, Learned, Lte, M ilbone, Sedgwick, J. Smith, W. Smith, Swift, Talbot, Thatcher, Tracy, Trumbull, Van Alien, P. Wadfworth, J. Wadfworth, Ward, Watts, aud Wingate. [BY REQUEST.] From the General Advertiser. Mr. Bache, I take the liberty of requesting you to publish the following reply to a cruel and calumniating charge against me, which appeared in Mr. Oswalds paper of the 23d instant, and which may be equally appli cable to the authors of twoljmilar pieces, whjch have been published in your gazette. I will not descend to answer in detail, the illiberal infinuatipns contained in them, not doubting tljat the extract given, will fully refute the felfe and ungenerous charge. J. A. Mr. Oswald, The unfounded and illiberal attack made upon me in your paper of the 23d instant by an anonymous corrtfpondent, who signs himfelf "one of the laity," obliges me from a regard to truth, as .well as from a sincere desire to preserve the character of an inoffenfive citizen, to con tradict his assertions with refpeft to my sermon preached on Easter day. This I ■cannot more effectually do, than by trans cribing that part of it which he alludes to, and which he call "an unprovoked attack upon a great and magnanimous people, not warrantable on the score of policy,or even of common civility." I afTure you upon my honor, that the f illowing extract contains the -whole of ti)e only pait of the sermon, which it can poflibly be supposed the layman refers to, and is verbatim as I delivered it from the pulpit. The occasion naturally led me to insist upon the great chriitian doctrines of the reftirreCtion and a future itate of existence, which having endeavored to e lucidate, 1 enforced with this recommen dation : " Let then the expectation of this eter nal life, excite our daily preparations for it. Let the employments of our future jlate be the principal iubjeCt of our con templation in the prefentr; and whether prosperity or Sdverfity be our lot in life, let us run with patience the race -which it set before us ; locking unto Jesus, the au thor and finijher of our faith who hath de livered us from the dread of annihilation, and given us the assurance of an everlast ing existence. " Let us put on the whole armour of God, and resolutely (land as christian sol diers, in the breach which the insolence of Deism, and the iniVious delusions of a falfe philosophy, have lately made in the walls of the sanCtuary ; let usv'g Inntly guardja gainft the introduction of that {hocking tenet, which is jiow, alas ! the fafliionable though fatal doCtrine in a nation, who once gloried in the name of christians, scut who having extinguished the light of the blefied gospel, in mercy given to "conduCt them to ever lasting bliss, now grope in the dark, and madly conceive that the ac tions of the present life, shall at its dose, be forgotten in an everl i.Hng fle-p. "To be no more—fad cure! For who would lpfe This intellectual Being, Those thoughtß which wander thro' eter nity, To pe ifh rather, swallowed up and loft In the wide womb of uncreated night, Devoid of sense and motion ?— Milton's P. L. B- 2. L. 146. Dreadful delusion 1 which that we may a void, let us eagerly avail ourselves of all those means of grace, which the benevo lence of Providence hath granted us, to Hrengthen and confirm our faith, and thereby to conduit us into the kingdom of Heaven." How far the charge against me is founded on the above extraCt, I leave the candid to deteimine. " This son of the cassock, fays the au thor, told us, that the French had re nounced their allegiance to the Supreme Ruler of the Universe—that Satan had , ercCted his standard in that country —and that the whole nation I>s4 Cnlifted under tiis banner."