'""W" —KB—ww)SHifna in-iw ■ ** 1 — ». AN EXTENSIVE ASSOR.TMI.NT OF Books and Stationary, Wholcfale and Retail, now opened and fo£ Sale by WILLIAM YOUNG. iookfrller, No. ?», Corner if Second and Chefnut-J} recti. AMONG which are FnouJh, Latiw, and Griik Classics and Dictionaries, Divinity, Law, His tory, r ravels, Votagxs, Miscellanies, and themoft efleemed Novels. WRITING AND PRINTING PAPERS, Prom the best manufacturers in Europe, and from his ma nnfa&orj on Brandywine, vit. Imperial,plain and wave fUtSmall folio post, plain Super-royal do. do. Ditto gilt Royrl do. do. BlofTom paper afTorted Medium do. do. Transparent folio pod Demy do. do. Superfine and common foolfc. Glaied and kot-preflisd folfoWlarbled papers. and 410 extra largr post coarse fafers. Thick poll in folio ditojdo. London brown, afibrted I Ditto in 4to. ditto do. Hattecs' paper Polio wove post, fined""* Stainer,' paper Quarto do. Common brown Ditto gilt do. Patent sheathing Common size folio post Bonnet boards Ditto quarto, plain Binders' Board*. Folio and quarto post, gilt, Alfa, a variety of other Stationary Articles, vix. Wedgwood and glass philosophical ink flands, well affort ted } pewter ink chests «f various fiats ; round pewcer ink 1 (lands ; paper, brass, and poltfhed leather ink stands for the pocket. Shining sand and find boxes, pounce and pounce boxes, ink and ink powder. Counting house and pocketpen knives of the best quality, ass ikin tablet and raemoraadum books. Red and colored wafeis, common file, office ditto. Quills. from half a dollar, to three dollars per hundred. Black lead pencils, mathematics! inftraments, &c. &e. All forts and flies 6f Blank Books, ready made or made to order. Bank checks, blank bills of CXEhange and notes'of hand, executed in copperplare, bi is of lading, manifcfU stamen's articles and journals, ic. icc. J""e 18 aaw3w GEORGE HUNTER, CHE MIST, No. 114 South Second Street, HAS for these two years past introduced a newfpceies of PERUVIAN BARK, called YELLOW BARK, which after repeated trials by the principal- Physicians of this city, is now preferred in all cases of importance that require it, to the best R«d and Pale Bark. It is a powerful Astringent Bitter, fits well on the flomach, is certain in itsiffecls, and requires only lialf the ufoal quantity for a dose. Many of the citizens of Philadelphia are now ac quainted with its virtues, the knowledge of which ought to be extended over the Union. He has a large fupplyof the Yellow Bark, and a general assortment of Drugs, Colours, Glass, Dye Stuffs, &c. LIKEWISE, Salt Jalaps and Camphor, By the Quantify. May 19. *iawjt " JOSEPH COOKE, GOLDSMITH Hf JEWELLER, » The corner of Market and Third-flreets, Philadelphia; MOST refpeAfully informs his friends and the public, that he has received, per the last arrivals, a com plete and general assortment of aim of; Every Article in his Line; Immediately from the manufactures of London, Bir mingham-, and Sheffield, all of wkicH are of the newest fafhion, and will be fold, wholesale and retail, or the»ow eft,terms, and the Nota6 of Mr. Robert Morris, and Mr. JohnNicholfon received in payment at their current value, N. B. The upper part of the House in which he noVir Jives to be let, furnilhed or unfurnifhed. law Twenty Dollars Reward. RAN away from the Subfcrtber, living near Harrifburgh, county of Dauphin, and Stateof Pennsylvania, onSun . ' U The Old Soldiers /~\Fthe Pennfylvan'a Jineof the army (both officers and \jf prir«iM)are informsd that there appears in the MaiTi fschufetts ?nd Connetlicut papeu a design to tak'e from them nearly all theirlandt over the Allegheny. Long publication! have appeared at Stockbridge and Hartford, fctting up the Conneflieut claim (though exiin<;ui!hed by the decision at Trenton) foas to take the following lands eiven by PtnnfuL vania to the army. DONATION LANDS. Difttift No. i, about i-4jclaimed as Connecticut's Do. No a. The whole claimed as ditto. Do. No. 3. The whole claimed as ditto. Do. No. 4. Thewhule claimed as ditto. Do. No 5. Tht whole claimed as ditto. Do. No. 6 The whole claimed as ditto. Do. so. 7. The w hole claimed as ditto. Do. No. 8. The whole claimed as ditto. Do. N>. g. The whole claimed as ditto. Do. Ni 10 The whole claimed as ditto. The Court of "ommiffioners was a renUt con/fituted atithe fjy —There wen among them two raf.trn members—They were all five unanitem. What (hould be thought of the Con ieQlcut claimants ly every friend to the pcace and the laws of this country. ? July 9, gt ~~ To r sal e . ArOUNT of BtEVIER, half worn ; about four hun dred weight. Enquire at the Office of. the Caz'ette of tfct United StatejjjNo. 119 Chcfniit-ftrcct. 5 ■■ " Philadelphia, - TUESDAY EVENING* JutT 5, 1796- (n5" The pi ice of this Gazette is eight dollart a year. Subscribers whose papers are sent per post are charjcd one dollar yearly in addition for enclo sing and diredting. Six months fubfeription to be I paid in advance. Advei tifements wiil be promptly aßd conspicu ously publilhed, at 50 Cents a square for the firft insertion, and 25 Cents for every continuation. On Sunday tad about 10 o'clock A. M. a man jumped off a schooner at Samuel Penrtife's wharf, Southivark, (whether with an intention of bathing or to end his life is uncertain.) He fink by several persons, none of whojn took any tlcps to;five him. His clothes were lefj at Phipps's tavern, Almond street wharf—he was! ftippofed to bea'tailor, having raeafures in one of hij pockets. Any person having a right to the clothes uny have them by applying to said PWpps. To do good, and to communicate forget net." We ate assured, and every benevolent mind mud exult at the recital of the fa£i, that the fubfeription c in New-York for the relief of our fuffering breth ren in Chnrlellon, very soon amounted to Thirty II Thousand Dollars; only a part of the molt wealthy of th» citizens had been applied to—the fubfeription was going on, and it was expc&ed to c double that sum before it was finifhed. What a f noble ! What a spirit of emulation mud 4 it excite in other cities ! This is the way to lighten the burthen of heavy misfortune, to raise the desponding heart, and once mote to "open the windows of hope to the mind, which the sweeping element had stripped of the produce of the indus try of years. There is a most glorious fpir.it of s philanthropy and benevolence which pervades this r continent —On ths- prcfeot occasion it will un -1 doubtedly manifeft itfelf with distinguished luflre. _ Every avenue thro' which this benevolence can be | cOndu&ed (hould be opened. Jtet us remember , that thelofsof the citizens of Charleston is at le-ft half a million sterlinc ; large contributions will be neceflary to realize to all the fufferers re -1 Ipeftively a small proportion of this sum. ; Every religious and corporate society will of course turn their earliest attention to the business, and the good work will be recommenced by the governors, magistrates and ministers of th?t gospel which direAs us " to weep with those that weep" •• to call our bread upon the waters, for after many days we shall find it."—The cup of misfortune goes rcund, and it is not in human wisdom always to put it by. ' t The twenty firft annivetfaiy of our Indeppnd . enceasa Nation was yesterday celebrated in this City. The Day was nlhered in with ringing of Bells, filing of Cannon, and other demonstrations . of joy. At twelve o'clock, the society of the Cin cinnati, the officers of the state government, and the militia, met in the state-house, and from thence proceeded to the house ofthe governor,to congrat ulate him upon the occalton. After which they partook of an elegant cold collation in the govern or's garden.—Public dinners were provided in dif ferent places in and near the city, where the citi zens and uniform corps nffembled, to felicitate each other on the return of that anniverfjjry which marked a new era in the Annals of Man. The birth day not only of the U. S. but of the Free dom of the Universe. Died, on Friday last at Germantown, Mr. Antho ny Armlrijler, Printer, formerly of this city, aged ■ 79 years. The Courtier Francais speaks of an atrocious maflacre, recently committed in the quarters cf St. Louis, du Botgneand Gros Morne. That almost all the Whites who dared to continue there had been aflafiinated, The authors are not mentioned. Mean jime it is pretended that this new crime is committed by those whom Lawaux has denounced as the enemies of France. The public voice point* out Piucbinat as th« an | thor. »V THS PRESIDENT t OF THE UNITE D-s T *-T ES. Wbereas, by the firft article of the terms and con. ditions declared by the President of the United States, on the seventeenth day of Giftober, 1791, for regulating the mateiials and manner of build ■ ings and improvements on the lot* in tt e c fly of j Wafliington, it is provided, « that the ooter and f party walls of all houses in the said city, (hall be ' ; built of brick orftone and by the 3d article of , the fame terms and coniitioßS, it is declared, «' that , the wall of no house (hail be higher than forty feet to the noof, in any part of the city, nor (hall any be lower thatnhirtj five feet, on any of the avjnues." And whereas the above recited articles have been , found, by experience, te impede the settlement in „ the city of mechanics and other., whofiYtreum n nances do not admit of creftiog. bouses of the » lcription authorised by the said regulations. It is t therefore declared, operation of the said - -TOa d .' h J'j and the Hereby suspended, until the f„ft Mon day of December, in the year one tWfand eight hundred, and that all the houses which (hall be e recled in the said tity, prior to the said fad M on . day of December, one thousand eight hundred, conformable in otherrefpefts, to the toreiaid, (hall be considered as lawfully eredted. Given under my hand this twenty fifth Hay of June, in the year one thousand seven hundred and ninety lix. r GEO. WASHINGTON. ; Walhington, Commissioners' Office, 28th fuue [ v. v J 9 THOMAS MUNROE, Ck. From a late London Peter. ■ nl 7 ct f W r ] "\ 3 Boa,d of : ? xV S 'f C j C " for ~U" f e four da y s . fining at ' r ,hc liotfe Guaroe, 111 confgltati4n for the |>urp D fc - ,\A * 0 f adopting an entire new form of dxefs aed accou trement* for the Cavalry. The Swords are to be lengthened, and the V-ar biiies (horteucd. a The W aidcoats are to reach a good way a own t the thighs. i- The Boots are to be made so ftroiig between the e calf and the thigh, as to resist the droke of a iabre. Helmets indead of bats, in a new form, are fug i- geded : they ar« to clasp at the chiu, like the old 1 fadiioned fi'pnting-caps. An alteration likewise is to take place 15 tha lad dies, and indeed in almost of the accou n treroents and dress. — r Many people are misled by the pompous found of the French Republic having iflued forty thjufuni y million: of livres, in a%oats. Theminifterif l writ, s 'i and laid it on the bed, and taking tier hat and cloak, locked her street-door, and left her key at a ( neighbor's for her lmlhand when he (hould return from his labor : die then proceeded to walk eight ornuie miles to a -qiagiftratc, and, requesting ad . m :7 on to hlm > to 'd Km the whole story, concluding with an earned desire immediately to be executed. She was tried this morning, and many drong in. fiances of fan. t y for some year, pad tppeiW the Jury feund her—M/ Guilty. / BATH. Yefteiday at the New-Rvoms, after several con ted, between Mr. Chabas a„A Mi. Galindo, in 1 . K 3 Vanet >■°fn«nauvr« ; the 'to M S ad r emo ' dIC D ' E ° n ,bod - opposition ,to Mop.. Maifon, the, mod powerfM aitapornft of f Mow St. George, where tl,ufe two marten of the t jf defence adomfhed a numerous let of fpe&a ---| tor, with their fc.«nce and acuity. The female ■ Chevalier, in the 69th year of her age, ii not leco*- ered of the (train m her wnft . but Mr. Delaunay, the young Lngliih profeffor, fenced along time with Mons. Maifon, and acquitted himfelf f 0 admirably the general .pplaufe of » brilliant audi The quantity as ,ice disposed of by the Agent to the provision committee at the Town-UU every Tuesday and Friday, at 3d. a pound, has Wreaf , rapid.y from s oolbs. to 3 ooolbs, each day, ! - THE MJRQpIS TOWNSHEND'S BIRTH - afltrrobled at Ha,r^ S) in G^of-dr^D^ r t'7 that 1 rendered that country when Lord Lieutenant Thjf was the twenty-eighth return of a J Jh J been thus g»,cfully celebrated, but never X • S el;;; P y rctt: umber and of ; Th .^RPOOL, eft 'f w 7 °« the public to le!lrn th; urther ■ effects of thofc viftones, i, naturally grfat ; the general opinipn iecms to be, thn the/will force i- either vlie einp«ior or :lv« or both, to :m immediate peace. It is i.«.t f<> . tilt nuirber of men that they have killed, and taker as the fmpreffioo it will make on a difaffe&ed cou. 1 n try. The Piedmoßtcfe peasantry are to a man rr e for revolt, and all Ittbordination js likely to be de e flroyed by a blow so terrible—The fir ft (Feeling of the king of Sardinia, therefore, w iH i, e to . himfclf by and it will not be iucunlift d ent with the hereditary politics of Tin in to Jiifc to a proposition of an alliance with the French - far the reduflion of Aotlrian Lombardy. At - least, it is likely for the emperor to dread such ;i cotnpaft, and after fitch a footing gained by the x French, we fufpeft it will be a race of conning, f who stall be the firfl to make their peace with :t,iu ij conquering enemy Lor Jan Evening Chronicle. i 111 confluence of the reiterated of 1 government, the senate of Venice has at lad ordered Louis XVIII instantly to quit Yirona,as well as the whole territory of Venice. The fate of tliTs unfortunate prince is truly dif trefling. At fird obliged to quit tha court of Itfs father-in-law, the king of Sardinia, he is now &!fo expelled from his retreat. The cabinet of Vienna has prohibited him in the mod positive terms, to enterthe Audrian territory, and has also threaten ed to difhand the army of the Prince ®f Cottar, diould he attempt to ds so. Thus banished fain his own dominions, driven out of those wluV long to the princes of his family, and prev from seeking flutter in the proviheefi of the v princcs of Italy, by the fear of exposing tl . t.. I the resentment of the French Republic, whe »: \\. lowed to a(k, what then is now the objef f war ?it cannot be the restoration of royalty, as . unhappy French king finds no asylum from he governments on the continent. The French fay he mud now look to F. ugh no, and get a palacejind an[ ertjbjifhment at liv- ;~r John Birfl, tome FreiidS papers add, that it repaying the compliment, as France gave an as)) to the exiled Stuarts and the Royalists wf\p Sol! Ed his eril fortunes. The quartern loaf was at iod. April 30 [Further London accounts to.moi-rnu._j WORCESTER, (Mafc.) June 29 ANECDOTE. A young gentleman, the outside of who • hea _ was, by far the bed part of it, defiied a y< ootfla dy where he boarded to dress his hair Sh com plied, «nd after spending, as Ihe thought fu?\; nt time upen it, deiired to know wliether it . d him—He went to the glass, and observed i it needed aliltle alteration—die immediately m -tl c proposed amendment, and then_\»ifhed to I it would do any better. He replied that it aid, but that still there was one lock which was lit quite afcit should be. She with much good nature arranged the offending lock in itsptoper -pv '• Very well," exclaimed he, looking in the with much fatisfaflioirat his own appearancc, " it does verjr well now." This head," h.., put ting histiand upon it, « this head I won'.'! not give for any lady in North America." '• - L you had been at the Siege of *Samaria," ft " you would have stood a chance (o have gott pieces of silver for it." *2. Kinrs iv 25. And there • and behold they besieged it, until an ajft head was fold for four score pieces of silver, NEW-YOR'It, July 2. "Frojn the Dominica Chronicle of June 2, received yefteiday. V* e to what we dated in ouj lad, relative to at Trinidad ; rhat by a gentleman at rived we are afltired that »o mifebief of consequence had happened previous to his departure the 20th tilt, exccjst what bow and then proceeded from nightly rencountres of the OitMi of'bur ships of tsar on the daiion, and the crews two republican privateers, who had taketl fjtelter in the town, after the dedrtnJUon of their vef ftis by our brave and vigilant cvuifers : further that / such prudent steps had been taken by governor , Chac.on, and so great moderation adopted on the part of the English coiiiniander, capt. Vauglian, as not to leave a doubt of t{je colony's being redored to its wonetd date of tranquillity. It is alio to he observed that the embarkation of the Emigrated French Royalids is imputable rather to a premedi ated intention, of embracing the fird favorable oc canon, and which then offered of participating of the glory of the present campaign, than to an ap prehension of any iofidious enemy at Trinidad. We have delayed this Gazette, in the expecta tion of official information from St. Lucie, to this island, but hoac having as yet been forwarded, we ourselves of the intelligence obligingly'eom municated to us by a mod refpe&able friend, just arrived from the head quarters. . surrender of that island teok place at the time, we have already dated, but the garrison ob tained terms, permitting them to marcli out with \ '3*l °f war, and lay down their arms on the Glacis. in number, upwards of 2opo men of ■» e crptieni, of which, there were near 400 w ties ; these are all embarked on board of prison* 'P» in Uie Calcnnge, and are to remain uniila con voy iaiis, which is fixed for the !d of August next. the surrender, and probably whild W H.fl. ? pl,ulaticn were nr gociating, about \ SSer" Z * fr " m ,he htC garrison, being fervit r ' J n '®' an, * orc °l'red people formerly in our he l ° f the Prench reached plenTvof a' B ®° u^r '®re quarter, and having a trouble before "f" ma^fiive fotne woorh°b 400 nen ' a ""° escaped into the W beer7 Cn t ' ,a ' fh " and "«« ! thefc e' ,-ho at Ce , rUrro " nded the G f rm 3 n Y,gh- U r l, B of u5' n,O I V' k ft Same ' Th famefstt, ii: reft caanot elude the