Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, August 12, 1796, Image 2

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    jg v Foreign intelligence.
By the Jostrn, cast. Stone.
LIVERPOOL, May 30.
A GRATEFUL SEAMAN.
The following anecdote is told of the late Eail
of Sandwich, and {sir Edward Hughes.
Sit Edward, it is known, before his appointment
as Commander in Chief upon the India Ration,
had little -money and many debts. He obtained
that appointment by the friendship of the Earl of,
Sandwich. *
Upon his return, afwr many suitable teflimonies
of refpeft, he seized one moment of cordiality to
extort from the Ea:l a promise, that, whatever lie 1
might next afl<fhou!d not be refufed, if it could be i
granted. He a (Iced accordingly a lift of .his Lord
<hip J s debts. They amounted to one hundred thou- 1
sand pounds, which the grateful seamen paid, be
lieving that he had thus made a new man of his
patron.
But it was not so. The Earl did not {hew all t
his debts ; and what he kept back was enough to i
begin a new lift ; the inconveniences of which bar- i
raffed the latter years of a life, upon the whole, <
more to be pitied, than condemned. 1
A few days ago, the Janus, of Sunderland, fail '
ed from that port on a voyage to the Baltic, but t
kad not been above three hotlVg at sea, before the t
master and crew, to their great furprile, discovered t
that (he took in a large'quantity of water, which t
increased upon .them, notwithllanding the pumps t
1 were kept open ; not being able to find out the j
cause, they returned into harbour, whin, on search- c
ing the vessel, a hole, bored through her bottom f
with an auger, was discovered. On a drift fcruti- r
ny, a boy na Tied Wake, belonging to the (hip, at f
length confeffed that he committed this diabolical ti
deed through an aversion to the voyage, and a de- p
site to go on board another of the owner's vessels v
tiling coast wife. 1 „
SoutVTof wncrc" by agreement,' a number "v
to begin a riotous attack, truf- a
ting for fafetyto the privileges of theit sex. The
magiHraies apprised of the business, oidered out
the fire engines, which smartly among the 0
ladies, with a copious ftreatn of foot and water. 1
They were soon so whimsically bedaubed, and ren- fe
dered so completely ridiculous, that they made a
hasty retreat amidst the (houts, hoots,'and peals of
laughter of those very persons who had assembled
to second their attack, and avail themselves of the b<
magifttates supposed dilemma and cosfufion. This n(
new method of clear Itarching, might poflibly, on
certain occasions, be adopted in with ex- th
Ceediog good effect. *
_ The clothiers of Yorkshire are in the mod flou- v. ;
rifliing state of business ; all the competition in the th
foreign maikets being entirely put an end to, and a ah
species of monopoly gained to our manufadturers. co
MENTZ, May 15. cl,
is molt esichantingly situated on the
Rhine, where it receives the Mein ; its site is truly fa<
grand ; and the city, forming a complete amphi- cit
theatre, commands a most luxuriant profpeft. sol
Mentz being 4 Roman ecclefiatlical state, is, of oft
cburfe, not very populous. The nobility have all ab.
fled; and were it not for the number of military coi
in garrison, the place would be a defari. The En
Archduke leaves this town 'very abundantly fur
nilT.ed with ail means of defence. The fortifica* red
tions which eoft the Fiench so much money and rec
labour, were never in so refpeftable a state as at wit
the present moment; and they may, with truth,
be said to bid defiance to-the most extraordinary
efforts of the eliemy, The French are, as they pla
should be, very sincerely detested by all the inha it p
bitantsof \his fortrefs : to receive a visit from that to <
barbarous banditti, and to abhor them, is the ef- tha
fedl of the fame moment. con
Field Maifhal Von Neu is the governor of Metttz.' thei
It is extremely difficult to obtain permission to flop Icac
in the town, even people having refpeftable pasT- the
ports are not allowed to be about head quarters j by I
every mark of attention, however, is paid to the whi
beaters of a passport issued by the British govern ftar<
tnent. Last THefday, a person of a very military of I
appearance was taken up here, on fnfpicion of be- com
ing a spy. The town major recogmzed him to have
been a priva e soldier in his own company ;he pas 1
fed himfelt off for a superior officer in Priefs' rejji- vre I
ment. As it is cleaily proved that he is one of the
Jourdan's emissaries, it is well known what fate a- T
waits him. 1
Colonel Crauford is expe&ed here every day ; 011 tl
he has been to pay his devours to Louis XVIII. failei
who is now witbahe Prince of Conde's army, Co- and ;
lonel Crawford, fleam, is as great a favorite with expe
the Imperial army, as he wag among the native L
troops in Flanders. On Friday a British courier in tl
passed through this place, having government dif- the ]
patches for that brave and refpeiflable officer; be glifh
, was advised at head quarters to take the route to
the Prince of Conde's army, which he did without
losing a moment. /
Serious are the rumours in circulation here.
Some people will have it, that the Pruflian, Han- Tl
overian and Brunfwick troops, are destined against ing n
Holland, in favor of the Stadtholder, and by no of a n
means, to form the cordon of neutrality; while o. Portt
theri pretend that his punic majesty proposes gene Mi
roufly to give away Brabant and Flanders to the cover
ioufe of Orange, and leave Holland to be a de- plaint
graded province of France: I'^
The Emperor, it is confidently said, will come Th
to the army in the coutfe of the next month. r fh
The park of artillery before the archduke's quar. was a
ters is beyond description graHd ; it chiefly conSfls must I
of the guns taken from tlie French, when they some <
were fhamefully driven from their lines,.in the en- fcraoe
vironsof this city. chsfec
Citloael Williams, who, with his floating bat- some
tery, so effectually annoyed the enemy on the a- gold n
bove memorable oecafior,, is considered here with Mr,
the hi" belt cliftindion. When the glorious affair cles, x
of last October is mer.tioi.ed, his name is altvays not pe
coupled v.ith that of the iliuftrious Clerfayte, the cafe w
Giviour cf his Empire. Colonel Williams has two ant vva
hundred Italian sailors undu his ccmraandj they j with I
call hiafi their father, anil would all willingly die
in Ins defence.
LONDON, May 27.
The alarm on the fubje<st of bad news from In
dia has subsided ; the fall in the price of the com
pany'* stock is ascribed to the fuppofin'on, that the
fleet which failed in February from the Texel, will
effe"£L its passage so India-—This (lock has bow-
Eat 1 ever again risen.
tment DUBLIN, May 25. ;
ation, Letters from New-York, of a recent date, :dvife,
ained that it was generally apprehended there, thzt the I
arl of, eonduft of the commanders of the British (hips :
of war in impVeffing seamen out, of American vef- 1
ionics fels, and seizing of American ships laden witl pro- t
ty to vifiotis, were the Itrong grounds on which the rloufe
ferlie of Representatives in Congress refufed tp give eft
ild be fedt to the treaty between Great-Britain a*d the c
Lord- United States of America, and that au open t'up- f
thou- turc would take place between the two couurries. I
, be- - * c
if his BELFAST, May 27. 5
The general el«dtion in England, isat present r
w all the older of the day, and surely a wondirful farce c
{h to it is. The different addresses of the candidates f
bar- which crowd the columns of the Londin papers, »
hole, are fubjefts of no trifling amusement ; tley abound a
with profeflkrns of "duty," "love of country," v
, fail " attachment to general and particular interests," t
, but Sec. &c. &c. when it is notorious thit the nine- f
e the tenths of these very candidates are oiiy pursuing u
vered their own interells, and that the price of a feat in c
the house is much more accurately afccrtained than
umps the price of a bullock in Smithfield ; rruch more tl
: the accurately we may fay, for the price o a bullock n
arch- depends upon his comparative value ; vhereas all ©
ttom feats are of equal value. The member or Old Sab
rruti- rum, where fearce the vestige of a hoife is to be f<
». at seen, and whose cleftors are, we beleve, five in tl
jlical number, and those, the mean creatures if the pro
-1 de- prietor, tells as well as the members fa Yorkshire,' n
effels whose inhabitants may amount to 8«o,ooo, and ci
whose extent is equal to the -provinc# of Ulster. f<
ir « ld ! -fl
truf. ated ? ' b
he May 30. (j
out Stocks have undergone a considerable depreffi- h
the on—3 per cent, consols were as low as 61 12. re
iter. Thareis no farther account of the Fleet being at I'
ren- sea. 6 tf
de a f. (
m°! rp PARIS, May 14. Tc
bled The discOvery of the confpirary which has just
the been disconcerted was made in the following man- di
L his ncr.
on A man as a citizen, was recruiting on
ex- the Boulevards. A gunner met him and demandsd
by whole orders he acted. The former hesitating,
• ou. was taken before the minifler of the police. He Ot
the there discovered the whole of the confpitacy, as
ida alarming from the political rank of some of the
ers. conspirators, as from the numbers of citizens of all
cliffes who were marked out as itt victims.
the The marine minister has received the most satis
uly factory news from the windward lfiands. The new
>V ''- citizens are divided into two clafTes—cuhivators and
:ft. soldiers. On the 20th Nivofe, and the ift Pluvi
of ofe, there were two battles. In the fifll the Enghfh
all abandoned their artillery and magazinjs ; she fe
ary cond terminated with the complete defeat of the
he English. ,
ur- Carnot, it appears, was the member of the Di
ca- rectory who disclosed the greatest energy under the
re . cent ctrcumftances. He is therefore attacked
at with the utmost fury by the Jacobins.
May ij.
iry The Journal des Hommcg Libres wprefents the
ey plan of the conspiracy as ridiculoui and absurd :
ia it pretends that it would have required 60,00 c men
nt to carry it into execution ;as if we did not know
:t- that all the enmesof the whole revolution have been
committed by a handful of mifcieants, who, bv
z. {heir audacity, paralyze all virtuous men, and mif
yp lead the credulous and ignorant multitude ; as if
the maffa*res of September were not committed
s; by five or fix hundred men, in the heart of Paris
le while the great body of inhabitants remained in a'
" ru ftupefaflion ;as if the authors of the lift
y of May had mote than two or three thousand ac
s- complices!
'r - May 16.
f Ihe division detained so long in fbe port of Ha.
>'f th UVt Eour corvettes failed on'
! Th 7 f r'r u r f tW '° fri^tes on ,he ioth.
ihe whole of the afternoon of the 20th (Mar
u r J r ' n ?n can "°" Wa " heird at ttle Hague
; on the fide of Barfleur. In the evening a fqnadron
. faded in good order ; a fair wind rose in the night
1- and a speedy junction with Admiral Van Stabel is
(1 expected. s
C In f^ m . T AIe PP°» r «<3 on the 29th of April
r n the Dutch National AflVmbly, an ß ounce, thn
" rl P l'. Vat "" ° f Maurh, ' lls have taken twelve En
e g ifh ships richly laden, on their return from China. Y(
t COURT of KING'S BENCH, ?Xh
T r ■ Weftminftjr, May 9. We t
ti. 1 • -J v * Kinfmjn. e t
■ . The plaintiff ,s a Jeweller and Silver Smith, liv- but' f!
ing near Charing Ctofs, and the defendant, the son our 0
: plrj;^: fortunc ' ioUpperSeymow
Mr. Mingay said this action was brought fro te- S,oo"
cover the sum of 441 . fdr articles furnifhll by the S\
■ plaintlffto the defendant in the way of his trade. better
1 he defendant pleaded infancy. A
The fn' nt,fFre P licd ,hst 'hey were neceffarics.. K-t"er
she fiift article that was mentioned in the bill ihrea'
was a tongue scraper. The learned Counsel said, he wi h
must beware of beginning with a foul tongue a : W
some ot his, learned friends might fend him aL " to use
scraper. There were four tooth sick caf« £" /
chafed by the defendant in one week. There were 1 ers L
tXJS&r' p,lrofGdd S3
Mr. Mingsy candidly admitted that these art! f«T
cles, with regard ,0 the bulk «f mankind could '
not perhaps be considered at ncceffarics. But this en j
cafe was particularly circumstanced. Tlie defend *
° f am " of Vf, 7 K. fonuiie, d g T h ft
w Ith his fcthtr'j pernxiffiea living cn a very large a l- ere. '
, f •
!y die Icvvance, in a stile of elegance »i.d ft. (li. suable dissi
pation, in Upper Sc j mvm: Sin U. I'l.is defendant
who was an adult, went to tlie (hop or this tradef
>m In- man, recommended hy a cultomrr. He happened
; com- to want a few months of the agi of 21, and his
lat the client could not look into his mou:H to difcoverthat
■I, will he was not of age. There was one article in this
bow- bill which he hoped the Jury would coolider as ne
ceflary, ant! that was a pair of buckles ; unlffs they
(hould be of opinion that he, being the son of a
gentleman, ought to wear fhoe-llrings.
advise, It. appeared from the evidence of the plaintiff a
st the shopman, "that thefearticles had been purchased in
i (hips 1793. wht-n the defendant lived in his father's house
a vef- and it did riQt appear that his father was at all privy
I pro. to. this trSrifaftien.
rloufe Mr. Er/kine, for the defendant, observed that
ve ef- the interePs of the puttie were deeply concerned in
d the cases of this fort, and paid a very just tribute of, ,
1 riip- praise to the ncrble and learned judge who fat ©n the
ies. bench, for the eminent service Irfe had done to the
* country, by his direflions to juries on such fubrjecta. |
He put it to the jury as grave, decent, and moral ,
resent men, whether it was ccmfiflent-with the principles j
farce of trade arid commerce, that a tradesman (hould
idates furnifh a very young man, who he knew was living ,
spers, with his father, with a great number of expensive
jound articles, not for himfelf, I)lit probably for women f
try," with whom he was connedted, when it was his duty
efts," tp have applied his money to very different purpo- t
nine- fes. It was an insult to the human understand- v
suing ing to suppose that these articles eould possibly be f]
•at in considered as neceffariesw
than Lord Kenyon told the the single question i;
more they had to decide was, whethei these articles were j
illock necessaries. It was .rot for them to inquire con
js all cerning the good sense of the law, which ibey were f (
d Sa- bound toadminifter. But if they were at liberty
to be so to do, he presumed they would be of opinion g
ir e in that the law could not be put on better grounds j,
pro- than those upon which it now flood. If the law did f.
(hire,' not protedl infants, then all the junior part of the a
, and community would be unprotected. The law there
after. fore threw a V" • 'tinfant JKvere im-
pmiewt. and contracted debtsaTTgrtttey t ;
preci- ~ao r at 9, and might be weighed down by debts „
before they were aWe to take care of themselves. The £
law on this fubjeft was founded in good sense and ft
>reffi- humanity, in permitting infants to cofltrafl for f,
[ 1 2. meat and drink,becaufe otherwise they might llarve.
ng at ft was in fulling the Jury to argue that the items in
these bills were necessaries. If they were to be con- <
ftdered in that light, the rising generation would l
soon be undone.
just The Jury, after examining this bill, found aver- c.
man- dift for the plaintiff for iol.
' c;
> °n From a Vermont Paper.
radsd e<
ting, A N E L E G T
He On John Bird M'lntosh, fin of Major Duncan M' l'J
", as lntejb, of Cafileton, <wbo ivas droqyned in Cajileton
the "W. on the 17th of May, 1796, at the age bj 4
f all fears and 6 months. 11<
. . THO children in beauty appear
atrs Like the flowers of Spring in therr bloom ;
new Tho' they feel not a sorrow nor fear. to
and Yet they soon may be laid in the tomb. an
uv i The misfortune of yesterday fhew3 w '
'h(h How vain are the joys that we prize; mi
N r And the Mefhngs tha; give usrepofe, m;
t h e May be luddeul y fnatch'd from our eyes. f a)
At an hour when the weather was fine, loc
Di. by his parents was seen,' hai
, " His y'jutliful companions to join,
the In some innocent sports on the green. '
ked But quickly, (oh! painful to tell.') f"
With his mates to a river he ftray'd,
from a bridge o'er its furface he fell, ma
the And is nuln ber'd to day with the dead. like
d ; Our life is, alas 1 like a dream,
len And death wakes our fouls into day:
ow ehiid, I was that furious ltream,
.^ n ''• at wafted thy spirit away 1
hv rJ I ,'°l ttly wittl luch fortitude glow'd, I"
./ thy nature,was aflive and brave,
•r T , e i the ftreara with such violence fiow'd, J. 1
s if I hy urength was deftroy'd by the wave.
Ed By the willows that grew on its fide, V„
rs, Thou waft floated along, and waif drown'd : per,
3 °n. some 3 ders, immers'd in the tide,
I ft i ny cold little body was found. Au
IC - . How vain were the effirts of art,
in attempting thy life to restore !
Ah ! Death had so wounded thy heart, It
J hy heart could have motion no more. k
Jn n " Vln g' 6° v,ew tile pale cheek, Unit,
1 h " grae'd with a blulh from his birth :
' 1 , ol " l P Bcan with eloquence fpeaV. I.
iho now they must moulder in earth! »at<
Jc v ora Death and from silence they cry, of 1,1
)n id thaughtlefs, ye gay, and ye braue,
t, yo" may suddenly die, 3°° f
i 3 And to-morrow be laid in the grave ! fi "e p
il WALPOLE (N. H.) August 2 noirfi
" To 1M R 1 RIFLE. m -
Sir, fubfer
YOU v,;ll pleafc to accept the bed thanks of l«un
your b'ethren of tk scythe and pitchfork, in my V
neighbourhood, for your goodly words of advice. ci P al 1
We did not, like Jotham Winrow's fellow labour- J? ancr
ers fend or intoxicating flip lo drink your health,
- but sedately over flrong beer and mellow cider of South
n our own making, drank success to the fa'mer and
, spared our money for bet-flr uses. lam a sworn I
foe to rum and every flavin liquor, that (laves '
- rrnport or (laves create. Would neighbour Peevish ,0 r
e ll: r' s . foul , and hod y to ° would Hand a 60 bah
ter chance ; the othet day, as he and his hired eonfift
man drained a bowl of grog, t0 enable them th
■ hetter to prlch a Idad of Tiay, a (hower began ,0
, threaten a What did thrs man of grcg
- with an exp-effion somewhat like that of Job's wife
s but take a fare brand, and apply it to his dry hay^
to uiehis own speech, to baulk the rain ; this im
; -piety fprmgfron, rum. The multiplicity of fl low .
j ers ought, by no means, to provoke a murmuring
i ' ""ft ! f y Wet " Ur . thf y "'crease th! Auc,
j grow th of our corn, tur nip, and potatoes ; they -
: fertilize our paftur.s, fwcll the udders of our cows
and lay a better rhicknefg upon the ribs of our ox
en ; and we can get hay fufficient on half the
ground we formerly did. C
1 hS r Umi h TOak " bad and poor farm r
er,. V\ henever I find a Jacob,n, I ju-'Je thct he
k diffi- has becu adulterated and perverted by fom e(l f •!
tendant mobs io our lea ports, or feels found toward
trades- good government, because the ufc of ftrotjp- £ r '
ppened has rendered hi& life uu'taiy, by making hj, f
and liis tune defperate.—Wheiiev:;i I call on a fkrm^
/er:hat readily fee liim pull out a full bottle, 1 T\
in this profpfrity, I look into hij paltures, and fee a(Z
ras ne- poor cows, poor fence., and plenty of briifh
•fsthey thirties. His corn withers for want of feafor ' •
)ii of a hoeing; his w;fe has little butter and no cheeiV
and its odds, but a (tariff raps at his door before f
lintiff'j get out of his hcttlfe; Ihew me your nerVhbom'i
afed in bottle, and I'll tell you how he prospers. °
s house CALEB WHEATEAR.
1 privy —
It is sir bet! It is charuikg ! It is bsavtifol.
1 that THE words'/war/, charming. and beautiful, arc
rned in 0 f peculiar use in the sublimely-vague dialed 0 f
ute of fetitiment; for by havjng l) 0 meaning at all in
en the application, they may be made to mean any thin.-,
to the Narciffa had just returned from her evening rami
bjects. hie, when, to be sure, (he had had a charmiti»
moral walk, the moon (hone fiveitly, and it was a beauti.
nciples /„/ n ight.
(hould Moll had beat the dog 'till (he had raised the
living w l, o l e family with his bowlings. W hen enquiry
lenfive wss ma( j e> w f, at the difficulty was ? Behold ! the
women f aua y brute had (pilt a beautiful pail of swill.
s ° ut y Goody Truckle, if (he could have walked on
'urpo- t h' ree now> half as wall as (he could once on two,
i"k ,iave ta ' ie " Goody Trott down cellar, to have
'■y (hewn her a charming barrel of pork.
It was expe&ed that the speckled pullet would
!on lay two eggs a day, because Johncy had built a
3 were f we t hen-roost.
con ' A connoisseur only could have undeiftood the
were •
? c . rt y Says Ned to don'c you think this Mifg
union Snip a char mi n- little toad?— Not so very agreea.
ounds hie, neither, fays Jack. You mistake, brother,
w djd fays Ned, (he dresses sweetly, her form is charming,
the an( j fb e tings beautifully.
'here- Strangets fometinjes make gross mistakes.
SiJmr • k\>L-pr-v.' a little
dehts t,me ; • y application had acquired a geod
ri»i grammatical knowledge of our language. He had,
; * by his own enquiries, and of his in!
" a ttru&or, found out that the epithet sweet, had re-
I Irenes to the /m?// or tafic; charming to form-thing
. • vocal; and beautiful to foqie vifihle object ; that it
■Tol" W3S thorcfore P ro P er to fa y a sweet tajic, or a sweet
vould y a, " 0r > * forming Jager, a beautiful pr,fp e a, or a
beautiful woman —With all this information, how.
r Cr ' he Was en,irc, y unacquainted with the more
ralhionable application of these terms, which alone
can apologize for the following blundtfr
His landlady, among other specimens of her
I economy, was one day expatiating oo her frugali
ty in having fatted a hog by the flops aid crumis
i]t ] lt " r own saving, and con luded this panegyric
Tleten by dedarin S ,!>at il was a t>'"utful hog.—Monlieur
t>J 4 I f(? 'd her that he had been in the countty but a lit'
| tie time, had seen btst a few of its curiofniea, and
I that it, would make him very happy to fee her beaa-
I tiful hog, Upon the approach of his benefactor
I to the yard, this paragon of ugliness, diflfonance,
J and stench, accosted her with his ufusl melody,
which, however, at this time, hunger had nnde
j more fwwrous than ever.—There, fays
I madam, is not this a beautiful hog? Why, madam,
I fays he, with a liitle amazement, I have seen hogs
look veiy fcuch like him before ; do you call him
j handsome ? But, Monsieur, is it not a charming
1 hog ? Upon my honour, madam, he does make a
| grunt exaaiy like our hogs. But, fay, Monsieur,
» fays madam, is is uot a ftocet hog? Sweet ! he
j may tajle very well; but by Gar he does fmelljuft
] like our hogs in France.
PROPOSALS,
j (By .William Cobbett, oppofi:e Uhrift Church, Phila
delphia, for publilhir.g byfubfeription,
l"he History of Jacobinism;
Its CRIMES, CRUELTIES and PERFIDIES,
j /"COMPRISING an Inquiry into the manner of difl'emi-
I Vvi rating, under the appearance of Philosophy and
j virtue, principles which are equally of Or
j P er > Viitue, Religion, Liberty and Happiccfs.
I By WILLIAM PLAYFAIR,
| Author of the Commercial and Political Atlas, &c.
With an Appendix,
BT PETER PORCUPINE,
I Shewing the dole connexion which has ever -kibfiUcdt
j b«tAvecn the Jacoßlns ; at Paris axid the iJeinocratb in the
j United States of America.
CONDITIONS.
J I. This new, entertaining and inftru&ive work, which
I is at once a history of Jacobinism and a complete history
J of the -French revolution down to the end of 1795, will
I c of two volumes, o&avo, each containing about
I J OO P^o €s * fhali be well printed, on a new type and
I fine paper.
I 11. The price of each volume, bound in boards, will be
I One foliar and a Quarter, paid for on delivery ; and to
j non fubi'cribers, a Dollar and a Half.
I 111. As soon as a Sufficient number of copies lhall be
I fubfcribedfbr, the work will be put to the press, and fin-
ifhed as expetVtioufly as a ftrici attention to neatness and
3f I accuracy will admit of.
y I *#* Subscriptions taken by the publilher, and the prin-
I c^P Booksellers of Philadelphia ; Meflrs. Spotfwood and
I Nancredeof Boston ; Mr. Rivingtoh of New-York ; Mr.
Rice of Baltimore ; MefTrs. Pritchard and Davidfon of
Richmond, Virginia; and Mr. Young of Charleston,
n South Carolina. Aug.
d— — —
n s India Goods at Audlion.
, AN Friday next, at io o'clock in the morning, will be
'vy fold at auction, at No. 56 South Fror.t-flrect, ahout
a 60 bales of India whife Goods, entitled to the drawback,
j consisting of— *
Long Cloths •
j Baftas
Gurrahs
' Emerties
' Cofiaes
1 Hiimhums
T injfibs «
Mull Mulls. ,
Edward Fox, Au&'r.
Aug.ia.
Landing,
From on board the Schoontr Expedition,
St. Croix Rum&Sugar,
For Sale by F. COPPINGER,
•Aug. 11 § !2i South Front-itrcet-