'"' * / • To be fold by public fiile, ON Wednesday, the 7th day of September next, on the premises in Mount-Holly,Burlington county, by the Subscriber, The Dwelling-House and Lot Whereon it stands, having been in part occupied as a (lore for several years past, and in a good stand lor Vtifinefs,to gether with the (lorc-houfe, stable and buildings thereon erected, having two large cellars under them. Also, the shop goods and household furniture. A clear title will be given to the purchaser on payment of the money or fuf 'ficient bond therefor, and possession of the premises will be given in the said month of September. . The/ale is so continue 'till the whole is disposed of. Mount Holly having become rhe County Town, makes this property m«re valuable than heretofore. The condi tions willbemade known at the time and place of sale, by PETER SHIRAS. N. B. All per Tons indebted to the fubferiber, are requeu ed to difchargethe fame immediately, as he intends soon to remove out of this ft ate. Any person having a just de mand againfl tha fubferiber, is requested to produce the fame for settlement. Mount Holly, August 16, 1796- ' "wanted, A STORE and Cellar or Compting house and Cellar, for the Wholesale and Dry Good business. Enquire at No. Ix 9 Arch-flreet. For Sale at the alove place, 500 Boxes Window Glass, 8 by 10, 7 by 9, &c. 500 Cream Cheeses in the bed order, imported from Holland, and entitled to drawback. Enquire of Peter Borger, Aug. 16 iaw3w For Boston, The brig Neptune, James Tower, Master, WILL fall on Sunday next. For freight or pafiage apply te EDWARD STOW, Jun. Aug. 16 § No. 76 South Front-street. Letters Patent, Granted to the Subscriber, for the Cure of Incurvations and Di/iortions of the Spine. EVERY thing has been studied to render this applica tiorifTafe, cafy, effeSual, and generally ufeful, and ' that if necessary, it may be accompanied with any other mode. The/uccefsof the Patentee in the cure of distortions, from Incurvations of the Sp%le, the Wry Neck, &c. in . thi» city and in different parts ef the United States, under the of eminent physicians, when every other mode had failed, wiU, it is hoped, afford the public fuf ficient testimony of the utility of this application. N. B. He makes an apparatus for refloring distorted feet in children —Bandages in general—Truffasof various deicriptibns, and one in particular on a plan entirely new, •which in some cases is found to answer better than any other. He returns thanks to those medical gentlemen in differ ent parts of the United States who have honored him with their patronage and confidence. gy The Ladies are refpedtfully informed, that he has an elegant assortment of St"ys and Corsets for Sale, which ■will be altered if necessary, free of extra charge. LUNDIN M'KECHNIE, Aug. 16 21W3W No. 17 Dock-street. Wr AN ARTIST, Resident at Mr. Oellers's Hotel, MINIATURE LIKENESSES ARE taken and executed in that elegant and delicate stile, which isfo necessary to render a Miniature Pic ture an interesting jewel. He will warrant a strong and indisputable refem blar.ee; and he takes the liberty to lay before the public of this place his most earned intention to deserve their pa tronage by kcA-enUiavnrs-tcv-plettfc. N. B. Specimens are to be seen. May 12. ' ? Auction Sales. India Goods at Audtion. ON Friday next, at 10 o'clock in the meaning, will be fold at auction, at No. 56 South Front-street, about 60 bales of India white Goods, entitled to the drawback, confifling of— Long Cloths Baftas Gurrahj Emerties Coffaes Humhums T anjibs Mull Mulls. , Edward Fox, Au&'r. Aug.ii. Sherry Wine T NOW LANDING, FROM the Ihip General Walhington, at Riee-flreet wharf, and WILL BE SOLD BY AUCTION, On Wednesday next, A.t lo o'clock in the morning, for approved notes at SIX MONTHS, Four hundred Quarter-Caflcs of S HE R R Y WINE. Edward Fox, Auctioneer. Aug. 1; Lottery FOR railing fix thousand fix hundred and sixty-seven dollars and fifty cents, by a deduction of fifteen per centfrom the prizes, and not two blanks to a prize, viz. 1 Prize of jooo dollars is dollars 5000 j 1000 1000 i 500 500 j aoo ioca 4 o 100 aooo 99 jo 4950 aoo 3-J • J°°° aoco io ao,ooo 5 Last drawn numbers of 1000 dollars' each, 5000 4331 Prizes. 44i450 4018 Blanks. , 635 c Tickets at Seven Dollars each, 44,45° By order of the Directors of the Society for eftabiiih ingUfeful Manufactures, the luperintendants of the Pat erfon Lottery hive requested the Managers to offer the foregoing S«heme to the public, and have directed them . to refund the money to ihcife persons who have purchased in the former Lottery, or exchange ti*e tickets for tickets ip this Lottery. I'he lottery hasaftually commenced drawing, and will continue until finilhed. A lift of the Blanks and Prizes may be seen at the office ot William Blackburn, No. 64 south Second ftrett, who will give information where tick ets may te pocured. Dated tliis 17th day of June, 1796. J. N GUMMING-, 1 JACOB R. HARDENBERG,> Managers. JONATHAN RHEA, J '7*ranjlated for the Gazette of tb- United From 3. Parii gaper entitled L.e Republican J /(in fait, dated April 10, 1796. To the Editor of the Republican Frangais. THE Treaty of £ommerce lately concluded between the American and the English govern ment, is the specious pretext on which the enemies of France found their insinuations that the execu tive of the United States is not well disposed to wards the Fiench Republic, and that he is entirely in the iaterefts of England. A true exposure ot facts will demonstrate the falfeßood of these insinu ations, and juflify the condu£l of the government of my country. When the French Republic declared war againfl England, orders were given by tie committee of public fafety, to seize, without difoiimination, all American veflels which French (hips ps war should find on the sea, and fend them into the different ports of the Republic. These orders have been flri&ly executed, and even with a good deal of 1 rigour : numbers of American captains have been taken from on board their veflels, a.id carried fey the captors to ports rfmote from those to which they sent their pretended prizes; the crews dis persed, some of them impiifoned, Itnd otherwise ill treated ; the agents of the government seized many of the cargoes, put them in a state of re quisition, even of those velTels deltined for the ports of France, and many of these cirgoes are not yet paid for, notwithstanding the numerous representa tions to our ministers againfl all these violations of our treaties of Alliance and Commerce, violations which would be regarded by ail oiher powers, less moderate, and less fineercly attached to ths French Republic than the United States, as so many- .acts of hofliiity. The Convention passed a Jeace, purporting that France would cease arresting our veflels at sea, when the powers at war with the Republic should refpeft our -flag. We had no treaties of Alliance and of Com merce with England, and we never should have formed any if France had not forced us to it by this folimn declaration.' In short, vliat else could the government of rhe United States do, to pro te& the maritime commerce of iti citizens, in -circumstances so diffieult ? The Erglifh pillaged our veflels on one fide, and the Frerch ruined cur commerce on the other. Our commerce thus a prey to two of the belli gerent powers, France reduced us, by the declara tion above reeited, to the alternativ of breaking with England, or of making a treaty with her.— This last measure, since the peace of 1783, had always been avoided by oar government; bgt it was preferable to a rupture which would have been prejudicial to our commercial intereils: we should have been deprived of the means of provifloning the French islands, and of furnifhing the French Republic with those innumerable cargoes of grain and which have entered their ports. The committee of public fafety were ve.y sensible that our neutrality was more advantageaus to France than a state of war, without a marine equally re fpe&able to oppose to the fleets of Great-Britain, and it was this consideration that led them te ap prove of ouf neutrality ; but the depredation committed upon our commerce rendered a treaty witlr England inßifpenfable, in order to put an end to it. ' Nothing was more .difficult to acsomplifh ; the English minister saw with jealousy the marked pre ference of the United States in favor of France— the part which they took in America, in the fuir ceffes of the Republic—the public rejoicings in which they celebrated the news of every victory of the French—and the public wishes of all my fellow-citizens for the prosperity and triumph of the Republic, pubh'fhed in all the journals and ga zettes of the United States; in fa •"■- CONTIA 'JATIOK OF Foreign Intelligence. From London and other F.ng\'i[h'bnpers received by the Jh'ip Farmer, M'Collom, from London, and other late arrivals. LONDON, May 12. " • SIERRA LEONE COMPANY. The Dire&ors have lately published their Re port, delivered at the last Meeting by the Chairman, Mr. H. Fliornton, which contains a brief account of the pre lent ttalc of'tnc Colony, grounded upon the declaration they had proposed on a former oc casion, of reducing wjthin narrow limits the whole amount of the risk which they wire about to in cur io Afiica. The fettlcment has, since the at tack there reported, continued uninterruptedly to improve, and has not become fobjedfc to any new danger or calamity. The healthiness of the cli mate has also improved. The deaths of iVjhty of the one hundred and twenty. BritiCh sailors then said to have been landed (here by the French from captured /hips, and of several others since, are found to have been caused by the hardfhipa they had fuf fered, and the Want of medicines and accommodati on, which had been destroyed in the unprincipled ravages committed ; and those other cases which have happened, have not excliifivcly aiifen from climate ; for it is remarkable that, during the rainy season, the Company loft none of their servants. The Nova-Scotia blacks have been remarkably healthy, and their births have far exceeded their deaths. This account is up Co the 31ft of Octo ber, 1795. The lirft ship, carrying any material quantity of trade gaods, which failed since the Colony was plundered by the French, had not arrived at the date of the lad dispatches. A fa&or) has been raised at a small expence on the river Rio Pongas, twelve leagues from the river's mouth, which af fords an easy introduction to ths capital of the Foolahs and is under protedlion of that King. Some delay and, difficulty occurred in forming the factory, by the opposition and mifreprefentatious of the neighbouring European traders, and Dy th# uni ted efforts of the (lave traders ofall the nearer and some of the more distant parts, to induce the na tives to remove it; but a palaver was held, in which the Chiefs gave credit to the good designs of the Company. From the call for various articles of eommerce, those already shipped are expe&ed to come to a good market; and a second (hip has been freighted accordingly. The Company's preferrt property is dated to con fid of a capital in securities of 60,0001. in trade 26,0001. and of Stock 011 the Colony o£ 9,0c01. making a total of 95,000!. Many of the Nova Scotians, since the French attack, have been diiven from the coast through fear, and have established more distant farm lots, which had been before neglefled. These lon on the mountains are the belt, the others generally good ; and the cultivation of fifty new farms has been begun. Premiums of forty dollars have been given as encouragements to fettle within a mile from Freetown. The Company's cultivations on the Bulam (hore have not advancejL_for_w«u..o£- goods, Jcc. Coffee and cinnamon plants, ginger, and several other articles, have been obtained by a vessel freighttned from the Colony to the island of St. Thomas in April 1795. Tropical feeds and plants from the Weft-Indies have been loft by the captureof Weft-India vessels ; and the vessel Prant Hatch, containing many valuable articles from the King's garden at Kew, was entirely destroyed by the French. The conduct of the Nova-Scotians has been very refpe&ful ; they ha»e voluntarily offered to erect some works for the future defence of the cclony ; they have elected tithing men and hundredors; their young persons have been put apprentices to English artificers ; they have built boats, and began to car ry on a trade by barter' with the neighbouring head men or chiefs: their children are at school in the colony. A delegate from some free blacks in Rhode Isl and arrived at Sieria Leone last year, and terms for receiving twelve families, certified to be of good morals, have been fettled to encourage their emi gration ; each family is to have ten acres of land on the Bulam fide of the river for a farm lot, and an eighth of an acre for a town lot also, for which they are to pay a quit rent, and conform to laws of the Colony. Two baptist missionaries have failed from Eng land in one of the Company's Yhips, wishing to fet tle under some African Chief ; and other persons properly qualified have also failed for religious in ftru&ors j a few Englilh families have also failed for the purpose of going directly to the capital of the Foolah kingdom, 300 miles itiland, and to fet tle there ; their exper.ces ar houses, his Lordship said, " I am sorry I did not know i'oon er that ftich witnesses were to be brought forward, for I have in my pofTefiion a-lift, containing a great number of persons of that description, sent to me l>w the unfortunate Mr. Weftan ; and, I am sorry to fay, that amocg the number is the came ot a pet foil of very high rank." In the career of copqueft, the French have nat attempted to revolutionize Italy ; and we find that our minillers persevere in their scheme of exciting civil war in the interior of France. What (hall we fay of this conduct ? Is Jacobinism transferred from the Rue St. Honoreto Downing-ftreet ?,Cer tainly the proclamation whicn the gentleman who calls himfelf the Prince .de Bouillon has put forth, inviting ( Frencji officers to fly to the Itandard of royalifm in Brittany, is calculated to piovoke the fury of fraternization. Civil war is the Jacobinism of Royalty, as Revolution is of Repubhcanifm ; and by an attempt so impolitic as well asfcandaloul, it cannot be denied that we juftify the French in turning all the force of their indignation against England. From a Paris paper.—Tranflatcd for the Aurora. Defcarles defended by Lalande. To the Editor of the Journal of Paris. College of France, 6th Prairial. Men of letters indignant at the speech of citizen Mcrcier (one of the Council of Five Hundred, who opposed the motion for depositing the afhesot Defcartcs in the Pantheon) againil Descartes have written against Mcrcier, but they 'have have not yet written for Descartes. Give roe room for two sentences in the name of the universe and of po!le rity. Descartes is or.e of those creative geniuses thai do honor to his age er.d country he fr it took iotc