Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, August 23, 1796, Image 3

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    , IC! rative reply- It is thought that the French will
content themselves with blockading this Fortress.
S ims of their detachment* having been sent beyond fro
Milan towards Como, in all probability, to raifc t8
contributions. —We are informed, that the body of ha'
their Army has made a movement, which feemsto as i
indicate an intention of penetrating beyond the dia
Adda, into the environs of Mantua. fur
County of Berks.—At theclofe of the fifth and
last day's Poll, the numSer were,
Mr. Dundas, - - 1332 C o
Mr. Vansittart, - - 1332 a ,
Mr. Luveden, - - 846 h j ß
Parson Home, alias Home Tooke, when he t ' h ,
talks of bis Patriotism and Consistency, (hould re- j, c
colled his former treachery to Mr. Wilkes, whom qll
lie betrayed-in the moll base and unprincipled man
ner. We (hall oscafionally refrefh his memory on ; n
this head, and revive fame few of those Anedotes, m ;
which exßiblt him in his native colours. j-
Citizen Hull, who loft his Eledlion at Maid- 3r .
stone, is the fame gentleman who was eaimined s O ,
a before the Priry Connsil a (hort time ago.—The pu
Poor Citizens have been moll cruelly treated every
where * , . « . . . be
The perfevermg itinerant Candidate, Citizen a( j,
Waddington, gave up the contest for Hertfordfhire,
when he found his principles did not at all take
with the worthy Ele&ors.
Of all the various addresses to conftituentg which ' n
we havp yet seen, that of Mr. Alderman Combe is f c
$he mod strongly marked by folly, arrogance, and °
vanity ; and exhibits an apt specimen of those ex
ertions which are to be expected from the introduc- .
tion of such a mind into the House of Coramons. "
This modest gentleman tells the livery of London, '
that by el££ling him, they have manifefted to the 01
World, an unequivocal difapprobationof the }Var,
and a spirit friendly "to Parliamentary reform ;in tr<
other words, that they have virtually ret rafted all ' ei
their public declarations on the fubjeft of the War,
and been guilty of a complete dereli&ion of princi
pie. Mr. Combe it vain enough to believe, that
his wnoderful abilities have made converts of all the
citizens of London "; >nd, > n the pSmi/iV ps hU ce
arrogance, overlooks'.the trifling objection arising co
from the re»eleftiori of three, Candidates, out of "
four, who have invariably supported the War,and ,
tigoroufly opposed th'at line of politics, which he 3^
has thought proper to pursue. But, it is not at all '
surprizing, that the extreme inconsistency of the
livery, in returning a man, whose principles tjiey Vs
had publicly and repeatedly reprobated, (hould
have exposed them to the serious charge preferred 1
against them by this Civic Popinjay. If they have 1
a just regard for, their own chara£ter, they will
take some speedy means of convincing their new
Member of his error, in as public a manner as that
in which he has been pleased to propagate it. °
Sit Watkin Lewes had, on the score of services, 1
|>y far the ftrdflgeft claim to the fuffrages-of the 1
city* of London ;and he wpuld have had those fuf- *
frages, if the other Candidates, who had fat with
him in Parliament, had not faqrifieed the cause to
a narrow and ftlfifh policy, 1 which induced them to
: look only to their own individual return, and, with
that view, to solicit fiuglc votes. The four old
Members (hould have joined hands in support of tr
the cause they all profefled to-efpo«fe. and in that <"
catc thecity ot LondoiA'would not have beer. repre- »
fentcd by a jacobin.
EDiNBUBGH,. June +. tl
Thursday the Right Honourable the Lord Pro.
,voft, Magistrates, and Council, give an elegant en- a
Certainment at H»n'er's tavern, to the Right Hon. r
Henry Dundas, Representative in Parliament for
this City ;to which a gtcat many refpcdtablc Ci- k
tizens are invited.
Frem Italian papers.—Tranjlaled for tht Aurors. I
PIACENZA, May 31. [
On the 26th inft. the French made a general at-
tack upon Beaulieu's army which extended from
Verona to Rovevedo and confided of no more than
14,000 men, infantry, cavalry and the late rein
forcements from Germany included ; they repulsed
the Aullrian light-horse and compelled Beaulieu to
rttrfat.
It is therefore believed that the Auftrians crossed i
the Adige and took the road to Trent. They 1
eould consequently not fall in with the corps of a- <
bout 30,000 Republicans of General Kellerman's '
army which passed through Brescia and filing along
the lake Di Garda advanced through Valteline in
order to reach the road of Rovetedo and cut off the
retreat of Beaulieu.
It is supposed that Mantua was invested after this <
battle. The garrifim of that place does not amount '
to more than 7000 men, which could not find time
to join Bea'ulieu's aimy after his defeat.
General Rofelmini commands the troops in the
fortrefs and the General of Engineers Orlandim
dire&s the artillery. The fortreis is provided with
amnHunition and above three hundred pieces of ar
tillery, but provisions are very scarce. Before the
place was blocked up the inhabilants sent to Ferra
ra for a lupply of provisions; but the papal legate
in that city prohibited immediately the exportation.
BOLOGNA, M»y3«-
The Cardinal Archbilhop of this eity. has ad
dressed a circular letter -to all the mDnafteries, con
vents, panfhes, Sec, by which he, being authorised
theieto by the Pope, ordains and commands, that
all the ehutch plate, gold and silver vases not indif
penflbly necessary (hall be weighed and kept ready,
for the u(e of the state.
The Arehbifhop exhorts the superiors, Sec. of
the monasteries, convents, parilhes, See. to be faith
ful and punctual in fending within siva days, the
demanded fpecification of all the plate, gold and
silver vases exiftmg in their refpeftive houses.
The prelates observe here: We ought to re
aiembcr that are citizens all and every one of
us. We ought therefore all to partake of the bur
den which divine justice choofcs to inflict upon 11s.
He concludes by assuring them that no more of the
plate than is indifpenfibly necessary, (hall be taken,
r;d that the state obliges itfelf to pay to the re-
churches the annual interest proportionate
to the intrinftcal value of the plate. This circular
letter is dated May a3, and signed by, D. A. Car.
Gienetti, Archbifhep and Apoftolicai Legate.
K v..-- < >' . t
i
•s.
' MOt)ENA, May 18,
Yesterday ten waggons laden \.vith money set off I
I from here for Milan, and we expedt momently foli<
180,000 gold sequins from where we thai
have sent aur silver coin to be exchanged for gold ; mig
1 as soon as the above sum arrives, it will be imme- ; trie
: diately fijnt to Milan, in order to make up the full (
futn which must be paid by the 22 inft. life
' May 15. S eT "
Ic affords us particular pleasure to hear that the
Count St. Romano, our ambaflador, has met with .
a most gracious reception from the French. At |,n '
his arrival at Piacenza, h# was complimented by 1 8
: the French commandant, who informed him that j
he had ordeti to escort the ambassador with a pic i
1 quet of hussars to Milan. -
The caih and nncained silver and gold collected ! '' ar
1 in thts state, amounts altcsdy to more than three j
' millions ; yet * whole million is wanting to pay the ' en .
sum due to morrow morning. The neccltary steps
' are already taktfn to procure the ftim wanted be
' fore the time expreflea, and also to' procure the P°'
'■ pun&Ual payment of the remaining sums. Our to .'
r Archbilhop, th* sooner to induce the clergy not to !*"
be backward in concurring to favc the ft<*e, has
1 addressed the most prefflng foliaitations to them.
; PARMA, May 24. dr.
The time allowed for paying the flipulated con-
1 tribntion to the French army, beifig this day olap- ,j a .
s fed, the whole sum has been remitted to the general
of brigade, Cervflni, who was detained here fliefe
several days to fettle that affair.
"Mr. D'Azara, the Spanish Minister at the court
of Rome, is arrived here, on his route to the French
Head-Quarters ; he is charged to negociate a peace
for his holiness.
We hear from Piacenza, that all the French c
troops left that city and marched to Cremona, as- '
I ter they had eonftrufied a bridge over the Po, rai- ®
fed some redoubts, and left a fufficient garrison at 1
' Piacenza, for the defence of the bridge,
t ROME, May 20. cri
e HisHolinefs Wishing in the present circumftan
. ces toprcfervitrannttiiUy-toutlieflLatcsof the Church,
* convoked the Cardinals and other ministers of go
if vernment, and agreeably to their decision, rcquefted *7
j Mr. Nichola d'Azara, minister of his Catholic Ma
jesty, yielding to the solicitations of the Holy Fa-
H ther, set out last Wednesday on his journey to the 0
French army ;he is accompanied by the Abbe IC- u '
vangelifti, chief afltftant to the Secretary o| State. §'
j • Meanwhile the Holy Father has resolved to open 31
j the'treafures of an abundant indulgence to his dear- m
eft fubjefts j duringthefeholy exercifesthe theatres n '
n will be (hut, and all kind of entertainment inter- °
# difled. .
lt The Cardinal de Hertzan, minister ef the court m
of Vienna, set out last Saturday for Ancona, where u
he will take his passage to Trieste. It is said that 111
ie * the British Prince, Augustus, might very well ftiake w
p a journey to Naples in order to take a palTage for 0
1, London in a vessel of hisown nation.
II 11
0 LONDON. I
h LORD HOLLAND AND LORD WVCOMRE. [(
d These are two young men, of whom the com
-3f munity need not be aftiamed, of whom they may j
e. ing qualities, too frequently the lot of hereditary '
wealth and station. We believe and expedt that
they will be good citizens, meritoriously a&ive for
the common weal. f
-0. They have been much together' while abroad ;
n- and they did not separate until Lord Holland was
n. returning home. jj
or Lord Holland arrived in the last Hamburgh pac»
li. ket, and he caSie to London on Saturday. Lord
Landfdowne, among other friends, eaine to town .
to meet him, and yesterday he was at Landfdowne a
1. House. He is a fine young man, and fortunately
for him, he seems very like his uncle Charles. Ac- j
i( compliftifiients, manners, temper, and we think
countenance too, indicating that temper cannot ea.
fily have more praise. Thus Lord Hulland t
and thus we hope he will be.
1 " —" Nor blame uj, if we check the plaufive firing 1
ed nQO to the'wtyward wori4 —confirm the reft'
to " Be what the purest mule would wish to fiog." a
Lord Wycombe, better occupied, stays behind n
ed in happier (cene# 1 in a country where Hnaccurfed I
ey with the blading, all ; deftroying gviilt and mifehief v
a- of corruptiofl, there has not been a war for above 1
n's two hundred years! . p
ng This inftruftive delicious countty is the Svvifs i 1
in Republic ! I r
he , Lord Wycombe is at Coper, the residence of , t
Mr. Necker! where the lake of Geneva uprising ; t
his against the garden wall, ; Mont Blanc, and the : f
int hig'.ieft Alps to Dauphine in the distance, ; r
me magnificent aslhey are, seem to (hrink on a com- j i
parifon with the objfftstn the imaginary perfpeft- ! t
:he i v c ! where with Voltaire at one end of the lake . <
ini and Rousseau at the other, amidst the concurring [
ith energies of, Haljsr, Eulet Barnouellet and Mau- «
ar- pertius, the mind advances to the more popular (
the scenes of the Democratic Cantons, where William i 1
ra- Telfand his associates, rid their country of all the
ate hideous horrors from dull, deftrtrftivc German deft
an. potifm ; where Willtam Tell and his associates sol- i
lowed by centuries of not unworthy successors, con- i
ad- tinue to illuminate and cheer the world 1 with the
an- .divine demonftration6 of truth! I
fed A man, who is desirous to fee another |
hat has oiHy to wish that his enAny would be 4 candidate \
lif- for a feat in Parliament, and if th« el?&ion is con
idy- tested, he may depend upon being gratified by
every Ipecies of merited censure or unjust reproach
of es. A gentleman, who offered himfelf for a bo
th- rough in Yorkshire, was so much impressed with
the the expe&ation of being reviled, that previous to
jnd going upon the Hustings, he assumed a veiv seri
ous face, and asked his Lady, if foe had ever been j
re- falfe to'his bed ? On her expreffmg some surprize ;
of at the question, he begged (lie would be frank in ;
iur- her answer, and added, " whether you have or not,
us. I (hallhear of it on the Hustings."
the " This eountry gets more and more polished every
:en, year : a ftiort time since there was a mafquerarle at
re- Wrexham in Noith Wales.
late A {hort waijl is graceful and feminine ; but the
alar folly of extremes has of late allowed r.o waist at all !
?ar. the stjlus (hould be worn three inches below the pre- 1
sent fafhion ; our beauties are now literally in a Jack'
' ' \
Sr.RCTrON OP M.-\l9tfS ">F PAR'r.t'fKUr. M
A common txpreflidn with i'ome old members, ing t
folicittng their cpuftituents to re-eledt them, is, T
that they are tried servants of the public $ so.me A
might fay with truth,, that they have not only been 3CO
tried, but ought to*be tonvicled. A
One of otir Pioneers modestly enough adver- have
tifes a Freehold Eflatc pojfejfmg a dejirable eontin- by tl
gency, too well known, and too highly ejlimated, to aca;
require comment or description i but another, in plain
English, informs the public that the sale nf a feat
in Parliament for the borough of , is unavoid
ably postponed! rj
lt is said that there are two persons how alive
who voted at thw* ele&ion of members to serve for K j
the borough of Southwark in thi last triennial Par- " '
| liamentv A .Sir John Lad was then their member,
! and upon th» oecafton ■ Quaker ohferved, " wc «
sent a I.arhipon an eriand tor three years, and he
(laid seven."
When Sir Robert Walpole had any material g; x
point to. carry in the House, he was accustomed Thrt
to aflc thole Members wl.o were his friends to sup 44,1
with hitn on the preceding evening, and ho Mini-
fter erer poured out more copijus libations to Bac- g^j,
chus, than he compelled his vilitois to lwaltow.
A. friend once sfked him, on what principle he ——
drenched them so unmercifully ? " With the fame '"f lll
*iew that yo dr basket-weavers ftecp their pliers the
day before they work them up ; that they may q
bend the easier.'*
„ HHiTrnrwtTmnnrtMwttw, •
BY THIS JDAY's MAILS. *
NEW-YORK, August 19. f
Saturday arrived here, his Britannic Majesty's '
Packet Halifax, Capt. Stanhope, 8 weeks from j an(
Falmouth.—She bvings London papers to the 21ft u j t
of JuYie (oneday later than by the Adelaide) but t j, e
they contain nothing of conference. w ; t
TheThifbeand Topaz, Biitifh frigates, were am ,
cruising off the Hook on Friday. ■
RUTLAND, (Vermont) Atlguft is. ottr
On Tuesday last died in this town, Mr. JjtMts c j, e
KiRKAtoiL, tfgecf 216, late printer of the Rutland
Herald. Mr. Kirkaldie was born and educated at y a
Edinburgh, and came to New- Yo-k but a few years col
ago. From November 1794 he has had the care t jj e
of the Printing Office in this town. Labouring
under a complication of diseases, he was obliged to an|
give up the bulinefs of his profeffion in May last, [ }Ul
and attend to the recovery of his Jiealth. Every
method of relief proving unavailing, the powers of a)J|
; nature have beea gradually wafting ; the Springs
of life ceased to flow, and he fell asleep August 10. j aj
His relationsand friends at New-York, are hereby
informed .that he has uniformly fuftainedthe eharac
ter here,of a* able and faithful printer, of an upright «
man, and of a serious cbritlian. Every attention a j
. was paid to him duiing his licknefs, that his (ituati- f lc
. 011 required : and 011 Wednesday his remains were w j
committed to the dust, with a decency and folem- j ai
nity suited to the occasion, and expressive of res-
peA to his memory. He has left a forrowful wi- p
dow, two young children, and friends here ca
to lament his death. on
; NEW-LONDON, August 18. T
F.xtraft aS ■»J«tt'rr f-nm ageiitUman at Port Inut e{ j
pendente, (alias Coneought) in New-Conne£ti
' cut, dated July 5, 1796, to hi* friend in Lyme. fe
' *" I arrived here yelterday, 5 .o'clock, P. M. in j n
r company with fortv-feven men and two. women,
fifty in all. I was in the frent party, walking the f c
' beach with three of my brother fuiveyors, and an
3 agent and two hands; having arrived at the weft w
line of Pennsylvania, we took a stand at the firft
point of the ieferve, and gave three cheers for
New'Conne&icut 5 we then came on two miles to
s this place, and at 6 o'clock our boats and cattle j
e arrived, and a salute of fifteen guns, to cOmmemo- w
1 rate independence, was fired, and a volley for New
Conne&icut, and a number of toasts drank with | 1(
1 great chearfulnefs. Th'* firft toast, given by Gen.
u Cleveland, was Port Independence, which is to be cJ
[' the future name of this place. It it a creek, and C£
has a ftnart ■current, tho' now uncommonly low,
and is a secure harbbur for boats, and generally
admits four or five feet of water, and is a moil
d noble mill stream. The shore of Lake Erie, where
d I walked yeftirday for twenty miles, is the best
:f watered with springs of go»d water of any country <
e I ever fawi no part of New-England is its equal.
j The land here is most beautifully interspersed with
fs i hill and dale: the (hagbark, English walnut, cher
i ry, maple, and all kinds of oak, faffafras, elm,
if | beach and ehefnut trees, art: wry plenty, and all
g : the vegetation most luxutiant. Wear# now pre
te : paring our instruments, and shall traverse a few
:, miles of the this day, and "to-morrow the g
whole gang of surveyors will set out to run dowt\
t- the Pennsylvania line, aud parallels of, five miles g
ie : d'tftant back to the lake. The only savages herea g
g ' bouts are from twenty to thirty 'of the Miflifago
i»- or Ottawa nation 5 but they do not pretend to
»r claim, any land louth of this lake, and appear to g
m be peaceably inclined. The geographical (lories
ie •of serpents here, are most delusive lies; for in tra
f- versing about 150 miles of this (hore, I have seen
>1- no more than two striped and three speckled snakes,
n- and those very small. 4 ' '
te Thomas'Starr, of Middletown, stabbed Samuel
Growell of that place a few days past, and he is
dj since dead of his wounds. The aflaffin is commit-
tt ted to prison. j
n- —— illillliaß—B—«*—
)y From a late London Paper. j
h " REMARKABLE OCCURRENCES
i)» THE YEAR, 1796-
to Tke Civil Lift in arrears fik quaiters. 1
ri- Tiie election of a member for an independent bo- .
en rough, who wasknqvynat the time to be in a state
ze i of menial derangement.
in ; A war minister led in triumph through the streets
>t, of Norwich by two ladies, who had him by the hair, -
while at the fame time a party of his friends carried
ry before him a bowl ot blood in honor of certain pro
at 1 penfities.
The said gentleman ele&ed for a great city, a- 1
he midst much exepiation of its inhabitants :
II! A gallant admiral flying from the Hustings, the
;eJ moment he was chosen, to escape Ac cetrplimeats
tk' of his conftiluems,
, f |
»*' » , /
V 1 u
Mr. Pitt making'two loans, and the people pay
, ing tor them. -
The Stocks fallen near 40 per cent.
And bread, and meat, and wine risen 200, nay
I 3CO per cent 1
And finally, the ministers and their abettors, who
■ have to aofwer for so much mifchief, again chofea
. by the people !
) ;|H » lIHIMH.I H..JI u»i ■miiTOHUiiii ■»
J ) Philadelphia,
TUESDAY EVENING, August 33.
The bridgt over HowWud's Ferry, which con*
ne&s Rhode-Island with the contine it rebuilt,
r and so far Compleated aS to be pafiable.
A London paper of the 18th June fays, that
' the price of the louis d'or at Paris was
e Kvres in affignats.
s foUH s.
Six per Cent. - ------ iifj
d Three per Cent ------ - - idfj
p per Cent. - - none for sale. - - 14/"
•_ si per Cent. --- -- v. - - t i,s
Deferred Six per Cent. - - - - 13/8 to 7
BANK United States, - - - 12 pr. cant.
'• Psnnlylvania, - - - - 30
e » '■ North "Ymerica, - - - . 46
c Insurance Comp. North-America, 40per ccnt. r.d*
Pennsylvania. 5 per ccM.
COURSE OF EXCHANGE.
y On London, at 30 days, per £.ioo fieri, par.
*>» at 60 days, par to 161 I-»
? at 90 days, 161 a 161 1-1
Amsterdam, 60 days, per guilder, 42
t- *- 90 days, 40
fOR the Gazette of the united states.
8 The Editor of the Sunbury and Nbrthumher*
111 land Weekly Advertiser, in .his paper of the 16th
ult. has published an account of the celebration of
II the anniveyfary of our Independence at Sunbury
with fever&l curious Toa/h,'drank on the occasion,
rc among which is the following—
" 14th. May the Yankees who are now invading
o«r t?rritori<o rom ihs fnic " of YVTiifkey boys, (3
" cheers.".}
ld It will be hardly necefTajy to refnatk that the
at Yankees to are the inhabitants of Luzerne
rs court y, who purchased and began the settlement of
re the territory said to be invaded more than 4.0 years
'8 ago. How well a toast of that malignity lmts the
anniversary of liberty 1 will not pretend to decide ;
' but I {hall run n» hazard in remarking that ft wr.t
T perfe&ly coygenial with the spirit of the company,
0 I a«d such a toalt as one might suppose would be
S 3 drank by a horde of/peculators, drunken furveyjrt,
land di/coverers and mountajn'Jelltrs at Sunbury.
I The editor, with his ufua! correttnefs and ele
*c - gance, concludes his account in these words:-*- ,
I " About sunset the muficiaris embarked on board
°? I a fail-boat and plaid some delightful pieces of mu-
I sic as they failed upon *he Sufquehanna; among
:rc I which was noticed with peculiar pleasure, the old
rt l" I favorite Yankee Doodle " It will not be doubted
I that this tune was more comfortable and more </. j
* I I'gktful to a Sunbury audience on that meriy oc»
cre I calion, than it had been to them on snore solemn
Jones, wljen played by the Tanked themfebes»
1 Thij tnne like the mufie of Orpheus hath perfornj.
.' jed wond"ers. Pinnket and his Northumberland sni
" 1 litia en! fe'lt its captivating power, and marched eft
n f' I retrogade to its mufie ; and- recently, did the afpir.
I ' n g poles of Northumberland proilrate
c "' J themselves before ,a eomp'any of Yatikecs at the
' c I found of this "favorite" tune.
a " J Let it be reeollected that th?fe sons of mjrtb
' ' I who are now so anxious to bring the Tankeet apd
' 1 I IP hijley-loys in one fate, were lately the moll ttfr
-01 I bulent oppofers of our government; so that it be
-1 !o I came neceflary to fend a company of Taniecs from
u8 I Luzerne, to reduce them to order; and that it
? 10 ' I was expedient too, for the Governor of New-Jer
' I ley, with some of his light-horfc, to do them tb«
'' 1 j honor of a visit on his return frorti the vveftwari—
e"' j Nay, so zealous were these people in the whilkey
' I cause, that they indited their chief military of£-
I cers for reading the riot a£t and proclamation to
3 !?' I the mob!
A YANKEE.
101 I Lucerne Comity, Attgufi id, 1796.
ieft j «iui" "»■ » 1 ,
itiy I GAttTTS OF TflE VffirKD STAGES MARINE XlSl*.
Lia). 1 J' . . , —— ' * 1
,; th fHIL AD £ L tHI A, eg. '
Kr . ARRIVED.
j rn< J Ship Greyhound, Green, Barbadoes, 18
a j| Brij; Lavinia, Charnock, St. Kitts, !2
Jte _ I Schooner Kitty,. Harper, Bordeaux, 56
f ew Amelia, White, Norfolk, 3
t^e j CLtAREtV.
I Ship Alexander Hamilton, Kiikbride, Liverpool
liles r^om ' Heron, Kingston
rea Schr. Expedition, Swain, Port-au-Prince
■ j Sloop Atkinfon, St. Thbma*
Ito I Swift, Mackie, Currituck.
r tQ I Arrived at the Fort,
• j Schooner Friendftiip, Monteith, Cape Franeeis
tra j Poll, Woodward, Jsremie
seen I From the Star, of London—June 22.
1 I Arrived at Liveiyool, theSulTex, Atkins, from
j Philadelphia.
nuel I .
le is I Arrivals at Nezu-Tork.— 22.
mit-1 D*y«*
I Packet Halifax, Stanhope, Falmouth 56
I Schooner Return, Norris, Jamaica 26
Larey, Bradbury, N. Providence 18
| Brig ArAerica, Whaden, Montferrat 13
Experiment, Robinson, Havatinah 18
Unity, Rogers, St. Bartholemews 20
I The Mars, M'Kennie ; Pigou, Sinclair; and
l I Young Eagle, Lord j are arrived at Liverpool from
ftat ; New- York. .
reets In the Press,
hair, J fpeed'tly will bepubiijhed, by W. Young, Mills
rried I Son, Corner of Second and Chefnut-Jireet,
pro-1 An Apology for the Bible,
In a series of letters- addressed to Thomas Paine, autnor
r, a . j of 3 book entitled The Age 'of P eafen, part the feconc,
j*beingan kiveihgktion of true and fabulous theology.
. I By RICHARD WATSON, D. D. F. R. S.
' >c I L.rd Bishop of Llandafi, and Regius Prefeflcr of X)ivin«
j ity is the VWvtrfity of Cambridge.
i Aug. . f6