I'oreign Intelligence. Qr c LONDON, June 7. From the London Gazelle, june 4, 179.6- a Cap His Majedy having been pleated to appoint W.l liam Campbell, Esq. to be Governor and Com- of mander in Chief of his MUjedys Bermada or So- ;§ f(Jr mess .Islands, in Ameiica, he this day took the t0 tra Oaths appointed to be taken by the Governors of o( g , His Majedy's'Plantationa. - bafen -■ and n MR. LOVEDEH. deeds There is no one man in this kingdom, to whom Blacl the public arc more obliged than to this gentleman, a He During thepropofed" regency, it was all but fixed cffetl that the Prince of Wales (hould take upon him feel thzi high office.—At this inttHit, Mr. Loveden, prifo with the created propriety and manlincfs, stood up inoui in the House, and moved that a farther snqniry Jeffu might take place before a step of such confequen- it w( «s (hould be rifqued. Fortunately for the coun- to fe try his proposition was approved ; and.during this drip enquiry, our invaluable and amiable Sovereign was the I completely restored. J lO mni! DISTRIBUTION OF THE BRITISH NAVAL TOR.CE, 0 n Eicluiiveof theHjREB Asued Vessels, which are g r ; t chiefly employed in proteaing the coasting-trade of c j aj j _ ; n j: Line. 5 o» Fgts- . Sps. Tot lncn . In pert and fitting . *8. » 31 43 IS 4 vind Guard-thips, Hospital-(hips,") R.o] and Prison-ships, at the >it 1 11 16' W J,J several Ports, j a fit In the English and Iri(h chan- 716 t 33 31 83 r i C a ne l'> •* o In the Downs and North sea» 6 3 11 3° At the Weil-India iCands and") g 3o l 0 on the passage 5 . . _ are At Jamaica 60 4 9 IS an d InArr-erieaand at 1 I , 13 7 »3 nea land S Pio Ea(Wndies and on the paff-| It 1 * 9 7 19 !■, * ag«, 3 - Coast of Africa I t 11 J Mr Gibraltar and Mediterranean 43 o 33 9 6 S to T«tal in Commiffios ito |19 (169 [ er I c Thfte if, perhaps, no Naval Officer who has rlcl seen so much real service as Sir Alan Gardner: he anc Vas on bdard the Dortfetfliire in the year 1759» ° u 5 when Sir Edward Hawke obtained the famous vie- Ar tory over Marshal Conflant—ln 1778, h« took ma the Lion, -of 40 guns, whan he commanded the aru Maiddore. of z8 gun«.—He wag in the engage- 38 nient off Grenada, between Admiral Byron and am the Comte D'Eftaing.—He signalized himfelf par ticularly on board the J)uke, on the 12th April, nal 1782, when SirG. Rodney obtained the viflory oei over the Erc.ich fleet commanded by the Comte e " de Graffe. It i« unnecessary to fay what he did 6n wl the Ift June, 1794, in the Fleet commanded by or Lord Howe.—The recolletlion of hit brilliant fer- P< vicet in the Queen,,l4 frelh in the mind of k make the fufTerings of Capt. Jeffup a joint eoscern, ; t [j e and address the Supreme Executive on the fubjeft, hs e . as a matter far, -very far, beyond that of property, I and with many men beyond that of life itfelf. ar , r . I have, Mr. Russell, a ftiendfhip for the British i„ ;i nation, and a r«fpedf for their navy, which to my fl, r y certain knowledge, contains gentlemen ofthe drift- f r lte eft honor and humanity. Nor am I one: of those m j n who believe half what is printed in the Chronicle j { by or Aurora, refpedting Britilh infolcnce, and im e( (.f. pteffment of Ameriean citiiens, for 1 know it is t) ■ry one of the dishonorable tools with which the Jaco- tf of rbins labour in their glorious work of vilification, p, 0B disorganization, confufiori, and final bloodflied.— jf id. We (hould separate thefc lies and exaggerations , Q[ from the ease before us, a cafe well authenti ated, tc and which inspires but one sentiment, and which a 3Ut were it a general practice in the Britifa navy as it n ■ ve is a rare and solitary instance, I would once more jfl,, j stake life and fortune to repel a tyranny more de- a h er grading than that of Tunis or Algier*. c j cu _ I I therefore hope that some of your correspond- v I ents will give some account'of Captain Pigot, t the commander of the Britilh irigate Success. It is \ ■ ou . probable he will be found some daring fallow who a led. | has been promoted merely for his severity ; or eKc ten ' t j some drunken, cowardly fea-monder, who owes his < ■_! I dation to powerful connections, who were able to ] I to pur chafe with money a commiffton which he could 1 ual-1 not obtain by his merit. A YANKEE. 1 (l From the Columbian Centinel. 'j 'ATRIO riSM. I ' " " I love my country, good Horatio; for- I " And were it but a ni-ft of vip'rbus serpents, j vho, I «• I'd'Hraw my tongue ferih, reeking from iuroot, I " Ere I would fpcik one word to her dlfgrace." p .*• Akon. s Mr. Rossei-l, t nis I HAVING lately returned from Europe, and having at a j travelled from the feat of the Federal Government to ach-j this *o«rn, I cannot bvit express my agreeable difap fjoor I ppintment at the vast improvements, the flouriftiing were commerce, prolpersus towns, and happy country, i r ' have beheld. I had been taught to believe by th<> pe nt rufal of some American papers at the Coffee-honies, or I in London, that the contrary of what I have experi tillcd j eiiced, was the afiual situation of affairs ; and I have I frequently felt t,he mod pointed chagrin, when I have I beheld foreijiners reading the articles, which have thus I degraded our country, and which 1 now know to be Jadf-1 falfe. 1 It will readily be admitted, that there are yonr grnm- I bling philosophers, who are continually railing at the J times, in every country j who fee every I hing through moral t ' ,e me^'um their own peeviflj optics ; and because , . , I they happen to be cursed with feelings whieh will not v. I P crm '' them to enjoy the comforts of life is they pass, utch- I a.re eternally endeavoring to make the reft of the world ng On I is -wretched a 6 themselves. —But I have ever thought :hers, J it vas the attribute of Patrioti/m. to- appreciate its » n gth j own country, When truth and candor would permit it. lat he 1 How tben can we account for the calamitous tales r | which our pretended Patriots are continually publish ' j ing to the world, and wV.ich are all as falfe as hell ? if By no other rule, than that they are fecrct enemies, ■oft I under the garb 0/ friends ! id) of I fn India r the Aaxrican charafler (lands as high as Ciane I that of any nation of> earth.— All the papers are luS of | £| e j -compliments on the wisdom, prudence ind rr.ignini- j have 1 m *y °f o ur rulers. In Europe, I never heard a (en- ! d "his I ottered which tended in the least. to. disparage I Anierica, exceptfrom thole wko brought certain Ame- I rit-an papers in proof of their insinuations ; and wh'ofe I objeit was tc deter emigrations. The t-elebrated I Dr. Winterbotham, in the preface of a vork lately | printed, speaking of America, (ays, " The United J States «f America, as a rising etjipire, open a vast field Wilis 1 for the cohtcmplative philofopber and man of feience, '«(, ' the adventurous merchant, the lkilful masufailurer, the ingenious mechanic, and industrious labourer— while the found policy and benign influence el its go author vernmertf, seem to invite each from the different parts second, , 0 f the old world, to reap those advantages which a ty- fertile foiland an encreafihg commerce must ever en g. iure, when uniiicumbered with impolitic (hackles and Dinin- hca»y duties and-irapofts. '• The inhabitants of Europe have not been infenfi -56 hie cf tiicfe circumftanecs, so fayorable to the tnjoy n>«'it-of • 'tuppiaefs and be j* Uo ?" t,e ™ i ed to form a judgment of -hftil/eon- ? numbers whith have emigrated, W d wVU Ibfl eon f 0 ne tinue to emigrate from iu faofoin—numbers which it. , nr. sent eonvulfed fixation will ccrtamly tnc#k> ««J ing which nuift add to;he riches and iUb,iity, a s wc prove higMy advantageous to the corame.ce and . riufatfures of the American empire. r' an E'i"lilhman could write, thus, what ought not ladel to be rctc.umc.nts of ah American public, when they tl.at fee th'ofe Who aflame the name of Americans, endea- eren vor'mc to degrade their country m the eyes of all the a( c Xwi and whose -hole time seems H service of (hole who would wife to make the world believe, America to be as barren as a sand plain, that it. commerce was annihilated, that it contained .n th no men either of genius or feiei.ee; mat ihe "chord- refp ed it over the poor ; that ingratitude was BraftAd as exp( if it were the fir ft of virtues: that the government on , Ure the hirelings of a Britifli Ministry ; tha. that pan whom the world confide,* as "-s the pomt of the CQn , ramid of I'atriotifm, Integrity and Pub he V'tue, was a traitor ; that a Jay had been bribed by the kf- yen On" of a hand; and that his illuflnous compeer t,ie the[ great Adams, was an advocate for hereditary Mo- not narchy i What I repeat ought not to be the resentment an( ] of real Americans of a conduit so base and degrading . p a ,* r The most marked detestation. am£rlcan . . ball ■ — "I 'I I IMHI""""" — j mA From the CthneßicHt Gazette- tho EVERY friend to t!te general happincts of j ■ mankind must intercfl himielf, in a greater or lets j ra ci ' decree, in all measures which have so. their objett to c f some ufeful'improvemMtj either as they refpeci j ] : political welfare of society, or the more immediate un y : advantages resulting from important difcovenes in f or f • the ufeful arts. . t0 ' 5 Under the influence of this sentiment, 1 nave - lately attended to a fubjeft which hag become a no! » theme of conf.derable controversy «'ith many not mc only in this but several other States of the Union. c j > The fubjeft to which I refer, is a vote of the Me- Jma • dical Convention of the State of Connefticul, I t [ l( r relative to a new mode of removing paint and \for r inflammations frcm the human fcody, which was ra ; n discovered and introduced into pra&ice by a fellow j .„g if of that focieiy. Being personally acquainted with 1 ne! n that gentleman, I feel the more disposed at this m{ - time to submit a few candid remarks on that sub- J t h, '• je£l to the public, as I am informed that dange- j r Jg roU3 sickness, in one branch of his family, called J p a him loon after his return from Philadelphia to the I 10 remote parts of a neighboring State, to afford me- an ic dical »fijdance to thoff who were dear to lum. j j;, !d Sensible of the importance of this fubjeft, as joU n > it refpefts not only the gentleman whose character J has been wantonly traduced, but also the public, i y» I have endeavored to inform myfelf as to the origin i and cause of that attack; and after an impJitial JU( ft* investigation, I dill am more surprised when I re- |e j iy fleft that such a pub!icati this gentleman's charaftei (hoJld be confideted in j ' s this point of view, is what 1 prtfume neither his 'ho acquaintance nor a candid public will be willing to | r "He acknowledge. If his refpeciabiiity in his profeflion i h'« can be eftimateil by his ihare the practice of I Ito physic, by the number of (Indents whom he has 1 uld taught the theory of medicine,, or by the promo I lion his brethren of the faculty liave conferred up- I on him, I belioVe we fliall ft.il! meet with difficulty I in determining from what source those epithets I mentioned above originated. Has he not, on every I occasion, for neaily twenty yeari past, when the I t, physicians of the county of Windham to which he t belongs, have convened to make appointments of | f N " delegates or officers for former afiemblies of Doe- 1 ,j n g tors, teeeived from his brethren some promotion ? to Ever since the ettablilhmeut of the present me fap- dical society of this (late, has be not beeh invari hing ably appointed a reprelentative from. Windham y> 1 county, to the several conventions? Has he no{ ' been repeatedly their firft representative, and even j' ]at this time is he not their chairman ? TUofe per- ; h ave sons who will tioublc thcmfelves to afeertain the have tr\ith of facts will find those queftious answered in thus the. affirmative. Whence then flows that torrent 0 be of abuse, which is aimed withfo much fo.ee at the tendered pa.t, t!® reputation of that gentleman, t'the * ara unw '"' n ß believe that so rcfpeftable a bo augh a ® convention ought to le, could be :aufe influenced by interested motives, pr others not'fo 1 not honorable as to convert their records into a repofi pafs, tory of spleen and malevolence, and make their fee ret ary the public organ of private (lander. ut > l hat falfe reprelentations, or some particular i!t it! c ' rcumaanc « E might exist which (hould cauK the tales paffingand puhhfoing such a vote, is possible. And blifti- vet that a vote, of that importance, (houlj be pilb helllifted to the world, without the moll mature delibe inies, ration, seems to be incompatible with that ftabih ty which would well become an honourable inftitu ullot f"®" » a "d in my opiuion, may derogate from the [nmi- her records m3y have on a candid and en fen- lightened publick. It is said that this vote wai arage the result of party, and obtained through the ex- Ame- eTtions of one er two individuals. By one of them whose that a motion was made that the discoverer (hould bH* 1 k* imraeiiiatc ly e *pclled the Society i ' ot * meßl ber from Windham County was at I field t^le ' r or any one person acquainted in the lence, ' degree, with the practice from candid cxperi lurer, ments. 1 lrer Of course there was so possibility of obtaining 1 go- any jest statement of the real importance-os the discover y' aa djhe accused person being absent, and x er * Having not the lead information that this ungene :s and rou ' cabal was #atrying on against him at this junc ture, afforded a fair opportunity for his enemies, to lfeiiG- all edge charges agaiali him, as falfe as they were enjoy-j base. At thsir meeting in OSober lad, that gen- "■ tleman openly introduced the fuljea of Uisdifctfy--' ry before the convention, and the piaftice bti,.g (1 r To new and exttaordioary a nature, he* was »psi> ted to deliver a le&ure on tha'. at the en'.a. ing meeting, with which appointment, he V?.s himUf affared me, he fhowW have complied, !«i not unavoidable engagements defaced V n ?t P,,!. ladelphia unii! after the society h*d Lu; that society instead of waiting for insecure, of even affording him an opportunity of defending hi; practice, by giving them fpeornens of its eSi acy. have stigmatize, thus ung-eneroufly, :: his absence, not only his pra&ice, but his c'haraftej in the inoft opprobrious and abulive term?. Wit it r e fpe£t to the otefuhvefs of this discovery, Ida not expedt that my adept ions will have much influence on the public lentiment, but if prefer may it ascertain its merits,'are adopted, the public will be convinced of its ultimate importance, a have gi-. 'ven it a candid trial, have relied on faftt, and nave, ihereby fatfsfied myfelf as to its efficacy. It will not raise the dead nor turn icd hair black, but wiii and has, to my pertain knowledge, removed many pains in a furpi ifing manner, which have for years baffled the efforts of medecine. ll'hen the wqrld •will divejl them/elves of their prejudices, and be infor mid as to the mode of operation by calling on the au thor of the discovery, and feeing his experinier.ts, or the written testimonies of many refpeftablc cha racters in the United States, they wilt thSn bs able to determine, as to its merits. In coufequenee of th!s cxtiaordinary vote, many unhappy proceedings mull unavoidably take place, 1 for as the Convention have dir4&ed their Secretary to cite any member of their Society before the.v. at ' their next meeting, and give reasons, why be fttould 1 not be expelled the Society, for even using the 1 meatjs ;no iuconftderable number rtitift be arraign* • ed before that medical tribunal, and hazard the flig * ma of a difgraceful expulsion J Several memberl of > the Society, I ana informed, notwithstanding that forh dden uatc have turned lh»ir 3tte»rtiai>-to deut. 5 mine the real importanee of the pra&ice, and b - " fnp convinced of its efficacy, have through an ea> 1 tie It desire, of furnidiing themselves with every ! means, which could render them ufeftil to '■ their profeffion, become purchasers of the patent " rights, and are now iicentiouily removing human pains at the hazard of the awful drfpleafure of e that inquifitionaltribunal. When their dreadful fiat ! * arrives, it'is hoped the world will not, with the me dical convention, consider them as the refufe aid 18 outcasts of society, but take pity on their doom,' -.d : f elteem them as the unhappy vidtims of unwarram* ■» able duplicity and their own unfortunate cretlul ty. B But not to trifle or treat this fubjeft with levity or unfairnefs, at which *bfer»ance 1 have ftriftty yjm ed in thecourfe of these remarks, I earne.fily hope it may be considered by the Public ot i..fficier,t im portance to claim a candid and impattial attent< jti ; ' e and that it may not like manyvvery important dif ;o coveries, which have been introduced in the times at of ignorance and fuperilition, be raftly condemned, '% but treated with that candour whifch becoeies an D * enlightened people, in an age of fcrenfic improve «• pent. A« OBSERVER e f IT. B. It is prefurned tha.t the Printers, vtio u have publiflied the vote of the medicil convention, will have the candour to give the above a p!at:t t» c their papers. es _ 1 y Windham County, j4uj. 16, 1796. en " WE the fubferiberi certify, that from a variety '5" of cases, which iirtve occurred, not only in our at own pra&ice, but in that of our neighbouring pity- [ n ficians, we are fully convinced of the uti 1 cf 113 Dodtor Perkins's patent metallic inilrumcnu, :u t0 removing various pains, spasms and inflammatory on affections from the human body, and that the dif -0 covety is of importance to the healing art. 138 • JOSEPH BAKER, ~) FEILOWS 10 * JONATHAN HALL, I orm jP" * ELISHA LORD, f MEDJCA* u > * JOHN BREWSTER, J contention. ets THOMAS HUBBARD, Lr y Member of the Medical Society, the * Doffors Biker, HjII, Lord and Brcwfter, with he the author of the metallic discovery, are the five repre of fentitives from Windham county t» the Conneflicut oc- Medical Convention. , ,n ? Doctor JAJLEB DYXR. ne- Member of the Medical Society of the Start of ari Connecticut, and Surgeon to the 21 ft Regt. am I CERTIFY, that for leven years past 1 have no{ been'troubled with almost a cunftant rheumaticpa-i ven in my »cft (houlder. For the two last vears it has >er- gradually iocreafed till it became" very dil'.rclßng» tbe and has been at #ided with a ftiffnefi to such a de 3in gree that 1 could not raise myhand to the'iop ot en t my head without gieat difficulty. On or about the the 18th of Jnne Lft, I myfelf operated or my )an , (houlder, when it was in extreme pain, with Dr. bo- Perkins's patent trailers—The pain, to mj threat 1 be futprife, wholly left me within fix minutes, a.-J tfo my (houldet; was soon freed from its former :ti&- )ofi- oeft, so that I could move that aim and th'juiiltf heir with the fame ease that I could the other. T ; ( pain ha? but o: ce returned, and then very Hgnt'jr, ular in consequence of severe cxercife: it was immerii the ately removed by applying the tra&ors. find 1 further certify* (hat 1 have been affliftet! wiiH pijh- a pain in my head for twenty" years pad. It libe- usually come on in the fore part of the day, w.l bill- continued tea or twelve houts. Has often bera titu- very distressing. Abx>ut the time cf the above the operation, I applied 'hi* "7 1 en- when in severe pain. I was in a few minutes ca&di wa» and the pain has not yet returned. Fot three yea™ r ex. before this operation, I do not think I have been hem three weeks at a time free from this corrjphin'. — ould I'rom what 1 have experienced, and heard, of lne efficacy of Doctor Perkins's inftnjfnente, I dec sl s at not but they will prove of great utility to mankind -1 the JAREB DYER, Phynciw. peri Canterbury, /lugujl 11, 1796.' ining -^ or by the fubicribers, f .L in PENN-STREET, , 130 Quarter Ciiefts fr«th Hyson.Tea ;) 'an 100 ditto do. Freih Souchong Tea; ?? ne ' 300 Boxes China, containing fmail tea filtts jaac- pieces; ;e, to pieces Baadsnoef. were fVikingp Ss 3 Trancu gen- January ie ' £ li!