Ao«t' Piibfifi'irg ?y the Printer, Ai Nc. 3J Lartitia Court, delivering to Subscribers, and to be had at the different Rook-Stores in this City, Berritnan & Co's , CHEAP AND ELEGANT EDITION OF The HOLY BIBLE. Containing the Old and Njw Teftamcnts and the Apocrypha, with marginal notes and re erencet An Index ;or an account of the mpft remarkable the r»ld new Teftamrnt, pointing to the place* whfreinthey happened, and to the places of frripture where ?n thev are recorded. — A Table of rime.—l ables of scrip- weight*ao3 coins : with an appendix, contain ing 'he rrierhnd of calculating its measures ®f surfaces hitherto ztenti»gin Treatifcs on this fubjeft. A Table of Offucs and Conditions of men. CONDITIONS *. The fizeof this Fdition will be ■ parted on a beautiful new tyj* * 3 nd good paper, made par ticularly for if. It will br Dublifhed in Numbers, not to c<% eecß go, one of which will delivered wtekly to fubfcrjb ers. at a qu-*r»irr o f a dollar. Those fubfcrib«p who prefer receiving he work complete, willbe attendeOTfc by fignifying the fame on any of the fubfeription papers in rfce Bookltorre in this city. «• Thrre willbe an advance in the price, on (übfLribing after the fir ft of August next. 3 In the courfeof'he Work will be gives an elegant Frontifoiee«—From an Eflgravins; of the celebrated artist, Gkicmon, Berriman & Co. gra'efullv acknowledge the verv liberal encouragement i hev have met with; and h-vereafon to believe that the'f xeeution of *fieir edition will answer every expec tation, and speak its own firaife J a v flaweoM* Lottery and Broker's Office, A o. 64, South Second street: TICKFTS in the Canal Lottery, No, 2, for sale—a Check BOOV for examination—and prizes paid in the late lottery. Check Books kept for examination and r for the City of V'afhington, No. 2, and ParteJbn Lotteries, !>oth of which are now drawing—information where tickets arc to he had, and prizes exehan«#d for undrawn tickets A complex? lift of all the prizes in the 1 • t*: New- Port f cr.p-Whdrf, Ho£l and Public Scho 1 Lottery, for examination. The ( fuhfcr|Hcr foiled the application of the public and his sri n<?s. vho wilb to purchase or fell Bank Stock, 1 Certificates Bills of hxchange or Notes, lioufes, Land*, ( &c. or to obtain money on deposit of property. 1 . Wm. Blackburn. Philadelphia, Augufl 18, <796. • taw Plans of the city of 1 Including the Northern-LipEßTiw and diftridl of I Southwark, , Pnh'ifhed, and fold by BENJAMIN DAVIES, No. 68, High ftrelt, ; ( Price one dollar.) 1 HIS plan is 26 inrhe. square, and has been en gr jved by one of the firfl artiffs !n the city, from a late " and accurate survey. Purchafcrs are entitled to a part)- c phlet with each plan, giving " some account of the 1 city, its population, trade, government, &c. t J"'y '9 tuf&ftf c Letters Patent, [ Granted to the Subfcriher, for the Cure of ' Incurvations and. Dijiortions of the Spine, J an improveMVnt in S'ays and an Apparatus. f VK.RY thing has been flndied to render thi; appliea -J tion faff easy, rffedlual, and ge-erally ufeful, and that if neceff.iry, it may be accompanied with any other mode. ' T he success of the Patentee in the cure of diflortions, from Incurvation' of the Spine, the Wry Neeh, &c in thrs city in Iff rent parts of :fce Unifed State., under the infpeijtion of miintut phyCcians, when ev< ry other mode had failed, wilh it ]s hoped afford the public fuf ficienfr testimony of the utility or this application. / N B. He makes an apparatus for reftonng diflorted ■eet in children—Fandag. *in general —Traff.s of various descriptions, one in partku! Ron a plan entirely new, which in some cases is found -o anHv'er better than any He returns thanks to those medical gi ntlemen in differ ] r ent partsof the United States who h*,ve honored him with their pafroinge and confidence. ! 11 The La-lies are refpecliully in r orme!l, that he has w an ' legant affnrtment ol" St ys and Oor'etsfor Male, which n< willbe altered if necessary, tree of extra charge rt LUNDIN M-KtCHNIE, '6 MW3W t No. 17 ' For iale by the fubicribe'rs, " IN PfcNN-S rk FET, . * 130 quarter Chests frefh Hyson Tea; 100 do. frefh Souchong Tea; 300 Boxes China, containing fpiall tea setts of 42 pieces; 400 pieces Bindanoes. Willings y Francis. fp Tannarv ' itaw. _ tuuljixa cy /•' Ji-L. Iji j ,vNo. do, .toutti Second at Jireet. d. The, Group; « Or, An ELEGANT REPRESENTATION P' ' ILLUSTRATED. lv Embelliflied with a beautiful head of Wl S. VERGES, C. S. w: THE publilher thinks ;t a mark of refpeS, due to a co liberal and enliyhtened public, to inform them that m this is the Poem for the publilhing of which he lias beep -r twice dragged from hjs house, and is now laboring under a vexatious prosecution. He is conscious that the piece " xontaiiu nothing either criminal or offenlive, unless ori- D ginal wit, decorated in elegant language, be criminal or lee dlfgufting to the prevalent taste; and, as he trußs that neither of these is the cafe, he submits the work 'to the public with a full aflurance of its meeting with a favora ble reception. lUj He would beg his prosecutors to call to mind (if they »nj have ever read it) the follotvirg apologue-to a well known romance—" A young painter, indulging a vein of plea santry, fcetched a kind of Cmuirfjthn Piut, refpeainga bear, an owl; a monkey, and an als; and to render it more striking, humourou , and moral, distinguished eve- 10 ry ngur'b- some embhm of human life, liruin was at r: and attitude of an old, taothlefs, fqi le owl perched upon the hatVil-: of a , .; '. '- 1 -V ' -de: czi his uofe.feemed to contend* ?'*te a : .i'* ar jj: d the omaanented with a hige " • however, could wnt conceal his long i I ' - picture to monkey, who appeared ,jth he Imp rei _s of painting. This ■wiimfualgroup the foa i i rt' ,md met with general approbation, - r * 1 ■ w 'ag hinted ihawholc was a lam cer, a phyCcian, Snd a member of • ■' ■ an liiliuuitJoD which v,as no ieoner circulat* " began to be alarmed, and even to piv ♦ fitted by the fcveral figures in the the ■ ; Jroup fell upon the painter, who dc- , ed tict h:,i ao design to offence, or to <ha - : : :cui-r pctTons, l hey affirmed, the refemttmt ' ' ''' Jcrkakd,—and their clamours beinp- w » t> * tu'lie, the Captain was a b<ar, the be ::,c Senator an owl, to their dy.ng J„ , .'v. .«;■ !ate Ihould attend the perions who • -v ' u ' v^ c members of this proup, the 1'" J "lhet the justice t« rwnunber that wl " I * «ltf |S t, ers, fOR THE G Z~Of THE UNITED Si ArES. ,t7> MR. Fenno, Some obftrvaUons in yonr paper (!iew an extrem? rettlefsnefs under certain paragraphs of letters frotr England tefpefting the conduct of the H'mfe j r( ._ Reprtfentatives as to the Briiilh treaty. It is t able surprizing no doubt that we do find in laces the EnglilTi prints any threats of war such- as J e . rc " held up as scare-crows to the multitude—but nnthe lain, contrary, applauses of the firmnef6 with which the ■ ces opponents of t!ie treaty infilled that our wrongs 1§ ues should be redrefled before we entered into compadi i with so faithlcf* a government. ,!0, That the oppofers of the treaty in Congress did par- not mean to set it aside is evident to all wh« are im• partial—fiom Mr. Maclay's proposition—which. : e(cf was not to RtjiCTbut to sus?enb the execution ying of the treaty until we h dafluranccs that ourfhips o,n and seamen fhruld be fafe in futifre, and surely the bin;- events °f'he day fully prove the necessity of this, for the treat-'has made q,i change whatever in the gant fla'ecfthe commerce of the United States—our seamen are ft ill heat and infultcd—our ships are ft ill ie , a l taken and condemned, the accumulated lofies o£ ieve which threaten our insurance companies, our banks pec- and all our trading people. ( . But if there be any crime in oppofirfg treaties — when difcufled in the legislative body, what shall we . fay to Peter Porcupine the champion of a certain patty, who declares his firm oppofitiim to another —3 treaty made a number of years ago, of which fpeak -111 -ing he has this fugacious remark. " {5y the treaty J for " roadc between this country and the King of ies, " Fiance, the French na ion is in my opinion no ere •'more illegally of the United States tha" the Chi ..n i pffc a 'e." Is there not an effort heie to set a ' for 'he French treaty in defiance of the -govern- ' merit of the Union, how can this be reconciled by ' >lic the so much famed friends of order, except that a ' ek, treaty is one thing when made with one nation—but lu *> quite a diffe/ent thing when concluded with ano- i ther ? There is however one discovery rbade by your coriefpondent the merit of whiih is all his 1 — own—he fays our feats were not of Britain decla clating war agamft us—but unless she would con- 1 of sent to do usjullice wc miifl have declared war a- ! gainst her. I believe even the Serjeant-Major will ' smile at this—she do usjullice ! Is it justice to take oul- ships with coffee going to AmUerdam %s soon J as soon as they are out of our ports and carry tfeem ,nt P Halifax —Is it jurtice to tie up c«pt. JefTup ite a I I . miferab, y lacerate and mangle the body of our 1 rn- c ' (,^£" —ls it jufttoe to tske our vefiels from the r h e WtX Indies and qu«ry • whether we hive a rigfct to carry fup-sr at all by treaty. Is it justice to * _ change 'he Governor in Bermuda'and retain the in- 1 famous judge. In a word what is the justice Bri- taiis haili heen acruftonicd to admiuifter to usdu a ring the last twenty years, and yet where are tht a > thunder bolts or where the danger they are in of war r from us ? ; a d" OBSERVER. i er J ,s > CONTINUATION OF m . il £ Foreign Intelligence. * Received by the Hamburgh PacL-t, Capt. Clay, from :<1 • Liverpool. lf ? EDINBURGH, June 30. " This day a party of upwards of forty stout fel m t r h lows, lately belonging to the Dytch frigate, bro't into Greevock, marched through this city in their V( Js way to Cha ham barracks, to j .in Colonel French's c' h new regime, t of Caledonian Vangei s. They arc f 0 remarkable wtl ! looking young men, and are said to have been moll of them soldiers under the old p — ; fovti: mtr t. They were enlißed by Capt. Collins, of the a- ;0 bove . orpj, who provided them with a pair of beau- ° tifirl colours. Hi ISLAND OF CEYLON. yo The fertility and beauty of this land is never ly spoken of by 'lie Indians, but in terms of rapture to —they call it the Paradifc of the World • .md the eai d accents called it " Tarmarafin," that is, the gar- co den of pleasure. Its air, pure and falubrions, nei casks a perpetual cheerfulnefs ip the minds of the a < j People, who are called CinglafTcs, a sprightly, aft tve and ingenious race of men ; their peifoue are ge well shaped, and of regular engaging features, fin with complexions inclining to the olive and topper be a colours. The frracefulnefs and urbanity of their to. ' manners, like all other Indians, is proverbial; and ter r if they are not so enlightened as the Europeans, for t it isfiomthe oppression they fuffered under the tlu . Dutch, and not from any natural dtfeft of intal- the r left. The women are exiremcly cleanly, and tho' M; | they cannot boast a fair ccmplexion, like the beau ; ties of our own island, yet the dehciency is well jupphed by such elegance of person, and inl'.iuat- ter , mg address, that it is ifflpoffible not to love them, set I i LEGHORN, June 3. t Intelligence has been received from Toulon, that TI 10 fail of French men of war ate stationed in a line < s at the mouth of that harbor, to watch the Enelifh . squadron still cruiiing oft that/port. < ELSINEUr]" June at. roa ExtraSof a letter. w j( 1 " a i eft y'» "»P Leapder, which with ano. cor ther vefTel had got'on shore for want of a pilot, ar- cen ' r T fa ' C,y "" ,he ,Bth in the evff ning. cur Ihe Lender got off, by si. il (hifting her guns aft, in c and afterwards removing them on board the Ze- wtli Anderfon. The Swan sloop of war arrived yor the lareic evening'. v-' " T uT I" 3 ° f 60 fail ° f merchantmen '« now colleSed, a,Ki they will fail a, f 00 „ as the c (; n wind serves, wb.ch there is every probability will <h c bc Z° n - There are many of the enemy's cruilers den m the Seas; but I hope his Majesty's thipa wr keep a good look out, and that the convoy tim will arrive in fafety. 3 f j " P.ii. The wind b„.w fair, and the convoy - the j i tma mofcetlt getting utider weigh." mm %RF3 F, 7.8. S. Extradof an oficiai letter to the. Miniiler of Ma fine. " The division, commanded by citron Moul- i irne Iton, has taken the English the Royal Oak, ( whdfc cargo conisfte of articles much wanted in ; „f this part." ' I - - t ,S j" DINAN, 20th Prairiai. • , c " e * The Engtilh have made a new attempt iipon the ; ,j 1c coads of Normandy. We are afiufed that they \ t j, e have even landed l ,Bob emigrants at a small dif- j ll>g taticfi from AvrAnches, that troops have been a( n marched to. the pi,.e of debarkation, and that al-. < ready they have had some bloody fkirmifiei On the 191}) they add, that an English squadron v rn . cotnpofed of nine llltps of war of different sizes, d j j, appeared before St. Ma lees, and advanced even to a j on the mouth of the road ; ne\t day it bad moved near v j_ s the gjn-poru of a fort called Lavarde, whicli'de- t t |, e fends the approaches to St. Maloes on the fide of 1, ,; S) Canealle.—(Perlet.) ti f u C r ■ LONDONT Ju'y 2. I Stocks experienced a coniiderable fall yester day, in consequence of the intelligence received ) , is from Germany in the morning ; the moriied men concluding Austrian fueccfTes can have no • other tendency than to prolong the disadvantages we of the war, and render the benefit anJ fclcfiings of pcace more distant than ever. A letter from Berlin o£the 20th u.lt. states, that k the Piufflan troops, who conititute the grcatelt part of the army which is to protest the North of o p have put themselves in motion on the no 16th inft. on their inarch to the Wel'er. The brother of General Buonaparte lately re a connoitring the Citadol of Mantua, was surprised, and nearly carried of by some Croats from the gar- an ■ rifon ; But some French Huflars coming yp, they * rescued him. l|S A General Election has been fometlmes called lo _ the Britilh Saturnalia; it resembles this Roman 1 1 1 feftival in more things than one ; during its con- £ °. tii uance all ranks are levelled, and trie conclusion I renders the equality more permanent by the Arilto- I 3,1 n _ cratic Candidate's estate comingrunder the ham- m ! g mer of the audioneer, and being purchased by some ra ', j|i of his Plebeian Constituents. ' M. Pache, formerly Mayor of Paris, mentioned jn upon the authority of the Minillerial papers as • m having been taken Up in this country turns out to be a M. Le Page from St. ]Doming.o, member of the Conflitue it AfTembly. Upon difcovening the e milliike he was immediately set at liberty. Bu Mr. Gibbon m his History, fays, that the time to waj whe " 'he Pope could trim up all the Parsons in Europe, so as to make every pulpit in Cfiriftcn- pal j. dom res u d with the fame air, like the leader of on u an orcheltra. The time, however, was now puffed der K . away, « like a tale told by an ideot !"—lt is lit*- of ir rally forgotten. anc Wc lay before our readers the last commtinica- c °t tjon from Mr. Barthelemi to the ftatc of Bade, niii dated 15 Prairiai, June 2. ■> pie » " Mighty Lords, pre •' From authentic intelligence it appears, that hi* the army under th«r cornrn&nd of Conde arc oiT tfieir ICTU march towards your frontiers, to refmne thepofi. <Hl< tion they occupied the last campaign. I cannot, P al ° Mighty Lords, refrain from calling your attention ,a > tf. the avowed object of that corps of Emigrants, we and admomfhing you to devise the most effeaual ' means for the maintenance of the neutrality of your territory, and to repel any that may be W« 1 made upon it. ra ' " 1 have reason to believe, that the meafurrs vvh. you have already concert«d with the confederate r.ara btaies for this purpose, together with the rein- 1 forcements composed of the Helvetic contingents. 'cannot fail t<t f the Executive Diicftofy of the 1 ' ;' the utmost confidence in th, moC f"P] tcrupulous observance of the duties as a neutral St. cou " :r y- that " «• You will not I hope, mighty Lords, mistake S the interference of the French government, when Citi in conformity to my inftruftions. 1 again solicit »og your attention refpeaing Coude's army. The on te„c r iy objea i have in view on the present occasion is. Cec ;11 prC J" V < !he of your Canton, and an chac earnelt Jciire to avert ham.voMn co-eltates thole calamities which to me appear the a ' , necelfary confcquence of neglea and the want of den, : a ciear understanding at the present moment. g' ne "1 he proper difpofuions have been made by our C T generals, ad possible precautions taken on the con- com , fines of France 10 repel any aggrefiion that may P^a be made by theenemy, as er traversing your terri.- row i tones, and Aould this band of Emigrants have the A temerity, if despair it/elf fhouid drive them to so I audi forlorn an expedient, as to advance with arms in I eonl their hands to the very Bosom of the French nation he n they cannot by any poffibihty efcapc deftrudion. don May trod preserve ]rcu, See. thefi (Signed J "BARTHELEMI.'V torn. In a few day, after the receipt of the above let- wort ter, M. Ochs, burgumafter of the state of Basle set out for Pans. ' ] ary FRENCH REPUBLIC. men' _. _ STATE PAPER. B The HKHOI M. V.M.MC, upon the delivery wrot " aelh'uk Co ihc Graild &ignior on tht datic ?T^ ighne,S evidence of Ext, the frienrifhip a faithful alliance with the Otto X V amity ? ich or 'B' natcc l i" a wdelyftem since the time of the great Solyman, Y nfirmed by many happy connections for three P°^s cemUHes pats, and mere.fed under imperious cir- 1 cumltances, 1. a genuine national fentimewt, wlrieh I in co,'fequence of the liberty it enjoys at present a wrfl In f utute extend the circle of ir, o p.ration, be yond the narrow limits of a fimpie wilh, by the T f. The French £? WC T B .. in ~ he of all Europe, ccafe inc trench Republic doei not conceal her in .-In 4 clinations and'the lucceisful valour 'whh ' - 1 j?i teoltn»id«, re< „ dcd ,:. ho " p "' ht3 ™ t ' •»» - ; iccar; Ma. o« haPp!M r tW ' R V M ' ,C > ' with the Ottoman Empire, she wishes it m»■ ,) 8 way* be governed by f„, h a Prince as your H 1 ri* °f\ u h •? WU - fhc behold, you wfj *' ed wjfhwifc mimfter, ; wink-in the bloom of life /' in you are only occup.ed i,, affair, of , he hi JJ Jj " poriancc without once I/Siinu -T, c 1 , «f. and glorv of your JJpj * m 3 "\ I »"«J'« h "VaufpWousco»^ uen ; e ,"^- > f^l t ; I * p.-- **«&. R«.i.= u".. ft KfrT «f f""°r " " **« " f * p«ni«u,ls 2st al-. devotion to your iughnefs." i his fpeechand its infwer by the Grand Vist- | ron wa. '"'erprered by Dragomans : and to the f,l n ' • £C3 ' dld ° f M. Vcrninac, «J> e ui-col„ U rcd V to „8 a icarf, and a cl.uier of diamonds in hi s har ear were additional ornaments. The F.e'nM, t. de- that followed the procefiion with shouldered ot landed from frigate, 10, the harbor, were att e Jj 1 through the streets, by military mafic, and went as Env" ' C " U ' l ° f the Sc "S!io with die er- nV " 7 ' red ARMY OFTHE COAST OF THE OCEANF icn p 7/ . no & e * non Verba. Tt-8 Head-Quarters, Rennei, 15 Pvairial of „. . >"* '3~4th year. In hope of defeating effefl of the vigilance lat we exerc > lm P«>l»ig on the good faith which a ,j. eit ma \"f obtainirtjf rather a delay favourable of to his perfidious deigns, or more advantageous he f ond| tion», the individual named-Puifaye, calW. , himlelf commander in chief of the pretended Ca. re- ' C haS mis!e ' b)r '" 3 a * cms to Ge d, r ° l l . ficß,B f of lhe alm y. various i ifijinibcaut , r . and ln »d:ous demands and proportions, te.idi mo ey them , in the eyes of the Goven.men:. ■ lit Commander in Chief, who ias for a long ; J known and difconeerted the atrocious plms 0 f JI( tbisageut of England, warns bis brothers m arms n _ to beon their guaid, and to follow wi h preafion I N jn w ' l,at '3 pointed out to them in the orders of nth o _ and 18th current. He at the fame time recom mends to Ihe/h activity ; and the lite. w ra! execution of Uie mandatejof thc Executive Di rectory, on the fubjed of the disarming of thc in- habitants* u . (Signed) " Xi. HOCHE." 3 f PARIS, July 2. ic Head Quarters at Bologna, June 2? ' Buonaparte, Commander in Chief of the Army is ie Italy, to the Executive Direftorv. )S General Angereau's division, Citizen 1- P alT;d the Po at Borgoforto, on the j6th of June' ,f on the 10th 1 arrived at Modena, whence I sent or' d ders, by A(ljutan«.Geneial Vignole, to the garrilon' f- of the Caiile of Urbino, to lay down their arms, and to surrender themselves prisoners of war. I continued my rout to Bologna, where I arrived at ■, midnight. We found in the Fort of Urbinp 50 pieces of cannon in excellent ordei, 3-00 fufees, and proVisions for 600 men for two mouhs. Fort Ur lt bi«o is in an excellent of defence: it is fur. ; r lotmdcd - bj l_ watlS' _ wctl provided with baftious, a . ditch full of water, and a covered way newly re , paired- Ii was commanded by a Knight of Mai n ta, and the garrifoti consisted of 300 men, whom we have made prisoners, ,1 At Bologna we took the Card ial Legate, with r all the officers of the ftaff, an ; four Itandards. : We have also taken thc Cardinal Legate of F ra, with the commandant o'i the Foit of Fei 8 who is a Knight ef Malta. In the Calico! e rara there are 1,14 pieces of can run 1 . 1 he Artillery we have taken will enable ( form the siege of Mantua. ; The twenty pictures with which Pa ma v ! fj'pply US are sent off. The celebrated pidlu ! J J»l. Jerome is so much elleemed in this cou lhat they off;red us a million for it. bome pictures fronr Modena are also sent ( Citizen Bartliele'mi is at employed in ing a felectiori of thepi£fures at Bologna, t te»ds to take jo of them, imor.g which is th Cecilia, which is laid to be thc chej'cl'ccuvre of chael Angelo. at Pavia, cnoplojhd in enriching our Botanic den, and our Cabinet of Natural History. I gine they will not forget a complete collsfli Serpents, which alone appeared to me fufficii compeniate for the trouble of the journey. pefl they will be at Bologna the day after t» row, where they will also find a plentiful harve At Milan I saw the celebrated Oiiani; ih audience he had of me, he was so confufed th j could not aufwer any question I put to him. 1 he recovered from his afloniftiment, he said,' 1 - don me, but ibis is the lirft time I have be these superb apartments, my eyes are not t»i.< tomed." He was not a'ware that by theft '■ words he uttered a severe criticism on the Arcl duke's Government. 1 hastened to pay hi® his sa lary, and gave him every necessary encourage* ment. By the firft courier, I (hall fend you the letters I wrote to him, the moment i received the recommen dation which you sent me for him. BUONAPARTE. Extract of a letter from Buonaparte, to the Exe cutive Dire&ory. Head-Quarters at Bologna, June \ efterday Maficiia attacked Beaulieu's advanced pods; all which he drove Li, having killed 50 wen and taken 40 prifoneis. I continue to be fatisfied with the difcipli" e of ■he army,as well as with the Geneials. BUONAPARTE. Tranquility is restored to this city. Pillage ha* ccafed. It mult be allowed that it is almolt a miri' ele, for the government were on the point of set* ing a part of those very men, whose duty it is to fupprtfs feJition, join the insurgents. Will peo ple be convinced it length that there can benoade quate fe urity f.>r pioperty in a great town like this the center of all the faftiduf, and of every species of feduftion, until its defence, at lead in part, flicll >be entrulled to ihofe who are molt ioterelicd all attack. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers