Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, September 06, 1796, Image 2

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    If
WANTED,
1 A STORE and Cellar or Comptilig house and' Cellar.
-Z"a. for the Wholesale and Dry Good business. iir. tjuire
at No. I 29 ArcK-ftreet.
Fc/r Sal: at the above place, \
joo Boxes Window Glass, 8 by 10, 7 by 9, &c. .
500 Cream Cheeses in the best order, imported from
\ Holland, and entitled to drawback. Enquire of 1
Peter Borger,
Aug. 16 %
aawsyr I '
_ No - '39-.
Dijtrift of Pennjyfaania to tvit <
BE it remembered that on the nineteenth Day of July <
in the twenty-firll Year of the Independence of the United ,
States of Ameiica Thomas Dobfon of the said Diftridt
hath deposited in this Office the Title of a Book the Right
whereof he claims as Proprietor in the words following '
to wit ». <
" Sele&ae c veteriTeftamento Hiftoriae or fele<st Pafla- <
<c ges from the old-Testament. To which is added an (
alphabetical Vocabulary or Dictionary of the words
,c contained in this Book wherein the Primitives of com
" pound and derivative words are minutely traced and 1
" the Irregularities of anomalous Nouns and Verbs are 1
l< particularly mentioned—For the use of those who aie
entering on the Study of theGreck and Latin Languages. ,
" Quo citius, quo facilius, eo melius.
By James Hardie A. M. Teacher of the Greek and '
" Latin Languages"— 4
in conformity to the a6t of the CoMgrefs of th<? United
States intituled, "An A<st for thje Encouragement of
Learning by securing the Copies of Maps Chart* and <
Books to the Authors and Proprietors ©f such Copies
• during the times therein mentioned.
Samuel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylv.
No. 140.
Diflrifl of Pennflvania to wit
BE it rememb.red that or "the 19th day of July in the
twenty-firft ycar of the Independence of the United States
®f America, Tnomas Dobfon of the laiddiftriit hath de- *
■pofitcd in this office the title of a Book the right whereof t
he claims as proprietor in the words following to wit >
" Unitarianifm explained and defended in a discourse
•' delivered ii the church of the Univerfalifts at Fhiladel
" P h ,' a 1 79 6 - B y Joieph Priestley, L.L. D. F. R. S. &c. '
" That they might know thee the only true God and 1
" Jesus Christ whom thou haft sent. John XVIJ. 3. 1
so us there is but one God the Father of whem are c
«' all things. 1 Cor. VIII. 6. t
By evil report and good report as deceivers and yet
V true ; . I Cor. VI. 8.
in conformity to the a& of the Congress of the United 0
States intituled "An AA for the encouragement of learn- t
ing by securing the copies of maps charts and books to v
the authors and proprietors of such copies during the *,
tunes therein mentioned."
Samuel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylvi
No. 141. •<
DiftriH of Pennsylvania to wit *'
BE it remembered that on the 19th Day of July in the
the twenty-firft of the independence of the United
States of America Thomas Dobfon of the said diftrift t'
hath deposited in this office th« title of a Book the right ,i
■whereof he claims as proprietor in the words following
t« wit 6 g
" Discourses relating to the evidences of revealed rcli- fl
' dfl'vered in the church of the Univ-erfaliih at ' "
Philadelphia 1796 and published at the requsft of ma- ti
'"7 °f the hearers. By Joseph.Priestley L. L. D. F. R. n ,
S. _&c. &c.
„" Se re ady always to give an answer to every man that ™
aiketh you a reason of the hope that is in you. S
" » Pet.lß*. 15." c<
in conformity to the aft of the Congress of the United p.
States inutuled «An Ad for the encouragement of Q
learning by securing the copies of maps charts and books q
to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the ,
tnVies therein mentioned • th
Samnel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylv. fa
- — pi
No. 144. ca
Di/lrifi of Pennsylvania to wit w
BE it remembered that on the nineteenth day of Tuly ar
in the twenty-firft year of the Independence of the United n c
States ef America Thomas Dobfon of the said diftriS
hath deposited in this office the title of a Book the right
whereof he claims as proprietor in the words following '*
tow.t , s <j t
■. « Corfiderations on thedodrine bf Phlogiston and the Y
«4ecompofition of Water—By Jofe ? h Priestley, L. L. X
" !>• &c &c.
" Qualem cemmendes etiam atque etiam afpice." tn
. " Horace." ' rl
in con.ermity to ad of the Congress of the United m '
States intituled " An A eft for the encouragement of ot!
learning by securing the copies of Maps Charts and Books br,
to the authors and proprietors of such Copies during the .1
times ther in mentioned " ,n:
Samuel Caldwell, Clk. Dill. Pannfylv. ° n
rot
F 0 R SA L E, p=
A very Valuable Estate, ha
CALLED TW- ITT ENH AM, situate in the tta
townlhip of Upper Derby, and county of Delaware, n -,
y 1-4 miles from Phiiad lphia, and half a mile from the £
new M efterr road: containing i -)o acres of excellent land,
4.! ot which are good watered meadow, 90 of prime wood- tfu
land and the reft arable of the firft quality. There are JOl
on the premifesagood two story brick honre, with 4 rooms of
on a floor, awl cellars under the whole, with a pump-well TV
of excellent water in front} a large frame barn, ftablcs, 0
and other convenient buildings; a smoke-house and stone, S P
fpring-houle; two good apple orchards, and one of peach- nu l
es " .„ olds are allul c| over, except those immediately wa
Tinder tillage, and are so laid out as to have the advantage
of water in each of them, which renders it peculiarly cot
vement for grazing. mc
The situation is pleafantandhealthy, ami from the hieh v
cultivation of the land, the good neighbourhood, and the
vicinity to the city, it is v«ry suitable for a gentleman's
country feat.
The foregoing is part of the edate of Jacob Harman.
deceased, and offered for faie by
Mordecai Lewis,
Ofl. 9. CO.] Surviving Executor.
TO BE SOLD, crii
That Neat and Convenient Housed i u<^
"fTTHEREIN the fnbfcriber now lives. There are foui wai
V V rooms on a floor : the house is ttf o ftorie„ inft
with a good garret above : under tJii whok i, an exce?l- the
ent cellar with a dry well, in -which is a convenient an j
framed chamber for preftrvmg meat, butter, &<. in warm •
weather. Attached to the house is a Stable for three tlor
horses, hay-los , granary, and cariiage-houfc, a wood- j ull
ya-d pavc»! with stone, and a garden with foil of a fine ! Sev
quality. An mdifputable title will be made to the pur. th*
chafer. For farther particulars a rp ly to the fubferiber 1B ! .
Princeton, or. in her abfenee to V homas D. Johnlon Ela
or the rev. Samuel S. Smith. ' he <
ANN WITHERSPOON. to
Princeton, Aug 44. aawtO whi
INFORMATION I c"'
Pfeßt HtSS!" " ' bC """WTO*! W
A'o. 147 Cbefnutf.reet, IQ V.
between Fourth and Filth ftrcets. Also, where Tickets!
may yet be had. Sept. t. eo '•Sni
0- The Sixtwth and Seventeenth Say* drawing it
arrived. 1 . _ :liy.
H ar> From the Wt stern Star.
t uire Mr. Andrews,
THE following Certificate fell into my hands
by accident. But as it purports to be intended for
public benefit, I think the author of it can have no
rom objection to its being publilhed'in the Star. You
are thciefore requeued to publidi it, and you will
' oblige Yours, Candidus.
WII.LIAMSTOWV,- August 22, 1796.
" This eertifies that in frequent c#nverfations
" with the Hon. Thompson J. Skinner, Esq. at the
July « time when Congress were deliberating about ma
nted „ jjj n g appropriations for carrying into effeiS our
" Treaty with Great-Britain, he fully and repelt
ving " edly expressed his sentiments to me, and to
" others in my hearing, in favour of making the
affa- ii neceflary appropriations, and pafltng the necef
ord" " far y awt or l^at purpose.
:om . " I'his I freily certify, an an aft of Judice due
and " from me, and not with any view to interfere in
are «< the approaching ele&ion of a member of Con
-1 aie 11 g re f s from this diftrift any further than certifying
'g cs - it t |)i s f (that the Freemen may on good infor
an(j " mation aft their own" independent sentiments)
" may be so confideied. Ebenszer Fitch,
' te£ i Pre/ident of William College."
tof u 1 hereby certify that the above is a true Copy
p" es "of the original, fubferibed by Mr. 1 itch, and
" which is in my pofieffion,
William Walker."
SPRINGFIELD, Aug*ft 30.
From Gorrefpondenti.
.'.J " WHAT think ye of the treety now?" This
de- question was asked by a writer ir» the Gazette of
reof the United States, and it seems to have roused the
wrath of the Aurora. A paragraphift in the latter,
def W '" 001 a " ow , * iat we are to { h'"k it a very great
matter to have the ports, because, (and is not this
and * vei 7 foolfh reason) we ought to have had them
;. long ago; TJiis argument, if it may be called ar
are gument, Ihews that we ought never to have had '
'• them at all. 1
yet If the war party had ruled the road, we should 1
ted not ave them. They would have had no :
rn- treaty, how then could we have gained them ? By '
;to They said so, ani swore to it. According !
tne to their own story, therefore, (and its strange to '
find any fact accsiding to their story) we owe the 1
poflVflion of the pofis to the treaty.' This makes j
it proper to'pm the question, again and again, Ja- 1
toi'tns, -what think ye of the treaty now ? " 1
the The writer in the Aurora observes, by the by, 1
ted 'hat the British are guilty of of the trea- v
-i(st ty, because they held the polls SIX weeks after '
? ht the tirft of June, when they oughj to have been 1
' ng g l<ren up according to the treaty. Son of. confef- '
sli- 'here we catch you. The Aurora has filled
at mote than an hlindred columns to prove that the
na- treaty was not binding on our government, at lcaft 1
R - not upon the representative branch of it, 'till it l
was fashioned by Mr. Gallatin, Ms. Findley, Mr. f
Swanwick, and all other foreign patriots, who have *
come over to teach us what liberty is, and how to 1
:ed pronounce our mother tongue. The name of 1
>ks Get "S e Wafll ' n g ton . W4tl » the seal of the United °
h« was a bauble that made the instrument nti
thei one thing nor the other, 'till the House had n
said it would do. Be it so, for a moment—Then h
_ pray, Mr. Inconsistency, was the treaty broken be- a
t cause it was Hot fulfilled before it was made ? It t>
was voted in the House on the 30th of April to
ily appropriate money to carry it into effect. It did l '
not Leeome a law, and appear in our gazettes for b
weeks after. Then to fend notice to Detroit wodld v
"g ,a k. e evera ' wc fk'. Then to fettle the manner of n
delivering of the polls would consume more time, p
et t ' l,s 18 a the treaty by the British ! it
L - »his accusation proves clearly that the new doc- »
trine of Mr. Gallatin, refpefting a ft are of the r<
treaty power for the representative branch, is no h
sd more believed in by one party than the other ; si
of otherwise they would not charge the British with
breaking the treaty, while it was their own song ft
that it was nothing, a mere dead letter, depending m
on their voice to call it into life. But who looks fc
_ for consistency from the anarchists. It is like ex- te
pe&ing giapes from th»rns, or figs from thirties.
People addicted to a certain pradtice, should te
have good memories. When a law of Congress to
ie stands in the way of a treaty, said the Gallatin
■ e ' P ar, y> il is necefTary that it should be repealed by fit
d> Congress, otherwjfe the treaty cannot operate. So bi
1- they said and lung, and so to.their disgrace fay the
re Journals of the House. Who believed one word gr
il a " ,his • Sure 'y n( * the Gallatin squadron ex
s, . ver y ™ en who vote(l in this way, voted for the th
e! treaty, although that treaty direAly an- da
j. nuls a law, and although Mr. Goodhue explicitly ve
y warned them of their inconsistency. After this, it ole
;e will be an up-hill draught to maintain that certain ty
men were sincere and acted from principle. No th
h doubt their constituents will stick a pin there. Un
WHITESTOWN, August 16. Ih,
On the evening of the jyth inft. a murder was sr
' C °Tn te a, " thC h ° ufe ° f J° hn Wem P' c - O- so.
neida Castle : an Indian ofthat tribe well known by Ca
the name ot Saucy Nick, is upon very good grounds du
• lu PP°'« d be the perpetrator of this greatest of
,nfor ™ atlon of the murder, upon oath,
Judge VVhtte, without one hours delay, issued his the
I "T*" 1 . for the L a PP of the murderer ; with abl
th h rVV ° 't0 rnake a Ppl«:atio n to me
- the chiefs of the nation, and demand the offender; 100
1 ami we are hapyy in the information, that the na- wii
. '"i vef y teldll y delivered over the accuftd t» the fca
* v ftatC ' 10 be P Unifhcd cur l aws Z
-1 fhtUn Th' " a r° n accoxll P anied the officer to yo.
'' Slhi' * f ? murdered ' wa » a white man, Eg
j and th. .nformahon rece.ved, j«ftifi« a belief h ' ■ %
he was from some part of Long lfl aiK i, on hi "
to the nuhtary tra a, to explore a lot of 171 th
wh,ch he acquired by hi, ferv.ces a, a soldier in the da
revolu.ion-war—his name ia supposed to be He h
>. f» . Mr. Ond,rd.„k rf Un s ' £
! *r. "i P»ift ,t£l 'i-s
Bail
\ J
t
fm . From the Fa&mir's WfEKtV Museum.
" And he fa'td unto vie—what feefl thou ?—
in j s And I said A basket or summer fruit."
I for EN every annual revolution there are certain pe
eno riods, at which men indulge ideas ot afTociation.
sou whence they may derive, either the pleasant or the
will profitable. Thtts, the gradual approach of cheerful
spring, the youth of the year, naturally induces us
to speculate upon the youth of hutnan life ; The
•' naked beughs an'd droppingleaf' of tjhe autumnal tree
l °? S remii'.d us of mortal decay. On the (irft of Janua- I
ry, we pander on the pad, and project tor the su
m tuie :by thecortimand of custom, we i >te thean-
T niverfary of oirr birth, and, by the command of the
(o law, times te ivcep and to laugh weobfeive with reli- 1
the g' ous folejtinities.
V These periodical habits are of peculiar utility,
and deserve to be studiously cherished. 1
j u „ ferious/eflcftion, and communion with one s lelf.
. They fugged at lea to, plans of reformation. "In
0H castle building," as a sagacious philosopher has re- ]
* marked, "no man is a villain." Though our in- \
f or . tended gooddeeds terminate as they begsn.in reverie, (
lts) dill it is better for our thoughts merely to hover f
round the temple of vinue, than to be utterly r
,' f „ stagnant. Among the forcible arguments ingeni f
jpy oufly urged, by the pious advocate for theobferv- /
jn j ance of the sacred day, that is not the lead im- t
preflive, which proves that by going mechanically
> to church we (hall, at length, go religiously theie. t
For these and other reasons, a sermon on the sea- j
sons may be ufeful. Whatever iccalls man from (
low cares v to extended views, whatever rouzts in- tl
sensibility, andexcitesto gratitude, and to love of
u s nature ii surely meritorious. The Lay Preacher, J
t] l( . fmce the commencement of his weekly labors, has
:er fcen, and has attempted to moralize the natural ope- g
eat ' rations of January, of May, and of June. The be- b
his ginning and middle of a favored year have palfed
em in review before him ; but the rich maturity re- b
ar _ mains to be considered, and extolled. Though e ,
, a d curious aud thediflipated of our cities boast of their
expensive exhibitions; though, with rapture, they h;
j],j gather round the tutored quadrupeds of Lawlson, h;
no and of Rickets, still there are "Jights," easily and
gy cheaply to be seen, which are ineomparably more
„g amusing and gorgeous. To the beauteous show <vi
t 0 of the season, men and brethren, you are invited, C
not by the advertifemeht of an adventurer, not by a .'I
tea juggler's devices, but by the voice of natHre. Her il
f a . tickets are inscribed on the green leaf, and the corn
blade, and her spacious amphitheatre is open to you lil
hy t without a fee. All may now, discern in reality, tb
ca . what the prophet saw, in the obfeurity of a vifiou th
tcr " A lajlct ef summer fruit," ripe and plenteous,
. en teilifying the»goodnefs of the year, and crowning it E
' e f. with gladness. ve
led Spring and Summer are periods of expe&ation tli
he The farmer beholds the com fall into the boforo of B
aft the ground, and the young shoots rife, but all is
it uncertainty, till the produce is ga hered into the
Ir. garner. Many an anxious look is cast up to the
ive varying sky, left the farmer and latter rain should
to too scantily, or too copioiifly descend, left the fun he
of (hould too fiercely glow, or mildewing vapours float, ve
ed on vegetation. But, when the grass is dried and ou
ti- secured, when the mellow fruit of the orchards is Ft
ad melting into his casks, and the harvejl moon lights is
O, his reaper to the lad wheat sheas, then is folieitude to
e- appeased, and he, exultingly, exclaims " i have si- tri
It milled."
to The present, is the very period, in which harvest, tai
id that " consummation" so " devoutly to be wished" in
1)r by every husbandman, takes Of those Di- qu
Id vines, who use themselves to preach oecafional fer- th(
of mons, 1 perceive it is the pradticc, to paint, and to be
e. prsife the benefits of ahtf particular year, in which ms
,i its eulogium is composed. But, although of the
c. numerous good days which happy Americans have
i e reckoned, those, which conjpofe the current year
,o have (hone among the fai.eft, yet, it is not the de- in £
• j sign of this discourse to speak only of the fruit baf- kcl
h of the present.season. Our basket, are always an,
,g full ours are those regular alterations of heat and inh
g moisture which beget plenty to the husbandman, the
» for we have " a south land," and « springs of wa- pa,
t- tei., we have the « upper and the netherjprings." tioi
At *" t,m «> America seems a priviledged quar- ed
d ter of the globe " Fruit" ever abounding, fubjeft col
e s e " Wan< l ulllt y m "k S our hap- to ,
n pydiftina.on. I hefe toprcks being slightly con ket
y fidered, the patience of the reader /hall be relieved the
o by the close of the fermoft.
e feiitorical volumes, or system of geo- o'th
d graphy we peruse, we find that mod countries are out
- exposed either to baleful vicissitudes of climate or ni,,
e the capricious violence of tempest, drought or inun- the
i- dation. In the hallowed voW, almost every hca
y v erse, allusive to the naturr.l history of Palestine, i n tan ,
t old time, contains lomer#morial of the irregular!. Sat
II h°' Cafona - A g rfeab ly to modern traveller,, two
0 the inhabitants of many parts of the Ealf, flill f mar , cau .
under the scourge of the elements. In Syria Tain Z
is witnefTed, tor months, and who has not heard of I
the torching sands of Arabia I The Nile the «1 „
■jf f «'tilizer of Epypt, like an ove, f on d parent
f " J * nd faddev: at their long May " °
' . w,; ru "ey regions of happier temperature still
. he journals of their weather ma ke extreme'var,- !
1 ablenefs, and, m many years, their '"baskets offum- Mr
' mer fruit are not high oiled We r i , .
answer, like him i The rains do nL A f j "° aco
the floods come iff such torrents as to'd qU '"
Plain, The gieen corn i« not b'unit hy venical fm»
beams, nor overthrown by a mighty wind The fh "
WdsreguMy y.elcl meat j and, in'our Samaria T
there „no gate, where the ponrefs isfamine , T
Wnen the harveft,of America are ripe for th,
Gckle, the i, completely ours, without h Z' *
duftion. According to Brvbonk, a lazr l or d'
hog eats, what the flavi(h Sicilian n M r a n, u r ls b
derate takes of a Federal Government wring not a
penny from the farmer. Lolling luxury is exciivd
tor its eoach, bul the plough ;,nd the cart go free.
To close the entimeratHi > of our blessings, we
i pe- pluck out full ears, and we * ; uhem in fafety. In
iog, France, the "'dogs of war," have ( trampied the
the vines of Champagne, and weeping Flanders lias ex
rrful changed the tilled for the " tented field." But
sus thanks to our Supreme Guardian—thanks to Wa
rhe shington, and the "peacemakers," we behold the
tree " baskets," the orchards, the vales of " furamer
iua- fruit" and not a single pikt, not a distant gleam of
fu- horrid steel mars the view. Fortunate America,
un- like Israel of old, you " dwell in fafety alone," your
the " heavens drop down dew," and your " fountain
eli- is upon a land of corn."
The LAY PREACHER.
;, y» ===
From late London Papers.
1 What with disputes about Prizes taken on the
rc " High" Seas, and disputes between Men and their
in- Wives, business goes on fwisnmingly at Doctor's
ne > Common.). The encreafe in the lalt ,veri
,vcr fies the eld Proverb : " When a couple are newly
rr 'y married, the firlt month is honey-moon, or fmick
-H' smack ; the second, hither and thither ; the third,
~v" thwick thwack ; and the fourth, the Devil take them
' ra ~ that brought you and me together.
illy Patents.—Among all the Patents in this coun
:ic> try, nothing has more curioiity than a Sign board,
a - in the neighbourhood of Hackney, on which a
om Gentleman proclaims that he deals in Patent Ve«e
tables!
°f ' A ridiculous circumstance lately happened in St.
,cr » James's street. .As Mrs. Burton was crossing, (he
ttooped un !er the head of a coach-horse, the htin
pe- gry animal seized herSt:aw Bonnet, which he eat,
,e " before it could be rcfeued from his javys.
fed Mrs. Piozzi sojourns at a rural cottage in the
■e- beautiful Vale of where {he has just finifli
ke ,ed a Poem, eniitled, " The Sports of the Goats."
eir A certain Gentleman at his nnariiȣe thought he
ey had got a Lamb—but as Mungo fays, " ado44ie
n, has got a Tartar 1"
nd LITERARY .—PARIS,
ire A new Play, entitled, L' Jnterieur des Canutes Re
>w volutionaires, (the laterier of the Revolutionary
d, Committees) was given on the 16th inft. at the
' a .Theatre de la Cite, and received with the mod cn
er thufiallicc btirfts of applause.
rn Four large volumes in Bvo. will shortly be pub
au liftied, which corttain the crimes committed under
y, the four different Legislatures, and efpeciaily under
an the reign of the Convention.
is, Antonelle, Publicola, Poultier,.j»nd all the other
it Editors of the Terrorfft Journals, continue to in-!.; 1
veigh against the Diiedtory, the Members of which
n they state to be man Iters. They (pare none but
of Barras.
is *
INSPRUCK, June 5.
le Yefterda" the following notice wa£ publilhed :
Id " The government informs the public, that the
in head quarters of the Imperial army ate now at Ro
t, veredojand that in confrquence every attention
id ought to be (hewn to that quarter, and towards the
is Frontiers of Tyrol, which join Italy ; and that it
ts is necessary to fend a3 irnrch provisions as poflible
Je to them. The imperial troops still cover t>ic coun
i- tries of Tyrol, and as yet the enemy lias net ap
peared on the frontiers ; therefore the brave and
t, faithful Tyrolian troops ought to hold themlelves
" in readineU to march,-if should re
i- quire it. It is also efi'ential riot to lose light of
r- the Vintfehgan, and the Oberinthal. Arms will
0 be distributed as soon as ttyey arrive, according as it
h may be judged molt convenient.
le
' e LONDON, June 27.
r, We on Saturday mentioned, that on that mern
; ■ ing, two old houses in Houghton ftieet, Clare mar-
C- ket, occupied by several poor famines, fell down,
s and involved in their ruins the major part of their
d inhabitants. About four o'clock in the morning,
1, the watchman was alarmed by the falling of fevetal
1- panes of glass ffom the windows, and, on observa
tion, discovered chasms in both houses* He alarm
- ed the tenants of each ; but, through fotne unac
-1 countable apathy, they could not be prevailed upen
- to move. The landlord, a but'erman in the mar
ket, was applied to, who, in vain, warned them of
1 their danger. About half part eight , both houses
fell ; in one there were sixteen perlons, three in the
other : seven were, in the course of the day, diig
; out dead, Conic of them children, fuffocated, and
r nine aiive, but mifeiably bruised. A woman of
■ the name ps Moore, nearly 70 years of age, was
' heard in some of the lower parts crying (or affif
* ,anc e : her body was not found till about eight oil
- Saturday night, when life had left it. There are
1 two still among the rubbish, which the people are
cautious in removing, dreading they ftiall be buticd
by the fall of the adjoining houses.
In the evening while some workmen were era
ployed in propping the adjoining houses, part of
the wall fell in, and threw down the ladders upon
which they were Itanding. The men were so much
ruilcd by the fall* that they were carried to the
riofpital, in a dangerous state.
July 9.
Mr. WHITBREAD'S WILL.
m r f T c 71 f ? llowi "g ars some of the principal heads of
Mr. Whitbread's will, and of those who are bene
fited by it—
To his fan, Samuel Whitbread, Esq. he hai
equedthed the whole of his freehold estates, toge
t ier with the brewery concern;, except a part t*
dau the wife of Mr. Grey, which was se
cured toher in her marriage iettlement. To his
1 i n fxn'- Jam " Co, don, Esq. to his nephews,
Jacob Whitbread and John Wingate Jennings, EC
quites, he has bequeathed 50001. each ; also 100001.
oeing the amount of tfuee bonds given by Lord
John, his foh-in-law, to whom he left 1000 L
the amount of another bond, also given by him.
1 1 ° Vf: ee hcad ciaks > Mr - Sangiter, Mr. Yel
lowly and Mr. Green, he has left 5001. each, who
arc ajltruftees for the management of the brawery.
.-°, " arm an, his, private clerk, cool. To
»s u. er 100!. apd toe»ery servant throughout lis
concerns, including clerks, domtllics, draymen, and
everj other he hag left a token of tit
\ '