Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, October 06, 1796, Image 3

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    Philadelphia, r
THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 6, 1796.
Citizen Adet, Minifler from the Republic of France
to tljc Uni ted States, returned to this city on Monday lift
from Boston.
On Sunday last a young mtn, a native and citizen of
New-Jerfery, was called on by one of t)le city constables
to affi'l in apprehending a negro who had robbed his maf
tt-r and ran away. The negro declared his intention to
murder the man who should attempt to take him, and
inftautly difchafged a muflcet, heavily loaded, and lodged
the contents in the young man's leg, which is so severely
wounded, I.hat it is teurecl an amputation mult take place, t (
The villain was, after considerable difficulty, secured and ,
committed to jail.
At in elfcSlion held at the City Hall on Monday the '
t 3d inft. for Truflees and Treasurer of the Mutual As- '
lurance company, for injuring houses from' lofn by fire, 1
s the following gentlemen were duly eletted, to wit : t
Truflees, ;
Matthew Clarkfon, William Richards, f
Isaac Jones, Jol)n Morrell,
Thomas Ewing, Robert Wharton,
John Knight, Godfrey Haga,
James Read, Daniel Smith. c
Thomas Allibone, Cftfpar W. Morris,
George Wefcott, t
Treasurer, ( a
Joseph Sims. t
JOHN JENNINGS, Clerk. v
A T a meeting of a large number of the citizens of
the county ol Philadelphia, fonvened by public notice n
on the 4th of October, at the town-house in the Nor- a
j thern Liberties, for the purpoieof nominating a proper I
person as Governorot the Hate, a-Reprefentative in the p
Congress of the United States, a Senator and Reprefen-- ti
tatives sol - the State L giflature, it was agreed to sup-
port the following ticket—
Governor. „
Thomas Xiifilin.
Congress.
Blair M'Cler.achan.
Sennter. 0
John Pearfon, Delaware County. a
AJfemhly. al
Richard Tittermary.
Isaac Worrell, tl
. Michael Leib, £
Manuel Eyre,
William Linnard, *
George Logan.
Pijblifhed by order of the Meeting, 31
JOHN BROWNE, N. L. Chairman.
JAMES ROLPH, Secretary. at
Mr. Fenno, g!
I accidentally came acrofsthe following- among bj
some eld English letters ;by the date, it wai writ- an
ten many years fmce.
To the Rev. Doflor Moobr.
P , May 4, 1764. ge
Sir, fifl
In the course of the current year, adiuated by qu
motives I trull confident with the principles of u- tai
niveifal benevolence, 1 fubferibed to a colle&ion Bi
which was made for defraying the expence attend of
ing the repaiis of your Parish Church. The Society J«
were pleaied to accept of my fubferjption, and it cri,
is g"-eot pleasure 1 observe, that the building Jo
is, in a tair way of appearing in it» o< igiunl fyhmgorr -ttn
It is well known that long before the circumflance off
of the fubfeription took place, I proposed offering arj
my services to reprcfent the ccunty in the next wii
Parliament : but, as it may be insinuated, that his
iiuifter motives have a&uatcd me in my small do- un;
nation toyour society, I have torequeft; that none tw
of the membeis thereof would consider themselves gif
under the fmalled obligation, on this account, to ma
give me their fuffrage, I had rather lose my e- ter
ledion than your society (hould forfeit the character vai
of Independhnt FREEMENTor that my i4onor ley
and generosity fhduld be impeached, by affoid- tha
ing the remotest cause of imputation on cither. I Gr
hare also to request that you would make the con- thr
tents of this lcttej extensively known. bifl
ex(
Mr. Fenno, nif
Please to publish the following article from of
theAuroia, with the remarks annexed.
Yours, C. wh
AN ELECTION ANECDOTE. is t
A certain great Merchant having some business [
to tranfafi with John Swanwick, the present evii
Member of Congress from this City, and candidate app
for the fame llation at the approaching election, not
took the liberty to represent to the member, that afid
he was injuring his pecuniary intered by the part
he had takc.i in politics. John Swanwick re- r
plied, " that he would rather facrifice his |fhole dar
fortune than abandon his principles." The great yes'
merchant having related this occurrence and dated offii
the reply, which does so much honor to the firm- qui
ness and patriotism of the little member, concluded as i
by emphatically alking his auditors, " whether such aftc
■ man was fit to represent the city of Philadelphia," feiv
What an opinion must the merchant (who in jus- tow
tice to the American character, it Ihould be dated, cba
is a foreigner) have had of the citizens of Philadel- he 1
phia, when he supposed that so praise worthy ade led,
•votion to principle in the member lefTened his claim not
f on the approbation of his fellow citizens ; and how,.thei
indelibly doe« the merchant's observation, mark his H
head and heart with the stamp of folly and depravity thei
If the above is true, it is so partially only. What
Mr. Swanwick's principles are, remains to be known. I
, It is.however, well known what those of his support
ers are; and if Mr. Swanwick's arc the fame, they /
are hortile to the Constitution of thei 'United States, and
to the peace-and prosperity of the people—the u- upo
rion of the dates, and the republican maxim, that tinu
the majority ought tQ govern. Mr. Baclie would Lo\
ehligliten his readers refpedling Mr. Swanwick's
principles by re-publi(hing from your paper of last
Evening, thepiece figned —A Pennsylvania!*. we,
■■■■■ii n 1 mor
BY THIS DAY'S MAIL. Ci*
reafi
ALBANY, September 23. opin
More Counterfeit Money.
i Yclterdr.y a person was taken tip in this city, and
<x;:mi. td befoie Mr. Recorder Taylor, on a charge
ot having knowingly palled a Counterfeit 40 dollar, prefi
hill of the bank of the U«ited States. Several >
counterfeit bills were found upon him. He is com- J
mitted to goal. s
, ran e NEW-YORKT oaober s.
"loft We hear from Duchess county, that on the 2d I
of last month, about II o'clock at night, the houfc I
and (lore of Robert Johndon, esquire, of Carmel-1
en of 'own, was consumed by fire, with a considerable I
tables pioperty. The lofsisfaidto be edimated at 7col. I I
mas- ' ' J J
oa Prom late London Papers.
, and I 1
>dged LONDON, July 28.
erely Yesterday the five Sepoys and three Lascars, who I ]
1 and i Came ° Ver '". the frum Bengal, and who e
weie, some lime fincc, shewn to the king bv Mr. j a
Dundas, at Wimbledon, attended at St. James's c
j the a P elitio "> Paying to be feut home by an f
1 As- ear 'y *hip- Mr. Dundas read their petition, which v
fire, wa * g ia '>tcd, and every sttention ordered to be paid d
t ; to their comfort. 1 hefe men were in the king's J t
presence chamber, as the company pasTed to aRd I o
from the levee, by whom they wer' much noticed. I I
General Jourdan's army marched againd the I c
Auftriang in seven of which confided J a
of 10,000 men.
.The extravagant luxury displayed at Vienna, by [ u
the marquis del Campo Danchania, the Spauifh Ii
ambassador, is the objedl there of general atten- | d
tion. The firft bill of exchange that he received w
'• was for 500,000 Auttrian florins. His sovereign 'I
sos ' laS j°' w ''h him for secretary of legation, aI fc
>tioe ma " who long in that quality at Versailles it
\for- at ar ' s > known for his attachment to lal
, per French politics. But his majesty under the present a
, the political circumdances has thought it prudent not fa
en . to receive him ; he has therefore been tefufed, like Ita
U P baroti Engelftrom, ambaflador from Sweden, and Ipi
for the fame reasons. s;, ai
TRIAL OF THE BISHOP OF BANGOR, h
AND OTHERS, FOR A RIOT. ta
_On|luefday morning about 9 o'clock, the trial v<
of the bishop of Bangor, and others, indicted for cs
an aliault and riot, commenced at the Shrewsbury is
assizes, before Mr. Justice Heath. di
Mr, Adam was brought down from London by I te
the profccutor, and Mr. Erflcine by the defendants. n<
Each of these gentlemen, it it supposed, were paid j th
4 or 500 guineas as a fee. te
The indi&ment had been preferred and found [ vii
at Conway, and was moved by a writ of certiorari, J nc
to be tried at the aflizes for the county of Salop, I m
at Shrewsbury. ■ j f r(
Before fix i*'cJock in the morning, the court be- J 1:1
gan to fill, aßd at half pad seven it was crowded J th
ng by all the neighboring gentry, who were very Iha
'it- anxious to hear this extraordinary trial.
Mr. Ellis opened the pleadings. J wl
The indidtment set forth, that Samuel Grindley, j ce<
gentleman, is aeputy regifler of the episcopal cod- I frc
fiftoVial court of the bishop of Bangor, in contt- Iwl
by quen'e of which he has a right to occupying a cer- J th'
u- tain office room adjoining the cathedral church' of j eel
on Bangui, called the rcgiftcr office, for the purpose Jof
id- of tranfafiiug the business of the said office ; that Iwi
ty J«hn Warren, lord bishop of Bangor, Hugh Ow- jmr
it en, John Roberts, John Williams and Thomas jow
ig Jones, being evil disposed pcrAm*,- -p? of di. Iwh
,T - "-"'tili.g kjiiimtl Lrriri'cHey ;n the exe-.utiol) of liia j raT
ce offiae of deputy-regifler, did, on the Bth of Janu- am
ig aiy la It, moled a'nd diduib the peace of the kmg, J 1101
xt with :he view of removing the said »rindlcy from re f
at his office, by force «f arms. For this purpose they j bui
0- united themselves with persons, to the number ol the
ne two hundred, who broke and entered the said re- I fen
es fitter office, where they remained for an hour, llt
to making great noise and didurbar.ee, and greatly j be!
e- terrifying the said Samuel Grindley, and his fer- jfo
er vant, apd did make an assault on the said Grind I eve
>r ley, whom they did violently beat and wound, so |by
d- that his life was despaired of, faying, that the said tail
I Grindley did unlawfully afTume the said office, and I Eu
n- threatened at the fame tim«, his life ; that the said cot
bifhop.of Bangor, &c. dirrcd up the multitude to Ik
expel the said Giindlcy from his office, to the ma- his
nifeft didutbance of ti»<r kiifg's peace, the danger afli
m of breeding a riot and fpillitig much blood. too
Ihe indiflment contained several other counts, we
which were mere fpecifications of law. The above the
is the whole substance of the indi&ment. dar
f> [Here follows some pleadings, examination of are
n evidence, &c. tut Mr. Erfkine's speech docs not t,ha
le appear—the novelty of the has induced us to vey
u, notice it—we (hall cite only Thomas's evidence, '
at afid the veroift, which was, not guilty.] rop
rt JOHN PHOMAS, fivorn. land
f- Ihe bishop entsred the office in a great paflion, |be
le damping his feet,faying, "fine work, fine work 1" I tre:
yes, said Grindley, fine work in breaking open my of
d office. \ our office I said the bishop ; you mud and
'■ quit it. Ihe bishop then went towards Grindley, ton
d as if he had a mind to collar him. The bishop unii
h afterwards grappled Roberts, one of Griridley's imp
feivants,'by the collar, and attempted to pudi him mai
towards the door. Roberts, chaplain to the bishop, Frt
1, challenged Grindley out to fight, but Giindley said
1- he would meet him another time. y The bishop cal- An
" led > " turnthem out, turn them out." He did tiv<
ti not hear the bilhop fay, the public records were moi
w there, and they mud not remain in improper hands
is The jury consulted about ten minutes, and gave tha
y their verdict that all the defendants were net guilty. Ist
July 30. trfl
( ABRIDGEMENT can
'• Of the STATE or POLITICS, - 0 f
TOR THIS HESK. ta b|
) Affairs have certainly taken a most fcrious turn. Get
1, and the war may be said to draw towards an issue hea
upon the continent. If the torrent ot fueeefs con- moi
t tinucs with the French atmies upon the \jpper and liev
d Lower Rhine we (hall soon tremble for * the
The very Heart of Germany. ons
1 / /" Ita'y der;
we, have never despaired of feeing things afTume a ger
more favourable afpeft ; and though we have still to v
to record events that the bulk of mankind will in
title as successes on the part of France, we fee no and
reason to depart from our early hapes and original I
opinion. The violation of the neutrality of hen
Tufcany, pre |
1 /tnd the fsrcihle Entrance of a French Garrifan at
■ _ Leghorn, whe
r. present, indeed, a fpe£Ucl« which it is difficult to froE
- - ■ » - * •• +V ;
eral look upon, uthout feeling the return of all those
sm- pitied and ja<rd fentifnents, v. i'.h which we have
long behel*} tiat people trampling, with irrpuaity,
upon the lav* and liberties of nation). But if it
is to he coused as advantage, and estimated as fuc- :
2d fucccfs, weisave a very serious protest against that I
use mode of co lidering it. In the firft place, their I
lei- views of t
llumhr of Brttifa Property, i
oh have been diappointed .n aimoii the "whole, by the <
wisdom and of thi'meafures adopted and t
executed byihr ;
FaHory and the Fket. ;
ho In the next,their aimies have been Hill more weak- f
ho ered and dlprrfed.—And laltly, the resentment t
lr. and hatred ps all Italy, have been redoubled and
9*B confirmed. The Brftifr fleet, however, js expelled
an from the 'pott of' Leghorn, and our commerce, a«
eh well as our military lupphes, has been diflurbed and ]
lid diminished in the Mediterranean. If this state of f
;'s things is supposed to be lalting, if the eftablilhment v
Rd of its conquerors is to be esteemed permanent in L
d. Italy, no doubt this acqtiiiition is of the gteatelt f
he coniequence to France, and of serious detriment t
ed and prejudice to Great-Blitain. ']
It becomes necefiary, however, as often as any a
jy usurpation of territory is effected by arms, to con- .f
fh fider its advantages under two very different and a
n- points of view—and perhaps under a third, v
;d which is the-complicatcd r'efalt of the two others, n
tn Theufesof any conqneft during war, are very dif
a ferent from tta final benefit .which is to arise frotn
es it, fuppofingit to remain with the acquirer in peace
to able jioffeffioD at the close of it. In war, to seize
nt a fortrefs or a bairen rock, is often decisive of its
at fate, or at loft prodpdtive of the great eft advan
ce tages; but the occupation of the most fertile and
rd populous territory, which in peace would enrich
and fttengthen the conqueror, is frequently even ®
I, hurtful in war, from the force it requires to main-
tain it ; or can only be eltimated as a negative ad
al vantage in the inconvenience arddiliiefs it may oc
>r cafion the enemy. When ihe robbery, however,
•y is made from a weak and neutral power, in whose
difficulties and calamities the conqueror has no in
y tereft whatever, even this negative advantage is ®
s. nothing ; ahd it can only be considered Amply, whe-
d ther the uses he derives from it, 'more.than coun
terbalance the inconvenience of extending and di
d viding his armies. That the French in Italy can-
i, not, without extreme hazard and imprudcnce, thus °
), multiply themfelve* upon every point, is evident
from the necefiity they have experienced of with-
■- forces from the siege of Mantua into
d the Milanese, and another retreat, of which we
y have already taken notice, '
The hopes, however, of the impel ialifts in Italy, '
which do not only redouble with these circHtnftan- ®
, ces, but with the frefh armies they have received
- from the Rhine, are dearly bought with the danger ®
- which that frontier of the empire has incurred from ')
- the withdrawing of so powerful a force, •■and so ne
f ceflary to its own defence aud security. The armies
: of the emperor, outnumbeied and outflanked (not
t withstanding that heroic valour which gilds the
- morning of every combat with success, and yields ai
s only tothe perfeveranceof atiscks & the frelh troops ' c
■- whi.:h the enemy produce in fcrccJEuj) rticfc ai- ''
> inics, we Cay, nave d"HTy"a~ choice of difficulties, " J
and even of lofies ; for it is there where they can- u
, not he, that.the fuperioiity of force secures to the
i republicans thole successes which they call cwnqueils, (t
but which are in fftdt, furrenderi of places, which
the Aultrians are obliged to facrifice for the de- 111
fence of others, which they eHeem more important.
It is the eternal shame of the court of Prussia to at
behold (from a base a jealous policy) these armies,
so dear and so revered in Europe, struggling with
every difficulty, worn down by fatigue, outweighed
1 by the mass of an enemy they always conquer in de
tail, by giving lessons of valour and geneiofiiy to g
Europe, which she is unworthy to rtceive, and too
corrupted to imitate. Does this sovereign forget -
Ik is I German ? or will he reft upofi his arms till
his own turn comes of fubje&ion and insult, and
assume the defence of the common cause when it is
too late, when it i; tfefperate? Upon this fubjett
we ?rc obliged to leprefs ourselves ; the sagacity, Ei
the ientimentt of our readers will leave us in no
danger of becoming obfeure; and besides, there ~
are,men whose very name involves and exprefles ah Oi
t,hat the bitterness of invective and satire can c»n
vey.
This however appears to be the true policy of Eu
rope at this fatal crisis, to'determine i t any price, j;
and with a/iy facrifice, this court to be virtaoui, to St.
be patriotic, to be German 5 to put an end to that on
treachery which admits the French to the conquest tai
of its country j to that disloyalty, to that obsolete '
,and untimely fpiiit of fail ion which the lad iilep- 1 i",
tors as Bradenbourg could scarce have maintained fir
under the fame danger and prefluie, under the fame mi
impending rdin of the common country of all Gcr- j wi
mans.
Frankfurt ha: fallen, and Mentz. it onct more threat- ha
tned ly the Enemy. ■ of
Are there no arguments, no inducements, no mo- va
tives more powerful and persuasive, no interetts nc
more dear and valuable to J '
Frederic the Third, ' n 'j
than a tolerated crown and a dependant authority ? lar
Is there a vile and malignant fatisfedlion in the dif Col
tress and danger of the Chief of the Empire, wKich VCI
can counterbalance or extinguish all fear, all sense W "
of his own ? Is the calamity of a rival more accep- Ro
table than the commbn advaatage ? the conqucft of an.
Germany less dreaded than the prdfperity of its the
head ? We are obliged to contain ourselves once ai "
more, but still we shall be understood ; and we be thc
iieve our readtrs will agree with us when we state Lo'
the motives we have for p.efling these confiderati- daj
ons upon the public with more than our usual mo- thc
deration. It is because there is an immediate dan- & iv
ger of the Enpcror being forced by thc numbers
to which he his nothing to eppofe, into an —
Immediate Peace
and into what'a Peace ? \
It is not btcaufe we entertain any serious appre- %
henfions from being left alone in this war, that we vw
press the neoeflity of once more engaging 0 f
The slrmi of the King of Prujfia ; be I
who have isheady derived thc greatest advantages
from thc oppafitioit the French have met with on
'
iofe i the continent ; and if it were to eeafe before these
ave thoughts can be printed, we have been placed in a
ity, situation in which it is difficult to eonceive bow we
f it can be injured or even attacked by that nation. But
uc- it is important to the peace, independence, and li
hat bertics of Europe, that %he Continental refinance
leit should be protrafied till France her con
quefta as she has abandoned her principles. Other
wise there is no alternative, that we are able tp dif
the cover, to prevent its final lubjedtion, and overthrow,
ind but the equal partition of power between France
and England : to this the continent will mediately
and eventually belong entirely ; while, to tfiat will
iK- fall the monopoly of the world's commerce, and '
rnt the unqualified sovereignty of the seas.
,nd •
led COWES, Julv 27.
as The America, captain Woodward, from the
nd Isle of France, arrived here this day. She failej
of from St. Helena on the firft of Jijnt, in company
'nt with the Standard rran of war, and 13 homeward
in bound lndiamen, besides country (hips, in all 25
elt fail, and parted with them two days after they left
:nt that place, and touched at the island of Ascension,
The Rodnev, Minerva, and as.other had
ny arrived at St. Helena ftom the Cape two days be
in- fore the fleet failed, and brought intelligence that
nd all was quiet there. Captain Woodward left a home
d, ward-bound fleet off Sciily, under convoy of two
rs. men of war.
if.
>m " '»■ kiiiw hiMn 11 — ■
:e- GAZETTE OF THE UNITED STATES MARINE LIST,
ze ■
its PHILADELPHIA, Oftobcr 6.
Ki
nd
ch . ARRIVED. Days,
en Ship Eliza, Barrowdale, Bourdeaux, 6^
ig Eliza, Yardfly, vHamburg, 6o
- Mary, Jemmeny, Brefl,
,c- Mary, Every, Bordeaux,
:r, The Arethufe, Cook, arrived at CoWes, from
,fe Philadelphia, tnd failed for Amfteidam July 27.
n- 03" Ihe letter bag of the ship Auroia, captain
Suter, for Covves, will be taken from the poft-of.
c . lice this afternoon, the 6th inft. at 5 o'clock,
n- Norfolk, September 29.
li. Yeflerday arrived the ship Charles Carter, Capt.
n- rom London ; she left the Downs the ift
us August, but brings no late newt,
Ql \i /r 1 1 r • tx Boston, September 27.
h . Vefiels left in Demarara, by Capt. Hatch, of the
to . brig Lucy.
Ship Aurora, Brantes, Baltimore.
Brigs.—Friendftiip. Milliken, Poitland } Olive,
y. Tap ra| , Boston: Reb«cca, Jones, Por;fmouth";
n . Bpfton Packet, Prentice, Bolton,
sd e Schooners.-Betsey, P ce le, Salem , Columbus,
cr Smith, Wifcaffet ; Fanny, Cumber, Bolton ; Pol
m Z' ' een,a . l, » ditto; Clarissa, Moulton, Old York •
e _ Hawk, Nicholfon, Plymouth j. Cate, Sangef, n!
cs London. °
'* vrj • , NewburV-Port, Sept. 29.
le Tuesday arrived here sloop Nancy, Capt. Sew-
f rd ' ' 8 da >' B from - Bermuda. Spoke, lat. 41,
p8 ong. 67, 20, the Lynx British ILop of war, V
«* ?"!""? fguad.oH. Spi-ke brnr
Sj Atlantic,, of C 010.,, 3 days horn Portland, bound
Grcndda - Lchat Bermuda, bng
le . ftcr Brown, New-York. Off Bermuda, 4 ,h Sep
•> "™, bcr » m " wlth j" heavy gale, wa, difmalled, loft
i w
6; The fltip Mary, Samuel Swett, matter, of New.
5 tffi. " I*"°°'« ° f
a ßß ,ved: Yo "' oa ° u ' D "- 1
„ * Mary, Tabor, Fa,al .ad Sr. C»r g ° ? £'
ft mini 11 ■■
5 '.for s7Z7,
3 FT,. f le S ant fi ay Hotfe,
-I Fifteen hands hiijh, four vmt« r»i,4
Enquire at No. r ° und -
Oitober 6.
0 , .*»
•e "
1. 0» Wcd'i'Jday evening, the tub infi. at ? a ,
' //y«? LoJfc'e-Hoiife y
Will be Sold by Public Auction.
AtARGE elegant, and well ftMiVd thrc-
HOUSE, (the late refidenct of Gen. Waiter
0 3tewart,|' with a L.ot of Ground thereunto
, t on the Weft fide of Th.rd-ftfeet, near
ft !^ ,n e in 3» f«t, and in depth 100 feet to ,n
e | leading into Union-street. The House is 3a f ee t frlT
.IHd s ° fcct de^P ' the fev cral rooms contained jn it ai ' '
commodious and compleatly finiihed j the two
d firft stories are each tnirteen feet hiVh • therV
P mahogany doors in the house, a geemetnc.d stair-ease
with mahogany rail., and a good fcy-light ■ t h r ti! i
!!" « llir ' Which ," -uUJSei?is '
' f n: i 811 OVen, ' lewho) " and a fcrvanti
*i nf a h nd , larSe W ' ne CCI W Owning tne kitchen, in front
|of which is an area in which is a pump, t |' L ?
vaulted Communicating w.th the said building 'U a
s neat, three-story Brick HOUSE, on the North fide 0 £
Jnton ltreet, contaißing 20 feet front ly Jo ieet
the louver .part of which is at present occupied as ato P '
mg-lioufe, and the upper part divided into wdl
1 large chambers: this Koule, may, at a imall exp.ni" b
convertcd into a convenient, dwell.,,v: the hrre, T'
, ver y- handsome, and the iront and back ha™ V ? "
\v.ndo>v-fliuttcrs. Adjoinine- the laiJ •»' f ycnetiau
e upon the Io L belonging to the firlt are' !"V° at< £ hol,fe » .
- Rooms, e ie g likewlfe ve?y H l,',g
---f and Stables, finiflled equal (or 4 w
5 the city, on a lot, containing on Union-ltre«", I
c and in depth on the Weft, fide of the laid alley ,
there are good cellars under the whole ol the hi , f
and a Wine Room over a part of the Stal lr •, 1 U S»
: Loft over the remainder. -Tpplved not. "
. days will be taken for one half of the purchafc ""
. the remainder on like notes at fix months f»
. given on ihe premifa until 'he whole is '°
. 40«. f °- otman * Auia,
— ' dtiath
be sent to sea at a small cx ? encc. For 7
; oa 6 Gurney Ss 5 Smith.
' dtf.