Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, October 26, 1796, Image 2

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    THE PANTHEON, .
C?"*~ And Rjcx&tts's Amphitheatre,
For Equestrian and Stage performances, Corner of
Chethut ant! Sixthftrects.
TIHS EVENING, WEDNESDAY, October a 6,
Will be presented,
A variety ofpleafingEntertainments.
•» HORSEMANSHIP.
Mr. Ricketts will pick up a pin from the ground, i
the liorl'e in full speed. .
And in particular for thi» night, Mr. Ricketts will leap
over a pole ten feet high, the hotfes in full speed.
After which will be presented,
A COMIC DANCE,
By Mr. Durang, who will change from a dwarf three
feet high, to a woman fix feet high. I
Equestrian exercises.
By Mr. Ricketts and Co. ,
And (by dtfire) will be presented for this night) (
The Sports of Newmarket ; ,
Or. The PONEY RACE'S. ]
Ar.d (foi this night only) the whole to "conclude with (
a Pantomime, called, f .'
The TRIUMPH of VIRTUE,
Or, Harlequin everywhere, f
Among other scenery will be represented,
An elegant view of Jl
■-Broadway and the Government-House in Netu-Yori. c
41fo, j
yf grand v'uiv tf the Delaware and Jersey Shore. ,
To commence with the original Overture of f
OSCAR and MALVfNA. f
Harlequin, Mr. Sully. r
Lover Mr. Tompkins.
Pantaloon, Mr. Dura'ng. w
Punch, Mr. Coffie. "
Palliafo, Mr. F. Rickets It
Pfer°) Mr. Spinacuta. I_
Arfel, Mrs. Tompkins. [ r
■And Columbine, Mrs. Spinacuta.
MANDARINS, * '
Meflrs. Griifin, M'llroy, Grant, Sqider, Mills,
Frost, See.
Sailors, Watchiuen, &c. by the reft of the
Company.
In tlit course of the Pantonine, the favorite h
song of
, ICH BIN KIDERLICH.
By Mr. SULLY.
The whole to conclude with the view of a th
Superb Temple, de
AND A m<
DANCE by the Characters. Nt
£3* Days of Performance to be Mosdty, Wednef- an
day, Thursday and Saturday. dc
» The Ladies and Gentlemen w 1;o ferure feats in let!
Ihe day time, are requested to attend punAually at 7, tr ,
as the performances are so at-ranged as to conclude by '
lo o^elock—the doors will open at 6.
£? Box, 7 >. 6d—Pit, 3 s. 9 d. ' do
1 ickets to he had of Mr. Ford, at the ticket office in vv '
Chefnut-ftreet, from ten to three o'clock each day.
tT Silver Tickets, to admit for the season, to be had ! evi
by applying to Mr. B icketts at the Pantheon, or at Oel- l v
lers's Hot!.*. J
' „ __ Ft
FOR SALE, aiii
An elegant HOUSE, No. 78, Walnut
ftreet; ' dcl
1 , W i nCH "%s fe4t fror ' A ' b ? 171 eet witß a
!° I ' 3 / ee ! w ' d <- Hy >»' feet 8 inches ,
l" p ; <™!" ,ot '! back the house owupied by tflc
George Willing, Esq.) The house is completely finifh- Co
bl .'° C T ery rc , pe f l, his JO feet deep, has two val
Xr -' feet, the back one is hei
« feet by 18 i-z feet, a handsome drawing-room, ?!
*4 feet by * 4 feet The roo'ms below, thl draw
uig-room and the chanibei-s adjoining, have mahaganv
doors, and these as well as the rooms above them havl the
a communication with each other. The height in the S' c
r and fecoiid ftot-y is 11 sett, and have ibco cor-
J- 1 r f < ? ,ns U P ftoirs > befidej the garrets, and
which are divided into three rooms,-® good kitchen
wash-house, milk and large ice- S "
. hou fc, a pump 111 the yard, and 4 3 feet 1 i nc h illev
!me HT° F ° Urth - (lr<:ft ' The ce,Urs "e laid with ° f
lime, and floored With two inch ? lank, and'plaftered ihll
The yard is wel paved, and the house is clear of the
KeH ' t -°°T be " S in exp
trie chamber bells ring in the pzrret a* ur«»ii • .1
entry down Hairs, /a e'tie/
except the one next to the drawing room, which ™
U W a lf v riW "' f? " room a »' J two parlours be
ow, marble chimney pieces. The drau lag-room, the
be! V»-- t'-e entry, are
cpe rift'v e." "in the
the back buildings, from the cellar, all the Tn
have large closets, and in ,he cellar is a laV J Ltde'
. rack, a wine store is taken off of the cell,r , a /
bins to hold bottled liouor are mld«T {T'r V /
Joft are as well plailered as anv room In .i, j, r T ns '
Ir.ftort, the house i,rn every refpccfcomnlet I /'ar
«" r
iges, the other ore. Thefmalleft itahl- K Car J'" ° fll
three, and the large.i for foufhoVu •°° m / 0r ln
on Wa!n«t-ftreet by feet, inches dJ' tv' iaBS
ta)e excellent lofts over rhem. The bisildinc-« *'^ 0
and laid .ith lime and t.o-ineh I,e
rem I X '°°- P s" of :I« dear 0 f ground ,£ »
rent, and has the pnvuecfc of an tr t * u , 1 1
kads into Fifth-ftreet. _\Ko a brick ftori , H \
on Fourth-ftreetj bv co feet deer j v ' C V I
filial! expenu- be turned j at a l^at
give immediate pofleffion of. ° re and flablei 1 would conf<
Getrge Veade, does
OA. 2 g. • No * ?8 ' llou t Street. for v\
* " ' dr. Freni
LOS I YESTERDAY T >' ,d
. A Nets of Hand, ' c,a £
c«s J,
No. ios, North Th ; rd Iree- tB ' hl "* bfcrlber »t ent r
— thcil 8
W £?
vance
mimnvxwr
?, 'FREDERICKSBURG, Odober 19.
er of Yfifterday wa» tun over the course near this
a race of four mile heats. The beautiful Virago,
the property of Mr. Taylor, took the parse from
Mr. Page's black herfe, and Mr. Thornton Alex
ander's black colt, without a touch of the whip.
QtS. >f»r the Republican Citizen.
Mr. Mullin,
Nat to your sentiments as a man, but to your
jund, impartiality a» a printer, the author looks for the
insertion of the following :
ea P Last night, as I lay on my bed,
. ' This curious dream came in my head,
That a mod'rate man appeared,
'■ ■ —■ ———and said,
three If Mr. JefFerfon is elected Piclident of the Uni
ted States, all the present ofii;ers of government
will be put out of office. Perhaps Burr vijll fill
the place of Pickering, as secretary of state, and
the 18 virtuous Virginians will canvas for the other
vacant offices. Pinckney will lie recalled from
France, and Mason (that treaty hero) will be fub
ivith ftituted. In J 5 months we will be involved in a ru
inous war, which will terminate in the fall of the
present fabric of gbvernmeut, and a disunion of the
Gates. In the mean time, every Frenchman in
America will become a pensioner. On the other
hand, if Mr. Adams is ele&ed t® that important
ori. office, which he alone is best able to fill, the cili- ;
Zens of America will walk forth to their fields ia
,re ' peace ; there will be no revolution among the pre- i
sent officers of government; laws will 1
be adrainiftered to us; the faee «f the tepublic, i
from Georgia to New-Hampshire, will be clothed
with abundance and peace; the people willbe uni
ted ; our rivers will swell with commerce; our vil
lages in a few years will grow to cities j and our
United Eagle will float thetaoft refpeftable of flags,
in all the ports, rivers and bays in the universe. a
t
Late Foreign Intelligence, d
the B V THI AMERICA, CAPT. EWIHXS. S
: Head quarters of his royal h'lghmfs the Archdule *
Charles ; Zell, near IVurtzburg, Sept. j, 1796.
MY LOR»,
YelWday the" citadel of Wur'txburg capitulated;
the garrison, to the nUtsber of 700 men# surren
dered themfelyes prifoaers »f war. General Bel- T
mont chief of the French artillery, is arnoHg- the
number. 81
A prodigious quantity of stores, of ammunition, f '
rtf. and provisions, lias been found in the town and cita
del ; partly left thereby the Auftiians, partly col.
im leded by requifitton from th* neighbouring cuu«.
Intelligence is received that the enemy has aban
dotied in Schweinfurt, seventy piece 3 of artillery,
•in which he was unable to transport. w
From the reports of the corps in front, there is
lad every reason to believe that the enemy has decided- «
,el - ly quitted the Mfiyn, and direded his retreat to &i
u T a .* The light troops which have b«en sent m
pursuit, continually bring in prisoners & baggage ; tr
and the Peasantry, exafpeiated at the unit's;J of CC
It- outrages of the enemy, has risen in maay pan , » n< i
•deliver up or destroy all the ftraggleta #ho fall into ,
their hands. hj
les 3 r °y 1 h'ghnefs, determined to persevere in
b y the fame line of operations, this j]*y detached Col. r
fe- Count Meerfeldt, with ten'fquadrons of light ca- ,?
wo valry, to form a junction with the garrisons of Man-
1S heim and of Mayence ;by which mesns a corps of
12 or ' J.OOO men will be enabled to ad in the rear
ny °! From the Jftingmfoed abilities of
ve the omccr to whom this enterpiife is entrusted, tlie
he greatett hope* are entertained of its fucceTs.
>r- The army moves this day towards Werthei'm • wi
and the head-quarters will be to-morroiv at RcnSin' g ri
"> gen.
y, B y 'J l6 last accounts received from the other fide mc
th °... i - )anul>e » " appears that general La T our ha,
d . "HI maintained himfelf in front of Munich 2 but ed
of the fucceffe* on this fide had lot then produced the Tl
id expcited effect, of forcing general Moreau to are lo(
•! «lr, ' r , dly - f=CmS P° l{lblc thal fcouki now P'
' venture to delay :t. hes
e _ 1 have the honor to be, See. on
ROBERT AN^TRUTHER,
—: — — 1 ——-Captain 3d. C«a«d. °J
—— -de!
'» T " x *'">f" <I»JVRORy,. f „„ Hml
le papers.
1) in MILAN, September 5. cau
•t ■in rccond iTOf-'lamation addressed to the Tyro- b«
a « ".vites them to confer th«'f" 'S
tpc does not ffiive to ra ,ke conoucfts
■ t Itural bsundaries the Alt beyoud her na. pnn
.» that fte might e y Tv 1 Rh ' ne •' a " d
I r
J TlKrc 'k''
does not appear that peace altha' f'*" . H " wev « r 11 r ,H e
, ill soon be conclE The
French are exorbitant Lehrb' a -J, ? of ,hc n «r<
ciation. K 10 °P ea * nego- y,
■ r r hh " dr ' i - (
»cd to aluck , lie „« T,t"
ent number of French are A' 'a j P fts * A fuffici- Bays,
Wp them in order. They are'rff-■" I T
being fired at with irranc k 'hreateaed with sos n
their duty. Neverthelc' Wur'mfw' 7 fc'U not d° the^
but the great majority of thefT r ,T n °? oubt
him, if he wa , on | y a Wl!1 j 01 " t'ace
vance against the enemy* Gtuation to ad- jpeafa
upon
. w
'• V - . . v • , ,* " ' -r' _ \ .~i »
*
COBLENTZ, Sept. 9. .
j . 6 o'clock in the evening.
The heavy of Jotirdan pafTcs this mo- I
OVVI ?#! mtut through this town. The French troaps are
concentrating in the environs of Wifbaden, wliere
\Px a ? ene,a ' and decilive battle is At lea.t
it is certaiu that thole tioops, wUich wereyeiterday
I! P' posted between Ncuwied, Dierdorf and Hacheu
burgh, advanced this day towards Wifbaden.
The siege of Ehreubreitfteiu is tarried on with
redoubled activity, and for that purpose the French
continue to fend over all kind of ammunition. Lad
night the garrison of the let some rockets
fly, which probably served to inform the Auftrians
of the fituat'ion of the place; the fame day the
French pioneers were harraffed on all points. To- ]
Uni- Jay all is quiet. 1
ment — 1
11(511 MUNCHENAU, September 9. <
and The Austrian general La Tour has again been* j
>ther forced, after a veiy bloody engagement, to fall
from back, and evacuate the fortrefs of Land/hut snd t
sub- his jiofition behind the Ifcr. The French light ]
j ru- troops purfaed him to within a (hart d:ifar»ce «f
the Brattnau, where fie has retreated in order to (top I
■ the the farther progress of the French in Aufttia. O.n
nin this fide the French general Moreau, tvhofe artsy
ther | amounts to 82,000 men, is complete dialler of Bap
tant vafja, and it is generally believed that the" corps of t,
cwi- general Ferino has not only jiaffed tha Inn near p
Is ia Bnrkerfhaufen, and entered Upper Austria, but al- tl
pre- so thatitwo conliderable French corps are advancing o,
will rapidly along the Inn and Ifer to Jnfpruck, which S
>lic, is no more than sixty miles front this-city, ' U
hed J*-, li
iiai- """" «,
vil- Trcrjlatcd for the American Daily Advtrlifer. w
®ur HASSIA, September 6. . • bi
igs, A raeffqngrt- who arrived litre just now brings ths u|
account that the fort of surrendered on th
f—. l be 4th infiv in die morning. The engagement pi
near Warubuig on the 3d, w&3 uncommonly mur
derous. The French firft chief of artillery, and T
general of division, Bellemont, \vas taken piifoncr. m
Tb< English colonel Crawford who was mortally
'ult wounded near An berg, and afterwards taken prifa-
was delivered up at the requetl of the Arch
duke. ' to
IRANKFGRT, September 6. of
Jel- French retreat much quicker towards the
the Lah " 3nti lht Lower than they formerly be
advanced. Franconia is totally evacuated, some few
Qn frontier places excepted. A number of the clerks
: ta ' a °d Secretaries of the different commifiioners have
ol been wounded by the armed Franconian peasants.
" Ycllerday a new hospital was erected in the Com- tra
pollell, betides the great one in the Germanic hotel, 10
where mod all the soldiers bro't there, were fuchas '°
had been wounded by the peasants. Ten peasants
who had either pluHdtied some baggage waggons,
, ncar Afchaffeuburgh, or had been found armed,
;d were (hot here by the French, before the gate of 'T
Safhfei»ftauffcn. " w h
Ttie division of generals KJeber and Lefebvre re- *° r ,
e _ treat by Wetzlar, towards the Lahn, and to Sieg-
J eu—another division of the French is laid ta march V "
ad a p' n l Da . rmlUdt » Grofoerau and Oppenhei'm. In raJ ,
{o this diretShofi, they will 6nd the garrisons of Man.
h*im and Mentz in their way, and they may t;et u , nC
into a bid Ctuation. clui
If the lmperialifts ean advance whh a fufficient P ar
a iorce, it is supposed that the French will not be a-
l " t ° alßtaiß themfclm on the Lahn, as they
of have loft a great deal of ammunition, and have been f,tU
lr °bhged to leave molt all their artillery behind. au
of September 9.
■ Ie ° ur c,, y''""fiw occupied by the Imperia {
lifts, and the Imperial gazette now again decorated 0 f ,
?£uf Ron " n E,slc '"" ,ht p»"- &
" 1 he Fiench left this city at three this
36 r/ mn fl'V V fV 11 ; !f3ft d,f ° rder ' after tav.ng
Jr d pofleffion ot the fame from the time they march
" T£f" «1 -r W ' 7 ' for the f H ace o{ 54 day« 1
le 1 lie Imsi, prnfo,, which remained here la!l night, mot
E . took the following precautions tofecure theii retreat, man
w b P "J T ? a, L e * ° f ,he cit s'' the r f=>wed off the poll!
5 ? h n e M t 'I' 8 " 1 ° n ,hC itMC brid^
over the Mayne they threw the wooden part of the ried
of Jhl 'ftl" U T 1 ' hay Wanted to bl ' Bw U P a part been
L f. ,hc SftQC feu* W.trty L
Sf"Vf,!" T 1U 1 P& ,h£ th«w the troo
key, of jhe gate into the drub. . agai,
" 2 °' do '-' k im the ,
ran I M """J ° f the Kir ™r borfe, his )
termave " with captain de Sehmut- perft
i, Ty whh » 1 k r eni r hufE - r3 ' "teud .he oed I
e fniall Frer'h lavm f* ta ken prifbners a with
: K*
f : ?ar CU i a ' y taval 4 P»®d this to tu
there on lire cth fr^,-f 1 r ' anlle ' l cotllc
the Fiench were cu- off f W'k ' C P achi
" In.the m. fi T' he ,oad t0 I:cr ps
baggag,. wagg on , wcte '4° S
hve, Bt 1 'edburg rive.
marched this day ihroorhTl' ' fh ' S van 3 uard flicnd
iteiii. c »y through this city towards Konig- favoui
/ pa(Tfs.
jNSS^,' w «'"r) s^.,, dJI
ptcr the Frach h,d hr ""
flays. our city lor 62 lias a 0
( The Witterau has fnff-r»j 1 , i,ltcnt
[of general Jourdan's army iflt V"'"' aC<
|the tpidli of the cou-itri' « through fubjec
Uoft 01l tlteir cattle a. /' H l" V|lla ff cs have All er
called S z la » ro » fl y
jpeafanu opposed the Fran h <lrmftadt » the pacba
Ps :<*
• year, of age, t« 9 ethcr, : w>h zj- inhabitants Uft\
** vv 'T r* Vi '^ C ' S ° f Lc 'B c ® trn > Siinifer.fi,,)
,wt \ Panly P lu,;dcred an d parti* burn, /
i- are When the feveul of ChedifWa. of p„r ]
»>e« le« Urmfladt, learned that the retreat of thj
lea;. French wouid be direded through those cart* !
erday they collected to the number of 4,000, undef tfiel
then- command ot M. de Schenk, and waited for the re.
.rearing fiench column in the mountains near Alf
w«h feldt. When the French advanced/ti XffnJ
rench Hood there fjuliy armed in parade. The Fre 1
Lad cavalry astonished drew their fword3, Mr. dc'
icketl than rode up to the French general, and declared'
tr.ans that his army of peasants was 15,000 ft r 6 Be '
r the that they were convened only for the purp B fe „f
lo- pnUt&ng the country from being plundered I
that it was not their intention in the lea ft to m„ ■ \
left the retreat of the French, bat that they were )
. d f te " ninc < J « destroy ,hem all if commenced
beers po.ndenng.tThe French then quietly proceeded.
' ! L ? mon « th .«lPP f nalgenerals who passed through /
S nd these part., inUriuit 0 f the French, wa, p,,4 /
light, Frederick of iDrange. J
stop! FROM THE FRONTIERS OF BAVARIA
n September 7. 9
.ray YtfteUay the imperialjlt. and the corps of the
bn- prince de Conde, were obliged to quit their advan
s of tageous portion on the other tide of the Iter op
near pofite Maachei), in order not to be ou.flankrd bv
t al- the republicans. The latter are aow in poffeffioo
cing oi theifer. In the engagement on the firft 'of
hictJ September, near Gergfenfeldt, the impertalifts had
S im t'r 6 beh,nd fcvera ' clnnon, the French had
- . «ke\vi.e a great many wounded. The day before
yifterday the head-quarters of general Mareati
were already in Wolznach. The ceflation ef arm.
between 13avariit and France is said to be agreed
; th.B upon J it is faiJ to be concluded a» VillenegcH, and
lon the ck&oJ-, betide great requisitions in kihd, is to
lent thirty millions »f ready cast to the republic,
mr- The French are said to have entered Freg&ngen.
and The army of general Moreau consists of °So,oqc>
tier. men.
ally - .
;^a " BILBOA, September iB.
ch- On the 25th inftaut, orders arrived from Madrid
to lay an embargo on all English veffeU-i,, thf»
port 5 but there happened not to be a single vefiel
of that nation at Bilboa at that time. On the
the a neutra l entered this pjort, which had
;rly examined by four frigates and a under
Few colours cruizing off this port.
rlcs "■
ave HAMBURGH, September 16.
,ta. The Erlangen gazette fays, that 8,600 Frencfe
m- tro °P. s » are on their march from Stralburgh, 4c.
, el) to join the army of Jourdan, and that Pichcgru is
ia * to have the command of the army of the Sambre
n(s and Meufe in lieu of the last mentioned general.
n», rc P orte d that in the neighbourhood of "*
:d, We,2 ' acr a vtr y severe engagement took place bei
of tween the French and the ganifou of Mayeuce,
which turned out much to the disadvantage of the
re former.
:g. 'houfand Hungarians have pa(Ted through
ch wa Kgons, proceeding to reinforce genei
raf field raarfta? — -
in- ' ' le 1 ' Saxony, who had 60,000 meo
ret underarms, hid notified the emperor, he had con
cluded a peace with the French, and that Buona
,nt parte was penetrating into Tirol.
a _ A courier from Jourdaa was captured by the
c ,, Auftriar.s with difpatchei for Moreau, relating the
cn situation of the army in consequence of the Aultii
au fuccelfes.
September 17.
a , majeflythe king of Sweden, under the name <
;d of the count de Haga, apd the duke regent, under
a " that of the count de Wafa, arrived at St. Pnerf.
. burg os the 24th of Aujjult last.
" s
CONSTANTINOPLE, August 10. \
— i he Fi-ench ambafiador, M. Vcninac has the -a
moil decided influence ®th the Porte, and is in a \
t. manner looked upon as the director-general of <he \
, e political affairs of the fame. Afttr several late 1
re meetings of the divan, the armaments here are car
le ried on with the greatefl alacrity j and orders have
rt been dispatched- to the pachas in the European and
1 ' Aftallt ffKJ*ii!Ll'£, to ihnr couiiiigents of
e tro<jp». That these preparations are not intended
against the rebels in Romeiia, 13 mott certain. For
1 the chits thereof, Sump, having been beaten, and I
r, his head sent hither, the army is almofl totally dif- |
. perfed ; and the beylerbeg, who hitheito comman
c tied near Adrianople, has received orders to advance.
a with 40,000 meß, towards This
d marth makes a great deal of noise here. TfccFienclt I
e that are here fay publicly, that it is intended by :hi»
s march of the Turki/h troops, to force the emperor
- to make peace with the Freosh, in order that th»
f latter may be enabled to encreafe her matine, and
s to turn all her efforts against England. These cir. I
. cumftance6 have occasioned here the report of an I
approaching rupture with a peaceful neighbour, I
1 whose powei, and the prefervalion tliereof, is per. /
haps of more confequenee for the Porte, than i« I
• commonly supposed. /
In the mean time, the Porte has frefh rebels to I
I contend with, in the interior of the empire. Thlr ft
pacha yf Midden is marched with a considerable t
torps, to take poflcffiun of the citie. of Niffa and B
1 Sophia. l'o the latter, $qoO men have been fent,l
in oider to entrench themfeives.there, until the reitf
ot tlie troops, which iia'vf teen ordered,-fhall arf
rive. The pacha, meanwhile, has a great number of
si iendsin the army, as well ae at court, who fecretlyl
favour hi«n, swd give him icfoimatipH of all that! *
pafi#s. t
1 he pacha of Scutari hat Hkewife raised the ftan. j
dard of rebellion again. A' 'he head of 6000' men, I
he makes all the neighbouring pachas tremble, and }
has a£lually defeated two ot them entirely. His t
intention is to take levenge of the Monten<-grines,
on account of the insults and damages he and his f
ftibjefts have fuffered on several occalions from them. J
Ail enemies that fall into his har.ds are mod barba- '
rotifly murdered. I'he Porte has lent orders to the
Ipacba of Bofuia, nud to all the pachas of Albania,
immediately to put themselves at the head of their
ticops, in order to oppefc the rebelliuus pacha, y