✓ UIV. FAN'iHEON, And fUCJCETTs's A WPHrt-lIEATRE, for Eq'aeftriaji and Stage performances, Corner ot ' Chefnut and Sixth streets THIS EVENING, Saturday, November 5, 1 Mr. Ricketts refpeiflfully informs the public, that in order to make the amusements of the Pantheon as plealing a? pofljblei he has engifjen forr.e eminent per formers' from Aftley's jinphitheatce and the royal circus, London, one of ~vhom, Majler Franklin, o years old, Will perform several jPleafing Feats in Hort'emanfhip. "To which will be added, a Comie Ballet Dance, un der the direflion of Mr. During, called The Two Huntlmen ; Or, Ihe Death of the Bear. Gillot, Mr. Durang Cul'6, Mr. Sully Liwycr, Mr. Su ly Country Girl, Mrs. Tompkins Mrs. Durang. To conclude with a Pas De Trots. Eqiiestrian Exercises. In particular, for this night, IMr. Ricketts will go thro' the Manual Exercise, on horseback, , (The horse in fuil speed) Drefled a3 an American Officer. With other performances by the reft of the company too tedious for insertion. And, by particular desire, (for this right only) The splendid and favorite Pantomime of Don Joan ; Or, The Libertine Deftxoyed. Under the of Mr. Sully. In the courfeof the Pantomime will be introduced the favorite song of « WHITHER MY LOVE," By Miss Robinson. Sale by Au&ion. To be fold on Saturday evening the sth of November, at 7 o'clock, P. M. at the Merchants' Coffee House. TWO three story brick honfei with convenient kitchens north fide of Marktt,between Seventh andEighth-ftreets, each house with the priviledge of an alley is 16 I-i feet front ; the lot is 150 in depth » One two story brick house in Za*e-ftreet, commonly called Sugar alley, jfhe house is 16 1-1 fe«t front, on said alley, with a good kitchen ; the lot is go feet in djpth. One vaca.it lot,adjoining the said house, in Zane-ftreet, 16 i-i feet front, and 90 fe«t-dotp ; at the end of 90 feet the said lot widens 33 feet, and runs back of the Marke' , street lots 111 feet. 33 feet wide. One two story jriek house and kitchen in Zane-flieet; 16 1-2 feet front; the lot 45 feet in depth. 45 acres of excellent meadow land in Greenwich, which wtll he fold either by small pafcels or 11 acre lots. 50 tons of excellent upland hay. Enquire of HENRY SECKEL, , * GEORGE COOPFR, HENRY SHE \FF, -ABRAHAM WILT, or OAob«r 19. T7 ' w Auctioneer. Wm. Holdernesse, No. 76, HIGH-STREET, Has received by the late arrivals, A IVell Selected Assortment of Silk Mercery, Linen Drapery, and Haberdashery Goods, Which he will fell, wholesale and retail, an the very lowed ferms j Amongjl which ire Some elegant 4-4 arid 7-8 Chintzes and Cottons, new patterns Diyo Foi'niture ditto Ditto Dimity Tamboured, Book, and Jaconet Muslins Ditto in Gold anri Silver Ditto Neckcloths, very fine Mantuas of the firft quality Silk and Cotton Hosiery Umbrellas of the firft quality, afTorted Jrifh Linens, very fine, ar.d Table Linen» Marfeillcs and Cotton Counterpanes Rose Blankets aflbrted—See. <3cc. 06lober a 6. d ' 'OLD London Particular Madeira Wine, In pipes, hoglheads and quarter-caflcs, L»nding this day at Chefnut-ftreet Wharf, and . for fa!e by 1 Joseph Anthony & Co. j Nov. 1. d Befl Boston & Nova-Scotia Mackarel, Excellent Halifax Salmon in bbls. 47 bbla. prime Coffee, ' Bed Boston Beef, 1 Codfifh in hds. I Spermaceti Candles, ' Spermaceti, and 1 _, _ Northern J OIL.. , Mould and dipt, tallow candles, of a superior 1 qtftli'y. ' < A Few boxes excellent brown soap, 1 6 Pales of Corks. i /.o Pipes excellent Lisbon Wine. 1 A few sacks of Feathers. J A few bales India Muslins. , FOR SALE BT t JOSEPH ANTHONY, h Co. « Oflober 31. Cbrfnut-llrett. r Pnaes in th. above Lottery are exchanged for tickew warranted undrawn fa 3. tti 4 te % The following judicious and candid analylis of it t( A Defence of the American Constitutions, by John Adams," is earnestly recommended to the considera tion of the Eledlors, generally. it ~ < For the GAZETTE of the Unitfd States. j1 SHORT VINDICATION OF Mr. Ad • ns's " .Defence of America;, Constitutions." There never wis r rary work so much »- talked of, I'd so lit til" this part of the Union, as Mr 4< - of our Conjlilu t'tortt.— Lcl.-imk' r.d men judge of v a merits ami >t» 4vfe&* b'» a •envierate pcrufal. Let every in (low ■ trie ctoce Ik- pafies sentence—is 1 jud To \niri iviflieut the conjtn jii im i. «.!• j- V, >i any man lhall, without having, f ei- ' eoutjfirtination ot this work, a.id of'tou the charaSer ot on& of the eartieft and moll ironui men of our revolution ! Let the man of harity refumc his in estimable principle—and hefore he condemns such ll a tharafter, read the work. As far as I am capable of judging, the follow ing appears to my 'mind, a (hort outline of his main do&rine, in tRe " Defence of our Constitu tions''—He calls his work a defence of our free governments and it 19 so. These governments were censured by a M. Turgot,of France, because they had a.legislature of two branches—and an ii;de pendent executive. He charged upon those who formed them, too servile an imitation of the En glish constitution. Mr. Adams had heard ef ihe | le intended views of-a faction in Maflachufetts to in troduce monfienr Turcot's theory there ; —to abo lilh their separate executive, and their senate—and wrote this hook, Vol. I, to prevent this anarchy. _ Before he finifhed his volume an infurre&nn had a£tuallj taken place tn Maflachufetts, (1786) the objetft ef v»hich was to establish one supreme body at to govern the Hate. The anarchists were then, as they have since been throughout the Union, de ns frated. In orderto vindicate the established repub ts, lican forms of three branches, each branch having ct a negative, Mr. Adams was led to review the, fe ,l veral governments in Europe, wherein the people .id had any (hate. He and every man in America knew that we not only imitated the parts of the et > English government which were proper to be a dopted here, to wit, a feparatiotv of the different power* of government into three branches, the t; complete independence of the judiciary ; —a bill of rights ; —the haieas corpus, arid the inettimable *» trial by jury; but alio continued in France the Cs - English (latutes-that had been heretofore adopted, and the common law of England. These princi ples of public policy were adopted at thefametime that wc wifely reeded the name, and political cha racter, of a king ; —a hereditary senate or nobi- I'tv : and a bench of biftops —The Enelilh »o - vernment wa, ai and ha(! ten for ages, the only one in. Europe wherein the people had a (hare, and in which was to be found the principle that we had aSually adopted, vis. iS, e di vision of the powers of government into the one— people, with a Negative on each—His work was r particularly 3 'defence «f the principal outlines of the government of this slate, where we have a go w v ernor a senate, elofled for five years by eledtors —and a house of delegate., chosen by the people immediately. In the vindication of f„»h a political form, and ot such imitations and adoptions from the Englifo government and civil system, Mr. Adams was u»der a neceffi-y.f vindicating the Englifl, gove.nme.K, as tar as it bore a companfon with any at that time in Europe. Wherever his companfon takes pl ie between that and those conations which he was then defending, we alway., in every instance, _ hnd that he 18 exulnsgly in f a v or of the free confti. tutions of America, and adjudges the palm of glo ry to them no: because they are called republics : . ' * Pame the most tyrannical gUvern men's at thu day in Europe ; but because ths fieo- 1 pU weredually foreign and free ;_becaufe they < ch«fe their own governors, re J. , fenttt,vc, annually ; and because there were no here■ 1 r y honors, titles, offices er diJlinSiont ; and the < powers of government were catefujly divided.— >1 Vid. I vol. 95 6. No where doe, he even inGnuate, that we .ught J nohi ? H a l y , firft m, e iftratts > or kings, or 1 5 J" H ,'f wi,ole bt>ok «'•» written for the pur . pose of luardmg againjl a state of thi.g,, w Lh i might give birth to such charter, in slates ! !nd d r e ent r " lto lhc histor y of cvernments, vKf,d t Pe 'rV " RftitUC " t ft/itics «f every c ir vil,fed and wealthy society. He fh»w, ,he daLer ■ .* , tree government becoming arifocratical h„ pointing sut this truth, that ia every fo.ietv, which L'JtV f: .J'Zf, '. c ' ""qv* ! 't'es of condition— fotne rieh feme 1 indigent; some famous, others obfeure • that some ; ngh" " .Key in r ob h ' and other governßeat,, where ihefe mutual checks ff and balances of power did not cxift. The Enirlirti constitution, in theory, has certain checks, which n z monarchy, have certainly raa de it one of t U ti ,! vfz [Tine E ::n ? ut iu checks and baiant «. ; "e. ?IXIS Mr ; Ada - a It 1 ' [; ,7 "J* /,h ma S\ft rat es hereditary •hZ great prcpn.ty. Can language be aore expli,,V» p Heth,nk3 anygovern.ent wiihout our checks a ,) * J1 ''■ • • ' ! one free republic. The -attire and qa.ii;>y ■»■ • ( arcby be would populate (if fuel: « , ° used) into a chief raagiftrate, like a president o. t e ,B United States, with a veto; hut obftrves, he would . •a- have him deßbe.—And that he is a friend to fre quent and popular elections, fee page 311 39* ( to this mngillrate, he would give the executtvipewr. . Thus it is jiven in one unrivalled federal ccnftttvtion. Again, he° would cVec-k tMs firit magiltrate— the 1 monarchy feauite or quality, and the rtprefcnlatrjes, ' the democratic part, by the aristocratic quality of . society, in a senate Here he differs from the Bntifh 1 *' euiogift, because he would not have this senate a he reditary body. Again, he would have the third :h branch of government a house of delegates, imrr.e-. 1 lie diatelychofen by the people, to check the natural u- aristocracy, and the executive. He defends the free < of governments of his country in so doing ; & proud ,l. ]y exults in the fuperioiity of her forms, over those es of every country, inckidittg_tbe constitution of Eng ut land. 11, This appears, to my mind, the principal outline of of his work. Those among my young country- 1 na men, whose education deft ines them to learned re ur fle&ipn, and probably to public ftatioiu will find, 1 n- in this work, a clue to guide both to political know :h ledge, and to the pra&ice of virtuous sentiment : they will find, too, that this learned and able llatef w- man, no where fabftitutes an audacious phihfphy, 119 in,the placf of religion■ u- I appeal to federal men—is not tTiis attack on ee the work of the man whom the federal party, lc more believe that Mr. Adams bad the conversation, 1 ca afTerted with Paine, than Ido the stroke of politics '• he that was propagated, so industriously, about two i 1. years since, by a member of congress, viz. that ' nt Mr. Adams had said, among a few fenatora, in the ' he senate-chamber, that our government would never lill do, till we had an hereditary firft magistrate, and ' >le senate. This story, 011 inquiry, turned out to be ' he a falfehood, or a gross mistake, " flock and block d, It is not to be wondered at, that those writers, ci- who have so long oppofrd and vilified the conjlitulioti, ne which is the checked and balanced government that ' 1a- Mr. Adams- so much admires; and the President, ' si- together with his measures of government, which o are perpetually abused by Bache, (as they were by i or hi« ptedeceffor, Freneau, who, while he was one of ' »le Mr. Jefferfon's canJUentiaLclerks, was the editor of he one of the moll virulent and antifederal papers in the * li- union, the National Gazette) it is not furprifir.g ' — that those writers,.and men of the fame complec- ' tiaii fhopld Daw auy—.,..ihfrrt- ' si ITJppporters ot our prefect incftimable constitution ! as Are they not the fame meu who have kept this of countiy on the veige of war for three years past ? 0- and who have uniformly opposed and vilified every ' >rs measure which the President adopted to avoid war? « lie Arc they not the fame men who lately oppofeH the treaty ? Look at them—hear their names—»(k , id their party !—You will know themjo be the fame si (h men, with unchanged minds, and unaltered views. C er The only pieces I hive seen against Mr. Adam's. a it, are two—the one alluded to in the Tclegraphe, and !t some references to Mr. book, in a late Bal es timore paper, {Tid to be taken from a Bolton hand- ~ ie bill. The references are either designedly or unin. e, tentionaijy inaccurate, or mifnndtrflocd by him who 1- made tbem. It is to be lamented, that great na il- tion, ir| the moment of exerting one of the proud- fa ; ell and'molt splendid of its rights— a nation thatde- _ 1- lerves, from its moral excellence, long to enjoy this J- unexampled excrcife of y« sovereignty, the eledlion y , ot ,ts c h 'ef magistrate, ft >uld be insulted in the \\ f- moment of its eiioiee, by the wantonnefs of malice I;. f- or the taunts of the fediiious. Let us /how the' m ie world of kings, that the freemen of America de- dl ierve this happy exemption from arbitrary rule " And let 1 manly h. d elevated contempt of all elec- ft, •r would not be browbeaten by foreign power, are th . " n ° t f , t " be drce ' vc,i «jol.d by domettic tricksters, I f I r' Whcu their „,obe w i. moa nobly exerted UNION 'nf 1, Ealtern Shpre, Maryland, ' i- 26th Oj • » B) LONDON, September 25. The lord chancellor yesterday had the king's or* I lt deri to prepare a commifiion for afiembling both J t) house* of parliament on Ttiefday next. h The fubferibers to the second loan this day made y good their payment of 151. per cent, on the whole of that capital at the bank. jf On VVednefday earl Macartney kifled the king's j le hand on being appointed governor of the Cape-of* t Good-Hope j as did Sylyefter Douglas, Esq. ca being appointed deputy-governor. T Ob TUESDAY EVENING, the Bth inih "? Will be Sold, dt the Merchant't ~ \ The Schooner Lucy, H ?" ow ] >" n S at Cbefnut-flreet wharf; a fine, (tout ' buiit vefiel, one hundred and sixteen tons burthen; in every refpei Wharton. It will he better described by drafts and pans of the ground, and buildings, to be teen at JOHN' V. 11.- COCKVs compting house, on the prersifes, and of whom particnlars of sale may be obtained. The whole will be fold together, or detached a« may bell suit the purchaser. Nov. j _5_ " " No. 153. D'rftrift of Pennsylvania, to wit- ■ BE it remembered, that on the twenty-fourth day of September, in the twenty-firft year of the independente of the United States of America, William Cothf" of the said diftricl hath deposited in this office the Title of a Book, the right %vhcreof he claims as proprietor, m the words following, to wit. " The Political Censor, or Review of the mod " refling political occurrence! relative to the UriitedStates "of America—By Peter Porcupine"—ln conformity 1 the A3 of the Congress of the United States, intitule" , "An A