Philadelphia, SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER J, 179*- By an arrival at Norfolk from London news is received that Moreau W4B preparing to attack the archduke in his rear. Extradt of a letter from Baltimore, dated Nov. 3- <• This evening, a (hip, after a short pa!pige_from Bristol in England, has arrived here. It is said (he brings news very unfavourable for the French.— The particulars 1 cannot learn ; but it seems they have been beaten in all quarters." At an Eteftian held yefterdsy, at the State-house in this city, for fifteen persons, as Eledtors of a President and Vice President of the United States, , the following tren'Jemen were chosen by the cits- , zens of Philad.-lp! ia, Paflynnk, Moyamenfing, , Blockley, and : 1 Thomas M'Kean John Wht'tehill , Jacob Morgan William Irwin ( James Boyd Abraham Smith j Jonas Hartzell William Brown , Peter Muhlenberg John Piper I Joseph Heifter John Smilie I William M'Clay James Edgar ( James Hanna In the city and townships, the votes were, , For the above ticket, t For the other ticket, " legi. , Majority 645. As a joint meeting of the Council and Aflembly of j New-Jersey, on the 3d instant, the following ap- j pointments were made. c John Rutheifurd, re-eledted Senator of the Uni- j ted States. f Jamts Kinfcy, re-eledted Chief Justice. f Joseph Bloomfield, Major General of the firft di- ; vision of militia, vice Major General Ellis, deceased, Franklin Davenport, Bnjgadier General, vice { . Bloomfield, promoted. c Joseph M'llvaiiie, Clerk of the Pleas and Peace r ef Burlington. r Extrall of a Letter. L 1 anticipate with great pleasure the profpedt of t fucccfs which you inform me attends our eledti f oneering.—What a tcene will open in the new order '> h of things, whicK will undoubtedly take place on the si cledtion of M>". Jefferion to the Pteftdency ! Thf party with whom we have always been at variance, cverfince the terminatian of the war, have but too t] well succeeded in all their machinations—every de- si fedt of tKat equalizing pla~n oPgovernment, the cont !i federation was exaggerated, and every difficulty re- tl fulting from the local prejudices and habits of the V several states was encrcjfed—particularly those of a o: commercial nature were worked up to such a crisis, ci that an explofjon became inevitable— : to these the m paper holders artfully united themselves, who join ing in the cry, produced the famous convention, ar which was to remedy all our evils, by amending the g ( existing form of government : Inllead of which, they produced the present monarchical system. Thf confrqnences rrftrlrr-Tg (torn 11.i3 bnnrfaced" tlfdrpati on, you Und 1 have often deplored. What progtefs has this system made in a few years ! how has it " l underminec the pillars of state sovereignty, by blen ding the interests of the several states, and involving t0 and convulving those of individuals with that fyf- " r tem, in such manner, that there is no small rifqu'c encountered by any one who has hardihood enough to call its infallibility in queftior,. Already do we t0 fee established a colossus, reared in our land in the V(r form of a bank—a moniler, whose w«ight and in- ,r fluence has extended from one end of the continent to the othei—a funding system, of which I will not l! affront your patience by reciting the malignant ten dency—a revenue government, whose ramifications pervade every corner of the union, constituting a phalanx of governmental retainers and expedtanti, as which the bare contemplation of ten years ago, would have filled the mind of every free American with to horror. Turn to the organization ofM he government fee how insulated and detached are its several parts tK from t,he refpedtive states—it appears'like a foreign machine operating in the midlc of them, tndepefl- an dent and irresponsible—and no man can doubt bat the time will come, when the state governments, al ready mere corporations, will be declared so, or pro nounced useless, if not injurious. I (hall not en- do large here, tho' 1 might fill the Pneet with amplifi- of cations—should you now enquire hovv a change is to dil be brought about in consequence of Mr. JefTerfon's 1 fei eledtion, I anlwer—Mr. Jeffcrfon it is well known al( always had feriom objedtions to the nevv cotiftituti- tei on, but, he uniformly opposed, even while in office, I many prominent parts of its administration—he has I objedtions to the funding system £ that however -waj established if I recoiled right, while he was absent L, in France—the bank scheme received his warmed ca! opposition, he always maintained that it was uncon- w ] ftrtuticnal, and (till thinks so. These two form the C o basis of the fabric—thefe null be overturned,'or pa eflentially altered—the bank must be thrown off fl u irom its connexion with the government—left to itfelf itimill decline, and by judicious attacks from time to time, dutrng an adminiftr*tion ot four years, may be completely crippled and overthrown. The' t h, funding system cannot be confidefed in any other w j light than as a system of favou'tifm—this may be, ca | and undoubtedly will be revised, corredled and amen ded—and'the public money more equally diffufed. Justice may be done to original crediters, many of whom, or their heirs still lurvive. I need not di late here on a fubj*dt which we have so often dis cussed, but, the bare contem, lation of the effedts of this fylhftj, in transferring the mass of wealth, from the fouthern_Jto the northern states, will convincc any one, that there ought to be a change—there sol ought to be a re afiion—and a reflux of property cat southward. This may be d©ut ty a rrvifion of the Ef system, and carrying things back to some formei int peiicd. But, what brightens our profpeft moil, is the the confederation that Jeffcrfon is a phflel'itpker—-an en- v»t ihufiaftie admirer ef the principles ef the French Ca 25? revolution ; »rd who vill lay, tTiat things may not 1 be revolutionized in this country to advantage. In the New-England States, t'ley have fomctljing like a religious eftablilhment. Our judicial code is boriowed from the British. We are ta-u much like ( j s that people, in our commercial, mechanical, and fo tjje cial habits. Jeffetfon's sentiments are hostile to all S these ; and (hotild he get into office, the whole tribe of Anglicised Americans, Tories and Yan -1 3 kee/T'from the tirft to the last, goei out. ' •om Who can contemplate the profpeft before hs, without rapture! See what philosophy and equality • has done for Fraw** !In n frw years, every prcj'i- ' he 7 dice has been rooted up, and an order of things has succeeded, little (l'.ort of the gr>(4en age. Jefferfon hatrs the British—He feels 4. personal a and general imipuhy to that nation. Helovesthe " a French—To draw eloft-r the bonds of -amity witft ' the latter, and to widtrn the dilfance between as and 'he former, wiil he a,» olijtin of attention—will n f?> undoubtedly take place. Shiuild an open rupture be r the eonfequence, Britain would soon be emancjpa ted } a revolution there would follow. Their commerce and manufactures reft on an Amtticas foundation, and must fall, rut off from a connexion with us. Britain props the war agaitift Fiance— her commerce supports our funding system, o-.tr banks, our nabobs. War with her, topples all down headlong and then we begin again de novo. A war would bring a crisis that would aecelerate ffce execution of our plans ; but as its chances are uncertain, I do not wish it : our business may and will be done as effe&ually without one. SAYS A CORRESPONDENT, The majority in the city, for the anti-federal tic -0 ket of eleflors, can by no means be considered as 'P" indicative of the permanent strength of the fa&ion opposed to the government; as, amonglt that ma m" jority mull be ranked a far greater number than the c excess amounts to, of true and real federalifts, friends to the prosperity of the country, and who s _in general dettft the fadtion aud their criminal de- F ' figas. Honett an hazard, and unwittingly forward the liberticide de he figos of wicked and atrocious demagogues, hf —— re, A Hamburgh papb a of Belgium might have feited, to oppose the exe- '' e s, cution of the decree, ordering the abolition of the le monasteries and convents in that country. th: *1 o all the faithful Catholics, who live in France of n ' and keep up a connexion with the holy apostolical »»'c ' e See. , th: '' Pius VI. Health and apostolical benedidion. ~ Dearrfl Sent, « i fs > The °® ce of a supreme fpiritusl (hepherd, which '°{ j ( our Lord Ji-susChmst, in his unbounded mercy, * U I has entruftcd to our feeble hands, makes it onr duty to teach all the faithful and particularly those who ' ia f_ fubjfdl to fedachon, and to prevent them • from (offering themselves to be led aft ray by earth- ed Iv wifdi m, finee it is said unto us as it was said un- liu , e to Isaiah'; Call and do not cease to call ; ratfe thy th ' , c voice like a trumpet and announce to my people their UefjMffes. pu )t We should therefore think otirfelves guilty'of a pr< , t fu>, if we did not voluntarily seize every opportuni- b " of ffiewing you the nectffity to be obedient to f,!t the constituted authority. abl J In fact it is recognized in the Catholic religion f "'' ( as a fundamental dodtrine, that the production of d governments is the work of divine wisdom, in order an, to avert anarchy and rebellion, and to prevent the nationsfrom fluctuating like the billows of the sea. Gc This is conlirmed iSySt, Paul/speaking of no par- — p ocular prince but of the fubjeft in general, he fays, n that there is 110 power, but what emmes from God', I. and that oppolition to this power, isoppofition to A 1 [t God himfdf. 1- Dear Sons, Do not fuffer yoarfelves then to be led aftiay ; - do not by a piety give cause to the friends si of innovation to deride the Catholic religion. Yotu 0 difobedieace were a crirre which would not only be s severely puniftied by the powers of the earth, but j n also which is still warfe, fey God himfelf, who thtea i- tens with everlasting damnation, those who are dif •, j obedisnt to t.he constituted authority. ' Dear Sons, J We ex hot t you, therefore, in the name of out ' Lord Jesus Christ, that you may sincerely and earned ly (trivc to prove your submission to those - who govern over you. Your condua ought to r convince them mare and more of this truth, and en ■" gage them to love and ptotcdl your icligion, which t ftiould be. maintained agreeably to the precepts of r, ' the Golpel and the rules of the divine discipline. < s 1 Lastly, we warn you not to believe any body, . wholoever he be, who holds up other tenets than bra = these, as thedodrine of the Eclefiaftical See, and '? • r w ' th Pa'"n a l tenderness, we give you our apoftoli 1 < cal beitcdtdtioir. „c( Given at Rofne, ad fanftam Mariam majorem, " c • under our Fisher-ring, the sth of July of the " " 1 ■ y"r 1796, and the 22d of our Popedom. * (Signed) R. Card. Brafchius de HoiietVis. St?t 1 ®OSION, October 28. t ; a , ; rohTr a V Uth °S ed i° ,i ßfer » 'he public, that Monday of the week after next, i.thc day when the people of this diftridt will aStmUe to give their in S v.t« foran elector of president aud vice.president. f" 1 Candidate, hen. T. Dawes, fen. V of «■—.» ■ ■ *** » ..... .1 I , GAZETTE Of THE VHlttt) ST/IJKS MARINE LIST. if? " —r~r— is PHILADELPHIA, November 5. fee i,- ARRIVED. Days, all Sloctp Lively, Collins, Rhode-1 Hand 6 lie Polly, Butlt'r, Norfolk 9 CLE A.RFD. Scho. Telegraph. Vanneman, St. Croi* is, i liidtiftry, Thomas, Boston ty Polly, Ober, NewYofk u- Sloop Hope, Fofler, Hifpatiiola 1 rr 3 Sally, Porter, Norfolk. ' A flilp ind brig from New-England are below— 3! a!fo fevcrrt! flaops and schooners, names unknown. , ie A brig from the Weft-Indies, capt. Teale, put ft intn Wilmington vrfterday. jl _ ■■ t — '— . — ( THIS DAY IS PUBLISHED, ; Price 37 T-2 Cents. t a c The Pretensions of Thomas Jeffer-' 1 ir son to the Presidency, »M , EXAMINED, ! j >n And the Charges against John Adams ■ ~ ' ".EFUTKB. Akdreffed to the Citizens of America in general, and, particularly, °- To the Electors of the Prejtdent. • e Sold by rt W. YOUNG, MILLS & SON, Corner of Stcond id and Chefnut-ftreets. November 5. tts Fashionable Waistcoating. \ >s GEORGE DQBSON, No. 25, * SOUTH T.HIRD-.STREET, I e Has received per the Diana, from London, 1 Clouded and striped Sptnifh Swanfdown Clouded Erminats and Moleikins 1 o Striped do. a»d do. :• Figured Manillas g Scarlet figured Erminels 1 e ; Printed plorinetts u i Do. Caffinets flnd CafEmeres c Superfine printed Quiltings, newest patterns j / Alio, per different arrivals, t A large and general aflbrtment of Dry c ? Goods, I £ Suitable to the prefeijt and approaching season. f 0 IVovember 5. dtf SWANN'S, 7 Hiding School, H ur fe Academy & Infirmary. % Adjoining the Public .Square, Market itrcet. b \ a ; T. SWANN 1 » v, RNs bis sincere thanks totoofe gentlemen by whom - he has been employed, during his rcfidenoe in this City, and 1 flatters himfelf that the success ot his efforts, in the numerous. \ s lobttiuate and dangerous difeafrs in Borfes, in which he has . crKilulceds together with few moderate charges, will fe cuie Jieir iu'uiefavjrs and receiuajendation. He now be.;* leave to iofoim them and the public at large t} th?t his Ipacrous and commodious ptrmiics, creftrd for the ~ » >>" rDf > (ci " bovc deferred are open for the reception of pupils , - of either lex, who wish to bei!.utied in the Art of Riding ' 1 urd tne .tgtu method qf governing their borfes, so a»io ride t rn wttH tale, elegance, and fafety—their horles will b> ooeh.llv and expeditioufly broke, .for every purpose, at.o •n-d- Mn t® the w,U of the riders ; the natural powers winch are shut upin rhem, will be unfolded by art, calling I nr, U r'f rm " V °' raotlon ' and giving to that noble anirtial al lthofc beaut,e. of aft, on which providence has so bounn -1 luily bellowed on them. • A'lo.at hi, hospital. every difor ier to which the borfe is V , liable will according to the rules of art, confirmed f ( by Jong and repeated experience. The uiility of the above inllitution has never been qncftion- ca. that H has long been wanted M this city, every gentleman', '<" c stud will m3n ,fefl, a„d T, Sw NN a, the fiifl eftahlilher ot pi follC " s and U P°" 'he fuppoitof that t L liCVtr »n*iou, 111 lervtng] to enable him to biing.lt to perfection. The idea of a lubferiotion for that - oramnt rK n" Kd b y fcve ' al gentleman, who wifli to 1 hl rrr inftituttoo the amount of each fubfcrip.ion to „ CK rctu.ned by lerv K cs in any of the deoartmentt.he profeffes, f* fhf • '° • ratC ch "S" (price 15 cents) And Sold by U DAV IE S, No. 63, Htgh-ftreet, " and b y tne Other Bookfelltrs in tbe City, " TIT FOR. TA T; : 1 Or, A Purge for a Pill. Being an anfwep to a fcurriloas pamphlet, lately pub- " - ed, en tit ed, " A PiU for Porcupine." " AT) T " whirh is a dded, A Poetical i\hapfody on the Times, " Dejcribing the D'rfajlers of an Emigrant. " " To bear an open flandcr is a curse, But not to find an anfvTcr is a worfc." /a This you gef, Booby tquirt, v m< 4< Bccaufe you wou'd : fci *' Since you're for flinging dirt» po 11 .Ve'li try who best can spatter." ' cri M , , IPadJ) JVhack.l » November 4. g r No. 154. ' 1 DiJiriS of Pennfj! ing to the n. a nn c r in which they are Sniffled. Ihe pro- grefs for arrivals atli dc r u«vd of the Mail on the Ma.n I..nemay be had feparat, {„ X, . lawow. « > « r N» ifi. D'ift'rifi cf Ptnnfylvrr.tri, to wit : Be it femembeled, that on the seventeenth day of tembef, irl the twenty- rft year of the independence? of the United State* of America William Mitchell, of the Paid diftri&, deposited in this ftfftct the title of" a book, • the right whereof he claims as author, in the words sol? * lowing, to wit: 9 " A new andVoniplete fyflem. of book-keeping, by an " improved method of double entry, adapted to retail, do >ifc " mellic and foreign trade ; exhibiting a variety of tranf- " a«slions whicn usually o*cur in bi&fjrtcis. The whole ; ga copy "of rhj f.cond, according to thofc ly'fl^mj ma.i generally >la Ci in use, is given in order to exhibit, by a comiwative k. view, the advantages of 'he lyiiem a>jw laid down. J'o { ' which is added, a table of tke dprlcs payable on goods,, " wares and merchandise imported into the United Staie» "of America. The whole m dollars art ! cents.- ut . « py William Mif&eU* Tn Conformity to the a <51 of the Congress of the United - States, intituled, "An a c that can be depended on, (h'-ill Ix reward-* e ed for bis information, pr >vide>), lie will icave the ' iireitions with Mr. John Fenr.o, printer, 'Philadelphia, £ or lulmund M. Blunt, Newburyport. November j. ' lavrzm ; Mr. Francis/" (Of the New Theatre) TAKES this opportunity of returning thanfc»to his fehofars and to the public. Mr. Francis -intends? on his return from Maryland, to open a public aci * demy for dancing, upon a plan entirely new. He flatters himfelf that his attention to his pup if, hj _ therto renders anypromifes of conducing his future , schemes on the mod liberal and ftritfeft terms, of pro t priety, totally unneceflary. A r . 3. Private tuition as usual. I ; June 3 nff ; Treasury of the United' States. NOTICE is hereby given to persons whd are or may be Creditors of the United States, for any i'um? . of thr Funded Debt, or Stock, baring a prcftnt inlcrtjl of j per centum per annum. t 13, Thtt pursuant to an Aa of Ccmgrefs passed on thtf ■ ißth day t>f April, 1796, mutlcd an ait in addition to an: t adt, intituled li An a n the lalt days of March, June and Se -ten>- " ber for the present year, and from the one tkcufand 11 seven hundred and ninetr-feven, to th*yeaf one chdu •' sand eight hundred 6c eighteen inrlufive, at the rate o( , " one and one half pel- centurti the original capital, " Secondly, by dividends to be made on «t.'' la(t day of " December for thaprefent year, and from the year an of do make, conjlitutc and appoint it ' my true an J laivful .jii~ tomey, forme, and in my name, to receive the dividends ivbid are. or/ball be payable to law, on the (her« defcribir. K the ftoek)yWt*s- in my name in the books of (here defcribing.tl'r books of the Treafufy or the Commiffioncr of j.oai s, where the flock is credited) from (here insert the com mencement and expiration of time for which the power < f attorney is to continue) -with po-.uer also an attorney cr att-,r. u " J,r bin, for that purpose to make andjubfiiM,, and tfi do a!, lavujul ads require for effeliing tbepremifis, hereby ratif i, r tj confirming all that my said Attorney or bisfuhfiitute.jbatl IS-.vful *y do, by virtue hereof In IVitnefs hereof, I have hereunto set ay Hand and Seal tie day of i n the year Sealed and Delivered in prefence> of, BE I T KNO I