t Pantheon, _ ANp'RJGKETtS'j AMPHITHEATRE, "Tor Equestrian and Stage Pirformahcks, __ Corner of Chefnut and Sixth-ftreeti TO-MORROW EVENING, November 19, Will be piefentcd, A variety of Entertainments. ACT I. Horsemanship, By Mr, Ricketts, Mr. F. Ricketts, Mr. Franklin, Mailer Franklin, Matter Hmchins, the Young American, and Mrs. Spinacuta. Clown to the Horsemanship, Mr. Sully. ACT H. Ground and Lofty Tumbling, % Mr. Sully, Mr. F. Ricketts, Mailer-Franklin and and Master Hutchins; In which will be introduced The Force of Hercules, By Mr. Franklin, a performance never before at tempted byfany in America. ACT HI. Equestrian Exercises, In which Mr. Ricketts will introduce A defcrij>tion of the Sailor's Fox Hunting. ACT IV. The whole to conclude with a Comic Pantomime, under the direction of Mr. Durang, called The MILLINERS; Or, the Wooden Head. Abbot, flflr. Durang. Officer, Mr Sully. Countryman, Mr. Tmnpkins. Wiginaker, Spinacuta. Dancing Mafler, Mr. Daring. Singing Master, Mr. Franklin. Valet, Mr. F. Ricketts. Mr. Tiffany, Mr.Coffie. Miss Sarfnet, Mrs. Tompkins. Miss Pink (with a song) Miss Robinfou. Fille de Chambre, Mrs. Durang. Mr. RICKETTS takes this opportunity of inform- I ing the Ladies and Gentlemen who attend the R'ding- School, that he has, at conlitferahle expense, engaged Mr. Frankiin, to 'jive leffops in the irt of riding and managißg Horses, al he finds it impossible to attend to , it himfelr, in consequence of a variety of business which he is atprefent engaged in. I *** The Ladies and Gentleman who fccure feats i the day time, are requested ta atfend punftua'lly at 7, as the performances are so arranged as to concluded lo o'clock—the doors will open at 6. £5* Box, 7s. 6d—Pit, 3s. 9^. Tickets to be hid of Mr. Ford, at theticket office in J Chefn, t-ftreet, from ten to three o'clock each day. 0" Silver Tickets, to admit for the foafon, to be had • by applying to Mr. P icketts at the Pantheon, or at Oel lcrs's Hotel. 0" Days o c Performance to be Monday, Wednef 'day, Thursday and Saturday. a By WILLIAM COBBETT, oppofiteChrifl Church, Phi- '' ladelphia, for publifbing hy fubfeription, a * ' ADAMS'S I Defence of the American Cmflitutiom. ° CONDITIONS: ol J* The work (hall be printed on Englilh wove-paper, page for page, from the bed London Edition; of course it 01 will be comprized in three large o&avo velumes. ™ 11. Fortfcethree'V.iumes, bound ii. -boards, the price to fubferibers is to be only four dollars, and to non-fubferi- ~ : -bers, five dollars and a half. 1 HI. The fubfcritieion (hall remain ©pea for ten days, and "'V if in encouraging number of fubfciibersare obtained in [ that time, the publilher engages to have the work'ready ? for deliveryin fix weeks from the present date. ' 15th November, 1796. N. B. Subscriptions are t; ken by the principal bookfet- pa lers of Philadelphia aud New York. th ' The lubfcribers to the History of Jacohinifm are ref peflfully informed, that it will be ready for delivery early nest week. *' Nov 16. g r eaj ~ —— 41 Sales of Malaga Wine and Brandy. ; Ba On Saturday morning, the i 9 th inft. at 10 o'clock, will be fold at Morris's wharf, just above f n the Drawbridge, by Public Aud ion, 100 Qr. calks old Mountain Wine, and ro"o 15 butts of Brandy, j. sa For-approved indorsed notes at 60 days. WM. SHANNON, AuiVioneer. n», - 2 Bui Washington Lottery. cW The 38th and 39th days' drawing of the Washington rUD Lottery, No. a, are received at the office No. 234, Mar- f." 0 . ket-ftreet, where ticket? may be examined. • N. B. Information given where tickets in all the other ' ngS lotteries may be procured. cies November 17, 1796. T - —— for, JOHN MARKLAND, • L Printer, Bookseller, and Stationer, v f n No. 91, South Front Street, received by the laftarrivals from London, an afTort ment of Stationary, which he wHI fell on the most reasonable terms, confiding of— A great variety of copper-plate printing paper, from .3.3 by 27 inches to the smallest size ; fuperfine, impe rial, super-royal, royal, medium, demy, folio, and A quarto post, foolfcap and pott writing paper ; marble • and blotting papsr, large and small rreffage card 3, sand " Cg a and pounce boxes, shining sand, ink and ink-powder, n pencils, quills, crown, half crown, and common size f/ o eit Iri/h wafers, coloured and red; India rubber, pen-knives Otu' lead and pewter ink-flands, do. chests, cork soles, copy w ith books, Jlatee and pencils, Entick's diaionatv, Watts' thew p& iTr s ' t!i„ , Alio, iome elegant jprints, an assortment of blank- tion < bosks, American manufaflurefl writing paper, do. play the o ing C2rds of a superior quality; and a collection of trees. BOOKS, London and American editions. be in! Nov. 12. To be Let, JS A Isrge cellar, in Walnut-flreet jnfl above Fourth-Street, that _ is flo.red with two inch plsok, and will bold upwards of ico *roii pipes of wine. A Also, aSiable acd Coach-hpufr, that will hold four bar- near Stt and IWB carriages ; and (everai floret in Fourth Street- for a Apply to Nc George Meade. Who has for sale, '-pi 85 boxes of Castile soap JL Red Lifboa Wine 4 at, A few pipes of bill of exchange wine Publi A few barrels ol Iriih raefs beel 4 at And a few barrel* of fbip bread. Com *OV k 4*, Losdi gr A Stated Meeting j' ; • > Of the Philosophical Society ICES, Will be held at their Hall THIS EVEI>TING at 6 o'clock. Friday, Nov. i 8" I .jo Philadelphia, November 18, 1796. I ,9 ' THE STOCKHOLDERS " Of the Bank of the United States F Are hereby informed, I j, THAT, -according to the Statute of Incorporation, a J General Eleilion fur Twenty-Five Dircctoks will be I inklin, tf ] e of the United States, in the City of I 1 I'ounir 'p h ' 3 ' on Monday the second day of January next, at ten o'clock in the forenoon. I a And, pursuant to the eleventh letffcion of the Bye Laws, j ( the Stockholders of the said Bank are herehy notified to v afTemble a General Meeting, at the fame place, on Tuef- I day the third day of January next, at five o'clock in the I a O* evening. y n and By order of the Board-os Direflnrs. j h G. SIMPSON, Cafnicr. j ,j 2nd Fundamental Article. I more (nan three fourths of the Directors in office j C . exclusive of the President, shall be eligible for the next J ° - succeeding year, but the Director who {hall be President |tl at the time of an election may always be re-eleAed. Jn! tftel. C In the Press, oi And will be ptiblilhed ia a few days by MATHEW J pi ting. CAREY, at No. 118, Market-flreet, 1 fe AN ADDRESS rame, C]~ o Elect ors 0 J fjjg Pygfifent C J tJjg th United States, " Firfl published in the Gazette of the United States, in a series of papers udder the denature of " A federalist"" ta Containing feme flricflures on Mr. Adams's De- I ex fence of the American Conflitutions, and on the j is Efiays of Phocion, since publilhed without that I signature, in a pamphlet entitled " The pretensions of Thomas Jefftrfb* to the Prelidency examined, and I „ n the charges against John Adams refuted." I . Nov. 18. 11 _ I rvs. M I de An elegant Bay Horse for sale, of Enquire at George Green's Stables, in Pine-street, I nu - , between Fourth and Fifth-ftreets. enl ding- T ° V ' lS- 1U_ W 5° ;aged THE PartnerAiip of JONATHAN HARVEY sTco. '" n : and being this day DilTolved by mutual consent, those indebt- COt ad to ed to fa.d firm ate requested to make speedy payment to wh Linels Jonathan Harvey, who is authorized to receive the fame, my and these who have any demands will please to brintr in fits their accoonts to him for settlement J at", U f inc f s Wlli be Continued W< leb ' Sy Jonathan Harvey, a v< AT HIS STORE NO. 106, S. ■FRONT-STREET; ur l Where he has for Sale, lcav cein A general assortment of Dry Goods, to! " had November 14, t 79 6. §im cut, oel - FOR SALE, inef- ' A valuable Plantation, or^ Frege ', Whlch u peculiarly convenient for grazing u" " fe it ment !ts fitua'ion for Health or elegant improve ment is not to be furpafled in any inland country, and ,f leac : =to f! cl r cd t °° r g e for onc farm, may be divided into two to fy fcri- .® ee fo,a ' ler ones . uniting in common advantages — but There is n.w ereded on the Estate a good Merf"ant hL and ,U ' Wlth two pair of stones (on a large limestone fprin 2^ Jin re " ts , fer 466 dollars per ann. and an another'vever r" g ' ady fj'lmg-fprmg a good Saw Mill, with a flutter wheel • f " er ,^ n re 15 of P'nc timber in the neighbaring moun tain, and a stream fufficient for another Mill with four tecel fe!- . P if\ o t r*T the . fe are ad i accnt to or immediately or p-jfl-- the banks of the river, the navigation whereof is about I •ef- hemg opened into the Potomak and for more than icm ery *^ e * a bove the miUs. The other improvements on Uoa «n hi "f 4 DCW commod ' ous Ba rn, the loft of which is of tl capable of containing 1500 (ralhels; the threfhmg-floor is state - 4" 1 feet square, well planked : another (do,Aw r f Barn, with feeds all around: a Diftillcrv with tk °" ° large Stills, and a Granary above that will' contain <00 V™? io bu&cls, well covered w.th Ihinglet, and a stream of wa- the Jl -er, conduced by troughs, running thro' it; a t a small P»nif distance is a large Cow-House and Stable, with ftalh in? t II cows, paved with stone in the European manner with fuher id room for above 40 waggon loads of hay : a little further is a strong ftone-walied Spring-House, completely fitted a " 7 ' for a Dairy -The whole of these Mills and Buildings to V 0 are at a proper d,dance from each other, ar,d from the Certa Dwdlmg, wbveh eonfifts of commodious Frame If _ Buildings, with the necessary cor.veniencies A w,!7 closed Garden of the fineft foil, with a stream of water ■ X ' 7 >n running thro ,t ; two large Aopic fe 4S ' 8llr ?' r * o°°. r rr, f S ° r . luildin K and limestone ; a number of Inan v Out-Houfes for Managers, Blackfnith, Cooper, and lod? Pular ings for Men of Colour add greatly to the converien the U cies and value ®f this Estate. . convenien- ine U The Purchaser, on paying one half the price aereed for, may be accommodated with a considerable credit for gh the remainder and with tke Cattle, Horse,, W™ This 1 tion an furniture, at a reasonable vflua- duty, the Thorn" "T made tS a " d CC Philadelphia, or Matthias SlJugh, Lanca a fter." ' mOnS m ,^ Ve " 1 jfoggfr'nr, igthOctober, r7Q j.I?" LKr : R .:, s radai ! TOBE SOLD, dif/ra', 1 A *' L^I^ ATI P N ' in th e town of Woodbury coun 1 tioa of which is woodland id „td 0 P w P °A H I great part of th, arable land is in a WfLSTSoTw - tion, and very natural to the prcdudion o'" Red r, sOn said plantation there i, a genteel ftlv . u i° V^ I wuh f 0 r6oms on a flQori Lda tf' the whole: together with 11,,„ „ ;' cpilj r under : trees. Any person iaclined to ourchafe said w aPP C " I be mformed of the terms by « W f July 19 ANDREW HUNTER. tie, of " ~—,< —j — of his v .. 1 olet; cn.bi.-f * r ° m this day, to the tweuty.cighth of April, , 7Q7 of effa r.e« Sr« Hn s^° Ufe m Stcond-ftrect, No. ,33' title of for a lodging w"a ((ore-" k " lated «ther' writer , Nov. 16. papers P.tlm A atthe^ may fUtUrCbe fup l >lled w: "h r,^at g art! Davi,a W ordermg ££ «c»c. ' Loido'u. ' X y Q t0 MaltU & Co. P«f« fc •» wfm 4 w I and dift • From the Virginia Herald. G at Mr. Green, ~~ THE reasons inserted in your last paper, and 9 ' I addrcffed to Mr. Mayo, why Mr. Jefferfon should I not be chosen President, were published in Davis's -S I paper of the 12th inft. They contain cogtnt ob- Ijc&ions; which, if well-fouuded, a< I take them Ul'be t0 be ( exce pt tbe 6th, from which 1 dissent) ought ty of 10 bt; conclufwe against him as the ftrcceffor ol Mr. nuary Wafliington. Any perfoß, to whom the power of I an tleftor is coafided, will surely not consult "coßfif edto "" nC -'P rinci P les > who would not vote for Mr. T'uef- j bad he not declined being considered a the as . onc out °f whom a choice is to be made, and yet I will vote for Mr. Jefferfon as his successor ; as tho' he were the successor of his political feeling?, fenti er - ments and opinions $ whereas it stands apparent to office I evcr 7 mEn wno has taken an impassioned viewof next | our public affairs for the l?.ft three years, that Idem J the supporters of the latter, have been the constant ' 1 and uniform oppofers of the adminiflration of ' George Wafliington, the revilers and calumniators ' of that great man, and whose efforts have been ' I.W | pointed to drive him from office, to make room ' for his successor.'' 1 The following isan extract of a letter, written to ' the I P ec '^ l who now transcribes it, by one of the c I ableit politicians that America ever gave birth to, in I andlv " o ' s now, alas! no who, when alive, w; 3 r not appreciated up to the weight and value of his fc talents, his services and his integrity. I-qnote the a De-1 extraa to shew, that the Freeholder's sth objedlion ' the I '* undeniably supported. " tha U Jth Sept. 1788. " 15 of « What a figure did the state of Virginia make " anQ under the government of one of these men during " the war, with an almost imperial eftabliSiment of " — departments, state troops, spy boats, forts, a train " lor attillery of twenty-four brass ordnance, and in- " eet, J numerable iron ones—arms and ammunition fuffici- " j ent for the Ottoman army—the entire command ef I 50,000 militia—comrnjflloners and quarter-mailers ~ I innumerable—a power of corresponding with the 01 bt- CGmma nder in chief-and congress, so as to gain w :to whatever intelligence they could give of the ene- 1,1 me, my's motiani! S» circumflanced, general Arnold in fits out an expedition from New-York—fails to the P c I Chesapeake, through the bay, up James river to an I Weftover, where he lands, and marches through not 3 a very pradicable country to Richmond, where he, T; I surprises the governor, who, however, efcapel, leaving every thing public in and about Richmond, Nl ( S. Ito be destroyed by the enemy; who, having exe cuted this at leisure and unmolested, return as they " a came. How many »uns were fired, during this invasion, in defence of the state > Not one, small or great. With what force did the governor and co e« commander in chief of all the land and naval forces 113 up ef the state appear against the invader? With not vol t>e one man. If a baby in its cradle had been gover- P r( 7 nor and commander in chief, could he have done tio ig ! cf *i Cer,ai ° l r D °t. Again, the state is invaded an( ik "Y Cornwallis—the commander in chief of all the t0 je forcqs of the state by sea and land, stations himfelf fel, m on Monticelli, where, as that admirable historian, Ru S biographer, journalist, and general, M. de Caste- enl lf .esux, obierves, the sublimity of his mind seemed P er ro t° sympathise with the fublimitv of his situation P ar - but colonel Tarleton, being n#refpeaer of hisV ado t- blrme excellency, detaches himfelf from the invad- a S° , r ' n « 3rm T> with one hundred and fifty men, rides afic "witty-five miles thro' a most defenfible coantrv, cao drives his sublimity from his contemplation on Mon- in 1 r la^cs and disperses the reft of the le- and n giflature, destroys a great quantity of property and ordl 0 ttores, and returns to his general. What oppofl- tura e Hon was made to this handful of men, in defence ful 1 is of the property of the state—the people of the 1 is rf~n fce honour of the ftate—aud the legislature vtla | of the state ? None. Did the commander-in chief 13 111 3 " ra y his milina ; N°. Did he give intelligence to the . the legislature ? No. Did he make an attempt to Natl 1 punish the temerity of this incursion, by orevent- P o1 " r ing the retreat, and retrieve and vindicate' the in- T > iulied honour of the state, and its governor ? Not t!aor j any. Could a baby iq the cradle, whether on the COI, -' ] . top or at the foot of a mouatain, have done less > tbc 1 . Certainly not. ,> If this extract be history and fafi, and not poet- W ry, you will agre e with me, that the s th obieaion Ti is urged with propriety, and founded in truth. The mi man who objects himfelf to popular favours and po- J r pular honours, especially the most pre-eminent in Eu Slates, expofea his public character and p condua to public scrutiny. As citizens, we have- a, * a right to dedicate ourselves to this examination— f 1 i 1 his privilege has been taken ; aad deeming it my !• duty, have followed the example of the Freeholder and co.onel Symms. With private character,, we I l-V, have no concern Any ftriflures on these, would be a violation of the liberty of thepref s , and a de- gradation to the authar. « Attacks," favs a n lawyer, " upon private reputation, are the'bane and 3r } disgrace of the pref,, by which a man may be ren dered unhappy during l,f f , by afperfiors, cruel, fear, f®?" dalous and unjust." Nene of these (hall ever efcapc !« ra) hps, nor be uttered by my pen. ' 2I1! ANOTHER FStEEHOIDER, ~ " on amaai wll For the Gazette of the United States. " go _ No/VI. To the Ekflors of the Present of the United Stale, the' p XfoftabU Fellow. Citizens, ' tCrwa eftabhfhment of the federal government , ,/ " of essays have appcared in J r Ca "7" ' tUle of « Difcourfet upon DavUa" £ Eur" " C writer upon the ancient revolutions of France Thef" 77 papers have been generally and miW 1 r Franc, Mr. Adams, who resided Hnr' PUbl ' d y. afc "bed ,0 Ad™ publication, at the feat off' '" g ® e ,lme of their vised t w ? n S d 7 fre V° tlieAram '™»S. cthey p 7 er «op.c « " Wh pases some questions. as s™ P r °- "on and diftinaions in the solio '° ° rdcr * fDifcourfe "la thereany thing in birth 'r^ v , a , " Republican) however illuftriou. " {hould make a difference between ontN. , and " "Other? If, from a common ancestor, tv ™ , : hould " hun | an race «* descended, they are all *■' lavis's " family. How then can they distinguish family* nt ob- " i" 10 the more or the less ancient > What ads them " ta g e is there in an illustration of an handled""' jught " thousand yeatg ? Of what avail are all d e l ii}*" f Mr. " r, « s < pedigrees, traditions, See. ? Butlbi, aiiva ver of " tage ml, ft be derived from his father and t " onfif- " chiefly, if not wholly. Of what .W, r!a • Mr. " "then, in this view, whether the family stw ' dered " f Y generations upon rccord, or only two." 4 yet qaeftions from the opponent to hereditary dT , ,J, O » tindions and orders the writer gives, at from iL r;J fenti- 1,113 te P'. v . mighty kcret liea in'thiUJj ' - nt to "An iliuftiious descent attra&s the'notiee ef :W'of " mankind. A /ingle drop of royal b!oo, J , {-. 0 , T that " ever scattered will make any „■ iftant 'or woman proud or vain. Why? r , n of " although it excites the: indigMhm of m tln ] "'j ators " l ' lc env y °f more, it Jlill attracts the alt been "°f worJd." Thus does the writer of th" room " Difcoarffis upon Davila" view even the lawful " Scatterings" of £oyal loins _ H en to incongenial are t'nefe sentiments, with the 1 : t h c of our Constitutions ? Again— to, t ' lor ,h f lc dijeourfes then {represents the ms „ , wis nrr ' 10 wl)ich various nations have severally t i(J f his kliflied royalty, nobility, orders and diftindHo,,- .J he ar,d . lays—" Other nations have united at! thJc irion -wjiituticn: [[or modes of rbyalizing and enn '' offices and them 3. alUefiend Ugether, #blic attentkn, lake ~ *~d congratulati n along with them. ring lhls has been the poh.-y of Europe: and favs I°F « ° U ff. aU ' hor ' ff/y explaining himfelf, it is to this rain "-f'tutiOß, which /be [Europe] owes her fuberio- I in- (< r "y> war and peace, in legiflatjon and eon- ' g ci . merer, m agn.-aUur?, navigation, arts, fancc: iof f ™ a y™ufaftures* to - —. ' lers ! iv efpeclabJe eL-tfors, we entreat yoii to read tj, e onca more this bold and explicit afferticn of the ' ;ain wrlterof " the discourses." To what does it a rtC" 7D 'f °f; 1™ tbat W old de/cent of landed estates, legiCative and executive the P o wer, and rank in the families of emperors, kintr S and no Dies, unbalanced as we have shewn by even not a virtual representation of the people, have pro . he ' cnul,^f t " M exifthig among mankind— >e», !~' J ub -'me ameuat ations of the human charaiicr *. nd, Neither the pswerful and continual inflnences of X(m tocic chrtlates, ntir the divine power of liie Cbrif.- ley ' la " rell g'°n itfelr, according to our -author, have his y ad an y effect in giving eneigy or dignity to man. |a j[ it amounts also to an explicit declaration, that the n( a conititution and government of our country mult :cs have the mod deleriora:ing influence upon 'the di lot vote d Americans, uirlcfs we hatlen to make our prelident and senate hereditary, to give large p or .' nc tions or landed,eitate and power and rank to them e(1 and tofuch elder children as they-may "chtnu" he to Lave, " trufling Providence rather tl«n them e)f selves after the manner of happy Germans, n, Ruffian » and Poles, over whole favored countries :e- cr, ''ghtening mortarchs teig»..faiou's,- permit <>s to offer for your confutation scd cpm'- _ parilon the situation of America, as it Rood 011 the ti- adoption of representative government twenty years j. ago, and at the present day : and fuffer tra then to eg al.c yoar calm determination, whether the Ameri y, can people are inferior at this time to those of 1-76 n _ in the vanoußarts, of peace, in military knowledge e _ and practice, in legislation, both c'ovjlitutional and id ordl » ar y' i 10 commerce and navigation, in agrlcul rj_ tural fkil! and energy, in manufadures and the «fe :e a [ ts » ;id ' n 'he whole circle of the sciences. le Xhe twelfth number of " the discourses übon Da e vua, contains but a dozen lines of ptofe. The reft :t 15 mat!e U P of poetical extiadls from pj\e, whom o !-; e wr 'W compliments, as " the great matter of 0 Nature," and as " a great teacher of morality and politics." • le following paflage extracted from our au t -'S poetical feletlicns, at once proves his own e and (hews that he admires the writer of 1 cbe P oet ry thepo/itich he teaches. " " "Oh when degree :s fluk'd, is the ladder to all high dt&gnt, 1 2, enterprise is sick ! how could commiimtirt. Depress w iiootls in cities, The primogeniture and due of birth, Prerogative of age, crowns .iisßtres, laurels, 1 But by degree, liand in authentic place Poetry does not afford an example of more ar dent declamation in favor of monarchy. But the ; eieaors are aware that it is the region of ha ion and fancy—not of truth and reason. We tru& it will require movefoberprofe, than can be written in the : eighteenth century, to pcrfuade the people of the United States to abandon the principles of our date and federal constitutions. By some accident the thirteenth number of " the discourses" is also maiked as-the twelfth. In that paper our author explicitly proposes, that " it fhali be left to the contemplation of .oar Sale phyfici " ans, to discover the causes and the remedy of that '■fever, whereof our power is fick-. One questi on only [says he] {hall be rcfpeßfully irf.nuaied : , " whether equal laws, the refultonlyof a balanced government, can ever be obtained and prcur ved [[ w «thout fomejigns or other of diftmSien , and de , Z rc ~'_ author requires no commentator on the passage jufl quoted. He fays immediately af terwards. " VVc are told that our friends, the 'Na. - « ' l ." nal Affesibly tf aboiilhed all * l( clrtlnc -i«ns. But he not deceived, my deur coun (l !' yme r!.' Im P°JF bl! ' ul " e ""not is performed? &c. „ "~' C \ HIJVC tilc French officers,, who served in A. i " hons"' mC ' ted tlleil ' at " J tora their rib. Our author in the fourteenth discourse reiterates to ranee, who bad begun her revolution, what Mr. virtTl ? ,t0 £ . uro Pe in general, when he ad- r Cm o ?'*' t0 alm at one branch, deriving its ai?j VCr people, and to preserve their kings and nobies » The National Afll.nblv of France " Wh' oyc rlo'>.k the enquiry. "on Wl .„u i°" l ' ] * * n °^ s ' eharafletbf the nali. , « w P rcdu ced, by destroying, if that " all *h " 2| - attention to families, and letting / aJ ' hl " hiJCsoa pursuit of Wheti^