whole mryion was employed in a coviti nihil cJort to promote harmony between the two republics.'' Mr. Monroe then adds, "nor W puriue this policy upon my arrival in France From the impuHe.of my ctun head'attd vty cWn bcarl oulys thebalis of my commu nications to the ■ QoVfrrtriientj and of my general conduit there, in those refpefts, Was L;d by our administration, under whose orders I afted, and by whole inftruftions I. was guided." Thus far the citizen minister; but what has been the language of faftion ? this is the purport of it—that the govern ment of our country has been afliduous in i. the manifeftation of hatred and enmity to- .vards Prance ; that it has Mnceallngly fought to f'avQur Great-Britain, to the pre judice of " our alius." Malignant and nn founded as are these charges, and depraved and alienated from love of country as are the authors of them, yet a partial credence of jucK statements has been impressed on the minds of many. No truth whatever rests upon a more solid balls than this—that it has. been the object of the American Ad ministration to preserve a ft rift and inviola ble neutrality during the European war. e t neutrality was not the objeft of France whatever they profelfed, through the organ ' of their firft minister to this country, after the commencement of the revolution, it is welj known that while he was soothing our executive with the sweet founds of" JlJler reupblichis pocket contained instructions to a roil fe the people to make a common cause with France, if the governmentrefufed toun furl the banners of war. In return for the unwearied attempts on the part of America to preserve animpartial line of conduft, what ■ have we experienced from the French J ; what but an attempt to devide the people i ' from the government—the plunder and rob- ] b<?ry of our citizens, even to a degree beyond < the infamous piracy ©f the Bermudians ? i And is France to be juftified, because we 1 have also been robbed and insulted by the I \ Britifii ? Or, is the juftification derivable j i from the founds lilerty and equality : Too much have these founds already warped the I judgments ofmanyandledthemto overlookas y abuliae conduft as ever one independent na- ] tion experienced from another. It is hoped i there are few, in our country who would not t rejoice at the eftablilhment of the real liber- v ty and happiness of the people in any quart- n er of the globe ; and it is also hoped there a are few who will be so far duped as to juftify fj a power, which, while profefling the'eftab- n lifhment of liberty as its objeft, in the plen- p itnde of conquest tramples npon the rights, r and insults the authority of a people who o have a just claim to freedom and independ- « ence. j It is quite fafhionable with some to speak I of those as attached to the Britifli, who re present the conduft of the French towards vt this conntry in its proper light : this may fr be attributed to the spleen of party. An ft American may deleft those who speak to as undermine the pillars of our happiness, jn without indulging an unjuftitiable predilec- ti, tion for another foreign nation. J Mr. M' Kean, in his address to Mr. Monto* U ' the la'e Minister to Frah;e, o'jfsrvei—" H you, Sir, we have heard nfathtng for which an ar Ameriean republican ought to Hhifh, from D( any fouree of information which a canclid man f.. ought to believe." —[t may be hoped that |the reports then which have reached this country, have no re foundation in truth ; reports that Mr. Mon. loe's houfein Paris was the residence of Tom Paine, and that under the roof of the late thefaidTora Paine wrote the infa- rroui letter which h» oirefled to G«orge ti . Washington—and the no lefj infamous letter to the Editor of the Aurora, in wkich • John Adams, the Prelidtnt of the United States, is treated by Paine "with the most scandalous difrefpeft>—But should the muh . of the to, not be coritefted, ' n it may bediffijult to determine the ideas of some perfsns with tefpeft to conduft which . ought to excite a blnfh. It is helitved, however,that there are very few honest repuh. t^( itcaos in America who Would not think it ], a ' reprehenlibile in a Public Minister abroad, to f give countenance to a vile defamer of the most exalted charafters in the nation, and to a j', shelter under his roof a fellow who would a j, make uftf if jhe most opprobrious and abufivc terms, when speaking of th» firft and second • msgiftrates of thecountry. ' ' > »■" ■ . By this day's Mail. I CI 'P the NEW YORK, July 17. cin Saturday afternoon the out houses of enc Major Hunt, at Powles Hook Ferry, were no\ Itruck by lightning, and consumed, together Sta with 3 horses, hay, &c.> Also, a brig, at ' Bowne's wharf had her topmast (hivered to tha pieces. A row boat, with several people, offe in attempting to cross the North river, over- ly 1 set and funk, fortunately no lives wfere loft, opir Capt. Sands, of the Olive Branch, from thei Bojjrdeaux, allures us that the number of gaii Americans who have (hipped themselves on Tin board French privateers, with a view of en- volt riching themselves on the spoils of their beir countrymen, is by no means small. Many tica of these men hold commissions. This faft to f would appear incredible) were it not confirm- j to t ed by repeated testimonies. From this pir- bab cumftance ii would appear, that, the brutal evdr injuries to which our merchants are patiently ing (uhmitting, is in 3 great meafttre nfcriba'ble- cpni to the villainy of our owtt countrymen. ■ It tent is a great misfortune to'otir country j*-that the neitherpaw nor example are fufficrent to-cotin- lie. teraft such fhockingdepVavity. Suchtranf- v'olu aftions abroad, united to the most infemofts of v projefts of felf aggrandizement among men witl cjf consequence at home (but whose eonfe- 16, quence ought to be made more public'by teen placing them in gibbets) are fufficient to' state hold A merica up to the. feoffs, contempt the and ridicule of the world. Surety an honest " man is a jewel of inestimable worth ! a 2..- Minerva, direi The Thermometer in the fhaie, on' Sa- pref urday, between 11 and 12 o'elockfln be q town, flood at 91 1-2 degrees. on a 'nor PHILADELPHIA, % TUESDAY EVENING, July 18. Uas hose We learn by the last ariival from Bor is I " c^x > at there were but three American lets ve '^ e^s at that pirt—that there was on? g'eat talk among the people of a rupture ern- between France and the United States. s in j that in consequence of this, and by advice to- American Consul, the Americans in , g j y that city were quitting the place, The pre- P eo ple of Bordeaux were however oppol'ed nn- t0 a %var with the United States. ,vcd Jt was currently reported that the Consul the as concerned in the privateers fitted out of ? of ® or^eau *> one of which had captured forty the Prizes tit INTERESTING TO AMERICANS. \ d ' Extraft of a letter from Holland, April 3, J a * 17.97- ar " " I fend you by this opportunity a recent - e : work of Mr. Necker, upon the French re ?an volution ;it has been some weeks published, ■tcr but I have not been able, until a few weeks I 15 ago, to procure a copy of it here ; I have 3"r tlot yet had the time to read it through my ter felf. I know not whether the government ins of the United States have ever thought an "J e attention to the literary part of European m- politics a fubjeft of inftruftion to their mi he nifters abroad. There is a certain class of 'ca publications which have a direst and im iat portant conneftion with the course of events h J and with the views of nations, courts, par ties, faftions and individuals,; this is no h- secret to yo*. In the present lituation of "d our affairs, and the designs which at least 5 • one European power has with regard to the " e j United States, it is neceflary to be upon the he j watch for every gleam, that may cast a light >le upon the systems which Comprehend us. 30 «My lltuatfon is not peculiarly favora iie ble for this particular : I find it difficult to '• as procure the publications which appear in a- England, and very seldom can receive them, -d until a long interval has intervened. Even ot those of France do ji'ot reach this country : r- very early ; and there are none that origi- 1 t- nate here. There is not any more certain ] re and equivocal mark of the deplorable declen- 1 y fion of this nation in importance than this ; 1 S- not one publication of the least note has bee* . t- produced by the Dutch press since I firft ar- 1 rived here ; and whenever I get intimation j 0 of any new work, I find myfelf obliged to t 1- wait for it, until it can be procured from f London or Paris, from Lausanne or Bade, t, k Hamburgh or Berlin. , p !• "Asitis lam getting into a way which n Is will perhaps supply me better and mote o y speedily than I have been hitherto, and I c n (hall constantly forward to you such works, I 0 as may appear to contain any thing interest- w ing to America, with some of the obferva- m ■' tions which occur to me upon perusal, tho' o lam sensible that this last will be the most » unnecefiary part of the plan. g • " Tojudge aceutately upon this work of f ( Necker, it is neceflary to remember who, p " and what the author has been, and what he h II poflibly has hopes of becoming again. I sent tl 1 you not long since the work of his daughter, N Madame de Stael, and mentioned one ofher ft 1 objefti ip writing that book. She has now h 5 returned to Paris } let me'further observe, b that it was by her exertions the decree in h: favor of M. de Talleyrand, permitting his zi return, was passed ; the fame party procured h' the fame decree in favor of the general Mon- 01 ' tefquiou : they are endeavoring to obtain aj ' the liberation of M. de la Fayette. Lally, e> 1 in London, who belongs likewise to the fame m party, has lately published a book in favor m of the emigrants, and in this instance, with pt ' the fame effeft.wfiich his former efforts have ic • uniformly produced, of injuring his own cause by his impetuosity. This whole par ' ty is detested by the preient Fi ench govern ' ment. Every one of the five direftors hatei ra them, *ith the inveteracy of a neighborly tit hatred ; I>ut the force of the opinion pub- in: | lique, to which they are all equally slaves, Ci has made a fort of compofitipn with them ca abfohitdy necessary. They, on their part, uti advance as far as they can, to meet the fyf- hi] tcm of the day ; and thus you can observe, rel in the midst of the nioft violent oppositions. th. a disposition to conciliate benevolence, even thj by courting prejudices, and facrificing prin- wl ciples, all but those in which the views of thi the refpeflive individuals are involved. This pei circumftahce accounts for the great differ- fin ence between the sentiments of Mr. Necker no now publifned, and those of Madame de th< Stael, in the work which I lately sent you. up " She rery evidently paid her court in wa that to the present direftory. This work Te offers no composition to them, but apparent- we ly looks forward to a different state of the the opinion puhlique, when the execration agair.ft we them may be as freely indulged, as that a- Be gainst the Jacobins may be at this time, hoi There are numerous indications in these unt volumes, that that the author has an idea of apj being called again to aft an important poli- for tical part in France. I shall not undertake the to state all the passages which have led me his to this conclufiori, nor to discuss what pro- afii bability there might be, that the thing will the ,eves happen, Considering the work as prov- as : ing such a wi(h,"an<J hope on his part, it be- chi comes, necessary to'remark, with special at- in t tention,'. whst he fay* updn the fubjeft of felf the United States, and-the American repub- abc lie. It'is in the firft feftion of the fourth the volume," -yvhich I think curious in this point in 1 of view. I fhall'requeft you to compare it wit wi'tli a faft which I stated to you in my No. site 16, written from London ; the conclusion age seems inevitable, that the plan which I then at r stated 'to you as ex'ifting, is not confined to A the present governing power in France. taft " But there appears to prevail at present you a 2efi'gri ftiil more pernicious, as it strikes the direftly at ofir national union. From the at t present conduft of the it cannot veni be queflipned, that they are determined up- whe on a war with the government of the United chi! ~ ttstM. There are alia numerous proofs that in the._prdfecution of this war";they ?rre pre paring to derive fuppo/t from a part of the American peopk. The policy upon which thev proceed, appears to be this.; that the I. Atlantic, or at lead the eastern states, c?n. _ not be governed by the Influence ,of France, > or - therefore, that a foutheni republic mud can f° r med, in alliance with France, to serve was 33 a balancc , a gamit the others ; but in order ;ure to form this republic, France must make war against the prefenf government of the rice Un k* d States, in the progress of which flie sin C f," fe " d an arm 7 to support and assist her riie . 01 " ew republic, and hereby they led lwo purposes at once; that of weakening by division a rising power which Jul ey b ' ;hc ;.y ruf ?%n am} j,jalou<y ; and of that.of difencumberiog. themselves from a rty C r" '^f r . ?~ ort,Qn '«* <*<> army, the return of which into France thfey already dread, fhey wi/h to form a republic in America, they are now forming a republic in Italy, k • to provide for the fubiiftence of their troops, 3> or at least to be themselves rid of them and thus you will observe that they step towards ;nt war with America, regularly as they step re- towards peace with the house of Austria ; sd, they are constantly in expeftation of this ks peace, and it will probably be made in the ive course o/ this Ipring or the following fum iy- mer. :nt "In one of my letters I wrote that they an had no idea of fendihg an army to America, an and I formed my opinion from the state of 11- their marine, and the impoflibility they are of under of restoring it for a long time. But n ~ various circumstances now lead me to a dif its ferent opinion ; and with refpeft to the rna ir- nne, they are preparing toturnall their exer no tion towards it, as may be collected clearly or from the pamphlet of Theremin, which I sent lit you a few days ago. You will find in the lie newspapers which I ferd you at this time, *e that Thomas Paine has left Paris, and is go- i , in ? to America; another of the French papers fays he is going with Mr. Monroe a " "to repair the mrfcWef dorte by the admi- 1 to migration of Washington. in " The plan of the western republic, in *, alliance of France, to oppose against the ! :n rising republic of the United States, must . y have been formed as early as the time of Ge- 1 i- net's inftruftions; how much earlier it was ' in formed, it is perhaps not necessary to conjee- J. i- ture—that Paine was in the secret, originally, » seems probable—that he is now going to r » America to promote the design, I firmly n r- believe. I fee in some late American pa n pere, that he wrote to Bache last summer, 0 the necellity which the French goveniment n found themselves under to dijlingui/b between !> the American government and the people; his S pamphlet against the late President, I have E 1 not seen, but am told, it is another addition e of Adet's appeal to the people. What his t conduct will be, is easily forefeen. The , French government calculate* that in the - war they intend, the eastern states will fide S - with the government; but that eur western country, and perhaps the southern states, t will fide with the.m; Paine, therefore, is going "pourfctner ce: etincelles d'emlrafcment." & t for which madame Roland jjidgedhim so pro- ® , per.Paine,indeed,ispurftrnijrfmVocation: he : has no country—no afifeftions that constitute d' : the pillars of patriotism, but going with n ! . Mr. Monroe! Where can the imangination • ftopin reflefting upon these things; can fe ' Monroe? Can?—l hate done. I remem- C , ber the late President's advice, not to admit B i hastily, fu(j)icion& against the designs of citi- fe > zensindiftants partoftheunion jandlwillyet H I hope, that a formal purpose to fever the um- 1" • on into parts, by the help of a French war D i against the whole, is at least not extensively T extended or known, and, that it will never co meet.with encouragement or tupport from fe' men who ought to consider union as the an principle paramount to all others in the pol- 5 l icy of every American!" be lal From Qukbfc, June 29. On Sunday last, 25th inft. Jacques Per- bo rault, Pierre.Voyer, ■ JofephJDe Rome, E- El define Tetu, and Gonfague Berthelot, hav- wl ing made up a party to go to the Falls of eri Choudiere,' took for that purpose a bark th< canoe, in which they ascended the rapids caj under favor of the tide, which was then Nc high. About J o'clock, fettir(g out on their of return, they made an attempt to get over Ne the breakers, then very strong by reason of da; the tide being low. At the vary moment Ri' when they had escaped the danger, one of them cried out that they were all going to Jol perish ; this affrighted the others, who, lo- Gi! sing all courage ; ceased rowing. The ca- out noe left to itfelf was quickly operturned by ftii] the violence of the torrent, and the bubbling 4, 1 up of the waters. The young Perrault fro: was the firft who fell overboard, Voyer and da) Tetu followed him, Benhelot and De Rome brij were the last overturned, they holding on Jul the stern of the canoe : of these five, four out were swallowed up in thetorrent, the young Bo Berthelot alone rose, and fortunjftely laid in c hold of the canoe, by which he held firm, del] until the current drove him on shore. He 1 appljed instantly to a man at the ferry house (hip for assistance, unfolding at the fame time to the misfortune which had befallen him and Shi his assistance—this latter would not even cross Brij the river, though offered a reward, assigning Ric as a reason that he was if raid co leave his Sail children alone ; so that this young man, aboi in the fad situation io wnfcli-he found him- ned felf, unmindful of the dangers which he was Mei about to encounter, and iffefted only by Ali( the misfortune which had happened, set off ; 801 l in his weak canoe, whiih he had ballasted Aui with stones, and croflei the river oppo- Bay site to cape Rouge, wterehe tooka carri- land age, and reached towi about nine o'clock frig; at night. frig; We cannot but deplore this unhappy ca- off ( taftrophe which has deprived society of four forn young men, who were accounted amongst fore the choicest and most polished of our youth ; Spai at the fame time we hope that this fad ad- I: venture will serve as a lesion to those parents teeri who through a want of irmnefs, fuffer their 42, children daily to becom; the prey of a dan- Aur that ger, which the tvant of experience prevents pre- them from being sensible of. The only con tne folation that remains to, their foad parents hich is the regret of the whole city at the fate of the the*e unfortunates. Notwithftandmg re can. peatecl efforts, the pody of the young°Per nce, rault is tl.,' only one which has been found. Tiuft erve PRICES OF STOCKS. rder 6jierCe fl t. 16/ a } Utn iake * P tr c * nt " 10/3 t» 4 / c Jt 'ff the ' c ' errc<l 6 P er Cent. BANk I dviJend off 14 a ij per ct ' ne her North America, 4j ht.y Insurance Comp. N. A It a res of rVflnfylvama, 4a .5 per ct. ajv ■ , , COURSE OF EXCHANGi. On I.ondon, at days par ant ' at Co days , n a at 90 days tz urn Amsterdam, per guilder ad. • 50 days 'ca, \*wm ilv, GAZ-ETTE MARINE md Port of Puiladelphia. I A R R I V £ D , n * v c [ ep S Sh; P Fame ' Wilfori, Malaga' 49 New York, July 17. cu- nr ARRIVED. DAYS. [m _ Ship Olive Branch, Sands, Bourdeaux 01 Brig Pearl, Fofdick, do. 65. ley Jane, Cameron, Shelburne ca, From the Olive Branch's log-book. 0 f Sailed from BQurdeaux the 21 ft April, are 9 n I May was boarded by the Dart lut K' l letter of marque, treated politely. |Jf- t ' lc 9 t ' 1 June spoke with the ship Hen- \ ia- r y' and rom Salem, bound to Bordeaux, , er- out 12 . da y s - On the 4th July spoke.with > rly t ' le ' ,ri ? Hannah, from Surinam, bonnd to ' :nt ®°^ on » out 40 days, Ihort of provisions, ' h e w "° had two (hips company on board lf) hove too, went on board and took out nine' , o ' people, the crew cf the (hip. Commerce of ;h New-rork, Godfrey Wood, from Liver oe pool, bonnd to Baltimore, who was taken li- tlle privateer Spear Eagle, capt. I a Barry, and sent to Porto Rico. 1 r ; n The /hip Kihy, from the Me of France, ! F le was also captured by the privateer Spear ' (I Eagle, capt. Barry, in lat. 13, and carried e _ into Porto Rico.' The time is not recol -3S letted. Captain Barry is determined to . tak e every American vessel he can find and fwears- he will accomplish his designs at the 0 risk of every thing. (He is well known to 1 many gentlemen in New-York.) i i- R From the Bpfton Commercial Gazette. t. t< it Boston, July 12. ai n _ ARRIVED. DAYS. W Is Ship William, Wales, Lisbon jo e Brig Hannah, Brown, Surinam 50 ~ n Caty, Carter, Jamaica 37 s St. Peter, Nelson, Naples 70 r ~ e Frederick, Bennet, Valentia e last from Gibraltar 41 J e Sch'r Industry, Tuck, Martinique 22 th n Hawk, Gifford, St. Michael's 35 ta 1, Schooner Industry left at St. Pierre's, Ja , (hip Jofephus, Wilkin, Philadelphia ; brig to '' Anthony, Miller, do. brig Mercury, Smith, _ Baltimore. ,0 e Sailed from St. Pierre's, 19th June, un e del convoy of the Woolwich 44, in coitlpa- t ], Iny with the following American vessels : A t ! brig Phebe, Taylor, New-York ; brig Jo- de 1 feph, Wait, Portland ; brig Commerce, f Gardner, Baltimore ; schooner Guardian, t Blackwell, do. (loop Nancy, Mitchell, do. . schooner Industry, Russell, Salem ; do. f t Harmony, , Hartford ; four fch'rs V . belonging to Plymouth, captains Taylor, let f Davy, Holmes and Harlow. 23d —capts. T1 r Taylor, Blackwell, and Gardner, left the ™ ■ convcry—24th, lat. 22, 9, N, long. 60, 33, J o ff 1 schooner Harmony, Industry, of Boston, ' fcr and (loop Nancy, left the convoy. July j Ca sth, spoke fliip Columbia, from New-York ! bound to Hamburg, 3 days out, all well, lat. 38, 50, long. 61. Brig Hannah, June 29, lat. 57, 50, was boarded by a French privateer natned the Efpiegle, commanded by citizen Barron, El who, after fcarching his papers and plund ering him of live stock, &c. put on board the crews of two vessels, one American, captain Godfrey Wood, from Liverpool for New-York; and the other, a Britilh letter ( of marqut?, captain --Pitt. Dnmimee ' thxc New-York, who had been captured a few the days before—the vessels were sent to Porto c ' al Rico. Spoke no merchantmen. Brig Frederic, June 7, spoke schooner ' ° John, captain Lovell, from Cape Ann, fifrr Gibraltar, in fight or the rock, 47 days L ] out. July 3, long. 62, 30, lat. 41, spoke (hip Jane of Baltimore, 8 days out. July D< 4, lat. 63, 49, spoke brig Mary, of Boston, * from New-York, for Havje de Grace, 9 pC p days out. JuJy 7, long. 65, 15, spoke brig Abbey,from Malaga, for Philadelphia, July 9, spoke Nabby, of Wifcaffet, 3 days 4t out. June 3, parted with (hip Lark, of ~, Boston, captain Munroe, bound to Madeira, * in company with captain Billings of Phils- ' delphia. !l!' Brig St. Peter left at Naples, 2Cth March, (hip Clopratra, Seton, belonging at, bound nf 1 to N. York, to fail in about three weeks. ' urr Ship Hibernia, Young, of Newbury-Port, cent arrived*tlNaples,from Alicant, 25th March, Tl, Brig A. B. C, Le Pelley, belonging to our Richmond, to fail in about 3 weeks ; brig a Sally, Douglas, was to fail for N. York in about 3 weeks.—Ship Perseverance, Ken- J nedy, of Chai'lefton,and a brig belonging to fe Messrs. Neil and Getty, of Boston, were at Alicant, April 26.—Brig Triton, Isaacs, of D'l Boston, was at Barcelona, April 15 Sch, ] ut ia Aurora, of New York, came in to Gibralter Bay, May 24. —June 5, off the Western Is lands, fell in with the Mahonnefe Engli(h frigate on a cruize, in co. with two other frigates, belonging to Ad. Jarvis's fleet, then tic off Cadiz ; the officer who boarded us in formed that the Admiral, about a week be fore had sent into Cadiz, 9 Transports, with Span!Hi prisoners, taken at Trinidad. He mentioned there being French priva teers off the western Islands. July 1, lat. w 42, 20, N. long. 62, 10, spoke schooner Aurora, Bennetj 16 days from Boston, all Ju ente well. Julj-, 2, lat. 42, 29, N. long. 6-> W« con- fpoie IhipMartha, belonging and Lad •„> eof K 60 frptn Boarder. ' £ • * amc " lw to Windward, two large Prr" J'P B ,'. " n^ r fpoke by on?, rte ■ Eng.-ilh frigate Prevoyante, had loft her lUd - f T maft f d r all h «- topmasts, in a heavy Th e other was also a m £ ate ' whlch h? ' d !'«" entirely drafted. For Bourdeaux, Ct The Ship E C. Ho, i-.Tfyij)ftCaptain O. Boys, adV AT Wiling an/Francis' wharf; or tt 15 da> ' s ' F ° r freijht FRANCIS COPPINGER, 0 , , No- 1 31, South Front Street. 1 -IVJI dm. No. 183. D'ljlrid of Pennsylvania, to -wit : .y s.. l. s. L^ E ** that on the 40 a o i , . da V of June, in the twenty W firfl year of the Independence of the United u > § .ji-n*?*™*' J AMts WOODHOUSK, of the la.d diftritf, hath deposited in this office the is. tl! '® Ql * book, the right whereof he claims aa 01 ,n .! ile words following, to wit : 6 C . e *°" n ? Chernift's Poxktf Companion, \ being a Defcripticti of a Portable Laboratory, rae containing a Pbilofophical r.pparatus, and i •1 S reat "umber of Chemical Agents, bv which nl. any person may perform an cndlefs variety of art ' amusing and inljrudling Experiments, defipn ly. (( 5 , use of lad,ies and gentlemen, and ■n- ' nt . en <*'l to promote the sultivation of the • • " Science of Chemiitry in fha United States nf fU ' Tt mer iS a ' ByJ AMes Woodhoiise, M. D. 1 !! I' o^5 Jr of Chemillry, in the Unverfity of to rennfylvania, Prcfide,nt of the Chemical So ls, " ciety of Philadelphia, Sic. - « " P r , crent ever V that ii not denomi ne n -' tc - Cheiuifiry, is but a fuiall part of a fyf- teni oi natural knowledge. >r T r Prieply on Air." In conformity to the ail of <he Congress of the en JmtedStates, intituled, " Anaftft>ribe encour >t. a<em«nt of Learning, by feenring the copies of RTfcps, chins, and books to the authors and pro e, P nttcrsr| f such copies, during the times there ar in mentioned. [ d SAMUEL CALDWELL, Clerkof tbe ,1 , Diftri<a of Pennsylvania. ,* J u! y rß - d^t—wstf Co i( l Ihe History of Pennsylvania, le Ey KOJBERT PROUD, o T S ii the pref», and will be published, -*■ with all convenient expedition, by Zicha- RI AH Poulson, jun. No. go, Qiefnut-ftreet, Philadelphia, where fubferiptions will continue to be received, and at the Philadelphia Library, according to the printed propofaU, until the s. ; work is ready for the fubferibers. ° i _i UI LL 8- "wtf 7 ! Public Notixe is hereby given, O ; at June term, 1797, a petition was | X presented to the Court of Common Plejs, held at "\ork Xown, in the State of Pennsylva nia, at the inftince sf James Short, praying the Court to supply a loft deed made by a cer- J tain Andrew Hickenluber, to Hugh Morrifon, i, James Morrifon, and John Sample, executors g to Hans Morrifon, deceased, for fix hundred ~ »cres of Land, situate in Meiullen township, in the county of York —All per sons who have any objeflions to make to the ob jeil of the fiid petition are desired to attend at - the Court Houte, in the town of York, on the - itb day of September next, otherwise the loft - deed will be fapplied. , I JOHN EDIE, Clerk.'. , 7»b 18- eotS 5 Stolen or Strayed, • the tzth iii:l.out of the Commons of Phil i -5 delphia, a brindled Cow, marked with the ( letters I.N. S. in <iiffer:nt places, a white face which extends over one of her eyes, a little whi e on the hack near the rump, her body and end of j her tail white, apiece cut off the under part of her ' off ear, and the lop cut offher near one. Anyper , ; fen returning tlie said Cow to John Simtsom, , Catharine-street, will be handfomelv rewarded. ; I J»'y '8- ~t This Day is Published, BY Mc.lT. Dobfon, Carcv, Campbell, Rice, and the other Bookfcllers, Prue One Dollar and tweniy-fivc cents. Elegant y pintcd on Wove paper, and Hot frcJTtd, Bv John Thompson, A V(£WOF The Constitutions Of the fevcral States with eseh other, and witfi rife United States : exhibiting in Tables the prominent fe atures of eaeh Constitution, and clalhng together their most impsrtart provifiens, unuer the several heads of administration ; with Notes andOfcfervatioiis. I3y WILLIAM SMITH, Of South-Carolina, L L. D. and member of the Congress of the United States. Dedicated to the People of the United States. N. B. A few Copies printed on an inferior pa per, at 3-4ths of a dollar. February 6 mw f ror Sale, 4t the Office of the Gazette of the. United States, No. 119, Chefnut-ftreet, The lafi Report of the late Secretary of the Treafuryj being a brief hiflorv of the llate of financial -oncer,s of the United States. The Proceedings of the Executive of the United States refpe<s\ing the weflem in furretflion : Containiug many faiils and cir cumflances no where else to be found. to cents. Ihe Letter of Mr. Pickering to our minister in France. 37 ft cents. An Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of the United States for the. year 1795- A few copies of th'e volume for 1794 may be had to complete setts. . D'lvernois' account of the Revo lutidnin Geneva. 12 x-r cents WALKER iff No. 73, South Fkont Street, Have fur Sale, Virginia Tobacco, of the Richmond inspec tion 350 bbls. Virginia Flour and Middlings 500 bushels Wheat 5 calks Ginfang. ALSO, Three cases Rouens Linens, entitled to the drawback 2Co pieces Bandannoes, and xoocsdies India Sewing Silk. June :htw"t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers