MEDICINES. THE Pqrr who may find it diftanc-, tn make ufeof Mr. Hunter's truly me ritorious offer, will be fupflied with medicine?— f»'\ barley, oatmeal. See. hy ap- lying at the fubfcribcr's store. No. Murket-flreet. ROBERT f>. STAFFORD. Tnfurance Company of the Srate | of Pennsylvania. THF. Office will be kept ufitil further notice at j the School House in Germantown. The Ccfripany still retain the room in Chefnut, above! Seventh flreet, wbere a person will att.-nd to re ceive and give an r wcrs to applications, every day frurh to iihtil i o'clock. Sept I-j. djtlawtf j Bank of North America, September Sth, 1797. J ON Monday /lext the Notice' for all Notes or J Bills payable at thisßank.which fall dueonthnt ! and the enfuinjj 6 days, will be served on the Fay- J rrs: And the like Notices on every Monday, till j the further ordersofthc Directors.—Persons wish- 1 ing to deposit iSitcs or' Bills for Collection, which are to fall due within the week, mud tfcemfulves undertake to give notice to the Payers. dtf - The Health-Office " I. c rrwjovd to the City-Hall, and is kept open ; ri?'*and day, where person? having bufiri'fs jnay J apply. Ww. ALLEN, Health-Officer. Sept. 4. dtf ! NOTIC K. * . l THF. Offices of the Department of War are for the pr sent removed near to the Falls of the Scuyl kill, on the Ridge Road. Sep'emhcr a■ dtf ; i'he Inhabitants of the DiltridJ; of Southwark, A RF. informed that a Coacheeis provided, to be jl. - kept at the Conflables' office, the north east earner cf Front and Almond streets, where the friends of those sick persons who deflre to be re- j moved to t{>< City Hospital, arc requested to males j appUratiwi—Alfo, a Heart: will be kept in readi ness for the removal of the dead. JONATHAN PENROSE N. B.— The Poor, who wijh to remove to the Tents on Schuylkill, may tie furniAed with orders hy applying «s above. A*p. 39 Fir sale or to be let on ground-* ' rent, J valuable Lot trf Ground ; OITUATE ot the north-eift corner of W«I- O nut and Fifth streets, fronting the State- House square. This lot is fifty-one feet front on Walnut street, and one hundred and thirteen feet and an half on Fifth street ; there are at pret'ent two small two story brick houses, and a number of small tenements thereon. Alfa, for Sale, Two three story Brick Houses With convenient (lores,, wharf, &c. situate on Water-Areet, between Mulberry and Saflafras streets, containing in front o» Water street fif ty-four feet, and continuing that breadth east ward nine:y-fivc fest, then widening to the south thirteen feet fix inches, l'hefe houses j ave the convenience of a public alley adjoining on the north fide, and are a very defirabte situa tion for a merchant, flour fa oflandoffice Dan. Brodhead, S. G j Nicholas Bettinger, } 1 Vtrfiu > I Samuel Cunningham. J e In this cafe the proof of service of notice be- ] ing inefficient, Itisordered that notice begiv- f tn in one of the Philadelphia and York newfpa- , pers weekly, for at leift eight weeks to the heirs or assignees of Samuel Cunningham de ceased, to atftend the board on the firft Monday in November next, to shew caul'e why a patent fcould net iflue to Nicholas Bettinger for the land in question. \ ■ ■ i IA true Copy.) JOHN HALL, Secretary of the Land Office. Aug. is- *iawßw. c 1' An elegant House in Arch Street. c TO be let and entered on immediately a large t and elepant house at the Corner of Arch and t Ninth Street. There are two drawing rooms a and one dining room—the largest is 31 feet by *6 —and two are so conn«£led by folding doors as to make but bne. Also, five bed rooms, be- n fijfes sin the garret, well ftsifhed for fervsnts. e There are stables and a coach house, with evry a convenience for a family. Enquire at No. 29, f in North Seventh street, or at No. 218, Arch j( Street; a Aug. 15. FOR SALE, v « BRETAONES In cases n German Cheeksin do. It Cambtjf k , b Plattillas _ Oznabrige .Cold and silver Watches Window Glass 10 by 8 Glass Tumblcrsin cases C Linseed Oil in casks, Ac. See. r George Penned, 103, High-SireX. -I Jnly J. 3 aw t. n Window Glass, Superior Qumlity, and cheaper than any othei (n the City— ei OF VARIOUS SIZES, ti From Bby 6 to 19 by <4, c ] Dy the single Box or tjuami'.y, may be bad at the Store of the Subscriber!, corner of Arch and Front- James C. & Samuel W. Fijher. Philadelphia, %\)t dsasette» : PHI L t A DELP nIA , c THURSDAY EVENING, SF ptfwbfr ;8 An Ordinance authori/ing the Mayor to lor l j row money in anticipation of the taxes of j the present year, and for other purposes. J WHEREAS great numbers of the in ef. habitants of the city of Philadelphia have e at present removed into the cuuntry, by -! reason whereof the taxes cannot.be eolleft r;,ed in due time, and it is neceflary that j money (hould be immediately procured for - : the purpose of pitching, paving, repairing, j lighting and watching the city. Be it therefore ordained and enafled by r ! the citizens of Philadelphia in feleft and ; j common councils aflembled, That the May"- si |or of the city be and he is hereby authorised _ and empowered to borrow, on the credit of (1 the corporation, from either of the banks 5 in the said city, any sum or sums of money not exceeding ten thousand dollars—one thousand dollars whereof'fliaU be applied to n ; the repairing of unpaved Weets, in addi r j tion to the sum already appropriated for j that, purpose—and the remainder of the money so to be borrowed, is hereby appro priated for the purpose of hiring patroles, [ and effe&ing such* other measures as the Mayor (hall deem neceflary for the protec , tion of the city, during the exiftirig cala : m ity, and in anticipation of the taxes of the present year, towards the completion of such objects as have been heretofore di c rested by an ordinance, making appropria • tions for the year one thousand seven hun [ , dred and ninety-seven. . , ; Enafted into an ordinance at Philadel phia, this twenty-sixth day of Sep j ( L,c ") tem ber, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-seven. ; SAMUEL HODGSON, Preft dent of Common Council. FRANCIS GURNEY, President of Sclcß Council. The following is from a correspondent : " I observe that the editor of the Aurora is at open hostility with you. I wish that in the paragraph wßch appears to have in curred his wrath, you had substituted people for ting ; for certainly no nation have been so completely tricked out of their own (i. e. rights) as the French." The former is a very natural wish, and the.latter a very just remark. But the rea son why the one exprcflion was not adopted rather than the other, was, on acequnt of a belief, that the only means by which tie peo ple could again, in any degree, be restored to their own, is through the medium of the restoration of the king ; and becaufc this is believed to be the wish of nine-tenths of the people of France, tho' prevented from being exprefled witn its due force by the art and villainy of the other tenth. And every man will coincide in this opinion, who, from having attended to the French revolution, has seen, as every such man must have seen, that all the leading measures of the revolu tion, m. «11 >«« J>een efEed«4- against the opinion of a solid majority—by art, by chicanery, deception, and by terror. The French have pretty plainly shewn, by a&ual and horrible experiment, that they are wholly unfit for, and cannot sustain, a free government, in any tolerable degree. And a speedy re-eflablifhment of a king, can alone prevent the renewal of those bloody scenes of and carnage which have already desolated that thriving empire. In this view every philanthropic mind mud heartily pray for the event. Who this king may be is a matter of very little consequence, so that he be not a log or a tiger ; let it be any body but the foi-difant Louis XVIII. whose principal aim seems always to have been to get as far as poflible from the reach of that " villainous thing called gunpowdet." [Many other reflections here present themselves : but a prefTnre of various em barraflments prevents, at present, any further enlargement. As the progress of things in France will, in all probability, repeatedly renew the fubjeft, the opportunity cannot be considered as gone by.] Trcnflatedfor the (N. T.J Gazette, From a worl written by Lovis-Ab£l-Bet?- sor-Rtiaur,called the " Te/lament of anE leSor of Paris." It was published immediately after the conflict between the people of Paris and the conventional army, on the fubjeft of forcing the present constitution down thelthroats of the people, notwithstanding their weighty and just abhorrence of that part of it which fays that two thirds of the members of the new body shall be taken from the old butch ering convention. Its.analogy to the char after and views of the direC ory who is the foul of the terrorist party, will apologize for its translation and pnblication at the present 1 awful and interesting crisis. "Of all the feourges, which hell has vo- j mited on the earth, since its existence, it is neceflary to be destitute of sense not to al- , low that the tuoft terrible, fatal and execra- : ble, is the revolutionary government. It is < precisely what the prince of latin poets ap- 1 peared to prtfage to future generations in this celebrated verse, wkich paints in true ( colirs what is* or rather what would be the 1 revolutionary government of the French." MoNSTRUM, HORRENDUM, INFOR ME, 'INGEVS, CUI lUMEN ADEMPTUM ! : Monflrum. " There never was a pheno- f menon more monstrous than this atrocious J invention, this hideous child of frantic crime. ( It is neceflary to have seen it to have belier- ] ed in its existence. It is not only out ef na- 1 ture and againfl nature, but it is out of the ' class of things which it is poflible for man ' to conceive out of nature and againfl na- ' ture." t Horrcndum. " The horror which it was , capable of inspiring and which in eifeft it % did infpice, was such, that we cannot think of it without (liuddering, and Our posterity a thousand years hence will hardly have cou rage enough to pronounce its name. I have seen whole families tremble as from a violent fit of the fever and ague, shiver in all their fall into convulsive motions, ■ iven when talked of before them. If it nfi s pofllble to aflemble in one single frame, eve ry horrible thing that the 1 world has pro duced since its creation, this chief-d'cetivre ■ ugliness and deformity would be less (hocking than the single idea of the revolu ■ .tiopary government. It alone has made more enemies, irrec#ncileable enemies to than every thing that could otherwise have > been deviled to hasten her deftrudliou." » Informc. " All that the perversity, de pravity, and pride of the wicked could invent of what was absurd, ridiculous, udforme'd, extravagant, flioicking, revolting, that the jmnlenfe Aore4ioufe of human follies could offer of inconceivable atrocity in silli ness, in extravagance and ih stupidity, it* far from coming up to the revolutionary govern ment. For who government, fays abftnee of revolution ; and he who fays revolutionary government, fays trfyfraaion of every kind of government, and fays even much more ; /or it fignifies, in ever)' sense of the words, the organization of disorganization, the systema tizing coldly all foi« of crimes, and draw ing up a plan of chaos. It is the-ne plus ultra of folly, ignorance, and ferocity ; and heaven no doubt has been willing to fee how far human natnre could bear away the palm of infamous-cruelty over the infernal spirits." [tfgens. "It was a coloiTus of deformity, an enormous mass of absurdities and abomi nations of every kind, an ( immense pyramid ofxrimes of evfry fpecies,of which the regis ters of hell could not contain the simple nomenclature. This dreadful colossus ap peared to have one foot on one hemisphere of the globe and one foot on the other; like the famous coloflus of the island of, Rhodes, between whose legs pasTed ships of the line. It extended, its rapacious hands to every thing it fofye&ed to be hofleft and virtuous u rider heaven ; its steeled claws would plunge themfelves|into every thing } stab, as we may fay, the two worlds to des troy them at the fame time. Its open mouth threatened to swallow the univcrfe ; and its empoisoned breath vomited a deadly plague over all the furface of France. It was a ghastly horrid wolf, whof« ferocity would not have spared any living bein-", if heaven, touched with companion for poor fuffenng humanity had not finally fupprefTed the violence of his rage." Cut lumen ademptum. "In effeft, the in stant that xhe revolutionary government took existence in France, was the epoch the most dark of our history; the fun enlivens no more the territory of France, but with a brightness fictitious and precarious. The father of light appears to bury himfelf with us in an eternal night; or rather, be concen trates himfelf in the sphere of his immortal rays, and hides himfelf from us, the better to isolate as from-all natures works. All the splendor, all the brilliancy of the universe was taruifhed ; every thing died with the reaftnr of m«« t <*ci-f thing difapp«ared with bis happiness ; all was destroyed ; the most noble portion of humanity perished ; and'the foul, which ennobled our existence plunge'd itfelf in the fight of its nothingness. He who created the revolutionary government 'acquires imprescriptible right* to the exe cration of his cotemporaries, to the sovereign contempt of posterity and to the never-end ing punishments of eternity. Sis name (hall be consigned to the bloody and livid history of barbarity. This monster, the day of his creation said to the French na tion, " Frenchmen, to prove to you how much I despise you, and to. give to you an idea of the pleasure I feel in humiliating and vex ing you, I am going to command anarchy in the name of the law, folly in the name ofreafon, atheism in the name of God »and you will obey! You will applaud «hc !" " Every thing I hive said as the revolu tionary government I have thought and still think ; I have felt and still feel. But, how ever energetic my manner of exprefiing my fclf may appear to you, it falls short of the reality ißafmßch as the reptile is below the eagle ; and when I shall be in pofTefljon of Pandora's box, should I open and exhaust it, there would not go out of it a monster more hideous and infamous than the revolu tionary government." RfMARKS. Such are the monsters and such the order of of tiling* which our American diforganizers still continue to idolize, notwithstanding the flood of truth that is daily pouring from the peiw of elegant French writers on the Crimes of the Jacobins. They are unwilling that the truth ihould appear, and stigmatize as Royalists all the humane men who feel an abhsrrence at the enormities committed during the revolution. Not a writer in France on thecondu& of their Jacobins but fays, he wants words to the feelings of hoirorand indignation which a recoiled icnjof their butcheries excites. Of twenty papers printed daily in Paris, only two or three take part with the Directory and the Jacobinic members of the Councils, all the reft, to the number of seventeen or eighteen are on the fide of the great body of the people who deleft anarchy and its abettors, and wifli for nothing so m»ch as peace, order and good gov ernment■ As a proof of the final] number of prints wh'ch favor Jacobinism, we shall adduce the authority of the patriotic Bathe, Freneau and Co.*whofe papers fay "that of all the prints we have quoted, his (Louvet's) is the only one decidedly on the Republican, or what is termed the Jac(4»in fide of thequeftion." Yetftrange otclf! ihefe conjiftmt gentlemen , after the candid acknowledgment above quoted, . fay, that the faflion in this country are ransack ing the French Royalist publications, wfcich fay they, are few in number, to bluft the charafter ' of (he whole Kevolotian, and fligmatiie ihe ' French as naturally cruel or malicious.—Of a I number of pamphlets written in France on the / Revolution now in my poffeffian, there is not , one but exprefles in language of manly indigna- , tion the horrid crimes of the Revolutionary Co- ■ •vernment. Tl*t the Ar.tifederal Jacobins a- 1 rr.ong us should wish to throw a veil ®ver the j mortalities committed in France during thei-Re- ' volution is not surprising, wh« we cuaCder. t l their attachment to ev.-ry fpe.-ies if Revolution r in Govern writ, which is never made araonj; a _ people like the Am*ric»ns, bnr' at :h.e ex r pence of industry, morality, and every facial virtue. 1 1 Whit man who has the smallest claim to vir ) tue and philanthropy, but mull dread the tnift , distant attempt at innovation in in efta'nllfhed s order of things, efpeehl'.y i* a country like 1 this, where as much freednfo is enjoyed as ii compatible with the object of mankind in the for mation of government ? What a fouice of pleas • ing_ gratification Hoes the purt patriotic hofom ! derive from a view of the great and f^dden ■ change wrought in the minds of the gr»at body ; of the peopk of the United States, from the , depredations and ins ilts coinmittedhy the French . nations on the perl'ons and property of our fei low-citizens ? What an heart cheering convic tion does it not excite of independence of the hulk of our countrymen to foreign influence,' ; whether British or French ? When the Britilh , I were committing outrages on our persons and i property, how did the bo'oin of nine-tenths of , J the people of tWis country beat with manly in .; dignation at their are doing the fame (although more unprovok-d) j the fame general sentiment of execration against ■ i them animates our viktucus patriotic fel ' ! low-citizens. Hide your heads ye tools of far r eign intrigue and faiflinn, whether British o r <" French, the people of America are too wife to . be the dupes, too good to be participators in , yqur wicked schemes against their country : They are determined to be independent, to feel sand I hope, soon to chastize) injuries and in ■ fults offered to their ellow-citizens, whetjierby Englishmen or Frenchmen Although there are friends among us, blindh- attached to for eign influence, still the great mats of the p-ople "of these states have giver, a clfar proof of their wisdom, humanity and patriotism, in their de cided detestation of the views dilplayed ky the two great powers of Europe, in their unjust conduft towards each other, and towards {his country, un-.ler diametrically oppoiite cirenm ftances. When a powerful combination existed against Franqe, and she wis likely to become a prey to her ambitious and powerful enemies, how did the citizensof America in general fym patbizein her situation, and feel with transport . every viflory ohtaired by Frenchmen ? Now , that France is become the opprefiing and not the oppreflcd nation, how different are our feel ings—they are totally changed with the change of circumfUnces in rerpe/t to the contending powerj. We have by the w:r in Europe, and theoppofite situations into which the belligerent powers have been thrown, learnt the infiruflive lefTen of the danger to which.we are exposed from a definition of the balance of power a broad. Let us profit by,our dear bought expe rience, and not ttuft to the insidious profeffions of friendfhip proffer; d us by any European p»wer whatever ; let ui choose good, quiet, impartial, honest men administer our na tional concerns, and trusting with generous con fidence to their patriotism we shall ever be happy, united and free. From the NEW-TORK GAZETTE, tic. Meflrs. M'Lean & La'{ig. Gentlemen, WHEN a single error in private life is brought forward by the malignant spirit of faftion, to tarnilh the charafter and disturb the peace of the most virtuous patriots A merica has to boast of, every sensible, deli cate and liberal mfod is wounded, and im mediately becomes interested to relcue merit from the fangs of its merciless, unfeeling opprefTors. The mingled emotions of pity and indignation fertcd my mind -£h<; ' fame, god-like principle" is uo\v aftifaiTßg , the people of France, aj appears by the late proceedings of their true reprefenta tiyes —the legidative body. What were his unremitted exertions to draw our coun try out of chaos and rr.ifcry, by unceasingly a (lifting in the eftablifhhient of our preftnt admirable con'ftitution ? How many labori ous days must he have spent in arranging the chaotic mass of public debts, and giving our finance and money operations that sys tematic and beautiful appearance they at present poflefs I What a multiplicity of disorganized objefts came, within the duties of that important office which he so honora bly filled, and to which he was Appointed by one of the best men on earth, from the high sense he. entertained of his ftrift and delicate integrity > What has been his con-* dudt in that dignified and truft-,worthy fta- , tion ? Above the fordid considerations of felf-intereft, his nofcje and difintereftcd foul was too elevated to avaifitfelf of even those advantages*" of fpeeulation, which he in common with others might have enriched himfelf from, and which hij previous know ledge of, fully enabled him to accompliflv \v hat embarrafTments was he not frequently put to for want of money, although Secre tary of the Treasury ? How different this from the condud of Citizen Monroe's dear and particular friends Delacroix, Truguet, and Co. ! To delineate the charafter of colonel Ha milton in private life, to enumerate jhe'ma ny and great instances of his integrity, hu manity, and generofny, would, my candid ellow-citizens, be telling you what you all know, what you have heard daily for many years, what numbers of you have experi enced, and gratefully acknowledge. How has candor, probity, and industry, uniformlv marked his profeffional character ?—What gentleman of the bar in this city, has given filch general fatisfaftion '—Shall we, people; of America, (to whom colonel Hamilton has rendered so many invaluable services) fufler owr veneration and esteem for hirjj, to be dnraniflied for one error in his private life? Shall we, by joiningor even listening to the tales of his inveterate alfaflin-like revilcrs, who are to a man the enemies of order, and the greater part of them the apostles of vice and villainy, gratify their malevolent and wicked designs of ruining the reputation and peace of the Ariftides of America ? No, ■1 enlightened countrymen,'ye are too liber! •|l7 geneious and just, not to look down with contempt and indignation 6n the par tisans of a disorganizing unprincipled fac tion, in their dark fiend-like attempts to lefTon, in your esteem, the man, of whose talents, probity, and reputation, they most itand in awe. The religion of the friend* «nd idohzers of Frenchmen offended at an amour. !—The chajlity of the friend of ras, Mrs. I allien and Co. wounded at an intrigue! The morality of the blind de votees to France, that land of dcbaucherv, immorality and intrigue, and where lewdnefs hcenfed and unrivalled reigns, stabbed to the quick at the carnal connexion with a woman, the fences of Vvhofe virtue were, already brdken down. ! The acute sensibility and delicacy of Gallic Americans put to the torture, at an affair of this kind, when the chajle virtuous rulers of republican France feel a pride in lading Mjjfh diamonds and brocades their kept miftrefiVs, whom they accompany to every place of public refWt, where they attraft the notice, and command the admiration and attentions of all present 1 What an ufurpatl'on of the holy right of cen sure !—What a perversion of justice 1 when uncandid malignant vice, forcing itfelf into the judgment-ieat of virtue, pronounces its decrees with partiality, fury and injustice, condemning as a vice in one country, what they approve as a virtue in another—Horrid profanation of every thing sacred. It is notorious that citizen Monroe and his partisans entertain and cherish a flrong attachment, and even adoration for many of the present rulers of France, whose lewdnefs is proverbial. I hen why, good citizen Mon roe, force colonel Hamilton publicly to con fefs his amour with Mrs. Reynolds, by re fufing to give him a certificate to exculpat* himfelf from a charge of a more fcrious na ture, intimately aumcded with the amour ? Would you, virtuous citizen Monroe, cher ami of the Barras, have been as anx* ious for the publicity of an amour in France? No, my pure democratic citiaen, you would not 7°" know you would have been laugh ed at, and if brought as a crime against your political enemy, you would be despised as a rancorous malevolent fool, if not pitied as a madman. Then why, ye dilbrgaaizers, will you bring forward, as a crime, in America, what you countenance and advocate in I ranee ? Ihe reafjn is, because your morali ty is local. I hope the citizens of the Uni ted States will scowl an eye indignant at your base attempts to blast the chara&er of one of our greatest and most worthy men, and that no American of a liberal and h.u mane mind will patiently hear our most triad and adive patriots publicly abused for frailties which the best men in the world may sometimes be ensnared into by the wiles of ■craft and villainy. But, I have, in this publication, attached too much importance to your vile attempts to injure your great political Opponent bv fenouOy I'efenting or refuting you*" vile in sinuations and abuse of him—The best ivav, and the only one which I (hall hereafter a-, dopt, and would advise every one tp make Hie of, who is so fortunate as to be placed in a iituation to hear thu great crime alledged against colonel Hamilton, by the admirers of . French morals—is, sarcastically to obfe.n e, " Upon my word, the colsnel has > re of the Frenchman in him. than, before the clif clofure of this amour-business, 1 had-any idea of—although he. has not'yet proved himfelf a modern democratic with refpeft to money-matter* ; and of course, not fit to be put on a footing with the Del-, croixs, theTruguets, arikl many otherhontjt tdoiS of our American-Jacobins'." PATRIOTICUS,