%i )Z [ / ' —• , PI)!LADEL PH IA , I EVENING, Octodfr it. i Ff/r tbi Gazettk of tic Un-itkd States. 1 Pialndtlphia, ofiller 17§7* c Mi. B. WYNKQO P. (Gonti'iii'd from yeflerdat's Cup t'e. 1 By this ftatetjient it appears, thi't the { eolfee was thrown into the dock and not 1 upon the wnarf, as itated by Dr. Riifh ; > and I know from perfru.' inflection, that the dock into wliieh the damaged coffee was ! J t!hro,wn was always covered at fl«»d tide ; 1 hence any effluvia mud have been prevented t from riling iiom that source. That no < morbid effects were produced by that fold < on the wh?vf. is evident from all the enfes : which occurred for the fir ft two weekj being confined to one* neighbourhood, or to per- < fot»"> who ha-d intercourse with the inhabit- 1 ants of that neighbourhood If the {vlge water could Haye given n'fe ] ■to the ditefe, no commercial city would 1 t'ver life free from it in the fifmmer season. To the argument offet-ed in support of : , the effluvia frrym the damaged coffee pro ducing the dife?fe, becaiife the failore were indifpo'fed while clearing the hold, it may be replied that their indispositions were too mild n; ' -f too (liort duration, to give fi.yport to iwch an opinion. 1 we learn from the writings of the ex- Lind and Blanc, that it is com mon for people to be made giddy and ij'rk by the effluvia from putrid bilge water, and that the gases generated in the eonfined 1 holds of fiftU mips, from, whence frelh air bail been.long excluded, has, like the fixed air of fermenting liquwrs, occafipned in, fiat death to perform incautioufi.y or fud dfilly exposed to it, before the holds have been ventilated or exposed to the aceVfx /if frefn air; but there is no mention hi either of these authors, or in any others shnt have come to my knowledge, where they have occasioned a fever even of the mil deft kind, much 'ess a malignant and contagious fever. The effluvia which arise from putrid coffee are precisely the fame as those which arise from putrid .grafj and other herbs, from the leaves and hark of plants aud trees, ami from almpft every other kind of jiptrid Vegetable: hence, if the effluvia of putrid coffee ever produces any kind of fever, it mttft produce the fame kind as other putrid Vegetables '; but the effluvia ot other putrid vegetables never produce any fever but ore of an mtermittiiig kind, which are never eonfagfeus, of which the remitting fever, whether r.ccorrpr.oi<d with bilious evacua tion* or not, is only a variety, rendered "flS&rcnt only by the difference of the con iKtutions or condition of the persons affect ed by the a£ting cause ; that is, if the cause operate upon a patient with a phlogistic or inflammatory diathesis, the fever will 'be accompanied with inflammatory symptoms, '.and the remissions will be obfeure so leng as -{hat diathe()B continues. When it operates upon «i patient with the opposite. diathesis, called the nervous or typhus disposition or constitution, the remiflionS will also be im perfect, but the increase or recurrence ot the febrile fymptojjis will also be moderate, though the danger may be great. The circumstances fa£ts whiclt have now been stated, appear fufficient to convince every impartial enquirer, that a disease of so malignant a nature as that which occasi oned such mortality in 1793, could not arise from the effluvia of damaged coffee or any other vegetable substance. If tc these ■K e add that such a disease wps never known 'to' be in Philadelphia, or any other part of the United States of Ame rica before, hot had altvays been introduced, when it did occur, by vessels from the Weft Indies, though the seasons had frequently been as hot apd dry,'and some more so, and the streets more replete with putrid ve getable matter than in 1793. And if we compare its leading and charafteriftic symp toms with those of the bilious remitting fever in its most equivocal and dangerous I form, as well as with the observations of all the physicians that have written express ly on the fubjeft, together with the causes which give rife to other ceintagiou!' fevers v 110 person acquainted with medical history, and qualified to discern the connection be tween cause and effett, can hesitate in be lieving that the disease never has originated \ in Philadelphia, nor ever can be occasioned by putrid vegetable effluvia, but is always, imported by vessels with sick pevfons or in fedted goods on board. (To be continued.) , Fron th NEWARK GAZETTE. Mr. Woods, I have with pain observed in a confpicu oua place of the CentiWl of Freedom of last week, under the .New York head, a statement intimating that gan. Wilkinfon had arbitrarily proclaimed military law at D'Etroit, which had excited great discon tents, and eaufed tbe merchants and others to remove to the oppoiite fide of tne Strait. It is to be lamented that there are to be found among us, persons base enough to invent and publifll every fpecits of report that can pruHbly bring injo disgrace either our government or its officers. Lut as there are fueh, it is our duty to defeat their nefarious policy, b"y detesting and expofmg them, when in our power. Having kft D'Etroit iii July last, I feci myftjlf authorised to contradict the above statement, and affureyou that it is in'pare iibfolutely falfe. Admitting it to be a fa£t that the general has proclaimed military lav, which I think is not improbable;,yet the' eonclufcn that the proclamation has produced great discontents, and caused the merchants ai;d others to leave the place and form a new settlement on' the .oppose fide of the river, is altcgether without founua t,'op. So 'far from military law being un • por-la#, I can sffure yon, that u a has been fercctaitiied, it has been dor.s fit the vi fpeeial inftar.ce and riqusft: of the irthsbi- b tarits themselves;, I was witness inyTelf to ti frequent solicitations from the moil refpec- it table of" the inhabitants, earnestly re que ft- ti ing the general to adopt the measure ; afid a petition was actually in circulation before r< t left that place,' ftjrit ni£ it sex pedietiii y arid b urging its necrffity- It is pofliblc, how- t; ever, that there may have been Come who n were opposed t\> the nieaftire ; yet it is not ti to be Wondered at, if, in theft, days of re- t : generation, there are to be found there, as f< well as here, pevfons who are opposed to g all government. • t The sffertiofl, thr.t many of the inhabit- h antshad, in conference of martial law, form- 1: ed a new settlement ou the BritiiTi fide of the strait is equally untrue. In confcquence of the trtaty bet ween us and Great-Britain, f eighty-four of the inhabitants of D'Etroit, f agreeably to that treaty, declared ihemfelres f British fuhjeels—fhortiy after its ratificati J I on they formetL the plan of the new fettle- c ment-above alluded to. In the latter et>4 ot : August, the / laid out the town on the op- c polite fide ofthe Strait, about two miles be- i Jovv D'Etroit ; and on the 4th July last, the i proprietors call lots for their several places, t and a£tually commerrcedtheir improvements. c The frame's of several dwelling houses, as c well as of a Block house, were befote this : framed, and ftigulated to be raised in a (hort j t time.— It is therefore not only a falfe, but ' a cruel assertion, that it was in confcquence ' of the general's inhabitants / of D'Etroit formed this new settlement within the Britilh, lines. 1 Among the-».nany reasons that were urged < in favor of' military law, it was alledged, that in eonfequence of the sudden change 1 from a rigid and military discipline, to a mild and lenient eiril administration, crimes of every species had ertcreafed to_ fueh adegree, that there was no security of persons or pro perty. —That by reason of forae ridical de fe&.in the, new system, or in consequence of the remiffnefs of the officers, there wes no adequate remedy }o redress the grievances complained of. That on account of the prejudices of many in favor of foreign gov- . 1 ernments and their enmity to their new qne, added to thelarge assemblage of IndiaS-i that were continually gathered round the tow», and frequently in it, who in eonteauencs of the secret mitigations ofthe Frenchand Spa- i, nifti had discovered enmity towards the A mericans,, the town was in real danger, of being plundered and pillaged—to prevent j whjch military law was the only remedy, as the civil could not exclude the ladian3 from the town, nor prevent their affeniblage out of it.—But many even preferred the milita ry to the civil law from principle—it was a government they had ever been accustomed to; under which they aliedged they experi enced fewer crimes, than under their new government. Their disputes they urged were then quicker fettled, with less expeuce, and generally agreeable to right and justice. It wai also formally stated to the general, by Col. Hamtramck the then commandant of the Post, that under the present law his garrifop was daily dimini/hing by desertion being enticed away by the inhabitants.— That frequent complaints were made of the excesses which they committed in .town, which it was impossible for him to prevent while the inhabitants were permitted to fell them liquor; an evil the civil law wus ina- 1 dequatc to remedy—that they were in real danger of an attack and in cafe of an attack, of a defeat by the Indians, as there were . frequently five or fix hundred of them in • the town many of whom had discovered hof-1 tile difpolitions, and who might, ealily un-: der the present regulations, intoxicate his garrison and render them an easy prey to their mereilefs enemies.—ln (hort he ailed- ( ged, that military law was the only method of preventing the threatened danger and re dressing the cu:iy evils complained of. Difpatche's containing these statements were, on the 7th of July last, forwarded by the General to'the government, and request ing orderi on the fubjedt:—lt is therefore presumable that iflie has proclaimed milita ry law, he hat not diine.it prematurely, nor without orders. Before the measure is cen sured, the above circumstances ought to be known, and it is believed, thjit when weigh, cd maturely, they will be fvund fufficient juftificfitron of its adoption. Your'a, # B. Newark, September 3 bth, 179 7. ______ From the NEW-YORK GAZETTE. Translated for this Gaitette, from a work entitled " An Eleftor of Paris/' written and "published at Paris, by COWSIN JACQUES ; author of several elegant and much admired prodiiftions on religi ous, moral, political and fanciful fubjef-ts, page'l6l. This work is universally and highly eftcemed and fought after by all ranks of people, not only at Paris, but in : the departments. 1 " What do you call RoValift ? 1 " Do you who regret the an cient regimen ? But, with the exception of . an handful of anarchiils, interested in the i prolongation of the revolutionary goyern . ment, every Frenchman regrets the ancient order of things. It woujd be ufclefs to dif , guise any longer this truth, founded in na s ture atid reason." " It is, in effeft, very natural and rea i fonable, to compare the situation in which • we were, with that in which we are. There • ts not a iingle honcft man iu France who docs not make this companion each moment I in the day—who is not by an irrefiftiblc ; movement forced to maVe it, even when ha yvifhes it suppressed. Before the revolution there weie abuses—great abuses ; and the ■ revolution was made to correct those abr.fes ; to-d»y abuses of every kind are multiplied ; without end. The film which bear ' upon us at present is such, that nothing [ which eppreffed men under the ancient re ; gimen, is comparable to cur actual situation. . Every kind of- privation, vexation and calfi . ttiity desolate us; we cannot make one ftepj s ] walking on ruius or dead bodies ; • V \ We cannot look aActtai! «.?» without feeing ir bl«od or tears. A'flu redly, this fltuation is v. not eonfoling ; and to force men to prefer o it to the ancient order of things, would, be tl to fay to them : » " We command you to prefer iniquity to si religious fentituents, crime to virtue, rob- c bery to honor, pirfidy to good faith, devaf- a tation and pillage to tranquility and the i maintenance of property, misery and famine \ to abundance and physical enjoyments, eveiy c thing that defoTates to every thing that con- c soles, alitlnVis sbfu'rd, over-dene, extrava- v gant, perplexing, tyrannical and murderous, f to all that is jufl, reasonable, confident, mild, \ humane, propitious to innocenre and favora- v hie to pre'f.rvatidiii" , " Who further do you call Royalist,?" i " Is it the mart of information, the re> J fleiTting obferverj wiio,. judging of .the pre- < sent by. pa ft ages, and. feeing faftions -rncef- v fantly fuceeeding ea«h other, (liould fay to Jiimfelf: —" If the prtfont regimen engen- < dcrs'faftions ; if it is in its essence to create < -them ; if we march without ceasing from I convulsion to convullion ; if parties succeed- ! ing and destroying each other by turfis, find 1 , in this order of things an eternal aliaieut to their fury ; it would then be better to be un der a chief, than to be in a republic ; be cause a chief is the only means of fuppr&ing all factions ; because factious rend and dif traA the bosom of the country, and leeauje tht people would never he Jmppy m a country al ways tt prey to patricidal children who tear her to pieces." ' ( •' But a man who reasons thus would me rit a civic crown, in Head of deferring perfer cut ion, becauf/he would be E&uated by a sacred love of his couhtry, and love of coun try is what constitutes the good citizen." REMARKS. • Friends to liberty, wherever ycrti are, fe | tioufly weigh the above fctitiments—they j were written by a man whom you will fee, . by the quotation bel-w, was once an ardent advocate for the revolution, which has taken • pla«e in his courjtry. How much morerea fon, Amtricr.ns-Trjr.y countrymen —had a frenchman, who lived under tsie despotism . of the Grand-Monarque, to wi(h a change in government than you, who in this land of liberty, enjoy .every right compatible v. ith the exigence of social order ? Do not, , my fellow-citizens, by complaining of ima | gitiary, bring upon ypurfelves real oppression. If you love and with toprelerve liberty, fol low not blindly the devotees to France— , they will lead you into the paths qi despo tism, through their zdtniration of every thing that is French ; for it mud be evident to every man of the lead penetration, that the too long continued and.mnrderous anar thy which dcfolates France," has opeued the doc«s of despotism, which the people of that unhappy country will soon eagerly rush ißto, to fhdter themselves from a more devasta ting tornado. Consider the excellence of your govcrnmept—-the invaluable privileges you poffefg—the benevolent and rational laws that have been made to feeuje you in the unmolested enjoyment of your particular mode of* religious worship, your property and reputation. Will you facrifice the cer tam enjoypicnt of all tbpfe bleHings in the chimerical hop " of eftaljlilhing a better and more eligible order of things ? No, the bulk of you are too enlightened not to fee, and too honed not to defpifeauy attempts at in < novation under the specious and pretexts of exclusive and superior patriotism and benevolence : a friend to mankind, I love regulated, rational liberty as the true source ps human felicity : and view as my greatest enemy and the decided foe to the ■ t happiuefs of his fe.iow-creatures, him, who, ' continually at. work to undermine thepillari 1; of fecial order, wishes to introduce the de ttruclive chaos ps anarchy. Americans, ye ['.are mori lit for liberty than any nation on earth, ye have more of it—for Heaven's fake do not lose any part by lideuing to the i fiends who acvife you to your ruin ; remem ■ ber, if you are friends to freedom, that yon . avoid anarchy—it is the grave of. liberty. ; vSufpeft the man who pretends a furious and violent attachment to the interests and hap r pinefs of the people—who is the bully of li - beity ; look round you and fee the moll ; glaring dcrelittion of principles in the coi\- . dust of the exclusive patriots of our own t country. .. Are thpfe the friends o" liberty, who juftify o» every occafioti the uftivpWs that have, for'feveral years part, tyrannized oyer the poor, ignorant, and deluded peo ple of France, ond in particular, those a mdng us, who, to a man, haw wi(hed the i dire&ory and army paid by them, to tri -1 umph over ihe people and the legislative bo- J dy, even when the peace and welfare of the t United States was evidently put in-jeopardy - by the fucceGs v fcf the former ? When'the , miniEer of the defpotk king cf SyainJnfult i ed a,nd abused our virtuous rulers, have not 1 the very men, who three years ago were for 1 giving a death-blow to every Spaniard as the vile slave of a despot, been the mod zealous fupporierscf the inttreds and unjust conduft - of Spain towards the United States ? Do f not the Jacobins among us, v4sh patricidal e grin, exult in the qmbarralfments of oureoun - try from foreigu infultsanddepredationsand t afcribeto mal-adminiftration what is afenba - ble only to the wyiknefs of government in - not having a naval force fufficicnt to proteCl our immense commerce from the dangers to - which it is c*puled from every war in £u h rope? Every dispute among ehe ambitious e powers of. Europe will prove eqtujily fatal to u cur iaureils a? the present has t been,-if wc do rwf haden to command juf c lice and refptft by an increase of-our powe*. a —Strengthen your power and you will al ii ways eiiiure peace, honor, hapcinefs—-f.nd e cbnliding the management of your affairs ; with generous unfufpiqioUs confidence to d den of your own choice, cheerfully abide r ( hy their decifioris. Observe the fiend-like g conduct of our apostles of anarchy; never docs any tr.cafure come forward to fecui'e 1. our abroad and our tranquility 1-: at home, but they oppose it with all their >, mjght, as formißg a barrier to their black de iigno cf forjenti'ig infurrcftion. See their infernal exultation at ar.y supposed J p which our frigates. They are afraid li of ftrengthaning the arm of government, left fj their idol anarchy may be crushed and de- in llroyed, and their horrid views thereby p fruftrated. You have liberty, my fellow-, o citizeßS, and may ydu continue to deserve y .arid enjoy, it, by, detesting"jacobinism and v its abettors.; they have dug a grave for R- 1 - e publ'icanifm ill France and so will in Ameri- a ca if you do not (hew yourselves determined i; on every occafioh to avoid and despise their li wiles and villainy.—The author of the fore- ii going quotation waj otice a friend to inno- g vujion aud Revolution, as you will find by e 'what follows 5 how he has changed, you v will fee by the translation above-—thev are the sentiments of at lead fotir fifths of 'lie v people of France. Ext rafted from work I called 11 The C<iii(litufion of the Moon," t written by Cousin Jacques, page 3. \ " All my works, my known prinV-iples { ' and couduft, which at any time cannot be ! { charged with incivifm, attell fuffieiciitly that ' tliere are few men, of letter?, who, under e tue ancient regimen as courage- < otifly as me, the abuses of despotism,' who I marked more energetically a tender and fin- ] cere love for the people, who was mo.e frpit- 1 ten with the charms of true liberty. But 1 were mjudice begins, there liberty ends; t when law, peace, humanity, even God him- i felf became causes of condemnation, that ' person mud be deftituto of common lenfe, ] who could expeft public felicity from sUch ] an order of things—who could not fee to 1 what refuli they would eventually tend." Mejfrs. APl.can & Lang, Every American, whether born or adopt ed—every friend to the honor and ''nterefts of his country, who is feelingly alive to in sults and injuries from any foreign nation whatever—every firm supporter of the mea furei of our national administration, particu larly in their elifpute: r&tih foreign potvers —in fliort, every honed man who loves true liber ty, /hould feel a virtuous and patriotic pride in (hewing hinifelf a decided loe to an aban doned, despicable and unprincipled fa&ion, which, for several years pad, havq aliuraed . al) fnapes, and put in prafiice every vile and ■wicked engine to impede the operation of sll measures entered into by the mod upright j and enlightened men iu America. To units iq supporting our government whaoever it is involved in disputes with foreign powers— • to juilifv, rather than criminally condemn e very dep it takes at fu«h an iutereding pri ■ 113, is a famed principle, aud it cannot be too often, nor too generally inculcated. We should not allow ourselves to deliberate a ■ moment, when onr government itfelf ■ insulted and its rights invaded by another nation—(hould feel a holy impulse to hasten , without reflexion around itsdandard, and give it our decided support ; which, in a f republican institution like ours, forms its 3 only ftreugth. -Should the points in dispute 1 be glaringly impolitic, or eveii unjud, it is 1 bettn to fufTer the momentary reproach or r inconvenience attached to their temporary 1 ' operation, than to incur the certain devaila-. - ticn which would flow from inviting foreign : in fun and injury ,by the weakness ocaafiou -1 ed from disunion among ourfelvw. Every 1 man, who, 011 such occafioris, is heard to 1 jnftify foreign governments or their agents, - in oppofnion to our own, ought to be brand b ed with contempt and ignominy, as being 1 delitute of every principle of virtue or pa l trigtifm. Men of this'damp are " fit for : treasons, dra?agems, and spoils—their no ir tions are dark as Erebus—let no such men e be truded." No ! Americans, they ought , not to be truded—tlyry are diggings pit for s your deftruftion we,know the men - let us watch them betimes, left the evil hour r come upon us unawares. n I regret exceedingly that my abilities s are not equal to my will in the developemgnt e of the nefarious views of foine patricidal - men among us, who have organized a fydem H for the deftruftion of our federal govern- j . ment—who arc opeuly and secretly at d work—have their agents and their Funds— - receive impulsion abroad as well at home— - eagerly catch hold.of every abuse offered to I degrade and -vilify onr government by so - *eigners of every defcriptiou—the vile organ II of a foreign choatic democracy, as well as , the representative of the mod despotic king in s Europe—-and finally, who would fcrvilely d caress and flatter even the fiends of hell it -- felf, did they declare themselves inimical to our virtuous ruler.? and admirable conftitu e tion !—Aroufe > from your lethargy, my ( i- countrymen! y<t,\vho love order and ration -- al regulated liberty who are friends to e the federal govemnierit —who feel a holy y horror at the daily recital (from the pens of le humane and enlightened Frenchmen, who I begin only no\)v to peep out of their dun it geons) ofthe carnage and devastation cdra ir mitted by the demons of disorganization and le anarchy in France ; the furies of infurrec is tion and antifederalifln are gone forth among $ ws—and their deadly poison is spread, with o aftive zeal, by vile, despicable printers in ;d different parts of the'Uivion, amongst whohi, 1- those in N',w-York hold a distinguished rank id in point of venom, although inferior in point a- of t dents. Do not fay to yourselves, as is in too commonly the cafe, that " thej' arc so tl- despicable and few in number that we do :o not fear all their BisfcJjinatioiM ; call to a- your raiad u the iate of unhappy and dcfolate is France; fee an handfal cf jacobins, having :o one view—one foul—one centre—i'.flirp the is govcrnm^rit—,t-»- >ple upbn the inoft sacred f- rights of the peoplr—dealing ea-ath aua def ?. trQftion to all around. As it is surely 1- much better to profit by<» the miifo.-tunes of d others than our own, let us encourage the r3 publication of the pictures of the horrors o which have marked the Heps of jacobins ie during the revolutions of France—let our ;e aftive and laborious countrymen use their ;r endeavours to obtain every Frtr.ih account 'e ofthe dreadful reigp hi the nun of blood, and y transmit' to their countrymen the justly aw ir fill defcriptiop of that hundred-headed hy s- dra, anarchy, whose frightful image fliould ir b.' kept constantly before the eyes of the people of America. liaft. virtuous a..ri »n,. lightened Frenchmen J whom heaven has I spared (or die benefit of the htmiaii race*— ' ] inspired by truth, who has, for a few yea ft. part, been chained down by the fell demou» of democratic tyranny, ye are rtow giving to yow fellow-creatures of evsry climate, a re volting but inllruclive lefiun, of the horrid evils which are to be apprehended in letting a few mjH get the ul'per hand, who, abus ing the ("acred names of philautropy and liberty, have made them subservient to their infernal views of declaring war, not only a gainst every thing facrtd among but even against the Almighty Ruler of the Uni verse himfelf. Americans ! do you not observe the con-, vulfive wrkhinga of the high-priests of jaco binism among us (our-gaHie American prin ters) when any accounts are published, written in France on the crimes of thJir . " patriots," which, till lately, dared not ap • pear ? Do they not pointedly fay, they are " lies," and affect tfo disbelieve them, altho' ev?ry fpeecb from the direftory and the le gislative body to e3ch other, proclaim the horrid iku:jtion of that di ft rafted country ? Read the mefiage of the directory to .'he council of five hundred, in answer to the ve- , folutionof the council, refpefting ths thw.rch of the troops within the contlitutiort' lim its ; in which Carnot, as President, fays ; " The cmtfe of these proceedings utn the part of the defenders of the co.untr-;, is to be attributed to the general alarm Sahi dis quietude, which for some months pf>V*, have taken possession of allperfons, has fvc Tcecded the profound tranquillity that reigned,', and the general confidence which every wltcri* prevailed- It is to be attributed to rhe de-V. falcation of the revenue, w-hich leaves all parts of the administration in the most de plorable situation, and deprives, often of their pay and their subsistence those insn, who, for years past, have facrificcd their health and Ihed their blood t'»- fer»e the re public. It is to be attributed to the nffajft nafion if the purchasers of the national property, of the public functionaries, of fh« defenders of the country—in short, of all those tvbo Jia-je dared to Jbeta themselves the friends ps th( rep'illic." In the foregoing address of Carnot wilt A be feeh a confirmation of the extrafis from French authors, which -nave, differtpt times appeared in the daih £ ettc, a#d which our anarchiftshav* pretended to doubt th< authenticity of ; if r<ally believe thera to be " nonsense and I;es," by calling on the Editor* of this paper, they will b* j dircclfd to the person by whom v they were i tranflated,Who will condescend to ha ve them Jn civil chapter andverfe in the Fnnch language. ■ i But no, ye furies of sedition ai)d uproar, ! t ftiall fee none of you ; ye are afraid left tlie i clear unclouded and fplejjidid light of truth i which is daily appearing, should expose to 1 i open day, the horrid works of darkness com mitted by your idols, Danton, Robefpierrj, Marat, Carrier, and a long lift of njoufters, whu.n you have entbufiaf! ieally and impiotif ' ly ealledreprefeotativescfthe Deity ! V» r hat ! • ' .do you want to keep < truth any longer in i chains ? Doyoyvvilh the liberty of fneecb ■ £.nd of the press, for another five years to be . ' under the tyrannical awe of democratic an ) arc hical despotism ? i>o, your reign has been , long enough—the fimc is'at la ft arrivj-d, - when virtue shall take p'aee.af crime, religion j of ath<ifm, humanity of iarlari.'y, Morals of < - debauchery, indujlry a(id commerce of fpccula r iion and robbery, the arts and fcier.ces of th# - ile-vajlating, deflrojitig angels of furious detna -1 cratic ignorance and brutality. The enlight t eried herqes of insulted huirsaniiy in Franco, ' r who have escaped the rev. lutiouary tornado, - are now manfully opposing the directory r Jacobinic attempts to sweep off the faee of the earth, /every, reminding viftage of civili. s nation and nfinemeut, by bringing bjick t the devaflating reign, of the blood hourdf I of chaos. Heaven grant, in pity toman n kind, that they may fucceed,in their god - like exertions ; And, may the industrious 1 t and patriotic part of the United States, a - vail thenifelves of their falutsry and fraf-mtU - lie labours to strip anarchy and ir.furre&ion j of the cmiatle and aliraitive garb in whitk • ()iir " patrjots" have industriously arrayed a them, and are still anxious to display tneat s in, notwithrtanding the horrid, frightfol II deformity in which every French writer dai y ly reprefeiits those fell demons trfhuman ft;-_» - licity. What their views are in wishing I *sjf 3 ftifle and suppress the flood of truth whiah - the fatal example of France affords, during y the reign of her jacobins, or apostles of dil - organization ; imift be glaringly obvious to o every man of the lead obfervatioti, find oug'at y ttr'be an objeft of ferious'and timely alarm to f every friend of order and good government, 0 PATRIOTICUS. - ——— 1 '' V '— l i- A meeting of tbe Sc lcfl and Common Coun j ci!s, is I'e^u'rftcdon Friiay next, a: Jo o'clock, in the forrnot n, at the Stats-House in the Cilv of Philadolphii, in nrdeJ to receive the retnrx* ? of tlie E!fi9iort, parfiunt to the I lib feet ion ef t((t! aift of AfiernMy, Manh-Jjih, 1759. n WI.LJAM H. TOD, 1, Cink of the Se'efl Connelly it ed.vvamd j coai.T:,' t Clerk of the Cpmtnoji Counrii. I- 0" The ■Pt M ers of the Chy are t* pub'.iftthe aujve iiivtJUir feveril Gaatttes. 0 Ca..:r 0 7" 1 0 The Managers, Treasurer and PLyitcians. Oi' the /'ft ij . ''j.Tiia are to a"-» J e t,* r ui 3? the <ai;i Hof ital (in the sth day uait, ,th& IKK iOyt i r..' o'clock in rhe afternoon ;-Wtln e company of F.vans, Konfe rsrpSnter ; Ho d her't Hlivclo It, a;la2.hr; and WiUiam Steward, (■_ hlackfmuh, is also requefled. Tiie aoove gentle tr.eii may be a.Tured, there is not a pcrf n in tlw \ houfj ili at a fsver of tny kincf, »t SAMUEL COATES. e ro mo* 179 V s "rhe Health-Office , r Ti? removed to the City-Hall, and is kept opt» cigKt and day, whera pcrlons having business may ' apply. \Vm. ALLEN, Hcalth-OfHceh 11 Sept. 4. 4tf d NoriCK r THE Offices of the IVjjarfniew 'J W;r arc At the pr»fent removed near to, the Fy'i ps tha Scnyl, » sl kill, on the Ridge Bo«(j, te 4.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers