sjt University of Pennsylvania, i odoler 27, 1797. j E THE different Sckools of the University will be opened on Monday, the 6th of November ; of wliich aU who are concerned, are requclled to take notice. .. '•* By order 0/ tie Faculty. ' WM. ROGERS, Secretly. Mordecai Lewis, HAS FOR SALE, |j At his Store, No. 55, Great lfrock-ftreet, 250 bales of Bengal Goods 11 Containing Baftas Coffas Gurrahs * Moragugungees £ Took?ry Check and Strip?* , Bandano Handkerchiefs Mamoody Calicoes JI boxes Trifh Linens X do. Diapers 7 do. Umbrellas . ao caniftcrs Java Sugar 1 i 78 bags black Pepper 116 do. Eafl India Ginger* 100 calks roll Brimstone yc pipes Madeira Wine 57 calks Giu A quantity ol Iheathing Copper and Nails. O(Sober 30. 3»wjw Wharton and Lewis, HAVE FOR SALE, At their f tore and Insurance Office for (hipping, No. IIJ, South Front-street. Jamaica Rum, 4th proof, "> entitled to ' AKcant Brandy, ift & id proof j" drawback. Madeira Wine, and A few hogflieads of Juniper Berries. O&ober 31. - ( Walker & Kennedy, No. 73, South Front Street, HAVE FOR SALE, joo Hogsheads of prime Georgia Tpbacco, ALSO, ~ 50 "Pipes of Bonrdeaux Brandy, 10 Pipes of old Port Wine* oa. 17! KKtftf From Marseilles. THE CARGO Of the flwedilh barque Gtiftavus Adolphus, from Marseilles, consisting of the following articles, is difchjrging at Mr. Latimer's wharf, and for sale by the fubferibers BRANDY, well flavored, of a, 3 & 4th proof Claret, in hoglheads Ditto, in cases Frontigniac Wine, in cases ef 50 bottles OK'vc Oil, of a superior quality, in baikets of 6 and it bottles Capers OliVe* Almonds Dry Verdigreafe Writing Paper Umbrellas (Silk) of aS, 30 and 3» inches Tafieties Long and (hort white Kid Gloves for \\ omen Silk Stockings Handkerchiefs, in imitation of Madrafl Artificial flowers and Garlaods Ostrich Feathers Ribbons Perfumery Scented Hair-Powder and Pomat»m Manna in forts Cream Tartar. «... BENJAMIN MORGAN & ROBERT ANDREWS. • September 27. eot^ Choice St. Croix Sugar and Rum ' Coffee Madeira and Teneriffe Wine For Salt by Janes Yard, No. —, South Fourth-ireet. OA. 6: d 3 w Imported inthefhipMANCHESTER, Benjamin Skewell, Matter, From Bourdeaux, and for sale by the fubferiber, No. 11 Walnut Street. Bonrdeaux Brandy ~j Iri(h market claret in cases ( Entitled to Medoc wine, in do. f Drawback. Sauterne, do. do. J Thomas Murgatrsyd. WHO HAS FOR Sherry Wjoe in pipes and quarter eaflcs Rota do. ' do- Pimento in bags 4000 bushels Liverpool fait. Aug. 24. tut&stf. 15 Dollars Reward. RAN-AW AY from the Subscriber, on the 29th inft. an apprentice I.ad, named JOSEPH BARNET, by trade a paper-maker; about 19 years of age, five feet seven or eight inches high, of a light compleiign, tics his hair. Had on, and , took with him, a castor hat, half worn, one brown mixture cloth coatee, new, one light do. half ■worn, one flriped velvet waitlcoat, with blue cl.th backs, one do. with fuftian backs, and sun dry other thin clothes. It is probable he will change his clothes, as he took a number with him. Any person apprehending said apprentice, and securing him so that I can get him again, lhall re ceive the above reward, and rcafonable charges if brought home. PETER IBECHTEL. Lewer Merion township, Monte-ornery county. O&ober 30. N i iaw 3W. All Persons, INDEBTED to theEftate of Joseph John son, of Germantown, in the county of Phi- Jadelphia, deceased, are desired to ftiake imme diate payment, and those who have any demands aeainft laid ellate, are desired to bring forw V d their accounts to either of the fubferibers. ELIZABETH JOHNSON, S JOHN JOHNSON, Jun. £ Admimftr s. JOHN JOHNSON, J Germantownj 10th mo. i;th, 1797- oa. 3 >- 11 Jt ' Lately Published, Jn one vol. 8 vo. (price one dollar in boards) fold by WILLIAM YOUNG, corner of Second and Chefnut ftrcets, ' . A Colleftion of Papers on the fubjea of Billious Fevers, prevalent in the United c ta tes for a few years past. CoMby NO.!U WEBSTER, jun Containing letter, from Doctors Buel, Taylor, Ramsay, Moufon, Mitch ell, on contagioß, &c. .See. Sept. JS- I Port and Madeira Wine,! * Now Landing, By (hip Edward,'from Madeira, and Betsey and Peggy, from Oporto, in Pipes snd Hogflieads, For (ale by PETER BLIGHT. WHO ALSO OFFERS FOR SALE, jr—* Thi ship ■ AMITY, , Four thousand -barrels burthen, < [ a excellent order —ready to take i in a cargo—about three years old. likewise, . The Schooner Industry, , Burthen 800 barrels, ready also to,receive a car- ( go—and a quantity of , Jamaica Rum and Sugars, i Just landed from the above vclfeli pt South street , wharf. , Nov I. feoim. FOR SALE, t BY THE SUBSCRIBERS, , Madeira Wine, firft quality, m < pipes Madeira Wine, New-York quality, in pipes i Lisbon WINE, in pipes I NUTMEGS*} ofthe Utefl im P ortat!on ' in fco * cs ] Spanish Wool, in Bales, suitable for Hatters. Witlings & Fraflcis, Penn-ftreet, No. al. Nov. 1. w&sif gf POYNTELL's Paper Hangings Manufactory, No. 70, Chefnut-ftreet, Where be has for Sale, AVERY cxtenfive flock, of every colour, and of the mofl approved pattern!, suitable for every part of a house, with great variety of bor ders to suit. ALSO— , A handsome assortment of the moll falkionaile Silver Grounds London and Paris Papers, and very bed p'ain Green and plain Blue, With Punnel Papers and a rich "variety of Borders. Neveij>ber I. eo6t N O TIC E. The holders of certificates of a loan to tke exiled citizens of the State of South Ca rolina and Georgia, under an a\sf of Congiefs July, 1781, are informed, that by lodging the fame with George Simpfon, Cashier of the Bank of the United States, they Will be enabled to receive pay ment of principal and interefl, asfoon as the certi ficates can be forwarded to Charleston for settle ment, and orders received for their discharge. November I. 6t Young Ladies' Academy OF PHILADEIPHIA. THR Public are refpedlfully informed, that the fa id Academy will be open on Monday, the sixth of Nov. inft. for the reception f»f pupils. JOHN POOR, Principal. N. B. A fehool for boys will be opened on the evening of said day.- 0a.31, d6t. / I NOTICE. A A Meeting of the General Board, of the Guardians of the Poor, for the city of Phi ladelphia, and fubutbs, will be held at the Old City Court-House, on Thursday next, the 3d of November, at j o'clock, P. M. Those Gentlemen whose time expired oa the 25th of September last, and who have unsettled account* with the Board, are par ticularly requested to attend. PETER MIERCKEN, Pres. Southwarl, 30th 08. 1797. 3'. In the Press,. And speedily will be published by William You-ho, No. 52, Second, the corner of Chefnut Street, ' A VIEW * Of the Science of Life ; On the principle* eftablifted in th* elements of Medicine, of the late celebrated JOHN BROWN, M. D. With an attempt to correA some important er , rors ef that work, and cafe 9in illuflration, chief ly feleifled from the records of their practice, at the General Hospital at Calcutta, 1 Br William Tatis & Chas. Maclean. To which is fubjeined, a Treatise on the a«Slion of Mercury upon living bodies, and its applica tion for the cure of diseases of indirecfl debility. Andadiflertation on the source* of Epidemicand Pestilential diseases; in which isattempted topr.ve by a numerous induAion of fails, that they ne ver arise from contagion, but are always produ ced by certain slates, or certain viciflitudes of the atmosphere, by Charles Maclean, of Calcutta. . Odl. jt. ftit Philadelphia, 08. 2\lh, 1797. \ LL persons desirous to contract to furnilh Ra- I XI tions and Quarter Mailer's Stores, during the year 1798, for the troops in Philadelphia, Fort Mifflin, on Mud Island, Carlisle and Reading, «r j' any of them, are desired to deliver their proposals, 1 under a sealed cover, oh or before the 20th No ( vembtr next, to I TENCH FRANCIS, Purveyor. The Rations to tonfiji of e I pound Flour or Bread I pound Beef, or 3-4 of a pound of Pork d i gill Rum, Brandy or Whiskey I lb. Candles f a lb. So -P \Xo every hundred rations a quarts Vinegar C ' I quart Salt J &ffMjthN Red Port Wine. Just arrived, by the brig Iris, capt. Rhodes, from Oporto, Red Port Wine in pipes, hhds. and quarter cafcs 6(3 cwt. Cork, for file by Philips, Cramond, & Co. July ai. _ _ _ § To bV&OLD or rented; \ LARGE 3 Story Brick House, on the il South fide of Filbert street, between Eighth and Ninth, lately occupied as the Sur • veyor General's Office. The Building i« 36 feet front and 35 feet deep, the lot 110 feet deep, with the privilege of a ni«e feet wide Alley extending the whole length of - the lot, to a thirty feet wide Court for Carriages to turn ill. The House is not Raftered, and may be turned either into one, or two dwelling , Hovfes. It is suitable for a large Manufactory, or would make a good Tavern. Immediate r pcflefiion will be given, Apply to Wo. ih, Chefnut-Street. 1 Aug. an cod ~The Medical Le&ures Intfie''tfniverlity of Pennsylvania, ace post ! poned until the last Monday in November next. October 14. aaw4w.j %l)t <sa3€tte*' I PHILADELPHIA', ; ft THUkSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 1. - P bi SIR, The return of the President of the United 0 States to the feat of government may be e , exptfted in the course bf a few days, and ; t it being the general wish of our fellow citi-' t ] zens that his reception (hould be such as to t( manifeft the refpeft due to his office; and f, the esteem entertained for his person. I a therefore direfted by the Governor to re- t ] qutd that you will immediately fugged the 0 fufcjcft to the Artillery and Corps of Horse v and Infantry belonging to the City and f ( County of Philadelphia and County of v Bucks, and concert with the proper officers a the bed plan for rendering the compliment ], grateful to the President, and honorable to p our fellow-citizens. j, I (hall be happy to receive an early, com- f munication in answer to this letter, and you t may rely upon every co-operation in my 0 power. - n I am with great edcem, Sir, ], Your obedient and humble servant, t JOS. HAIVMAR, t . Adjutant General. t Phila. ift N0t.'1797. j To William Macpherfon, Esq. t brigadier general of the t militia of Pennsylvania. t sir, < I have the honor to acknowledge the re- . ceipt of your communication of this date, r and (hall immediately in compliance with j the request of the Governor, proceed to , make the necessary arrangements for the re- ( ception of the President of the United States , on his refurn to the feat of government. / , \ I am, with great refpeft, *" ] Sir, Your most obedient ftrvant. WILLIAM MACPHEIJ.SON, Brigadier General. Jofiah Harmar, Esq. Adjutant General of the Militia of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, Nov. id, 1797. » The commanding officers of the several regiments to which companies (in uniform) are attached, and the commanding officers of the artillery, and troops of horfc of the city andxounty, are requeded to meet Ge neral Macpherfon, at his qnarters No. 9, north Eighth street, on Saturday next, at 12 o'clock. V ;. \ of the United StatX. Philadelphia, 03. 2 ijl, 1797* Di. William Currie. sir, I (hall now enter into a full examina tion of the fafts you have dated in your let ters to me, in proof of the introduftion of the present fever by the (hip Arethufa, from Havanna ; by which it will appear, with what little propriety, or even (hadow of probability (he has been accused : I (hall then give a connefted view of the fafts I have already adduced in my former letters to capt. Linddrom, to (hew that the disease proceeded from the ftitnch emitted from the (now Navigation, from Marfeille^,; and last ly, suggest fueh rneafures as will be likely to secure oiir city from a return of that ravag ing pestilence, or other malignant complaint. It is agreed that the (hip Arethu'a lod three persons by disease of some fort, in the month of June, during her passage from Jamaica to Havanna. Two of these were seamen, and died on the 4th of the month, two days after leaving the fird port. A negro died on the 16th of June of the Jlux ; as dated by Stephen Kingdon in his depofi- I tion taken before the Mayor, on the 14th • Augud. Though you so confidently refer to Mr. Kingdon for proof of your assertion, that all the above persons died of the yellow fever ; yet you will find, by eonfulting his deposition, that no mention is made ofthedif : cafe of the two jirfl who died. It is probable, ftlat as he was no physician, he did not visit them while ill s and as he consequently could not afwrtain their disorder, he did' not assert when on oath, that they died of the yellow fever, to please those who said that was the disease, and raised the outcry against the (hip. I.have not seen the letter , of Mr. Fitch to which you also refer for • proof of the disease having been the yellow fever ; but from the inaccuracy of your as ' fertion with regard to the deposition of Mr. Kingston ; I mud beg leave to fee it, before full credit be given to your ipfe dixit of its contents. But whatever may have been his opinion of the nature of the disease of which the two fifft men died, I may urge the fol lowing argument againtt the belief of its hav ing been the yellow fever. This disease we well know, from the records of 1793, and 1 the experience of the prefent'feafon, spreads with great malignity and increased virulence, ■ in close hot unventilated plaees ; and where little attention to cleanlinef6 is observed ; and we also know all these circumdances frequently take place on (hip board in the forecadle where the seamen commonly deep, f and in the space between decks, when ne -1 groes are on board, as was the cafe with the (hip ioquedion ; and yet the disease did not spread, though there were fifty-fix on board, t besides the crew eleven in number, and three f cabin passengers ; which would have increaf s ed the aftivity of the disease if any had ex- I ifted. The negro died 011 the i6tb, -but • he could not have taken the disease from the ' two sailors, because Mr. Kingdon 'fays he died of the flux ; and Mr. Brien, second mate of the (hip deposes that he was sick when taken on board in Jamaica. In the cafe of the Arethufa, we jind two men die of a disease supposed to be th e yellow fever ; and r no one bejlde take it, and under every circvm- Jlance favorable to its propagation, which I think a very strong proof that the complaint, yellow fever or not, was not contagious ; and j a conTcqnently that the opinion of this "(tiip jes having imported the disease of (his season, by . fp communicating inftftion to the fails of the j as (hip, and cloches of the crew, is unfounded. | tl From Mr. Brien's deposition, it alio ap- i ?• pears, that the " clothing, bedding and articles I el belonging to the deceased were thrown over- j t« board, and their births cleansed so that the 'c< opinion of the disease having been introduc- ' p ed in this way, is further disproved. Dur- , w ing the time the veffellay at Havanna, from ' w the 2lft of June to the sth July, I am able i 1 to assert, (he was perfectly cleansed ; a mea- | o sure which every (hip matter would adopt jo af;er carrying negroes, and after having had a three deaths on board. All this period, no w one was (ick, but all remained well the whole c voyage, until the arrival of the (hip at the J si fort. The second mate had indeed a lax !tl wliich came on after they entered the Capes, si and he went on (hore to the hospital, where (1 he was cured. The (hip had fifteen days t passage, and came in Jlone ballajl with her t hatches open, giving thereby a free current u for the air from ft en to stern, which cer- i tainly w»uld have dissipated every particle ( of contagion (if any had been on boaid) re- x maining after the wa(hing and smoking (lie 1 f had already underwent. The sailors had j■) the whole range of the space between decks c to deep in, but they took no disorder, because r the feeds of none were there. The pilot hav- t ing taken ficlc on board the (hip, is thought i to be a demonstrative proof, that he caught ( the infeftion which had been retained since 1 the 4th June to the 24th July ; but when t the fails with regard to his illness, and the 1 causes that induced it are considered, I ex- i pest the idea of infeftion will be laid afkle. < The pilot has uniformly attributed his indif- ' position to a seVere cold taken by deeping 1 one night, (towards the close of the (hip's quarantine) in the cabin with the windows open, when a cold wind blew up, which set direftly upon him, after a very warm day : he went to bed well, and awoke with a se vere hoarseness and pains in his limbs— thefe were succeeded by a fever, whieh at firft you said was " inflammatory, and succeeded by bilious symptoms, giving us thereby to underdand, that it was no more thon a common bilious fever, as we witness every summer from the fame canfe, as that ' to which the pilot wa< exposed. In his cafe, ' the operation cold, in suddenly check-1 ing perspiration, was probably aided by the 1 noxious effefts of the air blown off to his vessel from the immense mar(hes opposite to ' whieh the (hips lie at tlie fort: This is uot ' mere hypothefis—lt requires no other 1 knowledge, but that which I have derived from living in a marshy country, to under stand, that it is a much more probable way • of accounting for the pilot's inflammatory \ bilious fever, than by supposing that the eon*- tagion, lurking in art empty clean vessel for upwards of 50 days, was the.cause of it.— Now let me a(k any man, whether, if any eontagion had been left by the two sailors who died on the 4th June ; the reft of the " crew, and efpeeially the hands (hipped in their place, who were exposed to it all the ™ remaining part of the voyage until her ar- rival here, would not have been affefted j thereby ; and yet they all remained well ! '' In your letter of the 24th August, you fay, " On the 27th July, potwith(\anding the 8 pilot's subsequent recovery, the symptoms e of the disease unfolded their malignant na e ture, and coftvmced me his disease was the yellow fever of Wejt-India origin." Pray 0 what were these " malignant symptoms," >" that attended V this inflammatory fever, fuc " cetded by bilious symptoms" ? Did con- It fift of the black vomit, of a bleeding at the e mouth or nose, or a purging of blood, or livid n spots upon his body, which many of us have e seen accompany the disease of this season ? 1, I will take upon m« to answer, that none of thefe symptoms accompanied his cafe, or he S would not have been well, as you dated, in i- five days ; and I have no doubt, had you h not gone too far to retraft, you would ilill :r allow the mild name firft given to the com 1, plaint to be the proper one. But here I '■v some to the point. The pilot, you fay, is took the yellow fever from the (hip. Now f- granting this, let me a(k, if his disorder was :, so " malignant" as you (late, why, in the it name of cause and effeft, did he not give it y to those who vilited him, or to his friends d' who condantly nursed and surrounded him, >f inhaling his " malignant" exhalations for the d five days he was confined ? If it had been y the real yellow fever, it certainly could not ;r have failed to affeft all or most of those who >r were exposed. The disease would confe w feqnently have gone on to spread among the f- members of the family ; afterwards to the r. neighbors, and finally the whole quarter of re the diftrift of Southwark would have firft ts fuffered. Shippen-ftreet, and not Pine and is Penn-dreets,would then have become the fo h cus, from whence the malady would have I- spread to the other parts of the city. But v- did any thing like this take place ? No— re None of his attendants, or friends who vifit d ed the pilot, took sick. It was not thus Is with the malignant fever described by Dr. e, Chifholm of Grenada, which wat imported re from Boullam ; for it appears from theex -1 ; trafts you have givenfrom his work, that all es those who visited the infefted (hip, caught le the disease, and five sailors, out of the firft p, fix who went on board, did. The fame ra e- pidity of propagation is remarked in the le yellow fever of 1794, at N. Thofe ot who firft took it. gave it to others, and thus d, it went en. These fafts fully refute yo<ir ee opinion. " ■ Ignorant of the laws ofconta if- gion," as I may be, I will refer the cafe to x- any unprejudiced person (and to a physician ut in preference) whether under the circum be (lancet above dated, with regard to the pi be lot of the Arethufa, favorable to an increased id aftivity of the contagion, it were even pof :k fible to escape catching " a malignant yellow be fever" if pent up with a patient five days and of nights in his chamber ? And yet we fee an id ipftance of a fever, formally declared of the v- above kind, prove as innocent as an inr*rmit- I tent. What does this prove, the it, supposed formidably disease wat no more tlian a common bilious fever from marjby exhalations, ' excited into aftion by a sudden check of per spiration, from which hundreds are annually affefted in this city and vicinity, during the summer and autumn. You date that !' the crew of the Arethufa, consisting of eleven hands, left the vessel immediately af ter her arrival in port, having previously carried with them their chests, wearing ap parel and bedding, and that the light fails, which are often used far bedding by marines, were deposited in Mr. Bridge's fail-loft.— These fails (you fay) alone, without any other infefted article, were fufficient te give origin to the awful difeafe."-i-Here let me ask you, how will you prove these fails were aftually used for'the bedding of the crew, as you insinuate they often are ; and suppose they had been used as bedding on the voyage, how would that make them fuf ficient to produce the disease when taken on shore ; what infection was smothered lip in them ? Did you ever enquire whether the two men who died forty days before, slept upon these fails and thus infefted them ? And how do you know, that these fails ( which you do not fay were adually slept on) were not frequently and solely used for their proper purpose during the voyage ? Tho' j you mud have been conscious of the necessity of making these enquiries, yet you have never made them ; and still wiflt to impress the public with an opinion, that they were impregnated with the infection which has spread through the city. But it must be remembered that not aJingleperfon tookfick in the fail-loft from handling these fails ; and it has never been proved, that a single person in the various lodging houses where the eleven sailors of the ship difperffi themselves, was affefted from the supposed infefted bed ding and chests having been opened among them. These fafts prove, therefore,' that these fails were not " fufficient to give rife to the awful disease and that the supposed danger of the chests and bedding was a mere illusion brought forward to give an apparent authority to your assertion with those who do not think : for with men who do reflect before they adopt an opinion of such importance, your mere assertion, that certain fails from on : board a vessel, about which you know nothing i ctrtain, were capable " alone" to produce the : yellow fever, will have but little weight. , In your letter of the 24th August, you ■ fay the mate of the brig Iris, the cool, and : three of the hands, were attacked in fue > cession. The cock vomited matter as black > as ink. On the 29th August, you mention t only one of the above, whose cafe proved r unequivocally to be the yellow fever, of trs -1 pical origin. Why this inaccuracy in the - repetition of fads, if you ar- well allured f of them ? and if not, how criminal to raise 1 3 noise again ft a ship, to the injury of sci ence, for the fake of gratifying the preju r dices of the people, and to obtain a little - temporary eclat. f I stated ta the public my opinion, that s the flench perceived by the neighbours, if e suing from the snow Navigation, probably I affefted Mr. Latimer, his man, and the e people of the brig Iris. You fay, you - " believe they received the contagion from i certain articles brought on shore from the - Arethufa, but Ido not believe it was con , veyed to them, as yon suppose, by the east e wind, but by contad." In your next pub s licabion you fay, " while the brig Iris from - Oporto was unloading, the crtw of the e Arethufa had to pass across that vessel to y get on Ihore with their chests and bedding ; " and it is natural to suppose, as some bungs ■- flew out of the wine cajls, and the mariners 1- were making merry, that some of the crew of e the Arethufa also bartook of their cheer with d them. Mr. Latimer, Mr. Lewis, and others* e might have received the contagiou from.paffing ? near those people with their infefted mate >f rials ; those who work in fail lofts from her e fails qnd those of the Hind, and this I a m n sure, is one of the ways that the disease u now continues to be propagated." Hera II again I will bring you to the touohtftone, 1- by asking upon what grounds your belief I is founded, that Mr. Latimer, or his man, r, or Mr. Lewis, came is contaft with the v supposed infefted articles ? The chests of is the sailors and their bedding, must have le pasTed over the deck of the brig Iris, but it will any one imagine they would have been Is permitted a moment to lumber that vessel, 1, already no doubt filled with her own goods ? ie or that any of the' men would have been n allowed to break off from work, und turn >t to drinking with strangers accidentally paf o sing .' But granting they did flop (which :- you never heard of, though >in your power ie to ascertain the faft) what infeftion was to ie be communicated by their chests or bed >f ding ? Did you ever inquire whether the ft people who had died mora than forty days d before the ship arrived at the wharf, had j- any oonneftion with the clothes, &c. of the re late crew ? or whether they were never it dried or washed after those deaths ? Befrde, - will any reasonable man suppose (even t- granting the Arethufa to have been as in is fefted as the at Grenada, or a hof r. pital (hip) that these .sailors by flopping a d moment on the deck of a Vessel, or by mcrc ly palling others in the flreet or wharf, could II infeft them from their clothes, and vet the it people with whom they lodged, aiid who ■ft were exposed to the contagion of the fame a- clothes and bedding, in a confined, dirty ie hcufc (as the rendezvous of sailors cotoimon fe ly are) would remain free? And yet you is have never attempted to hy any of these tir were infefted, though the faft could have a- been lo easily ascertained, and though it to was so necessary to trace the progress of the in disease which you faidwas imported by these n- clothes. The perfeft freedom from disease »i- whichthefemen enjoyed aftertheir discharge :d from the Arethufa, as well as those who f- must have been much more exposed to the w supposed infeftion of their clothes and bed id ding in tht,ir lodgings, than the people of in the Iris from a momentary exposure thereto in be the open air, njuft prove fully to the fatisfac t- tion of every unprejudiced mind, " able to :ie discern the connexion between cause and ef »n feft," (to use your favourite expression) that
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