both parties. Nothing lias difcotvraged the rfiyaliits, and hitherto there have been so many reasons tojuftify their hopes, that we ought not to be surprised if by the fide of one conspiracy extinguished, another should arise the more dangerous, because to its own refonrcjs it adds the experience of the er rors which have occ.fioned the ruin of others. I fay dangerous, not becauf# that I think any coqfpirpcy would overthrow the estab lished government, but because I believe that fotne one may be found combining fufficient means to encourage even an open attack, aVrd then the blood of Frenchmen would flow in torrents (hed by the hands of French men. It is to prevent, as far as lies in my ; power, the return o/ these scenes of desola tion, that I have formed the design ofeom- i municatwg all the threads ofthe conspiracy ] at the head of which I am placed, to lead ] you into the track of those which may fuc- < ceed ; in fine, to diflipate id such a manner < all the resources of the royalists that they !; may be compelled even to abandon their j t hopes. I betray the cause of royalty j I t know it, but 1 am convinced I serve the 1 cause of those Frenchmen who are attached j i to that cause by destroying the foundation r of their chimerical hopes : and, if I do not f impose upon myfelf, this conduft will not , ' deprive me of any just title to the esteem of r those who (hall decide without paflion. \ c " I will not fatigue your attention by a | e longer preamble. I have {aid thus much , t only to juilify to myfelf an adtion which I | t think courageous, which perhaps may be si generally regarded as an aft of treachery. I r am about to enter upon the fubjedt, and I will speak as if I had been the only agent of a the king at Paris. It-is two years since I p undertook the management of his intereils. ii From that period I was aware that the roy alists could have no real constancy, but when ei united round a comrtion centre they aft by 1 preconcerted movements. From that period b I exerted every effort to lead to that centre p of unity all'the chiefs of La Vendee and of t; Brittany ; all the' agents foattered through a the different departments that I could dif- p cover, who pretended to aft for the fame objedt, and who all pursued it by contra- c< didtory means. I went into Britanny, into La Vendee. I went to Switzerland, where an English minister resides, specially charged to second the royalists. I went to the army i of the prince of Conde, and saw the king. At length I made a journey tft England, where I explained myfelf with the count d( D'Artois and the English ministers. No- oi thing less would do, in Order to prevail on dt every individual to renounce the plans which he himfelf diredted, the private scheme which ta he had adopted, to put an end to the ani- nt rnofities and the divifioni which reigned in ev the party; and in this last refpedt I never a could have produced a durable effedt in La kr Vendee and Brittany. I was also far from oh eonfidering their fubmifiion as an unfortunate mi event. It served eur cause because it en a- tai bled us to develope entirely a plan more wife lai than those which had preceded) on this very account more wife, because it embraced at on once the whole of France, and because it excluded every partial movement, but that da which should repder us matters of Paris by pr overthrowing the government. fla " Such is the plan which had been ap- of proved by the pretender, who alone was ac- de quainted with all its details. The English la\ mmiftry, the French princes, likewise adopt- th ed so much of the plan as was communicated bu to them. The objeft was, to make the cri political and military movements go hand in da hand. of " to be dividedinto two agen- ha cies. alv " The one, which comprehends the pro- cai vinces of Franche Compte, the Lyonnoife, eyi Fores, Auvergne, and the whole of the pr< South is to be entrusted to M. Precy.— fir: The other, which extends over all the reft ter of France, is to be directed by the agents at jor Paris. Thcfe two agencies shall reciprocal- the ly inform each other of their situation by a wit vegular and adtive eorrefpondence. No hyi movement is to be attempted by the one, if nol the other is not previously apprised of it ing and if it it not prepared to second its ope- fufc ration. &c " The twoagenciesfhallhave a dire ft com- 1 munication with the King, and with the a- to gents of the British government. This last tril having only two objedts, the firft, the de- and mand of afTiftatice, and secondly, in its ap- pea plication, the agents are to render them felvet independent of the inftrudtions which to might be given by the English. The se cond objeft of the English eorrefpondence end lhall be to give them every intelligence tend- pov ing to serve the cause ; but never to facih- thr tate to them the means of seizing any of our eve maritime* places, and in general nothing Th that could be uftful only to themselves ; the 1 king and the council having never ceased to tior think that the fervicts of the English are exc perfidious ferricet, tending to no other ob- it 1 jeftbut the total ruin of France. par '/ The municipal agentt shall sub-divide cul| the diftridts entrusted to their direftion into the as many military commanderies as they shall a v< Judge proper. They shall fubrait their la bours to the king, and propose to him the j>9rfons who are judged qualified to fill with ton intelligence and fidelity the fuuations of lons commanders in chief of the different circles. lev« The commanders are to receive their power tior from th« king ; but they shall not corref- 1 pond diredtly only with the superior agents Loi of the party. _ « The principal agents, and especially add at Paris, will spare no pains to ieduce j whi to the party of the king, all the members pon of the constituted authorities. They can por; » proinife to every individual all the personal C advantages which his importance may en- I fury title >iim to expedt, without the exception the of any one, even the members of the Cob- ry y vention, who voted for the death of Lours Hoi XVI. But they will not incur any engage- S raent which can give occasion to believe that Orn the intention of the king is to re-establish coui the monarchy upon new bases. The king of p will do every tiling to reform the abiifes 'I tyhjch had crept into the ancient regime, was '■' v . he but nothing could induce him to change the. 0 constitution. In cafe of a powerful party W f l"-" Councils proposing to. recognize the oj king upon conditions, the agents'at Paris : were; to engage that party to depute Jo his ivn Majesty a person properly authorized, with er- whom the king might discuss in person the rs. true interests of France. 1 »k « The objeft proposed is the overthrow - ib- of the existing government. It isin thecon- ' iat ftitution itfelf that the means were to be J nt found of overturning it without a great ' :k, shock. The frequency of elections prevent ' »d the opportunity of introducing a majority 1 n- of royalists into the offices of government ny and the adminiflrations. a- " Hitherto the royalists have derived no f tt- advantage from their number ; theiV pufil- f cy lanimity prevents them from attending the v ad primary assemblies, where, if they have giv- t c- en any votes, it hat been without previous er j concert, and their votes have been thrown -J j away so far as concerned the objedta at-which I :ir | they individually aimed. In order to ob- P 1 | tain a majority of Votes in the primary afTem- n tie _ blies, it is necessary to arrange three points : b ?d ! I ft, To force the royalists to attend. 2d, >n To compel them to unite their fuffrages in E at favour of the individuals pointed out. 3d, w 3t jTo induce that class of men, who have no g as j preference for any government, love that or- b I der which protedts their persons and prop a I erties, to vote in favour of the royalist par- dt h 1 ty. In order to attain this triple objeft, 4 I ! two associations shall be formed, the one »e formed of tried royalists, the other of timid T royalists, and men felfifh or indifferent. ft I "It is unnecessary for me to enter into if any details in this refpeft, firice you are in I poffefiion of the regulations to be adopted 'h >. in thcfe iuftitutions. as " These two associations shall be eftablilh- ' in n ed throughout the whole of the republic y The agents are not to allow themselves to a, d j be deceived by the idea that there are any e parties or dispositions which render this es s tablifhment fuperfluous. Every where there f u h are weak and timid mortals to whom the °J - philanthropic institution will be suitable. A e [The Redadteur, ih which this article is ft' - continued, ha« not come to hand.] Jit J (To be continued.) T, f on 1 PARIS, September 14. " .• COUNCIL OF FIFE HUNDRFD. g'< t Sitting of 12th Sept. of, , Tallot rose to speak on a motion of or t der. He dated, that by the law of - one quarter of their pay was allowed to re- I 1 duced officers. 1 "I do not know (said he) by what fa- to 1 tality it is that those brave men, to the tht number of 20,000, have not yet received ea\ 1 even this miserable pittance. I dtfire that of • a message may be lent to the diredtory, to gei 1 know the reason of this delay, and what lea obstacles there are in the way of the pay- Ha : tpent, in order that the legislative' bqdy may take the necessary steps for carrying the law into execution." The motion was agreed to, and the speech ordered to be printed. Quirot alfp spoke upon the order of the T day. " The constitution (said he) has provided for the independence of the legi slative. body, of the executive power, and '' e of the judicial power. But this indepen- I, s dence does not exclude responsibility. The law of the 3d Brumaire has provided for . the responsibility of the two firft powers, but not for the Tribunal de Cassation. The criminal tribunals are also inverted with a 'j 01 dangerous inviolability, and this is the cause |! le of all the affaflinations which the royalists , have been guilty of in France, which hav« tl,e always been committed with impunity, be- rftl cause the justices of the peace shut their p eyes, and only punished when they thought proper. Have we not seen partial magi- t ftxates fuffer, with impunity, libels which Prel tended to excite the assassination of the ma- f° ot jority of the direftory, under the name of ha j" the triumvirate, while they punished people ,] lor with severity' for singing the Marfeillois j u ta hymn, or a song against clocks ?—Have we not not fcen the tribunal de cassation contend- F -. B ing against the legislative body, upon the fubjedt of the royal commissioner Brothier, a - pel &C. dy k " I move that a committee be appointed the 1 to determine upon the mifcondudt of the tribunal de cassation, the criminal tribunals, and the diredtors of juries aHd justices of peace." whe The motion was agreed to, apd ordered 'hey to be printed. j" 1 ' 11 Jean de Bry, in a speech of great length, (h ° 11 endeavoured to exculpate the executive muc power from the reproaches which had been thin; thrown upon them on account of the recent rira events at Venice, by Paftoret, on the sth men Thermidor. He cited several articles of the conftitu- er ; n tion, and proved that the diredtory had not Mod exceeded their powers. He Rated also, that a r 'g it had been insinuated that general Buona parte had framed his manifefto so as to ex- !^'j s culpate his condudt. We caunot follow g OTe the orator through his speech, but it made Tl a very great impreffioa upon the council. was Sitting of 13th Septemlrer. The council received several congratula tory addresses on the 4th Sept. from Cha- gnu j< lons far Marne, Clermont, Ferrand, and carri; several other communes. Insertion aHd men tion to be made in the prscefs verbal. The adminiflration of the Maine and w °] n< Loire spoke the fame fentiraents. w h o l The order of the day was adopted on this on tl address, on that article of the constitution and i which forbids the administrations to corres pond with the legislative body in their cor porate capacity. Citizen Caignard, employed in the trea- bring fury, presented 50 livres for the expences of militi the war, and proraifed to give as moch eve ry year until the conclusion of a peace.— ca . Honourable mention. t f, L [ Several citizens of the department as L' York Orne addressed several remonstrances to the l council, on the table for the depreciation of paper money made for this department. Ilend The order of the day was called for, which f orm was uppofed by Labroifte, oa the ground Turk: that feme errors have crept into this table—Referred to the- dfre£tory. The discussion on Vitler's report 011 Fi nance was resumed, LONDON, September 11. A meflenger arrived yesterday at the Por tuguese Ambaftador's with advices from Portugal, and also dispatches for Govern ment from the Hon. Robert Walpole, his Majesty's Minister at that Court, which were said to contain the Treaty between France and that Country; they were deem ed of such importance as to be immediately sent ofi to LorJ Greenville, at Dropmore. . Some persons complain that the constitu tion has been little attended to by thf differ ent parties at Paris. Mr. Pitt, however, will furcly be the lad man to find fault with these parties for any violation of the conHi tution. The Cap of Liberty was not arretted from Britannia when a new Copper coinage was projected: (he voluntarily resigned it— not wishing to retain thefladow, after having been deprived of the Subflancc. Mr. Windham dill holds out that the Expedition against the Peak of Teneriffe i was negatively fuceefsful, « for," fays the | great Statesman, " was it not highly proba ble that, considering the fmallnefs of their force, the Englifli might have been totally dejlroyed, whereas we find that no less than 4CO have efcapedV' September J4. There is no reason given by the Triumvirate for the tranfportatien of Bartholcmy and Car not. They are not accused of being conterned in , what is called the conspiracy of Pichtgru, nad ' though the Royalijl Journals confideted them ! as being d-firous of peace, and on thct account in opposition to she Triumvirate, yit furcly that tie fire, of itfelf, could never be advanced as aferiitlj charge again si them. The only army of the Republic, luhofefeiiti "tents can in any manner ie doubted upon the fuhjeS of the late events at Paris, is the army oj the Rhine aud Moselle. Some tff the Members if thi Council of Five Hundred com plained that the army was negleSed, because it ftil preferred its attachment to Pichegru; and Thilaudeau, two days before the late convulsi on, in a fpetch upon the Finances, said, that " calm immoveable amidfl the pajjions that a gitated the njl of the Repuhlit, the brave army of the Rhine had not received auy pay for three months. Last evening arrived in town on his way to the feat of government, the President of the United States, escorted by major Ward'* ] :avalry. He was welcomed by the discharge , of cannon and ringing of bells. Several gentleman paid their refpeft« to him He , eave» town to day escorted by Captain ( Haines troop. ( XJ)e <lsa3ette* ~ ' ■ ■I c PHILADELPHIA, J THURSDAY EVENING, JtOVZMBf.It 9. ' Ray Greene, Esq. is ele6led Senator of he United States for the state of Rhode- ■ [(land, in the place of William Bradford, Esq. resigned. THE CITY CAVALRY vill parade on Friday morning next, the [Oth instant, precisely at nine o'clock, at he Hotel in Tenth*, between Arch and llace-flreets, for the purpose of escorting 1 he President of the United States on his 1 eturn to the feat of government. ■or the GAZETTE of the UNITED STATES. S MR. TINNO, ** THER.E is a talk of a military parade when the j 'rcfider; arrives. Some on horse and fonie on r ®ot —while the President rider in a chariot, p"r aps a coach, and as the Aurera fays, with wheels. 1 will not at this moment enquire by what au lority the governor undertook to iuilru<st the ad- b itant general about this buflnefi—He furcly j ot consult the democratic society about it, for B. . B. their eracle, is dreadfully and mortally cha rined. He ha; puhlilhed a wonderful smart piece S i his Aurora on the occasion, in which he raves IT baut slavery, and liveries, and frolics, and nobo y knows what. He fays the whole uniform of w ie militia of th> state ought to be ehanged; for if -1 »ey wear it they are all slaves, because thePrcfi 1 ent's folks all wear blue coats with red colfari. he people who serve the President mull be flares th :caufe they are yankeys—they are all free men dt ■hen they are in Maflachafetts, where I believe f Q icy were almost all born and married ; but if tke j military companies of Philadelphia, in uniform, lould turn out on this occasion, they are slaves-, and f" ie Prifident's people all become slaves too. So T luch for wearing blue and red : There is another B ling that seems to cause gseat uneajnefsto the Au- (• >ra writer. The militia is compsfed fays he, of en as free as the Governur ; this you know, and rery b«dy knows. But you know that we always ppofed the Governor was general and command- E in chief over <he militia. "Thi* is the Humbling /]; ock with the Aurora, how one free man can have r , right to command another free man. There is ■* ie ofthe faction who fays, he hopes hU hand will ither, if he Oiould obey the governor's orders.— f l -* his is a knotty point, I (hall leave it with the ult iVernor to fettle. There is another cireumftance, which it seems as not forcfccn by the governor—U it (bould in it will be miry, if not it will be dusty, and as is matter cannot be fettled beforehand, in cither fe, the Aurora fays the militia will be in a " de aded, prostituted situation, for the Prefide'nt's rriagt, it i3ys, will be sometimes before and. met.nifs behind. The editor, who'l suppose to the Oht Soldier, is a very wife man, bmt it is how he should know so much. I greatly fufpeJt he means to overthrow the 111 bole militia fyfiem, for he intimates that waiting the President was the object of that fyfte-n, d what becomes of this bulwark of our bherttrs, juld that be the cafe ? I wish we knew the in; II extent of the designs of some people who pa llow very loud about slavery finae they left off thi iijg to levee. It appears 3« if they meant to ing in a (landing army. If it is slavery in the ilitia to obey orders, you may depend we .fliall in be without one. The Aurora patnotifm is too partial—l hate lo- ■ I patriotism—No fslicitude was cxprefTed about j j militia of Maffachufctts, Cpnne&icut, New- e irk. or New-Jerfey—thu' they voluntarily plun- d themselves into this business poor creatures, ®* a ' :y did not fee thro' the medium of the Aurora. ei t there is something more (hocking to appre nd ; if the militia (bould turn out, it will trant m them into Janiflaries.l Now Janiffarics are irkiflj mercenaries and wsar turliMis. „ ; . I 1S PROM A LONDON PAPER. i.o*X> 'MouNruafx<is, Fi- Tejlerday morning at his lodgings in Tori flreet, St. James's-fquare, Lord Vifountmount j tnorres put an end h his cxijlance by Jhootin* ; himftlf thro the head. By the direction of the , or- I,diet it ffff eared that he had put the pijlol into ( )m "*oOtb ;he bad another in his pocked loaded, i and b evcr y account it is obvious that he had ' I n,ail: preparations for this violent ad, had paid 1 '' the few bills that he owed, and had conversed , , Cn "> " ™<>y gave his acquaintance reason to ! m- believe that he had for several days deliberate! : I 'ly Upon the filicide he accomplMed. | When a man in egfy circumflances, whe>fe * U" life cannot have affeStedhii conscience, commits f- this dreadful alt, it is not easy to account for ? ;r ' t,J e motives. The lenity of a tinner's Inquefl th to rescue his family from cruel and extravagent * P e '>"hies, >nay call it lunacy, but the inquisitive Q mind is eager in the fcarch tf rational argument A 1111 /111 those who were acquainted withlord Mount- R as mnrres knew him to be a man barmlefs, -thoirjh H 0t /"*>?»-tig in his mannert ; who in the incessant pursuit of dijlinftion facrificed his cotnfort with- j out obtaining his objeß. To be <noticed by per- n 'f ons •fVtgh rank was his supreme felicity, and 8- ' obtruding himfelf on the society of perfms who T e did not tajle the monotony of his canverfation, A a- and who rejeSed his advances, fixed ultimately T ■ lr a chagrin on his temper which he deeply felt. •y He was long supported by felf opinion. He laid " 111 claim to the merits of eloquence andpatrio- \ j tifm — he was, in his own eflcem, afins wri- H ( ier i as well as "Ji™ gentleman ; he wrote a A U Comedy which was never aSed, and published r " a book, the hi/lory if the Parliament of Ireland, ; which was never read ; and during the lajl ? | r,K Months of his life, he amused his vanity by -j ---; announcing that he had undertaken 'the difficult V, "f transiting Herodotus. Fond of nolo y riety he announced this design to every man he c < " met, and a few pages of translation, with a 1 ' very large body of common place notes were hit ~ '• late claims to the credit of literature. This per- ■' petualhunting after fame, was made fill fur- fyj y ther ridiculous by bis pursuit of a splendid mar■ T1 r '"S e - ' s f«'dhave been refufed by more u women of fortune than any Nobleman in Eng- ~ '' land. Whether this be true or not, it contribu . ted to his mental disquiet ; for those Journals, ™hofc Editors male the frailties offajhionable " life the- fvbje 9of their ridicule, and perhaps, of A their profit, had the atrocity to draw this vain }j ! 1 but in ojfcnftve man into daily odium. 7 o the ' disgrace of the readers of these Journals ! they A countenanced the scandal. Even in a paper of Bo yefierday, the day of his death, he was exposed in an illiberal lampoon and an allusion made to f a Lady with whom, perhaps, he never exchan ged a Jy liable.—These daily libels wounded , • him to the quick, and perhaps contributed to his 2f : fatal cataflrophe. 1 For feme time pajl he has betrayed symptom Pri ' °f uneasiness, He wrote a letter to Dr. Willis Ch ' on Turf day desiring tofee him on Friday mor- 1 mng, as he felt himfelf indisposed, The Doßor £ e ' came to his lodgings but a fsw minutis after [ he had perpetrated theaß. He had, by a course, I Ru; of prudence amounting to parftmony, created in Clo fact a very easy fortune, for from a very small to ' encumbered eflati he is said to leave a clear A°f 5000 1, a year, We underjland that he has a Car p half brother who will succeed to the aflate, but An of this faß -we have no certain knowledge. I 1 *#* Country Subfcribcr, to-morrow. GAZETTE MARINE LIST. Ati PORT OF P HILADELPHA. {£ ARRIVED DA y s M »< Polacrc.St. Dominic, Mitchell, Cadix 48 q Tryphena, Griffin, Bourdeaux 64 Newton, Ritey, S. Croix 20 Si hj'. Boflon, Clark, Cape-Francois 20 Sloop Sally, White, Norfolk 6 CLEARED (J BrigG(orge,Hall, Cape-Francois, ftvei Schr. Teatman, Crane, C. N. Mole n,ac ' John, Mayhew, Boflon, Capt. Mitchell left Cadiz 21 ft Sept. the a b!e blockade of which was continued 'by the British lleet. nc Ship Neptune and bark Mars weie at St. Übes the beginning of Sept. the for- ( mer to fail in 30, the latter in 25 days. Of A large (hip and schooner inward bound, were seen off the capes Sunday P. M. They were not in yesterday morning. j j The Tryphena left at Bourdeauz, Aug. 27. theJhip Louisa, BAI, of this port, to fail in 14 days for Lijbon ; Farmer, M'Collom, do. do. for this port, 20th Sept. ; brig Eli%a, Hope, do. do. 6 th. A few days before the Tryphena c ' failed, the brig Washington, , of New- ,n<l ' Tork, arrived, captured on her pajfage from Belfafl home, Sept. 9. spoke the brig Lydia, ten S Gordon, out 29 days from Salem to Bilboa, I all well. Oi Thi Phit nix, Grice, for, Amjlerdam ; " Eagle, Shields, for Hifpaniola ; Jefferfon, Morris, for St. Croix andfeveral other mer, fels, went to s ea on Monday lafi. open The flip Commerce, of Baltimore, was to that f fail from St. Thom as 'for that port the 2C th d 'f° rc ult. lhortl ■ fover; Landing this day, From on board th« schooner Two Friends, Dan- John iel Crawley, Matter, Neill 1° j Jamaica RUM, • FOR SALE BY Jacol George Latimer f Son. I Owen uovemher o. Keppe y " dftyy Insurance Company of North y O /, r . America. £ '"g* The Stockholders are informed, that a meet- in<r is to be held, by adjournment, at the Com pany's Office, in Front Street, on Monday next A 1 the 13th inft. at la o'clock. Eben. Hazard, Sec'ry. Nov. 9. djt. any o( All Persons who are indebted to b r ( the estate of Wiiiiam Heysham, fen. of Phila delphia, dcceafed, are recjuefted to make fpcedy .payment j and those who have any demands a gainfi said estate, will plcnfc to present them, pro- 1 perly attcfted, to thefuhferiberi. William Heyfham, 1 J Robert Hey/ham. > Executors. 2 K Francis Bowes Sayre, J 2 q •tovtmlcr 6. aaw4w I q —c.::' —Z-.: ;—,... wwwwb Int. PHII GSOPHER AND THE COX ori COMB. u _ vt Written by the lite Mr. Cawt horn. "the a n C " XC T h ° nee H,n( W» W'towr f-.uirf, ■„/» ,'A' T'r >' re » try\l to m ,ke it f om „; . , ? " " ,!n P' llls "*kward fift he flings, ' frf, Ant! rudely prefTes on -he elaflic ftringj ■ iad Awaken d rd f),ricks an 1 scoWs, an,l r »v<..' T/W I ' (, i as 'he cMTmance of wind* and wave, fed . £"<' ' , " a, r " far than all tj,> extatic race, ' lo I orgies ftunn'd the wilds of j Hi race. Friend, (juo:h the sage, that fine machine con tuns 4ft number* and diviner drains. ,its StraWs,fuck a* orice could build theTheban watl r or Anc ltoj> the mountain tprrent in its fall ; "J 1 An yet r'° c ,ke thtm ' roufc them ' " nd infpirr; en! ? Pne fll, S er ' and 1 t- uclj of li,e. A tfrelmg Uul, whole all cxprelTive powers, ve C O Py nature as she (inks or soars ; ■ 'it And, just alike to passion, time and place, it- Refine correflnefs into ease awl s h lie (aid—...nd flying o'er each qi«vV|nr wire, '.nl „ pr " h|B |'ght hand, and iVcpt it cm the fore >h- 2?"* t0 4 h,s »?<* tbe hegan to glow, ' / The found to kindle, and'the air to flow, " peep as the murmurs of the falling flood?. , ee J." ,I,L ' warblers of tbe vocal wood, ; ho Ihe lift ning passions hear, and fink and rife "> 2.? the r ' ch har mony, or swells or dies, ,fy The pulse of avarice forgers to move, It. P urcr "l"".""* fills the breast of love ■ id s PVOTION lifts to heaven a holier eye, And bleeding pity heaves a fofter sigh. :i ,f j , ha s ' ts ea ' c > araufement, joy and fire, Hid in Itfelf, as music in the lyre ; a d ' thf ! v rc - w !" all its powers impart, ° d n !?H ch J and ma n a g'<i by the hand of art: d, ®" 1 half mankmd, like- Handel's f.ol, destroy, hi , hrol f h , ra S« and ignorance, the strain of joy : ' Irregularly wild their passions roll i I h . r< ? Ugl ' ,Nat,,ra ' 6 inilrument, the sovi.. "t While men of sense, with Handel's happier 0' ikill, rA it Correal the t ifte, and harmoniae tlie will, » c ? ch t , h l e "' affeflioru, like his notes, to flow, it 1 "5 s d to ° h 'Bfc» nor cn-ct fntik> w J W!> I n V V vrtue me afnr'd and .efin'd r- M 1 s . ? F° R . cs , rt °> master mind, Melts in Its kindred founds, and pnurs along The according music of the moral'fong. I FOR SALE, BY Joseph Anthony fcf Co. le N °- J. ChefnutAfreet, . A cargo of choice Bourdcauißraady, ll{ aad ad / proof, just landed " tjo bales of Bourbon cotton of a superior qualit* >e 9 do. Surat, do do 7 ■y A quantity of heavy black pepper in bales ,f! Bourbon Indigo of the fir ft quality j i H'gk proof Jamaica ipirits , 0 Old London particular Madeira wine 7ln pipes & do. market do qr. cafcs. J New England rum in hog/hcads • I Genuine Holland Gin in pipes Claret in cases I Spermaceti candles and ftrain'd oil n Prime Boston beef s j Choice Halifax Salmon in barrels and half bartfa ■■ 1 B H Da - Herring in do do r Be* Boston Mackarel in barrels of the fall fate . New-England tow l : »m r A few tons ofßufiia cordage , i RufEa featherbed* t ' Clover and Timothy feed in sa&s /. Long whalo-bone r No I, a, and 3, Boston Tail duck A few chests firft quality Hyson tea 1 Carolina rice in whole and half tierces and t An invoice of Dutch hollow glass ware " _ N °vemb«r 8. Wharton and Lewis~ If AVE FOR SALE, . At their Store and Insurance Office for ikippm? No. 115, South Front-street, Jamaica Rum, 4th proof, ■> entitled to All cant Brandy, ift & id proof /drawback. Madeira Wine, and few hoglheads of Juniper Berries. OfloHer 3 r. r ot s To le Sold, * A V:iluable Plantation, OF upwards of One Hundred Acres of Land, well watered, in a healthy situation, about ieven miles from this City ; the buildings may bo made to accommodate a large family, at a mode rate expense, and possession had in a few weeks. Part *' }}* e purchase-money being paid, a reason able credit will be allowed for the remainder. Enquire of the Printer. November S mwM Clocks and Watches, Of every defcnpirdn, opening for Sale, bv EPHRAIM CLARK, dt bis New Shop, Corner of MARKET and FRONT STREETS. -"■— A LSO An extensive and general assortment of Tools, Files, and Materials. CONSISTING OF Clock Movements and Clock Dials, eight day and thirty hours cast brass, forged work and Pin ions, Bells and Hands, Cat Gut, screw and draw Plates, Turkey Stones, Pumice, Emery and Rot ten Stone, Springs and Giiffos, Chains, Key*, Seals &c &c. Spring and Handing Clocks. oa. » 7 . eotf Philadelphia, 08. 13. THE fubferibers inform their friends and custo mers in rown and country,that their stores are now open in the city, and others are daily opening, and that from the present appearance of the prevailing disorder have reason to hope, their friends may shortly come to the city with perfedl faftty. By fnveral late arrivals, numbers have received freih supplies of GOODS. litbert Smith Izf Co. P. W. Gallaudet W C». John Da-vis & Co. Sitgreavcs & French, Neill ts" Smith, George Dob/on, Wiltbcrger and Smith, Thomas Kjerfon, Alex Bit/land and Co. 7. R. Hardevberg• Jacob spe rry and Co. John Smith and Co- Owen £5" Jena. Jones, Thomas Orr, Keppele Zantzingrr, Ifi/liam Barker Co. Adam Zantzmger, Thomas Armat & Son. John Frits, J. Miller, jun. and Co. Berjamin *Jobnft*ti. 0&. la Philadelphia, 0/3. 24//;, 1797. ALL persons deCrous to contract to f«rntfh Ra tions and Quarter Mailer's Stores, during tha year 1798, for the troops in Philadelphia, Fort Mifflin, on Mud Island, Carlisle anu Reading, or any of them, a-x desired to deliver their proposals, under a sealed cover, on or before the icth No vember next to TENCH FRANCIS, Purveyor. The Rations to eonjijl of I pound Flour or Bread I pound Beef, or 3 4 of a pound of Pork i gill Rum, Brandy or Whiskey 1 lb. Candles 2 lb, Soip ( _ , 2 quarts Vinegar f 0 hundred rations I quart Salt ° ) SciftigthN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers