Ti'msedure certain citizen-, for alk-dpr • d difturbanccs in the pn'miry liolden. It was one of the eleftion tricks of the counter-re volution ills, where they could not carry the eledtion by dratagem, to provoke disorder, and then to have those patriots incarcerated who were moved to re fidance by their provocations. The resolution qf the 29th prairial ref pe&mg divorces is approved. It fettles, that i.i all demands for a divorce which havtf been or (hall be made upon the Ingle plea of incompatibility of temper and character, ( tlie public oflicer shall not pronounce the di- 1 voice before fix months have elapsed after the date of the left of the three afts of non conciliation, required by the articles 8, 10, J and nth of the law of the 20th September t 1792. , Broftarec demands leave ®f absence. ■ Several members oppose it. The Council 1 order a podponement. 1 The resolution of the 17th Thermidor, ' ■which authorizes minor children of which the parents are dead or absent to contrail , marriage one month after the refufal of the • fimily tribunal to consent, was negatived. j s PARTS, Sept. 13. The transported members were to have fiept yederday at Orleans. They travel with ' t every poflible comfort, except that of a good | carriage ; their carriage is thefame conftruft ed for the vi&irns of Vendome, by the hon- i nctrs gens, who took no great care to make 1 it an easy one. They are moreover allowed ' every liberty compatible with their situation, J even that of writing, whieh has been some what redrained, as there has been some rea son to think they endeavoured to make an t ill use of it. Orders have been given to j ' have them well treated. However some of ' their friends have spread a report that they are not allowed to come out of the carriages even for the necefiities of nature, which they c are obliged to fatisfy by means of a hole. I ■Upon this the aridocraey of the small towns I began set up a cry, and curse the cruelty of the republicans. This report ,has pro. ' duccd some iroprefiion in many places ; how- ] ever, the people in general t'Kke very little concern in their fate. ( BUONAPARTE J AND ' THE VAC HA OF SCUTARI. _ 1 VENICE, Augud 29. | The public will not be displeased at be- 1 ing made acquainted with the correfpon dcnce which has taken place between Ge- ' nejal Buonaparte and the Pacha of Scutari, the brother of the celebrated Makmoud. ' It preceded the order of proteftion pub- ; lifhed in favor of the fubje&s of the Porte, and particularly the Greeks and Albanians. ] The following is a copy of the Pacha's let- 1 ter : , ' GOD IS GREAT, AND HIS WORKS ARE 1 WONDEJtFUL. To the General in Chief Buonaparte, pro- ( teftor of the law of Asa—to the Pow erful man of the French Republic—to , the general of generals, the sublime con- i dpueror of the regions of It.ly, the mod faithful general in chief, great, merciful #nd beneficent ; to him I address this e pistle. Prince of Generals. , May you obtain all your wjfhes !—May , this sincere salutation reach you ! May I karn the interesting intelligence of your be ing in good health ! This I desire on ac count of the friendlhip that (hall for ever u nite us, and of which I wish to give con stant and mod signal proofs. The friendfhip which unites the Ottoman Porte to the Republic of France, was al was faithful and sincere. The hand of fate directed by the hand of God, in annihilating the Venetian power, and in fubje&ing that People to your laws, has established new relations between the Ottoman Porte and France, and the har mony existing between them is augmented by the approximation of the two nations. In this moment, this new union compels me to a(k of you a new favour. This favour which I am desirous of obtaining from my sincere friend consists in this—that I wish my fubjefts and my merchants who traffic with Venice to be protested in their persons, and in Iprafticc of their commerce—that hospitality be granted to them, and that they be regarded with a friendly eye. Such is my requed, and to obtain it I have writ ten this letter, and sent it to the bed of my friends. When these few lines reach you, and when you shall have understood them according to the spirit by which they were dilated, I hope that the merchants of Scu tari, my fubjeds, will be favorably received, protected and honored. AfTured that I shall obtain what I solicit from you, this letter will, in the mean time, serve to express my gratitude. God is great, and his works are wonder ful ! May the friendfhip that unites us last for ever and ever ! Ibrahim. Written on the fird day of Muharam, in the 272 d year of the Hegira. « ' ■ Ceneral Buonaparte's anfiver to the Pacha as Scutari. 1 have seen with much pleasure the sen timents contained in your letter. The French Republic is the sincere friend of the Ottoman Porte, but it particularly edeems the brave Albanian nation which you gov ern. . f I have learned with sorrow the misfor tune which has happened to your illudrious brother. That intrepid warrior merited a fate more worthy of his courage ; but he has died the death of the brave / You will find fubjoincd the order which I have issued, that the Ottoman flag may be refpefted in future in the Adriatic. The Turks shall be treated, not merely as other natious, but with a peculiar partiall - On all occasions I shall protect the Albanians, aud it will always afford tee pleasure to have opportunities of teflifying j thcefteem and great refpedl I entertain for i your jhighnefs. y I beg of you to accept, qs a mark of t friendHiip, four boxes of muskets which I I have sent to you. , , BUONAPARTE. <: LONDON, September T4. c The Abbe Syeyes and his coadjutors, the I n Committee of Safety, who have proposed the plan of tranfporution as a rneafure of national V iVcurUy, have evidently adopted an old faying '■ of this country. We have heard it given as a toait from the Citr Chair—" T he land we live in ; and may those who don't likeit, leave it!" As the Direflory have the power of wanfport ingthe profcrihed Deputies to any place which they may pleife to prefenhe, 1 here is not a doubt but that they will take special care to ° fend them to some diQanf country, where they : _ will never more be heard of. For certain it is, that if they are fufiered t.-> remain in Europe, p they will very soon deteift the forgery 011 which p, the Triumvirate have founded t'ueir accufa.ions p, against them. How well the French Triumviri have t'egard- j ' ed the Letter of the Conftituticn, of which they profefs themielves such zealous defenders, may be judged from the following ExtiaiSl, under the Section Lrgiflative Power . in- The Mttnbeis of the Legislative Body, from (he moment of th«ir nomination to the < 30th day after the expiration of their funiflions cannot be brought to trial hut according to the forms prefcrihed by the following articles : In- They may, for criminal aits, be fcized in Jlagr an ti dilecli, but notice mutt be given of it, without delay to the Legislative Body, and I •*" the prosecution cannot be continued till aftci the Council of Five Hundred have propof«d the bringing to trial, and the Council of Anei- S< ents has decreet} it. w IIJ. Except in the cafe oifliig'/ixj deltftum, T the Members of the Legislative Hody cannot be c carried before tlje Officers of Police, or put in a a . ffate of airtft before the Council of Five Hun- p, dred has proposed the bringing to trial, and the Council of Ancitnts has decreed it. nl U4- In the cafe of the two preceeding Arti- „| cles, a Member of th? Legislative liody cannot be carried before any Tribunal hut the High f n Court of Juilice. ' m 115. They may bt carried before the fame t ] ; Courts for atfsof treafon,dilapidation,manceu- c vres to overturn the Constitution, acd offences againllthe internal frcuiity of the Republic. i n Under the 6th head of Executive (Pow«r we w find the following Article: ' \ 145 If theDireilorv is informed that any con- J) (piracy is plotting against the external or inter nal fatety of the State, ii may iftue warrants of j, fuinmons, or Warrant; of Arrejl against the presumed authors or accomplices ; it may in terrogate them, but it's obliged, under the pe nalties egainlt the crime of arbritrary detention, 1 to fend them before the Officer of Police, with in the delay of two days, to praceed according to the laws. N. B. All the Deputies arrested have been ordered to be tranfporred out of the Country, 'without e-t'e.t the form of a trial, or being told tbe nature of their offences. All the Emigrant Writers in London have \ pledged themselves to prove, that the late tri- umph of the French Diraiiory will ultimately p operate to the eftablifliment of that very system of Government, the feeds of which it was his object to eradicate. Thu storm of the moment fay they, will but featter them like those of the j, thistle, to take root on more expansive ground. The numher of Editors of papers in Paris S condemned to tranfporution, are forty one, — ( the fate of thirteen remains tn lufgenl'e. The Hedaifeur continues the official print- In rrifcr to judge of the cleirance which the t j several steps taken by the Direiflwry, have made in the Councils, it is only ncceffaty to ftaie, that out of the Council of lildrrs whieh consists r of no, thare wereonlv u6 to be found, who : jflrmiiled upon the Mandate of tht Dire£!ory to pass the Decrees ordered hy them, that of the Co ncil of Five li'. ndred only j; 14c'could be found to perform the fame ungra- c Lcious and dishonourable talk. t LONDON, September 30. It is expefted that the emperor Paul will r assist Anftria in the new conflift, with a ■ powerful force. a Great ehanges have been made in the mi- f niftry of France, since the triumph of the j 2 diredlory over the conftitutiou. By this day's iVlail. BOSTON, November 11. j F.xtraft of a letter from captain James Scott, : jun. to MefTrs. Bambridge, Anfley 8c Co. 1 " Since my last of the 12th inft. from ' Quimper, lam happy to inform you, that t after a severe contest, my vefiel and cargo was by the tribunal at Quimper cleared the i 20th inft. with costs. I am now on my way to Morlaix to prosecute ray business, and | Ihould my captors not appeal to the court of Caflation, shall ai early a< I can load and proceed on my voyage, and in the mean time , Ihould our commissioners arrive, have no doubt but every thing will be well, at any rate now I expedt to hold the property to gether." On the road to Morlaix, August 26, *97. N. B. The above took place before the late Tornado—tinder one party is injuflice under another. CAMILLE JOURDAN. One of the members sentenced to be ba nished, but who has concealed himfelf in an obfcui-e retreat, has sent a very spirited ad dress to his conttituents. He fays, a hor rible crime has been committed :—'l hat the triumvirate of the directory, aided by the armed force, had surrounded the halls of the legislative council, prevented their afTem bling; and had banished fifty-one of its members :—That a few slaves of the directo ry, deliberating with bayonets at their bitafts, had dated to assume the name of the legislature ; and to pass laws :—That a greater stretch of military tyranny never dis graced the annals of history—and of all con temptible forgeries, that was the mod con temptibk, which charged the immortal de fender of the republic, as being at the head of a cenfpiracy in favor of royalifm. It is known that all the accusations a , gaind Carnot, Pichegru, 3cc. are sheer for r gerics. But when you want to beat a dog, it is easy tfc find a stick. ! NEW-YORK, November 12. Letters received in town by the late ar s rivals at Bodon, appear to contradia, at lea!h the ilated intention <>f tb> British m«3V»t;reri 'vhich have crofied '.he channel since the retnrrt of lord Malmeftufy : f or they inform that a TIIH cabinet council had been held, in which, it was determined to ' profs-cute the war with viVor. 1 We fully believe in this account of the 1 disposition of the B.itifh court. Tile err- 1 cumftances attending lord M.ilmefWy's dif- * ! million (it amounts to that) wc are certain 1 would produce the above-mentioned refolu- t tion. t NORWICH, November i + . c Pumpk'ns Distilled. g We are informed that a Gentleman in the v county of Windham, who owns a diilillery, v has undertaken to diftill Pumpkins, flatter- t ing himfelf that some kind of li quor cin be c produced therefrom, which will amply com- I petifate him for the experiment. It is ho ped that success will crown his endeavours, g —* - ' O Xijt ffimzttt. 5 PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY EVENIN9, NOVEMBE.It 18. C CONGRESS. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Friday, Nov. 17. fr Mr. Williams laid, though lie understood the b Senile had not yet formed a quorum, yei he w wilhed that they mi.rht proceed to business.- , They had already, he phi'trved, appointed a 0 Committee of Revifal and Unfinilhed Business, ayd he favy 110 ohjedlon ta the apr s pointrnent of a Committe of Elei9'oiu, el'peei- ci ally as there was business upon which they 01 might immediately aft- If the appointing J,, of this Committee were apreed he would a] then move that the llonfe adjourn til! Monday, »• ?n order that the two Committees might fit to- morrow, and be able to make their reports at * their uext meeting. Mr. W. moved thit a Committee ofEltilions he appointed. r( The f-nfe of the House taken, it was d in favour of the motion, and accordingly a Com- 0 mittec of seven members was appointed, viz. MefTrs. Coit, Varmim, J. Williams, Hartley, a j lient. Ha>lwin and Evans. On motion, the House adjourned till Mon day. f< a' Saturday, November Bth. ti The Senators of the Uninited States in town are, From the State of a New-Hampflure • Maflachufetts Mr. Goodhue. Connefticut Mr. Tracy. a Rhode-Island Mr. Foster. Vermont Mr. Paine. New-York Mr. Lawrenee. Pennsylvania Mr. Bingham. Deleware Mr. Latimer. Kentuky Mr. Marlhall. XT ,i„ f Mr. Martin, and North-Carolina | Mr Bloodworth . South-Carolina Mr. Read. Georgia Mr. Gunn. Tlie Hon. John Hiksy, late a Ssnator in the ' the Seaate of the United Statei, from the iiate of ] Maryland, is cleclfd Governor of that (late. f 1 Extra&of a letter from a rtfpeAahle mercantile ] house in London, to their eorrclpopdent in this 1 city, dated Srpt. 7, '97. " the conduS oi the board of commiflioners, ' fitting here for grarriig compensation to Amcri- < can claimants, for lofles and damages fnflained by the captures and detention of their property by ( Britilh cruisers, has been very gen crow., as far as ( they have yet proce.ded, and wc trust they will . continue, and that no eitfeen will have caufo to complain of Britiih honor. * Having received compenfatioti for two veffeh ( and their cargces, fe.lcd by Britilh cruilrrt, in h«- ( half of our friendsin America, the one cnpturc.l ( 1 and condemned, and the other brought in fc?re and paid for at prime cost with to per crnt profit, 1 prior to its being brought before the commiflion- I ers, in both of which they have given the. claim- 1 ants the price the goods \Vould hive foM for had < they arrived at die market they were destined for, , with lnteicft. thereon, from the time they \vo«!d . probably have been in cash for it, by a regular sale at that market, a'-d all cod of fait incurred in the pro ecution of appeals and claims, in one of which cases the claimants wore allowed for flour, which , cost per invoice average 4»/-, ftcrling. per harrel, , the price for which it would have fold in Nastz, li t/4 per barrel, deducing freight. &c. have a clear profit of 100 per cent, to the claiman s All which we have received on presenting the eommiflioners' cirtificitcs at the treasury in bank notes f6r the claimants." Tlie Aurora, in characterizing the profcrih r«l deputies, has demonflrated that they were not royalists ; but, it is of little importance whether they were or not, since our attention must in future be occupied by the designs of their oporefibrs. infamous retailer of blafphcmy, Surge lit proftm, has dufe'd them Royalists by a daih of his hafly pen, biit the real cause of their obnoxioufnefs to him, in field of being a prediliflion for royalty, is their able support of the ir.terefts of this country Hence l>!s joy at their deftruiflion —which'le has juflificd on the most despotic principles ! But this tried ar.d proven servant of infidelity needed not to have given us this new evidence ofaftrocious depravity, in order to a jull appre ciation of his chara<sler. Firm to the interests of Jacobimftn, he triumphs in the idea of his old mailer's .gain bearing the sceptre of terror : : he already revels in delightful mafiacres, and • multiplied profcriptionseven in distant imagina tion make his heart leap for joy. But difoider, , turbulence, misrule and murder are going out of date, even in France, however different an alpedl may strike the view of the cursory obfer r ver. Republicanism, called liberty,—and li" f centinus insolence called equality, are fall de i Cayin?. " The fafcion et thiA world palfeth a - way." The mad-cup philofophtrs of France have afiaffinated Rcpnblrcauifm, and by their | infiniteexccfles and atrrocious enormities, effeil ed what the united valour of European chival " ry attempted in vain. Slavery is alike odious, in ail its forms: or if one ihape of it can be more intolerable than another, it is to groan un -- der the bitter gripe of oppreflion at the moment we are compelled to trumpet forth the blefiings - of-freedom. This is prcrifely the cafe in France: '' the upriticipled Despots in power, triumphantly exult on the iuperior blefiings of liberty and Re. publicanifra,—while they are dragooning their ilaves into a surrender of one half their proper r- —or seising them by hundreds, totranfport it t'.em to inevitable misery and death. For the Gazette of ih Statss, j Mr.^Fenno, Mr. Bache, and lii.s correfpondems ap- ' ■* pear to be m great dilftrfs, leaf! the refptft a ftewn to the President of the United States, , v by the people of every city town thrd' t which he pafle.d, on V»?3 journey to his own v home, and on Ilia return to the feat of gov- •Ji fliould be construed into fatisfaftion I with the government, and an approbation I of its administration. I f As Mr. Mr. Bache is but a youth of yes- a | tcrday, when compared with tlie old patri- p ' ots, who firft Hood forth in defence of the " | invaded rights of their injured country, a- ft | gainst the ufiirpation of Great-Britain, I ci who am grown grey with years, and was witness to what I relate can tell liitn, that the testimonials of refpett which have re- v cently been offered to the President of the United States are no novelties to him. q Previous to the meeting of the firft Con gress in the year 1774, the members from MalTachufetts (our venerable President was one) were met, escorted and feafted (if you „ please) in all the principal towns and cities through which they palled ; the fame pub lic marks of refpeft were again manifefted with increased splendour, at the meeting of Congress in the year 1775, and in the year j< 1789, when the President was firft elefted g] Vice-President, a troop of horse waited up on him at his feat in Braintree, and escorted g him from thence, to the Governor's in Bos ton, accompanied by numbers of citizens; from thence he was attended to Cambridge, bya large and refpeftableconconrfe of people, g ( where he was again met by another troop of horfc. Throughout the state of Conne&ieut he q received the fame marked attention ; the . citizens of New-York were not less zealous on that oecafion, than they have been to do honor to him as President ; trfops of horse tc and refpe&able citizens went an far as ] a Kingfbride and escorted him into the «ity of New-York. b| Every person who is acquainted with the republican manners and habits of the Presi dent, can witness for him that every kind of fhowr and parade are contrary to his taste and inclination, and that they can be agree- j r able on no other ground, than as the will of the people, manifefting their determined re solution to support the government and the administrators of it, so long as the adminif- r tration is conformable to she constitution. As to Mr. Bache's polite alluiion to Darby A and Joan, I eonfider that as highly honora- l ' ry to the domestic and conjugal charafter 0 of the President, who has never given his Q children or grandchildren cause to blush for any illegitimate offspring. I a The following article is copied from an Eng lish paper, entitled 7he Cambridge In- teilicincsr, of August 19, one of the v moll decidedoppofition paper* in England. From the completion of the remarks, may \ be augured what the sensations of the Edi tors, and the people of all parties mutt ji be, at reading the account of the late hor- h rible political tornado. I "Onemight have hoped in theprefent si- j tuation of politics, in France, policy, if not - principle, would have prevented the French from again celebrating the anjiverfary of that atevrfed day the tenth of August. J It is holding out to the Royalists and the Pricfts, an example which no doubt they are anxious to follow. They hare as great " a right to overturn the free government of 1 797» by perjury, infurreftion, and maffa cree, as the republicans had to overturn the * equally free government of 179J, by the lame most infernal means. Indeed if any apology could serve for fitch nefarious con duit, the present faftion have a better right to it, than the former. We cannot now " enter into an inveftigau'on of the reasons for the late conduft of the Direftory, or de termine what measures may be tiecefTary to. keep the volatile and flagitious Parisians in order, but most certain it is, that the viola- J tions of the principles of the eonftitution, by the Dired\ory, in tampering with the * armies, forming them into deliberative af ftmblies, ordering their march towards the capital, their /burning explanation juftifying the coiidud of their commander under the plea of ignorance, awing, if not threaten ing the grand councils of thtrepublic—t;hefe violatious are so flagrant, that no one who knows any thing of the matter, will dare to charge Lou 11 XVI. with condufk in a ny degree similar. In both cases we affirm, theconftitution ought tohave bcenpreferved. The concerns of a nation surely are fafer in the hands of a freely chosen representative body, than of any other party or dcfcrip tion of men. From Springer's New-London Oracle. AMERICAN LEGENDS. In the early times of the town of N-rw-ch, the inhabitants used to make puddings of such an erormous bigness, that it almost ex ceeds the belief of modem crcdulifts. One of these is reported to have been so large, that when a considerable number of people ' had eaten on one fide, it fell over and, killed three men. After this fatal accident, it 1 was ena<3ed,that a pudding should not ex " ceed twenty cooms of corn. 1 In H-dd-m, the people who attended ' meeting, used to carry apple-pies, (of that fpecieß commonly called turn-overs) with - th<-m,for their dinners, of such a length, - that when they were eating et one end, the e hogs would frequently be preying at the o r ther, being out of the reach of the proprie tor. Upon this, they pafled a law, that no person lhauld carry a pie to meeting so large ,e but that when they were dining at one end, 1- they could keep the hogs- away with a fix >t foot ftaff at the other. ;s e: The largejl man in England, lately difco !>' vered by the Papers, ought to be sent to Paris, to button his ivejlcoat round the Di reftory, convince them that a nation „ t of such feljows as him ar« not easily to be reduced. I Frotn a London Paper. One Sunday evening, a young gentleman ' was taken into cultody at Eton, for playing at cards, fur which he vvas flogged, who, while the mailer was in tlie aft of flagella tion, gave several kicks and struggles, at winch the master said, " Ah, fir, you may •fi'lfflf Sat I'll cut. The wife of a person at Ratcliffe was, .T few days ago, delivered of a child without arms. The mother being told of the im perfeftion, after the fi.rft (hock, exclaimed, " Well, thank God, I've one consolation - Pitt can never make it take out a li cense for wearing gloves!** MARRIED—On Thursday r»ening lad, at Whitby, in Blockley township, Philadelphia county, by the Right Reverend Dr. White, Mr. Wimmm l.tvis, of this city, to Mife Salit Gbay, daughter of Gaorgc Gray, esq. " Medicus" on GAZETTE MARINE LIST ' ' PORT OF PHILADELPHIA. ARRIVED DAYS. Brig Fame, Knox, Havanna 24 SloOp Fox, Norton, Boston 15 CLEARED, Brig Jason, Majeftri# Port au Prince Prince Frederick, Ghiolfe St. Thomas Fair Hebe, Eldridge Amsterdam Abby, Williams Martinico Schr Polls and Sally, Hollet 1 Norfolk The (hip America, Hardie, and, brig Ma ry, Quandrille, for Hamburg!!, left New- Castle on Thursday last . Providence, November 11. Arrived fliip America, captain Arming ton, from Amsterdam, 68 days. Sept. 6, lat - 59> s°> lo "g- 8 > spoke the (hip Perse verance, captain Harwood, bound to Ham burgh, 40 days out from Philadelphia, all well.—Sept. 2J, 1at.48, 27, Jong. 32, 30, was boarded by a French fliip, mounting }8 guns, the captain of which, after having ex amined tfi? papers, let them pjfs without injury, N NOTICE. THE Stockholders of the Bank of the United States, are informed that accurding to the flatute of Incorporation a general Election for twenty five will be held, at the Bank of the United States in the City of Philadelphia, on Monday the firft day of January next at ten o'clock in the forenoon- And purfrant to the Eleventh fe&iqn of the Bye Laws the Stockholders of the said Bank arc hereby notified to aflemble in general Meet ing at the fame place on Tuesday the second day of January next at fire o'clock in the E vening. By order of the Board of directors, G. SIMPSON, Calhier. Second fundamental Article. Not more than three fourths of tne Direflors in office, excluCve »f the President, lhall be e ltgible for the next succeeding year, but th« Direflor who (hall be President at the time of an Ele&ion may always be re-elcfted. Philadelphia, nov.iS. 1797. ftE The Commiflioners For alleviating the diftreft of the Citizens »f Philadelphia, have removed" their qffice to the OH Court Hotlfe, Hiph Street. EDWARD OARRIGUES, Secretary. 13th mo. 18. i w . Now Landing, £nd For Sale by the Subscribers, 30 hhds BRANDY «sf» 7 hhds. Carolina TOBACCO Philips, Cramond, & Co. ntvemeer 18. For Savannah, in Georgia, THE SHIP Sally Butler, Captain Chisholm, ncw excellent accommodations for passengers Sails on the loth of December. For Freight or Passage, apply to ROSS & SIMSON. IVbo havs to difpofc of t A small invoiee ef GLAUBER SALTS INDIGO, and a parrel of HOLLY WOOD. November 18. For Londonderry, THE BRIGANTINE jj§§|fs uk er, vjjj^S s Wilciam Whittik, Mailer. - Aftronggood veflel, about two hundred *®os, to fail with all convenient speed, a preatjpart of her cargo engaged—now lyi»g a" . Willing and Fraacis'swhaif. For freight or pal fage, apply to the captain, or JOHN SKYRIN, Landcnkcrgcr s ivbarf,\ Who wants to Charter. A Vessel of about three Jhundred tons. UOV ' 8. § f Muftcal Instrument Manufatlory y 167, Arch-street. TO THE LOVERS OF HARMONY. HARPER, INFORMShis friends and the public, that he hu now ready for sale, n few of his new invented, * and much admired fide beard Piano Porte?, with t Pedals, patent fwcll, fonopahant and French harp - (top, which for sensibility of touch, brilliancy of tone, (implicity and durability of cor.ftru&ion, th« superiority of which.he flatters himfelf, a (ingle tri al will convince the unprejudiced judge—As they 3 are manufactured under his immediate infpe&ion, t of the very be®; seasoned materials, he can fell on h reasonable terms forCA»». Inflrnmants repaired, 1 tuned, jtc. ' N. B. Second hand Piano Fortes taken in e*» change for new. ntvrmtcr iS. lawimo. "o The Canal Lottery, ;e "Will re-commenci drawing, on Monday J > the 20th inft. ix ROBERT BROOKE, Check C/eri. Nov. 11. dt2t>. to The Medical Leftures In tV e Univerlity of Pennsylvania, are poft -3n poned until the lilt Monday in November be next. Otflober 14. 3iW4\ir. *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers