Mr. Clopton, from the committee of en rolment, reported the bill for declaring tha aflent of Coagrefs to an aft of the Hate of Maflachufetts, and the bill appropriating a sum of money for providing and supporting a naval armament. Adjourned rill Monday. a»nw» in hi. i nin ii n !■■■— Xfje PHILADELPHIA, SATURBAY EVENING, March 24. A letter received by yefterdayi mail fays, The captain of the veflel arrived at Gloucc fter from Uochelle informs, that it was re ported at Rochelle, that the Direftory had prppofed to the Council of Five Hundred, that as John Adams was in the pay of Eng land, all veflels having his name on their papers should be condemed as good prize, and that the captain's merchant told him the taxes there were so enormous that he had paid for the last year more than he had for 35 years before. Flagiliora Facinora. The Chief Magi(lrate of a free, sove reign and independent nation calumniated with impunity, by an alien, who narrowly escaped the gallows in his own country for crimes which mftlt death in every civilized community. The people of those parts of the United States who made the grerteft exertions in refilling attempts upon their freedom, tra duced by the fame culprit as the friends of arbitrary power. The friends of Independence, those who rifl<ed their all in the revolutionary war, dig* matized in the Aurora with the epithet moil justly applied feme twenty years ago to the prefect rcvjlers in that paper ef the govern ment of this country. • Piracy and murder juftified and applauded by a wretch whose gullet had a narrow squeak for a traiterous and murderous con spiracy in Scotland. A wretch whipped out of one city for lies, slander and abuse, recommencing the fame employment in another, adding slander to slander, and falfehood to falfehood in the face of the rudest and mod palpable confu tation.^—See the late attack on a member of the House of Representatives. MR. FENNO, I am' sorry to hear that the Germantown Turnpike bill has polled a second reading in thefenate of this state without a single a mendment ; if this is the cafe and the bill should in its present shape become a law, it will never be carried intoeffeft, for its pro visions are such that no m3n in his senses, will become a übferiber—The road is to be extended to Reading, and if not compleat ed in ten years is to revert to the state and consequently all that ftiall have been expen ded will be forfeited—True it is, that gales may be put up when the road is compleat cd ten milet, .and if the. company caH be reimbursed within that time, the money ex pended thereon, there will he no lnft ; but can it be supposed that the toll will be fuf ficient for that purpose ?—The people of Montgomery county and others travelling that road can avoid it by going one mile round : and as new roads may be laid out through that county so as to make that dis tance much less, there can be 110 doubt but measures will be taken by those who are op posed to the Turnpike road to lead people another direction, and thereby render this artificial road almost entirely unproductive— The company are fubjeci to so many reftric liable to such numerous prosecu tions, that nothing i:hl }• v 1 i * l - ni "fix ation can attend them. And as those who it might beexpefted would be the principal fubferibers will be fubje<?t to an enormous toll, whilst others who will fubferibe b«t lit tle will be almost exempt, it cannot be pofii ble that the fubfeription will 511. If thib bill is compared with the Lancaster Turn pike aft, it will be found that the toll on pleafura'ole carriages will be 50 per cent higher, and the toll upon carriages of bur then, 30 per cent lower on the German town than on the Lancaster road. Is this reasonable ? Is it just ? Is is probable that 'the owners of pleafarable carriages will do any thing to an aft so unjust in princi ple into efFeft ? I do not mean to censure the member of the house of reprefentatives-who was the warmed oppoferof this bill, for the amend ments which he offered and which in faft will entirely prevent it frcm being carried into effeft. lam disposed to think that he thought them right ; but I am sorry he was so much mistaken ; for had he thought as correftly upon this fubjeft as he does up on mod others which come before the legis lature, he might have rendered his country an effehtial fei^ice. It is to be hoped that the senate will a mend the exceptionable parts of this bill when it is read the third time ; and if that should not be done, there can be no doubt but it ought to receive the governor's nega tive ; for then we might stand a goodchance of obtaining a bttter law at the next ftf fion of the assembly ; but if it should pass into a law it is very doubtful whether the legislature would make any alterations in it in less than two years even if there was not a single fubferiber. A CITIZEN. For the Gazette of the United States. MR. FENNO, THE refslutions moved by Mr. Maday, in the Legislature of Pcnrfylvania, contain a deeiar ation that " the diftrelTes of the citizens engaged *1 commerce are lamented by the heufe. Ihe President's mefTag'e to congress, on which this proceeding was evidently founded, acquaints ms, that •' secondary interefls" and " reasonable coijceflions" were powers veiled in the envoys to offer, but that a liberal and pacific policy was treat ed hj ouf faitblef Ma so as to leave nothing fur ther to be attempted, and recommends such mca iures as wifiom, reflection and fuggeft ; Nat as the resolution-making member would have 'tcon/tru d, " engaging in lioilility with any of 'he 1 uropenn pows-s," bull, deferd ,«rfelvn. |f the member thiiks the pa ft is without retiedy, and t French juf.icc wi:l not reiref. the wrongs so ■wantonly a- d wicisdl/ exercised ver oar commerce —if he TtouU hjve our merchants idle, and by that mra t. e numerous class ef mechanics wb» earn tbeir bread by tie employment of flipping, let him ftiggel a provi nori for the payment of our plan fereprspetty, f" that the state at. Urge, participating i the h»a v» ev 1, can afc.rtam itsinterelHn what the gcnfle m n from the country seem, or affeil to think, they hav? none. Lamentation will then eemfe and the merchant and mechanic abandon tie city, and plow the foil, till the o'lve-braticb of peace again fi.itl flou -jb on the tree of I berty. If it is dangerous to place moie ex'enfive and difcreuonary power in the han '« of in :ividu-U, "i } n Pf Ke ' '"diff rest, may command a iprs chant s ship, a "d if to prevent the ahufe W ic, a reftri. ,ive law be necessary, it is with aorigref. %n conridrr and en d t. From the " wisdom, zeal vigor and concert" of our federal representatives, everything thatenn be done, istoUe expeded, to avoid * a .'late of wariare, that word of all human calamities-" for instance, that none but natural born citizens, or those adop ed before Sept»mb r 179 (hould co nmand, or id as ma A tr or chief mate, or li. u tC M nt f •'"J armel vcjfcl; lnd that good and rtpu a >!? cuizrrs fh.-utd »ou h for their conduct as or- ' ' c y -m f rap riw! of time past. That hey fhrul! receive inllrud'i ns from tbeir oiy (to be uniform an J printed) who should de liver them in preface of the colle&or, not to chace, fi-e upon or attack any veKel whatever, and that it Ut upon or broughr to in the prosecution of •he voyage, by any vefTel farrying the colours of anv . U r power, not having a gredter num ber of guns, they v ould »oi» hoist out their boat or go aboaid. but declare theirreadinefj to per-;it th; beat of the cruizer to come along fide, and not mere than three persons at 6ne time to board her to examine the (hip's paneri, &c. which being 'hewn, the said persons Ihou'd peaceably retire ?nd return to their own v<lTel ; if, however, they mould refnfe h 'o d», and persist to continue on brard for the fpac- ot fix hourt, then he jhould be 1 at liberty to maUe fail and renew his course, and carry cflf the f/id persons so on board ; and if fired upon or prevented, or logger a tempted to be pre .vented from failing and continuing her voya<-e, to repel force ivith force, andJirt upon the aggreflorj f» long as it may be needfary for the fafety at.c liber- his vtfiTel. and As conimiffiens ire not eves be granted t» ci|ry,ffels. they will c >•- ~e to | fail under great difidvantagts —they at e ill lia ble to be made prize of, without the bent fit of mjkin ca turcs. When the commerce »f Great-Britain w<s gres . ly t mbarraffe 1 1 y the pirates of B,irbary, it became necrfTary t enco rage reffels f force i\ themeditei/a nean trade, — th- y failed under particular regula tions and reflr (ftinn, ; if they struck, and b.camt priz? ti any vessel, ./ If, thai Jmtk tbeir free, th- men were not en tied t be ransom ed ; a bounty was given to th fe of certain ton rage and force, and rx.mpti n from light money, &c Similar regulations fem on this melancholy occasion necefTary Tbc condua of the French, whil< it has mode liberty f ink, ftiould teach us to defend our own pure and iincorrupted, free Irom the smell of their nefariqps proceedings, and " while any door to reconcihatian remains open," every merchant Jbip may negotiate for her onm rights, by tau tioufly avoiding to invade those of others A FRIEND TO LAWJ AND FKEEBOM. For the Gazette of the United States. MR. FENNO, A writer in your paper of the 10th in#, after making a Ibort quota ion from Da'jyniple, con certiing the hiltory of England, • which aflrrts that itshiflory is that of liberty, and of its fpirirupon the conflitution, Religion; wealth, powor, and a bove all, upon the dignity of the national character " As the man faid'-of Ht-rcnles; " Wbo impeached Hercul.s ?" \\ ho impeached the Epg'ilh nation al charader ? The- writer appears, however, to be a very young; nian, at .raft in historical knowledge, if >» hat he has published may be aken as the result of his Oudies. 1 here are many particulars in which we cannot place tha most Oeady credit in tif toriai«s ; and we know that this mod impartial Wif tory oJ England, and the bell, that has ever been published as far as it was perfciled, was written by - J re <h nan, who was himfelf an adorin some of the important tranfadions upon which he has written; [mean Raptn de Ihoyras, Neverthe i»fs, excellent as that history is, there are particu lars initwhichhave not received the uniform assent of well informed msn. But is it really true what Dalrymple dates ? I admire as much as any man the great charaders wl ich England has produced ; 1 admire the trial y J u ';» - 1 -->»*-'-eas corpus ad, and general Inirir ot liberty whichTfas DcL in that nadon Yet, permit me to diflfent frrtm DalryiupU, from writer who has adopted his fVntimenti. To difput« upon the principles of liberty at this time of day would indeed be a work of supereroga tion, as it would he the extreme of absurdity to fay the history of England is that of liberty ; it would hr* at heA tut a comparative history, and we should exc.ude all antiquity, as well as the eighty years war of the Dutch, and the noble struggle of the Swif-, in order to pay a compliment that is not warrantad even in itfelf. It would be in like manner as ah(W<i to talk of of the English constitution. Th at baft been very tSo r oughly invefttgar«d ; and would not now af ford any very irit}ru»fUve information in addition to what is known. As to its influence upon relig ion, I fear the history of Engl nd' is not very in ftru&ive whether it is confiJcrfid under Henry VIII. or Mary, James I. or George II with great delerctice I urge it, the history is far from delight ing to any mind of sensibility or liberality. If wealth and power arc in therr.felves, independent of the means by which they are acquired and (he ends to which they are applfed, the proper and juil objects of admiration; there I will acknowledge t"at. I know of no nation which def rves the attcn tion of mankind, thtre is none that merits the most ftr <sl and minure curiosity more than England. 1 do not fay how that riches and that power have be- n produced and employed, pcrh ps it is therein the " dignity #f the national charader" is to be best difccrned. If your Qprrefpor.dent would o blige with his ideas on this further in illuf tratiori, perhaps 1 may be mistaken as t>> his know ledge of thefubjeA; as to the reft his observa tions it is impoftible for us to make things bttter in France, theyfeem blindly regardlef* of all the wilt'em which we can them ; so let them proceed they like, so they do not meddie witli ouraff'irs I hope they may continue to "con quer their own felicity," as your eorrefpondent fays, and let us alone. I hope when your corref pondent has paid a little regard to the history he has written about, he will let us hear from him fomefa»sU, as they are much bnter than any Yague assertion bf any Writer whatfoevier. UMBO. P. S. If your correspondent is desirous of it, I will offer a tew reafonswhy I utterly dideht from Dalrymple in the most particular points. PRICE OF STOCKS. Philadelphia, March 23. Six Fer Cent. 16/4 ta 16ff> Three per C«nt. I of Deferred 6 per Cent. I >/7 13/8 BANK United States, 10 to li per cent. —Pennfylvatiia, »3 per cent. ■ North America, 50 per cent. InfuranceCo. Pennsylvania, 10 N. A. share* J j per cent. A NUISANCE! T he Commissioners forfupei intending the cleansing and paving nf the ftrcets in this city, are carneftly requeued, by several of the inhabitants in the vicinity of Dock-street to visit that part, between the Hurfe Mar ket and Third-street, where they will find a very great nuisance facing the house where boufehold goods are exposed to sale. The pavement is entirely bri.ke up ?nd impassa ble, in wet weather tQ the great annoyance of those whose biifir.nefs brings them that wa y- A CITIZEN. Died, this msrning, Mrs. Frances Bud den, reliA of the late Mr. James Bndden, of this city. Died at Beverly, Mr. Jduth Batchtldfr, aged 88. EXTRACT. " It is astonishing that even the mole Ja cobin cannot discern the unclouded meaning of French magnanimity and repnblicanifm, in the division of the Venetian territories, and of French fraternization, in their con duft towards the miserable Dutch. Indeed those creatures of French fehemes, the Cis and Transalpine republics in their letters to the Direftorv will soon adopt the language of Priam to Paris, in Shakespeare's Troilus and Creflida. Paris, you fjieak I.ike one besotted on your ftveet delights ; "V ou have the honey still, and we the gall ; So to he valiant is ne praifc at alt. Citizen Defaudryat a fitting of the Ly ceum of arts at Paris has lately introduced a new method of/launching blood. It would have been fortunate for France ifthis humane discovery had been made some years foouer. Bitaube, a celebrated French poet, has late ly published an Imitation of the fixrh Sa tire of the second book of Hprace, wherein he has happily clothed the Roman poet in the Gallic costume, fkilfully adapting his i deas to modern manners and circunillauces this day's Mail. BOSTON, March 17. AUTHENTIC. Frbm Gloucester, March 15. Capt. Hays has arrived here this day from Rochelle. He confirms former ac counts of French politics being much op posed to the American government ; or ra ther that they were carrying their system of depredation to the summit. He gives a re pert that was current in France when he fail ed, that the executive direftory had propos ed to the council of Five Hundred to pass a law making all American vessels good prize which should have on board papers signed by John Adams ! ! as they view him an emissary from Pitt. He adds, that it was the general opinion at Rochelle, that the requeft.pf the direftory would not be refuf ed. . ffj" It would require the patience of Job to refute the many falfhoods which contin ually ifTue from the jacobin prefTes in the United States :—But we cannot forbear to remind the people, the -Aurora, and fts co pyists, have affirmed and le-affirmed, that our Executive has for months past received letters from our commissioners in France, and that it had concealed them. Proofs of the falfhood are now before the public. Were they worthy notice, it would be as easy to demonstrate the absurdity and turpitude of nine tenths of the jacobiu assertions, as it is this. From Malaga. Capt. Henry Atkins arrived last evening from Malaga, which place he left the 4th of Feb. informs, that just before he failed, it was reported and believed, that the French had renewed hojlilities againjl Portugal, and had marched an army of 50,000 men towards Lisbon. The French capture all neutrals, W..,nd to any ports in the Mediterranean, and carry them in for adjudication. Capt. Atkins, in long. i2,lat. 35, spoke and was boarded by the Crescent Frigate, Capt. Newman, from Portsmouth, for Al giers, out 20 days, all well. From Gibraltar, February 2, we learn, that the Biitifh still continue to block the Spanifli armada in Cadiz harbour. We have accounts from Bourdeaux, of the condemnation there of Forty fix Amer ican vefTels. The United States, at this moment ex perience all the evils of war, without any of its benefits. Instead of war's costing money, if it were declared at this moment, it woul.l be putting money into thepockets of our citizens, and giving life and a&ivity to business of every kind. ARM ! or STARVE ! The Jacobins to a man are opposed to arming our vessels, or fitting out a finale ship of war. They well know, that ow ing to French gun-boat piracies, our mecha nics and artificers are almost starving ; and that the moment Congress gives leave to our merchants to arm, and orders naval yards to commence building new ships, that they will, find full employment.—THlS IS FACT ! The moment the newt arrives that the merchants shall have liberty to arm their vessels, not an ax, hammer, or mechanic implement will be idle. Business will afTume its adivity ; and the rnufic of the cunning workman will be heard on all our wharves. The French have broken down every barri er of the treaties mado" in the name of the most holy and undivided Trinity They have declared, in the teeth of those treaties and the law of nations, that the ships of all countries, kindredand climes shall be a good prize to them, if they have a bale of Eng. lifh goods on board, and bound from or to any port.—Those treaties and the laws or tiaiior.s, give belligerent powers the right to search neutral vessels—But as the French have declared by their late decree, that they were null and void, we have ne right to be governed by tlicm, as they refpeft France , hut to treat their ciuizers as wc would pi rates. GEORGIA LANDS. IMPORTANT DECISION. MefTrs. William Paine, Nathaniel Prime, Comfort Sands, and others gave to MefTrs. Samuel St wall, Samuel Dexter, and George Lane, a bond in the penalty of 300,000 dollars, conditioned, within a given time to procure and deliver to them authentic documents of title to one million acres of Georgia lands ; in confidrration of which MefTrs. Sew ell. Dexter and Lane, and their affeciates, delivered to them their notes for 220,000 dollars,-payable in instalments. Anaflion was brought onthebond againfl Mr. Paine ; and after a full hearing hi chin cery on the bond, the Supreme Judicial court on Wednesday gave juegment for the plaintiffs in the full sum of 220,000 dollars with the interest on the notes which had been due. Thus the corfderation of the notes being Cftablifhed by this decision, it is presumed an amicable adjustment will take place by i discharge ofthis judgment by the notes. NEW-YORK, March 21. ExtraS of a letter from Pbilidelphia, dated ycjicrday. • x 1 hings appear to be verging to a cri sis It is expefted the President's message will be taken up to day in the Houfe—lt was referred to a committee of the Senate yesterday. " It is expefted by many that the anti's will cavil about the papers—They may, but the business is too solemn to trifle with. The PreCdent has placed the refpoiifibility where the const itution faysit ftiallbe •If ourcoun try is to be facrificed, Mr. Adams is not the man to do the jobb"! HARRISBURGH, March 14. COMMUNICATION. Whatever delusions, the iuftpufiog afpe<S of the French revolution, in its early.fta gei, may have produced, the condudl of the dire&ory will now admit of but «ne in terpretation ; .and all the fine spun, flatter ing theories of liberty, equality and the rights, of man, have terminated in one of the most flagitious, lawltfi dominations, that ever the human race was doomed to groan under. But the usurpers are Readily advancing to their ruin, in the fame steps of all their predecefTors in violence and out rage. Peace, which is ever the bane of ty rants, they'dread of all things, and there fore war must be carried on, 3s long as any pretext can be found for its continuance, or any plunder remains to feed the rapacious appetites of the soldiery. Their objeft now, it seems, is to carry the blessings of liberty and equality into England, in which the tyrants very artful ly avail themselves of tke national sentiment of rivalry and hatred Jo that country. A sentiment, so ardently glowing in the hearts of Frenchmen, that not even the horrors of - the revolution have been able to extin guish it 5 and which the aristocrat, who flies from the guillotine, teelg in common with the jacobin, wfco diretts ft» operations. This is probably the best scheme "they could have fallen upon, to blind the people to their outrages, and to gild the nefarious measures of their government. Their armies too, must be employed at all events, as lcifure might be dangerous, and fugged to them the sacrilegious idea of turning their aftns opon their amiable matters. Audendo magnus tegitur Timor. Campnm miles defcendat in cequum Dum meus eft : variam semper dant otia mentem. Whether they are serious in their projec ted invasion of England, or whetker it is metely a gafeonade, a short time must now discover. One thing, however, we may be fureof, and that is, that we Anglo- Ameri cans, are no less honored with their hatred than the English themselves, and that if their abilities are but equal to their inclina tions, we shall have the fatisfadion of being last devoured. We are told, however, that we dirferve it, and peihaps we do ? for we havejeertainly been rebellions enough Jo pur fueourownintereft without consulting them, contumacioufly dared to form a commercial treaty with a power, which it is their sovereign pleasure to deflroy, and upon whom, they have already pronounced the dreadful sentence t>f " Deknda eft Car thago !" Whether the poor devoted Car thage will be able to withstand the fury of the modern Romans must chi-fly depend on her wooden walls ; and that she may not on ly refifl, but crush her invaders, will be the prayer of every American, that has not been Frenehified out of every perception of the true intcrefts and happiness of this coun ty- March 9. GAZETTE MARINE LIST. PORT OF PHILADELPHIA. CLEARED. Brig Nancy, Dougherty, Teneriffe Bride, Quandrill, Charleston Schr. Maria Matilda, Morse, Havaona Thomas, Van Duym, Port-au-Prince Sloop Sally, Potter, Peterfburgh Dolphin, Denyke, Savannah Robert, Briggs, do. Delight, Lord, do, Concord, C a b*on, New York A (hip supposed to be the Three Sifters, Dobel, of Boften, from Calcutta. The I ris, , from Hamburgh (via Newbern) and a brig called the Eliza, are below. j About twenty vefTels went to sea on Thutfday last, names not ascertained. CHARLESTON, March 7. The ship Fame, Jones, from Hamburgh to Philadelphia, 35 days out,having met with hard weather, in which his ship recei- ' ved considerable damage, was obliged to put into St. Übes's ; the ship was undergoing repairs there. .1 '—L L NEW-THEATRK Mrs. Ol dmixon*s Night. MONDAY EVENING, March Will be prcfrnted (never performeJ h.re, a CO* MEDY, called, , He would be a Soldier. Co! Talbot, Mr. Warren Sir Oliver )lJfiock t Harwoo4 Captain Crcvelt, Fennell Mandcville, Fox Count Pierpoint, Marfiiall W lkins, Taylor Caleb, B rnard Amber, BlifiTctC Johnson, Francis Servant, T. Warrell Charlotte, Mrs. Merry I ady Oidltock, (for that night M: s.Oldmixcfl Harriet, (for tfrat eight only; Mra. Marlhall Mrs Wilkuis, Mr«. Francis Betty, Mrs Do&or Nancy, , Miss Milboum* To which will be added (for the firft time on th>+ the celebrated Musical Romance of The ENCHANTRESS j Or, CTMON and SYLVIA. Cymon, (Crlt time, and fur that mght only) Mrs Marihail Merlin, Mr. Marshall Dortts, Morris Linco, Hirwoftd Damon, Warrell, ju«. Dorilas, T Warrell Shephejr. I, MelTrs. lavaroy, Laffcrt/, Hunter, Matthews, &c. Sylvia, Mrs. OMm'xon Urganda, (the ere Mrs. Warrell Fatiiru, Mr, Frauds First ,M'f» Mil^ourne Second Sliephtrtiefs, Vlif> L'Eltr.mge D»rca«, (an o'.d Mr. llcrnard " Shcpherdeffes, Mrs. Warren. Mrs. Stuart, Mrs. Hunter, Mad. Harwood, Mist Ann etfmi, St.c. To conclude withthcNUPTlAl.Scf CYiVO si 2nd ' SYLVIA—A ML.IT.ARY PROCf--»l)N of Knights of the differfnt orders of Chivalry, fer.t in search of Cyran, and a GRAND TOUR- N AMEN I', csmpefed by Mr- Bym . Tickets to be had at the ufml place,, and of Mrs. Oldmixon, Noi 133, Arch-ftrcet. £j" On Wednesday, T/.t d-pted Child i —with a Tragedy (in two ads) called The Prodigal j or, Fatal Extravagance— And The American in London—For the benefit of Mr. Bernard. *#* Mr. Moreton's night will be on Friday next. THE PARTNERSHIP OF WELL& fcf MORRIS, HAVING eipired on the nth FebrHary last, all persons having demands the said Partserfhip, are requefled to furnifh 'heir accounts far settlement ; and those in i b'ed to the fame, to make immediate payment to the subs. * i r GIDEON H. WELLS. N. B. The buiinefs will be carried on as hereto fore, hy the fubferiber, at his Store, No. 135, Mar ket Oreet. iw march >4. Escapes. BROKE the Prison of Cumberland county, in New-Jersey, and made iheir efcapr, berween 1 and 2 o'clock, this mornin., two Men, who wore convi&ed of dealing—one of them call* him felf James Legg, the other Edward Hambleton Leggi* a grey headed Man. about to years old, $ feet 8 inches high thick set, with a remarkable iargehead; Hambleton is about s6 years old, f feet, 9 or 10 inches high, black hair. Left the prison in company with the ah. ve defcr.bcd thieves, a fma!l man, who calls himf?tf Matthew Ivrorrifon, about 24 years old, 5 leet 6 inches high, 1 ght hair, fair complexion, smiles when talking i, a wheel wright by trade Whoever will f cure t ie tfc eves in any Gaol in New- Jarfey or Pennf, 1- vania, foall he entitled to receive Ten D liars for t: e old one. Fifteen for the young one, and Twen ty for Matthew Morrifoq GEORGE BURGIN, Sheriff. Bridgato n, march t.?. aa—mt&fjw (J 1 N 6' K A G, ' SAMUEL HOWELL, NO. 54, CHESNOT STREET. Wants to purchafc good GiNSENG t gathered in season, and . lear of damage— for which a generous price will be given if delivered any time before the 15th of April, march 21 , ot NOTICE. ** THREE Certificates of Six Per Cent. Deferred Debt of the United States of the following -efcription, viz— No. 1(5333, 10034, and 10035, for 5000 dollars each, dated Bth May, 1797, and flan.ing on the books of the Treasury of the Uni ted States, in the name of Benjamin Waddington, of Lanover Hou r e,near 'vergavenney in England, Esq. have-heen loft by the Capture of the ship Bac chus, from hence Co London, in June last. This, therefore notifies those whom it may concern, that *pj lication will be made at the Treasury of the U. nited States for a renewal of the fame. Waddington & Harwood. march la js w Twenty Dollars Reward. THE Store occupied on account of the United States, back of No. 71, North Water-ftreec was on the night of the 19th instant (March) bro ken opeß, and the foilowing articles stolen, and takan therefrom : Nine pieces Stroud, viz. 2378 20 \ ydS - Bloe ftr °ud single 2379 20 * _ cord * 2380 10 \ ' 2381 *29 | 2383 20 J 2384 20 238J 20 i J Tf e above reward is offered, for the difcOver* of the perpetrators of this robbery, so that they be apprehended, and made am»nabl« to iuliice • furtter reward will be paid, for the recovery of any part *f tht goods stolen, «n delivery oi the fame t* JOHN HARRIS, v Keeper Military Stores, march It. Iw For Sale, By Elliston Ess John Perot, ■A t 9 41, North Wtier Street, London particular Madeira Wine, in pipes and quart r calks, 4 years old and fit for immediate nf«. Inferior do. A few bales Allihad Coflet Bandanna Handkerchiefs Sail C'anvals, No. i,tog A few bags of Juniper Berries A parcel of Soal Leather, and A few boxes of China, march 3 »B&f4W
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