jrr*;r lttenrptrto restore harmony between the two natieus on just and honorable terms and aS fo yonr firm afTertion of the claims, rights and independence of our country, meet ouf most cordial approbation* and have secured our warm est gratiiude—We feel with indignation and re sentment the insults and contempt, with which your offers of reconciliation and of friendfhip hare been treated, particularly as those offei s were made, after our commerce had been har ftfed and almost deftroyedby the most wanton and lawless depredations—after our nation had been iftfulted by the most vile and insidious At tempts to overawe and di&ate to our legally constituted authorities. Although w« highly value the blessings of peace, vet under the pro tection of heaven, we are determined to rely with full confidence on your well tried patriot ism and wisdom, firmly refolycd to support with our lives and property, the honor, the Liberty and Independence of our country. MOSES LEGOMPTEj Ghairman. JOSIAH BAYLY, Sec'y. To the. Citizens of Dorchejler in the Statet of Maryland. GENTL EMEN , Your unanimous address agreed upon at Cam %ridge, has been prefehte.d to me by your repre sentative Mr. Dennis. When you express in terms of so much force and propriety, the feelings of your hearts, im pressed with, feutiments of love and duty to your country ; when you aflurc me that my attempts to restore harmony between the United States and France on just and honorable terms, and my firm aflertiort of the claims, rights and indepen dence of our country, meet your cordial appro bation, and have secured your warmest grati •tnde ; when you express your feelings of indig nation and resentment, at the insults and con tempt with which our offers of reconciliation and friendfhip have been treated, particularly as these offers were made, after our commerce had been harraffed by wanton and lawless depreda tions and bur nation had been insulted by vile and insidious attempt* to overawe ancf dictate to our legally constituted authorities ; when you declare your determination to rely with full con fidence on my endeavors, firmly resolved to sup port with your lives and fortunes, the honor, liberty and independence of our country under the prote&ion of heaven ; you penetrate my heart with gratirude for what concerns myfelf and most receive the loud applause of the hone ft world for what,i-ooceta* . JOHN _ Philadelphia> May \zth % 1798. ADDRESS of the Mil it in Officers of Netvcafile coun ty, state of Delaware, convened at Cbrijliana Briige oj the Jjrfi of this month. To il* PRESIDENT of the UtfTTED STATES. A number of the Officers of the Militia of N eiczafle county, in the state of Delaware, imprejfed ivith the im fxtrtance- of the present crifts of public affairs, io the hap s inefs and independencepf the United States ; aud conceiv ing that the unjtijl and imperious conduft of the Republic ef Francs toivards America, has been dictated in a great, measure by the unfounded riifreptcfentations of her own agents, and some tnifguidei and deluded citizens of this country. that the people and the government -were divided and opposed to each other ; tve fee} ourselves conflrained by every cons deration of duty to the conjlituted authorities, to'ourfelves, and to our country, to repel the insinuation which thus attempts to dijhonor the American character• Appreciating with due efiimation, the advantages of neutrality and the blessings of peace, we have beheld with pleasure and entire fatifaßion your earntjl and repeated endeavors, and those of your pxedceffor, to preserve this durable pfdion ; and we have seen with equal regret, that the anxious advances of our government towards a reparation of haYtnony with the French republic, htive been received with contemptuous disregard on their part ; and at the moment wben negotiation pyght to have produced redrefsy aggrtffion has been increased, and further depre dations authorized, under the vain hope of inducing a compliance with the xoretched demands of avarice and cor tup tion. Little does France under{land the American character ht fifipoftng we arc to be frightened intt) mean compliances, by. holding up to out view her dependant allies, a degraded Genoa, or a dismembered Venice. The picture raises jujl indignation in the minds of freemen, and will Jlimulate their exertions to avid a ftmilar fate. With pain do we discover in the infant y of the Trench government, pretending to be a free republic, endfounded ttpan the rights of man, the evidence* of an aSiive corrup tion that would degrade the mojl profligate tyranny—For tunate for America ! the ocean feparatcs her from this feat y of contagion, tvhofe influence is deflni&ive of all mo rals —and long may fhc enjoy under your prudent and wife adminiflratioh, tha happiness andprofperity which is the reward of public virtue and integrity. affuredy Sir, of our grateful approbation of the eonduß heretofore pursued by you, to preserve peace and friendfhip with foreign powers ; and our confidence in the wisdom andpatriotifm of every branch of the government; and we pledge ourselves as citizens soldiers, frmly to support those measures which may hereafter be thought ne cessary Io fecurethc conflitution, freedom and independence t/je United States. Signed in behalf of the Officers, GUNNING BEDFORD, Brig. Gen. Chrifiana Bridge, Jcftry I, 1798. The PRESIDENTS ANStVER. > To the Offices of the Mil it kS of Ntwcafle County, In th £. State of Delawat e. Gentlemen, Your address, which has been prefenlcd io me, in your behalf, by yonr Senators and Representatives in Congress, 9ssreffcs fentirnentf and resolutions, well becoming the cha racters of Officers of the Militia, the object of whofein flilution is, the maintenance andfecurity of the conflitution, freedom and iedependence of their country. The unjuf and imperious conduEl *Ef a majority of the French Dimftory tnwards America, may have been dic tated by mifreprefente tio>u of their own agents, and of deluded Americans ; but there is too mucb,reafon to believe that an unbounded ambition for univ erf al.empire, and an insatiable avarice of money, united with the delirium of viSor\, and a fwguine confidence that they art at leaflfor a time the masters of the have diSlated their infuffier ab ft arrogance, trampling a Hie on their own constitution, and the rights of their people ; on the law of nations, and the faith of treaties. . It is indeed an awful cons deration, thtrt at a time when agr.etst part of Europe appears disposed to adopt republi can governments a corruption should appear, which never was exhibited before, by the mojl afoiute monarchies, or torn pleat eft despotisms. It fhouldfetm that fraud and force, tvefc to be the only measure of right and wrong :—This system must scon be changed, or fcicnce, arts , virtue, liberty, and peace, mufl b; k.-tyiflicf, and a, savage barbarity, be fub/litvted iu their places. Africa is of too much importance to the world, for the purposes of wealth and power, to leave her the fwall eH hope of escaping, without her own determined exertions, the contagion of the generaldiftemper 2 "our approbation and hind wifhfs are received with gra titude > and returned with ftneerity. JOHN ADAMS. Philadelphia, May 5, I 798. Suite of an J Providence Planta tions.—ln Getferal AJfetnbly, May Siffion, A. D. i 7 9 8- Voted and resolved unanimously, that the following Address to the President of the Utrittd States, b: approved and adopted ; that his Excellency the Governor bp re queued to sign said Address, iu behalf of th; 3 General Assembly, and transmit the fame to,the Senators and R epreferitatives «f this state in Congress, with a request that they will present the fame to the President of the United States- A true copy : Witness, Samuel Eddy, Secretary. ,To thi PRESIDENTof the UNITED STATES. S I R, THE General Affemblyof the State of ! Rhode-Island and Providence Plantations, beg leave -to express their cordial approba tion of yoftr wife and pacific measures in the attempt to neeociate with the RepublietSf Fiance. They observe, with singular satis- ; foftion, that you appear to have been a£tu- ! ated by a sincere desire to do justice to that Republic, if in any thing (he had been in jured, to obtain joihc'e for the multiplied injuries which her cftizeiis had committed against us, and above all to prefei i Ve >1 Ipface.pface. j We indulged & hbpe that your overtimes for.j reconciliation, dilated fey a fpirit"of im- j partiality and a love of justice, would have } been heard with candour and treated with i refpeft. It is therefore with regret and astonishment we lears, that these unequivo- ! cal proofs of friendfhip l.ave been disregard- I ed, that our Envoys have not been accred- ! ited, and that the molt liberal advances to \ negociation have been rejefted. You have pursued peaee with a solicitude correspond- ' ing with the importance of the objedt, ahd j if it cannot be preserved, the failure ought not! to be atcributed to any want of liberality or ' justice in the means you have employed. We ars fatisfied that you could not have gone further toward the attainment of this objeft, without abandoning the honour and dignity of your country. In the present date of our national affairs, when a foreign power has loft fight of the immutable principles of justice and of the solemn faith of treaties, and cherishes the unfounded opinion that the people and go vernment of the United States are divided, we consider it our sacred duty to declare to you and to the world, that the constitution and goveinraent of our country have merited and obtained our affe&ionate confidence. ' On an occasion so interesting we feel the most lively pUaQjjy ity^jwng*foiV.rvcrj A. furance of our confidence jTn your wisdom and integrity, and of our refpc&ful and per sonal. attachment. Relying, under God, upon.the unanimity, courage and virtue of eur Fellow-Citiiens, we declare our solemn determination to support the Constitution and Government of the United States. By order and in behalf of the General _ Assembly, ARTHUR FENNER. The foregoing Address having been pre sented to the Prefideat of the United States, by the Delegates in Congress from the state of Rhode- Ifiand, —he, on Friday last, returned the following An swer: To his Excellency Arthur FeHner, and the Honorable the General Assembly of the State of Rhode-IJland and Providence Planta tions. GENTLEMEN,- THIS unanimous address, from the JJegiflature of Rhode-Island, comes with such uUthority, that nothing I could fay in atlfwer to it, would increase its weight j I shall therefore confine myfelf to request your acceptance of an affura'nee that I receive your declarations of approbation, confidence and support with great refpedt, and your refpe&ful and personal attachment with sincere gratitude. JOHN ADAMS. Philadelphia, May lith, 1798. FROM SALEM.• To the President and Congress, of the United States of America. PENETRATED with a lively convic tion of the critical and very interesting fitua-. tion of our national concerns the bers, Inhabitants of the town of Saiem, in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, are induced to present the following address. Sensible we are of the impropriety of an interference from the People with the estab lished Administration of Government, still we conceive occasions may arise, when an expression of the public feiitiment may be highly important knd beneficial. As such an one we view the present ; when the Leaders of a Great Nation are inflexibly pursuing the most injurious and baneful defignsagainit us ; and flattering themselves withaprof pe£t of success, by a separation of the Peo ple from the government- It is our disposition, and,, as far as our influence may extend, it shall be our endea vour, to disappoint and fruftrate these ex pectations. We are fully fatisfied with the measures taken by the Supreme Executive,for accom modating the differences subsisting between the United States and the French Repub lic; and it 15 with sincere regret we learn that those measures have been We still wish for peace, <tnd a restoration of harmony, with that Republic. But should they remain implacable ; should we be dri ven to extremities ; depending supremely on the patronage of the Most High, we repofca firm confidence in the wisdom and fidelity of our Rulers, with the ftcady pa triotism and combined exertions of our Fal low Citizens, for maintaining a vigorous defence. We are determined, at every ha zard, to support the Government of our choice : and to those, to whom the Potvers of Government are entrusted, we will afford our hearty concurrence and sid, for «arry ing into effedt such measures as they may fee fit to adopt ; holding in the highest esti mation onr Rightsand inteiefts as a free and independent peopjfe—thofe Rights and In. teretts for which we have once contended, and which it is our fettled purpofc never to itefign. ■ For Sale, The cargo of the brig American from Laguira, CONSISTING QF • Ca'accas Cocoa. Henry Philips, No. j 12, Souih fourth sfreot. aprll 23 § aprfl »3 oasette* PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY EVENING, Mat 18. E trafl of a letter from the captain of a . vessel, in 47 days from Amsterdam, dated at Boston, May ig. .. " If you have no late arrivals from Eu rope, suppose you wish to know how mat ters were, when I left there—Can inform you the American Envoys at Paris have at length, when it was foußd they would no j longer be trifled with, bten g*ypted 311.au ; dience with the DireSory, or rather their agent for that purpose appointed ; but nt* ! thing had tranfpiredl In fa& the general j opinion of our friends in Amsterdam was, that nothing serious was intended more than to amuse ihe Americans, to keep their party I alive in the United State® till they know ! the fate of the great and grand expedition. ; Should they succeed in that, they will com pleatly unmalk themfclves, so that they will t have the fame appearance to the Federalists i and Democrats as they now have to nearly ' all parties in Holland." [Tht information received by government, by thts arrival at Boflon, does not corroborate the above intelligence.J (AUTHENTIC.) Etraftx of a letter from Rufus King, to tht Secretary of State, dated London, Feb. 26, 1798. " Annexed you have copies of three notes which I have lately received from Lord Grenville ; the firft is an answer to my note refpefting the proceedings of the vice Ad miralty Court at St. Domingo. As this Court was not legally authorized,its proceed ings are void, and thofe'who have fuffered from its a&s are referred to the High Court of Adfpiralty for redress." - • Ct-Hf Note. "'Downing Street, 2 °t 1 79®* '• Lord Grenville prefentshiscompliments to Mr. King and has the honor to inform him, in answer to his note of the 3d instant, that he does not find on enquiry, that any regular authority has been given for the in stitution of the Vice Admiralty Court at St. Domingo, mentioned in that note : It does not belong to Lord Grenville to anti cipate the decisions of the regular courts here in any individual cases. The prpper resort of such parties as may CQnceive tfiem felves to be aggrieved by the -proceedings had in St. Domingo is to the High Court of Admiralty in this kingdom, where claims must be given, and the consequent legal steps taken thereupon ; and there is no doubt that the judgment of the Court will be'guided by the fame principles as have al ready been a&ed upon in cases of a similar nature." Extraft of a letter dated Charleston, May I■ " We are pestered with a French privateer on our coast, which has taken the ship Favo rite, loaded with Rice, bound toCowes and a market, out two days; and what other ves sels we know not. —Wecoinplain of the inat tention of Congress, as the Collector fays he has 110 orders to do any thihg for aur de fence. The "dispatches from our Commis sioners, have caused a general change in our sentiments here, refpeding our ancient and good allies." CONGRESS. Yesterday, the Hoflfe of RepresentatiVes of the United States again went into a committee on the bill authorizing the Pre'lident ot the United States to raise' a Provisional Army, when Mr. R. Wij.! iams moved to strike out the following words in the third feftion, viz. " oompany or companies of volunteers," for the purpose or inserting " military corps eftablifbed by lavj in anyftate.' , This motion occalionedeonliderable debate, and was finally negatived 50 to 38. General Shepard next moved to strike out the following words at the end of the fame feftion, " Provided, such volunteers ftiall not be liable to do duty in any place but in the Hate to which theyrefpec tively belong, or in an adjacent date," which was carried 60 votes being for it. Some other amendments of small importance were agreed to, and then the committee rose and the seve ral motives which had been agitated in the committee of the whble were named in the house (on most of which the Yeas artd Nays were taken) and the bill was ordered to be read a third time to-morrow: A call of the house was made by Mr. Sitg reaVes at half palt eleven o'clock, in order to nifure a full attendance at thepaflage of this bill. On the twenty-sixth of .April Bache publilh ed in his paper a lift of fifteen veflels at Cape- Nichola-Mole—Yefterday he published a lift con taining the names of eleven of the fame veflels j the preemption is, that the ether four have been liberated. In this way the number of Britilh captures is enereafed—the fame vessels have been publilhed in the fame papers three or four times over. While scarcely a single t<fl of French pi racy is noticed by Bache he has the modesty to call on the editor of this Gazette to republilh the twice told tale of the above lift at Cape-Ni cheta Mole ! Both houses of the refpe<Sive legiflaturet of the States of ConneiSHcut and Khode-Ifland have unanitrtcufly voted addresses to the legiflaturc and executive of the United States, assuring them of their entire confidence and support in the measures of government for the maintenance of our sovereignty and independence. Very little information is to he derived trom accounts published in the French Gazettes firice the 4th September last. We are const quently in the dark refp&fting the internal affairs of France. A late paper contains a Iketch of a deb:.te in the council ot'soo of ift and 6th March, on a motion for an enquiry intothe execution of the lawof the <th September which is a proscription of all the emigrants found ip the republic. This motion wai referred to a committee and a mellage on the fubjc<2 ordered to he transmitted to the di rectory—an answer was received from the direc tory in which this interference with the law is eenfured—on v hlth the decree for appointißg thecemmirtee of enquiry was imoufty repealed ; and several cf the members apologized for the part they had .taken. So much fc>r the freedom and independence of ihe breath councils! To Edward Robin {on, Captain, • and Di v d Irving, Fltjl Lieutenant, of tii: late Sans Culo: te Company of Light Infantry of the City of Philadelphia. tINIKKEK, * ' 1 Observing.an addrefain the Gazette of the United States, last evening, to which yo'ir signatures are affixed, diile&ed to the Citizens of Philadelphia, I ttifnlc I have a right for myfelf to eXjjrefs to yoil, through the fame vehicle of public information, the great fatisfaftion which, as one of the Citi Zens of Philadelphia, I received in perusing this address The manly and honorable facrifice" of opinion, the noble candour and greatness of mind in difa owing an attach ment once well-founded, though now dif covertd to be undeserved, whick you have displayed in thi» public manner,' do you in calculable honor. J" With yon viewed the French nation as an*injured people, aijd my bosom glowed with sympathetic ardour for the accomplishment of their liberty ; with you I now view them as the vile min isters of ambition, and the insolent invaders of the rights of our dearest country. The avowal of those former feelings and these present convidlions as I am conscious it is virtuous in myfelf, I am happy to honour and venerate it in another. Permit me, therefore, tho' personally unknown to you, to present you my portion of that tribute of applause which you merit fro»\ the whole body of onr citizens. It is not through os tentation that -this declaration is made, it is nothing but an honest ebullition of tbe feel ings with whieh'l was strongly affected in reading your manly address, and permit me to observe that if all are as willing to make the fame candid acknowledgment for them selves, and applaud it in others, our coun try may yet be great and 'happy, and it may dill be an honour to be called One of the Citizens of Philadelphia. This morning, in the House of Repre sentatives of the United States, the Bill for authorizing the President to raise a Provi sional Army, was carried by a majority of eleven^ci to 4.o^__ ! ft, ■■ l 1 • - '* ''M .. married] —Last Eveningnby the Rev. Blfhop White, Mr. Hezekiah'N ILES, of Wilmington, Delaware, to Miss Anne Og den, daughter of Mr. William Oeden, of this city. _ A letter from Lilbon dated April 4th, from a house of the firft refpeftability in forms, that the Prince of Peace, prime minister of Spain, is displaced. ANSWER, of the Pre fid em to the Address of the Inhabitants of Glecefter. Xf the Inhabit ant 1 of Gloeifler in the State of Majfaclufetts. GENTLEMEN, Your address to the President, and Congreft, hag been presented to me by Mti Bartlett, your Representative. Your approbation of the conduct of the Presi dent relative to our foreign relations, particularly 6f the measures adopted, for the honorable adjust ment of existing difficulties between this country and the French republic are highly grateful to him, and the declaration of your utmost confidence, in the virtue, wisdom and prudence of the Hational government the sacred avowal of your determina tion to support the conftitutisn and preserve invio late the rights and liberties of yojir country at the rifle of your lives and fortunes, must give universal fatisfa&ion to all good citizens. JOHN ADAMS. Philadelphia, May 14th, TfijS. 1 ■ 111 11 / * GAZETTE MARINE LIST. PORT OF PHIL ADEtPHI A. ARRIVED, Brig Diana, Kirkbritle, Liverpool 55 Came up from the Fort, fctooner Minerva, Mudie, Tortola. The Diana failed from Liverpool the 23d of March, in company with the flip Befkey, Cun ningham, of and for Baltimore, which vessel intended to join the Cork conboy. Left at Liver pool the fb'p Liberty, Bray, to fail for this port in a few days, and flip Nest or, Rogers, of Port land, to fail the 1 sth April. The Diana put into the Lock of Belfaft on the ift of April, but re mained there only one tide. Captain ivasin formed, by an officer -who boarded him from a frigate, that things mere all quiet in Ireland. April 16, lat. 48, long. 58, spoke the Jhip Caro line, Motley, out it. days from hence to Liver pool, all 'well. May 4, lat. 31, 49, long. 61, spoke the brig Endeavour, out 10 days from New York to Bordeaux, all viel!. The Diana mounted 12guns, and firtd a Fed eral salute oppojite the city. Baltimore, May 16. Arrived yesterday, Ship Hope, ofFred erickfturg. capt. Callahan, 30 days from St. Übes. The Birmingham Pearce, of this port was to fail in 3 or 4 days : the Tom to fail for Boston in a few days ; a brig, capt. Parker, for ditto; barque Waterman, of New-York. Sailed in com pany with the (hip Newport, far Boston, and brig Elizabeth for do. Lat. 35, 9, spoke ship Providentia, from St. Übes bound to Norfolk. May 3, spoke schooner Four Sifters, from Salem to Martiriique, lat. 35, 38, long. 63, 30. Lat. 38,50, was brought to by a French, privateer of 16 guns and 100 men, , called La Jean Bart, treated with great civility and by the captain, but his peo ple took a few fma)l articles which he infill ed on returning, but capt. C. would not waft to receive them. The ship Montezuma, capt. Chafe, from London, was separated from tshe convc*y in a gale of wind on the 12 th of April, in lat. 42, 30, Icing. 21. 30. The fleet original, ly consisted of 63 or 64 fail, but when the Montezuma left it, it had diminished to 34. The following vessels belonging to this port, were left under the prote&ion of the convoy: —The Hibernia, from Liverpool ; Sidney, from ditto ; Carlisle, from London ; and (he Ranger, from Briitol. 1 Mr. James Colhoun, jun. merchant, of this city, is in the Sidney. Cabinpaffengers in tht Montezuma : Mr. John Comegysj merchant, oi this city. Alexander Fulton, do. of do. Richard Cooke, of Annapolis, and George Willis, of L ondnft. TV ith a number of paffengers. The paffrngers in the Montezuma confi d?r thftrnfUves iinJcr a'pr-irticolar ol ligation trt return their acknowledgements 10 capt. Chffe, for the Hurnsne and polite attentKj 1 thpy have experienced from him dtring tti« paffagc. ■fir A ftawd meeting of the m merican Hrtioi *• piucal Society will be held at thtir hall at 6 e'clocla this evtiling may 18. VOLUNTEER GREENS. Gentlemen of the Troop are particu -L larly r-quefted to meet at the house of Barnabas McSnane, in Third flreet, to morrow evening at 7 o'clock —1 number of new mem* bets will be balloted for. John Morrell, Captain may 18 _ Macpherfon's Blues. ANUMBEK of the Members of this Corp», tiktnj; -into view the critical situation qf their coisMry, propofa to their brother liil 'iers to meet at Mr. Dirtwoody's, in Market-it feet, on Monday next, at j o'clock, t. M. may 18 Madras and Ventapaulenl ' HANDKERCHIEFS, Searfaukers and Carradarries, of the rteweft and moll approv«d pattern*, entitled to the drawback, juil received, AN® TO* SAT.E BV Alex. J. Miller & Co. ' No. 04, South Frjnt itrcet. may 18. 5 Ihe Sub/cribers HAVE f OR SALE, Six Tons of Cordage, ASSORTED. Two hundred weight of firft fort Tfinglafj. Philips, Cramond its Co. may t8 jt WAN I'ED, IN A PtIASINT StLIf»TIOM, WITHIN a few miles ofTewu (lor B Lady,late* ly from nd) Board and l.odg : ng. In a quiet reputable family—-would engage for siva at fix months, and give very little trouble A tine di rected to J. S. atid left at th« Printing Office will be attended to immediately. may 18 *3l This Day Puhlifhcd; By J. 0 n m r 0d , » No. 41, Chefnut»ftreet, (price 15 cents). A9BSMOH JVcaohed in Ghrift CHwrch and St. Peter's, Philadelphia; on Wedncfday May 9, 1798, being the da, appointed by the President as a day of fading, humiliation and prayers throughout the United States of N®rth America. By James Abercrombie, a. m. one of the assistant ministers of Christ Church and St. Peter's. *A fermoa delivered by the Re». Doc. Green, on the fame occasion, will be publiihed on Monday next. * -• may 18 Country Refldence. A FAMILY who live Six Miles from the City, wife to receive two or three genteel boaid ers. The House is handfomifly lurnifhed; the Gardens, Moadows and Lawn are beautifully laid out, and well '.locked with the cheiceft Fruit. There are several Muficil Internments, amongst which is a moll excellent patent Piano Forte. The Family have a handfoire Coach, which may be at the service of the whole. The Coach House and 6tahle» are mofl excellent —the Water good-—and the Air unequalled in the environs of the l'own. For particulars enquire at the office of thisGa* zette. <kf may 16. FOk SALE, " " A Black Man, WHO has five years and a half to ferire, is * good coachman, an excellent waiter, and has been accustomed so marketing for a family— his age about thirty two years. For fa thef parti culars, apply at the office cf this Gazatte. may 15. £ FOR SALE, About 660 boxes of fine Spanish GUN POWDEK, Containing J »o lbs. each. Apply at No. 13, corner of Arch and Front flreets, may 1 a. j IW Military Academy. THE Public are moll rd'pefl fully informed, that a Military Academy is opened in the Northern Liberties in the house formerly belong ing to John Matters, esq. between the German- I Town and Frankfort roads, North Second ftreet continued Br JOHN BARBER, Late of the 6och British regjment of Foot and assistant Engineer to the Army ailing in the Weft-Indies. Where gentlemen will be tauj lit th<- manual Exetcife and made completely acquainted with all the duties of ficers and private soldiers in camp, garHfon and Quarters j the forms of regimental and field re turns, detachments, refters &c. &c alf.> the art drawing plans, fetflions and geometrical elevations, the elements of tactics, gunnery and fortification.—A fubfeription lift is left at the bar of the City-Tavern, where the terms and the outlines of the propnfed regulations may be seen. The situation is extremely wel) adapted to the undertaking and eight acres of ground are set apart for the purpose. . W. Gentlemen from the Conntry boarded in the house if required. mj y IO - div»2awfm Furniftied Chambers— 1 o Let! I r pHOSE Gentlemen, Members of Congress and I X others, wilhing to engage Cot the neat session of Congress, Chambers, fnrniihed in a modern ftyld, and in a very pl S afant and central part of the city, may hear of them by applying at the office of this Gazette. eetw mivio. WANTED, APPROVED BILLS on Amflerdam—.for which cafli will be given at the rate ol thirty seven c*iua per guilder. Enquire o! the Cafhitr of the Bank of the United States. § apriln. OX BE£F~ ICO Barrels ) of Beef of bad quality, pur 5° half Barrels $ up with earefor long voyages, 100 Barreta of Connecticut Pork, jo Barrels of Connetflic'it Tongues. WINES. 3S Pipes cf Madeira Wine 30 Pipes of Port , 30 half casks of Sherry ,jo Casks of Lisbon 300 Cases of French Claret, of excellent quality. 800 Barrels of Scraped FLOUR, 100 Barrels of Condemned, and so Boxes of best Durham Muflar j. For Sale by John Skyrin, bar.dtribtrgtr's IVharj. 'may e,
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