continued deprcd -.nous on our commerce, the repeated infulti to our general govern- ! ment in the rejection of our envoys, anil the I inlijious measures pursued to divide and diflraft our councils, every tender feeling is ex inguifhed—But what better can we ex peft from a nation divelled of piety and e vtry moral sense, and whufe Creed is Athe tftti ' —With such, friendfhip cannot be maintained, and solemn treaties are as idle tales. It is to be lamented, that any American citizen wuul i take a part on the fide of our enemies, to calumniate our favorite Rulers and weaken the arm of government. \v e lament also, the abuse of that fundamental privilege in our conliituiion, the liberty of the Press: But calumny, when ifluing from some particulai periodical fountains, and aimed at " a WASHINGTON, or an ADAMS," is praiie : For such illustrious charaders need only be named, to be admir ed ; w ofe wife and patriotic exertions, from the commencement of our revolution, to the present day, have uniformly tende - '. to obtain and prcferve our Lioert) and la dtpei dence The measures pursued by the Executive of our General Governmeii:, in appointing and inltruftin? Envoys with a view t'> oper ate ■ reconciliation between thef« United States and the French Republic, are evi dences to us of f.iperior wisdom, and an ar dent desire for peace ; and the effeft of their negociatiou convincing, that further at tempts would prove frilitltfs. Nothing therefore remains but to place oarfelves in a proper fitoation of defence, having no al ternative but the ultimate argument of in jured republics : but in any event, ulyi'ig on the wisdom of our conllituted authori- < tie* to dilate, we (hall ever Hand ready to I co operate with them for the general fafety. < Ihe important and interelling fubjedts contained in the communications from our i neighboring Hates, together with those t which more immediately concern this, will ] meet our early and due attention ; confident e of yout Excellency's readiness to unite with e us, in every measure conducive to the wel- i fare of our common country. c t From a Vtrnitnt paper. _ c RIGHTS OF MAN. T .Liberty and Equality, t One and Indivisible. c On the 13th nit. three days af'er the tri al of Matthew [.yon for Sedition, the of fice of Mr. John Coek. of Poultney, a a refpeftable young lawyer, was broken o pen, and his papers deltroyed or dispersed. " Mr. Cook was a principal witn fs againfl; V Lyon, on the above trial —The following l ' are the names of persons arretted at the fyit "J u M r r 'n9 oo,l '. to ref P ond 'f'c damages he 1 has fu(lamed in the depredations on hi* property John M'Arthur, and Jeremy H. Dvvyer. both of Lyon's printing-office, f D.melMOnrrl HITjL? w Hawkins, jun. all of Fairlwven j Elkanah Afhley, Poultney. As the guilt or inno- p eence of these persons will foor. be deter- . mined in a court of justice, from motives a of delicacy we forbear to make any further obfervatious lell wc might be supposed to give a bias 'o the opinion of a jury. 011 the 6th instant foipe villains girdled a fine young fruit-bearing orchard, the pro- ; f perty of Mr. Silas Hamilton of Fairhaven ; u they defticyed 120 apple trees It m»y be .1' recolleded that this Mr. Hamilton i, the h person «ho Matthew Lion prosecuted for " defamation some time since. It seems Mr. 1,.' Hamilton had asserted that Lion had forged pi a letter to favwr his eleaion to Conyrefs, i r ,f and had given certain five pail kettles for I, votes. We do not know that we date the n f defamatory words accurately ; of this we T 0 are certain, Lyon prosecuted Mr. Hamilton for defaming hisch.rafter, Mr. H. contcf- i p r fed words and jultified ; the jury Rave I Di r ' 0r • a,,d L ? on ,)ad to pay i D colts 1 his ,3 the fame man whq has had l oc hit orchard destroyed. MORE RIGHTS OF man. an On the night of the toth i„ft. Mr. Rann of ot Foultr.ey, near to fairhaven, had a part l,ei of the tree of his orchard girdled; but the a PI villains we e frightened. and fled before they M ' had completed their diabolical purpose. N- B Mr. Rann, was the firft person who Fol mounted the cackle in that town. r ° :£ his fail< BALTIMORE, December , 9 . S "p»». . & into the house of deleFatcs U ot y t^ r °ft UCed 136611I 36611 motion for leave to brin , s tc a 'av •« an mA a b '». entitled 'he hC^/ . abo,itl '° > Slave- B ;:b;SFof : S2 Iff r D briro-in,, ir j e *prefs in r son oonrle „f , fewlv, ' RM " in the W »' before the house th'e plan'he haT'm " 7 •b£u,ki. m 1 ! ' mp " A lodge December 1 J*. °. r r n " ntry ' who ' ,:? T •«cnt, an i v„l at Br J'.J" ° f RoVer " ' good health, =nd * '?* in J™ : Men t Vernon ,his m, "n.ng for f rom *«ry M. I.C CO,r, I ),r ) f ed by his fecre font 1 rab, ncrcr, . - * "' '' 7ZI C!)c Gmttc. lc and ' '■ .. . ling is ve ex- PHILADELPHIA, 'nd e- _,. At} ':~ SATURDAY EVENING, DECEMBER .1, ot be is idle PRICES OF STOCKS. erican Pmiladklphia, D£crmbkr 22. j of our Per „ Ce p • , l6^ Tnrte Her Cent. icy <ulers Deftrred 6 Per Cent. x if We B \NK United Stated, at percent. aental Prnnfjrlvanii, a " 5 ,]j tto of the North America, 5 o ditto from !nfuran «e eomp N.A. ft area jj ditto ...j Pcnnfylvarlii, fliarev, 4? ditto »" d COURSE OF EXCHANGE d or an q„ London, it 30 days (, 0 e trious at 60 days t dmir- at 90 days " t tions, Amltcrdam, 60 dayt, per guilder, 30 cents j ltion, t •ndei " Medicus" to the Regimental Sur. v d I«. ?eon» is unavoidably podponed 'tillMon- ', d 'iy- a :utive a nting to The u oper- LEGISLATURE (/PENNSYLVANIA. f "' tcd ("Continued. J j 1 : evi- g f n 3r ' GF.NTI.EMry, their That the Yellow Fever brlopgs to a Ge- " r at - nus, effi ntialjy Jiill rent from that of the Bil- t] tiling ions or Remitting Fevers, endemial to marihv y J ll filiation's in the Summer and Autumnal sea- w 0 al- son or difters, not o.ilv in dega-e but in '» if w kind from of Bilious fever, is lying also fupportfd by the authority of al.noftev- > hori. dry author of credit that has written on the | C yto iuhjeOt, and that has had opportunities of L ifety. oblerving it m ail its varieties. ( ? >jc<a* Among theft- 1 need only mention War-1 > our ren on the pestilential fever at Bail,ados in j thole the year 'J 3 ' and 175^ —Hughes's Natural 2 will History of Barbados—Del'poi tes on the dif- ° j ident eases of St. Domingo—Hilar)- on the dif- lr with eases of Barbadocs—Schottc on the Febris j' 1 wel- Atrahrliaris at Goree in Africa, a. d. i 7 78 1r —Blane on the Direafes of Seamen—Mofelv <4 on I rdpical Difeales—Chilhohn on the Pef- m tdential Fever at G,-enada. in 3 -_:,nd _ Wright's letter to Dr. Gartihore, in Medi- A cat Fads, vol. 7 th. The majority of the Weft-India writers, as well as those who have seen the difcafe in the United btates of America, are also de- • cidedly of opinion that the Yellow Fever is tri- ! ° , K h 'y < onta S and of pestilential origta ; ■ of- • thc >' a « ree tljjj it is only so in warm ph r # and confined air, ' - d no- ! 11 , < ' nce h a PP ears necefTaryto eftablifti f«ch tk fed. W1 " embrace two obiei£ts ; tv "'nft : ,Z ; as 7' 11 prevent the in- a ing tr ™ lol ' of soR ''K n contagion through the mc suit *? ed, " m " f con l mcrc e, and such as will render cla hc the air of o«r fra-ports so pure and cool, that tv h;j it may counteraft or resist the power of the an •my introduced, (0 as to Ji ES™" p "" I " c, " e iB "f"" 11 *"™- i» nah 7 "t " j '' , l ft ' Ss aTl 3~arginhe7rre- t,-l mo- 2 > rta u J rOU i my opinion, that the ™ ter- , FeVCr W , hkh P r " vcd so Jeftruftive to the Z ives j,, 1 " U V vfl °. f '"habitants of Phila- v O , 10 - !Y fir \ Ca * S tHat ° Ca,rred were trac ed ' * OI, P "f 20 guns, called the Deborah si „ of tlt rr,TO k at PhiUdelphia on the ,Bth en • , , J y ,' ?" board ° f whlch persons , J be Si f A &brr . pr - (Ta « e from Jeremie to a the Hofilitair T^V' CrtreWattheMarinc ble r lt . 'l a ' f" 011 her arrival. That fewral f- pe-rlons died on hoard the DebJTSj ft a P t f or Lewis, mate of the Deborah L- 1 ««i s£*7 n " VVil, "- b^ "«"w K " [ John Bodin, (on oath) to the Mayor of Bur! 1 1 f j p n? i'! n ' aii ; has been acknowledged by the ve 1 n"[ r' l os Healthy Lp e Z iad lodgings ai Mr. Doyle's. uw that took tati While the Deborah was p-rformin"- quar ' antine, it appears from the ackhoSXt nn neiffhb X r I V, hll ' PS ' Wh ° refidcd 'he T srt neighborhood where the disease made its firlt be *™ n ee, to. Mr. Thomas Towne and iey Mr. John Punlon, that he brought up 1 sick _ man from on hoard a veflVl , K . P al * k prof - 1 owne, and afterwards to Mr t n „,' oral st; n 'e- Puiiddn, that Philips told'him "hef' " nam ' man from the Deborah rL rou f ht a the s >1- and died on the <th of A a l! . zd > all i his sickness he was" attended llvDr GHffitt^ who prescribed, at the fame Le £ ! sailor at Philips's.* ' hck a % he «te!d t I U ld in . formed th e College, that a Vell r a " ,an 111 with the d been at work on°Wd tteVviV thnt had D; a lay where t a r tended ons of the of d bond, scon iff k WOrk r d on the De- ha< t ill of fever ( ' )n who was taken alt< a law on tTie aqth 1- the attack. V ' ln S the sthfrom 5 t Ache- ~T h e Wal m ,t ft^,"" ' ", ter a little «»V below ° n ror n-xt h,n 3 °t SlnK house next T on birffe g h ta who had been thro^ maS2 e i^7 , J on the 2i d, and was "° en ver r with vellow fe- fi ,° n ° f Aleck M r on the4th cf r en n . a > tch -ho Fra " c: ■ —- me house With the carpenter, " ~ David Sfiraks ajfi>- ms t £ cl di > f-ont birf befbr- the 71 T-T o ' Anrf to!dbim i, i "* * ' vas ta f<"*£.v.itb bun, ns be Briftnl • from 'tb •r a "t " p " ne *f b " oU '"it"-* ,R<l tin tbnt i.Z ne '^ hrs '» foififis ah* as.«r> , *' « sieJL sailor from the Deb - ? to bis bouse. ?" m ' U No?. / ~ i °» tli" evrn'n* of the sSth, aftri fh , ;n ? J'fp'aivd like on; intoxicated' for two days. t—. A lad of t!ie name of Wrigjit, Nephew to :vlrs. M-Cri.ll near CheTnut-ftrcct, went on board fehe Deborah as soon as Die arrived, and frequently tft-rwards, and was attacked fever on,tho 31(1 of July. khhatum. S. pitcr tinned "a Regimental Surgeon, • a*. /''•*» paragraph of tin-" Sketch" &c Inert the year 1747, in one of those in which the } elhw Fever has made its appearance in Philadelphia. •cent. ' to f ■* to To John Ward Fenno. THERE appeared in your pajxfr of Tues day evening, lall what you term a lift of Unit ed Irilhmen. It is of little confluence to the public, whether I am or am not one of that body, but asfallJiood, in whatever lhape >ts it appears, Ihould b? icoutied, Ido not chule to be introduced before the pun lie wantonly Sur- without relenting it. If there is any crime lon- attached to the name of United Irishman, I ' ain clear of it. When I applied to you with a view to learn by what authority you made use of my name, accompanied by a falfe ai- , HA. which I suppose was meant to in jure me, if such a charge ought to be cause 1 •t injury to any man, for reasons heft known ] to yourfeli, you thought it convenient to 1 Ge- lv & ,,e to name of your authority Jinuft j Bil- tl,errt '"'s conclude that the LIE belongs to . rlhv * mrfc!tV Merely to lhew the public upon 1 w b?t lotmdatiujn your afiertions reft, I Uib it in J' )U1 tjm following affidavit. is j S. PARKE. 'the' f'V °f Pk<l»delsbff}, IT. so f . BEFORE nje, John Jennings, one of the; Aku rinen of the laid city, perfonal irar. I'y appeared, Samuel Parke, tavern-keeper, 3 in ' n Court, who being duly sworn, ur.ll ' ! th de P° fe Tint ill the publication dif- nanu s federal, said to be United dif- f r '" lmcn > Fenno's paper of the eighteeth r< bris ' nl ' ,lnt > among which his name is inlerted t ] 778 '*• therefore, denies the charge of bring one lely °* t ! ie locietv, or of having any com- ' p e f- municatiou with them in wv refped whatever tE and . SAMUEL PARKE. tl Sworn and subscribed before me, } C( this 1 qth day of Deer. 1798. J ; -rs t J OHN JtNKiNos, alderman. ;U . • December 21. Oi de- " li' r ls 1 o John Ward Fenno, 10 •' IN y° ur of Tuesday last, you re rm/ Pjelented me as a member of that body call ed United Irilhmen in America. The affer- th h tion is not true t I never was in their focie- P r I s ' x b nortl ° 1 know a lingle individual who is Wi in- a member. I came to America in the a the month of Oitober 1797, and I folemnlyde- L clare that 1 ne ver was in any political focie wt ty whatever in th(? country. And I defy ■lie any person to prove the contrary. Every to editor ought to be accountable for what ap >"- pear* in his paper, and as thu sal/hood has N< trv > our I you to con- Sc Vj II- vou do not wirti tob. o^r.4- <• .tW ntitkaa -of« ijjaiicioUS. Gl you are welcome to produce the name of Bt ' y° ur '"former, and let it red with him. Bl i do not mention this out of difxlpeft to that body called United Irilhmen, *s I know , "°thing about them ; but m#rely vith a de rl' 1, 4," to " ltnrm the public, that ycu with a th nnlicious intent, had declared to the world ns a tnoft notorious untruth. That it is with to a malicious intent, i, clear from the pream • ble of your falfe declaration, in which you £ u theifc men as Jangerpus to the state, as having dark and bloody ddigns. as o murderers, afTaffins, and what ,ot-and ten you mod wickedly and groundlefdy aflert Th. that lam ,„ e of them. If this is not ma- 100 lice. I know not what malice is. tor; \ou know that the IVfident ha> it now thai " in his power, to fend out of the country a- whj ny a len, whom he may consider as an ene- our • my to the United States, and vou endeavor Fra • hv the molt gross falfhoods and mifreprefen- eft i tations, to exhibit me as such a thei 1 leave you to solace yourfelfwith the pleas- to c mg refledions, which lAuft nece(Ta-ily arise tent IL . ,n y° ur min d from such conduft. Log wonder why you are sorry that you can fori' mention only twelve names (after inviting be il information so preflingly) as with the fame unh propriety with which you mentioned mine, • > 011 might have menticned twelve thousand, of 1 ' ted H names with which you are ac<juain- liorr ou ask why should vou mention the und< • na mes of Samuel Wylie,' John Black, &c. dene ■' the answer can only be this, merely to ex pole yourfelf. There can be no 'good at J a ,. ln lies. Rut sometimes men's " ' ma ' ,ce ol, t does their cunning. It ought Ire ' t0 " e con hdered, however, that you are but have H w- an ma 5' better in time to come. since With hearty wishes for your amendment, upor 1 am ' foun 1 JOHN BLACK. F, December 21. , n(la [I hurl back in the teeth of these fellows eve- t,m ry item of their abuse. I have called nei- sice ther of them an United IriOiman. If 1 had, nothing they can fay or do, would their alter my opinion, refpefting them, their Prefi principles or their.purposes.] to th - for u A CARD. There can be but one reason for the oppo lition to the Bankrupt Law, which is, to make as many desperate men as Doffible throughout the United States ; who/S p J h no end to their calamities, may effl ft a New'f (ion of order both civil and religious • then Huzza for Liberty and Equality, j / fl rranccns, ala Guillotine, ala Victor Hughes. A Horses to Winter. a'frig |. ORSKS will b= taken in to winter at P»«. Oclol °"r a: Sot. 1 havin tf defea $ m 1 two °* a ' ettcr from the Confql of j the United States at Gibraltar, dated I ephew and 23d of Oit. J798. vent " The American fliip Roanoke, j ■'icl«d Eben . ezcr Paine ' commander, from Nor- | folk in \ irginia, with a valuable cargo i of Cocoa, Indigo, See. bound to Cadiz 1 and a market, was brought in two days 1 'F ls ''"l a r 'ti'h privateer, on pretence of | ch 'the bc '" S Spanilh property; and after going [ tee in | through the customary interrogations, ! < has been cleared. | s " Since the veflcl was freed, being of ' • 333 tons burthen, I met Earl St. Vin. j {__Tj' u j ce nt, when I took the opportunity tore- f ice to ( l ueft the favor of leave for her going to f ne of at '' z w her cargo, which he not on- lhape ly granted, but also a convoy, as she is Nmlv nul with leave to bring out for the t crime States a cargo of the produce of 1 , Jft , 1 Spain. n 1 with "At foot you have the names of the a , f" as f ' X Frcnch prizes <ent in h 7 admiral Nel- 1 e> L it!- '° n ' five are now ready to pro- t< cause c ced to LilLon, there to get some tem- " nown porary repairs before they go for Eng- '' it to land ; they are under jury malls,and in a »to lhockin « state - Adm. Nellbn is block- th upon in « U P Malta * Oj sub- NAMES OF PRIZES. J c Le Frankliu, 80 runs v - Le Tonant, g 0 do . Le Spartiat, - 4 do . fa one Le Conquerant, J ot fc anal- Le Peuple Souveraine, 74 do. so 32' 74 d. S ition a Dane 111 27 days from Leg- da lited horn > "is reported that the Maltese had St eeth role on the French garrison, difpofeiTed tO . one t ' lcm the island, and thrown them oZ fe ! ves untler thc protection of Great-Bri- " ever tam and the King of Naples;— He fur- to tlier reports, that Buonaparte had been we compelled by the Turks to re-embark his f,,! army, and was in great want of provili. ons ; that oh the other hand the Eng- th: lifh continued to block them up." mj re . ELECTION. Sii all. Yesterday, agreeably to a writ issued by rer- the hon. the Speaker of the House of R c - "• cie- prefentatives of Penrfy'vania, an Election l '° oi s was held in the county of Philadelphia, for ' the a person to represent the fame in the State = de- Legillaturc, Thc following it an accurate Wa lefy RETURN OF THE VOTES -g ery in the refpeaire diftri'As. l P V 1. T -v. Muhlenburg. Logan. has Northern Liberties, 266 5 66 . an- Sonthwark, Moyamenm'njr.l l>J- Pmej-nnk, r 221 3J9 us, Germantown, ; a of Buftletown, (not received.) Blockley k Kingfelßng, 2 g ?6 to J ? w Total 687 1211 ; s «° | 'j| Majority for Dr. Logan 524 m- - """ ou OOMMVNICATION. he - ~~ A as Tbe object of Logan's million was to coun- -/V nd teracl the measures of our government. enfui ■rt 1 herefore Logan, and his employers, can be on W ,a- looked upon in no other light, than as trai- j tors. It was not for the benefit of America ~ .w that he was lent ; but, to advise the French a- «'hat plan to puifue, in order to accomplilh Hay le- our ruin. The outrageous proceeding of or France was faft drying the Jacob,n inter n" C ..' n n t countr )'i and Logaa went to lave Al —. their linking cause, by perluadingtheTyrants difpc il- to change their mode, not to alter their in le tention. In any other nation, the necks of Logan and his empi.oykrs, would pav the in forfeit ot their crimes: but here, with fliame ig be it spoken, they will probably not only go ie unhung, but unpunilhed. e, Any compromile with the present rulers d, of France, cannot be contemplated without Hf<l n. horror, much less, such an one as they would be willing to make. A writer in this paper a le under the lignature of American Indepcn dence lately took for his motto these Jines : r " The world is burning, Frenchmen stand it on high, •s " And either they, or we, must lower lie." '. it I read them with pl-afure at the time, and t have thought on them with pleal'ure ever Conu 'ince. Ihe sentiment Ihould be impressed upon the mind of every American. It is rounded in awful truth. French tampering has been the means of A enllaving almost half Eurode Godmnt r 1 . ** . 'ice to it. If we are, it will be with our Dec 1 eyes open. We have a full knowledge of 1 and we have expreffid it, in the r rreiident, therefore, if we are finally dupes T'O to their cursed wiles, there will be no excuse A ' for us. Harke [Russel's Com, Gaz. ton i prcfert left tea Ne "jo-London, Dee. 19. ®rder ' P«^kk U FW e l St,ttt / r,^ te * ° eor S c Wa «>;"gton, but^! • Newonrr ' v* r.Jed fiom beam" Newport, on a cru.fe, on Wednesday last. la> s Charleston, December 3. Patt A gentleman who came in the Carolina Jl akin l from London, informs, that he was on board ' a frigate at Portsmouth on the 3d or 4 th of r ° nt " October, and was there told by some of the officers, that a frigate had arrived at Sheer- A r n f'l ch Lord Bridpcrt's fleet in fight fitnatec of the -• rench fleet from Brest. It alfo ly in.pi on board the frigate, that accounts ""ftfioi had arrived at the admiralty, of the two fleets int line defeated 1116 *' ° f thC French bein ® tota! 'y J ° hß ° iulv ql of I From tht Lerjbtcrg I (Pirg ) P.!per. dated f _ Madame Bache is conftanily conj*r,ltu!a» J ting her jiicuhimc lierde on the ine!hmabl* lokc, kleffinga *f'ultinjj ' from the hte rmh.uTy of , the notorious Logan : To him flie fays they may look as their savior ; through his in ..ti go terceflion they are for a moment refcucd from - acli'z the indignation of the mighty republic, days j? "" >rt l " nc lince, when this Logan wai ct , Q f 'P®' ieD "f as an vnauthorisid envoy, every exertion was made use of to ptove [Oing | that he went to France merely as a Private ionS, . Citizen ; that he was not sent by Jefferfon | and die French party ! ! How inconsistent i» of the condud ef these fatellires of France ! V;,, one time declaring to yon that this of. hcious doder did no* go on any public bu orc- liner., and immediately after exi»ltin R in the ,g t0 iuccefn c f his mission Even publishing ad on- drf »« Prrfented Him in France, by French he is n . fnc " nß » e*preflive of their approbation e his condud at Paris ! However llrangc r ru T'l appf : ,r ' wi,h me ic »* "o paradox : X' of *»e 'alt exertions of an expiring faction are now refortedto, and .11 their utrfgue. ai d 'the a "? l ? conhrte " c,cs mult appear. They f*f M , this Logan hat effeded the raiW of the embargo ; that he has indued the direct, ry" pro- to cause a momentary lufpenfion of ,'epreda em- "of son our commerce See, What could W the despots of France beheld in this fellow inn (L o g»n)ahat induced them to do this? What could they fee in this Private Citizen >cb- that commanded greater refped than tl.e Official Envoys—but the agent df Thomas Jel!er!on, &c. ? Want of proof in law pre vents me from declaring him to be fiich ; circumuances, fcotifcientfous proof) are Mifficiently ftio~g to convince me of the fad. ]do believe he was the envoy of Jef. ft Hon and Co. that he was dineded to in form them that they werc.u.ablc. any lon ger, to dupe the people of America ; that their eyes arc open to their own intcref) and eg- danger ; that the gov ( rnmmt ( f the United lad States were too fenlible of French perfidy Fed to'uffer a continuance of their insults and in- IH J" r ' e . B « and th at, to preveut a war, it was "I' " I ' o relax in their f.verities, Tl.ia had the desired effed ; but it is not ur- to Dodor Logan nor Thomas JefFerfon thrt :ejj we are indebted ;iti» to the energetic mea his r,lr " of °" r government which they op ifi P ''. and woufd fcav e presented hnd it! ten „ '" power While I fi ßC erely lament ig- that there ,s a French fadion in exillu.cr, my attettion for my native country will not permit me to remain a- fient spectator, but ttimu.ate ne to watch with aflid ity their' adioni, and endeavor, as tar as the remote l'm n , of m y situation and means of ins r t.ou will admit, to expose them to pub!* . 4 execration, for ate i . _ - A Ring oi Small Keys. Wa.> loft yesterday afternoon— aßypcrf . n Jcll>cr . .ng them it thi. office writ be rewarded. doc %% ™. TTFipes Madeira Winel 63 FOR SALK BY 59 Crooke Stevenson, . - N ° 4 ' South w «er-ftreef. " : 56 A Few Chefti of 11 t: ~ IMPERIAL TEA, Second ftre'e 0 " South '' 4 t Company. A RF J"? STOCKHOLDFRS, -1 * ° a i- dee i» UM> GOVE IT, Secretary. ■a i> '1 he Sul>/cribers h Have received by the Clothier from Liverpool ,f A cassiasmlk , or j Caj „ P e ll AfTorted Buttons, e ~r A tr C UV °I " ftCr ,' inß e,ch Ca( - which they wilt s ol P" »>n I.Lvral term.. f No-« M M'tlford & WilH Sm t No. ,8, North Front near Arch flreefc e WANTED, J ABOUT fifty Caik? of < Annatto or Rocoa, s , y =» above. t "ea ai 1 JultPubliftied, r and IS NOW FFE ft D F ,K SALE By 3. D.jVIES, "• HiKh-ftrjet, { iHE AMERICAN RJEI OSITORY AND ANNUAL REGISTER, [ For the Year 1799 Containing complete and cor.e4t lilts 0 f t v- Executive, Legislative, and Judiciary De partments of the General and State Governments . As. reat variety of ufeful Tablet, neeeflary to be r 1 mi" f Very s ""-of the Union hmbLiliJhed with a hat dfome engraved Fran itfpiece. Dec. y Patent Ploughs, ... I {% J° fe P h at AtGoa Hnrti un ' 6 ' Co '^ ei t Ferry—Jonathan ! Th f Evini > Ember ton. Those.who have used uhem give thr-m the preference to any other kind, as fhey require nlr.'t f'" 1 ' BrOM(lbilttr are kept i„ erder at left «pence and an fokl at a cheaper rate—the plan is nmch amplified an,l cor.liltfof but one piece of cast iron, with the handles and beam «f wood ; they may befixed n ith wrought Wit haj for Sah\ Or to Leafs ft,- „ ter m 0 f y rari nymoer of valuable rncfl. of Land, well fitnaxed far MilJ., iron «Vorks or Firms moft y irjprovcd, lying chi. fly m the county n'f Hnn n"d re" , #t, .° f tWyfvania Thof who may inthne to view them w.H to a pp l y John Canan esq. near Huntingdon. . , Ctar let Nt-wield.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers