-2?, in anfwtr to the note of 'he imputation j of the empire ; that tlie of Eh renbreitdcin did not belong to them but to the military department. This point is no more of a nature purely military than the demolition of that fortrefs, whith, however, was treated of at Radadt. the French miniders, as negociators for peace, fcoukl treat of every thing which concerns the (late of poffeflion, and the relations between the two contrading powers. The blockade of Ehfenbreitftein is diredly repugnant to the armidice which was agreed upon. It might almod be considered as an a£l of hsftility, and even special conventions oppose it still moretxprefely. This blockade too is quite fuperfluous, nnce the deputation of the em pire have agreed to the demolition of that fortrefs from a love to'peace. The French plenipotentiaries, too, must recoiled tlie friendly, the amicable representations which they prdented to his Prufiian majesty on the fuhject, stating, that the French government had totally renounced all views upon this place. Were it to fall into other hands, the north of Germany would be more exposed, and an important difference would arise on its means of defence, and consequently the intereds of the king woutd be directly affec ted. The army of neutrality would th*w be no longer adequate to its object, it would be Iteceflary to in create Jt and to take other measures. In a word, the ministers of his Pruffi in majesty, expressly dare their reqm (I that the nratter (hould be rtprefented to the French government, and that the blockade of the fortrefs be given up, and its revictual ing permitted. PARIS, November 11. I/'ttcrs from Brussels of the 9th instant, are filled with an account of dreadful engage ments between the republican troops and the rebels ; of the whole of the rich and beauti ful commune of Bornheim, there are now on ly a few empty houses remaining. November 14.. The Ottoman ambaflador at Paris, has de manded palTports in order to return to Con stantinople, but he has not yet obtained them. November 15. They write from Milan, that an extraor dinary courier had parted through that place oti his route to Paris. He brought intelli* gepce that Buonaparte writes word he has loft but 900 men in all his engagements with the Mamelukes, and has driven the army of the Beys to the frontiers of Abyilinia. Half his army are marching towards the Per* fian Gulph, while the other half proceeded to Suex, where they intended to embark.— Buonaparte found admiral Richery at Suez, with 7 French fail of the line, and 4 Spani(h ships, bound fr«m Manilla. He only now waits for tlie monsoons to embark at Suez. HAGUE, November ij. The infurreftion in the Low Countries is ftatedto have alTumeda most formidable ap pearance ; the insurgents are appointed with flying and other artillery, and aie command ed by officers fivnic Ily in—the Tei vice of "the Prince of Orange. They style themfdves the Imperial Catholic array. The department of Brussels, Dvle, Forest, Lys. Scheldt, and Nether, have been de clared in a state of siege. This order, how ever is to be limitnd to the places where the tree of liberty has been cut down, and the tockfm founded ; the villages of Capillc and Wellebrr.ke haw been destroyed by tlie mili tary in their combats with the peasantry ; at the lattej place the regulars were repulsed, but returtring the following day with rein forcements, after committing great (laugh ter, obliged the insurgents to fly to the woods. ■On the 17th inft. nineteen waggons, with wounded French soldiers, arrived at Breda ; they have loft in the several rencounters up- ' wards of two thousand men. The loss of the rebels is estimated at fix thousand men. Tlie Batavian government regarded these 1 movements with particular felicitude, and ' has formed a corps of national troops on the ' frontiers for its protection, and to repress a ( spirit of revolt prevalent throughout that ' republic, as well as the whole diftrid of the ' Rhine. The garrison of Thionvillc and Ment* ' have attacked a large body of insurgents eol- ! leded in the neighbourhood of Arlon, killed 1 600, and made 1500 prisoners ; and it ap- ' pears that all those parts of the French do- ' minions, from which accurate intelligence ' can be received, are in a state of the greatest poflibk ferment. ITALY, November 4. Letters from Smyrna state that the com bined Ruffian and Turkish fleet, confiding of 50 fail, of different fixes, were cruizing i tit the beginning of Odobcr, off the island J of Scio ; likewise that Buonaparte had tak en a pofition'before Cairo with 15,000 men, . c and was. threatened by an army of Turks c and Moors, confiding of 300,000. Oil the ' contrary, the official Journal printed at Rome ' under tlie head "News of the army of Afu" a contains tlie following article : " Letters 1 from Cephalonia jnd Medina, concur in dat l.ig that General Buonapate, so far from hav- 0 ir.£ i'uftained any reverse, has gained a com- " pletc vidorv over Pacha Achment, near St. 1 John d'Acre, and taken poiTetnon of this 1 place, of Aleppo and the principal towns of a Syria, Nothing can withdand his undaunt ed courage and the excellence of his plans*." A gazette publillied at Rome, however, ftites that th» captain of an Kr.g'lifh vefl'cl b arrived at NeapoJis, had announced, that in '' nis ycyage from Alexandria, in the latitude * cf Cyprus, he had seen a French convoy cf b 25 {ail and three frigates, in the course to Alexandria, where prqbab'.y they have arriv- a ed, as when he left that place there were on- ® ly two frigates cruizing before :t. Ihe late Neapolitan miniderat war has si been removed on account of mificondud.— At Naples have been arrcded r< on account of the rrvolntioiw.y opinions. tl * Tbe Hamburg editor ju?t'y remnks thai tl at this intcliigi nc ■ has no dale, and is not ft official, it require: c:nf.rmatitn> t! .1 LON.Ws. ft lyeavber i 3. l- A letter t+oii; t; ,i! ad quarter* oc the tr io ipy of Italy, Jatey October 2j, dates, "that 0 tl)c French armj", cOnfillin'g of 180,000 ef le fedive men, without the r, Legioilj, is in full march.— This formidable h army is divided into three uTltniris.' One of kl thefti, a very lkoqg one, dirtids its march te towards the Neapolitan dates. se The SarveillaiH the anly (hip of jf tHe Bred fqiladron- trur accounted for before, le is arrived at L'Orient. it According to the overland dispatches yr, ceived from Mr. 'l\xlke, at Aleppo, by the 11 lad Hamburg mail, it appears that Genera! te Buonaparte has established a camp about i_ four miles from Cairo, where he is with his it army. General Berthier has been sent on h towards the confines of Syria, for the pur ie pose of entrenching himfelf in a favorable ;h pofition,|to repel the projeAed attacks of the ,e Porte and the Mamelukes, who are affenjbiirtg it a large force in that quarter. Nothing very is material has recently happened ; but the te French are exposed to the condant attacks of 1, the Arabs, who are Aire to murder eviitv n man who incautiously drays only a little d'if- B tance from the grand army. November 22. e Letters were this morning received by the e admiralty from lord Nelson. r This day at three o'clock the speaker of s the house of Commons, attended the mrtfl bers, went to St. James's to present their e addrefsol thanks to his majesty, for his mod a gracious speech from the throne. By letters from Cologne it appears, that th: insurgents in Brabant have begun to re taliate upon the French army by (hooting all the republicans that fall into their hands. A council of war has been held at Aix la Clia - pelle by the French generals, See. upon this, e fubjed; from which fad it appears that tlie . infurredion extends towards the Rhine. Accounts from the Hague, of the 6t'>, further fay, that the infurredion in Br.ibant not being quelled, by way of precaution - the guards at Amderdam had been doub • led. The p»ft however was once more i. free. Another article from AmC.erdam fays, the insurgents are dill in great force upon - the canal of BrulTVlt between that place and ; Antwerp. Ai Thyffelt there are 3,000 of • them divided into companies, wheie they 5 have appointed a military commission. The 1 Frencn general CMlaud is marching againd f them with I^,ooc men. All the municipa . litie* are declared permanent, and the belli . taken from the (leeple* to prevent the I founding of an alarm. Letter* fiom Brufltls of the date of No , vember 5, fay-. 1 " The revolt is quelled at Died, Lou ' vain, Aeifchot, and the environs of Hal and Engheim ; but on of the Scheldt, and in the country of Vaeß, it (till rage» in all its horrors. Several bloody adionn • have taken place near St.Amand, and they bave cannon and chiefs. —Those of Menin, Furnes, and Yprcs wear black cockades, and bear the Auflrian colors. On the canal of Antwerp they arealfo in force. «' General Moraud has put the city of Luxembourg)! in a date of siege. Secret correfpondcnce was kept up between the inhabitants and rebels ; and the general in his letter to the commander <tf 15th milita ry divifton, fays th« minds of the people in Luxembourgh are become extremely vicia ttd fmce the revolt took place." It is reported thjit letters have been re ceived in Leadenhall street from the Eafl India company's agent in Egypt, dating that a large body of Arabs had joined the ar my of Buonaparte .under pretence of friend (hip to his troops, oa their way into Syria, when (uddenly the Arabs turned upon the French, and drove them back to Cairo With great los». This (latement is probable, from what is said of the leading chaa&eriftict of the A rabians by all travellers, that th«y hare the art of covering their treachery with more appearance offincerity than any nation up on the face of the earth.—lt will be rem embered, that in one of the French letters from Egypt, it is dated that a distinguished leader of the rebel*, who had sworn by his " turban and his beard," to support with all his influence the caule of the French, was next day dtteded as the primum mobile of a <;onfpiracy which had for its objeft the as , fafGnation of the very French party with whom he had entered into treaty. , STATE PAPER. j Convention between the imperialgeneral and ' the Grifon council of war. Since his imperial and apoitolic majesty has been pleased to repeat the mod gracious afiurances of his deteimination to support and proted the free edates of the Gt'ifon league, the council of war for the three cantons, here aiembled, have resolved to ac- ( cept his imperial majesty's proposals, to fend . a dumber of troops for the security and de- , fence of our menaced country, our frontiers ; and defiles. It is therefore agreed that all < the partes and defiles, (hall, immediately and without delay, be put ints the poffcfE on of such a number of imperial troops, as ' (hall be deemed fufEcient for the defepce of the sam«, or the support 01 the troops of the country, in consideration of the danger and exigencies of exiding circumdapces. The imperial generals Bellega de and , Auffenberg have given the most solemn as surances, that the imperial troops (hall not be burdensome in the lead degree to she in. \ habitants; and that quarters (hall be pro- f vided for them without any care or contri- J bution on the part of the country. r Further, if circumstances (hould require f a greater orkfl'er quantity of hay, forage, a See. the fame being furuifhfd by the edates 1 (hall be paid for at the current price of i ; such articles. '1 he generals will also exert tbcmfelvrs to a render the quartering of the troops as lit- t tie burthenfume as poiCble, convinced thai a the inhabitants will behave wth a friend- a /hip towards the troops, confident with b the con fid erst ion of their being the defen- deri of tlieii lib.-rty ani their a-icient 03- r - fUtution. '• Ihe liberty, independence, and ancient coullitu ion itl he Gritani league, (hall ac !"•' cor(l ' S" to the eonrei»tiot», bie defended ajid - projected a/ainif attacks from all qiiarler-. ' 1 he imperial troops ire hound to obftrve 11 the ftrtVfeft difopline, and to defend the property of every indr*fdp-il of the country upon whom they may be quartered. •' Ihe above troops and officers shall in no wift- interfere or concern themf lvn with the interns! govgrnmen; of this free country, ' , rights priuiledges and immunities, free and '■ unmolested. I he imperial troops fsall be quartered at those piaeea where the fafety and preferva n tion of the pe.ice of tlm inteHor may mod j " requiie such a disposition. I'he illuftrous house of Austria, and the c free cllate of the three leagHes, are pledged * to the mod sacred obfervaoce of this con - vent on, under whatever circumstances may occur. Signed The heads of the league, and the rtiem- I bcrs of the council of war. His imperial and apollolic majesty's major-general and commander of the troops ordered for tha fuppurt of the Grifon league. , f AUFFF.\BERG. Chur, Oftober [j No'-ember 24. Wc this day resume our extrafts si om the t French papers, which came to our hands yefttrday. !| The intelligence from Naples, of the de- feat of the pacha of Syria by Buonaparte, ' ear St John d'Acre, wasfird brought by I s the I rench papers wh'ch arrived 9 Jays ago, j an article tron. Rome of t >e 14-th ultimo Fhe authority on which it was Hated at ) Rome, was that of letters frotn Cephalonia j and Mcffiua. This accoo :t does not ap t pear to have be -n credited even at Paris, and the Propagntcur makes the following obfer , vation on it . « The authors of these letters, who make ( Buonaparte enter Aleppo on the 10th of , September, appear to forget that the dif- I tance between Cairo and Aleppo is »oo f myriameters, and that the last official dif r patches from Bu inaparte were dated at the . former city on the 19th August. Even supposing that an army with so many dif ficulties to overcome, could march three roy , liameters per day, no less than 33 days , would be ncceffary for the journey. Ad mining, therefore, which is very improbable . that the armyfet out on the 20th August, the day following the date of the last dis patches, and that they marched 33 days without ftoppiog, he could not have reach ed Aleppo until the 22d September. But it was at least fix days fliort of this time, , that Buonaparte employed on his march, if wc are to give credit to the Naples letters. The news appears to us to be premature. Fhe letters may perhaps have mistaken the date, and Buonaparte may have entered A leppo on the Ift of Oflober, thought it ij not to be believed that he did so on che 16th of September." These observations are alone fufficient to discredit the account. An overland express from India has, we understand, brought in tclligence from one of the company's agents that proves the falfehood of it by a more certain tell than its improbability. A vef fcl carrying dispatches from Buonaparte, had been driven on iiore by the Emerald frigate, but some of the crew had been pick ed up. I* corn these information was colledt ed, that the French army were in Egypt and Syria, for the head-quaiters of Buonaparte wctt dill at Grand Cairo,whik Berthier who had advanced into Syria,was in a very defpe rate situation. Some private lettersreceived by this overland express, gofo far as to as sert that Berthier had met with a very c«n fiderable check in Syria, but wc connot as certain that much credit is due to this com municatien. November 27. Lord Nelson has now a pension equal to 1 that ef cither lord St. Vincent or lord Duncan. The two latter hare each 20001. on the Britiih and I cool, on the Irilh ellab lifhment. Lord Nelson had a-penfien of 1 10001. per annum, on account of the lofa ] of his arm, previous to th* late grant of < 20001. which makes his income from the >■ country amount in the whole to 30001 a year.—Should he therefore be aifo put 011 the Irish ellablilhment, his pension will ex cetd that of «ither lord St. Vincent or lord Duncan, by ioool. per anum — £ LONDON, November 23. Alcmene, off Demietta, \ September 28, 1795. Sir, I have the honor of informing you t that I arrived yesterday off Daujietta, and ! pursuant to your orders, cut out all the vefTcls that were anchored in that road, be- j ing eight in number, loaded with wine and other necefiaries for the French army. ! I am, &c. GEORGE HOPE. To Samuel Hood, cfquire, captain of his majesty's 0 fliip Zealous, Src. See. £tc. 11 -K - I Yffterday at noon arrived the Hamburg t,i mail, only then become d«e. p; Private letters from Hamburg, dated the 20th, report, that a dangerous infurrc&ior, has broken out in South Prussia, to which point seVeral strong columns of troops from Pomerania, kc. were proceeding by forced marches. This revolt is laid to implicate m fomp of the firft families in the kingdom, jj! and amongst others, prince Radzivillc, who it lately married a Prulfian princess, and who is stated to have been arretted at Berlin. Twenty-eight, thousand Bohemian troops are 011 their march from Bohemia towards the Rhine. The Austrian troops in"Sua!ii; and Franconia are generally in motion, and are engaged in fortifying Ulm and Wtrtz- ir burg. Accounts from Frard-.fort, of the 13th. I i- ftatc, tKnt all the French generals of the ar my of the Rhine, 17 in number, hat! aiTcin r it Med at Menu, and there received their :n ---structions for a new campaign. Jiit>rdo!i J cnnnnaiais- ia cWef; K-rmo has tlx right, .. and Be-rnadotte ffce left wing.; St. Gyr the •e centre.* Lefcvre the vanguard ; arid Maficnp e the rear. General Jourdon is expe&ed to y remove to StraftiUrgh. November 27. 0 This looming Mr. Pitt lent a letter to h the bank, fluting-, that he would be ready ■ t next -week to treat for a loan. This notice d was, as usual, communicated from the bank to the IWk exchange, where it occasioned t a depression of the funds. When this paper j was put to prel's the three per cent consols [j were at.s z 1 he monied men have begun their pre e paratiotis for the loan, which is expected to 1 be >7 or i 5,000,000. Three lifts are form . > n g» all by rcfpedtable parties, for the occa y Hon. IHiey write from Turin, that orders had been given for the paflage of 40,000 Fre.ich, and 100,000 muskets, through Lombardy. s Froth Basle We learn, that the citadel of f SchafToufeis furnilhed with cannon,brought ,f * rom the arsenal of that city, and that the artillery men are very aftivriy employed. From Stutgard there are accounts, that through Immerftadt and Kempton, Imperial troops are fonftantly marching from the Jyrol to the neigliborhqod of Gr.nftance, e w 'th an iinmenfe quantity of artillery and s ammunition. Xije dsasette, PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY EVENING, FEDRUART 6. ! The ci-devant Venetian islands, Zante. . Corfu, Cephalonia, Cengo, See with all the French /hipping, have been taken by the r combined Ruffian and Turkilh squadrons. The Ilies of France and Bourbon have been furrer.dered to the Britiih Captain Losacx. Abraham Baldwin is elected Senator of the United States for the State of Georgi a, for the term of fix yeais from the 4th of March next, vice Jofiah Tattnall whose time then expire*. He had a majo rity of only j votes. For the information of Shippers of Tobacco and Logwood to Hamburg. It is neceflary to fpecify in the Bills of Lading the word Leaf Tobacco, but unriecsf fary to mention the weight .-—and for Log wood, See. it is neceflary to fpecify the weight, otherwise these articles are fubjett to a very heavy river duty. At an election held on Monday last for Direftors of the Sank of Pennfvlvania, the following gentlemen were oiwfen 1 Robert Ralfton, Godfrey Itag-i, . Joseph Parker Norrit, 1 George Plumftead, Thomas Norton, John C. Stodcer, William Sanfom, , Benjamin Wiftar Morris, , Philip Nicklin, George Pennock, t Alexander Henry, J James Smith, Jun. < Michael Keppeie, 7 Johii Brown, Alexander Addifonj t ' county, 1 . Jonas Preston, Delaware county, c Thomas Dundafs, Reading, i William Montgomery, Lancaster. Jehu HjUingfworth. At a meeting of the Directors last even- ' ' ing, SaMukl M. Fox, Lfq, was unani- c moufly elefted President. 1 February 6, 1799. < MARRIED]—yc Act-day Mr Simon ' Walker, E deft sou of Vftlliam Walker, T - Esq. of Birmingham, in the Kingdom of t Great Britain, to Miss Ashley, daughter t of John Afhley, Esq. late of London. n Feb. 5 - I ..t 1.. ( dsasette ©arine %ift. '■ CLEARED, , a Ship Nancy, Button, Lisbon b Ariel, Coates, Canton Barque Mars, Torbet, Dublin Seht, Maximilian, White, La Guira I The brig reported to alhore on Hereford Bar, proves to be the Polly, Scnkey, from New-Yerk to this port—She has since got over the bar into the inlet with trifling damage. "" J A Farmer Wanted. f ' WANTED a n-arried Man capable of man- j, aging a Farm (of 60 acre* within 10 miles 1. of the city) having some knowledge of gardening, f , and vvh»f< wife would undertake the charge of a Oairj, &c —Su.h pcifons 011 producing fuificient recommendations of their honesty, in iuflry and so briety, w ill meet with liberal encouragement ; for particular npj.ly to the printer. Feb. 4. law tf IV ralture Lot. a, PO be rented for oni or more years, a Pasture 1 l.ot in Fourth street, continued, about half a I! mile above the city—lt is in a good Hate of culti- ■ vation, well fenced, contains ihrii acris, and U has the buncfit of a run of water pafling through it—apply to the printer. e1 feh - 6 4aw tf 1,1 TO Bfe RENTED, And immediate possession given„ i - A plcafant and convenient y Two story Brick House, in Dock-fti-eet, fronting the river Delaware. rt Apply " No. I jr. South Sersni-Wt *V feb. 6. " ;;; i NEW 1 Hfe.Vl KK. THIS F.VENINff, fr ffJl £ IJE rRE S E.f/rE 1), J l ' (for the second time here ) \ lc A'celcbra.ted»€ Q ; lVf F; P, Y,j c.ijied, • Secrets Worth knowing : ■ W nttcn by Mr. Mm tun, author ;yf Gt- Itmibus, Waj; to get Married, Gure.fqv tlie :o ' Hsart-Achc, &c.. bx. and performed at the [y ,1 beatre Royal, Ccrvent Garden, Loudoji, ;e I ? nd . tlie Theatres of Boston, New-York and k 1 Baltimore, with (Unbounded appbiufe. 1 IJnd-of the Comedy, ;r MIN UF.T DE.LA;COUR, | s BjrMr,and Mrs. Byrne. .; 7o which will be added, a favorite Comic jl Qpca, u; two a<tts, called, ■o '• . ■ BOSI NA. ). BO.'C, One Dollar-—P/t, Three-quarters i„. a IJolldr—and Gall Kur, Hilf a Dollar, *** -Future days of perlo; marine will be d Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, until 1 further notice., IO" 1 he Doors of the Theatre will open at a quarter part 5, and the Curtain rife at a |t quarter past 6 o'clock prectfely. « VTluable Real EsTate, tor Sale. t By virtue of an order i>f the.OseHANs' l ' C-'ourt for the County of New—Gas e tle, in the State of Delaware, IVII. L B E SO L D, L ' The Real Estate of SO rO MO N MAX H r E L L, Etq. , JLaie of rhr (aid county, dcceaf^d. No. I ALL the one undiv:ded third part of Seven-: t«n hundred and fifty acres of" Land and Marlh : Atiout three hun lred and tir'ty acres, more or lef, being up!and of a fu;:Crior quality; the rema.ning fourteen hundred acres being marsh ot the firil quality in the (late of Dela ware, the grettej part of which is in a high ft ate of cultivaiion, and. the remaindtr «an be put in pomplete oider at a very Iwall expence. , On the premises are erecled, 'I hree Dwellings, ; with a number c outhouses, &c. Also the r fame proportion of about one hundred cattle, and about one hundred and fifty head of (heep, :he unexpired time of servitude of a number of floct, healthy Nejjro men, a large quantity of hay, a number of horses, and swine, fanning 1 utensils, houfeholdand kitchen furniture, with many other articles too tedious to enumerate. No. 1. A commodious Brick-M.ffi.age and • Lot of Land, situate in the village of St. Ge >rge» now in the tenure of Mr. Samuel M'Glaughlin and occupied as a tavern, foi many years, to advantage. No. 3. A Lot of Marsh, containing about • thiity acres, more or less, situate near the said village of St. Georges. No. 4. Four Lots of Land, situate near , Christiana Bridge, on the South fide of Christi ana Creek. No. 5. A Lot, Wharf, and Frame Sfore- House, on the South fide of Christiana Creek at Chrillana Bridge. No. 6. A Lot of Wood-Land, containing" ten acres, more or less, situate about two rillles from Chriftia ia Bridge. No. 7. A Lot of Land, with a commodious Two story Brick Mefluage thereon erefled, 38 feet front and a 8 feet deep, one larcre room of" which has been occupied as a dry goods store for a number of years ; with a cellar under the whole —Alf® a Brick Building of 15 feet by 23 which has been occupied as a granary and fait flore, with a briek kitchen, smoke-house, and other outhoafrs, barn, /tables, carriage-hbufe, &c- This stand :s considered superior for a Merchant to any in the village of Chiilliana Bridge No. 8. The unexpired lease of a Still Iloufe for abbut eight years, within half a'mile cf Christiana Bridge, wiih three dills and a boiler, and every other conveniency for carrying oa the diddling bufinefj.—The house and fituitioft h've been viewed by gentlemen Lancaftrr county, who carry on the said business, and are allowe to be equal to any in the United States. The property contained in No. r, will be fold at public auflion, at the dwelling houfe'of Jona than Foreman on the premises, l*eginning on the 19th day of February next, at ten o clock, and continue from day to day until all is fold. Ao. 1 & 3, at the honfe of Samuel M'Glnugh • lin in the village of St. Georges, on Tuesday the atft of said month, beginning at ten o'clock I on said dsy | No. 4, s , 6, 7 and 8, at the house of William Shannon at Christiana Bridge, on Tuesday the ;6th day of said month, beginning at 10 o'clock on laid day. As it is presumed that no person will ptirchafe the above described property without viewing the bir.e, it is thought unnecefiai v to give a furtner description thereof. That'pm, there fore, contawiedm No. 1 maybe viewed by ap plying to.Mr Anthony Dnfhane on the said pre miles. That part contained In no. ait 3, by applying to Mr. Samuel M'Glaughlin at St. Oeorges. And the part mentioned in no. 4, 5, 6, 7 & 8 by applying to the fubferibers at Chris tiana bridge.—The terms will be made ae ealv as tfce nature of the l ufineft will admit of, and be made known at the times and places of sale, by ELIZABETH MAXWELL, Adm'x jAMi;S COUPEK, ") CAVID NIVIN, i Admin Vs. ROBERT £ AKIN, ) February 6 3Uwt , 9 p *** For the last time, XTOTiCfc is hereby given to all pel tons indek j r ° ro , ;hc J'ftateof Solomon Maxwell, esq. r ' W do not immediately fettle their re fpcd'v. accounts, by coming forward and giving their obligations, er difchargirg the faaie by mak ing payment, must cxp e a to be dealt with as the law (iireils; and all peifons having claims aeainfc laid eltate ate requested to bring them ii;, 1, e ,li T attelted, for fettUm.nt. ILIZABETH MX WELL, adm'x JAMES COUPER, >VID N:VIN, > adminiftratois, ROliERr E.AKIN 3 N. B. AII persons indebted to the lat: firm of Maxwell and Nivin arerequefted tPcome forward ana fettle their refp c aive accounts with the SuS - fcr,her without delay ; those, who have it not in their power to make payment, by giving ih-ir ob ligations, will meet with all the in Julgence the na tare of the c*le will admit of; and they, who do not attend to this last notice, nwy be allured, how ever disagreeable to the fuhferiber, that thef will l>t u>alt with according to law. DAVID NIVIN', furvirjng Partner ol M/tttut & K.vin. A LI. pirf'ons indebted to the Estate of U'hl :am HET:iiAM,lati of the city of Charleflon, and lormcrlyrf tin city, mariner, requeflrd to make paynitnt, and those who ha\e <!i mamU, agai'nff said F.ftate, will please 1 xhib.t them to ROBERT A<W. Philadelphia, Feb. 6,1795 c.i' t
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