FHOM sHE ZLnfyox ClulJt There is a tide in tbe affairs of men, Whitby taken at tbe Jlood % leads onto fortune ; Emitted, ail the voyage of their life Is bound in shallows, and in miseries. (Jn vuch a full sea are xtre noip ajleat ; And w§ must take tbs current tub en it serves, Or lost our ventures. Julius Cxfar. THE present moment is certainly fraught with more serious consequences to America than those (lie has experienced at any former period. Heretofore Ihe has made he;- way through a hazardous nonage with the a fti (lance of a valuable few to dire ft her in experience ; but in that flexible state Ihe has I received impreflions and taken bents, which, ] from the peculiarity of her situation, threaten I her with (erious evils. She was intoxicat- I ed with the fumes of poetic liberty, and amid j the irritation of war, intoxication became I fomented almost into delirium. The sober- I ness of enquiry was relinquiflied for the en thufiafmof (peculation, and her philosophers regarded less the fyftenis of duties which the j nature of man renders inseparable from tran quil society, than the delightful pifture of I human excellence and felicity which their fancies had drawn, and which prefenteci to I their minds a view of unlimited gratification, | inexhaustible plenty and undisturbed rcpofe. The vulgar were flattered by the doarine of equality and soon began to rate their own worth and importance by the reputations of eminent men. Their insolence was called independence of spirit; and not a circuni- I i (lance was left unimproved, which had a ten- < dency to realize those wild and extravagant J reveries which nothing but experience can I j coi-reft nor any thing but fuffering can awa- I ken. In her councils however, she had still 1 foire wife men ; and (lie was not without ; faithful and steady guides to conduft her! ( through the glimmerings of her doubtful e I r morning into day, which, while it unveils , the dangers which surround her,"presents alt so the means whereby they are to be avoided. At this moment we are to determine whether v we shall employ those means for our own I f prtftjrv ation, or fuffer avarice, love of ease, I and fall icious hopes to seal out misery. Two I r paths are now evidently open before us ; the I c; one leading into the bloody fields of French I J' turbulence, irreligion, and wretthednefs ; j t] the other, under the auspices of heaven, to I C the temple of order, piety and happiness. P But it is necessary that our choice be now I 'j made. Every moment's procrastination will Itl ■weaken our resolution, and every (lep we take in error must be retraced. We have had our I w season of conviftion, and if we refufe to I b< profit by it, the impression will wear ou t, I P the opportunity will pass by, and those hor-1 ft rid principles which we now have it in our I power to eradicate, will continue their infi- I 11 duous labors till they proffrate every virtue, I and precipitate us into that depth of misfor- I S tune and depravity which is now the objeft I of our dread and abhorence. Already have I we experienced the evil effefts of delay ; fa-1 li! miliar with insult, we have received blow as- I g ter blow till our sense of honor is become I callous, and we even begin to question our 1 n< own right to avenge. Is not this fufficient re to arouse us from our lethargy ? If it is I c ; not, the motive may be strengthened, by ob- I 01 fcrving the progress of French manners ln . I tu amongst us. It is only toparalize the hand f u of government, that frugality and plainness of Ct life are recommended by its enemies, while they themselves.are indulging in every species or of extravagance and debauchery. And who mi Can hope that amid the continual display of alluring wantonnefs and feduftive pleasure that our now honed though unguarded citi- tet zens will long r.-main free from contamina- pfl wa tion ? No one Can harbor such an expeftation. in f The door therefore (houldbe barred to their °f entrance ; anu this h the time to employ ° f , 1 ' mc the expedient. Let us therefore by a firm un and unalterable resolution convince mankind d er that we are ripening into an honest reputa- al! ... „ , . r nio tion, which at all hazards we are determined Frs to defend aud preserve : that our national her chandler is to guard our national rights and °' >f ent honor ; that we mingle with calm prudence vie keen penetration and prompt decision ; and ver that we are not a nation of licentious vision- " 6U ari-j- and patient viftims ; but men who t know how to t fti mate the blessings theyenjov and will r::1c V-very thing to perpetuate them, % St" ' | Xijc <sa3ttte. PHILADELPHIA\ FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARYij. A CHAR G E I To the Grand Juries of tbe County Courts of the Fifth Circuit of tbe State of Penn sylvania, at December Sessions, 1798 : r . I By Alexander Addison, Prcfidcnt of those Courts. IN circumstances of extraordinary danger J or alarm, extraordinary danger mul) be I adopted : for ordinary means are incompe [ar. I ter,t for extraordinary occasions. Though I I may not kill a man, while lam in nodan ainly gerfrom'him ; yet if he be in the aft to kill s to I me > or f' nc l hint breaking into my house in I the night time to rob me, I m;!y put liim to at I death. "1 his refultsfrom law of nade I felf-defence. The sacred right os-property f,the I w '" »ot forbid us, when ahoufe ison fire, to I pull down the adjacent buildings, to save the rin I of the town.—Nor will the right of has I personal liberty restrain the from lich, 1 committing to jail a man who has actually I done no mifchief, if another is justly afraid aten los mifchief being done by him. All these cat- I are extraordinary cases, to which the ordina mid I** , rules of P ro Frty, or of personal liberty I an ] fafety, are not applicable: and the vio ame I lation of those rules, in such cases, is, in true ber- I conftruttion, no violation of them : for they en- Werc never meant t0 be a Pp'ied to such cases, I but only to the ordinary and peaceful (late I of society, and mud yield to the great law of the I felf preservation and common welfare, ■an- I Nations, like individuals, are also bound, I by the law of felf-prefervation, in times of :of danger, to adopt raeafures, which would be heir I altogether unjuftifiable in ordinary times, to ' l h n e 7 ma y destroy art hostile army. If a hostile army be fufFered to march through a °n, neutral country, to attack another nation, sfe. this natiog may also enter that country, and . of oppose its enemy. If fields, gardens, houles, or towns, (helter its enemy from the full wn fo [ ce of they may be deflroyed. If jof it be necessary to weaken the enemy by want, led the c ° rn > ca . ttle > anc l all kinds of provision I may be carried off, and the frontier madr, as lra " " * cre « a desert. Such things are, in times en- of danger, jufhfiable by the law of lelf-de mt I f ence » though in ordinary times they would 1 be unlawful and inhuman. On the fame - an I principles of felf-defence, to prevent a dan- ; va- gerous communication of intelligence, or any < HI I measure unfavorable to its fafety, when a I nit . natlon 1S ' or ls llke, y to be, engaged in war, < it may order any aliens, who may be fufpeded ! ler °t promoting or favoring the deligns of its < ful enem y> to depart out of its territory This 1 may be always, and has been generally done. 1 And, unless where this right is regulated by I al- treaty, this may be done at the discretion of < :d. ™ government under which aliens reside. For every government must b* fofc judge of I '" what is necessary to be done; for its own t vn fafety or advantage, within its op territo- f ft, 7J ' n eVe " With ref P eA t0 their own t lub J e « s > most governments have reserved a * J Tight, without being required to (hew any e Ca -. r' r° Commit t0 dose custody any sub. ' :h I J ct | '"lpefted as dangerous to the peace or ' _ I welfare of community. In England, t ' tins right is reflramedby the writ of Habeas * to Corpus, which gives to every fubjeft i m . C s . priloned an opportunity of requiring the 1 w C „ of h,s commitment, and of obtaining, <1 mall proper cases, his enlargement. Wtten, 0 .11 therefore, the King of Britain's ministers b ke *j n . u necessary, for political reasons, to re' ti ur !" th n P ersonal liberty of any fubieft, t] without (hewing any Cause for it, a .law must * to be obtained from Parliament,'fufpending the ti t, P nvi . S e of writ of Habeas Corpus ? and * r !f ar ' ia ™ ent ma >', whenever it pleases, pass b r " I such a law. r tl ir Conforming to the principles of liberty * 5- '"herited from our ancestors, the privilege " of the -writ of Habeas Corpus is cftablilhed. « ' I as a principle, in the government of this r-J State and of the Union f. And, thorn* n ft Congress or the General Assembly may, re dl fpedively, like the British Parliament, by P< ri W ' this privilege ; yet they cannot, lr a- like the Bnti(h Parliament, pass such law 31 f I whenever they pWafe. For the Federal and tl I atate Conftitutipns have declared, that " thfe ei * piivilege of the writ of Habeas Corpus (hall , r not be fufpencled unless when, in cases of fl lt rebellion or mvafion, the public fafety may si ' require it." So that, in this country, no « citizen can be deprived of his liberty, with S- out an avowed and fufficient cause, unless fi< rs I ln ca f e °f rebellion or invasion, the lettifla- P e d rr 6 tb l' thC - Übl ' C fafety re l uires 't, and fa | suspend the privilege of the writ of Habeas fu rf Corpus. But here the Constitution leaves S ' [e aliens, as in other countries,, to the proteftion w of the general principle of the law of nations, or of the particular provision of treaties 0 made between the United States, and the fh f government whose fubjedls or citizens the St aliens severally are. so C Co'igiefs, in its last session, found the Uni- f '; .. ted States in extraordinary circumstances of _ peril, unequalled since tlieir independence so was solemnly acknowledged. ~ France, hav- « • .ng, w,thout any ref F ct to the principles "o r , ert .y' the law of nations, or the rights as ' f of individuals, plundered the land to the ut U most reach of hergrafp ; extending the fame unprincipled rapacity to the ocean, and plun- be 1 dered ind.fcriminately friends and foes. Of S t: . al! nations and governments none had with so ' more affection regarded the revolution of °u -ranee, none had more afliduoufly cultivated m a ! cr friendflnp, none had more fcrupuloudy all< I observed the rules of neutrality, or consist. the ently with those rules, partially indulged the llja views of France ; than the nation and o- 0 - ant vernment of the United States. And if &'< neutrality, justice, affeftion, and gratitude, the * Vattel. L. of N. P,-cl. sec. ,7, iO . ed' B. 2, sec. 94. pre tU- S. Const, Art. 1, see. }. }\, nn 11 nl Const. Art. 9, U , j U.S. L. iot. 2 L. 241, , =» j colid have exempted any government an nation from injury from France, the natio J and government of the Uq'rted States migh | justly have claimed this exeniption. Bu . what weight has justice with a governmen J without principle, without religion, an. j without an intcreft in the prosperity of tn people over which it is placed ! If the Frenci j government had regarded only the interel | of France, it would have cultivated the as trts feftions of America. But the French eo vernment, like the falfe mother, indiffer : j ent to the life of the child, regarded not th< • interest of the French nation, but the indul gence of its own pride, which, exalted by Cue ce(s, beyond the bounds of moderation ?er (ought to humble all authorities in univerfa be prostration at its feet. She commenced anc pe- profeouted fpoilations of our trade to an ex igh tent that threatened its ruin : and the difma in- effefts are displayed in the bankruptcies ol all. ow merchants, and the langiiiftiine; state ol in our commerce and agriculture. The Ame to rican government patiently and peacefully of fought red re Is by negotiation ; but the pre. rty sumption and rapacity of France rose in pro to portion to the patience and peace of Ameri •he ca ; and, with unexampled insolence, (he of repeatedly drove away our ambalTadors lent >m to claim only an exemption from injury, lly and a payment of just debts ; required us, lid by an ignominious tribute and bribe, todou :fe ble the damage we had fuffered ; and threat la- ened us, if we refufed this, with war and rav ty age oa our coasts, burning of our towns, o- and even diflolution as a nation, ue What could have swelled the insolence of ■y France to this pitch of extravagance ? Had s, we done her an) injury ? She can (hew none, te Was it her great l'uccefs, and mighty power ? of We are at a distance to defy her power. How then dared (he thus to insult and in d, jure ns ? She accounted us a divided people, of split into faftions, among which she had >e zealous partisans. In this-ftate, she knew, s. we could make no resistance. And, while a we remained in this state, she might fafely a perlift in her proud oppreflion : and she did ') lo ' For men, without regard to religion d and justice, will do whatever they can do : s, and nothing but resistance and force will re -11 strain thein from injuring others. France [f had long known and promoted diviflons and -> 'actions among us. And had lent l'pies into n all parts of our country, to procure infonna is- tion of our circumstances and opinions. s 1 hefe travejled through America, under va . rious pretexts, of curiosity, of philosophy, or d of avoiding tyranny or persecution at home, e This Talleyrand, who demanded the bribe . and loan from our ambalTadors, travelled y through America as an emigrant ; and, after i his return to France, was appointed ininifter •, of foreign affairs. From its fpics and other I agents here, the French government received s constant intelligence of the sentiments of s the citizens, and the measures of the go . vernment of America ; and was thus pre ! P ared to promote its own views, and defeat f ours. If ever there was a time in which it was f proper for any government, to order aliens i to depart out of its territory, it was proper . for the American government to do so at , tins time. In other countries, this would i have been done by a proclamation oftheex , ecmive. This was a new cafe under the . American Constitution, and proper for the - interference ,of the legislature. Congress, , therefore, pasTed a law*, the substance of , which in its own words, I (hall here state " It shall be lawful for the President of the : United States, to order all such aliens, as he , shall judge dangerous to the peace and fafety , the United States, or shall have reafona , ble grounds to fufpeft, are concerned in any treasonable or secret machinations against , the government thereof,- to depart out of the • territory of the United States, within such time, as shall be exprefled in such order— Which order shall be served on such alien, by delivering him a copy thereof, er leavinp the lame at his usual abode, and be returned to the office of the secretary of state, by the marshal or other person to whom the lame (hall be dire&ed." But " if any alien so ordered to depart 'hall prove, to the fatisfaftion of the Preli dent, by evidence to be taken before such person as the president (hall direst, that ro injury or danger to the United States will anle, from fuffering him to reside therein, the president may grant a license to filch ali- ' en to remvP wkh.n the United States, for such time as he ft,all judge proper, and & such place as he (hall defjgnate— And the pre hdent may alio require of such alien to enter into bond to the United States,' in fuel, penal , lum as he may direst, with one or more fuf- , fic.ent sureties, to the fatisfadion of the ! person authorised by the president to take the lame, conditioned for the good behaviour of : lurh alien during his residence in the United 1 States, and for not violating his license ; I which license the president may revoke when- < ever he fliall proper. j r , " And if any alien, so ordered to depart, . (hall be found at large within tlie United t States, after the time limited in such order I for his departure, and not having a license i trom the president to reside therein ; or hav- t ing obtained such license, shall not have con- i formed thereto ; every such alien shall, on ( convid.on thereof, be imprisoned for a term i not exceeding three years, and fliall never t after be admitted to become a citizen of the t United States." This law furtherenafts, « That it shall t be lawful for the President of the United 1; states, whenever he may deem it neceflarv ( for the public fafety, to order to be removed e out of the territory thereof, any alien who p may be in prjfon in pnrfuance of this a& • II and to cauffe to be arretted, and sent out of the Un.ted States, such of those aliens as t lha 1 have been ordered to depart therefrom, si and fliall not have obtained a license as afore- ft find, in all cases, where, in the opinion of ti the president, the public fafetv requires a fc ipeedy removal. And if any alien foremo V ! C ed or sent out of the United States by the li, president shall voluntarily return thereto tl unless by permiflion of the president of the in * 2 s tb J u » e ' 1798—5 U. s. L. 1 43 . snd United States ; such alien, on convi&io 1011 thereof, fliall be impriloned as Ion;; .<s, in th ? t W IUOn of the prelklciit, tft. publ.c lafet' 'sut may require." ent But it is provided, « That it Ihall be law »ncl fulfor any alien, who may be ordered to b the removed from the United' States, by virtui ic 1 of this aft, to take with him' fuel! part-o re his goods, chattels, or other property, as hi at- may find convenient ; and all property lef ?°- in the United States by any alien who ma] er * removed, as aforelaid, shall be lubiedt tc the his disposal." "1- One would have thought that "a law ft •ic- realonable in itl'elf, so conformable to the >n, law of nations, and the practice of all go a \ei niTitntS) and, while it is altogether con ' "sent with the constitution, so lieceflary to 'x- the fafety and defence of the United States; ia it it did not-obtain all praise, would, at least, ° iave escaped all censure. Yet this law was ot not only vehemently oppoled in Congreft ; !f" • but ' cv '' n 11 it was paired, has been re y , probated by ignorant, or wicked and fediti. re- j ous men ; and for their vile and felfilh pur - poles has been held up to detection, as un - ; constitutional and tyrannical. In many <- , parts of the Union, it has been used. as a v ' H 3 rT" 1 ' to t n rtame the paffi y, . ons of the people, dilturb the peace of the t j government j ,„d v ' F''° uce fu cb a commotion, as patens an insurrection if not a fepara s, tion from the Union. P It is proper for men in all stations, and >f Peculiarly in my Ration, to endeavor to coun fu . ch mischievous passions and mifera e. ble coufequcnceS. With this view 1 shall ! examine the objedions, which I have obferv n M-lf ? fl i l ' led L affamft this llw > Solemnly i- eftabhfhed by the authority of the United -i States. d 'r.lt is objr&ed to this law, that it is f, contrary to the express words of the Confti le tution. y We perhaps ought not to wonder, that d this obje&ionis made. Added to the want n of ftnfe and knowledge in foine of the ob : jedtors, of modesty in mod of them, and the general disposition, from prejudices excited e and nourished by slander, to believe every d ad\ of administration wrong ; the habit of 0 opposition prepares their mindj to make and i- receive it. for a habit of oppoling every - thing makes dreadful havoc, hot only on the - feelings and confeience, but on the under r (landing itfelf. This objection is made on two grounds, e The firft is, that the Constitution declare* 1 that" the migration or importation of such r persons, as any of the states now existing, r (hall think proper to admit, fliall not be pro r hibited by Congress, prior to the year one 1 thou fund eight hundred and eight ; but a f tax or duty may be inipofed on such impor tation, not exceeding ten dollars for each - perlonf." From this it itinferred, that, as t Congress cannot yet prohibit such migration or importation, they cannot remove the per > sons, who have migrated or been imported ; 5 this, itis said, would be, inefieft, pro hibiting the migration or importation. S It is well known, that the prohibition in 1 view, refpe&ed only slaves. This was uni versally understood, at the time of the pub lication of the Constitution, during its dis cussion, and ever since. All the members of the Convention know this. The speaker of the Hoiife of Representatives of Congress who was a member of the Convention, did, in the argument of this bill, in acommittee of that house, expressly declare this to have been the avowed sense of the Convention, on this clause of the Constitution ; and no man, of any knowledge, of the fubjeft, has ever seriously entertained a doubt of this. The Convention was so averse to the traffic in human beings, that they would not di rettly name slaves, slavery, or the slave trade. The southern members thought their States not yet prepared for the prohibition of this traffic. The other members agreed to give those states twenty years to think of it. In that space, they would probably aholifh the slave-trade themselves ; or, after that, Con gress might do it. In the mean lime, the Convention would not give fljvery.the tanc tioti of being expressly named. Instead of the word staves, the word person's was used ; and, to correspond with this, the word mi gration, and explanatory of this, the word importation, as more properly applicable to slaves, or persons considered, not as aliens, but as property. Or considering this prohibition as refpe&ing only slaves, we find another reason for this construction, in the power reserved to Con gress •' to impose a tax on such importati on while no such power is exprefled as to migration ; and thus for conftrutting those words as meaning a different manner of in troducing slaves. Congress is restrained from prohibiting their importation by sea or their migration by land, into any of the' states ; but may lay a duty on their' firft im portation, not on any fubfeauent migration the duty in that cafe being prefunied to have been pa,d before. While the prejudices or neceitit.es of the states then existing wre ' thus indulged ; the Conventmn confined this indulgence to them, ants did not restrain Congreis from prohibiting the migration or importation of flavxs into any state thereafter to be estabhsbed, but left them to the discre tion of Congress. Whatever reason may be assigned for it, this is certain, that it v/a the plain meaning of the Convention, and has been the uniform conftruftion of the Constitution, that the restraint laid on Con- " grefs by this clause of the Constitution, ap flaves! t0 thepr ° h,bitlon of introducing But supposing this not the true conftruc- Ciwii f this clause of the Constitution, and supposing that congress is thereby restrained a mm prohibiting the migration or importa tion 0 f any a] whatever ;it does not - ft low, asa juftconfequencefrom this, that Congress can make no law to remove such a -1 ens. A rule will not be extended beyond the ftrifl words, ,f this extension will pro mote mifchief ; especially if it endanger the t $ Art. i. sect. g. on fafety of the people, which i? the f u W;, the Uw. I would ask whether this reftrtui,., ■uy fuppoling it to rc-fped aliens -enerallv, mult not be limited to times of peace ; and whe- T" ft 171 govern in extraordinary time* -be of danger, or must then give W ay to the r f" eat ? r t ule °* felf-defence and general wel. of fxvcl Let us try this conftrudion by the he rules of reasoning. It is a rule, that, if an left argument prove tpo much, it is unsound lay Suppose a body of Frenchmen to arrive at to Bolton, who with arms and ammunition which men may carry for thei- own defence' so and tol the people there, that they are her the sons who have migrated, to fettle peaceably >0" ! nthe country. Another body of such aJ >n- igrants, with the fame tale in their mouth ' to at New-York ; another, at Philadelphia ■ s; another, at Norfolk ; and another at Chu * ft, leftpn. Must the state legislatures' 0 f Mas" _as rachuletts, of New-to r k, of Pennfyl vini , 5; of Virginia, and of S. Carolina, be conve' ■e- ned, to order those several bodies of emi ti. grants to depart out of their several states ? ir- Well -j theßofton emigrants march peacet n- biy into Connecticut; and the South Caro iy lina emigrants into North Carplfna ; audio a of the others, till they all meet peaceably in 5- Maryland ; and thea declare, that they are le come, by order of the direftory, to fettle e - and prevail on the President and id Congress, to give the tribute demoded by n, the directory. AH this they may do ; and i- yet, if Congress had proceeded to make a law, to prevent their landing-, or effect their ,d removal', we should be told, that Congress l- cannot prohibit the migration or importation i- of aliens ! I his seems a strange absurdity. 11 And yet the abfdrdity of this cafe is only a [ tere d| it is not removed, by substituting y the cale on which Congress has afted. Spies -,7' a \ a i l ' tim " dangerous ; they are gener y not less, and they are often more dan is gerous, than open enemies ; and those who Z T T oU ' o P'i nions . a "d pfrvert 0.-r duties, are the most dangerous of all enemies. A it power to make such taw is clearly neeeffary, U Uhi&l ? nerUl detfl!CC and welfare of the U "ted States ; the care of which is "pro •J UnitedW W ' th the3 ° Vefnme ' ,t of tlle ry For « the people of the United States, m of order to form a more perfecl union ins ,d dome (tic tranquility, provide for the com ■y mondetence, promote the general welfare, ,e and feet,re the blessings of liberty to them r. (elves and their posterity* eftablilhed a Lonftitution, by which objefts of gem r,l concern to the nation are properly submitted >, to the management of the General Govern h menu And tjiis government is txprefsly r, bound to " guaranty to every state in the >. Union a republican form, of government, e and to protest each of them against invafioe a and domestic violence! and has " power to make all laws which lhall be neeeffary and h I projxr for carrying into execution all the is poi».rs veiled by the Constitution in the go n vernment cf the United States, or any de -- partment x>r office thereof J." The rcftraint ; or expullion of aliens, in times of war or i- danger, has, by almost all nations, been cor. fidered as a necessary measure of protection n and (elf-defence : and, from the nature of - the cale, the law of nations, and the grner i- al conftitutioiial authority of the govern. - ment, I cannot permit myfelfctc doubt, that s a power to rcftrain or expel them neccffarily r exists in the government of the United s States, as in every government charged with , the general welfare, the common defence, ; and protection against invaliort and domestic violence. If this be a necessary and proper , mean of accomplishing any objett, with ) which the government of the United States s is charged ; the power of exerting it is clear* :. ly vested in that government. The difficul c ty of obtaining the universal consent of the . individual states to any measure, however fa . lutary, was fufficiently experienced, as the s great evil to be remedied by the Conftitu s t«on. And a conftruftion of the Confiitu ? tion, were it admissible, will not be favor i ed, which would leave the general defence of ; the nation at hazard, on the capri»e of a fin.- . gle state. ; * U. S. Const. Pream. i t Const. Art. 4 . sect. 4. ; } Const. Art. 1. sect. 8. 1 CConcluded in our next.) ) Jujl Received, By the ftips Juno, Walters, and Four Friend», Hubbcr. from Hambjre, JND FOR SALE, , . . THK SuESCRIEKHS, 460 pieces 6-4 quadruples filefias iS do. 84 do. 139 do. creasa la Morlaht 34 do. 9 8 coutils 3 do. 4.4 (J O , 44 do. 6-4 guinea* do. Ruflia fail-duck 10 pipes Ricarlo wine 25 Fr«nch brandy 80 do. claret 100 cases, at 4 doz. bottles each "> claret of fuper do. at 1 do. do. do.| ior quality. Also on Hand, 11 bales ticklenburgs. at aj to »8 tents pr. ell 11 do. W i.fer linnen, at 16 to ao cents pr. yard I box paterbornes 5 boxes hollow glass ware 5 caflc6tlulTja briftlet (firft qualify) Rrtck iff Lewis Bollmann, , , no - 100, Spruce flrett fcb. 13 j To be Let, A genteel, convenient three story BRICK HOUSE, , £pruci Stkezt, (no. 64) . THIS houfehas been newly papered and painted, and was not occupied during last fever. IJ - djt as. eo tf. Printing Work, Of Every Kind, EXECUTED AT. THE SHORTEST NOTICE. At the Office 0/ the Gazittf cf tht Unitkd States,
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