i C rve to the Pre tic Us- ret c. in the Cifalplue republic, are Angularly in.uo. |,nr, ~ i i • reur.l the P r gwf. of their army »"» ***-" r "™L al Hate of affairs on the continent. We were well juftifitd in regarding as verV equivocal "the news of the pretended pacification between the German emp.ie and France, to which Prussia and Audna we* total {trailers. A new incident which has been so long talked of that its confidences were forefeen, namely the arrival ot the Ruffian troops on the territories of the Ger man empire, which is now no longer a mat ter of doubt, llnce the French plenipoten tiaries at Ratdadt have made it the ground work of an official complaint, will foori put an end to the waverings and condefcen ions of the deputation of the empire. All the notes which the French miniftersmay addreis to the empire, or 'to the emperor tallcd them to his affidance, will not be able to dop the march of the troops One column of this army has taken the route to Brunn, the capital of Moravia, which indicates that * is de(lined for Upper Suabia ; and another column marches by Bilhta, which confirms what we have feted, that it was intended to protest Bohemia and Francoma, where the Auflrians are the more exposed, hav.ng but few troops in those provinces. Ihe French plenipotentiaries have declared that the entry of any.of the troops on the territory ot the empire (hall be confiJereJ as a declaution War * - . M. . 1 ■ It is eafv to forefee what -will be the im mediate rd'iilt of hostilities to the southern parts of the German empire, viz. for those parts which are not situated behind the line of neutrality. Every part which is within reach of armies will be invaded by them ; whilst, on the other hand, the Austrian armies will force into aftion the countries of Bavaria, Upper Suabia, and Franconia, now occupied by their troops. It is thus that the states of the empire, in de- taching themselves from the political both of which they formed an integral part, haue placed themselves in the situation of - - —. . . ancing ait the miseries of war, without en- —Every stroke that falls upon -i v::. . ioyin" any of the advantages of peace. something to the flock ol dtfnbuuve pft.ce Although the French papers contain the something to the encouragement and cj;;; news of the aimies of Italy and of Rome fort «f virtue. down to a very late period, it does not ap- From what has been prrmiied. it f pear that they have obtained any great fuc- that the public will hear with great compla wfles since the Neapolitan armv was repulsed cency, of the affiiftions, defeats, mert.fka in repeated attacks to dislodge the French tions, and disasters, ot one ot the molt at,; from their pofition near Civita Cartel- minable miscreants that ever polled rh. lana, and since it evacuated Rome. All that pale of a decent community, or funk mi the Paris journals fay about Naples is only utter ignominy and shame an office of hoi. a repetition of the reports before in circula- j and trust. Cacus has been dragged froir. h.- tion of 80,000 Neopolitans being destroyed, - cave; and the red-hot iron of public scorn t 2,000 prisoners taken, besides 99 pieces of ! momently fears his triturated heart t Thoft cannon,&c. kc. accompanied with inveaives ' who fappofe it impossible to make fuchacai againft all crowned head?, and particularly j tiff feel any sense of his own baseness anc against the king of Naples and his general. ' depravity, are thus clearly provtd to be mis But inattentively examining all the French taken. A mere fungous excrescence as he accounts, it appears that on the nth inft. '»• a wart upon the earth, acciirfed of gooc a courier arrived at the Luxembourg from , men and blasted of Heaven, he yet could rift the army of Italy, the contents of whose to eminence (such as it was) and figure in hi! dispatches did not transpire. Another cou- chariot. Had his crimes deposited him in s Her had arrived two days before, who re- ' work-house, or a dungeon, for the remain ported that the French were marching against der of his otherwise venemous life, then, in- Leghorn, to drive the Neapolitans from deed, would he have been an object for'dif thence. It is however probable that they . ferent emotions ; but being ordered other will have previously evacuated tha.t place, wife, it became necessary to call in extrane and have gone to assist in the defence of ous means in aid of the deficiency of public "Naples. i virtue and public justice. I'hefe have nol From the silence of the Direftory in pub- been appealed to in vain. The chamberlaii lid ling the news by the last couriers, it is to has interposed his veto against the repetiti be presumed at least that the progress of the on of the puppct-fhow, and this odiou< French army has been (lopped, until prepa- Punch, retires with a weighty load of re rations were made for forcing the parages be-1 preach, from his riciculqus and contemptible tween Rome and Naples, which it appears; mockery of authority. But his (jeeupation the K, politans are determined to defend, j is not gone ; all we have been able to effedt It consequently follows, that the republican | is, to strip it of its enticing qualities, and tc army occupied at that period nearly a line dull the falfe gloss with which iniidious art extending from one sea to the other; the had varnished it. What remains for us, is. right wing supported at Pefcaraby the Adri- to fee that it (hine no more, alic, the center by Aquila, and the left wing Jamec Alex. Dallas, Esq. Secretary of the by the Mediterranean.on thislide ofTerracina. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, called at my Pifcara is situated at the diflance of twelve office fomc two or three weeks lince. accom 1< agues from the frontier of the Roman state, panied by three persons, two of whom I did at the mouth of the river of the fame name ; not at that time know. The Secretary told tight leagues from the fame frontiers ; and paper which he held ill his hand was mv Terracina is alio in that territory. Such a paper, and if I meant him by the paragraph, pofitiun afforded fuflicieot time for the king quoted in the Bill of Indictment. To the of Naples to receive assistance from the Au- firft question, I had 110 hesitation to reply in ftrans, as well a; support from the Ruffians the affirmative ; to the second, I answered, at Corfu. The body of 30 00 men embark- that I was not author of the paragraph in ed at Venice were probably deflined for his question, and therefore fhou'd not pretend to relief, and the troops in Dalmatia, of whose fay who or what was meant by it. In order operations no intelligence could have been to throw me off my guard, by leading me to yet received, where from proximity of their suppose that I had been completely betrayed, situation to the kingdom of Naples, ftillmore he then rejoined, that he aflced me tins quef capable of forming a junftiofi with the Ne- tion merely for form's fake—that he had with him a witness whose teflimony would The state of affairs in Italy ; the imnoflibi. fufficiently eftabliffi the point. Whatever lity in which the emperor is placed of preferv- amazement this might have excited In my ing the kingdom of Naples and the duchy mind, it did not answer the end proposed. of Tufcanyfrom the itivafion of the French He again, very formally and folemnlv re without taking up arms: the recent move- peated his question, with a labored appeal to ments among his troops; the difficulty which my feelings. I told him, that his appeal he would find in defending himfelf ultimately was thrown away, for that I was callous to against a perfidious and ambitious enemy, any thing that could come from him—my who might be enabled to add to the strength firft answer was repeated. " Tefus God" 1 of France, of Holland, of Belgium, of Ger- exclaimed he, « »nd is a man to be put off' many on this fide of the Rhine, and of in this way" ? I ag a ; n yoi]j « j )o you ' Switzerland, tlie entire and absolute poffeffi- or do you not, by the term Collot u'H-r ---on of Italy, have uniformly appeared to us hois, in this paragraph, mean J. A. Dallas"? fufficient motives to induce the Emperor, On the impudent repetition of this question foor.er or later to recommence hostilities. I fliould mod assuredly have kicked him had The march of the Ruffian troops, a measure he not entered mv house, under the fandtion evidently originating from his own applies- of a gentleman's presence whom I was bound tion, removes every doubt on this head; and to respect ; inllead of this species of refent although the inclemency of the season may merit, so well merited, I again repeated mv perhaps cccafion for fomc time an armistice, answer—that I was not the author of the between the armies of Switzerland and Sua- paragraph, and of course had nothing to fay bia, we can 110 longer entertain any doubts as to its meaning and object that I, there with refpeft to his imperial m3jefly'sdetermi- fore, could not be supposed to mean any nali r j .it prol'ecuting the war. It is even body or any thing : this answer, by consent, to be preltimed, that the firft intelligence was written doftn, in doing which the scribe which we (hall receive, will announce the occupied more than half an hour,—whether commencement of hostilities in Italy. The owing to *he mrv state of hts intellects, or removal of general Joubert's head quarters, to his desire of interlarding fonie quirk or from Milanto Modena, tends to confirm quibble, which might serve his inafter, is not this opinion. It more particularly points out now worth enquiry. The Secretary illu the appre-enfions entertained, left the Au- mined this tedium by continued daffies of ftnans, confining themselves to a£t on the merriment, to the great aniufement of his dcfenfive against ilie formidable barrier of two friends. He damn'd a certain Mr. the Mincoi, ffiould attempt transferee scene Stock by the moll hyperbolical encomiums, of hofiil'.ties to the right bank of the Lower and injured a gentltmart of whom I had a Po. although some time would be nectflary good opinion, by bis praise of hitn as a clever to penetrate tl.at way into the kingdom of fellow and a very modest young men. The Naples, such a dinerficn rcuft, fry retaining half hour haying expired, and the few lines %\ie (Sa3rtte. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 8. COLLOT D'HERBOIS. My readers have no doubt become as tired of this odious and detedable name, at they have long been of the nefarious devices of its mod impudent and mod infamous wearer; but the piftute I have begun, however dif guding, mud be finifhed ; and 1 flatter my felf, that in those shades of it, the mod replete with xlUguft it will not be found the lead ufeful. It is not always ours to work in the delicate and vitid tints of glowing fancy ; the deep sombre of vice mud but too often fliade the fared and mod beautiful pic ture we can»draw. The severe, the often dil regarded voice of public duty, loudly calls on us, at an hour of unexampled depravity, to leave the la(h and the goad, and the Itvhrd crimina for which they are the atonements, to descend, in the mail of truth, with the spear of judice, into the cave ot Cacus, and the fens of Lerna. The time has too long been out of joint—daring villains have too long passed unpuniflied, by means ot that very superiority in daring, which (hould have drawn down weightier ehadifement, while the small fry have been devoured by a venge ance, which, though jud, has been too li mited, and because limited, has been, but im perfectly ufefut. The good old fafliicri oi plucking vice by the bjard, howcv /and however powerful, is once nic ing, and the emblems of its -rev', .J held with rapture, and cherished, 1 < tv;» vnd happy to fay, with gratitu l, : : the conneftionis indiflbluble immor having" been completed by the fcr'be, the Se cretary, with a vast deal of n>il<Jn?£>, delibe ration ami coDipol'ure, uttered the following truly curious declarations, —that he was no chevalier, and of courle Ihculd no.t challenge me out to fingje combat—that he was not a ruffian, and of course Ihould not attempt a boxing march with me, —110, no, he ; fhould take a far different course. He fitould not, indeed, hire bravoes to aflaffinr.te me, but, if ever I publilhed any'perl'onal attack upon him, hs would hire a negro to beat me with a cudgel, and he would (land by to fee that he performed bis work faithfully. He im mediately withdrew himlelf. The following result zvasa matter of course lii the Mayors' Court, Of the Crfr of Philadelphia, April term, 1799. City of Philcideipbia, THE Grand Inquest of the Common wealth of Penfifylvania, inquiring for the city of Philadelphia, upon their oaths and af firmations refptcti vely, do present, that John Ward Fenno, late of the said city, printer, raalicioufly, deceitfully and wickedly con triving and intending', Alexander James Dallas, of the said city, efej. to deprive of his good name, fame and credit, and him the said Alexander James Dallas to bring to the great est hatred, scandal, contempt and infamy with all the citizens of this commonwealth, on the 13th day of March, in the year of our Lord, one thousand ieven hundred and ninety nine, at the. city aforefaid, and with in the jurifdiclion of this court (the laid John having-before that declared, to wit in j the city aforelaid, that by the name, title, i and aefignation of Collet d'Herbois which he the laid John before that time, in a certain ! Newspaper by him printed and published, in M>e said city, called, " Gazette of the Unit it* s and Philadelphia Daily Advci tifcr" : c'aufe.t to be used, printed, and publifh d John meant and intesded the ic"xj::'3.er James Dallas) withforceand did faUeiy, wilfully and malicioUsly 1. ' and caule to be printed and ! i' ■ i .-\ ~. Vt J pjbttfhed in the said Nevvfpaper, called, " Gazette of the United States and Phila delphia, Daily Advertiser," the fullqiving fall", flanderou? and malicious words, to,wit, " We. are informed, that the price" Etc. to •the great fcandaland infamy of the said Alex ander James Dallas, to the evil example of all others in the like cafe offending andagainft the dcucc and dignity of the commonwealth of. Pennsylvania. JARED INGERSQLL. Witnesses. Alexander J. Dallas, Peter Miercken", Jofcph B. M'Kean, Thes. Wignell, Chas. Swift, Not being versed in the doftrine of libels, as the Secretary observed to me, (which, by the bye, as here praclifed, would puzzle Thomas Aquinas, and all the deep doftors of the last three centuries to expound) I can not know who drew up this bill of indi£l- ment ; but that it is admirably done, I may think and fay, though my law knowledge, unlike that of the profound Secretary, be not so wide as a church door nor so deep as a well. Am I to complain of having such intentions as this attributed to me—" con- triving and intending, Alex. J. Dallas, of the-laid city, Esquire, to deprive of his good name, fame, and credit, and himthefai.d,A. J. D. to bring to the greatest hatred, scan dal, contempt and infamy, with all the citi zens of this Commonwealth"? An excep tion might indeed be taken at the term rvitb. ■ Some modern language maker, I believe it is Dr. Webster, tells us that, " along with" is a vulgarism, and that the lame idea, is fully cxpfefTed without the thus redundant word, " along" : ergo "with" means " along with ;" and thus a lenfe is given to this passage, •which, 1 judge will be deemed utterly pre posterous, to fay the least of it. For it is certainly not very equitable, that all the good citizens of this Commonwealth lliould be " deprived of their good name, fanje and credit, and they, the said good citizens of this Commonwealth brought to the greatefl hatred, scandal, contempt and infamy, with [or " along with"] him the said James Alex ander." Behold besides a reductio ad absur dum ! All the good citizens of this com monwealth, along -with the said Alexander, (who, I am authorized to conclude from the peculiarity of the wording, is uot himfelf one of those aforefaid good citizens) being brought to the greatefl hatred, scandal, con tempt and infamy, 1 am at a loss to conceive in whom all these horrid emotions are to be excited towards them the good citizens afore faid. If it is meant, that each man was to hate, scandalize and despise not only himfelf but every other, I deem the whole to be bot tomed on wrong grounds ; for I am well persuaded, he, the said James Alexander, would never have attempted to impede my progrcfs in iuch a work. This being a point, however, of small note, I repeat my gene ral approbation of the compoiition. The " good name" of Dallas has long finee taken its departure from those regions wherein I have ever attempted to soar or to delve ; of course inv endeavors now further to elaborate it, would be in vain. But as it may have entered into the imaginations of some people, that he has adtually sustained a wrong, it is proper to add here some few remarks, which to the generality of those I have any refpeft for might juftlv be deemed fuperfluous. However infamous a man may believe a - nother to be, however low, mean, despica ble and grovelling, and however boldly and openly he may utter these his opinions, it behoves him to be at all times, the more par ticularly therefor guarded, again(l doing him a wrong ; because, out of the very abundance of his evil deeds, grows an abhorrence at that exaggeration, which puffing bounds fufficiently extensive, goes to represent him an inconceivable monster. In whatever I have written or publilhed on the fubjeA in hand, will be found some fair, proper and honorable objedt for pub- IGNORAMUS. he reprobation ; ami bow am ift r iy.it .the j one named cculd fuppole lii;;>kJf alluded to, ( by such a paragraph as that above, it isdii j ficult to account for on any other ground, t than the accidental exittence of a iyntlar fact , with regard to him. Of this I nothing kivow, j and nothing rare. Whether the fa (ft ever j took place with regard- to him or not, or | with regard to any other of his family or I name, I ixver enquired. When Dallas came to mr, I told h i in, that if he supposed himfell' alluded to, the author was his proper ohjeft, if he really was in learch ef reparation for tins real or supposed injury. A fait or a prosecution miy procure a man revenge ; but never yet yielded fatisfaition. The bell reputation is tarnished by too much handling. But re venge, not justice, was the object be had in view—other satires, circumstances a&ually opprobrious, the real grounds of his mortifi cation—this far-fetched, hard-strained appli cation of an extremely remote circumstance, 1 only the stalking-horse to his design. In purfuirig this design, how low, abject, and base do w*e find him ! One Swift, who is either a taylor or a pettifogging attorney, somewhere in the precin£ti of Irilh town, having gained, for a wonder, the ear of a gentleman, by the most inlidious and abom inable deceit and duplicity, fpunged up some expreflion that fell from him, and carried it, good dog ! with additions and distortions, to his matter. Together they go, overjoy ed as two thieves on discovering a rich boo ty. The last dreflrs up a pitiable tale, too weak, and too palpably falle to require refu tation, —weeps, fobs and fig lis—cnveigles | this gentleman, by deceiving him with re gard to his errand, to accompany him on an expedition the abftard objeft of which was, to ensnare a man into acknowledgments to be applied to his injury or if poffiblr to his ruin. Vfus ever fucn baseness, meanness, insolence and folly before displayed ! Here, he displays nothing of the indignant resentment of an injured man—polite to affeftation, pleasant, gay and jocose, he relates with glee an hu morous anecdote, and eulogizes with perfeft nonchalance the comedy of the day. He makes no demand for the author, until after he has acauainted me of his resolution to pro secute me ; and then tells me, that he wilh csto know the author, in order to prosecute him also. Finding, notwithstanding the depth of his craft, and the profound snare he had laid, that I was out of the reach of his subtlety, notbecaufel was too cunning for him, but because I had nothing to conceal, he then closed his proceedings with the threat before related. This couM come only from a coward and afqql;—it is too mean for our indignation—and contempt is the strongest emotion it excites. To that contempt I be queath him—Being already in the full en joyment of it, I can wilh him no added af flidtions to those he endures. I will rather hope, so remarkable an instance of a deep, defigfting and depraved demagogue, over reaching-himfelf by his own folly, may ope rate as a warniiig to deter others from curs ing the country by ilmtlar crimes. On Saturday evening last a detachment of the cavalry of this city arrived in town from the camp near Sellers'*, on the Bethlehem road, 31 miles from Philadelphia, having in custody the noted Fries and John Eberhart, committed by Judge Peters for high treason. Fries was taken on Friday afternoon, about five miles from the camp, by a de tachment of cavalry difpatohed for the pur pose. He was holding a sale at vendue, when the troops approached ; and made no attempt to tfcape until they appeared in fight, when he ran through some fields into a wood, and was taken after a purfuic of near two miles, Eberhart was taken at his own house, by another detachmenj, which left the camp about funfefthe fame evening, and after a very long ride, (between 4.0 and 50 miles) returned to camp before day fa eak, havir.g called at the houses of seve ral of the lufurgents, without finding them at home, they having, moll probably, fled at the approach of the troops. The prisoners weft lodged in the jail of this city. The feveial troops of horse from the city were quartered on Thui)fday night at dif ferent hsufes near the spring-house tavern, and an the next evening pitched their tents near Sellers's. The troops were qn the point of moving further up, on Satnrday at noon, and were to encamp at Quaker Town •nthatevening. They were in high health and spirits—A company of artillery and several companies of infantry were encamped near the cavalry ; forming together a very refpeftable force. Lisut. Williams, of the firft troop of vo lunteer cavalry, and Robert Goodloe Har per, Esquire, are appointsd aids tc the com mander in chief. Judge Peters arrived at head quarters on Saturday morning, at eleven o'clock. Departed this life, on Wednesday the 3d instant, after a short but severe illness, Mrs. Anm Fisher, wife of Doftor J mes Fisher univerfally beloved and universally r«c;ret ed—in her grave lie buried the hopes of her family—the happiness of her Hulband—the affe&ion and admiration ofheracquaintances. Young-, beautiful and virtuous dying under the maltintetefting circutnftances, the heart fißds it difficult to reconcile the inscrutable decree, and finks on viewing the untimely diffoiution. But who (hall dare dispute the jufticeor the wisdom of Heaven? that pow er whoaffli&s. can support—may it flied the balm of confolatiou on the foul of the for rowlul partner, and preserve the infant pledge of their affeftion. A friend whose heart is deeply imprefTed whose tears fall in honor of her memory, and who will never ctafe to cherish the recolleftion of her vir tues, pays to her this small tribute. Kent County, Delaware, Jprii 3d 1799. ; Ore M'MaUr, i >u!cw v !u, .-Mind : . liji« country fiani I-it-laud, eLwiit -3- h>oml-4 ago,- was til's morning, by the v-vilu i <'f twelve independent jur.Cfrsv declared y cf having allaultcd and calknged <V\. , - drew Browr. of tins city, to fight with toU. ■ Baltimore, dpi il $ ■ Arrived yederday, the fclioorer Milfoid, captain Gold, zi days from.Curracoa. Ship Montezuma appeared off Cnrracua the 9th March, after taking a French kttei of marque brig, commanded by eaptaif* Mallet, and fending her down to Jamaica } the prisoners were put on (here at Curiacoa, where captain Murray got a supply of frtfh provisions, &c. being off the island until the 13th March, sent orders 011 shore to the American reffels that were rea< : y, that he would convoy them thro' the paflage. 1 he Milford caor.e put in company with ;he fchoorrer Brothers, Nimrod, axd Little John, of Baltimore ; and brig Jane Maria, of New-York. On the 17th, at three p. m» the Montezuma boarded a l)ani(h barque and Swedifhbrig- On the 18th, fell in with an English sloop of war brig ; sent her boat on board of the Montezuma, bat did not detain her more than half an Rour ; did not board any of the merchantmen. On the 19th, at two P. M. off the island of Soana, fell in with an English si ijjaie, who sent her boat on board of the Montezuma, but did not dinin her n.ore than half an hour. At fix a.' m. our convoy took leave of u.s in l»t. 19, 30, for Jamaica : on the 23-d of March, if. lat 27, long. 72, 34' parted with the fleet. Collector's Office. Philadelphia, April 6, 1799. For/ale at public auSlion, AT the Cuflom Heufc, on Tujday'the 7th May, 1799, the following Merchandize, which remain in the Cuflom Houfn Stores more than ninl: months unclaimed by the owners or co u figneel thereof. RS No. 26 one trunk containing limn, tnuSin and dimity 2 one C2fs contai'hing.pliifh I one boxcont:iai!.ig tapes FIW C&Co. one box music books one liox (cwing ik-.c lies four (.hells of Chinxse cu , large paintings Mrs.Bpulton.ona box indigo lvt one box eontaii.i:<g iho«« and Cut i&uaGilpin one box garden feed's one box containing cotton (lockings shirt», pocket handkerchiefs & {hoes three boxes containing fix hundred and sixty one numbers of Winterbo tham'i general description of Ameri ca <>T one box soap four hhds. *beans one bag coffee two barrels walnuts one barrel peminto one box sugar iaß eight cases guns 9U W M P&C PD I one cases containing a forte piano one bor artificial flower#. dt?M April 8 One Hundred Dollars Reward. RAN away from the Subferiber, onTuefday the fecowd of this inft. April, living in Kent county> Maryland, near CheflerTown, the following di scribed Negroes, viz. William, about 5 feet 5 or 6 inches higk, a yellowith com plexioned fellew, about thirty years of age, formerly the property of do£lor William Mat thews, he has been very much given to running away, and has been so often defcribrd in the public prpers within this twelve months that any fur:her description of him ferras needless. ; Jacob, about 6 feet high, and about 31 years of age, of a common Negroe completion, down, look, his* little finger of his left hand (lands (Iraight, occasioned by the cut of a fiekle. Patt, the wife of said Jacob, about a; years of age, a I'mall light made woman of a yellowish completion, with thick lips for an American of her stature, Ihe is a very good needle Woman, and fpiiu on either froall or great v.heel, and is very handy in any common hot'fe work.—Two children of the said Jacob's and Patt's, the one a male child about four years old, the other a female child about two years old. The above described Negroes took with them, Helides their own wearing apparel, three coats, two of which were linfey cloth of a light grey color, btth new ; one of the two was a great d*al too large for either of the said fellows ; the other coat of brown cloth, half worn; three under jackets, one a velvet, another a drab, the other a light colored linfey cloth do, one new parr of Calf lkin (hces, lined with linnen and bound with leather, one pair of boots retrarkjbly large in the legs, several pairs of ftockircgs and a silver watch, all liolen : thefr own wearing apparel as follows—William had on a light-horle regi mental coat worked with silver twist, (which coat he had when he was brought home to me the firft of February last, a round sailor jacket (blue,) thickset breeches, patched with cordu roy in the stride, with other necessary clothing. Jacob, two linfey cloth coatees, lead colored, one new the other half worn, bice li.fey cloih jacket, half worn, two pairs of linfey cloth trowfers, as a lead colour, the an; new the o ther half worn, tolerable good (hoes and (lock ings. Patt has every day cloathirig, and her children wore home-made linen and linfey, her other cloathing not so well known ;Jit is uncer tain which course thry may take, as William is such an experienced coaster. Any peifon or persons apprehending said ne groes or founding them, so that their mafier may get them again, (hall be entitled to the a bove reward, or in proportion for either of then, that is to fay, 40 dollars for each of the fel'ows, and twenty dollars for the wench and children, and if brought home, all teafonablc B.—All masters of vefiels and ( then, are forbid harboring them at their peril. B. G. April 8, 1799 djw Landing at Pine-Jlreet wharf, From on board the fthooner Hjnaah, captain Barton, from Charlclion, *'««?. . \ RICE 76 halt ditto 3 55 balas cotton, 34 of wliuh are entitled to drawback, April 8 BENSON GEARS Foa sale by Robert C. Latimer.
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