S>ap's tl)iS SALEM, April j. elections. tliroughouj' the'Gommsnwealth as Ueutea- Sn effort bs been made to fu fee nee of the people , ~ . ex . pertained, he has tw<> thu* ppded his proportion of the w ftilligj*at»iv , made-to produce a A like effort has been ® 4 y° P toU^e; change in the Senate , an oppo sition lift the count) of Ett* n t|unWas appre _ , much m - e h f s C^ ft ; of Messrs." % n L* r HathnrWi Crowninfhieid, Kit- Sris- ES> i" 1 •» t«■ LvTao, Gloucester 5, Dauvers lo F: fidd i) ™SSl»(onf,«ins of MWTrj■ FMI - Choate, March, 1 reaiwell and Mai <h) ,Jj'in thofr town's above 1900 votes. From wtham, and ManchefW, we learn that this H» w« unammoufly lupport- S I" Andover, and some other towns from which we have not heard, it is expeded the division has been greater ; but be that as it may, the votes already known decide the eleftion by a great majority. ' In Marblthead, Heath had 131 votes foi Governor, and Mr. Sumner only 75. 1 c oppolite lifts «f Senators divided the votes in the fame proportion. Captain LeachJlarrived at Beverly, left at Cormina, Jan so, the following Veflels : Brig Eliza, Garltop, Salem, Brothers, Brown, Boston, | rr ;ve<l Goodhope, Neil, Salem, > fafc> Belvidere, F-anki"'t, Phila. I Sch. Barker, STarblehead, J lali-.il by French privateers, and ftnl ta/oi condemnation ; Shin Pacific, Kennedy, from London >ound to Cbarlefton S. C. (hip and cargc ondemncd ; fiiip Sarah, Cooper, of and rom New-York,bound to London, not tri d ; ship Republican. Simfon, of and frorr Saltimore, bound to Falmouth, not tried j >rig Aurora, Goodie, of and from Savan> lah, bsund to London, not tried ; a large Hamburgh (hip, the William, from Bain- j . _ _ nore, bound to Hamburgh, with a valuable RASTADT, lan. 1. :argo, not tried ; Eagle, of New Bedford, The deputation of the empire has com bound to Leghorn, arrived the 22d, nottri- mmcate( j t0 the French miniiters a concla :d. Seven or 8 French privateers lying in the collce ; Te( j ; n the terms reported in thi port of Corunna. . , former Gazette. Since ycfterday it is repor The following persons, who bad been that thc said Plenipotentiaries have; be.ei captured and sent to Corunna, came paflen- j e jj vere j to the Imperial deputation the sol jers with Capt. Leach :-Mr Auguftu, • noU . Willard, supercargo of the Ihip Apollo. IJr. u awe orders from our governmen Sima white and Servant, passengers, a Mr. declare formally, that if the diet of Ra Edward Palmer, 2d Captain, of the (hip t j^ son p erm j ts Ruffian troops to enter th Pacific, Mr. John Logan, matter of tiie (hip j m p er j a j tei ritory, and even if they do no Amelia. j o pp o se efficacioully, the march of the fait A French Pftvateef. \ w ;u b e confldered as a violation of the neu Lat. 27, N. long. 63, W. Captain Leach trality of the empire, and the negociaiion was hoarded by the French privateer L'Ex- a t Rafladt will be difcontimied, which wil pedition a L Egypte, from Guadaloupe, an place the French republic and the empiri a cruize, and plundered of a Pipe of Wine, in the fame fituatidn as before the prelimi They informed that they were waiting for ; naries of He.ibes were concluded. T( some of tbe rich American (hips from Cadiz. : this declaration, arising from the exigent-; Capt. L contrived ta keep up the appea- 0 f circumstance*, we add with pleasure, "th< ranee of being very leaky, which saved him m oll pofuive affu ances of our government from capture. j for the welfare and fatisfatlion of the em Capt. Richard Gardner, in the (hip Ha-j pj re and with truth d lire that such an im zard of 20 guns a"d 60 men, belonging to . portant incident as this, of such confequenci this port, has arrived at Newport in a short | that it might become very fatal to the inte paflage from Alicant; came out with a French j r | o r tranquility 'of Germany, may not de privateer of 1 8 guns, who was kept at a j the almolt accomplifhrd ho;>es of a perfef refpectful diftan :e. by the Hazard, aid a j reconciliation, and of a perpetual peac« be number of other armed Americans in com- tween the two nations. Nobody can be mis pany. Capt G. t few days previous to 1 taken concerning the motives and obje&s o; his arrival, took the crew off the wreck of I the cabinet of Peterlburg, and above all, thc the brig abigail, from Antigua, for New- em pj re j s too well acquainted with the as V'ork, laden with Raisins .and Rum—the fairs of Europe, not to fee, that Rnffia, as Captain was washed overboard in the gale. t er living fomented war fix years without A heavy gale coming on and the brig having taking part in it, should sot pl?ce itfelf fa oil all her fails, and Capt. G. beintJ unable openly in a state of huilility against France, o lupply her, the crew abandoned! her, and ; n order to obllruft the peace of the conti vere " ithmuch difficulty preserved byCapt. i, en t, and with a maniieft intention, to co _,ardner's humane exertions, ver the usurpations which it has long ago meditated. Thus the undersigned do not doubt, that the deputation will consider the nov meats ot the French government, as a lew proof of their pacific designs, and as an ipportunity for the empire to gain new ilaima on the friendfhip of the republic, a ■oidicg at the lame time a difficulty, which night immediately concern the empire. FRANKFORT, March 14. The Governor of this State we are in formed, has lately received a letter from the celebrated Matthew Lyon, in which he ac quaint* it with his intention of removing, in company with one thousand families, from the itate of Vermont to the state of Kentucky. NEW-YORK, April 11. Ext raft of a letter from the Havanna, of a " General Rigaud with fourteen officers of his I'uite, appeared at the Havannah on the ijth March, anil begged of the Spanish hofpitalitv to his officers, in the name of the French Republic, one and ir.divifible, of which he was the commander in chief in St. Domingo." 1 his news was received yesterday from Rhode liland where a veffcl arrived from the Havanna. It was reported there, that Ri gaud was obliged to leave St. Domingo by -Older or by the force of Touffaint L'Over- Uire, who had marched againlt him. Li a Portfniouth Gazette lias appeared a long account certified by the signatures of the American and Danish consuls at Lisbon c l a piracy committed hv the mate and crew ■of the (hip Stafford, captain Bakh, belonging to New-HaniplLlre. On the homeward Voyage from St. ÜbeS, adveri'e winds and damaged rigging induced the captain, from the dread of a long patTaje, to put his crew, much againlt their inclinauor, to Ihort al lowance. Many mCances of disobedience *°°k place among the criW; in cor.feauence e f yhat they deemed ill treatment ; and finally, on the captain's going on board a Danish iliip bound to Oporto, in learch of a fupoly of provillons, the crew would not 1 allow* him to return, and tailed away in fjiite i of his expostulation*. and remonstrances. The I Dall i(h fliip touched at Lifbou, where capt. ' Batch drew up a particular account of his tran faction, in the form of a protest, andde fed t0 the truth of it, before the proper judicature. The names of this mutinous „ew were as follows : Michael Welch, mate; Samuel Huffman, hoatfwain ; John Kelly, Tames Kelly, Peter Snow, Peter Ranway, T o hn Croft, James Davis, John Lewis, John Souvay, and William Douglafs, seamen ; Francis Jasper, cook. We are informed by captain Gardner, of the Hup Hazard, from Gibralter, that Lord Nelson had affuined the command ot the blockade of Cadiz ; and that Lord St. Vin cent was on shore at Gibralter. Captain G. brings no further news of importance —He saluted the town this morning, his vellel carrying 16 guns upon her gunTlcclc, and S upon her quarter* When Ledvard, the celebrated Ameri can traveller, was at Cairo, he wrote to die President of the Royal Society, for the ex prefj purpose of pointing out to him the expediency of Great Britain's taking ' poffeflion of Egypt, in order to prevent its beino- seized upon by foms other European power, which, with the spirit of prophely, he declared he considered as an event that could not fail to take pla<!e ere many years should daps«. After dil'canting upon its ex traordinary advantages of foil and situation, he urged as a particular incentive ta its con quest. t' e exigence in the country f>f near fifty thouLnd free traders, who would join and fapp"rt any power that (hould under take to rid tlem of the opprtfiion and plun der they fuffered from the beys. Le lyard s letter was, by his own desire, communicated to his m jetty's miuifters, but was not at.- tended to They thought it, no doubt, neither moral nor political to attack the J Sublims Porte without any plausible pre- I tence for war—L»n. Pap. • late date. [We have keen at some pains to procure tranflatio .s from our Madrid papeisby the Eliia and Mary, for this diy's publi cation, though to the sth of February their contents have been principally atui cipated. The following articles we find of some importance, particularly the no tification of the French Ministers to the Deputation of the Empire ] [Mer. Adv. LIORNA, Dec. 20, Two Tuscan 1 artats have arrived at this place from Alexandria in 3$ days, the cap- ! tains of which declare that all the French troaps ware in Cairo except 3 or 4000 men, which were in garrison at Alexandria, that two (hips of the line and (even frigates, the remainder of the the convoy, were in the old port. In the Tuscan veffcls arrived 30 Frenchmen, the greater part officers, who were wounded in t*e nxval combat at Abot), kir. '1 he news they bring is to the sth of November, and is very fa«ou;,ble concern ing the Htuation ef the French troops. The Greek inhabitants in Cairo have formed a corps to serve with the Republicans. In Alexandria, there is a corps of Tnrkifh ca valry, which Bou< apate allows to carry the Ottoman colors as the French, they lav aie not at wai with the Grand Seignor, there fore they will cot prevent the colors of the Sultan frsm being hoilted in the port of Alexandria. TOBACCO. •jt Hhds. Virginia and Maryland Tobacco FOR SALE, April 12 • Letters received in town !;\fr»,veniii!", from tiorthniiipton, (bite, that their is little pro bability of the return of the Army, until the latter end of next week. Out of thirteen ■warrants iffuenby Judge Peters, for the ap, preheniion of Rebels, only three had been returned—the persons named in the others, having by the rapidity of their flight, evaded all pursuit. The mfertion of the words " fwom be fore Alexander Tod", after Dr. Duffield's, certificate, was an,error of the press, as it was not in major Jackson s manulcript. Having thus disposed of Dr. Duffield's re mark on his certificate, I fliall add but a very few words of aniir.adverlion on his piece of last evening. Seeing that Algebra is derived from Al gehifta, a bone-setter, or Algiabarat, the restitution of things broken, and conlid'ering | bow much of what is most valuable h'as been \ broken in the present dispute) 1 really sup ! posed that a diagram from that science might have been within the reach o£two Do&ors; but a? I am no more inclined to become the Doftor's mathematical inftrudtor, than lain to become his dancing-niafter, 1 must still refer him to some other person for an eluci dation «f the analogy between his negative certificate in the face of affirmative telli »iony, and the product of a negative quantity in Algebra. H r m. jdekson, April 12- At 7 o'clock last evening the Legiilaturc of this ft.:t; adjourned, sine die—ln the court'e of the kUiou eighty afts were passed. E' quire of the printer. f 3* Xijt <3a3ette. Philadelphia, FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL l» & -.*> The Mavor's Court of this city is held four times in the year.—at the late (l-ffions the Grand Jury made eichty-ninil at turns!!— Larceny Affiuilt asd Battery Burning the Goal Houfe-breakiug Perjury Confpiracj in forgingßank-notes 2 Forgery - 1 Difordfily Houfies - % Tippling Houfci - '4 Pedling;, 6cc. - 1 Afl&ult ana Challenge, &c. 1 Ignoramus Bills - 13 Extraft from a St> Kitts' paper, of March 15, 1799. Basseterre, Mar eh 15, 1799 Arrived this day from a cruize, the Uni ted States Frigates Conft«Uation and Insur gent, commanded by eommodore fruxton and Lieutenant Rogers, and brought iu a ▼ery valuable French Letter-os-Marque fchooiter, called the l'Union, of fix carriage guns and thirty two mill ; her cargo con lilts of dry goods and Irish provisions ; ihe was from St. Thomas ten days, and captur ed under the guns of Guadaloupe yclterday morning. CONFESSION OK GUILT, By H'm. B. Gjl,us, Late a member of congreis Iroin Virginia, in his o\rti words, as publiflieil in the Virginia Gazette at Richmond. " The preceding evening's post had furniil ed the report of the fe(;retary of war, requii ing an augmentation ot the army, and mti mating th.it less than would no ani'wer all the objects' of government—aiu the report of the i'ccretary of the navy re quiring an augmentation ot the navy to 1: seventy.-sour gun proportionable .number of smaller vessels o war—These reports were alio accompaniet with the publication of a plan for a loan o 5,000,00 o dollars-by the fe'eretary of the trea fury conformably to'ati of the last f.-ifion o: congreli—The terms Were#per centum pei annum, and irredeemable ior ten years. These extraordinary proportions, as tai as I could leain, excited the diliipprobatior of all, and the alarm of many, and ofcfurle became the common topic of convention, The following as nearly as i oan recollect, was the substanceof the H'bicL fell' from me Upon that subject. I deplored the infatuated temp«r which appeared to me produce to mealwcs calculated, in my opin ion, to impair or drftroy our eftabliflied po [iticai systems, and Jomeftic happinefs—with jut the probability of producing any good ;n our foreign relations—l conlidered the :xpence, as beyond the ability of the United States, without reducing the people to the Tame pecuniary depressions, and driving the Government to the fame Coercive means oi Collection which now charafteriie every peo ple and government in Lurope. -I remarked that these expensive objefts would deprive the wealthy individual of toe £reat proportion of his revenue and the aboring individual of too great proportion )f the prod Lift of his labor which ought to je expended in his own or his family's com orts; and applied it to less meritorious class >f persons who do not labor—l obfervedthat ince time had ameliorated the despotism ot he feudal fyftcm, the purse instead of the Person of the individual, had become the ob eft of every gov«inient—that it would be "mile to set up%ftinftions refpefting the liffcrent forms of government, if it were to >e admitted ass principle, that the most free, tiould be as much at liberty, as the most def jotic, to thurft its avaricious hands into the jockets of individuals ; and limit its demands ~-lv by their ability to pay ; that individu als without erquiry (hould remain the paf ive fubjcCts of such exsAions—--and not be icrmiucd to use the eor.ititutional correttive. After U fill £ these and other general ob.fer- j vations of ,i limilar Rat are, I remarked, t bat I I always bad. been, and still, was a friend to the Uniaf. yet if the meai'urej propo fcti were to he adapted as permanent sys tems ; I would rather fee a leparation oi the Union upon proper and pacific, arrangements, than be perpetually fubjeA to all the perni cious coniequences, which in m.y opinion would necefttrjly flow from then!-' 1 con sidered disunion as a deplorable event but less deplorable, than a perpetuity of ex pensive armies . perpetuity of expensive navies —perpetuity of excessive debts perpetuity of excessive taxes—r—and all tie 'oppressive consequences resulting therefrom. I explained further by faying that I hoped, those proportions wpuld ne.ver be matured into political systems—That I trusted the coh {iitutional corre&ive would I'oon be applied. That after the people Ihould become apprised of the artifice of exciting and playing off their prejudices in one part of the union, again ft their prejudices in another.—Attei: they rtiall become fatigued with the various delu sions praftifed upon them by interested par tizans ; they will listen to the voice of in tertit ; and in a rey;ulai and couflitulional wav, relieve themfclves from their eppret iions ; if they Ihould unfortunately be fyfte matifed.———This, as iur as I can recolledt, was the general purport of the part I took in the conversation alluded to ; which was fur ther medified and explained by a variety ot incidental circumstances, which it is impossi ble from the very nature ot the cafe to recite minutely ; —But—that although a disunion oi states would bp a dreadful calamity—it would be Ms dreadful th..:i a iyileniatic del votii'iu. No one can doubt the meaning of Mr. Giles when he lays the disunion ol the States would be a lei's dreadful calamity than a iyl teuiatic del'potifm. For ten years the-peo ple of the United States have been preserved in fafetyand profpenty, amid extraordinary difficulty at heme, and amid the convulsions of » irope, by means of a farm of govern ment that has united the people of all the states, and placed their proteftion in the hartda of a nationajjegiflature, and a nation al executive, who have steadily kept ip view the general i'afety and happinel's. X liis state of things, and the l.iws made to produce it, is the ljftem which Mr. Giles has denounced as nioft cilaaiitous, more dreadfully calami tous than a disunion ofthe States. The fyl tem which has prci'erved America from French liberty, equality, and fraternity, is what he calls a dei'potii'm more terrible than the disunion of the States. 27 '9 7 1 If Mr. Giles (hall a& according to'this sen timent, he must from love to his country, exert himfelf in favor of a disunion as a lei s evil than a submission to the laws of the land. The loan is made, the is to be increased by fix (hips of the line, the army is to be in creased, whenever the JFrench fha.ll invade this country, or take measures for doing it, the alien law, feditiun law, stamp law, land tax law, bank law, funding law, all remain in force, and are likely to continue so , until a difuuion of the States. What will be I done by Mr. Giles and thpfe who think with him to effedt a revolution in our government, fliould be the fubjedl of serious reflection in mod of the States, andefp cially in Virginia —will they flop before they pass the bounds of ledition, and enter into the regions of treason ? Will they retire behind the curtain, ind play pfF some of the fecondaiy c'.araftcrs in the field of danger, and ft'.ll continue to roiflead and delude the less informed and more hoiivft part of society ? Will they be able to excite an infurreftion in Virginia, antt thus bring into jeopardy the lives ot some ot' tji.'ir tools, as has happened in Pennsylvania^ . MARRIED]—On Wednesday night last, James Jllexander Count de Tilly, to Mil's Maria Matilda Bingham, by "lie Rev. Dr. Jnnes, rair.ifter of the Univerfsl church in Philadelphia. (Kasette Sparine Htft. Port of Philadelphia. ARHIVKD, Shiu Neptune, Saunders, London Ncriolk* CLIAKtI) Sclir. Yeatman, Longhead, Charleston The (hip Neptune,of Bofton.Capt. Soun ders, arrived heie this morning, after a tall age of one hundred and forty-four days from London,. with a cargo oi hemp &c. S e has been blown off the coalt fiive times, and has encountered above twenty gales ot wind. Spoke no vcflelson the caart. Also arrived, Britilh armed (hip Niger, fix day* from Norfolk —'l his ship was lent into Norfolk some time ago by Commodore N'chalfon, on the fuppofi i©u of her being Ficncb property. Macpherfon's Blues. Battalion Okjjers, April ri, 1799* T HE Blues are firdeved to parade on Situr- X day, the 13th inttant, at the Menage, in comptete uniform, at 4 o'clock, P. M. Bv order of the Commandant, JOHN M'CAHLEY, AHjt. Library Company of Philadelphia. The Annual Ele&ion fOR Direct »r» and a I reafurer of r Company of Philadelphia, will br held at the Library, in Firth fir«t. »n Monday the May next, at three o'clock in th« afternoon, when the Trcafurer will attend to receive the annual Pay A S C there are fe»<r,l (hare, on whi.h fiws are due the owrnrs of them, or their representative., arehereby notified, that .hey w.l> be forfewd. to the laws of the Company, unkft the Jr.artJe paid off on the said Gxth day of May, or within ten days u v order of the Dir<'^ or S BENJAMIN R. MORGAN,Secretary april IS. 3UW ' Volunteer Grenadier:, . . I'l'iLJ.clj t-U,, .if.- THIS corps Ardsred-Co. aflc.i>!»'.< ac r!:v NH-; riag'c, ill Chtfnut <«Mn«rru» v'*' : 4 n'cUjck, P M. in full utiil. rm, witK avu.safid l£- coutrcniei:tiv By cotr.oufid, * D. Murgatrovdi Isi ~ s<erjti- Juji Vubiijhed, • And now to be Sold, by ■ ZACHARIAH PQUL.SON, 'jux. i . at his Printing Office 106, Cbesnut-stnet, P.frihdilfrhia ; Also to be had at tfW.Fhil»4cll hi* Librarf - f ASD OF • - JOSEPH iS JAMES CRUKSHANK, , Booksellers, Market - street, ■ .->■ "The History jof Pcnnfylvania, Br ROBERT PROUD, " In two ©>!&avo volumes'. • •<' * A work entirely new. original, andf highly inter efling; with a. Portrait of the head ot William I'enn, and mew Map of Pen n- fylvania, New-Jcrfey, Maryland, and the State< of Delaware, ar.d parts adjacent. IN this publication arc exhibited the remarkable rife, happy progress, and extraordinary prospe rity of that province, til) in.ax the time of the de * independency of the United States of Anc rica ; effV died by such uncommon and pacific mcatss such fibular, just and prud«nt policy, as appear no where in the hiilory of nations, to have so £cn-' erally, and faextcnfivdy prevailed, in any other country, to an equal degrre ol advancement, im portance, and felicity of th-:. people, and 1* gene rally to have excited the all obie. v ers» as iu the fiouriCbing and date of the province vf Pennjyivania proptl' to be known and remembered by ail the fe, who w>(h to be in formed it) ihe extraordinary . melioration cf this country, and in t!,c marts ol rendering the inhab itants so happy add profpero-is in Former time ; as well as an egnHt'^iUSexample forpofterity and iur roujudii'g states to imitate and improve u[?on, &C. M Hoc opus, hoc ftudium, parvi properemus et ampli,<» Si patriae voluntas, si nobis vlvere cari " Hor In deeds ltke.thefe, Jet all themfelve? approve, Who feck thwir proper biifs, and count) y\ lov*. Note.—'The futferibers for this work are particu- hrly desired to call, or feni, for their rrfrci&ive/ copied, or to direel their friends, in, or ma" Phi ladelphia, to receive the fame for them, at either of ihe two placesfirft.above.mentioned. .ndall persons holding fubfeription papers, are enr-cft ly requeued to return the fame, as foot) as poflible, to Z \CHARIAH POULSON, jun. afpnfaid. April i» aaw6w Mr. MarJkalPs Benefit. ON FRIDAY EVENING, Ah-tl i 2,' Will be pre/ented, a much jdmired COMEDY, THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS. Written by Sir Richard Steele author of the Taller, Guardian, &<\ In a£l 11. a song incidental to ihe Piece, by Mrs End of the Comedy, A New Scotch Pantonii mical Ballet, (c mpoftd by Mr. Byrne,) called HIGHLAND FESTIVITY. To whish will be addedt (for the second and last time this season) a new Mulical Farcft called The Rival Soldiers ; 0r i Sprig? of Laurels. [Written by Mr. O'Keefe/] With the long of Four and Tivtnty Fiddlers all on a liiiU. The Little Midfhipnjaii Miss Arnold Mary Tad Vie Mrs Warreli Tickets to he had of Mr. Marihali, at J. R. Stam», No. to- South Fifth street, near Market i'lreet, at H. & P. Rice's Book-store, No. 16, South Second street, at Carr's Music Repository No. 36, South Secohd street, and at the office adjoining the theatre For Sale, i»|i The 'Ship NEPTUNE, laying at Walnut street jfe—-- wharf, with her tackle and ap parel as she came from sea 5 her burthen is tons. For terms, app'iy to JOSEPH ANTHONY & Co. ALPHA. Toe consignees of goads on board, the above vessel, are requested to take out their Pera mits so soon as possible, as the ship will be gin discharging to-morrow morning. Two Beautiful Country Seats * DAYS. 140 Six miles from Thiladelphia, on the main road neir tile markei placej Gfimaniownj TO BE SOLD AT PUBLIC VENDUE, At the * erchantVCt.ffee-Houle, Philadelphia, oil 'I uefday the 16th day of Apt il,at 7 (.'clock in the evening, if noi previcufly diffiofed of by private filcj No. 1. CONTAINING an elegant ftine tidufe.fin iQied in the modern flvtc, touch adapted for a genteel family, bring two flwries l.igli, having four rooms on a floor, with good gar* rets and arched cellers. together with i range of back buildings eonfiftißfc of a two Rory (tone dwell ng hoafe, and three frame house', well calculated for ltores, with a large i ay house, coach house ar.d liable ; adjoining the front house is a good kitchen and flower garden, with a rcai variety of fiuit trees, and a neatly fin ifhed summer honfe in the centre. Also, iix acres of land, mmeorlefs, in clover adjo : fiing the above, abont two acres of which is a good apole ortharJ, foimefly owned by Mr. Da No. 2, cont-.ining i two (!o y ftonr Lou!?, having two font parlors and two back ro.-ilfe or. the firll floor, five flceping rooms on tht I'e ftoiu- barn, coach house, horfeafldiow flables, an out lioufe for firvanis, a good cider mill snd press, with 15 acres of land, more or less, ad joining the above, great pari of v. tiirh 1- an ex cellent bearing apple orchard, the reft in win ter grain The land is in good order and vry natural for clover. There is 1 confiant ftre.tn of water through both places. The great houfct of both places ire on the main r»ad commanding l>etwixt them about 400 feet front, much calculated for building lots. Thefituatifln is dry, airy and very health) , having remarkably good water near the differ ent buildings Any person delimit*, of viewing the premifss, will plcafe to apply to the propri etor, James Chambers, on tlic pren.ifcs. An indisputable title, and imn ediate poflcflion will be given to the purchaser. The terms will be made known at the time of falc. i CONNTM.V & CO. AudVrs. •jV ■ Warrell. dtjr
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