91 Jscto=XJ)fcatre. Mrs. Francis s Benefit. Wednesday evening, April .24, •WfiLL BK PR-ESINTKD, (Not a&ed these fourteen years) A TRAGEDY, called Edward and Eleonora. [Written by the celebrated James Thomson. author of the Seasons.] Edward, Mr Wignell. Earl of Glofter, Mr Warren. Thffald, Mr Downie. Affaflin, Mr Warrell, jun. Selim, (Sultan of Jaffa) Mr Marihall. Officer, Mr Warrell. Eleonora, Mrs Merry." Daraza, Mrs Morris. After tb« Tragedy, (for that night only) will be given a Musical Interlude, called THE CATCH CLUB ; Or, The Sons of Anacreon. With ctiafa&eriftic Scenery, and Decorations. President, Mr Marihall. Mr Darley. ("Mr Fox. Mr Gillingham. / u ) Mr Warrell. Mr Francis. ( Hlrmomcs )Mr Bliffett. Mr Warren. J Cwarrell, jun. Senior Vice President, Mr Bernard. Junior Vice PreGdent, Mr Hardinge. ift.Song, (The Sailor*s return) Mr. 2d. Tht Cofjlutional Glee, (by permifiitfh of the members of the Philadelphia Catch Club) 3d. Comic Song, (Dick Ranter; €r t a Catalogue of Plays and Farces) Mr Bernard. 4tb Glee " Come all Noble Souls'* 1 sth Comic Song. (Father M*Shsrts) Mr Hardinge 6th. Catch-—'Here 1 s a health to all good Lajjes 7th. Bachanalian S«»ng. (Women and IVlne before us) Mr Darley* Bth. T Glee t " Come live "with me and he my love" 9th. Song. (United Volunteere) Mr Fox. loth, Catch-—Old Rose and burn t'o» Bellows. The Songs, Catches, v and Glee, accompanied o» the Grand Piano Forte by Mr. Reinagle. Td which will be added) (not «<fted these fizteoi years) the much admired FARCE, called THE OLD MAID. Glerimont Mr Bernard. Captain Cape, Mr Morris. Mr Harlow, Mr Fox. Footman, Mr Doctor. Mil's Harlow, (the Old Maid) Mra Francis. Mrs Harlow, Mr» Hardinge. , Trifle, _ Mrs Do&or. End of the firft ail of the Fjirce, . A DOUBLE HORNPIPE, by Mr. Francis, and Miss Hardinge, (his pupil.) Tickets to be had of Mrs. Francis, No. 70, North at H. & P. Rice's Book Store, No 15, South Second Street, a, Carr's Music Re pository, No. 36; South Second Street, and at the Office adjoining the Theatre. Philadelphia & Lancaster Turnpike Office. Philadelphia, April 12, 1799. •K ANTED, AN afliveMan, of good charafter, to super intend the Turnpike Rode, he iruftbe well lecommsaded and give fueh feenrity a* may be re quired: for farther infojmati'n apply from the 7th to the lj[th May next at this office. Wm. GO VET 11,I 1 , fecret»ry. thf&f tuM April 2.3 NOTICE. ALL persons having demands on the sub scriber will please to present them for fitt tlement, as he means to leave the city an Thursday next, the 25th instant. R. WILLING. dit •pril »3 NOTICE. ALL persons indebted to JOHN RILEY, of of West-Chester, in Chester county, are requested to make immediate payment,'and those havihg any demands are requested to biing in their accounts to either of the fabferibers. EBENEZER LARGE,") JOHN FRIES, > AlDgnees. JOSEPH CLARK, J Philadelphia, april To be Sold at Private Sale, TWO trails of Land, being the eflate of doctor Samuel Cooper, lately deceased, lying in Talbot county on the Waters of Tuckahoe Creek in the date of Maryland. One of them immediately on tha said creek, is part of a traft called Hampton, and part of another tract called Rich Range, containing about Two Hundred acres; there are on the said plantation a tolerable good dwelling house and kitchen, and some ufrful outhouses, an apple orchard, and a spring of excellent water ; this place, about five or fix miles' from Tuctabee Bridge, and about four milts from Kingßrwn, is bounded in part by lAds now or lately of William Sherwood, and of Hugh Work, in the heart of the fifheries. and conveni ently situated for a person in the trading or vessel 4ine. The other is a jPlantation one or tw* miles difiant from the above, being part of a traiS called Dud ley Choice, ai.d part of a trad called StrazutriJge, containing about two hundred and thirty seven asres—This place well timbered, is bounded in part by the lands now or lately of William Hey ward and thofeof George Wilson—there is a dwelling house thereon, and some other improvements not confidcrable. The payments will be made cafy ta the purchal er. or purckafers, upon feenrity being given in a fatisfadory manner.—For terms apply SAMUEL COATES, 1 Striving E*ecut«rs ai yt/~\ n/r i c n fs~\ nd ro ( Estate of Samuel THOMAS MORRIS, |> c deceafcd) ; n ELLISTON PEROT,) Philadelphia Oi NEEDLE, at King's Creek, in Talbot connty, Maryland. apri! 13 China Goods. yusv :MFonfKD, In tils Ship Dklawarz, from Canton, fwiperial Hyson Skin C x E AS. and ( VeungHyfou J A very han«!fot)iely iflorted Small invoice of Silks ; Alio, China Ware, assorted. For Sale, by WILLIAM SANBOM. ilvr ft prili 16 Delaware Is? Schuylkill Land Office. January 25, 1799. THE Stockholders of the Delaware 63* SchuyK kill Canal Company, are hereby notified and required ten dollars on their refpe&ive (hares on or before the id March next, to the i reafUrer of the Company at their office near the Bank of Pennsylvania. Extrafi from the Minutes, George IVorrall, secretary. Wm. Govett, trsafurer. dlw »prll re Wants Employment, A MIDDLE agecfMan, bred to the Mercan tile business ; speaks and writes the Englifti, German and French language, and has been em ployed as book-keeper in this city for several years past ; on whose capacity, ind'uftry and hones ty may be relied. Please to apply at No .62, north Fifth street, above Arch street. Philadelphia, april 18,1799 ALL pcrfons indebted to the estate of J«hn O'Cooorof Warwick to wnlhip, Bucks coup ty, lately deceased, ore requested to pay the fame to the subscriber, and those who may have any demands again ft said estate, are desired to bring >n their accounts legally proved for payment* to STEPHEN MOYLAN, Executor. daw >ril ta, The fubferibers have on hand, and for fa!e at re duced prices, the following articles, viz. Seventy Pipes London Particular Madeira Wine, the vintage of '96, since when they havt lain is a Bore well adapted to their improvement ; 25 Chests of Voung Hyson Tea ; An Invoice of well-aflprted China—original cod between 8 and 900 dolU-in Canton. march si. THOMAS RrERSON, No. 177, North fide of Mirkefc-ftreet. OFFERS FOR SALE, HIS stock of Ironmongery, Hardware, &c. Oh very moderate terms, —The House and Store may be had with the goods. This stand is unquestionably one of the bed in Philadelphia, in the line it is now occupied, or for the Pry Good bufinefs—Ths House and Stores are spacious, and taken together with the Stable,privilege of a large vacant lot and other accomodations make the whole very eligible and convenient—The stock of goods although not very confiderabls in point of value, is notwithstanding very well aSorted. At the fame place may be had, A pair of excellent, yourg, and well broken Family Horse* ; Besides twelve or fourteen very good, young, fuk ftantial Farm Horses, bred in the Hate ef Tei neffee. April »o diw TO LET,; A Three Story Brick-House, In Spruce-street be-ween Second and Third-flreets, —Enquire at No. 35, Market-street. April ao § Charles Campbell, W ATC H-M AKE R. HAS removed to the Shop formerly occupied by Mr. "John Wood, No, tc. corner of Front and Chelnut-ftreets ; where he will thank fully receive and execute orders with neatneft and dispatch HE KAS COKJTANTIY ON HANJ>, A Neat and lAtge Assortment of Clocks & Watches. WANTED, A JOURNEYMAN : ALSO, one or two*Apprenticcs of'refpeifla ble parent). FOR SALE, A large quantity of Wateh Glafles Whole/ate and Retail. flor 24 JACOB PARKINS, HAVING invented an effe&ual check for de teiling counterfeit Bank Paper, which has received the fan<slion of on* Bank, and the approbation of the undersigned eminent artists, and having obtained a patent, securing to him, and to his afligns, the txclnfive right of the in veution, hereby offers to his fellow citizens the privilege of using it upon terms, to be agreed gd between him and any person difpofcd to avail iiemlelves of a guard againil counterfeits. THE(UnderfigHcd having examined Jacob Ptrkin's new invented method to detail coun terfeit Bank paper, do approve of the plan, it being inpoflible to engrave or fink two plates pe*fe<slly alike, without the original die or hub, the counterfeiter woald find it impossible to make an impression which would perfeilly gage with the check from the original die. ROB'T SCOT, Engraver & Die (inker JAMES SMITHER, Engraver. JAMES AKIN, Engraver. The terms may be known by applying to No. 11, South 3d"street. «03w March 13. Valuable Land* for Sale. ON Tuesday the joth of Anguft next, I lhall expose to public sale, at the town of New- Maiket, in Dorchester county, all that valuable trad or parol of land commonly called the Chop tank Indian Lands, situated on tha south fide and binding on the Choptank river several miles, sup posed to contain about fix thousand acres, to be divided into lots to contain from 100 to 500 acres each: The terms of sale as follow, viz. Put chafers to give*bond immediately after the sale with ap proved fecmrity, condition ed for the paymeat of the purchase money, withintereft from the day of sale, in jfour equal annual inftalnients, agreeably to an adl, entitled, " An a& appointing commis sioners to contradl for and purchase the lands com monly caILM the Choptank Indian Lands in Dor chester county, aad for appropriating the fame to the use of this (late, and to repeal the a& of a (Terri bly therein mentioned;" -palled at November ses sion, 1798. Wm. NfARBORY, Agent for the (late of Maryland. iril 19 A Certificate of one share of Bank Pennsylva nia fteck, No. 7*5, in my name, having been 101 l or mislaid, application is made at the said Batik for renewal of the fame : all persons con cerned are desired to take notice. JOHN VAUGHUN. April 30 N ANKEENS, Hyson, 1 Ilyfon Skin, and > Souchong ) JUST LANDING, From on board the ftip Wooddrop Sims from Canton, and forfait by j C. Fisher, l<o. 13, Atch-lireet. eodtf April IX Not ice. HIGBEE & MILNOR. jawtf »awif NOTICE, dfcw TEAS, The follotvivg Certi jicatrs. of Scrip of the Eight per cent Lutin have been LOST No. iy74 Charles James, iooo Dolls. ditto 400 2791 Andrew James, iooo 3611 ditto 490 2792 Martha Mullen 100 c 3656 ditto 400 3672 Ann Wil|iams, 400 In caf: the fame (hould be offered for sale it i« requefttd that they may be flopped and noiice given to the printer hereof. , a P"I 23. To Printers or Pitblijhers. ONE of the mofl lucrative cftablilhments in the above lines ot buCmd's in the United States, 18 new offered fale on liber.il terms. The eftablifhmeiit consist: of the publication of a very extenlive cfotutiting, commercial News- Paper, in a capital city ; and an office furnilhed with letter fufficient for the execution of ether work. Further ptrticuhrs may be known on appli cation to A. *B. No. 47, north Third-street; but nancy other than principals, or persons fully enabled to make 4 purchale t>f foroe considera ble magnitude will he treated with. April 13 For Edenton, N. G. Jno. Thompson, matter. FKiiIGHT will be taken in reasonably, if of fered before Wednsfday the 15th inft. when file will positively fail. Apply to GIDEON HILL WELLS, April 18. Jjgij The Ship NEPT UNE, laying at Walnut-street wharf, with her tackle and'ap parel as she came from sea ; her burthen is 233 tons. For terms, apply to JOSEPH ANTHONY & Co. 7be. consignees ,of goods on hoard, the. above vessel, ave requested to take out their Per mits so soon as possible, as the ship will be gin discharging to-morrotv morning, april 12. FOR SALE, co c Nnect;cut, «SRrvir— Just arrived from London, About 2 years old, sheathed and coppered about 18 months agp, afrer having made one voyage meafurei 359 (bus, Aippofed will V rr y 5000 bar rels flour, mounted with (6 long double 6-pound ers and two pound carrooades, with ammuni tion and fmal Inarms complete, i« in every refpeA fitted for a voyage to Indian, will require nothing but an additional supply of provisions. It is ex pected ftrewill be tiiffcliarged and ready for deliv ery iq all fipxtiweek ;jst liberal credit will be given, for terms, apply to April a*. At a Court of Common Pitas held at Pittsburgh for the county of Allegheny, the firft Mon day of iV arch,, in the year ef »ur Lord one thoufalid fevcn hundred and ninety nine— Before the Hon. Alexander Addifon, Esq. President, John M'Deweil, John Gibfon, George Thompson and George Wallace, Efqrs. Aflociate Judges as the fanpe court. ON petition of Alexander Sumrall, apri f»ntf in the jail offaid c-»unty,Spraying to be difchargtd according to the provisions of the aft of aflt mbly, made tor the relief of infolrent debtors. The court .*der, that the said prison er be brought before iliem at Vittfburgh, on the fivft Mon(hy of June next, that his petition and his creditors may be then heard—and dire<sl that patice of his application be publilhed in the Gazette United States, and in the Pittsburgh. Gazette, and continue three weeks in each, the Uit of which (hall be at least two weeks before the time of hearing. By the Court, JAMES BRISON, Proth'y. iaw3w&2oM, April 19. JuJl Piibli/hed, And now to be Sold, by ZACHAVIAH POULSON, yus. at his Printing Office, 106," ChesKut-street, Philadelphia ; . Also to6e had at the Philadelphia Library, AND or JOSEPH £3* JAMES CHUKSHANK, Rookie Iters, Market-street, The Hiuory of Pennsylvania, Br ROBERT PROUD, In two a&avo volumes. A new, original, and highly efting; embclliflied with a Portrait of the hsad of William s'enn, and a new Map of Penn sylvania, New-Jerfcy, Maryland, and the . ' State of Delaware, and parts adjacent. IN this publication are exhibited the remarkable rife, happy progress, and extraordinary prospe rity of that province, till near the time of the de clarc'd independency of the United Statei of Ame rica ; effe&ed by such uncommon and pacific meaHS such Angular, just and prudvnt policy, ai appear no where in (he history of nations, to have so gen erally, and fa #xtenfively prevailed, in any other country, to an equal degree of advancement, im portance, and felicity oPth* people, and gene rally to have excited the admiration of all obferr ers, as in the flourifliing and happy state of the province of Pennsylvania :—proper to be known and remembered by all those, who wiUi to be in formed in the extraordinary melioration of' this country, and in tVcmcam of rendering the inhab itants so happy and profpero'is in farmer time; as well as an egregious example lor posterity and fur rounding dates to imitate and improve upon, See." " Hoc opus, hoc iludium, parvi properemu« et anapli; * Si patri;e volumus, si nobis vivere cari " Hon. d3«i In deeds Hk« thefe> let all themfeWes approve', Who seek their proper bliss, arid country's love Note.—The fubferibers for this work are particu larly desired to call, or fend, for their refpe«Stive copies, or todired iheir friqnds, in, or'near Phi ladelphia, to receive the fame for them, at either of the two places firft abovs. mentioned. And all persons, holding fubfcfipt'ioii papers, are earnest ly reqscfled to return the fame, as soon as poffiblc to Z -CHARiAH rOULSON, ju*. aforrfaiH. April 12 jawjw OR STOLEN, To ivit : dtf f3« No. 135, Market-street. 6t dtf PETIiR BLI.OHT. diot rs'• ~T> V I 1 b#ve bl ' en ,n ® particular, fr/m j"'- SDOJttCiiiC /vtrticics* [ great reg?rd I have for the people of t|,\ r'l-i c u • 11 , they are better where they are. VVe h,, [1 he following excellent remarks on the „ flncr c | imate mQrc < p*va,l, B g rage for nngrat.on, are by no \ our foil, f l( ,m Efficient experience " means confined m their application to the k „, ( „ a i . i r c,lc "ce, has cate hrfnre 1 .™ . Ut ' d e l Ual t0 3,1 am P! c rew »rd to the '' ' AtirUSTA A I i mduftrious huffiandman. Our markets are ■ AUGUSTA, April 4. , convenient, and the navigation gßod JUDGE WALTON'sjCHARGE '''i' 3 ', C " mmerce fl T'f ,e ' . is , seen h Y th = TVr -the P 7 tn°i-iey and the high price* of our GRAND JURY of WASHINGTON. ? mducc - so aba n d °n f "ch a state of things, Gcntlelcn of the Grand Jury, ' "5* ZZI'M K W ! U 7 Be b<»™* IN visiting a county in the &urt» of i *il,J »he amn tV- r"f a. 01 which I have been accuiWd top,-elide, I| [ domeftrc mifchief of a reftleft i?el my felt involuntarily reitimded of th'* i t c n • • * r character which has given to it a nam,. A feli ° W C,t, " nS ' th T ere k fore > be «>"• name rendered still more dear by a recent in- ? J e,r ° W ° 1 be S P^n, stance. In the critical and nlLhuHitua- % a T ,7 T tion in which we ha've been placed by the 1 ? theinfelves ; and I will only add, greffion, the violence and Mice of h na- ! ' ' have { a,d > » the refultofdi. tion to which we had been allied, it was '' gent e "l u "7' and of the matured reflec found necessary, on the part of h' General t,Sn ! " S ,£> bafls ' the best 'non government, to resort to the mod vigorous P™* measures of defence. Amon others to "albington court y, March 28, 1799. raise armies ; and the great Walhijigton— the name a hod—has been appointed to, and has accepted the command. Near half a century ago, hav in r saved the remnant of the Britifo army at Braddock's defeat, a preacher of fte Gospel, exclaimed trom the pulpit in Virginia—" Who know* but this young man has been spared and de fined by Providence to be one day the fa nor of hiscountry !" This was the language of inspiration, and of prophecy: so proved by the progress of time, and of events. We all know that he was afterwards, by the voice of three millions of people, called to the command of an army of his countrymen; t nd conduced it, through a great and peri lous revolution, in the midst of difficulties and danger, to complete and final success, without injury or wound. But in my mind, his now contenting again to take the field, upon the present occafisn, at the patriarchal age of near three score years and ten, is the most illuftriousa&ion of his life. Gentlemen.of tpe Grand Jury, Having fotnething to fay to yoti as fellow citizens, I will confine mvfelf to officially laying before you the charges which I have already delivered on this circuit ; and reqiiefl that you will consider them as equally addrefT ed to yourselves. They contain my sense of an innovation upon the department ; the partieular duties of grand juries ; and the general pbjefts of courts » to restore which to their primitive purity, is my sincere de- And now, Gentlemen, a word to you as friends; on that spirit of remove, and for new countries which seems to have taken such hold on the minds of my couutrymen. For many years p .ft has that spirit agita ted men to that degree, as to induce them to leave comfortable homes and establish ments, in this state, and to remove, at great expence, trouble, and inconvenience to their families, to the states of Kentucckee, Ten neflee and the Cumberland settlement, eaeh of them very inconveniently iuuated for trade: but the most sage and judicious of thefc have 1 admit that the up per part ot Tenncffee, below the warm Springs, that i« between the Cumberland mountains, and the main continental base of them, dividing, that state from North-Ca rolina, to be a fine,•healthy country : per haps, it in the Italy of America: but all the valuable land is monopolized,;and not to be obtained. This is very much the cafe in Kentucky ; and experience lias (hewn, that it is not as healthy there as here. With refpedt to the lower part of Tenneflee, or the Cumberland settlement, the lands are rich, and may yet be obtaiaed at a moderate price ; but the country is extre*nely (ickly ; and great number# have already left it on that account. The townlhip, called Smith land, near the mouth of C'tmberland river, which Cox attempted tu crcft and fettle, presented, last fall, tfce most miserable fpeftacl# of distress and sorrow. 1 his I learned, when over the mountains last year, from general report, several letters which I saw, and from the examination of a man who was an eye witn«fs to the scene.—-That of one hundred and forty perfons,'old and young, and of either sex, there were not a lufficient number well enough to attend the dead, the dying, and the sick. And yet, fu-prizing as the thing is, this spirit of of emigration, has lately, in this country, received, frefh vigor. This hat been the eife& of the e(labli(hment of a government, called the Mifiifltppi Territory, east of the river of that name, and north of the Spanish boundary, by the govera ment of the United States. I also admit, that this is the Nile and the Egypt of the new world; there the warmth of the climate, the natural richnrfs of the foil, and the moist depofitions#f the floods, create, it is true, a wonderful fertility: but which af ford, at the fame time, the means of a noxious exhalation ; poifooing the attnof phere; exciting fever, and producing de billity, in the human system; and thusdef troying by flow, but sure degrees, the vital principle. Ido not, therefore, hesitate to hazard the conjecture, that the firft emigra tions to that cuufitry will be sickly, and short lived, and will decrease of their num bers. And although it will fupplied by frefh emigrations, such will continue to be the ftatc of exiQence, and of population, for two or three ages to come; and until (hall grow up there, and be constituted, as it were, by the climate asd the foil, and by the habits of lar defccnts. In ttiefe opinions I feel mylelf founded, by the hiitory of the resembling region of the old world : but fafts have al ready arifeit to jultify ihem in that of the new. During my long mission to the Cherokees iaft year, I bad the belt tneai.s of informa tion. I there learned, that greac numbers of the new emigrants, at the Natchez, had sickened; that some had died ; and that there vras,eonfiderable martality in the army feat to defend the territory. GEORGIA. Ttie State vs- Swilly. The fame vs. Jajjies M'Kenzie. Tl'-t defendants were bound over to ap pear at this term, upon a charge of pafling counterfeit bank notes of the United State.*. Before the grand jury was discharged, the' solicitor-general stated to the court, that he had aouhts of the propriety of proceeding in the (late court; and that those doubts were founded upon a two fold principle. Whether ie was not an offence more pro perly cognizable by the federal jurifdiaiin : and,; 2 dly, the difficulty of ascertaining the counterfeit by any adequate testimony in the poUeffion of the Rate officers: he, therefore prayed the direttion of the court. ' Upon this, co*nfel rose for the deftmj ants, ana urged the exweife of the fhv jurit di&ion ; upon the ground, that tie privilege; of the defendants -was the righl of being tried by their peers ; aud moreover that it was not good policy in the fUt<? Jurifdi&ion to diminith its own, by furrdyftng any „ art of it to that of the, federal. 1 he court said ; this is an ofF.nce against the United States, the legislature of which had enabled laws giving to their tribunals power to punilh : it is, therefore, more pro perly cognizable in them. It is more fo r on account of the mock trial which might take place here, according to the fuggeftioa. Without aHuming the guilt of the defend ants, the crime charged is of the moli hein ous nature : It ftrikei at the root of com merce, of public credit, and of confidence. The charge ought, therefore, to be inquired into, where justice is- most likely to be job tained by the community, as welPas by The individuals. That will- be in the circuit court at Savannah, where juries of their peers will pafa upon ttwin, as well as they would here. As to the policy of the thing, thij court i« governed by law ; and has nothing, to do with the policy of meafurei. It views the general government as the aggregate and su preme power of .the union ; and. pf which • this state is an integral part. It views it as the bulwark, the Itrengtfi, and the fafety, of all the states, and the people thereaf. The officers of the state government* are not only bound by the ccoftitutjon of the union, and of the states, to fipport (he ge neral go»ernme:it : but they have iakeft oath to do so. Supporting confutation and laws of the United States, ji therefore supporting the C'onftitution and laws of this state ; and the harmony of both would bediftwrbed by foftering these jealousies. But, assuming the queltion upon political ground, for a moment, the inference would be the fame, and equally palpable. Our agriculture invites and creaKs commerce'; both produce wealth to the individual, aDd to the slate. Bank paper is & light, porta ble and ufeful representative of the specie depositories of the large cities in the Union. Our ancestors, and o'irfelves, have found it a most convenient medium in trade. To fuffer it to lose its worth, by a want of a due execution of the laws ; would, there fore, be the vrorft of policy. Let the defendants be recognized to ap. pear at the next Circuit court at Savannah, principals in 1006 dollars ; and two securi ties in 500 each And in failure thereof be committed to jail; and the fberiff apply to the commanding officer of the militia for a fufficient guard to carry them before the federal judge of this diftridl. 'Just Landing, Front an board the fghoon'r albert, Joseph .Paul, maflcr, from St. Croix, A Cargo of excellent St. Croix R UM, FOR SALE, Euquire of aaril 21 Patent Ploughs, TO be fold for cash by Jofe.ph Salter at Atfion Richard Wells, Cooper's Ferry—Jonathan Harker, Woodbury—and Jefle Evans, Lumber ton, Tiiofe who hive uled them give them the preference to any other kind, as they lequire less team, break the ground hstter are kept in eider at lefsexpence and are fold at a cheaper rate —the plan is much iimplified and confiftsof lJt but one piece of raft Iron, with the handles and he-am of wood ; they may befixed with wrought lays aud coulters to be put on with screws and taken off at pleasure Patent rights for vending \ri<h inftriiiUons for making them may be had by*pplying to John Newbold, or the ftibfcriber No. tit North Front-ltreet. Who hat for Sale; Or to Lease for a term of fears, A number of valuable tri<sl» of Land, situated for Mills, Iron tVorks or Farms, most ly improved, lying chirfiy in theeoHnty ofHun tingdon Date of PennfyK-anu. Those who may incline to view them will please to apply John Canan efq.near Huntingdon. Ntv/told. ju!y tj 1 JOSEPH SIMS. di*.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers