I A> t!if Tv- ■%- ' that tt'.f -Ch KofOfc '* lticli had petie. rd into t%at to Jntry hoi! been obliged to iclhV it completely ; and that General * ft, * ' k jr.«rA\o*» antrj as well as a great part of- I't. fvlottr'i, had repaired the Rhine, hav- > ,n;; '.-ft a garrison i« Manhcim and in the 1 worU of Kehl, but had abandoned the ' hl.-c'ksde of Philipfturg. The Auftrians have advanced to Friburg and I anJ haw fummorted Kehl to surrender. Ad- . vices from Raftadt of the Sth April mention that Gen. Zftaray had gained a very confid irra'ile advantage over the French Gen. St. Cyr, as the latter was retreating from Freu denftadt to OfTenburg, on his way to Kehl ; and that the French had loft a considerable of artilleiy. Extract of a letter /rem Paris, April 9. " Yesterday evening we learnt Gen. Jour dan' had arrived in this capital, returned . frrm his ennpaign on the Danube.- We leafnt fcefides, not only that he had been re-, called from his command,' but that the must Snifter report's were circulated refpedting the .•native* of his rccul, t!ie loss of the army, audits retreat to GenJeii'JitA and Offcnbuigj ir even to Strafburg'h. Advantage was token likiwife, to increase ft* anxious curi- I oJity of the public, of an order of the Min ifWr of War, publifhcd ycftcrday irj Paris, ■which enjoins every confeript, requifitiona vy, and other Military Men, absent from Vs Corps, " to depart within 24 hours for his post, under pain of being arreted andpn nifhedas a Dcferter !!—Although this Order bi only the Ccnifecjuence of the existing Laws, and a mean* of carrying "hem into execution, malevolence will not let this opportunity ef «ape, of circulating the report, that a new Requisition is about to be raised, on account of the dangers of the Common wealth.-We are anxious to destroy this falfe report, by observing, that the Government confines it fclf to pressing the departure of those for th« army who ought, long ago, to have been there, and have no legal exemptions. At the fame time, in order to convey »n exaft idea of the state of affairs, Government has puMifhed, officially, the following intelli. gertce from the army of the Danube, h«w re* 1 turning towards the' Rhine : " The Commander in Chief Jourdan, 4k*v;n£ been compelled by (ieknefs, set of?for Strafburg, on the fame day (jd of AprH) .on ■which the attack was to be made oivthcene my. He had before requeued permiflion to come to Paris, and had proposed Generals St. Cyr, or Ferino, to command in- his ab fmbe-—The Executive Directory have ap pointed Gen. MatTena, to take, ad interim, the command of the armies ; but previously to his arrival. Gen. Jourdan had. on setting fift, entriilled the command to Gen. JLrnouf who, having been attacked in his advanced polls, ordered the retreat across the Rhine." BOSTON, June 6. Yefterd-'y the schooner Minerva, Capt. Pepper, arrived here from Amsterdam, in 43 days. Dutch papers to the latter end of April, we underlland, are received by this arrival ; but we have not been able to obtain any of so late a date. From those we have received, we find nothing more rrf pefting the operations of the cot-flifting armies, than what we have by the way of Portland. The account, piiblifhed under the Lon don heid as extracted from a Newcastle pa per. of a rising i n Ho;land, and the cenfe quent maflacre o* the French troops, we belie»e, wats confirmation, as ro such ac count, as far as we can learn, has been recei ved by Capt. Pepper. On Thursday Capt. Talbot took com mard of the (. on ft it 111 ion frigate : to which lie was introduced by Capt. Nicholfon. The Merrimack,of 24guns, Capt. Brown, jetlerday failed or a cruise. Extrafi r\f a IrKer from Rotterdam, to arefpec ( gentleman b er «, dated April »8 " The French hive been severely beaten in « Z'V*' " Gfri *>i«y. The Emperrr of KulT.a has laid Ml embargo up»n «'l the veflel* of Hamburgh in bit dominions, and his nude » I'MTund «n that city of are informed that he w-.1l b e hro't ' . t ire the Court this day to plead to hie In eiiiftmrnt. T"hev trll Us, La Fayette is coming tt> coax and wheedle i:s. This i« far different from what many prnphc Hed of ihe news of Truxton's c *r" ,n f of the Inl'urgfnt. War they foretold t-nfue. Slight of hand is he'.ter to theft conjurors than main fl.ength. The Dirrflory lend armies ; but 'hey can loud La • 1^' )C ' 3 m " n enough to tome on foch a r,c ' 1 err«nl>ut is warning loft on our cont.-t.rrun , artJ f |i C y Ajch jjudgeom as to bitif " e hopk wftn it ii not even lo rmich art aitcd ? Ho, peopft 're not £utfg< t in : jrJ we liii, c ilit poverr.mcntis notinfwcli a rape to r*e». rrait even the appea rance of a V.vrcii imftion «t a time, when t deceive i» at) that France wants ; torefift hy arm? i« all that we «-a t The French Sinon wrote i !jie»k?r,g 'etter-to Buonaparte ; that looks a« if he valued reputation too little, and employ ment by the five iifurpert, a great deal too much. If lie rdmes here on their vile errand, he will get rid of the taft rag of ihirjilcr he ha« left. PORTLAND.JuHe 3 Arrived vefterday, the (hip Cornelia, Capt. Benjarrian Prince, 30 days from Liv erpool. jlcft there fliip Frankltn, Tucker, to fail in 30 days, and fch. Eon ce, Thralh er, do. for this port. The ship Hiram, Whitney, the brig Atlantic of "ortfmouth, fchr. Eiia, Noble, all for Boston, and (hip Artthufa, for Philadelphia, failed 14 days beforec 1 capt. P. Ship Commerce, of Bos toll capt Wm. M'Neil Watts, ar.d fliipCalle donia, ofNew York, failed 10 days before capt. P. In lat. 48, N. long, 41, W. spoke (hip—, of Portsmouth, from Charleston, S. C. bound to Hamburg, out 21 days, all well. The American convey failed from Cork, the >Oth of April. ! Capt. Prince performed hi* voyage, out and home, in 98 days. PROVIDENCE, June 5. On Saturday moinin* last failed from Newport harbour, United States frigate General Greene, commanded by Christopher It* Perry, Esq. mounting' twenty-four 12, ape eight 6pound camion. . Captain Perry is appointed eommodote on the Havanna Rati on. It is pleafani to observe, th;it from ap pearances, there is,every probability of her proving a fall faiW, as (lie soon n;iflcd, un der her toplalls, every vefTcl in li^ht. NEW-YORK. June 10. The following Fxtrnß from Cayenne, vMt sent 14 ' ty a gentleman of this city, for pub- lication Extrad of a Letter, d^ted Cayenne -pr'il 16, 'O9. ' About three month, firice, some mono polars had it rumoured here, that the Brit ish had taken the Dutch set lemcnf'of Suri nam ; and on the frivolc us pretence that they would certainly carry off from Sinnamary the only two remaining members of the French Ltgiflature, these .were ordered immediately to Cayenne, 75 milts distant from Sinnamary; and though in a molt de plorable condition, after a fix months fickr Hefs, they were f reed to perform the jour ney on foot, hurried on by five armed, men. —They crawled through deep lands, expos ed either to the intense heat of the tropical fun, or heavy rains; after two months of painful alternative between flow convaleiceri cy, and, relapse into f>ang|r.ous crisis, they fecmed at last to bd in a fair way of recove ry ; when dreading their being sent back to such ati unwhplefome place as Sinnamary, they pre fentcd a petition to: the agent of the f)irfe;d to the surge. When they landed at Sinnamary, Marbois was sb ill that his life was delpaired of. The cause of their druel treatment is no other, than their having ended their petition by these words—" Nous avojns I'honneur dt vous faluer ;" in (lead of" Sa/ui and Rtf ptS »•" and because they had mentioned their detention. Marbois was in hopes at lead to find at Sinnamary, th* peace and reft enjoyed in the grave:. But a few days ago, some aimed men and a ferjeaot with djpawn swords, came to his house, and carried off all his papers of every fort, without his be irg able to obtain either an inventory of them, or their laeing put under seal. No doubt the diftrainere have been disappointed; for nothing can be found to hurt Marbois, j who devotes his whole time, now, as he eter j did, to study." LATEST FROM FRANCE. Extract of a Utter from Capt. David Travift, of the Jhip Motilda, dated St. Sebnfliant, April 24, to a gentleman in th'u cit«. " I »m informed by a gentleman from Bourdtaiisc, that the French army- on the Rhine, has loft 3P,0c0 men—and that their head general had quit the army." Our harbcur tva» yefterdayfilled with vef tela from foreign porta. Article* by them follow.. Capt Rouse failed from Cadiz March 29. On the 30th off Cape St. Vincent, wan struck with lightening, which killed Moses K oger». of Newburyport, Patrick Munyon, an Irishman. and an hog; the former were on the foretopgallant yard, fell.overboard and were not seen afterwards. Sajne time fprurg the head of the mainmafl—put back to Cadiz, refitted, and failed again April 10. —Paflehgers, Fr. Diego de Santa Maria, coast of Terra Firma, S; America—a Jcfuit from Italy, going to the Province of Popi an, S. America—and several Spanish King't Officers, some of whom are going to super intend the mint in S. America. Saturday Ia ft at half pa ft 12, the Urv'ted States frigate Adams who Was launched from Mr. J;>ckf«n's Navy Yard, at the Walla boght, Long-Island. Slie looks extremely beautiful upon the water. The Governor i *v Cutter hawtrd round.from the North liver,and fired a Federal Salute.' She is one of the handftuntft raoddelled v;ffel* in the Unit*d States, and will, it U supposed by judges, beap ontcnimonly fall failpr. Tf)r oasette. PHILADELFH I' 4 . TUESDAY EVENING, JUX£ r 11. An Express from New-York brings the Jift.;rreahlc information of the lots of the Ontario, of and for at the Cape, of Good-Hope, from Canton—No jiarticu ' irs are received—She is heavily .flfyttd in this City. THE Philosophy of Frencbmefl is at length put to the tefl ; and the genius ct turbulence ana mifrole gives ground before the flndy ftfps of the faithful. In a little time thtre Hull be no longer seen 11 captive Good attending captain III," nor Harlequins and Hostlers defiling authority to render it hateful in the I"i.';ht of men. Ihe years of the " Age of Reason" are numbered—the funHiing is about to be put to the last of it-, work it is the last page only that re mains to be inferibed, and the volume is soon to be closed forever. 1 hat fortitude and that coriftaixy which have enabled their possessors to shape acourfe of primitive (im plicit}' amklflthe tumultuous fluctuat'ons of a vast oceifn of abfurditv and depravity, will shine through the Lift age of .the fhaterHyf tcm of creation, -with a lustre whiah no for tune-can change, nb convdjfwc obftare. Heavy and difaf'irotis a? have been the chances allotted to.us it) this tremendous coftimotion, ignominious as have been the huiniliatioiis to which we have popped, there arc yet ioine prtxiou? moiTients of reftoratten)e£c us, dur ing which toenreg r . r't • the uufubl's tablet of time, or.r'tv/e aga :.£t'thc jaiiirnd revo lution and the infernal rfrpitffl'ic ®i "France. Jl'hc fiii.-i of- that K.-.p.bhc is at hand, .and the phial t wrath h pouring oufri-SSis the seventh phial. Thrfuflian tr!be cf per vt rie poets and falfe orators, the, pregnant lilt of venal patriots and brutal heroes,■ the bla'fted feds of philosophers and legill.itors, are allotted time only of time's help to despair their forms'of fautaftic and out rageous tyranny, where' private profpenty takes place of public, where evtii mobs themselves are invefte'd with regalia, and vice is nrade " a national and popular chara&e riftic," are soon to exist only in the haunted imaginations of their votaries. It only re mains for us to join the general voice of man kind, by declaring our dilTent also from prin ciples tending to the subversion of the earth —the minions of France amongst us are then re pre fie din a breath, and the cloud of our miseries will vanifli before the fun of joy- .We have heard it oftentimes frid, with much pomposity, that " Buonaparte keeps hik ground in Egypt." It would now seem that his ground is likely to keep htm. The valiant Sthercr, who obtained such signal victories in Italy, retires it feeius from the command of hi* victorious (Yoopi, »leng With the coupe lifte Jowrdan, into the midst of the Parifian 1 den. So unprecedented a step as the resignation of two leading Gen erals, is indicative of something more than ordinary. Perhaps these heroes' wifely cal culate, that when danger is toward, it is better jo be in chimney corners, than at the head of armies. The old Tories' Governor is getting his name up abroad : In a neat-satire published in Vermont, (which a gentleman has done me the honor to enclose to me) and metrified after the manner of Sternhold and Hopkins, I find this danza touching the man of (in : " Bus wicltsd folk* at helm, I ween, Bade pious Moles budge, though feditiou* as M'Kcan, They would not niakt him Judge." There is more of fixed and deliberate pur pose to do evil, and left of niifappr;ben!iim anderrorin tWe world, than is currently be lieved ; and when 1 hear a man aiugning crimes of the mod: hideous nature, to delu sion t I consider the integrity of bis princi ples to be violently suspicious, J ■■ It has bceii remarked of Frenchman., that their attachment to country is less ealily o verc#mc than that of mo ft other people : The ingenious Editor of the Wrgenries Ga zette, fatisfaftorily aacounts for it, by attri buting the predominance of this passion, in the breaf! of a Frenchman, to the contempt in which he is ever)- where elie held. IT is a melancholy, but undoubted fa&, that no nation has ever become great or powerful, which neglected to cultivate, toe military art. A nation may indeed, grow rich and remain so fur a time, without war, but no nation can long preserve its riches, without engaging in wars, and evincing by its courage, that it can defend with its blood,- what it has known bom to acquire by its en terprise and industry. The United States canrtot exped to be permitted, by a special disposition of Pro vidence to accumulate wealth and enjoy liber ty, without giving the usual proofs that they are a people who deserve the one, and can defendloth. Let our citicens'refleft up on their happy situation, and what appears to be the order of things in the affairs of nations, and be always prepared to engage in war, and finish it successfully. The mil itary art, like all other arts, is only v \e preserved by pra&ice. It may be loft by diiufein the United States, as it has been in other countries, and such loss, dram: after it the same consequences. Vegetius complain ed, " that the idleness of a long peace, had abolirtird the praftice of the military ejccr cifes, and that no one could be found in his time*, who could teach the art of war, or the.military principles of the old Romans." Loans end taxes may be complained of, by the factious and discontented politician, an'l the army and navy, considered as rendering thrm necessary ; let it however be remciYi • The reign of Valcntinian the Second. bercd by the ivell. n>eaniii S ajxl.(•>••&>!« i-alc part of the community, that without a well tl'uciblinid army and a navy, we ihouiu in a little time have neither army, navy, loans, taxes, riches, liberty, or govefT.ineti'. The great .effort of tlie Faction, both in and aui of Contjrefs, has been dirc&ed a gain ft the army and navy. Keep theie down, has been t lie-cry, from Gallatin in Congress, to Djwne in the dram /hop. Why all this 'Wife again# the army ami navy ? Is it not evident, that had the country remained with out either, France -would have made no ad vances to a negotiation, and equally certain, that our befl negotiators will be our army and navy ? Away with the army andnaty therefore is echoed by. the faftion, and the. factious newspapers, firom Bofion to Ken tucky. Was it before or since the commence ment of our preparations for defence, that France lowered her tofte of instlenie, and menace, to the United States, and ftjctfedt some slender symptoms of returning recel leftion ? Will any one, hat a jacobin, on account of the expence, recommend', that we intermit these preparations. Taxes and Loans may be represented as evils—be tills as it ftiny, it mil ft fcc acKnpwl edged, that they are infinitely iejs expensive and more pleasant to bear than a French Di rectory, in the United and the to tal loss of national honor. Armies and Navies are expensive things, but what country can long maintain its rights, Commerce,: and independence with out them •?' For tlie &AziTTF. of theUiJtTEl) Statbs. MB. hESNO. A Friend alked me, whither it ivas pos~ stile for-a person v>bt> approved of the con duct of the French government, and toisbed ibem suctcss in their undertakings, to be a good christian ? • I told him, that howfver painful it was to answer the question in-the negative, I thought inyfelf in duty bound to declare, that I believed he could not ; inafrouch as it was a government founded ifi Deism, or a diftulief of all revelation—the rulers and philosophers of that nation, di'fc«rded the re ligion, we were taught from scripture to venerate—in no one act of their public pro ceedings or detail of events, did we hear them acknowledge the jxiftence of a divine being, or the fuperintendar.ee of his provi dence. They had long since changed the original groundupon which they set out, and were purfuinga system of plunder, devaita tion, blood (hed, and universal dominion.— Hence the man who professed christianity, and was a well-wisher to such do£lrines and praiflice, rmifl at least be considered as acting very inconfillentlyffif not participating in the crimes above mention'd. In a word,. Jtjr. Ferrno, the rage is so great among our jacobin christians, in fa vour of the French nation, t+iat they even endeavor to explain the ancient prophecies in such manner as to prove that eveiy thing it has done, and is doing, is' warranted by scripture. One of them faida few daysfince " that no facrifice was too great to accom plifti the overthrow of all the governments in the world, that were not after the French model." I admire our form of government, and be lieve it' the mod suitable for the American people,, becaule the people arefuitedfor the government ; but I diffef very much in opinion with many of the Democrats, btfth in France and America w,ho teem to think that the people of every country are capable of maintaining the republican form. Thev are for cobbling up governments on their own model, without cpnlkleving whether or not, the people are fit for them. There is fbmethirig in habit, and much in knowledge, virtue, and modes of education. One truth these men seem to have 101 l light of altoge ther, that religion i,s the befl bond of loci ety ! ak 4Jue/i/caX. IT is, at all times, a very definable ; thing that the people ihculd be \vell acquaint- . ed with the political, as well as moral char acter of thole to whom they mean to confide the direftion of their public concerns. And ' perhaps, at no period whktever, was this en quiry more particularly neceflary than at the pref'ent, when the people are called upon to 'decide on the fitnels of one of two char afters offered as candidates to fill the execu tive chair. The perlbn to he elected tp fill this high and important flatten, ought not only to be a firm republican in principl., but also, as a pledge of security to the pt.ople, to have a jurt claim to confiflency in political conduct. He ought not to be guided by the whim or caprice of popular prejudice, or pc pillar clamor, which are too generally excit ed, by dcfigning men, for party purposes s nor change from fide to hde as may appear mod likely to promote his private views, but (hould pursue a line of conduit bottom ed on well digelted principles, and uninflu enced by party spirit, or private advantage. Hot* far chief juflice M'Kean is a republi can in 'principle, and what claim he may have on the confidence of those who now support him, on the ground of consistency, appears by the minntes as the convention, which formed' ou v date constitution. In that Convention he moved that our date len» ators (beuld be chosen by a number of elec* tor? equal to twice the number of represen tatives, inltead of the people at large. In that convention he seconded a motion for 'fuhftituting six years (the term for which a fenatcr fliould be choien) in lieu of- four. , And in that convention he alio moved that' no person (liould be a senator unltfs he ILould he seized, in fee simple, at the time of his ckftioncf five hundJ-eJ acre» of land within this commonwealth, of poflefied of real or personal edate to the value five hundred pounds. In all these motions he had but very few supporters, and among these there is not one who would uow support him. It is wetl that reaventiu:i pincipl(;«:ww.|ie.iii •fohi.ly ,»nc! Eofed by tlic vc.ry fame' in'teruft wtiifeli i\6v ring's fiim fortpardfor gcveror. . .Why tjiir: tins ex,triqrdinavy change of fenUrocnt. am.! union of interei'i, in pcrions/wito advocate:', principles so diwwtriially opposite ! WheX wall we loofc.for tfe'pfi-atmoving-caafe ? Is it in the e&ief juflite. ? If so let bin re concile it -to his coiifcitnce." Is it in- bis frieixis-r—l fteiiive no one thinks it is. Up on thfc whole it is hut fc-.ir l-t conclude that |ll is not rijrht, whrrc,.a combination of such jarripg principles fiiould be so easily rvcon®i,le»t)lt.' Jt is,truly intolerable, at this glorious sra of and triumph, to read from va rious parts of the Continent, the impertinent not'ficationt of certain pc-ddling diplomatics,. • prohibiting us from exporting articles of of British produce or aianufafture. Jrlave we not only ftifled the foul of Independence, but frightened away even its Gheft ? EstraA 11 a letter from a gentleman at G'?« braltfr, dated the afi'd March, to hit friend in this" citj/". , " We have 3rrived here ill the (hip Mo hawk, capt. Steel, after a disagreeable win ter passage of Jf.2 days. We had asa c.pas sage, but were obliged 'o make life of cur guns, or we (iiould have been tak n, as we were fey.e'ral times fired at by a French pri vateer, but we (hewed the Fteechsnen what thsy did not like By letting fly our (lern chafes, and our balls wen'; pretty c'io'fe to them. The privateer left us, but retained again in the dark of the evening—we fired again, and (be (heei.ed off to the .Spar.ifh Chore. We could fee eight gunboats clide3 this privateer. " the SpaniardsjTin the French in tak ing i>ur yefieis I have been here but e'even days, and ther? have been fix taken and carried int. 6 Algtfiras, tome of t hem £o.i jjlifh, but mostly Americans ; indeid foajcc» ly an unarmed veflel cornea into the ftreij/'nts that ia not taken, except it has a corvoy, and even then they mufl be Very careful if one or two ps them be not taken. -> Engiiih vessels Were cuf. off fr.> convoy from F.ngWiU. f.r can fe-e the town of Algffii vessels that go in A c nftani ■. tion is kept up betwixt he two > convtying letters, pre»ifi,ins. &c "An American brig had latel* a Malaga with a Frenchman. The l'r vessel came under the flern of the Abrticf. ~ and desired him to strike. The American did Jlrile with a vengeance—she gave him her stern chafes, and a whole v ,]| C y offuiall armt. She then pounded iff, and fired a broadside, which made the por r devils c y out for quarter, and about twenty of ihrnt paid for their temerity with their lives." •:<©: prices of stocks PuiI.ASBJ.PHIA, Jirxs 11. Six per Cent. Xfflo Three per Cent. y(, Deferred 6 per Cent, 1 4 y 4 B,*VNIC United .States, 13 percent. PcnnfyWania, IS citto. North America, 46 percent. lnfuran«e eonip N.A. Clares 29 ditto Pennfylvania, fliares, 3-3 ditto 3 per cent Scrip East-India Cotnpany of. W. A. J per cer.t. Sd'van4' COURSE OF EXCHANGE ' On London, 51 at 38 Jays JO at 6c a 90 days Amsterdam, 35 a 37.100 per florin Hamburgh .30 23a -io, per Mirk Banco. Philadelphia Rifle Company are to parade in complete uniform, on Thurs day next, at the corner ef Ninth and Mar ket ftrcets, precisely at 4 o'clock, f\ M." Puiiftuality is required. fOHN COYLE, Cap:. June io, 1799. Lost or Mislaid, ACERTIFI A I E ol One £h»re of the Bank cf the United States bearing date iftjarua.y thr name < f Joseph I homburgh, No. .5138, for the renewal of which application hath been made at said Bank, end all pt tfons conctrned are desired to take notice thef-sof. ROBERT DENISON, Junr. Fhilcdelphia, jtine 1 r. iTo Bricklayers and Masons. Propolals will be received for executing the rough (lone work, and laying thJ Bricks of art Engine house in Center Square according to plans to he delivered to the Ofitradlor, and nn der the direflicfn of the Engineer of the city. The R rick work will consist of plain straight wall plain an'' groined arches and hacking to stone work. Ifhe drawirfgi may be viewed by appli cation at the office of the City, in Center Square where every information on the subject will.be givtß and fepera;e prices may he off red si r each particular species of Brisk work—AH ma terials, fcaffold ng, Centering tope, planks and boards will be found by tie City—The Con tractor U to provide all labourers aod workmen* hods and wO'king tools, and to ereft and take down the lcaffo'ding Propol'!? to be deli vered tt> B. H. Litrohe, at his oftiee in Center Squire, before the aoth of the prtfeut month. June ii for Baltimore, .JOT THE SHIP MART-ANN, . P ofltive ty &'l on Wei next, and take frei'gh: on reafor.ablc terms. Apply to WILLIAM BELL. PHila. Jdn« 8.. - IS OFFEREb FOR SALE. (if speedily applied for J A Valuable parcel of Land in Ann Arun del cotuity. not far from the citv of An' napolis andkbout 30 miles from tile'city ot Wash inyton. On one of theft trails is a molt elegan' two rtory brick Dwelling House, 4 rooms 01. a floor .beautifully fnuatcd 111 an 1 xccllcht asd healthy neighborhood—Thi body ol Land will be fold in lots ur in a body T here are several ten ements on said Tract which r»nt for lotnethiug considerable per a tin. A further description ■% dtemt 1 *nnectffjry. Apply to the printer. June i« An Eluctob. MM'.CD- dtae. i»w6w.