" %m oa3?tte. * PHILADEL PHIA , MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 24. [WHILE France fafhions her condudt towards America by her idea of our charac ter and situation, America is too willing to be deceived with refpett to the chavaftey and situation of France. FrOm this source spring nearly all the difficultly with which we have been overwhelmed since the eruption of French republicanism. Forbearance ne ver wears the appearance of dignified mode ration unless the power, by which aggreflion is to be repulsed, is very coufpicuous. Our tamenefs has been miltaken for cowardice, and our reputation increasingly sullied by our ardor for reconciliation. With our fame we have lofl: our property, and our domestic tranquility,, and >ve are yet disposed to rely on thefaith of a nation whose perfidy is pro verbial. Plunder and coiiftueft are the ob'- j e £s of the Directory ;we should therefore be extremely careful not to funiifh them with weapons against ourlelvcs. That weapons have been furnifhed (and weapons of all othsrs the rnoft deftruftive, the means of se ducing the moll ignorant and turbulept class es of t!it people) by procraftinacing an avow ed (la'e of hodility, is seen and felt at home; and from the presses of the direc tory—The following article, translated from a P.iris paper, abounding, with ignorance, impudence and falthood, would never have cxided to. calumftiate our government, if a formal declaration ot" war had immediately succeeded the return of our outraged minis- ter, Mr. Pinckney. In such a state of things there would have been few bare faced and vaunting,traitors, few deluded oppofers df defenfive measures, and more felf appro bation in the community. . But the confe quenres of delay have been humiliating in theextreme ; and, eonfidering the subsequent paragraphs as oozing from the muddy foun tain of direftorial artifice, loft must be the spirit of the nation indeed, if it is content to contemplate such a pifture of itfelf, and j befatisfied with the undefined'-and petty fpe cics of warfare that eiifts between the two countries.] TRANSLATION Fro hi " L'dmt des Loix" of the 23d Phi' viost) year 7(11 Feb. 1799. " Thanks to the *wifdotn of tile Execu tive Dire&ory !—An alliance fought after, Hips again fromthe insatiable maker of coa litions, Pitt. His long intrigues in the United States prove abortive, at the mo iv.ent, when his cjiffimulation hardly hid the hope of success. The fame fate awaits him in Germany, awaits him where ever the opinion of the people is of some weight. 1 he hour that he had fixed on for the expul fien of liberty from Italy, has seen two re publics rife 011 the ruins of two thrones. " Upon what then was founded the chi valry-like arrogance of George the llld's la/t fpeceh to hi,3>;enal Parliament ? It seemed, i the four quarters of the globe had pro ofed him th." woi.IJ take up arm? trance ; America, at ■ ■ c. hsr word. " 'nee Vmdemiaire (Oflobcr) last, the Brit'.ih Agents had designated it) all the news papers of the United States the exadlepocha when Mack should open the career. They fxpefted therewith a secret anxiety thecom ir.umra'ion which, the Prdident, John Adams, v;cu]d rnake atthe meeting of Gongrefs.— We have just read thatfpeech ! It is no lon £fr the Echo of those of George the Illd. It is no longer, paflionate delamations, bit tei hri'ttionE, exaggerated reproaches,where with the President had filled his former com munications, and his answers to the popu lar addrt-flLs, in order to draw all the opin ions in lavnr of war. The DireifWy's mo deration has irapofed on him the <•''' •-vj i " i" tins is fub/H ---c ; pacific profeffions accpinpar •• ' -fflt::<iation of defend"" r ''c.. . - .reach republic is in - itcd 10 renew her .ic;ble relation with!'the Atr.'rican repub lic ; th; question of etiquette, on the renew al V-rii.tion, is introduced with delica -J/ W* e i'lefidatitiffpnouuaes that he w' !d '"pd a miniftef,. if he had explicit afiurances c i his •reception—He pledges hrmfelf to re ceive hi a manner becoming the representative 0 a ? re at nation, the niinifter the Direfto '/ would f-nd. [Th? riJiculoufly continued use these re publican tyrants make,, of the hacknr wrnw, " Britilh Agents" and « Britidiin is calculated to excite merriment ra ;l '-r than serious chagrin at the insinuation that our relets are under the influence and direction of any other nation than their own. It *-<le!cft»t»on of the conduft of France ha; ?en ' i'tfltxl witlj spirit, : t was theexpref ilon oi feelings of the people of the United States, and not of G.eorge the Hid. His opinions were pnqucfliojisbly similar to those c.' the Prefnient, for ail the enemies of Frame entertained the Urn ; but th*y had ger , f being flattered into a good opinion of -tie vnemies of his country. But mistaken as this writer is in the charafter of the Doftor, and the predominant objects of his embafly, he is dill more mistaken with refpedl to the " decisive fadl" upon which he grounds his belief, in a great measure, of the subordina tion of America to thp views and interests of the Directory. The constituents of Dr. Lo gan (perhaps iooo men) would iia»? eledtcd, to represent them, any wretch of au dacity, whose principles were known to be consonant with the holy right of infurrec- , ' • , though he had been snatched from ti gallows. wcre liie children of France, it is true,, devoted to licentiousness : many of them fugitives from the goals of .Ireland. /He .county of' Philadelphia, which this felf-appointed envoy repieftnts, iscompofed of the fubnrbs of.the.city, and several- thinly inhabited towrfhips in its vicinity. The li- v>i. berties of Philadelphia w r"; ■ all the Union to produce, in the fame space, an equal number of men so (hamefu!ly violent as are tLeclcdtors who people these diftrids; yet the opinions o£ these men are represented as the epitome ofthe American mind. Dr. Lo gan, I believe, is very generally execrated for his affu'rance, and despised for his van ■ty.] " What was the Frcfident to do, in a (late of things so different from his expecta tions ? All the u-.eails tc warm up the minds were exhauftcd ; and tfie national gooc 1 fenle had rilep. uppermost : the true papers of the negociation were difienilnsted, and fables could no loTiger be invented: it be came necefTary to go with the circumstances, kr.d i: is what h6 has done. t " Has he done it with freedom ? And can this change be supposed sincere ? We think not. He had I'o far esgagcd hinifelf, that n» relation to the P.tfidenfs speeches and eJdielTcs ; therefore, if any deviation from those opinions has taken place, it is a depar ture from the ground a (Turned by our gov eminent ; not from the diftates of a Brittfh ministry. It might have been proper for us never to have discovered our indignation, or never to hive it, until ourcom plaints were redrefled.] " We could not. explain this change of language, without the affiflance of our pri vate If iters, j but we fee that notwithftand-' ing the epidemical disorder which had caused the c.t.es tobedeferted, and the printers UJI -. der E„gl,(h influence, all the correspondence i of the Munfter of Foreign Relations with Mr Gerry, has been public, and medi tated upon by the. citizens of the United- States. Ihe insidious commentaries of the t , P*«y have not been able to put out the rays of light .which it has carried in- A- di of the people. The manceu vresdiic<tedagainft France were seen through; the danger to wluqh American Liberty was expofrd, has bceii felt ; .the people avsiled .htmfelves of the elcdions, to leave out of the lepflature fufpetted speakers, and to car, JT W it, true .Republicans. But a few ontbs Gnce, an American hardly dared to express in public, his regret for the hostile course given to the differences exiting be tween the two countries, a doubt whether it was true that the.Diredcry was for war, and ionie aversion loan English alliance. Now a molt relpeftable oppolition is formed—lt has a balance'in Congrcf's ; and in March next it will reign over the remainder of the 1-epie nution '""' utcd b y British intrigues. 1 he- great mass of the citizens bacis it, and it dares to express the wish for an honorable aC f* rv ' IC knowlccJ k e the ififpofitions ot the Direaory, manifefted by its Arretts ot 13th and j 9 ,h Therniidor last, was fuffi ciejit for that purpose. [Here is a firing of absurd and filly sals. hoods that answer well enough to dust the eyes of those dfeluded wretches who are fuf fcring- under the oppression of the adminis tration that vents them. They serve how- ever, to convince us that any negociatior. with France, at present, must be tedious, expensive and unfatisfaftory. While pri vate letters animate their hopes of a power ful party in this country, they will continae to meet our demands of indemnification with their ultimatum, a Loan and a Bribe. It is in vain they have a majority in Con gress if that majority is unprodiiaive. The Arretis of the Direaory of 13th and 29th Thermidor last, like the worm-eaten foliage of a sickly tree, will not perform the func- tion for. which they were produced ; the Uni ted States fees through them. Here fol lows the proof positive of this mighty chsfcge.] "We will .cite but one fa ft—and it is a decifi've' one—A Dottor Logan arrived in France (at the epoch* of these Arret's) for agricultural refearch'es ; received as a learn ed man by some of the Directors, he returns immediately to undeceive his . countrymen. He lands at New-York. Tribes of fpie, are set upon him : the English fadion perse cutes him ; the President denounces him to the Senate ; and the people of Pennsylvania places him among their legiflatqrs. [To a person unacquainted with Dr. Lo gan's character, his reception as a icf learning would net be turptulng ; but he would be at a loss to account for his imme diate r"urn. A learned man is not in dan- it was difficult tor him to conciliate wha". had pafled with the prelcut ; and from that, a certain fti fluffs is discovered in his exprc-f ---fion of pacific dispositions. Hs'is still sur rounded with men, who*< are humbled, be cause their plan miscarried : from thence, is to be discovered a light shack of Jul HOT, which charafterifes everj' forced rSiafure. •' Ihe tenor even of his'fpeeches, fliews, that he does not choose to appear to have been in the wrong-, and that'he wifiifs to fix ".he attention ot his co-citizens,. oiit(i,; point wich hurts them. He brings back to "their recolJedVion the e»orn»ous lcfFes <of their commerce, arid the indemnities they are en titled to j he cbferves to thetn that the offers of reconciliation trdrh the Executive Direc tory have not been followed by any modifica tion of measures ; hie takes care'they fho.uld not forget, that every American vefl'el met at fe,a by French corsairs is arreted'; ihat nohe elcape Condemnation ; that the tribunals con stantly adopt the conclusions of the captors; that the arreti of 12 Veiitofe § yea t, has no more protested them that Complied there with, than the treaty hid before protested' those who navigated under itS'feith ; that the depredations continue in the French co lonies, notwithftjinding the' prohibition, of the Direftory; that .the execution given to tht law,of the 29 Nivofe (concerning Bri ti(h is more vexatious 16 neutrality than the law itfelf. He announces that till ■then the Council of Five Hundred had rejec ted every proposition brought forward fcr a reviflon cf the laws relative"tb he persists to demand from Congrefi* that the perfpe&ive of a speedy reconciliation should not cause to be neglected the melivs of de fence. " But a recent difccv£ry, Jc'mQiifintes ■ better than any thing else, the bottom of John Adams's heart. It cannot be doubted that at the very time he was compofir.g his speech, he delivered forrie letters sis marine to armed vt-fTels having goods on board. One of them has just been am Aid oil the coast of St. Jean de Lifz, having 4 guns and' ii men—her letter authorises birti to cap ture-aW French armed vessels met: U'ith in the limits of the United States} and on the high leas, in conformity to a law of j Congress of 21 Meflidor 6th 1 year. This law, which is well known, is merely defen five ; how can Jehn Adams derive from it the means of aggrefiion ; Puerile tneans, it is true, but oße 11 jive by intention. " The Executive Direftory have pro nounced tliemfelves for a frank reconcilia tion ; all the republicans of the United States have welcomed their declaration ; the Britifli cabinet is out-played, but it does not give up the game—What lhall it not at tempt to disunite again the two Countries ? It knows, that if it can fuggeftpriT',*>cations superior to the Dire&ory's moderation, it will destroy the happy fruits of eig-lrt months patience. Such is the explanation' of the enigma. How many men yet-it) the Unit ed Statee do "blindly fallow that infernal po licy of a court, which seeks its salvation in a general conflagration ! If the Prefidefit be not of that-Dumber, he has them, at least for counfellers. " However, it does not matter—Such is the excellency of a representative ere v -nment that all power yields tc the t, ' pulse. The Direftory knows <rtb ; how they can rally the Unit dS-iatec TO THE «REAT CONFEDERATION OF K*- PU»hcs. [Regardr' as the sentiments of ■>. solitary individual, this publication would be too un irr.por* nttoex. >f resentment, or o chal- c.ige observation ; but when v,e e It contains the opinion, and isperhaj.* " one of the Direftory, can we fiirvey ft wit,, c -nlacency. The confef fion at the conclusion difavowedbv their partizans here, and di&eliev'ed by too many of our honefter citizens ; yet it iV aevertbfe lefs true that their erf is to revolutionize America, or in their own stile of expreffion> « RALLY HEK TO THE GREAT CONFEDERATION OF REPUBLICS." This is 110 novelty ; the secret machinations of their government have constantly tended to the fame poipt, but it has not'before, been treated so daringly and expressly as the universal sentiment of Frenchmen. Alarm- ing as this truth is, we regard it with un concern, and <■" pa in v a n«Jer their pretentions will shortly be p!"aded -ts an ev idence of their juliice. It is in vaii to de claim ag-^irFrance; a* home and there .done we must find . for the evil. How repeatedly and 1 w forcibly have we been warned of her . i,.-ous putpofes_. If we deflred proofs, and were anxious for con viftion, the bloody scenes of Europe would have furnifhed us with bethi The firrte psir tents which preceded the downfall of all the republics in that quarter are still hcvering, with baleful afpe£t, ev r our own. Insults and flatteries, menaces -nd concefiions, rob- j fceries and rellnquilhmfits have all been raar/halled like so many pioneers, to prepare the way for the spoiler. But it would seem -we have seen these things only in our dreams, and heard the voice of warning or !y in our slumbers. An unruffled ca'm brcods over our minds, ard the little spirit that was roused among, us isfubfiding again into apa thy and indifference. While this temper deadens every national encrg), and isv.go rates the nerves of faftion, well may the di re&ory affirm "it knows the wat to RALLY THE UnITID STATES TO THE GREAT CONFEDERATION OF REPVBLICS. VVtll may it ai'ert its ccwitroul ove£. .o'jr lives, liberties and property. Thefeare not the of one wjio is enamoured with the faflc of reprehension ; he feels the .alarming Situation of his country, and willi es to extend the feeling. He dp fires not to censure but to awaken. Could this be done hope w6i:ld revise; we might drive the nionfter from our Jhores, and {hare the glory of his cleftru<£lion.} _ To Jl\ | .. .IN this paper of the aid inft, there it a piece,hgned ,W. .reflecting oil any j well meant tj;e managers of the Alms houie and house yf employ. It flruck me at once, from, the intemperate expreilions 'that are in it, that thf author was not quite right in his mind, and I pitied him. But I have fincc heard that a certain 'gx-iHI-nun wrote it, whom I will not name. Be it who it will, the author fays it .is hastily. written. In this ii'tuation, I libra to tak® any advantage, and therefore I freely forgive all his abuse, as well of my character as of my employment, which, he iniinuates is a picker of oakum in goal ; and further I give him leave to write it over if he chooses. After this indulgence, I hope, he will for his ov\n reputation's fake, examineitwell, ane! not commit himfelf prematurely, but take time, arid let us have the new edition of his work a> fooii as Ins can, ccrretttd and improved, for it is much wanted. ' This from his friend, the author of ■No i—*io the Managers of ibe Alms-House end. House of Em. ployment. _ . Rigaud lately sent his brother from Aux Cayes, on a,million to TonfTaint.atthc* Cape'. On his way thither, he was murdered, along with four attendants by some of Touffaints party. MARRIED]—on Saturday evening lalti by the Rev. Dr. Smith, Mr. Chari.es Fok man, of Baltimore, to Mils Sarah WoLr, oi this city. ©ajette Sparine fLitt. Port of Philadelphia, ARRIVED. days Ship Edward, Wickham, " Lisbon j, Galen, Nicols, St. Sebastian via N. Y. f Lovina, Browne, Li"- ol Brig Winifred, Turner, Bristol 63 Amelia, Stotdburg, Liverpool 49 Bee, Hanfen, r Hamburgh 45 Hannah, Norris, Figato Jch'r Agnes, Bacon, Lisbon 38 Sloop Sally, Potter, Richmond 4 ; __ Arrived at tie Fort. Ship Harmony, Snell, Brig Amazon, Lewis, George, Hsrdinge, , Fair Amei ic Lab' Jloop Fricndfhip, Browne, Havanna 11 CLEARED. Ship Leor-x, Green, • ' Ripl-v, i lie itv -ny left th: convoy, on the night of the 22d May. , ; ie 2 6thj was c:.ptured by a French sri, ~c of 36 guns, from Guadaloupe bound for Rochefort, who took out captain Suell,his fearaen, four boys, and his boats, leaving or. board, the mate, ftew ardt ;k ? aprizc'u.r.fter a.id nine ' - "<»* in jat. 41, 22, long SB, W. On tfse 9th with the aififtance of one man, faffri'ger) aft.-r a kvere contcft, retciok the ship, md ft' . red for Philadelphia. (Signed) JOHN NELSON, Mate ot the ship.Harmony. Fcrt Mifflin, June 22, 1799. ' Wc are happy to tf*te, that all the letters were preserved on board the Harmony, and that only a few packages of fine goods were taken out at the time of her capture. She isdetained at the Lazeretto on account of j the Frenchmen beingfr'om Guadaloupe., Arrived, ship Loyih.y, Browne, 60 days from Falmouth. On the 28th May, in lat. 46 15 N. long. 4i , W. fpeke the brig Peg.- gy, from Belfaft, 123 days out, with pafitn gers, bound to N. York, ;oth June, in .Int. 41, 50, N. long. 66, 30, W. fj/oke the IT. S. brig Merrimack, cap:. Brojfce, 4 days -• irom Cotton ; fame, day, fliip Fair Amer ican, M'Faul and ship Nf .icy, from N. 101K, boi:nd for London 'and Liverpool, 14th, spoke the fchr. Hope, from St. Bar-j tholomews bound to Salem, iat. 4 c, Ic, W-. ! 68, 30, W. all well. I Ship George, M'Collom, f£ r MartWqi * left N. Calile yefterdjv. . The brig Sea' Nymph, cs-tain Greene, has put back on account of her having sprung a leak. A dismasted flii 3 is below, supposed to be the l.avinia, captain Browne, from Liverpool and Falmouth. A (hip and a brig, names unknown, are below. Captain Turner, of the Winifred, on the 28th ultimo, in lat. 40, 20, N. long 54, W. (poke the fliip Samuel Smith, captain Stiles of Baltimore, from hence, bound to Lisbon ; all well. Brig Gcorr"-, Howland, from hence to Oporto, feni into Vigo has been liberated, cargo tondctaned. Ship Ben. Frank'io, Senkey, for Bor deaux and Har brig Ruth and Ma -y, for Havanna, and ftiir. Ann Hall, for Charlellon, lay at New-Caftie yesterday morning. Captain Hanfen, of the Bee, Jnn? ic, •long. 62. 30. W. spoke the armed (hip Ro bult of N. Yoik, captais Haslet, g days out v f&r Cadiz all well. Captain Kanfeo left at Hamburg the sol Ship Vol'Birc. Bowcn, ard brig Grace, Edwards of I hilapelphia to fail fcr Pcttrf London La Guira Havanna 12 Hamburgh Havanna ' i; «'* ■><•> 1 1} ?.» Hy* 1 »!» 4' •«?)?; •thcijajK /ii. C*;* Wtvrfg' - ' . .' ...j_ Ship A£ivc Sory of Baltimore, jaft arri ved. . 1 , --,r • Hannah and Lliza, Ewing, Boflon. Friendship, Williams Salehi, Brig Polafte, Shoemaker, St. Tl.omas, Ship Rein D.eer, Frott, Baltimore. ■ £Mg -Litly, Blake, in-6 day s ; furtjft&b. Nancy, ( Young, i 6 do. for Boh on. j. I Abigail, Matthtws, t 4 ,do. Havanna, Sh/p Harriot, Margin, 14 do Baltimore. Brig Sally Dorfon, ,! > . 1 j , Ship James, M'Cartliy, Baltimore, Williarwton,.' Blair Philadelphia Brig Difpaicli, Rbfe* Ship phia, : Smith, for> Surinam. Brig Fame, Patrerfon, fold." * Ships Dispatch, Busby, .'and Prosper., Williane, for New York. . „ l h? U. S< frigate Gecige WaflKngton, opt. Fletcher, has arrived at Newport from the Weft Indies, convoying home about 70 fii'l,of Merchantmen. . . •« 1 It appears fays a Boston paoT, that the P. S. cruijers Xichmsnd ard £?gle, pi. k ed Up the five prizes which a Freud, priva-. t,?er was conduding into <Ju*LJottp.c, as mentioned in the late papers, . he .sloop of war building, at Norwich, in Connecticut, for Government, will fuon be launched. May 24th. No arrivals at the Fort, . Ship"l'rofpcrity, Joiigftarii iron. London derry, arrived at Liverpool May s'th. Ship Swany. ick, Kirkbridge, frero London derry, arrived at Liverpool the day the Ame lia failed Ship Molly, Swain, for Batavi«"wa.s ready to fail w!:«n the Amelia .kftt'LtverpocL.''' June 22. ■ Ihe brig' Georgia IV&ec, fcik-d f,-. Jn , Sa vaunah June 14. An EngliiU Letter of Masque had just there in co axts from Greenock. On Monday last.the trial of the French privateer sent in there by,-he United States brig Eagle, Captain Canr ivi!, was to cone on before'tire Georgia Dain.i Cauit of Admiralty. A gentleman who arrived in the G. P. in fortfTs; tlTs{alchooaer hatfjiift arrived in the mouth of the river, with 223 pieces of lignt Duck, which (he had taken from a Urge wrecked schooner in the Guiph. ; When she left she wreck, another schooner bound to the northward, was along iide, taking out other parts of her cargo. Baltimore, June 2*. Arrived this day, Ship Six Sifters, capt. Baker, 5 5 days Iron Liverpool—dry goodand fak.—Brink's no news later than the Catharine. A (hip for New.York and Boston failed rn coiimanv with capt. Baker ; parted from them- about 10 days after they came out. Spoke brig Alert, ofßofton, carrying 16 guns, in lat, > 30, long. 34 } from Brenen. From the Log Book of the scboor.tr Jay «<#>f. Merchant, arrived on Tuesday from. St. Vincent. < ! ~ J On the passage, Ist. 36, 00, in the Gulph Stream, April 6, fell, in with- the wreck of* ichooner, appeared to be upwards of 100 tons board a > no person on .K 3 J Une ' 1n lat ' 2 4,'I<Jng. 66, :fp6ke Amer,ca > of Newburyport, cjipt. Wilch, tn Compaq with the brig gambler, of Bever y, both letters of. marque, from I enenne bound to Havanna. ■ * ■ M A CPHERfoWIEUEsr^ 'ruTc 0 T :j ° rd * rS \'J unt: - *4** 1 799-. * -WiL iirit and second i reop of Korl^thc Artillery, Grenadiers and Infantry," rsre offer ed to parade at the Menage in Chefnut-ftreet on Wednesday, next precisely j o'clock P M. completely, equ ppca—."When arrangements will take place for the celebration of the Aimiverfaryof our iNrtEPKNDtNr.ii." By Ot-derof Big jdier Gcti. Macj berson.- J NO. M-CAULEY Adjt. NEW AUCTION... I HE Subscriber being appointed for the City in rtie place of. Mr. E. Fox, resigned, informs his frierids and tl,e pub ic, that his Store, No. 56* South Front (formerly occupied by Mr. Fox) is n w ppc-n for the reception of Goods* ' " Money will be advanced <-n if requir iAWUEL /3KAEL, auc'r. %.J The Sales of JDry Goods will eommenrc ™ Monday the ift July, at 9 o'Jack in ths flJcrniDg. june..24 cr*L • • • a-T *• T . 1 his is to give Notice, I'iA f the fubferibar, adrnimfliator ; of John Morton deceafed,hath(orhave)ob! in d from c Orphans Court of Cctcil County i laryland, l etters Tcftamentary (or of adminillrat >n)on tfec personal Kflatc of John Morton, late of Cacil County in Maryland deceased, all persons having claims again') the taid deceased art* hereby .wan ed to exhibit the fame with 'V vouchers thereof, * to the fubferiber, on or l<ef. \ '- e 3d day of July ; next, they may otherwise by law be excluded front" 3 ' 9 all benefit, ol t*ie said eilato given under y hand this 21ft day of June 1 799, REBECCA MORTON, Admin**. "\Varwich,Jit: 2i» [June 24] 3awr3(y. For/ale by the Package. GEdRGE DAVIS, . . No. 3::, High- .recti . . TTAS imported in- the Urnna, Ch;,r!tcn, AX from London, the K-.il. wing well aU'urtcd articles, put up in fmajl r;aci;aget, to suit the con»eniency of purcliafe-,, Ladies' clothg, Caflimere?, Iriib linens 4-4 arc! ?, • Hats—mens' and cfildreni' Vlask, &,ab, and Coloured, aiid -drabi -with.green un» ' dew. . , ' Hosiery—men and wcm»n»' Glk. cotton, and thread. ALSO ON HAND, Ttr.ported in The Delaware— Swoids from parcel of Fresh lioliea and / . r ~ . '<■ By'Xr. Skib j TjiAS. jULe 14- eodjw ' ' *. T * V
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