TOST OFFICE. Philadelphia, Julv 27, '99. ■» T ETTERS for the Bi itifh Jacket Mary, for 1 j Falmouth (Eng ) will he received at this Office «ntil Tuesday 6'h Atiguft. H. B. The inland postage to New-York must be paid. , | Several good Nurses T . WANTED. FI.VE or Six capable NURSES m*y meet u'iih immediate Employ at the public ALMS-HOUSE, On producing fatwfi&ory rtccmmendations. — Married Men and Womtp wouid be preferred. Persons acquainted with fn it able chara&ers, are particularly requeued to fend them without o delay to LUKE W. MORRIS, or n CHARLES PLE ASANTS, Committee of tbe Managers. 1 july t.i d6t ON THURSDAY, < The Ist ofyAugust next. at 8 o'clock in tbe ( evening at toe Merchants Coffe House, ; WII.L Br. SOLD, ) A COUNTRY SEAT. SITUATE in the manor of Moorland, Montgom ery county near to Thomas I.ongflreth's Paper mill, ar.d rot far distant from the Newton road, 'and anont 15 miles from Philadelphia.—containing I 1 ai-J acres of I..and,on which is a good two (lory 1 flone dwelling house, frame fiablc &c on this p ace 1 is 1 large gar 'en with every kind of vegetables. ' and »goori hearing orchard of the befl grafted 'ruit, fucli a° harvest an ! apples, pears, cherries, quinces &c. The crop in the ground confifls of frrn. flax, potatoes and clover. The situation it \cry lUaiiby sfjd being in the neighbourhood of fcvrral flores and floar mills, mak s : t a desirable purchaf- for ary person wifbing to secure a rum mer re-reatat a small »xpenca, T«rms may be made known at the office of Edward Bonfall. No. 64 Dock Street; or by BENSON & rORKE, auc'rs. July is 2 POR SALE Madras Handkerchiefs,") PulUat do. Mnfmall packages. en- Very fine SterEccas. f titiedtothedrawback. Caflimeres, J APPLY fr> Philips, Cramcnd £2* Co. julr "4 3* W ANTEIJ. AMTUATIONKn r. Compting-houfe in this eitj, or a birth to go to the Weft-Indies, or any other part, as ftjpercargo,agent or clerk, by a tOVNG MAN, who French language, b acquainted with business. and can addper fitii ailory tcflimonials as to his ability and chara-Scr. A line direSed to A. B. and left at this office will be punSually attended to For further par ticulars enquire of the printer. July 18 " TO LET, ■ And possession given tbe jrb of next mnntb A Three story Brick House, with a itood kitchen nci cellar, in Second-street near to the Ntw market. Enquire c ( THOMAS GREEVES, No 73 Walnut-street. ju'y 13. _ _ i'a-wiwf lii<et:ty Qollars Reward. DESKS. ; VU from the barracks at Reading, in thcwjrht of the jth July, 1799. the follow, ing si in he I lift regiment in the service of the United States. _ Ib,atat Briltii private, born in Chefler county, 25 years of age, J feet 8 inches and 3-4 high, dark complexion, brown eyes and lopg black hair which he commonly wears tied close to His head, by occupation a farmer : he is a float, good looking fellow and eonfiderahly marktd with the fmail pi s, is much add.fled to liquor, and very a hufiv wln-n intoxicated; be was dreffod ifl full infantry u"iform cirept his hat—lt is «ip{<Bed that be wi'i change his dr fs as h ftol' a plain round) it and a number of citiiens'cloaths Also y.imtt M'Mvllch, born in the cour ty of 1 . - « r r . . • 1 . aA ft^.AK*<Nl'!e#^e,,' *"*,*><»> *><* Zpw£ « &&*##?>* * fannrt.aod *u £t?sei -WI .£MRpt &i 'teafbt lj*aJdif** l ?mielhrwr te *oy»fl|cer in thi Iftffc*, ttap <Ma»c> amtath tor either * LEWIS HOWARD, Lieutenant I Ith United Sutei Rtgimen Reading, july 1 (>o) * - - Ren: ova I. Thomas Clayton, UaHer, HAs- removed to No. I»6, south Front ftrett, where he intends carrying on his business as fornerfy, snd has on hand a complete assortment of his own manufaftured ladies, geßtlemcn ant! childrftis' HATS. Canada BcaverU Mujk-rat Skins, With a complete assortment of FURS, always for fale.-r-He has received per the late arrivals fron; I.ondon,a complete aflortment of Fafoionablc Ettglijh Hats, Which he now offers for sale at very reduced jr.... 29 Patent Ploughs, TO be fold for eafti by Joseph Salter at Atfion Richard Wells, Cooper's Ferry—Jonathan Harker, Woodbury—and Jefle Evans, Lumber ton. Those who have used them give them the preference to any uwher kind, as they require lei's tram, breaK the ground butter, are kept in wider at lei's espence and are fold at icheaper rate —the plan is much limplified and conliftsof but one piece of cast iron, with the handles and heam ».t wood ; tbey may befixed with wrought Uys Slid coulters to be put on with fcrewianil off Jt pleafuve P. tent lights fir vending with inftmitions for fwSjnjt them may be lia l by implying to John Newt rid, or the fubferiber No. North Frunt-ilrect. IViio ha; for Suu; Or toLenfe for a term of 1 tan, \ number of valuable tra<3» of Land, w«ll Scuited for Mills, Iron Works or Firms. moft |v improved, lying chirfly in the county of Hun tingdon flat* of Pennfylvanij. Ttiofe who may irirTipe to view them will please to apply to lohaXaam ei'q.near Huntingdon. Nt-wl oJJ f i a «tf ju'.y 17 '~-r ■' prices, iaw 6 m n : r •' • - "**• " -'l'j ' ■ ■ .u .. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY EVENING, JfflX »s>. mm :■»!>: , the Inhabitants of the City of Philadelphia, the 3ifl.ri.iUof fiouthwark tfthe Northern Liberties. Notice is Hereby Given, r T~'HAT the following place* are appointed for 1 the reception of JLuST CHILDREN\ where they will be care of until applied for —to ivit— * A t the houfrof Frederick Kehlheffer, sign he Fiiece and Dove, No. 140, North Second, f C jllovrhill-ftreet. j. At the hofue of Michael Kitts, sign ot the : iian King, No. 80, Market-ftrect. —At Martin Rizer's, sign of the MarquitLa No. itx, South Second-flreet, opposite the New Market. The frinters of the different papert in the city are requested to.publilh ih>. above a few times in their papers, and they w ill oblige a friend to hu manity. June 15 AT a meeting of the viGtors and governors of St. John's college in the State of Maryland, on the 13th Hay of July 1799, RcfolvcJ, That on (he firft day of Oilobor next, this board will proceed to ele& a Profeffor ot Eng lilh and Grammar, who lhall receive, for hi« fer viccs, at the rate of £2OO ftr annum, to be paid I quarerly; »nd that public notice thereof be giv ! en, &c. &c, Test, A. C. HANSON. N B. The office iforefaid hath just hecorne va cant, by the resignation of a gentleman, whose affairs requir«, the immediate undertaking of a I It is the duty of the said Frofrffor (to whom is allowed an aflittaot) to teach the Engli'b language grammatically, anj to prepare ftudentslor a lupe- ■ riorf'hool, by teaching them the l atin grammar, | the Vocabulary, and Cordery. Writing is to be taught to all his scholars at tlated hours; and to thoft students who Ire notdeflintd for the tnperior fchoal, are to be taught, at tie discretion of their parents, or guaic?wns, Arithmetic, and other branches of fcienceufually taugl t inEogiiSi fehools —A complete knowledge then of Latin, Arith metic, &c. is confidtred indifpenSble in the profef for ; and it is expe&ed, that candidates who are not known to the Board, will fubn~.it to as < xami nation, as well as produce fatisfaiSory tefiimomaU of their good morals, and fair characters. The Printers within the United States are re quested to insert in their papers the foregoing re flation ane remarks, and to repeat the publica tion, as often as convenience will admit, until the 10th day of September next. July 22 t From the Farmers' Murfeum. " And -when the inhabitants of Jabesbgileid beard of that which the Philistines bad done to Saul, all the valiant men arose, and went at night, and took the body of Saul and the bodies of his sons from the wall of Bethshan, and came to Jabesb, *nd burnt them there. And they tock their bones and buried them under p tree at Jcbtsb, and fasted seven days DURING myrefidence at tho university. I had the good fortune to attraft the notice, | and enjoy the converfatioh of a country cler gyman, whole brilliant talents neither pa rochial penurioufnefs could choke , nor the (hades of rural obfeurity conceal. From the barren uniformity of cloiflered life, and the still more arid lefTons of W«nn pedantry, I used to escape, each vacation, and meet, at a parsonage, Wit dnd Learning, attireii in prieflly grey. Here, after being " long de tained, in thetiblcure sojourn" of a college cell, I could reafcend to the realms of Fan cy, and " feel 'the fovercSgn vital lamp" of Genius. Here, I loft my tutors, and found a friend. It was like the exchange of ar mour between Glaucus and Diomedc ; it was brass for gold. One day, in tbe study of this liberal Le vite, whom I heartily wish was copied in eve ry thing, " but b'S nonconformity," and who ought to preach in Wtftjninfter Abbey ra ther than in a dissenting conventicle, I pick ed up one of his neglefted sermons. It was Shandeaft ; and the eccentric prebendary of York might have bound it Ujiwith his own. As this sermon gave the firft hint to that style of Lay Preaching, which I have, for some years, employed; as it was a model of ease and sentiment in alliance ; andasits text was that which I have felefted lor my pre sent speculation, I could not deny myfelfthe pleasure of complimenting a curate, who de serves to be a Bishop, and if there be any merit in tbe following thoughts, it is afcri-. bable to him, whose elegant homilies " inspi red easy my unpremeditated page." In pur suing his track, I (hall be acquitted of pla giarifro, when ijiy readers remember my pro digal use of inverted commas, and my care to give credit for borrowed thought and ex pression. But, while I aw thus wandering, the men of Jabeftigiltad seem to be forgotten. This would be too fliameful an Aft of Oblivion. It (hall notp:ifs ; for they deserve a long and i honourable memorial. The inhabitants of the above Oriental vil lage, are introduced with some abruption to the acquaintance of the student of the book of Samuel, At the very bottom of the firft volume of the prophecy, in a kind of post script to the work, is found the narrative of their funereal rites paid to the family of Saul. Not the smallest reason appears for thispoft humous service. On the contraiy, it looks not only odd, but unmerited, and even im pious. For, during whole pages, immediate ly preceding this circumstance, we find no thing but a (hameful catalogue of Saul's crimes. To bitter envy of th« favoured Da vid's talents, he aids a ccmtempt of the ordi nances of the Supreme Being, and negleft of the mandates of his prophets. In a noctur nal visit to the enchantress of Endor, he em ploys infernal and necromantic arts to di fturi) the repose cf the tomb ; and concludes a life of violence, cruelty, and madness by an aft of suicide. One would fuppolb that in those holy times, the bones of so bad V'V a man w<juld loijg have been juffered to whi ten the mount of Gilboa ; and that 1101 even « common fepuiture would hsve been -indulged ta a body, prematurely destroyed by an irreligious -prince. Here is a my (lerf ; and on the firlV view of the inhabitants of Jabcfhgikad, an mourning weeds, un der " the wall of Bethflian," we are afton ifiled at their zeal for the interment of this monarch. That all the valiiaht men of a refpe&able diftrift -should ariie, and hasten by night to Bethfhah, which it piwft be ob ft'rved, was a hoftitf city, in PhilHtia ; that they ihould take the bones of one, whom Heaven had abandoned, and who had been his owr) deftrovrr ; that thev should expose themselves to the chance of death, or cap ture, in an enemy's country ; that mocking this terrour, end even the (till greater one, of the vengeance of the Ikies, tliey (tawhi take the remains of the flagitious Saul, and, " with dirges due and fad array," follow them to the humble itlorai of primeval burial, and deposit them " tinder a tree ' ot their own groves, *and that the poignancy ot their grief should be such as to induce a fall se ven days, all theft circumstances are., appa rently, the incidents of wild romance, or like the adventures of the Venetian they are " strange, pafling ft range. But let us devtlope the occult c;iufe of this con duft, and inquire whether tnefe " mourn ers, going about the ftrects" of Bethflian, cannot be juftified, nay, admired. As they are all valiant men, it is hard to fupoofe that so shining a virtue as Courage, should be disgraced by mad and vicious companions. Bravery, like the son of Tobias, is" of a good flock," and when you tell me of a good soldier, I look to fee him Inverted, not on ly with the gorget and sash of military splen dour, but Hyitb the more lustrous ornament of the manly virtues ; the mantle of charity, and " the bread plate of Righteousness." Whether this expefhtion is generally re alized or not, it is fully so in the cafe oi these valiant men of the east ; and, as will imme dietely appear, their corduft, a? simply de j frribed by the holy narrator, presents one of | the most affefting and honorable instances ot political and personal gratitude, to be found in the inwiitife tablet of historical competi tion. In the eleventh chapter of Samuel, wc find a clue, that guides us, at once, through the labyrinth of the ahove mystery. At the commencement of Saul's reign, Nahafh, a prince of the House of Amnion, wbofe trade was rapine and bleod, waged war with Ja befhgilead. Its inhabitants propose a treaty of peace, which the haughty invader eruelly proposes to clog with the sanguinary and infamous condition of the extinftion of their right eyes. Whether in that early period of their hiftuir, the inhabitants were few, de fencelefs, and incapable of opposing a formi dable foe; or their senators, like thpfe which have eompofed and disgraced more modern councils, were veiling to yield to ignomi nious exa&ion, is not ajcertained. But whether weakness, ar hafenefs predomina ted, it is known that the elders of the coun try implored the truce of a \yeek_; 'and, meanwhile, Saul is apprised cf their cala mitous fitoation. His.Tubjefts wept, and the monarch fympajhifed. Indignation at the wrongs ofjiis neighbours, and pity for their misfortunes, diftated a lummary and gallant process. He marches againfl, and defeats the Ammonites, and the men of Ja befli retain their freedom. They were tlie. anqeftors of that weeping band, whom ure have fceo performing a sol emn office to the dead. It was duting the youth of Saul that he avenged the men of Jabe(h upon the Ammonites. Many years had elapsed since thi* brilliant military ex ploit, which preserved the eyes, and inde pendence of a threatened people. Saul had degenerated from the virtues of his youth, had loft the confidence of an mfpircd Men tor, had forfeited the favor of heaven, had surrendered hiffifelf up to Vice, had loft an army, and, to add to hjs difgnce, it was by Philistine soldiers he was conquered ; had loft three fnns, and, finally, losing Hope itfelf, had fallen on hia own sword. He is pione on the mountains of Gilboa, without a friend to close hit eyes. iawtSlO <- * . , - Those, whom lie had rescued from the Am monite! are all as lifelefs as he. Then who it there to mourn fop Saul and J' It was the defcer.dants of those, whom Saul had once prose&ed. For, when this grate ful race heard the melancholy tidi gs of the defeat and death of the deliverer of their an. ceftors, what was their arrangement ? Was it oblivious of a remote obligation j or did felfilhnefs whisper, that an old benefit, like an old hound, was a worthlels fupernumT ary ? No ; a prompt and nokle Gratitude appeared, nor did it come alone. It was aflociated with bravery. " All the valiant men arose." Throui'h the nsift of a -es, I fee you, gallant soldiers your pofturc ercft, but your eyes overflowing. A bVave man has, generally, " a tear for pity." You renembered what Saul orce was, and how he bad preserved your progenitors. You forgot nothing but his disgrace and his vices. You bad beard that «• the battle went fore" againlt a benefailor, that cruel archers had wounded, and the javelin o d<f pair had killed him. You l<aftened with military and grateful ardour, your noflurnal march through a hostile region. You buii ed the bones of your benefaflor, with sim pie and rustic rite#, and the memory of your tears, your refpeft for the dead, a d your failing, ftigll never fade away. Senfikility shall eredl to ywur virtue " Fallen from his high (Rate, And weltering in hi> blood." " A monument, and plant it round with lhade Of laurel tvs r green, and branching palm, With all your trophies hung, and ails inroll'd In copious legend, or Tweet lyric song." The LAY PREACHER FrmthtVi* gexxss Gazette Modern Metaphors and Similiei. " To conclude, the place ymi fill has more than amply esafted the talents of a weary pilot; and all these threatening storms, which, like pregnant clouds, hovered over oar Heads, will, when ihey are once grasped but by the eye of reason, melt - into fruitful ihowers of bleflings upoi>the people." Modern Religious Style. " O ! the mad days that I have fpcnt ! and to fee how many <f mine old acquai-: lance are deid ! certain ! lis sure ! very Cure ! Oenth, as the pf-ilinift faith, is certain to all ; all (hall die ! How fell a good yoke of bullocks at Boston Prcv cations for DucUifts. « Has he tamilVprlv Diflik'd your yellow starch, or fsid yourlkmblet Was not extftl> Frenchified? or drawn your (word, Cried 'i was ill mounted ? has he given ihe lie In circle, or oblique, or semicircle, C)r diie£t paralle ? you mutt challenge him*' SLUTS. " She i» all gteafe ; and I know not what use to put her to, but to make a lamp of her, and run from ht r by her own light. 1 warrant her rags and the tallow in them will burn a Poland win ter. If she lives till Doom'sday, bum a week longer than the whole world. A few lines for modern lovers, of thefirfl fa mi/ies, without adequate ceivcn'tcr., toe cm mit to merr.ory, the more fluent yto pronounce, in the day of courtjhip > to their 1) til sine a s. " I swear to th«e, by Cupid's ftrongefl bow, By his arrow wi h the goldcu head, By the simplicity of Venus' doves, By that, which kaittcth soul* and prospers lores; And by that fire, which burn'd the Carthage queVn. When the falfe Trojan under fail was fcen ; By all the vcw* which < rcrmen have broke In Dumber more than ever woven ,(poke At to (Uck the honey of tie fwre«t I p Should I be alaJ to 'peiid an e*« with thee." ■ r ADD. I THE WALK OF AL RASCHID AT the court of the Caliph Mafa A! H* di, lived an old man by name A 1 R»fcliid, on whom the petty courtiers excercifed their wit, wliom the ladies dilliked, and who, du ring seventy-six years, had been fourteen time* batiifhed from the pre fence of his fove reigh, because some unpleasant truth was foiever dropping from his lips. He laughed at baniihmciit, for in the garden of nature he always found the best company ; and the court fourteen times recalled him, because it was perceived he could be happy at a distance from the court. Duriug on* of the periods of his punishment, as he was tracing the path of wifdonr in his retirement, he was lucky enough to gain a knowledge in the language of animals. *From that moment, his fa vourite amufemtnt was in lifteningto th»m, and fo'jnd that they often talked more ra tionally than the great ny-n who lurrounded the Caliph's throne. He one day observed upon the leaves of a bu(h a colony ps those infefts called Ephemera, on whom the Crea tor has affixed the end of their existence ai med ctofe to the hour of their birth—for they are born and die in the fame da). A 1 Rafchid attentively approached a small groupe of them, and perceived they were engaged in a violent dispute ; but as they were all talking together, it was long before be cculd discover tht h.bjcct of their controversy. At length when the nrt>ft vociferous among them had bawled till they were tired, he. found that their conversion had turned up on two foreign virtuosos, who were just ar rived.—These were a humble bee and a gnat upon whofepre-emine-.ee the opinions of the ephemera were much, divided. One fide maintained that the humble bee futig the fineft bass which had ever been heard through out the empire of infers, while the other defended the fzfeinating treble of the gnat. " Happy race !" exclaim:d A 1 Rafcbid, " who in spite of the few hours allotted to your existence, can thus amuse yourselves with the bass as a bee, and the treble of the gnat." With a smile, Ke turned his ear to one of the oldest ephemera, who fat alone up-1 oil a'leaf, and uttered the following soliloquy. " The most celebrated philosophers of our nation, wholived many hoursbefore me, have afTerted that this world cannot last, longer, than eighteen hours, and methinksthey were right. For when 1 conlider how much that great globe of fire, from which all nature gains existence, has, even during my time, declined towards the sea, which surrounds this earth, I cannot but fuppol'e it will there end its and its torch be extinguished in the waves. The earth must then be loft ; in total dirknefs, which muA naturally pro ! duce universal annihilation. Of thefc eigh : teen hours I have lived seven—sour hundred and twenty minutes !—A great age ! —How : few amonj us reach this period I—l have seen whole generations rife.flourilh,anddecay. My present friends are the children and grand ! children of those whom 1 knew in my youth, j They are gone long before me and, alas I I but too soon lhall 1 follow them. I most I own—God be thanked—-1 ict 1 tolerably well in my old age j yet, according to the customa ry course of nature, I can, at the very ut most only expect to live eight minutes move. What then avails all my industry ? What avails it that with a thousand anxieties and rarts I have gathered a provision ol" sweet dew upon this leaf, which the approaching end of my exiflence will not allow me toen joy ? In vain have I so often rilked my life in battle for our nation. In vain have I, far from the bustle of the world, endeavoured to form this colony by falut;jy precepts. Tis true, my friends flatter me that I {hall leave a great name behind me ; but what avails all this, if at the end of eighteen koun, the fun (ball be extinguiflied, and 'be warlj diffoke into, eternal ri 'thinffnefs j Oh-', if I could butcxpeiTl adi}r»ble fa ire qf thirty or forty hours" Al Raft hid frniled ; and immediately star- ted at having fvmled ; for hoars and years— Are the*4M>t> -the feme wfteft ? • •—.« JLate SfJatisa articles■ ' ■ - - ■ ■ y Via salem. Further Extracts from Hamburg Papers. MADRip, April S3* ' 'lt * They talk here of a genml tax upon all ; forts of income. v Pepfions, flock.' Many of tjte domains aw *Wb" ttbk->] ir'-*iv "*' ■■■lii; *l)on Seb." *: iterc&irt <»f <3k- t dj*, b»»feenappoi»t«t - Ail extraordinary, war per thaufand ha't bfcn laid upon Undid perty andsapitalu | - hINDAU, M:y to. Notwithftandingthr frt>itlef« attack aiade on tiie lft inft. upon the pofiiion of t!-.e French, a new attempt is to be m.iut {rem Felcikirtk to penatrate to Chur, in order to iffeft-a jimftion with General Belkgardc, who ban been ayfrver;,! thoufandi of the tirifon prafantiy. For this purpose all the Imperi:.! troops flattened in otsr neighbourhood have broke up to FeWktiik ; only two battalions will remain to guard tie Ihore of the lake between Brc&enz and Lu flenau. 'l'he troops are obllped to leavt all their baggage behind at Feldkirck. Ikfidts the whole regiment of Kinfki llghtliorfr, three battalions from the Archduke's army have joined General Hotze and thre: conipi. nies of ov r garrison have also broke up thither. The legion of Swil's emigrants con. lifting of jooomen has offered to form the advanced guard in cafe of an attack. Cpl. Williams's Flotilla is at Brrgentz ; and the communication with Switzerland is entirely closed. Head qvarters a' Maycnfcld, May 13. P. As. The enemy if! St. Lucienflieg were attack* ed from three fides, in their rt-»r, by the im perial troops, who.Charged with thebayexxt without much firing. Thus the important redoubt was taken in a Ihort time, only with the loss of 7 or 8 men wounded and ot.t killed. According to all apprarsitciiis, our brave troops will follow up the advantage they gamed, by a frefli attack, which will take place to niorrbw. SWITZERLAND, May i*. The head quartos of the French arirjr have not left Zurich ; a few days ago gener al ftfcffena held a great council of warthefe» after which he vwnt to the advanced poAt. Pontoons having arrived at Zurich, it is thought that gen. Maflena intends to pass the Rhine, but it is more probable that he intends to reinforce his, right wing in the Grifon country, and that be will defer offen five operations till gen. Moreau (hall like wise be able to act, which must take place (hortly ; for we learn that troops are rnarch ing from all parts of Italy. MAYENFELDT. May 13. The attack which our troops ir.ads this morning upon the French was very briflc, and our loss, confcquently, ir.confiderable. Without much Grir.g, they made u(e of the bayonet. The rnarkfmen volunteers, who had joined gen.' Jallachich's column, took two pieces-cf C3nncn near Flaefch : or the plain of Mayenfeldt our troops took «lfo 6 pieces of cannon, and several ammunition waggons. The French retreated over the bridges ft Ragatz and Chur, acrof* the Rhine. In the latter place, two companies. of Grens« diers were taken prifemers. We have taken, this d:«v, both near Lu ceinfleig and in other places, much more than 3000 prisoners, ami, altogether, 13 pieces of cannon. MANHEIM, May 10. The French troops which came down the Rhine, from the environs, of Straiburg, have advanced to Mentz. On the 9th, a tit vifion -of lightartillrry went from hence to Spires, whither General Colaud has also re paired. I On the 19th ult. the Grft celunm of tte Ruffian auxilary amy in British par, who.e march had been retarded, owing to bad wea ther, ftrl-ived at Gaia, fix leagues from Lrm burg, where they will remain till the other columns, from which the iormer hsdbeeivfe perated, by the breaking of the dykes of a large pord, shall have reached the app&uncd flatior.s. HAGUE, May 14/ There are continual lunfuirs here of * mar-time expedition ; and the company,® ridirg ;uli!!cry at Harltm wiil, it is said W. cmplcytd in it. It is further irenfioaWj that part of the rountry cf Clcvcl, i» BO* bccupifd ly ifie I'rerch. BR 4.
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