Gazette of the United States, & Philadelphia daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1796-1800, August 20, 1799, Image 3

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    Xlje (BWXtt.
PHILADELPHIA.
TUESDAY S.VENING, AUGUST 10
:<®
PRICES OF STOCKS.
Puii.adei.phia, August 19.
1.4/4
</«
15
Six per Cent.
Deferred 6 per Cent.
Three per Cent.
B 4NX United States,
North America, 45 to 47
Pcnnfylvania, 14
Infurante comp- N- A. (hares 17^
Pennfylvania, (hares, 17 to 18
8 per C»nt Strck —(untied—par to I percent adv.
Do. Scrip With the fix Instalments 1 > belowpar
Do. the sth and 6th Instalments » j
East-India Company of N .A. par.
1 and Warrants, 30 dollt. per 100 acre;.
COURSE OF EXCHANGE
On London, 51 at 30 days
50 at 6: a 90 days
Amttcrdam, 35 37 a-100 per florin
-Hamburgh 3° *3 i " l ®° P er Mlrk Banco
In tlv.' Aurora of the ift inft. appear*;
moducUon oi an under bant 1 ., lying, illiterate
correfpomfcnt of the Editor: this
fellow is I'o wfll knoWn for declaimatioi, ami
ahnte of all the ineafures at.d mm ot Govern-,
went, that it needs nrjly to him as
the au'.hor of any Rrpveientstion, and the
(U.iy goes for nothing—His unprovoked
narrative refpeainp; me, is a pretext for bit
(mattered fbai'ts ®f fewJ! fe'it at the nieafure
of Gov: nin-cot. 'i his, together with ai
irrrfiftible itch for fciibling, induces ant
ticU-.s his vanity to have his Scurrility pub
lilhed, so tbat lie may fpull it over to h:s
colleagues, the factious herd of Northamp
ton. Thie black detracting Paitroon, beiny
unworthily in office, has turned hi:, brain,
so that h; conceives he may vilify charac
ters with impunity—From the lameness and
one will be mistaken ip the paltry author.
This vain coxcomb is dail) in the habit of
abusing the Executive, and all the strong
meafnres of tlie nation : he ii a notorious,
ftditious Jacobin : whoever will take the
trouble to read his calumny against me, will
perceive what credit ought to be attached to
it when he impudently blends it with the be ft
digefled and wisest laws of the legislature.
He leaves no means uueffaved which his
cowardly nature dare attempt, todifcourage
the recuiting service. the duty assigned me
in this hot bets of difaffe&ion I would not
deign to notice this (liamelefs scoundrel but
to disabuse the public who may have (een his
infamous publication. I shall present your
readers with a specimen of this fellow's infa
my, should I discover any more of his filth
in the public prints; I wiil give a short hi
story of his ignominious life, even if it
should disgrace- a page or two, and (hock
humanity
PETER FAWLKNER.
Eafton (P) Aagnit nth r7g>
APPRO ACHf'NG ELECIION.
No. 111.
To the Eleilors Of Pennsylvania.
AMONG the other evils which the com
mittee attribute to the Britilh trtaty, is the
injury which it is alledged to have done to
our j£.7st India trade. Wh£n 1 firlt read
this paragraph; its absurdity was so appar
ent, as to leave no doubt on my mind' that
a typographical er-or had been iade, and I
fully expetted to have speedily ken its cor
rection ; but as none luch has appeared, it is
evident that this, like many other parts of
the address, was a bale and intentional raif
£prefentation. Before that treaty, we trad
ed to the Britifli \Eaft Indies merely Upon
fufte ranee ; our commerce thither depended
entirely oti the pleasure of the Britilh court,
and our merchants were liable to all the in
conveniences ariting from the fudaen (top
page of one of the great channels through
which their capital was employed. By that
treaty the privilege of trading there was se
cured, and eftablifhe.d on a permanent foun
dation. We were even placed on a far more
advantageous ground, than the great body of
Englilh fubjefts themlelves, for while their
enterprise is (hackled by the exclusive iramu
ittitiesgrantea to monopolising corporate com
panies, who never can carry Jon commerce
with Co much cheapnel's to others or profit to
<is individuals j ours is open to
the emulative effort of every class of our ci
, tizens. Accordingly our trade with this part
of the Empire of Great Britain has increaf
edbv the formation of that odious instru
ment, with a rapidity truly aftoniftin*-, and
the .njury received, is i„ confidence of
our Hupping having been augmefitsd to be
tween ftvett and ten thousand tons. Mr.
Coxe's pretensions to a knowledge of mer
cantile iafts, air too well eftablithed to i'uf
fer us Fin- a moment to believe, that circum-
family to the lowed grade of mer
chants, fli.mld.have been unknown to him.
How liagitioufly uncandid then does his con
duct appear*
But, .afe the committee, has not that in
ftn.;m«Hoeeu « foconttrued and afted upon
as la eMail on this country the payment of
two euor Jious tla&s of debts ; for one of
whlc.i, n.ioer the Treaty of ,783, Britain
bericlt, aid not pretend that, we were refpon
•lolc I I ar.fuu-, tharrt has not been so
*? "l' 0- 1 * has " ot ye t entailed upon us
t m payment ot tliefe enormous classes of
ocots. he American government has not
submitted <O, but hat expre%repelled fuclr
a confttvction, nor is it yet known that
Great Britain herfelf win infiTl upon it. I
anfr-cr mp«ov*r, that if the doctrine field
y * Cbiej J<jstice of Pennsylvania, and j
Mr. Dallas, 011 a former Bccation be just, the
United States are not only bound by treaty,
frut lie under the f o leni® obligßtioiiSpf mo
rahty and juftic?, t0 make payment of all
the clafies of debts, nv-v claimed.by the
Britilli cosnmiiiuyner}.
In the Aurora ot February Ji, 1798, is
the following answer to a query prtfpoied to
Thomas M'Kfan, bearing his own fig-nature:
" Before the revolution the British colo
nies in America were a constituent part of the
fame Empire with Great Britain, Ireland,
and the other British dominions. When the
revolution commenced, the war was proper
ly a civil one, and all the fubjetfs of the em
pire, wherever fettled, were entitled to es
pouse which party tbey pleased, and having
made their eladtion were bound by if, so as
}f
to luflfer in cafe of the failure, or to enjoy
the fruits in cafe of the success of the party
they espoused.
" Ibe civil war continued until the d.-jivi
tthe treaty ivit{> Great Britain in 1783, and
all perfonsborn within the British allegiance,
who at that time Had a&ualiy espoused t"lie
American cause and were fettled within the
territory of the United States) were entitled
to partake in the refill t of the contest."
" This opinion is recognized by the Ex
ecutive of the government of the United
States, in the iaftru&ions to the collectors
of the cuftoniS refpetting American seamen,
in the bill before Congress, by both branches
of the legiilature of Fennfylvania in the late
elfftion law that the governor returned with
Ms negative, and by authoritative British
writers ; who declare that all the inhabitants
of the United States of America were put
'on the footing of tbe inhabitants of a ceded
Island by the definitive treaty."
" After tbe treaty tbe national indepen
dence was consummated, and tbe subjects of
tbe British crown in future were placed on
the' fame footing with rtlier aliens, and fub
jeNf\ed to the C.ititr measures and rules in ac
quiring the rights of citizenfliip."
This opinion then adopts the following
principles ;
1 ft. That the revolutionary war was a ci
vil one, and therefore did r)ot subsist between
two independent nations, but between dif
ferent branc he* of the fame empire.
2d. That the people of America, being
entitled to " el'poufe which party they plcaf
ed" were not bound by thea&sof their owu
country, unless they gave to them their indi
vidual consent.
3d. That as the civil war continued until
the definitive treaty of 'B3, it did not end
with our.declaration of Independence in '76.
4th. That as America was ceded to her
ftlf by the definitive treaty, until then file
had obtained no legitimate l'overeign autho
rity, since lien it was granted by Great Bri
tain. »
And sth. That as the definitive treaty
consummated our national independente, it
existed before, only in an inchoate state ;
and therefore in order to complete it, a con
cession was neceflary on the part of Great
Britain,
Now what fays the Aurora, whose autho
rity certainly will not be disputed, either by
its jackall Mr. Dallas, or its prot£ « Mr.
M'Kean ? It slates that the Britilh commis
sioners had contended, that the independence
<yf America. u was ft conceffioii tuadc by
Great Britain." If the definitive treaty,
and not the declaration of '76 u consmmat
ed'our independence" they wereper
feaiy in the right ; for in that cafe the con
cession of our independence, by Great Bri
tain was neceflary to its exigence. All the
measures tint a nation could take to forw its
independence, bad already been taken by
America, and if these measures aUne diJ
not effeit a completion, or ciuifumniation
of the objeil, the act of the Britilh mon
arch in signing the treaty, was literally and
ftridUy a concession. The Aurora further
aflerts " that the confifcated debts due to the
tories during the revolution, were claimed
by a majority of tie board of commissioners
as being within the prpvifion of the treaty,
which stipulates for the payment of debts
due to Britilh fubjefts." And if all the sub.
jeds of the empire were entitled ta elett
which patty they pleated, the tories who es
poused the caule of Great Britain, having
never chosen to becowe American citizens,
lemained Britilh fubje&s : were placed in
the &tre Gtuation with every Engliftiman
who had debts owing to him" in America ;
and therefore, those whole property was ta
ken from them for the crime' of an aftive
peiional opposition to their native country,
had as just a claim to remuneration, as those
whose debts were withheld from them by
general principles of national policy, in or
der. to weaken the efforts of the common
enem^.
But if this reasoning of Chief Justice
M'Kean who fanttioned it, and of Mr.
Dallas who has the honor of having difcov
eied/it, be just, there is an obligation upon
the United States, much stronger than any
the treaty can irppote, to agjree to the resto
ration of all the confifcated estates of those,
who like Mr. Caxe, were brand.d with the
infamy of treason. If they had a right to
sleft their party, upon what principles were
they punished tor the exercise of that right?
W hat crime hacl they committed ? What
forfeiture had they incurred ? Wherefore
was it that they were held up to general ex
ecration, tfieir fortunes torn from them,
and their lives destroyed ?
Who will undertake to fay that this opi
nion has not been relied on by the Britnli
commiflioners, in the difenflion with Meflrs.
Sitgreaves and Fitzfimons ? Perhaps even
in some tSie a tite between Dallas and Mr.
Guillemard, the idea may have been original
'y suggested with no other view than to bring
on a dispute with Great Britain.
Candour and charity, however, induce me
to believe th:it the Chief Juttice himfelf yiis
convinced of the falfity of his ouiliion, at the
time when lie gave it, for if he really did
think that " all the l'ubjetts of the Biitifli
empire were entitled t® espouse which party
they pleased," that America was on " the
footing of a ceded territory," of courfepof
ie fling no sovereign authority until the cef
iion was made, and that hrr independence
was consummated by the definitive treaty, I
affirm hitn to have been guilty of murder.
If the traitors at whofc trial he prefixed,
•in wliofc cetidetnnati' ii he participated, and
Whom he il-ptanced to die oti a gajlows, had
a right " to efpnuf; which party they pleased"
and if the war was properly a ciitl one, they
could have owed no allegiance to the United
States ; for in tbijt cafe .they would have
been bound' by it, to have ci'uoirfed our cause.
Now trttifou is,in its very nature a breach,
or renunciation of tbe utiegaiy.ee due to the
sovereignty of the nation ; of cov.ife, whete
it does uotcxtft, no lucit oreach or renunci
ation can be nude, and tenftqufcrtly no trca
fonTommittedi Again, if the "United States
were not perfectly independent untjl tlie'de
ftiitive. treaty, then, and not be did they
become foveiei{jii,i\ji Jovereignty is abfoUte,
incontrouiable, and independent of all othei
powers. But treason " being equivalent,"
fays Blackftone, "to the crimen lies& majes
to.tis of the Romans as Glanvil denominate?
it alio in our English law" is nothing- but
an attack upon the f.iveneijjnty of * govern
ment ; of course where this does not exist,
110 such atta'»k can be made, and therelore
Roberts and Carlisle could not have beenguil
ty of the crime, for which'they Were tenten-
Ceddto death by Chief Justice and
afterwards, executed.
But the truth is, that the independence of
America was not rendered consummate by
the definitive treaty. The declaration of
independence was the date of its complete
existence, and had Great-Britain refufed to
acknowledge it, -ill the definition of the
world, tjnlcfs Wt» had been compelled by force
of amis to make a cession of oursfelves to
that nation, we should hatfe remained freed
from her fetters. The thfoiy hi-Id during
the revolution w»«, that the Britilli monarcli
having broken the original cvmjjad fubfifl
ing between him and his American fubje&s,
|i*d itifulved thefti fr6m their allegiance, and
tKiefore they were at liberty toerodt a new
gsvernm'-nt for themlUves. Accordingly
the asknowledgment of our independence
was not fuffered to be introduced as a con
dition of but was infifled on, as a' prelimi
nary to both the definitive and provifionaj
irt-atio.
The manner in which this opinion was
given by Mr. M'Kcan was not less culpable
1 hat its lubftance was abfuvd. The eledion
of Israel Israel, in the year '97, to the Se
nate of this date wgs objefled to as invalid
on various grounds. Among others, be
cause a number of persons had voted who
had indeed fettled in Pennsylvania previous
to the year J 783, but had not been natural
ised, and therefore were not citizens. A
committee of the Senate legally organised,
was appointed t« decide on tlie justice of
the objeftions. During the trial, Dallas,
wh? was of counfcl for the fitting member
lirft broached the dottrine which M'Kean
afterwards endeavored to i'anfUon.—Af
ter an elaborate argument, the Commit
tee decided against it. Some of the jaco
bin party, calling theinfclves judges of the'
ele&ion, then solicited the. Chief Justice to
give his opinion, which he dill in dire£l op
poOtio« to that of the Committee, In do
ing this he lent the weight of h'u office in
aid of a fa&ion, who loudly accused one of
the constituted authorities of our
country, not only with a judgmeat mani
feftly illegal, but viciously corrupt. But in
addition to this flagrant indecency he com
mitted fin offence infinitely Jrf* pardonably.
By giving a legal opinion in other than a
judicial manner he opened a do?r to the
wqrft species of judicial error. If he is at
liberty to give public opinions to the unau
thorised agents of a faftion, fun ly he may
with equal prfipristy give them, when solici
ted by individuals on their private afFairs/md
thus his mind biaffedby the ideas which lie
had already promulgated without havipg
heard the allegations hut of a single party,
would be in a ft ae very iinfit to farm a judg
ment cither legal or impartial. The great
constitutional qucftion Which he .has in this
instance undertaken (a peremptorily to de
termine may and very poifibly will be involv
. Ed in others which it will be the business of
the i'npteme court to decide. Splendid in
deed wuftbe the eloquence and luminous the
reasoning which can convince hii vanity and
arrogance of the ridiculous absurdity ot his
doitrine.
ERRATA
IN " MILO" NO. It.
\st parrgrapb, T,d sentence, for " never
theless it is asserted" read " it is not as
serted."
4th paragraph, f near tbe middle of the
column) read " Toy (Taint, the negro chief,
in fact declared."
The Dey of Algiers has certainly declared
War, against tlie French Kepuhlie, and im
prisoned their Consul.
The American cbara&er (landshigh in
the Dey's estimation. [li.T.D'Ad.
A PROCLAMATION.
New-Jersey, ft.
By his Excellency RICHARD HOWELL,
Esquire, Governor Captain-general and
Commcnder in Chief in and over tbc State
of New-Jersey, arid Territories thereun
to belonging, Chancellor and Ordinary in
the same.
WHEREAS it has been reprefentfd tt>
nie by the Board of Health of the rity of
Philadelphia, under the signature of Edward
Garrigues, their president, that certain citi
zens of New-Jerl'ey have lately gone on board
the (hip John, from the River la Plata, then
riding quarantine, in contravention of the
health law of Pennsylvania, to the manifeft
danger of the city of Philadelphia, with
which the citizens of this (late hitve contin
ual intercourse, and not without a poiUbili
ty of injury, and even calamity to this
ftSte.
NOW BE IT KNOWN, .irtjie
.of ti.e act of rhe legillature cf the ft«te of
Nrw-Jt-i:(Vy, jiafled. at Trenton, the. ele
venth day of June, in the year of our. Lord,
one thousand fevtn hundred-and übiety nine,
entitled, " An ait to pro-aide for the securi
ty cf the citizens of this stgte against the ifl~
traduction of conicgitus diseases;" (which
laid act is lecifed at large in my former pro
clamation on this fubjeft, dated the firft of
July la n , and is npw published in due forrfi
of law,) and by ai)-l With the content of the
honorable <be privy council, allperfoui who
mever, within cbc jurifdiftion of this state, are
hereby fU"i£Vly forbidden and prohibited, dur
ing the time the said a A Iball continue tn
furve, from going 011 board any vcflVl what
forver performing' quarantine under the
he»kh4aw> and port regulations of either of
the futei of Ntw-York or Peniiiylvania,
without permiflion ill writing f.rft obtained
from the proper officer or officers authorized
under tiiofc laws and regulations to grant
the lame : And all. juilices, judges and other
officers to whole duty it appertains, ate here
by charged and commanded to take immedi
ate cognizance of allTuch offences, and bind
ovijj offenders in tint behalf, in fuffiwe.it
sureties to appear and anfwtr as offenders
againfitheforce anflefFefl of the afoiefaidafc\
of aflfmhlj'.oftbls flute*, and in the mean time
to he of pood behaviour.
DONE under my ha nil and teal at
artfis, at Trenton, the nineteenth
day of Augufl, in the year of our
Lmd one thousand f<;ven hundred
and ninety-nine, and (f i ur hide,
pendtner the twenty-fourth.
Rd. HOWELL.
Bytbf Governor's Command.
John Bkattt, Secretary.
ELECTION.
Delaware County.
At a very numerous and refpelia
ble meeting of thfi Inhabitants
oj the County of Delaware,
held at the black-Hoife Tav
ern, in the townjhip of Mid
dlet own, the 17 th day of Au-
§ U A 1799,
It was unanimously resolved,
That we will support JAMES ROSS, of
Pittsburgh, with our votes and interest at
the ensuing eleftion, as Governor of this
Commonwealth.
Resolved, That in order to obtain this
defireable objett, a Committee, confiding
of four or more persons, be appointed in each
T-owrifhip to -assist in prombting his eledlton.
Resolved, That the Committee of Corref
poiidcnce of this County be requested to pre
.pare and forward a Circular Letter to each
Member of the Tcwnfliip Committees,
earnestly desiring tliem to use their utmost
exertions by all f.«r and honorable means to
promote the eleftion of Javes Ross of Pittl
bur&h to the office of Governor cf this Com
monwealth.
Mr. John Wall, Mr. Tcffe Sharplefs. and
Michael Keppelc, Esq. tbe Committee ap
pointed by a meeting held at Dunv/oody's
in Philadelphia or tbe 13th kiftant, for the
pyrpofe vf rcprefenting \o this meeting the'r
citte rmimfon to i'upport Joitfk Bail as Se
nator, and to dellre our co-Operation therr
in «ei* introduced to the Chairman, and
hAvit>g detlarcd the purpose c.f their million,
It was.unanimous!} ltfi'lved,
That we wiHfupport, at the enluing.elcr'-
rioijj by our intfreft and \otci, JOSEPH
BALL aa Senator of tjiis flute, to supply
the vacanty occafioilcd by the resignation of
lieni.m.ii> R, £f<u
Resolved. That the proceedings of this
meeting be signed by the Chairman uid Se
cretary, and jjublifhed in the Philadelphia
Newfpjipers.
HL T GH LLOYDj Chairman.
Benjamin H. Smith, Secretary.
At a numerous -and refpettnble meeting
of the freemen of the townlliips of Oxford,
Lower Dublin, Byloerry and manor of More
land, held the loth inft. at the of
John Sagar, in Buftleton, for the.purpose of
fixing 011 a suitable charafter to be run for
governor nt the en filing election ;
The meeting having taken into conlidcra
tion the genuine rqmblican principles of
James Rofs., Esq. of Pittsburgh ; his warm
attachment to our jGonftitution, and'known
impartiality refpedUng' ail foieign Govern-
MILO.
Resolved unanimously, 'l'hat they will, by
all fair and candid means in their power, sup
port him With their votes and interefls for
the office of .chief niagiflrate.
Kefolved, that in order to assist ifi pro
moting this deGreable objeft, s committee,
confiding of two perfoiw frpm each town
ship, be appointed in this diftrift to corres
pond with other-committfies already appoint
ed for that pwpoO.
Ret'olvecl, That MfiTrs. Frederick Carter,
John M'Qellan, Thomas Paul, William
Lardner, Jolhua Comely, Edward DutKeld,
jun. Benjamin Walmfly, and Evan Town
fend, be a committee agreeable to the fore
going resolve.
THOM'AS HOLME, Chairman,
Lower Dublin, Aug. 12, '99.
Those Citizens of Delaware Coun
ty, who are desirous that JAMES ROSS,
of Pittfburgli, flioiild facceed the pvefent
Governor, arcrequeftcd to meet at the JJlack
Horse, in tbf township of Mtddletown, on
the j7th day of Aug-, next at 2 o'clock ir. the
afternoon, in order to conlult on measures
to promote his election.
HUGH LLOYD, Chairman,
c.f the Gwefpunding C'cirmittee of
Delaware county.
July 30. 1799.
It is with great fatisfa&ion,
felcd to state, that the rtpdrfcs «4 t<
fpefting the IV. k tie Is in. the city jrns
vorable.
A meeting of the .Board of H. '' \
held this morning, anc) after a riati -
deration of the fubjeft, it war. cc ' !
that fufficient ground did not hijt t S j.
mand any public notice of itfrnnM'Kn.-
By private accpunts we leartf, that a &■"
iiderable mortality prevail? in Jsew-Yi :...
where, as Welltis with us, much alarm t
arisen. In Baltimore'alfo the season h;i< t,;
late been sickly—-but no idea prevails of arv
contagious disorder existing there. On the
whole, it may be hoped, that the present
alarms tiave no other foundation than ther*.
tra number of deaths, by no means uncom
mon at this season.
ii '
Died on the :2th inflant, at the br.ttfc
of Dr. De Butt 3, Shavpfburg, Wafiiin,;*
ton county, Henry Ormsby, Efquir ,
late of the kingdom of Ireland.; ?flcr irt
innocert aad reip'c&able life of fcrverity two
years.
o^ette
> i'j" :JS '<■ • *_ '•
'?W tf&jftkJfifyhijt s -
A fhij? aiul■».jjfig, r»amt%mt^newi< 4
into tbtf la®.' :
A fchri <i}stf..6p;i**
edat
Xw-Torh, August {q.
ARRIVED DaVo.
Ship Favourite, Swam, Dublin 63
Hunter, Whitlofck, Gibraltar 5 1
Warren, Dilleno, Bilfaft hj
Schr. Suckey, Jones, Virginia 4
Sloop Polly, Williams, N. Carolina 6
■
A PERSON of 'Judgment and Integrity to «cc.-.-
fionally .itcettil Vendues to purchase Wet au<J
Dry Goods for an extensive Country Pro
posals sealed directed to A. B with the name
ol fotne other person nientioiud to whom relcr
ence may be had, if neccffa.-y, for information re
lating to ths qualifications cf the agent, and left
with the printer, will be duly attended to. The
applicant will mention the No ofthehoufe whera
he, or ihe, reO.lcs, that a letter dir.tfed by poli.
may be regularly received.
a "g" eo 4 w
Wants a Situation, as Cook,
IN a gentleman's family -a middle aged wfcito
person, who uf)der!undi her business, and can
have en undeniable charter from her lift situa
tion Enquire at No. t%, nori h .Second ilreet neaj*
Market (Ireet,
"g- » c I4t
TO LET; .
A two fltory Brick House,
SITUATE on Dukt, between Front and s, cond
Street*, in ihe Northern Liberties; hiving a
large garden and yard, e*ten.ii» s to Green Street
—on which th re is .i flaMe and Imallfrane buil
ding fuitabU lor a (hop or copnynt- hou'.e. Th«
bnili in the bcft.marm-r pud in exCtllcnc
order; two roomson a flrqr wafli house, &c•
i'nijuire t No. 37 Afeh ftr?et.
P S. fhii hcufc Was lately occupied by Tofepb
Englc.
august 20 aawim
oi^ 'the^• '&y}^Avgufl^^
«• tHERMOMHTRfCAL NAVIGATION,
' Being a series of experiments and obfervr.'.ions,
' tive heat of the fca water from time to time, the
• psflage of a fliip though the LluTph rtrcarw,
' and (rom desp water iat.l so nili;gi, n:ay ha
' (. wind t0 tempefluous wcatlier)it may be im
•< polli'jle to heave the lead or<olif< rve til? hearen
■ ly Indies. jExtr.iilcd from the American Philo
" fophical Trarf,cti<jns, vol. i tS" 3 " With ad
" ditions snd improvements.-—.
•' God helps them ch*t help themfuives " •
(1, s.) lii conformity t» the aift of congress of the
encouragement 01 learning hy feturing
ed." D. CALDWELL,
august
WANTED TO PURCHASE.
FOB CASH OK .OtT CRKBIT,
Coffee, Cotton, Logwood Hides*
Ai-urr ro
PRATT SsPKJNTZING,
f
A very exr 'jisive assortvicnt cf
Suitable for the Weft-India market, which they of-
*' "•
Received by the skip Adrir.na. captain Carl*
ton, from Lender,,
A LARGE il'O T#i»T OP
HAIR S EATINGS,
Switaiite sos chair and foplia covers, c.
of- striped and yilain, and of the f'. Uov.
widths, fix 17, 18, 19, »o, ai, 11, 43. 54
56, aB, 30 acd 31 inchi-s.
FOR SAie -tr , "'v
<?!©£s£ MjNNOCK* ,
•"•" mf.
iuty ?
-.#m i.4
.Vrr'ft*."
'V:. ■• '
r '
' 1
ft & thaw