7 •-V reasons prevent me from mentioning the names of those moltir.t'amous wretvl es who have nst feared, to capitulate with tyrants. "To avert tlieif daring machinations, I trtjft it«is only fufficient to point thetir out to aH France. " Inform all the citizens, that it is in vain ihey have for fix years fought to create and consolidate the republic. Certain persons, despairing of its'fafety, have demanded the mediation of the king of Prussia, in the name of the French government. The PfUi- Gan cabiriet has made the following answer, which has been listened to without indigna tion, and without surprise.—" The king of Prussia consents to intergofe h\sgood offices and his authority to eltsblifh in France a conflitutional king." " Inform all Frenchmen, that the idea ot this culpable mediation is not abandoned ; and that it is proposed to renew it the firft fav6urable opportunity." Nothing has been published relative to the diffentions of the political society, opened iii the old riding fchonl. It nu mercufly attended. Many deputies are mem bers of it, as well as other citizens. The Thsophilanthropifls appear to lose their parti zans. The exercise of their wor (hip has ceased in tjie temple of genius. Sitting l of Tulv i" We have observed the re-appearance of fc- Ecii. SLriau* t'l.e elder, o„"~ motion of veral groupes nf : ,-ople in the public pl-ces, older—" Traitors have fold the Republic— but the y are not n"'"r,'oUS eur frontiers are menaced—the hearts of re- . publicans are filled with inquietude-joy and . . A number of troops are con hope brighten the eves of the royalists—we tir "»Vy marching from Brussels, Gand, Bru can no longer contemplate with a tranquil J he L , of Holland for eye the dangers which evOry where surround * n< th "P art ot , th L c .'WM re " us. Let ns not wait till the cealefced rob- P ub!ic wh,ch ls threatened by the Enghfh. brrs proclaim royalty on the dead bodies of ~ , " J, 1 . , the friends of the revolution." Marbot, general of division, has been After a violent invective Sn the fame a PP°' n,c a to the command of the 17th train, the orator demanded that the follow- d.y.fion.in the room of general tug refalutions (hould be referred to a lp.ci.il Joubert, who is mtended by the direftory committee. t0 ' >e P romott a to the r a n,c comman- IV body declares the coiifli- dec iu chief of the army of Italy, tution cf its allies to be under the protection . w 'j lß * g Macdonali is on of the loy dty ot the French nation. IUS a Y t0 . r '* - Every citizen from 16 to jo is deljrej to We are ilil in the greatcft uncertainty provide himfelf with a muflcet. [ rc 'P ti S' r, g the fleet. _ ( A particular adminiftratioli shall be crea--! °P en,n g ol V^ e Society iii the riding ted, charged to fuperiiuend the manufacture j l ' as produced a preat sensation. ofarms. i Several pe>fons who yeftetday spoke The exportation of every thing necessary ! a (?ain(lthis assembly have been arrelt to carry on war is prohibited. ' Citizens who are poficiled of guns are to of the ball of the Ancients, charged by the declare the fame to the municipal admin';- j police of the Thuilleries. In one of the Oration. 1 groupea wich,formed every instant, a citi- Thecouncil ordered fix copies'of the speech ' zen said, fufficiently loud to be hcaul, it and resolutions to be printed, and that they > would be seceffary to cut off 50,000 heads fiioujd be itfetleil to a committee compofcu !to fare the contry. The general indigna oi ft veil members. | tion Which this excited rendered it necessary CONTINUATION OF LATE foreign intelligence. VIA MW-YORK. ■r ■ ■ "<il» '< 3' FRANCE. COUHttL OF FIVK ITVKDKXD* Sitting of July is. •IT .'>» . -- f>A A great number of addrefies congratula ted the council on the fall of the triumvi rate, and demanded the speedy puniflunerit of the traitors. Among thele addrtffes thfre is one of the principal diftri&s of Paris which is mod re markable. It declares that nothing can be done while the guilty remain unpunilhed. " Punish," fay they, " Merlin, the fabri cator of copfpirccies; Rewbell and Scherer, «yapidators and plunderers ; Lareveillere, the exciter of war in La Vendee ; Francois Neufchateu, ai having moreliy aflafiiinated all the patriots ; Ramel, who has disorga nized the 6nances and ruined the public trea furv; laflJy, Talleyrand, who has provoked and organized the afiafiination at Raftadt." Referred to a committee of five. , The prefiScnt announced, that two impor- W.tjubjfiils wtre among the orcitrs of the -day, 1 -namely, the difeufiinn relative to the l«Sn ot* one hundred millions, and the report relative 'to The dilapit}a> •to;s,"i Mounded from all parts.. " '' Meiiteilkr ,h»d leave to (peak in the natne _ lo l'peak in 1,.. 'of the comnlitMe on this iubjed. He begai by c the council upon the mea .fire- uicrn o> ft 30th I'iiarial. u For ; fenctiv 1 f time," said he, " this nioft cxc craale tyranny has weiglted down tl>c friend of the republic. The legillative body ha: afTumed that attitude which become* it, ant exclamations oi surprise have answered th\ triumph of liberty." Here the reportci trade a brief re-capitulation of altf'th;' de nunciations agiinft the ex-dirotors and their accomplices, namely, the tranl[vrtation of Buonaparte, with 40,000 men ; the prosecu tion of Championet ; the daring violation of the conflitution of the Cisalpine nation ; the violation of the French conflitution ; their attempts at the acquilition of fore re ig n pow er ; the means of terror employed to influ ence the ele&ions ; .the confiscations ; the arbitary imprisonments; the recognization of the war in La Vetide, encouraged by their inactivity ; the inei.anceof republicans promoted by impunity. Such were the prin cipal heads of accusation. " Each of theie charges," f.iid the rirator, are not confinnd to one individual, they apply to all of them. Rewbell, Merlin, Laveilliere, TreilJjard,and Soberer, are pointid out as the chief s of that extensive conspiracy which has nearly anni hilated th- Republic. The contractors in general, and other public diljpidators of the public treasure, ;;rc referred to. The latter arid the Ex-iuiriifiers "re answerable to the Ordinary tribunals. Your committee has thought that having formed an aftive part in the conspiracy, they ought to be delivered O'er to the tribunal which is t > judge the executive diredlors, as was done in the aff.iir of Bar.cent'. As to the reft, you will act ac cording to your judgment; but as these dis cussions cannot, agreeable to the conflitution. be had otherwise than in a secret committee, it proposes to the council immediately to form one." The council ordered the printing of the speech, and the formation of a committee. PARIS, July io. The Chouans have Cpmmitted several hor rid excefies in the town of Montigne. All the gaming houses were (hut up ye llerday by order of the" police. The new political society, organized sonic days since, in the old hall of the five hun dred in the Thnilleries, is composed of 'ma ny deputies and many other citizens. \They have decreed as a principle, that no denun ciation shall be read which is not (igned by some one who is known. This society, fays a Jourh.il, does nothing but make a nolle, for every evening the neighbourhood resounds with the Marfeillois hymn, which tbeyfing in full chorus. (Journal du Soir.) We read, in one of our Journals, the fol loviug litter, which vfe publish without any obf-'rvatian : " The molt atrocious and Michiavelian plan of treason ever conceived, this time occupies the attention of a certain number of men whom public confidence has called to the moli eminent flations. The inoft urgent 5* - lie flionld take to his heclii to save liimfelf. It is (aid Gohier is a member of the so ciety. Bulletin of the fittings of the Political Society in the Riding Huufe The fittings cfh'.l night v.-err remaika ble for the croud of There were about two or three hundred to whom were added four or five hundred fpe&aiors, whose.persons have been remar ked in the Sections of i'aris. At haif past seven the Tree of/Liberty was planted, amidd loud acclamations. It was furrnounted with a cap of three colours, but that which was placed superior wai the Bonnet Rouge. After a speech from Santhsnax, on the reception c f members, Deftran funga song which he had made on the planting of the tree of liberty.. A deputation of the grc. nadiersof the guard of the legislative body received the fraternal embrace. A mem ber, after a fptech in favour of liberty, ex claimed,, " Live free or die j " and moved, that to " Liberty, Equality," &c. be ad ded another infeription, " or death." Leclere des Vcfges, author of tht: Ruffe de-Paris, after an eulogium on the National Convention, wh>fe facrfd feat' the fockty occupied, swore to be faithful to the Con stitution of the third year (general silence) : he t':en pointed Out as fit objefts for the fcaffold, Schfer Rewfeell, Merlin, Lepaus, Treiihard. Rapinat, Legarde, Faypoult, Trouve, Talleyrand, &c. (Long and uni *rfal applause.) The fallowing Eurijtean Extraßj it taken from the Lcndcn Star, of the 25th of July. Citizen Talleyrand has just published a vindication of his conduft, in aniVei* to the accusations pr ferred against hina in several pamphlets and journals—He begins with remarking, that all his accusers are them selves either Ex-Priests or Ex-Nobles, and even princes or foreigners, who having firft introduced themselves to notice with cun ning and dexterity, soon assumed, with au dacity, tke privilege of inftru&ing us how wc should be free from our own country. " What then," continues Talleyrand, 11 do these men urge, who are not French men, or those among Frenchmen <vhofe in tegrity they have succeeded in corrupting ? That I have been one of the Constituent assembly ! Yes, I was fully convinced that they could never forgive those whefe names are illultrous among the founders of liberty. I was fully convinced that men who had never experienced the firft Tallies of the French people,. in 1789, who indulged in fhamcful raillery on the sublime enthusiasm of the nation, and who, unable to prevent the Revolution, exerted themselves to ren der it odious, were in fei ret, enraged against the assembly which firft proclaimed the de claration of the rights of man, and were more favorable to the anti-revolutionaiy part of that assembly than to the part which produced the revolution. But I was ignor ant that they would carry their audacity so far as publickly, and without any mafk> to reproach a Citizen with having been a Meihber of the Constituent Assembly. And i i ■ ■ - *6"?. i .. .v, i PARIS, July 17 yet .tfi » i< one of the numerous accusations preferred 'against roe in their favourite Jour nal. " In the present agitatioa of the public mind three, fuppofltions are alone pufliblc. The Republic will consolidate its in the miJltt/f fo'many events ; we (hall be overwhelmed in the coafuliotv and deftruc tion of every kind of authority ; or Royal ty will be restored to opprefi us with in creased fury and tyranny. Every other fuppolitrprt is to me a chimera, and I have unqueltionabiy given Sufficient pledges of my zeal against the two last systems. Ihe fate allotted to me, by both the one and the other of ihem, is fufficiently known, as well :*s the kinJ of preference which thty would grant to me. It has been a tKoufarid times demonllrated that I can have ro other delire but that of consolidating the power and eftablilhiria the |»lury of the Repuplic. I did not, indeed expeft, to be reduced to the necessity of proving, in the 7th year of the Republic, that I am not an Emigrant. A proof rendered unnecessary by the unani mous declaration of the National Conven tion, which otdered'my name to be erased from all lifts of Emigrants, a"d repealed, at the fame time, the decree of aecufatiou which had bepn brought against me. " But it is 4lked by my accusers, What are the motives which caused the National Convention to erase the name of Talleyrand? The answer however, is simple, and un doubtedly decisive, I was sent to London for the second time, by the l'roviiional Executive Council, on the 7th ot Septem ber, 1792. I have in my poflelfion the original pafiport delivered to me by the Council, and which is signed by fix of its members, L fcrun, Danton.Servjn, Claviere, I Roland and Monge. It was committed to i the Convention, when it thought proper to take my cafe into consideration, and I will produce it to any person defirotu of feeing Talleyrand denies that he wore the wa y to demands Incompatible v. ith her dig white cockade in America and at Hamburg, j n j £ y > I hey also objedt (could it be iwagi and sppeals to- the testimony of the Envoy nc dJ t that men of the best characters a and Cot.ful ai th t city. Republicans have been entriifted with di With rclp. ci to the reproach of having pl o ,uatic miffijns, with an intem'on, tlirj fufferid the new cosliticn to be formed, lie : vindicates himfelf by quoting hia opinion, | v#l ; on at home. But if others who wen which was decide .ly given in fnTour of an not republicans had been entrusted witl honcraole peace, and makes the following business of that nature, would they not hav; thole who dare to accuse me of wilhing for t^e y j I3VC jj een f,| ent U p oa f 0 favourable ai the continuance of war are the very per- o pp' or;Un ity > sons who (iirred up the fire of discord, in- she Jrttoil de. Homme. Libre vokrd r;-:th the rrolt ardent prayers aa the . •*, . ™ „ , , r r . , ma i,tarns, that ir was lalleyrai.d who pro ury or u,,.. eager to excite rcvou- curcc j the return of after thi tionary movements in every prt oi inc ,- 4 . , . rr -it j u r»u i t . , r j • u a-r i. latter had been dilmifled by Charles jLa world, abuied c. \ " .srer in thcmolt inlult- . -n _ • . d • i . 1 , . - r A , croix. cut it was not to rans, that wa ine ar.Q fmpojte manner, threw obttacles , /r l , r n . 6 , r r . . . no longer neccllary, but to JLifle, even 11 in the way or every negocialion, and pro- . . . .1 1 T , . 1 1 rr :• the center ct our mil tary bulwarks. 1 p Off a ted in the public Journals the aliertion . . . , , K ° , , 1 ■» r this point cleary made out r 1 here neve lo fatal to the trarquilty ct burope. r . ' , !A r, 1 ,■ 1 th was an important tact that earned convict Fhfct'Republicsand Kin« r s are neCtfilarilY . • 1 • a 1 r\ o\ n , r . it *% * r j 1 ion with it aore itrongly, On the loci ir* a ilate ot nottihty :—when it is confide fed L ... ~ , u .1 r L , T , , ' n f Meflidor, when the confercuees began that I have been confianily engaged in re- . T /%#. . a . , . b 0 . ... ... .. .. -J j,® r 41 1 was not Mimfter ;itw. s only the 2Stt pamnp: the liulchieis produced by lo many . - T , . .*' • rr ■ li* U a i, 1 • Meflldot, I was appointed by the I/iretto inconnui rxies and tollies,-and in calminjr .» * /*» f / • » 1 » ■ r f , V r f 0 ry In Ihort every thing which has beer ;;ie itnurme 11 lions 01 the iLnvoys 01 neu- , . , . P, , , t .111 ~v done, either within or without the republic tr.u and amicable powers, every one rnult Oe ... , T 1 tlruck with aftonil!imerit that thef. nun «» «n.puted to me ; and I am m.errogatec (houiu acCuse me of co-operating in produ- lhe G '™ d duk % of Tufcan y was , no ' cing the coalmen, and that they Ihould kf P f . as if it were my pror.nc, , , , , ' to £ive inliruitions to the Genera s. Thti themlelves be ipnoraut on how many ac- . , . J counts the accul .t.on applies to their own have the effrontery to assert tnat U wa conduct. lh,ve all',, in a detail which ht, I who abated from the Republ.c th, been noticed bv the Legislative Bodv, point- U».ted State, of America, at a momen cd out the principal and more immediate : vv heo they know that American negoc.a catifcs of the CuaV.tion, and I may be wl- tors have arr.ved .n France, and they can lowed to oblirvi, that n,y oblorvations have I , no '>? £ 'f norant oi che } hav ' been received by the Kationai Il prden:,- „ lsd ,n l :' a ' ev /' n > on a «ount of the lan tiort, with a degree of .itteiirt which it on- B ua Sf«; fn » dcfc/ence,,of moderation anc ly confers cn tViith* addrclied them in the name of the French «It ii known that Aullria, ev.r. fr.-sr. Government, wl.ilc those who ..o«r attack the fignin- of the treaty of Cnmpo Foriuio, me w " e dcCroUi onl y. t0 W'Y »hem however favourable that treaty might have ex P rc 'j K,nß severe and irritating." lieen to it, having recovered from the ter- 1 alleyrand coaclude* hi. Tindicaiion by ror inlpired by cur arms, began to ltiedi- acctfing his assailants ot ignorance, malice tate projects of grejater ambition; that it bafeil defiant* . • was then cncoura; s ed by F ffia ; A . : that the events in Home and Switzerland became new motives and pretences for its at'iions ; and that it fought every where, from that time, for new nllies; which it did not find difficult to obtain, it: confequerce of the principles of the RepiiHl-ritative i'y«em which struck at all aristocratic e(\abliihtneiits, or by the natural effe£i of the oppressions cxerciled by fotnc of the French agent j, 111;- worthy of that uaux*, even in friendly coun- tries, or principally - in consequence of the impression made by the engagement at A- bonkir, which, iw giving us an addition il enemy, revived tj, _ audacity and hopes of others. '' At the commencement of last Bruir.aire, the end of October when General Joiibert let out for Milan, about five months before the Ruffians entered Italy, I had the good for- tune to procure the plan of attack which bad been combined between the Ruffians and Auftrians, and I give it to him myfclf. He has since declared, that it provod highly uC.- ful to his operations. .Every thing relative to the great changes ia Switzerland and It'a- ly was never either difculfcd or decided by the Direftory in my pre Fence. The altera- tions in the Cisalpine Republic are totally without my knowledge. I waS merely ac quainteS with them in Consequence of their execution ; so much so, that when Citizen Rivaud was sent Ambaflhdor to that Re- public, I was applied to for blank letter* of credence, and thus I was totally uninform ed with refpeft to his ambafly, until he had been employed for a confideraMetifne. Here I know, it is obje&ed to" me with severity, that I should not have hesitated to have given in my resignation.' And it is imagined that I was not disposed to that measure ? can it be thought that such an idea was gratify ing to my independence ? but I confefs, I was prevented by that dtffire, that indefa- tigable hope of peace, from which nothing could detach roe. I forg'trt myfslf entirely in that sentiment, and ta that I facrificed my perfoqal uneaiinefs; my repugnance as at) individua|. ....... " I am accused .that ait attach wrs not made on Portugal. But if such an attack had taken place and had been violently op ,, Olid by Spain, would they not h.tvc though; themselves juftifi.-d in blaming a condua which would have irritated this litter pow er, whole alliance it was so ufeful to culti-J vate ? I am reproached with not having" tut licicttfly encouraged privateering againfl En gland, but if it had been encouraged without , bounds.with w.hut vehemence wouldtlu yiuvi inveighed againtt the want of precaution, 01 the ftiipidity of Minifers, who allured, that 545 armed for cruizing hid br.n cap tured by the enemy from the of | the war to the end ot the ,6th that the nym'b?r of our priloners now in England amount to more than 30,000, for whose tub filteiice the Republic is at the yearly expenee of 15 millions, and that it is principally to privateering such a result is to be attribute 1, might have dared toexpofe the nation to the repeated hazards of a game, the losses ot which are lo sensibly felt • " lam reproached with the expedition to Ejfypt, which was planned previously to my administration, and had in no respect been determined by me.* But if that ex pedition in which the genius of Buonaparte, in which his glory, and that of his invincible army rendered certain and (till renders cer tain, so many fuccefTes had not been effe£ted, : and it could be proved, that I had opposed the projedt, with how much acrimony would not theie fame persons have said, that I was influenced by secret and impro- I per views, and that I wished to deprive the I Republic uf'the molt magnificent ellablifh ment in the warld, which was to strike a moll terrible blow at the Britilh power in India. " They complain of the cold indifference of the Swedish government, but how much more they have to complain, if it I order to prevent it the Republic had ~ vei Observations of Charles Dehcrciz upon the Refections pi,btisjed by Talleyrand Peri- S"td. As I have beei) named, or referred to twice in the reflections which citizen Talley rand has puoliQied, I owe it to truth, and to my own Chiirafter, to eftsblilh thole fafts with refpe£t to which I have been alluded to :n this work. It is true, as citizen Tal leyrand f;iys, that it was me of whom lord Grenvilledemanded irpaffport for lord Malm fbury ;that it was I who forwarded it ; thit it was during iny Ministry the negotiations were carried on ; and finally, that it was I who pointed out Lisle, in consequence of the exprels orders of tiie Directory. Ido not fee how theJe tacts can excite fulpicion ; but it it was necessary to jufiify them, I would fay that the facility of telegraphic communication, and the recollection of the intrigues of lord Malmfbury, at Paris, du ring bn: lirll million, were the principal mo tive.l. which determined the Direiloiy in prc ferir.g ths commune of Lille." It is well known" fays Talleyrand, '' that the expe dition to. Egypt had been prepared before the period of my Ministry. It is a certain fait, that citizen Magaller, consul General of the republic in Egypt, after a great number of memorials he had lent relative to an expedi tion Egypt, received, previous to my entering into admiftration, leave to return to France. It was in fa£t, and it could not be othtrwife, my duty to give informa tion upon the fubjett of his memorials." It would seem from this passage, that it was I who prepared the expedition to Egypt. I owe it to truth to declare the faft without attempting here to judge of the merit of the enterprise. It is very well known that dif ferent projedts, particularly under the an cient government, were proposed relative to Egypt; but what is not-known, yet is not less true is, that these memorials remained wholly neglecled during my ministry. That -•V »' . ■ -I: '■ \ neither myfrlf oil the part of the Directory aor the chief of division, paid any attention to their; ; that 1 had not any idea of the con tents of the memorials of ckfeen Magallcr. That his memorials no refpeft influenced the permiflion given him to return : but, on the contrary, it was granted on the ground of his ill Rate of health, and the danger he was in of dying 1 if he remained longer in Let citizen Talleyrand refer to the account which I gave 1 the Direftory ofthe operations of my admiruftration on the 12 Thermidor under the article Ottoman Porte. He win find there is not a word relative to this expedition, and that throughout it breathes the desire and the hope of promo ting and afl'uring the most perfeft harmoHy between the two powers. Citizen Talley. rand may recal to his mind, that in the firlt confer nee I had with him afer my return from the B-itavian Republic, having f or a a longtime discoursed upon the fubjeft of the horrible counter-revolution, whick had destroyed in one day the fruit of fix months labour there ; and the outrages committed against the French Republic on my person • ITpokc of the report just circulated, that Egypt was the immediate objeft 0 f the ex. pedition of Buonaparte. •« I would not attempt ( said I) to (leal the secret from you ; but Ido not believe the report. It is not to Egypt, but to the Black Sea. He is gone to deftrsy the fettleraents of the Ruffians, who are determined t j declare war againlt us, to restore Poland to its rank as a nation, to keep the house of Auflria in check, ami command a definitive peace. If you have any ulterior designs against Egypt, the Porte, in gratitude for th°e im. portant service yau will have rendered it, will willingly lend its afiiftance to r.a'lize them." ftitir.en Talleyrand left me to en. joy the sweet illusion which events have but' too loon deftroytil. My regard for truth has impofrd fcn roe these short obfervationi. It v ill plead my excufc to Citizen Talley rand. CH. DELACROIX. Charentotr 27 Me fTidor, July 15, 7th year of the French Republic, on; and indivisible. LONDON, July 25. Three Fret ch frigates from Alexandria ind recaptured part of the flotjlla taken bv Sir Sydney .Smith, before Acre. In this adion Lieut. Bull,by was taken, and caj.. tain Milier, of the Thefus, was unfortunate ly killed with part of the crew, from the ac cidental bursting of some bomb (hells. The following article appears in the Mbtti isur c t" the z6tl of MclTidor (July 14) q fd Genoa, 11th Mcflidor, July 9 :—On the 6th (June 24) an Englilh squadron ofabout thirty velTels appeared within fight of our port, and lent in a flag of truce with two letter* from Vice Admiral Lord Keith, or of which was addrefled to the French Charge d'Affairs, and the other to out:.government. He requeued, that having made bitrfelf i»af terof the fleet commanded by Vice Admiral tVrre the be permitted, toge ther \yith bis Etat Major, to go on (hare and r:egocinte the exchange of nooprifon. ers that he Keith) had taken. The latter concluded by faying, Port Maurice had fire: 1 upon his (hip ~ i:i c onfeqtience 6f which Genoese veiTeh (hoold be treated as enemies. On the 7th, June 25, some vessels tailed from hence to take on board the pri soners from the Englilh squadron ; they will be debarked in France." A letter from Dover, dated July 24, at z o'clock in the morning, fa rs—" There is now, off this place, a very heavy firing ; an [ engagement no^doubt; it is very dark, and has a fine effect." United Staf%«« "> DiftriA of Pennsylvania. j To toe Marshal of the Pennsylvania Dis- trict of the United States. WHEREAS in my opinion a contagious fitk flefa in the city ol Philadelphia, rtnders it hazardous ro hold the next dated Sefiion of the Circuit Court ot the United States, w and for the Pennsylvania DifkriA of the middle Circuit of the said city, the place appointed by law at which to hold the ftatcd Sefiion of the said C«nrt—Thefe are by virtuw of the powers and authorities refled in me, RICHARD PETERS Judge of the Peno fylvania Dift»icl of the United States, in the name and by authority of the United States, to order and direct you to adjourn the session ol the faii circiuit court, dire&cd to be held at Philadelphia, on the eleventh day ol" O&ober next, to Noma Town, in the county of Montgomery in the fame diftrill. being a convenient place within the fame for holding the said court; and you are to mahe pHblication hereof in one or more public papers printed at the said city, that the said court is a- - jaurne«! as it is hereby dircilcd to be; and you fire accordingly to adjourn the faiii court to th® sid place hereby appointed from thctim* you (hall receive this order td the said eleventh day ol o<fto ber next, the time by sow prescribed for commen cing the said fefiion. (L.S-) . JS Given under my hand and fta) at Bel mont in the laid diftriit this fo' l day of September in the year of our Lord I799,andin the twenty-fourth yaar of theljidependcnce of the Uni ted States. RICHARD PETERS. WHEREFORE 1, the fjid M»rfb»l, by virtue of the powers vefled in me by the above oider and directions from the honorable Rich» ard Peters, Esquire, judge of the Pennfylvinia diftfiili of the United States, and in the name and by the authority of the United States, adjourn the flffion of the Circuit co.qrt of the said United States, which was to have been held at Philadelphia, oil the eleventh day of Octo ber next, to the court hnufe in NORRIS TOWN in the county of Montgomery in the fame dif tri£l, thereto meet on the said eleventh day nf at le« o'clock ir» thp forenoon of the fame day of which all persons bound by Re cognisance or have otherwise tu do thereat are detired and required to take notice and give their attendance accordingly. WILLIAM NICHOLS. MArJhaf. Marlhal's office at Phlfa'Jelphii, - Sefterr.trr 7, 1799 (jHJthO. y< *P
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers