pflii filhuUbcPl A NATIONAL PAPER, PUBLISHED WEDNESDAYS AND SATURDAYS BY JOHN FENNO, No. & 9> HIGH-STREET, PHILADELPHIA [No. 13, of Vol. IV.] BANK of the UNITED STJTES, July 2d, 1792. NOTICE is hereby given, That there will be paid at the Bank, after the 10th instant, to xhr Stockholders, or their reprefeotatives duly au titorized, the following sums, being the dividend declared from the commencement of the mftitu \ion to the firit inllant, viz. Yor each share complcated in the month of March, Twelve Dollars. For each share completed in the month of April •Ten Dollars, Sixty-[even Cents. For each share compleated in the month of May, XJine Dollars, Thirty-three Cents. For each hals-share, Eight Dollars. By order of ihe President and Directors, (2 w.) JOHN KEAN, Cashier. THE UNIVERSAL HYMN BOOK. Now in the Press, and will be ready for Sale in ten days, by THOMAS DOBSON, and other Booksellers in Philadelphia, \ Self&ion of PSALMS, HYMNS, and SPI RITUAL SONGS ; taken from different Au thors, for the Use ot those who believe in the Rcftorationof all Men. Published by Order of the Convention holding said Faith, met in Phila ddohia, May, 1731. As this is an Universal Hymn Bnok, the favor of the Printers in different parts, in inserting the above advertisement, will be acknowledged. July ii. eptf. SECURITIES SOLDIERS, Mariners, and militia men's pay, lands, and claims on the public, SH ARES, in the Banks, in the Canals,and Turn pike Road, CERTIFICATES, granted by the public, and the old and laie paper monies, NOTES of hand, bills, bonds, and mortgages with or without deposits, BOUGHT, fold, or negotiated, at No. 2, in Fourih-ilieet below Market-tercet, by FRANCIS WHITE, Who tranfa&s business in the public offices for country people and others,by virtue of a power, of attorney, or bv personal application PHILADELPHIA, 24 Dollars Reward. RUN AWAY the 30th March last, a NEGRO WOMAN, by tne name otCHLOE. She is five feet two and a halt inches high ; quick spoken ; upper tooth open ; no eye-bro ats at all ; is about 30 vears old, but looks much younger. She is wc'.l (locked with cloaths, long gowns, jack ets, See. She is no w palling for a free woman, I understand, and has changed her name—Whoever takes her up, so that the owner gets her, (hail re ceive the above reward ; and if brought home, all other reasonable expences, from the fubfenber. JOHN PUZEY. Somerset County, near Princess-Ann, Maryland, June 2id, 1792. (*iaw4 within the United States, which, under his care or within his power, (lull be brought in such (hip or vessel, other than iuch as are dire&ed to the owner or consignee : but when a vessel shall be bound to a nother port, than that, at which she may enter, the letters belonging to, or to be delivered a: the laid port ot delivery, lhall not be delivered to the pott matter at the port ot entry-. And it lhall be the duty ot the collector or other officer ot the porr, empowered to receive entries ot ships or vessels, to require from every matter or commander of such ihip or vt ffel, anoa h or affii mat ion, purport ing that he has delivered ail luch letters, except as atorefaid.!' * (iaw6w) In fetlion 13, 4t That the postmaster to whom such lclteis ir.ay be delivered, lhall pay to the mafttr, commander, or other person delivering the fame, exccpt the commanders ot foreign pack ets, two cents tor every such letter or packet; and ftiall obtain from the pcrfou delivering the fame, a certficatefpecityiog the number of letters and pz 0 » 01 about 15,000,000 dollars as thev would have fold in the American market, exclufivc of tfie contraband tiade which was coniiderable. This will be'ieen by a refer ence to the liifl number of these reflexions, to be full seven millions inoie than our exports at the fame time, if then our imports were to bear the fame proportion to 18,250,000 dollars (our present exports)'the former might be above 24,000,000 dollars, without creating more alarm than we had then leafon to feel, 'i his view of the iubjetl may convince us, that our imports were too copious, at leait m some quarters, for several years before rue war ; and hence we find a heavy load of pri vate debt was created and remains upon some of the citizen* of the United States at this day. Hap pily for the United Slates, the reduction of the prices of iupplies, by the present freedom of their commerce, by the agency of fkilful merchants, in itead of planters inexperienced intrude, by the in trodu&ion of machinery in Europe, and by their own manufacturing industry, has kept down their imports many millions of dollars below that sum, although the impoftand tonnage have diredtly or .indirectly contributed to enhance the nominal a mount without incicdfuig the sum to be paid lor ,• them abroad. A Sketch of the general Trade of the United States. IN taking a iurvey ot the American commerce* the attention is att rafted to the.increase of (hip building, the new manufactoriesof articles necefTary to the equipment ol veflels, and the im provement in the aitof ship building, as well as the superior quality of the materials now used in their conltruttion. The largest number of veflels built in any one year before the late war, as far as it can be ascertained, was equal to 24,358 !on>, and at lealt 32,000 tons of superior quality were built in 1791. The timber and plank, are more cholen, nnd iron is more copiously used at this timt\ becaule the vcifels are not intended for fafe-, and the fenlible practice of falling them is bccom very frequent. It is important, too, that the art ot thip building is diffufed more generally than •any other equally important one which is carried on within the United States. The export trade in our produce is more bene ficial than heretofore to the landed inteitft, be caule ihe cultivatois Go not, as formerly, antici pate upon their oops abroad, by ordering out lupplies at the difcrction ot the European mer chant, to be paid for in shipments of their crops on their own account and risque. The planters in Maryland md Virginia, particularly the tobac co planters, iuflered extreme ly by an inconfider purfuit of that practice before the revolution. 1 he American merchant is noW more frequently their importer; and as he underitands the mode of procuring goods cheap, the re