A ??." r TOXS ■ Chipped Logvvood, WR SALE, Landing at Hamilton's wharf. Apply to John Vaughan, WHO HAS FOR S.*jLE. CLARET, In hog (heads and cases of the firft quality. Aug. 7 d Strayed or Stolen, th FROM the Farm of JOHN LAURENCE uj Ef'q. near the Falls of Schuylkill, a frnall Si young SO t <.RE MARE, of the Nan set breed, wit ha white flip in lier face.—, Whoever will return said mare to said a I'arm, or to Jamrs Thomson at the Indian 0 ' yueen, shall receive Ten Dollars reward, cc 7. d s i; GUTHRIE's GEOGRAPHY J Improved; d —_ tl THE fubfeription tor this work bn the ir original terms, of twelve dollars and the ei binding, will b£ 'doled this day—and on Monday the subscription will open at four ! teen dollars, excliifiVfe of tlie price of bind ing. b ' The new maps added to this editioh are b twenty one; anions \vhich ,are those of Ncw-Hampdiire, IVlafTachufetts, Cut, llliode-Illandj Verifiont, New Yo k, New Jersey, Pennlyivania, Delaware; Ma- P ryland, Virginia, Kentucky, North Caro lina, the Gcnelfee Government, South Ca- u rolioa, and Georgia. Thele mips have ne vcr beeii given in any former fyftfeni of Geography, and, it is hoped, would alone be fuHicient to entitle this work to a pre- iterance to any other edition of Guthrie. Ci N B. The map of the United States, t< which is compiling by Mr. S niuel Lewis, £ from the refpe&ive state maps, will be fa j more complete than any one yet publiihcd, c< and be printed on two large Iheets of a paper, nearly the size of the late Mr. Mur-i"* ray's map. 'e May 31 d Scheme of a Lottery," To ra'tfe 39,900 Dollars, on 266,000 Dollars, deducting 15 per Cent, from the Prizes—this Lottery confi/ls of A 38,000 Tickets, in 'which there arc t 14,539 Prices and 23*461 Blanks, being about one and an half Blanks to t a Prize. THE Directors of the Society foreftablifh £ *" ing Ufeful Manufactures, having refolv 3 td to eretfc LOTTERIES for rdifing One ' Hundred T housan d Dol l ar s, -grecably 3 id an Aft of the Legiflatbre of the State o* } New-Jersey, have appointed the following J persons to fupevintrhd and direst the draw r ing of the fame, vi 2. Nicholas Low, Rtihi* King, Herman Le Roy, James Watson. f| Richard Harrifoh, Abijah Hammond, ami 1 Cornelius Ray, of th< city df Mew-York— ' Thomas Willing, Jnfeph Ball, Matthew M - f* Connel and Andrew 'Bayard; of the city o! I Philadelphia—-His Excellency Rich r& How J ell, bifq. Elias General Elias Day C ton, Jam s Parkef, John Bayard, Do&- r \ Lewis Donham, Samuel W. Stockton, joshua c M. \ValUce, J )feph Blodmtield, and Eltfha ( Boudiriot, of New-Jerfey< who offer the following Scheme of a Lottery* and pledge themselves to the public, that they will take every assurance and precaution in their power to have the Monies paid by the Managers, from time to time, as received, into the Banks at New-York and Philadelphia, to remain for the purpose of paying Priat. s, which shall be immediately discharged by a check npon one of the Banks. SCHEME: 1 Prize of 20,000 Dollars is 20,000 1 * 10,000 10,00 c 2 5,000 10,000 j 2,000 i 0,000 10 1,000 10,000, 20 500 i",ooo IC.O 100 10,000 300 53 15,000 1000 20 20,000 2000 15 30,000 3000 12 36,000 8100 it 81,000 14,539 Prize». 262,000 23,461 Blanks. First driwn number, 2,000 Laftdrawn number, 2,000 38,000 Tickets at 7 Dollars each is 266,000 The drawing will commence, under th< infpedion of a Committee of the Superin tendants, as soon as the Tickets are fold, ot which timely notice wfll be given. The Superintendants have appointed John N. Gumming, of Newark, Jacob R. Har. denberg, of New-Brunfwick, and Jonathan Rhea, of Trenton, as immediate Managers thereof, who have given ample security fo difcharging the trull reposed in them. (jdT In order tofecurethepunclu.il pay mentofthe Prizes, the Superintendants of the Lottery have direfled I hat the Managers lflall each enter into bonds in 40,000 dollars, with fur fufftcient fecuritirs, to perform thei iallrutlions, the fubflance of which is I. That whenever either of the Manag rs shall receive (he sum ol Three Hundred D>lr lars, he (ball imtridiately place the fame in one of the Banks of New-York or Philadel-j phia, to the Ciedit ol the Governor of the| Society, and such of the Suoerintendants as live in the city where the monies are placed, to remain there nntil the Lottery is drawn, for the paymnt of the Prizes. 11. The Managers to take fufficient se curity for any Tickets they may trufl, other wife to be refpotmble for them. 111. To keep regular books of Ticket fold, Monies received and paid into rht Bank, abftrafts of which (hall be sent, monthly, to the Governor of the Society. Paterfon, January 1, 1794- On application to either of the above gen tletpen, information will be given where tickets may be had. February 24. tu&ftf (ps The Lottery publilhed by the l( Society for eftablilhing ufeful manufac tures," will commence drawing the firfl Tuesday in November next —' BY AUTHORITY. From the Philadelphia Gaictte. By the President of the United States of America. A PROCLAMATION. WHEREAS combinations to defeat the execution of the !a<,vs laying duties upon spirits diililled within the United States and upon ft ills, have from the time of the commencement of those laws existed in fomeof the western parts of Pennsylvania ; And ivhereat the said combinations, proceeding in a manner (übverfive equally of the just authority of government and of the rights of in dividuals have hitherto effected their dangerous and criminal purpose; by the influence of certain irregular meet ings, whole proceedings have tended to encourage and uphold the spirit of op position, by misrepresentations of the laws calculated to render them odious, by endeavors to deter those who might be fodifpofed from accepting offices un der them, through fear of public re sentment and of injury to person and, property, and to compel those who had accepted such offices by a final violence to surrender or forbear the execution of them ; —by circulating vindictive mcna cts againlt all those who (hould other w:fe directly or indirectly aid in the exe cution of the said laws or who, yielding to the didlates of conscience and to a; lenfe of obligation should themfelves 1 comply therewith, by actually injuring and deltroying the property of persons 'who were understood to have so compli |cd :—by infliAing cruel and humiliating upon private citizens for no other cause than that of appearing to be the friends of the laws; —by in tercepting the public officers 011 the high ways, abusing, aflaulting, artd otherwise ill treating them ; by going to their houses in the right, gaining ad mittance by force, taking away their papers and committing other outrages; employing for these unwarrantable pur poses the agency of armed banditti dif guifedin such manner as for tlie moll part tc >;fcape discovery ;—And whereas the en leavors of the Legislature to obviate ob iedlions to the said laws, by lowering the duties and by other alterations conducive tc the convenience of those whom they im mediately affedl /'though they have givu fatiffa&ion in other quarters )and the en deavors of the executive officers to con ' militate a,compliance with the laws, by ex- I iilanations, by forbearance and even bj accomodations founded on the fuggeftior of local considerations have been difap r pointed of their effetfl by the machin it ion; aof persons whose industry to excite re a tlftance has increased with the appearand r df a disposition among the people to relax it ' their opposition and to aquiefce in the laws f inforriuch that many persons in the fait ' \tcftern parts of Pennsylvania hare a j length been hardy enough to peVpretrat 0 ltsls which I am advised anloulit to treason i, being overt arts of levying war against th a United States.! the said persons having o: the sixteenth and seventeenth of J'tiy U' pad proceeded in arms (on the fecon day amounting to' feVer'al hundreds) t c the house of John Neville inspeCtor o the revenue for the fourth survey of th 0 diftri£t of Pennsylvania, having repe t 0 edly attacked the said.house with th ° persons woundiugfomeoftherr o —having seized David Lenox marsh oof the diftridt of Penrifylvania ( wh 0 pr.evious thereto had been fired upor ° while in the execution of his duty, b - a party of armed men detaining him so 10 some time prisoner, till for the preffit 0 vation ot his life and the obtaining a _ his liberty he found it necessary to ente 10 into stipulations to forbear the executio II of certain official duties touching procel >- l~es ifluing out of a court of the Unite* 51 States—and having finally obliged th ir) said infpedlor of the revenue and th r- Marlhal from considerations of perfom in fafety to fly from that part of the cour r " try, in order by a circuitous route t proceed to the feat of government; r vowing as the motives of these out rageous proceedings an intention to pre vent by force of arms the execution o , the said laws, to oblige the said infpec tor of the revenue to renounce his fai " office, to withstand by open violence th in lawful authority of the government c l.jthe United States, and to compel then lc by an alteration in the measures of th 'Megiflaure and a repeal of the laws s n forefaid—And whereas by a law of th United States entitled, " An a£t t e -provide for calling forth the militia t r execute the laws of the union, fuppre; :t lnfurre&ions and repel invasions," it h< ena&ed " that whenever the laws of th "' United States shall be opposed or th execution thereof obftru&ed in any ftal n. by combinations too powerful to be fu] re 1 pre (fed by the ordinary course of jud cial proceedings or by the powers vefte in the tnarfhals by that aft, the fan being notified by an associate justice ( the District judge, it (hall be lawful ft the President »f the United State* I eal! forth the militia o r fu i. Hate to fcip (J press inch combinations—arid to cault the laws to be duly executed. And if ;t'nt militia of a ltate where fach com bination may happen (hall refufc or be yi infufficient to suppress the iame, it (hall the be lawful for the President if the legis lature of the United States lhall not be ™ in feflton to call forth and employ fucli £5 numbers of the militia of any othe ie state or states moll convenient thereto, foi .is may be necessary, and the use of ..iilitia so to be called forth may bt continued, if necessary, until the expi , x ration of thirty days after the com cii mencement of the enfuingfeffion , Pro- i" vided always, that whenever it may b. 1 ' necessary in the judgment of the Prefi dent to use the military force hereby d ] retled to be called forth, the Preliden shall forthwith and previous thereto, bi Proclamation,command fucli infurgen; 'to disperse and retire peaceably to the. • 'refpedtive abodes within a limited tune.' 1 * —And whereas James Wrlfon an ass- W ciate jultice on the fourth instant b; writing under his hand did, from e dence which had been laid before h:u notify to me that " in the counties . " Washington and Allegheny in Pen " fylvania, the laws of the United State are opposed, and the execution ther " of obftrufted by combinations to. " powerful to be suppressed by the 01 | " dinary course of judicial proceedings " 01 by the powers veiled in the Mar " dial of that diltrift And whereas it is in my judgment necessary under the circumdances of the bj cafe to take measures for calling forth the militia in order to suppress the com ninations aforefaid and to cause the laws Fi to be duly executed, and I have accord " Q ingly determined so to do, feeling the (o ' deepell regret for the occalion, but with al the moll solemn conviction, that the - essential intereils of the Union demand > 'it, that the very existence of goven: > ment and the fundamental principles of > social order are materially involved iii T [the issue, and that the patriotism and . firi.inefs of all good citizens are seriously * called upon, as occalion may require to )( - aid in the effectual fupprelfiou of so fata! n >a spirit. Wherefore, and in pw Tuance of the . provision above recited, I George Warn • jington, President of the United States, do hereby command al! perfous, bein insurgents as aforefaid, and all olhei " whom it rtiay concern, on' or before the " firft day of September next to difperf and retirfe peaceably to their refpecliv , abodes. And I do moreover warn a' r - persons whomloevei againil aiding ahe. ' sting or cofnforting the perpetrators o ' the aforefaid treasonable acts : And do , e require all officers and other citizens ac " cording to their refpe&tve duties and the law of the land to exert their titmoft it endeavors to prevent and suppress filch 1 t dangerous proceedings. 1 j , J g In teftimoriy whereof I have cauf-u n ed the seal of the United States ft of America to be affixed to these d presents, and signed the fame o(L iS)witli my hand. l)one at the if city of Philadelphia the seventh te day of Auguit one thousand fe- I- ven hundred and ninety four, , and of the independence of the »j United States of America, the 1 3 nineteenth. 'Oj G°. WASHINGTON, ye^ e Pryldeut, )r Edm< Randolph. 1 r- . i 4 ■ ADVERTISEMENT. 11 LETTERS dn the fubjeft of the Waft f- ington Lottery, being by mistake repeat d edly addreffedto the Coinmiifioners for the ie Gity of Washington. , e Persons concerned are hereby inform d, ( jl that all such (hould be addrelTed either to W. Deakinsjuii. of Washington, or to the - " Subfcrtber. The commissioners never hav -0 ing contemplated any further concern In l " this business, than in their aflent to receive . t- the bonds arid approve the names of the managers. The prizes have been paid and j if are paying on demand by W. Deakins, Washington, Peter Oilman, Boston, and j by the Subscriber. For the Lottery No. a, the securities al ie ready given will be retained by the com-! mifiioners, or transferred by them at theirj 5-option to the bank of Columbia ; and the., ie commifTioners will be consulted refpecfting; a judicious and equitable disposition of the |( ie houses to be built thereby ; their treasury ; or the bank of Columbia will receive the ; monev intended for the National Univer ° fity, and they will be consulted in the no-, f s mination of the 44 managers ; but all thci is refponfibihty respecting the general difpo-| 11 fition of the tickets, and payment of pri-j it «es, will reft as in the Hotel Lottery, on| i e :he persons whose names are and may be 1 hereafter published as assistants to forward 1 this business with 1 S. BLODGET. N. B. Mr. Blodget will be particularly n >bliged if those persons who pofTefs prizes yet unpaid, will apply for their money aj Q) ,-arly as possible. t< June 7tli. i<>d above-mcinioned, and give the do fired information. s New-Yoik, J nly 3 ft' '794- \ Villuim and James Conjiable. Ship Washington. A ■ C. q. lb. Tare „ f Noi 317 3 1 16 60 \ Whole 0/ i 473 31 24 64 > Chests ' "- 1 W f 177 1 3 39 r '" X 177 I » 2 3 39 198 137 4i • re . 213 13 18 37 Half M 127 137 40 • Chests. 287 139 38 301 f'3'ij 40 Fii 379 1 3 18 41 404 1314 39 J , t Aug. 6 dim p. Freafury Department wh Revenue Ojfke. Augtijl $th. 1794* PROPOSALS \v 1 be received at the Of- tha sice oi* tl>e CominiAioner of* the Revenue, 1 No* 43, south Third ilreet, for f'urnifhing () > by contrail, Seven hundred and sixty eight col COCKED HATS, ™ . _ . rot For the corps oi ArtHlenlrs and Engin sers, to he made agreeably to a Pattehm. - fat which will be ftiewn at the Office a- f torefaid, to any person disposed to contract (a ug eod2w j JTATE of SOUTH-CAROLINA In the House of Representatives, Dec em be r 21ft, 1793. I |^{ WHEREAS the Comni':flioners ot lic Accoc»nts,h vc reported, that they. :annot proceed v to the investigation of 'he! Trealury Accounts, relpefimg lpccial In- el ients, without knowing the outftandtng a ) nount thereof in circulation :—l herefore, - Rtfcivtd, That all holders ot Ipecial In- 3 ; nts be dtreftcd, and requiri o, on or beioi • !»c iiili day bt November n xi, 10 deliver tl« ai >ecial Indents in their poffeflion 10 one o Nf iie 10l the CommilTioncrs the Tfeafur > t HlO to g>ve receipts tor the- fame, and Ijo p >rt to on public ac ■ tints, on or before the tenth Hay of Nov . a ? -nber next, the amount by ther* relpcttivc , e y received, and alio to the Legislature, a: w he r meeting »n 'November next, and tha; ill special ludent-i not rendered into the I'reafui y a> above, on or beforeTfie firlt da\ »l November next, ihall be, and the fame re hcieV»v bured. Rc/o/ved,l hat pubtie notice of this refolu- u ion be given in the levetal Gazettes in thiSj 4 ate, once every three weeks, urn il the ft rft j ia.y of November uexi. And rhat the Dtlc*l ~ ates of cbisState in the Congrels of theTJiii-p' 1 ed States; be requeued to cause this rcfolu-. ( ' <: ii ion to be publilhcd in one or mort papers #1 the cities of Philadelphia and New-York, T\ and that provision v»iil be made for the ex-! f-pences attending such publication. | ari lg l Ordered ) That the refbiution be sent to ol r tht Senate for their eonc'irrence« P' By order of the House, tt JOHN SANKORD C.H.R. Ie In the SENATE, u \ h December-21ft, 1793. Resolved, That thii House do concur with r tht House of Reprcfentatives in the forego r> ing resolutions. iC; Ordeted, That the resolutions be lent to f 1C the House of Reprefentanves. by order of the Senate, FELIX WARLEY Clerk r ' ewt just Publiflied, In oneliandfome volume,iamo. Price 5s o , AND FOR SALE BY " JOHN ORMROD, At Franklin's Head, No. 4T, Chefuul u Slre.rt, x ~ AN ESSAY ON THE Natural Equality of Men, ( d, On the Rights that result from it, and on 0 to the Duties which it imposes. P le To which a MEDAL was adjudged, by v " the Teylerian Society at Haarlem. Corrected and Enlarged, by " c WILLIAM LAWKENCE BROWN, „ « D. D. Profeflor of Moral Phitorophy, and the.,, ls » Laiv of Nature, and of Eccl6fiafticali t History ; and Minister of the English:,, Church at Utrecht. "" Aliquid Temper ad conimunem utilitatem |, n "| atFercndum- Cicero, j, : ' r | 7hi Firjl American Edition. si principle of Equality, iffl i rightly understood, is the only basis i 1 e ,on which universal justice, sacred order, a ry and perteft freedom, can be firmly built, t he and permanently fectired. The view otl :r-|it exhibited in this eflay, at the fame timeji o-'that It reprefTes the insolence of" office,Ji hejthe tyranny of"pride, and the outrages oijr , o .|opprefTion ; confirms, in the mod forciblejr ri- manner, the neceflity of fubordiuation, e on and the just demands of lawful authority. far indeed, from loosening the banck \ Lrd of society, that it maintains inviolate, c , very natural and every civil diftinftion, ; draws more closely every social tie, unites; in one harmonious and j»wftly proportioned and brings meh together on the zesieven ground of the inherent rights of hu alfman nanre, df reciprocal obligation, and [of a common relation to the community. March 18. tuts JAMAICA RUM, LANDING at Hatnilt r. s »harf, above lie Drawbridge, Out o, the (hip Uacchuj Cept. VAMrtEMAn, tiom JAMAICA FOR SALE BY ' PETER BLIGHT. 1 May 16. j FOR SALE^ At the STORES of •jefle & Robert Wain PORT WINE in pipes, hlids. su-d qui r 1 ter caiks I ISBON do.in pipes and qoarier cafe ; Souchong and Congo TEAS, in quarter . chests A quantity of Lifoon and Cadiz SALT Soft (helled ALMOXDSin bales Velvet CORKS, in do. , Ruilia MATTS. J'"" 9 d The Public are cautioned to beware of counterfeited Five Dollar till, of the bunk oj the Untie* States, i„j twenty Doha, bills if the Rank of North nmerica, J'everal of which have appeared n ci/culation within a few days paj}; they re good general imitation of the genuine Jills, but may be diflinguijhed by the fcl owing marks. Five Dollar Bills of the Bank of the United States. ALL that have appeared have the letter F. for their Alphabetical Mark. ' The Texture of the Paper is thicker and L whiter and it takes the ink more freely than the genuine paper. The O. in the word Company is smaller f_ than the M. and other letters of that word ? so that a line extended from the top of the g'O, to touch the top of the M. wouldexterd it'confiderably above the range of the whole \Vord. In the word United the letters are nar. rower and closer together than thcTeft of. 1 thfc bilk N ', The i and fin the word promise are not l ~ parallel* the / inclining much more iorward " than the t. The engraving is badly executed, the » ftiokcsof all the Letters are stronger and the devi e in the margin particularly ismuch ,coaifc r and, a pilars darker ihan in the true bills. Some oi the counterfeits bear daie in ' 1 791 —Wherdas the Bai;k was not in opera. } tion till December, and no fivfe dollar bills •jivere ifTued in Ihat year. V J\Ttwenty Dollar Bills of the Bank of North America. ALL that have appeared have the letter 1 B tor then alphabetical mark. They are prii.iedor a paper nearly find ai to that of t!ie counterfeit Five Dollar above described; the engraving is > tte> executed, and they. approach nearer 1 o t e appea ance of the genuine b lis. c The fine 1 uled lines through the word v trvci.t), in the body of ihe bill, are in mini -1 -er th 1 teen in the genuine bills, and but a welve in the counterfeits. — TCompany i* much like the fame orlls asdelcfbed bove, the be ingle 1 *he'a following. There is no ftroketo the t inthe wcrd )( "A'arth whereas in the genuinebills theftroke ; li* s well defined. it J The let'ers ent in the word Twenty, to ~.(theleft hand at the bottom, do noi come u. dowp to the line," but are so cut as to give ; , s 'an irregular appearance to the word, the ■kjiTWand '.hey going below them. x-| The (ignature 1 Nixon, ha*'he appear ranee of biing written wilh lamb-black, and to'o l, aud difiers from 01 her inks used in printing.th bills and the cafhiey's figna tnre. , . S ?. It is ftippofed these forgeries were commit ted n forru of the Souihern States, as all the counterfeits thai have appeared, have come irom ihence, and two persons have been ap ro_ oiehended in Virginia,on suspicion o» being 1 he author of them. to The 1 eward of ONE THOUSAND DOL LARS wili be pa'd to any Perlou or Person* who shall difcovei and piofecute to conviC noii the several offenders of the following or any of them, viz. — Ihe prrfon or p< rfons, who manufacture '1 the paper on which the Bills are primed. The person or persons, who engraved the 56 plate*. The printer or printers, of the bills. fcvery person who has acted as a principal a any other way, in the counterfeiting and it Uttering the said bills. Philadelphia, March 28,1794 April 22, 1794, «,Other counterfeit bills on of the Bank of the United States have ap peared in circulation. The denomination is of TWENTY HOLLARS, aiad the alphabetical mark is the letter B. They may be distinguished from the ge* > nuine by the following MARKS : The paper of the counteifeits is of a tf*®|more tender texture and glolTev lurface the ge'nuine, and there is no watef mark in them. t ! The letter C. in the word Cafbier, in em he true bills is strongly marked, whereas in the counterfeits, the whole letter is a fine hair llroke, evidently in an unfinished if state. The letter jn the word dem.ind# afis is badly formed and the whole word ill done ler, ani! there is no comma at the end of it, as ilt, there is in the genuine bills. of The marginal device, is much darker ime in* the falfe, than inthe genuine bills -ow ice, ingto the (hade strokes being coarser, much ; of nearer together, and confequeotly mucr iblejmore numerous. This difference llrrkes th< ion, eye ait firft view. ky. The fame reward of ONE THOUSANI tnds DOLLARS, will be paid so. apprehending ■, v A: prosecuting to convi(slion the levera ion, a'rt>ve Vefcribcd Offenders in refpeft to this lites a-» to the last described bills, med THOMAS WILLING, P-ciideo the of the B->nk Unitfd Sta s. hu- JOHN NIXON- Pr«fidentof th and Bank of North America. ty. By ordei of the Cnminittecs of the ti" pfitive Boards.