For the Gazette of the United States. Mr. Fenno, I beg leave through the channel of your paper to enquire of the Physician who reported to the infpe&ors of heal:h lad Friday, thfi\ the yellow fever had again made its appearance in this citv, but that it was not at present contagi ous what could have induced him to make filch a report ? No benefit can a rise to the public from a knowledge . f such a fa£t, admitting it to be as ftateo, but a great deal of damage: btcaufe such reports cannot fail of alarming and filling with dread, the minds of thoie who arS not pufieftcd of the Doc tor's fine discernment and capacity of splitting diseases into grades, sub-grades end lemigrades ; therefore such a report will not only rendfir multitudes uneasy and interrupt the usual course of buli- ' tiefs, but injure the interest and reputa * tion of the city in several other icfpeiSb. If tile disease really exiited, it would be commendable to found the alarm—it would be criminal to be silent ; but if it is not in the city, or if being in the city ■ it is not contagious, it is the height of cruelty to create utclefs terror and alarm in tke minds of the citizens. But Mr. Fenno, is it not very extra ordinary, if the disease is in the city, and the Physician alluded to has had 26 cales of it since June, that it has ap peared to none of the other Piiyfrcians, not even to those who attend the Dif pertfary, which I am assured from the bed authority is the cafe ? A Physician who has great weight tmh the credulous and ignorant, has already attempted to ruin the reputati on of this flourifliin? and delightful city, by pubHfhing an pinion that the late ' pcftiletitial fevtr waj generated in it } and that its situation and climate is fa vorable to the generation of the ifcilt malignant maladies. If such an opinion was not every man who knows erf that Physician to be a t° fuppoft a mis taken t Jt proceeded from a rage etieemed the most learned Universe j the au thor would in a few years have the di vine fatisfaSion of feeing this populous and prolperoua city <4eierted by all its opulent inhabitants, and become a so litary waste where he might fit alone " smiling ghastly o'er its ruins and en joying the fruits of his Angular opini- Ah" Jf the opinion of that phyflcian was founded in fas, Mr. Fenno, luch would be the bliiflcd consequence; for who that has any regard for health or life, would venture to miuih in a city notorious for generating plagues which put life in perpe tual jtoplrdy? This however, fortunately i« not cred ited, and the city, in spite of the reveries of Philosophers, Pibyficians, and Conjur ers, will fipurifh for ages yet to come; and •9, hen all all the sources of flagnant water in its Juburbs come to be removed or cor fefttd, If Will be one of the most healthy fituatiorts in A:nerir ~ Open on every fide to the dddefs of the winds—with 4 tlry foil—ih-eets favourably arranged—the inhabitants, industrious,, cleanly, and well informed; —it cannot in the nature of things be unhealthy. Compare its bills of mor tality With those of Baris, London, Edin burgh, Vienna, or Stockholm, and you will at once be convinced how much rhore healthful it is than cither of those. Be under no concern my fellow-citizens, the Yellow Fever is not in our city, nor is it pofiible for it to be generated in it, in its present fituStioh. WALTER QUCERIST. front the Salem Gazette. NtR. GUSHING* I SEE in the Centinal a nqmber of iowns mentioned, and Salem as one of them, which will soon, of have already begun a contribut ion for our unfortunate brethren of Boilon, the late fufFerers by fire. This is truly laudable and praifc worthy; and I feel that it is my duty and thu duty of every other person, to give on such occasions, our feafaring brethren excepted. At iirft fight it may apipenr strange that any exception should be made ; but I believe upon a little confideratiort the reasons against their giving will he thought good. I will suppose one of my neighbors, father of a large family, goes to sea for their maintenance, and takes the little he has, fay 1501. and embarks on a voy age ; but a few days after he fails, the vefiel finks; he and his (hip-mates are taken tip by fom