Gazette of the United States, & daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1800-1801, August 11, 1800, Image 2

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    Gazette of the United States,
HOM .
PHILADELPHIA,
MONQAT. E.VE.KING, ASCOST. Ifi.V
|CP To prevent applications for the Ga
, zette of the United States, the Editor in
forms the public, that he h-ts ftri&ly for
bidden the sale of it> either by the Carriers
or at the office.
An Extra half flieet of the Gazette c.f the
United States was published this morning,
containing the Foreign News received at
Boston ; we have re»publi(hed it in this
evening's paper.
In the Price-Current, in the firft page of
this day's paper, under the head of Stocks,
feverai articles will be found, with their
prices annexed, not published heretofore.
A Virginia paper, states the eleaion of
Littleton Tazewell as Member of the Uni
ted States Legislature, in place of the Ho
norable John Marlhall.
Died, at Petersburg, Virginia, Mr. Jo
seph Belknap, Printer, a native of Maf
facliufetts.
The 35th of this month is the day ap
pointed tor the eleftion of a Representative
toCongrefs, for the Third Middle Diftritt,
in Maflachufetts, in the room of the Hon.
Judge Sewall. The only candidate which
has been announced to the public is Mr.
Benjamin Pickman, jun. a Federalist.
\Tha following is copied from the Aurora of
lajl Saturday morning ]
Quid leg'j sine moribut, Cays Horace?—
The best lew 3 are of he confequtnce among
a nation of lafcals. His observation is
veryjuft, and it has been most wretchedly
exemplified in some of the towns of Vir
ginia. For instance, at this moment, the
chief magistrate of Peterfourg, is one Har
rifon, a lame Scots parson. When Corn
wallis, in the lad war, approached that
place, H?rrifon went ess to meet him, and
a£ted as his guide. And how this fellow,
who, by every law human ar.d divine, /hould
have been hanged, officiates as Mayor of the
town which he wanted to destroy.
[Who afled as a goide to the Britilh ar
my when they entered Philadelphia a(]<
Tench Coxe, who defcrves to be hanged by
every law human and divine for doing fo—
alk Tench Coxe, who officiates as Secretary
of the Land-Office in the city which he
Wlrtrca-vjUeiTruy— a H. T.mch Coxe .']
Seldom has the mod abandoned and pro
fligate Aurora exhibited furH a farrago of
fcily and falfehood as it contained en Sa
turday la fl
it it there stated that General Smith,
son-in-law to the Prtfident, bad been no
minated Infpcttor-General, with the rank
of lecond in command of the army—that
the nomination had been opposed in Senate
by Mr. Watson of New-Yorb, and re
jrfted.—That Mr. Watson had been after
wards nominated Infpettor-Gerferal, and ap
pointed to that office ; with a long lift of
inuendos, as infamoufly falfe as the data,
on which they are predicated.
That the whole is falfe, the reader will
conclude with certainty when he learns
that Mr. Smith never was nominated In
fpeflor-Geneial—iliat Jvir. Watson was not
a member of the Senate at the time referred
to—that he never was nominated Infpedor-
General—ana h?s not held any appointment
whatever in the army, since the close of the
revolution war, in "which it is possible
captain Duc:w was a drummer in foreign
service. '
How'long will the villainous aspersions
of this foreign outcast, this woithlefs fu
gitive, this chofi-n aflociate of Miss Mi~-
randa Fairfax of Shannon-bill, Virginia,
continue to reproach our country ?
The brig Ranker, Capt. EJihu Merchant,
arrived at Alexandria at Sunday August 3,
last from the lfle of May, with a cargo of
fait, being without papers of any kind, and
there appearing some contradictions in the
account given by the Captain and crew
the Mayor and Alderman of that town, on
ful'picion of some improper conduft on the
part of those iji pofTeffion of the veflel,cau-
Tedi the Captain and crew to be arretted by
I warrant, and they were examined before the
-Tiiftifts of the town.
The Captain Hated that.he is a native of
Martha's Vineyard, an-Tf iled from Boflon
upwards ot' two years ago,' in the Brig Patty
belonging to Benjamin Hodgeden-of Bolton,
which, lie fold on account of the owner
that he purchaled the brig Ranger in the
Ifl-ovid of Teneriffe, in January last, and
failed from thence in ballafh having 13 gnns
and about 30 fUnd of small arms on board
for the Isle of May, where he took in about
2000 bufliels of fait, and failed for Boflon ;
that on his homeward paflage they were
boarded by a French privateer of 20 gun*,
and plundered of their clothes and papers,
except his letter of inftru&ions from . Mr.
Hodgeden ; that while the privateerfmen 1
were on board a large veflel hove in fight,
fnppoftd to be a British armed vefTel, on
which the privateer left him, after throw
ing two of his guns overbard ; that he made
Cape. Hatteras, and being short of provi-
Cons, pot into the firft river he could make,
which Wftsf the Potomac.
The fiift and second mate* reTated the
voyage with several deviations' from th<-
captain ; dating, that the round house had
been cut offthe vessel at Teneriffe," after the
ift mate was on lioard, and that they had
loft two men overboard on their pafTage
from the Iflj of May.
The crew, 10 in number, gave different
and contradicting accounts of the voyage ;
lome stating that the round house was taken
off at Teqeriffe ; foine declaring that they
were not boarded by a privateer ; and others
that they three 8 gui.s overboard ; some a
gree that two men were loft overboard, and
others state that none wrre loft. The maf
teT and mates fay they are Americans, and
".he crew are Scotch, Irish, English and Por
tuguese, L '~
Alter examination, the captain, mates and
trew were committed to jail for further trial,
'And the brig is difmantelled and remains in
possession of the Custom tjoul'e officers.
Fur Gazkttk of the Ukiteb Statks
MR. sr.trxE,
The note left in the office of the
Philadelphia Gazette, refpetting the General
Court Martial, was very incorieflly printed
in that paper of Tkurfday—in the name of
good English you are requested to reprint it
without its deteilf.
" We understand that a General Court
Martial, consisting of thirteen officers of the
army, has been in session, at the Union
Hotel, in this city, liuce the 24th ult The
lubje&s before them are, an officer of Dra
goons, from the State of Tenneflee, and a
Captain of Artillery, from Fort in tile
State of New-York. The court is fa id - To
have been in council for foii»e time, on Wed
nefdayand Thursday last with doors closed,
and 011 Tltutfday they, for special reasons,
adjourned until' this day. We learn, that ]
Capt. James Bruff of the Artillery, ptelides,
and Capt. Campbell Smith of the Western
Army, officiates, as the Judge Advocate.—-
Members co!I' £ted from Norfolk, Hs'pei'*
•Ferry, City of Walhinfrton, Baltimore, Fort
M'fflin, Philadelphia, Ncw-Y»rk, and inter
meoiite places."
Mr. Wayne,
THE fol!owing extrad from the Evan
gelical Magazin- for March 1800, is at
your service. T!ie publication may be of
advantage in our country, and' ought to
flimulate americant, in the language of Ho
ly Writ, to " go ar.d do likewise.'*
" The Bible Soci ty in London, was
inftiruted in the year for the sole use
of the Navy and Army of Great-Britain,
and is fuppuited by annual or occasional
contributions. The committee of this In
stitution have already distributed above twen
ty eight thouf nd Bibles, and a considerable
number of Ntw Testaments to the dif
ferent (hips and regiments in the navy and
army " But in confequeoce of the.very
preat demand upon them, during the pre.
sent war, it appears, that their finances are
very much redd ed ; beiidts which, the So
ctety lias lolt a t umber of valuable fubferi
bers and friends by death. For carrying
on this meritorious undertaking, Religious
Books, or pecuniary donations were solicit
ed for from the liberal and well disposed of
that country, in order to be appropriated
to the laudable purpefes of said society. ■.
Examiner.
For the GAzsrrE of the United Status.
A HONEY MOON
PARODY; BV THE F.DITOH OF THE AVKOIA.
The wealthy Ffdi with gold iojsn
Will still ikfire to grow richtr;
Give ine hot these. I ask no more,
My Franklin Bride, my Llojd and pitcher.
My Lloyd so bare, my Wife so fair
With luch what Paddy can be richer,
G've me but these, a fig for cere,
With my sweet oride, my Lloyd and
pitcher.
In dirtiest job I'd never grieve
To toil a Democratic ditcher,
If, that when I return at eve,
I might enjrj n\y bride, ind pitcher.
My Lloyd so bare, my wife so fair.
With filch what Paddy can b^ricber,
Give me but these, a fig for care
With my sweet bride, my Lloyd and
pitcher.
THE IRRESOLUTE.
TRANSLATED FROM THIS FfUNCH.
[The following is in the best manner of Pa
ris vivacity, and is a pretty picture of a
faint-hearted and bafhful lover.]
Th yrsis ha» charms, addreft and art
To warm and win the coldest heart ;
With all his grace, and parts, and merit,
The tinvd Boy'* devoid o spirit.
The other d;y, in amorous ch*f,
Me said, as in & grove we fat,
How happy, Nannette, could I be,
Were I at home, alone with thee.
Early next morn, just a« he said,
lie came, and—ceug/A me in my bed !
Sigh'd, paz'd, and tnli'J of wondrous love
And wiihed irx with him—in the grove !
Extrafl of a letter from a gentleman at New-
Orleans, J led I cth June, iSoo, to his
friend in this city.'
" About the Bth of March I was at Lof
tus Height*. Lieutenant Fero had some
time before been tried by a general court
martial, and was cathicred. He had threat
ened the lives of such part of the court in
time of trial, a 9 he might fufpeft of hav
ing voted againfl him. Captain Grifon and
lieutenant Sm.th went into a public house,
and having beei) two of ths number, aflced
Fero if he made the above threats. He an
swered in the affirmative, and drew a dirk.
An affray took place, io which they were
all time Dabbed."
f i'
" Friend a d Pilc'er.''
POLITICAL.
Ft em the Boston Columbian Ccnt'nel.
THE JEFFERSONIAD
No. VII.
"When a mat drfirli, and emlracu error, it
requires more than ordinary candour, to believe Lint
honest."
MR. RUSSELL,
WE have vindicated the of go
vernment, and expoled Mr. Jefferfon's hy
pocritical deSertion of hi" own principles
in two very (1 liking and important exam
ples, and before we quit a Subjcft I'd fertile
in proofs of this philotibher's inlincerity,
it may be entertaining and ufeful, to adduce
one or two more inllances to the juftifica
tio.i of onr government, and to the utter
eoiifufim of this g.ieat author and his party,
It is a favourite maxini of JncobunlVn,
tliat mankind are one great family, whose
rights and ir.terelb are eflentially the fame,,
aid that 1 it any nation is Struggling, for the
maintenance of its rights and privileges, it
is our -doty to overlook the vulgar and ordi
nary ties which impel us to a neutral litua
tion, and not only to Sympathize with, but
to lent a -helping- hand to relieve them from
the y<Jcfr of ■oppreflioa. Impelled by this
' difii trefted, and as they call it, Godlike
spirt, our Jacobins with the zeal and fana
ticiCn of crufuders, intlead of the cross,
ere£rd the flaming torch of Liberty and
Equality. Vociferoufly demr.nded of our
government an interference on the tide of
their fufflring brethren in France, and de
nounced every l'ober citizen who was not in
spired-with the farr.fr philanthropic ardo- >.—
DeSpising, as beneath their notice, the lior
rower and meaner relations and duties of
men and citiiens, in domefti-c and national
connexions, tkey proclaimed their country
as the Grand ■Protectress .of hfhr.an rights,
wherever injured or however invaded, and
offcrrd-it as an affylum to the persecuted
or Oppreffert as every nation, charafler, and
colour. To describe the effeft's of this liberal
qnd enlightened policy, rcv fellow-citizens,
would be insulting mockery to your feeling?.
On every frle,you behold, persecuted felons,
opprrffed robbers, and injured traitors, of
every nation in Europe I —Already have
they begun to ccjio their unharmor.ious and
di(cordant drains of oppression against your
oivn Government !—wicnefs P- icstly and
others.—Already havtf tbey seized and pol
luted with their unhollowed touch those
tributary rivulets, which from the grand
Dream of public opinion, the printing pr. ffes
of your country,-Witnefs Callander, Duant
bfc.—Already have they broke into the
forum of the famSuaries of juflice !—wit
nefi, Dal las i -Duponceaus, and others !
Already'do they begin to seize the rule of
your Militia, that boasted palladium ofyour
Republic !—Witnefs tli? convidted -Major
Cooper, who fled in ■ 776, from the l'word
of jyfiice ifl Great Britain. And long since
have thty disgraced the Grand Legislative
Council «f your nation by a barbarous
foreign diileft !—Witnefs the wh'fkey
patriot, Albert Gallatin, next in power and
coftfequqnee, among the Jacobins to the
hero wlWiii I celebrate. The exertions of
Ames, Dexter, and Harper, to put a (lop
to the influx of European criminals and fu
gitives, 1 will l.ifig be remembered with grati
tude by every friend to the independence of
our country ; —and the violent opposition
madebythe Jacobins,by Mr. Jefferfon and
the dominion of Virginia to these falytary.
regulations, ought not speedily to be forgot
tep. Let" us now, quote the Philosopher
himfelf againff his modern opinions and
against the clamours of hit party : 1
" The present delire of America is to
produce population by as great importations
of foreigners as pollible" But is this
founded, in good policy " Are there no
inconveniences to be thrown into the Scale
again ft the advantage ?" 14 Every spiecies
of Government has its fpecific principles—
our's are peculiar"—" It is a composition
of tht freest principles of the EnglifhCor..
dilution with others derived from natural
Foreigners will bring with them
, the principles of- the governments they
leave, Which they imbibed in early youth ;
—or if qflc, to ;throw them off, it will be in
exchange for an unbounded licentiousness,
passing as t/fKo/ fto"m one extreme to the
other." "■*« It Would be a miracle were they
to, flop precisely at the print of temperate
liberty." See Jcfferfon'a notes, pages 140,
t, and 1. Never were founder truths con
vtyed iii language more intelligible. Had
they been Spoken prophetically, we'fliould
have been alrnofl disposed to think that Mr-
Jefferfon had been familiar with tie Sybils.
What would the eloquent Mr. Jefferfon,
so fiolk-d-in thinking right, and acting wrong,
have fa id, if he tould have forefeen that our
country would have been thus inundated
with Foreigners ? And with foreigners too
of his last and word description, who had,
before they came to our country, thiown off
their early prejudices, and passed from one
extreme to the other—from the extreme of
despo'ism to tfie worse extreme of an un
bounded licentinufnefs and anarchy. Would
he at that time have'thought it wife and!
"politic, tp harbour such vipers in our bosom ?
Would he have denounced the conftltuted
authorities of his country for authorizing
their retrieval'! Most assuredly, the author
of Jefferfon's Notes in 1781 would have ap
plauded the l<ite condudtof our government.
—Haw has Mr. Jefferfon, and hoW hate
the party whom lie governs, condufted ?
, They have courted, follered and encouraged
| theft poifonotiJ reptiles : They have invited
and allured them to their country that they
might strengthen their fattion : They have
■ loaded with public honors, and private dif
tintt'KMT, tlnSe vampreys who are making a
nedlareous banquet on the heft blood of their
Country ; T.i they have denounced their
own conftltuted authorities and tfejiied the
obligation of thtfir laws for checking the
grovth of this pernicious evil. .
I fliall give one more example of Mr.
Jefferfon s notorious tergiversation an t l
then fliall take leave of htm as an author.
Every lchtiulbojr ih politics knows, that
the maintainance of a Republic, very
essentially arid indeed 'aloioft wholly de
spends upon the proper and judicious diilribu
tion of power. It is a princip'e upon which
our ancestors have praftifed fucefsfully for
many countricSj in this country ind in
England. Mr. Jefferfon in the year 1781,
was so far an American in his politics and
had had so little converse with the Confti-
mongers of Paris, that he was whol
ly unadulterated on this fubjeft—Accord
ingly >vheu treating of the Virgi
nia, he lay's. " The Senate'is too hemegsni
ous with the lower house : Being chosen by
the f-me electors, at the fame time, and < at
of the fame fubjt&s the choice falls on men
of the fume description. The purpofc of
eftablifhiiig two branches is to introduce the
influence of different interests or diff; rent
principles ; with us wealth and mifdom
have an equal chance of admiflion into both
branches. We do not, therefore, derive from
the separation into two branches, those
benefits which a p oper complication of
principles is capable of producing." Again.
*' '73 despots, (alluding to a Jingle branch)
would surely be as opprefßve as one ;
An eleSivt dtTpotifm was not the govern
ment we fought for, but a balanced go
vernment," &c. Such were the found opi
nions of Mr. Jtfferfon before he went to
France. The early French philufophers
"I urgrt, and the Girondists, thought differ
ently, and accordingly Dr. Franklin and
Mr. Jefferfon as soon as they came in con
taft with them, became wonderfully con
verted. Herca it was that Mr. Jefferfon,
so openly and ftreiiuoufly condemned the
division of Congrefsinto two branches, and
profeffed' that liberty could not be secured
except by a single legislative assembly.
Hence also the loud and vehement de
nunciations of the Senate, by all the tools
of his faflion, and in all the renal news
papers in the employment of that faftion,
and of France. Hence also Mr. Jefferfon's
denunciation of the Federal cotiftitution in
his letter to Maazei, where he malicioafly
and falfely asserts, " that Washington and
the British fa&ioti, (who are the fame as
the present £Jftx junto) had wished to im-
pose upon them the form of the British con- :
dilution," t
Do I retiace events beyond the memory of
my read rs I Have they forgotten the at
tempts in the papers of the faftion to run
down the Senatotial branch ? Why have
those clamours long since ceased ? Why did
they ever exifl ? War it because their mas
ters the French had rhen adopted a single
branch ? And have they since grown tired
of experiment ? Did Mr. Jtffeifon a> d our
fadlion change their opinions with French
measures ? To these queries, all honed and
obfervisg men c n readily reply—ls it pos
sible that the philosophic Jefferfon, so at
tached to theory, can have so changed his
creed as to approbate the present mild and
lawfully founded republic of Fiance? Is
he enraptured with th Conservative Senate ?
Does he approve the Tribunate, and the
L-"giflative Body ? The Five Thousand
oligarchids to whom all offices are confi
ned—The thirty thousand body guards—
the Palace of the Luxembourg, and th"!
modest Consul with full power, that some
thing better than a diadem J
Believe me, my fdlow-citizens, to all these
things and to a thousand more absurd,
would Mr. Jeffetfon most readily fubferibe
For with him as with all the partisans of
France, his affection does trot depend upon
the form of the government, or upon the
men who adminider it. His love to France j
commenced under the monarchy ; it continu
ed ardent in its turbulent and revolutionary
date ; —it was undiminifhed under the pro
te£torfhip of Robcfpierre—it did not abate
under the republic with Five Kings, and
it remains constant to it, under the arbitra
ry dominion of a solitary tyrant. It could
not therefore be an attachment to the Form
—lt is equally apparent—his partiality
could notarise frorp regard to the
individuals who have fucceffivtly" admini
dered the Government. For although to
each individual who has exercised power, it
has partaken of the warmth of pe fonal and
fyinpathetic attachment, yet it has beep
perpetually transferred with equal ardour to
their fuccej/ive murderers /—What is it
then ? And whence does it arise ? It is an
ait chment to a foreign natioi for thefale of
their influence—lt arises from a well known
and frequently exemplified principle, in
society that a faflion in the bosom of a
country will always seek foreign aid. Will
it not then cease, when Mr. J fferfon and
his fa&ion get into power ?—God grant !
the experiment may never be mi.de—but if
it should, you will still find the lame foreign
aid resorted to, to keep tlem in power. I
will be fortunate if Buonaparte should not
do, what Philip of Macedon sd, first pro
tect the Jacobin faftiori from the influence
and force of the friends of order, then Lord
it over both.
If with such dangers flaring us in the face,
we can be falfe to ourselves, if, little preju
dices and partialities, if small intrigues, fliall
absorb the sense of public danger, and can
induce us to do any thing less, than all we
are capable of doing, we del'erve the yoke and
we fliall be patient under it.
I fliall make, a tew observations on the
kit tar to Mazzei in my next number.
ERRATA.
In the last nlimber of " Decius," for di
vination read divination ; for Statesmen read
Statesman ; for " so 3!r. Mt'i/.''
read to. isV. far have, read S £tis c>ft th- -Uiii.
ted States, &c. for " transplanted with vaftlf
g r ea'," rend '• transported with vaQiy great
er," it c.
. . . Aiturtv
B'ijJ f*ir.Hebc,
Sth'r
days
Amfterchm 77
via Fort Mifflin
0 coa-.-L. Omufillat
Worcester,' Riley Richmond 1 a
Tobacco and cowl
Richmond 12
Coal
Paulina, Street Bnlrimore 8
Sugars--W. Sc C. Jolly
Sloop Betsey, Tice Richmond 3
Tobacco & Ginleng
Prifcilla, Tunuell Norfolk 2
Ship Rose, Jones, Liverpool
Terrific, Brown New Orlrans
Schr. Sukey, Stone, St. Jago de Cuba
Nancy, Ford, Caps Francois
Jane, Toby Havanna
Highland Lass, Brown, _ Jamaica
Favorite, Cotterlll, New York".
The Northern Liberties, Seton, for New
York, was parted with in lat 14, S. long 7,
8 |W, 3. 2 days out from St. Helena all
well.
Ship Amiable, Tilh'pghaft, from hencf,
has arrived at Liverpool.
Arrived at tbe Fart,
Schr. Eliza., Bui), Norfolk ; 1 'ft it the 4th
inft. with ballad a,nd hams ; detained under
quarantine.
BOSTON. Augufl 5.
Arrived, ship Mary, Stoddard, 50 days,
Liverpool- The captain politely waited ori
us with his lateH London papers, and the
following marine articles :
A Complete lid of American vefiels at
Liverpool, June 14, vrz.
For Boston—ships Po'lly, Drummond ;
Sally, Lewis ; John Adams, Wood ; Sa
rah Gray ; Aftrea, - ; Lucy, R.
Giay ; Madison, Hartley ; Mercury, Pear-
Ton ; brg Three Friend , Norton ; and
fchr. Union, Parker —For New-York,
ships Union, Hall ; Gen*.' Mercer. Coffin ;
Liverpool Packet, BcbeC" j Liberty, Wood
man ; and Caledonia, .i" '■ -. For Newbu
ryport, Aligator, Gocflricfi ; —For Port
land, Wafliington, Scott and Mentor, Wait.
For Baltimore, Harriott, 'Marfton ; Union,
Porter ; Triumph, Parker ; Ann and Ma
ry, Spencer—For Philadelphia. K/ngftnn,
King ; and Mohawk—* For City Point.
Nancy, Lord ; Montezuma, Mo gan, for
Charltfton ; Nancy. Man, Wilmington
Sally, Norfolk ; brig Lydia. Mofts, Wa
fliington.
Same day. (hip Five Brothers, Fhillip9,
London, 35 days. Spoke nothing of cod
fequence. PafTengers, Mr Higginfon and
family ; Mr. Boot and family.
Arrived at Salem, (hip A£live, Bryant,
from Bombay. Sailed from thence April
23, and left there (hip Charles, Hall, for
in 10 days ; and the brig Nepon
fef, Stutfon, 11 j months from Boston;
condemned as unfit for sea. Lat. 31. long.
J7, fptfke brig. Spencer, 15 days for
N- Haven ; supplied him with spars, having 1
luffered in hard wrather ; the (lock in a
condition. ,
Arrived at Plymouth, (E.) fchr. Nep
tune, Coleman, from Alexandria. Sailed
from Portfmout'n, June 14, American brig
Alert, Thompson, for Rotterdam.
PORTLAND, (Me.) Ju!)T3°-
Arrived brig Sophia, Woodbury, 21 days
I from St. Lucie. . Left there fclir. Nancy,
j Tuttle of Beverly. In lat 17, 00, spoke sn
American frigate ; f;tme day was boarded by
: the British frigate, Southampton. In lat.
J 36, long 66. spoke a schooner from St. Vin
-1 cents, to Boston, name unknown.
Arrived. Brig Margaret, M Lellan, 24.
days from Jamaica. Left there brig Betsey,
Swaine, Nantucket, (hip John, Hatch of
this port, to fail in 8 days. Sailed in cc.
fchr. Isabella, DmalcL Biddetord. July ~ y
lat ?3, 21, long 65, 4|ke fchr. ——, Mor
ton matter, from Jamaica for Philadelphia.
July j, spoke schooner Mary, Delano, o£
Wifcaflet, 4 days out, bound to Boston-
POST-OFFICE,
Philadelphia, stb August 1800
Letters for.the British Packet Jane, Co 1"
Falmouth England, will be received at this
Office, untill Tuesday 12th liiftai t, at iz
o'clock Nqon.
N B. The inland Postage to New-Yoik.
rou ft be paid.
TO BE LET,
Either separately or. together,
The Two Houses,
LATELY occupied as a HOTEL by TVJr. Sa
muel Francis-, N<*.' 13, south Fourth ftrcet. For
terms apply to
BENJAMIN R.MORGAN,
- No. 41, Arch-street:
July 10 yaw ivy
AN APPRENTICE
' .. wanted t
At the Office of the Gazette of the United
States.
July 6
DECIUS.
.. «* *.
Gazette Marine Lift,
PORT OF PHILADELPHIA.
Beginning-, Smith'
Lumber
Edward & Sainuel, Tatem, T. Ifhnd >
via Fort—Salt—J. Da Coda
CLEARED.
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