Gazette of the United States, & daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1800-1801, August 28, 1800, Image 3

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    rv " "Jevor were more traitorous fentifnetu*
ti erreri or a more daring, infultirrgr and bo
lide wish exprcfled. yet these m tell you
tbey air " friends to the people" but they
should add be n:' in slavery to France, for this
i-< ihec'artd to bs their intention. ,md they
hope Btiosapartea (ueVrels Bray c > inue 'ill
all his enemies arf reduced, to that
fitnation. There is <ne way, a»>d only one
fcr mericar ropri-viHi't'hei.r wlfhcs being
Tea! /Ed, and that is. by out o(
office ail ih f charadhrs wh . undcrpri
teaee i f heing " Friends ta the People" arc
allocating a foreign government, and ex
itltingly proclaim the wdh t at your enemy's
*i&orie« mav n»t c-eafe til y >ll are " fid
profirate at th i- feet and become humb! fup
p/ieii't t /tr mercy "
t - Should the Ja obinsonce obtain an af*en
dat ey in the Councils of our country, the
pe pie of Anierici will bt compelled to
gratify their wish, to its utmt;/i extent. ]
V imf , J
From the (Boston) emmereial Gazette,
fnE C-H KArn-.K OF
General Alexander Hamilton'
Considered and Vindicated.
[Continuation]
IT has been afTerted, with as much bold
ness and effrontery, as if it had the fein
blance of truth, that General Hamilton is a
friend to monarchy, and some have carried
this political figure of speech to so ridicu
lous an extent, as to contend that he aimed
to establish royalty in his own p rfin. So
long as this absurd calumny wa? confined
to jacobins, it was fufTered to past unno.
.tieed, with the charges of the fame natuie,
exhibited and so often repeated against
Washington, Adams, and all the other ftre
ruous fupy.irters of government. But
when writers in so refpe£Uble a paper at the
Commercial Gazette, jJTume the allegations
and calumnies of jacobins, as tsvtbs, when
they afiert as proved, charges which aie
notoriously falfe, it becomes important to
check the dangerous torrent, and to prevent
the pollution of the few pure dreams of
public infifmation. What evidence exists,
or what fti.idow of evidence has ever been
adduced to prove, that General Hamilton
is avcrfe to a republican government and
attached to a monarchal one. His he ever
•xprefled an opinion of this kind in any of
his numerous public writings, ot ever in the
more retired moments of confidential con-
verfation ? If he has, let his enemies de-
Clare ; (for h: has enemies en< ugh who are
fufiiciently embittered) to ahom were the
declaration's made, on what occifion, and
what their import i I pafsky, as undeserving
notice the allegations of Junius America
mis and others, of ipeeches made by Gen.
Hamilton, for they are notoriously falfe,
and even the anonymrus scribblers are
artiamed to avow the I afenefs (,f their oii
gin. But the defence of such a man as
Hamilton, need not be repofecl n the fee
bhoefs of his enemies—his charafter does
not leek flv-lter under a negative defence ;
he has given to the world, noble, unequivo
cal evidence of his love of liberty, and of
republican government ; proofs more dura-
ble than the malicious, flan ers of his op-
polers. In our revolutionary war, he
fought the battles of freedom—he bared his
breast to the bayonets of an enemy, whom
feme of his calumniators dare not face.
After the peace, he partook of the labours
*>f government in the £ongreTt of the Uni
ted States. In the convention of 1787,
which framed the present federal conflitu
tion, and which his enemies affect to ad
mire, he was a distinguished, powerful and
important member.
Whatever there is of freedom, of {lability,
of wisdom in that fabrick, Hamilton has his
full [bare of the merit of it.—He was the
only member from the important (late of
New-Yo k, who ligned the constitution as»
ter its adoption, he wrote in conjundton
with Gov. Jay and Mr. Madison, (who
has finer apolbt fed) those nrift exeellent
elfays under the title of the Federalist and
the signature of Publius—a work, confef
fedly, the firft ever published in Aim rica, for
profoundnefs, for perspicuity and elegance.
His fellow labourers have had the generosi
ty to confrfs that it is principally the work
of Alexander Hamilton. And is it credible
th» a man who so largely and powerfully
contributed to produce our excellent con
stitution, is hottile to its principles. From
whom does the charge come ? From the
very men, who opposed the constitution,
although it has been supported lately by
ifonie who have afted, and still think more
<»rreftly. 1 W<>ulu not Gen. Hamilton have
prevented the pre p fition of so excellent a
constitution, w»uld he not have attempted
to increase the confulions and disasters of
<fhe country, inllead < f attempting to »lU*-
■viatethem, if he had really wilhed a govern
ment of more force and Iris freedom ? Did
he take the menfures which tyrants have
always fuccefifully pursued, to produce civil
wars and infurre&ions, in order that they
may ride upon the whirlwind anduiredl the
florin ? No,—Tlie whole life of General
Hamilton, hasbeen devoted inoft difintereft
cdly, to protefl, ftcure and maintain th
liberties of the people, on the only solid
foundation, that of law and regular organi
zed government. Many men in their closets
Tray have written, but no man ha* d«ne
more for the preservation of liberty order
■and good gevernmet.
Another charge of similar completion
in point both of malignity and falthood
which has been bellowed upon Gen Ham
ilton's that e is a partizan of Great Bri
tain, that he is one of a Britifli fa.dion.
JeCerfon in his letter to Mazzei", makes
this fame charge again'! Pitlident Wafh
irgton, Vice Prtfident Ai'ams, and a ma
jority of lh« Senate. The Chronicle, Au
vora, and Argus, have lefoundcd with
'ijefc chargei, but allhoiieft ipen knew tl.at i
they were introduced to ward* ff an en
quiry into French flu •:«; and French
intrigue. Of late, certain zealots of an *th
er de enption ave borrowed the (landers
o' j ic bus, uttered them with an impudence
a'd boldness, which has alio iflied even the
aSrirators i.»f th Bu- i* not' this
manifeilly as illfounded as the other ? In
wh t one atf, has Gtn Hamilton manifeß
ed a p/irt aliiy tor Grea Brita* ? In the
C-mhidt nf f liftingu:(ht'l a n»;»n. not i g
ei japes remai k. nd nothing improper e ude»
lever? crin i atiun Yet f.is wort! enemi ■
have never dan d to fpecify a a fin
gle faofc on this head. Will Federalills
quarrel with the pro;l»maiion of ■
which Hamilton so ably fupp rfifd in the
Cabinet againll Ji-fffrfon a' l which the par
tizans cf France so loudly condemn d as a
violation of our treaty with Fra ? Will
they aflume the language of opp .firi m and
contend that we ought to have armed on the
fide of the Flench Republic ? If i ot will
they censure the elocuent and hie author
of Pacificus, who vindicated Waftiing'on'a
proclamation of neutral: ty, and who contri
buted so much to keep he nation out of the
vortex of French revolutionary principles?
If these are evidences of a partiality for t
Great Britain -if fighting by the fide of
Washington, when the A uftins of our Coun
try were skulking in fafety, and the Fel
lowes'3, were claiming the prote&i in of
Great Bri ain ; if retaining the undimi nfh
ed confidence of our greacelt and firft of citi
zei s till his death, are proofs of Gen.
Hamilton's attachment to Great Britain,
then stigmatize him as the leader of » Bi ic
ifh faction, I (hall gl ry in marked a*
one of such a faft on under such a leader.
Ihe lad charge which the malicious iuduf.
try of his enemies has co tjured up agaii.ft
him, is that Geo. Hamilton is opposed to
the rde&ion of President Adams.
Tf it t it which has given all the bitter*
ness which has communicated all the venom
to th (landers against this diftingui/hed
patriot With the langua eof patriotifrn
in their mouths, thsfe ca'ummatort have
been governed wholly by the na row con
federations and feelings of petfon 1 refent
nunt. The public, however, before they
undertake to decide will consider coolly and
calmly the truth, the nature and the merits
of the charge. 'ls tl<e charge true ? What
evide. ee have they furnifhed to the public
that Geo. Hamilton it nppofed to Mr.
Adairs ? Faifts would speak a diffrrent
language President Adamt appointed Gen-
Ha lit on to the elevated office which he
now holds—This it at once a proof of
Gen. Hamilton's superior merits, and f
the improbability of their beini; at variance.
Is Gen. Hamilton i candidate ?n> —are any
ofhis'fmnd ca: iates ?no w at inte ell can
he hav in a chan-e o that offine ? None
Ifany, let his efiemies declare it—But >f it
were true that Gen. Hamilton is of opin
ion that ano'her man won'd b b tier
St ed to fill that important . flke, it that a
crime, which ii to flxip bid- ot all his
ba:d earned lauiels ? Is i ma;>, to be abuled
and viilificd because he docs not a,»rce with
us in the qualifications and merit o our
favourite ca didae. though he has suppor
ted our principles through a long la o ions,
and ufelul life ? It the ccnlli uii n a dead
letter, whic provides or a peaceable and
orderly rotation in office ? and » that man
republican, who censures anoth r for ex
er ifing hn> rights in a peaceable ■ rderly
and conttitutional manner ? But it is said,
that Gen. Hamilton tried to prevent the
ele&ion cf Mr. Adamt at the last ele ion
that this is a crime of deep dye, for which
he to be abused as a Roy lilt an I a
partizan of Britain lam glad, that tis
cafe bat ben mentioned, becau e t will
elu idate audjultify, mod fallv, he con
duft of Gen Hamilton the lalt and pre
sent ekdion.
Upon the resignation of Gen. Wafhing
toa, it was extremely doubtful who would
b« h s fucc*(T r It was well known that
deep and violent prejudices, infhmed anj
embittered for the lpace of tight years ex
ilted againlt Mr. Adams in tlx Southern
States. Me had been abused as Hamilton
now is as a r yalilt His excellent defence
on the American conllituiiou•, had been
garbled, distorted, perverted and mifrepre
iented as the fpeehes of Gen. Hamilton,
now are, by Junius Americanus, and other
jacobinic I writers, and he was generally,
tho' falfely believed to be an advocate for
litl s aod an hereditary aristocracy—his man
nets never - ere conciliatory to his enemies,
nor very flattering to bis friends —He was
conceived to have too rau h both of Cato
and Cicero in his composition to render him
popular. AH honest men. therefore, who
were r otperfona!y attached to him, thought
it the wifeit po icy to set up with him, a
southern frdcralilt, who might unite south
ern prejudice* with federal principles in his
favour, and thus ejfeßu»lfa guard against the
introduftion of that worll o> all calamities,
a jacobin P.efident. It was also believed
that this was the honelt and fair praftife up
on the conlhtution, and that it was import
ant to lccure h seder. 1 Vice President, who
would iiave all the powers in cafe of va.ancy*
That General Hamilton might patriotically
have entertained these sentiments is veiy
possible. The event (hewed the correftnefs
and patriotism of this conduit; Maflachu
letts and Connecticut by departing from
ibis fx/lem put at hazard theconftitution and
g ivernment. Mr. Adams had but on? vote
to fpnre, and yet he had one in Pennsylvania
and one in Virginia, ou of 34 in thofr dates
uncommon, une*pe6tcd fortitude to vote a
gainst all their colleagues, the ele&ion would
have been lolt ; Jefferfon would have been
our Piefideut ; France our mothe country ;
Buonaparte our Chief Conlul. Was not
this a miracul us cfc pe ? Was it wife or
prudtnt to play this defperae game ? Was
it not like agamcltcr who (kkiahis fortttn«
I m:d his fife upon a single thtaw ? If Pinck
ncy had been fupportcd wt should nqt hive
incurred this ha«ard—te w jiid have had
fcveral votes to spare, and President Ada'ms
would have b!etn. Vico-Erefident. fuui w,e
(hould have excluded Jeferfun and combined
the talents and virtues jf two djftinguifheii
northern a#d southern ftderalifts ; although
tio.n our perfonl acquaintance and local at
tachment, we may greatly prefer Mr A
dams, can any candid man deny that this
would h-ive been the fafel, moll hot-eft, and
moll prudent part ? SuppMe Jefftrfop who
had only two votes less than Adams, Jiad
ficceeded, what would the (out hern federal
ids have said to us ? " They might have
cliarged us with deserting the cause to se
cure the ele&ion of a northern man. If yon
had joined us the federal conflitution would
have been fafe ; now it is in the hands >f
the Marsean philofophcr who is resolved to
break its "Li tipulian ties " But tho' theft
have been Hamilton's id at, it is no
torioufly untrue, that he oppofrd Mr. A
dams If he had any influence any where
it was in New-York, and yet all the federal
vot rs iu Ntw-York were for Ada tat I t
la't choice ; and it is well known that Col.
M n, an able and virtuous fedrralilt in
New York aflmed his relation i i this town
*nd a fr'snd o( the President's, that Hamil
ton exeited his infiueuce for the New-York
lift of Eledtors who voted for Adatns.
If such were the dangers to which a di
vifiQn cxpvfed the fedcralitls at the last elefti
on, what mull be their situation at the en
suing one if a like diflcnfion (hould take
pla.e. Then we had 12 votes from New-
York, and succeeded by a majority of one
only ; now we (hall lose all the votes of that
state, and no wan without a spirit of divin
ation can tell where we (hall acquire any ac
cefliun.
Is Gen. Hamilton then to be fliguiatized
as the enemy of Mr. Adams, the sri nd' of
r yalty, a partisan of Bri ain, an ambitious
intriguer, because he would hoaeltly sup
port two fedetal candidates, Adams and
Pinckney ? a mode by which, if thecoift
dence in ihe President is not diminilh d, we
(hall gain his election, and feenre that im
portant p;>int of a federal Vice-' rtfident.
1 (hall consider Gen. Hamilton's great
and diftingtiifhed fcrvice hereafter. .
«• NO JEALOUS RIVAL"
Front tbe C 'tinecticut Courant.
TWILIGHT MUSINGS.
Full many a Jiuivcr is horn to bh'Jh
And uiajlc its fwcctKtfi on tie dtjert air•
G»at
AT largth Iv'e reach'd my cuflom'd waik.
■ How still.
Save when the evening breeze, in palling fight
M ti (acred murmurs in these mountain taps, _
Curling tii ftrcam below ! Thou oamelefi rill,
Roll or. thy uufeiii wave, till thnu arc loft
In the fait n»af» of waters! Tho' the tyring,
Withoewy fingers, decks thy fiiJ7 brii k,
With nodding violets, and the lonely n>f«j
l'h»* oft, ui wil.ows bending, o'er thy Uream,
At 'hey wi u d fee their images bolow,
The solitary rid bird, and the thrulh,
flew fwingingtothebreze, in wild accord,
their full fouls of fwe test long j
Thou'rt namclrfs still, and to the wsrld unknown.
Verhaps feme wauderiog, melancholy m.i»,
Btu ig with the "laniory of a griev ius wrong,
Will lit upon thy batik, and hold hit ey«t
Fall fixt up»n thy dream, that ft'als away
Without a murmur Or. p< rhapt some swain
01 tender year? that laves the woo It to rove,
Sighing and muting, as he wends along
t)r gain-,wit.i re-left foot,the mountains top,
And, whil> necalts, on all the fcira below,
A wifljlul look, feels, in his labouring bra aft,
The buiMii g germ of thought, yet immature,
And olt attempt* the it-expreflive (train
Of future fopg will mule along thy hank.
And (eel hit i ul touch'd by ihe goodly fights,
And mellow founds, that cheer thy lonely coar'u.
How like thine unseen life, O Banc*,* nature's
lov'd cKild ! i
Ev n in thy prime, (he drew her veil afida,
And fwcetly fmil'd upon thy ar4ent gate ;
Ta -ght i hee her language | bade thee tu»« thy
lyre ,
Tonoctsof willed miufirulfy But focn,
Like that fr»H flower thy youthful hind !.»d rrarM
And taught t® creep, in many a winding bout,
Thick o'er thy lattic'd cot, thy Moom dccay'd,
Yet, crc the hand of death had cut thee down,
Thus lung'ft, like dying fwatil, thiae own fare
wtll f
Sleep on, hl«(l Bard! The long last night will end,f
And morn will come, in Heaven's own fpleuduuis
dreft.
Sleep on, blest liar<3! The village swains Hall
come,
That erst did liflen to thy melting drains,
And cheer thy lonely grave, with tarlielt flower» ;
Shall p'int th« ftrang-r here; and, pensive, lay,
" Our minsteel sleeps beneath this rank-
LING GRASI".
* Michael Bruce, a Caledonian of high
poetic powers, who died of a confumptioo,
at the age of tweritv one.
f He wrote a poem in expe&atioa of his
own dea'.h
JSee an Extraft from the poem, in the
Mi/ror No. 36.
Federal Meeting.
At a meeting of the Citizens of Phi
ladelphia, held pursuant to public notice, at
Mr. Bunwoody's Tavern, on the 25th of
August instant.
Henry Pratt was appointed Chairman, and
'James Milnor Secretary.
The committee appointed at a former
meeting, to corrcfpond with the triends of
the Federal Government in Delaware Coun
ty, on the fubje£t of nominating a suitable
candidate for the office of Senator, for the
Diltrift, composed of the .City and County
of Philadelphia, and the County of Dela
ware, produced an extraft from the pro
ceedings rf a meeting held at the Black Horse
Tavern, in Middletowti Township, on the
9th instant, by which it appears that they
have determined to support New
lin, as a C for said office.
Whereupon resolved unanimously, that
this meeting do approve ol the nomination of
f Mr. Newiin,, aad that «* will unite our, City Commissioner's Office,
exertions, in promoting his election. , r•• p ■ , , , . '
The following Gentlemen, were appointed TN rrr r ..-> r- ' u '.'n 00 '.
, i • £• i i ! f' ruat.ee .. an Oi- J i..ar.ie <.l th. cleft md
a Commit te, to corh-f pond with our federal I Common Council*, P »Rc the a»d day ol May,
friends, hi dto pursue fucli other measures, 1797■ : f.'
" • iT.ay lit fund advisable .tQ promote the FR ' POSALS
federal interef), at ttie cnfuinj; election. ' 1 (in writinr)
Willi#*. Rawle. - received by the C ity Cor»m 10 nert, vntg
* •tj I* p , ' tne thifieth il3y of September nrxt,for r>- t on
Lev. H >llingfworth, . f . eaf; , lV , r one >ar .^« jrn „ eßCC , „ U) , fi)gt^, y
j •• n Itilkeep, ♦ • , bf 'a'tiu 1* . rtfit, the following public jroeerty of
Rolvrt . Wharton,, theci-y, v-x »V
Joseph H p!iinf.,n, *' l'i.e'A furf and Landing on Vii>e Streot.
Jnh.'i ; [ illowt'll, an<J *• /.' fM on .S-flVm, do.
*i i r: 3 J Vto on Mulbory do.
1 homas. Fi.tzimmons. 4 . Th Wharwi and Landing, o. High a . hef-
Resolved, that the f blowing* tickets agreed Jtiut %'trcfct.
up ma£ twiner meet; ngs, be republ HieJ in S* Dt oon Walnut street, the Drawlr gtj
the proceedings, and under the fauSton, anJ i -sd Cc.lar .*r««u._iuJu<jnT*.
' . . ' ? h-,lh Honfe
approbation of this nieytiug. 6 The Cellar undtr the City Hill.
Congress, Applications may he left with either of th<
Frmc.s Gurvey, Conmiillioners, or with tfceir cl. rk, at No. 63
Assembly, Cherry Street. . . r; .. toijoi
William Hall, ON MONDAY NEXT,
oel r c box, 5
Godfrey IT.ua. ' 1 '• Scpttmb.r,)
S'-imuel W. Fillu-r, WILL BE SOLD,
Jorin Bleakley, At the Mcrchaiith' Coffe* Hou* at I o'clock
D. K. Helmuth,
Select Cjuucil.
Heniy Pratt,
James Read,
Thomas Morris, (Jun t
Ar.diew B .yard,
William Dawfon, (brewer
Common Council.
Robert Walfton,
William Foyntell,
William Yuung, (boofefeller
John Morrell,
Edward Garrigus,
iicob Lawerfwyler,
eoige Krels,
Jonathan W. Condy,
Nathan Sellers,
Jeremiah Boone,
RoUit Evans,
Charles W. Hare,
Ifaae Snowden, (Jun.)
Peter Thomson,
George Dougherty,
John Carroll,
John Wall,
Thomas P. Cope,
Timothy P^xfon,
Janus Milnor.
HENRY PRA'I'T Cbsirm:n.
JAM 1. i MILNOR Sce'rj.
Gazette Marine Lift,
PORT OF PHILADELPHIA.
Arrived,
Ship Four Friends, Hathaway.
I fie of Mny 4?
Salt—J. & R Wa'n
Brig Polly, Palmer, Gonaivrs
Ccffee & Cotton --Summel Brown
Sloop Frienafliip, Lunimas Richmond 10
Coal.
Anivtd at the Fort.
Brig Franklin, Morris, Havanna—left it
loth Augull —Sugar and fegars.
Captain Hathaway, of the (liip Four
Friends, 1» ft at the Isle of May the brig
Lydia of Salem, and spoke on the 21 ft inft.
in lititudfe 37, 3 North, longitude 71, the
brijf CI rilTa, Nichols, from Philadelphia to
Curracoa, out 2 days all well.
Ship Swift Packet and Urig Enterprize, of
Philadelphia, were left atSurrinam the 20th
Julv— -time of failing uncertain.
An inward bound fliip and brig are be
low, names Unknown.
BOSTON, Augufl 22.
' Arrived, Schr. Maty. Young, Am.apols,
£ 14 days
Brig Montreal, Ritchie; Winfor, 14 days
fchr. Vaughan, M tthew, St. Johns, I
Capt. Farley, 26 days from St. Kittsj
and 22-from Thomas, interm-, That the
U. S. fchr. Enterprize, Lieu . Shaw, of 12
guns brought two French privateers, of 10
g-ns each, and 10a men, into St. Kiiis
after a copfiderable resistance and in one of
which wer- 35 killed and wounded. The
Enterprize 101 l only one man.
NFW-YORK, Augnft 27.
ARRIVED—JSMNE. •
CLEARED, fchr. Den Gode Henfight
Smith, St. Croix.
Ship Good Friends of Philadelphia has
arrived at New-Orleans, from Mad ira, in
distress, having loft the greatest part of
her crew by the Yellow Fever.
Ship Cleopatra, was spoke the 261 h of
July, off the Ma anzas 58 days from New-
York, bound from New Orleans all well.
Schr. William, Stoddert, has arrived at
Port Republican from this port.
The Francis, Nixon, from New York.
The brig Eliza and Marv, arrived in the
MiflifGppi from New York 25th July, 49
days paffige
The h»vorite, Brown, from Jamaica the
27th. , ~ j
The Evelina, Crowdelf, from Alexan
dria, the 28th.
THE CARGO
Of the Ship Criterion, B WicHes ( len. ccm
mander, from Bengal,
COHSISfrNG OF
A complete assortment of
BENGAL GOODS,
StJG.tUS of the firft quality,
BLACK PEPPER do.
FOR SAL* BT
WILLINGS FRANCIS,
Kc. i\ l'cr.a flrrtt
M«y s-
J|||* LAVIN IA,
a Tfcll known £ood vellel,
No* i»)i g 3t South wharf, upwards of
too tons ready to tabein a an -fay fcelcnC
to sea with very iittle cxpence, being full ot storei
anil is well armed.
JOHN CONELLY.
August 2$ dtM
The Frenchman
WHO refufed to give up a STOLEN
POINTER DOG when demanded of
him on Wrdnefday morning last about feveti
"'clock, by,the frvant i t the owner, at tho
cornfr ot Arch and Sixth ft eett, is dflired
to fend hini to the < ffiee of this Gazette, or di
ligent (earth w.l! be made afrer him, and he
will l e pr. deputed as the thief- The Dog is
white, excepting aye low fp.>t on Mi back, one
yel o« car, and two or three yellow fyots . tx
his forehead—the oiher ear is speckled— he it '
v.try poor and Up shot. An hanjr.me reward
will be given for the dop, and Five Dollar* on
conv.fiioii of the thief. 1 he' Frenchman is a
tall thi man, of a ccmj-l xion vry dark, and
drelT din tl ck .1 thes ( xc ( t g a llripe ' blue
and - lrte gingham c< atre) —he wufeenu ith
t'd dog in company v ith a short fat man, ia
Ra e near Seventh i:r;et, on Sunday afternoon
last.
auguff 18 d 4t
For Sale,
BY PUBL C AUCTI N- -IN THE
CITY OF WASHINGTON.
THf io.lowing property belongn x to Hie Trnf
tce» of the A fr g egite Fund, provided for the
payment of ccruin creditors of fcdward Fox
auo James Green:eaf.
On Mondiy the Stb October inst.
P ART ol the property of said fund, in the City
of WaiuHgton, that now is ren ered elar pi
every i cumbrai-ce, will he exposed at KtiVliC
Au&ion at TatiMclifl Tavern, an-.ontlt which are
the following valuable fituatioi,, viz. ir Lots in
square No. 973, 1 lots in square 974, 15 lots ia
jquari N» yyj, 1 lots in square f lath of fquart
1019, 19 lots in fjuare 1010, t lot it square lOte,
I lot in square IO», 7 lots in square io» j, 4 lots
in
square 1046 9 lots in square 1047, it lots in
square 1048, with fun'ry others, advantageously
(kuated in various parts of the city. Silo the »
llory Ira ne houle now occupied f y Mr Deblois,
beautifully fttuated (with ao extensive view offev
eral miles down the Potomac) on the south east
corner of square 973, fronti-g 4s leet on 11 street
east, and 41 fcctonfouth G street: a*.on.m di us
Kitchrn with an oven, ice. adjoining the south
front. A large frame liable, carriage house and
hay loft 50 fe«t by Is. and a pump of xc llcqt
water near the hack door 01 the kitcVm, the lot
extending 91 feet on ti street, a:.d I 9 feet inch y
inGhreet, comprizing lot* Ncs 1, 2,3, ami part
of 2», in the regiilercd ot the
rhe faleswUl commence at the said t.v.rn at ten
o'clock in the forenoon.
The termaone fourth rib, ore fourth in Gx
months, when a will be piven, the remain
ing moiety in two y?a"*, faynent to He (V urcd
by ' ori'l and mortgage. But tht creditors in the
abovf fun» l , may i»i li uof mortgage secure pay
ment nf their bondk hi dep'-Ot of c rtißcatw of
the truflecs at the rate of five ibilliitg»iu the pound,
to th« (mount fecur»d and A< dividend *ake
place '■elore the cvpifadou' of thi* • twv years, it
will be fct < ff ig irift th« I on t, a- dt the certifi
e»te« returned iri the fioj pr6n«.*oa,* sfcf'.
Henry ' ratt "1 *lv
Thorn ,» W. Franc's I
John Miller, jun.
J. hn Alhley
Jacob Baker.
THOMAS Tl>
Augult 4.
A PLEASANT
COUNTRY HOUSE,
WITH an excellent Orcb*rJ, lia< n, Pump,
Sc. &c. The whole containing 17 acres,
lunate on tlie Wilahicon road, between the
third and tiiur h mile (lone —May be purchased
on raatcmable terms. —Two thirds of ihe pur
chafr m''ncy may remain (secured on the pre
milt-sand on'intcrtft) d.iring three years
Enquirt of BONSAL k SHOEMAKER,
No. 114* Snuth p. tinh street, the Sub
scriber, at Monnt-Pleafar>t, adjoining the
premises, or at N• < 4?, WalniiMtre,t.
' JON-WILI.IAMS.
11 iv. f tf.
JIWF 1.1
FOR SALE,
a PRINTING PRESS cathffete,
ytuil Pica on pica body (new and Jd
f ca, do.
Sundry Fram s, and a great variety of Office
Fur .iturs. &c
Iroh work or a pr n'ing-prrfa,
0- They will be fold cheap torcafh —Apply
at the office of the Gazette Of the United
States.
To
'rinters.
WANTED in Exchange,
A FOUNT of Long Prim' r, weighing 6
or 70c lb. or upwar and a i'oua; of <
B\rier weighing /jcolbs or upwards.
*,
Trv/leet.
IEY, Agent,
jiaw t»
y* ,
» _• '*