Gazette of the United States, & daily advertiser. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1800-1801, September 10, 1800, Image 3
produce o:djr. To fijblh'tute ftabiliiy, f-f. i } em > wergy.' to a rncfs of diforj.-r, and iceble, fhifting experiments. Ta his judg ment Washington was always incomparable" In this choice he had a peculiar fel/city The Secretary of the Treasury wa3 all t : at could have been wished.. Public credit re vived. • A fufiding system was deviled, wife, modeffcte, and as just as the peculiar fituaifon of-ihe United States weuld admit, fixed revenues were eftabiilhed, easy to the citizen, - and colleiSfd without embariafs- m *nt' tye Vi'holi bri an'gement of the (ileal departments were admired for their fimpii city, their economy, and their efTtft. A merhra was gratified. Newfouices of wealth fprajijf into existence. A languiftiing and almolt ■ commerce started with new vigour, 1 rftid mamlfactures and agriculture received a torrefporiding fnpport. His contemporaries do him the justice to fay, that the Secretary has all the merit of it. Congrcfs followed where he led. This is the true source of the rivalj aloufy which has burst out info pitiful calumnies against the man. This however is among thefmal- Itjl hon urs of Hanv'lton. His exertions were not confined to his own department only. ]n every branch of the irovernment, he was consulted. refpe<s. d, and'influential. In the cabinet Walhin-i n did net think it beneath the dignity of his Itation to advifc with and command the talents of his gieat office s, wo <:ce eby 7 Jlandtng latu re fluired to give liim their opinions when ever ajird. Hatr.ilt on shone with pe cu'iar brightness. Always prepared, ge nerally corredt, and invariably frank and sincere, he was a great and important aid to the President in his arduous, deli cate and important station. Washington was afraid to hear the opinions of men.' however great, or however different from his own. He lWened with calmness and decided with Indcfida.ee. In the weflern infurreflion r 179£ . which v\as.fo formidable as trial with a " few thouiand dollars" fc|Le of pur grcateft men, would have d«cidW on wa't instead of peace, but which terminated to the honor and reputa tion of the government, Hamilton gave a specimen of his. superior and commanding talents. He was invite !by Washington to accompany him to the ft at of ir.lurreftion. When arrived they found every thing in our army in a state of dtpbraMr confufion and disorder- Diftnnl and diT.ot.tent uni ♦erfdlly prevailed. Hamilton wa requeli ed hy Mifflin to i itifere and almost in an instant every thing as reversed. Even h > enem es were char ed by the m: p.'c force of his ta'ents. Calumny itfelf forgot it.- effice, and on the return of the army join edthe generitl plaudit due to his unrivalled exertions. Whet) the delicate and impor tant question of neutrality occurred in tlx Cabinet, J.-fierfon and Hamilton were op posed on the question. Hamilton ftronglj advocated neutrality—Jeflerftfn feebly op posed The frnier was it cce-Mul a'e wrote those admiral.ie efiavs under the title of Pacificus in support of Wathington's con dust* When the Ptitifti ireaiy was adopt ed by the ccr.i()itutional authorities, l.i again volunteered in their l .ipport, aftd pub lifhed hi« excellent speculations under tin till" of Camilla*. In short, in whateve fmiatio.i he fs viewed, he ia fti.l the fam. exalted, clifinttieflcd, and indefatigabli public fervaiM. It is the Jingu'ar fortune of Haniiiton tnat either his oldr,- eui ctitini..., ptaili •very great act of his li:V. The old Jacobin profefs to-admire the C'onflitution. Cer tainly Hamiltor, hj; as much merit in tha admire the jui.dtn:, fyjlcm. The revenm fyflera. the fyl'iem of r.eutrality, and tin Ei it ill treaty. And for all these Hamiltoi has been the mojl powerful adrocaie, Ye 1 both tliefe eldfiics of men t'itii to think il of him. One other rem it t, and thei renfeious of my inability. I quit ih- I'm je&* 18 there any one, man ii) the Unitec Slates who has b en so iily it warded ? Hi came out of the army poor. He went inte the treasury f;om a profeflion which gav, liim Bcoo dollars per annnrn, and receivet a salary of 3500 dollars. He quitted it be cause lie not /;;><>. He has not f-ugh a foreign employ, nor ha* he been Prefiden ror vice P.efident' nor has he received salary of 25 oco dollars per annum. Am yet did he ever boat! of his services, fuffe ings, or complain of public ingratitude Dcts litis look like ambition ? " NO JEALOU.S IIIVAL.'' i BY DESIRE. The following Address was publ'fhed in the Gazette of thf United States towards the «lose of last ftafon. As the uncommon lhare of health we enjoy in Philadelphia, at this time, may be in part owing to the attention that has been paid by our eiti tens to the wholesome advice contained in this address, it may be of ule to our fuffering brethren at Baltimore, Norfolk, Providence, and other places, to republilh it. To the Editor Of tie Gate it e of the United States, Sir, PERMIT nie to join with you in congratulations to our fellow citizens on the return of health to thiseity, and to re joice with them that the destroying has not been permitted to commit such deveft/i ---tion in this as it has done in former years. This is, no doubt, in part owing to the general delertfon of the citizens, but it is also in some meafurc owing to the fmprov< d method of treating the diicsfe ; and I am more and more convinced from my ex perience thil year, that this fever is as trada ble at any other, and that by propet manage ment, the meft obnoxious part of it r that is ■, t' j I p a y be ' n a great measure ob f'a t ] w ' t ' 10Ut 'lie use of mercury, or o er that I have not made tife of mg giain of that mineral in the treat ment of it this year, and yet I have not loft one iingle patient in thisfever. It is evi ent, theieii>re, that that loathsome method 0 . ""-kering the body of the patient all over wita mercurial ointment, and consequently, that the lolsof teeth, and the other nume rous i!l s that enfua from salivation, and rom the profufe use of mercury, may be avoided. * But a writer in one of the newspapers alks theic-ferious quiflions—What, fays he, are we still to be vilited with thisfever every year ? Is all business to be suspended, is our city to be peferted, and are the citizens to continue to walte the earnings ot a few months in expensive excurfi&ns into the country every summer ? To these questions 1 answer, that it is but reasonable to-ex peft, that we (hall be vilited by complaints peculiar to countries situate in similar clr. mates and under similar ciacuinfUnces with our own ; but then by making - use of the lame precautions, and adopting similar modes of jiving with them, we (hall not be exposed to greater incouveniencies than they art- exposed to. The misfortune is that, we of these Uni ted States being chiefly delcended from per sons from the northern parts.of Europe, fisch as England, Scotland, Ireland and Ger many ; our ancestors brought over with them tlie enftoms, habits and modes of living that were common in those countries, and we, their defendants, have implicitly adopt ed their modes of life, without regard to the difference of climate and our own situa tion. It is well known that the people ofthel'c northern countries live in a manner very different from thole in the foutliern parts of Europe ; for instance, it is well known thr.t they live much more upon animal food, and that they make use ot much Ms vegetagle in then-diet than they do to the southward. It isalfo well known that they drink much more ardent spirits than they do in France, Spain, Portugal and Italy. Thcfe coun/ries were formerly fubjedl to the plague, which is the very word fpccies of infediousifever. Even the cities of Lon don and Exeter, which are lituate in the foutliern parts ot England were lormerly vi sited hy the plague, tluufrh now they are two ot the molt healthy cities in the world, and yet they are much more populous than any of the cities in the United Stores ; the reaton is, they have altered their method ot living-, and adapted it to ths methods pur sued in foutliern countries. Mr. Miller the autoor of the Gardener's Dictionary, gih who lor many yearr had the care f the phy tic garden at Chelfea, alTured me, that ;h< quantity of vegetables carried to the Londoi niaiket, exceeded what it had done former 'y, within his remembrance, to a degree tha was beyond conception, and Truth r, in hi I Cropology, among many other n-iemorabli things that he has recorded, a {Tares us tha there was no such thing in England as i kitchen garden before the time of Harp tne Eighth ; and now it you go into Co vent Garden or the Fleet markets, of a mar Let day morning, you v.nl Ice vegetables e nough almost to fill the dome of St. Paul's and the market ot Exeter, in Devonfliire is not more famous for its great variety ant abundance of excellent fifh. caught in Tor hay, arid on the other parts ot' tie coafl than it is lor an abundance of the choicel vegetables. At Panton, where King Wil lia'n lodged the firtl night after he iandie to drliver England from Popery and slavery they have cabbage plants fit to plant sut ii th« month of April. Ardent spirits, alio,are not nearly so much drank in England as they were formerly, in stead of which fermented and malt liquor, -tre ufrd, such as beer of different kindss hut more especially porter and cyder, of which they have great abundance in Devon- Ihire. A great brawney Irilh coal-heaver, who works on board the (hips in the river Thame;, that brings coals from New-Castle, I have been aflurek, will drink two or three Rations of porter in a day, by which means he is enabled to go through that fevcre exer cise. and yet enjoy the molt perfeft (late of health. It is byfuch means as these, together with their great cleanliness, oceafioned by their plentiful fnpply of water, that the cities of London and Weftminfler enjoy so much more perfefl health than they did formerly. To the house in which I lived in Londoii, wh:ch was the house formerly inhabited by S.r Robert Ladbroke, who was the father of the city, there were four kinds of water laid in. to wit—New River water. Thames wa ter. rain water and pump water ; and if si. milar reforms were to take place here, I am confident our citizens might remain peacea bly at their homes, and would not fee under theneceffity of betaking themselves to flight, into the country, for refuge, so often as they have been obliged to do for some years palt. I have lately seen some very sensible hints addressed to the Board of Health, on the fubjeiS of their reports of the ftatc of mor tality during the iickly season, which I think deserves to be atteuded to. It is a faft that in great cities, there are pifrfons taking their I departure from this world to the next every | day. ri.iy almost every hour, but as there are 0.0 bills of mortality piiblifheo for the great er parr c f the year, this passes almost unno- ! ticed, but when the Board of Health begin to take up the matter, at the commencement of the sickly season, and inform the public that five, ten, fifteen or twenty persons have ! died in a day, vithout diitinguifhing what dileafes they have died of, the puublic mind takes the alarm, h is like hoisting the signal of diflrefs; and is as much as to fay, to your tents O Israel j every man thinks that he is the next that is to be attacked, and that no * As far bleeding I seldom make use of it. thing but fl/ght can favVhrm from perdition: whereas if a biH-of mortality was publifh-<i every wefk throughout the year, fpecifying the particular disease each perfoa died of, the public m nd yvould become familiarized to it besides it would have a good .rfFe& in a mora! and religious point of view, by afling as a kind of mtmente inori, and might have something of the fame effcdt, as a weekly fcrmorl has by putting peo ple in mind of that laftcr end to which we mull all come and thus when the sickly season drew nigh, it would inform them of its approach, by which they would be gradu ally apprized of their danger, and become prepared to meet it. THOMAS RUSTON. ' , P. S. A friend of mine who lived fome years at Medina in Sicily, one of the fineft ' illands in the Mediterranean, and warfbmed a«a granary for almost all kinds of gtaiii so long ago as in the time of the .Romans. '1 his gentleman aflured me that the inhabi tant* scarcely eat any meat in the summer months, hence they keep no cows, and very j few sheep. As a substitute .for cows they have goats tofupply them with milk, goat's flefh and kid therefore is almost the meat they make nfe, except some little butcher's meat which ihey have from the coast ofjßarbary • But they have the great tft variety of delicious fruits, such as oliyes, figs, dates, pomegrantes, grapes limes,, lemons and ora -ges, and an abundance,of all kinds of the choicest vegetables. Horses they have none, or next to. none, their rich grain fielde being tillfd, and their other laborions work being cheily done by I mules and afl'es. | ' France is approaching her last stage of re volutionary insanity. Civism ii now exiled irom all power. Government is veft«d, by violence in a military despot. Thus it was in England, during thefantaftic reign of the fanatic Cammonivcaltb. The revolutionary wheel went round ; and, after revolving to the tremendous, but upstart defpotii'in of one military man, the people found more con ization, and afterward s more certain fecu l ity in withdrawing their allegiance from the unlimited usurper of the day to their former , limited heriditary monarchy. J f The following was Mr. Pitt's unanswer able Mild beautiful reply to Tierney, who cal led upon Miniliers to state tbe oijeil of the war in one Sentence. li 'I lie Honourable Gentleman (said the Premier) cills upon Mir.iflers to Hate th« objeit of the war ill one sentence. I can slate it in one word.' It is SECURIT Y. I can thus {late it in one word, though it is not to be explained but in many. The objeft of the war is Security ; Security a gamt'a danger, the g.eatell that ever threat iened this country: the greatest that ever threatened mankind ! A danger the pore terriUe becaule it is unexampled aftcf novel. It is a danger, which nas more than menaced i the fafety and independence of afl nations. I It is a diMger, which has attacked the pro perty and peace of all individuals. A dan ger, which Europe ha* {trained all its sinews . to repel, and which no nation has so fuc cefsfully repelled as the Briti/b, because no other nation has idled so £nkrc*tir auly, so SINCIUEUY,fo UNIFORMLY on the broad balls of PRINCIPLE! BecauC? no other nation has perceived, with equal cleamefs and decision, the • neceflity, not only of combating the evil abroad, but of STIFLING IT AT HOME, Bi-'caufe no nation has breasted with so firm a constancy the tide of Jacobinical potiir. Because no nation has sctutinizedindpierced with so stbdpast AN eyk, as the Gov ernment of Great-Britain all the disguising mamtuvres of Jacobinical hypo crisy."' The above incontrovertible, clear and convincing definition of the object '6f war by the mitigated monarchy of England z gainft the Gallic Regicides and the common disturber» of the nations ought to be read not only by British fubjefti, but by Evr.ny MKMBKR OF CIVIL SOCIETY THROUGH THE ARTH. That" Gentleman of the first reputation" Duank who receives letters " admiring the ability with which" L'Aureriis conduced" keeps cackling like a goose about British Infiuente, and has become seriously alar med at the encreafinjf circulation' of the Gazette of tbc United States. He attempts to impofc: a oelief on his gaping readers that it has but five hundred subscribers ! ! If the Advertisement for a thousand Rheams of paper per year give him fucb qualms as he has lately djfcovered, we could puhlifh a lift of neio subscribers to the Gazette which v.oulG, to use the language of an eminent Physician " shake his gall bladder. 1 ' COMMUNICATION.. I We are autorhizcd to acquaint the public, that should the present favourable state of health of this city,under the bleflangof Provi dence, continue ; —MeflVs Wignell and Reinagle propose to open the Theatrical campaign on monday the 2id instant, when Miss E. Weflrey, a performer from the New-York Thertre,. will make her firft appearance on our Boards. This young lady is said to poflefs, with superior figure and ample powers, all. the fenling, sweetness and bewitching naivette of our l.ite favourite Mrs. Marflial, and must be considered as a very valuable acquisition to our corps Dramatiqne ;—they have adver tised thfir last week at the Federal City, where they have been playing in an elegant little Theatre, fitted up in the Lottery Hotel, with great reputation but with no proportionate profit- . l >.• • ; { * NEW-YORK, September 9, I'CiR ionie weeks pally I have not read a ! public paper which did not contain remarks : on a late pamphlet called, " Srrious Confi- ! demons, & c .» In all the Jacobin prints urn work has been abused with the utmost i Icurnhty and venom ; -while, in the Fedeial yaasttes, it is uniformly complimented and amended. Although I am not much in : ■ '-he habit of reading polemical discussions, the contrariety bf ientiment entertained about this performance induced me to. perufts 't. I find it written with elegance and «fe. in a stile widely different from the trothy rant of Timofean If Grotius. The ; fubjeft is most ably handled, the arguments ' ate iorcible and conclusive.—.The vein of ! ,piety which pervades the valuable produc tion.renders it a desirable companion to every a , honefl man and Gncere Christian. It has 5 been fllf P efted that the religious creed • of Thomas Jefferfon was not ftriaiy ortho ■ cIox > and 'Ms suspicion is now rendered an r established fact. It has been proved that r he is an avowed deist, an enemy to Dure r morals and religion, consequently an enemy , to his country and his God. Whoever, r* therefore, furthers the cleftion of this man . to the Prefidncey of the United States, , mfu'ts his maker, "and redeemer, and boldly defies omnipotence to arms ! What can screen fucli wretches from the jujl vngeance of tnjulted heaven ! Gazette Marine Lift, PORT OF PHILADELPHIA. jfrriveJ at thefort. Ship Good Friends, Earl, Havanna £Left it 24th August—Sugar See. Schr. Christiana, Roes, Havanoa fLeft 2 ift Auguft—S'is;ar—S. [Gerard Minerva, Hughes, Charlellon Rice to L. D. Carpenter Cleared, Brig Express, Gardner, Antigua Schr. Speedwell, Blanchard, Jamaica Brig Juno. Vincent, from hence to Ja maica, was taken on the 19th August, in lattitude 29. 00, N. longtitude 68, 30, W. by a French privateer, after an a&ion of one hour and twenty-five minutes ; the mate was wounded in the foot ; the crew jvere put on board a (hip from Bfemen, and afterwards arrived at Charleston* Schr. Governor Clinton, Allen, from Port Republican, 17 days, has arrived at New- Castle. Schr. Phoenix, Donnell, from hence, has arrived pt Havanna. Ship Clothier, Capt. Rose Oj*tipbell, ar rived at Lema,from Baltimore the 3th May taft. SALEM September 4. Arrived, brig Lydia, Boden, Isle of May, 40 day*—no news, ArriVd, fchr- Whim, in 33 days from the Havanna. Sailed in co. with an armed Portland brig, which the night after they failed, by the welldire&ed fire of her ftcrn chaferl, compelled a New-Providence priva teer to sheer off, whose intention, no doubt, was to overhaul them. Capt. F. loft his mate, a southern man, Aug. 4. Capts. Kinfmsn, and Richardson, of this port, were to fa 1 for home th= day after capt. F. The former would leave one man on (hore Tick—the latter had 101 l one man, and would leave h« boy on shore Tick. Capt Fairfield who had folJ his veflel, was to take paflage with Capt. Richardson. NEW YORK, Septemb«r 9* . Arrived) days Bn'g Crokcr, Bartow, Salem Sloop Linnet, Btck, has arrived at Bar dadoes Cleared, Brig Paramaribo, Shepherd, Madeira Schr. Herk'mer, Lucjs» doj Two Brothers, Parry, ShelEurn William Ernot, Halifax Brig Three Friends, Shaw, from Bath, Maflachufetts, bound to Cnrracoa, foun dered at sea on the 23d of Augtift. Yeflerday airived brig Cruger, Barton, Naples via Salem. BALTIMORE, September 8. The brig Eucharis, of this port, was ta ken by a British privateer on her homeward bound paflage from St. Sebattians, and sent into Guernsey. CHARLESTON, Augufl 26. Sir rive J, days Ship William, Minor, Guernsey 54. Brig Hope, Dolliver, Havanna 21 Schr. Adventure, Patterfoo, do. 21 Sloop Nancy, M'Combs, Middleton, (Connefticut) 15 Twenty Dollars Reward. RAN-AWAY from Spring Forge, in York County, a negro man, named ISAAC, other wise CUDJO, about 21 years old, the property of Robert Coleman; Esq. He is about 5 feet 8 inches high, has a blrmiih in his eyes, more white in them thaneommsn, by trade a Fergeman; had on and took with him a drab coloured broad cloth coat, almost new, a sailors jacket and pantaloons' printed fancy cord, a iwanfdown striped under acket; a rorum hat; one fine and one coarse shirt' one muslin handkerchief, sprigged, two ditto Briped border, a blue Persian under jacket and two prir cotton (lockings. Whoever takes up fai«i negro and lodges him in any jail in this or any of the' neighbouring fiatei thai! have the above r« ward or TeafoDahie expellees il brought home. JOHN BRIEN. Spring Forge, Oileber»3,i799. N. B. As said negro formorly lived in ChefUr county, it is probable he may return tfaers. November j I TOBF.SOID i PUBLIC VENDUE, f i; ° n Thnrfday the 18th instant, i At the Dwelling House of the Subfcriler, " IN TH K BOROUGH of FRANKFORD, All his HOUSEHOLD KITCHEN furniture, Feather Beds, Bedfteadj and f V, D r e4 . d t ,n S i Mahogany Dining, Breakfaft.and l-ara. iabies » Mahogany and Cherry Bureaus ; an Eight Day Delks and Book-Cafe ;an excellent Piana Forte ; Mahogany and Winder a Settee, Lookiog Olaffes, Carpets, CM - a L- 1 artlc! ' s of I'late-; Venitian Blind., brafi f DryeGood '' anda Viriety s r> A ! r >- C * ,h 'f am ' da y—A handfomj and valuable | ■ Balding Li9t, fronting to the Main Street, asd - n '»g the house ot the Subscriber, two good riorfes, a Cow, and a Riding-Chair with steel Spring, and plated Harness; fix Ten Plate and two - Open Stoves V The sale to begin at 10 o'clock, A. M. and cenaitions made known by , f JOHN M'CLELLEN. j September io. eodr I - - _ : ! FOR SALE, Laying at Almond street wharf, as (he arrived from io». The Btfey is. a good rede], of the Burthen of 131 tons. *»* P° r te m-i of sale apply to PHILIPS, CRAMONDWCo. Augufi ic. TWENTY DOLLARS REWARD. RAN away from the Subfcriber«n Friday 49th Auffull, 1 Soo, a Nfgro man, Named Dra per, a'awt five feet eight or ten inches high, 34 years «t age, black complexion,. re d eyes and very lharp Nose ; Tind cv. when he went away a fhorc gray cloth coat, with large Metal B»-t. ns, nan keen pantaloons, and a tewfelt hat, other cloth ing unknown ; whoever takes up the said felU w an iitcnrcb hin» so as 1 can get him again, lhall re ceive, if ill the C'Unry, if out of the Suce, the above and all realonahln Charpes. GILLESS M'CLEMWY". Corner Jet County, "> "* * ' ''■ September 3, 1800. ' ' TO LET, OR FOR SALE, \ 2-story brick house iituatc in Duke-strect (or Artillery lane) Northern Liberties, louse, all built of the l.eft materials, and in excel nt order ; cellars under the whule, one paved, Icn and yard, l'evcrat fruit treen in the garden, wo [umuc f excellent waer near the premises, inijnire at No, yy, Arch flrett. J" 1 / tu&f 6w ■ Robbery.' , 300 Dollars Bswaho. LAST Saturday irght my (hip in Water flreet was opened by a falfe key, and fur dry articles of JtwEi ieaY, to the amount of ten or twelve hundred dollars, were rerriedoff. Am-<:"• cr thrrTi were, Two marrow spoons marked " Worrock Likenefles of Mr James Robertfon and wife, of Peterlburg—one do. of aMr King-one do. of Mr Jokn Trimble,'ate of this town, the back set with a large blue glass and a smaller ill the centre. Under w! i h w:s a plait of hair hid strait.'with J. T. in a cypher wrrked ia pearl. Together with a nember of fancy pi*, ces, painted by Bully, which cannot now DC rccollciled ; j Uoitlwam's Calls ftamp-d « Warrock.' AND The following :* I Gold watch,maker's name Provib, Paris I filvcr do Thomas Green, Liverpool, 7753 1 do do. Gearge Bifield, I.ondon, 13,500 1 gol.! do. French, no n?me 1 do. do. John RyUnd, London, 1331 I fiiverdo, French, t name 1 do. do John Hull, London, 744 1 liiver do. Jofepti Kern' er 1 do. do. J. Djrlington, Loudon 1 do. do. No. 9861 » gilt do. G. M. Metcalf, Landon, 4196 I silver do. George Halwood, London, 1906 I do. do. J Smith, London, 212 1 double cafe gilt watch* R. Oftvjrn, Rich mond, ico Dollars will Ije given for the reftoratiofl of the jeweliery, or »co dollars if the thief or thieves are also secured. Mr. Benjamin Morri*, the owner of the Watches which were taken at the fatne time, will alio give 100 dollars fcr them. July 19 : ■ £/" The "rinters at Peterfburr, Richmond, Alex tndiia—Baltimore—Charleflon—and o thers, are requested to insert the above for a rw times IN THE PRESS. A New and interejling WORK, ( Entitled,) Pra&ical Education, BY MARIA EDGE WO R TH, Author of the letters 1 ForLiteraryLadie«andthe Parents Affiflant.and bj RICHARD L. EDGEWORTH, F.R. S.and M.R I. A. Subscription will be received vy Thomas Dob- Con, Second Street, Philadelphia, and Zachariah Poulfon, at the Philadelphia Library; by Brown and Stanfoury, and by George F Hopkin?, New York; Thomas and Andrews, Bifton ; Ifaacßsw ers, New Haven, and the principal Booksellers in the United States and at the Office of this Gaz ette te. August 15 diw NOTICE. i LL persons indebted to the Efhte of Mr. C\ Jacob 1 bomas, late of Wafljingtnn, flat® if Kentucky, dtceafed, are requefled to m.ike payment, —jbC those v. !io bjve any demand* , against the fame, are deli red to exhibit their the aoth Ottober tiext. JACOB REESE, Adminlftrator. /C / September 6. d.jt *:'r» I', *.' jf* *■ V; , ,1* <v' vf