FOR S 4 L E, tor approved Notes at sixty i*yt, Ii -fc.es eenoini M.v'.*r* WINE, beftLondon particular; ICo p>.-c<* iight and Hark ground CHINTZES of an excel lent quality. Apply to Sept. 1795 Dancing School. iVIT.LIAM M'VQUGJLL WILL Sis School on Monday, the »Bth in.„. at the iVrant ill Room in Harmony ftteel,' W dmg from IY.iid to foui :h between Chcfont and Walnut streets. ■Ifi addition 'to the French and English dances ufoally iifeht, ho ni-'ans to introduce a variety of Seotw Reels, E6w very much adraired in Europe. September 15.' Le Breton, SURGEON DENTIST, . PHbilof ! l e celebrated Mr. Bubou, late Deli cto the Ki«gmißty ' el family of Fr anct memier of the College and Acudtny of Surgeon tit Paris, Keeps a complete alfortmcnt every tkmg necessary to be ufrd for the Preservation of the Month and Teeth. Pa'ent mineral Teeth, and human and ivory Te«th; Den trtfiec in t>owder; Opiate; excellent Elixir for fweetemng the ltionth, and preierving the teeth.—He also furmlhcs Bro&s* and foft Sponges. . .-J"? He lives in Chelhut-Hreet, No. .3J, above Fourth ftrest. ' Sift. 19. co "- United States, 7 T rnfylvania District* J y T OTICE is hereby given, that the trfels of Mtmmal in the crrcv.it court of the United-States, for ths v Pennftlvaniay elefiion, or in determining any question arifmg at «> fue'i meeting, whatever number of {hares he riiav be " entitled to; and that each person {hall be entitled to a tt vo''»for every {hare by him held under that number. JOHN BARNETT, JOHN M. T/u'LOR, •JAMES HTKDSHAir, tBOMJS PAUL, v MICHAEL HART. Sept. 14, 1795- §4 W - N. £-. A few Shires of the Stoek of the said Company a;/, yet be fubferibed for at :he Cer.V]iting-H'oufe of I.c-vi liMngrunftb is" Son, 3d wharf below tlie BtH'tge in Phila delphia- if the fubfeription fcal! not be full bv the sixth at October Book will then be transierred to Sa mtuel Sitgrtavei, Efq "E^.fton. Fifty Dollars Reward,^ FOR delivering to the Tuhfcriber, a Negro Boy. named MEKCii, about nineteen years of age, about 5 feet 8 or 9'inches high, fpsaks good hue rather hefitate's a little before' he aaf*cr« a queiljon, very fat and round in the face, has a Urge S»jr irom a wound ot the back of one ef'«his legs, a little above the heel. Had on v..hen he went ay,-ay, a .. c | t i Green Coatee and Trowiers, and an old' leather hit torn on one fide, a pair of half worn Boots, but., took with him Shoes and Stockings, the Stocbnga are White, had also a bundle tied up in a red iilk hand kerchief; it is likely he may have a good dcat of mo rev with him—He is a barber by trade. W ' JOSEPH BLYTH, No. 29, north Third ihxet. , rtiiid. *5 tii» Sept. 179J- Footman & Co. dljt. jawj.-x, d f. 6 w SAMUEL SITGR EAVES, aawtf. }0R Tilt GAZETiE 6F THE UNITFD STAIES. v MR. Frnno, ; . .. THtf enemies at the Conftitutitm cf the United States having failed m a seven year's open war again it isj nrinciples, arid the administration of the Govcrn mentjundv r it, have now ftlifted their ground—Seven years-has the-Conllitwion fnftained their afliults, umn. jured and unimpaired; and seventy times seven will, we tru'ft, eiapl'e, before the views and wiihes of its e neruies.will be accomplilked.'. ' ' The gr;at (kfigii of- the present moment it, to effe« tksir obiedt by fiire, bnt indirect means ; to destroy th« Confidence, of the peop'.ff. ill their long tried, old, faithful patrio's, by attempts to itiip them or every political virtue, and to blatt their characters as tyrants and traytors—-for if you dellroy thc_ friends of the f)f 'tem, the fyftero fill* of ®^JijA? derw , , 1 ., a * nether fever, year is tWleifl WfO»Vau. The people will b.' ju:l—j-.'ftwthcmfelvi-t, and just t* those they love—The Pidi-ier.t'i reput«t«n his be«p ma turing forty" years. - ■ Ceale V ipers, eeafe to gnaw -thy •I'-'i > The produce, your own biood-and bile. FROM IHE AURORi, FnbU&ed by Benjamin franklin Bache. To the pßEsiptflT of the U«ut*»-Stati<. S I R ' 4 THE importance of the present - crisis of the affairs of our Country i« such as to render it the duty of every Citizen, to express his opinion of public men and measures., A* the Chief Magistrate of a free country, you ought $o be the last person to objca to a difouffioii of the condud and charac ter of those whom th« people have appointed to administer the government of theii choice. If there is such a thing as political happintfs, if patriotism he Hot a chimera, an attachment to liberty and to the rights of the'citizens constitute the chief means of the ftrfVj and the ooly eritevions of the second. In vain Tias the cotifli'ution pointed nut the duties and the power's of the servants of the people, if the ckiiens are debarred. frotW mvelligating the omiffians of absolute duties and th« abule or ufur pfiuiiui ui puwer." 11 tnerc tie a countrf m which the influence of one man prevents ?r deter 6 this inreitiga:ion, that country is already snflaved. The name of Washington has too long hid this effect, and those who call the{tife)v<;R frte, fiave def-rted the standard of principles and enlilled under the banners '*£ a Hian. In vain, have reason and liberty called upon their votai its : Reason has been def piftd. and the name of freedom blasphemed by your adorers. B;t such j'b the Jircfent fituatiuii of our affiirs, such is the acknowledged eoudition of our politics, as to call upon every man freely and fear lefsly to express his opinions. In entering upon this fubjeft a recurrence to the commencement of our evidence as a nation may be neceffaiy; when the overbearing tyrant y and unprecedented usurpations of the Btitilh mo narch firtt called for h the spirit ofoppofuion, y man not dead to the feeiings" of a freem.an, every one wliofe foul was not debased by habits of fl:iveiy naturally stepped forward to vindicate the rights, a'rfd to avenge th? wrongs of America. At this honours and dangers which you (bared .n common with the other delegates to'the si.it and feconJ .. .r. nil... mtolence in the Britilh, and their insolence drove us to a te courfe te arms ; you, as one of tke moit experi eiced of native Americans irj were appointed to the co nmand of th? revolutionary aimv. This, it-will he remembered, was before the declaration of independence. Your public con dust as Commander in Chief entitled you in Tome measure to the gratitude of yout country ; that gratitude has been amply given Far, far indeed beyond your merits have tou poUeffed 'he admira tion and love of your fellow citizens f During the whole courfa ps the revolution tjtere is scarcely an ' aft ion which (lamps your chara£ 4 er as a confum- ' mate General ; the principabfcxploits were atchiev ed under other Commanders. But even supposing your military talents greater than those of any o ther American officer, I a{k you, fir, to point out one fngle aS which unequivocally proves you a fiend to the Independence of America. Even in your official letter to Congress you do not express an opinion upon this topic, nay you seen to have fludioufly avoided even the word You speak of the applause with which the Declaration was re ceived by the army ; but were not the date of your letter so soon after ihe epoch which gave lis birth as a nation, we fhotild be much at a loss at this diltance'of time to know to what declaration you allude. Yon fpeafc of the importance of the mea sure ; an enemy as well as a fiiend might have used the fame language 1 . But would an enthufiailic at tachment to American independence, would even a partiality approaching to indifference havediftated the consideration of it as merely a mean of " reltor ingthis cou.ntry.to the rank to which (he was enti tled by the Britifb Constitution }" It might per haps be advanced by r,n advocate of y.out conduct, that yuur continuance at the head of the army was fufficient proof of your approving the pifTolution of all political connection between us and Britain. If, it may be asked, you were not friendly to inde penden e, why d d you not resign the moment the measure was adopted ? Situated as you were, think ing as you probably did, that America asked more than (he was willing to accept in order to obtain what (he really tvifhed, a reflation would have been impolitic, perhaps unfafe. As the war con tinued, as the profpeft of our affairs brightened by an alliance with a powerful nation, your motives for retaining the chief command might have fome wh'at changed, but mull have been ftreogthened. What was at one period a port of danger became' a poll of honor. Success fanftifie'd it in your eyes as the indrurnent of fame if not of ambition ; and (he hi'tory of the foeiety of which you «re Presi dent migVt perhaps furrith some pioofs to (hew wish how little delicacy a crown might be oflered to a Washington. After the termination of a drug gie as brilliant as fnccefsiul, you were viewed by your fellow citizens as the chief promoter under a protecting providence, of an honourable termina tion to an important and glorious contest. Grati tude, a virtue of great minds, led your countrymen to bc!i and, Lastly, In attempting, in various o.hei instanc e«, to reltrain and limit the legislative authority- u£ Congress. Wherefore, solemnly protesting against the exer cise of power by the President and Senate, in any of the foregoing cases, without the concui rente of Congress, as manifeftly tending to abferb all the powers of government in that depaitmcnt alone j t» elUblifc, as the lole rule of lcgiflatiou over all the great foreign and domestic concerns of the United States, th'e mere will and absolute difcretioa of the President and Senate, in conjun&ion with a foreign pawer ; and finally to overturn and effed a total change in the prefeut happy conjlitution of the United States : We your petitioners, molt ear nestly piay, the representatives of the people in Congrefs'aflemWed, will, in theirwrfdom, adopt fucfi meafurea touching the.said treaty, as fhill an,(l effe&ually fecure,'free from encroachment, the con stitutional delegated powers of Congress, and the chartered rights of the people, ,and preserve to our country an uninterrupted continuance of the bles sings of peace. United State#, Aug. aB, 1795. FROM THI X. Y.J OAJLY ADVERTISER THE ALAHM!—No. VIJ jILEPH. MY rirft head of argument to Ihew that the treaty is execrable, is drawn fn m the adviferi of, it. The prinopal aud only responsible adviser is the Prtfident of the United States. What part Camillut had in the business is .not procifely known, faither than th«t there it no mifchief going fer*2rd in which he hat, not h'.t hand. The Senate too, ought to come in for i /hare — but when it is divided among so many, it it hard to affix to e ich hit due proportion. I ikalUeuli der the Preficlent at the great culprit.. He, it would leem, glided by fame maxims imbib ed in hj,! youth, and taken from that arttiquated book the blbhi, where it was written, " If thy brother tres pass againjl thee, go and tell him alone;" and again,< " Follow peace ivith all men;" advised thit lir*rtge ne gociajion. He might also have been influenced by these word*, •* IVbat king, going to make war ogainjt amther iing,fettetb not do wn frj', and confuitetb, >whe- ther hei/e fb.e