Mr. Bates'/ Night. \, j New Theatre. Ob MONDAY EVENING, May 16, VV ill be prelented, (never performed here) an Histori cal Drama, interspersed with Songs, called THE PATRIOT; OR, LIBERTY OBTAIN'D. fAt altered from the Play alf Helvetic Liberty, and comprefled into Three A As. by Mr. Bates.] • Albert, Mi, Green. Ofcir, Mr. Moreton. . Provoftof the city, Mr. Francii. Edw»ld, Mr. W»rre]l,.jiio. Corpora) Popgun, Mr. Bliffeit, v tjk Citiien, Mr. Mitchell. William Tell,(the Patriot) Mr Whi'lock. TetfsSon, M'f« Solomon. Werner, tyr. Hretc. Waller of tJri, \ Mr. WarrelL Old man of the mountains, Mr. Morgan. A Conn Fool (with fongj) Mr. Bates. A'cheri.. Messrs. Darley, Oatley, jun* Solomon, Robbins. Marina, Mrs. Whitlock. -Serena, Mis« Willemi. a ua'ncE of -female archers, By Mrs. De Marque, Miss Milbpurne, Mad. Lege, Mrs. Harvey, Mis» Gilafpie, Jcc. N. B. A New Medley Overture, wuh the Music and Songs, compiled and from the most - . Popular Tunes. End of the Play, .(by Desire) the Comic Song of • The LIITLE FARTHING RUSH-LIGHT,— By Mr. Bates. After which, (never performed here) the Farce of BARNJBY BRITTLE; Or, a Wife at Her Wit's End. £As often performed at Covent Garden, with .general Applaufe.J Barnaby Brittle, Mr- Bates. ■ Cledpole, Mr. Bliffett. Jeremy, Mr. Fiancis. f Ptter Pride, Mr. Morgan. lovemore, ' Mr. Gtecn. Jeffrey, • Mr. Warrell, juß. Mrs. Brittle, Mrs. Marlhall. Lady Pride, Mrs. Shaw. Damafis, Mrs. Rowfon. • To which %-ill be added, a Pantomime Entertainment, :(never performed here) called GIL BLAS; OR THE CAVE OF THE ROBBERS. As originally produred by Mr. Bates, at the Royalty Theatre, in London. Gil Bias, Mr. Bates. His Father. Mr. Warrell, Gil Perez, his uncle, Mr. Bliffett. Young Spaniaid, Mr. Green, Captain of Banditti, Mr. Moreton. Pom pry, Mr, Mitchell. Domingo, an old negro, Mr. Morgan. Post Boy. Matter WarrelL Dorothea, a tat Cook, Mr. Rowfoa. % Spaniih Lady, MifsWillems. Gil Bias's mother, Mrs. Solomon. The Entertainment to conclude with a reprefectation of A SPANISH FAIR. Tn which will be introduced several Feats of Tumbling, 'Poflures, Balancing, &c. Sig. Joseph Dollar.. I- And a Pantomimic -Dance of Ghara&ers. Harlequin, Mr. Warrell, juo. Scaramouch, -Mr. Darley, jun. Tunch, Mr, Francis. Columbine, Miss Milbourne. i - ' Madona, Miss Willems. Joanv, Mrs. De Marque. Tickets to be had at the cfual places, and of Mr. Eates, corner of Seventh and Chefiiut (treet>. J)n Wednesday, a Tragedy, never performed here, ed The COUNT of NAJ< BONNE ; with Enter tainments—For the Benefit <*f Mr. MARSHALL. Mrs. OLDMIXON's Night will be 011 Friday next. Estate for sale. To be fold on Wednesday the ißfh v Instant, by Public Vendue, at't Hi-City Tavern, At 12 o'clock, ALL that capital .Estate, lately belonging to John Mayo, at Ger man town, confiding of a good and commo dious Manfion-Hoiife, -out-houfes, Stables, Garden, Or-! siards, &c. together with about 73 acres of good (Land, tkewholeinthc heft order, and fit for the permanent re sidence of alarge Family. Possession to be given imme diately, free from every incumbrance. Terms of payment, one half in three months,' and the other half infix months, in approved notes. John Connelly, Auctioneer. . May 9 5 By aa Artist resident at Mr. Oellers's Hotel, MINIATURE LIKENESSES taken and executed in that elegant and- delicate stile, which is so necessary to reader a Miniature Pic ture an interesting jewel. He will warrant a strong and indifpotable refem- Wanse ; and he takes the liberty to lay before the public of this place his most earned intention to deserve tlfeir pa tronage by his best endeavors to pleafo. N. B, Specimens.are te be seen. May ia . § Jo be sold, at public sale, On the lith day of Jane next, at the City Tavern, iii Phi ladelphia, ,T^Ot T R Lots of Ground in the town of Lamberton, X county of Burlington, and State of New-Jersey, ad joining the river Delaware, late the Estate of William Richards, deceased, With all tho buildings »nd improve- | Bients, bounded by ground of John Mitchell, Lambert Cadwslader and others ; a clear indifputablc title wijl be grveh. The terms, will be made known at the time and place of sale. Afrit 26. m&th. General Poji Office, Philadelphia, . March r6, 1796. "1 TTHFRf AS funtiry Lette.s, transmitted in tbe Mails VV .of the United States, te and from Norfolk, in the ftufe of Virginia, were opened, and Bank Notes of feve ralHenominations (rauduiently tafcen from them at York, in tbe state aforefaid, in the months of O(Sober, Novem ber and December last : and whereas a parrof said notes and some calh hsvc hpen recovered and-are now inpofle&- on of the I'oft Master Gene-al. In order thers/ore that such Bank Notes as ffiall be identified may be restored to the owners thereof, and that the remainingrwitt.sand calh be equitably 'diftributtd among those who are entitled to them. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN toali persons who htivefuffeied by such fraudulent within the pe riod, and o» the route aforementioned, to exhibit their claims without delay, hipported by futh reasonable proofs as may be necessary tq tubftantiatK them. Such notes as Ibali be identified will be received by application to the General Post Office, on or before the firll d»y of July next; and the rafidue of such cash and nous will then be divided among the claimants in proportion to their refpec tr?e losses, to be afcertiined by the necessary proof), which on or before that day shall be produced tothe General Post Ofice. (sawtjuly) JOS. HAhERSHAM. troth ikHytyplfpfytt pMi/hed in Doiir, A'.'M v '-.J' YOU MIGHT' TO BE CASLIFUL •' AND tvho does not know that," said a young pragmatic.ti coxcomb, before he had Heard tne'rclt of the fentcnce, «' True jny friend," I anfweted if knowing was ali that was nccefiary to iirduce peo ple to do as they ought, preaching would"be little wanted, and the world would go round without lo many jolts and tosses, and many of' the egregiotfs errors as well as the smaller evils and cross accidents of life would be avoided. " But who ought to be careful? I don't underltand you fir, do you mean me ?' Yes, you" I answered, "in company with all the reft of the-worid; for observe theirt, from the Philosopher down to the fool-—from a Walhington to the molt cootemptable jacobiti in slufive, and vou will not find one of any age» sex, class, or denomination, but wb»i at fomc time sit other may feci obliged by having a friend -at their elbow to -whisper them to be cartful. And the traveller is in duty bound to (land ceiftry iq turn, during his watch, as he has too much-gnatitude £oon to forget the gentle admonitions and ajeclianate cau tions he has received from his goad friends, while he has been passing tiirough the world. Ah ! and travellers too at.ght tt be careful not to take a cup too mceh whoh they ire-to travel iu the night, lell they should get a fpre eye againll a post or a fence, that should be so uncivil as fist to move out of their way, a) they are advancing on each fide the road with their gractful $I<wt, their genteel /allies their wonderful evolutions, #od other pleajing attitudes, so highly entertaining to by ftan ers. Some have gpjje so far as t« suppose that even ■lawyers ought be careful and not persuade people c into uncertain law-suits, by beingpofii'tve they will recover ; when they have doubts in their own minds whether by beiqg pojuive they can-lead them fafe out again. It was laid of them in old time, that they took great fees—that was an evil under the fun, which the present generation seems freed from —but if that was a fault, what name (hall we give to those who if they can'-; do better, taksLefs than the fee tabic, and for the take of ptifchsfing bufi nefi offer writs at half price ? If any such can be, the law has gives them two names already, Petti foggers and Barrators, aud annexed punishments as difgraeefiil as such contemptible practices defcrve. And why ought not Do&eis to be careful ? The old ones, their pockets being full and their feelings less accute -|he| grow temifs and inatt^n-1 tivc to the caVra or diltreu. And .the young medical j Pettifoggers, who ru(h into the practice without a previous education-or regular ftuciy, who know lit - tle more of medicine than some of thenames, yet j call themselves of the Faculty because tfeey have the faculty of charging equal to the firftiate practitioners —Surely .such men ought to be careful when the lives of citizens are thu6 put in jeopardy by confiding in theh- ikill. But the evil will never be fully re medied till the people themselves grow lo (artfulas not to trust. them. These are not all—what remains must be reserv ed till another opportunity, A TRAVELLER. Foreign Intelligence. - LONDON, March 20. Admiralty-Office, March 18. Extract of a Lettcfr from the hon. Robert Stop ford, captain of his majesty's ship Phaeton, to Mr. Nepean, dated at sea, March it, 1796, Cape Finifterre, E. N. E. 40 leagues. 1 hare to request you will inform my lords commissioners of the admiralty, that the French Corvette, called La Bonne Citoyenne, mounting 20 nine-pounders, and carrying 14.J men, was cap tured yesterday by the squadron under my orders. Cape FiHifterre E. by pt. 50 leagues. She left Rochefort the 4th inttant, in company with La Forte, La Seine, La Regcncree frigates, and Lll Murine brig, destined for the Isle de France, and have troops and a great quality of soldiers' cloath ing on board, fajr that place. March 28. breviate of the bill For the cultivation of the wade Lands and Com mons of the Kingdom'. The Bill fen forth, that a confidcrable portion of the Lands in those parts of Great. Britain call, ed England and Wales, l,e wafteand uncultivated ; and the laid land., or certain portions thereof, are fubjeiS to vanous rights of common, or other rights in, upon, and oner the fame, .and that it would be attended with great public advantage, if such com mons, wjafte and uncultivated lands, were allotted and held in feven*lty».»nd improved by cultivation. f , T thß.Wli« M a», that it (hall be lawful for his majesty, his heirs and fuccefera, and all o ther persons whomsoever, to enter.into agreements for referring t 9 commissioners the setting oat, di viding and allotting *11 or any part of the said com mons waste and uncultivated lands, in the manner dirctted by the Ml , and aii agrcemenU b • so made and entered into, being depofitej with the clerks of the peace for the county, or place where Ing the d w! bC ' b!ndl " g 00 a " P arti " mak - There arc clauses enabling the lords of the trea sury to give his majesty's confentto any fjch anree- TL, #t ,s "- *~&<2B£ urc (hall not extend to his majesty's sorest, or chafes O, S , 2 8- the remains of Sir Hugh Palhf er , Barf, vernor of Greenwich Hofpitah The funeral ayerypt.vateone: the chief mourner, were adm! ral Bazely, Capt. Hartwell, Gcbrge Hartwell.Efa" and another gentleman. wsu,c.iq. S '' " u S h Palli,er was > unremitting pa ;„ f or e last fifty years, in consequence of a ball havinir lodged in hw hip, from the blowing u p of an arm chefl 0 n wh,ch h, was fitting. of the abvvc he «v,r runted night's reft, but bore the pain he fuffered with the moll manly fortitude. -r*,' l The following circtimftance relating to Sn Hup - Pallifer id not Very generally known: I'nr the lad fifteen or sixteen years of hit life he or ever lay down on a bed ; from the constant pain occafi„ned fey an iffne in his whithcretMeg, he was under theneceffityof corapofing himfch in an eaty chair, sleeping at intervals, and when awake, ie p.a ced the wounded limb on the contrary knee, «n which-pofition he employed himfelf in nibbing the bone "{for it was literally no more) to afluige the pain till flecp Again insensibly overtook lur/t. DUBLIN, March 22. Six of tbe ipurderert of Mr. Harman-have been convi&ed at the assizes of Longford. Saturday Patrick Hart was executed at thefronr of .the New prifou, purfoant to his fentniQC, for High' Treason. Before he left his cell fheriff Starrier proposed the following queltmns to'him, which he answered in the presence of fevcral gentleman, with much calmness : Q Are you guilty of the crime for which you are to"fuffer >A. lam —I was a Defender, and act ed as such. „ Do you know any p'rfon of consequence who is a Defender ? A. No ; I do hot know the principals •, but 1 am acquainted with a great many Defender!, and I wirti 10 God I could bring them to a pioperfenfe of their crime. Q. What was the ohjeft of the Defenders ? A. They*took arms to overthrow the government but 'not to deftrov life or property, the greatest part of what Lawler fworc wa* true, but not all : I never told him that at Finnagan's house : the blunderbuft found in my possession was given to me by one of the persons concerned in the robbery. Who if it AippW* money for the fees »f law yers, and othtr expences attending on the trial of Defenders ? A. I do not know. He was then conduced from the cell. On his way thrnugh'theprjfon, he repeated (in answer to the fheriff) that' the intentidn of the Defenders in taking arms, was so overthrow the government. — When on the fcaffold, " Good pesple (said he, in a loud and diftinft voice) pray for me : I was a De fender, my sentence is just ; I thank the fheriff for his indulgence to me—l forgive my profeeutors, and I hope t-obe forgiven." After hanging twenty minutes the bedy was then taken up and the head fevered from it;' the execu tioner then exhibited it to the view of the surround ing populace, laying aloud, " behold the head t of a traitor." LONDON, April 1. The British Eall India company are railing 3600 m«B for the navy,.at a bounty of 351. per man, U Among the many accounts of gen. ranee the report of his reJignation, the following. [Appears to be the most ably penned chara&ei of him that has been attempted : " If we may trust to the report of this great man, made bjr the English ind Germans, to whom he wasoppofed,he was as exemplary in hit condu<3, as a humane and generous enemy,as he was confum matc in military genius, in gallantry and in fit ill.— : He was the author of a new scheme of tactics, the value of which he demonstrated by success. When called to the command of a multitude of undisci plined boys, he found.no one principle of an army upon which to act, except enthufiaim in the cause in which they were engaged ; he seized upon this great pafiion and made it equal to all the reft ; dif ciplinc, science, maturity, fell before it. With en thusiasm only at his fupipott he attacked the vete ran armies of Germany in raafs, and to the aston ishment of a surrounding world, for thirty thice successive dayt, he brought thw unorganised multi tude to the charge, disciplined them in the midst of actual fire, and moulded them into a tegular armv upon heaps of slain. He exhibited a new science in the history of arms. To be repulsed was not have his squadrons broken not to be put into disorder—and he was the firit general who could so rafiy his men, that though driven back to day, he returned to the field with the fame alacrity to-morrow, and at the incefTant drop pierces the fttme, converted hit fcrist of de feats into the most brilliant conquest. Such was the fpkndnf-opening of hit military chara&er to wards the close of 1793, when he took the command of the motly host of requisition men, to refill the im petuous inroad of general Wurnjfer, who had cut rou rt S h ne * Weifiemburg, aud penetrated almofl to the capital of Alsace. The whole of hit military career f.nce that time has been equal to the promiie of his outset. He recovered all that the treachery of general Damourier had loft, and ac complished even more than his bombast had promis ed, and while he drove the veteran armie* of Eu rope from the plains.of Cambray to the Wefer be tore him, his course of vidtery was (hired by no a of violence—his reports to his country by no vain exultation. J 3 " Such u the general,who it said to have retired from.the command of their army !it is not unbe c°m.Bg,„ an enemy to do juftlce to such tale,, ts, Sj MU , Wl ' lcl< now blind mankind (hall fubOde, and the charters of the present day ZTJX * fuch > we ptophef,! St „« e tri^ UtC P aid h,s }we may there fore be allowed to fay, that his retirement, if true is a most important thing to thecaufe of the French V 0;. " c^ of Xbe ailUi * I^W material^ndeed to the Oermans, when, thev have uo longer a Clairfayt to lead them on, that th y have no longer a Piehegru to oppose. 7 >7 ■ut |P c L a . k Qfll y° f his retirement from the of Pa™-"and f"" ™ si " d lhe '•/ ' , from the P a wanting, we are th the U i» h r 7t 35 to , ,he Caufe> lhe surmise js, that he ~I holt.leto the unw.fe ambition of that ry to the Rhi C€ wh T ° f d r Cflr , etoeXtet,d their fcounda -2* i sis «■ »ife*hem to" h " *' f ° "djf U «» fur eft and iwchcTpefT deface. Morning Chreoide/jj/ NORFOLK, May 8, Quantity, Quality and Value of EXPORTS to Fo reig* Ports, from the Diflria of Norfolk ood Portsmouth, from ijl January ta 3 ijt March 1796. - *4,608 Tobacco, 3 08° 640^ 237,250 lb. Sugar, , 30,842*50 5,i00-lb. Bees wax, i,Jo 22,200 18. Candles. * 4 440 13 boxes Medicine, 'g* ' | 21 bulliels Flax;feed, 2 ,' 206 barrels Pickled Fish, 1 2?6 ' 146,229 lb. Coffee, 17 bo*es Prunes, 5 4 ditto Raifms, . 2 ? \ 3.960 barreh, Corn, 17,9 m ' | 330 burtiels Oats, ' 12 15 tiercel Rice, ooJ . 10,81 2 bufhele Peas, l£)| g l2 ■ 342 ditto Beans, , ' 367 47 , 710 ; 104 tons Hemp, l 2 8 8 tons Pig Iron, 400 ; 27 packages Dry Goods, n.cio ~777 barreisTar, "g*.- $,957 ditto Turpentinfc, 11,871. 154 ditto Rofini r, -- 3°j u g«oii, - 2I0 ; 25 bbts. Lampblack, 250 - 955 <*<»• M«l, 4297't0 3,856 do. Bread, 23,136 19,660 do. Fine Flour, 255580.' 6,911 do. Superfine Flour, 93,298* f0 r,?2» do. Pork, 30,996. 85,306 lb. Bacon, r3^ 4 B.n^ 47,390 do. Butter, 9,586. " ' 31,5 a' Uki L t' 4 'c '' s' JO ° '6 465 bbjs.. Beef, g,, ♦ y,238 lb. Checfe, , > 766 kegs Crackers, 38*. . 170 bufhele Potatoes, ,»£ 17,550 lb. Soap, j ißcßi 2,850 lb. Tallow, 24 pfyes French Brandy, 4,800. 90 hhds. Vinegar, 2(7Qo> 99 pipes Madeira Wine, 24,750. 10 ditto Malaga,' , (200 ' 31 ditto Claret, 1,189,000 W. O. hhd. Staves,< 22,7'83. 445,800 R. O. ditto, 6,241,20! '. 14,400 Pipe Staves, p6g < 342,300 Barrel Stares, 4,792^0 114,900 Heading, 2,872.50 1,264,590 Shingles, . ii". 59,100 feet of Boards, 88.6e 106,000 ditto Plank, 175.96 f 19,000 Hoops, w, 836 Shook hhds. 2,068. Total, Dollars, 1,088,105. ————— Yesterday arrived here the (loop Jenny; Capi ,b Vaughn, in 33 days from Mariguiuie. JLcft t(i re the following American vfeflels: ""' • Brig Caroline, Cornel, from New-York j fcl ners, Hope, xM. TarLox," from Salem ; Willi . Small, from Boston ; Neptunt, Hews, from I ladclphia. < The cargoes of tbe above vessels taken by < Adminiflration, aid the vessels detained 1 in coi :• quence of non payment. The fchoooer Federal. Coffin, of and from M timore, was to fail in five days. , • , The schooner Betsey, Townfend, from Sal <„ was at Petit Guare, waiting for an order frnm le Adminiiiilliaiioa to go round to A'ux-Cayes. payment. A gentleman who eame passenger in the.ab vessel, and was in fight of the aft ion at Leoga has furnifhed ns with the undermentioned pai culars. 1 That on the 19th March the Engliih fleet, ci • fifting of 73 fail, weighed anchor at Port-au-Priii e. On the 21ft thep began landing the army, and 2 p. m. the whole of them wete a<hore-;.they tl formed into two columns, under command of Ge rals Forbes and Bowyer, one of which filed ofi the eastward and the other tq weft of the tow the Swiftfure, and Leviathan anchoi close to the fort with, springs on their tables, « .commenced the attack. By *oiw-tkcTttfc division h?d formed, and advanced towards L garje. In their route they passed through a fuj plantation where a large number of French tror wete in ambush, who attacked them with great trepidity, and obliged them t» fall back with t loss of 400 men killed and wounded. FheFren then set fire to the plantation, and the Engl troops advanced by another route close to the tew and a general action commenced between the ms armies, which without lntermiffion t dark, when the Briti(h troops fell back a mile fro the town.' During the night the English to< poffsffion of an eminence that tommanded the to» ■on which they raised a battery of 4 guns. On t morning 22d at day Ught they opened t battery, and continued playing 011 t ' ie town ' three hours, during which time three attempts we made to floral the town, but proved unfuccefsfi About 9 o'clock a budy of French troops, fornn into (wo columns, came out of Leogane, ftorm 1 the Brififh battery, and put all in it to the On the evening of the 23d, a cutter came dow from Port-au-Prince to the commodore, who tin a gun and mada the signal for raifi»g the (ifg<—f dark the tro»ps the Beet gi under way, leaving behind them a few bags of ton arid some horses. Every American v« ; Leogane were taken possession of by the Briti* iket and carried to Port ati-Pnnce. Fhe town < Leogane was greatly injured by the (hot f'° m ' (hipping and 4 gun battery. The.Raifona't) ema of war was greatly damaged, and obliged a U r hour's firing to flip her cables and retire. WEST-INDIES. [ ANTIGUA, April 10. The Atlanta, of guns, has had » fe«' . gagement near Guadaloupe, with a French ' teer 01 16 guns, full of tncu, which (he j' ■»»
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