miMINGTON I * ■ [ ' -AND I I f .. A •’1 fttier.M 41 C> t j " ^^INTED BY JOH» «EtLE>»r, AT HIS OmCE, AND SECOND STRE^ ;^p^. « THg' ApSTRACV AND llW annum] .THURSDAY, JANli ,c Aucfibi^.; * “ Jwnckoer. S«ne day will Qjfcmor ^ fanie to be j Jher n»tter»i». . fold the #5 ^ jiie fanie to be rf •»»'. ««». ,i»^' i, diercd i and the pur- p...- 'f »"y *“““ T V. M. ^ ,.,b]anM7,179*- -J^][7isement. - ,. , if hereby r iN gWen, that the jTflie lay* ®o Tube s Beadiy wiUbe foW Htcre.at pub- kr 6iiU, na>”8( ** ■ JOHN JOHNSTON. m* *79^ ^ucriberi haac for Wc» by the baird, MOSCOVADO ^"^Tfaffior fBdity.-nAifo> fomc y^j^,^T>efe irtic^* they bIc if on Rafiwable terms, for ijfiias, POTTS k GIBBS. For SEW-Y O R K, Tk SLOOP Two Brothers, |Ciyim'(^kluig; iiiteniled for itaftartTnid^r; has excellent Ktaaidatieas for paflengers; iiw in a few days.—For paf- ;aif,iffij to tbe mafter on board ; □ Charles Jordan. lb ft Ue A quantity of TURKS- “ISALT. UNDS FOR SALE. )fefis, patented in the year 175S » ‘^f»,Ae other of 500 acres, lying ®® Waggamaw Swamp, ^*tjr, inakalthy fituaiion, well "^■fw rlie cnluvation of Indigo, *fo,iod linll gnun; a clearing and They will be on tcafonablc terms, to be paid down, for k^l2^^”**»c'-editof 5 years will 5I?f“twelI, and being fatisfic. mk.' *® ^wand Jonea, at- oho has the ori^nal patents '• Ks>iity_No»em 7- p.„,,—„„„ bettmii, 179J. ^Dudley, T Tp appearing to the dttf' r* court, that former of publication complied with three’week k?"*nm«ifcrv f'’'^ocks ,L* that .defendant "'iA yjx ^ ®®ce, at or before next ^ul be t^en, pro con- S»r??'T” ”• Ei ''•^*)»iSth Dec. 170 c. plate 6f N . Carolina. 7 In Equity—.,NbveiA. : Wilmington. 3 ber term, 1795. . Henry Toomcr, ^ JT appearing to the court, n.rMl- . yi that the former order William Blount. Sot' May term, laft pal^, of p^licatioii in this camfo has been complied smli, ordered that the bill be taken pro cop* Tcflo, that three monthf' notice be given to the pefendanf, by three weeks’.fucceilive pubiica* Hoia in the Wilmington Chronicle, that the jteftimony of Jane Duboice,, Allice Heron, 'Alio Stu^ey, and otheH, will be tc*ken before the maiter ill equity, for the dittridt of Wil- mmgtoii, ht his office, on the. fiiil Monday in 'March next. Certified to be a true copy from the mi nutes. THOMAS DAVIS, 0 C. M. £. of faid diRrii^. S the fubfci iber iptends leaving Ud* Bate ^ as foon as poffible, be requeds all tlu>ie who have demands aipiinft him to render in their accounts tor fetLlemeiic. Thufe who are pndebted to him (who arc not already fued), may take this as a poilicripc to the. final no* iice. • J J. JOHNSTON. At the fame time he wifhes to inform liis friends, chat lie will fell his remaining flock of goods (wholefale or retail), low for kafli, or produce—confuting of dry goods, wines, porter; grind-ftones, luniber, fhingles, i&c. J. JOHNSTON. C ASH, or GOODS gWen for AUDITORS SPEaE-CERTlFlCATES —Apply to JOHN JOHNSTON- Wilmington (N.C.) Jan. 15, 1796.' “l-sA ■«? ' ADVERTISEMENT. T O be fold, on reafonable terms, for C.ASH, 500 acres of land, on a point of Broad and Green River, Santee. Any per. 'fons defirous of purchafing may apply to Mrs. Elizabeth Richards, |u Wilniiugton. Jan. 13, 1796. WANTED TO PURCHASE, A GANG of not lefs than TWENTY WORKING NEGROES. Enquire of the Printer. Wilmington, JaniMiryi4> I79f- MR. FACCHETT’S LETTER. Legation of Philadelphia. Foreign relations. Private correfpondenre of the minifter on politics. No. 10. Philadelphia, the 10th Brumaire, 3d year'of the French republic, pne and iiidavifible. Odlober gift, 1794. , Jofeph Faochett, minifter plenipotentiary of the French republic, near the U iiltc^ States. To the commiffioncr of foreign relations. Citizen, , . , ^ I. The meafures which prudence prefenbes to me to take, with refpctft to my colleagues, havp liill prefided in the digefting of the d|f- patefaes figned by them, which treat of rhe infotrreaion of the weftem country, and of the iwreffive means adopted by the govern- ment. I have allowed them to be confined to the giving of a faithful, but naked recital pf events: the rcflcdlions therein contained A i, No. 2. c/x^e^ the conclufions eafily deduci- Wc from the charadler aftumed by the public’ P*^5**\ J referved ihyielf to^iveyon. as far as 1 am able, a k^f to the fatfti detailed in our rcimns. When it comerin qneftion tu explain, either, by cbinedtuiet or by certain data, the fecrct views pf a foreign government, ^ ^ imprudent to run the rifle of in*' clifcretions, and to give oncfclf up to inen,, whofe known partiality for that government,, and fimilitnde of paffions and interefts with. its chiefs, might lead to cpufiJences, the ifinea* jof which are incalculable. Befides the pre cious confoffions ' of mr.^i^ndolph alone, throw a fatisfatflory light 'uS^ every thing that comes to pafs. Theft I haVe not yet communicated to my collcajgies. The too-''. '*^5* a*.^fa^rfoentioncd leacTt^ itiis referve, and ftill left, permit me to open toyftlf to them at thi^ ^ prefent ' moment. I fhall then endeavour; citizen, to give you a clue all the meafures, of which the common dilteches give you an account, and to diftoveiviHie true caufes of the explofion, which it is obftinately rcfolved to repreft wiih great means, although the ftate of things has no longer any thing alarming. ® ‘2. To confine the prefcnt crifis to the fim-^ pie queftion of the excife, is to reduce it far below its true fcale ; it is indubitably con— nCifted witli a general explofio^ for fomc time prepared in the public mind, but which this lonl and precitotate eruption will caufeto mifearry, tor at leaft check for a long time —in order to fee the real cauft, in order to calculate the efteift, and tlie conftquences, we muft afeead to the origin of the parties exifting in the ftate, and retrace their prot grefs. 3. The preftnt fyftem of government has created malcontents. This is the jot of all new things. My predecdlbrs have given in formation in detail upon the pants of the (yfteiti which have particularly awakened cla mours and produced enemies to the whole of it. The primitive divifions of opinion, as to the political form of the ftate, and the li-^ niits of the (bvereignty of the whole over each ftate individually fovereign, had created the federalifts and the antife^ralifts. From a whimfical contraft between the name and the real opinion of the parties', a .contraft hi therto little pnderftood in Europe. The foN mer aimed, and ftill aim with all their power,, to annihilate federalifm, whilft the latter have always wifhed to preferve it. This con-' traft was created by the confolidators or the cqnftkutionalifts, * vvho, being firft in giving the denomination (a 'matter fo important in a revolurion] took for themfelves that which was the moft popular, although in reality it, comradidted their ideas, and ^ve to their, rivals one which would drauf on them the at tention of the people, notwithftandiug they really wifl^ to preferve a fyftem whole jnre- judices Ihould cherifli at leaft the memory and the name. 4. Moreover thefe firft diylfions, of the na ture of thofe to be deftroyed by time, in'pro- ptortion as the nation Uiould have advanced in the experiment of a form of government which rendered it flourilhing, might now have completely dilappeared, if the fyftem of finances which had i» birth in the ctadle' of the coiiftitmion, had not renewed their' vigour under various fortos.^.Thc mode of organiring ttie national ciWit, Uife eonfoli- . dating and funding of the public debt, the introdoaion in the political ettonotoy of the ufage of ftates, which prolong their toidftence or waii off their fall only expedients, im perceptibly created a financierbg daft, whe • Conftitnens.

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