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Adams, Prefident, his fpeech to the Houfe of Representatives
on opening of the feffions 1798, x. 108.

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Prefident, his meffage to the House on a suspension of
the arret of the French Republic, x. 143..

-, Prefident, nominates Wm. Vans Murray Minister
Plenipotentiary to the French Republic, x. 145.

Prefident, his nomination of Oliver Elfworth, Efq.
&c. to be Ministers Plenipotentiaries to the French Republic, x.
153.

Mr. Samuel, Prefident of the Senate of Maffachusetts,
acquainted with the intrigues of the French Minister respecting
the fisheries, x. 238.

Prefident, his letter to the House of Reprefentatives on
General Washington's death, xii. 21.

Prefident, his fpeech in Congress, December, 1799,

xii. 29.
Mr. his answer to Tench Coxe's letter refpecting
Mr. Thomas Pinckney's going Ambaffador to the Court of
London, xii. 142.

Mr. his recantation respecting a letter on Mr. Pinck-
ney's appointment to be Ambaffador at the Court of London,
xii. 147.

his public conduct, xii. 150.

Mr. his letters to the Houfes of Congress, and to the
army, on the death of General Washington, xii. 170.

-, Prefident, his pardon of Fries, and other capital of-

fenders, xii. 171.

Additional facts, iii. 225.

Addrefs, introductory, to the Gazetteers of Philadelphia, i. 147.
of the Republican Natives of Great Britain and Ireland,
refident in New-York, to Dr. Priestley, i. 132.

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of the Conftitutional Society of Sheffield to Meffrs.
Muir, Palmer, Skirving, and Margarot, i. 125.

to Dr. Priestley, of the Philofophical Society at Phila-
delphia, i. 137.

to the Prefident agreed to, with the names of the noes
and ayes. Address itself to the Prefident, iii. 27.

---, Prefident of the Senate's, on Mr. Adams's election to be
Prefident, iv. 345.

--

115.

to the public, by Porcupine. Gazette Selections, v. 3.
to the French and American patriots, v. 316.

of the Academy of Arts and Sciences to Mr. Adams, vii.

to the people of England, by Mr. Cobbett, vii. 315.
Adet's (French Minifter) letter to the Prefident on prefenting

the French flag, iii. 69.

and the Almanack-makers, v. 360.

decamps, v. 366.

--and Talleyrand, vii. 98.

Advantage

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Advantage to be derived in America from the French revolution, iii. 219.

Advertisement extraordinary, v. 426.

extraordinary, John Bolton and his wife, vi. 49. proving that the United States are the most free and enlightened people, figned, "But God has promised to protect the Poor," vii. 20.

to the American Rush-light, xi. 211.

Affair of the Vengeance, an armed French galliot, iv. 189. of the Calfius, a French corvette, iv. 193.

Africa, the release of all the French confined in the prefidencies there, demanded of Spain by Perignon, vii. 49.

African school, United Irishmen ceafing to affemble there, viii. 221. Age of Reason, an attempt in it to juftify the feizure of the Church lands, refuted, iii. 183.

written while the author of it was in a dungeon

at Paris, iii. 392.

Agens, Bifhop of, declaration when the oath, &c. was tendered him, iii. 197.

Aliens, law refpecting them in America, xi. 356.

Alleged offences against the Federal Government, by the Republic, examined, iv. 212.

Allegiance, why due to the state where a person is born, iv. 234. --and expatriation. Bill for preventing citizens from entering into foreign fervice, vi. 197.

oaths of, viii. 13.

Army of England, viii. 18.

Allen's, Mr. fpirited remark in the House of Representatives, vi. 165.

Mr. moved a refolution against Mr. Ifaac Clark, a member of the Houfe of Reprefentatives, x. 4.

Alliance, triple, early formed for throwing America into the scale of France, v. 292.

Altorf, exactions of the French generals there, viii. 265.

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town and convent, for five days abandoned to extortion, &c. viii. 268.

--, damages fuftained by it through French extortion, viii. 273. Almanack-makers, Adet's ridiculous complaint against them, iv. 342.

Ambaffadors, French, bore the criminal orders of stopping the career of American profperity, x. 263.

Amendment, reftraining the Prefident from employing frigates as convoys, carried, vi. 217.

propofed to the answer, as first reported, of the Reprefentatives to the Prefident's fpeech, vi. 132. America and Great Britain, difpute between, i. 343.

and Great Britain might bid defiance to the world, iv. 315. --, a friend to, for Porcupine's Gazette; ferious thoughts on the state of America, ix. 182.

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America,

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America, United States of, defcribed, xi. 355.

United States of, not provinces but fovereignties, xi. 355. An American's account of Mr. Pinckney's demeanour to the rulers of France, vi. 35.

American independence the greatest evil that ever befell England,

i. 47.

ftate paper,

iv. 149.

Minifter remonstrates against the decree of the 9th of May, 1796, iv. 374.

tameness, v. 311.

vanity in the excluding of the English from the Mediterranean ports, v. 256.

political parties, v. 289.

fpeculators in the funds, at an early period of the revolution, went to Paris, v. 291.

magnanimity, v. 281.

traitors, fitting out hips to cruise against the American

commerce, vi. 32.

youth, vi. 55

traitors on board French privateers, vi. 286.
morals, vi. 314.

anecdote; a converfation with a Frenchman, vi. 13. humility. Petition of the masters of veffels to the Spanish Governor, vii. 43.

lotteries, vii. 44.

papers, impartiality of, in the account of the mutiny in the Britifli fleet, vii. 58.

vii. 115

81

elections, vii. 108.

Academy's of Arts and Sciences addrefs to Mr. Adams,

forbearance towards France, vii. 133.

flag prefented to the French nation, vii. 151.
trade with France, vii. 187.

degradation. Captain Dunbar flogged, vii. 221.

meeknefs. Captain Kennard, vii. 222.

compaffion, vii. 224.

Captains, vii. 290.

Envoys at Paris, vii. 303.

liberty of the prefs, vii. 331.

language; a projector received a prize medal from the Philofophical Society, for inventing a new one, vii. 336.

lofs and gain ftated by amity with Great Britain, viii. 63. gentleman in Europe, his letter on the conduct of M'Kean towards Mr. Cobbett, viii. 174.

-----, a real one, letter to Peter Porcupine on General Samuel Smith's being a candidate, in oppofition to James Winchester, Efq. as a reprefentative in Congrefs, ix. 221.

318,

Judges, three of them bribed, by Frederick Evans, ix.

American

American elections liable to an improper influence, x. 404.
representation, x. 400.

character highly refpected in Europe, as stated in a
Boston paper, xi. 43.

affairs. Meffrs. Elfworth and Davie about to depart as
Envoys to France, xi. 95.

Rufh-light, xi. 209.

Citizen, democratic paper, extract from, refpecting
the election of a Lord Mayor, 1800, xi. 344.

Commiffioners, feceflion of, accounted for, xii. 73.
Whigs equally cruel, if not quite fo ferocious, as French
Republicans, xii. 98.

neutrals, conftantly in the habit of covering the property
of the enemies of Great Britain, xii. 123.

--'s, a late French, address to Peter Porcupine, viii. 146.
Americanus's account of the French incendiaries at Charleston, v.

105.

letter to Yrujo, Minifter of Spain, vi. 319.
addrefs to the people of America, viii. 170.

Ames's fpeech in the Houfe of Reprefentatives, ii. 179.

notion of the power and ufe of political clubs, ii. 182.
Anbury's, English officer, predictions refpecting the views of the
French towards America, viii. 111.

Andrew's, Saint, fociety at Philadelphia, the King's health not
drunk at the celebration of it, x. 42.

Anecdote of Voltaire and Dr. Franklin, iv. 68.

of Queen Anne, iv. 255.

respecting the treatment Madame de la Fayette met

with, v. 182.

of Tarleton, vii. 114.

,a farmer's, of the Spanish Ambaffador, and the daughter
of a republican Judge, ix. 315.

--s of various French Officers and Commiffaries, viii. 311.
mifcellaneous, ix. 305.

Aney, library there, how treated, iii. 399.

Anonymous's letter to Mr. Fenno, on Mr. Cobbett's opinion of
Great Britain interfering in American concerns, ix. 53.

Anfwer of the Senate to the Prefident's Speech, 12th Dec. 1796,
iv. 284.

of L. O. M. to Dr. J. P. on the fubject of etiquette, v. 385
of the Senate to the Prefident's fpeech, vi. 124.

as first reported, of the Representatives, vi. 128.
ultimate, of the Representatives to the Prefident's fpeech,
vi. 165.

to Noah Webfter junior's letter to a fubfcriber, ix. 50.
Anti-Bigot's letters to Mr. Bache, editor of the General Adver-
tifer, i. 140.

Antidote, Talleyrand Perigord the author of it, viii. 239.

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Antigallican,

Antigallican, the French alike celebrated for making and breaking treaties, v. 242.

's letter to Mr. Cobbett, viii. 75.

Anti-jacobins notification, toast given by Vice-prefident Jefferson, ix. 190.

xi. 91.

Review and Magazine, its express view and object,

Review of Mr. M'Donald's Brief Statement of Opi nion, &c. xii. 64. Appendix to Dr. Morfe's Sermon on French intrigue, x. 231. to Galloway's Exposure of Howe, x. 370. Apoftacy of Judge M Kean, his daughter's marriage, xi.

22.

Apoftate priests' treatment of the ejected clergy, iii. 209.

Bishop of Moulin, firft caufed atheism to be written on

the gate of the burying-ground, iii. 213.

Argus of New-York, narrative of its fuicide, iii. 303. humorous account of it, iii. 304.

Arming merchantmen, vi. 175.

Arms and ammunition, bill from the Senate to the Representatives, for prohibiting exportation, &c. vi. 171.

Army, American, a fanctuary for fraudulent debtors, xii. 46.
Arnold, Irish traitor, vi. 336.

Article in Bache's paper, 21ft December, 1796, accounting for
General Washington's retiring, iv. 443.

-s of the Federal Constitution,

78.

-s of accufation not contained in the Diplomatic Blunderbufs, iv. 339.

Artillery bill rejected, 57 to 49, vi. 197.

bill for raifing an additional corps, vi. 192.

Arts described, to raise the jealousy of the people of America,

vi. 292.

Affemblies, anarchical of France, the means employed by them in propagating their principles, ii. 407.

Affembly, Conftituent, the cause of all the horrors of the French revolution, iii. 215.

iii. 217.

Constituent, diftinctions with regard to its members,

Legislative, chofen annually by the people, a true picture of, x. 438.

Affignments forged by the Blounts, x. 74.

Affociated Teachers' address to Dr. Priestley, remarks upon it, i. 189.

Aftonishing baseness, paragraph from M'Lang's paper relative to the Boston Ambuscade frigate, x. 214.

Atrocities of the French in Suabia, a violation of a folemn compact, viii. 262.

Attorney General opposed the President's project of sending off Mr. Cobbett, x. 155.

Auckland's,

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