Schofields Middlewich Journal (Newspaper) - March 29, 1757, London, Middlesex Vol. SCHOFIEL MIDDLEWICH No. Cheshire 39. From March 29, to April 5, 2757. 0>-The Printer of this Paper is determined to no Labour or Expence to render it as agreeable to the Publick as any other printed in it being collected from the St. and &c. To the Printer of the MIDDLEWICH By your infer ting the following Letter on being a that lately two you oblige many of your and in your humble Y. Z. OU may one Evening we had a upon a Subject of a very high no than the Cauk of I then thought your Sentiments not quite fo right as J would have and I told that I believed fome wrong Authority had fattened them upon your in Life being too good to flow from fuch Senti X verned with as I then enquired $ what you meant by Chance if it was a real a Being No Man ever yet would clearly paint this X imaginary Exigence in real living Colours and I $ you that it was that the Man was killed by the and that it was a Chance he went that dill realizing and It growing then we I now add a few Words a in order to exclude this Creature of the tion out of and make it as plain to the Under- X as it is to the In the Cafe I could diffidently exclude Chance from having any Thing toin it Chance $ a not as a by barely Why do Men build This Accident would never have if Men had never Chance allowing it to be X X marked between Neus and and that Q Villages near which might have been to us in Cife we intended a are already The fame Advices that the King of is and in great Numbers that he in fifty Battalions and eighty including that there are in Saxony X V A y X in human and nothing real g The World at thrown into different Societies engage Men into different % a third Sec. Each v has a which he follows in a condant that follows builds a The Right Sentiments of Deny appear to me to be of fuch to that 1 think no Man can be happy that errs from I drill recapitulate the and offer fome Arguments to your * You Farther than what we faw we could not I that if one faw a Plan drawn upon a one would be apt to drew it and next would who drew it but Chance may have been the of the I then what you meant by Chance i and I 0 in Cafo Die Word Y thai the not have been r K iand it was your Trie World then is This we y are fure This we hv then was According to % it might as wed not have as have been as well have been as net have n. then determined X li its Since according to our Definition of Chance Ji f 5 - X a Man following his ordinary by at that Moment of Believe Not Deity f battalions and 125 that he is raiding in his Dominions an additional Number of 25000 Men 'Tis alfo that he intends to form a Lamp between and where the Saxons were lad March 12. Browne will fet out Tomorrow for the Army and Prince Charles of Lorraine will take the fame Route in eight The Plan of Operations which his will follow in owes its Birth to an of and is not y junction with that has been communicated to Original nor in the Nature of Things % the Field and that may and not being fird nor can have no Share of q regulate their Operations conformable with which in the or in its but is at to a finite if will give it a Being I on further it will be reduced to be a Word made ufe of to an Event that happens X v 0 0 the grand Army is to execute on the Side of Saxony and March 9. We are extremely here by the Orders given to our provide a further Sum of Crowns for the Ched the Whole to be between the lit of and id of March 17. The Duke of marched a few Days ago from with a Body of Troops under his to the Materials of this Houfe by their to % from the Pods they occupied on the Frontiers of that Decay the Time of their Decay and at fuch a h Province and having advanced as far as Friedland and Moment it will fall at that another Gabel in found the had abandoned who had for many Years followed another by this it falls ana Where is the Work of Chance Had not this Houfe fo many Years decaying before it comes to its alone never It but it could not be Chance is totally and would never have decided one way nor A there and that excludes In this manner I then and think But you not convinced of it 1 then if in the World thre not evident Marks of B auty Sec. You owned there Could Chance then produce &c. This you would nor affirm but The World might have made and as nothing could be made out of the World mud have been and is faid if there is a let that Ged be the or it is x no provided in that God there are the proper and out all h- of &c. out of the Original of and out c. iht World and we may boldly if fuch be none of Things can were he nor govern where he But faid does govern Paris of this tho' not the faid does Chance govern Parts of this World Is it in and to the Arrangement made by Deity in the It then Chance is more powerful than Deity does Chance govern Parts according to the Laws of Order Both you found too to maintain and yet you was unwilling to part with You then Chance governed our As good and pious Man goes a Tile from a Houfe and his Skull it was Chance directed his that and in that is for that good who better at the Hands of Is this fair dealing Deity to be a upon Deny at but to when weighed fet in to the Character we have allowed J remember I you You would then have had Deity wrought a Miracle to lave that Man You would have had the of could have prevented For Deity will never a of. nary to the immutable Laws that his eternal has placed in the Nature of His eternal had Things of a valuable Nature Decay is a a beautiful and no Ways a Piece of Chance work and it was right and fitting that this Man be That would have been To may be equally applied to every Accident of wherein according to your governs as a real Being and yea may thus reduce it to a mere or a Word made ufe of to a certain Be if this ire we not of a finite r 1 of our are there not Millions of of O ending this Fabrick And can any one of be X called a Work of Is a the the 6 &c. are any of Chance Are they not rather natural Effects flowing from Cauks And a Tile falling upon a Mans Head is ir not a natural End man and no Chance one Let us and not in part aad we totally redu Chance to a mere if we once lay as a that in the Original of all Things there is Beauty &c. We mud of exclude all chance and from the of and from any Share of For imagine there is a good and a bad Principle Original ot Things is bxh mult dedroy the a v a a of r igs ce all their Pods in He their filled up their and fet Fire to their and all the and which the Enemy had not Time to carry off. There in Quarters a Number of Sick and whom the treated with very great The Duke of having the End is returned with his Troops into The flew with the Precipitation into the and the Alarm was general throughout the from the that the whole raffi Army was From the of the Army in March 12. General is returned to and has upon him the Command of the According to the lad Letters from all the Regiments there have Orders to be in to one Part into the other into Lad a Report was that a Body of had entered this and made an Irruption into the of Count de and that a Cody of our Troops were dispatched to their on which they quickly retreated with their and leveral Head of March 9, to from of the 4th the Ruffian Troops in the fame Situation and the Army cantoned in fuch a on very The that it can be are quite with determine w ithin that it is that and not the cannot w in the exid one e lee enough to good A X a hard Body faking upon a from a ctr to have changed its Nature in that and not have done what it is its Nature to what it cannot avoid being fo ordered by fixed by an intelligible and good This you have done to fave that Man's ana Deity have acted with and out of the of and what or Deity is and dividing its 1 All this mud il it was wro g the Tile killed the Man or if our this did not a X $ X x X V A V THURSDAYS P O S T. arrived the Mails from Holland and ana u. i but Leo March p. THERE are rich Snips in this Port from the that w dt witM great impatience for the Arrival of fome Men of War to envoy not to dir our oa Account of the French Privateers that in from CI that the are making the in A C. x v 0 X a v A v JK X X X x X Notice ro any Danger of their being and hav in March 21 Wre hear from that the have taken up the Pavement of the Streets of the of and drewed them with and taken ail other Precautions of Defence a Siege or March 24. the the ot it's allured lhat the King of has given Orders to dellroy of and has General Lamothe to retire with 4000 ot his out of whom fome Volunteer have been and placed under the Command of who being by other have entered i to the oei vice his upon the being March 12. We Jearn from that tha droops of the of that Nan which begun to march on the 9th of this Month to join the Imperial Army in have received Tne Count de has made an Offer to Regency of a Battalion of his 1 roops of according to the at w as a company of 1 cO well mounted and o qui m the 'tis not doubted but t accepted threatened 11 t March 19. This Dutchy e by a rhe Kir by virtue they are