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IMPORTANT TRIAL, IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Doctor Benjamin Rush, versus William Cobbett. December term, 1799.
ACTION on the case for a Libel was brought in the autumn of 1797, by the Plaintiff against the Defendant, for certain defamatory publications which appeared in a newspaper entitled "Porcupine's Gazette," of which COBBETT was the Editor.
The publications stated in the Declaration to be libellous were as follow, viz.
From Porcupine's Gazette, September 19th, 1797. MEDICAL PUFFING.
The times are ominous indeed, When quack to quack cries purge and bleed.
Those who are in the habit of looking over the Gazettes, which come in from the different parts of the country, must have observed, and with no small degree of indignation, the arts that our remorse|less Bleeder is making use of to puff off his preposterous practice. He has, unfortunately, his partizans in almost every quarter of the coun|try. To these he writes letters, and in return gets letters from them: he extols their practice, and they extol his; and there is scarcely a page of any newspaper that I see, which has the good fortune to es|cape the poison of their prescriptions.—Blood, blood! still they cry more blood!—In every sentence they menace our poor veins. Their language is as frightful to the ears of the alarmed multitude, as is the raven's croak to those of the sickly flock.
Among all these puffs, I do not recollect a more shameless one than the following from Dr. TILTON.
Extract of a letter from Dr. Tilton, of Wilmington, to Dr. Rush, dated September 12.
We have had repeated instances of your fever at this place. The infection has generally been taken in Philadelphia, I am not ac|quainted with any instances where the contagion has been received