, 111 , Philadelphia, WEDNESDAY FV'NING, Accost 3. - IMPORTANT. PLEASING. AU- ! THENTIC. THE WESTERN POSTS TAKEN POSSISSItfK OF. ( Extrtft of a letter ftom Capt. Jame» Bruff to the ' , Secretary of War, dated Fort Ofwego or On- < tario, July 15, 1796. " 1 have the pleasure to announce that the Bri ] llfh commandant of Fort Ontario wrote to me on ' the 13th mftant that the king's (lores were em- | barked and sent off j that he wished to get away with , the detachment next morning at day light, and 1 requeued roe to fend an officer that day as early as ' yoffible. "In conference of this information and re- ' quest, I inflantly dispatched an officer; and next , 'day (beiug the 14th) followed with the troops i and two field piece*. On my arrival found the British garrison gone and Lieut. Elmer in poffefii on of the fort. Immediately I landed the detaeh- ' meut ar.d artillery and marclved in, the music play j ing the President's march ; and under a federal sa lute, displayed the flag of the United States from the citadel. u With pleasure I mention that the British eom mandafft l«ft the barracks and every other building clean, and in the b'efl order they would admit of '• ■ and we feel oorfelve* much indebted to Capt. Clark 1 „*nd Lieut. Fothergill, for the excellent order in J which they left their gardens filled with vegetables , and fruit." < What think ye of the Treaty now ? 1 Had ten thousand men been employed in besieg ing the Western Porta—had one half of them fal len by firknefs and the lword, during the Siese— had one half he r *fidue beei facrificed in carrying I the work* by storm. The acquisition would have excited univerfnl joy and triumph throughout the United States. Bonfires, &c. &c. &c. would have been exhibited, and the fad tale of Slaughtered thousand* would have been drowned in fliouts of * applause to the surviving victors. The Pofl* are r taken, and not one drop of blood shed ! Eternal ' praise* to the God of Peace and Negociation,* ' tha> ks to h : * servants, the President, Vice Presi dent, Messrs. Jay, Hamilton, Knox, Wolcot and . Pickering—thanks to the majority in both houses of Congrefß—and let all the people fay AMEN. * Come now and let os reason together faith the Lord. ' Kaiah. - "i Lord Dorchester, governor of Canada, has em- ' barked for Europe, in consequence of which the ' government devolves on Lieutenant Governor Pref- j Co*t, who ha* issued a proclamation, giving notice - of the fame. The citizens of Quebec and Montreal addressed fcord Dorchester before his departure, in a stile of affection and refpeft. When parties exist, as they ever will in 'a free country, it becomes important to uttderftand their 1 true eharafter and real'objefts. The anarchists, anti-fedeialiftt, Jaeobins, and democrats of our country (/or all these najres hate been deemed ap- ] plicable) fay and swear in there modest way, that 1 ; they alone are friend* of liberty. They are the ex cluftve patriate, the friends of French liberty, and of course the friends of American liberty. Fads, ftuhhorn facts, destroy the pretty web of felf praise. The clubbift*. the Jacobins, the democrat* (call them as you please) for they arc all scurvy names, have been the great enemies of French liberty. If liberty (hould finally fail in that country it will be owing to these vermin. In like manner if liberty, fhoultl die a sudden and violent death in the United State*, it is these affaflins, these blood-drinker* who will destroy it. In this country, at in France, the genuine friend* of liberty, the leal patriot* are the Jriends of Government / Mz. Fenns, THE H-iufeof Rerefentatives (that is the then maj rity) would not vote that their confidenee in the President was undiminished, because his con dud refpefting the British Treaty had in fact di minished it. Party at that day seemed to be puffed up with the felf importance of the task of align ing to the President, the exact measure of confi de! ce he was believed to have left. A member from Virginia, and one from New York, avpwed their Tefpeft for him (and in the imaginary fullnefs of their power it was a kind thing in those rwTuous gentlemen to profefs any) but they said it was /(ft than formerly. How this world must have been tuta'd topfy survey beforefich men (but 1 leave it to their intimate! to draw their characters) could find occasion \o give, or take away the praise of Walhington 1 Whether the people place an undimini/heJ fconfi dence in the men who pretended to have, some half, f me two thirds, and other* only a tenth of their fiiimrr confidence in the President, the next elec tion will shew. Unlcf6 the people change in a man ner 'hat their chatafter for iteadinefs and wisdom beyond every other renders impoflible, the innova tors on the confti tition, the flauderers of virtue, the men who have been in the habit of breaking their own private faith and who naturally trifled with that of the nation, will be flighted and rejected. When the praflire of the virtues of private jife shall have recovered or created confidence in thcmfelvci, they may begin again, and with rather more propriety, to talk of its being withdrawn from the P'cfident. If the people aft as the wife & faithful keepers of their own liberties, they will; of neseflity, they I « V — v I muj, refufe their fuffragcs to those whc would hate leveled the conilitutian with the groHrr. May the people (hew themselves worthy of this high func- 1 lion, by which they will (hew that theyare free and deleive to be so. So prays every SON OF L'BEHTY. PATRIOTISM. H»w different is the language of ihegenoine Pa fViot to the ranting declamation of ambitious fee'k era after popularity, and canting d<.ftag>girrs, who \ conceal uiider the mailt of patriotism tie mo# ini ' quitous intentions ! How oppofltcate the feelings of m//, whom the love of counrry infpire»to ardent cxertims, and the ' lbve of liberty to personal fervicee in htr canfe, to i thofe-ofthe little infects, who confounded by the meridian blaze of Freedom Snd Amtrics!s profpe- Tity, are continually aflailing the ear with&uzzings, 1 which, thoug'.i disagreeable to the feeling*, art ne- 1 I verthelefs harmless and contemptible. As proof h t point, let the following extract from the " Confp't- ' racy of Kings," by that indefatigable patp'or, Mr. ! Barltw, be put in contrail with the multifariuus effufionsof the pretended patrioti of our country, ' which procecd from the Aurora to the Arjus, from " the Argus to thz-Chronicle and from the Chronicle ' ito oblivion. (Col. Cent.J Tie Patriot muse, is thus invoked by this Republican Poet .— - ' AND deign', for once, to"turn a transient eye To that wide world thatJkirts the vreftern sky, ' Hail the mild morning, where the dawn began, t The full fruition of the hopes of Man ; i Where sage experience seals the sacred cause ; t 1 And that rare union, Liberty and Laws, Speaks to the reas'ning race—to fru'.dem rife, Like them be equal, and like them he wife;" ( ORIGINAL ANECDOTE < NOT lonu finoe, a county clergyman, being on £ a visit at Boston, w»s, by a polite and generous { brother yuwnman, invited to officiate in the facted functions of his offi. e.—His dif-ourfe wasbrit poor- ' ly rrlifhed by the congregation, being- in the ter- 1 1 rlfic stile. Their paltor observing their chagrin and c difapprobarion of the feoffments of his clerical J friend, in a whifpi-t requested leave to" read the c hymn, and accordingly gave out the followinj— c " Not to the terrors of the Lord, f Th« tempest, fire and smoke ; t Not to the thunder of that word j Which God on Sinai spoke : , But v e are comc to Scon's hill, The city of our God, r words declare his wifj, c And spread his love abroad," See. t On their returp fronj church, the visiting clet- 1 • gyman observed to bia friend, that the hymn hal ' rained his discourse ; the other replied, that he ha? * no intention of injuring his sermon, he only meat* r to take off the—WIRE EDGE 1 ! 1 j The TWO SINGERS. TWO fingers were oftla contention quite warm, c Which most, when they tuft'd up" their windpipes, j could charm: { Toamafterof music they jointly applied, This often-contefted affair to decide. They quaver'd; they fhak'd; and such graces were ' shown, « That each took for granted the prize was his own. ' j " Indeed, my good friend, cries the judge to the firft, i Of all earthly fingers, I think you're the wtrft: , But as for you, friend (turning round to the other) Teu can't jing at all—so mud yield to your brother." From the American Daily Advertiser. MESSRS. CLAY POOLE, Be pleated to give the following a place in your , paper, for the information of the public. AS the pra&ice of purchasing Accommodation • Notes, at a price below the sum fpecified in the note* is now become so common in this city, ruin - ous in its ctjnfequences, not only to the credit, of I the fair trader, but to the property of many, dri , ven from necejftty to the clutches of the unfeeling . usurer, 1 fend you as a caution to this description 1 of purchafcrs, and to serve likewise as an intimatf. , on of the'proper legal mode of redtefs to others, f whose paper and credit are artfully depreciated by t them to the great injury of many ufeful and induf -- triou3 citizens, the following cafe, determined 1 in the Couit of King's Bench, before Lord Keny. 3 on, February ift, 1795, antl reported in c Cases at Nisi Prius, Hilary Term, 35 George Illd. c Wiffem against Roberts. " This was an action of affumpfit against the " defendant, as the Drawer of a Bill of Ex " change.— 1 Plea of the general Iffiie. i» " The bill was drawn by one Roberts in favor - " of Thomas Ould or order, on Thomas Yates, -«' fo,/\ 86. dated Ift November, 1793, payable J " three months after date. Yates accepted it, 1- " but did not pay it, and the defendant was there, i- « fore sued as drawer, on his default. a " The defence on the merits was, that the r »«• plaintiff, the indorsee, knew that the 1 .ill was f " an accommodation one, between Yates and the I " defendant, and besides, had not paid the value r s " for it. The fiift witnefscalled for the plaintiff, II « on his cross examination proved, that the bill was t " really an accommodation bill, and that it was d «' known by the plaintiff to be so, and that he in if " fad had given for i( but 29. " Lord Kenyan said, that where a hill of Ex - " change, is given for money really due, from the f, " drawee to the drawer, or is drawn in the regular r " courle of bufuiefs, in such cafe, the indorsee) ■- " though he has not given to the indorfer the.full 1- " amount of th« bill, yet he may recover the whole, n " and be the holder of the overplus above the sum 1- " he has really pai"B, to the use of the but e " where the bill is an accommodation one, and r <• that known to the indorsee, and he pays but part it " of the amount, in such cafe, he can only recover n ■< the sum he has actually paid for the bill ; and if e " the plaintiff in this cafe was entitled to recover, y " he could only do it to the amount of the ', " sum he really 1 paid for it." Th no matter how 1 ifrcln' ,OW n d r hiS CXample - com 1 r Cuiaens of. Savannah, look about you—so fays 1 THE BRAMIN. t -- From a. London Magazine W 0 O D L N ACTORS. i- by way of i'n:c«*cde, a battle between "Tom Paine e and the Devil 1" It is ur.neccflary to fay that poor [I Tom very soon fell into the hands of his sooty Ma il jelly; >vhen the latter, aflilted by the reft 0 f |,is i( wooden compeers, fling Godfavc the King over - Tom's body : after which the biacl gentleman made - his bow, and retired with his brother attars vocil?- t rating Church and King ! EXTRACT. c America, by her zeal and firmnefs in the catife as s liberty ;by the wisdom ai d liberality of her confti. I! tution ; by her improvemer. in arts, manufactures, ] aflcl agriculture ; by the geneial diffufion i f know ledge; by the extension of her commerce, and t! c ineiaafe of her wealth ; by the industry, enterprise and virtue of her citizens, has become the envy and admiration of the world. Shall the glory be tar. I nifhed by the malevolence and rage of party spirit ? Or by the pride of those Jwhether demoerats, or ariftocrau it is indifferent) who wish to rife at their f country's exp; life ? , THIS DAY'S MAILSL I 1 NEW-YORK, Augult 2. Latest Foreign Intelligence. "Friday evenitig arrived at this port, the ftiip Fair American, Captain Gladd, ift 41 days from Nant*.—His. Editor has been favoured with a "■ regular file of Paris papers from May 20, to June 12. (which is several days later than the ;,cc«unts by the Brifeit) —Exfradts follow : Translated for the Netu-Tork Gazette. ... PARIS. From the Paris paper entitled "The Friend of Justice and Truth." dated the id June, 1796. Ejttradl of a letter from Infpruck (in Germany) k ' May. Wtliin a few weeks past the Tirol has been the route of the troops from Germany and Auflria, fcr the re inforcement of tjje army in Italy ; they were much a stonished to meet there the fad remains of that army, with -whom they expedted ttt (hare the-ir laurels, total. ly,difperfed, without any order: these movementi, e qially unexpected as extraordinary, have created a mod vivid sensation in the minds of the inhabitants, a part of whom did not credit the defeat of Beaulieu. recruiting for men to dra* the field pieces, is continued with the fame spirit ■ each man receives from 50 to 60 florins (German ). They are ' aboutjentrufting them with murdering air-guns, invent ed in the reign of Jo eph 11. which he made use of with the greateit success, in the last war against the Turks. This carabine, lighter and smaller than tfie common ones, iscompofedof two barrels, the smallest of which contains aj balls ; and by a flight movement, they pass from one to the other, into a receptacle made for them; which ball, by lowering the firelock, goes off with the fame rapidity and carries further than if fired with powder, without the leaf! noise, and that as often as a hundred times alternately, during the space of g or 19 minutes ; after which, the reservoir being exhausted, it requires to pump in trelh air, which takes up at moll 16 minutes. Count Louis Stahremberg, Minister from his Impe rial majesty, at the court of St.JamesY, prefenred the prince of Wales with one of those carabines, of the benefit of which the English may avail themselves, and make use of them in the Indies well as atfea; the damp weather never putting them out of order. OSSENBACH, May 16. We wait an opening close to the country ; it il said that the Count de Colloredo, on his return flom Vienna on the 10th inft. has brought dispatch es of aa important nature, which may occasion a great alteration in the political fylltm of affairs. After his arrival at Mayence, the Arch Duke Charles repaired to Manheim, to hold a conference with the Marshal de Wurmfer. Belidcs which, orders were immediately given to form Abatis's from Donn»rfourj>, by Hochfpeyer, as far as Edig hoveu. The Chancery at War, the CommifTary Department, the Magazines and Troops, which were found in the Cirele of Franconia, have ail re ceived orders to join the army. On the 9th, ticar2oo troops from the frontiers palled to Afchaflenbourg. These troops having been made prisoners of war by the French, remain ed in th* diltridt of Franconia, expedting they might serve again ; the time fixed upon in the capitulati on, beirg expired, they are now going to rejoin , the army. Various ideas are conjedtured—lt is thought the Imperial troops will abandon the siege, and retire to the Mountains near Neuwied. „ Sitting of the I Oth of June. Meflages from l the diredtory were read ; the firft 1 announced that the King of Sardinia had notified 1 the Treaty concluded with the French Republic ; • ' the second gave details of a frelh vidtory by the left wing of the army of the Sambre and the 1 Meufe, cm the rig'it batiks of the Rhine. The : enemy after the two former defeats, were entrench- . ■ ed at Altenkirken. Kleber attacked them, and gained a brilliant vidtory ; 3000 Aullriansare made 1 prifouers, 4 standards, and very considerable maga ■ zines of> provisions and forage have been taken frota ) the enemy. The fame mcflage reports that Buon r aparte, at the head «f the army of Italy, continu ■ ed the career of his triumphs. > On the Bth of May, the French army was se parated from the enemy by the River Mi.eio. The , grenadiers eroded that nver up to theii recks in water ; this adtion made the enemy give way ; the headquarters of Beaulieu was carried, fort reft and his magazines are in our hands ■, hi troops of the Republic, a/ter having made 500 piifoneM, en- « 1 tered Verona. 3 ' June 11. 1 The executive Diredtory received letters from 1 the in Chief, Jourdan, at half part 9 . yefteiday evening. They contain the news of a ' signal vidlory obtained by the army commanded by the General of Division* Kleber, 4th June, at i Altcnkiiken, on the right bank' of the Rhine ; 3000 prisoners, 4 colours, 12 cannon, a number of ammunition waggons and (tores, are the fiuits of . this vidtory. Another Courier arrived this morning frrim the army in Italy, announces, that Duonsparte had at. tacked the army of Beaulieu entrenched under Mantua ;he took his head quarters, cannon, ■' zines, and a great number*, of prisoners. Bia^-s' l » ''completely routed. (This news is official.) > • 1 *