I of Fr*n«r, #f«n«»e of th- treaty of peace con- ed no i 1 \la m'Tiil w " f > advantageous to fcmed the deftcro ®f ao etpeoitioa agawft Leg . hbrTfo the po.pofc of lkoTrfn K up that port - two of oZI thelen P e m v ( an-> of pofMB-g tfeemfetvc of « ? rd, she imm-nfc property which tbrEngWh h»ve there, ft* , Th' Ertghfl) nave aftcj upon the prin.iple tt ki« «he property of t,K.n tey I C0.,1d Mit, without refpectiog the "5 f' J' , hose the territory of tbe other powers. W, hope the «h,tc French will not adopt the fi«e principle- h , The new governor of inborn, d peiilio J si «Jw/lfcpto. .hih.!r s .£'£'. Th, fticw* a daided partiality for tbe E"glifh. - VtiWJ&'-W *'h ■ >, and not t, fo&r Jf S J Grand Duke 10 be violate!. L from t tab, w. 6**> TI is even fa'd they have > Ens'lilh reffelsof captur Duke to (hut tlw port agaw.lt the LngUm fr ft ™ TUESDAY EVENING. Aucpst 9. Th ; Married. Lid evening, Mr. S * M "™R ao * D! ' l^ l ' Merchant to ft«f* Mart Drihke* both of this city. From our in Hamburgh. . Tbe following extract of a letter from a gentleman Brig of the firft information, though of not fa rccen a date as-accounts already pubhfhed, contains a moreconcife andat the fame time more canned - ed account of the opening of the campaign u. - It Jy than has hitherto appeared ; ot Shr. the two vidoriea over the Auftrians, which ap pear to have decided the fate of Italy.. , In v Hamburgh, May 2d, 1796 ral ot " The French began the campaign .with two Steeli vift-riesover the Audrians, which are not denied, g oo d though extenuated in the Vienna gazette The l y ret firft beeiunipe of the campaign seemed difadvan- tej>tu tageous to the French. They f«t the Auft.ians | Capt mike tbemfelvea masters of the *¥**"<'' a v * r J to narrow pas. leading to the Dutchy of Milan.. The A French seemed to have negktfed to occupy it, and tains the'Auftrian army advanced the more boldly as the French remained alraoft quiet ab.ut Genoa and the cord, diflrift between Sivona and that capital, on the tea Thet fide The main armv of the Auftiians wentidotvn' body into the Gennoa country by the way of Ovada Bnd GampoWdo, driving the small posts of the French M always befoie them. They advanced near the sea Well fide on the weft of the city of Genoa. 1 lie French aw j out posts all were driven towards their main araiy, .equ whose right wing was leaning itfelf on Voltn near no™ the sea, (6 hour 6 from Genoa ) The Austrian nihT. General Braul'eu thought to mislead by a falfe at- bow tack made on the right wing near Voltn confiding rorjre of 6000 French, on the 10th of March, in order b fh to mafic his intended attack on the centre. The Iha French General Buonaparte (a young Corficar of its n 25 years, but a man of great military talents) was lion aware of the trick, and ordered the right wing un- " der General Cervdni ti retire in the night by a fort- 111 c ed march to the centre on the right ground of Ma- wal doona M Savona. Oi the following day (the IOth) v-ift early ?t four o'clock Beaulieu attacked with 15,000 you men all the positions fuppo. tiug the centre of the of 1 French and drove them back. At one in the as the ternoon he attacked the lad retrenchment on Monte vin; L"zint). The brigadier Rampon with 1,500 moi French who in the 'pidft of ,be bitde swore fo_ !ian lemnly not to'foifake «!»eir pod, defended it so well that the Auftrians were thrice repulfeg leaving 400 dead and wounded, among them a colonel and ma ns officers. The commanding general Prouavina was wounded mortally. On the 12th, in the night, t '" (1 the Frenfth general Laharpe was sent in support of "at the entrenchment whiHl it was threatened with a new attack. This was made by the Audrians com- ,he ■ iag down from the heights of Montenotte, in the ' begirininfe with some effect, but loon Laharpc got a" 1 the better. In the mean tim- Buonaparte, Made. lev na and Befthier, marched to the centre and tbe left jot wing in the rear of the enemy, when general Mas- | e u feria took the Audrians already retiring in their left ' *'■ flsnk and routed them entirely ; so that they 16ft 1,500 dead and 2000 prisoners, amongst these, a colonel, aid de 6amp of general Argentean, and "• 60 officers ; several colours have been lakes. The w Audrians tvere piiclued the I'iench occupied 1 ; Carcare Cairo, &c. The enemy was retiiing. r e This viftoiy has been announced to Ihe National c "; Convention according to the generals letters from P' his hea:l-quar'ers, CNrctre. S:me few days after °1 it was confirmed by the emptjroi's court gazette, 1 with the usual extenuations, that the Imperial ar-,. cc my made a motion backwards to occupy their for- a iner-pofition. " The second victory is ft ; H more important. It was near Millefu'a, on the Genoese territory, more w to the north. It was on the 14th. The Auftri ans have 1 l,;oo men (2,500 as them killed, the others prisoners), atnonglt them general Pui- a ' cera, 20 Hats officeis and many oiUers ; 40 "n- j 1 non, 15 colours, b;fidcs a Rrcat quantity ot nm* J 5 munition, baggage, mules, &c. All these affairs happened in the mod mountainous country, which j a accounts fdr the great rtvr.tbcr of prisoners. 1 a ~ l The armies on'the Rhine have announced the , 1 end of the truce, and unhappy Germany is once 1 0 move exposed to destruction by its own Emperor, j c or rather Miniftei, Pitt and his Ki g. j " The Piuffians,. Hefiiairt, Hanoveiians and , ' Bruniwickera, arc to fonh an army of obfervatior. j c in Welbphalia,. surely not intended agsinft the! 1 Fteuck at they are vi£torious ; but only that I J the king of PrufTia may mske himf'-lf a merit on the noithv n part of Gertnatiy, which niivv irerns , cnti utied to hi* protc&ion, perhaps as fowire Ens- ) peror of Nortlj-Germany." The schooner Expedition arrived at the Fort, af tcx a pa{T*ge of to duys ('ogn St. C r o»x. Lad evening the fh'ip General Washington, capt. Price, from whi h place he left the 23 d of June. On the z6'h *?.s blougbt to by a lllip of 18 which pioved to be a tn«<>ri(li cruizer.— They the ftipi and after two hours de tention. taking 3 few fmafi articles, and compelling 1 capi. Priee to Dgn 3 declaratj oll of having tece-itf- : 1 v * ' • * - . % J .ed on infney, f.sfFered him to prncaed His mate Yeftei waso»i board the Moor, where he fuv cap?. Pre" 3 un tice, and the crew of the brig Em«idi«, of Bos ton, taken 14 days before. He wsainlfrmed thflt M.iroon two of their frigates were cruizing to the wA- mencOn «,rd, and had taken 14 Amer.can and Br.tiih vef- thtrfe bl ft Is It appeared to cSpt. Price, that they took 3y a none but such as were loaded with gram. Tu , A K er,tkman of who was on board the which Morning Star and SwanwLk, up.n the arrival of Br.tifh those veflels at New-Caltle, assures us that the pnf- [ to int n fengei's wtre remarkably he.h.iy,' and (poke in the , to be highed terms in favor of the conduct of Captains taken p Steele and Joughin, on the voyage from Ireland. The (hip Junes, a flag of truce ? commanded by cairt. Latimer." with near two hundred ciUKiyt Am the French colonies, failed from this port on 5a- her ptck tifrdny l»d, bound for Cape Frances : fli« will for am. at Sandy Hook, and take a number of pallen-jers An onj irom New York. -r . The (hip Eliza, capt. Smith of Bodon, was d ' capiured on her pafTage from Bordeaux, by a Br»- On ti(h friirate, carried into Martinique and condem fliall be ned fend m "V'his morning arrived attke Fort, the brig Abigail for the ftom Jerernie, t TC f The Ganges andleveral other vessels left Reedy-If- ' land lift Sun.ay morning. S . I CLSAIED. , Ship Columbus, Verrack, Waterford ' Latimer, Cape-Tranoo.s " c ' . Brig Try all, Knox. Hamburg Nymph, Webb, \ Bourdeaux,^ 8 l Phoenix, Andcrfon, St. ✓ -B, William Pcntiock, Holliday» St. Croix vA--— Eliza, Thornton, Bourdeau* f Shr. Hope, Jacobs, PJilpaniola John, Coffi:i, Bolton- -yyi,,,;. In lad evening's Gazette we announced the am ral of the brig Morning Star, Capt. Robert L. j) s Steele from Londonderry with 350 paffengeu all in d ; oce{ ; , gead health. We learn that they have unanimous- £ om „ ely returned their thanks ta capt, Steele for his at- - lent ion and humanity to them du«ngthcii psffage. loyoo s Capt. S. fpoketlie Maria from New-York 0 m''' a of its m«d cHernial will be tpattcr of conlola as lion to me, to the last moment of my life. ; • been 11- " That my efforts in thii gloriwns cause brc, ly ; ' rc- in common with tliofe of abler meo, been iaefftc --one [a- t.ual, 1 mod sincerely lament j but I trust my cha the s h) rafter (whatever it may be) will not P.'.ffer either iertc 30 votir judgment, or in that of polterity, he of my name being seldom, if evrr, found aning 1 as the fnajorititts c.f a Parliament remaikible for hi cceo lie ving added more to the burthens, and taken away 00 more from the rights of the fobjeA' than any Its so- liament recorded in the annals ot ourhilloiy. 'i., al qq From the Mercury.—Bojlon, Au«uj! Z. I n „ presibent's s.pe?.ches, Sic. neg During the lad week was publillied, a volume cep ht containing the speeches of the President to the Se- app 0 f nate and House of Reprelentatives of Congress, , a fiiiee the establishment of the federal government ; van , m . the adireffes delivered to him on his firft appoint- tre; t l le raent as chief magidrate of the Union, with his 1 „ ot answers; his circular litter to the governors of the Sai jjjV. several dates, and his farewell orders to the arm its dre ] c fj of America, it i* a neat, compact book, !compil- ten !ed and arranged with much judgment. It is an wh )cf ; I additional record of patriotic and moral wh ],fen'tinWtStl of the illuftiious character who presides eve a over our Let every one possess himfelf and a «°py. and Fedetalid Would eel ■fh^' with for no more thorough refutation of any at- co: .jj.-'d peiV.ons hi« ebarafter may receive, ihan a recur- an rencc to its pages would enfme. Let the timid, foi ioi'ia'l doubting Republican, whenever the clonds of fuf- |wc from picion overshadow his confidence in Washington, _ a ( ter open the volume now offered to the public—and the full ray of truth will irradiate hij mind, and 11 r confirm his faith in ku polhical dkliverek ■ . # Di . f nr and SUSTAINER. r 1 WEST INDIA INTELLIGENCE. Xt i By an arrival yptterday from Cape-'Nichola Mole, " mo , t . we learn, that the Quebec, and another frigate ar- J ,l} r j_ rived there the 15111 July. Tiiey failed from Bar- "i Died badoes with five large transport ships, with troops ai Pui'i and military stores, under theii convoy, bound to ,e can . she Mole ; but off Cap«-F>ancois they were chafed - am- b y ,hret French 74 gun Alps,and were obliged, to flairs leave their convoy to the 1' renob, who .took them /h ; ch | all, and carried them into the Cape.—Tbt sickness | at the Mole, exceeds its usual tnortali d ihe ]ty > ,rrom 5° to 60 d >' A " e *pe aa, ' oii „ OlPte ' of the reduttion of the islands isdefpaired of, and , eror | even an attack from the Brigands is apprcheAd>af ' i botli at the Mole and at Port-au-Prince. The 1 an< 3l Bri.ith troftps had evacuated Bompard, and return- rat ; or jcd into the Mole. Both the tiking and holding ( ,he i this place, even for the short time tbey held it, wa*. tj iat I attended with great loss to the English.—l here ri t on was no pressing of Amertcaiis while ouv informant 1 teems was at lhe Mole ; but h* saw fevetal indances of . jv m . their treating th< m with much refpeft and civility. There is no sale for American produce. ( .rt, as- HALIFAX, July 9. Monday arrived the Danish brig Dover, Capt. , capt. filocum, sent in by his Majedy's fliip Afilftance. :3d of Thursday arrived a Dar.ilh (hip, f:nt in for cxa f»i|> of minatioii by his Majedy's fliips Affiftince and Rai ie r.— foil. July 13- rs de- Thursday arrived an American brig from St. pelling 1 Domingo, prize to hi 3 majeily's (llip I'levoyantC, rccei#-: Capt, Wemyfs. " v -•\ Yeftcrdfty his majesty's (hip Dover, an old 44 . , FAI » un (hio, and ihe g >B" NEWBURYPORT, August 2. >n Sunday brig Tryal, Capt. Samuel Chandler, atn- K. ved here, 59 days from Liverpool. By him we Am are favored with Englilh papers to May 30, from whith we make the followiug extradi. AUg. >(} f LONDON, May 23. fed The examination oi Drouet is carrying on he- p po- fore the commiflion of frven. Paris is not yet /\ , in. tranquil, the partizans of the conspiracy still enter- t he pri an- tainii'g some hopes of carrying their plan into el la- fe&. * io ° v -l The Duke of Parma, alarmed at thorapid pro- < U a gre f s 6f,the French, has solicited and obtained a hat cessation ot arms, but on Conditions the mod hu jq to himfelf. ♦ — Ola- A number of French troops, it appears, have (^arj been detached from the army of the Rhine to lta- Bve, ly > while the Emigrant Corps under the Prir.cc o f c ' Conde been augmented to 15,000 men, by :ha the accession of a confideratile body of French.de- t ; OBj ■ r i > IVrisrs. l| yttn, Gfn Reks, the commander sf an Imperial corps LegM ( ng- i' l the Brifgan, is gone to Italy, and has been fuc ' Js'j cceded by Gen. Furftenberg. ITav A letter from Elfineur, of the 14th inft. announ- p ar . cts a declaration of war by the Dey of Algiers, arrainft Denmark. May 24. Peace is said, by the Parisian Journalists, to be negotiating in layout of all the Slates of Italy, ex lume cepiing those belonging to the house of Aufttia. It s Se- appears that even the Pope will not be excepted. rrefs, The treaty with th« king of Naples is already ad lent ; van. ed. One of his agents is arrived at Pans, to oint- treat with the Direftvy. 1 liis When the Treaty concluded with the king ot f the Sardinia was submitted tc the council of Five Hun- I rmies dred, some of the members remarked, that the mpil- terms were too degrading for a conquered Prince, is an who submitted to the terms imposed on him, and moral who was (plainly intitled to that refpeft which is elides ever due to misfortune. — imfelf In the fitting of the 19th .inft. a report of the .vould celebrated Abbe Sie.yes was read to the Council, iy as- containing the tlrongefl threats against England, recur- and exhorting the Government to turn the whole timid, force of the Republic, and to direct the wa© c >f fuf- I weight of their vengeance against her. D 3tos", — win Tj-n-'iaag. ■■ r— -and NEW-YORK, August 6. r I'erek Capuii. Flyn, in a brig from Philadelphia, was , plundered by a French boat, and carried into Leo cane ; one of hi* men died in conference of wounds ( "Mole received ftom the Frenchmen. A reward of $0 { atf ' Toes was offered for every American velfel into Le- No r oganc. The RacHel was boarded both by Englilh : troops autl French privateers, who examined and permit iund to ted lier to P rdceed - Nc chafed r> — 1 fuiatammmm — ged.to 'BY THIS DAY'S MAILS. f _them M i'toef* . ALBANY, August 1. . U nortali- pfter Coh> f(q- of Conn<-aicutt, late fuperm- N tendam of the maaufaftory in Je.fey, we are told, , ' j , ! lias an important appointment i» the Canal eompa- . nies of this (late—he arrived in the city last evening. N It is reported that Lieutenant Governor Simcoe {I*!*' of Upper Canada, and Lord Dorcheller Governor holding Ccne 7 al of his Britannic Majcft/s pofleffions in I_a!t V r Ameriea » have been reccntl y ltcalkd trom thcir L ht 'l pefitive governments. - .ormant V b NEW . Y ORK, August 8. nces of THE FAIR AMERICAN. Cl¥lhty ' h appears on further enquiiies which have been made at Bolton, bv the friends of the owne.s of that fuip at this place, that the reports of her be ing 101 l on tlie Goodwin Sands are not well toin ■, .Capt. dsa—that (he was a£lually seen bearing away sot ( ia?ce. North-Seas, aDd not llranded as formerly menti fot exa- ontd _ The'coniradiaion, at any rate, leads us ndRRa- t0 f, o p e that a different fate has awaited this vefkl ; , and that ihe mivy yet arrive in tolerable feafen. :om St. Arrived at this Fort, brig Sucfefs, Wallace, Savan voyante, nab Harriotßoge the brig S? ) Sally, Capt. Gidney, after a of days from Lame, with 146 paffengvs. ' * TO TH C INHABITANTS OF GEURGETOWS. Fcliow-Citivent, j _ BEING appointed by the pariic'ular dtfire of itbe whole.of the passengers of the brig Si'Jy, to Fteturn ycu out fineete thsr.ks lt*f "yonr kind atten f tion to us, fuice we arrived on yoar hoipitable fhors I now, thiough the medium of your newspa per, beg leave to make known our sentiments: be -1 ing, pieviotis to our arrival, in a ft