CONGRESS House of ReprefentatiViS. Januirv 14. In committee of the holt, on the report of the Secretary of Stcte, mlariiie to the com mercial intercourfc of tb'u country, 'with so- reign mitiotu. Sketch of Mr. Madison's observations in reply to Mr. Smith, Mr. Madilon said, he had hoped that the gentleman up yellerday, would to-day linve favored tlie commiltee with those ar guments which the late hour yellerday, preventedhimfrom bringing forward; how ever, as this did not appear his intention, he rose to make some remarks on the very important fubjeft, now before the Legilla ture. The fubjeft before the committee, be acknowledged, is of a commercial nature; however, it will not be poliiblc, he con ceived, to do jullice to it and to the in tercfts of the United States without mak ing some allusions to politics. The ques tion as it at tirft presents itfelf is of a ge neral nature ; the committer arc lb deter mine how far if i«the»ntereft -of this coun try, by commercial regulations, to vary the Hate of commerce now cxiiting. He declared himfelf a friend to free trade, and give it as his Opinion, that it would be of general advantage if, all commerce was lice ; but to this rule there are, he con ceived, exceptions. He inttanced the na vigation ast of Great Britain as a proof of the efTift of one exception on tbeprofpe rity of national commerce. This ast, be fore the present revolution of France, when it produced its full efTeft, and because it was not counter-balanced by a-y similar acts on the part of rival nations, gave to Great Britain eleven twelftlra of the (hip ping employed in her tiade. The rapidity with which it produced its effects was not lei's remarkable, lie said, than the extent of those effects. The a<£t passed in 1660 ; the foreign tonnage then employed in the British trade v. .-.s to the British tonnage as one to four, in 1719 it was reduced to as one to nine ; in 1750 it was as one to twelve, and in 1774, it was reduced to less than as one to twelve. There is another exception to the advantages of a free trade, w here the fraction of the country is such with ref peft to another, that by duties on the commodities of that other it (hall, not on ly invigorate its own means of rivalfhip, hat draw from that country the hands em ployed in the production of those commo dities. When an effect like this can be produced it is so much clear gain, and is confident with the general theory of nati onal rights. What has been and ever will be the effect of leaving our commerce alto gether to regulate itfelf? It is to submit it to be regulated by other nations. Sup pofc, that this country had a commercial intercourse with one nation only, and that we should admit of a free trade, and that nation procecdedon a monopolizing system, would not that nation enjoy all the carrying trade, and with it the maritime strength it confers be heaped upon a rival! Then just in the fame proportion to the freedom we grant to the veflels of other nations with us, and to the burdens other nations iinpofe on ours, with them will be the transfer of those maritime refourccs. It had been remarked that this fubjeft is not novel. It is as old as our nation, it 1 as been difcufied from our political birth, and it lia« exercised the thoughts and at tention of reflecting persons ever fmce. In 1784 the States, at the recommendation of Congress, granted for a limited time certain powers to Coiiorefs, for the regu lation of our common commercial intereils; but thii was found ineffectual. The States then, endeavored to attain this dcfireable objift by concurrent regulations, which originated with Mafachufetts, but inef fectually also Out of this experience rose the nicafurej that terminated in the exit ing eliablifhment, with a riew to some per manent regulations and the vindication of our commercial rights. This was no more an object of the eliablifhment of the pre sent government by the people than it was their film belief that some regulations on this head would be one of the firft fruits of its operations. An attempt was one of the firft fruits of those operations in the Hoi.fe, but this firft experiment expired in tie Senate, and there it fell, not from a dillike to the principle, but because a better • mode, it was thought, could be devised than that proposed. It vat alio urged, when the qucflion wasfirft agitated, at New-York, that such regulations then would not be well timed, considering that the execution of the trea ty with Great Britain was yet depending, and that uegociations for a treaty of com mei ce might soon be expected to be open ed. It was thought by some, wife to wait the event of thole ncgociations, that then the Legillaturc might proceed on surer ground, and ast more unanimously. We have waited; the treaty is not executed, and we may infer from the communications of the executive that there is no negocia tions depending that (houlil stop us. We have tried to bring about such a negocia tion, and we have failed ; we have gained nothing from those nations with whom we have no treaty, and if we have been favored by one with whom we have a treaty, it is no doubt upon the idea that the policy we at present pursue is but of a temporary nature. Having seen the end of what was then pending, we are surely now free to take such measures as a regard to our in terest may dictate, and if we find that the state of our commerce does, not comport with that interest we are free, and bound to vary it so as to make it contribute to our welfare. The propositions before the committee fliould be examined as they concern our navigation, our and the just principles of discrimination that ought to prevail in our policy to nations having trea ties and not having treaties with us. With refpeft to navigation it was con ceded even by tile gentleman up yesterday that our navigation is not upon the fame footing by the regulations of the two na tions with whom we have the greatest com mercial intercourse. With refpeft to G. Britain, while they carry their own, or any other produce to any of our ports and take our own produftious and that only to part of her dominions ; in her Weft In dies our velTcls are entirely excluded. The gentleman from South Carolina, viewed this part of the fubjeCl in a different point of light than it struck him, he said. He (Mr. Smith) considered it as a favour that our produce (hould be admitted in the British i (lands, when the fame articles of the produce of other countries is positive ly excluded. This exclusion, he answer ed is merely a matter of form, it is of no consequence as this is the only country that can supply those articles; it is a pro hibition that exists only upon paper but is never called into exercise. To exhibit at a glance the effect of the Britiih navigation ast on our navigation it is fufficient to compare the quantity of' American and Britiih tonnage employed in our intercourse with Great Britain ; the former, in 1790, amounted to 43,000 tons while the latter was 211,000 tons. — A change owing to a particular change of circumstances hastaken place since that pe riod in favor of the American ; but the proportion in that year, as lei's influenced by accident, may with more propriety be taken for data. Further to shew the ef fect of Britiih policy he compared the proportions of the domestic tonnage em ployed in our intercourse with other Eu ropean nations, at that period. With Spain the American was to the Spaniih as sto I ; with Portugal 6, I ; Nether lands ij, I ; Denmark 12, I ; France 5, 1 ; Great Britain I, 5. One obser vation may be deduced from this view of the fubjeft, that if if was the interest of this country to extend its navigation as far as it may be extended, by a transfer of commercial advantages from Great Britain . to France, it might be encreafed tenfold. Gentlemen might wish to know the proportion which American tonnage bears to that of foreign nations founded on the document of the late state of things intro duced into the house yeilerday j he had made a calculation on this basis and found that, with Spain our tonnage is to the Spanirti ns 16, I ; Portugal 17, i ; Ne therlands 26, 1 ; Denmark 15, I ; Rus sia 14, 1 ; France between 4 and J, 1 ; and Great Britain 1, 3. This exilting foliation of our commerce is the more mortifying, when the nature; and amount of our exports are considered. Our exports are not only necessaries of life or necessaries for mannfa&ures, and there fore of life to the manufacturer, and thence ought to command a good market where received at all, but the bulkinefs of them gives an advantage over the exports of e very other country. If we chose to adopt the principle of excluding other nations from our foreign trade,in order to encreafe our maritime ttrength, the nation might secure the carriage of the whole of its ex ports leaving to other nations the carriage of theirs. Such a regulation would, to be sure, be fubjeA to a very considerable inconvenience, that of returning empty from the markets to which we exported our commodities, and therefore would o perate as a considerable tax upon the in tcrcourfe, but the leafoning does not lose weight on this account, and if such a re gulation was confined to Great Britain this would be the effect, that Great Bri tain,inftcad of employing in her commerce with the United States 222,000 tons and 13320 seamen, oould employ only 66,000 tons and 3960 seamen, and we in our trade with her, by the fame means, would raise our number of tons to ij6,qoo and of seamen to 9360, He did nut suggest that it ever would x neceflaryto carry matters to this length but it was well to fliew how far we have the right and power to extend our naviga tion and maritime strength, which view of tlie matter is a fufficient guarantee against any inimical viewt which may be formed to our disadvantage. [Speech to be coatinued.] FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. FRANCE. NATIONAL CONVENTION, October 6. Letter from Lucombe Saint Michel, Re presentative to the People in Corsica, to the President of the Convention. Calvi, O(Sober 1. " Citizen President, my letter of the 16th of September, informed you of the answer which I gave to an English flag of truce, which I refufed to receive. After having cut off my communication by sea with St. Florent and Baftia some English vefTels gave the fame fummon3 to these two cities. I know not what was the answer of the officers who commanded there but I flatter myfelf that it was Republican. The English, after having examined Calvi and St. Florent, being of opinion that the lat ter place was more accefiible than the former, was resolved to attack it. The attack was concerted with Paoli, who had come down from Corte to Murato, where, as usual, he prudently kept at a diflance from the fire. For two days, two vefTels cannonaded the battery of Fornelli, in the gulph of St. Florent; Leoneri, Ex-Le gislator, commanded the land forces, and had along with him four field pieces, which the English had given him. The fire was brisk : we have not, as far as lam inform ed, loft one Frenchman ; the English ac knowledged that they loft 17 men, and had several wounded, among whom is a Captain of a ship, and Mafferia, a friend of Paoli, and of rank among the English. A great storm having arisen during the engagement, the English re-embarked j they left the four field pieces Jb the Cor ficans.—During the night, the French made a sortie from Bornelli; they attack ed and pursued the Corficana, and took from them four pieces of cannon. On the fame day the Corficans attacked St. Florent, Patrimonio, Barbagio, and Fu riani; they were every where repulsed with loss. " I received the details by way of the interior and from confidential persons, whom I had sent into Nebio. Stfch, Ci tizen President, are the men who sent to the bar of the Convention a Ferrandi, a Conftantini, to declaim against me and my colleagues ; and to protelt, that the rebel lious Administration and Paoli wished to be Frenchmen. I fend to the Committee of Public Safety a very curious publica tion. I expect, with impatience, the ap proach of the English, and of the faithful fubje&s of Pitfcal, the firft to Calvi. The enemy know, without doubt, that the ar tillery of the place is out of order [ but I am there, and I am every day exercising 21 o cannoneers, who will do them more mifchief than they are aware of. (Ap plauded. ) (Signed) " lacombe saint-michel." The committee of public fafety present ed a plan for lodging the young men in requisition at Paris. Ofle|in informed the Convention, that he had discovered in a concealed place, twelve hundred mattraf fes, twelve hundred coverlets and camp equipage for almost eight thousand men. These articles belonged to the ci-devant Count d'Artois. Oflelin demanded that they (hould be appropriated to the use of the young men. [Applauded and decreed.] October 17. Bunard de Jointer wrote from Mombe liard, the loth of October as follows : " I make use of a bit of paper found in the castle of the Duke of Wurtemberg, to tell you, that his principality belongs now to France. After having been informed that the little Duke had furnifhed hit con tingent to the allied armies, aud that his children were in the' Emperor's it-nice, I have this morning entered Mombeliard with a battalion of Dole, Jo cavalry and Tome small artillery. We took the city without diSculty, nor was there a gun fired. " I have laid hold of all the ca(h. Hi therto I have only found 18,000 livtcs, 7,000 sterling, in specie, there remains furniture in the castle to the amount of I J,OOO livres, (6oco sterling) which I (hall fell. I fliall make haste to get the corn threflied, and fend it to the army of the Rhine. " I (hall form a diftrift, a municipality, and a club in this town, and sequester all the domains of the Prince. " Feudal signs (hall be replaced by the Cap of Liberty, and 1 (hall try to revive the confidence of our alfignats, which are very much dil'credited in this country. October 18. Thuriot proposed to sequestrate the ef fects of all the foreigners put in a state of arreft.—Referred to the Committee of Public Safety. Letter from the Minister of War to the President of the Convention, dated Pa ris, October 17, 1793. " Citizen President, our brave Repub licans have fought with the (laves of the despots. The General in Chief is going to commence new operations." Letter from Jourdan, General in Chief of the Army of the North, dated Head Quarters, Avejeus, October 10. \ " Citizen Miniller, the Republicans yesterday attacked the Have's. The right division, commanded by General Duquef noy, has done wonders. The left division did not anfwerwhat was expected from it. The battle lasted from ten in the morning till the close of night. Our republicans cofidufted themfelvcs, and fought with a courage worthy of free men.—The battle will re-commence to-morrow. I am going to set out. I hope to fend you good news to-morrow (Appteufes:) UNITED STATES. GEORGE-TOWN, Jan. 9. Slate of the Hotel Lottery this day. Gain of the Wheel, 73,095 Dollars. Tickets in the Wheel, 24,100. Tickets are therefore worth 1 o Dollars 3 Cents. Capital Prizes now in the Wheel:— The Hotel; I of 25,000 Dollars ; los 20,000; 1 of 15,000, and 2 of 5,000. WINCHESTER, Jan. 6. From the Knoxville Gazette of Dec. I. Two Cherokee Indians, a fellow and a fquavr, taken on the Tenneflee, by Capt. Harrifon,in a late scout, have been brought to this place ; they inform, that the town on the south fide of Hightower River, where a part of General Sevier's army had the late combat, is the principal place of rendezvous for the Creeks and Cherokees to affcmbk, previous to their coming in upon the frontiers; this town is princi pally inhabited by Creeks, and is governed by a Creek chief, called the Buffaloe- Horn. Since Gencral'Sevier'sexpedition, the Indians have done but very little mif chief on the frontiers of this diftrift ; they have stolen a number of horses and cattle from the out settlements, and some small trails have been seen in different places. On Monday lalt Nicholas Ball (palling from Golliber's creek to Wells's station, in Knox county) was fired on by five Indians, and received three bullets through his clothes. In the action which Captain Evans had at Hightower, Mr. Ball had two bullets (hot through his hat. Copy of a letter from Col. James > Win chester, to Brigadier General James Robertfon,dated Sumnereounty,Croft's Mill, Ncv. 9, 1793. SIR, " Some horse's having been stolen, and Indians seen in this neighborhood, I or dered our Lieut. Snoddy, with thirty men, to scout the woods about the Caney Folk, and, if poftible, discover their main en campment. " On the 4th inft. be met two, who fled, and he pursued to a large camp near the Rock Ifiand Ford of the Caney Fork where he took 28 good Spanish blankets, two matchcoats, eight new brass kettle' one fire-lock, three new swords, Spanilh