were ;i!icoui,/":ed or-ln the hands of any banks, officersor other persons. % Sixth. Similar and fepavate ftatemetits for the years 1791 and 1792 respectively, and so far as the fame is rtow prafticahk for the year 1793, fpecifying separately, in each ih.tement, under each branch of the revenue, the monies received oil ac count of the revenue of that year and those received on account of tilt-revenue of each preceding year, and dating so fir as the fame is now pra&ifcable, the amount of all monies,; bonds or securities on hand, on the firlt day of Jan. 1794, with the times of payment of such bonds or securities. The Senate adjourned to i I o'clock to morrow morning. Foreign Intelligence. LONDON, November i DECLARATION 6f the Grand Master of the Sovereign Order of Malta, to the court of Na . pies, dated Sept. 38, 1793. / THE Court of Naples having caused to be notified to the Grand Master of the Sovereign Otder of Milta, that not will ing to have any thing further to do with those who at present govern France,it sent away all the agents of that country, who had hitherto relided at Naples, or at the parts of his Sicilian Majeily, his Eminent faighnefs took the earliest opportunity of fyHowing' that example, and of ordering the ports of Malta to be {hut agninft all kinds of French (hips of war or privateers as long as the present war (hall continue. • The Grand Mailer wishes to make known at the fame time, that (5 nee the no tification which the late king mr.de to him erf the acceptance of the constitution of 1791, the government of Malta has had no relation with France. The dreadful troubles which have broke out in that kingdom, and which have deprived it of # Sovereign universally regretted, and the violation of the rights of nations, which have been permitted there under every point of view, in regard to the Sovereign Order of Malta, have induced many per sons", not acquainted with the fundamen tal laws of this order, to think that re prisals ought to have Seen made ; but these laws even prescribe neutrality in all those quarrels which arise between the dif ferent Chriuian nations. The .Grand Master, however, fully determined not to acknowledge the pretended French R. in the person of an agent which it might fend to Malta, ordered, on the 15th of March lad, the Chevalier de Sevtrcs de Caurnont, in his quality of member of the order and of its delegate, who had resid ed long in this island as charge d' Affaires of the King of France, to retain the title which he held from his Majesty Louis XVI. of glorious memory, and to keep the arms of the king over his fate, which he has hitherto done, under protection of the government of Malta. • But (he Grand Master learning through an indirect channel, that a person named Aymar has been appointed to fuceeed the Chevalier de Caumont, and that he is now on his way to Malta,' formally declares at present that he will neither receive nor ad mit the said personage, norany other who may be fer.t to ref;de at Malta, as agent in any refpeft, of the said pretended Re public, which his Eminent Highness ought not, cannot, and will not acknow ledge, A gentleman lately arrived from Pan's, and who had been several times in compa ny with' "f. Paine the Outlaw, declares that he is in daily expectation of termina ting his Career by the guillotine, to which he has made up his mind. His voting to fend Lpuis XVI. to America, is the cause assigned, which renders him a fufpiciou: charaftir there. When the verdiA was pronounced up on, BrifTot and the Deputies, they requeu ed leave to. speak themselves, or to be heard by their defenders. As it was believed, that this requefl was made with a view of delaying the sentence, and as the accused had already been heard, the Tribunal re fufed to accede to it. Sillery was the firft who fuffered by the fatal engine. Several, addieifed the peo ple, particularly Briffot. The execution, of each of the Deputies was announced by a discharge of eight pieces,of cannon placed on the road to Chr.illon. BrifTot was the last of the Deputies who were executed. "the French are breaking up the graves in all the churches, in order to make even the'dead contribute to tlfe expencee of the war. The lead coffins are converted into 1 bullets, and the copper ones lent to the mint. When our letters came away from I Frankfort, there was a report of a pitched battle having been fought, near Stras bourg, between the Auftrians under Ge neral Wurmfer and the French Army. This report adds, that the French wot defeated with immense (laughter, and se veral thousands of them taken prisoners. S:ia(bourg is said to have opened its gates to the Allies immediately after this defeat, we (hould be glad to hear those reports however probable they are, offici . ally confirmed. , A detachment from Lord Hootrs ffeet at Toulon, has we ur.derftand, betn sent to Tunis, to take poiTeffion of the {hipsof war and merchant vefiels belonging to the French in that port. November 14. To the Sitting of the 29th. the Jaco bins of Paris presented a petition to the Convention, requesting that Trials be ter minated whenever the Jury (hould declare themselves fatisfied with any part of the evidence brought forward. The Conven tion granted this requcft, which was also backed by the President of the Revolu tionary Tribunal. The Jacobins solicited this Decree, from an left Briffot and his Accomplices (hould enter into too long a defence, and, by the pow er of their eloquence, mak« an impression upon the Judges.' In the Sitting of the 31ft, the Con* vention learned from their Coinmiffionefs, that 500 men were employed in razing the fortifications of Lyons. In the fame Sitting it was decreed, that the women (hould no longer be permitted to aflemble in Clubs. The Prince of Saxe Cobourg is one of the most extraordinary, as well as one of the greatef! characters of the age. To great profundity of thought, he unites the ntmoft cheerfulnefs and hilarity of manners. Being middle-age, (hort, and. inclined to corpulency, he has a jolly ap pearance, heightened by a "Habit of laugh ter, which he indulges inceflantly. He is remarkably fond of drawing : but does not confine himfelf to plans of sieges of battle. On the morning of his firft en-, gagement with Dumourier, Clairfayt ha ving paid this General a visit, is said.to have found him diverting himfelf with (ketching a caricature, of which Clairfayt himfelf was the fubjeft. To have (elect ed such a time for such an employment 1 roust have appeared strange ; but the Prince had previously arranged the neces sary dispositions for ensuring his success. LAST MOMENTS of the LATE QUEEN of FRANCE. When (he heard her fenter.ee read, (he did not (hew the smallest alteration in her countenance, and left the Hall without fayiilg a (Ingle word to the judges or to the people. It was then half past four in the morning, Oft. 16. The Queen was conducted to the condemned hold in the prison of the Conciergerie. At 5 o'clock the Generale wa9 beat.— At 7, the whole armed force was on foot; cannon were planted on the squares, and at the extremities of the bridges, from the Palace to the Square de la Revolution —At ten o'clock numerous patroles passed thro' the streets. At half pad 11 in the morning, Marie Antoinette was brought out of the prison, dressed in a white dishabille. Like other malcfaftor6,(he was conducted upon a com mon cart to the place of execution. Her beautiful hair from behind was en tirely cut off, and her hands were tied be hind her back. Besides her di(habille,(he wore a very small white cap. Her back was turned to the horse's tail. During her trial flie wore a dress of a white and black mixture. On her right, upon the cart, was fcnt ed the executioner ; upon the left a con stitutional priest belonging to the Metro politan Church of Notre Dame, drefled in a grey coat, and wearing what is com monly called a bob wig. The cart was escorted by numerous detachments of horse and foot. Henriot, Rouflin, and Bou langer, generals of the Revolutionary ar my, preceded by the reft of the ftaff offi cers, rode before the cart. An immense mob, especially women, crowded the streets, insulting th,C Queen, and vociferating " Long live the Repub lic!" She seldom cast her eyes upon the populace, and babeld with a cold iudiffe rence the great armed force of 39,000 men, which lined the streets iri double ranks., , , The fufferings which (he sustained dur ing hdr captivity had much altered her ap peal ance, and the hiir on her forehead ap peared as white as snow. The Queen, without anguiih or bigo try, was ipeaking to the Prielt seated by her fide. . Her spirits were neither eleva ted nor depreffed;—(he fcemed quite i sensible to the fliouts of " Vive la Repub lique !" She even (hewed a kind of fatis fa&ion in looking for the moment which might rid her of her miserable existence;. When she passed through the street called Rue St. Honore, (he sometimes at tentively looked at che iufcriptions of the wi>rds LIBERTY and EQUALITY, affiled to theoutiide of the houses. She ascended the fcaffold with seeming haste and impatience, and then turned her eyes with great emotion towards the gar den of the Thuilleries, the former abode of her greatness. At half past twelve o'clock the guillo tine fevered her head from her body. She died in the 38th year of her age. The executioner lifted and (hewed the blood-streaming head from the fouv differ ent corners of the fcaffold, which is (hewn only from one fide in all other common ex ecutions. The mob instantly vociferated, " Long live the Republic I'' A young man who dipped his pocket handkerchief in the Queen's blood, and pressed it with veneration to his breast, was instantly apprehended. Upon him were found the portraits of Louis XVI.' and Marie Antoinette. The corpse of the ill-fated Queen was immediately after buried in a grave filled with quick lime, in the cliurch-yatd cai'led de la Madelaine, where Louis XVI. was buried in the fame manner. November 17. We are sorry to hear that the Coura geaux of 74 guns, one of the British vcf lels engaged in the ast ion before St. Flo rentz, inCorfica, then received so nvch injury that she funk before (he could reach a port to. refit ; the crew, with roost of the ammunition, &c. was however previ ously removed. The Courageaux \vm a» oldvefftl, having been taken from the French in the war before the left. Letter written by Monsieur to M. le Mar chal de Broglio; dated Ham, Nov. i, desiring him to fend a popv of it to all towns, in which emigrants reside. " Gentlemen, " 1 have this instant deceived the news of the horrid outrage which has'terminat ed the days of the Queen, my fiftcr-in law. The grief and indignation which if excites in me, can be allayed only by the concern you take in it. True Frenchmen and faithful fubjefts, we ought in a two fold degree to feel the horror of thjs crime It is by redoubling our zeal-for the ser vice of our young and unfortunate King, that we can one day render fucli losses less grievous, and efface the (lain which mon gers would imprint on the French name. Such 1 am well convinced, are the senti ments which animate you. Such are these which my brother and I will prtferve till |we breathe our last sigh, and such is the end to which all our efforts tend. " Accept Gentlemen, the afTurance of my fentimcnt* towards you. (Signed) Lcui. t Stanislaus Xav'itr A very large French frigate of 42 guns is taken by a Spanish 50 trim (hip off Cape Ortugal, and lent into Cadiz. Both (hips fuffered much in the adlifin. The French man is named Rcuiliilone or Rollignolej FRAN C E. SITTINGS OF the JACOBINS. O&ober ji. t "Dubois Cranee asserted, that a force of such magnitude as 60,000 men was not wanted to reduce Toulon. Twenty thou sand men, vvith a large train of artillery, would be fufficient to produce this effect. One hundred and thirty pieces of artil lery were on their way from Lyons to the army before Toulon. " With 20,000 jnen, and this fitpply of cannon," exclaim ed Dubois Crance, " I will answer for the reduction of Toulon." November I. A letter from Perpignan was read. Ey this it appeared, that 30,000 men, eager to fight the Spaniards, were encamped under the walls of Pcrpignan ; that the National Deputies, ailed with great pru dence, and combatted in common with the foldiera-the enemies of the Republic 5 that, the* Spaniards were entrenched chin deep at Boulon, but that the Republican troops. were neveithelefs resolved to Itorm then- entrenchments. Tlie Representatives of the People in the army of the Eastern Pyreunees, aflur ed the Society that the troops would soon enter Spain. The'pofitiort of the Repub lican arir.y was in front of Bellegarde. Frefllnet, in a letter from the army of Italy, informed the Society, that the ma gazines received large and daily supplies of Ito.res. He also acquainted the S>>ciety, that a sortie had been made from-Toulon by 6000 men, who advanced to the vil lage of Lagard. After a vigorous contest, the English, he said, were defeated, with the loss of the Eoglilh General killed, and hi» nephew made pvifoner. PLYMOUTH, Nov. 13. By letters received here, we have ad vice that Earl Howe's fleet are cruizing off the Lizard ; some of the (hips have received damage, which will cause their re turn to port very soon. EDINBURGH, Nov. 7, Yesterday was (hipped on board the OfnabuVgh cutter for Oftend, 5000 flan nel vests and 2000 pair of foot socks for the use of the British at my in Flanders ; and from the profpeft of the lubfcT!ption still going *on, a very considerable addi tion is expecled. The vsfisi fails tc-mor- row. LEGHORN, October 20. Hitherto we had seen only single {hips belonging to the Englift squadron in the Mediterranean enter our harbour. Three Engliih (hips of tjve line, mounting 74 guns and 650 men each, turo f igat-.s ef 32 guns and 220 tnen together with a French frigate of $3 gu:is 3n:! 300 men, commanded by M. Van Kempen, are at length aft-rived here. These ftips brought several copies of the Proclamation addressed c.i the 27th ult. to the people of France by Vice Ad miral Don Juan De Langara, Conrpand er of the naval forces of his Catbciie Ma jesty at Toidan. AMEBIC A. KINGSTON, (jam.) Nov. 30. Information is receivedby the Felicity, from St. Thomas's, that in confluence of intelligence from France, the ruling'pow ers at Martinique and Guadakiupe hating' seized and condemned all veiTeh belonging to Denmark and Sweden, lying at these ports. The Spaniifi flifpi of war at Potto Ca vrJ!o have 6000 troop* on board. The operation of the Spanish force in tended to ast agafnft the French part of St. Domingo, is retarded by the sickness of the'troops, rrtare than 1500 of whom ar; reported totally Unfit for duty. Last nifcht arrived heir the Penelope, Captain Rowley, from a cruize. In thfc Bite tsf Leogane Cap*. Rowley y fell in with, and engaged L'lnconftant, a French frigate of thirty fix guns, which, after a few broadsides, struck to tire Penelope, and may be expected at Port Royal thi» day. The Penelope had one man killed, ope inidfh'pman and lht men Wotmded.— L' Inconstant loft the ftcoud Captain, two Lieutenants, and twelve men killed, and had 12 men wounded. Tbe wounded midshipman of the Penelope has loft his arm. CHARLESTON, J.in.t. Ext raft of a letter from a gentleman iu Cforgin, to hi? friend in this c'i'-. " TVc people, h_re have jot recruhinjr mad, for the French service to go sigat,:ft Weft-Florida, Atrgu'h'ne,- and Ntw»CTr leans. Cel. K ,is to command a le gion ; Col. P , a battalion : Meflrs. O. C. Slc. are Captains t« Co!. P's bat talion. They httVe ciiliftcrl upwards of thirty of ttie militia troop of Ijorft, no\r in ft nice, in Gieer. comity. NEW-YORK, January 32. • We hear with plerf-rre t'ut try? tntr* faftiire of glass in is now earned on with-great faefcefs. Th; produced there, in tleamcfs'and. tranfparcnev, an* of tS«. inr/onid glsA," and some of the most elc.-ant huikSir.ga t refted rn that town it; lafl glazed with it,