Beared 'channel of commercial intercoure with that extensive and rich country. At present, the land-carriage between the navigable waters of the Monongahtla {a fork of the Ohio) and; the navigable waters of the is less tba.-1.4d miles; and a good waggon rciad is open between the fwei water:-.. Men of judg ment on the iubjeel of inland navigation, h?.ve examined the ground between the branches of the Potoins-k,, and those of the Ohio, and have been decidedly of opinio!:, that the iar.d-cafiijige between the two places where bouts nmv come to each, can be red weed to fifteen n;.i!es; and they have fcur.d nothing to convince thejn, tl.at these v.-aters may not, hereafter, be made to commnnunte with each other. The lettlers on' t'fif Ohio and Mdlfippi, «s ill of coflrfe carry their heavy produce to a market down those rivers; but their re turns wiil be mast natural through the Po tomiack, for they cannot ascend the VVet t -rn Water?, without great or nuch loisof time ; the current there being so rapid, that a (harp boat with fix oars can fcarcdy ascend firteen miles a day. [to bs continued.] To the Editor of the General Advertiser. Sir, I have observed in some of your late pipers certain ftrifturca on a fpcech of one of the Mernbers of Congrcfs from Mas sachusetts, which I consider both harsh and immetitted, and, tending to prevent that freedom of debate which has been so wifely provided for The writer's opinion and inferences are by no means worthy of notice, otherwise than as they fnew a difpolition to pervert the truth, and abuse the liberty of the press. That Member's chaia£ler as a friend to genuine liberty and good go vernment, is too well eftabliihed to be af fected by such miftatements and scurrility, as is contained in the paper of "Monday ; neither is such a mode of writing calcu lated to make a favorable impriifion on the minds of many of your readers. Paris of a sentence, or even of a fpscch, may be fg stated by designing partisans as to appear very exceptionable, and this is believed to have been the cafe in the pre sent instance ; because, independent of the known principles of the member, some people of chara&er who "were prefcnt, declare they heard no expreflions that would bear the ccnftruCtion which has been attempted. Gracchus fays 'f he would be unfaith ful to his country, to let such sentiments pass unnoticed in thi3 he claims some merit to himfelf, while he pays but a poor compliment to his friends in Congress, who let such expreflions as he has stated, pass without reprehension ; and to be a ufefal watchman, he ought to pay more attention to his recitals. Per the Gazkttr of the United Statu. Mr. Fenno, According to the " opinion" of a wri ter in the General Advert ifer, " on the condudt that America ought to adopt in future"—it appears that the wisdom of this country would be evidenced in the firft place, by throwing every thing into confufion among ouifelves, and in the se cond, by immediately plunging into a war with all the world—our agents at home and abroad are to be dismissed—and all the measures which have given prosperity to our country, and secured that prospe rity by peace and domestic tranquility, are to be subverted and overturned, if this is the way to preserve our name in exist ence as a nation, if this is the way to ena ble us to help our friends, preserve our peace, our liberties, and our independence —then the modern do&rines of volunteer quacks in politics which run counter to the experience of man in all pad ages, ought to prevail—ln vain have the people of A merica fought for freedom, deliberated on the best measures to secure the inestimable jewel, and established a just, wife and com petent government as the only mean con ducive to that object—if, the nature of our species is inverted, and confufion and every evil work is the only preparative to peace liberty and fafety—the politics of maniacifm will not prevail, for the parti zans of diforganifatum are not like Samp son, willing to be crushed themselves in the ruins they contemplate with so much pleasure—Our Councils will not be influen ced by hairbrained politicians who, rcfleft ing 011 the fortunes which have been accu mulated in the convulsions of Europe, are anxiously demons of trying their hand in tjiia happy retreat of freedom and peace. Y. Z. From the Columbian Gazetteer. OBSERVATIONS. The coldelt day iu December, 1789, in this city, was the 20th of the month— the Thermometer was 21 degrees. Fri day miming hft being 10 1-2 degrees colder. In Jan. 1790, the coldest day was 20 degrees—in February 9 degrees —in March 6 degrees. By this the coldeit day in the winter of 1790, wa» 41-2 degrees colder than Friday morning last. The coldest day in Philadelphia, in Jan. 1789, was 18 degrees—in February do. 7 degrees—in Jan. 1790, 12 degrees —in Feb. do. 6 degrees—in March do. 3 deg. in Dec. do. 6 degrees. In Philadelphia, in Jan. 1791, 8 d<*g.| in Feb. do. 5 deg.—in March do. 2 deg» From the above remarks, being all I could cofleft, we may not expecl to expe rience but very little colder weather in the ' course of this winter, than was experien ced the lail week. On the zsd&24th ult. was held theexa miuation of the several schools in the Tren ton Academy. The scholars who had been iludying Reading, Writing, Arithmetic and Book-keeping, exhibited such proofs of attention ar.d improvement, as were very fatisfaftory to the trustees and visitors. The Grammar school, under the care of Mr. Whitefide, was examined in presence of the Governor of the State, the Hon. Isaac Smith, the Rev. Mr. Armftrongand Samuel W. Stockton, Esq. who expreiTed their approbation at the proficiency of the students, several of whom diftinguilhed themselves for their progress in the ma thematics and natural pliilofophy. A number of the (indents of this aca demy have been fitted, from time to time, to enter the junior chls in Princeton col lege, with credit to themselves and their tutors. Others have been qualified for the mercantile and mechanical branches of business, which arc here particularly at tended to —and all, whofc morals are un impeached, and who have made fufficient proficiency, are entitled to a certificate, under the fcal of the corporation, setting forth the branches of literature which they have fuccefsfufly studied. Such is the healthfulnefs of the city of Trenton, that not an in (lance of mortality has happened since the firft establishment of this academy, among the many scho lars who have ccme hither to pursue therr studies. This circumflance, added to the eligibility of it? iituation, being on the post and stage road from Philadelphia to New- York, and the cheapncfs of boarding, ren ders it' a desirable place for persons at a distance to fend their children for the ru diments of their education. An Observer There arc at present about eighty scho lars in the several fchoolj: the house is in complete repaii, and would accommodate a much larger number with convenience. As the schools arc under good regula tions. and will be carefully attended to by the trustees and visitors, it is hoped those who may think proper to fend their chil dren to this seminary will not be disap pointed in their expectations. For the G.iZETTf. of the United Sr.iTts. To the SIEUR GENET, Minister WHENCE it it, fir, that you alone, among the diplomatic characters in America,, have been felecled as the notorious object of public animadversion ? Intercfting to vour felf, as it is to Americans, this question Mr; Genet, demands your attention. G. BAKER. New-York, 28th Dec. 1793. TRENTON ACADEMY. of France In answer to this question, will you, in the spirit of calumny and felf-admiration, prefumc to fay, that the American press, devoted to the cause of despotism, perse cutes you as the martyr of liberty ? Inftcad of thus yielding to the fedu&ions of pas sion, rather, fir, for once, render homage to the simplicity of truth, and refle6t whe ther a more correct answer may not be given ! Shall I mention one for your con sideration ? Yet deem it not Angular, that a person unpraftifed in the infidioufncls of Courts, unversed in the sophistry of St. Omers, and unambitious of rivaling you in artincf, (hould give an answer very differ ent from yourfelf, an answer which is plain, simple, palpable. Tou alone, among the diplomatic characters in America, ha-vc noto ripujly offended agaittjl diplomatic propriety. Delegated, as French miffipnary, to the constituted government of the American Republic, your mifTion, as relative to this 'government, was either a million of peace, or a million of perfidy. What then has been your conduit, as relative to the Ame rican government Have not your pro ceedings, instead of evincing a Minister 01 peace, branded you as the Apoltle of dif- . cord ? And was such the purpose of the nation whom you claim to represent ? No ! fir, however zealous you may be to ca lumniate the French nation by confound ing them with vourfelf, we acquit them of the charge : Never can we believe that the republicans of France would appro bate a million of perfidy. To do juitice to the French people, we mull then be careful to discriminate between them, and yourfelf. And, making this discrimina tion, we are conflrained to regard lome of your proceedings, fir, as meriting no flight reprehension. Could we totally abltratt your diplo matic character from your proceedings, while you hold and abuse that character, »'e might regard your language aa but the intemperate effufions of a felf-adminng fciolill: And, in this abftrafted view, the combination of fatuity and vanity, being regarded a? innocuous, might afford mat ter of transient mirth. But when, i« abu sing your diplomatic trust, you claim t,hat your language (hould be refpefted as t'ue voiee of France, the fubjeft inllantly ai fumes a very different afpeft ; and your publilhcd declarations, whether refuiting from ignorar.ee, vanity, fanaticifm, or per fidy, become seriously interesting ty the friends of true republicanism : For, whe ther you betray the republican cause, from ignorance, vanity, fanaticifm, or perfidy, whether you betray it from want of wis dom, or from want of honelty, Hill, fir, you injure the cause which you ought to benefit, and which, notwithstanding its be ing profaned by your profeflions of devo tion, is precious and facredto Americans. " That you are not destitute of talent," ha 3 been already conceded in the address which 1 presented to you, through the Gazette, in consequence of the letter, of the 13th of August, which you wrote tor the press, and sent to the President. My generosity, as one of the people, having made you this concefiion while there appeared some room for hoping that you would listen to the voice of inltruftion and reform, although your own own conduct has since reduced you, in point of ehara£ter, to be but a mcndicant penfiotier on the charity of, public opinion, yet, while I scorn to despoil the beggar, I scorn to revoke my generous conceflion. But left, from your pronenefs to eulogize yourfelf, you should abuse this concefiion to your own injury, let me remind you, that, in kind, as well as In degree, talents are various. And, as " you are not destitute of talent," so nei ther was an ancient noted incendiary, one trait of whose chara&er seems not altoge ther inapplicable to yoUrfelf" Satis lo qucnti#, fapientitc parum Considering that a person in your station ought not to be so ignorant of clallic lite rature as you profefs to he of some of the moil celebrated works on national law, al though I do not question your profefled ignorance, I now credit you as having the ability to underiland a (hoi t sentence from : I, accordingly, omit giving you a version of this which I have just cited. And, leaving it to your own moments of temperate refle&ion, if ever you have any, I observe, that the chara&er at large may be worth your attention. You may find it delineated by Salluft, in his hillory of the Catalinarian -war. And, while you are meditating on this fubjeft, let me urge you to reflett, that, however much or however long you may have abused our patience, yet the incendiary, who makes profefiions of virtue in the cause of vice, and boaits of patriotism for the purposes of sedition, will not eventually find more support in America than your prototype found in Rome. The injtdioufnefs of your profejjions, the illegitimacy of your doctrines, the audacity of yourpretenfions, have conspired to provoke and juftify typographical ftri&ures. Ap pearing before the American public in the novel' and amphibious character of typo graphical Minister, your claims to public animadversion are various, urgent, and un rivalled. Whether we contemplate you as the foi-difant oracle of national law, as the expositor of the American Constitution, as the exotic guardian of the sovereign people of the United States, as the public accuser of their constituted authorities ; or whe ther wc contemplate you. as a diplomatic Proteus transforming yourfelf inte a mul tiplicity of shapes, and adopting -such V - rious forms as you may think adapted t<> aid your machinations —whetheryou adopt the form of epiltolary correspondence, di plomatic communication, consular protes tation, circular address to American com mittees of beneficence, circular inftru&ions to French consuls, or any other form which anarchial zeal may fuggelt; still, fir, we find no cause to deny you tne character of which you seem so ambitious, the charac ter of an Apostle of Discord. You may aft'eit a tremulons concern for the Prcfideiit, and, with the modesty pe culiar to yourfelf, profefs to the public, as in your letter to Governor Moultrie, your "grief at feeing General Washington, that celebrated hero oj liberty, accessible to men whose scheme: could only darken his glo ry" But in vain may you expect that such arts will delude the informed Ameri caus. The weeping of the insidious cro cadide deludes none but the ignorant. If he has become the obje&of your pi ty, General Washington is fallen indeed. Are you so vain, Sir, as to imagine, that his, or his country's glory depends on you? Learn then to know thyfelf; and be af furcd, that it is not the breath of Genet, but the energy of truth, which fvvell# the trumpet of fame. After considering, that, in your letter of the 2 7th of October to the Secretary of State, you have charged President Wash ington with usurping power which the ennftitution does not allow him ; when we further observe, that, through your sub altern Dannery yon profefs, to the Exe cutive of MafTachufctts, an anxious sensi bility left holSlities ftiould interrupt " the ever-dear fraternity v between " two nati ons yet JiJlers," and that -you also at the j fame time exhibit a manifcitcJ again ft our National Executive ; the language of such communications excites, in the American mind, at once, contempt and indignation. Ate we to b«* duped, or terrified, from the maintenance of our own internal fovereigu ty, by the insidious profeflions, or mena ces of a diplomatic or consular di&ator ? Will you, fir, fay, that there is danger of hostilities between France and America? If so, whence does this danger arise ?-— Whence, but from functionaries who, in trusted with affairs of France, abuse the confidence of an high-spirited people ?— Whence, but from such persons 33 your felf? Mr. Genet! will you, while Miaifter of France, pretend to be ignorant, that your Mailers have rcprefentedfederalifm at the evil genius of anarchy of rebellion ot royalifm, as a monfttr threatening dellruc tion to the unity and indivisibility of the Republic ? Did yon tlien, in ordering Dannery to denounce the PreCdent, pur pose to excite in America the very spirit which has been excited at Marseilles, at Lyons, at Toulon? Speak, Sir! what was vour purpose in that infidious'denunci ation ?—What, but to divide and command the American People ? Accordingly, the moment of our national difmiflion, would have been the moment of your congratu lating yourfelfas Di&ator over America. Not to particularise ail the insidious communications which you have been ea ger to publish, and without now remark ing on the illegality of the doctrines which they contain, the publications alieady no ticed, especially those relating to the affair of Duplaine, fufficiently brand you as the Apostle of Discord. And, on reviewing the conduct of our public functionaries, and considering your various insinuations and direst charges again ft them, the mind is impressed with one concluding sentiment. To be the first of warriors, and yet to be accused for being the friend of peace, is the peculiar honor of Waftiing ton ; an honor worthy the first func- TIONARY OF THE FIRST REPUBLIC IN the universe. Formanifefting himfelf to be the vigilant friend of peace, as well as the firm affertor of our national sover eignty, he is honored by the approving voice of his country, and has shared, with other officers of our government, in your calumnies, and in your honorable hatred. ALFRED. AMERICA. JAMAICA, Nov. 9. Uindecided Engagement. Extract of a letter written on board the privateer brig Eagle, Captain Ogie dated at Cape Nichola Mole, October 28. " Lad Thn' fciay noon, while in com pany with the (loop Sufon, Capt. Young.