A private letter stats the loss of the Al lies, on the borders of the Rhine! within the last month, to amount to 35,090 men !—The lot ot the French, which cannot be so cor recftlv ascertained, is rated at 40,000. Th? king's fycech for continuing the w4r, had a very evident effeiS on our funds. Con sols fell'to 68 ;-Bihs. PLYMOUTH DOCK, Jan. 16. In consequence of an express arrived yes terday from his Majesty's ship Pegasus, of z8 guns, Capt. Barlowe, of their having seen five French frigates; ahd a cutter, to theeaft ward off the Start, which had taken fcveral transports with provisions from Cork, the following ships gdt under way last night, and proceeded immediately to sea in search of thdm; Powerful, BHliquex, Dilator, Pearl, Foreign Intelligence. From th London' Morning Chroni cle, received by Capt. Truxton. STOCKHOLM, Dec. p. Our Capital, amidlt an externa! calm, exhibit s U1 the symptoms of the mcft inter na! fermentation and public distrust ; double patroies traverse the (beets, the former or ders again it going out in the night with out lanthorns are renewed with great rig our, and the inhabitants have been direct ed, uni'.-r the most fev. re penalties, to (hut themselves up in tbtir houses, the moment government (hall tl.ink fit to give the fig n your friend. (Signed) From the Paris papers of the 19th, loth, 2 IA) 22d, and 24th. BREST, Jan. 13. The day before yesterday, we celebra ted the Festival of Reason—The statues of St. Louis and Charlemagne, were ta ken from the church of the ci-devant St. Louis, and burnt. Not a day paflTes without some prize taken from the enemy being brought in. Yesterday there arrived, one loaded with canvas, another with flour, and the third with provisions. Government bouo-ht all the commodities at the regulated price, and they are retailed at the fame price to the people. Preparations are incessantly making, EngLr™ Port of the Mountain, (Toulon) Jan. 13 . The executions still continue. All the men haVC P aid thc of their crimes. The turn oi the wo™ comes next, Army of the Rh 'tne. Haguenau, Jan. 18. The army of the Rhine, with all its ar tillery, is returned to Haguenau, and has been replaced in the Palatinate by the ar my of the Mozelle. The rumor of an in cursion into the Brifgau continues to pre vail, Pichcgru goes to replace General Jour dain, with the army of the North, bear ing with him our regret and our esteem. PARIS, January 2 1. All the armed fe&ions of Paris, are at this moment afTembled at the Place de la Revolution, there where the last King.of the French died on the fcaffold, to vow the deftrilftion of tyrants, renew their oath to live free or die, and exhibit the facied cause of liberty and equality tri umphant. Were those who (till cherish the frantic and culpable hope of reviving tyranny, but to witness this sublime spec tacle ; were they bat to behokl the heroic enthullafm which animates all France, they would no longer dare the combat, would no more endeavor to rivet their own fetters ; they would then be Convinced cf the utter impossibility of subduing such a people. "Michaud." Ihe number of p. ifoners in Paris on the 23d, was 5,202. BRUSSELS, January 20. " Among the reinforcements received by General Jourdain's army last week, besides 18,000 troops of the line, are four regiments oi ChafTeurs, and fix bati a r ion.s raised by re "quifition in Picardy,-confifting of 800 men each. Of the men brought from the depart ment of Calvados, 180 deierted, and arrived here on Saturday last: they were formerly perlbns of diftin£tion, and tock arms o-ily for the purpole of making their escape from France. 1 hey fay that twenty-four battalions of 800 men each, were railed by requisition in Picardy; that they are in general badly disciplined and badly clothed, but well paid and well fed j that they chooft all their own officers by a majority of vote?; that Jour dain's army is to be augmented to 150,000 men by the middle of February; and that the invasion of the Aultrian Netherlands is to be attempted. " .The action, which took place on Wed nesday Jail seems to have been liery bloody. On Saturday 350 French, wounded and pri soners arrived here, and twenty-eight wag gon- loads of Aiiibaans wounded. " On the 16th, a body of 8000 men of Prince Cobourg's army pafied the Sambre near Marolles, and attacked the French in their entrenchments, which were carried by allault. Ihe enemy had 700 men killed and 500 taken prisoners. They loft seven pieces of cannon, and were puriued to Landrecy. The Auftrians had 700 men killedandwound ed. This victory is attributed to the skill of Colonel Maeck, who is again returned to the army. " Lernann." " The French, in their turn, attacked our posts near Templeuve, but were repuiled— with great loss, however, cn cur fide. " Field Marihal Lacey is expe'f ars of uninterrupted success; ( Marlborough had not completely opened 'the frontiers in ten years) luch an event w.fl therefore tend to prolong the war, and Ihould rather depress our funds below, than ra.fe them above, their present price! iiut it is not easy to conceive how Co bourg can prevent such numerous force,, animated by their late fucccfTes, from pe netrating into some part of so extenfnc a liwe, and if any important port is taken, the adjacerr. pe st s mult immediately fail back, left their retreat be cut off and at the Emperor Joseph destroyed all the fortreffes in the Netherlands, 'except Luxembourg and the Citadel of Antwerp, inshighJy probable, that before the mid die of March, Cobourg may be forced to abandon the Auftnan Netherlands, and to ' Retire for fafety behind the Dutch fortref * r , 1S dl ® cu,t to conceive the effect that such a disaster would have on our ed n Sth at t a vT/- When the market is ed w.jh at least fiventun millions of Scrip concentred in a few hands, many of them una e to make a second payment, and all of t,cm eager to fell. Should the Bank krin *( Cf , refufc t0 lend moile y on the i,.?' ie v° nce did the last war) thedepveffion of the funds would be great indeed! and if the Bank lead their $£