✓ * C, , ■— i Far the Gazztt£ of the UrtITED Statu I Mr: Fevno, There are few persons of .good sense who hope to fee liberty prevail in France, who have not been (hocked and discoura ged by the rncafures they have adopted to abolish religion. It is not merely the Ca tholic doJlrilie that is attacked—«t is the Christian religion. The head and founder of it has been treated with a degree of ir reverence, which in this country will pass for incredible. Bigots in politics may if they please, attempt to suppress the natural feelings of wonder, of disgust, of alarm for the coitfequences of this un heard of profligacy of manners and princi ples," which considerate persons will deem more dangerous to the liberty and happi ness of France, than the combined armies. A clergyman whom I do not know, but v who bears the character of a man of sense and virtue, exhorts his congregation to beware of the contagion of these mon strous examples. What minister would not betray the cause of religion, of morals, of heaven and earth, if he fufTered the threats, or the newspaper abuse of bigots v and perfccators in politics, to deter him from the discharge of this obvious and ur gent duty ? Yet a writer, who calls himfelf " no Pharisee," and who might as properly have fubferibed to his jargon of illiberal abuse, no Scribe, has arraigned Mr. A. for preaching against the irreligious pro ceedings in France. What ha 6heto do with France, fays the Pharafee—What has he to do. with vice and irreligion, is the real question—He has to do with them as a preacher of religion, to expose them to his hearers A—he has a right, and is bound to enforce his exhortations by the exam ples of the Jews, or Romans, or French. " No Pharisee" mistakes the time and place. Our churches are not yet to be (hut up, nor the Bibles burnt. Our cler gy are to be respeCted and beloved. The attempt of " no Pharisee," to libel a mi nister, and to suppress the freedom of the pulpit, is a proof of the progress that li centiousness and irreligion are making. I venture to predict, that when it lhall be come the general practice of America to vilify and peifecute our clergy, there will hot be left, Liberty, Law nor Religion. NQ CLERGYMAN. CONGRESS. House of Reprefcntativcs. Friday, May 2. The fullfwing olfervations were made by Mr. Smith of Maryland, on the propos ed tax, on fnujf and manufactured tobac -10 :—The house in committe of the -whole. Mr., Smith considered the observations of the member who had just fat down, as amusing, and ingenious, but not fatisfac tory. To him, it seemed a very odd Scheme to crush American manufactures in the bud. Men of capital and enter prize advanced large sums of money in e reCting fnuff mills. After long exertions, they began to reap the reward of their expetices and their labor. At that em'titi cal moment, the government souses down upon them with an excise. In his opini on,. the resolution before the committee comprehended very great injustice to the manufad&ujers of tobacco. He understood that a fnuff mill required a capital of five thousand pounds to begin with. We are going to impose eight cents per pound on fnuff, which was more than double the price of the raw material. Here Mr. Smith inferred, that it would be necessa ry for the fnuff maker to posses an additi on of double his present capital; so that instead of five thousand pounds, he muff possess fifteen thousand, before he can lupport his present business. After pay ing so vast a duty, house rent, the wages of journeymen, and a multiplicity of other ca(h disbursements, he is to give credit to his customers for fix, nine, or twelve months. There was another hardfliip he mutt keep accounts of his sale. (The words of the report rtferved to by Mr. Smith, are as follows : "he (hall enteijo to bond, with fufficient security to render a faithful account every three months, of the quantity of tobacco or fnuff fold or sent out, within that period. Previous to taking any tobacco, for the putpofe of being manufactured, he (hall notify the fame Jo the office of inspeCtion, and (hall keep a book, in which (hall be entered daily, the quantity of Jobacco or fnuff fold or sent out ill each day.") This re gulation may often prove a very great ] hard(hip< It will require an extra clerk, 1 at ao eSp^nt-eof thrle, four, orfh'ehun d(£d ffollurs per annum. For the manu- t facturera of fnuff, this might be practica ble : but, at lead in hl> part of the coun try. (Maryland) : tobacco-spinners are 1 poor, work theinlelves, «»nd employ ttoys to fell, many of whom, cannot so much' as read. How are they to keep accounts, or how are they to escape perjury, when you bid them do what they cannot pofii bly do ? Bclides, tobacco is frequently fold not by weight, but by the yard. It had been (aid, that this tax was hot more exceptionable than the excise upon This comparison did not hold. By the tax on distilleries, the agricul ture of the United States was greatly promoted. Land that would out bCar wheat, was, in confeqilence of that ex cise, and the encouiagement, at the fame time given to this manufacture, covered with crops of rye. Hence there vVas no jult resemblance in the two cases. But if we are to excise every thing, Mr. Smith said that the committee might excise, as properly as tobacco, those ltrings of oni ons, that were sent from ConneCticut all over the Union. They were the staple of that state, as tobacco was of Virginia, and were equally fit to produce a revenue. He expeCted that we (hould next hear of an excise upon nails. Protecting duties 1 had been laid for the encouiagement of that manufacture in America. Progress had consequently been made in the bufi- 1 ness ; and now there was nothing want- 1 ing, but a smart excise duty, to knock it 1 on the head, under the pretence of railing 1 a revenue. Printed cottons, linen, paper, 1 were also articles that we (hould no doubt saddle with a (tamp duty, as had been the 1 cafe in Britain, and thus crush that infant 1 manufactory. In the cafe of the present tax, it would be said that the manufactu rer must lay it on his cullomers. Yes. But will his cultomers advance him a ca pital double to what he had before ? Be sides the tax, he must havevilits of excifs men, which are in themselves, extremely troublesome. In fine, he considered this as a dange rous precedent. It commenced a fyltem of taxations on internal manufactures, which would intimidate men from adven turing their capitals in manufactories, sub jeCt to be saddled with excises, the mo ment they begun to be profitable—or whenever they were enabled (as in the cafe of fnuff) to exclude the foreign arti cle. Tobacco and fnuff were, good arti cles to begin with, for few, except the manufacturer would complain ; he consi dered this, as the opening wedge, and (hould vote againlt the measure. Foreign Intelligence. BRUSSELS, February 28. We are allured, that the plan of the next campaign will totally differ from the lalt. It It appears certain that the Prufiian army considerably augmented and joined by the contingents of the Circles of the empire will be exclusively charged with the operations on the Rhine, and that the Austrian troops now there will join the trmy under Prince Saxe Cobourg. It is hoped, this latter inafs will be fufficient to pulh with vigdur our conquests in French Flanders and Picar die, and, at length, to give the lalt blow to the anarchy, which, at this moment, defq lates one of the fineft kingdoms in the world, NATIONAL CONVENTION. Sitting of March 6. Goupilleau announced that Catalinieres, the intimate friend of Charettc, had been seized at Nantes. Proclamation of Tureau, General in Chief of the Army of the Weji. Nantes, 28 Pluvoifc. " Citizens, " The time of deceiving is past. I pro mise you the naked truth, and it is as fol laws: " 1 he march of the columns ordered to traverse the Vendee country, has been the means of destroying 6000 rebels, who were scattered about, the retaking of a very important post in the interior of the country, and the capture of an immense quantity of baggage. The banditti who had the audacity to enter Chollett, by striking terror into the garrison, have tit the dull:. They have been (lain by a di vision detached from the army of the north, commanded by General Cordelier, whom I sent in pursuit of them. " Another division, wider General j t Duqiitfnoy, has put to flight t! ( e main 1 body of Charatte's army, in the thicket, and killed eight or 900 of them. On 1 the 26th Pluvoife, General Cdrdelier.put i ij or 1600 banditti to the bayonet, near > Beaupreau, which has very much weaken- r ed La Roche Jaquelin's army. r Three hundred of the rebels have just 1 been {hot in the sorest of Pince; and b many other advantages have been gained J by General Haxo. t " The trifling ill fucee(Te» we have ex- e perienced, and which have been so much ] exaggerated, do not deserve notice.— 1 There are still some numerous parties in < Vendee, who are so much more dangerous, ( as thev alone occupy the right bank of ( the Loire. My predecessor has allowed 1 them too long a time to repose. We t must yet make very strong efforts to ter- 1 minate this war; but if the soldiers will I only fight courageously, and the princi- < pal officers second my orders, if all the i constituted authorities will join me, and t if the patriots are not milled, I {wear that c all ft all be well." t March 4. i Barrere proposed, that from the 10th t instant, and- during the war, every (hoe- { maker shall be obliged, under a severe pe- £ nalty, to furniih every day two pair of r (hoes, for defenders of the Republic, who, during the winter, had saved 50,00 a pair 2 of (hoes by going bare-foot. 1 March 5. } A numerous deputation from the feftion < of Marat entered the Hall, yuith drums 1 beating, bringing with them large lumps 1 of falt-petre on platters. Being come to ' the Bar, Monmora said, that it was an 1 offering fronj the fe&ion to the nation, t After exprefling very ardent wifties for 3 the welfare of the Republic, and the over- ' throw of tyrants, he observed that the 1 fe«£lion of Marat possessed a falt-petre kind 1 of morality, the source of which was inex- t hau liable, and whose expressions had very 1 frequently served the cause of Liberty and 1 tranquility. This remark was very loudly 1 applauded, and the address was ordered to ' be inserted in the minutes, ' < LONDON, March 13. From Paris, under date of the 7th inft. t we learn, that the Brest fleet was to be ; ready to put to sea with the firft fair wind after the sth inft. On Saturday last, syr the firft time for two or three weeks pail, the wind came to the eastward—the pro bability is, that the enemy would avail themselves of the opportunity, and are now at sea. The precise number of (hips t of the line composing the French fleet, we believe, is not at present clearly afcer- 1 tained. 1 The manifefto of the king of Prulfia has ' given the lie direst to all the insinuations, j all the declarations, and all the aflertions of the party writers, who have again "and { again positively affii med, that the king of. Piufiia's concuirence in the general cause was not to be relied on, and that he would take the firft opportunity of retiring from ' the confederation agairift France, when he 1 could promote his private views of arabi- ' tion and interest. A Paris paper of the 6th inft. dates, s that the Brest fleet had hoisted fignels for failing'on the 23d ult. and that one hun- 1 dred vefTels had arrived fafe in Brest wa- ' ter. The Sans Culotte, the Genereaux f and Languedoe, three ships of the line, are fitting out, besides a number of fri gates, all of which will be ready to put to sea before April. The duke of Richmond intends imme diately to make the Tower impregnable, 1 as the rats have undermined that celebra- 1 ted fortification, and rendered it in rather 1 a tottering situation. His grace deserves much praise for his (kill in fortifying it last winter, and having those breaches repair ed, which were made by such mischievous VPrmin ■vermin. COLONEL MACK. The following Ihort account of this Austrian officer, who is just arrived in London, will, we hope, be acceptable to our readers. Col. Mack is a native of Wurzburg, and son of a tradesman of that place He began his military career as acormnpn huiTar in an- Austrian regiment, but his uncommon talents for military drawing, his unwearied application to this art, and his extraordinary 11; ill in laying down plans loon raised him from obscurity, and in troduced him to the-notice of Maifhal Laudohn. His dillinguifhed conduct at' the affair of LifTa ■ still more ingratiated him with that great commander." Field Mai ilial Laudohn had made all his disposition for crofflng the Danube, and attacking, that place. Mr. Mack, ■who had formed the plan of passing the river, as well as that attack, went the night before to the Marshal to receive his lait prdcrs ; -when this General informed him, that he had jail received intelli gence of the Turks having been reinfoi ced at JLiffa by a corps of 30,000 men, and that of course he had given up h-= project of an attack, as, after having palfed the river, in cafe of meeting witii any difatter, he should be at a loss how tq effect his retreat.. Mr. Mack did not credit the report of the reinforcement, btit could not prevail on the MarJhal tc execute his intended attack. Mr. Mack left the Genera], crofted the Danube in a boat, accompanied by a single Hulan, and stole into the place, got certain information of the supposed teinforcetner.t not having arrived, took a Tu'rkift officer prisoner ,in the suburb, re-passed the Danube, and at 4 o'clock in the mor irfg informed the Marfaal of his expedi tion. On this report the Aultrian army passed the river, and took LifTa, the whole garrison of which place, confiding of men, were made prisoners of war. In the present war, Col. Mack; ftp.! attached to the Staff, has much contri buted to the successes obtained at the be ginning of the campaign, especially the attack and capture of the camp of ,Far. mars, for which he made all the neteffa. ry difgofitipes. 111 this affair he reiceiv ed a wound, the cure erf which obligee him to repair to BrufTets. He expt£tec to be made Quarter-Matter General o] Prince Cobourg's amy, but this place having fallen to the (hare of Prince Ho henlohe, his wound afforded him a pre text to retire to Vienna. Called these t£ the conferences held with respect ta the plan of operations for the enitiing cam paign, he has caused a system to be adopt ed totally different from that which hai been purlued in the prececding campaigns This he has laid at Bruftt's before th( commanding Generals of the confederal troops, and he is to communicate the fame to our government. We learn thai every where it has met with the fu|kl! approbation. PHILADELPHIA, MAY 5. A letter from a gentleman of refpe&ebili ty and information in Liverpool, dated Marc I 3d, to his friend in this city, fays—" Thai in his opinion, Peace is a». event which i. not very remote. —The writer eSs this iettei had been in Scotland and Ireland, and in tat principal towns in England, and co'lecten from all quarters that the current of the ge neral sentiment would very shortly set Lrre fiftably in favor of peace. Says a Corrcfpondent, It is recommended to a certain affernblj to establish some rule, if they have none al ready, and if they have to enforce it, for the fuppreflion of impure and coarle allusions ir public debate. Obscenity is not wit in pri vate company ; it is liiexcufable in a gieal afTembly. If such instances have occurred in the hiir ry of speaking, the delicacy of lentimeni which character ifes the members, will lug geft every reflection to prevent the repetition Extract of a letter from England, datec Feb. 17th, 1794, and received by the Wil liam Penn. " The business of Congress is very im portant! I hope they will have wisdom giv en them from above, equal ta the matter that may come before ihem . The President conduct and speech are univerfa Uy admired you will meet with Fox's panegyic upr him in the debates in the houle of Commons he might have been called to order, had i not been for that saving exception, his pre/en Mtyefty, or something finiilar—-Genet's folly though high'.v censurable, has done mud good : —the dignity of the American govern ment, and the cool, prudent firmnels of th President, will give the United States a de gree of importance in the eyes of Europe.- The prosecutions that have been carried c in Scotland agaii'ft the friends of reform, an the severe fentenees that have been paftsi upon several persons will only encreafe flr easinesses inltead of caufmg them to subside the measures of government will probabl only add fuel to the fire, and oceafion ii bursting out with greater violence. 1 hav no expe&ation of the war's ending whi minifler3 can find money for carrying it 011, but should the allies be no more success.! than they have been hiterto, the difiatisftli tion and difficulties will in all likelihood b so great that in two years niprtnyceffity fece those at prefeat ;t the helm tc qui.