gres for ascertaining the person of the an . thor or printer of the said paper, and to take eveiy necessary step for tarrying on a criminal process against him, as I have no doubt but the lasv of Denmark will attord me a prompt and exemplary fatiffaftion. (Signed) Hailes. To thiS-ts added in the Danilh Gazette that Count Bernftorf haying recommended the immediate invert igalionof this aitair to theDntch chancery, the publiiher was sum moned before the council of state : and th&t the curiosity of the public was at the highest pitch to know the issue of these proceedings, especially as the Briti(l) Mi nister had been supported in his demand of fatisfaftion, by the repfefentations of the other foreign Ministers. Young Count Wurmbrand, long fluf fing from the army of the Netherlands, has lately written from Liile to his friends at Vienßa, where he is, with four other Imperial officers. They have liberty to walk about the town, and receive their remittances of money without interrupti on. They daily attend a two hours lec ture upon the rights of Ntan, and the causes of the.presentwwasr f with the Pa rilian newspapers, &c. It is added that none of the Aulirians arc forced into the French service. April 8. Yesterday captain Cook arrived at the admiralty office with dispatches from Lord Hood. The contents of these dispatches, we understand to be, that his Lordship finding the French in Baftia too ft'rong to be attacked, with any profpedt of success, by the force at his disposal, and being ill supported by the Corficans, had re-embarked tiie troops. The King of Prussia now finds, that the fafety of his crown, and the rSprefen tation of the dearest interests of his peo ple do not depend on the conquest of France -The Empress of Russia has also notified to the court of Vienna, that as long as the Porte with Sweden and Den mark, (hall continue to excite her appre hensions, (lie cannot give her promised aid to the Confederacy! The Flanders MAil which arrived this morning, brings no news of any import ance. Two mefTt ngers came over in the fame Packet, but nothing material had Occurred on the Frontier. The emperor was expected to reach Brnflels on Wednesday last. His Inaugu ration as Duke of Brabant, takes place in a few days, after which it is believed he will visit the armies. By letters from America we learn, that fix fail of French (hips of the line and five frigates, apparently the squadron that Earl Howe chafed, are faftly arrived in the Chefapeak. They had one million four hundred thousand pounds sterling, in specie, on board, which they have fafe ly lodged in the Bank of Philadelphia, for the purpose of buying provisions and llores. This wealth, thus sent to America, not enly invigorates their agriculture and manufactures, but it tends to make them maritime. They will themselves be the carriers of these cargoes to France ; and thus does the present war, through the madness of Great Britain, advance the United States of America half a century in arts, commerce and wealth. [It does one's heart good to find foreign nations fcoMing about the prosperity of America—and it is no mean aigument in favor of peace and the measures of our government.] April 13. The Chancellor of the Exchequer, in his new bill refpedting the Crown lands, purposes, among other regulations, to grant immediate leases of 90 years to all holderj qf Crown leases, which is confi dired as a liberal boon to them, the ut ir oft extent of all former leases being no more than 40. According to the mod moderate calculation, the crown lands, if brought to market, and funded, would produce an annual income of 400,000!. The late indecision of the King of Prus sia has produced a number of contradic tory reports; but in contradi£lion to state. ments in the foreign Gazettes we are as sured that the zealous co-operation of his Pruflian Majesty with an army of 80,000 men, is effectually secured to the general cause. The Dutch troops under the command of the Hereditary Prince of Orange, have approached Phillippevill.- so very cltifely, that the garrison of that place iias only paflage left free to a place where its cavalry used to water the horses. The French are now reduced to catch the rain water in cisterns for that purpole. On the 26th ult. at day-bveak, the Republicans attempted to throw a consi derable convoy into that besieged fortrels. The Dutch attacked the convoy and the escort with such vigour, that both fell in to their hands. The French escort coh fifted of 200 men, of whom 13 were kil led, and three others wounded. Yesterday we received the Paris papers up to the sth instant. They contain no thing of much importance, except the perfect acquiescence of the populace in the arrest and trial of Danton. The powsr exercised by the Committees of Public and General Safety is at present so defpotie, and so formidable, that no man, in or out of the Convention, dares to hint a doubt of the propriety of whate ver they choose to order. Ihe Prince of Saxe Cobourgj as Ma jor Maitland dated in the House of Com mons ob Thursday, is to be superseded. The Emperor is to take the command of the Combined Armies in person, and to be affilted by a Military Council, at the head of which is General Mack. Such is the progress of a war against the people who, twelve months ago, were represent ed as incapable of finding troops, arms, ammunition, or provisions! All the great Generals hitherto employed to subdue them, the King of Prussia, the Duke of Brunfwick, General Wurmfer, the Prince of Saxe Cobourg, have either retired or been dismissed. The Emperor, of Ger many, a* if contending for his last (lake, is brought from his amusements at Vien na, to assume in appearance the command of the army, that men of abilities, not men of rank, may be enabled to direst its operation. The duke of York's plan for raising a corps of waggoners for the army on the Continent is like to take immediate ef fect. Of the 600 men that it is to consist of, 240 are already raised, 120 of whom embarked at Gravefend the week before . last for Oftend, and 120 more on Monday last. Government find them in clwatlis, boots, &c. they are to have is. 6d. per day subsistence, with liberty of returning to England at the expiration of one year. Yesterday morning advice was received at the admiralty office, that four French privateers, which have been cruizing in the chops of the channel for some time, watching the motions of our ships, were captured by his majesty's cruizers and sent into Scilly. A dreadful instrument of deftruftion, contrived to throw ten bombs in a minute, has been lately invented by a foreigner ; a model of which has been (hewn and proved before the prince of Wales and se veral other persons of diftinftion. A public fubfeription, patronized by his roy al highness and the duke of York, is be gun, for conftrudting one upon a scale fufficient to throw bombs of very large dimensions. Accounts from Madrid, of the 17th of February, state, that on the sth of that month an important engagement had taken place between the allied troops and the French, in the vicinity of Andaie, in Biscay. The Spanish general, Caro, hav ing attacked the French, in order to dis lodge them ftom an important battery they had erected not far from Fontarabia, the latter refitted with such vigor that the Spaniards were forced to retreat, with the loss of seven hundred killed, wounded and prisoners. The brother of Cardinal, late Abbe Maury, has lately been put to death at Paris by the guillotine. April 12, There is a rumor here, that the Em peror of Morocco, gained over by French money, means to attack the Spanish set tlements on the coast of Africa. This will be a very troublesome diversion, al though at this moment the marine of Spain is in good condition, and able to repress the piracies of the Moors. HOUSE OF COMMONS. April 9. The House having refalved itfelf into a committee of ways and means, and the accounts of the surplus of the consolidated fund for the last quarter up to April 5, 1794, being referred to, Mr. Pitt said, it was with the highest fatisfaftion that he infortned the commit tee, that the surplus submitted to their consideration amounted to something about 231,0001. the whole quarter yielded 2 7b,0001. more than the last quarter of the preceding year, ending the sth of A pril, 1793, the produce of all the perma nent taxes for the kft year ending the sth of Apiil 1794> he said waS only about ioo.ood. kfs than the income of 1793, the riioft productive year the finances ot the country ever experienced. This he represented atf a very flourifhing account, when it is considered that the firft yeai ot a v«fr is always mo(t deficient, and that commercial failures, arising from accident al causes, dillinil from the war, had ren dered this year particularly distressing. He then moved, " That the ftirplus of the consolidated fund, amounting to 232,0001. and ending on the sth of April 1794, be applied to the services of the pfefent year"—which was agreed to, and the refolations ordered to be reported on Friday. • Adjourned. DANTON, The influence of this distinguished cha ra&er, now totally destroyed, has been on the decline for some time. The me morable fitting of the Jacobins on the 3d of December afforded the firft public proof of this decaying popularity. Having made a declaration, that the Constitution ought to sleep while the peo ple were preparing to overwhelm their enemies, Doupe de L'Oife reprobating this doctrine, Danton was reduced to the necelTity of entering into a defence cf his condu&, and of confeffing, amidst the murmurs of the Jacobins, that recent events might have occasioned good Patri ots to fufpeft him. It was at tljat period, and immediately after Danton had conclyded his defence, that Roberfpiere commenced a review of the causes that had produced such suspi cion.—The alledged emigration of Dan ton into Switzerland, his feigned illness, his inordinate ambition, which seemed to aim at the regency or diftatorfhip, his former intimacy with Dumourier, his want of activity in oppofingthe Brifiotine part —all these circumllances were alluded to. Robespierre, however, concluded his speech, by declaring that Danton had been calumniated. Notwithftauding this event, no cordial friendfhip subsisted between Roberfpierre and Danton, for they were rivals. To oppfe the increasing power of the former in the Jacpbin Club, and in the committee of public fafety, the latter at- 1 tached himfelf to the Cordeliers, whom, by secret means, he endeavoured to £xalt above the Jacobins. It is fufpefted that Hebert acted under I his direction, that he was the concealed author of that conspiracy, which involved the actors in ruin. If this suspicion be well founded, it will scarcely be deemed an extraordinary Gircumftance, that the overthrow of the Cordeliers foonld produce the deftru&ion of the power of of Danton. Cammille Defmoulins has long been fufpefted, and so long ago as the month of December, he was denounced, as having been the intimate friend of Mira beau, the Lameths and Cuftine. Lacroix's attachment to stock-jobbing, and some facts which were disclosed in the evidence against the Hcbertifts, and which tended to criminate Phillippeaux, have produced the arrest of these two de puties. Danton is a mart of blunt manners, and of a boisterous eloquence.—" His form," according to Dr. Moore, " is coarse and uncommonly robust—his manner fierce and rude—he speaks with the voice of a Stentor, declaims on the blefiings of free dom with the arrogance of a tyrant, and invites to union and friendfhip'with the frown of an enemy." NATIONAL CONVENTION. Sitting of March 29. The committee of legislation presented a revised plan of the law against monopo lizers, which was agreed. The principal articles are— Wholesale dealers and manufa&urcrs (hall be bound to declare, within the de cade following the publication of the pre sent law, at their municipality or their lec tion :—, 1. The quantity, quality, and nature of the merchandize they poflefs through out the extent of the commune of their residence. 2. The quantity, quality, and nature of those which belong to them in every part of the Republic ; and they (hall point out the magazines or store-houses where they are placed. All persons are considered as wholesale dealers who buy up merchandise, or anv commodities, and keep them in magi. ' zincs. They (hall be bound to giv§ in the flat* Of their magazines every month. They fliall have written over the out side door of their dwelling-house, as well as over that of their store-house, a table of the names and the nature of the mer chandise or goods in which they deal. And manufacturers shall, in like manner, indicate the nature of their fabrics. They shall be bound, when required, to prove, by the teflimony of their muni cipality, the sale or the employ of their raw materials in their mannfa&ories. The retail dealers shall not be fubjeft to the above declarations and inferiptions, except upon any magazines they may pos sess over and above what is contained in their fhopsor where they fell • in retail. The penalties to those who neglect to make the declarations prescribed, are con fifcation of their merchandise, and two years imprisonment. Every wliolefale dealer refufing to fell in wholesale, and retailer refufing to fell in retail, the goods in his pofleflion, shall have their goods confiscated. Those who fell their goods at a price above the maximum, fliall be punished, /or the firft time, by a forfeit of ten times the value of the goods. For the second fault, all the goods in his pofleflion of the fame nature with that he fold above the raaxi , mum, shall be confiTcated, and himfelf j imprisoned for two years; and the inform er fliall have the entire profit of theconfif cation. They who shall be conn&ed of letting their commodities perish voluntarily, and through malevolence, shall be punished with death. OSTEND, April 8. " Our last intelligence from the army states, that the day before yefterdav the Carmagnols in pretty strong force, attaek ed our posts of Werwick, but were driven back with great daughter. The Ghent Gazette of yesterday re lates, that the army of Royaliits under the orders of MefTrs. Roche Jaquelin, Charette, and d'Autichamp is at present composed of 80,000 men, all well armed —That, according to letters from la Flech, Anges, and Nantes, this army is at the gates of tbt last tncntiottecHown— that M. de Precy has made himfelf matter of Limoges, and advances with forced marches to effedt a junction with the above A Generals." * DOVER, April 10. Arrived the Union Packet, Captain Sutton, with the mail and meflengers, MefTrs. Wiffen and Shaw, from Oftend: the messengers left the army but two days ago, when every thing was perfe&ly quiet, and nothing material had happened. A Swiss gentleman who came over in the Packet, and who pasTed through Frankfort, Coblentz, and Cologne, about ten days ago, states, that the Pruflia ar my is daily augmenting; that fix thousand frefh troops marched into Coblentz the day he pasTed that place; that eight thou sand were expected on the following day, and that all the military preparations Teem ed to go on with vigor. UNITED STATES. HALIFAX, (N. Caro.) May 28. - On Friday night last, owing to the ve ry unpardonable imprudence of the gao ler, the malefactors confined in the pna.n of this town, effe&ed a general goal de livery.—We have greatly to lament, that Peter MasTer, alia' Peleg Maffey, «1.0 was committed for having pasTed counter feit Bank Notes, was among the num- A correTpondent obTerves, that the Se nate could not have given a more une quivocal proof of their sincere deuie to preserve to the United States the precious blessing of peace, than in the late ap pointment of Mr. Jay, as Envoy Extra ordinaly to the Britilh Court. And it should he mentioned among the heroic ads of the President's life, that regani lefs of the insidious politics of his native state, he did on this momentous occation, with a degree of firmnefs worthy the Chief Magistrate of the United States, select a man in all respects well qualuie for the important trull. The President is a military man, and cannot be afraid of war—an honcft