John Anthony de Braganza ; her Majcfly decora- t. ted him with the order of Chrillfcs, and his inter- j preter, Lewis G. dell'Afcenfione, with the order of St. Jago. Friday following the Negro Prince, having taken leave of their Royal HighnefTes, went on board a vefTel which is to carry him to the bay. HAMBURGH, Jnne7. The war 011 the fide of the Rhine piomifes to extremely bloody, if we may judge from the Pro clamation of the French Directory, as well as that of the arch-duke Charles, which is defervingof at tention. Enclosed is an extract of a private letter from Switzerland, dated May 26 : " The good tin derftanding between France and Switzerland be gins to be re-eftabiifhed, and we learn that nocamp of Swiss troops will be formed near Bade. The cantons of Fribourg arid Soleure have ordered all the French emigrants to withdraw from their ter ritories, and have acknowledged Barthelemi as am bassador of the French Republic.'' LONDON, June' 6—7. Yederday an account was received at the Admi ralty from Cadiz, containing advice that Admiril Mann, having taken on board four months provisi ons and water at Gibraltar, had resumed his Nati on before the Spanffh port, that Admiral Riahery, with his squadron, wa3 ready to put to sea ; and a Spanish squadron was likewise ready to fail, at the fame time. Admiral Mann, apprized of this cir cumdance, had sent a message to the Spanish Ad miral, that it was his intention, at all events, to at. tack the French (hips, the moment they should get clear of the neutral port ; and that if they were at all'aflifted by the Spaniards, they muff answer for the consequences. A letter from Leghorn, of the 6th ult. dates, that Sir Gilbert Elliot had caused the Corfican- in furgents, to the number of. 4000, to be attacked with great vigour ; and that a considerable body of them having been taken -by surprise, in the vicini ty of' Ajarcin, •AilafptSfrt'- the rebels were defeated with great loss-, and a num ber of prisoners made, who ar« to be immediately tried as traitors. Saturday two of the rioters at the Hudings, Covent Garden, who had been for several days no ticed amongst the molt forward in menacing Admi ral Gardner with clenched fills and opprobrious language, were taken before a Magistrate, and after a full examination, not being able to give a good account of themselves, and no creditable person ap peaiing in their behalf, were ordered on board a King's ship ; and it was recommended by the Magistrate to fend them on board Admiral Gard ner's flag ship. That Mr. Home Tooie in his daily addrefTes to the multitude surrounding the Hustings at Weft minder, should attempt to poison the minds of the people, and by the most inflammatory speeches, excite them to ads-os riot and disorder difgraceful to Englishmen, surprizes no-body ; but, that Mr. Fix can descend to follow so contemptible an ex ample, is mattei of aftonifhrnent to all, and to the refpe&able part of his friends,-# fubjocl of deep re gret and mortification, Jung ~2i. A few nights since the Bristol and Birmingham mail coach arrived at the Hop-pole, in Tewkefku ry, about twelve o'clock, with four inside passen gers, confiding of three gentlemen and a lady, when one of the gentlemen and the lady getting out, left an old gouty gentleman and another passenger be hind in the coach. Fresh horses being put to, the guard and coachman went into the houfeto take a little refrefhment, when the horses set off full speed, and passing through the turnpike gate, which was open, went on for Gloucester, and pafled along the various turnings with as great legularity as if the coaehman had been on the box. After going al most eight miles, to the no small terror of the pas sengers, they met the other mail coach, the guard of which, observing that no coachman was on the box, he went on with the coach towards Bristol. One of the pafTengers, just before they met the other mail coach, was so much frightened that he jumped out, and was much hurt. The old gouty being unable to follow him was obliged to flay behind, and was several times heard on the road, by different persons, crying out murder. FOR SALE. . The Brig PUNCH, Ai» entire new vessel, built, finifhed and fitted in the bed manner. One hundred and thirty-fix tons burthen,' and will fail remarkably fall. For terms apply to Mr. Sage, at the George tavern, or to ' JOSEPH ANTHONX & Co. Augujl 26, 1796. ?IO- Diftrid of Peianfylvania : to wit : BE it remembered, that on the sth day of August, in the twentieth; year of the independence of the Unit ed States of America, William Cobbett, of the said diftrid, hath depofitcd in this office the title of a book, the right whereof he claims as in the words following : to wit. " The life and adventures of Peter Porcupine ; with a " full and fair account of all his authoring tranfaclions: " being a sure and infallible guide for all enterprifins; " young men who vyiik to make a fertune by writing " pamphlets, by Peter Porcupine himfelf. " Now, you lying varlets, you sHall fee how a plain " tale will put you down." Shakespeare. in conformity to the aft of, the Congress of the United States, entitled " an a& for the encouragement of learn ing, by securing the copies of maps, charts aud books to the authors and proprietors, during the titnes therein mentioned; Samuel Caldwell. Clerk ef the Diftriit of Pennsylvania. Aug. 8 !»t4 w WILLIAM HASSELUON. WAS committed to the goaj of Dauphin county, on 1 the 27 th July last, a lad who calls himfelf , William Hasselton-, aged about 13 years, and has red | hair—fays he wai an indented apprentice to one James Demster, Weaver, now in Philadelphia, and has lived fomc time with Peter Egart, near New-Holland, Lancaf- ' ter county ; and further fays, that his mother lives in 1 Rrandywine-hundred/ near Newport. The master or | owner of the said boy, is hereby notified to come and pay ( the charges and take him away, other wife he will be dif- _ charges! hy dfie courle of law. JOHN M'CHESNEY, ' Hainfljurgh, Auguftai, 1796. 3t jailqr- ( VmsMJLtJIM.tIIWNHMH • »rMSW!Sf. "-f?. •** O Philadelphia, FRIDAY EVENING, Accdst 16. The President of the United States yederday tectived the Chevalier Martinez. De Yrvjo, as En voy Extraordinai yand Minister Plenipotentiary frcm his Cathplie Majesty to the United States ef Ame- I rica. t Extract of a letter from a Refpeflable Merchant in J, London, to a House in this city. r " I do not regret the treatment of Mr. Jay's j- Treaty. It was not what it ought to have been, and might have been, as is generally believed here. The spirit of the Representatives will be a lefTon to j future treaty makers. One thing 1 cannot but express a degree of adonifhment at, and that is the dread your papers were full of—of a war in conse quence of the reje&ion of the treaty. This coun try has more than enough of war already, and A- ( j merica will ever'derive morejuftice from firranefs, than by any expreflions of fear." ■1. REMARKS. Nothing can be more ahfurd than to suppose that the heroes of the American Revolution were afraid of Great Britain. No, this was not the quelliou with the statesmen, the patriots of our country. — War or negociation were the alternative.-—Not that Great Britain would declare war againd the United States, but, that, unlels she would consent to do us.justice, we should unavoidably be compel- f led to declare war agtiinlt Great Britain. ( The " treatment of Mr. Jay's treaty" has been f the means of encreafing thfe public expence6 of the t United States enormously—and now—its oppofers are trying to persuade the people, that they never intended to set it aside 1 Let the people beware of I such -wolves, who are thus arraying themfebes in e 1 sheep's skins. £ With refpeft to the above letter, its authenticity J !. may well be doubted when the compof.tion is taken r into view. If is however singular that certain per- sons w\\a feel that (heir opposition to the treaty has ' rendered them odious to the independent and free 4 ' citizens of the United States should seek for apo logists among the English, whom they have been in the habit of abufirig for two or three years past. > Extractfrom a Ne-vj-HampJhire Paper. Prance has been ftiled the " torrid zone of libei- ' ' ty"—in such a climate the growth of -weeds mtift be luxuriant—and though our Jacobin naturalists are continually endeavouring to describe them as ' innoxious, we have abundant proof, that they are : impregnated with the most deleterious qualities, and like the poison tree of Java/would, if not checked, spread death and desolation over the fair eft country. From Paris papers .—Tranjlated for the Aurora. PARIS, June 7. , LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY. 1 ExtraS from the Oration delivered by the Prejident of the Popular Society of Milan, in the square of the Cathedral, the t ~jtb May, 4th year of the ; French Republic, and Jirjl day of Lombardian Liberty. , J. TO THE PF.OPT.K % , THE French have broken the fetters which for so many centuries have weighfed heavy on us ; they . have put to flight the cowardly satellites of the , Austrian tyrant, and by the valour of a free peo t pie we also become free. The emblems of liberty already wave in thp air. : This tree which we have just raised in the midd of 1 plaudits and of the transports of joy of an immenle , coneourfe of people, announces to alt our future re -5 generation. 1 ; Citizens, ; By this feftival, by these emblems, we declare - that we are free ; but shall we will to be free with . fufficient energy ? Shall we determine to imitate the 1 generous people that has driven away our tyrants; ; and shall we be animated by the sacred fire of Li . beity ; shall we prefer death to fubmiflion to a new ; yoke? Yes, Lombards! Let us swear to live free : or die. r Let us hasten, Lombards, to accomplish this 1 great work j let us declare unanimously, that we : will be free; let us (hew ourselves worthy of be ing free, and we shall be so in reality. Let Reli . gion and Liberty go hand in hand. Yes! Let Tyrants tremble at tha sacred name of liberty ; and far from submitting to new chains, let the vo racious Eagle return affrighted to his enslaved , country. (Signed) r CATTACfcO, President. D. Montegappa, Joseph Barrelli, ' Secretaries. Liberty, Equality, Safety to Pelrjons and Property. " CITIZENS LOMBA«CS, Lombarby, ci-devant Austrian Lombardy, after having experienced duiing so many centuries the I oppreflive yoke of a number of usurpers, who have , mauled it even to dedroying the name of its ancient 5 origin, has at last reverted into the hands of its ori ginal founders ; this country has ceased to be the patrimony of crime and tyranny. 1 People ,of Lombardy 1 Let us rife j let us turn with joy and admiration our view towards those bra/e Frenchmen, the scourge of tyrants,and let us acknowledge in them our fathers and deliverers. 1 They have not invaded with projects of avarice 1 and ambition. They neither wish to subvert our 1 religion, invade our property, nor endanger ou: 1 fafety ; their efforts are solely againd our natural- 1 enemy, whom we were obliged to call our sovereign, < he who.had so far debased us as to make us kiss the 1 chain he imposed. ! Let us awake, Citizens Lombards, the tyrant is < here no more, he has fled. Let us not delay a mo- I ment the naming 6f a national representation to ' take out of the hands of the mtinicipalities parti- j fans of oligarchy, the deposit of the Audrian feep tre. Let us establish a government founded on the t rights of man, which shall unite all classes into one ; family ; a government founded upon the principles ! of liberty and equality ; which (hall be the hope and solace of the poot hitherto oppressed and deba fed ; let us waufe to be heard at fad, throughout the crlobt, that the Lombards have resolutely determi ned to make themfclves a Country. the Popular Society of Milan^ FOR THE -GAZETTE OF THE UNITED STATES. MR. KENNO, THE instances of individual heroifnt in the French armies are worthy of being recorded, and , they do honor to the French Nation. There were J however as striking and extraordinary traits cf he roism and firtmiefs discovered by the officers and, soldiers of the American army during our r'evoltlti on-war, as were ever exhibited on the theatre of the Globe. An Officer of Artillery told me, that in one action with the enemy, every one of his ma- i troffes \yere either killed or wounded—and of thffe fvho survived, several were wounded in three and four different parts of the body early in the ac tion, and yet continued at their poll till it was en ded. in another adlion a ferjeant of Artillery continued at his gun, after receiving seven musket wounds from the shot of the enemy. Yours CHRONUS. GAZETTE OF THE VNITKD STATES MARINS LIST' PHILADELPHIA, Augujl *6. Arrivals at Bofton —Augujl 19. Schooner Two Friends, Capt. Cole, 25 days from Guadaloupe. Left there, Capt. Smith and Capt. HiggiiS of this port, Capt. Lunt in a schooner from Newburyport, and Capt. Horn in'a brig from do. Vejfels at St. Pierre (Itfart.) July 22. Brig Kimhley, Newharen ; Eliza, do. Kifby, Peggy,' Philadelphia ; Aurora, Plymouth : schoon ers, Trial, Ropes, Salem ; Sukey and Betsey, In gerfo, do. Hope, Batker, Ipswich ; brig Three Friends, schooners, Sukey, Newbu ryport ; Union, Goodhue, do. brig Ruby, do. schooners, Charlotte, Freeman, Portland ; Henry, Green, Boston; Betsey and Nancy, Cunningham, do. Vfjch at St. Croix, July 28ih, in addition tc the alovcmcntioned ucjfcls. Brig Hammet, Sally, Baltimore; schooners, , Boston ; Washington, Cooke, do. and a number of othq», names unknown. Vijfth at St. Thomas', July 3 1. Brig Betiey, Twonbley, Portsmouth j schooner Speedwell, do. (loop Lavinia, New-London, with a number of southern vefiels. June 29, was spoke brig Joseph, Capt. Babcock, from Chailefton, bound to the coast of Guinea, 20 days out, lat. 38, o, long. 39, o. August 20. Arrived schooner Rainhfow, Capt. Freeman, 15 days from St. Croix. Spoke, August 17, ship Dispatch, from this port, bound to the N. W. cojift, out 5 days. Sloop Defence, Cajst. Carver, 17 days from Marygalmite. Left there Capt. Rich, of Bo ston. August zx. Arrived brig Active, Capt. Snow, 57 days from Bourdeaux, failed in company with the brig Mary, Csjstr CWaiV—CtiaTteftovrrr. Litrft' 'there (hip Polly, Colwe'l,to fail in sor 6 days. Spoke bri^ , from Kennebunk, bound to Liverpool, 11 days out. New-Tork, August 25. Captain Barnes, of the schooner Ruthy, left at Grenada, 31ft July, the following vefltls— Ship Lydia,. of Boston, William Chipman, nta Iter, belonging to Benjamin Gray, and brig Sea Nymph, of Philadelphia, George Hasty, matter— both captured by the Thomas, of Dominico, Wil liam Bofworth, mailer. Brig Morning Star, Perkins, mailer, for Kenne bunk ; to lail in-three days. Brig Sally, Apton, of Salem { to fail soon, Brig Nancy, of Norwich ; veflel and cargo con demned and fold, for carrying on a trade in time of war, in a manner not allowed in time of peace. Brig Gayofo, Capt. J. Prince, of Philadelphia, from Cayenne, Surinam and Demarara, bound to Trinidad, for a market, with his outward bound 1 cargo on board, was taken by a British (hip of war, and carried into Grenada. On the Bth of August spoke the brig Two Sif ters, of Baltimore, at the entrance of the harbor of St. Thomas, from Berbice, having put in there in distress, on account of his crew being ficfe. TRIBUTE OF GRATITUDE. ON the 3 111 January, 1796, at half past •) o'clock in rhe evening, the American brig Friend ship, Capt. Afcough," in a violent gale, stranded on entering the port of Lisbon. The vefTel soon fill ed with water—in this fituawon we remained until 2 o'clock the 1 ext day. The officer commanding the round Castle, so called, had the goodness to ex hibit torch lights the whole night. In the morn ing at fun-rife he alarmed the Bellum Castle and the city by firing signal guns. The Sea at this ' time wjs so boisterous that n " entering on the Study of the Greek and Latin Languages. " Quo citius quo facilius, eo melius ".By James Hardie A. M. Teacher of the Greek and " Latin Languages"— j in conformity to the act of the Congrefi of the United States intituled, " An Aa for the Encouragement of • Learning by securing the Copies of Maps Charts and Books to the Authors and Proprietors ef such Copies S during the times therein mentioned. " Samuel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylv. No. 140. DiJlriß of Penrjlvania to tuit n BE it rememb.red that oh the 19th day of July In the • t twenty-firft year of the Independence of the United Stfttej of America, Tliorfias Doblon of he .aiddiftriit hath de posited in-this office the title ef a Book" the right whereof he claims as proprietor in the words following to wit ') " Unitarianifm explained and defended in a diltourfe " delivered ir the church of the Univerfalifts at Philade!- " phia 1796 By Joseph PrielUey, L. L. D. F, R. S. &c. lt •' That they might know thee the only true God and «■ Jesus Christ whom thou haft sent. John XVII. 3. " To us there is but one God the Father of wham are ' "-all things. II Cor. VIII. 6. ■a "By evil report and good report as deceiver* and yet - " true - a Cor. VI. 8. ] in conformity to the ad of the Congress of tke United States intituled " An A & for tht encouragement of learn ing by securing the copies of maps charts and books to the Authors and proprietors of such copies during the times therein mentioned." Samuel Galdviell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylv. '• No. (41. Ie DiJlriß of Pennfy/vania to iuit iJE it remembered that on the 19th Day of July in the 1? the twenty-firft year of the independence of the' United 0 States of America Thomas Dobfon of the said diftriA j hath deposited in this office th« title of a Book the right ; whereof he claims as proprietor in the words following r > to wit * " Discourses relating; to the evidences of repealed reli f. " gion delivered in the church of the Univerfalitb at |f "Philadelphia 1796 and publiffieH at the requtfft of ma "ny of the hearers. By Jofcph Priestley L. L. D. F. R "S. &c. &c. " Be ready always to give an answer to every man that " alketh you a reason of the hope that is in you. " 1 Pet 111. 15." in conformity to the aft of the Congress of the United 7 States intituled "An Aift for the encouragement of 1- learhing by securing the copies of maps charts and books n to the authors and proprietors of such copies during the [. times therein mentioned." ;i Samnel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Pennfylv. No. J42. Diflrid of Pemfyhania to tuft , BE it remembered that on the nineteenth day of July Q | in the twenty-firft year of the Independence of the United 3 States of America Thomas Dobfon of the said diftricSt hath deposited 111 this office the title of a Book the right K whereof he claims as proprietor in the words following to wit " Cor.fiderations on the do&rine of Phlogiston and the • " decomposition of Water—By Joseph Piieftlev, L. L. e "D. F. R. S. &c. &c. o " Qualem commendes etiam atque etiam afpice." 1. " Horace." in Conformity to the of the Congress of the United States intituled " An A6t for the encouragement of learning by securing the copies of Maps Charts °aad Books P to the authors and proprietors of such Copies dui jng thS e times therein mentioned " e Samuel Caldwell, Clk. Dift. Psnnfylv. S — —: d t or Charter ' TO THE WEST-INDIES, y 4-— =■ Ihe Snow HOPE, Capt. Rindge, now ready for a cargo, w Cirr y 2000 barrels. If not engag "• in ® ve dj y*' wiU freight for J Boston and Portland. d For terms apply to 4 . Samuel Breck ? jun. Roll's Wharf. Where may be had, A quantity of Boston Dvwc, Nos. i & 2, AUg. 16; djt'