Art. lit. AH the nobles fliall, in eight days-' Siting to/he public house of the commune, the pa pert, which prove only their nobility, to be there burnt. Ait. IV AW feudal authority is abolished-—al fa/ all exelufive privileges of hunting. Art\V. All armorials, liveries and other distinc tions of rank are abolished. Art. VII. Those who contravene the present & decree, (hall be considered as attached to ariltocra ey and enemies of the people. ' One of the deputies, Goleat Serbellofl, as he departed.for Paris, difchatged hirnfelf of his cham berlain's key,-confidering jj, he said, as a mark of .slavery. The new commiflary has, by proclamation, or dain.ed that all persons indebted to government or power* at war with France, or to emigrants,, (hall render an account of the sums due. Another pro clamation orders an inventory to be made of all the moveables belonging to the church. Our correspondent at Hamburgh, whose infor mation may be relied on as authentic, under the date of July 8, communicates the following parti culars— The French were mailers of Upper Italy, except the citadel of Milan, which they were preparing; , to assault. The repott of th? loss of 8000 French, at a pass on the Adige, was a falihood propagated in some Imperial gazettes, and universally be lieved for some days in Germany ; designed pro bably to aid" the spirits of the Auftrians, when marching to Wetzlar to encounter General Kleber. The Anltrian general put an end to the truce, at the moment the conspiracy of Baboeuf an. Droutt was to have been executed in Paris, and relying much on the cffe6t of that plot. The dif eovery of it threw the Auftrians Into Cqnflernation —as it did also some of the Orleans party, who are emigrants, in the north of Germany. The French a:lrty on the Lower Rhine made a Tapid progress—all the villages were deserted be fore them—The archduke crossed the Rhine and Jordan pursued him. - The battle of Wetzlar, in which the aichduke bent his force to affifl War < tenfleben, fucreeded/ and a few days afiei, the. action at Ukeradt, which was (till m<rv severe, ami in which and a'her aflions the German ac COlltitJ declare, the French have loft in killed wounded, 16,000 men. General Jourdan seemed not to lend any aflift ance to General K.eber, and in the fame irae Gen Moreau made a fpi it ed attack on the li--es near Manheim, and drove the A.uftri ns to the Rhine Cattle, near Manhcim, on the left, or weft fide of the river. These were ma< ceuvres to aid the main point; that of eroding the Rhine at Strafburgh.—. •This has forced prince Charles to fall back with his main body. By this (tep the army *f the prince of Conde is entirely tut off from a communication with the Aultrian army; and must retire to the fouthealt or inner part of Suabia, or fall iato the hands of the French. ' On ihe 24th ef June, at Strafburg, it was given out that Moreau was intended to reinforce the Ita lian army, and provisions were ordered from a3 far {is Savoy. Suabia is a rich fruitful country, its inhabitants numerous, and well affected to the French revoluti on—it abounds aifo with rich abbeys and monalte ries. [Gi«od picking for Republicans.3 The French occupy Raltadt and Ofienburg, be low Strafburg—the northern army of the Auftri ans is retiring, a pas de geants, as our correspon dent ex*preffes it, with gigantic (tricles. Gen. Kleber and Lefevre have ,again crofiVd the Sie'g—aijother divifiou' was bombarding NeUwied * cn the' Rhine, and would soon reercsis. that river. WarenfleuWn was retiring on the fame mure as be fort, towards Wc ziar. The environs of Marihrim have been evacuated by he French army of the Sambre and Meufe. which was fupoofe*! to be marching to Suabia. On ihe 2d of July the head j quarter, of prime* Charles wrre to beat Schwetfin- | gei,near HMdilbtr^. At Riftadt the French pof- ' fefled themselves of the iargeft Aultrian magazine.) The French were to occupy Leghorn on th<* 19th June, and were probatly at Rome eaily in July. At that time aKo, 80,00. French were marching towards Frankfort. Gen. Bucinaparte, fix years ago, was a fiudent at Pari*, a tlniverfity in th» Milanese, from whfch he was expelled on account of his principles of li berty, and a fort of infurie£tion among the stu dents. r The empress of Rtiflia has given the Diet of Ra tifbon to understand, (he cannot loeik-with indiffer ence on the difiolution of the Germanic, body, and their abandonment of the emperor. This is mere parade,"for (he has given the Dutch the right to t rade to Petersburg, as formerly. The duke of Brunfwi. k's Pruflian army of ob fervation, will preserve the north of Germany from invasion. His head quarters are a Mindtn. The Pruflian king pretends thus to preserve the neiltrali * tyof the north ; while his real motives are proba hly to make himfelf ufeful and necessary to the nor thern circles, and get his army maintained at the es penfe of Lower Saxony. Great Britain begins to fliow more refpeft so neu tral powers. She has restored the (hi, s captured from Denmark. An English man.of waT was latfer ly condemned tp pay all colts and return to their former ft it ion, forae French cutters and prizes she had-taken in a harhor of Norway. The French have taken off the embargo from Hamburg (hips, and paid for the detention. The officers in the fervire of the re public cf Holland, having I carnt, or the fubjeft c the revolution which has t ken place at Curacao, some tilings related contrary to tru h, felt themlelv.-s • compiled to -take the enft'omary mode of traiqui 'zing the m 'nds of those who have commercial bu fiuefs with the inhabitants of .hat island.. itKe the revolution in Holland, ihe land farce t .e two frigates ftalioned at Cura ao, in ccii •o.rr.ity with the orders they had received tinm tl fie.. government, have always guarded vh» ftft'y c * in that Island, auU maintained good -. ■ .' ' i ■■- .■. ' "V ' ' order until the tjth of August la ft, on which day ail the garrifwn Jifcharged. In a few minutes af ter the publication of the new conltitution, the sol diers disbanded themselves and refufed to fervear.y longer ; they broke their arms and fold them to the people of color. Whereupon the officers saw a croud of armed people, composed of inhabitants of the isle, strangers and people of color, enter the fort and seize the magazines, arsenals, &c. The officers were insulted with impunity. By favor of some generous citizen*, they were taken under the protection of the burgesses, and the under figne.l, with full permission of the governor of the isle, and the high council, as well as of the comtnandant'of the *Wo frigates, quitted the Island to place them selves out of the reach of infultsfrom the people of color. D<- Wefteholt, Captain C >mmandant. Pringlr, Capt. Commandant. R. G Pleghei*, Lieutenant. L. H Pei ret Gentil, Ensign. J L. Matile, Ensign. W. H Quaft, Adj't. of Artillery. , New-York, Sept. 13, 1796. TYRoiujune 26. ' Several trench spies have been discovered in the Tyrolefe, some of them hove been hanged : among them was a republican major, disguised as a Capu chin. On the 17th, an action took place near! Mofitebaldi, between our advanced polts and the French troops, in which an Anftriao picquet of 20 men was made prisoners ; but the French were-at last obliged to retire with the loss of 200 men. INSPRUCK, J;ine 21. General Beatilieu has been ted commandant of Galicia. M. ae Mallas was to have command d the Italian army, ad interim ; but as he is ill at Botierf (in the Tyrol) general Beaulieti continues the command till the arrival of marshal W urmfer. LONDON, July 12, Letters were on Friday received in town from Jerfcy, (taring, that that island had been thrown into a considerable degree of alarm, in confequence 1 of information rereived there from St. Maloes, dating, tftat general Hoche, who has been employed for some months pad in bringing the war with she Chouans to a conclusion, is now forming a camp of 15000 men in the environs of St. Maloes ; and has put every filhing and other small veffe] in that port 111 requisition. All embargo has been laid on til the vefFels in thai port. The object of this expedition is aVowcdlv again It the island of Jersey ; and on Monday last, the go vernor of that island thought' fit to issue a notice, stating the intelligence he had received, End caution ing the inhabitants to be on their guard. Orders to the fame cfft£l were also given to the njilitary. July 13. It is positively a fa£t, that the seal partizans of the house at Orange, now m the unfortunate Duu-> republic, ire at least ninety in every hundred of lire people ; but they are afraid of cotirfe to discover their sentiments, or indeed to fiiffer the flightcft liint of those sentiments to escape them. None but the mere rabble of the Dutchmen, withot; pi •■■i'frouf advocate^ for the French ; and they are in the French pay for the purpose of diffufihg French doctrines, and keeping the refpe&able order of Dutchmen in sub mission and terror! GUILDHALL, LONDON. Monday, July 4. GftLBSMIt) aga'ltijl DICKhNSON. This was an adtion breught by Mr. Goldfmi against the defendant, for damages, sot having said of the plaintiff, at the Itock exchange, that he proniifed to be answerable foi tbe expence of print ing, &c. the forged L'Eclair, which falfely ao uounced a Convenrion [between the Emperor and the Fiet ch Republic in February last (thecircum fiances of which are now full before the publfc,) whereby the plaintiff said he was injured fn fame and reputation, Sec. That it was done mali/ciouf ly, &c. to effect his ruin, &c. To plaintiff's da-, mage 20000. The defendant pleaded two pleas; firft, That he was not guilty, as stated in the plaintiff's decla rition, Sec. iecondly, That he was jurtifted in what he said, he having been told so by others, &c. To this there was a replication, that the defendant was jultilied in what he said, Sec. j On the part of the plaintiff, Mr. Erlkine exert ed his talents with his usual zeal and eloquence, and called his evidence, vtho proved that the substance of what was complained of'was uttered by the de- I fendant. / On behalf of -the defendant, Mr. Serjeant Adair made a very abfe speech, and called some witnesses, but they did not come up in their evidence to the cafe he opened for bis client. Mr. Erfkine mad^a very animated reply on be i half of the plaintiff. i Lor 1 Kenyon summed ap the cafe, and made ; many ob)ervatioii6 on the whole of th« cafe ; after Which the Jury retired, and having remained out of court about 40 minutes returned with a verdict for the Plaintiff—Damages 1500!. ' . VULGAR PREJUDICE. A few weeks since, a lady in Dublin, who labour ed under an acute and obftinSte fever, w sattended by an eminent physician, who found it necessary to exert his Utrtioft (kill, and prescribe the molt pow erful medicines, but without any apparent effedt— and with some astonishment saw his patient exhauf ied almost to death, in despite of all his (kill ; at leucTth some flight symptomS of a crisis appearing he ordertfd some dr-tighis to aid exhausted nature, and calling in the evening to know how they had operated, was informed his patient was dead ! On entering the chamber, he saw several women occupied in walhing the body/and preparing it for -he lift of the ohfecjuies ; and aceidently calling his. eyes toward" the windr w, observed iA the casement if one of the shutters not only the bottles he had rderod that day in the state they came from ch> ;*thecsry's, untouched, bst all ti'ie medicine he had pr»fcrib6dfor a fortnight before ! On interrogating the nur.fe-tender, the an/wer was, " tliat she thought it a fin to teize the poor Ldywithfuch nnufeous tralh, or to be making a p<sUekerry's (h;>p her belly." On a closer infpedtion of the body, the vital warmth did not feern <Juite extin£t ; a very faint pulft- almost imperceptibly throbbed at her temples and wiifts, and the application of a mirror before her mouth atd nollrilSj evidently (Trowed that res pira ion was not gone. The body was inftantlv put into a warm bed, and by the application of proper cordials, reltored to life in less than three houts, and to perfect health in lefsthan a month, to the in , expressible joy of the lady's family and friends ; hut the poor lady had the to find herfrlf deprived of a mod beautiful and luxuriant head >>f hair, which the witches of death had (horn off, in their hurry to fit her tor the coffin. NEW-YORK, September 14. The brig Mary, <!apt. Ware, wliuh artived yes terday afternoon, left Bourdeaux the lß.h July — By a eentiemao who came pafenger, we do not learn that any occurrence had taken place later than* we have aheady accounts of. We are promised some papers, from which if they should be fouVid to contain any thing new, we (hall give extracts to morrow. ' 1 Died, in this city on Friday evening last, aVout IO o'clock, arter an illness of 13 days, Mr. JO SEPH SADLER, a native of Great Horfely, 1 tar Colchester, Efiex, England ; of a refpedtahle family there, and much eftcetned and regretted here by his friends and acquaintance. At Philadelphia ..n the 12th inft. Mr. WILLIAM FAIRLEY, after a (hort illnels, of the house 0/ Robins and Fairley, merchants of this city. "*" "—■**—mi—i t n A,,t m > GAZBT%R Of THE t/MITKD STATES MARINE VIST PHILADELPHIA, Stpttmicr i£. arrived. Days Schooner Williams, Hugene, Virginia 5 Patsy, Hugene, do. 4 Sally, Baum, North-Carolina 4 Sea-flower, Williams, db. 4 Betsey, Aftiby, do 4 Sloop Sallyj Potter, , Richmond j Brig Sulanna, Parrock returned. CLEARED. Ship Lovina. Brown, > Cork Brig tark. Odlcot St. Thomas Schooner Chriflcy, Brown, Edeiiton Sloop Jane, J?vkfon, New-York Arrived at the Fort, Ship Richmond, , Martinique Schooner Lovely Lass, Gribbing, Weft-Indies Good Intent, Hathoway, St. Bartholo mew's And a sloop, name unknown. Ship Ariel, Terris, of Philadelphia, from Phi ladtlphia to Surrinam, is takenjand carried into M r. i iqifc, where she lay when the Richmond failed, ■yhe Riolvtn'or.d' and carpo. were unconditionally- li berated, without any reltri£tjonS. Baltimore, September 13. ExtraA from the Log Book of the ship Rebec ca, ariived on Sunday last. Left at Hull. Adventure, Swain, of New York, about half loaded—and A Kennebei k velfcl, unknown, just arrived, and would lail for Bolton. July 27, lat 46, 42, long. 22, sf, spoke ship I <dullry, Fletcher, last from Norfolk, bound to Havre-da-Graee, out 28 days, all well. Sept. 1, lonp, 65, lat. 36, 15, spoke a ship from Bolton, bound to St. Bar:hol<-rr.» ws , it blow ing hard, conld learn neither reflel's or captain's name. 2, lat 36, 35, long. 69, 34, spoke ship John, cap'. Jackfo.*, of and fiom Philadelphia, hound to Hamburgh, out 7 days, all well. Extradl of a letter from the log-Eook of the snow Eli za, arrived on Sunday last. July 91, lat. 47, long. 15, spoke (hip Venus, Sprigg, from VVifcafiet, bound to Liverpool, out 24 days, ail well. . 'August 16, lat. 43, 5, long. 45, spoke (hip Juno, capt. Taggett,from New-York, hound to An.lierdam, out r5 days. August 15, lat. 36, 44, long. 6a, fy>oke an Englilfo (hip from Barbadoes to Liverpool, out 24 ays. Sept. 3, lat. 36, 45 long,. 69, i"p ke (hip Be.ky, Capt. Cunnyngh >m, of and from Bait.more to out 3 days, all well. / New Yoßk, September 13 ARRIVED, v days Ship Hope/Angelico, Madcita ■ — ' Brig Trio, Jacobs, J 'mdica 25 Chatham, Gieenfield, St. Ann's 18 Raven, —, Trinidad 25 •Eliza, Dunham, Savannah 8 Friends, Johnson, Honduras Bay 30 Calliope, Leonard, Curracoa 23 Schr; Eagle, Borden, Montego-Bay 32 Sophia, Stapelden, ,Charleston 12 Hope, Horace, St. Bartholomews 19 Robinson Crufoe, Church, Jamaica 35 Sloop Commerce, Leer, Martinique 20 Sailed in company with the (hip Henrietta,capt.. Williams bound to Falmouth, and parted with her fafe through the gulph llream. Sept em' er 14. AK RIVED. Brig Mary, W are, Bourdeaux Nymph, Miller, , Senegal Sloop Hannah, Wright, Savannah Schooner Harriot, Bioud, Port au-Princc. CLEARED. Brig Minerva, Wheeden, Welt-Indies Schooner Two Ftiends, Brooks, Martinique Capt.-Miller, arrived yeiterday from Senegal in 47 ''-ay- % 'Spoke Sept. 7, the brig Jamaica Packet, J hn Jay, mailer, from J .maica bound* to Liverpool, one f the Jamaica fleet, parted in a gale of wind, lat. 35 46, Ipng. 65. ' \ 1 I >V ' • r Sept. t2, shout 2oleapues south of Sancfy-fioak r spoke a froop from New YorL und to tin Waft a Indies, could not leaf nI he v<-(Tr] or mailer's name. Capt. Clarke- n the brit? Somerf«t, of New il York, failed in company with apt. Miller from t Senegal. s Capt. Smith, in the fchooi er Caroline, of Bolton e failed from Senegal fo r Hamburgh, A days before I" capt. M. t The brig Jenny, of New-York, cupt.. Dauhijjne, r and schooner Rambler, capt. Prefofcle,#f B Ron, i, expected to fail soon, from Senegal, for their res- ports. t The fchr. Fell, it y, capt. Cozine, armed at Se f negd, from New-Yoik, a few days befor cai-t. M. f failed. » — .!■ r—» STOCK Si' Six pet Cent. *•», - *17/^ Thnc per Cent. ------- . to/7 4. per Cent. - - none for sal;. * - \y lafl.pric4 ~ per Cent. ... i(,,6 't Deferred Six per Cent. - ' - to 7 ii BANK United States, .... ao pr. cent. Psnnfylvania, ■* <• - 27 — North merica, ... >46 .*1 Insurance Comp. North-America, 40per cent. ad*-„ Pennsylvania, S percent. It courSf of exchange. I. On London, at 30 days, per £.xco fieri, pa/. ——1 at 60 days, par to l6t i-i e . " 11 at9odaysi 161 a i6i i-a c Amsterdam, 60 days, per guilder, 44 90 days, 40 I I 1 —I^—M— J Washington Lottery. The 20th and sift Days Drawing is arrived at th 4 Office No. 334, Market-street. Sept. 1s- Information ~~ IS given daily of the drawing of the WASHINGTON LOTTERY, at the Office No. 147 C.htfnutJlrect, 3 between Fourth and Filth Greats. Also, whre Ticket! may yet be had. Sept. 15. r.f The aoth and 41ft Days drawing is arrived 4 Just Landed, 5 96 Bags of Prime Coffee, Entitled to drawback, tor Sale at 1217, South csecond-flrect. k Sept. 15. *d$ 18 ■ 1 ! T f '' One Hundred Dollars Reward. QOME villainouji person or p rfons having, in the fright O of the 7Xh*inft. broken and much injured the Marble . ic Steps at Mr. Pierce Butler's door in High flrett, No* - s IT5>1 T s> above sum of 100 dollars will be paid immedi ately to any one who will discover the perpetrator or ' } perpetrators, so- that he or they may be apprehended. '» Apply to ' PIER 1 E BUTLER, Or SAM. MAGAW. Sept. 15. "tf&mj i * —' —• r- Rofs and Simfon . Hive for Sale, A few calks • Of an excellent quality, And a parcel of Lampblack. c- Sept. 14. ji A Manufactory FOR SALE. |f A Valuable SO P and C \NDLK Manufa&or < . filiate in a Convenient part ol the city ; ihe works alroolt new, nn an entirely original conltr 6li,>n, and built o) he bell IQ materials, and mn be fct to work immediately. P.-rfons who wilh to pure hale, ate requited to app<y at No 273, _ South Second Street. September >3. t t f tf " —lj —»-—.—1 , 1 tm p Mordecai Lewis ' a * H'S ' 0R SJLE., ' s NANKEENS, long aid &ort. China, well alTorted. QuicklllveT. P DiaperS J > Baftas. > Coflas. i. Bandano Handkerchief. Roll Brimstones r, Sept. 6. tt&fxm .1 —- w For sale by the fublcribers, '» IN Pt NN-STREEI, '> 136 quarter Cheils frelh Hyson Tea ; . ii>o ditto do. frefh Souchong Tea; 300 Boxes China, containing (mail tea setts of 4* pieces; '> 400 pieces Bandano^s. L ' Willing; y Francis. January 36 tt&f 3 — TO BE SOLD, That Neat and Convenient House> WHEREIN th. so fcriber now lives. There are lour • rooms on a floor : the house is two stories high 5 with a good garret above : under the whole is an excell -8 ent cellar, with a dry well, in whicl? ' 8 a convenient j framed chamber f«r preserving meat, butter, &c. in warm y ' weather. Attached to the house is a Stable for three horf«, hay-los , granary, and carriage-house, a wood -0 yard paved with Hone, and a garden with foil of a fine 3 quality. An iridifputable title will be made to the pur -2 chafer. For farther-particulars apply to the subscriber in 2 Princeton, or. in her abl'ence to Thomas U. Johnson, tfq. or the rev. SamHel S. Smith. y ANN WITHER-POON. 5 PriilcctOß, Aug 24. sUwrO o ■ Plans of the city ot Philadelphia, r Including the Northekn Libekii t s and diflriA of SoUThWAR K , Publilhed, and fold hy ' BENJAMIN DAVIES, * No. 68, High street, " ( Price one dollar.) h THIS plan is 16 inche fqoare, and has been enj graved by one of the tirft artists In the city, from a lats and accurate ftirvey. Purchasers are entitled to a pam« rs phlet with each plan, giving " some account of the K , city, its population, trade, government, &c. n July tuf&ftf A Handsome, well-Droltt ;; SADDLE TORSE, For Sale, enquire at the Contftogo Stable's, the owner 5 having no life for hint. Aug. a* tEL&fJVf
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