TS-*. —— i , , PHILADELPHIA, fJCCXDA r EVENING, SEPTEMBER, it. DEATHS li/ fftrs art. 6n §at'?i\jay liijl, James E\vlng,'o/ tot Jhip America. A fc*x dapJitiit, Mr. Peter Serafendikei Oft Saturday tinning, in Mis, Hin's Court, nftir pock ahd Second J{t:cct, Mr. Timothy Rutfeil, Printer, ahd a fndy and he? Daugh ter, lately arrived from England. Yejlerday morning, Mr. Nathaniel- Bar nett, of North Thirdflrett, and Mr• George DarmSn, of the Cuflom Houfti The OoveTnrtr of Charleston "has issued a proclamation offering a reward of One Thou sand Dollars to any- person •who may give information which may lead to thedifcovery of the principles or accomplices in a plan, ■which he has reason to suppose is earried on, for making secret iiiiiftments for improper and illegal purposes. CO M WUNICATIO V. S-nie vcfTet, illy e»<>sgh employed, wafted over foßeflort, a turbulent Paddy, who was perrnitre-i Kv pood will of the oiptain, and sft r earned soli citation a land, (unhappyin belngcho fen tor jr. afvlu-n hy too maTy ft oundrels) as a tlecr age vi(Tcn;»ft. This hoir-hred Cub lud no fnoner fct foot In Airleriea, than he gave nat that he fled fror* govs rrnienta' to for,era! himfelf for nruty w. j eks previous to his di parture—Though it is,a well known ftfl that he came down on board the vcCcl daily, for wunv d yspr-violl* to her failing. Having thus e*citod aJittle attention by dubbing himfelf a prrftcutii pa tricl, he loon became emboldtncd to the greatest height of impudence and as it is the prerogative of his inture, to feel no lack of afTurame, be soon, by tl.u hrlp 6 r a number of turbulent and fa&ions demagogue', set up an IriQl daily paper, which, during the short time it laded, was sedulously im proved in impudently ctlumniating that govern tnent, nnder tbe protection of whose lenient hind the pcnnylefs Pad y had met a refuge from flarva tion : 1 his, naturally, soon died ; and our booby became an underftrapp r to a f (3'ous Theatre ef taMJlVd by a vile crew of Ja obias. Here he produced an Irish tragedy- ("Thin day at eve I'll meet thee here again") but the few filly pud- tfaped and flared at the wil : phantasms of his lunatic brain, arnufmg at length their b mifte 4 senses kicked the tiagedy. together with Mr. P-iddy, into contempt. Thus he failed here— hr spite of allhi« Tudiet at Trinity Colkge, from which, however, by his own flunid eonfailion, it epp ars he had been expetle with contumely and tU£j;: ace. A short time flnce, he informed th. pub lie, in the trnth-lovisg Chronicle, that he was in volved in debt, and designed to tax. their juries With another tragedy, whereby he means to pay his debts vid transport his filthy carcase rack agrin to that I»nd, from which he was driv en by gtvcrvmr4.il perfnation ~t We is valouroufly going t» dive into the LnnV mouth, and his n :w Irifk tragedy, by the fubli.Tte litctary feaft it is to afior.i his gaping creditors, is to compensate all their deinan is. 1 his insolent intruder could not cjuil the foil to which he has already too long ben a pollution ; without a rew l'pecimen of Jacobin-Irish Impu &nce. He hands to the Lying Chronicle a mess of botheration and nonsense, which even their ftuptd intellects perceived to he unworthy of publication But net* light beiig thrown upr.n the fubj:3, pro bably by the additron of a little C ash to th" com munkation, by forae friend of the needy citizen, the ill '.crate ard heterogeneous hodge-podge is 6 na' y thrust upon the puhlie. Independent of the chara<fter upon whom these dirty off i'o,nrin ;« of the kennels of Jacobinism are h- aped,bsing a iif tinfuifhed public servant, the intrirific infolei ce ol tone, and knldmfs of public insult, mull arouse the true American bl«od in the veins of every man who lus net too great a contempt for the worth less bully t» notice him. These raftals will ky ana by turn u out of our own ho -f t, and take pof ftffion of our goods and chattels, in th« name of liberty and equality. Indeed it 1« high time to re pel their unbridled insolence, and o hu'l hack in their teeth their own vile calumnies The lying Chronicleers who preoounced -he Irish nonsense in the firft inflanc* to be unworthy even their own proflituted anJ dir'y pages, have since informed their readers, that it ought to be read to the chil dren, aiul deposited among the vatuakli papers of •very citizen. The whole piece discovert a brutal ignorance, and a total üßXcquaiiitance with chrnn obgy—'• Cicero and Demotthenes" with other in flancts of the fame kipd, abound in the stupid medley of fcurrilit/ and impudence. Cato'i tam ijbmnl is l'poken of in another place; hat it is ftonp ing too low to criticise on so paltiy and con empti ble a produflion.—Regard for the laws ia the sole confederation which could save the puppy frpm a lcick'd hreech or a wholcfome flagcllatiau of the horsewhip. " Learn, mangy cur, who 'tis youfiiarl at, " You fpur.ging, funAion-lacVing varltt ; " Though fools are hcens'd flaaderers " This may not save your forfeit ears." «' Dear spirit of our happy clime, " With Star deck'd tiara and port sublime, " Canst thou believe, oh ! Goddess blest, '* Such Stygnn fiends thy realtii infelt ? " Me*; such against thy ray ferane " Do darkling howl with wolfi'h spleen, " And wish to fee th.-e crucified, " Thy ftamlefs garments to divide." " Can he who 'gainst his country rais'd •' His impious arm, by us he prais'd ? " No ; rath r, each Colupii'ian briafl " The vagrant catifF will detest, " Can he who made the law hi< foe " At hom.\ with us b* faithful ? No ; " The doij that bit his master there « Walks in a longer tether here." From the NEIV-TOSK GAZETTE, W/. EXTRACTS, tranflaled for this Ga%etU, from the Hi/lory of Crimes, committed during the French Revolution, jufl publijhed at Pa ris, in fix volumes o3avo. Volume ijl, page \fl. " Others (of the proconsuls sent into the different departments) put in requisition the best wines, and expressly forbid all citizens to buy any thing in the markets until they had supplied their tables with the greatelt rarities, and those of the ftaff-offieers of the revolutionary army which accompanied < them." " We have seen those rascals abuse their authority, I will not fay to fcduce, tor it is ! necessary to please in order to corrupt, but to violate their young and innocent prison ers, tp wrejl from them those precious fa- ; vors which love reserves only for love. Some 1 of those prifoaers, rich and interesting, but < subdued by terror, have been seen to give J ' their trembling hands to their executioners. ; i Ala» ! some of those marriagee formed un- | i der fueh fatal auspices, have been fometiroes ' i ufcful to , humanity. They stopped the i blood which flowed on certain occasion*." ■ ] it {t would not have been prudent to r t '- { fufe their alliance, as many of them guillo-, t t|ucd tlw fathers fcr having refufed their j t aaJgKters in narriage, whether to them selves, or their fon9." One of them diftinguiihed himfelf by i deed (till more a'i'ociouS, -if possible. He arretted a number of farmers. The pretext r* was, they had not paid their civifc gift.—»• Their unhappy wi<fes, at the feet of the pro t cftnful, solicited the liberty of their lidf binds. ■' Let them pay the sum they owe ' and they shall be free." " But what shall we do ? We are poor and cannot." «« Bor row—do as yon please ; but no liberty tin lefs you bring what I demand of you . They went out : in fine, at the end of fomi; days, after having cxhaufted eve'/y possible refoiirce, they brought the sum. Go—fays ! he to them, in three days you will fee your _ husbands. Alai ! what is th« firft obje£t , on going out \fhich strikes their view ? It p was' their husbands going to the fcaffold, by cJrder of the monster ; to whose house they ( , went in tears. lam very sorry for it, fays . he ; very serious denunciations have' been produced to me against them; you your fdves are very happy nrrt to have shared the fame fate. The stroke was too strong ; the ■ nlimber was too griat—he was denounced I to the committee of pubucjifety. The ' | proconsul was summoned to give an account ! of his condu6t. One of his friends expressed j some apprehensions of the result.—" This I affair," answered he, " will be soon ir -1 ranged ; I will carry some money to the ' committee." He was right ; one of the members declared that the denunciation was I ill-founded, and the tyrannical monster was continued in mission. " Others depopulated whole communes, loaded multitudes of carts with human vic ' tims, from the great grandfather to the child in the cradle, and sent them to the slaughter house, established by the revolu tionary tribunal of Paris." " Brave repub lican," wrote they to Fouqu'cr Tiaville— Brave republican ! (the villains !) —" Brave republican, I fend you game for the guillo tine, which soon I hope will be taken out of the bags, and they sent back for more. Take courage, support your energy ; we will not let you want employment." " One Twote to the committee of public fafety, to complain to it that the law rela tive to the military tribunes, was not adapted to empty the prisons promptly, and that the guillotine loft its prey." " Another Wrote to his colleague : " The guillotine continues to operate with full force. I yefttrday caused 28 to be ex pedited in the commune of " « In three days it will begia its exploits here - '.' This colleague answered him : I dined with ■ Robefpierrte yesterday, when we received your letter, we laughed heartily ; go on as you have begun—be not alarmed ; the guil lotine ought to move more rapidly than ever." " Another said, in a popular society : " The society reproaches me with being too tender, too moderate ; they shall, damn me, they shall fee,, if I am not soon at the sum mit."—-The fawe caused a mother and her daughter to be arretted in a promenade, cau sed them to be ttripped, and run his hand down one of their throats, under a pretext of her reading counter-revolutionary works," " Some fans-culottrs complaining to a priest who was pro-consul, that they had no work and that they were in the greatett mi sery. This scoundrel of a senator said to them : " YOll are damnation fools ; don't you know some rich persons? denounce them to me ; I will have them guillotined, and give you their property." One of them answered : " Representative, I have a wife and five children, and am without bread ; Well, I would rather that myfelf and my family should die of hunger, than to givf them bread at that price. The rich of my neighborhood have always supported my an- j e;ft<»rs and myfelf, by paying us well for our labor ; I will not repay their goodness with the fouleft, blackett aft that can be committed." M A carrier of the mail faying tb one of those proconsuls, that the roads were very bad, that he had much trouble in getting horses, was answered : " Address yourfelf to the representatives near the armies, it is ! their business j mine is to cause heads to j be cut off." " The fame wrote to an administrator of J thp diftrift t " Take courage, take energy, do not leave at liberty a single man of wealth or talents." And he answered to a keeper of the prison, afked permiflion of him to get the prisoners shaved : " I will have them shaved, fays he, with the national ra zor." He put on his .door the following infeription : " Those who enter here to so licit the enlargement of the prisoners, will only go out to be put in a state of arrefta tion." His agent 3 obCerved to him the ho experi.nced in feeding the pri soners, from the amazing quantity of them: Oh ! damn them, give them a wooden bowl of verdigtis, let them eat that or nothing." " No, No, criej another, we must make them soup in a large copper kettle ; we will throw therein a quantity of verdegris, it will be thought to have come from the kettle." " Another agent wrote : " I am at pre len< grand seigneur, I cart offer to my friends every day, 011 leaving the table, a large dish of mens heads." " A commander of a detachment of the revolutionary army, who was under the or ders of those proconsuls, transmitted the I words following as the order of the day : PILLAGE, RALLYING, HOR ROR." JIKMJJIKS. Truth begins to appear ; already in the ' above work has she broken her chains and 1 begun to tear off the veil from the ciious 1 of the Jacobins, and to expose them to the i view of the .world in all their horrid defor- 1 mity. France is expressing the (hnrne it 1 feels in haVing givep birth to such monllers ( and in fuffering so long a time the scourge infiifted on her by him.,. Americans fym- 1 p»ilfaized with France in her struggles a- r gainst the combination against her; the t freedom of the press being totally desTroy- t cd, and, the tlirt&wa and controul 1 1- jof the party dominant, oh tins fide \ the Atlantic, were ignorant to -What extent y j the honors of the Jacobins extended. Lit e tie did we think, that REGULATED t i LIBERTY, that firft idul of our hearts, - that objedt dearer to us than life, and with >- ; out which life itfelf is, a burden, was daily f- | bathed and almost drowned in the blood of e her most virtuous and zealous worshippers 11 by hypoerites abusing and adling in her name—Now that we know the truth, 1- ought not such among us who have advo cated every measure adopted by the different 9 fa&ioas, who have governed France for e eight years pas!, candidly to confefs that s they had not till now the most distant idea r of the exceffe6 to which things were cSr ;l lied, and of the danger to which CIVIL t LIBERTY was exposed in creating an y sbhorrence to it among the French them j selves ? Ought not our " exclusive patri -8 join the French people in execrat n iri{( the raonfters, who have tyranized over - France and drenched her in the blood of e her bed citizens ? Ought they not particu e larly to Join the Legijlativc Body in con i demning the conduit of the jacobinic Di e re&ory> with rofpect to their treatment of t this country ? JTo, my fellow citizens, we 1 have fiends among us, who, with patricidal s look and fatarrnic grin, have expressed satis - fadtion at all the losses we have sustained i from fm arbitrary, villainous order of the '■ Executive of a foreign nation, which the s people of that country have themselves s pointedly called a piratical decree." Let no fueh men be trusted either in , public or private life—they are not radical - ly found. It is remarkable that not an : American privateerfman in France, not a : traitor who has been in public office and - betrayed and attempted to betray the in - terefts of his country, but what has befcn - a diforganizer, an enemy to our national e jrovrnment—to virtuous Federalists - who have administered it, and adtive .pro t naoters arid insolent approvers of French de . prtdatio*s on our property. On the con» e trary, I defy our Jacobins to produce a fin e's friend to our federal conflitution and c its hitherto virtuous adminiflration, who - has been concerned diredtly or indirectly in 1 privateering under French colours agatnft : their countrymen, or who has abdfed the sacred trull reposed in them as public offi - ceri. N No, my fellow countrymen, you 1 j will find privateerfmen and traitors only - among the " EXCLUSIVE PATRI -1 OTS," the revilers of Washington, Adams, ' and fom« other real friends to their country 1 and civil liberty : It is high time to detach 1 yourfelvei from them, and rally round the 3 friends of Virtue, Order, and Federalism. 1 FRENCH CRUELTf. HOM THE HISTORY OF THE FIVE INDIAN NATMNS OF CANADA. > " The Count dc Frontenac waspierced to , the heart, when he found that he could not • revenge these terrible inenrfions of the Five • Nations ; and his anguifhmade him guil.y of • such a piece of rtlonftrous cruelty, in burn l ing a prisoner alive after the Indian manner, f as though I have frequently mentioned to have been done by the Indians, yet I fore -1 bore giviug the particulars of such barbarous 1 afts, fufpedting it might be too offenfive to • Christian ears, even in the history of fava » ge». Here however I think it ufeful to give : a cfrcumftantial account of this horrid ait, 1 to, shew on one hand, what courage and re -1 folution,-virtue, the love of glory, and the 1 . love of one's country can instil into men*6 ! minds, even where the knowledge of true 1 religion is wanting ; and on the other hand, ' how far a falfe policy, under a corrupt religi r on, can debase even great minds. The Count dc Frontenac, condemned two •! prifouers of the Five Nations to be burnt ■ publicly alive. The Ihtendant's lady in i treated him to moderate the fentcnce, and : the Jesuits, it is said, used their endeavours I for the fame purpose. But the Count de Frontenac said, there is a necessity of ma king such an example to frighte® the Five ' Nations from approaching the plantations, I fihoe the indulgence, that had hitherto been 1 i shewn, had encouraged them to advauce 1 with the greatest bofdnefs to the very gates los their towns ; while, they thought they ' f run ao other risque, but of being made pri ' foners, whire they live better than at home. He added, that the Five Nations having burnt so many French, juftified this me thod of malyng reprisals. But with sub mission to the politeoefs of the French nati on, may I not ask, whether every (or any) horrid-aftion of a barbarous enemy, can juf tify a civilized nation in doiag the like ? When the governor could not be mo ved, the Jesuits went to the prison, to in ftruftthe prisoners in the mysteries of our ho ly religion, viz. of the Trinity, the Incar nation of our Saviour, the joys of paradise, and the punishments of Hell, to fit their fouls for Heaven by baptism, while their bodies were condemned to torment'. But the Indians, after they had heard their sen tence, refufed to hear the jesuits speak, and began to prepare for death in their own country manner, by fingiug their death song. Some charitable person threw a knife in to the prison, with which one of them dis patched himfelf: The other was carried out to ihe place of execution by the christian Indians of Loretto, to which he walked, seemingly, with as much indifference as ever Martyr did to the flake. While they were torturing him, he continued singing, that he was a warrior brave and without fear ; that the most cruel death could not shake his courage ; that the most cruel torment fhau'd not draw an indecent exprefuon from him j that hie comrade was a coward, a scandal to the five nations, who had killed himfelf for fear of pain ; that he had the comfort to reflefl, that he had made many Frenchmen fuffer as he did now. He fully verified his words, for the most violent tQr rrient could not force the least complaint from him, though his executioners tried their utmost skill to do it. They firft .broiled his feet bttwesn two red hot stones; r < then /they put li is fingers into red hot pipes, and though hfe had his arms at liberty, he would uot pull his firjgers out ; they cut his joints, and taking hold of the sinews, twilled them round fraall bars of iron. All this while he kept singing and recounting his own brave a&ions again!! the French. At last they flead his scalp from his (kull, and poured scalding hot sand upon it ; at which time the intendant's lady obtained leave of the governor to have the coup-de-grace giv en, and I believe she thereby likewise ob tained a favour to every reader, in delivering him from a further continuance of this ac count of French cruelty." MORAL. Thoughts on Miff, confident! as a Microcofmos, or Little IVorld. Man has been considered, and with good reason, as an abftraft or model in miniature of the universe. God made him the last and mod excellent of his creatures. He inter nally endowed him after his own image, with a divine understanding, whereby he might contemplate and serve his Creator ; and he furnifhed him with the powers and faculties of reason that he might govern the world and all the creatures fubjeCi to his command. God also having created three forts of living natures, viz. angelical, rational and brutal, gave to angels an in tellectual and to hearts a sensitive nature ; but to man he vouchfafed both, together with the rational abilities peculiarly be longing to him ; and hence he became the bond or chain of union of all the three, and by his participation of them may be truly said to be a little world, as presenting so ex actly its component parts. God therefore placed on the earth, the man he had made, as it were another world ; the great in the small: For out of the earth and dust was formed the frefh of man, and therefore strong and durable. His blood, which is dispersed by branches' of veins and arteries throughout the body, may be re sembled to those waters which are called brooks and rivers over all the earth ; his breath to the air ; his natural heat to the warmth which the earth Contains in itfelf, and which, stirred up by the heat of the fun, afliits naiui e ~nr iTuT fpeed:Vv procrM tion of those rarities which the earth b'ring • eth forth ; hi* radical mnifture, oil or bal : sam, on which thr natural heat feeds and is I maintained, tothefatandfertililyoftheearth ; j the hairs of his body which adorn or over i shadow it, to graft which covers the upper j face and (kin of the earth ; his generative t power, to nature which produces Ml things ; his determination?, to light, wandering and unliable clouds, wafted away by uncertain winds ; his eyes, to the light of the fun and moon ; the beauty of his youthful days, to the flowers of the spring, which either the fierce puffs of wind blow from their stalks, or in a short time the fun's piercing rays dry up and wither ; the thoughts of his mind, to the rapid and inftananeous motion of ce lestial fpiriti ; his pure nnderllanding to those intelledtual natures which are always present with God ; and his immortal foul, while righteous and exalted by the beauty of holiness, to the image and fimiltudc of God himfelf, for, though in respect to God, no man is just, or good or righteous, yet, with such a kind of difference's subsists between the substance and shadow, goodness may be found in man, and God being pleased to ac cept it, has therefore called him the image and similitude of his own righteousness. The allusion may be drawn out to a still greater length, and man as the measure of all things, may again resemble by his fevtn a ges, the seven planets. Our infancy may be compared to the moon, in which we seem only to live and grow as plants ; the second to Mercury, wherein we arc taught and inftrudted ; our third age to Venus, the days of love, desire, and vanity; the fourth to the fun, the-ftrong, flourifhing and beau tiful ag»of man's life ; the fifth to Mars, m which we begin to take ah account of our time, judge ourselves and grow to the per fection of our understanding ; last, and se venth, to Saturn, when our days are fad and overcast. In these we find by dear and la mentable experience, and by losses never to be repaired, that of all our vain passions and affections, sorrow only abideth. Our atten dants are sicknesses, and sundry infirmities, and by how much the more we are accompa nied with plenty, by so much the more greedily is our end desired. When time has made us unfociabfe to others, we be come a burden to ourfeWs, and are of no other use than to withhold the riches we possess from our successors. In this time it is, that we, for the most part, and seldom before, prepare for our eternal habitation whith we pass on to with many fighs,groans, and doleful thoughts* and in the end, by the workmanship of death, finifh the forrow fuT business of a wretched life, towards which we are always making advances both in sleeping and waking ; never have those be loved companions of honor and riches any power to hold one day, by flattering the promise of entertainments ; but by what crooked path foevtr we walk, the fame leads on direftly to the house of death, whose doers lie open at all hours, and to all per sons. For this tide of man's life, after once turning and declining, ever runs with a per petual ebb and falling flream, but never flows again—our leaf once fallen springs no more. Neither does the fun or the fumm'er adorn us again with the garments of new Leaves or flowers. Foryf there is any baiting place, or reft, in the course or race of man's life, the fame might then be perpetually maintainal livings, and as the"sap and juice, wherein the life ofplants is preferred, does evermore as cend or descend ; so it is with the life of man, which is always either ipcreafing to wards ripeness and perfection, or declining towards rotteanefs and dissolution. NO TI c £ THE Office* of the Department of War are for j the ; r sent removal near to the t'il's ef the ScuyT kill, on the Ri<lj; Roid. September 4. iiy this day\> Mail. ( NEW-YORK, September 9. It appears by a New Prbvi'dence paper, handed us lad evening by capt. Johnson, that th« privateer Revenue,, tvbich captured the (hip Asia, is owned by citizen Jean Baron, residing in Philadelphia, as appear! by a copy of the privateer's eortimiflW found on board of the prize {hip. The above paper is dated at Nassau, ' Aug. 11, BOSTON, September 6. fICKAROONERY. Captain A 'jams arrived at Gloucester, from Martinique,' l'rt lat. 40, long. 67, was boarded from the piratical French privateer which lately failed from Marblehcad, and robbed of his light fails, a barrel of beef, and some fmaii articles. The officer told, captain Adams he should make a prize of him, were it not that expeaing to fall in with some Indiamen, he did not wi/h to be detained. CADIZ BOMBARDMENT. By arrivals from Lisbon, we learn, that admiral St. Vincents, after having obliged the Spanish fleet to take fhelter'in Cadiz harbour, had inveftcd that city. In the prosecution of his plan, he captured port St. Mary's, a place* about fix miles from Cadiz, and from whence the city is supplied with water, vegetables. &c. ftje Spanish fleet having retired beyond the part of the island on which Cadiz'is situated, St. Vin cents proceeded to bombard both the city and the fleet beyond it. By the last ac counts from- Lisbon, the bombardment must have commenced about the 4th or sth of July, and had not ceased on the 9th or 10th, as will be seen by Mefirs letters. Lord St. Vincents' ffeet has been strongly reinforced since his engagement with the Spanish : And the troops which lately eva cuated th£ island of Elba, in the Mediter ranean (4000) are said to have joined him. It is said. » gif«t »art of the inhabitants -have rr-TI, 3l~tfieTjparufhfleet~27rccwered no disposition to meet the' English ; which from its length of time at sea, and experi ence of commander*, was in.a high state of discipline. The damages done to the town, and .fleet, are variously related ; but the fa& of the bombardment may be relied on. The pofleflion of port St. Mary's was ne ceflary to the supply of the English fleet with water. Letters from Lisbon suggest it as the opinion of many, that admiral Jerri# means to destroy as much of the Spanish fleet as possible ; and then lay Cadiz under' a heavy contribution a la mode Francaije. In such contempt does admiral Jervis hold the Spanish fleet, th»t while lying ofTCadiz harbour, he by turns unrigged and rigged the veftels of his fleet, n open view ; and it one time, we are informed by an Ameri can captain who saw it, five ships had aau ally their t&pmafh on deck at the fame timt?*. and fevcral ship's of the squadron (ailed into the harbour, gave the forts a broadside, and returned. C. : i Capiain Alien, arrived at Gloucester from Lisbon, 50 days, confirms the of the bombardment. LATE FROM FRANCE. ' [Through the friendly attention of Mr. John G. Rogers, of Gloueeftcr, we were Lift evening favored with Paris papers to T u 'y 16th, received there by captain Inger fol, from Bordeaux.] Afteracurfory perusal of them, we can only fay, that the Courier Ju Corps Legifla tify of July 16, informs:—The negociationa for peace are seriously entered upon at Lille. Every day the two legations meet 3t 11 in the morning :—Their conferences are never long. The English conduft with prudence ; and are much esteemed in Lisle. The mi niflers of the French legation are also held in high refpeft. Fifty cannon were fired cm the arrival us lord Malmefbury, at Lisle. " Letters from Italy state, that general Meerfeldt has again arrived at Montebello ; svhere he had a long conference with general Buonaparte ; which terminated to the fatis ifaftion of the two parties. Buonaparte im mediately difpatehed a courier extraordinary to Paris. Ti"» fame letters kate, that the Ift July was fixed on for the |>urpofe of pro claiming at Milan, the definitive treaty of peace ; and the independence of the Italian republics." In the fame paper of the 15 th, in a de bate upon the celebration of the 14th Ju ly, Vaublanc congatulated the Council, that the mediation of Buonaparte, fupportcd bv the pacific disposition Si the Directory, had succeeded in the liberation of La Fayette, Latour Mauburg, and Bureau de Puzy,who are reflored to liberty and independence. The negotiations at Lisle are to be car ried on solely with the English Commiffion^r. The " Pojlillor. d;s Armeei" of the 14th July, fays, that Perignon is recalled from the embafiy to Spain ; to which place Per rochel has been sent. " It appears positive that the emperor has difpatehed orders for the liberation of the prisoners at Olmutz." This paper of the 6th July contains" Prefidtnt Adam:,' speech at full length. FEDERAL REPRESENTATIVES. In the 4th middle diftria we reafon to think, that Bailey Bartlett, Efq is chc fen to supply the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Judge Bradbury. In Rhode-Island, James Burrill, jun. Esq. i was generally voted for. In New-Hampshire, the accounts stand in favour of Mr. Livermore, te fucceedMr. Jeremiah Smith. On Saturday the Chevalier d'Yurojo, vf fited the Prefidcnt of the United States at Quincy. The Chevalier attended the theatre on evening, and ye.lsrday gave an «n-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers