W had information by the French paperi. < Oy the lad accounts from Vienna, indeed, t.iere is intelligence that seems to counte nance this report. The Emperor, it is fa id is to retain Mantua ; and to be indemnified tor.thf lpfs of Lombardy, by Dalmatia, and a part of the Venetian Terra Fir ma. The rumors upon this fubjea have yen so frequent and so contradictory that ( . they lhculd be received with caution. If it found to be true, vs'e fliould consider it as a fayeurable omen for the return of a gene !" , P eace - T'}°r»gh apparently separate, it j w?• Potable that the negociations at L dina, and at L.ifie, have been in a confi rfsrable degree connected ; and they may both, therefore, be expe&ed to have a com mon re fait: A confirmation of peace with the Emperor, would afford ground to be lieve, that there is a fair profpeft of a fa vourable ifTue to lord Malmefbury's riecoci ation. b The report that the new Dutch Conditu tion has been rejefted, gains ground. It 1 has already been rejeited in some places, and ' the accounts from that country agree in Ha ting its acceptance, by the majority, as cx- I tremely uncertain. t Government have lately contrasted for, and are fending off with as much expedition as possible to the squadrons employed in the ' blockade of the enemy's ports, immense J quantities of vegetables. A gardener, at t ■lotherhithe,. has already lent off to tht vest ft!s at the Red House, Deptford, which are I employed on this service, 50,000 cabbages, ' 00,000 carrots, 50,000 leeks, 103,000 oui- 0 ons, and 60 tons of potatoes, which are r , Ml the completed manner to prevent \ Spoiling iu the carriage. August 25-^-26. We are bappy to announce the fafe ar- u r ' va l of the Leeward island fleet, in the el Downs, at Bridol, and the other ports to which they were dedined. r ' We received lad night a regular ft ries of the Paris papers up to Wednesday last. The ni mod material article of intelligence brought pi by this conveyance, is a letter from the re commander in chief of a battalion of Berna- divifion, upon the fubjeft of the trea ty titween the emperor and the French re public, which announces the ratification of the conditions of peace, by his imperial ma- d; jefty, 011 the 30th ult. This letter is dated Udina, the feat of negociation, July 31ft, m and the following is a literal translation of in 't : ta " May my letter announce to you fuffi- pt ciently soon the happy news which I have cl just learned. A courier that arrived last ■to night from Vienna, dispatched by the mar- is quis di Gallo, announces that the emperor P< has ratified the conditions of peace, such as ur they were presented to him. All the world ta rejoices. I hasten to close my letter, that so it may reach you sooner." Notwithstanding the tirft impression made, 1 on the authority of this intelligence, vague D and nor.-official as it certainly is, on a more tic attentive perusal of these papers, we do not ed fee reiifon to give implicit credit to this re- J th I port. If the definitive treaty of peace had in really been figtied on the 30th, at Udina;- it gr could not have be<;n unknown to Buonaparte nu kf Milan, 011. th«.j( f,th of August, the date pr< of the following official communication to thi the directory, p which no notice is taken Id ot that event. Se •' Citizens Directors, " After the battle of Rivoli; I announced that 21 (lands of colours would be sent you, Tn of which you have yet .only received 16'. I Ra fend you by general Bernadotte, the reft, rot which were left, by mistake at Pefchiero al 1 This excellent officer, who had established wa his reputation on the Bank of the Rhine, I s now one of the officer* molt essential to ! Gc the glory of the army of Italy. He com- ■ ver mands the three divisions which are on the 1 irontiersof Germany. I entreat you to be his so gtjod as toallow him to return to the ar- 1 iriy of Italy as soon as possible. I ought Fr« not to omit this opportunity of paying to Bu his brave division, and the troops which last eve year arrived in the army of Italy from the sup Rhiiie, and from the Sambre and Meufe, the par tribute of praise which I owe to their ser vices.—--On every occasion they have sur mounted all opposition ; at the pafTage of the Tagliamento, as well as at the attack of An Gradifca, they displayed that courage and J that ardent zeal for the national glory 1 , which fays diftinguidi the army of the republic. You thei will *?d in general Bernadotte, one of the friei mod solid friends of the republic, from pri|i- Cor ciple and from character, equally incapable and of any compromise with the enemies of li- not! berty, or of any aft that could tarnish his to t honor. ity 1 •(Signed) BUONAPARTE. The following article is extrafted from the Brulfels papers which were received this 1 morning, down to the 20th. Ed o Vienna, Augujl 9. Though it is well tran known that the definitive treaty with the French republic is signed, our court does not A think proper to publifit the articles—politi- San' cal reasons are said to account for this pro- in v, ceeding.—To judge by the hodile prepara- said tions still carrying on, our court certainly meditates some important projeft ; as, in- N stead of putting the armies* upon the peace havi establishment, their augmentation iacontinu- Emi ed—that of Italy is to be re-inforced to fides 10,000, and that-of the Rhine-to 70,000 ris. men. Paris, Augujl 21, Paris has been re- Ii markably quiet tp-day, nor have the bills were pqfted 011 the walls been so numerous or so and I virulent as yederclay and the day before. our , At lad the. long expe&ed report on the menl mefiVge of the dircftory has been brought ly. lip to-day. It is evident the royalids expected that Paflc upon would have been entirely in their fa 'or, as they had previously taken care to M spread the dolt ajarming accounts of con- M fpiracies, plots for arresting and murdering his ! several deputies, (hutting tl»e barriers, the now introduction of troops and cannon into the M city, &c. They even went so far as to re- Lad; port confidently that the plan of the com- S: fr.iffitm was to propose a decree of accusation en. aj.Ku.ft cli- di,v£Wy, auj in cafe the latte ■ed, made arty resistance, to ojt-law them imme nte- mediately (les mettres hors-la-loi). Bu said how great mud their disappointment nov hed bv, on feeing that itidead of the violent rnea tia, fures, of which they had formed such fan - guine expe£lations, the commission, tho H{r l ave . it accuses the direftory of indiscretion, shew: hat the fincerett desire to bring on a reconcile tit tion between the government and the lem- means to creep into the legidative body with ith the lad third part, and whose underhand be- manoeuvres have been the cause of the pre fa- sent didurbances. ci- PA RI-s, Auj»iift 16. ;u . They report that Gen Sch-rer his afTured j t ome of ins friends thatG-n. T.jpogpe was soon n( j tofucceed liini as Wr Miniftrr. ta- F - rom thf Am " Des La,s - n * has hcen d fptaced for havin?, as tome papers fay,oppofed the march of the-troops to Pans. ir, The.new colours sent to the JlfTerent demi on brigades of the army of Italy, are truly magni he hrent * T!,e nam « of ihe battles it which ever ife r j y c r rp ' . Hra, l ,rerent are In golden letters In the middle u an infcriptlon j for example, on the colours of the jia." My mind was eafy— the 31ft was there." On thnfe of the 15th," re I know you—vou will heat them," On those of ■s, thei4th an 4 *,,1 Light Infantry," The palTage ii- °/ fyrol. —On of ihe c 7 th, The ter re rible - ,-th bears down all before it." On those of nt '/ ' rhe , " ttl covered itfclf with glo ry- ! hefe inscriptions of an antique and flmph ' 'emind the fold ers of the battles where th ey have fi.anallzed infpire tli-m r- with new ardo-ir, and inlame them with thit , e enth'ufiafm which Is the forerunnar of viaory. ■° 9'"' Angereau has given orders to have eve ry Jo hirer taken up who fhouhl attempt to infnlt any Citizen on account of hii ireA—This has entirely put an end to the disputes between 'he military and the young men, so that now all is it perreelly quiet. The Parisians seem as iodifie ic real to every political event as-usual. L' NEW-YORK, Oflober 24. OF PEACE. if The following appears under the Paris 1- dateof 21ft Aug. (thelateft). d The negociation at Lisle goes on in the :, mofl languid manner. England is obstinate if in retaining all the possession* which die had I taken front Holland, and France, on her part I i- pretends that she is bound by the treaty con- J e ( eluded with that Republic, to hive restored I.to it all that it has loft during the war. It I - is remarkable, that at the moment when I r Peace is mod neceflary to France, they vol s untarily deprive themselves of all its advan -1 tages, for the interest of two states that are t foreign to them. , ' Ninth of August, the President of the I e Dutch National Assembly gave pfficial no " tice, that fix French men of war had arriv- j t ed at Batavia, by means of which squadron I - 1 that principal place of the Dutch pofTeffions 1 in India, where provisions of all kind are iif I t great abundance, owing to the arrival of a ; number of neutral velfels, is molt efTeaually : protested from all hostile attacks. This is I ) the squadron which lately failed from the ' 1 Iflede France under the orders of admiral ' Sercy. j I A n aftio'n has taken places in the Eift I , Indies between the Britilh troops, and the ! Rajah of Cotiote, in which Major Came- I , ron, the commander fell, with.the addition- I c al loss of 300 men. The Rajah was after- 10 I wards subdued and brought to fubmiflion. I Lord Macartney arrived at the Cape of ; Good Hope, on the 4th of May last. E ' very thing remained quiet at that place. Ihe king of Prulfia is recoveriug from ; his late indisposition. b It is dated from several quarters, that the ? French Diredory have inftrufted General S Buonaparte, to afford the king of Sardinia every succour that may be neceflary to the C support of his throne, against the seditious part of his fubjeds. BATAVIAN REPUBLIC. The Oracle, an English paper of 22d I S Attguft, states the following: IB A letter from the Hague, August 16, £ fays, " the primary afTemblies have exprefled their detestation ,of citizen Noel and his friends, by every ad of publicity; The new ni Constitution was rejected on the Bth inft. Ip; and the people are determined to fanftion I nothing which gives such unlimitted power I to the French. It wasrejeftedby a major- ISI ity of more than 15,000. B TREATY WITH PORTUGAL. The French council of 500, haveapprov- I SI ed of this treaty, but no particulars had yet I St transpired. K A dreadful earthquake has happened at I Santa Fe and Panama, in South Amerjca, I pc in which between 30 and 40,000 fouls are S< said to have perished. lo th M. Necker, the Ex-financier of France, be having been struck off the proscribed lift of ds Emigrants, is returned to France, and re sides at prefeut in the neighbourhood of Pa- G ris. ta I th In a former paper we stated that Crowns M were received in the banks at eight JhUlings an and ten pence, or one hundred and tjen cents; be our informant was not correft in his state- lal bank recivethem at 110 cents on- I CI lj- j ou Paffengcrs in the Chel'apeake, Capt. Robt. I br Adatnfon, from Bristol. frc Mr. and Mrs. Garnet, and family, Mrs. Hardy, Lady of Capt. Hardy, of thi his Britannic Majedy's frigate. Thift? A now in this Harbour. Miss Woodcock, Sifter to the above Lady. Samuel Elam, Esq. Dunderdalc, I£fq. ttcr \Ve hear that the Prefide.-.t of the Oaitecj ■ Tl£> States intends honouring the New Circus But Greenwich -ft reef, with his presence, this low evening', at the representation of that grand iea. and much admivtd Pantomime, The Ameri la ii- ean Heroine. Jgh _ ?ws The Venl li a, in 44 days days from Ci lia- braltar, brings the LateJ} Netvs from off Cadi*. < ing The (hip Venilia, captain Payne, failed has from Gibraltar on the ?th September, un •ity der convoy of the Dolphin, a Brifclh yo gun to Hup After pa fling through the Straits, in- was boarded by a frigate from Lord St. Vin ind cent's fleet, who were then ftiil at anchor ith before Cadiz. , (f nd Capt. Payne was t>ound. to, Leghorn, but •e- on account of the iniipmerable' French crui sers, was unable tn> proceed. No Ameri can can possibly escape, and several had been captured and sent into Algeziras and con on demned, while capt. P. was at Gibraltar, j chiefly bound to Malaga for fruit ; dino» i ; Citizen! are mojl cordially ■ r- congratulated on the following j pleasing Report: < L* < re CITY HOSPITAL REPORT, K p Fmm to 2 5 th Oft. in the morning. I Remaining last Report t l Admitted fmce, NONE. 11 1, Discharged, NONE. ' •» Dled . NONE. it Remain i.nHofpital, jConvalefceot,i s l „ TV * , l S,ck HJ 8 1 hree ot whom are dangerous. r Interred in City Hospital burying ground ]. since lad report : From the city and suburbs, NONE. j From the city hospital, NONE. s SmrHiN Girar#, n e (Signed) Caleb Lownes, . . John Connelly. , Published by order of the board. \ JOHN MILLER, JTun. , Chairman. C 5" Coxe pledges himfelf to the public \ "> P rovt •" days, that the afertions con tained in Dr. Currie's publication againjl Dr. Rush, in the Gazette ofihe United Stales of the 6th irift. arefalfe or mfreprefented. Phi/ad. Offuber 2sth, 1797. Extraa of a letter from Cape Francois, dated Oftober i, 1797. " I wrote you the 21ft ult. Since this 0< period I have nothing new to communicate, rave the arrival at Port de Park of the two , French frigates from America. ' They were closely pursued k off this island, and were very near being captured, ' «. '• The com million still continue to con- J demft our veflels bound to Englilh ports ; 0i and the privateers and gun-boats take every thing they fall ill' with. Veflels captured bound to French ports are set at liberty, but the administration take their cargoes, and consequently ruin their voyages." Isaac Tichenor, esq. it eleAed by the aflercbly erf Vermont, governor of that fUte, by a majority of 44- Paul Brif ham, efq, it elecled lieu', governor Samuel MattocVi," treafprrr. Rofwcll Hopkins, feeretary. Counfellnrs. Meflrt. William Chamb?rlin,Jonej Galufta St-- phen Jacob, Duke Knoulton, Corn.liusLynds, E bencz.r Marvin,'Gideon CHin, Elijah a'obinfo-, Scl Annuel Safford, John Strong, John White, anj Sin Samuel Williamt, efquirca. Abel Spencer, speaker of tht house. GAZETTE MARINE LIST. Sm — Scl PORT OF PHILADELPHIA. r arrived, days . Suf Ship Clothier, Gardiner, Liverpool 70 bou Brig Jane, \anfife, Cape Francois 24 put Sch. Kitty, Dillingham, Gonaives 30 ing Little Will, Eagleion, P. Prince 28 hair The (hip New-York, Capt. M'Cloud in Sep nine days from Londonderry, with 440 1 passengers, ha» arrived at New-Cattle. • v of New York, OSoler 24. wit! arrived. days Lio Ship Chesapeake, Adamfon, Bristol 56 beth Catharine, Macey, Liverpool 6? brig Brig Eliza, White, Aux Cayts ter ; •cleared. Suss Ship Christiana, Paine, New Orleans panj Schr. Peggy, Redfern, Halifax t Ship Warren, captain Church arrived at mizt Kingston, in 24 days from Wilmington. . in I Arrived (hip Catherine, Macey, Livtr- carg pool, 60 days. Sept. 11, spoke the ship rum, Sophia, of and from Baltimore to Bremen, woo long. 17, out todays. Sept. 28, fpokc of si the schooner John ofMarblehead, from Lif- 16 c bon to New-York, or Marblehead, out 38 pafle days, long. 38, lat. 41. ; ng , Arrived ship Venelia, Paine, 41 day« from on b Gibraltar—the Venelia failed from Gibral- O tar 011 the 7th September in company with W\ the following American veflels :—the brig anch Mary, York, of and bound to Philadelphia mafl and the brig Ariel Field of New-York, that bound to the Weft-Indies. Oftober 11, waft Cheeftman, of and frotii NtvV-York, 5 days on 11 out—all well. rc ttn Odt 15, lat. 29, long. 57,:fpoke the Y brig.Sally, of and bound to Newbury-port, Patt from Jacquemel—all well. Oce: Admiral Jervis was still before Cadiz when Ron the Venelia failed. ; T Aliftof Americau veflelstaken bytheFrench bour and Spaniards and carried into Algeziras diftr from the beginning of April to the last of Oce; August, 1797, which are ih the follow- tress ing situation, viz. has \ Ship Columbia, Cook, Norwich, and 1 O ~ited Snow Mary, IWmra, Boston, the feme reus, the eargo, the latter the vessel and this condemned by the Spaniard*. ran ? r .^' p E!IZ3 ' Tt - lrner . and brig- Byficld, nm- Linffman, of Boston ; ship Roanonke,. ,'T' °. Carolina, not yet condemn ed, but ftronrrly expefted will be. Gi- Also, two brigs lately carried in by the trench, which we are almost Aire will be condemed. uled At Ceuta, we hear of the following vef un- fels condemned—Capt. Fairchild of Bof gun ton and capt. Bray of Philadelphia. Jits, I.ift of veflels left at Aux-Caves 24th Sept V n " received by the brig Eliza, from Aux :hor Cayes. Brig Julius Pope, New York but Laurania, , Philadelphia rul " 1 air American, —, eri- Eliza, Townfend, Silem een j Elizabeth Coates, Johnson, Newbury- Port ! o . G i or Z e - Bart let, Baltimore far, j Sch r. Polly, Thurfton, New-York ).»!J William, Holbrook, . Boston ton Nancy, Tyler, Washington N. C. nee Fancy, Gsilcrfon, Newbqry-port Sioop Sally, Waters, Philadelphia ? „ Sea Flower, Smith, New Haven From the flcop Rache), Gilbert l rnaOcr from the etth.Sept. when hn Iff; Pnrtde ?aix ' | On the 29'h Sept. wj, b n ?rded a'r. af> of the ! weft Cayccs bv the .Aqujlon Hm very politely and let him pjft without Ion" c!e ,, lay, there were in crmpany the Vir.x frigate jn/ an Aiwerlcan Kriyr. Tv . ° n ,t S ? d o *" hcr '» 28, 10, N. anrli Ion?. V 7 t ' ,a w . a fcljooner (I mding to the foytl-ward ; ;p- IJ 1 '- bors nway anH run down towards u», fi re d a 15 | inot and h'oiOed Anvrrican color«, and after a fmr.l! chafe,hajiled her wind, fired another (hot, and haul- 1 ea down her colours- " Ofi. 3, in lat 29, 4,N.Jong. M' saw a TeuVr, msft with the erofs tr.es on it," and wc be- : lieve the cip and ringing. 19 8, in lat. 34, vs.N. Jor.jt. 73, 1? , f-j] with a xh'p's mainmast, which had been cut away 1 the wind being li K ht, took out th« boat, And went 1 to it and towed it along fide, from which saved top gallant mjft, top fail, tcp gallant fail and royal marked on the fails, S. Allen, fail maker, London, I • J snd Ufo saved the top yard, lower rigging and top mart ngging, aad fonie running rigging and fevc- 2 . ral blocks. " A lif} of American vejfels that Lave be:n brought into Port- j .. h-pfiix. fmct the \ Rachel. Slip Cod.'eftj,/ Pknty,Cliurnftdet, Philadelphia, ngJem- I * ' B„ Z Amelia, H'.ujlon, de. condemned, I Rambler. Onden, da. cleared, Alfred, Leivit, Ncw-TTorh,condemned, Harriet, Phipt, Baltimore, do. B'tfey,LivingJhn, Norfolk, do " |o Polly, , Alexandria, condemned in Jean Realel. lIT Schr. Alcope, Rice, Philadelphia,condemned, 0; Ballahoo, ——, do. condemned, I overboard 7, out of 16 of htr guns. The day after the gale, she passed a*large (hip, without a mast stand- Oi ing, and apparently without a living person on board, as no fignalgwas (hewn. On Friday evening, the 6th inft. captain W. passed the Ocarabefla, capt. Stor'cy, at anchor off Cape Roman, with only her fore- a t thi maftftanding; capt. S. informed capt. W. that his chief mate and one man had teen waihed overboard, and that he had then 7 feet water in his hold ; he had sent his boat on shore for a pilot, and was waiting for its return. Yesterday arrived the schooner Cummins, Patton, Cape Nichola Mole, 16 days ; ship CC Ocean, Williams, Jamaica, 32 days ; snow ln f°' Romulus, Wallace, Oftend, 80 days, Exc The Ihips Susannah and Ocean were bound to Londoh, but have put in here in distress, occasioned by a heavy gale, the l^e Ocean is difirafted. Another fiiip in dif- be r tress, also from Jamaica, bound to London, boar has been spoken with off Cape Fear. A On the 191b Sep\. near St. At'gullinc, ® >rmer Captain Stevenson met with a Hatebor" & In, cargo named Lovely ; her marts had all gone c.v« flie hue; he hailed her repeatedly, hut could field, get no answer, and could not fee any thin; nake,. living on board but a dog ; the sea and wind !emn- were so high that he could not board her • fte appeared light andeafy upon the water', ? the as though (lie (till remained tight, ill be The ftip May Flbwer, Eifkop of tlaa port, was carried into -Nassau before ca'it. ■ vef- Lowe failed. Bos- ExtraSf-cm the of the fnoie Row lus, Capiain Wallace, in 80 {lavs from Sept. OJi-'nd. ux - " Lat - 49> 3°) I'ong. 15, ty, was board ed by a, French privateer and robbed of a fork spy glass and four cafe bottles of gin. phia " Aug. 26. lat. 38, 26, long. 56, i O , spoke the Swedish (hip Neptune, capt. Da ilem niel Jaderbern, from Alicant, bound to Port Baltimore, with the following paffengera oa lore bo2rd : 'olk " Mr. Joseph P. Tvjufgnive, of the ftiip fton Governor Mifflin, of Philadelphia ; captam .C- J on Cruff of the barque Pomona, William port S. Pin-rimer, of the brig Telemnebus, and phia James Af.vood ofithe fchoontr Abigail of iven Boston ; capt. William Muo-ford, of th*- ■ftcr, brig Eliza of Salem, and capt John Proud X thr o *. the br; g FriendHiip of Providence : all of a-ed . lvtlDm have been captured by the F-ench tie- 111 t!le Mediterranean, carried into Cartha ancf gena, and their vessels and cargoes condem ed, fur the war. to; a role, d'eouipage in r.ro ,nft- per form. eel*-J '" -fheNeptune waslaft from Carlhngena, ml! Where (he left seven Ameriean vessels con aul- demned. " The Neptune left at Alicant the ffcip L- ' na .Kennedy of Charleston ; (hip Sara!;, Hopkins, and brig Sifters, Coggefhall, of in kohon ; snip John and Martha, Knapp, of y — Newbury-port ; and the brig Venus, Tu ent lin, of New-York, all ready for sea, but ■yTl a . not venture on account of the French on, P r ' y ateers, who paid uo refpeft to any flag, top September 2, lat. 37, 10, long. 58, ve- 27, spoke the snip Julius Pringle, of I Charleston, from London, bound to Virgi nia, out 8 weeks. 0 * Sept. 17, spoke capt. Hardy in his •»>- I Majesty's (hip fhiibe, of 40 guns, from Halifax, who supplied us with 140 lbs. of bread, and 12 lbs. of sugar." tuomas Wallace. A guard was put on board the Romulus, on her arrival at Oftend, who did not per mit ca P l - Wallace or any of his crew to go on (hore for 30 days; nor was the vefTel per mitted to be entered until captain Wallace obtained the interference of Mr. Skrpwith, lat Paris. Ihe Romulus having touched ajt Cowes, they considered her at Oftend as having cleared from an Englilh port, which. I occasioned the above treatment. *The fhipLiefdy,which was met with on her beam-ends by the Diana, who took off I the crew and carried them to Savannah, (as ra mentioned under the Savannah head) is said on I to be the fame (hip that the Susannah fell '* ln with, and which is called the Lovely in b our paper of yesterday. m footman Co s sliiEtion i Room. M I - * T HE r" blic are refpeafully Informed, thai the ' I Worg of the fublcribers is bow open for the X I rec^P t^on Goods, and the Hales will cQiumence ' J ' 011 "••onday next, the 30th intt. when will be fold, ™ A ar g e affortfnent of Dry Goods. ■r AMONG WHICH ARE, x Su;iersi:e aud common Cloths Caflimeres I*larne's, BhDkets „ 1 Coatings and Baizes 1 Cotton and vvorfted Hosiery I Cii'mzes and Calicoes , ■1 j Chintz an.l purple Shawls J Book and jaconet Muffins j White and brown Linens, ' Tickings, Checks and Stripes. I ALSO ) A quantity of Ladies' Morocco Shoes. I | FGOIMAN \2f Co. AuSion:ey, j -° fl - -»4- d j TO BE LE "T—At a moderate Rent, , The principal part of aHOUSE, 1 , W , IT , H '- N a