siijtSHSST PHI LAD ELP HIA , TtIfiSDAY RVENIN.G, NOVEMBER 7. ~ %gm ■-».... . Th? J-'cmbcrs of the First City TroDp of Horse, •ARE reqnefted to ho'd tbemfelvesin rea diacfs, to efcnrt the Prefident'of the United litotes, oi) his return to the Sent of Gov, ernmtnt, which will he in a few days. The e:r!ieft notice will be given of the time. The place of parade will be at the Hotel, between Arch and Race streets, in Tenth street. JOHN DUNLAP, Captain, The Members of the Troop of Volun teer Greens, A RE requeued to hold themselves in rea diness, to escort the President of the Uni ted States, on hisreturti to the Seatof Gov ernment, which will be in a few days. The earliest notice will be given of the time—Tiie place of parade- will be at the Hotel, between Arch and Race-streets, in Tenth-Ureet. JOHN MORRELL, Captain. T'n the Militia of Philadelphia. AN order from the adjutant-general of ■the militia of Pennfy'vania announces, that in confcquence of an intimation only from the Governor, some of you are to be called on to parade in honor of the President of the United States! In thus honouring the firtt roagiftrate of a free people, we honor our selves. It is not necessary to enquire from whence the power was derived, for issuing this order. The Governor ie conftitution aiiy, the commander in chief ; to the con stitution he is amenable ; and ncirie but tray tors arid parricides will question, oroppofe his authority in this refpedL Like him we are free men, and fubjeft to the laws and the constitution ; but that ConttituJon has given him a to command us, as a part of the militia of the Rate. No friend to our country will dispute that authority ; fncl\ opposition will be setting up an authority unknown to the laws and the'conftitution,\ which is worse than to revert to a state of nature. The obje£t of this order is to {hew our refpe /t to a magistrate of our own electing, our attachment to {he constitution of the United States, and that the feat of govern ment possesses equal patriotism with other parts of the union, which have paid fiich dif tinguillicd honours to the patriot whose pub lic services meiit every acknowledgement of a grateful people. Are you not men, citizens, soldiers! i Rave you not righss, privileges, property and honor to defend ? Is not the constituti on your own work ? Are not the magis trates, the guardians of that constitution, those rights and privileges yourown choic ? At a mom 'lit when the demons of anarchy y this cia'y's Ma J. NEW-YORK, Nov. 7. Yesterday arrived here the ihip Mary, Capt. Allen, in 45 d?.ys from London. By this arrival we are furnilhcd with LONDON PAPERS as late as the 18th of September, from which the most im portant ictelligence is extracted. ' A gentleman who came paffihger in forms, that he saw a Loudon paper at the? Downs, of the 20th Sept. in which it was announced that the negotiations at Lisle had been abruptly terminated, and that Lord Malmcfoury was returned to England re infeEla. Phis eyent is rendered highly proba ble by the tenor of our accounts of the 14th Sept. this day publilhedfrom which it appears, that a categorical ati fiver had been required of his Lordship to the laji proportion. The purport cf this propoiition we do not know ; but it was probably one to which the Englilh mini ft er had refufed previouflv to accede —and as he is not of a character to be dragooned into a compliance, we think his return indubitable. (N.Y.Gaz.) LONDON, Sept. 12. We enter on the duty of detailing the ex traordinary event that occurred on Monday last in Paris, with emotions which it is not easy to describe. It is a proceeding which in every view, either of gigantic interest in its confequeuces, or of audacious charafter in its design, has scarcely a parallel since the j commencement of the revolution itfclf, and it is impoffibleto speak of it in the language which applies to ordinary events. It may be r.ffertfd that there are occasions in the po litical as well as the physical combinations of life, when all principles must yield, to im perious necefiity, and when all the rules of moral condutt are set at defiance. The ad fniffiori of this axiom is all that the most ! odious tyranny demands for the juftification of every excess ; and it is certain that it is fufficient to take from the most fettled fo cietv every assurance that it can frame for its own independence 1 . With this Ihorl ob servation, we preface the narrative of the new revolution in France. We (hall faith fully lay before our readera every thing that the Triumvirate has said in juftification of the measure it so secretly contrived, and vi gorously carried into execution ; our read ers will thereby be able to decide whether the circumstances of the republic were such as to create the pretended necefiity which fupercedes all law ; or whether it was mere ly a cabal of pcrfonal interests, in which a struggle for ascendency is exalted into a .ftioek for the deliverance of the people.— The genuine friends of liberty iii every country of the world, who are the steady and impartial fpeftators of this astonishing. r cene, and a severe posterity, free from all the paflions which blind the performers, will pronounce judgment on the aft. It for us to furnifh the materials. The blow was struck between three and faur o'clock on Monday morning the 4th September. The confufion of dates from their new division of the year, made our cor respondent call the 17th Frudtidor, the 4th, when it ftwmld have been the 3d of Septem ber. We yesterday morning received the following letters up to the 21ft Frudtidor, or Thursday last, the 17th inclusive. Paris, 19 FruSidor, Sept. 5. The explofio* has at last taken place.- The events of yefterdey are of the greatest importance. lam going to relate them in order as they happened : Duringthe night df the 17th, the com- , million of infpeftors, with several members , of both councils, had assembled in the hall 1 of 500 at the Thuilleries. At midnight 1 General Lemoine (others fay Moulin) ap- ] peared at the gate of the Pont-tournant, ] which leads into the garden of the Thuille- 1 ries fronj the square of the revolution, at the head of a confidcrable detachment, and 1 demanded admittance, which was refufed < him by Ramel, commander of the guard of 1 the legislative body. But upon the gene- ' ral's ordering two pieces of cannon to ad- ' vance, and the grenadiers at the fame time 1 declaring against their commrnder, the gate was opened and Ramel arretted. The gen. then proceeded to the Manege, where the members' were deliberating, and found there Rovere, Bourdon de l'Oife, Pichegrn, Wil lot and several others, all of which he immediately arretted. Pichegru and Willot made some resistance, but were immcdi- t ately fcized and disarmed ; and it is even t said, that Pichegru is grievously wounded, f At the fame time Barthelmy was arrested at the Directory ; but Carnot had contrived to e make his'efcape. ; Before the execution of this blow, the i Direftory had taken care to have all the c bridges, the square of the revolution, the , avenues leading to the Thuilleries, and the : mofl considerable posts of the city occupied by strong detachments of troops, with canneii. c In the mean while general Angereau re- t paired to the barracks where'the grenadiers t of the legidative body were quartered, and, < having assembled them, alked them if they ( would follow him : to which they all an- t fvvered with one voice Yes. They and. the elders at the, fchpol.of Surgery, not f ar f rorn thence. The Fauxbourgb St. Antoine, well arm ed, evidently by preconcert, came and of , iered their serviceS to the direftory and both councils. They were thanked, and invited to repaid to their refpedtive occupations.— before they returned home they drew up in 1 the Rucdes Francs Bourgeois, where gen. ■ Angereau pafild along the line, and was re ceived with the loudest acclamations. They afterwards retired very peaceably. • During the whole day the bridges and chief polls were guarded by the troops ; the ftreetp, especially about the directory and the councils, were crouded with incre dible numbers of inquifitivt persons, who seemed to be guided by no other motive than curiosity. Not the lea!l outrage was .an'd' the ntrnoft order and tran ■ quillity reigtied in e-very quarter of the city. At 6 in the evening the directory an swered the meflage of the council of five hundred, by fending papers relative to the conspiracy. [These papers we have already mentioned.] During the night the commission of five made report on the measures to be adopted in the present conjundture, and proposed a projedt of a resolution, which you will find in the Moniteur. The only uncafinefs now entertained is from the friends of the constitution of '93, or if you will, the Mountaineers; but it is affVired that the diredlory has positively re fufed to join them. The barriers still remain shut. It is pre sumed that there are 12 or 15 thousand troops at Paris, while all the issues from that city are completely blocked up by 25,000 men, distributed around at the distance of 5 leagues, so that it is impossible for any j person to escape. No news hitherto of Carnot. Some fay he has (hot himfelf, while others pretend he was killed by some people who attempted to arrest him. It is now one o'clock. Every thing is remarkably quiet. From the Stnllnelle.—" One Perotteau, a gun-smith, Rue Croix-des-prtits Champs, has j been arretted. This villain has confeffed, on his examination, that the royal commis sioners of Louis XVIII. had purchased from him 700 muskets, on bons, signed with the initial letters R.. .e. The whole has been seized and confifcated, and the proofs and papers are now at the Bureau Central." 20 Frudtidor, Sept. 6. Never since the beginning of the revolu tion was a plan carried on with more cau tion, or executed with more celerity, than the famous measure taken by the diredlory on the 18th infl. This will appear evident to any person who considers that the majo rity of the diredlory, while they were pre paring every thing for such an important blow, had to baffle the vigilance not only of their colleagues, Carnot (a man of su perior abilities) and Barthelemy, but also to deceive the numerous spies employed by their enemies in both councils. So great was the secrecy with which all their mea sures were concerted, that they had adlu ally marched a considerable body of troops (some fay 10,000 men) into Paris, sur rounded that city on every fide at the dis tance of 5 leagues, occupied every import ant pott, and arretted their enemies, within the space of two hours, without any one's having had previously the least suspicion of the matter, and almost without noise. ■ It was not known till every thing was over. It is true that the anti-diredlorial journalists had repeatedly denounced to the public a plot, refemhling in some few particulars the plan executed by the diredlory, but as they had been ofte'ri obliged to retradl their assertions, and to invent reasons in-order to explain why the execution had been defer red, they at last fell into the predicament of they lying (hepherd in the fable—Nobody believed them when they told the truth. So minute were the preparatives taken by the diredlory, that the prisoners of the temple had been removed the day before, and that house of detention cleared for the reception of the members who were to be arretted. Gen. Moulin, and not Lemoine, was the officer who, on the night of the 17th, or rather on the morning of the ißtb, ob tained admittance into the garden of the Thuilleries, through the gate of the Pont Tournant, and arretted the members then aflfembled. >■ The fame day ( 18th) about 12 o'clock, Lafond Ladebat, president of the ancients, aud Simeon, president of the council of 500, followed by some members, appeared at the doors of their refpedlive councils, and demanded admittance, which being re fufed them, they adjourned to a house in the Rue St. Honore, and drew up a protes tation ; but the fear of being arretted soon forced them to disperse. That day the theatres shut up, but open ed the next. This evening, pursuant to an invitation given from the diredlorv, the adlors of the opera eelebrated the victory obtained by the Republic over the attach of Royalty, by giving the OJfrande a la Liberie and the Marftillafc. The law annulling the eledlion of several departments, and •rdering the emigrants to quit Paris, &c. having passed through the necessary -formalities, has been promul gated to da'y, and polled upon the walls ; so that it is txpedled very few emigrants will be found in Paris to-morrow evening. Carnot has not been taken as yet, some fay he has been killed ; others, that he ha 6 killed himfelf. It was reported this morning at the coun cil of ancients, that Dumourier and Bouille are at Paris, that the latter has been arrett ed, and that every precaution is taken to discover the former. No. 8 of the democratic conftitutionel has appeared to day. He violently inveighs against Merlin de Thionville for having pro posed that Antonette and Felix Lepelletier should be included in the decree of transpor tation, and accufis that member of attack ing the true patriots under tlie liatae of ariar- < chifts. I ills makes forae peopte imagine ' that the Mountain is beginning anew to' ' rSife its head: But it appears that the di- ' redlory and a majority of both councils are j resolved to keep it down. Tims will tell. c In the mean while it seems, that the vidtori- i ous party is resolved not to spill one drop of t blood, and to use as lenient meafurts as the ' r.ature of circumstances will permit. 1 What will serve to confirm our former»ob- ! fervations on the trade of this city, is that the public inferiptions which on the eve of i the explosion were so low as seven, rose the t two days following to 13, a rife ascribed to the firmnefs and vigor displayed by the go vernment This day at two o'clock they 4 fell to 10, owing to some appehtnfions of a new commotion. . Amongst the different persons spoken of j as being to fill the two vacant places in the " direflorv, the molt remarkable, are, Merlin, > minister of jltftice; general Jourdan, Robert 0 Lindet, Garat and Talleyrand Perigord. I • 21 Fruftidor, Sept. 7. j) Among the different objedls seized in the ; place where the members of the commission a were arretted by general Moulin, were a con- c fiderable number of swords and daggers with ' hilts half red and half black, several packets of cards signed Rorere, a new dress for the deputies, and a chest containing 40,000 li vres. | j ! The prisoners of the temple dine toge- t ther, and communicate freely with one ano-; ! ther ; but are allowed no communication | with the outlide. They -ppear very airy, especially general Pichegru ; Bourdon de L'Oife is the only j one amongst them that appears dejedled. I a Those not included in the transportation lift • 1 , have been set at liberty. It is ever, allured i ' i that Thibadeau was at the fitting of yefter- 1 I day- t By a decree of yesterday evening, the journalists whose arrest had been ordered by ' the diredlory, have been condemned to be | transported, and the diredlory authorized to : make domiciliary visits in order to discover ' the retreats of such as have not been arretted. ' From the Ami des Lois, citizen Betami, ' living in Rue St. Logare, No. 1 79, has writ- \ ten the following letter, dated the 18th : c " Yesterday, about 3 o'clock, a man c whom Ido not know, came to me on the r part, as he said, of the brother and secretary L of general Pichegru, and offered me a muf- 1 ket,-piftols, a sword, and a good reward, provided I would afiift at carrying off Pich- j egru from the temple. I told him that I t would consider about it. They told me t they were very numerous and sure of fuc- { cess. He teazed me very much, but to get j rid of him, I answered yes. He wrote down my name, and said he would call again. They know me, at I served under Pichegru, and went to fee him from time to time. But I will never betray the republic." I'rom the Journal des Hommes Libres— We read in the declaration of Duverne de Prefle the following remarkable passage : " There is a foreign party *vho expedl the future afiiftance of Spain. At the head ot this party are M. M. dela Vauguyon and d'Entraiguts. I will give their means of eorrefpondence with the Interior. The members of this party think the king of Spain is for them, and among other particu lar*, the marquis de las Cafas. " Now we mud observe, that of the in dividuals mentioned in the above phrase, La Vauguyon has been at Paris this long time. His intrigues were known by the diplomatic body, and he himfelf is not fignified /.mong the conspirators lately fallen. Another, viz. Las Cafas, remained in England notwith standing the rupture with Spain, under pre tence of an illness that has laflcd till novu, and n arrived yesterday in Paris in high ftilcj at the a Hotel d'Orleans, rue des Petits Auguf- f tins."* v Barruel Bauvert, author of the Adtes des „ Apostles, and Richer Serezy, aufher of the n Accufateur Public, have been arretted. The a ex-deputy Chiappe, attempting to get into f the temple in order to speak to general Pich- '' egru, was sent by general Dutertre, com mandant of the temple, to general Ange- ' rau's head-quarters, and then arretted and [■ sent to prison. The report of the arrest of Bouille and r ' Dumourier is not confirmed. '' The day before yesterday the constitution- f al circle held a meeting at the hotel de Mont- J morency. p , Yesterday the barriers were opened, and >'■ the troops withdrawn from the bridges. Places of public resort, such as the Palais 01 Royal, the Champs Elifees, the Garden of -J the Thuilleries, &c. are as crouded as ever j hi coaches and cabriolets roll about the streets e < as usual. In fliort, every thing wears the afpedl of the greatest tranquility. Ihe Journal des Hommes Libres, fays 0] that the diredlory has ordered 12,000' men di more to march to Paris. . P if c can from perfvnal t/wzi lei. e flats tb'ts ajjicrtion tohifiilfc, i 'he M trquit De Las CaJat is Jlill in Eng- i| land. The Chevalier tie Las Cafas has moji certainly . n htcn dja ned by ilnefi, and be tcent to Paris only ivith ' the lafifjint hope of cvnfultirrv a German pbyf eian, ivho , ' is eminent for the cure of bis particular disorder. IVt Lc lieve It it too far gone for any hvntan aid. ' We have given this aecount of the pro- u! ceedings, because it is more particular than di any we have seen in the few journals which " have been fuffered to pass over into En- U gland. The Mom'teur gives the fame nar rntive very concisely. The Redadleur is th still more brief in its relation of the manner ry of the arrest of the members, and the (hut- w ting up of the Councils. It" makes ample a mends, however, by furnifhing us with all 1 the documents upon which the Dirc&ory : pu have grounded their proceedings. They ! are too important to be curtailed. — Morn. Chron. X ™ ( The documents will be given in future papers.) Rl COUNCIL uFTTvT UNDRED. , T). Sitting of Sept. 7. j ADDRESS of the LegiJlative Body to the French natict;- Sept. 7. I The council of five huudred. taking into I conliikration the extraordinary and critical circumftir.ces in which the Kcpublic is placed . and deeming it the duty of the Initiative bo dy to make known to the French people the plots which have been formed for the purpose of en flaring them and subverting the republi can con!!it,.tic nof the Third Year—l» declare its own sentiments and hopes, and at the fjrne time time to put the nation on its guard against the manoeuvres which may be attempted to mifltad it by the accomplices of the conspira tors, has therefore agreed to the folUwin? re felution : 6 Article I—" The leyifhtive body concurs in an address to the armies and departments the purport of which it as follows : " French MEN , " It is encumbent on us to declare (he truth to you, and we proceed to acquit ourselves of that duty. " A conspiracy which hid for its object the eftabliihment of a throne in France,,and of privileges and grievances a thoufandtimes more «dious th ( an thofc viiith had been aboliflied by your will—a conspiracy always unmifk d,but nrvcr deftrJyed, had again brought the RepuS. I lie to the lirink of ruin. The government, by . irs wiidom and firmnefs baffled the execution j «f it at the very moment that it was on the point of breaking out But one hight more and our couuiry would have been plunged into eternal mourning—but one night more,and ar bitrary despotism would have raised her hideout head, and eredled her ul'urpation on the carcases of those, who, more or l«fs, hadfervedthe cause of iiberty. icn who had thirfled for the popular power wirhthefole view of exercising it again* the people wcr e for a l<-'*g time engaged ill ; planning the execution of that execrable projedt. 1 he greater part, (Chiefs of the insurgents of j Vcn emaire) emboldened by imDunity, had re •irr.edl ihrir plots. They corresponded more judacioufly with the agents qf the pretended Louis XVIIIr The donfeflions of one of these j agents, (Duierlie de Prefle) prove it. Their I ! ! ' rs eile< ' 3l Venice, th«ir communications j with the emigrants and the principal rebels proven. All the documents aro made public. 1 . "?" ns b y *hich they promised to execute their deligus were—i. The annihilation of all public and nationalfpirit.—j. » l,e afTatfirution of every one whom they treated as fuddled of patriotifilß, and impunity to be grained to the afiafiinj by tribunals fold royalty.— 3. The extinction of th« financial refourcM of tfie Plate. fbajement r^e government andi republican lnflitutions.-— j. Acivil war lighted up in different parts of the Republic.— 6. The of internal security, and the inter ception of all communication through the country.—7. The diftrefsof the landholder,the mechanic and the soldier. 8. A vigorous f a . brication of all laws subversive of the cenftitu tion. This objetfl and these means will not sur prize, when you shall learn by the authentic pieces which have been found, that their ap pointments, previously ordered and regulated by counter-revolutionary officers in almost ev ery department, proceeded from a general plan formed and organized under the name of the society of Legitimate Children, a focieiy, one of whose laws was the most absolute and •the blindest devotion on the part of it 3 members to the erders of their unknown chief. « We will not remind you citizens of the deplorable success which has resulted from their combinations. In April, a Peace, an honorabl. and solid Peace smiled on oht wishes—it is re moved 'o a greater distance. Could it have been raised on a land convulsed and ready to cover itfelf with blood and ruins ? The nation al credit began to acquire confifltncy ; the public creditors were on the point of being paid, there were no arrears due to the armies, when ftiddenly qiifery and penury returned and spread themfelvas ever France j the ftockholdtr was in despair, the infot.ipriotis at 40 livres fell to to, the armies wire without pay orcloathing. Those armies which triumphed over Europe, were, O fhameful and forrowful reflexion ! compelled to fubfifl, cither by requifitiont, or by the produiSl of their courage j and yet a hideous laugh escaped from the lips of the par tizans of the counter-revolution ; they every day law the cmbarrafsroents of the government increase, and they every day increased it them selves. The moll far-fetched explanations,and the m»ft impudent perfidy were deemed good means, for the attainment of t|ieir end.' The adherents of fanaticifin were recalled, a fhame ful and public traffic of the erasure of emigrants was declared ; the citizens terrified at their proceedings, met together, but that right was prohibited. Arms were diftribiited, poinardj marie, fcveral were fcized with rallying orders, and regiflers for enrolling names were opened! 0 Country ! O sweet and noble sentiment of liberty, generous incentives of honor and of national pride, what became of you ? O names to often prophaned, of jufticr, morality, huma nity, of social and public virtues, where did you take refuge ? They existed with the armies !" (The address, after dating the egeSt refilting irom the inference of the armies with the transac tions cf the 4. h infl. and entreating the public 0- pinion not to be milled with refpeiSt to the conduit of tha direAory, which it afTerts has finally etlab limed rhe constitution *f the third year, and put a period to th* revolution concludes in thu follow ing manner:)— " With refped to you, Frenchmen it depends on your union and on your confidence to encour age us to proceed. Reltored shortly to our eut tornary hbors, all our cares shall be employed in hea ing treachcs which it was the business of our enemies to widen. " The restoration of the finances, of commerce, of ineiuftry, and agriculture; the relief of the in digent cl 3>s, of the hospitals, and the creditors 01 the slate ; the debts due to the imaiortal defen ders ( .four country shall claim our firft attention.. Peace also, that confuting peaee, obtained hy vic tory will also come, we hope to consolidate all our triumphs and repair aj our leffts. But if on the contrary the enemy fhuulj persevere in accele rating his own definition, let the union of all good citizens and their attachment to the confli tu'ion of the third year produce in him despair, and prove th« pledge of his approaching ruin ' •' Frenchmen, the unity of adion is re-eflab. lifbed between the two • reat powers ; not that 0! """y which might result from the depen dent <- f 'he ore upon the other, hut thut which is produced hy the harmony of reciprocal K 's, \Vc have laid before ypu our coudixt a „d our prmcples Our lives ,- r v.holly devoted to the mains nance of the republic : we fhal! not tell you that we are ready to I-jfe them in comfca-insj eiw ry faction, but ivefolemnly fwcar to you that we will overcome them/' Article It —» The law of the sth shall be an nexed to this refoluti .n, and proclaim,,! wlth it in a t the departments and in ,he armies of the re. public. SITTING OF SErr. ?o. A f'Cond message ti oni the directory announ cing to the council, the receipt of the following ktrer from Central Moreau, addressed to citizen Barthekmy : Tic General in Chief of the army ,f tl , Rlml w felle, to CitiTen Barlhclemy, member of tlx Exuytn, Btrcflory of the French Republic. " Headquarters at Strafburgh, rn,h Fruc tidor (September 5,) " CITIZEN DIHECT®R, '• You will no doubt recollea, that on my last