> o E T R r. To the old American Tune " Tie Day is Broke," ANOTHER ftarmy day is come* Loud blow the trumpet, flrike the drum— The foul inspiring fife ; Fierce be Iheclafh of founding arms," It fooji ejch trembling fear disarms, Tii Tribute—Death or Life. What if ue lov'd and fought one foe, With those who hate, who spoil us now, Is gratitude their due ? We early taught them Freedom's lore, We for! them—cloth'd <nd fed their poor They to our bofems grew. But shall the bale, the infidions band Spread baleful treason thro' our land ; Our morals, heartsdeftroy; Daft thro* our throat the fatal knife, Stab what we value more than life, Oar Wife, our Girl, our Boy ? No ! let their madness to u« prove, Their greedy grasp of Empire's Lore, Their with of anpry sway : But O ! let us be friends at home Against them roll the rattling drum, And dart the bayonet's ray. Strike glitt'ring Faulchion, well worn steel, On heads which honor nevw feel If Tribute they demand { Take the brown muftet dear to Fame, (Stampt - ith our country's blefled name) Pois'd oft by hero's hand. Defend your rights, your country's laws, The ikies will redden in your cause, And patriot thunder roll ! 'Tis now—that HE wkq once flood forth, And marked his own, his country's worth, Again expands his foul. Toh im look up ! your guardian ! guide! His country's j"y ; its friend, its pride, And wlien th« day clouds on, That he {hall lead the embattled war, O ! croud and follow from afar The Man, 'ti« WASHINGTON. i AN ACCOUNT OJf TUB ftLOPAtSANDA. fExtradfroma work printed in Germany, entitled, " Historical intelligence and Political Confederations, concerning the French Revolution, by Christopher Gir tanner, Surgeon and Dodor of Phy fick." Thfc third volume; There hath been for some time pad in almofl all European countries much talk concerning the Propaganda, a society whose members are bound by engagements to flir up fubjede against their lawful rulers, , and to promote Qiflentions and agitations in all European states Hitherto this society J , is kitown chiefly by the effede produced by l it : it consists of two ordetf. or clafTes of : meo, viz. men of enthufiatlic difpofi ions, ! { who imagine the r selves to be called to re j t form the world, and of ambitious, mifchiev- ' a ous knaves, who flatter the former in orderto t life them as their tools, and whose wifli it is t to breed trouble, confufion and diflradion, e which affords them an opportunity to fifh 3 in troubled waters, and to lay hold on pow er after*it hath been wrested from the hands c of those men in whom it had been lawfully J and rightly placed. I have taken great pains (even in France itfelf) to obtai) an accurate account of this 1 club or society ; I found means.tn become a member of almofl every club irt Paris, e ven of that famous club of 1789. whose President was the marquis de Condoreet ; j and which, to the best ofjpmy knowledge, ! nerver admitted any foreigner as a member ; (; except myfelf. But notwithflanding all my j pains, endeavors, and researches, concern- ft ing the Propaganda, were in vain until lately, when I obtained by the kindness of l an eminent man, in whose heart the wel p fare of mankind is fincere'y imprefled, the g following authentic account, which I have a here translated, and by his permiflion com- {v muni:ate : I have no doubt of the authen- £ ticity of this %ccouut. £ The club of the Propaganda is verydif- ] c ferent from the jacobin club, notwithfland- a ing they are too frequently confounded ' with each other. The jacobins are the flir rers up of the national assembly ; on the other hand, the Propaganda are the faduc ers and stir rets up of th e-whole human race. n This c'ub exifled as early as the year 1786, f ( and the lords Rochefoucault, Condoreet, aj arid the Ab';e Sieyes, were at the head of it. e Their tenets art as follow % and for the p furtherance of them, their society is eftab- Vl lifhed as a philosophical order, whose objed w it is to control the opinions of mankind. To r( become a member of this foc>ety, it is ne cefla y that therandidate be either a defen- a der and promoter of modern philosophy w (that is dogmatical atheism) or else a man of an ambitious charader, turbulent aod w discontented with the government under p which he lives. When he is, admitted be w gives his •word of honor to observe secrecy ; p before he is accepted, he is informed that a ] the number of members is very great, spread n over all the earth, and that all these mem- Vl bers labor inceflantly to put any falfe or u traiterous members (w ho might betray their p secrets) out of the way. The candidate c further gives his word of hAior, that he t; will communicate all information he may w acquire, to his brethren ; that he willaa- t( ways defend the people in opposition to the t ] government ; that he will do his utmost to t ] refill al! peremptory (by him called arbi- t( trary) commands, and do all that in him t | lies to introduce an universal tolerance of all a religions. d There are two classes of members, fitch rl an pay and such as do not pay , they pay p according to their abili y ; the number of f t contributing members wtre about 5000, the f ( number of non-contributing members about 0] 50,000 ; these bind themselves to fprtad c( the dodrines of the Propaganda in all coun- y( trier, and to promote the designs thereof. p ( The order has two degrees, adfpirants and w initiate ; the firft is aeqnainted with the scope of the order, but the latter is also in„' formed as to the means the order uses to ob- cr tain this end. An aspirant cannot be ad- m mitted into the degree of initiate until he has undertaken a philosophical million, and ca can clearly prove that he has made ten pro- ca fjlytes. The trcafury of ihe order possess- gn ~~ es at present 20 millions of livres, ready money ; and, according to the last accounts there will be, before the end of this year u (179!) 30 millions in it. 1 The order is built Upon the following principles: opinion and necellity (or need) are the springs of all human a&ion ; if you thsrefore can cause the need, necessity, want, or despondence (call it which you will,) to spread. you may thereby controul the opinions of mankind, and will be en abled to shake all the fyftemsof the world, even those which seem to have the firmett foundations. To delude the Hollander? has cod the orekrgrtal labour ; but the consideration thfii fbe blow becomes universal has fuflained th"£m. The plan of the order is as follows : No onecandeny but that the oppreflion,un der which some men live (let it be praftifed where it will) is agreat cruelty 9c calamity, this therefore must be removed and put an r end to by the light of philosophy. When this is done, it will only then be needful to wait for the favourable period in which the nunds of mank nd will be univerfully tuned to accept the new fyflem, which mud be preached all at once over the whole of Eu rope. Those who obftina*ely refill this fyf tera. we must endeavour by persuasion or by need to renounce their opposition j but if they perfifl, and are incorrigible, they must be treated as the Jew 6 have been treated, and be excluded from the rights of focLty, driven from among men. There is another article in the society's pldh which is no less remarkable ; it is this. The Propaganda mud not not try to bring her plan to bear until she is perfcftly convin ced that the need (want or necessity) exist ; it would be better to wait fifty years, than by precipitance to fail. A rtumerous society like this, whose members hitherto as yet a& singly, which accumulates money, which goes to work fl 'wly, and carefully avoids all precipitance, j which vril! strike no blow until she is well , allured of almofl certain success, such a so * ciety is a dangerous thing ; their progrels may possibly be fwift, and deliverance out , of their hand seems next to an impossibility. The Dutch patriots who fled to France con 1 fidered the Propaganda as thei? chief anchor : ■ Suppose (fay they) suppose then that the House of Auflria will afford us no assistance, 1 there yet remains for us the Propaganda ; these are mifiiowaries of this order all over Holland, and perhaps even already some re- I gular lorfg-s. J , In ths club of the friends of the people ' j at BrufTels, a speaker lately exprefTed him j felf in the following words : tc Kvery where ! 'hey are preparing fetters, but philosophy ! ar| d reason will one day triumph . and the time will tome when the unlimited, uncon- ( trouled ruler of the Ottoman Empire in the S evening shall lay himfelf to reft as a despot, and in the morning shall arise as a citizen." 11 The treasury of ths propaganda receives * considerable sums from all the provinces of Holland. C e STAUNTON, (Virg.) July 24 " j At * meeting of the field officers of the 81ft regiment of militia in the county of Bath, h with a representative from each company, g and a number of other refpeftable inhabi- \ tants at the court-house, on Monday k the 9th day of July, 1798, o On motion, Valentine White was appointed Secretary, Major John White was unanimously elefled a Chairman, t Refolt/ed unanimously. That an address be n presented to the President of the United States, and that the following gentlemen be appointed a feleft committee to prepare the o fame, to wit : Samuel Blackburn, Charles tl Cameron. John Brown, William Poage & George Poage,—who brought in the fol lowing report, which was unanimously e agreed to. ' p To JOHN ADAMS, si PSESIDENT of the UrnTED STATES. ? Sir, ,c WHILE France, faithful to her decla- Ci rations of " Renouncing conquest or inter ference in the government of other nations," attended to her own emancipation and the « expulsion of tyrants, leagued for the pur pose of Treftoring her ancient form of go vernment, and riveting her former chains ; - we viewed her cause as the cause of MAN, rejoiced at her success, aad regretted her ''' misfortunes as involving the interests ofhh- b ; man nature ; but when a fyltem of offenfive war, maflacre and indiscriminatepplunderr r di succeeded to sober and rational defence ; - when the rights of MAN, the right of pro perty, things sacred and things common "~ were facrificed to national ambition, and the power to conquer and extort money, invari ably furniflied the pretext and juftified the measures, we seriously lamented that a re volution so glorious in its commencement, unequalled in the extent and celerity of its progress, should terminate To little to the credit of the principal a&ors, or real advan tage of that magnanimous people : if these were our feelings while difintsrefled fpeda- f c tors of the conduft of France, what must c < they now be, when she, having exhausted Ji the blood and treasures of Europe, is ex- 31 tendingherviews to this government, and by tl the m»ft unjuflifiable and unprovoked fpoli- 31 ations on the property of its citizens, is P draining her principal sources of wealth and 0 revenue, and by insidious appeals to the people against the government, calculated to foment divisions in our country, preparatory for the iQore easy introdudion of her plan of universal disorganization and re- J ceptioa of that eonftitution or form of go- j t( vernment, she may please to didate at the point of the bayonet, arts already pradifed ~ with too much success in Europe. Under these impressions, Sir, we would B do injustice to ourselves in concealing the ft, entire fatisfadion we feel, at the decided measures adopted by our government in re fpeft to that nation. Can France,, intoxi- p, cated as she is, seriously believe that Ameri- ve cans having so long c joyed the blelfings of tic an efficient government, *'h;ch happily th 3y 'combines (he greatest personal lib'riy. its vidua! ifcuri'y, and national honor, tat ti :ar fe£t of a most enlightened policy and price of the dearest Wood of their fathers, tould lg poflibly be induced by promises or threats to d) j abandon it, but with their lives ? No—we ju i declare to you and to the world, the conlli y, J tution we have adopted we will transmit in -3U violate to posterity, or perifti in its ruins ; it ul I is not for us to fay, whether war is or is not n- neceflary ; conftitution of our choice has d, delegated tjie decifien to a different depart :ft | ment. Peace, honorable peace ! we rank "a mongft the firft of earthly bleflings ; war we he view as the scourge of human nature ; this Jn however we do fay, our persons & property ed are Inbjefit to the call ofour country ; either 3 : or both are ready to be facrificed in her de n- fenc.' in manly oppofitioo to invasion or Ra ed tfonal insult, either from the long accredited y, despotisms of the old world o the gorern an ment of Fiance regenerated-Really the most :n energetic despotism, concealed under the to new-fangled appellationof citizens direftors, lie and the advocates of liberty and equality. :d At this trying crisis, Sir, when tlie most be efiential interests of our conutry may be at u- Ibike, when the secret enemies of our most ■f. excellent conftituticn begin to (hew them iy selves, when the most falntary measures if adoptedby our government, arc mifconftru ft ed aid opposed by men too, to some of i, whom we would willingly ascribe the bjft of f, motives ; when foreign enemies are calcu lating on our internal dtvifions, and domestic 's enemies are laboring to realize those calcu s. lations; we esteem it our duty to add g (however late the declaratian) that in at -- taehment to our country, in obedience to ; her laws, in refpeft to the cha: after and n confidence adopted by our chief magidrate, we yield to none, and only wait his call to rally 'e round the standard of our constitution, and li seal this declaration with our blood, t (Signed by order of the meeting) • JOHN WHITE. Chairman. 1 VAL. WHITE, Secretary. 1 M ails for South-Carolina Cs' Georgia, t T) A CKETS are now provided for carrying the . A Public mailsby water between Philadelphia and Charleston. They will leave Philadelphia on Friday's. The poll by land will be continu ed twice a week until an experiment is made in regard to the expedition and regularity of the packets. If any person Chufes to have their letters sent by iand only, they will pleale to write the word Land upon the letters : other wise they \jrill be sent by that conveyance which will firft start after the letters are left in the ! poft-effice. "Joseph Haberjham, Pojl-Majler Gemeral. Philadelphia, August 13, 1798. s;t c 3* The Office of the Insurance Company of North America, is removed to the < School House, near the Market, in Gepnantown. Orders for Insurance, left at the south east cor- , ner of Arch and Sixth streets, will be duly for- ' warded. august 13 The Office of the Insurance Ccmpany of the State of Pennsylvania, is remov ed to the North weft cornfr of Ninth and Market ' fiw august 13. 1 CO" Any person in the neighbour hood of Germantown defirousof effefling Insuran ces at the Offiee of the Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania, now op' ned at the North . Weft Corner of Ninth and Market streets, may - know the terms by leaving an enquiry at the house of SamufJ H'.Filhcr, Esq. in Germantown. ' ""guft §iw { c 3* John W. Vancleve, Attorney at Law is removed to the house of capt. John Harrifon at the j Mile Stsne, 011 Point Road, c near Frankford. i augnft '3 " sot c The Office of the Colledor 1 of this Port is removed to Congress Hall, where 1 the Custom-House business is now tranfailed. t augult ii. t The Poll-Office will b<; mov- c ed on Monday the 13th instant, at one o'clock P, M. to the North-fide of Market-flreet, the t firft house Weft of Eleventh-street, where Mer- I chants and others are requested to fend si r their n letters ; as the Letter-carriers will be flopped ], carrying letters out, after that time. Post Office, Philadelphia. august TT. G £? lhe Sublcribers have reraov- j ed for the preferit from Penn-ftreet to Eleventh- n street, between Filbert and High-streets. WiUtngi £s" Francis. „ awguft 9 11 & Wanted —A situation in a Pub- f, lie or Merchants Ofiice, or to go as Supercargo, a by » person regularly brought up to the Mer cantile and Insurance business in London, he has lately been a voyage from hence to the Welt-In dies as Supercargo, can be well recommended, " —Please to enquire at the Printer's, august 11 This Day Pubftjhed, s And for sale at the Office of the Editor, No. 119 Chef)iut-ftreet, (Price J-tth of a Dollar, J ri AN ORATION, ti Pronounced July 4,1798, Ci At therequeft of the Inhabitants of the Town of jr BOSTON, in commemoration of the anni- w verfary of American Independence. rl By jfostAH S>uTNcr. . " The inroads upon our public liberty, call for reparation—The wrongs we have sustained, call for—"Justice. That Reparation and tint ® Juftiee, may yet be obtained, by Union, Spirit, h and Firmness. But to divide and conquer wjs tl the maxim of the Devil in the garden of Eden, tl and to disunite and enslave hath been the princi- j r pie of all his votaries from that period to the present." Observations on the Boston Pcrt-BUI, (Sfc.p. 78 by the late J. 3>uincy, jim. i auguft 11 b For Sale. £ A ftrohg Second Hand Coachee, With Steel Springs.—Enquire at No. 319, Mar- ( j. ket Street. 5 august 9 s4t w A House to let, In Fourth street, next door to the Indian Queer!. Enquir* of Robert Smith, N0.58, South front street. f jnly i' cs The Office of the Committee, Appointed to superintend the building of th« Frigate to be loaned to the United States, is remo- S ( ved to N*. 11l Spruce street—os which those gen tlemen who havs not already ceme forward with te their fubferiptions will please to tike notice. cc ROBERT RITCHIE, SK'ry. •" BY THIS DAY'S MAIL. •e _____ d BOSTON, August 8. 0 [C?" Sinceour 'aft we have been favored with '" London papers to June 9 —about 18 days :i " later than before received. 1 h'ey were brought to town by Messrs Monkhoufe lC and Eerkfdale, who came 011 shore from the Britifb June Packet.] (Col. Cen.J as RASTADT, May 20. a " The Deputation of the Empire, hath gi ven an answer to the last note of the French 1,3 Commiffioners.—ln thS ,'answer it refyfes to 'Y France any pofielHons on the right bank of er the Rhine. But animated by a desire for e " peace, it is willing to agaee, that the centre a " of the Rhine (hall be the bound-ry, and the islands irr it, belong to that power, within H " whose half they lie; Ehrenbreitftein, £ which is on the right bank] it fays, cannot be de ,e ftroyed tinlefs France gives an equivalent. s > A new negociation between England and France, has been proposed by Count Co -1 benzel, by dire&ion of the Emperor. lt His Prufiian Majesty will not accede to ft the demands of the French. 1- -s FRANKFORT, May 19. '* Ruflia lias resolved to take the moll aftive part in the war, should France refufe peace, and support England with all her power. This has been notified to the Emperor of c Germany . who has in consequence cora '• rr.iffioned Count Cobenzel, topropofe a new d negociation between France and England ° Gen. Buonaparte's Expedition. ■' London, June 9. An express from Lord y St. Vincent mentions his having advice from the Mediterranean, that the Toulon fleet, having Gen. Bhonaparte on board, •> had thevigilance of Sir Horatio Nel son ; sind ; had failed on the projett-d eriter prize. In conftquence, orders liave been a i(Tiled for fitting for sea, immediately, every 5 ship of war, that cait be put in commiflion ; e and a f«vere press has taken place in 1 all the maritime towns, and on ihe river. » That Ireland is the objeft of Buonaparte , no question can remain. A correspondence c between the insurgents and the French Di r reftory has bee'i long kept up. > Letters from Li(b-<n fry, that Admiral Nelson and Curtia, had joined St. V-inc nt's ' , fleet which now confiftsof 32 fail of the line.—He is to go in quest of the Toulon fleet, leaving the Spaniards to be watched by a small squadron. " ARMY OF ENGLAND " London, May 30. Paris accounts states, that Gen. Grenier is fhortl'y to fail from Durkirk, for England ; ai d that the troops have marched from St. Omcrs, Bethune, Arras, &c. for the coast. May 28. On Saturday a bill passed the ' house of Commons, for manning the navy by suspending all protedlionG, LONDON, May 26. j Dublin mail arrived yesterday. Soldiers are paced at free quarters in that city. The < loldiers and butchers lately had an affray, ( which ended in the former's favpr. Several < persons are jull arretted for treasons. 1 May 28. t The Iri/h mails, which arrived on Satur- { day, brought a variety of intelligence of the ( utmoll importance. The lord lieutenart, { onTuefday last. sent a'meffige to both r houses of parliament, stating that ins 1 ma- t tion had been received by his excellency, c that the difaftedicd had been dan g enough J to form a plan to priflefs themfelvrs, in tlie c course of the present month, of the metropo- 1 lis, and to seize the feat of government, and v those in authority within the city. The i lords and commons, in co sequence of this r meflage, immediatfly entered into some fl loyal resolutions, and eaeh went up to the v eaftle with an addrefs'to the lord lieutenant j the latter with the speaker at their head, displaying a laudable instance of sage deter- I minatiois, by walning in procefiion whole ft of the way, thrdugh the most populous 1; streets of the metropolis. , Such is the abundance of money at pre- t: sent in the city, that «ne half of the v. hole amount of the loan for the service of the k year has already been pa d into the bank by t the fubferibers, although not more than two a millions are yet due. j. May 29. t ] The Irish rebels have been defeated at tl Saggard and Naas. Several hundreds killed, k May 30. ? The Dublin Mail of the 25th inftaat, ar rived yesterday, by which we have received t( not only a confirmation of the dreadful ac counts given in our last paper, but also forpe J important details of several frefh aftions li which have taken ptaee between the milita* te ry and the rebels in various direftions.— ai Ihe rebellion is now openly supported in r< most parts of the counties of Dublin, Kil- cl dare, and Meath ; aSd ever, the neighbor- S hood of the metropolis has been aflailed by the daring insurgents. In some instances, tl they have made a desperate resistance ; hut tl in all they have been completely defeated Y with immense (laughter, while his majesty's in forces have sustained very little loss. Near ol Dunboyne, the rebels, who captured the bsgg'ge of two companies, guarded by a fgoall party of the Reay Feec,ible&, S3 fitted te in our paper of yelWday, remained undif- 3. perfed on the 24th; but on the following il day a formidable army was sent against them°, al who happily succeeded in putting the whole C body to flight. te „ , .. May 31. f 0 By the Dublin mail of the 26th, which la came to hand yesterday, we have received «f accounts of several frefh actions having been cl fought between the military and the infur- w gents, in the whole of which his maiefty's er forces have completely triumphed. ~ The in rebellion has extended its influence into the counties of Wicklcw and Carlow; so :h»t th S there are now fire count 'et- in sn open ft i of iofurre&ion. The official details of t of the engagements., which took place Hacketftown, in thf county of Carlow, a ►j, at Baltinglafs, in the county of ,Wicklo ys state that the rebel? loft in the former this re hundred men, and in the latter between o; f e and two hundred. Battles have also bet m fought at Clare, Ballimor, Berretilowr > Lucan, and Lufk, which terminated ia i similar manner. The Rebels have burnt the town of Kulcullen, and destroyed a great j. part of the refpeftable city of Carlow, at which place a dreadful conflift took place, . the result of which was, that four hundred of the misguided wretches were slain, orer )r whose mangled carcaies the travellers from rc Dublin to the southward were for a whole e day obliged to pass. Such is the frightful n pi&ure which our intelligence of yefterdajr presents to our view. But this is not all ; our advices from the south state, that the county of Kilkenny ig j in a very perturbed situation ; that the greatest apprehensions are entertained in the counties of Tipperary ond Waterford ; and 0 that in the county of Cork, an open rebel lion is hourly expe&ed. The vicinity of th« metropolis < ontinues to be infitfted with nu merous- bodies of the infurgei.ts, against e whom all the troops in the garrison have re ceived orders to march, and the protection of the city is now committed to the yeo f manry, who, from their numbers and afti . vity, appear fully adequate to the under v taking. Two members of Rathfarham vo lunteers, Meflrs. Lcdwiehand Keggh, who headed the rebels in an aftion fought Hear that place, were on Sunday lait, with eigh teen others, executed in Dublin, pursuant to the sentences of several courts martial ; on the fame day. Dr. Esmond, of the coun ty of Kiidare, aifo fuffered death, for re -1 bellious behavior. The rebels have, pofftff ' ed ihemfeWes of some unimportant polls not far distant from the metropolis, and de stroyed the bridge of Kiilcullen, to prevent ' the communication with the South. Juije i. ■ The Gazette enables us to lay before our 1 readers a-iifpatch from the lord Lieutenant, dated the 27th ult. containing an account of some further advantages obtained on the preceding day over the Rebels, st Taragh, Hill, about ten miles north of the metropo lis, where they appeared in great numbers. For some time they refilled the a:tack ofthree companies of the Reav fencibles and several troops of yeomanry, but they were at length obliged to fly in all direftions, leaving three hundred and fifty dead upon the field. N» prisoners. The loss on the part of the King'* troops was nine rank and five killed and six teen wounded. • June 4. The official intelligence which has arrived from Ireland since lour last publication in some measure answers pur expectations, and gratifies our hopes. A numerous body of rebels assembled ©n the Curragh of Kildarc, (amounting to 40co)have laid down their arms, and given up a number of their leaders; that the communication between Dublin and Limerick, which bad been cut off by the In surgents, has been reflored ; and that Sir. James Duff hat retaken the town of Kii dare, and killed between two and three hun dred of the Insurgents, who had poffefiion of that place, with the loss of three men kil led, and several wounded. The Gazetteadds that " the outli is'entirely quiet." We are sorry, however, our letters from thatquarter do not admit us to fubferibe 'o this last as sertion. The rebel. »we are on the contra ry affined, are still in greatforcein the Coun ty of Wexford ; & that a large fletachment of the loth regiment of foot, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel ( oly i ll g, which march ed from Waterford for that county, on the 28th ult. had been cut off by the Insurgents who, to the amount of near 7000 men, were in possession of the City of Wexford and its neighbourhood, when the Gentleman.-who states this unfortunate circumstance came a way. June 6. Maj. Gen. Fawcett having marched from Duncannon fort, with a xomoany of the Meath regiment, w.is furronnded by a very large body betweerv Taghmcn and Wexford and defeated. The gearral cffeSed hit m treat to the fort. (Official.) The town of Newtown Barry was attac ked June i, by the Rebels: They surround ed it in such a manner that Col. L'Eftrange, at firft retreated in order to colic & his force. Hethen attacked them and drove them from the town with great Daughter, and pursued them several miles. 500 of the Rebels were killed. The colonel's whole force was about 33°- (Official.) A party of rebels in endeavouring to eil ter Carlow have been defeated. (Official.) Yesterday's Irilh Mails brought news to June 2* The Rebels appear to derive mi litaiy inftru&ion from their frequent disas ters. In the North of Ireland which has affefted much loyalty, such indications of revolt have appeared that martial law ia de clared there. This was done at Belfaft on Sunday last. It is feared the Toulon fleet has eluded the vigilance of admiral Nelson. [We think our accounts via Gibra tar and New- Yotk later than any news from the ftreights in London at the above date. Nelson was off Toulon, the beginning of June.] June 7. A mail from Dublin and one from Wa terford arrived yefterdsy with neirs to the= 3d. No aQion had taken place since the ' Ift inft. Hje rebellion still rages with un abated violence in the counties of Wicklow, Carlow and Welford, and it is feared is ex tending to Kilkenny and Tipperary, the former of which is proclaimed under martial law- The rebels still hold the city and part of Well ford—from whence women and children have fled to Milford in Wa'es ; where those who have long existed in afflu.' ence andeafe arenec< filiated to buylodgings in barns cr llet p is the fields. Secretary Dundas is affiled with 1 fit oi th.- palsy.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers