4 ?■ tljis 3>a?'s ftail. a CHAMBERSBURG, April 18. Patrick Donogan and Francis Cox, accuf cd «•; accomplices in the murder of Francis Sl.it,. have made, their fctcape from Harr;f burg jail. An handsome reward is ottered for apprehending" them. The Herald of Liberty, a newspaper pub 4(tied at Washington (Penn.) asserts, that « the Pivlident of the United States has granted a free pardon to David Bradford, the principal in the inhirre£tion of 1 794-' CHARLESTON, April 13. A letter received by a gentleman in this city, from his correspondent in St. Kitts, by the vessels which arrived on Thursday, men tions, that the inhabitants of the W ind ■ward lilafids feel themselves under great o bligations for the proteflion the American frigatfs, cruising in those seas, gi\e o commerce of the islands. April 17» . By the late arrivals from the Havanna we le*rn, that iome time in the l4 " er e " d ° March, the ship Of- 1 "' oi ' mounting ff««, and "* m,ed w,th 8 3 ■ W as captured after * Woody engagement, by aliree French privateers ; one a fchnoner, formerly -k Provide»ce privateer, mounting -16 truns; the others, fchoomMi' carrying io Sind 8 gnns : they tarried her by ooardmg. ■'[ heaccount received in the Havanna, which -was ijvnerally credited, fa id th.it 78 men of the Ocean's crew were killed. She was from New-York, bound to the Havanna, with a very valnahle taVgo »n bpsrd, belonging to Mr. Cramond of New-York. The privateers carried her into a Bay to windward of the Mattnzas, in the island of Cuba. Cattt. Giice, from Gibraltar, informs, that when he failed the Britilh fleet still con tinutd. to blockade Cadiz. Lord St., Vin centwas it Gibraltar.- Extract of a letter from Statesburg, dated April 14. " On ThurSday morning, about 2 o'clock, •we hid a considerable (fyock of an earthquake so as to awake and alarm every person in the house ; the fliock was throughout the neigh borhood ; and we are informed it was much more violent in Camden." " y Yesterday anchored in the roads, his Bri -tamiic majesty's sloop Sprightly, capt. /ump, 1 -in 1 o days from Kingston, Jamaica. This vessel we learn was dispatched for two feantn belonging to the prew of the Hermoine Britilh frigate, who have been confined for feme time past in the goal of this While the French direftory demand of Germany, that the Ruffians (hould be pre vented from marching through her territo ry to attack them, they demand of Spain lermiffion to march an army through her lominions to attack Portugal \ and threat ., ■ . ,en each power with her vengeance in cafe BALTIMORE, April 23. of refufal. Such is Democratic eoufiften- The French privateer taken by captain C Y • ■ ■ « r 1 in rr - \ ▼▼ city. Decatur in March last off the Havannah, mfw-VOR K Anvil i± and of which we have already published a*. J?E W YORIK, April 24- account, came up this morning. She crui- e ave care u v exami e our fed with the Delaware till the s th instant, of London Liverpool, and Glafgovy pa off the Hnvanna, when she was ordered to per., received "5. Monday, a „d find little in proceed under command of wh «-' h V American reader wonldpro captain Burrows, but meeting with a heavy nounce intereft.ng ; the public attention ... gale of wind in the Gulph Stream, about England Scotland, and Ireland, being al fhe rcth instant. in which she loft her rudder, «»oft wholly engrossed by the projected union !he was t-ken in tow by the ship Abigail,. . Ire ' and Wlth Great , captain Kean, fortius p«irr. i ' . "" arc 4" The prize's name is the Porpoise, had on Sunday morning arrived at Dover a car board when raken, 24. men, aed carries one tel from Gravel.nes, with prrfeners ; but no long brass 9 pounder, mid ship. i French P«P ers wcr , e r ered , to . be P uC 011 | board. Ihe cartel failed again in the e»en „ r , r . . „ ing for France- Exlraa of a later from agenthman m Havan- . g , he pr ; foners who came over in the received by the carte l, s ome G f w h om are officers, whs had Ihtp Alxgm , aled ] rea'd.the Paris-papers in France, we learn , T , . ava p na > *pru 3. that it was generally underdood that are «• Ihe Havanna «at prelent very sickly. ! of t| £ wit!l tlie Emperor was de- Sixteen Americans died ot the yellew ferer c j^ e( j. Dn the 28th ult. One of our passengers j n con s e q Uence the Dire&ory hid order was taken lick the 3d day arte our arrival, j -r. r* c 1 u , 1 ni_ j c cr 1 • 1 • ed a new military confiription 01 three hun tVe can, from the malt head of vessels in this • . r , . , » r . ••. j r .. , , . * . , , « < ... cired thouiand men to be levied tor attack >ort fee Americans taken by the Ennlifh • o • ' j • ■ r j.l . , „ , , ... ; n r . irg O-ermany, and it is laid that every man nd French daily,, within gun fh»t of the i r.. r. j • . u r . vloro Castle " of the age ot between 20 and 30 is to be sent 'to the armies; except those whole situations affords tl.em particular proieftion. This lew levy was partly intended to reinforce he army of the Rhine, while a reinforce nent wasalfo intended to be sent to the fron iers, and a large body of troops to Brest. April 24., The following toaib were givenyefterday, at the anniversary dinner of the Society of the Sons of St. George, established in she city of Baltimore. , 1. The Day and all who celebrate it wor- thilv 2. George the Third, Mfho reigns over the land we came from —(3 cheers, with " God Saye the King ") 3. John Adams, who presides over the land we li«e in—(with" 4. Lieut. Gen George Washington, the tried friend of his country.— (3 cheers.) 5. Lord Nelson—" The man whom the king delight*.th to honor."—(9 cheers.) 6* Capt. Tru«ton, and fnccefs to the Constellation, the Vanguard of Columbia's naval glory— (9 cheers.) 7. The Wooden Walls of OU England —may they ever prefervt an Hifurmountable barrier to the- fiend like efforts of Gallic ambition, and the vile, insidious arts of dis organizing Jacobinism. (bumper toatt, 9 •cheers, with" RuV Britannia.") 8. The Navy of the United States of America—may it continue to protedt com merce, overcome its enemies, and rife the impregnable bulwark of the government which created il ( 3 cheers, with " Let Fame Sound her Trumpet.") 9* William Pitt and Timothy Pickering —-the intrepid champions of their country's honour—(9 cheers) 10. America, our adopted country may her independence and prosperity be com mensurate with time. m. May the intcrefts of Great Britain and the Un ted Slates be cemented by the irdifT luble bonds of a mutually advantage eus friendfhip and commerce 12. Tht lovely filler virtues—philanthro phy and unanimity. 15. Tlie city of Baltimore— may her pro grets in federr.rifm keep pace with her other rapid improvements.—(3 cheers.) . Ttie fliip Abigail, captain Kcan, and brig" Mary, in .19 days from th« Havanna, failed with 27 fail os-American vessels, bound for different pons of the continent under convoy of the.. Delaware, General Gr«ene and Jay ef war. The following vefelt were left tn port, to fail with the fir ft convoy. Ship Louisa, Ghampley, cf and for Balti more cjchr. Buckiliin, Helms, do. Plato, Hamilton, do. Ship Diana, Flinn, of and for Philadelphia Brig R ; P U y' d °- XT v , Ship America, Sansls, New-York. Three Sifters, Wright, do. g r ,g , Aekins Bolton. Arrived on Monday, ship Harriot, capt. Ajlnufter, from Cork, last: from Plymouth. The Harriot left Corfc/on the 15 th Septem ber last. and oi\ her paflage.' was taken by L 3 Courageaux Fjench frigate, and after wards re-takeii by an Enclifh ship of war, andi carried into Plymouth, from which port she failed on the SUI of February. arrived, fchr.' Tabitha, c?p f . C a leb Greene. . L.eft Sirinam pn the 25th company with a number of Ame ricans under convoy of the (loop of war Portsmouth, captain MvNeal—parted with the coavpy i.n .lat. N. on the 29th. In tlic 'fleet wera. Brig Samuel, captain M'Bride, of and for Baltimore, Milfard, Williams, do. fchf's Caroline, Benfon, 40. Mary, Boden, do. (hip. Nancy, Deas, of and for New-York ! brig -, Gillender, do. brig. , Star, do. schooner——, Nichols, do. brig , Spooner, Provid'-nce, r. 1. Arrived, brig Ranger, captain Martin, 47 days fnnß' Bristol—Dry Goods—Git tings & Smith. Left at Brijlol, Snow Wathington, of New-York, bound to Baltimore. Ship. Nonrpareil, of ar>4 bound to N. York • Hereule», of do. to do. Brig Winifred, to Philadelphia. All to fail with convoy. Spoke, 4th April, lat. 40, 32, N. long 60, 30, W. brig William, of Savannah, bound to Copenhagen, all well. Sailed in company and parted off Cape Clear, Bth Mareh' with (hip Planter, for Richmond. The Ranger carries 14 cannon, and on ariving, gave the city a salute. Now Landing from the-fliip Delaware, lrom Can ton and lor sale by the Subscribers. Hyson, "N Hyson SJtin, / * Young Hyson, f Souchong, j Carton and Garden Fans, Nankeens, China Ware, assorted. IJmbrella»1 3 to 30 inches, Silk Handkerchiefs, Hair Ribbons and Sewing Silks. They have also remaining on Hand Black Peifiins, Choppa and Pullicat Romalls, And a general afiortment us Dry Goods as usual. Thomas iST Joshua Fisher. 4th m« 26 Notice. THE fiib'fcriber, having been appointed ad miniflratorof the estate of Mr. John Lup ton, late of this city, merchant, deceased, re quests those whp are indebted to said estate, to make payment, and thpfe who hive demands against tiie fame to exhibit them to him with out delay, W. MEREDITH, No. 16, south Foujth ftieet. doim April if) NOTICE. THE Publie are requsfted not to receive any drafts, notes, obligation! or bills of any kind drawn in favor of orindorfed by Ab'tjah Hunt. J. & A. Hunt. . Jesse if Abijab Hunt. Jeremiah CJ* Abijab Hunt*. Abijab isf Jno. W. Hunt. Snodgrass, Is" Co. , fhofe on whom they are drawn are a!A) deflrod to fiifpeni acceptance, until refcrencs be had to the Itmlcribcr. About twenty thoufatid Dollan of bills r>t the abpve description havirg been t.ikcn from the car rier near the moutk of 1"< nnrfi.'e river by a party of Ih6 artifice of dernago- y. no ■ex ertion of interested' devotees is relaxed, in th; great work .of increafyig and fortifying their partifaii3. To flrike* ? and quickly too, is obvionfly the sole means of warding off the thousand milchiefs and dangers from this source, which from their nature, can never be diftinftly known, arid if Account is made to meet them diftinftly, mull baffle calcula tion, and defeat oppofnion.- In this painful posture do we at-this in stant (land-; our government arraigned by | th£ French rulers, at thS tool and dupe of England, and treacherous'to the people ; and the people, while they ari flattered as emi nently virtuous and pure," murdered by V.on stitutionai Decrees, without diflihdtion and without remorse. No civilized nation ever perpetrated the enormities \ve have' endured from the French ; and no independent people ever so tamely endured them. '"Meanwhile, (confounding truth i) their influence here is e.icreafing and extending, and the refledtion seems to flrike r,o one,' th'at on ever)' step which it advances, depend not merely the coiaqueft and fubjugatioh,'but the ruin of thousands, the desolation, misery aflAdefpair of tiioulands, the murder of thousands. The allotted period of' our falrsition is pro tradled almost to its Latest verge ; and the proposed negociation,iff*fTered to be prolong ed like the last, may yet infiribe on the blood stained Tablet of Diplomatic Skill, the post obiit of our Independence. The interval be tween the present time atld the issue p'f. the propoied DegociatioiT,' ffiooW, therefore, be a busy oue : over that Are have no longer any coiitroul—it js conflitutionally committed ; but, therefore, have we the more important part to aft ; and conscious of the dangers to which it may expolii us, we Ihould proceed, (regardlcfs of the clamors of the mercenary miscreants* who surround us) to point them out, that they may be pro vided for, and avoided. The French republic, more than any that has preceded her, polk lies this contumacious and inveterate remembrance of an injury offered to her pride, and adds to it, a more insatiable thirll for conqtieft, than ever ani mated Alexander, or her own great Mo ■narque. Since Hie fir ft became di drafted by the whimlies of her fantaftic philosophy, (lie has in-no in (la nee, forgotten or forgiven-aji injury. One BafieviHe, Vlow and insolent sansculotte, whom she had sent, at an early stage of the revolution to outrage hisholinefs, the pope, was," for some of his democratic gambols, murdered by the populace : though ample atonement was made, and the breach acknowledged to be healed, this occurrence is made a pretence, at the distance of eight years, for the seizure and plunder of the Ro man commonwealth; the anarcluzing of its inhabitants, the deftruftion of its govern ment. and the exile or murder of its mem bers. Of Switzerland the unatoneable crime was t» have failed in making common cause with her ; for on Switzerland (he had claims of gratitude, and consequently, was not ia tisfied that (he (hould merely keep aloof from the struggle, or even that she flioiild secret ly and partially aid and assist—Her laches in the glorious career of revolutionizing the world, was never forgivejr, 'till Switzerland swarmed with revolutionary cut-throats, and * Bach I call that barren tribe of feeble-minded caitiffs, who have lately attempted to revive the Papal creed ot Infallibility; to tflablifh the do&rine that ibe ling can da no wrong, and to proscribe all difference from them in opinion, by stigmatizing it as atufe. That the king (or the governing pow er) can do no wrong, is, most undoubtedly, not only a very valuable, hut a very eHernial principle in government; but in our», under its prcfent cotiftruf thi.s truth, one would think s alone necef rary ro rouse us to'a proper fenle of our Cit- nation ; and yet one would also think that evidences enough had already been afforded of its exigence to convince the moO Scepti cal. It is riot, to be sure, 'to citizen Piclion, the coi reiporldent of American' traitors, that we are to look- for these evidences:—it is not to citizen Talleyrand we are to look for them—nor to our own Democrats ; it is not very wife to look to men lor a display of truth whicli mull blast them. In the per severing hostility of France against the com merce of this country, in her unrelenting spirit of refcntment so repeatedly displayed, at the repudiation of Genet, and the treaty with England, in her oppressions, cruelties, tortures and murders exercised upon our lea men, may we read a blind and brutal refolu- Jiion taken to revenge upon us those partial indications of relentment at her insolence, which howe.ver just and however honorable, mnft thus prove fatal, if hot followed the fame spirit which gave rife to them. - And yet, " funt qui formidine nulli jm buti ipcftent." There are men who view common cafe, ti> be relieved by or dinary means. With them, the demand oi tribute, is construed into anxiety for the preservation of peace, and the malTacrc of a whole iliip's Grew, palles for tin iymptom of an indication of hostility ! Compared with the fate she prepares for us, it is, in truth, no Her of herfvieft'horrors will be more. exhauftcd on our heads ; and all.that annal ists have written of the cruelties of Herod and t)f Nero, or Poets fabled of tin* torments of the damned, will be our wretched lot. The all-blasting' Upas of France, once al lowed to takej-oot on our ftiores, and her infernal tri-color must soon float over our miftfrable land, then become an ocean of .blood. The Northampton. InfurredtiolN, com menced in deceit and wickedness, has at length ended iu a complete difplav of mad ness, delation and folly. The mifchiefs of this alTumption of l'overeignty on the part of a handful of fools and knaves, have already had their full operation : and -it now re mains that we benefit ourselves by those les sons to be drawn from the occalion, which, left unimproved to further ends, the Infur redtion roig'ht as well have been permitted to rage. Such is the nature of the age in wiiich our lot is call, that no event that emerges, however apparently simple in i's afpedl, ought to be viewed in an Onconnedted light; but while the mind is kept continually involved in odc turbid whirlpool, while we are driven from outrage to outrage, and from insurrec tion to infurre&ion ; from the hostilities of Genet, to the treason of the Flour Merchants, and from Diplomatic Skill, to the moody Rebellion of the Land of Slaves ; —there is danger that by dwelling too intensely on separate points, we negJedt to trace up tfte origin and connection of t;he various evils by which we hjive been scourged, to their true source, To effedt a radical cure of the dis ease u whereof' our powi-r is sick," it is ne cessary to diicoVer and operate upon the cause : It is effedting but a partial purpose, to put down the infurredtion of a few coun ties, whilst a band of French mercenaries dijperfed over the commonwealth are prepa ring an Infurredtion of the whole state, un der thfi auspices of a thoroiigh-goihg French RevdlutifSrtift, who would soon league poor Pennsylvania with the land of tiaves in her holy work of dismembering the Unten, and soon deliver us over, bound hand a#d foot, to the dominion of the Diredtory, There is but one remedy now left, which can reach the evil. Arnongft the fir ft good effefts of the en creafing glow of Fcderalifm, in Franklin count), h.is been tSe decampment iron) Chamberfburg of two filthy democratic prin. tert. Extract of a letter fom Boston, April 18 Fame, Ricard, ( Lenox, Lake, Louisa, Champlin, Brig Abigail, Thompson, Betsey, Haward, ■ Amiable Creole, Story, Schr. Daphne, Ripley, Phcebe, Cummings, Minerva, Davidlon. Capt. P. also informs, that a fleet of Bal timore and Charleston verfel had failed se ven days hefore him. The capture of the (hip Ocean, Kemp, of tin's port, was confir med, but the (laughter of the crew only re pot t. YeftmLyarrived the schooner Ann, capt. PUtt, iu 8 days from Charleston, with thu Mail. Ship Jofiah Collins, of and for Edenton from Cadiz, was fcen on Occracock bar on Wednesday last, with an anchor out to wind ward, throwing her cargo overboard and sawing her stem down, apparently for the of throwing her guns overboard. Brig Amazon, Lewis ; fchoor.er liErmo ny, Houston, and schooner Amv, Cufhing, Irom hence, have arrived at St. Thomas's. A gentleman in town has icceived a let- Icr by way of Baliimorefrom capt. Decatur, dated off (he Matanzes, Apiil 7. which states that the French privateer which he was in chafe ps, mounting 16 nine pounders had escaped him. The ship South Carolina. Garman, and brig Tryphenia, Fulleiton, from hence, have arrived at Charleston. Capt. Whipple, of the Suffolk, arrived at New-York, cape clear bearing E N. E. 30 leagues, spoke the (hip Molly, of and from Philadelphia, 28 days out ; The cap. tain of which informed him, that the day bvfore he had fell m with a French priva teer of 16 guns, and beat her off, with lols of no men, and but little dan a;e. Ship Caroline, from 1 ence, lias arrived at Livt rpool. 1 he {hip Clothier, Gardner, from hence, arrived at Liverpool, in 38 days. ALL persons having any demand# on the Cbc-valier de Frtire, Minu«r ofPortu gaf, ire desired to pre/cm, »ithout (.)f« of time, their accounts to his Stf*ard, Mr. Kapiu, that they miy be imtrediately paid. Fiar.klin Court, the a6th April, 1799. i day* *J»