©? tj>is S>aj»'B KEWBURYPORT, April 19. Extract. ' The Jacobins calculate andaa upon the frail tic "and T afi>ons of human nature. !hu is the tr/R«ry of their science, and like all otlnr profcffional men, they understand .t better than the friers Th<y know the weak fide of the Hew Engird farmers and Fderahfts.tobea Jove of money »nd of courfea dread of ex ~rr.ee —They hA, ve therefore seized w.th art and avidity, which lead« daftly to the heart Abandoning France to her fate, and almost ceasing to calummate the best patriots, they h ve confined tbemfe ve lately, chiefly to the expeflces of naval arrngements, the costs of a ft»d.ng army the expencts of fortifications, the eight per cent 1< an, a d'he Land tax. This scheme the moll politic, and the most danpo-U which . hey c""M have adop ted has not b»en without . . created a division already, which is hum.lia tin to our country, and which mult be irratifyi"E <0 France. It this country is to be defiroyed, if it is bke Holland—like geneva—Hk# Venice—like Switzerland like Piedmont, to be subjugated to Trance, to he plundered its young men to be BV'flacred —its womtn to be violated—its inor Is to be pot Toned—its— its religion to be abrogated—its laws and liberties to be fub yerteri it will be effected through the med ium of its parsimony ; its love of gold. NFW-YORk, April 37. j n oitr poWer to rcfcu<* ourselves and ourta- We ftoppjd m ; U(s fromtl)e , of an all-dellroying that agreeably t0 Public Notice, the flip- 1 porters of the Federal Republican Ticket taonfter. But not a day, an hour, nor a aflcmbkd at the house of Mr. Smith, in nionient Ihould be loft in pursuing the only Broadway, to concert metres, preparatory meaf whlch a dto f e ]f.p re f erV ation, to the Eleftion-The Democrats had early ' b r taken poffeflism of the room—which, howe- in this portentous ends, admits, ver, did not prevent Mr, Smith, the'fe-mer a memorial should instantly be addressed Chairman, from taking the Chair. As soon p ref>dent of the Un ; ted StateS) fe _ as the Meeting was organizes, and procee- ... , , r dings Were commenced, the unlfgrm vio- quefhng an immediate and complete enforce lators of order and decorumcommenced their ro ent of the law which provides against the irregular career, and caused such confufion j n j ur ; es t j,at ma y be derived to the citizens as to render an adjournment indispensable. . , . t . , ,• , IV, .J!_,', pn f„ of the UWd States by the agency of aliens The l'ederail Its accordingly did adjourn to / the Military Academy—and immediately resident within th« fa^ie. organized themselves. The proceedings of That there are men among ourlislves equal the lad Meeting were read and approved— . The names of the Ward-Committee were j * "innnal with those, who a,« thus con called over, and other arrangements were ■ cerned in preparing forging arms} about taking place, when a scene of difor- , an( j pj-a&ifiag all the preparatory steps to the ganization was commenced by the Jacobins i , , r , which would have done honor to the Infer- ( overthrow of our government, and the fob ual region An immediate adjournment of jugation of our country, cannot be doubted ; the Meeting was moved and carried-—and t j, e ftueld of citizenftiip, w.hich they. the peaceable citizens, who had assembled to , s , • n deliberate in harmony, with their cha* raoft Worthily \ear, rs mterpofed against ra&eriflic good order rei ired to their refpeft- the fame fumlnary pi'ocefs, which our fafety iva homes—leaving the Jacobins to enjoy requires, and the laws autliorife towards the contemptible ' fatisfaflion of gaiv i;'g an jj opportunity Jo declare the atrocity of their ' views After this cummesced a scene of The present cafe is one which admits oF riot, and folly that wouldfiave aftonlhed any no cotrtradlZVion—atwtatiovs nodelay. T*hb person unaccustomed to Democ atic method cloathing is French uniform'—on the buttons of doing hufinefs Confufion was the j * , , . ,• 1, l- j lot the <oats and waistcoats is placed the word, and it was >liferally realize®, j f "No dosbt can f,*i(t that the whole was a French military insignia, with the legend preconcerted meal-ire intended to fruftrate j Refmbl'ique Francaisc. thelaudabie views of the Federalists—De- i . . • mocra.ic appeared and spoke h cannot ' therefore, even be laid, as .sal both at Mr. Smith's and at the Academy— ! ready attempted, that tli'S cloathing was iti and, with an effrontery peculiar to stupid j te »d«i for the troops in St. Domingo (which dul ness, the wretched tools of the faftion in > . . , a place to which they wre not invited, and | in ,tfelf ,voul( J a fla » rant of where they had no pofiible right to appear our laws)—No ; the .commander of that —difgtifted and offended awery peaceably dif- ;fl a nd is determined on independence; and posed citizen. I . ~ . . , The supporters of Government are now ; he would not > ,n such a lno,nent ' write exerting themselves—the Jacobins forcfee 1 " French' Republic" on the .buttons of his their down-fall in this City—and like a j frtldiers. drowning man, are catching at every expe dient—aie making a 'aft and conmlfivc struggle—and nothing but the calm firmnefs of the Federalists prevents the m«ft atrocious extremities. ALBANY, April 23. Bradford, one of the famous leaders of the former infurre&ion in thr Western coun- ties of Pennfvlva. ia, it is Hated in fbme of the papers has received a pardon from the Supreme Executive of the Union. Should Fries, the leader of the present rebellion iu that (late, meet with similar lenient treat ment, tVe Jacobins will be inclined to en gage in frequent infurre£tior.«, si r ihe fake of having their names known abroad. Mr. Andrews, T have seen a paragraph in the Centinel of April 19th, extraftfd from the Vcrgcnnes Gazette, that a Leroi, a Frenchman, had made an fxperiment that phosphorus, if in ternally applied, would furprilingly stimulate » \V ak constitution, and even prolong, for a day, the life of a dying man. A And that (as a recommendation of the French nation) the arts and sciences had not been neglected in France during the revolution of the re public. Whereas it seems to me, that Mr. Leroi give 9 the above as his discovery I thought proper to make it appear that the rtimulating operation of phojphorus has been known in Europe a number of years before the French R.e»olution. Hankciviz. has discovered by chymical ex periments that all animal parts contain in abundance more or less of the animal sulphur or ph'ifphorus ; Marggraff was the firlt who <!if ov.red by chymical decomposition the real <.attire of it, viz. that it is con posed of a c fixed acid, called since the phofpho sic acid, a d the phlogiston ; and by that it is concluded by Mortimer (on the natural a imal heat) that the phosphoric acid gives ile noii i{hm«nt to the phlogiston whii h is separated by the motion of the heart and hlnod, and thus by the uniting of both these ni..tiers, in proportion to the quantity, a quicker or flower circulatinn of t'r.e fluids vill enfuc, and accordingly a flronger or lelTet heat in ilie animal body will be the confcqu enrr» After the natim; of the phosphorus has ."Ken known, its inward use by weak and cold conftitu lions, came soon in rec mrnen 'dation, and to my k"ow!edg<* has been given fonutimesin such cases be r ore the year 1784' and fometinus without the least operation. Albany, April 20th %l)e dsasette. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY EV)'J*tNG, APRIL a? <a>ii A CIRCUMSTANCE more menacing than any that has yet anfen in this country ; has been disclosed within the last forty-eight hours. Thiough the active vigilance of the May or of this city, a difeovery has bein made which leads to the inoft.alarming condufions. A large quantity of military clothing, bear ing the uniform and insignia of the French Republic has been fe"ized, and the perions more immediately concerned in the secret and clandest uie y b\liriczt\on of it, have been committed to prifoii. Providence has once more interfered to preserve lis—once mere is it placed with- We fhallbe fafe in fuppoling that this in fernal uniform is prepared for an-army which is to start up among o'u-rfclves, com pletely diftinguiftied, by its cloathing as by its defrgns and a&ions, froro the citizens of the United States. An army, which at midnight, may realise the threat of a villain who is still tolerated among us, and who laid, " he hoped the day was nut distant when be should enter Philadelphia at the head of an armed force, and not leave one brick upon another Has not the latj 3 . -French Consul, Le Tombe, granted his'certificate of pfoteaion as Consul General of the French republic with the United States ,' to the very fellow who has direded claudettine fabrication ot this cloathing, and who is now in prison ? Have not Le Tombe's fundionslong since ceafcd ? What does this mean ? Has the infatuation, which has pro ft rated Europe,- taken complete pofleflion of our faculties too ? To strengthen the inferences so obviously to be drawn from this disclosure, that infa mous morning print, called the Aurora, has already attempted to cover the tratifa&ion with a veil ef ridicnL'. Some other circumstances, of which we have been apprized, since writing the forego- ing, tend to exhibit this discovery in a light still more .important and alarming. The cloathmg', it seems, had. oeen diflributed in small parcels at- 'different places indifferent parts of the city : the person at whose house the firft quantity was discovered, positively denied that he had any thing of the kind in his poffeflinn, and it became ucceffary to burst open v the doors ; when a quantity of uniform coats, together with shirts, overalls &c*..; Were ilnured'uitely difcovere;; laifeized. The quantity tr.lxli at other places was far more considerable. Two considerations of the most serious nature, arise out of this very remarkable -fact: That the cloathing msft have been distributed not lets for the purpose of eluding refcarch,'- than fftr.'-the m<Jresud den and effectual perpetration of the obvi ous de'ign ; and tb.it, in all probability, but a small part of the f:heme and of tlie pre- K ff. parations for carrying it into effect, have been as yet brobght to light. The fir ft thing we hear from a new re public, after having received its liberty from the Great Nation, is- of enormquS. requisi tions, in provisions, jewels, cash, plate, pic tures, statues and men. Thus, lite the cro codile, does (lie fubfifbnceby devouring her own offspring. Which (as a celebrated writer has obfcrv ed) seems to have been deiigned by the Al mighty, for a Great Original, whereby for 1 man to dress and polish his uncouftly mind ; —to be his foiace in sorrow—his comfort in adverlity,—and last refuge from the dtfgulU ing devices of a juggling world -terms at length, after withrtanding so many wide-and reiterated perverfrons, to be brought to that complete ('rate of cynfulion and-tltpravity, a s which the malevolent and unrulydifpofitions of a re ft 1c Is herd of discontented fopjiifts have, io long aspired. • All that k uncouth and preposterous,—all that is Ihnllow, ridiculous and absurd, —is ijow Pbilofophy. Bombast and Romance, iridutus piha, dilfsenfe the honors of the Academe ; Impudence, Ig norance and Vice, defile the (eats of learning and expel genius and sense from the Porch and the Grove. u " Philafophy, as it before ut liei, Seems to hsve borrowed fonje ungratifirl taftc Of doubts, impertinente and niceties Frcm every age thro' which it pif-'il ; Bat always with a Wronger relish of the last. More oft in Idols and madmen's hancjithan iigei, S) e feums a medley of all ages,— With a huge fardinjgal to swell her fuftian (luff, A new commode, a top-knot and a ruff, Her lace patch'd o'er with modern pedantry, With a long sweeping train Of comments arid difputcs, ridiculous Snd tain, All ot old cut with a Bew die." • • —'The scourge and curse of foc'iecy—the ma lignant peftilitnce of marpcner of • turrow—the einbitterer of woe',- —and the sting, that, when distress anrfojfi, (till has referred dregs to pour from her dire cup, to heighten miiery conliirnmate. Never were these glittering trappings of pageantry more Ihockingly abufcd than at the present day. How prepofteaous does is found to us when we hear the and L L. D. tacked to the nan* of one, not only.despicable tor the of his ac- bat who never an honorable afticn in the whdlejcoiiWe ot his life ! The great Erasmus once oblerved, with a contempt which became him, UndeDoc toris titulo gloriantur, nift ut. doceant ? .Could this learned man be permitted to visit the glinipfes of our farthing rufli-light, we could ihew him Dfefors, not only, unqualifi ed to teach, but too ignorant ind too mu lilh to be taught. Poor Janus is toiling with ill the sever ity of an anchorite, and scribbling with all the inveteracy &iid redundancy of a fool, to efface the odium of a ciTcumftaHce which af ter all, is, it; tbe eyes of his associates rio o diuro at all. Silly wight ! and has he yet to learn v that ths volume. thejiast, is ne ver unclasped by revolutionifcers, and that if a man is ready to seize the moment as it flies and join them in ailaflinating the com monwealth, they never enquire whether he has a whig or a tory, an'honeft man •or a knave—whether he rode in to Philadel phit with a crown of laurel on his head, or a traitoi-'s head oil his shoulders without u crown ? A thousand times in a week do we hear exprefled this inconsiderate convi&icni of meek and forgiving federalifts. It U tk.' extreme of infatuation. Kever came that man , round, who, " any time these four years,'! retained the tin&ure of Jacobinism. A man may hate Great-Britain, as a man may hate the kingdom or the republic oi France : but an objett of hatred has long existed, paramount to all others, —the great er.fwallowjpg up.the less ; and whoso hath within that time, cursed his own country and cloven to France all jacobins have done) must be a villain in grain. The whole blood of his cartkered heart, must be of the nature of that black drop, or feed of original fin, which. Mohammed wrung fro.m the beast A 1 Borate ; nor do I think any thing short of a similar operation to that which he performed, can ever qualify a quondam de mocrat toaffociate in any christian society. IL PENSEROSO. T hate 'tis spungy world with all its (lore, This buttling, jioify nothingnef. of life, Thi« treach'roun herd cf friends with hollow This vale of sorrow, and this field of ftrife. Me (hall some little tranquil thatch receive, Some •' fettled low content," remote from care; * Ther* will ] pipe away the sober eve. And laugh, all dayi at " Lady Fortune" there. Why (hotild I mingfle in the mazy ring- Of drunken Folly, at the (brine of Chance, Where insets Pleasure flits on btirni!h'd wing, Eludes our wi(hes, and keeps up the dance. \\ hen, in the quiet of an humble Befidetht fountain, or upon the hill, Where Strife, and Care, and Sorrow never come, I may be free and hippy if I will. ?HILC«PPHY, TITLES. " He has come round." core, Yeiiej-day arrived the Oiip Packet, stint. Kelly, from Bombay, whence he failed the 10th December, a month pre- vious to which, licut. DuwS),of his Briti'rni; majesty's fliip Zealous, arrived-tvit'h difpa'tch es from' Rear ' Admiral Nellon, by way of the Defart and Bafforah, containing-an ac countof the vi&ory obtained over the French fleet ; but it was generally believed the dif- j patches were of much greater ■ consequence, from an intercepted packet of Buonaparte to the Dire£toi'y, th<rt: was taken' on its pafiage, and that they contained ample plans:of the intended operations of tlie French army.--* The Lieutenant returned by the fame route to join his ship. ' Immediately after his arrival every thing wis put in the belt posture of defenee, mount-, nig additiona] guns where wanting : the European inhabitants had -voluntarily embo died as ,n militia, and were daily training to the use of arms. The Governor had a'lfo convened the heads of the different exfts, and orderej them to {ele£t about 2000' men to learn the military exercise, this had eaufed some uneJimefs, as religious prejudices prevented their Carrying arms, but tlicv declared themfel.ves perfectly willing to™ assist in any other manner agaiuft the com mon enemy. A war withTippoo Saib was also looked on as inevitable ; large quantities of c.utie, and 'a number of troops, were gone down to the Malabar coa-ft, to join the army from There Itemed to be great unanimity anion all ranks and degrees of people in Bombay, and voluntary contributions, exceeding three millions o.' rupees, had been collected in th:,t place aiul its dependencies, and remitted - to England, to lupport the war. Rear Admiral Rainier, eight days previous to the 1 .Tiling of the Birmingham, had arriv ed in, the SutFoilc, of 74 guns, Trident. <of 64 in company. The Centurion and Suffolk had 1 ailed, the former, it was reported, for the- Red Sea, to prevent the palling of the French army. A squadron wa? also fitting out to follow her in a little time after. Little appruhenfion was, however, en tertained of the approach of Buonaparte's army, as it was ebneeived the passage down the Red Sea, would be attended with so ma ny difficulties as to make it nearly impracti cable, especially as a Britilh squadron would have the command of it: A march thiough the delerts would be dill more difficult, as it was supposed by thole acquainted with the nature of the country, that a great part, if not all, rauft perish in the attempt. L'Union, French privateer, of 18 guns, had captured, to the northward of Bombay, a Moeha fliip . bound to Surat, and two others, out of which Ihe took ten lacks of rupees in treasure, and afterwards sent the (hips to the Ille of France. So .unguarded was the Malabar coall at thi« time, the month of October, that the privateer was the whole day in fight from the town of Bombay. Extraft of a letter written on board the ship Delaware, Stephen Decatur, commander, dated the sth inft. Our time has been so much taken up in attending' to the trate that we "have had very tittle time, of chance c\f r taking prizes. This is the lixth fleet we have convoyed from the Havatihtf, amounting to 142 fail, indepen dent of those condudled to it. We have been four days at an anchor since we left Reedy llland in December ; and expettfoon to return to port unless prevented by frefh inftruftions. Preparations are making at Norwich, in Connetticut, for building a Hoop of war for the federal government, under the agency of Mr. Jofrph Mowland. She v.<jp 1 mount 18 guns, and is to be commanded by captain David Jewitt. State of th- poll in the congreflional dif trift in Virginia, of the counties of Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince William. Levin Powell, Fed. R. West, Demo. Fairfax county 290 259 Loudoun 546 80 Prince William 81 181 917 5.20 Majority for Powell, three hundred nine :y-feven votes. State Legislature. T. Swann and R. B. Lee, federalifts, are elected for Fairfax county, and Joleph Lew is, jun. and William Noland, federalifts, are eledled in Ldudoun. Lewis 504? Federal Candidates. Noland 4943 r^/v" S ' Democratic. Olburn 92 The information from Virginia makes it very probable that John Nichols, of Stafford, will not be re-ele£Ved; but in his place, Gen. Blackwell, a firm and able Federalist. In deed the eyes of Virginia have been opened in the course of the last J 2 months to such a degree that there is more than /qua! chance a majority of the representatives from that Rate will be Federal. MARRIED] —On Saturday last, by the Right Reverend Bishop White, Mr. Hore Browse Trist, of Charlottefville, (Vir.) to MisS Brown, daughter of C. C. Brown, "Esq. of this city. (Bajette Sparine sLitt. Port of Philadelphia, ARRIVED days Ship Birmingham Packet > Kelly , Bombay 138 Sch'r Sally, Sherer, Surinam 30 Lervis Wrothburn, New York 3 Sloop P.tience, Rogers, do. 3 Polly. Thompson, do. 3 CLEARED. Brig Sally, M'Call, Ruby, Girard, Gavofa, Bingham, I Mitifrva, Giaf'on, iiiir l-.'xpfilqic ill, C Sloop Clancy Olepant, Sally Yni);;b:in, , , Polly, Bifiiop Oaptaid Shetvv, failed froni fur:nam pn tVie 25th ultim&, "i company with 65 fail of American ve(fe!s, under cojiv y rf the Portfmoiltli (loop of vviir eapca'n Rf'Nc?}. The following, Philadelphia veiltls were in theJleiet, viz. x Brig Ifab.lla & "Ann, Hamp on, ' Jean,' ■ Sehr Little Fanny, Fofdick,' Betsey 'Hollon, Parson, ' Captain Shtrer paried with the convoy the 9jh instant—Spoke no vessels or; the pas sage iCaptain Sherer further Informs, that the fliip Spy, captan Weft, of this port, was to fail in 10 days after him. Captain Kelly, of the (hip Birmingham Pa.cket, failed from Bombay the 10th of December, in company with the English Fame for Lond n, parted com pany the next day—on the l 2th of Decem ber, at'day light in the mornmg. perceived five Mahratta Dingeys ajft er'a, Handing af ter us, at 11 o'clock, we being about two miles astern, took in steering fails and prepa. red for a<Stio>', they then took in fail and h6ve too to the northward, when they were broadsides 10 us, couid discover them croud ed with men; fteing us pr.'pared, after lying about an hour, made fail and left us. On the 25 of March, at 4 o'clock, P. M. in lat. 15. 30, N. loi>g. 45, 58, W. fe'l in with a brig—fpfead Spanish colours and fi red a gun, kept 011 cur 1 1 w. be ing then within mufkit ihot, fire a gun with ball, atid kept hailing in Spar.ifh to hoist out the boat and fend her aboard, lint cot givicg time to effc& his, fired about twelve rounds with round and grape (hoi in to the ship, at last the boat btftig got out captain Kelky went on bo rd, and on her return Mr. Moore went also on bard the Spanish captain then produced a bock which he said contained the King ofSpain's decree, ordering all his (hips«to carry into por t for adjudication all neutrals they fell in with from Englffti ports, with cargoes, it was represented to him that the papers then pro duced containing full and ample tetlinv ny of the property being truly American that he might detain the ship if he thought, pro per, but in cafe of lofa, recapture, &c he Ihould be held fully accountable ; thev kept us on board till the nrioriting aod efttr. go ing on board the /hip fuffered U3 to proceed on our voyage ; the brig was called Nom de TobefomS, captain Pedro de Ancory, from St. Andero, b(it whsnce bound he would not inform us. She mounted four twenty four pound carronadts on Aides, fix fix pounders and about 40 men. The fol lowing letters were thrown overboard at the time. One for MefTrs. Thomas and John Ket~ land, Philadelphia. One for Gabriel Christie, in Havre de Grace, (Maryland.) One for John Parker Boyd, Esq. in Bof toii. One for—— Mlisiford, merchant, "in New-York. One for Mr. Obadiah Bown, N. York, being received on those conditions. On tlie 2d of April, at 2 o'clock, P. M. in lat. 25, 57, N. long. SA, 4, W. was boaided by the ship Venerable, captain Ramfey, from Barbadoes bound to Liver pool, in company with three other (hips. On the iSth of April, in 'at. 31, 4S, N. long. 70, 55, W. spoke the schooner Commerce of and for Boston from the Ha vanna, 13 days out, failed incon.pany with a fleet convoyed by the Delaware sloop of war, captain Decatur. On the 25th of April, in lat. 38, 3 N. long. 72, 32 W. was.boarded by the British ship of war Swan, had a Swedish or Danish brig in tow, bound to a port on the conti nent, which the officer would not name, but said they had captured her on a suspicion the property was Spanish and had taken her four days before, from the course they were fleer ing were bound to Bermuda. The ship Fortitude, captjyn Kearney, ar rived at Bombay on tbe 18th of September, and not being able to dispose of her cargo, failed the 4th of 00, ber for Calcutta. The brig Hannah, of and From this port has been capture 1 by a French privateer of 8 guns (one 24 pounder) and 90 men. The privateer has since been taken and car ried into Kingston. A small ship, a brig and a schooner, in ward bound, are below. LETTERS for the British Packet Weymouth, for Falmouth, will be received at this office until Tuesday, the 7th May, at i* o'clock noon. N. B. The inland poftageto New-York must be paid. # TO BE SOLD, An Invoice of Woollens, CONSISTING of Coarse and Vine Cloths, — principally Dark plue, and printed Caflimeres Apply to Owen If Jonathan Jones, April 29 On Wednesday, th« ill of May, yft the Herfe Market in Seventh Street. An Elegant Riding Horse, Fifteen hands high, warranted found, f.v« years old. Wm. DAVIDSON, au&ior.eer april 19 dtw nc'. At Willing and Francis's wharf, from the ship Jdxe, captain CampMl, 43 hogCheads btft Jamaica Sugar, Hamburgh Pot t Paflage St. Kitts St. Jago de.Cuba aj)iil,S9. POST-OFFICE, Philadelphia, April 29, 1799. •No. 151 Marku-ftrect. FOR SALE, TO-MORROW will be landed, ,£cr laic by PHILIPS, CR.AMOND & Co. it I 'I jam,ik.' (JeWpurt. Norfolk . iST. Yorlc SnowhiH
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