' tot t&is aDap's ©ail. Salzx, Jvtr 30. [The schooner Do'pbin, captain Benjamin Russel, arrived here on Saturday laitfrom Dublin, which place be left the jth oj June. Captain A', has politely favoureu us ivitb a number of Dublin papers, fron •which we extract the following articles.'] CONSTANTINOPLE, April jo. The orders ifflied by the Grand Signiorto the Grand Vizer, before the late favorable intelligence frcrn Syria, is to the following tenor : " It is not unknown to you, my Firfl Vizer, my General Representative, and Vic torious Chief of my am)its, that it is the purpose of the French to extirpate from the race of the Ottomans, which God preserve, and to fcize on the Holy Land of Mecca and Medina, the country of our prophet, and t! - place where the faithful cfter up their prayers. " I have, therefore, thofen you, to frus trate this intentirn ; you, who are my mod diftinc'ill minister gild efpec'wl favorite, ar.ii lwve before difp»rfed and destroyed the rebellious ai d maVgnant hoiiles at Erzerum, I IraHFon, and on the Pcriiar. frontiers. It is , tiicrtfore my will, that yon, with all dis patch, and with as little hajrga; ■- as poflible, p: 3c?,-d to Diwnafttis as General iiv Chief, v,hf)C I inved you with fuil power to take with you the Janizary Ago, and as many regiments of janiflaries as you (hall findne ceiTarv, which shall be enforced on their i, ;irch by others. " I present you on this occasion wi:h a pi-llice, and a keen sword set with diamonds, in order that )ou may ule the former to give r.rw warmth to your seal, and the latter to - prove your bravery ; may the Almighty grant thai you, and all those who go forth | with you to battle, for the maintenance of Religion, may return in fafety ; for these jre the times in which men should with one accord, and with their wV.ole hearts, exert thetr. (elves in defence of Religion and their Sovereign. Viziers and other Miniflers and public oilicers mull not imagine that the pre fcnt times resemble other times. I call upon you to exert all your zeal For the maintenance of Religion and the State ; employ the un limited power which I have entrusted to you to reward and heap benefits on those who ihall (iiftinguifh therafelves with courage and fidelity in these important services ; and fe rerrly to puni(h those who (hall aft in a con trary manner. May the Almighty let vi&Q ---" iy shine od your forehead—Veneration be to our Holy Prophet." * LONDON, May 31. 3irectory vacant by the exclufior, of Reubel. fcrted in.' the face of day, that the Frjncl, Republicans have never, in any one inflance, I violated the Law as Nations : If the French I DireAory intend their Proclamati6n to have j any cff. a on the people of France, no great er proof of their gross ignorance of public y'..l i r _ r r tr h it thp ufurprd one of France, *luch has ever vio ' . r * * t» 1 » <• 1 « • t# |b» CupjMicni, ;'«**& taM." ifftiwiwf. ffee title of Baren ■tmiti ■* ~ Tw« 'new fliips the, Bw, of v e*efc, an<3 / sre fitting/or ft* at Brett -V Wijh great expedition* DUBLIN, May 23. jtjfKlVKitsAJiT of tie BEBELLIOX- vVitb the dreadful recolle&ion of the last futnmer frvfli in out minds ; with our pre fers miraculous and unhoped security full in our view, we weed hardh call upon our read ders to obfervc with solemn gratitude this awful Anniversary of the horrid Rebellion ef 1 795. Who ainongft us have not felt the calamities of the times ! Who of us j does not deplore a friend, a relation, a bro ♦her or a parent? Add who, amidst these agonising re'colletYions, does not acknowl edge the hand of Providence which aire (led the m-ogref* of horror, and ft ruck down re bellion even in the moment of its triumph ? Witl such motives for humanity and thank ful nrf J, let us hope that the twenty-third of May will riot pals without the most salutary iraprHlions anchhe mod serious obfervanee. Public confidence will ever be proportion ed to the wisdom and energy of government —The vigorous meal'ures adopted against the Operable aiTafllnE who have* so long ilif^raced the r,*jne lufWtnetv, ant! wlioni no fxten fion of rr.rrcy has b<cr. sb!f * i reclaim, has enabled loyal men to look forward v/ith {brae afTurance of hope ;—accordingly we lire 111 various parts cf the metropolis new houses eredi'mg, apd other vifib'e marks of confi dence ; some of the many loyal perfonswho have bee 11 forced to abandon their houses and poffefliuns in the conntry, have lately vtn . tured to return to them ; near the metro polis, people without much appreheniiofi rfgain repair to their country houses and to the villages where they have been used to fpena the summer months, efpecialty where they have the advantage of yeomen corps in the neighborhood. The debates of the French a (Terribly, an<2 j pages of the Paris Journals, are filled ■<->ith cries of vengeance for their innocent ambaf- 1 fadors. The Star, The Morning Chronicle, ?nd The Courier have " yelled forth their syllables of dolour and the whole jacobin ifra of Enrope seems to have been roused in* to sympathy. But wi must ohferve that all this outcry has terminated in the bellowing new powers on the Directory ; the conse quence so certainly following all their formei devices for exciting the languid spirit of the French nation, that we cannot avoid sup posing this to bp a new trick of the republi can rulers, and" (until we (hall be convinced to the cSntrarv) attributing the killing of the French Minifteri to the dark and intrl cate policy of their masters. Jean tfe Brie, who alone escaped tlie fate of his fellows, it tlie fame ruffian who in '93 proposed to organire a corp of tj<3o af faffinJ to Jeltroy all the Sovereigns of Eu ' roj)C —he dees not fecni to relifli thep-aciicc of affaflination quitt so well as the theory. May 25. The last week of April appears to h.ive made the Cantons of Switzerland the thea tre of the most bloody «nd alternate carnage. A general attack has been made upon the French under Maffeiia by the Austrian ar mies, which has fucct-eded so fir as to drive the French from their pofitioni, but not un til after a desperate conflict, in the begin ning of which the French were fuccefsful, and the Prince de Ligne and two thousand Aufti ians killed or taken prtfoners ; bat at length Maflena, weakened by the loss of nearly five thousand killed in various aftions, was obliged to retire. This retreat seems to have been the sig nal for a general riling ; the gallant 2nd in iulted Swiss immediately took up arms again ft their oppressors, and have .fallen with furjr upon the French troops; but we are sorry to relate, that this effort of honrlt ven geance cost the lives of three thoafand brave men. The French, hemmed in oa evary fide, but po{Telling the towns, and advac tageoufly potted, are as yet an over-match for these undiftiplined troops. In the cantons of Schwitt and Uri, the French were driven from the open country into the towns by tht peasantry ; every (haggling Frenchman and every linall party are ieized and treated as they defcrve—»» robbers and murderers* The whole Canton cf Berne is fa id to have declared again ft the French, and expelled their troops. May 31. • With pleafurc we have it in our p<t>W*r to declare, that internal peace, tfrdrr and fub l miflion to tbe laws, is fu far ir-eftablilhed among us, that permtnent duty will oft this day, by order of Governefter.t, cease with the yeomanry carpi throughout the king dom. Jun« r. Thic day, his Excellency went in (late to the Houfc of Peer;, and gave the Royal aflent to a number of bills. After which his Excellency delivered a Speech from the Throne, and prorogued both Houses to the 16th of July next. The Speech, after congratulating the Par- liament on the fuppreflion of relielion, k'.'. continues to ob'.'erve on the improved Hate of affairs on the Continent—the fucceflcs of the Austrian arms ; thanks the Commons for the large and extraordinary supply voted for the exigency of the (late, &c. Sec.—His Ex cellency fignifies, that agreeable to his Ma jeAy's commands he has to fay, that a joint Address of both Houses of the British Par liament has been laid before his Majesty, ac companied by Resolutions proj»ofing and re commending a Union between Great Bri tain and Ireland—and looks forward with anxious hope to the final completion of that measure. *. CORK, May 18. Copy of the dying declaration of Walter "Bauer, Matter of the Rooms at M.llow : " Dear Fellow Chriftiant, " At this awful moment, when I am go ing to appear-at the tribunal of my injured God, the only consolation or hope my foul can find is in confefling my errors, and in exhorting you all to return to your alle giance. " It tvas d-unkennefs and idleness that have brought me to this fad end, and have disgraced my refpe&able family, by this ig nominious death. Avoid those who would lead you into drinking and company keeping, the fame means of feduijtioo, and r*turn to your allegiance. " I die an unworthy member of the Church of England. (Signed) WALTER BAKER. " Robert Atk.vs, Ky itaefirf. << RicrfAßD WoODWARIV, ) KINGSTON, June 22. The Spaniih schooner Felcciti, of 16 gum and 89 men,' commanded by Don Boc co, one of the Spanilh coixiniKr.der» on the late expedition against Honduras; and a Spanilh Schooner with hicbs and dry goods, called the Minerva, that was under his pro tection, have been captured by the JjJamiHial. We believe it is generally known, that in the late fle'et from London, arrived tlje famous Mr. Bowles, Chiel of the Greek Na tiofi of Indiiuls, ".v!;o !t will b; tecolk&ed was, for h con£ teraMe, time, detained by the Sp.mifh GoxjfnVWnt at the HavJinnah, whence he at '?r.;{tb nrticfe ess efcnpe. He has,' we unoeriiand, visited finee that time, and afterward* repaired to London, where be w.;s greatly careffi-d hy the higher ranks, and held in much efhtistion hv his Majesty's Mintfteri. Me trudesat I'attbn'i Hotel in this town, "fit! it is laH, is to he conveyed to the Cdntinffit by a vets.l of Vfar from this island. NF t W-YORK, Aujguft 3. By a r filial! yeJierJay. The (hip Gei mania, Capt. P. D. Steen, left St. Mary's July 26, Ballad, to J. Juhel. The (hip Enterprize, capt. Aplin, f*ilad in company with the akove (hip, and has on board wine and brandy taken out of her— to J. Juhil. Left at St. Mary's the ftu'p Hope, capt. Har'mond.of New-Bedford. The Enterprize belongs to Providence— fhe went from Charleston for the Gerir.an ia's cargo- The copperbottomed (hip Columbia, prize to tbe Janus, came up ycfterday from the Quaremir.e Ground. . NEW-LONDON, July 3 1. ftr the C&**tCtiCttT Gaz^tti^ hail storm. On Monday jHly 15th, the inhabitants of the fouthrrly part of Lebanon, and of the towns of Bozrah and Franklin adjoining, experienced the mod awful and devastating storm of wind, attar,ded with bail and rain, thunder and lightening,probably ever known in our country.—About J o'clock P* M. a dark angTy cloud gradually arose from the foutb, it continued iocreafi"g and gathering blacknrfs and rapidity of motion aa it rose I* about half an hour after, a cloud of a bras* or flame colour feetned to roll up in front of it, like a column of smoke, which presently orerfpread it, growing brighter and appeared more wild and agitated. At thii time an cxtcnfive black cloud, before unperceired, rose along from the N. W. to S. W. similar to the firft, and in a little time formed a junAion with it; when they di re&ty (hot their united summits high in the air, and the whale hetnifpher* by-fix o'clock, wai covered with almost the darknef* of- night: emitting (harp forked lightening followed with heavy thunder. A calm of a few minutes fuccceded, while the birds and beasts guided by infticd, fled for refuge at portending some great calamity. The wind with a diftintt roar soon began to blow with great violence, and incrcaTed almost to a hurricane ; when astonishing to behold, hail lionet of a prodigious site, two or three in chcain sameter, were driven with almost the force of grape foot, upon every thing in it* court* | they wire at firft fcatttfiag, but in A moment came thicker and larger, until they fell in > complete (bower of ice, so great at to prevent an obje& from being diltinguiftied at the distance of two or three rod*. Dir«£tly scarce an inch of glass wai left id the windaw* next the dorm, and in some inftaoce the sashes were broken \ fhin glei were split and blown off the roffs of houses and barfis ) and vegetation almost wholly laid waste by the fuTy of the bail; while the wind overturned trees, unrooted, removed, or destroyed barns and fenc«3.— Every think seem.-d in confufion and upnar, and mett asd beads wtre silent with aston ishment. This (cene laCed according to different judgements, ten, fifteen minutes though most agree that the greatest dis charge of hail fell in Jhorter time. When the bail ceased, a Ibower of rain more abun dant if possible. immediately followed and colle&iug ran with violence, swept the hail into waves and the ruins info heaps, and bore them away promifenoufly to the torren-t and lew grounds, p'refenting a most fr>gu lar and melancholy fight. After an hout from its commencement the storm abated, and the fun just fitting, broke through tb« clouds and afforded a profpeft dreary aud gloomy beyon i description. The earth seemed almost desolate and waste. The poor beasts were the obje&s of the" si ft at tuition ; the cattle were found alive thtAlgh sadly broiled and wounded, the backs of cows were bloody, legs of horses cut and iwolleo ! when the smaller animals iuffered much tziore : Some pigs of four months old, with thecp were killed, numbers of geese, turklvs, Ac. expoftd, were beat to death ; Birds'are daily found in large num bers, in the fields and gardens, dead and maimed : Buildings and fences ar - fcen bruifiH to such a decree, that they will long remain {landing proofs of the violence and size of the hail. In the field and among the fruits, the deftruftion it terrible and, truly diftrefling : Corn fields the rabft flourifliing are'def truyed, in some not a ft-.lk is left Handing; fields of rye, fits, Sax, See. are nearly rui ned in many nothing could be fived, and are still plowed up, and in others perhaps a Gxth part of the crop may be obtained, but with much more labour than all th« pro duce will neat. The largell grass in mowing grounds is not only levelled with tlse earth, but cut up and swept away or driven into the earth with a force that almost exceeds calculation. Vast numbers of apple-trees were blown up and the fruits of all, with good part of the leaves and twigs are broken aod ttripped off. Many of the fruit-trees in the gardens, such as peach, plumb, 3tc. are so bruised and bar ked that they will not survive. All the trees even the hardest, are more or less marked in their bodies, and so wounded in the tender parts of the houghs, and deprived of cteir leaves' as to appear at thtdiftsnce of v?.-o and th.cc miles to iuvc fniTcrrd fror.i * bli;-h*. or a Sic. With the tnoft painful sensations do the husbandmen vjejy. theuu'clves, ftrij ped in .. an fcot'r of all their plentiful but hn: d earned ;>rofped'-', ; jilfflfcft khe whoie of the I'ippor. of th.-ii tan.tlics anil i'usck. Tl* horrors ct tlse liecne and the ravagei the 1-m art: truly indefcritotslc, the ft'fforers «u» only compare sft'im.vith tfieir ideas of the day of judgment. The LiaiUfWries were so large as to be taken for th- falling of briefci from the chimney upon .the roofs of the houf:s. After the ram, which mult have washed theni, they were carefully examined in ditilrent places, and found to measure Tome 4 j inches, by in circumference, others Ijx inches, fonie fix inches by nearly l'even ; they aw general')- compared by lixrita *.o>i to the full fit* of hens and geelecggs. Banks of hail five and fix inches deep, re mained on the Saturday and Sunday follow ing ahd measured then three and an half in ches round.—They were generally more flat than round, with ragged cd es. The couiTe of the florin was ch.afly from the S. VV. to tfie N. E. though fame-times the hail came from the south and then again neaily from the Weft ; windows were broken on three tides of houses. It ritn much in veins, da maging only fame fields and totally deflroy ing others adjoining. Thij. hail *xtetl3ed nearly fonr miles in width, where it was'minl dreadful; it grew wider in Franklin, Which is to the call, thd fcemed to fperid ui' If there, ending in rain beyond that place. It was doubtless the fame cloud which ;salTed over Litchfield country, &c. fcattoriiif its hail through the State, even to the mouth of other in the foutli, took this dire&ion and heri spread ils mod diftiugujfiled horrors. pie, that atmdfti all this diflrefs, the live* if men and beasts have been ft) wonderfully preserved ; only two or three men have been knocked down, and one or two children, one deprived of reason for two days. However afloiiifiiing this description may is impartial is the relation, and no ways in erefted perlbnally by the fcene,but from mo- Lives of hnmanity and curiosity has taken nuch pains to ascertain the facts j and they ire now so particularly related only with a , iew to preserve, atleaft during the period of 1 News-Paper, the memory of so awfnl and ilmoft an immediate display of the hand of eview their condudt and reform : That pie y among the serious and reflecting may be iromoted, and l'cience by the attention and efearches of the deligeut and curiont impro« ?cd ; the fufferers have great reason to fay ' In the midst of judgment the Lord bat re ntmbtred mercy," and be thankful that their ives, houses and cattle have so escaped; lot been jnOre extensive. Happy will it be f they learn t® kn»Wbitn, who has a right 0 take -what he lends; and more happy will it be if we as a nation, are brought by :hia and the (lowns upon our country, to 1 sense of our duty, before worle things .ome upon us. P. S. A particular estimate of the dama r ' ftail forwarded. A letwf fiym East Haddaat to the editor i tbU Suck damage wm done to the grftiA, yardetii and window glafv in that tewa. Mail-flfone* were p'eked up which weighed three. otfocca, and me'afurtd from, four rnchrtto A eonfidmble ptrniber of panel of glaft were broken in thii city, by the h»«l, inthe f*ac storm. The florin wa» yiotent,, at, Wiochcftrr (Li'chfieM county,) Torting toh, Tor ingfore, Harwingcon, Briilol, N««r-,Hau(tfr<l and Gofteu. <oa3Cttt JLift* Port of Philadelphia. Ship Stockp«rt, Williams, fr«sm hence to Liverpool, wis i'po'tft ou the 27th ult. in Int. 40, ii|, all will. An inward bpunct fch. from Lijbon, ,fap pofed 10 be the C'ix,ef thh» poti, '■» brio*. The Montezuma (loop of War, c-.iptrun Mqllowney, left New-Gaftlc, at 5 p. M.yef t< rday ; remained, the Unittd States' brig Eagle, Campbell, and brig Florida, Long, for Tenerifle. The fch. from Lifbnn, it said to have had a flmrt patfape. Ship Maria, Thompfao, for La Guira and sloop Fri«nd(hip, Brown, for C apt Francuis, went to fca on Thursday, and (hip Adiiana, Fletcker, for London on Hurt day. A Dini(h (hip ii below—name not yet »f ---ceriained. Salem, July 30. Sunday arrived the fhlp T.Jfex, Captain Benjamin Henderfon, 76 Jays from Copenhagen Lat. 53, 50, N. long 35, 40, IV. fp ie the trig Neptune, Capt. R. Barr, of Salem. Capt. Henderfon reports a number of injlances nj American vejfelt being brought to by Frenchpri vateen in the North Sea, and permitted to pajs without mohftatm. Let Americans beware •' the tyger crouches, before he leaps upon his prey." Neiu 7~tri Atigujl 3 • ARRfFED. Si'P Enterprise, Aflin, St Marys Steen, do. William, ————y Chitrhjlcn Brig Ann, JLaw, Vir» Cru% Scbt■ <\< —iCsft. Allett, bat arrived at Baltimore from Netu-Or leant- Left in the Mer the Diffatcb, Clark, the Btllona Capt Do , and a Slvcedi/h ship. ' Ship Svlly, M'Cerlhy hat arrived(rt tyeiu London. Bis Sully, Kotchlift, I:j; arrive.'! at New Londjn from Hay anna me ¥ jID.K Ir P H I J , - a '".y- - : ■ 'X T;. nr ittSSO'AT EVENING, AWSVSt j PRICES OF STOCKS, Philadelphia, AUGUST 3.. Sii iper Cent. XJ/ 4(1 Deferred 6 per Cent. 1 4 r 4 s< j Three per Ceht. 9 y . , B\NK United States, . i 5 to 16 1 ■■ North America, i ( t0 , 7 —— Pennsylvania, ~ j ir>furan«e comp; N. A. {hares i; i Pennsylvania, (hares, 47 to »g 8 per Ont Stock—funded— par Do Scrip with the five Infh'ments a J Do the jth Instalment only ft f beiowpjf Eaft.lndia Company of N. A. par. Laud Warrant?, 30 doll*. per rod acru COURSE OF EXCHANGE Ou London, JI at 30 days JO at 60 a 90 dayj AnfJerdam, 35 a .17-100 per flotin Hamburgh jp zji - lao per. Mark Panct. Upv.-nnh of 300 Recruit from the Wcf tcm and Middle parts of the State have ar rived.at Brifrol for the 10th United Suites regiment, con.wa-idetl Jpy • Colonel Moorv, all in fine health and fpiritj, and recviiitri' in a Ihoft time. This is fiifficknt evidence that the service is n«jt Co"disgusting as-hai been iiiduftrionfly reflrfrfsrtfed, Whatever declrntion has been wit;v & J 'oy the Aurora, Darby the cunduttor, or Editor if you will, is Ceitjinly iu better calo It is raid of him that he gets hts dully sllou ance of gin, " which was not fp before," as will also t>e be seen byan old folilcxjny hand ed tis by one of his ci-dcvant ailocmtes : Darby Debt's Soliloquy o*er c Gin Cash Is til is a gin-calk that I f e before me. The bung-hole toward my mouth ? Come h t ros fuck thro*.—- I talle thcc not, and yet Uracil theeitilL Art thou not wayward Barrel sensible ELECTION. r"pv r c i . Governor, arc n-qneftd to m«a at tiyf Black Horfc, in the tiivnfhip erf' MiddletcWJ), or» Che o&y Ok Au*. Dt?xt 2. o clock in the aftci noot>-> in order' to consult on raeafurcs to ? r_ July 3©, j 799.« A&&'jnrjriv.\g b$ a Wutones/of the fpttd>V tar.t; of ;ht Town-fiijjyof (jfrfoatitototi, ht ld at Rit-r'i Tauten 'on Tlmrfday ,? • z(% if it 1 ; ''< ' "" * *V«> • _. ; V . ■ • Kesofcedj ■ t{H iantawn, ■ tb* of diq, -as^. Goveriiorof this-Cy {j ' '■•eiptffb-'/" cd to HKet o:, o'clock P. M.ar die lign ordtru'Jvfjl'iwf-, I foil in Germ in town. O 'V ,> THOMAS DU.NGAM, Cha!»rtwi. August u /.-'.'J, A few of ' '' w hit x N g; : .?s&* - Sjfit mi -«■. ■ t ■ * »"pft 5- ' - * To be Let,• in Germamovjn^ To j small family. Handforric Lodgings, In fart, funit/bed, CONSISTING of a parlor and two charci*- ben, with the use of a kitchen and cellar. En. quire at Mr. Charles Englcs, in Germantown. august 5 dnv Twenty* Dollars Reward. DESERTED from the Rendezvous at ftaf. ton, JOHN FRANTOM, a tidier* , n the 9th Of. State- regiment, 5 feet 8 inches high, b!*e eyes, swarthy complexion brown hair,, which he wear* long and fjiieiied • |, e fti>op9 mtith in 1 walling, and hat a copfuierabJe impediment in his fpee«h. At the fiine time SOLOMON KfNNJ MONTi a fok'.icr 111 the fame regiment ; ; i( . 19 a han<il'ome young man, 19 years old, j'feet to and* quarter inches high, black et'e. ftort -brnwn hair, fair completion. They were enticed to ricfert by two men who laid they ti.e Baltimore fioop of wjr, and went an irftenton to enlist in that ft-rvite ; both rre in full uniform, though they will probably changethei'r dress. 1 he above reward vril! be given for Oliver ing the two, or ten dollars for either of' to M)v officer of the ninth regiment; ! v M TH.CHMAN, ift Lietitenart <ttb U. S. pe^'rrenf. Ej:P.tor (M.) Aug. t. (<) * d .;: 'Davt. •- TV : - . ' ' ®a3ette. Si 1 --fc ■
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