, the -.Columbiar. Ccntinel. •">;!} yet did insurrfctios want col urs to imprin: its cause; '.. e a. s ieeking !oi a time Of haoot and confulion.. • -i't \jt.] -j. Mi. RU*sskll, | ainly a matter of ftirpriie itfnr, that there Ihould be - C-!jhufet(s, a man so flagi- { advncatt'j znd efi'deavor to , i . iiH'ders, hdilfeburning, and ■ ty, s?i - tnfurgents of Pennfyha- * ■' tlx fame time, it is not ! • with corifolatidrt : d'iftovrred, what has for a t i.Tin J'ufjxeled and denied, that • i/jrbours within her bofoni; ho ' ould overturn all ordir, oft. { • , ■ and law?, that :'liey might tri- j v ' •! ruins ; andj hat were eyeri i.j !.. . ■ traitor Arnold to bcowne ijkVa of an insurreCtion r>- ! iof the Union, he would j •• 'vacates and friends, who ; • i 1 one of their " brethren." j i ' >' citizens of the United i to |be made acquainted, I reftiou against the laws' it. >.irts of PerinfylvanitJ, is a evil tree of which the f,i-\ . , «re tlie root, and that it is to [ 1 ')e indebted for all the ex- [ en .n-y the fnppre'flion of the' a. , ipill afiwrdthe fanner but :ion, when he is prefentcd r his ; j his proportion of the ex- j . ■ V the Union mujl • ipn, that he is to look to ' a i-emunerauon. That ! r, Jr* ■■ . * <!-ftnl hiay be con««mpla [j t>-a. ■ ;culdte the expenses of an |, army t ' . j£#£3ro«n» its equipments and j edto enforce the aUtliori- i. ] •h all America, thofq in- | ed, punctually and (,-heer- ' ( rtion of the origir. of the ' ; •» mind d in. eternal truth, [ j e inflammatory resolves, ' • ■ minciufions ot. the Pittf- j - •• r ; ,>r Society, the-biirden if ' for a long time been " /he j ■ ry Excifeand fee, at j 9 icfoUes, at time?; tie -- > . ' -tcei Sißratktjpridge, ' U- rllrrns, M'hrtrre, ■ ■ - If, l r jh, Tannehillj and . , I ;ners byiti; nanjes which . fo> nd io hand-bills, calling. > • citizens to allemhlc,'.lN ® '' ■ fields, t^T' defiri>y the . i . :lieer's ot excise, and. tp v -inirt' of the mod abjift j ? / . . o': bnt this t"he chits, in • co i , call- tl»e• Txercife of li ! • »> f . ' hia club, it is true, has, t >ie r 'i. er, diiapproved of their j lis is only adding hypo- j " >.uilt, and pra£t:fing ilill ' ° ■ipofitions on the public. ™ -in.'d a ftn'ou« idA, that j j " is been collqfitd, by «4 j * ■ -oflnties in Infurreßisn ; J ■ - - .Is of tlioufandsbf dollars °.' 1 - .on'res paid by the citi ' "d States, have been ex-. P| :. : md p'incipally for their oen rhis is conlidered, ve rioters are nineteen '■■> t' • ity emigrants fecently . :--;rt i . ope, and.mafiyof them T . J citizen of the United j m ! Us excepted) from r8 ' the absolute heeetfity, I.A i.cutcrl'ul aid and at- atl he ai m of tlu; Execu- « n d, to bring the in- ag' - of dir.;, as citizens of " of leaching, them the |sfe owe to the laws of the a.^ rir o! hg.ition to fafraip jW, . the public bmde.ns. be . -i fliould firft be held "ol y r -fuft its teims, the./'qft ' ty. .'.v ull be re'firted to, we •heir duty at the'point wh ?' " n the jud usetts Farmer. l^ c .4. obf - ■ ■ me: i< ' tm Daily Advtrtifer, ■ the United States 1 e< ' ' pari TER si. earr ftrved tlmt the means S -' n employed to turn the j r ' ty te western country to " e "r' ■■ ... the governmifnt,would ' e P . ted arfiorig other things T,? ttention from the true V ' " oided." requ : what is this question. seC 1 -shall the majority go-1 * •ued ? fliall the nation tith c shall the general will | the ic ST prevail, or the will of a fa&ion : /hall there be government, or no govern ment ? ant It is imhoffible to deny that this is ife; the true, and thflc whole question. No s art, no ft'plii.try can involve it in the least obfeurity. i _ The- <Jouiiiaitiop asm h»ve-«rdajn«4 j J f for yoilrlelves and four prtfterity con- , £ tains this exprefJcßn-fc," TheCoogreis . „ 'have power to lav and colfefl faxes, | n * e duties, imports, ami Excises, to pay ' h . L the debts, and provide for the defence ; aB~ * and general welfare of the "United r to i States''—You have then, by a solemn an( - arid deliberate act, the molt important ' Tfl ' and iacred that a nation can perform, ' pronounced and decreed, that your Re -0,1 : prefentatives in Congress shall have "a r power to lay Excises. You have done ' iat i nothing fioce to reverse or impair that gO- • Your Representatives in Congress, tn * ! purfuan' to the Commission deiived ' y " ri ; from vol), and with a full knowledge " n, ~' jof the public exigencies have laid an 1 J l '" I•; At three, succeeding fellions j they have revised that aft, and have as Vl! r O -:, often, with a degree of unanimity not j common, and after the bed opportuiii ' j I tiers of knowing your sense, renewed ' ' » their fmdtion to it, you have aequiefced ' [ in it, it has gone into general operation: '® a j and y'j/t have adtually paid more than a f J ~ j million of dollars on account of iu sto > But the four weltern counties of ■£" j Peniifvlvania, undertake to rejudge and j j reverie your decries : You have said, out - „ Q oll g rc f* s Jhall have power to lay tcc "'-Excises" They fay, " The Congress Cj • Jhall not have this power." Or what is lu J equivalent—they fliall not exercile it : ,to ! —for a power that may not t>e exer y* is a mdlity—Your representatives *a" ] Save TaTd, and four times repeated it, an j" an excise on diitilled spirits Jhall be "'. a ' collected"—They fay it Jhall not be col - 5 .l 'lected—We /ill putiifh, expel, and banith the officers who (hall attempt the cr " . colle&iort. We will do the fame by eve i ry other person whofhalld are to comply e i with you; decree exprefied in the Coll • ttituti.ona! charter.; ami with that of i . ■ your Representative exprefied in the \ laws. Tije iovereignty (hall not reside i with you, but with us. If yon pre- I " K . fume- U) dispute the point by fovce— i , at swe afe r&idy to ineafure (words with < ; Je f you; and if unequal ourselves to the i i'' contell we will call- in the aid of a so» re ' reign nation. We will league ourselves ( with a ign power.* . i ; If there is a man among us who fliTill 1 aSRnn that the question' is not what it ( y ie has been fla,ted to be—who fliall Cndea- 1 . V<,j.ir to perplex it, by ill 'timid decla- •ho ro' 11 '' 011 ? Bgajnlt WCife. laws—who (hall! 3 'invYc'f'ves,'cr I"i"fimla'tions aTj* ,£ t , gauift the govehimcnt—who shall.in-' c ! culcate dire&iy', or indiredlly, that si }j_ fplxe (Might not to be, employed to com- a i pel the insurgents tfl-a fiibmiffion to the h , S) ! lavvs, if the pending experiment to g : ir > bring them to reason (an experiment 0 n j which will immortalize the mode:ation c iiJ.' the government) fliall fail ; such a c ' man however he may prate arid babble it » '*PvWicanifm, is not a republican ; lie s . j attempts to set up tile wilt of a part a . i gain.ll the will of the wljoie, the will rs a faS'ion, againll the will'of thena i_ 'j°"> the pieafure of a_/«•*£>'againit your pieafure ; the violence of a lawfefi com ir hhiation the sacred authority of J ; pronounced under your indisputa ble commission. t0 til y _ Mark such a man, if fupb the. e be. ta n The occalidn may enable you to difcri- pa d ; minate the. /<«<? 'from prejended Republi- th 8 j cutu sxjitor friends from the friends of w ,Ifaaion. It is in vain that the latter fliall I' . attempt to conceal their pernicious prin- X . eiples under a crowd of odious invectives t fi . agamft the laws. T-our answer is tliis : ex f "We have already in the Constitutional ; a& decided the point againll you, and ot . ; those for whom you apologize. , ' vl , IVe have pronounced that excijes th( . be laid and consequently that they aie 1 not as you'fay ineonfillent with I.iber- y e: > ty. Ut our will be firft obeyed and nai we fliall be ready to consider the reason terl which can be alforded to prove our on judgement has been erroneous: and if b . ce they convince us to cause them to be observed. We have not neglected the w ",' means of amending in a regular course late the Conltitutional aft. And we shall prif know how to make our sense be refpedt- f° r 1 ed whenever we fliall-difcover that any tain part of it needs correction. But as an T e earnest of this, it is our intention to be gin by ft curing obedience to ouraiitho- J nty, from /those who have been bold to In enough to set it at defiance. In a fulll defc refpea for the laws we discern the reali- " A ty of our power and the means of pro- law > viding for cur welfare as occalion may J?'"' require ; tn the contempt of the laws, we ee the annimlatioiv of our power; the m yc * Note Threats of joining the Bri ttjhare aßually thrown out—how far the a the idea may go is not known. i„ pe shall pofTibility, and the danger of its being ern- nfurped by others andof the despotism of individuals fncceecling to the regular s is authority of the nation." No Thjjt a fete like this may never await the you, let it be deeply imprinted in your mini's and hvdedldoMtn to your latest in« 4! polarity, that Ujere i« ijp 1 to tk/r. con- potifm itk)« tu/e or more to ba dreaded n'efs ' t nan that vvi.ich begms at anarchy. xe»,' TULLY. pay Europeaii lateliigence. ™n F R A N C E. taut W' NATIONAL CONVENTION. Re- • lave _ J une '• lone The following is the-addrefs to the ar that niies of France, for giving no quar ter to the Englilh and Hanoverian refs, troops, which was adopted in fub ived stance hy th; Convention—tho' they dge afterwards repealed it. i .in Bavrf v re then read an address to the ions armies of the Republic, the purport of eas which was adopted by the Convention not in tlie fitting of the 26th. It is as fol tini- lows: ived •< England is capable of every out ced rage on humanity ; and of every crime ion: towards the Republic. She attacks the in a rights of natirtns and threatens to annv hilate their Liberty. of " Ho.v long will you fuffer to conti and nue on your frontier the Haves of aid, George ? x j, lay " -He formed the Congress of Pilnitz, refs and brought about the faandalotis fur it is render of Toulon. He burned our ma it : .gamines in the maritime tows. He cor ner- rupted our cities, and endeavored to ives dvftroy the National RepvefeiUation. j it, JJe ft'<*rved your plain's, and purchased be t'reafons pn the frontiers, -ol- , " When the e/eut of battle shall put and in your power either Englilh and Ha the noveriaris, bring, to your remembrance 've- the vast t rafts of country Englilh Haves ply have laid waste. Carry your view to on- La Vendee, Toulon, Lyons, Landre oJ des, Martinique, and St. Domingo, the places still leeking with the blood which jde "Jie attrocioos policy of the Englilli hai re- filed. Do not trust to their artful lan- ' — g ua g e > which is an additional crime, ith Worthy of their perfidious charafierand the machiavelian govetnment. to- " No, 110, Republican foldieis, you ves ought therefore, when victory fliall put ip your power either Englilh or Hano -ITIII Brians, to strike; not one of them tj t ought to return to the traiterous terii ea- to, T England, or to tie brought iytu ■] a . France. Let the Britilh slaves perilh, la ll and Europe be fiee ! !" n ■ « —- x . X tf — a . tion of the manner in which the tiefend iii_ crs of the guillotine (this is his expref lat ffion) had been thieatened by the allies m . at Kaiferllautern.) Barrere has also pub lished a long manifefto against the En to gli(h nation, which the Paris Gazette , lt of the 3 ill promises to give on the fuc -0I) (feeding day. ,le LONDON, June 12. lie ——. a . j STATE PAPER, :;// letter frem the' Bhiti/k Ambatfador a* Co a. t*nba£en, to Count liernjlorff. Minijler of State to bis Danijh Majejiy. n- Copenhagen, May 14, 1794. of • SIR » ■ d At the time wnen I wasbblited to appljr to your Excellency, aiid complained against the publication, called, The Danith Spec- 1 e. tftor, I requefted'a public and speedy re i. partition. lam ignorant of the causes 'of 'j. the delay in the proceedings of the Trial, )f which it was not niy butfitiefs to investigate. |[ j « :s > however, but too obvious, that from tjie-ftep taken by the Public Accuser, that eyen if I had thought proper to wait for ;s the result of that Trial, I cbul_d r not have : expected any thing fatisfaftory from it. il ,In however moderate manner the Kings d ot . Denmark cx;rcifcd that abfolute-powcr, "fith which they had been inverted fmce J the Revolution of the 1660, yet there is ' much doulst but that power remained in c their hands as late as thp begiuing of lall " year, at a time when aDanilh fubjedt of the I j name of Brabands, after having been in- * b , terrogated by an extraordinary commission, cl r on an accusation for feditioia writings, has f been on the King's authority taken up and t thrown into a dungeon in the citadel of £ ; Copenhagen, where he still languilhes, ; without ever having been tried ; and still ,0 ' later, we witnefied the irreftation and im- cr 1 prifonment of a citizen (obfeure indeed) tli for having, in a publication, ridiculed cer- B tain sacred things, and amongst others, for r,, the rebuilding of the Chateau of Chris- rf tianlburg, for the armament, &c. ' In appealing to the laws of Denmark, I I appealed to them, such as I knew them to be; in l'liort such as 'your Excellency all defer j bed them, when you said to me, all " Altho' you were not the head of the C o law, it was still in your vour to direst it in 1 some manner or other.'" A remarkable , • declaration, which 1 did not fail to com municate to my court, as well as many of to my colleagues, at the time at Copenhagen, in P rei ' t '! u a Profeflor as Literature in a libel ot which he declared himfelf to be the ] the author, insulted a minister of a nation dr.i Ui peace with Denmark, expressing freely cor njr his regret at the Minister's having escaped j r m aflalTmation. , In thisbufinefs, a ftate 1 byfinefs, similar to thole which I have before quoted a re gular process is entered upon : andmore alt over, beforean inferior tribunal. The pro lur cess is commenced againll a man guilty of eft the grenteft crime against fociery ; namely, to have endeavored to excite a quarrel, be ej tweelr«two rjations. If tfie ft itcrice of his Judges be in con formity with the demand made by the Public Accuser, in the name of the King of Denmark, he ought to have been sen tenced firft to an amende honorable, and afterwards to a pecuniary fine of two hun dred dollars: imprifonmcnt can only bean ahernativr in cafe of contumacy. The identity of tie person defigniied in the libel is acknowledged, and is obvious to every body except to such as do not chufe to ac knowledge it; but even if the presumptive ar- evidence had not amounted, as it really ar- does, to poGtive conviction, one may bold lan ly aflert,' that the rights of nations, in a state of litigation, becoming a proceli be tween one nation and another, permit no tJ -' fort of inte pretatiort of quibble and chi f canery. It is the fpir'lt, and not the literal he import of tfyefe (acred laws which requires of ftrift adherence. on I (hall not take upon myfelf, Sir, to fay i whether my Court will be disposed to reft D ' contented with the faitisfaftion you procur ed, for an insult which it received in the lC " person ofits fervaht a; the Court of Copen ne hagen, undei' the immediate prote&ien of he which Court it had placed him. ni- The molt abjeA slavery is, perhaps; not more distant from true liberty, than popular licentiousness; and particlarly that '2 lictntioufnefs, encouraged through the 0 medium of the press. cannot but endanger the fafety of the State which tolerates it. z, As to myfelf;, and as much as it is poffi ir- tile for me to separate my personal cafe, ( i a . from that cf my Court, I declare myfelf )r _ fatisfied: the person who attacked me, has 1 retraced in a Court of Jullice ; having of ° j fered, as lam informed, to take an oath, ■ j that I was Hot the person defignatsd in the ed libel, none, of his afperfioius couid have \ reached my honor, and if it depended up ut on me, I fbould abandon him to his own • a . confluence, and to the judgment of his ■" ce fellow-citizens 1, I have the honor to be, &c. ' t " (Signed) D. HAILES. 1 ■h PHILADELPHIA, ' a » AUGUST 26. n- c ,e J A letter from Hamburgh dated July ■ 1 'd to a merchant in this city, fays that the r French have taken Oftentt. / >u ut Extras of a Letter from Baltimore. j 0- «We learnt yesterday that the ihip m which failed from this port the ztd May, J- and which carried to Fort Dauphin soo pas ta fengers, was loft on her return in coming a | ( round Cape Hattertis. She had a good : ' many pail'engers eleven of which perished. : , . The others laved themselves in the (hip's ; ' Troat—aim am Fed,' naTceTraTiNoriolET Courier Francois. t - 3 Died on the ioih inll. at Fredericks- 1, j. burgh, Virginia, Ma. H. QallenJer, wife •J, 1- °f Capt. John Callender, bfi that place, j t e I r .. Account from Lloyd's (London) lift i of captures for one month, ending ! * the 30th May, 1794. By the French. By the English. ai I Portuguese, 1 Frigate of 31 ei 3 Spanish, guns, £ r S Dutch, and a corvet of 20 1 American, guns, that is all. 85 English, of which 10 are outwaid, • — and 4 homeward bound i S° Weli-Indizmen, 1 to iv' t Recaptures Quebec, 3 with con-j - deduded voy, and x tunning outward bound New- V f foundland ships : 1 n° from Hull to Leghorn, / | with bale goods and ■ 3 lead, a Packet from ' a "j Lilbon, with a large furaof money on board, and a frigate of 32 ' ' guns (the Castor) that is all! , Nt tar Capt. Art of the brig Norfolk, 9 j" days from Charlellon, informs, that on , , the 15th inflantoff Charlellon Bar, was ?'! boarded by an officer from the Terpfi 1 - . chore frigate, in company \yith the Ze bra, a sloop of war, part of Admiral * Jervis's fleet, from the Well-Indies. Same time he saw two 74's belonging T" to Admiral Murray's fcjuadron, on a I cnufe. The English officer on board ' the Norfolk, enquired if there were any aS ( British sailors on board; one piade an- "°' Hver, and said, he was born in Wales j The English officer told Captain Art, 1 his orders were to take out all such he of - j fell m with, and further extended to 15 j all British privateers, to ft rip them of - all tneir men, except as many as would conduct them into port. Capt. Art told the officer if he took out one of milt his crew it would oblige him to return 1 to port, but all his remonstrances were j l * in vain. trioi Letters have been received since Satur- day from the wettward—we learn that they tw o contain intelligence of a meeting of the aftii ied CommiiJicners with parties of the Info gems ; which produced nothing fttisfa-'4~ lar ry. The appointed meeting hacJ not then re- taken place. re- Rumor with her hundred tongues has ro- circulated some particulars, which if vvell of founded, will in due time be authenticated ly, It may however, not be improve.' tj be- that they are Hot of a very pleasing natiS?. •he Foreign Intelligence. nd Prom Hamburgh Papers received by the m- Jh'ip Birmingham Packet, Capt. Loci: y er > and f n °™ Henry and Charles. Bel — . ry From the Hamburgh Gazette of the $th ic- of July. Uy Intelligence from Opperheim of the Id- 2 5 thof J une , mentions, tha Moellen l a n*' Kalkreuth are at ICaifcrflati- De- tern- By the Manheim head of the > no 26th, it appears that the Pruilians had hi- taken Pirmafens. A genera! action salf al from S a ar Louis to Goemeifheim was es expected very soon. ay ° n the 2 * th of J ane > Cobourg, who eft 11 appears must have crorfed the coun jr- try from the environs" of Tournay for he the protection' of the Luxembourg, :n- attempted in conjunction with theprincc of of Orange to relieve Charleroi. On 3s the 26th they made the attempt, the an D . utc !> troops in the centre and"right iat wing and Cobourg's army forming the he left. ;er The Dutch were fuccefsful in driv • ing in the French ports, but Cobourg . hearing of the capitulation of Charleroi on the 25th retired. He loft 1500 as men by his own account, the print?-of ,f. Orange xoo by his. The combined h, armies letired to Nivelles'. he The duke of York" hadTlis head quar ve ters at Oudenarde on the 24th of June. P" Deaulieu on the 25th had fotmed a juadion with Clairfayt. Some symp toms of infurredtion had made their appearance in fundty towns of the Ne therlands. The last accounts at Hamburgh when the Snow failed were that Ofttnd was taken. A letter from Copenhagen of July 1 ft, mentions, that tlie Danilh naval armament amounts to 15 fail of the 7'\ line, 4 frigates and some smaller vessels le 1 The coasts are also to be put in a state j of defence. f Reports said that Beaulieu had been . killed and Cobourg wounded. Y, From Amflcrdam, July I. f- Char-leroi capitulated on the 25th l S • and the garrison were made prisoners of j war. Bruges and Client were in pof- J session of the French on the 26th, the -j-gJfiTlohs" evacuated tliofe places. Co bourg has ordered the evacuation of ; Quefnoy, Conde, Lapdrecy, and Va f- j lenciennes. The Englirfi under Moif' - :e ' intended for Oftend had gone round ft | the Scheldt, that place being off. On the 26th there was snuch confufiort 1 at BrtifTells, in consequence of the cap ture of Charleroi and the retreat of Cobourg, whose baggage had already arrived at BrufTels. Great fears were j entertained for Vhe fafety of that city. Extraa of a letter from Leghorn, June - 1 16th. A frigate arrived here from Genoa, ' in a pafiage of two days brings intelli- genee, that a fleet of seven fail of the line and 5 frigates failed from Toulon and under their protection a number of • -trarifports with 10,000 men 011 board, for the leliefof Corsica. The English fleet under Vice Admiral Hoth.im, having received intelligence of theirl.i:!- ing joined that under Admiral Hoody, and being 14 fail of tha lints flrong" went in pursuit of the French whom they fell in with and chafed into a small port, named Juan near Nice in the ter ritory of Genoa, where the french landed their forces and put themfefves in a pollute of defence by occupying the fort and batteries. .Lord Hood left Vice Admiral Hotham with nine fail to block them up and proceeded with the remaining five to continue the siege of Calvi. The Engli/h had also made a declaration to Genoa in confc quence of the intrusion of the French, that if they did not declare waragainft . Prance, the allies would consider them as enemies. The anfwerof Genoa was m>t known. . L From Madrid, May 27. In confequcnce of the late fucce/Tes of tho French, allthe-Cataloniansfrfrni 15 to 60 were ordered to take up arms. From War fait), June 2s - is at Marca, within a few miles of this city. The cockade worn by the patriotic Poles is blue and green. The Polish ladies have sent to the pa triotic camp fliirts. June 25." ; : The Ruffian and Pruflian armies are two miles from that of Kofciulko, an action may therefore be soon expected.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers