J. om ihi American Daily Adverlifcr. Extradt from a work entitled " A View of the United States of America," now in tlie Press of Wrigley and Berriirum, of Philadelphia. 11 is eitahlilhed by a recent investi gation in Great Britain,, that in the year 1791 the United States of Ameri ca took from that kingdom (exclulive of Ireland arid the Britifli Eaft-Indp, from .vfiich they import many manufac tures) the immense value, in Biitifh manufactures, ofJlcrlmg t , r £• 3'9 22 >77* ii 8. in the fame year France, now at war with England, toolr as thtf equivalent for the ad vantages of Mr. Eden's treaty only 576,6?! 6ld And Rullia took 281,743!. is. Den mark aild Norway zig,8o!(l. I is. Swe den 36,259]. 43. fid. Poland 39,8331. i6si 9tl. Germany 778- 2X31. 3s. 2d. H011and692,7251. 1and692,7251. Ss. 3'd flaxen manufadtures, and milled iron j "tides, probably to a greater amount [ t-'ian 28 i ,0001. ft ei ling, and though ( 1 ermany and Holland can (hip very lit e in raw materials, provisions, or 1 . nber, yet their exports to Great Bri- J " 1 79 1 were 1,569,0001. derling. jj I tlis large aalouat- m«ft iurfnded t i a greater value of Dutch and German ' •nanufadturesthan the difference between j, our imports from Britain, and those of r " all F n'ope. The fame remark applies V.i the British trade with France, Rulfia, t :anders, &c. and indeed the United •' Si tes ot America promote the demand 'q of all those countries for British manu- fa: ures, bv permitting Britain to fend ! Vs o-eign poods to the value of nearly " nilhon and a half dollars per annum. ' :nce it appears almost certain, that d f :!>e United States of America take £ 1 >m Great Britain a greater balance p £ mnnufadtured goods than is taken r ' ;"!< m Great Britain by all other foreign 3 ' nations. The important quedion occurs I . w ought a wife and just nation to .l C-. iuft themselves towards such a customers? , thi " 1 he Foreign IntelJigence. dti for C motion o/EUROPEAN NEWS, but received by the Mohawk, from Lon- toli • ■ and the Prudence from London- ,lor ■y ene LONDON, July 3< J was iiter the levee yesterday, Mr. Jay, "ew Commifiioner from America, •.! i audience of the king, to deli s his credential.-, to which he was in- { the; r. ■ oee by Grtrville, Secretary fore State for the Foreign Department Hig id condudted by Sir Clement Cot- noil Dormer, Knight, Matter of the Ven oniesin waiting. Jay, at his interview with the pear: m on Friday, declared himftlf capti •Ik ned by Congress with the mod by t aflurances of amity towards this after <7 j and that nothing but the molt P e >'' ne effity (hall ever suspend that " intercourse, which it is the ich nation to cultivate ent .„ -3 indemnity for the injury for so e An, .icans have fuitained by the by tin . ■ and detention of their vessels ;&e A .■J foine other objedts, which it is the £he Lr . nof our Cabinet to grant. r cafe his majesty shall think fit to [ jent the Admirals with a gold f.P e .' 0 Hi 38 4'flfiark of approbation for .his ", e , services. , I Yetteiday advice was received at , ' Ve , Lloyd's Coffee House of the fafe arri ' p*"!' , va ' Downs of about 50 fail of U ; ; l ' ,e homeward bound Leeward liland " ' (hips, for London, all fully laden with new final's ; ; ■ J the wind being fair, they proceeded for the river. It is now confidently said, that for more than fix weeks pad, the Auftri ans, convinced of what mud be the is sue of the campaign, have been trunf -6 10 'heir, magazines and military j (tores from the Netherlands back to Germany. About a month ago, Bar reie, in one of his reports from the committee of Public Safety, said the campaign would close much foonerthau was expected. There are strong pre emptions that the Emperor and the committee of Public Safety wnderltood one another ; and we (hould not be sur prised to hear that the Auftrtan garri sons in Conde, Valenciennes, Quef noy, and Landrecies agree to evacuate these places, 011 condition of being al lowed to march out with arms, artillery and baggage. A very inftrudtive work has appear ed in Paris, under the title of " The Constitution of the Spartans, Athenians, and Ronpans." The author is M. Guerolt, who before contributed so much to the stock of rational public amufemcnt, by his translation of the Fragments of Pliny: July 4. J Yesterday at noon a meflenger arrived 1 at the Secretary of States office, with 974 dispatches from the hon. Mr. Trevor, !" his Majesty's minister at Turin, which , ' la " place he left on the 20th ult—Thefe J :on " dispatches Hate, that seven fail of the , ' t0 French line, with several frigates, were , " c blocked up by Lord Hood's fleet at the eiK '' hay of Giens, near the Hieres, from oes ' which situation it was dt'-med impofli ble they (hould escape. 1 e This mtffenger passed thro' Brussels, 8c fays that the Prince of Saxc Cobourg I with his army was (till at Neivlles. The a ~ l)uke of York, it was reported, was "P" (till at Renaix—other teports (lated j lo " him to have reached Grammont. His 1 ' II ' baggage and ltores had been sent down J the Derider and Scheldt to Antwerp ; and from Grammont he could pursue r ;UT his route in security down the banks of n " 'hose two rivers. Of the four batta- " "8* liiins-of Hcffians left in Tournay by the Duke of York, two had joined him P at and the other two were '■ f hourly expedted to arrive. They were ies re P r laced ,n Tonmay by Austrian troops. The messenger saw Lord Moira's ed ? fmy Wltfl '. n two hours march of Ghent, C , .'n the neighbourhood of which was General Clairfait, who had already been re inforcej by General Woimoden jy 1 some Hanoverians. He then passed on to Bruges, where he arrived at five o'clock on Tuesday morning. 01 at Just as he entered the town, he disco- 01 te vered that it was in the poffeflion of the C " French, who had re-entered it on the T J" fame morning at three o'clock. He ac •n cordingly turned back, but was soon m i rs after pursued some diltance by two of W [ 0 the French light-horse, whom he evad ed by turning through a wood. From f thence he passed 011 to Flu(hirig, where °5 he embarked for England. Every thing was quiet at Turin at his Ca departure. The French remain in their na former position, about 15 miles from Turin th« but do not attempt to make any nearer ap- the pronehj and if the government of the aru country can but preserve tranquility at (j v . home, there is no apprehension of a foreign e enemy. b or July 5. hat When this paper went to press, there was 110 accounts at the Secretary of State's To 5 Office, from the Duke of York's army, unt ' latter than those which appeared in the Wi ' London Gazette of Tuesday lad. Of the , v i, ■ junction so cenfidently dated in some of r - the papers to have taken place between the ;° rl - forces Under the command of his Royal lcnl Highness, and those under Gen. Clairfayt war no intelligence had been received by Go- atta vemment. w jjj con . Our correspondent at Oftend, it ap- n i,.. pears, was midaken in his aecount of the P £ capture of Ghent. The fatf, ascertained , , by the Dutch Mail, appears to be, that hel P after Clairfait had fallen back upon it from of 1 Deynfe, it was attacked on the 24th ulf. vest, In consequence of a large body of Hano- to b: venans poftfd on the banks of the canal of Bruges, having at the approach of the enemy indantly fellep back, the town was tor some time in considerable danger, but T fay the exertions of Generai Clairfayt and Polal the Auflnans, it was at length saved, and morn "he French rc-pulfed w'-th loss. fib] " 1 We hear, that the Prussians have refu- f fed Lord Cornwallis to advance, in con- ' sequence of which, his Lordlhip has , dismissed his flaff officers ; if so it will mark accelerate vfchat ia so universally wifhec theii —uur Jepanurefrom.this country. ::nnot The out polls ot Tournay were at n old tacked by the enemy vefterday, but they pre- were repulsed with the loss of 50 men. "iaw- They aifo attacked Orchies, but were set iikewife beat off there with near 20c J that j killed ar.d wounded. r his The-Dutch troops are ordered ti, return to iloila'Mj. d at- July 2. arri- The account given in last night's ill of Gazette of the late operations of the ar Hand mies, so far as it relates to the action of with the 26th v'timo, differs very materially fair, from that which was fir ft communicated to the publi" in the Gazette E the American Envoy—to fee how far the Convention are disposed to make peace with the present MinHlry. Should llc they decline to treat with the leading th» ? en 'he next fubjedl for consideration will be, —what ar- C 7 e rangemer.ts shall take place to ensure 1 e -1 anquflity to tbe country ? jj- 11 Tlie perfon.s to whom the nation look . up are Mr. Fox, - s > Mr. Sheridan, The Dufri oj Grafion, and J he Marquis of JLanCdoiune. tiS r XTT * 1 1 :e j With the three former the Portland J; s P art y llav e no objection to at't ; but i wn Ministers prtfer a coalition with the ! p . Marquis, whose friends are less nume- ; " ue r o ,!9 > fd fiom whose connexions admi- ' , G f niftration have no apprehension, as they ! , are not fufficiently strong to prevent Mr. I by anc ' si' s fatellitescoming again into i ■ m power—should they conceive it necefla- ■ , re ry to resign, for the desirable end of j 1 :re procuring Peace to the kingdom. i )«. , i's duke of York's aymy. i It, —— as Camp at Tournay, June 24. c 7 We have struck eur tents, and are 0 ■" jult going to march for Renaix. c d We marched through Tournay from r ollr camp to-day about one o'clock, on our way thither.—Our leaving that ; r ie " c'ty was one of the most affecting scenes i!' iC wc eVfi r witnefTed. As we went thro' •, the town, the few inhabitants who re- ' mained there were (landing in groupes. j' j with melancholy countenances, the fe |_ male part crying, and some wringing " their hands, lamenting the departure e of the British army as the forerunner of their approaching deftruftion bv the " s Carmagnols. The inhabitants of Tour- r r nay were more attached to the British ° 1 'han any place we have yet been in ; m - they were pi otefted in their property, m all( l wet e liberally paid for every thing f by the English officers ; and the Duke of Yotk by his justice and humanity had particularly endeared himfelf to them. We left a weak garrison in i Tournay of Heflians and Auftrians, under the command of Colonel de Wurmb, who defended Nieuport, but l '° ; who will hardly be able to hold out a wi fortn-.ght in Tournay,owing to the pre- ne; sent ruined slate of the fortifications and want of ammunition, should the enemy attack it, which in all likelihood they Th will, considering the richness of the conquest, and the weakness of the j place. On our retreat, it was smpoflible to help remarking the uncommon beauty of the country, and plenty of the har vest, which is probably so soon deftincd to be the prey of the enemy. Wlt neii DOVER, July 4. an y as v The Swift, paflage vefTel, Captain prel Poiake, arrived here from Flufhinp- this in t motning. This vessel pa (Ted Ortend on gov 1 uefday lad, at which time they could mof fee the French troops marching into dill Oftend—a vessel was on fire in the har- that bor, supposed to have been set on fire than They also attacked Orchics, but were j iikewife beat off there with near 20c I killed ar.d wounded. The-Dutch 'troops are ordered tc. return to Holland. Ji '.iv 2. I The account given in last night's ! Gazette of the late operations of the ar mies, so far as it relates to the aft ion of the 26th v'timo, differs very materially from that which was lirft communicated to the publi" in the Gazette En of his lordship returned the following an ially f wcr to Mr. Iver, at Strodrig, the se ated cretary, who gave the notification : :tra S 1 R, ncilt J received your delicate and gentle ''r" manly notification of my expulfioii from but the club of Bowmen of the border of jfied Dunfe and Kelfo, which 1 take in good Inch part—and, do assure you, without the emy lead resentment. Every focitty has a dor- right to choose its own company, and 1 all I dare fay I am not suited to their's. At my age, vyith my rank, fortune and character, it cannot be supposed that the casual motion of a merry making eea 'J a y> when wine is uppeimoft, can give hi s me either pleasure Or pain, (led 1 am Sir, the With continual regard, lose Your obliged humble servant, Red Buchan. Dryburgh-Abbey, June 9, 1794. eet- To Gilbert Ker, Esq. Stodrig. use, »of BRUSSELS, June 16. The allies have been obliged to con th' - Cnt w:t h throwing into the the tOUr con 3 llerec ' p' ace! small garrisons ; , e and the French taking advantage of the circumstance, have approached Lan d»ecy r and established themselves at 1 Cateau, Cambreiis. j LE TOSCIN BELGIQUE. , □U "To arms, Gentlemen, to arms, 1 ; without losing a moment. If we do < eft nor in concert with the brave ■ ar . Auilr.ans, we Ihal! be forced perhaps ' „. e t0 %ht against them. • c " If >ve do not fig'it in defence of t ok ° Ur re ''B' on » ollr lives, Our liberty, and I our property, we (hall be forced to r fight for the purpose of de" oying these b objects. t ' What then will be our situation ? g If we refufe to obey, we shall be guillo- 1< lined—lf we do obey, we shall be tl , damned to all eternity ; for we are for- r l ' ! bidden to commit or to be ci : guilty of robbery and murder. If we t( ! emigrate, how /hall we exist, and whi- tl l' ' tne ' ft l3 '! we fly ? The foreign powers h; | will not afford an affylum to cowards, w • r - i who may set their own fubjefts a bad f« 1 example. Will the Emperor receive tl 3 us in his own dominions ? Let us our- w 0 | selves determine whether we should me- fr j rit such a favor! But if even he does, may he not with reason force us to serve in his armies ? " How honorable is it to fight for Fi our God, our King, our country, and • e onrfelves ! How dishonourable to aban don every thing, and at length be D n forced to fight for a morsel of bread. „ " How delightful will our repose be t | come after the war, if we keep pofTef- da s lion of our country ! On the other hand, ed h f OVV / ad and forrowful will our lives be; ap _ if, after the war, we shall bltifh for our tec _ conouft, and fliame and disgrace will qu ' be our companions. We fliall be like rel , wandering J ews , and indeed more con- bu 1 tcm P tl b!e than they are, because it de- co\ r pends solely on us to preferveor to fur . tender what we have. m :, - r a " wllat n '" c do vve run in foi; , r °J l,fta «W? If we die, we shall die thi . martyrs, if wc possess the true fenti- of ments of religion. col 1 t wai alf< PHILADELPHIA !•"' . 9 feri AUGUST 30. ,al whi Pursuant to the Governor's proclama- "'l' Hon of the 7 th inft. the General Alterably mit meet at the State Ho„fe, on Monday next, at 3 o clock in the afternoon. ' the »» tlOll Mr. Fenno, we Th, following Letttr from a Gentleman hav at J tt/Jburgh may perhaps net be un- J Jattsfaftory to some of your readers. fron a o rece Subscriber. a] , u( Dear Sir, da \" " I find myfelf so much occupied 0 with the politics of the day, that I have tain neither leisure or inclination to attend to the an y else ' Neccffi, >' obliges me and as well as many others to join in the cftati present coDteft,and to throw our veight I inarf in the scale of oppofltion to the federal had 1 government. I have conversed with refidi most of the leading men in the present Allei ant 11 bailees, and am well convinced, (alio' that they arc actuated by other motives diffic than those they aliedge for their conduct again jattf --/ou may rely on that notion* snort of a dilution of tlic Fodtial Govewment, and the re-eltablUhmeiu of the old Continental Syiem will fati,. fy them, or induce them to live in peace under any forms of law. Many of arl of them are men deeply involved in debt, ciety wh,ch the y are cither unable or unwil telfb Img to discharge. Others are in necef is or fitous circuraftanees, and have been that lo "g applying for lucrative otfkta. Dif eraf- kj'sfied with tkmfelves, and equally f» rhich Wlth every government in which tliey r an- have not a hand, they have long beJi e fe- meditating the stroke they have now giv ; en, and have been but too fuccefrful in cncrealing the number of their friends, ntle- " There is nothing in my opinion, from which has contributed so much to the r of P re sent ferment, as the volumes of the rood daring addiefTes and resolutions of the 3 the different Democratic Societies, which las a h' aTe s)ee " carefully dispersed thro' all and the Western Count 17. In these publi c's. ca: ' ons ( he Executive and the laws of and t,ie United States have been so con that 'lantly abused, that the people in ad iing m iring the of these societies, g; ve have been led to adopt their principles, and to wish w-'th them, not only foi a change of men and measures but also for a change of government. The ma it, j°> ty lam convinced do not expect any opposition from the president, but are i. in expe&ation matters will iucceed to' their wishes. For my part I am of a different sentiment, and am well con vinced that a powerful foiee will be sent into this country. Should this :on- Shortly be done, the business will soon the be over, as the insurgents could not ns ; keep the field for one week without the fiiffering materially—they have no pro an- visions for the occasion, and have their at farms lo attend to, which they will not forfake without being well paid for it. I am happy in having it in my pow er to afTure you, that the gentlemen ms, who opposed with violence the passing do of the Excise Law in Congrefs,are molt ive violently opposed to the present hoflile jps measures. Mr. F. has even had the courage to harangue in public against of them, which nothing but his great po nd pularitv could have rendered fafe. Yon to may reft aflured, that fho: Id the matter efe be taken up fetioufly by the Executive, three-fourths of those who now join the i ? general cry would peaceably retire and 10- leave to their brethren the honors of be the opposition. Many of them are al >r- ready startled at the crimes they have be committed, and are taking great pains ve to conceal the knowledge of them from 11- the world. Most of their worst actions :rs have been committed tinder disguise, Is, which to me is a convincing proof, that id fear is not yet entirly banished from ve their breads. When I have any thing r- worth communicating you (hall hear e- from me again. S'*' s, Yours, &c. EXTRACT > r From the REPORT of the STATE ( d COMMISSIONERS, ie Dated at Pitijburgh, lie 2.-th 1794 " We arrived at this borough on Sun s- day last, and at the inn where we alight* I, ed met with the three commifiioners •; appointed by the President of the Uni r ted States. On the road we had fre il quent conveffations with individuals of e i'efpc