fatfcd through Lorraine. oo their happv ■ back ;r.to Germany. In : le dilj tr us aftior.j on ,he 18th and at Tou' nay, t'K-K ;gii>!o(l ail their attiliery, {h» " e,it ta« command .f Colonel Ccii, 2r?vc. The Auftrianj loft almost as muc la t ie d c ommand> d by ireneral Ott<* li> coilleqn::nce of the calamities of wa , L'n:v.t.,;y at I.ouvain is closed, an the students and f/r»t'eflov« kmve joined tbt generalflight. BREDA, July 6. Another part of the Hdnovtrian Hospital. is arrived here; and all the omp equipage, artillery, baggage wag gons,, &c. &c\ In all above a hundred carriage, Ind four or five hundred draft hoiies !—They were on their return to Jrlanover! OUDENARDE, July 3 . On Sunday last, a second adtion took place between the advanced guards of his royal highness, and t be Carmagnols. His Highness always tnakes fine difpofii ?i >ns, but iiiltaiice, not with the uccefs v hit h he so well defcrves- The eiTicdt was, as to any beneficia coufequence-, b«t very little on either Ju'e. Ihe loss on bet}] fides, as to carnage, mid waste of human life, was coiifiderable-. The Heflians loft nolli . The Duke's arfty are in tolerable heaitli, and. about fix or seven thousand Engli/h remain. he Hcffians, Dutch and Aultrians, carry his returns up to 13,600 mem 1 ne Carmagnol artfties continue en creating, and with more madneis every hour—One line extending from Ypres, To Werwick, on the South Eafl: 1 o Meniri and Colirtray» on the North and North East j And so continuing on both fides the Lyf, to the fotks of the river, where the Canal branches off between Wacken ind'Deynfe. In the late a#air at Oudenarde, they turned the position of the allies, flank ing our army, by a sudden and unex pected wheel of their van at Harle- f bake. I i > ' r _ - pro- On the Scheldt, from Lille they hav® ' . themselves to be fupenor to corrup inother army, hanging on our real, ' lon » an d whole mighty efforts, fecond md harraffing very hard upon Renaix !, cd and fapported by the invincible As to Prinee CoboUfg and the Piince coura K e of 'he armies, and the gigantic f Orange, they too, are harraifed by a P° wer °f the people, must annihilate rail artviy of the Carmagnols, who in- Britain. The English ring in :reafe everyday, A dayfeldom passes, ,Ile ears of the people the word Dicla vithout Joriie affair or engagement of ft* 'he purpose of exciting them nore or less confequSnce. The three !t0 "^ e "P murder their reprelen • reat aftiorls have been on thefc dates, j ' a *'* es; fi'.tie 2(5, if, and yesterday July 2. 1 " "V 6 We retunicd t° tKe time of the The ;oth on the Sambre, the Aullrians ' domination when the inlrdious ind some fuocefs oh one wing. The Louvet fcattefed his venotn againlt Ro aid between 3 and 4000 men. And rioi:l of , the conspiracy of that animal, yeiterday, the Au.'Kiatiß had another ? Must we again endeavor to check, the 1/& is laid to be great. | P rf ' errt; the fiiends of Liberty, and the j a mies of the Republic from these new fiiaies which England has prepared by lifperfing her Journals through the fron ;ier departments* " We have been witnefles to dn infi hous exprrfiion of uneasiness for tlx afety ot the Deputies, and to a.propo it 1011 for furroundingthem with guards md thereby diltinguifhing them frdrr he tnafs of the people. Fiiends of Li jetty, fufpeft filch infidioiis piopoii ions. Be allured that the authors o htm are not lincercly attached to thi Republic. The members of the Com iiittee of Public Safety need 110 guard heir best, their surest protection is thi ove of the people, the etleer- of eve:-, food citizen, and the fortitude of thci; ellow-deputies. " Five years of revolutionary experi nee have taught the people to miltruf he exaggerated representations of met vho are the natural foes of liberty. " They are the who to make ti lated, endeavor to afiimilate us to them elves, and who speak of the troops of ; leptfty in the fame manner as they fpea! if the troops of William, or of 1 hey wish to attach to us the charattei if tyiants, becaule they are cotivincet hat all Fiance detests tyranny. Yes ft speculators, ye dealers in iieaclicr ind Haves, ye bankers of crimes we de :eft tyranny, for We abhor you.—Tin hatred of home againll Carthage is re ,n l ' le hearts of Frenchmen, ii the fame degree as the Punic Faith i evived ih the hearts -f LONDON, July 23. In the National Convention of France, there are at present sixty-sour ci-dcvaht nobles, two of whom lire of the Committee of Public Safetv. " Froh the a London paper". Mani festo ■ OF THE COMMITTE3 OF PUBLIC SAFETY O F agaiwst GkEJT-£R:TJINt [The Mowing Manifello whs prefent e.i by Banere, from the Commitee of Public Safety to the National Convention, on the 30th of May.] " Shall the French Republic be al ways forced to derive her energy only from events ? Too long has the atten tion of France been concentrated on the eonfpiracies of Danton and Hebert, It is time that flic should know that if the traitors were allowed to carry on their criminal proje&s with impunity but for a few days, France, surrendered to England and Austria, Would be nothing more than a pile of cinders. "At the period when the conspira tors tirft took the veil of patriotiftfl, a fyllem of calumny was adopted at Lon don—a system that has iince been ren dered permanent. From that period •too, projects have been Continually formed agaiitft the lives of certain mem bers of the National Convention of Francei " A few days only have elapsed since the journals of the foreign Powers as serted; that the poignards of aflaffins had (tabbed all the members of the Com mittees of Public and General Safely, and that a Revolution had taken place at Paris! A few days only have elapsed since the English newspapers prophecied that Robespierre would soon be no more. Robespierre has escaped the poignards of the Ministers of ; but thtfe Ministers still think, that, at lead, he cannot exist under their calum nies, and that, by affcrting that his in tentions arc to make himfelf the dila tor of 4 France, they shall be able to •enccntrate on his bead the combined It is these fame English ivho, in (peaking of the French armies, express themselves in the following hia'nrier - Fliat Horde, th% Convention, hdlx adopt ed such Lt mode of eonduti—Ti- Com, millcc of Public Safety has ijfvtA fuel o/ddis, as if no national reprefentatioi exilied, and, as if the power of thi French Republic were in the hands o one man. " Tile English have invariably at tempted to mifleadthe public mind. A the commencement of the revolutioi they endeavored to produce a belief, tlia Franee was contending only for a chanjM of dy natty. In the progress of tin revolution they insinuated, that project had been formed in France to raise ; particular person to the diaatorfhip— Thefc projects were attributed to th Committee of Public Safety, for th< purpose of aflerting that Robefpiern was to be the dictator. conjured up, has been made to flit befori *ht eyes of republicans, who have - r 1 I r. " Not content with letting loose af fafiins to mafTacre us—not content with letting loose calumniators to defamt us, you wish to make us die a lingering death, and to itarve us by seizing the corn wich is destined for our support. " 1 lie favorite system of ; a to corrupt the human race, and to ex terminate one country for the puipofe of enslaving another. That fyttem which they bed understand, is a system by which murder is organized, and a pro ject of famine carried with facility into execution. What people, not in Europe alone, but in the globe, we would alk, have not been furnilhed with ample cause of detestation of the people of the Fiencti Republic. " In theif dsfpiTeable journals the !iepnbllcari f:>ldiers are invariably cha actenfed afi the foldirrs of Robefjturre— he foltTiert of Robrfp'urrt, it is said iave attacked Menin—the soldiers of Roleffierrt hate evacuated Ailon—tjic '"'titeri of •Robefp'urre have advanced toward* Fiirnes. " We fhotifd think that we were guilty of injurtice to the power of the people, to the authority of the National Convention-, to the unremitted labours of the Committee of Public Safety, to 'he patriotism of Robespierre, and to the courage of the armies, if we were to coudcfcend to ntfute luch calumnies, which, equally gi-ofs and atrocious, are calculated onlv toamufcthe Engh/h in their brotKefs or their taverns; We i state them merely to prove the intimate ! relation that fubiifts between the cakim- \ niator of Robefpifcrre and that Englith j Agent who has so lately sent a ;iew j Corday to Paris. accultion against these islands ? Africa bidk Ucm give her tatfk the sons whom they live lent into perpetual slavery. " demands from them those pofleffms Wiich they have laid waste. Anieiica points to them, with a re pi oachfj hand, a» the cause of her mi le ries. " Eirope owes to them her corriip- I . Ition. " Tl?y do not difgrac* their origin, ) Dcfcenord from the Carthaginians who J dealt inthe flelh of beatfs and slaves, { they hat? not difeatded the commerce 'of their forefathers. Cxfar when he j landed 01 their Island, found them a I ferocious race, contending with the woivej for the fee simple at the woods. I Their subsequent civilization—their ci ' vil and naval wars, rjl bear the stamp j and charatter of their primeval ferocity. ! "In Bengal they starved several thou j sands of the human race for the purpole ' of conquering a fm&ll number, and of : pi ocui ing an inconsiderable extent of territory. This project was executed With that degree of coldness which's the prominent feature of their national clMradler.—They would rather reig: the Sovereigns of a Church-yard, than ! CCafe to extend their conquffts." Archibald Hamilton rowan, From a London Paper. Our government h,aving ,requested all the European Courts to apprehend that gtntltman, if dicuvered in their dominions arid to delirer him up to the custody of the Biitifh agent residing at such a court ; advertiftments from the different courts to this effedt have lately been publilhed ih molt of trie continental papery. The fol low ing is a literal tranllation of that pub lilhed in%ie Oszette of Breflau in Silesia : " Ihe BtUdh court having requested the arrei'.ation oi Archibald Hamilton Row - an, an Jrilhman, who escaped from prison at Dublin, all migiltratei and courts of justice of this depiftttient are ordered to extrt the fh"iutcii ; meawre in height, of corpulent ar.d rebuff ! appearance, and flrong limbs ; his afpefl | and walk i.tilitary, of a brown and olive complexion, his eyea bcown, as are his eye-brows and hair, which he wears cut ftort behind, but a iittie bald above the ioielicad ;he a ; *s no oiher living lan guage thin Engii/h and French, and the latter but. unpen ally, and mixed with the rormer, Given arEreflau, June u, 1794. /'Signed) Royal Prufiian Supreme ad ministration college." For tht Gazette of the United States, Mn Fenko, Notwithstanding the low illiberal wri Iter, in your evening paper of Monday, upon the Age of Reafoo and Thomas Paine,* deserves notice, hiVlhall not pass without Tome observations from one who is intimately acquainted with that excellent Writer, and his works, which will be read and admired when this defamer, will be Configncd to con tempt and oblivion : And 1 am not a little surprised,' that Inch a jargon of iian.lal, tallhood; and abulc, againll one oi our bell arid mod valuable Patriots, j should find admittance into an Ameri can paper. 1 He lays this Pamphlet the Age of Realyn, has heen thrown on the public as a baflaid is laid in the streets, with out a typographic dad, or mam, to claim the brat, with an intention to juflifv the title; this is an impudent and a fool ifli falfhood, for Mr. Paine avows the Irat and has given his name to it. Mankind have from the firft of time been going on in improvement, and of cpnfequence it is to be fnppofed, that by the fag end of the 18th century, liibje&s "will be more thoroughly difcuf f«H and better underllood, than they were at the fag end of the 17th. . of then pt-oceeding to make his ftnftures upon the book, he Hops' to give you the hiltory of i|s author, which is a mixtui e of misrepresentation, ® | al »I°od.1°od. Mr. Paine was known ia England both as a Patriot, and a writer, befoie he came to America his publica tion in behalf of the inferior officers of the Revehue, gained him great credit, and many friends, though it cost him his place ; it was for that and not for any difticieucy in hia accounts, for he had none, being only a surveyor, that ?. a 'id corrupt government displaced h.m, and it was Dr. Franklin himfelf who was the cause of his coming to country. The last ten lines of this paragraph contain as audacious an un truth, as ever insulted the public the" truth is Mr. Paine published the ftcond part of the Rights of Man in London, and remained many months after in that city. He was. then frlefitfd a mem ber of the National Convention for two places, he chose to represent Calais, and a deputation was sent to Dover, where he embarked publicly at noon day, and the fame deputation accompanied him ' to Paris, where he took his feat. It is true his fame went before him ; it is true he continued his hatred of Kings and tyrants, yet he voted against the death of Louis 16th—but his inti macy with BriiTot who translated and read his fpeechcs, and who has fincc been executed for conipiracy, and trea son, was"the cause of his arreftation, and of his being confined in the palace of Luxembourg in Paris, and not in the Castle of Luxembourg which I suppose this writer would have us understand ; the remainder of this paragraph is too contemptible for notice. And for the remainder of his piece, with the religion of his fore-fathers, and his church hiltory, the Jews with ecjlia' propriety urged the fame arguments, at the coming of the Savior, as well as the Catholics at the reformation, and they may continue to be used forever against alterations in church, (late, government, or politics. The extract of the letter lame pen, and doubt less was wrote by the fane hand; he fays Mr. Paine's book was wrote to please the reigning party in France, (if so, it was right, the reigning party in France arc a very great majority of the people ;) and tc save his head and get out of prison, this is falfe ; the book was published be fore he even apprehended &n arrest, thai it may have been fupprefled in England, lii very probable and I am convinced i book witite in favor of Revelation, if ii I bore the name of Thomas Paine, woule be in like manner fupprefTed. Upon the whole these d ulardly St tacks upon Mr. Panic's political charac ter, can do h;m little harm among i people who remember his exertions it the cause of Liberty, and the good ef feels tl,cy produced, they fmellftrongli of ilie Hanoverian rat, and are pofiibli made by some of the lately imjiortei eniilTari/s, who Mi. Pitt finds it ver convenient to distribute annually amonj us, but who are spies employed not or ly to watch our motions, but to fomer discord in all pasts of the union. UNITED STATES. -■ ALBANY, September 8. I D:eo in London, on the 9th of May j last. Mr. Saml'el G. Dorr, formerly jof Providence, (R. 1.) but late of this j city—Mr. Dorr went from this city about two years finer, for the purpose of procuring a patent in England, for a machine, which he had invented, for /hearing cloth, the ingenuity ot which has been highly extolled by all who have ever seen it. It is so contrived,' that a boy of r 2 years, can do with it. in the fame space of time, as much as 30 men, by tin common method.—ln England, he had procured a patent; exhibited his machine to the principal manufacturers, in whose presence it was tried, and found to anfiver the mod san guine expectations : and he had now a fur project of realizing the well -earned ; rewards ingenuity—when, fud nly, theja: of his maker summoned to the world of spirits, a man, whose Wlll ""egret ted, not only by his more intimate connections in life, tut a * a son of Colttmiiii, tht- proof of whose mechanical genius will stand upon re cord t.ll the late it poller, ty, fl,e will tlle loss > drop a tear to his me mory. The situation of Mrs. Dorr, who accompanied him to Entlaud,< must be truly diltrefling. The commiflioncrs appointed to car -7 into operation the law direftins for tifications tobf ereiEted 011 our northern and western frontiers, have fixed on the following places for ere&jng block houses and pickets, to wit : on the well eft* frontier—a block.lioufe at Fort otanwix, at Onondago fait springs, at Lanandargna, at- Canawages, on Ge nefee-river, and at the town of Bath • Pickets at Fort Bruenton, at Three rivcr-point, at Genava, at Mud-creek, at the head of Canandargua lake, and ! at the Pamted post, near the Pennfvl vania line—Onthe northern frontier— wrn l fe 3t Skec » b «rou g h, at W.llfborough, at Peru, at Plattfburgb, and at 1 hurman's patent. Several of the blcftk-houfes and pick ets, on the western frontier, are already completed, and all of them in great for ,WaL r • .„ Thcff houses are each to be funufoed with a piece of cannon, wnci, with the neceOary ammunition, are deposited in theblock-honfeat Fort biDWlx ' 3 « »!A» 700 cempleu stand »f armj f f or the ufeof the in!.: b: ;;uit , >f this frontier. Tfree hundred (land arms _ have sent into Clinton icr. f These, with the accoutrements, wb cb W* already depojlted -with them, are thr irms rtjc)rid to in the Governor's Icier. The ditch and glacis of Fort-Stanwi* ire said to be in as good a ftstc of r*. 3a,r ' 38 > vlien occupied by the Amtri :a" ar »y in the late war. By a gentleman from Fort-Slanwix, VC i that person, I ived therein a boat from Niagara, informed, that new, had been re :eiyed at the latter place, from the Mi he American army, had began hi, narch into the Indian country that ie had defeated the Indians in a batt'e iear the rapids of the Miamies, a „d on .is arrival at the fort eretfed by Go ■crnor Simcoe, at the foot of the rapids, ie sent a peremptory order to th« Bri'- ninutef—and that in cafe of their com. ihant-e they would be permitted to re cm to Detroit or Niagara, in peare, )ut that if they hcfitated he would im mediately storm the fort. The Bntifh lot thinking it prudent to dispute thi, Batter with the hero of Stony Point, Two gentlemen who passed through his city on Tuesday last, dired from Sliagara, reported, That the day before hey left that place, 3 Indian runner, idings of the Indians having been de. in an action with Gfn. Wsyns * he British ; in consequence of which he three companies in that garrison, vere ordered to march, to the relief of heir tawny allies. It is added, the In- 7 Niagara, tellipg him, unless he complied .vith their dqmands, they Would desert the British, and make peace with the United States—-Captain Brant was to go with three companies. The militia were called in to keep garrison. was The following letter from bis Excel lercytbe Governor, to the Major-Gene ral of the Militia of the Wejlern DjJhiß, was this morning rtceiv td, byexprefs and it gives us great pleasure ts be en abled thus early to communicate the fame to our tiume'rous readers—especially ibofc of the iv.Jlern counties, ivhoft interefl is fa materially concerned?—the prompt and de cided measures which the executive bar taken, mujl in a great measure allay their apprtbeujions, and inspire them with a confidence of being fuppirted in their claims and ajfjied with the force of the country, in cafe they are interrupted in their fettle merits. Little Britain, Ulftcr county, 6th September 1794. •T AM ANY.' Sir, A c.rciimi'Uncc has lately occurred on our weikrn iroutier, which renders it iie ceflary that the arms and accoutrements, for which I tranfmittejl to you an order on the 2d ultimo, lhould, if not already done be immediately drawn and forwarded, especially the proportion of them deftintd for the mi i:ia of the western frontier, and particularly those for the county of Ou tarlo. If the Horehas been incompetent to furnilh accoutrements required, you will please notify me of it, in crder that the deficiency may inflantly be supplied. For your more particular information, I enclose you a copy of a protest, delivered by a British lieutenant, at the settlement terming by Judge Wiifamfon, at Great- Sot.us. rhe principle set up in it, and which equally applies to all our settle ments weft cf the former line of property, cannot for a moment be tolerated by our government—and If any attempt fiiOuld be made on the part o! tilt' Eriuih to parry it into execution, it will be juflifiable and neceflarv on our part to repel force by force. Under this impreflion, therefore, 2 ear neflly request that ycu will exert every mean in your power to keep the miiitia of your divition in the moil perfe