The Repre£ent«tives of the people at the head of 50 fufiieers, now entered the hail. At the fame instant, a citi -7.C0, wlx> marched at the fide of L.. 13out don, was knocked down by the weight of the body of young Jvobcfpien e who h*d ihtown himfelf irom the win- Jmw. Tint citizen was called Claude >„"habru. tMI/i w> Vvo travoifcJ the great hifl» whtnct the coufpiratuK were fled. Upon en tering that of the Secretary, the elder RtJulpitiTc (hot JilmCelf in the month with » pistol ; ?t the fame instant he t treetved a fecund ball from a Gens d - Arme. The tyrant fell baihed in his Uood. A Sans Calotte approached luin, and with great eoolnefs iaid— THERE f* A lUHIEME MING? All the other conspirators, as cow ardly in their lalt moments as they had bcai insolent before, hid tlitmfclves in the molt obscure places. One was drag ged fron) a chimney, another fiom a pre&. J-ebas, Itabbed in feverjd pla ces, fa in a wood-hole ; Couthon, al so wounded, was behind a delk. 1 hey were all arretted, in the utmofl quiet. Humanity has nothing to mourn for in th-r execution of this national jultice. A puuch (llamp) with the iinpifffi ou of a fltu -Jc-lys, was Jouiid in the desk, and carried to the Convention immediately. The citizens watched themfeWs over the papers and deposits in the hall. Citizen Abarede, member of 1.1 le de putation. Dining the bufniefs, a mail entered, having the watch word at the gale. 1 demanded what he wanted : he replied, •« Redd this paper, and yon will know my business." I read as fol lows : PERMANENT SITTING OF THE J4COZWS. qih Thermidor. «« The. popular fj fteoi decrees, that i» mambvra, ukeri frefcn among them, and pointed put by twme, (hall go im mediately to the Cotfimmie, 'ami take part iu jheir proceeding. (S«gncd») "VIVIER, Prrfident." A pcifon pie Cent fuatclied the paper from We, *Ad said he would take it to the popular ReprefenWtive Le Bour don., A* fi**ce then I Vave heai d *o tlidg more of it, 1 mention it for {ear the defignrog fhooM hfave/upprcfled the :ircinnftance the knowledgeuf th< , - "««ir I communirated tills in the morning of the foiii Thcrtnidor to Merlin ii The Convention ordered tlicfe details tot>e inserted in tiie Bulletin. In the fitting of AugulV 2, both Rof fienol and David were ordered to bear relied, upon liinilat pleas with those which arretted Lebon. LONDON, Augufl 18. DEATH OF ROBESPIERRE! {[Upon a fuhjefl of filch vast import nnce, as the dcftiu&ion of two tyran jiical committees, and the National Con tention of France recovering its autho rity, we cannot oe too minute—we (hall therefore publish, seriatim, all the parti culars of out different Correfpondcnts, not attempting at present to reconcile the discordance of their narratives, but leaving each to be confirmed or refuted liy future communications.} PARISIAN INTELLIGENCE. Guilt has received its punishment. The regicidal tyrant is fallen from his thione of blood ; the guillotine has done an aft of juflic« ; Robcipicric is no more. It was on the 27th of the month, [July] that the thunder which deftroy cd, brj(an to mutter over his head. The tribunes of the Convention and of of his tyranny ; theprofcriptions of the committees ; the degradation, contempt and weakness, into which the National Convention had fallen. In the nights of the 27th and 28th, Barrere and Collot d'Herbois difcovcrcd to Tallien and Billaud de Varrennes all thefeciets of Robespierre, and his two mioillers, St. Just and Couthon. On the 28th, Tallien and Billaud de Vaienocs, having united all their party, j;ot pofiefiion of the tribunes of the Convention in great foice. pierre, who heard the threatening norm w.is foi absenting himltlf. St. Jult, Couthon, and Diunas, was of the fame opinion ; but Barrere and Collot d' Ilerbois, who had betrayed him, ridi culed his terrors, and drew him moll reluctantly to the Convention. By the fame art* the confpiratovs ftduced Caesar to his deftrudion, in fpiteof the fatal prcfeutiments of his mind. Robespierre had fcarctly entered the hall of the Convention, when Tallien announced that the commandant of National Guard, Kenriot, had been ' arretted. He then addressed himftlf to Robespierre, drawing a dagger from J Ink bofum, • /I- "Tyrant, this dagger is destined for thee, if the nation doe» :iot cause thee to peri!h on the fcaffold ; I aitefl the fsered Lull of Brutus, which you now behold; the terror ot all tyrants. I have not condemned my King to death to become the slave of Rohefpierre." The tribunes (houtcd with the molt ea ger applause. Robefpieire at fir ft turned pale ; but recovering his usual audacity, teckon ing upon his afcendaney, his creatures, theteiror he iilfpiied, and his populari ty ; lie raised his voice and commenced his apology. He had spoken but .a few words, when the whole Convention arose, and with an unanimous Jhout, thundered in his ear— '/ Down with the 'Tyrant His lirmnefs forfoolc him. In vain lie called upon Barter?, St. Jufl, and Couthon. Billaud dc Varennes ascend ed the tribune, and proposed agamlt him 20 fevcral heads of angulation. Barren: followed liirr.. Hi. tead an address to the people, in which he un veiled all the crimes of Robefp'.erre alul of the committee of public fafcty. He gave tliem proofs of this, and accuied Orllot d' Hcrbois and himfclf of hav ing been their accomplices. He exenfed this by pretending that without this nteafure, they could not have been mailers of their fee rets, nor consequently have revenWd tl«rm to Ta lien and Billaud de Varcnnes, a« the)' had done, the night gone by. He con cluded by demanding the arrelt of the two RobefpierreS, St. J n't, Couthon, and Dumas. This decree was patted unariimoufly amidll the applaufc of the tribunes, and thev were arretted immediately. But those who betray are never mill ed. Tallien fearing that Barrere might profit by the fall <>f Rohefpierre, to raifa himielf into his place, sent in the night to arrcft him, as well as Collot d'Herbois.—Upon the arrival ot the officeis, B-itrere {tabbed himfelt. His a (Toe rate elcaped, but the vengeance of Heaven will vet overtake him. The Revolutionary Tribunal pro nounced icntcncc ot on the two Robefpicrres, St. Jntt, Couthon, Dumas and Henriot. The people with incon ceivable fury liilhed upon the younger Robefpiene, and ftabWl him at ihe gate ot the pnlon with a' hundred dag gers. It war. with difficulty that the guil lotine peiformed its function for the ML At length t'ue 'people were fuHiciently appeased to luffer their being ltd to exe cution. On the way thither,'Rubei pieare had his llioulder broker with a musket ball. In this agony he was dragged to the fcaffold to fuffcr all the pains of death under that guillotine by which he had muidetcd his lovereign. When his bead was (truck o(F, the infuriated tabble, whose idol, and whole terror he was only the day before, mill ed upon his body, mutilated it with a thousand anil carried the bleed ing members in triumph through the city. Such has been the fate of this famous difiator. The mefTenger, who through Bade, brought this intelligence to the Hague, was rewarded by the Britirti anibafiador with a purse of ducats. On the 29th the municipal officers sixty eight in number, who had collect ed themfelvcs in the hall of the com mune and declared for Robespierre, were executed ; as was also a deputy who had been a commissioner with the army, and was couvifted of being aceffa ry to the plots of Robefpieire. A general officer was alio guillotined at the fame time. But Few lives were loft and these chiefly such as (hewed an inclination to refill, or who did not heartily support the deputies of the Convention, who were dispatched to the different quar ters of the Capital to fee the orders of the Convention carried into ef fedl. Several accounts fay the people of Liege fought very obflinately on the tide of the French ; the latter after an obstinate adtion on the morning of the 27th, made themselves matters of the Gate of St. Margaret, when the light being carricd into the town, by the co operation of the citizen?, it became flill more desperate. At the bridge, to which the Auftrians were driven, the citizens of Liege, who formed the French advanced guard were of especial service as the Aullrians, after muny attempts to fuflain themselves, wete obliged to take refuge under the cannon of the Chartreuse ; when the French made three attempts to carry theit batteries but were beaten off in their turn. It appears that some of the Liegois, that fired upon the Auftrians, being made prisoners, were carried to Cologne, i A letter from Rotterdam of the 15th ind. fays that the rnagiftfatfs cf that city entertain so unfavouiable anopini.;n of British soldiers in their iddivid 1 :al capacity, that th.-y have cumc to a fur mai leiuiution not to lulier any of them to enter it. It is said that Kofciuiko has left the Poliftj army, tuid that the city of War taw has opened negociations with the Prufiiar.s. From Paris Papers, up to the 9th oj Augrxji. These papers bring an account of vic tories obtained by the French over the .Spaniards—The bombardment of Fontarabia—The orginization of the new revolutionary tribunal—A lift of neaily 200 persons who have been . guillotined fmce our last accounts.— «■ .Lift of prizes taken from the com bined powers by the French—the mortality which prevails in the Ffeneh army in Flanders, j&c. &c. from our correspondence it appears, that the Frtnch have made wonderful Anauft 17 efforts to take Sluys, which has as yet relilted witli glorious effect the defpe- .Sortie few days ago, the Carmagnole rate assailants, The number ol beiieg- were molt com pleat el y enfnartd. Gen ers, appears from our Flushing letter, Vander Duyn, in the evening, orderei amounts to i7,c00 men ; but they were a large quantity of faggots and othe in such a fickty (late, and so seriously fire-wood lo be heaped together in thre attacked by a dangerous epedemic dif- different parts of the town, not fa fuccefsful sallies and stratagems of Van which he set fiicto; at the fame tim induced to believe, that the French ere ramparts. now thought it advilcable to abandon At nine in the evening, the whole their pioje£t. In one grand assault, horifon fcemed to be in a blaze, and th< the loss of the latter amo tinted so 1800 j lire from the town flai kening, every 011 men. I imagined it Was in flames, and lookc< The Dutch have purchnfcd of the ;on its fall as inevitable. During til King of Prufiia, a large quantity of the fcrts at intervals fcemed ti heavy cannon, which has been deliver- ' burn with lcls vehemence, and one wai ed from the fortrefs of Wrlel, and car- t entirely extinguilhed. ried down the Rhine to Holland. A J The FiemU kept up a heavy fire al vessel, entirely laden with ordnance, is 1 night, and towards morning fired en now delivering her ( uigo at Delft* tirelv with red hot fliot ; and threv Yesterday Government dispatches bombs and fliclls into the town from e were received at l.oid Grenville's office, : very fide. from the Earl Spencer at the Court of ' As day light approached, the Com Vienna, which Lord Grenville forward- ; mandant ordered two more files to b< led to the King at Weymouth. j lighted, the gates opened, and tin draw-bridges let down ; cealing, at tin Augufl !§■ fame time, to fire from the ramparts. It appeals that the Allied Armies Th e French on this advanced in great under Prince Cobourg, on the Meufc, nl)mbers to tak , po( lelf,on of the town, and under Prince Hohcnlohc and Gen. before ; t reduccd to a heap ol Moellrndorf on the Rhine, are again ; ashes . and in a most coiifufrd and difor moving forward, in confequencc of the j , manner> c)offed U,e inundations ina6i,v,ty which lias prevailed through- ll|ewau . r waß furdable out the French armies for the last fort- , whfn \ haJ adva)lced as near al night. Ihe commotions in Pans have Commandant wished them to come, evidently parah/ed their movements, th v ., rt> to thcir urtfpejikable ado and has given time to the Allies to take Bifhment) s aluted wilh a fhovver of grape the neceflary steps for attive operation. fllot flom a jj t |^ Runs on t ),, ramp; , rtS] n J . 2 .°\ ~ . I and trailed in the feverett manner dti- We yesterday received the Momteurs, . vctrot . They loft on this printed at Pans down to the Kh nit ant. occasion near 1800 men , who were Ihe Committee or General safety c £ t j ier killed or drowned ; and near 300 lias been cho fen by a \ote o tic bounded were next morning brought vention. The new, members are ; Ef- intQ R farcherceau, the cider ; Breard; Lolloi; The F| . fnch d ; d not fire a flngle Thuriot 5 Tallien, and 1 rerllard. ilie ( j ur j ri g t | ie jh r4e following days, and old members who remain in it, are Car- now ed w ; th lhe atell circum . not, Bar re re, Collet d Heibois ; Bil- fp C^jon < Lejng pietty well convinced laud Varennes; Pneur and Robert . not obtain Slavs so easy as Linder. One fourth of the members ' obtail , ed Bre:la Uft ' is to go out every month by rotation, and the Convention has determined that this regulation shall be adopted in all the committees. Lettcis from Cologne mention, that General Piehegru arid Jourdan have each refufed to obey the orders of the new committee of General Safety a' Paris. The siege of Sluys is raised ; and it is (aid that the French have loft in their attack of this place by death or Cck nefs, near 4000 men. The garrison of QnefndV has been forced to surrender at difcretiorr to the French. Valenciennes and Conde (till hold out ; and have occasionally made some forties against the enemy. It gives us very great concern tolearn, that the mafTacres have been renewed at Geneva. The Revolutionary Tribu nal in Council had previously suspended their fitting for fix days ; and several' refpe£table persons having been released, some favorable hopes were entertained that those scenes of horror should have terminated. We find however, by let ters received yellerday from Geneva, that two of the moil refpeftable magi strates were feledted as the firft victims of the renewed vengeance of these devils incarnate; viz. M. Fatio, formerly a Syndic ; and M. Navitle, the attorney general. But so high was the charac ter of the latter, that 17 members out of 21 of this bloody Tiibunal acquitted him, on condition of his emigrating the territories of Geneva, and having his propei ty confifcated. The fovcreign mob however would not acquiefee in this decilion ; but forced the prison where he was, dragged him out, and he was immediately (hot. The Tribunal hr-s given notice it would try all the other prilouers con fined immediately' W< are sorry to learn ttiat Treves has been trk.cu oy storm. A lc- ter from Cwblcntz, the 12th inft. gives th? K>l lovviiijj accounts of this aii'atr. " General Ivlichaud having received orders from tile Convention to take Treves whatever it itiight cost him, marched thither in consequence on the Bth inft. A French column forced one of the intrenchments lituated before rhat city, in spite of the molt vigorous refinance. The Pruflian corps in the [neighbourhood advanced with gK*at halt but not in time to save the city which the French entered on the 10th. The Aultrian troops retired in good order towards Mayence. General Kalkreuth is arrived at Mofcile with I J,oop men, but we are assured that the number of the enemy exceeds 50,000. It was not ■till the fourth aflault and aßer a great loss that the Fhench carried the entrench ments which covered Treves. By the capture of Tieves the city «>f Coblentz is much exposed to the enemy. FLUSHING, SPRINGFIELD, M. October 7. The famous Capt. Hull wa« tried by the Supreme Camt,at Northampton, on the last week, for pafiing counterfeit money—was convicted on leveral in didtn.ents, and sentenced to stand in the pillory one hour, and to pay a (hort visit to CalHe William—for the term only of—eight years. William Whiting, late Speculator in the publick cloathing in thi3 town was convicted of sundry thefts. He received the discipline of the cat, on lalt week, and will ad as an aid to Capt. Hull, on the Cattle: through )•:a dellined cam paign. Extr< Bef a letter from Hartford to a per/on in'Mi town, dated the 4th of tint month. " You will doubtlcfs bear various re ports with regard to the fickntfs i.i this city. Dr. Hubbard of New-Haven came here lalt Monday afternoon un well and died on Wednesday, of the yellow fever, and was buried the fame evening. No other person has died of that cllfotder in this city." PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 13. Verbal !>nd written accounts from Amfierdam by the Adriana, ftatc, that the people there are in great alarm on account of the French. We are aflured that bills on Cow's unfold, arc not accepted by the mer chants there and that vcflVls are in great demand to transport peuons and property from that place. For the Gazette of the United States. Mr. Fenno, It is aflerted in the General Adver tiser of this morning, that the present opposition to the Speaker of Congress is owing to his " voting against the ex tenfioii of the excise." This statement is an artful attempt to mifiead the Pub- lie Mind. The truth is, that this gentleman signed an appeal from Congreis to the State Legiflattire, in oppolition to a sacred Law of the Land, ardat a very critical moment of Infurgehcy. This was an attack on the Constitu tion as well as on a fupretne law of the Union, which to lay nothing of the gentleman's tilling the Speaker's Chair at the inoruciit, was a very cxtrtiorUina ry step : How much the inftilt is in creased by this cpnduft of one of its Officers, Congreis may judge for them itlves—and so v iil the Citizens, who have votes for true federal Characters only. Mr. Fenno, A rcijieflable number of citizens have had the following ticket in contemplation. They confidtr thei'e men as suitable and worthy perloßs for the important trull they confide in than. It is their requelt to have tlitm ptiWilhed in ytmr paper for 1 more 'general confederation of their fel- lowcit->cns. Congreft—Thomas Fitziimons. Senator* —Vv'm. Bingham,Robert Hare, Nathaniel Ncwlin, Jo.'eph Thomas. Aflciiiljly—Geo. Latimer, Jacob Hiltz heimcr, lietij. R. Morgan, Hcnrv Kam merer, Sam. M. Fox, Francis Gurhey. At a general meeting of the citizens ot Philadelphia, held on Saturday the i ith of Oftcber, 1794, at the City- Hall, for the purpefe of nominating (uitable perlons to he inserted in a tick et for the tnfuing clc&ion J Charles Bicldle, Esq. was appointed Clvaii rtiati—and Mr. John Hallowt.ll, Sect etai y. The following gehtlemen were agreed on, as ■'ropei' petfoas to fcrve in the ca pacity mentioned—viz. Replefentative in Congtefs. Thomas Fitzfimons. Senators for the State. William Bitigham, Jofdph Thomas, Robert Hare, and Nathaniel Newlin. Members of the Hotife of Rcprcfeiita- tives of this State. George Latimer, Jacob Hiltzheimer, Beiyamin R. Morgan, Lawrence Seckcl, Robert Wain, and Francis Gurnry. On motion, Resolved, That the Secretary be di« ie£led to caufc the proceedings of this meeting to be publilhed. By order t,f the meeting, Charles Biddl6, Chairman. John Halloweli, Secretary. ARRIVED, Ihit day a few pipti of tht frjl quality French Brandy, Fourth Proof, Esteemed equal to any that has been in thi« city for a number of years, ALSO, Forty Hog/beads of JirJl quality of Sr. Croix Sugar, And a few Tons of Good Black Pepper, FOR sale Br Levinus Clark/on, No. zi6, south Water street. oa. 8 d Old American Company. THEATRE—CEDAR STREET. THIS EVENING, Ofiober 13. Will be preferred, A COMEDY, never performed here, called a Bold Stroke for a Hufban d. Written by the Authoress of the Bellos Stratagem, &c. To which will be added, For the last time, A Grand Serious PANTOMIME, in 3 Afls, called The Danaides. With new music, drefies, fctnery, and decorations. In the course of the Pantomime, Monf. Qucnet will dance a Peti de Dtux ; alio dancing by Madame Gardie. In a£t 3, a Grand Combat, between Mi firs. Marriot andPrigmore. The Pantomime is coi..pofed by Mom Qi cnet. The MuDc by Mr. TVlifu-r. And the feenery executed by Mr.Cice ri. A CITIZEN.