. confutation a* folic! at tht peace, the terms of wl icb it (hall didlate. We (hall know how to shew mercy §t>. error, and flrike crime* ; be inexorable againlk immorality; the immoral man mull be catt fr«in fpciety as a dangerous dement, corruptible from its nature, & always ready to rally to the fiiftion of Con fpira tors Do not mistake for those who have con stantly supported the eaufe of liberty, those to whom disorder it a want,and confufion a means of acquiring riches : listen to the tirlt avoid the httcr. Your representatives will not fuffer that the public functions be exercised by any but true friends to the people ; they will keep at a distance all those perfidious beings, who speak of the rights of the people only to rel'erve to themselves the ex cl u live exercise of them. xla ving expreflcd their, solicitude, mani fefted their thoughts and intentions, the National Convention recalls the French people to sacred principles, to eternal truths, round which all citizens (hould raliv. A nation cannot be governed by the de ci lions of an inconstant will, which bends taevery paiTion ; it is by the authority of laws only it ought to be governed. The laws are destined t» guarantee the exercise of the rights. Jt is that import ant guarantee which men look for in po litical aflociations, and they find it by the aid of government which holds the citi zen within the circle of his duties. All that oppoles the exercise of those rights is a crime against the social organi zation. Individual liberty (hould find a limit on ly at that point when it become! an in fringement on the liberty of another ; the law should recognize and mark out those Property ought to be sacred: Far be from us thofc systems dictated by immo rally and (loth, wkieh foften down the crime of theft, and fix it upon prin ciple*. Let, therefore, the law guarantee the right of property as it guarantees all the other rights of (he citizen. But who are to make the laws ? The people only, by the organ of repre lentatives,. to whom they have delegated that power. No part icular authority, no aiTemblage of men is tht people, none hive a right to speak or a<3 in their name. If the daring hand ftiould attempt to seize the rights of the people on the altar of the country, the Convention would fliew itfclf the more ready todevelopea gainft the usurper of the power with which they zrf cloathed, as they are to render an account to the people of the attacks on their sovereignty. Tho' firm, the Convention will never lose fight of prudence; they will listen attention to the complaints addreiTed to th,sm ; but they will nor fufi'er that the right to inform and advise become a means of eppreflion and degradation, not that voices fcall ever be raised louder than that of national reprcfentation. They will aflume again ft intriguers, a giinft those who can yet regret royalty the uioft decisive meai'ures. They will main tain the rneafures of fafety which the pub lic good requires j but they will never content to Tee them arbitrarily extended ind that bare fufyicion be a source of ca In a word all the as of government sear the character of juftire ; but that juf i.:e ftzli no longer be exhibited to France n'iih blood, as lfie was dcpi£led by the rile and hypocritical conspirators. Frenchmen ! —Couiider as your cne l.ies a', who would wilh indiredtly to at ack iibt.ty, equality, the unity and indi ibility of the Republic. Avoid th;.fc who constantly speak of Dlood and i'cafiolds, those who pretend to t monopoly of patriotism [ -'atriots ex 'hiffs~\ thole men of exaggerated princi :herevolution, who fear the fcrutinv of juf :ice, and who expert to find fafely in anir- Esteem, search for those laboriom and modefl men, those pure and good men who avoid public stations, and who prac tues. Never lose light of this truth, that if rapid and violent movements are necelfary to prodnce a revolution, cahn prudence mult be left to terminate it.* Unite, therefore, at a common centre ; love and refpcA for the laws. See your brave brothers in arras give you the example of their sublime obedi ence by their submission, Their glory it to acknowledge the voice of their chief* ; they bless constantly the de crees of the National Convention ; if they fufFer, they atti lbute the cause to unavoidable circumllance? ; if they die, tlieir last breath is for the republic. And you, in the bofoni of cities and mented by useless difpnteß : You throw into your aflemblies oMtrudtfons which will retard the triumphant progress of the revolution! O Frenchmen! wbat grirfh to o» what our entmfc% W fee ternal cwmmc* Joe* inernaUf t' fbey ft»B Bfrfonger fkaforr, h« done in * ♦lirbefom eft heß«£»»bfe. Watlike virtues produce heroes, cfted the dyk* of tilt Lek, on the fide of Gueldres, and ordeied cuts to be made in the dyke in seven places, which his highness pointed out himfelf, for thepurpofeof forming an inundation, in cafe the French should unexpectedly advance farther ; which inundation, at the or dinary height of the water in winter, may extend from Wizeningen to Schoonlioven. All the inhabitants of Gueldres are ardently occupied in the defence of their pofieffions. The prince also made a short tour along the dyke of the Lek on the fide of the province of Utrecht. O&ober 7. The affcmbly of the states of the pro vince of Gueldres, which was to have been held at Nirntgucn, has been tranf ferred to Arnheim, where it was open ed on Tuesday last. Prince Frederick of Orange afiifted at the *fTemblr, and afterward* set out for Gormichnn. The head quarters of the British army it ftijl at Grofbeck. By a letter from the the city of Guel deri, we arc informed that a (Irong pa trole of French had been in the Prussian village of Veenray, on the other fide of the Meufe, where they exafted a quan tity of grass, oats and llraw, for their horses; and while this was collecting, they enquired how far dillant they were from the Prussian territories. Being an fweied that the village they were in wat Prussian, they iwmediauly counter- DECREE. manded their order, and would ee» pay lor whit h*d b>;eu already deliveed, as having received no order to go upa tlic Pruifian terriioiy, or to air thing from thence. Tbit it mprabili. MUNSTER, Seftimitr 30. We hire heard nothing here of thesp proach of a Prussian army, so mvich talk ed of, for the relief of Holland ; but itap pears certain that General Mollendorfj is preparing to advance yrith an arrar of is or 15,000 men tofuccour the Auftri»n» near the Lower Rhine. LONDON, Ocloher 13. Mr. Drake has beea appointed nani fter from the Briiilh court to Miian. By the Corunna mail, which arrived on Saturday, wc learn, that the rich homeward bound Mediterranean fleet, tinder the care of admiral Colby, and to intercept which, it Ufaid the Fiench have sent out several -a jre ilfft , failed from Gibraltar or. the ;ijl! Ou the roth i!i. itiiflfiir.i! ! rd Hood Tailed from in \ c Viflory of too guns, to ihe vi vai-i of that port: his lordfliip fuL artd by the Bri tannia, of 100 gum, admiral Hotliam : the Agamemnon, of 64 gunt, captain Nelson, and a frigate of 24 guns. On Saturday news was received in town of the fafe arrival of the grsateft part of the homeward bound Jamaica fleet. The sum neceflary for the completion of Carlton House is eft imated at iPD,ooc] The latest intelligence from Warsaw mentions the secure Hate of that city, which is well provisioned ; the works are fully repaired, and all the booty-left by the Prussians brought fafe in.—Te D eum had been sung on occafioo of the infurrcAion of the wholt of Great Po land. Kofciuflco, it is reported, has •marched at the head of 40,000 men to South Prnflia, to make a diversion in favour of the infurgenrs. General Clairfayt is like a /rum, never hear of him but when he is beaten ! Higgins, Lemaitre and Smilh, three of the perlous apprehended on the in formation of a conspiracy to assassinate his Majelty, are committed, not on any charge refpe&ing the. pretended con spiracy, but on the chaige of tieafon S3 membeis of the London Correspond ing Society. Upton the informer, and as far a» appears, the inventor of the conspiracy, having prevaricated in his evidence, and been conttadifted in ma terial parts of it by witneflea of unim peachable character, is also committed. We have dated that Bayley and Bar. ker, t .m of the pevtbng taken into cus tody on the supposed <;pnfp!racy, were dilchargtd. Inflead,ait Barker,vve (hould have said Burks. . One Taylor, who was a principal evidence again ft Watt and Downie, in Edinburgh, and had just travelled up to town, to become a witness againli the persons confined in the Tower, was committed on Friday night, to New gate, on a charge of Bigamy. UNITED STATES. NEW-YORK, Dec. 8. The Comptroller of the Treasury in behalf of the Secretary) hat reported the Eftimatei relative to Appiopriatians for the year 1795 By which it appears—That making pro vision for deficiences in former grants; and for sundry appropriations as detailed in the Eftimatea—The following sums are neceflary .• For the ciril lift, or the sup port of government, including the in cidental and contingent expences of the several departments and offices the sum of 43 J> »49 53 For the sup port of light-houses, beacons, buoys and public piers, and for fatisfying certain miscellaneous claims, the sum of For the department of war, comprising the following general objects of expen- The iupport of the army in cluding expences 4 n the hospital, ordnance, quar ter-master and Indian de partments, the defenfive protection of the fron tiers, contingencies, and to corapleat certain for ! tificitions, the sum of t For the piy, support, and I expences of the militia i ordered into service in [ the year 1794 the sum m 1 For the naval depart ment the sum of For the paymentof mi | litary pensions, the sum of To til estimate for the war department Amounting together to dols. 3,407,909 40 He adds — The funds out of which appropriations may be made for the foregoing purpoles ira ift. of 600,000 dol lars of the proceed* of duties on imports slid tonnage, which will accrue in t^e year 179 ;, which is annually rcferved tor the support of government, by the ac. 'entituled " An act making provision ft t the del)t of the United Suits and id. The furplua of revenue and income which willaccrue totbeendof the year 1795, af ter fatisfying the obie&s for which appro priations have been heretofore made. Anil that— It may be expe&ed, that the revenue* of the United States will prove adequate to the ' expenditure contemplated ; but owing to credits allowed by law, and tl discharge of artillery by a detachment which went from the C ity for that pur pofc—from thence they were escorted into the City by Captions Dunlap, Singer, and M'Connell't Horle, in full uniform—their companions in the late truly glorious, fue cefsful, and bloodless expedition.—The concourse of citizens which Ihoutcd a welcome to their return was immense—e very eye beamed gratitude and pleasure- As they pafied the President's Hoiile, who was at the door, the band played j the Father of his country, exprefled in his counte nance mere than can be defcrihed. By this Day's Mail. TRENTON, December 9. His Exeellency Governor HOW ELL, accompanied by about 90 horse, arrived yefteiday in this city from the Western Expedition He wa» met some distance from this place by a num. her of citizens, and efcarted into town —On his ap> arance he was welcomed by the discharge- of 15 cannon, from Capt. Gee'l company of artillery. PORT or PHILADELPHIA- Days. Snow Liberty, Young Charleston 9 Brtg Diana, Mason Jeremie, 17 Betsey. Hathaway Jamaica 40 Friends Adventure, Meaf: St. Domingo, 16 Schr. William and Mary, Dunton Vir- ginia, 5 Sloop Nancy, Hubbard New-York 5 Nancy, Tice Virginia 10 A brig from the Weft Indies, and a (hip from Boston, names unkown, were seen yesterday in the Bay coming up—be sides a ship which lay at the Fort lafi night not yet known whether outward or in ward bound. The brig Jefferefon, Morris, from St. Croix was seen under way this fide of the ' 3*»004 »3 point. A Philadelphia sloop from Guadaloupe ii arrived at the Fort. Captain Suter, of the Ship Aurora, 56 days from Hamburgh, informs that J the (hip PreGdent Washington, from Chaalcfton, and the British {hip Esther, a Liverpool letter of 10 guns, from Virginia, were both arrived in the Elbe, on the fame day that he came down, which was the 6th of Ottober. i»s«i>97J »? Brig Adventure, J. Mtafe, junr. matter, 16 days from St. Domingo, on the 16th Nov. on the east end of Hif paniola, bearing N. spoke the Resoluti on of New-York, Wm. Whiten mas ter, 17 days from Curracoa, bound to Amsterdam, all well. 1,112,569 01 *t9ili4eAO Lat. 32 N. long. '72, 30, W. spoke the Brig Industry of .Salem, 15 day« from St. Croix, bound to Salem, all well. The brig Nymph, Webb, of and from Philadelphia, is fa ft arrived at Je- 8J.357 °4 1,940,655 74 remie. On the 3d of Dec. between 30 and 40 fail of outward bounrf redcls were seen under Porto-Rico in irons. ARRIVED. DECEMBER 9. ARRIVED. Proposals for Printing by Subscription, THE Dramatic Works WILLIAM SHAKSPFARE, O F TO WHICH IS PREFIXED THE A UT HO R' S POEMS, also An Eleguit FRONTISPIECE, BY Mountford, Bioren Co. No. 75, Dock-Street. C 0 N D IT lONS. Tiili Work will be csmpriied In Duodecimo Volumes, prated on a fire American paper, in a stile of Typogra phical Klegarce that Ihal! reflect th« hi,hell credit on the American prgis. That it ffiall be cinbellifiied With n beautiful Frontispiece of Sbakipean e: grayed by the best American Ar;ift 111. That the price to Sut (bribers will l-e klght dollars, ore dollar to be paid OD subscribing, and one dollar on the re ceipt oi' every fuceeedirg volume lut the last:—to enable the Publishers to purfiie with .convenience this arduous undertaking. IV. Each volume Oiall be delivered in blue boards to the Subscribers immediately on the pub'ication of ey«ry volume « fth best lmpreffions of the Frontifpiecf—the price to be raised to Non-Sublcriberi. v . 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