o" ; .on iV. I'oviland, A TL AS, Tho/f.aj B'irnbam, M S T E R u. . la i'» a tew d»v«. F.**r f*e?■% t*if« U Blubber OIL. for l *' 7 Advertisement. cjmfn't'ecl to the Goal of Gloucef :<>untjr, New >. ley, ouic time in Oc r iart> A Negro Man, inied <»" fulp cion oi beni£ a iwjv ; fry* hg imm Virginia — any he ftiitto, is dcfireil t.» „ p ove property, charge*, and h m in week® from this V He will He Ut go a» the tx eiftri o ! that, time fee*, &c joseph Hews, Goclkr. Vc. 24 NEW THEATRE. •i-t . - v- v i r vi r* SATURDAY, Dfcfmber 27. Will be Prefenttd, The COMIC OTERA of .ionel & ClarifTa, O R The School for Fathers. ! r John Floweidale, Mr. Wliitlock 01. Oldboy, Mr. Bates -flamy, Mr. Moreton .ionell Mr. Marfb all 'wtnaii, Mr. Cleveland enkins, Mr. Barley servants, Meflrs. Darley. jun. Bliflett, and j Warrell .... \ adv C'ldtcy, larifla, Mrs. Oldmixon ,'enny, A FARCE, —vkrittcn Ivy John O'Keefe, Author of t e Poor Soldier, Agreeable Surprise, &e. called Modern Antiques, Or The MERRY MOURNERS. Cockletop, Mr. Francis p art, Mr. Green Jr-ey, Mr. Bliflett > T apkin, Master Warrell Hearty, Mr. I3e Moulin Thomas, Mr. Warrell Mrs. Cockletop, Mrs. Camomile, Belinda, Kan, Flounce, Betty, Box iWf D IVir— Pitt J of a Dollar—ard G:*.''e'y I * do lar. Tiled "x.r>; win be opened a>a{ afrei five at 1 '! tiie prrfqimance begin at £ alter six o'clock- Ticke's and placet for the Boxes to be tik;n of Mr. Wfals, at the Theatr*, si rm TEN 'til' O me, sn days of pc fo'm ar.cf from TEN'till THRES n'dock. N learn by the difaftrcuj exam. pTt ot the osoft demncatical Hate that en ills on of Europe, the ex. tre me danger ol foreign influence ; and a. bove all, box* rapid and inevitable it is to transjrefs the feeble interval which fepa. rater the abofc of liberty Iroin it* rain 1" S.Hd by Thomas Dobfrn, No 41. Second street, Jnliß Orm;->d, Che nut Itreet, by M. Carey, Maikst ltrcet, lid by the Edi tor hereof. December 11 WANTED, A person well ac qni ntcd vnih FARMING as pnaifrd in tht«#nf»i so to the netchhouiho*!. cj t' e Fedrral City. He mull be re r .nmemled Horrfly, Sobriety, loduf t irr. Enquire of Garrett Cottringer, Nj. i •, sort! Frith ftreit. d.* ' pec. aG For ih c Ganelti cf the United States. PROPOSALS, WILL soon be ifiued for publi(h;rtg airueauJiMPARTIAL HISTORY OF THII UNITED STATES, from 1787 to J 794, compiled from Anttfe dcral Newlpapers, and other publicati ons, the speeches of a certain pirty in Congress, and the Refolutioni of the Democratical Sacieties, with copious j cxtrafts from a Pamphlet much celebra ted in the four Western Counties of Pennsylvania, and known ehewhere, by the title of the Thirteen Lying Letters, the whole compiling a body of authen tic information for the ignorant, and credulous which as experience proves, eanno: fail to be of eminent use, to guide the opinions and the passions of a multitude, in a time of popular turbu-1 lcnce and fermentation. These materi- I als for History, being now scattered all over this great country, and buried »s they really art: under loads of the mod offenfive ruhbifh, are in danger of be ing entirely loft, uiilefs the public Ihould encourage their collection and arrange ment, within the convenient limits (which for cheapness and brevity fake, we have chosen) of Twenty Four Fo lios. Perhaps it may be found neceffa rv in the progress of the work, to pub lish many of the documents in an Ap pendix : which however will not exceed fix volumes more. ttst SaWjw Dedicated to David Bradford, Esq. It :s really strange, that no authen tic account of the political situation of the United States has yet, appeared in any fyftcmatical work. For the fugi tive nefw paper speculations, and pam- phlets do not deserve that name. Strangers have of late discovered great eagerness to learn the state of this country, and many have adtually fled from the diflrefles of Britain and Hol land ta feel: refuge among us, expect ing to find true liberty and prosperity. But they have been cured of the delu sion and fortunately infinite number* of emigrants have been prevented from ru!liing into every ve!Tel bound to Ame rica, by reading the papers and speech es from which the history is compiled. Those papers and the knowledge of the fa A that oppression had driven a part of the people to seek redrcfs by arms, has checked their rashness and folly, and induced them to retire to England and Germany. So little do our own citizens know of the condition of the land they live in, that they are really deluded into the persuasion that the government and ad minillration are republican, the laws honestly intended and wifely adapted to promote the general good, and that since the ever lamented fall of the ve- Mr;. Shaw Mrs. Rowfon Mrs. Cleveland Mrs. Erancia Mrs. Bates nerable confederation, the work of the ! patriots of 1775, t ' ie numbers wealth and gl°ry of the nation have made aftoriihing progress. From this cen sure however justice require! we should except the four weltern counties of Pennsylvania and a part of Virginia and North-Carolina, where the enlight ened citizens have had the full benefit of the information contained in this history. As the middle and eastern Rates still fit in darkness, altho Greenleaf's paper in New-York, has avowed, and the Bos- Mii's Row son ton Chronicle has never ceased to prac tise the mod hardy fidelity to truth ancs republican liberty, it becomes ab solutely neceflaty to gather these featur ed fweeis till their united fragrance tor ture the sense. For colle&ively they form such a mass of republican evidence as all the parasites of a Court, and all the Knights of the funding system will not be able to resist. It is recommended with all becom ing earnestness and refpeft to the re publican focietiea throughout the dates, to encourage this work, and to cause one set at least to be deposited in some convenient place in every election jdif trift. This measure cannot fail to pro duce a renovation of the republican spi rit among the electors, which in a (hort lime would bring down the colossus of ariftoeracy that now bestrides Liberty and Equality in the United States. The readers of this publication will Ibe furpriftd to fee that the antifederal objections to the Constitution were made by men inspired with the spirit of pro phecy. Consolidation, Land Taxes, the j fctting up Lord (hips, the loss of the liberty of the Press, and of keeping arms, (landing armies ruling every body by martial laws instead of juries, the south beggared to pamper the fea-fa ring monopolies of the north, in (hort, all the abominatiot s of the aristocrats who have held the power of the go vernment have been so plainly foretold that the book may pretend to as much divinity as Ethan Allen's Oracle of lteafon. The ptogrefcof opprsfiion is p.ii'ited out ftrp by #ep- 1* ' iai *"-" en (hewn how all the pabiic money «;as firlt pocketed by the Congrefsmcn to pay iheir wages ; and then how it was ail atfoTbei! by the collecturs and hang ers on of office; and then how the Knights and paper Lords swallowed ail; and how the Indian war took more than all; how the public deot was made by Congress to oblige and enrich each otlier and their friends ; how agriculture was lirft ruined to pam per the monied interest ; how trade was I ruined ; how manufactures were (truck wi\h palsy, merely because tie men who said it was unconditional to pass any a£l to encourage them could not get th? upper hand. It ia also (hewn how the true repub licans struggled to prevent the fall of liberty; and how their abhorr-i ce of all foreign influence led them to ' cncert with Mr. Genet, the means by clubs and societies, of organising the opposi tion into a system of energy, especially at the elections : the connection be- tween those clubs and a party formeily in Congress, and the causes which pre vented the fuceefs of the four western counties, and the expected co-operation of their friends and allies in the cities. The merit and ufefulnefs of the work will recommend it, but the nauseouS la bor of examining the materials exceeds all credibility. None but those who had become familiarifed to the Chroni cle and other documents, could have endured or even survived it. The com pilers were obliged to hold theii breath as long as the divers to search for pearl in the sea. They are alive however, and ft ill in, hopes that their works will reward them. For the Gazette of the United States. In the Woods, 2\Ji Dec. 1794. To Robert Mickle, the pro. tem. Secretary of the Republican Society at Baltimore. SIR, HAVING lately met with a paper containing the address of your society to the government and people of the United States, I cannot restrain my in clination to submit to your confiderati- on some thoughts which occurred t< my mind in the perusal. If they ar not well founded, I can allure yoi they are well meant ; and Cnce you "ociety make their ultimate stand a rainft what they look upon unjust cen urc of the President, and those mem iers of the two houses of Congress whe oin him in believing that " certaii elf-created societies" have aided ir kindling the late in fur. eftion, in a pur< leart and good intentions ; I feel fe. :ure in believing you will extend the ame candor to me if you think me mis aken. You fay these societies havt >cen declared, in their particular con lu&, to be instrumental in promoting reneral principles, are deemed unfriend' y to all law and government —They an o considered, 'tis true ; and you ac knowledge that if these charges had prung from the meanest quarter, they vould naturally excite indignation in he breads of the innocent; but co iling fiom a quarter where wisdom and :aufcon are, at least, supposed to be ire to wipe them away; and I de :lare to you I feel no wish to make hefe charges Hick upon you ur.kf, hey are flriftly m e in f.i6t and ("out d jolitical philosophy. Upon this ground E am willing to place the dispute ; and rou need not be reminded that from he abundance of the heart the mouth peaketh—for this »sinfpiration—while [ am persuaded you will not deny that rom fettled mature refolutiuns of the nind the uflions of men generally jloiv.— onvinced that embroilings from with lut and conspiracy within are forming igainft the government and the laws ot he land, fettled by the voice of the >eople, and approved of by innumera >le blessings flowing from that oider of hings, you ought not to thii.k it trange that the eloquence of Greece nd Rome is heard in the Senate in re jelling the intrigues of Philip, or in dc eloping the dark designs of Catahne. Common prudence, you fay, compels is to suspect there arc such men as hefe among us—And, independent of >ofitive proof, where ought wisdom to ook for them but to those dark noc urnal clubs where Catahne found his loldeft comrades, ar.d by whose aid C-je ar was made finally to tread upon the icck of the Senate, ar.d triumph over he liberties of Rome ? Your maxims tre generally jull—" the advances of mbition are often through the moll ecret ways"—but you are blind in the pplication : Where are we more sure of inding your ambitious men than i:i your owfi " J±if createdfocieties ?" Loo* fiit a moment, into the Slate Houle Yard of Philadelphia, and whom do you fee elevated ahc.Ye the head* of a mob but members of the " felf-created society" of Pennsylvania, endeavouring one after another to bring the coufli tuted authorities of the union into con tempt, and amidst the jluptd gaze of po pular-admiration, wishing tojlide down, like molten gold, into its very vitals.— Could thele men but ouce get clear of the controul over them which results from the constitution and laws, and which they evidently appear to be aim ing at, tho' like Cseiar they might con tinue the name of Congress and Preli dent, like liim too would they subvert the government and trample on tVe rights of the people. Such are the places wisdom and prudence naturally direst us to look for dangerous ambiti on—and these arc file men on -whom the public eye must be fixed if they will preserve their excellent constitution, and continue to enjoy the blefling9 resulting from it. Are not Bradford and Brack enridge members ®f some of your " felf created focieties?"—The delibeiate re solutions 6f your societies with their natural and obvious effedts, shall ke the i"f»bjcfapprobation which he felt refpe£lirtg the form or the mtafuris of government ? Was it because if real grievance OpprefTed us, was no oihtr m de o' g:tting rid of them tit h>y the < I rtul acul precarious resort to civn war ? Was it be cause it wou'd not have seemed uikr to seek reparation in the gord fnl snu jus tice than in the blood of our countrymen; to have tried them by pefit'on fcef r; v™ pro okedthem to rebeir.cn ? Wasit became that, amonp us the liber y cf the prt f s wai interclitfe 1 , and lit er yof fpetch reckoned sedition, that we should be under the neceffitycf pursuing the m< fl lawful end by the molt unlawful me. ns, and of " metting in the dark to perform incanta tions" against a law which we had an aversion to, or againftaco.iftitution which we did not approve It would look indeed as if personal rancour or impatience of public security, which we -thank God, » yet the natural and ronflitutionjl right of all our citizens, whether individually or collectively, had no little (hare in the con du<3 of our accusers, or as if that tiie crn fure which, for aught we know, ionie o- , ther fccletitt may hive deferred, h„s, fcaf tily at least, been extended to u*. Let our fellow-citizens judge : On tl'e opinions rt mc-ir accufton ed to thin'c lor chterfbl y, we :clv:—wt 11 a lured that " ftrcng alFertion witl o t proof' * ' i| inflexible priuciples than any oir. which is the object of human rekrr I ; nor is the idea of a school, for actjti r ing a knowledge of the nature_ ot tTM and government more abfuri than I '- of one fer acquiring i know edge >'• aftronumy and the Wiatfce®atics. if from the las er we m*y lev" <° ,T ** the wanderings of a plan**, ■ ■ m former roay we know the ceita.n rK<-. of crttaio- l-w» and ffXtrnH** *» people 1 And shall fvielte • ™e en couragement cf the mra- eft * s >ru ; » | men, mret with the pi '* c