Fine Frefli Lemons, Sit Four Dollars the 80x,., ton sale sy THOMAS RANDALL, 88, s p r uce ftieet, midway between Second and Third ftrcets. Dec 36 d And to be had of Melfrs. Thomas Dobfon. a id Robert Campbsll, Second street, of Steiner aod Kammercr, No. 85, R:ir< kre t r, and No. .24» north Third Iheet, Price lettered 7/6, common 6/6. Hi/lory of the CLERGY\ DU#! NO Tltt' French Revolution, In Three Parts, By the ABBS BARRUFL, Almoner , To her fcttne His hnefs ihe Priuceis <>i Conti. THTRD EDITION NEW THEATRE. ~ TO-MORROW EVENING DrceMBER 31. Will be Presented, A TRAGEDY, called MACBETH. With the original Music and Accompani mtnt», by M athew Locke. Duncan, Mr. Green Ma'coim, Mr. Cleveland Donalbajne, Mailer Warrell Macbcth, i Mr. Chalmers Macouff, Mr. Moreton Banquo, Mr. Whitlock Lenox, Mr. Harwood Flcance, g Matter T. Warrell Siward, Mr. Morris feyton, Mr. Franc's Doctor, Mr. De JWoulin Mefteng-r, Mr. Bliifctt taHy Macbeth, Mrs. Whitlock Gentlewoman, Mrs. Cleveland Hecate, Mr. Darley First Witch, Mr. Bates Second WitcJi. Mr. Warrell Third Witch, Mr. Wigr.ell The Vocal Parts by Messrs. Marfball, Darley,Rowfori, Dar leyjun. Mitchell, Mrs. Oldmixon, Mrs. Marfiiall, Mis. Warrell, Mrs. Shaw, Mrs. De Marque, Mrs. Rowfen, Mrs. Bates, Miss Row lon, Miss Broadhurft, &c. To which -will be added, A COMJO OPERA, written by the Au thor of the Poor Soldier, called' Peeping Tom of Coventry. With the original Overture and Accompa niments.) pfeping Tom Mr. Bates Mayor-os Coventry, I iarold, Mr. Darleyjun. Mr. Francis Earl of MercTa, Mr. Greer Count Lr, - wi»» - - Maud, Emma, L?dy Godwin, Mayoress, J of aDol]arv~and Gallery 4 t <*oßar.. Thedoorj will be opened at a J after five •vA the performance begin at % alter six t o'clock. Ticket! ami places for the to be taken of Mr. Wells, at the Theatr*, from ten 'till one, and on rlavi of pe form »nce from TEN'till three o'eloclc. ' No money or tickets to be returned, not any person on any account whatsoever, ad mitted behind the scenes.. Ladles and Gentlemen are reqjnefted t( fend their servants to keep placcs by fivi o'clock, and order them, as soon as th company arc seated, to withdraw, as the; cannot on any account be permitted to re main. . Vivat Refpublica ! This Day is Published, A N Authentic History OF THE Revolution in Geneva: Price 12 1-2 Centj m The writer of the abvve introduces th: Jollow vg inter ejU*g remark — Sucha detail will be neither void of interest nor utility 10 vour prudent coun. tiymen, May they re/left on it with at. tent ion, and learn by the difaftrcus exam, pie at the molt tiemoc atical state that ex its on the continent of Europe, the ex. treme danger o» foreign influence ; and a. bo»e all, how rapid a> dinevitable it is to transgrels 'he feeble interval which fepa. rates the abuse of liberty Irom its ruin !" Si!d by Thomas Doblbn, No. 4'> Sscond street, John Ormrod, Chelnut ftieet, by M. Carey, Maiktt Itieet, and by ibe Edi tor ht'itof. December 11 An Excellent Hand Writing. W to port up fropi a Journal i~- to a Moil Elegant Ledger,an excellent tree ana n< at hand. None 11; ed to apply but foch. AI'PLT.AT y No. 234, south Third flrect Dec. 29' . THE COUNTRY THANKSGIVING. FAR from the bustle of the-anxious 7he mighty Poptician t of the age, ' democritic zeal, with clamour loud, Turns public spirit into party rage ; Here let us fit and take a laughing view, , Of embryo brats, whose births for office wait, Imploring help from all the obstetric crew, While strangled thousands * liek the ar- • tilt's feet.' v In doleful mood thus prostrate Esau lay, When Jacob, lucky rogue, the blefling stole ; " Have ye no blessings left for me, they fay,— •' O fad reyvard for all our pain and toil ?'* See the sage R—n-- ? fe, whose mi mic art Can turn the Planets, like a fpirning wheel, For philolophic play, mount Faction's cart While tottering empires in his fancy reel. „ See blustering Commodoie, his squad rons rang'd Both Law and Medicine, hail the wilh'd for day When Chefnut BURR, to polilh'd eye ftone chang'd, From cloudy films shall purge their vi sual ray. See in Vermont their chaste old truant grow!, Satan's high pried, whole laws he ne'er defam'd, V So from the woods looks out the moon struck owl, Or bear, which (trokio'g off, the mas ter's tam'd. See Bolton too prcferves one feeble clan,* For Granna's nest-egg, where (he night ly lays ; While from his lying press their tool fhaped mans Her cock-a-doodle crows their envied praise. See southern brethren aid' this glorious cauft, ( Pure land of liberty) and compa&s join, To abate th? rigour of our federal laws, And help the French to new-form'd Guillotine. " Citrfe on your clumsy, chopping, dull machine, I " Whose tardy work our feelings ill doth suit ; " Clap in all Frenchmen, but the Jaco bin, Mr. Cleveland Mrs. Marfl-all Miss Broadhurft Mrs. Cleveland Mrs. Shaw. " And chop off heads as we tobacco cut." Oh blest Equality I what charms you'll prove, When tyrant law co more shall clank his chain f The mouse and horse in equal size (hall And every mother's son turn Cqngrefs man. Before your doors the roasted Pig Ihall cry, Come eat me, Sir, and thank you for your pay ; Pumpkins vriH grow in form of pump kin pie, And the whole year "be one thanksgiv ing day. See in the weft, the threat'ning cloud alcend , The whisky vapours just condens'd to f°g> The uplifted groves this dreadful pha lanx bendj And for a cannon point a hollow log. Here fafe we fit, our barns well-ftor'd with hay, Our corn well cribb'd, with heaps of pumpkins round, With thankful hearts we'll celebrate this day, And pigs and pies the feftive board (hall crown. While Joe and Sue for tardy evening long, That eve which consummates their nup tial ties, The chcarful dance shall aid the jocund throng, And hymns hymeneal greet thelift'ning skies. - Connetticut, Nov. 27, 1794. * The Conjlitutional Society, f A—ms, Printer. X See Braclcenriclge's pompous deferiptton of the Infurrellion ; also, Mil on's defer'rption »f the unfair means iuhich is heroes made.use of to fnpport a similar aufe. ' GEORGE MEADE's COMPTING HOUSE is removed to the South fide of Walnut-Street Wharf, one Door Weft from the Cor ner. iiw [From the Monitor.] An 0 D E. croud. move, For the Gazette of the United Stales. Mr. Fenno, THE offence which the Jacobin so cieties in this country tike at being called " felf-created" naturally excites the curiosity of the public to know who did create them, as well as what they were created for. The fa£t is, they were made by a foreign emissary— for his own glory and that of those who appointed him. A board of phi losophers having demonstrated that there was no power in Heaven or Hell, and illegitimated all they found on earth, made out their own right te re generate one nation, and to impregnate all the reft. Their apostle to us, h vng been furnifhed with the means and in ltruited in the 'arts necefTary to his wotk, commenced his public ministry by preaching peace, with his pockets full of war commissions. He transub stantiated treason into expatriation, and revealed the mystery that a nation might be .neutral and all her citizens at the fame time engaged in acts of hostility. He moreover taught the people that the way to preserve their national inde pendence was, to despise and reject the authorities which their wisdom had ef tablilhed, and of eourfe to follow him. Inceflant in his pursuit, he hired wri ters, bought fpcakers, paid printers, and organized tHe malcontents into corporations from Charleston to Bos ton,; and through the wilderness from Vermont to Kentucky *, some of which he beatified with his presence, and all with large portions of his fpiritj which yet remains with them. He often eat and drank with the meanest of his disci ples, and inftrufked them by signs and parables as they were able to feceive his do£lrine f that it was their" right to rule, and that they might enjejr in this life what Odin promised his vctaries in the next, the pleasure of driiking out of their enemies (bulls. At one fitting, impioijfly likened to a ccmmunion, he instituted the facramentsof his order, not in bread and wine, bjt in pig and wine. The head of the poor animal, fevered with a carver, aid elevated on the points of a large fork, was given by him, and from hind to hand a round . the table ; and a libation of wine, was at the name of Walhington, dashed with the glafles. Such Was the origin offocietiesj certainly as unne ceflary here as for the people to rife against themselves, and as absolutely un adapted for anything but mifejiief, as a wolf is by his nature for any thing but to destroy. They are now, like their filler Jacobins in France, purging and wiping themselves cltan of one rebellion, and preparing the way for another. From the Minerva. To make bad men known is to pro vide for their punilhmcnt and our fafety. It will be doing both to bring into view at the present day, some of the incon fillences of our difotganizers for some yeais palh As it will (hew that they did not believe the old calumnies when they dinn'd them in the ears of the public, it ought to prevent their gain ing credit for the new ones they will not fail to invent. Members of Congress, mujl not be members of the State Legiflaturet—For said the party writers, no man can fcrve two, mailers. There was according to them no end to the mifchiefis of having Congiefs-rtien in the State Govern ments ; and the country frcmed to think it proper to keep them separate. There is scarcely a part ot the United States where the doctrine has not been preach ed, of excluding Congress members from holding any other trull: from being Judges, Sheriffs or even Lawyers, be cause they might polfibly have their minds drawn off in Congicfs from the public good. They would banish every sinister view and all undue bias. How happens it that the members of Clubs are not thought in reason at least difqualified from feats in Congress. How is it that the party who espy dangtt at all times and in every thing else, fee none in fending Club-men to make laws ? The Hate Legislators and Congress co-operate it appears very cordially in enforcing the laws.—A man runs a less riflt of halting between two opinions who i 6 a member of two legiflat tires at once, than he who juins a club topublifh refolvcaaud propagate jealousies, suspicions and accusations a gainst the whole government, and then takes a fqat in the legislature of the state or the nation. If the chief magi ftratc informs that certain Clubs have had an eflentir.l part in fomenting the infurreftion, what answer can the Club law-giver consent te make to the infor mation he fey by his jotc. This is all t>ue and thereby difgracehii club or shall lie candidly vote in the nega tive and disgrace himfelf}—A single vote-may happen to decide the point, and in giving it a man is in a dilemma that is no less uncomfortable to himfelf, than unfavorable to his eonftituents. He cannot determine whether he shall serve God or Mammon, as he has laid himfelf under some obligations to both ; and the people at large and his immedi ate eonftituents more especially will be puzzled to know whether he votes as a Clubift or as a Legislator. It makes the oddest jumble of characters the molt ridiculously inconsistent with each other that can be imagined. It is beyond the grimace of a patomirae, for the fame man in one place to be obliged to bluster in' favor of the laws and in another framing resolves that they are the abhorrence of freemes, odious and tyrannic 1: in the day voting supplies to pay for suppressing resistance, and at midnight writing .ettcrs of fraternity and union to the clubs who have out lawed the officers of government.. What a clatter was made, about Con gress mens being Bank-Dire&ors, and how remarkable was the silence on the members of the state legislatures being concerned in llate banks. If so much influence was then dreaded, why do not the jealous patriots, as they call them selves, fee club influence ? why do not they found the alarm ? Is club influ ence less corrupt, less dark, less ambiti ous and afpirin'g than any they have here tofore denounced ? What other socie ties are formed merely to overawe go vernment ; to echo 9 disorganizing fac tion in our legiflatois in every project of confuiion, to intrigue for the election of the members of that faction, who in return faithfully fopport 'the Club and the meafuret of the Club after they are chosen. It is injlurnce of the worlt kind and of the \rorft men. It is a speck of rottenness at the core, which the elec tors will not fail at the next opportu nity to cut out. To Citizen BLAIR ' . President, and the Members of the De mocratic Society of Pennfylvattia, efta bliihed at Philadelphia.. Gentlemen, PERMIT a fellovr-citizen, whole hofom burns in the cause of freedom with an ar dour almost equal to your own", to approach at this momentous crisis, when the reflect ing mind is deeply alarmed by the threaten ed deftrutftion of the patriotic foeieties, ellablifhed for the preservation of the li berties of our country. Your fellow labourers in the great work of our political falvarien, unfortunately, did not reach me until yesterday evening, or I lhould before this have poured forth my cordial thanks for the provident care which your refpedtable body manifells for the public good. FACTS I have read your address, gentlemen, to all my neighbours; and they are aftonifh iflgly pleased with its contents. But, ior what I lhall presently relate, they were on the point of withdrawing their confidence from their repi efentatives in Congress, and of placing it in you, their better friends. — They were on the point of withholding all thanks&praile for the wearied heroes, who have returned from the western waters, and of bellowing them on you, the more worthy volunteers in freedoms cause. All this, gentlemen, and thmgs more glorious would have happened, had not a meddlesome q.riJlocrat suddenly popped upon me a number of questions, to which I could not for-my foul, furnilh fatisfaflo ry artfwers. Anxious, my dear brother patriots for the preservation of that liberty for which We have so nobly fought and bled, and fully convinced that nothing can so much. contribute to this delirable end, as the continuation of your society at the feat of arillocratic villainy, I lhall now repeat to you the queftioss te which I have alluded, hoping, and trusting, that you, as watchmen on the walls of our political Jerufaletn, will enable me, your fdlow centinel, to serve the cause of democratic liberty, by giving theih a full, complete, andirrefiflible answer. This done, 1 pledge my honor all will be fafe ; and the good people of New Jersey, with loud hofannas will hail yon ' Welcome ye Saviors of your Country.' The queflions, my dear firs, as you will perceive, were all framed from fen ten - ees in your addiefs, and were as follow, viz. Pray fir, who are the ariftocratical fac tion among us ? And what are the princi ples which they difleminate, unfriendly to the rights of man ? What combinations and fcheme< ha»; the rulers of our country formed for the definition of our liberties ? Which /of our temporary risers have adopted righteous policy, that the Svinilh Multitude are unequal to the talk of governing themselves ; and that publii meafurcs are only lobe diicuffed by public charaflers Have any attempts been made to pro scribe the liberty of the preis ? If ft., point them out ; if not, t why talk of rapacious jaws extended to " swallow every vestige of freedom ?" What rights haye bee* filched from the people without the ffcadow of reason or of justice ? Or, is it possible for human nature to enjoy a greater degree of political libei ty than t'.e people of the United State, t at this present moment enjoy ? Wh« iniquities of public men an.: mea iures have the democratic society of Ihi ladelpliia detedUd ar.d exposed. What adtions and proceedings of the eo vernnant are kept fccret from the people, and who are the fomt.among us who hold the fafljionable tenets tl.at the people cu°ht not to be informed refpeiting them r You fay, " The will of the people ii the law. How is that wili to be expr.iTcd ' By the democratic societies—or by their ie- Are our rulers, the servants of the demo cratic societies, or the people at large > I will not, gentlemen, attempt itj for I queftiens pu?.;.!ed and confounded me—J made out, however, to silence the rascal by reading with a very loud voire, the fol lowing solemn pafTagt from your address : " In the name of God, to what purpoic [ " did we llruggle through ar.d maintain a " seven years war againtt a corrupt court, " unless to submit to be the hewers of " wood and drawers of water at home—- " for surely foreign domination is not more " grievous than doineftic." Having fre quently before baffled the enemies of ourl liberty by such reasoning, I trcd it again, and it again had the desired efiefl—but, my neighbours are not fatisfled. I (hall ex pen'« blues and Dunlap's squadron of horle, who from their readiness to volunteer it a ag nft my brother Tom and h » afiociates to the wtflward, I fufpeft to ne, one and all of them, of the vile ariftotratic party. Ctii. AfotrVjcr. jiurcra 1 N. B. An anfwef to the above questions to-morrow. UNITED STATES. NEW-YORK, December 26. I [The Popular societies in l'Vanre ' were formed with as boneft views as the ; cli bs in tile United States. Let us fee ; what they have done in France, the account is authentic : it come s from a dillinguifhed republican—Fieron, a member of the National Convention.] The following pai&gc. it tratiflated from the " Orator of the People, " a French Publication, by Freron, da- ted September 24. " The Jacobins, it isailedged, have been ma ft era of France and of the Con vention since May *t. * 793* Now what have they done ! By pieaching liDerty, justice, virtue and probity, they have ellablifhed the most frightful tyranny iccorded in the history of Re volutions.—They have been the means of flaughtcrring thoufai ds of citizens of all ages and sexes, folwly because they did not belong to their deltru&ive party, or pofTeffed talents that they feared. They have pillaged the pub lic and individuals ; they have exeiied and nourilhed the war of La Vendee, while every day they were alluring in the war was at an end; and they converted this war into a source ot wealth by dilapidation and robbery, which have already cost some milliard! to the republic.] [A milliard is nthou sand millions.] They have arm Stated Commerce, [This agrees with Lindet's Report] the arts and fcienccs ; they have prostituted almolt all employment* and public fund)ions to rogues and ig norant men, such as those who enmpo fedthelall commune of Paris, the ju rors of the old tribunal and the num bers of the old Revolutionary Commit tees. They have poifomd society with informers and pensioned knaves ; tlicy have destroyed public morality to make .way sot baibariiy and fcrocinihifts. Thty have in (hoit brought more cal."- mities on France than ever Pitt and J'>- bovirg wiflied to aiflift her with. We may with juilice attribute to them ail these horrors, for they have been com mitted by those* members oftnatclub, who made a part of the Convention, and who governed that body ; and by their aflbciates who were Jacobins. Did 'he society ever remonstrate against. thcie abominable deeds ! never ; on the con trary, the club supported 3r d defended tliera with all their power. They re ceived Mi-ith' app'.aitfes LeN>n and Corn er, on their return from Arras and Nantz, where, under the prete:,; i t pumfl'.tßg certain prrfnis, 'hey Ihed ftreamsof innocent bjocd and de livered over property to pillage and dil truftion. Tltey expelled fr-m t!. f.,- tieiy and brot to ;helcalf»M the u..for- I