£- - -u,i**er*r. retry .«■ »» ■' r' 1 \traflt frcte He addrejs of th; Netvs- U] Ll : cf th: Parmer's Cbroikk. si ConneSicHt Paper. w V i.ik- other f»: »t« with fa£li.m vexed ° /,, ! Demoiatic clubs ii-jpplexeri, \,'«ic forced to hafe dilfetttions ■v ;> r'.ick by lawless mol convrniiins, tv sept secure our vines beneath lVniline our brows with lamel wreath ; 1". that once th* impropriation, >de as great nolfc as it creation Would k)'tu return to priiliue chaos, rokuul hand ilictLhcdoutto lljy US. I , :it to pals front small to * great, / ><! leave tfcr Coutiient the Stare; jfcLr.'i not your fouls been roaicd to t'iry : rte —* - A - >e the tale related to you, } ions of <zuhijkty loft to order, ] excise now resolved to murder : Co ht him and bound him neck and heels, e crouds (bo 1 round with glit'ring tlrels 1 i i t raised to llrike the deadly blow, I n Excile cued sot help,—ajiii' 1 io! ; States turned out as volunteers. c tee 3on their wat-caps' bout their " ears, ]V - -rfcd the mountain* ! 1 e some no {vf»pers--got, and many 1 nice hard thowcrs were out all h ri^lit, i' . nr>. to meet the fijht: t .' ' now at deilined plaie * 1 their la-.v'efs fori to face, r lit trogues had run awiy, ( The; quick the vi&ories of the day o . thio' the Viion highly f,unded, t 1 k £thy periods, finely rounded.— n Ah Congress next a «iantfi debated, 1 I f inh'jluy-cluls werefelfcteated ; t /. i; eftion if its cost we count, e A e worth wiii rife to great Amount, c Th loss to balance, I here mention, t Tua'. old STEUDEN gives up his pen f fion ; t j a truth, is he has fought the dud, t As i'jrv Pensioner cv long must ; t Ar. i-eea. fraught with conlolation t i"i> every after generation. rrom a Virginia Paper. r — h To th- People of Frederick and Berkeley- j Counties. I! Frl-ndj and Fello-iueCitizeni, n WELL a wart or the patriotic zeal by y which voirarr T pun --i.il io uiitV ri an imperfect sketch of our national con- fl cerna, which, I am happy to fay, have, in mauv important po hti of view, every flattering ifpeft. _ , The madness and violence of some, in ° tlie countie: of Pennsylvania, o have.been completely defeated by the cau- n lion; wifdom/ar.i pafrnal prudence of f ; the President, fuppnrtedby generous citi- zens of every deienption, in a crisis To in- terefting, and finally by the march of our brave armed bands, led on by patriots, that while they rendered this eflential fer- I vice to their country, dervivedto thetn- v felv'e- la'ting reputation, by a due regared t to the law», and the civil authority of the c people. . t This un'ortunate bufir.es has indeed been a considerable bill of cost, with this consolation, that it will prevent fach ill ad- " Tiled violence hereafter; will evince to the h vorld, that the American people under- d JUrittrfceirrights, and know -he true value f ( of Order and regular government ; and it t ] will be-a flrikitig pcao£. ti l fei*h m — them ill, that they have vigorous republi tais to meet them in arms if need be; — c and Our hopes are sanguine, on feeing a p return from the Treafmy department, „ that the resources will be fufficiently productive, without more taxes, and that agreeably with the President's recom- c mendation, and" the real wish of every n member, we (hall soon. be enabled to re- '] duce the public debt. a The successes of o-ar allies have been, b and still continue to be, rapid and brilliant n and it is now hoped by many, that Mr. f Jav's million to the British Court, is in a train of adinftment, and that among o- S therthings our Northwesterly Polls, (too n Ion? deta'n:d) will at last be given up, fl jvhieh of course will favt h. the expence of a an-icieroiw regular army. J The pay of privates in the militia is raif td to fortv shilling*- per month as they arc proper'.v e'onfiJcrcd the great support of a tl ] ree people. The pay of those who went a< forward with-fuch promptitude to sup- tl fret's the late infurreflion, is also lugment- t ] cd, and there is a proportion depending b to regulate the pay of militia tfficersj_ _ Ae'sof Congress will be more general- 1 Iv promulgated, and it ispropofed to print a them m the German language, for the more I perfett information of that induftricus and ref,v<Ttable denomination of citizens. (j I")iiTerence in opinion, has prevailed on fo.ne p >in ts; a circnmftance, perhaps, not alt-j-ether improper in a fr.e govern ment. . Upm we whole, I rejoice witn you and rverv A-n rrean citizen, in the many and a greatbidfirc;* /- at present enjoy, w hi!e t i.v» mi/ anticipate, with zealous ronfi- ] c!enc», the future advantages that will re- u t t-i. n tie op rit'.Ons of a government of equality an d brotherly love, formed by he o ipl-, such as they intended, and c «ch a< th.y are determined id support. 11 May thh our common county, conti-. G cue to b -tlie compete afylnm tor the sea- ar , timental, orderly, generous, and a <j fed, of uurl'pecies, iiom every' ciime,..at w( the farnr'time it exhibits to the obfe.-vin- world, the beautiful piitures of mo3erati on, religion, jnftice, and republiran equa- 1 ' ljty, is the win* of your sincere frjen 1, as R. R.il 'j if id- w t<" p- For tht Gazette of the United Slates. re — oi REVOLUTION IN GENEVA. Ml. Finno, • ! I fend inu a fourth letter, being a eanttna ' ation of the Hijlorj of the Revolution d in Geneva. Itj authenticity may be de fc ) pended tn—being from the fume hand ivh'uh furttifbed the account already Jt< pubhth -d. I D. E. J u : t< Londin, OSoler 4* u r Tlie fvmptoms of mildness which the Revolution of JGeneva fei?med to aiaime, haxe-foon jffven place to its original cha- " j' rafter, viz. that of Pillage. Scarcely ls had the conspiracy of the Montagnards T ' betn difeovered ; Scarcely had the Re r volntionary TribtiHal been compelled to 1 puni(h its authors ( who declared before Cl to punilhment, that they had n ■ done nothing wjiicli their very judges 31 I had not inlligited, ordered, and direst- c ' ed them to do.) Scarcrly indeed had P this Tribunal got rid of that faction, which alarmed them by threatning to " make the fruits of the pillages of the & Genevefe Revolution pass into the hands of the French, than they began afrefh e ' these fame pillages with an activity quite . new, in directing them more particular- ! ly against the class of Merchants, whom " they had lately denounced as being rich- cl er and more avaricious than the Ariilo- [ crats. It is tt ue that in this third scene, m the blood of innocent men has not been 11 1 (hed, and that three of them condemned to death for the purpose of seizing on P' their property, have undergone this fen- P' tence, only in effigy, on account of *' their absence. But four or five hun- rc dred heads of families, have not the °J less been included in a new lift of con 31 fifcations profc: iptions and imprison ments. Thus the scourge of this terri ble revolution has already reached and j* r struck about a thousand Citizens, that is to fay more than the half of the ge- " neral aftembly of the people, such as it te was comoofed two vears aero, when a le ~rffouiaita iu.in.i-a.i.l lILJI.') ftrangcrs werr aflbciated ! In the mean time, though the fourth part and the worthiest of its actual members, have been thus excluded, such are the fears of their opprefTors on the true fenti- ments of the majority of the three thou sand remaining members of that aflem bly, that they dare the less convoke it, 1 as votes are given by a secret ballot.— P l They have provisionally reimplaced it by 23 Revolutionary Clubs, where the votes are given publicly, aijd where those alone, for whom tranquillity is be come a (late of violence dare to give w ( theirs, their boldness increasing in these cc clubs, in proportion to the discourage- . . ment of the most honest. These 23 little deliberating Republics meet every day, and make sometimes separately, sometimes collectively the most contra- c>: dictory ptopofals. The fluctuation of this new demo- cracy, is inexpreftible. Sometimes it ar permits those artilU condemned to im -1 ptifonment in their own houses to go re out three time a day to attend theiraav- w cations; and soon after recalls this per- m . million. At other times wishing open- f u ly for the depopulation of Geneva, it a( i allows the inhabitants who have not been a 1 brought to trial to depart with th,'ir moveable effects ; the next day aftonifh | ed at the croud of imigrants, and the quantity of goods which they had car- g-, 1 riedoff the day before, it again forbids /(J departure of any of them, as well as of every kind of specie, merchan dize &c. &c. ji~ The grand question which still divides th i their minds, is, that of allowing the by administration of the Republic, either ex " to the Revolutionary Tribunal, or to on the syndics and council, which this Tri bunal has lately difpoflefled, just as the . former hud difpoflefled the legitimate th t aad Constitutional Administration of I. • 1792. si > To induce the Revolutionists to be- aj lieve that although ftigmatiztd by all il 1 their neighbours, they have still at a ce ' distance allies, and approvers of their re enormities ; tlie authors of these crimes v< ' liave ordered for the lft of September w I a civic feftival, in which to take advan- fe c ta«e of the condiment which the u French Convention has lately paid to p ~ Geneva, in placing its colours bcfide al P those of the United States ; They have h 1 difplnyed them « the Ameri- n cati for the purpose of loMing the p Ger.erjfe in tlie sweet delusion, that t'.iey are Itill worthy of being ebmpxrfd a;id aijoeiated to the Republic of the new world. It is true that at-this (how, unecould read in mvked chaTafters on the countenances of the fpeftators and afliilants, shame and remorse. But what" are #e to expect from a people to whom no other virtue regains la ap» j pearance but that ot discovering such I remorse, and no other courage bui that of furmonnting it ? j One trait more will fsffiee to hnifh ♦ tUe picture of their misfortunes, it is that the French themselves, the indica tor* of all these cor.vulfions and plun i ders, diffatisfied either at not having been able to collect the fruits for them . selves, or in having been so much sur passed in the Revolutionary cat eer ; pre y j tend at this moment some compafiioi! | for the Genevefe; * ■and have written to their diforganizers to persuade them to put an end to this scandalous and ufclefs tragedy. Whether these will persevere in pro longing it or drop the cuttain for a ' while; the fate of this little republic is no longer doubtful. If the revolu tion of France is triumphant, Geneva already entirely surrounded by its ter j ritory, is inevitably condemned to be „ come a French city; or if even by a j miracle it should escape that defliny and it's virtuous citizens (hould extri cate themfelvcs from their actual op j preflion, they would nevertheless be forced contrary to their inclinations to let themselves roll in the orbit of the f great planet to the revolutions of which s Geneva has firffcred herfelf to be attach -1 ed as a satellite. , After these lall consequences of a firft step toward* the revolutionary doc , trine ; one may trace it's source, it's current, and it's overflowings, from the moment when it announced itfelf with mildness, by the modest and innocent ' title of citizens which it's partizans a > dopted among themselves, up to the , period when after having succeeded in proclaiming the equality of rights, they f found out the art of extending that equality of rights even over theJtrtunes , of tbofe who did not think as they did, and when after having disarmed them without refillance, they plundered, ba nished, and put them to death. Such I are the late ravages which this doctrine has introduced into Geneva! There was not however in that small and m terefting republic either abuses to cor | reft, or reforms to operate, nor even mI-i'li ..Inffn icalolllv. t lince the Genevan laws at no time . knowledged nobility even among fami | lies the moll ancient and the moll opu lent.* It mud be also observed, that the ancient government whose members have been so cruelly parfued and perfe cted, had always (hewn in the admini (tration of jullice and of the finances a ' purity, against which even the spirit of r faction had never raised any doubts, and . ( , that the exact public ceconomy of the , administrators could only be compared ] to their personal difintereflednefs. It was so much so, in fad, that their fuc , ceffors in seizing on their places, began to double, and triple their salaries ; and it seems that they have not yet found r them fufficient, since in the course of the lall fix weeks, there has been an ' expenditure of the public trcafure or rather a dilapidation of about 40,000 pounds flerling. Two great and importants truths • arise from this afflicting picture, the 1 ft, Tkat at all times when this new 1 revolutronary doctrine shall find it's . way into a free (late; it will make ' more havock than in any other, because such a Hate will have nothing more to ■ adopt of it than it's excesses. 2d. That 1 a free people are nevertheless the mod exposed to this dreadful storm, since we * The French Lave among other things j given order or granted permission to print ' in the public Papers of Paris, the elo- ' quent proclamation of the great council of ' Berne, which throws out a particular Jligma againfl the Geneva Revolution, and 1 the Deputy of the Convention, <wbo is late : ly arrived on the Front iers of Swiffet land, • esprejjed himfelf marly in the fame manner 1 on this ftljeft. : * One of the fundamental laws of ■ the conftitKtion of Oeoeva runs thus. f I. it any member of this commonwealth be | fatisficd with the rani of citizen without 1 ■ aspiring to any superiority or pre-eminence 1 wbajoever above his Jellow-citizens, ex 1 cept where public ofjice entitles him end r requires it. Such was the cafe of thr a very firll foreign constitution againll r which the French have armed them - selves : such was the constitution which e under the impwtion of aril'.ocracy, they 3 previoudy attacked with open force and e afterwards by intrigues and whiih they e have at last overwhelmed in one com - mon ruin with the people, whofc pros e peiity it had so much adv.snced. are"able to judge that that winch 'as driven the Genev.-le into the open sea, is precisely what ought to have fixed them at anchor, ;Lnt it to. fay the con formity of their democratic conilitntion with that which the French have been establishing. UNITED STATES. KNOXVILLE, Dic.nibcr 13. On the iSthult. Peter Greaves was killed by Indians, within a quarter of a mile of Sharp's ftaiion, near the south bank of Clinch rivei, 20 miles nofh'of this place. The Indians who killed hira had waylaid the pa'h, and fired at so Ihort a distance that he was powder burned—upon being wounded, he ran waspurfued, and mutSl hacked wit"h a sword ; and from the foicv of the blows about fix inches of the point of the ' blade wis broke off. Two scalps were taken off his head. 1 Oil the 1 inllant, a party of In dians, about two hours arter dark, se creted themselves within twenty feet of the door of the house of Thomas Cowan and fired upon his Wife and son as they (lepped into the yaid, and pierced the cloaths of the latter with eight balls, but he escaped under cover of the night in to the woods, and Mrs. Cowan retur ned into the house unhurt. The firing alirmed the neighbour hood, and Captain Beaird was at Cow ans, with twenty men. within an hour and an half, patrolled the woods the ' whole night in search of the Indians, hoping they would lliike up a fire by 1 which they could be Sjifecvered; the ' next moining, (I Ith inllant) by or- I der of Governor Blount, Captain Be- 1 aird went in pursuit of the savages. < Mr. Cowan lives cn Dam j Creek, within 1 I miles of this place, J It is to be hoped that the members < of Congrefsj in whom the power of declaring war is solely veiled, will inJi- r vic'ually apply this cafe to their own fa- ' milies and feelings, and aft accordingly, c Itisa faftr.ot to be denied, that the < moil extreme frontier family, in their 1 poverty, are ajmuch entitled to pro- < teftion as the molt wealthy member of I Congress in ins eafc and luxury. ( Extraß of a letter from a grntl?nvin in < Philadelphia, to the Printers of this < paper, dated November 14, 1794. " Dotlor White has had fime diffi culty in getting his feat ; in fact, it is 1 •"*. 1 !'•="" 'he Committee will report favorably ; and from what 1 have collected from a num ber of the members, they are difpefed to accomodate the South Western Tcr- c ritory, particularly Gen. Cobb, Meflis. Giles, Blount, Macort, Madison, and Baldwin, who are gentlemen of cor.fidtr- 1 able weight in the house. * " This day there is not a quorum of 1 the Senate ; to-morrow the house of » Representatives do not fit, confequcnt • ]- ly no Congress till Monday, when the f anxious public will hear the budget , opened—great murmurs prevail, with not only the public, but with the Se nators and House of Representatives, that the business is delayed and great t expences incurred for want of the at- r tendance of the members who are nearell. " On Monday last arrived in town from Cumberland, SefJeaAt Sim'i.J ** M'Clellan, with ten C' ,fr °k ee prison- 0 ers, who are to be delivered up at Tel lico block house on the 18th inftanr, as agreed on between Governor Blount and a the Chiefs of the Cherokee nation. j We learn by a correspondent from Kentucky, that during the pall Au tumn, upwards of 3-, 000 pef-fons have ' removed there from the Atlantic States, t —This Territory too has had an unufii- - al acctflion of emigrants witliin the lall fix months, And from the belt infor- ' - mat ion, we have reason to expect 1 ,0 o next year, chiefly from Geoigia, South * and North Carolina. ' t N E W-Y O li K, "January S. v Gxtrad of a letter from Mr. Paul R. ; Randall, to his Father, Air. Thomas [ j Randall, of this city, dated Bermuda, 18tb Dec. 1794. ; " Sentence of condemnation lik« beeti pronounced a" j.'nft the lchoooer Gover- r | nor Clinton, and her cargo, without | , i any qualitication wlvitetcr. 1 molt so- j j lemnly aver, and mv ronv.ie! cannot ad vise me upon what grounds (he is thus ! 3 adjudicalcj : whether we have finned J against the law of tuitions, against any | f positive rriftfufthms—or, wh *hr» there ' j is any secret inftrtiftioiis, ici! j motive, or other i:iHuc 1,1 .t lha - would be indecent to guci. at. . .• • totally ignorant. That wc ed her an American vefifel, id "r i 1 properly, ond net , . traband trade, or Kj j-'fft I blockaded or b«'iegsyji» D cer'a.n ; \ ' I ' ■ t-i f « ..dthttthCTewv , gan.lt her by all which it * I that the sole crime i s . French Colony; 1 l, ave it ' draw the conclusion, whether tW» i not evince a maniftlt de(i gn of ing the Americans to coirfc'n hoftil,,;, in an open fray. I {hall, of comfe, enter r» y a r peal—zpptaifers are already appi„„/ Ci and they may begin to difcliarge i,|' day; they attempted to remove her it. i to the country, that this bufineft i be done entirely after their own mind the Court, however, on application, r. fufed to indulge them. I tr.ufi find fc curitv in 5001. sterling to proJecutejL appeal, 2nd they mufl give bail to r< turn th; property. I (hall then have no thing further to do than urge the con pletion of my papers to be carried t.» the Court of Appeals, <;s well is regu lar protests against any efpei ial hard, ships attending my cafe. I have 111 detftood that they do not intend i-, make me any offer of her, but wi j fer>d Iter to England. I doubt mik 1 whether any thing can be done by wa. of negotiation with tliem ; tl rv fcei determines to improve the property, ! . which I have no ohje£tions. " We arc unacquainted with yn politics, and have no r.ewsfioro Europe. I must suppose that our policy it peat' —we are, however, amused by l};,; British government. Our ve/Tcls are seized, as in time of war. " Yellerday a Philadelphia brigirj» condemned, and no quarter can he ex pelled from the Admiralty. Still M Goodrich has relinqiiifhed th»er *efiel», and offers his privateer, the Experimen for sale. You will judge in wfrat ner this letter (hould be tr.sde publii as I believe the American merchants ii general think themselves free from dai ger—mention it, particularly,. t.> tl Chamber of Commerce. " Mr. Harvey, my counsel, bavin. read this letter, would give me a cert floate to confirm it, but we are aboi ■. collecting a note of each American cafe. Gaudet, the <swner of the privatee , before the trial, swore he wauli coi - demn her, and would away v.-in her cargo—and said that I must go ;o Htll for restitution. They have alien ed me all my wearing apparel as agre t compliment—but have kept my pifto s and Iword." Philadelphia, Jan. 12. —— ' — Says a CorrrJpoiJent. The friends of Liberty can have b , one opinion refpeflingpolitical clubsforr . ed on the model of those lately iuppreff j in France, or which is the fame thing in terdicted from diGeminating as clubs their anarchical tenets ; that opinion is, that good government, fec-jrity of petfer. property and life, and such clubs, cannf; fubrift together—A writer in the As re fays, that " the rrJlriSions on the clubs in France may produce the word of co sequences"—but what consequences c be worse than those which have been d. d. red by members of the Convention t have flowed from the Clubs .' these conJ qnences are written in blo»d In every quar ter of that Rrpnhlic—the blood of oqjun citizcns, meu, woiweu-aiKTiHUren The European Intelligence by the Ju' ana, arrived at Baltimore from Hambur; is the latefl made public—none of t other arrivals afford intelligence frrm Am sterdam so late as the -Sib Nov. which « the date of a letter publifhcd in Kew-\ ok —The Juliana arrived at Baltimore, Su: day the *th infant in 7 weeks paffage,cor. . frequently left Hamburgh about the 16 November. There is very probably, telligence on the Continent of a later da than any that has rrifct the public eyt will be recollected that a letter via Ne | York, from Rcchelle in France, dxt f Nov. 8« was publiHicd before the arriv. of the Juliana was known here. 1 We hear that " The Volunteers"^ new performance of two a(fts, by i Rowfon—(the mwGck composed by M' ; j Rein;gle,) is in rcburfrl at the NewT!;- | atre. When Mr. C les renewed hi* I ft" amendment to the s . ■ bil' jropcfmgthe clause :• if, n . ■ iciation ot T ill**' -ei -, - • • Sos CiCI" .* i - rr> ! s ; ltir A»wmgobfc: - - _ | tWlownij. articlf OA %,-i.i, of rcVilitv Uiuftrd St?t**s : . anv office of pro f -.j 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers