£og-goo yt-waut-kan, al::'.s Red Jacket, X (L. S.) 1' K iii-v.'v ti-a-yoo, X (1... S.) t. Sauli-ta-ka-ong-yees, f< or two Skies of a b length-, X (L. S.) v Oun-na-lhatta-kau, X (L. S.) a Ka ung-ya-neh-quee, X (L. S.) h Soo-a-yoowau, X (L. S.) si Kau-je-a-ga onh, or Heap of Dogs, X {L. S.) n Soo-iiooh-lhoo-wy, X (L. S.j c T-ha-00-wau-ni-as, X (L. S.) " Soo-nong-joo-wau, X (L. S.J Kiant-whiu-ka, alias Corn planter, X (L. S.J r Kao nich-fhong-goo, X (L. S.) v WITNESSES, e Israel Chapin, James Smeary, Ang 'tlus Porter, ( William Ewing, , ■William Shepherd, jun. t I John Wickham, . James K. Garnfey, Israel Chapin, jun. ( Horn.'-o Jones, , Jo'fcph Smith, Jntef p retcrs . , Tafper Panfli, Henry Abecle, _ NOW KNOW YE, That I Inv- ; Kbg seen and considered the faid'tieaty, "do by and with the advice and consent of the Senate of the United States ac cept ratify and cosfirm the fame, and , ■ every article and ciaufe thereof: In Tetlimony whereof, 1 have caused the . fcal of the United States to be herriin-' . to affixed, and ligned the Lmc with my hand. . . GIVEN in the City of Phi ladelphia, rhe twenty ## ###*#* day 0 f January in . *SrAt of tite # the year of our lLord * United one thousand favenliun * Statis. <1 red and nitiety five, ■ *##*#*#*# and in the nineteenth year of the Sovereignty and Independence of the United States. G®. WASHINGTON. By the'Pkesident Edm : Randolph. Tr v Copy Geo : Taylor, Jr. C. Un. D-'p. of State. UNITED STATES. NEW-YORK, January 28. Yesterday both Houses of tbe Legifla -tureof thisftate, proceeded to the elec tion of a federal Sena:or ; when in a con ference between the fame, it appeared that the Hon. Rufus King was re-elected. NEW-LONDON, Jan. 22. Saturday lift arrived in this port, the schooner Helen, of Boflon, I-Ot Luce, mailer, 66 days from Havre de Mavat, ( formerly de Gracej) Capt.Luce brought no papers ; but informed'tis ver bally, that on the iot'i' of Nov. the im portant news rcai-hecj Havre, of the fur_- renderof MicftnCiu, v.'h/i h was garrison ed by 80 a men. This account in addi.ion to that Hated . \ under the Boston head, reduce it almofl to a certainty, tint the French are in pof fcfSon of that city. Capt. Luce was at Paris the fir ft of No vember, where all was tranquil ; provi fionsof all kinds were plentiful and cheap as they were at Havre and throughout Normandy. Left at Havre-de-Marat, ship , , Mortimore, of Norwich, and a ship li om Cojine:fJ -jt-River. NORFOLK, Ja.iary 16. ORDER. In the name of heaven ! Mr. Davis, is there nr.y rebellion 'or disorder within the United States at N this time ? If I look into vtvur paper, let the fubjedt be \ whatever you please, 1 find order is the b'Jrthen of the long—for in fiance if a li tie inlig-nificant feribbler, who signs lutifslf Civil in the Herald No. 43, dealing in Italic references, which no or.t undertlands, warts to recommend himfelf to the public attention, he f".s out by tilling us that he is a friend to order. Mr. Ames in his long winded fpecch, declares that if the freedom of ; t: e press Ihould be reilricted by the a doptton of liia proportions, he has no thing in view but the preservation of or der. 'l'he preihlent, lie exhorts lis to pray that the Lord will dispose our hearts to order. It is not, Mr. Davis, in your paper only that such a hue and cry ii raised after order—l find it every '''here the cafe. The Mayor of a town fends anaddrefs to the Commander in Chief, mutual compliments are palled tipon the love of ord.r—The Field Offi cers they addrrf* the Brigadier Gene / - -_ s -v -f - ■- '■ V **■ r*i!s, the Captains tliey address the Field Officers, the Sergeants the Cap- m tair»s, the Ci-rporals the Sergeants, and }r soon, through every gride order is the w burthen of the song. Now, Mr. Da vis, as I have heard from indisputable ft authority that the western infurre&ion fa has beeu finaily fupprefled, 1 could not ' p< find out who are the enemies of order, ' If for this purpose I applied to a friend of pi mine for information, who wished to B convince me how ignorant 1 was of the ty (late of my country— G " The enemies of ordfr (fays my tl fiiend are numerous—To begin, every tl man who dare, to call in quelhon, the C wisdom ofany measure directed by the fc Executive of the United States, is an enemy to order—lf any man thinks a public debt is not a public blessing, he is an ensmy to order—Any man who dares to complain under all th# robbe ries which Gieat Britain have commit ted upon us, is an enemy to order—lf any man thinks the Chief Justice of the United States, cannot discharge the 0 functions of Chief Justice & Envoy Ex- v traordinary t» the Court of St. Jamei's r ' at one and the fame time, he is an ene my to order-—Any man who has the ' hardihood to think " proclamations, 1 ■ are not as sacred and binding as ■ " laws. "is ;:n eremy to order—Any ' who wifiies fucceft to the cause of the Fr#ch patriots, is guilty of a breach ! ' of neutrality, and is an enemy to order ' 1 —Any man who thinks that govern ' : ment was not intended for those who admirulltr it iut for the benefit of the ' ' public, is an enemy to order—Any 1 man " —My friend was proceeding ' - when I interrupted Mm, by remarking r that he had already included nine tenths | 1 of the real American citizens, and that 1 so far from being of his opinion, I was - persuaded the people he had dffcribed > were the only friends of the conftituiion ' » and the laws, that those pretended sup I porters of vrder wie members of an f ambitious junto, who endeavoured to affix the fligma of anarchy and d;for der upon men, who, frparatirig vern.nmt from the adminijlration, admire and will support the one, though they mav despise the other. Let us be Upon the watch, the brawlers about or der arc the greatell enemies to a free conllitution. PETER PLAINMAN. NORTHAMPTON, Jan. 21. :- Canandarqua, Dec. 24, 1794. Mr. butler, 1- lam desired to request you to give it the following melancholy event, which happened in this town, on the 2cth inft. a place in your paper :—Two men were instantly killed by the falling of a tree which turned up by the roots, as lC they were travelling 011 horseback, near :» the court houfeinthia town—the tree t, was observed to fall by a man (landing e at about eighty yards diltaiH, he did not fee the unfortunate perfon3 pafsbut within a minute ortwo observed a horse 1 driving to get tip, and ran to the place r ; when to his ftirprize found the two men 1- and one horse dead and the other woun ded. All inqucft was immediately fuirrj d moned to examine thebodiescf the men A which were unknown to any one present j- but from the papers foun d with them, and from information afterwaids recei ved from Mr. John Morgan, aiid Dr. Stiles, of this county, we find that the i- name, of the persons were Thomas MigJ ip hells, of Conway, and Cyrus Everitt, lt formerly of Foxborougli, MalT. and that Mr. Mighells, had that day set out to teturn to his family, a wife and nine children —and that Mr.Everitt had been L *" living about three years in Niagara— and was Oo his way to Foxborougli where he ftippofed his parents were li ving. Mr. Mighells received a blow on his head which broke his skull, and 5 his brains were thrown out upon his hor ;n fes neck—his th ifh broken in two pla-1 I ces, and his body very much brnifed. )C | Mr. Everett had his back broken in , e two places—and his shoulder badly a broken —their remains were decently in 1S terred in the burying ground in Cainn-, , darqua, on the 22d inft. An Inventory was taken by the Ju icj ' rors, of the effefls found v ith Mr. , g 1 Mighells and Mr. Everitt, and the pro () perty, of which are some valuable p>- d i persi deposited with Phinehas Bates, -)f Esq. of Canandarqua, where th» sur a. ! viving friends of these unfortunate fuf j. ferers may apply for the fame. r ~ 0 NEWPORT, January 20. ir The schooner Sally, from Guada s, loupe, bound to Boston, Samuel Top id lift, matter, wss cast away on the night y of the i s fli in (I. about 12 o'clock, in | •n a snow ilorfn, at Point Judith, near in Coon's Rocks ; a final) pait of the car ■d go is saved, the remainder, and the 1- schooner, are supposed will' be entirety 0 loft; In lat. 34, o. he fpoks Capt. Tho mas Porter, of this town, on his passage iron St. En ft at: us, to New-York, ali I 1 ~ • fil well. Cspt. Toplift had 24 days paflage ta from Guadaloupe, snd informs, that be fore he failed, the British had been com- fe * pdled to evacuate every part of that t) Island, and the French were in com- " I plete pofieffion of the whole—That the v British were collefling their troops at Martinico—That Sir John Jervis and w Gen. Grey had failed for England in f, the Boyne man of war—and that all 1 the bills they drew were protested. a Capt. Toplift has favoured U9 with the n fallowing Proclamation : <» • LIBERTY—LAIV—E&UAL TTY. e VICTOR HUGUES, J; Commissary delegated by the National Convention, in the Leeward Carib bee IflartJs. " CONSIDERING that the crimes 1 committed by the Britilh officers, as ' 'well at the taking, as in the defending , of the Colonies, (hews a chara&er ot r such consummate and unheard of t . roguery as hjttury never yet produced 1 an exafnple. "" Considering that the rights of hu- J , inanity, of men, of war, and of nations, f have been violated by Charles Grey, , general ; John Jervis, admiral ; Tho- , p . mas Dandas, major general and gover- , nor in and over the island of Guada . loupe, Charles Gordon, like wife a ge c neral officer, as well as of other Tubal- ' tern officers, in imitation of their chief j commanders. - " Considering the jobberies*. murders, and other crimes committed t by them, ought to be transmitted to s posterity. j " It is RefolveJ, That the remains M of Thomas Dund.is, deceased, in the island of Guadaloupe, on the third day n of the month of June (llyle of the Slaves) shall be dug up and thrown to the wind ; and that there shall bcereft ed, on the fame fp®t, at the expence of the Republic, a lofty monument, bear ing on the one fide the present refoluti g on, and on the other fide the following infeription: e " This spot, returned to liberty thro' " the courage of Republicans, was dif " honored by the body of Thomas Dun- I. " (las, major general, and governor of " the island of Guadaloupe, in the name "of die tyrant George the 11 Id. In " remembrance of his crimes 1 the pub " lie indignation has caused him to be " dispersed, and this monument to be re t. creiSed, in order to attest the fame to h « polterity." The 20th Frimaire, in the 3d year of the n French Republic, one and indivilible. a (Signed) " VICTOR HUGUES. r Sealed with Seal 6f the Commiffi ,e on, and ligned by the ConventionaJtom „ miliary and his Secretary. id VElL,'Secretary of the Commiflion." it fe CONGRESS. ;n "* HOUSE or REPRESENTATIVES. : "ii — ;n Wednesday, January 28th. Nt THE House went into a committee on the bill for repealing part of the adl to en '' courage the importing of arms and am r. munition into the United States. ;ie The bill was read and reported without g_. amendment. Ordered to be engrofled for t a third reading. ' In committee of the whole, the report n of the felecft committee, on the laws of to the territory north weft of the Ohio ; the ie chairman read the report, which was a— sn greed to,it was then reported to the house and a committee were ordered to bring in rh a btil. '■ In committee of the whole on the re port of of the felest committee, on the mefiage of the President, whh a letter ® from the Governor of North Carolina, ei r - closing the memorial of Thomas Person, a- and. others, fproprietors of L land, south 3. weft of the Ohio. j„ This report produced'a long debate. It was contended that the government of the United States ought to indemnify the pur ll" chafers of certain lands in North Caroli -1-' na, who had purthafed them under the fan&ion of the state from the Indians.— J- The government had given up the land to r. the Indians. Mr. M'Dowell, who l'pofci 3 1 for some time on this fubjedt, observed that the right of the government for what they had done mightjuftly be quefUoned. s ' He called upon Ae legislature in behalf r " of the people", either to give them furr f- pofiefiion of their lauds, or to give them some equivalent. He aiked this as a mat ter of right, and not as as a favor. Mr. M'DoWell never had been, nor was now. a fhllling interested in the concern, but knowing as he did, that a very great num p- ber of citizens were injured bv this act of :\t government, he thought that it was jufi |„ and right to competifate them in form way, or at least such of them as are wil ,r ling to relinquiih their claims. There wtr r * many m easy circumstances, no doubt le *ho would not be vill i.-kg to give up then fy claim 3, but on the other hand, piany b) their situation would be obliged to do it. s- ■-;. _-.. -- ----- *- -- .• \ , ■ : • : ~?.-_ . • ...• _. ■' . - ' a-' .*'••. • ■I - * PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30. ! . 1 ■ t . ■ . 1 ' * ' We be.-r that a veflcl is arrived at 11 JT . -x New-York which left London tire beginning of December. i • » . i* . , A Letter from London, by the i above arrival ? received by a Merchant of this City, contains the following 4 Important Intelligence. ...." I am npw happv that I can congratulate you, that the TREA JL'Y. of, Amity and Co;>i- I rnsree is r confirmed between- I this Country and the United States."' By this Day's Mail. NEW-YORK, January 29. LEGISLA I'URE o/NEW-YORfc. The committee appointed to draft, a A lifter to the Governor's commu-„ nication, at the opeiiug cf the Sfffion, were yeftevday discharged from the fame. • • > •• ♦ i The two houses hsveappointed James- Watson, I'.lq. regent of the Untverfiiy of this State, iiT the room of the late Baron de Steuben. .... „ ! Yellefday afternoon failed,, in /onv pany, for the Enft-Jndies, the Ships AMERICA and SAMPSON, the for-t mer commanded by Capt. Howell, and the latter by Capt. Swords. They left* the harbour .in view of a largq concnurfi of citizens, whose countenances express ed a wifli that.success might attend their departing friends and fellow-citiztns. Mutual huzzas were uttered with more than uftial warmth, after they got un- der way. ExtraS of a letter from a corrcfponilint in London, to his friend M B'flnn, da ; ted OS. 29, 1794. " A f iiend of ours, in France, re mitted a bill on Hamburgh, to ahoufe there, the latter part of laJl month, for two thousand pounds ll • ling, with or der to get it dic°u ted,& veiled n bills 1 on thi« place—which was so punctually: - complied with that we got the needful " J two posts ago—We mention this, as a, n ' circumllance, that remittances from . France now begin to come 0n.." :S 11———1 ■ Curious Anecdote of the Antiqiii'.v of CYDER '• Cyder is mentioned asan ancient liquor both by Tertullian and St.Austin, the former calls it faccum ex fomis vincf fimum. The other writing against the Manichees, who abstained wholly from wines which they obje&ed to, the Ca tholick chaige*them with drinking the juice of apples, far more dtlicious than wine, or any other liquor. From these paflages of Tertullian, and Auflin,\vho. were both Africans, Cardinal Perron (who was horn in Jersey, of protestant parents) thinks this liquor was firft ' known in Africa, fom thence passed j into Spain among the Bifcaynnets, and from thence into Normandy. ™ When Lord.Bolingbroke's pofthr.m 1c ous works were publithed by Mallet, s Dr. Johnson chara&erifed the noble s author, and his works, in the foUowJng '• memorable sentence : " Sir, lie was a c scoundrel and a coward: a scoundrel, for charging a blunderbuss againlt reli. . gion and moralky ; a coward, because d he had not resolution to f\re it off him felf, but left half a crown to a beggarly Scotchman to draw the trigger after his death." •» , A late memoir of Sweden dates that ' there was lately found, during a period j of nine or ten yeati 2036 men & 3570 women above the age of 60 ; 212 men and 328 women between 100 and 105 ; , 3 I nun and 36 women between 106 and . 110 ;22 men and 19 women between 111 and 120 ; one man ?ged 122, and ' one woman'i 27. Sweden is more tem ' perate than any land in Alin or Ameri l ca in the fame latitudes. j J*he population of Spain by a return : to government in the year 1787 was ; to, *68, 150 fonis. Of which number ' the icligious of denominations were 188,625. ■ f Mr. Coxe in 1791 (latei the Danish Revenue at 1,400,0001. (terling. The J Public Debt in 1785 at 3,600, 0001. of which 200,000 is liquidated annually.