mr.tiei* ti>uld terminate RefJ y ; end though Breda i« .rom . - ,- .» f°"". V* hollilities have y again begun. j ,ny, - - . .-' J Warfi HAERLEM, Dec. 8. J \v»w Wc fc , from Emm.rick that a havel and iocefont cannonade has been a heard finer the 3d mft..both near and pru|T) tar from t:i* ffcc«, On Friday .t w*s fjnd so very violent that the whole town w s ke „ „ Z , Ltt Of alarm. We learn since, that the French have made their ap- Pa pearance with boats about Herwin, rfN P.nderen and H.ilhw«.. to croft, .t u iuupofed, the river Waal imthufe envi h tain, but that they were d.fcovered by tl[e g th* allies in that quarter, and their boats On t _ . £ a "J On Wednesday, Thursday and Fn- lau 1 4*yj the French iet off a balloon in the vent eve.ling, at Emmerick, and appeared j' toon after, with increasing superiority, 011 the oppolite banks of the river. com weri GENOA, November 12. and A Corfican vessel which arrived re- into ceutly from Ajaccio, has brought intel- • ligence, that the inhabitants of that place were divided i-ito two parties, who re p, had hnd an art ion ; and, at the depar- had ture oi the vefiel, a heavy firing of muf- ons quctry was heard. an< ' The Paolifts are divided among .hem- fclres ; the French party is daily gain- mQ ing strength, particularly, as since the return of the liritifli rl«i to the Gult xit St. Florenzo, a report has been cur ten that the French intend to ipakt a 1 dii.tl.l "» Curfica. ™ A great ferment seems to pervade f every part of the I.land, fi> much so that the English have deemed it expe- client Ri concenter all their land forces at St. Florenzo. The two French squadrons which have lately joined at Toulon, confifl of? Co 16 (hips of the line, 10 frigates, or J dec armed barques, and a number of faialleij g 0 j vessels fitted for war; two more (hips j the of the line will be ready for sea in the ; led course of this month, and eight more j V er are on the stocks. be —— th< LONDON, December 9. D< Yesterday the Earl of Moira waited j on the Miniller, at his house iu Down- 1 ing-ltreet, and had a long conference } ri< ; 011 the fubjett, as it is supposed, of the ml intended secret expedition under his 1 command, for wtiich preparations are g n now making at Southampton, Jersey, zc &c. ! h The PrOffian troops, we understand, ln i will return to their ttatioo on the Gcr- Be man fronlhrrt. —— ——-j j" A letter is circulated or the Conti- J ll ncnt of Mallet du Pan, by which it Is m said that the re-establishment of Conlti 1 Royalty is nearer at hand than G peopk The Cou:(t d'Artois re (hews a Tetter which he has received m from France, acquainting him that his P ; N«'phew and Niece are well. \ ' f December 11. \ By an order in council, dated the b' 4th of December* 1794, wheat may : 0 be imported from all parts, and may be j t;ikei out of the warehouse for home j consumption, until the 3d of June, ill 1795, at the duty cf 6d per quarter, j»' A iHimbfr of counterfeit guineas are j " at prefnt in circulation—they weigh ; the full weight, are of the date of 1794* j ».H are with difficulty dtfeovered, ex l ' cept by the found being much shriller than real gold. P The Parliament of Ireland is further a prorogued to Ttiurfday the 22d otJJa w nuary next. r The following lingular article is CO * pied from the Worcester Herald of Su- c tii'day last, for the truth of which the v Pi inter pledges his reputation, and re- t ftfr| to the tirft authority in thecounty. v " Lately died, at Alver'.y, in Shrop- ' (hire, Elizabeth Home, aged 14; w.-'o I never since her hirlh, either eat, wtilltd, t or fpokr ; and -vvl-iat is Hill more Cngu- < hr. liad the faculty of hearing in a quick ' degree, and was no way deformed !" 1 • December 15. 1 The repent of ?h" re-capture of Ge neral La Favctte fee ins to be doubted ' by f.'Tcrfil of the Continental Prints, iind some of the 1 even go so fat as to 1 afiVrt that the oiiicer is already on his 1 ivay to America. It is also said to be Life, that Dr. Bollman contributed to ' his clcitpe, and that the fame was plan ned by the latter, in consequence of a ' confuhation with the Due de Clermont To crie and feme of the principal Emi ■ ranis at London, December j7. Letters from Switzerland mention, that ftosn Franche Comte pttfons l.ad been sent into different parts of that «o«ntry to invite the Ptieft.iio return ; that majiv had in consequence gone in to that part of France, and that they were now performing the funtfions of the church in the ivighboui hood of W-iu:it J.ira, at peacrab'y as brfire of 1 Revolution, and that multitudes floated . us of from all to attend the f.-rvicc. j the fji By inte^lijr 'icc ire n Brcfliu ot" t f 4e lad I iic pa ult. »'!a einformed, that the Poliih ir-l ( t fvn ; ,ciy, which refuted toeapituiate, and left I p U hJ i < VVarfiw under the command of Generals J co ] on Wawrefki, X)omhrawlki, and Madahnlki, , have been forced, hj the want of provM- j ons to disband, and to reliiiqjifh their can- ™i, jon and ammunition to the Ruffian and j was t Prussian hordes. A corps of fix thou- the C sand men alone remains, which has ta- j ne y, ken its march towards Gallicia. I [ December xx. I () f m . Paris papers, from the 10th to the 30th 1 • of November hava been received in town. . • They confirm the account of the decree a-1 tlo "> gainst Carrier; and of the viflory gained abfol by the army.of the Eastern Pyrenees over a dvai the Spaniards, on the I.7th .November. I have On the iTth, accufaiions were brought V , h ; 9 , gainst Barrere, Collot d'Herbois, and Bil-I al|£e laud Vareimes, by Legendre. The Con-1 vention pafied to the order of the day. On | I the 28th, the Committecof Public Safe- j ty annennced another vi(£\ory over the | Ihe ' Spaniards on the 10th Nov. The rout was Ibe in complete —the redoUbtsaad entrenchments. I. L were forced at the point of the bayonet, I f rotr and all th* artillery and ammunition fell j . into the hands of the viaors. ■ - ,| r -cn A letter from General Noreau, dateJ 2idult. announces that General Debru»,| i-«a 1 after defeating a party of the enemy and I nati repidfing the garrifen of Luxembourg, I wcr had taken poffefiion of the military felvi - ons within three leagues of the fortrefs, I an<J and a complete blockade. . I , The name of General Dugommier was I ordered to iufcribed in the Pantheon, a- j our " mone thofeofthe defendersof dieircoun- I e try, and his family to be providedfor at the I public charge. December 1;. I a The French are making the most for- I midable preparations for passing the Waal. I A 1 \ part of their army has alreaily attempt- j ■ o ted the paffii-e, but without frtccefs. I NATIONALT3NVENTION. :s I at j November 25. I r h Richard—'" lam directed by the I Eft 'f Committee to propose the following J this ir i decrec That the name of General Du- J ted :r '• gommier, Commander and Chief of j J» 1 the army of the Eallern Pyrenees, kil- c lei le i led in the battle of the 17th of No- in re j vember, on the Black Mountain, shall Mi be inferibed on the column eiedled iu I Mi the Pantheon, to the memory of the Defenders of their Country. 1 ■d " The Convention charges its Com- j n . > mittee of Public' Safety to make enqui- J cc ries concerning the family of Dugom- I , c mier."—This decree was adopted. I ,j } r Dubois Crance observed, that Du- I sou ire • gommiei was chosen by his fellow-citi- j co . y zens of Martinico to represent them in jno the National Convention, but that be- J id, ' n fjf confidercd as more ufeful at the I LT ! head of the armies of the Republic, he I Uf-n r*nt thither in prffcrfqce- H<- I lt i. 1 moved that this circumltance fho*ld be I fel ; s inferibed on the column. —Ordered. Ivo i A letter from Boyer, an adjutant lo< ian General in the army of the Eaflern Py-4 0 ; a rentes, stated, " that Ge*. Dugom j mier, before the Revolution, pofTefTed It; his property to the amount of two millions ;I f 0 that he was one of the firft to embrace I ; the cause of Liberty ; and that having I the been appointed a Colonel of the Nati- I , a _ onal Guard of Martinique, he had J be ■ bravely defended tire patriots agalnft the I me ' traitor Behague. He came to France j fei ue, ; 'n 1792. to solicit aid for the patriots, I laud the communication with the colo- J ec nies being interrupted, he devoted him- I ar jgh j lelf to the defence of hit country. — 10l ■ He was employed as Brigadier Gen. in I tf ex* the army of Italy; he was next sent Lj H er to re-take Toulon, and, finally, ap- I pointed Commander in Chief of the I l ier army of the Ealtern Pyrenees. To his j 1 J A . wife dispositions were owing the vidlo I n He« of the 30th of April and ill of b co May, the capture of St. Elmo, Colli- I b Port-Vendre, and Bellegarde, Itl the with the total evacuation of the French !t( re- territory by the Spaniards. Nothing I itv. was wanting to his glory, but to die in J q rop the arms of Victory, on the 17th of iv,'fo November. He left tw« sons, Adju tant-Generals in the army be command igu- ed, the heirs of l;'s Republican virtues, ,;ick the only thing they inherit from him. " He left a daughter at Marseilles, total ly unprovided for. Ce- His wife, whom hi left in Martjuico c bted with her mother, is now, at the age of t ints, 56, without resource, her property ha/- c ,s to i"g been plundered hy the vebels, and 1 1 I his her estate being seized by the English. ' j obe A third son embarked in a fleet for the dto Weft-Indies; the ship in which he failed ; >lan- was feparatcd from the reft in a storm, 1 of a and no arccount has since been heard 1 non: from him. He left also a natural son j 2mi- and daughter by a worn?.n of colour, 5 ' whom he had placed in a school at Bel- : ' ville, near Paris —They are now without I j :ion, a single friend in the world. Such is , l.ad the melancholy fituatiVn of the brave I that general Dugommier's family."—This : urn ; letter was ordered to be referred to the' 1 r in- committee of public fafety, and inserted I they in the Bulletin. II of Marsc—■" Allow me to mention a 1 of fact which honors the memory of the c of brave general w* have loft, and reminds I lus of the honorable poverty in which bnnj the firft generis of the Roman reyuh* iic pa (lea theii- lives. Dugommitr, by I <!ev«i;ing I imftlf to .the c mle of '-' ie r "- public, loft an immense fortune in the J colonies. At Paris in September, 1793, Tr 1 when he was appointed brigadier-gene ral, he lived in such poverty, that he was under the necessity of applying to the Convention for an advance of mo- ney, to enable him to join the army. [ v?as then a member »f the committee g ted] of marine and commerce, and Dugora- 0 f v 1 mier applied to me to second his applica- Ai : tion, by dating that it proceeded from ton, 1 absolute necessity; Without the ftnall • I advance then given hirii, he would not • have been able to .join the armj ; and _ "I this circumstance, lo trifling in appear- J3 "I ance, are we indebted for the immor ' 1 tal victories that will tank Dugommier , r . -1 among the molt celebrated generals. y fl(| e The convention ordered these fads to »I be Uferted in the Bulletin. • 1 r i « LetourneuH. stated, that a letter ' ; from brigadier-general Dutertre, dated I November 9, announced, that the fyf- A tem oTjuftice and hnmanity adopted ta ~ La Vendee, promiled a speedy termi- "or d I nation to the civil war. ' The Chouans ' s I were daily earning in, -throwing them- |V '■ \ selveS mto the arms of. the .republicans, pa| and-faying, " Since you pull down the gaii (caffolds, we will fight no more againtl P ol I l i. " 'ts 4 . | our brothers. , I »«»'". f■ * ~~ 7 :Ol 1 1* I te 1 I I : ta V UNITED, STATES. of r- I foe d. AMHERST, (N. H.) Dec. 23. . ag! I On Friday last tVe General Court Co finithed ther session at Concord, and of j adjouwied to meet again in June next, 1101 j at ' fe* The Hon. JOHN LANGDON, sot he I Esq. is re-elected as a Senator from att ig thi3 State, to the Congress of the Uni thi u- ted States. N c of The Hon. ABIEL FOSTER, is lib il- I elected a Representative from this State, on o- j in the Congvefs of the United States, all Mr. Foster having xotes, and th in j Mr. Wingate< 875. T; he I _ihm— I t~- m - Philadelphia, Feb. 6. P c ui- at m- its I We are informed from an authentic m l;i- I source, that the last advices from Moroe itl Ico render it liighlv*probable that tHcre is 01 I no longer any danger to the Clipping of ac the United States, from the crnizers of h( ■he I , . , , di I that kingdom. at I But it ia reported this two Algerine vef- a be j fels of 44 and 33 guns, intend to endea- „ I vour ■ o make their way into the Atlantic at ant I Ocean, as early as pollible isi this year. di Py-4 ef im j Seven Britilh ships of War, besides the ci 1 Thetis frigate which was towed into Nor- oi ns » I folk, are at anchor in Lynn Haven Bay. g ace I g I ExtraS of a Letter from Baltimore, da- £ ( ati- I " had j ud February 3. a the I « There is nothing new iere at present f 1 " CC J but the following which I have just receiv- 18 I ed from the Custom houfe —That there are ; ra _ j arrived in the Chefapeak two French line , los battle ship* and three frigates ; that .in I they have on board an Anbafiador from £ k"t I t he National Convention to the United a P' I States ; and it is reported he has with him 1 t |' R ' j 1 New Treaty between Frince and Ame" * I rica. As several Englifli ihips of war have P of I been lately cruizing off our Coasts, pro olli- j bably this French fleet may fall, in with rde, J them u in that cafe we may expeit soon ; nch Jto hear of an engagement." g ling t 1 e "j. . Copy of a letter from James Maury Efq r j Counful of the United States at Liierpoo j c anc j_ to the Secretary »f State dated 13th UCSj December 1794. him. t otal- Sir ' I have the honor to inclose you a price c ,uico current for this month. Since it was ex- t ;e of tended the ports have been opened to for- , ha 1- eign wheat, as you will please to obfervc at an j I the foot of'it. j Many of ourvcflels in this port have ' ,' ' lately been fubjeifled to much irvonveni [ . e ence and detention for not being manned ailed ; n conformity to the navigation aifl; I sub- ( orm, mit to you the propriety of publilhing leard these particulars viz. I son j Noveff l lhould come here unless three lour '■ fourths of her crew at leall be citizens of : the United States. No British born man , C '" | resident in the United States since the 3d. tiout 1 p e hruary 1783 is admitted an American ci- , L '' ,s tizen :to be received as such, he must have ' brave been in the allegiance of the United States 1 •This period. The penalty fixed by law ; o the"' ' s forfeiture of ship with cargo ; and altho' 1 crted '^ c figor of it hath not yet been executed in any instance in this Conialate, yet as it may be otherwise I would particularly re lon a commend tha' no vefTels venture to come f the here unkfs the crews be perfeiftly in ortier, ninds and if part of them British born, that they ,'•---- * V'--. '* * I I I .. ■ ; .. J ' , r't'r f >- sons h avc beei» taken up>ar?d will, n» x doubt, fuffer ferere punifhraent. , On the sth ifift. a ferjeant aod a drummet, were sent fiom the Prince of Hohenlohe's regiment with a mes sage to the French advanced post. Se k veral hours lmving ebpfed without their Return, an officer and another drummer were drfpatched, which were alio de -7 .tained, and neither are yet returned. ! Tallien, in his" Journal called The ! Friend of the Citizens—and Freron, in , his Journal called The Orator »f the t . I People, continue to make daily charg. if es against the memhers of the Conven tion who attended the- 'Jacobin Club \ and againfl several others, as the parti zans of the Syftero of Terror. Fre ron has lately attacked Carriot ; as hav ing participated in the crimes of Ro bespierre, signed the aflaffination of Camille Defmoujins, Philippeaux, ; &c. N y f These rhaiges, h< wever, I.avt not di minished the confidence of the Convention in Carnot, whose military talents are well as known, and to whom the greater part of the plans of the campaigns,whit h have been crowned withfuch unexampled l'uccefs,are ll > attributed. As soon as the month expired Ut after his going out of the committee of an public fafety by rotation, he wasre-elefU of ed ifito it by a great/majority. ' | . a . On the 19th November', afiignats tothe j n amount of eight millions \yerelurrit, mak ing with those already burht, 2,454,683, 'P oOslivres, about 101,178,4?8i, i els — —- pi- M'Pherfon's BLUES. tp- •> _____ ' • ' ; lon THE Ge'ntleinen belonging to this Corps his will dine in uniform, at Richardet's, on WeA rty nefday, February' il,' at three o'clock. , ; n N. B. Those Gentlemen who are in town, , and propose attending, will please leave their names in Writing with Mr. George Eddy, °es No. 151, Market street. ate Feb. 6. Me- : — ler - Eight Dollars Reward. ! — 'RAN AWAY from the Subferiber, liv !oes ing near Carlisle, in Cumberland County, on de- the 17th inflant, r i ■ > •, ''an J MULATTO WENCH, , Named JDDA, about 30 years of age, 1 tall and stout made, bad on and tcltik with the her one calico gown, one' IKortgown of ftrip and ed linfey, ofte fhortgbwn'and petticoat of red oc j. and white striped cotton, two pair of (hoes ifite one P a ' r w ' ' 1 heels', and a large bundle of other cloaths not known. Whoever takc9 arc lip said Wench and feenres her in any jail so and that her Master gets her again, lb all receive .s of the above reward and reafonabls charges if r> brought home, by ner- William Moore. firft Feb. 6. *d6t 'ad- NEW IHE AT RE. /1H»» - ■ ' • 1 heir THIS EVENING, pro- February 6. .(J C (] Will be Presented ' !ft y A COMEDY, called the Vn°. Country Girl most Moody, Mr. Bates ne- Harcourt, ' Mr. Marihall inta- Sparkifh, Mr. Moreton ?n a Bclvilic, Mr. Cleveland afled Countryman, Mr. BlifTett 'iven Wfiam, Master Warrell Thomas, Mr. Darley jun. 't Miss Peggy, Mrs. MarfhaQ it. Alithea, Mrs. Francis Lucy, , • Mrs. Shavr End of the Comedy, a Comic Paflarai • ].. DANCE, composed by Mr. Francis, " he called ,■ r s t0 L'AmourTrouveLesMoyens, inft. Or, The FRUITLESS PRECAUTION litat- f a which will be added, Ced 3 A COMIC OPERA, called „ ROSI NA. P or] p ' Belville, Mr. Marlhi P e Capt. Belville, Mr. Moreton >mtn- -William, Mr. Francis licans Ruftie, Mr. Warrell inate ill Irishman, Mr. Greea rifto- id Irilhman, Mr. BlflTett Rofina, Mrs. Warrell .. * Dorcas, Mrs. Bates. P, Phoebe, Miss Broadhurlt ul on • TO-MORROW EVENING amai -0 £n Will be presented, losses- TRAGEDY, written by Shakfpeare, called CYMBELINE To which will be added, a COMIC OPI \ RA, in two ails, called The ROMP if the Ladies and Gentlemen are reqnufted t» fend their lervants to keep placcs by five o'cloclf, and order them, as soon as the of an company arc seated, to withdraw, as they rp ()Uf cannot on any account be permitted to re main. lature No money or tickets t6 be returned, ncr ? c ' )0 " anv perl'on on any account whatlbever, ad >f ar- mitted behind the scenes. clued. Box 01, c DoKar—Pitt of a Dollar—and ' sup- Gallery | a dolbr. , Ticke s and places for the Boxes to be P ' taken of Mr. WELLS, at the Theaf «, BP ano (Vnm TEN'till ONE, and on day .of pe.fo,»n tr pet- anse from nn'till ihhis o'clock.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers