' y ' - J <✓ A 5. i -: fir Eloquence. ff HI '• hfirib -frcipscifiily folkite the pa tbc puoiic, lor th, com fci nccrn v nt oj , SCHOOL, on thr evenings j, oi TttC uay, and Xnrurday, from £ sto 8 o'clock, for /ovtog Gendertn'n whole »] parents *iay wiih to iuvc ul u imiructcu in Ohaj.or v, as ah agrL-eablc reiaiation aitci the more ufefal Undies oi tiiw tiay. It i» a fad. well known, t at v>ry many who Jiave had the .dvaatag. of a £ool education, have not acquired, through life, the most ap proved and elegant mode o public delivery, * the pleaf'Te and advantage of which must be strongly telt by every one of true judgment (!) The fcubferib r ha>, irom early life, been intimately acquainted w th some of the firft literary chara6t< rs, and has paid Uriel atten tion to Garrick, Sheridan, and the belt Orators i of the age ; he trulls, therefore, that he will be found cap ble of mrtruiting his pupil.- ... the best manner of reading aud reciting. As icon as a dozen are engaged to excite the Seed» of Emulation, the School will be opened by the public's humble servant, John Dei Moulins. A public day of Speaking, once a quar ter,fcr the infpedion of parents and friends. * m * Private Inftru&ions given any hour in the day, s2r.i liofc favouring J. D. M. with their adtfref* at No. 89, S. Fourth-street, (hall b< immediately waited or, and the terms will then be fettled agreeable to their inclina tions. 4t. g T. STEPHENS, BOOKSELLER a»D STATIONER, 1 No. 57 South Second Strekt, PHILADELPHIA, 1 Respectfully informi the public, that at his Store they may be supplied with rooik of the modern European and other pub lications oi merit, oil Politic*, Divinity, Law, the Belies Letti*es, &c. &c.—Alio a great q variety of ELEGAN T PRINTS and Paint ings, and every article in the Stationary bu finefs ; whicn he continues, as ujual, to dil pofe of at the lowed prices. Gentlemen's Libraries turnifliedor purchas ed ; and the utmoil value, in exchange or e*fli, given for any quantity of iccond hand fiooki. Wholesale Dealers supplied at the above- Store on very moderate tcrni&. May 1. stf. IMPORTED, In the Shift Manchester, Copt. Cox, juji ar rived from Liverpool. aid fur Sale fay the pacba/ the United States of* A- 1 merica, "fames Pb. Paglui of the said Diftriil depcfited in th's Office tfoe Title of a r Book the Right whereof he claims as Author t in the following words, to wit: " lhe FEDERAL POLITICIAN, by ■ " fames Ph. Puglia, Teacftcr of the Spa " uir.i »nd Italian Languages, and author " of the Sphhifll work entitled el Drftngtto ! " M llunbrt, or the Man Undeceived. &.c. 1 u Est modus in reous, sunt terti dsrriqvc Fines i U Quos ultra utraque nequh cousisttre REC TUM. In conformity to the Act of Cpngrefs of the United States intituled tl An AA for the 4t erftouragemcnt of Learning, by securing ' r " the copies of Maps, Charts and Book* to «' the Authors and proprietors of such Copies * during the times tberefn mentioned. SAMUEL CALDWELL Clerk of th* Difitui if Pemfylvania. May a tuthi tf Newcastle Pier Ldttery. The returns of the drawinjr arrive daily M the OFFICE, No. 149. C! efaut ilreet,be tween Ftiurth and Fifth a torreil Nunierfcal Book is kept; a!fo, the nips of each day's drawing Sled.— Information givefl where a ~evv fvrfraining tickets may be had, v>arra*Uffumbvia*. Cow trixfi '■ .""j prixei tttJirJ. Tht'iOrh Day's Drawing is arrived. A Sf FIVE THOUSAND tfOLl/ARS Arawn that day. W.ifhifigtoft Lottery< The public are informed by (hat this Lottery gainlt tyranny. Without doubt those woithy rcprefentatives who have remain ed within the reach of the tyrant, filter ed still more than I ; some of them were laden with chains because of their love for liberty ; others who saw the threatening ne arm of the opprclTor constantly lifted over ; n their heads, prepared generaufly, and ex- C , H pecltd with patience, the moment to rife "of upon and crush the tyrant. It is not be cause you will terminate my fufferings that I thank you, with all France ; it is j bccaufc.you have f. 't-d #ur country. Hap py ji he, after r.aVin® been' opprefl'cd vou for liberty, may hope to deiend her again with vou. 'JEAN BAPTISTE UOUVET, one of the Representatives profcribedin 1793. ANECDOTE. MAR.\T, deprived by nature of all thole qualities which render man beloved and rclpcClabie in society, lupplied in im | pudencc and atrocity what he wanted in : eloquence ami good lenle. When he en c tered the Flail or* the Convention, he tuft immediately hit eyes with an air 01 lelf fatisfaition on the I'peiVators in the tri ' ' bun/". which l'crvcd as a signal to a psn • cj(h* V )* to break out in iholit3 of applauie. Marat Commonly took b»s feat on the fu'lt bench pppotite the Prefideat, but this ill-(haped dwarf, who conceived himfell to be the high priest of liberty, did not long remain Jn one place; he often moved triumphant from orte part of the hall to the other j w her ever a member attempted to refute the nonsensical arguments, or combat the ferocious tenets of his party, there he Sew and overwhelmed his adver farv with gi"ofs inveilives: If he could not frighten the eloquent orators from the tribune by reiterated insults and menaces, then he gave a signal to his people iu the tribunes, who dro vntd the voice of his enemies by a tremendous tumult. One day during lfnard's Prefidence, when sortie deputations of Paris demanded the exclusion of certain members of the Convention, the deputy Vincent, former ly a military rfun, had placed himfell on purpose behind Marat, In erder to hinder - him from quitting his feat. The conceit ed friend of the people attempted several times to ru(h upon the moderates who in vtighed in the most forcible manner a gjinft the perfidious machinations of the , Commune of Par'u, but Vincent, who had lain hold of his coat, pulled him as often back as lie tried to rife. The extreme conceitednefs of Marat did not permit him to fuppc fe it pofiible that any body fiiouid venture to insult an • iliuiirkxis personage like him ; he afcrib • eti the behaviour of Vincent to an ardent • delire of enjoying his company, and en > tered in a conversation ; he began with his usual rhapsody on the crimes of the patty of Statefmcn, \_hommes iTctat~\ but hardly had he reached the middle of his vocabulary of inveflivet, when Ifnard in a solemn manner, invited Tallien, Legen dre, Freron, Chabot, lientabole, and the reft of Marat's noisy adherents to refpeift the fanfluary of liberty : Marat wanted | now to call the Prelident to order, but be- | - ing unable to refill the powerful argil- 1 . rnents of his (lout companion, he exclaim ed, " Ifuard is indeed a very handsome ' T man, but this is all his merit j he affefts ' • the gravity of a Solon, and speaks like a 1 blockhead." " Why.' replied Vincent, t 1 there is certainly a great difference be- ( tween.Marat and Ifnard ; his phyfiogno- j . rnv bears the damp, of vLmie.~fc> ut tliou art crime perfonified." Marat, furious at this remark, broke out in base invec- , lives, and went off, laying, " Take care, I'll mark thy character in such large let ters on thy back, that every Sans Culotte (hall cry out, There if a Conspirator." The deputy Vincent was arretted after J the 31ft May, 1793, and re-admitted in ■ the Convention after the fall of Robe ' fpierre. t From late aril Papers. [The following papers we have never . met with in the London Prints; though 1 , by their importance they deserve to be ' recorded.3 ; NATIONAL CONVENTION. ; December 15. , 1 A Secretary reid a letter transmitted by ; 1 Isnard from his subterranean retreat which 1 he inhabits these last fifteen months ; he 1 1 desired the Convention to judge him or to point out a tribunal where he might 1 . prove his innocence, which has not been I 1 tarnished since 1789. 1 > "I do not denund, he said, a repara- 1 f tion of the wrongsl have been overwhelm : ed with : Ido not claim a compensation 1 _ for the hardlhips 1 endured : acknowledge . my innocence andl will bear the frowns I ! of fortune with irdifference. Let Ifnard < r perish ; if his death can in any manner contribute to th: welfare of the Re s public ; he will die contented provided 1 3 that true liberty, those principles which 1 , he always adored, triumph as they now e do." - Note concerning IJnard, Marat, and i Vincent. 1 e [lfnard was known in the legislative »f- I fembly as one of the most eloquent and energetical defenders of liberty agiinft e the infidiout manotuvres of a treacherous y court ; re-ele&ed by his fellow citizens i. of the department of Var (Provence) to e represent them in the National Conventi on he diltinguifhed limfelf by an unlhak [l en adherence to trie principles ; in the winter of 17911093, when pirty spirit d was carried to the highest pitch, Ifnard, d Condorcet, Gregoire and many others of I the diftinguiftied members of the 1- Convention fook their feats in the centre e of the hill called the plain and were dif i- owned by both parties which seemed de •- termined to facrifiee the interest of the e Republic to private views and pellonal ran ir cour. However, Ifnard, chough not en g raged enough in the opinion of the moun ■r tamers was so far from being fufpe&ed of c- connivance with the Briffotins that about a fe month before the revolution of the 31ft -- May took place, Marat in his execrable rs journal, which served at ohce for a lift of is proscription and a letter of recuiamendati- ' 00, sold his>n .■< • uV '' ' c j \vant Ban ere ir.tj iluaru ; tiu-y lay 1793- nard depolited inmediateiy his powers as deputy, as soon as Barrere, organ of the committee of government, invited the de nounced members to suspend tlienifelves voluntarily till the crilis was over : " I have no will, said he, but that of the people, and no wilh but for the triumph of liberty. If my country can be preserv ed from the horrors of a civil war, I am not only willing to give up my feat in ,the Convention, but ready to facriiice every thing dear upon earth ; my head May fall if the life of a single citizen can be saved at that price." The friends of Ifnard, for he had many amoug his colleagues, peifnaded lnra a short time after his arrelUtiori, to fly from Paris; because innocence was no longer a fafeguard in the eyes of his perfeeutors ; and the question was not whether he ought to die for his country, but whether he ought to offer his head to a set of men who were determined to immolate the marked out vi&ims indiscriminately as conspirators, in order to cloak their tyran ny under the mafic of justice.] Chenier, in hit report on public i nil ruc tion in France, on the 3d of Jan. con cluded as follows : ' " We have ptit into the lift, the ce lebrated Thomas Paine. The caprice. , of the tyrants had driven him from the Convention as a Foreigner ; you have revoked that decree, and we no'longer fee in Thomas Paine, a man of genius without fortune ; but a colleague (3ear to all the friends of humanity; a citi zen of the world equally perfected by Pitt and Robespierre ; a retnarka- J ble circumstance in the life of this phi lofopher,who opposed thearms of com mon sense, to the sword of tyranny, the ! sacred lights of man, to the Miehiave lifm of Englilh politics, and who by ' two immortal writings, hasdeferved well of human kind and conlecrated liberty in both hemifpberw." ■ ■ _ By this Day's Mail. From the GEORGU GAZETTE. FALMOUTH, (Jamaica) Feb. 18. ARRIVED yesterday the barque Nep tune, Miller, from New-York. The Neptune failed from New-York on the ltd of D.cemher, and on the Bth of January, at 3 P. M. fell in with the pri vateer Point Petre, off the weft end of Tortuga ; at P. M. the privateer fired at the Neptune, on which she hove to, when the Point Petre sent a boat on board with a prize master and two men, who ordered her into Port an Paix. As soon as the Neptune anchored Captain Miller, received further orders to wait the deter mination of the French Adminiftratiop, '• whether or not he fiiouid be permitted to depart the harbour. Under the mailt of ! trading they compelled him to deliver 100 1 barrels of Hour, 40 of pease, 21 of corn , meal, 10 of pilot bread, and about >OOO ( feet of lumber, the value of which (after a detention of thirty days) they paid, by forcing him t( take 9 hoglheads of very 1 bad sugar, at the moderate price of nine i dollars per cwt. It is to be observed they 1 put their own price on the goods taken, and those given for payment. A mode so ( novel to the Americans will probably operate as a caution to those who attempt voyages of this nature with a speculative ! view. The Neptune failed from Port au Paix > on the nth iniiant. ; CHARLESTON, April 11. Yesterday arrived the schooner Betsey, Douglas, Plank-Bridge ; ihip Fame, Da- ' vis, Boston. ' Letter from Mr. Pickering, Secretary of ' 1 War of the United States, to the Go- 1 vernor of the state of Georgia. War Department, March zotk, 1795. Sir, I AM direfled, by the Prefulent of the United States,'to inform your excellency, ' that on the 2d imft. he received from James < Gunn, Esq. one of the Senators, and Tho- 1 mas P. Carnes, Esq. one of the Reprefeh- | tatives in Congress from the state of Geor gia, a letter, requesting that a treaty might be held with the Indiaßs claiming the right of foil in certain lands lying beyond f the temporary boundary of Georgia, for 1 the pnrpofe of extinguilhing their claim I to them. This request deinauded, and ; has received much consideration. 'The I j crisis at which it has been made, has oc casioned no small cmbarraffment to the ■m *■ . r —r ■ ■ tL ' V :; -' J '**«■ The ,i have bctn v. nn difficulty reitraijicd • from open war : atty movement which t may hazard that even, mult Ue WHt , OU S . made ; and it is well known, th« n„ m J i iures «c»te to much jeatSuiy ailK ./ . at those which aficet thJ'C^Sg . they are. previoufiy dii'pofc-u lo g, * ut them - How tar th is may be the cafe, is unknot' I and asCoiigrds,-KW ,lu: y - the lituatiou of tfle foiithmi ana south. weltern frontiers, have provided i n t h» : ad\ ot appropriation merely for their He 1 fenfive protection, it behove* the- ejwecu • tivc to obterve great de kacy in t| le rru" . nagtmem of Indian a flairs.' i v j 3ny (n _ - quirks and arrangements rnui'j p, ic*dt . the treaty required ; and as time is rq ii ! lite for theie, no defyike »iiiW Can i pi' Cleric be given. ■ I The aAs of the kpifiaiu/e i»PCr eW vi*. r pne passed on the *2ih of Dcctinber, %• ' . otilel " on % 7th of January lal|;, tor . piopriating and felling.lndian land, wer t laid before Coiigrdi. The delibcra-.iont of the two houl'es lfi'ued in "a cync in rent rclolution for directing the attorney gene ral to inyelligate the title of tlfe ffate of Georgia, to the lands fold to the fevtraL companies, by the a& of the 7th of J#nu ary. A copy ot this reiolutiou ] l laV e the honor to tncloi't. The request before mentioned, embraces an important objts. The fuel., here d«x tailed shew feme of the difficulties in whit h it is in olved : the Count ction between the two atis is not the leaf!. Tile Preliderit, therefore, while he is felicitous to gratify the willies of the people of Georgia," 10 far a-mayconfift with his public duty, thinks it tie. (.liiiry to avoid a haiiy decision on the fubjecf wi.ii which sb many weighty c'onii derations are combined. A pofrponement is the more necefTaiy, because.it is deemed proper that the commifficncrs for„hjldi.ng l'uch a treaty as that which is r„-qtn.ficj, (hould he appointed with ihe advice and confentof the i'enate ; and under the pref lure of tfie legislative business at the clufe of a ieffion, It was not priflicahle to aUmid to this matter before the adi'Uirnihefr .cvf Congrels. The senate will afitmble on rite Bth ps June, on executive fcisf.r.rfj; in tl,c interim, the President will be able further to examine the question of the treaty, in all its relations. I have the honorto be with great refpetf your excellency's obed.'erir fervaiit, 1 • I:via*by Pickering. A true copy from the original file in the executive. E. Waters, s. t D. NASSAU, (N. P.) This day the following a: tides, ci m pofing nearly the whole of tlk- c.:i : 'ii of the fllip Hafmpny, Robins- n, »n Ame rican vefTel, from Bordeaux 10 Norfolk, captured by the Argonaut, wefe con demned in the court of vice-adrr.iralty, as being French property, viz. 46 ingots of silver, 447 hogthends and 300 catri of claret, 200 j i;es c f brawilv, (jO tierces of vinegar, cloves. From the Ntiv Tor ': Evening PJI. Meflrs. Prinur:, AS a gentleman of taste, I cannot help admiring the gr. nd: ur of the au dience that attended the Mulical En tertainment last evening at the Tontine. How enchanting the appearance, how charming the drtfs, and how divine the behavior of the Ilndies; harf*yny a»4 sociability were the chaudei illics that illum'd the company ; equality- was the ruling objeft of the evening, for, from the lady of the highejl rani, down to the tooth drawers wife, they were all well met. It was however so fie lamented, "the caniages that conveyed those heavenly mujical J.uls, were not all equally ele gant : Some came in burnished Hnd gilded duaches .with servants in livery, that proclaimed to the gazing crpwd their owners Were-perfoi.,l of no mean extraction ; others, whose desires wei« equally bent on feeing the fliow, had to take paltage in the liar!: mourning veh:~ cle : there was not, however, any one so "grand but had a competitor, and no one so mean bcit had its fellow. Thimder-ltruck, I (food and to fee the cavalcade ! The Coach liilt, and in procefuMn followed the Berlin, the Landau, Chariot, Calash, Gig, Whiflcey, aiid Chair, while the pranc ing of liately fleeds caused envy in some' and admiration in others. The dark paflages (by nature) that conveyed the loveliest of the lovely to the enchanting apartment, were elegantly lighted ; but the door was a little too low to adroit the feathers without creating some in ! convaniencies. We are happy however to hear that no accidents took place. The citizens who have fafhionable wives and daughters, cannot but revere the, foundertof this inftrucHng and amufmg foriety, who have gcr.tr.,uiiy u«ifpn:t ed themselves to our snores, to teath our females the accoroplifhments of t*i> h life, and learn them to ttead i» ftepi their proi>enitors were ignorant- of. BEAU DASH. NEW-YORK, April 27. Many people suppose that monarrhiet are, in their nature, more rtiaitial aud fond of war, than rt pi:bln.s. f The drf organizeni of this country are trequof 1 tt