Price of Stocks'. 6 ptr Cents ' 20f 3 per Cents l i/io Deferred IV3 Bunk of tile United States 4^3 Pennf/(vania 40 North- America 45 NEIV "tHE AT RE: Miss BROJDHURSr sNight. Oil Monday Evuiing, June 8, > to the Opera, Mil. Mokston wilL rAt OCCASIONAL ADDHESH -~V fir MR. HARWOOD. f r which W-'l he (with ations) a Comic Op ra, never per formed . here, called ~1 ne Beggars Opera. Pcachmr.', Mr Bates Lockit, Francis Captain Macheath, Mr. Marfiall Filch, Mr. Blijfett. jemmy Twitcher, Mr. Cleveland. Mat of the Mint, Mr. Barley Ben Budge, ' Mr. Gr en Robin of Mr. J. Darley Nimming Ned, Mr. Warrell, jun Harry of Paddington, Mr. Warrell Mrs. I'eachum, Mrs. Sbatv tolly Poaehum, Miss Broadharjl Lucy Lockit,' Mrs. OUmixon Ir. kit HI. A HORNPIPg, in character, by Mr. We.rrell.iim. Between the 2u and 3d Acis of the Opera, A CONCERTO w the VIOLIN, , By Monf. 9ouLL.tr. [Composed by Girnowiecki.j The Opera to conclude with a DANCE, by the characters. Previous to the Farce, by way of Overture The BATTLE of PRAGUE, [Adapted for a full Bind. By G.J.C.Schetky.j' I. Slow March. | tillery. Word of Command 6. Trumpet of Recall, and ift signal cannon. 7. Cries 3c groans of 3. Bugle horn lor the j the wounded &dying Cavalry, and id. fig-|B. Trumpet of Vidkory. nal Cannon '9. Grand March. 4. Trumpet call. (ia.Turkifh Music. 5. Attack. Cannonade.! 11.General Rejoicing. Muiketry.Lighthorle Go to bed Tom. and advancing. Heavy ar-, Finale. To which will be added a Farce in two a&s, called The First Floor. Whim fey, Air. Grceu; Mon ford, ' Air. Cleveland Young Whim fey, Mr. Moreton. Furnilh, Mr. Bates I Simon, Mr. Blijfett. Tim Tartlet, Mr. HariuodJ Frank, Mr. Warrell, jun. Snap, Mr. Darley t jun. Landlord," Mr. Warrell Foitboy, Majler T. Warrell A'lr:. PattyPan, Mr;. Roivfon. Charlotte, I.ljL OUfiJJ- Nancy, Mrs. Hervey Tickets may be had of Miss Broadhurft. No. 21 North Seventh street, anu at the usu al places. MRS. SHAW'S Night will be on Wod nefday. A Comedy, ncves performed here, called TheQ' II APT E R&/A.C CID EN T S To which will be added a Musical Inter- * hide, never performed here, called Linco's Travels. W'th other Entertainments. Mr.&Mrs.FßANClS.'sNigibt, , Will be on FRIDAY. Ladies and Gemlemen are rcqnefted to fend their servants to keep placcs by five o'clock, and order them, as soon as the company are seated, to withdraw, as they cannot 011 any account be permitted to re main. Tickets and places for the Boxes to be tak«n of Mr. Wells, at tne The at « from ten'till one, and on days of perform* ane? from TKN'tiil three o'clock. Alfoat Rice's Bookstore, No. 50, and Carey's No. 118. Market Ureet. — rix ot a Dollar—and Gallery 5 a dojlai. Just Imported, And for Sale by yoseph Anthony Iff Son, A Quantity of Nankeens oi fine quality, An affortmcnt of India Silks in boxe9, And a few boxes containing CompleatSets of Tea Table China. They 'also have JuJl Landing, 200 Barrels Prim Bofiou Beef, 70 Barrels Pork, Malaga Wine in Quarter casks, biuret in calks and cases, Russia Hemp, 3itto Sail Duck, Ravens Duck, , White and Brown (heetings, iaft India Sugars in Sacks, Hogs Lard, tn kegs and barrels, Whalebone, Whale Oil, & Spermacaeti candles N. England Tow Linen, ' Vindow Ghtfs of various ltzes, and .1. neat assortment of Looking GlaUcs. Jue % dxot at -tTtc ' , Z. Office Nc> 149 Chcfnut Street', concerning , > e Drawing of the Wafhingt n and Pater- t - n Lotteries—and alio-where 'i'ickets may : 1 ■ kad. J Far Sale, \ ' .—HE time of a Stout NEGRO LAD, who L has upwards of fix years to serve. t. E-Kjuire of the Printer. 7 fun; 8 d t EXTRA C T, from Plrt 11. A BONE to Gnaw, f&r the DEMOCRATS. Siege of Lyons. Conclnded. The pause was not long. The depu ties, profiting by the impious frenfy with *vhich they had inspired the soldiery and the mol), and by the consternation of the relpe&able inhabitants, continued" their butchery with redoubled furv. Thole who led the unhappy fufierers to execution were no longer ordered to confine them -1 selves to l'uch as were entered on the lilt of j profcriptioiij but were permitted to take whoever they thought worthv of death ! To have an enemy amonp th« democrats, to be rich, or even thought rich, was a fu.Ticient crime. The worus, nobeleman, prielt, lawyer, merchant, or even iioneft , man, were i'o many terms of proluripti on. Three times was the place of the guillotine changed, at every place holes were dug to receive the blood, and yet it raain the gutters ! the executioners were tired, and the deputies, enraged to fee tiiat their work went on l'o slowly, repre sented to the mob that they were too mer ciful, that vengeance lingered in their hands, and that their enemits ought to perifti in mass ! * Accordingly, next day, the execution in mass began. The prisoners were kd out, from a hundred to three hundred at a r time, inro the out lkirts of the city, where they were fired upon, orftabbeJ.— , One of these maflacres deserves a particu lar notice. Two hundred and sixty nine perfonsj taken indlfcriininately among all classes and all ages, were led to Brotteaux, ' and there tied to trees. In this lituation they were fired upon with grap lhot. Here the cannoneers of Valenciennes, who had not the courage to defend their own , walls, who owed their forfeited lives to i the mercy of the royaliits, valiantly point ed their cannons against them, wh<*they were bound hand and foot!, The coward f is .ever cruel. Numbers of these unfor . tunate prisoners had only their limbs bro . ken by the artillery; these were dispatched with the sword or the musket. The great est part of. the bodies were thrown into • the Rhone, some of them before they were I quite dead; two men, in particular had strength enough to swim to aland j!>ank.in , *he river. One would have thought, tfiat, thus saved as it were by miracle, the ven geance of their enemies would have pur lued them no further ; but, no sooner were they perceived, than a party of the dragoons of Lorraine eroded the arm of the river, stabbed them, and left them a prey to the flowjs of the) air Rea der, fix your eyes on this theatre of car nage You barbarous, you ferocious monsters ! Vou have found the heart to commit these bloody deeds, and lhall no one have the heart to pubtifh them, in a country t*at boasts of an unbounded liber ty of the press ? Shall no one tell, with what >pleasure you plunged your daggers into the defencelefs breafis of those whose loolto—JmJ ofiiir putted your cowa-rd hearts! Shall no one tell, with what he roic what god like conftaney they met their fate ? How they smiled at all your menaces and cannibal geiliculations > they despised you in the very article of death ? Strewed with every fweetefl flower be the grave of Mons. Chapius de Maubourg, and let his name be graven on . every faithful heart! This gallant gentle man who was counted one of the firft en gineers in Europe, fell into the hands of the democrats. They offered to spare his fife, if he would serve in the armies of the Convention: they repeated this offer, with their carabines.at his fcreaft. " No," replied he, " 1 hatfe never fought but for " my God and my king; despicable cow " ards ! fire away !" The murder in mass did not rob the guillotine of its prey; there the blood flowed without interruption. Death it felf was not a refuge from democratic fu ry. The bodies of the prisoners who were dead of their wounds, and of those who, not able support the idea of an ig nominious death, had given tliemf Ives the fatal blow, were carried to the fcaf fdld, and there beheaded, receiving thou sands of kicks from the fans culottes, be cause the blood would not run from them. Perfonsfrom their sick beds, old men, not able to walk, and even women found in child bed were carried t(f the murderous machine. The refpedtable Mons. Lau ras was torn from his family of ten chil dren and his wife big with the eleventh.— The diilraiSled matron, ran with her chil dren, threw herfelf at the feet of the bru tal deputy Collot D'Herbois. No mercy ! Her conjugal tenderness, the cries of her children, evety thing cal culated to foften the heart preftnt£d themselves before him, but in vain. Take away" (laid he, to the officious /ruffians by-whom he was surrounded) — f ' take awa-y the (he rebel and her whelps."f Thus spurned from the * Let not the reader imagine that the Convention did not approve of all this. A depuiat: on from the cit\ went to Paris re presented at the bar of the Convention the ■ devastation and carnage to which their ci- I tywas a prey; but in place of being heard i with that attention they deserved, they i lucre thrown into a dungeon, and the Con- • ■ventiqn decreed that LyonsJhould be dejlroy ' ed even to its very name, which was in ' future to be commune affranchie (free com- t mon), and that a column Jhould be erected > to commemorate its having warred againjl > Liberty! ' i \The readers indjgnation certainly will t not be lejfentd, when he hears that this Col- > lot D'Herbois, this arbiter of life and death I was, before the revolution, a player !it is I. presence of him who alone was able to save her beloved hufbarwj, ihe followed him to the place of execution. Her shrieks when (he saw him fall, joined t® the wild nefs of her looks, but too plainly foretold her approaching enct. She was seized with the pains of .child birth, and was carried home to her noufe; but as if hertor mentors had (hown too much lenity, the fans culotte commissary soon after arrived, j took posse ffioii of all the effects in the name of the sovereign people, drove her " from her bed and her house, from the door r of which (he tell dead in the street. -f ' About three hundred women hoped, by 1 their united prayers and tears to touch " the hearts of the ferocious deputies; but all their efforts were as vain as those of j Madarfie Ltiuras. They were threatened with a discharge of grape shot. —Two of ! 1 them, who, notvyithftandfftg the menaces ' 1 of the democrats, Hill had the coarage to I ' persist, were tied during fix hours to the 1 pofls of the guillotine ; their own hulbands [ were executed before their eves, and their ! : blood sprinkled over them ! ' Madanoifettt Servian, a lovely young : woman of about eighteen years of age, was executed, because (he would not disco ' ver the retreat of her father ! " What !" (said (he nobly, to the democratic com mittee) "What! betray my father ! im " pious villains, how dare you suppose » it Madame Cochet, a lady equally famed 1 for her beauty and her course, was ac cused of having put the matchTo a cannon 1 during the siege, and of having affifled in 1 her hit/band' j escape. She was condemn ed to liiffer death ; (he declared herfelf with child, and the truth of this declara tion wa» attested by two surgeons. In vain did (he Imp! >re a respite, in vain did (he ' pltad the innocence ,of the child that was in her womb : htr head was fevered from her body amidst the death howl of the ' democratic brigands. Pause here, reader, and imagine, if you 1 can, another crime worthy of being added to those already mentioned. Yes, there is ontf more, and hell would not have been fatisfied, if its ministers had left it uncom m tted. Libidinous brutality ! Javogues, one of the deputies from the Convention opened the career. His example was fol lowed by the soldiery and the mob in ge neral. The wives daughters of al most all the refpe&able inhabitants, par ticularly of such as had emigrated, or who were murdered, or in prison, were put in a state of requifit'ion, and were ordered, on J pain of death, to hold their Bodies (I j spare the reader the term made use of in the decree) in readiness for the embraces of the true republicans! Nor were they 1 content with violation : the firft ladies of ' the city were led to the tree of Liberty i (of Liberty !) and these made to take the < hands of chimney-sweepers and common | felons ? Deteftabie wretches ! at the very name of democrat, humanity (hudders, ' and modesty hides its head ! I will not insult the reader's feelings by ] desiring him to compare the pretended i tyranny of the Britiih government with i that I have here related ; nor will I tell ( the United Iriflimen, that even anlriffi Massacre is nothing compared to the ex- . ercife of the Democratic Laws of France ; but I will alk them to produce me, if they ' can, an inftarice of such consummate ty- 1 ranny, in any government, or in any nat tion. Queen Mary of England, during a i reign of five years, caused about 500 inno- , cent persons to be put to death ; for this, posterity has, and very justly tpo, branded \ her with the fur-name of bloody. What fur-name, then, (hall begiven to the affem- ' bly that caused morr than that number to 1 be executed in one day, at Lyons ? The < massacre of -St. Bartholomew, an event j that filled all Europe with aonfternation, r the infamy and honors of which have been • dwelt on by so many eloquent writers of \ all religions, and that has held Charles the IX. up to the execration of ages, dwindles into child's play, when compart e»l.to the present murderous revolution, a which a late writer in France emphatical- c ly calls 1" a St. Bartholomew of five v even said that much of the blood shed at a Lyons may be ascribed to his having, some ' yrjrx before, been hissed. from the f Jlage in that city. 'there are a hundred f persons now in Philadelphia who havefeen { him inthe character of Harlequin. Blessed j revolution I that exposes a city of a hun dred anl fifty thousand inabitants to the wanton -vengeance 0) a diverting vaga- n bond I I "f Citiztn Benjamin Franklin Bache's c gazette fay!, that" it "Mould be an easy r " matter to apologize for all the murders t " committtd in France let him apolo- f g'ze for this. Not that I imagine he can- c not do it, according'to the democratic creed, but it twould be curious to hear his a ology. ( Doctor Priejley also, fays that all these things are Jar the good of the Unitarian f religion, and therefore fays he, we mufl 0 look upon tl.em as ft blefling .' t " Thus if eternal juflice rule the baft, 8 " Thus shall their wives, and thus their C children fall" r \ Too much cannot be said in praise of t the intrepidity of the Romijh priejls. No 1 terrors, nor torments, could bring them to f] confefs that they had done anrang in adher- f ing to the Catholic church. They fujfered <_ death with a degree of cheerfulneft that *" never has been fUipajfed.—Mr. Maupetit n also deserves to be immortalized. He tvas 11 taken prisoner during the ftege ; but he d.d n not, like the poltroon Brutus, put an end to v his life for fear of the feoffs of his enemies. t He fuffered himfelf to be buried alive, up to his neck, in 'which situation his head was , mashed to pieces by four-pound balls, that his enemies tojfed at it in derision, all which v he endured without one plaintive accent. 1' ) years."s According to MonS. Boffuef, 1 there were about 30,000 persons murder i ad, in all France, in the massacre of St. Bartholomew; there his been more than 1 that number murdered in the fingli: city 1 of Lyoas and its neighbourhood; at > Nantz there have been 17,000; at Paris, ■ 150,000; in La 300,000. In : lhort, it .appears that there have been two 1 millions of persons murdered in France, since it has called itfelf a republic, among whom are reckoned two hundred and fifty thousand women, two hundred and thirty thousand children (besides those murdered in the womb,) and twenty four thousand Christian Priests I i And is there, can there be, a faction in America, so cruel, so bloody minded, as to wi(h to fee these scenes repeated in their :j own, or any other country ? If there be, | Great Ood i do tnou mete to them, ten I fold, the measure they would mete to ! others j infliil on In em every etirfe of j which human nature is susceptible ; hurl 'on them thy reddest thunderbolts; sweep the sanguinary race from the face of the creation ! (J Charles IX. bigoted and bloody mind ed at be was, durjl not attempt that tone of tyranny which has beeu assumed by the National Convention ; there was some ho nor among the Frenchmen of those days. The Governor of Bayonne having received the order for the massacre of the P rot eft ants of that city, wi ote to the king : " Sire, I " have found in your city oj Bayonne none " but loyalJubjeßs, and not a fmgle cut " throat-" At Lyons, the common hang man being ordered to enter a prison, aud dijpatch two or three proteflants : Ko," said he, " I am an executioner, but no " murderer." Let aty man produce me, if he can, a fmgle injlance of this kind a mong the republican French : let him tell me when a democrat has been known to re fufe to shed blood• The common hang man at Lyons, when France was a mo narchy, entertained a higherfenfe of hon our thau bnsyet_ been expressed by any mem ber of the National Conveneiou. * This computation is from les details des creautes des Jacobins, lately published at far is. For the Gazette of the United States. Mr. Fenno, There is nothing that can equal the ptftriotifm of agenuine democrat but his modesty; and by the. aid of these two ingredients united he will attempt things, which no man besides would dare : —Of this defeription are the two writers who through the channel of the " Auro ra" have offered their remarks on the " Review," which appeared in your Gazette of the 2d inft. One of them indeed is so extremely out of humour with the author of that piece, and with you for publifliingit, that there are no names, he can bellow, too hard for you. Grub Street Gazette, Witch of" Endor, detejlable slanderer, wretch, John Hull't calf,andpredantickpedagogue, " flip from his pen in such rapid fuceeffion as would alirioft stuD a teader, who had never looked into an "Aurora" before. But this isall confiftentenough. The "Au rora " has an exclusive right it> be the vehicle of abuse. Clubbifts and demo crats may employ her to traduce the Government of their own country ; to spread discontent and opposition to the la>vs ; afid to pour all their viaU of filth on the heads of the firft and faireft cha racters of the age. They maylikewife 1 make use of her to canonize and offer incense to murderers and atTaffins ; to sing the praises of guillotines and fuftion boats ; —to vindicate the demolition of ' towns, the oppreflion of innocence, and j all the other high-famed deeds of mo dern patriotism. There is nobody that wifhesto interfere with them:—they J are welcome to all this bulinefs ; and for ought I care may have a copy right for it. But if they were not as uncon- fcionable as the D 1, they would r stop here, and not set themselves up for J lictnfers of the Press. This is an Of- N sice not known in free countries. Were r not your Paper and some others in the > United States open to the impartial dif- e cuffiot%ofal! public questions ; were you ! ' not free igough from undue influence ' * to publish what you think is the general j sense of the virtuous citizens of Ameri- i • ca, however opposed to the bypocritick i < cant of designing men, their mifrepre- t fentations and falfehoods, what would posterity in the next generation think v of their predecessors. They would cer- * tainly believe that we were all as much ' t governed by French councils and opini- j ons, as if we were not an independent j: nation,buta diftantappendage ol France, t The least they could suppose wonld be a that the virtue, justice and religion of 1 America, if there was any left in it, had 1 shrunk into secret corners to avuid p«r- r fecution. God forbid that the Un ; ted States should ever interfere in the inter nal government of France, or that of a- t ny other country. This would be too I the treatment she has jecei- t ved from Fiance herfelf.notwithftanding f the Republic is now quarrelling with one half of Europe for the fame offence, J But so long as there are men among us, who endeavour to introduce foreign po- litics into the councils of America f to t , mislead the publicmiad ; and to change the fpecific names of a&ions, is it'a • duty to oppofe.tliem, whatever the pre sent rulers of Franee, or their American [ friends may think of it. ' From the Columbian Centinel ; ODE, t Peter Addrejfeth the Jacobins in much d'jlrefs, and great tribulation. O ! HOW melodious is a friendly found, Which comes with greetings to the [ woeful ear ; [ Which comes, when sorrow spreads .her veil around, And the heart trerSbles with a dea€ly fear. No balm, tho' brought by beauty's peliih'J hand, Serv.'d in a golden-vase, -or ; Made of the riches of a blooming laiid ; Can like to friendfhip soothe a languid foul. With such dear friendfhip fee meek Peter comes, With eyes half drowned, and with blub ring chops; Heaving up sighs, as thick as hops, And droping tears, as children drop their crumbs. O ! could you fee his mournful, wailing face— You'd fend your cluft'ring sorrow» out to grass. He knows thy tribulation, and thy iverij , How that thy fouls are Jpungy, like to corks; Thy paartine, her ion aged 16 years, her whole family, and many of their frieijds. It happened 111 the following manner: Ro'eefpierre and Trial were admitted into madanie St. Amaranthe's house, and were frequently there entertained at dinner. One (Jay Ro befpier®, intoxicated with liquor, spoke with much indiscretion, and even difcl.ii'ed some of his puipofes in prefeuce of some of the gucits and attendants. The next " morning, Trial came with eagerness to Robclpierre, to reroonflrate upon the irn- " prudence he had committed, and expoled to him the dangers he might run by such an indilcretion. Robespierre paused a mo ment, then enly laid to Trial, « be not uneasy." Two days after, the wliylt ia- _.. mily and all the-fei vairta. VviVguiilotined. MR. RUSSELL, IN your last, I read a paragraph denying that Capt. Joseph Perkins, of the fchoonir Polly, belonged to Kennebunck, (as had been announced in the Centinel of the 20th } since wh'ch time I have heard it alTerted he belonged to Pepperelboro'. This is to assure you, there is no such man belonging to Pepperelboro', and 1 presume there is no commander o£ a vefTel il.trc, but del pifes such condudl as faijl Pti kins is found to be guilty of. J",