ir l»AllrAt»fit?HlA jurft Id; . Franfclih, in his 14th number, has Crowned jiH hij arguments against the Treaty, by faying, that Treaties are a qu\d pro quo bufmefn—that is, if vou go to market, yotrnnift give an equiva lent for what yon briiig away. Ah, true it is, that' it will never be good times with, some jierfons, (■» ion,; as " no jfennv <><» jja'erwilfr" exilts as a proverb.—" Give and Tak;," 1 even la titat)* Underitand. By the Brig Ann, Capt.- Talbot. DUBLIN, April u. CATHOLIC MEETING. Yellerday a moil numerous and re fpe&ablc meeting of the Roman Catho li#s of this city, wns held in Francis street chapel, for the ptirpofe of recti*- lngtlrc report of the delegates appointed at a meeting on the 27th of February lufl:, to prefeut an address to his majesty, in refpetfc to the event of their million on that ocenfron. Oil the motion of Richard M'- Corrr.ii.k, John Sweetman, Lfq. was called to the chair. Mr. Edward Byrne, one of the dele gates, in a co.icile fpeec'i, inYormed the meeting, that, "pmfuaut to the inAruc tions which he and the gentlemen who were aflociated with him in the delega tion liad received, they had presented their address to Ins mrtjetty ; but he fr.ould refer them for a more particular Account of the proceedings on that bu siness, to a gentleman who was alfoci aled with him on that Removable and important trull, who was then present. Mr. Keogh went at great length in to a detail of what passed between ihe Duke of Portland and the Delegates on the fubjeft of their miffioi: ; and da ted, that after presenting their address to his majeftv, they applied to his grace to know tl his majelly had communicat ed to l.im any antwer tp their address ? To this his grace declined giving any a ifwer; but he told them that his ma jedy's intentions should be imparted thr ugh the medium of the Lord Lieu tenant. After dating what had pafled between the Delegates and the Seereta iy of State, in a very minute manner, Mr. Keogh took compiehenlivc view of the relative fituMj'on of this Country, with tefpeft to Great-Britain ; of the infultswe have received from her, and the benefits we render to her. He then adverted to the circumllances at tending the American war, when A mcrica, before (he resorted to arms, com plained of her privileges being abridged, of having feat deputies with addresses to Great Britain, dating their grievanc es ; of their addrefies being reje&ed— their deputies b ing unfuccefsful, and the venerable Franklin being tieated with insult. The confequeuce was, that America was fevcted fiom Great-Bri t 'in. He then adverted to Brabant and Holland, and, after reprobating the condu£l of the Britilh cabinet towards this country, concluded a speech re plete with great energy ar.d ltrength of y.rgument, with expressing a v;i(h, that no further quellion on the fubjeft of Catholic emancipation (hould be brought forward ; that wi» ftiould cor.lider our felvcs as united with Irishmen of every defer!ptioß. He bellowed the highelt Cilogium on his Piotellant fcllow-fub jetta, p rticularly the inhabitants • of Belfall, who dood foreniod i'l the cause of the emancipation of the Catholics. [In the course of Mr. Keogh's speech, the gen'lemen of the College, who had been to present an address from their body to Mr. Grattan, en tered the Chapel ; they were received with the loudell burds of applause, and were immediately accommodated with feats J Dr. N T evin, after a speech of some length, moved, that the thanks of the meeting be, and are hereby given, to Ed\vard Borne, Esq. Jnhn Keogh, Esq. and Baion HufTey of Galtrim, for their alacrity in undertaking, and fidelity in executing the trust reposed in them, which was unanimously agreed to ; as was also the thanks to Theobald Wolfe Tone, Esq. their agent, for his cheer ful compliance in accompanying our delegates to London $ and for the many and important services he has rendered to the Catholic bodr. A resolution was also agreed to, that the Right Horn Henry Grattan be re quested to present the petition of the tatholics immediately on the meeting of Parliament. The thanks of the meeting were also voted to the Gentlemen of the Univer sity, who had honored the meeting this day with their presence. After which the meeting adjourned, fine die. i'RICZ of STOCKS. " 6 per Cents 2of 3 per Cents 13 Deferred I^/3 ■Bank of the United Slates 43 JJEW YORK Tune 9 • tr«op» at G.-enada had obtained a signal w, lis n ; ,: ts: f of a paper lately eftabhfhed at tftlem, ifld driveii from one o£ their st ronge st Wafhiugton county, Uate of New-York, p 0 (; 8- entitled " IVathiiigton Patriot," and^ published by Wm. W. Wands and S. J. Honeywood.—The following address by the Editors, we have inserted, as po.Tefiing the double recommendation of sense and novelty. [iV. T. Minerva."] Introductory Address. Too long have vile abuse and |. v :y rege, Employ'd the press and foil'd the week ly pa^e — While Truth herfelf, by partial hands pour* ray'd, Half met the lhrht and half was funk in (hade. And was the Press, fair Freedom's gift, j defign'd, To ft;l've each bafcr purpose of rffa'n kind ? To flatter pride, to point ths darts of f;>it«, Tj blalt the good and fcrcen the bad j from light ? j Foibid it licavfu !—A nobler aim be ours, jTo mehil the, heart, to aid the menta' power*.; iVfhew the world," on one exterilive plan, All that is good and great and dear to man: The llatefman's plans artd counfeli to difp'ay— To point where glory (hapesthe hero's way : And while new wonders buril from eve ry clime. To mark the unfolding* of eventful time : Thus while our youth, with sparkling eyes (hall read, How patriots conquer, or more nebly bleed, Their geneious fouls may catch the sa cred flame, And join their country's love to that of fame. Copatriots dear! of every sex and a R c > Whom chance may lead to view this humble page; Protett our pre is—efpoufc a flranger's part, And deign to fofter learning's favourite art : With candour read, nor too fevercly blame, 'Tis all we aflc who dare not hope for fame. SCENIC EFFECT. We take the liberty to observe, that in this paper, previous to the re-build ing of Drury lane theatre, we recom mended with all the strength of argu ment of which we were poffefTed, that theftage (hould receive, conformable to natural phoenomena, its principal light from the deling and not the Jloor —It seems in England this improvement was not deemed pra&icabje, yet so it is, it it has been adopted within these lad few months in France with complete success—as usual perhaps it will be taken up on this fide of the water at second hand, so soon as it (hall be found necef fai yto make further theatrical alterations. There are now about seventy theatres open in Paris. The convention are de termined that the people (hall turn their minds to politics as little as poflible. BALTIMORE, June 7. By the Brig Mentor, Capt. Mitchell, which arrived on Wcdnefday, we have received Antigua, and Barbadoes pa pers to the 13th May, from which the following is extracted. BRIDGE-TOWN, May 9. By the arrival of the mail boat yes terday, is confirmed the melancholy ac count of the death of the governor, Mr. Campbell, and 38 other Gentlemen who were ignonimoufly executed by the ene my at Grenada, almost the wholeef which is said to be in their polTeffion. She also confirms the reccnt defeat of the Chat aibs at St. Vincents ; ard adds, that they turned against the French, whose heads they daily bring in, and whom they now accuse, as being the instigators and abettors of the depredations and cruelties which they have hitherto committed. May 13. On Monday arrived the Sloop Betsey, Capt. Barnes, by which we learn that a number of difaffedled persons had been taken up at Martinique, among others a Frenchman, together with a Mullatta wo man, who had secreted him in a Chest, in which w39alfo found several hundred na tional focV.adcs and proclamations, in tended to be difpers'd about the ifland> it Was supposed this man was one of those who had escaped froti the schooner that wis taken by the Thorn flocp of war, when the attempt was made to land the troops and commiflioners there ; —both him and the woman were to be publicly executed. The above (loop brings an account that information had been received at Mar tinique on Friday last, that the Britiih Philadelphia, June 10. On Saturday la!l failed fur London the (hip William Penn, Capt. Jofiah, — Pairengers : Mrs. Penn and family, Mr. Nicholas Wain, Mr. John Whitefidcs and lady, Mr. David Bacon, Mr. Francis Cabot, Mr. Jolhtia Gilpin, Mr. Waring, Mr. Whelen, Says a Correspondent. The Elettion of Mr. Jay as Gover nor of so refpe&able and important a portion of the Union, as New-York by foLARCE a majority, (larger I be lieve than any Candidate ever had be fore when there has been any appear ance of a contest) gives pleasure to every federal Patriot—no recent event appears to have excited such great and general fatisfadtion. Mr. Jay's majority is not so great as was expedted bv the friends of the Uti'.on in New-York, and else where ; but several reasons might be as signed ; had he arrived beforethe eledtion began, or had there been a moral cer tainty that he would, the bed informed persons in New-York are firmly perfuad td that more than three fourths of the whole number of eledtors would have voted for him. Mr. Jay having Thirteen thousand four hundred and /evenly fix Votes out of 25,368 Freeholders to the a mount of £. 100 each, is one of the dron ged criterion! of the Sentiments of the People of New-York that could be ex hibited. The late tranfadHons in France have served very fully to display the real cha racter of the mock Patriots ofthis Coun try^ They harrat length thrown of all disguise, and limp along in open day with their cloven feet. Wlien Robespierre and Co. were fil ling France w'th crimes and horrors, not a whifpcr f>£ difapprohation, all was neceflary revolutionary energy. Ven geance having cleared the State of one set, another take* the lead, but the Peo ple have, it fecms nothing to "do with the new order of things—Measures of moderation Mercy aiid J ullicc are the works of aparly—fee the paragraphs in the Aurora. The bloody proceedings of Carrier, Collot &c. &c. were never (ligmatized by our anarehilts with the word party — no, the people, the peqple did all, was the burthen of the Song with our fallen Jacobins ; but now, that mercy, compa ratively speaking is the-Order of the Day, the people are entirely loft in the. bufmefj—What advocates for the So vereign People, are the mock patriots of the United States. A Gentleman who arrived yejlerday from Baltimore, has handed us a Baltimore Paper of the Bth, from which the fol lqtx< ng is extra Bed. Thursday arrived here, the brigln duftry capt. Robert Rofs, from Aux Cayes, in fifteen days—He informs that he left in that port the following vefiels ; Land. Courier. Schooners Regulator, White of Balti more, Eagle, , do. Expeiiment, —, do. Port au Prince, Allifoti, do. Polly, 1. 1 , do. Adeline, .Stanly, do. Wolf, Bierd, do. Active, Comp ton, do. Mercury, Brenton, Philadel phia, Dob, s ■■■—, do. Nancy, Haf iarcf I .Charlellon, Patty, , do. (loop Miranda, Smith, Philadelphia, besides a number of others. Saturday arrived at the Fort, the Brig Clio, capt. Hammond, from Je remie, 20 days.—Nothing new. Same day arrived in Port, the Brig Rover, capt. Smith, from Gibraltar, 5 j days ; and the brig Amelia, capt. Hub bel, from New York, 6 days. Captain Smith failed in company with an Englifli fleet of about loomer- convoyed by a 50 gun (hip and a (loop of war, with which they parted April 15. 12, spoke a sloop from Bolton bound to Martinico. * 17, Spoke the fhipWillink, J. Stew art, mailer, from Cadiz, bound to Bal- timore. 27, Lat. 34, 8. saw b wreck, no masts (landing, and her deck torn up. 28, spoke a schooner from New-Lon don, bound to Demarara, which suppli ed the Rover with provifious of which (he was in want. ' 3 1» spoke the (loop George, from Philadelphia, bound to Jamaica. Mr. Parsons, Mr. Ellis, Mr. Clark, and .Dr. Howard. BALTIMORE, June 8. Arrived at die Fort,yeflei day, schoon er Franklin, capt. John Fry, from Port de Paix, 15 days. The administration of that were puichafing American cargoes at the following rates.—Pork 24 dollars ; beef 14 do. and flour 12 do. and pay ing for the fame, in coffee, at 3ofous per pound, and other producc in pto portion. In the Franklin camepaflenger capt. John Wallace, fupetcargo of the brig j George, of Alexandria, by whom wej learn, that, having arrived on the co*lt of St. Domingo, his veflel was taken pofieflion of by the republican privateer called L'Union, capt. Boyer,-of Cape Francois, commifiloiied by Genera! Le veaux, and carried into Port de Paix, where, after several proposals being made by adminillration, for purehafing his cargo, which he refufed, it was for cibly taken from him, and landed. By the Franklin wealfo learn, that, the day before (he failed an express ar rived at Port de Paix, to General La vaux, from Martinico, which he left the 7th of May, informing a squadron, con fiding of three 80 gun (hips, four 44's several floopsot war, & a number of tran sports with troops, had arrived at Mar tinico, direflly from F r snce, and landed on that island ; and the i*xt day after the departure of the oxgP's, a genetnl attack was intended to be made 011 all the forts. The foregoing intelligence we recei ved from captain Fry, and is confirmed by capt. J. Wallace, who belongs to Philadelphia. Fed's Point Telegraph?. POUT of PmLADElriilA. ARRIVED. Days. Ship Alexander, Carman, Charlcfw ten, 10 Brig Newton De Coda, St. Croix, 1 2 Ann, Talbot, Dublin, 56 Sc'h FriendOiip, Willis, N. Caroli na, 6 Seaflower, Tillet, ditto, 8 Sloop Polly, Midget, ditto, 7 Eliza, Smith, St. Croix, 16 Sally, Lewis, Bermuda, 10 Charlotte, Barker, New-York, 4 The brig Ann, Capt. Talbol, failed from Dublin the 1 ith of April, 5 days after the brig FHenddiip. The brig ; Adventure, Capt. Potts, had failed for 1 Liverpoool. j About four weeks ago, off the banks of Newfoundland, Capt. Talbot spoke J the fliip Roebuck, Capt. Bliss, out 30 | days from Brittol. In the Ann came jo refpe£table~ps£" ! fengers. I Extra a decree of the Convention and that Vadier had made his cleajrc to Switzer land : That fifteen ether l epitleu;a tites who had been favorable 10 H>r cause of barrete, were imprifi.nrd in the Chateau de H. m (in Pictl**!y.) That tumults had been excited in Paris, a gainst the Coimntion, but were fupprcf fed by the exertions of the Convention, which were seconded by Get:. Piche gru, who was then in Paris to confuk with the Committee of Public Safety, on the plans of the ensuing campaign. Prom the fame gentleman we have the pofiuve afiurance that a TREATY OF PEACE had been concluded between France and Prufiia, and had biefl pub liflied previous to liis leaving Parts. . We learn that Paiis papers as late as the 13th Aptil are in town': we have had the promise of foine of the lateit, and hope to h y before our readeu, in our Diary of to-morrow, intelligence that will interefl them. La Medufe took otr her passage, two Spanish, and one PorUtgucfe vtliefy which they burnt. By capt. Paine, of (lie ihrp Diana, arrived yeilerdav in 13 days from the Havannah, we learn that provisions were very plenty there, flour 1 z and 13 dollars per bane!—a fleet of 40 fail of merchantmen, failed about 12 days be fore capt. Paine, for Cadiz—Produce was (earee, white sugar, 14. dollar b ikt cwt. niolaffes 2 dollaia per keg, con taining five gallons. The lnow Pattern, captain was the only vefTcl belonging to this port remaining at the Havannah. Captain Paine on coming cut of tTe Havanna, spoke the fchtxintr Willing Maid, of New leaven,firomSt. Thomas's bound to that port. The Jbllcvving IvteriJUeg Art.cles are ta ken from the Comieiticijt Cotnr.at. The Bojl on paper entitled the Mercury. zvhicb ought to hai e been rueiied J>y tbit Day's Jriuil, and frum tubicb this tei/igenre cktj originally taken, is not come to haiiiL J tAui.xfj fent-untler the-fa »/ La-tv, are yd Recent onil it:ti rejtjjisr intfliigmce ts frt~ ' guently arrijltd by tb i Smv jueifr ♦ provifioH by Ityiu ajtoearfjo '[be waitings to fieuf/t the regaijar ,cit\ tain tranfmj/ion *f Neiu/jjiafpf tjt'm J Kail., k . .• ' BOSTON, June j. Very !ntcJ~rom France. By the Neptune, Capt. Crocker, which arrived yelterday from Nantes, in 41 days, Paris papers wtre received to the 12th April, with which were we oblig ingly favoured. Tlie following inter eiting Articles, are tryntla'ctUrorr.thciTU • CONVEN i lON, SeflioMs of the 3xlt March. Commotions in Holland. We are allured., that there is at firefent in Hollai d, t igh:yth«uia < H French troops, and that fifty thcufanu more ire expected irom Belgium. Ihe Gazette of Berlin, states these two tads as iriconteftible. Holland also has became the theatre of civil discord. Fhe-iity of Amsterdam is opposed to the States General ; the municipality of this city have reiuiedlalaie Ake oath pri-" scribed to the public functionaries; and have written a very severe and vehement letter to the States General ; of wlii.h the States have demanded a recantation. The Municipality rcmaimd Uilfhaken it was neceflary to employ force to reduce them ; the Hotel de Ville was farrcunded bv a regular force; fix of ttie refrailory Municipal Officers were arretted,-and re placed by other citizens. The refinance of the Municipality, aiid the violence of the Slates to subdue them, maintain the greatest fermentation iii the minds of the fiatavians. . Extrall of a Liter from the Hague, dated April Bih, I 795. The firft of this month seditious move ments of a very fcrious nature, took plac in several cities of our province, above ;i!! here, at Amsterdam, and Delft, anil in se veral villages. The Orange cockade was mounted by the revolters, and cxcelle* committed against tl- Vit patriot.-. At the village of T,ifl'e ; on th» r oad to Amftrr dam, general D.ien< els, w 3 ba'ppcrt. d ti he palling ihrgughiln_^ii.ice, wis .uTiilfl and dragged about by the iViir of his head ; he efiaptd Irom these hired wretches with difficulty. In this city a boatman appear ed in the morning with a largf Orange coekade in his hat, and excited the peop:e to revolt. Crowds began to gather ; i-Kt the firmnefs of out brethfe:: the Frrr.M, and of the National Guard, win \\:ie quickly under arms, put a tiop 10 )uit!<«r disorder. The principal chiifs ct this re volt are arretted : Wt expert to I.e tlrrW severely punished. A Gaiicys it airircy J raised. Wc hcrr' from Air/Pardsn., this fifty of the lriiitii'c-Srs have been 1