«t government equally remote from tlefpotifm and democracy, and the Abbe S!eyes proposes a divi. fion of the legislature into two branches, and a lim. pie Executive to be called President or Doge. Such is the general afpeft of affairs among the Bel ligerent powers, and no evidence of peace with Spain For other particulars, fee the head of, Fo reign Intelligence. According to a (laternent, afcertaiiied in a Ger man paper, the French Revolutionary war has coll the Germ in Empire 170,000' men, 887,807,352 florins iu money. The Representatives who are at Brest wrote, that thi Popular Society of that city discovered the mn!l lofiy ambition, and pretended to take all gov ernment into their own hands. R.-ferred to the Committee of Public Safety, [Americans, look well'to Clubs.3 The British Exports, according to the Custom- Iluufe Books, encrwfed the last year more than three millions. Tliwy have progroflively risen every year from 1752, when the amount was 18 millions, 10-1 793' when they were 34 millions ; and in 1794, to 27 millions fteiling. From the Hague we learn, that the Representa tives of Holland have forbid interments fither in ch'irch yards ; as also the wearing of liveries, or ar morial bearings. Every diltinguidied lrat ui any of the churchcs mutt be removed within three months. Philadelphia, dugujl 20. STOCKS. Si* per Cent. - - Three p:r Cent. - Deferred Six per Cerin Decatur : — Admiral Cot nwallis s »<3ion took place " June 6" off Belleifle Admiral Bi id port's action (fee their letters) took place " June 13 ofF the fame place. The Danish brig arrived at Bour deanx, " June 26," having been taken by a Bntifh fleet " near Brest," but on what dc.y is not mentioned, about 100 miles (36 hoars fail wiih a fair wind) from Bor deaux —;6 hours fr m the evening of June 26, would count back to noon of the 2-th—now. Belleifle 1. not more than 100 miles from Breit waters, which d.fHnce is small for Bridport's heavy fleet (or part of it " (even fllips,"&> .) to run from the 24th to 25th at noon, ■where they took the Dane, and, and after a fleet hove in fight, immediately difmifled her—after which the battle took place, as . elated by Decatur which reveng ed the difa.ter of Belleifle by ajhip on the debit fide. Further, in corroboration, Capt. Decatur ays, eie was to have been a junaion of two French fleets, which it appears Bridport prevented, and attacked the weaker ' Thus we have endeavoured to demonstrate, that the account may be true of four E'igli/h having a en, to pay for the th ve French Ihips-and this we stall, at pre/in! believe to be fail- Ext raft of a letter from a gentleman at Christiana Bridge, to his ci)nei>»ndent in trns city, dated Au»uft 18. . " Yeftertlav 1 receiveit#b ofFßiche's papers, in one of. which! o&fcrvcJthe ■* number nf»iti*eits froni different parts -fNiw Cas tle city, atTembled at the 8m inrt. to-ex press their sentiments or opinions, concerning the latetieaty, &c. A few minutes ;ifter, 1 received a Wilmington paper, which I enclofe'for pcrul'al ; — from a curfjry view of the two papers, I thought it piudent to acquaint the public with a true Hate of farts. Two friends happened to comc in, each had kept some note* of the tranfa&ion, we fat down and drew the enclofcd, which, please have published in such paper or papers as you please. On Saturday it will appear in both Wilmington papers—So much I for Treaty." In consequence of an anonymous advertisement, about ten or twelve petfons met at Chridi.ma- Bridgc, nominated themselves, with a few others, (in all fifteen) a Committee to take under their consideration the Treaty of amity, commerce and navigation, proposed between the United States and his Bri.annic majeily. A few members of the committee met the firfl day of the present mouth ; but as a fufficient num brr_ did not attend, the bullnefs was pollponed, an.l the members present adjourned to meet on Sa turday the eighth instant. In the interim, some evil-disposed persons, not willing to hazard the result of the committee's meeting, and taking the advantage of a day, pro posed a water melon fair day, when a variety of (laves, and other loose characters, would aflcm.jle : by this means the number was much encreafed, and a variety "of negroes and others, many of them with out the knowledge of their matters, did, in a dis orderly manner, exhibit effigies representing, as 'twas said, John Jay, El'q. and the tao Senators chosen from this (late, at the fame time animating the mob with the idea, that the gentlemen they were attempting to ridicule, were under British in- i if fliiencr. Attempts were mad<* by some of the citizens of this place, and others, of refpeftable char after, to dilTuade them from so improper a measure, and with fame of the best characters it had its effedt, for, to the knowledge of some of the undernamed, they went away diflatisfied with themselves, that they liad by any means appeared in tke business. The public will therefore be pleased to take no tice, that we the undernamed citizens of'Chrif tiana Bridge, and others who were prefrnt on the occasion to declare the above mentioned impru dent and disorderly conduct was committed con tiary to the wish and with the mod decided disapprobation of the principal inhabitants of this place, and it vicinity, whom w£ flatter ourselves will be ever ready to dil'countenance any proceed ing that wijl have a tendency to promote difor • der and. Confufion. 32 pr. Cent .50 sS - Chrijliana-Bridge, ) Auguji \-,th, 1795. 5 IVilliaM M'Mchcu, Sitmual Barr, 'John Burton, Maxzvell Sines, IViliiam Shannon. Solomon Maxwell, Thumat Sballcrofs, Jih/i Lew dsn. James Couper, Extract of a letter from an officer in the Western ar- " I hava ju(l tinje to inform you of my arrival at this post the 3d inll. after encountering a fatiguing tho' generally a pleasant trip of eleven hundred and odd mile 9 down the Ohio, and up to the source of the Wabafh river, which is within nine miles of this place. I palled, and halted at a number of Indian villages, and was treated friendly by all but one par ty, who was rather insolent than otherwise, these were some Kickapoos, but principally Potowati mies, situated on the Banks of the a river of considerable size, which empties itfele into the Wabalh, about one mile fram the town. How ever, by soothing language, and imprefiing upon their minds the fatal eonfeqnsnces which mult await their tribe, should they insult the flag I bore, I was permitted to pass, after presenting to them a - bout two gallons of whiskey—that liquor fodeftruc tive to these wretches. My Journal I (hall forward you, by the firlt fafe conveyance. Thelndians are beginning to collect for the trea ty, but in so tardy a manner, that it is problemati cal. whether it will b« held in all this month, or, in" fact, until the middle of the next. I rather think the latter. Such delays I remember heating you fry, was not uncommon, whrn the late Sir William Johnson had the superintending of Indian affairs, under the ISritifh government —the3sritifh are ufmg every exertion to prevent the Indians meeting, but will not, I think succeed. Every day frefh parties tho' small ones arrive ; numbers are encamped a round us, and several for miles are raising Corn, in the vicinity of our pod. This condudt bespeaks good intentions towards us, whether they bear them in their breads or not—l cannot enlarge on this fubjeft, as this letter is only intended to assure you of my faccefs. CAUTION. For the Gazette of the United States. Mr. FROTHUP's BEER-HOUSE. WELL, Francis, we are heartily glad to fee you ; the company are very dull, and want your enlivening converfatioti. What now, quoth Frank; what, fore.ver heeling to every little squall ; why my boys, it mull blow harder dill before before the haulvards of my fpirita shall be lowered. Cheer up, cheer up lads ; let uibufk it on another tack. I'll warrant you, my boys, we (hall make a good har bour after all our dorms.—Aye but, fays Bob, that harbour ha» been often proroifed by our maf tcr and mate ; andjull ayve thought all was snug,, ftnack comes a gale right in our teeth, and makes all sneer again.— I wish, my boys, you had nothing to-sear but head winds, cries Jack ; we (hould soon beat up to windward : but the old hags are against us ; they are constantly muddying the water for foundings, & (haping clouds for head-land ) : there's Mother Carey's Chickens turned into land birds, and drift-wood broken off from an old abandoned' wreck flatters us with falfs hopes of approaching T R E A T Y. SIGN ED James Caldwell, John Hall, Lewis Ruse, Richard Hambly, John Springer, Joseph Israel, Samuel Ruth, Robert Porter, IVilliam Scott, my, to his Father. Dated Fort Wayne, June 10th, 1795. la" 1 : I wish from mV very foul I had (laid, fj' my old giaiidmoiher's lire-fide : J;-.-k, fays (he, you will repent going nn the main 'ocean.; many and m<- >y 1 liurigrv belly and .vet jacket you'll get ; Jack the lea is never at tell, and he that goes on troubled waters must expe£l to be tofled about.— Very well kept up, gentlemen, cries old Mr. Phil pot, taking his fegar from his mouth ; I could al most fancy mylelf an hundred leagues from 'and, inllead of fitting at Daddy Frothup's Beer-irlouf*: but pray, gentlem«n, favor us with a little expla nation of your trebles ; perhaps an old man may serve you.—Thank you, thank you Daddy, fays Frank ; I'll tell you all about it : foil mull know, Daddy, that wc are jolly tars, and earned and spent our months wages as honefily and freely as any of your land lubbers, and when money was gone went to sea for more; and then " S?e tile trew with fun-burn'd faces, " Chanting black e/'d Susan's graces," —But Hop, I'm going'to tell you: you must kuow tiiat at every Beer-House we went to, we were sure to find some queer, fly," sensible fellow, bellowing Congress, and the Cunftitu tion, and Gee. IVajbtngton ; —n'c<, no, they were afraid to go so far yet —they told us, that if it was not f(*r Congress and the Conllitution, ant! nil that, for they were afraid to name names, we might all be as rich as lords, and keejxour coachcs ai:d drive Susan about all the day long ; that Congress and tile Conllitution, and all that, were mighty llicklers fur peace, but that if a few people they could name had the mmagemrnt of affairs, there would be lare doings; they w<*uld go to war with England, a d with Spain of course ; that we should all go a pri. vateerfiig, and bring in Don Sangrada del Toledo's, dollars by and thousands ; and the fel lows who now llrut about, with their infurancl stock,' and their bank stock, and their public debt Itoclc, should all be tumbled into David Jones's locker, stock and all ; aad that we should be the great men of the land. All this was mighty firu to be (ure, Daddy. They further told us, that we might live like princes for just nothing at all ; that provisions of every fort would be as cheap as dirt, for the farmers would find 110 foreign market and the dogs would be humbled down to our own price; and as for toddy and hue cloathes, and all the good liquors of other countries, we should have plenty in our prizes, and the land-lubbers who [laid at home might fuck their paws, and wrap up their bodies in bear (kins. Now, just as this very thing was comin,' to pass, pop comes a treaty upon us, and the Gholls of War were about to be laid ten fathoms deep in the Red Sea. Oh ! my dear fel low, if you had but seen the wry faces our Beer- House conjurers put on, it would have given you the bunyio's ; they tried to keep up their own, by addrelfcs arvd town-meetings, and fcribbJings find blackguardings, and actually would have knocked the Congress and the Conllitution, and all that, in the head, if they had not been afiaid of the people ; for 1 overheard one of these wife men faying to an-, other wife man, " The Game is loft, the people want jyirt us." But the belt of all is to come yet : these very men, these Beer-House conjurers, all veer'd about in a jiffen—one did not think the people at large had been Co firmly attached to the conllitution; an other grew fearful that his comrades would leave him in the liirch, and therefore determined to fhift for himfelf; and the privy counsellors in the junto, like able generals in a midnight retreat, who leave their tents {landing and fires burning, prepared a farrago of corabuftibles to be lighted up in fame of the Jacobin papers from day to day, as if the whole force was (till embodied, the fcoundrelsthem felves are skulking about to make fair weather, and leave us poor Jack Tars the buts of the finking storm ; but if they ever catch us again in their Beer Traps, we will give them leave to flay oft our hides for AfTcs Skins, and ride about in triumph upon our raw-heads and bloody-bones ; for be it known that we will (land up in future for our coun try, our Congress, our Conflitulion ; and huzza for ever for the great and the glorious George Wafliington—the man who can conquer his enemies in war, and preserve his friends in peace. Mr. Fenno, The following note is extracted from a worTc lately published on " the conduct of France towards Great- Britain," tending to prove the former the agreflor in the existing war between those Countries', by a Mr. Miles, who was for fame time resident in Pa: is, and a member of the Jacobin Club—lt is illustrative of the hiltory »ud the principles of a man who was a consi derable agent in the present revolution, and at that time at the head of an executive department—your readers will recoiled that the fame Le Rfurt after wards fell a viiflim among a thousand others to the fury ps Fadtion, and the reftlcfs ambition of his bro ther-demagogue.!. A. B. " I HAD relieved this man (Le Brun) in 1787, who with his wife and children, were in great dis tress. —The year following, he again solicited charity; and on being refufed, endeavored to obtain it by fraud. —In January, 179 c, he made another applica tion to me for succour, personally, bf letter, and by his wife. At the -firft of these periods, the States of Brabant had iflued a warrant againtt him for having fapported, in* journal that he publi.Tied, the despo tism and wild projects of Joseph 11. At the second epoch, ke fought flielter from the resentment of the Emperor for having supported the States of Brabant ; and at the third epoch, he fell again under the dis pleasure of these latter, and his journal was proscribed the Austrian Netherlands. ■ Th.si arrival of the Austrian troops towards the close of that year, terminated the contest between them, by compelling him to fly from Liege.—ln 1791, I saw him in Paris, where he prop«fed to recommence his journal, and solicited, through a third person, my pat ronage and recommendation of it iri England, the number of journals then publiOied in France giving him 1 no profpeft of success, he made an offer of his frryicei to the Government at Bruxelles; and would hj ■; re turned to Brabant and- fupp'orted the measures of Leo ; pold, if the terms hi: demanded had been acceded to, & which were greater than they would have been, on ac count of' Linguet's having quitted the Low Countries. Without money and friends, his only refourcew3s to intrigue and cabal in the Jacobins, into which he had been admitted a member.—At this time Dumourier, who both dreaded and detfftcd them, had occasion for rheir support, to aid his views of ambition,—Le Brun extolled his talents, and having contributed to puff him into notice and power, was rewarded "by % fitua .tion in the foreign department.—ln 17911 he became Secretary of State so- fo r cign affairs, and threatened to fuhveft the Englilh Government, who ". ..le. fm-t s a ftw yenhs hefor ■he offered, to support for the pahtT-y Confideratton of Cif'y pounds a year. — In Jam: y 179$ tinned the order for the execution of his so vereign : and as he is at this moment a fugitive for otKer crimes, it is not improbable hut, in 17 >4., jj'S Wall hear of h>s having been han?ed in feme country, where morals are yet refpeifted and laws enforced. TRENTON, Augult 18. 1 a thePkinteko/theNEtr JakSF.r State Gazette. A" publication having appeared in the Nvw je fey State G.izctte of,the 4th inft. containing cer tain refolutiw;i» disapproving of the punofed treaty between the United States and Great Britain,' 4a id to have been adopted at a general meeting of tha Citizens of Trenton aod its vicinity, held the 29th day of Ju1y,1795—W W e the fubferihers, citifcem ot Trenton and Us vicinity, not having coiiotirred in, and not, approving of the said re futations, ;hu? publicly tertity the fame, atid declare our .entire fa tisfadion and confidence in the.contfittjted autho rities of oijr country, and ourdetermiimtio t to ac quiesce in such measures as have been or may be fi nally adopted relative to the said treaty by fucU conlHtuted authorities. Trenton, Augujl, 14,' (723* Citizens of Trenton. *If»ac Smith, *Samucl Leake, Philemon Dic kenfoii, Charles Axford, *Jamcs F. Armtlrong, James Ewing, Go. Campbell, fames B. Machefj Mafkell Ewing, Samuel Diclcinfon, *J. Rhea, B. Smith, Thomas Yatdley, Peter Howell, A. filing Archibald VV. Yard, Pontius D. Stelle, Johti Guild, Abraham G. Clavpoole, Lambert C*d wallader, Aaron Dunham, Geoige Davis, Willi am Hay, John Coryell, jun. Ogden Woodruff, John Rit;gs, Joseph Bond, * An. Dn. Woodruff, N. Belleville, Nathan Beakes, Ebenczer Cowtll, Jnn. * A Cliambers, Jun. John Chambers, Peter Teale, Bernard Handlcn, Silvester Doyle, Jonathan Doan, Benjamin Junes, Robert Taylor, Micajali How, George H»lcomb, George Beatty, Marlon Reed, William Reedcr, Joseph Brittain, Job Scott Abraham Bloodgood, Kens. Williams, Jo(bu:» Wright, William, Rippin, Charles Axford, jun. Jofiah Appleton, Thomas Rippin, John Harding, William Patterfon, John Robirifon, Alexaiuie'r Chambers, Trrtwcl! Wright, John Mufgrove, Ste phen Welch, JaiVies Yard, Henry Pike, Jamei Monjoy, Rubci t*Murray, Iftiac Yard, George Ro zell, William Yard, William MafgroTe, John Hoist on, Anthony Bilhip. Citizens of /icinity w"ho happened occasionally to lie in Town. Robert Pesrlen, Robeit Pearfon, jim. William Pearfon. N. B. Tho£e persons names to whom Aflerifms are placed, wete out of town before notice of ihe meeting was given, and did not attend said meeting and of the other fubferibers, it is said, not more than 3 or 4-perfons attended, who totally ciifappro ved of the said proceedings. CINCINNA TI, June u Lift Saturday being the lufptcious furth of July, so dear to every American, the morning was iifiiered irf by a laluie from the cannon of the fort; and which again were fired at one o'clock—A. number of refpecl ablc citizens, both civil and military, afleiublcd at Gor don's Hotel to partake of a handsome repast prepared for the occasion. The day was spent with great har mony, and the wine received an additional itH from the following toads, which wtre answered by Ulutei the cannon. GHI*S. I. The People and President of the United States, zj 7. The governor and North-Weiter» Territory, may its riling fun never fet — T 3 3. The Legion of the United States— 13' 4. The Terrlto.-ial fair. May they love and be beloved, .5 5. The French nation and confufion to all ddpots, 13 . 6. Agriculture, the true interest of America, and parent of virtue— 5 7. commerce and manufaflures — 3 8. Honesty, because 'tis the best policy— r .? 9. A government of laws, without fraud or force, j xo. May iicentioufnels never be mifUlien for li berty, nor liberty fur liceiitioufnefa — S 11. Unanimity and felicity to the great family of mankind— n. The gfobe we live on. May all who inhabit it claim avid enjoy liberty as their birth-right— 13. The day, Volunteer—May the civil and military go hand in hand SALES OF A BRIG. The Brig S A L LXi Intended for Sale lass night, miill J>efold /luflion THts EVENING, at the Coffce- She is incomplete order to proceed to fei—Burthen 140 ton-s —built about two years ago, and well found, —An inventory will fliewn at the time of Tale—Now lying at Walmit-ftreet wharff, where (he may be viewed at an"y yjnd. Wm. shannon', Auctioneer. August ic. For SALE by tie Subfcribtrs, in Pcnnjlrect, the fol lowing Articles, of the lajl Importation'from China. Bohca Tea. 105 CKcOs 95 Half Cefts 8i Qu irtvr Chefta 160 Quarter Chefrs Hyson Tc.i, 120 Quarter Chests Srochang Tea, 400 Boxes China, containing Tea Setts, 4jcw» Piece* Nar.kcci p. Willings SfJ 5 Ffa;uil. *' ritf Augufl 20. S H O T, OF all Cz«, frorruji lb tn Grape, ' > Camhoniei, Pots, and other caftmgt extoit-d at the ihorteft noticc, . ■ - Nail rods, from jod to Tpike, Hoop Iron, of allfizei, Strcaft* or cutting intti/iiails, from a Wad to 12d nails, . • Anchors, from 17 Cwt.to icolb. Bar Iron, A Quantity of James River Tobacco, Carolina Pork. Herring* in barrel?, Kiln-dried cora meal in Hhds.'and Bbls. Rye flour Slc. to be fold by Levi HoUingJ'-jjori\ & Son. : i Aapjl 4