PS * , i„ g the (am( fitting, and ordered to be deputed in the national archives. Directed to Madame Buzot, at Evrenx. I leave this lalt remembrance of a husband who loves thee, in the hands of a man who has rendered hie the greai.elt services. We m"ft fly f" ,m a si " c an " klnd a 'y ium '* 0,: - der to run frefo ' ifks. A terrible cataltrophe puis an end to our last hopes. I fee all the preffin dangers threaten us, but my courage dors no t fcavf <*$• •• ■ But, my dear friend, tiic time iieir, <V$ «»a«f pa t 1 recommend thee above all to do every thing in thy power to recompence the ufM'tnu! who (hall deliver thife this hi I let. He will relate to thee all our misfortunes'. Farewell; I expect thee in the dwelling of the. titrhteou*. Signed, BUZOT. To Ci'toy. Pons Chai.lek.oy, born Pont, at Mar- ! feillys. Omy mother ! my dear mother ! I have not time to detail to thee my litnAtion. I deliver my felf to the Providesre of God in order to find an sfyluin. Do not despair of my fate ; and if it if in thy power, tecumpenfe the man who {hall hand thee my billet, orcaufe it to he delivered. Adieu, my deai mother, thv son embraces thee. Signed, BARBAROUS; i Letter without a direction. Bear Friend, 1 lived for thee, I have lived for mv --- my country, opp efled by infamous villains, affafiWted ; in a cowardly and ferocipu» manner, for my honor. : ' I have fuffifftd mush ; 1 have borne all my pains with courage ; my chaiarter has uever ceafedto be '• the fame. I care little what people may think of j me. 1 fulfilled my duties ; I wilhed the welfare of ; my country, and my confcienc? does not reproach j in the least. I find Hlyfelf in the molt cruel situation that can poflibly bjj imagined. 1 throw I myfelf in the arms of Providence ; 1 do not expert. I to be delivered. Farewell a thoufaud times, dear V wifir; I embrace thee ; I embrace my sou } my last i fight are for you j may he not forget bis father. j Recompences ,to the bell of thy power, the ho- j . nest man Who (hall hand thee this letter, he did alt f , he could to be ufeful to me. j t Signed, PETHIQN. ! . i.i,.in I, 1 i NEW-YORK, November 2. t Just arrived, the ship Minerva, 50 days frrirrt Lon don. Captain Clarkfon has favoured us with a Lon don paper of the Bth Sept. by which we find a report that the Ernprefs of Russia had deelared war against [ the King of PrufTn. 'This report is taken from a Pa ris paper of tfie 3d Sept. which is so particular as to ' recite the motives of the Emprets, verbatim. No i t news of this event had arrived in England by the , t Hamburgh mail. ; . The French ship Mdntague, of 120 guns, is said to ! j be loft on the roeks near L'Orient. 1 General Montelqu.eu's name is erased from the lift of enjigrantl. . ' The Spanifli government intends to fend 1 force to • St. Domingo, to protert if, until.the French (hall be 1 i able to fend a force to take pOißfHon. Further details t to-morrow. . Ocy JtrT'r: h*.v:. received as ' rewards far their important feryices,in the Weft-Indies, < the fretdom of the city of London in a gold box, with a polite address, pronounced by Mr. Wilkes — i they have alio been pi efented with the freedom of the Company of Goldsmiths, and that of the Company ! of FidiKiongeis. By a royal decree, Cbttoc goads are permitted to J>e imported inro Lilbon for one year, to supply the ■ deficiency from India. ExtraS ef a Utter from Fort Royal, [Mart.] dated ' September I i, I 795. " The affairs at St. Vincents are far from being 1 arranged, about 50 eftaies are burnt to the ground ir.any of the negroes killed and milling and to add to the other dillreffes of that devoted country; an | Epidemical diieafe has can ied off great numbers of the negroes and whites. M (Sera were however in a train of fcttlement un til lilt week, when the enemy having deceived rein forcements affiiulted and earned in the night a fort, which wo held in th; Oharaib country —out of 250 men of which it. cdnfifted w: have heard of but a tew who have efcapcd.- The affairs at Grona- 1 d" arc pretty much in the feme state. We are • waiting the arrival or reinforcement* which we Jaly expert, when it Is to be hopfe.i that the affairs in the Weft Indies will wear a mdre lavoi .We afpe.rt- I have irude .1 number of cxpeiiuients with the Eudiometer at TnniJade, St. Vincent's and this i lHanJ ; I flatter myfelf with fufii 1 11' a- curacy t Mid attention. At S'. Vincents and Trinidade, the < air was nearly of cc; 1 .1 purity, o '"; mcafiire of ni trous air and one of ii l (tiofuheric «.r lolt I 34 behind, ' < theie was of l*ourfe an ab' '.ptio.i o r 66 parts, but at Fort Royal 1 found 1 44 loft—the loss was < therefore 56 which nukes 10 jittcrence. ( AUGUSTA, Ort.-brr ;7. < Extrau of a letter from the Secretary of IVar to his Excellency George Matthew! Fjq Governor nf 1 Georgia,' dated IVur-OJJice, September 26, 1795. 1 SIR, i ?f YOU are acquainted with Mr. Seagrove's jour- 1 illy to Philadelphia; Unfortunately he left Geor- i giu before my letter of the 2d of July* for calling tne Cieek Treaty arrived. That ciicumitauce and the lateness of the ieafon appaiently rendered il im- Jiolßh eto hold the treaty this fall. Mr. Seagrove 1 im.xined,.thai in Ortober the warriors' would com- t we.ice their, hu.iti.-." and remain dispersed till late 1 in next Mi'ch. That whatever efforts should be used to collert them to a treaty during the long 1 huiuing feafmi ; a partial afl'ernbiy only cculd be c V«tained : And you have perceives! by former 1 ; jftomoaunicatiotis that this would b« repugnant to the \ Pi" li.lent's views ; which "Nvere by universal notice, t a,id a complete representation of the nation, to pre t vent any cavijs about the obligatory force of the v ; .treaty thai might be made., » t Tie Pre!id?ic has therefore determined (tho' j with reg et, knowing the foHcitnde of Georgia on :>tsii:. Itibjcrt) to postpone the Treaty until the 1 i, .Spiing, * ' j Mr. Heagrave thinks the firft of May the earliest ( j>enod for a.jjfi'ii-ral neeiwig '0 be obtained ; and Cole.«in \ju the oil w*ii oc .uu.i c- . d ligible place, But of the preciie time and place you will hereafter be duly advised. I am, 0 With gieat refped^, d Your obedient Servant, TIMOTHY PICKERING. Hh Excellency George AJatthe wr, 1 1 Esq. Governor of Georgia. j • A.tiue copy from the files of the Executive. Edward Watts, S. E. D. * Referring to a letter /# Mr. Sea<rro-vi. e Philadelphia, WjiDNE.iiJAY WEfiHKO,' NOVEMBER 4, 1795. ■el D /"£ RTTSEME^T. J "OM the firft of December next, the dsnua! fubferip tion for this Gazette will be EIGHT DOLLARS Subscribers out of the City will pay One Dollar a year in addition, for inclosing and uiretfting their Papers. , Remote ftiblcnbers are requested to pay up arrearages 6 to uiie above period; alio tlie kalf year's advance from | tfclt time—thole who do nbt, will be considered as de clining a Continuance of their fubfeription. • 1 AHvertifemeuti ot a square, or less, are publiJhed in this Gazette for dollar ; aud continued at one j. or *v dollar for each subsequent insertion. _ . ljiie KJiwr acknowledges, with gratitude, the favors j j| of his ndrertifing patrons—He assures them, that the en |creafed, and encreafing number of his fubfenbers, is con , . tinually extending the circulation in the city—lts dillant ; I circulation is now equal to that of any other publication. t ; Philadelphia, November 3, 1795. ' : ■ • • / Yeilerday a Pardon paffe.t the Seal of the United /itiiti.6 for Vigal and Mitchell, the two lnfurgents ' j/who were under Sentence of Death—pursuant Itherelo, they were liberated from prison, | ' IMPORTANT. j The Air-Furnace bsJoAgufg to the Hollow Ware ' .Company ceased blowing this day; whether this cir ! 1 camiianCe is the rtfult of the high price of fuel, or ; the difcontinuafioh of foreign aid, is not yet dtter ! mined. The probability, therefore, is, that the Pro j]- !'!(.tors wilf bci"ipy thenifelvcs with disposing of the Utock on haftd; until the Furnace is prepared for ano !tuer blait. EXTRACT, IT iriay be in politics as in physic, the great po -1 liiician as well r.s the flcilful Pliyfician, may fome | times find it ilecefliiry to apply quack remedies; — I the empiric however, has an uniform line of condurt I * —lie lirlt operates 011 the mind of his patient by j bringing him I® a belief heis \ifited with complaints for the lulijugatior, of which his moflrums are per fertly *nd lolcly competent, and when the imagi; ■ nary sick man swallows the potion, he is soon con j vinoedofa radical cure, Ky the approach of the great unifherpf human woes, death! Such also is the propefs in quack politics, and the analogy, is pertertly verified in the cafe of the Wcftern Infur' gent's. ARRIVED. The Guftavus Adoiphus, Berghdahl, 89 day? from Leghorn. S TO C K S. Six per Gent. - ' - - - - . 18f6 Three per Cent. ------ icyTg ! Deferred Six per Cent. - - - - 13/10 B.'iNli Uaited States, ------ 33 pr. Cent" I ——— N'H'th \meiica, ----- 50 | 1 Pciini'ylvania, ----- - a 3 . Insurance Company North America, 31 pr coijt. Pennfy!vania,[lnt. off] 6pr. cent. — 11 ■ BY THIS DAY'S MAILS. NEW-YORK, November 3. Yeflep'iay .the ship Minerva, Captain Clarkfon, ar • rived it tins port from London, which he left the 7th, and ihe Downs the ijth of September. [By the Minerva, Clarkfon.J An American gentleman, who arrived yesterday > in London in 43 hours from Aniflerdam, reports, that lie saw 14 fail i.l the line and a number of sri : ga'e-at anchor in the Texel Roads. He states also, that the French, to the number , ;of icb,oco mer., have .irtuallv crofted the Rhine. 1 iiis lujnwur, tlie probability of which is fanrtion -1 ed by every preceding account in the French and j Geuiian papers, we have given limply as it reach td us; It was confidently believed in Amsterdam on Ibe 31ft tilt. j Gcvernm<*nt yesterday morning have received ' fume fai tiler difpatchesfrom Quiberon B.'.y. Very • litne on this furtjert is fdffciei.. to tranipirt, but it appears that an uninterrupted louefpondence is kept I up \Vith the Royaiilts South of the Loire, as also 1 with the Chouaus in the interior of Brittany. Sept. 5. The report of the Fiench having crolfed the Rhine, is confirmed b.y private letters from Ham bi '. They fay, but without mentioning any date, that the army of the republic has passed that 1 , river in fulj force. The negotiation at Basle, for a peace between Fiance and the empiie, appears to encounter new j diih' J ulties, and -to meet with obstacles which ii threaten to be infurmouutable. On the one hand, I we arc told, that the llatua quo, and the avacua tion of the wliolfc coiiqucied territory, are the ; terms offered to France. Such conditions, we 1 will Ventura to affirm, were never before proposed to any power, after such a series of virtoriee, and possessed of such a superiority of military force. 1 The propofcrs of such terms seem to have entire- , ly forgotten the relative situation of the belligcient powers,, and to have supposed that France was re- , ceiving indeall of dirtauoor endif ; on's of pe-ce. I 'i'hev are uureaionabie, because rrance is entitlcil j io .c.ip the fiuit t>x her viclunes ; they ar; unjult, 1 i " V • » : : because ft; haj a tight to a compeoiation tor her expence ot h] h\l :;nd treasure ; and they "are con- ! temptibly ridicuii-u, because there is iKtf even an ! apprartnee <>t such a military force as would be iieceffary to fecund tiicm.aiid io induce the French government to make such large and unexampled concessions. We freely confefs, however, that nothing' can be more harsh and humiliating for the empire, than to make peace on any other terms. This the/ ewe to the prefumptuoui incapacity of thttfe (iatelmen • who have involved ail Europe in difficulties, from which neither they nor any man <else is able toex tricate it, and wiio have placed the dates of the i empire t» h lunation so peculiarly critical, that it .is < almolt equally difficult and dangerous for i hem to makepeace, or to carry on wax- 'Fothefepre . tended statesmen, the Princes and States of'the Empire are likely to owe the loss of their domin- < ions, the Germanic body, the ilifmemberment of i its territoryj and all the powers of the state of infe«urity and peril in which they will be ! 1 placed by the aggrandisement of France. ] Frelh reports are in circulation of an early and I . ftort session of parliament, to be closed bv a disso lution. For our parts, we believe, that the fame i irresolution and fluctuation which pervade all the I other parts of government, also prevail in this, min- I titers, we ate convinced, have no plan on the sub- i jedt. All is committed to the Chapter of Acci- < dents. 1 hey know not whether they are to recog- < nize Louis X/ 111, They know not whether they are to carry on a mad war, or. conclude adifgrace- ! ful peace : and they jire equally when < they will difTolve parliament. All theft contingcn- i cies depend upon each other, and upon anything but design or forefignt in miniiters. ' i September 7. WAR BETWEEN RUSSIA AMD PRUSSIA. A Paris paper of the 3d inft. (le Journal de Peilet) has the following article : " Ihe Empress of Ruffu has (! ;; tared war a gainlt the king of Piuffij. Amonglt the motives assigned by the Empress in her declaration of war, the following are the molt rerrtai kabk: " That his Prufllan Majelty jias refuted t« eva cuate the diftridts of Cracovia and Sendomir. " 1 liat his Prussian M;jelty has made a peace with the French, to the prejudice of the <1 gage ments whicli he had contradted wirli a power late ly become the ally of her Ruffian Majesty." We are noft', according to every appearance, on the eve of a war with Holland and Spain. We have captured a frigate of the Dutch repu'blie. So ber men, not infedied with a political Mania, will alk what hostility the Dutch have committed sgainlt us \ They have dismissed the Stadtholder; or ra ther he abdicated his office by retiring from the United Piovinoes. Spain has ventured to recog nize the French republic, and, to prevent the sub jugation of all her dominions in Et'irope, has been rajb enough to furrender„apart of her territories in America.' these are good orfufficient reasons for a declaration of war. But it appears, in fadt, that so insatiable is our hatred to the French, thru wc cannot be upon good terms with the pow ers connedltcd with them ; and to be an ally of that nation, feeras to be a fnfficient cause for exciting the vengeance of Great-Britain. The trcafury prints are now busily employed in preparing the public mind for a rupture with Spain. The Spanifti part of Hifpaniola, they fay, certain- ' ly became Freneh property in the moment when the treaty, by which it was giveh up, was ratified ; ' and that in this light is the matter considered by ; government. But if we should attack their part ' of the iflnnd, whilst in possession of the Spaniards, this quibble will avail but little ; and the firft gun that is filed, will obviously add our late ally to the ■ number of our enemies. Difpatchcs were yelterday received at the Admi ralty ftom Lord Bridport's fquadrsn, at Qmberon Bay : they Hate, that his I.oidlhip'sfquadron were very much in want of both water and repairs. Mes sengers, in oortfequence of these advices, were sent off to the different sea ports of Plymouth, Ports mouth and Falmouth. Difpatchcs have been received at the Admiralty from AJm. Duncan, who is arrived in the Downs, from his cruize after the Datch fleet. The Ruffian fleet remains ip the North Seas to watch the ope rations of the combined Swedilh and Danilh fqaa drons. Died, on the 15th uh. Prince Charles George, \ of Hesse Darmstadt, in the thirty-ninth year of his 1 age. Saturday some difpatchcs were received at the j Admiralty fiom Rear Admiral Parker at Jamaica, which were brought over in the Princes*. Royal . packet, Capt. Skinner, arrived at Falmouth, and brought >.o'wn as far as the 20th of July. The I fleet on that 11 at ion had failed to look out for a French squadron expedted from Brest, under com- ' mand of Admiral Val de Neilley. Saturday.the three percent. Consols rose 1 7-8 per cent, from some intelligence circulating about Change ; one of which ftifed aih adtion between the BniilU ami French ii'.ets in t;;e Mediterranean, . j with great advantage to the former j but there is no regular communication of any such event, how- : ever probable. Another Dutch frigate is said to be taken in the North Seas; but no official accounts are arrived. ] A communication is now fettled ; so that go- ; vernment are likely to have notice of anv material I event in the course of three score hours from Paris, wind and weather permitting. The whole naval force on this intended expedi- . tion to the Welt-Indies, will be ten ships of the 1 line : three of which are to be large three deckers, 1 besides frigates and llorefhips. The reception of Gen Montesquieu's petition, ( and that of the Bithop of Autun,'gives us realon 1 to hope that the whole clafsof Constitutional Emi grants will speedily be reltoied to their country. When will the French government have generality and magnanimity enough to require the liberation ; of the gallant and unfortunate La Fayette? t The time fixed for the failing of General Aber cromby's army for the Well-Indies, is the begin 1 ning of Ottober ; it will consist of 25,000 men ; j loj'ooo of whom are destined for St. Domingo, 1 au«i the rcuiaiuder f u i the Leeward islands. Gen. ; •/■ ■ ' Whitt gees om (ecwidt-i H/.nrnjnt?, *.nd will ~!0 bably l»rfr the dire&ftu of th'> foive iuiemie.i 'o ( id againfl the French f?Htmc.i.U i« St. Domingo. cflticar Mr. the Klcfleiiger, arrived tt Lord Greuville's Office, with difp.itches froth Vi« enna ; a,.d Mr. Hunter, the Messenger, at Mr, Dundas'i Office, from the flritiih Cavalry on the Continent. The contents of these dispatches have not trans pired. The Mi'iTengerj arrived at seven o'clock la the morning, and a Cabinet Council was held at L»rd Grcnville'g Office at twelve. 1 ne destination of the troops under the command of General Doyle, is fupbofed to be for the Cape of Good Hope. Should this be'fo, as the Count d'Artois and tb« Frt;!<rrk:its will have no British troops with them, we mt)fl t;ot t.tpetfl any Gazette accounts of their operations; :til they get to Paris, or meet with some such disaster as their prepurfots at Qaiberon. Satutday morning arrived at the Spawfh Am. baflador'i Hotel, Don jofeph-Chai Ics-Antonia, Marquis de las Cafas, the new Miuiller Plenipoten tiary from Madrid. Such is the ignorance of political tranfa£h'on» in which the Spaniards are held, that not only it the peace with France .till unannounced in their Gazette, bat that the body of the people had not difcovercc it, at neatly three weeks from its con clusion. 'The treaty was signed at Bade, about ; days journey from the Spanish frontiers, on tbi 2id of July j and there are letters in to\*n of the Bth ult. frgm ihe rftofl refpedlable houses of Bar celona and aleutia, which fay nothing of peace 1 , more than that it is eagerly drlired. The airily lift is now as large s#s the Bible, and much mote looked into ! City Dancing AfTembly. THE AfTemblies will commence for the Season, on Thursday EvVi/ing, the 19th inft. J OX. RfDMAN, "I Sam. Stehrett, {-Managers. Too. W. Francis, ) November 4. " dtlcjth. A few Bales of Book Muslins, One ditto of Bed fide Carpets,——To be fold low s to close Sales, by Mordecai Lewis. Novem. 4- jawiw. Sale of valuable Property. To be Sold, by Public Au6lion t OnTuefday, the 10th day of December, 1795, At the Tontine Coffee-Houfe iu New-York, at 11 o'cloek in th« forenoon, all the right, title, and iutrreft of ths AMERICAN IKON COMPANY] In the following valuable TRACTS of LAND, •*;*. I- LL that trait of land containing about 2500 acres, -L\- fitnate in the county of Orange, being part of the mountain lets. No. 32 and 13, in the patent of Cheefecock, formerly laid out by Charts Clinton, Esq. deceased, and purchased by tlfe Agent ot the American Iron Company of William Smith, Esq. on the Bth day of November, 1766. This tradt contains fame plough land and swamp; also Potuekei't Pond and the outlets thereof. 1. All that tracft of land situate ou the Weft fide of Hud son's river, near Buttermilk Falls; containing 1000 acres. In this trait there is said to be a valuable mine, fomc good swamp and timber land. 3. All tliofe two traits fitutte on the north fide of the Mohawk rivsr, beiDg part of the Manor of Cofby, pnr ohafed by the Agent of tiie American Iron Company in the years 1765 and x 767, of Oliver Delancy, Efq;. the one con taining 2940 acres, the other JBl5 acrcs. 4. All that trail of land situate on the north fide of the Mohawk river, near the German Flats ; adjoining part of Cofby's manor, and bounded on the eaftby Canada crock. This trad will be divided, and fold in the following Lot*, viz, Acres. Acres. Lot t containing 966 Lot 14 containing 1000 » 937 15 Ipoo 3 844 16 4 So& 17 4J3 J 7«3, 18 . 1160 4 19 1000 7 970 io ioc« 8 1000 41 1000 9 1000 ti 39<3 10 1000 7J9 n icoo 24 9,30 14 1000 4J 13 ICOO Tite trad on No. 4 is chiefly beach, maple, bafi and elm. The purchase money to be paid by the following inftal mcnts, viz. one-fourth on the day of sale: one-fourth on the firft Tuesday in A pril next; one-fourth on the firft Tuesday in Odlobqr, 1796; and the remainder on the firft fuefday in April, 1797. when deeds wiHbe given to the purchaser. ' Plans of the different trad; of land may be seen by ap plying to Mr. Piter Goelct, one of th« trustees, in Ntiw- York; or to Mr. Edward Edward/, in Philadelpliia. November 4. ___ m&t - ALL persons indebted to the Estate of Doctor JOHN H. GIBBONS, late of Philadelphia, deceased, are requeited to make payment; and those who have any demands against said Eitate, ;we delired to bring in their accounts duly attefted,lor settlement, to ROBERT HSYSHAM, Attorney in fad for Mary Gibbons, administratrix to the said deeea ed's Estate. Arch-ftrcet, No. 107, Nov. 4. Jan/6t Notice is hereby given that an at tachment was iffucd out of the inferior Gourt of Common Plea* in andfoi the county of Cumberland, in the state of New Jersey, returnable on the twenty-fifth day of "Febru ary last, against the goods and chattels, rights and credits, lands and tenement* of George Hutz (not being a resident at that tint- within the state of New Jersey) at the suit of Jonathan B.dlinger, indorsee of Job Butcher, which was levied by the sheritt of the county of Cumberland " oa a certain Coop or shallop called the Fly of Philadelphia" with its rppurtcnances, as by the return of tiie said sheriff will more particularly appear—and notice is also hereby further given, agreeably to the direction of an a<ft of the Lcgiflature of the state of New-Jersey in liich cafe made and provided, that unlcfs-ths said George Hutx shall ap pear and give fpcciai bail to anl'wer the suit lb' as a/ore -I'aid instituted against him by th.. said Jonathan Ballinger, within such time as is prescribed by lav.', " that then and in hat cafe.judgmcnt lhafi be entered"againii the said George itutz " by default, and tliat the said ;loop or shallop so as •iforel'aid seized oh the said attachment" will be fold for ihe fatisfaclion of all " creaitors who shall appear to b« justly entitled to any demand th»r»un, andfhaii apply for tliat purpose." Dated at Salem, in the county of Salem', in the said state, the thirty first day of ivhtch A. D. 1795. CiLlio, Ckrt. Lvrius Horatio Stockton, *> Attorney for the Plif. J Afrit 1 Jlawl^
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers