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M WANN AII:
VasillA a VI I *™' 1 * *f Piwwirsh.—W* regret toperctivv
I 1111a IjIIiI IIM a I A iM • ) ttat the yellowor imUfiwarltiirInkappeared
mA I I l " Pensacola—«ii or seven deal ha |„J ukrn
lilac* dining- the week previous tu the I Till ult.
I lie origin unite disease has been Mlitreclenly
•ceounteil for in llie dheovary at e number of
cell, of damaged emlfi.li on t.l* in moiyi in
dillr.em pen. o( (he t„w„, where ,| |c r#ver
pri.adud. Tlteee Halt were * perl of the cargo
ol lire brig Franklin, cut eway el (lie Bareness,
end enutted an ineupporleble effluvia They
were Iramcdieldly removed, by order of e com-
niittce of the llue> d of Health.
HA 1 t’HD.VY MORNING. sf.r I. 7. 1022.
I'lintcrafind i( nctfmrj minefrequtMill) thin
•njr other elm of mm to confess cmln,
inrt II’ they tre not corrected hy others to cor
n et them themselves. In Tlmrada)'% publics*
lion) the monthly obituary, it should have been
■net''lionet! wss lor August j mil in the si tide
upon the sub ject of the new poem sltrihuteil to
Moore, In place of •• worthy of him," it should
hive been espretsed tmworth) of lain. A num
ber of others will have been detected by the
Jtadfcr.
Br. Welali rrernlly ettacked (he attend t»
ptmeof Aandrnon'a Biography of the Signer*
of the declaration of Independence, In a cutao*
ry review of that wot It, in such a manner aa to
bting forth a r* crimination, which if not dit*
proved, will At a stigma upon hia character
not to he easily wiped off. The charge
against Mr, \\, is, that having w ritten a life of
Franklin for D'dnplaiiu ** depository, whith he
sold to the author of that work, he, after it* pub*
JtsMerf.— 1 the office of twiurl Dint, Brok*
or, in Boston, was entered on the J2J, ami rob.
bed oi fifty.four hundred dollar*, ptincipally of
bill* of the Kagle Bank, New-Haven, Conn.-
Mr. I), has offered a reward of Si)i) dollars for
the recovery of the money.
A Census of the population of the state of
Massachusetts, in the year 1764 (not 60 years
•go) has just been published, ftom which itap-
licatinn, offered to sell it a second time to Mr. P ears * the grand total was at that day
Two negro fellows entered the store of W.
l/ippitt A Co. on the mght of tht* 29th ult. for
the purpose of robbing it. The manner in
Uhicli the entrance was nude, was by one of
them hoisting the other on hia shoulders, who
iliui opened the door in the second story, which
wfts not locked, descended nnd admitted his
companion. Information was immediately giv
en by a negro boy who saw the transac
tion, to two pence odicers, who proceeded
to the spot, and naught the villains in the act
of carrying oil*several boxes of Spanish svgatv.
They were on Thursday l*nt tried before « Jus.
tlce'a Court, found guilty, ind sentenced to
eight davs imprisonment, and to receive fifty
lashes curb, at vhtferent timea. One of the f«|.
lowsconfeKted that lie hail on s previous night
committed a robbery at the tame placej and It
appeared that they had been induCc4 to com
mil this act by an individual who had prom sed
to purchase from them the fruits of their vil
lainy. Srvral recent attempts, we fed con
vinced, might be traced to the same cause—no?
thing is aioie true than that if the e were no rc.
ccivcrsb there would be no thieves. A free
man of color was at the same time found guilty
of stubbing a negro aluve with intent to will
lie wax lenianced (<; u </ mouths close confine
ment in jaii, mul to rccsivc 75 l.shes at three
■ •evcral Imits.
Health qf JWw-Ter *.--8ix new cate, of yellow
fever ami ilirce deaths were repor’cil to tlie
llonr.1 of Health on the S611, ult. Og the S7th
•'* casea were re; urted—ol theaetwelve, .ever,
al had originated-ia fJKtcl diitant from the ori
ginal seal of the diaeaae- The City Inspector
icporti eighty one deathajhiring the week end-
lug tlie Mill wit of which fourteen were ofyel-
inw (ever. I he city, say,, the Advocate of the
Jfilli, on Saturday presented tlie appearance of
a town bescigcd. l i on, day break to dark one
line of carts containing hoars, merchandise and
eireots, were seen moving toward*Greenwich
village and the upper wards. Carriages and
linclta, waggons ami horsemen were scouring
thcsticeiH nnd filling the roads i persona with
anxiety strongly marked in their countenances,
and with hurried gate, were hustling through
the streets. Temporary stores and olHces ure
erecting, and even yesterday, (Sunday) cults
were in myliun, and the saw and hummer at
work.
Tho Washington City thisettf, remarking
The construction given by Governor Clark
tliealweneeofOol, llammond, (i. e. that it was
*11 ahsndonment of tlie office of Secretary of
Stati) i-xcluims—“ll'liat a pitiable plight such
■ “ouuutruct on;” by the President, would pui
koine of our executive oilier ri in, who are now
•mulling dlienisidvcs st the springs and else
While !'*
Iftfortonaia tihtpwm k. In another column
Win hi loiniil a deiuil of the Ibss of tlie line
picket slop Liverpnul, by striking on an (aland
tof'Ceim the Dunks of Negfuiinulaiid. The Li.
trerponl was one nf the finest ships ever built i
the slate of Ncw-York, and had taken the place
of tile Albion, whose Isle she has thus follower)
•hough unaccompanied with the dreadful loss
of lives of her unfortunate predecessor, A let.
«er from a passenger stales, that she was going
•ttlic rate of seven knots per hour when she
■truck the iceberg, shout half past three in the
afternoon The captain and must ofthe pas.
•angers were on Deck at the time, but she sunk
sorapaily that tlm clothes, papers, books, !uf.
were lost. Nn Maine it altaclied tu the captain,
wliu was hmking out at the lime, hut tlie fog
Was so thick that licfure the ice Was discovera
ble, all eflurts tu keep clear of it were useless.
A puncheon marked "Onsimho," a hen coop,
•ltd si *»'al articles, were picked up on the 3d
lilt, in lit. 41,43, Ion. 4t|, 46, by the ship John
U Thomas, arrived at St. Juhna, N. II. from U
Yerpool, no doubt • part of the wreck, as Hie
Liverpool hud on board some of the Oroaimbo’a
■water casks,and was lust hut a few days prevl
While the population is thus flying from in
fection, we are sorry to perceive that in sever
al instances they have ci^fied the seeds of the
disease wilhtlie.n—twu ol (lie esses on tlie Will
were persons who had removed tu Greenwich
from the lower port of the city. The Evening
Dust remarks of the disease—“it lias at Iasi
gained such a twin! as to become a sweeping
epidemic," which is ascribed to “a fatal cuiifi.
dence in a single individual” Tlie Democrat-
ic Press states, that a private letter mentions a
number of names of individuals who are down
with (lie lever, of whom no account is taken in
tlie reports of the llotril of Health i and that so
great-w^stlie crowd at Greenwich, Glut a per-
eun whu two weeks previous took a house there
at lUUilollura, has rented some of the room, at
kUd dollars a piece. The prevalence of thu
disease io a seiious blow to the commerce ol
the city of Ncw-York, and the scarcity of i#oney
IS so great, that many will fail in their engage-
inents. We entertain very little hope of a
check to it until a frost.
Five cases of yellow fever were reported by
the Hoard of Health on the 29th ult. two of
which were persons removed front the lower
part of Broadway to Greenwich.
Sanderson. It was examined and rejected. Mr,
W. it also profuse in his commendations of the
Life of Franklin, which if the above assertion,
are true, was written hy himtef. It Is prnperto
state that Mr. Wsti.li lias pronounced lheslate<
meet /die, and promises the testimony of ano
ther gentleman in common with his own to re
fute it. The proof, the prool'a the thing.
Diehard C. Tittrrmsry and Polly Clmtton
were apprehended in Hartford, Conn, a short
time since, and committed to jail. The lady
and gentleman had with sn accomplice robbed
tile trunk of .gentleman In Philadelphia of 850
dollars, 550 of which Were found upon them
They will gfdbuMy he demanded by the Exec,
utlvc of Pennsylvania
A letter from an F.nglish gentleman, to his
friend in I’lidailelph i, states, that tlie Plymouth
Agricultural Society, at their late meeting,
awarded the fi st premium to a plough made in
Connecticut, and pronounced it su|>erinr to
evty other invention of the kind, which they
have had in opportunity of examining.
Health o/Qaeiec.—A brig arrived at Quebec,
from Dublin, on the 7th of August, with one
hundred and fifty passengers, among whom an
ahirming sickness prevailed. The captain and
mate were suffering In tlie last state uf typhus
lever, and eighteen or twenty nf ihe passengers
in s similar situation. A Quebec paper of tlie
13th lie’., complains that dying and tlentl emi
grants among whom the typhus lever prevails,
are thrust into houses lu central pans of the
town, to the immediate danger of tlie spread of
tlie disease, among tlie working classes.
Captain rnrter, arrived at Baltimore on the
S8th ult. in 17 days from Lignin, reports that
general Morales had arrived at Pnrto Cubello,
and landed Ins tioops destined lor the protec
tion of that place.
Harbarom.—Who after reading what follows
will say that the Gothic barbarism nf placing
tile body ol (lie debtor in the hands and subject
to the arbitrary will of tlie creditor, should be
tolerated in a Christian land I
From the Furl put Sentinel, .luf. 18.
Imprisonment for debt /—Died, in St. Andrews
Jail, on Salii.day Iasi, Mr. Israel Perley, lie-
longing to Sticin, Mass, aged 32 i ears. Mr. t*.
had been imprisoned tlie last ii months for
debt. An inquest was held on Ihe body of Mr.
Perley, and the following is the verdict, wh cli
is taken from the St Andrews Herald—“ Tlml
the aforesaid Israel Perley, entile 4tli day of
August, mat, being a prisoner in the jail of St.
Aiulrcwi, in (he coun'.y aforesaid, then and there
died of the visit h! mo of God; and tlie jurors
utoresuid upon their oaihs further say, lliai they
believe his death has been hastened in ennse-
quencsof his confinement in the lower room of
Hie jar, where lie ns exposed for three m mills
to a ptstilentinl i ffluvin arising from the vault
in sail room, which occasioned insanity and
(lisente, by which he came tu Ins death.”
248,714 souls, of whom only 20,788 belonged to
Maine, Tlie population of Massschutetts Pro
per, was, by the last census, 523,287 rouls, and
that of Maine 267,8.191 making tngether821,126
-having more than trebled niihiu the period
of 60 years.
The Millers from Ireland, Scotland and En-
glsnd, which have arrived in the Canadua, No
va Scotie, &C. this year exceed 30,000,
1 he Boston Daily Advertiser proposes that
no editor shall notice on any occasion, (except
their shipwreck) vessels, whose names are as
long and ridiculous as some recently christen
ed—one of these is the schooner ” Did-you
ever-sce-lhe-like I”
The Seaton.-Accounts of tho great drought
In Msiyiaud and Pennsylvania continue of a
moai distressing nature. At Frederick, in Ma-
•ylami, the aggregate of wet weather In 10 nr 60
days has not been mure than 9 or 10 hours.
The earn is destroyed and the springs dried up.
At York in Pennsylvania there has been no
Min of consequence since the 21st of February
last, a period of nearly aix mouths. The sum
mer crop* have in consequence totally failed,
A Waggoner who left Carlisle for Ualtimure with
flour waa compelled to sell it at seven dollars
per barrel, on tho road, out uf charity, so great
■vas the distrei* in consequence of the stoppage
«flho mills for want of water. Numerous in-
■lances of the tame kind have ocoumnirall of
which she w the extent of ihe distress caused hy
the unusual dryueaa of the taason.
The-Liverpool Advertiser ef the 13th July
predict* another wet harvest, with all its unfor-
tunate consequence, of d.m.gcd corn, un-
wholesome bread and an unhealthy winter, and
idds-” theae apprehensions may teem very
premature, in the middle of July , but it must
he recollected that tins is one uf tlie most for-
ward seasons in the memory of man v ao much
*o, that even ft> this northern part of the island,
there are fields uf wheat that would have been
ready for the sickle in a week.it the weather
1(0(1 cominncd favorable.”
A letter from Kichmond Of the 29th intt.pub-
wrier, says, “1 am
Lulled in live Cliarlrtlun Cm
eorry to inform yon that S.gnior Ui-osa, of the
TTheatre,-is dead-lie died at Lynchburg, Va,
where he «nd a part of the cuwpany went t„
perform for. lew weeks during the summer.
X *'ii #ty to add, that Mr. Ue.wn, Mr. and Ur,
Horton, Mr. Moreland, and Mr. Kirchoffer, are
•II tick of Milieus fever, which ihey ire suppos-
edto have taken in going from Richmond to *'
Lynchbuig, by water.”
Only three of the crew of the Macedonian re-
punned sick^of fever on the 29th—«U the others
Ate iu » convalescent state.
A shipment of American manufactured goods
will shortly he made from llbston to the Island
ol Haytl, as un experiment. The present rale
of duties in that island, on American gnuds,is
double that on thoseof British manufacture.
1 lie London Morning Chronicle, in an article
on Mexico, obtervea—“The knowledge of tins
state ofthings, it is said, induced the Washing
ton government to send the -only General IVil-
kinettn among them, not only to-further the in
terests of the United States generally, and to
inform them of the recent determinations of
Congress, bm also to endeavur to cnuuteract
and remove the fondness fur monarchical situa
tion*, which they observed in many of the lead
ing men in Mexico”!!
Court tf Sttfutry—The court of enquiry up.
on Captain Hull, continues in session in Boston.
We have visited the Court once (says the edi-
tor of the Patriot) and were then highly grati-
fled witit their course of proceedings. It ef
leaei seemed to manifest a determination to as
certain the truth, and to ferret out corruption
it any there has been. The witness on exami.
nation was Lieut. Abbott, who was allowed a
very considerable latitude in making hisstate-
ments, and appeared to receive all the sympa
thy and countenance, which consistent with its
duty, the Court could extend to him. We came
away alter an hour 1 , visit with very favorable
impressions as to the uprightness and impsr-
tislity of the Court, and prepared to receive
tlicir decision upon the matters submitted to
them with deference.
The Ceulinel stati
J/timert of Napoleon. — An interesting volume,
and it ve may judge from tlie reoummendation
of Nuplleon himself, a very luthemic one, has
been rtpcnlly published in London by Dr.
O'Meara This work purports to b, a journal
of the utreserved communications of the illus
trious priintver of St.'Helena -during tlie three
first years of his captivity, when Dr. O’Meara
was on terms ol perfect intimacy with him, anil
enjoyed his entire confidence. It will be re-
collected that ibis intimacy and this confidence
were the prim ipal reasons lor the rrail of the
Doctor from St. Helena, against the w ill of his
patient and liif own desire. The conversations
were taken down immediately after every in
terview, and afterwards revised when there h i
any uncertainty by further conversations on the
same subj.-ct. The following extract from the
work given in a London paper, contains Bona
parte’s opinion (if Madame do Slacl Holstein,
who lias attempted, with wliut success posterity
will judge, to arite domi the character of tlie
man to whom she rendered herself obnoxious.
“ It la a curious (het, that Napoleon bcmmdn
Mr. O Meara to collect fnr li'un every bonk lie
omdd in which hit was libelled, and read and
In 1643 the-General Court of Massachusetts
ordered .tjist in the yearly choice of assistants,
the ftcetnen in balloting should use'Indian Corn
and Beane,, the Indian Corn to manifest elec
tion i t-he Deans the contrary j with a penalty of
teo pounds for putting in more than one Indian
Corn or Bean for the choice or refusal of any
public officer,
The Unnt] Colossal Statue to the Duke of
Wellington, formed from tlie cannon taken at
several of the victories of his Grace, l-n been
completed in London. The statue alone weighs
upwards of thirty tom, and was to be placed
a pedeatal of immense blocks of Devonshii-i
stone, in Hyde Park. The following is tlie in
scription;-” To Arthur, -Duke of Wellington,
nnd bis brave companions in nrms this statue of
Achilles, cast from the cannon taken at tlie vie
tories of Salamanca, Vittoris, Toulouse, aqd Wa.
tcrlop, is inscribed, by their country women.”
es that Lieut, Abbott had
been prevented attending the Court for two
commented on llmm continually, sometimes se-
' J fchit'ng them, but much oft eneriu strains
ot ridicule. Occiisintudlv some very awkward
stories came out about the authors. We shall
only extract one relating to Madame de Siael
“ Madamede Steel.” said lie. “wasa woman
of considerable tab-ill and great ambition i but
so extremely qiti-iginng and restless, ns to g ve
rise to the observation,-that she would throw
her fnends into the sei, that at the moment of
drowning she might have an opportunity of
saving them I was obliged lo banish her from
court. At Geneva she became very intimate
with my brother Joseph, whom she gamed by
Iter conversation and writings When I. eiurn-
ed troin Libs, she sent her sun to be presented
to me on purpose lo ask payment of two mil-
ions which her father Nccksr had lent out ot
ns pnvHie property to Louis XVI. nnd to offer
her seivtces provided I complied with this re
quest. As 1 knew what lie wanted, and thought
that I could not grant it without ill-treating oth
ers who were in a similar predicament, 1 did
not wish to see him, and gave directions that he
should not be introduced. However, Joseph
would not bo denied, and brought lorn in ill
spite of this order, Ihe attendants at the door
unt liking to refuse my brother, especially as he
said that he would be answerable for the conse
quences. I received him very politely, heard
Ins business, and replied that I was very sorry
it was not in my power to comply with his re-
tjhest, as it was contrary to the laws, and would
do an injustice to many others. Madame de
b acl was not, however, contented with this.
She wrote a long letter to Fouclie, in which she
stated her claims, sod that she wanted (he mo
ney in order tu portion her daughter in mar
riage to the Due de Broglie, promising that if I
w,,h . ' might command
her and hers , that she lenti l be black and relate
Jor me. f ouche communicated tins, and advis
ed me strongly to c-rapty, urging that insocri-
Hcai a time she might be of conffllcrable ser
vice. I answered, that I wuuld make no bar.
daya by severe indisposit oil.
Captain Hull is at present in Connecticut, on
a visit to his father, who is dangerously ill.
’fbefcritish authorities m Canada hare or;
dcred a detachment of troops to be stationed
and the Eastern, Townships, to “give
su, putt to the laws, and the due administration
-Ijustice 1 ’—thsi ij, to prevent smuggling! the
Montreal papers aseert, that of 12,000 chests u!
tea consumed {a the Canadas, only about 2200
paid duties.
“ Slio^y after my return from the corniuest
ot Italy, continued lie “ I wjs accosted b\ \t.i
dame de 8..el in a large cumpan^ Hm U gh
that time I avoided going out much in puphe
She luhowed me every whore and «i.,.iT IC '
close that I could hot shake her off a?i^?
She asked me,’who ,t tins moment" is t ^
■■
serving that “lie could not call her -
woman, but that she was a test,
' a wicked
■LATEST FROM ENGLAND
Tlie brig W ilson, Captain Britton, arrived at
Ncw-York on tlie 27th ult. from Dublin, bring,
ing London dates of the 19th, Liverpool uf HiJ
20lli, and Dublin of the 22d July.
1 lie most important intelligence contained
these extracts is from Spam, which appears to
be in a s'ate approaching to anarchy. Tlie la
test dale mentioned,' from (his quarter, is of the
8ih July. An arrival at Charleston bringsdnwn
the intelligence from the Peninsula to the 33d
of July. By this arrival it appears that the ray.
al guard ofFerdinand, who had so abruptly left
Madrid, according to our last-accounts, are rep.
resented to have reached the French frontier,
where they were received in a friendly manner
by the Cordon Sanitair. -The npinion appears
t o be general in Cuba, says the Courier, that th”
Kings (if France and Spain have a perfectly
good understanding upon the subject of the
late disturbances in Spaini but a confident ox-
peclaliun wus at the same time entertained, that
the Constitutionalists will be able tn save their
country from the horrors of a revolution, not
withstanding the efforts of tlie disaffected to
overturn the present order of things,
The following is tile latest commercial inteL
ligence
Liverpool Market/, Inly 20—Cotton has been
in brisk demand, the sales amounting tu 16,700
bogs. The public sales yesterday were well at-
tended by the trade, St went «a follower 100 Sea
Islands, 620 bsgs of middliiqfto good; fuir qua
lities 12J to 14j, average 13}. Not ma#y buy
ers for Sea Islands, and they sold heavily and
rutller lower. In prices generally there is very
little change; Brazil is rather higher Ilian last
week, whilst Duwcd and Orleans remains with,
out alteration, and offer more plentifully. About
2000 bags have been taken on speculation.
YVe copy what follows from the Commercial
Advertiser of tlie 28th ult,
SPAIN.
The last accounts contained in these
papers are on the state of matters in the
Peninsula, arc dated Madrid 81b July, on
which day the revolted Guards left the
Pardo, and after leconnoitering the city,
with the view of forming a junction with
their brethren in the palace, or getting
possession of tho King’s person they at
tacked it in three divisions, two of which
were immediately diacomfitled, and the
third, after some hard lighting with the
Nalional Militia, compelled to retire.
In the mean time, (continues the fie.
counts) several demonstrations wereir, a( | - „
about the Palace; Morillo siefced tl>- e ,
stables. At this period great consterha
Don prevailed in Madrid, *r, j . h ,
ston is likened to thatwh> ch pre ^aiUJ iri
Paris on the famous 1 Qfjr of Auguot Fi
italiy.il is said, a ’deputation from tlm
Cortes tnststed thMthe king should dil
nuarHa'nnd" 0 ' r60 ’? ,nin g diviaiono of his
guards under certain stipulations, and put
himself Ufider the protection of the regn-
lar troops. Ferdinand acquired } the
guiirds were! dismissed, and he was com
ph lely its the hands of the wnslitipnal-,
In this businea, no person of the rank
of a general was engaged on the side ol
Ihe rebels. On the side of the peonle,
Morillo and Batlasteros weremnsl active
It is charged tiNthe Duke del Infantiduthai
tic tvas guilty of attempting to involve the
peasantry oT Madrid in the disgrace of the
dayi which accusation, if proved, may cost
him his Irte.
Tha Iasi Paris paper which had reached
London, (ofthe 16th July) contains nota-
ler intelligence from Madrid, from which
circumsiai ce, it was supposed, the c»u>
munjcalion between France aad Spaiu was
flbstrucled by the iJioaefflenH of the hot-
tile pat lies.
Subsequent aernunta add, Hut Hie )>„U
del Intnnlido ami one hundred tk i», ,, tr
eight others had been arreaird »s tlire
chiefs nf a conspiracy to effwl a counter
revolution, in which some agents of France
were implicated. The Secretary id n lu
War Depart men t had resigned rather
than obey the injunctions of the King wlm
had insisted that orde'rs should bfi sent tit
General Pspinoaii not locomo to'Mmlrid.
A butly nf revolted Caribineera had been
entirely destroyed by the militia in Autle-
lusia. On the whole it appears, that the
liiiitnplt of (he Constitutionalists hod been
complete, and that this last attempt to
restore (lie ancient tyranny had few or no
parlizitns among the people or even ainonc
the oliicers of the army. “
The Constitutional, alluding to these
events, says dial a meeting 0 f ,h e foreign
Ambassadors bail been held at Madrid, at
the house of the British Minister. The
Austrian and another Minister propnsedj
s species of report on Ihe recent proceed-!
mgs in the Spanish capital, to bu drawn
up lor the inlormatioo of their respective
Courts, the preamble of which report was
to declare, that all the disturbances in
Madrid, and the dangers to which the
King’s throne and life were exposed, hail
been occasioned by the Liberal Faction,
popular ideas, and the manoeuvres of se
cret societies. Our Minister (Mr. For-
syth) relused lo sign any such document,
because it wa B contrary to truth ; end de
clared, that if it should be published he -
would contradict it in the face of the A
world, and assert that the King was the'
prisoner of (he Royalist Faction, by which
alone all the disorders had been caused
and tho Monarch’s persmi endangered.
This determination is said to have been'
approved of by Ihe majority of the Diplu.
matic Body, and a note prepared, found
ed on the basis of Mr. Forsyth’s declare-
lion, which hail been signed by all the em-
hasssdors but one ; who had it waa he-
kieved, demanded his passports. Uis
name is not mentioned.
Accounts from Usynnne, of the 8tU
state that the insurgent chief, Quesudnu,
had completely ruuted tho troops under
Banos: and thnt ilia a I* VTS Sf nf fi la — Veo * I L
and that the army of the Faith
lied taken Lerida, except tho Citadel,
which the constitutionalists could not hold
two dayB longer.
FRANCE,
A letter from Paris of the 15th July,
says, “ government has just concluded a
contract for 10,000 horses fur the arlille-
ry, ij'c- All Ihe different officers have
been ordered to their posts,-and tlie cun-
scripts uf 1821 are ordered to ioiu the
army/’
RUSSIA AND TURKEY.
The private advices from St. Pcfers-
burg, to the 80th June, continue to men*
tion the return of the imperial Guards,
and that the continuance of peace is uo
longer doubtful. % *
GREAT BRITAIN.
Mr. Leonunl gave notice in Ihe hoivta
of commons, that he should bring for*
ward a motion on the 23d July, relativo
to the recognition ot the independence of
South Americas
The 8th of August had been ffxed fur
the king’s embarking at Greenwich ou his.
(our to Scotland,
Many of the principal underwriters nt
Lloyd s hud refused to underwrite a shin
about to proceed from Ihe Thames with
warlike stores for Turkey; therubyslrong-
ly marking their abhorrence of the cause
of the barbarians.
1 lie culamiiius of the Irish have no wnv
abated. Hundreds 'were dying daily of
want, and the hospitals were filled with
the sick. 'I lie promise of harvest, how.-
ever, was favorable,
FROYI FRANCE.
From Ihe Aero-Fork American of the 76th inn
Uv the Cadmus wo have received our
regular files of Paris papers to (he 12th of
July, | heir content* have, of course, been
anticipated by the London papers receiv
ed by the James Mmiroe, yet we perceive
severe! particulars or continental intrlli*
getree not given in the latter, which wr
insert below. The details of the atrocities
committed by (he Turks on the unhapfcr
Greeks of Scio exceed, if possible, thiiU
given in p(receding statements. Amntit
other victims upwards of 5000 children
under five years of age, are slated to havit
hung, drowned, or otherwise destroyePii*
the Turks, At Tenesme the Greek cltil-
dren are said to have been tied together
and drowned, fifty „ r sixty a B ti
these wanton cruelties parallel, if they
do not exceed, Ihe noyades of the French
resolution, yet Christian Enrons coute.nu
plates them with apathy if riotcompfa-.
wncy, for they are committed in tho name
and under the (anction of established a-
busi-8, and the unhappy victims are invol
ved in Ihe crime of asserting just and ns--
lural rights againstthe tyranny of fanatical
barbarians. The cause of (he Greeks i*t
withstanding their partial sufferings,, is
Mill not to be so desperate as is supposed.
The inhabitants ot Albania, known under
the name of Arnauts, have almost exclu
sively taken part with the Greeks.
A junction ot the Wullachians and the
Arniatoli (nr Christian Militia) had been
effected at Fourca and San Marina. The
allied force was well pro.iJed, being in
poSsetsidn of some English artillery,
which had furmerly been supplied to All
Pacha. Chourschid Pacha, suspected by
the Pcrte of having appropriated to his
own use (he greater part of live treasures
of Alt, sod also ananyed by the Suliotes.
it was supposed, would be driven lo raise
the standard of revolt; The Pacha of
Scudre, m Macedonia, had already thrown
--ff allegiance to the Porte; and the avow.'
ej design of Ihe Pacha of Sitlonica to ex
tirpate Christianity bud apiead Ihe fl.me
•it rebellion throughout the country. In
these statements encouraging to Hie pros
pect of the liberation of the unhappy