a^nawwaa—hk—a ! CONTINUATION OF LATE , I Jforciott intelligence. VIA NEW-YORK. From Hamburgh papers, received by the ship Black-River, capt. Smithy in 48 days from Hamburgh. Armies of Italy.—The Vienna Court Gazette of the 10th inft. contains the capi tulation of Bologna, against which place general Klenau had made those movements detailed in our hfi. The ordinary Vienna Court Gazette ot the 10th contains only long details of the battles from the 17th to the 20th, which prove that in killed, wound ed, and prifouers, Macdonald 1011, in that period, 17,268 men, including 4 generals, 8 colonels, 502 flaff and other officers, &c. 3 generals, 149 flaff and other officers, 4776 men, in killed and wounded. By this im menle Daughter, which chiefly decided th' fate of Italy, it appears, that the French colonels, 350 ftafF and cpn.miffioned ofl must have fought with more desperation than GCrs an d 7183 no.i-conimidioncd officers am military prudence. privates, as prisoners. F. M. SuVarow lia Againfl the remains of Macdonald*S army ftened to pursue the flying enemy on 'tin of 16,700 men, at the iitmoft, above 30,000 20 th in 2 columns ; that on the right over- Auftre-Ruffians are now marching; and taking them on the Nura near St. Giorgic general Klennu, who entered Bologna on the Gen. Cfubarow, after several engagements, 30th tilt, left that place the next day, with took prisoners the 17th half brigade, com -4b Tufcany, after having taken, near Bologna, m-ls, i lieut. col. 26 officers, and about three cherts with Roman coins, and some j 1000 non cominiffioned officers and privates, liugdred? of waggons with baggage, ammu- | being of the enemys bed troops, the cide nition, and 'precious effrtts, deflated for rant regiment d'Auvergne, 1 piece of can- Paris. noil and 3 stand of colors ; regiment of Prince Sulkowlky, who was fuppofrd to Karaczay likewile took 1 piece of cannon, have arrived at Vienna with official intelli- j howitzer, andcolfacks the whole baggage gence of frelh victories over general Mo- of this column of the enemy. The kft eo rean, brought the above dettils of the for- lumn on high road to Piacenzi, fllFo over mer anions. But, if we consider the rapid took the enemy ai fd { orccd them to accele motions of the armies, it is not to be won- rat e their march. Ed, in Vienna, of the battles which many troops heard of a Ligurian legion under Gen dircdt letters and news-papers, from Italy, Lapoype, for whole arrival Gen. Macdo announce to have been'fought between F. M. na ;.(i had wilhed 3 days and made thc>greateft 4S ■ 27th to the 30th tilt, in confluence of having been sent bevonJ the Po already, on of Bochc tta, towards Genoa, whither F. M. to our right column, could be annoyed by Suwarrow has already sent proclamations, to j iritis legion. F. M* Suwarow hiving quick announce his near approach for its- speedy IJy sent 2 regiments of Co (Tacks back by Stj delivery. Some letter* (\ate Moreau to be j Giorgioty cover it, the legion, without wait on his retreat to Nice, which he will find ing their arrival, r&treated to Bobbio. But extremely difficult. | General Betetzki having penetrated from Ourprivate letters from Pavia, to the 4th, ; the Trebia towards that place by the njonn and from Verona, to the sth July, lay, that ! tains, with I Ruffian battalion and 50 dra after the total defeat of Morca:\ with the j goons of Karaczay, he encountered that lc lofs on his fide of 10,000 men, taken prison- | gion there ; and though it was upwards oi ers, (t generals, and several thousand in kil- j 3000 men flrong the General attacked with led and wounded, the Iwperialifls entered 1 the bayonet, diipt rl'ed them entir«ly, except Genoa. Bnt this account, however proba- ! too men, who killed, and 103 taken prifo column (these letters add) ts detached, to ] and 46 taken. scour the diftrifts of Florence. | "The array now continued the puriVit as In the armies of Switzerland, nothing far as Fiorenzuolo, where it arrived on the bad occurred, except demonfhations and re- j 2 |ft. On the lame day General Oti iciic'.'ed iiTorccments 011 both fides. Borgo St. Tonino, and pursued the enemy - on the next day as far as Parma, where Gc n, VIENNA, July 10. | had alieady arrived from M..n- Confirm the statement lately giren by private while Gen. Ott took 120 prisoners. contains two supplements, with an account zuolo, namely, the 22d, aud intelligence be f the * ider of Bologßa, 1 - ; tula- 1 : received,, that Gen. Moreau had pent J t J \ c. .jrrendt by caj ' i ,» and a most interesting cireumftantia -" 4 detail of the battles of the 17th, ißtfy ant '" f x ult.'-an4 the farther movements of'the J"• 'l combined army, down to the 20th, tilt. , ~~ Bcfides a numerous artillery, very confi - derablt were driven beyond the Trebia, with the bayonet, and loft 400 men in killed, j officers and 120 privates as pri soners. " In the quarter where Gen. Mela» was, the enemy attacked Prince Lichtenftc-in three times but were repulsed beyond the 1 rebia, with the loss of 900 men killed, and up wards of 50 prisoners " This terminated the third day by a de cisive blow in our favour, and the enemy renouncing the hope of feeing Moreau arrive, retreated by night leaving behind them, wounded in Piact-nza, four g\Berals, four ing . ~.«ca,. ~ trated with 1800 men fronv Genoa by tin Bochetta, into the plain between Tortoni and Aleffandia, the army immediately broke up again from Fioiienzuolo on the 23d and gained the Secrivia, on the 15th dint of forced marchek ; but Moreau di«j, not think proper to remain, and on the fame evening Gen. Csubaro* occupied the city of Torto- na, with 4 battalions, aftd blotkaded its ci tadel, as before. " Moreau had fought on the 18th with Gen. Bellegarde, who being obliged to keep Alexandria blockaded, couid only oppose the enemy's superior number with a weak force ; yet Gen. Bellegarde, though with tht sensible loss of 203 men killed, 578 wovnded, and 1229 prisoners, prevented the enemy's farther progress, till the arrival of the army, in iuch a manner that Moreau re mained four days totally ina&ive, and on the fifth began his retreat towards' Novi, and had puffed the Bochetta on the 26th. " Thusf in thefpace of ten days a nomc rous army was almott destroyed, the siege of Mantua again secured, the whole Po deli vered, Tortona re-blockaded, and Moreau thrown back to his former position. " The refitlt of those toilsome days is 6,000 of the enemy killed ; 5,085 priloners on the field of battle : 7,088 wounded priso ners, included 4 generals, 8 colonels, 5©2 stasis and superior officers, consequently in all 1 2,268 prisoners : 7 pieces of cannon, and 3 (land of colors. Our loss eonfits, in killed, of loftaff and superior officers, and 244 non-commiflioned officers and privates ; the wounded, 87 ftaff and superior officers, and 17816 non-commiflioned officers and privates, on the part of the Imperial Ruffian troops I lieutenant colonel, 4 officers, and 676 privates, killed ; 3 generals, 3 colonels, I lieutenant colonal, 5 majors, 35 commission ed officers, and 2,041 privates, wounded. political opinions, Sec. it was anfweud tSat it was a political fubjeft, with which the military could not interfere -. The g?r rifon with their baggage, behdes the Frenc 1 taken prisoners on that day, in the attack made on the bridge, and on orher days; to depart freely, and undsr fafe escort, to Pietro Moli. « The farther particulars, with the am munition and provifioni found in Bologna, are to be given hereafter." At 5 o'clock, this afternoon, cap'. Du val arrived here, as courier, from F. M Suwarrow with the intelligence of a new attack, made by Moreau, with 12,000 men ; but he is said to be completely defeat ed, with the loss of 2,000 men, and the reft of his anny was entirely dispersed. COSTANTINOPLE, June 20. After his defeat before Acre, Buonaparte sent one of his mult resolute officers to Cairo, with orders for the commandant to fend him immediately all the troops he could spare. The latter answered, it was impossible to weaken his force, being threatened on all fides by superior numbers, and having much to do to keep th« people of t airo in fub je&ion. Receiving this reply, Buonaparte ordered thecommandantof Cairo, and all the garrison to j"'in him ; but the officer charged to carry this order, seemed confident of the utter imprafticability of advancing through Palestine, where the Turks occupy almost ail the paiTages. This cirtumftance causes the highest consternation in th« French ar ray. A small vessel, dispatched \>y Sir Sidney Snrith, has foundered at sea. 1 hree Engltfh officer»and a dragoman, who were 011 board, went to the bottom. The Grand Vizier expeds to terminate his marcltfrom Scutari in fifty-three days. The flotilla of galleyß, which arrived here from Widdin, will go to Egypt. HAMBURGH, July ap. The Frankfort papers fay,, that Buona parte, has been wounded in the thigh, and loft, tbe best part of hi 9 grenadiers ; diseases were also making great havoc among the French, It is ccr'ain that most of the Turco- Ruffian forces are gone from Corfu to Mal ta, to support the operations against the forts of that iflaod. The a&ivity of F. M. Suwarrow exceeds all descriptions : as soon as he wakes, he takes the bath, dresses himfelf, goes to his foldiere. and tells them—" We must march boys !" The Ruffians (land as unfhtken as walls when in n&ion, and thsir officers set them the example of bravery. Gen. Moreau's force joined by the Jivi fion of Victor, does not exceed 25,000 men. - On the 26th ult. the French entered Mo den.t a third time, and retired after railing a contribution of 15,000 sechins. Pruflia is said to have consented to the paflnge of troops through Anfpach and Ba reith. All the Swiss troops and armed peasants, who fo'ight with the French, have been al lowed by the Archduke to return to their ntfpeftive hemes. VENICE, July 5. It is certain that Admiral Nelson block ades the harbour of Gei:Ott with above 30 men of war. Just as we had learned that the French Fleet was blockaded at Toulon, advice was brou ht from Tried, by an Aus trian ship from Regufa, with the news that the French fleet had been defeated Rear Malta, by the Englifti, who captured 8 (hips and funk the fame number, whilst the reft had saved 1 bemfelves by, flight. This fliip news nerds the mote confirmation, as. similar re ports from sea are fcldom to be depended upon. NORFOLK, Septemper 10. By the arrival yeflerday of the letter of marque ship Hope, c ptain Callaban, from Liverpool, we have received Lon don papers to the 20th, and Liverpool pa pers to the Z2d of July, from which we give thefollo wing extracts : BOMBAY, March 1. " War was declared agaiuft Tippoo Saib on the 3d of last month, at Madras —Our arm es are already marching towards Seringapatam, which place, with Mango loie, and all the Betuate country-, will I hope, be in our poffelfion in two months at fartheft." [Morning Herald."] Yeftfcrday afternoon captain T. Graves, of the Ve:iUß frigate, arrived at the admi ralty'with dispatches from earl St. Vincent, which are said to contain the official account of the junction of the French and Spanish fleets in the Mediterranean. From the London Gazette. Downing drtet, July 20, 1799. Difpatchet of which the following are a copy and extrad, have been received from the lieutenant colonel Robert Craufurd, by the right honorable lord Grenville, his ma jelly's principal iccretary of ftacc for the foreign department. My Lord, I have the honor to inform ySur lordship, that on the 3d instant, a considerable corps of the right wing of general Maffena's army under the command'of the general of divi sion Lacourbe, attacked general Yellachitz's position in the canton of Schweitz on the whole extent of his front, from the Sill to Schweitz and Brunnen. affair laftcd the greatest part of the day;—and although the French at fir ft gain ed some grbund, thfy were afterwards com pletely repulsed ; and general Yellachitz's corps re-occupied all its former polls, except Zurich, July 6, '99. Brunnen, of which the enemy retained pof- , session on the evening ot the 3d, hut ftol , whence, h; was alio repuli'ed the next morn- Major general Yellachitz- bellows great praise on the contingent troops ot the can- : tons of Glarus and Schweitz. 1 have the honor to be, f G ; ROBERT CRAUFURD. Extract of a letter from Lieutenant Colo nel Craufard to Lord Grenville, dated Zurich, July 7, '99- I have much fatisfa&ion in being able to inform your lordftip, that in t of the total defeat of general Macdon.ild s army and the retreat of Moreau, general Haddick's corps, the detonation ot which has been so frequently changed, is now de cidedly on the point of entering the Valais. BOSTON, September 11. v Latest from tbe Fleet si Captain Ozias Goodwin, - who arrived here yesterday from Gibraltar, on the 22d July, in lat. 36, 6," long. 9, 57, spoke the Carolnie Britilh frigate, from the captain of which he learnt, That the combined French Snd Spa nilh fleets failed the day before (July 21ft) from Cadiz ; and that he had watching the fleets that morning. . , Captain Hills also spoke the frigate, and obtained similar intelligence ; and that at 2 a. M. the fleets were Handing to westward. On the 2 jth July, spoke a Danish (hip, the master of which informed him, that he had been boarded by one of the French cruizers, from the officer of which he learned, that the combined fleet was ftandiug'N. N. W. dis tance feveii leagues. At 6A. M. Capt. H. bore away, to avoid the fleets. %f)t dsa3Ctte. PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 16 For tbe Gazette of tbe United States. \ Mr. Fenno, TENCH COXE, lately at tbsCheflercounty court, in the pretence of a number of refpefla ble citizens, expressly declared that Mr. KoU had encouraged and Itpported the waftern in furrtflion. This charge it so impudently falfc as fcarcelv to merit refutation, only to ftiew the total want of truth and propriety in Mr. Coxe propagating it. Mr. Coxe, when commiflisner of the reve nue, niade an official report in 17941 the secretary of the treasury, in which he minutely detailed all the caufet which led to the western infurre&iop, and named the mod ailive agents in promoting it. In this report, which is very lengthy, he never Infinuafcs a charge againit Mr. Rofs, nor through the whole of it mentions his name; but on the contrary, he decidedly fiatet, that Mr. Gillatin and Mr. had • Uid the foundation of, and principally promoted the inl'uri'eflion. Does not, this (hew to what vila and abomina ble lies Tench Coxe and his party are reduced to iupport the eleflion of Mr. M'Kean ? AN ALLEGHENY VOTER. According to the best accounts. Buonaparte, so far front re establishing the Jsfvj in PateJliae, is in a fair way of becoming a wandering Jetu himfelf. The wits of Paris are somewhat miflakt-s as to the igent who is to adminifler extreme untlion to the Dircilory: It is sc t Abbe Sieyes, because he is one of them ; Suwirrow is to be the High Pr'iejl of their final iifmijjion. SUWARRQW ahd SERRURIER Th* following anecdote, tranl'mitted to us from the Imperial head quarters, may be de pended upon as authentic: The French general Serrurier, two days after he had surrendered with his corps to General Vukaflovich, dined with the AuflrioGeneraliflim<» The cloth being taken awav, the veteran of Rimniikoi aflted th« Gallic Chief, where he intended to retire to? " To Paris," answered Serrurier.— "I am glad of that," laid Suwarrow, "and hope to fee ynu there soon " Serrurier neatly replied, " This is what 1 always hoped my felf." [Lon. paper. The duty on flour alluded to in Jos. M. Yznaidi's letter, (publifhcd in the Gazette of Friday lafV,) laid by the new lutendant at Havanna, is eight dollars per barrel—behdes the former duty of twenty, one and an half percent. Eleven deaths of ferer, were reported at the health office iu New Yoik, for the 24 hours ending at 12 o'clock Friday. New Orleans and Charlcfton,(S.C-) are said to be extremely sickly. Jteiv-Tork, September 13. By Hambu rpapers received yesterday, we are enabled to lay before our readers late Official accounts of .the operations of. the armies in Italy, to June 26, —By which it appears that Moreau arid Macdonald are re pulled and beaten in every quar;er.—lt also appears by an article under Venice head of July j, that the French fleet had been de feated near Malta, by the Engtilh, who cap tured eight ships and funk the fame number, ■whilst the reft had laved themselves by flight. This news was firft brought to Trieft by an Austrian fliip from Regufa, and then receiv ed at Venice. On Thursday afternoon a duel wis fought at Powles Honk, brween Mr. William Chambers and Mr. John Furnace; in exchanging three foot on each fide, Mr. Chambers received a hill through his coat, and was wounded in both of his legs. Mr. Chambers wiftied, another (hot, but the seconds would not permit it. A» Mr. Cunningham, the late pastoral poet, was fifliing on a Sunday near Durham, he was oblerved by the Rev. and corpulent Mr. B. who auftertly reproved hirn tor thus prophatiing the Sabbath. —The pot r Bard heard him with me«k nefs, and then replied, " If your dinner was at the bottom of the river along with mine you would angle for it a'.fo." [Z,o». Pap. jdßajette JLift. Port of Philadelp The following velTcli of this port were at Hamburgh the 18th July : Ship Good Friends, Earl Fame, Richard Connefticut, Moore Brig Liberty, Henderl'on Sally, M'Call Weft Point, Elderfor Snow Abigal, Thornton. The (hip Clothier, Gardner, of this port from Liverpool to BaHimcJre, was spoken on Friday lait at 3 P. M. Cape Henlopen Light-houie bearing W. by N. distance 7 Ltaguts. Ncvj-York, September 14. ARRIVED, Ship Clepatia, , Cuiracoa Sheperdefs, Ryers, Savannah Brig Hunter, Parker, Cape Francais 23 Aurora, Witen, St. Kitts 17 Polly, _ Bunck, Jamaica Ceres , Savannah Schr. William Goodrich, St. Vincents 17 Fox, Ramfdel, Havannah 18 Sloop Susan, Bird, Charleston Boston, September?,. Arrived, brig Benjamin and Nancy, WiL liams, 53 days from Oporto. Scfir. Little Cherub, M'Condrav, 49 days from Madeira. Sch. Adive, Atkins, 46days from Liver, aotol. Schr. Trio, Silfby. 74 days from Russia.... Sch. Lydia, Annapolis. S'pt- 10. Arrived, ship lnduftry, Goodwin, f rom Leghorn and Gibraiter. Ship G'Brien, iJills, from Valencia and S jibralier, 49 days from latter place. No 17, Ion!;. 46, 2c. W, fnokethe United States Yigate L'lnfurgente, of 40 guns, Alexander Murray, Eicj. Commander, 10 days out, all veil, bound to Gibraltar. Sii'ip Holland, Goodrich, from Farragona *' nd Gibraltar. Sailed under Com. Meeks. junds. "55 -1 o £ £ 2 O O o 0 o o I 0 o > o 1 2 [ o ) I ) o ). o \ o ) o ) o REPORT Of the Sextons of tbe different the number of Funerals at tbeir grounds. for The 48 hours, ending THIS DAY AT 12 O'CLOCK. Names of tbe Burial Grounds. Ctinlt -Cliurih, St. Peters, St. Pa ims, xfl Prefbyteiian, 2d do. 3d do. Scots Pri-lbyterian, Associate Church, St. Mary's, Trinity, Friends Free Quakers, Swedes, German Lutheran, German Presbyterian, Moravian, Baptist, . - Methodifh mVCrfili uj Jews, African Episcopal, „ do. Metljodift, Kensington,, Public Ground,* The above list comprehends all the bufigh- ', from the City and Liberties of every- diseai* order of the Board of Health. , WILLIAM ALLEN, Health Officer. CITY HOSPITAL, ' ADMITTED. Walter Dugan/Corner of jd 8c Plumb ft. John Bergen, Walked to the Hojpital. Eliza and Patrick Boyle. N cholas, Margery, Sophia, Suf.m and Grace Boyle, not fictc but admitted as diftnlTel Children. Betley Sharp, Meade alley near Water ft. Jacob Emlen, from the street. Jane M' Dermott, 6th (I. between German & Catherine ft. Hugh M l Dermott, William Middleton, admitted infenfib'e Susan Sullivan, ill 3 days previous to ad. Mary Bayer ill 2 do. do. John Davii, ill 3 do. do. di stharged. Catharine O'Brirn, Ann M'Kenfey, S'd ney Si/ith, (a black woman,) Margery Bell, John Murray. Jacob Meyer, Polly Price, Samuel Davis, (a black man) Alexander Cocheran, Mary Ann Dickfon, William Evitt, Philip Conelly, Omiojohnfon (ad mittcd by the tismc of Maria) a black wo- man. Remaining i-n the Hofpit,al 53, of whom 25 are convalescents. Interred in the Public ground tfee last 48 hours. »Clty and suburbs, 6 City Hospital 4 PETER HELM, Steward. POINTED iIY J. H'. FEN SO- }« v" * O O | o o O 9 O O ° . 6 o o o o .0 Total 14 s\.