Gen. Miranda, in lii* jufllScafrry memorial, in exculpation of iiiuilelf, tbl ows- ail the blame on Dumow ier, whom lie accufeiof tre.ilon. The moll positive contradiction is given'io fonie very absurd reports v.tiich had been indiiltiioofly e nough circulated relpeciiiig two BaibiJi-I'jancci now on the Conti nent. The public are itnieated to give-J-iwie-ocedk toany fiich reborn. ) h'is is the day appointed for all the inhabitants oP the 1 olnh pro vinces taken po (It lii on ot by the Icing or Fruflia to take the oath of fidelity to that monarch. Count Hei izberg is the petfon whom his mnjellv has sent to repj efent him on (hat ntdiinn. The acconni ofc iHe fud !en death f>f Dr. Lettfoin is untrue. 1 tie doiftor has contradicted it in a let ter l'ubfcribed by binifelf. Letter from Gen. Dampierre to the National Convention ot France, written before his nomination to be Commander in Chiet ot the northern army. " Finding itie republican danger, 1 have taken fiuc.h extraordinary mealuresas 1 Hope will mtft your appi obaiion. 1 will rally to your - standard as much as pofTible the jroops, and all good citizens to counteract the designs of a traitor, who has now thrown off the niatk. 1 dispatch to you ci' ip.en I ardie, officer of enginry ; he has been wit ness to all the intrigues ot Ijumoo rier and. his little circle ; and ot :t!l that horrid scene ot vi 1 lainy cI which those he entertained about him were capable. He will-let you into a lull ■ ■ knowledge of all this dark hiftoiy. It is my wiflt to save my country .'I wait with impatience for your as filtance and pro edtion. I oifer mv felfbecaufe 1 fee no other general that will come forward. When a superior is appointed, who has his country's falvaiion at heart, and the independence ofthe republic, 1 will obey his orders to the lalt extremi ty." Never was an age so fertile as the present in chemical discoveries. Ac cident some time ago proved, that animal fuMances remaining a cer tain time in the earth, instead ot be ing; devoured according to the vul gar notion by worms, were convert ed inn a fubilance of exac'tly the fame qualities with that called Sper maceti. Experiments have been •since made in imitation ot this pro te/s of nature ; and various pans of'the human and other bodies, de posited a few months in the eqrth, or in water, have been convened into infiaipiiiable fubftauces, whicli burn with a bright flame till they totally coninmed. Ihe only parts not thus convertible are the earthy basis of the bones. And as every thing infiamtnahle relolves it felf in lis analvfis into different kinds of air, the body of tnan therefore will finally resolve itfelf into ethe real fubltances. All dead bodies are capable of being made into candles ; and ihofe who have been tlriving in vain.to give light during their lives, will certainly have that capa ..city after they are (lead. According to Lord Rawdon's af feo miles, welhall find the cities of Mentz and Caflel, (which (land op pofiie to each othei on the banks of rhe Rhine) closely besieged by the Prnlfian General Kalkreuth. At tending the Rhine about fifty miles, we come to Spires, where General Wurinfer, at the head of 40,000 Germans, is preparing to lay siege to Landau, a Wrench town in Alsace, which Marihal Vnnban employed all his (kill in rendering one of the ttroiigeft fortrellesin Europe. Pro ceeding about twenty miles to the fomhward, we find Ctiftine with the remains of his army, which tlie Ki"£ of Prnfiia has driven from the Electorate of Mentz, encamped un der the walls of Weillenbourg, in Alsace. The celebrated invfcmor of the terrible fire, known under the title of Cailles, which did fiich surprising execution at the late liege of Bel grade. under Marechal Laudohn, has been sent for expreis from Vi enna, to affiil at the siege of Menrz. T he allies, it has been rtated,are by no meaijs agreed as to their object, or the mode to attain it. 'f he ge nerous valour of the Prince de Co bourg, it was laid, refpefled an ene 454 mv, he had found brave beyond ex pecta. 1011. VI l»iit was even yer more motnen tons ill.in this, it was aliened, upon ue know not what authority, that the BritiHi Cabinet was n»t indil posed to negociate for a peace. To (his idea, the vigorous preparations at home, and the fubfi.fy to foreign troops g|ve some contradiction ; not TTTdeeJ i Surmountable tothofe who recolltrt ishe Miniller's accuftonted practice of armed negociations. Mr.-Secretary Dundas's son, who is jiow of age, is the political pupil of Lord Auckland. He docs not come into Parliament till the noble Lord has pronounced his education finijhed. The Earl of Fife's fuccefiion to the fortune of his kinfwoinan, Mrs. Duff, is disputed by her nephew, the foil of ihe late Admiral Duff. The bsne of centemion is worth jo.oool. of coilrfe it will afford pret ty pickings for the lawyers. Miss Scott, tjie wealthiest Heiress in the kingdom, is, by an abfuid C laufe in her father's Will, prohi bited front marrjing-a Peer, or the presumptive Heir of a Peer, under the Penalty of forfeiting the greac (Ell part of her fortune. This per haps may be one reason why Mr. Dundas has never counted on the ho nors of the Upper House. You,rg Oswald, the son and heir to.the great fortune of, the Ameri can Peacemaker, is lately married to the beautiful and accompliflied Mis: Lucy Johnson, of Edinburgh, j Extract of a letter from Dundee, data , April 21. " I am just now. come from wir n effing a molt ditit'trous and melan choly scene. Above 150 persons having this afternoon crowded 011 board a light lloop in this harbor, at full tide, in order to view the launching of a vellel from the dock yard, unfortunately,froin the weight of the perfonson the (hrouds, yards, and declc, the (loop overset, and eve ry person was thrown into the wa ter. By the Angular exertions and activity of the teamen (and huma nity of others who ft ripped- and fwarn in to save those unhappy per sons) bqats were inttantly got close to the wreck, and almost allot them were picked up in less than a quar ter of an hour. lam sorry to learn, however, that about thirteen have pevilhed by this fid catattrophe.— The wild and helpless fci earns and veils of parents and others, i.t qnett of, and trembling for the fate ot children and relations, may be much easier imagined than described. A mother saved with the lots of theiu f;int in her arms, and children pre ferred with the loss. of their keep ers, formed altogether the molt helpiefs and wretched piftnre 1 ever beheld. It has indeed at present spread a very dismal gloom over the face of this place. United States. WINCHESTER (Vir.) June« 4. On Thurftey the 23d t:k. Lome pcifor.s un known, but believed 1 om a variety of circum ftmtces to cr»ni;ft of from 3 to 6, fir. d upon thue unarmed Indians, two Chickafaws and a Che rokee, in ihe woods, about 600 .paces from Gov. Blount's house, and.wo.undin tne Chick a.aws ( John Mot-m) wijh which wound he died on the 24 h, and was buried on the 25th. The toitowiwg is Governor Bloum's order for \ hie buTial: "■John MorriS; the Chickafaw who was so inhumanly murdereo on the 23d inlUnt, by the bale hand of fame unknown ailailin,. to be bu .ried thi&afternoon, at theufual bunai ground of the white people, with the military honpisdue to a warrior as hi* friendly* nation. TAe pio ctfliou 10 com,meuce in the street near the'inaga iinc, at four o'clock. ORtiER OF PROCESSION. ,c Serjeant, corporal and twelve privates to precede the corps. . 41 The Governor and brother of the as chief mourn- rs. ' | " The Chlckaiaws, two ant! two. " rhe civil and miliiary officers, two &. (wo. " Private citizens, two and two." < The tnnabitants ot Knoxville generally, and many from the circumjaccnt coun;ry attended., and expjeffed great lorrow at the inhuman mur! der ot this good and iriendlv voting Chickalaw John Morris, and his brotnei Janus Andtr