foreign intelligence. VIENNA, June 15. The Austrian army of reserve will have thrse .different camps j the tit ft in the neigh bourhood of the Inn, near Braunau ; the fecood, in Upper- uftria, near Well# ; and the thir in Lower-, mft ia near Miuken durf. Those camps are already dtawn out and tie magazines ready.—The whole army of reserve will be formed of the divifi ins and companies of reserve which are now in the licr .ilii.iry provinces, and corapleated by recruits ; th divisions have already received order , to. march to their destination. The enmitata of Hungary have explained them selves as to the number of troops tbey had offered to fu uifh ; that number will be 26, 000 men Bohemia will be protr&el by a corps of 36,000 volunteers of that country. The new reci'uuiijg will continue during the whole war, .iccording to the terms of the capitulation. Mr De Switchzky has been appointed md interim, charge d'affaires from the court of Vienna to Petersburg, since the recall of count de Cobentzel- His majelty t e emperor of Russia has recalled his amballador at the court of Naples, the count de Mulkin. BERLIN, June 17. . Extract of a private letter. Qoiftu de Luzi set off on the 14th June as Pruflian envoy extraordinary to the court ofPeteriburgh. Mehemed-EfTendy.Bty-EiTcndi, charge d' affaires of the Ottoman Porte to the court of Pruflia, arrived this morning at Berlin. It is aliened that the Czar has forbidden th&" importation of Enghfh merchandize in-, to Russia ; that he is putting himfelf irt a formidabh; date of defence by feo ; and that a confederacy is said to be forming among the northern powers, to repress the depreda tions which, without regard for any flag, are daily committing by the British. HAMBURGH, June ax. Madame De Genhs is only expedled here about the middle of next month. She will Dot fee any peifon but her tiiro pupils who are in the country, and five days afterwards lfae will return to Paris. STRASIJURG. June ? 7 . Nothing; yci been hrard of the May* c*«« cnrprtn the pay of England which wat to make a dii>erfion on the Mein and the Rhine. It appears that it is in want of officers. It was said that General Kray ■would reinforce it by a numerous detach* ment from his army ; but it is much doubt ed, corifidering the circumstances in which he finds Uimfelf, whether he can fend the lead detachment. Far from it :he draws to him the small bodies he had detached to harrafs the rear of the army of Moreau. It is more positively aliened that he hat reinforced the corps of General Retifs, and that he intends to have that General make a ufeful diversion on the lake of Constance. His intention is by that to prevent our • afting on the Tyrol ; but the forces of Moreau's army on that point are fufficient ty con fide rable to do away any fear from such projeSs. Suchet, lieutenant-general, to Count Ho .. henzollcj-n, commanding the Austrian troops «t Genoa. Head-quarters, Cornegliano, id Alessidpr,(June 11J year 8. General. I am informed that the English, in contempt of the treaty concluded with the general in chief Maffena, are taking away the artillery from the arsenal, and eft p ;rt of the vcfft-ls from the port. Thus, an unfortunate people, a ttranger, from its weakuefs', to all our quarrels, finds iifelf de prived of its dearest hopes. It is in prefetice of two armies, equally generous, that we permit, General, a nation to be thus spoliated ! I knew t."iat your alliance with the En. glilh might be a check on your own gene rous sentiments. But give to the 7th ar ticle of the convention the interpretation which it merits, I invite you to cede to me, in the courle of this day, the pod of the Lanterhe and that of the Mole. In this manner the orders you have received from the general in chief Melas will experience no alteration, and it would enable me to prevent the ruin of an unfortunate state. I expeft from the Aullrian loyalty, and es pecially from yours, general, that you will answer me in to fausfa&ory manner. (Sighed) SUCHET. Copy of the answer written to lieutenant general Sachet, by the commandant of the Austrian troops of Genoa. Head-quarters, Genoa, 'June 2 r, Lieutenant-General, The Englilb have not touched a cannon. I would even oppefe force to it. I am to reflore them to yoe. The affair of the port has been terminated at my instance. At thiG moment, I alone ?.rn fiill the prote&or of Genoa, and I wilh to carry that title a "long with me. I have not received the capitulation, nor even the arrangement which you do nve the honor to mention : perhaps it is an error. Sly orders are to deliver the place to you on the 25th, with its artillery, and the half .. ...... of the provisions. I will execute it. As I V-v Pl^nf"Pr<; to the remainder, M. de Mclas will make what arrangements he pleales : but, above WANTED—in Exchange,' all, it is myl'elf that mult be accountable for A FOUNT of Long Primer, my conduft to his maiefly, in whose name I or ' OO or u P w * r( l ß » and 3. fount of command here. My garrison, who his no ®™ ,er w« S h.n g 4c*lb.. or upwards-.bey r , ,1 c mult not be mnch worn—Any uerlon having desire to surrender, would never forgive me tyvlea of thi above icriptlon and dilpofed A were I to give up one poit hefure the time. Exchange them for otfcer prinling'ijuterials; I wlfh, geneml, to preserve its esteem, and or w : ll fell cheap, ir,l7 ipply *t the Ofnee bf yours alio, 1 the Gazette of the United fiutffs. Tomotr.tir it J o'clock ia the afternoon, t. will lVn4«n ofticetto you t6 conclude tht .ultrrior n»y word that you llwll have polLHton »f tb« fuiti on. the Sjd, anJ the city r»n the.l4th. Tbc EiigJiilinlfo will leav&the.porti The a(Tu)rc*me of it, and you inny rely 011 my word. I am incapable of deception ; and I will anew, cause the cannon to be guarded, not witliftanding there' is no risk. I have the honor to be, with the highelt confide ration, lieutenant general, your very ".humble and obedient fgrVuit. GOMTE UE HOHE^ZOy^RN. WEST INDIES. KINGSTON, [Jam.] July 9. 1 lie American schooner Margaret, with provifi 'n», arrived at Port-Royal yesterday morning, a prize to his m.ijefty 's (hip Arab. July 17- The Hughe?, Guini:aman, with three hpndccd and thirty five Gsld-Co.ilt was taken on the fir ft of June, off I'orto- Uicj, on her passage to this Island, by a Spanifli armed ship, and carried into Porto C iveilo. The mate is arrived here. Yeftcrday arrived at Port Royal his ma jesty's cutter George, with a mail from G. Britain, after a paftage of five weeks from Falmouth—file brings accounts from Marti nique of the hourly expected arrival of Adam Duckworth, to relieve lord Hugh Seymour who commands there. July J 8. The cutte* George patted the Cork fleet for this island, under convoy of the Nereide frigate, op the 25th of June, in lat. 23, long. 3a, amounting to 28 fail. London, June, 39. a letter from Zurich, relates that Buona parte, in reply to a fUtement from the. Hel vetic Government, that the eountry was much diftielTed for prorifion, and that a famine wsuld be the conP-quence of further reqnifitions, returned the followimg an swer:—.Let those who are hungry go to the armies, and fetch bread from Suabit or Lombardy. In conil-quence of fumraonfes sent early on Thursday morning to the Cabinet Min ifies, * council was held at Lord Grenville's office, which fat feve-al hours. PORTSMOUTH, Jrine t 7 . The remainder of the k ufiia<» troops which arrived lately from Gntrnfty, this day were tranported from the ships they •rrived in from Guernfcy into Ruffian men of war now laying at .' pithead and they will fail immediately for the Baltic BY THIS DAY'S MAIL. NEW-YORK, August 19. The brig Amazon, Niel, arrived at the quarantine ground on '■'aturday lad, failed fron St. Sebatlians the 10th July, and brigs an account of a suspension of the nfgocia tions between the American Envoys and tbe Freoch Consuls. The combined fleets were still in port. The Amazon, a few days after she fail, ed, wa* taken by a Guernfcy privateer, and had a priae-mafter and several people on board—Capt. Neil Ih rtly after retook his brig, and brought her into this port with the prii.-mafter, &c. [The Secretary of the Navy hating intima ted to lieut. Eltifoo of the 1 n\>ate A datns, thai provided he would accept from Wm A. Duer, rridfliioman. a fatisfac lory apology fwith Jacobinism niay con tinue. ,Le^us no .longer cry Peace, ueace, when there is no peace, but until the " evil and adulterous generation" of French rob-, bers and .vfurpers " pass away " make no reply to their horttaw profeffions, except through a trumpet, funding tj the cba-ge. A letter from St. Sebastians dated the 9th of July, to a refpe&able house in this city Rates that an express had jult arrived there from Paris, bringing accounts of great vi&oriti obtained by the French in Italy and on the Rhine, and confirming the in telligence that the negoci tions with the American Commiifioners had been suspen ded, in confluence of which fays the writer 00 doubt all W. I. produce will rife. A letter from a gentleman in Baltimore to the F.ditor states, that the Yellow Fever •has made its appearance at Fells Point. [The vigilance of our Board of Health is .unremitting—they deserve the grateful thanks of their fellow-citizens.] From a Baltimore paper. The Mayor of our- city has received a letter from the Board of Health of Phila delphia, on the fubjecVof the Yellow Fever.! He has fubltiitted it to the board of health here, to make a reply, who we understand are now engaged in obtaining the opinion of the mofl refpettable pliyficians of the town and point, in order to give an accurate ae count of the real situation of those places. The New-York Gazette of yederday fays, '* Yederday the Columbus arrived at this port, and the dispatches were immediately put in the poll-office, and will be forwarded this morning to tfife office as the Secretary of State. A gentleman who came paflen gerin the Columbus informs us, that the'fe dispatches were brought down to Rochellc by the Secretary of the American Legation, and were dated the last bf M.iy JLLJi!' * [OFFICIAL.] The Prefideht of the United. States has bfen pleased to appoint David Hop kin*, 6f Anne-Arpndrl county, Marflial for the Diftrid of Maryland. From the loth to the 17th Augufl, there were 59 deaths in New-York, only one of the fever—33 were children. , , Dr. Tillajy, the reGdent phyGcian of New-Yoik atTures the inhabitants of that city, that as it refpeft* tli? Yellow Fever, no cafe of importance has occurred since the 1 12 th instant. The Ftench frigate Vengeance .was near ly ready to fail for France front Cntracoa. the Ift of Augnft, having her fuU compli ment'of mcn from Guadaloujv. The Hon. John Lawrence, Esq. has re signed hi.H feat as a Senator from the state of New-York, in the Senate of the Ur,ited States. Brigadier General Wafhing-on arrived at Char'efton on the 3d inftent, from the en campment of the late army at Harper's ferry, on the Potowmnc. The (hip Gadfden, captain Gardner, of Charleston, from the Spanilh Maine, bound to Charleston, is captured by an Englilh fri gate and carried into Jamaica. PATHETIC. The following incident requires not the aid of the penc.l to awaken every feeling congenial to humanity, nor, in exciting our tendereft sympathy for the unhappy fuffer ers, can it fail to rouse the keenest indigna tion against the authors of such Inhuman wrongs. Two vcfiels, belonging to citizens of the United States, concerned in the infamous traffic of human flefh on the coast of Africa, have been lately captured and sent into this port by the Ganges (loop of war. Taken at different times, they arrived se parately at the quarantine station. the one having on board one hundred and eighteen, and the other sixteen unhappy viftims. With a view to their health and conveni ence it was deemed proper to la»d and en camp these unfortunate people. Scarce had this benevolent measure been effe&ed, and the mifcrable Africans mingled with their fellow-fufFerers when a Husband and Wife ! who had been torn from their home and hap piness, and hurri-d on board separate vefTels by their brutal opprefiors met, and recog nised each other. Loft, for a moment, in an ecftacy of surprise. they exhibited a scene of tender iefs, which would have foftened even the savage hearts of those who had or cafioned their f. paration. But the (netting was more than the unhappy female could fuppnrt ; —her fr .me, lhak n by the influ ence of her affeftions, yielded to the shock, and flie was prematurely a mother ! Let the monllers. who encourage and who praftife this horrid traffic, refleA on the vengeance of an offended God. An appeal to their conjugal or their parental feelings were a loft hope, and a mockery of hu manity. To console the feelings of our readers, we can aflure them that the beneficence of the Abolition Society, and the general fym patl y of our citizens have greatly alleviated the fufferings tff these much injured people ; and we .are happy in knowing that the un fortunate woman is recovering. We uhderdand, that the General Court Martial, in ftlfion at the Union Hotel, have been for several days pad very sedulously en gaged in the investigation and developement of the accusations againd one ot the prison ers, which involve matter of themod curi ous import. That having accomplilhed the hearing of all the tellimony which could be obtained in this quarter, they have adjourn ed until Monday next, to procure, if pof fifcle, the information of a gentleman in Virginia, who is claimed as a mod materi 1 witness. as well by ihe prnfecutor as the prisoner ; for which purpose an officer is laid to have been ye'lerday morning dif patched by the coart A deputation is also said to have been fen-, by consent of parties, to New York to obtain (he testimo ny of some offi era there, who are reported unable, from bad health, to attend in perlon. A late British pimphle'eer observes with great elrgance and energy that the war with France, it followed up with energy and sys tem in the present campaign is near a con tlujion. Whether the Cronriwell who has completely deftroytd the Reptefen tativc Government 'hat great Doric pillar of Revolution ! Whe her he will be induced to change the order of the political /lrchi teSture to its OfcD Corinthian ; or whe ther be will succeed, for a time, in forming a new Compojitc of his own ; (till no order can there be permanent, beautiful, and secure, for Fiance, f>y Britain, and for the world, but the Royal Bourbon Corinthian. The difappoi:ited, tortured, jaded mind of that difcO' folate diftrafted and impoverish ed nation too.feelingly murmers it, if (he dare not openly avow if DIED,] —At Dover (Del.) on the Bth inft. ix the 26U1 year of her age, Mrs Auna Maria Vining, the amiable confoit of John Vining, Elq. To her memory, the following Tribute is justly due—from a friend. How inscrutable and mysterious are the ' dispensations of Heaven ! Short-fightfd < Man ! in the moments of grief and def ► pa:r, is sometimes atmoft tempted presump tuously to queflion the wisdom and justice 0 f omnipotency 1 This melancholy event, to her .connex ions and intimates, is one of those severe and ajflifting (hocks,, under which defpnn ding nature is ready to fink ; and a clrcmn llance that mud impress all who knew that Lady, her iituation in life, and her ineflima ble worth, with sentiments the moll foleinn and' sympathetic. In the tender relations of daughter and filler, of th 4 dill more tender and endearing ones of wife and mother. I f-ar to speak of her—it is impossible to do juflice to her memory. Though an acquaintance or.ly, my heart bleeds while I write ; and the tear of sorrow cannot be fupprefled, when I re colleft that (lie is now no more. In her sudden and unexpeftfed death, all frciety has. ftillamed an isjury, and the female world been deprived of one of its blighted irnan ents. To the higheQ cu'tivited- mind } and ■ heart the mtjfl tender and t6?£Monftcj *cie added a tweetnefs of difpcfitio", "n elegance of manners, and a superiority. in every fe male accomplilament that could endu;Jf Jo niellic life, or aigpify the LaJv. The de light of her fiiends, (he imparted reft and haspinets to every locial circle—«l» who saw, admired and edeemed her. " Each lonely scene {hall her reflore, u For her the tear be duly (hed. " Belov'd till life can charm no mote, u And mour»*d *tilpityN frlf be dead." to n, (Del.) unniveffally lamented, Mr. Joseph Warder, an old and refpe&able iu habitant of this town. Died at Charleston, (S. C ) Mr. John Charles Menville, in the 41 ft year of Ins a^e. A dreadful fire broke out at Charleftoft, (S C.) on Monday the4th of Augult. in which several houses were defttoyed, and considerable pertonal irjury received. A Mrs. Miller and her husband were burned in a dreadful manner—Mrs M died the fame day. It ia Lppofed the fire caught by a candle being held too near a talk of Brandy, which caught and immediately communicated to a cask of Gun Powder. A fnbfcription has betß opened for the fuf ferers at the Charleflon Exchange. Ext- aB of a letter from Capt. Ged of the Petapfco S oop of war, dated at sea, July 30, 1 Goo. " While at St. Thomas's I learnt that e* peditiun was pone from that island againit Curracoa, confiding of 8 or io veflels, and from seven hundre to one thoufa'nd troops. The reafen assigned is, tlie Dutch not ma king advances for the repair of the Vengeance It is generlly believed, and from the inter course I etween th- two islands ihey mult have the mod correct information. I fear should they fuccced, there would be a g'eat deal of American property loft I have boarded several vtlTuls going the e. On 24th inft. I boarded the Brig Ruby, Lillibridge, from your port, fcou- d to St. Johns Pi>rso Rico. Iran down the Island with him, until I loft him in the night, but' I think there is no doubt but h; got in fafe.'*. From the Nitv Tork Commerc '-al /Idven'tfer. Captain Gardner, in the ihip Colum bus from Rochelle, informs, that. at the. time h* left Pars, which was abouttbe. i 2th June the nfgociations between our Commiffionera and those of the Frcnch*-Re ptoblic were going on, but were somewhat retarded in tlieir progrtfs by the in ifpufition of Joseph Buonaparte, ore of the Commif. fiop.—What May have occurred lince that', time, we pretend net ti> fay ; but we are inclined to dilcredit ,the report by way of St; Scbaltiaas, th,it N'.gociation were sus pended. From the Providence Journal. It appears there was a considerable mis, take, (owning to wrong information) in the account published in the Journal the 2d or July, concerning an interview at sea between the U. S. frigate General Greene and a Eritirti /hip of force, on the pafTage of the former from New-Orlans to Norfolk. Since the arrival of the General Greene ' Newport, a letter has been received from then, e (by ih fame gentlemen of this 1 town who handei ua the former acconnt) jetting that matter in its true light, by which it (hould seem. " The Britilh ship was not a 74, but'the Melampus frigate, of 44 puns j that the British Captain, after havihg 6rft obtained Capt. Perry's perrriflion, sent aw officer on hoard the brig under convoy of the General Greene (the Aftive, Brown, of Salem, frota N Orleans) who rema ned on boari but a few 1 minutes. Capt. Perry afterwards aik ed Capt. B;own how the officer had treated him ; he replied, with the utnfoft politeness. Both (hips had ail hands to quarters, and ready at a warnirig to apply the matches to the guns." From en European Print. f Sieyes who expecfted to form a new triumviate with Ban as and Bitonaparte,. does not conceal his chagrin at haviug Ser ved only as a footftool to the thhone ef the Corfican. He awakes from histepofei puts his partizans in motion, and prepares the means of overturning the'idol, of whom Ire is now no more than the priefl. Sieyts wiflies to have the afliftance of an arm, bijt he is desirous that himfelf fliould remain'the bcml. A war has corfequ'ently taken place between the consul and the president of the senate, and pamphlets begin to be circulated on both fides. Two have very lately made their appearance ; one of them dirfeftly levelled again it the Corficar., and the other 1 ' written in favour of the Abbe. ' ■ Information For Sc.i.r's. In a Tate claim for wage? by the sailors of an American