Late FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. From Lond m papers to the 6tb July, receiv ed at Mew-York by the ship Justimi, from Liwpool. WEEKLY RETROSPECT OF POLITICS. r-» r From the General Evening Pod, of Satur- dria, Milan, Turin, Pizzighitone, Arona, day July sth. Platentia, Coni, Ceva, Urbino, Savona, and We regret to fay, that, finer our last &«««» the Auftrians only retaining Man- Retrofpefl, the apprehensions which we tua, Peicaierh, Ferrara, 1 ui then entertained have been realized ill Italy cany and Ancona. to their fulled extent, and all eur hopes I he was d.pulated to continue and wiHies have been fruftrated, by the over- till an answer could be received from the whelming numbers of the enemy, and the F.mpernr || ; but whatever might be the re ill fortune of the Andrian armies. We i fuh > neither army was to recommence hod proceed to the talk impoled on us, of tra- !■£« without giving ten day notice. Tne ting, in a brief but perspicuous manner, the loss ° f the Impemlills in the dreadful battle events that, in ill probability, will lead'to a Marengo is dated by the Gen. Berthier * termination of the war between Auttria and " 3000 killed, 5000 bounded (including the French Republic. 7 Generals, and 4 ao inferior officers,) 7000 prisoners, 12 dandards, and 36 pieces ot It has been before dated, that, as Toon as canmWi That ot t he enemy at 800. killed General Melas was undeceived refpeftmg the (i nc ]„ding Gen. Dedaix, who had jud re forces and dfligns of the French Gonfular turned from Egypt,) aooo wounded, and army of reserve, he sent from Turin orders , loc pr tf one rs. General Melas is now on to general Ott, before Genoa, to raise the thc route t0 Mantua with the whole of the blockade of that fortrefs J but, in the then Anftrian army. impeffett date of our information, we con- ' From the Goad, Suchet ha« re fidered as fortunate the accident by which ported t0 lhe Minider of War at Paris, this orderhad been counterafted. On better that, in his operations againd Gen, Elf grounds, we now experience the unpleasant n j U) between the 28th of May and tht 6th reflexion, that, had general Ott promptly 0 f J unei he had taken 7000 prisoners and obeyed the order, the result might have been pieces cannon. If we may believe more favourable to our allies, or the decision U K p r( . nch J ourna ls, the execution of the at lead protrafted till the necessary aflill- art ; c![; of the Convention signed by Gen. ance could have been afforded (at turning Melas, refpefting the fnrrender of Genoa, the fortune, of the field. It appears, tjiat, met wllh forae obdruftion on the part of on general Melas perceiving the advances of the British Admiral Lord Keith ; whp at Buonaparte's force* into Lombardy, in hiw : firft made s ome objeftion to delivering up anxiety to prevent the enemy from eroding ttlf art i]i er y found therein, and particularly -the Po, he ifTued. on the 2d ultimo, the a claim to either the polfeffion or the mod urgent orders to the commander in the ran |' om of 119 veflels which he had found Genoese to march and defend the padag? of in the harbor, and which he infided were that river, and cover Tortona and Alellan- h ig lawful prizes, as they mull have enter dria. As the French did not pass the Po ed after the port had been declared to ke till the 7th, and the march from Genoa thi. ' n a st ate of blockade. We have not, how ther was at lad performed by general Ott in j erfr , yet fc- n the brave Admirals datement three days, it seems very probable, that, lad on fubjed. this officer, immediately obeyed the orders j n Suab , the Imperi »l,ds dill continue from Mela, of the id, he might have ac- 011 the drfenfive ; but do not seem drong cemplifhed the important objedl fpec.fically enough cffe a U aliy to impede the progress ot required ; some, at lead, of the Audr.an e * emy .-Augfburgh was taken by Gen. magazines might have been f''*ed ; and the on the b 2 Bth of May, afterward. Imperial Chief gamed time to devise means evacuated ani iu taken of on cither of delence or retreat. Fate, how- . _ . 35. n ki,A u , , , , . .. ~ the iath ult. lhe principal object ot M>- ever, had ordained otherwil.. General Ott fcnt evidently is to cut off from preferred «... ing to receive Maffena's fur- Q K ray Ulm t h« fupplie, which he render, winch occupied him till the S th t . hiS drawn from D .nawert and He then eroded the Appennines with tjoco j slftadt by the navigation of the Danube, men, and arrived on the cth at Vocrhem, , r c i i r i where he wa, joined by about cooof who -1" purfuu.ee of this def.gii, Ltj.uroe, had been Rationed to, defence of the TV IK'^ Po, but h»d been driven back by the French * IU the w D",Ulbcnbc irj.i . • tween Dillingen and thc memorable village when they palled that river. , 6 , r . . . ° • of Blenhrnn, altera severe coined with the The French army, under Berthier|, as force under Oen. tlatirr.y, who hjft (the our readers may recollefl, had aflembled at French fay) 4000 prifoneri, and 12 pieces Stradella ; but its advanced guard, under of cannon. The Hamburgh pafljrs speak Lannes, was at Broni (about midway be- of armies of Rcl'erve, and other aWple pre tween Stradella and Voghera) at the time parationsby forced levies in Germany, for general Ott reached the latter place. Th* carrying on the campaign ; but tliofe or nejit day (tiv 9th) Lannes puflied hi« divi- ders having been ifTued long before the late fion forward, supported by Vidor and Wat- difadrous events took place, it is very un rin, and found the Imperial army occupying certain at present whether thc Emperor will the heights of Cifleggio, a village aboat pcrfevere 111 ,the conted. Meanwhile the half way between Voghera and the Po, and Gonfular Chief seems to be arranging a between the former place and Broni. Here powerfulplan of operations againd the Ger the enemy made the attacks about noon ; man Army of Suabia, in cafe the anfwrr of and after a mod obdinate conted, in which his Imperial Majedy should not put an end the numbers on each fide seem to have been t o the campaign. While Gen. St. Suzanne pretty equal, and the advantage was for a on the the right wing of Moreau is prepar long time doubtful, nay, in many points, ing t« make an irruption with a considerable in favour of the Andrians, the latter were force (which has been colle&ed near Mentz) at length broken, and repulsed as far as into Franconia, the division of the Army of Montebe|lo, with the loss of 3000 killed Reserve under Gen. Moncey is marching and wounded, five pieces of cannon, and with 25000 men from the Milanese through Jooo prisoners. the Valteline, to attack the Grifons, the By this time the Auflrian Chief Melas, principal pod between Italy and Germany, ■finding that the Po had b.en passed by the Should thi* plan succeed, with a French enemy, quitted Turin } and concentrated his army poded in Franconia, another in Bava forces at Aleflandria. General Ott, contin- "a, and a third advancing from Switaer lially pre fled by the French army slushed 'and, Marshal Kray mud be reduced to the with its late fuccefles, fell back on Tortona, neeeflity of trying the fate of battle, or and continued his retreat towards AlefTan- submitting to a blockade, by a very superior dria. When, however, he had reached Ma- force. rengo, a village three miles Ead of that city, From Egypt we have had French ac and about a mile and a half Ead of the C ount«, profefiing to copy an official letter Bormida, he was overtaken by the French from lord Keit h, a s commander in chief of army with the chief consul at its head, who the Britilh fleet in the WediUtranean, to had polled from Milan and eroded the Po General Kleber, which declares that he had the very day whereon the battle of Cadeg- po /; t j Te jndruaions not to consent to the ' gio was fovght. Melas now joined bis kind of cap it u lation that had been entered forces to those of Ott, attacked the advan- j nto w ; t jj 0I)e 0 f t h e allied powers, § 4cc. in [ eed guard of the enemy, under Gardanne, con f eq „ ence 0 f which it was, that Kleber j at seven ra the morning of the 14th, and the (a 8 in f e lf defence), renewed hodilities on j battle soon became general. As a very mi. t v he Turks . Acaordiag to the fame date *ute official detail of this ever-to-be-remem- mentS( however , l ord El g j„ had fubfe bered aflion was given in our lad paper, it ~ dec i ared t o the Ottoman Porte,that will be only necedary here to date, in gene- h; , Britannic ma j e sty, f ro m refpeft to thc Jal terms, that the battle lafWd 14 hours, the Q Seignior, would not impede the cx opponent arnnes being all the time within cut ; on or t h, treaty of El Arifch, although muflcet (hot of each other ; and prodigies of it had not his entire approbation. It re valour were exhibited on both fides. At mainB t0 be seen whether Kleber wil , now the comniercement, the advantage was with acc the , ftmg offered b that treat or> the Imperialids, who had made goo pnfon- fu r mi on his own drength, and his al trnoment, dash' d intothe midd of thefqnad- of battering cannon have been (hipped, rona,animated them by his example, and de-! The Quidnunc*, as usual, have been pay cidefthe viftory. General Melas now at-: ing into the lecrct of its dedination, and tempted to retire towards Genoa ; but the ' seem to have come at lad to the sage con- French General Chabran, who having been (lnfien, that it ia-jeither intended to attack ftationtdat Bardo, had fallowed the Audri- the western coast of France, the Dutch 4 an dies tuarceuvred on his rtiT 1 and cut off his retread The next roSrlJuig (the fjth,) finding the fortune of the day so decidedly with the Frencharmy, "Melas judged it proper to fend General Skall to Buonaparte, with "pfojjofals for an Armistice ; and a Convention was afterwards signed by himfelf on the one part and the French General Brrthier on the other, by which the enemy was put in pos session of twelve of the (Irongeft towns and fortrefles in Italy, viz. Tortonaj AlefTan - - province of Zealand, 0* Ac Frehch army is Egypt ! ! ! A quadruple alliance is (we know not on Mat foundation) said in the Germanpapers to be forming between Russia, Prussia, Sweden and Deiiifiafk, sot restoring peace to Europe. Eeery thing, indeed, seems at present to lead to 4 supposition, that Aof tria will fooncoule to terms with the Freneh Republic ; but the proceedings in Parlia ment do not eticonrage any very sanguine hope, that this country will be able, in confequcnce, to relax its exertions. t It has been rationally conjeftured, that Maflena's engaging the Austrian officer iti negociation at tliis junflure was a pro jected measure, to enable the consular army,- without interruption, to secure the Milanese, the Austrian magazines, and the passage of the Po. Buonaparte did not (as supposed in ourlaft) accompany the march after the capture of Milan, but remained in that city, and sent forward his army under the di reflion of Berthier. || No tidings refpefting the determinati on of his Imperial majesty had reached town when our paper went to press. 5 This will account for the temporary detention, by lord Keith's orders, of gen eral Defaix on his paiTage from Egypt. LONDON, July 6. Sieyts cannot forgive Buonaparte for having torn from him the consular fafces, he obtained by a lengthened series of crimes, mean compliances, treachery, and tergiver sation. He cannot tiring himfelf to regard as his milter the man whom he thought fufficiently honoured by being employed as his lieutenant. A few days before the Chief Consul set off for Dijon, Sieyes con cluded a train of reproaches, which he had made in the hearing of more than twenty persons, refpefting the e r asures which Buonaparte permits from the lift of emi grants, with faying, " Buonaparte,you wilh to make yourfelfa king, and every ftepyou take brings'.you i earei the throne." Sieyes,' cooly replied Buonaparte "my country has made roe a general, I with to die a general. If I had happened to be born a king, I (hould have died a king, and had it been my fortune to have been educated a priest, I (hould r mained a priest, and I (hould have died faying mass." This sarcastic re ply prodaced a general laugh against the Abb' 1 , When Buonaparte, after refig'iing the crmmaad of the aimy of England, had set out from Paris t" Kaftadt, he pafled on his way through Basle. There liv«d then in that city a very rich Banker, who was a decided royalist. His hatred against innovation was such. that though he could not withhold his esteem from the virtuous Barthelemy, yet he never could prevail or himfelf to go into the fame company with him ; i»or indeed were auy sf the Minis ter* or agents of France pemitted to enter his house At a little diltar.ee from the gates of Basle this Baker had a superb country house, which almost all strangers vilited from curiosity, and where ihey were received with the most cordial hofpitali y. It was not doubted that Buonaparte would have willingly gone hither, if the proprietor had expressed any defue to fee him. The honest Swiss was requested to fend Buonaparte an invitation, and at the fame time to permit twenty five Austrian soldiers to conceal themselves in-the house, with the view of seizing his person during tha night, and of conducing him to the fartrefs where 1 the brave Bournonville was condemned to langui(h thirty two months. The banker was (hocked at the base offer, and the pride of his integrity was still further hurt, when a very considerable sum »f money was pro mised as a reward of his compliance. He instantly declared, that instead of being ac ceflary to so infamous a plot, he would be the firft to discover it to Buonaparte, if he (hould perceive any-suspicious movements, either in his own house or the vicinity. To this man, whom the influence of political sentiment had rendered his enemy did the conqueror of Italy own his preservation. DELIJNGEN, June 16, On the 13th instant, the Austrian Gene ral, count Sztarray, was compelled by the fiiperior force of the enemy to retreat by the Zufmerthaufen and Wattenhaufen. He withdrew, with'a part of hi* troops, over the bridge of Goniburgh, to the left bank oftheDanubp. On the 14th and 15th, a new a&ion took place, in which the troops of th« Empire were engaged. Tn the mean time the left wing of the French army ad vanced from Biberach, between the Danube and'tbe Lech. The French have likewise advanced from Kempton, and palled the Lech. ULM, June 19. On the 17th, in the afternoon, an afti on took at Leiphelm, near G un/brug, on the right bank of the Danube. The coun try here is level, and the Austrian cavalry were able to aft with good effeft, of which we had a proof by 2®o prisoners being brought in, moll of whom had very severe sabre wounds. RATISBON, Jnne 20. The report that the French had entered Munich and Ratifbon is unfounded. They have not hitherto made any considerable movements in Batavia. The corps which pa fled the Lech at Friedberg hat partly withdrawn towards the Danube, and Gen eral Meerveldt has agiin adtanced. Mo reau manoeuvres in front of Gcoeial Kray. Gazette of ihe United States. PHILADELPHIA, ■frKDNIS.IDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 3. PRICES OF STOCKS. PaII.ADM.FHIA, Se PTE MBKli j. Old 8 per Csnt Stock (or c»fh 109 per cent. N«w 8 per Cent Stock do- ioߣ Si* per Cent, (lict amount) 871 Navy do. do. 87 Three per Cent. do. si Deferred, • do. 84 BANK United States, do. 31 —— Pcnnfylvania, do. 16 —— North America, do. 48 [nluran.e tomp- N. A. fharci 10 pet cent, be low par. Penhfylvania, ihares, it per cent-, adv, Turnpike Shares, 10 per cent, noder par. Bridge Stock, par. Baft-India Company of N. A. 7 per cent advance Land Warrants, dolls, per 100 acrti. Erratum. The Address to the Governor of Pennsyl vania, in yesterday's Gaiette, (hould have been signed " Seneca, and not " Senex.'' S. P. B. cannot appear unless the author's name is given to the Editor, either verbally or by letter The behaviour of the Fellows ought to and fliall be exposed, provided the charge is backed with the author's name, which lhall, on no account, be known to any perfpii but the Editor.—lf the fatt stated is true, there ought to be no hesitation on the part of S. P. B. The Liverpool Packet, Beebe, has arrived at New»York, in a (hor: passage from Liver pool. [OFFICIAL.] Extract of two letters f'om Lieutenant John Sbanu of the Uni ed States Schooner En ter prize cf 12 guns and 70 men, to the Secretary of the Navy, dated the 10tb uni 26tb July, ißco. "On the 9th instant, I fell in with the French privateer L'Aigle of 10 guns and 78 men. She engaged me with much fpirii for 15 minutes when (be lowered her co lours.'' " Ob the 23d I fell in with and captured the French privateer Flambeaux of 12 guns and 98 men. She engaged me for nearly two glafles. L'Aigle had 4 men killed, and 3 wound ed.—Flambeaux 4 men killed, and 29 wounded. The Enterprize 2 wounded in the engagement with the Flambeaux." Extract of a letter from Moses 1 ryon, Esq. commander of the United States ship Connecticut, dated St. Piere's, Martinico, 21 d July, 1800, to tbe Secretary of the Navy. " Since my last of the 21ft ultimo, we have only fallen in with and captured from the French, a French Ketch culled Le Chouchon, with a cargo p;r invoice, which I dispatched this day with the convoys," The United States (loop of war Balti more, Capt. W: Cowper, has lately con voyed from the Weft-Indies, 16 (liips, 35, brigs, 56 schooners and 10 (loops making in the whole 10,7 vefieli Capt. Blunt, of the brig Guftavus, arri ved yesterday from Lifcon, informs, that on the night of ift July, the Mercury of Hull, laden with Spaniih wool, was cut out of that pott, supposed by a French privateer. Her cargo was valued at 300,000 Crowns, Accounts state, that many American ves sels are captured and carried into the Island of Gucrnfey, where they are condemned un der the flighted pretexts. The ship Caroline, Motley, of Portland, had betn recently taken in and the cargo landed. Shi was bound from Spain to New York, when taken. For the 48 hours preceding Monday morning, fun rife, there were reported 28 new Cases, at Fells-Point ; total now sick 101, exclusive of 18 in the Hospital. In the fame space of time there were 28 deaths in Baltimore and its vicinity. A London Editor fays we have a won derful account of a sailor, on board the Ca. ledonian Ead-Indiamen, who, in a violent ftorni near the Captof Good Hope, had his ftiirt blown from his back. There was, it seems, on this occasion, no need " to raise tbewindto purchase another. A wicked witendeavours to insinuate that Buonaparte has Mrs. Billington into his service ; and, what is flill more pro voking-, that he has done it, not for his pri vate amusement, but that of his people at large. The celebrated Barrington has become High Constable of Parametta, iu New South Wales. There is now at Bath, on his way to the metropolis, a religious maniac, named Wil liam Forbes, from Peterhead, who gives himfelf out as the last of the Prophets. He fays he is the person mentioned in the Apo calypse of St. John, who is to recover the book which the apcftle ate. This book he has written, and has printed at Montrofe in three small pamphlets. They are in a barbarous, unintelligible jargon, partly in prose, partly in verse. He does not, how-' ever, affix any fpecific time for the accom iplifhment of his prcdiftions, and the politi cal part of thena is all against the French. He appears to be a harmless, inoffenfive creature, but a perfeft enthvfiaft in his own fanciful prophecies. Heahh-Office, 9th mo. 7J, i 360. The BOARD of HEALTH, impref. fed with a sense of GRATITUDE to the Great Author of all our BLESSiNGS i thankfully acknowledge his superintending protedting Providence, oter this city, in pre serving it from the Ravages of Sickn.js of former years.—And they can with peculiar fatisf £iion congratulate their Fellow-Citi zent, and their friends in the Country, that the City is a* perfe&ly FREE from sick ni'ss, as at any period within their kootor ledge. By order of the Boafd, EDWARD GaRRIGUES, President. PETER KEYSfiR, StCRtTARY. We underliend that the General Court- Martial, recently held at the Union Hotel, have completed the business. before them, after a leflion of five weeksj and adjourned without day; The members Were imme diately charged by the Prelident, to repair forthwith to their refpe&ive Rations. The Court are supposed to have been engaged m the decifioh of two causes of the firfl im portance to the military chara&er of th® nation. The President and Judge Advocate left town this morning for the City of Walhington, and the members dispersed to their different posts. The Editor of the New York Gazette fays—" We have it from authoiity which we cannot dotibt, that Burk, the fellow whtf sometime since printed the " Time-Piece" in this city, was lately hung in Ireland." [Mat tin who prints the Baltimore Ami ricart, was a partner of this fellow in Bos» ton.] ' Extraß of a U'hr from G Ir altar dated July 10, 1800, to a refpeSaEle merchant m Salem. J " Since our last. we have received from Spain the unpleasant news of the Austrian army having been completely beat by the French, headed by Buonaparte, and were under the necefiity of giving up all their" conquests, Genoa included, to get leave to retire with th# remains of their armies, which have been cut up in a most (hocking man ner, if the accounts we have received are true. 1 his will put a stop to fpeculatiant from your continent to Italy, unless you fettle matters with the French, so that you can fafely enter their ports, which we ex pedt must soon be the cafe. The Engifh troops gone up from this can now b- of little or no use, and I suppose will be called home, unless it is judged there are fufficient to make a serious attack on Malta. Our crui fera off Cadiz are determined to tak; evety thing going in ®r coming out there, as they fay fufficient time has elapsed for those in Europe and America to be apprized of it } therefore they cannot plead ignorance," 14 July '7- A li'P has this day arrived from Z-rghorn in 12 days The captain re. ports that there wefe a great many Ameri cans there, but no sales making, and pro perty was getting afloat with all p fijble dlf. patch, as the French were expend. It was thought the Emperor would make Peace, but nothing ha. transpired that can insure its taking place. The losses the French have sustained are great, and it ap pears both armies are heartily tired of the contest. Coufideiable blame is attached to the Austrian Hurfe, towards the cl«fe of the last decisive battle f r refufing to charge and give a decided fuperiortty to the French —as yet we have not seen the Austrian ge-1 neral's account of it. No prizes of confe-, quence have lately been brought in here. The plague still rages in Barbary.'' , ExtraS f a letter from Curracoa, to the EdU tor of the dated the lft uh. } " Five privateers have arrived here from' Guadaloupe, full of men and fuldieri. The, Vengeance has recruited hcrfelf from them,: and is now 50 strong, and will fail fromt this port in a few days. Hope the gallant commodore rtiay chance to fpeax her. The Governor has bad all hands under arm< ever fincc their arrival, but IO or 12 days have* pad in doing nothing oc either fide; but I hear this day that some of the privateer* are going soon. Ihe embargo was taken off this day, having been on ten days ; but provlfions are so scarce, that the veflels are permitted to go merely upon that accouot I imagine." E/eSion in North Carolina for Rcprcftntativtt in Congrcfs. Hill/borough DiJlriß. Majority for Stanford - Fayettcvi.lc DiJlriß. Majority for Grove - - . 2ig 2 Wilmington Diflr 8. Majority for Hill ... Bg^ Mr. John Stanley, is elrSed by a majo rity of 856 votes a Reprffentative iu Cob grefs for Nrwbern Diftridt, in the place of Mr. Spaight. Hr. Robert Williams is rg-ele&ed by a great majority, a Representative to Cote grefs for the counties of Rockingham, Stckes, Surry, Guilford, and Carfwell. General John Hamilton opposed him. By a gentleman direst from Halifax, we learn thart Mr; Alllon was coofidered to have a majority in that diftridt ; a lettar froflf a county in the diftrift confirms the fame. Mr. T. Blount is the other candi date. Mr. Archibald Hend«rfon it is expefted will be re-ele&ed for Salfbury diflrift 5 the county of Rowan give him./ nearly i 0::0 votes, Major Matthews ajo and Mr? Locke 241. ■ ■/ »*