EMIE , :: ' ' ‘ 1?(K . Ea INE MEM " = '.'-. - ,:ii:tik::Mbbitt *'. lithlpti.a.:l INN r":lrOtilme illiii `BIOGRAPHICAL. *nth 01 Mrs. Nadhon. • ~The. decease a Mrs. Dolly Payne Mad. widoW of Ex-President Madison, at ' aahington on Thursday night last; the :12th,hist., Will sadden many a heart. She wtni -born on the 20th of May, 1767, ma- Mai her:age at the time of her death; 82 yOure,,l month, and 22 days. She was a . w . enien of great intelligence, genuine piety, Awl remarkable gentleness of disposition, and during the bright career of her, illus. trions husband she adorned the circles of the, highest and wisest.' 'rho annexed ( sketch of her • early life we copy from the "National Portrait Gallery" published in !this.city in 1830 :-.Phila. Daily New. , . The parents of ,Dolly Payne were na ,nvesof Virginia, and ranked among the most respectable citizens of the State.— Vhilei on a visit to some of her friends in Nexth.Cattlina, Mrs. Payne gave birth to her eldeit daughter, the subject of this me. heir marriage, Mr. and Mrs. the society of . Friends, or .emitted their slaves, andre insylvania. lure was prodigal, fortune its/gifts ; tier in her early lob / fed to wealth or rank for m she enjoyed in society. age, Miss Payne-was , ma r- Id, a young lawyer of Phil a member of the society .of wring his lifetime she contin in the simplicity and seclusion of that sect, though even then, the, beauty which became afterwards so celebrated be gala to attract attention. Soon, however, she was left a widow, with an infant son. Aft:. the death of her husband, her father also. being dead, she returned to reside with her surviving parent, who had fixed her residence in Philadelphia. The personal charms of the young wid ow, united as they were with manners cordial, frank and gay, excited the admir ation and awakened the kind feelings of all who came within their influence ; and, unaided by the extrinsic and accidental advaritages of fortune or fashion, she be eame a general favorite, and the object not only. of admiration, but of serious and de moted attachment. Among many lovers, equally distinguished by their rank and talents, who sued for her favor, she gave the preference to Mr. Madison, hen one of the most conspicuous and respectable mem bent of Congress; and in the year 1704 became the wife of that truly great and good man. From that time until Mr. Mad ison came into the administration with Mr. Jefferson, she lived in the full enjoyment of, that abundant and cordial hespitallty which - is the 'distinguishing characteristic of a-Virginia planter. Mr. Aladison being appointed Secretary of Stag, removed,- with his- family, from his-happy home to Washington, in April, 1801. The infant metropolis of the Union was, at that time, almost a wilderness. The . President's House stood unenclosed on a piece of waste and barren ground, separa .ted.-from the Capital by an almost impasse . ble marsh. That building was not half -completed, and standing as it did amidst the rough masses of stone and other mate rials collected for its construction, and half hidden by the venerable oaks that still sha dedtheir native soil, looked more like a ruin in the midst of its fallen fragments and coeval shades than a new,. and rising edifice... The silence and solitude of the surrounding space were. calculated to en foto°. this idea ; for beyond 'the-;Capitol Hill, : fat as the eye could reach, the city, asit was called, lay in a. state of nature; 'covered with thick groves ar,id , A)iout, treen, vide end verdint , with • only here And there n house aloag the intersecting Ways, that could not . yet be-properly called streets: - The original proprietors of the grounds on which the city was - located, retained ,their; rural residences and 'their habits. of living. The new inhabitants who throng- ed to the •seat of , government; came film quarter - of the Union, bringing with • them the modes and customs of then. res pective States. Mr, Madison from Virgin ' ia, Mr. Gallatin from Pennsylvania, Gen. Dearborn from Massachusetts, and Robert Smith from Maryland, were the heads of the several , departments of government. Ths President's house was the seat'of hos pitality, where -Mrs. Madison' always prod sided, (in the absence of Mr. „Jefferson's daughters,) whenare were female guests. After the Presidellri the house of the Sec retary of State was the resort Of• most Com pany. The frank and cordial 'manners of itS Mistiess wee peculiar charm tii• the frequent parties there assembled.-';All for-' eignera who visited the seat of government,' strangers froni the , different States •of the Union,. heads; of departments; the' diploma-. . . tre . corpsiTsenators,7representateresi'vity f - zees, trainee& wither' ease and • freedom, ii_Sociability and. gaily tote nilit with itt , no tow sodiety. Evete*ti spirit; virulent and;-.,.. , /ttered as it vas, bY.her gen ' kb' never 'iVisited at" the Presi , dent* • 44 I he 'other , inittistetialt itti!oloso •,. , %,-resiSt the softkningitititt tices of• conciliatory disposidc•Nether frank and gracirsti.dlinners • but •frequen entlittg tut' 10; and ;at at her 1118 . - tsble—o ttblelharWas boll - erred• With ~1 r; 'Alston of Virginian hospitality, rath • ~ . ~ . - • .•. 2. , • ~-. 2 , "",:''' - '‘' - i1; - - .1,"•'•, :::‘• -,:1 i'l.ll',',') '' ".T. k . , ;`,'„" . , . . '-,',',' iii,. t "... .".‘ ,••• ~."."..• "' , l" ,',-•',': • ~•,.• „ t .1. -....,•!..;.,•.",' "":' , 7: ' '.., "... •-;•.',' ..,•!.. ..`„,, •,.?[..'•':-- •,''',..-ti , ", ! - ',i ~.: ~.,, . '•. t .", " . •'l" . '''''', ; .:-. ;,,, • •. ... ............,• • ' "'' '..'.tt'., . ' ',."'''''' ;"•'•1 " • •- - -,. , .‘... • ~ . . ... . ME ME NMI ; =in or than withAhe elegance and refinement of European taste. "The lady of a foreign Minister was once ridiculing the enormous size and number of the' dishes' with, which the board was loaded, and'obServed that it was more like a harvest hoine'supper than the entertainment of .a Secretary of .State. Mrs. Madison heard of this and a similarremark, and only observed - that if she thought that abundance was preferable to eleganCe ; that circumstances formed, cus toms, and customs formed taste andas the profusion 'so repugnant to foreign' ells terns arose from the happy circumstance of the stiperabundtince and prosperity of our country, she did not . hesitate to sacri fice the delicacy of European taste for the less elegant' but more liberal fashion of Virginia. The many poor families daily,- supplied from that prbflisely spread table would have had reason to regret the intro duction of European fashion had Mrs. Mad ison been prevailed on to submit to its dic tation. ; . During the eight years that. Mr. Madi son was Secretary of State; he and his family lived with the inhabitants of Wash ington as with fellow-citizens; receiving and reciprocating eivilitiesin the most kind and friendly manner. The Srcretary him self being wholly abiorbed in public busi ness, left to Mrs. 'Madison the disclicirge of the duties of social intercourse. And nev 7 , erwas a woman better calculated for the task,---Her quick-- recognitionJor-persons; - her recurrence to their peculiar interests, produced the gratifying impression in each and all of those who conversed with her that they were especial objects of regard. __Her house was very plainly furnished, and her, dress no way extravagant.: It was only in hospitality and in , charity that her profusion was unchecked, and sometimes made her sensible that her income was not equal to her wishes. When the term of Mr. Jefferson's presi dency drew near its close, the spirit of po litical intrigue which had lain dormant was again roused into activity. A new Presi dent was to be chosen, and there were scv era( competitors for the people's favor.— Each had partizans, zealous and untiring in the canvass, who left no means unem ployed to insure %success. Private` society felt the baneful influence of these political intrigues; social intercourse was 'embittered by party spirit; personal confidence was so often violated that a degree of cireum .spection became necessarily almost incom patible with that frankness and candor which constitutes the charm of intimate society. -` In these trying times Mrs. Madison ap peared to peculiar advantage. Her hus band was assailed with all the violence of ' political animosity. In accordance with liar hucliarura-wiallcs_vha_ continued her civilities uninfluenced by party politics.— He believed that when the effervescence of popular excitement should subside, hos tility ,would cease. Thus thinking, he, With unaltered-equanimity, continued his social intercourse with persons of all opin ions;the chiefs of different parties met at his use with perfect good humor; and the frank and polite attentions of Mrs. Madison were paid, without distinction, to all who , joined her social circle. Her snuff box had a magic influence, and seemed as perfect security from' hostility - , as a parti cipation of bread and salt is among many savage tribes. , For who could partake of its contents offered in a manner so gra cious, and retain a feeling inimical to its owner. The kindly feelings thus cultivated, tri umphed over the animosity of party spirit, and won a popularity for her husband which his lofty reserve and cold manners would have failed in effecting. The moment of decision arrived, and Mr. Madison was de clared. President of the United States. In Washinktbn, the day of his inauguration was a day of jubilee. - After Mr. :Jefferson fah the city Mr. Ma dison removed to the President's li6use, which soon became the centre of a gay and brilliant circle, and yet of social and delightful society. In addition to large dinners every week; a drawing room was now opened, where the beauty and fash ion of the nation found the best theatre for display. • But this scene of general and individual prosperity was interrupted by the war, whicli Spread desolation along our coasts, and brought ruin and devastation to the city of Washington. This is not the place to' discuss the cau ses of that fatal event. News arrived that the British forces bad landed forty miles belowthe city. Their destination was tin ! known. Several .''roads led across 'the country to the city, _and several to Balti morel and when it . writ ascertained that Washington waS their object, the oamman ders of our army--fbr, unfortunately; the command was divided, at least authority over Gen. Winder Was ciaimeitby the Sec retary 'of Watottid not agree on the 'route to be chosen, nor the measures to be adopted to oppeSe British forces who were' advancing in the country: Iri this dileinina,, the 'President Walit vied to, and With a view or,settling this fference; 'Went, acconlpitnied' by sivortirrobroboro• of the; cabinet and 'some. personal - friends, =to Bladensburg, 'where ther .unexpectedly, f oun d the two armies-, eneigeid.; • Aimp; while terror spread over the Every cite that could eonVeyturiee ek; made ; their escape te the Aadjeinink towns..„ Those who were unprovtded with a conveyance fled on foot, carrying with ME IMO =EI C:LEA : RP.IP them -whatever 'Could be So:carried. The sound of-the cannon was distinctly teard; The dismay wattuniversal.- • Mr:Madison, who had:gone forth only, to hold itiCouneil of war, returned 'not ; no one ' in' the city pretended to any authority ; 'the whole was a scene of confusion.' Some personal friends who had remained with Mrs. Medi-- son, most vehemently urged her to leri , to the city. , Thoy had her carriage brought to the door,:but could• not persuade her:to enter it - .until her husband should return and accompany her. But an extract from a letter written to her sister, though neces sarily 'broken and 'abbreviated, will give a truer, Vila fuller view of her trying:situa tion, than any other pen can do :. • TeIF:SDAY, August 23, 1814. 'DEAR BIStER My husband left me yesterday morning to join Gen; Winder. He inquired anxiously whether:!, had cou rage or firmness to' remain .in the Presi dent's House, until his return on the mor row or succeeding day, and on my asset: ance that I had no fear but for him, and the success of. our army, he left me, be ' Beaching me to take care of myself, and of the cabinet papers, public and. private. I have since received two despatches from him, written with a pencil ; the last is alar miifg, ho . desires I should be rea dy at a moment's warning to enter my Icarriage and leave the city ; that the ene mpfeemed stronger than had been repor ted,- and- that- it-might Aleppo that. they_ would reach the city, with intention to de ' stray it. * * * lam accord ingly ready ; I have pressed as Many cab- Met papers into trunks us to fill one car riage ; .our private pfoperty must be sac -rifted, as it is impossible to procure wag ons for its transportation. lam determin ed not to go myself until I see Mr. Madi son safe, and he can accompany me; as I hear of much hostility towards him; * * disaffection, stalks around us. - My friends and acquain• tances are all• gone—even Col. with his hundred men MU) were stationed us a guard in this enclosure. ' 44 ' French John, (a faithful dome;tie) with his usual activity and resolution, offers to spiko the cannon at the gate, and to lay a train of powder which would blow up the' British should they enter the house. To' Cho last proposition I positively object ; without be ing able however to make him understand why all advantages in war may not be ta. ken. Wednoda9 morning .12 sun-risc, I have been turning my spy-glass in every direction, and watching with un wearied anxiety, loping to discern the ap proach of my dear husband and his friends; but alas ! I can descry only groups.of mil itary wandering in all directionS, as if there was a lack of arms, or of spirit to fight for that own firesides. nree o'clock.—Will you believe it, my sister 7 We have had &battle or skirmish near Bladensburg, and I tun still here within siound of the cannon ! Mr. Mad ison comes not. May God protect him ! Two messengers, covered with dust, come to bid me fly . ; but I wait for him,. * * At this late hour, a wagon has been pro cured ; I have had it filled with the plate and most valuable portable urticles belong ing, to the house. Whether it will reach it:destination, the • Bank of Maryland, or fall into the hands ofßritish soldiery, events must determine. Our kind friend, Mr. Carroll, has come to hasten my departure, and in a very bad humor, with me, because I • insist on wait ing until the large picture of Gen. Wash ington' is secured, ,and it requires to be un screwed from time wall. This process was found too tedious for these perilous mo inents; I have ordered the frame to be bro 7 ken and the canvass taken out ; it is done, and the. precious portrait placed .in the hands of two . gentlemen of New York, for safe-keeping. And now, dear sister, I must loriVe this house, or the retreating army will make me a prisoner in it, by filling up the road I am - diNeted to take. When I shall agajn write to you; wherel . Sliall be to-morrow, I . camot ' The *disastrous events 'which followed ure too well known to need description, even if the limits of this sketch allowed of tho melancholy details. During the re minder of Mr. Madison's presidential term he resided in a private, house, :\vhere, how ever, he received company with undimin ished hospitality. When at the expiraL tion of his - officad service he left the city of Washington; and 'returned' to his moun tain home, his departure was lamented as a private us well as a public loss by the citizens,' with whoril his family for sixteen years had lived on; terms of., reciprocal kindness. ' ' The Washington, Union adds to this the following account :.•-•t.Tpoti the expira. tion of Mr. Madison's presidential service, she retired With him to Montpelier, Orange county, Vu.,•whereahe admimstered,.with a warmth and tt: :grace of manner. never ourpassed, - . all-the =rights vf-:hoipitalityi iit the hOuse.of her distinguished-husband.-;,, Visited by crowds of American, -eltitens, tin# by /strangers from Europe, :who were desirous 'of seeing's° noble. alstatesman, one ever lot :his • Watt withou way withq.i.i;: s =trongest SOPA of the c.4.3urtdliies'• • le? ,b,Aftt s • side at Mo • ' she removed fav'asbardiNge'itoille-lity Thence she returned to''..4llmttielietitand finally came to :Washington, in .1843, to IIEI ME Neutral in Patins Min reside at her house on President's SqOare, Where'she breathed her last on,Thursday night; between 10 and 11 o'clock, after lingering'illness of five days. ' • , Little has been said about the victories which these brave mountaineers - are .bb- Wining aver the mercenary hordes ofßusi ria This is becatiso the hired Press of England either does not ortlso will not ndeistand...the inaportance of these victo ries by a, nation hardly known by. name to their readers.. This, however; ought not to .be true either of the Standard of .Freedom or of its friends, to whoin we shall not further 'apologise for saying a few words as to this interesting people and what they have achieved. '! Circassia is a mountainous, lint very fine and beautiful country, bordering upon the Black Sea at its . eastern extremity.— It is also contiguous to the Russian territo ry lying towards this extremity ofthe Eux ine, and interposes its lofty mountains and fertile valleys between the clutch of Rus sia and those , more loiel and less wild countries towards the Euphrates and the Tigris: It is thenim of this ambitious pow- . or, Russia, to become possessed,:if it can., of all the realms contiguous to the Black Sea, on all sides: On one'side "the Wolf" has - already laid its paws on the Danubian provinces, on Moldavia,-Wallachia, and is, en tliia side, therefore;ltist - adViniCing - to: wards Constantinople. But before it can enslave . the tracts lying 'On the southern coasts of this Sea, it must subdue and pass, the find people who hold Circassia—a race in metaphysical requisites, the finest spe cimen of men now to be found on this globe, and of courage and activity unsur passable. Against these noble but unof fending people, the _Muscovite serfs have now for many years, been carrying on, cruelly, bloody but fruitless wars. Xe quarter is given; and the amount of lives lost is not known, excepting that,,gcneral ly, it is very great. It is believed that, ta king battle, sickness, fatigue, altogether into account, not less than 200,000 Rus sian serfs have left their bones' amongst the wild passes; and this without obtaining any ground that is tenable. The Czar, in furtherance of this murderous conflict, tries to stop all access by sea to CircaSsia4 and it was because he approached Soudjoult Kale . (a Circassian port,) that Mr. Bell had his brig, "The Vixen," captured and con fisented by Russia, against the law of na tions. EIN S DM Circuslan Trimnigh All - this expense of human blood and treasure is, however thrown away. It is now known that the Muscovite hired serfs have received, at the hands of these noble mountaineers, the most complete defeat -thoy--perhora-cyvvreceivcd. --- Their forts arc captured, and their armies totally rou ted and annihilated. - But mark the criti cal time at which this blow of an avenging Providence finds out their legions. It is already known that the Czar's interference in Hungary is unpopular with his general Officers. This blow will greatly help to exasperate those feelings. They will now see before them the prospect either of-an inglorious and hateful conflict in Hungary, or- that of it still more hated campaign in Circassia, which, for years, the Russian military have dreaded as they do Siberia. If they perish there,. their very death is concealed. The Petersburg . Gazette has not even a sigh for them; and their own friends are really ignorant of the manner, of their fate! . But while this catastrophe is depressing the Russians, it is animating both the Hungarians and the . Turks .in a !high degree. The -latter are now threat ! ening the Servians with retribution if they act against Hungary, to which, in one point; they are contguous; whilst the Wul f lachians, animated by the•victories of both, arc, it; is said, showing such a front as to induce the Czar. and his tool, Gen. Duha mel, to relax their holder the province, in order not to further irritate France .and England, at a moment se critical. Such is the brief exposition - of this af- Whielt.is . fitr Tess known everywhere than it ought to be: It has.proved a more severe cheek to the hungry designs "the Wolf" (as Palmerston has , well.christened Russia) than the wolf has littely experien ced. It has come in a • happy time, and -we hail it as tho probable forerunner of others. If the brave French people only tbrae their worthless president to do hisdtt to,:- liberty: in Europe need experience* 'further . check,--and monarchy at •:lestiVill be taught the Meaning •of mddemtiorf:and justice, if means' to avoid the;foundation of a- universal Republic . .—Standar4Hßf Freedom.- '''• • • . „ Pnocunss or Amunic.t.=-Ille "growth , „ of the Anierican cities Ls unparalleled in the history of the weird,' Already lialf a Million are, embraced within limits sObtirlis 'of Qui: inetrojioliti; 'and half that number within those of .- Nev; scid e i ms eQranina hbOUt_il'huhdra 4t, fifty, Boston one hundred And thirty, and Baltimore one hundred-and five thousand inkaibiunnkt. ' The second, - child born: in Cincinnati 'it-is ,Sitid, is still liVing," and has hot, the middle age ochre, while the,,eity .pbpulatton: h"undred thousand: n giopillatioif; of St..}Louiti . i4s.s.one thousand -:tai hiludred 18101 sixteen', thotisand in-1840, s forty thousand in:1845, and is probably ntriv"notlessqbah sixty. thousand., • Barak, ;contained : two thousand four hundred and tvtblve in 1825; =ORM ME in 1846, twenty:able thousand seven -hun dred and seventy-three; and now contains about forty-five thousand. In. 1828, the population of Lowell wits three thousand five kundred and thirty-two, it is now more than thirty thodsand. Chicago, a plape Scarcely known on the latest maps, has already reached a population of eighteen thousand ; and Milwaukie; of still more re cent origin, is rivalling it in its growth and population. , , Rome is still where it has been for . more than 2600 years; it is upon the Tiber, 16 miles froth its mouth, which runs south through the western part of the city, and then turns west and continues that course to its outlet, where it is some 800 feet wide. -Much of what was formerly covered with buildings is now cultivated.' This is,par-1 titularly the case with much of. the south east part within the city wane' and east andl southeast of 'the Capitoline Hill. Bad air (malaria) is said to be the cause of the de sertion of this part of the city. The an cient hills are still to be fOund, but are by no means so prominent as they.once were, on account of the vallies ,having been fill cd up by the rubbish constantly accumu luting. In this way the • place of the an cient forum has been filled up at least fif teen feet. The land at the base of the Tarpaian Rock IS so much filled up that the modern-traveller-is.-prone_to_thinklhat it would' be far from' certain death to be thrown from its top. It is not, as former ly, 75 fact high, with heaps of rocks be low.. In the northeast part are extensive gardens,and on the west side of them arc the residences of the English and Ameri can inhabitants. The Palace of the Pope is near the cen tre of the ciiy. The Church - of St. Peter is on the west side; it 750 feet long, and 550 feet wide, "and will hold 32,000 peo ple. It cost $50,000,000. The statue of St. Peter stands not far distant. It was formerly a statue of Jupiter, and was chan ged by one of the early Popes into that of the apostle by some mysterious power, without changing its material substance in the least: Which gave rise to the remark of the wag, that it was formerly the statue of Jupiter, and it is . that of Jew-Peter still.— The report that the great toe of this statue has been entirely worn.away by the lips of the Catholics is not exactly true. It is a Protestant slander. Yet it is true that the repeated kisses of the faithful for hun dreds of years have worn it. away consid erably. No Catholic passes it without stopping to kiss it. To see poor ignorant people do sp, that is bad enough; but to see men of learning and science, and of cultivated minds, like the Pope and Car dinals, constantly approaching this image with all . reveNnce,. and wiping this toe with their handkerchiefs, kiss it, wipe it again, and go on their way, is 'quite, beyond en durance. One can have no patienc.o with them.—,Dr. Baird. The Beaver Islands—ten in-number-- lie in the bosom of Lake'Michigrin, in a bout latitude 45 deg. 50 min., and are be ginning to attract considerable 'attention, both on - account of the healthfulness of their climate, the extent of their fisheries, and as the Zion or land ofPromise ofa con siderable body of Mormons, the followers of Mr. Strang. Big Beaver Island, the principal one of the group, is 13 miles in length, by seven in breadth, containing a bout 50,000 acres of fertile and well-tim bered land. Paradise Bay forms the prin cipal harbor, and-is the seat of an exten sive trade in fish, wood, &c, It is easily accessible, perfectly land-locked, and suf ficiently capacious for all the craft on the Lakes. - Around • this bay the Mormons arc making their- settlements. • There are two wood-yards and three Store's iu opera tion, a steam saw-mill is-going up, and im provements are commenced - en all the lands within four miles, 'beside - various com mencements in ,other locations. There are now employed in , the' fisheries. some 200 boats and 500 or 000 fishermen; but the opening of farms, the building of mills, and the establishment of all the various branches of business; always found in a settlement_ of a free and enterprising popu lation, will -soon leave this branch of busi ness of comparative non-importance. Good stocks of cows haYe been brought on by the Mormons, who are intending to devote much attention to agriculture, with every .prospect of success. '..'Notwithstanding the high latitude, •all the fine grairis flourish, and-the prospect is that the grazing will .be of the first quality. •In case they shall succeed, they. will be able - to furnish sup plies to tho ; Lake trade; at a point.where there is no competition 209 miles, and • where the demand. must- always be great. The Mormons have already established a ,scbool, at . Which, they fnruish gratuitous instruction; to tliti; children of the residing ;in In abonl,6',weeks they will commence ; the' publicatio*. there of 4 wcokly paper, the, pres 9 rind. materi als. for which nro • alit fr, Parolmsed,— Teir nniebers and w aro now a. bout throb end it;is &pee* tbat PPf 6 r.e. • WR be . 1110080.: t .. ;;1 • 41PTIMPF:7-7.1 3 /dO O AtPrf4l. • The cholera hae readv its,appearanee in Erie, Pti., so say the papers. ' ' =NM AT ONE:.i' O,O.L.Ak.A,VKAI'I.;,.I•S:!-A.OVAr.NO.g; The City of Rome. The Mormons at Beaver Islands. " f, t - ,) 1 L4ft:1 1 1 110 1*I'NEIVE By E eci ; bgreph ironi London to 10, .-. • erpool4. , '• .. , . FOR TILE NEW VORK cotiainu. AND RER, • Lorniare 80, Three o cIiMP. M. From Paris =Pr date of Friday; P; M. the correspondent of the ntrtes writes as follows: "I have reason to believe that beyond the information you are already in posses sion of, there is no further news of the mil itary operations before Rome.,.: . The reply to repeated enquiries is still We are making our hay gradually," and from, one day to another we expect to hear something. decisive. The last- accounts state that a steamer has been signalled ofF Toulon, but of what tidings she is the bear er, nothing is yet known, or at least has not up to half past 8 o'clock trahspired. The intelligence from Rome bye ordi nary mail only comes. clown to. the 19th: It is believed that the military force of the expeditionary army is likely, to be consid erably increased. We are UM that over 60,000 is not an exaggerated figure,in case the discontent or jealousy or fear, orwhat ever else the feeling may be termed, which actuates both Spain and' Austria, not to speak of Naples, should assume a more unequivocal aspect. The late victories of - the Ansfririiii veto much exaggerated ih their first reports.—: The real facts of the case are as, follows; The Hungarians having crossed the Waag on the 10th and 20th inst., sudden ly made a violent attack on the Imperial; ists' position, and penetrated even into the centre of them, and afler a battle of three days with the two Imperialist armies; the Ilungarians retreated tg theirfOrine Vsf4i tions, but not without having, by Their on: set, done considerable damage to the Im perialist corps. The Ruisitin General, Paniutia, was wounded, and the vex) , fact that the. Austrian bulletins remain silent on the subject of the "killed and wounded" and the "captured cannon & teen,"shOis, that the intelligence which they hove to communicate on that score is by no means cheering. The Austrian papers publish a decree of the Austrian commander-in chief, Gen. Haynan, in which that milita ry chieftain states that the inhabittinteof the borough of Bo Schar Kong having aid ed and abetted the Hungarian insurgents in their attack upon the brigade of Generi al Wyes, he (Gen. Haynan) has ordezed their town to be burnt and annihilated, & that:this order was executed on the 21st instant. The cholera and typhus fever continue doing their work in the Imperialist armies. Our - correspondent informs _us that 300 sick soldiers (none of them wounded) were brought into Vienna from Oldenburg on the 24th inst. The unfortunate ,Hungari an hussars, that attempted to desert frorri the Imperialist standard, and return to their own country, have as many of them ns were captured suffered a cruel punish ment. Their leaders, three noncommis sioned officers, were killed on the spot.—; Seventeen young recruits were sent to the Italian army, and the rest, of seventy, were decimated. Seven were shot on the 23d inst. CONSTANTINOPLE ) June lA—The Porte has refused to comply with the imperative demand of Russia for the passage of 80,- 000 troops throngh Servia, .and the Rus sian envoy, in virtue'of his instructions, has refused to send the reply, which was respectful; but arm and unyielding, to the Emperor. LAITST MOH Rom.E.--:-It is stated the the French government has received a tei egraphic despat9h announcing dud.' the French had occupied Mount Orio, which gives them a command of part of the city. SAliplNlA.—The Austrian garrisCri quit ted Alessandria on the 18th. VENICE..—A dechrivs attack upon Brett hlos was conterriplateny the, Austrians: 7 . Negotiations for peace were, in progress.: Some Further Foreign Heins; A I'EVERK En(KOSSUTII. The. follnwing prayer offered by KQS suth, will be interesting to our readeM— It was offered by him, kneeling, "aniicl-,tho multitude ' b at the grave of - the'tagyarbe. roes who fell in the battle of Rapoyltiai, was originally published in the Opposition,, a journal - ofPesth. We translate frornik, German: • . Almighty God! , God of the, warriors of Arrad!` Look down from thy starry, throne upon thy imploring servant, fro/0.'109.v) lips the prayer, of millions ascends to, thy Heaven, praising the unwarchable peffC'r of thine Omnipotence.' Q God, over, me' shines 'thy tam, and beneath me repose the relics of my fallen heroic brethren; nboye my head ,the sky is blue, sad. ander .zny feet rthe earth is dyed'. ll Xl' NYitti. holy., blood of the chi Wren lof on.r.apeestQr =t; Let, the - animating beaylpot 44y, sulftlkil:: here, thatjlowers may spring up from t 4 blood, se;that these hulls,of clowlect ings may not monider unadOrnad. of our fathers„and of* nations and bless the voice ofl, ppe:wgric47 4 l,# ll 4 which 1 49 AO the 001: 0!: bons thuoct to break dilll'9ll l 4oo army jt, ; forgpo l ;..e,uppri t 4;.7 man 144 kneel 01 : 1 444ifT 3 ra remains of ritice us theirs Thor. - - , . ti 7 • la .• 1.-! -: - ., ; . PUMBER`~• ONE AUSTRIA AND •lIUNOARY. 4 ri la 8 , -,, El INEE MIME MEE :