ARRIVAL OF THE CAMBRIA. SEVEN DAVS LA fl FROM ISUUOPK Bv Eipres and Telcgrapn irou t Hilifa-x ta the Pennsylvania-! -aament- Debates in the Englifest of the Prince Bictsinlrtlawf-an.ee Return of the of Caniccess of Garibaldi Jiff airs p enice, fyc. St. John, N. B. Thursday, Aug. 2, 8i, P. M. 5 .The steamship Cambria, Capt. Shan- nun, arrived at Halifax at 3 o clock mis tnonung,and will be due at Boston at 4 o'clock to-morrow afternoon. The Cambria has 5G through passen gers, and brings European news seven days later. The Cambria spoke the Niagara about fifteen days out of Liverpool, tor the fourth day out. Passed the packet ship Shannon for New York. Jiff airs in England. Parliament is to be prorogued on the tfth. A motion, which Lord Brougham previously announced his intention to make, as reference to the French expedi tion in Italv. was laid UDon the table of Peers on Friday. The resolution embod ied a wide range of subjects, and implied a direct ceusure of the foreign policies ofj the government, and it is understood that the envoys and agents in Northern Italy, and in Sicily, will be fully noticed. In the debate which took place on the 420th, in allusion to the cholera, Lord Ash ley, the chairman of the Board of Health stated in the House of Commons on Thursday last, that he had reason to know that not one half of the cases were repor ted. Enough,"however, is officially known to make it certain that the epidemic is ra ging in many parts of the country to a dreadful extent. During the last week 339 deaths by cholera were reported in London, which is more than double the number of the preceding week. Bristol, Plymouth, Portsmouth, and along the whole south coast it is raging in a very malignant form and the mortality is very great. At Liverpool the disease is rapidly increasing. 1 he number ot cases repor ted for -i days previous to Thursday, were respectively 61, 74, 83, 102. Ireland continues to be generally ex empt from the scourge. Mr. 31CL.-ready, the celebrated actor, is tiiting a work, and will shortly publish an edition of Pope s works. Ireland Riots The Crops. On the 12th, a verv serious riot took place between a party of armed Orange men and Catholics, near Castle William, in the county of Down. The Orange ?arty having celebrated the day, it being he anniversary of the battle of Anghran, at Tullymorc, and being on their march home, whilst passing a defile called Dolly's Brea, found their path waylaid. All the passes and sunounding hills were occupied by an immense number of Roman Cath olics, provided with forks and fire-arms, and plainly contemplating a general mas sacre. The Protestants aided bv a small party of police and military, stood upon their defence; and succeeded in forcing their way through the gap, after a short struggle in which 40 or 50 persons are said to have been killed or wounded on both sides much the greater proportion being of the Roman Catholic party; 38 Ribbon men had been taken prisoners on Friday. Two medical gentlemen drove through the country, round about the scene of the con test, with the view of administering relief to those who were wounded, but they were refused admittance at every house where thev called. The Cork Examiner in alluding to the potato crop, says the disease has appeared in a few fields. There can be no doubt but it is equally positive that as yet the general crop is saved, and in almost all places unusually abundant; and the gener al impression, is that it is so far advanced that supposing a blight to set m, the tu bers will have been out of the ground be fore such time as the disease could have reached it. Offers of several private residences have been made for the accommodation of her Majesty during her sojourn at Cork, which, as it is not her intention to step out of the royal yacht, have been graciaus Jv declined. Jr ranee. The committee of the Legislative As sembly, to which the question of the pro rogation was referred, lias come to the unanimous decision of recommending that the Assembly should be prorogued from rhe 15th of August to the 15th of October. The Budget will not be brought forward until after the meeting of the Assembly in October. Wc learn that the Socialist agents in one of the Departments of the Interior, undismayed by previous-, reverses, are still very active in making proselytes among the peasantry. The National announces that Prince Cmiuo, the son of Lucien Bonaparte, and rx-Prcsidcnt of the Roman Constituent AfeS'.-mbly, had been arrested at Orleans, by order of the government, on his road having a claim against his cousin, Louis Napoleon, for money lent in aid of his election, the Prince was coming to France to demand it, the conduct of his cousin against Rome having stirred up his ire. It is said that the Prince will not be im prisoned, but that he will be forced to em bark for England or America. The questions openly discussed arc about a consulate for life for the Empire Henry V., and the cornpi de Paris. The change of Minif within a an event most certain ' very short time& ig to be president of the Itissajfllierjs Minister of the Interior; SS'Fallon, Minister of Foreign Affairs. decree of the 16th inst., Gen. Lamorcierce has been appointed Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary of France to Rome, and he is said to have left Paris for the head quarters of the Emperor of Russia. Baron tie Rothchilds is about to leave Paris on a trip to Italy. It is said that his journey is in connection with the in demnity to be paid by Piedmont, which would necessitate a loan and also the un paid half years interest in Roman bonds. The missing Montegrand representa tive has escaped to England. The Pope has addressed an autograph letter to Gen. Oudinott, on the occasion of receiving the keys of the city of Rome. His Holiness congratulates the General on the triumph of order in Rome, and expresses his hope that Divine Providence will cease the dif ficulties that may still exist, lie adds, that he does not cease to direct his prayers to heaven for the General, the city, and the French nation. The letter was direc ted Gaeta, July 5. Cardinal Picoli, and the Marquis Cac- chetti. arrived in Rome from Gaeta on the 8th. The latter is grand chamberlain of the Apostolic Palace. Preparations are making at itome, which leads to the beliet the Pius mil is expected to return to the Quirinal. The French are doing all they can m distributing money freely to get up a cry in his favor but in vain. All the wounded have been removed from the Palace. The Roman troops who had agreed in the first instance, to do duty cojointly with the French, are all leaving; and the whole force remaining now amounts to less than 1000 men. of those manv were anxious to leave, but Gen. Oudinot would not give his consent. The Pope's engineers having been ask ed to make a demonstration in his favor, rjreferred Quitting the service 39 out of 43 resigned, and the rank and file were disbanded. The same occurred in the artillery. All the officers having resigned with the exception of three Captains and a Ser geant. The reason given is that the French refused to give them any precise guaranty as to the protection for the rights of the people. Garibaldi has succeeded in making his escape good from the French Division, who were put upon a false scent, and he is now in the mountains of Abbruzzi. Previous to his deDarture from Rome, he had secured ammunition and military stores. Another account states that Garibaldi is on the new palitan frontier where he has been joined by another body of troops and formed it is said a body of 20,000 men. Venice. The recent operations against Venice 4 tj have been discontinued in consequence o the fatal prevalence of fever and sickness amonorst the iVustrian trooos, caused by O - - - the excessive heat and hard work. The Revolution in Hungary. A Turkish Ambassador in l'ans, re ceived a despatch on the 19th inst., by courier, announcing that the Polish Gen Bern, had again completely defeated the Russians under the command of Leurs, in Transylvania, and that the latter had been obliged to take refuge in Wallachia, with a small remnant of his army. Advices Irom Vienna, ot the idllx o July, state that Buda and Pesth had sur rendered to the Austrian Russian troops on the 11th inst., without resistance. From a report of Gen. Haynau, ad dressed to the Emperor of Austria, it ap pears that a very sharp conflict took place on the 1 1 th before Comorn, between the combined armies and the Magyars. The Hungarians fought with fierce impetuosity but the Austnans claim the victory Another and probably more reliable ac count of this battle states that 180 pieces of cannon were brought into the field by the Hungarians, and the loss sustained by the latter in artillerymen, may be estima ted from the circumstance, that several of the guns had to be secured liteially by the ditch meister in Finlay. Nothing could be more complete than the defeat of the united Russia-Austrian armies, under Hayman. He was obliged to fall back OU Raub, where; his head-quartern aro at present, and which city is filled with wounded. He had been obliged to send 3,000 wounded to Prcsburg. But for the timely arrival of the Russians to cover his retrea Hayman and his staff would have been taken. The Ban Jellachich lately demanded by a flag of truce the garrison of Pcterwardein to surrender. The commander of the garrison replied, "I L-nnw wp how attain sfnnrl. nnn that the so called Bern of Cantria, will soon find himself surrounded, and with his whole army be destroyed by the Russians. He holds the enemy in check, making successful sorties. Comorn will invested. soon be Ten days per annum is the average sickness ot human inc. Jl Black Bishop. A black Episcopal bishop is soon to be ordained in .Lngland and sent to Africa. Dubuque, Iowa, it is said, contains four thousand inhabitants, five thousand dogs, and fty colonels. Thc narrowest . i part of th Atlantic is miles deep. In other more tnan iwo parts it is one and a half" miles. From the New York Tribune. . Hungary and Austria. Incidents of the War. ; , The Morganblatt, a paper published at Stuttgart by the well known critic Men- zel, contains a series ot letters by a CrexH man officer m the army of Jellachich. They throw a good deal of light upon the mode in which the war is carried on be tween the Hungarians and Austrians. The following interesting passages from these etters we translate for The Tribune. In reading them it should not be forgotten that the sympathies of the writer are nat urally on the Austrian 6ide: I myself often find it difficult tAJinder-W stand that I am still alive and have a wholepast I had learned some useful lessons; ne imb to my body. The hardships I havf been through in the past few weeks, thl dangers I have escaped, arc almost beyon my power ol description. As I was a ways at the advanced posisrhich, y ill luck, latterly often were the rear pots of our corps, and as for the most nai I was on the move alone with ray li'le trrtrtjr. tr;i 9t( danger were measured jut to me and mine in double quaij5; nrr,di ong forgotten the appearance of & bed or i chair; and from the hour we feft ?esih till dav before yesterday, when vre vere forced to take a day's rest on count of khe exhaustion of the men vhich is of course never thought of I Iwd rxAonce taken off my clothes. How friefctflllv I look with all this! I could not heln t urn ing when I first saw myself in a ffliss; a long beard meandering in no very orna mental fashion over chin, chetka and mouth; my hair cut as it happened by a husser; a black cloth over my forehiad to hide a slight cut I had received a fcw daj's before from a Hungarian hussar: mi long white cloak covered with gray- Hack, brown and yellow blotches, variegated with stains of blood, and cut pierced by gashes, bullets and the firebrards of bivouacs; my shako hacked and $mjshed; instead of neat bootees, course wateooots, high over the leather snlatter-dasHsrs of my trowsers; and not a jot of fringe re maining on my black and yellow "scarf. My sword is all battered by th? bltws it has given and taken, and covered vith a thick rust of blood; my favorite A?i, my noble war-horse, is worn thin as a ct, and is minus an ear through the cut of a saber, but still iresh and ready for new battles as, thank God! hismaster is ilso. My soldiers, too, hold out well, but rook even more like a troop of robbers thn I like a robber captain. For the rest, more than half those I had with me at the beginning are either fallen or badly wounded, and roy little corps has had twice to be filled uy. But the great empire has many people and what harm is it if we all go to the dogs? The Emperor always gets soldieri. Hu man life falls low in value wtieifyoil have , tried a year of constant Sfljfcthuj as we have done. As we are always in fas immediate vi cinity of the enemy and often set up our watch hardly a mile from his outposts, we have had, especially lately, as ryuch fight ing as one could desire. Scarcely a day has passed withvbit our being beset by the hostile hussars either in grand or moderate style, and we often had this pleasure for breakfast and then again for supper, and some days were nothing but one continu ous skirmish. Generally it was only a few sabre cuts that individual horsemen exdhanged with each other, or carbine bullets that the outposts sent from each side, or else the business was to carry out or to "hinder some shrewd ambuscade. But now and then the matter became se rious, and there was sharp fighing and bat tles even, in which the crash of cannon came to play its part. Then many a ri der must change his seat on horseback for a long resting place in the cold earth. The greater battles were in part very bloody, for they were fought on both sides with the greatest courage and with indescribable animosity. Thus at GyongyosI saw two squadrons of Kossuth-Hussars charge thrice a hollow square of our infantry; twice the quiet, well-aimed fire of the foot drove them back; horses and men iell in platoons, but with a ringing shout "Huz za, Fljen, Eljen Kossutk!" they dashed up the third time at the top of their hors es' speed, regardless of the-"hostile fire, and broke the ranks on which their sabres now raged like lightning. . Alas, we could not fly to the help of our brave c omrades, for at the moment we wera raged with au overwhelming force of the enemy's cavalry. Though at tha .end of the strug gle we held the field, our loss was net small. It cannot be denied that the great est part of the insurgents, and especially their cavalry, fight admirably and show a courage and skill which belong only to the good soldier. What are those boastful, noisy, cowardly Italians to these bold Mag yars and death-daring Poles? To describe all the counties little fights in which I have been engaged lately would be tedious. There were many mournful events and few agreeable. The gay spir its and excessive confidence with which we began the war have disappeared, to give place to a manlier tone of mind. Merry war and drinking songs are now seldom heard in our bivouacs. Every day comes the news that this or that friend or brave comrade has met his death from hos tile bullets or sabres, or lies dangerously wounded. When such announcements follow continually, the soul must at last become oppressed. When this unhappy war will end "cannot be told. The' Hun garians will carry it to the last, and it will cost seas of blood . before Hungary and Trnv1vania can become conquered pro vinces. And then it will take an army of sn non mn to keen that fire from burst- in forth, which will long burn undcrs its to us subalt- ernoffrrst . . Wh has lately made battle very dua- greeatf to me is that 1 nau oueu t P08e P Iiusaais ui uty - o mentand in fact was again and apm compiled to fight them the hardest. Once r .,.Ja1rrmst a whole day skirmishing with a tbp consisting almost entirely of form from the sauadron to which 1 banged for years. A former corporal of rjl own company, whom I myself trained aa recruit, commanded them as officer, ,d it must be confessed that he did it cll. 1 shot an old hussar through the ip head w ith a pistol, who had .known as a cadet, and from whom in times fell dead from his horse, out ne nau before shot at me, his bans going mrougu mv o oak and throufrn me long iau v "r horse. With one hussar w no Deiore uau been for a long time my private servant J " 7 . ."lo I I and served me truly, I long contended with mv sabre: we let fly our best at each otn or and finallv nuit without great hurt on either side. Earlier comrades, witn wnom J-l- . w ... , I nan aramea v ttMiy - bottioe, gamed or gossiped so many hours, rode so many wild race at night as we sallied lortn irom the drinking rooms of Galllcian castles for distant villages, now stood before as bitter foes. A hostile hussar, whom 1 had wen known, once shouted to me in Magyar in the midst of a fight: "Thou wert once my brave officer and I loved thee, now thou art the enemv of my country and I shoot thee!" Saying this he left off his pistol at me, the ball whistling too close to my head for comfort. A few days after I came together with the hussars of my former regiment in a cu rious fashion. The little fights and skir mishes of outoosts had been so constant for many days and so tiresome, especially for the horses, that both parties wanted rest, and a sort of a spontaneous truce arose between the flying:corps. We had set up our watches about 2,000 paces from each other, tolerably free from care as to an at tack, at least as to a surprise, for on that day every body preferred resting to fight ing. On our side the stock of provisions was very poor, and in the region about, there was nothing to be had, as the Mag yars according to their fashion, had carried off or hidden or destroyed everything. I looked disconsolate as my people got rea dy the eternal mamaliga (c:rn broth.) At anv rate, this is a tolerable thin dish, but when you have had nothing else for two weeks it is perfectly disgusting, and I shall never forget it in my life. In our wooden flasks there was but little Sklikowitzer, and there we sat forcing down our meal broth by the help of a little wretched wa ter, in bad enough spirits around our fee ble watch-fire. Our opponents seemed as usual better off for provender of all sorts than we; their laughing sounded once I saw two hussars stand up on the other side, and showing a white cloth, ap proach us. Curious to know what it was, 1 went toward them, and soon recognized two hussars of my old squadron. They saluted me politely, said that they had a stock of good things, a cask of wine and a fat sow, and as they knew we were not very well provided for, they had come to ask me if I would share a part of theirs. As I knew ihey were genuine Magyars, who, when not excited, always act with honor, I gratefully accepted the friendly ofler, and sent a couple of men over to them. A few hours after, at eveniug, some horsemen from the Polish Legion of the Hungarians attacked us with such fury that we could hardly resist them. Gener ally such truces between outposts took place only with the former regular troops, or the well disciplined Honved battallions or squadrons. There were many divi sions in the Magyar army which it would have been dangerous to trust for a moment. If an outpost on cither side wished for a few hours' quiet, the signal "to feed" was blown. If it was answered from the ene my the armistice was agreed on if not, reiected. At the time for hostilities to re- commence the signal -to sauuie was . ... l n M no saauie blown, and a few minutes after came the onset, or at least it was all fair to attack. In spite of this friendly way of going on, the fighting was marked by jhe extremest fury on both sides, and there was never a word of asking or taking quarter. The Magyars hardly ever take quarter, and our soldiers fight to the last breath rather than give up their swords. How often have I seen a horseman on our side or that of the magyars, eoveren over and over Ji blood, defending himself desperately a gainst overwhelming odds, and letting him self be hewed from his horse rather than take quarter. I myself once defended my life for near half an hour against three ex hausted Honveds, and at last escaped only by the vigour of my AH. The horse made a great leap over a chasm across which they dared not follow; it was then that he lost his ear. I got only a slight wound on the forehead, which would have gone deep er had not a silk handkerchief in my sha ko prevented it. Elderly Roses. There is a rose bush flourishing near Bristol, Pa., known to be more than a hundred years old. Thinking Tools. The human brain is the twenty-eighth of the body, but the brain of a horse is but the four hundredth. The New York Herald calls John Van Buren the Great Gun of the Barnburners, and John M'Keon the Pocket Pistol of the Hunkers. Madame Schodel, the great German prima donna, has been condemned to death for attempting to poison Kossuth, the Hungarian leader. ashes. put what is all riiat ACT OF THE 10th OF APRIL 1549, . r.t.tl.d V?n Act to create a sinking , Y - ; .uD rrr-nJ,ial andl ZZlt cgistercf Willi, cr of the Editor General cer at """ tne isommonwtuun. "Section 10. That whenever anj ior eign executor or administrator shall essigc nr transfer any stocks or loans in this CctC- mnniL'ooltli ctonrlirlfr 111 the name cf a de- cedent, or in trust for a decedent. Tvhich shall be liable to the collateral inheritance tax. such tax shall be paid to the Register transferThere-(furhi3 of the proper county on the of, otherwise the corporation penuuuug such transfer, shall become liaoie to pzy such tax. "Section 11. That the provisions oij8 u Spvpnl runf Assemb v relative tot" hall not be collateral inheritance taxes, held or taken to apply to any property or estate, real or personal, passing by will to or in trust for the wife or widow of a son of any person dying, seized, or possessed thereof. "Section 12. That in order to fix the valuation of the real estate of persons whose estates are or shall be subject to the payment of a collateral inheritance tax, by the laws of this Commonwealth, the Regis ter of Wills of the county in which letters testamentary or of administration shall be granted, shall at the same time appoint one of the appraisers, whose duty it shall be to put a fair valuation on said real estate, and the assessor of the ward or township in which such decedent died, shall be a nother appraiser; and it shall also be the duty of said appraisers to mik e a fair and conscionable appraisement of the personal estate of the decedent, and it shall further be the duty of said appraisers, to asses3 and fix the then cash value of all annui ties and lile estates growing out of said es tate, upon which annuities and lile estates, the collateral inheritance tax shall be im mediately payable out of the estate at the rate of said valuation; and the said ap praisers shall be then paid for all services performed by them in the city of Philadel phia and the incorporated districts, and in othei cities, and several seats of justice within this Commonwealth, at'the rate of one dollar per day, and in the several counties within this Commonwealth, at the rate of one dollar and hity cents per day: Provided, That any person or per sons dissatisfied with said appraisement or assessment, shall have the right to appeal, within thirty days, to the Register's court of the proper county, on paying or giving approved security to pay all costs, togeth er with whatever tax shall be fixed by said court. "Section 13. That where any person or persons shall bequeath or devise any estate, real or personal, to a father, widow, or other person during life, and the re mainder over to collateral heirs at their decease: immediately after the death o the testator, the estate so granted shall be ppraised n manner herein belore pro vided, and after deducting the valuation o said life estate, the collateral inheritance tax on the remainder shall be immediate ly due and payable over to the Register o Wills of the proper county, and when the tax is not paid it shall remain alien against the State in the manner herein provided for, until the final settlement of the estate unless it is paid before such settlement; and where a testator appoints or names one or more executors, and makes a be quest or devise of property to them in lieu of their commissions or allowances, or ap points them hi3 residuary legatees, and said bequests, devises, or residuary lega cies exceed what would be a fair compen sation for their services, such excess shall be subject to the payment of the collateral inheritance tax, the rate of compensation to be fixed by the proper courts having jurisdiction in the case. And if any per son or persons having their domicil in a- nother State, territory, or country, shall die, leaving real or personal estate within this Commonwealth, the said estate, whether real or personal, shall be subject to the payment of the collateral inheri tance tax. "Section 14. On all estates of dece dents who have been dead more- than one year, and whose estates are subject to the payment of a collateral inheritance tax, if X . . 6aid tax has not yet been paid, interest from the death of the said decedent shall be charged at the rate of twelve per centum per annum on said tax, unless the same shall be paid within nine months from the passage of this act; and on all estates sub ject to the payment of the collateral inheri tance tax of persons who shall die after this date, if the said tax is paid within inree munthe, - a:. . a turn shall be made and allowed, but it tne said tax shall not be paid within one year from the death of said decedent, interest shall then be charged at the rate of twelve per centum per annum on such tax, com puting from the time of said decedent's death; and in all cases where the executors or administrators do not pay such collate ral inheretance tax in advance, they shall be required to give security for payment of the same. fu ran. "Section 15. That if the Register of (J Wills of any county within this Common wealth, shall discover that any collateral inheritance taxes have not been paid over according to law, he shall be authorized to issue a citation, which shall be served in the usual manner to the executors, ad ministrators and heirs; and where person al services cannot be had on all said par ties, the Register shall give notice, for four consecutive weeks, once a week, in at least one newspaper published in said county, citing said parties to appear before him on a certain day, and show cause why the said tax should not be paid, for which ser vices the fees of the Register, and other officers, shall be such as are allowed for like services in other cases; and if said tax shajl be found lo be dua iA cp tie delinquent dull W d U uA BUG it sum oe uie cuty ot iLc Efi- ofthi: is Comcaoarelth, on return cide tc hits, that the executors, administrators and heirs, afier citation hiving bean - .. warded aa aforesaid, and cn proof cf ser vice have been found to be in default, to employ an attorney cf the proper county tc sue for and recover the amount of such -tax and the said attorney shall be. tl owed set vices the usual per centage for collection, u dc taxea as costs ana paid, by said delinquents; and the Auditor Gen eral is authorized and empowered in the C1" - serv'ice anI mileage, and other reasonable .:t :r T6.- lees wnerever mere was or may De prooa bie ground for issuing the citation, or-fox prosecuting an investigation to ascertain whether any taxes were due. And it shall be " the duty of the Register of Wilbj to enter in a book, to be provided by him at the expense of the Commonwealth, and to be kept for that put pose, the returns made by all assessors and appraisers un der this act, opening an account in favor of the Commonwealth against the dece dent's estate, and that estate, execuiof3, administrators and their sureties shall bf liable for payment of said tax, which tax shall be a lien on the property of all par ties until setued and satisfied, and the Ke gister may give certincates or searcn irom saia dook, ana wnenever any sucu iax i . i . , t i :Jf.v Ml till UcLlC 1 CllldlUCU uuc ouu uujiom v. one year, it shall be lawful for the Regis ter to file a copy of the claim in the proper Prothonoatry'8 office, and proceed to re- .1 -.L cover to same in me. name oi me com monwealth by scire facias, according to the provisions of the act of March eleventh, one thousand eight hundred and forty-six. entitled "An Act relating to registered te . es and municipal claims in the county of Philadelphia, and any supplement there to against the owner or owners oi sucn real estate for the time being, all the pro visions of which act shall be operative in relation to such collateral inheritance tax, except that there shall be no loss, cr limi tation of the lien for such tax by reason ot a failure to file or sue the same within any limited time. "Section 16. That it shall be the duty of the Register of v ills - m the several counties of this Commonwealth, to collect and pay into the State Treasury all taxes due, and that may be due, under the ccl- lateral iuhsritance laws of this Coramon- weakh, of which he shall make a return under oath to the Auditor General; and he shall be allowed to retain five per centum on all taxes paid and accounted for in full, for his services in collecting and paying over the same.' The Indian Outrages ia Florida. XX. Blip 11UUI -V '-V. - -J dated July 2S, has the following informa tion from Florida: By passengers on the Florida boat, ar rived this morning, at 10 o'clock, we learn that a further outbreak of the Indians was uiauc ai vudiiuii a uaiuui) uu wit uii coast, nearly simultaneous with that on Indian River so near that the expresses from east to west met at Tampa. . The Indians, some fifteen or twenty in number, came in at the trading store at the mouth of Pease Creek, at the head of Charlott's harbor, and inquired for Mr. Kennedy, the principal in the establish ment. He being absent, they killed the clerk and another man, and wounded sev eral others, among them women plun dered the store, set fire to it and burned it to the around. Thev then decamnpd with their plunder, and drove off with them a number of cattle. No suspicions of hostility were enter tained by the inhabitants, who were of course entirely unprepared for an attack, or for defence. An express was sent to Tampa, and the ofijcer in command im mediately despatched one of the two com panies at that post to give protection" to those of the settlers in the neighborhood of the depredations. There. was not a' suffi cient available force to put sue the Indians into their recesses. . " The express from Tampa was sent by the citizens with despatches for Washing ton, which met the Florida steamer "at Palatki. The frontier is almost enlireW deserted, as it is believed that the Indians contemplate another -desperate tvar; " In pom instances, at Indian -Kiver and Uhat- lott's Harbor, when the Indians first made their appearance,, they were perfectly friendly, and received the hospitality of savage manner described. . The greatest alarm and confusion; pre vails . among the frontier " settlers, an of whom are abandoning their settlements their crops, and fleeing for safety topla, ces of security, . leaving their all in nrny instances to the mercies of the releniess savages. ' . . - : We stated the number of Indian - war riors in a former notice at two hundred and fifty. This we believe a full esu mate, but we are new .informed that at Tampa and Charlotte's Harbor; the esti mate is much larger, from five to si -hundred. . v - i--"-"-- Mr. Kussell, who was wounded-hi" the arm at Indian River bv the Indians, has been obliged to have the arm amputated. Who can now doubt that wo shall have another Indian war. Doubiless ' the two attacks were by concert, and although bat few of" the Indians at either place made their appearance, yet circumstances go to show that there were others in reserve to assist in case of any resistance on the part of the whites. . 1; : There is no Cholera in St. Louis.