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<r i "I", J [ron-o^njohceof tho CaroHnian] WA?MisatoN, Jul)- 7. Conq^e-M. immediately nfter the expiration of the dSly of fourth, earnestly eugnge 1 the business then. Ony?*terd?vy the'^vjl and Diplomatic Apmopriutioo bill was defeated. On, motion oiMr. Orr the vote was rtconsidcrw and to-day the bill passed with the objeetiooj^lo aiucndmtipts and propositions throv aside. A bill liko<hia can summon to th< contest many of tho antipodal squadrons nix elements that other sttMU ti hare not th' power to marshal. The opponents of tlx uuuunisirnuon, tne economists, tlie disap pointed men, who have need of dollars an> cents appropriated for their respective local ties, and the many who vote for a bill as th best they could get, will bring into action u > sufficient force for reconsideration. However, as the bill is now only partially consid^ ered, as the Senate has to make liberal ndmr ditions to it which is always (lone, the usual ^ report of all appropriation bills, especially the Deflcioncy and tho General Appropriation,will go t*> the Committee of Conference, and thou compromise their respective claims, m and lake what they can got, if they cannot , get what they want. The"Senate* after listening to the Nebraska excitement and threatening* of the Northern abolition* ts, hiupe reversed their vote on the insane bill, supjwrtiug the veto by a majority of six. It is the opinion that the Tlotucatead bill will pass the Senate at the first opT 1 : . .1 1 J^? ??m>j . & iiuhi II 31UU1I mat IDC 1TC8I- I dent will sign it without hesitation. It is yet t > be done. Congress will have hut little time to dis- f pose of all these, should the appropriation till ho pushed through, which is not at all probable. Tho District appropriations were defeatod, which has caused much resent-| ment towards tho present Congress. Some attribute it to a refusal to aid the Know-1 Nothings; others bring the opposition of outside pressure against the Treasury as the j objection; we have the money, and the protecting it from outright depredation is the adoption. The great rejoicings throughout the land wore unexpected; the tolling of bells, the feeling and humiliation that was so devoutly aroused by those who looked to the aggressive power of slavery, have not yot developed the proceedings that took itbuvt nn llin Itli I..l?. V- '' , ~ .... ... v,u>v. livci j portion oi l the couutry seems to have joined in the! gladness inspired by the day, eoiumeinora-' ting it in tlio usual manner. The news from New Hampshire is more Favorable to the election of the Nebraska men, or such a demonstration as to prevent the selection of any one under the present obstinate proceeding. Kanzas is the point to which emigration ' is directing its westward ho; and soon the! great Far West will be peopled with a race j judging from the public demonstrations, as determined against abolitionism and its attendant evils. tu. : ' me cuy is now oecoming pretty much; such a city as its founders contemplated for j the seat of government?free from the noise and jostle of a commercial town. All have left that expected anything from the droppings of the treasury, and have gone to the i springs to recruit for the next session. Cholera?Harrow escape from being bur'* ied Alive. A correspondent of the Boston Journal, writing under date of Manepy, Jaffna, Coy-1 Ion, April 12th, furnishes the following thrilling accounts: 441 have alluded to the prevalence of cholera. The ravages of the disease in the parish of Manepy have been fearful. I never before realized the presence of death as for some time when the pestilence was at its height. In some instances the attack seemed to he nothing but death itself from the out-! set, and tlm victim was hurried into the i grave within eix hours, and even less, from i _ a! ii - fl A ? * 1 me nine 01 me nrsi appearance 01 me dis- j ease. The people havo such a fear of hav- ] ing a corpse in the house that they bury as! soon as possible after the breath has left the body, and in some cases, we have reason to lielieve, even before life is extinct Several iustances of this kind have been reported, and in regard to the death of some of the , native Christians by this disease, we have jiad most paiuful suspicions and fears. 441 will mention one or two authentic cases where jiersons narrowly escaped being buried alive, as such instances may not be 1 without use as warnings, even in America : One occurred in February, in a village (Asia-' vority) adjoining Manepy. A person who was attacked with cholera reoiiested liis I friends not to btiry him nt once if ho died, but to wait for some tirrie. He died within eight or nine hours, a* was supposed, when ; liis friends, without regarding liis plainly cx-' pressed wish, prepared for the interment;! but one of them, having recalled the dying man's request, delayed the funeral three or 1 Ibur hours. Meanwhile the body moved,! and the man asked for congy or gruel ; the heat of the body returned, and the man has since regained his usual health. Again, on-1 ly a few Sabbaths mornings since, a teacher in thr Sabbath school at this station?which school, by the way, has been entirely broken up for more than three months by the cholera?pointed out to me a little girl, a meml?er of his class, who was supposed to have died ; but as it was iate in the afternoon she was wrapped in a inat?nearly all arc buried hero without coffins of any sort?and the corpse left till morning for interment.? , {.Hiring the night the poor little creature r*vfv?4 so much as to complain of the cold, i ?i. #? a..i ?i? -I ' iiiiu iu wr n/r unni, wiwn mic wjw cnreu lor, Ami has mae# become so well a? to he able to attend the Sabbath and day school*. A Bio Lump.- ?It appear# that Calafornia i* wot the only State in the union ia .which big nugget* of precious metal are fomgI.? A Uw days ago, * mass of gold weighing 1,480 pennyweights, and worth $1,410,70, was taken front the McCormu'Jt mine, in ooluwbia county, Georgia, U mm ractod nearly from the enrfc* of the earth, from a rein of great depth wad riehcese. %r CnJfrpisf. -ZTri 'ay* Morning, July 14, 1854. AGENTS. Ei Wi GARR, K. "W. CO* of Walnut wd Hiird-ct,, Philadelphia, U our authorized Agent A. Ml PEDEN, at Purview P. O., Greenville District, is our Agent for that place and vicinity. WMi BAILEY, at Weaaanfc Grove, Greenville J>utrict is our authorize Agent N, W. SMITH, at Merritsville, Greenville District is our authorized Agent ' l-l ' t'J'J' 11 ~.l! L IL ..'JllP BUDGET OF NEWS. ?3TSamckl O. Baulk, Esq., has retired from the management of the Andereon Gazette, John V. Moons is now sole editor. Tubus has becti ft fire in Spartanburg.? There are mad dogs in Columbia, as well as mad peoble. Srnatos McQueen has returned to Washington. The crew of a Swedish Brig are reported to hane discovered an Arctic Contineut, only two of the adventurous navigators survived their great discovery?and of these, one has siuce died, and the other gone crazy.? The only article which they are said to have rescued from those frozen regions is the remains of an "old shirt-tail. Tuere is a man expected in Washington named Lovatt, who beats Orpheus out of sight. He plays tunes upou rocks and makes bees " discourse most excellent music. Tuk Augusta case Bridge has been decided in favor of the City Council. Madam Sontao, the celebrated vocalist, U1VU ICVVIIHJ Ail iUC VIIJ VI iUCAIW uivuvicru. She was taken ill a few moments before she would have appeared in Lucrezia Borgia. The Cholera is prevailing to some extent in almost all the cities in Union. Cistern water is said to bo a preventive of this terrible malady. The citizens of Georgetown are contemplating the construction of a Canal from the Sainpit to the Santeo liivcr. A writer in a Mississippi ]>aj>er, recommends the planters to pack their cotton in hogsheads instead of bagging. The independence of Canada was recently advocated in the British House of Lords by the Earlc of EUenborough. The National Intelligencer predicts, that in 1856 the whigs will elect to the Presidency some sterling old school national whig. There were 108 deaths in Baltimore last week. The unhappy Mexicans seem to grow daily more and more discontented with Santa Anna and his government. There has been a great fire in Philadelphia, which originated on the night of the 5th inst., in the National theatre, distroying that building, the Chinese museum and other buildiugs, and property to the amount of nnff million or mow .lollnro Mr. Editor :?In your paper of last week I see your correspondent " Fair Play," puts a number of queries to the minority on the question of the Baptist Female College. 1 suppose he is disposed to keep up the recdrd true and unmistakable?a thing for which the minority themselves professed to have u wonderful.hankering at the outset. But you may rest assured that the day is not very far distant ,when they will bo disposed to harm the record, and have all their present actings and doings upon this College question forgotten. The position some of thein occupies upon various points, would not suit many others but themselves, and it will soon be found to suit them as little as any one else. All they have to do to become exceedingly leg weary, is to just hold on where they now are. The people are looking in and notching down indelibly, many passing events, and long before the present generation shall have passed away ?there are many now living who won't know themselves, without first bitinej their own finger. It is somewhat of a case, surely, that the owner of the Glcnns Spring Episcopal Female Cdjlege, while laboring to build up that Institution (a tiling which all admit lie a right to holds ozi to a trusteeship in the Greenville academies, and by his action indirectly says, "You shant have a rival College spring up here. Although he can't be ignorant of the fact that three-fourths of the people of the Town, and I think it will he universally admitted that more than niue-tenths of the people of the country are exceedingly desirous that i* should be done. It won't do to say in rep'y that lie too wants the college in Greenville, and that it is only the transferor the Academy lands to which he objects. The majority, each inan of them, have rights in the academy lands, equal to his own, and as they compose full three-fourths of the community, they think and will continue to think, that they have almost as much right to their say-so, as the onedburth who oppose. The time Wm when friends, good friends , thought that a resignation as irvtttt wouM JSt- ; bavecome in most appropriately. U was looked for. But that moans of escape is i aow cut off. The patties to the bill In Eq- t uity are made up. The protestants have t their three names affixed. The record in t this, as well as in many ot^gr respects will I stand. i The 6th question of y?ir*6ihibapomlent- i "Fair Flay" is full of ineaniug. It runs this ? wise,* are these men who promised to cense < opposing as soon m au unmistakable irihjor- t [ity of the people was ascertained to be Ja i favor of the transfer, concerned in the Equi- i ty court opposition 1" I would only say i that 1 have heard it confidently asserteJ re- < pentedly, that that pledge had been made < unequivocally more than once, by one of the . individuals whose natnc now stands arrayed amongst the three protectants. He may be able to explain this seeming want of a redemption of his pledge?I cannot, and yet | the record will be complete without it I \ suppose of course, it will bo forthcoming in due season. OGLETHORPE. For the Southern Enterprise. . A/k JBilitot:?Anderson being a competitor of Greenville for the Female College, uses those weapons with which she tried to defeat the Furman University at this place but the prudeuoo and firmness of an nble faculty hath dispelled those evil forebodings and nothing is more requisite at this time than a vigorous and united effort to secure the greatest boon that was ever offered to mothm. If Female education at home, like heavenly blessings in di*guiso, steals imp er ceptibly oh the soul, improves the intellect, and makes groat men from much greater and better materials, educated mothers, who no callous who sO luwi, iu every virtuous principle, as to desire to throw our weight and influence against the interest of our own Mountain home to secure perpetuity in scholarships, to less formidable reveals less numerically and entirely inferior in local advantages ; and the misconception of the I advantage* to l>e derived from the proximi- ' ty of the College to the Furiunn Institute is 1 n strategy to drive us from our local ndvan" 1 tages and locate it iu their Eden's Garden, after our expulsion. A brother's protection, j 1 a brother's society, and a brother's tender (' solicitude for an affectionate sister, would, in ' j ihe absence of a father, constitute hiin the ' guardian of her personal reputation. 1 It is indeed strange that those calling themselves christians, no matter of what denomination should refuse to aid the progress of Female education, and with an illibcrality not extended to any by the 13aptist and with boasting refusal to lend even their best wishes iu a laudable enterprise. Such unfortunate divisions, none gave quietus to tho eon- > science, nor worth to the man, and many of our oldest, as the Editor of the Mountaineer would think most reputable citizens, ami his sixtv subsrrifwn-s nnlu son .l/Ul.ivu j j w.?y wv uvuaiO| iilllisi H lady of 3 weeks date will give 500, it is folly to give wise without n proper appreciation of Female Education. GREENVILLE. ! ? For tho Southern Enterprise. THE IMPORTANCE OF ASTRONOMY. It was probably a clear evening in Autumn, j when the sun had sunk beneath the western horizon, and night had thrown her dark shade, upon the earth, that the l'salmist, after Brazilur un into the l.lne vault I...... , c, O . - i gave vent to one of the most remarkable er-1 i 1 1 pressions of humnlity find gntitude, that, per-j ! haps, ever emanated from the pen of an inspired writer?44 O I Lord who is man that Thou art mindful of liini?** The Psalmist must have had, comparatively speaking, a t very imperfect know ledge of the science of astronomy. Yet wo must not suppoee that i he looked on the numerous stars, that glitter- 1 ed over the broad expanse of heaven, as mere j ornaments or lights; which the Creator had plaeed for the convenience and purposes of this earth. But by the aid of divine.inspiration, and, perhaps, the inaoy observations he had made, from tho time he was an humble shepherd watching his flocks by night, he was enabled to view them in their true light; as worlds of vast proport:'ans, scattered throughout the immensity of space, and wisely concluding, that the Almighty would not have made such immense worlds without1 placing creatures of intelligence upon them, i tA A/1inirc on/1 ?n/tel?a ' w MMtKMv wiv? ?uu nv*ao vi uivir vrcntor; it is no wonder that he thus expressed his astonishment that the Almighty would condescend to take knowledge of inun, a mere worm of the dust; or even this earth, which is only an atom iu the great works of creation. The science of astronomy, as history in forms us, "has, in all ages, engaged the attention of the poet, the philosopher, and the divine, and been, the subject of thicr stay and admiration." Although there were many very important discoveries, made in this science, at different periods of the world, yet it did not arrive to any degree of perfection, nntil about the 15th century. Since that time, by the invention of large teleseopsa, and the untiring labors of more modem astronomers, ft has attained to such a degree of perfection, as to fill the grind with wonder and j amazement. ' trationsof this scieuco, we are enabled to conempluto millions of worlds, a thousand times Hrger than this earth, some, of which, arc noviug at the auuiziug velocity, of a hundred housand miles on hour; all in perfect hnrliony, our nijmls arc filled with the greatest istonishmont. Such objects and motions, as ins, are well efrlcurjtted to give us a proper dea of the stupendous works of nature; and, vhen seriously contemplated, cannot fail to nspire us, with the most lofty conceptions >f that Being, who k the maker and uphold* :r of all things. The study of aatrouotny, tends greatly to promote morality and religion; to expand he mind, and ennoble the character of man, rhe thoughts and actions of men in a great noasure correspond ; if, therefore, they are iccustomed to contemplate such sublime subect as this study presents, they will not- adlictcd to low and vicious pursuits. I can only allude, here, to the importance >f this science as connected with some of the uost useful terrestrial arts and sciences; ffhieh owe a great deal to it, for tho degree >f perfection to which they have attained. From such considerations as these, is it not to be feard that this study is to much negleced, in our academies and lower institutions >f learning, throughout tho country ? But tome, perhaps, think that this study is beyond the comprehension,and will not interest he juvenile mind; but a little reflection aud ixperieuce might show them their error. I luivC often noticed that the youthful mind will soon become interested, when you speak sf the various phenomena of the Solar System ; such as the nature and cause of eclipses ?the appearance of the moon when viewed through a telescope?the probable cause of tho Sun's brightness?or tho relative magnitude aud distance of the planets. Or if, on a clear evening, you direct their attention to the various constellations, which compose the fixed stars?the animals they represent, and [lie names of the principal stars; they will not soon forget them. And here, I would remark, how important it is, that youths should lajcome early interested in such studies as this ; for, while they liave n tendency to expand their minds, they ilso learn to look on the vain inuseinents and Measures of this world, with less importance. W Original. TO A BOftUET. Tlvo dahlia, rose, the pink and thyme, In thee their beauty all combine, And from this union we can see, IIow loved one's do on earth agree. lint sweet boquet, I'll) lonely yet, And ncc'r cau 1 that one forget. Whose snowy hands arranged thy hue. And bound thee up in ribbon blue. And then thy lovely fonn she wet, With crystal tears of deep regret, To know that you tnust fndc and die. And then forgotten lonely lie. But had you seen her love and smile, And place in thee the chamomile. The sweetest herb that ev'cr did grow, Upon this sinful earth below. You surely would have said 1*11 strive, To lire and thus reflect that smile. And ohovr to nil that I may wp, The sympathies she had for mo. Unt Oh ! sweet Boquet you must fade. Your loveliness in gloom be laid. And then when with your harms you part, Til join that sympathizing heart. EUGENE. ???> The Connecticut Law. The resolutions of censure adopted by the Conneetient Senate, against Senator Touecy, have not yet reached us. The following is a copy of the late law which passed the llous? hy a vote of 112 to 85 : an act for the defence of liberty in tui? state. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Re . prexentatives in General Assembly convened. Section 1. Every person who shall falsely and maliciously claim, declare, represent oi pretend, in presence of any judge, commission er, marshal or other officer of the Unite<J States, that any other person is a slave, oi owes service of labor to any persons, with in tent to procure, or to aid or assists in procur ing the forcible retr.ovjd cf such ether pcrsor from this state, sitaii pay a fine of five thou sand dollars and be imprisoned five years ii the Connecticut State prison. Sec. 2. Every claim, declaration, pretence or representation, that any person being oi baring been in this State, is or was a slave or owes or did owe service or labor lo any other person or persons, shall be deemed ii all cases arising under the ac^to bo prinu faci* false and malicious: and the truth o any such claim, declaration, pretence, or re presentation, shall not be deemed proved ex cept by the testimony of at least two credibh witnesses testifying to fact directly tending to establish the truth of sueh claim, declare tion, pretence or representation, or by testi mony equivolent thereto. 8ec. 9. If, upon the trial of any prosecu iton arising under this not, the pro*eouting of fleer shall claim that soch false claim, deelar ation, representation, or pretence, was nuui wholly or in part by means of any aflldavil record, or other writing, shall be admitsbb on primary evidenen of iu contents. 4ac. 4. Upon trial of any prosecutloi arising under tfcb act, no deposition shall b 4tr ^ tion, arising under this act, any witness shall, 'iu behalf of the party accuse^ and With intent to iihl him in his defence, bllseiy nu<l wilfully, in testifying, represent tfr pretend, that any person is or ever was a slave 'does or ever did owe scrvieo or labor to any person or persons, such witness ahull pay a Hue of five thousand dollars and be imprisoned five years iu the Connecticut State prison.. Skc. 6. Wheuever complaint or information shall bo made against an t person for any offence described in any section of this act, and upon such complaint or information a warrant shall have been duly issued for the arrest of such person, any person who shall binder or obstruct a sheriff, deputy sheriff, or constable, in.the service of such warrant, or shall aid such accused person in escaping from the pursuit 6f such officer, shall be imprisoned one year in the Connecticut State prison. Sue. 1. No claim, declaration, pretence, or representation that any person is or was an apprentice for a fixed term of years, or owes or did owe service merely as such an apprentice for sucli fixed term, shall bo deem cd prohibited by this act, nod no sucli claim, declaration, pretence, or representation that any person is or was such an apprentice for such fixed term, or owes or did owe service merely, as such an apprentice for such fixed term, shall render any person liable to any penalty under this act. The Fortunes of Paskie witch. The cause of the high favor enjoyed hy Pnskiewitch, add which, unjustified by tal?m or success, has caused so many suppositions, is entirely owing to the fatalism which it is known is peculiar to the Russian Czars, and of which their history has given ample proof. During the occupation of Paris by the allied armies, a grand mass being eelebrntod on the Place de la Concorde, in honor of the Allied Sovereigns, Paakie witch was appointed to the command of the guard of honor placed at the foot of the altar, which was elevated on a sea Holding more than forty feet high, towering above the vast crowd assembled there and visible to the furthermost extremity of the of the Champs Klyseea. It would seem that Paskiewitch, a young man then, found more intercut in onrliiii* tlu> l'nrij luilioo 1.1^.1 .?u.w there in immense numbers and in splendid toilets to witness the ceremony, for from his lofty position he beheld n well-known little actress of tho Varieties endeavoring in vain to make her way to tho front ranks in order to get a better view of the ceremony. Paskicwitvh. with true Polish gallantry immediately descended the steps of the estrade, an^L ottering his hand to the lady, procured hefs seat on the bench reserved to the officers of the guard. This feat achieved to his satisfaction he, was about to regaiu his place, when a loud crash was heard ; the ill-joined boards had given' awav, and the three superior officers?comrades of Paskiewith in that day's duty?were precipitated to tho pavement below, whence they were borne, crushed and dying, to the hospital, llad Puskiewitch not left the place for those few moments, he too had been among the victims of the catastrophe. The story was told at the banquet given that day by the Prince Talleyrand to the sovereigns. The Emperor Alexander alone was silent amid the exclumatious elicited by tho good r..-? e ti 1 j j - iviMuiu ui iiw aiu-cic-camp; out, on retiring from the bampiet, lie sent for liuskiewitch, and accosted him in his usual mysterious manner: "Providence has evidcutly some great design upon this man," said he, as he examined Trim attentively. "From what country are you 1" "From Litliuuia, your Majesty." "Ah, Polish?so much the better? L love the Poles. You are a fortunate man, it appears. Providence has visibly protected you this day. I love men who are tortunate. ' Vou shall enter my guard. Meanwhile, the command of a brigade of Grenadiers is vacant ; it is at your service." It is entirely from this event that the for tunes of the Marshal take their date. The luch of I'askiewitch has hitherto justified the unticipatiou of the Czar; but he is how an okl man, and "Fortune loves not the aged," said Louis Quutorzo to Villars after his disastrous ! campaign in Fluudcrs. It is said that Pas, kiowitch is far from sharing the blind confit dence reposed in him by b ieholas, and that i if he accepted the command of the arrav oi I of the Danube it was because he durst not i refuse. No reasoning is su tiered to weigh against the command of the army of the Danube it was because he durst not refuse. ' No reasoning is suffered to weigh against the ' commands of despotism, and the opposition of good sense would he deemed rebellion ' and disobedience. Paskiewitch, born in 1777, r is nearly 80 years of age; but the Czar is sab ' Utied. It is not a soldier he has placed at ' the head of bis Danubiau army ; it m the star r of Russia! lie slumbers on in peace, while ' Paskiewitch trembles with dismay; he known ' that all Russians are equal before Siberia; 1 | his name is suspended on the chances of a " | battle; and be is com do! led to beorfn life snow 11 when but a single span divides him from the grave. > , - - .1, f.r - ! r The Old Soldier*. r The soldiers of the war of 1812 celebrai ted the 4th, at Independence Hall, in Philai dolphin, and embraced the occasion to force f their claims on Congress, lte-solutions were . adopted complimenting Mr. Churchwell, ol . Tennessee, for reporting a bill granting an I additional amount of land to those who ser j ved our country in our second war of Indi. peudence. The following realution was also - passed ; J "JietolMd, That Senators and ltepre* sentalives in Congress be respectfully reques ted, promptly to take Up and pass, with some - slight moemrcations, the lull reported by the # ooimnittee of which Mr. Churchwelf is cbairman, believing that the, men who defended ? their eoantry in our U*str<jggie with Great Britain,, should be provided for before any S other grant should be-roade to todividaak ft who never served in any of our vars." Tfce order of events witf as fuftows: Siege I operations were wtuiuviiveu ou lVtii May, ft and continued untH 1Mb June, the attack | and defence being carried on incessantly, mid 1 with equal I y a very 00 both aides. Repeated storrintnnr parties were directed 5 against tne intrench ments, mines and counter V mine- wem exploded, crv-sing immense F1 slaughter to both besiegers and bewieged, I Mutton Pacha, the hrnve Turkish cotntnaader, ! I was killed by a shell; after which Prince J Paskiewitch, the Russian commander, was struck and disabled by a spent ball, and will 4ft probably die. "*** A On Uie 13tii Jane a tremendous attack was ordered under Generals Gortaehoff and Schib i ders, but after scvero lighting the Russianer I - i were repulsed) and a Turkish brigade sent i from Sliuinla by Omar Pacha and succeeded | in enienng uie iortress. Thus reinforced, tlie' 1 garrison ou tho 15th wade a sortie; a detpe- . 1 rate liand to hand contest ensued awl n- 1 j dod in the completo discomfiture of U?r Russians. Prince Oortscakoff w as severely wounded. Ocn. Sehilders had his leg shot XI off, and two other generals were kilted. , The carnage among the Russian troops was dreadful, and they retired, lighting a cross tin; river. Pursuing their advantage,, the Turks crossed nn arte of the river, seized the Isle of hope, and blowup the Russian siege works thereon. Tho Turks then brought, out tlieir guns, and erected temporary batteries on tho Bulgarian bank of the river, before the north fuce of fortress. Tlie Russian, battollion cast and west of Bilistria immediately retreated in good order across the river hud destroyed their bridges. The Russians at latest dates were in thevieinity of Knlarnsch, awaiting re-enforcemcnts and orders. (Jcneral Liprani's division, and several detached corps, were marching in haste from Blatina to join them. The victory was gained entirely by the Turks, the French and English not having made their appearance. The siege of Bilistria being raised, must niter the whole plan of operations in ltulgagaric, and consequently must change tluv plans of the Allies. It is surmised that Pasj kiewitch will order his whole force to fall I back on Jnsiy. I Ere this, the Russian* hnv* - linouishcd nil their jxwitions on the left tianlc of the Danube, campling the forts of Ilarso- 4 vu, Matsehin, mid Lscaktelm?and npprolien~ sions of their advauce ou the Bnlkius is, for the present, at an end. Russian accounts, via Bucharest, admit . that operations against Silistria are susja-n- I ded, but say that the siege is not finally raised The Russians have cvacutcd Mogurclli and Sinuibea. 5,000 Turks have occupied Turtukai, and it was re|x>rted, but considered doubtful that the Turkish garrison of Kustcliuck had en wived to Giurgevo, killed 400 Russians, ami taken 9 guns. Admirals Dundas and Ilnmeliu iaswed m circular on the 7th June announcing, the cIoms blockade of the mouths of the Dauabe. Most of the fleet were cruising ott' Sebastopol, butt some 0 or 8 ships were at Varna assisting its the conveyance of troops. Trans|H>rts with heavy (2una havijn? nnm ed, it was likely tliat Sebastaopol wuvtkl 60 attacked. The Bai.tic.?There h.-is been no news off iiniK>rtiuice received from the Baltic. Two English steamers destroyed the whorff and some gun boats at Kemi, Gulf of Bothnia. The English. sMips Odin and V ulture landed 160 men a* Kalvn Knrlemv, but theywere attacked by the Russians, and drivels back to their ships with the loss of 3 officer*, and 3 seamen killed, 2 officers ami 14 seamen wounded, and 25 taken, prisoners. Admiral Napier had sent 4 ships against tin? place. , All Russian pilots are sent into the interif. ior. i Tlie British under Admiral Plum ridge, have taken possession of Fornea unopposed. U was to Im fortified as a station for English troops. Guekck.?Advices from Missonghi to June. 14, say that the insurrection was totally extinct at Epirus, but the Turkish troops were, inarching to Thessaly, where the insurgents. ' refuse to submit. The U. S. frigate Cumberland and Saranac were at the l'irseus. Asia.?Bafea Pacha is appointed Gover1 nor of Circassia and Abasia. At the latest date Schmayl was in full march uponTiffis. ' Negotiations.?A report waa current . o L- i uint ivus*?u? nuu ngainmode peace overture* ' through Austria, but the terms are said tobe the immediate retirement of the allies from 1 Turkey. It can scarcely be regarded as true. 1 A rumor is again aftfoat iu the English pa1 pets that th* Car will abdicate, lie u> iiae| wise reported to be sick, and for that alleged a reason did uot meet the King of Prussia, lie 1 has, however, ordered Prince Dolgordotiki, Minister of war, to proceed immediately to the Danubian Principalities, and draw up an accurate report of the position of affairs in a I, military point of view. This unusual mis siou produced a sensation at St, l'eteiifcflh. , The Latest.?A telegraphic despatch i states that at the conference at Teschein, U r was decided that Prussia would not formally i declare war against Russia, but would place - a portion of the Prussian army under the or. dere of the Emperor of Austria. | ^ i t JVVUbAAt fl!a*?mla" vv^waKuw; muiuMig, rfUnB *?<-? General Dunuenhnfg ha* succeeded to the chief command Of the Russian force* of the . Danube, in consequence of the wound* re, ceived by the (general in command. ^ * , General Luuers had his- jaw carried away , by a cannon ball. From the Baltic, the report of the Englieh , Iocs at Kaiana Karieoy is confirmed. On the 21st ult. ail the screw steamer* . {proceed to Cronstadt; and a Stettin tele1 graphic despatch say.: The Ami of flp*