University of South Carolina Libraries
1 0I ssf he le wonde a SIR onnead j &oifhas riever beenArao: ed to 'j hi is s weor-in the, Ineior of Afriqs, The Nile has ohe al he Blue Nile andr i ite I 1H. .The sources of the for me of~these was disoovered by Bruce, in the interior of. Abyssinia, but such a hl Popular belief that the sources of the NUe could not be discovered, that 4rii6e was not believed! One of theoii modern travellers, who told a r accurate story, was not believed, ,e4use it was incredible that the springs of the Nile should be known, or tat a peculiar race of blacks should exist as were found in these regions of ancient Ethiopia! Believed or not, however, Bruce's accdount was true.' He did discover the springs of the Nile, but the. Blue. Nile was much the shortest branch.. It bore the same, relation to the White Nile (which is the real river,) as the Upper MiNssIssippi does to the Missouri. It' asthe inferior branch. The real source of the Nile remained to be discovered, anti is not known. The White Stream, (Nile,) which is the Western branch, is the largest Prior to the expedition fitted out by Mehored All in 1830, and in which Mr. Werne was a passenger, the farthest point reached up the Nile was in lati. tude about 10 degrees. But, although the source is not yet exactly known, w6 da know that it is very near, if. not - *ast exactly on the equater. Me.' Werne, ii this expedition, reach ed latitude 4 degroes, or nearly 400 miles beyond the previously ascertained limit. There was an obstruction or fall in the stream, and it grow narrower as Mr. Werne thought; but it was quite certain its sources were yet several hundreds of miles further. The sour ces of the Nile and the Niger will prob ably 'be found not far apart. They are saii to be in the "Mountains of the Moon," but who knows any thing of the Moon? No one. There are unknown lands which may yet reward'siome fur ther adventurers with the fame of dis COvery. It is most curious, that the lat. 4 (to which Mr. Werno penetrated) is sever al degrees beyond the point at which the heads of the Nile are placed on our common maps, while it is certain that the real springs were yet hundreds of miles beyond lat. 4. All our ideas of Central Africa, (generally represented as a desert,) are deranged by the fact, that Mr. Werne found these remote re gions luxurant in foliage, and inhabited by dense warms of people! These people were, some of them, gigantic in stature, while they were most savage In life, *The voyage of this Egyptain expe dition was one of peculiar interest, It has but recently been given to the En glish public. Mr. Werne being a Ger m an, Blackwoods Magazine thus speaks of it. We can conceive few things more ex citing than such a voyage as Mt. WVerne has accomplished and recorded. Star ting from the outposts of civilization, he sailed into the very heart of Africa, up *a stream whose upper waters were then for the first time furrowed by vessels larger than a savage's canoe--a stream of such gigantic proportions, that its width, at a thousand miles from tbe sea gave it the aspect of a lake rather than of a river. The brute crcation were in proportion with the magnitude of the water-course. The hippopottamus reared his huge snout above the sur face, and wallowed in the gullies that on either hand run down to the stream; enormous crocodiles gaped along the shore; elephants played in herds upon the, pastures; the tall giraffe stalked among the lofty palms; snakes thick as trees lay coiled in the slimy swamps; and ant hills, ten feet high, towered above the rushes. Along the thickly peopled banks hordes of savages show e ed themselves, gazing in wonder at the strange ships, and making ambiguous *estures, as signs of friendship or hos tility. ,Alternately sailing or towing, as the wimd served or not; constantly in sight of natiyes, but rarely communica ting wviti 'tiI1 often cut off for days from land by in 'erminable fields of tan gled waeds--the expedition pursued its co~urso through innumerable perils, guaranteed from most of them by the ci~id ramnpart on which it floated. Li Oie look~ed hungry and savages shook - ?hbir'teai's, but neither showed a dis *pos on to swim oftf and board the flo *Father Mathew is sojourning for some dlays in Dublin, mnakijig preparations for his trip to Americn. He intends to sail trom [.iv~rpool, by the ship Newv World, 4t! the end of~April. Hie succeeded a ehp I time sinee o Castle Lake Pis 'tillirydavery. valp le property; but soonorqthtn havo it dralyed in making *VAI Mky,'lhrfke up the concern at a con aidrlolois~tohimselsing prt of t-aaor~ilsIirelh s ut e etdrod, e.* thf prog p h A horhr I lroi nh _4.% qqut and souther, seI i of Upioi, ltik wiqcthe' finm of cifilisaton in eachend, showing, by tnpusweijle fact' and sta tite htthe isoutherni is the-most, roe. advantages of climaJe and domestio intf tution. Little notice has been takeli ~ the address at the rhibttwit is. evident that the factahave ocoupied a considera. ble-portilon of Eubl.Idtention, and pre. bly sotiesofhenareitplainable,'ahlmgh there Js no attempt to miMrejresent orfal. sify any thing. Mr. Fisher shows that the south is superior-to the noilh in wealth in proportion to the -number of white pop. ulption of the two sectibns, and this Is shown by population, by assessed value of property, and by the superiority of ag. ricultural wealth. He clearly proves by 'facts that thero is not a shadow of truth in the oft-repeated declarations that the. south is undergoing the process of im. poverishment, depopulation, and decay, or that there is the least ground for the in. 4 creasing impression that idleness, cruelty, ignorance, and pride prevail in that se. tion, owing to her slave population, or that there is any necessity to emulate the north in enterprise, industry, and civilization. The ground has been frequently assumed that, as the accumulation of wealth is the highest proof of civilization, the north -in this respect is'far beyond the south; and yet the statistics of this lecture show that in proportion to the number. of citizens (and that is the true test) thesouth lsgreat. ly superior to the north in point of wealth. This will be a startling declaration to the north. and -will. be-stronuously dispu. ted; and yet thim fact is.sustainable, that when there liosbeen at intervals a deo.ine in manufactures . artd commerce at the north, the agricultural- wealth ofthe south has been steadily on the increase. This fact is apparent when we refer to the com. mercial ambarrassments or 1836-the bankruptcy of the first mercantile 'and manufacturing houses, numerous and ap palling in numbdr-while the south stead. ly maintained its credit and position, even with the low prices of agricultural pro. ducts. Take two states-Massachusetts, always a model state, and Maryland, both possessing about the same extent of terri tory. The census of 1840 gave to Mas. sachusetts population of 737,699, and to Maryland afree population of 880,282; and yet in 1847 the property of Maryland was assessed at 202,272,650,-while in the same .year the property of the extremely rich state of Massachusetts, with nearly dotible the population of Maryland, had an-esses. sed property of $300,000,000, making Maryland 25 per cent the richer state. Take two important states, New York and Virginia, the latter called, inconsequence of herslave population, "poor, idle, mis erable, and decayed." Nedw York, the proud Empire State, lad a population, according to the census of 1840, of 2A28, 921, and the poor starving state of Vir. ginia had only 790,810. free inhabitants. The property in the state of New York, with her grand canals, her great inland seas, her thousands of flourishing towns, cities, and villages, is assessed 'at 8832, 699,993, while the property ofthe decay. ed state of Virginia is valued at about *600,000,000, giving an average of6*758 to every white man, wvhile in New York it is only *260-a little more than one third. aSo. the comparison runs with sev. cral other northern and southern states. But it wvill be said you include slaves as property. So they are considered and reckoned by the laws of the United States; and it is asserted that the white man of the south is poor, even with his slaves. Put them together and make the average. But the truth is, the south is richer, cal. culating the slaves as 'pet-sons, and not property. The southern states, with such staples as cotton, tobacco,- sugar, indigo, and rice, in inoxhaustable quantities equivalent always to gold--together wvith abundance of corn, grain, and cattle, may wvell be considered the. richest section of the Union contrasted with* the fluctue lions of commerce and the occasional de pression of manufactures. The lecture is a very curious and very interesting one to the wvhole Union, and the south should print and circulate millionsof copiesofit, and present it to the north as' a friendly relation, as well as gentle ad monition to the thousand of abolition pamphlets which. wo honorably and hospitably transmit to the south.-7Ymes and Messenger April 22nd. .. JusTrcE TO JouN C. CA LJOUN.-At the' meeting in Western Virginia, the Reso lutions of which wvere drawn up by HEN RY A. WIsE, the following was one of the number: '-Resolved, That the expression of our gratitude be tendered to John C. Calhoun, a Senator from the,8State of -South.Caro lin, for the conception and authorship of this appeal, and to those with him in the Convention who voted to adopt it and to reject all temporizing substitutes, wvhich were proposed by some whose extreme moderation has ever heretofore vielded and wvill forever hereafter "yield the ques tion, and whose proposed action would have committed the fate and fortunes of the minority in the nations to that ruthress majority which has never yet been touch. ed by the tenderness of an appeal, and the pride and passion of which have always been more haughtily emboldened by the humility of imprecation and rotest.' Singular Suicide.-Michael Storin drowvned himself in that beatiful stream, the Merrimac, at Concord, N. H., in peeeofhis wife, who went to see if. hehdtecours=g to do I. RAVELLING AGENT.R D"Rev. PaSZanEO Ruim.. i. a travellng1 a tfor this paper, and Is apthorized to re. 1b evesubscriptIne'ay receipt for the same. t1 AGiEnTS FOiL -THE AMNE. dessrsaWurs, & Co. Sunmterville, S. C. C -T. W, Pious, Msq4 Cfimden, S. C. . 1D" All.comuifgPions Iintended for the 1ANNERm ust be dire'(Pid$.g Paid to the resent EDITOR. 't) ti * Cotton. t Charleston.-Prices from 5 8-4 to e r 1-2 centsaper pound. t Our Paper. We have heretofore been extremely diii- c lent in making any personal remarks in re. t [ard to our "Banner," but the very flattering r mcomiums lavished upon us by our brethren t Of the press and from various private sources f ,ompel us to break the bonds of silence and t peak. To those presses who have so no. iced us, we tender our grateful acknowledg nents, and to those of our subscribers who C we have so pleased, we but ask them to aid I is in extending the sphere of its usefulness t )y encouraging us with a liberal patronage. We scarcly dare promise anything for the 4 aresent, but we are now endeavoring to make I arrangements with some of the literati of our I District to furnish the Banner with original niscellany and short essays on domestic sub. c eots, of which Doniestic E'cbnom* will re. :eive a full share. In regard to'our typo. graphical appearance, we shall shortly pre. sent the paper in as artistic a style as any in South Carolina. While writing we were tanded the following communication, which, Ls it refers to the subject, we annex: t Ma. EDITOR:-We are highly pleased to see the enlarged and improved appearance of he Banner. The new heading, with which Fou have adorned it, is particularly fit and ippropriate. All this seems to indicate that the interests of our paper are on the advance. rhis is as it should be. In a District like 'his, which contains so large an amount of wealth, enterprise, and intelligence; a respect able sheet ought to be amply sustained-and Inubtless will be, in time. The Banner should be patronised by every one who can afford it: it should visit, if possible, every family with in the bounds of the District-especially* should any farmer be unwilling to be with. aut it, for it is to him as well a-t6.others, an. important medium of communicating intelli gence, ' D. t THE MAIL.-We leani from the Wilming- I ton Commercial, of Friday week thaIt the hour for the departure of the Company's j boats for Charleston is fixed at one o'clock, ar a soon thereafter as the cars arrive. The Commercial says the cars will genrally he on band at that hour. We believe that the boats, previous to this arrangement, left at three i'clock. This ought, therefore, to cause the :llivery of the mail in Charleston two hours ,arlier. These Companies seem to be more mnxious to accommodate the public than is bir. Collamer. 037 THE M. E. CHUncu.--Th~e Baltimore 3un, says, at the New Jersey conference ofI ;ho Methodist Episcopal Church, on Friday, he resolutions of the last General Confer mce, res'pecting the propriety of submitting o Arbitrators the difficulties between the Jothernmand'Southern divisions of the church roperty wvere presented by the bishop rho Baltimore and Philadelphia conferences, ;o which these resolutions were submitted at heir late sessions were unanimously in favor1 f arbitration; and it is presumed the New iersey conference will also concur. VAL.UABL.ESTATIsTIcs.-The tabularstate-. nents in the appendix of Comuiissioner Young, >f the Land Office, make one of the most use ul compilations of na~ional statistics ever laid e >efore the American people. In looking over ~ hem we observe that the fifteen free Stated f the Union have an area of 454,310 square niles, comprising 290,777,600 acres. And ~ he fifteen slave States, 938,868 square miles, unbracing 509,276,520 acres. The total po >ulation of the free States is 9,918,844, and f the slaves States 7,513,008. The free states have 30 Senators, 139 Representatives, mnd 169 Presidential Electors. The slave states have 30 Senators, 91 Representatives, r mnd 121 Presidential Electors. 037 FAST Day.-Ba resolution of the south Caratina Coniferd e, of thb Methodist E0. Church, at its last session, the first Friday a n this month was set apart to be; observed as t iday of fasting and prayer in all the socie- g ies throughout the Conference district. 137 DESTRUCTION OF THE TURPENTINE rREEs.-We learn froin the Wilmington, t N. C.) Commercial, that the insect which f Iestroyed the turpentine trees last year to a sueh a great extent, has again commenced q ts ravages. ti 03' It is supposed that the wealth created >y the rise of property through which 'rail. t eads are made, is rmore than equal to the s ictual cost of the road, that is, the cost of the xilroad, as to the whole community, will be ~ wes tha nothing. Got Wrepal kA 4 Nort, 4Iin u A ptanyidgd chion saeydif! neert In action. Reaon remoostrance, ammonjustice and regar4oJpJo Ise bates and the great clarter of our liber. es, seemto ha0 P " ineb 4tj ip* . ulating polhticians, who are determined to ripple the power, and 'destroyfthe ltAefeeb f the south, by:a censtAnti persen ad npudent itltirferance with thd poslire and ckn.owledged rights ofthe Soith. 'There is o alternative lef, but submisslotiU6r 0 oils Ince; we must iccept sich diiditionp as' he North think'proper.to Impose upon qs,or ntrench ourselves beneath the, barriers of he constitution. The nion of the*outhern tates Is a conservative measure -Impetiously emanded by common safety-uitedw can heck the advances of a fanatiei lrit, and an nwarrantable and continued assault on our ights; divided, we fall an easy prey to 'the' tachinations, of our enemies. There'can be o doubts entertained of the true policy of he South. The recent elections In New York and ,onnecticut evidently show. a great falling .f in what in called the "Free-Soll" vote; ut, still the leaders are encouraged to 'keep p their organization. We -undorstnd' the ource of this encouragement. The Whigs, ingaged In the business of proscription,. in emoving Democrats from office, have no oisure to take up this abstract question,-but vhen the spo:ls are distributed, thdy will ome to the aid of the free-soileirand thete rill be a union between them on th atihedt, lirected against the South. A heaitkhey 'to aove at this time, grows out of adesre'to'as. ertain more fully the viciws of General rATLoR on the subject. Wisconsin and ther states have expressed a determination D exclude the South from the exeraile of all heir rights in California-the mandate has one forth, and is speaking all over the North, nd proclaimed 'without ,hesitancy-"the lorth will not permit the South to carry any laves into California, and the will of the 4orth is sufficient warrant, for Congress to xclude slavery by law, without any further iscussion of constitutional rights." It will ake this turn beyond a doubt. In several arts of New York we hear that meetings ave been held and resolutions passed con emning the Whig policy and the Whig arty in unmeasured ter'ns, and yet declar ng opposition to what is called,' a further xtension of slavery, without th6 least regard D the constitutional rights -of the South Yeare to beocut off rom any claim WhAich ve may have, as part of the Republic, on the erritories acquired by our blood and treasure, and if we submit to it without an e-fbrt to >revent this crying wrong, it is imposible to oresee or prescribe any limits to. wiat mnay' Dllow this despotic determination. The true, afe and constitutional.mode of redress is to .certain whether the South will tinite on any specific course of action-whether aicting LU one body, mildly but firmly, they will fall iack upon their rights and defend them; vhethaer, for example, adopting the Virginia esolutions as a standard, or any other inde >endent course, the South is willing to con ederate. as much for the preservation of the mien as for their own protection, the time as now arrived to mark out and define a pecifie course. We shall lose the friends eft to us in the North, by a want of energy nd decision. Our enemies are industriously t work preparing for the next session of ongress, while we are taking no decided tops, to ascertain host our force at the South an be concentrated. That the President is uxious and desirous to protect the right. of he South, as well aw other sections of the mien, we are entirely willing to believe, but ve apprehend, ho has transferred great pow. rs to his cabinet, either for want of co'indence ci his own experience or from a belief that hey will carry out his wishes, and sustain is principles. It is a dangerous experiment,. 'articularly when it relates to great constitu. ional questions, and the rights, sovereignty nd independence of the states; on thin point, onnected with the safety of the union, pow. r can never be delegated to an irresponsible abinet. We hope for the best, but it is evi ent that we can rely only on ourselves. Con. erences and correspondence, should be comn. cionced, between the eminent mean of the louthern States, and a perfect understanding hould exist between them, as to the proper ourse of action, should attempts be renew. d to assail the rights of the South, and Car y out the threats, which are made in all di. ections at the North. We shall renew the ubject at a future day, IE' SMarL Pox.--The Hamburg Journal ays: we understand that there was a' case of he Small Pox reported in Augusta on the 7th ult., and that there Is another about 8 miles below this. itr A BArK Lhrnrr~rrT B.r. has passed ho New-York Legislature. The bill has one ~ature which restrains vexatious suits against n individual who is a stockholder, and re. uires that the proceedings shall be against hie stockholders collscrively, ilT We learn from our exchanges that a ill has passed the Sonate of Wisconsin, by vote of ten to three, making the vender of itoxicating drinks responsible for the sup. art of all paupers, made such either direely r indhrectly by mans fthi rra... ' br~~~~i4a**'. #wr -rfb. ItZ1 ho ~ ~ aiI 0iifafuhr&'* mis e i1teri, the M 400W iisVb untittthitt' ii o o proofs of' thu., t he e~l repeal fIe hundfod uni~* wvds afer twice Ierinjg them, md me pal thoroughfare of tohdon afly onte. assing through. It, and h6ok n alltid' 2. ,One of the.moat distingu liied-.wal. ivanl Dr., ha aai. ,I Anyll ever road his'. ermonrni nat liy hOteet struck with their Intelleotual-, ferilltyi Having occasion to preacha charity aor. mQn b6eor, the lord mayornndinidormen .4f LondoN )he tpoks far mthr.4'lfouret tmnd' h'I;and,;p n akod,' comingdwn' rmnthe pIg pwbether hi ;w ap Aired, he replied, . es, inde? , ege . b vearyith stib adiddling 8. An anecdote iW Mdle ke, Which.shows tho'easy terifs'" n',ihIIto: stood with v era1'nbibniMf ni ay and" wh jh ds uit. chatadfor1std 46f th great philosopher. - Osin obelon heri several of them were.-mit at Lord AshW ley's house, the party -soon anfer asaeinb. lipg saj down to csr4, Aothetiucarolf any conesptiop toQk plqoa. 'A(Wr lock. !g on for pome tjmI, the,1p0llosopher0took out hit- ddbegan bq yMit~ it, wi much appearanc of grvjIy an y4 e liberation One of'ie 'y observing lord, ho repliad,"'J hiica ing t it as far 8s'1 aimd able in- yuro'6m ; for I have waited Lwiih ipatiendee foi- 'the honor of being .ln. an atiinibly of'the greatest geniuses of the a e,:hnd having af length* btained thjsggod',r, ne, T:thought that' oould not dobottorthan write .down your een'eeeation;and indecd I haie set down the substahce of what isi lhIelaid" for this hour-or two. A'very, briet1peci. men. of jvia h: had written wasadfMint -to make the objects of his -ironysabandon the card-table, and engago -n rational discourse. - . 4. -A friend-calling on-Robt Hall,-nalk. ed for some brandy and water. "Call things by their right:names, and you jball have them,'' he ,replied. "I want some brandy and 1 ateri".said his rjpnd. "That is the current name, but not ,the proper one," responded Hall;'"call it figin fire and distiled damanation, and ou 'shall have a gailon, if you like. Pine Level. 10 Mr Bancroft'snew volume,the -fourth ot-his ifistory of the. United States,"all be published in September, and the -fifihs Vhich is nearly all'Vritten, will follow in thie - ing spring. "The sheets of, the fourth hyvei been read by a friend of the editar of tO Home Journ *ho thihks the Quebe paign, and the c'haractero Pitt, which n tAins, will be received as the 1n t a pinid specimens 6f historical writing yet furniheied by this couitry. -- ARKAWSAs ELrErOrn-1-The Vickaburg &ninel says that -RoAN, Den., is elected Governor by a small majority. . But little in terest wasfelt, and only Z000 or 8,000 votes polled.. MonE Count ManTr~ra.~G-Aletter fromi on board U. S.. ship Albany, ,at. St. Jago do' Cuba, March 21st, from Hi, n oPn sacola, says: at IodtoPn "Our passed midshipmen4 fours in number,. are all under the hatches for refusing to carry lights down in the rooms of the lieutenants when calling the reliefs. -They will, in all probability, be tried by a court martial on our arrival it Pnsacola, -Otlicora and -crew alt O& In the Ohio Hodse on the 24th uitimo, the resolution relativeto slavery. in the Dis.. trict of Columbia, was passed, yeas 28, niays 20. One menb'er objected to the bom~bastic chargeter .of the resolution, and :two otihers objected-to the wording also. (Er The substitution of the tEnglishiword "station" for the French word&"depot," in in much common use 'for the stopping places of railways, Is recommended in the newapa poe, as more expressive and better English, Some of them express the hope that'ln two years there will not be 'a single "depot" in the United States. 03 Boowell once asked Johnson If thete was no possible circumstances under which auicidewould be justfiable. *"No," was the reply. " Well," says Boswell, "sdppose 'a man had been guilty of some -frauid that lie was equally certain would be ound cult" "Why, then," says -Johnson, -"i -that case Jet hlim go toean'ne .ooutity where his isne known, and not to the. devil, wheom ho is knpwn." Printera' Fesiva*.--.T ho Association of- Practical Printers, recently lbrmed in thiR city, assembled, at the Tremont Temple, on Saturday evening,' to listen to an address from -Mr. Poore,s editor. of the Boston Bee, priviously..appointed. to this service. rihe add res jbhlgbly omr. mended bf those who had'the p ensure of hearing it. At the close of the oxorolsps in the Temple, the Assomiation, ith i, vited guests, adjourned, to the 'Rovee House, where a sumptuous "supper wasn provided---.and we are happy to add, a temperanc supper,eso thr as.intosloating drirnks were. onoegned. Tle - eQm nfy remalded togother until about midniht, dlisoussIn~ the g ib tings rovld4 f.the body, and hearlng speehes, totv (Baten 2%'e901 10 fA0 brits la IIr m~n C ar w et dnt ny Th aG f1owb iend, p [*We vehisquet qutt at fly and Denmark wery a su le 9g~n edmtiss4na to in~p Liverpooltfor thme last ~we some mnarkedisymntomsfe jrgp The latest quotation for the 'bdOhio .Piour-havoadvaned toSta1~sipsbar rel. Wheat, whit.tid mixed .ilOd. Cd69QAt 411,W01 '2;"i d RZA -Pnovariots.-Bqeeras gne, off: si re taibut so*1 Pk didtgins andp stieedn rp Ocn~atr bhasaold freely duitingthe ureel40rt1s. to 5s.Oo.irhe market is considerdbly reduced for JRema, mnd th.erisrh aut Ag~ury-Shoulder. brouglyt the igtsmo race~ &f8s .4 . e p Oro'. (m~Fm t o Am ri-tj d Tflersl~b 'Asai 8"Ss t.4 One hu d~lhirftWigoRn 2&~di ed disttie reYtaiefpriche, 1001. . Flou .M-C adaiodW 4 ' " - pr t. Whn ed al921I2 " ; on nwhich ill'in c~,urso-of p&"u Euroe , hasnriikkale B f 1Egt#nd. S8heremdidsigqiieacent,;i t whim ow ing sprospecsdf a revival oftrde: :a.aoTrd: Paindrato read a jntid of fthme aqkeado r fflerit by- the MTS~jhln ndjnyb. l LAND.+.t ie triat of mar-et pr the sei~~L fon .dhinues tb bb ? th t tq .(ing chairaot. Tho'repohfil ast4~r, of tise Districe Poet Law Iuispecters talo Commissioners at Dubis'eirdya vol. umoe of misery of the m'ost dispiriting des criptiomn . 'i . T - i . :-.ANE.-4 igis~ mr rtrcaqidl iniths count ry,..but all -partieey pseprg fr tIhegreatL electQral at rt ig bu!toojake place. oTere tert .the Na ti ndAcr .bl h Mofeta~ deathuinkd dosi at nr - edsbindipositin.; 4 The cholera is n s' r ariongstha troops quaf. tenpoily:In garrison at Paria. lt isbelieved that the dampness of the Westher h~as contuibuted to. a. develdppsept of 'lWis disae. Reas tures fingi be~ adopted forr the rermdval of the troIops nto more hnithy. CEur rNe t..--W6 have' d9": ac. cont of Cfi'dlsfluoiii'of t0ifpf Brescia and ni eneml.lhi oft&In habitante;raler a oieg&ef'Agt de,-e Breasa or rather tho ruins of Miiht *as Bread, iaIinthehanda'of tlk. dtris. The town -wassbombarded:-frtimliours, and the streets were carried at lie point of the .hayonot. Th~e inhahitantasaWgre driven intotheir houses andbrnt wt6. -Vienna. journals contradict the sqmora of.GenerV BEN's dfiat hg 'kRemIana and-the flighi of hiasroops into Wallichia. It appears, on the os ktrary, that ttinAusa trians General PMcKdaaRR sanoonded by a hostile population,-ha thsuht rt resign his coinand, and underr the proletin of the ta for .Walladhia.~ .A victory has hben gained b-the Han. garipn foes over~ he A t~lT latter lost 1800 men, 84 i foahn .On the 31st datql h h lN p~f Viena bygeAlife si;Mn's soria - riounoed -~~ 1nfellig~eda he , osisi.i 14 tilitios had bieMokh betW46n Denamarkc nd-Prusing4ki4ti.44, in 1 attorliptinga to captur si4redeg~ Dookendorf,.was utterly defeatedgaa3. line of battle ehip and a -frigate feletoithe shIfp grounded, and ?ekngfirebotly.4 .r exploded,. and .l1, on. board seven huhdred in numb~r~pr~.~.~ A dispatob on'th ~ nitg ced to tltd hlddkiide o aM~~bro a raun ports by Ienrkrt Central Germany iaece i o~tfAp heKing of Prussial ha h mqjority of the Frankfort~s A.orby, u ,Lottershetm~urin pf the 5th, announce efatabe Gan, M ~alor hed bombardt 0en05 twpuiy.fbur houra and a oi on Jiim on th~j cenln' t onpitui ~n, Thi aind the deputation prof ~ 1 wheroiea S.JO theeasenia s ib