From a London Paper of September 19, he is rather strange that Buonaparte should not have taken the trouble to inform the Direcory of so important and signal a victory as that announced in Garrau’s letter ; nor is it less singular, that nei ther the General of Division who acquainted Gar ran with those brilliant exploits, nor the place should have been named, from whence he gave this mo mentous information. , ELECTIONEFRING FALSEHOOD, In a hadbill published this morning, signed John, Barker, chairman, there is this assertion, that Mr. Adams “avowed, that the government ought to have the authority of changing the constitution.” This is founded on an extra faid to be taken from an answer to Paine’s Rights of Man, under the sig nature of Publicola, published two or three years ago in the newspapers. It is the truth, that Mr. Adams neither wrote nor dictated a sentence of the publication under the signature of Publicolay nor did he ever see it until it was in print.