The New York Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1868, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1868.—TRIPLE SHEET. ——> ce they were left free to on those matters. | men of the King's auite were hurriedly sorambiing to | THE CONST:TUTION WHICH THE HON. BEN | thetr legitimate ‘The Execative at Macon Wh,'on, but succoedod EB UC R oe P E a "aretha einete nowadaya na las thas var vee Jeave the Hammonta, and during @ drenching rain FILL, OF G2ORGIA, DEWANDS—-LEAVE OUT tala t proto Fact ihe, court, nave +3 - nicer owt tap Av wir ha ing lose and less ‘ener’ paves | Storm and im pitchy darkness it was impossible to . lest vend tee : Confedera! ramens By steamship from Europe we have interesting | ‘in international teartentate Any coe whe | make 0 sciection according to rank end-distinetion. | A2TICLE Xi¥. 1 Ho. Shall thay appeal ta, vain x ATE ye PS Getatls of our cable telegrams to the 20th of Sep- 1 of Gh eggnclnned with Oe wants Of Franoe \HOWS | Tho suiall steamer was soon crowded, and an hour AARNE ANE aH rm, be thas os C4 Cadle for the tafitia'ts somber, though there area good hasny who ‘runaway from | OF two clapsod until the rest of the Hammontia’s pas- BF ee oe 8h: | may bear by Heaad and violetoe; while ae — ' the chasottps satchine to ae and otier coontries; | songers were taken off, On tho following day his | T° T!¥ Beinn or TH Heraup:— governments formed by negroes and sirangers reboltion collapsed, yet Mr, Cobb, Itte other gen- FRANCE AND PRUSSIA. nd that, moreover, the soidiers im the army are no | siajesty pald a visit to the Exchange, where he re- | mM Your editorial comments on my teltor of the sx law and only maitary power shal Yemen of Southera views, still cherisued the delustve dlspowed to fight throngh heayy ca? NE "mon tage | mained about ten minutes, contuetod around by the | !S!. You desire to kuow what constitution the South eee eed of American governments | bope that brigher days, ins Southern scase, wore Roviow of the War Ramors and Tendenctos | {hee ioe ig Re is when | President of the Commercial Chamber, Mr. A. Schon, | ¥20% originally based (the consent of the governed) wit be | tm July. ios expiains his views on the lost uses of the Twe Powers—The Rhino Provinces=— are to go to war ther rel ae ‘Over §,000 persons woro present tn the vast hails of | The Southern people desire to live tn the Union | destroyed aud the princtple of force (of Asiatic des | the Which were drought about by defeat of ‘The Prassian Opinion enthiaaateal ate, Bene Seren en goat being | the Bourse, and greoted the King with three times | Uader the constitution of 1787 as amended by thir Rent Sa n wens | ae & candid acknowl that ‘on the Situation—Tho French and Prussian | that promotion which the brenc | faystem 80 | Uhre cheors. tle then auld to Mr. Schin and those | ‘een amenduents, tho Inst being amendment thir- | originated tho’ tnsave cey of Soigenet ene com- | dress he courselied, on tho, vert of FB ey 8 Forces—The New Art of War—Adoption of giaoguees. Wine, the: peop ia hoar:—“What you need, gentlemen, we all need; it | '¢%, abolishing slavery. The constraction Axed for cansenh te & government of equal Siates aud of free | cheerful and 4 prompt obedience 10 the cousituiion ican D8 ie will not decide La) ‘ { pence; and T confidently hope that 1% will not be | tat constitution by the surrender of the ar- | KiP ay people at the ballot boss a destare thas rf ead ‘bat be iy oor des yondous Onr latest mail reports from Europe go to show tea andy ous a ie ‘can maintain himeelt @t the | disturbed. My words in Kiel were intended to give | les organized to maintain secession they | an amendiaent to the constutu head ion - ntrary, that war ramors and tendencies thicken in the Old preseut ipa PJ “rial: strong expression of this reliance; and it remains | Stilt 19 adverse to secession as @ consti. | bayonet slall atand and that Biate governments | he beleved that a bgt Sure wan auoad, acch” be World more and more, What will come of them? | that neither a republic we Soe inexplicable to me how could even for amo. | tational remedy, They nether expect nor | formed by the treo consent of the people of the Biate it oaly for tae people to put forte ‘That is the question, Minister Rouher announced po In ferahce wit be me py Sheed piel: phase teal > desire any further contest for elther slavery or oe power Will bo the sade” cf ‘ll the days 1a of the country taeare oo aeamandes been sotlig anh recently in high circles at Paris that the month of THUR vheven oy? the Kreus Zeitung and other feudal organs we find | ®°°ession. ‘Thus they accept all the results of the American history, success. October will nob pass without grave military or di- | | Barly tm 1s07 the privet dw tof te 4 war, direct and indirect, legitimate and consoquen- | of yeqbs ul were made gia ie shel eae | Conk ation wi the by Mrs, Cobb and Miss plomatic events. Marshal Niel says that France is Which virtually met tial. But they do not consider the right of the sev- | Ti accepted the Executive terms of, Featoraly a | ago from the South, Whete ocay eas, pod om yt prepared for war. Napoleon III. delivers at Chalons | with no slight opposition eral States (each State for itself) to regulate their own | Without co.piaint. They accepted all the Congres | the General and fat jen ier Slagara Fat and ie purpose of visiti: one of his usual oratorical, or rather oracular, utter. | the press domestic affairs, according to thelr reserved powers, | Civil Risto bit eer tesa aeamen’s Baresi, | other polis ances to the effect that he cannot make a speech on the situation for fear the newspapers may comment | execution. in their own way, subject only to the constitution of | tlon—until Conzress juired them to . the their own leaders for de as the had asked | About ten o'clock day Colonel Williams, the United States. on tt. About the same time, too, at Kiel, King Wil- foo eres Oe 1.am expresses his belief in peace and in the Prus- They will, of course, agree to any further amend- ment of the constitution which may be ratified and —— to do. To grant thi cond ot benefit the | Piorida, catiod sian army. Suoh is the budget of speeches. Coming — adopted by the States in the manner provided in the to facts, itis undeniable that both Powers, France constitution itself. In their optaton the proposed | honor, ‘To the new governments created by this | ceeded and Prussia, have created colossal armies — amendment (fourteen) has not been so adopted, but | new constituenc; ‘ne white people have Tatasod the a, aE inn thet, aa taking leave with the avowed object of defending them- | Mobilized minion of a has been distinctly rejected. They confidently belleve ne tare igor while they remain white they will | of his guests the General was observed to lt down sclves against each other; and judging from past | National Guard iain bet ween the the courts will so declde, and fondiy hope the Ameri- | ““Pardon me for so often placing my views before | Gov observed & tremor of the bows and, a andon experiences it would seem more than likely that Total them by the can peoplo will so decide. Now to the facts:—This SR per Reaeamienens pty. The aa nd a contzaation ne a mege py Reyer these two armies will bo pitted ina fight sooner or mense satisfaction, proposed amendment (fourteen) was submitted by ‘ont? yey was at once ore Inter, elther this fall or next spring. 1 will be only | direct supers cape sees the Thirty-ninth Congress to the Legislatures of the | fo ude have been Hghting the Lrosreasct the Tees | HOw CO ven maical, remedies Gener aquestion of time. As to a general disarmament | hig ger dowinion. We several States for ratification or rejection, including | lution then saree begun. The plat late rebellion, was carried into the and a diplomatic settlement of affairs there appears | him at (he head of thie picture of the in this submission the Legislatures chosen in the | jowvenn <OMartnOuaL ee government and contr | and iu a few moments was a corpse, not the slightest prospect, for the Franco-Prussian Ft ye gg] py bo | Southern States under the constitutions adopted in | cient intelligence and virtue to retain liberty when THE NATIONAL GAME. quarrel is one which only admits of adjustment by | tiis fall it has been announced that the regular happy in theur 1865. This was certainly a recognition by Congress of | they possess it vain will be the effort to recover It af. arms—vé et armis, A backdown on either side is | army, divided into ax corps, will be commanded by | ance from Germany. those State governments. The amendment was voted | [01 1t, Nas eo Towra aay: Nearer and out of the question. The claims of each are too high {te inperor tn ers oS te cece ia ee eee on by all the States, and was aistinctly rejected by | Once more I repeat the isgue—the Southern Laigemagl ec ota soya and too clearly announced for that. Last year the | shal McMahon will lead the First corps, Bazaine, L@- | leave to lay belore more than the required number for rejection under the | renounce secession and renounce slavery for | The Dauntless Club, formed from the Agato ning, casus dellt put forward by France was the Prussian | bieuf, Floury, Castelnau and Canrovert will Com. | sasent of the people. constitution, ‘This was an end of the legal question | COMlal | and | permanent reunion repaired to the Capitoline grounds yesterday to play occupation of Luxemburg; this year it is thetr occu- ae os tnamaet te aeeae tale ee = So cues an of this proposed amendment. This amendment | faith, maintain that Unton against the return game with the Nonpareli nine, deter- pation of the countries situated on the left bank o1 | the equal of the great Prussian strategist, but more- AS, ‘your was rejected by the Southern States only because it | foreizn and domestic. The Southern States are will | Mined, if possible, to offvet the victory which the Rnine. ‘The real asus det 18 Sadowa. From | over as the greatest engineer of the age, Todieben | tures of Sclloawig. includea, as an inseparable part thereof, the disfran- EN rete OT oe crowned the Nonparelis in the first game, Owing the moment the result of that memorable bajtle be- | HOF ,excepted. ., MeMakon gained te | eee tae wane chisement from office, Stato a8 well as federal, of | York or of Massachusetts, and wil claim ‘no more to the tardiness of the Nouparéils it was came kiuown the French have been unable to re- | jiant dash. He of Irish at Dave Wer uaxhCoourese intend of separating the pro- R wer to modify and change those constitutions than | fully @n hour beyond the appointed time strain theic jeatousies at the sight of Bismarck’s | claims to be a good Frenchman by this time. As to tad justice of {tions contained 1n this amendment and re-snbiuit- pe Rereep errr per nese pen pinrr sm remy tad when they made their appearance in the work, ‘The substitution of a Power equal in popuia- | CA%obert and Bazaine, itty well known pe they biy pray that the ing them to the States, proceeded in a most viudie- | Sher put they will never consent to those constita. | Zed: There was not much time lost, however, rague treaty be no longer tive spirit to declare the very goveraments to which | tiong noi 0 ait in getting to work, and both parties entered the con- tion and territory to those of France in place of the | came back like that king of France who weat up the | done ina they submitted the amendment to bo illegal, and nS nor become willing partics to the destruction tot with'go0d Wil, ‘The Wempare® nine took the second rate kingdom of Frederick the Great hes | lull with his army and then came down again. ‘Tne | circumspect though’ Ww! further d to create anew constituency in | of tte, society and property, whlch advenvurers and | pat, and Sieained @ lead at the start, which th caused them to regard 8 second Jena as by no means pr pete pe ay na i o — oaieern Renee: i Ona are froin ae tions. Now, will the Northern le—will the cap- | {creased gradually up to the close’ of the au undesirable eventuality. the people. Conscription absorbs the very fower of | Prague treaty tay Inonts for these Staten, "In this Hew constituency ali | Hallsts, the religious inen and the lovers of freedom | tanings. Tie Dauntless then got tn on the ba THE RHINE PROVINCES. the iiabitents in non-productiveness, leaves all | Prussia’s otherwise firm the negroes wero included, and frown it more than | 0d peace vote to maintain and spleddid dispiave of “mamnism” they scored seven Hence {t is that this old question, or the oecupa- | Wade to langutsl, raises Tue tenet a and wil | tone ns Wee tawiag Weogth aibug, | Nofth went to the South aud took charge anddires, | “us isthe issue, ‘The North has the numl Tung. In the last the Dauntless had the ad- tioa by Prussia of the provinces on the left bank of | Redoubt be heeded, Nupeioon is not so exttuvagant | diminishes the ohance of a peaceaio solution. =’ | tion of" the negroes. in the work of forming hess | WUSt deeldo the question and pay the expensos, ‘The | Vantage ‘ray inlively atsio, cresping ap 10 abd the Rhine, is just now agitated as never before, | #4 to keep up such a state o 3 long. lis ov | | Anotuer such sore spot concerning the North Ger~ | new governments. Congress also reduced the States South with sollcttude, but with calmness, awaits the | foie adversaries until: they in the van with True, it has always been a dream, a traditional bit of ela eee meee vetted Ay = Rg yg 2, ag of the Secor to alitary Glatricts a ordered the pets fo su | voce in such a question om * | ave rans. It was evident from the very commence. policy for all the governments in France to endeaver | dard. In the meantime tl hig, with the view to fuare complication and em: | inenta, ‘The white. people of tie South denied the ies ce eens ieee aan tnighity Seok aneer cnn: to secure “the Rhine frontier; even the Bourbons, | he stands fora moment neither kee! barrassment, Hore tie thinks that | consiitutionality of proceedings, and, like good OBITUARY. unity to socure the victory. ihe errors in the held who allowed France to be curtailed of her fair pro- | Making war, Rochefort avails wer oot beet efiiting at ny time the | citizens, resorted to every method of bringing the ae on their side were very few, while the ‘mutts, wild ; opportunity to pelt him with sharp and ti es of Kaden into the German Con- | question before the Supreme Court of the United throws and other poor plays on the part of the Non- Portions, conceived the idea. Of course, then, it | words, It is true on the Imperial Marshal federation. In on the other hand it is the States for a pe adjudication, Congress en- Howell Cobb. parells were almost too numerous to; tion. This behooves the Napoleons, whose mission it is to allow | oilsets them with the announcement that France | universal opinion, openly declared in the Con- | deavored to prevent this adjudication, and when | Generai Howell Gobb, of Georgia, and late of the | was the opening, me of the Dauntioas, and they’ no such curtaliment, not onty to entertain the Pe ee ae Held ready to strike im aaa ; of he teal apatite, It Ue poace come Pod sage eee ss pore epic oe Confederate army, dropped dead at the Fifth Avenue | showed well ability to fight a good up project, but also to effectuate it, cotite que coitie, ‘THR PRUSSIAN FORCES. of the Continent should be interrupted tt would be | been fully and the court had become ready to | Hotel, about half-past ten o'clock yesterday fore- | 8° sore of the game is as follows:— Moreover, France having already secured on the side | While France has bean eal ‘ ler preparations | very likely on account of one 3 these two points, pronomace its decision, the Congress again inter- | noon. Howell Cobb was born at Cherry Hill, Jeffer- i of the Alps “her natural boundaries,” so a8 to pre- pe la Baek tee ee oer a SS eee coin or ing ‘Ww of ~~ Secenenes cleupreamdetiened Jurisdiction of the | son county, Ga., on the 7th September, 1815, He was oO R x vent an irraption upon French plains of the Roman | in the Corps Législatif, in newspapers aud pum- | o has scattered the hopes of the war party. Pray do an unarmed and desolate people justice | the soa of Colonel John A. Cobb, who, when quite 4 iegions under Victor Einanuel IL, the same natural | Phiets, Prussia has not slumbercd. Siicutly but | This ismore particularly observable on the Exchange, | and answer ine, whe was revolutionary and rebel- | boy, removed from Greenville, North Carolina, with é boundaries, serving; 9a..®) barrier to Proselan’ smbt- Seine tar cree fo" meee tis shook amore the Miuvted greats ee eee Havhite the. Southern whites were thus vainiy ap- | ‘8 father. I the year 1884 young Cobb graduated 4 tion, are now regailed to be indispensable on the | great joust may come off. ‘The North German Con- lt would appear, however, that when a peaceful to the courts the negroes, the adventurers | at the Franklin University, standing high in his ‘ side of tue Rhine, Tue question thus brought for- | federation army consists ol:— constellation 18 in the ascendant all sorts of rumors of States and the military were proceeding | class. He was then about ninetcen years of age. It Hy ward under the present European circumstances 18 | army of the North... ane = a: [py ye pe nae — aa ae ~ may prove not uninteresting to state that his uncle, yi ciearly @ pretext; but there are uot lacking those on | Army of the South... 160,000 | with the Prussian establishment it ia not mere | heard free from passion the Northern people will | Howell Cobb, after whom he was named, repre- s the French side who argue it out admirably as pe! Thus divided:— we will rele several improvements | blush with siame at the atrocious manner in which } sented a district in the Congress of the United aA. purely the most legitimate aspiration, the m Reg: and we Ses the ith. In Georgia the pro- | <t.t0g anring the last ith G: 1 o hatural desire tor seif-derence, felt now ag gt all | Regular troops in reserve... the ‘a convention failed by nearly 39,000 | States during the last war with Greas Britain, and 5 7 1 times by w great people who prefer to keep | Landwehr or National Guards. of, attention ; but the convention was declared carried. ‘The | bis cousin, ‘Thomas Cobb, was not many years since Home runs—Adams 1. Hiei hivad fo Keep Dying tue ticket, “No intrusion on | All thé troops of South Gen Bavaria, &c., of | another, but also to combine with it a of | ofold Union ten) and’ wade an open charge or iui | 11806, two years after he left college, Mr. Cobb | © Umpiré—Mr. James Morris, the provinces which retain a semt- Scorer—J. W. MoGewan. these premises.” The littie provinces about wiich 80 niucl ink has been wasted and s0 much blood is «4 to beshed would make half a dozen of and are inhabited by Germans, Bis- tuader the dir ‘ect control of King William. The in- pola 06 Sees eee ee habitants of the South and of the annexed provinces | lincs. time have not the most ardent sympathy for Prosstan | tended ndence, are | fortifications throughout the land, poste, fraud, 1m every forin we demanded au {nvest! was admitted to the bar and commenced the prac- tc te June ton. the in was refused and the af : vesnpaiien as ia. | who fraud were ‘retained in office to tice of law. It was while practicing his profession pe ‘only to Siar org awe pd ig yh of reconstruction, and they so | Le exhibited those fine talents and abitities which had in | ratify the proposed amendment fourteen. Now, | the fact that in the cnsuing year he was chosen te Eagle vs. Gotham. A very handsome dilapley was made yesterday sand helds them a3 his, and, whether | domination; the new kingdoi 1s not so compact or | and costly objects, such as y= | p- it as to secure for themsclyes the lucrative | afterwards distinguished him afternoon between these two veteran organizations, ed or not under his. yoke, it is K well eam ees tnt boil ein a renee ee Iowa Pot = = ae be bat teases tar saber po Sema created wa gg oapenemee ee prominent walks of life, which resuited 1m another victory for the Eagles. buat they do not wish to become G for fo! vernment thus year of 1368—a fact atuuticd even by | TNs are alWays Germans. Sce 1813 According to | materiel, Iu the constructed Berita aorta formed by @ constituency thus ‘created, proceeded to | continue unnoticed, a6 is evidenced from | Both these clubs have good nines, and the game of fon. The only arsimilation they haye | the authority of a Prussian staff oMcer the King’s | Railway this pan has Ny been yesterday neither need feel ashamed of. The Eagies with the empire 18 that of religion and terri- | tty can be mobilized, mado for activa cam- | operation, und the briige over the Spree, is this amendment revolutionary or is it legal? Legialat posit been remar! eservedly succeseft tory; aud, indeed, the French assert that both | Paign he fd notice. ie landweilr, itis | is? @ ne 6 specimen «of warlike fortiflea- @ constitut.on so amended founded in cousent or pled ear na cane eet). Ralleibee ere the Adenauer taelciorou evaey pase aneeee ine iniabltants and the territory are perfectiy | contended, form an adinirable feature in the Prussian | tion, Great attention 18 given to im- | force? General of the Western district of the State of Geor- cat The score of yesterday's game 1s as fol- insigniicant in themselves, not worth »v- | system, and performed weil in the campaign of 1864. | proved sigual lights for the use of the Son & to enmpenee, that the Supreme Conrt—any | gia. This was certainly an elevated os 2 ing about or fighting for; but, then, tney ave of | 1¢1s composed of cillzens who are equipped at gov- ~ navy. Experiments have been made with | coart—will decide that an amendment rejected by | mango young, yet he proved himself equal to the oorman. iimmense tmportunce in the hands of ‘the lon man | €TAMent expense, taken Into camp, Where they are | thé drummond, calcium, uestuim and electric | the legal white constiiuency Of the Southern Staten | task, and aiter @ year’s experience Mice FLOR. Players. F.L.0,R. ruling at Berlin, Aud the dimiculty, according to | drilled and exercised in mancuvres during three | light for the purpose of as well as the tila | to whom submitted that amendment, and } he exhibited marked fitness th per- 1 @ 2 8 Connell, Sd b. o138 them, cousisls 1a this, that while Prussian troops | months every year, gencraliy inthe spring. They | mination of sie sore fortresses. | aferwards r: by an Megat negro constituency | formance of the arduous duties of the situation. i H 3 8 Vincent, oos hold those provinces they remain a standing menace | ate commanded by oMicers of the regular army, | The trials with the jut mre still procecting created for the is valta? Hits naturaliy cool judgment almost in. 3 ij} Gaunpbelit's i? to Frau ye, are In possese{ou of her very gates, As | Mostly by those on the retired lists, General Von | and the renowned Siemens & Ke, Wii the go still farther and hold that, while | tuitive legal perception made up for the lack of 4 | @ 2 8 Cbanfrau, |. 1 j Acomprouse weasure the Old proposition emiited | Moltke, Known to fame by his skilful campaign in | have improveineuts in siere which ee | the negroes in the South way retract a rejection of | experience, and during the three years which he 1 122i by Count Hardenburg, Prussian Pieuipoientiary jo | Bonemta, commands the forces under the | most t results, For the purpose of con- | that amendment made by the white people (yet tho | held the office his administration of the duties was a } i } Bat oo4 the Congress of Vienna in 1514, has been | Amongthe other able military mon who have built Percy beryl er thowe fi me ord- | people of Ohio and New 4 cannot) while the | characterized by a display of skill, vigor and unva- 8 Hy & mooled, but so far with but Llue ehance | Up the new Prussia are foreinosi the two priuces | nance two have one for | pro} to radly inal ponding, 'on reoonsidera- rytng success which was most complimentary to the @ 8 1 Goodspeed, Mdb...2 1 2 of success. That diplomatiat, 1 @ note | Who commanded the corps In the late cam) verval commanica' aud the other for ton retract their own hasty ratificat of that same | course adopted by the rising yor nse tus dated December 20, 1314, proposed to erect | aad they are recognized as oMicers of an ability ¢ i | on the practice ground, and the distance chosen is | ancadment? Yet it secms these are exactly the Having in early life obtained political notortety as the Rhine pre 10s into a separate and neutral | is rarely met with in princes of the blood royal and | nine tnousand pages, ot equivalent to three-fourths of qneetions made by the very form ia which theSeere- | @ Jackson or “Union” democrat, MM rts aa. Ba. oh. TA. kingdom, waich asia from being | 4 on heir¢o the throne. ‘They have gained thelr spurs | @ German mile, The tria.ebetweon the Bnaiish ine | Cary of State has deemed it his duty to prociaim the | elected on a eral ticket to the Cor ? ee eT ae bronght into a direct and supposea unhealthy con- | and medals on the baitlodeld. oresight ana calca- | inch Woolwich cannon and te Krapp ninety-8ix | supposed ratification of this amendinent | United States fh Aes ce eee n 7601 23 3 t with France. Hardenburg was opposed to such | lation are qualities that must be accorded the Prussian | pounders, not ha Jet been satisfactorily terml- | fourteen. No inteil mind can escape and no | legisiative body. -He was successi’ Umpire—Mr. Gaughan of the Eadeavor Clud. contact from fear of the contagious iniiuence of the | atmy oMcers. Precision arising from mathematical | nated, are to |. ‘The late victory of the Krupp | honest mind will deny the platu conclusion that this | ed im and 1548, When the late General Boorers—M ‘Bellows and Cebea. revoltionary spirit and ideas. Apparcutly he was | demonstration 1s remarkably their forte; they wiil | is ascribed by the to an overcharge of pow- | amendment was not ratified but was rejected. And | Dromgovle falied in health tt became necessary that | Time of game—Two hours, not of tae Bismarck stock. The Vienna Congress, | tolerate no guesswork so long as the arithemetic fur- | der, enda’ c‘y assert, the sale! the | Ihave fag LS ke without finding tt | some one should snDpty his place as parita- however, thonght fit in 1815 to rajointhe two powers accordins to the old map by abolishing the “Conted- eration of the Kline’—the title conferred on the pro- ces when Napoleon I. overran m with hits sol- 3 and when they were Freachifed during a few years. THE PRUSSIAN QUAD Had not Prus wn so 1a of years the qu LATERAL. ge in the last couple ine frontier” would not now be so urgent, and the burghers on that bean- m would have been loft quietly to quait and to peer at their casties without fear vakening to the roar of Krupp’s monsters and the rattic of Dreyse’s needie guns. But as things are ettuofed to-day tuey are kept constantly on the qui vive for direfol events and bloody spec- tacles, The recent changes ant the con- siguration of the soli—and this is the rievance alleged by France—constitute the orth German Confederation one visi army, the territorial shape in itsof being but a potent weapon of attack against the very kensiiive modera Gauls, directed against their hy nishes figures. ‘Thus it isstaied that they had been | gun. In rej it. Krupp Offers 109,000 thalers’ se- pertect satety of each Weapon guaran. calculating for the last twenty years every mancuvre, every evolution they put in practice ‘agatet poor Benedek. The discipline they have inaugurated ts notvorlously severe; the whole army functions with the precision and stifness of a machine. While it works it will work well; but look out for accidents— machines are not made to meet accidents. In this lies the drawback of the Prussian army. Precisely on account of its highly perfectioned di manceuvres and nice calculations is tt liable fled, disjointed and beaten by the least unforeseen obstacies and sudden emergencies which will be forth. coming at times as long as “the world ts world.” Per- 8) stems altogether isa litde too much ou the hothouse order. The navy is not foruddable, consisting at resent only of Sights vessels, carrying 449 cannon. ‘rance, second only tu Fnglend as a maritime power, can easily have things all her own way on the North German coast. THE NSW ART OF WAR—OUR IMITATOR: The new method of warfare developed by tie late curtty for teed for one tor ‘This is a proper occasion to refer to the late Rus. sian proposi of abolishing, by tnternational of the well known invention of the new Dryse ite musket and the explosive projecitios of | say mn Von Ebener and Pertulasct. All three in tions have been fully described. The lasi two Jectiles can be fired from any sort of gun, The e: losive material in the first is nitroglycerine, he other the oxide of chior-kallam, We will toon was a. But it tions may lay these abominable Le the | courts, shelf, as we do herewith, Before qu! sub: ‘Well, the white ject of guns, for fear of tis having suMictently | supmiited to the ov ww of their governmenta— Laer by Beata fag at caoirs ofan ters | Steele ‘maaan ala pe hapctsand en by Pruss! campaign or ne ‘bayone: have been sold 48,000, of modern and vatua- | when ail these had iniled by actual ay ble quality, and taken to Stettin, destined for Hong | the alent hu: Kong in the overthrow of governments framed by the mstituoncy of ecessary er to argument (itself | mentary concinalve) that this amendment was never’ pio- | louse, Cobb, without ed by two-thirds of the representatives of ail the | in that body and without any 0 aty3 that a large number of the States wore } in a State Legislature, suddenly found hi ae from representation for the express pur- | vated to this arduous and responsible consent, eX) ve projectiles, in conmequence ya securing a two-thirds vote of the remnant. | man could be betvor quatified for it by his readiness io ef or man of common sense will, {f honest, | a4 a debater, his strong good sénse, two-thirds of a portion of the States can | temper, his personal integrity and his thorough ac- amendments for ratification by three-fourths | quaintance with pariiament preced the States unless, possibly, a portion are wil- | Were derived, of course, cine! absent, as was the Case W. amendment thir | pecutiar province of conducting is this jonal policy of Mr Gov sien mani vee Peocnen of recon- ing set re the reater the horrible and revoiting detatis | struction, inclading disBavouet atkendies nt to the | to open the way for tue er tt hops it might bo allowable to say that the Prussian | of the effects of these diavolical Inventions, and will | constivutfon, must stand beca.se express the hope that Russia’s benevolent inten- | not subuitto its overthrow—nay, not even by the | He made ail the party motions. in his Congressional career to this Cobb occasionally found time to deliver care- repared and Powerlal speeckes wpon jcading ons. AS an enthnsiastie admirer ef General Jackson, found sentiments of astach- inion, Cats political faith was his never failing His most important Hie duty was mocratic bat- the negroes will | teries and recover their retreat when of the South have thus far Pa Mr. Cobb imbibed ment to the iederal Base Ball Notes. ‘To-day four good games are to come off:—Attantie va. Prineeton, at Princeton, N. J.; Mutual vs. Ori- ental of New York, at the Union grounds; Star va. Independent, at the Capitoline grounds; Herat sys vs. Westcott’s typos, at Sixty-ninth street and fadison avenue. Ri the New Engiand base ballist, says ifa foul be caught on the fy that tt “must be re- turned to the pitcher and he in his position” before 8 player ru the bases can be put out, Section three of rule fourth says, “No run or baso can be made on a foul ball. Such @ ball shall be considered dead and not ia Diag until i¢ shall first have beem settled in the of the pitcher.” It will be seen, is not required of the piicher to be ja posit “foul” to place it again in piay, and that Mr. Kogers ts slightly in error. The Active Olub has prepared charges against the lutuals for Duty in the game between the two clubs on the vital @uinis—say these latter, The map shows that | gigantic strargie on our own continent has been at- equaily marked by the stability of the vocat Tred Prussia Holds ia ‘ter grasp that fatmoas German | tebiively stucied by the two Powers confronting | ‘The brisk shipping trade of emigrants from Ham- qualified co the States, appro 7 | general government and to the guaranteed riguts o Lr ey Santi te nists teas in iheaoe corner wich ag a Wedge Ko often pterced the ranks | each other on the Khine. French and Prussians are | burg and Bremen mado the Stettin merchants President a by pong and the individual States, Ie energetically argued with the Actives on September 30. He has also pre- of the Roman legions. Threatening directly cute; on oti sides they propose to adopt the latest | desirous of a steam packet Mne via the of | courts, But the negroes, it is said, wil not submit General Jackson’s standpoint when the ferred charges against the Actives for enterin, Tho raine and Alsace, this corner lies between th Alerican style and thus avail themselves of our | Swineminde to your ciiy. The prospectus of an as | to the overthrow formed by force } doctrines of nullification were e the contest with the Mutuals, the latter having Duty and tic Meuse? and here is gliuated tie Prussian | discoveries in the art of war. The Prussians, made | sociation, to ran at the commencement four steam | and frand and by on constiiuency and on | Many Southern men, ‘he whole country | in their nine. There will probably be @ mecting of quadrilateral, which bids fair to eclipse Mantua, | Coguizant of tho value of time and rapid movementa, | ships of 3,000 toas each to New York, will seom ap | witeh the couris are to pass etgment; was looking with anxte: the Judiciary Committee on Wi ‘even! Feschiera, Legnago, Verona, the quadrilateral im | arc now cngaged in studying our war mancenyres, | pear. + and yet the whites are denounced as revels, and the | movements tha in the Palmetto | next, to take action on the complainta, Italy. Cobientz, Sarrelouls, Travbach, from the | the employment of railroads, telegraphs and the! ee negrocs and strangers are to be sustained by the | State. During all this time Cobb never wavered in ‘The return game between the Olympics (which alt eirenqhed which Frama, Bie sed ait O@Dg6d | ect Eland ts toscana oie tee ENGLAND eae Besta fs Petactt a no more rans | tes oak enka oe owe oe mi sopen et | Reobaany pec ocean a anireame mt eccording to the iatest style (cannon and works) o! uaririlateral on the kkhine in accorlance with the ei he Ulymplic nine) and the Acines was l= tae very Iaet inventions, Wife celebrated manufac. our pega como ae torictate for the States than his name to-day would be bv ed on That pay: turer at Beriin, Herr Krupp, has been kept buay on the job of farnishing canuon of the heaviest ca‘ibre yet made, From those fortresses Prussian armies an pounce upon the French positions of Metz and Yhionvillo, like a hawk upon ite prey; and this causes tue principles of the fortitying art evolved 01 own war, they discarded the stone and masonry metiiods proved worthiess at Sebastopol and Mantua and took sensibly to mother earth and the spade. On the other side the French are Be aigaey | on our syatem of grand earth fortifications in the open PROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT. 1. be declared and the country remanded tothe governments | and the constitut Minister Johnsows Speeches in Leede=Nas ry Lt, one a te ieee war were threatening t destroy the one and obilte- rate the othor. tional Union and “Few Differences? With | triges of the radicals tay lead AmericnThe Honor of England Net “Tare | know, the exact reason why some in the s juraday, at Hoboken ‘The Acmea were Score, 37 to 23. ‘Three good games next week—Mutnal vs. Atlan- tic, Union grounds, on Monday, and Mutuel va Unton, at Tremont, on Thursday. Cmpire va. Gotham, on Thursday. ” a conti , hocessitating at those points the | Geld, witi the view of making such easily in- During President Polk's adininistration Mr. Cobb, , freeenoe of ooumer-torces to ward ol tie danger. trenched positions 2 prominent feature in their | nished%=—The Alabama Claims and Chinese | SUPPurt tho reconstruction ‘They | Who was then a member of the shirtieth Congresa, we e 04 or; fo DI ys m- - disiniegration Hmportance. In general campaigning, OW1Dg Wane | playing it, a fa Amérsoaine, on raids to" break cont. Loxpox, Sept. 26, 1868. 1 Cass, of whom he wad w firma political and Extensive Swindles of a Confidential Clori. ness of execut on, they still retain value as homes of refuge for beaten troops or serve as entrenched camps from which large bodies inay emerge to make acoup de main. it is precisely these advant' which the Prussian military foiks claim for Coblet Sarrelouia and Trarvach when the tug of war comes with their antagonists, munications, cut railroads, and to adapt tt to our new style of cavalry—on foot in time of pattie, it may be funny, but it is not surprising, to observe these pretended mastors in the art engaged In taking Jessons from tie last comers upon the arena of arms. ‘There are a good many other things they will have to learn from us before they can consider their eda- cation as finished. The free nse of the now firearms In my last letter I spoke of the position which Minister Reverdy Johnson really held in Bagland and compared it with the complaisant views which he seemod to take of past and passing events, While that letter was being written Minister Johnson was addressing the authorities at Leeds to a couple of Speaker Lh vg yuesd it great th the ultra wing attestod = his A swindle, extend! throngh @ long series of Years, the confidential clerk of a well known firm Ia tus clty being the criminal, has just boon exposed through the admirable strategy of detectives, and eS the arrest of the culprit was e/fectert. victimized firm is that of Messra. Hall, Kim- & Co., importers and dealers in iron, Nos. 80, 82 and 84 poo Avenue. Tntil last May a mam ey FRENCH OPINION ON THE SITUATION. “As long as there is a Bouaparte on the throne of | and revolving cannon is also a point exciting in- | those soft-soideriag speeches the tautility of which of that assent, goveruments of 186% were | nurtured. His action during the discussion of the | named Henry Wi had been In their employ. France there can be no peace! ‘That was the ery | terest on both sides. The Zindnartegewener per- | he has not yet learned. Minister Johnson came from by the ent cas only be maintained | compromise, mesures of He gable sous capsolties, acd in wansover posision he Was 0n the Continent during the First Empire, and tt is be- | formed its t adintrably two years ago, Then It | 7 og Houghton’s, where he is slaying, to visit the | A ‘heir creation revowtion, and oo it. He was indefati Serious coy . i] yraniever, “ ton ho was nning to grect the ears of the second one, too, | Was op! d only by @ lot of old fashioned Austrian Ny be continged revolution. ervament, a) = i “poh Ee x f>— e ae with the Ro Fe Osineae Trals, Mexico, ‘russia demonstrate | moakets. Now it will have to encounter Chasse- | Leeds Art Exhibition, and of course he was recetved we ct ee ge a ee quite conclusively that the empire is peace oniy alter | pots—with the sabre bayonet of the most perfected | by the Mayor and then by the Art Trustees, and of oe aly provoked the. Ditecrest ‘Smee “ Cee. Mimnpllcitiy relied, d upon by is enn ior" war and during suort periods. Indeed, “Napolcon sven va-t-en guerre!” might be sung like Ma brook, though in a different tone, so familiar are we made with the declarations of war launched from the attern annexed—tn the hands of Froach soldiers, Which will prove the best implement of destruction? A Prussian appreciation acknowledges the Chassepot to be the equal of their neediegun, without being su- course there was speech-making on both sides, as you will have seen by the newepaper reporta, You will observe in these speeches of our Minister jor Governor ever known in the jusion of "s term as Governor the State he resumed the practice of law, work- ers that no check was piaced upon ties. The temptation to defraud overcame him, gud once entangled in the meshes of dise ‘Tuileries, throne | perior to 1, for the Chassepot’s greater range is fog assiduously in the duties of his honesty he lost all sense of his responsibiuty. uilerics, “Tuat the gccupant of the French throne | Perey te anced by ite greater explosive tendencies, | the same old twaddie about England and America he'was again called into active political Kfe in (he | Some time during last May a dofect was acct. die now as plainiy exhibits his desire and intention beng is being one country, and about our on lan Pieree a e. Binns 5 jandidate for O dentally diseovered in his accoants, and though this for a war, or, in other words, he seeks a means wiere- by he may be enabied to execute the mission with which he has announced himself to be charged by Heaven—viz., Making France great, prosperous and happy. He has fought through three wars, but they were for the benefit of other vations; it is high time that he should fight one in his own behalf. And the struggle now imminent with Pru: not only his own country, but himself dy- nasty as well. Such a serious stake, the dinoulty circuinstances in which he is placed among the other Powers, the strength of his opponent, ail these aro sufficientiy weighty motives to render him cautious and to expiain the hesitation which is apparent in Dis present atutude. Ji “se recueille pour mievs sauter.”” Jn regard to the course he has hitherto Pate two sharp French critics have been allowed lately to express themselves freely. Emile de Girardin Mie that the Emperor keeps himecif in such acioud of smoke, produced by an excessive use of cigarettes, and maintains around him euch imbecile Miniatere, in order that they may not glare his glory, as lo render him entirely ignorant of tho real state of France and to delay the appearance of a French Bismarck. Edmond About saya in regard to the same high personage that he reads too little, and even then only what ts given him to read, ingles but litte with the people, and yet fooliahty | imagines that ~} an old man of sixty, contatns | ‘within himself all the brains and vigor of younger minded men tn the country. ese are somnewhat rough blows to be levelied at an imperial majesty who can make @ million of armed men put Jeft foot forward by merely ringing hia little beil; bat tuey have been struck, neverthcioss, and they Icad to the inguiry, do the Fronen people desire a war? it may ely asserted that, with ali their love of GERMANY. burgere—Address of the Schleswig-Hol- steiners=Grief Likely to Arise from the Prague Treaty—Peace Anticipations Warlike PreparntionsArmy and javy Improvements—Sale of Prussian Arms to | nation.” Mr. Johnson must either be an unrival Chine=—Stettin Line of Steamships, BERLIN, Sept. 24, 1868, Tho weather of last Sanday did not favor the good Hamburgers in their desire to do honor to their Toyal visitor by agrand tllamination and display of Pyrotechnics, for which the snug sum of 12,000 marks had been expended, Towards evening it be- gan torain cats and dogs, and his Majesty, who stayed over an hour at the soirée of Senator Mr. Hayn, repeatedly expressed regret at the frustration of the intended dispiay, though he sald that he was tully satisfed with the good will shown by the citt zens, Another mishap had occurred tn the afternoon during the festive trip on board the steamship* ammonia, which, on her return, got firmly stack on the shoals of tho Eibo,as did atso the accom- panying steamer Cuxhafen, making tt necoasary to toke King William back to Itamburg on board of a sinall private steamer which happoned to be near the place of the accident, This unforeseen intormerzo guage—how often have we heard this *~and about | UP the our similarity of thought and sentiment. But you ‘will also observe something more important, viz.:— That the new American Minister declares that “there are but few differences now existing between Engiand and America, and these were of an unim- portant character—unimportant because they did not fn the slightest tarnish the honor of master of wa or the least Ainerican of Americans. If the Alabama and Shenandoah nesa did not tarnish the honor of Eogiand, and if the Americans do not beltove this as firmly ae be be eve in sunrise, then Minister Jolinsou is a mi better Feprocsatative of his people than he seems to me a ‘The Alabama claims—the Alabama clal Alabama ciaims. This pee is the key for Aterican dipiomacy with England, But Minister Johnson seems to have forgotten these claims al | A ther. He ce alao, that in the still more tm- portant matter o nege and oe com England has adopte! a poltey of | and carefuly recited and pr hostility. . Jonson ere to be in town assisti tution? Not one. And yet the southern peopie for and chaperoning the Chinese Embassy instead a right #) tamgh!t and hon- wasting his timsin the country excha: and treated compliments with provincial Mayors and cuu ing their after dinner excitemcnts. Perhaps, ever, he does not yet know that Inese London. One woud hardly be aware he depended upon the London Journ tion, since the farce of ignoring the ¢ kept up with Di ohn peraey M4 Gala for themselves etotu- rawent ate tran loyalty to the 9 cone, or informas | tials is stl | n h the constitution by fowide + | Why cannot Point to gle honored ” the past of our history i javti@eatioa of tie y | thy @ the wa - | we stead of the daily chronicles which « i! Henao of the sayings and dotugs of th t | i i hen Mr. Buchanan became a ¢ he worked laboriously tn Bts his eiection with all the foree and ability ho He visited several of the Nortlorn States and while on his visit vindicat the election of Freneene which offer was accepted. Dat Congressional career he claimed con- silerable attention by many of his speeches, the inent of which we way in vindication of the con- twenty-first rale; on he tarlif ques. speeches In January, 1% sitntionality of the cele! the od of May, in the same yoar, on ion, enforcing (he doctrine of free trade; on the 22d of Manuary, the annexation franchise ia the States, or deprive | Texas question; Citizens anywhere of the great rights of | 1546, liberty secured as the resnlt# of Caucasian | of February, 148, on the cau our future relations with the Chi- | Wisdom and valor In the #tragwies of Ly centuries | war with ¥ the Or nestor he ihe can 4 conduct of the of July, in the same the 1 ear, On We Civil and Diplomatic Appropriation tos attempted to secede and gurated by the Sontherners rnment Howell Cobb took As a soldier ho did as | hostilities were ine er again to participate in | against the genere! go the very moa Who #9 de- | his stand with the South. ching of mony note, yet he tuade considerable e throvgh the newspapers and distinguished is appeals to the people ing no! | no! but on all the peimelpies | himself more than once by 1 | Of hte State to relly to the anppor: of the fading Con. ' Lot, while stationed at 4 | Macon, Georgia, he inaucd @ special ordor, callin, yory wan Within his district and setting | federacy, | forth fact pointed almost excluaively to his disiionesty so ‘eat was tho confidence had in him by the firm that 0 immediate action was taken. Very shortly afterwards it became known that be had been leading rather an irregular life, had been living open adultery with a iniliner in the Woss Divisiou, and was the ownor of considerable reat estate in the city. In the course of events it was learned that he had expend- ed, from time to time, large sims of money in various enterprieses, A suspicion them formed in the minds of the firm that he was actualiy guilty of swindling them, and (rape oes of ptepa ae \ ag towards the production of proof of his elity. Io ‘order to save himself from the be, wd which an exposd of his crime would inevitably bring upon him, his victims charitably gave him the opportunity of leaving the city by discharg- ing him. Clerks were thea eimpioyed in over haaling and scrutinizing the books, and afier the labor of several months {t was found that over $25,000 had been stolen by Willey. His lations may have resulted in a still larger suin thus illesitt mately changing hands, but it can never be ofl. nitely Known how much he really stole, Detective police were engaged to work ap the case, and a) the exercisg of strategy gicaned "indubitable evidence of the man's 09 He was found to reside in @ house om West Randolph street, ostensibly a3 & boarder, but it was finally learned that ho was there living with @ fomale who kept a millinery =, on the jis floor of the same premises. Yesterday Dopu Sheriff Fitch arrested him on @ civil capias at lodged him in jail. Mosars, Tait Kimbark & Co. yesterday commenced be tar) i sal Titer « 1 comfdontty yok t © | Geet“ i be On « Bart i aperior Court against the prisonor for woul Tihs 0 Qo race and Tordeas oh wer created no small coutusion aud gave rise to many | ro + ae krabamomilors iw the to by phy ana of ro } pee 7. ro ine on sy e t wna “ re, evtaaing to Jorn uf Fy +0 Tee a portion of the amount whicu ha le fast now or maintain their present colovsal army if | ludicrous scenes, Dignitied Seaatora ana goueics | London journa: Aacwt oon Chetan ard Ves fuer stacy to | paw ie was ab Owe abogod to have emboasled from thea,

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