The New York Herald Newspaper, September 2, 1870, Page 4

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UROPE. ; Naval Preparations in Great Britain. NEW YORK H atany moment by moans of a steam pump, thereby allowing the vessel's restoration ¢o {ts original Nota- tion when not required for hosillilies. Such & fleet of those would give a good account of the heavy broadside ships of the day; however, this 1g not likely to be taken up by the Admiralty; tn the firat place, as t: requires # wonderful amount of accemen onthe partof an Admiralty official and servant of the country to perceive that such a fleet of hornets could be made avatlable, and scarcely if they could how it would prove the utter inutility of the eumb- rous and unwieldy five masiers and other tre- mendous broadsides we bave been for years bulld- ing. and the manifest injury such @ “nest! could te; hearing of the catastrophe fs a guarantee that none of you will be deaf to my ‘appeat” THA FRENOR OFF COAST. Letters from Otvita Vecchia of yesterday inform us that the Frenon ilag still waved over the fortress, there being still some soldiers tn hospital, some ofti- ¢ rs of the administration, gendarmes ond men be- longing to the military, about two hundred in all. ITALIAN TONE. The language of the liberal journals in Italy, espe- cially the organs of the republican party, ts certain- ly suMicient to arouse the alarm of the Papal gov: ernment, Thoy assert that the September Conven- tlon ceased to exist for toy ae 7, when the ance Is upset, and he thinks, as he thinks of overy- thing which forces itself inte his too solid brata, that it ts ‘(mos sextraordinary.” The yoice of America is not wanting; {t comes tn melancholy but charming accents of woe from our lovely representative, Mra, X—, who bewalleth un- ceasingly the catastrophe which clapped an extin- galsher on the gay life of Baden at the very outact of & brilliant season, and scattered that festive world of fashion to the four several winds, Poor dear Mrs, X——! She with great almculty got to Keli! with her HRALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER = 1870.—TRIPLE to dwell savagel, usa land tn the imacor of th trent, respond, offered tho Trent, may be fadnce Let us remember how the cowards of Europe were reafy to fall upon and devour us in thoae death-struggling days aud pay (hem iw Kind, IN IRELAND. Sympathy for France in the V’ar—How th Differont Classes Fecl—Napoleon or th: French Nation¢=Tho New Agitation for stant it wes tossed to the 1 torches were biaail I even Lae ae ‘- Eu that reminded me of the groas “Wide Awake’ processions of 1860 80 vividly, WATIONALIEN Thus was Archbishop McHale honored, who is @ true nationalist and one of tho opponents of infallt: bility, and thus was Cardinal Ouilen ooldly received, Who cares more tor Rome than for Ireland and ia & true tnfallabiitst, ONWARD. Ph cere ot TeanG Oe pyar 2 sading ous « betweou light sn arkuess, Oi (he religious shibboleths that were their shame and hy oa tafiict upon these “ixon monsiers.”” French troops returned to Rome and crushed tho Repeal ef the Union—Sorious Movement ently. at ‘somo future day whon Russia or Pros- | volunteers ‘at Mentana; that Italy has ag muoh right | 2Umerous sutte (of which her husband is an unim- Against British Intereste—A Grand Federal- ey pred Eula are be deer nanencs tea, pizanes ae En Tron-Clads, Turret Shi sta or France has heard of the inventor offering | to unification and the establishment of her capltal | portant attaché) just in time to see the bridge blown Tone apncat the assertion, there are rutetlt- ? wre! PS, | them to tho British Admiralty and that that vale | at Rome as Germany has, and that now is the mo. wilh CORl mati Tse 4 fetlo Combination—Oardinal Cullen and | Fri octane Tespectable Catiolics who desire wise’ institution has “refused fo take the matter in. | ment to assert tnat right by an immediate march of | UP» Whic y ons and was opened with | pPremicr Gladstone~Light fn Politics and | active, pastes be to Con F nt ane Rams” and Torpedoes. to their serious consideration for the present,” we shall learn one of these mornings that one of these powers I have named ts in possession of these without hesitat- the royal troopa on the Eternal Olt of France, and ing on the frontiers to do the wor! prayers for peace three years ago. Cut off thus from Strasbourg and Paris, and seriously frightened, Religion—For Home Rule and Against Foreign Iafiueuce—Eloquent Dofence of the spective of creed or showing, tacit fin class, is slowly but carnestly : Moke iar o Renee Lae a povirtually to infringe the neutrality towards Prus- the refugees, like hundreds of others, forced a weary vet pepe ng sontorias Peep ae auIRa Onna such word ‘oil, eo TORPRDONS. fut the Court and government of Italy pull one | passage to Basle, through a maze of military prepa- | Heratd aad America. sige And majestio. England come ce es Vigorous, old ‘The North American and West | This is the case wich the torpedo which I wrote about some weeks since, Commander Frederick way and the majortty of the nation another in this matter. rations, highly musical and badly intoxicated soldiers, hardships of all kinds and even battles of Dustin, August 15, 1870, jestlo, cour’ secured i¢ with chains of gold and bad; A within a tew months she Nas age, qt the wings Harvey's sea torpedo has been Dd: jeans or ‘TO FORTIFY. 5 Sympathy for the Frenoh tn the war ta liberal! se ama oleic Sue asa du Figaro |, Meant cena hen min tree of ma | eur crater four fvcding norman dom | expe by mon of cain tn, oh Ta | fh, ui, am dled foe fad most reifable antl , that rv; iJ 10 Nat o! ” “ . ——— lumseit that his tecoudon ths Admienee hava beck | removed ditokes and embankments outside of tne | Po, wake. At Basle, which “oorners® intoPrance | journals say, “creeds.” ‘There ts no fooling but one | Minn ane ‘vourg Clerk: Gat sehen HOF Ene. PAPAL ALARM IN ROME. The Holy City in Active Prepara- tion for Defence. THE WAR SHOCK IN SWITZERLAND. playtng fast and loose with for some time past, at the last moment, after placing every annoyance and obstacle in-t%¢ way cf iius gallant young ollicer, ‘vito has spent a considerable sum of anna in per- feoting the invention, ho is quietly told, in @ neatly omMetaliy worded despatch of the stereotype form, that his torpedo “will not suit.” What is the result? BUSSIAN FORESIGHT, Russta, who knew well the merits of the invention and in every way was informed of the whole of its intricacies and “Infernalism” by an eminent naval Russian oMcer, who has been on & visit to this country, and witnessed the experiments tn our har- bors and reported n the forpedo, that the Rus- sian government at once clearly saw the value of gates of Romc and mounilng the carthworks with ‘cannon at once, 60 as to be ready to repel the invad- ers, Whether regular or irreguiae, IN PRUSSIA. mmande of the Prussian Armies—Muster the Chief Ofticere—The Victories the Flold—What Has Ensued aud What May Be. Treves, Prussia, August 14, 1870. When I last wrote you I informed you that Prince Frederick Kart had taken up his headquarters at and Germany, and was for days inundated with a panic-stricken multitude from each country striving to reach the other, our party were reduced to the desperate expedient of bivouacking in a railway car for the night—a privilege by no means easily pro- cured—and in place of anything more substantial subsisted on their hopes of better days. As arate, no one ever leaves Baden with much ready money (always excepting Monsieur Dupressior); so at Basio it became necessary to “draw.” Imagine the con- aternation of the party when it was announced that all fnanctal transactions with Paris had for the time of hostility entertained by the great bulk of the Catholic clorgy against the Emperor; they sympathize wita the great French nation, but not with his Ma- jesty. The middie and lower classes are more gone- Tous and give Napoleon and France words of choer, and would give him more tf they could. In Sackville street Mr. Lesage has opened a sub- Scription ist for the relief of the wounded of the French army, and to date the response has been very flattering. Few in Kurope will admit that the United States initiated this humane labor, but it would be @ Sisipkgtan task to endeavor to find ia land, | The Pie) clerk Gatholio faith welcome the new movement wita 40%, ‘They reason thus—if the Protestants are not in earnest and deceive us we will be no worse of than when we were deceived by O'Connell, Keogh and all the small fry that have orawied toto ry ever the shoulders of honest men. If they stand by their promise, as they have ever done, we know what will be the result * AT THE POLLS. The election for a membor of Paritament trom this olty las brought the question of federation fairly before the people, The Protestant or con. servative candidate 18 tain Edward R, King. parma, eo the leading landlords of the count Longford. He has tasued an address to the eleotora ‘ ire Rn er OR ae they, Sapte. this place, at an tron foundry. Iwas then not al- | being coascd, and that comfortable lettor of oredit | tne. annals of any continental nation the golden Hinned in address batons a nee abrablege. Ris : aac ata now arming their navy with them, while Our Admi- | lowed to disclove any army movements of names of | on MM. Monroe et Co, was no better than & mar- | jitany of good works that are the glory of your Sant- | ba which are 80 unusual, thorot hy ane “3 Bis: ’ . ratty, Limaging, is “taxing t Into thelr serious con: | the oficers commanding sorps, riage certificate In Indiana. It had very nearly | tary Association and the pride of the American sol. | @%-English, that T annex the ‘points th tems : marok’s Policy Agitates at | siteration” of what possible use they om ‘othe | Before 1 commence to give you a brief outline of | come to be a question of “selling the diamonds’? Captain King-Harman, on coming forward to ad- Tells Peak.” Russtan navy when they have been considered in detail by the British Admiralty, The rams, in my idea, could be and would be well adapted for the Moncrieff system, and might be used the laat few days of blood, I will give you the officers’ names DOW commanding the Prussian army. ‘The Prussian army fs divided in tweive corps;— or starving in the streets, when an accommodating négoctant agreed to cash a draft for 600 francs only for a commission of five per cent—the dier. Both the Prussian and French peoples are Imitating your great example; but, like many other good things you bave discovered and witnessed, dress the assemblage, was received witn loud cheers, He sald:—Fellow countrymen, I come before you at the suggestion of a large and infuential body ef your townsmen, asking mo to come forward _ eee o> with great advantage, a3 it 14 pretty well known there 1s a studied avoidance of th t x x that aram cannot command a speed to make her | | Férst—East Prussian Army Corps, 1s commanded | money being Swiss vaper. It is needless to add | ricg was the ploneer. nici ond ough 0 ifave ab ueartt fe only cause that any Nationalism and Democrac in effectual in heavy weather; aud upon tats {base my | by General Manteuffel, whom the people of Frauk- | that tne financial agent carried the entire “Mosaic e Irishman should have in his heart; namely, the oracy idea, fort-on-Main called the second Genéral Butler. percents Sor sgyeroaibe ard With these funds the | eCZML OF THM UNION—A FORMIDAGLA MOvAMANT. | great quesiton of the day—thatIrishmén should be a —Pomeranian, by General Fanseckt. la physloguomy, these funds the There is a@ movement beginning to attract atten. | and aro competent to manage their own affairs. The Ireland. IN ROME. ai Toi remaptia ed by General Von Atven- ese case ang henna aeeter 3 we know, | tion that at present 1s no bigger than my pen, but it aan ae adopt is a question of possibility and ee neue dats ‘Fourth—#y (eneral Von Alvenaleben I. they arrived ‘more dead than alive.” A altatiar, OF | is g gerious and promising undertaking, Tinformed | because they are ignorant of one circumstances: T By the European mail of the 20th of August we j have the following special correspondence in very | The Expected Attack on the Holy City— What May Follow the Removal of the This corps ts composed of Prussian Saxony and Thuriogia, Fifth—Posen, by General Vou Kirchbach. even worse, experience has, according to accounts, attended the precipitate exodus of all the gay cir- cles of Baden, Homburg, Wildbad and Wiesbaden, you over a year ago that when the Irish Ohurch was disestablished there would be earnest advocates for have frequentiy and over and over again held conversations “with English members, and “I rarely ever met with an honucst English member who ‘Amportant elaboration of the history of Ola World | Frexok Treops-Chance of the Garibaldi- | Sizih—silesian, by General You Tuinpling. find fi S repeal of the Union, as the legislative ligature that | did not say, “The fact 1s, we do not understand r " Seventh—Westphalian, by General Zastrow. and one finds the descriptions of these disorderly | pinds Ireland to England {s your Irish’ questions.” But withsta ‘pilaira to that day. aue~ Papal Preparations aad Church Poe | 9/77 :1—Rnineland, by General Gosden. retreats singtlarly amusing, though they were far re Called. ei OF ERE | SI sg those vay men will 40 lnto the Tobby of the THE BRITISH NAVY. Wbrowing Out the Vid Fing—The North Ame- rtean and West Iudinu Squadron—The N. Engiish Rams Compared feach— forpeda Refused by Ad- ralty Accepied by Rassia—The Moncrieff System, ticy—The Ponti@cal Com: ers §=and Forco—Fortresses and Reoruitmeatsa—ltaly ‘Taking Position—ome Fortifyiers ~~ ~ Tou, August 16, 1570, __The Papél government 13 fully convinced that the departure of the French troops will not have been accomplished very long before a second Garibaldian invasion of the dominions of the Church will take place, in spite of the assurances given by the Iral- Ninth—Sonlewig-Holstein, by General. Manstein. Tenth—Hanoverian, by General Von Voigts Khets. Eleventh—Hesse and Nassau, by General Buse. Twelsth—Saxony, by the Crown Prince of Saxony. The Guards are under the command of Prince Augustus of Wurtemburg. FOUR ARMIES, ‘These twelve corps, to which must be added the armies of Bavaria, Wurtemburg and Baden, are divided in four armies. The Army of the North, from being s0, I fancy, to the actors therein. Phil- osovhy, however—Talleyrand, isn’t it !--enables us to regard with equanimity the misfortunes of others, TOURIST COMPLICATIONS. With the alien worla—the tourists of England, and more especiatly Amernca, now on the Conti hent—the new and starting condition of asfatrs gives rise to rather perplexing complications, Great numbers are naturatly harrying Lomewards, and to such an extent that for the dilatory ones a months since a number of able and intelligent Prot- estant and Cathollo gentiemen he!d an informal mecting and compared notes on the subject of home rule. They have held several meetings since, and the result of their labors appeared this morning, That your readers may be able to judge of the programme of tho federalists, a3 they style them. selves, I append the circular, which has been signed by @ large number of influential and substantial members of the gentry, the learned professions and House of Commons and vote on Irish questions asif they knew all about them, Can we be legislated for by such men? Does not the experience of the lnat seventy years show that tt 1s impossible Englishmen can legislate for us? No men are better able to an- swer that than you. Ireland for the last seven years has sufferea very much, but Dublin has suf- fered more than any other portion of the country. Look at your streets, comparatively deserted—your public park, with scarcely & cai to be seen driving in tt, and the blinds pulled down on the win- dows tn the pubtlo squares, not a soul living in the Lonpon, August 20, 187 fan government to the contrary, and the constder- hi movement in that direction is now diil- | meres gc ads: ne id it he . Ate 6 defend t r % reantie community, It reads:— jouses and knockers of the doors never touched. After the British Channel, China and the Mediter- | able military force with which 1t has encircled the Pineal ihe i - soriheey a pats cult, especially as the two important HOME GOVERNMENT, Go to your principal shops and what do you find? ‘Fanean squadrons, comes the one cruising on the | Pontidcal frontiers. The information recetved in p 4 , 18 under com- | German lines” of steamers are stopped, GRA¥TON StREEZ, Duniry, T1097, 1870. | A general complaint as to stagnation of trade, That ” mand of General Vogel von Valckenstein, the gen- | and o great many good people have a ‘he honor to forward you copies of | was 4 complaint general throughout the country, oasta of North America and in the West Indies funder the command of Vice Admiral @. G. Wellesley, ©. B, It consists of twenty-one ships with their | pennants flying, besides a few vessels “laid up’? in | wrdinary at Port Koyal and Bermuda. Tae vessels | ‘mm commission are the followag, viz:— 4 Royal Alfred (flagship of the commander-tn-chief, | Aboukir (with the broad pennant of the Commo- More at Jamaica. Rome of clandestine enlistments at Terat, Rieti and other Italian frontier towas has led the government to consider the danger so imminent ag to require an immediate organization of measure of defence, aud & plan has consequently been drawn up at the War On: which does not differ essentially from the one carried out successfully tn 1867. THK 8WORD, The Papal territory t# divided tnto two military eral who defeated the army of the German Bund north of the river Main 1n 1863, The Right Army 1s commanded by Prince Frede- rick Karl, with Colonel Stieble as chief of staif; the Centre Army by General Steinmetz, the hero, as thoy call him, who defeated the brave Danes in tie Schleswig-Holstein campaign; the Lefs Army corp3 by the Grown Prince of Prussia, with General Von Blumenthal as chief of staff, nervous dislike to going on the Frenc) steamers, albelt thelr immuaity from seizure or delay seems to be guaranteed, Thus the whole burden of trans- atiantic travel is thrown on tho Engusn lines, and the demand ig sald to excoed the suppiy. For such as are obiiged or are determinod, in pursuance of their previous plans, to remain abroad the question of a safe and at the same time accessible residence rules the hour, ‘Tne interests and business connec- tions of nino out of every ten Americans iu Europe contre in Paris; and it is thither, I conclude, that | wial aed at a meeting convenod ‘by private cir- the Bilton Hotel on tho 19th of Jat month. We do ao by desire of the committee Into which the meat!ug resolve! itself, and we aro desired by them to request your earneat consideration of these resolittions and tho other pro- evedings which wo enclose. The meeting at the Bilton Was the rosult of a wish entertained by some centiemen, citizens of Dublin, to bring together iu private and friendly confer. ence a fow of thelr {ufuential fel'ow citizens representing different sections of political opinion, to deliberate on tho present condition of the country, with a view of conaldering ow far it would be possible to unite all. pariies In som proposal for the romedy of existing veviis, ‘Thal Crighuated’ “in “the but it was worse in Dublin, Absenteeism was, in fact, killing the country, which was, in fact, in tno condition of a barrel with two leaks’ in it, obe leak being absenteetsm and the other emigration, By means of one of those leaks they drained away tho money from the country and by the otner they took away the bone and sinew of the land, The latter f consider the worst drain of the to. ‘Those two leaks can be stopped in my opinion by home legis- lation, which will bring back money to the country, wnich will restore commercial prosperity and bring 25 4 K 1 the wandering tootsteps of the army of tourists will | nowledge tl among very | among us all those means of wealtn by which Eng- The Raccoon, Valorous, Eclipse, Danae, Sphinx, | dlvistons, of wulch the drst (Rome and Comarea) is"| , The ren obet iar ain ep car peat ld tend as soon as the season will admit, A prominent | {nfluentinl classes in the clty as well as the country | land now flourishes, and which by fraud and unfair Nove, Vestal, Koyaulst, Philomel, Lepwing, Plover, | commandel by General Zappl, and the second | Heitke by his side, tue real conunandcr, um whose | American banker of that city, who Might almost ne | the present mode ofr saninging irish ata Sey ost| conmierojal tresiiey ais: had Genie os Tealan tae : Ppgl u » wn Wh 5 cl wWomen— | pression that a neceasity existed f . 3 ” : iafyrmidon, Terror, Britomart, Cherub and Minstrel; | (aorthorn and southern provinces) by General De | strategteal powers the whole of Germany place the | Sthroad, has declared somewlal grandiy that ho con- | Er afctat lent is tke utes {ora change. fis noediess | Innd nas deed to ireland her fair share of tt ‘the three latter a small cla:s of gunboate. Courten, under whose orders Lieutenant Colonel @ VICTORY —DEAD AND THE aumeeie Siders: Paris “the safest place on the European con- Rie tien of the Bobilitg and of a large portion | and imposed pen, the country an unfair proportion The Dart, another gunboat, of a larger type, is | de Charette, of the Zouaves, commands the mtiltary | _y nave given you the officers im command: of the | Theat.” There is a touch of the {anfuronade of the | Mecsdntry’” trenfeebles lag the pubtisopinion of Insiends | fo tect anette Tee nee faa pkcpurlon. tae just leaving the station for England, and a cor- | district of Viterbo, chet do batatlion d’Albiousse, of | Prussian army. The first advance made was by the sees the Kept of the “Guards under the Linden at | aud thus causes the disregard whioh ia admittedly shown to | act of union mtorr’ ‘was an ciigatoanaee Ido not Wwotte—the Pylades—has just arrived from the Bra- | the same corpa, that of Civita Vecchia, and Colonel | itary, under the Crown Prince of Prussia. O4 | Reriin in fis mind's eye, there are those who think | yuvier You will perceireby thstosolusions weeneiors tray | believe there 14 a man here progent, who will Seny jplls, a3 well as a donb‘e ecrew gun vessel, from the | Azzanese, of the Roman line regimeat, the southern | yletory than the victorious generals themselves knew | 4,quite as probable that the spiked helmet of the | after ful’ and careful consideration the menting arrived at that * * * J gay the “Orange-green” is a prou : pheniiars eee uhlan may be seen on the Champs Klyses in days | the unanimous conclasion that no adequate remedy could be | @Usign to bring Irislimen of all classes and creeds ‘west coast of Africa. provinces of Frosinone and Velletri, In this latter | tb to be at first, Five thousand prisoners have found for the defects of our already been brought in, aud they say more are tocome, On the whole, however, either the Pras- ete fa present srrencement except by | together and to say that they will not have Saxon { Among the whole squadron are only two paddle. {| district the battalion of peasantry, calied squadriz- ‘ it . Y sian or the French capital seems suficientiy remote cei tg TA Trish Parliament the | domination in their home affairs. (Knthusiaatio .| coming; six mitrailieuses, three eagles and two ment of Irish affairs, will also perceive that ‘wheel steamers, the remainder betng propelled by | Werf, who wear the picturesque costume of tne’) cannon. trom the scene of active operations to be secure | they iurther came to onclusion that tus could be | cueering.) The man who gives his business to be country and were originally organtzed to hunt the | ‘Marshal MacMahon was wounded and Genorai | om actual invasion; and 4 do not anticipate any | accomplished without any interference with the integehty | COU by another ts either a fool or an idiot, | We be- rapa 9 fey ndin ror dade br Douay killed, “pie Roticeable dimuution of the customary crows of | or unky ofthe empire, by adopting = foderal arrangement | Long ‘o nelther class, and, therefore, we demand to Be FORCE. brigands out of their mountain fastuesses, 18 to be | “one joss on the Prassian side is very heavy. They | September in the Paris hotels. under which the mane pment of all purely Trish affaire have our own affairs ie ped own hands, to bing 7 Hee i x 4 e Pras § s b le 3 % @ i a "7 ie ‘onncede n Irish Parliament, c The whole squadron has a toial horse power of | increased to three times tts present numerical | estimate it as high as 12,00) killed, The wounded | pqae hits oMeE the cool resorts of Switveriand | Shimperial Pariament to control and protéel tous Imperiat | Gentlemen, rash your sufrages ia furtherance. of Mearly 6,000, nominal; 229 guns, 27,600 tons, and | strength. An extra miliiary division will have its | have all been removed, but few of the dead hav | Yetia are reapiig golden harvests. 7 interoats in which the three parts of the United Kingdom are | the principles of federal government. manned by a force of nearly 4,000, oilicers, men, boys | headquarters at Monto Rotondo and Mentana, ex- ota a Rp anaabee ¢ Pagal teeta ras REPUBLICAN INDEPENDENCE. ss to be found. The latesh and moss femecksnin y thor er ae, “CIRGULATE 1 IN THE HERALD. nd marines. tending thence all up the vailey of the Anioto | from duty was requircil to look ator Whee ‘AL | No one doubts the security of the sturdy little con. | statute passed in 1887, which consolidated into orf domtinion | Tio 200,000 Irish-born men and women in tha NAVAL IRON RAMS, - oem seth. Riseeee J | federation, and some, like raysell, have becasur- | the North American provinces of the British Crown. That | United States who read the NEW YORK H#taup will Tivoli, and thence to Subiaco. night long the “Krankentrager"’ have been at work, | prised, Ifaucy, to learn thatil boasts an available | statute, provides that e province should have its} read Captain Harman's speech with interest, It la Sir George Rose Sartorius, one of the admirals of | “que fact 13, nowever, that the whole Roman fron- | 4Ud have heen assisted by a large number of sol- | Krmy, ‘all told, of 209,000 men. it is thoroughly | ow Parliament, to fe on Provincial affairs. | the first bugleblast of a new campaign, “Every son- the flect in the British navy, has for some consider- . miel eiata 7 diera. Every village near by has ali tts houses con- vs, setae ane es joroughly | For matiers which the “interests of the sf nt of P erakian: O savy, § | tler is, geographically speaking, very dimMicuit to | verted into liospitals, while the sick of the army and | Schooled, moreover, in the duties of neutrality, for | Dominion ‘geseral parliament is. provided, ‘to | tence has the light of Protestant Grattan, caEen, able time past—in fact, years—advocated the intro- “ Z coe haa 1 ho aro wouuded. who can be. remove from its position it has an extended and an expen- | ‘whioh each province sends tts represontati ‘Outside of | Emmett, Wolf Tone and Lord Edward Fitawerald ear cr ¥eabue Of thostaci clams. ‘Gissteads pan, | So, the mountainous nature of nearly all the frees Angela rg Wiesbaden, Pe Sh eet ache sive experlonce of the same. Witness how, la 1359, | the British dominions there are numerous {nstances of coun- | Upon its brow; tt is manly, straightforward and to ees chs: ceishiet: starenad 60 ny th i , | laud side laying it open to the ingress of invaders | S%0 the gencral hospitals, ‘arg, whlch | it nas had to guard its Italian front with an eye to | Seen uudes various (ormss Of sarees reat, ao united togeiber the point; it 14 the frst speech of a contest. God mi . as a 4 ength apened 0 y the Ac mi- | tyrough numerous passes. For thts very reason it In the woods aud the broken ground the podtes re Tera iors tetra to bess Lae rete eo | ponent paris-of the Gontedaration olieel fae ns only Knows where the treaty of peace will be signed, Falty, while it 1s wortay of remark that the French | 45 eqysidered that tite force placed by the Italian | Of the Prussians and French ite sid | potey walla dna tow ik ae bo tiaaR The Paine: oer a ee mea ag a at have several of these vessels, and, as is always the | government on the frontier is not sufficient to in- rae Be ttuane wards ae ging Ly! i trenches, | agent in the august person of Herr Bisinarck for @ | relations between England and ireland fa-gety goneraity on. HELL GATE case, our netghbors across the Chaunel mostly taves- . " nat TO Se dy abe veh arebeing buried, | jtvely recurrence of similar events, Very prompt | tertalned in this country, aud that such a plan would be mup- * J ly ‘¥ promp tigate f. thet ti pe Rob sure the safety of the Pope's dominions, On the | clotned in their uuiforms. No other tombstone is | and suarp ate the clear-headed federal Powers, too, | PoFled by many who would not concur in a proposal for a . igate from their own polat of view, with every de- | omer and, although the attitude of the Italian | Pat to mark the gpot than a plain wooden cross, on | in eneir action. The gage was scarcely thrown | mpler¢peal of the Act of Union and a consequent recur- | A isch Uiene ihe Bie! cae of energy, anything that ts made public In people, decidedly opposed toa French «Hiance and | Which ts wa aes pee Ok the reaivianly ene across the Rhineland before 6,000 Swiss ridemen | reer hanealet tebe cating borers its 3 mony bain | Progress of Operations—The Pians Adopted— cae ee ee is no Gd fs jideeiag | the recent course of military events on the Rhine, | comrade, wno Was a favorite, | ate Gee Sreperer pemnet Hela e Geet toto | Besley Ties Sela te pon niAf ompecatcly ond moterately oe Woot a hes ble to be Secured— t ‘gu Was going ou in’ this coun | geom to exclude any probability of the Italian gov- | 18 hushed forever, to some retired courts 1n serious words her rigid inteatioas. Very | ential’section of English opinion, They are persuaded that Pao Dupereccner nce ta or ‘try some few years since respecting thi | grament’s having to send a contingent of o0,voo | Wt@ Placed in single graves alongsid syacefully xecelved Were the Sime, 1t should also be | such s.mensize of SIC gOvernINEn Ot Teo ea on a aot the Cocpld at tho coove pal of vessels _ Wrene he vee ¥ oe | men to ald the Emperor Napoleou. I, the difidence | are in itis eyes; he is burying his son, who died for pe oer Bintan Met erties} aan j and Jingiand, many Mangers which must conlinue to exit 20 | NeW York, feted in iat the Deon of tho whole on the alert, and tested most fully tue capacity | with witch the movements of Austria have been re- | the Fatheriaud, yet 1 13 hard to part go with one | L mountalzauroned’ republic, fll of the life and | wukdiseoutsnton the parcet the rest casa ol the eee | COUnIEy, take th pep star press Sa hg of such vessels; and the proof we have of the light | cently regarded bas necessitated a considerable con- | inst in tae bloom of youth and le oe pt ries vigor of her breezy hills, and blessed with a | he committee ergs? paab thone who were placed’ in pie; | clearing of Hell Gate from all obstructions to free ey ar: i , “i Wy id ¢ 13 89 nearly to live; but sticl e fate iotie ¢ * ant fei | of = % . ghey are held In by them 1s their adoption. While | centration of italian troops in the Quadrilateral, | War. | palriotie unity of sentiment and a fathomlese love of | toerciss the county ids tational movement of tals aad) | DRY Sa on” Tne and again the HERALD Das demoe: Qn this country “Jolin Bult’ pays bis money, ana j Tram: ON THE RIGHT. er vere greatly to be desired to retain her | Bony would the object be Attained, but «union be cer ; Btrated the urgency of the speedy completion of this baa i | ; S given: ¥. nw -Getaliaces ry | MRA. at Were greatly | i ret mented between-all classes ‘a | c, ' 3 pmagines that he possesses every class of ship to | our tatest accounts {rom the Tyrol, however, con- arg haye his given von at tow details of the left | undiseriminatms freudship bolt in France and | fail to produce the hap feat goelal and political etfects, tre | Work ita, national character in view of its import protect his commerce on the sea, as weil a3 MIS! tra sie: me current reports of a strengthening of | Chay ght army, ice Frederick | pyassia, aad sewilk bea desperate extremity which | committee need scarcely polnt out to you that such @ pro- | ance to our transatiantic as well as coasting trade, fact ed w! very spine Niagelen ise i ces either Power to violate her tier, ) po: eB not re lent i - J hearth and home, aud is, in fact, supplied with every | ine austrian forces and fortitications in tie ‘Trent |, ‘the French advanced upon Saarbrack, having | gilles in Isis weut Tecklessty ‘across the bridges ut | Hons between the ‘connivies, orany” iaterference with tne | 204 also in regard to the immonse amount of modern necessity of the age he lives in; yet, alas, t gine phe RNR for lia object to begin the war after Marshal Niel’s vith smail count of ihe angry freemen to rinciples of the constitution or the prerogatives of the | Money values to be affected by the opening of this | istrict. The italian squadron is cruising up and f pein 1 * | Baie, with sm: angty freemen to | Brown. ‘he constitution of th yvhen the time arrives how glum he looks to find that | gown the Papal coast from ‘Terracina to Ctvita | Fee TiRInen eathp’ Dore Rtn: Beuried HEED ua whom they belonged; but fitty years of progress | gumetent guscantre toyen that ake aes: whe pemarss°h | Channel, Aiter tinkering at tt for a generation An’all classes of vessels of the day he alone ts def- | veconia, and its movements are duly telegraphed to | 18a town ot about 12,000 iifabitants.. tn about two among. a Wveriy-loviing and jeajous People Will Put | have taken up this question in singleness of purpose and | and more, the frst efforta tn tils direction z EMS BANE 5 sare dul, rap | Hantetne e eager ay this convenient passage of old Rhine m a new Melt | goo i that this movement fs not intended and never aa Dae gain 2, anne’ ‘elent in turrets, rams, lit asps of gi f tho government at Romo, as are also all the details | NUTS the Prussian troops retired from their Strong | to either Lighting Frencumen oF exasperated Ger- be used to serve the interests or forward the views of | dating back as faras 1342, and accomplishing but Bione class, when of ali other nations he should i Apa +: sh - { position aud the French arullery cocupied the sum- | mans, 1 y. any political party; and that the only alm and object of their | little, now, for the last year or two the matter ee ave been the happy possessor of the finest. In- | Procurable on the tand side by a speciai corps of j Mutorthe camp and directed a strong fire on the | ~ Tr g heart goott to see how these people | organization will be to -untte Irishmen of all creeds and f Weed, he must say within himself, “i have badly In- ‘vested my bullion for these Iron sliects and plates; dwhy, Lhave none of them compared with tue gold | which } exchanged for them."’ om the Director of Police, Marchese Cup- » has organized and aistributed in various disguises along the Italian Srontier districts, RING FOR WAR, 10n of luyasion or insurrection PR On the first intim: Saar, where the Prussian ambuscages were posted, | and both sides of the bridge, flanked by Prussian ; tirailieurs, who fought with energy and showed tuemselves up to the mark as good soldicis. { DOUBTFUL OF PARIS, iaadard of their liber French, half German aa they are, ditterin in minor politics, and even Let hin Mord in Europe bre rally to the comm | advantage to the welfare of thelr native classes tn a peaceful effort to attain an object of incalculable and, and which fn he result will protect the rights and liberties of all. Betore taking any public to give effect to these views the committee have resolved on endeavoring to rtain seems to have been taken in hand more energeti- cally; and a few years hence, we are assured by the officers in charge of the work, will see one portion of the channel cleared, that ts, the immense sub- { think he Is correct, although it must be admitted i ructnre, evel rivately the opinions and sentiments of those persons i he Iron-ciad vessels England does possess—though | the whoie country, incinding the capital, wilt he de- | T informed you in wy fast that the tove of the | 424 Were nations stpucuures amd every may | Freland whom on such a subjoct they ‘woud most desire to | marine vromontory—if the term be ailowed—at few—in some Instances ure fine specimens, at the | elired IN astaiw Of siege. AS a preliminary precan- | Mancyerians was not so great as the Prussians try | to "aie $ ol Helyetia—for “liberte et | Consult, Jt ts with this view that the proceedings of the | iaietts Point. It is not believed that the other jpame time it caunot be dented fn (o'o" that aliand | Won the police have been hunting out all persons re- | to make out. I was talking to a private sokiler of | vatrl tous pour un tells their | committee Wy hee mated to you for your consideration, ana by “ every oue of the vessels are in a positively satisive- | Biding In Bele whose papers were at all irregniar, | Hanover to-day, and he informed me he came by the | = me re | the committee will feel grentiy obliged by an intimation of | great rock—tne Gridiron—will have to be blasted, story condition. i THE COST AND RESULT. | Two millions of money was voted Jas session for | War purposes, and @ portion of this will donbtless | ‘be fet apart in tmproving and at th wine time ad- ding to tue iron. d feet. How r, w return to | Whe rams, we have only the toispur, which has just ‘arrived at Plymouth from a private yard ced On he! and especiatly Italian subjects suspected of political missions. About one hu v {has ‘summarily € throug a drain near the Castle of St. Angelo, calcu- lated to admit from th: dows outside the walls clandestine visitors into the clty, has been just dis- cove’ Tne armament of this ancient fortress and the lved individuals have A secret passage | France, resolved that iis Holfness shall not want for Way of Frankfort, and said he thought by the way | the soldiers were served, m comparison to the other | ciues, that no love was there, aud he thought the people wished the French success, as neariy all the community were Americans and English, The | trampet sounded and he had to fail in, and as he | wished me goodby he said, “The day atter to-mor- | row we shail be all lying dead.” I tried to cheer the English, They say the name the first Napoleon , Where patient industry has story in so many words, of war and the military Dy then 1s a hard task, he tie band. tablishment ne yever, upon the bi ‘Theirs is a wild but beautiful country, uleved miracles, sup- population and sead- re porting and educating @ den Ing out Into the World a cla universally recognized a5 class in Lurope, and whose of young men Who cleverest men of t peculiar capacities have Switzerland is poor and must of necessity remain hese tedious reiteratlons | your readiness to co-operate with them in the object they itated | have in view, or for any aug ve iit | might be useful for their guidance. gestions or observations which Should you wish ua to add your name to the commitice wa will have great pleasure in do! We lave the lionor to be yo ig, Taithful servants, since by all known laws of water courses it seema probable that the removal of the rock at Hallett’s Point will nave such an influence upon the current that blasting out a few of the rocks in nearly the midst of it will leave @ suficion’ breadth of deep water east of the Gridiron, with any of the end, frox iat t can learn, is a the sp r } batteries of the Aventive Hill are to be strengilenea | him up by saying in a iew weeks you will be in | piven P. its ci est proverbs: —Pas a’ Hl. RR, “sucking currents,” now so dangerous, that the © She will probably be put in With the mortars, about thirty in number, which, | Paris. | ment Oat ie at is La geet ead ee eh] mere walling about of the Gridiron, as it were, by a fore the end of the year, a3 at the Keyham factory, | With 10,000 shells, have been sold to the Pope by the DESPISE THE ENGLISH, | sd 4 gene We repene skson, Subble fence will sutice. : ‘g near Piymouth, all iiands which can be spared from | @eparting Frencn, and the Catholic Committee of | It would amuse you to hear the Gertaans (aik of j POOR BUT HONEST. re: ~~ "Honorary Secretaries. Hence ail e‘forts of General Newton, in charge of i ‘tie other siups are The other ram 1 he Ruport, now balidiug ot | ne mos any ot approved appitances of modern gave them they find out to be the truth, “a pation so until man may make gardens of giac.ers and The honorary secretaries are all sen of standing | and wealth and the work under the authority of the War Depart- ment, have been concentrated for the past eiguteen Chatham. . 3 laid dk in vecemt warfare, are going to make itm a present of a mt- | of shopkeepers.” green flelds of the rugged mountain tops. ‘The stern, | i 1 distinguished members of the | t z 2 sag ae ates MAbineW vans this *do tranleuse, hoping he will be more successful with it y STRICT SECRECY. uabending labor of the peasant, trained in the aera uy Ounrel mS ee ae SE rd poopie were hueiy engaged in laying dawn the | against the Garibaldians than the Emperor has been | An order has deen issued {rom Herr von Thile, | Severe schoo! of his great preceptor, old Calvin, en- | 4, The members ct the committee of the association | Boobie ty Heit We oh and Kevpt, end lately tn Tron Heet'plaves, ‘and if June last waa so far ad- | With it agatnat the Prussians, and that the Pontif’s | that as it 1s thought highly desirable to keep the | ables bin to clothe Nis steep slopes with green mea- | ee the Lord Mayor, ex-Mayots Mackey and Sir wi fetes apa Eee and Eee oa ay yan vanced that her firat bolt was driven. She is now | temporal thunder will be more convincing than his | movements and operations of the war protoundly | Cows to tie very Itmit of vegetation, and what with Acmeranment aod TC OT Ne Dose a aaft has been sulk into the rock erty making rapid progress. The greater portion of her | spiritual, secret, correspondents of the newspapers cannot be | Wis flocks and fowls, hts paich of grain and herp, — za, sae rep ie oe hated i ensam | Fhore lino by means uf a coffer data, ‘This shatt 15 of double bottom Js now neariy ready for the inner | piating and before the ead of the year will be far ad- vanced towards compiction. RECRUITING. Genera! Kanzler is seriously occupied with restor- | ing the dwindled numbers of the Pope's army to recelved xt headquarters as heretolore. But Mr. Russell, whom the peopic of America remember with ratitude for his truthiul letters to the London Zimes and a few tous of closely shaven hay, enables him to rear his children, give them some measure of knowledge, and send them forth with their wits for with some of the lish tongue; Isaac Butt. the great orator and jurist of the Wish bar; half the members of the Boards of Aldermen and Town Councillors, Poor Law Guar- the following dimenstons:—Length, 115 feet; cross section, 95 feet; and “datum line’ 30 feet be'ow mean low water. This ‘datum line” constitutes the ‘The late chief constructor of the the navy intro- | Sometaing like its former eifective force of 19,000 | during the American war, has been allowed by the | their capital, He has few taxes to pay, and no | a, i valton: floor of the shaft, from which eight head nysih rei woah ce - 7 {aunts 21 rect ne! a7 & x 7 | priest to keep or cathedral t pas wh ians by the dozen; Sullivan, of tae Nalton; the edi- ; foot ae, ir ig eadings or duced a different bracket frame from that generally | men, and nas issued orders to ius recruiting oMicers | King of Prussia to accompany him ag one of his FET EAGn ODI ERE EI a He ee arate atrol tors ‘of the Mayo Rraminer, Kingstown and Bray | tunnels are being driven into the rock, a3 80 dn use, and the Rupert is built upon this plan, Itis abroad to spare neither exertious nor money to ob- suite, Observer, Waterford News, Mayo Constitution, Dub- many radi, irom the centre of the bottom of said by many that it gives 2 maximum of strength | tain recruits, Thelr numbers do not as yet amouut toe but he lives free, and goes back to mother earth | ier ish an, Southern chromele, Northern Press, | te shalt,’ and in go many directions, These with @ minimus of Weight. She will bo plated with | to iifty @ week. ‘ honored by his labor and tainted with notouch of | Po commen! mother Chronicle, ™ Boyle | tunnels or radi will be from eight to ten feet ruior twelve luches thick, laid ona teak packing of | ‘Tie Antes legion gives the. War Minister more iN SWITZERLAND. religious Or political degradation. He has filled a | Roscoma See ene ae Pome. Oly! in diameter, and from 190 to 200. feet in fourteen inches, haying an inner skin of tron one pnd 4 quarter inch thick; and, notwitistanding her email size (3,159 tons), colapared witu the Warrior (6,109 tons) and the Minotaur (6,621 tons) nd other similar vessels, it is generaily wiieved that she will be better protected than any of the British tron-clads and immensely superior to the Cerbere and Boule-Doz the two French rams from which are anticipated «great expections” and like which the Rupert, 11 some respecis, Is to be constructed. « There 1s scarcely a shadow of a chance but the poet wilibe @ far superior vessel to the two french rams I have named, wien I tell you they are pniy to have an armor plating of eight and one-fifth ches thick, on wooden buils. ‘The Rupert's deck on the level of the top,of the trouble than all the other corps in the Papal army on account of the eagerness of the best class of Fr 1 soldiers, which 1t comprises, to gel recalled under their national flag, at the present emergency, and the unceremonious manner in which the leas scrupulous members of the iegion effect that pur- pose by deserting with arms und baggage, the vi- cinity of the frontier at Corese affording a very fair chance of escaping across the Italian boundary. Nearly two hundred soldiers of the legion met lately and drew = @ petition to the Empress re- questing to be recalled from the Papal army, where sympathies for the success of Prussia prevalied, and allowed to serve their own country at this period of danger. eThe telegraph authorities refused to for- ward the despatch unless signed by the colonel of the legion, and so it had to be sent by The War Shock and Its Effects—Stern Reali- ties for Peaceful Quiet—Bismarck Shakes Europe Even to .“Tell’s Poaks”—Soclety in Centusion and Divided—American Travel and American Fashionable Woe—Action Against Invasion—Poor, but Honest and BraveEng- land’s Gri Difficulty. ROSSINIERES, August 13, 1870. War! Nothing but war and the ‘‘rumors of war" | even here among ‘‘Tell’s peaks,”’ in what at this mo- ment may not inaptly be termed the refuge ground of Europe. The familiar routine of Swiss pension | } | i | nopie part, but it is notin the nature of things that he or any of his brotherhood should grow rich. There is little wealth im the land and it is confined exclusively to the cities (at several of which they make pretty ladies’ watches and mark them all “Ge- neya,”’ which is not nice, though I belteve the watches are all good); but to sup, sive and least satis{actory of national institutions, an army, the peasant, the watchmaker and mill owner must pay their share, and it is a grievous burden for poor Switzerland. In that way is she most sorely affected, and the wars of her big neig- bors are calamities indeed for her. AMERICAN VISITORS. The country is full of Americans, I hear of them and see nota fewon all hands, and a fortnight ater the shores of Leman will be thronged with port that most expen- | Price & Co.; three Meutenant colonels, the Hon, Lawrence Harman King-Harman, D. L., and Captain Edward R, King-Harman, of Longford; Phillp Callen, meraber of Parliament, and George Brown, member for Mayo; a number of clergymen of the ‘disesta- blshed” Church, the Lord Mayor elect of Dublin, Sir G. O'Donnell, baronet, Mayo, and the well-kuown Father Lavelle, ‘Two hundred and ninety-two names, each repre- senting great wealth, rank and interest, consutute the committee. The Catnolic priesthood have not signed it to any extent, Those who have done so are opposed to the rule of Cardinal Cullen. CARDINAL CULLEN'S POSITION. ‘The Catholics who take their cue from the Cardi- nal, ana who roar themselves into sinecures under 0 length. ‘Uhis, at a distance of about fifty feet out, wilt be intersecied, or, pesnaps 1¢ may be better to say connected, by galleries, forming a curve around the centre of the shaft, and these curves or. galleries will be repeated at every fifty feet of the length ot the tunnels, This ts What is called the “cellular system’ of mining, and which elsewhere and on pre- vious occastons has proved go effective. In the in- tervening rock or standing ‘‘piers’’ between the ie leries and tunnels, the powder chambers will be struck, and charged with a sufficiency of powder to carry away thirty feet of rock overhead and twenty- five feet laterally each way. The tunneling process is a slow one, the rock operated upon being hard elas, yet it proceeds as rapidly a3 is possible. bular calculations are dally prepare OE, testing the density of the stratifed rock. ‘hen 1s com. ress i % ri Lhe Gladstone government, poon-pooh the federails- re 7 , } deri if 01 2 ‘depressed fire.” She is tobe atimed with two 18- | therefore We are not surprised that a few evenings | days among the misty hills have suffered @ rude oe en ed Peon ali ae Rat a ae . exe ate nee mee a pane inet aid Cot. | even depth of thirty feet from close to the shore line Lon guns, waich will be mounted on a revolving tur- afterwards no fewer than twenty-seven legionaries, change. Our arms of peace—tie alpenstock, the lege Green so long they heve their Irish to the farthest point of the present rock. , and she 1s so constructed that she will be able | Comprising @ sub-adjutant, should have deserted at ! tout roq and the fi i h | events may, one might say must dccur before then, tone i as ies and can build Mx, Reitheimer, the superintendent of these guns '. . It seems the order of the day, read to the le- y net—are hung up for orna- | nowever, and such disastrous complications arise | 102! buttered upon both si al , ° fo agit nor up $6 she simte of of hee rashening: gionaries by order of their commander, Colonel Per. | ments; the unfinished sketch of the wild Diablerets | as will make us all wish We were at home in “our | churches by tens and school houses by units. | But Hote Westy lL bee Cee eae na oe ed, the late chief constructor of the navy, hose design she is, Is very sanguine about her, understand, ag well as the officials and assistants ‘who were in his department. MON! TORS. {a anpenrs: & most singular thing that the govern- not hold a ficet of small type monitors. They yeaux, has nad but little effect, although he reminded the officers and men of the great honor which had devolved upon them since the departure of the French troops—via., that of representing Frauce in the ranks of the Pontifical army. It is even rumored that the eaice will be disbanded, and its elements remains in melancholy incompleteness, while, in j lieu of the wonted silence of the drowsy interval irom | one o’clock dinner to seven o'clock tea, an excited, | polyglot buz of conversation reigns continuously on the broad balcony below and floats discordantly in | own countrie,” though the voyage thence bids fair to be almost as precarious as that of the weird mari- ner I quote, Iftheaction of our noble representatives on Grant’s last message, or rather their refusal to ; act, is to be taken as an eatery of the manner in | which our government will will continue to interest itsvif in the welfare of the several thousands of its the most superficial observer can sec that there is not a more unpopular prelate in Ireland than Cardi. nal Cullen, When he arrived from Rome he was received by his administrator or vicar general and two priests, Not a man or woman of the people put out foot or hand to say “‘Cead mile falthe.” ence in this kind of work. In a communication to | the HenaLp he scouts the idea, as recontiy ex- pressed, that any 1 to life and property is to be feared from this grand explosion when it is had. He say) Excepting a sli # elevation of the upper strate of the it ubt a very useful class, and would jist ted between the Zouaves and German rifle ‘ in case of necessliy, 8 marvelous auxihary | Testun at my window while I write. Bismavek has just | subjects on foreign soll would Look as though the | ayrgver the qe sceaterie “evening of tne ath aust | Ge eter of fhe intended gfand exriadon mil rai be British deet at ho and Tivcad is Gomnded poms | A.Geplorable inewent ooourted yesterday, about | Diaved is unsuspected court card to (hat unhappy HOOF We a GLANDS DIFFIOULTY. over twenty thousand | crore Ne ten or twelve | perp ne auitaipaied break a reindowrs Whe ai en ‘of ganboats, t in round calculations, | noon, at the Zouaves’ club rooms, near the Campo di | Projet de traité, and bas ail Europe by the eara, even | yt 1s rather mortifying sometimes tO 100k about us | Cresent ms roghnerterdha ont ta adjoining howsaholde ‘wilh tbe experienced.» These f oe a * orated records a ere ae or sixty of — wien i eo aids ‘ peg Ayn on le Ro aerate \ to our homogeneous circle of wandering spirits etd ea benied: =e Ay! Any Hy BA ua o is long and arduous labors at’ Rome, a few hours = gorrol aN a. pee ray much are tf nealea oe Hoot nd probaly, ten in tne Mediverra: | tulforai, was seed with an access of furious mad. | *WaY in these mountain crevices of the Simmen- | Giscgver the existence of intelligent, Nard-working | Yefore the masses assembled Lafore the Herel. Ad | ‘shed, ‘and prove that more than 4W similar operations, with ae Pemmatnler bela ‘caployed for coast guar ese, and Taking aride, belonging toan erly | thal. I hear our sprightly Madame 1a Capitaine, | legislative corps, who sctaally, mucosa in doing a eee a ri to La So yy Ae eg Care eetieg i Hie ene oh des one ee + - dier era i the | o “ex. jomething for their several countries, while our own 7 u dai t ‘dwellin; fi and allowed to fot at moorings up Ports. Cais aoe ae rgrl tome yg tient | Whose hus! nd is at Metz in tne capacity of an “ex- | 8 Sack Tore time and inthe end accom. | CToWn, floated from the second story of the a rect hs 1B or endangering the life of @ harbor, the Medway and at Plymouth. ac THE TURRET QUESTION, Mute ts stm the all-adsorbent topic, "Next to this 1s p’an of Captain Moncrief, the basis of which ig to “wasp” fleet of small craft, without turrets, ‘with high freebords fitted with the Moncrieff ‘which are of most admirable construce among them a Zouave, it is feared mortally. He ‘was with difficuity secured by a patrol of Zouaves, who had to fire upon and wound him very severely before he consented to be pag ‘This morning the colonel of the Zouaves published an order of the day to this corps, alluding to the ; Cursiontist to Berlin,’ firing a cattiing volley, ava mt- responses are in heavy monosyllabies, and who per- sista in saying ‘voter pas” for votre pays. The i weighty Englishman, who develops largely the na- Amer- takes plishes doting. On one point we wanderi! traitleuse, atthe good-natured German doctor whose } icans all agree, and that 1s in the new appointment to the Court of St. Jame: see it once more brought up. It is “now or never’’ with the Alabama uestion. In the bitterest hours of our national struggle England showed us no mercy; in these days, hotel. The men and stalwart boys marched tn open column ed companies, chaunting, when the bands had ceased playing some popular air, John Brown's body les a moldering in the gravo, But his soul goes marching on, Troops of boys and girls crowded the sidewalks Mr. Reitheimer also takes exceptions to cortatn statements which appeared in the public press, as to injuries already done to private property near Hallett's Potut by the mining and blasting going on, and he calls these statements “incorrect,” “tech- | nical absurdities, which were evidentiy gleaned will say when I will tell you that it bg oy oceurrence as follows: You are all aware | tional imbecility for digesting an idea, is justawak- | When ‘she finds herself in a precious flurry because | and joined in the chorus of the great Ameriean song. | trom outsiders, also interiardea with deliberate the deplorable events of yesterday. Although @ War has broken out at her doors, and caught her LIGHT. ” AD - 8 Of ious ness not belong to the is Times, cut off from the in route, reaches ed ot in ecate skilful move- i 2 ay me bes te “and would dis- a e 4 7 ‘ Seraiabeas attern—in these days letherbe pushed | ment which was enthusiastically ¢heered by the This is not tha propor time, nor is 4 my province to eaten corps, the regiment must, nevertheless, come to the ald of the families of the innocent victims. A sab- ti, therefore, be opened throu if the oa him four days after publication, or not at all, ac- cording to the humor of Fremen officials, an indu- 1 bitable evilonce to his mind thes the Kurovean dal- Into 's history of tae impediments and, sanoyancos wi very commencement, to emi aae from the head of ona of the gntumns and tu an la | tees are on file (a Washiggton to bo used when wanted, tothe wall. Gladstone, who saw in Jett Davis the | people. The movement was the almost instanta- “father of @ nation,” isin the box to answer, and : neous lighting of ahundred torshes, A light flashed | perhavs Malmabusy. who wiidlu a week bas seen Ut officers the mit in Byig®, ition, wired depth by the | scription of Water, which Ay to be got rd Of regiiuent, and the valoial emotion felt \ ‘\ +

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