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4 NEW) YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1870.-TRIPLE SHEET, Pil a bia d the troops were und he rear | bh: Ciaraisnee that mneral rence of the whole people 1 above bo vestifted by | comfort and of for life and to tnetm. | te Marquis . Of th Gorda wan In gusting’ bat coed envier: Paredquo, Selma ¢ four Heamtod at tad ps Hh he Bd id, ate sas Dena! marcy ha ween atoning. irae ee e ‘ Warmée, the same corps that.1 Seonassecacwar TRBMY OF PEAcT. THe fore ‘yo enh nna efiitor of the papor or ro @ committes of ‘Sedan, oe} The official Provincial Correspondence, in venti- not fail to be siruck—amid all the folly ‘the Franco-Prussian n Dovsd, a village half way between MACMAHON'S ST'RATEGY—PeARFUL CANNONADING. | lating the peace question, indulges tts readers with Began ant Mon aareer® inter Day. or rather. while he ‘was turcwigg back his riage | & Yer long article, profacing it with the remark thot ‘This morning the reiteavof MacMahon's army was | towards Scdan, the cannonade Sreppen Tora time, | the rapid march or victory Justided the entering continued towards Mézicres; but since that they hayy | but only commence again with double and trepie | upon the question at tuis time, It will suffice to Special Reports of the Battles returned, and igniting las commenced again (ist, | fury litte later, vou atthe very middio-of tie din quote one oF two extracta showing tho’ drift of the and the frenzy of the wer fever—umid ail the “allong- y “marchoning,"” the screaming and dancing ‘THE LAY POWERS. ae ang waving at eitd patiotssanaid all the } ‘These ordera haye have been obevéd to the letver. cries of “ A Berlin! & Berltn’'—with the extremely } The Cpserontiore thrown over the Prussians, and good behavior and the invariable good nature vf the | now thinks French have every chance of Bopp aion, Paris had gone ‘mad, ae true, but epic he end. e.oMicial journal of he |APOLEON. saw Gm, At ough 4 \- Btrespo! and ards Coming to Paris in tho ‘dle of July the specta- rye ana atop nt ben onthe Prustens alle re Miah idl tercoulde i e A. M.) near Mouzon, aud excitement of the battle L cor not helj 6 lunacy Was lively &nd unagcom! id by an: has also. disclaimed the accusation of the of Mouzan and Sedan, “Vaurnow. Waving for @ height which commanas | dertug wher in: te amine ot WoUdeS aN RCT: | Ocal organ. Tt lays stress upon the Mer that the | erimual Yarbutenoe.” Bub, roturnmg. after & fort, | the Vatioun uaa harown iisl! 1ni0-tho ari Gf Pras. excellent’ view of the batue field, aud, shail he | Munition could come from. J am qnite sure thatone | territorles once torn trom ‘Germiany have ever | RUht's absonce, the same spectator ame rnd hie earegen —— the “Vatican x cal raw) BOER ACRE ey se able to give you some Stelle cre 1 joloae this lever. weenie battery near pity sone for ae hang a served France ag the basis .of attack, How, then, pean. pepeel plans Pig! atone ry madi Lode care of the Divine founder he BELLA ij ec eucement uw must hay he td great Dhave established my headquarters for the present | away at least thirty rounds per gun in that ume, f | Can it beotherwise that at present tne univeral | most maleucent reeonie sea) Pty od MacMahon Utterly Defeated | 3: #ouoa, « true vidaze wich, although only | Wus absent from tie spot for nearly two hours, and | clamor ts heard—this ignominious state of things | emia had broken loose, | Overs se THE ITALIAN: ADVANCE. tT bo legknes One Pee oF wh ( within the | when £ pane bagk wey Ligeti ‘2 asmerrily a8 | caa pnly be ended by retaking those provinces. pomsonasy hy Fehaiioas eofaherings, esha an frontier, eh there 18 not om: ever. I left here again, an lel was : at Mouzan. post offs, butw tolegrapl. ‘we normal number of | battiry. was uot alent for an inslant, and-yortney | ouce delouging to Germany, Tr 1s, Indeed, | but the morals und mannets'of Paris tohave | Pecpariug Wacts Cor « Kuropean ‘Congrom. inhabitants of Bouillog is two. thousand, but there | continued as pofore, a8 if cannon balls and'powder | nothing more than’ self-protection, for Soutn Ann nnn are now in it nearly twenty thousand persons, all | aud shell grew, out of the ground, . ego Oa FEA arge the unter. | bette would femank tab ak on erm éePrencn, | Phe era p ‘pe eae fully Stneclous that making 7 e ConKUCE Of wart 2 unfor- n ) 0 nd practice uch demand, they do not seek sui over other Discipline, Energy and Bravery | tanate towas through which thoy pass gots more lndinively in‘erior to the Prussian artillery, as indeed | © 1 Tato halen pane, and more brutal. ‘they burn and festrsy every: | they are infecior to, the British nd ake Renices | Peoples nor ihonuce the so-called Suropean +4 u I mean, of course, the outer Reagan ennui eerna [ane Nan women ointeeene tides ton davstnask, buve testuce with, drunken peo: | This otty ts tranquil; great agitation prevauls in io, civilians as well a3 soldiers; "aud the Cour dea | Pubuc option, Dut ull 18 calm 40 ihe streets, ‘The uraciesy relegated underground, CORDS AN Petre here Mr pee ogee nee 4 the atern edicts of Cwsari! up again, 21 he Pru ms thing ln sbeer wanton Wickeduess,. If they ever do | artillery. The Amorican artillery Ihave never seen, | Of Power, but soicly wish to attain peace amd quiet ism, 4 / of the ssians, meet with a teal reverse gud buve t fall back in | but from all 1 hear trom Kuropean ofticers wit RT eat cise ‘othe iuost Tuationable parts Sora tt Armapathias, elk areprwaye for tao bakes cesbaneraaeed Giworder the vengvance of the Inwabitauts. upon resent at some of your great engagements dur- | yy 13 teresting wo look back to the your 1815, when | (tHe Boulevards a dreadful horde of beguars—the | to "trance, but very little wol ‘ them will be feariul. Ang ‘tie etvit war it 13 also immensely superior to tho | gubt renowned Wittags von Hane eae es Peck | lame, the halt and the blind; the rasoals with sham | $2 #tanes, but very jittle, outs ie change THE FORURS UNDER MAOMAHON AND BAZAINE. Frenei. The French artillerymea don’ £0 | sian commissioner for negotiating the Bano ds Paralytion, the spurtous crip- French arms ‘Would * soon 2 them Napoleon and MacMahon in Council Be- | Watlo. the delay-ioving Beigiau who is going to | take the same pride in heir guns or then horses at Pans, in the metorial drawis up by lim pg rd Dunchbacks, tae borrowed babies, bring round. Pome | th Pee aed the’ ‘inal Beates of ‘the Church “are the 10 t urrounded guide me over the hilia 1 getung ready, let me note | that is shown by the men of the same arm in other ping tes of hurdygurdies that have no bowels and a talian forces to im numbers, ‘Three! i occaston, und counteraignea by General Von Knes- : for the information of your readers that although 4 countries. ‘They do thelr work, but not, at least as | heck: we rend:cn"lt Is meee Mor dente Brance pers on Violins without str! Parmdée ata ‘coneel Bt Orvieto, fore Bonaparte’s Fall ae polatat act aay common feoueh any | Hon n6 rau A Grek penare Tac | of tow sroughate wa have ore aoe foetus | oer Mac ca etanar, ongcermiced, | SeEt ang Hic an tb eternal of Hortee tas ny A, all. hese are now cqnoensraied in two | Held Pp es the Prassians ait fre, And this | invasion of Germany. For warlike purposes these | 9 bus they a ee ‘De found. aii | Just obtained from the Parliament the credit neces- ent armict, and no ollicers, eXcopt aacMaon aud | alone gives the Prussians an P preoct ee ey | have been her point @apput since centuries, Hence | Over Paria, and’! berping or fatter catalan | BAEY ‘two Other Glasses under the flag.’ hus Maohauen'e ataie Ae teeta Gus able io fire at lous tarse aloes te aang Aud | ao alteration of the poutdattes would be in favor of | tng” yor with numa Ose, Sieh ea 5 ae OF tit cuando “a enn ‘ pray is composed of the First Pe ences CONF Udon? Meir OWe- | tho future peace of Europe.’ alatence, if you moot thom alone, with remeaiy | Meus of @ neutral Power at the moment when the THE DESPERATE STRUGGLE AT SEDAN | corps, commanded by Mahon; Second: corps, 3 AND CONFUSION, ‘AN BXC! ‘PROPOSITION. . bone aniy | chances of a Kuro} be diminish- commanded by Lebeuf; Fifth corps, commanded by | ,Tmentioned in a recent letter thats corps of | Tne dtsclosires witch preceded tie war acquainted ., Tub nilisanoe has been aggravated by the | Tava ‘ctouien as he ome which exclios tne Per vee get Devaully, who ts superseded; Seventh corps, oom. | rane srcurs, or free-klivotons has been lately ralsed | ine ‘world with proposition made atthe beglaning Gabased spony countless swarms of the most | aigrm of the Holy See and tho anxious preocou nae papacy tx Douay; Mwellth corps, commandes | py i. Moquard. bt gen Cio ee Rover | gf the current year by tho Jato Lord Clarendon to | wnwomanly women, terrible tO sce, with sunken | Hon of ita gud; ‘These tater do not doubt y Aras Said, utter absurd, butis one fexaght ‘with great | erauce and North Germany, banng reference to mU- | Byey ana uigs patoube ar fed upon uur whitened | wese toOpe are desiined vo invade they ca, the Hlow the Ficld was Fonght | oisats of mo Te eM manded hy Bae unger to the regular troops se Wea ee tual tiaarmament. We do hot pea | Hoca~aho female clowns of a pantomme of har. | Gumniond and solge, Tarn, sn onder. jeu say, hoe zaine; Foarth corps, commanded by Ladmirauit; | amatour soldiers. But It 49 utterly impossible to : olig Sine homiee voices. Dade harass. by absinthe have to. rativy an accamp: aot, and Won. Sixth corps, commanded by Ounrobert; Eighih corps; | Make a Freuchian Delleve that m order to make a | Sacfiice of human iife, Germany wonld be anx- | ana ‘pep, brandy. ¥launting and yelling, | 2 pr fen by Deans; Ninth corpa tee Guardey man a soldier you have only.to put an int ious for a renewal ot strife unless the attitude of ‘and Bi ‘along, these ‘mghttul bern The ai ‘and most absurd ramors ere in ob have made oeeaering along ‘night after night 9 culation and received with avidity. Not one inhab- ae Op ee Aisorder; wis, to colnpiets, the | ant arrives from the provinces but has seen with his J . own eyes King Victor Emanuel’s soldiers trictshave begun 0 yullulste wish coipumos and | OW fie, Rtsrumi Oltys troops everywhere; they 3 cutthrouta, men with on and men with polg- ee peony Spe they = (gel os 4 ap bravoes and vagabonds of every | proach, an ene Tags ay, entry desorption ‘What have hey been dotug. all these to the capital is tix qoare fotos corners have 4 ‘idden them? Have n Vegetating in the catacombs, or has the Gfund Kgout Sollectour (tne BROOKLYN cITYy NEWS. aoe eae Gunttal: TLOOUU'S, WOBK. ate HI General bona 1s doing his very’ best to rid chis Miscollancous Local and Police Paragraphs You will have heard that within the last three days of Interest. nda rea fat 2,000 ty pom have taken place in — bei ria significance. Now and pedi rine ‘Thirty-nine ¢housand one hunared and five dollars bi cyl have been captured whose guilt aa Prassian | Were expended by the Park Commissioners upon ; but in the rit; F uaa a ue y ampeoyties Prospect Park during the month of : rary 18 Commanded Le. Bourhekd, hands and tell him to Agh ery a} Matte to: | France would de a manaoe, In which case Germany ‘MacMahon and Bazine are virtually the only com- } day thore was an excellent itustration of my mean- | THEM we jasrited im te, marmtelance Of & large | "1 Manders of the army. I must add that MacMahon’s | ing. A puriy of these Franc treurs were ordered to THE FRENCH “CRUSHED” BY DEFEAT. force at! Gold consists of 120,000 men, and Bazaize's | Watch a wood, 2ud were warned at the same time {hen od Sena tta ea bit 6 tae ANd pane of 85,000. tat from the wood tt was likely a party of therrown | Continueah’! fooak, her Ariny sarengsh in men would tasue, against whom they were | peace 400, $00 teen’ eels to @ mali bi bof THE BATTLE OF SEDAN Warned not to fire, “Hurdiy had the warning been | Pg#ee 400,000 men, equal a eee ee given when the French cavalry did appear, and «wo It would, therefc be an excellent step if in the» Border Engagements and Bel- pimeirecse as or three of these free-shooters at once let drive at | suipuiauons of peace’ both Towers would wares nue A i Special Report of the Great Fight in the Vals { Kiam Ai swicl feld battery, seeing what had taken | 19 levy, for Lhe purposes of Une standing army, more gian Neutrality. ley of the Mense—Opesing aud Tersiination | Couid “ho "so "idiocy made dure that “sey, | Man oue-half per gent of the population. Germany, of the Engagement—Partial Success of the | the Franc tireurs, must be Prussians, Roread ain tanta a nani eh Reet on ‘till Freuch—Ultimate Victory aud Triumph | 2 in less time than T take to write ual to. these Lines let drive three shells into them one ater | PO,Cqualte ‘hat of uy of, te ye of the Prussinus—Charges and Counter } guoiler, wounding seven of and sending th uA THE PEACE MOVEMENT. Charges—How the French Held Their Post= | whole company of sixty CAs Tight about, | Cust to be embodied in some shape or another in 1 the ensuing peace negotiations, f The end oi the story is that these aixty heroes went i atc tlonA Critical Moment, Wavering, and | gyi, ‘the Belgian fontien aud at onoe tod ‘down. Deteated—Twenty Thousand Prussians aud | their arms, and surrendered themsoives prisoners in BOHEMIA IN PARIS. Platform of the Prussian | Ten Thousand French Killed and Wounded. | this most convenient neutral coun 7 isn Frontier, Sep' A HERALD TELEGRAM MESSENGER KTLLED. ayia gattaapap tcf Nar ab! sR olice net are outcasts and ne’er-do-" of the very tae People. Two Pracipy Massy montis ib pal tas poole Nenkepee, pee fad Can ighaige in his | The “Dangeroas Classes” ay They Are—Hor- Towese aoe ag Reh) de Li There were fifty-eight marriages and 137 births " de ras abot ye ui in weather whish 1a deemod cool even for autumn | from the tleld's telegram seving Weta sent YOU | Fible Realities but no Romance—Riot, Revol, | feisnious Saier Pe a ance, | recorded at. the Health Ofice during the woek end- beggars and Ye ce Sense feat ann, aii roueng | MESIORDN IK cocasions Dut steal am a particular loose Mrs, Keegan, restitng in Leonard gtrect, near women. the last named dolorous sisterhood | Mill, was severely wounded yesterday by the aca- s7une Repasede bats, seer node taken and lest | dental discharge of & gun, in the hands of her soa, po eghng Bene monn ll re: bi and. ‘2 raid | #2 Charge from which took effect m ner side. nas rte meee cn oe mom ne ee mar sirup ‘The great dramatic combination from Niblo’s will law at every Le gon ghee & place of pub- | appear at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Friday gomg. Whether it reached London in safety {an | Brandy, Absinthe, Peppered Drinks and = adheres — pai o coh gl a paid So Unable to say, for the poor fellow wo took tt'vus | ‘Thetr Viotiias—General Trochu’s “Efforts for Italy for Rome and Against Pon- what he has seen. f have just returned froma | Wee Jue Stobas he came back to look for | Reform, Security aud Medemption—What . 0 ‘ COMING TO THE CLOSH. Bokemianism Was aud Is—The “Wild tifical Temporalities. thirty-six hours’ sojourn on the hills and im the | tie second movement was bute signe change, | Beusts of Civilization.? u to bar ths ns wooda of Ardennes, and have seen, so far a8 | He threw his right more forward, as one individaal can eo along @ Une that | roed to Sedan, iusteue of drawing ste, fron Lsieinhg cipares. Uh -yrypepagl ry patie towards tt. hy t The Cunard mall steamship Ouba artived at | extends twenty miles and more, one of those fear- The latter immediately attempted to onthank tho It is the sad fashion, th this sadder time of fren- this port at gn early hour yesterday morning, | fully bloody nattles wiich seem to be @ distinguish- } French on their right, making a dash of columns at | 704 Passion, abject terror, gross ingratitude and } tia resort alone, and whois unable t0 “Justify her | ana saturd: wilt 2 bas , ing feature m this campaign, and which yet seer to | the centre snd trying to turn the lett, allnt one and | DS iuspiotins to bee ‘ad Emperor Napoleon. | means of existence,” 18 amenahle to arrest and to produced -Uelts Gomtrand paondan Rea bringing our speciat European correspondence and | 100 rar unsatiaiactory that both sides claim, ay | e same time. ‘This was about one F. M.. and from | Wem we read that whic! aera ee sux months ment at St. Lazare; bus it is | With the entire powerful cas. u newspaper mail despaicues dated to the 34 of | tney evidently will claim in this inst toe | Hottest, ‘N° Fs M. the Dattio wad us its very | Heror,” te. magnidoent lines of Dryden anent | exantbhanent, “waiun, Soliton ea Dore ey evidently wil auce, tho vic- | hottest. ain Darius rise irreaiadbiy: to the es a Mitton 00, it ts reported, 4a al- | patroimen Kapber and Green, of-the Sixteenth eptember. pee ‘Tie Prassians had ovidently received feesh rein. | 4,certain Darius rig iy to the mind. ‘The | ready full to overflowing, that these | un- ganas Oy forcemeats, and were determined to carry their | Fteuel not penalised ee a9 eae aa have been conveyed. They | precinct, were fined by the Police Commissioners Our special war exhibit from the fields of Thave ed the fight that took place to-day the poiut. br) om tne are ear 'nd Us Ae an sy teen ran sonernete cae of town, and nO | three-days’ pay each for arinking too much lager battle of Sedan for two reasons. In the iirst placa | FIERCE ACTION OF THE PRUSSTANS~THE FRENCH Sf less than twelve of those huge yellow and green | becr and.clupbing @ disorderly citizen at ® recent Mouzan and Sedan and on the frontier of Belginm Sedan is the most important town or village along “IRM AS A STONE WALL”? close his eyes;” but bi assuredly the victim of | om: called paniers-0-satade, passed yester- x neni Park. day along the rue Lafayette on their way to the » gels ip pce dyenne . Ser eee ari, P08; | Tuo Water Boatd has Fowived to repave citaton omnibuses passed & philosophic gavroche remarked | street from Second place to Nelson with cobble pithily to auother young blackguard, his companion, | stone, The section of Clinton strect proposed to be "Pe Vamour! Lamour! Yes, there was lov’ indeed, aud with a vengeance. Another gang of | !Mproved ts in # very bad condition, Huntington captured women Was marched on foot and between | Street will also be repaved with cobble stone Irom files of sergents de ville to the Conciergerte. The | Hamilton avenne to Sintth street, mob hooted them as thoy went by, and they re- 18 ” . ‘ “doo severe a fate.” He is “/alien, fallen, fallen, are of the highest interest and importance. The | te whole line; and im the second place tt was last BS ere &¢ this tligp to me “ Seat en wig Fer fallen from his high estate,” and ‘deserted in his initiation of the grand popniar German movement | nignt the headquarters both of MacMahon aud tue ) latinéhed one alter anowier at the French right; but | BIOs! weed by those, his former bounty fed.y | 1 for peace is reported at length by our writer m | Hiperor tumselt, Mente Os frotn a etn he ee ered, from each | cat sense. 1 destre neither ta Diacken him nor to Berlin. From Rome we have general advices | | 1 may further mention that whatever other fewits | Manon commanded im person and recived a some- Ste WALA Nu omeoae Api e een lus Majesty may have, he has to-day shown himself | whatsevere wound. Andas the fight raged here { his government during tho last eighteen years which describe the Pontit in active preparation to | tg pe ne coward, for he was to be seen here and ead indeed ir the oe Une except on the French | 9 UM ‘ “A eit, where a division had nomimiously given will ac teast adnut thus inuch—that he put down meet a coming crisis wit Italy, the GERALD | there aud everywhere, wherever the balls rained | iqopening vas made. in Macmabene oie pede Bohemia PPL AOU Ee DOTA Ay oe Seperh. % ee 3 F y tne ; 3 ith foul lauguage and dreadful gestures. The Board of Aldermen held a special session yes- writer in the Eternal City indicating the approach. | Dardest. #0 a8 (0 allow the heavy guns of Sedan, within shot 9 torted w: y s PP) ‘sala’ iain oeeriod op wink Weare of which Was how Uus part of the battle, to play Levee age: pps Hoy hdl pa Ag ieee ‘They, poor wretches, and the d_vag- | terday morning and passed @ series of resolutions of rants and thieves and the whoie tribe of Bohemians ing fall of the Papa temporalities and probable who have broken loose, are bat in the same case as | Tespect to the memory of ex-Alderman Charles upon the enemy. ‘To understand in some measure the events of the It became now evident that the amir could not | 224 att—Which Henry Mlirger jas so inimitably de- exile of the Pope. « ve Ini thib YaxIbY Of ‘the Sfbens' oO cont - ab 1 Poren picted in his “scones deja Vie de Boheme,” The | the wild boars and the Wolves Unat the thunder of | Franks, of the Sixth ward. The Board also resolved ay tot: tance = nett ae ves ae mio eo toes | Coens aren Pees To atorly Petrone, we yeressian | Terms Bohemia and Bohemians have beea very much | the battle cannon drove lacly out of the Forrest of | to attend the funeral, which took piace trom the lave imagine an oblong, of which the right ana leit— - mulsapplied within late years, und we have grown to | ardennes into the cultivaced plains of Belgium, residence of deceased, No. 12 First piace, » far as Fam able to gather, have | jock upon the Burgotaster cf the city of Prague as 3 kind of careless, clever, boon companion, disrepu- table at may be, but on the whole a jovial Soul, and —Wwhen be had any pence in his pocket—generous, Nothing could be further from the truth; aud, as usnal, (he dramatists and the novel writers, have > | Deen the persons most te blame in spreading the “ | erroneous impression, Read the “Jortunes of ‘These Bohemians are the wild beasts of clviliza- Hon, and the rey of ree driven them into the Governor Hoffman reauered his decision yester- or quarters—that 04 ct For Ab cotufort we are told that the arrests are | 487 morning th the case of District Attorney Samuel tosuiictent, and that there are more than twenty- | D. Morris, of Kings county, charged with malfea- two thousind wale scoundreis—to say noting of | sauce in office. ‘The demurrer of the counsel for Mr. the ladies—still at iarge in Paris. Would not ue | Morris is overruled. A new investigation is ordered best pian be to onral taem all, nolentes volentes, in | in the matter, and William C. DeWitt, Corporation #'ii managed to Keep their communication by Vou- nnn ~ armies of = open wiih the King’s army, now on the road to aris. THE BATTLE OF MOUZON. | which are the longest—sides are formed py the | Bytrtillery, and, MacMahon’s Army Totally Defeated—Com- | me Crown Prince of Prussia and Prince Fredenck plete Surprise — Utter Rout ef the | Charles respectively, and the top and bottom sides, On the French ie: FrenchA Race Toward Mezieres-Napo- | which are the smallest, are formed by the armies of hadan easy vi leon nnd MacMahon, in Company, Almost | yucmanon and Bazaine, The objects of the Crown | Stu the day. ¢ ON THE LEFT. 41 said before, the Prussians nd ting it is that both sides be losses Jam unable to gt , cic 1: more th ugh estimates, but bellev ney “> Whit i \ 1 Captured=A Crushing Victory. Prince's army (which ts the right hand side of the | fay be net downs sean mighty mes may | Nigel,” or the engaging novel of Whitemnars,” or | one great brigade of Black Guards, and send them | Counsel of this city, has been appointed reteree, bee BOUULLON, Beigian ewe oblong) are twofold : on the one hand to keep press- | Suns beg atleast twice aa many as the Frenens | £2.% he nl ype | aoe Men whey po vo ar ged 2 ti gut bes qrcentans, SARIng: care to place them iu } fore whom the second examination will be held. August 31, 18 ing on slowly but surely towards Paris, and on the Events press so fast up each other that it 18 | yeon: ‘quite a picturesqne and romantic place. But we Tron! e The State Attorney General will be present at the ‘The monch of August has proved a most unfortu- | aimeult tor nate pertod for France. On the 4th of this month the nation had to humiliate itself so far as to listen to the despatch which told of the defeat at Wissem- bourg, and yesterday I witnessed a battle, which, I have no doubt whatever, is the Inst, Anal, crushing victory of the Prassians on French ground. THB SITUATION IN THE FIELD, On the 29th inst. MacMahon gained a victory at Stenay over a division of the Saxon army that was trying to cross the Meuse. Yesterday he descended from the heights above that place, intending, I be- Lieve, to pursue the enemy he had aefeatea on the previous day. At a farm between stenay and Mouzon he met the Emperor, who wasoa his way | bo Seaan. | The two were at breakfast, and the army was making tis cternal soup, when two Prussian aiyl- sions fell upon them like lighming. The F r had Wut time,t Jump on horseback am reach the high road avout five minuies before te Prassians entered the farm; and your special corresponuent oopreteemega heariog to represent the peopie. THE POPE PREPARING ‘FOR ‘The funeral of Major William Denman took place, EXILE. from his late residence, No. 62 Hicks street, yester. day. Deceased, who was seventy-six years of age, Italy Coming to a Crisis with the Pontit | lield a commission at one time in the British army, es " He came to America when still full of vigor ant Eugiand’s Diplomacy Nine Years Since | gipition and started the tiret Catholle weekly As Pio Nono and His Every-Day LitePlan of | paper in New York, known as the Lruih teller. Ho the Votlean—French and Germin Interests, | Conducted the latter paper for twenty-tive RoE, August 27, 1870, and resigned his duties as a journalist when the Truth Teller was merged into ‘the Zrish-Ameri Although Lord John Russell's offer of the Island of | and then retired to vrivate iif x oheelaat ‘hee Malta ta Pius IX,, in 1861, a3 a secure refuge from | Mass was celebrated by Rev. Father Moran for the the invading forces of Garibaldl and Cialaint, was a | Thu in calvary Cemetey: ase Boe ere, tne good deal jaughed at at that time, a similar offer on | last resting place by alarge concourse of people. the part of the British government 1s again talked of no here, and the report has been strengthened lately by | The coroner's jury in the case of William Jones, the arrival at Civita Vecchia on the morning of the | Who dled of pyentia, saperinduced by a pistol woun@® 230 of the British armor-clad frigate Defence, Com- | 40 the foot, rendered # verdict to the efect that they mander Nowell, sixteen guns, 430 men. As long as |] Were “unabie to determine from the evidence as to Civita Vecchia was garrisoned by French troops it | the person who inflicted the wound.” Deceased was a very rare occurrence for an English ship of Ferry. street, neces ‘on nee’ sth war to enter the port; but now that there is only the | last, and lingered in grea in at the City Hospital Frencl advice boat Daim to represent the imperial bene death ended his sniferings a few wees since. fag in these waters, It appears that the xetreat of | ing betore ductive Madilen: of Waveho nant: ook The Pontiff on the sea side will be insured by the | ness, eince missing, named Dennis Heffern, testified Defence, which vessel will remain on the station in | that Henry McKenna, the keeper of the saloon, shot case that political or military events in the Ponums | Rucceased twice, aid that Jones told him that Ate- keep pace with them, But | roa nefoe, and Ned Ward, and the Old Bailey Sessions stall to-morrow bave ‘many | Papers forthe conluding years of the Beventecnth details WuicW ate imupossibie toget ou We day of & Devtary, and you will Giacover that the precinot of aitle. sanctaary Which existed between the Temple and Ludgate was the haunt of the lowest and most abandoned of mankild; of cheats and forgers, and other hand to prevent the junction of Bazame and MacMahon. ‘The army of Prince Frederick Charles, formea by ve nS ele AEE oa the left hand side ot the oblong, has also two objects | ‘The conniry is turned upside dowa. Every hovel in view, Like the other Prussian army, 1t is trying | On the froutter ts renved at fabulous prices by French | foocpads and miduight murderers, who, wren’ they to prevent a junction of the two Freneh armies, and | }2OPl¢, anxious to get away from the Prussians, and | saiied forth from their dens, were the curse and the tne belgian imukeepers are proportionally also to work round the top mide of the oblong (Mac- | insolent “and rapacious. As asual, once a | (ero tte tea: eating tte Parisian Bonemuiae Eke Malion’s army) and cut off his communications witn | battle hag Inc 4 wonderful genius of Victor Hugo has thrown a halo | Par think 1¢ part of thelr right to do what they like and | Of Posity and reverence round the hideous hothouse On the other hand, the two French grmles, the toy | go where they will once a fight 1s over. Of course during the Middle Ages, Was known as the Cour des and bottom of the oblong, are trying to form ajune- | all that dh — the ign | gt frontier have beea | nijracies. Tho magic pen of the great master of tion with each other, and the top side, MacMahon’s | Z4de Prisoners, aud very well pleased they seom to | perion nas converted: the ruttianly begar, Olopin i ; he in Keeping ofa people whose entire eytny Troulllefou, tuto an interesting character; the chieis army, 1s also doing its best to keep open tts commu: | on their side. of the Grande Truranderie ito heroes; and the fig- nications with Pari Pst aa Hie'ty rebel di Neco) Tie wane ging wench of ihe gutters, the gipsy Esmeraida, , pstrover ore fs ~ it my . into the sweetest and purest of womankind. and destroyed more saciories ‘and other industriat | 44’ quarter of a county simee there arose Mn France bu dings than can be built tn the ne 3. | @ ‘writer who had the courage to tell his country- (hroughout (ho battle to-day nothing c men of what eiem the Parisian Bohemian was ‘ : : : 2 plucky than were . ae ie. ‘and such, indeed, was tue position they held until ch, however, altiongh they behuved very well, | Tally composed. | That writer fica belt I , yesterday, when Bazalne surprised the Prince Fred- left much to be desived on te score of order and | ag are some of tue scenes and conversations in the erick Charles by an attack on his rear, at the same | “scipline. “Mysteries of Pacis,” that strange upd powertul z per ’ . in the Village atone where I write this there are | este! : ; lime that MacMahon made a felnt of attacking the | nearly two hnndied unwounded Frenen prisoners, | Ory, contains hundreds of pages revealing, that a army of the Crown Prince, and by the evening of | but only five Prussians, of whom iour are very The 7 ii di r pt only to run fi @ most undlg: an- | “d. ‘The’ Belgta Prsathy. 'Y | truth. ‘The author’s pervetsity plunged his readers had not only to run for it ma most undignified Man- | veseerday both French armies were in full communt- nated. he Belgian sympathy shows | py umes into situations madder than the maddest ner, but recolved some few balis much nearer Bis | ‘tion ey eee ees uae ps a a pee j opium-dveams of De Quincey; but these were inter- oy safe or agr Je. a . rather too inuch 80, im fact, for a neutral peopic. 4 JH person Was either safe or agreeable. A litte é 7 ns Their av “s spersed with narratives and descriptions as calm, via e ch ca reir ar nh the ir¢ pI busy a cculs r way olf he gained a height from which, with the | 22 e meantime MacMahon’s attack was carried army Js on the irontier a busy and Important } ag accurate and 28 appalling ag tke driest minutes atid . rince, | 23 ii the fate of urope depended upon its eforts im : 5 ee Auctdanes further than was intended, and the Crown Prince, | ® eh aed ie Of evidence collected in a blue book emanating hat had done ia such good ser- i Op is of the i 7: he other Prussis vas ene shoot from & sanitary commission or an inquiry should prove i e se Beet BNL nell vice at Woerth, he could see pretty well all that | Wins poe boy ts ber Frganign army) wes, Also, en burhood. into. the crime aud destitution of the metro- Sans ibs Ms Poe riled howl ei a wis gaged, fell back in order not to be cut off from it, —-_—_— pols. ‘That which Eugéne Sue drew | infallible sovereign. ‘Tne Pope's navy would hardly PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE a “ ‘This morning early, or rather last night, the mistake Cc really existed, ‘The purvis of Notre Dame and The «French were from first to Inst in the ut- | was discovered, but too late to be rectitied, for Mic. THE PEACE QUESTION. the purlicus of tite Palais de Justice were really most confusion. ‘They had no tdea whatever of the eel a = made good i ye the coh eren ed choked up Iallich and pepe ene oon sinks i . q | he had gained, and placed along the heights ruffianisia, robbery, and del x enemy being at hand, and, da usnal with them, had } hat command the valley of the Moselle, not ony Teally a Kae aux Fevess there was Teally & Dowge kept no look out, no patrol, no scouts, no advan vaitertes of urtiliery, a Interie= | w/aine—a tavern by the sign of the “Lapin Blanc.’”’ afford him suitable accommodation, even for a trip a across the Mediterranean, for his only reaily sea- | prominent Arrivals im This City Yesterday. worthy ship, the steam corvette linmaculate Concep- George H. Peudieton, of Cincinnati, ‘arrived yes- tion, in which he has sometimes enjoyed an hour's | terday per steamer Cuba from Europe and is stop- cruise off Civita or Porto D'Anzo, is now undergo- | ping at the New York Hotel. g William—forei miard. riunately for th the advanced guard CROWN PRINCE'S DIFFICULTIES AND CHOICE. cemProclamation to the People—) v LThave been there. The Ogress, the Chourineur, the ae PC ties Prussia ae yee AMIE A Wan ik 4 Thus, when the day broke this morning, tho | fon or Monndeciece’t th be geile Hs Schvolmaster, the Choueite, the Gouaieuse, Torbil- | ng a thorough repair of her machtucry Mlle. Christine Nilsson, of Paris; Colonel Robert : eee bce 28 60 18 | Orown'Prince had the choice of three evils Jett him, | °° oundarion Perms af Peace—Oil- | Tara, the defionincal gamtn; Bras-lRouge, the re-| But so far Pius 1X. contemplates events calmly | tenox Banks, of Albany; J. H. Bradford and Thomas easily beaten back as to give the French some little | The one to fall back from Carignan, witch is op the cial Mints--Liberty or War. - ceiver of stolen goods; the murderous widow and | ang shows himself in public with unrutled features Witkins io ante ‘ at the Cl: time for their formation—such as it was. Had tua | borders of the Ardennes, towards Champagne, and BERUIN, Sept. 1, 1870. her ruftian sons In the lle des Ravageurs, were char- Sb vacentiell tlie Midtohes of the G6 nu pi ms ini on, ngland, are ia! e Clarendon Hotel. not | done the atfair which F recor would have | ##0W MacMahon to cut him off from the direct road : weg iba ab acters as genuine as any of the rogues and drabs ie attended the churches of the Gesu, Santa Maria Colonel Findlay Anderson, from Sait Lake City; 5 icy ; ” ip in A ‘6 ae 2 sBidstirhokeens aie oF the second +o ight is way ane the Mo- The fact of the neutral Powers of Burope being | who periodically hold up aie in tie dock of della Pace and Santa Maria d:Na Scala on the three } Ww, B. Gale, of Chicago; A. Peltzer, of Lonqon; H. wen sluply a 8! jicr and ot an cnagagement. selle, and trust to numbers and geoeratship to out- | actively engaged im trausfor » outra the Middlesex Sessions or the Central Crimimal 5 ‘ ts . af Sen dae ' 7 lipase flank and ontmamber his adversary, and the third | MUNCY ehwaked An irausformung thelr neutratity | he Dudgeex em OMe Stem of France then | 4a¥® sppointed by his Holiness for public prayers | Vieuxtemps and Napoteou Verger, of Paris; 8. af. ‘ : ; ‘ to wirn to his left, occupy the forest that forms the | tC eB Armed oue causes the most lively apprehen- | tarew upon Paris every year, on the ex- The first regiments to get ito line were the tnlan- | gntiying portion of the orest of the Ardennes, and | Slous among the German people. As already com- | piration TO their sentences, ‘hundreds — of ry of the marine, of which corps there was a brig- | make Is way by th , - ahi road to Paris, | municated to you, any i erence likely to take | desperate wretches, the scum oh the salle; Beck de some 6,00 x, These rej st not 9 three difieulties he selected the first, Wy fate a1 s Brest dad Rochelort and Toulon, ie Jorgat ibéré nde some 6,000 strong. These regiments must not | yeing'au the more obliged todo 60 that already A in the future development of events by tho | wag a stundiug danger and a standing terror. The be confonuded with the American or British ma- | whole division of tis army had, so to speak, got | larger Powers is watched here with the utmost sus- | padeurs des varrieres, or ruflans of the exterior thelr daties not bemg in the least analogous. led on the road, and could not have fought | picton and even Indignation. Tull expression was | Boulevards, were always watting after mightfall, ch marines never do duty on board ship, iy back withant great lon only at seaports. They never goto Algiers, but ao for the cessation of war and return of peace, and } pock, of San Francisco, and Dr, Holbreok, of wound up on Wednesday evening with vespers at | Charieston, S. are at the Everett House. the Church of St. Bartholomew, on the Tiberine M. Bradshaw, of England; May Dosmell, of New Island. It 1¥ affirmed that the Pope will not be 80 | op ns; General A. W, Harvey, of New York, and easily frightened from the Vatican as is generally } Asnurst Bowie, of F hfladeiphia, are at te New supposed. York Hotel. ‘The inroad of an [talian Mivision of two, or even General G. B, Carse,of the United States Army; thetr permanent ovccupauon of his outlying pro- | yjeurcnant Commander H. B. Seeley, of the United vinces, Will not induce the Pontiff to Abandon the | states Navy, and W. H. Simes, of Mississippl, are at te at as and sine poten eyes Rat not | the Irving House, . e a sufficient motive for him te leave the Vatican, 7 ‘His intentions may change us events become more | General J. A. Cunningham, of Boston, J. F. Joy, cogent, but at present it 1s stated that his Holiness | of Detroit; W. H. Seward, Jr., of Auburn; H, J. is resolved not to take his dight trom Rowe until the | Kimballand 8. K. Crittenden, of Georgia; Captatm - Italian troops actually march into the city in hostile . : i 7 s guise aud with orders from thar government to es- of Canada; .Geueral Z. A, Sheldon, of New give ‘ 3 etl i bludgeon in hand, for the inebriated or the unwary. 'e—-THE WoRK cox. | #VeH vo this fecling at a mass meeting held here the | Mu pierrenses, tte marcheuses and the traineuses, i ite aia aa AaB, day before yesterday and very numerously attended | the dregs of that unhappy class of, Peed ot duty in the other colonies, aud thus, perhaps, t was the first time lever heard the Prasstans | by many of the promiuent members of the Reichs- | Whose organization Parent du Chatelet has left us easure the onipion stated in mor commence a tight early m the morning. AS & rule | i. rae en e ote in every i : ch no Reichs: | Soterribie an analysis, nifested the outlying quarters © nus e : : them practice Is to let the men eat as good a meal as | “4 *udtuen of note in every branch of life, At | ofthe city, and to their own shocking trade were one of my letiers, that the great body of the French | (yey can get before the battle begins, Bus tt wag } this meeting an address was adopted to his Majesty | always ready to aid that of the be ed ida ae ad suffered in discipline trom having become | otherwise to-day. the init adits a canine aivarwie oN rey oa ine low nelghborhivods or Paris too Africanized by ite campaigns in Algiers, Bethia | _T0push on and get past the French position in the | ‘8? Sis and also a proclamation to the people: swarnied with pickpockets, bullies, sowteneurs of ree Marre at early dark would have been an immense deal gamed, whe: ADDRESS TO KING WILLIAM. ; loose women, tramps, beggars, itinerant mounte- tat the French troops | and the atiempt pusequently made, hen the present War became unavoidable the banka and pediars, between whom and the thieves But the Ch y is alert enough and netive | PEOPIe Unanimously supported your 1c Was dificult to establish @ distinction, and an in- pact gti engl Ce Ag Pa sae eaee reabcrtieae eve ty: finity of other Knaves, male aud female, who could | tablish themselves permanently Witiin ita Walls. , and Colonel A. J. Herr, of Jiarrisburg, are hand; and to-day it had not only a vietory b the ight for sccurity, unity and grandeu sha e eneric the of gens TAB SWORD, St. Ni buta'month of defeats to avenge. Germau Fatherland, ‘God has blessed the arms | OWlY, be classified under the General Kanzler nas heen inspecting positions in | 4 te St. Nicholas Hote, wielded with unexainpled bravery for the just cause, rf Streams of the noblest blood have been shed for these victories, With unexpected celerity they lcd us to the aun had im view. Powerful efforts are the province of Viterbo, where the firs! inroad 1s Captain 8. Brooks, of the steamship City of Brook- AY ts Ms ithe jeneatea fe, bpaitiye. as- } lyn: Joseph A. Lee, of Loutsiana; ©. W. Wyats, of sertions of the Italia istry thal Papal fron- | 4 : Os te a fiers will be. scrupulously respected. Rumors aro | Pustand; Captain 8, Palmer, of the Royal Navy, afloat of Italian patrols betug captured by the Ponti. | and George E. Gray, of San Francisco, are at the ni The Prussians commen M., but no sooner did the bouch along the ullery commence to move before four a. “ORMSs This was the Bohemia—these were the Bohemians that were stamped out by the government of the Second Empire, J will not say that the operation ‘was perforrued with entire and definite success, The eh ‘no scouts, guard. So complete was the two of their field batter de combat by the Prussian guns we stormed again experience of the last few days proves the contrary, Ltroops and mee verse, but Ibelieve both ac- | Hoffman Hou : tofire asingle-shot. The troops el a an ain by the Pru y colt P00 r 01 the as! f battened- | counts to be incorrect. Saas . “ tune to fire asingle-shot. ‘the troops engaged on | and again by the ain column con: and has shown that even in the ashes 0! The Antibes legion ts 1n such # stato of discontent Ceneral J. N, Patmer and R. W. Tyler, of the ' ach side formed the rear of MacMahon’s | tinutng on its route. But it was of no use. Infantry under the immertiave command of | was met dnd repulsed by infantry, the mitvaitleuses expecting General assisting Lathe deadly Work, Sill the mam columm the army, and we De Paiily, who was down vilainy their wonted fires continued to smouider, Still the Napoleonte régime. worked a most marvellous change m Bohemian Paris, The ough 1 did not that its disbandinent is contemplated. A consider. j Uoited States Army; S. RK, Reading, ef Reading, ar, is now busy- able number of the soidiers would be free in two or | pa,: y, Hy oniley, Of Hartford, and Judge Thomas - . ‘eubern “| shed on, and still tae French swept russian | w lated to Jimit the prize of | Cyee oy red. ‘The Rue eux Feves is | three montis’ time; but they have not the patience nee Qihise { snention that De Finly ‘hi i [Fine ormatehe nn nu. WePE MOR TUSSON | og struggles luccording to their judgment, ‘rue | Cite cuuirely dismpwentel: | Ove i vudge wirects | to walt for the conclusion of ihetreigagements, and | HO, of Wisconsin, are at the Astor House. th ‘are , foolha. jon neither ‘This work continited for upward of two hours, | Memory ot in glorious uprising of our forefathers 13 Prior to the Second KEmpirethe police of Paris were | remaining inactive in Rome, while the tate of thelr General R. M, Gardner, Captain Atkinson and Mr, to hurry biuself ‘nor to dion’ | duitig whieh Line the losses Were fearful on tie side | aol icane ae a Peet ack ee busta feeble folk, ‘The streets were patrolled ab night | couutey 1s fone e i pa ve pe Mame Mundelia, D. P., of London, England; Lieutenant P Y e surely is fe | e Gel An * omy tt =i ‘OF Us Teas ea eri Mag a pt avs ee es lere in Stu Ri ae mt OF CHANGE OF FLAN—ATTACK THE PRRNOH rive, — | MPAFORCH Your Majesty with wae tim, pledge taith- | AMA AE long Muerwats os ate ae and the | the French Ambasnador at tha Colonna palace and | Xesulger, of the Vulted States Army, and Dr. Bar- nave said all hal need be + in we ni a change tovk place on the part | MWY fo persevere unui the wisiom of your Majesty | Teves, of course, took. care to carcy on their avo- | entreating ltim to obtain their relevse. ; ron, of Princeton, N. J. are at the Brevoort House. duchy ; of the Prussians, It was seemingly determined py | “Mall succeed, under exclusion of wil foreign inter- | Cations’ at the precise itme that the patrol was not | ‘The Marquis of Bannevillo, in order to be free to | x. A, Southwick, of London: W. W. Steven: es 4 ARTILLERY DUEL. their leaders to attack t reach line as 1 stood, | ference, in xing conditions which secure, better, nce of Napoleonism or | go tn and out of his residence wittout such obses bere: spades) cig Oy son, For halt an he tile Was one of car break it and thas noid the whole line of the heaghts | feu formerly, the peaceful intentions of the neg! sion, has been obliged to establish a corps de garde | Of Boston; G. ©. Maguire, of Georgia; Jonn Hop. , in his court, and to post up a notification at the entry inforuung the soldiers that thew return wo 2 France depends not upon him, but on te Koman } SUagdeld, Mass., are at the Westininier Hotel. War Mintster, at whose disposal they were formally Colonel R.* Powell, of Lowell, siasa.; Judge J. = ty hee oe i” yt — oi May, of Missourt; Colonel C, A. Van Kirk, of Phile- he war. ‘This decision of in uh siphia? i i ister flila these ardent young with fury, so deiphia; G, P. LL. Price, of London; F. R. Lord, vhat General Kanziler finds tb 1 ty to let afew | R. Gordon, Major Head and Thomas H. Merrit, of of the most noisy depart now and then, trusting to | the United Scates Army, and A. M+ Bowers, of Texas, the arrival of new recruits to take ielr places. De- | a9 vt uo Metropolitan otal. ; . sertions continue to wedken the logion dally, so thar | * ul etrop 5 what with those Who went to get away per sus et | G. W. Meuderson, of Baltimore; Mr, Patten, of neyaz and those WhO Wands to fight tor their coun- | Ganada; N. ). Bradley, of Missouri, and ty. astrtee, bor and guarantee the unity and freedom of the cleanest, the best lit, and—at night—the safest made to, ontfank | Viole country, as atyo d tien, ce dn Europe. Not only were broad and handsome MacMahon, whieh partial chanjre of With everlasting loyally, boulevards driven througn the dangerous districts, bringing forward his right. ‘Then it was that | This address, alveady very numerousiy signed, | but, through a benileently despotic system of “ex- left rested on Curignan or Chariguan. | wit remain here a few duys y et before beng trans- | Propriation,” the entive districts teurselves vane them, But Ue Prussians were too numerous and tou Belgian drontier beyond, and 1s mght | sstea to the King ' ished—a slenificant contrast 6 that blundering and quick for them. ok iN a half cirele upon Sedan. ES Ie ees half-hearted course wich prevails in our. own Regiment after regiment ana brigade afier bri; ‘Whe position was dimiraule one, weil selected PROCLAMATION TU THE GERMAN CKOPLE, country, Where we pierce a New Oxford Btree! » and gade was lannched against them. and one which did MacMahon infinite credit, Baa |} | Wine tue acmed portion of the peopie 1s now de- | leave St. 6 where we bniid 8 Viotoria street and The Prussians got posession Of the helghts above | Le been well supported there 1s ttle douht but Liat | fending us om foxein <oll wud shedding its bearis | leave the slums of Westutuiscar upstanding and as Mouzon, sbetlod the French out of the town and } @ total victory would have been the result of the | bloud for victory, the diplomacy of foreign Powers | villanous as they Wore 209 ye: $9 fs apne fairly drove them down to the Mease, into whieh | day’s fighting. But, wiarvelious to relate, a whole | Is preparing to tmpo: upon us. at the decisive | a rigid bat humane adcinint aspa od we Ne hundreds of Prete) soldiers, having thrown away | Freneh division on the left of that line gave way in | moment, conditions of pea Onee already, ufcer | Publique cieured the ui roughfares of common inst battery. ‘Th Savannah, and Charles McLean Knox, of covered tite neh, Wilose object was to fall back on Mouzoa, and th Hoh themselves, 1 possible, until the udvanc of MacMaton’s army should have thne to along the Moselle. | agaist cud | | _ Toeitect this an ¢ | f t be os a while the Jew Who conscut to stay and fight for tie , St. O ved and tried to Bwim across, aud | the most iguc Hous Manner, and alwost befor glorious bates of 1813-id- the German | beggars and vagrants, ane while Gio Vigitanoe of the try, tl ‘ r * of Chicago, are at the St. Charles Hotel. yeaa’ in gaining the oer side | hundred men had been Killed or wounded made by 0 been deprived of the iraits of victory. | police contned the lower orders of wantons within a) Ee) Pei rakisacs nie haed atin iia: W.a Sis ob Toetinpana «vin * not afew were drowned in the attempt. companies and battalions for the Belgian frontier, jie Vanquisted Joe Was spared and favored beyond | d umits, the developinent of a system of con- ‘the oa ; ane vf atibcenedieel vine ck Qa a 1" . B. Moore, of Ale- "REINFORCEMENTS. where tuey laid down their arms and declared the:n: | his own expectation, the G n irontiers were | vict transportation, the evacuation of the bagnes at | plain to Cardinal Anton bama, are at the Grand Hotel. ra the war taken by the Ussertatore Romany, und & deputation of Frencit soldiers from diferent regi- Tents in the Papal army, have intimated 10 the edt. 4 Personal Notes. tor and ‘on of ~_ paper, nee hore go oe pu ; Ex-Secretury of the Treasury, Hugh McOuloch, lishing Prussian victorics and laugling at French os to Ba Gefeats sdmmary chastisement Will be initicted on LShetoeaio ailments onan oo ho them. Cardinal Antonelil confessed that he never | bsuking house, et een and pare se wis remy ve it is stated that among the arrivals at watering the a1 complained of im the Osservalore, but he , 5 promised satisfaction, which was soon given in a pester $C STE OE Ls: Ns: ROnAQAe AeRORTe Se <4 severe reprimand to the press censorwho had auth. | Corded at the Liuperial Motel, Wilikamsadpae. Ger orized the articics in question, aud an intimation to | aaay. he establishment of penal ew Culedomla, relieved In the meantime, as the day waxed on, the lead- | selves prisoners of the Belgian troops sent to gi ected, exposed to hew attacks; instead of | the southern seaports and t ng brigades of MacMahon’s army arrived on ie | (he fronues of t luberty of the German reaim we obtatned the | settlements in Guiana and ne eas chethon. ater pe A file engaged. | tality being broken. , weakness of the old Bund. For haifa century | Parts from its hideous population ot lnerated fetous. Unt the risk was too great to hazard the fate of the You will hardly betteve, as L write this, every vile | Kurope has atoned for the sin of diplomacy by an | Jean Valjean no longer iurked me ind doorways, om campaign upon a single battle at so late an hour, | lage, haralet, farm, tavern or other place of réfuge | armed peaccs While the same danger threatens at | Schoolmaster no louger distigared, hig features wict the more so as in MacMahon’s rear there were some | for falles along and within the Belgian frontier ig Present the German people must not rematn silent. | vitriol to bale the gaze of the ue eb Jean bn very unpleasant symptoms that a Prussian army | full of these French soldiers na officers; by far the | ‘he world must Know that sovereign and people are | jean and the Schoolmaster, indeed, were no Lg = was in that direction also, Hetherefore had nothing | greater part of them have not a scratch. In the very | resolved to recover What Was held back from them | ‘permitted to infest the capital at au. ido not say left but to fall back on the forttied place or town | room below the one lam writing ti there are two | in 1sib—a tree, united country, protected at its | thas these relormatory and fpkeane roared called Sedan, which he did, fighting hand to hand | young officers of cavalry, both unwounded, both of | borders. z completely abolished vice and fetaleg ity or cri ied the whole way, ustance of eight miles, A Freneh | whom have made themselves prisoners of war with- In an address to his Majesty we have given fall | in Paris, but I do say that from 1852 downwards or army never retreats tn ordor, and #0, by the Ume | Oul baviug received ascraich, ‘The division which | eXprossivu to these sentiments. May Lue concurs | increase of decency, Of cicaniiness, of decorum, country and prevent its