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6. NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1870.—TRIPLE, SHEET. The New Phase of the European Straggio— | The Situation—Slow Pregvess of the War | Utter Failure ef M. Thiers Mission to The Funeral of Farragut. ‘ @TREET. aition. The pending war in France has been, ever | We learn by « despatch from our’ special | poured almost unceasingly yesterday ee irereer eee x The European war question is now familiar | since Sedan, eminently a war of sieges, and | correspondent that M. Thiers has again met, at | and the announcement that the funeral of JAMES GORDON BENNETT, to every schoolboy. Everybody knows, in- | as such since that unprecedented victory has | St. Petersburg, most utter and complete fail- Admiral Farragut would be postponed in such PROPRIETOR. cluding even the young: American women’s | progressed with the slowness and caution that | ure in his mission. We know how he was ‘an emergency, the funeral took plsce, and was rights women, what the war means and how | usually characterize sieges. At present Metz, | doomed to bitter disappointment, first at Lon- | ® grand tribute to the memory of the distin- All business or news letter and telegraphic | and what the eltuation is to-day. France, | Verdun, Mézitres and Paris are besieged, | don, then at Vienna, and now the same thing | guished dead. The procession was a8 gor despatches must be addressed New Yorx | poor France! beaten almost to death, refuses | while there are no hostile armies of any mag- | is repeated at the Russian capital. His mis-{ geous a pageant as the programme repre- Herat to surrender, because France has no govern- | nitude whatever confronting one another, or | sion there was to convince the Czar of the | sented that it would bo if the weather were ment, no volce, no one to speak for her. The'| likely to confront one another, in the | danger which would menace Russia if the | fine. The President and other members of Letters and packages should be properly | German hordes, like the hosts of Alario and| open field. This and the pending of | Prussian power were further increased by | the general government, the Governor and Tho Abbe McMaster ew France and Reme. The Abbe McMaster, in the last issue of the Freeman's Journal and Catholic Register, of this city, says of the present provisional re- publican government of France that “‘tiam- to rain France ase rppublie;” that “it is not possible ;” that ‘in a fow days wo will hear of thelr overthrow by another mob, ‘with as little right to national respect as they have;” that “France is prostrate ;” that “she has no gov- sealed. Attila of old, prey upon the fair fields of the | peice negotiations must acceunt for the | annexation of French territory ; but he spoke | members of the State government, the Mayor | ernment whatever;” that ‘‘the fools who pre- Rejected communications will not be re- rich and cultivated south, move about at will, | slow and tedions progress which the gigantic | to unwilling ears. The Emperor politely, but | 80d council and members of the city and | tend to rale her arg not respected and are not ‘ on the soil of France feed more than balfa mil- | war bas assumed. Strasbourg fell only after | positively, declined to give an audience to M. | county government, the First and Second divi- | obeyed ;” that “brave as the French are their ~~ lion of men; but because the men who proved | forty-seven days of monotonous leaguer, | Thiers, and Prince Gortachakoff repre- | sions of the National Guard, delegates from | courage avails nothing;” that ‘‘each abortion that calls itself a government of France salutes Voltaire as its patron,” and that ‘France will be trampled in the mud so long ag she lets such wretches assume to rule her.” Now, this, as an inside Catholic view of this French republic, is somewhat important, con- sidering that it is doubtless « faithful reflection of the opinions of the Church leaders in France, Hence, besides her military demoralization resuliing from the enervating influences of a luxurious empire, Catholic France is suffering now from a religious demoralization, resulting from the revival with the republic of ‘liberty, equality and fraternity.” The Abbe McMaster, as a good and loyal Catholic, is equally disgusted with the Italian occupation of Rome. He says that thing was expected after the withdrawal of the French troops; that ‘‘the Piedmontese government ia one utterly lost to good faith and honor ;” that its occupation of Rome was effected through mean devices and upon false pretences; that ‘we have no word whatever from the Holy Father,” and that if he is still in Rome “the probabilities seem to point to his being a prisoner;” that ‘‘the Italian conquerors can easily say, to quiet squeamish consciences, THE DAILY HERALD, pudtshed every day in thé | untrue to Napoleon are afraid to accept the | Metz still holds out against the same harrowing | sented to him the impossibility of recog- year, Four cents per copy. Annual subscription responsibility of defeat and disgrace poor | experience, and Paris, most likely, will hold | nizing in him any official authority and the Price S12. France continues to suffer. Every school boy, | out for many wearisome days to come. It is | inexpediency of the Russian government hold- THE WEEKLY HERALD, every Saturday, @t FIVE | every school girl knows that France began the | said that the French have gained numerous | ing any diplomatic intercourse with him, par- Cuwrs per copy. Annual subscription price:-— war. Every school boy, every school girl | minor successes recently around the city, but | ticularly as his avowed object was to create . knows that France has been defeated. Young | beyond varying the routine somewhat they are | distrust and enmity on the part of Prussia and old, teachers and taught, rich and poor, | not likely to effect the final result. One report | toward friendly Powers. M. Thiers might all the world over, ask themselves the ques- | intimates that the Crown Prince has | well after that entertain and express the opin- see tion, why does not France submit, bow the | been badly defeated at Mount Voalerien, | ion which is attributed to him that France had Any larger number addressed to names of sub- | knee and make the best terms possible? but the details are hardly consistent. j nothing to hope from Russia. acribers @1 50 each. An extra copy will be sent to While France is thus being humbled, while | Indeed, simultaneously with these reports | Thus, in all quarters, every effort made by ‘every club of ten, Twenty copies to one address, | Prnssia, or rather Germany, is adding victory | it is stated that the Prussians are cuntinually'| the republican government of France to bring one year, @25, and any larger number at same price. | to victory, reducing fortress after fortress, and | coming nearer, throwing up works at Bag- | about a cessation of hostilities has been frus- An extra copy will be sent to clubs of twenty. These | making herself perfectly comfortable in French | neux and the terrace of Meudon, directly in | trated, and nothing is now left to the French fates make the WEEKLY HenauD the cheapest pud- | vineyards and French chateaus, the great | front of Forts Vanvres and Issy, on the south. | people but to yield to the terms imposed by the Powers, Russia and Great Britain particu- The organization of the new levies in France | conqueror or to persist in a heroic defence of larly, after some patient watchfulness, have | is going on so inauspiciously that their final | Paris and rise en masse against the invaders. begun to ask themselves the question whether | organization at all becomes a matter of doubt. | The very desperateness of their position may the policy of watchfulness has not lasted | The government has made another call for | yet bring victory to their arms. long enough. In other words, the power of | mobilized guards, the firemen at Tours have the governments of neighboring cities, the members of the honorable societies and the commercial boards of the city, the Grand Army of the Republic, the friends and family of the deceased, the sailors who served under him, the Fire Department and the orphans from the Union School were in the line, intent on doing honor to the noble dead, whether the sun shone or the rain rained. And in addition to all this, as a yet more spontaneous demonstration of the love and respect which the people, without regard to party or politics, feel for the dead hero, the stores and dwellings along the route were draped heavily with mourning, in which ap- peared appropriate mottoes. The procession and the display were so grand and general that the mind wonders what they would have been had the weather proved auspicious. Among the mottoes that were displayed it was noticeable that more than one spoke of Farragut as ‘‘the noblest Roman of them all.” Undoubtedly these are the terms that most fitly represent the character of the dead hero. He and George. H. Thomas were the repre- sentative noble Romans of the army and navy. They possessed the old Roman virtues AMUSEMENTS THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING. ae avustinucs Domaen i ineee fx im Germany has been so augmented that all the | been enrolled, and a few men here and there . ROOTH’S THEATRE, sd ot, berween Sih ana 6tnavs,- | D2ropean Powers, the great and the small | seem to have been placed in fighting condition, Marshal Bazaine, it is said on good autho- Bir Van WINKLE. Matinee at 234, alike, have become afraid; and in spite of | but the enthusiastic and unanimous uprising | Tity, refuses to recognize the republic. If Bazaine’s Position. INWAY. HALL, Fourleenth atreot.-Gxaxp Nirsgon | their caution Russia and Great Britain have | that we expected, and that the provisional | this report be true the situation in France, a ae peas been forced into something like action. Our | government expected, seems to have melted | ad as between France and Prussia, has LIN EDWIN'S THEATRE, 720 Broadway.—Bax Er'> | news despatches regarding the feeling and | away like the snow on the hill. No cheering | become more complicated than ever. If action of Great Britain and Russia explain | masses of sturdy men seem to be rushing to | Bazaine maintains this ground King William Mun Cunt eae nothing, but they suggest much. Russia arms, | the rescue of the capital of France such as | May not find it so difficult after all to treat | of patriotism, dignity and sense of duty to | that he has asked for an Italian guard,” and arms to the teeth; concentrates her forces en | rushed to the rescue of our capital in the memo- with Napoleon. Suppose that Bazaine sur- | such an extent that the jest of the ribald | that “the fact may be that he is a prisoner, Deana cP tines tive “Matinee oa” eee the Baltie, in the Polish provinces, on the | rable spring of 1861. Indeed, it is reported | renders with consent of Napoleon, and sup- | never touched their names or degraded their | not permitted to communicate with the universe personal character. The incidental stories of their lives that will be hereafter and are already told to exemplify their characters are tales that thrill the heart and blanch the cheek with honest enthusiasm—the stories of the statue at Chickamauga and the masthead at of Catholics, otherwise than through the in- spection and revision of his gaolers.” Finally, the Abbe contends that while the Holy Father may be a prisoner he cannot be a subject, and that “religion must have temporal independ- ence in Rome in order that Church and State GRAND OPERA HOUSE, corner of Bighth avenue ana | frontiers of Roumania and on the shores of the | that there is considerable insubordination in | pose, besides, that King William gives Napo- 384 st —Oruna Bourrs—Lx Punit Faust. Matines at 2 | Black Sea, Not since the time of the Crimean | the French armies already raised. Marshal | leon a safe conduct to Metz, would it be diffi- Wo0p's MUSEUM AND MENAGERIE, Broadway, cor- | war has Russia been 80 active in making naval | Leboeuf confesses that he dreaded to tell the | Cult forthe King of Prussia to restore Napo- besa rep every afternoon and evening» | 454 military preparations. People naturally | Emperor how inadequately drilled and | leon? Bazaine has, at least, two hundred NEW YORK STADT THEATRE, 45 Bowery.—Geaway | ack, what does it mean? It is not ether-| equipped the French army was when it was | thousand men on whom he can rely. If Napo- Opmna—Fua Diavouo, f leon from Metz were to make an appeal to the EER sal aM Bg Great Britain. The government has | determined to declare war. How hopelessly PP Naw Yorx-Aanpsoue Jack. been somewhat inactive; but the people—the | unequal to the emergency the French people French people—France, meanwhile, seeing in | Mobile. With these men love of country meant | be not confused in one despotism elsewhere.” FOURTEENTH STREET THEATRE (Theatre Francais) | People, who have always given life to the | prove in their present emergency is something the republic nothing but disorder, and feel- | love of the whole country, untrammelled by It appears, too, from certain despatches we VaLenix, THe BLIND ORPHAN—A Cur ov TEA. British goverament—are loud in dispraise of | he could not have foreseen, or no dread of the ing that Napoleon was backed up by the | State or party lines; duty meant duty to that | have bad from Rome that the Holy Father ia FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE, Twenty-fourtn st.-max | the wait-and-do-nothing policy of the Glad- | Emperor would have silenced him. whole strength of Prussia—is it impossible | whole country, without reference to the pre- | retained in the city against his will. If so, pe eae es ae stone administration. Men old in diplo-| While the whole French nation thus stands | that the peasants, who are Bonapartists | tensions of narrow States to their services; for | however, he will find some way for the Infor- ree ee CONWAY'S PARK THEATRE, Brookia.— | oti) experience, like Sir Henry Bulwer, | paralyzed their dreaded foc is receiving new | almost to a man, would vote for the restora- it is a notable fact and a broad proof of their | mation 7 “iy > ont rcp =e pean ve BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC.-Epwix Forazer | 80d young in political experience, like | acquisitions. Besides the force relieved by the | tion of the empire? All our reliable news | unswerving devotion to country that the two | what then e canni anil We’ exp banaue sits =< Lord Carnarvon—each representative of a | fall of Strasbourg; and which may justly bo | from the interior of France reveals the fact | heroes of our civil war to whom the national | that the good old Pope will counsel resigna- tion to ‘‘fixed facts,” and will give thanks in being relieved of his earthly kingdom, in view of the enlarged liberty he thus gains in labor- ing for his heavenly kingdom and that ‘crown which is not made with hands.” As for the Abbe McMaster, he is, in the blaze of tha nineteenth century, blinded like an owl in the blaze of the sun. He can see nothing beyond his normal twilight of the Middle Ages, mind naturally reverts as the most perfect representatives of Roman dignity and Roman patriotism in our army and navy were natives of Southern States. They are both dead and both laid in Northern tombs, and both are to-day as deoply revered throughout the length and breadth of the land as though they had never passed through the ordeal of hate and bitterness engendered by our civil war. Bee Ey ee HOUS?., 201 Bowery.-Va- | large and powerfal —_class—denounce | considered in the light of reinforcements for | that the peasants soe not rena Mie aamawiee teiistre ieee the inactivity of the government and call | the main army, twenty thousand of the reserve | Tegret the fact while we are compelled to 18M, NXGuO AcTe, qe Matinee st are Pas loudly for a more spirited and forceful foreign | recently left Hombourg for the seat of war, | confess it, SAN FRANCISCO MINSTREL HALL, 636 Broadway. | Policy. The result is that while most men | and now a fresh corps d’armée has crossed the This is one of the difficulties suggested by Nuoxo MInsTRELsY, FaRnogs, BURLESQUES, &c. who understand European questions begin to | Rhine near Fribourg—troups fresh and eager, | Bazaine’s position. But it is not the only KELLY & LEON'S MINSTRELS, No. 806 Broadway.— | think that Russia is about to carry out her | young in war, probably, bat old in discipline. | one. If Bazaine stands by the Emperor Pe ee ee traditional policy in regard to Constantinople |. The scenes in Strasbourg after the surren- | France is not only at war with Germany, but eHiQOLEY'S OFERA HOUSE, Brooklyn.—Nzuno mix. | few doubt that the British government has | der and the proceedings at the surrender are at war with herself. 7 = an — a MmURITAa RERGGER Tex araie been forced to consider whether the time has | fally reported by our special correspondent | and the attitude of the defender of Metz Rink, Third avenue and Siztyhird sires" ™* | not come when, to prevent dangerous com- | with the besieging army. The story is dismal | compels us to look at the possibilities of a NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway,— | Plications, it ought to use its yet powerful in- enough, but it isa story of stubborn heroism | civil war of the most alarming kind. The — = finence to bring this horrid and destructive | and persistent courage that will live as long | legions of France have never been so turned Ald for the Foundlings. If there is any charitable institution in the city more entitled to all the sympathies of the Proposed Addition to the Police Force. The Police Commissioners are disposed to war to anend. As we have no longer any | as the grand old cathedral of Strasbourg | against each other as were the legions of Rome = = os : is add a thousand men to the police force of the a T R I P L E NS) H E E 4 ¢ | good reason to doubt that the prolongation of | stands. site. MUGEN I aaa 08s in the Inst days of the republic, and as was city, thus making the eee: pody three thot stated pedal pati igae canter 3 ———————————————————— the war will be the prolongation of destruc- the fashion under the empire, If Bazaine | sanamen. We think that they should not hesi- | gisters of Mercy. During the first ink of its New York, Saturday, October 1, 1570, tion, the weakening of France, the strength- Nice Rnglish Cabinet Comer stands by Napoleon no one can tell what may tate an hour about making the increase. The | existence ils aclateeecces imei and SS | ening of Germany, the disturbing of the} Ourspecial correspondent in London tele- | happen, necessity appears so urgent that the Commis- | cared for no less than twelve hundred babes, CONTENTS OF TO-DAY’S HERALD. balance of power, the attitude of the great graphs some particulars of the result of the Criminals IN ENGLAND seldom escape dis- | sioners need have no fear that the Legislature | who were laid at the charitable Sisters’ door; Pacs. eee . | Powers is forced upon us as the question of council held yesterday by the English, Cabinet covery and punishment. No sooner is acrime | will not endorse their action. If there be any each poor infant, perhaps, destined to ine 1— Advertisements, the hour. in regard to the course to be pursued in the | . omitted than the officers of the law are 2— Advertisements. @Faris: ‘Total Fatlore of M. Thiers’ Mission to | Tt is undeniable that while neither Russia | °™sting crisis in iat aioe te a placed upon the track of the offender, and Russia; The Czar Refuses to Recognize or been determined, as we are informed, that the though years may elapse, in the end they al- Receive Him; Important Action Determined | Dor Great Britain was unwilling to see im- 4 Upon by the British Cabinet; A Last Ap- perial France humbled, neither of those | S°Verament shall make a forcible and last | ros invariably secure their game. Seven ya for Peace to be Made to Prussia; appeal to Prussia to consent to peace on condi- London bank was rebbed of ele reat Britain Opposed to Dismem- | Powers has any interest in seeing Germany, | |. years ago a London ban! ed of eleven pa 3 Re; argehenty ond ae, under the haughty domination of Prussia, be- ete of the destraction of the French fortresses thousand pounds bya fellow named Jones, and Y A ed a . S ; Baran on Tuesday the Army of, tne Crown | coming too powerful. France under the e rg Bro icagRmE Tigée: hed so well had he laid his plans that he made nee Said to have bee! aten; 5 a i i ad Prisoners and Fifty cannon’ Cape, Bonapartes was ’a dangerous power. France CORED OL NEO EEO TE Murer n nD good his escape with his booty. But the police ture © Herald Special Report of the Sur- mated that England will resort to any warlike of London never forgot his great crime—the measure to enforce that appeal if it be, as it robber’s family was placed under sur- surely will be, rejected. The fortress and city veillance, and when, trusting that time had oh Strasbourg, ones \sanin/ under, the ‘German effaced the recollection of the robbery from flag, will never be remitted to France under the public mind, they ventured, two weeks render aud Condition of Strasbourg. under Napoleon the Third had been gence—The Imperfect Census. upon as the grand bulwark of the North aay system of moral suasion; for King William since, to sail to Canada to meet the guilty A want of authority in the Commissioners at present to increase the number of the force they may safely adopt the proposed course, and trust with confidence to the Legislature for its endorsement. The Commissioners aro very naturally alarmed at the increase of crime, and they see the incapacity of the present police force to stem the current. The public are convinced that the police force is insufficient for the wants of the city. There are not men enough in the force to fur- nish a decent patrol. Many policemen have beats to travel ranging from two to six miles. It is absurd to suppose that the lives and property of citizens can be protected under these circumstances. It is impossible to expect that a policeman can prevent a bur- glary occurring when in the performance of his duty he is compelled to be 8 mile away. We need a thousand additional police in the city, and we hope that the Commissioners will not hesitate to add that number to the present force. neither mother nor father—without a name, without a known lineage, a little human help- less waif, the child of crime or the child of poverty—cast upon the stormy waves of life. But He who could still the storm has provided shelter for these unconscious unfortunates in the haven of charity and mercy which the good Sisters have established. ‘Looking at the sdarker side of events touching the fate of these children one may shudder to think how many of them might have been sacrificed to the mad necessity of infanticide had no asylum like this been open to the guilty or the poverty- stricken mother. This establishment has been bravely sup- ported by the Sisters of Mercy, with the assist- ance of a few friends. What energy, what deep love, what devotion to all that is good and pure in human nature were expended in this effort it is not for us to divine. The results of one year's labor speak volumes. An appeal is now about to be made to the public in behalf of the Foundling Asylum, which we trust will be responded to with the well known liberality of the citizens of New York. It appears that a grand fair is to be opened in November for the benefit of this excellent institution, with a view of complying with the requirements of an appropriation made by the last Legislature, which provided that a grant of one hundred thousand dol- lars would be made in case a like amount could be raised by private subscription, An appeal in behalf of this fair, we understand, is now being made by delegations of ladies from the different Catholic churches through- out the city. Those who donate anything for that purpose will have the satisfaction of knowing that they are assisting one of the noblest and most useful charities in the metropolis. Tae Era or Fravp—Srarruine Pzrrxo- TION OF ForGERs.—The perfection to which criminals have brought their art seems to be on a par with progress in legitimate channels; A forgery was discovered in Wall street yes- terday which for the success of the counter- feited names is ahead of anything on record, and will startle every business man as to the safety which he has been accustomed to con- sider guaranteed in written signatures attached to papers of value. In this case the forged signature was so perfect that, despite irregu- larities in the numbering and general appear- ance of the check, it was certified by the bank on which it purported to be drawn. Subse- quently it was presented to the individual partner of the firm of whose handwriting it was a forgery and pronounced genuine. It was not until the gentleman referred to had been requested to scrutinize it more closely, and had made a deliberate examination of it, that he detected the counterfeit. The account in another column reads like a romance. 4—Parragut: Ob: ies of the Great Admiral; The | j i i sion and the Interment; ‘The President, Mem- | Ithad made Italy a great kingdom. It had ) lc Authorl- | gorely humbled Austria—; lo Ge SecMieens mrtoama ae | eter Dembled Amteasnee 2016 toked cig ae ae toutinse Peed Peeues against French ambition. It was, above all, a Sa oe aaa ad tid tA lass husband and father from whom they had been aes or diay tore CET OnVen tae, ME yd restless Power; and neither Russia nor Great That they shall take who have the power, so long separated, the sleuth hounds of justice Spying Out the Land: Visit of Prominent Eng- | Britain was unwilling to see it shorn of its ae ue aaeeLe aie Ga ane accompanied them. On Thursday there was Hanmen to New York Horse Notes— Yachting: | strength. But so complete a derangement of Pear aes P rf jaeea directness * a happy family meeting in Toronto—the sor- Se cstlie amree copetecazas | he esee Sperm sable wer Srerennto | SOOT chum eckiag oer ce | oe cere eee een ee 6—Eailtoriais: Leading Article on The New Phase effect was not contemplated, was not desired ; see ox at a fs aes ears: nae away in the blissful reunion—when the tender Zriain Taking Paton amusement "an | 804 both Russia and Great Britain have begun } T° Co-pnet nat 0s ane power of it late ally | *02ue wae Fudely interrupted by several un- @ Be ae LAO RIO EG to fear whether New Germany may not become cvachtlprcaly taps vated =k me ly poetical policemen, who took the crestfallen rhe American Naturalization Treaty Ratified | More dangerous to the peace of Europe than think that that vaey pendonl nik 5 rte es ri Jones into custody to answer for his ap- tioal | Toteliigence—Movements of President | France has ever been known to the modern ae ee ved ar oath pap e Sey aS eee usta Notes FRR | world. ‘To check Prussia, however, would | * ection, and lead him to favor the designs |} A Fin Supsgor for discussion among the ss a d f Russia by rejecting all propositions of , i i 8—Onme a8 a Fine crt Anomer, Btartling Case of now be difficult, if not impossible? Austria | Of Russia by rey cling ail propositions of peace. | the woman’s right women is offered in the Blano-Oaptare oi Counterfeiters—Brooklyn | dares not speak. Neither Russia nor Great England has acted a cruelly selfish part in | cage of Mrs. Myra Bardwell, a married woman City News—Hinancial and Commercial ie- | Britain can say to Prussia, “Halt!” Russia | T8974 to its neighbor and late ally; and if its | of Chicago who was refused admission to the Fair—ituesian” Exploration—Marriuges and | remembers the Crimean disaster, when Great | °¥" political and material interests aro now | bar in that city, not because she was 8 woman, eaths, : 7 x B— Advertisements Sh basse hasascicehads Britain shared with France the glory and, as yest port bg si eine ae ae but meaEsgs she was a es ensghborce and See a eke MN doe See i 3 a . which is to come up again before the Supreme Fares—A Shady Murder—New Jersey's Y . | she thinks, shared also the shame; and Kus ssi ; u at Druukard—Sat Shooting Heeident tn akin aot as feats Hiaiines There is | tTuthfully said that ~ angen which the | Court of the United States. There will be a N k—Person ntel ce—Killed on the i ii i is Rall Shipping nintelligenee Advertisements. | now no France to hinder her crossing the English Cabinet now takes will dissatisfy the | good deal of abuse of husbands generally AL—The Unites States Detective Divislon—tne Will | peuth, 19 hinder her marching to Constanti- | Pelligerents and please nobody. among the fair strong-minded over this case, the People—P..shionable Event in Hartford— | pople, to hinder her making the Black Sea, if Tne MIckMEN’s Despotism threatens to be | 2° doubt, yet they must remember that Mrs. Brilliant Wedd: in St. Louls—A Bull Fight if if 2 ‘ i0 be in Kansas ty New York Swinding Cin: | not the Mediterranean, a Russian lake. As | very oppressive upon the people. The late | MyT@ herself, devotedly fond as she is of the ; British Honduras—The Census In Mas- A * ; ; Cea had sate OF Moraie wa tlt: | there is no France, there is no Prussia; | resolution of tho Milkmen’s Union decrees that | !9¥» must be more fond of her husband, or else Gounty—Acoident at ihe Kennebec Pie for Prussia’s hands are full, if she is not actu- | the price of milk from this day forth to the in the city of Chicago she could have obtained master Needed—Advertisements. ally friendly to the enterprise. As there is no | consumer shall be twelve cents a quart instead | ® divorce, and then there could have been no sn SR Se France and no Prussia to hinder Russia, | of the present price of ten cents. When we | Mection to her practice of law. Tux Cases or YELLOW Fever on Gov- | neither is there any Austria, for Austria could | consider that the cost of the article in Orange ernor’s Island have been quarantined by Dr. | be easily bought over. For the present Rus- | county is about three centsa quart, and the Carnochan, and the city is thus probably ren- | Sia might give Austria the mouths of the Dan- | expense of transit to the city about one cent, dered sate for the present from any infection | Ube. But Great Britain cannot consent to | the difference between six cents to the whole- from that source. any such arrangement. She cannot, she will | sale dealer and twelve cents to the consumer Sergereet re not, have Russia in Constantinople. She can-| is a pretty handsome profit. Taking into Honor To GENERAL SPINNER.—One of the Mr. Twexp, according to the Chicago | not, she will not, have so powerful a rivalin | account the addition of water at the rate of clerks of the United States Treasurer at Wash- Tribune, would not thank any man who is | the Mediteranean Sea, Not even the absolute | about a quart to the gallon, which the milkman | ington confessed yesterday that he had embez- worth five hundred dollars to vote for him | oontrol of Egypt aud the unquestioned mas- | finds convenient at every neighboring pump, | zled seven thousand dollars of public funds who does not vote early and often and get | tery of the great highway to India will constrain | the price which our citizens will have to pay | which passed through his hands. General drunk regularly once a week. This is a Chi- | her to consent to the enthronement of Russia | under the new tariff is about fourteen to six- Spinner, upon hearing of the defalcation, with- cago opinion, but they are very fast, and loose, | in the city of Constantine. British statesmen | teen cents a quart for the pure article delivered eae wpeianiie Hesltatibinieold dome vf his own Tne Lirtte Onto GamEooox, Lew Camp- bell, seems to be making headway over his opponent for first Congressional honors—Gen- eral Schenck. Sporrep Tart is a stanch advocate of peace. After seeing a military parade on Broadway, there was ‘‘no more fight in him.” As with Red Cloud, his mission to the East was a stunner, and a great hit for the Quakers. Watt Strext will be less jubilant after reading our Washington correspondence this morning. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has decided that the tax on brokers’ sales is not repealed by the law of July last, and our Wall street financiers will continue to Broxen at Last—The long drought, by the regular, dona fide, old-fashioned, centennial equinoctial nor’easter, which began to thicken on Thursday evening, and which opened in the good old style during the forenoon of yester- day. We hail this old-fashioned storm as the too, in Chicago. are notyet ripe for arevolution so sweeping. | at the door. Have the public'no remedy for | ponds and replaced the amount stolen, he hold- wane s — portion of their gains to fill | ..aing of the dry season and the beginning of Tar Norrneast Srorm.—After the drought | What, therefore, isto be expected from the | this extortion? = ing himself individually responsible for any | © "°° °9™® exchequer. a plentiful watering of the dry land suffering come the freshets, and a heavy ono is re- | British government in the premises? Not} ie pearn oF A Hero.—Among those | deficit in his department. This is the first case ported in Virginia. Lynchburg is suffering | Ws but skilfal, vigorous, forceful diplomacy. | ye at Metz lately was the famous Baron | of fraud in the Treasurer's office under General and Richmond is threatened. After the rain | Bussia is no longer disposed to let her oppor- Henri de Riviere, who made a sensation in this | Spinner’s administration, and his promptness of yesterday, which prevailed South ond tunity slip. Great Britain can no longer afford country some ten years ago by marrying a not only in securing the government against North, we may expect to hear of immense to wait. Intervention, therefore, of such a rich Mobile widow, and subsequently in being loss, but in setting the precedent of individual freshets in our own rural districts, where they | kind as shall make an end of this war, or a prosecuted for the recovery of certain moneys .| liability, deserves the highest praise in these from the long drought in both hemispheres. The storm was a wet blanket in the city upon the Farragut funeral proceedings ; but this is a small matter compared with the welcome and much wanted rain to the country. ——- Boozy rrom Dopzy.—The French army which moved up to Sedan to relieve Bazaine at Metz actually halted at Douzy to give a ball to | number of young ladies who had come to see them from Sedan. Thus the sec- ond empire, which came dancing into power, ; Tne Nationat Luxury.—It is compute® have been suffering so much for water. ouee the whole of Europe, are the | +. nis city by a rich French lady with whom | days of official dishonesty. danced to lke fal, tt fol from too mech |g. Nan TO te eee New York Pourcrans iN THe West.— —<—$— he had been travelling ond flourishing in both | Taq, RewaRD oF Ta THOUSAND Tuarens | 20cing. woman or baby, costs the United States gov- hemispheres like an East Indian nabob. Let this be said of him, however, that if he lived the life of ‘‘a gay Lothario” he died the death of a hero. offered by the little German town of Osterode to the person who should capture Louis Napo- We learn that Commissioner Tweed, accom- Tne Race BETWEEN THE CAMBRIA AND THE panied by » number of choice spirits, passed | Maaio did not come off yesterday, owing to throngh Rochester a day or two ago on Pall- | the non-appearance of the stakeboat, which leon has, since the imperial surrender, man’s pslace car Mayflower, en route for | was also to carry the judges. With the free STEGER PA resulted in raising the question, to whom does Omahs and a market, on “‘pleasure extur- | wind blowing outside the harbor the race SzoreTaky Bourwkit has determined to | the money belong? It belongs to ‘Old Fritz,” sion.” Ex-Governor Seymour is out in that | would have been an especially exciting one. | commence calling in the three per cont certifi- | and the authorities of Osterode are quibbling ection already, having felt the way. It has been postponed until Monday. Gates about the lat of November, in raising @ doubt about it, VALLANDIGHAM Bgiiioose.—Vallandigham adopts the modern conventional etiquette and says “Schenck lies and knows he lies” when he makes a certain assertion. Schenck will have to bring out that Vienns blunderbuss which shoots backward if he expects to gat equare with the bellicose “Wal.” ernment three hundred and fifty dollars a year. But we must trifle away our loose change on some amiable folly, and as Joha Brown had a little Indian why should Uncle Sam deny himself a similar pet? It is pleasant to know that the taxes go for nothing worse than cultivating Indiana.