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OE LEILA OOOO: NEW on heh the cunapset ta turer ot Rusia aati ye pe rae EUROPE. ‘harbor Greaty Made Between Russia and Prussia | Mrscats,tee evan gi ite, wrementioned roy of 9 be entruste: During the French War. ‘with mating the necessary changes in the boundaries, Majesty isthe Treaty of 1860 jenty tn the Be aren wold to aruned parietvaioon te eifecoccons lo te rsate Russia ia the Bast with '& body of troope. fully eaual tothe of army. ARt. 11 arranges that after the conquest of Turkey both Powers will concluie & new treaty wud rereresee (108 par. on. The Attack on the Dublin Police Pre- meditated by the Mob, ip ANt, 12 declaren the oresent treaty been entered 10 voluntarily, and that D: e themse OE eb ch Gracin eh RT it treaty, in all its prghende tno treaty doncluvied mm 1856 between Itussia wad this treaty im declared nail and votd GAMBETTA SUMMONED TO ACTION j tresty: wien io tate Sees teal thy easteot ines ta Berlin. THE PROVISIONS for faving Russia an immense maritime foothold tn the Mediterranean, on the present route of Ang'o- The Bonapartes and the Peas- try of France otal fal int ai ul Waa Supt a eaten beyond the limits of the iu r beg of But why did all-thiy fai? Austria, of course, did Hof intervene; vut could not these shrewd dividers of em 3 flud any reason equally good for cuttin; her up’ No doudt they could have dove Poke meantime Russia, finding that alliances with 1S- sia have veryempty resuits for all but Prussia, haa resolved to look pat poe pate and Bismarck is ‘eaties elsewhere, ‘Te German steamship Main, Captain Oterndorp, | HVE” to making treat from Bremen and Southampton, arrived at this port GERMANY. THE EMPERORS AT SALZBURG. to have been entered | Indian commerce, and those for “conquests tn the | yesterday bringing two days Jater maiis than those brought py the China, Asis stated by the semi-oMicial Prussian (Cross) Mazetle that’ the question of the temporal power formed no portion of the late Gastein discassions, and that it is wo be treated as ap afar afiecting Italy alone. According to the Patrie, it has been decided to hold the usual exiibiuon of painting and sculpture al the Paiais de l’industrie, in Paris, on the 1st of next April. ‘The work of restoration at Worcester Cathedral ts veing carried forward rapidly, and promises results which will greatly enlance the internal beauty of Buiser William to the Peeple. The German journals publish the following pro- clamation of Mis Majesty the German Emperor:— | From alt parts of Germany, up to the present moment, I have received telegrams announcing the ! ; Where offered to our soldiers who have recently | Fetorned to their homes, In addition to the | proud consciousness of having contributed to the greatuess and the unity of Ger- | many, each of these warriors will ft per tits warm reception @ manifestation of that atitude which his country owes him and a thank- far recognition of bis ardaous perseverance and a mirable services—services whose immense signitl- | cance will be ever warmly appreciated, as is proved | cordiat and Joyous welcome that has peen every- | that fine old ecclesiastical pile. | by the numerous congratulations I have recclved It ie stated by the Riforma that the Italian Par- | from every posajble quarter on the anniversaries of Mament will not assemble in Rome until the end of ; thegiorious days of Gravelotte and Sedan. With | my hearty thanks for these enthusiastic congratula- November or the commencement of December. | {ious I tecl Impelied vo expreas my deep gratitica- ‘The building Jo which the members are to meet re- | tion at the fe: reception that has Dee aiyen vo | our brave troops. ‘quires 80 much alteration that it will be Impossibie, | OUr Dri ¢ 4 Zrpoemes, to got lt reedy by an‘ceniar date. separ fat toad The London 7imes says that it must have done y a ‘The Pope’s heart good to see how freely nis late sub- AUSTRIA AND GERMANY. jects enjoyed us jubilee. The 23a of August was Roe a, the second celebration of that auspicious occur- | The Meeting of the Emperors at Salzburg. Teuce, and there is to be yet another, for there seems rom the Basten Budget) to have been some miscalculation as to the days of | Tmportant as the agreement is it is far from belng St Peter, and the Pope inust contrive to live on to { of the nature of an mternational treaty. A treaty -November before he will have reachea the reai end , W4% not contemplated on either side, ‘ofthe perioa assigned by tradition to tne reign of | We two Ministers was merely to examine whether ‘she first Pope-Kmg in Rome, and in what manner the personal rapprochement The Pal! Kall Gazette learns from Egyptthat the ; etWern the representatives of the two dynasties Viecroy 1s becoming more and more displeased with | Which rule in Central Europe coald be brought nto huis American friends, and it is rumored that they j harmony with the interests of their respective ate ailtobe sent away with a gratuity of some | States and taken advantage of for the promotion of mouths’ pay. The Turkish oMcers are jealous of | Uropean peace. {t 18 creditable to these two shem, and Kastm Pacha manages to pooh-pooh ' statesmen that they perceive with equal sagacity every improvement which they suggest, Mercha , and zeal the great advantages which the Austro- ‘Warké, the Abyssiniaa Envoy, is supposed to be sta ; J!Unxarian and German empires would derive fro | ’ ac conceried pelicy, ‘fhe klea which mspired the at Jiddah, ewatting instructions from Prince Kaisa. The Liverpool Courier of Soptenber 6 sayvs:— “A case of typical Asiatic cholera ts statea to have | eoccuriet at Walton on-the-Hill, near Liverpool, a statement to this effect being made at the meeung preseut agreement was the same as that which ori- inated 1k the great polteal manifestation of last ember—that, namely, of determiniug the rela- tions between the two empires exclusively by their ; bational interests, now ‘that viel old dynastic ; Policy has been given up, Both Aiunisters must have | thas the most pressing and important interest of their respective States was to consolidate them- ol the Local Board last might. ‘The case 1s that of | an old soldier recently returned from India, but he | selvae as nome, and Pe gar esr tg pay ‘8 how considered out of danger. We mention the ; Cousider forcign questivas in so far as it might bes come necessary wutualy to provide agains: any maticr simply to caution the public agatost giving coniingencies that might hinder their essentially implicit credenee to the statement. Tne case has | Lita eek. kta Gales of the agreement was ot apparently been verified as one of Astatic cho- | S%cly defeuce, and the Gastcin programme cannot ‘a but be received wita sympathy in ali qaarters where sera. But even in the worst eventuality—the ar- | similar objecis are pursued. It 18 not surprising, rival of Asiatic cholera—there ts no cause for alarm, | ther. some bat an ad ra = express her oo ‘Me disease has been disarmed of half its terrors | CUrrence In the leading Idea of the Gasiein confer- ences. England, on the otner hand, who usually by samiarysclence and 1t is satisfactory to koow | tases the imsative 1a ail steps wuere the malate ‘tat Liverpoo! and the neighboring districts are well | Lauve Of peace Is concéraed, was WIThe! remained prepared to cope with the enemy. ‘the water is | SeDl. et that the moral mnion of two abundant and clean, the seworaze complete, and | Sided solution of European questions 13 lookea upon the appliances of the local authorities ample and | with disfavor in some quatiers, there are other mat. ready at hang” ters, Such as the socialist movement, whose «i Onthe afternoowof the 3th witimo anacctacnt | fm # 2 ant Russia especialy: jadaing: by s sold and Russia especially, judging by occurred in the Scheldt, at Antwerp, whic was | precautions taken against sociale ucariy proving fatal to several persous. It appears , mL Must he) Saihy Basie cube sie re that a party of twelve persons (seven of whom were | to tie Vienna Cabinet as a mediator between Aus ladies) put of ma small boat, accompanied by two. tia. “<4 pene iu on el he consesmons boatmen, to visit Her Majesty’s yacht Vicioria ana | Mie sh pert be Bony oy si sith reer | Ey fact. Albert, lying in the roads. They succceded in get- eat tas Nom as? ‘ing alongside, when a@ heavy swell, caused by a | passing steamer, occasionea a fright among tne wecupants of the boat and it was capsized, the i ‘i whole of them being thrown into the river, a | Prince Napoleon Proposes to Tell tho ‘Trnts. heavy tide running at the time. The accident being | The Gaulois publishes a pa e : observed simuitaneously from the deck of the United wie ilaenirec i iieghs pestn aloe tive-buty ie States irigate Juniata aud Hor Majesty's yacnt, “La Vérit: & mes Caiomniateurs.’’ In 15 the Prince, Licutenant Harry Rawson and Mr. J. Alien, with | et explaining his reasons for mecting tne atvacks several satior, Immediately plunged overboard ang | ‘Hat have becn made upon him, notably by M. Jules aller great digiculty succeeded in resening five | FAYFe tM the Arsomnbly, proceeds to meet two ladiex, who were nearly exhausted m getting into | the boat which came alongside. Oa board the | ¥8Ts A " United States frigate the Ifevoat nad been got | M8 the enemy. With respect to the iret ready; before it could. be launched an officer ana | Chars he says that in Juue, 1870, being several of the crew leaped from tye bowsprit into ous of becoming better acquainted with Earope C1 ¢ - | and of escaping from “sterile agitations ana politi- she water and sncecedet with their gallant Britisn | Tal anuigacs,” he obiainod the Emperor's permis« ecempanions in rescuing the remawuing persons from | sion to ieave France, Which he did without tie least Qn almost certain death. { noi any impending danger. Tie first inti- RUSSIA A ‘To bran recent events any p ism must be Welcome, ce jsiamarck has offered his services | and the Marechal des Logis Bordelais, of the repub- FRANCE, such Was conveyed to him by a teregram which he received at Bergen, in Norway, on the 8th of duly, Woieh ran Uns:—“Situation’ very deli« ~ ; Gale as relates to the eae Incident, put nollag new yel, Saw M, Olivier (his morning. who Ap Exirnordinary Disclosare—Trenty Binde | requests Your imperial Highness to Keep ‘eienin at Versaiiles Between” Prussian and Russia | reach of the wiegrapb, and will send despatch if Daring the Siege of Paris—Division of Aus~ | Rocessaty.” oo eam ly he rocelved at roe 2 e fol 2» as tia and Turkey. 2 Prince of Prussia withdraws his GERMANY VIBNNA, Sept, 6, 1871. ‘Nothing was better accepted in dipiomatic circies, | @uring 4 certain part of the war between France and Germaiy, than the common opinion thar we m the Caxmber are for very obvious entente cordiaie between ustia w that x ama Prussia was based on a defimte un- hestttatt @erstanding of some sort in regard to the mutual support tha: these Powers woulda extend ~ % each other m ceriam contingencies. Hxactiy What were the points of their understanding, how far they mutually agreed to cover one another, and precisely what rewaid Russia was to get for the very great service she did In maintaining tne pas- fled an active sive atutude that prevented the intervention | offered him the condnet o: an e of any otter power, and eapectally wheter ene ae ne ace We alliance contemplated tuvare possibibues, ‘and “ minacted all his Was matter of very earnest surmise 1m Lon- | by the advice of iis ton, Vienna, Constantinople and Brussels through | form part of the expedition under. the command the winter, Bat the feara of those wao had most | of Adnural Houet Wal 2 xe Prince jore- reason to be alarmed scarcely stimulate their | SAW ‘iilicuities aoe to from a divided mMmaginations to the real programme as it appears | Coan nig tan ¢ in the 1 Ww meet which wer by tie Cabines aad OUTLINE ‘ given beiow, which has first seen the Ught in Constantinople. It appears that it was deter- mined what troops Russia should put in the field and how she should use her Fleet, | ar nd that the occasion for giving active support | should be the armed intervention of Austria 11 | will be remembered that Englaad was then no longer in the game as a possible danger. Russia | had flappeu her in the face on the Black Sea ques- Yon, and shut her up. Thiers had fallea to secure | the co-operation of Italy, but Austria might still have made ber arrangemenis with France tor one more reconstruction of Germany, and the mare) of 0,000 men through the Erzegevrige on Berlin, with no troops but the Jandwehr at home tn Prussia, pre- sented @ temptation tiat Bismarck did not believe | Viepna could resist. Henee | THE ARRANGEMENT was made that “in case of war between end Austria” Russia shoula come to the rescue, and | the two conquerors once in would only make peace on terms almeat as terrible to Ausiria as ihose ane once assisied iu makaug fur Polaud. dhe collowing are ue MAIN POINTS OF THR TREATY, ARTICUED. Their Majesties the Ismperor of all the gis and the Emperor of Germaay, King pf Prise | x1 i fos pier at Sonata‘ esac a aon |." ul the portion of if trowps, and of dette Py orone aud found that it was - the numb regain | an 1 Ang the number and crs f war vess@ia, which they pro- possible in twenty-lour liours to induce ite 11 eof Phi conver co Present Westy, wud wil) have The meen ene aa tke | Lialy to act against vielorious Prassia, expecially as aa it ik formed gn easential poruion of the trea, | tue RegOUsOus included Vienna as weil as Kor 7G, The Generatissins and Comin, rot fhe united | enc Aiter qeong a despateh from the French dcoope wil be named & tue proper time and al tHe proper | Atubarsador wt Florence to prove Uhat the inistry m our upderManding | in Paris were aware Of this mission, and a telegram iar as speed- ly mmmediately xtaies That he st. vas om ine uIst. u the chemy by accepting 8 thal on iis return he and tie Emperor tion to land ash whic at 1 | & mission ty Italy, organization, bat the Kinp Minisiers placed the naval fH t to the fron- order wag vision Pri ters of the Army of poleon 10 at of L very pro: “v t, jeavar in beter Bited for a arselt. Hist set out at once for . letter. si Impression Was one of aston My argent desire was U with the arany and the Yielding to 1¢ Prince at last accepted Impekor obser Hig, “ou Will only tb Ic ine. fans are ay retires upon Parts by the st it will be before Paris, proba- spall detiy tsive battle, ‘and hy uu Wil! be ba Priuge deciines to aad = instruc. thay he reached rejom | northern fortresse jo on the piace, ‘The nomination will proceca ir. Of the high contracting parties, Any. 7, Uf, in future, a Gisacreement how'd arise beteveen | J2OM General Trou, dated \ugust 25, stating that Pt. BGS EL Winch the penetel wena peewee” | she position of adairs had ‘rather wnproved, the ebed aiid a war should foui0w, th t Hajeot ce staies (hat on th h, lea that’ the and Ewperor of’ Germany, Kirg ror aad (he arm ines incase their troops should couguer= wut he lye pa long peace only ou the following ex): pire of Atistyya renon favor uf ihe rights and e'nswne to the territorie and Siienia anil the Duchy of Salz\ ur Fenounoes in favor of Russel # conitons :~-1. The tele. man empire ait f Bobemia, Mora | geatn 10 the bimperor: ~ | ot think I ehall be able to ind ui) cironrawances cl are Fevased 1 vention ‘ the atorementioned t pomegesion tor a! art he Move 1 has oiered but our Maycaly Ww give the one- | SCG | | tected conformably with the law, orders that the | pphlet which it states | ‘oi | palace; ihere wer In repiy to | porftive orders; Mere but three possi ther BP yoy iE renin t do net ar ee byte action We you thing Ioan bei many way uscful with you. To this despatch the Emperor telegraphed:— _Cursn, August 27, 1870. } 7 Tonsteosirod pout eapelehes, Nothing new bere, Tosa ¥ Our ere, you to remaid where you ere, and to conflaue’ the ‘Degotia- | ion. “1 will write to Paris that you shali be defended in case you are attacked. Notwithstanding the anxiety caused the im- | portant movements in progress Prince Napoleon | Writes:— Fearing to thwart the views of the Emperor iting Italy, for that Power taight possibly nave seoderel te vital service if the fortune of War had. not gone Tatally against 1 obeyed the Em- | ta or if Mt had beon simply uncertain | pekor, Sedan camo, abd thea the w ‘of the self- styled Government of National Defence, I left Italy for ‘ Swhamaeed, previously writing this letter to the Em. Prot Bopt. 4, 1270. Siex:—I have been informed of tie petty and of ur captivity. My devotion, my duty, my course, ask to to rejoin you, especially now that ail de- | fence of the country has become impossible to me since the events at Paris, ‘Yo this the Emperor replied:— . WILnELMSHOmP, 17, 1570, Mx Dnan. Covsie:—I am very sensible at the offer you make to hare iy captivity, butT desire to remain aloue with the few persons who bave followed have even j requested the E:press not to join me here. I hope we shall pen cach other again in pappler times. and th the meautime 1 re f allies of the Prasmans yr ‘overturned our aynasty under the pretext of better defending themselves, A mov, j blinded by despair and deception, allowed itseit to be led ye | hateful group of “ambitious ‘intrigners, who set the | frightful example of anarchy’ In. the presence of the invader. Tesources Femaiaing to France were scattered; the res! which th heroism of some soldiers avd some d'stingutshed had not suffered to. render successful had pifect than to entend vevadtation, and to inake: the full of the nation more eanguinary an roround, Our une more happy country ature the spectacte of legree af abase- | moat'to which = feat poopie may descend when in the face of my it finds in Hs leaders only fmpotence, cuvy, | gre Rg, hatred and all’ ert | padsions uit if mT i doubts as to | 18 Feception ecisive as they are--wonld ‘mei adiressing an At. | sembly — which lories in being composed of our enemies, and while a tirade against the Emperor or his family in a certain means of obtaining applause. from. the 1 sans of the white fiag or the adepta ot the re: one. | But radvress myeelt to all my fellow citizens, to that gener ‘ous and loyal people who in the end never forgive those who | have abandoned thelr to that | people who have alway to that je whom our foos consnit by | a plebiscite, pecaaze It known that pariiamentary intrigues, calumnies, factions, combinations, | all would be poweriess, as hey, were on the oceations of thé plabiecites of 18W), 1804, 1815, 1648, 1851 and 1870, T address tmyself to that people who may be mis ed and deceived for = time, but who agu.a awaken, aud, seeing the servile drivel- fore’ ieAidtes) who govern them, will recall in their hearts the single name of this century which, despite the faults and misfortunes of thoae who bear it, is ‘at once a principle of authority and a democratic guarantee. I await with cont dence the Judgment of that people. Trial of the Petroleuses—Scenes Court—Detence ef thy Women—A S in the cicr's Plea for Mercy to the Miscrable Wreiches— | Tho Judgwent of the Courts Death, Hard Labor and Close Confue meat. Panis, Sept. 5, 1871. ‘Those who have watched the tedious, dreary | trials of the chiefs of the Commune, although the | ' brisk “go-ahead”? manner of tné@ President of the ‘The task of | Fourth Consefl de Guerre had at an early stage of | the proceedings prepared them for an early termt- nation of the afuire des pdtroleuses, were totally unprepared for the electric rapidity with which the wretched creatures have been found guiity and con- demned—the women Réiffe, Su¢tens and Marcnais | to death, Papavoine to hard labor for Ife and Bocquin | to ten years’ réciusion. | When the Court opened tms morning the Preal- dent, referriaz te the absence of the advocates for the defence, read the following ordonnance:—Con- sidering that Maitres Marchand aud Angé advocates appointed to defend two of the accused, neglect do- sence, there was ground for referring the case im- mediately to M. le Batonnier de l’Ordre des Avocats, Considering that the advocates by profession neglect acting as défensew's @ogies, the President | orders, conformanly with the articles 105 and 110 of the Code of Military Justice, tnat catl pe made for d¢- Jenseur:, and consequently appoints M. Gainez, Licu- | tenant, and M, Bordelas, Maréchal des Logis, to re- place the advocates qui sont défaut, Considering that these defenders, named yesterday evening, have been able—tirstly, to study the dossici; secondly, to 1n- | terview the accused; thirdly, to demand from Maitres Fiuroux end Haussman, the provisional deienders, the results of yesterday's audience; fourthly, that there 1s uo opposition ou the part of the devence, nor from the Mintstére Public, the President, regarding the defence as sufficiently pro- debates shall coatinue, On the beneb for the de- fence Lieuienaut Guinez, of the Fightieth regiment, | case of a prisoner is surely as reprehensible as that { of a doctor who may refnse to visit a sick patient. | CLOSING TRSTIIONY. ‘The first wiincas called this moraing was a wine ! geller im une Rue Solferino. He did not know the | acensed besore the 22d of May; he recognized the girls Réuite, Suctens and Papavoine pertectiy; tiey | eat at bis house and attended the wounded; he be- | | Neved that he had also seen the woman bocqnin, | but Was not positive as to her identity; he saw the } Others on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; the arges:—First, Uhat he had provoked tne late , itl Retifie hae a chassepot; the 135th battalion pil- | and, second, that he had avoided meet. | laged the second aud third floors of his house; he | | haathe women arrested; he had scen them with | the isurgents; he did not believe they had taken | Partin the inccadiarism; tae accused pulaged the Legion Witouncur, (Wher the witness scid unis tne | risoners iaugbed ironically and shrugged wetr ; shoulders.) The witness said that iad them ar- rested, ior he was afraid of thet; they were not armed; he had nut seen the patrol; they knew they would bura tie place; the gir! Reuffe came to his | house wien tue Versatilais made ine attack; sie , was accompanied by a aandsome young man, ‘The AccuseD—1 never denied that ‘The Witness conitiued hus statement—He had not | seen Lie girl Rovide pillage Uie. Legion a’ Houneur, ' but he veleved he had seen ber-with some of t | property, which she carried to No, 4, an uninhabited house, She carried a ride on her shoulder. \ghea the troops eniered she hid the rifle and herseif also, ‘Tne wife of Rochaix, the employé at the Legiv @Houneur, who was exammed yesteruay, was tien called. She at once recognized the jive ‘prisoners; | sue nad not knowa them velore the 2d, 23a and 24th; On the Monday morning, at three she Was uwWakcued by a tremendous noise; the federal ' battations were returning; “General £ndes,” a | the witness, had barra des erecied in front of the thr al had ries sinz (15 Dow hier 2ross their should- 1 j ers; on Kity and Tues saw ine five accused; one of them to fetch brandy irom the Tue 3 aid not see her again; the others i a middle of tie bariicades with the federal. | them m my windows encer the Sotey and de une, Lcould not leara what t they ¢ Jin the Legion @iouneur. ¢ own Knowledge the Women aid inOt Say so, old us that the sounding of a bugle would give the signal jor bu houses. On Monday morning | saw six given to cach exvan: per’ firing the place, but saw nothing given lo the women, ‘The President a admitted ‘fae prisone the; ceived ten franc”, replied, “Yes, but if was at four had nor then commeuced.” fhe Witness continued—[ saw tany © peiroleum on Monday morning rolled by fe: beiore the Louse i | all the preparati powder fitteen da Réufle two or tir day; the secused 45 the Wor previousiy: I 0 times on the Mond were calied. Knew the giri Marchass, at the time of the Pra | Militatre wit ¢ : bio Who had lived fans: sue left for name 7 y aso itved ved with ger of the eé whore the girl lived, Was recalled: he rememlyered that she home on the Sunday. } HE GOVERNM Es | captain Joueune, the Connais | Ment, tuen adaressed the Con | pelga against civilization commences on the 18th of last Marea, by peopte who neither beheve in God | nor the eovntry- as proclaimed by one of them, | Jules Yailes—nas brought 1 forgetful of the most sa in a large number, who apparentiy t trum of their ative du Gouverne- hie hovibie cam- t, ¥ eveatnires, ‘oppro: rd splendid ri'e of Woman In sue wife 18 he Object of OUT aifections sudo { when occupying herseli entirely with her | Is its guide and protectvess, Tier inp ad useful | influence is felt by all of dese j fined to suffer, “is maint her m the path of soci = dnues, But when she deserts this holy mission her influence changes character, and gue is no niore tian an evil | genius. Sne bec a moral monstrosity. Then woman 1s more dangerons than the most dangerous man. She drags lum with ner; she "§ breast all that remains of praisew Snes, | ditetory furnishes us with the ti tr col mses Of tie cinbs and the w served the hame of ‘furtes ol the guillotine’ hor | fiew tne world, Can on , | species has propagi | Iatality in ISTL do we. re hefore you are the dau, 1793, «It all of if all were to com . unsung hat Anone these them, vera’ + we cond YURK HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, i je! 2 1871—TKIPLE SHERY. Woman—I reproach myself for giving them the | revolt to sterile tion, from Paris to Versatiles. | oot will a = cannot invoke I pies god "3 Loner minds claim the benefit of popular imstruction, | It is in vain that they endeavor to do without you Among the accused as, governesses, Taey Coad and attempt to constitate a definitive government gentiemen, pretend that they know not the dilfer- | without raat consent, Itis in vain that they at ence between good and evil. See to what Jead | tempt to dishonor you by calling youa ‘vile muiti- these dangerous theories—t! emancipation of | tude’ and ‘rurais,”’ and a‘irming that you go to the po they not, in order to tempt the miserable creatures, made the most incredible chimeras to sparkle be- fore their eyes? They have spoken of women advo. { Cates, women Dept women ra of) armies, Such ol ions appear like dreams. | exaggerations have sprung from writti | of which women—some of them celebrated—were | | tne authors. All these professors, these sposties of disorder, took possession of the Rappel, the Marseitiaixe and the <Afranche of M. Pascal Groasset; they opened a school from which have ap- peared ali these heroines of immorality, robbery and incendiarism. Some, from the pulpit of our | churches, have substituted for the Word of the Gos- pel the propaganda of crime. Others, apbepr | the purity of chuidhood, have usurped in the schools | the venerated function of Sisters of Charity. The | woman Michel, a governess, who will Se before | You, transioried the Church St. ito & Fevo- luuonary club. she retailed to apis trangest maxims and repiaced for we poor littie | beings tne canticles of the Virgin by revolutionary ongs, ‘the Commissaire da Government tien a‘t- dressed the Qourt, more especially with respect to the charges agamst the prisoners, and laid particu. lar siress OM thelr confession that at the last mo- Ment they hail received money. TH DENCE OF THE PETROLEUSES, The Advocate Fluroux then spoke in defence of ; the woman iivtifle, He declared that on opening his brief he searched in vain for an insurgeat, and had } found only » woman. protected by the neutrality of | the flag of Geneva. He expected to Ond un incen- ; diary and a petroleuse, but he coud discover neither fire nor petroleum. voting urn driven by pees and gendarmes, They fear you, for you are France, the France, that works, aud prays, and fights; France labori ve. hteving and patriotic; the France, in short, that will speedily arise from tts ruins more valiant and more orious than ever, because it is the France that de- Spairs neither of itself nor of God. Who dare brave you? They drove away your municipal councillors; you have established them once more. ‘ihey dis persed your Conseils G’n¢raux; you are about to re- establish them. Arise, then, peasantry! ‘Co work! A few more efforts nud France will be saved by you alone, Electors, in the day of social danger, when very thing crambies around us, when the holy ideas of family authority and religion are troduen under foot, when revolution crushes and grinds on all sides, when the bands of the Internationale openly Preach theft, when the horizon, darkening more and more, 1s fllumined only by the sinister flashes of flaming houses, it becomes necessary for you to close up your ranks, to defend yourselves: it be comes necessary for you to put at your head men whom no will ‘daunt in the pursuit of their purpose of securing your poiitical rigits, defendiag your property aud protecting your existence.” IRELAND. The Dublin Riote=The Attask on the Police _Premeditated—Kesults of Official Keily—The Mob Dave Their Revenge. Dunwiy, Sept. 5, 1371. The scene of last Sunday's riois presented to-day ie Te Seema ancy’ freee aay wee coat webedicn ‘The New Gorman Proviners, . Count Bismarck-Bohien, a relative of the Chance!- , 10F, has, tt18 known, been replaced as Governor of | Alsace aud Lorraine by Herr Von Moller. Speaking of the duties ‘before the new Governor, ine Stras- ‘ burg correspondent of the Fruniyurier sertuug wriies:—‘It is, indeed, a dimou post that term | Von Miller undertakes: dimMeutt, because im the or- ganization of Alsace and Lorraine almost everysmmg ¢ still remains to be done; dificult especiatiy, because the temper of the population 1s more embiti ever, A remarkable fact! A whole vei sians are in our provinces, and yet is notnngor almost uothing, organized; a@ whue year iney ove cupy our villages and towns, and yet have ther ned no atiection, They have annexed ihe land, taken the towns and tresses, bat we hearts and minds— these they have not been able to conquer. On the coutrary, the jechas toward thei to-day 6 more unfavorable than eveu tit the fret moment aiter the surrender of jetz. ‘Te remen- brauce of the days of August and september tu last Year, of the library destroyed, o: the Cathedral mu- Ulated, of the suburbs reduced to asnea, of innocent ; Women and children butchered, of all those horrors } cre: by Herr Von Werder’s artullery—tiiese mem- ories again arise, and at this mowent especiaily, int | men’s minds, and renew “their vitterness, AS a | proof of the predominant feesing in strasbourg the Jolowing fact may be taken;—The Prussian off¢ers, ; Who at last have to wuarter wiemseives at their own expense, can find no piaces oi resiteace. Li vain haw | ue Matrie issued an order that those who wakes | desire to let rcoms to Oliced and ollicials might give notice of it, Tn vail have the quarter- musters taker @ round througm the » bole town ahd inquired in all the houses In wien officers have poe : _ a, The —— be aio | @ very singular appearance. It was visiled by large i id & KOter; he d n Africa. ‘bi wyer | crowds of persons, who, like myself, were surprised then attempted to prove tat incendiarism under | ©. ; | $e eetumstancen een eas & political oifence; | 9% the amount of damage done to the houses, the | it was @ means of resistance. Incondiariam was | lamps in the streets, and other property capable of | Occasionuliy adopted in war; they could judge of | peing injarea by the Weapons of the rioters. The the trath of hi 18 v i Won coMmumed an eed tt teaae ‘tia — | windows of several houses on either side of the way were smashed; the doors were battered, and every- | resemble tye prisoners. beige afr again ye ingeabtpadpridet thing seemed disordered and unsettled, ‘those Who the accused Papavoine and Locquin. The advocate Visited the spot were of opinion that the struggle hitherto been quartered whecher tuey Will nol give them up tor compensation; the peuple wil have Bong: of the yentiemen, ‘They prefer (od ow & Yuum te remain empty racher thai let itty tne Prussians, +O much so tual the bil.ctiug systear wust ve mati tained till the end of Leptember und the autiorities are reduced to have puslic paluings, lise the former cannon fonudry fitted up Jor the ofticer. ‘This 15 what 1s called the restoration of (ne childrem of Alsace ani Lorraine ty une boson of tie Ger- Man mottier, (rom Whom they Wad been art ov Maitre Haussman thea made a speech in favor of | pleaded weil: iF TS ae el Bat Serepiing ‘was a severe one, much more so than many are im errpteere ai hg. yin otuee to teal | perrofeuses, the public mind being dead against any | A in that. it ew hhat tik J ee | Woman with mineral of prochvities. He declared | CUned to think; the Naulonaliets maintain’ thay — no proof existed 1s cllents having been actually | Was simply a street row, which originated with & ‘the Ressiaw Adveuce ou india. ; concerned tn the crimes latd to their charge, [tv 18 | true that they dit not oppose the acts of incendiar- | ism; but it must be remembered thata set of ban- | @its were then all powerlul, “Negative facia were few unthinking Inds, who tirst began to shout at the | police, and afterwards, when remonsirated with, to pelt them with stones; the conservatives, on the The London Advertiser says, regarding the Rus. | sian advance on Judia, tbat at the | resent moment, | when British interests iu the kasi are completely | Not regarded in law as acts which constituied com- H plicity. Tins the inaction of a person who, kaow- ing that a crime was about to be committed, did not oppose 113 perpetration, could not be assimi- lated with acta of legal complicity.” A SOLDIER'S PRAYER, Considerable curiosity was expressed by, the public to learn the defence of the women Su¢tens and, Marchais by their soldier advocates. ‘the Mar‘chal des Logts Bordelais contented himself with declaring that the woman Bocqain threw her- | set on the mercy of the Court. In my humbie | opinion, about the best course that could be taken | before a conrs marpial, Licuteuant Gainey, how- | ever, bel g of more eloquent cailvre, went io for a | “talkey-talzev” in favor of Marchais, and acquitted } wimselt famously. He commenced with adminisier- | |_jng a well merited box on the ears o! tue delinquent advocates thus:— GENTLEMEN oF THE CouNCIL—I shall be brief. 2 here take a place deserted by the members of the bar; 1 remain on a field of battle which has been | abandoned. Yesterday ip this place there were | advocates of talent and renown, who hail come to | | defen’ the chiefs of the insurrection, but none of | them have thought it their duty to come and offer a hand to these pariahs of sociey. ‘The Lieutenaut then attempted to explatn the demoralizauon which exists among the laboriug classes, He said that young men who had scarcely courage to shoulder & musket eniercd the large magaxtns of Paris, | thus usurping the places of women, taking from , | them their datiy bread and means of gaining an | required no prophet to predict such an event, contrary, assert that it was A PREMEDITATED ATTACK on the force, which had been in contemplation ever since the meeting was dispersed in Phoemx Park. For my part I must say that, for once, I am inclinea to agree with the latter. gust the bitterest feeling has existed beiween the lower classes and the police, and more than once I recollect having expressed my belief that a collision between them might take place at any moment. It Any one who knew the feelings of both parties knew that @ collision, sooner or later, was inevitable, It has taken place, and it if now only to be hoped that the conflict will not be renewed, The crowd, it is true, on last Sunday, labored under some excitement, They had gained a COMPLETE VICTORY OVER THE GOVERNMENT and its agents (the police), and they could not allow 80 lucky an event to pass over without wreaking their vengeance on their enemies, I need hard'y say that none but the very lowest class in the com- | munity were concerned in the riot, and thot their wanton attack on the police 13 reprobated by every honest livellhood. He Would torminate withanan- | 7S0ttuinking man among us. The chatrman of Ever since the 6th of Au- ' neglected by our Mialsters—wiiea ‘bey are deaf to | the appeals of India, dumb as to the state of afidirs ‘ in China, and bind to the icessant advances of | Russia on our greatest dependeucy—it may be well to draw attention to the latest step which ihe great Northern Power has taken to give i another place of leverage from which to wreucu our Indian em- pire from us—or at least Lo attack 11 with mcreased probabilities of success. As tne puvlic would cer- tainly never hear of such events from the presente government unt it Was ico Jae to prevent taene (a3 We fear 113 1a the present case), it Decomes Auore mfperauively the duty of the imde- ertns ees press to waru them of tha Menacing attitude takeo up by foremu Powers With reference to tue Easvern po-sessions | which tuey are known tO covet so much, and to | point out the daugers which. by the reckless ulc~ ness of the Gladstone Cabinet ure accumulating round Ingia. In tie last weeks o1 ihe late abortive | session, which were devoted to the wnholosate with- drawal of every.measure to which tue goverai | was pledged, and to sopbisical excuses for their abandonment, the Kussian goverment quicily, and without any remonstrauce irom var Ministers, took siov Of a large Island in che set oi OKutsk, | | Which it would not hé too inuch to desert one of the most important keys of iue ar Last, is istand of Saghalen, or Tarakai, extends along the eastera coast of Asia, betiveea idz and 115 degrees. east longiiude and is only Separated from the Contte ing so without presenting valid excuse for their ab- | ecdote. Some time since te saw bands of insur- | the meeting spectally warned them agaiusi interfer- a ‘ a >. Pits ialanct gents who had been made prisoners entering Ver- | ing with the police, because, as he sald, a collision | Rewtby a strait calied tie Gals at Tartary.. hts Malai 1 ence ene rena Teattechs hot Than of wrenan er | Would destroy the effects of the great victory they | som avout etguty to 120 miles im width. It wielndes ron | had won, The answer to this advice was. “Let the an area of some 3),0vv Sidare Uuies of mountainous ; lean Cunard, had already taken their seats, The conduct of professtonai advocates who neglect the women, of whoin but one | Mug the | “tive francs ; ed te accused, Suctens, if she | 2 | another realy | have on this point the testimony of the ch “ 20 | him, believing that he had power to restrain the | people. Sne addressed him with these words:— | “Po not let the crowd thus show no pity for these | nfortunates; for, after all, they are wome: “Well, then,” concluded Lieutenant Guiney, * also gay to you, “Have pity on them, they ure wo- mem, You will hear LT ech ote is that ofa sok | dier.’” ‘The Court retired to deliperate, THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT. At five o'clock, alter having beeu absent rather | more than one hour and @ hait, tke Court retarged | | lato the riding school. which had in the meanume | Deeome crowded. Hearing that the judgment would probably be pronounced the same neon, the tair sex had “niurried up,” a bad sign for the accused. | Ladies like vivlent sensations, They had evidently | a presonuiment of evil. The same for:nalities as those I described when the chiefs of the Commune were coudemned last Saturday were o served; the guard presented arms, the members of the Court | Tematmed with thelr heads covered. ‘The President | frononnceg the judgment of the Court, which con- jermnod the accased:— H Ehzapeih Retiffe to death. Leontine Suétens to death. Josephine Marenais to death, Jalie Papavoine to hard labor for life, Lucie Bocquin to ten yeurs’ reciusion, CONCLUSION, The rapidigy with which the trial had heen con- ducted and the severity of the sentence deeply im- pressed tie audience. The general opinion, how- ever, Witch | hear expressed was that the sentence Was hot too severe for the crimes whicn had been proved against the prisoners, bui that the condem- nation pronounced by the tiird Coane of War } against the leaders of the Commune was in come urison Jar too lentent, Several of those condemied yy the third Couucil of War have appealed againss their sentence, Snould they be allowed afresh trial , and be sent before the fourth Conseil de Guerre Goa | @lone cau help them. Immediately after ne juag- Ment was read publicly yesterday the court was cleared of the public the guards and prisoners were introduced and the sentences were read to the accused. Tae Women Retiife, Suévens aud Papa- volne burst ito tears; Marchais remained u- moved; isocqvin exclaimed, “Oh God, who will take | care ot ny child? There is @ key to every heart; | Ja it not the fault of man that any woman should have failen so low ¥ Giais-Bizoln’s Letier to Leon Gambetta Sume moning Him to Action. M. Gla‘s-Bizoin has addressed the following letter to his aucient colleague, Gambetia:— Mz DRAR AND ANCIENT COLLEAGUE--It ia time that you shou!d make your voice heard in that Assembly of refngecs at Vermuiiles, to the great damage of the city of Faris, wotded aa’ much fa its dignity’ as the capital asin all its interests, It ts timo to put a end to the macuictions d incessan:ly not only against the membera of the gov- nt of the National Devence, but still more agalust tho pe ot the revolution of the dth of September. ve absointely necessary to propose this d.Jemma to the ity OL that Assembly, named sn fall epuvilcy and that | which makes glory tote anti-republican asp.rations:--“"isither | you recognize the Tegitimacy of the revo.ution of the 4th of | eptember and of the government of the National Defence, a in. acriminal sense) which presided at your vonyoca- ted on these benches, will not permit you to achere with heast to a revolution yo which you owe your existence as a uational assembly, you aro interdicted to abure it or take from 1 under the pain of felony. It, on the | | contrary, you thing and declare that this revolution ‘has an | unbiemistied take care that this does not bring | you to the trout ike its authors, ‘Th ro is still mores | You are their accomplices before the failen government, to j witich you should make an honorable amend, which can per- upon the basis of the whole fmperial ment. Senate, Chum'er of Deputies, Council of dissolved on the 4th of heptember, Councils Gen- aad raunielpal | prod of oilicial candidates, Iv tis necessary that you replace on his | throve th Sedan, of wim the goverament of the Na+ | tional Dei the National Assemviv at Bordeanx, prociaim » You will ina him without trouble, | awaiting and all your orders—ready to pardon you you Would pardon those Who have participate sto a greater or less Jommune, But inaily cease or retiro, | atyour to make @ place for the inatitauons | men of the coup a’ tas, my dear ant ancient colleague, is important to say | to that Asseinbiy which forgete what ft Is and waat ft showid ie. | This done, put in their place the wisest orators of the ma. | Jority to snow you in the annals of the history of any peop! & revolution aécomnlished like that of tue 4th of September— t tho leas: effusion of blood, whhout violence against | 8, without proseription; acclaimed the same day and | the some hour throughout all France, in the qities as | reo nized by all the forelga Powers, even Vruesia, our enc treated with it, They tevk n +» Which, unforvunately tor us, haw | i one | which, durin; for the rights and have you seen omen? “We u pouroiy executis doviaring Inthe tribune that the elections | © auiapices of the goverument of the 4th of | had been the freest ever seen in France,’ ne iny dear and ancient colleague: —Te republican Ny Has SOW! the nation, equal resp Where and wh uits powers with more divi oF thi | held | Septe: t *a conaideralie minority in the Assembly, It is | t ‘of men of tale 1 by inexpe- { rience in pariiamentwry netierate | { indictment of ie govern the National Devence and of | i ation of Tours and Bordeaux, formedatthe beginning | | Of dhe seanon hy the extreme parties—republican. and legit | | mits—paraiyzing onr friends; ft ie always that they have lore to ta e to the wall in the reaction, and that they re- | th too wide opened before the attacks made 19 Fevolution of thedth of September, without the one nor the other woutid ex jo one F and gnotent co ry tony Sap to j bee ty 1 cessary ta o rinciple of this ora que revolution ot the 4th of Septem: e"—-priaciple so powertul and_ #9 imperious that enchalns ico that majority of your colleagues who wil curse They will curse it from ‘the depths of thelt sons. ai) do nothing; butthat which they ao openly tn publ | 1a words and acta, the tre renubhiean party wad. the j Man in whoni it places Mls eoufidence shoud no lon ines ir tales AL GLAIS BIZOIN, The Bonaparisis and the French Peasaatry. M. Paul de Cassagnac 13 a candidate for the repre: | sentatiou of thw canton of Platsance in the Gonsell General,” A local paper contains an address to the electors signed by M, de Cassagnac, of which the Jolowing are the principal pas: ; 24 you have known me. Tue mistortunes of m: | country have not lowered my courage nor changes iny heart. Jeti love, as I have loved, the imperial 1é7/n Thal has given you eighteen years of calm, of pre ty and of happu —thas imperial rege Vhat Would Btn be in power i the defection parties had not basely deserted tt T still Nate and curse those impotent mon, wrecks of tse | | repr Who go irom ine 4th of September | ) We the Commune, from tae Commune to the Natioual Assembly. vassine (hus Law reason 9 Fevult. rom | distinction, & woinan of high life, aged, approached ~ - a ri " . el si ertiie country, richly wouded with oak, birch, Dane ROOT OEMS WAR: SEERA MATELY, SUF; M10, ON iead willow, ae containing besides appareniuy Inexhaustitie coal mines, ‘The act is anscrupuions and unjustifiable, and te excuse inat the resources Of the island will be amore quickly deveioped be Russia than by the Jeddo govermuent is too timsy to pear investigation. xcept for is Vart mincral resources it 1s Impossible wo look upon Saghaticon as of any great vaiue to Japan, bus it ts equally te | possible to regard tne action of Russia without ree | prehension and auxiety. It 13, m fact, one of te | Most lawless acts of aggression, or annexation, 11. history, aud it evinees as much disregard for tie ; interests of Russia’s European ailes interested im the Kast as for tue unfertunate Ainos, whom they. | have now suojugated. i FOREIGN PERSONAL GOSSIP. keep out of the way; for, as I told you, noi a singie | member of the force was to be see) in Pnwenix Fark. They were to be fonnd where thelr presence was considered most necessary, and as they were standing quietly 1a the streets they were tirst groaned at by a mob and then assailed with sticks and a\ones, Thave already descrivea what followed. possibie to say with approximate accuracy what WAS THE AMOUND O¥ INJURY DONE to property, or What was the Dumber persons in. ‘jured on poth sides, All that can be saul on the matter is that ia the former case the injury 3s not very great; but as regards the Jatter, a large num- ber of persous were more or less wounded, With the’ exception of about five or s!x persons none were seriously hurt, and one hyuse can only be said to ave been completely wreekel The adray, every one udmits, had its origin ip foolish, TLI-TIMED POLIOW OF THE LORD TAKUTENAD and his Cnet Secretary In dispersing the meeting on the oth Of August, But tnere can be uo douyt mat if the poitce Were In fault on the former oc: n the people are to blame for the riots on Sunday, which are jocularly styled "The battle oF Qucea street, About two score of THOSE DIPLICATED in Jast Sunday’s proceedings were brought wefore . the Courts yesterday and sentenced to various terns | of imprisonment, Varying from two to six inoains, The Court and iS approaches were crowded by the Irlends ot the prisoners and others interested im the proceedings. Several of the prisoners, a may add, several of the police aiso, had thelr beads bandaged with pieces of linen. some had wounds on the nead, others on the sace, and a few | ob- served had their arins tn slings. THR MAGISTRATES denounced in the strongest terms the duct of the rioters, Mr. O'Donnell, Chtcl Magistrate, he was sorry, very sorry indced for the character of the city, that such disgraceful enes had taken place, There might be some excuse if nen met men in fair open fight, bat to go into @ public house, and, arming themselves with stones and other murderous missiles, sug them at policemen in the way dese surpaised i qaisgrace anything he had ever heard of. Mr. Dix, the other magistrate, said that what struck bim as | being @ very bad teat.re in these cascs was that there did not seem to be the slightest provocation given by the poliee, It was the most wanton aud unprovoked attack he had ever heard of. ‘This 1s THE GENERAL OPINION of all classes, and none aro more enraged and dis- gusted tian the memvers of the Amnesty Assock tion, But, while they deplore this unfortunate o currence, they condemn in the most unmistakable Manner the brutal conduct of the police on tne former occasion, Which, they say, aud say traly, Was the direct cause or st Sunday's riots. FOREIGN TO! Bismarck ou the Faternationals. The views which have recently been viten ex- for topieinagts tnpracing The word Tat Reumlons OF you hold ' pressed in the HERALD with refereace to the pro- gress of the Internationale »n Germany now find corroboration from no jess a person than Prince Bismarck himself. Chancellor lately remavked toa friend, “volitical cares are at present banished by soctal oi bat be even more careiul not to step on the latter than on the former,’? Commenting upon this siater ue Berlin correspondeus of tife An Aligemwine Zeitung writes:— “Whether the Chancellor has used such an expression 0 all events the movement among the work has certainly reachet aa extension. and a which looks highty dangerous for internal and gocial order, and w not, at gmen werghe peice the German government to maintain an attitue Indifference, u Side by 18 untons start up mushroom-ike everywhere, and even the country districts are more aud more overrun With the apostics of socialism,” Cholera Mobbists Distarbanec. A correspondent of a German paper, writing from Wilna, gives an account of some very eccentric dis- turbances which tok place near that locality some days ago, An unknown individual for some time weut about among tie peasantry seiling rosary beads, scapulas, and other religious objects, This * ' mysterious person, who was afterwards recognized 3 4 monk that had fled from a monastery in Gall cla for some reason or other, took It Lito “his head to excite the peasantry agalust the measures taken by the government for the prevention of cholera. we succeeded in spreading among tie people the belief that these measures of tue anthoritics had no other object than to Boleyn ne peasantry, and thus get rid of them. A bddy of 000 peasants gccordingly assembled, and made an onsiaugnt on the officials engaged in disinfecting and other anti-choleraic ocoupations, Serious ex- cesses would have been the resuit had not a number of policemen arrived on the spot av te proper mo- ment and arrested thiricen of the roters—the seller of beads among the rest, To prevent eimilar occur- rences In other piaces bodies of policemen will scour the country, #0 as fo be on band In cave of need, + = The Iran Cront, According to a general estimate made by the Cor- man Ministry of War, the number of persons who received the Iron Cross daring the late campaign amounted to avout forty thousand, Though this pumber may appear large, considerably more deco- rations in proportion ty the troops engaged were conierred during the War of Liberation, Atleast four times as many German soldiers were cugaged in the last. campaign aa tn those of 1815-1815; yet in the earher war about fifteen thousand seven nun- dred Tron Crosses were (istriinied. ‘Pie dispropor. hon becomes still greater when we tal nto account tie higher classes of the Order. During the War of Lileration the Grand Cross was awarded to the Crowa Prince of Sweden, Prince Blucher, Vount York and Generals von Gneieenau, vou Tauentzen and von Bulow, While mm the late war only seven generals were thus distiaguished—-namecly, the Crown Prince, Prince Frederick Charles, the Crown Prinve of Saxony, Field Marshal yon Moltke and Generals Vou Goben ayd vou MauieuTel, The other dt is im: | id that | According toa Berlin paper the | hich cannot possibly alow | & ——Victor Hugo, says the Figaro, 1s going to re- turn to Paris, ——7he Emperor and Empress of Brazit left Coburg on the 2d inst. for Carlsbad. —Mme. du Picssis d’Arancey died recently Vetry-le-Francats, at the age o! 109 years. —Garibaldi has written a letter accepting the presidency ot the united democratic sovienes of —WMer. Maunoint, Bishop of St. Denix, Reuniow “it Island, has jusc¢ died, alter a short illness, aged sixty-one, “ ' | —=Prince Louis and Princess A'ice of Hesse, are ! expected to visit Euuiand Wis month, and to sty | for a short time at Balmoral, | — -M. Gambetta and Siarshal MacMahon have y the French Committee of Inves- conduc. of the late war + |. ——m. Thiers has sent his card to all the Ambas- ' sadors and Forel Ministers in Paris, | 1t bears simply the words, “President of the Freach Repu» ) he" | ——M, Cavatiere, better known as Pipe en Boiss | has been sentenced by the court martial at Vers sailes .o transportation and imprisonment Mi @ fortress. { ——'The Prince de Metternich, Austrian Ambax- fador to France, has teft tor tiuugary on icave of absence. His duties will be perioriued by Count | Moyds, { ——Captain Keith Fraser, of the Life Guards, ‘been appointed to atcend on the foreign ovicers and ! visitors of disturction. who may arrive in England to witness the manwuvres, ~y —Prince Ismarck ts sald to have made the re-~ mark that political cares have given place tw careg of sovlalism, and that the iatter distur) his sleep ‘sul! more than the former. ——Gustave Tridon, one of the memlcrs of te Commune, has just died at Brusseia, aged turty. He ts said to have papel & fortane of 1,200,009 francs, and to have leit 1b ali to the Interuavional, — uM. Drouyn de Lhuys, according to the Londow Post, 18 likely to accept the Ministry of Foretyn | Afaira when a modiied Cavinet ts forined, or repe | Yesent France at the Court of Queen Victoria, ——M. Victor Place, the late Consul Geueral of France at New York, 18 sul imprisoned 1¢ Mazas, and will pe tried for fraudulent practices mn the purchase of arms and anuaonition for the French government. —rhe names of the Wahabees sentenced to trang ortation for hfe are Ameer Khan, Moba Atl, | Tobaruk All, Taji Din Mahomed and Aminoouin. | Hashmadad Khan and Peer Mahomed have been } acquitted. FOREIGN | Steam omnibuses have been introducedinty Parts, | Za Gawots announces that Italy is anaing io view of a war with France. The youngest of the female Communist prisoners is eighteen, the oldest seventy-four. ‘The Naples branch of the Internationa! Soclety, nambpering 1,003.members, has been suppressed. About a hundred colonels and 670 inferior oilcers ss retired from the Spanish army since October, 1888, The railway directora of Poland have received | orders from the Russian anthorities to issue tickets no longer in the Polish but tn the Russian language. The Jialie states that the Minister of War at Florence has ordered the soluers of the class of 1866 to be sent home in Octover on unlimired fur- lough. 4 Seventeen trucks, containing nine millions of floring (2f. 16c. even) in sliver, arrived on t 26th of August at Munich, That si the frst tn- stalment of the sare of Ue war contribution which fails to Bavaria, was handed over to the public Treasury iy the extinction of the State debt. Sea ‘ng Complain that the Spanish quaran- | regulations, obilging vessela to go cither ta niander or Vigo, have become @ source of dis- Tacetul specuiation, vessels being compelied In the rat place to go to one of those 8, even when having clean bills of health, and in the next pla having to pay about two thousand reals for guaran. es of various kinds, iio noel ‘of the French Ambassador in Berlin was decorateu, ll within the last jew Rao i 23th ult. eee ig rt the bean m4 I Lee carved in stone on iajad several workmen were to be seen gooaples m covers ing the symbols of the empire with ts of zinc— not effacing them. Several Berlin journuls ask, not unnaturally, if tits procedure has peen adopved im: the bellef that an imperial restoration 1g sti!i on the cards in France. dadadl tt dehick the many queer spect rench no-~ Ligne of Fusties we find, in these latter and troubloug times, the following 18 not the least noticeable:—, ‘There 16 @ revolutionary committee at Lyons, in the Rue Grolée, of which Hénon, the present Mayor of that city, 19a leading spirit. Now it appears that on the occaston of the ¢meue of April 40 asi the committee in question signed an order “to invade the Hotel de Ville,” the proof of which was given to the court marital at which the man Paraton was tied, to whom the order was give: This fellow, Paraion, Was Condemned to deporiation for lif but the’ “commun * flourishes openly ‘ud. seare Jessly aud M. He! sul Mlayor of Lyous, a