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THE SUN, SAT of its members is 80 that any individual of the Board owing his butcher, baker, or washer- woman for goods or services, may be cited before the Arbitration Committee, and, if the debt is proven, be compelled to pay it or lose his seat at the Board. If the send of individual honor in the association is #0 nice in regard to such comparatively trifling matters a8 .an unpaid butcher's or grocer’s bill, then how much more ought it to be alive to the necessity of putting an end to such bare- faced swindles as the VANDERDILT hoax! atte Sa Mr. Gueriny enye it is not true the Tri: bune has gone down on its marrow-bones before Fise and Gori. eral opinion that Mr. Guegury's bones now have no marrow in them. But what does he say to the fact that Mr. Sawcen Sixcuam, the publisher and principal proprietor of the 7ritune, wrote to Jay Gotin after the Tribune had been excluded from Govt and Fisk's lines, and finally pledged himself that if they would let the paper be sold on the lines again it should cease to attack them? Was not that the Tribune going down on its marrow- bones, if it has any? Perhaps Mr. Gaeerer had better get the opine ion of Gov. Chartix before he gives an answer, i Tho valiant Seames, when he swept American shipping from the ocean, hardly an- ticipated that he was using up diplomats as well as crews; but the fact question has already swalfowod up Apax Jonxsox, and Morzey, and now both Fretixa- uvvser and Trosavcs shrink from being sunk in Perhaps it is best under the ter at all in Lon- our judgment it is even more disastroms to the French than the result of the two great MI, battles at Hagenau and Saarbriick, with whieh the war and the destruction of the Second Empiro were so effectually com- chatige, thie jealously gua: p AND THERE BY THE DAs SMT nea _—— The Quarantine Quarrel. By an agteoment entered into in 1834 be- tween New York and Now Jersey, those States fixed their boundary line from Spuyten Duyvil Creek southward to tho ocean, w certain reservations in regard to health reg: whereby the quarantine laws of ‘ork were to extend to vessels lying at tho Now Jorsey docks or aground on the New Jersey shore, bers of the Bren William Kirchner, long an efficient patrolman Of the Seventh Police Precinct, was taken ill recently, and was granted a sick leav noon, while walking out for his health, he met Omlcer Kearus on post in South street, near Pike, and, on Kirchner's invitation, the two went into a neighbor- Jog saloon to take a drink, While they were there * Shoo Fiy" Roundsman Ryan entered, in civillan's dross, and began ® conversation with Kearns, Kirchner, who didn't now Ryan, inviled him to join in with Kearns ina sociable smile, which invi- tation was indignantly rejected. Kirchner was taken abacic at the roundaman's, manner of declining the ke, and high words followed. jonrndd to, the ‘street, and there Rirchnor struck nd followed it ap by flog Amunements To-day. ‘Theatre itip Van Winkle, re Kngageient Extraordinary, Ae, On Thursday atter- ‘The Beach Pueamatic Tanne! Walinen'e- Frit Wood's Museum Ace of Fates ‘Our Comin Germat The daily ctreulation of Tu Sun during Very possibly. ended on Saturday, It is the gen- the last week, which By virtue of this agreement, and of tho was as follois : laws of New York existing in 1834; or since enacted, the Quarantine Commissioners and Dr. Cannocnan, tho Health Officer, claim jurisdiction over every vessel entering the , even though she may havecleared ata foreign port fora port in New Jersey ; and morc capecially over veascls cleared for the port of New York, which, before entering at the Custom House here, go to a New Jer- sey port, Perth Amboy for example, and there discharge their cargoes, and thence clear for or enter the port of New York, the cargoes in the mean time crossing from Perth Amboy to New York or Brooklyn in lighters, Under this claim Dr. Cannocian has re- cently seized such vessels and lighters on their coming into our waters from Perth Am- boy, and in this action has been sustained by the Quarantine Commissioners, ‘The men then ad: ing him soundly. Ivor, and the friends of both Tishing Up, separ: or Kearns is o yan’ drew nis re' Kirebner and Kea: Neither Kirchn: Meace both must g 'y circulation last week, Average daily circulation dur- Daily average Aggreyate dai! fing the week, in the Fon, A. T. during the previous teeek, ending August 6, Wholesale Store. Mr. Fancher cailed at the Sun office yesterday, ‘and gave the particulars of the nice little fight which came off in the Hon, A. T. Stewart's wholesale store . Mr. Faucher said Tae Sun's report of the fight was calculated to do him an in- Justice, He eays tuat he had not been out of tl store a day of two, as was reported. Before he came to the store on Wednesdsy morning, Mr. Walker, one of bis friends, had sold some goods for Counolly, a small Irishman, who had only been employed there some six months, placed his card on the goods and sent them up stairs. Walker protested, saying that be had sold the gooas latter came in, he ro- monstrated with the small Irishman for bis action, * Thereupon,” said 3 abusive, and threater then told him that nn Tho Dectsive Battles of the War. All the world has been expecting that the decisive battles of the war between France and Germany would take place either at ChAlons or in front of Paris. that they have been going forward at Motz and in its neighborhood for the last four or five days, The facts respecting them havo reached us mainly through French sources ; and fromthe boasting of these telegrams, the impression has come to prevail that in these great combats the Imperial army has pnee more begun to be victorious, and to re. But a careful examina- facts shows that this im on Wednesday 1: But it scems that the Alabama for Mr. Fancher. the same abyss, circumstance It is evident that who could have grappled with Moglish states- men, the Hou. Horace Gueerey, was not selected for this mission, no other American can possibly It is announced ia the Lond Court Journal that Mr. Apa Bap a houso in the aristocratic quariors of the W End, To be sure, Banean is only Const and got his appointment by bullying the Presi- he is the biographer of Grav, on a house is the t Connolly became to strike me.” Mr, Fancher od of him was to let him nereafter alone, to strike him, Wo very seriously doubt whether the Health Officer has the right to punish the offence by seizing the vessels and their car gocs in this manner. mariners, and importers have violated the quarantine laws of New York, let them be regularly prosecuted in the courts. have violated the revenue laws are to Le seizures in the case, they must be 1oMAS Munpry, Collec tor of the port. Dr. Cannocnan has no right to take such v trieve its fortunes. If our shipow 1, Tam not afraid of you," au has taken \ f : ) t 4 h } f calnd bin and struck hima pow of the head victory ; that the great purpose of their movements, the concentration of all their forces at Chilone, has been foiled ; and ‘hat the main body of their troops, the army under Bazarne, having first been broken in two by the battle of Sund: which forecd Lack into Metz something like one third of that army, has since been sub- jected to a series of destructive engagements by which it Las been worn away to such a de- gree that, having started to march one hun- dred and twenty miles, in four d marched no more than fifteen miles, At the same time the German army of the Bhine, under Prince Frepenick Witi1aN,” pursuing the luckless but gallant Mac- , has been steadily advancing upon Chilons by way of Bar-le-Duc. the despatch of Wednesday evening from Mr. GatLianvet to the Courricr dea Etats Unis, MacManon with a part of his advance guard arrived at Vitry on Wednesday, hastening to Chalons with all his might. about twenty thousand men, were sent out from Chilone to cover his di about twenty n Chilons, and the precaution of sending twen- ty thousand men to cover the troops of Mac- Mauon thows that the Germans must have been close upon his forces, while BazaIne has been engaged for four days in fighting within fiftcen miles of Metz, _MacManon and his pursuers have marchid upward of cighty miles, ng to Me Garrrannwr the Avecn five bloody combats Letween Baz. and Prince Freprnick Cuan among these five battles were those of Sun- ‘dey and Monday at Metz, these two, as our readers will remember, the Prussians, suddenly appearing in force on the eft bank of the Moselle, surprised Bazaine when oue-half of his forces had crossed the river on their way toward Chilons, aud, attacking him fiercely, succeeded in prevent- dng the crossing of the other half of his ammy,aud forced it to remain within the intrenchments of Mrrz. tle of Sunday; and although the French claim that they gained the day, it is evident that tho Prussians accomplished perfe the object for which they fought, namely, the division of Bazaine’s arwy into two separate parte, The battle of Monday w sally on the part of this force shut up in n the crossing of the river and effect a junction with the rest of the army, from which it had been separated. also the French say that they were victor ous; but there arg ple that, Lowever well they foug! ever sanguinary their battles, they have not succeeded in cutting their way out aud reaching the open country on the west of Thus the divi army still remained at the close of Monday's Battles have aleo 7 at Gravelotte, Doneourt, and Mars-la-Tour, all of them e Mr. Funcker, Twill have nothing nd showed his contempt for ning Mr. Fancher's letter of nis now in Mr. Libby's hands. public to kno made by the Hon. that the rim of silk hat was broken by the forces of Mr. Fancher hid | employ of tao Hoa. A. T. Stewart over ten the 14th inst., ent and lawless pro- emile is im ét pledge of peace. English mission going a beggi Jersey to Hlinois? But the root of the diffleulty lies deeper Maxwell's Coatly Drnuk—A Marderous At. Under our present quaran tine administration, shipowners and mer- chants complain that th an extortionate Ring, and that pretended zeal for the preservation of the public heaith is only 9 cover for exorbitant and unwar- ranted exactions of vessels arriving in our harbor from abroad. many instances they are subjected to voxa- tious delays in the lower bay; that they are often not allowed to send their cargoes to the city whilo the vessels are riding at quaran- tine, except they employ a designated class of lighters; that great favoritism is shown in the specdy fumigation of vessels arriving from infected ports; that these, and a long train of like obstructions to the prompt dis. charge of merchandise and the release of ships from the captivity of the quarantine, can be removed by the payrhent of money somebody connected with the Health De- tsa great deal of cash out of and that to escape from this stealing under color of law is the reason why vessels really bound for New York go to Perth Amboy to discharge their than all this. Is it not th nd Fisu to reveal no man who respects himself likes ‘o serve under them, and expose himself to the fate that has overtaken Mr. Motter ? height of folly Brooklyn, while dru ‘Thursday night, rine Hurley, who lives in the rear and threateret to shoot her witita f, which he flourished about her head, 1d running into the str Cadmus and Jacques, wiso by: Maxwell sitting attempted to are the victims of Allthat the F; on the field of bi » Imperial did summoned Ofte: lo wast pic It is asserted that in Cusine are in ecstaries over the youth, According to ve from her erful Prussia is less threatening to Groat Britain than an omnipotent Lis will, in reality, become the safest guarantee for the future peace of Jerman civil England is not likely to swer' policy of neutrality. riaing ais (ham head with bis m over on the bed to his feet, be offered such that the oficers were 1m until We was al France or Russi vate resistance terday morning Justice Delmar coumitted the pris: ation is akia England and of the United States, and is des- tined to elevate the standard of thought all over ay ever become a ri- She will always re land country, and @ little additional not inake her a Even in the event of complications in je that England sack Swamp On Thursday one of the geutlemen concerved in the purchase of forty-two swawp lote oa the Hack rpcues, Was cornored by & Well known citizen, and was told some facts in the presence of other parties, which the Aiderman did Citizen McLaughila charged forces, Vitry Norcan Germ: gland on the sea, ensack river for dock 9 not atiempt to deny, that these forty-two lots, for whi Aldermen agreed to pay 42,000), were last full as. sessed at $18,009, for the bene. Kevren’s creditors : Alderman Vin Ketren $42 ‘This proves that Belgium and Hollan & pretext for gal exaction of Alterman Vaa the ring agreed to pay 0 for the property, tain schemes wh! Administpation, have Is dane, eltizen MeL mens ral handred thousand botiom aud make upon the truth of We only know that they are made ; that there is a controversy about ju risdiction between New York and } sey; that there is an unseemly quarrel be- en our shipowners and importers on the one hand, and the Quarantine Commission- ersand Health Officer on the other, to the detriment of the commerce and the jeopardy ot the health of this city; that ev administration Health OMfcer, it is cal position in the Un fore no exeuse for exacting a d than its legal fees. Hin saya, it will require we of un Asiatic than a European power, ath the sword and man her fleet excepting to defend her interests in the Orient, and her possessions in India. an politics is rather of a traditional and than practical and vital character ; as winked at all the enormities of tox for the seke of peace, it is not pable that any attempt of these charges. now hardly unst surface eveu W In the first of Valicensed Bare The corrupt Common Council of Jersey City, ves a salary of $1.20 each in arter, are desirous of retain. s long as there is any Jnice to be omis are proverbial for turning out any number of voters th ation act there ts no ordinance re ing a person to take ont a ation of the City C ieee te Ke © most lucrative politi- of Angust tue lice: iL upon an exp indulge this luxury of playing he good Samari- passed 4 retoli rin the meshes of The Health Officer and the Quarantine ie diss tide Dhan ssloncrs received their positions from Goy. Horrman. 1s of this quarrel and the truth of and he should nd is full of fine but she will keop out of ha aud wind ber own busivess, and that al in the Horse Cars, . Tompkins hauds us the fi begun by a these charges w then take proper measures for the prompt dismissal of his appointees from office if they roprietor of the Hx depot informs us that his daily sales of now pers are as follows : TUE SUN und one eleven reading sponsible places they hold by his authority Will the Depraved Worl! und the Fule eres thirteen hid ; of facta to adds: * So rai A Shameful Stockjobbing Hoax, The story that Commodore Vanprnunmt pad been struck with paralysis, and was dyis p at Saratoga, was an adroit but disreputable stockjobling hoax at the Western Union Telegra their readers # »long as it is s : dout, fearess, aud iupartial,” Congress havings enacted d States authorities cog in Congressional elections, Gov masters’ orders, A Toimmany ddy the Smasher on charge of petit larceny, yn wiih respeetab zance of frauds Horrmay, obey in limbo, this do to be about te amend the State ph office at signed “ W convene the Legislature, a ia i conc Troy at a late hour, So long as he ¢ Kisseinenen, city editor Tr ciated Press agent, it was forwarded without question, reaching this city in season for the po: Mr. Kisseiiy bing barroom 4: ually Lloody we have repulsed the enemy, after having inflicted upon Lim We have gained adva feats of arma of the Ver the proboscis of so. it was not so bad ; Notwitistand! — counts from the ¢ bt continue to be but fortunate to question the truthfulness cript of the morn- im denies the ort, and the editors of Times have thus fur failed to dis. cover the real author of the falsehood, The effict of the story was, as might be expected, to depress New York Jem, and Hudson River stocks, clined three to four per ANDERDILTPstocks in proportion, while Lake Shore and other stochs sym pathi decline to a considerable extent. disgraceful us it was, served its y enabled certain partios to cover their short As soon as this was cMected, the contradiction of the story was immediately information that the Commodore, so far from being paralyzed, was just then engeged in a g Ganson, STEWA ntclligence sent the declining stocks Lack to their previous prices, and everything tock Exchange was once y ly the lic cost the dupes of the ewindlers about half a million dollars, cock Exchange was indignant; Lut the successful sharpers who had played ly there is no reas of the Prussian Ki for demasiang a polices which recall the campaign of 1814. Frepenick Cuan.rs and Gen, vc meré have been decimated, Lut constant re Infurcements afrive to them from tho army That they reecive ments is probable, but not that they of the Crown Prince ; pursuing Mac- lroad between Nan Besides, it is notorious that ts are at hand Lut ten days since bi SS a Emperor is not # gentle: from his camp and New Style ph Pohley aud ¢ rested yetenday on th caarge of stealing two bar- of the Crown bragging, while the G more consciontivus. . Worth $116, from the store of Theodore Kelly, They suid they had bee erdered by the City Marshal to seiz come from the arm, | accounts trom for he is far away near V 3) West Sixteenth st ee ee LIAM constitute condition of the situation; tain what Marshal b aed the goods without a Jess, from a care and Chalons, nies large Prussian reinfurceme without drawing from Crown Prince. ful study of the French te! el Phiewes, forces Gf thie We had the pleasure of a visit yesterday Major-Cen, Tima Watnninay the siren song of Einaa R ing well, and, though he has of late be lod a live of divsips sting fact about all these battles is that none of them have been fought from Metz than twelve All this proves that Ba Je to con tinue Lis march 1 compelled to hborhood of M announced, with the Hie is strong for the revlecti President Guaxt, and for at a greater distance ne of euchre with deseriie the girl sew Gueuiey tor General would adora a place in the Cabinet, raed n Coron the pretty witne was takon before Jastics K remain in the ne Mr. Avnratam O'NALL so-called comic paper Punchine/to. 8 now running the it has been in the hoy of reopenin troops ehut up in Metz been his opinion that it wou hitherto vain, Lis communication er, Who testified that the girl's nam and Cuauces Dawson Suancy I lived a vissolute life for not capital enough to carry it through, and i bie baleen tb has passed into O' faut ons with only that pert of his «8 which has been free; and he has ac cordingly preferred to fight there a series of Datths in which, as the French themselves proclaim, they have performed noble feats of arms, and have gaincd great advantages, but have not been able to accomplish any Part of the great purpose which they bad in view, and have becn four duys making four foon miles out of « hundred aad twenty that Shey had to accomplish, ; Buch was the real condition of the two maxtiog wn to Weduewday wight; aud in tick upen the street escaped unscath- with thelr ill-gotten plunder. We submit that this transaction ought The Associated Proves owes It to the public, which confides in the truthfulness of its intcliigence, to ferret out rying it through with a vengeance Wear that the prisoners had done any Wwroug it an organ of the Tamme ani] the examination was udjourue! wacil bosday stupid besides, y plunderera, aud very It must stop soon for want of sustenance, and then people will Let them ask to cud here, The Sunday Magazine, published by the Lip bumber coutains fifteen Which ave profusely illustrated, aud ail will be read With interest, Those were prophetic words which mance uttered to the British Ambassadyr at Ber lin, just before hostilities were commenced, when the envoy of Vicrowsia was trying to inter between the belligereuts, has fastened this quarrel upon us; but we feel that Prussia is entirely compéeut to cape wid France im the.Lielde'* them to justice, Heved, it ean be traced to a conspiracy in the street to depress the price of the particular stocks affected, then the Board of Brokers should declare all transactions void ‘until the matter is fully investigated, As Waunderitand the rules of the Sicck Ex. The Sunduret is the title of a new Trish Paper which bids fulr to rival the People and the Akmployors and workingten are advis their surplus Cauda to building up bank account. Mutual Benoht Savings Bank in the SUN building al- Lowe Als por Conk IntergHt, CoMMmOLG.NE eVery MODK— whe wuire scAvih AGATH . = al OW? Poor Cleraymen U er Worthy of bis Hine—Lét the ry their Dend-A Feeling Letter. To the Bator of The Bun, Sin: The sun in the heavens shinés for all; ‘Tus N. ¥. Sum tries to do so, and succeeds pretty Well; but it has not shined yet on clerical labor, the Poorest paid ofany work done on earth by man. An article has been going the rounds of the papers Feflecting on a clergyman of a neighboring city, be- cause he refased to bury a person, belonging to the parish of another clergyman, without ho was patd for it. What rieht has any family, when they are able (and no clergyman of any denomination will ro- fuse to bury the poor without compensation), to de- mand the services of & minister at a funeral, a man whom they do not know, and a family whom he does not know, withont paying for his timo and service? ‘The Son of God, who ins{ttated the Christian min- istry, has answered this question, When He sent the Apostles out, He gave the injunction at the head of this article, "The Inborer is worthy of his hire.” Tt costs ® clergyman as much to get his edacation and prepare for his profession as it does for a lawyer or doctor, and no one expects to have their services an as and educate them ns they not be paid for withoat paying for them. It costs » clergym: much to provide for his famil the former. Why then shon!: Services which strangers call on them to do, Every tnlalster expects to bury his own people without jos the obliea- T speak now of any compensation; bis salary includ tion for all kiuda of service; bi strangers calling om a clergyma jose congrega- ve never contributed. bury a member who had never belonged to Would not doit, simoly beeaase;t! claim on the lodge. It isthe same with a Mi lodge, It would not bury & person who had ai Why then shouid friends call on Methodist, Bap person who and) never — coutributed — a rt? ‘There is no reason; and oar Lord's Lat the dead bury their dead.” appily to din fin, aod ‘have noglected all churches and ministrationa while they lived, ont giving even a thank for the servi sidered as essential to a respectable funeral to have the service of a miniier as an undertaker. No one expects to get an undertaker with; 48 much as on undertaker's. It is high time for a clerical strike, not to com: congregations to pay for clerical service, becaus thee are all willing to work and wait for Go Paywiest for euch services, whose ambassadors th are, and who will pay in His time, but to ad the resolution to attend no al outside of their wn concregation unless they are pald for their ser. vices. If tt be a luxury of reapectability to such services, then they should be paid for, JUSTICE. — m THE ADMIRAL OF THE PERIOD. —_— Tho Lenguo Island League and How it orter and je Hon, William D. Kelley-A Congres= Fatle of Success—Admiri slonal-Naval Alliance and its Result Correspondence of The Sun, Wasixotox, Aug. 17 chief, Porter, the regular semi-annual F the Officers of the Navy and Marine The pamphlet contains the number of officers in each grade, the daty upon which each is enzaged, the new pay-table adopted by Congress i ing hours, ister of its clos: the several grades, ‘There isa well settled conviction in the minds of tue people generally, that for the past el months our navy has been so gross ¥ mismanaged, that it has become a linghing stock abroad as well as athome. Wherein this mis man ment consists perhaps it would be dificult for the uninitiated public to say, knowledge of naval a@uirs, and in consequence are unable to point to any xpeciile act or acts calling for condemnation. They have a general idea of the eon r, if not erimi. most reckless extravagance in the expenditure of ropriations, and they k Dw also that the over to the confide ct knowh jepartment hus bees tar trol of a man in whom they Further than this the peopie edge of naval corr power which are d Di Itis a popular beste that Porter ts responsinte for every iniquitous transaction in the maaag e navy. This ie an error, It is tra ruling spirit in everything, but he is o} ne of 8 clique organized for their own personal benefit This clique is posed maluly of officers high in rauk, “on du here, with a falr sprinkling ot monbers of Congress, inost of whom have axes to grind, and depend upou the naval oficisis to aid tiem The whole mamber of Rear Admirals in. the ser. vice is 31, of whom 27 are * on duty,” 19 of ¢ in tois city alone, It Is’ not necessa all belont to Porter's clique. In to tae Rear Admirals employed hore, therc are ten Comaidores «!so on spectal duty, be remembered that neai the retired list, and would, if they w ploved, or nomipaliy so, be F year, They reeelve,the Admirals per year, and the Commodores $4.00, tration of what tls special duty fs upoi ter's tricuds are put, I will meniton one or two @ the rinecures. Rear Admiral Marwood ts at the head of the" Departinent Naval Laws and Hot for the examination ¢ also for the retivin this duty oe re not ¢ ‘on a salary of $2,007 th, Powell, Balle form a FoLOtio ir session and on Conmods le _constitnte n “Board for Exa tions sabe to naval purposes, ave the Torpedo Bureau, with eizht offi hed to ft,and the Healy established Signal Corpe—an unnecessary ap eninge foreed w Savy by Commotere Alden ait a Comme at its head with eleve tunis. Again we have the © Hydrogruptte Odie for tho @istrtbition of charts” one” Commo tow nd five avsistante, Tt mnt be remembered tha hese assistants are al! Commanders and Lientenant Commanders, ant al go to swell the number em ployed on tuis speciai duty, In addition to all those is the Navy Yard, with au Adiuiral in com mand, and stil another, Gollsboroug's, as Port Ad ai (the idea of a Port Admiral at Wash © nothing but the Tallapoosa ever com Naval Observators with one m7 vmo lore ‘and or +0 of particular w tered tarou zi the Navy Depar abl the cufots of the dider Auother swindle perpetrated ntry oy Porter and his clique ds the a ele em Notwithstiadin 18 omerrs he active Ist of the Tol the 135 retired officers a Licutenant em ployed on some. pleasant y remunerat ve ty. On tie active list al fave an officer at ah ayer for every five en. rien! and yor ite found necessary to em than bait of the retire! list, Mo. tit ' the magritude of tris awin te, let us take au fustance ana ‘kee how tt work. By law the pay 0: ¥ OF the erode in’ which he was ret Irhe | ced on duty, however, he ree the full pos of ' Je in which ne now holds a convatesi on When retired, If Unempiove Would rece.ve MW) per year, & @. Wulf toe’ sea piy of a Com ng employed, as ve f © reeewy on seine nem tease, Thy pe way, Of ine retir 1 ot then were Jered to wine i there are Keven vteven retired Come ten are emp) We have (wenty-fve of nae active fiat, olemployed, At the Naval y we fint that there are on dut Com three Comu nd twenty-uiree Liew oMnmaniers, ae Professors, many of then e school but a year or two thenise ones ordered to take the plies of th 1 rs who were dist 1 tor ‘ ty Porter, What wouid be ‘ HW would dismiss alt he n West Point, and order twe youn thought tae Would the country submit to itt A Man Makes a Siigular Request of a Deck Mand, From te Lvoy Ties While the ferry boat Dyor w of her trips across tle river yésier proucied one of the deek lt demanded that aman why wa: proxiuiity to a woman in on r notified to change Lis por nd wade # four of tha cabin, saw the el } to, and reporicd to tie person who tL Orte | Wich that Dat eon ne that demanded t clon. “But,” exclaimed tie excited individe “do you see how ¢ that man is to the Woutan t ‘replied the eu (tye ferry company eis probably her husban it... °° N putin he party of the first par Jaw wort “un Viui's What's thy matters" Tov techs my ortunite deck band were overpower When tue boat reached the Wost Troy side tuan eave Up the Woman, Mid DUsiand HR Wie wor! Festured to each — - An Or County Farmer Mn Ing nel! A Remarkable Suicide, Courwart, August 19.—This morning, at about reven o'ctovk, When Mrs, Ann O'Brien, of this plnee, was returning to her house from her farm, she saw her husband, Thomas O'Brien, the branch of an apole tree Mr sixty-tive years old, aagiog on O'brien wi He had been suffer 401 tuinor He bad evidently with deliver: mitied suicide. The rope which he ased was thr quarters of an ineh in diameter, nearly new, BOW ‘Was systematically and well arranged, ad stepped pop @ stone fence neir the tree, and, adjusting the rope, jumped off und hanged hiinsel /, Tho Princess Wana, N gard to his marriage been frustrated by the Anstrian Conrt, his life might have taken > very different counsels he has allowed himself to be ruined. He tion they do not attend, and to whose support they uppore afamily desired an Odd Fellows’ lodge to ist, oF any other clergyman to bary a id“ never been a Methodist or Bap- ng to ‘That is, if men have lived in sin, are thon their com- Panions of the world should bury them withont culling on the clerzy to do ji, as is olten done, with+ It |s con- t paying for it, A clergymau's services and time are worth at least pt have Chief Clerk Robeson has recently, issued by permission of his wortiy Corps. dail the recent promotions made to have no n, or the many abuses of pont of he is the Tt must I these offlcers are on of Administration. of FY * Board ome EMPRESS RUGENIE. —o—— POSTSCRIPT, = = 4 THE PRUSSIAN ACCOUNTS OF 111 KECENT BATTLES, tothed—The A ‘The Course of a Great Life Chang From the Staats Zetti Had not the original plans of Napoleon in re- course, and there might now be no necessity of his despairingly bewalling the fnet that through foreign ns of mete oalty of the French—Tho Flight of Mace Maton's Shattered Army. Beatin, Tucsday.—The encounter before Motg on Sunday was an attack upon the rear guard of the French and a repulse of a sortiv from the fore trest by the troops of the Firet Estern Prossian and Seventh Wostphalia Army Corps, the com manders of these two army corps, Von Manteileb and Von Zastrow, having directed the movenioutsy It is probable that ‘Tun sIRGR OF Mere ‘Will bogin at once, The siege train at Magdehourar has left for France already (on Satur lay), and other #iege artillery is to follow it. Strasbourg, it is supe pored, will be besieged exclusively by South Gere man, chiefly Baden troops. An carly eurrenier i however, anticipated, after the earnost of the #ieco will have been sufficiently #h bat the iu sion Is not #0 in the case of Metz, Our special correspondent at the headquarters o¢ the Crown Prince of Prussia writes on the 19th ins The more that we gather of the detailk of the battle of Woerth the more clearly doce iy appear that there was no miracle about the affair, 1 sudden eurprise to. military eritics as though a new weapon had been discovered, From the villages in the rear of the fleld T gather ‘far more of the Frene movements than could be learned. from the pri ers or the villagers upon the field itself, Tt wou Ml #eem that the Imperial commanders in this quarter ‘wore altoget wished to marry his cousin, the Princess Wasa, crand- daughter of the Grand Duchess Stephanie of Baden, and had already offered her his hand on the occa sion of @ visit to Baden-Baden, His eit was ac. cepted, but with the condition that Prince Wasa, the father ‘of the Princess, who lived in Vienna apart from his wife, should give lis consent, Napoleon Emperor of Austria with take the wooing of but ho received an t that this Was not permitted by inasmach aa, the Prince was ‘his, however, Was merely an excuse, since Franz Tonep! 8 determined to prevent the proposed mateh at any price. He therefore contrived to in- fluence Prince Wasa to positively refuse bis cou- tent; and, while Napoleon still hoped on, a match between the Crown Prince of Saxony and ‘the Prin- cow Fras quickly brouzht about by the intrigues of the Austrian court. Napoleon was deeply moved and exasperated at thie, and apon frst icarning that this, his darling protect, had been frustrated, lve KAve utterance to the memorable words, “Les kou- Yerainé de I'Europe ae souviendroat de mol.” (The Princes of Europe aball have cause to think of me. It is trae thot at a later day the Emperor of Aus- trian had only too much cause for regretting the share which he had taken in this affair; but for Na- poleon, the result was much worse from having perhaps the only real heartfelt desire he ever expe- rienced repressed in this rude way, £ven thoueh the voman wuom he had de: i of the Fronch had by no meani ngu self for eminent qualities, yet her modes! almost dependent uature would have been & tee that ehe would never have en step the limit of her autics, never have inbored to fecure a government whicl would have the highest interests of France a plaything for her humors and her eclfiahness, But this was the result of ihe second choice which Napoleon then hit apon. Among the u - turers of rank who happened to be in Paria at the time of Napoleon's great political stratarem, there War a certain Countess Montijo and her danzhter, who vad created a sensition and drawn the atlen- tion of Napoleon toward themselves by their ex travagant style of living, as well as by the beaaty of tho danghter. Napoleon had drawn these women to iis new court, and had indalyed in every kind of galiantry toward the daughter, who, howev quickly given him to understand that, despite ler coquetry, she was just as careful of ber honor as he was of Lis, and would yicld in no way to his pas. floor uolets he allowed her the legitimate place at nis aide, When now the proposed match with the Princess Wasa turned out a failure, ‘énie contrived to procure an invitatic to Com there, in the freer intercourse with Napoleon with th Nd of @ brilfiant tuilette, in’ whic! iid her blonde hair had an espeeia eflect, she succeeded, through the magic opearance and her sple re, in #0 allering him that he, still sensitive result of bis former plans, and with the rmination of meeiing. the crowned princes ree OUTMANEOVRED by the Crown Prince, and that whatever the merite of the respective small arm fire may have been, there was no comparing the tactics of the two mics, Some say even now that the Chassepot ix better rifle than the needle gun. But be that om inay, the French allowed themselves to be so pluced as {0 reqaire mo common decteo of fighting to sv them. First, we hear of their blind confidence ond of their eries, “A Berlin.” while they were reniy in desperate’ danger. Then came the news ol the SURPRISE AT WEISSENBURG and of the death of Gen. Abel Dow He was posted in a corner of the Fronch territory wit German troops cotlee'ed on his fink ch further from his supports th: ed in the fa ech ane or be known whether th Would have exiricated bis a they aetnally sustined had for Le tell by one of the first disch Thas was a step gained by Uh t storried the pos and bad Loqun to SUATTER THE ENE MacMaion and De Failly we on tonct, The former Prince with whole co believed among the Frene! hand, and is sment not Fuilly to support bis left in France, Talsed to tee position of | again wns the fmpetuous Empress a woman of doubtiul descent and of an | Freneimen are apt to show. ond equally doubtful past, vy og them in detail was given & Since then this woman has shared his throne with him for eighteen years, and has apparently, it i trae, contributed very much to its spleator; bat if Nat poleon now looks back over this period, and cal's himself to account tor the influs 8 Whieb since then have been brought to bear upon him from the side of his wife, and by meen of her have beon made efleetive, he ean seareely do otherwise th curse the hour In which he entered into this alli- ance, mun’ Prussians ond Bi andy be tle was the result fia wlans together far outnusubered the corps of Mac Menon. We may take it that the Crown Prince had at lost alt as many opponenta, n disposable troops on Aug. Ua his Thaye heard TWELVE TO SEVEN on. good authority, mentioned ax th fight ot Woerth, and before Mac Jong engaged lw Was sending an aide beg tielp from Butly ‘Phe distance wad not ereat to Bitehe, and the messenger must have arrived in time to bring tha neeried help if only everything Wl be odds in the ahon bad. beer cAMD alter Kt ee A Marderer Buried Alive. From the Memphis Avalanche, Aug. 12. The officers of the steamer Cheek te of the dy; bak lynching of Beck, who is said to have murdered Mr. | here again overconfldence prevuiled. > French and Airs. Goode, on Favori'e Island, two monthe | corps was destroyed Lefure the other came to ita aco. Beck was in Anstin (Miss) jail, Whore he had | support. I have beard that on Sunday, that t= on Been placed by the Sheri of Tunica county, who | day tollowing the battle, a larue force Vad brought bim from Indiana a tew days ago, On | the rear of where MacMahon had fongit eInesday morning a large numberof men gathered | who saw it tell with wo the around the jail in Au: in, took the prisoner out b; force, brought him down to the river's edge, plage him in a skit, and rowed ap the river w Pavoni nim to a tree over the RUSH OF THE BEATEN ARMY westward, and the ad of angry ard almost in. credulous troops toward the front, It was te to renew the bittie; too late ave the five ments whien lay strewn 0 their re: and Frenehinen some two montis aud trial would ba guilty, We nce in aid respet for U before. A aecompil n will Anotver secount, from what appears to be a reli- a defeat. It certain that the able sour ys Hat there was ho lynching, p great disorder as they yusvod erly ut that the twe t Gurough villages ten miles in tae rear. ‘The corpit Beck out of jail m: euard, and the prisoner was rowed acrons the river by tue Wening light of the moon, on Wednesday morning about 3 o'clock, to a sandbar on the Ark..n of Falily cauld ouiy tave SACRIFICED THEMSELVES USRLESSLY. When once MacMahon's corps had been demoral sas shore, and there, ander the long shadows of the | ized, and to have fought a second battle of Woertlt trees, the crowd gathered round their vietim and | would * been to play into the hi o feasted their dranken eyes upon his pahid face and | Crown Prince. who would have liked noth t trembling lips and totte iunbs, While curses and | tan io ongage the whole Erench army in detail, vd Diasphemics disturbed the quietude of the morning | Lest thew by degreas. ‘Le must re number he air, As the first gray streaks of dawn shot up. | Is the l« ‘ai who has the larger force piv ward from the eastern sky, a grave was scooped out of the sand by a lot of men who appeared, t that moment, more likedemous than human beit Binding the Wretch’s hands and feet toother, they threw him into the hole, Two or tires of th ent in te uiek of time. FRANCE 18 NOT PROPERLY FORTIFIED for a wor with anited Germany, ‘Th whien hold afew hundred men and did we stoutest stood upon his body while the ho! in cid Limes, are useless against modern ar lery. being filled up, listing their fet every now and Uh There iv, for ean aycient fort to keep on a level with tho rising sand, As the sa} wood covered hills, . qnant, picturesque # went in those men actaaily danced upon the smoth- | of Alsace, called La Petite Piorre. 0: ering victiin beneath, and the whole erowd broke ened as a check to an {nv out In an unearthly At length, whew the hole gh the Vosges, but now it fe at Was filed up and heaved over, a “stag dance was ringa shot. The black the twenty’ visilanters carried ow | Prussia wave sun rose above t miiitary stores L ir skiffs and disapeared up aud | Tt was nots n the river aluug (he Mississippi shore. The onte a . pished. PM A CI’Y IN THE WOODS, doned to the ¢ feared destruct! ‘ = wehed on. Now if a stroug lor The New Jersey Camp Meeting at Denville |My ert te nilof w Worship wader the Temple of the Heas | tw Crowa tinew must have seat veus The Finest Camp Grouuds ue arNew against it. York Sing Sing Ectipsc 1 do not ay. thot any mere fort by ar ie Thirty-six miles from New York, on the | Would hinder ie ile Pierro, among ite wart-enve abominably misuanaged Morris and Essex Raiiroad, | ere! hills, Hlustraces two p ee 1s the Denvil!e camp ground, where the second an. | men's voreadiicss for tly ih uual comp meeting of the Newark Methodist Con 3 ue dd, It was not equippe tee ference is in session, ‘The ground ts but a few bun ‘red yards trom the railway, and comprites a beau THR MOVEMBRT: OF 28008 tiful grove, a mile in extent, in which are pitehe Einar het l a any aay trey ede 4 the tents of the worshipper fornsed thelr fled neat and. their ‘ This is the second meeting of the Conference on | more fee em of orzaniaiiion it ts dim, » this ground, and as it is inteaded to hold all {ature | i The MipAs OF provisions C16 - meetings here, the baildings which have h | Sees active aerachmente of teleerach' ment ed, and other improvements, ere permanent struc: | with thelr lie set up at intervals . tures. Many of tho former are beavtiful in design, | #awly dccreneing colts of wire. and ty el ornament tothe gruve.as wellas a convenience tothe | on the move, endants, About twenty of those co: pied by their owners, #omoe ot y hay t ts them since July, and long before u the ' present meetin Aina pees Ridlenacofsthesramuaneras Dut they nope efor vrow tiew eae UteekeRGrR oI number than ever be the soldiers lanzh, und tell of the ot ' fore will have t , Int e war Lins carecty t ; Cone ont “ hot yet occupied, und this ts a sare indicat } ‘ the Fike wanagers may bet € men ure thor ‘ ton to make the grove an attractive pitee entleman of Stamford, Conn t ® douce for the admirers of tuls peculi crop of cotton with every prospect o it ter for the nse of the camp fs brought t t very ew. tourive, bu 1 Hail back of the gre A large and 1 i New Buglund, ‘The x building bas been etected for te exclu oo ph iliac i 4 larraivied seats for the ace ants were set Out about the middle of May, ‘The ersons. Here all the relivivus exe wre Asuaae anced suo. und 16 Hold are eit woile at poinis on either pile oft Ao wees sp i dition bo these, large boarding teuts bay —— vided for the aecommodation of tone who) ¢ North Cavotina Anarchy, ten's, lee cream tents, elgar stamis aut in fuct every | 4/8 Aug, 18< Judge | Heo: 4 Yesterday Bis top tay over the metao- | ordered Kirk to show cause w r rial aerviec ii Coby, whe Waa | HOt iste aatast htm for not filled wt x Lek ae WAS [ thrns of (netsoners whowh ‘ was for slong tine Pr Gang Meoting ita for, who were hurried to t Associit {un active worker in the esuse of | belore Judge Pierson . a THE LATEST NOWS GLEANINGS The vy Weights’ Clams Bate es The United Assccistion of Heavy Men enjoyed | Mojor-Gon. Hazen wil « Ruro: their frst wnnual elam-bake in Fuuk's Uni The Bo sama of the Newari ; B terday. In point of numbers, respectabil squad op Thursday hy ponderous proportions, it was the most sue ous Sertbanake was (elt tn Laske aus) ; reunion of the keason, The Association was ¢ rhe materi nts ti 1 roLin January, 1970, and is composed of 133 mem- | Ground ee hui be majority of w Arch Masons he Newark Bec ant Kar tof . N oly So'clock Wallace's fine ban ned | tnstiintion, hw De MIG. Va the ietabers and guests to a sumpiuons t | Charles W, Willard of \ Mr. Morris Goodhart took the piige as ie champion canitidae [01 ( ' 1 ‘ to dinner, amoug them ED. Bussford, Req. PD ted, dr. Judge Koen, Frank A. hansom, D: A ofl, Td. Coe, Satauel C, MeGray weigh ; Abe A. Hummel, whose Aeht- | weight bi rawut 9 Ibs., the Honcdotin c. da Liew b bis twenty thousand ‘duilar dianond y iu nd the. ubiquitous. 0. : ' Fesumed at 7 o'clock —— : ‘ ‘The Sequel to the Binghamton Tragedy, Phe Newars Common Cougeil test 1 yl Linouawros, Aug, 19.—On Wednesday anor: | ed acommittee of n 4 ing last tree ‘burglars broke into Mr. Toibert's | Rarelere of thal 4 ‘ marr store in thie city, but were maniully met by two | * Mea theelty iiaia. A 1 clerked who stovt on the premises, one of whom, | |The Rev. Movmiil Allen. te sen however, Merrick, was fatally injured in the struc@#e | Brown Uuiversity digt ou We (won ta, ae that followed. The bursiars escaped, but the bodies | Mass) asea 4 youre fmourte, il tA ~ of two of them were found this morning in the | Guateurthe ls cootury, Chenanco river, After tue murder they attempted | SNA’ TM A ete i aiinsn fl Wo cross the river, and Were drowned, ‘They were Aw of the tate. Bisthay of Cob both injure with the cier! still at large, ¢ of tiem very severely, in the fight At the store,” Their confederate is 0 taken to Nr Aa bu taken to Hurtiord tostay ame Gay at the residence of her sn Bolland. ib Weak Vouriowuis wtrecle Be es ee yee ee q