The Sun (New York) Newspaper, August 27, 1870, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Sun. BATURDAY, AUGUST 27, 1670, It Whines for AL Amuscments To-day. Van Winkle, Mates ala the Doeeler's Danghten, 860 AY CS Browse Yer the Paling Mativers Lith Faw Mat nee 85 Bene tw: ‘Comic Pantonine, Matine, 1 Oya to Visors Satine. Lhe daily cirentation of Tis Be Me last week, which ended Saturday, wring Ang. 20, was cs follor Money se DBZ OGM Thnrslay Treva D [ridley Wednenday 2.5. 128,000 Bat ies PI Aggregue daily eirentution last week, %62,300. Arcrage daily circulation dur. ing Ue ek, 127,050. Daily average during the previous week, ending Aug ust 18 120,760. MacMahon near Moutmody—The Crown Prince neer Paris. At lost we have, from a tel pondent of raphic cor n hii SUN at Sedan, positive information respecting the operations of Marshal MAcMation, Te is endeavoring to form a junction with Bazine, who still re. mains shut up at Metz; aud for this pur pose he is moving his army by way of Mont- medy and Thionville. The Prussians, how- ever, are going outto attack him. ‘Their in- vestment of Metz has become so complete that they are able to sond from the army lying there a suflicient force to cope with MacMation also, Our correspondent states that this force has moved from before Metz, by of Dunand Varennes, and that yestord frits left wingr had passed Buzaney. The outlying corps of the two armies were engaged yesterday, nnd our correspondent expects that tn important action will at onco take plac between them in the neighborhood of Mont medy. It is also ascertained beyond an question that the ¢ now pressing for further toward Paris, and that the King of Prussia is with him. Of th position of the n which moved into France by way of Muthou Leon marching tow * ry And hes sine vd Paris from the east we have no fu ought by this tim distance of tly er information ; but to be within suppor’ army of the Crown Princ Hi Our rey rs uuite in re ing the f people as one of pro. Jalarm. The tel i +h correspondent of Tint SUN there reports that found aux'ety there prevails among them a deep and menaeing: ion of mind, that they now convinced that th Goverament hag lied to them, and that the ofileial statements of sucecsefal ax by MacManon and Bazaixn, of thelr junction, and of great strategic operations, have all been pure fal hoods. the amy is now at k to be no ¢ mm. Married men to active & ganize and them with nd with miroariat, they would, of ¢ civctive soldiers; but hi made a le when a hundred and filly thousar off Ww can they now be y two zy ili tifications of Paris, aud cute all intercourse between that city and the outer world? = Or of wh use will s Le when the French Government 2 an arn T after a revolutic cith wary overturn or with ont one, has been compfled to accept the hard terms of the conqueror, and to make a peace which will only consecrate the humil jation of the country? It is too Inte to ra new armics for the salvation of France —_— Shall Penton be President of the Convens tiont T of Gov. Frnton and Gen Munnriy tothe Republican State Convention meaus wer. The elevation of the former to the chair of that body would be a terrible ro- buke to Gen. Grant, which would be inten- sified if Gen, Mennrrr were made one of its Vice. Presiden In the face of this double defeat there would be nothing left for Gen. Guanv except to follow the example of Mar thal Bazarsi at Metz last week, after the kevere beating administered to him by King Winiiam, and fall back within the interior lines of the ¢ » House and Naval Office of this pert. The Administration muat therefore, prevent the clection of Fexton to the presidoncy of the Convention, or amit itself to be power! in this State, After such a re not recover his position and restore his pres. so Gen, Guant could tige by securing the nomination for Gov: raor of the Ion, Honacn Greaney, his favorite candidate, aud in whose behalf ly openly | 1 at Chicago a week ago, while swinging around the circle, Everybody exeopt perhops Gon, Gnawe knows that Mr Cay the f id and of Gov. Fi ror. To the bitter end t fought soul der to shoulder in the rece Custom If ! nents, when the head Fustos's henchmen, Merritt, rolled «. ‘Tras, Mr, Greenery in clined his car to the elosing strains of the nt battle over th eoren adered the ¢ cuing to Son ator ConkLING at Saratoga, and Lfied up hig melodious voice in concord with the elo- fan of the Oneida Chief; but there fa oot a politician in the State go bind as not to see that the henrt of the wily philosopher of Chappaqua is with t! balled Scoator of Chautanqua, M ‘ av it ie pretty certain that Mr, Ganutyy would come out of the fight about the wor Deaten man whom the Repu $ can put in nomination this full, nothing would be gained for the Administration by placing his ad of the ticket; unless, in. deed, the friends of Guany and the enc of Fenton, believing that the State will Le Jost to the Republicans in any event, arc in clined to let GineLey run just this once, and therefore claim that the defeat of the party was due to the double dealing and waning popularity of their eandidate, thus making au cud both of GueeLuy and Poy gon. The key of the porition, however, is for Ahe Licnde of Qhanr to defeat Puntos for naine at the h 3 the Presidency of the Convention, and then claim it as an Administration victory. For, once more intrenched within its lines, it will be hard work to dislodge him, — - How our Commerce enn be Destroyed in Time of Peace. On the Sth of October last, the steamship Hornet, otherwise called the Cuba, was seized in W ton, N.C, by the orders of Secretary Frsit, on a complaint of the Spanish Minister, for alloged violation of the neulrali- ty laws, ‘Tho Federal Court of the district was not in session at the time of her se'zure, cage Was postponed for months, Tho charges on which eho was seized not being proven, she was finally delivered to horown- eronthe 17th of June last, on lation that no claim for detention or dam- ages be made against the officers of the n © coneeqnently had been de- over nine months by the United vornment, solely beenuse Mr. 10- 1s said she had violated the new trality lawa. The Cuba and her cargo cost her owner Vefore whe left this port one handred and sixty-five thousand dollars. ‘To regain pos. session of her and bring her back, including law costs, expenses, feos, bonuses, and the like, cost him thirty-five thousand more ; 8o aut he disbursed on the vessel, her outfit, and her recovery, the large sam of two hun- dred thousand dollars. Sails, anchors, naval stores, aud powder, which lad cost him over forty thousand dollars, were sold by order of the Government, as perishable materials and brought at auction oly thirty-seven hhundred dollara. When the Cuba wag brought back to this port, in the latter part of June last, her hull and machinery, and the portion of the eargo which had not been stolen or nefariously sold while she was in the hands of the United States Government, would not have brougit cighty thousand dollars, aud tt The Spanish Minister, therefore—an utter ly irresponrible party—caused a loss to an American shipowner of ono hundred and twenty thousand dollars, simply beeause he chose to make a statement which he could not sulstuutiate. International law gives no redress to the owner of the Cul The case was a disgraceful one in every particular, Disyraceful in the trackling of the Administration to the representative of a power which cordially detests us, and h showed Ler deiestation in our late war, and now shows her contempt of us by the nonchalance with which she treats our protests against the barba roUus excesses mmitting in Cuba; diszraceful in od « nesiy of Government offi on and elsewhere which it disclosed ; disgraceful in the entire iamuni ty with whic wl may ruin ny Spanish off American shipowner, The Florida 's now in the hands of the d Siates Government in this port, 8 on the same charge, on en affidavit made by some y whose name even the Q ritice refuse to disclose, and without a possibility of its owner being alle to If th ot justice ;and any such sis 2 sulstantiate e amended, Py t Guant declared, in that infe mons n 1 which he 6 te le e hbert hat “a war with Would “destroy ods alt shattered “com. 1 is cutitled to by these alsurd complaints, ace may suit her Letter than war. But roy it as United States would, we The False Pretences of the d matter was published in the Tritune yesterday : neuen of whe Kine. "Tue Sum Queru—bork Te SUN whi tac Wud?” Wall Tire Spe ribunce The sulj New York, Aug. UM, 187 Answer. —Vhe despateh referred to wae written by a Yery capable speetal correspondent of Gie Tribune, engaged solely tor we for war service, Haid solely by us. and admitted to the Prossion hecdqnarters as the Tribune correspon ient, by a pass trom Vou Moltke, eranted on the recommendation of Count Biswirek, He sent his letter throng, by special ger trom the battlefield. to tha Triduie's London office, whence it Was transmitted to the /ri tune by teletraph, ‘Tux SUN bad no more to do sp it has todo with th tof Instead of iia being ite special correspo this hour know bis Han correspondent isa deliber- hood, told with the cortuaty ny the most ignorant could it escape We answer "HH. K.'s" inquiry—we add no couments, Whether ® newspaper, capable of ha course, can be believed ut any time, or on any Fulject, tsa ion which every reader luust seitle tor himbelf.~ The Tribune's correspondent tells a false- ood when he states that only an epitome of the report of the battle of Gravelotte was published in Tim Sun, It was published entire in Tum Sux, the same as inthe 7'vi bune ; though the latier journal dishonestly kept the conclusion of it from us until go late an hour that we were not able to print that portion in oar whole edition, 1 honesty the ZrWu.e isin the habit of prae tising. Av tor thoq Dattle report was our special correspoudent or nt, it is settled by the rules of the Assoct ted Press, His report was ours speci al 3d n whether the writer of this generally, from beginning to end, from top to} m front to rear; and it costs us some $400 in gold, just as much in hort as it costa the Jiviune, though, by keeping it back vill an inconvenient hour, that Jour. nal sought to deprive us of our right to it, With what face then doos the 7'rihune assert that we have no more to do with th’s corre- spondent than we have with the Emperor of China? Don’t we pay him for his work and do we pay the Emperor of China? Docsu't h’s work belong to us aftor it is lone, and have we any right to that of the povor of China? Livery paper that belongs to the Associated rty to employ as many tele. Phie correspondents as it likes in Europe ‘Tu Sun has several; so have the Jlrald, the World, the Vinics, and the Tribune, But all their telegrams have to bo furnished to all momlers of the Association before they are published ; and every paper has the same s is at Jolly p quered city and Port Hudson, and then past Vick handled, unwieldy right to use them og that paper by which they are first received, Thus the special correspondence of any one is also the special correspondence of all the others, ‘This the False-reporting Tribune knows, and in its own dishonest way lives up to; and yet it lias the impndence to make extraordinary pretensions of having exclusive news from Europo, when i Aas noné and cannot have any. Whether a newspaper capable of such « course can We believed at any time or on any tulject is a question which every reader must setile for himaeli, ——— “ Fairness and Unfairness in Journn On Thursday morning we published an editorial article of a columa on “The City of Boston Libel Suit in En: wes carefully propared for Tur § lawyer, at a cost of several he time. The Leening Post, of the sre even ing, copied nearly our entire article without credit to Tum Sux. There wasa period in the history of the Jeening Post when such an act would not Lave been tolerated in that cetablishment; when the role was impera- tively aud uniformly enforced that every article—every pa ph—copied — fre another journal should be duly credited We think that rule was more honest than the present pract t. ad.” ‘This article vby a co of the Kvening Poat We do not intend any unfriendly or un favorable reflection on the upright and venerable Mr. Bryant, We always under stood him etrongly to approve the rule which we have montioned; and we have no doubt that if he supe paper in detail, the Leening Post would oan. tinue to be honorably conducted. It was of course through inadvertence that the Taprored Datty Times repented yester. day morning the fault and ov. perverse Locning Post. — Will the Republican State Convention which is about to meet at Saratoga ray a word to check the Cubans in their arduous stragele for freedom and ndence? Or have the Re publicans of York no sympathy exe with those foes of Cuban freedom, Masinrox Frew and Baxcrort Davas, who got & single bribe ? ——— In another column we publish letters addressed by Gen. Fraxeis D Murray str wer of the steamer F the Hon. Mastuton Fist and to the Attorney General of the United States, Mr, Fist has so far vouchsafed no reply t Gen, D. urgent and respectful appeal, He simply intimated to the messenger who handed it to him last Monday night that he knew ne at cl! of the matter until L of the seizure in that morning supposed be should hear abi on in the course of that day, The reply from the Attorney-( which we also publis sition of whet t v0) a law can citizen to en ra had read the account s paper; but that from Wash- londay hands of the & pa rome lites in this Wee Florida must be released at once; and we trast that in receiving back bis vessel, Gen. Dan y not ec Gov eut for f in Cuba, ¢ nl r(oneral nu Gueciry for Gor Voor Gur rus 1 eof being beaten! Wat ng for Gnasr. He says tration.” Yes, indeed ; 9 made $60,000 by a sin- e, is the g Secretary of State! Gen. n1DGR propose: that Financial Integrity be the platform on wich G seney is putup, A tform for a porty whos cting Se : by a single brit columns lon. ate mak! oem cess When the glorious old Adimiral Farragut —ho was only a Captain then—had destroyed the rebel navy, and run his fleet through the terrible f the batteries which defended New Orleans, he left Bex Born possession of the con- P the spoils, while he pushed on up tho Mirsissippi to finish up the work « ing that river, He dashed first past the fire of the rebol batteries at both places in bis usual gallant atyle, On arriving north of Vicksburg, he found Admiral Poxtea lying off the city with his flect of irou-cluds, Fanraavr, as became a veteran of his a was a little old-fashioned in his notions, He believed that wooden ships, well manned and nd fought at close quarters, were on whole more eflicient than the clumsy and and he cor. tainly did a great deal to prove it, Porter, on the other hand, believed in irc rates, and fighting at long range with all the modern improvements, At the taking of New Orleans, Pouren’s part consisted, it will be re membered, in throwing large bombshells at the forts from a fleet of mortar vessels at a g tance ; un expleit which made a great doal of noise at the time, both at the scene and in the pepers, but attended with any important praciival conse ‘on-clads now in vogue; t dis. pear to have been About this time somebod: rote toa Memphis editor ing g whether exch of these ri vo com mondors had an fron-clad feet, 1 editor, who seems to have been at once sententi: lisse castic, informed his corvespondeat in reply that the fleet below Vicksburg—Farnaacrs—was « wooden fleet with an iron cowmander; while hat above Vieksburg—Tonren'’s—was an iron f a commander, hoot with a wo It is said that Admiral I wheu this met his eye, He w uTER was furious sted tos file of marines at once and arrest and court tial the offending editor; but he was finally persuaded to restrain his wrath, But the story ag joke in the West, f¢ Star, which sailed fiom this port oa Thursday last for Havre, took out several hundred barrels of bard bread for the French If the Prussian Consul in this port bad, on the affidavit of some enterprising bootblack, entered a complaint against this vessel for violation of the neutrality law, would the Secretary of State, the District Attcrney, or any other United States ollicial bave dared to stop her? oo Fanny Lewavp, a well known German authoress, has appealed to German women against French fushions, She thinks that the subser- viency of Germany to the style of women's dress devised in Paris has Lad a great deal to do in heightening the arrogance of France and in bringing on the present war. She especially ex- claims against the immodesty of the fashions which the French women have invented, and German women bave universully adopted, Was long a stau ermnen Frevch romances alsa. she saya, have cansed THE SUN, of valuntle | ntended the ce of the dier (Gen, MeClo tan 9) at the War Office in ke,” said onr trend. Pertinent question, wi Nobin case of a War with France fortune as atteadod us in the campaign arainst Ans tris, The grent ditenity te t be pers Denon a Over » SATURDAY, AUGUST much moral damage in Germany; and she calls ‘upon the women of her native land to rise agamst those evi that in many respects Faxwx Lewaro’s accuse. tions are just; but she ought to remombor that While French wonen have perfect taste in dress, German women are the worst dressed in the world, unless it be the English, Indeed, it woald be difficult to determine to which of these two nations the palm for awkwarduess and bad taste in the women should be awarded, It is vain to contend against the supremacy of Fi tuthetic matters; and the longer the world lives, the more its inhabitants will be sure to draw their freliions of dross and their model of social manners from the people of that favored country whose centre is Paris, This is the order of nature, and it will be useless to rebel against It. —2— Mayor O'HAr, is said to have changod Lis mind on the clot! suit consisting of an emorald-green coat, a French tri-coloved vest, and Prussian blue trow- sors, the whole to be set off with sleur-de and a star-and-stripe course, will be English, and the boots Russian leathor, Mayor O' Hatt is a genuine cosinopoli- tician to the roots of his hair, on How France has Reon Swindled, Prony the dournal of Commerce. Teis related of the Care Nicholas that, shortly after we Crimesn war broke out, he was siroiliay arouch aa nance yord at W pride the pyramids. of there, whiea he titty ehineed With bis walking-stiek, It pave back a rt roveale “ated wooden ° had been practised by the con- wistag all the bulla there stored away Foilow ing up this clew the Car aseurtained that job. Ding and trand pervaded ull departmen the army Forviee, and that, except on paper, his eutpite wae in no contlition to coatond with the witied powers. Na- con's army aud miley equipments and provis sare not a font and @ousive as those of Nicuolaey bat they fall far short of what h Wold expected” them to he. We question, in tie first place, whether the getive army ‘was mg Tike 400,000 strong. We have never able to’ firnre up more than 260,000 or cuir Preveh troops in the na. vance on Pros-in; and wo Vellove that the motu enuineration of Lie men at Lis command was th oason that budueed N on to stand on 1 Invasion oF tary ring—has ng rea oUt of Thea, v sunposud and” oniiorns More that a ye D We Fett the states France lad aver «1 1 1 her aud the Gover tretorie iter MoeMa: be rife that France t of tac we t to ny capital.’ gil # in the Proneh ar. with Prossis. on of fight A, T. hW aa M. P—'o M. i i t ? My " 1 Prussta Ready Two Years Apo. Prom the Army aut Mery Jourma Two years ago a V found a strategist poring over his maps er. “If you wil pert Gon. Ve I should to im you must answer or not Pruss 8 you tilns beat.” Certoiniy,” ropliod the Ge ral ask it” 1 hand up open map with si ant sesture, he inquired: “Are you ready?” Yes," was the answer; “only we ean 9 for such good t our King eannct wh Het Vien tora be Boy, ts repidsy closing up Tho new schoolhouse at ashineton was — - BROOKLYN, - Thomas H. Haufricht, a young vietitn of ¢ np. Mon. was fonid dead yetterday ta am outliou deur of Mis dwe ling. 2e Ploya etre Patriek Coltter 69 vers, of Fourteenth half, wourstii'g nor 1 The atockhollere and dopostiors of the slofrnet CURIGSIIIVS OF CRIME. Elton Besser, who Keone a sullorst hoarding hon Storhen A, Ordon, of 191 Grand erect, was yore Sty ren mt JOLLLNCS ABOUL TOWN, Maric in Central Park this al Phe Maiden lane Ore continue The Voy of James Byron, of 9 Olive ‘ was found’ fluatiug of Bier w, East Klver 1 6 i8 a laree hole in the sidewalk on Four ray. Ast) wast the city 10F aces Will fol ho tleket viators’ war Wa Mayor Q'tal: yer ierday, and Mtr, A vas requires to Dud bal in $0) bo keep the p ravyears The Kien. novuced bis tatention of resume? before Nis aflernoon al ts plente, in Jones's Wig whiteall ont hy 1 punt munittec Have made ONAL INTELLIGENCE, -— Nopoleon's wh abouts is at last ascertaiued., Ne sat Lewitaena The Hon, Thomas T, De Witt, Chief Clerk of the Brovbiyn Police Board, ts 1a Saratog ‘The Hon, D. Wemyss Jobeon Is the © Youth’ who ates thn’ despatches of the Courrier dea tale Unis tor the Commercial ddcertiecr, Ue is only © years old, ‘Tho Hon, Samuel Spencer, of tho Mansion Mouse Dar at Lonw br ), furnisbes the Ninth Regunent with lubileators free, He recklessly declares Mat he will Continue to dono througaont wa eitire way, eveu fit thould prove the ruin of ail bis relations, Capt, Auznstus Fuller marchos his company up to the Continental Hotel bar-room at Long Brauch every morning before sunrise, and pays for all they can SWal Jow. Capt, Miller, on the contrary, restricts Lis coi wiatid fo LWo buttles of O-cont elarét dally. a) Mas Morlacent has parchased # farin In Billerica, ‘nd ts nakiug butter ang cheese, picking blackberries, aud riding Uorvebaca.” Her sister and father wii} arrivé from Rurope soon, dod wilt lee alone. on, the, fa uring Se, theatsiiel woman. ycle Ly at ‘dane cr, APPALLED BY LAGHTNIN , it | and banish them forever, Rodout | s rnouyevn pe RSONS PARALYZED BY A SINGLE STROKE, tantly Killed-A Ghaatly Spectacto bing Preaks ofthe Storm Kiend— 26.—At noon yestordey the #moke that had for a wees covered the river lifted, and from all perts of the horizon dirk marky As night drew nigh the flashes of light ning end the dvop mutterings of thunder were For miles the storia clouds hung over the river, and the ligh Despite the warn ing storm, hundreds upon tna and children thionged Union avenue on th and at the boginni formance there could not have been less th A Veings under the canopy, P. M., and large drops of rain had already woilo the thunver ds of men, wou to a efrens t This was just es question, and ordered a ter upon the can drowned the voico of the ri A shott distance from ihe main tent was A smaller tent, need asa fruit stand, and a fow fect from this stand stood a willow tree in t ¢ cornor of the yard of an adjoining dwelling. ner of the clreus ground, under and near the troo, were grouped alarge number of persons who hed taken slielter from the storm, were also congrezated about twenty-five persons, White hitched to the tree was a horse with « wagon, A colored man wes rented and Jollity prevailed about thie group, one coloret man yelling owt at tine yer a show befor studs k tio, The hat, of ‘Under the fraft tent * Save yor money ; lt up the entire ecene, and a peal of thunder fol- lowed which shook the earth. were every where, end a fearful panic was imminent; Presence of mind of Mr. Bailey, the propri- aved hundreds of lives, smizut to the audience, * K J caflod towdly on the Band to p he same time he nbout the ving throws Hitt Rows of pallid fucos Vsave a rush ing had done tte work out ob) the west or main canvass killing the Ter Voote and singeing his clothin ed Wo the group Of colored persons WERE INSTANTLY KILLED, ‘otown, aged & Lge “Tei ty vais treghtea it—wod thus J then the eat te for the open the alter en miles our rou, haverne, reporia the then anoer Md think Lane y ind Deen routed yet what had tory and got i vd and wounded, the As I said,’ this sort two miles along the road, The Suicide of Mri Coroner Jones, of Brooklyn, yesterday held an Inquest on the body of N Of Myrtleavenue and Steuben street, who had cou mitted suicide by taking arsenic separated from Ler husband and had lived with her @ miss of 18 years. She Waa drank to excossand taken linge doses of mornin Tuesday #he rout her a arsenic. which the re, Myrtle and ied that evening. Of polions without o prove wag about 8 woare old, Wilhelmina sic Mrs. Siegler had daughter Emma chter out to irl obtained at Kingh Bedford avenues, e fres home THK VECCORIOUS FRENCH IN BERLIN Hew they were Received by the Poople— The Boys ask the Turcos for their Catw TWe Ladies Taiking Prouch and Arable to the Privoners-ilow the Baule wae Lost. Correspondence of Loniton Meio. When the train witt the prisoners got in, there were ahou! 5,000 people inside the terminad lining } a ereat n sins," oF atroot= a they are ong'them. A tre. inred yell Received infenery and te blac corriige there wor who pats hil!) at Weilesen. bare, th creen boule ihe French were partl Lut their guides in vite! then to stand up, to respect for tt cople of the capital. Whit: they were slowly pas Ing berore ‘me Toximiied the expression of treir countenances, It war Tuostly that of & Kliy curioste ty, and of embarrasement Hol uniixed with pride, Of course they could not _nacerstand what tye peo: plo, in an enormous comfurtin Of voces, eld to thein, but the anspeakably cou teal erin of boys, sitting on the shoulders of each otuer, at ull events mave them a iifit of it At last one succeasiul ery tut the upnor fiand, for which somebody had furije ed the boys with heerssary Frotcl), ard Wil h was addresses to cvery Zonnve after the m: of Le ne, chats! aro the tom-cats the favorite refrain of the juvenile It was easily observab'e that, wi the Fronch, far from being considered and Nnswmiliate} enemies, wore extrony In a tow minutes the boundioss biluriey of neely 5 copter, who hid themselves fn the {interior of their first-clnss tailway carriage. I helt the young ladies handing in refreshing drink to the taw lows of Southern France and of the AUar, aud made my cab follow the track of the circular tailwny, over Whicu the train was to proceed to the Bastera line. THis circular railway, on & level with the road, hon Hned with henves, and is, actreot railway. Deco masses of peo ple stood ail along it At last was over! by the train, and let it Powe. But now had iva aspect changed! It looked as never railway train had looked before, ‘That fraternization of the prisoners. with the boys had Vecome perfect; numbers of them had crept into We carrigzes, nnd wore sitting vetwoen the lags of the fronch and the A‘ticans, we: riug Severa had p ed themselves with eats, Those that could not get into the crowded enrriay 4 ciimbed on tie ton of them, wi they aunsed treniselvis by sinnding on tueir heads and brand ing Choir logs, ‘There ware no stsirs, no protrad. ing bouts, Hat boys Were hot sitting upon, Keen a distance the train Ke a Buad'siet with thonsands of lez: usands of ras fruding in inconceivable direetions tall, flea iy, beardioss Arab, mely handeoino face, who ion becanse he looked al ‘The people. in fet, imiacin & wonrin, and tue ladies had presented bin With a fan, with’ whieh Le kept fan- Ring bimscifand stniiiog in the most areh ana ev quettish way, being evidently accustomed to have bis tua with tae public. I resched the torminus of the Bastera Kailway by a short eut before the train, Dut could get in with great ditienity, owing to the iumenso crowds by which it was #urro The densely peopled neihborhood, tae oat Berlin shaw! rouna‘veture, had poured f fi he w he really w ater mus n Wore Visible w Nore the attempt to admit by t oken down, T dave say that t 2 50,000 peop dificult, t cach a large basin o: © a querter of 4 pound of nd cheese, a pint of Ve 1 insted (hom 1 As vigh hundred | 1 Supper finished, Ue cards to the prt bw pre cither to th m P ys . Wh \ par tehed rot ly hand ou thi el tie Bren zhad been stores belonging to pointed ont toartoen nt ni of It etancing hots we kuew they We My we were.” Wuen this was explaine? to the Frenchman he ka ate, We ni fore *s yours. W t no Ie been acens Vy the rapid aud coutingour advan shane, ——. The Battic-deld of Forbnc rom the London Times, Aug. ¥ The heights commanding the town, which lh chad occupied for some days afsir of the 24, locked now like the scene of a recent pienic, lore a bot Uc, there a piece paper whieh might have enveloped randwiches or the buffer-trod of the ouutry ; there the remains of a wood tire: there the lid ‘of a tin pot. ‘Puen more remuins of Wood fires, more lds of tia pots, and broken bottles innumerabie, The sort of dédris that one ees on a race course the dav ater ther n idea which ta again suzgested Uy # nuinter of sticks stilt remaining in the ground tu di f fifty or sixty yards wlead on the way fo the Spicheren heivits,” These are not however ren guns them, I Uass from jalse indicat Jndications of war, Where thes fre plinted in the earth (9v Duried but thea aitns, fox this day at ie be loit her A few yards ahem! there are three mor tH Plants; then wip nea dozen; thon ¢ ri “ t . s iz they eonla tiniled to do #9, twenty von, Puss rtd. ny. not diticulty, up the steep ascent, L tad ach lying torn opea on the ground tronents battered helmes) bloc 1 bodies 1 in the convu Prussians ai ret teen ti down into the plan Dobsorve th fF ascent marked, ae if to show how Were, Win KeodlewnaR stuels in ¢ 4 where his Wearon star salen On, at r oll Unable any longer to ¢ nderstood t 1 of T nk ‘ u then t ' Whou Head t tende have not y lind the na t . 2 Pra 83 French 1 min 1 nt of the mount; Nan i hota ns, the Freneli {ylts, who Her a por At least must have waits td OuzIL A then, on the leit Jc of tho Dattie-tlel], looking trom’ Sawrbr Lotling but groves, “Hicr rulen in Gott, © ineeripdon, 29 Prenssen, 60 Franzosen No. Hove rest Iriends and tors tovet r inseristion, 6 Prussians Tobserved that the words 1 charitavle oy plilusopiieai ch,cven on thelr own Spieneren helwhts q v1ind; and the eronnd wh ed with letters addressed to such Mons, or auch another at M warded @ la'wilte de son rémment’ 4 read several of these letters, which Wore natura dul therctore, under the civeumetances, te MI reprosehked the Preneh sol who avparer hinks less oc his relations than hi Hons ain of bin, With not answer Wters; aud ain We {ull of wssnrances of alfvet Some notilied the enclosar not one in ¥ ‘of money, and ther ich @ sistoror a mother expressed JOU AL tLe prospect of her brothos or ver fon dying tor munity frie Lonis Barbari,"’ bays a letter from the mother of ® to her fon, “has pronosed for know ae soon as posei!)© whether accept hin for your bother in-law.” A certain noinbor of French soldiers, whose knapsucks had been emptied, seemed to have carried reiimious books With them, ceneraly of the simolst kuid, “LAlphabet Chréien upward, Tsnw an" At du TLAite dela Guerre’ ving by the give of ¢ poor fellow, and by the side of another 9 manuser copy of the’ Air dus Djinus” (andonte con mote trom Auber's Premler Jour de Bonheu — By all Means give us the Buzzawe, To the fulitor of The Sun. Bun: Lh relation to the offal dumped in the !owe ray by the New York Renderlag Company, word Ita dt bi Berton 40. anort Dot tubeey ola atde whe wouldcloan the streets five of charge, ud tave th elty 200,000 0 Year IPT. 27-4. M POSTSCR SUN OFFICE, A Over 259,000 Pravainns tn bis Vici Vaton with 126600 Raw tev » Hope of France 100,000 A¢ arcing the ¢ vail Strasbourg ) my, whieh all now proves shut up in Wield Marshal Sir Alexa of Cinelsca Hopital, w war, died its TIN: stkan oF BTh A eperiil correspoddent te ‘The ¢ All the regin cuts bevor been Hed ww from the ordinary reserves, CANKOMERS WSCAPR. The special correspondent at Perle writes op Who, with on rcoret scrsion ies thut the practice of wii i by Cou namber abomt 2%),000. Garde DioLile will reach au eg CBM. PAILLY'S RLMOVAL digodoye | Maw bin befors \ e had the Emperor's ov and dangerous re the arrest of 1,20 peopl their minds of.ea neve battle at Gr —Cyrus H, Met Ia @ very oh v ropidly cities ary built u in the West, its related tint at om n vacant tot yto slesp, amt fa story bard as ante ivginia paper tolls a molan: —A man has be of the Cineinnati ous endeavors of Uh © Three young men, properly pr ted by a majority of th: each Representative district oF Knick Are entitled to taltiog free of char xacted, amounts to $0. written by 4 J ont anstinetly the # home eeninrice ao, tract ful career of Napole sand final downfall downt other incklents, et the blood of th of tie old leat rity ana popalat foiue becomes re th Pranee with grew this the propusey eodee BAZAINE STARVING IN METZ Wir y 40,000 Man, tvs io at wn The Doon .—The best information ebout German om vam annot exceed 100,006 really good troops, the remainder being raw ian foreo left at Mota, or within dat 252,000, after 100,000 gent to reinforce the Crown Jor Woortford. Governor in the Peninowlar rapa trom Monk The Mrashonee hesievers are making repht prow and the otvenal ow need, ‘Nhe Gernon Lan hosseg eis have ay privately that I wos Cunrobory peselily two divisions, cot ewad A with whew Mee exepnen, of the Corps Le elaittc M. Kerf Ty a ‘rocnu's OF Baris, ted tw thursday ple who elangs have the intelligence to play the Marvetita. Wr k, the reaper moher, bh Mic buildines of Paris, especially tone having fine carvings on thle oxterior, a vay tnd ts to be sold his ow tnrimen are urged t 1 States, Die stron eal ‘ Tis a sore ¢ : Jitond, the sista of w Aurical 6 are Jostices 1 tm Who tuition fom ols ven ‘ 4 at Loni yeh NG wae

Other pages from this issue: