mm rmTTTUT TO T1 TED "A TO) TOT H A . .. -t I- - :." V " j , , VOL. XIV NO. 47;! PHIL ADELFHf" THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1870. DOUBLE ; SHEET THREE CENTS. !' i . ' ' i "J'' ' 1 1 t -i ; it.'--. ' ' FIRST EDITION THE WAR ; III EUROPE. The Latest Situation. Probabilities and Doubts. The Advance on Paris I Affairs Around Metz. The Latest Advices ty Mail. YiEtesenburg, Forbach and Woerth. Further I ails of the Battles. French Prisoners at Berlin. THE SITUATION. Affairs Around Metz Ne Satisfactory Arfvlee., u4 the Exact Conditio or Thine Still la Deobt Bazaine Still Near Metz. I -. The despatches -which we published ' in our later editions yesterday, and those which were received last ni -ht, afford no definite and satis factory clue to .the actual positions of .the belli gerent armies between the Moselle and the Mease. It would still appear, that Marshal .Bazaine . has succeeded in ' reopening his communications with the capital, -but It would' seem that he ' 'has not succeeded In effecting: the withdrawal of any considerable portion of his army from the neigh borhood of Metz. A report from Rheims, dated as far back as Monday, states that Bazaine, with part of his army, was retreating by way of Vouzieres, on the Aisue, but it was thought that this force was that portion of the main army near Metz which is supposed to have escaped to the west of Gravelotte before the road was seized by the Prussians in the battle of the 18th. The latest reports from Paris lay no more stress upon Bazaine's alleged escape to the northwest, but generally acknowledge that he is etill hemmed in by the -Prussians at Metz. One report even states that Metz is completely isolated, and that the Prussians have' cut off all communications between that point and Thion ville and Montmedy, and then, in the face of this acknowledgment, insists that Bazaine aad MacMahon are in dally communication. The Minister of the Interior claims to have favorable advices from the armies in the field, which he withholds because some of the jour nals Indiscreetly make public details which fchould be kept back. If there were any truth in this statement, the ministry could easily fur nish the public with such details as would not ' benefit the enemy, and withhold from the indis creet journals the rest; and if favorable news bad been received, tney would not be slow to j Adopt this course. " The despatches received this morning np to the time at which we write state that the Paris papers are persuading themselves that Bazaige is realizing some deep-laid strategical plan. Ad vices from Montmedy, by way of which place Bazaine was said to have effected his escape, dated Tuesday, the 23d, mention nothing what ever of his alleged movements In that direction. Adair Near Parte-The Pru.slaaa Still Ad . vanclnc Concerning the position and movements of MacMahon and the Crown Prince, the reports of last night were as unsatisfactory as those from the valley of the Moselle. According to them, however, the Crown Prince would appear to have progressed as far as St. Dizler, 35 ' miles southeast of Chalons, and 115 miles ' ' east-southeast of Paris. There were reports . that he had halted here to reinforce the Prus sian right and centre, under Prince Frederick Charles and General Von Stela metz. The despatches which we have received this morning, however, lead to the belief that the Crown Prince Is steadily advancing on the capi tal. An official despatch from Prussian sources states that Chalons has been evacuated by the French, and that a Prussian column is west of that point, advancing rapidly on Paris; while a Paris despatch, dated midnight, gives a report that the Prussian . advance , had reached Sezanne, a town about 30 milei S. W. of Chalons and but 65 miles . S. K. from . Paris. Prussian detachments are also reported at Brienne, on the Aube, 40 miles S. . of ' Sezanne, and at Chaumont, near the Marne, 30 miles further to the S. . These reports indi cate that the Crown Prince's army is advancing on the capital by way of the Valley of the Aube, as stated a day or two ago, avoiding the army of MacMahon in the neighborhood of Chalons. As to MacMahon, according to some of last night's reports he was Etill at Chalons, while others insisted that the camp there had been abandoned, the army being posted on the plains immediately east, with the advance as far as Ste. Menehouid, on the Alsne, twenty-five miles - to the northeast. The official Prussian report of the evacuation of . Chalons, and the movement . of the Prussians to tha west of that point, tend to strengthen the credit of these reports. The Naval ReconneUaaace ef the 19th. The unimportant naval encounter which took place on the 17th, and of which the details have just been received, is of little significance. The Bay of Kuegen, from which the German do- tpatch-bo.it Grille started out on its recon noitring expedition, divides the island of Ruecen from the mainland, and is situ ated almott directly noith of Berlin. On the narrow portion ol it the strong sea-fortress of ctralsund is situated, at a dis tance of 120 miles from the Prussian capital. The Danish island of Moen, near which the French squadron was encountered, is located northwest of the Bay of Ruegen, the arm of the Bailie which interposes being here about 0 miles in width. The French fleet in the Baltic is apparently inactive, and manifested on this occasion no disposition to do anything more than repel the audacity of the Prussians. THE BATTLE OF WEISSENBURG. 1 A Preech Aeconnt et the Enaaaewieat The Conflict aa Vaeqaal One Deeperatlea et the. Tnrcee-IIew the Germane Fight. j , The correspondent of the Courrier tin Bat Khln gives the following description of the bat-" tie of Weissenburg, writing from Haguenau, under date of August 6: .-.. i ...-..- it j ' The rumors current yesterday In Strasburg, and upon hearing which 1 Instantly sent out for Hague nan, were unfortunately but too well founded. Let me hasten to say. our soldiers were overwhelmed by nurrbers; 8000 or 10,000 men of our army fought for six hours against 80,000 men may be against 100,000 men. The 74th and 60th Regiments of Infantry, the 16th Hcglroent of Foot Riflemen, one regiment of Turcos, and one regiment of mounted riflemen en- cam pea last night in tne neignoornooa oi weisscn bnrg. Skirmishers and patrols, sent on reconnois sances towards the frontier, reported no enemy vislole, and our men were far from suspecting aa engngement imminent. This morning at daybreak a vigorous cannonade was 1 4ieard, and an Immense - German army artillery, cavalry, and infantry appeared on . Schwelgen heights (Sehweigen Is the name Of the first Bavarian village on the other side of the frontier), and on all sides around lu The first bombs feu on weissenburg, and almost Instantly set Ore te the barracks and other buildings. The 60th Regiment of Infantry was making tne morning soup wnen trie bans begaa to fall In the camp. - General Douay, who Com manded the division, thereupon ordered a forward march ; the soldiers quitted all their accoutrements, inrew aown meir Knapsack., wiucn tney were Be ginning to buckle, and darted forward. The French division had only three guns, the enemy had a formidable artillery, which threw bombs and shells into our ranks. Our soldiers sheltered themselves behind some farm-houses near Weis senburg, from whence they were soon dislodged by the enemy's cannon. They were overwhelmed by the number of Germans, which momentarily in creased. The Turcos fought like lions ; they charged the enemy with the bajonet, but they were riddled with grapeshot. The two regiments of infantry likewise displayed prodigies of valor; ofllcers and men met distressing losses. Our soldiers were soon disturbed by terrible Intelligence General Douay was killed by a bomb and. General de Montmarle was wounded. The Germans continued to fire with their numerous artillery upon our men, houses, and farms, burning everything within their range. At the height of the battle a detachment of Infantry came by railway. It was ignorant or that which was taking place, and was on Its way to join Its reglmet t. The train was stopped at Hunspaoh (a station live miles from Weissenburg), our soldiers quitted the carriages, loaded their muskets and leaped into tne ngnu rnis oatue oi one against ten lasted until 3 P. M. The French retreated through the woods and the vines, pursued for the last time by the enemy's grapeshot. The Turccs had posses sion of eight cannon, which were retaken from them after an obstinate and most sanguinany eontest, during which they nad destroyed a Prussian hussar regiment. We bad no time to plok up our arms and tents; most of the wounded were left on the battle field. I reached Haguenau at 8 P. M. Numerous groups were In the streets talking with animation of the day's events. Then came a mournful sight. namely long lines or veuicie., arawn oy oxen or horses, containing some furniture and bedding, and filled with men, women, and little children, sobbing. They were inhabitants of Reldsellft, Schoenburg, and other neighboring villages, who were flying before the enemy. They established themselves under the trees in the stieets, ana townspeople nocked around them. They sobbed, and Imagined their villages were all on tire. By and by came through Weissen burg gate the soldiers ef our regiments which had been eDgaged In the morning's unequal conflict. They came worn out, exhauaed, having tasted no food lor twenty-iour nours, weeping mis one an officer, that one a comrade." 1 questioned forty or fifty of them. They all said the strife was Impos sible, and . declared that If they had been merely 80,000 strong they would have repelled the enemy, for their small columns had repeatedly held the enemy In check. 1 A sergeant-major of Infantry nar rated tne inciuents oi me Duuie as i nave aoove given them to you. Some wounded soldiers came up, leaning on tneir uiuskbu. a i urco snowed us his arm traversed by a bayonet. Another Turco brought ns bis captain's sword ; the officer had been killed by his side: ne kissed the weapon of his un happy leader. All these things were mournful, and In the silence of the night produced an ex'.raordlnary eneou At u r. m... two veiucie nuea wun wounaea soldiers came up; they were carried to the ambu lances. At IS P. M., I could Bee Slaters of Charity running in every airecuou,seeK.ing meuicines,ana as sistance, and discarding their do ties with exem plary zeal. At 1 A. M the drums beat in the streets of Uagueaau to onng tne local nremen together, They were sent down the road towards Wois&en. burg to bring in the wounded and to help bury the dead. Another remark to the lnnorof our regi ments should be made, namely they lost neither a Dig nor a cannon. I write under a vivid Impression produced by the events told by me and by the scenes 1 witness. THE BATTLE OF FORBACH. Another American Account Terrible Heenee of Meuaere The Complete Hout ef the French. The correspondent of the New York Times, writing from Metz under date of August 7, gives the following description of the battle of For bach: The following Is an account of the battle at For- bach,which 1 heard from the officer who brought the news to me jtmperor ana ms stair, ana wno reached Metz In a railway tender after General Frossard s flight from tne scene or action, to those of my readers who remember what took place at Saarbruck, It will be easy to form an idea of the position held by the French troops after the advance of the 3d Au gust, on Friday evening a report was spread in the renon camp to tne enect mat the Prussians were advancing upon Sarreguemines a French frontier town of nearly seven .thousand Inhabi tants, situated at a distance of about ten miles, as tne crow uiea, buuui oi BuarorucK, ana at tne same distance southeast of Forbach. General Fros- sard, on learning this, abandoned his position on the hill wnicn masks me town oi saarDruck, as well as that which he held upon the hill of Arneval, and withdrew the whole of bis forces to the heights of Bpikeren and to the Auberge de la Breme d'Or, wnicn is a roaasiue inn, eiauuing in me vauey to the west of Spikeren, and built half on French aad half on Prussian soil. I believe that I have mentioned In a previous letter that Saarbruck Is protected on the way by a range cf hills, and in order to understand thoroughly the Prussian advance, it will be necessary to state that these bills had never been reconnoitred by the French army. They extend from Saarbruck as far as Merle-ba-ih, which Is a small village about two miles from Fo' bach, on the road to Metz, and are covered as far as Htlrlng Wendel, a large iron foundry, less than a mile across the frontier, by immense woods Into which the French have nevei penetrated. This t&ct Is very Important, as in the opinion of French military men it is almost solely on account of the woods not having been properly reconnoitred that the troops under General Frossard s coaimand ex perienced such a disastrous defeat on the 6th of August. OFKNIKG OP THK BNOltiEMKNT. Karly on Saturday morning a reconnoitring party was sent out by General Frossard In the di rection of 8aarbracka.but 1 am told by the person from whom I got my tnf jrmatlon that not a single man ever returned to the French camp. At 11 o'clock the Prussians, leaving their position on the heights behind Saarbruck, quietly took possession of the bill of Arneval, and of that which masks the town of Saarbruck. A large body of Prussian artil lery then descended Into the valley and commenced shelling the French position on the heights of Splkeren, from which the French were forced to retire, after a brilliant resist ance, at 8 o'clock In the afternoon- The French artillery retreated behind the hill, leaving a number of guns, among which were several mitrail leuses, behind them ; but on joining the troops sta tioned at the Auberge de la Breme d'ur, commenced an orderly retreat along the high road in the direc tion of Forbach. They bad, however, only just reached the road which lies in the valley at the foot of gpikeren, when a large number of Prussians sud denly came out of the woods on the hill to the west, and bringing their mitrailleuses to bear upon the re treating regiments, kept op a murderous Ore upon thent aa they advanced along the high road. At a short dlotance past Miring Wendel, the point where the woods finish, the French were joined by reinforcements from St. Avoid, at between P.H and 4 o'clock, lu the meanwhile a large bo4y of Prussians bad descended to the road from the hills on either side, and attacked the Krench in the rear. The French army, encouraged by fresh troops, turned upon the enemy, and during three hour a most bloody battle was fought on the big! road be tween the Iron foundry of Htirlng Wendel and the entrance to Forbach. It has been reported by the French Government that the Prussians ha4 Bred npon tne hotltajt at Forbach, but I am told that this ts feis and that If ball' struck the bnlldlsf rt was purely by accident. . , , . The fight en the high road appears to have beeh ft regular munwwey hundreds and handred Of men falling eith-,ii-ftler mortally .wounded, on either side. After three boors' uninterrupted ngntlng the French were forced to beat a second retreat, whk-h was accomplished In the greatest disorder. They, - However, made a snort stand -at Fotoacn, ana aid their ntmost to bold It against the advancing enemy, but valor was of no avail, or,' although every inch of groend was obstinately, contested, there was no .disguising the fact that the Prussians advanced surely, thoegh slowly. i M-. '.- - v . - . ' COMPlIrl JLOVV OF TDK FRENCH. At the eitxeme end of Forbach. that Is tosavat the southern extremity, Is the railway station, built at the very foot of the range ef hills which I have already mentioned. That portion of the hills which Is Immediately beyond the station la crowned by a thick wood, which had been occupied by the Prus sians during the battle, and as the French passed out of Forbaoh on the road to St. Avoid, In a tole-i rably orderly though hurried retreat, thyencoun- tered such a terrible Ore from the Prussian mitrail leuses, placed on the very verge of the wood, that they were completely routed, and fled in every direc tion unoooupiea oy tne rrussians, Hinging away their arms and cursing their Generals as the real cause of their dishonorable defeat. At first every retreat seemed to be cut off. There were Prussians behind them, Prussians on their right, and . Prus sians In front of them, for a large portion of the enemy descended from the heights to the high road," and thus cut off all escape in that direction. The remnants Of General Frossard s corps succeeded with some difficulty, in escaping over the hills on the eastern side of the road, to Pnttelanire. where the still remaln.The person who brought me thlsinforma matlon, and who escaped over the hill facing that on which the Prussian mitrailleuses were planted, tells me that the slaughter of the French troops, aa they ' moved along the high road, after leaving Forbach, is beyond all description. An attempt was made to i answer the fire from the opposite hill, but it was found that the French shots produoed no effect whatever on the Prussians, who stood sheltered by the wood. It was now past 8 o'clock, and aa nlo-ht set in the remnants of the 2d Corps of the Army of the Rhine were able to escape ao.'oss the hill and MBih Pnfrtelftnora .... .... v. - THE BATTLE OF W0EBTII. 1 Farther Particular by Mall of MaeHIahon'e Great Defeat The Forces Unequal, or Course, ,,.) . j . . r-. , The following la from a French account of the battle of Woerth by an eye-witness: .; o ' General Douay 's division of the 1st Corns had heen surprised and decimated by the Prussian army under tne urown rnnce, ana oau etiectea its retreat upon Bitche by the Col du Pigeonnler. Marshal Mac Mshon, learning what had occurred, pushed forward rapidly to a point between the Vosgesand Haguenau, with three divisions of infantry and two brigades of cavalry. During the interval the Crown Prince had descended the Valley of the Rhine in order to in vade our territory on that side. Between the foot of the Vo.ges Mountains and the coarse of the Rhine, the valley is broken and hilly.' MacMahon,' not being able to prevent the enemy entering the valley, desired to rally and collect ' his 2d Division, ana - at tne same ' time to. cover tne voegee ana oaverne. rie advanced,' consequently; from Haguenau towardsWelssenburg, believing that he was- la a position ' where h could be supported by the corps of DeFallly and ' Li Aamirauib no buuucuit iuiiuu oimseir engaged with the entire forces of the Crown 'Prince on the road from Bitche to Haguenau.-: The field of bat tle was Inclosed on the east by the forest, and on the west by the lower spur of the Vosges Mountains. The country near the mountains Is broken and woody. - MacMahon commenced the action with vigor, and his cavalry, attempting to turn the left flank of the Prussians, advanced as far aSFrosch wilier. But his force, notwithstanding heroic de votion and prodigies of valor, could only Inflict onl the enemy a greater loss than itself sustained. It was at last compelled to give way before an over whelming superiority of numbers.' Where we had a battalion, the Prussians sent forward ten ; we had sixteen squadrons of cavalry, the Prussians brought sixty into line; and their artillery bore the same proportion to ours. The greater part of our p'ects were dismounted by the concentrated fire of the enemy's batteries: it became Inevitable that a retreat -should be effected : and we fell' bade leaving the field covered with the slain. The enemy was too' mucn exnauBiea Dy tne struggle to pursas; and MacMahon, with the remains of his corps, fell back nnon Saverne. ... Marshal MacMahon had not more than 40,000 men ' to resist iorces lour times mat nuraDerand con tinually reinforced. All went well-tUl middav. The Prussians were losing ground-,-ftoischwUler bad been retaken; the Turcos charged with the bayonet ana carriea au oeiore mem. . iiut fresh masses of-the enemy now debouched upon us in compact order from the woods; the Prussian artil lery took np a position' on the edge of (he woods, and poured their fire upon us without intermission, and thelr-dhells set fire to the village. About i o'clock some regiments began to waver; our losses became very heavy; and a rumor spread about that our artillery was short ef ammunition, and that our soldiers had exhausted their cartridges. The rnv. alrv made a last effort, but were repulsed, and then began the rout. Night began to fall as the retreat commenced, adding darkness to the other causes of the disorder, and the Haguenau road was covered with fugitives. An America Aeceunt The Ferocity ef the Pru.alaa Oeoet Tribulation and Terror of a New York Correspondent. - From the account ofthe battle of Woerth by the New York Herald's correspondent we take the following vivid extracts. He writes from Woerth under date of August 6: I am far from being a rich man, nor am I a person of very sensitive feelings, aBd I believe, without boasting, that wlthoat being a hero I have a fair ' amount of animal courage. But I would not go through again what I have since I wrote the fore going paragraph I would not have my very soul disgusted with the sight (and the deadly sickening smell) of human carnage and butchery which I have witnessed since I put down my pen last, not to be made the wealthiest man In New York. - How to relate what I have seen how to depict In language which shall bring facts home to your read ers, as if they themselves saw what I have seen is my great difficulty. About eleven A. M. yesterday the whole nature of the battle seemed to change. The Prussians became the attacking party, and, much to the surprise of every one, the French gave way and retired to the rising ground behind Woerth. For three long hours the vUlage was the scene of the hardest struggle of the day. A Prussian division occupied Hand the French tried hard to dislodge them, but without effect, by firing from above with shells, and by repeated advances of the French out posts. The house lu which I was, the hotel of the Cheval Ulano, was in the very centre of the town, and, of course, was very soon riddled with balls. At flj st the host and his family tried to keep out the unwelcome missiles by shutting all the doors and windows, but the Prussian light Infantry with the ends of their muskets smashed all the Venetians aud glass so as to prevent any one tiring at them from the Inside of the houses. A party of about twenty, drunk with excitement of the fight, rushed at the house, broke open the ioor, and prepared to fire a volley Into the room. 1 am not ashamed to say that with the family of my host the latter being infinitely more, afraid than eithtr his wife or sister, mother or daughter I fled to an inner room, a kind of cellar, a little below the ground floor, where we all remained for about two hours until the worst of the danger was past. Dur ing that time it seemed as If hell bad been let loose among us. Right and left, front and rear, the street firing ef infantry and the mitrailleuses of the French artillery continued to vomit forth destruction aud death. The cries of- the wounded were fearful, but no one dared go to help them, for even to show your face at the window was to receive a well-aimed bul let from a needle-gun. ' ' The Prussians had got Into their heads that some one had fired at them from the houses of Woerth, an idea which was without any foundation whatever. But the balls from the French C'hassepots on tne rising ground carried so far that the Prussians posi tively believed they had been tired at from the town, and were furious in consequence. .The mis take was one which cost several Innocent persons, gentlemen who bad gone to the top of the tower of the hospital, in order to see the battle better than from where we were. Fortunately for myself I did not accompany them, although much pressed to do so. I am quite cenalo that they had no arms with thein. One of them had a revolver, but he left it at the hotel ; the other had no arms whatever. Moraover they were both far too prudent and judicious ever to commit so wicked a foliy aa firing upon troops ad. vauciug into a town. Hut the Prussian soldiers from all I can learn btlieved that they, had done so, and rushing up to the tower took them prisoners and marched them to the rear.' At least after many hours spent in inquiries that is all I can learn of thein. 1 ne Prussian officers like all officers in the world so long as the heat of batue lasts-are too prone to believe what their men ten them, and at once rnsbed to the conclusion that they baO been fired upon by the people of Woerth, Upon the bare assertion of these men several of the most respec table persons In the town were arrested and carried to the rear. ' i - Presently the battle began to rage hotter and hotter In the nnner part of the town. Knowlnrr aa I did the position of the French, army, I felt certain that MacMahon had drawn en the enemy In order to give them battle In the position be had himseif chosen. For a time the Prussian infantry continued to pour into the town by the little bridge just before the Inn. By companies, by battalions, by regiments, by brigades, and by divisions, they passed, all in ex cellent order, all looking wonderfully clean after having passed the night under heavy rains In the open fields. ' - I never saw finer, stouter, better dressed or better drilled men. But what astonished me was their number. They must have taken at least an hour and a half to pass at a smart pace, the drummer of each company btatlng a w U charge in front of his company. I saw at once that 1t would take to use a vulgar expression "all that MacMahon knew" to beat these men, if only from their number and their freshness from fatigue. Half an hour later. long before the greater part of these troops would have reached the French position on the rising ? rouna, me souna oi cannon waxea rainier and artheron. ;, Presently it could hardly be heard at all, and then as I saw thePniSBian cavalry and light artillery nush through the town and make for tholPrenchosltioa I instinctively felt that MacMahon had fallen baok. and the star of France was on the wane for the , And i was ngnu ine rrusmana commenced to enter the town, not to pass through It, but to re- main and estaunan tneir nospiiam. The hotel In which I lodged was quickly filled up With the wounded, the dead, and the dying. It has been my lot to see not a utiie service iu me east, nut such fearfully ghastly wounds as those 1 have seen this day it nev.r entered Into the mind of man to Imagine. Men seemed literally-to be: mashed Into. niooay, snnpeiesB masses oi gore, . in many in stances the poor creatures couia not be recog nized, all their . features Rein? utterly de stroyed, in others, after cutting off their bloody clothes the most awful tearings away to the very bare bones of flesh and muscle were made visible. Dozens were brought in but to die. What became of the French wounded I could not find out, bnt long, long train of French prisoners being escorted to the rear, and consisting of more than six thousand men. mixed np with about eighty ofllcers of their own,' connrmea wimi i uearu iruiu a wounoeo enruvmir a ' pied, that nearly the whole of General Ducrot a aivisioD. cuiiBiHuiiii oi tne laiu vnasHeurs. tneisui.. 46th, Sisth of the line, and his pet Zouaves, had been surronnaea ana cnpiurea py me I'ruMians. " " ' THE FREMH AT BEELI5. The Arrive Ilefore the 13th ef'Aeca.t, bat A correspondent writing from-Berlin, August 8. says: - i'otf "' ! "They have come, and such a scene of excitement nas never Dcen wnuesaeu in uenin. , jrrom an early hour this morning people have been waiting at the Anhalt station to see them arrive. All through the day fresh people moved In the same direction, until at 6 o'clock the Ascan Platz, at the- corner of . the Anhalt and Koeniggratzen strassen, was blocked with hum (in beines and vehicles of everv clnaArin- tlon. The quiet Berliners were beside themselves with joy. a tan young leiiow oesiaa. me, after shoutlnir till he was hoarse, said to me. 'Tbev said they would be here on the 18th, and they are here In; rood time.' . At 6 o'clock the tram moved' out of the Anhalt station to shunt on to the line to take thet Eriaoners to FranKiort-on-tne-uaer, aoout two hours y rail from here. In Berlin the junctions between' the different railways are in the open streets instead ' of being outside the town. The train containing the- Frenchmen therefore moved slowly out of the sta-, 1 tlon Into the Koeniggratzen Plats, across the Ascan tju.b and thmnnn r.na lortcsi nrnord i.ia ta-aa i met bv the Frankfort engine, and taken about two ' miles and a half to the Frankfort station. The scene- waa HiucBcriunimT. iircm ncm vwruij-two car- riages filled with Frenchmen, each carriage guarded' Dy rrusBiau lomieri witu uxea uayoneis. Tne prisoners seemed all to belong to the 60th Regiment oi tne line, iutAeu wmi i urwn xw people cneereu the Prussian soldiers vociferously, bat there were no Insults to the Frenchmen, who took matters very coolly. One tall lnrantry man smoking a eigarette smiled and bowed, and a powerful, grave-looking 'Tnrco calmly but Ironically appropriated some of the cheers, ana in tea ma cap to me crowd. , . The maiority of the prisoners were cheerful enough, bat there were some bandaged heads and arms among them, and some sad face One or two were mere boys, but they all looked as U the would have liked to have another try for superiority ; but being beaten ana capturea mere was an end of It, and thev had to put the best ace on the matter. The train passed very slowly alongUie erewded streets, with the clanging bell of the enclne warning the foot passengers out of the way ; and ao the drat Invasion of Berlin by the 1670 Army of the Rhine passed off. The crowd slowly separated, but the accumulation was so great that twenty mounted police could not, for a quarter of an hour,. clear the way for the post office van, which became blocked up in the Platz." NOTES OF THE WAR. The Disadvantages of Prussia on the Oceaa. - A correspondent of the New York Tribune in describing the navy of Prussia, says: To sum up the whole Prussian strength In a brief paragraph, we find : First. That her gunboats are so slow as to be practically useless except for police duty. Second. That her sailing-sloops and frigates are worthless as a means oi onense or defense Third. That her iron-clads are too lightly armored and armed to enable her to measure strength with France. Fourth. That her mailed champion ship, the King William, would be pretty sure to be rammed and captured with a half hour In a general engage ment; that she is so long as to be unhandy; nas but one screw, and hence cannot be easi y turned and manoeuvred, and mounts too many guns of too small a calibre, too high above the water-line. In a fight between this ship and the Kocham'teau (Dun derberg) there would be advantages on both sides. The French ship has one gun the 18-inch that If properly bandied ought to crush the other's plating : both ships are at the great disadvantage of having but one screw; the plating on the Frenchman being only about five Inches (on the angle), as compared with the Prussian's eight inches, the latter would have a decieed advantage in this respect. The bat tle would be a tolerably even one between them. provided that both are equally well manoeuvred: but, after all, there is this important Hem to be taken into the calculation or chances, viz. : That, whereas the French ship has but one gun that will, in all probabuity, ne able tu penetrate her antago nist's shield, the Prussian can count on every gun in her battery piercing the five-Inch skin that is the sole protection or tne men ana guns or the much vaunted Rochambeau. And yet, the King William must after all be counted rather as a great bugbear than as the impregnable floating castle that the governments of our times have a right to demand from their naval archi tects. Her heaviest gun is a Krupp 10-incb, the ball of which weighs something like 300 pounds not enougn to penetrate a 10-incu cuirass; ana it is een doubtful if in a heavy seaway she could open her Sorts to fire them at all, although she la built C) feet i beam to give her the requisite steadiness. II er casemate, bulkheads, apd battery are so far above the centre of oscillation that the natural roll of the ship, which ought not to be more than 14 degrees, is increased to sometning line -ft or uegiees. and 1 for one would not like to be around when a broad side of 10-lnch Krupp guns was cast loose for action, wiin sucn a rou as mat in tne snip. Aa Official Prayer for Peace. The Bishop of London, as provincial dean of Canterbury, has forwarded to tne uisnops ot the province of Canterbury a form of prayer which he and the Archbishop of Canterbury have agreed to recommend as a help to private devo tion darln" the continuance of the present war. The Archbishop, in a letter to the Bishop of London, states that he found that precedents were against the issuing of a public form of traver while his own country is not engaged In the war. The form recommended is as follows: "O Almighty God, King of all kings, whose power no creature is able to resist, to whom it belongeth jastly to punish sinners, and to be merciful to them that truly repent; assuage, we beseech Thee, the horrors of tola war, which Thou hast permitted te break forth tn Europe ; restrain the passions ot the combatants; Inspire the conquerers with mercy, and the vanquished with submission to Tny will; give panenoe to all who suffer; nrenare for ffle summons those who are called to die; and set to this warfare bounds whim it mav not nass. We pray Thee, O (iod, speedily grant peace to the nations, and so overrule, in Thy good providence, me course uj on eieuia, iut out present anxieties may end in Uie spread of righteous ness, enlightenment, and true liberty, and thua 1 by kingdom may at last be esUDilsbed on earth. And this we pray through the merits and mediation of Jeans Chnat, our Lord and Baviour, Prince of Peace. Amen." SECOND EDITION CABLE WAR NEWS. Bazaine's Escape a Canard. . t , , ; .- , . - The Sieee of Metz. j i ... ' f '.!'. - r . T-r : 1 The French Evacuate Chalons. The Advance on Parish Thet Bpnbardment of tStrasburg. Xaovements of Z&acX&ahon. Belgium's ' Violated Neutrality. ) I i 1 . '-; , i .'i , France aad Beldam, Paris, Aug. 25. The journals of last night demand to know what action will be taken by the French Government, now that Bel gium has permitted a violation of her neu trality by the Prussians, , . L. , j . v The Slece of Mete London, Aug. 25. Preparations for the siege of Metz seem formidable, and the en trenchments proceed with great activity; liazalae'e Strategy. ' The Paris papers are persuading them selves that Bazaine is realizing some deep- laid strategy. , , T he Parle Ceaacll. Pabib, Aug. 25, At the council of .minis ters held yesterday, General Wirupfen, who has recently ' been operating against the rebels in Algeria, was appointed to the com mand of the corps formerly commanded by General Failly, The council is now composed of .vthe ministers and liouher, Schneider, Persigny,' Baroohe, and Troohn. - i f ' ,v The PrasaJaas betweea Chaloaa aad Pawla. "UXohdon, Aug. 25. The following official despatch from Berlin has just been received.' The Government has received a despatch . -r, i n " . ,0ted Bar-1-Dac, last evening, to the eftct that Chalons has ' been . evactuated bv the -' er French, and that a Prussian column is west f rhklons. advancing raoidlv. ' . , ,7, , , jtabib, Aug. 2 iuiuuiKUb. xii ia reported that the Prussians are at Sezanne to-day, '."(Note Sezanne ia a town of , 5000, people,' 25 miles southwest of Epernay, and about 65 miles east from Paris. ) " The Prince Boyal of Prussia is reported at Nancy. ' Nothing has been received from ' Metz or from the armies of MacMahon and Bazaine to-day. ' Alaenahea'e Movements. London, Aug. 25 Noon. The entire com mand of juaranai Mao&ianon lett lineims on Monday, hoping to protect Paris. Prussian scouting parries are near Chalons and Troyes. ' Mentnaedv Advleee to August 23, Tuesday, mention nothing whatever of Bazaine s iunstion with Mac Mahon. . . Bazaine's reports find no credit. Prussian detachments are reported at Chau mont and Brienne. ' Laying Waete the Coontry Aronad Pari The Paris Committee of Defense has given an order for the destruction of the crops and food in the Departments of Marne and Seine as the Prussians approach. ' The above probably Is intended for the De- partmems oi iuarne ana oeine-ei-juarne. ine former ia the one in which Chalons Is situated, and extends east to ste. Menehouid, north to Rheims and south to St. Dizler; the latter is situated immediately west, between the Seine and the Marne. Ld. ve. Iil. The Empreaa Ilopeleaa The Empress is still at the Tuileries, hope less and dejected. It is said she has beoonie very unpopular on account of her bigotry.' Chance la the Mllltnry Situation. Spinal to the Courrier de Ktat-lrni. Pahis, Aug. 24. A decided change is ap parent in our military situation within the last forty-eight hours. We look back upon ourselves after three months of disappoint ment and defeat, and to-morrow perhaps we shall take the offensive. Such at least is the opinion which prevails at the War Depart ment and throughout official circles, The Hetreat oa Chalons. This is the intelligence which I have ob tained after the defeat of Froschweiftr: The dtbrW of the corps engaged retreated in pretty good order upon Saverne and Nancy, whence they were transported to Chalons by the Strasburg Railway as rapidly as the dis organized service of that line would permit, Other Concentrations at Chaloaa. On the other hand, part of tne troops en camped in (Jenterbaa, soutn or , Alsaoe, as well as the large garrison of Belfort, were sent forward to Chalons by the Paris and Muhlhouse Railway. At the same time an ex peditionary force concentrated at Cherbourg, in order to operate on the shores of the Bal tic, and nearly forty thousand troops of the line were also despatched to Chalons, where they arrived in five days. The Total Forcea. These forces, added to fifteen thousand regulars from Paris and the frontier towns near Belgium, made up an effective army of one hundred thousand men. Thirty-five thousand of the Garde Mobile were also added to them, and under the able direction of General Trocbu these forces, lately en tirely distinct, have not been slow to con solidate into an army homogeneous and inured to war, and provided with all necessary mate rial fer a campaign. aaother Army at Pails. After completing the formation of this army General Trochu went to Paris to orga feize and create another new army. Baaaaaary ml fflaeinahoa'a Movement, Af tet having rallied with considerable loss tha last detachments of the corps beaten ia the battle of August 6, MacMahon arrived at Chalons, and has been placed at the head of the amy raised by Trochu. JJis first care was to ' secure his communications with Ba zaine, who had been almost hemmed in around Metz by the Prussians. - - lie arueoeeded, I am assured, and his ad vanced post extends as far as Mezieres and Montmedy, and cover the Ardennes Rail way and a line parallel with the frontier. A fact which proves that communications with Metz; are intact . is the arrival yesterday at Soisson of a great number of Prussians made prisoners at Gravelotte, another con voy being also on its way. This fact rrovea that this J day, so fieroely disputed, was not without glory for us, since we have leisure to make and guard prisoners. :- !' i1' Fotnre Plana. As for the plans of MacMahon nothing ia publicly known here, but I will take care that you ' shall be ' promptly Informed. Tha Ministry is inflexible on the point, and you .would not receive a despatch which I should send. n v. a . . : . i i Parle Reaay lor the Prlace Royal. The Prince Royal of Prussia seems to realize the risks which he was running and will try eventually to go the aid of his con federates, in the campaign, for it is affirmed here that he has retraced his steps and re treated on St. Michael.4 It may be true, how ever, according to another report, that he continues his march on ' Paris by the Valley of. the Aube. In any case we are ready to receive him. . . -, ... Work oa the Fortlfleatlona -, is almost finished, and yesterday the erection of drawbridges at the crossings of the prin cipal roads was completed. Bastions have been constructed at each entrance, and posterns whose . batteries will deliver an effective cross-fire.' The armament of St. Denis i and of Mont Valerian is really formi dable" : : - i . . 'Another Battle at Diets Reported. Another battle occurred at Metz on Sunday. and ended in our favor. ' Something decisive is preparing in that quarter. . ' , . The Bombard in eat ef8trasbnra-. I London, Aug. 25. Strasburg is well de fended, according to the TeUgraph't corres pondent. The defensive fire has destroyed 'all property within range of the guns. '. The French Armies Well Supplied. ' The French armies are now, well supplied with provisions of all kinds. . ' What the Parisians Fear. : Paris letters say the great fear of the Pari sians is that some success of the French arms may enable the Emperor to regain Paris. When France will Treat Tor Peaee. Correspondents of London newspapers concur that the French authorities will only treat for peace Deyona tne iinine. Dense fogs still cover the battle-fields. Bazaine aad the Mala Army. It is believed in Strasburg that Bazaine has been severed from the main French army and his power completely paralyzed. The Advance aa Parle. Chalons has been abandoned. It is said that the forces of the Crown Prince will to-day enter that city as well as Rheims, meeting with no resistance, while Prince Frederick Charles moves on Paris direct. A Mlece Improbable. La Liberie of to-day, referring to informa tion received from private sources, says that a siege of Paris is altogether improbable now. The Battle oa Sunday. The Fatrie repeats formally that the Prus sians were defeated in the battle of . Sunday. A Cheerfal Freach View. Pabib, Aug. 25. The Journal Officid to day publishes an article, of which the follow ing is an extract: "Our ports are free. Our fleet will strike boldly in the North and Baltic Seas. Our commerce and industry are aotive. Our credit is good. There' can be no com parison of our finances with those of the enemy. Prussia looked for treachery and discouragement here, and uneasily wonders at the promptitude of the nation in arming and organizing, and understands by this time the more the struggle is prolonged tha better is our situation. Our resources in men and money are inexhaustible. "Though invaded, France arms the entire nation. Neutral powers remain friendly, but comprehend that there cannot now be any question of mediation." A baa l'Emperenr ! The Siede this morning, commenting on the item of news that the Imperial headquar ters are at Rheims, says: "Who cares? Mao Mahon can only have one headquarters the centre of operations. The Imperial head quarters can only be a superfluity, an em barrassment, pretext for losing battles. The crisis is too dangerous to talk of Imperial headquarters anywhere near those of the Commander-in-Chief." . FnalUh Dlacouat Kate A gala Retfaeea. London, Aug. 251 '30 P. M The Bank of England has reduced its rate of disoount to four per cent. Alacfflahee'n Ariay. It is reported here that the whole of Mae Mahon's army left Rheims on Monday. Pru.tlaa Conceal ratloa. It is believed that the Crown Prince will join the armies in front of Metz. There are strong detachments of Prussians at Chaumont and Brienne. ... Horile at Teal. The garrison of Toul made a sortie yester day, and seven hundred Prussians were killed and wounded in the action that followed. , Thla Merntac'a Quotation. London, Aug. S5 ll-ao A. M Consols opened at 91 1, for money and account. American securities flat. United States 6-a of 1&63, sj ; ef 1xA Old, &o; and of lbtiT, b5; KM'is, 8i luilways heavy; Krie, IT; Illinois Centra), 110; Atlantic and Great Western, VI Livbhpool, Ang. . 11-3') A. M. Cotton opened dull; apland. V4'.d. ; Orleans, 9V4.Vd. bales tc-daj estimated at booo ba.es.