«bsqn; rncocK, Editra. KiBBIED ’4pBS§SSRSS&E£ the n^h^Satr 1 Krlends* ceremony, on county Cfa.) paperi. llthlnat the morning of the toSaU?pV?^ri.vv£'J? - Harbaueh, Wffliim H;Brooks, Rnnc n™Jffs , TS k ’S u i >f tS “ city. Mo Cards. * - . •w TnSS.T??S MA §f' - 5 a tto nth 1 st. by Bev. Henry Jrf Sfe 88 - H. Burr to Henrietta M., daughter o°Thursday/Oct llth,at TOviT?i?2 ln f> cll > Herman town, by the key. Jan.De Ti J Rect^, . r ' Byword S Harlan to Catharine this city 6 ™’ dau *‘ ll ter of Mr. Samuel Leonard, all of j.'ffßlGgT—rneiLY.—On October 6th, 1868, in PhUa 'S,?!? 11 !?. by the Her. P. Coombe, Henry Spangler » 681 eon of Joahna Wright, Ksq., of this city, No Card ’Joylor Kelly, of Baltimore, Md „ ‘ DEED. B .T 8 < ?, day eyentog, the sib Inst., Isaac 81et year of his age. tioSwiftvSFrr 8 !.? 16 , 1 !? 8 ?f the family, and the mem- Trttart^r. t £SoSps} ol ii.^ I * al society, are respect! ally in- BB c r yß o P n e. @W of the latljudgeWTl' Boora *“* Oct. loth, Mrs. Mary Cimobßil daughter of the late Conrad and Mary WorLnatl llie relatives and friends of the family are respect ’s?f t^.al } enr draped witofresn laces and covered witti ’ to anything horticultural. : ** with Its cnrtseyings and sprinkUngs and pistols and censers, and llt tfe lndulging in the cWce of shrieking at toe top of their voices with the certainty of bemg listened to, Was but a ofseve ? did not impress me with a sense of number as it did the peasant girl, because I happened to know that several of them were dum mies—laymen, dressed out in robes to iml fete priests and look effective. But the at tentive kneeling figures crowding the pave ment, crowding the doorway, and crowding the green hollow; around the church to a •gieet height up the hillside, were beautiful, with the believing faces I had come to see. And I was impressed and touched when they came to the special litany, of Saint Yves, Confessor, and the voices of all my peasant girls, reverberating from the floor and re-echoed from the grassy.hillß, made a- soft music in his honor. .. ‘*Saint Yves, ConfessOr,” they sang over and over again, answering the base voices,, of the priests, ; esh Holy Mary to plead for thel forgiveness of our Bins, which we confess through thee.” The crowd was tremendous, and I thought toe pastilles in the censers a benevolent idea. I had difficulty in penetrating, al though in good time; and upon the com mencement of the mass the chapel, filled up instantaneously, like the neck of a bottle, and overflowed : aronnd the landscape. When we all came out the breezy air was delicious.. All was life and pleasure, and a French Sunday. A peasant was standing under toe eaves, selling to the highest bid der certain votive offerings of grain whioh lay in the bags around him. The auctioneer was toe only fat Breton I have seen: My ■ landlord told me that he was a weaver, ana toe sedentary calling must explain the ano maly; toe rest of his race are the race of the lean, sad Cassius. Over his head, as he stood clamoring for bids, I happened to notice a red line or thread, which passed guite around toe church, and went out of its way to take a loop about a stone, cross standing near by. This upon examination proved to be an endless wax taper, of: toe kind used for igniting toe gas: at, home; it waß an offering, and may have been sold after the wheat, for all I know. We moved about through the strange crowd, my host, his guest, and his dog;/toe last was strongly agitated, and his taS, dis tracted between the impulse to waggle and the impulse to drive through his legs, was a monument of indecision. For my own part, I cannot get over my amazement at meet ing a peasantry identical with the subjects of Henry of Navarre, and I peered hither and thither with the curiosity that never slakes/ now at a bride, the bosom of her jacket covered with embroidery, the tinsel glittering through her lace cap, her neck tied with velvet streamers set with stamped trinkets, and a downcastairofexquisitehe roinism;now ata dandy, with a ..cross or ehalice.or candlestick beautifully worked on the back of his violet waistcoat, and his mass of streaming hair invaded by toe shirt collar, all rigid with stitching and starch, and set along the edge with a > tinkling row of links; now at the babies brought to HrinK of the fountain in their best cJotbw, their little invalid feces set in close ' caps trimmed with gilt lace or needle work, and trolling about at toe bottom of vast incloßUres of upright ruff. Haring infancy this ornament is worn standing, in the Queen Elizabeth manner,and the blessed child's head in oneof them is like a bon-bon in a paper horn. At little girlhood the starch relents, and the structure fells aronnd the shoulder. The innocents when applied to the sacred[spring usually refused to drink, with a touch of Protestantism that I liked. Their more pious mammas reclaimed them promptly, with the lightnings of the church and toe thnnder-claps of toe nursery. In other cases the child was not produced, but prudent fathers might be observed carrying toe enchantment off in bottles, like Vichy water, for home pharmacy. A lively business was doing all around toe church. There were booths for the sale of every sort of cheap ornaments, rosaries, crucifixes, silver rings, gay braids, and va rious kinds of haberdashery. There were all sorts of lotteries and games of chance to gratify the Breton’staste for the mysterious. One of the few games of skill was a kind of pitch-penny into an inclined sieve, the elas tic bottom of which will toss out a coin un less thrown just within the rim. My com panion, to whom games of the disous, from counters to quoits, were an old and cheap success, astonished the crowd and dismayed toe proprietor. He threw with perfect accu racy, almost broke toe bank, forgave the greater.’part of his winnings, and scattered the rest among a crowd of beggars, escaping amid a chorus of vociferous prayers for his future happiness. The piety of this ni«<;s of mendicants is inexhaustible, and of a mar ketable quality. The peasants appreciate toe cheap advantage of their paternosters, and are;quite liberal with their centimes, a copper the size of a three-cent piece. lam an aristocrat, and never give less than a 6ou. For this sum I purchased the devotions of a very dirty old woman, who went on her knees three times around the church in my favor, telling her beads audibly, and all toe while, without ah instant’s distraction from the search, examining the spectators for the next client . : A different aspect of poverty presented itself shortly after, and one that it will be difficult to forget. We had finished luncheon in a quiet ehady place remote from the throng. The salt tide was filling and dimp ling below us, and the tour terelles were sighing in some covert overhead, when a slender and comely boy of sixteen sud denly passed before us without any noise. He was very ragged and miserable, and we gave him or our leavings with'the pursy liberality of men who are full. That lucky boy got a mutton bone from which the meat had only been whittled like a lead pencil; his avaricious teeth snapped on it 8, sharp grinding noise; I was re aninded of the story in the other day’s paper, of the man, who was observed writhing, in a crowded Paris omnibus, his face lived with horror; I‘lhave sat on my teeth; and they have bitten me.” Our caprice further, endowed- the poor youth, with some orOpes, large buckwheat cakes baked incredibly thin, and peculiar to Brittany, I believe. It gave us pleasure to see his hollow white cheeks distending with the paste. / After some' further experi ments in the luxury of this sort of self-de nial, we bethought ourselves of a. glass or two of wine remaining in the bottom of a bottle. The eyes of the boy, which had been steadily downcast, at this point lifted and met our own. I don’t know when I have been more terrified than when those appeal ing eyes,'hollowahd scintillating like some Spanish beggar’s eyes in a Murillo, looked mto mine and quietly ran over with tears! They overflowed With tears"above the edge of the glass, as hemeekly turned it up over his nose, and then he hid his face in extreme shame, shamblhd off with arhalf-kiok at the dog, who had already began to lick his an kles, and Vanished; The big landlord and I:looked at each other, rather »gtu«t, There is something so saorea In the tears of a boy of sixteen, the time of a hoy’a pride, that T was fain to connect the wine, in some inco herent way, with the wine of Cana. I could not make It ont 9 but a glance at the drained gla&s carried me off at once to the first mira cle* and the prodigal Master treading out frfa that the merriment should not flag, was Indeed a noble" Pardon! - , f ' ; Omt IVHOIiE COUNTRY, The Interminable War—- Fearful Loss of Life in the jungles of Paraguay— A Call for More Men—tTheMlies In ; Critical Condition—The Treasuries of Brazil and Buenos Ayres De pleted—A Strong Party Opposed i to the War—The Strong Po sition of the Paraguayans— The First Movement of Gen. Polidoro—The Next Effort by General Mitre —He too Retreats —Losses in Three Days, on Both . Sides, 12,000. What is Said About General Lopez and. His Army—The Wool Market* - United States ' Ministers-Naval. Buenos Ayres, Aug. 13,1866.— This ma j) leaves Buenos Ayres undera cloud of de pression Buch as X have not seen in these many yeara. The war with Paraguayproves a formidable undertaking. The Allies have manmuvred well, and have marched into several evacuated places, and have accepted the surrender of prisoners, once to thenum ber 0f 5,000 or more; but the battles are in decisive. Both parties claim the victory! and they about equally share the losses. No camp has yet been routed in battle, no field taken by force, and the loss of life has been fearful. All parties deprecate the war and dread its results,as it begins to draw heavily on the treasury, and already has taxed hu man life fearfully. At present there is a de mand for more soldiers. Thirty days are gjvenin which all are required to enroll, and mom the enrolled 3.006 are to be selected to go to the seat of war. The marshes and j ungles of Paraguay- are as fatal as those of India, ana already the diseases of the camp have carried off more than the r»n.int«ps 0 f oattle. j Treasury is exhausted, arid the- best mode of replenishing it is.attracting serious attention. The old mode of issuing paper money has been tried here till the dollar has gone down from 100 cents silver to A. and any suggestion of a. new issue of paper numey produces great alarm on ’Change, we imports are already high, they must do higher, and it is proposed to add a duty on exports, chiefly wools, and thus cripple the pastoral industry, the only really productive one in this country. Tb e monetary crisis in Brazil has seriously affected the supplies for the war. A new ministry has been formed, and it is under stood that the powerful party opposed to the war on Paraguay can only be defeated by some speedy and telling victory over the Paraguayans. These discouragements are not lessened by the recent news from the army. The allies are losing vast numbers of men. Their recent battles have been bloody and undecisive. Gen. Flores who took to the front 5,000 men, has not over two battalions left The Province of Corrientes invaded, called out the militia, and as the whole was exposed they went unwillingly, leaving homes entirely unprotected. By battle skirmish and picket by disease and deser tion, they are now said to be reduced to 62 men. A friend from the army writes that nine-tenths of them went to the Province of Entre Bios. The position of theParaguayauß is strong. Hnmaita is their great fortress, and between the Allies and it they have their army and four lines of fortifications. In their present position they have a good natural defence in the swamps and jungles, and they have occasionally a stone wall, and in one place they can set 50 men safely against 500, A recent trial of strength, moßt hotly con tested, gave the Allies no material advance. On the 13th of July the Brazilians took three batteries from the Paraguayans. It was a hard contest, for the Brazilians lost one whole battalion of 400 men. On the 16th the Paraguayans retook ene of these, which commanded the other two. On this day there was a very general engagement, and so fearful was the strife that at times the Brazilians were fairly intrenched behind the dead bodies of their comrades. It was on July 15 that Gen. Polidoro as sumed command of the Brazilians, on the removal of Gen, Osorio. All he knew was that the Paraguayans were making batte ries In a wood in front. Early on the 16th •he sent two regiments, who, with two guns, drove them away; He then called up 15,000 men to scour the woods, and they soon came up to a deep, wide ditch, and immediately a masked battery opened on them. An ef fort was made to storm, bnt it failed, and as the host-retreated they were followed by 8,000 Paraguayans, who were waiting for this turn in aflairs. The Brazilians stopped in the first wood; rallied, and ' before sun down drove them hack to their intrench ments. On the 18th, Gen. MitrS attempted to dis lodge the Paraguayans in the wood in front, and he dashed down in' force, sweeping everything before him, until they came to a lane between two marshes, 12 yards in width, and here they were enfiladed, An effort to send out a flanking force failed, and the Paraguayan reserves'arose and fell upon the retreating Argentines. The Ar gentines did as the Brazilians had done the day before, and rallied in the wood, when 16,000 men came upon them, and the Argen tines held theirground ;till their flank, was reached by the enemy’s cavalry, and they retreated. ,1a these three days’ fighting it Is believed that the loss on each side was about equal, and in killed and wounded It Is said each side must have lost 6,000 men. The army of President Lopez, though it has lost so many thousand of men. is still formidable. He is said to he receiving re oruitSnrqm yarious quarters Of the plucky little Bepublic, and the spirit of the people is far from being subdued. A deserter to the Allies says, that Lopez has throe en campments, one part holding the Allies in check, one at Humaita, and One at Villa Pillar. * : At Cerro Leon hehaa a general retreat for sick and wounded men, and 4,000 women spive inthifl hospital, audmany of thesfiMO SOUTH AMEEIOA. [■Correspondence of the N. Y. Tribune.] ; «g*stffiag’sjagassiaa!g youths m France studying engineering and. various professions, tending to make the army and r avy. independent of foreigners. Porto AlegrO, the long-coining Brazilian General, with his 10,000 trooDs and 12 000 horses, has at length arrived, and his com mand is incorporated with the "Allied armv .to thebattieof the 18th, CoL Palleia of .Uruguay Sell at the head of his troops. He was one the finest officers in the service, a fine scholar and good man. We owe more to his faithful men than to any otheif for the details of every-day life in the Allied camp. He was taken to Montevideo and buried in great pomp. More than 10,000 people as sembled, overhelmed by a sincere and general sorrow. . My view of the warand the state of things is not a bright one. . I reflect the state of public sentiment here at this time. It is a desponding tbna. ; But I am heartUvwith the Allies in my preferences, and Iheartily look for their success. ‘ • ’ The state of the market here is not at all buoyant. The probable increase of the tariff at Washington has suspended allsales of wool at,this place. . 3?tt. neW 5 Minister here, Major-General Asboth, and Mr. Btruthers,'the new Consul, have not yet arrived here, though their appointment has been known here for some time. The Shamokin United States war steamer of eight guns has been in this harbor for some weeks. She is preparing to go up the river to carry Mr. Washbume? United States Minister to Paraguay. He has been here nearly a year, wailing to get through Lne lines. - - - . Brazil is about to send here three more iron-clads. THE PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS. THE “REVOLUTIONARY” STORY. Opinions of -To-Day's Hew York Papers. We take from to day’s New York papers the following editorials in reference to the report published in yesterday’s Ledger as to the questions said to have been propounded to the Attorney General, by President Johnson: rFrom to-day’s N. V. Daily News 1 The Telegraphic Hoax. morning papers yesterday, purporting to be a senes rise. to gold. ,We hope the perpetrator eif ' the forgery will be ferreted outandpunlshed Cas hedesMves to i he l wiia.ttie2ie(%rer oweathe ; publio a full explanation of ; the mSnner in < i S^ r ! tende ? toformit lo“- , L oi Lfe 6 Philadelphia joumalß the iedjei' baa hitherto been one of the least sensa- - tional.a feet which obtained for the despatch much of its credibility. But it to a melancholy truth that the chief plausi bility of the report 'Was derived from the. (Contffiged on thejiwtPago.}