VOLUME XXIV.-NO. 100. EDD ING CARDS, INVITATIO NB CFfor Parties, &e. Now styles. M ASON 8. CO., 907 I manta street. do3Ofinw tr§ - 101XED EAII.TH CLOSETS ON ANY .r floor, In or out of doors, and PORTABLE EARTH COMMODES, for use in bed-chambers and elsewhere. Aro absolutelf free from offence. Earth Closet Om loony's office and salesroom at WM. G. RHOADS', No. Int Market street. a .29-t MARRIED. iffiI:D—BARBINUTON.—In Moorestown, N. J., at 'Trinity (Thumb. on the 4th inst. by Rev. Hastingt "Veld. Edward D. Boyd, of Washington; 11. O. to Re claugtOr of the late Samuel Harrington, Surgeon it:. 6, Nary, [Washington Chronit4 please copy. • 'DIED.' • Iit.IDEBSON.—JuIy llth, at Dublin, Ireland, flora Atplerboti,daughter•of Prof. Anderion, Wizard of tilt, Norm h. COB 11IN ..—On the 4th bet ~1111flegarde, Infant daugh ter of Clint-l es F. and Mose Corbtn, opal 10 months. GOLME.—At Grafton, Illinois, on the 19th ult. lifor pan 11vInie, formerly of Bustleten, Phlsartelphia, in the 7:111 year ot his age. .tv 1014 OLSON .--On the 4th suet ; , Mrs..lane Nicholson, vette of dames Pi Madsen. aged 40 years. 3 he relatives en., friends of the farisib' are reaPckfallY int lied to attend the funeral. from the residence of her ho share'. No, 1034 South Fifth N treot, on Monday after noon, at 3 o'. I"ck. To proceed to the Wharton Street Church Vault. ' N,Olt.7oN.—On Thursday, August 4th, Charlet! F. 4erscj at Ida cow rraldenco. The telittivel and Irian& aro respectfully Invited to attend his funeral, front his late realclence, 1071 Arch street, on Tuesday meriting, 9th Inst.:at 10 o'clock "• • 400 ky.EAIt : ( 3I ""EET . Q. LANDOLL, Are aupplylog their Cmtomers with BLACK BILKS 'At Gold WI Premium. COD LIVER OIL,- . CITRATE klagnesta.--JOIIN C:BAKER-tt 0n..71% Market BC SPECIAL NOTICES. ALL Sizes and Styles. FINEST CLOTHING. JOHN WANAMAKER, 8 and 820Cheatnnt St. ON FREE EXHIBITION, A V- -it AittleTlNE'S GALLEitY. }ireitre-t:11-1.1e4lir-T.-taTitERTiz ein"F Fonn.ns Panorentic Views of Ber in; Potwelarik, cherlotteromea. Ilettlelber g . Jena . Wennur.Erf art, Eine..l3aelen-Fladen*Wk-- httelen• }SI Ameterdam • Ws- Liege. 'intern, Rot terdam, Utrecht. - -_• - A e Wnicte aet_ed . the ;Berlin 3ftvegtni, Inteitor all the roran% in the- various royal - palaces of attention i 4 dralrh to the fact that In a few lbw* on the inane. awl its Forttlientions, ae helve° seen, will 4. , t,hibited, r,s•2:trp • - • HOW ARD HOSPITAL, NOS.. 1.518 Yry avd.11,13 LOVA:3I'd strf.lt-, Dispensary Department.. cal rresniment mi medicine Dirnietied gratnitcandY — c — tire• Otit PtiLITICAL NOTICES TB7O. SHERIFF, 'WILLIAM 11. LEEDS. 16 tl ocl2rti HEADQUARTERS UNION - ilk, N CITY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, 1.10 CHESTNUT STREET. At a Meeting held on Wednesday, July 27. the follow ing among other proceedings wan adopts,' lt,solr.d, it,solt , d, That the Convention to nominate a candi date for Representative of the Yirst Representative Dis trit t be RECON VENT D ,and a hub-Committee of Three be eeleiied from this City Executive Committee to effect pei 11l anent organization t hereof. In accordance therewith, the Delegates elected to said Convention will meet at the S. W. corner of SIXTH and DICK ERSON streets, on TIFORSDA V, August 11, at 10 A . M., for the purpose of placing a candidate In nomi nation. By order of the Republican City Executive Com InittVe. CHARLES W. HIDGWAY, Viet President, presiding, JOHN 31rCUL1.01.143H, t Secretaries. 00. jy7S-tlif is-rprit§ 361161L15H UNDERTAiiEnt6 Air. Dickens Begajmn Reform.. The VI Mall Gazette has the following : The undertakers have seldom received such a severe bloW‘ as that dealt, to them by Mr. niekenes will, " emphatically direct that be buried in- an inexpensive, unostentatious and strictly private manner; that ,no public announcement be made of the time or place of my burial; rthat at.the utmost uot -more than three plain MOuraing roaches be empleYed,and that those who attend my funeral wear no scarf, cloak;black hew, long hat-band; or other slteli revolting absurdity." Thisls plain Speaking, and tin- grim ravens who hover round the :house of- mourning with the view - of turning tears into cash will be all' fir a- flutter when they read this expression of opinion with re gard to their trade,uttered by one whose voice has none the less influence because it proceeds from the grave. .LordDerby,-Lord Clarendon and Mr. Dickens have all set .an exaeanie, 'which the vulgar and- ignorant will do Well to follow, of simplicity in their 'funerals. The day .will come when we, Or' rather our` de .seendants, •will wonder that undertakerr3.were ever permitted to trade upoit our sorrows in the present disgraceful fashion. In nine vases out of ten, when the head of a family dies, every sixpence is of value, and nothing more lamentable can be conceived than that the hard-earned savings intended to provide for the necessi ties of a wife and children should ho squan dered on black kid gloves and silk hatbands for - second cousins, doctors, servants, and ethers who are mere puppets in the hands of the undertaker to help him to plunder the family of the deceased. If one or two dukes and duchesses would have the kindness to direct that their remains were to bo deposited in theground without havin a brick vault specially made to receive them', em', the middle class would at once consent to be buried in a similar manlier ; and this woiildCtit off the 'bricklayer, who, with the haberdasher, joins the undertaker in the work of extortion.'l3rick vaults are but attempts to light. with nature, - who, in the- long tun, will bo victorious. We have much to learn and much to unlearn on this subject;:but the day will come when we shall conquer our prejudices,and not be afraid to say to the portly Undertaker, as hesolemnly Stalks through the streetsthe head of a funeral procession :." My dear sir; instead of being as you imagine au imposing object, you are, -in the words of :-Mr Dickens, sitriply a 're volt•ing absurdity.'"- 2, • THE DlittllGffT. ' Sufferlnw in Itlasaschnsetts. The Boston Journal says " - Therlong continued drought is making bad Ivork in this region. Gardens are all drying up, the . pastures are crisp and burned, feed for COWS and cattle is getting short, the fruit is alropping prematurely from the trees and in orup places wells are giving out. Last night there were indications of showers, and at one time a few . drops ofrain fell; but the clouds ;passed away, and to-day the sun is as hot and tscorching as before. Unless we have rain at 'once - the crops will be very short in -this Tegion," , .. • . .. _ . it,i , )'..g7 .. 1 : ..... _.„..,.,.......:,:. ‘‘ ill! // ./,/,>,.:.: _ , , z : '.., _ ~ ..._÷,..; •, : , ~.. _ . ~,.,_ _ __,,.. _ _ f _ ...,. . •-• ' 1.1 T. :lc, i ; ':...: ' , ..'1" . in* 1,: .. - ' ;fin. i;: 1 1. T. 7,'.,1..."0,: c .. ' , ',h ~ o_,_ . _ ... _ A . . , . ../ ~- --- '.a • = 44 ~... , 4 . I F, r. 7. ''' ' '''."-.T ''''.- r'; r ' -r i t - . t ' • ''' . ‘;.' 7 _ : - Z....f i r .: • - -- /P ' ) 11121-(4 1 - '..- ‘, -;-- --- - - . F . . , . MI ' ' ' • r^ Pa:tl 1) ..; 1 ir: ,, , •.- ..:--25,,r1 ~, ''.. 7 r ill? • Tar4`, ~,,. . -_,.,_,-_, -4-2.t,-__ . r ~, , , . - . .. - . ' •. ' 7 7 , 7 ,r - "..a ; - ',, U --- ----- .e . ___ _ • f"' •,.'' ..._ s . ' • ~ . , ... . , ..• ~. 1 ,-; slap., :i. ,) , i., I, h: ' 4-4 - - • 01:P l'i ( :, ,- , ,, , i 1,0 , r - rn, r'•l '' . b . ",-...-,-*—"" -^.1.. , '2-, ......., •,.- - . 1....... , .i....`7.-ks-- ..-- '*"."-- f ri' • 1 Ci--!"- vT. 1 A c,. C• •• "••••. •''r • : , ' __ _ . J - , . . , . .. , . 1870. MUM= REPORTORIAL NEIG MOIL LONG BRANCH. [Correspondence ,of [tie Phlla. Evening Bulletin.] CONTINENTAL HOTIF:L, Aug. 4.—Even to buying a coffin everything in this world is a matter of business. It is a business with the clergyman, when a connubializing couple leave 'upon his centre-table the foe that au thorizes the lady to throw her patronymic from the - window and substitute for it the cog nomen of her spouse. Horse-racing is also a business. Its wstbetics have the gleam of the dollar. Its part iice is as distinctive as the parlance of the prize ring. Long Branch, all this week, has rung with it. To-morrow afternoon it will probably ring louder than on any day since the season for " trials of speed " - between aristocratic - horses at this picturesque point saw the date of their inauguration. Long Branch at this moment is very full 'While billiard tables make an expensive bed, their soltnebs has never elicited any marked or special admiration. . A cot needn't be de iicient b : of comfort. A cot in a cottage may even be a luxury.. The trouble is that souse seventy-five of - them plaided liu a het dining-room, and each occupied by an inhar monious sleeper, who snort..s clear through the chromatic settle, produce what to the edu cated ear ratherthau of .melodyj is suggestive of discord. Six., miles from the B ranch, at a point called . Ocean Grove, a luxurious camp weed ng is in course of progress. By this ro lig:ons- lewd - many people are. also brought here. The clerical garb among the velveteen and white linen costume of the sporting world iti -ilently admonitory of a world to come; and b4:.7cstive also of the fact that sin, fast horses auu tl , l(lles . will ultimately be among the thinp Pecuniarily this Monmbuth racing park at Long Branch is- something more than u success. The investment made with so mach courage has so far proved very handsomely re unerativeitte,yond the most fanciful expecta tion of the inventors. The averageattendance a dollar a Lead has been (;,,it.o people per day. Ihe restaurant and refreshment rooms ate virtually a gold mine. The gentler sex who vinit the course visit it in open► costume. All thi s stimulates trade. The dant-cat , of the thing• is anotlt.... matter. Were we all members _ . . ttM f4ociety of Friends, everydealer in fancy ..:oats-would be obliged to shut his store, arid o either into the business of cultivating potatoes or of manufacturing brogans or reellarle -coats.-As -it is, the laduis talk Mast-, and -if they don't absolutely bet tanner they bet its equivalent., in fans or gloves. ILo demi-monde at Long Branch is refulgent -in glory. .:It tacit ter toils_ nor would horrify us clannish Philadelphians:is looked upon at Long Branch as something: that. is nohody's inisiness, and; of coats,-not` to be discussed. Your correspondent neVer,, acva more stunning seraglio' tier a hilife . --- orgeous -gaming. '-house - Ahan - New - - Yorkers — It ve established :here. To walk - .through.. Wu ington- reet -at- Cape - May' is- equiva- , lent, in bringing to your vision familiar laees, to : walking through Chesttint street. At this place the,Pidlailelphi.ans have must ertid at the lloW land . TfoitSC.' In all tins" "last iwts I._withite sovenhuudred-ov.rflowing rooms, there are probably not fifty people who are residents of. our Quaker Cite. ' e. season- here __LtAjihor.L.one.:—Fpr.—tbli-.- revson the price,s of everything, ftotrtymir dor mitory to your tensor, may tic set-down as steep. Everybody here looks overworked Mr Wilkinson, whose vigilant eye supervises .1111,!. Continental. is.so_at en • . • • I at! ex tra_ pair of intspendets :he:could_ : . •. - areeli itionee the customary junction bet welch his vest and trowsers. The waiters and toddy, mixers alike show evidence of toil. When a bartender cant get time to adjust his duster and his ear-locks, the inference that ho suffers from fatigue is fairly entertainable.. Your correspondent this afternoon visited Monmouth Park. The hour for the beginning of the races was 1.30 P. M. As if by the hand of some Titan a super-saturated sponge had been wrung out, immediately a great black cloud broke directly over the course. The consequence was that when the quadrupeds ran, they did so in mud and water nearly ankle-deep. As a matter of course there were present 11071 C of the gorgeous turnouts that on each day previous and on to-morrow will illumine the greensward. The down-going train, however, brought to the spot a multi tude of Philadelphians. In this point of view Mr. J. Warren Gore has left nothing to be de sired. As your correspondent has previously stated, the road from Philadelphia to Long branch is among the smoothest in tho country. People may leave Philadelphia at 7 A. M., take lunch, bath and dinner, see the races, and return to their homes at early bed-time: - - - . • The trains stop directly at „ the track. ' To those unfamiliar with the routine of a race course some hours of observation may hero be advantageously Enuployed. Of the many horses present a considerable number are held at the price of a very beautiful dwelling. Asa"triat ter of course, they are delicately cared for. Their reqiiiqqa and treatment are those of the gladiator or the rower. His finished, and by a leather, muzzle over his nose the horse is prevaited' from (Thing what he otherwise.would do—from eatingthe straw that constitutes his bed: • While the horses are being prepared for the contest the sporting Men Are keenly surveying the gronnd with an eye to business. The scene' for a while is Babel-like. In surveying it we felt Very much as. Bunyan's Christian and Hopeful must haVe felt when they found themselves amid the tumult and confusion of Vanity Fair: • tThe 'tim e Whew, we-most enjoy the descriptive talent of Dickens is .on. °cm-, sions like that of yesterday, when - the pools are sold by auction, and the profesSional betters and tricksters are in all the fervor and excitement peculiar to their. calling. One of the horses in to-day's race was ridden by a scion of English nobility? Lord IVodehouse. The youngster is twenty:two years of age. Be is" horse 7 all over. He talks horse, leeks horse and thinks horse. To-day's programme was this : The first race for the Robbins's stakes, for three-year olds, to carry 100 pounds,tWo heats of two miles, purse, $3,000. • First horse, , 52.000 ; second horse, $7OO ; third horse; $3OO. ' The second race was for a purse of $7OO, for •two-year olds, three-eighths of a mile. The winner of the West End hotel stakes to carry ri pounds extra. The third race was a selling race for all ages, 11 miles for a purse of $6OO. The winner to be sold for $l,OOO. If entered to be sold for $750, allowed live pounds ;for k $5OO, ten pounds. Any surplus over the*stated selling price to go to the second horse. The fourth race, a gentleman's cup, for all ages, Welter weights, gentlemen riderti; the prize an elegant silver punch-bowl. The following pools were sold ou board the Jesse Hoyt, this morning, by T. B. Johnson: - - For the two. mile) heats, Kingfisher, $lOO, . $lOO and $100; -Enrreryi $70,.5G8 and-$O9; . - Major, $5, $6 and ,„ . For' the- gentlemen's . riding race.. Rapture;:sloo; $lOO and $lOO ;St. Patrick, 150,-450 and 800.• ~.. , , . .-, ~ , • . The first •race ~ was for three-year olds, two mile heats. Only threeThorsesran._They_wero_ kingfisher, -. Enquirer, and; 'Major. , The • tirsb heat maven by Kingfisher, beating Enquirer by toil) lengths,' Major being four lengths be hind. ' Time 3.564. Ilefere the race Enquirer was the favorite itu the iittoki . abd 'Kingfisher second choice.. Be-,' tbre.tlia.aaeondiheat rain descended la a tor:i' rent, - , Enquirer ,won the heat ,by two lengths of ahead'Staler; and . ntielengtli ahead-of Kling ; tisher. Time Z1..741. On the ' third heat En... - quirer won bY'paelength ahead of Kingfisher.' 1 Tune -1 ruinutes:. , - ' • FIEREEMI For the second race there were four en tries: B. P, , McGrath's ch. c. McKinney, by War Dance"; A. 11, Richards, ch. by Lex ington • W. B. Babcock; ch. f. Nelly Ransom°, by Jack Malone, and S. W. Jones's ch. f., by Kentucky.. McKinney won the race in 1.23. ;For the third race W. Pennocks entered b. c. Norton ; J. O'Donnell entered r. b. Con nolly, and Cornell entered br. c. Donevaile. O'Donnell's horse won in 2.30 , 1 - . For the fourth race there were two enyies : Rapture, ridden by Colonel Caster, ana gr. c. A—Patrick, ridden by Lord Wodehouse, as named above.. Rapture won by two lengths in I.ti9. , •- Saturday closes the present racing season. The programme is this : Firstß«ce--littrale Race Handicap—For all ages. Two miles ;eight hurdles. Purse; !: , 800 —nee to first horse, 5200 to second horse, and -](,O-to third-horse. k'econd Race—Restoration Stah.s.—For all ages. Suhscription, $lOO, p. p. bleats of four rniles.Purse,s.s,ooo—S3.soo to first horse; :3,1,000 to second horse; .5500.t0 third . horse. -• • lionliontious. I. Thos. W. DOS well; b. h. Ab-del-Kader, Australian-;—Roiteue, 5 - years. - • • 2. - Col—las. J. O'Fallon,elL b. Blantagenet„by Plant t—Rose'Bonheirr; years. J. Also, eh. h. Sundown, by Uncle Vie, darn imp. Sunny , 'South, by Irish Bird' Catcher, 5 years. 4. A. Buford, b. h. Crossland, by Lexington, dam by Albion, 5 years. G. R. W. Carneron, br. f. Invereauld, by St. Albans—imp. Itleanor, 4 yea. _ G. Odinl3owle,eb. c years, Pontoon,by Doneraile— Undine, 4 years: 7. Also, b. c. Legatee,by Loxington—Levity, 4 years. 8. J. W. Weldon, b. Tn. Floia .31eiror, by Lexington-Floride, 6 veare. - - Causes of the Suleide of the Late French Minister—Sew Factii El lei ted—lll* snuffy Established. The Washington correspondent of the New York Herald says Since the decease of Prkrost-Paradol litany little facts have come to light tending to show that the lamented Minister did not, at a re sponsible being, put an end to his own exist ence, as at. first very generally supposed, but that, on the contrary, his was a tolerably well ascertained ease of self-destruction during 'a lit of ireianity. The Marquis de Cbambrun, one of the roost, intimate friends of the de eeased, is well satisfied of the soundness of this theory, which, moreover, is the only one reconcilable with all the facts in the. case; A few days ago the Marquis received a let ter from M. Thiers, in Which the latterpays, substantially; that " poor Paradol was for a softening of the brain; and Conternplated With, horror the probability . or posObility_ of having_ to live the life of one bereft of reason." Ac cording to M - . Thiers Paradol had. received_ ins dieal attendai:iee.for - thireatenedpalady. while-in France, and this fact, taken-3h' ton ,i.tection with Other little circumstances, wonld seem to 'establish with reasonable certainty_ that he was not sane at the time he put the - pistol his breast and discharged the contents into his heart. • His letter to M. de Jardin and that to M. Ber , heiny are both cc nSistent With this theory, so are his 'declarations to the Marquis de Chambrun and others, and his requests of should over happen him. to take, earn of big obildien.74.t is be- lieved now: that when he - Made -those declara tions and wrote those letters the calamity that neanticipated. was not suicide, but a loss . reason _ whicht_Wonld unfit' _-him_ to 156 - _dh - y - Aimger guardian of his own children. - The act of purchasing the - rpiStols - abso comes cleared up consistently with the theory... of insanity with the new light thrown upon it. In Franco he always kept pistols about his house as a matter'of self-defenee and protee' lion against robbers; In the hurry of 'leaving this country lie discoveredhe had neglected to bring with him his old favorite pistols. After being in this city a few days, and While suffering from the extreme heat and general debility, his cook came to him Otte - mOrning, and said : " Ah, Monsieur! this house is: haunted. There are ghosts here, I am sure, for 'I hear strange noises every night." • ' M. Paradol answered. " Ah, Yes! Marie, '- the house is haunted ; but not with `dead spirits. lam not afraid of the dead, but of the living." The next day he botight the pistols and na turally enough told M. de Jardin that the reason he; wanted them was beratise he was living alone and required them for' proteetion against the. possible attack of robbers. His daughter, who left this country under the im pression that her father had died from natural causes, explained that he had been for ;some time in 'Tread of insanity from siitteilingf of the brain, and also,stated that it was -his habit to kefn pistols inhis bedroom:" This morbid dread of insanity; arid tlid lact . that his, wife lead died insane, weighed en his' mind' heavily; atid, no' ileubt, battened - the ter. Hide climax to his malady,: The night preced ing his death he had - ordered` his valet to rouse; him early in the morning, so' that he might take some medicine which hail been prepared 'lndir his own instructions. From this it is inferred that whou he retired io bed that night he had no thoughts of self destruction ; but lie was unwell,-and suffering greatly from the heat, and it is supposed that he woke up suddenly during •the night with his head feverish, and that in'an instant the itlea filled him that he was insane. That mo ment he took the pistol and shot himself through the heart. This is only a theory,to be ire,. but it tallies with all the' antecedent(etr 7 inniistances., There' is another .little fact tending to' show the condition of his mind. When, he arrived here M. de Jardin askeilliim if he bretight with him a court suit. He answered yes, but that he would not use it, beca.ase he felt him self too young in the diplomatic service to 'do any act to make him . appear so cod spieuous. "Besides," said, he, smiling, " you see the court dress is the same as that of the Cabinet, costume, and When I return home and get elevated I will have this suit all ready." It is said, moreover, that he wrote a letter ad dressed to M. ll:Lieu, expressing a fear of ap7 preaching insanity,' and begging him in that event to look after his children. 1 give these new points about the matter in-justice to the memory of M. Paradol, which has been as sailed Capture of an Enormous Grizzly Bear. The Santa - Barbara (Cal.) Tines of July 22 says: A large grizzly has been committing de predations on the stock of the citizens of Car ninternt and Montecito for the last two years, Trequently killing two or three calves during the week, and hogs whenever 'he could find Ahem. Several attempts have, during the time mentioned. been made to shoot and poison this general intruder, but withoutsuccess, and several of, the prominent citizens had offere,d rewards amounting in the aggregate,' we learn to about 51,000; some say $2OO covers all. He had been frequently waylaid by par ties stationing.themselves-in trees-; traps - had peen set for him, ..and nearly,every device re sorted to in, ordel, to kill, him, but all' proved ineffectual until Monday last, when Messrs. Califs-and Hubbard,' of Carpinteria, started -out after him r and on Tuesday came upon him in the Canada Bane, and killed him, He Mean suied,from the tip of his nose .to hia tail 71 feet, and from the tip of his nose to the-top of his head 18 inches, and weighed over 1,000 pdunds. 'lt is' 'Stated that ' +hat4 deatroyed inore than $l,OOO worth of stock, in the"L i tSt; two years." , FRIDAY, AUGUST r), 1870. I a IiEVOST•TPAIM &DOE. A CALIFORNIA BEAR DJ? THE 'WAR IN EUROPE ENGLAND AND BELGIUM: England's Duty In the Present Crisis— Armed occupation a Necessity. The Pall- 3Thil liazetr, in the course of an ar ticle upon the dangeroua position of Belgium and the possibility that England may have to intsrferelo protect tier, says: ' •' We have no wish to speculate on the course or • -result- - of ••F interference. - - 'We - shoiTi d' only interfere if interference were forced neon us; and 'neither France nor Prussia is likely .to do that with out much consideration. We shall only on-' serve, in passitig, that we could Produce an enormous effect at -an almost -inappreciable cost, husbanding our resources against the ex haustion of those with.whom weditaight have to deal. Gunboats in the Scheldt, an'iron-, clad fleet making a flying Iran bridge between' the Scheldt and the Thatnes--if needful an English contingent doing, duty with the' Bel to a ti garrison—and:A ntwerp'wolild be ittipreg-,= nable. Without putting a man in 'the field, --we- bold- 'a' --. Belgian Torras Vedras, from which' we should. hope to -make a diplomatic conquest• of all our protl•ges had been robbed - 6n- , Our good Allies of France and Germany ought torbe assured' that. we have.ndif.:quitelost spirit. Lately wa have often been taunted' with our placid abstention, with more or less reason; these taunts rankle..and - ate - apt to min g , into violent action when war fever I.sl abroad. , We Wight have interfered for Denmark; yet when France, DentnariCifold ally,looked onquietly;' it would have been somewhat Quixotic for Denmark's old enemy to'have gone fluit into field. 'the eld. -We have been' taunted with not interposing in favor of Hanover, for not mixing ourselves up In a domestic quarrel, and making a dynastic question of a national one. We are ordinarily - a peaceable and a practical people, and slow to swell our debt or thin our poptilation for ideas, nulesa,the ideas be made very, plain. But this possible Belgian ques tion is as definite as it well 'can be;' next to the Belgians we have stronger concern in it than any one, and far more than the Belgians we hold its issue in our hands. English honor and ,English feeling will insist on our inter posing should circumstances "demand it. The sooner we hold ljeinperate but decided lan guage the less likely it we shall be called i.pon to act : while at the same tithe we shall guide French and PrussianS to prudent coma sels, and probably spare woes unnumbered to our unlucky Belgian neighbors. ,=lThe__T;.ii T yn tt u e e g P ay r e nsa . . . - The left wing of the .Prussian army has stormed Weissenburg, a, fortified French town iirr the Lamer River., near the -Rhine. . The' details of the atlair are not given, nor is its_ importance or significane - & - indicated, - butthe Prussians are reported- as - completely-succesS- . Weis,..enburg WaSabandoned as a defetis sive point of the French line in , 1867, but its, irvOrks were nottazi:rl;anir since the' present operations began they have been occupied by at . least a division-•-cifttroops. .These- were driven in the PruSsian assanit,-and the works, which extend for 16 rifles along the Lamer. ' river, fell into the bonds of -the victors.. The Prussians subsegnently ,advanced ten miles to the south, destroYing the railroad ,between Lauterberg - and Strashtfrg.' It is intimated - in' some Of oar despatches that the attrick'Was intended to prevent the movement of the French-by. that route across the Rhine and to,the right . of Mayence. This, - Etter:curse b -ilierels -- 41143-7 - supridsitio - ri — or ifie torrespondent, and will not command the tidiest credence of careful students of the situ anon on the Rhine. All speculations of the kind are as absurd as they are unsatisfactory and unnecessary. The right wing of the Prussian army at Treves appears to 'he greatly strengthened, ,and indeed-,to every point of importance in 'the triangle between the Rhine, Mos , lle and Saar additional Prussian troops are hastening. It would Seem therefore clear that there is no intention to give up this important district ' without ti terrible struggz The Attlitode`Of - ltrelj- on the War Quefi. , -1. itton. The Florence correspondent of the Timel 1 ; says ,:t' The Martinis Visconta-Venesta, the Minis ter of Foreign...4.ilairs, was, this week, called upon Itt'Parliainent to reply . to inquiries con cerning the attitude to.be maintained by Italy . in case-of- tt;-Freneb-Prtissian ' war, and • the continued French occupation of Rome, in connection with, the -words .alleged -to have been use‘l'latiily by the French Minister, 011ivier; td-thd eillOt - that the Italian Kingdom is not yet well Oistablished: To the last of these' inquiries, Signor Via conti-Fenosta replied, that as soon as it was known there shit such .language had been at tributed to Signor 011ivier, although in an un official conversation, that funotionary waS written to ftor an explanation ; the response , to which was that the conversation was - not oorre.aly reported.`. -But there. ,. is a -lingering feeling of dissatisfaction, growing out of the syspicien that. tthe opinion attributed to the MinistOf - IWATiat Of - ()Metal circles in France. Upon the Roman ques tion. the Minister replied that the • policy of the Government would still be that of waiting. as the - one most in accordance with the dignity and. the interest of the nation. C,•rtaillly, the actual state of things 'cannot .continue forever, and the Minister gged the Chamber to, leave.to the Government liberty of jtoigment matt.of :action in dealing with' a questiOtt to which: whiAi3 responsibility is pledged. Upon the Spanish King question, the Minister simply-said that the good offices of Italy would be joined to those of the other Powers to the end of, preserving, if possible, the peace of . Europe. HOW ITIEE1" MARCH. . What ^French Soldier Carries [Prom tho Loudon Telegraph.] The whole of the Imperial Guard has uow left Paris. The last regiment that left—the Fourth Voltigoure---were marched up to La Gillette this Afternoon. The weather was in tensely hot:, the sun converting the long ave nue to which :King Flausstuann has given his name into a perfect oven, and the march must have proved very trying. Nevertheless. the men were picked men, very different from . some ef•the line battalions which wont off last week, and carried cheerfully and with affelas tie step the enormous load with which they were laden. When will generals and men in authority take the advice given so many years ago by Lainoriciere,' more lately by Trochu, and acted on, I believe, by Havelock. in India, and " Stonewall" Jackson in the American war ? . This advice, which is founded on experience of real warfare, was to the effect that to retain his efficiency as a fighting man, the inf.tutry soldier's inipMirnenta should' be reduced to a minimum, and that the weight he hasto carry 'should liereduced by two-thirds at 'the very - . least. Marshal Niel did his very hest to effect this by organizing a regimental train, consist ing of one-horse two-wheeled wagons, four of which were:to.be.atta,Ohed to each company. But he died before the organization of this ' "regimental"train could be . completed, and the number of these , carts is ' that only the Imperial Guard 14As had about:a doien distributed to each regiment, and they are used tor the purpose of carrying spare ammunition ,:only: The result . Is , thati,though the foot soldier has a much lighter weapon in. the Chassepot than in the old: murtledoader,. .Imstill hes to carry on his;back, and shoulders weightof about seventy pounds Prench,that upwards of one-third of the regulation vi eight carried, by a sumpter mule oue of these Vciltigeurs, whom' I treated, to ..a glass r. of beer,' supplied me with the details of his 'pack." • First, there is the Ohassepot, seven and a half pounds ; the sword, bayonet and scab-. Lard, three . pounds; ten pounds' of aminutir Lion, distributed partly in . two pouches and. partly in his . knansack ,a pair of shoes; a lour-pound loaf of bread; a canvas bag slung over, the left shoulder,andLcentaining,-any creature comfort the man may have procured: it was empty in many cases,but ray friend car-1 -- riedriirivaponud- - of - tdbatein,- some - cigars, - ,_ flask of .brandy, good-sized veal and barn and.-a, string or ~ ereelaA a Pail. Over the lrapsack—first, a greatcoat; secondly, a blanket ;'.l.liirdly, his share of the canvas for iLe fr.nif.',frahri, and sticks for the same ; and fourthly,alll/ge camp kettle: • mridelhe knapsack be had a second pair of trousers, combs, brushes, needles, thread, but tons, a pair ofgloves, a couple of pairs of socks, and three shirts.; in additionA flask capable of: containing about rtqnart of liquid is thing over 1.1 n., right' shoUlder. A longmareh with such a' weight runSt'lricaPhoitate •,all but the .Very strongest men"and It is only tee easy to under- Stand beiv it haPpens that knapsacks an& ha-. peti;milito. are in varigbly.droppedthe moment the rirst shot is fired.. - ' _ . In the French army the practiceis generally to order themen to lay down their 'knapsacks on going into action, but the stamina. of the men has he - en,irled to • the uttermost before they get tip to the front by the carrying of such monstrousloads: - :Picked Men may"stand it,' but it is sufficient to look at an. average regiment of the line after a few miles' march ii,g to form an opinion of this vicious system, of overloading, for the maintenance of which that sturdy old veteran, " General Routine," THE NATHAN .MURDER. The Coroner's Inquest—lmportant Testimony Li/cited. The New York Ilerrild, in its account of the Coroner's investigation of the Nathan murder, has the following : A Good Witness. The first witness called was officer 'Mangan, who was on the Twenty-third street post the morning of the murder: He seemed to be above the ordinary calibre of policemen in point of intelligence, and-gave his answers to' the questions put to him by District, Attorney Fellows, who represented tbe people, :and t c o thejutors, Who examined,him at great length, in a quiet, confident way, that gaVe general satisfaction.'- Police Officers, as a general, thing, when they are :my way officially connected with. :tn./important case, make desperate attetimts to show their- own ‘Vonderful- smartness-Thy making mountains out of mole hills -of inci dents that may to a certain degree, by the way they are stretched out, lend au, influence for or against stiSpeeted.:partitisi . ; - :Manganw,asnot w of this stamp, and the- consequence' as hip testimony in all:points - reuiftin'ed 'nil:Shaken' by the severest cross-examination. ' Wha Opened the f boor First Before Sl:ft . O'clock. The only really valuable,_ „portions of , his evidence were that relative-to his heariag,the, alarm of murder, what he saw when he en teral the house, and' when he " tried" and saw the hall door shut last during his term of duty. The latter was probabir the most im portant point of-all, if a point of evidence in - a, case like:this can be called important which throws . the murder in deeper mystery , than ever; fer if the officers .statement 'be true, if was ---- utterly iMpossible for _any one to -have- left the house by the ont - way between the time he "tried' the door,or rather saw the doorshut the last time, and the time when the; tilthatrsiins appeared on the stoop to give the alarm: (Jae very portant fact elicited by his testimony showed how unsafe a thing it is for sensation news papers to jump too suddenly at conclusions in a case where a man's life may be at stake before they hav,e good foundation to spring from. ' Whose ,Night Gown Was Stained with Blood?. • It will be remembered by all who have made themSelres familiar with. the details of thiS terrible murder and every, incident con nected with it and . its surrOundings what 'a •stress was put upon the fact that Wa.shington Nathan's night gown "was' besmearedwith blood when he came out on the stoop to' give aie alarm, yet Mangan testified that it :was Frederick Nathan's night gown and socks which had the blood stains, and, that. no sign of blood was risible about the 'other on.' These'stainsirrederick accounts for by his having knelt down and -leaned over the dead body of his father when he found the. corpse 'first, and by hip baying st ood in the pool of l.dood:wbich surrounded it. Thus it will be soeli that eneral Blair did not See so blindly a ter`alL In his statement mate what'he, saw ou the morning of the murder from his win,- ' do g• in the Filth Avenue. hotel, which over I :;looked the Nathan mansion, it will .be , recol , 'leeted that he persisted that the young man with the side whiskers. he ,:had.seeu sitting at the third-story window at 51 o'clock was the i~tiine one ho save a half hour afterwards on the :.sioop with his night-shirt stainexl with blood. `to all the"reporters;' whci had - been' in formed that Washington Nathan, who does not wear side whiskers, was the one whose night gown had heen found stained with Wood, appeared very much, like a contradict-, lion ;, but it will be seen by Mangan's evidence that the 4eneral was correct in his statement as to the identity of the'two brothers. How it was possible ' for nearly every' newsl; paper in.' the- city . "tot- geti- Muddled about this, little 'incident of 'the' .case (for • the result of the inquest will show that -it is little in its bearing on the guilt or innocence of any lierinin in the holl0e) is a mystery, . It may he that onritig'follie restrictions put upon the in‘testlgations of the reporters the detectives bad a hand in the misinformation. It may have been accidental:on their part, but for all that it was mischievous in. the extreme, and might Kaye been -criminally so had any evil result tlowed from it. Could a Loud Noise be Heard From Room to Room? The, testimony of the carpenters did not amount to much as a whole,and although they were very rigidly examined by two of the ,jurors, nothing but one fact that could tend to throw any great light ou the case was elicited. This fact was simply, this: they stated that to slid best oftheir belief it was impossible for a person sleeping on one of the doors above that occupied by old Mr. Nathan to hear any ex traprdinary noise below them in the house, but that they did believe a person sleeping on the same floor could be awakened by a loud-noise in the room.. This, , taken iu connection with the fact that they also swore that there was Only one sliding door between pld Mr.-: Na than's room and, that of the rear sleeping apartment, becomes a very important feature in the case. An Outside Confederate with, the Mar . It will be seenif adeordiegAbMangairifilesti inong,.as has already been-mentioned, that no person could have leftthe house by the : front door between the time,when the officer saw it, , -shut last arid- When,the alarm - was - out having 'Peen detected; 'and yet Washing- , ton Nathan states , when he came dOWn stairs he found it open. - Now; the' detetitives have opened their 'eyes to this; and tbe result of the inquest will undoubtedly prof that they have.. opened them to the extraordinary part of the . „ case With geed pUrpose., • ;1 Granting . Mangan's statements about {leer to be true, and-Washington Nathan's also „says one of the detectives, they sho.'so- - just ' this . Somebody in the house might, have , -- had a confederate who aided hina in doing the- RICE Tii:4ER CEO; Kiy% murder. The inmate would har,e• piloted hint. out by' the - back way after;the deed was done, looked the stable door, pamed through it to the Twenty-mecond street door anti let him.out of that: _Then It was an easy - matter for hint to leek all the doors behind him and for ap-, pearanee sake pull the, froit "door Open awl. 4( are the "-dog'' bide it. ,The whole think would be but the • • Work ocia 1111nutte, - anti — then, when I , Va.9Uffigton rtaprie,' down stairs, after discovering the murder, why' ' he_casewould- seem.- plain- to biro - that:the: murderer bail left by the front way,,and thou vk lien the detectives examined the'butli destrii and found them all secure on the inside, they would naturally come to the "same conclusion.;, This theory could easily reconcile the apps rent clahl between.the officer's .and Washing- 7 on "Nathan's statement about the door beings,, epen. The detective who formed it thoronkhly believes in it; but then comes the . ' question; ho is the inmate. of the house who piloted . 1. the outside confederate in and out of the'- house?• Time alone can, tell. , ACTS &ND . .10ANCIJES. —Chi - note ladies go Calling with iiquare pieces of red paper:for cards. '• Dr. tiolliind is to edit Hours at Home. Newspapermen have to edit hours atthe office. —Dickens was• a warm admirer of that n' naughty novel, ".Griffith Gaunt." —The " coughing hors is the Indian name. for locomotive. - ' -The. San Francisco. Jews have abolished' • the separation of sexes in the synagogues. , —A costly "Japanese"dily bulb With name as long as a hoe handte produced,an ordinary, -,, —A young lady at; Dubugne sues her ma ternal relatiVe for slander, in talking ,abont , her and that Smith fellow. —An Illinoisdoetor to be sure a patient was - really beyond further fee-paving, burnt him ith hotiron. He was too dead to resist. .' —ln Indianapolis a dry goods_ clerk fallen heir to.a million dollars. He was tear ing of a piece of calico when the news reached him, and he left it half torn oft; and said he would have to be excused. - • —Dr. Fetters, who had only one eye was , • accustomed to say: ," It takes ,but oneC eye to seleet the proper remedy; it needs two for the • apothecary who prepares it;.as for.the patient who swallows it, he is lucky if he is blind —They had to appoint a new cemus-taker - in a Buffalo distriet, became the old one, spit. tobacco on a red-headed woman's carpet.: He was carried home on a dray. —Paterson (N. J.) .papers are inclined tof - , think that-when-temperance_people_ga,oh:azia' . excursion, .and all -get drunk, it don't speak very well for the cause of temperance. Itrde-1" pends on how you loek at it. . •;, —An English life, insurance• company Just paid the inspratiee of a mampho took out..: • • his policy - in-17:0, -and-diedrecently-at theage::, ,of one hundred and three;,the first instance, in which has beenpaid on thelife of a centenarian. —The • lrom an's' JbatriM aritionnees, - under'. • the head of , " What Woinen are Doing'," that `` Jiidge Mrs. Esther, Morris, of Wyoming, ' ' getting.onswimmingly-in her-official duties, • -which are,rapidly increasing. She has lately, married several - couples." . _ • . ••-: - ----A Pittsburgh druggist iold a woman some -- laudanum, and then sent a man 1.4;,t • to., the , iIDUS(3 . with a.stomach-pump, winch arrived. , just in time to save her. He then charged $lll for pumping her out. "There is Cheating' iii, all trades but ours." .• - —A pretty girl at.the Catskills took the burst ing of her trunk so happily that a wealthy • -young. Gothamite was captivated, proposed and was accepted. -- Now-there isn't n'grri at, - - the mountains. but has smashed her trunk, all-. to pieces, to show hew sweet her temper • —it beats all what a passion drunken men have for lying down on railroad tracks Or ; a 9miet sleep. At Morris, 111.; two men, named McArpine and OS \yald, got their:kegs full and: went to bed'on the Rock Island read, and a few minutes they were in the Land- of the- Leal, all hashed to pieces. —A German naturalist has discovered that ' starlings are of extraordinary service in des-:' troymg insects,and saw a single young starling consume one hundred and forty snails in four-: ,, teen hours out of the twenty.four. • The snails were' heard . plaintively murmuring: ' '" W'' can't get Out." ' • ' • —The papers say the young Prince Imfie- •-• rial has.been in his first fight; and has been baptized in blood. It is a , cheap . way to' be baptized in Wood,, to stand off two miles and, .., see through a field-gla. , .s a poor Fronehrnas riddled 'with bullets. But that's where the glory comes in. ' • . • —When a •m an is returned to Congress . lie{ has two chances of rare distinction. He may be invited to dine with the British' Minister,- , and he may be buried in the CorigreAsional bilrying-ground, and have a monument, re- , semblitig a store-box surmounted by, a cheese,, , , ...„, put over him. It pains me to think that,X can, A.. 11„ never be returned to. Congress.—Deri Pigit. —A girl at Ed wardsville, 111., was trying milk a cow when she 'kicked over--the,;, rl over—when she got' up and knocked bier down—the cow down—with' her fiSt—the • girl's fist. Bore is a chance for some effemi.; nate young man to marry, got a partner , for' • life w hose milk of human ki udness—the,girl's-L; will make him happy or break his neck attempt.—X. Dent. —‘, Chassapot peaches are in the market * i, and are more effective than, the guns of the. contending'armies of Europa. ' Undertakers keep an agent at the fruit, stande, and when they see a man buy peaches, they ,Watch Min home, inquire his height, and go 'right home and make a coffin his size, then go back to the. , house and watch for erapo on the door-knob.. • They generally have to wait about three home • before sending in their cards., —The Murfreesbore Monitor, in detailing an:_ accident accident that occured to aMr Jaquith, in.that. ' no gh borhood, by reason of his horses, attached to a wagon, running away, says : " Ho was tak-. en, more dead thaq alive, from under one ofthe wheels of the wagon. When he was taken up all the 'skin was peeled from his breast, anthills •• • flesh, horribly lacerated, Itioked like a quiver ing mass of jelly. -We are glad to bear no bones were broken, and that he has escaped ,without injury." Tough old boy Mr. Jaquith enlist r be. —Venus rising from the sea and Piskstand 7 ,., ing beside it are too most poetical cOrtibina. tions. The latter has given wing to the iincy of a Long Branch songster, with the follow. ; big result Close to the sea, on Jersey sailds, Tho lord of railroads and of lands, • Clad in a bathing suit he stands. The roaring sea before him falls ; o watches iu his over-alls-- Then quiclr as thunderbelthcr.spraWll. - • • —A Western poet follojring pathetic pared:* to the St. Louis Divatc/i: lii-Chow a little had, • Which doiVu, lus back hung low, And everywhere that KI-Chow 'went, The piptall'it would - go ; While sitting in the school ono day, - It reached onto the floor, I When naughty children, fond of Av. • Fast tied it to the door. • , • • 'lhe teacher jusethen coming in a , To bear the children spell, i t ?tanked /poor .up. by the root%‘n • • With , a, demoniac yell;, • : .‘1 And when•the children gathered rou.ruk - • The teacher to them said, • • ; Behold the tale-bearer's sad fate In lii-Chow, there, Acme dead." i;.;i , ~`