Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, August 25, 1870, Image 1

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    F IXED EARTH CLOSETS ON ANY
floor, in or out of doors, and PORTABLE EARTH
F IXED
for use in bed-chambers and elsewhere.
Are absolutely free from offence. Earth Monet-Com
vany's Mille° and salesroom at WM. G. RHOADS', No.
Uzi Market ntreot. • , a ,29.trt•
- .
• DIED.
LEWIS.—At Summit Grove, near White Hall, on
Tuesday morning, 23d hist, Franefs Morton, young' et
;rid of Edmund and Elizabeth C. Lewla, aged thirteen
The funeral will take pinto from the residence of hie
°parent& No. 12 North Thirty-eighth street, at half-past
three o'clock, thin (Thursday) afternoon. Interment at
t!outh Laurel
mUlli.—On the afternoon of the 24th instant, John
]Sitiir, formerly of Lonitiville, KY.
WEIGH T.—Suddenly, on the Jet Instant, at Falehle,
'Peer Bergen, Norway, George 1.14 - right, eon Of Jainen
A. Wright, in the 18th year of his ago.
400 EYBEABCH STREET.
& LANDELL,
Are supplyhut their Cnxtomen with
BLACK !ALBS
At Gold 123 i: Premium.
PURE • COD LIVER "OIL, CITRATE
rtlngtacels.=-JOHN 0. BAKES & C0..78 Marko et.
spa;l - ki -- NVffekii.
Finest
READY-MADE
CLOTHING I!
and I
MERCHANT , 11
TAILORING,
at
JOHN
WAN AMAKER'
S,
818 & 820 11
Chestnut Street. / i;
GRAND VISITATION
KNIGHTS TEAIBLAR,
•
FULL t
TO' ATLAPITIC CITY, -
On Friday., Aug.ust-2.6th,_18-71),__
lIENA ING UNTIL
Monday Afteilloon,. 291 h:
N *riot))) Coleman erica of. Xisighte 'Templar have
to))) , !e arraheornoote for a repetition of their vitat to
t'ainth City thieseason, loarthg VlNE:Street Ferry at
On Friqni, August 2&3
Programme while at Atiaatio City.'
FRIDAY EVENING.
G..h.plithentliry Hope tciil be.giren itt:•ettch of the
1:.) the propriettn-e.
MA flUtinAIG
- At 9A. M. will rnport tat In full dr.-m
T. , r paradvozi.tlie.t,each.
A t 1,, P. - itlrthe - "Cirarriltrright9 Tiqnplar's nereption''
ill l) given at headquarters, under nu" litl4piC , ,A of
) true Curntnandrry, pre:c.dect by a diaphs) of firvnurk9
ill uitrallug Masonic eta blezna.
SUNDAY.
Item.
Sir WM. fl . JEFFP.E IS, E. G. P., of New Jer
). 1, in kad iu devotiou, in Ow
111014iDA.
'At ri373l.%i'M reDvriaCllol,
1 ., r the Grand fieviev. before the
Sir WAI WALLACE GOODWIN, P. E. C. Cyr.ne
niznandery and E. 0. 0., of NewJetaeY, gill hare
[;mineral command.
tienorol Headquarters will be at the Sea View Excur
Pion li o n t ,g.
See time table for running of trains, etc.
Hound Trip Tickota. good from Friday afternoon unti
rilon,lay afternoon, inclusive, 83 00.
au2.5-2trpt
IiESQUEBONING VALLEY RAIL
ROAD COMPANYr-Oilleo, ]2 South SECOND
ttreet.
PHILADELPHIA, August 22, 1870. A
NOTICE -TO STOCKHOLDER/3.--Thu Seml annual
gpument of interest on the capital stock of this Com
rADV, nutter the. leas. , to the LEHIMI COAL AND
AVIGATI.O.N COOPANT, at the rate of TEN PER
LENT. Vet aimutn: Or TWO-AND A-ItALF DOLLARS
share.crear of tasee, will bout/We at thy/ °nice, on
and after THUM:WAY, goptembei. 1;7370.
uu2s to l W. B. WHITNEY, Treae nrer.
gr, NOTICE—THE PENNSYLVANIA
F IRE ItifdtillANCE COMPANY..
Aucitisrssth, WM.
The annual meeting of the Stockholder.; of the Penn
f.;. Ivania Fire Insurance Company will be held at their
()dice on MONDAY, the sth day of September next, at
]o o'clock, A. ht. when an election will be held for nine
Xirectora, to serve for the enauing year.
MAL G. CROWELL,
a u 25 eJ
-
HOWARD HOSPITAL,__ NOS. 1518
cal Vatetiard street; Dliplin sar DpartMnt.
—Medical treatment ncl medicine furnished gratuitousir
to the poor
POLITICAL NOTICE
1870. 1870,
SHERIFF,
:WILLIAM B. LEEDS.
jel6 ti ocl2ribg
EXCURSIONS.
BIECK'S PHILADELPHIA BAND, No, I,
The New Treaty as to Bel,..rlant.
_.
The folloWing ,
are the conditions of the new
:reaty signed between England and Prussia :
"AirricLE I. His Majesty the King of Prus
sia having declared that, notwithstanding the
imatilities in .which the North German Con
:ederation is 'engaged with France, it is his
iced deterniiiiation to respect the neutrality
of Belgium so long as the same shall be re
spected by France, Her Majesty the Queen of
the United _Kingdom of Great Britain and Ire
land on her part declares that, if during the
said hostilities the armies • of France should
N ielate that neutrality, she will be prepared to
co-operate with His Prussian Majesty for the
defence of the same in such manner :IS may be
mutually agreed upon, employing for that
purpose her naval and military forces to in
sure its observance and to maintain, in con
junction with His Prussnui Majesty, then and
thereafter, the independence and neutrality of
llelgium.
" It is clearly understood that Her Majesty
the Queen of the United 'Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland does not engage herself
by: this treaty to take part in any of the gen
eral-operations of the. wax', now. carried on
between the limits of Belgium as defined in
the treaty between Belgium and the Nether
lands of APriil9, 18.19. '• '• •
m'An'r. 11. His Majesty the King •of Prussia
agrees on his part, in' the event', provided for
" . , --- 7 in the foregoing artiele,,to , co-operate with
Iki CAPE MAY. E
REDUCTION OF FARE AND
. ller Majesty the Queen of the United Kin g
:
CHANGE OF TIME. - dom of Great Britain and Ireland, employing
The Stemer Arroweialth will run as follOwa until his naval and military forces for the purpose
she close o the Benson : aforesaid ;• and, the ease arising, to conceit'
Leaving Arch Street Wharf on SATURDAY, 27tb,
with Her Maiesty , the measures which shall
VEDNEs DAY; Mat of August, and FRIDAY, tha 2d of
iSeptember. at 9A. AI, he taken, Separately or in common, to secitre
the neutrality and independence of. Belgium. ,
Leaving Cape May at 8 A. ht., on 1110NDA.Y, 28th Au
gust, and THURSDAY, Seviendairrist. Fare 82 25. , ir -
. ,anm.'lll. This Treaty shall be binding on
Excursion Tickets for the round trip, e 2 80, good any '•
day during he balance of the getteoe. nassteeirp§ the high eerftraCtiug _ parties - during - the , con--•
- - ' tinutinee - Of theniesenf
war between the North
'SAGS.-2 BALES RAGS NOW - LAND- ' 40-rwinn flunfedurAtiote, an or
' 'ann.§ after the ratification of any Treaty of
__JA.—INGI-frofh-steinnor - Pienuor, from winningbon, ,
C... and for ealo by COCHRAN, RUSSELL ~54. 00. $ 1.41 • +.l '1
he s t n u t greet.
es t.
•
---, ----
WILL GIVE A
.Grand Eioursion to Long Branch,
Saturday, August 27, 1870,
leaving Philadelphia, from WALNUT Street Wharf, at
welock A. IL,
BY SPECIAL TRAIN over Camden and Burlington
Cuunty and New Jersey Southern Railroads, giving
parties
Eight Hours at Long Branch.
'And nn opportunity of viewing the Trotting Matches at
3llouniouth Part:, and the Enema pment and Dress Parade
of the celebrated
Ninth New York Regiment,
•-;. Colonel James Fisk, Jr., Commanding.
Furs for the Excursion
,s 2 BO
Tickets will positively be limited. They should there
fore be purchased at an early date.
They can be procured until 7' o'clock h. M. of the day
previous to the excursion, at the office of Beck's Band,
028 Market street ; Ohms. Brlntzinghoffer, 936 Market
Eltreet ; Enos 0. Renner, 601 Girard : wpm); J. 0: If eim,
E 215 North Tenth street ; Ticket Office, 828 (Blastula
Eitreot ;'also, Camden and Amboy Railroad Ticket Mee
:Walnut Street wharf.; any dny.nrions to the exeurslon,.
Dud on the niorning , of the excursioi; . -
au2B int pi
, -..... • . _._
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, . __
O,F THE
THE WAR IN EITROPE
WHAT THE COPU3ATANTO WANT.
A Letter from Berthold Auerbach. the
Novelist.
I was wandering through the villages and
forests of my native country, when thesounds
of war from over the Rhine reached my ear.
The solitary wood-cutter leanedon his axe and
asked, " What does the Frenchman want ?"
The stone-breaker on the road held the ham-
Mer in his hand, the reaper In the field let the
sickle rest and in the village the old maa who
was teaching the children, all asked, " What
does the Frenchman want?". Here and far
off it wax said, "The Frenchman has had a bad
harvest; he is coming to get something from
-its."--Yes,-indeed ; the Frenchman has a blid
harrest; but in a different way and not from
this year alone; and that is.why he wishes war,
While for war the worst pretext is good enough
with him.
And . what I said to many .a parting man
courageous for the, - efiroleati to many 't.'" one
remaining behind, with a rigid, earnest face, .I
will now proclaim to the whole German peo
ple, to those fighting abroad - and to - those wait.
Ing at home : In- these quiet days,Wheri every
one is unsheathing his sword, all minda—as in
the waiting room of a railway station--are in
agitation, in suspense. We count theminutes,
we ask, " Why not begin ?" The time until'
something is done seems - so long and weary.
Our hearts have not been able to put up with
the idea that such a war is. possible in our
days, that the peacefiil acquisitions of two na-
tionieshould be at stake through the gambling
of an adventurer, declaring war against else
lization„ -However, this-is the case, and. ever
figani. the--;:eaine. - question - arises;• ' "'What:
does the Frenchman want?" . I am going ..to
tell you.
The Frenchman has a bad coscience, he is
displeased with hiMself, and n
therefore, he
wishes to deafen himself by the din of war and
as lie cannot put his' own miserable household
in order, he wants to make a row in the
world ! Be is at war with himself, and there
fore seeks to stir up quarrals.with_others, -He
serfi his .neighbor, the German nation, quiet
and pr intent, steadily working, increasing in
Ns ell being, arrive at unification, make whole
mOCUli laws. awl administrate conscientiously
for the public - v. elfare. The Whole world looks
—with respect on all this. The Frenchman_
,- tilene, Instead of taking an example.what do •
L ite_ .
..... l' Jealous of his neighbor he
e anis to destroy the- harVest of - - his
strenuous labor, -and in doing. so he
speaks of liberty and civilizationi_But4*-
Li:rill - Ms /S a gfeed for territory--a common
rapacity. Our hills are crowned with verdant
tillage. The French have despoiled their for
-es-IW--A-trit -deep tinder the soil whiell the
r firtiter tills lies, from time immemorial, the
Crud which furthers our industry.' -The French
e` Want to take our-coal-beds on the Rhine - and
.-te the Saar, and speak at the same time of lib
ii rty d - of civilization
can
they are to
Mg a, ! Why t? Who bring what he
I,as not got himself, and what cannot -be
, i, , len? The man who governs the-French has.
otten acted the lucky gambler. "He has . specu- •
tided on tbestupidity and the baseness of men
,Jel has won. On the stupidity - anti baseness of
he Germans he has also speculated, has hoped
to find men foolish and vile enough, to take his
_
part.
But what had he to experience?:He has
already helped Its to V
ietory, the most' beauti
ful and indestructible! The wicked . One ~ w as
cuing to bring us a curse and he has brought
as a blessing already. - There is' no more a
' -any and a South Germany :- there
- a united G erman._we_n o _
...selves to be torn asunder, so as
mg, and to be emiSidered - as noth- --
ing in our disunion. The French have an im
moral dance—they call it the cancan. -The
war-dance to which Napoleon now plays the
riddle is the war-cancan.
What do the French want? To tight—
haughtily to try their strength against their
leaceful neighbor, and to conquer tracts of
and because of his own accord nobody has a
desire to participate in French grandeur.
What can the French write on their tiagA, 'or
a device? Nothing more than this : '' 'We
want to light and rob." But what do we Ger
mans want? What can we write on our ban
ner? We fight for the purest and holiest
cause, and for a century the struggle for the
equal rights of' man before the law has lasted.
Let us not forget—for we Germans • arejtiSt
even towards our present enemy—that the •
Fench have done much -in this struggle.
E pm! rights before the.law have been gained
in all essentialpoints. To-day Germany fights
1.
for the equal rights of nations.
What do the French want? They want the
preponderance, ,i the guardianship over na
tions, the prestige. They are impertinent
enough to say to the neighboring people,
" you dare not feel well, for I myself am not
well ; you dare not arrange your affairs as it
seems best to you; you must pat the soup as I
salt it fbr yon; and of course everything that
I like to eat must be served to me frost—l am
the chosen people of liberty and civilization!"
The bragging of Frenchmen, behind which
they hide theirgreediness for territory,
must receive the bIONV which it
deserves. No agreement,. no means of culture
would help us. We no incite blush at our own
abjectedness ; now the blood roust be spilt
that ought to have risen to our face. Our
German device is, "Equal rights to all oar
time; !" We free ourselves and the world from
the arrogance of the French, and free the
French froth their own arrogance. We know
what we want, and dare proclaim it to the
world,.The French must bolt for a pretext .
AtTniseli . es; and try - to 'perSfiaddAlMWorld by
all sorts of artful means. As sure as truth
triumphs over untruth. so snrely the victory
will be ours.—N. Y. Pos;,• -
and on the expiration of that time the inde
pendence and neutrality of Belgium will, so
far as.the high contracting parties are respec
tively concerned, continue to Test as hereto
fore on the Ist Article of the Quintuple Treaty
of the 19th of April, 1839."
The Euipress Eugenie and queen
Victoria.
We translate from the New York Stoats
Zeitung some extracts from a leading article on
English, intervention in the European war.
The Empress of the French in her troubles
has requested Queen Victoria, the mother-in
law of the Crown Prince of Prussia, at present
withtlie - arm - y - on -- its-march-to-Paris, to medi
ate, so that a peace may he established which
;will make it possible to the Bonaparte dynasty
to,continue in France.., Queen Victoria was,
however, thereby asked to do something.
which . doeS not at all agree with her wishes,
for she has always been opposed to that
dynasty. -She - may be - a - woman of narrow
views, but she has a strong sense_of the right,
and - the act by which Napoleon, after, break
ing the most sacred of oaths, has• placed. bins,
- self - on thenthrone, conVinced her longlago
that a reign so Commenced could not end well.
The Queen only knows what the King •of
- Priissia has decided to do, in case of „victory;
and, while' her sYniPatilles are.with the re-es
tablishment of a constitutional monarchy in
France, with the Orleans family at its head,
she has simply expressed her regrets that she is
unable to do anything. She is a constitutional
Queen, who has to act .strictly in accordance
with the views of her Cabinetlthat Cabinet is
of opinion that at the present moment an in
tervention might not be favorably'received.
Queen Victoria has therefore made a State
allair of that which was asked of her as a per
sonal favor s , ThesEnspresS meant ' that Jam,
-should speak' Odd Word for her . liuSband"and
child, but the Queen -who knows• full well the part which the Empress has taken in
the declaration of war, tells her as plainly as
possible that the „Bonaparte dynasty has
nothing to expect from her personally; that
whatever she may do will be in accordance
ith• the, views of her Cabinet, and that the
Cabinet is of opinion that only - when the French
army shallsbe victorious -can a diplonsatiest
tervention he of use. This answer must have
been, to •the Bonaparte dynasty, a mirror to
show it its own weakness. It will have
learned therefrom that in case it has nothing
further to hope for from its own endeavors, it
is 105 t,.. and thats-ansearnest intervention of"
Nbut ral Powers 'n favor of Franeesean-o-nly
be made-when it shall have fallen.
Neenea and Ineidentsin _a_Former-Ad..
Vance on Parts.
_-th __Tb_e_graphicspensof-Carlyle---has-clatcribed
e i nvasion Pratide. 78 ;years ago, which,in
in, military aspect, LI in many respects paral
leled to-day. The advance toward the French
- Capital: Was thenunder different.cireumstances
froth the present, andstne system of warfare.
has. in the meantime - completely changed, - but
-the-events- of that day still continue to be a
subject of•constantstuds; with militarrwriters,
and-are noiv invested with-special interest.
Carlyle gives us a life-picture-of the scene in•
the alarmed capital; not unlike what may- be
epeatest within a few days : • -
I'k - 6r - doe's the other MoVerlientSladk - ein the
hive against - foreign Desfitits. Strong forces
-hall meet in 'death grip ; drilled Europe
agaiimt mad undrilled France, and singular
coneinsionS will be tried, Couceive,_ there
-ferija iri some 'faint degree, the tumult that
whirls in this France, in this Paris! Placards
;rem Section, lroni Commune, from Legisla
tive, trom the individual Patriot, flame moni
tory on all the walls. Flags of Danger to
i. Fatherland wavnat the Hotel-de-Ville; on the
Point Neuf—over the prostrate Statues of
Eilias- Thera issuniyersal-erdistingoireringstni
enlim ,_' there is a tearful-boastful leave-taking;
rregfilar intirebing•on the , Gtent Northeastern
[toad. I.klarseillese sing their wild To Arias
11 chorus : which now all men, all women and
children have learnt and sing chorally in
Theatres, Boulevards, and the heart
burns in every bosom. Aux ert-mes ! itlarchons
—Or think how your aristocrats are skulking
into covert; how Bertrand Melleville hid
den - in some garret in Aubry-le-Boucher
street, with a poor surgeon who had known
me.' Dame de Stael has secreted her Nar
bonne, not knowing what in the world to
make of him. The barriers are sometimes
open, oftenest shut ; no
. passports to be had ;
T'uwnhall Emissaries, with the eyes and claws
of falcons, flitting watchful on all parts of your
horizon ! In two words, • Tribunal of the
Seventeenth, busy under howling gal
leries ; Prussian BrunSwick, ' over a space of
forty miles,' with his war-tumbrils, and sleep
ing thunders, and Briarean 'sixty-six thou
-and right hands'—coming, coming !
"Oh,Heavens !in these latter days of August
he is come! Durosoy was not yet guillotined
when news had come that the Prussians were
harrying and ravaging about Metz in some
tour days more one hears ' that Longedi, our
-first strong-place on the border, is fallen in fif
teen hours. Quick, therefore, Oh ye impro
vised Municipals quick, and even quicker.
The improvised Municipals make front to this
also. Enroffinent urges itself; and clothing,
and arming. Our very officers haVe now "wool
paadettes ;' for it is the reign of Equality,aud
Ilse of Necessity. .Neither do men now
ssseis sr and sir one another; citonen (citizen)
were suitabler ; we even thee 018 the "Free peo
ples of Antigtiity". did, so have Journals anti
he Improvised tlolumunes suggested; which
shall be well. •
lutinitely better, meantime, could we sug
gest where aims are to be fosind. For the
present our ' • ;!. 1! , (0 , chant chorally To (wins ;
and have nu arms: Arms arc searched, pas
sionately : there is joy over any musket.
Moreover, intrenclunents.shalll4? =dere td.
in
Paris ; on the Slopes of `Montmartre men dig
sue shovel ; though even the simple - saspect
this to be desperate, ti They dig; Tri-colpr
, as hes speak encouragement and ?cull-speed-ye.
Nays 'twelve members ,of the Legisla
ure go daily,' not to encourage only, but --to
mar; athand and delve; it was decreed-with
acclamation. Arms shall 'either be pro
vided, or else the ingenuity of a man
crack itself' and become fatuity. Leon Beau
marchais, thinking to serve the Fatherland,
and do a stroke of trade in the old way, has
commissioned 60,000 stand of good arms out
of li elland ; would to Heaven, for Fatherland's
sake•• and his they were come ! Meanwhile
railings are torn up ; hammered into pikes ;
chains themselves shall be welded tcigetlier
into pikes. The very coffins of the dead are
raised for melting into. balls. All church
bells must down into the furnace to make
cannon; all church-plate into the Mint to
make money."
The advance toward Paris is then described :
"And so Brunswick advanced from stage to
stage; who shall now stay him—covering forty
miles of country? Foragers fly far; the vil
lages of the Northeast are harried ; your Hes
sian forager has only 'three sous a day' the
very Emigrants it is said will take silver-plate
—by way of revenge Clermont, Sainte-Mone
hould, Varennes especially, ye Towns of the
Night of:Spurs trete ye! Procureur Saussy
and the Magistrat s of Varennes have • fled ;•
brave Bisnitace Le 'Blarfe. of , this alms ttOr
is r to -the woods ; , MM. •• Le Blanc, -a
young woman fair to look upon, • with
her young infant, has to live 111 green
wood, like a beautiful Bessy Belle of Sang,
her bower thatched with rushes S catching
premature rheumatism. Clermont may ring
the tocsin now and illuminate itself ! Clermont
lies at the foot of its (low (or Vache sothey
name thaq Mountain) a prey to the Hes,
sian spolier; its fair women, fairer than most, -
are robbed ;.not of lite, or .what is dearer, yet
of all that is cheaper and portable; .for. Nece
ssity On - three half-pence - a day; has no laW. At'
Sainte-Menehould the—enemy-has—been-ex—
pected more than . once—our Nationals all
i. turning . out in arms ; but was not yet seen."
.._,Tho_.paucipitLebosingsceue-of-the.caulpitigni
ALE
remembered as the Cannonade of Vainly, in
which the army of the Duke of Brunswick
was finally repulsed, is thus told:
"At seven In the morning the mists clears
off: see Kellermann, Dumouriez, second in
command, with ' eighteen pieces of cannon'
and deep-serried ranks, drawn up around that
same silent windmill on his knoll of strength
Brunswick, also with serried ranks and
cannon, glooming over to . him from
the Height of La Lune; only the little
brook and its dell now parting them, So
that the much-longed -for. has come at last!
Instead of hunger and dysentery, we shall
have sharp shot ; and then !—Dumouriez with
force and firm front looks on from a neighbor
ing height, can help only with his wishes in si
lence. Lo, the eighteen pieces do bluster and
bark, responsive to the- bluster of La Lune ;
and thunder-clouds mount into the air ; and
echoes roar through the dells, far. into. the
depths of Argonne Wood (deserted now), and
limbs and lives of men fly dissipated this way
andthat. Can Brunswick make an impression
on _them.. tiielll.. The, dtill - -bright Seigneurs stand.
biting their thumbs ; these Sams-culottes seem
not to fly like poultry! Toward noon-tide a
cannon-shot blows Kellerinann's horse from
under ; there bursts-.a powder-cart high
into the air with knell heard over all.: some
sWagging and swaying observable ; Bruns
wick will try, Cmarades' cries Kelkermann
".Pine la Patric Aliens vainere pour elle, Come -
let us conquer tor Ler. Live the Fatherland,'
rings responsive to the- welkin, like rolling
fire from aide to side our ranks are as firm as
rocks ; and Brunswick may recross the dell,
ineffectual ; regain his old position on La
Lune; not uubattered by the way. And so
for the length of a. September' fiay—wittr
bluster and bark; _with belloW far echoing! -
The cannonadelasts till sunset and no impres
sion made. Tiltan hour after sutiSet, theTe*
remaining clucks of the districtstrikingseven ;
at this late time of the day Brunswick tries
again. With not ,a whit better fortune! He
is met by rock-ranks, by shout of Five La
Patric, and_driven back not unbattered.
Whereupon he ceases ; retires to the tavern
of La Lune ;' and to raising a redoubt last_ lie
be - attacked !"
A Poet to the Rescue.
After many years of compulsory exile and
voluntary seclusion, Victor Hugo has returned
to Paris in the uniform of the reserve National
Guard. "A la bonne heure I' says 31. Gaillar-
Abt, announcing the fact byo_cerin cahle.a.of
good omen.
ICertainly it is significant, bntrather. of the
T dowilfall of the Napoleonic dynastyl.than of
the final,trinniph_of_the—E'rench_arms.--The
poet and &reamer of Hauteville House would
prove no great accession to the military
strength of Prance, were_he to. enter-into
acute service. and as a - member of the reserves
- of the National Gbard, he can only look on
at the final scene which seems so rapidly ap
_proaching. His son is charged with complicity
in the recent plots for the assassination of the
Emperor, and whether the accusation Stand or
fall, it is reasonably certain that. Victor Hugo..
would not clime to Paris except in the belief
that the overthrow of "Napoleon le-Petit "
acconiplished.-:- •
Possibly, with this hope of witnessing the
dawn of a new era in the government of
France, there is united an aspiration to rouse
the drooping spirits of his .countrymen with
the - battle, sow!. Certainly the poetry of the
war in Paris has so far - shown a plentiful lack
of the ancient fire, and has given us but faint
echoes of the lyre, of Berauger; The oppor
tunity is thus afforded Victor Hugo of inter
weaving with the laurels of his youth fresh
wreaths, even though these be wet with the
iit'e-blood of his cotintry,.and if his return
••hould only make the lyrical wail of Paris.
V) ca•r! , relpectable s it willnet have been in-vain:-
An Official Prayer for Peace.
The Bishop-of London-, as ptovincial dean
Canterbury, has forwarded to the bishops
01 the province of Canterbury a form of
prayer which he and the Archbishop of Can
terLiity have agreed to recommend as a help to
private devotion during 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 'prayer while his country is not
engaged in the war. The form recommended
is a follows:
t Almighty God, King of all Kings,whose
power no creature is.able to resist, to whom it
helongeth justly to jaunish sinners, and to be
merciful to them that truly repent; .assnaue,
we beseech Thee, the horrors of this war,
which Thou hast permitted to break. forth in
Europe; restrain the passions of the combat
ants : inspire the. Conquerors with mercy and
the vanquished with submission to Thy will ;
give patience to all who suffer ; prepare for
the summons those who are called to die ; and
to this warfare bounds which it may not
pass, We pray Thee, 0 God, speedily grant .
peace-to the nations, and so over-rule; in Thy
good
our
the course of all events,
that our Present anxieties may end in the
spread of righteousness, enlightenment and
true liberty, and thus Thy Kingdom may at
last be established on earth. And this we
pray through the merits and mediation of
Jesus Christ,our Lord and Saviour, the Prince
of ice. Amen."
A DEVELIBII PLOT.
Attempt to Throw a Train oil the Penn
sylvania Railroad Track.
The Lancaster Express says :
on Monday night last a most devilish
scheme was attempted on the .Pennsylvania
itiu tread ittl'abY'S 0 . 61 4 ; ,'aliotit 'one West .
the Gap Station, to throw the Cincinnati
express train off the track. The object, it is.
supposed, was to rob the passengers on the
train or the express car. This curve is very
short, and the embankment is pretty high,
rendering it a dangerous portion of the road,
a tat; should the attempt have proven success
ful, no one can tell what might have
been the loss of life, or how ter
rilde an accident would have happened. It
appears that a tie was placed across the track,
hut fortunately not fastened tightly thereto.
The Cincinnati express train being consider
ably behind time, the freight trains received
orders to proceed ahead to Leaman Place
Btation. One of the freight trains struck the
tie. Tarrying It Wring seine distance, until the
,11,,j0e was stopped and the tie removed,
' lien it was taken afterwards to Leaman
Place. It is thought that the parties in put
ting down the tip were frightened by the ap
proach of the freight train, so that they did
not stop long enough 'to fasten it to the
rails.
—A thoughtless lowa youth tied the bridle
of his horse' abdut his waist and lay down to
sleep. Isis •nocle was broken when- he was
found, and the horse was careering across the
country.
—Alaska wants public schools, schools of
'herring having played ont. ' : • • :
.
-A Berlin
correspOndent says the whole
Almanac of Gotha seems clamoring at King
William's headquarters for stall. position. The
Prussian authorities seriously propose Orpheus
0. Kerr's proposition for corps of brigadier
generals which , they will denominate cbrps
-
—,lenkitis tells how Many yards wore made
up in a wedding-dross of a recent fashionablo
bride. Extravaganco in this direction is very
extraordinary, and, yards are of no account;
some of the giylswill 7 put :lap with — nothing
'Short - Of a lawn. -
Swedish • are
building a city in the neighborhood of Syca
more. Most of them own from ton to ilftoea
Gores-of-laud,-
LATEST FROM wEsiT HICKORY. PENN
SYLVANIA.
The 99 Tannin ' 9 of the 011 Itegtone.•
The Titusville Herald says :
West Hickory, besides being noted for its
tlig - tielli, dry holes and rattlesnakes, has a
new and charming feature of attraction in the
vast number of wildcats, or 'catamounts, that
are to be found in the neighboring forest, and
which make night hideous with their melliflu
ous notes, when on a forage. Since the un
timely demise of the wildcat at Fagundas, by
reason - of an encounter with a bull-dog, no
" varmints" have been seen, and it was hoped
i bat the aforesaid animals would let the peace
ful.-settlers have - a rest. But such felicity
was not to be—and now comes the story.
Near the headwaters of West Hickory creek
Jives an humble and upright agriculturist, by
the name of Adam Goodman, who, after en
gaging in the perilous occupation of an oil
operator on the creek, reformed and opened a
keno bank, and with the accumulations of
several -Weeks retired - from - businesa-:out of .
the babli window (as a
. police officer entered
the front), and purchasing a few acres of soil
began to farm it. Not having- previously
studied -Lydia- Thompson's work entitled :
"What I Know about Farming," his first
year's' work was not a success. His pumpkins
were devoured by potato bugs, grasshoppers
carried off his cattle, the weevil got into • his
sheep, and the corn crop failed under the
combined attack of the hoof-rot and murrain.
To crown all, he was himself attacked with
the hog cholera.
This was the situation on Saturday night
last, when from a dreamless sleep he was
awakened by an unearthly howl,- a crash of
glase, and:the striking of a ":heavy Something"
upon his breast. At first he thoughtitmust be
a horrible 'nigh - Una:re; caused by too rich vi
ands, but when he considered the fact that
there were no horses within ten miles of his
cabin, and the only supper he had partaken of
was a couple of buckwheat cakes, such rea
soning seemed erroneous. All was..quiet, and
tinnily, thinking. it miist have been an Oil
Creek bedbug on_a raid,_he dismissed the sub
ject, and was preparing to settle into an all
night's sleep, when a scratching was heard
beneath the bed. Hastily rising, lie jerked on
Ms unmentionables, and, dropping on all fours,
began to claw beneath the bed atter the mid
night intruder. .
tie foetid it, and in one : fourth of_a_minute_
-- all - tlfe — elothes there wore upon him would
130 t. have. made a
_bib _fora china dcill. -He
finally
_found himself in the corner partly
scalped, with his lower_limbs_e_looking—as.
-- aratigh - 116 - 11 ad been through a wool-carding
machine; while, at this juncture, with a spit
and a growl, a catamount disappeared through_
the. open window. Such is the 'simple tale
of Adam Goodman. He- now desires to emi
grate to some spot where the insects are not
so troublesome. His farm is a good ono, but
he says he cannot stand the cats.
SHOCKING SUICIDE IN NEWARK.
A Leather Merchant, Hangs HlmielL
••• -The-N eivarkltdvetti Ser e Sss! •
• A noon to-day the city was shocked by the
intelligence of the suicide of one of our oldest
and-most suceessful business men—Mr. Alex:;
ander M. Utter, of the firm of Jacobus &
Utter, leather dealers, of NO - . 100 - Market
street. For sortie thirty-five .'ears Messrs.
Jacobus.& Utter have been engaged in busi
ness in this city, and in that tithe have been
unusually successful. Mr. Utter was a gentle
man of the highest standing in his business
relations and otherwise and always won the
kind consideration of all with whom he came
in contact.
•
Between 10and - ll'o'elock this ferenoon Mr.
Utter sold a bill of harness leather and• then
was seen to proceed up stairs. At about ,six
minutes past twelve o'clock Mr. Jacobus, his
partner, went up to the head of the stairs in
the fourth story of the establishment at No.
300 Market street, which is used as a drying
loft, and seeing Mr. litter reclining behind a
bulk head about four feet high, against the
railing of the stairs, said: " Come, Alex., it is
12 o'clack,'''and descended the stairs.
Eliciting no reply, and thinking that, per
haps, Mr. Utter was asleep upon the pile of
leather behind the bulk-head, he retraced his
steps and beheld a sight which riveted him to
the spot—the body of his partner cold in death,
with a rope around his neck,, which was
fastened by a knot in a crack in the bulk-head,
which had at some tithe been a door. Scream
ing for help he cut the fatal cord, when
Patrick Nugent, an employe, came to his as
sistance. Dr. O'Gorman was at once sum
moned, but his skill was of no avail, life was
extinct.
The, unfortunate man must have died an ex
crutiatingly painful death—by slow strangula
tion.
The rope was about three feet in length. He
evidently adjusted the rope around his neck,
tied a knot in the end of the rope_
which he forced clown - ' a crack in
the bulkhead, and then deliberately
settled down upon a pile of leather. When
found his tongue was protruding from - his
mouth, and his face was frightfully discolored.
Mr. Jacobus, between whom and the de
ceased the most friendly relations have ex
isted since they entered into partnership,
could give no cause for the rash act. He was
free from debt, worth some $130,000, and their
business was going on successfully. Several
times,'howeVer, - within the past three or four
sears, -Mr. Jacobus said he had come from his
home to the store in Tr eteSpentiiiig condition,
and on tw6 or three occasions had buried his
face in his hands and wept.
Mr..Jacobus„:on2.thesw-oeoasionsi-knowing
that his partner's trouble was of a strictly
domestic character,. urged upon him strongly
to overcome his feelings and try to look upon
the bright side, at the same time assuring him
that if he continued thus to give way to his
feelings, and permit his home troubles to
weigh so heavily upon his mind, he would cer
tainly become insane. Others, too, who wore
somewhat intimate with deceased and his
family, attribute his suicide to the same cause.
WHALING NEAR MOUE-.
An Exeittniz Adventure.
The New Bedford Ale Mo.!, says : " Captain
George Harrison, of the fishing smack Quill),
of New London, which arrived here Saturday
afternoon,had au exciting chase after a finback
whale while fishing on Coxswain Lodge,
twenty-five miles southeast of Block Island,
on Friday last. The whale suddenly appeared
near the smack, and Captain Harrison threw
a swordfish dart into the. critter. The fish took
about twenty-five fathoms of line, and the tub
was also allowed to go overboarfL i The whale
Went down, and in, a few minutes was seen to
' blow' about three-quarters of a mile distant.
The smack up jib and went after her, and
when within a short distance Captain Harri
son threw an - old lance into the small boat,
and with two sturdy oarsmen started in chase.
He was soon alongside; and threw an iron
into the fiSh.
"Thembegan the fun'; for three holiks,the
whale dragged the 'boat' at a rate of about
eight miles an hew, the captain standing
ready to cut the line should things get danger
ous. _That_moment - arrived at last, the-en
raged lish suddenly went doWn, and the boat
and its occupants were instantly submerged.
Three desperate cuts were made, and just as
the boat went over, the line was cut, and the
whale and gear diSappeared. The smack was
far in the distance, but the men clung
to the
bottom of the boat until she took themotU
—The.T.Jticaßpaid-tells of a man who, has
been pulling agony out of an accorrieon for
seven clays in that city. That's nOthing ; we
knew a school teacher once who did it-. for
seven months, and there was just as muck
llgeny the - accordeorfas wheu - he beattus-
FACTS AND FAIgHBIES.
[Translated from Graf von Platon, by it. W. 1,04.
low, in the Atlantic Monthly tor . b'eptomber.r
Remorse.
How I started up in the night, irr the night,.
Drastrwn on without rest or reprieftl!'
The eets, with their watehmenywere lose
to my sight,
As I wandered so light
In the night, in the night,.
Through the - gate with the arelumediamL•
The mill-brook rushed 'through the' rooky
height,
I leaned o'er the bridge in itly yearnins,
Deep under me watched I the waves in their
flight,
As they glided so light
In the night, in the night,
Yet backward was not one-retitraing.
O'erhead were revolving, so countless aridf
bright, , • .
The stars melodious existence;
And with them the moon, more serenely be
bight;—
They sparkled so light
In the night, in the night,
Through,the magical, neasureless distance.
And upward. L gazed, in the night, in the
- night;
And again on
Ah woe! tho. b t a he t
w w a a y setse d i n
h he idflye tingd;
e
light,
Now silence thou light,
In the nighty, in• the night,
The Remorse iii thy heart that is beating.
-:General 'Butler was the "best boy".in
school. -- •
—A French.engineer has invented a steanr
girl—a new machine for paving.
—Oshkosh,WiS., will produce 50,000 pounds
of Swiss cheese-this season.
—" Full of elan" is the latest description Of
intoxicated persons.
—An Indiana - -base - ball club has leased a--
graveyard as a' ball-ground. . .
—A man in Indiana, on bein asked Why
he never combed his hair, nebg
ly-remarke4"
that "it was a heap cheaper to cut it."
—Miss Helen. Taylor,.scep-daughter of John-
S. Mill, is said •to be e_dithagosthumo
works of Buck].
= --The Cincinnatl-Chronkiesayiri-"---Man's-in---
humanity to dogs makes our.ears tingle dailyP
A fellawleeling,-.&e.-
—A soldier was so badly injured by the
bursting of a shell that he actually took up
his quarte-in-different-pasrts-of=thelownT-7
—A duel with eight-in - eh knives has. been...
- staved off at Huntsville, Ala. Mr. Gallagher
apologized to Mr. Venable.
—The reason young'Cavaignac didn'tjoin
the army was that he couldn't be allowed to
make " certain dynastic reserves" in the oath.
—The most terrible fatality yet for Napo-,
leen is the news that . Louisa MahlbachL is_._
writing a " - historfeal novel" on-his 'wife. -
-Stephen Pearl Andrews is writing up "the
inexpugnability of mime elements" for Wood-.
Mal and UtajliteslVealy.
—Lillian Edaarton is to-lecture-abent-."G05,....
sip, its causes and cure." She should patent
that cure.
—" How happy should I be with ether !"
as the patient said who couldn't get chloro
form.
—Daniel Boone's monument has almost dis
appeared iu the shape of chips in the pockets
of relic-hunters.
Beetz, a new tenor - with - a - high o;
has arrived in New York. Perhaps ho beats
them all.
—A jolly Texan painted and disguised him
self as an Indian, went to his own house,
scared his wife into a fit, set the dogs to howl
ing, and caused his child tojunip into a cistern.
—A French statistician estiinates that since
the departure of the garde mobile from Paris
there is but one able-bodied man •tb eighteen
women. _
—The " Girli of the Period" in Arkansas is
described as thirteen years old, shoeless, bon
netless, stockingless, and with the sheriff after
her, for stealing a horse.
—Bostompeonle are chuckling over a land
speculator who invested a quantity of his
wealth in the purchase of " lot 17, block 21U.'
It lies somewhere out in the harbor.
—Monroe county, Mississippi, has added
sixty pairs of twins to the census within' a
year. This is what may be called going in
t' win.
—A dose of lowa whisky killed a water
snake a foot long, which had slipped down
the throat of a farmer while he was drinking
from the river.
—The first important action of the pre.sent
war was - defeat of Napoleon 111. on the
anniversary of the departure of Napoleon I.
for St. Helena.
—Mullins, of Tennessee,/ is out iu a circu
lar on Roderick Random Butler, because Rod
erick Random implies that.Mullius is an ass.
—Ladies, you cannot be too . careful about
your clothes-lines. Mrs. Mack, of Troy, boas'
lost her nose, just because her clothes-line and' •
that of Mrs. Sullivan became.eutangled.
—Au old topermistook a,, pitcher of vitriol
for cider, last week, at the railroad 'depot in
Scranton, Pa.. and emptied -it before the sta
tion-master could stop him. Only for the .
momptuess. .physician-in- administering-7
an emetic the consequences would have been
fatal.
—The youngest lieronautin thelJnited States
is a boy named Bird, at Poughkeepsie. Al
though only thirteen years of age;he has made
more than fifty ascensions, and looks forward
with no little eagerness to the time when he•
may travel across the continent in a balloon:
made under , his own directions.
Louisville boasts a base-ball player, who
•• runs the bases so rapidly that nothing is seen
or heard of him after the ball is struck until he
yells 'score 'at the hothe plate. The papers
say that as the umpires could not decide
whether lie went around or not, it was neces
sary to provide him with a red scarf. Now, as
he flies from base to base, nothing can be dis
cerned save a red streak, which, as he turns
each . base, forms apart, and at last the whole,
of a beautiful red circle."
—A Chicago lady with a very pug nose has.
been made happy. Says the 'Tuna "The.
distorted feature caused the lady infinite mor
tilication, but art was equal to the emergency.
A few 'da y s since she applied to Dr. C.
Thayer, a Madison street dentist, for the manu-.
facture of a rubber nose, after the Grecian
style of architecture, The result was the con
struction of an organ of the required style. It
was tinted to suit - the fair complexion of the
wearer, am/ now Mrs.e—,--, follows as fashion,
able a prdboSeis as any on the avenee, and one
that shoUld put nattire!to the blush ter the fats
error inher handiwork:""' •
—The following lineS were found on a law
yer's table in the Rochester court-hou.4e, after
the adjournment of-the court - the other day:
Fair woman was made to bewitch;.
A
A companion, a nurse,
A blessing, "a curse,
Fair woman was made to, be which? 1 ,7
—J ohn.Smith fell in love with a maid,
Mich night near the window lie stood,
And there, with his soft serenade,
Ho awakened the whole neighborhood: , ::L -
But vainly; e tried to arouse
Her from sleep with his strains so beviltck.
• in.
While he played in front of the house,
SU . sleptln Matti() haa-ititiAlQn.