Daily evening bulletin. (Philadelphia, Pa.) 1856-1870, September 06, 1870, Image 1

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    VOLUME XXIV.-XO. m.
DIED
URKJCVJSSi—AtbIs rnldence. Germantown, on thoSil
1 1, at., Jimta ll.GrcnTM. ln the 7dlb yoarofhia a«8, .
Ilia relatives nod frlenda aro roenectfuliy Invited to
emudjhtafuneral, from his lato reeldence,on Fourth
‘ ‘ 1 j .at 1 o'clock. Funeral to proceed to
1 rieftda Sonthyraatem Gionncl. • Carriages will loaro
‘he residence of Samuel Fog*, 1310 Cherry street, at 12
..’clock,'for.the convenience, ofhis friends In Phils',
delplua. «
L h W 18.—0nS ftrenth• flay oven!n gj 3d inatant, Sarab
P., wife of Mordecal Lewi#. ’ .
lbo relatives and friends of the family arc invited Jo
«v. ,e t<iapralw from tbo residence 6f her husband,
i - aliinffiortl, near’ on Fourth'day"moniiiie,
tn® < l in»*w‘* tooioobnttho Loastfafcicr o'clock.
MANBON.—At Atulalua(a,oji thc 4tb (uatant, Sarah
J»i{& Manf»ori, wife of W. h. Mattson, of thle city.
Tue relatives and friend* of tho family ard respectfully
invited to Mtoml tbe, funeral, fromlitrlate residence,,
Blount Vernoji Bixteenth,on WtiinosdaV'
morning, at 10 o'clock. To proceed to Woodland
Cemetery. ; - s
PETBBBOK. 0n Sunday, the 4th instant, at Cong
Branch, llammh M. Potcrßoxwd&nehUr ofthe late Johu
Bouvifcr, and wife-of-Boh*.rt B; Peterson, M. I)., in tho
fituh ytur of her age _ _
Her fiiDoral wfj) take place from ter Into residence’.
1000 Eocust direct, at 3 o’clock* on Wednesday, the 7tli?
hiMiunt. , ’
loo: T~ 41)6
* LANDELL,
Are supplying their Customers n-lih
v,-. ; ; BLACK. MLKh
At Gold ltri Premium. '
‘TJKK COD LIVEII OIL, CITRATE
Magnesia—JOHK C. BAKER A C0,.713 Market H,
" ~ SPECTAX" NOTICES.
JOHN
3 W ANA MAKER.
I' ' ;.V.. ." 3...
% FINEST CLOTHING % l
818 and 820
( BE9TISUT STREET.
b:?‘ ou k store
WILL BE OPEN AS USUAL.
d©H.\ WA'JfAMAKEE,
Finest ClotUlng Establishment,
B{B~aTid“B2o~Ghesfnut Sireet7
COXPPX:TTbNERV7 r ~f TT—
-1024 Wnhint ftreet.
i Late of 12K Spruce atroot. I
1 j»f!i <>•; September Ctb, \» tlh a.u excellent slock
OAK.EB,? ?•-••> / ;
i;I •’ ICE-CKEAAIs; . , o , ;
WATER ICES.
- . , BON-BONS,
un . ail •.tandaid articles In his lino.
He is also well prep Med to furnish wyddiiig and
parties.•Riuj eT» tjrtUfcff‘ lo hirf viXt xhafedfac*
luted to order, and of thu first quality and in the most
artutkal manurr. All orders Ailed at tho «hoTtest
j , «e 5 2trp*
FNI VJSHSIT Y OF PENXBYL
VANIAi~The CqHegc Year wiUopeaoo TfldlS-
Va \ . September 15'. Candidates for admission will pro-
Bunt themselves for examination at 10H o'clock on that
day. i'BANCIS A. JACKSON,
wc-5 latrpj . ...„ . , Secretary.
ITS*’ BOUTJCtJLrTUEAIi SOCIETY.—
U'S' E?say THIS EVENING by HENKY A. DBKKK,
Esq., on European Horticulture. It*
H3* FilB
r and 1520 bombard street, Dispensary Department,
edicol treatment nd modiclne furnished gratuitously
o the poor
jps* thiT i 7 k:-nsvi.vakiXfiee in-
SIKANCE COMPANY.
Skpt.s.ism.
The Dfrtftoys hQYQTHTfflTAYdtrclarcd&iJixidentlof
’S', st» pertihate qn-tuo Stock-oC, theOgtapanyfortue
six months, which will be paid to the Stockholders
or their legal repreaontativeg, after tho J6th Inst.
__sroSt§ .. ? •’VFlJu.fl.’C&pWlßriL^Seoretary.
POLITICAL NOTICJEST -
Bj** 1870. ■= : ‘ hri ’ ; ' 1870. ■
- SHERIFF.' :^r:^
j«» 16 tl oclirpj
rv-Eg* ROOMS OF TELE REPUBLICAN'.
rabUct* Slaft Oflntrtl '*3ay:-tW
XollowiugjfgointTpna were BpaitfmoDMraaojfted: *
juio/i'frf.Tliftt fills Committee recommend tiio recon
voiiiugot tho Republican Convention of tho Second
District Gf ? PonnH)ivanift,and tlua Cfaarloa
A. MiUPivof ibisUomtaifte*’. >8 chair
mr,n nMii u permanent organization ia effected, and that
lrkiCimtock, of the Seventh Ward ; Win. King, of
til'.' Eighth VVRrd.acd f C3eorgfi,.„Xrumai», „of tho Teuth
n:<), be tt(\ mmttt*o to(iotehmb§ who nro entitled to
s-.airt in paid Convention. .
Rfsoivt-fi That the Chairman of this Committee givo
i;i>uco of iho time und place of the meeting of said Con
?bnt meecimr shall bo held on TUES
*\ A y * { * h ,° l ?*-k iußt. * at, 11 the .usual
placo ol
hall can be obtained; if not,'tbe Chair**
man ot thia Committee to deaignatcitbo place.
nil'h ‘r/lmJl l\ l 1,10 of this Committee fnr
5-J5? Vk* n° f the gentlemen who wero camlidntes be-
Conventiph <ot tho Second
Diemct of 1.-tii ot June, n copy oft lfese resolutions.
...?«»..-Ai
IKK CHESTNUT STKEET a,JWUTIV ® COMMITTEE,
Oom^rue" 0 ' Ul ° U “' on *•*»«&» ®i|f Exocutire
JOnNXIB^IiI,.
President. '
.
John.McOuli.oug-u,
MVC.IIONGj
rrs* the union bbptf^looXN
INSTITUTE fob the BLIND, TWEN-
Tvr'lf'xJ'S?,R“ c0 "troelB. • Opening Muchlbltlon of tke
‘? rm , WHBNl3SDAY ) B ojßtemter,« l atB P. M.~ Aimij.
elan, 16c. @ V
V 1 ? 0 . Oia vTWO HUN.
JL,. tils 7 famoria Bnl(id'oll,quf>rta'and
11 steamer Wyornlnq,ivqni Savaitnak,
ffiw&V&SL 1 wwi vmmxfaw
' ..-aa
THE Ffi ENGHREVOLIJTION.
STIUi ANOTHER ActOIJSX
**??. >«rg.i>hc. r ri»»t Crowds in the;
Streets.-? he Soldiers and Cliuras
I>n , ernl*lng: : --'l , ie JUe a rl»laiif Hnii in.
vnded-->Uepar<are of IheEmpren—The
Bepnblle Proclaimed.
„ ' r Wfumtij’ 1
OsTEHPi Sept. 5; republic has
been proclaimed in Paris., On the train which
Jett Pans this morning and. reached Ostend
this evening by way of Sillc, thomail carriage
came 1 with? the 1 imperial arms
etfaced ,?and ~ the' 'legend i: Poste Na
tionale' Prancaiso. In ..Paris yester
day evening,the,approaches to the Palace of
Legislator*! were guarded by detachments of
the line and Sotiadrons of the gendarmerie.
The Guards of Paris and the National Guards
occupied the centre of the Pont de la Con
corde, and were formed in squares around the
centre of the Place de la Concorde. No ve
hicles Were allotved to traverse the Place do la
Concorde. 'MI... M. V -.,M,
TUe Chanips I'lyMfa
were cleared of ali carriages, .and a cordon of
National Guards' stretched across them at the
:• Nond Point/. After tho. suspension of the
sitting a number of persons gradually assem
bled on tbe grand staircase witliin the Legist
: iative Palace, and finally came out on the por
,j lo oin front waving their hats and shouting,
i I'own with the empire!” “Long live the re
: public:” These shouts were not echoed by the
: troops, but the demonstration waa taken up by
| crowds on the quays, and by other crowds in
ibe Hue Hoyale, and along the Ene de KivoU,
j the gardens of tbe Tuileries ... These crowds
[ werea .compact mass from just beyond the
! obf-ijeir of Luxor, quite down the P,ue P.6yaic
4- to rhe-fiae Sfc-Honocerand oown the Rue de
| Pivoii to the Rue Castiglioue.
j Tbe Mtaops
I ere all shut, and tberewas no disorder be
\ond that merely incident to the presence of
| .-<■ great a multitude. About six o’clock tbe
National Guard and the troops of the line
nearest the Legislative Palace began to show
-igns of sympathy with the people. Shakos
wsre ralfrcl on the bayonets, and cries uttered
here and there-of “Death to the Prus
sians -“Long live France!” Shortly
alter a eoltirnhi perhaps a thousand strong,
oi National Guards, fully uniformed and
co nipped, with a band playing the “ Mar
-diiaise, 1 came down, the jiucoi the quays
i "cm the Pont des Arts and pressed on to the
I ..egislative Palace. The gate keepers made
i -ome resistance, hut finally gave way, and the
f 1 XHiphopreshi ug i n after-the troops the whole
I• re iosure was rapidly filled,and the multitude,
l ’hr troops still in the front, and in perfect
j order, surrounded the wlmle huijding-,- and
; j,assed intu the doorways and tip the munef
, .uiis..stair ways,-a numferwii invadin'' tp,,
i l 'Eliding,, appropriated to the residence of the
j (. uimsellor of State and other officials.
I Tne Crlenor the M altitude
t— l
0
| " incessant. The Emperor's name was
i .never mentioned, not even in cries for .his
[ downfall. The Deputies of the.Lofticaina om
! wi the hail.to meet t; c people.. Men embraced
I ’ aril i.tliev, v.'!' h cries of jov, shouting, VLong
I ,; ve. Prance 1 ’ The Depullesof tbe-Left were
-' (.11 gathered in a body, .aisdiset efiV/amid
j ■ r.i-.- "l •• a I'Hotel de Vjile,” for the Mnnict
'■d I’alacA Two stalwart workmen in blouses
IDnl *- v National Guards in uniform
; icnrs Picard and Gambetta. raised
tueiudii the air and carried them as iu .tri
mujih to the Hotel do Villa.. :...
OTie Scene on «helr Arrival
most impressive. .Some one bail mounted
Uic- towers of N'crtro D&mo, (rad- from*each of
flic- graypiles-floated three or ! l6‘itr fiwcolor
1 a §?- Ttio gilded colossal lamps of the Place
dt J Hotel do VUln.wfere: meatUed iiiitlagß,and
high up on each was perched* boy waving tv
tri-color. .
The fast place itself was a dense, mass of
people. mingling with whom6vervwhere wero
tUe uniforms and bayonets of the National
Guard and of the line. As .the Deputies ad
vanced or were borne up to the facade of the
vast building
Heart Bbcbefart
fame out} to meet them, bolding out both
hand*, with a cry of- “ ,Vivo la Republique!”
At the same moment half a dozen men buret
open from within a window in the facade and
began throwing out a great cloud of small
white paperey cryitigy as they Old so, “ These
are the votes of the plebiseite!” Then for the
first time went up a great cry from the whole
vast crowd of ‘‘-Down with the empire!” It
was taken up awl, sent, with a noise like the
roaring of waves along the quays and along
the Bue de Rivoli, both towards the Louvre
and towards the ancient city of Paris.
Bown tne Boulevard de Sebastopol.
A procession of several thousand troops,
sitjroimdfcd ■ by crbwds of mon, women and
children, advanced with bands of music. The
procession and its. Wings filled the enormous
sfreOt from front to' front of tea houses,on
cither side, and the music of the bands was"
accompanied by the whole mass singing the
“Marseillaise. In all this time and in all
shops were still lelt The
police were swept in with the procession or
quietly disarmed. I heard of and"! saw no case
of riplcmje, no disorder,, .no robbery. Every
where the deepest excitement and the most
extraordinary improvised public order. The
imperial arms were torn down from all the
public buildings, and in one or two cases the
windows, of shops were broken which con
tained them. In the Rue > Vivienne a Well
known milliner's, establishment Was thus me
naced, but-the proprietress came and remon
• strated with the leaders, holding pp'A'eoJA’Na-'
poieon, and saying, t* If
snould my windows be broken?” The then
cheered and laughed, the Women cried “Vive
la Republique! ” anil the crowd, passed on.
One gate of the Tuilories on the Bide of the
Seine was burst open and the crowd poured
iri, but fbrebbre to enter the palace on the ap
pearance of M. Emmanuel Arago, who came
out. to meet them, and said: “Citizens, the
Empress left Phrisat nfid uight. This palace,
ti.e property of tlje people, is under the pro
tection of liberty and the law.” The crowd
cheered immensely. Ouards pf tho National
Guard at the eat'esi. The -Bepiib
lie jW.as.prpclaimed immediately afterwards at
:the Hbtelde Ville, with the Provisional Min-
CONDITIONS <»f pence.
Interview Betwoea Count
BlSmarcU and the “Tribune” Corn
spondent-.818 march’s Views' on the
situation—Prussia to Hold Strasbourg
andUetz. o'- , . . “
London, Monday, Sept. 5, fol
lowing is an account of a-conversation hold
with Count Bismarck by, the-special corre
spondent of the Tribune ■ who described the
battle of Sedan: , : . >-. ,
Kino of Pbcssi Vs .Headquarteus neab
Ki£DAN,,Bept. 2<L* 7 !Xho first question asked on
the hill of Ohevagn'e ’after we 'knew, what a
magnificent -victory had been won, was, what
terms wUlbedeinamledpf,irranoa«liy Count
Bismarck, There have 'been specuiaSbns and
rumors enough. I’onuhately, I am able: to
give a very clear account of Count Bismarck’s
views as stated by himself,*; )X had a long con
versation-with him on tl}o subject only four
“fy" before the victory 'pi 'Sedan; that is, on .
aw? 0 * 0 * A VS«at., Xhe etto^iicaufiitl am at
iioerty to make public, I ha<L.receiyed a file
andAad’/orwarded
S aate f re.
hi® perusal. On ,gQing to claim my
papers tP;4he,r > e'venihg.; , at®hW-BaoeUeniiva
cigfrbijxes; 'bushy
never seems to quit his lins 8 ■'
1 ■- Sot 3®d\>
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 187?. '
77,'.'- ; JXeAjtologices.':
“6 apologized politely- for keeping ou his ’
wliitoand yellowferage cap, saying that he
htidonly that instant come in-from-a. long,
walk .abound, the .prettUysßitnateid, town oF
X'btWbht, where we were thensauar,tered,arid
that be was afraid iof taking cold if ho remain
ed uncovered. After a little talk about the
war. very interesting, but which would be out.
of place here, and inquiries on iny part as to
the recovery of his son, who ha 3 been sligbtJv
wounded, I broke ground by asking Count -
Bismarck what.wcre likely to- be the condi-1
tibns of peape demanded by, the King of Prus
sia’s Government.
He,ansyrered_at once, with great apparent
frankness and in the clearest manner. J surv
pose, I need hardly- remind your readers that
Count Bismarck speaks capital English, so
that thpre could be no ‘ possibilitv of mv mis
understanding him.'
Three Courses.
“ There are three courses open to us,” he
said, “ witli regard to peace with France. We
must stop the possibility of another so unpro
voked and uncalled - for-attack by the French
nation w the: French Government on our
common Fatherland. No Minister who foiled
this could-bdld office fdr a week, for the
opinion of all .Germany wonld.beagainst him.
There are, as I have said, three ways of
stopping an attack ou the Ithine provinces.
We -might make Alsace and
Lorraine a neutral State like Luxemburg or
Belgium, extending from the former country
to Switzerland, and so separating Franceand
Prussia by a, group, of neutral States: but I
copfess it appears to me that neutrality of the’
existing small States is already so difficult to
protect andis at every moment capable of so
many and such dangerous, compUcations, that
Jclonptthinkit would.'be'.worth: while-to
make more neutral States and with them new
dutiesanddangers. "
“ .Second/)/—We might annex Alsace and Lor
raine, and hold them as conquered territory.
But lam sure that this would not be looked
on favorably by the majority Of iny German
fellow-countrymen. We are all most anxious
to complete our unity; but we do not want
any people among us who are unwilling mem
bers of the German nation. That the Alsa
cians would be most disloval subjects of the
King of Prussiain spite of the great majority
ot them speaking the German language and
being of Teutonic origin; there can be no
doubt.
'• .Thirdly- ~There remains to us then as a
third course, to take Metz and Strasbourg and
to keep them. This iawhvl we sludl do.. Stras
bouTK particularly is aljsolutely needful for the
protection of South Germany, which is at the
mercy ot a French army. SoTong as France
possesses Strasbourg,there is nothing to stop a,
> rench invadiug army. Now it'would bo
unfair_if -we: were to leave- our--SdutH ;
German brethren unprotected after they have
fought .so bravely and well by our side in this
camnaicu. Then again by holding Strasbourg
v.-e could always prevent any movement on
the .lili'no. we should be able not only to
march an army by the valley of?the Main on
Paris, but to take a French army marching
•■n MayenCeor Oohlenfz in flank and rear
ho wo have besieged Strasbourg, vigorously
and when we have-got-the- old' German town
back again we shall make a- Gibraltar of if ”
Rurailowine to suggest,” I said, “that
ihe cession of Strasbourg is not a thing to
winch Francewillbeeasilyreeoticiled; alltbe
More because, it-is - you-say-’-the-kev of
i- ranee on the East.’ ”
Cesalon of Strasbourg-.
“ My dear Sir,” was the reply! you have
been with us continually since our entry into
France. J have heard you constantly talking
i- IJow, bavayou -not Clearly seen thaV
it would be difiieult for the French to be more
a ngry with us for our victories.over them than
.'noy already are? _ No, not if -We vvero
encamped m the Bois de Boulogne itself Arid
just became they are and will be for many a
year to conic very.' sore against us”, we must
take care not to leave in their hands the means
of doing us a mischief.
"When you meet a drunken man in the
streets, what do you do if he is mischievous ■’
C’aila policeman, don’t you? Weil, Stras
bourg aud Metz Will have to he our police
men, and good stout ones, too ?”
"It is curious," I remarked, “how much
the French do hate the Prussians, and what
stories they tell and believe about you. I
have lived a CTeat deal in Paris, and I know
there are told there as facts some fables which
ere all’but incredible.”
Taken Place or the English.
••les, answered Count Bismarck,." we
have taken the place of the English 30, day
years ago. But as they have come to for
get their hatred of < perfidious Albion,’ so
they will have to find some day or other that
tin reis some good in us. Also, it seems as if
the French nation stood in constant need of a
bugbear! to vent their wrath upon. For the
moment, we are the bugbears.”
1 ventured then to say. ,<{ i see. that the peo
plearein a greatfrightinErigland lest vour
Excellency should cast a covetous eye upon'
Holland.” , 1
" V es, iam aware that,is an English idea,”
replied the Cqunt;," hut, like other English
dens, it is not accepted out of the country of
is,birth. We want nothing in Germany that
is not German, and Holland certainly is, not
G ennany AlreadyJßoSen ia. looked.upon with
no lnendly eye by,many of my countrymeu
fed non-Teutomp -provineeV-There is no fear
pt our taking Hollarid—as little as’ there is of
}be French taking Belgium.”
i Now, I fancied -I maw a.quiet twinkle of
Satisfaction in Count 'Bismarck’s eye as ho
added the above last. word ; and perhaps I
J5W.,9£,)v.e1l let. it be „the,.last.word.cf.my.re-.
pert. :. ■
THE NEW MlNlSTlty.
Wtio and What They Are.
The following list includes all the members
of the new French Ministry not given upon
our inside pages:
fillulsrer ofFinnuce.
Fierre Magne, isa lawyer by profession, pol
(tieal economist and statist by choice. He is
palm and temperate, as-befits a man of figures .
tipd facts. Ho has been inadministrative em
ployment, since 1835;: His first accession to of
fice was the result of an able memorial on the
finances of Algeria, which excited the atten-
of M. Brigeaud. Since 1848
tie has continued to, • occupy important
positions in tho • X”i nance -Department,
nnd, although hie., did “ hot appear
before the public as a Minister, he was well
known to have propodWand worked out.
most of the measures intended to restore and
strengthen' tho national credit: -The great ;
peace loan was his plari, aud it was crowned ’
-.Nvitu astonishing aticcess. Ho. weq 9 primo
mover in the liberal , scheme* -which distin
guishedthe close .of; Naiioleon lll.’s reign,
and ought to have : been Minister of Finance
in the Ollivier Cabinet. He, however, took
Ebsition in the recent changes brought about,
y the war, and itbespeaks 8onn& judgment
to havo intrpdnced a solid mdh Uke M. SSagrie
into the present Cabinet. . v .. . , /
Prelect of Police.
Count Emilo de Keratry, has, in tho
P r .efeetiu» .of : police, at Jlpa , juncture,
pet the least.delicate if not the most honorable
of all the public offices'. ' Not'only must he
keep down dJsorderj bnt ho must do it in a
B °t offend the- morbid' sense of
liberty, tn>e Couut ia a publicist and poli
jician, as was his father, who died at the great
£ l ?.w?ra^l r , ha^! Il «P a6ael,thr P u S ll t fi e Na
the empire, the restotation,
ftflalheray3^4B3oand r iB4B.vvfM.de-Horatry
birthi'horninlB32.' Helawman!
of mubheißqrieiyie/hayihgaervedlricavalry,
l>otu in tuo CiixuCtij in Algeria nnd (n >
Mf xicor In 1865 be sent in his resignation,
and retired irons the army covered' with
praise and military decorations. On-his re
turn to France he took up his pen,and became
an interesting contributor to the Itevuc- dcs
IJtw Jfoijifes, especially on the Mexican ques-
U*? 11 ' t len undertook tho Revue ilo'derne.
His articles were strongly condemnatory of
Bazalne and the goyenimont. H 6 was' re
turned to the Legislature of 1869, where- he
was distingmshed by tho extreme boldness- of
his opinions, especially on: the duty of the de
puties to meet as in their own right, if - they!
were .not formally summoned, by the -govern
ment, °
Mayor of Paris.
Emmanuel Arago, -member of one of the
most i Uust rious families' in science and ' litera
ture that Europe has-produced, is the. eldest
son of I ranoois Arago;-brother of the great
astronomer and politician Etienne. He en
tered early on his literary career. At 27 he
abandoned- literature .and took, to, the j-se
verer study of law, in which ho made such
hucaess that be became - one. of-, the political
lawyers, and defended Harßes .and:: Martin
Bernards n 1839. He took an active part in
J revolution of 1848, He made his way,into
the Chamber,and from the steps of the tribune
proclaimed the republic:'and called for! the de- -
position of Ibe Orleans faihily. He was sentto
as emissary of . the republic. In be
half ot the national workshops and to save im
nnnent_riot bo seized a part of - the public
iniids, in whirb, however, his hands being
c| ean. he was justified by a vote of the As
sembly. He also represented the republic at
Berlin, and procured the liberation of the
Polish patriot, MieroslawSki.' After the Presi
dent s election he returned to Paris, where, in
common with the eminent men of iris' party,
he opposed the Roman expedition. In the -
-Mcctionyif lft® he.was returned .for. the East-;
ern Pyrenees. He is probably as lit a man for
the Mayoralty as any one in his party.
President of the Connell.
M. Francis Paul Jules Grevy is an'advocate
by profession. He. was a student in the revo
lutionary day's of-1830:--turned- out -with- the
people and fought on . the barricades, and in
the assault fn the ' barracks. When he was
called to the bar his known political proclivi
ties brought him business more honorable
than lucrative, in which be acquitted himself 1
with distinction. In 1848 he became one of
the commissaries .of the government, -a posi
tion “1 much labor, calling for judgment and
discretion,,without great bonoror emolument.
He was also member of the Assembly and
member of the Committee of Justice. He was
moderate in bis tone, though he generally
voted with'the Left! He opposed the expedi
tion to Rome and the .Napoleon Presidency.
He retired from active politics after the coup
e’e/<d.: _ AlterTHfili he was returned to the Le
gislature by a heavy vote, and he lias ;the re
spect of men of all parties. !' ‘
Minister of War.
General Leflo (Adolphe Emmanuel Charles)
v.as corn in the south of France, in 1804. and
made bis military successes in Algeria. He
became a member of Assembly In 1848, and
"as sent to St. Petersburg as diplomatic re
|-resentative of the Republic. After the elec
tion of Louis Napoleon as President be sup
ported -the President against the republican
party, but toak the parliamentary side subse
quently.; so.tbat.when.the toiqi.d’i'tot came he
was considered a dangerom .adversary, .-n,).!
was expelled from Franco, to which lie did
not return until 18-10. Of his administrative
ebilitiesit woukl be preinarure to speak. He,
Las beeh probably named for hi? political
career. ■- ' 1 . ’ ■:
An Important-I,otLer..’-The Fall of the
EmiterorForwoni.
.BEiu.iKj,,.SeptembOr sth, IiTO-rA letter
louudmn a.prisoner of high rank in the French
anny contains interesting news of the situa
tion. dated at Baris, August 22. The letter
says: "Aon can form an idea of the pleasure
"j getting letters'from Berlin. The news in
Paris is All official, exaggerated, or false, and
a; uelied.cpiiiiphtly by, fresh advices. Paris is
quiet,with a certainty that the Empire is done,
i he altitude of the'Chamhers aud of the ‘Right’'
are unsatisfactory. Some still think of savnug
the dynasty and their fortunes; others crave
power, and there is no visible patriotism. The
last drippings of military force from the con-.
tiuent come ip, slowly., The Garde Mobile ia t
u udiscipljried trash. Trochu, because of his
many proclamations,, nicknamed " Tropin.”—
the Parisians will laugh in pity and mockery
—canfaot save France. The most abject impe
rialists clamor for abdication' as the' only
sirfe.tv for the dynasty. The people are for a
republic, but hold the. republican leaders aso
untrustworthy nnd mediocre. Personal rule,
being over tpe oountry is now uppermost!
Paris thinks only, of flight anil tlie.saving of
valuables in London. - Our friends have gone ’
in the Mobllfe to-thtow’away their lives. Our
last hope is in the armv.”
fill' STORY OF lIAIIBAKOSSA.
1 A legend of Germany. ■
The Frankfort'correspondent of the-New
York Post sendsthe. following interesting ac
count of a weltkmown German legend and its
apnlieationtotljb present day ;. ■ ■ , :=.L rl .
Ever since the 2oth ofJ.ulyS an immense na
tional German flag has been floating from the
top of E'riedrich’s Ttiwor of , tire
KyffbiiuserjTind'people have streamed thither
to see it frOm ailparts of the surfpnnding conn
try. The idea of .raising the flag originated
w ith a Heriinqipholsterer named ilollor, who'
went down purposely to accomplish his object.
,pn„. thfi,.eigittyk'aet,
bign teyver, wmch is now crumbling on'all
sides, and, from falling by 'crimp
irons, was arid a number of men were
required to work for twelve hours to got the
tliirty-feet'flag’-pole Into position.'
"Deiitscblatpl'k united with storm-like speed,
I’ve heard, tbejoyfuldiows o’eriiead ; '»
My Kaiser novv can rise iniloed,
. The rav.qoa l*»g ago are dead.”,:
The legehchhaA It, yoa.rememhar, that every
cenuiry.thelPinperor awakes,-land sends bis
out to;see lf.jtbe, ravens still- build their
t,hesKL .fcoty-or iiijS’aoi the time fop're
ay pearing'pn earth Tmw" not..' arrived, and ho
iplt-eps for antrthor century. The lFe.w Zeituivj
Says,.on this Jsubject, that the longing pf ceu-’
tunes Tor unity, this moat beautiful desire of
all Germans,'has gone -with fulfilment; the old
ravens of discord ate dead, and tin? Emperor,'
fhe .rcpi'ospnfetiye of "Gerautiiifim,”, has, re
appeared m-liis highest glory, (.rermany’s
• ni<)ruiii;t-TJnitcd . Germany -has, after Jong
night, again'(m\yned.' The (fay of this joybits
morning is “the 15th of July; 1870,” the sigulfi-'
cant, subscription to this excellent composition,
the day when the partition wall of inner con
flict fell. i■,.
It willjirobably be remembered that, as the-
Crown Irince„e£,l?rusßia passed. through.
Leipsio on hisxyaj to.tako command -of the
South German troops, tlie-Poet Mulier von
derWorra presented the prince with a- poem
entitled “ ; flajiba®S^a'4.':Atvairening.”. sAs "it
may to
the great really 'esaape . frpmi
his dong confinement,!.we-.transhatei'npoem
which was dedicated 1 *‘To -King Wilhelm bn’
his Departurp€p| > tlid''. : phino;V-:andVariiti;pdb- i
lished in,the Lsmzigßr Allgvmeing'Zmtunji. '-It
is. to be sung kstnC-fhelody 0 f “ Deraltemr
barossa; der-Kaisor-nlPrteaorioli:
;. j
moor,. \ . ■.,,,,,
- - "TUoKaikwwtTOt-of.ydre, . . , ,
1 tby»tnarrow,T . ( - - .■ ■■,
i .fttrembJeth^rWe'fight: .'< s
Rut oh theifliinf^are'mandlng.
f i'Xrue watohorsyday andnight.
Then ligbteth up hisglancing, ■..,.!
Then strikes he on his sword,
“ My people, they are Worthy,
They’ve oris’n with one accord.”
Out,-now, thou world-defeater,
Out, now, thou trusty b ade,
Upon the Rhine shall dawn us
A glorious morning-red!
■ So storms he on to battle,
His swOrd in foe he stoeps, ■ ;
The Rhine’s high tower is trembling
Down to its.hidden keeps.
Hail! 'Wilhelm Bar liar ossa,
_Hail! King, prepared for th’ fight;
•Thelocg, long lost thou bringest:
The Empire’s early might! •
Lead us in ancient, glory
To th’ Rhine, and over tli’ Rome;
In Strasburg, in the Minster,
There Shall the crown be thine! ”
Apart from.poetry-and legend,howevei;,this
Red Beard courage is one of the characteris
tics not of the King of Prussia alone but of the
whole German army, every soldier of which
feels in'himself Some of this- old Barbarossa
spirit.
CTKIOIS COHHBniTIOS OF A PRO.
PIIKCV.
Napoleon’s Fall Predicted.
The war, writes onr Frankfort correspon
dent, has its humorous as well as sad side,
and before the times becometoo earnest I will
give you a number pf curious gleanings and
anecdotes which have appeared in recent
German papers. I' bought for a kreutzer a
few days ago- a small printed sheet headed
“ A Remarkable Prophecy,” in which the end
ot Napoleon is apparently foretold for the'
present year, I had seen similar things before
in relation to Nanoleon, but will communicate
it here:
The following calculation isays the printed
sheet) la bf great interest now bn account of
the surprising results gained therefrom :
Louis Philippe was born. 1773
His queen. 1782
They were married. jgpy
Ascended the French throne. 1830
By the addition of these historical numbers,
as follows
-1830
1 ■ - 1848 . •- ISI.S
wc gtrthw Gniinuus- year of 1848, in which-
Pouts Philigpg actually abdicated the French
tbrune. . This method- of-cuieuiatioit has been
applied to the present Emperor, and equallv
surprising results have been achieved.
Papoleon 111. wits born... •'••>•1608
TheEriiprfes Eugenie was 'born..i. 1826
They were married ....1853
Ascended the thToiie. ........ ,18T>3
Taking thi-se figures and working thetn'outf
r.s before, we have
i 858
J 470 18711 1870
Jne cfcdiu-uoii of is apparent
to every cue : Louis Napoleon will lose life
throne during the present .v eat.
Another prophecy is communicated bv a
clioiar to the Jltonb u Xudirirklcn. anil is
tnuml in the “ PropLitics ile Xu-uradamus,”
m the edition whteb appeared iu London in
I<u2.- Nostradamus was a'-celebrated astrolo
ger of the sixteenth century ; horn on the 14th
ot'December, 1508, at St. Kenu, iu Provence,
ot Jewish descent, his proper name being
Michel Notre Dame. He tirst studied inedfe
cine, and after gaining great fame, first began
to make prophecies in the year 1547, fesuinghis
famous predictions (BropAetics) first in Lyons
in 1555. .These'predictions were in rhymed
ti liatraiiis,divided into centuries,of which there
were seven; the second edition, published' in
1-j5B, contained ten, and had a great success.'
1 hough -many regarded Nostradamus. ns a
quack, he, wasmuch sought after by high and
low, and Catharine de M edicts invited him to
visit her at Blois.to draw the horoscope of her
sons. His predictions have been since the
subject of aVast Controversial literature. In
the thirtieth' prophecy of the tenth century of
hi«..-‘tPhophetics,’’- this writeT to the Ham
b"vote A'aciirichiei: finite one passage which is
applicable .to, the present time. It Toads thus :
Nepyeu ot saug du St. nouveau venu
J’ar.le surnom soust'ri-nt arcs pt.couyert ‘
.iSeTontohassez mis a inort cbhssuz nu ' 1
l*u Oblige et noif converterbut leuf vert. 1
The translation 'toads: “ The h*phew and
the blood of the newly-arrived' saint (Napo-
h J bti lr) "supports by the tiamiijirch and root
(I he edificei ;,tiioy will be huntedsiown, killed :
hunted'.naked. Tlieirgresu w r ill,;be clianged,
into red and black.” .Though Mils, last luteap
pears obscure enough foil anybody except a
prophet, a German announces the-ke'y.toit by
translating r< ri as hope, I'juyu as blood, and
i.rot as nionrntng—" Tlnir hope will be’ turned
into blood and mourning;'’; o ~, > .
IWO BOVS!) Ot; Aoi,SI,
JSowtiie Sfininf tiie tVpm:!i ftefeut u«s
. , .JUeccive'l In y«cw tfurlr.
'The New York /wtnncrut says :
„1
p<.-fVi>ua|MN in this city. belonging' to vv.hat is
tMilud “thu Associated Press'.” enjlufud two'
hours of mortal agony on Saturday niormug.
For fUttsH two hours, the extra oditiou of tlm
J/m.hj ■Denitic.rut,- followed • by extras of other
newspapers which -te-long to the American
Press Association, were -cried about the'
stfuets, ami betoro: tho.daors ami umlor ,tho
'editorial windows of the . newspapers of the
'Associated. Press; mid on every .side tho
jopifig voire bt eh ild lined and tho morn
Sonorous tones of youth wore announcing 1
tho - 1 “Surrender •of N-.ipnl«o!i and
(apturo Of. tho whole -Er.ujrh Army!”
Crowds of people blocked up the streets, abd
.hsciwsiou.qs to t lie truth of the despatches
raged on , every side. The Press
newspapers .wore gloomy,, si lent, anxious.
They had no news. Two hours or wivt-ulmd
ness were passed in their.editorial rooms'. “At
last they also rcifdviid their news-to thosa'ino
effect; and the extra Tribune and other Asso
elated Press extras published at twelve o’clock.'
noon,.came.out into the .street to compote
with und,- confirm the extra Lteniocrat, pub
lished before teu o’cfuck it, the morning. ~ ■
So much for .the comparative enterprise) of
ht! two.establishments. .
. We sold fifteeii thousand extras before thfi' !
Associated Press got their nows.
—A IjOhißvillo jV.)pen-...u01:u0 Wieiicr.) tho re
ceipt of ft Theildttlo Brow.u trhg.t’ . Thera was
Srobhbiy something dn itiwhichThe 'did not
lenti.on, , r \ 1 ■die-;'. V -i’-.., •
| r i TT*t’ —-. r w”
l —Enoxnothipg rathor co w on pistols and coflee
has been furnnjljeclby Kansas City.. Two ju-ju
qulirreled/in ,a.; restaurant, tv lien one drew a
pittol. ‘lThe otb'er tiuatelicd up a cop bfscald
• lngr bot.cotrea'and.dashed it in his antagonist’s
face.' wiis iiu oud on't.
; . • •*-*!*«•. . :
j -r-Tlijltairtabmay get into a musio store as
well as irtto<£i’iaeyi«pa<)or oilioo, is mado i clear
to an’EvansidUe-papof ;" A -y oiuigTivly wont.
' intbj* musjdstora t ip ,i.a city not a thousand
tnUes from.this.'and agkedtin! clerk'if, ha.hail
,«I.ovingf'Eyes 'Xthe ’song.) He replied, ‘ I’m
_toWsopytUggirisf
PEICE THREE 0 3 M P >.
FACTO ASTD FANCIES,
A German War Song. ; v
The Gennan armies have sung their wa»
from the' Rhine to Sedan. The present" cam- !
patgn has produced a number of songs which 1
are expected to take a pormanhnt place id the
literature of the nation; but the most popular
among them aro . two by Ferdinand Freili
called “ Die Waclit amßheio”and “So
wird es geschehem”. The former is already
w i 1 readers in several translations,
rn V« n. at^ r . h ? fl “otygt appeared.we, ‘
L" a “ English dress. The' following 1 transit'
I’o° haS bee “ made for the New Yorh '
°i^ssyti* l ,hleaming in might,
Burst into the folds of Judea by night - • ■
As the Persian, who fettered the ocean, their
poured
° n I'l 1 ' 1 PlainB of Greece his barbarian
As t sp P^ u ’ !!ke an an'pw that Tartary
tlle SoUth - witU his .
D^ h or% apis , h Arma(ia ' “ invincible” nambd,
H claimed* rag ° agallLSt England pro- ,
As tbo-Corsican uncle, in countless array,'
Led oufhis battalions to Russia away: !
As his bloody pavilion he built ou the dead,
And t ' d “ lmSL ' lf the world’s ruler and '
So the Corsican nephew, the heir of that
dream, ... ...... . „ . .
Seeks to conquer: the banks of the German’s
own stream,
With brandish of mace and with ringing- of
sword, , . •
He wbuld give the Rhine vineyards a prey to
ms horde. . ........
The Turco, the Spain, the props of his throne.
Li ke himself are h yenas and jackals in one;
übo howl to’the waving of tyranny’s steel
Thy -war song of freedom, O Rouget do Lisle*
From the Saar to the Neckar men listen in
fear, : , ■. , • - -
A.u<] pale maideus tremble in .Land&u and
Trier; - -•
To its mother the nursling runs hiding Its '
-head • _ . “
In her bosom—but, darlings,, away with vdur (f
dread! - , _ , ■ • ,
1830
1
8
0
y
For to guard you from harm comes all’GOr- '
many on, - -
7i ! -- thousands of thoEisii.ilds sta.ac! for.vai'd ,*rs
;■ . one; \ i..^.
J.ike a storm, on ihfty throng ; like : a wedge• •
moves.their mighty r •
Bringing, ruin. \to tyrants, to peoples , their .
. . right- ...
So r.ow shall it end ! The host,
The Persian, the Hun, in one day each was.
They vanished, their splendor; the -might of’ ‘
theirsword— . .r: ; .. .
The Armada went down at a breath from’th-*'
Lord. i
Auxl_liim,-too,-tbe-booster,-who 'grasped tha
world’s crown, ,
G od’s winter and Are made a league to tear '
' down; ' r
Only one day of patience, and lo! as fate calls >:
On tins troubler. this throned Zouave, the >
.. -L.. . thunderbolt falls ... . - J -
—Ottawa pays $lO a head for bears—not 310 1
ior bare heads. • • • - T ---i
—A Vermont-bee tree lately panned out; ffitf' 1
pounds of honey.
—An Illinois horse 'died of nose bleod'Sii 1
fifteen minutes. r
- Troy girls generally encase their continu
ations m No. s'b.
—A Vienna manufacturer prints; handker- 1
chiefs with maps of tho Beat of war.- d
Kentucky expects to Paise 35,000 liogs
heads of tobacco this year. .
—The largest kitchen in the world is that of 1
the Liebjg.Betf Extract Company in Eriigdsiy.
It covers 20,000 sqnaro feet of ground. . ,
—lt is estimated that the-cotton cron this
year will exceed that of lasthy more than half i
a million of .bales.
„ —-f, -Washington suicide c/imbed, a tree,, r
b xfid his head in the fprk of. a limb and swung','
—lt is so cold in the Rocky Mountain region
that stoves are necessary for comfort in the „
caV.s oT the Union U:uirQad atf night.
—Tho papers are tai&ng-ahput. the “Prussian ’
anaconda” in France. Kapoleoh prohablv
thinks it a great boa; 1 ' *-• . *• i
—Admirers of Tonnysoirwill '.■eg'i'Ct ft) h6ar* “
that there is no truth in tho report;that he is
engaged upon a new poetn. t
— j A ! Michigan paper, in a ease of boy poisdn-' 1
iog, says a doctor was called in and “the UtfWn
was pronounced poisoned by tile'doctor.” ■- •
—The-Rev. Horace Cook has 'fciiriied l! 6n,lea-’ V
niaD, and is operatmg in a Hew Xorkl Vdiqij)2 i
sale clothing store. . j . dy.-milo o'iil
—Tftvo carrier-pigeons recentiv flewhfrohao
Pestli, Hungary, to Cologne, German# adis-f *
tance ol' about TOO miles, in eight hours. T ( „n {
—Prudence McName Start
mon woman rightist, of California, credentfe:,
“tiled a man who had been slandering hey”", ’
—ll' was-supposedthat-onlydiifindfheanop „ ~
liur would wo ho troubled with the.ravagasof ,
tio- bnso ball'fever, hut iiow a Western man .
pruposcs'to go ar'ouud tho' coiihfry all tyintef ;
o u(i Imiture about th 6 gaThfe;* l « -i : j
—The Onondaga Indians; fhhs'o ijf, them hJ f
Unnr whoadherbtothe:‘ ‘hbcipht faith Of their -
iatlu rs,”-have been: celebrating their- (
gilecn corn dance on their irQsehvatibn;::-The i
strange ritt'.s were witnessed ,by .quite; a-i
lUiiuhcr of pale faces. .. j . t
is ijaid that Susan B. Anthony, ,who is, a
to ifciure again thus, winto.r, .will have her,'
lei lure published in.pamphiet.fofm, and ,su<m r
as dij not'wish to he,-ir hnrdeliyer'it Catt’phi'-
oliastv'tluvwh'blii thingfbr t'eri'ceira.
dit-.t that the book will nieot with ai largp'shio ! 1
i»u -tfiw'of the fearful alteruativP.—RetiPi# - r
Freti I'rm. (
—Wiien'General Palikao mounted'the'trib- !
hune to reail tho list of new Ministers the lioft - 1
heard him imperfectly, and some 6nh,’cried.-. >
cm' '• Kpeak higlier." ‘Kero the Coimftmlido-'a .j
reply not i-vcry day heard in a. leeislatiyq BS- »
S) iulily. “ Gentleineu,” said the "Ti l
bog your pardon for not but ,
I have for that.a good -reason; I'pqcbivedi'
.twenty 1 -live years ago;, a ‘ ball in myiliroast; it ’
I-, thi re:'stilt. 11 -'riio General rccommohced' •
’•ending the list without further ’interruption. '
-An excursion of merchunta aftd business ’
jneujs. ofiiiip.ixi.ng in Iseyv Yorktogo but Woof ’
ami exterminate a large quantity of buffulbbs
tor iiimiseuiotit; None.of them'have ever boon)
introduced- to a,bufl'alo, and they are .not sure -
whether buftalofis grow on trees, or.are caught;, '
v.-ith a Uookor liuo. but tlie menare coniidoat i
they can bring pekeo to our distracted-co'uh- ,
try, if once brought face to : taoe, with the bne-'
my.—iV. Y. Dciiu ( m ; - -r.-ixi or
—That Elrolra editor that trioti to'.raise,eal>- .j
imges by planting sour kfput, and' failed,'has’.: •-
been reading what Mr/Greelßy.’knows-Jahont 1
iatnilitg. Some time since hkpJan ted a quantity
-
contracted to, furnisbr.themWith- canarjrstbtrtls
oq the Ist of B,eptem'hcr.ofFailingiitOi fUTllish,; {
tho birds, lie, oxplajhqd that ho had planted ~
quarts of.canary .seed, but that he cuda't,
A cbbiounded hirU,—--
-J- v't’
• ;:'3 ;-.i ir». :
80 SHAEr, IT END,