J-*r \t* VOLUME XXIV.—NO. 129. !JHARRt£D. 1 O’MAUOKVr-B&OWjJ.—Oa tbo 2Afc.—lnßantzwland, on tho22d ol Auaust.aU the British Legation at Berne,arid on 4 he Sfcjd vf same month, by tbo pajral Nuncio at Lucerne, ti)*' Hon, I rnncle Plunkett, Second Secretary of tho legation at Florence, to Mary Torls, daughter of (thruh * Bpin Morgan,Eb/j,, of Philadelphia, United of America/ - f * 9 DIED. NOBBIfc,—On WodTKMlay morninc, Bopt. 71b, M7O, T.dwara 8. Norris (lute of Lancaster;, iu the Wth year of fils ago. i- ■ 1 uueral services at bis late rosidence, IA(K> Be Laucy Place, cm Friday morning next. 9th, 1670, at 10 oVlock, punctually, to which his friends are iuvited. Interment at Baltfmoro. i -■ "■ 400 .^^ch-stkeet. 4o o A LANDKLL. Aieatipplying their CuMomera with BLACK SILKS At OoJd IJJ* Premium. PUKE COD JLIVER OIL, ClTiiA?J?fi Mmiiml>.-JOHN C. BAKEK U C0..7H Mftfk<:t »t. B"ECI AL NOTICES). lS',w Styles. Trimmed Elaborately. FitiWell. Finest Quality. JOHN WANAMAKER’S Finest Clothing 318 & 820 Chestnut 0:;?* Fruit and Floral Exhibition!! - Kept, nib to intb. r;«. ‘ "" Promenade Concerts Every Evening. *. GRASP-Bim.AVIS AKTICrPATET*. t’KiVEKsm: or feknsvl: ) AN I A.—The C •>]!'-trei ope n on THUtt>- J»a i. S-'pt'-ciiMrrK. • I'amim-at/*?fTjriitfiirfrslen‘W)!t pto tiit-iriwiTesjfor fiarniiiiiUouat lu.*i o’clock on that rViANCIS A. JACK>ON, fchKrotarf. _ ITS* HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS, _l/»18 IreX e.ad 1520 Lombard uroet, tMfppn»ary Department. —Mo-lical treatment nd medicine furnlibed jrratultoualy o the poor ' ; ■ 1 ~ politic ait no t re KF 1870. 1870. SHERIFF, WIIililAM K. LEEDS. J«lfi tl ocl2rp| Headquarters Union Republican City Executive Committee* Philadelphia* Sept. $,1870. All p T'tona claimiugto bavo beenelected members o] the Twenty-Sixth Ward Republican Executive Committee V»';U rt*se:nl'lc at 1103 CHESTNUT STItEET, 4>ii I’rijlfty EvenUiff Kcxt,6epteuiber 9ih t At £ o'clock, SccieUrli.. frs» HBAi)QUAKTi3KSr UNION RR PUBLICAN UITV EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, JlO3 CHESTNUT STISKET. V - ' ThoDwloga.t** o)oct~l to revlso (he nil os of the Uuiou j.epubllcan-Party v.'ill &b*seroblo at tbo Old County Court hotiso on MONDAY NEXT, scpttnihcr 12tli,at 20 o clock. A. M, • * By onforof the Union Republican City Executive < fumaittee. * JOHN L. HILL, President. .l fin X MC'C'CtXO'Cfi'B ,) c : " M.O.Hoko. bccrotarles. IT3» THE UNION REPUBLICAN Naturalization Committoo will rot daily at Mr, N. &OBY 'b, 416 Library street, from 10 rintll2 o’clock. EEAITESTATESArEs: M PUBLIC SALE.—JAMES A. FREE raaiii Auctioneer.—Neat Dwelling, No. 625 Ronald non street. On Wodnesduy. September 21, 1870, at 12 o clock, noon, will bo sold at public sale, nt the Thila? aoipma ixchunce, the following described real estate : AH that neat turee-fitory brick. dwelling and lot of groura, on the east siiloof Bonaldson street, as the same T Ufl ,,*M U^i? id .. onod ** feot u °rth of 81iippon street, in tho 1 ftrd * l2 f «?t front and 40 feet deep. > l 4 wti * bu tlt y neat imall diveUint sr, with that htats ,ht hack parlor, hy- Inmhlfn N2l$owi’r." 1 sood '" der - *«•'«»« P"’Mual Srtti^ r * of u inCtl ff^ ranC ®‘ ' ? ‘ 9ST9IW to be naid at the time of sale. JAMES A. PBEEMANiAuctioneer, Btof6; 422 Walnut street. lEjjj BALE.— JAMJES A* mSSSSSSSSS without reserve, at the hhUaaelptUaKxchau P <’o b t)m ril' lowing descrlbcd'roal eatnto : 'Air that”oorftin sround with tho three-story briclc ?» situate on the west side of Franklin^piji ll^^ l inches north of Diamond street, in'the Twentieth w« P ri of tho city ; containing in front on FraScHn u loot 2 inches, and in depth westward 70 ??«!♦,?«?* * wide alley, with tho privilege tWe o f. f t to ft 4 fe^ The above is a neat %-stprvdioeUing with mansard roc/, /wu*mffBrooms and bath , parlor*- hot and coM.-.wweiV Bents for $3OO. *ud the three vctv violently gestictu let ing Deputies of the Left address the people, '‘living to quell the tumult. (Tambetta ap peals to them to preserve order and to await si)., arrival of representatives, as they will I;.r tng i n the question of ikduajac. ' Vbelitne. ■‘■ J vr.-5-irOWttircOo'cit>A;k; —Su■ : ■ ITALY. ’ A Deputation Sent to the Italian Govern. ' Bienff-riijl People Prepatad for Be. vo|t*»Be«Apn^xaUo]i t lndi apvDSADlO* London, Tuesday, Sept. 6.1870.—The spe cial correspondent ot the Tribune at Florence, under the date of September 3, says: “A de puration from Nice to the Minister of Foreign Afiairs arrived this morning. They announ ced that Nico is tired ot enduring the tyrannical yoke of France. The young men, both in the towns and the countrv, refused to join the Garde Mobile. Daily con flicts are occurring between the military and the people. Seoret societies are formed, the cities are crowded with Mazzlnian agents, and a general rising of the people is imminent. Re-annexation to Italy is indispensable.ttThe Minister declined to reply. The Deputation leaves, saying, 1 Henceforth Republicans, heretofore opposed; will now have their own way.’ 11 The, Roman question is as doubtful as ever. Troon's are continually going forward to the Roman frontier.’" fßy Cablo.J The Bumbling or tbe Volcanoes. St.'Jban de Mauhiknnk, by way ot Paris, Sept. 7.—Most exciting rumorß are- brought here to-night lrom Florence and from several of the northern Italian cities. At Padna, yes terday, ;a band of young men paraded the streets carrying the French and Italian tricolors, and clamoring for the Universal : Repfiblici The same thing occurred at Milan and at Cremona. At Bologna,, the Prefect,. Signpr Bardesonp made a speech to a crowd or very menacing aspect, begging them td have patience,' Pas all that Italy had . ever hoped for was within a short time to-be hers.” From Florence we have only repetitions of riotous demonstra tions, bringing out in one or two. casesthe ne cessity ofnsiiig the public force. Throughput this part of Franco the m ost intense satisfaction reigns with the v new order of things, and the fiercest determination to protectand toavenge tlie country’—-JPorM. ° ...... ..... Cabled ' . - IHh PEAtEFIIL CAPITIILATIPy OF PABIS PROBABLE. ibe 'Available Force for Defence jutneb IV»SSerßted...(inn» and Ammnnltlon Wanting;—Etter Despair of Defence. London, Wednesday, Sept. 7, 1870—The special correspondent of the Tribune at Paris sends the following despatch dated' Sept. 0, midnight : “ The following is an exact state ment of the real situation of Paris, obtained upon the best authority. There will be, with . Gen. Vinoy’s trobps, 10,000 soldiers in Paris, utterly demoralized, beside 80,000 armed National Guards, 20,00 u Gardes Mobile, and -about—j, CM) —armed—volunteers -This-is-tb»- whoie armed force that can be counted on for defer ci. . There are no more guns. There is hardly ammunition enough for one battle. The Pror ' 1.-ional government would treat on any terms but the cession of territory. They fear that if the armed force were ordered to the ram parts, the scum of the populace would pillage ihe town. Intervention is earnestly sought, dules Favre’s application'to Lord Lyons for mediation, is without immediate: result,: the latter haring received no. instructions since ihe change of government. Not withstand'' 1 1‘gtheproelamai ion, tlie feeiing is utte-TdC spair' Resistance is known to be impossible. The Prussians are expected at G’ouipiegne to morrow. ■ ■ 1 - (Bv Mail J That Prussian Wager. - --The-subjoined. letter; FroniaPrnssian officer, appears in the JUberU . - J.’.-.’-... l. ; Haint Avoi.w, Aug. 19,1870. —Monsieur de Gjrurdiit One of my numerous countrymen in Pan 3 wilt forward to you these few lines in reply to your rbodomontades, which have ex cited in our camp, laughter as loud as our can nonade. , You have made a bet; I propose to you another. I engage on'my honor to pay you twenty thousand francs if my regiment does not march past your house in the Avenue da Roi du Home before the I.sth of Septem ber next. Do- you know why we are so certain, of conquering . you? Com municate this to your * friends, if you will, but'do iiot.suppress a word oi what I am-'about to say. 1. Because we have the moral support of Europe. 2. Because of > our superior artillery. 3. Because we all wish for German unity. (The J idea of annexations comes from your Emperor; who has forjimita tors Counts de Cavour.and de Bismarck). 4. Because our soldiers .are well commanded,and we have not among us divisions of interests aud of principles, iior insubordination'ns among your mobiles—whom wo fear less than schoolboys. Each of our soldiers has the instruction of one of your officers. 5. Because we are fighting for civilization, that is to say, for the emancipation of hu manity by instruction. How can a man like yourself fiavoTailedtoseo thatthe future be longs to the northern or. Protestant races? book at tho United States of America. What are, by the side of them, the small nations of Batin origin ? Republics always in civil war, without moral force, and with no other wor ship than the superstition of their ancestors. the Inquisitors. In Europe are not the two peninsulas in astate of decay*? In vain should' we give a King to Spain, your neighbor the Catholic (the' Queen) must tell you what that country has become. Italy has degenerated under the shadow of the Bame prejudices of iuiotized Catholicism. France has declined since she has abandoned her safety to the ar bitrary-Tulq of a man who has always lied,to ns as well as to yourselves.' You see where twenty years of despotism have led you ; you wished for the empire-peace, and you have the empire war, invasion, and the loss of two provinces, for we shall keep them. .You are hound up with the dynasty of the Bonapartes from fear of the Socialists! That is to say, in avoiding Cbarybdls you have fallen into Scylla. Examine the situation: under tho first Napoleon we and Europe re covered what was lost by the conqnests of the Republic; underthe second we are taking the ninth part of your country, besides the cost of the war which you will have to pay us. God is with those who desire progress, and for that} reason He is l abandoning you. Do yon even believe that thore is a God? You have universal suffrage, and your elec tors cannot even read. ’ That is the arm the most dangerous to yourselves. In truth, without your Ledru-RolUn, who en dowed you with that mode of voting, you would not be in such a position. But Provi dence orders everything for the best. Ger many the classic land of free thought, which had Luther before France; (ever knew what logic was, is destined to be for Europe what the couptry.of Franklin isfor America, Do not forget my bet, and address your, answer to M. westermann, 8 rue de Mont-Blano, at Genova, to be forwarded (in France) to A^^jQOß:;;Fßt!p,:YoNHonsrE'xif.” M r.u c Giraj din b egs .th QjLiberti toannouned >• that, considering as certain that the regiineiit of Col. Von Holstein will hotlile victoriously ;', imder:his wihdowB either before or after ' the Ipth-of Septembet noxt, he already disposes - ot thoZOiOOOft*. Of the generous Prussian ofli cer. ima as soon as he lias received them, on tho 16th of September, he will pay them tutor . the fund pf the, Boci&te de Secours for tho' wouiided. " ' . . . .. : The inurls on the SltanUou. .The Figaro publishes the following .extract 2. letter, of, the Comte de'Paris, tiddrosaed from Twickenham; oh-the 20th of August) to a ’ friend in Paris : -> < 'What events within throe ,'days! what rude shocks for everyFrehch heart! You wbll'-understaud how’"muehwe suffer iu the presence of this national disaster. *V *° ‘?££ ravato ourdistress, we arecom- I'eiJeu to be passive spectators. The.refusal ct tho request made by my uncle and my brother is, in this respect, cruel. That re fusal has prevented me sending to Paris a Jetter, with the same object as theirs, that would have arrived a little later. Only to think that Paris is to be besieged, and that on these very fortifications, the last boulevard of Prance raised thirty years ago by. > Louis ".■hpP o aD( * -Duke of Orleans', there Wifi not be a single member of the Orleans family among the defenders of the country! And Av o a t, perhaps, is harder to bear than all in our disinterested importunity the public sees only.the motives of a restless: ambition. Blit do not thick of us; think only of the, splendid.. ail ?.y * s upholding the honor of if ranee,' and of ail those brave citizens most recently ; £0” e£ dyd at Paris, who will save our country from the last humiliation. Yours, ~-Lqris Philippe D'Orleans. General ’rrocbn’s Generosity. i lie tollowing anecdote of General Tropliu maybe read with interest, at a time when ho is.called upon to. play an important " part in public aiiairs, as it shows that he is not less distinauished for his private virtues than for his taints and courage as a soldier. Upon the death of Ills father, some years ago, lie be came entitled, under the French law of sue-: cessipn, to a moiety of the small patrimonial estate in Brittany, which was to be : divided between, himself and his brother.; This brother had eleven gichildrenv The General has none. He simply remarked that his brother needed the property more than he did, and relinquished his share .of it.' Isot long afterward his brother likewise died. Upon tins occurrence, the General observed that,, haying no family" of his own. lie was the better able to provide for that which. Provi dence had bestowed upon him. He adopted hiH'eleveu nephews'aha hieceB, laid down his carriage, reduced his own domestic expendi ture, and assumed with cheerfulness the duty of providing for the whole, of his late brother’s family and household. (JEOBOE W. CIKTIS OSf KEI'l lillt’AS’. An Able Speech. The following remarks were made in the Republican .Convention at Saratoga, N. yesterday, by G. XV. Curtisi# . , Mr. Curtis was conducted to the chair by Judge James and John A. Griswold, and pro ceeded to address the Convention as follows* Speech of Mr. Curtis. * Gentlemen 0/ the Convention: I thank you hearth most generous granting for ~ .. of your confidence and regard. 1 salute, in return, all Republicans who- meet here on this spot, where the JRepublicah party. \vas organized, to take means to rescue New party-now inpowerr-We-raustr he Republicans, and to this end it is indispen sable thatwe should be harmonious., If we‘ become be sure tofollow. I hold every member responsible who, in the comiDg canvass, allows private feelings to overrun his regard for public good. When Mr. Burlingame was a member ot Congress,during the exciting ami-slavery debates, he said afl men -who spoke and voted for slavery could be . 1 - e P. o S ni s e . t }tlmit looks, seeming to wear a coii^i^ia^^m-^raEijW»-ai)g';»; or Xam Robert Toombs’s dog; whose dog are you '.'” ** ~ this“"Hmblliat weshomd remember that we are-liepublicans only \\ e meet to nominate State officers, hut ltisa custom -of political - necessity that 7 elections turn on national issues. * This is nght. A party which can govern a nation sattsfactorijy-can certainly do as well'in the >Slate : ..„On-the-confrary- r a-pnrtvseokrng-tKr>- iional power on other had principles will make a platform to deceive and attempt to Governor whol will sign ah Erie Rail road bill. We tnust. remember as wo advance the history of the past, and how the past few yeare rung with cries of victory. The history °t the Republican party Is written in the noblest years of the history of our country. During its dominance the country has been raised to Understanding of fair play tor all men and the right of every man to control himself. Our party has maintained that justice is the best policy. Every issue has been wise ly and bravely met as it arose. I will not re hearse at this time the full and splondid history ot our party,; the iuSp we have done speak for themselves. I beg every republican to re number that 4be true secret of success has hem, not tuat our principles were for justice iiberty, but that we have applied and arid practiced-^these thiugs. The majority have not been seeking their own personal welfare, but, r rather, ; {fprgetting self, they have done ait in their power for the country. It is not bo much what the republicans have said and done yesterday, but what they say and do to-day, that will influence the result. Thoir character in the past being only a certificate of fulfilment in the future. We must give our full views r on tbe question of flay. We ‘ should take up men whose records jue guar antees that they will uphold the character and principles of the Republican party. All we want is an honest election, with the votes cast honestly counted, and wo must succeed. In politics it is not to be considered whether the Republicans furbish the best conceivable gov ernment, butrather whether that party does not give the best practicable administration and furnish the beet guarantees; 1 wish to draw* attention to one point, and that is that the history of the Democratic party is written in the blackest colors. ' They do not contest-for power as their own reward of the past, but upon what they promise. The - history'of the past services of the Rephblicam party is a sufficient warrant- for«~the-futurdf One ground which the Democrats contc.st.upnn is a relief from taxfcs. Shall we take the chances of Democratic dishonesty and the disturbance of-all the measures of reconstruc tion, aud allow them to return to power in the nation ? General Grant went into power March 4,3869. As the old Roman Generals were raised on tfio-sbiclds of their soldiers and borne in triumph, he took the placobf anarchy and confusion,. Others hau cried peace, but General Grant has made peace, and the people seized the?hoaestand sagacious soldier and lilted him into the place he has so worthily filled. If,the administration loses power it will be because the honest and intelligent masses of the Republican party neglect their duty and forget their fidelity, in ancient Athens two men once contested for the suf frages of the pfeople. One was profuse in his proimsGS Of what he would do, and the other came forward jandsaid: “ WhaChe promises I have dope. This reply can well be applied to the Democratic 1 and Republican parties. All that the Democrats promise we have done, ov are .doing. I give now one or two facts. In the last seventeen months of Andrew Johnson’s Presidency the national debt was increased thirty millions; in the first seventeen months of General Grant’s adminis tration the debfc'has been decreased one hun rired and seventy millions; and Congress at its last session reduced the : taxes more than eighty*tl This simultaneous re duction of. the -debt and taxes implies the honesty ona abihty of the Republican Admin istration with, a mqst faithful regard to its tra ditions. It has'.tnaintained peace with all nations andthehameatJd power of the United States was never pinch Respected as it is at the present tiiqe,,under General Grant’s Ad ministration. 4 f I 1 remember when in Berlin, Getfmmy, c.visiting; the King’s palace ana . /being • shown a >suit of clothes worn; /by Frederick the Great iii the field. a NOVf, if every German general in the held fighting against wanton and wicked. aggression, in which our sympathy and our prayers' are enlisted, word those .Clothes ho cqiilunqt he insured.victory. _lt _is with m; iw prroo] the spirit and principles of the men which nave gained the victory and given France a republic, which we pray the people mav have the sagacity to maintain. It is not because of the victory gained at Saratoga that our re volutionary fathers succeeded at Yorktbwn • ’ it was not because of Vicksburg and Shiloh that Grant, received the surrender at Appromattox, but because our lathers and General Grant fought out their- battles on one line, never stopping until the final victory was gained. V e must fight on the lineof 1861 and 1868, and keep up the contest at every point until every citizen has bis full rights. The true mission of the Republican party was defined by Abraham . at “Gettysburg - -when,.standing ovor the graves of our dead soldiers, be said they fought for no section, no State, but for the great principles ot humanity, which lie de fined as our mission to-day. As our brothers by sea and land died, so we Republicans and citize.pa-KhouJd live, and a government for the people shall not perish from earth. THE RHINE-GUARD. KV HAVARII TAVLOK. A peal like thunder calls the brave, W ith clash of sword and sound ot wave; To the Rhine, the Rhine, the. German Rhine! Who now will guard the river's line V Dear-Fatherland, no fear be thine! Firm stands thy guard along the Rhine. J A hundred thousand hearts ljea f high : The answer flaines from everv eve : The German youth devoted stand To shield the holy border-laud; Dear Fatherland, no fear be thine! Firm stands thy guard along the Rhine. And. though my heart in death he dumb, Still though shall not a Frank become! Rich, as in water thy fair flood, Js Germany in hero-blood. Dear Fatherland, uo fear be thine Firm stands thy guard along the Rhine. He sees above him Heaven's blue dome, Whence souls of heroes watch their home, And vows, with battle’s pride possessed: Be.Germau,Rhine, as.is mr breast! Dear Fatherland, no fear be thine ! Firm stands thy guard along the Rhiue- So jotig as blood shairwarm our veins, : - 'ft bile for the sword one baud remains, One arm to bear a gun,—no more Shall foot of foemau tread thy shore! Dear Fatherland, no fear be tbine! ■/ Firm stands thy guard along the Rhine. The oath resounds, the wave roils by, The banners wave, advanced on oigh : To the Rhine, the Rhine, the German Rhine! We ail Will guard the river’s hue. Dear Fatherland, no fear be thine! y Firm stands thy guard along tlif( Rhine. \ Tribune. CRIME IS NEW JERSEY. Probable murder at Bayonne. About 8 o’clock last evening two stages full ot members of the Lady Washington Cliow derGlub of New York passed down the Ba vonue plank-road, on their wav to this city. “The - occupantsa-w’ere-rinttsuulfv" uproafibiffir hut above the noise Officer MaeCauley de-. tected groans proceeding from an express ‘ wagon that- followed -the —stages. —-The wagon was stopped, and a man bearing ghastly wounds and unable to speak was found covered by a blanket. Domed ves Carroll and Stratford,who were near the spot-, came to tho assistance of AlaoCauley and the occupants of one of the stages were taken-into custody and lodged in the Fourth Precinct Police Station. While the wounded man was being borne on his way to the ferry hot pursuit was given -to the other stage, and before it reached the terry its occupants were also taken nrisoners. Tbe injured man proved to be Joseph ScuUy, of No. 251 Washington street, New York. His wounds were a severe gash across the throat and another on the right arm. This latter wound laid baTe the bone, and it is said that when found the man had bled almost to death. Notwithstanding the f’uct tea. there was hardly a possibility that ho could live an hour, be was sent home by the police iu charge of an officer. Not one of the twenty-four persons arrested would tell anything of the affrav iu which Bculiy was wounded, but the gang will scarcely be so united as to remain long iu pri son for tho purpose of shielding the guilty person. The persons arrested at the First Precinct ate Peter Ewell, Enos McCann, Jas. Ash,. Peter Daniels, Patrick Curry, John Thomas Sullivan, Win. Morgan. Tbessare all young men. The following are older stage-drivers bv occupation.: Peter Islington, Richard W. Snedeker, William Rudger, George Clarke. Oue of the stage drivers is reported to have said while in cus tody that the murderer had not been caught after all.— Tribune. .—... TRAGEDY IN CHENIER COUNTY. ; Suicide of au Unknown Mao. / The. J illaye /?< cord says ; Au unknown man was iound in Mr. Cumiskey’s field,near War ren tavern,in-Eart Whit-eland,Chester county, Thursday morning, September Ist, with his , throat cut and hacked in a feartul manner. Ho was discovered by a little girl. Squire Bossert,--Deputy Coroner, held an’inquest upon the body, and returned a verdict that he c-aine to death by his own hands. No papers, or anything that would lead to his identification, were found upon him. He was supposed to be in- I' sane, ’aiid was'’seen' ‘ the - preTi’otis’ afternoon -.about the place. He told some parties he had . worked in the Phoenixville Machine Shop. He was buried in the old church yard, hack of the Willistown church. Ho was‘well dressed, and had a valise with him. He was from twenty-five to thirty years of age, small size, light or sandy complexion, and apparentlv of German descent. A -Barlow’’ knife was found near him, with which he had killed himself. FACTN AND FANCIES. —The Germans carried on the war in so of fe.nsive a manner that Nar>eleon isn’t going to fight them any more. —The Birmingham Musical Festival tried to hire Patti-Cnux, but, as she charged $2OO per sing, the negotiations censed. —Alabama utilizes her 200 convicts, making them build railroads. —All the German female babies this vear wiil be named Augusta. —The Prussian soldiers now forage on French towns, but King William looks after the Board of Engineers. —lf you want your neighbors to •’* know all about you,” give a party, and don’t invite the folks who live next door. —Punch says that - when Lot’s- wife was turned to salt ho took a fresh on c.f —“ Shingle weddings’’ are ajyfcmingjkJh- Vonable in lowa. They occur wlmst-eifefirst, child is old enough to spank. —Waterfnelons are sold in the market-of Alton, 111., at five cents each. —‘.‘Fall openings sidewalks. —There are some apprehensions that Mr. Seward Will buy. China, Japan and the Fiji Islands, before, he returns. —The,clothes’of thg season at the seaside— bathing-dresses, . - ‘ " —A lawyer’at Terre Haute lately went to an editor’s office to cane him. The doctors have dug three bullets out of his frame, andsay there is another one that they oan’t find, which will probably kill him, ’—The coal holes on tho PJRICE THREE CE*m. POttEIGI CORRESPOISOEIJC® XEfXEKTBftII ROHE (CYrrespoildencei of tlioPhita, Evening Bulfatla.j i ; “ Forty Cats. ” '■ Bomb, Italy, August lOtli, 1870.—The story with which I closed my letter of last week proved to l>e of the nature of the nursery declaration of “forty cats in the yard.” Thera was no fight between the French Antibes and German Chasseurs,' yet the excitement was very great for awhile, and the account I re ported was currently believed' throughout the city. At the very first souhd df fire-arms a perfect panic seized the people and the.Court* Every one believed that the revolution had hurst out- The people in the neighborhood of the trouble—for there was trouble—shut up their shops and tied to places of safety. Tho guards at the Vatican were put under arms- The artillery at St. Angelo went to their posts Free passage was forbidden, at certain point#; of the city, and the yens (Vmines went through the city with pointed guns, looking, at tho houses and pedestrians with suspicion/ ready to fire at the slightest provocation. For two hours this state of affairs lasted. I thought I should not he able to mall my letter, and. ...that ’we should be deprived of our afternoon drive. But, like a thunder-shower, the’ fright passed oft'. At- 5 o’clock the carriage came, as usual; the coachman reported that all path ways were open, anehthe difficulty was over What the diiiiculty had been of course we did not know, except from common report ; but (with that delightful philosophy peculiar to the children of this nineteenth century, we started oft" on our afternoon drive without nervousness. It was none of our business, •‘none of our country, none of our fights.!’ : As we drove by the Theatre' of Marcellas and through the Piazza Montanara we were surprised to see every one so. tranquil. -When the carriage rolled by the Piazza Mangana we said, of course, “Here the bomb fell the* other night ;”aud one of us suggested, with siVage'mischief, “Suppose another one should' be thrown now.” lam afraid we would have likedtohave'b<:on“iratttorrow:” — Thereis7 but a thin partition, it is' said, between civili zation and barbarism, in such .sensational times as these rve each become a little savage, . especially when we are as I am, a spectator, ’ one of the audience in this great Coliseum of ‘ Europe, and belonging to a nation that Is re-' spected. " . The Otsercalore Roman? of the evening " gave a very poor account of the cause of tho trouble; nobody believes the Osservatore— it. is a sort of daily Primer or Mother Goose. But after a day or two had passed, the - truth, at last was sifted out, and itwas a mouse from a mountain.' Terrible Freak of Insanity/ A poor crazy fellow, who had formerly been in theZouaves, had been put ..in. the asylum for delirium tremens. As they supposed he was- ’ cured, he was allowed to leave. The poor, wretch barricaded himself in a room of a club . house, near tho Palazzo del C.'ianccllerie, aftor providing himself tecretly with ammunition and arms. From the window of this room ho amused himself by picking oft'the passers-by. He tired no less than 80 times, and actually killed and wounded 37 persons! He protected himself behind the window casing, but at last they managed to wound him, and then forced their way into his room. He is now i n the military insane hospital. For some days the ZouavCß went about the streets without sabres. Notwithstanding the alarm at the Vatican, tbo Pope went immedi ately to the place where the sad event occurred and gave his benediction and consolation to the wounded and dying. Pius IX. was in the military service in youth, and although so de vout and religious, ho has the natural instincts of a soldier—resolution and pluck. Since then, in order to put an end to the military dissensions which naturally spring up daily between the Prussian and French soldiers serving in the Pontifical army, Ptus IX. has authorized the departure of all , sol- , diers of-the-Legiomof Antibes-wlio wish to-rav; turn to France. 150 soldiers have already left, , but none of the officers have profited by the pel mission. Italians on the Frontier. There was a report that the Italian soldiers ; had left the froptier; on the contrary, they £ have been assembling in large numbers; at -. Temi and the towns nearest to Rome on tha v . Italian boundaries. Yesterday the Pope,lua- ( easy about this great accumulation of forces so near Rome, requested the French Ambassa- . dor, M. do Bonneville, to ask thei French re presentative. at Florence, M. da Jlalaret,what— this camp Of thirty or forty thousand men meant just at the very threshold of Rome. M. de Maiaret replied that this collection of troops concerned Italy more than Rome. At Naples the insurrectionary movements are threatening. They are said to be more ia favor of tbo old'Bourbon family, however, than of Red Blurts. If Francis 11. had a little more dash and spirit in him,he could easily re gain the throne his brave young Paladin an cestor, Don Carlos, won for his family in t 755. North and South Italy. Bo complicated are matters in Italy that it hi believed by some of the far-seeing politicians in Rome that in the Congress of Nations which is to he held after this war Italy will be divided into two kingdoms. South Italy, and Sicily,with Francis 11. and the pretty queenly Mario Sofia on the throne : North Italy with its old 'ceded province of Savoy, and Prince Humbert for'King, and the Papal States re constituted to keep the balance. However, all tbe.se speculations may be thrown to the winds by “ Circumstance, that nuspixitual God,” who is marching swiftly and hotly now oyer the battlefields. The Italian Government has shown itself both too greedy aiui too weak,: however, in the late events, to merit strong or sympathy from any nation in, the coming Congress. It is known that she owes her royal existence to Louis Napoleon L and!it is also ; known that a treaty exists between the Cabinets of Florence and the Toilerios in which 'ltaly promised' France 100,000 tnen'in ease of need. . Now is the hour of peed; and instead, of, despatching this help, she oeneontratea hor forces wiffiin a few miles of Rome, saying Oho. needs them at that spot to protect Naples! . Bhx» even asked permission of the Roman author*, ties to use their,railroad fo# the, transporting _ > _.,. ' i; -;A