The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, July 21, 1870, Image 1

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    \TITE D A rriy G A vain,
12311=111
PENNI3IAN, REED & CO.,
lerrrr Sixth Ave: and Smithfield St
B. PENNIMAN, JOSIAH SING,
I. P. HOUSTON,
EZITEE2
EDITDII.4 AND PROPRIETOR/S.
Trorrof or Tilt DAIS{
=
NICONII EDITION.
FOUR O'CLOCK.
WAR NEWS
FB 04 EUROPE.
Franco-Prussian Crisis
Deigaration of War Announced in the
German Parliament and French.
Chambers—Loan of Twelve Million
Tinders Voted—stirring. Speech by
Kin; William---;Capoleott Responmi
ble.for the War, Without Which the
• ' Peace of Enrooe Could Not he Pre
nerved-The Ultimatum of Germany
the Dethronement Bonaparte—
Rumors of the Commencement of
Ilostilltles—Aireat Commercial De
',cession in England—Millionaires of
a Few Days Since Non . itankrupt
A mericanSanitary Organization in
Paris—War En I huslasm Unabated.
. ,
Illy Telegraph to the. Pittsburgh °arctic.)
The Empress Eugenia Delighted.
LONDON, July 10.—A special dispitch to the
-TinirS from rork says the Empress Eugenia I.
delighted that the Prince Imperial win diem
see his first campaign with his father. 0111.
vier avows entirs confidence in the favorable
result of the War.
health Join• France. ,
NEw YOU% July 19.—A sp.:Waite tb. Tot .
Item London buys: It Ls oesitivtly isisertm d .
here to-rltt. on what is tmgardell as the high
est authority, that. Attars, jolts trance
against Prussia. There is much excitement.
Modßiles Probably Commenced—Nasal Hattie.
eupposed to be In Progreso.
•
Tire Recur.. Judy .11, Noon.—Thu rambliryp
sounds of heavy cannonading. as if from ai
point on the coast. are distinctly beard in
this city, creating great excitement. It is
supposed that -the French fleet \ have
overtaken the Prussiansquadron from Reg
lend. end that a great naval battle Is in pro
gress:
LONDON. July2o. Noon.. -There are rumors
that a navatbattle is in progress off the coast
of Holland.
2:011 P.N.—The Tones of this forenoon orts
that a movement of the French army ban be
gun, and that hostilities bare been orrenal
near Forbarh.
the Rhine . tells his experience to the rmre of
this morning. Ile save the German army is
quiet., grace. ansiotnand resolute. and on the
other hand tho French' are drinking, yelling,
swaggering; aml literally spoiling for a-, gght.
dred everyone Germeu soldier he saw a hue-
Telegraphic communication between France
and Germany has been destroyed the au
thorities.
France pie nes an army of 350.000 men upon
the Rhine.
All Germans in the service of the French
have been ordered to return forth With.
Neutrality In the Battle and North Kea..
LONIXtY, July 31—It is revorted here' that
Faglami. Russia and the United States pro-
K n o s r e th tlg. u ncutralization of the Baltic and
' The Prussian Government has announced
that the merchantmen es - en of the enemy will
not he interfered with on the high seas, un
less for causes which wonld expose neutral,
to seizure_
•
Meeting of Aorth tkrtuan Parliatnent—Dee
.laration of War Announced:
•
Banos. Tule or North Ger
man Parliament, met yesterday afternoon.
The Grand. Presi de nt 3lechllagburg-,cheerin.
was chosen . Vehement cheering
followed Count Von Elismarck'i announce
ment of t he nli of war by France.
The King opened the session With
oPeech. Which 'seas greeted with the wildest
euthuniadm.
Stirring Speech from King William.
King William charged the Depend of the
French with seeking fore pretext for war In
tu.ner unheard of In the annals of political
Intercourse. and declaring sear with that die,
regard fur the people's rights to the blessings
of pence of which the first Napoleon gave such
an analogous example. But Germany now
had the will and the power to repel aggres
sion. and before the judgment seat of God
and matikind, the King solemnly declared.
the responsibility fell on the man who had
dragged two great peoples into a derastatier
war for the furtherance of his own personal
l l'h er rkiiig of Prussia had no interest in the
selection of the Prince of Hohenzollern forthe
Spanish throne, except that it might bring
peace to a friendly people. It hod neverthe
less furnished the Emperor of the French
with a pretext for Amu unknown to diploma
cy. and. scoming - peace, he had indulged in
lenguage
only have te
been Geri:neer which could
prompt. by a mis
calculation of their strength. Germany was
powerful enough to resent such language and
repel such insolence. Unsaid BO in all rever
ence, knowing that the event weighed the
responsibility which rested on the man who
drives into war and havoc two great and tran
quil nations yearning for peace and the en
foment of the common blessings of Christi.
mvilizntlon end Prosperity; and for contests
more salutary than those of blood. Those
who rule France have shrewdly atudied the
proper methods of hitting the sensitive pride
of that great neighbor nation, and to promote
reitish.interests have misguided it.
Then. concluded the King. easter fathers be
fore us hove done, let us tight for liberty and
our rights against the wrongs inflicted by a
foreign crtueror, and es He was with our
rs
fathe.. Goilhwill' be with us In a struggle
withouti ch Europe can never enjoy laid
.
Ing Peace.
French I.7hamhere—Asuroccarentent of the
Existence of a elate of War.
DOrinCur. July 30.—1 n the Corps Legislatif
to-day, Duke Grammont announced that war
has been declared with Prussia and her allies
In the follow - Mr secede •
Afesstricre: - The expose, presented to you os
the 15th Inst., made known the causes we
• bare for war against Preside. According to
the rules and usage of nations, and by
order of the .Emperor: t have requested the
Charge d'Affaini at Berlin to- notify the Cab
inet of Prussia of our resolution to seek with
arms the guarantees we could not obtain by
discussion. This has been done, and I have
the honor to make semen to the Corps Lest.
half that in consequence thereof a State war
exists since the Pith , between France and
Prusda. •
This declaration appears to be to the silhat
of Prussia whorls' her armed assistence.
Alleged Intrigue by Eugenie.
It Is now stated at Berlin that the failure of
- the Intrigue between the Empress Eugenht;i
to marry her niece, the Duchess of Albat. to
Prince Leopold. le the real cause of the pees
eat trouble between France and Prussia.
The father of ttaiDuehess is now In Madrid,
drowned in debt and generally despised.
Prism Napoleon g * sea to she Battle.
It is rumored that Peace Napoleon will, go
to the Baltic. and with his land force 00-opier
ate with the fleet. , -
Spies Captured.
•
. A number of spies have been captured n
- both sides near the Rhine. General weidel.
Adjutant General of Hanover. has been ar
rested at Weimar as a spy.
Elbe Blockaded—Hesse with Preset..
•
BrEslits. July 20.—A French squadron Is
blockading the Elbe and watching the Orr
man ships at Hamburg. •
Hesse, has allied herself with Presets.
Preach Call Up°. flasisivarlasok • 1
Paula, July 20.—The French army carries
with it aproclansatlon,by the Emperor calling
upon the liattotariani to rise against the
donaltdcm of Paula. . •
- Dt:MIN, July 31—A demonstration was
made last evening -la berm of France before
the Cououate of that power. The crowd
waved tbetrl-colora and indulged in cheers
and ottier'uotay manifestations. The police
were ordered to the scene of the disturbance.
They charged the crowd and 'clad the
- c ook olors. Tim mob aft erwards rallied and re
t their stanard.
Harmony la North fiermaay—Lean of 12,000,-
000 'Mien Voted.
Britux. July 33.—The most perfect harmo
ny exists in the government of all the North
German States!. In the Saxony Chambers yes
' terday, Baron de Friesen. Minister of Finance.
made a speech. telling the Deputies that
Fame was anxious for oar. and ebe should
have It. m sharply and severely as possible.
. BlnremeNke w G e r m g an t d Pa relniamnnta,stleally.
alter the
Moe, speech, had been delivered. a loan of.
twelve malleethalas was tarried unanimous
ly amid the wildest expressions of enthusiasm
•by all parties. '
Commander of thrittetliusto Army.
33.—Connt Dargan has b een
appointed Commander-tit-Chief of tbp foniet
of Switzerland.
French Offletal-Appetuteututi, •
PA161.4, July 20.—Tbe Journal 0141 this
morning contains a decree nomina Gan.
Edmund Labour. lately Minister nt ar, as
Major General:Viscount I)e Jean aa Minister
ot war ad interim. and Prince De 'Latour
D'Arersue as .Asnbiissador to Vienna.
It is understood that all the French Consuls
la the German Confederation have. reeolved
patsporti. 1 •
Germany's Citimation—Derbrenementet Man.
. .
Lotruott. July' .--itermany makes the de
throning of Bonaparte its ultimatum.
Bret Coauaeretal Deprerlam.
The Llveirrool rtorkets forterdar .wete Att
rerls..Prostrated. NMllog was ever known
. .
. „
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STABLI SIIED IN : ~
,1
EH
like the commercial depression. many Men.
worth one hundred thousand pounds sterling
a day ut twit ago. are bankrupt to-day. Busi
ness in yarns itird fairies at Mancheler is
31.3 1..'3131ed. •
No Entztizement 'Vet by Lend or hica."
LONDON. July 20-N0 news of any enrage
meat either: by land or bus yet been, re
ceived hare. Rumors of alliances are 1.4111 ru
m rS only. Thus far no authentic Information
of u any power having taken sides with either
combatant has been made public.
• An American Maw-rimiest.
PA Ins. July tal.- An American resient Lre.
Dr. Ei boo given 10. Bill francs to the 'sod
etY to obi the wounded soluiers of France..
War of Menarche. Not of People. :""
rnANir.lllT. Jule :li).-The Ge...ettc. In an edi
torial...l:s bow the cause of the war con
cern, the people of France or Germany. and
.Mtleuttes the question is between the mon
tivhs of the respective countries, and one
that the people du nut feel at all Interested In.
.31retIng of Americans In Parts. '
rams. July 21).-A meeting of citizens of the
rutted :Bates was held atThe residence of Dr.
Evans last night, to take measures for the or
ganization ofa sanitary commission. It, ie
pr. mosed that the commission shall co-operate
with the International and French societies In
itid of the wounded, Dr. Evans . Placed at the
iiinposal the new organization the report of
the American Sanitary Commission 811 ,, n col
lection of models of ambulances, stretchers.
hotimtal tents and other appliances used by
the .1111111.3i01l during the lust war.
1 The War Enthialasm. •
• •
The warlike entloisinsin in Frauce is una
bated. A riehmanutacturor of Mulhouse has
offered to equip 5.000 volunteers and supply
them with rations during the war. The Dep
uties in the Corps Legislatif sign liberal
subscription. for the wounded. M. Schneider
gives MOM francs to one of the aid societies.
- American Minister . Washburne.
•
•
Mr. Washburpk, American Minikter, teas in
Ikthemitt whenite heard of the breaking out
-of the trim Me immediately returned to
Paris nail yesterday was in t onsultation with
seteral of his diplomatic colleagues.
Vrenrh Allhmee with
Zit Liticrte asserts that M. V imergate has
.gone to Florence with a t reat y'of alllance.be-
I ween Franceand Italy. The same paper
bhp, In case Denmark .loins France In the
war. the Prince, of Orleans will serve in the
banish artily.
nailtreeland and Proud..
. Beetm, Switzerland. July :1).--The General
of the Swiss arrnyland severalother officers
of high rank hove been arrested in Germany.
It to believed Prussia .3lurposely retards no
'swer to Switzerland's declaratlon of neutral
ity.
The wKti alid Itoll4-y at..wll
• ',sm., duly The Stn win rd thismiit
kethe-vs the recent t stocks is altij•-
r due to croakers. People on 'Change
were iiht with customers' orders in hand
and undeliverable, necessitating a realization
^t any I.rice. The money market remains
base and money Erect!' offered at 32.21,1 per
emit.
LIVEIII . OOI. July-V-3 r. o.—There is a bet
ter feeling in the market note and business Is
mcovenng from the effect,. of the panic.
Ifio Fighting Vet on Sew er Lana.
•
['mug. 33) r. sr.—No fighting tin 'tea or la d
Is yet reported. Deputies from the Depart
ments of the Upper and Lower Rhine, Moselle
and Maurthe are kept well Informed be tele
graph of the movements of the army, and
they state that uo important conflict has Yet
taken place between the hostile forces. There
have been some skirmishes between pair-Olt
and customs officers. but no blood spilled and
not a gam tired.
The Emperor did not conic to Paria — to-day.
lie received the Ministem and answered dls
patches at St. Cloud. •The Pratfalls on the
border say Bismarck In moth troubled at the
slowness of the Lauda - ea in coming for.
scard.
,
Bslglem and France-1. 31ircomtruction.
I,oltDOls,. July organs
ski - trance misconstrues as au evidence of
hostility 'the destractiOu of n bridge - near
Ilizmdotr, which was merely the result of nth:-
apprehension of orders, and declare that Bel
gium remains legally neutral.
Bpantsh Press Condemn Napoleon.
'the Spanish papers unanimously condemn
Napoleon for declaring war.
=1
GENtvA, July o).—Dou Carlos. baring been
expelled front Frxnee. arrived In this city yes
terday.
Rumored Colliolon at Korkneh.,
LONDON'. JUIS r. m.—lt is rumored
that a collision twitplace this morning near
Forhach between French and Prue>hm ad
vanced guards: Nothing . further Is known
and then 1s some doubt cast on the report., an
ttivices from Parl4 to-o.ar are Positive that
here has been no !letting.
Napoleon nits not Negotiate.
. ,
Earl Granville reports that the determined
4ml absolat e refusal of the Emperor Napoleon
to entertain negotiations render It probable
any . attempt to reams theta would be useless
until a great battle has been fought.
I =1
It se reported th;rt France dealer that the
AlpulatlOne of tee Paris CooreetJou
:whir to the present war:-
=0
RCE, , r. TIIE 111011 COURT or JUSTICE.
Pants. July :20.—1n the High Court of Jus
tice yesterday 31.. lelouquet, advocate of
the accused. moved that Otteen of the prison
ers he tried separatelv. Among the reasons
on whidh he grounded, his motion was
that these men bad nothing to do with the
affair of fkmibays.. In the course of his ar
gument he called Meggy, one of the prison-
Prs - Monsieur." and was interrupted by the
resident of the Court. • who pointed
out that' owing to the grave offence
with which the prisoner was charged he
should Oct be thus addressed. This interfer
ence of the Court occasioned a scene between
the counsel for the defense and Procureur Gen
eral Grand Pt ere. The latter demanded that
M. Floureh be onlered to leave the Court
room. One of the Counsel then announced he ,
would call up his brief. The other advocate
dill the same and all the counsel rut - prisoners
withdrew from the court nom.'
Of the total number of deaths in Paris lost
week one-tifth were from small-pos.
3:35 M.—The bonne in growing weaker.
Itentes continue to decline and are now quoted
nt Mfr.
IMEMI3
LUNDON, •luny :M.-- , The_ case of Edmunds,
patent office extortioner, was yesterday dis
cussed in the House of Commons at some
length. The Government firmly opposed the
release of the accused.
The family of the late Mr. Dickens Lace de
clined the Lords' offer of for the manu
script of "Edwin Drood." ,
•
MAIIINE NEM
- LONDONDEILN Jut; 20.4teanter St. Pat
rick from Quebec bat arrived.
EINNANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
.
LONDON. July AL —Deco oa,—,..Joes for
money 09X: nn account. eWti: &X/ bonds at
London dull. 'Ws. fdy, - : '6.55. 09%: '075.80: Erie.,
I:044 Illinois, 10tl: Atlantic and Great Western,
at: Stocks dull.
LIVERPOot., July M.—Cotton market firm.
but not quotably higher; middling uplands ht
0'01; middling Orleans 9%d; sales SAX) bales.
exports LORI bales. California white wheat
12s: red western No. 2.10 a switio• ml;
red winter lla Idrtlls al. %Woes n flour
aist.:Ns. Corn: No 2 mixed 11,. Oats
20 01. Barley 30. Pens Ans. Pork
105 s. Beef 113 s 61. Lard 725. Cheese
dna. Bacon: :a:Y.4074s for short rib middles.
Common rosin Ss 3d. Pine rosin 13.3 d. tr:pir
its petroleum 11. refined lo 7d. Tallow 44s ad.
Turpentine nto. Linseed oil 31s 10d. ;Linseed
cakes 11.
LoNDoa, July Z).—Tallow . ls.
Bogor 31.1. Gdaz.lls aa. WhalT 37. Calcutta
linseed 614.13 s hl. Petroleum dull. lo eiNd
Hops .ss4On Id.
The Ikhrgla begial aaaaa .
lily Telerrap n li to the Pittsburgh Gazette.l
ArLairra, July 20.—The entire niortilug
boor ICU occupied In the Senate by the negro
A. A—Bra u argument enforcing big
e i ll i fi t tgl i t_y toe otet from the Virg Senatorial
In the House a resolution was offered that
no election be held to this State until the ad•
mission of Its Representatives laConcresaand
that all electio n /awe not suitable to the ore,-
ent condition of the State bo repealed. .
Both Houses bare adjourned till Friday.
I=IESED
Ncw OaLcsas, July Dl—Flour firm and de
mand fair; superfine .55.75 , 36,06; double extra
Eil..sa: treat , extrx $6.75. Corn buoyant; mixed
M 01,12341 white 11.1t41,17. Oats 64 67c.
ay arm: Prime V . .... 41%. Pork firmer and
held at SW: Bacon firmer; Jobbing shoulders
15)10)16c; clear rib 18Xelne,clenr sides InXIS
H am . %o. Whiekey Ofee„.sl,o7X. Stcr
lint
1340134 Ni•
Oiwego,
oalrguo,July 33.—Fluur very • active and dde
higher On the different srrades; salts 3.000 bbl
at Pah for NO 'I spring and amber.' 89 for win
ter whtte. *9,75 for MX Wheat firm; sales
s.ooobush extra white Micligan $l.BO. t4st°
bush reel Ohio at *LA 1= bash amber Michi
gan at VA&
—A telegram from Washington, lowa. earn
that Gabriel Armstrong, su b contractor on
the• Chicago and Southwestern Railroad,
working near that place, decamped on Fri
day of last week vitb ten thousand dollar.,
leaving four to Pro- hundred hinds unpaid
and debts amounting to twenty-11TP thousand
dollars. He was accompanied In his flight by
his foreman. clerk and an under contractor.
—A telegram from Danville, Va., says a
large number of citizens of Casstrell county,
North Carolina. had Bed to that placefor safe
ty from Col. Kirk and North Carolina State
troops. 'An aged citizen named Borrie had
been badly beaten by Kirke men, and was
brought off by the flying refugees. Kirk was
- still arresting prominent citizens.
—The Cincinnati Board of Trade will to-day
'consider means of securing . transportation 'of
f t r m eVzo rv uldi i i , tuti c. ilthei , azyzu , it p cp=os i : of
lay at. New Albany and Jeffersonville tracks
tr the landingto connect with the railroad
between' those places. and thus transfer
height around the falls.
—A telegram from Dentine. Va., geaterdsr
etening, says Col. Kirk hu attested about
seventy more prominent citizens of Casswell
county, N. C., some of whom resisted and
were bad maltreated.. Bedford Brown taw
gone to wubington to see President Grant,
and ex.Oorenror Graham will meet him
awe.
I\ .1786.
CII E ('A PITAL
The New French Minister, .M. Para.
do!, Commits Suicide—The Massacre
of Miners h Indians in Wyoming—
The. President Goes' to Long Branch.
(By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.?
=I2II:MME
NEICIDE OF THE NEW rnr.sill MINIS - VEIL
M.-Prevost Par:ldol, the new,Frencli Min
ister. shot himself through the' heait at one
o'clock this morning at his residence on New
York avenue, between. Ninth and Tenth
streets. The Emperor Napoleon hits been no
tined by telegraph, end M. licrt hen's:. the late
Minister, who bas not sailed from New York.
hex been notified to return to Washington:
The both . of M. Paradol Is being embalmed to
be taken to France. No ru uu n bino yet
signed, but it is believed that he had been con
templating the deed fur some Ilium. Ile bad
written letters to the ineminirs of his family
foreshadowing ouch Intention.
I=
Tne French Minister shot himself in his
sleeping chamber, the drat mom of the second
story, and the circumstancesattending It
show that the act sn as premeditated. The
inmates of the house :It the tithe were his
housekeeper and a French serving man. The
wo man heard the report of the pistol nut
runheil into the room. where she found Para
dui Icing dead till the door, bleeding trout the
left breast. the bull having entered immedi
ntely over the heart. Tine wmepun was a
small tingle barrel breech-loading Colt's pis
tol. it is ascertained that be walked out
yesterday nod purchased in ' , air of pistols of
tine style described. The other was found
upon his Imre. with a cartridge be
side It. The body was embalmed itnd
prepareil for but othing further will
la!dune untilthe eeriest of M. Ilerthenty. late
French Minister, who is is New Turk, and
who willeen summoned. tic telegranb. Tbe
body no doubt •be taken to France. M.
Paradol had prepared himself forbed. but had
evidently remained UP In his chamber for
mine t hue: mei:tit:Whir suicide. Ile had noth
ing on but his night shirt and slippers. and ap..
• parently stood facing the tire-place :ind near
the centre of the rimin. The body. urns found
lying on the back. one leg draw n up and the
left arm outstretched above the head.
The French Minister took possession of his
house on Friday last. Wort on. Sunday evening
he sent his son and :laughter. who accompan
ied hint to this country. to Newport: It: 1., in
tending to join then: in a few into and %peed
the summer. He left a note saying. ^I wtl
kill myself. M. Bertherny mane back and
- stay." The ntembet, 'of the French legation
were absent from Washington, with the ex
ception of M. De Jardin• the chancellor. That
gentlentett communicated the fact to Secre
tary Fish. who • after
. ex pressing sanitise toad
regret. suggested a coroner's Inquest. to
.which M lie Javelin assented and seven
was designated by the coroner for thatp
c ur
pose. Th
the
entire community in shuck.:' be
theve
The t , ecretary of State to-dav telegraphed
to Minister Washburne. Instructing him to in
form the French government of the sudden
death of M. Prevost Paradol. The President
has ordered a guardof honor over the re
mains ur the deceased Minister, with such
other attentions as may be required. The
Secretary and invited guests anticipated much
pleasure at the dinner which was to have been
given to-nig ht by the Secretary incomPilment
to the late Minister.
. .. . • - •
TIIE I iuggss - r. ..
At the inquest on the body of late Minister
Paraded u note war read req uest) had been lett
by him for M. Dc Jardin, ng the lat
ter to send his famll • and servants to Prance.
Ite .lartihr testified hat Paraded*. mititi ap.
neared affected by the heat.. The - jury re
turned a- verdict of lentil by his own hand,
while under mental l aberration.
. TUE 3t/l MACRE 411 , MINERS EY IN HANG.
The Indian otter I. in rtateintMt. a telegram
from Go, Compliell, Wyoming Territory.
giving infortuationl that-the party u-ho went
to North Park In ;searel, of missing miners
had returned. In addition to those heretot
tore reported. there Arent found the body tit
one man nainetlYandyke and another suppol—
vd to be Wilcox. Letters written by Van
dyke, found near his - beldr.. Indicate Ova the
Cleo ordered hlrn an - ay the day previouieto
his death. All miners have left North Park.
=2
The President and ramify will leaee to-mar
tow for Lome Branch.
BRIEF TELEGRAMS
—Lady. Franklin arrived at Omaha Tester
day. from 6Juk.
—The Georgia Democratic Convention lies
been celled for iugu.,t th.
—Thirty-time persons died from ,tin. , .r..ke
In Nnm York citi on Tne....lay.
The Denirrerat MAtte mi,n•
icau Inr,ts at 11.• t
--The rather at st. Louiscontinues iiry.
Mercury at noun; 3 P.M. ICO; 6P. N. 94.
°emit. Prussian bllnlster..ls-
New York. but refuses to receive 'visitors.
—Arrangements arn'Perfeeting torn mass
meeting Of Germans In Fuocull Hall, Boston.
—The weather at New York - yesterday wan
cooler. but there werc• sixteen fatal ratios of
caustroke:
—A moss meeting of Ger:mini was held at
oinalm last night to take step.. for sitbstan
t MI aid to Prusilia
—ln Dayton. Ohio. Toonday night. D. W.
Stott - art A: Co.'s blind factory - was ilt 7 iitroyed
.hy lite. Logs eIXI.OOd.
—Jefferson Davis lett 3teniphis yesterday,
via the southern mail route, for Pasrope, to
bring his family home• -
-Orders have been received at Portsmouth
to fit the steamers Narragansett and Califor
nia foram Immediately.
•
--St a meeting of New York Cotton mer
chants yesterday an association was formed
to build a cotton exchange.
—The Wisconsin Commksioners to lo
cate a new insane nagium have fixed on
Oshkosh as the proper place.
----Wm. Erode:it:h.. of Cincinnati, on Tues
day, after putting his ',rife on the steamship
Silesia at Nev.- 1 ork. dropped dead.
—At . Lyuchburgb, Va.. yesteitlay. E.C. Ran
dolph was shot dead by two brothers named
winibish, during a dispute about land.
' —Recorder ' , wilt, at Detroit. yesterday sen
tenced Virginia Doyle twenty yearn to the
House of Correction for poisoning - tier. mother.
—The weather hm been fearfully hot in
Chicago for the past eight or ten day., the
thermometer averaging tC3 in the shade. Yes
terday it stood 06 at floe o'clock.
—II. F. Lindsay, who was shot for the se
ductionof ids wile's slater by Capt. W. F.
Hayward, her father, at Chester. Va., on
Tuesday. died yesterday morning. •
—lt is stated that United States Senator
-Revels WKS ejected from a street car In Lou
isville on Tuesday, on account of his color.
and that jin will bring suit for damages.
—A conductor and an engineer of the
s;orthern Railway were arrested at Ports
mouth yesterday on a charge of usmslaughter
by causing the death of engineer Clark on the
13th.
-4. Olhbons, chairmen or 1.111 Executive
Committee, calls a general convention -of
renlans to meet at Cincinnati, August Z3d, to
take advantage of European complications In
favor of Ireland.
•
—ln the case of the Richmond (Va.) elec
tion, Judge Oreigon yesterday decided that
the violation of the law In one ward of the
city vitiated the late municipal eleetion, and
that another mutt be held.
—Sults arising out of the lust September
gold plank. at New York, have been trans.
ferred to the Supreme Court at Nest York.
The sults number sLateco and the total
amount of declaims is - '
--Col. Hartwell, special Indian agent: has
returned to Denver from North Park, Colo
rado. He found the bony of Vandyke. who
has been missingeince the Indian raid,' short
distance from his cabin, shot through the
head. The trail of the Utes. who were In the
Park at the time, was followed for two 0r...
bat he, did not overtake them, and returned.
rEISTEXARIANS.—TiIe WO Sir. lieorge
T'ernewall Lewis, it Is stated, expressed a
i-erious doubt whether there is' any satis
factory evidence of a liuman being ever
having attained the age of one hundred
tears The recent celebration of the one
hundredth birthday of PUebe Thomas;
in Chester county, Fa., was inupport.l by
the niost undeniable evid e nce; but the
Londiin .&ho cites in disproof of Sir
Georde Lewis' assertions, the note of a
certain Jacob William Lunig, who just
died at the age of one hundred and three
years, one tnotmth and four days. The
evidence in the case is singularly good,as
Lunig, in 1;99, insured his lift, and then
reported his age at 32 years. At that
.time there was no reason to overstate his
agr, because lie would thereby have in.
cNased the premium payable. It is
atited that the amount payable to .the
heirs of !Antic, will be six and a half
times the sum originally insured.
.
Ax amusing conflict occurred recently
between the civil andrnilitary authorities
of Moines, France. It is customary In.
garrison towns for the manager of the
theatre to give a free.bOx to the General
Inicommarld. lien. Des Fortes, now at the
head Of the subdivision quartered at Nits
sues, blalmed • the privilege, which bad
been waived by his predecessor. The
manager ofrqrFA him a box, but he hiiiMst,
ed' upon e particular one, which happened
to be let for the season to a retired judge.
Furious at being reflised:_ he:appealed-to
the General bf the &Tinton, who espoused
his cause, and made A.:representation - JO
the Prefect, in consequence :of which the-
Municipal Council of Ni.64lell . siras ordered
to hold a special meeting and pass arso..
lotion compelling the manager to.:compgy,
with: the wishes of Gen. Des Portal. • The
Council met as desired, but, contrary to
the desire of the Prefect, voted .nsmni
mouldy against the General's pretensions:
Of course it ran only be by an abuse of
the military Government that a - General
claims a right to be on the free• list of a•
theater. • •
IMili
PITTSBURGH, 'THURSDAY, JULY 21. , 1870
THE PRESS ON THE SITUATION
AN informal declaration of our neutron.
ty in the war between. France and . Notch
tionnany has been sent abroad in the form
of instructions to American foreign minis
tors and coimails. Food. arms, sad lanai
Pons of war are to be sold to either party
to the conflict, but no enlistment of troops
will he permitted in this COMltry. This,
it is to he hoped, will put au and to the
pi:fmasitions for rinsing indeperidnit corps
11111011 g the French and tiertnane.—N.
Tribtt II C.
ANY interferenes , by France 'with the
neutrality of Belgium will Involve the in.
tervention of Britain as an. native ally of
the Prussians; for not only in she bound
by treaty to defend the inviolability •of
Belgian territory, but she has every rea
son ao dread the expansion of France
toward the North Sea ; whence In time of
Sear the Francis cruiser. might look down
mob the best part of England'. ammo..
cial Marine, and command her entire - Wile
wig; the continent. The sympathies of
tireat Britain are c e miequently strongly
with Prussia, and in spite of the Euglish•
man's thrifty predilection- for peace, it do
possible that an alliance with . 'Kdisg ,} Wie
liatu_would even now be re'veived in Lon
don with enthusiasm. England, on •the
other hand, by remaining neutral in *the
inspending conflict, will reap elm - min:mope.
casuistry profit collie commercial agent of
all the unfortunate belligerents.
lirssta; if she takes part at all in the
war, will side with Prussia ; hat at pres_
cat she seeing dispossed to husband - her
resources and 'saliently await her oppor
tunity in the East. An !Ong as chic re
niniva Austria promises to preserve
a neut ral att it ude, which seems to be decid.
edly her beet policy. Italy is uncertain.
HsAland and Sweden and Norway profesl
neutrality; and may perhaps lee able to
keep their`profesedons. The evidentlean•
inn of Spain towards Napoleon indicates.
that this whole moyemeut,—the fictitious,
grievance, the declaration of war on false
pretenses,—.lord lams arranged beforehand
bevorean the :Emperor and tien.:Prim.--
I 'NI - tit it Pitt sSi is ill erne against
divided France. For, although the ,dis.
patches hitherto have led - us to believe
that France is. united - , if the dispatch of
Mr. Smalley meats anything, it is that
there is a .signilicatit division in French
public sentiment. The. opposition of M.
Tillers scents rather captious, considering
Lml ungorly he urged a war kith Prussia
tater . Endows. 'Tito cause . then is no less
cause now. France, however. is ready;
and, — although Prussia loot not -been
surprised, it !wenn, us if France had the
advantage.
There may be high principles in • thin
war which, in time, will be apparent.
I,oking at it coldly, it is selfish unjust,
and unnecessam and the strongest argu
ment against tin' 'cello - of the turopetin
system. When Napoleon and • Bismarck
i-na disturb the peacolonf the' world in
forty eight hours, there) is neither free.
than ran safely—and it is very , hard to sew
even civilization itself.--N. .Standrult.
only thing to be done Y (imitates
in the rnited States for their brethren
who are lighting and suffering in the war
abroad is to collect money for'the wound
ed, for the widows and •orphans of the sol
diers, and possibly. also, to send out - rein
forcement s of capable, surgeons, who will
always find enough to •10.:—Nefi Yorker
•
. Tor. critical' thunder of the London
booms and cracks about Sapoleon's
ears. With its well known 'fur', but In its
arensations as well as its coueluilone we
hove the inemoiy - of many ;Via inaCCUIW.
sues to restrain our implicit
. winfidence.
The young barrister who forges the titan.
leritolts for the .Jupiter of the I.ndOn
puss 10 the Onslictint of a panny s line. $4
iorztri.l•l wrung 'at tlw• atut it scit of
1 .- 4 commentaries. and spends tlw
rest of his time in correcting himself.
lie AF ilv melawrepreaents, tbe,soli4 di
plomatic sentiment which stands a long
distance back of the Time... and carries
the traditions of the Palmerston school
whirl built up England's prosperity by a
o,tree of careful friend ship toward Prance.
—Bog. Pant.
Tut; situation as regards the age and
experience of the principal European
commanderspromises to be not unlike
what it was when NAPOLEON L took the
command of the Army of Italy,onl it
would not be surririeing if nomerkettion
appeared whose rine would depend, like
that wonderful man's, upon disregarding
military traditions, and snatching victory
while trampling upon .professional con.
,eutions. Youth and audatify, as well as
genius. are essential to - tine power to do
this, and these finalities will perhaps soon !
be forthcoming in men as obscure at the
present moment as was the young ('or-
clean, NAPOLEON BoN.trAn - rE, in 1790.
.V. V, Time..
• l.
le the great claims pu t forth for the
iteedlegun aretrue ' an has searely been'
doubted since the battle of Sadowa; if it
combines twice the projectile power, with
greater' certainty of aim and rapidity of
firing, thou the "Prussians have an great
,4
all'advantage, relatively to he French, In
the ass of this- arm as th t
.2; found in it
against the Auntrians. Ile Chitesepot
does not differ Materially fru, any other
good breech•loading rifle. It-lias no ele.
menu, of peculiar or HIS ',ODORS power.
Ou'llm conttary, thoAustr ens soon learn
ed • a dread of of the ne silogutt, and a.
conseionnues of their inability 'to cope
with it, only comparable io the fear that
bow-aniharrow warriors hive of the dash
of gunpovi - der.--Chicago Tribune. !
i
THERE will, of _course, Inc an interrup-,
lion to the strong current( of emigration
from tiermany .11 the: Fnitted Slates,
which bas been ineromling • ein ' largely In
volume for some years Amu. Last year
we receie'ed 132.537 immigrants front the
tierman States, and in the last live years
not leis than 600,000. • This in a matter of
great connequence to the (whole country,
but particularly - to the 'Vestern Staten.
The Frerdin immigration is comparatively
unimportant, the. adding to our numbers
from that country in 1860 being'but 3,153,
and not more than 24,000 in the last five
yearn. But blentomy, besides sending tin
population in large masses, has bend Ter
nishing considerable quantities of money
foninveatmentin nog tlonernintmt .bends,
md . for - railway and' other,enterprines.
This will naturally cease during tine con
tinuance of the war. Other dlsturbances
have been previously noticed, spehan the
littctnation ittlite prices of American se
cufitleeind temporari derangements in
the gold market, all of which unsettle
business affairs and affect values with i :'pos
for the time, although vrehavenathin to
do with the war and are far away from its
immediate turmoil. So, it 'will be, moat
that we have tannelo look.. upon - this
ro
Eupean strife whir ' other eyes than
those of indifferent spectators.—Philndel.
phia Ledger.
Tire Pidetibi# side: of the, question may
be slimmed np as follows. gleaned horn
the Most intelligent and reliable eioureea :
They claim (is conversation) that they
are the most refined and best educated
people on the faux of the earth; and their
school eyatintr lathe most perfect.llbey ..
have beed-Onable to perfect 'this' syele'm
under the lead of Germany as Germany,
but are able to do -so under tale hiad of
Prussia. This system of refinement they
propose to extend; and contend that they
may use all means. even if not legitimate,
to further theobjecti.
.They offer to Spain
a Prussian prince as king in furtherance
thereof, the objective point ; being to form
among the German States A unity in pref
erence to a Uition, since a union can lioe.
disintegsfird by any meni4 thereof bpi
many qbjetting to ant i ea schentet
They hope by thfi war tol ealizi (what
was merely ,Itall'eant , itfittorciry) that
progress wialkli they alarm , ne of a
higher order Of knowledge r —Philarfelphia
17.fir-aes the area atthe contest is widen•
ed by thesemeµory- of Holland, Belgium
or fieitr t ellihd til t e coming clunguign
present the leading characteristics of
grant's campaigns before.Bichmoid,
series of struggles between fortified
lines within cannon sliot; andoften Within
inwiket shot of eachwther.-,-Pkg/tdelphia
•
THC far, nearlyy all the news of; the
war we have had has 'been French news,
and That 4ct : pturt be remembered in
. .
judging of the situation. : fflral - London
papers point out how grossly file telegraph
misrepresented the opposition -of M.
Thiers to the war, and, thcinth the enthu.
siaani of the - Parisituta in prnbably not ea
aggerated, the truth an be that the
--sober judgment of France is against the
Emperor.—Phildifelplaia P. ,
-Tam design of the French Emperor
doubtless is.to wage veal upon a ;erman
territory. It is- the favorite ambition of
the soldiers of France to be - led across the
Rhine, and the whole nation would be in
spirited by it. Resid'e's, it !is a serious
mutter to have a great army of invaders
quartered upon at country. It was there
fore an effective stroke of police on the
part of Napoleon to demand of die South
1 ,4'11111M states yesterday Yu lui : lnedinto
decision on the question - of nentriditv.
HP knew that they could not avoid ftl.
l eav i ng prussla; but that If be should as
tack them before they had openly taken
part with her, he avoid pat himsdlf i .j,lain.
lv in the :wrong. 7, % ccordlugly. lie drives
them to a decisimi at once; and thins ripens
the•way for liimself to attack any mitt of
the Berman frontier.. The ralatiniite is
peculiarly exposed to attack on the side
of France, and might 'he desiiinted by a
detached corps of. the French army in a
ft,. days, perhaps before Prussia •
mild
occupy it; and the Emperormay pos. ibly.
have hoped that this fact would cause
Bavaria to hesitate la•fore - taking 1 p his
challenge.
When the seat of war mutt needs he s
territory perfectly familtOr; to the It esters
on both sides, every mile.'ef whie t l et s,'
neat made n special stndy, : anal opoli
which the energies of a nation have been
spent for many years -to make it impene
trable to tin invader, the difficulty of an
ticipating the first eflinta of the eon,
Instants is greatly heightened. N iither
army ran leave its own position. fair he
hind it - without .facing :SUMP of those
wonderful fortresses, which on, to tide
century what the vast 1./ethic cathedrals
were to a more religious a . O, the highest
efforts of its genius and its renour,,,
;the.one side Verdun, MeHs and Strivharg:
the other, 'Saar eoldentz.. Mainz
and Hastadt. To stone-Snell wo r k s as
these is impoSsible ; to lay-siege to th e ,
is to dear out the spirit and resources; of
the unity; to leave them behind is perilous.
In. an 441,1E45T campaign On the liltine
efficient gunboats would be invidualile to
Napoleon ; lint he has none there, Itel can
not bring them without violating the
neutrality of Holland, and to Iritiid them
is the work of many nionthar--..V.
ihy.Poott.
Composition of the North-lierumn
Army.
Maturated for the Gazette.'
The North german army has s guard
and 12 l'nuvincial Army Wrpt, tI army
~.-orpe, the I2th, consists of the unity of the
Kingdom of Saxony.) Every two army.
corps according to their -ntinber°. coast i.
tutu au army (grand division , of which
there aroconsequently - aft. The gaunt.
corps has two infantry ilhisions of 2 bri•
rade' and ono cavalry division of 3 bri
gades. The 12 army-corps - have ouch
2 divisions and the 11th $.6
3,1 division, the. contingent of
llesse liarmstacit. 'Each division has
2. brigades of infantry and 1 of
cavalry. Each infantry brigade has 2
regiments, and the 2 infantry brigtides of
guards and the 12th. 1.1 th,• Nth, anti33tl
.infantry_tirlindes have each 8 regitnents.•
Besides these 4 regiments of infantry (be
longing to the Bth Artily-corps ) form the
garrison of May/ nek. The I.2.tii`A nity.corps
has also one rogiment at, fusileers. .1.
Anuy corps have each I battalion of Ja
gem, the guard-corps, the: oth . and 12th
have emli hatallioni, and the 11th has
3. II of the cavalry. brigades have each
2 regitnenta, 3 have 4 each, and 14 have
3 regiments each. Each Army-corps has
un artillery brigade. In•ttio Unlade and
eight A:my.corps them brigades Inive
ail. I n•gimeni of field and I of niege
artillery, ill tile other 4 each 1 regsweitt of
field und 1 detachment of siege artillery.
Finally, inch army corps has one batul
lion of pioneer* and one Of trains; the
11th has besides a - company of ploneerit
anal one of trains of- - the ilessedlarmstiidt
division, •
There. are, therefore, in all 13 army
corps with 23 divialons , altogether 34' in.
fantry, 28 cavalry, and. 13 artillery bri•
moles, with 118 regiments of infantry, 7il
of cayalry„ 18 hatallions of Jagers, 1;11 re
ginietha of field artillery, 10+ aiege• at ,
tillery, 13i hatallions oZ pioneers and 131
of rappers anti miners.
From Prusala come :17 regiMents of in'.
funtrf, 13 batallions of Jagers, rogi'
nients '9l tavalry, 12 of field artillery, 12
hatalliens of Menem.", and 12 of mappers
and miners, • .1
From Oldenburg, one regiMent of in
fantry,,one of cavalry and two 'batteries.
- .
From the seen States of Thuringen.
regiments of Infantry.
Fran Anhalt, one regiment of infantry.
From Sunny, 9 regiments of - -infantry,
.2hatallions of Jagers. ti regiments of cav
alry, 1 of field and I nt• siege. artillery
and one batallion - each of pioneers and
'From Meckleebbrir, 2 regiments of its.
fantr)., 2 of cavalry. I batillion of .lagers
and 4 batteries.
Fropi firtinswick, f regiment of infan
try. lof cavalry and I. battery. •
From flessiebarmstadt, 4 regiments of
infantry, 2 bf cavalry, 2 batallions of
Jagers, hatallion'eacb of pioneers and
miners and 6 batteries. • •
The standing army h. one (lettere]
field marshal, one' commissar-. general.
41' generals. 10 lieutenant gcnemle.ll2
major generals, 144 colonels of infantry,
4(1 of ~mralry, of ) artillery, 11. of the
engineer corps and two of miners.
I. The anuidingarmy or the field inapt,
hare: . •
A—lnfantry 1, 24, igenious of guards
with 17,035 men in peace and 27,451 1111'11
in war. 2. Infantry of the line, :12.1 ha.
milieus with 1711.061 men itl ponce and
:120,121 own in wir.l degrees and Sharp
shooteni, 18 batallions with 11,1112 Men in
peace and 10,11(8 ig war. Total infantry
8(18 batallions with 200,812 men in ,pence
and 871,080 in 'weir.
•
B—Cavalry I. uards; 8 req imeuts OE4O
squadrons of 4,207 men in peacr.:„.and
war. 2. Line Cavalry,lB Cuirssnier, 21
Dragoon, 16 husr, 48 1. 7 111 an and 2 Lan.
ear regimental sa 76 regiments of 379
squadrons with 11.1,008 men in hears and
40,137 in war. - .
That the cavalry appears to he stronger
in time of peace than in Wur, in because u
portion of
. thetn (fr 4 squadronit of 9099
men) is used to garrison fortresses in war
time,
(k--1
C 2 -9)tithi:lll4illeiry,fa' regiments with
201 billidriee, 804 guns and L'3,9411 men in
peretuf, and 214 batteries, 1222 guns and
41;439 men in war.
Li—Pioneers..7J companies, in 134. ha.
talliona Witli 0597 men in peace". 8,030 in
E—Sappers and Miners, 27 contlinnies
in 14 bstallions of 3Arrl men in peace and
4,47i4 in war. •
Total strength of the standing army: la
peace 287,484 men, with 804 field pierce.
In war 311,826 men with 1,272 field guns.
11. Renerve — Troepe--These are formed
upon the mobilization of en -army, and
contain, tor.orery infantry regiment, one
batallion, for !every Jager. and Sharp.
Shooter batallion one - company, for every
Cavalry regiment onwegnadron, loran Ar
tillery brigade \ four batteries; and for
each batallion ot Miners one detaelutient.
Total,, 1333,072 min and 26,700 meehonics;
making In all 10,672 men.— • -.
in. Garrisonroops--(Landweht) I. In
fantry:l2o= „lattidwehr—Bat. 132 men
(nucleus) tripe and 12,072 men in war:
199 Landwebr : Bat. 3,382 men in peace
and 200,144 men in war, 181 ager reserve
detachments 7,246 men in war, total in
time of war
l ui
9,302 men. 2. Cavalry :
64'equadrone 1 r garrisoning of fortrpattes.
3. Artillery : 1 regiments of lieavy ar
tillery,o2 corn ies with 0,230 men. in
pence *IA 32, naen itt Wpi. - 4: Pioneeni:,
8,684 men. i
Total garrisoatroops in wartime 263,082
• COMBLBED !1 DLNOTD. OF TUE AIDIY. -, '
• , Vt. ':, ,". * , In Pence. ,'- In War.
1, Field .Army. - ... 287,441 641,8:A
2 . Re B orro Tfo?Ps. •.----- . 186,672
3. Garrison Troops.. 13,046 266,082
Total 300,517 957,5R0
Theseare merely the privates and non
commissioned officers.. To these are still
to be added 12,098. officer, in peace sod
15,009 In' war,' 2,250 'gene d' armies and
•
1.71:3 rn I tx in the lllilitlay School,.
These will nmke the pexpe Krengtl3:ll9,-
3.3 S Men and the wer etrellgth 1177,262
133313. .
L Time of service: Standing Artily and
Lantheehr of the let call, I• 2 yearn—three
yearn' Kervice under the tit , four itr the
ret,erve and live in the Lan7l,celtr, The
'2,1 call of Land wohr from the :32d to the
ll;th year) is only called to twat' arms in
garrhani
With thiaThowever, the war strength
is not exhausted, for no 101) 001) men are
added each year to the army, so there are
always ...WOOL) men subject to th.• tom
:mina of the State utter the expiration of
the aervice period. Thins, in • fact, the
Northollerman rionfedenttion really. COD
!rola more than
=
Metz, Thionvillc and Forbnch Stroh.
epic Points on the Frontier.
3letz, Thionville , and Forbad, are three
- b utes situaled •in flue Moselle Department
of France,flu the vieinity of Mach
both nrmiek are loncentrati'ng:
Silioll9 lao lietiCribed no (1)51W9.,
• .. . .
-• Metz, the\ chief town of the 14.1mrtnient
of the Nl,,selle, is situated nt the con
fluence of Ithe loselle and the Ssille.
The population is Aunt sixty-five thous
and. The I tut until 'FI:Iti was nothing
but an its.'tubing,' of narrow sir - vets, -
allele and 1, slly built. It oats muter the
~
:Idlye mind, that-alien of the Marshal of
Belle Isle that it began to be rejuvenated
and limatented. Thin' impulse otter.
given was tot arrested; perhaps, indeed,
it went too far. More than one souvenir
l'of the and Id ages has been destroyed
it
whirls lII4i ll'have given .
previousus snore
1,1 . 11.,,. for which people search now in
vain. Butt we cannot regret the transfer
motion sari has giYeti Metz beautiful
streets and courts, good wharves, well
built and 'delightful promenades. 'lilt
illltlfie/Illte 4:olkrl.ll:ted solidly- 'rrf stone,
are genendly of ti very simple architecture
111111 Lay, rarely four thorn. A great
number have gardens 'attached. ts,!mite
streets oni,the right bank of the Moselle
are very steep and are . intp,e,salds . for
carriages. • 't 'entitled now ill narrower
limits than it IV:LA formerly. the city of
Metz beholds a part of its mountaitis, its
abbeys 111111 its ellUrrilt,S repfiteed by itti
menoe' fortifications.. It Ilan become 011 t
of the.toost stnntgly fortified Places in,
Vntuce. Its lo,uttlivonti Mention,lls its
strongest claim to renown that 'it has
114,.11. been ttlkell Sill, it. tins • bl,ll our
rettudad by a wall. . .
,
It was that it might not debase rtself
that this proud city refused n pas . ?age.to
the armies id the lloly Alliance when they
evacuated the French territory. It made
them cross the Moselle on a bridge. which
it 'constqlsted milder the ramparts. in or
tlf, to nrfialt Itself the shame and grief of
'such n ,mectacle as would be afforded be
the passage of foreign armies through
the walls.
The fortified wall of Metz, et, which
they.luve not ceased working Mill, French
domination begun, and which the role_
bratid Cormontaigne almost entirely al
tered a little more than a hundred yearn
logo, is no important, on :account of its
strength and extent, that, all army of nt
beret 120,000 mien; with an extraordinary
amount of war material, would be- needed
to undertake its selge. There only re.
main of tire fortiticationa of thy sixteenth
century the entrenchments of Guise, the
tkrpenish tower, the gate of the' Ger.
mans, and Lthe tower D'En . fer The
gate of the GOrmans seems to have liven
preserved to lriyo 'an idea of all those
which formerly existed, and, which hare
been demolished as useless since tIM
adoption of the new system of fortifica.
tions.., They were hot strong castles with
four towers surmounted with batteries,
and - having,each a castellan. There are
noticeable on the walls of the. tower.
DIM, !raven of Simms]; ennitnn balls.
nail there to shown therein the dungeon
trhere,tluring nix 11161011 K. the monks were
shut UP who plotted to-deliver the !place
to the imperial troops. The approaches
to the town are defended by two forts,
six lunettes and one earth work. Thetis
two forts were built by. Cormontaigne„
that of Bell,Croix, with the lunette of
Chenenu—presents a development of gal
leries of mines about • 10,000 metres—
crowns from the east the heights from
winch one caw leap into the city. The
other, called Fort Moselle, or the Double
Crown, is situated toward the north. Its
works, formed •of ditches full of water
and tanking fortifications, make it very
difficult of attack by the cannon of the
enemy.
. Thionvillc, the chief town of the Can
ton, and district of the department of
Moselle is shunted on the left bank of the
Moselle. Throskssis Vas, the home of
. Theodon, according to some: Ty lon rifle,
the habitation of two rivers, (recording to
others, who follow Celtic' origins, up.
poured for the first time In the recitals of
the historian . Fredegaire. It was to
'Lionville, saps this historian, that Pepin
the Little, in 753, taut his grandson
Charles, at the age of 12 year's, to visit
Pone Etienne 11. Charlemagne loved to
stay at Tltionville. He therepassed Hue winter, after lie had beaten the Saxons
Ile rented there after the content of Lom
bardy. Ile there celebrated the feasts of
. 'Noel and Pamirs." to relieve the grief l,
catoisal by the death of queen Hildegarde.
Ile there called. an assemblage of the
chiefs of the nation to submit to them the
will which &titled his estates among his
three sons. 'rltionville took 'the part 'of
the Count of texembourg• under the .
sovereignty of tile Emperors, when.. tha t
battle occurred lietween Elisinge and- Uck
ange, where the slaughter was such, says
the historian I3ertels, Abet the blood of
the conshatatite, running Into the Teuech
and thence into the Moselle, reddened this
river its for as Thionville. Perhaps no
city has changed masters as often as this
one. it belonged to the Seisms in 1443,
the Duke of Bourgogne in 1514,twn years
later to Ladish. V., Icing of Hungary and
Bohemia, to - the Dukes of Bourgogne
from 1467 to 1471,7nsperial Ilona, of
Hapsburg up to 1599, to the Kings of
Spain up to 16441 at last to France, of
which it originally funned apart. About
1581: a band of partisans commanded by
lirotienstein, ravaged the suburbs of Thi.
olivine. A butcher named Vassar obtain
ed consent front the blevernor that ahead
of one hundred men, under the command
of a captain, should make a sortie, and
undertook to ' guide this troop himself
across the woods, to bring them agaitud .
the enemy. Hardly, however, had they
left the city when the conker, refused to
allow himself to be led, and continued his
march by the Luxembourg read. Vassar
left him and betook himself to the midst
of the wood, persuaded that he would
find there a group of partisans. ' He was
not deceived. A detachment, who were
carrying off the Count of Argentaux from
his chatean,had halted in an open space.
o ur but c h e r glided through the trees,
came suddenly upon the enemy, and,
firing bin musket shouted, "'Chin way
dragoons! This way infantry We have
them'." The partisans, surprised, imag
ined that it whole army was in pursuit
of thesis. They fled, abandoning their
prisoner to Vassar, who took him to- the
city amid the acclamations of the inhabi
tants. In 1814, Deneral Hugo, counitand
lug the, place, bravely sustained the-attack
of a Prussian army corps,and forced them
to retire with considerable ham. Thies.
tine Nrpo the birthplace of Merlin, the
P'resi*nt of the Convention, of the three
Genehils Merlin, brothers of the preced
ing,.and of Thizion, a deputy to the Na
tional Convention. During the thirteenth,
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Thlon
title was the beat fortified plate in the
Luxembourg country. One sees there
yet the tower Aar Peal which serves as
a magazine, some houses bniltagsinst the
castle, preserving traces of the old wall.
The actual fortifications are those of 'Vali.
ban and of COrruentaigne, which. have
preserved the, bastions,-: rebuilt of brick,
anterior to 1634. • The shape of theplace
is an irregular heptagon, with half moons,
oruntergards, and lunettes. The !iniprr;
Mace of-the' town is far from correspond
ing to the defensive works.- his composed
of a few streets and. courts. No one en.
ters there Without having to answer two
questions: "Is the gentleman a stranger?
-Is the gentleman a soldier?"
Forbuch, the chief town of Canton sad
of the District of Sarregnemines, of the
Department i:rf Moselle, is an admirably
situated town. It is on adellghtful plain
at the foot of a mountain called Schloss-
VOL. LXXXV.-- NO. rc,
berg. and derives some importance from
its custom' house. It was formorlv the
chief town of grand seigniory, and for Its
defence a castle won built up.)n the bile of
a mountain. The ruins are Fain visible
there. • In 1718 the seigniory,was erected
into a duchy. In 1512 (*Mules V. estab
lished his cutup in this cpuntrv, when he
uvus preparing to lay seiile tp Met . ?„. ,The
town of Forbad), tiposed of narrow
and winding .sirects surrounded by
sandy mountains and large forests. The
roads from Sarrenuemines and Sanelouis
meet there, and Make one of the princi
ple outlets of .Ileriusny. It is the country
of Houchard, a general of the French Ilr
toddies)) armies, who - died in 179:1 on the
revolutionary scatiiild. To.day. Forliach
is given over to industry. line should
nut leave Forbad) without taking time to
visit the Homan ruins of Micropolis,
which are four kilometers on the ancient
road from Metz to Strasbourg, and the
Sainte.Croi I lapel, situated in the midst
of trees on the slope of a mountain. For ,
bad) in the last railroad statist) on the
French soil.
=I
IVas fOrlll,ily a city of .the tierthan 4 . 011-
Ceder:l6m. the old Zolverein, and was gar
risoned Inv. Austrian and. Prussian iroops.
Its peculiarly dangerous islsition, being
on the left of the Maine and grsatly cov
eted by thi• Fre , inch,;„ led 'to its fortifien•
!ions being4of the strtnigeSt character. : It
was originally garriconed by 8,006 men:
hut after the decisive defeat of Austria inn
the fahr contest, it MAN agreed by the
treaty of Prague that its fortifications
'Mould be dismantled and its garrison
withdrawn. This stipulation Was insist
ell on be Ann.tria, but the Prussians have
never carried out tine cmulitions,and May
ence is at this moment tint, of the strong
est cities in the world. The four lines of
works are greatly strengthened by nut
works sold detached works ;Intl . by Fort
which is Inin,the upper bank of
tine Main. 'Fine city of Alayence is on
isoite tfl lit. 11101/th Of this river, which
here falls into the !thine about Invents'
miles west of Frankfort, with which it is
connected hp a railway. A bridge sonic
l.ninio feet long connect'', it with the forti
fied suburb 14 ( * .tel. It has now a very
large garri4oil and is commanded by
Prince Waldemar, of Schleswig-Holstein.
. .
,fiAsTAtor -
Is on the righq sulk, of the Intim% und 18
very st ronglv fortified, It in in the terri
tory of tht . den, and formerly held 8
garrison for the tierman Confederation,
IM! Sillef , BBdows its garrison has been
Trunsiati. It is situated • 4frie fourteen
tulles e.outh of Carlaruhe . ..andsome'eighty
from Strasbourg; and will Unquestiona
bly be a rtoint of capital importance dur
ing the corning struggle. . Its fortifica
tions ore Mt the Vauban system, and de
dared dared to. e the perfection of engineering,
but eXpe r' VW, 1100 proved that earth
works a ! stronger than . stone walla,
There ar three large forts on the little
river whi .11 runs past Ilastadt, which have
many bastions, wer ditches, curtains, gla
/
cis and I nettes, but die chief strength
will proJably be in the fortified camp
which th . Prussian-, are about to form
there. ShOuld it he necessary to with.
draw its !garrison; it. could easily be re
',faced ht; Baden soldiers., The 0 rand•DukC
having shown the most unmistakable
symputhY for the Prussian cause. . '
. .
Is the fortress parr excellence of Prussia
and is regarded as the tlibraltar of the
Rhine, opposite to eol.llelliZ. It is connec
ted with this town by a bridge of boats.
Part of the fortifications lie at the'foot of
the bi11.41.18* feet in height, and almost
perpendicula., but since , it was taken by
the French in 1196, and again in 1799, its
fortifications have been trebled and quad
rupled in at reno h. and the entire hill bus
'been turned into a fortress. It has been
thought uneecessary to 'scarp the steep
sides. though it is on record that a British
tourist made the ascent to the intense as.
tonisliment of a sentry. The garrison
atnonnts to 14.000 men, and harkitherto
been under • the command of I.lovernor
Prendzymaki, who belongs to the Eighth
Anne Corps., commanded by General Her
wartb, whose headquarters are In Cp.
blentz, on' the opposite side of , the river,
The troops are furnished with water by
an artesian well, and the fortress contains
a steam cooking apparatus of un
exampled magnitude. Provisions for
three- years are continually kept
in store, and the . greatest pre
cautions arc taken to pr . event a knowledge
of the fortifications falling into the hands
of strangers. Ehrenbreitstein has been
besieged ninny times py the French, and
was taken only An one !occasion, in 1799,
when the garrison woo forced to surren
der for lack of supplies. The chief dan
ger now is front the hills in the rear.
which command the lower ranges of for
tification from the increased power of
modern projectiles; but though much of
die citadel might be laid in ruins it would
seem impossible to take it by regular as
sault, or by a coup de turtia. Eltrenbreit
stein is mounted with 000 pieces of arta
' Ivry, and its tines cost $.3,730,0(N). Coblentz
may be considered under the same head.
It is situated on the confluence of the Mo.
!wile and the Rhine; and its fortifications
were built by the famous Vauban, being
improved afterward by Montatembeck.
Ito garrison is errs large, and Is chiefly
from the Eighth Corps. In time of war
Coqlentz and Ehrenbreitatein will accom
modate 100,000 men. Cobleutz was taken,
by the French Directory, iu 1794, after a
very fierce struggle. The French - built a
stone bridge over the Moselle here. and
fortified it with a tele du punt bristling
with cannon.
Oar Trade with the Blockaded Stales
Our imports from the States oldie Zoll
verein, in the,year enditii June 30, 1868,
were to the amount of $21,568,988. Prus
sia brought us $11,000,000, and Saxony
$5,000,000. Among the leading articles
were: Cotton Hose, $2,522,239; Laces,
$084,000: Clothing, $815,000; Hops. $333,..
000: Pig Lead, $546.000; Silk, $713,000;
Cloths, $3,810,000; Women's Dress Goods,
$851,000: Webbings, $603,000: - 'Velvets
and Ribbons, $1,200,000; Furs. $900,000.
These are. among the larger aggregates.
Included in the list are paper. pencils,
books, pipes, beads, steel sundries, toys.
dolls, Sc., &c. Everybody knows what a
world of trifles and gimcracks form the
staple of a German "fancy goods" store.
The articles Imported are not made here,
many of thein, and cannot be. So if the
tear lasts, look out for a rise in Christmas
toys and presents. During the year end
ing June 30, 1869, our exports to Germany
were $39,427,403, including gold. Cotton
was pat at $14,000,000, Petroleum at $3,-
000,000, Tobacco at $5,000,000. Lard at
$1,400,000, and Gold and. Silver at about
$lO,OOOOOO. 'We sent also in Sewing Ma
chines to the value of $377,000, Dry
Goods $330,000,..0nns $441,000. In the
year ending June 30, 1868, our exports
amounted to $45,945,864, of which $43,-
3811,384 Were to Atlantic and $0,477;t36 to
Mediterranean pints. This is 'a large
trade to be erLdangered by the sear, and
the pricea of French goods will undoubt
edly stiffen in the niarket.tf the blockades
are made effective, and the extreme pro
tectionists will have . the great gratitica,
ties of seeing the "products of foreign
looms' kept out of out maract.
The Treaty of Paris
no Congress of Paris in 1895 made a
declaration by which the powers that
signed it are bound. The articles are four
in number.- First—Privateering is and
remains abolished. Second—Thu' neutral
flag covers the cargo of the enemy except
contraband of war. Third Neutral
goods, except contraband of war, an, not
seizable under the enemy's flag. Fourth
--Blockades to he obligatory most be
erectly,. It is under these- rules that
_Trance and Prussia conduct their war on
the seas. When the declaration of Paris
was made, the United States were asked
to sign it. This they refused unless the
other powers would agree to further_s
stipulation _that private. property should
be exempt as well from seizure by public
armed cruisers as by prlvateors. In 1881,
Mr, Seward tendered the accession of this
country to the Paris'Declaration, but it
was declinetrty England and France un
less to apply prospectively: So far the
States of Europe bane not excepted the
ultimatum of the United States, "that
free ships make free goods" equally
igainat privateers and nifflonal vessels.
E
(4
I=
In 1 , 366 Bismarck said to an
•'ln our relations with tine Vnited States,
1 never had a doubt. The Tory party in
Prubsia, to which I ant supposed to belong,
at the outbreak of your war besought the
King to recognize the South. I opposed
it inflexible. To me it AVas dear that the
North only could be tlw true ally of
Prussia; with the South we' had nothing
in emnmon. The tiovernment of Prussia
never wavered in its friMulship for yours.
It is n traditional policy with as. - Frederl
irk the tireat.was. 1 thi tk, the first Euro
pean sovereign to 4,4 gnize Your indti•
pendence. 1 alit hearti y glad to know
that America Onder4tands and reciprocates
the friendly feeling-have steadily
•maintainee'
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
Lir Fon PROTIIO,NOTARY,
M. (4. COREY;
=I
071.1131.1,0'
[a -DANCING
• Prol: D. Mayer
Bean thato HI% I riends and the oublte foro
anti he has engaged Turner'. Ilan ht.
Dancing Schol, which sell' beopened for tho re
volition of pupil. on the let of October. Circular%
will he read, in Selitectbaci
Li -P g r Eat i M"" NNELL s'
FIRST MPRTGAUE
7 Per Cent. Bonds.
111' NINETY PER CEYL,
•
AND•
.4ccrited .Interest..
These Hondo ore oecured by FIR ell 3101tTtldi
upon Weed. Etinlytnent and present revenue.
The flood forum of tb oboteet East an
W i est through line f romfnt the e
Ohio ti Hirer to tide
water.
M It A
I p i e n e a l e e ad k y t a r n pd o a ri n n d o n s a e l a dynre lo acnoul lm Mc,
r.tteburati Line ham eonnuand uf Territory
so rich In [entertain fur prollteble rullway (realm
It connects l'ilisburatt and Hanle - lure—tau of
the most ell,rhel Cele, 01 the l'obeit.
. . . .
'II, road r now eartang the intere,
t will he comple•ed in January and ~ L ntht
rotutuAnd the ant and Induettee of the citizen, 1.1
KIHNT NA'rIONAL BANK. I'ITTSDU K:11
CoMMEILCIAI. BANKING CO..
t: A 1.11A1:K. Y CITY
.1,121,011-riumf
•
I)En'ATES?4 - .RTIEO,,ETAYiNug:
It BICT OF PENNSYLVANIA; IN BANKRUPTC-Y_
Mixon. matter of Robert !Dixon and Cuthbert
ferttnerx . Dixon Brothers. benkrupts.
11'o ant District 4. , Prsionlrytnta.m.:
A wnrrunt In Bunkruptcy. Iste been. Issued by
sold Court mrainat the Estate of Robert Dixon
end Cuthbert Dixon. pennant as Drton Brothers.
of the County of AlleghtnYLStete of Pennstire
bta. In said tlbtrlct. who hare been duly adjudged
ankrupts upon petition ofd their creditors. end
the payment of any debt• and the ddllreryttf any
property belonging to sold tomkrupts, to t hern. or
fur their u.. nod the %muster of any property' by
them. are forbidden by Inn. A meeting of the
creditors of sand bankrupts. h o Prove their debts
and chose one or mom A sine. of their estate.
wilt behold at, la Court of Be kruptcy to he hold.
t No. 93 Diamond Meet,. n the City II Pluto
burgh, in Wild dlstrict. nn the ILOTII DAY Ur
AUGUST. A. D. 1870..10 o'clock A.M., At the
men of SAMUEL LLAttrif a lt. Esq..r•otto et the
rs
Registe In Bankruptcy of Id District. • •
A. MUItDOL7I,
T it
V. S. XI rt.! mMessenger.
7 Per Ce t.. Gold
=I
FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS,
Coupon or Registered,
(FREE OF Q. S. TAX,'
=
Burlington, Cedar Rapids
Si Minnesota R. R, Co.
We are still offerinet a limited enentlty for isle
At 90 and Interest.
=
J. EDGAR TU O MPSON , t Trance..
CHARLES L. FROST.
These bonds have do years to rep, are convert
ible at the.option of the holder into the stock of
the Company at par. and the payment of the prin
cipal is provided fur by a sinking fund. Ihe con
vertibility privilege attached to these bonds can.
not fall to tosser them at ea, distant day to com
mand
a
market
but g . shove Par.be
sides paying adaut •per cent. currency. Interest
In the meanwhile. U.S. Flvo-twentles at present
Prices only return 3 per cent., nad 'we regard the
secuCity equally g.
of
nod t greater part of the crud Is
cm
1,
ponres etgd
The established:character of this road, running
or It does through the newt of the most thickly
suttied and richest portion of the crest. State of
lowa. together with its present advanced condi
tion and large casein., warrant us In trnheartat-
Ingly recommending these bonds to 'lnvestor! as.
In every respect. LA undoubted security.
HENRY CLEWS & CO.,
Wall Street, New York
O. MeCLIF.yi 8 CO., rOtOlurgls, Pa
BOWEN & FOX, Philadelphia. .
OUIItTZ & HOWARD, Philadelphia.
DABBER. BOOS. di 1110..-Philailelphla
BeiI4VBFI & BRO., Philadelphia
TOPPOSE O.WHRU dg CO., Philadelphia.
;WILL BE ISSUED
SOON.
PITTSI3VROH; ITS
Industries & Commerce,
=I
FACTS AND 'IGURES
liGro 'th and Present Prosperity
iep 7
Motive Mftnnfactaring Intrtests
OF , PITTSBURGH.
11113113
COPIES OP TIDS VONAZ WILL BE PLACED
Leading Hotels
OFTIIOSEPORTIONI3OFTIIMUNNAWNICII
ANN IN THE BLIOIITESS DISONICIS TILIBU
TARY TO THE.
TRADE OF PMSBURGH.
=be Volumi .11Iliciitabed and Land la a style
not .hltbaelo uncombed en. On onN;Ja,pealtod
aWd6u Deep
Assignttlo -AdVertiSeM
=
MANUFACTURERS Axil usiuss mEN
For their Favors.
.
DAVID , LOWRY,
E. A. MYERS, Publishers.
JANES KILLS
kinaTimirvaelif
IS TILE tiEST AND ciar.ArEn
'ommereial nd Family Newspapn
ELISIIED IN V ?INTERN PENNSYLVANIA.
Sr, farmer. wee sole. or wereben/ should be
, %beet It. , •
Stunk , subscrtberi
Clubs of nee--
Clubs of ten
Al copy Is ftirulsh .0 er,taltonsly to the eat tet , ul)
f Club of ten. Postmaetere see requested to
Mas Aleuts. Ad • .
=!
=GEM
Noll.' ES— , To-Let." &dr. ^ Loot.:'
•lbesrdirsq,"'.h - .. not . exeredigag
INA' It LINES. will At Overfed in rich u.rut Jlll4
tirEsTr-il CENTS: taea"da"..' lieu
CESTS.
•
• WANTS.
. . .
W ATP:•—lvnedintrly, at .i llrat
b. bbb=4,-tb i ;bbri,.;.',i ‘ . ll, 1 4z. — F
Wil-.t to Al
on Conatilaaron Welty and country. App l y at
7U Smithfield 'tract._
AV ANTED. RECRUITS.--S b b e rall
Mont, able bodied tsten.r4rtodroputation.
I ”nte d tc ! 1111
_ fie the FOURTl.l_Cuy i pm fi y
/bellto tritifiy.. This company loon ol the
/ belt in the Battalion. AWAY at the °Mee of
A EY, FIGMO)N.
'root or 424 'greet.
MEI
•
j`JlNTED—St,veral Men for Finn
v Work. Gardening and Drivink t. Alu. fof
NMI. ward Work. • goreral gin. Was Warded liar
Cooking. Charaberwork. Dinlng-room work
OW=lnt7PgaT.PlmgßUAtl
epannion WM,. •
V V WANTED-MORTGAGES.
'30,000 to Lo.n tong, or pco.ll amounts
• flit tat, of Intiorost.
' TURMAS K. PETTY.
BM. Bond End Real Estate Broker.
No. 175 Bmlthdeld Street:
WA STED--MORTGAIi ES.
Thirty Thonsand Dollars to Loan
nnnn or ssnnil 111,114bLIN on property In AnagnenY
linty 01 a In.lr rate of Internet: •
eIIi.R.LEA JEREMY.
Reql P:stakto Arent..
6S Grant atreeL
LOST AND FOUND
- - the 'l2th or
13th Inn.. • CltrCIC for 934.33, No. !Hi,
dated Ilith July MAL. drawn by Wm. McCully a
Cu. In favor of Measta. Bradley or .
hewer.
The nnder will please leave It at Na. 18 d 1110.
Wasal street: As payment has been stopped It 4
..t_nd value tu any one. /
.1 - I `OI.IND.-011 Saturday eveniug - ,
L., POCKET.IIOOK. crodalnloe 19011. Y. &O.
The owner can have It by calling at 943 Sandusky.
street. Allegheny. and Identifying It.
• .1. .111/111AVFET. -
.F3:_cp„.• 11l 6th,A LlGllT
rkowa cow. s ur, 9 yetta old. Owner will
Come and {.ay
VIo. •IS.II
TO-LET
r0 -LET.--No. 36 F.splanade street,
Allegheny. HOUSE of 1 rooms and flyslebel
=I
l'onvetpnl. given Scplember,lst: Apply
premtoe, or to .11,11 N EITERRETT. Dtaraorar.
LE=
FOR SALE
FOR SALE.
Country Residence
At Edgesroosi Station. A hone DOUBLE TWO
STORY BRICK HOUSE and newly 3 acres of
ground. The house contains 15 rums: situ s
well of soft water In kitchen. Any ono in want of
a splendid house 0111 do we'llu call and odAtntorl
this property. Will take adty proPOrll 1C P.M'
payment If suitable. For fur . ther Informatloo call
at the Wood. opposite Eddworth dirdlon, on tl
• ..,
Rlfkos .10/1R GRAZIER.
FOR SALE—HOUSE. Furnished
at 7ti Firer street. well !warted for •
emit:l4 , 6om.. Terms ruorlerate. • T-2
FOR SALE.—A BRICK HOUSE, ear
tb gra so f y!gig 1=1.' 1 '1'111! . hTs't
7th ward. Will sell low, as I wish to_ s w tot •
epe
country. Apply at SO LOGAN BTHEET. or le -
/rens 111r5.51.• L. 8., Nrll. BO lArytan ntreet.• 7-11 ..-
IF(T SALE CHEAP.—S2,SOO
!oar lotsVi b ilVigt O f ilT4 'raga with •
otabllna. trentlng_un a forty eel @Uwe!, onahalf ,
Beare back et Pennsylvania avenue, Twentieth
went. near East I.ltrorty. Apply at 174 Brant
street. sear Seventh avenue. • Jullbarlrst '
TA1N13340 ACHES, one bandred and nosey
acres under cultivation, balance wood.. Improve
ment-1k dwelling's. very large barn and stable.
and sheep houses, orchard and well watered by •
null cr eek peeslnit through Che 8 1t in
in
tut/ ilea If:abortA'
noar sill/sew . and churches. nue farm can ha
P '"' B. lrl t craffrneo...N.',! P fll T 4lnurth Ave:
r iik-s-i-Ek. • •
• •
t l everaftlocond-tuod . W_Aool,ll.
MO Light 110141 t CARRIAGE, la good order.
coot or p 110IISCS.
Apply to ro
ON DYER,
C J
Corner of South Canal street and H Mary•• Court,
Allegheny. • ltd2W:l-YElllt_
<FOR SALL—Engines and Boners,
New and Seeond Hand, of all kind. ,c.lnatantlY
on hand. •
• crders from .11 mete of the country wotnetir
tended to.
LL h. . •.
Coiner Merton J AvenueANW3 Bl
end P., Ft Co .. W. 4t C. B. W
Alle•h •
ja Olt SALE CHEAP, OR EXCHANGE .
OR CITY PROPERTT.—A ens COUNTRY
I - IDENCE, containing 20 acres with R Mosel. •
thereon; one, a tile, comfortable uid convenient
honr:tgrd writer. and one of the beet water Mar
rAigisyl fur a mIMI rat
Xof a male Igtri B . le7arCa 'r er . o Dal Rail.
road. Al....vend gond Parms goof location.,
and houses for sale. Enquire of
WILLIAM WARD.'
mell No. 110 Grant ISL. opposite Cathedral..
lOR SALE.—ON 8 AEI CREDIT.
S LOTH. h non each to orchard of Janie bear
:l f.V4I . I C.. 4l ' g a :floe view of Yeas Tres. .
Otte. Peke
00 «l BAO each.
!WU tl AND LUT. lull of choice bearing trait,
PV'T.B72:NEW COTTAGE, oroomt, vdde hall.
Inuit and aide port-Wok 2 cellars. 2 lame
good well of water at back door, mintage
m bewail
Vi a etrtr tap e ti b tirii:figli"rr` t "' d oppos b l .ft 't
Venn street, Da Washingo ' with 1 1011. Price
thin le r ltrir ' fVe n en c lidTa th w a age WIT!.
cline. Enquire of • . • • •
W. LINIIART. on the premises.
lek.7l4rrret
.
iALL--An; elegant frame cif , :
onto ' gS2Z u rti " .V2 d ergtor g n iel.,Vt. Vglst
arty Is very desirable. both on account of Its COO.
vienee and reasonable mi. Any one desiring
a
desirable huuw should nut re fall to secure this
bargain. •
A lane and beautifully situated lot, MI by . 1
feet on 44th street. near Butler, can be bought at
present for • very reasonableconalderallon. This
will waken pretty snot fora handsome residence.
On Boundary stneet—A Lame dwell int (
.% story)
rontaintr 11 ur 1 rooter.. 001." renting for' Ott Lot
2-i by 100. 111,250 U will buy this. w lab Isfar
bent. to value.
.300-Lots 20 by 100 each, pleasantly Blum.
bed near the Pen.ylvanla Railroad, can be par
tt...lLuStr,Al. ttbT uPttlitottat. the corner Of Pena *Ad
FOR SALE----7FROPEIVII. •
The two story double b nose, tba realdenel of
Robert 8. Kennedy. Req.. adjoining the residence
of llama. Wm. and Ray Walla,' and Wm.CoOper.
to McClure Sownship, on the New grigbkes Road.
shoot 3 voiles from the atty. The hints* coatalee
14 runom also, Ice house and cooling rotreriaian.
liter kitchen we laandryandont-bonew &meet/IMO
to the main building; the house Is eopplieg
'rotor anti eaa. The moods, comprising ahead
10Sf cues, are tastefully w 0 out and ant sleeked
with an abundance of fruit nod ornamental trove.
.• all trans. 41. (?sz the premise. on a law stable
cutd limPariv out houses mad gardeners houia of
3 roomy. Varner StatiOn, on the P.. Ft. W. AFL'
R. EL Is within • taw minutes' walk of the Louse..
For terms. enquire at the PEARL BULL, Ana.:
Juttnitt
c=
EARTHEN WARE
At Auction.
triViDntri
IS CASKS LIVERPOOL_, ROCKINGHAM
YELLOW WARE. by the Cut
•
Without reserve. to the hiabestbidd.,
Grocery add dealers an specially invittelyi
tend this rate chance tur bargains. •
ZEM3
A. LEGGATE. Anal.
JAMES RENOi
SEWER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER
II
laylnt of BDioe Pipe Rosso Draßit
0 7711;4. •S and 47 SANDUSKY ./51%
Flesidence,lo9 Fremont St , AUesbeny. , jak
DWELLINO.HOUSES FOR L
ju..•Oe 1.1111 street. Craeford street . , Fe
, trees,ll3m st.ipet, (lent trtwt. Isabella
.ligtt sttmet.Ferry street. Bertha street. .
avenne.'relnt•street. elsestrntt street, Ely
gatt4 .. =tel tt mog i ltra 1 0, 1t .. t0. 40 . •
M.Oi L b rienterPalnl i r ‘ streee,
en
mm 04,11401 street. Alleebee7,4l4th .crept..crept. treet, d other teeth tees.
• • b. cutlatTatt
- -
RUBBER TU - Trl 7. i • -
AU fixes of Inn. nobber itibirt . g. 1,4;14
=EI
1333
ai~nv tM iAli
nINCINNATI
A— , select bran& haw Cured trams Uti - Br*
Beet received sadder ate be the tlerwerott 4*. 4 '
t by
• Yrio:k St
•Jale 9141
..... .. _. :-4-:~.
11
II
1.13
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