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. l,jcj R. Hctltlg ifintcs TIIUBSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1870. THE WAR AXB OV POSITieX. Wc revived the following sharp note yes terday: Leaveswokth, Sept 3d, 1870. Tu tie Editor of It Timet: " Please don't take the trouble to -end me v our paper any more. I am a subscriber to that pajier for" eleven yean-, and it L with profound sorrow that 1 notice that iuiiwir tiality and jurtice are no longer considcred v irtues by that sheet called The TrME. Your insult to the French uation i- infa mous.. Yours, C. BjriE. M. Bouifiee is quite right in stopping his r-ub-cription to a journal which does not plca-e him. Thin ia in reality, and not in mere name, a free country, sad the right of private judgment in all matter', ilitics, re ligion and government, i sacred. Our por tion in regard to the present war is liold and jwisitive, as it it ajt to be on all great cpien- t'nns. It was before our own war, when we indicted for publishing a Republican n p.H r in a Slate Stair, it was during the nar, when we received a good many sharp n-te-i saving ''Sop my paper," and it it as .l-i U-. I and emphatic now as ever. WeT (. uM no more 1 on the side of the des pot .ii id tisurjier, 1oiiis Napoleon, tin ii we could hae Ireeii on the wide of l.m-iiM-tcr and w omau-whippers Iieforc jikI during our on n war. The principles in volved are precisely the same Union and l.i! rty. And, although many kt.mji:- h.tvc " i-lopjKsi their paicr' iluring our whole j. n rn.ili-.tie experience, hundreds and thousand-, of olhcr Iiave alw.iv volunlecreil to lake their places". It so happens that our p-'pir continue to luive the largest circula tiuii, :ind to be the leading Paper in Kan--!. We would not conduct a upcr which pleasl everybody, and which did not have lln- mo-it outspoken opinions. And to M. l5.nii-.-" we will not say adieu, but an ,emii: TonanU the people of Franc c h.ie the w-irnaM ("cliligti of sympathy no lulnil, revenge, animosity or iinkindness. of any -nrJ. We want to see them free and limit r a government of their own; not that of a i-clf-inflictcd at.d self-imposed deapot a nun w ho drove nic'i like Victor Hugo and Iaiuis Blanc into exile, and from whose tvrauny ivui M. Bouisse may have buffered. Most t'f t!ie Frenchmen who are in this country are here Iwmum; they lielieve fin Kcpuhlicau iie-tituiious mikI like our government. If I.oiiis Nadeon i a just ruler, why did M. Ikniii- migrate? Hut we 4iall not cs IHrtM' the cause of Imticrialisiii and .aiM!i whatever Frenchmen, heteoi .it home, iii.iv do. When James BiichtOiari was President ve despised him, and our couujry .u s-ived because the Buchanans wrredriven Iivin j-ower. Loyalty to principle, to idea-, j cry different from loyally to a man .ind to dynasty. The defeat of Frame has lieen ciu"-etl by the infamy and bad rule of Na poleon, and if the French hate not the power and the principle to -hake him oR iud recon-truct the government on a fiee and honest basis, then the worst enemies of France on French soil are Fienchmcn, and nut I'rusblans. Hut certainly no argument i? needed on tlicte'iuehtion,. Louis'JXatoIeon ha- wi it It n his own epitaph written it in blood all oer the fair fields of France. These brave men have been killed, these wives made widows, and these children made fatherless, It-cause Iamis Napoleon, a selfish and infa iixiii; det jKjt, has murdered them murdered them for his own glory and not for the glory of France. That is the verdict which history mid posterity will render. France was utterly unprepared for this war, riusliad been kept away from her citizens. There has been no volunteering, as we had in this country, because t lie men w.ie uniiHil to arme, and there was no entliu-ias-ni Air Napoleon's infamous perboual govern ment. The New-Yoik 2. i6im. of Wednes day KXt-. The (.lovernment of France, as it luis ex lLtctl for nearl' twenty years under the dc-imti-iu of Louis NaHleon, has been wholly ieeiHlcnt uihjii the military jHiwer for it.- exi-UiRv. But it ai a great army, and not :i martial (icople. that the Euijeror re 'iiiiol r leirel. He ban done all in liK Hiwer to repress the idea and practice- which at thix time would have given France a dozen pitriotic armies for its defence. Under the l.ni)ire the growth of an intelligent patriot ism ha been impossible, and the general un ci' iio-'-c-don of tireams lias been forbidden. The Emtieror of France has lieen .it war with the intelligence and the cou-cicnic of r-ranee ever since lie mounted the limine. He has not only det4royed the liberties of the oiintry, Imt Iibh debauched ita -oIities and rushed its public spirit. It was not (otriot ivu. but n Mavih homage to his jierxin and lviiaty, that he deBumded. Instead of giving the jieople those governmental in-ti-tution- whiih would have secured their devo-n-'ii, he ha" given them a dcbad C.ivarir-in Midi was destested by all liberal-minded f'li nchmeii. Wc now see the resulti: of hi '.v.-tein in the loweift condition of public spirit that ever was shown by a great nation in the Mipreiuc moment of its existence. The Pru-iani have outnumliered the I'n n h at Iii4 two to one, ami, btides nuiu-U-r, the (iirmaiii have had jutUv, fretilom imI (oil on their idc. Whenever through out the eivilinl world a heart was found whith lieat ropon-ivc to human fntilom, that heart has been warm and true for the lieriuan r.iu-c, and the great inxxo of man Lind make no mistakes. Their syuiiathic ire tvtroii the side of liberty, virtue and limior, and thedcxpot who goes to war with out counting this hot, may le Mire that his -word N drawn without iiod'n approval. ' Tlie i!.-Ktiin of NapoIetn the Third ha Nu a tailure, hevau-e it has mined France.' iir friend M. Bouie will rometiine ad mit this great and terrible fact. The leader ship ! Kur)ie has changed from France to - iiii.nn, :iik! changed for the uio-4. tuli--t.iiiti.il and everlasting reasons reaoii whioh leuth troiii the throne to the collage the H-Jnl, and Tanect the whole blool, life, intelligence and honor of a cop!c. All true ronii lsgin with the man him-elf, and nations must le saved- by tsiving Ihc j'isipUi. Kegeneralion comes from the free hoijnthe village or among the farm, rather than from the palace in the capital. KM. Biii' is not right, Loui.-? Napileon will iw: Is-. France ha a great pr"-J-i'i lcfor' br. Human vi-ion cannot whst revolutions and field? of blo.l may l lfore her, what 4ornts, lur Ii.il. iicr-o and anarchies, bu(, at Inst, i-h. mu-t .ly upn the virtues, tlie intelligence, the fokiance, and the free piri( of th ivmnion jopK It will ikiI come by declaring pm-ls inlallilde, by telling the people that llity cannot and i-hall not think, by putting men in jail for their freedom of leech, by flopping Republican newspapers, by mur dering men because they are Protectants, br excutingas a PrusbUn "tpy" every man wlio speaks with a German accent. France will not be changed, reconstructed, saved, until Frenchmen can ray of thet thing: yous atoll change tout ctki. Germany is already prepared for great things. She is free from priestcraft, .-be h free mJiooIs, her people are moral and intelli gent and capable of reasoning, dialling, free thinking, on all ipiestions. They rc not a morbid, but a healthy people. They work oft" their bad humors, not by drowning them or keeping bilent ia regard to them, but by giving every thought and emotion free oope. That is health and power. Every taiag can lie hoped from tlie (itch, frohffrett MIA which is bora of Lu ther, Melanlhon andojd'Fritx, Ofthisieo ple the Ciacinuam Gasette nays : The German people are intelligent and brave. Education is generally diffused and with its ideas of JibertT and equalitv; and the thn ctfiTia7, : WfcrtST .ZZZ lesson OAreeenmuMUT-evewa Mads to give IU - vV. 7i. ' ", ' 'JL "T1 --o - i f-"- . . j.j, iiwii institutions; and it may be set down as an axiom fhatra people fit for free government will have it. The grand German patriotisja which ia now arouxd: which has obliterated for the time provincial boundaries, and the uense of sore injuries from Prussian military scoarg ings and conquests, and has united the peo ple in the cau.se of German natiocaliry, will not eat-ily be reduced to the uses of dynastic ambition. The national spirit which King William has invoked cannot be pot back in to the Hohenzollern battle. Tlie divine right of a Prussian Prince must give way to the rights of the United German people. The ambition of the Prussian royal familv must now- be subordinated to the unity of Germa ny, as hitherto it ha.-? subordinated this to its own t-upremacy. Germany and tlie United States henceforth march side by vide, tlieir flags intertwined; the victory of one is the victory of the other; for they are the first, the most pcogrwsi ve and the greatest of Free Commonwealth. DEFEAT 4r MMAMHf. Tfce IjiI Erraek Araay lnw f. McMahon hat been twice defeated in less than one month. After his first defeat ami melancholy retreat he found his way to Clialons, and there took his few regular and aUeiiied to form the nucleus of an army. He received of new recruile, or militia, as wc should call them, or of Garde -Mobile, a they arc called in Franc, between 130,000 and 00,0utl men. With thi force he was ex)cctcd to hold Ch.ilon against the strong force of the Pmsiaii Crown Prince, send him reeling home, and thu gain a decisive vic tory for the French. Nevertheless, the Prince and King William advanced. We heard of them at St. Dizier and Bar 1c Due, and then on the Marne, at Vitry le Fran coise, and oii after at Chalons. This jKist hnd lieen left de-erusl by McMahon, ami Paris .-ecmed within the grasp of the (Icr-nian-'. Their advance guards were heard of within forty mile-, of the gay capital, or not much farther away than Lawrence i-, from Iaacinortli. In the meantime terrible Iwttlcs. were fought aiouml Metz, and only to show that lt.iz.iine was safely botlleii up. ISKnnI was hv in torrmt-, but the great Frtnch Marshal was -lint up. Then we heard greiit talk in the Corjs Ieg-i-latif about a wonderful strategelic move ment whiih McMahon was tuakiug, and ab-xit whiih nothing could be said. Mc Mahon was following up the railroad from licruay to Keitu, to Attigny and Rethel, roving the Aine river, and going to Me ziu, on the Men -c, and in the Argonne, or rdcnii', mountains. That was the movement, and it was intended for the relief of I5.iz.iine, Mter that, th Crown Prince could I sj whipelal Pari or on his way home to Berlin. But the Gcrm.iiu do not fill into the traps They never avoid a fight. The Crown Prince followed McMahon toMezieresand the border of Belgium. His fighting seein3 to hive taken place on the webt of the mountains and the Mtue, between Rethel anil Mezieres. On the other '-ide were Prince Frederick Charles and the large and fresh army of the Crown Prince of Saxony. Here the fight raged from Sedan, Moiizon, Montmedy, Car iguan, Beaumont and Stensy. SteinnieU remained, probably, at Metz. A defeat for France here i : defeat of all her armies in the field, and a defeat all over. The following ii copied froui the N. Y. i"7my of Tuesday, the 30th ult , while the kittle wits going on, but before th news was received: The "Fore-t of Arden," which the rever ies of the melancholy Jaequa have made classic ground, has become the theatre of a more protentous drama than that which Shaki'peare located there. "Much depends," kivb the Jo-iiiud Offieid, "upon the battle which may take place in that vicinity at anv moment." So far as Paris is concerned, nearly eveiv thing stems to depend upon it. Foi let MeMnhoa svffer a rfecjVue dtfeat in fii w Ct4.nl jt-x'ili-m, ami the latl foi MiVuVt Jtlnrle i.tts ken icmoicfl, which might prevent tlie Prussians from besieging Paris at their leisure. Let the great reserve army which lately moved out of Chalons, become as thoroughly demoralized as tlie troojn which McMahon commanded at Woerth, ami in terted action with Bazainc becomes as much out of the question as any effective succor to Paris, or any formidable breach of the ex tended Prussian Hue. It is jwrfectly clear that a concentration of troow Irom all three divisions of the German Army is taking place atcorroiondingioints of the valleys of the Meu-e and Aisne, lie tween which from north to south runs the richly-wooded and mountainous tract of country known as tlie Ardennes. Evident ly the opinion of the Prussian Generals, that McMahon should be first dealt with, and Pari-taken afterward, has prevailed over that ascribed lo the more imiietiious Bis marik. It i-difficult to reconcile the state ment of one destatch about the impending luttle lieinjj proliably west of Jtheims ami Epernay with the other indications that arc giv en of the movements on cither side. The pre-ent ssitof ojicratinns is at least thirty niiles mirth-eat of the )iosition so defined and is represented by an irregular inrallel gnim alnjil thirty-live miles by fifteen, of which Youziers :iml Rethel on the Ai-uc, and Stenay and Mnuzon on the MtiiM? repre-eiil the four oirner. By the Miiitlieastern angle, repre sented by Stenay. the Prussians arc enter ing who have advanced by the luirtherly route from licforc Melz, while the advance iihiu Rethel and Youziers in the wet is made by the divisions that have been pushed niw.iil fmi.1 Nancy to Chalons along the .siiiral line toward the capital. The inten tion of this combined movement evidently is lir-t to i-olate MeMalion completely from any eomiuuuioitioii either with Paris'on the mic side or It.iz.iiuc on the other, and then it seems not at all improbable that McMahon will niaken sUml either behind the Aisne, lietueen Yoiizires and Bethel, with his right resting on the milway leading northward to Mezieres, or may retire still further north, where he will have the fortresses: of Sedan and Mezieres immediately in his rear. Ajsirt fiom a great and decisive Kittle, which may or may not happen, according lo the di-ptsiiiou of the French commander, the Prus.si.nis will certainly endeavor to get os.essioii of the ortion of the railwar, .iIhmiI eighty miles long, between Montmedy and Hheinis, which a 'yet is not control lei I by i hem. This line so described forms two .sides of ;i triangle, of which Mezieres is sit uated at the :is-. A line drawn from lilieims t,i Montmedy, to form the base, would Is-alssit sixty miles long, and would I'.i-s through Youziers, Btizany, and Stenay, all named in ,.ne connection or other with the latest movements. Within the "pace to boundeil the interest of the caiiiiaign is at present coiiceiitratcd. Till". Kansas Pacific Railway con-i-ts of the following divisions: Kaw Yalley Divis ion, Kansas City to Erookfield, iOO miles; Smoky Hill Divi-ion, Brookfield to Kit Car on, ttj miles; Denver extension, Kit Carson to Denver, 50 miles: Denver Pacific, Denver to Cheyenne, li6 miles; Leavenworth branch, Lawrence to Leavenworth, 33 mile-;. Tola I length of road, 735 miles. The distance "etween St. Ituis and Denver via North Missouri and Kansas Pacific lines is !M)7 miles. The time for through lasscn gen after September 1st will be forty-eight hours; fbr through freights from four tv five days. The fast despatch lines, as toon as fully orgauued, will render thi thuetertaia, and msy do etill better. We do not see why it may not be done, for Denver merchants inform u that their express freights from New York via lTnion Pacific are but fen data en route. The present rate from St. Louis to Denver is $".50 per hundred, and may soon be less. The distance between Chicago and Denver, via the Kansas Pacific, is 1,191 miles. 1'HEfew York Jfcmld, considering tlie complete ideutihcation of the Republican party with the caiic of Prussia in the war with France, thinks that Gen. Sigel would be a more available candidate at the head of the Republican ticket in New York ihaa Horace Greclcv. Gentlemen who have just arrived from Paris tfa London, express the nalil iiili.n Vbtant - zt the eaterariae &.ii w ,i- . -. , . - - m-j . - m,ivl ...s......v-.s.. uiiusnina; J war news. They say that any, of. our promi nent journals print more actual news con cerning the movements of the 'armies than all the papexj of eitherParis or London to gether. It is knoBto;uvE officials that the Consuls General of the 'several leading pow ers telegraph the Icading'nointsjof cable 'des patches of the newepaptfa eaUi day f o their respective governments. l XMMUI. i The Republican Convention of Missouri is ) rem in twain; iwu ucseuafe. wnwnawu ami two platforms are adopted. - J. W. McClurg and B. Gratz Brown are nomiaated for Gov ernor. The only difference between the plat forms is that McClurg is in favor of letting the rebels vote as soon as it, is prudent to do so, and Brown is in favor of letting them vote now. In this respect we agree with Brown. The right must be granted some time, and it Is be-t to do it now. It is mag nanimous in the Republicans to grant it be fore the Democrats have made an organized demand for it, and it is graceful and Chris tian to do it now. McClurg had a majority of the Convention, and we presume all of' the one hundred colored delegates. They live in the neighborhood of their old masters by whom they are persecuted sometimes shot or hanged by mobs. They arc thinking more about justice than mercy or forgive ness. Brown had the united strength of St Louis , , . .. ,. ., . . - Pnisian corps on the heights east of this and of tbe.ermaii all over the State .L amj reHcvc ,,. BaValkltl.. A Carl Schurr. prc-idcd at his Convention, j littlclatcrtheFilihcoris wasorderedtobreak Gratz Brown is in every resjuet the stijierior man. He is a radical in every respect; ami a man of large, lilieral and philosophic views. His history has Ijeen grand and honor able. But vvearciiot.vcryjuuchplea-ed with the course of hi leaders. They have been ungenerous and tyraunii-tl, and have been attempting to force their principle and their. man down the throats oCtlie. people whether thev will or no. The St. Iamis Democrat . '. ., t i r .i ti has lieen the bull dog of tlicrainnaigii. The primary meetings m St. Iaiuis. were carricii,. in some instances, by force, and colored men ........,.,. ti ,.i ir.ui ...-. Tl,-.t U ii. a .. . . .ii-i i" - the way to initiate a liberal l'Sn, but is the way to alienate the w hole colored olc the first time it comes to the poll-. The vote in 1SGS stood. Grant. S5.G71: l' .., . .. -, r, .-.- ' Jertli. l'eiiiforceiiicnt.s were cuntiiiually Seymour, 20,,8&; iMh.njyt Grajit, So,-Tlhnnin ; ,IV iL Kni,;,1;I ,,IC W1CI1IV ;n 88S. Thb yrjl Democrats fjiive iaid.jVanicst on this point;" and perceiving" the that thev would make no uominalmu-. If Eleventh Pnissians to approach vigorously not. Brown mav count on that vole. How . . , , , , large the colored vote may Iw we do not know. Ms-t of it will prohablv go for Mc- Clurg. But, with the division of the Re- The Twentieth Brigade was the first to publican vote, ami the whole lkiiimiatic,,'lih: "rouSU Woerth, and luarchci towards ... i hlsa-Jinu-en and rroscliweier: it wa- vne.i.ratz lrown will ie Hie next i.over- nor of Missouri, and the Jiet Gov crnor,vwJ should Viv. that fisotifi ever had." vei i;u ii, ,.,", t i.;. ..,;... ;..t.s. .....i J.....U . , ,. .. ., ,""' , f vote for him if we had a e hanee. s McClurg, wem-vir loard ihil he amounted to anvllnng. ' m THLtet.LouiRepublicaii.siK. 'i he third ' annual exhibition ot the Kan-as- Agricultural and Mechanical As-ociation will W held at Leavenworth Cilv September loth, 1 Ith, ,,,i ..,,,,.,1. .ri. : i: , t ,-i , AiHll .1111 J Vlli. J li'j i'iuiiiiii ii -I if. rtiin iv , , , j- i -1 be the largest ever ofiercd wct ut St. Lomr, and the airangeincnts are mo-tcxi client. The First Untile nl .lie I. ! vance to El.saJiau-en, skirl the forest l i . ,i. i ,....!.... e,....j....;.Niederwald, and oiierate against Froseh- .1 iuriv--S.-liui:iii. vi mu -i-vi'iivii i-tyH'tum who writes from Verdun on Tnudav mor- ning, descrilie, thcbatllc which took idueiit lo "n" "p tfnl fj'nfi 1 v .i u. x, i.-ir,l''n'sw,"s,Iwdciidivwon p i... -a -.' .i.-cvL... I" !... im iua 3unuav aiieiiioon, me. jh.hi.ii .iiiim ,c".vw -..- '. i .ii Vfi.. J: ITa -,1 . i fifi WJ ' 1 'rZt the dav previous the battle wa- considered imminent. Several attempts we.n made to i .i . .. .1... i.i -.j rri.n' .:- . t ri-.i,In his strong iiobitions on and near the uwu. m . "-"" y v"rluZi ,ieiS': of Fro-diwcicr the enemv oflereel u. ick Charles, or rather the, cori now muted I , , ,?,. T, , u uiHler FeldMan.halSteinmet7:hadtakcniUla "P lUtm lf'th: ., i. U...I .. .i . . :. iiosition on the road toKauhiv at the ikiiiiI ?. .: .u-. ... i, ...... Vi iV...... V. .r"? . S. '.."..- ..;;.r.i. ieiionir ami X-line up to nit; ioiu.-i oi iiiui ... Tk- - . , .r ,. , , i r.. .. r .. ..i ftroois ot the Division Bothmer, .who had the . . .:. -. erial and tcr past heavv hrc ol artillcrv w,iaf one heani in everv direction. Theoldirn of the Priis siau landwehr headed the I'ni-imi eeap-i d' A1IVII IHC llis.sfl, 1..is 1, . -11 .. 1 ... 1 n railuusen Is-chii I heir (ieadlv . i- ..i-., :".. ..11 ......i e. touliisioii all aie-unu, . . ,.. .1;..: !...' armee; The mittr. work on each sil men falling iu tverv diretiion. columns whirling aroiiuil, as liiillt s, wliMlmg, er r..r....,l ll.p!r rfi.i.llv- m.rk ll.n.mH. tt.3 , r , .. v ..- .;."i.'r -.-sM traillc.. was making faafiilluvv iu ihe Prussian ranks. h7i.nl frantic bravos .,- noumiiiL' its new exploits. The lire was so welldirtsled, the pnrislou so gnat, that each lire was Mritively mowing the Prus sia'n ranks, who were lighting in .1 ileserate way, tlieir-artillery reidying til ieuther, and destroying French battalions right ami left. At 7 in the afternoon the Prussians were making a movement of retreat. A mitrailleii.-c liad lieen iwhv taken from, the French. Although it is only one of the himdred e-a-s-s of the battle, 1 mention it as it led to an important result. For Ihc last hour one of the greatest cflbns of the French liad for its uhiret to ilisfnlm llie l9rtisstnn . ... ... .. , p. iVc ! 7 ( inimine wooaoi jmrnev. lnnr. imiminr-1 t . ..... 1 . . i. u.g pntevis. . . ...v ....i...... ..... ,n. 1 e brace colonel of the Fortv-fourth infantrv. r. Second Division, in re-taking the mitraill euse, was the taiisc of a.Liree)holyof Pnis sians emerging 'suddenly 'from the w'oods, and precipitating themselves as an infuriates) torrent on the r rencii divisions, it was onlv :t pretext rnissians Fu'rbachr trhich sight their wnen tuc rotiu 01 name .seemed in tavor ot thtir .qnHinent, to change defeat into vielorv by, thV .Mwe'rful movement of immens lliinl iiml rotiitli colli:, and Garde lm-1 .f ... , .. j,.".. : They were fioi.tiug Hoiiiey, Grfcy, V, "" xiS&KtOS' ". ; nerceytestyraiH.piinm. At a.pwr-(-,... , .... ,, .. ... . .... .,,,- 4 o'clock," thc"att.trk eommeneed: A ' - ". '"-" """"."' -loritw-as lx,H.sMesl that ther.,'mllllr?, ww ,.'. :lf iiK. would tol low tlie same tactics as at I ., 'v. ," i . . ...'... .t TwiisMs in keenms onfof t .-- r .1..'. -n. .1 jlj' 1 1 nnes, U (.U and I Vg t, ' d o'PfmI S SaW." rhuThrtianeprer at - , . . . . , Il.u1..U nni.!! HH..... ri..l.LM.IW7A.jlrk .-"- -- .- ...... ,. .....- ... . -t - a match for them. The I m,.cri:il t .uard, 4? Tm " 1 i'Saffi 11 1. . 1 1 1 1 1 1 . ' . exactlv estimated, riic e-ncmv lost ..00t) ?lTt ITS' i ? 'n ""unde.1 priors, thirtv puiaU'ini tuition lgau the (lelens vc The grena-, a, , , , ,4 diers advanced, and from that moment un- t..Vi .1 'M.... ?..i !. .... 1 ....1 .1--1 .aq,wr,er,? , ,.n. wo..... . lave ""'"Saivi-bns of the Sixth Cor1W. you were in the middle of an '- , .!1... . .1 JT.1I 1... . .1 I . erniptiou or .Mount es.uviu, Port St. (dentin sweeping with t$ powerful laltcrics the flank of tlie aitvJiiioiSg tfilunuji, re-gi- a..uarterioriJ;prNewelv, the Priissiaas "wre , retreating; Tii.g fwnullJOO l -jyW iiiemsoi c:airciiaTgBis.oa-tBe wiags. .i mtn hvivtlstfxmtml. Tlie r ratiea have lost etitin shiarhleriai: the encmv. thegua!dexceiVifsartiirer--aiid a brigade of cnadicrs .lid not lisiiU Thev were kept in te-erv c lo I be I .M. Durimztheoinilut tli rest ol iherFrel.ei. armv wa. retiring oii.tlie reutelo Verdun, and at! o'clock' T followed the Imperial r. ' . ?.-. .?.".. close on 0,lii0 uieM pijlnl.liud wouutled. 1 IO,W0 Prvkiis iisik Mit iujhaht against 70.U0 Freaclunen. PosifbwIy owing in Fort St. t iuanj reircaung in,iuetsiucTarcuvu.;ucn, 5 , 1 1 . Tl l.- t- " iVtaiiifiaL'een'wounde-nfhrreiJenM P; """" " V4 Ca-ugnv had an arm cut, and Marshal j Napoleou.in wtne unknown place may I Bazaine himself received a slight contusion I ,Le verjriwisest thing .he.can dy under the on'the,-Jtad.J rhrard.; , The-ii1,CiheiS,Bf1r.' acr.f the Cliamp. (le-mtfailll wa, hirnT.lc 111 the Freiichgovertauent uncethe late defeats 11. morning, fn ret.irnins,UHr mardied-i-ver ,U wnr " ? corrtsiwnds with any the dead Nsli who were in heap-, in sonic el-'. IrMffi'tufly NYi-rk "llWtf1 cMttion. Bemo - iM The New- cratic )vliticil oinvcntiina .against, jojaking, tneir piaiiornis 100 expucii. n snows aam age was doae.lu tlie iuiy. ia J24 by. bend rag forth a jieace platfoni and putting a popular General on it. " TheVaiae rnUtakeasvi eoin- mkted iu 186H by the non-agi cement of .- .. i i .r it . .. .ij. ceymourwiui ins piaiiorm in ine matter ol linancev ThejMB of'-theriHViWt,yjls-?;Be" caauousanu insincere; iiooawinK lire flf, if possible: learn the art ofn-ing c guagetq conceal ideas so thai jneti may be . induced,' fa n'firwluGaeri. 'abn-;aBu,aaujal virtue of tbx,Freach-HLheir impul-1 iiwkhii. ii is fcc.reiaiM umifiHUDu uiai inere tsno.tiarwtBr inrtieiiiiaifiLMvils party, but we didpotuprs t roiild lie -""' " s.t-.v vm.u-ci (iviuihju, diryimalan-saadlaaiidi lin esiaaaaati- Tammany streak has J-sml, by, and the ex- .... -..i thantliey,aBd.tVs-U-thcrirMis .....n ,.,ii w.r. , .... .n -,. 4....... .. . i... T r-? i i . M. S. AnAwsKmspialvmade-a eneeeiisiii. . . - . . .s..t. ., ,- . ...,.iV teavenworth. irf'Whidi Jul a-crtoO that either niwseir-or bidney. Clarke wVralit-b.' iKiwiaated Ar ''ongrrssJ. j lVcs'''be -Aaean throw whatMrength he coaltol's . lo Clarke?: That's the wav it sonnaV, "this tKstanre.- If that k tIa?'uitTcprccitIoti,'ir ii'. a- pirptv rood reaimn. whv .the ireonle shoakl arwaid sending Adams delegates tr the CoBvewtioat' I Tho dnrfrine of "nonim-Je mp'.Viin idialfTTs . -s.; -.'- . 1-.. ' t - r- . t toi ,jwnupw: qw, upiat.iaurjicwiiiuwi auatvw ZTSL "rJTJTJS lauRaraacnnauiT, aim nhii ir.aiaa against this time. 117. i" Cloud ISiiffc Headquarters of the Tbibd AkjrfrJ Aug. 15, 1870. Ob the' fkh of August, reli able istidliWBec1 wis recoticl 'M thfc bead" quarters oTtheThird Amy .Tnat Marshd McMahon was busily eMeaiii conceatrat- arrivals by railway. In consequence of there advices it was resolved to lose no time in ef fecting a change of front, which had been de termined upon a-frwTday previously; bat1 not yet execvted.'t , L '" ""- The Second Bavarian and ri fib.. Prussian corps were to remain in their respective, po-, siuons at Lemnncli ana rrcnscfittoTf; the Eleventh lVussian corns was to wheel to the right and encamp at Jlolrxliloch, with van pushed forward, towanl the, river Sauer; and the First Bavarian conn was to advance into the neighborhood of Lebsann and Lampert sloch. The Cavalry Division remained at Sclioneubanr, fronting .west. The corps Werdcr ( Wurlemburg and Baden Divisions) marcheil to Reimersweier, with palrols fac ing the Hegenaa forest. The Fiflh Pmvbn coqw, on tlie evening of the 5th, pushed its van from its bivouac at Prenschdorf on to the heights cast of Woerth. On the other side of the Saar nu merous camp fires of the f nemr were visible .during the night, the' French outposts occu pving the heights west of the Saar, opposite Woerth and Gunstett. At dawn of the tith, skirmishes commenced along tlie line of the outposts, which caused the Prussian vanguard to send a InttafJoB into Woerth.'-'-f rt i At H o'clock steady firing was heard on the right (Bavarian) flank. This and the tire the encmv directed against Woerth caused us to station the entire artillcrv of the Fifth j off the engagement, il being the intention of ! our Generals to begin the battle against the concentrated forces of tlie enemy only when the change of front hail liceu effected, and the entire German armv was rcadv to be j brought into action. """ At a quarter to 8 o'chxk the Fourth divi sion (Bothmer) of the Secimd Bavarian coriH (Hartiuanu), iuducetl by the heavy areofthc outiiosLs near Woerth, had left their bivouac at Lembach, and proceeding I "i Jwuiii aau MaiefttirpMiiw.it, rauvT a I "harp engagement, ieiietratcd as far as XcAweiS r. where th cv spread, fn.nting "to the svutli. At half-iiast 10 thi-. Bavarian i corps, supposing the order to break oft' the engagement, wtuclt liau been given to tlie Fifth Prus-ians, to extend to themselves, J Jtbdrew to Laugoi-Salzback. The aiemv Iientg' thus no longer pressed I on his left, turned all his strength with the . ?"Mt1 "'VTKi aS-"t ,hc tiftl' Pnis-ians at ' '!' Hiedirection .if Gua-tett, the Fifth Pni- ' sians immediately proewled to the attack, lo ddiai ,lc uli.IllT if ,,oiMe Ijefwre ' lv had lime to concentrate. immiy lolywcJ 1V ,he p.H, JhU-. - ihc French stoml their ground with the tit it pertinacity, and their fire was crushing I Whatever the gallantry of our Tenth Divis- ion, it did not .; ' . , the Ninth' Division being "drawn into the tight, tbe wjiole riftli corjm found itsell in volved in the sanguinary conflict ranging i along me lieiclits we;-l ol vvceriu At half-jMst 1 p. iu. orders were given to ,he pjr.t -j, t,,ri Voll ,er Tan) (o I . leave one of its two division'; where it stood, '"'d, sending on the otlieras quick as posi- Ole tiv ia?liaiiu and .Lanipertslocli, seize j - , r . .L iuiioii tlieenemvs front in the gap lctwven sj,,! ruariaffcori-s, at Langen-Salzbach, and the Fifth Prussian corns at Woerth. ! The Eleventh Pru-ians we ordered to ml- i . m - -... j -. .. .- . wel": Tlie Auriembarg divi-,m wa? to pru i .ls to remain at Saarburg. . t 1 .1 i . i t .. . I l At oeloek the combat bad eMended 'g 'e '" line. Tt' was a severe stiug , 6 ;.. t ., w K f. l! V'Ji!.. the r.leventh fnrt.ian mar 'J-.l-n-sli.uisen vanan corp- reacneu e.orsaori, om couui not , , . , J ., , . ' , ., c. I lay hoid ot the enemy fa-t enough; the bec- nd Bavarian Ind to exchange tlie exhausted 11IH.11 l-aneen-t- temlierg 'division Hipnclud'GSn-t'tt. At 1 oeloek Iresli orders were given. Th. ... , . . . ... I iirteinU-rg Pivi'ion was to turn to". ml ., . : , . 6 . J .. , , . ., -. I'eiehshofcn, liVw-arof ElierUicIi, to threilt ,, "r e . r,., , . T, i the enemy's line of retreat. 1 he Nl Ba Is vanan was to att.uk at once and dislodge Hie i-' i - . r r i I '.,K'.ui '""' ."" I"'" "rs.-.iweiei ...... in the neiglHMNiig vinevaiils. etweeii '2 ?,,J .0,;,k ' ?Ilinauf- ,,"""i:,-,!': ' ,r"l """ '"-H ami advancing will, Hisu,uniate Urajr as-urncd .he oflei.sive gaum me ith ami lltii Jlni un tori But all his, assaults nciv beaten. !''., Thus the fight was bri-klv goiug.oii at Woerth, jieither jwrty making much pnigiis, till at iciigiii iije nriiiiani attack 01 the w liava rian Corps at Goradorfl'and t of the 1st Wur tcmberglirigadc,oM tlie extnuic left at Ebers lueh decided the fate of the day. ' Toward. the close nf imp kittle the French atteniitcd a grand cavalry charge against the anuieryoi uiese iroojis. vuraniiicry await ed them in, a, stationary position, and re pulsed ilirni with severe hff. "The iiiCintry cfjd so likewise. Thin last ' e.crimciit hav- . --.... . .. . 1 mg laueu, the enemy, al,-i o. clock, c vacua , K n" hw;IW 'a ,Jif,H ,hn,.,1, .1,,, 1 - -.---"--, --.-- t --- . --- mountain passes 111 the. direction of liitche. The cavalrv ofall our div isions. wen-de-spatch-cd in pursuit. The cavalry division, which on ;ccotiut, of 1 nc (iimcuu gniuiiu, wiiicu allowed lime t j. ,.' :t ,1 ,.' ; r ;a , , . . i f&T' ' h"'1 'l Y ""S" I P?" ft SS. feK'SL'S.jft! - "' Keaelllaa; the lavasioH. Krum the J!. IiiKri.MHiui.1 The change of the original French pro- gramme, which consisted in the invasion ol Geruiany, the aiinihilati(4i ol the German - - 7 " !. ".iv..v v. mere iireuiisvn, iuvo a rcpuuie 01 1 ne iiiiaoexs Irom tlie French territory, eiftcrf come, very painful fcrturcs.. The reivlllug of an iu ;.: : ,...... 1 J 7 : " ."-- -s..,ra ..,,. l" lm advance u.lo the interior of a omn.trv, .ll "' dlflcreiitfroni de- '"?"' W"" or 'n "I wrntory. it Ltt."' 'lu,.reB 'WY : ! sira.-gemo ot .HeMahon may be heroic and even I w . . ... I j,1 IXa well advised: the attvmirt to ,deleuil L.iris may neierve uie name 01 a oaring nauieocnmueai 01 me woms repeiiiiig the invaders." The desire of repellingjjieni. ;P , Sak:i f ? -ty-ij niiuc lit & lrt.H.r, iii "..nc. IVUUW to lie uowherr. Everv Frenchman toknowithis. Imt not one dam to f-eakr out,' They tee tlie,,ivaUiiche coaling; llicy know .filial thev will be cni-ibed if- thfv " do ,, .net." jsih it back, aiidj jet 'thev do. 'not tlirow themselves against.it, but merely .content themselves ia making preparations to receive it. It comes iiearer and nearer, with Mich ! force and certaintv as fate and doom never ll'Jefore advanced towards; ,the liearfof any nauon; jviiuivo on ,wnn faicu, an-wvyr. wliehaaaiR power thate shadow wbkli'ji iurcaaU has alreadv obscu red, Uie crcaUsi 8iveess,,ana vivacity., aae auEence ot any-wajlyigaeat geaitu in, the unheal FreaapvexpnMtjhrcliaaayf tiepeo- Me wajHKlpoaNuiijaMncieaaiBg iaeavat sa - U schemes of mo viae the hichest civil an thorUiealxomoaephrloaiMNer; the self- . . . .. - r-. '-- . . '. -"--i- .uciiaauHi in ioiwu iu a imkuoi uie..rnu-1 sian' armv by McMahon; bv the Garde Mo-1 uiif-or. . uv viui luev raui , III . PnMfV- ut pettte-vuenv, aadwliat we tsOJed bv the juore aMmatriate name. of. buAwkukinir olli iae.uuiMWrmakB a-very. uualuL u not a ." - . - . " r ' . r: ..;- -r-1 jiery, kuBuiluiiag mpressioa. iTbey.Vhow 5rjT; aafaatal yiWt7aU'thf;,Freiicavais if n -StanfjcnBgia.kis aytatohour.of trial-thue 5aaa.maaia rrarice.hocoiild' open the jeVesof the peojde, axho ooakl aaow ibnu the Xontee af aiJ laair ih'aiaaaT and tha iaimr-ri of jthe aangai ;-,wao:woiM Iw Jiataned tsl wewkto 111 kk mdatmaaB tluL kU '.'. . n...'- . - - , . : LTrLirTtir,lL:l??f wwran: w,inr.3satnawanMaka)I-IIWIfc- gnverniBfflt jml , the- 'great . firinci . . . siipiit llirir :iiiitiiitinliiin in-lli h.nf hrrlilt. nl iii.in iiti iiiniii jmi'vn-isn 171HI ii. in iir ildliiril I-.IIIII Mll.l III., rsvvllll .11111 1IUII pWUa feir ova revolution in Jarocof aa advta- '- .1 - ij 'l" iL.1 j;rJr- "ni " tvmmm ana auwBVj;,. gnqpfm aeuraetunoBS and aceannalnnnw tbcnaaaaanv M fcro,of the wK,'mZW uptt. Kcmar aa4. ffoavaM wmfjmOm I www wm vsai,aooar-ffT do a greater service to hia cooatrr. imaainiDie eJeawnt of jaaeaee..laca.ia left to Fraaee, can pcWT.do7 la kJ not probabJe that King iniliaai who, up to thu tune, haa 'aaofn, .aloae iwodexaUoa'tltaa ever before was coaihiaei Lwjth an equal strength, would .listen 'to' m- jeaole proposiuoRs, u taey .were auoa with Jaimess and ia boch a shape as to readi the sameencbasa ciiatiauaUoBof the war wili inevitably secure to Genaanv. , ' We have no reason to doubt that such Blight be the case, but we despair of seeing the man who aught exercise such aa influ ence over the French. Thousands of brave aics will yft be slaughtered without in the least changing the nkimate result of the war. ami who knows whether thev will not etill dream of repelling the uvraMoowhea not a square mile of France ia left uninvaded! square our Comoro fair. The ladaeeateats Ofvraito CawaeU 1 About Racing at Fair. We esipy the following excellent ankrlej anaiMjnncm of tKn, l CkXIu that from the St. Joseph Gazette: 'citv. ' Despite the severe opposition of certain rural and farming uewnpapcm, on the rab-Uian Miniver's statement regarding, the jcct,of the introduction of fast honw as an jpcJKreiab treaty, "very Bisuwrckahle.' oltiectofczhibitiematAgncuIttiral raus, iti , woman hair is said to lie her crown lias been demonstrated that tljerc are two clasesi of opinions prevailing in the prem ises; one class virtually holding that sliced is cs-entially immoral, and the other claim ing that the high-mettled and. pure-blooded horse is as much an agricultural product, as oxen, sheep or swiue. Out of these two nisitions, a very violent disputc has arisen, and die contest, so far as having waned hy months of dicussion, glows wiui growing warmiu. ue nuiuan miuti y retunusl to -Jinp with the informa- pruves the inlcntion tu tcezc you. IVn't tell is a very oueer machines-imbued at the out- Io1 ,t .., bc.r is twice as Ug wlien his me he ain't got no mind; he knows set with Urge proclivities for evil, it has , ,a;r ;llrucj to uie f iau otherwise.' J what he is alter. He's gol sense, and takcu eighteen centuries of Christian civili-, too much uv it, tho lie never went to skoed a zation to smooth down its. rough edge, and , Tfce MaaUex. dav iu his life ixcept in au dih. toitmvince tlie vanoua classes of luankiud ' f His morals wu niglecktid, and he lacks a tlut differences ef opinion arc not open war, uy josii bilunus. gianl deal nv humilitr mightlv. lie ain't and may iibly exist in ihjwe who are The -a a mimall Uing, a liule un-1 bashful a bit, and I doubt if he blush-s oft iMaWlutelydeserviiujofUiiui locked up fagA kiv-vcresl with luir, hitebed to a ing. in a dungeon, or led out to execution. faj, an,j ,;wj K;,, thv A-ft; In faek, he wu. ncwr letvhesl ui a tall. TIum; new tolerations have grown out of " Hturalistwill,tcll vou. if vou a-k them, HewiniN.rii fullgrown, he don t git old ll eircumstaiices which nave urpugiu tnc mjtru.-n.w-WB ui uwiuviini wwn. uustn iw :......!-..- ..r ..ul:..i ... li. a.. gelher; and by degree1, a they have leen enabled (o examine cadi other's motives,, standing suspicions have Icen reliihjui.ihed, and old prejudices overcome. .Indeed,' it-- no .inuu.il thing of late years, to see whede shoal of wrll-intentioacdr higols suddenly give wav, and finding their neighbors no worse llun ihemselveis and their pursuits of . . . - . . . .? . t - . Happiness noi a wniiniore oiecuynanic, ,go in with a jxvAP to ciiiot thiui-r9 iu aim- ,Ul5u t i -tt i- . i a .i JjiicIi a Mctadc hi ne witiwma t the coming Kansas raw. The.tery hhcrar .rcmiums offered bv the .Wiation ifor the advancement of the horee, is m itself an eyi- a . ?- r i deijee tliat they hale arrived at tlie conelu-.l 't im iu 4 jn good store, an lie well haa-,-ion, that it is no treason against Heaven touJt monsgobiibainthe l:t retail clerk in .ovc a nm: none as mi.cu as a nne. ox : aiw Ml T. fStewert:, empkiv., that a mun i- no worse taking adebgliir Xlieluonkev heiimtgK a likal liedfit in i..tvi.o....u -..rc.u. .. 'n"i,WMIKilii1 pin head, all in a heap forpi I "bathed .in beauty, and who neU. it ., ,Mlt ,.:. fic,. ;. ., cmtntfalwl elew pi u -oauiea in oeauiy, ami wno net '(lothed with thunder," thsn-in the nV - is eunditv of the tcnanu. of the barnvard. or tit. ..rtwllli lit niu i.f ill. f,vs4.lp a.f ll. I stys or pens. It will be asked, tu whom aie the people of Kansas indebted for this great change in public tentiment. ,, , It ,h in coMeipjence of Kcutiemcu like Cspt. M. II. Insley its President, and Mess-rs. .1. T. McWhirt, G. R. Hines Geo, T. An thony, John Ilannon, Ed. Riu-cll, Ben. F. Akers, C. Moore, C. Hicks, J. C. Stone, John H. Steiner and Levi Wilson, who com poe the Board of the, .Association, lending their countenance, pecuniary aid and influ ence tu the encouragement of branding iroe borsea, and the extraordinary .speed which trotting horses have shown. The members of the aseoication arc men of the . highest respectability influence and moral worth; and it is to their 'efforts liber ality ami enterprise that the citizens of Kan--.-. will Ik indebted for an opportunity o( witn-.sing the fine ring contest tlut are Mire to (HX'Ur. t t The large eoiicournC, of rpectaturs who of late v can have attended the trotting races at fairs" is ttiong evidence of the. interest that jieople take in this kind of amusement; and m'i long a i the trotting remains under the control of the acaociatieii,it will be patronized, encouraged and literally supported; not only bv fir mers and breeders throughout the State, whose ccuniary interest it is to be so, tit bv every man, woman and child, who has a fondness Air the noble horse. At first tlie projxisitfou to offer purses for trotting horses at the fairs, startled the pious- niindnl iople little, and for a while a seii-ation, like the -Iir of silk when a con- gregation rises from- prayer, t might have .wu near..; oiu pre-sviuiv nit- iiou.iuui agi- talion ended, the clear, pure, broad light of common sense, and genial good nature came (Mil and spread over tlie minds of the iople like the sun when slipping from mist and , cloud into one of those hlue ovals of the breaking heavens. t F.ir the $ 1000 purse, u,,1 the (;erma'n W4V. in ,-,.: In sense in this direction. Jkit recent devch., St. laiuis, Clucaeo, Omaha, St Joseph, i . .. . .-, .:a- . , , wimiM lend .mo i...l.ni...;K-1.. d,4 Atchison, Kansas City, each of these ? cities will Ih; represented, , For tive tliree minute purse of .ri00 several rattling ''green ones' arc iNMiked. The iacing purse will be con tested for by representatives from Liwrcnec, Atchison, St. Joseph, Kansas lt ...' - ,n .. ,l,c noroughhred ring Chickamauga, Bronx, Xewrv. Vi w '' Little Arthur, Allmiiltra, etc., will siirclv me.t. And to wntributc furthci lo the en-. dJ , h j,, f awllll,ingof - iliey rfi. along the ClAmaMe pnmie terlaiiiiuei.t. we undcrslnnil that toI. .Irnni-l . . . . . - .- " ....L. .illi;.... .1... ......... .r..r...l.i.. ....... r . son and M. Wm. Viiughen have kindly con sented to exhibit tlieir stables of young horse" recently imported from Kentucky. The exhibitions in the Arena will be under the Mile control of Mr. John H. Hteinef, a young and enthusiastic admirer of the horse, iirrroi ihc norsr, , . . 1 f anil the entire general suimntemlencede- nilvH i.iK.n the well known horseman, Rciy. F. Aker-,t.r whose knowledge and ability iiiuch ol ne nneraii y ana namoi uie auir is line. A most praisewhyfeature of the rair i Ihc arrangement effected with all r.mnuun wcih lire .n. iu..ni riTcr iu issue half-fare tickets to visitors, and trans l.rt siis-k and freight to and from the fair free of chaige. Taw toonest Clavhe. ., , I . ... ll'toni llie Ttyeka Rcccnl. Insn-a.l of answenng the ohjecfions we . m ... fa.ive urgeil against him, he has attempted to orriiK uieir lorce wnn oaee, niauaons ana witiu lymg supplemented with cowardly l.is.minlHXw Hull, he riarw tttit fnuinlnlinse i-lianttM. Tliw man In h Inmnr Cin. sai be it said is .a member of Congress. alraoisValloccasioiLs.aiHllbe'reean la- no better ck. The following plan sbovrs the si lle ought to he a Jv-'xl man. at least But fxemplifia!ioirortheejitenttowhiehthr8lew". ',f,,,4? V"ehel(I with rcfirenre to Jh he, isn't. He is a contemptible poltroon a sneaking scoundrel, who, if he' had hia iut deicrts, would to-day be occupying a cell in llif penitentiary, instead of travel sing the State as a candidate fof-V hijha'tsd rerponi- !. k ha1 Msai aaa.it I )e ofticlil is.-ition. These are hard words: but they are trite words, nevertheterv. Tliryf are written coolly and deliberatelv and we ! st.nrl ready to hack theiii uiv ' .r ,' i Notcrs 'of Kanasf there s your Kepreen-. ....I ........ .I.Y.. ...... ...! ...1. I iin. t-siT(aoiv i . if .ir sniit-. --sts- -- . .TtieNaaatobPasrMaai.tfiaWar. "in 'Xano,iil nnna of Uinuler KicM.. I sats "Pmia sigaiieaiiand represents, tkt prtnciplea ol neutrality, iintny,amlprogreM; rrknoe signifies oppression and retrres- saai. feJUptblka'lherica; "May tIre(LtarJa victory faJOtthe Jotolrwsta; mart would al be the triumph oCthe ngha oi the Fn)ach peole, the fa'l of their tyrant .aad the expulisioO of the infallible Pope from Rdme.' . - fe Impnrdnl (Cliristino Martoz's journal) reaiarkk: '.'The. .Imperial Calaaat, by f).aar1sit laleeaoodiv Jiaa preciptaed 1- mnee iBthAWar, aanl has haady-.aaaaV'u- of t,m a pretext' tr i LWRirHAX toTWtT. lae. LaavtawoiUi Tikis publishct-a hat of Dntrirtt, walk the miiber rfdjrl.b. i:lj - ' ... X5 EZZ- -rL K -rlw3,-iu aiarsnai nousf.m. nae rim vanna-M vimtomc,tl1MimiMatim9m i!2L'i . SSfef HL": .. J?5?,!5 lauvc; me Miampion (nar oi ine coraaion- Tiutiuu w ealth the "moil constimmafe fraud in the ' ing in liie shape of n man and a, i-jlitictan who ever ' pates; Be rather, altbiuirted lo foist hiuiwlf upon an honorable i wjrv they should ffiaSr. 'SllSd TlJ, two. -It bare! v has a fkactiaa over wVMk DoWahaa Colmtr will -be entitled la aiaa idehsaaaar; the Fifth District nag .th oaf? e. . t m as. . . . . fmehavimra simrle renrepentative. WhiwA one naving a sing diCkief. 4-iA7cotemK.rary atKra wna lk f4tjao ernpan. csif5CfflSsir T-7jm TThe only rlgMfnftVitawltrsthe Kornine at breansL "1I 1 D-. i.j : l u : .ti drewwed, number iSemmki? Nothing worries, a aua so much in a lady aa aflectatioa of maaaer apeech. -"Why aught you. uppuse a joaag ba who speaks her mind,toAx mcuhnef Be caaMaheia Fiaak. ,fc -... Daring paaee- a Sariag war-time it .;--! . f.r.rrTl: .- VM.IIM1I. ill, a w pwaes. The Dutehare in ' ctisternatien over a degree of Holland opening the 'examination ofapotbeeariMlo women. -7-Many ladies' wear entire wi in the summer, as the braids wo'ra are so heavy that they cannot pin them to their own hair. - Philadelphia rejuices tJver the discov ery that it ha thus fay this year, consumed P,vW more beeves, and. 11,UW moresbeeis than in thevrresjpiiading jeriod of 1809. ' Young ladies at thejwa shore wear blue and green veils tied arcHind tlieir heads to protect them from the. sun while they sit on the 'piazzas. , Plain 'itink or green Swiss aiustia ' dresses flounced and trimmed with white ValmrininfK lace make verr beautiful aad stylish evening dresses, and "are very' fash-i icmable. A zealous Christian, snendinr last' Pnn- ! day' in New York, went to five churches in , Mieecswion. ami found theni all closed. He , returned to his lodgings Impressed with the! ltr .l.. .1 . r.. ....u: !-.. i The I.oii.!..ii Km,;,- eall tli Pnw."' '0f beauty; but nowadavsit Is uuossiblelo' -tell whether a woman is wearing her own crown of beauty, or that of some other wo - nun. Tliconly two joiirneyuien tailors' as-o-, eiations in Philadelphia are named resiiect- would Ik hard to iind two names less suzzes- ! iveir. .viiaiii aid i arwiise AMiire. mi. :..i.. r .. 1 t it t .. t - .1 tive of the biisines-. A, anialcr hunter iu Svnto lkirbara ,,l:l. ; ., ...JjA. dial i mean well e-nutt. .-. --- - . . . 1 -tul iIiiaiTi. tt.nn Imv .UtiiVi ciiiivInmIv. bf It the iihmiU'v jr uot a liUBr.ni Iviu;. he w "" " i .. .--. .,.- . w ! monkevar uot a luiaraii twiug, lie u siu- ay 'rf, Bis neiii, , xpuu In huiuanitv, a kind ov biainhus,r ; 4lc droops in coliJ,wt.lhiir, ami i vou km ruv JiiiiterV, a libel, with a loUR-lail rmas i him on a winder iii and v'v jest it, a ini-terious. mixlur ov ludikroWs. nut (four finger in iti' 'lle"WnH-.a gin next plvx m . t " . .. . . IT I -. joke lew i..;-l.;..n.UtjleIiuiii.ir..a kiml O v leinf holibvhoss. or eoliueetiiui ramt'Olauk- he- .':.. .- i:....:... ..... ii ..TIL ..:.. I.:. liwceriiuaii ill ..isii.jjn.i. aie. iwi j I darkness. - - t a . I tKB a1uttlra t tlik niiiiiLirK rioliL lttaaTr i t. ? i i.ri.i.. . . T.-i ..,:--. T iW'Itiok al. ami Hifinkr he e. ag-Hiig' .AM, .1,. ,,,. . u.. ;, ;.. l ... ,ii,.r.,d? m.r him in a. - kf-.s. -.- --j- , ,Mrk.f , ,m nj T,.,,,rcIBiUtolf. and tei ill Litbcr, aiHA.'fry lew Iwta, i 1 1 1 1 iaaa hti iiiil.lai.li- i at tmbt nlt ,;E f,ICC ;5 ., rtril,0fJMiy,u,1iMjlier. lie resemble: Uie rat ten itr in ccuntensuce, and skratihes hit;, bed nz natral as a dwtrikt nkool .boy; and undoubtedly for the mine reason... , Monkevo never grow euny older in ex prebhun; a yonng monkey looks juH like bis grandpapa, melted down,' and born again. They are sometimes kejt as peU, but I should rather watch two adopted orphan buys, fifcoh from the Home of the Friendless, than two nionke . ' They will cat everything that a man will, evcept bolony sarsage, here they show more jnstinkt than reason. But after all, the monkey shows evident eigns ov reabon, they are, as a means ov praktikal grace, the most useful krkters i hav ever pondered over and skratcbed mi head about. i They won't work, and thy won't play, unlesci"they kan raize uim devil, they are too mutch like a human being in look and actions to kill off, it is impossible tew gaze at one and git juadat,him,.aud it is impoanble tew latl' at tlieir aairking aUnity, without getting niad at yourself. If enny IkhIv should make a prebent of a monkey,i don't know now whether i sliould konsider it intended for malice, or a joke, but i do knowlliati should bend him back hi the same person that fetched him, to the donor, marked in loud italicks C. O. 1). In conclusion there is only one thing that i have a great supply ov doubt about in ref ercnee ten the monkey, and that iz his moral stamina, while in the garden ov Eden, with the rest ot llie critters, prev ions lew iim lime , (hat AjaBI fell; was he stricUy on the j ,,w.t ur Ha, heju-st.,. full ov the devil az . jlt. j lowy , .Vn answer tew the aloVC kolitilinlriilil IZ earnestly solicited. Ttae Uerasaa Wayw. The.wavs we arc about to refer to. sv the I III 1..1..1..I.!. f 1 . - ....a !. . ..fi miiiiit nstaatiH iim- .in- niiiru iiiiu'iviil iiimi American ways "and those "of most of theMhat the girls of the iwi.Hl were growing other peoples "absorbed bv our countrv, and kiw make up thei fortv millions' of in-1 mt.in the.l'ti;tnf .Stain.. Them in who now habitants marked example of what wc mean br" " the German way '' in the proceedings at the in - emian way " in the proceedings nnmtmtUm 'r ,. .. Slnn,;m, p"ri. r j. ' of the emiaii Rifle Clubs. A " KiflcCliib" is essMtiisllv a masculine iiistitulMin. Rifle men. and onlv nidi: and the inauguration of a park devoted to rifle-shouting would ordi-,,rto four inelics nearer he-av en than ua narily be regarded as an aHairto interest and S ' intended her to reaehm this muiidaiie divert men exelusive v. lint tills is not the Ii- Riii fhia is not the Cmim Kir. It msmiis lo bea natiiHial Irart tl.t i...:.fiJirllL.t.ran iMssiblv be niadc to af-i i f , ,. - .1 ,.t ., ,..,!... r....:i.. ... 1 lo.il l.nciriliFll .iiiii iicii-uic iJ uv iiiii., "' , wife , c,iMm, ,Jle boHsehokl-can ,. lvm iete vnUt, lc'whole femilv can par- . . - ' Aiinlinitlrall.iir vwrtaartrall. .. fc,t;Te.,K,-s;(,ni .,,,. , arAn, ", i ;lcIud,tlltf Wlcc o- tv .-.... .. , ., : . . . r lie presence ol everv mcailrer ol the both sexes and all ages licit (an be - I4UIU. spared from home oppressing domestic duly, i fastened at the ride. This is the Grrniau way, and a most adndra-. - ble, commendable and wholesome way it V. Tfc Nllaalian. We do not mean to sav that Americans, or 'l'r.n ihr n. i.,i lnhli(aii. ,' the people of anv other of the various na- ' rlc ,Kitiie the,.Arg.mies has l,n tiopalitirs that makeup the polatiai .f iMrf,,l'hlits,,,d " "ult is so plainly -et ft.rth evuntrr. never". U.ke out their families on tes-1 IH t,M' desMtches that no wonls.in- ne,se, t -.'. ... . tive occasions. "A e are of course weff aware ' that there :i re. ano njo: lli Iumssi-' 'Hut llies are. rllvm u.riid. Willi llie I Mnianxit ia rulraml timn ccasions when wives, children. f fnon will is? made iy the n.idni I-rem h . -T I. W .. T. jr.M. fa. a-M..'ll ln. I..' 1T1 t .1 SL .:.u..... 1.... rr.ai.vp.'otsiLiiisHt cxoirmons.' - iue- - .- - .-.. ...-, ... -. . . w-,.. iW ;' "relciiraiioiiH, etc., with "the man on " " mui ..re mi.-, who iioki - ., -- -...-- .:.: ..... 1:1 i ,l .. ..... . -i ,. , r : U carried, than ihi- very ocrion wlicn"''u",,"',i-n" Th: tli. wAtat.I. iifaikiiiuai I a ! Iifpaiat aan.tanaiMaii' liiuitraiaii nviutn mei iiami i ii m a niajipani i the men In the opeuing "fi the "hhooOn"ri I'.irk f a rtlle eluh, whicnv aa we have al-1 readv oldened, is s,ie?ntiallv a masculine: institution Jhal it would be ni.isrsj that llie t women waild nalurallv cxeeted to be left j ouCof tlwt. if at uo other time. liutil Uk not aeeiu t be iu Uie nature of the averaae ' iuteUtgT nl Gernun to seek pretexts for the"" oi wne and cMiiuren man snar- enjoy uieiiii in which he artki- f9f:M for and huds reasons L lie of the comiKtny. Thu-l 1 i is:h9 umi uv iHilir kiwi lin; isswic iNtJaMon may be, provision is made for wife,- im.kher.ond daughter, as- well as husUad, !. ...... iI.a. .... ..B.f.. u... ..... L...I. lather. and Win. ' t tlli ".sv-htllvon ISrk. (Ii- .iri luia uniteatby fJietl""nd the wjiole Irouse. hoid, from the aged grandmother down lo the prattling baby. rii--re aie pUeen, ft alii amusemeni.sfor ail ami, there can be j nojdouhl alioiit .it, genuine pleasure at the prijscnce.of all.. JIt is a bight welf worthy of American 'ooscrvauoii, ani uiai no, wei trained mind and no kindlv heart can fail lb tubroughly,satbted with. Whilst he fHiaggaUeries are buy enough, and are rxceueni i.i.ngs 01 tueir kiuu, uaj Mir,t"f far the least active, and attractive localiiie on the Park crounds. The rnuwc pavilion and the '4ringhorses are the places where n .HmiiiQi milter, where ther cnlov . K'tti y - .'instrumental iuumic, where ihey hear the choral perfornunow of the eul- ZffSSttlZi t " -an? Jherc the ciuldrea romp -ia : r.ii-:. r.. .i ..i,. c . -rX. &!&., hor4 or the A, r. Th u their hands at rifle bhooting, m come te"nZZ .'"adac aaikl - ??&. """' ;-?---" -A-: 1 w"?cau - " - " .jtwwAWTiaM,AKptTPUinat - lie. I aVtX tUpil fjAa. J--Uarr k ffaaaaa q rlfiaWH aaiTawri irarjTaiTaiuBnc iiraK aasaapw .. . .aaaai HaHiaa aaaT Kaa aapawtw, aVa a fr.a.l.know. Traai.iathjrWeaVarai , of. Catholic Jwrnipco tha- Catholic world, j WaWUeth-vkceof A eeaaabsMwla-ntaalMa rrnai nf Tajhtiria ia Jlkaa shadow "over the power1 of the' Church aulitaat. . Fraace Maked ,ja3tt thotoajhr by traditioa Jaad attwa to; the Vatican, aadjhas ever ,aoae her ataasaVto wealtaa j?totarfaatisa .1 jpm, ja ja wf caa dargy Who waa,dmeato fJni byi iiiniJM6iiiiac..jm niiiwiT iWCa-gWkprieapieacfedoira, thi. . .. . . . ' . ". I "M W, MUMK. " ! Uf.MtsTll.;l-Vl. cownaaace, ana bow jkk inaLiae aross .w 1 La .- - r. " T -n ... !. j""' 1 hi Frcach sword-arm. which he,rcuas. Upoa rren awe, than upon his ast great .sposed spirkaal victory at theEcaBenical CounriL. fori Letter in X K JTmej. .1. BXMK. BYJOiH MUASG3. ,1 I liate a Ii. A ti has got no manners, 'i He aiat no gentleman. He's an introodrr: doat send in no kard. nor ax an ialerdurkshtia, aor don't knok. at the front- door and nuver, auvrr thinx ov takin' of his hat. Fast you kno' he is in bed with you and up yo aoaer-tho wliat be waats tkar is mistry and be invitee himself to .break w and seta douia.ia yore buttcrj 'lhout.nhnjkin his pants, , He heliw hisself lo sugar, .and meat, and merlassis, and bred and pcrjurves, .aad4 vinegy ennytbing, and eloni want lor no iavitaahun. He's pita good, appytilc, and jiat as sun cat oocthlng as anutlier. 'Tainl tuiiii tik lfatlana linta Ctr likiu i:iMu. k v. ..... i..-a;t.. t-..;u.... pro-ldencc, whh vou, whether or not, and shootn hisself at v'ou like a Uillet.-aml he nuver ' nuW He'll kiss vourwife twenlv times a davl , and lia zoo,"and ridiknlc you if y. , word, and he'd rather you'd . slap at h ou sav a hint than hiot box: liesadoehzer uv the elodzirinist kine. Everv time vou shu. vou don't slai , him. Imt slan voiinsclf. and "he- zizzez arid' . ' ....- .' - ' pints the hinc lee uv the finger uv ssporn at you, till he aggravates you to distrackshin. ile glories in alightin every pufi on the ,ixactswt w liar you elmv him from, which uther things .-,t, .1.1, iu lt. never gits old - . - t ... . .IIHl IIC I" lllllieriiritl WWW IlllIICVU 111 llie iu-iW '-T'?1 ,,cl"' p , . II -TsT, and a beep mole with him. Taint Iw itsc. s rpTr-Trv'jw, I (."w s Tin: lAI.I. IMNHHI.s. -.r (It nrl r-n'A 1 i ' Tlie wiaTure. Ult rs sM BmIs. Ir.Mii tlir Nc Vr"E Til ' TllhHAIK. 'lbe (oitture is now hrcimiing rstlier a f-crions suhjevt with llie many who have chosen during tin- si-l few war., to o.iitonu to tkeextravagaiit dictate of fashion. Smie who couimem el with loii, luxuriant hair, are compelled at la-t to put on the fnl-e in default f th real, while other-, fearing a like fate, arc endeavoring ! nee Irom the wrath tu come" b.s dircanhng all false ap- ienoage. in-s-c who re.uiy naveipeir n.nr aftff M:ing through .-tiili a hiiir-ihistroving ordeal are pioud to show it now' and are bcainainc to.armnge k-rin verr simple and graceful etylth. Tight putts cu the top of the head are worn. Braids areal' arranged a?ffi'wr, ana wiui me cnnieiaiue on.in :u the back, made to as?ar tliii k by rimping. This style of coiffure is putty. Pendant braids are still worn by eiiildren, mid are very becoming for young mi-ses. Kli (llOf aie pnmiised :t greatly redo, nl 'ii".. and are'o be worn as high on the arm a. to rr nai re kvcii or eieht buttons I. fa-ten them. Still, short-wrMted glove- will he adhered to by aianr, espeeiallv where the arm i- ina- mented by braeekt-. In " jewelrv little of novelty w offered at pre'-ent. Jet eema much in vogue, and during the past few months a vcrv light aitiele of thi- kind called "Whitby Jet" has grown sviecdmgly pviilar for morning wear. eot-HK AXMfir-. Linen for ordinary wear itill the f.tvri ite, and the present stvle of e-llar high in the back, and turnel down in front, will Jirotcct the threwt nmeh more thii, (lse stely worn by our fashionable belles,. Laces for full drciM will, of course prevail, and collaas of this material arc worn in every conceivable r-hsje, while a short fall of lace at the wrist is slwavs cellv, xih! give n graceful finish to the drew, iwors. Oh rvHihing thi- int iu dreiiiliiiii v cnuc i more tlian ever ls-wilderel. Kiis were at one time almost unknown ! llw fitir isxtion of the jhili.ilie workl, ninl the more, delicate and insiguificaiit the firnt covering, the more aristocratic and refined the wearer. At last, however, this more sulrttantial article became a m.ist puLir item in letnale. attire, and, until the last lew months, women s understandings gave nlllla III TitTaP fill liIMli1i lit (tniWIhi' smbimI ---- ---.--. ...... ,... .....n.-.-.. .,, . .-.-.v even -more foidish and reckless n.ncerning "e"r eet tlian were the Ulles of other days, iand good Mother Colunilo-.i may well look ' anxiously to the future of Ur fiiir daughtei. ! - ' ' prevailing style of foot-drc-ii .-lull 1 15 continue " . -ti.vrn VM. ...i.i i r.vi. mi t may have a very pretty anstiwratic effect , , stilling the uncomfortable wearer from wsiv, mi im-nnis iiuic ei.s.riemv i re splwre, but precious little CXK-rieniV i: iM"ircu in convince me napie-ss aiiveiuiires hat sia-h a mode of renewing heaven is pro- t m-ative ot seitsnluUM must. "tii-v.hmI on- ! " heavenly. Slippers have revived .-sHucwhat ?-' '" "' "'" ''"A ""- '." I heiajr.iuilo thestyle fi.r young ii.sm Bni a radfc.1 clangs in thi- demHmrnt of trade I " lnwuaaeu iut mc ixur-ua is, in an mil heels; and boots it i said, will be mostly . . l!..l r...-ii .i". r .. . r. r. war- t . e-apwii. h. e mav )a.r.iaps Miri..i-r nut I fail to Itltcririit al le3t some rt of the Mmaf) aa, y nr'rtr lil.li.lUM BftfTI ft, fS r- . i lriria BEAUMOHT. ' rs ";. a, iwa.": , . .V..VJ-. ,.,.-i Kt Jk1 , t-su.m . . J .M.-milr ' U'ri'ii .iiim '? VlMt..(lt "'.? C.-.rl , CRHlaitoV I' l..f.. ' ."' I'UII !2 ' Vontiffti P " lirainl 'i. :i rrP l.liui . " . Monlfc-i,- .. fr,, j. ? ,. iit i .1.I-3-. i i ",, i Oil'S i '.il' f ' t i ' i .Jl-lns . - i s Wr-biu - . tin K' ; ' t fi iil!.r tr rj vtfivlmM s'lltpe- M..l ..' l f "T I- fc v I has-.w ' j. Jf ,fn.. - jik. I i it :.- .i ii - nv t - . fc ! ''IfH . '' '' . ' Fr.in 1 itir l I ranroi to M-7ir.s It alxit nilr".ii1li-. .-3lJt 1(11 f ''.(' I 1.! , , , , I ,r Bm-4-. ritrvfeFraiH.J- ' 1Vnr " Kt-i ttV'HTHt M. Viti-r , -1 " ' v l ' r J-- t . 'Tta-taWaiilasi-1 .5-i:t.,.-i -: t.' mic ;. ' TuasLjToaisor xuk. HBvrri.Me,. . - " . . i ' XeiieiTS " " ""' ' &nm n;ur Beattinoni "" M"MlM-ly . tV"-i Pint - S!:irU Vrnlun Msii JUwJms rrifF. ItartrZ t rails " Zi4-etr 'Chakms-' fVVj " Naner' The XMsaho Falk Attrertuer. is. iajhrned he. C J. Goait that a anrrev of the Fort &ott. lala A Neosho Fans 'railway, will, he made Wkhih the next two week by th "M'taannrf, Kanns Texas Railway O.mpany, i.itial (as-a- I er rioii a.auiv Jiuei.o-' an.Li liaiou. Will isKsjtsnStt, a.-sr?g -. .Ti.r '-'' .. m " j. sy. WMT S. Y. KetaM, Aay. SM. A aNCtiac of tat, GeaCtal Cbaiauttas- of the German Union Democratic party, con- nting of 390 delegates froat the different want organizattvffMMQfjy-e Teuto afa Assembly Rooms, in TErd avenue, last night. Great enthusiasm prevailed ana the foflowingatmaleBt'waV aavaaosdr The po litical and ethical history of nations proved tfJermany an eminently peaceable State, and xveenaeavorconMKenerrespoannie lortae jjitmatwat wasaftaklegaoae. The crimes of rulers are visited, upoa the people, they mie, ana r ranee must pay in present numii ity fbr the irrogaBce and aggreMkms of Louis JEIT., and the. Boaaparta family. Oermaav hailKcw made tosuAer ia the past. and should have the, sympathy of all honest men, and particularly ot the Americans, in her effort to humble France. Millions of Germans have contributed to the pros perity and power of America, while Fraace insulted ua in her Mexican expedition and her attempts to aid the South in rebellion. The Germans are a great people, physically and intellectually. Remhitionswereaeloptea censuring the mean, and despicable course of democratic niiers which expressed sympathy for the r reach., it was also resolved that J xsas 'Napoleon was in the liahit of hobnols- iHBg wiin ine luriuocr oi ie cngtisn gov ernment aad didn't care a tig for Ireland, and that theonly correct and proper course for good people to pursue was to organize patri otic (erman) cluhs anil suWribe to the relief of the wounded of the war. Consider ing the fact that there were "many thousands otTaptiired enemies" to sliare the anticipates! 'Iwnehta, the last resolution should receive the PPort of every sone-T ,, The above was conuiucd ui the address and endorsed by the' resolutions, both of which were adopted unanimously. TK Uaaal wm C'aallaNrsi iu lnr in Iaaa 1'. II rum the K.rl s.u Muitr.' The editor of the Garuetl I'dtimlioft r an nounces himself as an anti-Clarke candidate for, delegate to the State Convention, and adds that "Judge Iawe, in the game for Congress, seems to have the innings. He has lieen perceirtiMv gaining strvngtli for llie pa.st two weeks, and hoiild there le no ui r rel at the Convention, his nomination seems to us to la? a evrtainty. 'That is the talk all around. A evrres xndeiit from HumUildt write-, as follows: "Judge-lame will carry this district and Allen toiuilv s,did. Clarke won't ge-t .. mell. Ihir primary iTiee-tiiig" close with three roii-iug cheers lor .lu.lge Lowe.' . ' - - )tVTiui August, 31, 1S70. .Five .ait of th seven delegates) to the Stutc oi.vei.lioH were - si -r tbe r iry electinii in Joliii-on onniy. ' We mid pleiiKl meeting last ni, '. Judge. Loup made a masterly rAiirt, w liu li. "-.s well ru ceived by the jivople. J. H. Pvoi.v, August ."I. 1 7t. ill am glad lo iiirWm you thai tlie 1'ai.Ii ditriet. heretofore douUful, will Is- unain irioii. for JudgV i.owe. thu- giving lis ..it ll.rev. OMWslomie ilisiri.t is O. K. Iir a new dml. Ft Miami down .Huong Ihc lri mis ol prgre. Tritm. Pelltll fliais in l"rrt. The p-ditical ehange-. iu I'lariv' m eighty j ein. .ire summarised a fullnwi : In 179Jll.greal French IJi'voluii-m w.. in-iugiirateil. lamif. XVI. m.ts . pil, aifl all llie monarihis ..( E'Topi dlai(d war against the voimg republii IVame w withmit finamis., withoiii trisi-- In 179. the resibi- Ind U-n triumph ant evervwher" acain-t the mviuithi. .1 govciniiMBt and had c td'li-l'cl interml or der. In iV?1;! "Bom parte :u h-rii Fit-t Mil. 1W4 Hoiiaprrte E"ipeior 181o Walciksiand ht- I Muni and the restoration of the T nr'siiis m the tm nl' Louis XVIII. H;H The revi-lnlMii and exfiil-ri'ii ot Charkh X. for general di-regard ol ("n-litu tional government, and in particular foi !Vt ignac deerees again-t the press. I.ouis I'lul Itppe ascends the throne. IMS lajut? Phillippe altdi.-ite.; pulir diaaatisftKlioii at eace policy abroad: tain pt-ring with election t Ihmih and liiii.l.iig In Minera of Ihc press; and lxii ,N",ib...ih eleeted President. 1851 Loiiit Nssjb'on eleetel Pie-ehiit for ten years by Y,839.!"lri yote. IHoi! The second Euipite bv voir of 724.111'. itiieiw. s- l A P-rliaa mt I he Wmyerts Nfnlrn Irom ua .saains.isi booh lanrrrn h--tartaerff tllnrsso of S'Hlef fnslr ClHMe. NtW YoMW, St pi. . Ill the priipcitv stolen from llie McthodM Hik iVii-eni $!," in Jersey I ily Ninds and aili (. ut silver were reiorcd this miiniitig t ih- of" tii of ihr liisliliili(i.. The J.luii'l.-r n.i. m irt a. stikaxetroiigly made up and lv a l.iesf.iger wli s iiinlile lo .1 tie vh i- it catile Irom. Ml lie kl. n n.i lie bid Ims i, instnutisi to deliver ir. The Hii.Af sav. i J' llie .ir.i!vli. ,i...e whiih fell oil Chief .lie-lice t'li.use. M-viral days ago, llud he is unable to walk uiti.oiit assistance, and his miml seems sbattcrcd and nupiifvil. The- health of the Chief Jiistien has been visibly decliiiin:r for uuiiy niontlis. A gentleman Irom ibis city, who-e Inis7ii-i. ealhsj him to the supreme Couri, during its last session, remarked to his friiniN, ou t.s turning, that he was struck with his hanged apliearai'.ce1 and list visible marks of prema ture old agt. Xlw Yomk, .sept. 2. The .Ven siv: We 'have jut learned with deep rcgnt that tliief JusiceChae has for sometime pa-t, liee-n Mittering Iron, a pi ral.v lie stroke, whii Ii, without entirely.eWsiriiyiiig the Use of his : liml, iiMapaeilates him from walking with out help, arid keriniL-lv afls1s his mind. His recovery" is dcireil rnth.T than con tidentry.'exax1ed. Iialeed il is eniiilinl doulalul wliethcr he will ag;.iii be able In resume hiiarduoib labors of the. I", m Ii. The thief Justice is now at the cooulrv -.it !' Seiuitor Sprague, hisiuiii-iu-law, on Xarra gaiiselt Itay, wIk-iv he has the Usa. meili-.. attention the country can aUbrd. Till: largest kitehen in the world i- tint of tlie I.ie-big YWvi Extract Company in I'ru grray. It covers ll,flU0-(iiarcfet of ground, aial i divided into "a anmhpr'of eonifart inent, wiiich are all constniitisl uitli . view to tlieir KCiiliar iit. You (liter lirt .. large, dark, cool hall, with pivid fl.M.r. where the meat is weighisl and cirvvi-d throiigii oningi irr the wall to the ciitling madiiiies. These are fiii i r in iiumKr. and mn cut up iXaj young omii in an ln.tir. 1'rmn the i-utting-match(si tlie meal g.s-s into tivelri" rvcein-rsj where it is pres.s; hy Menm urr ol" evenly-iivL siuiiiN to the s.n,rf. ineh. Tlis; twelve rervivera are rapaUe ol (. n lainiiig li,trtJJ huii . j fth " i-ii.i tliesv the rural, or mtlier th- ltipiid novr, rut. tlinmgh pia- into re'pisejis. eon-tnidxl for list mrjas? of sejiarnliiig fttiv-.ul -tains? from the extra.t and to thar r I-r-l ly, it is raised by steam .iir-siiu int.. I.irg--coolers, filtered, and suf-ejuently .iilil t..r I transsirtatioii. the Imti her of tliei.nii.iiiv rs a si-irniinr eirniiioner, who (.in wiui ci.j' and gn.e. kill eiglitv oxen in an hour bv skilfujly separating the verlel'ra-. j .A (r'ii.r..MAN in Uo-tou Ii.idlii.s.niniti'.n attracted, ah he w.i,pasi.iflg along the sliel, by a woman who appearar ( jo in gicat distress. He tlopd and iuuiiid nlmt troubled her m muJi. Stic r plied in a pilei.-n tone, "My huslauid is iU.r and I have in i uiouey to Isiry him." Tlieg-iitle man heitaleil, lit she retHteil l.crsinry. 11 rial do not faficve lue conic ami -s. He followed her into Uie !;oii-', ami time, wire enough, her lio-ljan.1 was h ing in the i-n -ready for burial. Tlie geulleman, pilyiag h r jlifitints, removed hi-, glove, and, giving Iter, money enough to bury her 'lUslund, bade thr gijod uioniiiig, arid de- Iurted,, He had gowe but a few blchii le liii-vcdJiU. gloves, anI, on returning tor tin-in, entered witlmiil ceremony, and luund thv Jtiippiiked drad 111:111 sitliug up in hia ioftit,.oNintiBg the money lie had given 'w woman a few minutes, larfore. He tis.L ins glovtv, s)nd reuiarkcl -to the man tli.it !" need ik4 trouble himself to count the mouey, as it was right, and departed, a sadder and a wiser man. In view of the fact that a large numl! of cattle hare died ia linage county within the IKca arw ajas-u aa spaaiMB or lexai lever, and cJauar'rartkat the laws of the State have leen disregarded, the people of that county, at a nteeriag held ill rJuriiDKanie the other j day, resolved that they will stop the driving otsaal cattle tfaruugn the county, laicciully if pnaaiblebat feriiblyif neceay. A -Lur-ilar aaotMaort kcoateauplaleil in this ctnin ly. TrjicU. ComaMoituxaM. , The State Fata. Among the aitraciiei -proaaiaed for the coating State Fair nilLIs- a locoaaotire, a fay car and a isasseager uach. finished in the moat ncaakeataaanner.and placed on exhikatioa by the Chicago & Alton Kaibead Coatpaay. The Secretary of I he Society haa beta notified by the Company that lhaac ears will he placed on exlubitlon, aadcaaanaebioatia iwaaaTrrmllr invited Ft. ,SiAc7w'ssr.