Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 April 1859 — Page 1
PIKE'S PEAK.
Th« vernal rains were falling fast, ... Aa through a little village passed, A youth who bore a hickory pole,
And oxen under bis control, Pike:s Peak i-
Hi* biow was glad his eyes were bright, Xor to the left, nor to the right, lla tamed, but onward kept with steady course, And shouted till his voice was boarne.
Pike's Peak
Ho left his happy home by night, And toward the west he took his fligfct, Above the moon in beauty shone, And from his lips escapcd a groan,
Pike's Peak!
You'd better stay," some old men said, You'll surely lose your wits or head The stormy prairie's long and wide." .But loud that headstrong youth replied
Pike's Peak
llcwaro of swindlers,cheats and thieves, .Beware of those who would deceive This was the old roan's last advice,
To whom the youth said in a trice, Pike's Peak
At length the barren plains lie reached, His bread 'most gone his form well blenched Hut still ho groaned that furvAnt prayer, 'Which did not go far through the air,
Pike's Peak
A traveler by the PUttc was found, Flat as a pan cake on the ground, Rtill clinging to his hickory pole, "And on the ground could scarcely roll.
Pike's Peak.
There by the diggings, cold and gray, I.i fuless and pennylcss l.e lay, •And could ho speak, you'd hear him say,
Humbug
From the Great Kepublie Monthly, for April.]
N A O E O N I I I is in
'On thc 5th of May, eighteen hundred
and twentv-one, at Longwood, in the is-
land of St. Helena, a great prisoner died,:.
after he had accomplished the age ot fifty- i.
1
sejiuli
fii
hurricane ot the tropics swept in the full
1
lorce of its fury. On the dav that was
to be his last, the elemental strife was renewed with sublime violence, and amid the howl of wind.-:, the gleam of lightning, and the crash of thunder, the congenial spirit of Napoleon soared on the dun cloud ...
ol battle, and civing through the lips of
the mightv hero, spoke the old command
(letober, eighteen hundred and torty, at midnight, mid took trom it the body oi the grand dead exile. (hi the fifteenth of December, while France, in each department and province, trembled with enthusiasm, and the streets of Paris were gorgeous with the troops of a king who had succeeded to the Emperor's throne, his collin was borne, and crossing his beloved Seine, was placed in the Motel of the Invalids, in the Field of Mars. The sword and the crown, the military hat ho wore at dread Evlau, on
his cofiin. he sleeps at peace by the bank.-
.if the river he had long before designated j-ss
for his ih
of Ansterlitz shade the imperial mauso- •sP»«r.r
lem aud in the religious light of the
Chapel of St. Jerome, the world can see
the funeral tramp of the craped soldiery, awakened the memories of the imperial glories, a man sat in a lonely chamber tar from the great pageant, in a castle prison on the banks of the Soinine. Old as the hit( i»F iilirmitnlAc iu I In tit
LTOlUllS
sits there musing tlie news is irn.
num. nt it" in vi niu»
brought to him that Napoleon Bonaparte
CLTADKL OF
HAM.
Dec. 15, 1840.
SIRE You return to your capital, and the people in multitudes hailed your return while I, from the depth of "my dungeon, can only discern a ray of that sun .•hat shines upon your obsequies it lo not be angry with your family, that it is not there to receive you. Your exile and your misfortunes have ceased with your life ours continue always
You have expired upon" a
low your oier.
Montholon
a a a
two. Ihe elosing scenes ol his career »t hmperor brother, the beantitul and palewere in keeping with the mighty incidents J. ». ii° .1- ,i
4
of his lite. He had lived amid the storm, ,,
I.I
ii two people ot dillerent temperaments were
1 1
cud
1U1
,a
among your companions office of a son he remaius faithful to your I Triumph, and"'remember" the nephew's ideas, and has fulfilled your last wishes.— uncle
When you touched the soil of France, an electric shock was felt you raised yourself in your coffin your eyes were for a momept re-opened the tri-color foatcd on the shore, but your eagle was not there
Th# people, «s in former times, pree§
around jour passage, and salute you with tion that he should marry Donna Maria, their acclamations, as if you were still! the Queen, who had become a widow by alive but the courtiers of the day, while rendering you homage, say, with suppressed breath, God grant that he may not awake
And much more to like effect, in his high worship, aud almost prophetic sorrow, wrote this prisoner in the old citadel. There were guards about him, but they could not check the sorrow or the song of the captive. The mother he loved so well, and for whom he braved so much, rests near him now at Ruel, in the neighborhood of Pairs, and his uncle in his inspiration •at the hotel of the Old Guard in the classic field of the god of war.
The ashes of the Emperor made an Emperor, and business-man, Louis Phillippe, knew it would be so, long before the barricades of the 22d of February Washington's birth-day, we opine were built, and the cry of Down with Louis Phillipe down with Guizott!" were shouted and shot from behind them,
But how happened it that this youn.
...
Miade wretched tor lite. Josephine paid learlv for having crossed the brother-in-
I i- lage, and it has so turned out that a grand
a a a a
1
i- pushed tor rrair.'o what the marriage with
the
to the vanguard ot his troops. ouut .Montholoii s-.ivs that, twice he heard him say, /•Viicc' —tirf/HT Utc far//ire—Jnsrji/ihicIn a narrow tomb, beneath the shadow of a willow tree, the chief ot war slept, from the seventh of May, eighteen hundred and twenty-one, until a sou .1 4\ 18Ub, at the 1 uuerie ot Louis I hilhppe, by the order ot Ins lather and the will of the French, opened the lone sepulchre, on the eighteenth ot
daughter of 'lie house of Austria intended to bring about i'':it
11111
l0'~e
th-resting place. The banners '^i ..apivepuoiiean, aim son
or"
lL'ai
the tomb of a man who. in the language of |lias
an eloquent writer, "needs no epitaph."—° .a jnf
1.111*
IIIL,
rh
mice, despite the Citizen King 'and is |of
about to take his place upon a throne that |aiu^ banished the tvholc party beyoud thc war had consecrated, and to which the I
glorv of his renown had imparted the lus-!
•TOTI1K MANKS OF THE EMPKROK"
horder-
*l '•l=u
BO
He has conveyed to me your last words.— they tarried some bnef breathine time He is in prison with me. —A
,l I,u
eu 0 W1 1
'"'V,11
er 0 our
axo 1,s 100 ,l
the death of the Duke of Leachtenberg, the cousin of Prince Napoleon. In his letter of declension he admits the charms
But to return to our intentional wandering narrative. From Switzerland, the student went to Strasbourg, actuated by the predominant idea that the cause of Napoleonism was the cause of France, and indeed of Europe. He reached hi3 point of operations on the 28th of October, 1836, and on the 29th he walked through the town while a brilliant moonlight steeped the deserted streets in splendor. That moonlight was the light that opened for his entrance the dungeon of Strasbourg, the prison of Paris, the portals of Ham, aud the throne room of the Tuileries. His imprisonment brought to the excitable French mind the memory of the first Na-
nephew was in limbo in the old castle, poleon, and the triumphs of his eagles, and while the uncle was parading the streets from that day forth, the present Emperor of Paris The dead lion seemed to have became a leading thought and a particular more power of locomotion than the caged hope to France. He had to endure much 3'oung eagle, live as he might be, with his Jere he won the prize of his patriotism or wings clipped and a few feathers taken out of the tail of his judgement.
It is a queer story, and to amuse the reader while he travels along in the train over scenic Erie line, or any other, as the ease may be, we will take some trouble aud more pleasure in reminding him of it, but without much system of detail.
Hortcnse Eugenie de Bcauharnais was mistaken. not'thc genuine love of Louis Bonaparte, ex-King of Holland, but her cousin, the fair Emily, was his true heart's Valentine. The Emperor and Josephine, the latter in particular, wanted Louis to marry Hortcnse, Josophine's daughter and so, just before the embarkation for Egypt, they brought about a marriage between 3Iademoiselle Emily the Louis-loved, and Monrsieur de Lavalette—from which event
1
(•?, loved again. 1 ressed they then, those
.. ,. 'imperial match-makers, upon Louis, tne
faced, yet accomplished and bewitching
llortiMise and, in a mad moment, atter
and controlled the tempest. Around tne ,' .. ,|. _• much dodging the question, the affair was low-rooted dwelling that was his prison- ». .i »i.„ settled into conjugality at Maimaison, and house, for a dav preceding his death, the
his ambition, but his star was above him aud leading him. On the 26th he commenced the revolution, and so far as appearances went, finished it before sunset. As he passed along the street? the night of the 28th, lie said "To-morrow I shall be the deliverer of my country, or I shall be in the grave." In both he was
l)jV'st'11 '""peror pei ornie ..]hMl The Cit.v of F.l-
00 wu aru
s,ic.n
\lt the battle of Waterloo, there was willow-shaded tomb by the a plentiful crop of peace in Kuropc, until iville.
inspired again for their old thrones, beneath the
int. lit is I i*ii
has entered Paris despite the Holy Alii- took placc the house of Lctitia, mother a few moments inhalations of
four
Our young Louis entered pretty
trceb"
mto
thc
tre of eternity. When be heard the great ja democrat, and smelt powder among the tence tidings of the return of the ostracised, lie Italians. ^Like the rest of his race he was Ham, seized his pen and thus addressed him
revolutionary movements
At six o'clock in the morning (29th) the designated moment came, and as the town clock struck the hour of six, he sa}rs it reechoed through his heart with such force as almost to stop its beathing—so he has a heart, though politicaf anatomists deny its existence. In farther proof, he loved his mother to her last moment he dared the guards and police of tlic Austrian and one of the Deputies, French Governments to receive her dying jtinic, he retired as 1 blessing, aud he has remembered those
law's first love. That great primary law jaetly how matters stood in the "free tight," Destiny kept his place with the serenity I of human right is not to be trifled with. Prince Napoleon Louis Bonaparte was one of three son's that came from this mar-
S 0 S S a
dndlc.-f. the cheeks of the taxed peasantry, aud
When the present Emperor was born, delivered his message to the nation I
audit happened on the 20th of April, heart. Ills fate bore away from the
that right to be there now,) he was the lir«t! freedom, and he rejehed New York in the £a)nartinc prince of the Napoleon dynasty born un- Spring of 1^37. The Prince ot Destiny,! Qe„ ('liangarnier
I
imoeri: re at announcement wa
1
If we mistake not, he was baptise the Pope of some high Cardinal, 'i,'1'1.eal!'.in
1
conse-' already a .Reformer, became a confirmed made of Democrat, llence he was called bv lii.s
twcutv-iuie, or thereabout, left the student of war and its great wants, and child of llortese the inheritance purple—blood is purple, in the la of Jloinor and the Doctors.
S10'.:UHl h'S Iu'
ell tor-his education into queer hands—no Lemain.nL iii Kn^land and sonic tin
0 lz il
jah'
'l f0,1 .-l1
1
ul
.von-,
lunirgcois
ecclesiastical authority found out what height that overlooked the town, and after
or five kings and one emperor
tria for putting a stopper on his projects. nation spoke during the progrcs* of
Does he remember it now trial and the King and Court of leers,^
Ihe ex-Queen of Holland, then the dared not the sound of that utterance,
Countess, or Duchess of fet.Lcu, disguised: accomplish the end of the nephew of iSa-
-r
they had to go England There
and return to Switzerland, where thev had been living previous to the Italian "troubles, and resumed their residence at Arenembcrg. Arenemberg was a part of a Republican Confederation. To study went, with heart and brain, the philosophic aspirant, and while engaged deeply in such pursuits the crown of Portugal was offered to him. It e»me to him with the eondi-
I
—A
ing that Louis Phillippe would revoke the paid thc penalty of his treachery to bethem I headed Louis XVI. edict of French exilement, and allow them headed Louis XVI. So to Ham, for life, to reside in their native country. Louis they consigned him. It is not within the Phillippe said he was not strong enough I limits of our pages to enter into thc de-1 must have time, and he will na\e it if the on his throne to entertain the proposition,1 tails of the imprisonment there. assassins are held in chee&. lie knows and hinted with official emphasis that they Five years were passed in the chill of France, and trance loves him for knowing had better retire while as yet they could, hid strong cage, but never had thc eagle her. France with a larger list of land rock, far France was not big enough to hold the within its bars quailed its eye as it gazed owners than thc United States a a
bondagc- and fled—disguised as a workman. He left on thd^5th of May, 1846, the room where he was, by his physician, Dr. Conneau's report, an invalid passed down thc passages, through the guarded court, the drawbridge, and was free. As he passed by one of the sentinels he dropped his pipe, 'but stopped to pick it up, and calmly went upon his way, with his sabots clanking on the ground, and a plank upon his shoulder, and something that
?hon» lik? a star, or a cro*n of stars, hieh
NEW SERIES--VOL. X, NO. 39. CRAWFOEDSYILLE, COUNTY, INDIANA, APRIL 16,, 1859. WHOLE NUMBER 870,
and clear above, beaming on his vision.— It was not the crown of Portugal.. To England again sped the freeman now,, and no cold shoulder turned the brave islanders upon him—and upon the instant he wrote
of the bride proposed to liim, but he can- to Count St. Aulair, the FrenohEuibassanot give up, for a Portuguese crown, and a half a crown at that, his idea of a whole French Napoleon. And the Prince was right
dor, in London. St. Aulaire had been a strong friend of his mother, and to htm the Prince expressed his reasons for desiring, and his rights to be free.
While in Ham, he had made application for permission to see his dying father, but the Government of Louis Phillippe turned a deaf ear to his proposition, though every sentiment had been brought toliear upon the Ministry and Ihe King, to advance the wishes of the Prince. Now, free once more, he endeavored to reunite himself with Louis, and for that purpose sought passports from the resident Austrian Envoy, in London, who also represented the Court of Tuscany, hut again he was de-
Leghorn, with no kindred by His bed, as had died atLongwood the mad who "needs no epitaph." Will all the £feat Bonaparts die alone, and away frodi France?— In February, 1849, Prince Loais Napoleon was in London, a wanderer 'in Licester Square, with the rest of the nioustached exiles of Europe, aud while^-'sipping his coffee, aud perhaps waiting with certainty the event, his Destiny came-'to him, and with an extra in his hand 'toldthim to pack his carpet-bag, for France was in*revolution, and the Eagle wanted him.
He went. He offered to Serve in any capacity. The Provincial Government of Lamartine & Co. was in full exercise of power, and the sages of political accidents and the accidents of political sages, required that the Prince should withdraw once more from Franee, else run the risk of further trouble and all for the benefit of the nation. Meantime the election had taken place and Napoleon was returned as but able to abide his he was asked from the scenes of the revolution." Re-elected
friends who were friends in his misfortune, from four departments, including that of No-hearted people act not thus. Short was Paris, his native place, he determined to the struggle between the artillery regiment listen, not to the advice of demagogues, which had espoused his cause, and those but of his country, and in consequcnco he troops that still held faith with Phillippe accepted the election of Paris, and appeared the King, and in the barrack yard of Finke- jin the Legislative Hall on the 26th of Sepwalt lie was in great personal hazard from 'tcmber, 1848. the bayonets of the troops, but he warded Turbulent were the scencs that followed off their dangerous proximity with his in the Chamber, and amid them and its sword, and ere he could understand ex- main point of excitement the Child of
lie was taken prisoner, and all further trou- ineideut to personal courage, and a reliance ble, except to our hero, was at an end.— on the future, which he felt was his Hurried to Paris, was he there tried and A President of the Kepublie was now thence banished. A frigate waited for him
I-: a droll, and that of the Bonapartes-the monuments of his uncles glor), fanned 'Potal number of votes polled.. .7,35(T,000 resolved to put liini where he would not (,ceil
QJ-
i.:. i.,...i. i„.... 'iu... Red Cap lvepublican, and son of Rob-, mysteries ot her power, lie still fostereil I,. x-.........
Cavaignac
Ledru
110
-,
a
he has, at least, scene of his aspirations to the land of.-j^p^j 36,900 I that on such a day a great State P™8-!|„!r ind told her to got up and make a fire.:a
tQ fulfin aU Juti(,g which thJ Con
i" Mondiolmf uSe^VchTtCi' Siuce that hour, what? had simply anticipated them one day. and
ut'
While the music of the muffled drum, and "cod himself with great enthusiasm to„|hc "O Prouhommist, or Fcurieritc, no Orlcan-1 muzzling the press and many other things
manes of the illustrious guillotme^- gus a :ist, „„fiourbonist. was the mat, who ruled jth.t well, thil free land would not put ,,, l-renehuien live for suicide sometimes.^ ot. Helena giant were taken from tiieir Prince dc Join-'lier
dcs
3*•
Polipnac made Charles X. so unpopular' With him he had hope, ambition, l((Ve|The Provisional Government, with poetic great^ucstion, first! that the Parisians threw them overboard of country, love of adventure, a golden
No sooner landed,:
fittv-thrce.
fenced, and forwarded to the Fortress of.
r. r- j-j a *-tate prisoner for life.
brave as Julius Cicsar, but the affairs did His destiny was the destiny of 1 ranee,,
not end happily, and he had to thank Aus- and uuder the impulse of her destiny the
in to iiic «in«*id il tr iitL lit
tlic.'
Purc
out°of which
to
"iSf. fiftv-thre^ oth'-r brive anil faithful Contented France raised lilies in her that was a good deal. child's screams. Joy tool: down Ins gun.
a
SIIM
of ue vc to wicIcl thc
raise
TFO
a
brokc the wll0
the sweet Eugenie, and she is in part his 'THE
glory, and the Prince so lately born, Is
They form the trinity of Gallic glory,
io me urs.1 war nauou oi
Aftcr this—what?
may be gazing at the planuct fate with instruments that have prccussion 'l,t°
caps rivilcd to them. Dethrone, if
rl
ly species of sentimentality that is to be
until the event is the reach of his! i-
on the coast, and when he stepped on fixed upon as the day of election through- that we will merely mention here in its gave them tin opportunity tD tell it with-
bo:ird an imaginary eagle Hew above him, out France. general form: poised its pinions for a moment, received The Prince offered himself as a candi-, Three of the great members of tin
a a O a a
1,443,107 of them went to the Castle of Vincenncs,
'inc 17,910 loner would be sent to him, and he must,
hangarnier 4,790 guard him well. An arrest was intended
On the ilav of Inaugaration the Assem- °f the President of the Hepiiblie. I he prop
Democratic liepubiierone and indivisible, I «'ho, at midnight served the process of ar-
I
rC8t
.-ti0 .. stitution imposes on nie." After that he forthwith they were taken to the cage in- agoing to burn the child to .b-at,
stitution imposes on nie.' After that lie loruiwuu vu.-y 'was agoing to tium
retired tended for the I-rcnch eagle. Napole.m I
ltriti«h co-ist in m-gardens to garland her future with emblems I Abstract questions of civil polity are and pointing it at her, compelled her to
ttiitri
hh ha
ishty elements
.. but it was unnecessary, autl while taction
gecret
*he
work 0
dcmous to
aud Buurbunist aud
W a a I a revival
new paradise
master )irit of the wcrc t0
,c
arran
co d'etat
her sons after theirbannshmeut from Italy, poleon, by introducing him to the process remedy for a terrible disea" wheels, and capable of being rolled away, and sought Paris as a place of safety, hop-1 by which the father of Louis Phillippe had *F
0 needs
The llalakoff and the Redan and Se-
.v„,vdi bastopol arc his feathers, signed somewhat
love-sick, stiff, and ^mpous day, is his.— ,-on
ifa
KOFFLnmartia
.. .- •,
to a nation, ita fete, are his, and nobody can
go halves with him in its glory. England
did not like to see him building such a har-
"V* wi ouvu «vvm»
ugenie is title th-
1
no recal tit
Pcace, for a Napoleon, a man of no par- dwarfed in the front of an expcctcd war, come in. He then left the house and did
-J,° „s 'i'i lli.nl urnp in \u ty, no socialist, no dreamer, no romancist, and therefore we stop not to scrutinize his not return, as we understand, tor a day or
Napoleon of the with for a moment. .Men looking at comet.-
grand Napoleonic idea, and lie knew it.— I cannot be turned aside, by fireflies
thing broader and more suitable to the I nation, be calm, be prudent, (.) Napolcjii,
the schemes of demagogues, and bow near loom and the tick of the silk worm, to the
ind voice of God that calls on you to keep the tn f'M'f
their «"ich, Conn., say
revolution, when Communist aud ''I
must
of cha-1 last the Baptists were to have a grand
of I celebration, quite a number of persons
FLTESCI! IMPK»VEISYSTEM
thau two year3
and no matter how his faults may appear to -4i t. l- the last experiments have ueciclou us, to.the people whom he rules, his vir-j
1
tues, his force, his spbynx-like silence at adoption. I he various calibers that
times, his word and his history, great matters Europe. And then there, is his destinv.. That is a great belief.of his, and his works
an our
are nflcd
The night is dark, with clouds in the, _. ,, sky, and the star of his destiny is hid—
It may be that the European sky is clear- [K,U,1C result as the old twenty-four at thirty 1 slaves, er than ours, and philosophers of politics |^ye« :iu^ requires no more than one-sixth may be gazing at the planuct that rules his °t" the charge. Ihe projectiles penetrate
a
are men and can, but do not murder. Be more than two feet), and an enormou: it understood by critics, that an American can be a lover of liberty and yet feel that Napoleon is a great Frcnch, if not a great European, necessity. This paragraph of explanation to our friends.
Will the first cannon that is to be fired precision is such that at the distance of 1 at the opening of the next European war, speak French, or Austrian, or Italian?— Let the Prussian-Anglo-Austrian sentinels
keep a sharp look out or they may find
a
lhat belier in lus aes my, or star, jvears
lic
Mwithin -I :i
,I
peculiar powers, hen he was 1 resident, .' I
needed, and the 10th of December was for example, that- was a great deed of his, till Ins arrest, .v. .,
ra| 0
The
sonic- With an army that is as numerous as a jn and assisted to lay out the child found it
than the dreams of thou eloquent mute, and be great. Speak wash it, or even take off the clothing upon of Louis Blanc.—! no more to diplomats as you
spoke
his place was above Year's day, but listen to the voiee of the if they ever said a won! about it. he, would
tell you a good joke, with which
Fourierite all Norwich is ringing. Sunday before
be baptized, not in the riv.-r, but
gcment bv his in a large pool sunk in the floor of thc
on the 2d of December, 18.32:! ehureh. under, thc
pulpit,
blcedin- now and then. I It was an extraordinary occasion, and the
haJ
ita mali) A sliAro .. .. -1 irnrr.
I dirty
tbe 0f
Knt. lin inrifflft tliA mnnnr^li nf frmat! lmagi of iVin Avrvnnur. nf a is she expressed her gratification in trench. That was enough.
\ClQ,y GL?
there, but he invited tho monarch of Great ima£?inc the iokes at the espensc of
And Eugenie is his—the Spanish girl of
which is on
house was crowded with Episcopalians,.
Peace—wUh ^some despotism: but he CongregationaHsts, and Methodists,"as well V.0" \vstcrI1
tC/',with
°,ne
tllC
or
•theirs together, and they all belong to' It is affirmed that the new artillery. It is now becoming a common practice France, not France to them. which has been under examination for more to
block ot stone of the harde.-t ce-
Vou!"Otto
an extent of eighty centimeters
breach is made by the explosion. The advantages of the four-pounder are still more remarkable. It requires but five hundred grammes of powder to throw a ball a distance of one kilometrieal league. The
three thousand one hundred meters
uml by the superficial observer, in the I little daughter Nancy, whose story to the ]iej-on!1 |ri.-c. Ci.i li-ui'itio:i
to outward show, is compact sculpture— \yc should premise that the offense was |1C ,atter requires V.^.-dv investi-ation his silence, his awful non-committalism
couimittcJ iu the fall of
!out fear:
Rollin 70,119 and told the commander of the fortress £. inir her father callcd to For a cofon countrylfif-'aid to be pecuiiirly
JJJ
so_„lacic
of
ired.
the Presi-1 President ot the Kepublie found ont the:j j1(, ]acontinuing to cry and fret, iier large supply of this vgeiabk father became enraged, and snatched the Tfurd'.r. hild from its mother's arms, tore every
ci
jld
on the three surprised gent email, andjdo so
awriv
t(
sight ai)t to gl
so
r{i !l
lionoe more diverted than edified, tor,, f....
audience more diverted than edified, tor,. committed forgerv before the service was ended, thecongre-:-
iearncd that the pool was half
soap suds, and various were
Ae afi t0
how they got there.—
the day it leaked out that1
sexton
bor for such great fleets as he could stow igla, and forgotten to let off thc tea-1
taken a bath there Satur-
Iff
JOr "J/
Britain over to see what he had done, and .. '»«bnate, by th
WUEK is a man like a rooster?
beautiful, the eraceful,1 his heai ia combed
T11E WAU
fpi
th':
that arc done, and the nephew's works that. produce a double effect, that of solid Miut are in experiment, may accomplish the and shell. Their form is conical, and ends of their mutual creed. leaden aihttcs give to the ball a precision
.t ,lMt „f hearing of tlie
Four davs after .his terrible the
little suffering child died ami was buried. None but .Joy and his wife and two daughters knew anything of the cause ot its death. The neighboring women who come
S(
mortified and decayed that they «."»i'd n«.t
on New it, Joy told his wife and daughters that
1
i. and they beli horrible secret.
KlMTolt TK.'IIT.
We b'.dievc it i- rare that, editors indulge in a drop, but when they do their readers are sure to find it out. A Syracuse contemporary was called upon to record a melancholy event'' at a time when
.•rrespondent his head was rather heavy, and did it up iu the following manner. Yesterday morning, about -J o'eloek, l*. m., a man with a heel in the hole of -. stocking committed arsenic by swallowing a dose of suicide. The inquest of tinverdict returned a jury that the deceased come the faet.-^ in
from Nor-
a«-eM-dancc
TI •.| I* I- ARISTUCKATIC JIIU nsn .T»\U rs
W(lRK__A
AlI
cftD,liktes ti,f3
X- ied the pool and commcnccd dcsccnding the
nee a- 3tcpS Suddenly they paused, then held up,-.n their i- r^ifa hurried consultation, made a retreat, and j]iCjr |,e
it was announced that the ceremony would _.eem ,vr,.tchcd and dejected, and wary of be postponed till evening. The rest of -r ]iv 'J'he celebrated Uev. l'r. *1]the services were gone through with b_v an
I S I S
ARTILEKV. 1 UK FI.AMI-.S AUI-: I'ANMD).
ta'Ce
.is{, ow completed, and
JCIH
Is, that anticipate history, existed are according to this plan reduced be seen to break over tut* heads oi lite atithat puzzles romance, are to two—twelve-pounders, or siege-guns, dionce. I he tellow nig is a copy ot manto the first war nation ofl ii
never obtained before. The informant of
tLc Tlnics
We cannot see it, but depend upon it, no order to give an idea of the terrible matter what happens, that daring son of these new pieces it suffices to sny peaceful Louis, King of Holland, and of that a twelve pounder (new mode)) will,
feated, and thc ex-Krng of Holland, broth-j the gay Ilortense, will be found equal to with one-halt the number ot shots ui the er of an Emperor, father to a foturc-'Empc- the emergency, even if it be death—not ,u^ pieces of twenty-four, produce the ror, died on the 25th of July', 1846, at exile, That we have seeu, he cannot sauie effect and the new pat.urn twel\e- tria. stand. pounder produces at seventy meters the "Who \vi.-.b
correspondent in 1 an. says
it
strikes.a single man on horseback, and at that distance would destroy a body of
ur
tliat the Napoleon of to-day may do what ed on the new system are loaded .-it t! Napoleon of forty years or more did to the astonishment of old fogyism in his time— form an army of reserve at Dijon, and cross the Alps, before Austria has taken brcak-
i"l'lI1,ry- All the pieces (ioiistrui.-t-
nntzzle, the loading at the breach being given up, as many experiments have shown it to be inconvenient, and even dangerous, so muclf as to counterbalance the «d\1m'a-
fast. It is a terrific fact, that Franee, by }Ses- (Scientific men affirm that these imthc blast of a bugle, can rally into active proNeiiients have raised the art of desfcrueand enthusiastic service an army of five jtluI1 artillery to all perfection. hundred thousand men yes, men who Inn IIOKKIULK -CKiMl whipped the Arabs on their own sand -T ..
,• I- Last Saturday, we learn trom (lie Ualields, and punimcled the luissians, until the retreat from Moscow is a mere
hash Intelligencer, a man named illi.tm
of moonshine in the memory of the na-jJoy was convicted of Intrnm-g his own tions. |child fa death,, and sentenced to eighteen That belief 1n his "destiny," or "star," or only found character of this wondrous man. All else, ijury is thus given by the Intelligencer.—
c0n
whatever else you chose to call it, is the ,- i-ViViu. ..
principal witness against inui was his -Aoju to to .., uI ...
with
iSf^but concealed
tby the family through lear ot the lather,
a 5 0
so
j-or
SOUK
Napoleon received.. .5,434,226 be a trouble to them in their plans, so one fretful and had'eried considerably rlu- Hieic Hut not a hundryth part of its
tl aniI
mm
unite, ajtlioii" its «.-oiI niosi spontaneoiisT
a
After the fire begiin to burn, their labor would spe-.-d'ily sr-i
particle of clothing ofT it, and then took il hv one arm and letr. and held it over tin
fro7n him, but were unable
aiI,:i
„.]icn yIr,. Jny l'.mnd that
„fot|u. i,f)llsc
ITAI.Y
fortifications, and !o forbid a
with his
death. He leaves a child ami six small wives to lament iiis untimely I0S3,.. Tn death we are in the midst ot lite.
-l)rdi h.«, with a living i."1,niifl a
lion-
ndvantago of tne assembling of
opera and the theaters a cloud of these fluttering messessengcrs will frequently
ltesto ut till kind, whli \a.s iucl\
.p0undcrs field-guns. ihepicee ,, i.'i
tlwui is lus dpsfinv I ... tllbiited 111 the elgoi.l lili.-itr, lU 1 lor-
di.«-,r
Who deprives Italy of that most sacred treasure ot' e\iry nation—independence Austria.
Who sits up'"! the neck of Tuscany, which is
also
ui Italian province, renders
all good impossible, and encourages all evil :—Austria. Who has robbed us of our Constitutional liberty, gained with ^o much cllort taunting us ac the same time with not being advanced enough lor liberty .'—Aus*
that we .should be eternal-. even denying us tin- right to Austria, ..Austria, and always
weep Austria Tuscans the hour has arrived in whicli: this ancient tyranny will h:n to pay the penalty its evil doing.:, and Italy will be cleared of foreign tyrants. The hour: is near when we shall be a free and independent nation.
In this critical hour 'we need courage -. self sacrifice, unity, and determination.—•--et our cry be unanimous—\\ ar to Aua-'--tria'. Let us not support that, war with, empty words, hut efficient acts. Whoever, attempts to oppose it or prevent it, let him be disowned forever, for in supreme nio-^ men's Jike this, he who i^ Ji"t lor u^ against us.
Willi I iod's help, and the rd ol a loyal king, right and justice shall triumph. Have courage, then, firmness anil discipline. The hour of redemption will not find us unprepared and unhiiid'Ted by the wretches who would wish to prevent us, we will raise the cry, "W ar to Austria !:. VL'G /'Italia
Tin
CKSSSO.V I I:.II.I: ISI.AMIS TO CKDAT liiMTAIN. There is something very singular in the cession of these islands to (ireat lliitain,
|ilicnient in the penitentiary.— |,v the chief, for tlie purpose of obtaining
f- ti
,ii,.. it.,
the -lrtic'cs of the d"ed of co^ -ion.
,* our g"veniinen'.-\.v-..The Kejee tirchijiel: tli'e most extensive an
,• ,• ,| jr.. i.. it It cilCn^i.C illiU \-.itUU-i'. IU tor another ottense, lat
ia
nh
iti- area
,j, 0:10 --iiuare 'miles. Its eli-
s:du!
inriou.- .—
•h tropteea
an.l liiid spontaneoii?T\- :ird ahuml-uuly -i"
davs .and was couseiiuent- the most valuable of the plant's of com--
disturbed her father, available h.vl vet under ca!:ivatioii.--
and th-rc are over Fe-
the (ire principally out jeeans, who, if tliey.eoiildoi.ee b» made to
brUi}i„ because there was no othcrwood feel certain of enjoying the produce of
1-a" A I.oil! t.'o/H/ friiil ive pre
and that tai maniilaetun
tlx
I :-t,h llctec.
cori'jsjioie.lent. of (lie" /.'.•(.v writes that,the dcl']ng!and eonlinue with vi.: or, but the iv:- all calculations info •ts thiii.it ha.' alreaily thoroughly eili'-iont .at a •n live and si.-: miles, j)eeinif.'n.- are now being hich .'ire expected to ]o.more extensive a!i reliance.on oU!
rnis! rou''
auge, seem .-ystems of '.va„-,ti ii'
money everv further expenditure in such direction.--. Another invention by official in the London dockyards, ior a shell that, explodes at the slightest contact, and is const runted to throw litp.ud lire over the rigging M.--.-ei- c:v .'.lurdlnary di-i-tauce. i.- a!iranting. also:_gi efit attention.— It s.euu.- a- it' in i-vy,of a war with France, the 'channel v/ouh! b-.: no bar to id that Dover and (.'aiai-: may
operations, bombard cach asure.
A Mas sa-.
1
IIIII,
arm s.
have- at 1
•lit en'!'!.-'' crown
arts ol unir\
ur ov. 'ti.-iana.
111 iv meut
mmittci
alur
A
I
,.om!!11!I1i,.ation from freman-
,tr:i]i
wi
as with the Baptists themselves. The ^*t-' Vhc"eVlVI.rntAVl e„nvi"t. opening services wcrc gone through with, .\„.,r -jv^ter, and Saward. "iin thc pulpit was rolled away, and the minis- jem penman Thev are all en-a.^ed si oi iana-
public works, making r,a l,. cV
in
eoi.KON
trea
the arri-
are engaged wio'cimg
t]th
apj ears to be good, t.ut t.?
1(Il
1
r*UNr'•
enormous lonv. and
.... .{•
th-:
is employed swefpii,2 the nrd-in the new
^.1^ fir r/rin Ll
,„/,.
Marr/
TRAM
A .SKOU..—At
1'lV
ino[c'.
a
a
Haiti-
since, a poeir unfortunate name of John ." miih, *'i.-
found wandering through the eastern section of that city, having in his possession which the demanded indemnity'^"'-- not ben
J,UIIian jkull. which lie was trying to di-proinjitly paid. lie- l*a.-».h nr. aoing .11 pose of for rn? drink of liquor. "no- niau-ol. ••'.ir.
-The B,,s.
it "learn been take:
tha t. fi
5*]ne f'nind
•()Ul
}:,^
ies int.ere in tho eve that A nieutii :i- li-M .n th- 1 y«:k* of Sly. Abo ill "»S 0M? nt lVo
!U vn.rioM"
nooracing S'^iie oi ultivated intellect.-i 11 a?? rcjircjieritativci :', Pennsylvania,
rlr aid Maine, .-ome wealthy whom the subji-:t has been jged themselves to I'l,i,'iiit as the iieiieJeui ol. dowiiicntol. LIJC In.-tituti"ii. j., aj.j.ointcd to wait upon Health a» so:,n astiieir plans aud one gentleman., ,promt-.
At.KINO f.—Is 'it how tsi.j Kmperor
1 'lombo iv I A I
pomp .' I!" i- gri/.'.h-d, cadaverous, und lame in ti,o bft I and labor. io coneeal th:. last detect. Iii* walk is awkward.— turns our his to'.*, and b-ans heavily on th" strong s'iek ],e carries in his wdighived h.Hid- He earef.illv (Jr' SScd but. though hi- cost lit- h'ni very uecuitely.. lie has nothing »l.c air of a porit', -'d man. Ilis f. jure if improved bv thc c'lirr,-- V. lit* lii '"'it will noL ci-neea'i. I-.very step he tai es is .-t'l'iied, v.hii'-his eye scans every a».-er-by witli a look which lia^ sunt,*t!dng ui.canny iu its expre.-sion—/loiiseholtl 11 or:lti.
OSf uiid Doniiuii .1 ave gores to war ith each ether. A por* -f the hr t..r js a: pre.-ent the scene of hostilities.— The ground of difficulty was the s.-i -i:re f,v Danish vessels by 1': sident l'aei, t'-v
