Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 16 May 1895 — Page 7

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NAPOLEON C3NAPARTE.

The Incipient Hero Completes His Military Studies.

A LIEUTENANT OP ARTILLERY.

Poverty Compels Him to Journey to His Regiment on Foot—Social Gayeties at the Barracks—Death of His Father.

First Command of Soldiers In the Field.

[Copyright, 1895, by John Clark Rulpatli.] IV. —L'Ecole Miutaikeand alence. When Cadet Bonaparte, in the autumn of 1784, was promoted to the Military School in Paris, he was in his sixteenth year. Ho had now made his way by stages, beginning with his tenth year, from his native place to tho capital of France and if of France, then of tho world. Three months at Autun, four years—and more—at Brionno, and now to the school in Paris. At tho last-named place he was destined to remain less than a year. Thus far he seemed to bo rising toward a career of activity, if not of distinction but there was never a timo when his pathway was moro clouded than during his stay at L'Ecole Militaire.

The school at which ho now became a student was the best in tho kingdom. It had been reformed and renewed as a re-

NAPOLEON AT THIRTY.

suit of recent agitations and tho institution was at this time well fitted to be the finishing ground for a young military aspirant. L'Ecole Militairo de Paris held the relation to that of Brienne and the others of college to academy. The curriculum was more ample and the methods moro rational in the first than those pursued in the provincial institutions. Hero tho academic training of Napoleon Bonaparte as that of his younger brother Lucien afterwards— was completed. From this school ho was to be delivered, as if by a second birth, to the world.

The social character of Napoleon now began to show itself moro distinctly. Back at Brienne he had boon introduced by General Marboouf to some privato families of distinction. Them he impressed as a peculiar, forceful and solitary gemus, moro capablo of heroic dreams and boyish monologue than of polite conversation or social amenities. Going to Paris, his acquaintance was somewhat enlarged. Marbauif's nephew, tho Bishop of Autun, now lived at Versailles and that worthy was glad, after the lapse of five years, to receive his former pupil, greatly grown in intellect and person, but virtually the same in demeanor. Eliso, the sister of Bonaparte, had meanwhile been brought out from Corsica, and was now a member of the Royal School for Girls at SaintCyr. So that tho young man had now a few friends and some social advantages.

For the rest, he pursued in Paris tho same self-centered life as at Brienne. He was a hard student—in his way. Ho still disprized the polite branches of education in favor of the exact sciences and geography. In humane inquiry, his sole endeavor was to master History. His study, however, in this field did not reach historical generalization or a broad philosophy. He stopped with the individual. He dwelt with interest and enthusiasm upon the lives of great men. Plutarch he knew almost by heart. The well-known stories which in that age passed for history ho conned with the passion of a zealot.

In after life, the peculiar effect of this discipline was manifested in all of Napoleon's work and policy. Out of his history proper ho branched in only one direction—politics. He became rather expert in tho political platitudes and persiflage of the times. To the end of his life he was sever capable of high and abstract views but he knew all special things as If by intuition. His mind flashed out, lightning-like, in this direction and in that the blase of it illumined many a dark and blood-splashed place but from that prodigious intelleot there was never diffused a broad and universal light. Much of this must be attributed to his inborn character and something to the manner of his education.

The year 1785 was in all respects critical to Bonaparte. His course at the Military School ended with August of that year. He was admitted to his final examination almost precisely at his sixteenth birthday.* Nearly six months before this time his father, who had found a temporary residence at Montpellier, came to the final scena The visionary and unsuccessful Buonaparte had discovered a refuge for himself at the ohateau of Madame Permon, mother of the Duchess d'Abrantes of great fame. £here, on the 24th of February, ho expired, of a chronic malady, perhaps cancer of the stomach—most fatal premonition of what should happen to his famous *\on thirty-six years afterwards.

Hard was this stroke of death on the members of Buonaparte's family. From the timo of his union with Letitia Ramolino—a period of twenty years—thirteen children had beon born. Eight of these were living three were in France, nnd five with the mother in Ajaccia All were at the door of penury. It ia a law of nature tad of

A

who bears thirteen children is a heroine but Madame do Buonaparto had now to go into the fields and plant mulberry trees for a living! Marbceuf finally prevailed with the authorities to make Joseph Bonapai'to also (wo will now drop the Italian form Buonaparte) a military pensioner. But the father's death and Napoleon's protest countervailed the project, and Joseph was doomed to remain a cadet of the Church. For Julien, who developed a passion for polite studies and wished to be a priest, a scholarship was obtained for the school at Brienne. Such is the perversity of fate. As to Napoleon, it was agreed that instead cf going into the navy, as Keralio had recommended and as Marbccuf had wished, ho should become instead a lieutenant in tho artillery. After his graduation, he should bo assigned to tho Regiment La Fere, stationed at Valence, on the left bank of tho Rhone, three hundred miles away as the bird flies—far to tho south.

The final examination at L'Ecole Militairo was passed. Like many other incipient military heroes—our own included—Napoleon did not obtain a high rank in his classes. His papers gave him oniy tho forty-second placo from the head. Louis Antoine Bourienne, his future privato secretary, had been far above him at Brienne. Des Mazis, his favorite classmate, was now graduated far below him at L'Ecolo Militairo. But tho grade was sufficient and he was enabled with his commission as lieutenant to chooso the artillery as his arm of the service.

For two months (August to October, 17S5) tho restraints of red tapo held back Lieutenant Bonaparte from going to his place. His means gave utterly out. At last, late in tho fall of 17S5, he set out by conveyance from Paris as far as Lyons, but was then obliged, from sheer inability to pay his fare, to walk the remainder of tho journey to Valence. Thero he arrived, and took his place in tho Regiment La Fere—doubtless so callcd because it had. no iron in it!

Great was Napoleon's surprise at the character of tho discipline. By the officers and men almost everything was practiced except those exercises which tended to mako them soldiers. They werogay, dissipated, frivolous. The pay was insufficient to support them in their career of pleasure and vice but they were nearly all scions of the nobility and know not what it was to bo limited in tho means of gratification. Napoleon's poverty and ambition alike held him back for a moment from this manner of life but, strange to say, ho presently threw himself into tho swim, and during the winter of 17S5-SG he dissipated like the rest.

Valenco was a small but important city. Tho young military officers were welcomed by ambitious families into their drawing rooms. For the nonce, Bonaparto concluded that ho must become accomplished!—that ho must bo a social lion and quaff tho bowl of pleasure with his fellows. He had social passports from Marbccuf.'s nephew, who was now tho young Bishop of Autun.

But to a nature such as Napoleon's pleasure, however torrid, could not long suffice. The lieutenant presently turned upon himself in anger and a sudden reform was tho immediate result. The thoughtful brow and sullen manner returned. Ho went back gloomily to his books recovered his vantage, and henceforth to the end of his life—though many a timo he heard tho Sirens singing on near-by shores—ho never postponed his ambitions for tho delirious dreams and fleeting hallucinations of a dissipated life.

During his career as a student, Napoleon's general reading had been in tho naturo of excursions along tho coasts of political philosophy. The French manner caught his imagination. He talked of liberty, of tho virtues of the elder Romans, of humanity in a state of nature—as revealed by Jean Jacques.

Now, in tho spring of 178G—recovering himself from tho winter's revel—he turned from tho "Contrat Sociale," which ho had begun to distrust as a ground of political life, to the "Histoire Philosophique" of the Abbe RaynaL Hero he lost himself in the mysteries (and mists) of that science which is said to teach by example.

The writings of the Abbe Raynal, from being a conglomerate in which several strong hands—notably that of Diderot—had a great part, wero now in the ascendant. The French mind caught them, embraced them, and adored. They were thought for the time to be the beall and the end-all of political philosophy. Behold Napoleon, whose mind had already been well stocked with the fascinating but unprofitable stories of Herodotus, Diodorus, Strabo, Plutarch, Xenophon, et id omne genus,—behold him at his candle-lighted, deal-board table in the barracks of Valence, rising in thought somewhat from the particulars of human story to the general laws of conduct. Be it remembered, however, that at that epoch the human mind had not yet gained the first glimpse of that universal coherence and consistency of all things which constitutes the bottom principle of the New History. As for the unfledged Jacobinism in him, that was sufficiently inflamed with knowledge that five years previously this same "Histoire Philosophique" had been burned at the stake—so to speak—In Paris, and its author driven into exile.

Meanwhile, in August of 1787, while the members of our Constitutional Convention were hard at work in Philadelphia building their ship of state, an insurrection against the French government broke out in Lyons, fifty-three miles up the river from Valence and the Regiment La Fere was ordered to put down the revolt. On the march thither Napoleon Bonaparte, lieutenant of artillery, had his first command of soldiers in the field.

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JOHN CLARK RIDPATU. Us A Sore Sign.

A.—How do yon know that Maler ba» come in for a fortune? B.—Why, formerly people always said be was crazy. Kow„ they pay he in

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GREENFIELD REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY MAY 16, 1895.

niraMnvaMmr

FOSTER TOWN PKIDE.

GOOD WORK OF VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETIES.

Public Spirit Awakened to the Value of United Effort—How Two New England 1 Towns Were Transformed—Methods and

Plans of Procedure.

The following from The Forum for March strikes tho keynote of progress in the towns of our country and shows what earnest and united effort may accomplish toward beautifying and making them moro healthful and desirable as places of residence, not to mention the increase of wealth:

The American people are showing a rapidly growing interest in the improvement of their towns, and of the many causes of this progress the numerous village improvement societies aro not the least. As Jack Falstaff was "not only witty in himself, but the cause that wit was in other men," so tho influence of these societies is by no means limited to the towns or counties where they are organized, for their example benefits many towns where no improvement societies have yet been formed. Far more has been accomplished than I ever expectod to seo when I enlisted in this work 30 years ago. But compared with the public needs and the rich opportunities in every state the work seems just bogun. These societies fostor that town pride and public spirit which suggest liberal plans and prompt to generous gifts, impressively putting to every citizen tho question, What is it my duty or privilego to do for my town?

A sketch of tho Laurel Hill association of Stockbridgo, Mass., the first incorporated village improvement society in the United States, is suggestive. It was originated by Miss Mary Hopkins, now Mrs. J. Z. Goodrich. Her untiring efforts to rouse tho people resulted in a publio meeting where the subject was discussed and a society was organized. As a result the Stockbridge of today stands out in marked contrast with the Stockbridge of my boyhood. The main street, irregularly laid out and unevenly graded, with deep pools of standing water, with few trees and fewer sidewalks, tho "green" without trees or any semblance of ornament, loaded wagons making deep ruts almost to the church door, the. cemetery with a.broken down wooden fence and full of brambles and weeds—these all appear in my recollection of Stockbridge as it was in 1853. Today streets are graded and lined with shade trees. At tho first annual meeting tho treasurer reported that the amount paid in in laber or" cash was $1,390. The number of trees planted the first year was 423. At this meeting Cyrus W. Field and E. W. Pomeyoy together gave $250 to be used for prizes. Fifty cents was given for every thrifty tree planted of kinds specified $10, or a silver cup of equal value, to the planter of tho best 15 trees to tho second best, $G to tho third best, $4. All the trees were to be planted within certain specified limits. Another prize of £10 was offered lor the largest number and the best trees planted along any publio roads of the town. A prize of $10 was given to the person who made the longest and best sidewalk, and other $10 to the person who made the greatest improvement in tho grounds around his dwelling anywhere in tho town. A reward of $10 was offered for evidence which should lead to the conviction of any one injuring tho trees and footbridges under the care of tho association.

About 4,000 trees have now beon planted, and tho association has the income derived from about $4,000 of invested funds, supplemented by individual subscriptions. When $2,000 was given for a free town library by a single benefactor this amount was nearly doubled by individual contributions. The library building, a fine stone edifice, with reading room and lecture hall, costing $25,000, was the gift of the late J. Z. Goodrich. Mr. Cyrus W. Field gave $10,000 for a park, and Mr. David Dudley Field, in the last year of his life, gave to Stockbridge 58 acres of land, including the romantic Ice Glen, for a mountain park, together with $5,000 for its improvement. The Laurel Hill association, with an offer to pay onehalf the expense, induced tho railroad company to add an acre and a half to the grounds about its station and to erect an elegant building. This association has beautifully adorned these grounds. Its anniversary, fitly observed on the fourth Wednesday of every August, commemorated last summer 40 years of successful Work. Every acre of land and every homestead in Stockbridge have appreciated in value by reason of this society.

The appearance today of New Milford, Conn., presents a striking contrast to its appearance in 1872. The New Milford Village Improvement association has completely transformed its wide main street Its spacious "green," formerly uneven and unsightly, with wagon ruts ana a dirty stream, which in a drought became a mud swamp, has been drained and graded and made into an attractive lawn. This long parallelogram is now the finest park of its kind in Connecticut There was unexpected liberality in providing the needed funds. At the outlet the membership fee was $5. Afterward it was reduced to $1. The women held a fair, which netted about $7(f0. The amount received from membership fees and subscriptions was $1,(92. The residents along the main street volunteered to pay an assessment of $1.50 per front foot, which yielded $4,187. In four years the society raised about $7,000, and residents expended for walks and other improvements |2,600 more. Many citizens still voluiit^. rily pay an annual tax* to the association. These improvements have attracted wealth and culture from abroad and enbauoed the value of- property—a Q.

AGPiOWm,

IXDUkSTltY

MARKETING FORESTS IN THE LOUISIANA PINE REGION.

The South Waking Up to Her Possibilities. Thousands o! Acres Heavily Timbered. Massive Hard Pins Trees Straight «A Arrows Find a Foreign Market.

[Special CoiTCjpoiide:ice.

LAKE CHARLES, La., *—Tho south ia waking up to ifcs possibilities with an energy that is likely to mako New England's thrift palo before it. The development going on throughout tho southern states is nowhere more clearly exemplified than here in Louisiana, tiie land of tho Acadian and Creole, of going plantation life and of French blood. Tho northern immigration has transformed its towns, business enterprises and social life, bringing out with distinctness its rich natural resources and waking it to the chances that await intelligent endeavor.

Nowhere is this seen more than in the lumber industry, which has suddenly sprung into pvominenco. Throughout tho state's history its magnificent hard pine forests have stood unnoticed the massive trees, straight as tho most perfect arrow, with clear, clean trunks reaching high in air and the symmetry of their forms liiarred only by tho festoons of Spanish moss clinging to the branches, have attracted I no woodchopper, nor have tho new rcsidonees of southern cities drawn upon them I for material, it heing rather the policy of the builders to ship lumber from the far I northern mills at au added expense of freight and handling.

Hero at ako Charles have been erected 13 sawmills, and at other points along the gulf area dozen more, all busy slicing up tho magnificent hard pine logs into lumber of assorted sixes and for various uses. Up in tho northern part of the state aro tho forests, nnd they are a sight, to make the builder's heart teat faster. Nowhere can bo found handsomer, straightor trees, and with their roots fastened deep in tho rich southern soil they are standing thick and erect awaiting tho woodman's ax.

Thousands on thousands of acros are covered with available wood,and tho gangs of choppers mako but small impress upon it. It is said that tho lands owned by one company are so extensivo that a gang of choppers might begin at one side and reaching the other sido the trees would ho largo enough in their track for them to commenco over again.

Tho old time methods which involved so much toilsomo effort and so great a strain on tho musclos of men and horses aro dono away with in this modern marketing of the southern forosts. A lumber Camp of Louisiana is entirely unlike tho old timo camps in Maine, New7 York or Michigan. New tools, modern inventions

UP T1IK LONG CHUTE.

in saws, grappling hooks, etc., aro used throughout, and railway tracks, roughly laid, but sufficiently smooth to allow of flat car passage, aro pushed into tho very heart of tho woods. With their branches festooned in tho pretty Spanish moss the trees make cathcihalliko arches for tho tracks, and thero is over tho entiro enterprise an air of romance and strangeness that seems utterly foreign to so prosaic a business as lumbering.

Onco ready for the mill tho huge trunks, straight and uniform, 20 to 30 feet long and 3 feet in diameter, are made into groat rafts in tho bayous or slow running rivers, and tho noisy little tugboat sets to work hauling them to tho mill. Puffing along between overhanging, moss draped trees with its slow moving burden of timber kept in lino by energetic raftsmen, it makes a pretty picture. When arrived at tho "boom" beforo the mill, tho logs aro herded together like so many animals ready for market and await their turn of a most curious contrivance.

This consists of a long trough leading from tho water up a slopo to the end of tho mill. An endless chain, with projecting irons, runs along its deepest portion, and when tho log, no matter what its size, is pushed and pulled by tho spiked poles of the guides into lino it rides easily and smoothly up the chute to its doom. Onco entering the portals, a rulo is applied, and its measurement is quickly taken. Then a rattlo of grappling hooks, a rush of the log carriage, a whir of Gaws, and slico after slice of tho great trunk is whittled off and sent on its way down the room to end in smooth boards and pickets. That nothing may bo lost tho ultimate refuse goes up another chuto to tho roof of the engine house and becomes fuel for the motive power of tho mill.

The daily output of each mill runs up into the tens of thousands of feet, yet the supply of logs In tho boom seems undiminished.

In thus developing its natural resources, which are so closo at hand, and whioh have so valuable and remunerative a power wrapped up in their sturdy bosoms, the "now south" Is making forward strides whioh can but commend it to the entire nation. Much of the capital employed in these enterprises Is from the north. Northern men aro animating and managing those mills, and investors aro realizing what oan be accomplished in this little known and less studied region. On the cleared lands farmors are settling, and rice and cotton aro growing in fields whero a year ago were unbroken forests. Thus is the lumber business doing the 6outh good in two ways—by furnishing an Incoiuo and enlarging its tillable area. The great trainloads of lumber that go northward into Toxas and the prairie states and tho shiploads that are carriod from gulf ports to foreign lands toll how extensive and prolltablo is this now and growing Industry.

C.

M.

HAKQKR.

Japan's Tower of Victory.." -5

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Japan is to have its own Eiffel tower. Tho Eastern World, published in Yokohama, announoes that a number of Japanese patriots in Tokyo havo conceived the Idea of so commemorating their vlotories. The tower will bo 1,000 feet high, and the lowest story is to contain an exhibition of national Industries, while the highest will be a Walhalla devotod to the statues of Japanese patriots who have died for their oountry. The cost Is to. be $850,000, and, European contractors are Invite^ to Aeiril

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Meals. Flag Stop.

IVos. 2, •, 8 and 30 conncct at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the Kast, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xeniu and Springfield, and No. 1 for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at t7 05

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