Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 3, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 January 1860 — Marriage of Garibaldi. [ARTICLE]
Marriage of Garibaldi.
> Garibaldis still at Fino, in the neighborhood of Como, where on the 3d instant, he met with an accident while riding on a restive horse. The news at first occasioned some alarm in Milan; but a letter from hismedical attendant, published in the newspapers, removed all apprehension. Further •evidence of the slight nature of the injuries is found in the fact that on the 6th inst. the gallent General was married, to the eldest daughter of M. Raimondi an Italian patriot, who possesses one of the most beautiful of the residence on the lake of Camo. In 1848, M. Raimondi was obliged to take flight; his property was confiscated, and his palace used by the Austrians as a barrack. Under the new regime, however, every thing has been .restored to him. Great rejoicings took place at Camo on the account of the marriage of ibis daughter to Garibaldi. (£s”Hon. Schuyler Colfax, writes to his paper, the South Bend Register, as follows in regard to the admission of Kansas: “I regret to say that it looks probable that the Democratic majority in the Senate will resist the admission of Kansas into the Union, although all parties in that Territory participated in the election of Delegates to the Constitutional Convention, in framing the Constitution itself, in voting on its adoption, and in electing the State Government unde.it. Of course all sorts of pretexts will be alleged for this rejection. But the real reason is that it is to enter the Union as a decided Republican State,, in spite of all their efforts to the contrary, to strengthen the Republican phalanx in the State two votes, and to give three Presidential votes in the great contest of 1860.”
