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° eo . ‘eave of commercial affiic‘ion and peeunis- foreign influence, the extension of (be mvurall- and baa be lived, be instead of his brother, might NOTICES OF NEW BUBLICATIONS, When the companions of Nearch under Alex. , but too frequently presenting in the persone efthe pon teal Im no country bas 9 general See eee ee aoe Se sventaens: Fours, have been Napeleon Ili. When Charlotte was a bn ets a ca . ander the Great, reached the weetn el Indus, | that bear them, an unfortunate eontrast of qua wor See ot pele occurred, + | with the exelasion of uaeralized citizens from of- | widew, her fermer lover met her in London, where 2 ate nothing excited their amasemen’ in that wonderful ta haa been cansea by tue coapection of bank fices of trust and power, and hostility to the Pi a | diseppetated passion poured eut to her ite bi Bilge at Bl ale Yrans BM tre country ms b a the regular vio anda of al ae those of the celebrities they are nan MISPHERES.”— letter deen henomeson which never | ? | maay be interred from the first stanzas, whieh we | teased to us by Mr. Nolle, cosiplaining of the | st WOiBe, onthe coasts of Avia Minor and Srec‘e. | Varione are the tastes in the selection of @ mame - a for neatly nine under circam- nt, to swallow all ot ess; -or can it be i | here transiste :— Even their short there sufficed, however, to | for achild—various «to the motives that infuence Seantec of peace avd war, cf paymoat af speci by | that au administration can go inlo power and: Te- Tee thee again, after eight long years— manner in which the text of his work has been fea: | show them the conmeesion of this astanlahing changs | the cecision. Sometitcee « rich frlend or relation is Re bana 220 or nom payment, of deficient revenue tons, epg ng o mgr pug Zia, whose axpect makes Sutter my heart! dered by the Amerivan translator. Not having with the phases of the moon. For f amees as to be conel ind, pod toerefore, some barbaraus do- evenue, of it woul jen a ie see rut y tears— 5 ? jess | Bignation i: 4 > eb ih a thorn be fan ey ene’ ry Mager great’ polis eee tae esttlod, when Pang bes Ayn Padget seen the original, we are not of course in a position ne sleeps upon this bank,’’ it is neverthe is affized to oc at ig cal | of silent power. Stronger eveu than the larger | Fide 98 long as he lives Cyto fine De ‘king, the commere'al, the caacufveturing, | any one of them can at any time be revived in Con- His aint seems, bo to have been of te pronounce an. impartial judgment between the | sun, because so much nearer to the earth, it raises | Date way miss tce expected legacy. Sometioes the 4 ~ gress, or through the columns of cir the lamented busbavd oF the agricukkural, or the cther i: terea‘a of the coun & partion primt;.| 20 av aarlotte having, | Parties. We feel bound, m fairness, how:ver, to | upon the boundless plains of the Pacific a wave only | Bame of some div inguished man is selected, to which ‘oy, On fair’ at'ributed to its tion. | ani no one can for a momeat imagine that the | Siar saceriage, won ther affections completely een place Mr. Nolte’s reclamation before our readers:— wae feet high, bat extending down to the bor. | the life of the nev weaver acds no new Justre; thug Bach saucer ar has sffordes addi ‘evi. | abolitionists, the most dangerous enemies we have | ber first love. _He was @ post ulso; so was she! Panis, Oct. 25, 1854. | tom of the sea, and woves it ouwards, chained | we see George Weshington and John Wesley ovca- @ence, not only of irs fensibility, but of ite being | to encounter, have ceased implacable, malig- | They were both artists too. “What she designed, Janxs Gordon Bewnerr, Esq:— ig | ae it were to its own path, high in heaven. | sionally figuring in the police Tevet, a8.e nanan ‘We syatem that is best adapted to the wants of the | pant and unnecessary war an our brethren of tie | he hed; what she wrote, he illustrated.” In | ‘ Deaw Hin—Wili you permit an old acquaintance | Harm'ess and powerless this wave rolis | of people arrested for ».oi or petty larceay. A clas- spempmeat ana of the people. We caunot dey South, whom to protect is to the Union, | fact their brief married life was, from all accounts,.| to recall himself to your rememprance, aud to re-| slong the plecid surface of the ocean. But | sica: taste inspires others, who are not al very i8 without departing from the principies of the | which, must be protro'ed, mblsh cauot be | far happier than that which usually fall to the lot of | queet of your Kindress an insertion of’ the foliow- | lands arise, New Holland on ong side, Souih- | particular in the names, povided they smaak of the hat there is a ‘ution. pe Leh ackepeper ba therefore to yo mips onista are elected to the high | princes; but “Death did lay siege to it,” mo: could | ipg statement in one of the fret numbers of th: | erm Asia on the other, and the low but immensely | ancients, owing to whic’: it cappens ‘taken to briz 88 Dear tion as possible, of Btate and federal government. the princess long survive her lose. RALD that ma) | broad tids! wave is 4 together and rises up- | boy now living, in Philadelphia who has been chris- and te make i ‘Se'vermancal system of the netion. James Owner, ler alater Zenaide, who was unhappily married Fe andet ae Airey 38, Dan Yopohed | wards, racing rapidly round the sharp point of | tened—if we may thue usm tue word—atter Commo- ae , Very respectfully, " Napoleon's Footp ange to her cousin Charles, Prince of Canino, the zoolo- It is but a few weeks ago that a publication In | Africa. An hoor after the moon has risen highest dus, one of the most infamous of the Roman Em- ‘a. M. GovaE. ery iret ait, died s few weeks ago at Rome, leaving several | the English language, called “Fifty Years ia Both | st Greenwich, it reaches Fez snd Morocvo; two | Perore, . : dren, the on! descbudanis of her father, | Hemispheres; or, ces of the Life of a | hours later it pasees through the Straits of Gibraltar, | | The late Bishop Chase, of Iltimois, bad a dislike te Bon. James Guthrie, Secretary of the Trewary, [Correspondence of the Newark Advertiser.) ly livio, Washing wn city, D.C. Mr. Po: {Fionenos, Nev. 4, 1854. Joseph Bonaparte. The brother of Charles, Louis | F, Merchant,” stated to be a translation of my | and along tre coast of Portugal. The fourth hour | having Greek aud Roman uames imposed upon ebil- i . Powera, the Amerizan eca!ptor, has a copy ia , ‘ormer ty a in of my | ¢ dren, which he displayed ver: ted!y ep one oc- SI aT bronze of the cast of Napoleen’s head made by hia Luciea, (named after his father, who himself never | German work under the same title, was put into j sees it rush oo LS pew i ja | anaes " ott pn hed ge a4 > resided here,) is said t» be one of the best linguis's hande, Although tne gentleman who under: | 0d pass The Hnew eating oa | lag op aeipr areto anaes, hve ie Sat, and worthiest men of the day. He also oceupied a tok this production bas been pleased to say, in an | rocky cliffs of Ireland and the numerous islands of t/ yhis child,” sald the bish rem Lannie Deane for the purpose, there being Bo wuitable earth a | charming villa in these environs until the receat | appendix of bis own, “that the duty of a Zansia- | the Northern seas arrest ita rapid course, 90 that it sean ‘Pullian Dleero,"” earwrenct: eb: tallies ni ta ec known in this commanity shat I | St. Belew. Only exon; jee were made to mup. | Testoration of the family in France. tor is faithfulness to his text,” I deem it due to | reaches Norway only after an eight hours’ headlong Marcus Tuliius Cicero,” ass g or the far-famed secret political orga- aes several Nemtate atta Bonapaste family. One of the best hotels of Ficrence—Hotel da | myself, as tke author of tue text he bas chosen, race. Anosher branch of the same wave bucries | ‘Whatt” wae a member “Marcus Tullius Cicero, ? Nord, the old Ba:totini palace—is kept by a Fronch- | to state that uo ruje nas been leas observed by him | slong the eastern coast of America in almost furious | { of Naples ser of tea hy the Lae) acer Grote mop, who was mapy ryeurs cook to Prinsd Jerome. than this, To say nothing of the character Ne ithe baste, often smoantisg to 180 miles an hour; from ‘Tut! tut! with your heath+n nonsonge! Peter, to her favorite English Physician, Dr. Playfair, who | Being now a prince in his own right, as maitre of a | langusge, which has beem whoily divested of all | thence it paseeson to north, where, hemmed in | | baptise thee,” aud the child was Peter thenceforth ve it to the present owner, with the medal struck | Palace, be, too, msy oxe day be raised to tne peer- | shedcs amd dashes of humor that ocoasonally mam- 0% sil sides, it rises here and there to the enormous and forever. icocr of Ue kataaarobt’ sad Nepolaon’s antoi | 00%! fest themselves in the original, I must beg leave to height of ciehty feet. Such is not rarely the case in Ganery again, set much store by Scripture names, the 24 October lat, at a meeting of te’Coua- | graph. The sombre bronze head speaks a moral | , O7nepicuous among the entatives of the | deny the translator's pretended ciaims to faithful- the Bay of Fardy—a ciroumstance which shows ne | many 0° wi oh oObadiats Syren Sa ao i to which I was attached, I offered the following | lersen to the beholder, who, recognizing in it the first Napole2n aynesty, who linger here, ia the | ness. Not only has altered my ideas, senti- | forcibly the vast superiority of this silent, steady ae, 4 tabi fe og ny . snd resolution, which the Council refased | fettores of the nelf-willed original, seeaalso that the | Duke Talk yrand, a nephew of the great dip'omatist, | mente and exprecsions, to such u degree as to make | movement over that of the flercest ten pest. Even at | other iahs ; but this fuebson is not mear opsrees reeeive, alleging '@ Want of jurisdicti»a; but ad- | sbalow of disappointment hes passed over them, a is enjoying @ ebeertul old age in beng of me doabs whetber he possessed an intriasic know- | = a Lapin amet po eres so Om earth, ae wee 8 eee ene oe Eee Geultee Ree me fo present them to the (rand Council of | snd,been fixed there by the irom stamp of death. At | he mast poll society, sons, however, of the language be pretended to transis‘e from, , Cape Horn, VICIORCS Of SARENE HRRDONNE ORA-)| SERRE |e Hinodé; bet even tenen-ate Bee: : ature]! prefer to keep themssives within | but he has frequently altered and ‘ected facts, | not raise the waves higher than some thirty feet, » A beds Teccordingly Se Se calegates Ce por ms pat bel mag reptenedaens pe here the line of pots iA es at Paris; while their mother, | and indulged, pom dl say ‘whether intentionally or | nor does it ever disturb the habitual calm of the The story is well known of the man Mer aving u ‘and Council, which, with the resok,. | fallen atabition. Mr. Powers has also the original | te¢ scion of an. ancient prince German house’ | not, in omiasions ad Jiditum, 6nd iu the most glariag | Ocean deerer than a few fathoms, ao that divers do | called four sons after oy ex, Laks, 8 2 to be presented at th: | model of a bust, by our late countryman, Clavenger, ag A jo resumed her i dually and priviteges | mis'atements. As an instance, I shall on!y cite one | 00! hesitate to stay below, evan when the hurri:ane | John, wished to, have the fifth christen: cemaaiee were not, however, pre. | ot Louis Buonaparte, father of the present Emzeror | 2 ia, wtere she is by right of inberttance a | fact out of many. [a my gccount of the defence >: | rages abv ties a bit:” but th 1 =e — ‘Council toreesive | of France, whose decided resemblance to it discre- | Bember of the House » a8 the Dachess of | New Orleans, in the year 1815, it has been ssid by | stand in its effect, this mighty wave sbows ita trne | *posties a bit; t the sequel, as ne not entertain | dite the scandal touching his parentage. Segan, and probably the only political Fepresente me, spesking cf the wounded British soidiers:— | power only whea it meets obstacles worthy of such | Lower, in the last edition ot his va‘uable on Gould He approach ‘After the fal) of the Bonaparte dynasty, this | tive of “ woman’s rights” tn Europe. Dake | * Not's single one of these amputated soldiers, (Iafc | effort. Where strong currents oppose ita approach, | ‘ Doglirh rurnames,” is vt oo familiar tous, It ap- ; the subordinate councila (not mach | Srst Louis, who married Josephice's Saugiier, Hor- | 2&8 not been com with pub life since the | bekind by Mejor General Lambert, at his retreat,) | 28 n the river Dordogne, in France, 3 races in con’ | ‘¢ars that the father bao two otber sons, Seo wees m in that). ‘The whole were retarnei to | tense, lived at Florence, gccapying the old palaco! |. bake of Weseileo, tn which he hore o gallant part. |, whom number wae 84, came to his death, whilst of temptoous haste ‘up the daria lowain begy Beene Per Oars hea prees siete Nob pet PEt ahace, i galian ir 5; he mo risoners #! a red am| lou In ra ’ a , with thas information, Qa the 34 Instant, | | now known aa the Hotel d’l This patece, b; dancors Uden Valion With: the lr Of th aid omlananer our a Jofty hi coustantly Gentle in ‘its appearance, thougn | cause, ae he said, its], not one survived the operation.” ouser. Or it rolls the mighty waters of the | ting wind among his schoolmates, he was Hee ee eee a one er | eee etn Eapere at Rocka shite’ | of woman's emiles, looks frevh aa any bean of focty,,| Tostead of these words my pretended transiator puis | Amazon river mountain bigh ‘up into the buge | Sulcyed with having this diaiich repeated, af better fitted to the Graca Council, I'read exch and | Florence, he took possession of the whole imaense | #24 is as much admired as eve:—only that now he | the following oues into my mouth (.ee page 225):-- | dark messes of foaming osscades, aud then drives | metre than rhyme:— ‘Of the preambles and reeolaifons in toad and | edsfice for himelf'and euite, the hetel being broken | ust share the compliments bestowed on hin per- | “ Kighty ot these suffered amputation in our City | thew steadily, resiatlessly upwards, leaving the calm Matthew, Mark, Lake and.Jobu, tone, and as t:ey were severally resd, they | up for their accommodation. Here his des; ma | £0n with hie ale de chambre and coiffeur, acknoz- | Hospital, and not oxe died, whilst of 81 British of amnor bebind, and its roar and its Acts of 'Postles, Dick and Tom. by the President as totally imedmian | jesty graciovsly sondescented to receive the Graud | dged Parisian artistes, to whove genius he himeelf | 5 risoners who suffered the eime oper tion, not ove |@huncer fr miles into the upland, Some pertons spprar to have tried how mear they “ appealed from his decision, and he waa sus | Dake of Tuscany; whom be farthermore honored bears unchanging testimony. survived.” The manifest object of this misstate- Of the coral formations, which are amongst the | could come to the height. of in giving ‘Af unanimous vote. Thas baffled, by giving him s dimner st the Pitti palace. The ——_—__—_— ment is to show, that the American surgeons were | most curious of the myriad marvels of the ocean, | Rameato their children. » the Tamaiara fer me but 19 sak Yor my fuels) autocrat of all the Rassias, could not accept such Our Kansas Correspondence more skillfal shan the British, whilat the case was | ee ea Tat a baton Raia aoe e pene The whole matter speaks for | courtesy from an inferior sovereign; though the “ precisely the reverse, and the remarks that ac:om- | We have the following beautiful deacription:— ‘whose accourt thereof is in the of Staell, < ented necessary 40 ac ana idea of using the Grand Duke's own palace to Waxanvsa, Kaneas Perritory, Nov. 90, 1854. vy this fact will make it evident that I could not | Here, in the lonely, weary sea, 0 restioes and un- Memoirs of the Historical Society of deizena would ‘any sacrifice by endorsing | him in, ia P| least amusing. During this sojourn | Exposé of the Emigrant Aid Socicties— Robbery of | bave ssid thing elee. I shall be sin:erely | easy, we find, moreover, that strangest of all pro- | vania), gave most ext names to all Sescintions. Jaues Owner... | of the Emperor here, the princes, his two sous, | Emigrants’ Letters—Distress Among the Emi- | bliged to jou by giving publicity to this commun!- | ductions, helf vegetable and half animal, tce coral. | children ; at present, bat one.ef occurs to eur rashinton, Nov. 8. availed themselves of epportanity to visit the cation, and to believe me, > | From the tree-shaped limestone springs forth the | memory— Aurora ams which be thought eg gg OE ee Knowing tat the Henaz> has avery wide cra: | 25 Tae 'Amnerdin Fares Vike Nour, | eerie gredsos ether of Sees ead eum | Bucy, «gaat sativus, maw 24 of the Bone) as of the Medici, are u) avery "5 jam, 5 inc. Noure, 5 ers, and then | ey, 9 a of he ive loatitutons of our county end vitivene | found everywhere in Tuscany, King Joseph redded | lation, and having always understood thot ita | ‘The Chevalier Henri WikofTs ‘History of his | into stone, burying iteelf in its own Zoot Doe, | Hered be ehlidren, selling these One Atiekatay 2g qharacter as citizens thereof, thst wo ahould divest | bere, after quitting his elegant retirementat Borden- | columns are open to the publication of trath en all | Courtahip and {ts Consequences” ia likely to cre-| ‘icky homes” Somreno | Mr. New, who is anid to bave called bis first child of ‘ail unnecessary concealment: and town, N. J., until his death, and was buried with Bis | spiects, I take the liberty to trouble th ation fo seri : ; but the story ie bi whaveos responsi onsti Ohariotée, in their family chapel 5 liberty you wi ate a great sexs judging from the descrip‘ion | Thus it is that the many-shaped, far-branched | Something, and the next, Nothing; but the story tution and we nadia Least Tithe Banta Groce thao & the | Some matters that ought to be explained, to pre- given of it by those who have seen the proof sheets, coral tree grows; where the plants of the pees creation of tae fertile imagination of Ma- | vent ignorant and unsuspecting people from being | and fromthe large number of orders which the | "PP¢F world bear leaves and flowers, there Eee meet At sone of bia mucceeee. which are the names a mem! | Hilde, palice in the Vis | imposed on any further by certain designin mablisher haa already receved for it. The book {5 | fC ee maitee satel, aka fn ‘tise sao forse | reguite of our reflections upes this gui Order of the Sous A aay her Sa | Large, and here married his daughter to the y 7 ig com | Teceve @ bool ving sensitive animal, clad in the gay form | resulte of our reflections upom this subject. the public; Sierehice oe bian Prince Demidoff, after having ereandéred BV panies in the Eastern States—I mean those who | said tobe exceedingly, curious and to rival ininterest | and bright colors of flowers, and adorned with 1. The son should not be called after bis father, — Beoalved, That the paleney: fro: miltions of dollars amassed while he was King of | take the philanthropic names of Emigrant Aid So- | the biatory of every unfortunate passion, from | Pbotphorescent ane As if in a dream the bac ingle jer utter her meer distinguish wey eeret ym all the proceedings of he Retrheie. The son by his first wife, Miss <- | cleties, professing to be organized for the purpose | that of Don Quixote and his Duicines down to wine » pe: fbi pent pny yp re | ania ee tee che weuie bares, bea, 0 of lending aid to poor persons to come to Kansas to | thoze later amours to which weare indebted fo:some | Yet, whatno tree om earth, in all its vigor and | rly from those of his immediate family 5 pats ayer signs of rcoognition and pase-words; and pope et A} Saar Pinte, won ey in | better their condition. I intend to ¢xpose the real | of the most piquant of modern French memoirs. | beanty ever could do, that is accomplished by these | but this latter is vot attained when a child bears the required fo publise tn She of the nomena pu, | time foldl the ambitious desires of hls mother, now | design of these professed philanthropists, Many | The earlier chaptera are said td illustrate in & re, They build large, powerful mame of itaperent. Confusion must always follow, of strapge animal trees. castles, not always to be avoided by the additions ef senior pracy and i Se ee letters, Ihave cause to know, have been written | markable degree the pathos of sentiment, and to | ye Aes igh, tate Bic aries, and junior: or the designations, lat, 24, &e., whicl re joined ‘the army, and may be. | back by the dupes of these gentlemen, exposing | exhibit in the most ammeipg light the absurdity of | cemented like no other building on tnia globe. are commen in New Evgland. ar. their deceitful promises, which ind two of mature affecting the extrava | For they are a strange mysterious race, these Am eminent lawyer, who adorned the Philadel i wieeBirbe heed HS ig genres “ maidens of the ocean,” as the old Greeks ‘used to phia bar forty or fifty years ago, bad a eon with the a Should America give France her next emperor, it | cur comfortable homes, and come out here into the | gan-es of a feeling whic) neither in reality seems dam ‘ peme first name es bineelf, who was studying law Whereas, Exclosive jarisdiction over the Distrist | Would not be more strange than that Lonis Napo- | witderness to ruffer from want. Yot as Thave sees | to bave entertained, Through the various lo.e | sur Fee ey Nigerian etic leat Cong marvelous econoxy, their gigantis edifices, all had in his office. One day a letter arrived wit:out any thereof having ‘voice in the election of their | mate of the Tombs at New York, should now ve | nene Of them published, either in your paper or | passages which are liberally scattered for the edifi- 20 . early attracted the attention of the curious, and addition of juniec, bot intended for the younger, Talore stand in the anomalcus positien of dlatran- reigning. If, however, his hitherto unacknowledg. | any others, to which 1 know they were written, | cation and amusement of the reader throughout the | Ese Naree oy gate Pi ple ge rag hn ¥ gent Teed. waa from @ cource not itable to avy ene. fyeemen, sil the rights and privileges of nephew has inherited the Napoleon will and | | believe they have beensuppressed by the agents | pages of the book, as well as the correspondence colored, delicate flowers, which, out of their ele- | “I am ashamed of you" aid the fatber fodig- ‘Napoleon ? His uncle’s adoption of the title | bere, who should have delivered them tothe Post | which took place between the parties, there ap- | ment, ap only humble, brown stones, were | nently, barding it wees aon. ie? pepltoa pprobium, and has giveo it | Office. This town is fifty miles from a post office, | pears an evident consciousness on both sides that ie neaile Tred lants, wae the mee wits ie h ry oe pa Toc mae oe at fongress ‘a certain heroiam which rend is , ponalart ie and we have no means of conveyance, and have to | cach is playing a game which is only to be century sabered yet to this beteand only repeated | direction. ' without | ‘mation by the several partisans of Gens. Jackson depend on the company’s sgents to carry our letters | won by finesse sad stratagem. Step by stop the | and energetic efforts succeeded in establis! ing their One of the sons of the Benjamin 81 of wheat eee and Harrison, tu: to Weatport or Kanms, in. Missouri; aud when avy | reader is initiated into every move, as well as its | claim toa place in the animal kingdom. Charles | we bave spoken above, was born di on ints in the | Clest them to the presidency. of us show that we are dissatisfied with things here | calculated resulta, and be dds but little difficalty | Darwin, at last, in the charming scosamt he has | sbeence from home. Ou Sie ream, “ Apropos to this s an snesdote of one of, the s0- | we are watched, and we believe our letters hone | in following cut’ the thided of the plot. The |-£:van Nef bie vopages, set all errors, aside, and | bit ae ae Sere ie bot hens ae node Piombono, made | him. ie » Velowelysnvoclated with jthe Bonaparte. fay. | wey fer inek not comtog te hands Tbave spas the | SWai2, with sll his reputation fer adventuconsness, | creates. 8’ "01" UO Min MNT © | of ering people talldag of ld Ben Stokely.” -) J. Now, we we ir 3 and cor rings, ibe | senticd emanated | wey and Tas goog Sona tapdiie | reo, which shows st be han meget | ine ty nme; ot arom, ince gem | shy consine, tl ate FA ae ae | thus:—Jacopo I., having been called saa while | Missouri to see if Ican get work; and if I can, Sohbet his every phra = and action, and his Efe breemy and a ap carly inte mi. satin fat cl he “excene of he who governed the republic of Pisa, of which Piom- | Allegany county, Pennsylvania, where I came from. | Pradence is sometimes carried to s an extreme | For in vain e ‘ pro‘ect his lauds 4 w winds ery exiata| Ho ease dopendncy, Kled Ploy an be gas | Be condition of maay of oar emigraats (nm | thatthe lady becomes impatient, and is competed | fennel the fay of the osean; In rain as he ls oF re aoe nate bibtae Meee ano i ez i Hs F 53 i ef ie F 5 3 H Fi ‘| : elit ae aa | 5 at Ve i: & Fi ial i 4 E i Eg i | F i i | ! . & ‘i ses rt f fe gz t H : i i 5 i i Pennsylvanis is de-| to warm bim up. On the one side is secon the aivawent jee rg igen ig Bat tpatie, full, is more fully their representative them Ne a Colambie ism sired wp by Bit eee es ad Soe ae Many of them bave no means to lire on; steady, persevering pursuit of an object which secms | nute polyp! work quietly and silently, with modest | others. As tis is all wrong, it is best to prevent indi- v i P 2k i ES = f % * & now balf conceded ‘whitewash—whi:h being wale ph Sed 2 < d Ligiod always to be within grasp, bat'is always escaping; | industry, in ene terms beat a oad Prkegpentierion fedliogs, by giving no o-caslom election. of any | ‘#Snelated from the Italian, reads thus:—— dena tsade of hay and poles; some ia woth! onthe other, a heartless exhibition ef coquetry | Tigh y,wares of EB ever Se eee id ecert | "2. The more common a fast name te, the more wae fa £ i Hg Hi Pi iE i i u i An ass Tam ! yet thro’ my wit biggrin the open which finds delight fa inflicting ppin merely for the | in st ll waters; theirhome is amid the most vio. | ‘Ommon should the first aame be. We can ab:liah Pag aE tpn EA i enjoyment of the sense of power which it affords | levt breskera, and living force, though so minute, | *Lmost any prefix to Smith, Brown, aud Jones, As it being | There is verily a ciple in poor humae natare | ad, though the fall has been more ble than ote ’ * ight f the} d fathers of the bar lately obverved ¢ ‘who | which gives Toe wrong, if successfal; while | we expected, yet December is juat about setting in, | Both parties with considerable natural talen's, knox. | ‘rinmphs victorionsly over the otind, terrible might | tue tle LENte ens ve the genet right elt, if it fails to conquer, is put on the | and the is gloomy enoug! ledge of s0-iety and previous experience in affairs of sisevutervestiey fa be lh Ba § avid of the Smiths, and espectaily of the John Sm' Tn another church of Piombino, St. ‘Antimo, are | and if and fever shall A 5 oped this sort, scem at times to be amusingly unconscions | clese vast lakes in thd midet of the ocean, where The very mention of Jobn ‘anith in a cours house, 7 seen everywhere the arms of Napoleon’s sister, | Which prevail much here, I do not of the abeurd part they were playing; and the best | eternal peace reigns undisturbed by the sto-my police office, or othe: public piace—and is is of fre- the United States, who | Princess Elisa Baciocchi, wh» hed it restored from | what the prople sre to do. tell A va be raging tempeat. But when their mar- | quent mention therein—brings a broad grin inte Pe pait of the joke is that the Chevaller, in his history | Wires end t ves ee) ate every one’s face immediately. . tre of the ceiling i ath matter of fact, 1 have not tasted a Yellous structure reaches sarface, it rites no abolition of slavery inthe | decsy. In the: cent ting is a pai jag ji “ : of his liaison, with a naivete for which we did not | further, for the polypi are true children of the 3. No name should be givem to s child that will See Ee alae niet eras | tnolueste Conatlbate car ture,” the’ ertede give him credit, still endeavors to delade hinself | see, and as soon’ as sun and alr tonch thenr they | suggest a lndicrcus idea when written in fall, ov before him—an allusion to the Princess and Felix, pri . There rans @ atory of the ssinted od scons bien ae: New York city; rer rea HE gee [ie [ i i” i i ; : z tt i i i 8 i [ 5 EE die. when the initial only is used. We always pitied Mr. eye Bnd the public into the bellet Kast that nsed ap | “Tike enchanted islands these olroular reefs of the | P. Cox, and Mr, 7. Potts, bota worthy men, but Qi was really touched by the tender god. | corals bask in the brightest light of the tropics. A beg ste god‘athers. The truth is there was not a particle of ove on | light green ring ‘noleess a quiet island lake, the | | Middle-sged persons, in Philadelphia, can recel- either side, though, on both, there was a liberal | ground is white, being aballow, shines brilliantly in | lect a druggist, named Ash. (now deceased,) whose simulation of it. Of the two, the male sctor in this | ‘Be go7ceous floods of light, whilst without the Sania hed ‘annoyed with inquiries from schoo! dask, black billowe of the ocean are kept off by a ridiculous farce deserves, perhaps, the least cen- | tive of breokers, rushing incessan ly in white foam boys; and otuers of the rising generation, as to the residence of Mr. Calabash. eure. Whilst his reputation for gallantry flattered | gainst the cliffs ; above them an ever pace, deep the amcur propre of the lady, it parry also have | bite ether; and tar beyond, the dark ocean and the |. Forty or fifty years ago a wy were ae be A sf havy a'r blending at the horizon aud melting bar- | French tailor, nemed Frogg, in © 5 warned ber against compromising herself too far | moniously into one another. Toe effect is pecaliar | 8. C., and om the birth ot one of his rons ome with him, unless ehe had serious intentions | ly giand and aimost magical, when tne coral rings | persuaded him that it would be a very good of marrying him. Clever as she was, she | are under water, ard the huge furious breakers toss | for the child to call him atter the chief a a von bes a of prudence, | UP their white crests in vast circles around the still, | of the Btate—Govercor Ball—which was Load be — P * | calm watere within, whilst no land, no rock is seen | Ccrdingly, the unlucky combinaticn of the two nameg and 4! bas now to pay the penalty of her | to rise above the surface of the oc-an. never striking the fatver antil it was ‘oo late, indiscretion in the publsity to which her subse | | Frequently large reefs, richly acndded with grace- | | 4. Remalcs ahould bavs bat one given name, and irer. ws, surround on sides lofty mountains, e: Ty ie ie | guent conduct has driven her quondam admirer. | \/oIna whose foot there grows, & luxuriant, | s8amlddie name. Thia is the practice amozg if FH § ; Hi g i z | E § 58 Hf : E E | it EE Gi FL by 5 Hay tr i : $e z i 4 . ; t+ E i 5 i L Es a gi u i i I ? 4 i ii z uf ue Fi HE i fy i 5 tf fay i § Bit i Ha E 5 £ i is E “ii ef is ; EF E3 Fed E eF #E 5f i i ria ee “i Bas bes Fi i i H 4 i i i i ‘ : f i =} 3 z -f 3 ar Bre 7 | A J % of seve beds; paved the town, | the company’sagents. The Certainly there was nothivg in the history of the é Soi f ean doctrine” in the ial colamns of the Na pon a nity 5, Pa . Boe tropics] vegetation. Insice of these reefs the ciety of Friends, ana were it iy tienal Intelligencer, of the 29th ult.; or who would be ¢: bags citadel, created roads, arsenals, Mind Rossin Paes os ai soratta re ade whole affair which justified the incarceration of this poe is smooth and mirrvr-ltke, basking | it would have many advantages. We shoald knéw ' } rotecti reigned, | ' CAE E a ve favil, or for & ne; ted nade bere oats Be glad ‘they.con 40 improve farms axa cities SLE | Se pn ada om eso oat in the warm sunlight; withont,’ there {3 at once, on weelng & lat y's name, whether the | / { ‘tional or sir 4 bank, or for tional it I fare ; img, foaming 1 | married or sin; and, if tse former, ie aub-treasury, e than for her roads and hos . Indeed, from all pce, wall know ing that sive Se ant comes, into | some prison, and still ‘leas the strong diplomatic | Strnel warfare ; raging, Me Gre eal te, | of ber family Bie, aed th seers Nyon and rush in fierce sttack against the firm wall, be Resolved, That-we will not aid, directly or indi- Scene, Ae wasn yn Oy opposition that wae offered to his pardon. Hud the } .jeging it year after year, century after century. | that the adoption of this rule of buts single first. ploomre same time, and with like | rieh gentlemen will have to advance the money, ; !@ on bo sole ee.atherw ioe, yin the election of say bs tity, itdoubtfal wh a ae was | Wwe they wil got the d at a low price, and Sardinion judges been inspired by the same happy | Thus the tivy polypi protect proud man on his | Dame for girls, would put em end forever to the will not stitational | * heart the Saint which paintings made her. will require the poor pre-¢mptor to mortgage tie ideas of appropriate justice which animate the frisn | treatencd island against the destructive flood; whole brood of Emma Milvindas and Eapbemia~ pledge himself t ly ti lypi struggling boldly against th , Helen Lauras, and a style of nomenclatare ia ee et eae Gm estab ae having looked graciously on one of | lend to them to secu‘e the payment of tae money poly pi sags ing boldly against the unoieasure \ bench in similar cages, they would have contented | Coan! and was ail the notions on earth united, they | thought, by most pe:sous, to be ridiculous in the Biv tyl ce aboreeoumernod monaren’ "| Soe goer wh wae oe lvar fa dy best | Hn en they ol are singin dohwt to com thonene ith vendag for eparon aed alr | sd nt bul oe runes of thon goa | «xem +E Wendy Week teaeny or ah ee Daniahed the unfortunate from Luces’ and | fer. themselves, for ‘little’ or nothings ‘and tien "Pon uniting the parties upon the spot, Judging | the occan— but the corals bui d a po:t of the crass The United States and Dominica. Frrra Warp, Wasutxatoy Cry, } Srinhe her ovogtoneswalsiioeenbie the oes Glens they will let the poor deluded from their respective dispositions and temperaments, | ({ te arsat earib, lor their télangs count alone in {From the Albany Journal] Oot. 5,1854. f with herself; eo that when the princess came to |.go because they will have no further we spprebend no greater punishment could have | the yarfaes t the aca, tenon arc und 4 oalasier: Extract from a letter ‘dated San i {0 THE GRAND COUNCIL 5. 0. 8. 8.8. OF THE DIS~ | Florence for a visit, her rival was compeiled to |.wse for him ex. to hire him ag a/ bela as a sacefal lake fe te oe Domingo, Nov, rRICT OF COLUMBI leave at once far Laces; and wie coven her re. | hard “on the, load ‘they ‘have swindled ‘hin | 20 ifileted upon their folly. sble; all ring sbeped, with a peaceful lake in the | 29, 1954:—— The sccompanying preambles and resolutions, | turn, Yet this princess is warmly remembered at | out of, This is what all this emigrating aid will | The closing numbers of Haydock’s Catholts Rible | centre ; all consisting of no otver material | it iy 9 positive fact that your government’ is’ mAh tes of enpranp sg preg ne hahe Lucca, where mal seals to have uaxto heraelf gene- | come to, and {t.already begins to leak out. We who | have just been issued by the puolishers, Danigan antl oe ay erst oe yom sishinji or bas made a treaty with the Dom'slogse, held on Monday night, be 24 instant, which ca cre py neighbourhood of Florence, hie ype th gn pod phernwtlyeh oA nd bond & Brothers, of Fulton street, and the work way | ue planted end peopled by tie same waves, by | By it the Bay cf Samana is to be ceded to the Unk to receive or take any action on them what- | which once belonged to the moet beantifal of Nap» | for them to buy. As I have always Jearned thit | 20W be had complete at their store. Its typo- | whom trey wee rained abuve hizh water ma k. | seq States for a naval depot. In retarn the United ever, alleging a want of jarkedigtion, a3 tha’, the | Jeon’s sisters, Pauline, the Priacess Borghése, who | your paper was willing to expose th» wrongs and | graphical merits and the beauty of its illustrations | A Ne AT pal fen f sn ang wine Bees States are to officialy acknowledge the inde- Grand Council alone was competent to entertain | was also celebrated for her “consummate vanity and | irjuries done by the rich and powerful, I hope, fr | render this book one of the finest of the sort ta’ | bydanevtiina iu their beancaes, and inweeta sea’ rdence cf Domiaios, There i hiten aay of the. questions embraced in the resstutions: | coquetries,” though her attachment to her imerial | the’ sake of the poor men and women whom :lese | ), be lished in this oo ig on a. er ith the an se Waser ioteeae. eee {ts loa. There is come hitch avout ‘are, therefore, most respectfully sabmitied brother, hich declared self most toushiogly after | men are duping, that you will give thiea place, for | | 228 ever been published in this country. Its exira. | me nbe arrive with the tee, and water birds soon | che detsils. 48 mest as T can find out, they want fer the consideration of the Girani Council, with 1, is certainly a redeeming attribute of her | tell you that Kansas is no place for mento coms | ordinery low price, taking into account the anpe | five life to the scanty, litle stip of uewly made | «me modification of your tariff or port regulations, ks 8 view that the principle contained thereia may be | fame. There is at lo an elegant marine villa, | without means to Itve, and boy their land w sen it | rivrity of the style im whi bithas beep brought , . el 1 \ Yay to ti Sdopied for the forare government of the order. | which wasereoted by t3is PHaceat whither store: | Je ao.d, for dere is little chance bere fornaemt | cot, vil, we nee to doubt, enoure for ta lacce | ai ewes aieet, below, | plant and ani ich Mr. Cexsean, who ta the Americta Minister In regard to preamble and resolation No. ,it is | tired to lament Nepoleon’s downfall, and where she | grant to make money over aad above his living. one , eee ej nale, huclees fucns twining its | Pie pipotentiary, has no authority to promise, though sumed that the Grand Council cannot now, since | formed the project of following him to St, Helens. | Jas. Wan. role. loog, | xbastly arms arond the bight | hey say the Presicent is willing to do it without, Eoerender hus attnined po mer and stromgth, consider | She was tise ear supplicat ng before parmission. | SS 7 Appleton & Co, announce, in addition to their “A 7c corel, ard. throng their brancnes glides + © | ocrhaps it is adjusted by this time. If it ts, you the extreme secresy hitherto enjoi , longer ne- | could be obtained from the allied powers. When i Towa Unite States Srnator.—The two houses | splendidly illustrated nusioual work of the “ Reyub- that falls cm the surface changes Wie wat Inge be will doubtless have the basiness officially announced > @eneary. hls and resolutions No, 2, embeates nd: ngeseac we tennis ae ene fad 3 i we og Loge ope man gp oni gagc lican Court,” a long list of books adapted for lowe But the ae has liguts of itsown. Chere ts | in the forthcoming mossage of Gen. Plerce. Most mentour question, the agitation of which has shook | ther’s death reached ber, She did not long survive | States Senator in the place of Hon. 4-C. Dodge, | Doliday presenta, amongst which their“ Gems ut te glimmer of gorgeous flab io gold and silver | ieoste ere who know anything about ft, think it” our aey Union to the centre; a question fraught | the blow, and at her death bequeathed this marine | whose term of office exvires on the 4th of March | British Art” and“ Ornaments of Memory” deserve | oy aby, bloe belle of brilinee ean ‘ss they fu is @ gtep towards annexation, and the planters aud with more wan any ether that bas been | villa to ber sister Caroline, then widew of Murat. next. Two ballote were taken, with the following | special mention. These beautiful works are pro | ttscug’ the purple colored tops.of lofty fuci, aad | traders ave jubilant rene Some of the old . lor . wilted lag Unloweiet Tee ee ae, enema | ree fusely illustrated with engravings, and are magni- the bright, sparkling light of Uny, gelatinous crea- | Spomish stock go againat it, the same reason. aay influence over destiny of the Unios, let | of their father, went to America, the one now in | Dodge, demoerat 2 . r: dae tant with ane ow Infisence be cxercised to ston a the Union | Paris having found an asylum in New Jersoy; her | Warren, {usio ficently bound, We know no more elegant and teen oat oe lecaneetataer saa Besa Deioe sates on “thelr ida, they wena ane ~ if the Ondes ca catartein Pak teste gon 1 re ahr suftert a mee Maat hes | Gok; uations appropriate ornaments fér ® lady’s table. day facce, and nigns covers with ber dark mantle | fore difficulty in keeping the upper hand of Sou- + of fifty thourand foreigners, and every cne a Jesuit, a 5 ty Bole Umit tae Mime § . Mr, Vale, of the Bowery, also publishes an at- the sea sleo, these fantastic gardens begin to shine | louque’s folks at the otber end of the island. compelled Germany A cancas of the ot : ~ do not i: would not be so dangercus to tho ‘Unioa, as the | yeilionce, finally obtained permission to settle in | Detioral whigs who voted for Mr. Cook was held | tractive list of works suitable for New Year's gifts, (1 new, mysterious light; green. yellow aud red fea i wil give you the Vereft of say Short ex horde of itioniste mids q nearer mother, wards | the evening, whee Mr, Harlan was nominated. handeome , flames are s9en to kindle and to fade away; bright | sllies ¢ Pr anh @ No. 8, is en's, resin of the first of 4m soolana oh BOSSIP ek ee The six net ‘ebig, members retined from the mee which fs sega “Velney’s stars twinkle in every direc'ion; even the darkest | perience. Here, in San Domingo, ani Tsay @euec of the third resolution, adopted by the | of Lipova—a transposition of Napoli. Here abe | °atcns with the determination not te support the | Ruins,” at an extremely low price. recesses blaze up: now and then, in bright flashes | elsewhere, they ore ot mixed Spanish and African Order, at © mase meeting iteld’ at the City Hall, | Stredep an elegant ‘palace, Kept open howe, and | Rotinee. As the balanos of power rests with them, | Dunigan & Brothers have just ismued a“‘History of light, and trul rays pass incsssantly to and fro | blood, ih all sorta of proportions. Pmothinds of ones g7h sitimo, and the ‘resolutions only go to | became very popular, 0 sncich ‘so'that the ng | they can either seoare the reelection of Mr. Dodge, | of the Catholi¢ Missions amongst the Indian tribes | the wild, dark world beneath the waves. Broad trem are what you would call mulastoes,. (th a , 0 sto! Y measures which bitherto divided | Indies of her clre'e embroidored for her amaguvacent | OF Pave the election postooned until next winter. | of the United States, from the year 1529 down to [wlTOwS of flushing I'ght mark the track of | Fave Balt s denen aifte-cnt names fof them tack, the two great polil the c: sein sever: After the two ballots, as noticed above, had been * the dolphins throogh the midst of the foaming - actually ti Rg peal poke Tg phd with Brady halon fo pn gree taken, smotion revailed to postpone the election | 1854,” which possesses a high historical interest, woters. Troops of porp ics are eporting about, cee are & few pure waltes, prialpeey ey from, the Order, that they are no} again to bs re- | effect, This memorial i only avother proof of the | wZtil Thursday, fhe 21st inst. apart from ite religious purpose. We shall take the 9 “fie — my — & seinen J Jove Lag Mee ee ee > glk piggy, with consent, sionab! miter attachi — —emeerenees f e yv intense spar ve 1, @ whew iy en ac ott any | Big Pleat date ad | Tr Pn Dane 1 Rew Cnet, i | "vena Mons daseary somber o | ada ya gee ih mera | MRE flog even by: those wh. ¢ " t er i pale spec! inht from every fin and | be J faver of the Orter, eapéclaily, Bis yo ogp toe ie atone pte) General M'Donald, me Ge corp nieece tt oials s Bena Aan foe this ably conducted periodical is already before us, | scale, through the c-owd of brilliant starfish, whilst | ey. have been at war for y mn like = a, Thie er eae elec: riick has so far been | vately murried,.and whom phe also survived. aber syepingé since, it was vona ‘presen: to the child | nd ite contents afford evidence of a desire to in- Frat fr seal Me wood: pho 3 mpl mee x | hah fseynie | ee Ritown: oe a Spanieh wae hon meatniie aw thar odioate ga, tebe Fee teeta the Urace nen a cee of Mr. and Mre. Carter a firet clase city lot, the | sugvrate worthily the coming year. It opens with | tary notes of an wollan harp, and yet louier than | cathedral, aeons! &o: I bave not been fino the b Asscciaticn to have the privi of naming the ‘“ . Ainrclation to have the privilege of naming Tie | a ctarmingly written article, entitled “The Ocean | even the breakeas on the rocky shore. But the great, | Interio, but iam told the soil is good. for sugar, of the 29th ult.,as the “True American Doo | Louis Phill , in compensation for larger claima; trine.” but lived ouly'six months to enjoy it, hoving been | news him Lawrence, and hia name now stands | 404 its Life” which, inlaying bare the wonders, both | €4 itsclf Is not silemi. Listen, and you will coltee and tabsore, Nl ee eae ee m cats potent nen theese ne, legislative | cut off by the same malady wd proved fatal to | “Lawrence Carter.” * animal and vegetable, that people and diversify the tral i [op Mm roney kintags tt ‘wilh the brent jangeat (eas ~ re) al | ‘nea bt the Hag ” scouts af havion come definite aye ee | bee ppc brother. depths of the great waters that interspase the earth, meloay, unsil all the sweet sounds of sea, esrth and | tens outnumber them in population, There is al policy: and’ en Aa. futare poe aioe | bee eae ee ne nem e,. ta nite belka df hye a SC | describes them with a vividness of fancy and postic | air melt ito one low voice alone, that marmars | liit'e trade jhaproeh Seg: and News sich it ia incumbent that that polley should be Peactital rion. Daring her residence with ker | ing, La. ite langth jn cou’ thirty miles, and is wili | feeling, which invest the subject with additional | over the weary sea.and rises, singing eteraal praise, co sales we Domtt i in S year cannot amount settled at once, ancl that the principles by which | father in the United Btates, she loved, and was be- | enclose about 6,008 sapertical adres of laud, 25,000 | attraction, and contsibate to form a most delightfat | tor Prone of Lim, wio is mightier than the | tomer Mie te inna They eis ave We are to he governed, and the measures to be sup- | loved by her cousin Achille Murat; but, the course | acres of which ceded to the State | any waters, yea, than the mighty waves fhe h otis hy wood 40 °% Beaty, ny dena, mut pion betre | 0 oad oe ere, rn emuvh.Intsndegpy er | Congres fr even and Grning Durwes It | Canecan wk ie nfosce of Ihe plas a thn Theale on “Geen Nameo; evi mtr | “ischasiee eons Py bu, dow, eh a al , «€ y e cola ine pon sisabee oF sara poner by the | land, she married him against her will, and soon | redeemed and rendered available for cultivation by | moon on the rise and fall of the ooeab, are probably | ises the abaurd propensity which some people have, $f This funaned, when, | ng ma tee rho the in became hie widow. His name was ale Napoleon ; | the construction of thie levee, Dew to come of ovr readers; of giving their children high sounding sppellations; | Ayperican government wants it, soot NPT