The New York Herald Newspaper, February 1, 1858, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1858. § The W the public mind—people to } the cultural interest. But manufacturers Curious Story about Louis Napoleon ta Secondly. Is the Ballavo living anywhere | pretemder. As it is, we watch his ith in- © Washington Oupre, Si: Bongins on | Adsnse peated SE EE toa eet taliaes Tanase eed Se aan alee ee New York. in Troom® ect and. "wil abe corroborate the | crest and cutout without sympathy for the (From the Washington States, Jan. 29.) ing on, and a panic was the result. Whether | being the case, the productions of the (From Graham's Magazine of January. } statement of Mrs. Mercier? If she will not, it must | man or respect tor his antecedents. THR ADMISSION OF KANSAS UNDER THE LECOMPTON | there was any real necessity for such a interest protection, in order 19 Ir 4 MYSTERY? be either because such an eveut as the death of prises an am CONSTITULION, AND ITS PROBABLE EFFECT ON THE | revulsion, we vi ae ae ee aan to encourage pasns rer and enabie him to geucralp $5 poqantpace SEO Sawn, custom = nye gg neeee coemmeh, Ae SEA tak che Supreme Coust—Special Term. PU JOCRACY. tot ture, an | live, rotect to be to . reve ae ete 4 oy “4 still decreed by fate to | pang is as Power gave oy saith and ent past lee Ly ox fo to relax in favor of the extraordinary | ghe has been bribed to silence. sefore Hon. Judge Davies, in | manufactures, not b; shut out all like fresh phases ‘of difficulty. to. the politician who 8 | ¢he country aa there was before the revulsion—in | productions of the meaufacturers ae countries, | document bearing the above title, and which, if it | ““Tnirdly. Is Colonel Webb, or M. Wikoff, or any DECISIONS. lately thought he had reason to bid the subject & fact, morgthan ever there waa before. The earth | by means of high duties, but furthermore by giving | have noother merit, can atleast claim a high rank as | other quondam American friend of the Prince, aware | Jacob Mussina etal vs. Belden et al.—Judgmoat for plain- vearty adieu. It comes before us now in the least gives tort her bounties as before, and the specie | to the home manufacturer a monopoly of Tie raw | the very ne plus ultra of audacity. We give it pre- | of any such liaison formed by him in New York? | tiffs on demurrer, with liberty to defendants to answer em uestionable shape, but in so opposite a manner to | representation of wealth is more than ever before. | material which the foreign manufacturer would wish | *¥ming that our readers may be as much interested | But ‘above all, are all the cognizant of the | peymeut o1 costs. “ payment o1 coats. hat we so lately deemed unquestionable that itde- | We see no reason, therefore, why things should | to have exported for his own use abroad. Here we | i” such a singular story aa we were, and trust that | imprisonment that the person confined in | © jojerg ee sands a consideration more for our self-defence aS | not assume their usual healthy condition, and the } behold the mext and second phase in which the Unit- | 8uch of the parties named in it as have a bona fide | the prison of Ham was the same as the Prince Louis | Bayard vs. the § 4 pr pst ada cemard emocrats than for any settlement of its troubles. country 4 on, prospering and to prosper, as before. ed States of North America are now situated. This | ¢xistence will pardon the mention made of them iu | Napoleon who was shipped off for America by the | ‘¢ Plaintiff to recover cage he must avor an@ hey, it would appear, are settled by the people of | All that required is a restoration of confidence, § situation will continue and will last until the United | the text. French t in November, 1836, after the | prove a readiness on his part at tha time and place to per- lansas for themselves. i and we see no good reason why that should not take | States manufacturer will be able to compete on | Jn the year 1851 I became acquainted, in the city | affair at Strasburg? form the contascts on his part,and as the defendant Governor Denver's proclamation to the pores of | place, since all can see that we are neither equal terms with the foreign manufacturer, especial- | Of New York, with a woman named Louise Mercier, | ‘There are many circumstances which tend to con- | was not bound to part with his property until paid fer, the Territory, showing that there is a majority of ten | a3 g le nor have lost anything in the real ele- § ly with the English, and to produce wares as good and whom I thought to be a native of Belgium, | firm the fact of the imposture. ‘The principal of by op teint Veen ok pe = thousand of ‘the bona fide voters of the Territor, wane national wealth. rash and speculative } and as cheap as the others. though she was generally known as French Louise. | these are:— Bg ind payment should ferred against the Lecompton ‘constitution, is the first well | operations of scheming and theoretical men have # From all these considerations taken together it | She was about forty years of age, possibly more, | — Ist. That the present Emperor of the French does | ““cnry H. Morange vs, Peter Morvis.—The acts to be por- authenticated evidence we have that the people of | heen rebuked, and that class of operators have been, | follows, that the United States may be considered | 80d person of intelligence and great vivacity of | not, in the sllgniens degree, resemble either his re- | formed by the varties to this agreement were concurrems, Kansas are almost unanimously opposed to it. We | for the present, partially wiped out, leaving the | as approaching every day nearer and nearer to the | Manners. In the Spring of 1853 J again met her in | puted father, Napoleon, nor his mother, the | and therefore tho plaintiff, to entitle himself to recover, had plenty of newspaper statements to that effect, | jusiness of the country to be carried on by the more § general and common condition of being of the old New Orleans. Mere she was taken sick, and at the utiful Mortense Beauharnais; nor is there | must not only have been ready and willing to have per: and no lack of their endorsement by politicians; but | cautious and prudent men of capital and judgment. | States of the Old world. No doubt also that the day request of a friend I visited her several times. She | any trace in him of the peculiar genius, habits | formed on his , but must aver atender of ( performance we never have had the facts presented to usas they | The greatest regret resulting from this fact is that § will arrive when this vast collection of separate inde- | W#* very fond of recalling her adventures in New | or characteristics of the Bonaparte family. « his part i a a Kol Rot Judy re for defendant om now are. They come to us as the official vote of the | the storm carried down so many of the really worthy | pendent States must unavoidably, in order to sus- | York, all of which, as told by her, struck me as | This is not the case with the present ; demurrer, y 'o amend on payment of citizens of Kansas, endorsed by the signature of the | business men of the country in the whirlpool of dis: } tain itself, approach in the same’ manner, nearer | being generally founded on facts, but also as | Prince Napoleon, the son of Jerome Bonaparté, | Oiiia pank ve. Thos. Whitehead, receiver, de. ali. federal official governing the ‘Territory; and we can- | aster which so suddenly overtook them. and nearer to the governmental forms and condi- | Sreatly exaggerated, she being given to repre. | who resembles great Emperor in a startling | ment tor plaintiff’ on demurrer, with liberty to deteademt not but recognize their full bearing and importance. | “ ‘The revulsion which commenced here as suddenly } tions under which the old European States sustain | Seuting herself as a heroine and the subject of | manner. The present emperor's features are cast in | to answer We remarked on Saturday that the result of Gov. | spread throughout the commercial world. A suspen | their nationality and preserve their political ex- | Stange adventures. The following was her most | an entirely different mould—they are heavy, “im- | Kilen Doherty ws. Wm. Spratt tet al.—Judgment for fere- : Denver's returns gives an entirely new aspect to the ok to its very foundation the § istence. remarkable narrative. At the time I did not believe assible,”” stern and repulsive, partaki largely of | closure and sale of premises. wde Kansas question; and it isa matter for thoughttul mom chanr Uaaks eee pM! by the British FRENCH JUSTICR AND A YANKEE CAPTAIN: a word of it, but having subsequently amused myself the traditional Puritan style, the orn bk ped | clare defendant Spratt and estate of Nicholson & consideration whether Kansas ought to be taken into | government, as well as the banks and money insti- } {Translated from the Courrier du Havre of Jan. 13, for the by imagining its possibility, I was amazed, on inves- | astic warriors who died) for their own religious , liable for deficiency, SamuelfJones appointed referee. the Union with the Lecompton constitution, and @ | tutions of ail Europe. A resumption of specie pay- New York Heraid.] tigating the matter, to find the degree to which it | ‘iberty, but had little toleration for the religion of | | |ichard Corkery, die, ws. Jas. Shechan.—Judgmont for majority of three to one against it. We have per- | ment inthis country, however, had no sooner taken | We announced yesterday the audacious act by | was confirmed by facts. And it is indeed the | others. j pail for Coe o ae peg ag ou 4 sistently refused to be led by the statements of han its effect began to be reflected upon | Means of which Captain Durham, commander of the | strongest point in the story that Louise Mercier, who 2. That he speaks French with a foreign and a | The America: stultified letter-writers, and achetniug or speculative pace eee of peek “countries, and for Rne American ship Adriatic, has defied the verdict of a | was ignorant, could not have been acquainted with | northern accent such an accent, in short, as an sap grey tise B. Hart.—Judgment for detea- politicians, representing or misrepresenting each and | jast three or four steamers the affairs of the | *upreme court, and has succeedéd—at least tempo- | any of these facts. | Her story and my own observa- | Englishman may be supposed never entirely to get | dantcn demurrer; plaintiff at Liberty to amend oa pay- every side of this Kansas controversy. We have | commercial world abroad, have been growing bright- | rarily—in evading the heavy consequences which | tions on it are as follows: — sid of, however long he may have lived in France. ment of $10 costs. always argued for a simplification, and nota com: | er and brighter. With this state of things in Eu- ] would otherwise result from it to him. A private “She stated that twenty years ago she kept a 3. That his tastes and private habits are not those Geo. Bennet, et. al , vs.[Alex. Frear, et at.—Lilas plication of the facts of the case; advised our readers | rope, and the perfectly solvent condition of our own | correspondence from Marseilles, of the 10th instant, saloon in Grand street, well known to the frequenters | of a Frenchman. It is a matter of notoriety that — ¢f, al , vs. the same,—Complaints in each case as.to the de to wait patiently for such simplification, and not be | country, we think we may confidently look forward } furnishes us with some information concerning the | of such places of resort. It was the nightly rendez- | the French are a very temperate peoplevand that feadabt; Frear dismissed with costs, deluded by the exertions of d@magogueg in search of | for better times and at no distant day. The charac: | bold manner in which the escape took place. vous of the profligate of both sexes. In addition to | whatever their peculiar vices may be, they rarely | ee Tee Brown, e al.—Judgment setting political capital; and who, hoping to bless their own | ter of our people, as a nation, is such that we cannot [Here follows the letter-which we published in our | the public bar, where refreshments were sold, there | Jead them to intemperance; certainly not to con- | oy tars, have Ancatsaceialy cursed Kansas by their inter- | Jong be here by the ban’ of stagnation in the | issue of Saturday morning. were apartments above, where private parties could | firmed heavy drinking, such as is congenial to na- | darter pig op ane tf Se 2. kc commerce and business of the country. “Go ahead,” P. §.—Half-past nine o'clock in the evening. The | be served with supper; that amongst the frequenters | tions of Saxon blood. Now it is also a matter of | missed with costa. . We have now to take decided action on the ques- | jg our motto. Adriatic has escaped from the old port,and not from | and patrons of her saloon one of the most constant | notoriety, that very heavy drinking bouts are per- | Augustus Thomas, et al., vs. John Connolly.—Decree for tion. In a few days the representatives of the entire That we have imported too much, there is no | that of Joliette. was the French Prince, Louis Napoleon, the son of | formed ‘from time to time at the Tuileries, by the | 8 ¢ performance of contract. people will be put to the test t sustaining the doc- | doubt. But this evil is already correcting itself, In | Captain Durham had been sentenced to pay 1,500,- | Louis Hovaparte, ang nephew of the great Napoleon. | highest personage there, and that truly Anglo-Saxon | Maria Winslow, by, €c., vs. Daniel 7. Muslow.—Judg- trine of non-interveution and State rights, onthe | January, one year ago, times were considered | 000 francs to the owners of the Lyonnais, and the She § id that he was in the habit of entering into | —Gennan, Teutonic or Norse—whichever you will— | mert declaring marr! null and void, with costs. rinciple that the people have a right to form their | “fush dered | Court of Cessations had, three days ago, confirmed | conversation with all the girls who used the saloon, | propensity, §inds a zealous disciple in the occupant | _ John Stezer, Jr., vs. Hippolite Mali and Otis P. Jewett. Fyn coustitution; ‘or that a constitution condemiiitd a co eye ay gee wy “the | the verdict. n” and of treating them to mnie and other re- bf the. throne of Capet,, The Bonaparte family, Pp ppd ogelcay renga with Shey by three-fourths of the people of Kansas shall be | mouth, amounted to $3,345,462. ‘The imports for | The Adriatic has, it is said, a crew of thirty men, | freshments; that latterly, that is about the | from the early period® of the alliance between | “ngs M. Sanders ws. Ophelia F Tayler, oun abe po forced upon them by the national Congress. the corresponding week of the present month | and according to others the crew numbers forty. | midéle of the summer of 1837, he seemed to | them and the olini of Corsica, down to that | ment tor plaintiff. : pi We cannot too earnestly beg of democratic Sena- | amounts to only $1,340,960—a reduction of $1,804,- | They are all sailors ready for every emergency 4 | have hecome very intimate with two girls in | of the present surviving members, have always The Milwaukee and Mississipi Railroad Oompany vs. tors and members, from the North and the South, to | 502. This certainly shows a beginning for the | recruited from the scum of the miritime population. | particular, both” well known to the town.| been noted for their abstemiousness and temper- | John H. Wolcott, et at.—Judgment tor [plaintiff on demur- give this vital question all the honest consideration | year, and may be called a. ofectths sovement” in | The crew of the Chacal, commanded by our country: | and the police, one of whom was a Bayonnaise or | ance. Has a degenerate son sprung {rom s0 illus: | Tet; dwieudane vrei aa such a fundamental question as this of State rights | the right direction. Itshows that we are cutting | man Gazielle, numbers between sixty and seventy | Spanish Jewess, from Bayonne, known by the name | trious a stock? Probability is against it. Selah S. Squires, de, ws. Joseph Hayes, et at.— Judgment demands, and especially in its present relation to | gown our bills for silks*eatins, laces and_other lux. } men. of Josefina Vallabo, bat” whose real name sie be- | “But, it may be asked, how could a Yankee, be he Mien aa tows dak Nese: Wes ine Kansas. We beg of them to consider the question ies, that ri im- If we had only to appreciate the act of the Cap- | lieved to be Julia V., and the other was a French | ever so cute, impose upo the French nation for so in all its bearings—its gains, its losses and its final bes 's PP tag te Slanoee ag proce pai ote tains Durham ane Smit in the aspect of their bold. Canadian, who was familiarly known by the soubri- | Jong a time and so effectually? bar ny yp oh President, &c. vs. Board of results, Noisy declamation on the one hand, or bland | “Young America” is buying’ less patent leather, | ness and audacity, we could but praise the spirit of | quet of Petite or Little, and of whose real name | — ‘The difficulty here supposed is more apparent than | pisors of New York.—Judgment for defendantou demurrer sophistry onthe other must not Jdefraud their con- | fewer gold-headed canes and kid gloves, and man- | Combination which prepared it, and the firmness | she was ignorant. He was generally accompanied } real. We have but to glance at the career of the | with costs. victions of the truth. Let them act like reasonable ages to get “glorious” not so oftea on port and | with which it was perpetrated. If we were to read by a young man, with whom he had made acquaint- | real Louis Napoleon to perceive how peculiarly Henry F. Turner vs. Van Collem, et al; Philip Frank reasoning men, honest to themselves by being honest | snerry. A million anda half or two millions re- | the history of that escape in the ‘Histoire des Fili- | ance at the saloon, and who was also an associate of | favorable to such a grand imposture the circum: | enheimetal. vs. the same, and Meyer H. Meyer vs. the same,— to those principles of State rights democracy by | trenchment in a month will soou enable us to pay | bustiers.””by Oxmelin, we would applaud with both | these two girls. This young man strongly resembled | stances were. Judgment for plaintii? on demurrers im each case, with which their constituents sent them to Congress. | our dabta. hands the success of the two thieves, (/arrons.) But | the prince in person and inanners, was about the | He was born on the 20th of April, 1808, at Paris— | liberty to the defendauts to answer in twenty days, om It is beyond doubt that a large majority of the in the year 1858, in one of the principal ports of | same age, and spoke French perfectly. Mrs. Mer- | seven months after the separation took place be- | Paymemtotomts, Northern democracy is opposed to the Lecompton American Matters tn Frav civilized Europe, an act of filibusterism is not at all | cier, in fact, fora long time Delieved him to be a | tween his mother and father. The latter never saw | ment for plaintiff on ee constitution, on the ground that the people of Kan- | FRENCH OPINIONS 0% MESSAGE, | proper; and if the Chacal does not succced in seiz- | Frenchman, until he on one occasion told her he | him and could not be persuaded even up to the day Francis Palmer, dc. vs Elisha Smedley; the same us. sas who hi right to choose their own institutions AND ON THE AMERICAN BANKING SYSTEM. ing the Adriatic and its bold commander, it seems | was a Yankee, a native of Boston, in Massachusetts, | of his death to recognise him. He lived with his | Abel Brighee; the same vs. Lewis Griffin; the same vs. Need- are opposed to it. The press ot the democracy tell | (Translated for the New York Herald from Le Courrier de | impossible to us that a formal claim should not | but that he bad been taken to France wheu very | mother at Paris until he was seven years old—-when, | ham Maynaro; the san Ezra Castle. —Judgment for da- us so; and democratic Legislatures, in a number of Paria, of December 30.] be made on the American government to insure re- | young, and educated there, and had been so long in | after the battle of Waterloo, she retired to Augsburg | fendant in each cause, with liberty to plaints to amend instanoes, have instructed their Senators aud mem- qT ‘ ¥ Bs 4 ‘ ‘ spect to our laws and the inviolability of the decision | that country that he could speak the language bet- | and thence into Switzerland, where on the banks of | 0" payment of c bers of Congress to oppose it. On the other band, he banking system as it exists in the United | GF our courts. We don’t know if ever a similar cir- | ter than his own; that she became acquainted with | the Lake of Constance she led a secluded life for jershum A. Seizas vs. Henry L. Hewletts et al.—Judg- the South are almost the question is, shoul democracy ton constitution at The national dem nimous in its favor. Now, | States is a result of that peculiar sort of liberty | cumstance has occurred in the judiciary annals or in lis real name by picking up a letter which he had | many years. When he was old enough he was sent | ment for defendants ou demurrer to their answer, wit the South press the Northern | which prevails in that country—a liberty which has | international relations; but we know well that, in one ropped out of his pocket, which was addressed to | to the military camp at Thun to study the art of war. PON 1 rye r the pene of the Lecomp- | 9 tri ‘axcid thene whieh ts at praia defined | Way or another, such a defiance thrown in the face | l-yman Clotlin Bowen—[I presume these two to have | We next fhe of bam in 1830, whet, with his elder seas Ranction a tein, a Ne ee ny sacrifice ? pacorsnt : ofhe y ., | of justice—the only institutioi which is yet unani- | been the names according to her French pronuncia- | brother, Napoleon Louis, he joined the Italian pa- | ties deposited with the defeudants by Coates & Co., Nov acy of the North have always | by the constitution of the United States. Hence it | moiusly respected in France—cannot remain with- | tion, though they are probably mis-spelled]—and | triots at Bologna in their efforts to shake off the yoke | 15, 1847, with advance made by Coates & Co., Oot. 30, fought, and always will fight, side by side with the | is, that any active attempt to reform this system, | out answer. when she asked him if it was so, he admitted | of the Austrians; the two young princes fought se- | 1847, to Mr. Geo. Peabody. united South on ‘any reer nese aggran- | beyond the mere expression of wishes and earnest If the Yankees have taken for a model the old | the fact; though even then she had some doubt | veral brilliant actions with the oppressors. but the | David Johnson vs, Henry Snyder.—Jadgment for plain- dizement or safety ot the Union. Northern ; : ©” | Achilles, of whom Horatius said, Jura negai si | about it,as he had so many foreign ways with him. | patriots were finally vanquished aud crushed. Louis | tif, with costs : democracy haye stood by the South in the acquisition | Tecommendations, would be an attack upon State | nara, and if for them “right does not exist.” we do | The four, that is the Prince, the two girls and | aud his brother made their escape from Italy with the | ,,%2h” D. Lin Daag. wife Tas 2 Dem ot a of Territory heretofore, and it is prepared to stand | rights on the part of the President and of Congress. | not see therein a sufficient reason for the other civi- | Bowen, sometimes engaged a private room, where | greatest difficuity; indeed, it was owing to the | U¢sment that the sem Von Decca eee by the South in the acquisition of Territory hereafter. | Such au attempt would be a violation of the famous | lized nations, for whom right does exist, to consent | they ordered supper and spent the night. On these | adroituess and presence of mindof theirmotherthat | ‘tqsou ut th the devisees in the litsone ot ae ath ¢ The knowledge of these facts ought to make the | principle of “self government,” a principle which | toolishly to tolerate all their pranks. ovcasions the Prince and Bowen generally drank | they:succeeded. Napoleon died after a short illness, | (o.tatr x, but the came ¥ (im the surviving childrea Ser crt aw tet rahe | Ee t,he Aci ni oe Gee Seas ee mee ecomee nc aaee ES | me genre temreen wes eee |, Ss "aia aren a auctifice fa position in the’ councils of the nation, eres Lerrel ae geen ee ha ey | Senor Nee eee ote ace Gaumaer. | Prince made very little secret as to who he wae—the catead ty Leute Pullliggs to. ants Seance’ imme: | 17, <i tinge thst the coats of ail ee” eats eo and break up the party power of the democracy in | principle of their political faith of which tl In a short space of time Costa Rica has been both = Vien eh gn rapid Reber a | ae cone Bly. a ornmeed oven: Yo Bagland.:| Pct epee manelaee, oe George M. Robinson et al — the North. “The facts, on all sides warn us of such | exceedingly jealous, in spite of the injury which it | the object of Hattering she never knew w! jis means were, whether he | and after a short stay there, returned to Switzerland u > - raises and the mark of un- | was in business or not, or how be supported himself: | in August, 1831. They lived in retirement until the | I8/smeut for plaintifl, with costs, in ,conformity with re- danger. On the other hand, how is the South to be | often intlicts in its practical application, and of the | juct attacks. Thisis not the proper moment to enter wt of referee. benefitted by such a sacrifice of the North? Let us | absurd doctrines to which it someti ives rise. ost attacks. e prope ne she set him down as one of those men who are to be | month of October, 1836, when Louis Napoleon made | ?® . >, id “a political fs governmental mactinecy of th into an examination of the causes which have pro- | found in every large city, who live by their wits and | the rash attempt to excite the garrison of Strasburg Scere Sk, BNET. Brel gh—lotqmins. et pee. Ny 3 ry . The admission of Kansas, in defiance of the ex- | United States, with all its modes sf action, has. fre® Fonte ipo grok payer ane if coteaee te iosaepoes by the want of wit in others. to mutiny, which ended in his being taken prisoner, | Danie Palmer vs. Jas. Myers et al.—Jndgment that the Preset Tovarey, bing ive the Senate of te Unites | SPR wees explained tus here in France, and | by proving’ that the sgcumtions with whlch it ts | siow of August the Prince cafe to tne tar, Piere | shipped: of ie: the Called Geates sens tessa, | tne arisen of te beet aries we Btates two black repablicah Senators, which will csi aii orwapl rundersien it, We tre- ee it ooren py tye an she was serving; he had evi lently been drinking, He vas put ashore at New York, where he remained | & Co., composed of Win. H. Jobuson and said Browa & weaken the South two votes in that body. If we are | quently see in the public Journals and hear in com- | fer ph onipld aritied S prateswortliy aim to which | 884 was accompanied by the two girls and Bowen, | about ten months, during which time he made him- | Sow to the defendants, Myset & Lowery, without the as to draw any inferences from the prevailing opinion | hon conversation. errors of opinion advanced, which | Net desires, she purst¥d a p and called for some drink for the party—after stand- | self acquainted with many persons, some of the first pny Wataieas tol at tena ee auntie. for aome, yearby the aimiion of Katbor under | ad 404 Sulse appreciation, and unjust accusation of | tis tru that she for some time hesitated between | Tom they usually preferred where they called for | quainted with: Howen a not Knows; but eit im aup. | Unt traged,for (othe complait” A recover manne ‘ "9 " , o ot 4 4 e pretensions o' ifferent monopolists who * “ ty 7 rs p i property Partnership x penne ber ye ero = ene Perm generally spring out of some events or deeds which, anxibasly coveted the Transit route, constrained to | ee ae ; shee a ee | peed ye acres aoe Bese ~ Fob on, ohasiel & =. ne oe injunction now existing must pet wo ‘or py aaa Sob Ge wtke ‘vensa, we Wil it may be true, are damaging to the character of the | such a course by the engagements she had contracted | there about three hohrs—when Bowen suddenly | frequenting. We are not likely to know now—for it taken to Jobu W ‘Ashmead er Mn rons to vent yetveah tint suembating’\O the fallowtar fetes private individuals concerned in them, bat which by | since her expedition to the San Juan river; but as | ran Gown stairs, bis face pale and his | isnot protable that the fortunate "Nephew of his | receiver and determine the requis amouss of exer Tern the ‘Benate of the United States parties now | Doieans affect the general character of democracy | far as she was able to disentangle herself and to | frame trembling with excitement and begued her | Uncle* will voluntarily come forward te disclose the | Alanson Robison vs. Prederick M. Kelley, el al; James R. rt ~" 37 a ve $8; 36 opposition. ron elections and liberty. us many persons woald have it to be be- | freely follow her own ideas, she adopted plan which | 45°Come up stairs instantly, for the Prince had been | secret of his elevation. © | Kelleyies The Same; Bbenever Kell wy. The Sams: Boencser La hich i vege Ne a Bc ics Gi raeees lieved. But when the enemies of American demo- | he always had adhered to. $ selzed ts a violent fit. She ran up stairs accord- Thus we find that Louis Napoleon was in | Kelly, President, dc. The Same; Wells D. Wallbridge ws. cum of "democratle Seanhecd f ‘Tennessee, Ken- ua tpetricg pe ey Prt nod geoas| eae | sieenal co We Get to ote Coes en ee ingly and nd him lying on the floor, his coat, | France, or rather Paris, but a few days during | fc org gone cc orshene ie ye by wet veg bucky, Minnesota and Texas, which wil make par. | against democracy from the special acts and deeds | passage, in exchange for which he had only to de- | tex tnjatu colar of and his head resting on the | the whole, of the period which, clapeed between | peri oft drm o Keliey, Towne & pcumannes of next two years Benators are lected in nino Northern | Sect their attgcke ‘arom the Acnorieat constitntton, | mand the Rea ot the et eapieed, proms | ME hands in a distracted state: the ‘other igirl was | and his transportation to the United States, in 1836, | out the asacut ed concurree ot raid Kelley ratio, eared 0 i ; ; ‘ : : erican Ter , vringi sand exclaiming, “ Oh! my God, cars: | void, and presents ved siveady eleetel. who are democeale, visi--Allen of | Crastnmmshiea tr fox ered srtoreed mach abies | 224 she United States We widesd! he's Gendl how did happen?” Mice’ | achalty unknown fo the trench people, How core. | the complaint A reosiver man be appealed of nites Rhode Ialand, Wright of New Jersey, Bigler of Penn- | has occurred. Now, to all this determined. system | miitatecn Limited 9 the following points: | Mercier felt his pulse and heart, and found that both | mously would such a circumstance facilitate impos- | Property of the Partnership of Kelley, Townsend & Ce., sylvania, Pagh of Ohio, Stuart of Michigan, Fitch of | of depreciating all that concerns America and her | acre the Iethinos of | had ceased to beat. His hands were cold and his | ture! Assuming, now, that it is the fact that he | S04 the judgment new must be contianed watil the Thdiana, Douglas of Illinois, Jones of Iowa. and one of | democratic institutions there is one simple answer, | Central America the Ba ee mae erie ten face growing he Bene a gel bor — meg poker oe in New York, and that another, ngs, ng weniren, to cppeaal ec vostivel' tan detsranen zed as he was leaning bac! strongly the Senators trom Wisconsin; besides Bright of Indi- | and that is this, viz:—That the American constitu: , > to don it resembled him in appearance and | the ite amount of security. may lose his seat on account of illegality, and a | tion, for more than three-quarters of a century, has | Hepes tehy peared eba! BF aes ais that he suddenly put his hands to his | manners, personnated him and declared himself to | Blonezer Kelley Frederick M. Ketley—Judgment for ping ugly may be sent from Maryland in place of | covered and protected, like as with an wgis, 4 | Central American republics under a just and etable uttered an exclamation in French; his | be Louis Napoleon—let us see what obstacles there | plaintiff and order for appointment and a like reference te fe. ce; in all, eleven seats will need occupants. | people and a nation who have been going on ina | » stena; to watoh po the arrangement and Goce: head then droppe d he would have fallen off the | would be to the carrying out of such an imposture. | same referee. Some of these States se Senator's terms will ex- | continual and uninterrupted course rosperity. pt of the Transit line jointly with Nicaragna: for | Chair if Joseti sprung up and caught him. | — The greatest danger of all, viz., his detection by ‘Thes Colyer vs. The Excelsior Fire and Mutual Insurance pire may already be classed ax black republican, | ‘This has been done under its guidance and. under its siinotats the aeabuanne © ch might be obtained of | 2ey laid him on the floor and took off his coat, vest | Queen Hortense, was surmounted by her sickness | Company—Judgment for plaintiff op demurrer with conte, and the ‘reception of the Lecompton constitation by | totelar protection. Not even the utmost excesses to | the three hefore-mentioned Powers and the equill- and neck-handkerchief, dashed water in his face,and | and death. He arrived in Switzerland at the nick Se Sey ornate to apply to make compiains a democratic Congress may result in the entire de- | which liberty has been carried have succeeded in de- | brinm of their respective. interests presented Wh, | Tabbed his hands and temples, but in vai | of time to witness her departure from the world— | ™95° 2e%n! _— feat of the democracy in the re interests | presented snffl | could heno mistake about it—Prince Louis whether recognized by her or not canuot be known; | read Crampanps Sadeaseus Tor neat woe ate ea tates now democratic. | stroying either the constitution or liberty in the i ity, it w: b, “ee y eiaven ahttions Henetel aneae aoeoee may cient security, it wa ; ' " oe maple wat tnd of the biack Tepublicanside of the United | Cried. cottcrctashy sweat eaeeeraue, inter | Americans to contribute also on their part to the | PAnne "smote done? An occurrence like | and the world woul herlGy diegete tine eae ot By | mee ea com ‘ enate, g parties stand thas—demo- | People ‘either age. oc thay ry so generally ava forei, sapere edged pth be wen bedhead this, taking place under such circumstances, and | genuineness when his morher had not done so. It | original security in thts came f uot ixinted with cury pposition, inc g Kansas, 83. Majori- | know, that the action of the President of the United | Of fortune ee ee NOR ans The capricious changes | ing house of this description—the person being | should be borne in mind that she had not seen him | Teason of the money paid for extending the time of pay- ty for opposition 2. | States cannot be carried a step beyond the limits to | st Ci e i » necessary steps | &, foreigner of such high rank and notoriety, | since the events at Strasbourg and his sojourn in | Ment of the mortgage; such payment is 0 be deem: This is not an encouraging picture to look upon. | which itis confined by the constitution, Withthe con: | gor wrtainnne thinced” See Veer when treks { filed them all with alarm. If the polise got | New York: trouble and residence in a foreign coun- | S€eount of the principal interest secured by the m But politicians, it they will, cai he prospect | stitution in his hand and its strict letterfor bis guide, | jwnefit of the combination made known hy the New. | Wid, of it the whole party would probably be | thy might have changed him somewhat. After her | There must pe the usael ae panes oortaees ie te pleasanter. We do not think we erate the dif: | jt is not permitted him to propose any special action. : slishe | arrested on a charge of murder, and the saloon bus death he still avoided France, but having ‘ ficulties to he apprehended at the North by the re- | Ail he ean do is to make recommendations, and con. | 2k%,, Lcedel ts tet ot the | hess be ruined. ‘The difficulty was cot over by | become powessed of the means’ of subsistence ean and ots Ge Lsty Ointhatroet, to pey”"8:,000 in: ception of the Lecompton constitution by a demo- | tine himself to such general considerations and views | relations with Nicaragua. rer fed and | Bowen, who suggested that the body should be con- | which the prince had, he remained in Switzer- | cipal and interest owing on that sum. cratic Congress. With Governor Denyer's proclama- | as Mr. Buchanan bas so ably and clearly done in his | disconcerted by the sition of th net at | Cealed until it could be carried 4 and disposed | land until the French government insisted on Geo. C. Genet ws. Charlotte G Prince ¢ al.—Motion ta of; that as he strongly resembled the Prince in man- | his expnision from that country. To save the re- | dissolve injunction granted, with costs. ners and appearance he should take possession of his | public from a war with France “he withdrew from | 4. Wright et al vs. Thos. W. Pearsall.—Report of refe- and whal ther articles were about him, | Switzerland and went to England, remaining two | Tee confirmed. med by Franc tion before us, endorsing the people of Kansas in the | message. The terms of the constitution referred to | Wyshi ” protest against the constitution, we cannot see how | hy Mr Badhenan ase very explicit. According to Silo wey See iptera fl tunes) Vhan the name et a democratic Senator or member of Congress could | those terms the federal government alone has the | the mission of Senor Facalante and reach: face his constituents in the North if he voted for its | right of coining money. But it has been found easy, | oq hin Our Commissioner 1 n to the Prince’s lodgings, shut himself up there | years in London, indulging inthe true English taste ance. ‘The South not only positively gains | without any one being able to hinder it, to interpret | obtain passace for New York on board the steamer, | “det 4 plea of sickness untu he could » for horses, racing, betting and drinking; tastes evi. | Politteal Creed of Senator Henderson of Texas. nothing but loses much by making the acceptance | this paragraph of the constitution according to a | ang wd for many Gaye agaihet ‘bi il detained at | foPe-—Which would be in a day or two dently in accordance with his anglo Saxon tempera. | The Clarksville Standard of the 28th Nov. contains the ¢ the Lecompton oa : i wan te certain coufived and limited sense in which it is ap: | Colon fe tae ee eee then told her for the first time, that the Prince had ment, and quite — » { temperament of a | following letter from Hon. J. Pinkney Henderson, whiok orthern democracy. It will only help to drive it | plied. The word “money” has been understood to ‘minds like of Se eh a few days before received a letter urging him to re- | Frenchman, especially of a Bonaparte. ovt of Congress, and drive the Northeru democratic | fignify ‘coin in metal or apecte, and not to refer to | jqar’yminds like that of Senor, ¥ turn inuediately to Switzerland if he wished to see | Thus, when the daring attempt on Boulogne, in psu Gena sasie aocumaeeamiie smammumian tats Senators out of Congress, who would stand by the | paper money. The latter kind of money has, there- | Escalante was to him . @ of | bis mother again, as she had been taken dangerously | August, 1840, was organized by him in conjunction fetter was not inte Publication, bates South in bringing in Arizona as a slave State, or se- | fore, been lett perfectly free for the banks to ‘create | fortune. by which, trom the mclity te which | ill: and that he had engaged and paid his passage to | with the refugees, blacklegs and vayriens of Paria | 't tends to make more explicit the attitude of the writer, curing to us Cuba aragua or Mexico. at their own pleasure, according to the strength aud | he enw himself reduced. he. wee ewabled | Esrope in a ship that was to sail almost directly. | then lurking about the purlieus of Liecester square, | pies it — p led . It is not our desire to dictate what the South or | extent of their credit, without any one of them hav- i i reasced, be was Guat en offered to ass murying the body, which | he was still unknown to the people ef France per: Mansnatt, Oct. 13, 1867. y to rise again to a higher station than that he had | \o' Gone the next nig having been placed ina | sopally. He had been received into English soety Smm—I hasten to acknowledge the receipt of your faver the North should do in this emergency; but we do | ing any power over the ot 80 as to prevent cither fi i is first intri ‘ally . reaned desire to see the national democracy united and | their Setablishiment or t too prod expansion. eg ppl y Arend ate dol Rb the grave dug in the cellar of the next house which was | a8 Prince Louis leon, but he was not much es ph ae toe mo 09 aotne ag ponent strengthened, and believe it our duty'to fearlessly | Not only the habits and manners of the people are | Plan of Costa Rica and uncer 'the most freorable ete. | Unoccupied. teemed, and his society was certainly not courted or | position. Tam truly obliged to yoa for sending ik to me. “ide edheeadbe yp adovaiebir ne ie It was the interest of allto keep the secret; bat | sought after, and his circle of acquaintance became | [had flattered. myself that my political seatitmonts were Bowen told her that he intended to sail in the ship | limited pecneipely to those who the same tastes | fully proven to every cltizen of fexaa who has paid any the Prince—that he would contrive to take leave of | a8 himself. On his landing at Boulogne he was | attention to the progress of the different political contests ni one single present to that great party such facts as may tend | in favor of this extravagant issue of paper money, | cure x . pe tre > to warn it against destruction. This is the more | but also the commercial wants of the mtry, much oy mn wale tpg, Aenllaranding bee! particularly needful now, in view of the new issues | as they have beeu exaggerated, in some measure de- | hesides other advantages not vet known to us. Time y | Which must arise within afew years, and which | mand it. Of the dangerous consequences resulting | will show whether the treaty ce yrante all | 2% few peop vesible, and that he meaat to try | laughed at, and narrowly escaped being shot by the | 5 cise Same, gece cunenstion. le public speeches, made muist be the means of securing wealth, power and an | from such a system the Americans have just had a | the guarantees and advantases, | jock. fn rope in his new character—and | remorseless National Guard of that city. The next | uring all of these, I hare battled for tho democratic A d - es desired for by our . ‘ ; . cause, still, if there exists in the mind of extension of our institutions southward, if our states- | signal proof amd experience. But notwithstandin - swerel sie is ane a added that if anything good came of it | six years were passed in the prison at Ham; he then any one any men now look calmly at the facta efore they plange | alf that the country has jost sulfered, we must agam | Zovermment, However that may be, we are now | Ho wculd remember her and the gitls, | made hie exeape to Belgium, and thence to England, | Femoye tha unt, as {have never enetciaed poten the North, with the South, into this Lecompton | remind our readers of the fact that, neither the Pre- the North American governr nt I “: delivered us and do something handsome for them. | where he resumed his former occapations, until the opinion which I was not at all times ready to express. maelstrom. They should neither sacrifice the North | sident of the Cajted States, nor Congresssnor even | from a long and disastrous war, But in one joy let | How be managed to deceive his landlady she didn’t | revolution in Paris, on the 24th of February, 1848, | « Texas” asks you, in behalf of himself aud others, to or South for Kausas, especially when there is such the several State governments, have any one | is not forget the future: let wa prepare dane the | Know, bat he did—and not only her, but the drove Louis Philippe into exile,and opened a new ca: | what political school 1 belong. : incontrovertible reasons (as given by Governor Den- | of them, together or separate, any power what- | calm for the storm, and as we belore ould, lob aot vants of the house and others—and sailed for Ea- | reer for pretenders of every description. B. careful- In answer to this ‘qwestion f authorize you to say that [ ver) for letting Kansas alone. ever to provide a remedy for the future against | ¢. = wh ante o f aren ong at | POEs ly watched the pro of events, and on the 23d | Am a democrat (not of the school recentiy originated in - 150 great'an evil, Public sentiment and morals | ChuTey rely ceurians of forsas. Hie ae ton ive never heard directly from him for many | of May, 1848, he addressed a letter to the National | Texas. called the "Jackson democracy") but am a State Financial Affairs in the Northwest. | have committed the wrong, and made the law and | ever the Central Americans must attend to their | MNy years, but she read in the newspapers that his | Assembly§ offering his services to France, which was | Pott, cred t comained ie the metioost dorgocretic Pek, The Chicago Tribune referring to « communica: | constitution of no effect, and they alone can repair | CX", ust atte mother, Queen Hortense, had died either just before | coldly received and sneered at. No one believed | Pom aloreeg 4 cotsined ia the r T Ttee emtnavng tee tion which appeared in the HenaLp, and some re- the evil they have done. The wisdom and experience 3 1 enti ie lk a or just after his arrival in Switzerland, she forgot | in him. He had been a stranger to France (with . 7 marks appended thereto, in reiation tofailuresin the — of private Individuals is the only healing remedy nd eclaarkinen mre oe é mie ae . whl b, but she thought it a singular slice of lek, the exception of a few days passed in Paris in 1831 Sal rar at teas ibn Daag West says:— which can now be brought to this sore evil, and give © compensation for the couality. as he w rtai been found out if the | and 1837) ever since he was seven years old—for his | 1866 and approved by the State Democratic Convention at We dg not often choose to deny any of the num- which can alone check the injury periodically inflict- | tion which pe there insisted — I h able to dis | imprisonment in the dungeon of Ham cannot be con- | Waco. berless roarbacks which are put in circulation in re- ed upon credit. No other means are presented of | parties, the expenses of each of. th tinguish clearly who was near h P remeinber- | sidered a sojourn amongst the French people, since | | Secondly. you are askod what porition f occupied in 1860, gard to this city and its business; the nonsensical | setting ap a breakwater against a general inunda- The pont ea of Ge natineal ve | @d.the riot at Boulogne and how he got sent to | access to him was forbidden except under very strin- | and if Tdid pot then, from the stump, denounce Gen pemey in which @ portion of the press of Chicago | tion. and diplomatic representation, might ve portioned | prison for life, and was locked up in the Castle of | gent regulations. He was, in fact, unknown and | Rusk’s course on the compromises. | In, reply to this | re, ve indulged has made the town, her people and There is another thing also, which people either | Out also in equal parts, Thie wonld nroce Bante iam, and she had at one time thought of calling on unrecognised up to this time, quest you to say that I then entertained the same political her newspapers the butt of ridicule, and, perhaps | forget or which they do not know. and that is, that | tage to those States which are richor'n territory and | 4+ Wikoff to inquire about him, ag she heard that | | But, in 1848, he returned to France to commence | Dieeirume. “ite not that l dvommmend General, Rusk’ justly, for halt the world besides. In this case, how- | the present system of excessively expansive banks, | population, without causing ecnehlenbke teed to | gentleman had heen to see him in his dangeon—bat | the wonderful career which has raised him to his Course on the compromises of 1860. "1 was too well ae- ever, a wandering drummer for some New York | and of their unlimited issues and inflations in the | fy? "smaller ones under the suppacitem that the ex. | she thought she had better let him alone, and keep | present eminence. | The prestige of the name of Bo- | quainted with the purity of hia character, public and pri- house, assumes to give the figures which militate United States, is the work of a President who be- penses of a simple coniederation mast neouenlly he | quiet. but when some years afterward Bowen con- | naparte, so dear to the hearts of the Freach, has | vate, to doubt for one moment his howesty and patriotism. f representa- etween uneqital on aceonnt of ainst our city’s credit, and they are worthy of de- Jonged to the same «chool and faith as Mr. Buchanan trived to get elected President of the French Re- | done nearly everything for him, though, if he be an | It is, however, trae that Twas then (ax I would still al- nial. To get the facts we have had the proper books | belongs to, namely—it is the work of General Jack i Central America by means of sach | Public, she thought she would remind him of the | impostor, it must be admitted he has shown the ut- | ways be under similar circumstances.) opposed to the at the Court House examined, and we find that the | sou. It is a victory of his, which he achieved in be- | @ purely democratic system: in reforming upon | afar at New York, and asked a gentleman who | most coolness, courage, sagacity and tact. compremiors referred to lous ly fg whole number of instruments of all sorts, contracts, half of political liberty. It is the result of the homage truly liberal and econom: - . was going to France to take a letter tobim. She The survjving members of the Bonaparte family, f eppenea. hese ean | H 4 = ; cal principles, the constitu- } » agreements, settlements, assignments, decds paid by him to the principle of “State rights” and | ¢; tite eta Tueiples, the constit’ | merely wrote:—“Have you forgotten the Grand St. | Prince Jerdme, the Princess Mathilde, and others, : My Mog conveyances, mortgages—real and personal pro- to the separate independence of the several States. | A gunnes that hativnde ceca unigration insuch | Eien? Ehave moved, and am now living at the | suddenly found themselves rising on the | eum’ we Were yieldiag everything aud Reaves noting, = which have been put upon record since Mr. Buchanan, as aman of sound sense, and a8 @ | as their own, amalgamate with the old place in Walker street. Petite died here | surges of the revolution to their ancient | potieve that those of 1850 would not, ax was said, bug 838, is 97,310. Since the orgunization of the | man of business—such as he really is—cannot but wh , mn geeat distress about two years ago; | eminence—visions of another imperial court | our peace with the abolitionists of the North, and stop their county of Cook, twenty-eight years azo, the cuaitel | regret the excesses to which the principle of abso | their Trek Institutions andi: willingly adop* | sour” old chum | Jowetina keeps a house | fiitted before their eyes, and dazzled them. | further aceresstons upon the rights of the Scuthern States, 5 mortgages put on record (without record they are | Jute liverty in the banking business has given rise. scbot in Broome street. We want you to keep your | They appear to have received Louis Napo- | And] ask it now, did they give us peace andquict? Tam ‘worthleas) number a few less than six thousand. Of He comet but lament the evils it inflicts S00 pub: a Seeds oak LT Ay herviry bog ea promise.” About three months afterward, a Br “nch | leon (or B., which shall we call him’) as their genu- | opposed to yielding by ee cue dee these, three thousand only have heen recorded since | jie credit, and the dangers to which it exposes it. | the pretension of propagating a Hoctrine, but we are | Bentleman, whe ot know, and who would | ine nephew, though they had not seen him for thirty. | r'tit, and I ean say to those r ‘ rther eoncessions to the demands of 1840. So mach for the lie of the blandering ni». | Jjut he can do-no more; he cannot pass beyond his aeaver vir ony ae {not give his nan and presented her with | five years, for Hortense Beauharnais was not visited | S7uth’s making further eoimescine to tie demiAt Compoop who made it, Now for the Hunatu's com. | jnere ryatets, Mes obliged sore the oh poh arly ded a & ae eee £1,000 from the President Louis Napoleon, “as a re- | by them in her retirement in Switzerland. Had the Inay hed e vote wo give fer the o's fenster, hey had meut«:—Chicago is hard up; there's no denying — utterance ot his wishes and desires vel ofl. Me “ ~ membrance of kind services rendered to him when | prospect of a court, with its splendid titles and ap- | jeter aot give it for me, because I would surcly not Chat; but that fer condition le worse than that of | State Legislatures should unite we Ghete efoom tnd to provoke ‘the discussion which Is to precede | 16 was sick in New York.” And she says that when punayes, anything to do with this? | Were they Fepreseat their views, in voting upon such a proposition. Lonis, Cincinnati or Boston, we have vet to learn. | which is imperiously called ,for and is indixpensably aa = he was made Emperor she received another $1,000 | bought on their own terms, as De Morny, Persign| J. PINCKNEY HENDERSON. Bhe has had her full share of failures, aad willdoubt- necessary for the financial Salvation of the United VaLvapee Piece or Gonetix Targeray.—His Im. | in the same way, and Josefina Ballabo also received | and St. Arnand were’ By the way, we may as! P. Sam truly obliged to you, my dear ie, foe yous Jess have more hereafter; ber merchants contend States, ~ verial Highness has transmitted to the Committee of | the same, with a promise of more at a future time. | Why the latter, whos exhorbitant and rapacious | letter a By So Thad ee that my political against high rates of exchange at home, and a most | |fransiated trom Le Pays, Dee. 20, for the New Your Connell on Education, Englaud, a very intere Mrs. Mercier died a month or two afterward, but | maw it was found impossible to fill, was got rid of in | Pomition ant Senin ih ne chooenstons te posit, infamous currency in those parts farther West, where Hiemaiy| F specimen of gobelin tapestry, the subject being “Ar- | Josefina Ballabo is possibly still living at the House | the rimea? Had he important secrets in his keep. | fvery toitical contest which has ha since angeta- their principal customers reside; ber manufactaring When any country is possessed of large and ex- | ria presenting the dagger to hér husband, Potas, | in Broome street—if indeed there be such a place ing which he threatened to disclose? A splendid | tion.” ‘| differed with the majority of the people of Texas, industry never was very larg id it is probably tensive territories out of all proportion to its popa- | after having stabbed herself.” ‘This piece of work | for | would state again that I place no positive cre: | embassy to Russia, and other peg ge things im | (and 1 suppose with @ majority of the democracy.) on the now less than @ year ago but the rule is yet to paY — jation, it becomes necessarily rich and abundant in | was commenced under Louis XVI, was completed | dence in. any of Mrs. Mercier's statements, as hers, | store, keep De Morny quiet—while the embassy to | Compromice measures of 1860, and have never lind reasom deiits; that all ohverve it cannot be said; hut that our — the production of the raw material—the almost | during the republic, and received its border in the Now, if this story be true, there are ral things | London does the same with Persigny; “ dotations” | to change my mind. 1 would in my answer givam above, business men make as many sacrifices to sustain spontaneous fruits of the earth. In this case it will | early days of the first empire. It was given on his | to be ascertained before it can be received implicitly, | convince the Princess Mathilde and others—and an | have spoken of m, srreat desire to seo the Union preserved, their credit as their net , and that Urey suc. | y understood that i is to make | marriage, in 1807, to Jerome, King of Westphalia, Firstly. Is there a Bowen family in Boston, allied | anexampled system of bribery, corruption and in- | and this nation still continue to grow in , extont, or) os well as any, we have no doubt. Thisis not | 4 liberal ¢ yohange yt on liberal | by the Ein ror, his broth ~ Princ “ Jerome has | to such names, or anything like them, as Lyman or | timidation preserves order in France, and peoples aire: wre 8 fer Franved hg everyone who le ve. hich praise, but it is the truth terms of its abandant raw materials, which, while | just given it to his son, Prince Nap in order | Clofiin, and which Knows anything of a son being | Cayenne! i " po win oh quemues + ome pR 7] yt NRY AND BUSINESS. | it produces copiously, other more populous nations ‘that it might be presented to the Museum of Art at | sent to France when a ¢ hild, about forty years ago, jow ag it to last? let inquiries made, and nue forever, 0a fh wan sae HENDERSON. From the Detroit Advertiser, Jan. 20.) | are better able to work up. South Kensington, as some proof of the interest | to be educated! If so, what became of him? For | truth be sught to light or at = ree, ee pth terrae oe ' ations all around us, at home and The condition here supposed was originally the | which they both took in that establishment. ‘Viewed | if it be trae that he returned to New York, and | mystery cleared up, one way or the other. If it he al ur unpressions are that the money precise condition and ittation of the United States, for its money worth, this specimen must have been | there became aequanted with Louis Napoleon, was | really true that the. present Emperor of the French feo Vener Pn og Pithas about apent its force As soon, however, as the population of the United | valued at above £2,000; but Isoking to the curious | present at his alleged death, and reappeared as the | be no other than Lyman Cloftin Bowen, the Yankee, | , tue United Mates sloop of war Marion, mm. While tei E and more Gonse, and | ints i sick val Wri di ill he sooner the French know it, the better. Had | Brent, and brig Perry, Lieutenant Commanding 4 fe mission. While there are a thoum totes became more numerous and more dense, and | facts of its history, it. is of far her value, as an s owh disappearance is still to be ac- | then the bn A Safutert din ion to aid the pro- | {topped down yesterday, rom the Navy Yard to the Na- ugh¢'to be sure, people disappear in | he on slightest o poy jon to a @ pr | val A ened ‘has been th eas to the cause of the revulsion, it is gene- | when the country becafne possessed of great capi- | evidence of the f rally placed at the or of over trading and specula- | tal, then manufacturing industry began to be de- | uy between the tw Gon. When the crisis came, a aniversal loss of cow | veloped and to take its place alongside * but in the promotion of y relations which have @is y relations which ys polities ew York, mysteriously enougi at times, and are | gress of liberty our sympathie® would have gone | trom the Gosport Navy Yard, and ordered to the steam never heard of afterwards. with him, Yankee or no Yaxkee ~pretender or a0 | frgote Color: do Norfolk Beraid, Jan. »

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