The New York Herald Newspaper, September 1, 1869, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 18 —TRIPLE SHEET. 5 {ts 8 milion ohms. Should ne still further inquire, LIC EDUCATION. but what is an ohm? a suitable reply would be, it is the yardstick of the electrician by which he meas- hat been born in. 1788 and 1792, and they aepa- | tried every persuasion by friends, put faiied. At last rever on January 16, 1816, having been mar- | the daughter, as if to settle the tion, in resolu Hy ka pied and thirteen ron ‘Dut never | tion satd, and knowing ber m Toudness for THE GALLOWS... mo! “ By @ vow fulfiliea, 7 - | ured the electric condition of conductors, ana which _— The Libel upyn Lord Byron and hie Sister wo as ot marrage, ad Moll bas notary tax; I make vow, and will geo mcoaivn, ook oF £ ares * he Semeey Veonsieneisisennnes may be represented by a round wire of pure copper, Augusta Nafied te the Pillory of Falsehood | like a woman scorned,” especially reg: the ee " Pal pidge ee. he the Coming Year—Changes one-twens of an inen in dienteter and 240 feet in i George, Count Johannes—Deathbed ¥ re- | pays vale dents.” oth ie we ngth, e temperature of sixty degre ANOTHER EXECUTION IN TEXAS.} we ¥ lated of zenobia,G Joon of Palmyra, that f the | Teceived thie message ape Copemstraieas 5 ‘ut of 2o on Monday next the schools throughout the city | Fahrenheit thermometer; whil ‘ohm, by which unde! rectic Board ucati he measures the resistance of insulators, is a unis, ava Leap 06 Ma lon: will the length of which is a million times as great. be reopened after the summer vacations and pupils ‘After duly initiated into the interesting m: and teachers once more enter on the duties of ob- | teries of cable working and cable bookkeeping, the k of a sumptuous repart, ting and imparung Snowiedge, Ai the pope | BPSYGY Se etcuea hares During a te have, no doubt, longed during some tame past for past they were eably interested by thrilling i the return of the school days, but as tbe vacation | counts of various incidents and hairbreadt draws to a close they all naturally wish it were just | during the eventful voyage in laying the cabie, Gay she di matermity she refusea marital | avail. “I am my fathe 4 eaud.” Ads said, and final- fights to the King, her hi a; mor could the ly Lady Byron did br 9 vee debts, amoun' to sev- ‘Longinus change her determination | eral Ceres Ppoun as wberting, ‘and then ned to at a wife's mission to be a mother, and when | the bedside of her -gaeynter, to her amazement and that, by preof, was even inidated, the woman | Simos: danger ‘@ ner life.’ The above ia true, and should have no further Knowledge of man, | narra the me ey the Hon, Mrs. and also by ‘That, however, was pot the natural aT phnosephy of toe Deoness, 48° Codatote of n, sister to Lady ‘and certainly n hege lord, 7 Of Bedford. athe baron f Mrs. Be zener Stowe, the autnoress! Who is the : i i [ Hanging of, Mexican for the Murder of His Stepdaughter. ‘Triwephant Defence of Innecence. To rws EprTor or THE HERALD:— ‘Toribel the living 1s at ali times a cowardty crime, bur it ts doubly so, and in its mendacity and malice mari- saa changes wholesale libelaupon the dead? . ‘Messrs. Brown and Gaines are gentlemen of long teafold, when the dead are the oajecta of the slam | ounaed she sexual separation, and Anally De tae’? | Who 4, abe that accuses Lora ese with sexual | Silstie longer. This latter wish some of the teachers | ezherionge in” counection with the Malta and Alex" Particulars of the Crime, Ounviction | |, protects the reputation of the dead as | tht” er cause, in the sixth wee of their marriage, | SUIlt Yam the innocent and chaste Chaworth? | and pupils naturally think would have'been useless, | andria cables, Mr, Smith, who represents the in- iJ well ag the living, and for the reason that if it 46 | ana daring a jealous mood, Lady Byron fearfully re- sy oy arianinareee, pass in pevem without bel, | as the vacation would have been a week | terests of the bie ho (i trea Bacal ipa and Punishment. ‘Rot then revenge of the living, neue ton biteys ae ae Sh Loca deers Cat eyleens oA wasnot Amery ‘of Mary Chaworth. Re Cunetier | longer but for Commissioner Gross, wno managed Tapoetaat aaiany from the first one that crossed Ubeliers of thie dead, But tue «law's delay” is too | Yee Coaworth was very unhappy in her me foe more damning memory that overshad- | to defeat a movement to that effect at the last meet- | the channel to this last greattriumph. The number i 7 slow to meet some cases, and were the writer of the | an! it might have been different had we y —_ that Ltn of mar .?? Who is the human | ing of the Board of Education in July. However, | °% engaged in pandas i. sn oles 4 ¥ Ban BLERARIO, Fl Pash cust 1, 1900, } | bel now engrossing public attention not » woman | Upon this sighing remark Lady Byrom, iasaaily | Oftisoestugus adultery and incenuous aaulvene | the rule was adopted, and unless specially altered at | Somme tt thon being on duty at al hours of the d ‘The highest penalty known to the law was shisiisy | '* %# Possible chat there is ome man et least im this | ‘afery Chaworth rejected you for yourdeformiy, as | maternity? that publishes that child of | the meeting of the Board to be held to-morrow even- | and night—foris must be remembered that when tt lace, forthe community that would pergonally resent it. | yaid once, and it had been better if I hadatill re- | #12 Was born and lived for years from that ing the schools will be opened on Monday morning, | 18 midnight at Duxbury it is daybreak al et ‘mficted upon Bartolo Mendoza, ‘at this place, No reader @sn doubt the talents of Mrs. | fected 9 man with ® devil’ foot!” and wih those | Comnection—thus creating the virgin blush » | France, so that ® telegram dated lixe the one given murder of his stepdaughter, Merced Avalos. ‘The criminal lived near El Paso, Texas, ‘and had ‘gt different times attempted to seduce the girl, witn- ‘out success, she ‘being engaged to be married to a young Mexican, ‘with the consent of her mother, On the day of the murder the girl started to goto £ Paso, Mexico, to be married. Mendoza tried to pre- vent her, but she insisted on going and started -alone. He immediately followed her and asked “ir she still refused to comply with his desires before “marrying?” She answered “that when she returned from El Paso she would retarn married.” He then ‘drew a revolver, cocked and pointed it at her in presence ef a younger sister, and said ‘Take that,” firing and shooting her through the heart. He re- cocked bis pistol and snapped @ cap at the younger terrible words she left the apartment. To Lord | POD the cheeks of maiden innocence, and when the teachers will be expected to be at their | anove at twenty minutes past five o'clock P. M. the quivermg aspen leaf ike that of indignation upon those of matrons, and f- ” posts. During the vacation a great many Paris time is really sent at past twelve o'clock ALTERATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS IN THE scuoox, | P.M; Duxbury oF Boston ume. It may be ofmes e BUILDINGS sages of business for the public the time recorded have been made under the direction of the architect | that of Paris; in business for the service of the cable of the Board and the Superintendent of Buildings | company, Greenwich time—the same as on the origi- nal cable between Ireland and Newfoundland—t and Repairs, Almost every school building in the | in ‘the iocal business of the Duxbury office Boston city has been overhauled, the furniture repaired and | time, i + diced: narect the heating and ventilating apparatus put inorder. | After cordially thanking the cou! a it i the gentlemen con- The workmen have been obliged to “ny about,” go | <ifty manager and lis peut tole long to 06 Te- that their operations might mot interfere with the | membered vis the Cable House in Duxbury. opening of the schools; and by the end of the week ali will be in readiness for the regular sessions to LITERATURE. commence. , pons THB FREE COLL! ‘i Reviews of New Books. will algo reopen on Monday with @ full register. At | 4 Text Book OF PRACTICAL MgpiciNe. With par- the last examination some 530 applicants wer e ad- ticular reference to Physiology and Pathological Stowe as a fiction writer, and as proved by “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” but she bas now eclipsed herself by this atrocious tibel upon one of her own sex, in connection with Lord Byron. I claim the privilege of establishing the falsity of the incestuous charge, and my knowledge is founded upon personal acquaintance and friendship with the Hon. Mra, Augusta Leigh herself for more than seven. years, also with the Countess Guicctoli, ‘and with the Earl of Harrington, formerly Colonel the Hon. Let- cester Stanhope, Lord Byron’s intimate friend and mine for more ‘than twenty years, and who had a conversation upon the very theme with Lord Byron scarcely an hour before the poet aied, and which ‘was about to be renewed with Mr. William Fletcher, his loraship’s valét en chef, when aeath permitted fearless and outspoken denunciation from every waey—those condition of society? 1 ask again who is Mrs, Were as daggers in the breast of love, esteem or | Beecher Stowe; the suthoreas? | Oh, answer It not in respect that aged + e Birt ion; but here, and from moment = - u Maaadten, speak ‘out ‘in the, name of Nhgutted re~ we " e wife of @ clergyman; she is the Ther or oar ten eae eae a ee sot Koh | daughter of a clergyman; she ts the aistet of two cler- Sought those friends best entitled vo advise. Laay | gymen—andall of them New England clergymen. Byron, in another evil moment, as if destiny was | ANd had the charges been even true Christian chari- driving her to marital desolation, sent for ber former | tY, before sacred pulpita were changed into political governess—the human being who was the cause | Tostra, should have taught ner to cast oblivion upon why Miss Millbanke had formerly rejected Lord | the deed and the dead. Belng, however, false and Byron. She came, and, of course, took sides with | Malicious, if that isthe result of teaching from a her former pupil, over whose mind she had great in- | family of clergymen, of course, all anti-democratic, fluence, and sanctsoned even the brutal remarks | 98 18 the magazine, then quickly may their churches upon the deformity of the husband, and which was | De closed in mourning for the fatal fall—ay, thou- quickly communicated to his lordship. Then it was | #8008 of fathoms deep—of the chief daughter of their that the wounded poet's brother sent for the faithful rte etic aeeacroaae: ioteny Goa peti and devoted Augusta, his haif sister. She was his dark abyss of surging waves of misery was hot more nid senior by five years—she having been born in 1783; 7, 3 mater, and while cocking it a third time it went Of | (> broken sentences, ‘These accumulated inct- | marriedin 1801—and at this time clés) the eignt | sudden and for al! time than ts that of Harrict | mitted, making some 800 to 900 pupils on we roll. | Anaiomy. By Dr. Felix Von Niemeyer. Trans- accidentally, the ball passing throngh his cheek and years’ wife of Colonel George Leigh, of the British | Beecher Stowe from her former high sphere into | (. 7 lated from the Seventh German Edition, by Dr. Bose, which prevented the perpetration of another dents form ‘part of my MS. autobiography, but the Denny, cad’ the: taothar Or wenin a born of that mar- | the dark caverns of charnel-house oblivion and con- General Alexander S. Webb, who was chosen presi- George H. Humphreys, M. D., and Charles E. Hack. murder, He was almost immediately arrested, ana, | Present occasion demands from my friendship to the | riage: and Augusta at this time was thirty-two years | demnation. dent by the Board of Trustees, has aiready com- | ley, M. D. Two volumes. New York: D. Apple- menced familarizing himself witu the duties of his | 02 & Co. position and the manner of working the college. He It has been remarked more than once by celebrated {s said to beaman of rare executive ability, and | Physicians that the science of medicine hardly keeps under his direction the college is expected to take a | Pace with the progress of the age. During the years foremost position among the universities of the na- | that the value of steam has been discovered and the on. telegraph has been invented the world has remained pape See ccimestininte orien ay in almost complete ignorance of the remedial agents Owens, still remains unfillea; but an appointment | for cholera, consumption and several other diseases will ht be etl sta resi une, ote now ranked among the mysterious and incurable. Board of Trustees. Messrs. Fitzgerald, Tisdall and W. B. Silber, both tutors in the department, are working | 20 Walle medicine hasbeen, on the whole, laggard to obtain the appointment, but whatchances of suc- | in the marchof science, it cannot be sald to have cess a may ae it ra Pedal to oe a stagnated. Numerous important discoveries have Tisdall graduated from the college with honors in , 1859, and since that time has been engaged as tutor been made, beneficial to human life and health and in the college. He is a great favorite Saipng the | happiness, Everything of importance relating to students and attachés of the oollege gener: iy, 1s | the science has been, as the translators remark in Ca bere age eainearrr perry martes the preface, presented to the world in a “ multipil, with the college as tutor of Latin and Greek since | City of excellent English treatises,” almost rendering 1851, and his long Leics i ample bate of | these volumes superfiuous, Still, ag the preface oe ete ata colleen OLA, gn tge rote ie also very correctly says, ‘the sciences of pathology named as probable successor to Dr. Owen. Mr. Her- | and therapeutics have made vast strides within the berman 18, perhaps, one of the most thoroughly | last ten years; and for very many important re- drilled Latin and Greek scholarsin this city, and has pooiiiieen! ica alcooeurita: il a eas sates na had a great deal of experience as a teacher of va- sacha rious era Bt the poles te yale H is now at- | medicine we are indebted to Germany. Professor tached. The iden of dividing the office 80 as to | Niemeyer’s volumes present @ concise and well ai- mak fesso! one for Latin and o1 2 to se plan paren aa ont empee ne for | gested epitome of the results of ten years of care- ceive more than polite considcration from the Board | fully recorded clinical observations by the most of Trustees. illustrious medical authorities of Europe, together are spoken of and will Tao doubt be mode by the | With many valuabie and practical deductions regard- Board of Education at an early day. Among the | ing the causes of disease and the application of rincipal changes spoken of is one which will, no | remedies such as we believe have not as yet been Toun, meet with the approval of the teachers, It | assembled in any single work.” ig proposed to graduate the sogle of teachers’ pay in If the reputation which these volumes have ob- accordance with their ter of service. At present | tained in Germany be considered an evidence of the pers graduated according to the number of | thelr value to the medical profession, and puplig on the rollof the school, but in addiction to | through physicians to suffering humanity, there that the Board will probably take ito consideration | is nothing in the quoted sentences, strong the circumstances and experience of the individual | 83 ey are in praise, to which we can- and so regulate the salaries that the more deserving | not heartily subscribe. Our comparatively lim- shall receive the higher remuneration. It is also | ited knowledge of medicine inclines us to depend proposed to divide the city mto districts, increase | considerably upon the judgment of physicians of the force of superintendents and assign one toeach | Prominence in their profession for @ critical opinion district, This will give the superintendents oppor- | of the merits of Professor Niemeyer’s work, and this tunities to keep the schools under much stricter gur- | 18 all that is favorable. We have no doubt that to Velllance and ave the examinations oftener, and it | the medical world in the United States it will prove ig presumed that the additional expense of such an | & Valuable assistant. To the scientific student it arrangement wili be more than offset by the in- | Willalsobe welcome. At odd times, during the creased efliciency in the schools. pat two weeks, we have perused the pages and The German question will no doubt be agitated, ave been surprised at the interest their but will scarcely be settled in accordance with the | contents awakened, independent of the infor- views or Wishes of the would be dominant class, | Mation conveyed and instruction afforded. But it is The argument adduced by the German representa- rincipally to physicians that these volumes will be tive in the Board that “so many Americans visit the | found of value, even as they are designed solely for Continent for business or pleasure that @ regular | them. Thoy will therefore note with more than knowledge o: German and French should be institu. | Ordinary satisfaction that both the translators are ted in the course of studies,” will have the effect, rentiemen of ability and established reputations in Bornans, of ee the movement. Those who “visit ete professions, besides betng thorough masters of @ continent for business or pleasure’ can afford to ie German language, Dr. Humphreys being “‘one of pay ES earning the languages jand the exorbitant pd pede) the Bureau of Medical and Surgical cost cl just memory of the dead that I anticipate the trath at this time, inasmuch as the subject has sud- denly been published in such Hbellous form as to ‘be ‘the theme of society throughout America, and must be in Europe. In my observations I shall not regard Mrs. Stowe in her character of the matron, nor in any of those domestic virtues which proverbially belong to her; him being overwhelming, the jury retired for delibe- but I claim the privilege as a public critic to review ration and returned ina few moments with a verdict | What she has caused tobe publisned as an author, of guilty, ‘The prisoner was remanded to the county | Without fear or favor, and doubly do I claim the jail tor sentence, and on the last day of the term. was right of defending from a libellous charge a lady sentenced vo be hung by the neck until he was dead. | friend, now dead, who, being thus shamefully Upon being asked if he had any reasons to give why calumniated, cannot defend herself. In fact, all Judgment should not be passed upon him he replied | Persons implicated or interested are waited for by that he had nothing to say, but asked whether he | Mrs. Stowe until they are dead before she gives to could be attended by a priest of his faith, which was | the world this monster of libellous conception, and snarerey in iA ge eget es prisoner rocotved for which she is or will be paid money, as it is fair 8 death sentence with perfect composure, and on | to assume, from the fact, that she is a public writer his return to jatl stated that he had but one time to if die and that he was not afraid of death. But he ex- | Of repute and fora talented periodical, which may preven & Btrong desire to have the sentence changed | now be termed “The Incest Libel Monthly of the ‘om hanging to shooting, making a request to the * SRetirenn' entniine for ee judge to whom he ex. | Atlantic;”” and zone readers vias legally aapaicg preaed the same desire. He seemed resigned when | ‘hat the greater the reputation of the authoress ani a ts Hie pasa Cale tare ena ial beth the magazine of nitro-glycerine combustibles, the rrajo atlende: spiritual wants, givin; all the comforts to be derived from his rellgione tga a bed Fete ade yo ataanhial ith » Mendoza was born in the city of Chihuahua, Mexico; | greater the wrong to the memory of the dead and pion of penne polls aneee aye a Crag ane high, to the reputation and wounded feelings of the liv- and weighed abou: red and sixty pounds. ages Nothing neg could be noticed in his physiogno- ing, and the greater the dom An, law, 94, olno. fae my deno! the criminal, aithongn he had a down- | Punishment upon indictment and conviction, as the eae a le had rears a oes Paice in a | libeilers will find hereafter. quarrel and was a@ fugitive from justice at the time Of the murder and attempt at # double murder of It is a legal rule in the cross-examination of a wit- two innocent, unoffending young girls. Nothing of | ness that if an untruth can be proved im his pre- a cieine ina ae Peso, rfixks eae ame vious examination in chief then falsehood perme- ‘ cow belonging to one of his neighbors, which could ates througn the entire testimony, Falsus in uno, not be fully proven. From and after the second | Jalsus in omnibus—false in one, false in all. Now, pes ie Lepr Cane OHA ay PRPS eS to apply thia rule of evidence to Mrs. Stowe. She re ie ° cellent appetite, and, What may appear strange for states three times in her narrative that Lord and & person who knew the hour of bis death, his per- | Lady Byron lived together two years, and during eo de ent eee trea asa one which time “she struggled with the fiends,” &c. nis e at More like a beast than @ man, and it was observea | NOW, it 1s notorious and historically true that they petal Ue He Lid os sof itive men that ‘ne ate | were married on January 2, 1815, and separated for- more than the whole tive, ie appeared very anx- | ever on January 15, 1816, their only child having tous for the coming of the day of his execution, and frequently wished that it would be the next day, | been born on December 10, 1815. Thus they lived ane nen eonsered ay. he ted ol rate + wait * aoe together only one year and a few days. Again, Mrs. few days before the execution he made a will, and, | stowe always mentions the accused lady as having after providing for the payment of his debts, ne be- od queatned ail of his remaining property to his wife; | beet Lord “Byron’s own sister.” She was only the but be ete “4 a ept tt py willed the | half-sister of the poet, holding the same blood rela- revolver with which he commit e murder to | tionship as Abraham id to his wife Sarah. And, to his attorney (mr. Clark), and made a disposition of i everything personal, even to the hat, Slothes and | Make the direct accusation more appalling, tae shoes, which he wore. Puritan authoress directly charges that an incestu- On the evening before the execution an extra | ous «child of sin” was born of the body of the sister ze Lady rf ears. ‘The American press never gave a nobler proof of Eixcept ‘at about nie’ taarrings poe tae eee ‘the | ite high mission than in its utter denunciation of the first time that Byron had seen the Hon. Mrs. | !belé and their mercenary publication; and from Leigh, and with the indignation, from the sav: this day forth no virtuous matron, no chaste daugn- insult and wrong her vrother had receive ter, no honest man should support the Atlantic well might the slight, fragile form and | Monthly, for now to have it in their homes will stain features of Lady Byron shrink abashed | their own reputations, ag supporting the most infa- before the majestic figure, the queenly dignity, | ™ous and malignant libels in the history of tne liv- the intellectual and mild look of sisterly reproach | img or the dead. Throughout England and Europe from the Lady Augusta, dignified by that title in erally there will be condemnation and resentment, society—less in courtesy than to her character as a | for itis @ gross insult to their beloved Queen, that gentillissima—a very “lady of ladies,” and as such | Her Majesty housed for years in her own palace an was finally honored by the Queen of Great Britain, | !ncestuous and adulterous wife. To publish that the as Iwill prove. ‘The ancient governess arrived ia | brotherly and Rev. Henry Ward Beecher had inces- the latter part of the month of February, and the | tuous connection with his married sister, Mra. Har- honorable Mrs. Colonel Leigh in the middle of | Tiet Beecher Stowe, and also that & dark “child of March, 1815; and what followed established that | 8m” was born of that union, would be equally true the former became the ‘damned Iago” of the family, | 88 is the scandalous libel upon George Lord Byron and worse, being a female; and the latter, the Lady | 224 his sister, Lady Augusta. In fact, and Augusta, @ species of innocent Desdemona; the | % be mumorous for a moment—for even oet, a2 equally innocent Cassio, while Byron | Death sometimes smiles—the above suggestion becuase @ self-consuming jealous Othello. e first | Would be nearer the truth with the Beecher brother resolution of the brother upon the arrival of his sis- | 824 sister; tor some twenty years since there was ter was that he would separate from his wife, and | belleved to be a notorious connection between by a legal document to that effect. ‘This resolution | tem—mentally. of course; and the offspring created was successfully resistea by the honorable Mra, | therefrom was actually brought into the world, and Leigh, upon the paternal ground that, as Lady Byron | it suill lives, and beara the familiar name of “Uncle ‘was enceinte and in few months would become a | Tom.’ The authoress should have gwen “a local mother, should tne husband separate bya legal habitation and a name’? to the fiction child of document of otherwise,” before the | bie would cern Augusta, as she did tothatof Henry cast & ing reproach upon the child, as to a te true father. ls argument was conclusive | SOLEMN DENIAL BY “ite, BYRON ON HIS DEATH- with Lord Byron; for he never doubt . chastity of th wife, and would rnin we In a conversation I had with the late Field Mar- wrongs rather than injure her reputation, | Shal, the Duke of Wellington—the warrior of Water- or that of their future unborn innocent child. He | 10o—and having read my Sioaaphy of General therefore concluded to remain domiciled until after | President Harrison,” he was pleased to say that he the birth, and then, upon the convalescence of the | Wished such a pen would do him justice after mother, toseparate, at least for a time; but an event | his death in regard to the only event of his life in goon took place, from the malice of “the female | Which justice had not been done, viz.:—“‘It is sald Iago,” which made Byron finally determine to be | that 1 could have saved the life of the brave Marshal separated forever. I Rave already shown the dig- | Ney. Icould not. I tried. But King Louis XVIII. nified character of the beauty of ly Augusta; it | Was inexorable.” The Duke of Wellington then told formed a perfect contrast with Lady Byron’s, and as | Me circumstances of proof, which are now in the latter was prone to be jealous it was no dificult | My manuscript sane i ol In 8 similar matter to create that feeling towards Augusta, and | ™anner Lord Byron wished justice upon one finally of @ criminal suspicion, instigated by the | theme, viz., that im regard to his sister, fiendish governess, who urged the natural fact to | 8nd he besought a friend, to whom he wrote, “not convey belief, viz., that the Hon. Mra. Leigh was to suffer unmerited censure to reat upon is name only the half sister of the poet. This poisonous sug- | iter death.” To the Countess Guiccioli, the gestion having entered the brain of Lady Byron, | Countess of Blessington, Viscount Canterbury created from the serpent shrine of slander, it fatally | (formerly Speaker of the House of Commons), the permeated her intellect until she became upon that | Count D’Orsay and the Cornwall ‘frelawney he false Mea @ Monomaniac, and thence she lived and | S0lemnly denied the truth of the imputation, and 80 she died. It was the first week of July, | from those personages } received that denial in 1816, in @ scene of quarrel, that Lord Byron | #0lemn conversation. There is, however, another was indirectly accused by Lady Byron with | Proof more solemn. When a man is assassinated being ‘“over-fond of his half sister, Augusta, | 42d in his dying moments he proclaims his mur- and that the suspicions of my governess | “erer itis proof of the criminal, and all other dying are not without foundation.’’’ This false and malig- | Confessions’ are received with equal reverential nant aspersion upon his sister and the wife of | #0lemnity. I now transfer the reader to the death- Colonel Lelgh, conjoined with the previous msuit | bed of Lord Byron at Missolonghi, on April 19, A. D. regarding his deformity, determined Lord Byron | 1824. There were present, among others, Count that after the accouchement of Lady Byron they | Pietro Gamba, the brother of the Countess Guic- should separate forever. The brother and sister | Cioli; Ls get ne of Cornwall; William Fletcher, confronted their accusers; they were abashed and | the valet, Colonel the Hon. Leicester silent, and Lady Byron cast the responsibility en- | Stanhope, afterwards the Earl of Harrington. tirely upon the governess, whom the poct has im- This gentleman honored me with nis friendship to after a preliminary examination, was sent to the custody of the military at Fort Buss to await an in dictment for murder before @ special term of the District Court. On the 27th day of July an indiot- ment was found against him for murder in the first degree. On the day of trial a jury was empanelled, the prisoner pleading not guilty. The evidence against uard of twenty-five citizens was detailed to watch mortalized in the sketch, the day of his death, extending over a period from modicum now inciuded in the course of | Reliefat Bellevue Hospital for the Outdoor Poor,’? 1, which t densi of Byron and he himself the father! and that Lady i 1834 for more than twenty years. I was intimate | studies tends to show that the experiment and his colaborer in the work, Dr. Hackley, “one of the jail, which was not censidered very secure, it Porn Rea, fe he hacen bret, Mase R6, with him and in his confidence, and often was his ‘periment would be 0 Spe that a number of his Mexican friends | Byron confided to her, in writing, the secret! The Would attempt to rescue the prisoner. In spite of | perfection of libel 1s suppressio veri et suggestio the continual centinela aleria! called about ever: ten minutes, the prisoner slept well, arose at nie | /a/si—the concealment of truth and the invention oe Se and Fed é ae, hearty USaeribead He, for | and assertion of falsehood—both of which obtain e fires time after breakfast, appea to realize his . horrible situation; suill he conversed freely on in- ‘a kept tr ct inane di) Malena different subjects with his usual sangfroid, Your | “ons that the “sister” wi , ugh she corres tpg Leto oo ae ue pra baton when he | knew it. The faithful and noble-hearted Augusta— Was ay write a letter rother in Chinua- | worth a legion of Lady Byrons—was married, ibe Pintalets Bhrdnnielals Bee Bah cys ormatdlin Reta | cineer of the Beltish army, Colonel ee SAN Exzeanto, August I: . " Srx0m Dox —, Chihuahua ae ; meray ore Leigh, alluded to in the will of Lord Byron as being ly BELOVED BrotarR—' condem: for having committed # crime. {deserve my punahment, | tte husband of Augusta, This will was made and and sak Deraee of the Yours geile oad hoping a you will | executed on July 29, 1815, only about six months sarty ut ‘be provisions of ‘ay Taother'e wil as init for after Lord Byron’s marriage, ana tt 1s notorions that jered, which was not i diasinvulation and abandonment. T, ARorefore, suppieate CG ies rap aalbe And at ip te Ra art gs too Wes seeps the physicians to the New York Hospital and one of ‘The of Education, although contemplating | the surgeons to the New York Eye and Ear In- many changes, have been reluctant in introducing | 1rmary.” Reliance can thus be placed upon the ac- them too speedily, leat it might be feared that the | Curacy of the translation. It only remains to be said entire system was being narhinxingly interferea | that both volumes are handsomely printed and with. One very important amendment to the pres- | bound. ent system which should be made by the next Legis- ae . the total abolishment of the local Magazine Notices. — fet waaieea te Paphesper Mart FP ngeninl The Overland Monthly for September is of more oe ie the wards, ‘they recommend teachers for | than ordinary interest. It is far superior to the appointment or promotion as their leaders” com- | August number in the quality of Its contents. Among mand, and the regult is that many who have served “ e long and faithfully in tnetr moattions ‘see others of | the most noticeable articles are “White Pine,” “The leas experience, but having the good wiil of the local | Story of Herman,” “The Affair of the Villa A—,” Egat A eet nein ba af A “Are Our Public Schools a Failure?” “The Pacific re ol «) tilese local boards are often farcical in the extreme | Rallroad—Unopen,” “National Characteristics," and do more towards demoralizing the schools and | “Gold Digeing in Australia,” “In the Track of s it being the most powerful invective from the pen He eodhnens bE Frag eareae Bouse, of man, and could only emanate against a woman | nopieman who introduced the free press in Ind upon the ground of faise, malignant and demoniac | and was the patriotic champion, with his friend an Wrong, received by the author, and also his true and | democrat Lord Byron, for the freedom of the classic irreproachabie sister. land of Marathon and Miluades, and towards that Following the above scene, Lord Byron made and | noble cause advanced from his own purse tue sum duly executed his last will and testament on the of £16,000 ($80,000), Within the dying hour of the 20th of July, 1815, leaving all his property to his | great poet Lord Byron requested all to leave the sister, ne. Mary Leigh, wife of George Leigh, | chamber except Colonel the Hon. Leicester Stan- Esq.,”’ and in the same will he writes that “Lady hope, The poet then knew that he was dying, and Byron avd children I may have being otherwise | gaid to his friend, “Stanhope, I wish you to take amply provided for.” The former will, made in | charge of dead body to England. See that it is bac bed by law vacated and void by his marriage | puried in the grave of, mother.” (Both these dying wishes were fulfilled by the friend.) - On the 10th of December, 1816, the only child of | Hype’ | declare to your at Phils soles moma, ciliation with the husband; but he was firm in his Ho.end Oy ARAL aeneriey ov betTarent fa mates forte wAfareof"at'tEce | by his. wife’ was baptized "Ada. Auguste nema | Taoluuod, o, Reparate,, She expresged contrition, pony sou waked He aware ot) fue Comminnners" of Puble Schools | taming contrivutions are exethoas in ety wes notify my aunts, Jesusa and Ynocenta, of what has at aaurrateanis une watanbotareten ot manentuete " should have direct contro! of all mat 4 tion; and as a publi and so defend us when again assalied.”” 0 e direct control of all matters appertain- | and the poetry is tolerably good. As usual the book peed al ve {ril'be remembered in your | after the very lady now 0 maliciously Itbelled, and | gestion; Public confession of her injustice fog | ing to the schools and with the proposed division of | reviews are particularly interesting, are well written ‘His who was the virtuous mother of a legitimate child, made MENDOZA. born to her by her marriage with Colonel George ark. When leaving he told your correspondent that it | Leigh. Can infamy go further down to the depths he had ever injured him in any way he asked for of hell than to conceal from the public this lady's Pipe belo lad ii ee forgiven. Shortly | marriage, and her maritally conceived and born alterwards his last meal was brought to him, whic! child, and declare it to be the incestuous offspring he‘ate, though without his usual appetite. ‘Amon; of Other things brought were beans end chilt verde, | of her own brother? Yes! Mrs. Stowe charges Rich he retuaed to couch, mating that “they always | the Lady Augusta with the triple moral 8 with him, Treating nis last meal he | sins of fornication, adultery and incest— dispirited f r Pe heat a hr aie Sled Be Malin W8e | even to maternity. The triple-neaded Cerberus of 2 ier him Cottedi he Uap and being tol hell alone i3 the proper emblem of this demoniac ‘at it Was made of black muslin, he appeared to be | and atrocious libel. Of very much dissatisfied with the color, and asked as | knew Lord Byron, the Bear del wisnt wes & particular favor that he would have him a purple | child; but I have intimately known several of his or maroon colored shroud made. The Sheriff re- | intimate friends, and I select (as subjoined) from the plied that it was too late then to make another, | number those with whom I have conversed upon which reply seemed to trouble him more than the | this very subject, and who had the indignant denial fatal procession which was soon to take place. from Lord Byron himself, and ag I had it from the ‘This execution being the first by authority of the | Lady Augusta; and superadded ts the deathbed de- the city and appointment of additional superin- | and are quite imp: tendents this direct control could be readily and sat- ‘wood! isfactorily exercised. The public ts yee Bac ye mainiury Hagasine, ter Angus, con eagerly the dot of the Board of Education, and | tains “Cornelius O'Dowd,” “Historical Sketches of the Board should not be hampered by the quibbles | the Reign of George If. No. X1Il.—The Painter,” blk pebacatin il alethonn “Cant: A Monologue in the Vapors,’’ “The London i WRG Art Season,” “The Lords and the Commons,” and TWO HOURS WITH THE FRENCH CABLE. two continued novels. ll the articles are very in- wen oe bea bp Baap pea al- Lou argu rom a strong ry stundpoint, are The American Association for the Advances | Ciitereadabie for the sake ui their Keen reasoniug ment of Science Visit Da ry. and analysis. (From the Boston Advertiser, August 31.) The London Quarterly Review.—The July number A small party of scientific gentlemen, members of - the American Association for the Advancement of | of thls able review is well worth reading. It con- Science, — eo -* rannaiies nee last | tains nine papers, among which those most desery- week, received and accepted an invitation on Thurs- dal “Bast Dhristians,”? day, doth instant, to visit the cable office in Dux. oxen nedane he waar "aE tad? ths brought the party tothe landing. In an old but well | ‘The Truth about Ireland.” The remaining reviews to the injured sister Lady Byron herself proposed Colonel Stanhope took the hand of his dy (mark this, Mrs, Stowe) that the unborn chide if a | friend, aod said:—"Byron, the name of Augusta girl, should not only be named Ada, the father’s se- | Lelug added to that of Ada at the basen of your lection, but also Augusta, impressing that innocent | aughter, and at the request of Lady “Ag Ron told Dame as a seal of purity upon the virgin jewel yet | me by your sister, dispersed that siander forever ; within the casket of human nature. By the justice | Ut if you would be happier send your dying declara- of God it was #0; and the child was | ‘on by your confidential valet, Fletcher, aud order baptized “Ada Augusta,” and as she grew | bimto see Lady Byron with your death denial.” to womanhood, and. was ‘married, she used that | \‘! will do so," said the dying poet. «Send Fletcher name in preference to Ada, in justice to her father | {9 me. God less you, Stanhope, Of ail men yop I and his sister, and thence she became alienated from | best love. You will live to see the freedom of this her mother. ‘Lady Byron had the lingering hope of | ¢lagyi¢ land when { shall be no more. Adien !”” preventing her husband leaving England, and “mad- tI many tepra Sojonel Stanhope adieu esa’? was ted as @ means to an end, but this | to his friend foréver, and within half an nour there- only expe: the issue; for they separated within | #fter Fletcher was at the bedaiite of his dying mast Six Weeks after Ada Augusta’s birth. Then took place the oft-repeated broken senten The day of separation came (January 15, 1816), put | “ited by Mrs. Stowe and others, but now explained by the statement by Mrs. Stowe of that fan’ intervicw | the previous interview with Colonel Stanhope:—""Go is entirely false and unnatural, and also malignant | ‘© my sister—tell her—go to Lady Byron— im ite crimmal assertion. ‘The authoress writes that | YOU Will see her, and say’’—nere his voice fatiea “Lady Byron went into her husband’s room, where | ‘rom exhaustion. But, had he power, who can he and the partner of his sins (the Hon. Mrs, Leigh) | 20Ubt but the dying man would have repeated to nis were sitting together, and said, ‘Byron, 1 come to | faithful valet what he had already declared to his civil law on this frontier—Presidio and El Paso coun- | claration of the poe i say 7 ke. There is falsity tn the very | !althful friend? preserved clapboard mansion of that quaint old | &Fé also well written, and comprise “Scientific vers Ues, Texas, and Dona Ana county, New Mexico— | friend at Musolonet Colonel the Hom ii herole | phrase “Byron.” ‘The ignorance of Mrs, Stowe a REQUIESCAT IN PACE. town were found the headquarters of this new and Poe Met a I IS although some twenty or more men have gone under | Stanhope, afterwards’ the Earl of Harrington, wie | (0 the domestic phraseology of high society in ing. | , Jt Was at Ashburnam House, on the Sunday follow- | wonderful highway. | The visitors were cordially | $£0, ae ee eis te Coleen by order of Judge Lynch, and although numbers | had the distinguished charge of the dead poay of | !and has betrayed her. Ladies and gentlemen of | ins the evening I passed with the Honorable Mrs. | weicomed by the manager, Mr. Brown, and were at | te last named being of more than ordinary interest, have been Killed and few assassinated during | Byron to England. Also I cite Queen Victoria inde- | TMK in married life—and even of royaity, | Leigh at St. James’ Palace, when she related what once brought into the presence of the flitting, Name- the last twenty years, it was therefore ex- | fence of the calumniated lady, wit! as [ know, personally—as among the more | | have recited; and speaking of the subject to the | like image which indicated, in symbols on @ gradu- [ , pected that a ‘large number of persona | fahaii conclude this late eVect Which testimony each otter ‘by their | Earl of Harrington tthe former Colonel Stanhope) | ated scrsen, the thaugite Wore one aera: MUSICAL AND THEATRICAL NOTES, would be present at the gallows; but only THE DEFORMITY OF LORD BYRON RIS CURSE. bap rge, and Mary, &c., | that he narrated to me the dying declaration to him | the other side of the AUantic. Intempreting the fitful sia $25 about two hundred and fifty persons were on It is a well known fact in human history that there | When in the domestic circle and friendly. if’ other. by his dying friend Lord Byron at Missolonghi, and | tremor of the image, or line of light, one inch in Our theatres will make an extra spurt next week. The round, including about one hundred women. | 1s nothing so quickly creates a hatred of another as | Wise the address would be “My Lord,’ or “Lord | authorized me, slould the occasion call for tt, to | length and one-eighth of an inch ih breadth, the | «formosa? will be the sensation at Niblo's Garden the crowd, wig edings were curiously watched by | to taunt any person with his physical deformity, | BYton.” Noblemen bachelors and most intimate gen- | Tepeat his words, as the sister had her narrative; | youthful interpreter, who did not look the wizard 7 Fifth the crowd, who appeared impressed with the solem- | especially if the person ts of a quick and nervous | tlemen friends of rank alone address each other by | aud the present libellous occasion does call for it, | that he was, calmly read, for transcription by nis | ‘Dreams’ will be the attraction at the Fifth nity of the scene. Hardly @ word was spoken, and | temperament, as was notoriously George Gordon | tHelr title or family surnames. Now, the facts of the | 4d! have done my duty. " assistant, a message in which occurred at intervals | Avenue. excellent order was Kept. No military were present, | Byron. At the time of his birth am accident | “Farewell” are these:—Lora Byron left nis own Seer aay Cant anes kane the words ww Orleans,” “Citizens.” &c., 4c. | «Uncle Tom's Cabin” will be produced at th 1t being the intention of the civil authorities to show | caused @ malformation of one of his. feet | fom and went into thatof Lady Byron's to take | _ Inconclusion, 1 neh orcad proof of innocence, | Wnile inspecting the apparatus the members of the P e thar the arm of the clvillaw was strong enough to | and legs. Of this he was feverishly sensitive, and | farewell of his wife and daughter, and he had sent | Which, it Mra, Stowe knew and concealed from the | party received the following message fresh from | Olympic. word to that effect. There were present the father, | Public, is, in itself, @ crime upon the dead; tt she mother and infaat child (the wey left upon bis en: | “id not know it, then she ts unfit to be a writer trance). The husband received into nis arms ‘Ada | Of history, being ignorant of facts, Augusta,” kissed her with deep emotion and wept. It is the custom of the queens of England when He took the hand of his weeping wite, and while | 8ny lady of rank bas been overtaken by compara- thus situated (a group for the painter or sculptor) | “ve poverty, by misfortune, or any honorable cause, he satd, with a deep sigh, the words of his favorite | t0 present gratuitously to the distressed lady # suit author, Shakspeare, “When snall we three meet | of furnished apartments, cuisine, &c., mone of her again?” to which tte wife responded, On earth, { | Majesty’s palaces, either at a oie Court, Holy- hope.” Lord Byron replied “In heaven, 1 twrast;’’ | T00d, or, a greater compliment aul in the Royal and those were his last words to her, as he gave | Palace of St. James, London. Need I add that per- back the intant to ite mother and silently and slowly | $0nal chastity and the matronly virtues the con- left the chamber, and with royal etiquetie, face to | ditions precedent with Queen, Victoria’ She her- f So “Lady ‘Byron's caressing the spaniel,” &c., | self the model wife, widow and Queen to all pos- another fiction; and well it might be, since the | verity! J say to the libellous authoress, “0 shame, spaniel wasa large dog of the Mont St. Bernard | Where is thy blush?” to conceal from the public the breed, and always at might guarded his master’s | great moral fact which here follows:— when at Newstead. There inthe | Tue Queen of Great Britain, Victoria the Good! daytime the noble dog was the pla ful companion | God bless her | in sympathy to the monetary misfor- of the wolf and bear that guarded right and left the | tunes of a lady of rank (from the providence of her monastic staircase of the ancient Abbey, husband), and that lady having tue right of entree On April 25, 1816, Lord Byron left Engiand forever, | % her Majesty's drawing room, even upon state oc- and never again saw his rae, child or sister, The | casions, and the Queen gave to that iady for life a uphold order. any allusion to it would dri’ At three o’clock the Sheriff, accompanied by aja rarlous rage and even a6 mead or deputy, proceeded to the jail, and everything being | only four years, he resented it by striking = aon ee La ion to the gallows was | his yaurse's friend with @whip for alluding to 1t—con- _ ae ini "4 With Father Borrajo by hig | trasting as she did the beauty of his face with the wide, marc! to death with a firm step and looks | deform! ty of his leg and foot, which to him through- fixed A ty the ground, never raising his head even | out nis life was a hideous contrast. It was the same os until all was over. His responses were made | to him as was the withered arm and deformed legs in aloud voice without remor. Arriving at the | to Richard III., and my readers will remember Glos- scaffold he bowed before tt and ascended without | ter’s sollloquy, viz., “To shrink my arm up like & the least sign of nervousness, heard the sentence | witnered shrub; to 8 my legs of an unequal read in English and bg ote with apparent indifter. | size, that the dogs bark at me as I halt by them.” ence, and still stood firmly without a tremor until | Now, when Lord Byron said to his bride “You will the rope was cut by the Sheriff, aad he was launched | find that you have married a devil’—as cited py Mra, into eternity at half-past three o'clock. The fall was | Stowe, but as if he reaily meant Satan—he imply over six feet, and hia neck was broken. He died | alluded in bitter sarcasm to his deformed foot—more without a Lda fa After hanging half an hour the | resembling the devil’s than man’s, And through body was cut down, placed in a cofn, delivered to | his life he took the utmost trouble b: his costume, &c, the attending priest, carried to the church and bu- | to conceal the deformity; but whet in that respect ried in the morning in the church yard. And may | can you conceal from your wife or your valet? God have mercy on his soul! Thence it was that Lord Byron on the day of his paces a dying commanded that no person but his faithful PERILOUS SITUATION AND HARROW ESCAPE OF AN ASSOCIA= | farce lavucnny ietcter should see his naked body France, sent expressly to them:— “Blow for Blow” will be indulged in at the To Duxsuny, rnow Bumsr—time, 6:20 P. M. Comique. ( ime. ) The company present their compliments to the gentiemen And the fall dramatic season will be inaugurated assembled at Boston, aud hope to be able to send them news at the Bowery, international boat race that will be gratifying to ~ The bleached blondes of the Thompsonian brigade te of transmission 1s about ten or | of beautiful burlesquers have carried the Quaker The usu twelve words per minute. Looking for the mechan- y ism by which these wonderful resuits were obtained, Sacer ve KC the inquiring visitors observed on their right, placed ie New York Conservatory of Mustc opens for the on a marbie pedestal, a medium-sized spool of silk- | fall and winter season this evening under tlie direc- covered copper wire, said to consist of several thou- tion of A. F. Lejeal sand turns or convoiutions, in the centre of which vateta . spool, suspended by a single silk-worm fibre, was @ mi- “The Great Boston Combination Company,” whose nute mirror attached to a little magnet made from a | queer anffcs are still remembered in this city, opens plece of watch spring. rom a lamp properly placed | at Selwyn’s theatre, Boston, on next Monday evea- and shaded a beam of light was thrown upon this 7 mirror, and from the mirror was reflected two nun- he Richings English Opera Company commence dred times enlarged upon the graduated screen in | the season at the Philadelphia Academy of Music on front of the timerpreter the flame-like image already | next Monday evening with a number of new singers mentioned, In transmitting from Duxbury to Brest | anda repertovre of new operas. the operator, with his right hand, makes use of two M Albaugh and Miss Mary Mitchel! will tn- nd broke “Pre. | poet died at the ear'; e of thirty-five years, and | Suit of regal apartments at St. J ’ Palace, and | keys or springs, one of which being pressed causes | augu! he regular dramatic séason at the Louts- TED PRESS AGENT. lawney the Terrible,” who “at one View betel tei & marble tablet to hie soemnore over his’ Grave nl that lady’s name was engraved on a silver plate and | at rest a deflection in a similar mirror, sending the | ville Opera House September 13, appearing in the Apollo and Satyr,” as he told me as we ai to. | the village church near Newstead Abbey was erected placed on the front door of those apartments, pub- | !mage-flame to the right, while pressing the other | sensational drama of “Eustache.” {From the New Bedford Standard, August 28. gener at the burial of William Godwin. | DY that fithfut sister, of whom he had written :— licly seen at all times, in the royal banner square of | Key deflects the mirror at Brest in the opposite di- The Royal Opera House in Madrid has been leased On Friday afternoon last Mr. W. G. Blanchard, of ron was Well read in Shakapeare, and that prince ‘Thou atood'st, an stands a lovely tree, the palace. Who was that lady whom the Queen de- | rection, sending the image to the left. | Its tndica- | by a Sefior Rables for aterm of five years. Ninety Poston, agent of the Associated Press; Mr. Howes | of poets says of women, “The eye must be fel, and fe though gently Deut, lighted to honor? Does the reader ask? Do the | tions are thus interpreted A {ery rr ia ce to perform es Must be given each ‘season. The err, Holmes’ Hole marine news reporter for the | what delight can she bave to look upon the devil 9 #, with fond fide! Ys poisonous publishers of the libelagk? Then thus i | the right and the nonce to the left denotes the letter ouse will be opened early in October with a strong sociated Press, and Peter Claghorn, boatman, left | It was that very thought which caused. his remark above s monument, Oo EE ent Tatyana te word, and dare denial | a; @ fitting, once to the rignt and then three times | company of ge hy of its truth—that lady was this ve - The foregoing narrative and solemn denial of the | ta, che Hon. Mra, Colonel Leigh, 4 barseut of tord slander I received from the Hon. Mra. Augusta Byron, the poet, and this royal honor was eeat? Holmes? Hole in @ smail sailboat for basa fining in | to his newly married wife, and i Vineyard Sound. The wind was fresh, with @ cho} out that truth, and rf arded ‘with shuddeteg a ging White-crested sea, While engaged in fishing’ marital rights, is si le sienebapinacasevcge to the left denotes the letter 0; and thus letter by Miss Annie Lonsdale, the original Nan in the com- letter the words are spelled. edietta of “The Good for Nothing,” im this city, Passing to an adjoining room the delicate tnstru- | and agreat favorite at one time in other deyazet large schooner, under fall sail, was seen approach- TH ; Leigh, ersonally, at her residence in St. James | enjoyed by Lady Augusta while ved | ments used for testing the electric conduct it Nibio’ ws ” ing, but @ man being distinctly seen at her tow, and Two years before tis thera ce with Mise Mitbanxe Palace, Fondon. al Madame Stowe, at St. James if that palace, in her own apartments, 1 repeated: the cable are shown, among waich are condensers seat vente enettiog from, tte siege ins on the lookout, it was confidently | Lord Byron had been rejected by her—a circumstance pres y le gh ge ‘eames chico.) ly saw the Hon. Mra. Leigh, received her hospitality, | and batteries, rheostats and shunts, bridges, Soaane and Willie Hess, two faveniie musica! belleved by the fishing party that she would by | never forgotten by man. 1 ated . In @ reckl ine! po caer LT, came, however, directly for the l@ | moment, incited by wine and Sheridaa—wno re. far koa fn — in the latter shouting to her to led his poet friend (one of the committee of first carried ‘Se h The howsprit of the schooner rury Lane theatre) a8 @ tes of Sir Charles strock her ute: A e boat’s mast, and then the bow Surface—Byron wrov for @, and addressed two ae i femolish ing the rudder, but throw- | ladies, half in jest, half in earnest, proposing mar. fh ana 17,19 tie starboard side of the | riage, and to his amazement he was accepted, and ’ er from wholly going under. | by Miss Millbanke. Never were united two dengs e Her sid@ was stove, with moment of the collision eS, dam: om more anti-aympathetic, He @ voloano of fre; es evenings with her and freely conversed of switches and plugs, and, crowning all, the wonder- | phenomena, the one a violinist, the er poet brother and his eventful life, and each of “ yi port, on Fridley ara Tul astatic galvauometer of Sir WHlam Hamilton. | appear at the Opera House, Newport, o1 - Lege smote fa rile re Pepi 2 ~— ing, mage 8, In & grand concer o De given Ht a megatarads, cl and ital h en and air the terminology of conduc. there SASERORL OE TOS IRR RINDe ONIONS tion, resistance, electrostatic capacity and continued The Worrell Sisters—S ne electrification, It may, however, gratify them to | appear to-night at the Brookinh Meeee or mitusi learn that the insulation of the deep-sea cable be- | in thelr pleasing and popular burlesque of “Lalla tween Brest and St, Pierre has more than doubled in | Rockh.”” They are in Brooklyn for two nights eMcacy daring the short month which has elapsed | only, as they are to play in Trenton on Friday sore es fay to retain the Fant nd, re- Ww @ Jago governess, to bring up and | ys without reserve, And shi b: educate the daughter in total ignorance of her | accepting my friendship, ‘ana waich | ogsin prove, — and especially as to his talents as an author. | though she is in her grave with her brotier, by thus lonsequently she no knowledge of his poetry patty defending her reputation; and were | in tntll after her ba Hap when one day in her hus- | France I would do a0 even to the death. My brosier band’ J jlibrary she rat saw @ volume entitled | editors who have published the libel from the alian- Bi Works, Lord Byron believed that his | ri Bone. Wane they nobly scorned it— Would ‘bring up’’ his daughter correctly and | justice to the dead, copy this refutation of t = id | she @ frozen fountain of the ice brook temper. rre- seized hold of # rope hanging from the schoone: justly; for in 182, when she was elght years old, he | jigious, flenaish and coward lumny. ‘The spirit | since this cable was first committed to the embraces Dow and was for over ainile, & Otho time ia Mange ey oon, a ge and Bi cto A pe + Lady Blessington Ly! he should not inter- of Byron whispers to me these ines | upon the on - | of Old Ocean, as is evinced vy the fact that soon “The Vivo the well known operatic manager, mad Wholly submerged in the water, By desperate effort ures, viewed wih hatred tne admires ot fein a ae education ee * ree, having full | nai sianderer of himself and sister, and a aiter it was laid the insulation resistanceyrose to | a flying visit to'San Francisco, about. el hi een da H mai at last to climb & part of the way up the | handsome women for her husband, and thence she Natitem to: have ‘seen’and reag | COUPlet of verses upon the renewal of the libel:— c 2,300 megohms, and has since been gradually in- since, to arrange mat he Brignoli seas ol yg, Age tt 18 now 5,000 megohms per nautical | opera there thie winter ie transacted tne oustvess vVessel’s side and make his situation known. Mr. | became mentally ‘ entaky ‘bound in to saucy doubts and 18 improvement in the insulation of the | connected with his visit and returned to New York trusted eet, to her. I have seen and read Blanchard and the boatman, who remained in the | fears;’’ ana the Jealous are not jealous for a cai , the original letter by the courtesy of Lady Blessing- ton, Now, see how Lady Byron fulfilled her duty ay grave be sleepless as th w'd couch of fire, that thou mi deep-sea cable is believed to be mainiy due to the Wrecked boat, which, fortunately continued to float, | but jealous be t tt and as th ‘ hey are jealous, as dit Suiron ter cones all withta (ie time above mentioned. were taken in tow by other sailb Cause h a and its results. The daughter by her marriage ve- Even worme shall perish on th: @ above mentioned, Fremotiy, went to ‘the "aid, and autely resonen | slakspeare, | It is generally called thé “honey. | came Lady Kihg, and sudseqnentiy the Countess of Ten thonsand depthe in Dante's helh wevow, subjected “nt great pecan deminer sure fO.wnieh itis | The Brignolt opera season in California commences olmen” Hole, where tuey found, Mr, Norressera | moon’ the fret four weeks of ma but Byron | Lovelace, by her husband's inheriting the earldom. Be hurl'd to infamy the novels of Stowe, mistance of the portion of the cable connecting Dux- | ‘ieee te iquagee california theatre, San Fran- had been landed by the schooner’s boat. The Pig. ‘nrimetone “ana treacle” ‘thareimons "hace ve 3 ei one | Perio tive pcnvgnver was very ili | 1 remain yours, respectfully &e, bury and St. Pierre is much less—namely~ 1,600 Seigwols, nusien Pein Renoten ‘Gare, ae servation of the three persons in the boat was litt married on January 2, 18) t ween her mother for a long GEORGE THE COUNT JOHANNES, megohms per nautical mile : pote me sonoit: a az + of uiracul 'y 2, 1816, he being twenty-seven | time, and would not, in resentment of the Of the 8 " r 0 of . zaniga and Miss McCollough. We understand that Bhor! oulous. Years and ghe twenty-three years of age, reapectively, wrobge ‘Abd ingylte to her fainer, Lady Byron Naw Yous, Angus — Court of New York. Trone would Inquire of a cable electrician, what | no effort will be spared to render chorup and orches« oe megolua | bo might with propriety be told that | tra worthy of the princwais. ° . RO Pe

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