6 FIESCHI AND THE lltFERWAL MACHINE. During tnc Inst wtrk of the July of 1855, France was full of vague, but deep and tinl rcrsal apprehensions. On the 28th of July, the fifth anniversary of the Revolutlou of 1830, louts 1'htlippp, then growinor rapidly more despotic and less popular, was to review the National Uuard of the Seine and the troops of the garrison of Paris. Bnint Pelagle Trisun was full or republican prisoners. A band of nearly one hundred i,yonncse conspirators, amoni whem Rcvcrclion was conspicuous, hirt lately defended them selves before the Peers at the Luxembourg with boldness and eloquence. Mad'llc Lenormand, the labionable prophetess, had predicted a political catHHtruphe about this time. The.ie is a heat and oppression in the air bo lore thunder, and also beiore the outburst of political volcanoes: sisrns which alarm the thoughtful. The DucheBS of Berry's lriends wrro suspected of a wish to remove, the wily king. Letters from Hamburg, Berlin, Coblentz, Aix, Crmrabery, Turin, spoke vaguely ol myste rious murmurs of danger. Now it was an am buscade on the road to Neuilly, then an ex- itlosive machine opposite the Ambiiru-Comiquc 'hcatre. Houses were searched, arrests made. The bourgeo s urcaiieii the puimc anniversary t tho Three Days, yet they scarcely kue why. It was eenerally supposed that the Luxem bmrs trials had dnven the more violent re publicans into a howling frenzy tn;it mint terminate in some insane act of violence, iiiuibteis were auxious; the mouchurds (spies) were restlessly watchinl; M. Thiers adjured the king to be on his truard: the queen. Amelia, besuuguthim not to tace. the danger. Tho king, cool in juderment, unimaginative, crafty, bold irave, and sell willed, turned a deaf ear to all tnese random rumors, aud bantered those who tried tt arou e his tVars. On the 28. h. the citizen kin'.: positively refused to allow any alteration in the place where tn.fi review was to be held. lie was a ti n lile and chatty as usual, did not mauifest the slightest appreh' nsuon, nor ordered any precaution to be taken; but it was secretly resolved to guard and surround him as if he had been gom into an cneaet meot. The only words that Louis Philippe ottered, alluding to the review, were on the night beiore, when.postponiua sjme work which ne of his librarians wisued hiai to supervise, he si.id: "To morrow at least If I am not killed." Lone impunity had given the king a belief In the luiilitv of conspiracies. The Duke of Orleans shared deeply in the general apprehension, and aid to General Baudrand, his first aide-decamp: "General, they threaten to fire at us. My brothers aud 1 will keep constantly near the king, and make a rampart for him with our bodies. You and the other otlicers ol the cor tece, on your part, on the least movement, must draw close aud cover his Majesty." Eveu that brave scarred old veteran, Mar shal Mortier, the Duke of Trevlso, was ner vous. Mortier had been in the retreat from Russia, and, indeed, in all the great battles of the Revolution and the Empire, and, having pased through rains of fire and hailstorms of bullets, had lorgotten what fear meant; but still the rumor roused him. Although the old soldier's health was so bad that only live months beiore he had been obliged to surren der the presidency of the council, he resisted all the prayers and supplications of his family, and determined to attend the anniversary re tiew. "Yes," he said, with the old flx-bayonet look "yes, I shall go. I am a big man, perhaps I shall cover the king." There Is no doubt that these alarms arose from a consciousness of the feelings ot the people. You heard the rumors at the mar ble tables of the cafes, and round the Tough deal Blabs in the poorest wineshons. In 1833, there had, been emeulSfl at Sreno- ... . , "wle, Lybns, Chalons, Marseilles, and at a dozen places, la 1834, two thousand persons were neized or chased out ot France, one hundred and sixty-four political prisoners tried, and four thousand witnesses examined. The press dreaded more chains; iustice was interfered with. The prudence of the King in his foreign relations tho old Napoleon party maliciously construed into neglect of the dienily and glory of France. Tolerant and wise men thought the King too indiscriminate In his efforts to defend his power lrom revolutionists. He swept into his lawyer's net every sort of opponent. He treated his enemies as if they had been God's enemies. There were fears that Justice was not merely to wear the bandage, but also to have her eyes put out. Tho press was to be gagged and throttled off lrom truth; there were rumors that the King was going to raise a body-guard, and so dely the bourgeois soldier, who had burnt pow der bravely ior him before Charles the Tenth turned bis back on Paris. There was no true liberty, then, alter all the lighting for it. King Stork had unseated King Log. The July morning came; the sky was blue and burnlne, the heat was striking fiercely on the walls ol the Tuileries and the paving-stoue3 of the boulevards, and the leaves of tue trees in the Luxembourg gardens were binguid with the lieat. The quick, sharp "tam-tam'' of the drums of the National Guard sounded every where iu the soldierly city, from the Place of the Bnstillo to the Arc de l'Ktoile. The measured tramp ol the iniantry was heard in the Kue St. Honore and rouud the Bourse; behind the Madelaine and past the Louvre the lines of bayonets flashed and trlittered; everywhere there was marching. The cavalry, too, were coming through the barriers; childipn laughed and clapped their hands; grisettcs and baunes smiled aud showed their white teeth; old sol diers drew themselves up stilliy, and assumed a critical air, now aud then perhaps passing their Bands across their eyes with joy and pride when a son or a nephew (decore) marched or rode past among the "Premiere Legere" or the Cuiras siers, and nodded shako or helmet to them as they passed. The men of Austerlitz, t'- nieu of Marengo were there, looking at the yc.!ia of the last revolution, and brown-faced striplings Iresh from Algiers. 1 There were many blanks iu the ranks of tho Rational Guard, and that indicated mischief and dislike. That keen observer, M. Louis Blanc, Bays: "The ity was alarmed and weighed down, and on every face there was a sort of lialf-defiant apathy. People were siU-ut and sullen." At half-past 10 the mockery of the festival to celebrate a restoration of liberty bad begun. As the king passed through the gate of the Tuileries. the erenadiers threw their muskets forward and presented arms, stiff as statue of Iron. The king beweu ana oowea, aua still rode on bowing, to eucouraee the scauty cheering. The staff was brilliant. The king was followed by his three sobs, the Dukes rinrWriR. Nemours, and Joluville. close to and watchful of their lather. Then came old Marshal Mortier, the ttrand Chancellor of the Legion of Honor, against whom steel and lead had hppn nowerless for sixty vesrs. He, too. looked on the alert, and watched the populace and the blouses suspiciously, ready to throw himself beforp thp kins, on whom he wasted his devotion. There were three other marshals rode near him Count Lobau, the Marquis Matson, Minister of War, and the Count flioiitor, The National GuardB were cold and silent, About half-past twelve the cortege reached the boulevard of the Temple. An immense crowd Of every age and both sexes crowded the road ways and the. alleys, aud tilled every window, Tho poorer the distnct the more eager and numerous the crowd. Ormrwitn thp .lunlm Turc, the space being large, the mob was enor mous, ana many wuu-ures&ed women filled the terrace. At that moment, M. Bock, a grenadier of the first battalion of the 8th Legion, advanced from the ranks to present a petition. The 8th Legion occupied the space between the Rue du Temple and the Rue Saint Runae, the 7th Legion having been just marched from there to face tbo Chateau d'Eau. M. Laborde, tho king's ald-de-camp, put ont ais hand and received the petition. The King was just passlDat a tree opposite the last of block of buildings adjoining a w-ttied cvje. Titer vaa notMiis leioaxka- THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, ble about the house; It was a small, menu strip of building, three stories high, with a dirty owning over the bottom shop, which was the lowest order of cabaret. The last window but one bad the usual Parisian outside shutters, and lllo top windows were open, with a dingy Venetian blind trailing .out and held up lrom within half a foot of the bottom. The Interior of siifh a house one could easily Imagine. Two nien In blouses drinking glasses of iukr wine, a grisette and her mother busy ar, Mop-work, abovo, them some grimy gunsmith In swarthy attire filing and scraping, busy by himself, or with some chrery comrade, too industrious even to throw up the blind and look out. All at once, lrom no one leuows where, comes a sound like a badly executed volley, mingled with a sort of niu'llled report. In a moment there is a teriible gap in the king's ecort, and there arise cries of rage and terror, lor the boulevard Is strewn with dead and dying men and horses. Men have fallen behind anil rouud the kine, but he nod his sons are unhurt. In the lnne facing the houe, and under tho terrace of the Turkish Garden, a rain of shot had in the same way cut a path in the crowd. t The excitement was almost maddening. The spectators and the National Guards Hew in all di rections, as if an ambuscade battery had openod upon them and was about to tire agniu. A whirl Wind of fear swept the boulevard. Had the earth opened, or tire (alien from heaven? Nooneknew what had happened. But there lay the heap of torn and blecdnicr men. and thorp was thr wnft. of smoke still drilling lrom the fatal window where the blind was lifted for air. Lenorinand had been right alter all; the popular terror bud some foundation. This was the blow that w is threatened. And what was to follow? In a monieni the more resolute men, tho soldiers especially, who are accustomed to any sudden ness ol death, threw themselves upon the door ot No. fin, lrom whoso top window tho smoke still kept breaking out in thick whiffs. The king was unh nrt.all but a graze on the fore head from abullet. Tberaancof his horseba I also been skimmed by a shot. The horse, starling, bud strut k tho kiug's arm against the head of the Due do Nemours' horse,;aud fora moment Louis thought that he was hit. Tho horses of the two princes, who rode forward eager for their father's safety, were also grazed; but he relieved their anxiety by a tew words. Then with one look of deep grid at the caruatre around him, the king rode forward, reassuring the National Guards by his presence and hiB words. When the crowd of soldiers and citizens went to raise the wounded, tbey lound forty-two persons had been struck and nineteen mor tally wounded. The nineteen included the following: Poor old Marshal Mortier, sixty-seven years old, struck by a ball that had penetrated his left ear, traversed the muscles of his neck, and fractured his second cervical vertebra; Marquis Lachasse de Verigny, aeed sixty, struck in the head by the bullet, and his horse killed by five balls in the neck; the marquis died that night. Colonel Ratl'e, of the gendarmerie of the Seine, aged titty-six; be ex pired in the night. Count Oscar de villette, captain of artillery, thirty-four years old; skull fractured by two slugs. Rienssec. a lieutenant colonel ot the 8th legion of National Guards a great sportsman aud proprietor of a horse breeding establishment at Virolflny; killed by three bullets. Labrouse, seventy-two years old, a tax collector ot the 7th arrondisse ment, struck in the right arm aud abdomen; died two dajs alter. Leger, mathematical instrument maker, and grenadier of the 8th legion, Benettet, ebony carver, and grenadier of the 8th leg'on; killed on the spot. Prudhomme, marble cutter, and sergeant ot grenadiers; dead. Ricard, wine merchant and grenadier; dead. Brunot and Inglar, weavers; dead. Ardouin, a journalist; dead. Madame Ledernet; shot in the thigh, Madame Briosne; four wounds in the thigh. Madame Langoray, a workwoman, mother of four children, one of whom was in her arms when she fell dead. Rose Alison, a servant; wounded in the thigh. Louise Josephine Remy, a little girl of fourteen, dead. Leclerc, an apprentice of thirteen years old, died a month afterwards. The twenty-three wounded consisted of five suDerior officers, eicht Nutionul Guards, five workmen, three children, and five women; there were all ages and all classes, geneials aud bakers, and a dver. the son a cnet a escaurou of a mayor and a street gamin ; a lady fell beside her dying hus- band and dead sister; there were wounds of every kind, in tne breast ana on tne neaa, thighs and feet, hands and mouth. A hair breadth of difference in the cle.vation of the ambuscade battery, and more than two hundred Dersons would have been mowed down by that storm of slugs and bullets: a second sooner, and the king'niu.st have fallen, riddled by shots. Before the wounded and the dead could be removed to the hospital of St. Louis, or the neighboring bouses, No. 50 had been surrounded by a crowd of enraged and shouting men, commissaries ot police, police agents, National Guards, and matideDed citizens. Ail tne doors were at, once blocked up by the crowd; the ground floor aud the first floor, where M. Durant's wine shop was, was ransacked and searched in every part. M. Jaquemin, a commissary of the polio", was the first to ascend to the third floor. A kick or two ot his toot, and the barricaded door fell in, and M. Jaquemiu and three Municipal Guurds, seven or eight National Guards, and M. Bessas Lamcgie, Major of the 10th arron- dissenient, rushed in. The first two rooms were empty; in the third, -which was thick with smoke, they lound at the open window a rough frame-work, like a clumsy table with the top removed; In this had been screwed twenty-five gun-barrets; some oi tnese were split and shat tered, almost all displaced by the terrible explo sion. On the right-hand side was a fireplace, iu which blazed a fire of straw and wood. The police, suspecting some trap iu a fire too large for a garret on a hot July day, at ouce scattered and nut out the fagots. As the men's eyes grew accustomed to the thick, sulphurous smoke oozing from hell ilselt, as it 6eemed to their excited minds, they saw -that the room was empty, but that there were 6mears of fresh blood on the wall. On the floor, near the door, lay a pierced grey hat, with pieces of torn gun barrel near it. All at once M. Jacquemiu, cry ing "They are here," springs on a door in the wall facing the window, but it proved to beouly a large cupboard-containing some straw and a mattress. Returning through, the two rooms, the soldiers and police found on the left band a small kitchen, with a window looking out upon the court-yard. Here also there was a hat pureed with fragments of gun-barrels, and there were prints ol fresh blood. There is a ladder in one corner and a trap-door in the ceiliug. This monster of evil, this last embodiment of Satan, must be there. M. Jacquemin is mounting the ladder, when Corporal Uautrep, of the MunicU pal Guard, draws him back, "if they are there," he says, "I am armed." He mounts with sword drawn and pistol ready. His comrades wait impatiently for his cry for help ; but there is nothing there but a portinunteau that has held gun-barrels, a ham mer, a flask basket, and a sealed letter. Jast then, a soldier, looking out at the window, finds a rope hanging down into the court below. It is covered in places with blood, and the oolice at once feel sure that the assassius have escaped In that direction. Whilst all this was going on, Daudlu, a sharp officer, who had run into the court ot the tatal Maison Travant with some men of his bugade, hears Leievre, one of his police agents, cry ing: "I see a man dropping from a rope into the next court. ' Lefevre and a comrade named Devlllers in stantly climbed to the roof of the shed that looked into the next yard, while Daudin went round by another door to the doorot the Cafe des Milles Colonnes, next door, when he was arrested by mistake, and led off to the Chateau d'Eau. In the meantime, the two agents had come upon a short, stoutly built man. stagger ing from a dreadful gaping wound in his temple, and trying, with both hands, to press back tho blood that was gushing down ovei his eyes. He could make no resistance, and waa at once led to the Chateau d'Eau with bayonets held to his fareaet. They found on biffl six franca flay centimes, a packet of gunpowder, a knife with a born Lmulle, a pair ofgreca spectacle! ft Tftbi a4 a life-preserver made of cord and weighted with lead. In the confusion of numerous arrests, the man contrived unobserved to throw a poig nard with a silver handle under a camp-bed. Taken buck to tho room where the infernal ma chine was, and examined belo'e M. (iisquet.tho prefect ol poiice,the procurcur-gencral.the king's procureur, and the commissaries of police, the man explained by signs that he was the aas sin, and coulessed that his name was Girard, the name lound on some receipts for rent which had been discovered to belong to him. He was then liandeo over to Dr. Marjolm and Dr. OIli vier d'Augers, and about two o'clock taken to the Conciergeric. The mdUnntlon at, the h'deous fanaticism, the bloodthirsty vanity of such a piitriot as Girard, aud all who instigated or aidad him, was deep and heartfelt. The people felt that the king represented, however imperiectly, peace, order, and prosperity, and that without him anarchy and murder must relpn supreme. The National Guards, who that very morning had been so cold and sileut, were now loud aud enthusiastic in their cheers, and as the king rode mournfully back to the Tuiler1,'s, shakos waved on thousands ot bayonets, and the "Vive le Roil" ran deafening from street to street. The Bourbonists, who had declared that the Duke de Betry died stabbed by Guizot and De caze's liberal ideas, were now told that the Duchess do Berry's party had incited this mur der. Party spirit, olten dishonest, was now atrociously so. Each party tried by every mean and dishonorable shift to throw tho odium of the crime upon its adversaries. Jn a letter to Marshal Lobau, the king spoko ominously of the murder: "Fienchmen," the king wrote, "the National Guard and the army are mourning; Freuch families aie sorrowing. A frighllul spectacle has lacerated every heart. An old warrior, an old Irlend, spared by the fire of a hundred bat tles, has fallen by my side, struck by the blovs that the assassin destined lor me. In their desire to reach me, they have immolated glory, honor, and patriotism, peacelul citizens, women, and children; yes, Pans has seen ber best bloud shed in the same spot and on the same day on which It was porred five yenrs ago to maintain the laws of the country." The very day ol the attempt the Chamber of Peers was organized as a court of iustice to try toe conspirators, under the presidency of Baron Pai-quicr. Girard was twice examined the day of the massacre, first at No. 60, then iu the Concier geric At first faint and bleeding, he could only feebly hold up his fingers in reply to the questions. He implied that be was alone in the plot; that he had been tor weeks making the internal machine; that it was his own idea alone. He then fell back fainting. No more could at that time be got out of him. In the evening, bandaged and slightly stronger, he coulessed that he had had accomplices, but declared that he alone held the bliudupand fired the train. He was a republican. The agony of his wounds then compelled the doctors to lorbid the wretch being tortured by further questions. The next morning tho man was better, and could speak. He said his name was Joseph Francis Girard, and his wife and child were at Lodeve, near Montpellier. He was thirty-nine years of age. The judge represent ing the enormity of the crime, Girard cried, with broken words: "I am an unfortunate man. I am miserable. I cau hope for nothing. I may render a service. We shall see. I regret what I have done. I may perhaps stop something. I will name no one. I will sell no one. My crime has been too much for my reason." He confessed that the newspapers Lad excited him to the crime. He spoke of the enieutes in the Rue Transnanaia and at Lyons. It was still doubtful whether Girard had really had accomplices. One man declared he had seen three persons at tho window,aud others imagined they saw conspirators escaping over the roof towards the Rue des Fosses du Temple. The portmanteau that contained the gun-barrels was the great clow upon which the police relied. It had beeu brought to Girard three or four days before the crime, and Girard said it came trom his wife, and contained linen and brandy. A waterman at the cabriolet stand in the RueVendomc had carried it from the corner ot the Rue Chariot to No. 60 in the Temple boulevaid. It was a wooden trunk, four teet long, covered with black skin, and very heavy. A commissioner was also found who, on the morning of the 28th. of July, had brought the trunk back lrom No. 5 to the Place Vendome. The cabman he had ordered to drive to the Place Maubert ; but on the way he changed the order to the Place aux Veaux, near the Port aux Tuiles. A cooper's boy had helped him to put the box on his shoulder, and ho walked towui ds the Rue Saint Victor. There the clew was lost, lor Girard himself refused to say where he had taken the trunk; but it was dis covered that he had taken the trunk to a marble-worker named Nolland, No. 13 Rue de Poissy. Girard, whom he had only seeu once, came to him with the trunk, telling him if it was not sent for in an hour not to give it up without an order trom M. Morey, a harness maker, No. 23, Rue St. Victor, who came lor it. Here was another clew. Nolland, taken to the Rue Croulebarbe, pointed to No. 10, at the corner of the Kue de Chant de l'Alouctte. The sc ent got hotter. The people there remembered NolUnd's Iriend. a Corsican, named Fieschi. a shoit man, wiih brown beard and hair, and a southern pronuuciation. He had lived an in famous lile with a woman named Petit, who had a young daughter with one eye, since living in the Salpetriere. He had been the terror of the place, and used to boast of an iulamous con demnation before a military tribuual. The udge's eyes sparkled. This was the man. Nol and, being taken to the prison, at once recognized Girard as his old neighbor of the Rue Croule baibe. Morey's porter identified the fourth story iu No. ll in the Rue du Long Pont as the place to which be had taken the trunk. The ponce lound there a young girl with one eye, named Nina Lassave, Fieschi's last mistress. The trunk was found in the room: she haJ just written on a scrap of paper her intention or Kunng uersen, oiorey naving deserted her after giving her sixty francs to go to Lyons aud hide herself. The trunk had contained Fieschi's clothes and account-books, which she had pawned. The gun-barrels were ideutitied as rejected Government barrels, purchased from M. Bury, a gunsmith in No. 68 Kue do l'Arbre Sec, aud a pupil in the Temple testified to Girard and Morey buying the trunk found at Nina Las save's. A woman, who had been with Nina to the review, declared thatshe returned trembling and detracted with grief, hearing that the murderer was killed. On the 6th of August. Nina confessed the whole. On the 26rh, she went to see her hideous lover, and found him at work at some machine, as she thouolh, inthe ordinary wayof his trade. Fieschi told her not to come to I'ari9 during tho fetes, as there would be disturbances; ana, n sue came, ne said he would not receive her. His manner seemed altered, and he looked careworn. She, however, went the next day, aud me purier ioiu uer mat nescin was tnen snui up with his uncle, an old gentleman (Morey,) ouu tney had given orders that thev would see no one. Some minutes after, she satv Mnrpc and Fieschi sittius too-ether ri riii bine htur iiinlur thtf tent of a cate. Fipsnht. th than ever, came up and told her he could not receive her. The next day, feeling sure the fire had come lrom Fieschi's window at No. 60, she lost her f0PImS ure that her only frieud was oeao; and, packing up her few things at the 5mm rfui:ned t0 Prt to see the trieuds whom Heschi had told her to consult on emergencies She flr8t called on Pep in. a ing him at home, she went, all in tears to Morey, who said to her: ' "Well, what is the matter? It Wfta F(Pirhl then, who fired tbethlu? Is h" dead iS He afterwards, however, owned that he had been with Fieschi on the Monday, and then took the gist to a small wine-shop Outside thH?rrira du Tjone, to talk to her more priyatelv B,trriere . Nina said, "What a dreadful hln, '.n m.n, IKS" ThCy 'fty eneral waTsS i "He was canaille. like the mt It was cruel to kill fifty persona t ret at one. I, who am oaly a woman, tf I had Visaed nlstols. Blld. after havintr firprl with rvno. I should luve shot myself with the other." "Hush I we snaii-t lose by watting ; and he'll give ui his bodv-giiard. Fieschi is an imbecile; he would load three of the guns himsclt, and tt is just those that burst. I urged him to load nis pisioi. nu uiikui io nave Jjlown out his brnins. He la only a brasgart. He went and told in several fdaees that something whs tiouu? to happen on tho day of the review: that ras wrong." "But how did Fie?ehl, who whs an engineer, construct a machine like that?" "It was I who traced the nlan. I have only just torn it up, or I would show It you. The gUllS were iimufu ui;u wy inti iuev CO U III not ntiss; uui ritiaiu uit-u too intr, On his way to dinner outside tho barrier, Morey had stopped at a paper maiuilncturer's to return a passport to a man named Beacher, which nescin nao oorrowuu. ruining oacK, Morey stopped at the corner of ft wall to throw away a bag of bullets be hod in his pocket. I'epin, the grocer, was found in his shirt only, hidden in a concealed cupboard at Magny. He had with him two blouses lor disguise, nine hundred and forty francs, and a volume ot tho works of St. Just. Pepin had already been under accusation for having, in 1832, permitted the lusuigeuts to tire from bis windows In the faubourg at the troops. The police also ar rested Victor boireau, a tinman and a n ember of the danperous Society of the Rights of Man. It was he who, on one of Pepiu's horses, had trotted and galloped past No. 6. in order th it Fieschi and Morey might regulato the. gun oarrels. Beschcr, a bookbinder, who had lent his passport to Fieschi. was also arrested. The trial took place before the Court of Peers, under tne presidency of M. Pa-quior, on the 3()th of January. So great was the internet ex cited in Paris that applications were made to the grand referendary tor seventeen thousand five hundred tickets. Firscbi, now the blood was washed off, and the plaster and poultices removed, appeared a short muscular man, with a hieh, nariow fore head, hollow eyes, livid face, and thin pointed nose. Ills Corsican face gave him a diabolical likeness to a degraded Napoleon. His black hair was cut very short, and shaved over the left temple, where the wounl had exposed the brain; a second wound had gashed his left eyebrow; a third splinter hail ripped the left corner of his mouth, and gave it a sardonic, grinning expression. His left eye was closed, and seemed lower than tho other. His little eyes were quick as those of a rat, and much hidden by the brows. This mon ster of bloodthlsty vanity, calling itself patriot ism, wore a black satin waistcoat and black cravat. He took snuff perpetually, and kept arranging a portfolio of papers with gay and smiling alacrity. He was never still a moment, constantly rising up, sitting down, or turning his hi ad lrom this side to that. He Bhook hands with his counsel, offered snuff to his guards, and seemed piqued at their refusal. He assumed the air ot a great man, whose actions, though mistaken, had been in pursuit of a grand idea. Morey, an old man on the point of dying from a terrible disease, had a calm, fearless manner, and was treated with consistent respect by Fieschi, whose death, however, he had no doubt planned by overloading three of the barrels. Pepin, a mild, talkative, weak man, looked pale and miserably apprehensive. Bescher was careless; Boireau, a very young man, energetic, eloquent, aud assured. Fieschi, in some vague hopes of being re ceived as evidence, confessed, in the course of the trial, the whole progress ot the crime. It was a plan struck out by Morey as earlv as 1821. It was originally a mere soldier's scheme. "I said to myself one day, 'If I was in a for tress with five hundred men, and an epidemic came and carried off halt of them, could I defend the place with a few people left ?' I had then an idea of mounting ninety muskets in a row. With that, thought I, I can destroy a whole regiment with a few men. Morey's wife saw me at it, and told Morey, who came and asked me what it was. I replied, a machine that could demolish Charles tho Tenth and all his family. It was too complicated, how ever, being ranged In batteries, and made for flint looks. "I explained it to Morey, and he said, 'That would do very well for Louis Philippe.' He put the model in his pocket, but did not say what he should do with it." It was then arranged between Pepin, Morey, and Fieschi, and the expense of the whole plot coldly and carefully estimated at five hundred fiancs. They met one day. after dinner, at Pepin's appointment, in the cemetery of Pere la Chaise, to make experiments as to the best way of firing trains of powder. Afraid of being seen there, they went up into the vineyards. Morey drew out his "pear" (small powder-horn) and spread the powder. Pepin struck a light that went out. , Fieschi then lighted the powder in the middle, and his com rades seeing the good ellect, cried at once, "Ca vabien!" "And certainly no way is quicker and sharper than that," added the witness. They afterwards drank together at a restaurant at the Barriere de Montreuil. The sums advanced to Fieschi were found in Pepin's books entered as paid to "the Dauber," as Fieschi was nicknamed from his griininess at his first interview with Madame Pepin. Boireau lent tools to pierce the touch-holes of two of the biurets. Morey had regretted he had not money enough to carry out another project. He had wanted to hire a house next the Chamber of Deputies, aud blow up the king and the princes the day ot the opening of the Cham bers. He also said (he was a celebrated leader at shooting-matches) that if he ouce got the king at the cud of his gun, he'd take good care not to miss him. Fieschi especially insisted on his not being a mere hired assassin. "Ne," he said; "I worked, f gained my bread even while I was about to nuke this attempt. I shall pass in the eyes of the world as a great criminal, not as an assassin. I do not deserve the name of assassiu. An assassin is a mau who kills to get money, but I I am a great criminal un grand coiipable. I declare that I re ceived nothing from anybody. They shsll never say that 1 am a stabber. I had goods from Pepin, but I paid lor them; they were only sugar and trifles." Fieschi mot the Prince de Rohan also at Pepin's, who came, as Pepin said, to discuss some new machine for decorticatmg vegetables, but more probably for political purposes. It was about rive o'clock in the afternoon of the 27th when Morey arrived with the powder aud bullets. The guns were loaded for the most part by Morey. The mounting and load ing took up till after six. Morey then went out, keeping his handkerchief to his mouth. He also took off his July decoration, and turned his back to the people as much as pos sible to prevent being recognized. The barrels that burst were found to have beeu loaded with intervals purposely left between the powder and the bullets, so that they might explode and Fieschi be destroyed. At eleven o'clock that night, alter leaving Boireau and his experiment of riding past, Fieschi went home and tried to sleep, vexed and alarmed at Pepia's disclosures to Boireau. The next morning very early, Fieschi went to a young Coisican, named Sorba, to ask him to be his second in a duel. It was only a pretext to obtain society; for Soroa was too young, and he dared not couhde his fears to him. M. Sorba, who evidently kue w ot the plot, said to him, You have an unlucny hand." At halt-past nine Fiesehl met Boireau again on tho boulevards. Boireau left the friends with whom be was, and eald to Heschi: "We are all ready. You go to your work ; we shall be atourpobts." Fieschi then met Morey on the Rue Basse du Rempart. Morey proposed, alter all was de molished, to destroy the telegraphs, to set tire to the barns in the baulleue, aud to attack the National Guard when they came to put out the f rMorey said that when the Government was once tree, the world would be happy, and the nation rich. Small fortunes were to be left alone- but when a man had a million, all beyond three' hundred thousand franca were to bo thrown into the national funds. Pepin clapped ' him on the back, and said, "Mon brave, you shall be recompensed." But Fieschi I replied, the Government was not to be shut uplfleattfl-boi. There would U civil wars, APRIL 18, 1807 and all he wished was to win g'ory at the head ot one bundled or two hundred men. and chase the stranger from tho Rlnne. and drive of the ( os'aeks, who were je.ilous of Franeo. Peotn then declared that the hea ls of all suponrter. of monarchy must roll along tho streets like paving stone's. .. On the 15th of February, the seventeenth audience, the Court brought a verdict ol giultv auainst all the prisoners but Bescher, who was acquitted; Fieschi, Morey, aud Pepin were condemned to death; Boireau to twenty year' detention, and to bo for the rest ot his lite under tho surveillance ol the police. Morey heard his sentence with cairn lu Oillercnce, Pepin with assurances of his inno cence, Fieschi with vain and verbose assurances of repentance. . He had become a lion of the day, and keenly relished the popularity he had acquired o dearly. F-ven the peeis applauded some ot hn Fallics. With distorted face and sardonic smila he watchel eagerly tor his moments ol recrtini naMon or seli-assertion. The antecedents of Fieschi were soon un ravelled. He was a Corsican of Genoese extrac tion, born at Murato in 1TU0. His father, a con demned criminal, had died in voluntary exile. One of the assas-in's brothers fell atWagram; his only sister was blind. A second btother, born dumb, was so heartbroken wnh eriel at the news of Fieschi's crime, that be reuiaiued two whole dajs without taking lood. Giuseppe FieBchi was originally a goatherd, but, being quick and adventurous, soon to t Corsica, enlisted In a regiment of light intaniry nt Naples, and, displaying much zeal and cour a"e, became regimental staii-sergcant by ths tune he was nineteen. Entering Murat's Guards, he distinguished himself by great courage in the campaigns ot 1812 and 1814, and won fie decoration of the Two Sicilies. In 1815 Fieschi deserted to tbo Austriaus, and h's in formation, it is said, contributed to bis old mas ter's deleat at Tdeutino. When Murat was at Vescovato, Fieschi re)oined him, und was sent on impirtant secret service to Naples. His reports encouraged Murat to his ra-h and fatal cxpedrlon. On landing at 1'izzo, Meschi re quested leave to go first and reconnoitre, ai,d a very snort time niter murat was snot oon oy the penoaTtnes ot Monteicone. Traitor or not, the man did not thrive. He returned to Corsica a bet gar, to wrangle with bis brother-in-law tor a share of the fraternal heritage. Unable to obtain even a sou, Fieschi took the law into his own hands, and, like a true Corsican moss-trooper, drove on a cow be longing to his brother, and sold it openly in the market place, brought befoie a magistrate, he produced lorged tapers to prove bis right, aud was in consequence arrested and sent to Bastia. Here he escaped to the mom, tains by leaping lrom a window twenty leet irom the ground. Iu 1816. when only twenty-six years old. Fieschi wag condemned to ten years' imprison ment at umhrun, aud to police supervision ior lile. At Embrun ho learned the trade of a cloth-maker; and when he was released, break ing the ban, be went to Lodeve, aod practised his trade. From there he went to the royal manu'actory at Villelouvette, conducting him self there well, and with a pretense ot religion. Coning to Paris, he obtaiued help Irom his old commander, and became porter at a newspaper office abd a sd.v of the police. It was at this time that he sought helo of Morey, and described him sell as wretched as the dog that looks tor food at a street corner. Most men, be aiterwards said, in such misery, must have gone mad or thrown themselves out ot the window. It was in this poverty and despair that men like Morey took advantage ot his cunning, recklessness, and mora iu ate vanity, ice uov ernment observing that a sort of boastful grati tude was a leading point in his character, per suaded him to disclose the plot to his old bene- iacior, ai. iaovocar. The king, in acknowledgment, forgave Fieschi the pairic.de's penalty of wearing a black veil on the scaffold, aud walking to the guillotine with bare feet. While he was undergoing the toilette, be merely said: "Is it not heart-breaking that I should bo the first executed for political causes since 1830? I would rather have remained on the field at Beresina." Pepin was cruelly bound in the camisole. While his hair was being cut off, he said to Fieschi: "I am your victim." Fieschi was going lo reply, but his confessor stopped him. Heschi then throw himself at Pepin's leet, and begged him to tell the whole truth, as he had done, that he might appear before God without lear. Pepin heaved a sigh and replied, "No, I can say nothing. I will not compromise lathers of families." A 8 lor Morey, he was so weak that he had to be lifted on lo the scaffold; but he said calmly; "It is not courage I want, but legs." The scaffold hudonly been erected at a quar ter before seven; at quarter past eight the execution took place In the Place de Jacques, beiore a vast crowd fhut filled every avenue. Pepin was calm and resigned, and declared his innocence to the last. "Since I must die, I will die. I have nothing more to say," he replied to the police agent, who, whi e he was being strapped to the plank, still urged him to cou letsion. He died first. Morey then ascended, calm and Imperturba ble; the plank went down, the old man's neck was clipped by tho lunette a second head rolled Into the sawdKst. Heschi fcaid to the people that he had told the truth, and died without fear. Fieschi left his head to Nina Lassave, m order that she might benefit by the sale of plaster-casts taken from it. The doctor who had healed Fieschi's wounds opened the skull to see how the cure hud operated. The poor girl Nina was hired a few days after as dame du comptoir in the Cafe de la Renaissance, in the Place de la Bourse. There, in flame-colored satin, and with rich ornaments in her hair, the miserable creature sat, at salary of oue thousand fraties a month. The cafe was daily tluonged by unfeeling idlers, who launched at her cruel sarcasms, re proaches, and disgusting ribaldry, until Nina often fainted, and was carried out of the room. When she returned aud resumed her seat, she used to pathetically entreat that sport might not be made of her misfortunes. She is de scribed as a rather pretty, mild, one-eyed girl, with a vulgar expression, and with two fingers eaten off her right hand by scofula. The massive oak frame of the infernal ma chine, with its split gun-barrels, may still be seen at M'me Tassaud's, that indefatigable old lady having instantly pounced on the relic ot a remarkable crime. The infernal machine was not an oiiglual thought ot Fieschi's, for, in the year 1789, a watchmaker named Brillou, being expelled from the Arquebusters1 Company at Senlis, deter mined on revenge. He fired a train of gun bai rels at the procession as it passed his window, shot a man who broke into his barricaded room, aud then blew up the house with all who were In it. The only man who escaped was tho sol dier who tried to drag him out. and he had twenty wounds, an eye knocked out, aud a knee pan broken. All the Year Hound. NEW PUBLICATIONS. pilANG'S SUPERB CHROMOS 11K1VAL, TO OIL, PAIKTIKCM. Consisting of the Group ot Quails, Little Chickens, , DucklliiK's, Victory, Winter Crowned Wreu, Kuby V reu, yvt aud Mit-Ci Bikers, the A wakeniuif. I Lie bisters, Amerlcau (Jem LttnUsc&iibH, )S klmla: Worlp tare Texts. MotUues, etc.; Album uud huuday hk'hool Cards, ben and Wood il oases, lSuuerlliiH. Autumn l eaves, Hosts, etc. tic A splendid assortment fur sale by a. W..PITOIIE11, Healer In Albums, Photographs, Pictures, Aud Manufacturer of Frames of all stales, 826 1111 NO. SOU CHEMNi'T STREET A II the Kfw Bookg on band as soon as Issued. P1ITT.AT1FI PHTA O TT TJ (1 E n M Wfr? BANDAtiK INbTlTllTK. No. 14 N " NINTH Hireet. arutva Xliii-kt. K. C EY KKKTT, after tlilrty years' practical eipeneno Kiiaraultioa the sklllul adjustment of his Pruuilui Patent Graduating l'reemire TruH, and variety i other. hupporlera, Klastlc blockings, bhoulde Brace, Cruuihea, buBuetulers, eio. Ladles' avail muni oouUuvted by a lUy DrtY GOODS. pRICE i WOOD,, N. W. tor. EIGHTH and FILREKT, I1AVK JUfT OPENED One lot of Plaid silk Poplins, m-ia a yard. Fine Quality French Pen alea. All-wool Delaines, choice sondes. Melange Poplins, very cheap. Black All-wool Delaines and Black Alpaca , . Oros Gram Black Silks, cheap. i'lald and Btnpe scotch Uluahams, , Black and White Baluiorul Skins. M 1IITE UOOON t WHITE UOOIM I Jus: opened, a large lot of P'lald tfaluaook Muslins. Very clit'hp. White l"l(ties, 50, so, s, S5. 7S, 800., and 11. Bull Piques, 7S rent per yard. Mint liuish CuUihrloa, Jaconets, Nainsook, Swiss MuMliift, Vliturin I.nwns, and W lute l'arletaus. A new lot of H iKUred Swiss Mulls, very cnettu, W hlie Mamelile. and Hone) comb (4uiKs. Colored Alhumbra Quilts. EI MEN UOOlttt! EI Si EN UOODHI Table Mnins. Napkins, and Towels, best makenMilrunif Linens. Aprou lilrd-l!) e and ..Nursery Dinners Linen iluukuliack, by uu yard. DltHLINM! BfRt makes Shlrtlug, Mnslliix. Pillow-case, and Sheeting Juki opened, a Inrnelot of Ladies', Qonts'. and Chil dren's Linen I umtirlc lldkls Ladlen' Hull, White and Colored Borlln Oloves. Cliiloren's Jtntl. White a .0 Colored Oloves. Ladles' J-ng isu tsilk CJloves. Jouvlus Kid tihjves.best quality Imported. piuol: & Wood. N. W. Corner EIGHTH and FILBERT Streets, N. B.-Cloths suitable for Ladloa' Cloaks aud A cneap lot o nil-wool Casslnieres. Ladles' aud Children a liuup bkiris. loffl 229 FARIES & WARNER, 229 NORTH NINTH STUEKT, ABOVE It ACE, WILL OPEN TO-DAY One case double width all wool Delaines, choice colors, btst noons yet ollered, 6Sc. a yurd. Black A Ipacas, 4n. 46, Mi, Su, 115, 70, sic, etc Yurd wiue t-pmiK CUiuUt 8, i-'to. Plum and Figured Percales, Mourning Chintzes, etc bprlug Delaines, Plaid Poll ae Chevres, etc, UO.TlK.STM.tt at reduced prices. 2(Miu yards Bleached Muslin at 12!t'c, worth 15c, by the case Bleached Sheeting, 2'i yards wide, SOo. Piilon-case Muslin, l' yard wide, Hoc Heal W ater '1 wist Bleached Musllu, Mc Best makes ol Bleached Muslins. . One bule ol Rood Busnla Crash, 12c. 1 able Linens, Kapklus, Towels, etc. Bullardvale Flannels, reduced prices Best It cull wool Flannel ill cltv. Yard wide Douiel Flauuel, 37.c. Meltons, for boys' wear, Bsc. bprlus Lalmoruls, (I 'S, n llllE Uul)i WHITE tiOODMl Marseilles Quilts, from auction, bargains, Lare Plato ftalusooks, 5u, 65. to, aud s6c Plaid Nainsooks, -5, 31, u7,'jC.. etc Hue Victoria Lawns, 31, i.',, s, 50, and 80c. Plain and birlpeU Nainsooks, bwlss Mulls, etc bhirred Muslins. White Marseilles, etc Aprou Bird-eve, Nurseiy Diaper, etc Linen blurt i runts, so, i7a, 46, (O, M, 62),', and 75c, Three-ply Linen Culls, lac B0 doz. Misses' Linen HdklB.. 10c Butcher Linen, 40 Indies wide, 54 and ffilic. UeutB' boring uud bummer Underwear. Cents' Neck-ties, busueuders liukls.,elc Hosiery ai reduced prices. Ladies' bluing Uloves, 2tic. up. Hamburg LdiouKH aud Inserting. O. F. elvet Bihbons. all widths. aouo Linen Fans, at all prices, etc etc FARIES & WARNER, , KO. 229 NORTH NINTH STREET, AT THORNLEY'S ! ! ! NEW GOODS, HEAETirtTL CIOODS, CAM MI ON A BEE HOODS, DECIDEDLY CHEAP ClOODS SIEK GOODS, DUES GOODS. UN EN GOODS, DOMESTIC GOODS WHITE GOODS. GOODS FOB MEN, GOODS FOR DOTS GOODS FOB CUIEDUEN. IN FACT, THORNLEY'S, N. E. CORNER EIGHTH AND KFRING GARDEN STREETS, Is a good place to buy DRY GOODS, because you are sure to get the worth of your money, aud always a large block lo select from. "ONE PKICE CASH STORE." , THE FIVE BTORY WHITE BUILDING. Established in 1803. fa lanmsp No. 1101 CHE8NUT bireeu KID GLOVES. "ANGELE." This Glove being cut by the STSTEME JOSEPHINE, WITHOUT BEAM ON 6IDE, renders it the best fitting Glove Imported. The extensive sale of it by Flrst-Class Re tailers in New York, in competition with other makes, la a guarantee or Its quality. E. M. NEEDLES fit CO., M.YV. Corner le veutti and Chesnut 1B9J1H XflKKjtHO I0II 'OtJ CI1KAP DRY GOO I 8, CARPETS, MATTIXGS, OIL CLOTJib, AND WINDOW bHADris, V E- ARCHAMBATJLT, N. E. Corner ELEVKNTH and MARKET Streets, opened this morning.f rom auction Iiusraln Carpets, all wool, at 76c., 87c, II, $125. Jl'ST. aud IPSO. Ingrain Carpels, wool filling, 40c, 60c.. and 62c. Fjigllsh Tapestry Brussels Carnets, only SP75. Entry and btalr Carpels, Mo. to 76c Rag Carpets 4.5c. iPj6c7I,,Hemp Carpew, 8oc to 62c. Floor Oil Cloths, 6oc. Window Hhades. tl to 3. Plain Window Hol land, 60c. White Malting. 87c to 6uc Red Matting. WO"" gussets. II to 110 biilr oil Cloths, 25c. bprlng Chiuttes, iac to aoc. DeLaluea. S6c. Muslins, lie to 26c ' r tP t. CHEAP 8TORE, r219m N. E. Corner ELEVENTH and MARKET btreem. J CHAMBERS, No. 819 AUCH STREET, . Novelties Opening Dally Meal Cluny Laces. Black Guipure Laces. Polute Appiiuue Laces, Poinle de Gaze Laces. Thread Veils lrom ,2'&o. WHITE GOODS. Mantel lies tor Dresses Bargains. Bhi..-re".Cn.Wr,Blin,B' 2 ,ardB wWtJ. l B0 cents. Bhirred anil Tucked Lace Musllu India Twilled Long Cloth ; Plaid, blrlne. and Plain Nalimook soft tinisL Cambric, 1 yartf wide: Cambric Edgings' and Insertions, new dealgn vary cheap- t n'i PROPOSALS. O ,penksylia railroad com. Proposal.' will iFSSSZTfrRfSS Vh. Pennsylvania Railroad Company, PhUadalnhli i.mil the llrat day of May. l7, Include T( uuh m iftuKJ tory proposal .houfcJ be received inU SLnKd , Line of bteamSlup. llt i41ank forma of tirw.i . . .. tlon, will be .urnlih-e'd ZSSST " I'.UMI naiUimu a REMOVAL. TJSJM18 REMOVED TO NO 412 "UNE bireet. betweVn Fo7:;.K,.VTS,.."f ruhev win . - - -T V. la auu jruiu continue their Manufactory I. tlf In BVurif . .. , . i . idbTlveVbo,,;V04a Bllvw' OK r. a raoj ld Uohl