Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, May 01, 1852, Image 1

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MOOT PAID WITHIN •THREIIIDONTII. ' 1
of' NOT PAID WIZHIN , ISIX 'PONTIUS. . 11
IP NOT PAID WITHIN NINE MONTHS. '1 71
IfNOT r
frqs.Thi above tonal SIMS,' flbirral as th6seof ttii? tatty'
v•••• swamis paper la the 13tato.avid swill be sticited,.
•
IStalspgaUwlascio wW bs allowed until all stroarssuhav
boo* piva. ; , • • • , •.• • •
PUTT ; /MD 'Assume AP PO3thaSTE)ll3.
ta footf
"Podoirire sato ootlfy Mr oublidier. ex dkeoted
lry leen Alie r that peons an lot littod by thosotO Whom
they. me 111 KM tbetohhiverr bald Aiptbialbie for the
mese% of t o Masai: '
Pandas Moir move pedseseed to the:Melte.. or to titian.
become anbaeriben. aid are /table for the PtIOS Or 'IMMO
;Moss Is ridtir tiattrait4 ail! ttlrb*ithritrt the ,00rraty,
POO Os abates.
For the Clearfield Republican
ThalWaNtigbbott dtid.the Bear,
INELFIRIINERS REPROVED.
Two metibitee live:4l'lfeet tieight4s'itt a wood,
The ono ilea selfish And the other 'good. • •
Repeated;tfets of kindneter done by John
To Christophi made no more improetuon on
The jailer. than a wolf caught in a snare, .
Would thank the hand that gently smoothed hue heir;
For almost daily kindness he received.
The thought to make return-was not conceived.
It happened on the last day of a week,
Good neignber:.fohn his cattle went ters'ifecilt.
And piiising late, near to his neighbor's farm,
A bear rose up and nearly seized his arm;
lie leaped .behind a tree to clear his jaw.,
A ndcaught the savage beast by both fore paws;
Then calling Christepti! Cbristoph! with all might
lie was compelled to hold the bear all night.
At length to his great joy appeated thb'day.
And he shoaled "Christoph, come this way."
But Christoph merely stood within his door
Arid looked a while and went in as before.
"Atm, alter eating breakfast, he at last •
Went, axit' in hand, to AA how John waiLlast;
And coming slowly, theta beheld the plight,
In which 'poor John had been throughotp the night
Ah! Chrisloph, why then did you not come out,
For you heard me long ago, nu doubts
Yes John, I heard you cull, that Is so;
But that you was thus flied I did not know.
111 had Corna lam night amid the dark
To kill the bear, I would have missed the mark;
But now 'l have my breakfast and am hero,
I'll split his skull at once, You need nbt leer.
Says John, ( ask one favor now from you;
Please hold hint white( cleave his head in two;
It would give me much pleasure now at least.
To have a chance to kill the ugly beast
Christoph replied, tt•ell John 111 bold the bear,
And, you will kill him and give me a share.
But John,szt.xasxp, went home with axe in hand,
And left neighbor Christoph stand.
• -
mtele
Own-
I hilts
When evening was &swing on apace,
Friend John returned with smiles upon his face;
And said, you see wo all du need a friend,
For on each other we do oft depend. -
To aid each other. then should be our sum
If you cliim kindness, go and do the sacao. ,
eritisloph replied, 'tie truly** you say.
Now kill tho bear,
_and relo:m to-day. - . It
me,
Cos
was,
ustric
ASA INOLLIN'S ADVENTURES.
Asa T. Knollins was a genuine specimen
(Stile down-east Itankee---a log chopping,
trading, sea going ambicious animal, pas.
Ping his time between the ocean and the
main land. In one of his voyages befere
the main , mast he went to Porto Rico, and
by some chance it happened that his ves
sel sailed without him. Asa felt somewhat
homesick when compelled to prolong his
visit, and watched eagerly for an opportu
nity of returning to, his own, his native
One evening he was walking along the
sea side in a melancholy guise he was sud
denly surrounded by a gang of British sai
lors belonging to the sloop of war Terrible,
commanded by Capt. Bagshot, and then
busy taking water and other stores prepar
atory to a continuance of her three year's
sruise. Asa-was disposed to show fight at
first, but as the press gang was armed with
cutlasses, he concluded his best policy was
to submit quietly, and so he entered the
barge, without opposition, and was ,taken
on board the slay, That bight, as he lay
awake brooding over his misfortunes, he
chhlked out his plan dr conduct,which was'
no othorthan to feign of simplicity amount
ing almost to idiocy, and to display as lit
tle knowledge of seamanship as possible.
He knew how to throw into his counten
/Mee a complete vacancy . and innocence,
calculated to throw the shrewdest observer
off his guard.
Tho next day at noon, a' dish'of broiled
beans was set before him, without any oth
er "fixins." Our
.friend- flared up at the
meagreness of the entertainment.:
"Riled beans and•na pork i" he exclaim
ed. "This is a little too mean, I 'swow
Taira fit Tor a dog.,
"Hadn't you better complain to the tap
tain '1" •asked the black-whiskered , boat
swain' with a'sneer., . .
• ' ord 'sea, hess,", remarked
Knoilins.. a:brit idea. ‘Cont
plain to-the Captain S 9 Twill."
And-regardless of opposition, be - bolted
Into,the where - Capt.' Bagshot sat at
dinns_ 'with three or TobEef his officors.
are you 1" asked , the!
Oapteirb fiercely Dainglis , 'Luirago . eyes en
~ tha Yankee, ! " •• ,
"Who be I," pjacatite,4
i"Why, , I'm Asti T. - Knolling, , coe'rr,
bola Well4-Land lieW , 'ethei folio at
bu g Y.9r1Y.,A017.21111.E' :
"Your name is Jonathan ) , guess,"
~s aid
Cleagshot,,tnimi r cking the namal:tone
- .:''el'& it Asa t . Lnollinaloithe
"WeWivilat doiioWitabf 'of Mlir
! 40eganw to. me you Wie, pretty well
ap,"
said Asa, looking over the ta ble.
lips* lalletifixhieru. Ebi e l te rns i , . h an i i J p ifi c i
apples an& o:baijayruhl !Yiivfoook hatn't
did the clean thine:by ;A I Ihotigh4:llTOM
yaw don'tknew nochint:etiou i r 4,00
-*height rd iitep hero.and
Itioik 44%0,44 Why,
teleig`lber& ItOtunCwilliout'poik Ir„
finelow,ftiiatOtlifl lte-tonlh-ingt"
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. A WEEKLY PAPER .DEVOTED LITERA I PURE,-AaiilolJatißE, MORKLYTY, ADO tOßEidtsl DONESTIc INTELLIGENCE.
Volume a.
• ,
exclaimed the captain, willing to, humcir
the charactir."
"Yes, cap'n bear's without , pork. Don't
that bait all nature?"
"What do jou live on. when you're at
homer' asked the captain. , • .
"Pork and beans, biled chowder, flap
jacks,, and doughnuts," answered . Asa,
"What aro tlap-jacks I" asked the cap-
tam.
, "Don't you know, why 1 I thoughteyery
fool know'd that! They're made out 041 our
and eggs, and milk, ruul water, beaten up .
Iter-Slap, and. then they're &plied into a
firen' pan and done brown, an4PQrVeduP
- with rneylesies, or nierlasses and butter,
which over ypu cheese, and of they don't
go,down slick, ther's no stuns in Rox
bury!"
. .
"iteu seem to like merlasses," said the
captain.'
"Wall, I guess,' Clu," said Asa: "But
I not raw as, your lelleri eat it." , -
"Hciw then?".
,
" Wa11,.1 like to run a stick into the
bung hole of a hogshead', and then pull it
eout and draw it through my mouth.
it good then t Wall, 1 guess as how it is."
"Well Jonathan."
)
"Asa, cap l n. l
"Jonathan, I say you can go now, and
I'll see about the pork to-morrow."
Asa.went back to his astonished ship
mates, reporting the captain was a purty
slick sort of a fellur."
One day when the men didn't tumble
up from below with the requisite alacrity,
the boatswain, rattan in hand, gave each
of them .a "reminder" with his stick as ho
came on deck. Am wait the last as usu
al, but watching the boatswain's bamboo,
he caught the weapon in his hand and
dexterously twisted it out of the officer's
grasp.
I "Hello ! whiskers I" said he "I hope
you - don't mean to , hit me cause it
hurts a fellur. ' No, you didn't—wall I
thought so-4 forgive you," and ho threw
the rattan overboard, escaping to the quar
ter deck, where his originality and suppos
ed imbecilitY, iecured him impunity. In
fact-ho was treated as a privileged buffoon
by the Officers.
Taking up a cannon ball ono, day, he
asked-, , -
"What'n the world yep3.,thing,
cap'nl
"That's what we keep to pepper the
Yankees with;" answered Bagshot.
"Want to know,"said Asa, "How'd you
work it?"
"We put them into those big guns and
fire them off."
"Shavi ! you don'rsay. be they travel
purty fast cap'n I"
"So fast you can't see 'ens." ,
"Hilda feller when they hit 7 41 '
"Yes when they'rq fired out of a gun."
"Not otherways?"
"No."
"Then here goes !" Cried Asa ; and
handling the inissel like a , bowling ball he
let it drive among the legs of the officers
and men, shouting; "hurrah ! let her rip!"
Cries of rage and pain followed.
"Seems to me,. cap'n," said Asa coolly,
"them here things does hurt a fellur, even
if they aint fired out of a gun." -
One, day Captain Bagshot Called Asti aft.
"Jonathan" said he, "there is a boat along
side : you.may get your traps
. together,
and go - ashore. think - his niiilesty can
do without you."
"Wall, cap'n," replied Asa, "before you
spoke. I'd purty much made up my mind
to quit. I ken make better wages fishing
by a great site. Besides I want to go hum
to see the folks. Good bye cap'n I shall
see you again." •
"I think net," said the
"I guess I shall. Good bye."
And with a light , heart Asa'bid adieu to
the Terrible. • •
More than three years eller, during the
war of 1812, a British armed vessel lying
at St. Johns, was boarded and carried in
a dark' night, by *sl daring.band , of Ame r--
can pn l vateersinen.; The miniver° secure
ed - ,'ado ado hy!cine; ati theicaine. ,The leader
of the exhibition then sought"the compel:l
-' der, anademended his sword.;' Indignant
and confou n ded Capt.tßitgglitit asked the
name of his captor. •
"Lord ,blegglob, cap'n" answered , a fa.
miliar• voice, don't you know me? I'm
Asa s T. Knelling 0111tJ3e.aPleilaloitg_o' you, fr. spell . . biok r at Porte i Rien f 1 told yowl
guessentilie r abliee ilea again; tied whtn
Yooko6:ooitei
Make yourself comfortable cap'n,
dad excuse , me for a motnent,: 'tide Ifve
kat down your ftag,rea up,the slt(ra
dtil'airilies,"tilid , work, the vessel idto POt
.- •
is a curl.
Cala rack that. wh enevdr the winter 'usu.
Beatty eettete:dh this 3 13 b le, of Abe Atlantic,q
e.wteeli la, tinCetrimonly iriSerope.
'lj@,Wsr4fest WVintbrwe rernerriber:watt,e9..
i 4 MO* :,Wittititle , the 'ord'world ea so.
vete that it hitt al rtiost`pawkil into a pro.
lierb..-Thetikktittiit'a4tpa, which has been
bore
sciatensoyo4peyed ei geeif
iaParis, ,
,imyeed-by
the
I.l:eutEPPraturc, ; If*onlete+tit Wen*
iipuliuiticiY,Vanitet4cs.4o. ,fricad
tiaditt '
=EMI
- . Fzeid the N.Y. Republic.
Incidents in the tattle - et New Orleane.
ot'Witotits
Was in the battle
of Isiefr Orleans, mentions, an Incident
ofthrillidg' `: ittratignnesS,'and one very'des
ciPtive of the Western hunter, many of
whom Marched to, the
in
of Neiv
Orleans, as Voliddeerti in the army under
the telieWned Andrei , Jacksen,
"Vire nirehed," seta the 'officer, "In a
thouthind men, in 'a
direct lino upon 'the Altierietin defences.—
f belonged to the hoar ; and as we adianc- ,
ed, iviitehed through our 'Olises the
pesitien rind arrangenients of, Our enern,Y,
with that intensity an Officer only feels
When marching into the jaWs of. death,
With the assurance that, While he thus of
fers himself as a Sacrifice to the demands
or his caul:dry, every defied; be he sucess
ful or otherwiSeovill be judged with the
most heattleis strutiny.
"It wise strange Sight, that tong range
of ebtfon balds--a dew material for breast
Works—with the dr oiv d Of beings behind,
their heads only vieible above, the line of
defence. We cofild distinctly see their
long rifles tiring over the bales and the
battery of General Cabe directly in our
fried, with its great Mouth gaping towards
us, as if they waited to deveur us, and the
position of General Jacksbn, with his staff
around him. But that 'whichattracted
our attention ghost, Was the 'figure of
a tall man, standing dn tho breastworks
dressed in linsey-woolsty, with buckskin
leggiris, and abroad-brimmed felt hat, that
fell around the face,almost congealing his
features. He was standing in one of those
pkturesque, graceful attitudes, peculiar to
those natural men,dwellers in forests. The
body rested on the left leg, and swayed
with a curved line Upward ; the right'rm
was extended, the hand grasping the rifle
near the muzzle the butt of which rested
dear the toe of his right foot, while with
the left hand he raised the rim of the hat
from his eyes, and teemed gazing from
beneath intensely upon our advancing col
umn. The cannon of Galeria Coffee had
opened upon us, and tore through our
ranks with dreadful slaughter; but we
continued advance, itoWaveriog , and
cool, ai If nothing threatened our progress.
I, The roar of cannon had no 'effect upon
the figure standing on t 1 cotton bales, but
he seemed fikedand Motionless as a statue.
Af last he Meted, threat back the' hat rim
over the crown With his' left hand, raised
the rifle to the shoulder, took' him at our
group. • Our eyes were rivited upon him;
at whom he leveled his piecel But the
distance was se great, that we looked at
each other nod smiled. We saw the rifle
flash, and my right-hand companion, as
noble a looking fellow as ever rode at the
head of a regiment, fell from his saddle.—
The hunter paused v. few moments, with
out moving the gun • from his' shoulder,
then re-loaded, and assumed his former
attitude. Throwing' the hat rim over his
eyes, and again holding it up with the left
hand, he fixed his piercing gaze upon us;
as if hunting out another victim. Once
more the hat rim was thown back, the gun
raised to the shoulder. This time we did
not smile, but cast short glances at each
other, to sea which of rta. 'must die; and
when again the rifle flashed, another of us
dropped to the earth. There was some
thing the most awful in thus marching on
to certain death. General Coffee's bat
tery, end thousands Of musket-balls play
ing aped our reukti, we cared not for—
there• was a chance ofescaping unscathed;
most of us had walked as 'cooly upon the
batteries a hundred times more destructive
without quailing ; but to ktiow that every
time that rifle , Wasieveledtowaida us, add
its ballet sprang .frore the barrel,• one of
us must MS surely fall ; 1 to see the gleitra
ing sun flash as • the deadly :iron . came
clown;• and see rest, motionless as If Ole
ed upon a , roek,•iind knoW, when the hard
mer struek,•and the Spaxkflew to the full
primed. pan, , thni , the' Messenger . of death
drove uneinnkly.taittigoal-4o knovi this
-and- still , mareh on, Was awful. t ir cduld
see nothing but the. Rill figure sledding on
the bresstwetrks ; he' seethed' to gre*,
phantoratlilce , higher and highet,ifietithing
through the einokellatiptiknatural
anis of some great: 1304 of death; degn
did 'he reload and - rehitid
and disehargelliiivrille:viith thn' Sited
failidg aim,' and with theSaifie unfailing ,
result; and it Wad with indeacribablepleatt;
um that beheld, , tis ivelnearlit the Ariidi-
It:an the aulplittiene' clea': gather
ing armada tai l 'itad , abtittind . fhat - Speetitil.
times fromimy ge*e: Aver 16404 bridle
add,•tO:uly mild; cite'
teoritributed• Me& itd , our 'defeat' 'tiny
Thing 431 es fort: while •he • rentairiett od r
sight, bar attentibri was drawn' (rein' 'mit'
tutietr; and althe itild',-Vvt? tibeiiide
enshroadedtihithesmdke; 'the *ea'
InciniPlateo4wnre l in ilientter rCbrifi k ien
aM: onablevilvthenitrienitylnXinitil Or
der inffieient make thy' stfoLras?tltt~' r dt•
tickt We relit Atieb bidder. '
1; ..) , filoilotirste thertraiddit' Ott theiritiandli'df
mfivrirernalar lha hart& thil "poPle
shitolte 666)0 1 0.0e 6610004
tgestuj i tabte , tinAhele:dritvtirlii.J.
chinplotittlici)exiitre era' 41 '
iigkii?kiikilie!
ithiecamproofshutukird • 1 . fifty , - yeitodi,
ka., i, 1852.
in the timid vital point, so Tong n's there is
,a great prOpertion 'ofthe' republic wholly°
free oil the wild Indian, knowing iM leader
but Of their iiivn choosirlg,, ktuitving
lakkvbut that of right, and the honorable
obgetv'anob of friendly interequeae,'Anier
ien is uneoriiiberable • and till the armies
of the combined worlil, though they Might
drive theist from the sea-coast, arid across
the Allegheriy Mountains,woUld not be able
to subdue the free Smiled hunter rtmongst
the mountains; and great prhiriei, W and
*mighty river's of the West. .
MYSTERIOUS OCCURRENCE. ,
An occurrence of a, somewhat mysteri
ous and melancholy character, recently
tor* place at a hotel in New York, the
particulars of which, says the Newark
Miming Eagle, have come to the writer's
knowledge, and arer as follows: ,
Some six weeks • since, a lady, took
rooms at .the hotel• before alluded .to; she
was, yoeng end beautiful, and 'from her
manner and genteel appearance, had evi
dently been used to refined society. She
was without companions or attendants of
any kind, and from the moment she enter
ed the hotel seemed to prefer the retire
rrient of her own room—seeking, the ac
quaintanco of no one, and taking her
meals in her private apartment. , During
the first , ter!, days of her, residence there,
In gentleman, apparently a stranger, and'
of prepossessing appearance, called to see
her upon two separate - Occasions. end was
admitted to her room;
. since which, time
nothing has been seen or heard of him.
Matters went on in this way for several
days, when the lady complained to the
Waiter who attended her, of being very ill,
and reqUested him to procure rt_physician.
who, when he came, pronounced the dis
ease,to be fever and ague, and prescribed
accordingly. She, however, refused to
take any medicine whatever, and contin
ued to grow worse daily. Suffering (as'
she informed the waiter,) from a. barning
fever, she ordered a basin of ice water.
with which it appears she -bathed herself
freely. Thie treatment, as might , bo, ei
pected, brought on inflammation of the
lungs, from which she never recotered,
but sunk gradually into that "sleep that
Imowri no waking.'
For several days previous to her death
'she was attended by a lady, a resident at
the same betel, who, learning the peculiar
circumstances of the case, volunteered her
services, and continued almost day , and
night, to watch by the pillow of the,aying
stranger, until she finally closed her eyes
in death. To this lady the unhappy wo
man revealed the story of her lite, under
a sacred promise never to divulge it, be
yond that she was the daughter of a judge
a resident of Long Island, N. Y., and that
her husband was wealthy and held a high
official station under the government at
Washington. She also stated that she
hlid no wish to live longer in this world,
but prefered death, and continued to re
fuse any medicine to the last.
She had ample means in her possess-
Sion, and made all the necessary appropri
ationS for her funeral expenses—requested
that she might be laid out in a rich c.assi
mere dress, which she ordered to be purch
ased for that purpose, and that her body
might be deposited in Greenwood:COM.
tery.
A few hours before her death, she took
from her fingers several #aluable rings,
wept over them for a' moment, and the'n
handed them to the lady Who had evinced
so much kindness towards het, remarking
that they were ineipmssibly dear to her,
bur that she had nd further use let them
now, and' begged their acceptance as'a
token of remembrance. :' "
After her death;'an inivertisernent was
inserted in seveml of the city papets, stet
ing the facie, id 0144: that her friends
might pave an' opportunity to claim her
tea:albs. Oil the day appbinted for her
funeral, twolgentidineri.called at the hotel
and requested to see the . body ; their re
quest Was complied with, and open, vie*.
ing the filatures eif the demised; they burst
into. tears and•acknow !edged' then:443l9Mb,
one , to be 1:1 1 uncle and the other to hither
eitly - hiother, *hose feelings' Ott thd' oe
Itxtsion can hettey be iiitaglad • that{' des- 1
oribedh Her death ha's' pieta* &rift a
veil over a seetie'of seductiohL and ' dear--
; Oa r the particulars of Whieh inky 'tither
ha made pane:
„ Wm' di*ruction Law. Il_e_pealed. ..,
.oe,Weilnecday lust, the House; passed
o,#,Oeputt), )41 to rppeali the; aw Which
Keyented
,the keepore cf , prisons in our
_,State from receiving within the, walla of
,I d l e .PAsons,,ftigitivu! slavett. This: wti.
1n , 4 'celebrated,: law -that ,'Gov.:, Johnstonie. Pt in 40 PgeKot (Wring the Wide bflast
flPranTr,aq vetoed at the meeting of die
PlNfrilt PigislAtaret . :. .1446 ,9 0 Ihrilioute
liiy eyote i ,of 6,9,,tp,27i finvottli; Whir , vb.
' ,t 4051 kt. ;We :ttro;,pleafied to *duces
ibis. 115914,c.44:49u1gpgues ita.veNand‘ this
jiA 'Pna ,009.9gh to. twit their, ,own Arlie
r t ~,„.. Etttothof .byideripa -.thitt
. WlFY#E l, .eatertaiOutk , ProPet,,,rogird
,Cl i tha., Ilti, ig of their ,tvutbittn , bregiren
an.a.:w4tH i rß l K 115 Oviwuptioto hiibis/494
Rf:P#l' rPc**(gltheir proixittyv.wiT
• • ' -Dem. Union. ,
3 t:-0 .
T,A.;ael
N %I 14.
it I 11,
Ntimber 2 L.
Revolution in Buenos Ayres..
DEFEAT -AND FLIGHT OF ROSAS.
' 'The English mail Siearriship 21viot ar
rived at Southampton on the 13th ult., With
toliiceSfrOni ,Btierms , Ayres to the 2d,
Montevideo to the MI, and Rio 6 Janeiro
to the •12th of Febuary. ' •
It was iiiinoredin 'Medea that Roam
had'aetually arrived at Southampton, in
ilia lhvibt.
It, web openly stilted in Rio that M r.
SOnthern (the English Minister,) had ac
ted thinughaut es a partisan of GCB. Ros-
Ss—liiici recent) Y endeavord to patch up
matters with the BraZillan GOvernment,
though holding part with the opposition—'
and had,in various ways, aided General
Resits to -secure a comfortable avinir for
himself in case of defeat ; in ahsvverio ell
Which the Brazilians shrug ;their "shoulders
and are; 16.1 in Wonder et the' British Min
iiitor's disinterestedness:
The passage of the Parana by,the liber
ating array tinder General Urquila l corn
trieneed on the 22d of Dectinber, and Was
aceoinplislied on the StlibrJanuarY: The
Crossing of this Wide and rapid filler by
an army composed of 28,000 men, with
50,000 -horses, 50 pieces of artillery, and
a proportionate baggage train, Was neces
sarily a work of some time.
The army was brought together on the
Diamante, a settlement lately founded by
General Urquiza, inorie of the most beautt
ful 'Situations on the banks of the Parana,
and, both in a military' and Coinmereiel
point of view, one of the most important,
us it commands the Punta Gorda, and e the
upper navigation from that point:
The citizens of Santa Fe, and of Roattr
io, as well as all the inhabitants of the pro
vtnce of Santa Fe, except its Governor
General, Echague, immediately declared
in favor of Urquiza,'and requested to :be
allowed ta take part in the campaign.—
Roses had here a force of 4000 regidar
troops, who at once pasSed over to swell
the ranks of the liberators.
Governor Echague fled towards Buenos
Ayres having endeavored td organiie n pro-,i
visional, govrnment for the province before
his departure. - • •, • ' '
The adherent: of Santa Fe ' Wag, Moat
important to General Iliquiiiiin hii intend-,
[ed operations against Buenoi 4 3 ire§,' tis it,
Ileft:his rear Well protacted,and enabled him.
to keep open the communication with En-'
tre Rios and Corrientes. ' '
The province of Cordova• else contri- 1
buted 1,500 men and 19,0004herses, (com
manded by a son of the Governor, Lopez)
to this crusade of liberty.
06 the 10th January the inhabitants of
San Nicola°, the frontier town of the pro
vince of BuenesAyrea,pronounced against
Ceneral. Roses, notivithstanding the prox
imity of a considerable force of Rosista
cavalry, who on the swine night attacked
'the town ;but the citizens being veliarm-
ed and prepared to receive them, sueceed
ed in driving theM back, With' considerable
loss, to their encampment at Remelt°.
1 Commodore Parket, in command of a
, division of the Brazilian squadron, which
guarded this part of the Parana, innedi
ately despatched the brig Calliope and sev
eral launches to protect the inhabitants
and some families who had
~,i l An refuge
on the. frontier island, in case Of d second
attack. General Urquiza, on his' side,
bent forward two cavalry divisions, one of
Which under Col. Santiago Orono, came up
to the Rosista camp on the 13th and rout
ed the enemy, who on the first charge fled
in great disorder.
On the night of the 10th took place one
of those events which are so strongly cbir
acteristid of the system of G. Roses.—
A Major Aguilar, and two other officers,
.Who had belonged to the' Reside army in
the Banda Oriental, bribed for that purpose,
introduced themselves IMO the quarters
of a cavalry. regiment of 500 then, cut the
throats of the colonel (Aquino),• the lieu
tenant colonel, and three' other Officers;
1 and succeeded in making their escape to
Buenos Ayresi thore - to' receive the reward
,of their prowess' from their erriploYer, RO
sag. . heir accomplices' Were' plashed' by
a detachment of cavalry,• overtaken, and
many of thorn- . cut' to pieced.'s.• Thigi seen-.
&lout; - assassination' 'and usCless cache
produced a 'general sentiment' of profound
disgust. - - , ..i 11,
~ The-army of Utlniza,' Aoined hyi 'Xit(oo;
Santafilcinosi Wag . nblV. • coneentrited 'et
Espinillo, and every thing being arranged "
fdr this morel on Mini:Os' Airchi . Prissed
the Afroya , de I Medio; thb''frorititif of that
province,: dri the 15113: 1 'Itr" vids'Oetrilicito
of an Oriental division•of 2000' Men, in
:funtlY and'artillery;.4oool3raillitin'tideps
Of the three arms; and the Main iigidir :kr.'
gentines of the proviridif Of.' Entre ,Aftis,
C4r*inteii,iCordova, Santa Fe, and' PI
MOO; Ayres. - . i:;i - . ili ~. ~
~•:
);'",The forination of this artily;' of Witielf
i foreigner's , only constituted` otigififtli; Jib.
.vga:the , rndvement ito ; higo'd 'national one
ortihe :part of,the,A.rgentinepeePlii,';artiis
ri t intobeideliVerildfrbtriliiiyateni'Oferiik i
*tyranny , and oppreraddrii.'rind tie the
,beet contradiction 'Ware rtaadition'4foo l
ilwear, that hiai powEir iri irfairdindby'ri ft
vigil invasion.' ,: .r . c: I, ~. : , 1.; i 'i1.. ,, , I ,: '.!
Jit in , rt . ; triarchreit toatratrai dap/ ; we iiiiiiik 6t
tUrcodoalAbtaiAiid positailthif '•itif''AV the
northern part of the proving, putting to
-_ _
';: ~ -, 1 ' 'Frith' of kilvettltint .
„.. ,_ ~.
111 1 1 14 1 6 i 1 8 i"
. 1:1•171=1:....‘ t:
it: tlairax,airaw i tp ~
• . 1 „...• L .. ~,,,,, ..,_ ..
t• , =,..ii= , 1 , 6 4.
•do . inoarbt. I *man 1001100. 1 . :410 ig
I do ' I'd loofahs I 1 i 00 d 4 10 00
do 32 tooth; ,it I do . ,11: , 00, . ,',. ;'.ID 09
I .2 lO g r i tt t ritlic will ba amok to, Neyablft.and eau
" Mc VlP•F:litotlailarail 10101bolloild;pdd 14140 br _
avant ivory mail, la Om coodts—alla t em l P ll I Fi t t,r . II '7' "'
aoaveaMmet sad @hasp mow fra tan b tain,ided.,
do s t.,;
btroatp-tho metabast. monad= , add all othear-te est ~.!
the kaowlede,4ll theft lerodloa sad tottlfare ). VVri ,
ltha to Insert , Card ' for eetl Mechoolo.lderettext. tad
•Yrofoolanel nut to the totety) ,We •have Weir tr min
i.ntboutentroaabing CMOs on? ',dated tpolooms, mot 7 1 10
a a letldmalo basoilise Orin toed b? advdtthdoW attain t-•
or. ass geseraltols, the MON e teadraly a man ad leak
do gull? will hi htatoofiti.
.1 ~ ~.'; , , .' t
• , Boob, Jobs and. Blanket
. .
Rtite
OF MR Pl. _
GeV tizeititi
BY _lt. EVICT j l 4 l
11 "IT
-2:0-1146PFP5.141RFKPOLACAN,"1.,11,.
rout and, driving before it all the cay.
airy of Rosaa,r which ; had been detached
(or its defence. On the:29th• JanUayy '‘its
adva,nced guardyeached the Rio Goo)shas
(within six leagues ; of Buenos Ayres)ihay.
ing
,fofced ,General , Pacheco. to . retreat
across that riyer, with little man, thin;1000
men—l-all that , remained to hirn of,theliqrge
force ; wit h which he had occupied thb up
:r. district.
According tokens' own. accolipts,,the
had between Opronda and : Eosatio,,4o oo
men under Echague, betWeenSaßNicolao
and San Pedro 3500, under'General Man
cille. ; and. in the centre 5500 nien,...com
mended by Bich*. ,',Of these,. , lmoo
men, onlyabout .1000, flying. in totaldis
order,,succeeded,in reaching, fintoslLug
nres. hr ; fact, Rome could i t hardly Julve
F6eted a better , arrangement of bis.trdopn
to enable I . J,rquiza•to beat them in.d.qtailias
he came up with their scattered divisions.
His design, however, was, to have, set Are
io the plains, and -11avelhail knYolyed the
liberating Priny, and one half the.province
in a gen eral . destruction. This
.. .seheme
Was providentially defeated hy ,unexpect
.
ed and eopious fcdls . of. rain •which.render
ed it impossible to spread the imendedcon
flagration; and hencethe , dispersion,' of
his troops,. whieh was, planned .to, effect
I this object, insured their , speedy defeat,—
It had been his first idea to. - concentrate
1 ' whol efor ce so4 • ii • .
the or his at cites agape,
I , recent . ,.
'Where'all his recruits ,werf,Felleet-
Cd, and Made a formible array in point of
1
number's., , -i , , 1
On the 27 th
. of January, Bosco started
for the Ciunpaign ; that is, ho left his calm
' residence '' P 'with
try
,at . alerino, .; all ~his
writers and
,perinnal adberents,, and od
vanCed a distanies of two leagues qp , the
road to Santos . Liigares. , On the 40th, no
one knew Who was to have , the chief;, eetn-
Mend of the troops collected at that spot
nor had any plan ofdefence been . concert
ed. His principal care during the - last
month had been to collecttogether a large
sum of triondyi'm t .a Make• all necessary
artangementa, in, case or behig ohtiO,d to
. fly the cOuntry. He was otily 'Persuaded
to leave his quints by, the 'preesing heliet
aliens Of his chiefs tit.Stinte Lugaree; i abd
of Genordi Pabbeeo id ,liericin, Wlico cline
froth Palernto' for that' la.tirtiose. Hil, ex
cused himself by saying, that, haiing,With
drawn all the military 'from- the City, 'his
' departure-would letivq-Buenoi Ayres Corn
pletely paralyzed. • , . •1 '
013 IhO 31st:of January, Admiral Cliferi
fell sailed from Colonia With the Steathers
Alfonso and _Pedro IL, in the'direetiiniof
IBuenos Ayres, in which port three Brazil
ian corvettes and a steamer were' already
at anchor. It is supposed that thhineits
ures lately adopted by Roses for increas
ing the squadron, caused this movement of
theßritish squadron, Roses having lately
bought the English steamer Coiirri&i for
.£18,600 sterling, and armed in Etiglad,
and was daily expecting three other' Ves.
sels, with ammunition and military kitties
from the same qUarter. These factiiip
peered to have been only recetitlY trade
known to thelizazilian Admiral.
The steamer Prince_ , with news ' froth
Buenos Ayres to the 3d,. and from got
tevideo to the sth, had ariiiieit n't , Ithi.' e
Janeiro. The steamer Iffonncilitzi; . Wlit4h
left Biieniis Ayres on the 40, and tiVrived
at Montevideci on the sth, made known the
result of the battle which took'' plots' on
the 3rd; folic lertgues,from BuenoS 40 4 4
at the very moment When ilia Priiice
took her departure.
The intelligence brought by the ivr,✓iitce
would only have made
,t, iwiiro, of the
diScoitifitiite of the Vanguard",of Resps,
commanded by Pacheco,"and'eopipo4d'of
his beat troops;;' buctliiiiika to the Mtn:c
-c/14d, we are made *c4nianted• 'Ai:4W 'Ate
fttoling acetic, or thi4 eientfill dinine';' no
overthrO* of Gan. Pachece viati ,folloir.ed
by a general ,engthgement along the Milole
line of defendeSi arranged with 'the - greatest
care, by the orders of Rosie, and resting
nn the entrenched r ctimpcc Sautes Lugares.
The Oriental division; cOninnuaded by, that
gallant follow, Col. Cediir Diaz:, a nd - the
Brazilian contingent, formed the advanc t ed
&aid of thei allied 'nreiy. GOn: Urquiia
himself Was everywhere. Veinited on ; a
-n6ble'cliarger.biseerninanding figure wise
seen rapidly pestling doWd OlO, , iinti t fq di
reefing eVery 'movement; and niterl'O'o-
I giirdles6 of personal phrif. His Eptiviikno
troope occupied' the centre s 'and the Afideii
tides or oribei'iiiiiiy *40160 do the ex.
triaidileft, ishiiii tlie' l ettrerher right, or
rather_ the reserve',' was stationed near the
BiiiraCtis;' hiving beetv•liiPdedon the death
by the Erazilian,s v adr,owi' this ifailYso
.cenitinsOd'nf-Bitililtaii'ti444"' ft' Chilito
1
.6 imentiditiolLbeklhar the 'Od" Kit!li °
brigade (of Orbe'S tifoy) . ; 600 ' strenie, d
previously revolted (after having assassin
cited their .colonel). with the ultiniali Wen
,tiotk or joining. their patron ' ' Rosalr.' '.l This
tlivision,however' who itad!ciute' tly chard*.
ed :in tho , roning of. Urcluiz4under' on , fie.
Oro. injunction; and' ivith...:the. hill . diltiigs •
le assassinate . him in:tha firseertgagerrigns.
found their- treachery detected - and peer .: cy
' n 1 'e bar 0
`ddhdd'eistiekilik retTitiptiO ;10 e tier
wilsitliii dila:4 4 6l'o4i tinti, ititikiWilet
lett to fdetiert; 'Worn foltiiii4 Wi l l a bibila.
Entrorian horse, quickly surrltilial;•Ad
ant tnpieces on tins spot; of the whole GOO
•