Sunbury American and Shamokin journal. (Sunbury, Northumberland Co., Pa.) 1840-1848, February 27, 1847, Image 1

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    TERMS OF THE AMERICA'."
H. B. MA88ER, 1 '
JOSEPH EI8ELY.
? PcatisntsRS inn
PnoraiSTons. ' -
It. BJSSEH, JKMor,
OJJtce in.CtntiAikyTin the rear of H. Mas
, , ser's Store.
THE AMGftlCANli puiillsned em; Satnr
usy at TWO DOLLARS per annum to lie
paicl half ysnrly in advance. No paper discontin
uetl till Alt arrearages are paid.
No subscription received for a less period than
mi mouth. All communications or letters on
biwincii relating loth office, to insure attention,
tnust bo POST PAID. -
W. H. THOMPSON,
Fash ion a hi c
BOOT AND S1IOK .MAKp,
MnKn SrnufcT, Hcnaunv,
THANKFUL Tor past favor, beg leave to in
form h e friends anil the public generally, that
he haa just returned from tlio city with new and
fashinnalde I iste, an I a full tssortmrnl of Light
col. ire J, Bronze, Black Kid, and all other kinds
of Morocco for Uclitletncn. Ladies and Uhih'ren's
wear; and he assure all who may favor him with
their custom, th it they may rely upon bavins; iheir
w.iik done in the mml substantial and f-ishtonuble
manner, and at very low piirea.
He also has a full assortment of low piiecil work,
selected by himself, which he will oc II lower than
ever ofTreJ in this pluce, viz :
Men's Miocs, as low aa ft, 00
Extra Stout Qoot4, " 2.00
C!ood Lace Boots 'or Womrn, " 1,00
Women's Slips, 60
Children's Shoe. 25
Side Leather, Morocco. &., for ssle low.
August 22d, I84G. apltltf
Boot & Shoe
ESTABLISHMENT.
"DANIEL DItUCK EM 1 LI E II,
At his Old Estiiblishmrut. in Market Sirect,
Sitnbury,
(OPPOSITK THE KKD MOW IIOTBL,)
RETURNS his thanks for pist fivors, and re
, apecifully informs his friends and the public
generally, that he continues to manuf.iciuitt to ol
der, in the neatest and latest style,
CHEAP HOOTS AM) SHOES,
warranted of the beat material, and made by the
most experienced workmen. He hIsd keeps on
hand a general assortment of fashionable Bouts for
gentb men, together with a large st.irk of fashion
utile eeritb men's. In)', la lies' and child en's Shoes,
all of which hi. re been m ule under his own imme
diate inspection, and are of the best material and
wo.kmmidiip, which ho will soil low for cash.
In a Mil ion io the ! ove, he has just rceived
from 1'hilndi Ipliia a larce snd rxten .ive sop!y of
Uoo's, Shoes, etc. nf all descriptions, which he al-o
ofluis for ca.-h, cheaper than ever belore off. red in
tiiis place. He respectfully invites his old enstn
meis, and others, to call and examine lor llicin
' Ives.
. Repairing done with neatness and despatch.
Sunbnry, August Ifith, 1846.
PIANOS.
rilHE SUBSCRIBER has hren appointed seen',
I for t e sale .,f CONRAD MEVKK'S CEL.
EHKATED PREMIUM ROSE WOOD PI
ANOS, at this pluce. These Pianos hae a plain,
massive and Ixauiiful exterior fi. i-h, and, for depth
wnd -.weetnes of ton, and clegince of workman
hip, are not surpa-serl hv any in the Uniied Statea.
Tl.e f.jt winat is a recommendation fiom Cant
IIikts, cell bi nted perfomier, and bimlf a luaJi
uf r'Uior
A C A It P.
1I vio had the plea-ure ol trying the excel
lent Piuio Fortes munfactured by Mr. Meyer, and
exhibited at the -,st exhibition of the Fr.nklin In
stitute, I feel it due to the true merit of the maker
to t'rclare that these itiitriiinenls are quite equal'
and in some r.-i-pic' even uprioi, io all the Pi
ano Fortes, I saw at the capitals of EuiO, and
during; a sojourn of two years at Paris.
Thcs- Pianos will be r-oWl at the manufacturer's
lowest Philadelphia prices, if not aoiueihins; lower.
Persons are requeued in call and examine fol
lhemselve, t the resilience of 'he subscriber.
Sunbury. May 17. 1815. II. B. MAWSER.
" Cimlerlt'Urti
DEATH SLOW.
rPhe public will please ohserve that no Brambetb
1'ilU are genuine, unless the txix baa three la
beta upon it, (the top, the and the bottom)
emh loiiUiiiiiiR a fic-simile signature of my hand
u 1 1,,.. n n.ni.u l It Ttiu Is.
I.rl i,,rr-,l on ti.el. Iintifnll v ilesifflied.
and done at an expense of over f 2,000. Therefore
it will lie seen that ibe only thing necessary to pro
cure ihc medicine iu ila purity, is to observe these
lawis,.
Remember the top, the side, and the bottom.
J he Ji2ibiwmg respective persons are tiuiv aumi ri
xeJ, and hold
ltiiTPTrAniT!S CIV AGCNCT
For the sale of BrunJreth'i VeeelabU Univereal
tt.ir.
g 1113.
MilLnn Maekev &
ChamlN-ilin. Hunliury H. B. Manser. M'Eene
villn litlsud ol Meixell. Northurnlieiland Wui.
Forsylh. Georgetown J. &. J. Walla.
Union Cuntv: New Berlin Bocar & Win
ter. Selinsgrove George Gundium. Middle
luirg Isaac Smith. Beavermwn David llubler.
Adamsburn Wm. J. May. MiffliusburR Menscb
Ar Haitleion Daniel Lolls. Freebure
O. Si F.C. Moyer- Lewisburg Walls & Green.
Columbia county : Danville E, B. Reynolds
cS Co. Warwick enuman c lUHeuiiouse. ai
UWw ('- CI ltmliis. UloouiabuTc Joho R.
Mover. Jeieey Tvn l'i Bisel, Washington
Robt. McCay. Limestone Balb-! it HsNi'ich.
itkn.tiA ihoi airh Aasut haa an Eneraved Cer
ir.u r Affcnr rnniainina a renresentalion ol
,i, HliAMiUKTH'S Manufactory at Sins Sins.
and upon which will also be seen exact copies of
... . i - u t it
tlie new laoeu nvu useu upon mc iira
ISnrm.
Philadelphia, office No. S, North 8th street.
B. BRANDWETH.M.D.
Jnne4th 1843.
'eoi;ffc"J. Weaver,
BOMS IHAKSS SKIP CHANDLER.
A. 1 3 tiurtk Water Street, thilutklphia.
wwiu ,..,.i.i,il on hand, a ceuerul assort'
HI mint of Uordaae, Seine Twines, &c, vix:
'Tlr'd RniHie, FUhing Ropes, While Roea, Mauil
i.. n 'jnat f.lns for Canal Boats. Also, a
roemdole 'aseortuMia of Seme Twince, Ae. auch as
Hemp Mbad and Herring Twine, Bert Paiont Gill
Net Twine, Cotton Shad and Harring 1 wire, Shoe
Thread,, A, BJ Co"i'1' ,ouh,LinM'
n.i,. r.nttnn and l.inen Carpet l-haina,
Ae., all of which be will diii f on reaaonuble
tanns. 1
Philade'nhia. November 13, 1842, ly.
T II OLASSEM.-r-J he fiiat quihty Sugar HHjbe
ItI Molaea, only 12, cents per quart-, also, a
n. arik-teor yellow M.dairea for T.akiitt, en-
.rej.Ui pel q r':ri-B
S
Absolute acquiescence In th. decisions of .he
By Masscr X Elscly;
AnitlVAl, OP TDK ajTRASISIlIP
CAnutiA.
Fifteen Days Later from Km ope. .
Iligl'lj' Important Commercial Intelligence
Decline in the Grain MaiJiete Slate of the
Cutlon Market Oprninc oflhc British porta
for the Tree Admission ol Corn Sinprnkin
(if the Navigation Laws Advance in the
Rate of Interest The Famine on the Con
tinent of Europe.
The Steamship Cambria arrived at Boston a
bout 4 o'clock on Saturday afternoon. She sail
ed from Liverpool on the 4th inst , and her newa
ia, therefore, fifteen days later than that received
by the Sarah Sands. We are ir.debted to the
kindness of Livingston & Co. for an English pa
per. The commercial intelligence will be found to
be deeply interesting and important.
There was a decline of four to five shilling per
quarter in the price of Wheat in the Liverpool
and London markets on the first inst. The stock
of flour at Liverpool alone was 500,000 barrels.
There was a prevailing opinion that the British
corn-growers had large stocks, which, with the
temporary suspension of navigation laws, and the
repeal of the impost duty, tending to check spe
culation, would, it was assumed, produce a re-action
both in prices and also in the extent of fu
ture operations.
At Liverpool, on the 2d, prices were four shil
lings a quarter lower on Indian corn, four shil
lings on flour, twa shillings per load on wheat,
since the publication of the weekly circular on
the 20th.
The cotton market had been in a very quiet
condition the sales had been limited in extent,
and prices are rather on the decline.
The market for provisions was steady.
The accounts from the manufacturing districts
were still unsatisfactory. In cotton fabrics only
very small business was being transacted, and
prices very irregular.
The state of trade in Manchester exhibited no
material variation in the present condition of the
market from that detailed in the circular, save a
decline in the value of nearly every description
ef cloth and yarns. Matters could not be more
unsatisfactory. Transactions were restricted to
parsing wants.
It is stated that a loan of four millions sterling
has been negotiated for the United States, by a
'veil known city firm.
The Pope of Rome has contributed one thou
sand Roman crowns from his private purse, for
the relief of Ireland.
Gen. Tom Thumb has left England for the U-
nited States.
The government of France has addressed a
circular to the French consuls and agents of Mex
ico, that French subjects are not In make use of
letters of maique delivered by the Mexican go
vernment.
One hnndred thousand barrels of flour having
been ordered for France in the United Slates,
thirty-five thousand barrela reached Havre in
eight vessels. The rest was shortly expected.
The state of commercial and monetary affairs
since the sailing of the last steamship had been
one of extreme peculiarity and interest. The
large draines upon the Bank of England to meet
the demands caused by tbe extensive importa
tions of grain and all other aorta ol provisions
into the kingdom, bad induced the government
to raise their rates of interest, , This caused bus
iness generally to be dull.
An enormous business haa been done in angars
during the fortnight. Speculators had been ex
tensively purchasing. Trices had advanced con
siderably beyond the quotations of the 1st in
stant, and even over those last reported. At the
close the market bad taken a turn, less business
was transacted, and business bad assumed a de
clining tendency.
The iron market was not so brisk as last re
ported, further reduced rates having been sub
mitted to for pig descriptions ; buyers have been
induced to purchase with more freedom. Prices
of manufactured iron continued fully as high.
The tea market was rather dull.
The Zenobia reached Liverpool on the 27th,
Patrick Henry on the 2Sth, Anglo Saxon, from
Boston on the 23d.
There appears to be no mitigation in the ac
counts of sufleiing by the famine in Ireland. The
amounts being taised by subscription and other
wise, for tbe relief ol the sufferers, were, bow-
ever, very liberal, and will, when applied, do
much to alleviate their sufferings.
We have, from France, accounts of more dis
turbances, and of tbe threatened famine. The
French government, however, was taking active
measures to avert the impending calamity.
Accounts from Prussia are almost as distres
sing as those from Ireland. In the mawufectu
ring districts particularly, the destitution ia ve
ry alarming, and robberies are of freiueot occur
rence. The market for provisions is steady the iron
market ia not so brisk.
Upon the receipt of, intelligence ef the Otb,
from New York, a sadden advance took place ia
cotton at Havre.- Tbe sales are reported at 7,000
bale.-Sugar advanced, -
The Bank of England has again advanced their
rates of interest.
Great Distress existed in Prussia for the want
of pevisiona. , . .
mQJKx AMEMICAM.
AND SHAMOKIN JOURNAL.
mnjori.y, the vital principle of Republics, from which
Sunbury, Northumberland Co.
wittily r rtnsalan Government lo
wards the polish Kxlles.
Tiontluhd ly the Dothm Allan from the Pa
ris Contlilulionticl.
We compile, from one of the Poliuh journal
published in Pari, and which our government,
unfortunately for their fame, have Bought to sup
press, the following narrative of the act ofcru
eity practiced on IVIca banisliod Io Siberia for
pol'iic"! cause. Europe ia but too often en
tirely ignorant of the practice n Muscovite ty
ranny. But, from limn to time, mno victim
escapes ami come to west cm Kurope, to de
nounce Io the civilised world the frightful
coiir.v pursued by tlmt barbaron government
towards that portion ol it subject whoso only
offences are their aspirations after liborty. It
will not be furrjotton, that only a few weeks
aince, he journal published an account of the
arre, by the police of Kuinigbbnrg, of a Pole,
whom they had Fiirprised asleep on the steps of
a church. lie attempted at first to pass him
self off as a Frenchman, n native ol l.nnguedoc,
but when closely pressed by their questions, he
at length Confessed that he was a Polish exile,
who had escaped from Siberia. He waa im
mediately thrown into prison, rind by orders re
ceived from Berlin, he waabntit to be deliver
ed up to the Russian Government, when form
natr ly be again succeeded in escaping. This
t'ucilive litis j'let succeeded in reaching Paris.
His name is Rutin Piotrowski; he is well known
to some of the most respecinble Polish, emi
erants, who attest his excellent character and
his veracity.
The following are the fuels which he relates
relative to himself : A native of Ukraine, he
served in the corps of General Dwernck', du
ring the insurrection of ISJI1. Alter that corps
had entered Golicia, M. Piotrowski returned to
Poland and entered the service in the 12th re
giment of the line, where ho remained until
the end of the campaign. Driven back into
Prussia with the corps of General Rybinnki, he
came to France with the other Polish emigrants
in 1832 1 there he remained until 1643. Ha
ving at that period formed the resolution of re
visiting his native country, he left Paris in the
month of January of that yesr, returned to Rus
sia under Hie name of Cataro, where ho took up
Ins abode as a professor of the French language
in Kamienietz, the capita! of Podolia. He soon
won the general esteem, and was even employ
ed to give lefsons in the house of a high Rus
sian functionary. After a stay of nine months,
ho was everywhere received as a stranger of
trrent learning and irreproachable character.
Unhappily he confided the secret of his origin
to several persons. A clerk in the oflico of the
government having learned that M. Piotrowski
waa a Pule, communicated the information fo a
relative, an old sergeant-major, who informed
the governor of llio province. M. Piotrowski,
at rested and confronted with his accuser, st
firl denied the fact, but seeing that be should
exposo many innocent persons with whom he
had bee;: in friendly relations, he confessed that
he was a Pule by birth, denying resolutely thai
he bad returned lo Russia with any hostile
views against the government Notwithstan
ding th a donial, and the absence of all proof,
he was loaded with chains, transported in De
cember, 1843, to Kief, and condemned to be
shot. The governor of Kiel commuted his pun
ishment to hard labor for life, and the sentence
was approved by the Emperor. He was trans
ported to Siberia in '.he month of August, 184 1.
Several persons, accused of having entertained
relations with him, were bsnifhed to remote
parts of Russis, and others compelled to serve
as private soldiers in the Russkn army. - The
inronner waa decorated with the order ol St.
Stanislaus. Iq Siberia, Piotrowski waa pla
ced, by order of the Governor General, in a
brandy distillery belonging to the government,
ta labor there as a common workman, with ex
press orders to the inspector lo keep a constant
watch upon him. This distillery is situsted in
Ekateriusk, near a ciiy in thaldUtrict called
Tava. '
He found in that locality about 300 convict
nearly all of whom were robberaand murderers,
from all the nations iu the Kobtian empire, only
two being for political offences, and both of
these Pule. Ia the commencement of his Hay
he wss watched by a sentinel, but afterwards,
being employed in writing, he was lees careful
ly guarded. After spying 10 months in the
establishment, he determined to regain his li
berty or perish. He left his place of exile tow
ards the end of January, selecting the winter
as the most favorable season of the year to es
cape, the river,, lakes aed bogs being nearly
inipassa'de except when frosen. F ont motives
which may be easily appreciated, La gives no
account of his journey. He confines himself to
a narrative Of his journey across the Ural
Mountains, in the' midst of bare - rocks, Irozen
and frightful deeeils, in which he several times
remained three days, without taken at.y nour.
Uhment. Fesring In atk the hospitalily of ihe
few inUbilant of the country, 1:0 exesvated
for himeelf, at night. hole in ihe annw, a ad
ufier cbsing up the entrance, he sjied the)
there I, nd appeal but to force, the 'vital principle
Pa. Saturday , Feb '27, IS47.
,M"J". '-, , 11 -'
coming of daylight. S.vithI lime, Iho wind,
drifting the snow over the opening nf his retreat,
it wr.s with iho greatest tlifneuliy he could work
his wny out the next day. After enduring num
ber! ess danger sndsuflerings, such as he would
not have supposed it possible to endure and live,
he reached the borders of the White Sen, then
St, Petersburg, and last escaping from that ci
ty he succeeded in passing the frontier of Run
sia. He arrived in Parts the Wd nf October,
nf'.er an absence of 3 yesr. and eight months,
during which time ho traiersed tnnrelhan H,
(XKJ miles on foot. During his stay in Liberia,
he was able In communicate with different po
litical exiles; he conversed also with the inha
bitants of the country, nml even with persons
connected with the Russian Governmenl ; and
the following are amor.g Ihe facts which he ob
tsined front the mouths of the best informed
persons, and Ihe most reliable eye-witness.
The number of Polish Exiles in Siberia exceeds
50,000. Many of Ihem are employed at hard
labor in tke different establishments; the nirt
are colonized upon the lands bt lonffine lo the
Ailmihixlralan of Erilm. The following is
the fate of some of these exiles:
Col. Pierre Wyent-ki, chief of the insurrec
tion of the 29th of November, 16I50. who wss
wounded and taken prisoner during the attack
on Warsaw, in 1831, was condemned in l?3t
to hard labor and transported lo the mines of
Nertceinsk, situated in Eastern Siberia, on the
confines nf Chins. There'he found a number
of his compatriots condemned to the same fate.
A short time after his arrivil, they concerted a
plan of escape, and ga.ned over a Russian pea
sant, who was to transport Ihem to the other
side of a river, and serve them as a guide. In
the nielli lime, at the moment agreed upen, all
the exiles sssrmhledon the hanks of the t-tresm ;
the pessant conducted them to a small deserted
island, and, tinder pretence of seeing if they
were observed, he left Ihem and went lo de
nounce them to the superintendent. Betrayed
and surrounded, i he exiles, after a vain at niggle,
were re taken and thrown into prison. Pierre
Wysoski, the hero of so many battles, was con
demned to receive 1500 blows. He submitted
to his punishment with the firmness of a martyr,
and being aent, after he had recovered from
their cfTi'Ct, to the fortress of Akatui, situated
farther to the East, to lahor upon the fortifies
lions, he performed bis task with activity, spoke
to no one, and after the expiration of the day
shut himself up in hiscubin
Another attempt lo escape was followed by
even more cruel consequence. The Abbe Si
eracin.sk i, a native of Ukraine, was head of a
convent of Dasiliena, at Owrnel, in Wolhynia,
an order that devote themselves to the eduea
tion of youth. Accused of hsvinir tsken part In
the insurrection of 1831, he wss deprived of his
sacerdotal rank, and sent ss s common soldier
in a regiment of Cossacks to Siberia, to guard
the frontier between Russis, snd Ihe tribes of
Independent Tsrtary. S on alter he waa made
instructor in a military school, in a regiment
at Omsk. There he met with a number of
Pule, and formed with them Ihe plan of pen
trating In Taschkent, end of reaching, through
the Tartar country, the English pns-essions in
the north of India. He communicated this
plan to one of his associates, njrned Gort-ki, a
captain who had served under Npnlenn, and
one of the I.eginn of Honor. . This old soldier,
sn insurgent in 1931, had been condemned to
serve for life, ss a common soldier, in a battalion
of Siberian infantry. Several others were soon
after received into their confidence. Rut three
Pulish soldiers in the same battalion, when
drunk, betrayed their secret before Co!. Grave,
commandant of the Fort of Omsk. Immediate
ly more than lour hundred I'uli a were put under
arrest. This occurred in 1S34. Their triul
lasted three years. At length, judgment was
rendered, and it received the s.. net en ol the
Emperor ; by it, Sieracint-ki, Uorki, ai.d lour ol
those accused with them, were cunJemneJ to
seven thoutand Lluw$, and in Case they sum.
veil this punishment, to perpetual bard labor;
the other, to the number of more than Iwu hun
dred, were condemned to receive from five hun
dred to three thousand blows. The execution
of the sentence took place at Ouitk. Geueml
GdldfiayttT was tent esprers troui St. Peters
burg lo alUiid to it. On Ibe appo. tiled dy two
battalions, ut a thousand men each, were soul
to the spot. All the oilier Poles were sent out
of the. way. These soldiers were to iiiiiicl the
blows. Each ut the instruments used to iiilliel
the blows were as large as the bore of a musket.
Each victim, nuked to Ihe waist, was l.d four
teen times through the ranks, a mddier on each
side striking st Ihe Same time, and both coun
ted aa but one blow. The Abbe Sierscinski re
fused the strengthening beverage that was of
fered bi;n, and went to meet his butchers cbauu-
ting the Miserere met Dtvs. He fell before
he had received a thousand blows ; he wss then
seized, tied to I litter, and carried to receiv
the reftt of his bloody flagellation, lie endured
four thousand more blows, when hs expired
two thousand blows wersj Inflicted upon hi life
Ices body. . fkW the. others who were sentenced
and immediate parent of d..poti.m.-J.r,n.e.
Tot. TXo. 2.?.-Whole No, 33ft
la thoarvon thouennd blow expired during the
infliction. Ol the informera, one waa strangled
and the other drowned; but no one knew by
whom Ihis act of vengeance waa done. Gen.
Galafi.iyefT was appointed commandant of Stav
ropol, tho chief (own of Caucasus. Other
scenes of similar atrocity are related, the pub
licity of which may at least serve as some chas
tisement in the inhuman monsters who have
perp.MMted them.
TUB niCATII UP III HOC,
BV T. t IIRATLV.
Napoleon's gret st mis'ortnne, that which
wounded him deepest, waa the death of his
friend Dnroe. As he made a last effort o break
Ihe enemy's rsnk, and rndo again to the ad
vanced post to direct the movements of hia
army, nm of his escorts wss suddenly struck
dead by his side. Turning lo Duroc, be said,
D,ir3C, fote is determined to have one of us
lo day.' Soon after, as he waa riding with hia
suite in a rapid trot along the road, a cannon
ball smote a ire beside him, and glancing
struck Gen Kircener dead, and tore out the
entrails of Duron. Napolenn waa ahead at tho
lime, and hi Ftiite four abreast, behind him.
The elniid of dust their rspid movements raised
around them, prevented him from knowing at
first who was struck. Rut when it was told
thai Kirjrener was killed snd Duroc wounded.
he dismounted and gazed lonr; and sternly on
the buttery from which the shot had been fired;
then turned towards the cottage into which the
wounded marshal had been carried. '
Durec was grand marshal of the pilaco and
a bosom friend of the Emperor. Of a noble
and generous character, of unshaken integrity
and patriotism, an-! firm as steel in the hour of
dsngor, he wss beloved by all who knew him.
There was a gentleness about him and purity
of ft cling tho life of a camp could never de
stroy. Napoleon loved him -for through all
Ihe changes of his tumultuous life, he had ever
found his affection and truth the same and it
was with an anxious hearts and sad counten
ance he entered the lowly cottage where he
lay. Hia eyes were filled with tears aa ha ask
ed if there was booe. When told that there
was none, he advancrd to Iho bedside without
sayings word. The dying marshal seized him
by the hsnd and anid, 'My whole life baa been
consecrated to your service, and now my otily
regret is, that I can no longer be useful to you,'
'Duroc 1 replied Napoleon, with a voice choked
with grief, 'there ia another life there yoa
will await me and we shall meet again.' Ye,
sir,' replied the fainting sufferer, 'but thirty
years shsll pass away, when you will have tri
umphed over your enemies, and realized all
the hopes of our country, I have endeavored
to be an honest man t have nothing with
which lo reproach myself.' He then added,
with faltering voice, 'I have a daughter your
Majesty will be a father to her. Napoleon
grasped his right hand, and aitting down by the
bedside, and leaning his head on bis left band,
rernaitH d with closed eyes a quarter of an hour
in profound silence. Duroc first spoke. See
ing bow deeply Bonaparte was moved, he ear
claimed, 'Ah ! sire, leave me this spectacle
paina you.' The stricken Emperor rose, and
loaning on the arms nfhis eqtiery and Marshal
Soult, he left the apartment, saying in heart
breaking tones ss he went, 'Farewell then my
JrltndX
The hot pursuit he had directed a moment
before wss forgot ton victories, trophies, pri
soners and all sunk into utter worthlDssnes, and
as st the battle of Aspern, when Lsnnca wss
brought to him mortally wounded, he forgot
even his army, snd the great interests at slake.
He ordered hie tent to be pitched near the cot
tage in which his friend was dying and enter
ing i't passed the night all alone in inconsolable
grief. The Imperial Guard formed their pro
tecting squares, as usual, around him, and the
fierce tumult of battle gave way In one of the
most touching rcenrs in history. Twilight was
deepening over the field, and the heavy tread of
the ratils goiiig lo bivouacs, the luw tumbling
of art 1 1 1 ry wagons in tlie ili.tauce, and all the
subdued, yet confuted sounds of a mighty host
fi lx -ut sinking to n-pne,rrise on th evening air
imparting still greutor solemnity lo the hour.
Napoleon, With his great coat wrapped about
hint, his elbows on Itis titees, sod his forehead
resting oh his hands, sat apart from all, buried
in the ptoliiundest melancholy. Ilisrhoet In
timate friends dure not approach him, and his
lavorite officers stood in gruilps at i dlstsnce,
gazing anSiously on that silent lent. But im
mense eons- qoences were hanging on Ihe move-
menu of the next morning a powerful enemy
waa near with their array yet unbroken and
they at length ventured to approach ami ask
for orders.. Dot the . broken-hearted chieftain
only shook hia head, exelaimed, 'Everything
tomorrow ' and still kept his mornful attitude
Oh, how overwhelming Wss the grief that could
so master that stem heart 1 The magnificent
apeclaeleof the day thai had passed, tbe glo
rious victory he had won, weie remembered no
more, and h saw eiily his dying fiiead before
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him. No sobs escaped him, but silent and mo
tionless he sat, his psllid face buried in hia
hand, and his noble heart wrung with agony.
Darkness drew her curtain over tho scene, and
the a'ars came out one after another a pon thn
sky, and, at length the moon rope above the
hills, bathing in her soft beams the tented host
while the flnmea from burning villages in tha
distance, shed a lurid light through the gloom
and all wassail, mournful, yet sublime. There
was a dark eottoge, with the sentinels at the
c'oar, In which Dtiroe lay dying, and there, too,
was tho solitary tent of Napoleon, and within
the bowed form of the Emperor. Around it,
at a distance, stood the squares of the old Guard
snd nearer by, a silent group of chieftains, end
over all lay the moonlight. Those brave sol
diers filled wuli grief to see their beloved chief
borne down with auch sorrow, stood for a long;
time silent and tearful. At length lo break tha
mournful silence, and to express the sympathy
they might not speak, the bands struck up a
rcrmiem for tire dying marshal. Tho melan
choly strains arose and fell in prolonged echoes
over the field, and awept in softened cadences
on Ihe ear of the fainting warrior but still
Napoleon moved not. They then changed the
measure to a triumphant strain, and tbe timi
ng trumpets breathed forth the most joyful
notes, till the heavens rung with the melody.
Such bursts of music had welcomed Napoleon
as he returned flushed with victory, till his eyes
kindled in exultation ; but now they fell on a
dull and listless ear. It ceased, and again the
mournful requiem filled all the air. But no
thing could arouse him from his aponizing re
flections his friend lay dying, and the heart be
loved more than his life, was throbbing its lau
pulsation.
'What a theme for a pointer, and what a eu
logy on Napoleon was that scene. That noble
heart, which thn enmity ol the world could ni t
shake nor tho terrors of a battle-field move
from its calm repose nor even the hatted and
insults of his, at last victorious, enemies hum
ble here sunk in the moment of victory be.
fore the tide of affection. What military chif
tain over mourned thus on tho field of victory,
and what soldiers ever loved a leader so '
Food roa Expomatiom. it is estimated that
the wheat produced in the United States for 18-13
made 23,973,300 barrets of flour. Allowing one
barrel a head for horn consumption, of 20,000,
000 of persons, and we Lave to spars 3,973,300
barrels. The corn produced was 470.136,375
bushels. Deduct from tbe wheat a sufficient
quantity for seed, and we have left double
the number of barrels ever exported from tbia
country in one year.
A Rich Beggab. A womon, named Eetsey
Rich, who died in the Almshouse of N. York
city, and had subsisted upon charity all winter,
was found to bavs in her room property secured
on bond and mortgage to the amount of $3600.
This is one Of the proofs tbst indiscriminate
street charity seldom benefits thoss really in
Want.
. Mr. Davia Bevan, the late great London Ban
ker, left by his will 250,000 to deliver among
hia family, on condition that the males do not
devote any portion of it for buyicg commissions
in the army.
The Catholic Almanac statea that the num.
bcr of Catholic priests in the United States ia
eight hundred and thirty-four, being an acces
sinn of ninety eight in one year ; and also that
there are eight hundred and twelve churches,
seventy-two of which were erected this year.
An honest backwoodsman, unacquainted with
the slang terms of the day, recently went into
a store at Cjlumbia, S. CH to purchase a bill of
groceries. Stepping up to tbe keeper ol the
store he began with
Have you any sugsr!'
We eint grit anything rhe !' wss tha reply.
Well, put me up 150 pounds snd make out
your bill. I'll cal! snd settle, and get the sugar
in an hour or so.'
In an hour or two after this the gentleman
Called, paid his bill, snd goUthe sugar. As usu
al, the shi p keeper said
'Want snylhing elte sir !'
I did want somo three or four hags of coffee
some rice, spicee, oil, etc. ; but I got ihem st
some other store. Vou told me you didn't Aeve
anything the but tugar V
- School Regulations in Maine. Among
other refutations stuck up in a school-house in
Maine are the following .'
'No snapping apple-seeds at Ihe msster.'
No kibsiug tbe girls in the retry.'
A person in company said in a vkdeel pa
sion to another "Yoo ate a liar) ys are
scoundrel" The other, with great eewposur
turned around toUit company, and a id to Ihem
"You rn'iit not mind what this poor ftllowis
nays j i Way he Ua ; he wtaouly talking
le biets,
. i.