Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, May 12, 1870, Image 1

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ADDISON HUTTON,
AROHI I TNCT,
532. Walnut' Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
PLANS, DESIGNS, PERSPECTIVE VIEWS. ,
SPECIFICATIONS, AND WORKING DRAIY/RGS,
For CoVago.s, Farm . llmises, Villas, eourtalonnss,
Ilrols, Churches, School Downs. FRENCH ROOFS.
27jui.TUly
W. A. ATWOOD. •
ATWOOD, tA:NCIC. & CO.,
COMMISSIO!.I
Wholenalo dealers In all kind, of
PICKLED AND SALT FISIi
No. 210 North What - lies,
Abote Raco street, '
PHILADELPHIA
. .
CHIESIAN
MAKES TINE ruoTooßApirs,
dt 21 West Wain Street,
NEFF 'lr. B — T:AL DING
Ojan7imm
DENTISTRY
DR. .1.11. ZINX,
No. 68 East Mail), street,
(it fen doors giant ofTardner's Medd. tibop,)
Penn'a,
Will put in tnetli horn 420 poi. eat, to th ,
cnse luny requiru. All work ,arrunt.d.
lufeb7o
D R. GEORGESEARIGHT," '
Frain the Baltimore college of Denial Surgerj. Office
.et ttio rosidenca of Ids mothor, Bast Loather street,
'throo doors bolow 'Nodford. lOstiOd
D R. I. Y. REED,
110 ‘IEOPATIIIC rLIYACIAN,
Ito located In. Carlisle Wilco next door to St
I'nu Pa Ertintolic ,1 Church, Wok belittler street
L'ailegte from a dtatahce please c5ll in the forenoon.
nt.
I'IIYSICILN.
Wilco tho room formsrly occuplod by Col. Joltu
Loo. 10nu88
1)R. EDWARD SCHILLING,
rnttrly of Dickinson townohip, °rico, nn nomittant
of jr. Zfunr, i k 12.14 Irate to inform tho Htizont al
Cnrlinls and TiCinity, Clot ha hen pormanuntly lo
eated in this pinto.
OFFICE No. 26 NAST STREET
11M
E . L. BiIRYOCK,
.JUSTICE OE THIS PEACE
Oinco, No. 3 Irvioo'• now.
F E. BELTZIMOVER,
ArrOllYiKY AT LAW.
'• iu South Ilanoror grout, oppomito Bunter dry
goods etold. 10.09
GW. 'NT'
. IDICEI D. D: S., -
G. DEN T I St. '
Late Demonetrator of Operative Dentistry of Om Bal
timore ('allege of Dental Surgery. OfDro at his resi
dence, opposite Marion Hall, West Main stmt., Car-
Asir, Pa. /
Wien
norincr p. won't. A. t,. WiIIEIIMAN.
D. V. lIOLL,
JOHN A. SWARTZ. R. T. SINNIT UM.
ErTOLL, WHITEMAN S CO.,'
witoLEBALE ',BALERS IN
MANUFACTURED TOBACCO,
N. E. Cor. Third and lifarltet streets,
C. P. nummicrt. WM. B. iAmozre.
•
& PATIYER,
. ATTORN EYH AT LAW.
(*lice ouHalnstreohla_Marlon Hall, Carlisle. lUsool/
HAVERSTICK BROTHERS,
DD.UOS, PEDFILMEST, JIAZWY GOODS
AND PATENT MEDICINES
Nu 5 South ItunoTor strool
14n1,701y
HITTTON & ItIc:CONNELL,
WORNITIIICIC WAREIIOOMe
No. 809 , Market Street,
North bitio,
11=6!
Parlor, Dining Room, and Chambor
VURNITURE,
irl thri l lutost styles rind linsi marinfantura. Also
F‘CATIIEIt DIMS AND MAFTII.EnSEI3.
Web7g
ISAAC K. STAUFFER
W A 'I CM I S qnc( JEWELRY,
No. t4R NORTH SECOND STREET,
core or of Quarry, Philadelphia.
An :erportmont of Watches; Jewolry, Silver and
Plated War. constantly on hood„
Oirltepalring of Wotellus nod Jewolry promptly
attended to.
I7Sopt OD
J A-4 ",,,V , T 1 ,N. 1 .N' 1 RT1D!1`,.1w, •
No. 14 South lianover strut,
—OART.IBI,E, , PA. -
udj,thifigJudge.Ortilthin'a.!
24usliTO
•
CORNMAN,
tJ ATTOUNF:Y AT LAW.
()Moo In bug ,ng ottocinol to the Yro,nklia Hotel, op.
pushy tho Court !Immo. • lolona
TOSEPH RITNER, I JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW AND' SURVEYOR,
Muclumiceborg, Pa. Miro on Railroad mtroot, two
doors north of tha Bank.
[domino. proktintly rittondoil to.
rr R. MILLER,
T.., • ATTORNWAT LAW.
01588, No.lB South 11.orer street, opponite.coylo'•
ivr C. HERMAN,
•• ATTORNEX AT LAW,
corholo, P. No. 9 11.11eom'o
PIL IL SIIA.MBARGER,
JU T 1.31 oF,-Trin PRACR,
Pitialiold,.‘Vooepon'aboro' townohlii,
Comherlond County, Ponn'a,
All hoof noonointruoto4.to him will recoivo prompt
ottorition. 2Uoot7U
SHIRK & BRO
con6iii9tori idrinctiAt4irt,.
dill wholeinlo deplore In Country Prodtied. -Con
Ilimmonts re.pnctfully xollcltod.Rent roforeuce give.
No. 1636 111 rkot streot,
I°o7o
•
•
SPANOL - BR & WILSON,
CA , ltlq:NpP o ltS AND STAIALIJUDPYS,
=
8006
• •
NVATCH-EB,
CLOCKS,
AND JEIVEL,RY
CITARLES'Iit.
f. •f '
;To. ITC, South 'lawyer St., CV Wale, Pa.;
Hems constantly •u band a hill tssortnimi :or
WATCHES, ' .
oLopup, .
•
BPEOritOLEB,
./1 H
at the lowolit cub pilcoirt Particular attrntion peld
to the milling of Watchaa, Clueka'and dawalry.
N, 111.,-•11 NAT' Zil 4 l§.lo'Couliattly
15:1069-iut
.1: If..WEAICIAiY:
WEAKIrEIY-& - SADLER, --
ATTORNP.Y£I4'A 11431%,.1 t Y 1.11.
(01c°, 22 SoutlLLlatiorgr .stront, Dolt tho Uood Will
Bose Bowie. . . 3:0P60;
MrILLIAM. KErr.lsrg,ty,,
..v ATTORNISit, L&V
.oMce In Voloutoor
•
J
krrditNut 14 LAW. •
°Wool northeasit cor.UPP4 fNe court Itouco. 10.9G0
WES. B,'l4lEONt3, -•— • •
ATT0101f11:41ND COUNMILOR [AT LAR t '
. 'Fifth streotloolow'Ohestiaut,l*
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NATIONAL 'HOTEL.
\ .CARLISLE PA. • •
The g token and,Onttrely re ,
fitted and Tindlithqd ti•la hotel 1.• roparoll to funded:l
good acconntwidations to all who, den rota bloke It
their home. koli.ira of the patronnifo of tho ant ,
rpllndlog ••,critihtry trivalling, aolicitod
'Vomits largo an fvotufortahlo. 'Pablo alwajo,
plied with tbn best:,
•
6=170 \ „ , • Proprietor. ,
TUE "BENTZ TIQUSE,
\
(Pormerly Oortncirs \ liouse.)
No. 17 AND 19 EAST\MAIN,ST.,
, C • ELME,
me undersigned littrieg purchaxed hnd entirely
refittedraoto furnished /11110 N throughout\with
slaps furoltoro, tills well-known nod old eitablisbed
Liotel. solicits th a custom of the community and
travelling public. flu Is 1. oil prepared to furnish
first -daps accommodations to'all who desire to Make
a ilolei th dr HOME or I,k:omit t. mporary
The custom r from the surroumilict country Is ee.,
specifully solicited. (.7,,urteous and attenthre eer
y nonfat° engaged at this popular hotel,
CEO. Z lIKNTZ. Prom'.
N. B. A fitat chola Livery iF connected with the
Motel the management of Mr. JOB. L. Z"ntRNEII. k
800.
80.1pr . 1109•ly
TRAVELERS' GUIDE.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
SUMMER TIME TABLE.
Eight Trains (Daily) to and from Phila
delphia and. Pittsburg, and TWo
Trains Daily to and from Erio
(Sundays excepted).
ON and after Sunday, May 1,
Pas eng. r Tniiiis of Hui Prnioyiranis
Rail and coin Roy will Orport firm Harrisburg and
aril Pittsburg an tallow:
.
2 10—Philadelploin , Exprenn leni'dt Harrisburg
doily (roc pt 11.. lily) at 2 10 a. at., and arrives at
Went Philadelphia at 0 30 a. m.
6 'do—Neat Line tenet, Itarriahurg daily (oxenpt.
Monday) at 5 2 n. m , and arrival tot West Phihodal•
phia. at 9.35 a. m.
Mall train tunes.; Altoona daily (except Bundhy
at 3 00 p. no.. and arrivon at Utorritthorg at 9 lop. no,
11 12—Poc1116 - I?`,Wrtnan lenVen Hrtroinburg dolly
(. xcept Sonday) tot It 12 p m., nun arrivps at S 1 oat
Philadelphia pt 2 (6 p. m.
10 45 Ann:toad 11 press leaven Harr inburg daily
'OllO 45 , and arrives at West Philadelphia at
' 10 a .
ii 50 9oullteen P.xernas buoy. Ilarrinburg dolly
(except al ozoliov) tot 2 60 p.m., nod art Ivan at Went
itiladeLphpo at 7 00 p m.
Harrison g Accommodation leaven Altoona dolly
(Stordloy excel) cal, at 7 10 a. on., and arrivtn at Har
ris mg at 135 p. m.
3 55-11arrepaorg .000 mmodati m leaven Harris.
horg at 3 50p. m., and tooth , w at Plot adolphia at
1) 50 p no.
S 0 —l.ion , antor Trnbt, vino Mount Joy, leaven
Ilacrishurg daily (except •unday) nt 8 Ott a. , and
arrives nt Wont Plollalelphia at 12 55 p. m.
MEI
4 15—Aria Part this moat fur Erie, leaves lInr•
ring erg duly (except Snuday) at 4 15 p. m., arriving
.. 2 . q1/ 11 gilliittitiffignrigsFPORRITTSW
(except Sunday) at 12 10 a. at., arrives at Altonowsat
4 5i a .m. and arrives at Pittsburg at 9 2.1 a. a.
2 40—Pittsburg Express bray , s Harrisburg daily
(except Sunday) at 2 40 a. m., arrive.; at Attoona srk ,
8 0o a rn , takes breakfast, and arrives at Pittsburg
at i 30 p. pr
4 10-4Prmioc Express ICaves Harrisburg daily at
4 10 n rn., arrives at Alto.na nt 8 55 a. 0 , takes
breakfast and,arr,ves at Pittnburr at 1 50 p. m.
Fast Lille leaves Ha , risbur'g daily (except runday )
at 4 16 p.m., arrives at Altoona at 8 12 p. m., takes
supper ancik,tiv.o at Pittst tug at 12 12 a m.
nml Train leaves Harrisburg daily (except Sun
day) at 1 15 p arrives a: Altoona at 7 15 p. m.,
takes adi per and arr,ves at Pitts It, g nt 130 a m.
Way Pa-kertler 'Frain loaves Harist.org daily (ox
c..pt munday) at 7 45 a. nt , arrives at •Itnona at
13/lAlUlth A. BLACK,
Harrisburg April -S 30 " , P l i 87 ' 0 1' . "I'1"• Pa'na
itliaDlNG RAIL ROAD
Monday,. April 18, 1870
GREAT TRUNK LINE FROM THE North: and
North Wool 15 - ,r Fbllodelph.o, New York, Reading,
Pon ,clue, Tamaqua, Oxblood, Shamokin, Lebanon,
Alloniono, Easton, Ephrata, Ulla, Lanc”ter,
Jumble, dr.e., dre.
Trains leavr Harrisburg for.j`Zow York as follows:
at 5.35 r.IO At.,_12.20.t.00n, And 2.06 soonest
log with similar trains ow Pennsylvania , Rail Road,
and arriving at .Now York at 12.16 soon, 8,00. 0.50
null 10 00 r a., respectively. Bleeping Cars straw•
ashy the 636 a M., and 19.20,n00n trains without
change.
Returning : leave Now -York at 9,00, A. 12.00
nom, and 5.00 P M., Philadelphia at... Blb A.
and. 3.30 r a bleeping care accompany the 9.00
A. ID., and 6.00 r. x. train• from New York,
without change.
LnArn Ilarrisbarg n.r Reading, ['attar!lho, Tama
qua, Atinerevtlie, Ashland, Shamokin, Pln• Grove.
Allnutown and Philadelphia, at 8.10 A. x., 206
and 4.10. 0. U., slopplbg at ',Almon ausl principal
way ; tbo 4.10 e 0. train connectit,g for
Philadelphia, Pottaville, And Columbia only. for
Potteville, Sobnylk 111 haven nod Auburn, Oa
Schuylkill and Susquehanna Railroad. leave Harris—
burg at 3'40 P.M.
Way Passonger Train leaves Philadelphia At 7.5 d
A. It., connecting with alsnllar train on Want Penn
sylvania Railroad, returning from Reading At 6.35 P.
M., Flopping At Olt Stations.
',morn Poituville at 6 40 nod 0.00 A L.. •od 2 45 P.
at., Herndon at 930 A. M.. Pharaohlo at 6.40, and 10.-
40 A. at., Aahland at 7.05 A. It and 12.30 mom, T.
mat:ion at 8.33, A. Y , and. 2.20 P .11„ for Philadelphia
and Now York.
. .
Leave Pottovllle via Schuylkill en d 8 mgt.:alarm&
Roll ltoAd at 8.15 A. xi for Liar,.'Ahura., and 11.30 A. m,
for l'lno 11 ro WO And Trornrnt. -
Mewling Accerninodatirn Train, Inane Pottnville
at &An A x . pasties hemline at 7.30 A. Y.; eirrPring
at Philadelphia at 10.30 A. IC Ataturnlng, learns
t'htiadulphia at 5.1 A p to, panting Rendiar• at 3,60
P. , arriving at Pottsville at 940 p Y.
Poitstutro Accommodation Train, loam Patti•
town ai 8.25 A M. returning learns Philadelphia at
Olt
Columbia Rail Ifuad Trains lease Itoading at 7.11
A. er., and 8.16 P. X. for Ephrata, .Litia, Lancaster
Coluruhla..4,3.
. Rail Road TraloalMtye Pork !me m Julia-.
don at 9.60 A M., 3 01.1.1111 d 610 P. SI ratartr ,
loam, s chwooyerlllo at 3.66 A II , 12.46 noon,
and 4.16 r u., rourno.tlag with ° similar train. on
Itemilos7 Rail Road.
Colobrooltdala Railroad trains lanno Pott.tow6 at
940 A M. and 6.20 P. M. re , uri , lng. Irma. Mt. P.am...
ant at T+ o , an +.11 20 A. a.. oonnoating with similar
trains ow I. ouling Rail Road.
•
11.4, Vdilay:Railroad train' Ways Bridgeport al
8.30 ♦ at.. and 2.niland 0.02 r..at,, ,6 t 6 r 616 6, /We
Downingtown at 8:20•x, at., 12.45 nuns; ,and 5.16 v. an.,
coil...Ong with altallar train. on Heading Rail gond.
uu, ruudays i Learii.-Plew York at 0.00. P.
Philadelphia at 8.004. it. mad 3.16 2. (the LOU
n.O trnioonly to-Ito/WINO leave . Pone
•Ille at N.OO ' ll•rrlabure at 600 •. and
410, p. u., and Reading nt 7.16 A. /d .14'10 06-r. 11.
for ilai rhburA..at 7.23 0. u for'New Tarr, and at
9.40 A. d nod 4.16 Pa: for Philadelphia. •
Comm ututlou. 6111tiage, tioneou, School aid Exeur.
AlOll to dud from all poliite, at re loyal rates.
ileggage chucked through; 1110 pound, allowed exeb
Pasnouger.
103e6P
MEI
Insoo9
•
0. A. N 1 4301.1.8, fleu Oup't
Readitig, l'a., April 18, lu7o.
281tp70
cIU MlikatllAN I) VALLEY' It. R •
CHANGE' OF MOO& , •
SUMMER: ARRANGEMENT.. '
On and spear- Mangey,. Seery 2,' 1820, Passenger
Trains will run daily, ae follow., Outlays excepted):
MEM
,„,,
•
ACCOSI4IDATION' TOATN lenves--11arrisborg
thou A.ll, Mechanicsburg 8:35, Carlisle 9:ll,'Newrille
9:47, Shipponsburg Chnotbernlnirglo:44, Orem
citstio 1::113, a:riving dt Ilagerettnyrvll:43,.
VAIL Tit AlN"luoves HairlsbUrg 1:38, P. x MO.
clotnicuburg 3:orr Carlisle 2:4u, Novville
ponnbing' 46. Obankbel obure4:2o;Oreuhcastlo 4:38,
arrit in I at Hagerstown 5:23, r x.
1333911E991 TRAIN loaves Harrisburg 4:16. P
Heellaniniburg 4:47, Carlisle 6: 1 7, Newvillo 6:30, Ship
pousburg lb
1 'urrtvihs nt,t'hurnherels g 6:46. P w.
A. 311X11D,1111A1N bluves Oholoboruburg 8910, A 11
Qnronmedn o :l3,nrrivltlit nt Hagerstown limo; • St. ~
PHILADZLPIIIA,
CARLISLE, PA
',' 1 I . l l ll XsT,VvAlitl) I
• . ,• 1.
ACCOMMODA*ON 7TIIAIN io4llollChaMbl,2lbUrg
15:00'A sr, Bhippenebtirg 6:00, lievrvilla Cs On, Carlisle
033, Illocinnalcsburg 73.2 . arrivisig at Ilarrlaburg
MAIL' TllAlN.leavaa Ilignratown 7:00 .s.
male 7:35, Chamborshorg 8:10,! Bhlpponaburg.B9o
Now:Rile 0:10,. 9:4R, 'ffimhanicaburg 10:22.
arriving at liarrieburg 10:56,71. - • :
:4P7f.P738 TRAIN 'leaves ' lingerstowit 12:00'
greenmails 12:28; Chamhalebutg 81iipperahneg.
1337, Roseville 2:10. Carlisle 2:so,,Blechanicsbuig 3:181;
'arriving at Gar: Isiong 3:60; '
A 'MIXED, TRAIN leaves Gager:down Broll Per,
Greettcrtatlel:l2;firrbiltiffirECTsatnberskiirg'ESli.6. - Pli. -
-o®' r- Making civet,' , Ontiedtlona ktitrialiurg *rigs
triloo to and Itom Philadelphia. Non York; Weahing•
too, pal tlmoto,,Plttaburg, and all Dolntel,V•mt...
.4„ . • O. tr. Lurx.'sxipti ••
liuprlnte 7 dant'. Office, Chamb'g. April 30, 1870.:
w.
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'4OglT TrAITrIoN;
'Alanqvpr a'nd pppafrot 14111914!.;
doorti ttetl
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'Pin.'49.l/294laky, •
'Beet Commun Whlasy t "r! Pqrd ,
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t• TIPTTLIBIL •
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101[00
HOTELS
$A ST II A RD
I=
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WESTWARD'!
MIRE
TAB TOAS.7t ,
.
•
The following
,ia ono„of finest pro : .
duetions of tho late Sir WaltOr Scott, and
wo aro Inclined to believe that .it oannot
bo road , without causing the • bloOd to'
tingle : , . ,
• The (oast la Opel. Mott brimallog wine
•• In lordli;cup la titan to ehteml • •
at. 'Boron, each eager guest! • . • •
; r And allonce dlla tht crowded hall' •
Jo deep as when ihahorald'a call • •
Thrills la the 'royal breast.: r•
Than up, r'oso 6(63 . 1;1110 host,
Ahd sm]]]og cried, "A toast] a toast!
To all our ladies fair;.r
Hero, before all; filadged rbe oarrni
Of Sulu urea's- proud' n.l heautebua dataeL-.
The Lady quudermorel”
Then to his feet each gallant Nirung,..
And Joyous Wair the shout that rung
Ae Brir . nloy gem the word ;
\ And every cup whe raised on high,
\ Nor ceanod the loud and gladsomo cry,
• Till Btanloy's voice was heard. '
"E s iuigh, enough," tie tinning Dahl,
And lowly bentkieheughty heed,
mikhove their due,
Fo v earh'in turn snot play hie pre,
And pledge'the hulye of hie heett„ •
Like galkint knight and trui I"
Then one by one each guest sprung up,
And drslued in turn` hobrimming cup,
And named the laved one's name;
And each, as hand oh ho Mod,
ILe ladyo's graoo or beauty praised,
tier constancy,and fame,
'Tie non St. Leon's turn to rist.:
On him are fixpi . tti se courtlosa eyea—
A RallLnt knight is he,
ildvlctl by soma, adthirsil by all,
Par Limed In lady's bower and'hall,
The flower of chivalry.
As St. Leon rated his kindling eye,
And lifted the sparkling cup net . high
I drink to ofez,” he told,
-"Whose image never may &part, -
Deep graven on this grateful heart;
Tin memory be thud.
To ono whose love for ton shell last
When lighter passions long box' Inwood
So holy 418 I ruo
To one whose iOl.O bath longer dwelt,
More de, ph fined, more keenly felt,
Then any pledged by you,"
Bach goodt upotartod at tho word,
And laid a hand upon his sword,
With fury flashing eye;
And Stanley oald :"Wo ctavo tho name,
'Proud knight, of thin most peorloom dame,
Whom, love you count to high."
gi.,Cein paused, an it he would
~Not breathe h'er name In Carole,. mood
Thue li g htly topoother ;
rmatz.:akkirxethatingtuulabatr, ,, h ,
To glee thnt word the rrverene e duo,
And gently said, Mr MOTE= r.
THE BONAPARTES.
-The year 1769 deservelr to be remem
bered in the history of the world. No
fewer than twenty-six eminent mon were
born in that year ; among whom were
Humboldt; envier, Sir Thomas Lawrence,
and Sir Walter Scott. But in addition
to them there were five destined during
EMI
tl lies to exercise a remarkable in
fluence upon one another. To begin
with the least eminent 'name on the list,
Lord Castlereagh, afterwards Marquis
of Londonderry, was born in July, 1769 ;
Marshal Noy and Marshal Soult in the
course of the same year ; the groat Duke
of Wellington in May, and Napoleon
Bonaparte in August. Five months
earlier Corsica had _become subject to
France, and incorporated with the French
kingdom, after a long struggle for inde
pendence,, first under the worthlenii-JCing
Theodore, (who lies buried inthe church
yard of St. Anne's Soho,) and afterwards
under General Paoli, who_ .also found a
resting place in England, Among Gen
eral Paoli's adherenta in Ajaccio, was
one—Carlo Bounaparto, an attorney in
moderate practiCe, the descendant of an
ancient but not remarkable Italian fam
ily whichliad come from Genoa during
the domination of that city in the island.
This' Carlo was educated in Italy, and
had beeii married some time to Lmtitia
als'o the deaendant of an
Italian family. They had one elder son,
Joseph, born in 1768 ; and called their
second by the name of a collateral an
cestor of some celohrity in ancient 'ltaly
—Napoleon des ::Ursius. It was not a
common Christian name, but bore in it a
certain dignity of sound, admirably fit
ting It, for the part it was to play on the
Pagei . ofhistory. The BounaparLos—or,
as theylatterly preferred to, spell the
name Bonapartes—were sometimes said
to to of Greek origin, and- their app'ella•
Lion Was called a translation of the not
uncommon Greek surname, Kalomeras,
or Kalomeros. Napoleon was not un
willing to have this legend believed, and
it was openly put forward by his agents
during certain disturbances wader' the
Turkish rule in the Moroa. 'Nor was
this the only attempt made- to assort an
ancient and honorable descent for the
family. The following remarkable story
was invented or found : The old legends
of the Man in the Iron Mask wore raked
up ; Lid jailor was given the name of
Bonpart ; his daughter was made to fall
in love witli t tla Prisoner, ' to marry him,'
rind to bear aeon"; this son Was sent to
Italy to hveduoat,e4 ; was, called after
the name of his grandfather, Boupart—,
Italianfied" into Bonaparte'; and finally
timMatiWith the Iron Mask was assumed
to be the elder twin brother Of Louis the
Fourteenth !
This story. is durious'and astounding
enough inall conscience, but is scarcely
less so than "the fact that Napoleon hoard
it With cornplacency,and would willingly
have WWI it
. believed. HoWeve ,r the
facts of his parentage are 'simply tliese
' futher,was ri qproioani of respoot.,
-able rank, who s'uffored many-th Jogs •at
the. liande of the French on their per=
ohaio bf the island ft"om the Genoese, on
account, of Ills open objection to their
ve,giese; but who; neverthol44 was event•.
ikliy,a' member of the 'governing 'body Of
the city of Meech), and that, moreover,
title 131uries Behapaite,' being
rhuo, 1,4444, died of cancer in the atom
qafl.fr'aPOP
.1785002 v ng hii family of live eons and
tbAllt.daP M ° Fltr9FJ,_ l l9 t ° M . 9.
Pet lkriapzwit i o pot' apavte, t 0 the
mothers J3r so many greatimen, was nide.
Ilitted' Viler tmlento for . the tas *fore
her.„;sTailoleon, !ATI indeed
Cell/Anna) , ..treated. her. , wlth thO
dOhpeet roppeot, ',, She .r,deelVell briperitd'
horfOliti'dnri.ng his ;,wee,aeeigne , dl'
ialeee,tbOor Feeleynco, inid.a.largo an:
'nutil'ennt for her adateennee;'whiloldle
wee diginfiedmith the title of.' Madame
/116 i'°: " : Vari.n6.o gl,e,SO,OPli4os of for. ,
tab; hoWever,, her stern.; (food sense
nevertoth leer-;ehoconstatitly looked:
•foiyearckf r the day bi, isea' enviable
„ for,
tnnoi_avell took oaro to prbvide for the
fetuve., It ii eabfthattlitidgthetheight
of tl4lifoimily pioisliptity; ohoicoonnad
for, her saving F. habit's „by r emindings her .
questioner that ehe..might .have AWOntaTH
,allY,tnpriiide for 'f alltbel3o.ltinga i ''.or
' „At his •aiidioatien ',in 014)1 Napoleoni
took care that three; hnnd ed thousand.
frilaaa's' Year,should be pee Milt° her, 4is.
~vvell aa, What,was, called he Private:pronl :
artY , ln.Fr.nticenan„d.hek: mai7, - inrp,arig, - ; -
' Shomisited himdnripg. Oxile o;Edba, •
1
*heti , Sir Neat CaMpbe 1 ,saye. , other.::
l"
111 , 0 '.OV,'lttflYi la/ VerY.heolsemeitof midi.,
din tie r ,vnth. , it !goed flgure,-, twit freak
colon:" ! She,itutrVivest,[hOr - ipn'lleallY
(Hien yearis,,lnd .;diedLatß?me, in-,Fob
'Nepoleoit's + first/ wife ,was Josephine,
widow of the Viseompt Alexandre Sean
harnois, who had fallen during the, Reign
of:Terror. Her ; moral ;character was
none of the best,,though .she seems to
have behaved with uncorenaen.prndence
during the trying niceties which succeeded
her husband's , death, , and by attaching
to her,''successively, Remus and When,
she was enabled tp,exerolso a not inct3n
siderable. influence on the . destiny , of.
Napoleon.: She married him.in March,
1706. She had already by her first mar
riage, children-Eugene, Writ in 1781;'
and Hortense, Who, in 1802, married'
Lodis .:Bonianniite,' liar step father's
younger brother. Jorophino, an Is well '
known,. had no, children 'bi Na,p' oloon:.
Who was, howeVe'r; warmly athichod tn
both' Eugene "titid' Tl . Oriensd.' The hOY
appears to hive beee 'worthy' r abid Step
father's opirden, and afterwards ''as a
general, and later, as Viceroy of Rely;
distinguished himself by both courage
and moderation. Ho married a dangh.
tor of the King of Bavaria, and thus
, founded — a - family - Whiclrhauteeti — re=
ceived into the inmost circle Of the older
royal and imperial caste of Europe. One
of hiasons 'was King Consort of Por
tngal,but died early ; the - other married
the beautiful Archduchees Olga of Rus
sia, and died in 1852 ; and of his daugh
ters, one, Josephine, became Queen of
Sweden, another became Empress of
Brazil, and tho'Hiird Princess of Hohen
zollern Henchingen. '
As to Queen Hortense, it is hardly
ponsible to draw her character. She was
witty, beautiful, and gay, and seems to
have been, in her latter' years, a good
mother. But thus ends the little that
ranft,kaAdtinfhexrfavorithflhurawasmallw
and extravagant, And- notoriously . un
faithful to her husband. Some of her
biographers have. gone' no far ati.to say
that the present Emperor, Napoleon the
Third, is not really the son of Louis,
but of 'a . certain Count Flabault, with
whom she was very intimate, and' by
whom she had 'already had a son, the
late Duke de Morny. The singular re
semblance observable between the Count
and Louis Napoleon strengthens the
story.---Hortense-died,in-18a7 r -having...
resided for some years in Sivitzerlaud
with her younger son. She was accom
plished In music, and wrote the air now
so welLknown, "Partant pour la Eyrie."
Her husband survived her until 1846,
but they de not appear to have met from
the date of Napoleon's downfall. He'
died at Leghorn, and was buried beside
his father and hie elder son at St. Lou,
in PranCe. Like most of the brothers'
he was highly accomplished, and wrote
- several •works of fiction, including an
opera and tragedy. .
Napoleon, by his second marriage,
left, as is well known, a, son, the King of
Rome, who, after his father's abdication,
and the futile attempt to have him ac
knowledged, as Napoleon the Second, ac
companied his mother to Vienna to the
court of his grandfather, the Emperor'
of 'Austria. He „entered no' military
service of the EMpire, 'and became
colonel .of a battalion of infantry. His
health failed early—it was said by reason
of the assiduity with which he pursued
his military studies ; • but . the truth seems
to bo that he was encouraged, by his
,grandfather's - eennivhnoe, in every- spe
cies of youthful excess, and that the
decline of which, Mlee a long illness he
died at Scholibrunn, was the result
desired and attained by that astute policy.
His mother,. Marie •Louisin, after her
husband's death, became; by?the treaty
of Vienna, Duchess of .Parma and Elomo '
Mitior states, . aid, retaining the title of
Empress, lived in comparative retirement
until her death in 1847. She had mar
ried again a man of inferior rank, who
is said to,have kept her strictly under
his authority, *ill a view „especially of
saving a handsome ;fortune for himself
before her death, i . „ • , ,
Napoleon's eldest brother Joseph, the
king, first of Naples and aftervrardh of
Spain, begmtlife as an ardent republican;
and in 1.79 was a member of the Corsi:
Can Gevernment: under Generid NOB,
an old friend of the family, and godfather
to the future Emperor. Eventually Jo
seph, whose mind wanted firmness, left
Paoli'and came to Marseilles, where lie
married•the daughter of a rich hanker in
that city, M. Clary,, . A. ryouriger 'slater .
Was the wife of Bernadotte, afterwards
King of SWeden. Joseph's exploits as a
member oflthe French. Republican Gov
ernment, and his , subsequent elevation, •
successively to the Neapolitan and Span
ish thrones, are.matters of Itiatory-1;. /
After hit brother's abdication he, - re- I
' .
tired to the Untied States, whore, 13 a They,perinitpolygamy in Feejee, 'and
the unii , nionaties are trying to induce the'
Count pf Sairiillieeli,: . ho' aided' for sn'iri
years the life
,9 i iriyato citizen . In natives to give,
made a, convert,give RAIL A short time ago
1830 he returned) to Europe and adve- imo•of ilia
and this colivertewore av solemn Oath that
cated, rho' claims of • his' nephew, the
present EMParcir,:to the Ekenek throne:' he ;Would forsalrUMly4alny.foravar.' He'
Bylhis wife, who eepa'rated, from,hinton, had ' twenty - anion ' wivestliis ) Convert
t wo brid,—and sp ho 'Went right' bet and
f ; or ea .A o m e e f ri t e l a, lima l7 had-two
, got bp the, higgesefren hiiich:Ri t was
Il daughters i\de i:
t 11 6
i n ° ly
Charlotte, aiarried . 'hOi n odoliiii Oharlis,' overheard of In; that nartOrtae' , '"raolfic
the eldest spa ocher, father'e third brother cocain. Whop his ielatioreVand
. frienel;;
Linden. Her children .may,. :therefore, and tile missinnailes'cam6 . loo:Vartake'
be said to tic;present the 'elder branch of of the cielicneles of the Sonnon ) froin'his
the faMili ~, and thongh they cannot be festiveboar4 thin' Con'YO4 drOl,ido a
consideredithe,neit heirs petite dynasty,; 'aitttitin;: and'there We're' , 6entY4leofiiiti
osying to the operation of the ,BallOue. WIV.4, impaled On reliOlilni spits; ' all
law, they oindoubtedly tome ' nearer thedoalikle, and brown, and trimmed' with
sneciession ! thaii do 'the: •obildrea•Oftlia • parsley and , epees. of bouts,,, f,m.i 4nollnl ; ,
ybliiiigetil brother Jerome, ex-king of d' 9 , Bl g . l4 in:7 l otl l P,
~ P, P 9r.,1,M,4 ~ F,cli'4tliflor,
I r o ardittii 4 . . .. . , ,• . arias wont hop and poi 4
,tlmic„rogrote,,
~ .I'," ( but all the reeleefans, turned il); and it
..'f hoer grmdfatber, Lucien Bonaparte, , ,
~,. ~. .. ' ~. ~...
'the thirdattliersoas Of 'Cart; and'Llutiz: ,4 " t !" ." . 1 + 10,t4939 twt3'1111, 1 .,7° 1 , 1 f49 1
tie; :Mao" or u bf i ;
,',,i,1: 4 6 80 ,4 0 06, Atoiii: , worcr , effeetnaliY, d,iyprood,front I that i con 7 ,
Pag . ,f o A. , lP ,P.; °Mc? , Pt, Al!4 1 -0, .that
gpished as,a, man of science and letters. ' 7 6 ., r . i.
He 'engaged at first in.polities, in-whieh• would 6 1"93.P , PitRu.0. 490:t,4 1 - 1 7 , Y.P l '.
low with ony,y,7,i4a„a l! reed it, Ivaa yoyy,
he Baerne!tohaynshown,more talent than
any other f the brother& except Napo.. '
Man, btit,' as of too independent a dis. , ,
4 eueccessftili; but , those missionaries re-
fused'to 'permit him. to come in and,!
teach a Sunday school class. 'Ho /feels
, POOition rto ~ submit , to , : the peror
, Em's.
61 4OrfitL 4 113 'carlf faired :froth , 'lrraboo i 'Aroa.til.l. b ir ' 9°ltldees a'nd'irldist.° 6llo6 :' '
and-,ii , ned I larasidentai t at Cardin);
. in flip . ' . -Ar f, .- ,,, 4,1 ''',,,, ~,,,, ~.,
Hrinaart tit tes, of which, and oflguSig. "''' l'inire'rl'a man wbo 1
,lipopB•Ai list pi! 4
1
nano,' ,the Pope created Ilitin'!irined," 'the banks in thenenntry,no an,te tie able,:
,H o r,c! 4° Voinainod, 000upiod with solon•
~'to say that ho Icoopu a haul; aolooinnt '.
':.',
TAIpII,SDAY • Y. '2 -IS79.'''
„
, tiklmrsiutas roturri,
ftench4lba,:ppuihp again ,visited TAO,'
and.,bad , p.ahare iq'the govempnent ef
tba llundrcd,pays t in tinally;pade l ,the
~ tit/nOceesft it:appeal, on ; the , fellett,Ere
peloc's behay ang+that ; Of, lAis„port,; to
'whieh, the IFrenclic „Chamber r:lSSnincl .
i!.;lle.qtadi )efore this iboon oeptfired by
amllngliah oruiser,while .on a voyage ,to
, Ameriett i l Did hail:raided in TO/ouster.
shire; under surveillance for three or four,
' , yehre.,l 'Hero his second son, 'princei
Louis tucidu, was horn, , retiro4'4 l .
to . his'lloman „estains,f, Mid blwiti/h”
by;exploratipp and..,eacavation, :4ieCey
ered the .reinaihs of an , ancient pity pa
his property,,, ; he aCcumulated.,alene
museummf antiqUities, and wrote an in.
teretitirig,necoont of it, .He died An,1..846 7
He had been :twice' married 7 first,tp,the
daughter of an inekeeper,ie Proy.ence;
and .afterwiuds„ orr„ . her "death, tp . the
widow of a stockbroker named , Jonher•
thou., . 1 . ,
Ito deeply offended, his brother by both
his marriages, andlis children were not
mentioned inothe law ofsncoession passed
by,: the Senate. Ho had,. eleven. in all,
most of whom survived' him, and are Stilt
living. liiii,okiest son,. Charles, the late
.Priupe of,Canino, was AV naturalist of the
highest, attainments, and the second was
said to bp orfp.of the most accomplished
linguiStS, in ';Europe. The notorious
.Pierre Bonaparte is the third and only
surviving son. Several of his daughters.
married into families of middle rank (the
eldest, by, hie first wife was united to Sr
Thomas Nye; 'British ambassador in
Greece, by . whom she had a son and
dalighter,) ; and the, youngest, became, a
nu -lb • - ,
Princo Ch'arlea of Canino, loft aevoial
children at his deathly. 1857, the eldest
of whomwas the late Prince Joseph. of
Canino, and the second is known as Car.:
dinal Bonaparte, a proniiuont member
of the Papal Court. Tho sisters have all
married among the Ronian and Tuscan
nobility. The family, generally, differs
from the French branch in being retro
grade in its political opinions, and in act
ing directly against the very principles to
which it owes its present elevation. We
may observe en peasant, as a curiosity of
genealogy, that Cardinal Bonaparte pre
" t TaI r iIaSIREERTMEEERFU
hit granduncle the []rat Napoleon. The
priestly tonsure no doubt, hbutributes - to
This sppetirance. • "-
The youngest of Napoleon's brothers
died only nine years ago. Lie was but a
youth at the rise of the family prosperity, -
and 'diet not realize-the change in his
'posilion and prospects sufficiently early ,
to satisfy the new Einperor. During a
naval .visit to the United.. States, and
whilst he was in command of a French
ship,, lfo married Clio ififaiTigli or
of an American citizen, Miss Elizabeth -
Patterson ; by hor he had a son, Jerome,
now known, _ we:believe, as CoL
parte, in the United States army ; but
Napoleon' speedily dissolved the marrMge
by decree, in which, uo vainly endeavored *
to persuade the Pope to join, BO that a
question remains as th Whether the sub
sequent marriage, of Joromelo Catharine
Sophia:Dorothea, daughter of Frederick,
King of . ClTUrtemberg, and a lineal docon
dant of our George the First, was strictly
Bo it as it may, his son and daughter,
by this union, are acknowledged by:Na
poleon the Third, and the son has, like
his father, been admitted to a royal alli
ance, and that too with one-of the most
exclusive families .in Europe. 1n,1859
he married Clotidla, the eldest daughter
of Victor Emanuel, King of. Italy, and
has by her several children. His sister,
Mathilda,-inherits the beauty of her fam
ily. ' She was married in 1841 to 'Prince'
"Anatole Demidoff, but, it is not possible
to commend her for: anything except ,it
certain brilliant wit, which seem heredi
tary among the Bonapartes,
Napoleon's sisters married well : Elise
to an Italian nobleman. named Baceio
chi ; Caroline 'fo Murat, sob King •
of Naples, by Whom she WairnieTther of
the letOiPrince Achille Murat, who mar
ried a grandniece of General Washing
ton; but died without children, in Florida;
where ho had been' long settled. His
next brother, Prince' 'Lucien. MUrat,
married' to an - EngliSh subject, Miss
Georgiana Fraser, , and enjoys the favor
of his cousin, the present 'Empefor.
Another brother is a 'colonel in the
Fronchl service, and has espoused •o,'
daughter,of the famous •'Bertllior; Prince
of Wagram: Pauline; , the third' of Na;
sistersi ,,, whe nnoSt resembled
him in 'nppearainmi 'and , seems have
been Lis favorite, married the Thnitan
Prince Horghose.c She was of bid indif.:
ferent morals: • • • ' •
• Tho prokint Enipictor . has married to
plows() lihnoolf, and*itliont . rifdronco to
political advantage' •" Tho bOautiful and
•gontlo, though / bidotod "Einpro'ss Eugo"-,
nio,•hrot noblo' but not royal
'that, Or Montijcil her fatlion'Was D Oho o (
Ponoranda, in Radii, and'ohei is ott3cOt
tish descent, through hor I giandrnothor,'
a Kirkpatrick. • ", • • •
• •
t,THAV,,G.RE,A.7!,4Iwr 0prT.R.44.0T.
^T. • . :11t ItAILK. TWAIN. -
In as few; Words- as 'PossiblOl wish to
larbefore 'the . nation 'What share,' how
doctor small,lC hain had in this matter--
thifileattei iwhich has di. exorcised the
, rliihd;' 'engendered so much All
feelinvand aci , tilled the newspapers of
both'tontirient's with. 'distorted etate-
MentsamtVextravagatit comments.
• , t :Thb 'origin of this distressful thing was
thit , :-atui Y, assert here that every fact in
the reawnsei, lean •be amply
,proverlby thMfil
edial records-of the Gen
eral Governinent ; • • •,"
John., Wilsori Mackenzie;' of Hotter
, ddm; ~Chemung county, 'Nett Jersey,
deceased, contracted with the General
Government,' on or about the tenth day
of October, , 18d1, to fiiinish td Rioneral
Sherman tiMeuni total of thirty barrels
of beet. , Vei'y
,He started after
Sherman with - the beef, but when he got
to. Washington, Sherinan had gone 'to
Manassas 4so he tiiek the beef and fol
:lowed him there, but he arrived too late;
he followed him to NallMillo, and from
Nashville ,- ChitttanOoga and from
.Chattanoolto Atlanta , Atlantbut IM never
eould °Vertu e hint. At Atlanta lie took
tt, fresh' start;' and followed hint' clear
through' hie Mareli to the 'sea. He ar
'rived toolate again by a`forr days, but
hearing that Sherman' was going out in
the Quaker City excursion to the Holy
0L and, ho took shipping. for Beirut,
dilating to head off the other vessel;
When he irrived in Jerusalem with his
beef, he learned that Sherman had not
sailed in the other vessel, but had'gone
Ao_the_Plains to_flght the
,Indians. -He
returned to America, and started for the
Rocky Mountains. After eighteen days
of arduousi travel on the Plains, and
when ho had got within four miles of
Sherman's headquirters,. he was toms.-
hawked and scalped, and the Indians got
the beef. They got all of it but one bar
rel. Sherman's - hi-my captured that, and
so, even in death, the bold navigator
partly fulfilled his contract. In his will,
which he-had kept like a journal, he be
queathed the: contract, to his, son,-Bar
tholomew W., who made out the follow
ing bill, and then died :
The limited States, 1
2 - RovviflfrginykiNNlAAELf4 141E441,
of New Jersey, deceased•:
.To thirty barrels of beef for
- General Sherinan@sloo $ . 3,000
To travelling% expenses and
transportation •
Total, $17,000
Received Payment, -
Ho died then ; but ho left the contract
to William J. Martin, who tried to col
loct it, but died _before ho got through.
Ho left it to Barker J. Allen, andkhe
tried-to-Colloot-it-alt.,--Hellid,not sc r.
vivo.
,Barkm:.:J. Allen left ~ikto Anson.
41. Roger's, who attempted to collect it,
and,goalbng as far as the Ninth Audi
tat') offiee, - ..when Beath, the great Lov
elier, t amp . all unsummoned; and fore- .
'OlosOd on hi`in also. Ho left the bill to a
ralatiVe of his in Connecticut,-Vengeanco
Hopkins by name, who lasted four weeks
and two days, - .and mado the best time on
'record, 'coming within oho of :reaching
the TWelfth Auditor. In his will he
gave the contract bill to his uncle, by
the name of 0-be-joyful Johnson. It
was too undermining for Joyful. His
last words were : "Weep not , for me—l
am willing to go." And so he was, poor
Boni.' Seven yoople inherited the con
tract after that. But they all died. So
Weenie into my hands at last. It fill to
me through a • relative by thernamo of
Hubbard—Bethlehem • Hubbard,' of In
diana. He had a'grudge against mo for
a long time ; but in his last moments he
sent for me, and forgave me everything,
and weeping gave mo the hoof contract.
This ends the history of it.up to the
timo,tliat I succeeded to the property.
I will now endeavor to set myself straight
before the nation in everything that cOn
corns my share in the matter.' I took
this beef contract, and the bill for mileage
and transportation to the President of
the 'United States. Ho said_: •
" Well, sir, what can I do for you?"
" I said : "Sire,Ort or about the tenth
day of October,,lB6l, John Wilson. Ma
ckenzie, of Rotterdam, Chemuug county,
New Jersey, 'docoased, contracted with
the General Government,, to furnish to
General Sherman the-sum-total of thirty
barrelii of hoof" . •
He Stopped .me there, and dismismid
ifiefrom his presence—kindly, but !Frilly.
the:riiiict''day I called, on the Secretary
of-State.' Ho said
"bell, Ar ?"
I Said.: ,2
P, Your Royal Highness—On. or about
the tenth 'day' of October, 1861, John
'Wilson 'Mackenzie, of 'Rotterdam,- Cho.
LIMIT bounty, Now Jersey, deceased,
contracted with tho General Govern.
moot tekurriish to General Sherman the
sum total of thirty barrels of beef"-- ,
7‘Tfi . do,t3ip- that , will do; this,
Wilco . has nothing to
,do, witb,contraots,
for bear." . :;• „i• . •
was bewod out, „1 thought Abe mat-.
tar al}
~ fiTor, and Ilnally, the following
day' ,I visited the aeoratery„of the.Naii,
who Qaid, tBplBLik,quiekly, si. ; do not.
keeq . Lne weiting.'? , Bald
4 . 1 4(Mr Royal Ilighness—On or about
Alio -Aith day pf Getober,..lBol, John
Nilson, Mackenzie, of .Ibitterdam,, , Che-,
murk/ countY, •Now Jersey, , ideeeased,
contracted withthe,GeaeralSloyerament
r to,rarnish to gen. Rhernian the aura
,tal ef thirty, liqrrets , ,of be ef--?,, •,; t: • •
na.fm• f Ka
had nothing'', to, doi,,wtth,..;beer,contraate,
fop Qap.:
,81.113rInma elttLer, / I began ,to
,tbink Atm,as a, purieep bled ofq eloverrt-i
• 4,ldokpa sprolv,lAM •as i they
1 11411Cd , t9 ge n t •A 44 of I)7 l PgfQr that boot,
The following, dey, went to the &wre n .
tary of,the lotorgr. ,I st}id:t i ~; „
"your Irn o paOalr,.lllghneqs-iOn or,
about the tetitlrsttly „ .
11 . ,:f itriiat ,sit rrlbaxeheiLPA
bri you beftire. „Gon-talso yqnr , infernons;
beef contract' 94 , ..,4i1,t4is ,citajAsatippt, ,
The Interlbr Department jjep t retblag
whatever to I , k! ytttb.pnbetstaece:, for the
wi Went" grail b4t WRS exeisporated
now. , T gold kauut ( them; I
would every, , doparttnent, ot. dips
Iniquitous liocuruord.,ol,l that:contract
. Iptueou pas ottlod3 rugd,oolloot that
at 4 to3thPr4ducosisore,,
log. culiuided Poxdatoutor General I.
13,et!ogsid,.flp ' Agcloo4o.rol, Departmotit ;
flk9oser, to,F die Jtoullo of
4301)ps",),#0 1 1, 04.1 l'Asy ,luul nothing. to
do_ with, contracts' for beef. I
moved upon the Commissioner of the
Patent Office. I said : . •
"Your aUgust Excellency : ,On or
about--!! • ' •
"Perditioh I have you got. hero with
your incendiary beef. .Contract, at last?
We have nothing, to do with beef coin-
tracts for the army,' nirdear sir.!!
"Oh, that is all, very ,Iroll—but some
body ha:vet to pay for that beef. „him
got, to be paid now, too, or eOnilscate
this old. Patent pillee,'Wnd everything
in it."
"put my dear eir—"
"It don't make tiny difference, sir.
The Patent Office is liable for that beef,
reckon; and liable or not liable, the
Patent Office has got to pay for it."
Never mind the details. It ended in a
fight. The Patent Office won. But I
found out something to my • advantage.
I was told that the Treasury Department
was the proper place for mato go to. 'I
went there. 'I waited two hours and a
half, and then I' was admitted• to the
'First Lord of the Treasury.. said :
"Most noble, grave and reverend
Signor•—:'..On of bout the tenth .clay of
October, 1861, John Wilson' Maoktin="
"That is sufficient, sir. I.have , heard
of you. Go to the First Auditor-of the
Treasury," . • -
I did so. • Ho sent' me to the Second
Auditor. •The Second Auditor sent me
to the Third, and the Third sent me to
the First Comptroller of the Cora Beef
Division. This: began to looklike
business.. He examined his hooks and
all loose papers, but found no minute of
the beef contract. I went to the Second
Comptroller of the Corn Beef Diviaion.
He examined his books and his loose.
papers, but with. no success. I was
encouraged. During that week I got as
far the • Sixth coniptroller in that
division; the next week I got through
the Claims Department ; the third week
I began and completed the Mislaid Con
tracts Department, and got a foothold In
the- Dead Reckoning Department. I
finished that in three days. There was
enly one place left for it now. I laid
siege to the Commissioner of Odds and
Ends. To his clerk, rather—ho was not
there himself. There were sixteen
beautiful young ladies in the room,
awritinguirchonlacamL , thensrwa
well fathred young clerks showing them
how. The young women smiled 'up over
their 31;orilders, and the clerks smiled
back at thorn, and allwent merry as a
- marriage bell. TwO or three clerks that
were reading the .newspapers looked at
_rue rather hard, but went on reading,
and nobody said anything. However, I
had been used to this kind of 'alacrity
from Fourth Assistant Junior Clerks all
through my eventful career, from the
scery_day...Lentered_theifirst.-office-of„the
Corn Beef Bureau clear till I passed out
of the last one in the Dead Reckoning
Division. I had got so accomplished by
this time, that,Lcould stand on one_ foot
from the moment I entered an office till a
.clerk spoke to me,"'vrithout changing
more than two, or may be three limes.
So I Stood there till I had changed
four different timerr. Then I said to one
of the clerks who was reading:
"Illustrious Vagrant, where is the
Grand Turk?"
" What do you mean, sir whom'do you
mean? If you mean the Chief of the
Bureau, he is out."
" Will he visit the harem to day?"
The young man glared upon 'me
awhile, and then went on reading his
paper. But • I knew the ways of those
clerks. I know I was safe, if he got
through before, another Nen York mail
arrived. He only had two more papers
left. After awhile he finished them, and
then he yawned, and asked me what I
'wanted.
" Renowned and honored 'lmbecile
On or about—"
14 000
" You are the beef contract man.
Give me your-papers,-"'
He took them and for a long time he
•ransacked his odds and Midi:--Finally,
he found the North West.. Passage, 'as
regarded it—be found the long lost rec
ord of , that beef contract—he found the
rock open which so many of my armee.
' , tors had ;split before they over got to it.
I was deeply moved. And yet I
rejoiced—for I had survived. I said
with emotion, " Give it me. The
Government , •will settle noriv." Ho
waved me back, and said there was
something yet to be done first.
" Where is this John Wilson Mack
enzie?", paid he.
"Dead."
" When did he die!"
"He didn't die at all—he was killed."
"How?" •
" Tomabawked."
' " Whotomailawked him V" •
".Why, an Indiari, of course. You
didn't "suppose it was a superintendent
of a Sunday Sehool, did you?" •
"NO. Au Indian; was it?" •
" The, same.',
"Name, of the Indian?" '
"Fibi ham o I I know hie name."
..'"liihSt hive his name. Who saw the
• ,
tomehawkies done?"
"I don't Irnow."' • " ,
'!You wore not present yourself then?"
"Which you ean see by my :hair. I
,wakabsent."
"Thou, how do you, know that Meek
.
enzie is,!tead 4"; .
'• "Iloos.wm"les certainly died at that.
time,,aud I have ovary, mason to,belleve
that ho ; has • boon ;dead ever 'Since., I
1rk" 4 90 has, in ;fact.' • ,
have priers.; ,have you,
got the Btdais ?°t ;„. .
'"Of,99urr '• , • ,
" Welk you numb get him. Hare'you
,gpt,tbe tontehawkr,!
:.; "I hev,erth ought:cif pooh a thing." ,
i;,
You Must gatthe tomahawk. ' .You
must produee the' Indian and the toma
hawk:, •;/(31,aokenale's death eon be pro.
these,iyou can then go, before the
commlesion.- appointed to. audit elairne,•
with Rome phew of getting 'your- bill ua:
derauolshoadway that yonr children may
possibly live, to receive titan:Loney and en.
; fork, - But that : man'a ' death - must be
proven, HoWeier,. • I mai!as Wall
you that the Geverruhent mill never pay'
that .transportation, andthesoti•aiollihg
expens4 of the; lamentedt.MaokerusiM
It may; possibly iMy.; for the 'barrel'
of , beef - lhat ,Shermante soldiers.. cap 4.
Lured, itymt
,can got a - relief bill thrOiigh
Congress ; ;making tor appropriation i for
that,p4Miae.l)4 it , will hot pay fortbir'
i'ffentY-ulne,barieleUMlniliatutate."
•I• 1 F Then tlunvitionly U. hundred dollar,'
. , .
due me, and that isn't. certain After
all Maokonzie's travels in Europe, Asia,
and America with that beef after all
his trials and tribulations and transpor
tatioue ;' after tho slaughter of all those
innocents that tried to collect that bill !
Young man, why did the First Comp
troller of-thii Corn Beef Division tell me
this?"
"He didn't know anything about the
gennin,eness of your elsim."
" Why didn't the Second tell me ?
why didn't the_ Third why did n't all
those divisions and departmentstell me l'"
"None of them know. We do things,
by routine here. You have followed the
routine and found out what you wanted
to know., It is the best way. It is the
only way. It.is very rogul'ar, and very
slow, but it is very certain."
."Yes certain death. It has
, been, to
the most of our tribe. I begin to feel
that I, too; am sailed. Yming man,'you
love the bright creature yonder with the
gentle blue eyes and the stool pens behind
her ears—l see it in your Soft glances ;
you wish to marry her—but you are poor.
Here, hold out your, hand—here is the
beef contract ; go take her and be happy 1
Heaven bless you, my children 1"_
This is all that I know about the Great
Beef Contract, that has created so Much
talk In the Community. The •'clork to
whom Ibequeathed it died.. I know noth
ing further about the contract, or any one
connected with it. I only know that if
a man lives long enough, ho can trace a
thing through the Circumlocution Office
of Washington, and find out, after much
labcir and trouble, and delay, that which
he could have found out on the first day,
if the business of the Circumlocution
Office were as ingeniously systematized
as it would lidtif it Were a great private
mercantile institution.—Gatazy for May.
We rather hold the opinion that Pius
IX. is partly indebted for his longevity
to the love of the humorous that is one
of his prominent characteristics. The
good man is now seventy- eight, and even
the weighty matters that press upon him
during the sessions, of theUeumeni cal do
not prevent his thorough enjoyment of
the passing goad things. It has been said
that the most superb looking members
of tlio Council aro the Oriental prelates,
lift tI4 •rSiii TIRE EY OW 9iYtCtil
—in fat , they are , dirty. Ono of these
unclean firtionaries was invited to an in
terview with his Holiness. The Orien
tal bishop could , not speak a word of
Italian, French; or English—nothing but
41 curious Latip, Arabic, and Cbaldoo.
The interpreter carried on the conversa
tion. Before going he asked, as usual,
the Papal benediction. Now be it re
momberedthat his Holiness is one of the
cleanest, neatest old men in the world.
- Hertakes - a - cold'spongo - bath eV-cry-Morn
ing, and when you see him in his nice
whiti3 clothes, notice his fresh healthy
face, handsome hands, and thoroughly
well =kept appearance, you can not help
thinking of a hearty fat baby just out
of the morning nursery toilet; for the
white skull cap and silvery hair add to
this illusion. Imagine then what such a
clean old man mutt have felt while
breathing the odor of this. Oriental spe
cies of prelatical sanctity.,,_ ,
When asked for his benediction, the
Popo turned to those who surrounded
him, and said, with an expression pe
culiarly RoMan—for these" Romans are
the Most witty, sarcastic people-in the
world :
"Are you very sure this bishop doos
not understand Italian?"
"Very sure, Holy Father."
"Well, then," said his Holiness, in
Italian, drawing himself' up before' the
kneeling unclean man, "Dirty and ugly
as thou art, I bless ,thee," etc.,' etc.—
Harper's Magazine, for May.
HOW TO MAKE MONEY.
Enter-into-a -business -of-which- you
have a perfect knowledge. In your own
right, or by the aid of friends on long
time, have a cash capital sufficient to do
at least a cash business. Never venture
on a credit business •at the commence
ment. Buy all your goods or materials
for cash; you can thus take advantage
of the market and . pick and choose whore
and when-you will. Bo careful not to
overstock yourself. Hit) and fall with
the market'-on short stocks.' Always
stick to thosh wheel you prove to be
strictly honest in their transactions, and
shun all others, even at a temporary dis
advantage. Never take advantage of a
customer's ignorance, nor equivoir - 4!
nor misrepresent.. Have but ono price
and a small profit, and you will find all
the most profitable customers—the cash
ones—or they will find you. .
It over deeeived in business transac-
Cone, never attemptlo save yourself by
° putting the deception upon others; but
submit to Hui loss, and be more cautious
in tho future, According to the char
actor of success of your business, sot
aside a lib'eral- percentage , for Minting
and advertising, and dO not. hesitiite.
Never let an article, parcel, or.package,
go out from you without a 'handsomely
printed wrapper, card or circular, find
dispense thern continually. Keep your,
self unceasingly , before the public: by
judiciously. advertising; audit matters
not what business of, utility you make
choice. of; . if infolligontly and „industri
ously pursued, a fortune will bo the re
sult.
Truth will ,never die ; the stars will
grew dim, thesauri'. will pale, his glory,
but truth, will beforever, *nog.., Integ
rity, uprightness, honesty,. love, good
lieu, these ire . all imperishable. No
grave can over. entemb these immortal
principles. j'iloy-• have been in prisod,
but tlley have'. been,, freer than before;
those who have mudiriried them in their
hearte have burned at the . stake; but out,
of thelrishes other witneeses havo,arLsem
No 1103 can drown, no storm mil wreck,
no abyss can swallow up the ever Hiring .
truth of God., You cannot.kill gelidness
and truth, and integrity, arid faith; and
holiness; tho . way : that is consistent
with thesis must be. a way .evorlastingi--r
A young woman, in one of the rural
.towns of Now liarepshiro wasdesirous gr
!teahhing sohnol in o,nbightoring village,
And' got this doel!ment from the select,
! } This is to certify that _Tamar
Noyes stands; on , with tptlux
girl's Of 'ter age , and sox, and for, what
;knoll is , as good , as (pike in? goneral.!!
Tamar got the 61311001, - • ;,-f
la
WIT AND 11DITO1.
,
'Why' is Canada like eearteltipt Be
cause it borders on the United States.
Caution to thoso who, attOuci..balls 7
Never tiniakthe With a , red.
. . ,
-A codfish breakfaSt and an India rub ,
hor.ovortoat will keep: a'nrum dry all, day.
'Chimney, sweeping must be: very
agreeable. business, for it soots everybody
who tries it.
..Why o,re good womenlike ivy? .113-
6itiite 'tip) greater the ruin the clone
thoY'eling I
. _ _
I am / going. to draw this beau into a;
kno,,as‘the ' lady said at , tlio h:yrndnial
altar.
An editorof a paper in Indiana wanta
to know If modern' whisky was ever seen
"Commn thro' the ryor . .
A California'paper says that tho
peso Twill win universal reSpect by a"
Boit of heathenish habit they have of
minding :their, owl
The ladies of Uniontown, Penusylvii
nia, have , a societycalled "Anti. Slande
ring 13oelety." An exchange ktys, "It
don't meet often."
What
,is. the "clifferenee between a
-
young girl and air old', ilk? Merely a
difference of time—one has feeling, and
the other has felt: .
An urchin bein; sent. for five 'cents'•
worth of inaccaboy snuff, fcirgot the
name of the article, and . asked for five
bents' worth make-a-boy-sneeze. " •,.
The Cleveland. Herald thinks the mar
riage service should be made to iread.:
, :-Whoda,reS to take this. woman? and
the groom shall answer I dare," • •
How can you get anew set of teeth in
serted gratis? Go into somebody else's
garden where they,keep a big dog e and
kick him
The man in jail who looked out of the
window of his'_oell and exclaimed,: " This
is a grate country P' is- now generally
admitted to have spoken within bounds.
".Don't trouble yourself lostretch your
mouth any wider," said a dentist to his
patient; "I intend. to stand outside to
draw your tooth."
What is the difference between half-a
glass of water and a broken engagenient ?
One is not filled full, and the other is
VC.
What is. the difference between a con
ceited conjurer and an important blood
vessel in -the neck? Orie is a vain jug
gler, and the other is a jugular vein.
" Tell me . truly, , what is love?" once
said Mrs. E— to Mr. E—." "" My
idea of it," said the wretch E—, "is
hot. grog got ready for 3 - Our husband's
return home after midnight.,"
"John," said a hen-pecked husband,
wives as it is to trade horses." " Why
so?" "I'd cheat. somebody before
.night."
A Yankee_ paper says, in anobituary
notice, that "the deceased has been for
severalrars'a Director - of a bp:k,• not
withstanding which ho died a Christian,
and universally respected."
A new -parody and pbent by Figaro,,
commences thus :
" ' yore that tea I
Touch note single drop ; .
In putt; It tom pod thee
But cow, for Ueavon's sake, stop
A jilted swain spitefully says "1:Ive
did not know as much" as her daughters
of the present day. Had they been in
her place, instead of being deceived, they
would have deceivid the devil."
Teacher—Boy at the foot Of the class,
spell admittance. -
Teacher—" Give the defini
tion." Boy—" Fifty cents, children half
price ; front seats reserved for ladies."
Keep doing, always doing—remember
ing that wishing, dreaming, intending,
murmuring, talking, sighing and' repin
mentg.
Round hats have almost , entirely su
perseded bonnets with both yciung and
old. They are worn very, .high, a 3
gentleman expressed it, - three . StorieK ‘i
nigh, with a cupola and alccn and:a
flag alhalf-mast.
We see that a Miss Minnie Hawk, frOmi
New 'York, has been, singing with sue 2
cuss in America, and is engaged to 'ap
pear in Euthpe. Wo aro delighted to ac
knowledge our charming sister. If she
has as great a success over here, 'as her,
brother, Tommy' Hawk, she' will have
nothing to complain of. - • "„
In a village near. the , Southern State
line,:a few days ago; a isifce'young than
put a sheet around kiln to scareaDutch
man. The' Teutonic; 'goutleinan_eays ;
just jump oftf My wagon and vip 1,317.
'khost all the tiine:' I would viR him if
he waSa • whOle graveyard," Some ono
asked the , young 'mail' What ailed his
blaok eye, and ho' said ho had received
bad bows from Germany...
On
.
On a tombstone, in Germany, there •18
-painted a red o'x,•withtail elevated:and
head sunk, evidently on the point of run
ningbis horns, into a chalk white iudi- r
vidual who is pressed up
,against a rock.
Below the picture is this incriptiOn.
"Py the thrutt of ox'si horn -
fettle I into ?leaven's hours t,
Alt tti qui ckly
ul
Wife etchiftlrou leave in'ult 1;
But In oterr.itv rest I ROW,' .
Aii.091.11101 thou., thou ul hictst thou I".
Wo.hear a good story of a man who
Went to tiro frontier tO see a friend:
Tho;family consisted Oftho linshand,,b)s_
Wife and two. grown -"Sons., The goo
old lady was the only One of, the' family.:'
who did not - ink!) a Milo' of the oho
joyful." • Bitting- by the • fire'a • few'
minutes, the 'old man tipped him a wink,' '
and tho visitorfollinve:d Old: • Stop
ping, by .4 ,tioo,.j.to pulled, out a. long
necked , bottlo, remarking, • have to
keep it hid, for the.boys tWdgetto drink. ,
lug, and the eld:womancrtould.reise the,
They tottic rw.driuk. and. returned
to . tho 'firesido., 'Soon' ,• Toni, ,the
son,, milted thio. visitor out• to coo ftecolt;
and,taking 14Int,heltind the barn, • pulled
out a thiiikiromarking,. have.to hoop
• this hid,: for tho oid man svill.geit drunk,
and the 4-1 pay,', . and they
took a drinld andcrefurned.: ,Boorr.Beu
v
iztepped outfit: , visitorls toos,Mnd Walked.'
00;, ,, ,th0 visitor ' .As; they
'reached, thellitr. lion, Blob r droll' out x ! -
goorl stied bottle, remarking,:'..'.' You:'
.know t!lie ! olit 'snail !and , 'Toni, 'wlll!'get , !!,;
•!
drunici , atid I I have! to Aide
'visitor. onnoluded , ,ke..conld stand 'it'!.
to admit confidentially ! with !the
totally, and statiod 'tinhorns:,
111161
II a 1 1
ITsnms: ADVANOX,
$2.0:.; a year.