f I lis . 4 BY ANDREW J. IllllSY. MUCiLLAKEOUS Frtmtht United States Lata March lr5. Magazine for Memalr of John B. Cibsoc, L. L. D. John Bannister Gibson, L. L. D., Chief Justice of Pennsylvania, was born a: Carlisle, Cumberland County, Penn fvlvania, a district of that Commonwealth fertile in the name of its distinguished sons. Hs father was Col. George Gib son, a well known officer of onr revolu tionary war.who having commanded with success a regiment of the Virginia line during the contest with Great Britain, fell vcith honor at the memorable deieaf of St. Ciair, by the Indians in 1791. Having received his primary education in his na tive town, Mr Gibson entered Dickinson College, then in the zenith of literary fame, and was matriculated with honor in 1800. He was fortunate in having had at this enerable seat of learning, the instructions of the well known Dr. Charles Nesbit, of the Church of Scotland, for whose virtues, the pupil recorded in 1824, his dutiful re membrance by a design, from his own pencil, of a monument to his memory, and m a printed eulogy on his life and charac ter. The domestic relations of Mr. Gib son pointed to the law 29 his profession, end having passed the usual term in the .-tTi I'm -if" his Linaman. the Finn. Thomas Duncan, at that time the leader of the bar ! ed opinions distinguished lor their impar io central Pennsylvania, and afterwards a j V,i11- ' iearQin aad conclusive force, ludge of its hiebeft court he was admit- ! llhout disparagement to any of the dia led to practice" in 1&03. "The Western : guisned men who, at different times. Country" was then beginning to attract i have sal beside him as associates, all will that notice which has since made one of . agree that to him the court has been large the most populous resions of Pennsylva- ' indebted for the praise pronounced Lia; and like manv o'ther voung men of uPon 11 bJ lhose besl qualified to know thedav, Mr. Gibson attempted to push lls character. Mr. Birney, we are sure, his fortune in the "backwoods." He did but speak a sentiment of perfect truth, opened his first office at Beaver, upon the wheQ on an occasion dictated by respect to river Ohio. After a sojourn there of , lbe tribunal, where for fire and twenty about two vears, he removed to Hagers- ; yea Chief Justice Gibson has presided, mwn Marv'lanrf. whence he soon retutnpfl . he declared, amidst the enthusiastic re- ' - j - sgsun to nis native town, Vyariisie. tlis advancement here was such as to gratify his friends He found, in their full course of practice, such men as Duncan and Watts, and when he had proved, as he very shortly did prove, his ability to cope with them both, he had established a rep utation as wide as the Commonwealth. The poliiicl associations of Mr. Gib son had been with the old Democratic r - parti ; and lbe critical condition of its aff. air in IttlU, calling lor the service ot its tu'4t WiC ablest men, he was returned from his na- Iu person, the Chief Justice is consid tive couniv 10 iwo succt-ssiveSute Assem- erable above the common stature; and has bliesin lslO and 1811. where he suppor-j alwa"s been distinguished by extraordma ted with vigor and ability the adminisira j r' vlgr ot health and frame. His tem tion of Mr. Madion and Governor Sny- Pers are eminently social; and among all uer. He was here amon the early-advo- rates of that large sysiem of internal im provenient which the Legislature of Penn sylvania has since been coinpleiine, and by which aljne that State can take the name in the Union which her endowments make not more eminent than natural. Returning to his constituent5! in March, ISl'i, after two years of public service in critical aud trying time?, during which he left no proper expectation unanswered the lefrisiaiive career of the Chief Justice would probably have added to his profes sional advancement, had he cfiosen to re main at the bar. He seems, however, to j have early entertained the opinion, which ! he has since expressed, that his qualities j to recall the days when he played mar fitted him better for the bench; and having ! bles in the street of Newmarket, or assu a short time before united himself in mar- md the part of Punch's man at a country riage with Miss Sarah Galbraith.jhe j fair. He loved to visit the peasantry in daughter of a revolutionary officer, then '. their cabins, and listen to their tales, living in retirement upon his farm in Cum- j There he saw the Irish character its wit. berland, he accepted in 1312, the Presi- its humor, its sensibility to mirth and fiency of the 11th Judicial District, just j tears. There, too, in those rough natures then created in Northern ' Pennsylvania. ' which appear so sullen and savage, when A ue ueaiu OI juuge Drathcunuc uarmj 1 Cladf a varanrv in 1816. of a seat in the Supreme Court, Mr. President Gibson: transferred on the "27lh June of that year, to the bench upon which he has j since continued. As an associate justice, j it was the happiness of justice Gibson,! through his whole career to have beside ! him for a presiding officer, the late Chief, Juftice Tilghinan; and the eleven years in youthful imagination. In after years, he which these eminent persons assisted each j acknowledged that his first ideas of elo other in discharge of their high duties, 1 queuce were derived from listening to-the seems to have been not less an unbroken circle of judicial harmony, than it was of cordial personal intercourse. The death of Chief Justice Tilghman, on the 30th of April, 1827, left without an occupant the seat in which he had presided foi more than 20 yaars with dignity and usefulness; and made it a matter of no email difficulty for the Executive to sup ply the vacancy with satisfaction to ihe public expectations. Names eminent in the profession, and in the . State, were strongly pressed upon Governor Sbultz for this honorable office; aud the appoint ment to it on the 17th of May, 1829, gave conclusive proof of -the high confidence entertained by the Chief Magistrate of Pennsylvania, and the old fashioned Dem ocratic party of which he was the repre sentative, in the ability and merits of Mr. Jurice Gibson. From he date juM named, the Chief Justice has occupied the seal to which he was then appointed. And, with the exception of having acted as one of the electors of 1628 when his name was put by the democratic party at the head of their State electoral ticket, and he assisted in casting the vol4 of Pennsylvania" in support of General Jack son hi9 public services have been exclu sively confined to the duties of his jadicial office . Few men in magistracy, any where, have given more extensive evidence of a hie of labor. Independently of con stant sittings throughout the common wealth on the circuits and at AYi Prius, where some of his ablest opinions have been given without a record, the Pennsyl vania reports preserve enduring evidences of his abilities, fidelity and learning. "The Reports of Pennsylvania said the late Charles Chauncey, "are entitled to the admiration of Lawyers at home and abroad. They contain decis ions which have led the way upon some very interesting subjects, and which have been followed both here and in England." How far and how faithfully Chief Justice Gibson has participated in these labors so honorable to his native State, is attested by upwards of six thousand cases in which he has taken part in the final judg ment of the court, and more than twelve hundred in which he has himself deliver- spoase of men of every party, that at no time have the judgments of the court been guided by either favor or resentment; and tfiat in learning, integrity, and industry, the judges of the court have never been wauling to themselves, the profession, or the country. We all agree" said this eminent lawyer, "that the Judges of the Supreme Court have been faithful i to the Constitution and the Law; faithful to the State and to the Union; faithful to classes of society throughout the State, he is ever greeiea as a welcome guest, liis hearty health his fresh and genial tastes, and his devotion to judicial labors, indicate a man on whose vigerous power age has made no mark." Ccrran, The Orator. Ci-rran sprang from the people. He W2S born at Newmarket, an obscure town in the county of Cork, in 1750 being thus four years younger than G ratten. On the father's side, he was descended from one of Cromwell's soldiers. Pass- ing his childhood in the country, he was thrown much among the people. He loved oroojni, iee to nec witn Uieir oppress ors, he found the finest and tenderest affec tions of the human heart. There, too, he found a natural poetry and eloquence. He was a constant attendant at the wed dings and wakes of his neigiiboi hood. It was customary at that time to employ hired mourners for the dead, and their wild and solemn lamentations struck his laments of mourners at the Irish burials W hen transferred to Trinity College in Dublin, he became distinguished chiefly for his social powers. Full of the exube rant life of youth, overflowing with spir its, and fond of fun and frolic, he was al ways a welcome companion among the students. His mother had designed him for the church. When he came out of college, his tastes took, another turn. But his mother never got over her disappointment at Lis not being a preacher. Not even his brilliant reputation at the bar and in Parliament, could satisfy her maternal Tieart. She lived to see the nation hang ing on the lips of this almost inspired ora tor. Yet even then she would lament over him. 0, Jacky, what a preacher was lost in you. - Her friends reminded her that she had 'WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POIffT THE WAY ; EBENSBURG, THURSDAY. MARCH 27, 185 1. lived to see her son one of the judges of the land. "Don't speak to me of judges," she would reply, John was fit for any thing; and had he but followed our advice it might hereafter be written upon my tomb that I died the mother of a bishop.' But no one as yet knew that he had ex traordinary talent for eloquence. Indeed he did not suspect it himself. In his boy hood he had a confusion in his utterance, from which he was called by his school fellows "stuttering Jack Curran." It was not until many yers after, vrhile studying law at the Temple, tha-t he found out that he could speak. . After his fame was established, a friend dining with hica one day, could not repress his admiration of Curran's eloquence, aad remarked that it must have been born with him. "In deed my dear sir' replied Curna, "it was not, it was borne twenty-three years and some months after me " But when he had made the important discovery of this concealed power, be employed every means to render his elocution perfect. He accustomed himself to speak very slowly t correct his precipitate utterance. He practiced before a glass to make his ges tures graceful. He spoke aloud the most celebrated orations. One piece he was never weaxv 01 reoeaiinir. int n.-n n i - r - . i i - a .i - . , , ,,,, . Antnonv over the body ot Caesar. This ne recommended to nis vounj iriends at I It..- , i-.";- .. r:.i, the bar as a model of eloquence. And while he thus used art to smooth a channel for his lhnntrhLs tr Hnic in ttn man's eloquence ever issued more freshly and spontaneously from the heart. It was always the heart of the man that spoke. . r I. 1 u : : ucwuse u uu eiuouons were so intense, that he possessed such power over the feelings ot the others His natural sympathies were strong. Like every truly great man, he was as simple as a child. He had all those tastes which mark a genuine man. He loved nature. He loved children. He sympa thized tVtttl lK nour. It - nsrkanii f : . r r- ; irom tnese popular sympathies thai n-f. preierred ICousseau among the French writers, and that his friendship was so strong with Mr. Godwin. His nature was all sensibility. He was most keenly alive to gay, or mournful scenes. He had a boyish lore for un and irouc tie entered into sports with innniie glee. 1 . . : In these things he remained Snd of his days; whUe in a child to the en sensibility to tears he had the heart of a woman. Thus, to the last hour of life, he kept his affections fresh aud flowing. lie had the delicate organization of ge- j nius. His frame vibrated to music like an j Eolian harp. He had the most exquisite : rcusu iui me oca u lies 01 poeiry. tie was extravagantly food of 1 r : luiazina. tion. lie devoured romances. And when . - . , ... iu ui3 icauiug ue uiet w iui a passage wnicn ' graufied his taste, he was never weary of repeating it to himself, or reading it to the I friends who came to see him. In conversation, perhaps the most prom inent faculty of his mind was fancy sportive, playful, tender, and pathetic. His conversation was a stream which never ceased to riew. His brilliant ima gination, and the warmth with which he entered into everything, gave it a peculiar fascination. Byron said that Curran had spoken more poetry than any man had ever written. In, a circle of genial friends, after dinner, his genius was in its' first ac tion. His countenance lighted up, and his conversation, beginning to flow, now spar kled, now ran like wine. Flashes of wit played around him. Mirth gleamed from his ey es and shot from his tongue. He had an endless store of anecdote, to which his extraordinary dramatic talent enabled ! Mtn to lhe hjpi; o&ecL- He - -told stories, and hitting ofi the point of Irish character by the most exquisite mimicry; be -set the table on a roar," lollowing perhaps with some touching tale which instantly brought tears into every eye, You wept," says Phillips, "and you laughed, and you wondered; and the won denul creature, who made you do all at will, never let it appear that he was more than your equal, and quite willing, if you chose, to become your auditor." The wit of Curran was spontaneous. It was the creation of the moment, the electric sparks shot from a mind overchar ged with imagery and feeling. In this it differed from the wit of another great Irishman. Sheridan had more of the ac tor about him. His brilliant sayings were prepared beforehand. He aimed at dis play in the receptions at Holland House as much as when writing a comedy for Drury Lane. Perhaps no foreigner, who has visited England, has had a better opportunity of seeing its distinguished men than Madame de Stael. She was constantly surrounded by the most brilliant society of London. et even in that blaze of genius, s he was most struck, as she often told her friends, with the conversational powers of Curran. This, too. was in 1813 when his health had snnk, and ht? pri wrre so depir??- WHEM THXT CEASE TO LTA, WE CEASE TO ed as to make it an effort to support his part at all in society-. From the vivacity of his conversation, one would hardly have suspected the depth and seriousness of big eharacisf. " In talking trita ladies, or with young persons, his mind wet remarkable for its constant playfulness. A fleam of Funshics iDumiced his whole being. Yet those rrho knew him intimately were aware that he was subject all his life to constitutional melancholy. Like many other men celebrated for their Tit, his gay ety alternated wit deep depression. The truth was, that he sympathized loo inten sely with die scenes of real life to be uni formly gay. In his country he saw so much to sadden him, that his feelings took a melancholy tone. The transition was often instantaneous from humour to pathos. His Iriends, who saw him in his lighter moods, were surprised at the sudden change of his countenance, "In grave con versation, his voice was remarkable for a certain plaintive sincerity of tone" a sad ness which fascinated the listener like mournful mtrcic. thtnsrum. Oac-Ered Ttaomoson. The Police Gazette is engaged in pub- Jb- 1 1- l- I.. r . -r-i . . ijuu.ijmu, toiler iiiu v. ii as onc uyce 'ri i m , - - .' i "u.Fu, i.uV tuiummcu suiciue a lew cays ago in a lew loik prison, an account 01 which we publishrd m the Chronicle. From the account before us. i,S,Kl . must a portion 01 which we cony, he must ' YrTxJZ vnrC ' r 7 I ui , 1 a I orx city 01 an bonorable slock, and was t rrifi4 . ;Jvf .1 . Gtomn - :.: .1. . 1 u as wayward and peculiar as his mind When a boy at school he was not re markable for proficiency, but lagged in attainment far behind boys of much infe- rior capacity, yet in the school yard and 1 in the street he shot beyond them ail, and was luc acknowledged ieadar cl erery Acknowledged Jeadsar or eerr - t , , - - ;:7 . ;u"uSJ His mind was very acute and vigorous: ac . he was possessed of exeat courage for acts of desperation and fearful undertaking , His boyhood promised thai which his age developed. 1 rT-.t r r ,, ... . The following exploit is sufficient to . . , t"l''cul r e 1 raane toe reaoer.iamiuar witn l nompson s : desperale and culiar naluret and ePableg ! us BnderslJd lLe exacl briDSS of his mind. n ...... ., , On a certain night late ia the Fall when the trees were leafless, and when inter sent its prologue to not through the streets of New York in a howling. dTsmal driving . Tj ""S ulom,"Ilm& storm of wind and ram, a party of five or six persons were ratnereu together m a r 1 ... . . u : .1 I c ' a rcir. L 1 - I doors of Frankfort. As became the dis- position of such a night, the conversation felt the mournful imnulse of the dements, . . .. , uu suruu ,rom general aiscussion to ine j congenial subject ol superstitions, strange ; densed dignity of thought, appearances, weird oracles ghosts and j an extraordinary power walking of the bandtged dead; till the Rrall,n i,,fi fi, no. ashy speculators in these views of horror power of WOrking it into an intensity found themselves pressed close against j which made it glow. aad fcome of lll6 each other, round the fire. Thompson ; mosl elaborate arguments ever uttered in was one of the circle, but though he could , pariiameiU have all the brilliancy of tlo not resist a certain awe which crept over ; qtieuce. He continually reasoned, though him from the combined influence of the ,h. mns. mf.tanhnriral nf nPakPrS- and shuddering legends and the shocking night, he was more free from the tyranny of the illusions than any of the party. When things were in this state, some reference was made to the condition of the burying ground of the Brick Church, which still stands at the corner of Bee km an street and Pari Row, and which was then undergo ing some improvement or repairs that ex posed the vaults, or one of them, to the incursions of any person who might feel a disposition to invade its mysteries. Who dare go there and bring a skull?" said Thompson. The party shuddered audibly at the au dacious thought. "Well, I dare ! continued Thompson, compressing his lips, after his peculiar fashion, and answering his own question; Ml dare, and if any one will bet me five dollars, I will go do it now !" The money was bet; Thompson pulled down his cap, drew his cloak around him, and followed by two of the party who were deputed to witness his exploit under the shelter of an umbrella, led the way to the cemetery. The rain came down in torrents, driving this way and that, as if vexed and full of spite that it could not pelt every object that opposed it from iu path, and enjoy the night alone. In the midst of this hissing and doleful atmosphere Thompson went on uncovered, and one of the pair who followed, describes the pictuie of his tall, ungainly figure, swathed tightly by his cloak, which fluttered only at the skirts, as one of the visionary spectres of which they had been talking, flitting thro the troubled air, and seeking its road back to the quiet tomb from which it had tem porarily estrayed. Soon they reached the Brick Ch'jrrrh, and Hdding tHetr to stand FOLLOW. by under the shelter of a porch, Thomp son darted forward in the darkness, as if too eager to accomplish his object to lose a moment's time, and disappeared ia the church yard. With but little effort be tore away the temporary door of a vault, and entered its awful walls. He had taken but two steps inside, however, when he vras transfixed by the appearance, far ia the distance of the charnel house, of a light. The cold sweat started from every pore, and for a moment he felt of the bUMU,uikuuw wueiner ne was awafce or in a dream. Recovering Lis courage by the result, and feeling that un- conquerable impulse which always tempts rsw imiuu iu ou auuc a Liu ics i any can a . ger which it does not understand, Thomp- , - son summoned up his courage. steDoed ,u'"4ftu ao" ms nanu uesperattly , and Col. McCahen in the chair directed upon the light. It was cold and clammy, j the member to rise. "Nockamixion" vras and as it crumbled in his fingers he knew fresh and unused to the scene; and be ro it to be phosphorescent wood from one of j in his seat as directed. nd such a ren thc coffins which lay decaying on every . rimand ! With all the solemnity of 'a side. Gaining courage by this destruction countenance naturally grave, the psucd of his fears, he ran his arm in the coffin, ! Speaker after alluding with tears in hi drew forth the skull, and then ransacked ; eyes, to the painful duty imposed upon with his fingers among the clattering re- him. recited the enormitp nf th tH- mains that lnmn!H frm his !,-!. rli f.-i - w - o . his wav into the ontn air mw ine ojitu air, na witn tuem ne astounded the expecting party in the store in Pearl street, as he laid them down ; before him on the counter. Here is the index of an ertranrilirarx- cnlrit -,r, ..i , spirit, and examining it properly, we can ! T"A T 1 " V, aau uuuyns 01 m M G rattan. G rattan, the first man in the brightest day of the Irish Parliament, was descended of an honorable lineage. His father was a barrister, member of Parliament for Dublin, ard also iu Reccr-! der. He himself was a graduate of the i . t:.ji , I i guuucu. xuiertug me iiiuuie 1 empie, ' the was called la the Irsh har n 1772 t.L -, . , jjot hls minj was parliamentary; his study c 1 jljl 1- JL-' I 1 u' F.u ' a.uu.u,Br :f "V;"" n "I a 1 a n ? i Jl1 T ,H! bad heard Burke and Chatham, had heard the full power of . r n : .u limagmauve oratory of all oratory the uT, 1 a . r r , b.esu Grattan had the materials of a ; rlat"eTkeen 1 - - 6 r c ,1 i and an imagination furnished with all the ; cssemial kn"owled for debate-not over- ; whelmed by it b refrefihi lhe ori inJ ' force of hi mmd liL lhe lini, ! r i a . ? ' , rg S, refreshed by dipping into the fountain, but ; dippin, onl3v Yet, though almost . 1 j .u " 1 1 . J . . 0 . men, ne was no imuaior. tie struct out Lie MrUCh. OUl n i- . fl i . 1 j n, :ta k m - ,; i l- . - x. l r ! , eiuien comommg uie ncu exuuerance 01 , Burke's imagination with Chatham's con- Possessed of. of reasoning, PTlrun inarl' I lis combination of logic and lustre, thouch j so unusuai jn others, in Aim was 'charac- teristic. He poured out arguments like a nier, m opposition to the administration shower of arrows, but they were all ar- f Louis Napoleon. Lamartinc. who was rows tipped with fire. Mr. Phillips sketch ' once called the Washington of Franc?, of him brings Grattan belore us to the most unexpectedly came to the aid of tiit life : "He was ehort in suture, and un- j President: Lamartine has yet considcra prepossessing in appearance. His arms ; hie influence, and Louis Napoleon felt s: were disproportionately long. His walk 1 grateful, that he tendered him any office u a stride. With a person swaying like j within his gift; but Lamartine declined, a a pendulum, and an abstracted air, he i public gossip says, because 1e is under seemed always in thought, and each tho't i bonds to write two more volumes by provoked an attendant gesticulation. Such j certain day, and the?e required all bU was the outward and visible form of one i time. His Memoirs" Lave enabled Lirn whom the passenger would slop to stare j to redeem one of his favorite estates from at as a droll, and the philosopher to con- j he hands of the mortgager, and now in template as a study. How strange it is f working to redeem more of his patrim -that a mind so replete with grace and ; nial property. symmetry, and power, and splendour, j The remarks of Geu. Cavaignac are a should have been allotted such a dwelling , subject of more moment than the rest ot for its residence ! Yet so it was, and so j lhe speakers, as he will probably be the also was it one of his highest attributes, j prominent Presidential candidate aain-? that his geuius, by its 'excessive light.' j Louis Napoleon. He blamed severely, blinded his hearers to his physical imper-j in the name of all sincere Republicans, t.'te fections. It was the victory of mind over law of Public Instruction and the Electo matter." " j ral Law of the 31st of May ihuse great . . j misdeeds of the majority. le.iv'nilre tnriont i Gen. Cavaignac said: -The Oonstitu- ftissi ftwaw&'U i A few years ago there was a member of the Legislature from Bucks county, who acquired the sobriquet of Nocka mixion. The name was acquired because ' of bis presenting numerous memorials every morning for and against the division of Nock a mix ion township. lie wasmosdy known by the alias; and even his barber was known to call him Nockamixion. One pleasant afternoon, when ihe mem bers had dined, and were ia ihe Hall full of fun, Mr. Macmanas, then a member from Centre county, aud now a lawyer of Tlebrity. moved iht he T!ri;-t br cttTlcd VOL. 7. NO. 21. to order, and that Col. McCahen take the chair; This motion was unanimous! agreed to, and the ever ready Colonel loo', the Speaker's chair. The member from Centre then rose in bis seat, and made an elaborate statement, that the member from Nockamixioc by encouraging a spirit of faction in that usually quiet township Lad caused great distress there amon? the women and chil. ! dren, and he was credibly informed that SPlsral "ioa nf no- . - 1 : , ana Le leared suicide, had occurred ia ; consequence of the active part taken by ' the member frr.m TimL fr. ..,.;.. Z j the division of this township. He there- Inra m r r Ik.l . I- -1 1 i mwn- LU',i.u iiii ue woriuv member ov subject to the reprimand of the Speaker. This motion was unanimously carried. i i - j . uisucs3 Lrtuuceo in the community, by ; traordinary caution as to Lis future con- ' duct in respect to 'the vices and virtues of from Bucks." rmrininn The rrmr.t.r f ,u .1 : r 1 ? . . . ! of laughter at the end, passes all I " Mr; enten. the present Attorney 1 general 01 tne Lotted Males, at the time , , . been heard to say that it was. the richeit larce he bad ever seen, 2nd that' until the end, and the drop, was himself deceived. ; SQd thought it was a regular" .Legislative session. Trtatnrnl af Scarlet FcTer -L3ip9flEi Frcicriplioii. Dr. Lindsly, of Washington, etronslr recommends the mode of treatment of scarlet fever, resorted to by Dr. Schnee- mann, physician to the King of Hanoter. i 11 1S " foilow5' and ceedmtly simpls ..Krom lLe fim d of thi JlnM a nor, f -. sooa a$ we are certain of its nature. k. uuj : 4 muoi uciuuot wuruuig auu eveni over the whoJe bo(J vi of bacon, in such a manner'that, with the ' excepaon ol the head, a covering of fat u . i,.a 1- - 1 . 1 rbinTin tth.! . 1! , ! fl1 ",er! 11 1Sfb"' 1 tto ke a p.ece 01 bacon ihe s.ze of the hacd- choosing a part still armed with the 1 rinj . , : l. rs ! T't r : a firm. SP" D 01 iiis piece eiiis are 10 o raaue, in oraer 10 aliow tnc oozinz out o! ti.- .,. ; i,-,fa. The pK,inT , k,., tM - 1 w awvtiij- a-u wi ft tilLiiy um ui ! Pormed, and not too quickly, in ordtrr that the skin may be regularly faturmec with the fat. The beneficial results of ihr 'application are soon obvious; with a ra- pidity bordering on magic, all, even the most painful symptoms o.' the decease allayed; quiet, sleep, good humor, appetite mum, aua mere remains only tr.e init tience to quit the Etck room. 1 1-, Frtatu FYiilics. Lamabttxi; and Cavaignac. Gcner:i Cavaiznac. a truly rreat man in Franrr hasunited wiih Thiers and Gen. Chaiga tiou. might be revised; but it was not the Constitution which interned the rational sovereignty nor c6u!J this fundanae-utui principle be destroyed by any puriv. There could be only two parties, for tho Monarch or the Kepubhc. Those who had ill guided the Monarch, hudavetl r for the Republic. At present, tl way lor Uie Kepufilie. At present. tle Republic teas ill-guided; and it was to U feared that, if it coutinued to be sc. it would hare to make way for a rvMora?i:i of the Monarchy.' " - t"TLe popula'ivVu of- Prun-x h if i
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