n ! j j 'w E GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES EOIXT THE WAY J WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW " 1 Mrv 11 X -.ii 8Y J. Human Love. BY X. P. WILLIS. Oh if tLere is one law above tLe rest, Written in Wisdom if there is a word J Tbiit I would trace as with a pen of fire, Upon the unsullied temper of a child If there is any thing that keeps the mind Open to an angel visit, and repels Th ministry ot ill 'tis human Wre.; &J has made nothing worthy of contempt ; The smallest pebble in the well of truth lias its peculiar meaning, and will stand When man's best monuments wear fast away. The law of Heaven is love ; and tho' its name lias been usurped by passion and profaned To its unholy uses through all time ; Still the eternal principle is pure : And in those deep affections that we feci Omnipotent within us, we can see The lavish measure in which love is given, And in the yearning tenderness of a child ! la every bird that sings above our head, And every tree and flower, and running brook, We see, how every thing was made to love, And how they err, whc in a world like this Find every thing to hate but human pride. HISCE1LAIK01I5. THE MYSTERY OF LOUIS 1IIILI1IIS BERTH. From Eliza Cook's Journal. A French writer of some celebrity, 31. 3Ii chaud, has just published a book, entitled, 'The Pubttc and Private Life of Louis Thilippc, vt Orleans, Ex-King of the French," in v.hich he adopts and illustrates, by circumstantial Juuils, a story which has long been floating about in France, of a most extraordinary pur port. It is to the effect, that Louis Philippe was not a Bourbon, and had not a particle of royal blood in him, but was the son of.a very humble Italian, whom some have supposed to be a Jew. 3Iaking use of the Athemeum, we give tl pith of the story, which runs as fol lows: That Thiiippe Fgalite whose character, un fortunately, affords no guarantee against the possibility of such an incident exchanged his Infant daughter for the son of a jailer, with whom he had formed an acquaintance when travelling in Italy, in order to preserve the family estates from lapsing to the crown for want of heirs male. All the incidents connected with this supposed exchange of infants, and with the events of their after-lives, have the character of romance ; the time, the scene, the :chief actors, and the final issues. Our readers- j shaB see what view 31. 3Iichaud takes of the transaction : The virtues of the duchess have been pointed to aa a refutation of the charge of exchanging children. It has also been alleged, that no in ducement existed for either the husband or the wife to perpetrate such a crime. We deny not the-virtues of that illustrious lady; but who can tell how far her wishes were controlled by her husband? We know that the greater part of their fortune consisted of demesnes (appa nages) which, failing male issue, of necessity merted to the crown; and that at this very period the duchess, after having been married four years, had given birth to but one child, and that a daughter, stillborn. Such was the state of affairs when the duchess and her hus band set out for Italy, where, under the titles of Count and Countess of Joinville, they spent several months at a village named Modigliana, situated on the top of the Apennines. Here the duchess proved to be in an interesting situ ation. The duke, who was fond of mean so .ciety, formed an intimacy with a jailer, named 'Chiappini, whose wife was similarly circum stanced. A bargain was entered into, that if the duchess' offspring should prove a daughter and the jailer's a son, an interchange should be effected. Things turned out according to this anticipation, and the term of the engagement were mutually fulfilled. The jailer received a large sum of money. His son, born at 3Iodi ghana oa the 17th of April, 1773, was removed to Paris, and kept concealed till the Gth of Oc tober, when the ceremony of private baptism wa gone through, as we have already seen ; while the duchess daughter remained in Chi appini's house, and was educated as his own chad, under the name "oT Marie Stella Petronilla, supplies being secretly sent once a year Jrom France. According to the Memoirs of Marie Stella Petronilla, she continued long ui this melancholy position, ignorant of her high birth, and very ill treated by her supposed mother, who loved her not, and lamented that son i whose fate was hidden from her. The lather had some idea of the truth; but, know Wg the duke only aa Count de Joinville, never warned that he was a prince of the blood royal w France. ILis reputed daughter excelled all his other children in beauty. Everything, in deed, about her. .indicated that she was of (lif erent blood. Her wit and precocity astonished ery one. Eefore she had completed her seventeenth year, the so captivated Lord New gh, a British nobleman, then travelling in Il'y, that he made her his wife almost aaainet uaauon, ana conducted her to a home of splendour and magnificence on the banks of the Thames. By this marriage she had several children, one of whom is now an English peer. On the death of Lord Newburgh, she succeeded to a handsome jointure, but of this she after wards forfeited a greater part on her marriage with a Russian nobleman, the Baron de Stern berg. With him she lived for several years in great style, in St-.rterfbttrgi. ;.A oa wm there born to her, who, while yet young, accompanied her to Italy before the death of Chiappini, whom she still regarded as her father. . This man, before his death, addressed a letter to her, which altered her whole destiny, and troubled the remainder of her days. This letter, supposing it to be real, revealed to the Baroness de Sternberg the secret of her birth. It ran as follows : "3Iy Lady I am near the term of my earthly existence, and now, for the first time, unfold the following secret, which very inti mately concerns you. On the day that you were born, my wife gave birth to a son. Your mother, who is long dead, was a stranger to me. A proposal to exchange my boy for you was lai'd before me, and, after repeated solici tations, I was prevailed on to consult my worldly interests, (for the terms were highly advantageous.) You became a member of my family, while my son was received into that of the other party. Heaven, I perceive, has made up for my faults ; you have been raised to a condition superior to your father's, though his rank also was noble; and, therefore I leave the world with some peace of mind. Keep this by deaf to the voice of conscience. In entreating you to pardon my crime, I beseech you to con ceal it from mankind, that the world may never know what is now incapable of remedy. This letter will be forwarded" to you after my death. (Signed) Lacbext Ciiiappisi." This epistle was forwarded to her by the sons of Chiappini ; though it is said they kept back some papers which might have been of ! great use to her in recovering the lost traces of her parentage. "Words (says 31. 3Iichaud) can. bar-iiy express the effect produced by such a discovery on the mind of 3Iarie Stella. GiCitd with great energy and lofty sentiments, she passed at once from a position which hs.'I been excessively humiliating to a higher rnk. Not a jailer, but a great lord, is her father. But who is the great lord Im patient to fathom this mystery unwilling to believe, with the jailer, that the past evil ad mitted of no remedy, she made inquiries, and sought evidence in every quarter, Her efforts procured her the knowledge that her fatlrer was the Count de Joinville, a French nobleman, whose rank and fortune 6he was ignorant of. To learn all the truth on the subject, she set out in the beginning of the year 1828 for France, accompanied by her youngest child, Edward, son of Baron Sternberg. She found her way to the village of Joinv ille, of which her father had held the lordship. Here she learned that Joinville had been part of the pat rimony of the House of Orleans, and that the duke, who perished on the scaffold in 1793, had sometimes travelled under that title. She next visited Paris, and there made several vain ef forts to reach him who had succeeded to the title and wealth of that powerful family. She consulted many men of business, and became the dupe of sharpers and police officers, who received much money from her by way of pay ment, and robbed her of a good deal more. AV hen her means failed, she had recourse o an artifice, which, considering her position and difficulties, was certainly very excusable. She made known, through the public journals, that the Baroness de Sternberg was. in possession of a secret in which the heirs of the Count de Joinville were much interested. Louis Philippe was. not long in hearing of this ; his covetous disposition already rejoiced in the hope of some addition to this immense possessions. He ac cordingly communicated with the baroness through his natural uncle, the old Abbe of St. Phar, who thought that possibly he too might derive some worldly benefit from the adventur but when the royal duke and his associate found that the secret referred to restitution, and not augmentation, the gates of the Palace Royal were hermetically closed against the baroness She made great efforts, but, as she was a stxao, ger in Paris, and all her motions were watched by the police then nothing better than the slaves of Louis Philippe she because once more the prey of those designing men with whom Paris swarms, who were probably . the agents of him whose interest it was aboTp all to overthrow her pretensions. A distinguished writer, whose name she does not give, but whom, from her description, we readily iden tify, vainly endeavored to make interest for her with the Duchess of Angouleme. After being duped and plundered thu3, she was obliged to return and renew her search in Italy. She returned from Italy, after an absence of seve ral months, armed with fresh and' important evidence, and, above all, with a judgment pro nounced by the Ecclesiastical Tribunal of Fa enza, on the 29th of May, 1821, which fixed her rank, anj prowed that she was not Chi3p- JULY pirns but the Count de Joinville's daughter. W1in ima linnv rfiof ia TtnlrA rf Orleans was the only Frenchman who could then bear the designation of the Count de Joinville, and that at the-, very period in ques tion he really was travelling with, his duchess, this evidence seems sufficient to settle the question. . , , , t'-- 'The additional evidence did not "settle the question," so far as poor 3Iarie Stella was con cerned. Her story reads like a romance to the end of the chapter. 31. Michaud continues : Armed with this, and other important pieces of evidence, the baroness set to work again, hopeful and confident; but, unfortunately, she could not find one honest man in Paris to direct her. She fell once more into the snares of the crafty, and spent her money to no purpose.. Pecuniary temptations were presented .to her in the most insidious manner by Louis Philippe's agents, but she resisted all with a pride truly worthy of royalty. Convinced that she was the daughter of the Duke of Orleans, nothing short of a full recognition of her rights as such would satisfy her. Her stature, mien, and manners, even her voice, testified to this distinruishcxl origin. Ail impartial men listened with admi ration to her forcible assertion of her claims. It was scarcely possible to listen without being persuaded of their justice. She bore a striking resemblance to 3Iadame Adelaide, the duke's sister, while the features of the latter vividly recalled to her her reputed father, the jailer. It is even said that on one occasion, when she conducted her youthful son, Edward, to the picture-gallery, the child, on observing a por trait of Louis Philippe, cried several times, "Papa Chiappini! Papa Chiapr.mi;" The.bar oness was vexed by this incident. The police, who were ever on her track, ho did all in their power to prevent the circulation of her me moirs, threatened her repeatedly with impris onment. l is a strange fact, that Louis XVIII. and Charles X. not only consented to, but ori gJliated all those manoeuvres against the baro ness. Those princes seemed then to repose entire confidence in him whom they regarded as their cousin, though that individual was ceaselessly engaged in schemes which com passed their destruction. The fall of the elder Bourbons, and the succession of Louis Philippe to his good cousins, rendered the baroness' posi tion more than ever difficult She was more than once desired to return to England. The intervention of the ambassador shielded her from persecution; but she was now alone. The Baron de Sternberg had conducted her favorite son, Edward, to Russia, so that her courage and consciousness of the justice of her claim formed her only protection against the spies tnat surrounded her. Her memoirs having been seized, and the tribunals of justice closed against her by the ruling powers, whose tools they then were, they ended by pronouncing her mad; the only pretext for this calumny bein a peculiar fancy which she had for feeding some birds which flew to her windows from the gar dens of the Tuileries. We know, however, on irrefragable testimony, that to the last she re tained the full possession of her reasoning faculties. She never abandoned her claims. but always subscribed herself Baroness de Sternberg, born Joinville. Durins the last five years of her life, a fear of being arrested in tne streets caused her to confine herself to her own house, where 6he knew she was safe through the protection of the English ambas sador. On the night before her death, in 1843, happening to hear the cwinon announce the opening of the chambers, she called for the public journal that she might read the speech of that brigand. She never spoke again. Mow tq be Beautiful. Venus, the embodiment of female beauty was anciently represented as haying arisen from the sea. inis is only another way of saying that cleanliness is . necessary to beauty. Without cleanliness there can be no health, no WmtV A hanl left unwashed for a few days becomes ugly ind repulsive. If one can conceive of a fiClcft Unwashed even fr.r a wwl- -urn miicf agine something far from very beautiful. A face freely washed, looks handsomer than at any other time. But it is in vain to wash the few square inches of the skin we have in sight, if the vastly larger area w coyer, with 'our dress is Jeft, from day to day, and even from week to week, uncleaned from its constantly accumula ting impurities. The health, and consequently the clearness and freshness of the skin, require that every square inch, nay, every pore, should be in the best positon, and that 'cannot be if a single pore is left clogged with' the impure mat ter which is continually passing from the sys tem. But the action of -water upon the skin, especially cold water, seems to be more impor tant even than its first office of cleansing it froin impurities. The rain bathes the lovely rose bush, washes it from dust, but it also enlivens every leaf and petaL So the cold bath not only cleanses the "skin from its impurities, but gives it tone, strength, and glossy smoothness, and a fresh appearance, like that of the rose just washed in nature's bath, a genial shower. Bathing, in all countries where beauty has been esteemed, and health is tho fountain of beauty, has been considered the first necessity of 31, 18S1 life. I have knewTimfinv inline ;,rA,i .1:, m j j uuvuy uiocascui miserable, and looking as badly as they felt, become fresh, rosy,' bright and healthy, after a few months of systematic bathing a thorough purification and renovation of the skin, with a consequent increase of vivacity, strength, grace of action, and expression. This is suth a re wjyE3e effect of the water cure, which con sists mainly in a certain regular and prescribed series of bathing, that ladies would resort to it for the improvement of their looks, if the recove ry of their health' were not a necessary con comitant. The relation of general and entire cleanliness to beauty, is simply this : no person can be beautiful without health, no person can be healthy unless the skin maintains its proper ac tion and the skin cannot act with vigor with out the cleansing and tonic effect of a daily bath. People worry through life without it, but those who bathe every day enjoy life. And whenever you meet a clean, fresh, rosy beauty, with brightness in every look, and an elastic grace in every motion, with the liht elancine j in her laughing eyes, and the warm blood play- k inff n Ti o - j! a m n a 1- V.ob' V .1 i. 1 i & "iiaott witta, ire ciuc uiab uer EJUH is refreshed by frequent bathing in cold water. Water Cure Journal. teller li om Col. ''William Blgler. The following letter was addressed by Col. William Bigleb, the Democratic candidate for Governor, to a celebration of the last 4th of July, without distinction of party, at Easton, in this State. It is a frank and friendly expres sion of sentiment, and will be read with much interest by all classes of readers: CLEAiLFiELD, June 25, 1831. Gestlemes: I have been honored by the re ceipt of your highly flattering favor inviting me o ifun you at Easton, on the 4th proximo, in commemorating, in a suitable manner, the ap proaching anniversary of our National Indepen dence. I regret sincerely, to be obliged to say in reply, gentlemen, that a previous engagement will deprive me of the great pleasure I should take in being with you on that interesting oc casion. The friendly tering in which you have been pleased to extend this invitation the patriotic sentiments with which it abounds, in reference to our glorious Union, and the significant motto, "Units-d we stand, divided we fall," under which it is written, have greatly heightened the regret which I should have felt under any circumstan ces at being unable to avail myself of this proper opportunity, which you have so kindly made known to me, of meeting and taking by the hand, the intelligent and patriotic citizens of old Northampton. The usual propriety and interest of a proper conimcnioratin of our Nation's Birth Day, is creatly augmented by the threatening circum- stances which have surrounded our National movements, for the last few years. The lively sensations of patriotism of love of country of love for our whole country, which each return ing anniversary of this greatest of all modern events, very naturally excites in the minds of the American people, will be greatly neigntenca, on the approaching occasion, by the evidences to be seen in all parts of the country, of a grow ing disposition to abide by the adjustment, made by the late Congress, of the only contro versy between the members of bur National confederacy from which the least danger to the perpetuity of the Union, would be reasonably apprehended. The flattering hope they excited in all sections of the nation, that a strict ob servance of the obligations of the constitution and a faithful maintenance of these measures of compromise, wilkhaTe the effect in a short time, to relieve the country from the angry sectional conflict in which it has already been too long engaged, will give a fjresh zest and a renewed zeal, to the eeremonies of the approaching an niversary.. Whatever diversity of opinion may have boen heretofore entertained by individual citizens and statesmen in relerenco to tne various ele ments embraced in these measures of compro mise, no patriot, it seems to me, will seek to disturb 4his adjustment, and again launch the nation on a sea of excitement and danger, un- .1 11 - 1 less he can first demonstrate uiai nis pouvj, whatever it may be, will result in some greater practical gp.od to the whole nation. I say the whole nation, Tor it is tne weuare ui f"1 and npt a mere section of the country, wnicn the true patriot will seek t?; promote. Nor will i.'nrif in- roiicA tn Jrt all the cood he can, merely because 410 cannot accomplish ojj. yua he deems wue find proper, if, tnen, a graiey good is likely te' result t? the country from the maintenance of these measures than can be se cured by disturbing them, it is clearly wise, even on the part of those who cannot approve eft. teir features, to acquiesce in their adoption. It is certainly no inconsistency or humiliation, . ;i:.it Ktnta- xeha mav have con- tended against some particular, features of this adjustment, to acquiesce in the whole as a com promise. It is clearly right to do so, unless it be made entirely apparent that a gceatcr nation al good can le accomplished by substituting cAmi nfhor innrlo nf settlement. This, in my humble opinion, would be a most difficult and dangerous undertaking, an I one which I fca would cot the country dwrly. Those who are dissatisfied with the constitu- t tional provision for the rendition of fugitives from labor, should not forget that the compro mise measures also make provision for the sup pression of the slave mart in the District of Co-' lumbia, and that the question of extending sla very into the Territories, has been in the flame way refered to the sovereign will of the people who may occupy the soil, a tribunal, which it is not doubted, will in every instance, interdict its extension. This feature of the adjustment stands on high and glorious principles, the will of the majority the principle on which our revolutionary fathers determined to found all our Republican institutions. And what other disposition of this dangerous controversy, let me ask, would have been more in unison with the principles of our Government and the compromises of the constitution, or have better answered the exigencies of the times! We cannot hope for a peaceful continuance of the Union, if we disregard the great conserva tive principles on which it rests. The funda mental law of our land cannot be sustained in part and abandoned in part, the constitution must be maintained as a whole, and that it is the clear intention of this instrument, that every fugitive from labor shall be returned to his mas ter, will not be seriously denied- It is then the clear duty of the people of the free states, how ever repugnant it may be to their inclinations to maintain and carry out this as fully as any other clear requisition of the constitution. The present law may answer the constitutional pur pose, and with this view its execution should be facilitated rather than embarrassed by those who are charged with the administration of the laws. How forcibly, in the present crisis of section al conflict, do the admonitions of the father of his country fall upon our ears, and how we are constrained to wonder at the almost superhu man sagacity, which enabled the great and good man to foresee and forewarn the people of ap proaching dangers to their government from sectional conflict. We cannot resist the conclu sion that an allwise power gave direction to his judgment and thoughts, nor. should we think lightly of the lessons of wisdom which he has lefl for our use. Let us hope then, that the admonitions of Washington the glorious exam ples of the laws of 1775 the remembrance of tho brilliant past, and the cheering hope of the future, may awaken n the approaching anni versary of our Independence, a spirit of patriot ism, of love for our entire country, of reverence for the constitution, as shall constrain the American people without distinction of party or sectional locality to embrace and adhere to our National confederacy as the sheet anchor of their political faith. The humblest service in maintaining this great fabric should be esteemed more honorable than the accomplishment of the most brilliant designs of monarchy. In conclusion, gentlemen, I must tender you my most profound acknowledgments for the honor which your invitation ha3 conferred upon me, and beg you to remember me to the good people of old Northampton in whose behalf this kind request has been extended to me. With sentiments of high regard, I remain gentlemen, your fellow citizen, WT. BIG LEU. TOAST. Col. Wm. Bigler. The man with his Country in his heart and her Constitution in his hand. Well may Pennsylvania as she viewB nature's nobleman in his person, exclaim, "Behold I and the children whom God has given me." Our 3Tew York Correspondence. New Yoek, July 20, 18-31. EDITOR OF THE MOTTNTAIN SEA 11 EL: The Sun, of this city, has long arti cles on the revolution in Cuba, which, it says-, has ao tually commenced, in or near Port Frincipe, a large inland city, containing a population of dver , 100,000 souls The garrison of Tort frincipe, consisting of 2,400 men, a small de tachment of which, consisting of 50 lancers and CO infantry was sent into the mountains, in quest of the revolutionists, who are adopting, says the Sun, the guerilla mode of watfarc. The inhabitants of Port Principe were to have published a pronunciamentoy on July 4 ; but, as they have not done so, as far as I canv learn, and, as the news, in the "private advices of the Sun," is not corroborated by any other author ity, I am inclined to believe, that the whole story has been "made to order," for the pro prietors of our celebrated "penny daily," who are understood to be largely interested in cop per mines, and other property in Cuba, which, for some reason or other, they cannot make "available," under the existing government. .It is certain that the idea of "occupying," "liberating," and ultimately .'annexing' Cuba, has not been entirely given up, by the moe hepefal aong the "patriots,"; butj what they are actually doing, toward bringing about the consummation" so "devoutly to be wished, (by them,) your correspondent knows not, as, however, straws show which way the wind blows, it may not be amiss to inform your readers, in this connection, that seventy-seven veteran Hungarian hussars, who came to this cpuntrv after the disastrous termination of 1 i-n IMBER & their struggle for liberty, have just sailed from' this port, southward I cannot say to what point in quest of military service. , Steam communication.- across the Atlantic, bids fair, in a few short years, to supercede the splendid line of Packet Ships, whjch, but th other day, wens deemed unsurpassed and unap proachable.' Boston, I see, is about to enter the field of competition . with New York and Philadelphia. A line of Steamships to Liver pool is projected by the modern Athenians, with every probability of success. The wealthy firm of Spofford & Tileston, the owners of the racket Ships known as the "Dramatic Line," have already launched two propellers of gigan tic dimensions. These propellors are almost ready to sail, or rather, steam ; and two others, now on the stocks, will be launched, shortly. 3Ioreover, strenuous efforts " are being made here, by some of the real friends of Ireland, to purchase a large Steamer, to ply between this port and Galway. In connection' with this en terprise, funds are being raised in Dublin, Cork, and other cities, throughout Ireland, to place a second Steamship on the line, in order to practically demonstrate the alleged superi ority of Galway, as the Trans-atlantic racket Station. It is confidently expected, by the more san guine, that Archbishop Hughes will eubscribe, at the very least, $1,000, -"for the cause," seeing "that, in 1843,' when he was a simplo Bishop, he was able to afford 500, to buy a shield an object decidedly utilitarian, and some are apt to think, less evangelical, than the present, in its aim and tendencies. The 3Iadrid correspondent of a Paris paper gives an account of a successful experiment with a new flying apparatus. The flyer was a 3Iiss Juanita Perez, who weighs some 240 pounds, but who, nevertheless, moved through the air, by the help of wings, with great case and rapidity. She announced that she would rise GOO feet in-the air, and fly a distance of 1,200 feet; but when she was once fairly afloat, she evinced no inclination to stop ; nnfl greatly exceeded her programme, both in heighth and distance, to the surprise s.ud delight of the as sembled thousands. Her wings are sail to have a spread of some fifteen feet, and to be fastened by ligaments of great flexibility. They arc arranged so as to move with great rapidity, and they make a noise like a windmUL I see, by the Paris papers, that a gentleman of that city, also, announces that he ha3 invent ed a complete apparatus for flying, which he proposes to exhibit on the Champs de 3Iars, in the course of the present month. This gentle man says, that he and las two sons can move up and down in the air, with all the facility of a swallow ; skimming along near the ground, or mounting upright to the sky, at their pleas ure; and that the three have, several times? flown across the Seine. I have had frequent occasion to refer to the filthy condition of cur City, and, lest your rea ders should imagine my statements exaggera ted, I will just draw attention to the following startling fact: Deaths, for the week ending June 21, ISol: New York, 503 " London, 931 Now, as the population of London is over 4f times that of New York, the mortality of the former city would, if in the same proportion amount to 2,388 ; whereas, during the preva lence of the Cholera, in that city, in 1849, the deaths never exceeded 1600 to 1700. Now, as no man can pretend to compare the itural advantages and position of the two cities, to what can we attribute the appalling fact of such wholesale destruction of human life, except to the criminal negligence of our 3Iunicipai Authorities, and their entire inatten tion to the ffst laws of health arid decency. But what time has a man for sanatory reform, whose whole soul is engrossed in the profits to be made, by a gas contract, 05 a paviag job? I have condensed from an English paper the following anecdote, which will afford your youth ful readers an illustration of the result of earnest, active, persevering, and practical industry, when combined with moderate tact and talent I am sorry to say that agriculture and horticulture are not regarded in this country, as avenues to greatness. Let this anecdote suffice to dispel the illusion: Some thirty years ago, a young gardener, who worked for 12 shillings a week, at a garden near Chiswick, about five miles from London, offend-" ed his master, and was turned off. He was -standing, unemployed; one day, at a garden gate, near the residence of the Duke of Devon shire, who, happening to pass, was pleased with his intelligence and manners and asked him to call at Devonshire House the next dayl The call resulted in his being sent down to Chats worth, in Derbyshire. There ho soon reached," as a practical and scientific gardener, the very head of' his profession, which position he had long maintained, before he was known to the world as 31 r. Paxton, the designer of the Crys tal Falace. Yours truly, FITZROY. The only obstacle we imagine," to Tdic3 wear- i.in5 ts orrtgrs i?, that luitons have eyey-Ez. ? 1 ) . I I.' ir
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