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% Sftteeklg Jfrnnilg Betospapfr—^ebdek to J&oiitjjtnt $Uglits, ITitaratarf, Agriculture, ^foreign anir domestic fttfos, fa.
E. M. KEITH & B. F. BENNETT, Editors.
“ EQUALITY IN THE UNION OR INDEPENDENCE OUT OF IT.”
TERMS—TWO DOLLARS ■•rear, ta Ad mace*
. CA8SVILLE, GA., THURSDAY, .ATJG-TJST 4, 1859. tTO. 39.
VOL. 11.
Easiness Carte.
E
L. BROWN, Attorney at Law, Cass-
rille, Ga.—Will attend promptly to all
• business entrusted to bin care.
April 14, 18.VJ.
iscftlanfotts.
Our Hatnralization Laws.
Washington, July ID, 1859.—Attorney
General Black has, in compliance with the
request of the President of the U. S., ren-
B II. LEEK K, Attorney at Law, Cass- dered an opinion in the case of Christian
ville, Oa.—‘Business entrusted to his E rn ..;t, a native of Hanover, and who cmi-
• care will meet with prompt and vigilant
.attention, and monies paid over punctually.— grated to this country’ in 1851, when he
Office under Standard office. Feb. 1,18M. was about nineteen years of age. Thissub-
V. WESTER, Attorney at Law, J cct was rcccnt1 ^ madc thc basis of a com-
Calhoou, Ga.—Will practice in alt the munication to our Minister at Berlin, who
w.
• counties of thc Cherokee Circuit. Par
ticular attention will be paid to the collection
of claims, and to promptly paying over the
moneyWhen collected. Nov. 28, 1858.
L. RAY, Attorney ate Law, Ellijay,
was instructed to demand thc release of
Mr. Ernst.
It appears that he was naturalized last
February ; and in March, after procuring
a regular passport he went back to llano
H Oa.—Will practice in the counties of . .
• Cass, Cherokee, Pickens, Gilmer, Dan- ver on a temporary visit. He had been m
sun, Fannin, Union and Towns. Collecting of (| 1C v i]] a <v C where lie was born about three
debts will receive special attention. , , . ,
March to. is.',:i—lv. weeks, wnen he was arrested, carried to
- — - the nearest military station, forced into
TTTOFFORD, CRAWFORD & HOW- tIlc Hanoverian army, and there he is at
W ARI). Attorneys at Law, Cussville and ,, . . .
T? Carters,’ill.-, u».—Will faithfully nt- the present time, unable to return home
tend to any business entrusted to their care, ill { 0 family anil business, but compelled
WofTird, John A. Crawford, Cassville; .1. A. against his will to perform military ser-
Howard, Carter* i*i lie.
July 23,1858. vice.
E
The attorney General says that this is
a ease which makes it necessary for thc
M. KEITH, Attorney at Law, Cass-
I ville, G i.—Practices ill the counties of
a» Cass, Cherokee, Gordon, Whitfield uiid Government of the United States to intcr-
: fere promptly and decisively, or acknowl-
«f the public square, in It.ce’s building
N iv. 18, 18,>8.
edge that we have no power to protect
nafuralized citizens when they return to
A C. DAY, Tailor, Cassville, Ga.— i their native country under any circutnstan-
Shop near his residence— on the same ces whatever. What you will do must of
• lot. All work done in J course depend upon the law of our own
w irr.lilted tu last. Particular nlteiitmn given ! • 1
Cutting, lie asks a o intiiiu nice of the lit,- ! cluntry as controlled and modified by the
law of nations, the Constitution of the U
,1 p itruaagu heretofore bestowed.
Cassville, G i., Kcb. 1st, 181
j nited States, and thc acts of Congress.
B ank agency.—Thus. m. coupton,
Cassville, CJ.i., Agent, of the Dank of the
.State of S mth Ciroliui, will sell Mx-
c'linge »a Cliirlestou and New York, iniike
a 1,mucus on Produce, Ac , and attend t•> all
111e hiiiuess usually trails.tried bv Hank A-
geuts. Nov. IS, 18,'iS.
D
OCT. J. W. KLVYBUKW, having lo
cated permanently in Cassville, offer his
profession<il services to fife public, and
will attend promptly to every call, day or
niwlit. Office next door south of J. A. Ter
rell's residence, where he can be found during
the lav, —at light »l the residence lately occu
pied by R.*r. I). Kelscv. Thankful f«»r past
nitron age, he asks a continuance of the same.
0 issville, Ga., Fob. 1, 18-VJ.
S T A \ DA HD JOB OFFICE.—Thc Stan-
d ird Office being well supplied with a
largo v iriety of the best kinds of printing
materials, we are prepared to do all kinds of
JOB PRINTING in the best style of the art,
at short untie.!, and at low terms.
Particular attention will be paid to the
I>rintinir of Circulars, Blanks of all kinds.
Blank Notes, Programmes, Hand and Show
Bills, Posters, Ac.
We respectfully sol.cit the patronage of the
public All orders must be accompanied with
the c ish, or an * 4 acceptable city reference”
given. Jan. 1, 1851*.
I ” BOX AND BRASS FOUNDRY AND
M ACHINE SHOP, on Georgia Rail Road,
near Cotton Factory, Augusta, Ga. —Or
ders are solicited for Castings for Rail Roads,
all kinds of M tchinerv for Gold Mines, Bridg
es, Draw Bridges, Gas Works, Flour Mills,
Paper Mills, S iw Mills, Gin Gearing, Water \ prisoned for an actual offence against the
Wheels; all kinds of Smith work: Shafting j, r ,. i , u . i ...»
and Circular Saw Mills, complete. | h " y oC hls country, but being bom in it is
\V. M. RIGHT, j not a crime for which either punishment
March 81, is ’H-jy- I mprietur. j can be justly inflicted Among writers on
PI K WING M A.CHINES! I public law, the preponderance in weight
SEWING MACHINES! ! of authority as well as thc majority in
The natural rights of every free person
who owes no debts and is not guilty of any
crime, to leave the country of his birth,
and in good faith, and for an honest pur
pose—the privilege of throwing off his na
t ral allegiance, and substituting another
allegiance in its place—thc general right,
in one word, of expatriation, is incontes-
tiblc. I know that the common law of
England denies it; that the judicial decis
ions of that country are opposed to it, and
that some of our own courts, misled by
British authority, have expressed (though
not very decisively) the same opinion.—
But all this is very far from settling the
question. The municipal code of England
is not one of thc sources from which wc
derive our knowledge of international law.
We take it from natural reason and justice,
from writers of known wisdom, and from
the practice of civilized nations.
All these arc opposed to thc doctrine
of perpetual allegiance. It is too injuri
ous to the general interest of mankind to
be tolerated. Justice denies that men
should either be confined to their native
soil or he driven away from it against their
will. A man may be either exiled or iin-
SEWING MACHINES!
SEWING MA RUNES!
SEWING MACHINES!
SEWING MACHINES!
s&tfsg ass *»> «?-* dm "*
goods. Muslins, Silks, Linens, Jaconets, Ac.— . that the territory of a State is thc prison
for sale at Leyden’s General Sewing Machine _<■
Repot. Atlanta, Georgia, at manufacturers’pri- >
ces. Send for samples of work and prices. In practice no nation on earth walks,
^ ct *~ tf _ A. LEV PKX j or ever fly TOik, by thc rule of the coin-
N EW GOODS AT CASSVILLE —The mon law. All the countries of Europe
undersigned would respectfully call the have received and adopted and naturaliz-
thc poblfcgenerally^ohfsStoc^ir^ Goods— the citizens of one another. Theyhave
number concur with Cicero, who declares
that the right of expatriation is the firm
est foundation of humah freedom; and
a future residence. When we prove the England had not given his assent to the
rights of a man to expatriate himself we expatriation of these people. If the Prince
establish the lawful authority of the coun- Regent had a right to arrest naturalized
try in which he settles to naturalize him, j Englishmen, Scotchmen, or Irishmen, in
if thc government pleases. What, then,' Canada (as the King of Hanover arrested
is naturalization * There is no dispute 1 Mr. Ernst in his dominions.) and compel
about the meaning of it The derivation j him to fight for him, he certainly had a
of the word alone makes it plain. All lex- [right to hang them for fighting against
icograpliers and all jurists define it one 1 them. But Mr. Madison denied this whole
way. In its popular etymological and I doctrine and all its consequences. He
lawful sense it signifies the act of adopt- | immediately issued a counter proclamation,
ing a foreigner and clothing him with all! declaring that ifany naturalized citizen of
the privileges of a native citizen or sub- j thc United States should be put to death
ject. | on thc pretence that he was still a British
There can be no doubt that naturaliza-! subject, two English prisoners should suf-
tion does pro facto place the native and j fer in like manner by way of retaliation,
adopted citizen in precisely the same rcla- j The prince regent's proclamation was nev-
tion with thc government under which ; er enforced in a single instance. A prin-
they live, except, so far as in the express j ciple which our Government successfully
and positive law of the country has made resisted under such circumstances, will
a distinction in favor of one or the other.
In some countries emigration has been so
encouraged by giving adopted citizens cer
tain immunities and privileges not enjoy
ed by natives. In most, however, political
favors have gone the other way. Here none
but a native can be President In some
of our States foreign born citizens are inel
igible to the office of Governor, and in
one of them they cannot even vote for two
years after they are naturalized. But if
these restrictions had not been expressly
made by positive enactments, they cer
tainly would not have existed
In regard to the protection of-our citi
zens in their rights at home and abroad,
wc have no law which divides them into
classes, or makes any difference, whatev
er, between them. A native and natural
ised American may therefore, go forth
with equal security over every sea, and
through every land under heaven—inclu
ding the country in which thc latter was
born. Either of them may be taken up
under a debt contracted, or a crime com
mitted by himself; but both are absolutely
free from all political obligations to every
country but their own. They are both of
them American citizens, and their exclu
sive allegiance is due to thc Gcvernmcnt
of the United States. One of them never
did owe fealty elsewhere, and the other at
the time of naturalization, solemnly and
rightfully, in pursuance of public law and
municipal regulation, threw oft; renounc
ed, and abjured forever, all allegiance to
every foreign prince, potentate, State and
sovereignty whatever, and especially to
that sovereign whose subject he had
previously been. If this did not work a
solution of every political tic which bound
him to hifnativc country, then our natu
ralization laws are a bitter mockery and
the oath we administer to foreigners is a
delusion and a snare. «.
There have been and are now, persons
of a very high reputation who hold that a
naturalized citizen ought to be protected
by the government of his adopted coun
ty, everywhere, except in the country of
his birth; but if he goes there, or is
caught within the power of his native sov
ereign, his act of naturalization may be
treated as a mere nullity, and he will im
mediately cease to have thc rights of an
American citizen. This cannot be true.
It has no foundation to rest upon (and its
advocates do not pretend that it has any)
except the dogma which denies altogeth
er thc right of expatriation without the
consent of his native sovereign—and that
is untenable, as I think I have already-
shown.
Neither is this view supported by the
practice of the world. I need not say
our naturalization laws are opppsed
scajcely be submitted to now.
The application of these principles to
Whitfield’* Death.
■‘I could see Sirius announcing himself”
Study Promo tire of Health. j Educated Farmer*.
Professor Pierce, of Harvard College, j Fanners and Mechanics! Education is
said Sir John Hershell, as he swept the lately stated facts that show that the schol- j a subject which comes home to you more
heavens with his telescope, in search of Si- are who have distinguished themselves j directly than you think. Crafty politi-
rius, “until the great star rushed in, filled have, on an average, lived longer than those cians and public speakers arc constantly
the whole field of vision with a sea of light” | of indifferent attainments. It is an un- calling you the bone and sinew of the land;
Thc time came for Whitfield to die. The questionable fact that literary and scicn-
roan had been immortal till his work was tific pursuits are of themselves, promo-
dona His path had been bright—and it
grew brighter to thc end like that of the
just “You had better be in bed, Mr.
Whitfield,” said his host, the day he prea
ched his last sermon. “True” said thc dy
ing evangelist, and clasping his hands cried
—“I am weary in, not of, thy work, Lord
Jesus.” He preached his last sermon at
Newbury-port Pale and dying lie utter
ed therein or.c of the most pathetic sen
tences which ever came from his lips. Is it
Beecher says he wept when he read it
first ? No wonder: if I could weep at all,
it would make me weep. “I go to my cv-
tive of health. We are always amused to
hear young men and school girls talk of
having injured their constitutions, or des
troyed their health by hard study. Study
is not answerable for the mischief. List
less poring over befiks is not study.—-
Study implies vigorous exercise of mental
faculties, which is incompatible with pro
longed dreaming over books. When the
mind relaxes its efforts, intermits atten
tion, thc student should leave study, be
and you may depend upon it that you will
never be any thing else blit bone and sin
ew without education. There is a law of
God in this matter. That class of men
who make the most and best use of their
heads, will, in fact, he the most influen
tial, will stand highest, whatever the theo
ries and speeches may say. This is a na
ture of things which cannot be dodged or
got over. Whatever class bestows great
pains upon thc cultivation of their minds
will stand high. If fanners and mechan
ics feel themselves to he as good as other
the case of any naturalized citizen whoj erlasting rest. My sun has risen, shone
returns to his native country, is simple j an d is setting—hay it is about to rise, and
and easy enough. He is liable, like any j shine forever. I have not lived in vain.—
body else, to be arrested for a debt or a i And though I could live to preach Christ
crime, but he cannot rightfully be punish- j a thousand years, I die to be with him,—
ed for the non-performance of a duty \ which is far better.” The shaft was Icvel-
which is supposed to grow out of that al- ( ed. Then he said “I am dying.” He ran
lcgiancc which he has abjured and re-•' to the window, lavender drops were offer-
nounccd. If he was a deserter from the ed—but all help was vain—his work was
,. . .. • i w i. in their whole spirit, as well as their
emigration of their: , „
and Shoes: Brogans : Cloth Gaiters, Congress , -rk„ r>„ . express words. The States of Europe are
Gaiters. Aa: l&s’ W of various finds Tbe ^ practicalIy committed against it No
and orices. Also, Hosiery, Gloves, Ac. Keeps conceded the existence of the right bv ma- 1 j o
on hand * supply uf Cap, Letter, Commercial ... , . , . .. - government would allow one of its own
Note. Bath, fancy and all kinds of paper, en- kln S ,Mrs to regulate its exercise. Spam , * divide his .Romance between
relopes, ink and pens-all of which he will and the Spanish American State have al-1 SUbj , to ‘ allegiance between
sell cheap for cash. CalLOhe PosLoffice. ^ if England , b y a recent ,l and an0lher f ° r *** * U
ROBT.C. LATIMER.
Cassville, Ga., March 10, 1850.
know that no man can serve two masters.
army, he may be punished when he goes
back, because desertion is a crima On
the other hand, if he was not actually in
the army at the time of his emigration,
but merely liable like other members of
thc State, to be called on for his share of
military duty, which he did not perform,
because he left thc country before the
time for its performance came round, he
cannot justly lie molested. Any arrestor
detention of him on that account, ought
to be regarded as a grave offence to his
adopted country. What acts are neces
sary to make him part of the army? What
constitutes the crime of military deser
tion ? Whether a person drafted, con-
scribed, or notified, but not actually serv
ing, may be called a deserter, if he fails to
rei»ort himself? These are questions
which need not be discussed until they
arise.
But it may be said that the government
of Hanover has a right to make her own
laws and execute them in her own way.
This is strictly true of all laws which are
intended to enforce the obligations and
punish the offences of her own people.—
But a law which operates on the interests
and rights of other States, or people, must
be made and executed according to the
law of nations. A sovereign who tram
ples upon the public law of the world
cannot excuse himself by pointing to a
provision in his own municipal coda The
municipal code of each country is the off
spring of its own sovereign’s will, and
public law must he paramount to local
law in every question where local laws
are in conflict. If Hanover would make
a legislative decree forbidding her people
to emigrate or expatriate themselves upon
pain of death, that would not take away
the right of expatriation, and any attempt
to execute such a law upon one who has
already become an American citizen
would and ought to be met by very
prompt reclamation.
Hanover, probably, has some municipal
regulation of her own by which the right
of expatriation is denied to those of her
people who fail to comply with certain
conditions. Assuming that such a regu
lation existed in 1851, and assuming also
that it .was violated by Mr. Ernst when
he came away, the question will then
arise whether the unlawfulness of his em
igration makes his act of naturalization
void as against the King of Hanover. I
answer, no, certainly not He is an A-
merican citizen, by our law. If he vio
lates the law of Hanover, which forbade
him to transfer his allegiance to us, then
Stat,,fC (7 . and f 8 Vi< ^) has «* bhshed a In Eur0 pe as well as here, the allegi- the laws of the two countrias are in con-
W INSHIP IRON WORKS, Atlanta, permanent s^tem of naturalization, in the ^ deinall ded of a naturalized resident, a » d the of " at i°ns steps in to de-
Geor*i».-.I. A R. WINSIIIP A CO., very teeth of her common law rule. France . i alwavs understood as ex- cide the question upon principles and
Manufaciurerg of S««m Engines and has done the same: and besides has dc- U,USt ,mC **** > understood tsex iff
Boilers, Circular Saw Mills, on the most an- , . ., , v - ....
proved pb.n. Turning Lathes, Sugar Mills, clared, m the code Napoleon (art l ( .)that
Kettles. Mining Machine* , Mill Work, of all the qualitv of a Frenchman will be lost bv
descriptions, New Myles of Iron Railing lor . '. . r . . *
Fences and Cemctrv Lots, Bridge Castings naturalization in a foreign country. There
elusive. There arc not many cases on re- ndes of its ow-n - Bv thc P ub!ic law of
cord, but what few we find are uniform the world - we haTC the undoubted right
and clear. One Alberti, a Frenchman, to naturalize a foreigner, whether his nat-
naturalized here, went back and was ar- j ural sovereign consented to his emigration
rested for an 'ffence against the military or not - •"Y opinion. tbc Hanoverian
and Bolts. Railroad Work. Gin Gearing from j s n0 government in Europe, or America,
8 to 12 feet, latest improved Horse rowers; ° „ D
L"^ d .l^ I uT^ dBr,lS8C * Sti,,gS,B “ d ' law, which none except a French subject government cannot justify the arrest of
t* order at short notice. m the United States, the thought of giving J d ^ ^ ^ Mr. Ernst by showing that he emigrated
when his national character, as an Ameri- contrary to thc laws of that country, un
can citizen, was know n. less it also be proved feat the original
A Mr. Amther, a native Bavarian, after 1 ri S ht of expatriation depends on the con
sent of the natural sovereign. This last
Haring experienced workmen, a large and
veil assorted it
stock or New Patterns, and our it up cannot be entertained for a moment
facilities being superior to any Foundry in the Upon that principle this country was pop-
State. we feel confident of giving entire satis- , . , ... ...
- - ■ £ror us with their ulated. We owe to it our existence as a
Ever since our independence wc
faction to those who may furor *us with their ulated.
orders, both in regard to' prices and quality of nation,
oar work.
done. The doctor saiil, “ lie is a dead
man.” And so he was; and died in silence,
Christ requiring no dying testimony from
one whose life had been a constant testi
mony.
Thus passed away, on September 30th,
1770, one of the greatest spiriLs that ever
inhabited a human tabernacle. Thc world
has been an immeasurable gainer by his
life. He had preached eight thousand ser
mons, and they had but two keynotes ;—
1st Man is guilty—be must be pardoned.
2d. Man is immortal—he must be happy
or wretched forever. Wccping filled New
bury. Flags floated half-mast, and the
ships fired minute guns.
“ Mortals cried a man is dead:
Angels sang, a child is born.”
The Rev. Daniel Rogers, remembering
in his prayer, that Whitfield had been his
spiritual father, hurst into tears, and cried
—“ My fatlier! iny father, thc chariot of
Israel, and the horsemen thereof.”
Coke sleeps in his grand sea-grave with
the everlasting music of the billows for his
dirge. Robert Newton sleeps at Easing-
wold, Richard Watson, and John and Chas.
Wesley slumber in London graveyard ;—
and George Whitfield’s dust rests in its
trans-Atlantic abode, until
“ That illustrious mom,”
when thc “dead in Christ shall rise,” and
they will meet in glory, to die no more.—
Meantime earth holds no mightier dust—
Blessed be God that ever they lived, and
left their influence to mould humanity.—
live. W. C. McKennon't Lecture.
take himself to either play or physical la-! jieople, it all may be true; for goodness
bor—he should rest the mind and cxer-! is one thing and intelligence another. If
cise thc body. i they think that they liave as much mind
Nor is the going of thc miiul to replc-! as other classes, tliat may be true, but can
tion study; it gives neither depth of schol- • you use it as well ?
arship nor richness of wisdom—promotes I Lawyers, and physicians, and clergjr-
neithcr health nor life. Especially is this
detrimental when accompanied, as is usu
ally thc case with students, by habits of
free eating, sufficient of themselves to ru
in thc health of those even who are habit
uated to out of-door exercise. It is bad
habits and not study, which min tlie
health of students. Contemplate Kirke
White, boasting that he was dying over
his books; then turn to Walter Scott, pale
and old, with his immense amount of lit
erary labor, giving his afternoons to out-
of-door exercise, like a man of sound sense!
Which presents the true example ?
Think of it, dyspeptic student, and
blush for shame, as you ought, that your
unjustifiable habits have ruined your
health. But in thc name of justice, make
not study a scapegoat for your sins!
men, and literary men, make thc discip
line of their intellect a constant study—
they read more, think more, than the la
boring classes. Thc difference between
thc educated and the uneducated portions
of society is a real difference. Now *
proud and lazy fellow may rail and swear
at this, and hare Ills labor for his pant*.
There is only one way really to get aver
it, and that is to rear up a generation of
well educated thinkiug, reading, farmers
and mechanics. Just as soon as your
heads are felt, as much as your hands arc;
that will bring you to the top.
You see how it is even among yourselves.
If a boy has an education, you expect him
to be a lawyer, or doctor, or preacher.—
You tacitly admit that a fanner does not
need such an education ; and if you think
(The wate
Save All Manures.
water-closets and privies of every
house should be so arranged that the sol
id and liquid excrement of the family
could he readily saved and applied to the
soil. Many persons who annually pay-
large sums for manure, think they can-
Before us in a feeble specimen of a! so you can’t blame others if they follow
man, who has dragged his existence j your example. There is no reason why-
through the winter in a state of semi-stu-1 men of the very highest education slioukl
pidity, unable to study as he says; yet. not go to the form for their living. If a
thrice a day, at the table, he docs the' son of mine were brought up on purpose
work of a healthful man. Thus he uses ! to be a farmer, if tliat was thc calling he
up his remaining life and energies in dis- i preferred, I still would educate him if he
posing of thc excess of food which he j had common sense to begin with. He
puts into his stomach, gradually but sure-! would be as much better for it as a far-
ly exhausting his vitality to gratify his pal- i mer as he would as a lawyer. There is
ate. This is not study, it is animal indul-! no reason why a thoroughly scientific ed-
genca—Life Illustrated.
French and Sardinian Lou at the
Battle -of Solferino.
By the IFeser it is stated officially that
the losses of the Sardinian army were un
fortunately very considerable, and do not
amount to less than 49 officers killed, and
1G7 wounded, (142 sub officers and pri
vates killed ,3,409 wounded, and 1,258 sol
diers missing, making a total of 5,525 ab
sent at roll call.
The loss of the French army amount
ed to 12,000 rank and file, killed and
wounded, and 720 officers placed hors de
combat of whom 150 were killed. Am
ong the wounded are Gens. Ladiuirault,, . , ...
, ... ... ent campaign on that occasion. Until
Forey, Anger, Dicu, and Douav. Seven I . . * ° . . , . ,,
n . ■ . .. , „ , - , , then it had now and then been brought
Cols, and six Lieut Cols, have been kill- . .
e( ^ I out, but at last it lias played thc pnnci-
t , . ...... | pal part. The lsiwer of the rifled cannon
As to thc losses of the Austrian arinv, .
, . , , i ..." jis henceforth established. I Will cite but
.they cannot yet be calculated, but they , „ ,. _
not afford the permanent investment nec- ' t have ^ vcry considerable fnHn I one feet in support ofthei assertion. Gen-
essary to arrange their buildings for this ! thc number killed and , voundcd? which ! DcSVa " X ***' the tkstanc ? abo% **
purpose ‘ 1 ' ' ’ '
foolish.
ucation should not be given to every for
mer and to every mechanic.—Deevher on
Fanning.
[Cavriaua (June 28) correspondence uf Hie
London Telegraph.)
Scenes on the Battle Field of 8olferi*
no—Effect of the French Billed
Cannon.
I have visited to-day thc plains of Gui-
drzzoto, where thc battle which began at
Solferino teminated at a late hour of thc
ntgbf. At ten o’clock, in fact, the Sardini
an and French cannon could still be heard.
The artillery may be said to have done
its work for the first time during the pres-
They are penny wise and pound j werc , eft Qn ^ fie , d of batt ,^ wWch ex . | thirty squadrons of cavalry, consisting of
| tended not less than 12 miles in length.
j Italians and dragoons, forming into oulsa-
t3F“ Foundry and Machine Shop on Wes- have upheld and maintained it by eveiy naturalized in America, and after ^ tion j
tern A VUautic Railroad. form of words and acts. We have con- ““
iaa*c wiKsnir | kob’t wixship j cko. wixsair.
March 24th, 1859—lv.
The s-e it to >u :h place-; needs to be but ou.„„ , . - , , „„ . , 6 es, and preparing to thunder down upon
, , . , il bey left in our hands 30 pieces cf can- ’ 11 * _ .. . . *
little raised over the apparent vault, and „„„ , , , , the squares of Rer.atids division. Thc
.... ... , ... . non, a great number of amuntion wagons, , 1 . . .j? , ...
which should have a bottom rapidly slop- j four ^ and 0 Q(|0 prigoneri dan ge r w:,s imminent *id grave, for the
ing to a well .built and capacious drain, j A wrjter fro|n ’ VerQD , under ^ of ! French troo P s had their flanks compro-
which leads to a cesspool at a proper dig- 1 j une ,>g ^ . j mised, and were in front of an Austrian
tance from the house. This cesspool may | m. ’ . ..... ... . battery, which worried them with grape.
, , , i 1 here are here some 400 or 500 Pied- „ , ,
be excavated in the gravel, and made by I . , _ . .* General Desraux pointed out tlic danger
.... , , , i monte.se and some French prisoners.— . ... .
cementing the gravel, or may be brick or .. . „ . ., to Captain Fist, commander of the eighth
• ?. ° ’ •' What the losses on this side may turn , . . ....
stone laid in mortar. It may be arrang-1. .... . - ... . , . , bitter v of artillery, who at once cstablMi-
. . , , , ° out to be it is impossible as yet to state . . * . ' ,. „
ed so as to mix muck, loam and road - - ™ „ . , , ed a battery of rifled cannon upon a small
with precision. There cannot be less ■ a ,
scrapings, or to use the liquid alona— ,i ,« nAn . . . eminence in the plain, and fired four
™ , than 12,000 or lo,000 men, hors de com- , . . „ * . . , . , „
The unne, as I have shown, is made more j j . rounds of shells containing forty balls a
valuable by mixing with an equal bulk of. ^ distance of more tlian two thousand yards.
water. Run into the vault of the water The “Honorable” Dan. Sickles. The effect produced seemed like unchant-
closet the spout of the sink and allow all The. recent reconciliation of Mr. and inent Thc captain saw in thc first place
the sink to wash out the vault and mix Mrs. Sickles elicits.almost as much com- wide gaps had been made in the enemy’s
with the feces in the cesspool. j ment as the battle of Solferino. The Phil- ranks, then all of a sudden this terrible
This will enrich the manure by its own adelphia “Bulletin” thus remarks : mass of cavalry was dispersing in every
constituents, besides supplying the water j “There never was an honor that had direction, utterly disordered, and with-
for admixture. If you have but scant such recuperative powers as that-of the out heeding orders or rallying at the word
means for thc constructure of the cess- j Honorable Dan’IE. Sickles. A few months of command. Twenty thousand of the
pool, let your drain empty into an oil-butt ago the honor aforesaid was destroyed: Austrian cavalry, upon whose aid every
sunk in the ground. Haul near this oil- he was totally dishonored, and in his hu- reliance had been placed, were thus ren-
butt a large quantity of mud, loom, saw- ! niflity would like to have been called— dered useless, and it was directly after
dust, shavings, leaves, straw, any kind of' the Dishonorable Daniel E. Sickles. But this catastrophe, if I am rightly informed,
vegetable matter; and even chopped brush, ■ now, he having made his wife narrate for that the Emperor Francis Joseph aban-
and, funning a compact heap, or a basin, •: the public the whole story of her shame; doned the camp, tears of vexation and
[°OK TRACT DEPOSITORY renoumSgXTnat^J ^ Bav*«n Government, so mr Hum ; ^ , „„„ about toatm* ,
1°. ,e - - rg - , ‘ he allegiance and transferring their fealty to noring his naturalization, expressed doubt j ph|cot Better work hard for nothing and P ^
of the aitj
Illd, JORN V: BURKE. Agi
Cotton Avenue, Maeon)G
living here for many years, determined f - -f-° * am sure no man can cstab- [ acc^ng t o the material, with a long- j killed Phillip Barton Key; having been a despair in his eyes.
stantlv promised full a^minnWa nrntM* upon”returning to his native country and Ksh ' ♦- i handled dipper, dip it out on the heap.— lion and a hero in Washington for some TUE plLES or DEAD ASt , tijeiu am-ear-
0«*»1 ii-i Vo™ 1U,. P., When U.o h-» is i. up !»«,!»; b.™* .U»d .-1HJ ft, munk, |
i l, The Bavarian Government, so fer from ig- k “ fer T" Wt eal ‘ Y‘? rs f ,f ? Io ‘ fer r" ioa .’ t kcep I and haul it away and put more in its The plain of Guidizxolo is really horri-
a | once more thegentle Ter^, a,,d hishT- W * to look upon. Evan so late as yester-
: ’ ■’ 1 J were not buried. They
in groups of twenty and
huddled together in one spot, where
exploded or the Chasseurs
d’Afrique had passed. AH still maintain
ed the attitude in which death had struck
than down.
Here ww one with uplifted arm to swi
off the Mow which had split open his skull
and splsshirt his knms fer and near.,—
Close by was another, with his hand up
on his breast shivered and rent by the
r.«- —T «*■ ! 8, i SSSflgrfS:-—net value of the most j virtuous as he
5*- VOWeT * neoaeary to redeem “J" 8 h-obum* 1 * «-• *•** kjr, Drofiub le crona on wdl mannred land is had already no
Si Letter Voi f* 0 ** - it, we shall be guilty of perfidy so gross horn subject of the British crown, taken ndiaghard to attend aa miagmary ooo. ▲
V&ting Carte, Pap^r CatLST'r^i/steil’^i that no American can witness it without prisoner while earring in the American qaire o( bbak paper, tied with iW tapc, ear-
,I,k a, Pencils, Slates, Wafers, Aa * feeline of intolerable shame. ranks, should be hied and executed as a - . -- - - ,
SoM aaW as tbsr san bTpirdiaaed anv- „ g ^ , ."Tj. -. . . - , bia first ease and make hie fortune. Suck it, ty«-
lv ask fora liberal share Expatriation iadudesnot only etnigra- traitorofhis lawful soveragn.
Of this many persons
profitable crops on well manured land is bad already no doubt; but his public ac-
^ __ ____ at least $50 per acre, we have $100 as the knowfedgement of the feet is quite touch-
» ried under a lawyei's arm may him! ralije of the wsste.—Copeland Country ing and gratifying to have the truth set
so dearly before the public eye.
5*da** tion out of one’s natural country, hut
nraliaation in the country adopM as t to til*
. „ the world; to him ftat hath shall he given-— |
rigfa* arrnrimg ^ ^ ■— •—
Dakhfd sad minA your djaaoea.
VHmr go where you wouldn’t like
la h* found dnd. J \-
“Ha that fights and runs away,
Map five «o fight another day.”