Newspapers / The Eagle [1866-1875] (Fayetteville, … / June 25, 1867, edition 1 / Page 1
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. i , : , ' , : ! - ; it -J: ' . : ' ! ' , f' . 1 Ur ..V THE NEWS. P0BMSUEB EVEHY TUESDAY. j;;h; uyroyer; Editors and Proprietors, :o: ,i - f i? A i JiTTE VILLE, N. C. Weekly, One year, $3 00 ; Do. one montns.. 2 00 One Square, 1 jnch or less first insertion, $1 00 i , cacJi subseanonf. i nuA-ti-vY fin L ' . A - - aaaoi,. MS each subsequent insertion . For one year, xifte square. . For six months, " For three months, . . . For Quarter Column, 5 squares, 3 months, 60 . 15 00 9 00 , 600 $25 60 75 40 9 12 For Half Column, 10 squares 3 " 6 44 9 tt 100 125 . .75 125 150 200 12 , For One Cq!sjaU JiO squares , 3 months,, 6 i 9 44 12 : i t 4 NAPOLEON'S THREE WARNINGS. The celebrated Fouchc, Duke of Otrnn. to, was retain'ed for a -time, it is well known la the service of the Bourbons after their restoration to the throne of France. He retired to the town of Aix, in Province, and there lived in affluent ease upon the gains oi his Icng and busy career. Curi osity attracted many visitors around this remarKaoie maiii ana ne was habitually irpft hi co mm imn.ii ncr ins rpminnconoo n the creat events which it had been his lnr ' " 0 vftfttiuvviiwQ kj i to,witness. On one occasion the company, nf?semhled 111 hia snlnnn. hoard from 'hie Mc 7i c Ti t -.w. ..ro flip frtl ntjcinir efnrv : the following story: ! By degrees as Napoleon assumed the power and the authority of a king, every tliirig about him, even in the days of the consulate, began to wear a court-like ap pearance. All the old monarchial habi tudes were revived one by one. Anions , t'Mpther revivals of this kind, the custom of attending mass previous to the hour of lence, was restored, and Bonaparte him- self was punctual m hwjippearauce at the Chanel 01 St. C Oud on R'irh nns nne nothing could be more mundane than thie. mojle of performing these religious services. The actresses of the opera were the choir i8ts, and great crowds of busy, talkative people were in the habit of frequenting the gallery of the chapel, from the windows of whjch the First Consul and Josephine c6uld be seen with their suite and friends. The whole formed merely a daily exhibi tion of the consular court to the people. At one particular time the punctuality of Bonaparte in his attendance on mass was rather distressing to his wife. The. quick and jealous Josephine had discovered that the eye of her husband was too much directed to a window in the gallery, where there regularly appeared the face and form ot a young girl of uncommon beauty. The ciurnu,, treses, me unman? eye, tne grace- Ill I TltTlirO nf till a nnrenn n nA imnl 1 t . . . . . .'.i. A i r i . " i linnosinAsa V. r. I f l . ' 4 ger's glances were bent no less often Bonaparte than his were upon her. -uvuoiiivijg iw uicv,uuai o wnf, us iue etrau upon ; , j Who is that vounsr orirl?" said .Tospnhinp one day, at the, close of the service; "what can she seek from the First Consul? I ob served her to dron a billet just down at his '.'X. TT . . jeut. ncpicKed it up; 1 saw him." ! No one could tell Josephine who the ob- j : i . "whco precisely . was, inougn there were some who declared her to bean emigrant lately returned, and who was ; probably desirous of the intervention of the First Consul in favor of her family. j . With such guesses as this the consul's wife was obliged to rest satisfied for the time. : . ; ': After the audience of the same day had passed, Bonaparte expressed a wish for a drive in the park, and accordingly went out accompanied by his wife, his brother - Joseph, Generals Duroc and Cambawres, and Hortense Beauharnois, wife of Lewis Bonaparte. The king of Prussia had just presented; Napoleon with a superb set of horses, four in number, and these were harnessed to an : open chariot for the party. The consul took! it into his head to drive in person;: and j mounted , into the coachman's place. The chariot setoii; but just as it was turning into the park, it went cnsh against a stone; v at the gate, and the Firsts Consul wasi thrpwn to the ground: He Attempted tb; rise but again felK prostrate in a stunned ; or; insensible condition. Meanwhile; the horses sprang forward with the chariot,; " and, were only stopped when Duroc, at the risk of his life, threw himself out and seiz-j cd the reins. Josephine was taken out in ; a swooning etate. The tv&t of the party re- ; turned quickly to the Consul and carried? fJhim back fa his apartments. :J On recover-! ing,his senses fully, the first thing which he' : did was to put his hand in his pocket and TV r Vi uroppea at nis feet in thin itlinnAl , T . . . ... vui. v,'i"i' AJtuuiug over nis snouider Josephine read these woids: "Do not ridp . out in your carriage to daj." A ? 1 1 I' "This can have no allusion to our late j accident," said Bonaparte,1 Vo one could ;iorcsee I was to play the part of the -coachman to-day, brtbat I should bo awl! i ward enough.to drive against a stone. - Go j f Duroc, and examine' the chariot." Mj - -jDurocobeyed. ; Soon after hevreturned,! cry pale, and took the First Consul aside. ,; .' zen Uqnsul," said he, had vou ; not , uio bione, ana stopped our drive we fcnd all been ' lost!" v. . ;. - . . : v:-"IIow? was the reply. : . i Xhere was in the carriage copccaled Se T 111 . r 'W 4Kb und the back scat, a bomb-a massive hxxtiibi una with a slow mif 'ntti..i it--kindled. Things had been so arranged that in 'a quarter of b scattered among; the trees in the Park or,St. (ffoud. There must be some treach ery close at hand. Fi,ii.ho m,, u r nils vuoois must be warned " "Not a word, then." rnli T5- ..v ft(l Wnau6C ui one piot Dut engenders Vrr T" -"Cbt ""sepnine remain ignorant or the danjrer she has Pnoi tj ,utff!lu,lc,!re ten none of them; and uie ovcmmenc lournals say not a word about mv fall." ! The First Consul was then silent fnrC time. At length he said: "Duron, mn - tu mass m tne Chans . nnrl I , I -"V. VA- attention a vnnnrr t shall point (out to you. She will occupy "u"n n ID-lDe gaiiery by the right. Follow her hnmp rr o., u. fo! lowedand bring me intelligence of her name, her abode, and her rirmmefon Ti will be better to do this yourself: I would not have the noliee inferfer tt, taken care of the bomb, and removed it?" I rx uive, citizen, Consul." ! 'fCOme. tlien. HQ orrntr," A. J il park," $aid;Bonaparte. j The drive, was resumed, but nn thic sion the coachman was allowed tofulHll his On the morrow the eye of more than one person was turned to s turned to the window iri the But the jealous Josephine sought t , gaiici J . in vain ..iI.. c g. , She was no? there.- The implS I T?t..U nLll . . . . "ipaiiciHi ,ot vyuiui, wun nis, conhdant, Duroc I Li .L' .i- , . ivuiuo, were greatlv annoved at her arifte, and small was the attention paid by them tq the services that day. Iheir anx iety was fruitless. She was seen at mass no more.j;;-';f ' ' : The;sumrners of Napoleon were chieflir spent ;dt Mai niAlftnn tnf mnfnre n Ci C bud and the Tuilleries. Winter had come on, anditlie First Consul hnd fcQurt iij th great apartment of the last tHese palaces. It was the 3d of the mon .iv.I, U bL....l1; ,. .. ' . andfthe 1? irst Consul had been - i L t of Wliinh hk "DL....U1: II it . . t i " : iiiu uuuiLiir? 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 r i "j " j" , I'uv'iuiius wen caiieu niross, afd. ,n e evening Bonaparte entered his earriage to go to the opera, accompanied by his aid-de-camp, Lauriston, and Gener als Larines and Berthier. The vehicle was about tb start, when a female, wrapped in a'jbfack (mantle, rushed out upon the Place Cjirouselv made Her way into the middle of the guards about to accompany Napoleon, and held forth a paper, crvinw: VCitifcn, Consul! read, "read!" Bonaparte,, with that smile' whih T,,r. riennej escribes as so irresistible, saluted the petitioner, and stretched out his hand lor the missive. I I "A petition, madame?" said heinquirincr y nd .then! continued, "Fear nothing; 1 shall present it, and see justice, done!" .! I i r i j r X r i cneu me woman lm vuuizen uonsull" 'cried the plonngjy, joining her hands. .! .1 !i . . What she! would have further wo lost. iThe COnchmnn. whn il- no. r.. wards slid, was intoxicated, wvn th loch to his horses and off they sprung with the fr"?1! "gntning. JNapoleon. throwing ihto his: hjat the paper he had received, re niarked. to his companions:" j I conld not well see her figure, but I think the poor woman is young." ; i-TM jcriage dashed rapidly along; it vas justj issuing from the Street of St. Nicholas,! when a frightful detonation was heard ! 1?,!nK!ing with and followed by a crash of j broken windows. The infernal machine had exploded! Uninjured, the carriage of the Consul and its inmates was whirled with undiminished rapidity to the opera. Bonaparte entered h!Isiboix! with serene brow and unruffled de riortment. He saluted, as usual, the as sembled spectators, to whom the news of the explosion came with all the speed which rumor exercises on such occasions, j 'All vere j stunned and stupefied. Bon aPan fjone was perfectly calm. He stood with crossed arms, listening attentively to the oratorio of Hayden, which was executed on that; evening. . . - Suddenly j he remembered the paper put his hands. He took it out. and rnrl in these lines; ! Ini the name of heavpn PIUtoh rn,.,t d0 F0? 09 to the opera to night; if you do g;o, pass notthrough tie street of St. Nich- olas."i-vl.s I t vi,..',, . .; :'-. . .. . . . i The rning came, in some respects; too late.- ),:.-! - . r ;; t On reading these words, the First Consul chancel to faise his eyes.1 Exactly oppo site-to fiijtJ,; in a box in the third tier, sat the yodng girl of the chapel of St. Cloud, and with joined hands, seemed to . utter prayers of gratitude for the escape which had takjen place. Her head had no cover ing -but tier flowing and beautiful chesnut hair and her person was wrapped in a. dark mantle -;. Which the Consul recognized as identical with that worn by the woman who had delivered the paper to him at the carriage j door. "Go," said Bonaparte, quietly but quickly, to Lannes, "go to the box idireptly opposite to us on the third tier. Ydtfw maptlel : IBring her tothe Tmleries., , I must see .her;' and without raising his eyes, but to make. Lannes certain I of the person, he tool the generara arm,; arid said, point ing upwardf See there--look!" n v t ' j (ftonapartejstopped; suddenly. S;The"girI was gone; no- black mantle was to be seen. Annoyed at this, beyond measurehe'. Kur-; riedly ient off Lannes to intercept her. . It was all ja vain The boxkeeper bad seen such an individual, but knew nothing about her. Bonaparte applied to Foucho and Dubois; but all the zeal of these function aries failed in discovering hpr m Years ran on after the explosion of the infernal machine, and the strange accom pany ing'circu instances tended to make the occurrence more remarkable in the eyes of Bonaparte. To the consulate succeeded the Empire, and ictory after victory mark ed the career of the great Corsican. At length the hours of change came. Allied Europe poured its troops into France, and compelled the Emperor to lay down the sceptre which had been so long shaken over half the civilized earth. The isle of JUba became for a day the most remark able spot on the globe; and, finally, the re suscitated empire fell to pieces anew on the field of Waterloo. . v Bonaparte was about to nn it. Vrti The moment h foot on the bank which was to convey him to the English vessel- Friends a ,, y - " tiau followed the fallen chief to the verv last were standinc bv him tn mvA him fii adieu. I He waived hishand to thosearound, and a smile was on the lina whinh haA cently given the farewell kiss to the imno.1 " w mm m m m.m Baim - rial eagle. At this instant a woman broke i r . . ... thP. hflrifl fhnf cfnn1 KaCa.. "VT 1 . ni was in the prime of womanhood; not a girl but yet youna enouffh tn retni , - , w ij. O " " uuiiiiuuil CU ucauijr iur wnicn sne wcuid at anv! time have been remarkable amons a crowd oi Deauties. Her ieaturen were full nf.nr lety and sadness, adding interest to her ap- pearance even at that moment. "Sire'" i ; wacer- Anu -everywhere it is a thing saidshe, presenting a paper at that moment, i f b.eautv g-eaming in the dewdrop, sing "read! read!" The Emperor took the epis- i .f ,n. Pumn,cr ri,i. sinning in the ice genie. ue presentea to him, but kept his eve on i lit? presenter, lie seemed, it may be to icui ul inat insrnnt tho norfnm St. Cloud, to hear th hofM ;. Cloud, to hear the choristers chanting " L'kiiuiiiCU Ui Z.15 1)1 , ' - vuwiiovcio uuauiiiiir niPlnr inncln in -1 ' 1 , v . H thfm in nthor rlnT-c t., tv w in iue ciiuitei ns nn nnn honi-H all his friends came hanlv before him InH v w - vi.Vk3. .1 iixtr iiiiniM i inrnn Ans among them the face whirh h ,no ""7 to see at the fourth win hTLn H IS P Vfl W n Q rtntir rn I1 a. v " mv UllCl v. reality, altered, yet the same, j These illu sory recollections were of short duration. v,v wo iiuw ui tfiaL nnnnrpnnnpo in Napoleon shook his head and held the na per up co.ms eye. After perusing its con- tents he took the paner betvvppn h? hon. and tore it to pieces, scattering the fra"- mentsin th nir. "Stop, sire." said the wnmnn rnlinW aavice! warnpd! . - " .uiivrvv l(IC It is VPt timn,' liV l; . j , -u, , repuea ne; and taking from h s fin- Te'nW of hU F rntal rUb?' '-We vemr of hie Egyptian campaigns, held it out ine hii heid the fZ,1 , ,1 . 1,"n" '"S,""1'"8 Emperor then stepped m - he Veel ' KoMonW 19 !?6 rue vessel. JNot lone afterwards he wna ni. ningon the rock of St.-Helena 1 Th,,Qnfh n . .. - Thus of the three warnings, two were SSffiS . 1 xt i . i'"6 nosticated NaDoIeon's fatr if nn ,'n k . " - , Il Ulll power ofhisadversar esthp. thirrl vtroo jected. I "But who was this woman Duke of O tranto?" woman, liuke ot O- "Oh1 replied Fouche T tnnw n.f certaintv Tho U Vi l , . x,l lciure represents . the old hero " , u WU1 Ior tue most Part o certamiy. ine LmDeror.if he knpm nU . 'cf.n.):J.. l . -.r kca nmsrfUe t:n j xv.-i mately, seems to have kpnfc fh sperof 7 A.,! at is known respe tnet is, that a female, related to St. Recent one ina WVt .1 nP i ' J - u" of the authors 0 the explosion of nf t alone, leaning uppn the carriage St. Nicholos, died I a? Se hospital Hotel and i" r f '.T'ie aU,.tude Dieu inilS-57 .hlf . 7 , lotel1and easy; his head is bare; -in one hand is suspe'nded bv a Ik hhUDd,her D6Ck .W-aS ?he fe,t hat 80 fa,ni,iar t0 ery Southron, oriental 1 mbv nV N n " 1 qU in the 0ther ld his fie,d Slas the back! oriental ruby of Napoleon. ., ground a courier restrainsthe ardor of two n ' spirited horses, while the surrounding r. Did he hit the - Owl? Sydney Smith eminently su-estive oh iTX fS Kead bTh 6 Zte Sa I strew thefround,and .the. lurid smoke of thedullnep nf .a" 1 : JH.UJHC, anu eo it nas a; suggestive moral; that is, make your point plain hit something: 1 " I , ... One day a man went into a store and began telling about a fire! There never had been such a fire in. Essex.. A man going by Deacon Pettingill's barn saw an owl on the ridge-pole. He fired at theowl and the wadding somehow or other getting into the shingles, set the hay on fire and it was all , destroyed ten tons of hay, six head of cattle, the finest horse in the coun try, etc The deacon was nearly crazed by it. The men in the store bepdn exclaiming and commenting upon it. "What a loss!" said one. "Why the deacon will nigh break down under it," said another. And so they went on speculating one after an other, and the conversation drifted on in all sorts 01 conjectures. At last a quiet man, who sat spitting in the fire, looked up and asked,! "Did he hit the owl?" - Fish Culture. It appears that experi ments in the culture of fish have been at tended with success in other countries' as well as our own. As an instance, we see it stated! that, eight years ago, on that por tion of the little river Kibble, in England, which lies between the borough of Preston and the sea, only 96 salmon were taken. ka$t year the numbe part of the river was 16,000. ,7 This is the resolt'of stocking the stream anew, of pre venting the throwing of noxious substances into its waters, and of otherwise attending to the habits of this finny species..- The re port of the English Commissioners tells the same story about several . other vBritisfi streams. ilnmany. of tbem:4h;yalue Vqf the fish taken in one season is estimated at ten times f be cost of stocking. a CTH22DID vzzczirrizz. ' n Mn.ia Cvrtain occaIon. one Taul Denton, wtbodut preacher in Texat, advertised usually furnhed. When the people ' ---- . nuuur man i IS- Mr. Faul Denton, your reverence has lied. out, ,l ; I'romiiea not only a good . barbecue. .Th mer Mor. Where's the liquor." "I here!" answered Hi mto: 1 f . - .-v. isiuijury in loiics or thunder, and pointing his long, bony finger at the matchless double spring, gushing-un in two.Rtmnrr . - . , . 1 O " ' nil u vu ,J?y from the bosnvof the earth. "Inere!" he reneatwl. with ii :ui.. as ligntning, while, his enemy iactuallv rrpmhluH of c.t. .. 7. - icci, "mere is the inuid . . . . , ; o auu corruption, doth our Father in' Heaven co d water. But in the glade and glassy del I. where (li rpl lau j v.. jMcwiuus essence oi Hie, pure w... j.iay, mere tiOfi brews it; ana aown, low down in the deenest villo where the J?S?3& , . ' : r n; i 8,?; Bd -hW ,UP in. th tnodntain tops wneru inn naKeu irranite nr itfera 1 L- 1.1 ! l? ? sm! where storin clouds brood and j the thunder storms crash: and -far rmt 'ill ! - . ' ' w v. w vlj u" me iiumcane howls ' rausic.anu tn5 big waves sound the chorus '.?weel,u,5 e march ot Uod there he ?rews ltf the beverage - of life health-civ- ins: water. And vervWhnr.. if X - - i iiviu iv IO CA Lllllllr VN' 8 Cl" lo..lurn tu ''Ving jewels; t,,cau4,1S a goiuen veil over tne setting u, nunc srauze around the mwU.i.i .V "Hill-uu nioon; sportnixr in the catnrarrr slnin ; moon;. sP.ort,,5 1,1 t' cataract; sl i . "-t""ij tiie PlaP.lPr? ll:ininn in l I. CI t . o j ..v...i. IW fc,ltJ uui -s owpr: IoIdlOGT its -bright fiiinur vt.i-f r.i cj - . . vui iiiiua k iv around the wintry world; and weaving the many colored iris, thai senmh's zone o7h earth, all checkered over with i- nowers bv trie mvsfm h.-nwl nf mfr.,t; inai messed lite-water, no nnisnn h.ihhioo - j "- v. ikiiavviuu on its brink; its foam brines not madmss ' . mu.rdt-tr' 110 b!JJ stains its liquid glass; j , A eep UC depths! (Speak out, pale widows weep not burning tears in its mlii9. ,-opeuK out, my tnends, wou y,0".eS;i alcohol?' you exchange it tor the demon's drink. ' A shou Kkc the roar of a tempest, an- swered 'No!'. Tim W, vo.r We are iniebtc i to Mr? G L Bo a photograph of General K E K,k Dy Mr' U Bruce "' ,llis c''y. dunng the . autumn and winter of 1SG4-'G5. and which rCVed the u..ti te S "f u ac" n,1n nf,i .uk .1... ...l.- .5 K Thi V " !Tt lhe Enquirer of February 2d, 1S65 'pronounced4 "the head nnn uIJnLuZ 7 thestafiiiy; iue vji ncru i concurred in the onininn thnf ,v i . . ... -ullu ,u ,e opinion inat 4 ' - V.UB. .ti I UI 1 1 T a'.-:-:. r". , csle.ve:.l.aKe.n J),m- ,uju. uy o, ,ne Virginia House ot Dde- I u2 Purcha;he Picur the btate, but the close of the war prevented lim0n f the P-urchas.er; ' . . S : ' SZSKS u.e . connict shrouds the scene and : rolls away in the distance. The London Zoological Gardens surpass everything of the kind that is to be found elsewhere in the world. They are not a mere show of wild beasts.1 but a true zoological collection. with a kripniifimnni ino- Un mT o'z r . 1 j'Scment. The number of an- maIs, aIMiving, was, on December thirty- first-. !nif rrl. eo.r i ? vnncsciyou are quaarupeas, 1,305 birds, and j17 I reptiles. ' The list makes no effort to number the swarmin ded thn0f t,e,lqr ? ?Parly f0UrT dred thousand pounds have been spent in the last two years iri procuring hew animals. For . ' warming,' lodging,. t and tending these animals. buildin? t new hnnsps nnil tendingithe srarden. etcL f h nmhiv Inst year, was 5,923. - The number of visitors - W tT W 4 ' m n m ... .... mimt a cj " " T mmmV wwarMfa aww m .923.:. Tha n.,mhpr nf vitnrs uuiiug iue year was oy7.a49.i J There is The picture is eight by twelve, and is ?r DU"ne ProPerty of the nation; thatitisfor old-fay agents only, and can be had at the ciLPl?otS book-store of Mr:Bid-ood. ' Price'Sl ' cldehowitshaU be uswl and for what purposes, ... . r - 1,!UC.' :: V'le. ; and not to the clercrv. either individnallv nr - iV nicn these 'gardens are un- ble use it is now, perhaps, more iiniTersalJv nTa!!(: ;The great wealth , of the English cultivated than another grape.1 -scientific societies enables ' them easily to , We are not prepared with tho evidencea as outbid alPother menageries for nevy aiid" to the indigenousnesa to this State of the Ca rareUniinala. , If in cny sea or zone al cu- wba but such is the reputation of ita nativ rioos animal is found, it is sure tocravitate ltj": We tnow the fact, only, that it abounds in ta London; just as all the new - tnori . and fni f r6 phjsical in" somani are surn .n W thpr. hOM . ?iV0,n.3 are. m r ci its luxuriant and - -r,.o", ."'' not a nmmJ C Lis t r a I . . i 6 ! . lfjr ccii iranc iney get on ine Qontinent ;ast year there were exhibited betweensizty.arid seventy species that had not been exhibited befi re. Th most rp- markabie of these was a splendid sea. bear, Utano) of which no specimen had- before been brought alive to-Europe'. 'This ani mal was a curlo'us combination of the com mon seal and terrestrial carnivora, and was caught in the Antarctic Important Cpccchby Center 7s. lTCSlilplil rif IIia IT M (J.. . 4 . i . . ' v . " irons ox me aoter where the exenrmonut dined. He de- Call from a crnwrl tf i r . , vwren nneom vocaiiv m tnvnr rf i reiterating views exurcssed in h o t . w 4 - uq UCUdUl 1 JI HL spnnir: declnrwl thf. ;h, ta.. , V. -. , 4, - oPl VnsTeS3 10 dert the peo ple; said I the Sontherners nnw K-.i ai , r'-ij i " . vuuuson nor ine nn l w tbey er would get, and that if ; they rejected - them, the 8c?e w would be tnven unnthprln j i - - : uM.t iue num. be compelled to yield .The Senate added that another struggle was over us; that Con gress, which has done so much for the slave eress-hich has done so much for the da cannot nnioflv rami i. i. .. u r . . J. greai aistmcton I t uuica win, ana canvassers nnnn eve of an election, will have toVthe , , , " wna ineJ do for them. Men should not be compelled to labor until lifehas ' oemg is a curse, nor can this always be the case here wli if' x vwwu exieat. i.nese me a canity i at. A . ..... " . - w w v.i T 1X1 .i. 1 1 i ought to leave him and Vet "wo fnW nearer snndnvn fnvi,:K tt , pledged himself to ml XT nnI 7lii Ui "suls OI man aud Pre dicted the most imrvff .,, .v.i t . . - x'vuw viwuiciciiu results from tne completion of the Pacific Road. He two a . i1 i . A1C t xicueuuy appiauaed. j I - xroa mexico. 1?iii4Va. C r . ' i I ' - ; ( is ew lork, Jane 10. A special to the Her- ut4lc uerewro, zuth ultimo, says Es cobedo issued an order that all officers hidin" who did not surrender in twenty-four houra would be summarilv slmf .' Jklenuez dirl iint i, .if 4 tured on SatnnUr n;t ' t.A V" i , j "'p"" ".uu niu tuot eariv I OQ SlinriAV lnnrni'n : 11 1 f . i "mut:m iuu uaunc n.irb- w I met his fate like a hrn.vA mon . i - - v uamu. - . uLr1 commander of Maximilian's KV1: No other execu- l?U,avo taken: though many are susnendtrL Aiitue renchoffioersare missing , ' lie P"ncinal prisonei-s are confined too-pth. er. in a clinrrh in Aur,.i 4 Maximilian continues ill of dysentery. Ihe wife of the Prin oi, ei an American lady, and closely related to Presi dent Johnson. hia1a h.i- wQW i dent Juarez at San Luis to intercede for her ""auiis me and th.it. r h i? Lms lady has ened sn fur- r.n u. i 1 sion that yesterday oh her arrival hei-e from 8 e' te Ew,Peror and Prince Salm balm had a long interview with Escobedo: and there is reason to believe terms were ar ranged by. which the lives of most of the for eignera will be spared. ? ; : Eitoalisza in England, The Pall Mall Gazette professes to have found the key of the ritualistic controversy. Here it is: ... . "It is a aucstion nf lion is, Who is toba tha mQto;n hm,,..u I TI -1 1 v - w . lain . j i 1 1 I tt 0 , wicirjj ur luecQDereffauonr ye can hardlv dnnht n.tnfl --A.:i iu" when the issue is once made thmnahW to the common understanding fheaverae Briton can put up with a JJcat d. 1S as the clergyman confines himself to W ,!W5 ia. ,a ly articu- tW clergyman 3 ,a son 01 authorized official squire or lecturer but da ms in addition, to be the mS of hl3 Farishioner,, d vinely, with all manner of mysterious authority over them, and when he P?c that ritualism is only one wly of a"g and exercising his authority, he wiU Jecl caUKe4 UP to make his . clerical friends JnmJ th"r as his forefathers did three undred He wiU give them to un- to extort confessions, tW auie like; he will make them ifeel collectively. When lannchp1 flections the laity will probably take into con- .uwuv.vu. 0Kjijj.c umei topics wnicxi nave oeen left untouched for. a long time. ;They will be a littje apt to ask who appoint and remove the clergy?4 and . whether the . congregation na7.e n.ot a certain degree of interest in the subject winch ought to be recognized bv the kwas well as interests of the clergyhem- aires, and. those of -their patrons? - Such a.' . r . . UW1 Huesuons wni, most assuredly, be asked be- ore long, and will press for an answer in a ms urgent . manner." . . j f - , The Gbape. The three best and chief yari- eties of American grapes-the IsabeUaie Catawba and the Scuppernong may be said to be natives of North Carolina. . . The first received ita desismation in Tionni- o8- Isabella Gibbs, of North Carolina. -m - . V Vnose. nusoana carried a vine from the car- den of Governor Smith, in Brunswick, to New York, and planted it on Long Island. For ta- iproniaDie culture. I . " The delicious ScuuDernon: 'ow'-''i.)i written in the earliest records, sco-or-non") is undoubtedly native, and exists in our midst in almost incredible . abundance.' The first explorers of the State, Raleigh and oth ers, found the vines ' stretching in all direc tions in the primeval woods, covered with their heavy clusters of. frmt n j TiTvcrt-n men tions with an enthuiasia rather -foreign to 1 . . . t 1 vyxiuicu is aoi ine prooertv 01 tne cler- r 1 1 n t. r hn f 1 1 m u. ; x 11 . . 1 111 . mf , , , , ... . " . . tu.tifiu I the style of his quaint historical narrative.. ' B&igh Stnlind. I Sir v r.vvin. mt. WAtTOvoTox. June 1L The follouin- ara oi? hc?,n.nal Sraa Gerrals Grant and Sheridan reUUre to the threatened remoral of Governors .Throckmorton and Uellaj These commnnit; ..i. over tiro months arro. hnf m,v. r ly referred to in the newspapers, have never yet been rmbhshed: . . . tt Onixxra, P. 7L, April, 18C7. Qea. U. S. Grant: I transmit by mail, to dav, a communications from O ne asis for the removal nf r,nv ti ton, of Texas. I fepl J,i-A nffin 41 u jectjthaUhe ouht.to be removed, and I fear l will be obhged to remove the Governor of . w Aiuuiu- me as much as ne can. I will pimmor, i, mi: Louisiana. as soon as.the suppmental bdl reaches mo officially. I f(' vself fuJ equal, to the new tjisl- n,l i through wiUi it creditably to the mihtarr; I send Griffin's application and this telcam, askmsr the benefit nf m in,i..i ti ? my intenUon to make but few removals. ; r - r . I3. H. SmaiDAK, I-Iaj.Genl. WA5TTCfGTO?r. Anril S "r; fZ 1 T. tt Sheridan, New Orleans,' Louisiana: I would advisclhat no removal of Go vernors of SUtes be made at present. Tf. ; ft nneeKnn under consideration whether the ' power ex ists under the law tn ial actjof Congress, or by trial under the sixth oowtiuu ox uie act promulgated in orders 33. f U. b. Gbaxt, General AttOrnev frpn recently published. irn an I'mrrrd. fc mittea or printed that he has determined r .u i?.ortbcomino opinion on the powers or the jnihtary commanders shall not be civea . u u in pnnrea copies or it can be prepared for tmnmiBmnn leading lournals of the country. . The' main pomts;of this opinion were submitted to and ttproxeu uy me uainnet to-day ; "'U. The4 Cabinet also h the matter of the Indian troubles and Shcri- linn Q omrw-ol .t f tt. ,1 upon the.former subject, the sentiment of the administration is generally in accordance with the views exoressed hv Ronml :Kn. - u a vau i oi ui uo i ernor w eng. -: man, and steps will be taken immediately to correct the abuses practiced by Indian agents, WAiiii4tturB, quanerniasters, &c u 1 The action of General Sheridan in the re. movalfOf GOV. Wells dn-9 nt -mot.f proval of the administration. The recon struction acts are regarded by-the Cabinet as fiTPPAll 111 Or! tr nnnMoi. ,1 1 1 ' a ....0aj a A tn o uuu iann -m mem- selves and they think that such a construc tion of the law shnnl.1 : Tirtf I. wherejby greater, hardships can be worked. Th opinion of the Cabinet is that there is no warrant of law for the removal of - State officers. All statesment about socalled "rings having urcred the President to remove Gen. Sheridan have but slight foundation. -?Bnt One person a Louisianian, a politician tdd radical, has suggested Gen, Sheridan's renv al, aripiMr. Johnson has not encouraged any one td btlieye that-he entertained theidea of such removal. The stories about the Presi dent's ihtentioa on this subject are' p.nr.f. tured by persons totally unadvised cf the pur poses (or intentions of the ad:niiiistn.tio:i.f . Telegrams that the President is very ill are untrue. Mr- Job bettei health than he was vesterday and to- 'v citejt a Bugm coia on ounday last, he has not been ill for about the lot two or three J weeks.;. 4 - . 'Din. . Ths Public Dx3T.-i-The public debt state xnent for June 1 shows an unexpected reduc tion durinrr Mar of 17m kit fn . . .1 " V Y l VjAMU AAA UiU AA. V ligations of the go rernm en t; funded and nn- .uxiueu. xu ine uetaiJg, the principal changes to be n increase of OTer -$G1,000,000 in the five-twenty six per cent corn-bearing bonds, doubtless all in the form of the new .issue of 18G5. j .This1 increase is : more than iT-et by the retirement of abont $37,500,000 of seven thirties, over four millions nf est nqtes, and half a million of fractional cur rency; together with the addition of nearly thirty nine millions to the currency reserve m thfc treasury,, during the month of Hay. The coin reserve in the treasury stood at 38, 758,418. June 18. aTftinRtSni VZOAll'tTr. l the decrease being mainly accounted for, by the heavy coin-interest . disbursements of the month, which through the sub-treasury in this aty alone exceeded sixteen millions. The matured debt was reduced over two millions in May. v :; . . Ths Pnrrxoa t fob , the Pxedon or " Jot. Davl Paul Bagley, the famous . pardon mf?VS r.eSp0.nsibIe. for thQ genuineuesa of the following latter of .Gov. Worth, of Xorth Carolina: . . ". f r . Execctive Dn-ABTitmor Nobth ' ciso'tnti, ) . ...... IUlexoJcnb 1,1807. i f ft 1 TTtS nUd- by the Eev.F Paul Bagley, that Governor Sharkey, &J, Walker and many other, distinguished gehuSS fedenl 0fth0 Uni Stes,. -re- Kn1?9" -.r PtToa in the, late , rebel! hon cr civd war, and also praying ther Prcri dent to grant the do Xnotow Z Sif lnaence Mr. Iavia inrcfus- . - "r ruuuu jjwicjt wou.a TUClilT- require the rrmnt;n-of .no proper application. - . . .. ? . .-'" : Governor of Korth Carolina. The heavr rains of Tntf " ' . aamato the erowing op, of ' corn in the counties nf a Tr.t.- n Tina t A "r-i - - . Montgomery. . TIia Tt-v,n, . also; "niateriaHV' iTJr P?" Anms savs th.t '7- )" ?esDoro- Tif -7e.exi that Placo chfo& wS so badlv ininiwl l,c flv i, e V" iV -v. nv-ta Jjr,iAie cool Trlh- er. that many farmers had it plowed ahd corn lilautfin' incfo,i . ,u?eJ.cp mar. fsaysr-Vl'came'to thi.v Sfnfrt f, j "wui a rea cent: arid iv hrA work,1 and honest dealing I have hddmf own up to this day a " rajr V.AV JkT VPnre ?rrrv rtfi..v j "... r
The Eagle [1866-1875] (Fayetteville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 25, 1867, edition 1
1
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