Appleton Motor, The (Newspaper) - March 8, 1860, Appleton, Wisconsin CHURCHILL'S REMEDY ron THE ASD or OP IBB OF LIME AND OF SODA la U mv all of NEW REMEDY discovered ill of Is obtaining for It the moat UN TY Ei arid status It Is a SI 1C anil EFFICACY In t Pulmonary and Xenons Diseases The winch constitutes u-t most Wood venerating I Cure of Consumption aid lit ft period be no I OS to nature of the din ir obtained IN ALL CASES by wUu leaion of the is of j ruili ce clt itb not a curative but will I r i c ic i of thi f 1 act A i u AS VACCIN TO HM M Professional Correspondence Oil I hue Ron In -I IL ti lire tairi anil more it 1 oj tt is Ml II Atu i lLc h I TO m VT Alii 9 the 1 i tl L mm r Dr them LIE Nil n HEi sA A 15 iW tmc anil urn A l-l wo w z i O 5 1 mid In Ml about torty 1 1 11 but ins to tlie it lint tt at was a tsa one 1 I up by Mtw I I r ri u ill rui ol disease I i 1 t i T in nn i cant TnM I Hand I i tin d I now i ii i IT 11 Oil aa in t utr i IS I Mr IT I KITI w ti IV in 1111 f tlic or I in Ill um n cttn pure iji Dr for wid ac I i formula Work on -I i to tin of I rf i- I'll r sir will 1C oil Fl I Mi trv to ITII Do My V rii nil or I ill E upon Out i n i ul t I- Nold i I'll Id In tin ill 1 U a J WINCHESTER 43 John St ternt nt HUM K Hi i i i u li n v N lilts C M II n t the I MID I n t 1 li -in i i 11 I- i 1 nut nn I r MI i i uli nt H 1 I II -y IK I t in it I 1 i n ot t i 1 nn III 11 i il i lire i r -1 tin ir ir- t ir i in i i ii h r w of tin it t it In- toi flic tr itin lit of I ill th ir 11 cl i- f MU Utter -n i i c t t 1 I -i I II RC K Ir fl i t i In i CM i n n com 111 ni id- th u c M mil furnish thn t n r M 1 in I rn Ir- irm nt i- rn t if tin in 4 n on nt cf mini r Ii c tii n i it Ii tin i 1 I in -In jr in el ro i in T il M i i1 t i i tl MIC til In u-r 1 ill Ac mill i ni ot i in j i in f i i 1 j t ar i- 1 i ro M i 1 u i in t'i -ij In o I c IM volent rt t i u i t ft t In tin i i i ri i i in- h 1 r 1 i1 to inn i I i j r i1 H it j n M Vt lea or in 1 Hi c i i i I h the I I -111 tt M M in ul d LI Mlo i i on 1 t tli i in of r-c junl ui o in i nil v 1 1 to Ihr in i r 1 e- an I of 11 1 1 n ir lire id tn if nit Dr J n -i i i in 1 r I'll U Inc v U IlLUtin ll li DJ M GOOD KIT a KI to i in: mi: iiKi'oxnom t I Hf V i I in n ir Ill I Ir A f n Ll I bellii u r 1 ci i i j c i i 1 d 1 tcl I i i n 11 in of i and of printing the -i r i- in n ltl i CM ut I m th lrr M t ti Hi their li DO inni i in e now M nr ii cm ir II inr i a i i i 1 hi con- he list writers i- i tin i 1 in Ic r lor H 1 iiM her sinei nil will IM ml tn N t ind -i i Ic U r-u j sen anil on to ii n 1 tli or i 11 fall I i i n I i Un Mil r a MI In- in ur i- I 11 i rn will i- ii ii i t T 11 -.111 it M'tir 11 1 10 must Infill with mi ol tlu n inj will sub- I 1 I IK K i iHi i il 1 i mill r i tin 10 See to l- J ir -n 1 o 1 1 I'M i in tune 1 u- lid u we 1 i -I 1 t- v nun Hi n Mri in Ui linnet of One in r ami in I 11 -u V i tun th inl-r- by I I l 111 THE APPLETON MOTOR HOLD TO BBS OL I APPLETON WIS THURSDAY MARCH 8 1860 NO 29 MOTOR Select il 50 per annum IN To who by carrier cents extra i O F A V K 11 T I S 1 N C j c 4 3 1 tt 3 50 U DO 4 J 1 JO 2 50 i 10 13 10 ti 15 3 Jill U 11 15 lin tl 11 T 50 9 50 W 4 6 60 7 ID 1 W i SO o 50 4 50 7 line ol tire or lem lines a J ear p in Union BY H W LONGFELLOW Sail on 0 Union strong and Humanity with all its fours With all the hope of future years Is hanging breathless on thy fate We know what Master laid thy keel What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel Who each mast unit sail and rope What rang what hammers beat In n forge anil whut u heat Were shaped the anchors of thy hope Fear not each sadden sound and shock Tis of the and not the rock Tis but the Hupping of the sail And not a rent made by tin In spite of rock tempest's rour Iu spite of false lights on the shore Sail on nor four to breast the sen Our hearts our hopes arc all with thee Our hearts our hopes our prayers our tears Manufacturer unit denier 111 Cap ter Nute Folio Volt Manilla Wrapping Ac at the mien Appluton til y Dealer In Oil Malls Yankee kc Call anil let your worth Store of Market anil DENNIS MAR Tailor IB on hand ready to ut anil make lent Clothing in the most one door of Tin Shop College A lit warranted every CONSTANTINE A I ITn K Clerk ol the Circuit Court County Appleton nan a full f all tiling in ami i attention to the insertion of both on and W Hit u Dealer in Warn ols Millinery Boo Oroc rien store Hank Col Cheap Al enue H iu the Poet up Our faith triumphant o'er our fours Arc till with all with St to Smith A Attorneys ton Win G II SHAW M and ill wherever hU are needed He can hit one door ol the Hank C ol I and Loan Agent in Hank t Dealer In Hat and dents anil Goods At the le nue corner ol street Appleton M i 10 Real even of Lumber tence Ac ike V ird and Mill be found n in tin loot ol Jolin street First Wind Wn Kite low lor 01 I lour Barrel Appleton k HARKER and Appleton J M I YON Ic Livery Hoarding Sale and Maule Morrison strict just In rear of the Hotel WILLIAM JOHNSON Dealer In all of Lumber I t nt the Circular Saw Mill Third Ward 1 1 t LEWIS uid thu Journal of tlie of the Edward Bates was born on the 4th of Sept on the banks of James river in the county of Virginia about 30 miles above He was the seventh son and youngest child of a family of twelve children all of whom lived to a mature age of Thomas Bates and Caroline M Both of his parents were of the plain old Quaker families which had lived generations in the lower counties of the peninsula between James and York rivers They were ried iu the Quaker meeting according to the forms of that simple anU virtuous people in the year 1771 lint in 1781 the lather membership in the Society of by bearing arms at the siege of a soldier under La In 1805 Thomas the father died leaving 1 very estate and a very large fumily Left at an early ago an orphan and poor the son was fortunate in is better than a patrimony a heart and a will to labor diligently for promotion Besides of his brothers were industrious and prosperous men and treated the helpless with generous inflection One of them Fleming Bates of Northumberland Va took him into his family as a sun aud did a father's part by him lie had not the benefit of a collegiate being prevented by an accident the breaking of a which stopped him in the middle of his course of study and con- fined bun tit home for nearly two yearn In childhood he wus well taught Ly ins father and afterward had the benefit of two years instruction of his kinsman Benjamin of Hanover Va a most excellent man who dying left behind him none more and tew more intelligent Coming under the protection of his er Fleming lie sent in the Full ol to Charlotte Hall Academy St Man's County Maryland where he remained three years and then left by reason of the dent mentioned without pre- pared to enter Princeton College where his brother intended to send Thus in his hopes of getting a thorough education up the of following any learned profession set his heart upon a warrant in General of the State and exercised the of- fice both before and after its admission into the Union He resigned the office of in 1822 and was a ber of the House of Representatives of In 1824 he was Monroe United souri and served as such appointed by President States Attorney for tlie Missouri District He was elected a member of the United States House of Representatives in 1826 and served through the Congress as Representative of the State In 1830 he was elected to the State Senate and served four years and in 1834 he was again elected to the House and took an active part in the revision of the State laws From thut time till the present ho has held no political office nnd sought none taking little or no part in local politics but often freely expressing his views upon con- questions and national politics in public speeches and in newspaper essays In 1853 he was elected Judge of the Land Court of St Louis County nnl after hening in the about three years he re- signed aud returned again to the practice of law lie acted as President of the River and Barbor Improvement Convention which sat at Chicago and in 1850 acted as ident of the National Convention which met at Baltimore In 1850 he was appointed by President and con- firmed by the Senate Secretary of War but declined the appointment for personal and domestic reasons Mr Bates was complimented with the honorary degree of LL D in 1858 by the Harvard College Some years before he had been honored with the same degree by Shurtleff College Illinois Such in brief is a of the early life nnd services of one of the most able statesman of the West From youth he has been accustomed to self- Ins life has been one of labor and It has for the been spent in private in the faithful discharge of his personal ties and is devoid of that ty and which nothing but of- discipline can In personal appearance Mr Elites has n noble and commanding air In stature ho is of the type of Mr Webster HIM hair be- gins to tokens His eye beams with intelligence from beneath masshe brows nnd his face is marked with deep thought His manneis are those of a ished gentleman of the last generation In his domestic relations IIP is a fond band and a kind and indulgent father He married in Julia D one of the five daughters of Coulter late of South Carolina He had by that teen children only eight of whom -ons and two daughter Though he was born and has always lived in a slave Stute yet 1 e has never sought to live upon slave labor He formerly a tew whom he kept ants but he emancipated the lust of them some ago His aged mother died in 1840 set free by will thu few ing slave's she had and Spring hU ter Bates by deed 32 slaves all that remained to her having be- fore that set free tix or eight by separata instruments the residence of Mr Bates situated about four miles from the City of St Louis is a brick mansion surrounded For the Motor Opinion ot Thomas Jefferson writing to Mr Mcllish January 13 says You expected to discover the difference of our party principles in General ton's Valedictory and my inaugural address Not at all General Washington did not harbor one principle of federalism He was neither an Angloman nor a separatist lie sincerely wished the people to have as much self-government as they were competent to exercise themselves The only point on which he and I ever differed in opinion was that I had more confidence than he had in the natural integrity and discretion of the people and in the safety and extent to which they might trust Kches with u control over their government He haa asseverated to me a thousand times his determination that the existing ment shall have a fair trial and that in port of it he would spend the last drop of his blood lie this the more repeatedly be- cause he knew General Hamilton's political bias and my apprehensions from it It a mere calumny therefore in the monarchists to associate with their principles But that may have happened in this case which has been often seen in nary cases that by oft repei men come to believe it themselves It ib u mere artifice in this party to bolster selves np on the revered name of thut first of our worthies In a letter to Dr Walter Jones July 2 1814 Mr Jefferson writes I think I knew General Washington in- and thoroughly and were I called on to delineate his character it should be iu terms like these His mind was great and powerful without being of the first der his penetration strong though not so acute as that of a New ton Bacon or Locke and as far us he sau no judgment was ever sounder It was slow in operation being little aided ?iy invention or imagination but sure in conclusion Hence the common re- of his officers of the he de- rived from councils of war where hearing all suggestions lie selected whatever was and no general planned his battlon more judiciously But if ed during the course of the action if any member of bis plan was dislocated by circumstances bu was slow in ment The that he often failed in the field and rarely against an my in station as ut Boston aud He was incapable of fear meeting personal gers with the unconcern Perhaps the strongest feature in his was prudence never acting until every stance consideration was weighed refraining if he saw a doubt but when once decided going through with his after it we corresponded occasionally and in the four years of my continuance in the of- fice of Secretary of State our intercourse was daily confidential and cordial I retired from that office great and malignant pains were taken by our federal monarchists and not entirely without effect to make him view me as a theorist holding French ples of government which would lead libly to licentiousness and anarchy And to thin he listened the more readily from my known disapprobation of the British treaty I never saw him afterward or these nant insinuations should have been ted before his just judgment as mists before the sun I felt on his death with my that Truly a great man hath fallen this day in Israel More time and recollection would enable me to add many other traits of his ter but why add them to you who him well otten seen m the Scottish eating an untruth j aml barefooted t ind Doom ma the circular Saw Mill Third In the mean time he as keep On of apprentice in the of his who was a Court Clerk employing Ul HUM THISTLE SAVED The following is related the origin of the thistle as the national emblem of When the Danes invaded Scotland they availed themselves of the pitch darkness of night to attack the forces to prevent their tramp being heard one of the Danes trod upon a large prickly thistle and the sharp cry of pain which ho instinctively tered apprised the Scotc of their danger who immediately ran to their arms and defeated the foe great slaughter The thistle was thenceforth as the adopted emblem of Scotland a recent Sabbath morning a stranger visited one of our built for the purpose of worship and on asking the sexton for a scat he St Paul's Be ye have plenty of seats to let The sexton notwithstanding his answer scending to show the stranger to a scat At the close of the services the gentleman in- quired for the Treasurer of the society and ascertaining the price of a seat for one he quietly handed him the amount w it the request that the sent might be for Chi A HEARTED German recently announced the death of a schoolmaster in who for fifty one years had superintended ft large institution with old-fashioned severity From an average inferred by means of re- corded observations one of the ushers calculated that in the course of his exertions he had given callings tips the ruler boxes on the car and Mrs and Brown the widow of Old John whatever opposed His 22.700 tasks by It was further i unit TIA was pure Ins justice me inflexible J ever or consanguinity batted being able to bias his decision He was in every sense of the words a wise a good and a great man His temper naturally irritable and high toned but reflection ind resolution had obtained a and habitual ascendency over it If ever however it broke its bonds he was most tremendous in wrath In his expenses he was honorable and exact liberal in no motives of on peas kneel on tlie sharp of of friendship or wood wear the cap and roj Uow vast the quantity of human misery inflicted by a single perverse FORMULA FOR EGG is said to be such a choice recipe that you had ter cut it out and keep Take of sixteen eggs and twelve full of loaf sugar and beat them to nicely cultivated gardens and arbors and I to whatever promised utility but shrubbery among which the grape w uch mime to the place is prominent CROSS fc CO Second Ward Appleton from the Attorney at Law mid General Land a i lo all the laudi in County Tulei paid and m At of Gillie MISS Artl cart MARY WING e tlie art with the ami at the most loor west S ml Furniture Wares the Avenue one Dealer In II nt Law Collections the ol to on over the Pout J V JOHNSTON Clerk Count ol Co Win and Insurance will taiei titles Ac Office in building S WARNER Attorney Agent for the chane ind of real estate payment of tales col- lection of debts attended to with iu rear of Book Store his spare time iu eagerly devouring the con- tents of a pretty good library but without direction or advice In the winter of his kinsman then a member of Con- gress and afterward Governor of Virginia procured him the offer of a warrant in the the Navy the special object ot his ambition thin which all others he de- ivate character is eminently pious teachings of his youth Though he is not extravagant lie lives in a comfortable substantial style befitting the man who has a national reputation like his His pri The have become the settled principles of his manhood the decent respect and veneration for religion which politicians most universally in their outward lives he cherishes by daily acts of devotion in his family and other ordinances of religion the sentiments of consistent piety With the virtues of head and heart which frowning and on all visionary and all unworthy calls on his tv His heart was not warm in its but he exactly calculated every man's value and gave him a solid esteem to it His you know was fine his stature exactly what one would wish his deportment easy erect and noble the best horseman of his age and the most graceful figure that could be seen on back Although in the circle of his friends where he might be unreserved with safety he took a free share in conversation his col- talents were not above mediocrity possessing neither copiousness of ideas nor fluency of words In public when called on the consistency of cream to this add two- thirds of a nutmeg grated and beat well together then mix in n half pint of brandy or Jamaica rum and two wine glasses of Maderia wine fadv the whites of C D and attend to all of out town mid on College opposite Crescent c J and dealer in all kinds of Furniture CaMnet Ware Work Ac for or ready pay on College Avenue oni door west of the W C COOK Manufacturer and dealer in A No 1 Al an Tor all the land the in- thereof ready for business street near IllA It Wholesale retail dealer in Moves and Tin Sheet Iron Britannia and Japanned A constantly on hand Avenue s r r street Shop in rear of lore Here again he was doomed to ment His mother refused her entreated was ing that all her sons should march er needed to repel an invasion but was still too good a Quaker to agree that child of hers should tollow arms as a profession and war for a livelihood He declined the warrant wo can well imagine and it is doubtful whether he has ever been called upon for so great an effort of moral courage as the rejection of that warrant required He could never have made it successfully if he had not been from childhood and accepted as a settled truth that the boy who deliberately thwarts the wishes of a wise and virtuous mother is not likely ever afterward to do much good for himself or his country A similar event in the life of will be suggested to every mind In 1812 having renounced service in the Navy and with no plan of life settled his brother Frederick who was Secretary of the Territory of 1807 to 1820 when the State was formed by successive appointments undei Jefferson Madison and Monroe and was second Governor of the State invited him to came out to St Louis and follow the law offering to sec him ly through his of study He accepted the invitation and was to started in the Spring of 1813 but an event detained him for a year Being in his native county of a sudden call was made for volunteers tomaich for Norfolk to repel an apprehended attack by the British fleet and a company i in February marched some of the early statesmen of for a sudden opinion he was unready short ho is equal to station in and embarrassed Yet lie wrote readily t 1 1 Makt s T Brothers DOCTOR II R MERRIMAN and is i t one door ot the Credent Hotel City of till October of that Oa u private Inn where he will promptly attend to all ealls in his H U M P MOTEL Avenue K P Koci Proprietor taken pride In the public and the traveling community that no will be to make this Tils Hotel here Ic CO Proprietors of the Milli and In Doori fcc Work to order done promptly and with care approved paper anil county LITV Public and Justice of the Peace al anil sergeant successively Tlie next Spring he set for St Louis and crossed the Mississippi for the first time on the of April 1814 Here he ied very diligently in the office of Kufus a Connecticut man a good lawyer regularly educated at Litchfield and time a in Congress from Missouri Territory He to the Bar in the ter of nnd practiced with fair cess aa a beginner In the Fall of 1820 the State government being put into immediate action i waiting to be told by any other power or or no it was a State or had a MotOrt lion he was appointed the first the Republic the Government which his countrymen may assing him is RICH The young man has but a suit of clothes not a foot of land in world nor an Eng ish education Yet he is rich His highest ambition gratified to the fullest extent He wants nothing more friends or fame Ho has learned to drink liquor He can gamble lie can swear He can boast of a deeper degradation and flaunt his on bis tongue Slang phrases his pride lie can gulp down poor liquor as readily us a sot who has practiced twenty years before he began lie can blaspheme as revoltingly as the older by the side of him He is He has no noble He envies no one their dignified and intelligent hood or gentlemanly manners He never dreams of coining out an honorable name and a competence by industry and a less life The nobler aims of life have no allurements for him In the steaming dram shop and surrounded by kindred spirits he is proud to excel in the bold blasphemy and ribald jest He is a rich tippler and con- tented with his means and his position He is Wisconsin A Republicans have one Senator anil one Representative in the California Legislature These men met in caucuses The Senator concluded not to nominate a ticket The Representative Mr Tilton nominated Mr Tilton as the Republican candidate for Speaker nnd jn the next day nominated and voted for Mr Tilton in the House following is said to have cured several cases of hydrophobia in human beings and cattle Take immediately warm vinegar or tepid water wash the wound clean therewith and then dry it then pour upon the wound a few drops of hydrochloric mineral acid destroys the poison of the saliva The death of Jonathan P King said to be resident of Mackinaw is an- He settled in Mackinaw in 181 rather diffusely in an easy and correct style This he had acquired by conversation with the world for his education merely reading writing and common arithmetic to which he added surveying at a later day His time was employed in action chiefly reading little and that only in agriculture and English history His correspondence became necessarily extensive and with his agricultural proceedings pied most of his leisure hours within doors On the whole his character was in its mass in nothing bad in few points the eggs beaten to a stiff froth and beat them into the above described mixture When this is all done stir in six pints good rich milk There is no heat used made in this manner is blo and will not cause headache It an excellent drink for debilitated persons and a nourishing diet for consumptives The Missouri Democrat thus announces Mr Bates opinions touching matters of rent political interests Since the dissolution of the Whig party Judge Bates has been identified with no political but nevertheless he has not withheld the public expression of his opinion on each of the questions which have been debated since that event He was a Whig and was designated recognized and proscribed as such in this State Were it not for his undisguised Anti- Slavery opinions he would in all human probability have been one of the of Missouri in the United States Senate for years lie is wedded to the cause of Free Labor both in opinion and practice lie denies that the Constitution extends over in in lew that the over and it may truly be said that never Territories he declares that Slavery did nature and fortune combine more not be permitted to enter any ly to make a man great and to place him in the same constellation whatever thies have merited fiom man an everlasting remembrance For his was the singular destiny and merit of leading the armies of his country successfully through an arduous war for the establishment of its dence of conducting its councils through the birth of a government new in its forms and principles until it had settled down in- to a quiet and orderly train and of lously obeying the laws through the whole of his career civil and military of which the history of the world furnishes no other example I am satisfied that the great body of the republicans think of him as I do We were indeed dissatisfied with him on his of the British treaty But this was short-lived honesty We knew his And I am convinced that ho is more deeply seated in the love and of the republicans than in the Pharisaical homage of the federal ists For he was no monarchist from of his judgment The soundness of that gave him correct views of the rights of man and his devoted him to them He has often declared to me that he considered onr now constitution as an ex- periment on the practicability of republican government and with what degree of liberty man could be trusted for his own good These are my opinions of General ington which I at tory which was when acquired by the United or which became fixe at any period subsequent to its acquisition that no power but Congress can plant very on such soil and that the Scott decision merely defines the Constitutional status of the negro the discourse e essays of the Justices which accompanied the ing of that decision being in his opinion mere leathe and prunella possessing no in- weight and entitled to no nary consideration either legally or Brow is much annoyed by the multitude of letters addressed to her by entire strangers who seek to promote own interest or gratify their curiosity regardless of the re- straints of delicacy and propriety Sewing machines have been introduced into some of the female seminaries of the East and instruction is given thereon The Cincinnati tells a good story of a newly appointed police officer who ar- rested a millionaire of that city as a character A railroad bus been completed between St Joseph Mo and Atchison K T ning time between St Louis and Atchison 1 hours An English poet advertises in a public journal that he wants to borrow on a manuscript poem the estimated value of which is Modest Some of the chivalric of Columbia S C have ordered elegant cane to be presented to Mr Edmundson as a nial of their appreciation of his manliness in attacking a sick Congressman for truths spoken in debate The revival in the churches at Over eighty persons have uni- ted with the Methodist church about twenty with the Second Presbyterian church and sixteen with the Baptist church The strike among the shoemakers at Lynn Mass still continues An attempt was made to stab the city marshal threatening letters have been sent to the principal and the women have joined the movement The Westminster Review states that the great revivalist preacher was at one time a slaveholder in Georgia being at his death the owner of 61 ty slaves men women and children whom he left in his will to the Countess of Huntington Mr Speaker Pennington having hud anything to do with the Clay's debts as stated by a correspondent of the Cincinnati He neither aw the money collected for the purpose nor paid it out The story is a fabrication A report comes by way of Charleston S C that Dan E Sickles the hero of last winter's tragedy at Washington has a change of heart and intends to join some church He is said to lead a ferent life from what he once did The journeymen shoemakers uf Detroit signified their willingness to contribute of their means to sustain their brethren at and other Massachusetts in their present strike should such aid become necessary A horse thief named John Guthrie was hung by the people of Linn county Mo last week The slavery issue in about babies a year ville The trial of the Ottawa rescuers is now in progress in the U S District Court at Chicago Hon Judge Drummond presiding Three other citizens of Ottawa were ed on Monday Cortinas is in possession of the west bank of the Rio Grande and continues his dations in Texas dipt alry nnd Capt Fowler's rangers nro ing the bank to the extent of their ability James Densmore succeeds J X Van Slyke in the editorial management of the Hudson Mr Buchanan may tulk as he will about manifest destiny but we never knew any man whose WHS more manifest than his mil It cost Milwaukee last to bury the defunct canines of that city It is said that it takes eleven men thore to bury one dog Since the election of a Republic an er there has not been a singk disunion speech delivered in Congress Exchanges from the Southern States say that the wheat crop is killed ami in many placet the farmers are ploughing und sowing spring wheat A memorial has been sent to V from the Pike's Penk region sigi.ed by 000 miners who protest against being an- to Kansas and ask for a government James S Alban of Portage county is the Republican candidate for Judge in the 7th Judicial Circuit Judge the ent incumbent an candidate for reelection The Madison Journal says lint Hon S Orion is a candidate lor tion to the offioj of Circuit Judge which be now holds with uch credit to himself and tion t that District from Sicily announce that the political arrests and excesses of the police were and women had been Polit cul Several THE HAIR QUESTION The great problem to shave or not to has been again revived and a newspaper champion found for each side The editor of the Syracuse Journal who wears bar on his takes the negative and the ble head of the Kuyle the leads off thus A dull red half open sleepy ami often Mire eye belongs as regularly to a bearded face as the hair itself does Whereupon declares pon So far from this tion being rue it is the exact opposite truth then puts in a hard blow after this wise If beards are essary to promote health as some pretend to say why are not women with them as well as men They suffer nothing through want of hair around the mouth and under the nose why then should men Syracuse very pertly inquires seat of Gorl having formed on an Why was not woman made like man quaintance of thirty vears I served with every The last JB a poser him in the Virginia Legislature from 1769 i will wait for to to the War and again a question if he can and beaten by them ers had died under torture had in vain protested against these barbarous acts Pekin dates were to 4th of Dec The sian mission was going on well The rebels were not agreed among themselves nnd the Imperial troops had been victorious over them Henry D Foster has boen nominated for Governor by the Democratic tion of It is probable that not loss one dred men will leave Fond du Luo county this spring for Pike's Peak gold mines The young State of Wisconsin raises nearly or quite of es including town county and The slavery m Kansas has passed both blanches of the Legislature by the requisite two-thirds vote over nor veto Both Houses of the Minnesota Legislature have passed the Three Years Exemption the effect of which to extend HIP timp for mortgages on leal estate three years A is ing the Sicilians rise nnd to Southern Italy with her fonder right ffl Europe