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Delaware State Reporter
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Delaware State Reporter

   Delaware State Reporter (Newspaper) - June 17, 1859, Dover, Delaware                               RE STATE 51. JOB PRINTING J REPORTER of King DEL HAVING carefully ft full assortment of UrO the super- JUNE 17. 1859. WHOLE NO. 514. of in prepared on reasonable of Such u 75 75 76 75 75 TS 75 76 76 75 75 In plain or In fancy of any slse or according to agreement NOW ON HAND and for sale at the REPORTER a Urge assortment of to which the tion of of Peace and others requiring respectfully FOK 08 THE re Capias ad elaine to attach to attach surety of Foreign it Marriage of State Commitment and Bond In 75 or Warrants for f 1 00 12 cents per copy FOR 75 cU. ftc 00 per 1 00 1 00 of 100 and 7S 75 aDove all printeS on the boat and blank spaces tilled to facilitate kem by mall or by well or freight oa the to can bo forwarded to any point on the Scaford for 25 cents sheet is one i Blanks neatly printed to order on AT Market Street t tenders his services to to the -All entrusted to hia care will be promptly attended on Public Srd door east oi Fountain's J P. B. N. Bird Messrs. W. Henry J. Baylor and John K. The Road over the As this road will soon famous as the rout of the French army from France into Italy the following given by a who recently passed over will be nad with The road over Mont Cenis is macadamized throughout its whole and is wide and in perfect consisting of easy On the top of the mountain there was rouch but most of it was removed from the road a work of great as the cuts hi some places were ten feet and the snow so compact that its sides were The diligence was several hours in passing through region of and it was snowing at the time and ex- tremely On Monday and Tuesday of this week it rained hard on west side of the and it was feared that tho passage of troops was impeded by fresh The ney over the pass is no nice affair even to one who occupied the protected seats of a ble was my fortunate What must it be to soldiers on wet with severe and encumbered with knapsacks and The pass feet three higher than the famous Simplon That of the great St. over which Napoleon conducted his army before any road had been is 8.200' The east grades of the Mont Cenis and the tion famished by granite posts on its nithin seven or eight feet of each firmly planted in the and about four feet indicate that a in thus ing it was the easy and safe hauling of cannon and baggage over the I walked fur miles over the in the cent from the Sardinian and carefully ob- served its The engineering were but they have been overcome with such skill that the ascent is uni- form and easy in every part. Occasionally level place is to afford relief to horses from the wearisomeness of a steady I noticed that the marks of the drill in were nearly the effect of exposure to severe and the character o the which is a soft It may be if the history of the road shall over be thai future antiquarians may from the ob of all signs of that at teast no great difficulties were encountered in its even jf they do not insist that formed on a natural One is with wonder that such a great over high mountains should have-been finish S T T I E And Blank Book 127 INDUCEMENTS CASH cd on a line exceeding fifty miles so completely excellence any road I know of in the United whether public or vate and long or It is kept in high on a brisk trot with entire It seemed most as this great road the work of the elder that the representative of his name should distinguish it for the march of a great army aimed at the same Power which Napoleon successfully encountered soon after crossing the Swiss wifeof Julius was at once the object of his love and Tier wit her under- standing and her sweetness ted the conqueror of the Her mind had been cultivated with the nicest and her manners were upon the most perfect Anxious to promote the happiness of her she in fact became their and it is to say whether she was most or wife to the Emperor was celebrated for the sweetness of her manners as she was for the solidity of her the of her and so thoroughly was the acquainted with he capability of hir intellectual that hat he always consulted heron questions of Yet this flattering compliment to her abilities neither fill d her with or luffed her up with presumption for her ity was her and her bility to her and so great was the ascendency that she d over the hat historians ascribe of his noble acts o the influence of her wife of was a man in whom were united great ed and n fined Her tions were grounded on an innate principle of wuich withstood the pernicious bad for her mother's character was as much by censure as her own was adorned by Margaret the eldest daughter of the illustrious Sir Thomas was a wise and amiable Her Teaming Was most eclipsed by her She ed in Latin with the gi eat who styled her the ornament of After she had consoled her futher in had rushed through the guards to snatch a last had obtained the liberty of paying him funeral and had purchased his hi ad with she was herself loaded with fetters fbf two having kipt the of her father as a and for having preserved his books and appeard before her judges with justified herself with that quence which virtue bestows on injured commanded admiration and and passed the rest of her life in in and in OP The vaster the crowd the more solitary the the more lonely the No says a re- cent is known in London it is realm of the incognito and the It is not a but region or a is no such thing as personal knowledge there is good bad there is No house knows the next Irish Rev. Henay in a recent spoke of Irish wit and humor as displayed by the educated classes and by Swift's wit was burning with en clement ot fierceness the social wit of Sherdian was Canning's was keen and as when the curate was anxious have him praise his mon. and could elicit from him nothing but the remark that it was said the I am careful not to be too you did not said were but jou were tedious wit was the ideal of fancy and nfl when he remarked of an Irishman in Hyde who kept his tongue thrust out of his that hew as probably trying to catch the English accent The bulls of Sir Boyle were alluded Be was not onry witty in his but in the correction of Thus after in Why we thing for posterity posterity done for as he by remarking that by posterity he did not mean our but those who are to come after ns Sir Harrington said to lord Norbury had a hand for but a heart for That was a fearful jest of bury's on sentencing to death a thief who had stolen a made a grasp at my you clutched The of the peasant was illustrated by the re- mirk of a baggar on told by a he never alms to strangers air in the but would thus briefly enforce the stirring the soil during droughts as deeply as not to interfere with of growing and those of pre- vious so that a deep light soil shall in- vite a free circulation of beneath the Hot the moment it presses beneath THE SOIL BREATHES it just as truly as you A few years if one asserted that trees had lunga and he would have been held to an argument to prove just a few years earlier no one would have believed that a fish's gills and the leaves of a and the lungs of an animal all performed the same that of aerating the or The soil How does it breathe Its circulating the blood of the is watet this comes to it from the and is already sera but this soon looses fts gases by contact with the just as the arterial blood fresh from the lungs loses its oxygen ing its circuit in all pails of the The blood comes back to the lungs for mdre but the blood of the soil cannot do so we must let the air in to corne in contact it. We cannot here explain the of the The Democratic Candidate for This subject is extensively In a year the Convention to select the candidate will meet at Already the names of several eminent and distinguished men are in this Speculation is and not a little curiosity is manifested to know who will the high honor of leading the Democracy upon that For no are free to that he must be none of your of that order of the political animal whose species are undefined and whose are not of tha positive He must not only but be must express He must not only be beyond reproach in private bat his political as well as his avowed must up to the progress of the and appreciation coming destiny of the He most and not to in possible in domestic or reign With such a shall have an easy tri- The massed will follow cheerfully the not uie i 7 u water standard of such a and the discordant the becomes very fiom the of the past which it originally and it deposits -n a determined effort for the thus not only aerating the but adding to its Cold air can hold but little but hot air dissolves an immense which it deposits when it or on cool Who has not noticed of a win general where is the man? We care not wether he be found in the North or the the East or the The location of hia dence we hold to be secondary altogether to the greiter question of Sure honor will never relieve an angel Take those stones out of my doctor to an Irish pavior in froit of his And where shall I take then sir Take them to hell said the wouldn't the he more out of your honor's way A doctor detained in court as a witness com- plaited to the Judge that he was kepi from his patents so might recover ab- But bulls rot confined to tor's a locomotive leaving behind it a snowy is dependent upon the man and not upon sen Sir made a practical bull made a hole in his door for his cat to he also made a smaller one for her A sfery was told of a- Jt being day jost helped the when reached across and cutting fish in took half of it with luck to do you think nobody has a saved but like i for minutes after the tram had passed Think of this and watch the car on a day i the past the hot breath just as full of water as in is puffed out into the eye of the and not steam enough shows to make a it is so quickly absorbed by the Wo can scarcely conceive of a more being than a gentleman of leisure in a community of The very fortune that has placed him above the of has imposed on him a greater curse than if he hnd been doomed to the gnl one common and pervading platform of principles retching the length and breadth of the It is a fast day with a great with red works harder to rid of himself sleeper corrupts the atmosphere of the room by his own bat when two persons arc breathing at the or f it greatly to to purchase AND COMMON WARES OF tYNDALE No. 707 Street above who have a system of doing business peculiar to They impart their wares direct from the and soil them in small quantities and aa cheap as they can be WHOLESALE ht in the Urge quantities at COUNTRY T. customers hare the doable purchasing direct tho of selecting from a very large and fut at a saving of at least 25 per THE FOUNTAIN TUB op A remarkable combination of alloy of the three and is foUnd in which never presents itself in any of the genuine mineral masses of the The meteoric appear to of a certain kind of though they are devoid of In all when on their progress out in space How is a man to show what he when he is but a grain of band out of without re- lation to without a without without distinctiveness Crowds pour along the and although each has his own character written on they arc one and all the same to men This is though of in a lees with every great especially to the young and unfriended All at once he passes from the midst of a friendly neighborhood every one knows where the eye of every one is on his and inhere the slightest Incident of weal or woe affecting any of its members N the theme of interested converse around each cottage almost an absolute In in those vast of and noisome courts ai d of which the lower our great cities while the worst vices of social they are involved in loose j in the ed about the hard and t true of the can be said to ally extending into a sort of vapor sphere from There are few or no mutual two thousand three thousand miles common and friendly The investments of combustible vapors j such as bind the inhabitants of pany them on wide sweeping but a country side or of a small town and when they are whirled violently into the oxygen contained in the terrestrial they kindle under its and burst into The then leaves its train of productions floating in the serial re- C. FOUNTAIN BRO THIS NO OPEN FOR THE reception It has been refitted and for the better of guests Its lo cation la tho very centre of the business portion per subscriber thankful for the liberal tronage extended to him during the three years hi kept Hotel in would invite all his old and the citizens of Delaware to stop with him whenever they visit the city either on business or ure Every facility and accommodation will be afforded which usually appertains to a first which make n parish not a district but a living organized British Re- WHILST THERE'S have WILLIAM Feb. 25, 1859. late of Del. tf sunlight or until gradually dispersed by The heat produced by the flame on the external surfaces of aerolites seems to be altogether so sudden and transient that it has not time to soften the solid mass contained in. The stones never present any appearance of indentation as they would if they had been plastic or half in consequence of their raised temperature when they strike the but the must be of a very intense character it for the surface of the always has black glazed There a perfectly fied or enameled something less a tenth of an inch in covering the inner and separated from it by a clearly marked The flame of the meteor is evidently more fierce than that of the hottest porcelain for this is altogether cient for the production of such perfect of glazing as the aerolite cling to one THE subscribers have at their establishment a large assortment of Bailing to which thoy would call the attention of those about enclosing Cemetery Front at their Front between STEWART To School Teachers supplying Globes from SI 00 Numeral of the School Stationery of any School Books of all and generally the appliances in our line for the School atr reasonable Liberal made with Teachers and School T. No. 127 Market Del. around them perceives the stendy advance of they remain all unconscious of his and seem not to dream of giving up their existence here until they are more than buried in the I account this on the ground that Divine Providence holds every man in a state of perfect throughout to choose either good or and when is really mind upon that he up to his lust hours of be free to think and act from heavenly or infernal What a man does in a state of is not a pondent of his real Under the dread of a man may act and give all his thoughts to Heaven eternal things but this cannot really made him any or any more fit for Only what hp does in according to itself upon his internal and it. It is from cause tlint twelve extracting all tho nutriment from a the deterioration in- especially in a close A bird not live without a large supply of pure A bird hung up in a curtained bedstead two person's died before the Many infants are found dead in and it is attributed to having bean overlaid by the but the idea that any person could lay a moment on a baby or anything else of the is Death was caused by the want of pure The most destructive typhoid and putrid vers are known to arise directly from a number of persons living in the same small those who cannot afford therefore arrange to have each member of the family sleep in a separate If persons must sleep in tihe same they should be about the same and in good If the health be much both will but the healthier one the the suffering for want of an ent So many cases art mentioned in standard medical where robust infants and larger children have dwindled and died in atew months from sleeping with grand- or other old that it is useless to instances in It would be a constitutional and moral good for married persons to sleep in adjoining as a general It would be a certain means of physical and of tages in other which will readily occur to the ive Kings and queens and the highest personages of courts have rate It is emanations collecting and concentrating under the same Which are most destructive of than he would to forge an Comp mion he for jhe industrious hold no U ship with the He roams from pill IT to from parlor to from mend to and insurance offices to libraries and reading finding no rest fop the soles of his feet nor the vertebra of his His soul is disquieted within He would fain be but mirth companionship is questionable and pis gaiety is suppressed by lack of until the poor ennuis is almost driven to Such a man has our honest for we pity hia imbecility and The honest but needy whose daily task must be daily completed be- fore he can look forward to cessation from is happier in his sinewy strength and cheerful than it ever entered into the mind of the independent idler to suppose or POPULATION OP THE professor of the Berlin University has been making curious researches respecting tho population of the The following is the lation of of of of of Total population of the The average number of deaths per in certain where records are is about one to every At the present time the number of deaths in a year would be about 42 which is more than the entire ent population of the United At this rate the average number of deaths per day is about the average per hour is about 3.653, the average per minute 61. at every second a human life is As the births in considerably exceed the there are probably 70 or 80 human beings born per tates or the struggles of sections ia choice I a For the last twenty years the party has sustained by the irce of its principles No great name of like that of Andrew has marshalled its Its as beea rather to avoid men jes as great the positive for the more available but less attractive elements P the neutral and the But this course cannot be pursued The American people will now hesitate before endorsing at the polls the product of compromising politicians io They yearn for the energy of their own noble spirit in of public and would rather be ers of a brilliant and able political ral than the of ah Shall we have such a men who are to compose the Convention lay aside personal partialities and give us such a one Will present position of public will That part of one can lead the Democratic army to him whose name will the and the abiding faith and re- spect of the Eastern more destructive than the simple contamination of an atmosphere breathed in Journal of an A Sensible in speaking of the effect of a free interchange of social courtesies between individuals and masses of people of different sections of the cited by the late visit of the Masons to Personal acquaintance is not only to but to just opinion of Too well we know the hate an the one and the contempt on the which the citizens of the two great sections of the Union entertain for each To the uninformed to that part of it which ought to be best newspaper Gpe people of the South aro little else than a barbarous and brutal horde of and nee versa to the uninformed the people of the North are but an un- principled rabble of atheists and This is all as it is altogether There are different characteristics in two but the average of intelligence and morality is much the This must be lowed by all reflecting all that know that human nature is much alike the world over It would bo by all men of either were not the passions inflamed to madness by the misrepresentations of above if were better quainted with each It cannot fail to have struck the most casual observer that the most liberal men North and and tho roost take them as a are the Especially is this the case with the Southern for yea of them visit the North to one Northern merchant who visits the Bat the Northern and we may the Northern is thrown into close their temperature for The other day we saw several Irish laborers trying to decipher a notice headed The although written tolerably could not be read by the and they requested us to it for them which of course we At the conclusion one of them turned lo his comrades and remarked in a very impressive be never buy of a man who is so Haggardly that he wont get bis he the printer and he'd They all acquiesced in his de- ciMon S. said a father to his son while they were working at a- what you to associate with as you do When 1 was ot your age I could go with the girls of the first The first cut is always a said the son as he assisted the old man in rolling over difficult to find anecdote recorded more honorable to the be- of an of any than the a celebrated who had laid by twelve loins for a journey from Lynns to seeing a man who was walking with visible marks of deep-felt sorrow in his accosted and asked if he could in any way relieve nim sir exclaimed the for ten I must be dragged this evening to a and be separated from my dear wife and helpless Is that said the humane I can command the sum you and it shall be at your A friend who met him the next day asked if he had relieved the dis- of this poor man as was publicly reported WHY so MUCH is says Bayard girls do not jump from infancy to yonng They are not sent from the cradle to the to to sit and look No. they are treated as children During through a period of they are plainly and loosely allowed romp and pjay in the open They take in sunshine as do the They are not loaded girded and oppressed every wav with countless frills and so as to be admired for their much clothing Nor are they rendered delicate dyspeptic by Continual stuffing of candies and sweet are the majority of free and various and abundance of sunshine during the whole arc secrets of beauty in after AN boy who been brought up in a log house in that between any other was not much encumbered useless I class in tho bond of this strong union is personal neighbor's where several of more fashionable contrivance had just been received from the among other looking which was opposite personal contact with Southern more far than motives of occasions that liberality of feeling for which the commercial men of the North have ever and we trust ever will be Hence the great conservative class of the Republic is the commercial in the midst of the Southern merchant maintains his and year year repairs to the just as though had amid all the fury of Abolition presses and the Northern merchant stands serene and unconvinced that his ers are savages ana And the bond of greatly more we the The boy had seen his own and on entering the Three things a man never gels tired of ing the and women's Because they arc new for dav res the first object presented in Lyon's said Pigalle and view was a dirty looking s what a delicious supper did I make shaggy ye he Our genuine if we have our conservative our religious those of name and function who hate and love may learn a lesson from this fact iust It is it is very V it is nn easy and it is this the Union make the people of the two This is the so upon bread and with his who blessed me nt every mouthful they and every mouthful was moistened with tears of their Some men do wisely to counterfeit to keep their always not for fear any one should Steal treasures frighted without further ho ran home as fast as his legs could carry ex- Tie sren the LATEST On the corners of Bleeker and Fourteenth New Bonner has placed who don't budge inch from morning till who keep well with each whole -j The reception given the lem- af recalls a similar reception given last year to the Seventh of New and in but someone should look and repeating over and over those see that there is nothing to steal IU this same city of These are but the we of a system of al and Let all the great Masons the Odd the excellent example set by the Sir Let great cities let Legislature visit tet the States vote money and pay to promote interchange of and then let demagogues do their WH be the mono of the in spite of i 1EWSP4PERS  

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