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Hartford Home League Saturday, August 11, 1860,
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Wisconsin

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Wisconsin

Hartford Home League Saturday, September 08, 1860,
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Hartford Home League Saturday, September 15, 1860,
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Hartford Home League Saturday, October 06, 1860,
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Other Editions from Saturday, June 27, 1863

Appleton Post Crescent Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Wisconsin

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Maine

Daily Zanesville Courier Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Ohio

Dawsons Daily Times And Union Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Indiana

Defiance Democrat Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Ohio

Burlington Hawk Eye Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Iowa

Burlington Weekly Hawk Eye Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Iowa

Janesville Daily Gazette Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Wisconsin

Morning Oregonian Saturday, June 27, 1863 ,
Oregon

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Hartford Home League
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Hartford Home League

   Home League, The (Newspaper) - June 27, 1863, Hartford, Wisconsin                             OF AN Washington for Single In Tun up of IMI lo clubs ut miy upon not W for time live CPU per Job Printing of tin of Typo Jobbing BUSINESS Attorney at C. Wl T TOMN to nnd acknowledging and on M. 10.-I6A. M. fruin A.M. P.M. nnd Main nnd Mil T In ut 7 P.M. a and of tho 5it of Ad will MUS. Int of In Sbop on HA A. A. nro hold tlin and 1'ucadiiyn of at 7 o'clock M. all of Notions called Storo near Notary J to drawing nnd Ac. AUo to collection E TOR 3. 44. thy bread upon the shall find j wonder what that means ton as he sat the blazing such ant light before quite sure that I understand what that man ter asked for ing at his I gave him something to do n lumber more for humanity's sake ilian tor the he took my warmly gloved his cold and repeated tlie lure proverb that my mother lins iio often ought me. I'm sure I was not ti the sense I have always thought of it given u poor child a or a joor somo it havo been a case to thin Both might have me for a but with the mercy of my charity er have returned to The mou lot come to or only stay un- .il n little money and then if he has and that end nny elation we present time sustain to each Thus iu the heart of the the but ft of open told day they the he hail been blessed Giles might be yet happier and morning Giles where bo after dark the housekeeper and her son Inn t leaving basket in of the it but the two apon the Early mid the ragged tha a good m JL to of fo lion CM i 1 In A J. unit nt In II of Wust Hindu for nnd will to nil other 1'iirtoniic-Suti to euro with until In HID William It. would Hartford and vicinity emit of It liii will from from to of or In liny ot bout my rooms only on Art Int. to old to notify public Hint lio will ut ready willing lo attend to nt nil lie n public It. T. PAINTING PAINTING nuo PAINT well the of 1'KOTKC-r, IM If yuti lo intended to on JAMES E. COOK Who 1'nlnt Khop In Iho of the good people Iho and to 1802. J. K. CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY Of voitK CASH Sixth minimi 1802, 40 In Incur liability Merchandise Household Furniture at by H. H. Tho will to all claims and the BACK PAT M AND I K G K Will be attended to on with of Washington who will In to to all our claim eaten before tho at to It tho Interest lo call AT er wins laid nt rest he promise ot boding of yet in kept hope growing and and then dying ini house of Giles now by want and vent up many blessings for him who in their hour had befriended them whether the intelligence ot for- unc would have made that wife's heart lighter than did tho announcement of her I will have if tomorrow were but Dreams than those j thut for weeks had visited their lo them thut and before half of his fellow borers were thinking ot their daily Giles presented himself at the door Hamilton to receive his of the duties that fell to the lot of the lumber met him at the or rather extra very antly impressed his man of hard always and j invariably the yard aud in the my I'm glad didn't know but you would ber or something ot that What is your name j In a moment it stood on the book and in great round ilton had been praised when a go with At this Porter came the forin la of the and to mercies tho new comer was ter the two had gone in the set ut hisi und ed to the Mr. Brent said him not allow Davis lo work hard I guess the poor fellow has seen hard shouldn't was the he works as though meant to .do his will I like a man in earnest in and there is an expression in I believe I. can rely on a man owns such nn eye as he null nt n to Porter to busy Brent to his During the mind did riot revert to the as his foreman called but when at night went look about the he found him at work sonic timber which he had promised to have measured and delivered early next morning iti the careful to himself he bo waiting or I must see the last of anil so ho up to hand with distrust in the heart confidence had in the Thus do the hour and the impulse sometimes of our nature's highest nnd holies have you not The other men have gone home u long Porter wished me .to this timber and I have to do jj from charity that at ard had grew to be from his employer down to 1 the little fellow who made fires ami did the errands The after being caught in her sepond visit a used to go in with the little whose hand grew strong as the better time coming on tier i ts And waved its silver hor The winter went by and March month of winds of hails nnd days that are cheerless and are gloomy even to the gayest and still master and stood as firm and in each other's confidence as Olten he sat Hamilton Brent conceived an imperfect knowledge of proverb shining upon in the kind efforts of Giles but the full time hud not vet for him to see wealth of its Upon one of these stormy days you and I have seen in came an order for ship which Brent must attend to himself All day long he staid in that and chilling That nigh this walk home seemed longer than house cooler matronly His great visions were sad dreams more like spiritual visitations than like visions that we love to think linger around and above us in our sleeping The day at his passed sadly and until it grew nearly when heart and flesh had failed and he fainting to the In thd hour of ment that Giles Davis stepped into the position of counselor aud Every one .in and around the office gladly followed his direction's his He it was who they agreed should support Brent home and During the illness of many weeks that followed this rash arm was the one on which the good old housekeeper for help and The quiet was brought from her the der one of her husband's to assist iu the onerous duties of The sick man whose friends of an who lived with in all gone to looked in moments of the prat he could riot every would go to consult with favorable to his not until had Brent took old teat in the and Giles his ed place iu the But tlie est cmi bind humanity ted their and never forgot under owed prosperity to the the summer when home he would with a of a otie in a tind on as to and by Dr. Charles Alexander make a few commend ol r. OF very has at some time or made sensible low much can be communicated by the tones of the human whether em- ployed in the service of speech or The infant readily appropriates the of the ere it can comprehend the of the woids uttered by the The er animals may be repulsed or or wise governed by un of the tones of ihe if and borrow from the sanctuary of reciprocal we can appeal lo the rience of bear witness that it is not so much in the intense in as in the tone in which they are that the aro How that un instrument capable of being the eloquent and should be understood by in all that relates to its formation und even to its most refined and skilful the acquirement of such a moral would dent from the fact that the Creator has BO connected the mechanism of the voice with the most portion of our mul even to render pleasurable in a dependent upon the degree of protection we afford this It had been equally easy with the to produced this wonderful human some peculiar motion of our external members of our our or our fingers so have escaped the mortal ly that now attends on neglect or abuse of our vocal In. constituting the most vital functions its we the that the human proceeding from Ihe very seat of designed to be life-giving in its cise and that it is to cease from its seven II unti THE that much more to than you want to when yon lire or when Your House is on Fire CUE or tux C E 33 B K A T E 1> WAUPUN THAT if EVER VAIL OUT or HVT Ala I G Volli and both Shallow and I believe I hired you didn't I I you no here after that hour unless I bid has no right to upon you than ten hours offered me a shilling for doing this the man's grew very M times have been very with mo and me ty and J am glad to earn aii honest ny whenever I all but I to thut up and I until you get You go home und the man His voice not trust itself in what eaid cold and was going have nothing to eat until to go to house on way nnd get the and not go arid ask for it before my work you do this for money buy thing lo cat j 5s is your day's handing him riot any of PINE AVOOD Is liud and more thw of soft All Work to at and ns he a. I will that the this for me. I om begging there a dignity in liked lo 4, hired was the I business other men whom I to I would give wore could afford I would certainly be a then to give to port in a city Boston than six dollars a. think I. can trnst This is to be add I your until you Hamilton Brem of 1C down to hia own dinni table in i altar of To bii some to insure as a his It was uot lhat his plan was when pi her hands received u slip of witli Merry written on dollar note Giles received a little and opening it iu his pleasant it to of in the lumber provided would to occupy the home in company her the matronly housekeeper and her not with her nothing save the sweet smiles had made her humble home a paradise for a band nnd as Brent enjoyed the pleasantness of the lingered in the his heart understood nt length the the bread upon the for it after many pp IN rebel published u ernor Brown of calling upon ahe people to ofr HI fan try orie in each and more where nnd themselves best have but knives pikes to but I. appealed to the Con federate Go to return part of the in and I trust my peal may soon who cent only with life NO OF The pulpits of bur contribute more than their share of ny to the alarming ignorance that concerning this most important as is the like of the accumulates and capacity by repeated rightful why is it that among the such faculties for this ly of the are vocally con- according to St. speech as a of in puny Why do so many totally break down under what is termed the of their ministrations which if performed would rather be luxury to nnd recuperative errors in their ual mode of the health or 'the vocal might ing a agency in bringing about these results but I the questions the great it is because there of of There truly philosophic support of is If the blood should return from the lungs into the geuer state in it entered tbe if no in the lungs to come in contact the death would be ihe The demonstrated this well-attested fact by an experiment a couple of He the jugular vein vessel that returns the Mood from tie head on its passage back to the of one with the carotid artery vessel which sendy the arterial or perfected blood to means of a tube and allowed the venous or blood lo flow into it. The result that the dog in bruin the venous blood was made to became and would shortly have On allowing ihe arterial blood again to the was a venous blood is unfit to sustain life because it has lost properties of nutrition which it originally acquired from the Hence we find it on its way back to the lungs by the air and hence if air be excluded as in of hanging or death If this exclusion of the air be but partial ns when people suffer their lungs to become contracted neglect of proper or Irom the use of death will be lingering leaving trades of impoverished in the pallor and ness of the iu in an ul- cerated throat and and in other of 1851, DK of Xew in the presence of eminent and other scientific resuscitated an gator which had been killed by lying the After an when fire nor the dissecting knife produced signs of Dr. laid bear the lungs and the Then a hole was cut iu the below the and a was Professor Froshey worked with At a faint of moving blood was in the diaphanous veins The inflating process be- ing ihe next began to run r Each i jj not contract muM be length of or will charged K Transient Im and Bit of lent published on first not the and well-digested treaties upon the governing laws of the organism or adapted us as I nra satisfied the struggle to our I 1. battle arid been echoed us our to with fury prepare meet which prevails re- the vocal that embraced iu and the observant aod admitted the diaphragm into this So that the complete popular idea the voice is this the which arc ed by the force the air through the glottis or aperture of the or upper portion of the air striking the edges of this which in support of have been denominated air by tRe edges causes those the The br of the being governed by of the theory very and even the lest sieni and we conditions .to sonorous tions are liberty of a sonorous arbitrary are none of these conditions exist in tlie V be through the to that produced sound strange ears when sciences science of streams from the into the quiescent The heart began to then to pulsate and signs of life elsewhere the animal began to move soon strong men not hold they bound him to the and lied until life was apparently again inflating he so revived that became dangerous snapping at everything and his For the third time the trachea was animal and was L Dr. Ely was one who hod against the theory of dependent upon all the his son had the medical friends had left him and crape was tied to handle of the door Standing by the side of his lifeless Dr. lily to this theory should be I might yet save my Antl fiting by the example in he restored his his soon the infant ceased to And again and yet third the re- stored the resuscitation proved complete months after the child was living und perfect Ely cams promptly a nobly honest reported the case as which he had I ft ft I Sec Theory of i. Synopsis of its that be has E. he bws of stragglers iHe ed n' Y men senT for zepa as as well to which Howe Food 4a generally multitude -or diseases t afflicting and Instead of the husky on every once inore the of the evidence of a Respiration and Emma Tlie as you are arc composed of minute ramifications ol air and They are suspended as it in the by the trachea or nnd are also attached to the heart by The pulmonary ry carries the venous already proven to be unfit to sustain from the heart through .to subject it to the action of the this action or tion has been the blood is re- turned lo left auricle the and by thut into air is wo thoroughly understand how that good blood its healthy circulation -in the aft be to that sacrifice of as1 we or the b from the does be bttro in Jt is A- v supplied the wind pipe and the two bronchi into wind pipe and throughout ute and innumerable ramifications oi the bronchial the blood in the through a wonderfully ihin which is estimated to be hot more than from 1-70 of an in. thickness lie tip u a of venous is dark in shall find in a short while that portion of the the face of the has undergone The air bladder and rcii This is precisely the change that is instantaneously reason of the and the this result is of is That the air has rendered the blood sustain it 1ms by operation deprived of its life-giving and is no longer Fresh in: order to the production of is an essential lhat laboring are accompanied by a if not abo an act of As if to remind that this portion vital which the mainspring of the is in- trusted to our own hands ic order that may enjoy just as much of animal life vigor as we choose and have nobody to blame but it ue do not attain to our full capacity for and ju this much abused of our GOOD When you rise in ihe throw opcu he casement of your sleeping anil regale yourself with a glorious repast of the fresh morning Sip it in gradually and until every little air vesicle in the lungs is awakened from inanition by tbe unexpected presence of the rare your and do not be stingy in tbe lumber of your Repeat this og exercise every night before aud at regular prescribed intervals during Avoid as much as and impure or let your hands bo with your in order to avoid the deadly influences of a drooping Ever preserve an erect position of he the chest thrown nd the shoulders you sit or or even Do not impede the free action of the ribs by or Use systematic in the open Read some work on human physiology and the natural ol body which you may study your eyes are not never for then you take your and retire you systematically re- tire earlier than you would not loser such a in any Nothing exhausts the nervous energy more rapidly than late and midnight Be regular in your at intervals not exceeding five hours of your food be of the substantial rather than of the It should be easy for your aud btt taken When you read or speak or see that you do not employ any muscular et- fort of the throat iu the under the mistaken idea that power of voice or even voice itself is produced by wear and tear off those If you hare injured your voice by this filse careful how you or how you maim or burn those delicate under the rain ex- that you can recover your voice by such unnatural See that your children are duly instructed in the proper use of their respiratory Let in the air alternate short intervals with their studies and in all respects upon them the same per rules which pou observe for the nance of a vigorous physical Let these few simple rules practiced upon daily by and by our and we should soon hear no more of of of the of of the lungs and of sore but relieved of the fumes from distempered and the dark evil ir- nnd other concomitants of nerves and impoverished would wear its unclouded brow the sunshine of and an With our present unstrung animal to tune and we should become more in harmony with and loving universe of God the higher emotions of our that ao oft become chill and torpid in a low degree of under an of flow in ous ANECDOTE OF QUEEN 8. P. B Morse relates in the Journal of Com- merce this characteristic anecdote of Victoria of England was in London in 1838; aud was present with my friend ihe late K. at the imposing ot the coronation of the Westminster He then related to me the following I may truly be said to have the first act of her reign When her William a ger immediately dispatched by his Queen by his to apprising her of the She apprising immediately called She letter of condolence to the Folding she directed it the Queen of. Her maid of honor in noticing the said JOB Queen the widowed Queen is not to be ed of that first by is but one of tbe many dents illustrative of delicate tion Tor the feelings which she a personally We no longer that of which the mere mention of tbo name of thoir excites in English It u not so much the as the personal ter of its incumbent which gives to its nnd although in the ent case and unite to intensify the The death A. is He Tell while of the gallant 4th regiment at Port was a of was for some lime Professor Carroll and president the bank three and lour thousand 4th 7 ir i he was commissioned ills uJf bie was its Lieut. and is command of the in and Col Paine was i a large person bpr relatives and personal lo otOB habits bis quires him to bring into play every which ig capable of the in a quantity of One Tact with a and in lhat to be Why is a a T to a and Crwn  

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