Home League, The (Newspaper) - July 11, 1863, Hartford, Wisconsin AN Washington Wis. to potter tip of bo to nt upon not cunts pyr 1'rlntliiBoruvoryitiiiicrlpllon with Ht With mi Jobbing BUSINESS H Attorney c. ton Attorney lit TOMN 11. Notary Will tl to Ac. on HA U I fruin for tho 10.15 A. Mull from thu Wont A.M. 0.10 P.M. COON mid Mil In every 7 ulvi mid of St Town nt nil take muni collections Milliner the Int of In Shop on NO. 120, A. F. A. IFI. Tho uru bold first of onchi at it. W. mid nil of usually Storu Notary Will J fully to Ac. Also to collection mid NV 111 to collection of demands for JULY 11, 1863. OF ADVERTISING s 1 ode 00 2i 2000 12 oo 3 00 4 CO 1 00 THE HORSES OP General The French General baa written a work on tho horses of the to has added many eral Daumas in of the early General French letters and in legend and religious illustration of the The high esteem of the horse was enforced bis for the Prophet oh conquest or were strong and through the power of their Mohammedan legend and aliko est Thus tella the of the origin of Allah willed to create the he said to the south will that a creature should proceed thee con- dense the price was reduced to GIty After that came the near It also had a and the over- ho would bot part with his foal for the whole But lo I the presents likewise with a when the dweller in the Sahara cast uu through and power unable to persuade himself to keep of the horse of tho desert and he a cunningly drawn from with whom friendship was first established when Daumas was accredited to him asi ARAB Of honor only the dog is suffered to bo his com- precious to him almost as his greyhound as hunts or six months hunts the gazelle from the huro passes to the young of the at twelve months old is eager for the old hinds but is retailed until the age of fifteen or eighteen after which is held in and regularly allowed to greyhound is au intelligent animal rt I f i V thyself and wind condensed Then the Angel and he took a handful of this matter and it to who formed of it a dark bay or a dark chestnut horse with blackj saying have called thee horse 1 created thee and I have bestowed upon thee tho color I have fortune to the hair that fulls between Thou shall be the lord all other Men shall follow thee wheresoever thou slipping a JL o anil Halo est. Good for pursuit as shalt fly In J. lit In north of for liny part or and will to nil earn with nnd and In the o. would nnd shall riches and through thy means shall wealth ii The Arabs have many relating to the They pray to lah to make by their coines to tbe aid as occupy bunt only on It. 3IAZVS10JY to old to notify public Unit liu will bo round lit willing lo to all Ho of public to nil anil BACK PAY M I K G K im with AS. C. TUCK who will In person to to till Ilio nt to It who claims to cull AT PAIN TIN G PAIN themselves with lightens tho ex- penses incurred on their grain of barley given to a is inscribed by Allah in the register of good a for the tri- umph of aj magnificent loan to spirits enter not iato a teat where there is a it is suid honor begins nt the to iu the 8UPBUSTITION3. But all horses arc not honored One shall be set as worthy only of and lull of self loyo One gazelle is pointed out to and he Kills only a common is very sensible ot the reproaches addressed to aud slinks ashamed of without He has no lack of vanity aud indulges in A thorough bred will neither eat nor drink from a dirty vessel and refuses milk iu which the liana has been Has he not been taught this disdainful daintiness And yet the utmost that is done the common faithful and is to let h while another shall be that .it will be well to cast of The Arab superstitions on this sub- ject are thus pleasantly tola by the French General a renowned chief ol tho who flourished in the of the 955, happening onn day to pursued by Sand sheikin the turned to his and asked horses arc in front of the replied his well let us make for the sunny they will melt away like Some time afterwards Ben Dyad again turned to his son and horses arc iu of the cried his is well us make for we shall have nothing to they are the negroes of the who cannot walk bare feet on the He changed his and black horses were speedily A third time Ben what horses arc in the front the enemy chestnuts and dark that Kvory known tint 1'IIOXKCT, ni IIH of if you have any nuch Jobs to bo to cull on JAMES E. COOK Wlm to n 1'iilnt In and on tho of good to nnd 1'avcr lo Juno 2Sth, 1SC2. 10 J. CONTINENTAL INSURANCE COMPANY CASH Sixth minimi 1SC2, 40 Thu In the pronto without Incur liability This Company Household nt by U. 11. exclaimed Ben strike I other his among the offal bones thou that are lying And while the latter for thou is driven with from tent and Upon thy back greyhound sleeps iu the compartment re- served for on carpets by his or on very He is clothed and sheltered from the like the and is even preferred for being as that is an additional proof of the purity of his The women take pleasure iu bedecking him with in tying collars of shells around his and securing him from the evil eye by fastening talismans on He is nicety and being lavished upon In mer to give him they make a paste of milk and of which the stones have been There are some who never feed their greyhounds during tho Nor is this Tho accompanies his master when on a and receives the hospitality with having a portion of every thorough bred greyhound will hunt one but his By his his respect for and the of his be that he re- cognizes the attention paid to On the master's return after a somewhat prolonged the dog leaps with a bound on to his and The Arab talks to friend listen You must bring some I am tired of eating and flutter him in macy The petted animal leaps about in frolicsome and seems not only to but to wish to death of a gui fills the whole with the women and children bewailing him as if were one of the Sometimes it falls to the greyhound to lind for and one that nourishes a family can never be for AN AUSTRIAN chatty and gossipy letter from writes that there had been received in that city from Vienna an account of a scene which is the of the A brilliant of noble birth was horse of another Interesting from A Vicksburg correspondent land gives the following interesting description of the operations of General Grunt against Vicksburg Let us parapet and sec the siege by In front of beyond the enemy's but hidden from lies the Look carefully and you can distinguish the the court house and two or three The hud a on the former when we but made it too warm for and they mortars ing and they are well worth We watch a and in the direction of Young's beyond the up shoots u flash of and in a moment the ponderous with its fuse glowing and rises slowly from behind the it as. though mounting to the zenith over it conies towards 113, down through its flight trajectory into the and explodes a shock the for miles There are women and tender children where those shells but war is 8 inch monsters are grumbling faraway on the McPherson's are can even see the beside them at each Ours will at midnight then there will be lo your let us go the A hundred yards to the right of where we now are we enter a deep Following as it winds down around the we reach the opening of a The air within is damp and close like that of a Candles are ing dimly and we hear ahum of voicer far within and out of and presently meet two men carrying a barrow of for our boys are at work night and This is the approach on this part of the Finally we reach the moonlight emerge into a deep cut across of the od This is open and filled who protect the working A heavy parapet of cotton bales and earth is built on the side toward the and must mount the beam to look We are now within sociable distance of the of my your horses Ihe TUB SOCIETY water Inn much more to mnn you want access lo whon you MO when Your House is on Fire or TIIK C E 35 B K A T E 1> Tit A T If Jilt FA I LSI OUT OF BUT ARK for these might overtake us had we not given barley to purs all the mer coals despised are him tho for he is own brother to the ho in And tho ns white and chief would mount such a There arc sonic tribes that would not consent to allow him to a night with They such el 'the Jew's a color that brings II And tho Out ii Roan this is. a pool of is sure-to be but will never horse is to bo that has no white spots except a star on the or a simple white stripe down The latter must descend to the and then the owner will never be in want It is a It is tbe of tbe If the star is it is universally t lie adds to that a spot in front the saddle no man in his senses would mount nor judge of horse flesh deign possess it. Such a horse is as fatal as a If u horse has several white is the preferable the right feet be but it not er it be behind or a to have stockings on both off forefoot find the near hind It is Called foot of master of snch a fail for he oml Tho it must be side hind generally mount alight on the near ings arc a sign of good fortune horite with the felt I Hla will t i is the same with white master's will never turn strangely fortunate at cards he invariably is position and no one folt the least doubt of his playing but at a recent party the servant who stood behind him detected him in the act of trans- ferring cords from his to his The servant called to bis master and told him what he had watched the guest for detected him unfairly and charged him He turned pale and denied the Count who was insisted that swindler should turn his pockets inside or if he refused to do should never again show his face ic any house in The fellow exhibit the of and left Vienna the next morning on his to will marry some wealthy girl and model gentleman your neigh for it American ONE OF Vicksburg letter Cincinnati Probably the best sharpshooter in the army is Lieut. 23d Indiana attached to Stevenson's When took up its permission He dug a hole in the a very short range of he has time n fails tlie i fortunate rebel who shows within 800 yards of goes to is known as of the material of which his is He haa killed more rebels since than company of in the Or XT OC Gr Wells Shallow and to nil g cull or In It M much moro of All Work Warranted to Terms July r Never buy u horse a white four he carries his with The prejudices of white spots little t- following little story liad blood was a dispute beforehand as foal So when she was oti the point of fouling be invited all first ol all M The Arab day for when the owner i d ode m one tbet The off forefoot then showed a meeting of and a part at unanimously as platform as without confiscation without botheration and tation the the Southern the Commercial V has passed a variety of It was a religious then still india rubber and world It till be Those men lying on the ground twenty or thirty yards from us are our advance pickets but that gray fellow with the bright musket which glistens a few steps is a longhaired and one of Wall's famous Texas bull dog to you may be Now jump down and enter the mouth of the other which leads forward toward the salient of the Stumbling along we reach the end where the are very air U almost Never let us watch Sec that bright ing fellow swinging the beaded drops of perspiration trickle down his facs there is not a dry thread in his coarse but no matter the pick and each stroke slices down six inches of the tough subsoil of That fellow was once a faced young whose billiard and cigar bills were a sore trial to his worthy Jim says that he used to wear and girls called him good but that's played out now he is going for Uncle Sam. But we return to tbe fresh Look over the parapet again towards the where the rebel you seethe little gray mounds which cover the hillside so thickly you can count a few square my that is sacred ground you are looking upon There our gallant boys charged there they were slain in heaps but they pressed on nnd leaped the parapet and rolled back Others followed their flag and they sprang over An hour and one The rest were keep that bundle sacredly t Each word will be each line When has restored the ravages of and grandeur has made this struggle the most memorable of those great conflicts by ideas floated into these of the humblest the merest routine the life led in The New Post Office The the features the laws which went into effect July 1st Sec. 3 prohibits the delivery of any pamphlet or age the postage charged thereon Box rent paid in letters will be returned to the dead one after the date of their Letters bearing requests to lo are not neither arc drop The postage on letters returned from thp dead letter reduced to three The weight of thutter is limited to four The postage on letters to the Pacific coast is reduced to three cents per Drop letters are charged two cents postage but the carriers fee is Letter postage will be collected on any newspaper or periodical so marked or upon as to give anv other information than that contained in the print The same to other All letters not duly franked or except soldiers and naval and all ted except that sent to regular sub- and all miscellaneous mail matter reaching the office of delivery without is charged at double the usual rates of If postage is partly the unpaid postage is charged at double In all cases where the failure lo postage is evidently such letters will be other unmailable ters to the dead letter Letters bearing the request to to if no time is be re- turned at of thirty days after their They should be promptly re- turned at the time when such a re- quest is made in any A business on a letter is regarded as a re- quest to fee in 1 Hues or one 1 1 three t one subsequent not under contract be length of or they will be continued Special and of SO per Transient must bo paid for inbly in Deaths inserted But lent published for half Business on Brat not fivo per each additional fifty ning National unity and freedom will be Not for the historians sake dp I keep but for your who receive and oura who The next skirmish may pulses and our full our love for will be our only legacy beside that of having died in a survive the limb un- or bowed with sickness or crippled those letters dear of dangers trials of privations comrades Keep bur letters wrile us all the courageous If cant r and we to and shall besides the regular but the sender receives the receipt of the ty and other measures are taken to afford greater security to registered The maximum standard weight for the gle rate of postage on printed and mail matter is fixed at four ounces The postage on transient able matter is fixed at two rule ounces or and four cents per rate for Three circulars pass same rale of two when enclosed in one unsealed en- to one No extra is as for any business or address printed on the wrapper of Only weekly newspapers can hereafter be the county where the paper is The rote of postage on regular papers will be the same within the States as from one State to Small newspapers may be sent in packages to one address at the rate of one for a package not exceeding four and one cent additional for additional four Publishers may enclose in their tions sent regular tho bills of thereto without additional write or print the date of expiration of subscription with the Rente agents may carry and deliver on steamboats and at rates as may be agreed between the publisher and subject lo the revision of the All mail matter not sent at letter rates of embracing book manuscripts proof and other printed and all other mail matter except must be so wrapped or enveloped with open ends or sides as to postmaster to examine the destroying the otherwise such package must be rated with letter The franking privilege is restricted to the heads of departments and bers of AH correspondence addressed to any cutive or any offices in must now be official tions written by some officer of the an officer or re- sponsible and in such under the on the the must sign his name with his official the Rachel was always an excellent Sho made the fortunes of her ers and and worried and bullied agers until had given lucrative to the four or five lucky performers who bore the name of She pensioned her father and mother and showed real affection for those who were connected with her by The death of her favorite gave her constitution a shock from which it never Shs had a real passion for like a true she not over tho thought that she but over the em- of When the queen gave her a bracelet at that her first impulse was to fuel its weight when shortly after her she as the recompense of one night's performance at the sum francs in she iu relating the incident to a that she experienced ferocious joy of nu animal that has tho long wished for prey in her No artifice was too mean for if gold was lo be Her quarrels with the managers of who were dismayed at her fill many ges ot this aud she never permitted any scruple to stand and the metal she When she was only she or her father exacted n condition that she should receive a perquisite of 500 francs for everytime she chose to appear more than twice a In the which was then being there is u procession which simply moves across the Rachel joined this and claimed her 500 franco for an ex- tra When she was she received a superb Corneille from a gentleman who was touched by the rapturous and earnest way in which she spoke of Corneille as her A few days the donor saw his medallion in the cabinet of a collector to whom Rachel had sold it. And a lady who fleeced the public so unscrupulously was not likely to let lovers Ii is related that she devised and carried out the following in- genious She announced to her friends and admirers that she had a perfect passion for ami intended making a collection ot these She procured u very fine and showed it to one of her admirers in a tele a tele ns the gift of a He understood and ed her with an ot still greater last gift was then shown to a third and was eclipsed in its until the tion had reached its when it was sent to the and the proceeds invested good subsequent years she said to first raised a ruby and then a sapphire But the story of the guitar is perhaps the most A report got afloat that Rachel carefully preserved the guitar which she carry about when she was a Rachel heard and that an acquaintance had an old called and begged it as a ent. The guitar willingly was sent to Rachel's and hung np at an hour when she expected the it ol a rich He inquired why tbo guitar was hung and she replied it was a memorial of her early Immediately he longed to be possessed it. She refused but at last to his proposal of giving in exchange for it a diamond bracelet worth lover was subsequently by the original possessor ot the who happened to see Sometime afterwards the and recognize it. was told by a person who did not believe and wished her to contradict it but only how rious he was 1" ion their way afoot to a. church where one Mr. were overtaken by a drenching As they the the the what shall I'm soaking It won't pulpit never be as get to and said of. no aboa t ire complete My let there All other and all sons writing to which are not must prepay their KATES OP matter of all descriptions per rate or cents books of all or 4 unsealed three one 2: cents ed six to one Weekly not exceeding 4 oz. 5c daily LETTER FROM JOHN AHAMS TO HIS os THE 5 OP the greatest question was decided that ever was debated in and er perhaps never was or will be decided among A resolution was out one dissenting that States and of Ireo The die is Ihe fourth of 1776 will be a ble epoch in the history of lam apt to believe it will be celebrated .by generations as the great anniversary It ought lo be commemorated the day of by solemn acts of de- votion to Almighty It ought to be- solemnized with bonfires and from one of the continent this You think semi 6c.; V-v V exceeding 8-oz in 20c.; 30c.; 12c.'; 2cents.-; 12 oz iii 15c. 45c. 90c. 9c: 36.'; me transported with but I am I am well aware of the toil aad blood treasure it will maintain this and support and defend these states yet all the J can the light and glory I can see the end is well worth all the although yow audl may which E hope we shall TO THE lay this down as the law of I- military authority Ihe the of all and and so its true that the States where slavery have management of the be age d have pawed to It the Is to in prim battle be- -is a hani i Rives the The will not the Banished the same Jii Jge Juwett not disposed to join their i not only the or TIIK UKIT but the COMMANDER or TUB ARM TV HAS ORDER TUB nut the slant that the States become theatre or from that 'the war powers of to interference with the WHICH claim of for to cession of the wilh to a It is a war say is war when in be invasion or a war of to ACCORDING Of WAB and by tha laws of .an country all its and municipal two hostile niw ia the of boUi to emancipato all the slavet ia