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Kenosha Times Thursday, July 02, 1857,
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Kenosha Times Thursday, August 06, 1857,
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Kenosha Times Thursday, August 13, 1857,
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Kenosha Times Thursday, August 20, 1857,
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Kenosha Times Thursday, August 27, 1857,
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Kenosha Tribune and Telegraph Thursday, October 22, 1857 ,
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Kenosha Times
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Kenosha Times

   Kenosha Times, The (Newspaper) - October 22, 1857, Kenosha, Wisconsin                               IN E V E R Y T H t ST IN JVC VOLUME L OCTOBER 1857. NUMBER 17. t-i AAC ia If In it nut m i by nU it ill bo 8 BUSINESS i in. I KAN I1 su Wi I ol HI A. I K. 0. v l aier or in mavis's I 1'n-k I l K. TI. i lil 14. J. County V MS I. U. H. K ml Silas Ui 10 in tv rn vV i mini in- H -in Ki mi- i KI In l 4; I nv At m mill r i i i i dJ mi i V AT I. i. it i y- t rn 1 Tho night on tho Whilo before nio With a A n o and Anil mov her ino Till I rl Why TI Hii 0, l Tint thy luim n Ami thn in black i- linil I'm Mini's ii A nl the w g Liu flu no Tlinn vim Anil i- nili v dim on tho no 1'ioin i litui Ii i U 6 v r u K drr n thy rn Ami Th i ay My H wildly Aud J buits in 1- ui F nil Shark Iu ol 18-58, 1 was on beard the at anchor off tho My gig and and 1 and my friend Tom Carey wore going tip the river to look after our who had been ifp days before to a of The yet iti and the i ool and Don't think it really wa comparatively The nca atmosphere ot the j tue m at in the We did not on our or black to a nt i tin i -i t fin p 11 n iV ci i in. vci l iti .I in K. and d in nti 1 in mul i 11 in II t. 1__ T. tli in IM r i I Mm i U I I IV j l Mul IV nml i- ui I T. i Wood vV IV l. l l Ji AT in 111 Pu Mm t. Is. t i I M in Drn i i On ii i. i V. nil I'll put i ISA SS L Ihn i nnd In of bi 7 10 A.M. -J In 4 1'. M. ill Dn I All II I mil In ma t i. I Chirk ft AND UK 1 in T lum on n llr 1 m d ol hi n rindy n lit lit A. 1'ox, to in- thu of nnd Ii hit An unit in mul or klm tins him of hix and to tlin J at tho 3 ill y. CHI t-i 1 i i a Mill clean and I into little lor the My little boat had ivs been ot tlie whole she in light and ant a and win without doubt a regular Ji wu neared the bar 1 pec surf on it in a remarkably unpleasant I had heard ot the but 1 had not paid to ii I it was only a tale to frighten and old women but when 1 saw the follow one after Ihc mi the and then roll boiling anil into the mouth of the 1 I altered my and looked on like with ii boat we had under L did not r had far from the ship when the .it die called my attention to bo its 1'ad put off from in the licet said Tom out and see if you make hut it is t boe can I 1 can't see anything astern it be my perhaps it is a bo in tho you're bioko iu the in the w ly of those two watch the next and bee the poor holding on to tlie I did see aud k lowing the coast swarmed with I saw at once that their only of in they nnd got outride the was for us to reach Hum .is soon an they got clear of it. 1 1113- men to put their tin ponded nobly to my and we soon began to ily over the A race like against amost exciting and us bounded over the n multitude of thoughts through my It perfectly at what a rate the will travel under such Had our boat been endowed tho the result might have been ferent as it sho seemed to know she was on an errand of for 1 never saw her skim -o lightly over tho She was a agon of a was tho same gig of the Stout arms aud hearts propelled her a velocity I had before witnessed vet wo were some distance from the bar when tho boat eomo out bottom and two of them clinging to makes said tho as more cleared tho nnd struck out foi God safe so said I. tho 1 saw the cap- tain and four hands go in this Give a bottle of grog each we get i ori said the young fellow who pulled the ol but hang all grog in a case as 1 felt the rebuke T felt 1 ought to have known sailors can only see said Carey pool fellow's A shark help water fnm our and I clutched the thwarts of the sec him coming down to the another poor fellow Give way my rally all that's your Wo wore now drawing to the one man only remained in the water lie struck out and then lifted up his hands and his cry for help was drowned iu tho surging of tho in back tho who had divested himself of et aud now dived after he the di owning we hauled them on i just then r. huge shark ed past God you said ing my friend's The two men who taken boat had no age but a good irOm them that the man who went down was the captain and as he was striking out ly only a few before ho in nil probability he by a ther he nor the Iran ever Jt was a termination to our attempt to go itp the and 1 felt ihe ter painfully the .is 1 that both the poor fellows had and the cap- to lament their Of alter an WAS otit ol the question to proceed on our intended and we therefore made our wiy back lo 1 Mi ed willi Ibis sad is strangely eh ir- 01' the of The boat the melancholy accident and well worth at least yet alter wo had rescued the mcrr ofi her there not a man in who touch and left out to 1 had having in the same on a former drowned a. wo got on the appearance of tho sky betokened thunder storms which it this season arc in these and wo therefore made aft Snug the A storm in tropics is iu the neighborhood of high the lurid among their the rumbling and then bursting with i crash their hurled back with double rain falling in over everything hangs a black which is occasionally rent asunder by All this is to contemplate a pipe and a strong of but to have been up the Ullua without shelter would not have been Snugly in of a 1 was I sat up till the si orm smoked tin oo or four and then retired to my berth be lulled to sleep by the distant mul The Count Gerfaut de by I position and foi into the circles of 1'arisian above of which ho had cultivated lie was both a scientific and an In pursuit of his art the Count gone to There he had resided sonic On his return he was observed to be changed iu Among other in. which had been his ruling was now his The sound of the human voice especially had an influ once over him which appeared almost to produce Mysterious rumors were circulated with re- gard to in Italy which had this change but to none did the Count Gerfaut confide the real Count had conceived a profound sion in tor a young prima Gina a creature of beauty and whose fame destined to exceed that of her although as yet confined to Verona loved her genius as much as he loved when he asked her to become his he never in- tended that tho should quit by some felt ed that her lover should desire her still to con- on the stage she loved her than and so she married but the Prince of taking possession of her left the stags Bui Gina had loved She strove to hide even from herself the that would arise in her noi to linger on the past she beg an enthusiasm to take her and iu music what j she darod not whisper to All 5ior palled on the Prince became hateful to the word iVom But he wai in he had never even deigned to her At length the Princess health gave way her for music took the of and beyond all doubt the Princess wss To to the great physicians was the Process and her for the time echoed in the the by a companion chosen for that was seen -i the Bios dc at tho at the but so palo as she listened in wrapt to the it was impossible to believe her other a Tho Princess soon attracted tho morbid curiosity of the Parisian beard her the his return from Italy he entered the op- There ho beheld beautiful i of ho had so Their eyes then a deep which showed that there wars life overspread the aud shoulders of tho Princess but twined away without I sought the physician who was to effect I vouch otH What would save Nothing a to the emotions nf the could the pent-up passions find sought the he told him how he had loved told Low they had sept told him that she be saved though he to lie never would seu her said Ihe Prince will trust but on a public stage the Princess do can his old hotel of the St. German set to work he a engaged a an aud without a public an artist's triumph could not be invited Ihc the and Guilietta and Bellini tender worthy the a tho was ever the opera She was the ot the an eye brightened 1 infused in the she comprehended she tha which her as she seemed to give her strength she sang as mortal sang Gerfaut listened despair and At length the List in the ily comes Romeo to see her once tho tomb is and his arms around With i lie s tarts md Juliet falls back into The Prince and tho guests rush on I o the Kit too Gina Juliet lay in mimic but her had moved or not to the not to her but Golf ed her and being over lips to had caught her and they had said her words on Thq Count ue the order o. the o. La at ami the is raising a n to that i- to be one of tho wonders model n ments to her living man turned TO litr and tho marble HI to bid her live A oo the of In 1S32, run upon the Bank of was produced the walls of don being the emphatic stop the Duke go for gold advice which was followed as us to a prodigious The of Wellington was then very and the 14th of it boing urgently believed that Duke had formed a the panic became and the run upon the Hank of for ooin was so incessant that hours upwards of half a off. Mr. in his of Sir Robert states it to be well known that the above placards device of four two of whom were elected members of the Reformed Each put down and the sum thus was expended in printing sands of these terrible which were eagerly and were speedily seen on every wall The ly be Tt wss Monument the Since his death and burial in 1886, the tal remains of ex-President been quietly reposing at in Orange distant some nine miles from on the line of the Virginia Central During all tins time no tal record with high sounding eulogy disclosed Ihe place of his final only neighborhood ti and historic record serving to point the way to it. The neglect attesting his worth by suitable attracted and some iow years since a number of 01 Orange county bet about the task procuring 1 laving been it was conveyal to Montpelier on the loth and placed in The monument is in form an and as graceful as It is composed of seven of two ot ure live and weigh over pounds two others four feet by two weigh thousand pound? and another feet longr inches at its base and thirteen inches at the one thousand The gross weight of the entire is Tt rises just twenty-four feet above the level ol tho burying The height of the ment proper is twenty-two feel six but the on which it boing raised eighteen inches above the adds that much to the height of tho About nine feet tils is led the following simple inscription BORN 28, 1836. The appearance of will commend it to the of erery one who ir ay chance to the ted its appropriateness ami beauty to strike every It is tial and and in strict keeping the quiet of ihe country buri il the man whoso grave it A more pre- tentious pilo would have been quite out of and been mean anu tame in view of the hills which encompass tho I It is the memory of dep grc u j hallows aud gives something of i to the and at and no labored monumental pile was j needed to keep that memory .AU that was desirable here was a-1 memorial to mark the precise spot -A here Madison w IK laid when life's activities were and this granite monument crested at the of the citizens ot will hand down the spot to remote The monument establishment of John W. of MX hundred a sum expense int by the In digging for a suitable il to go ihe consequently exposed to The bo placed above the coffin hid bui ijo curth had fallen in thing to be as when the was except Ihe coilin lid was out ol allotting a view of f ho in- As no to pre- the part of the rior portion of the was and the several gentlemen looked in upon the remains of the great The it- of black wa- in 9-r.iT tho nearly tilled a species of moss which adh to the Beneath partially den by were a few of the larger and er The lower jaw fallen the bones of the breast and the ribs were and the only part ol the skeleton re- mained weie the skull and of Ihe the of the the and the bones of All upper part ol the body had ed to the dust Irom whence it was and in a more trace of the body will until the of the rection shall the scattered tho body had been interred just On reaching sufficiently the foundation was commenced aud built up as two ore on side until a proper height was when it was over the and then built up to the a within which rests the ot and pre- beneath the center of the The foundation was vt gathered on the Montpelier from a of the us a man possesses a capital of 000 is honored with tho brevet title of In England there are hundreds on hundreds of private each with per who ave rather looked down as only indifferently well by with half a county as their own aud a principality for their iVe do not allude to such men as Marquis of with a or the Dukes of of of whom is nearly as The curious thing how little the of the British middle classes is made matter of Tho day Mr. Muntz who had been member of went to his long He had been patentee of an im- proved method of making for and was believed to be manner of plain with all com- never indicated His will was proved fortnight ago aud the mere which i- wholly of his amounted to He left and of to widow to each of his four SOPS to son in to his to his er all the u and fashion to son Had passed away Ironi he vould have boon duly ad- In a Jew lines without any simply announce how his y was disposed of. There is no surprise whatever at a having addition to his the sumoi 0 ot personal In the least ostentation is by the Some a of a private house in the Cottonopolis of and among thcr ol whom the company were composed our fi a man of and being the dressed of the lot one owned live millions two had millions each a fourth had two millions and tho poor among such was about one Here or owned by and Colonel Benton is improving but u disease aird he may recover bis health and Lord peerage dates from the year 181. is reilly so j that he can live only in a small on some per the satisfaction of knowing that the cott ol a suit of el it did mil nearly he go to and wear liU in tho of wa- a pi peer by a w con- fore 1 t ir o jut i- a on record of the r fluent of this on the of Lord It was the accession George a by and up with grand no- of astounded and angry at a tall 3lilejian walk into his lic on as as if ho The ter The his the Lord privilege have uncovered his lie declined doing -o until Lord the most lite of the courteously accosting stated that perhaps he was unware that he was is iny the haughty know an- swered may wear your before the but before Lord as much as his at blood would and instantly took his an apologetic bow to the fair oiselles who wero A JUat Two boys playing in a barn at Detroit found a iti a tub of inro which he had len wl ilc trying to and after poking him under several left tho a new actor appeared on the stage in the son of an enormous old and a sagacious after sundry frantic efforts reach down and claw the he fairly ed and Siting his claws firmly into the extended caudal appendage down into the thus foi ming a means of which the rac in the water quickly ed himself of. He set his claws and teeth in- to and held on like grim while the old fellow up ths by hn a dray he companion to the this two scampered the result of the  

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