Madison Express (Newspaper) - December 4, 1845, Madison, Wisconsin TERMs OF SUBSCRIPTION 1D will bo and at por annum Ji if not pad -in will be TERMS OF one per for anil twenty-five cents to tins be POST PMU to 0" till all at the fit Village BV W. spreading The ami The u man in Vt large And tiw of Ate strong iw iron h nr is nnd and long II n Ian Hia u lie And thv in Fot v. ctk from morn You c in hear ti s blow You cnn him his heavy V. jth fin 1) it anil Likea old kuk th Aiu coming homo from Look iu onen door I thu And IK u I i lliu L i MS on til to thu j a J lit In- it 1.1 lita il in t c Aul it i m l ll -i II ID lili r in i IK f lien .is hum ho .it out In lift i in he be ID iln e II il O ir foil 11 il i the A FOB WHO IT. A. was the l our Faithful and TWO DOLLARS IN 6. 4? 1845. Number 2O. crept into my It would be most Why boys have fought it out like and kept the whole from my ears what to do puzzles me. 1 shall have to give to the school my notions of what self-defence demands ot whipping the boy who Tho nest morning the school as Every boy was in his In walked Master Horton with more than his usual He ascended the opined the rend a and then ed in exactly the same he had used the whole of his school ishing with the Lord's asking forgiveness as we forgive he called before him the John knowing that all defence was plead guilty in the hope of some mitigation of the thought Charles ed arid I struck for I was very 1 You done exceeding exclaimed Master Hoi have broken the law of the being are striving to What absurdity They would over- throw all Don't you see We read of injunctions to in the very one great Teacher said if he were of this world he would It is very I am for and because I am for peace I cannot let the new opinions come into my War is the world's emphatic and to prevent war it is necessary to I mean to on proper My conscience will not permit in vor of war than Nor is it for you have no temptation to The cause of peace is in- jured by fanaticism for if I were to tell you that all lying was I mean in every fighting I the master got entangled in his own ar- and came to an abrupt But feeling that something more was lie called up William THE INVENTION OF A COMPOSING Every thing that contributes to the ded with pleasure by aH who have the benefit of the human race at turnini had a lesson on subject from the persevering Bruce grew wiser by seeing the pertinacity of a I an find they both cast aside I and If what you desire to be worth the toil it may achieve examine the ground The vast difference in the price cf and if there be not some of this and the preceding tury u a matter of most grateful Knowledge is the lever which is to elevate the political as is that which is to redeem the and we cannot but hail with delight any thing which utes its The following will be read with as having this tendency directly for its by cheaping the means of A communication from Vienna con- tains the An important invention has been made here which has already proved Poetical arid whose results he angry is no excuse one wrong I thought William tile Now very straightforward not excuse he raised his Growing voce v worthy il taught of in In- v. lie was it is above other nor very ek 1 excepting in Latin and mil He did nut si m to Know much beyond his that the young id- a to shoot into and lie wrote most classically and and his pronunciation without that must be con- never good old any thing in needed for excepting what lie was customed to and as for their iving Fie would then now behave us well as did I was a boy It was a U u None of the modern 1k rash anil fanatical had crept into it. The good had a holy horror of all he loved the old old He bowid his head most the and expected as a ti r of course that the jonng would reverence to lie loved u t good the prompt p ij of the quarter and ho was or troubled except v. his happened to behave xery much or very much 'er thru was j Of course he was sadly perplexed i rnr day when he was told that one of tie John had struck Charles diaries ad not the He could how it happened that one struck for that was lie had done so when at and had been fl iggi d for it by his master that was all But the forbearance of to him was n I must look into says is no I sec that by his There is something out of rule in I don't recollect such a case I tr have have heard of such a except among the fanatical it can't be that iuch folly hai himself in an oratorical and jou know that I have forbidden all and fighting among my and as long as I am at the hejd of the I will punish every boj who no matter for What is the use of laws which you can break when you Prepare for Some boy hand me the Charles who up to this had stood calmly and burst forgive ho did not hurt me do for- give i Be replied the have a reckoning with you John's punishment was more severe than was verj much excited but poor John bore it without It is supposed by some that a man become so much accustomed to using the us to be able to use it without being and without ting in the and may with perfect equanimity of Not so on this at with Master Hoit n His inward feelings sympathized with the out- ward and after John had been soundly Master Horton ed as if he would like to have another So he turned towards don't think to impose upon me by affected I have with too boys for I will know Now tell me why you did not come to me and com- plain when John struck or why jou did noi try to defend Aie jou a fool or a coward My snid when he sent me to this told me er to All said the is a wise I give the same rule to my I have just whipped a boy for But did your er tell you not to defend plied me to strike any one for any he told me kindness and the best Is your father a fool ed the Take The master was v t ry The veins in his forehead and his nostrils were because of the presumption of the boy in bringing such into the But very wisely knowing his frailty of he dismissed the subject I shall at the opening of the school this explain what is tha duty of boys in this Now attend to vour on was a Le was all without the least tact or in his he was the best mathematical scholar in the Master made a bad for William had been puzzling his head over the master's and could not make head nor tail of it. When lie marched down to the and stood like a with his mouth and his eye fixed on the Tell said Master what I have been saying about war and I know you understand was always will have incalculable effects on the periodical It is the invention of a thoroughly successful Type Composing Machine in the form of a having the external ture of this kind of instrument and a set of 1-21 in two of 01 and the other ol former of which being broad and latter It is well known that no however agile and is able to compose more than 2000 letters in an while that Composing oven if played on by and tanly ten performs the composition of 360 types in a minute and in an The is light and positive incompetence on your some total disqualification through physical or mental never believe that What a wonderful gift is was the remark once in our to a great amazing genius I am not so sure of was the I am ced that any one with a fair musical can do what I have with the same say six hours a duy for twenty There must no doubt be something for nature to go It is tor but a folly often to endeavor to make musicians of all those who cannot a Without good perception of form arid one cannot tutored into a The and and nearly all other dis- characteristic features are early made Keeping the natural bias in then regard nothing as either in ref or There is no saying what may thus be by effort in the true for our faculties only become except in the rarest by training and and there is nothing which we like less to hear from the than that cowardly which is so often and which sits tamely down with folded hands in labor is slow progression is dis- but if excellence were i intended for the substituting I think you said of one finffer for ov for the multiplication of 1 by 10 and it i consequently ten times more if any body could do any thing of I said no such foolish ex- quickly than the most agile by a what merit would there be claimed the a towering tor at his bad blooded Try William was very anxious to please his master to acquit himself well before school so bespoke again with great care and You that war was not always that I am and I think you said it was The master was confounded and lost nil his presence of and de- termined to get a proper answ er from he roared jou do not immediately give me a proper I will flog William and could not remember a single word the ter had said on the except the last sentence about and the master's doctrine was so puzzling that he thought he would shift the you that all except when was very At this boys could not help whole school broke out into a roar of and ter having no other laughed After the uproar had ter Horton remarked that he would more explain liis opinion on the subject at some future but the opportunity never S. E. C. N. and faithful in her solemn work of training up children for heaven and The minds of children are very susceptible and im- A a a may engrave an impression on the mind of a child which no time can efface wash outl Yon walk along the seashore when the tide is and you form or write words in the smooth white which hes spread out to clear and beautiful at your feet according ag your fancy may but the re- tide shall in a few hours wash efface forever all that you have Not so the lines and characters of or which your conduct imprints on the mind of your There you write im- pressions for the everlasting good or ill of your which neither the floods nor the storms of earth can wash nor death's cold fingers can nor the slow moving ogei of eternity How should each mother be of self in bur treatment of her How and how earnest to the 1 truth of God on his truths which shall be his and teacher when her voice shall be silent in and her lips no longer move in prayer in his be- in commending her dear child her covenant Sat. We are informed of a project on foot in the county of which is of some interest to our A company has been formed there of many of the who have put together their means arid will dispatch an agent in the spring to Vermont to procure for them a large flock of the best quality of They can be procured there at about per and a person who lias made the says that a of one sand can be driven frou this to Kalamazoo for a shilling u hencl starting late enough in the season to obtain feed upon the If that slate is the place to get our as the quality of the mal is so much superior on the to those in other None but good sheep should bo into a country where they can do so well as in Michigan and It is almost impossible to get set of coarse sheep once iu s e set o the crown of on illimitable pasture may be prolonged according is reserved for those who 5 d willbe as R ired or the sinle Would gold be as slab-sided DEATH AND sentence of death is already passed on every one of and God knows when the sentence shall be put into We say every day one to how suddenly this man is this other taken off in the midst of his sins how young this other has been called away But who takes who says to that is In the afternoon he gave us the j said of this man to-day may he began his row be said of I will not say to be very calm when I then there is an end of he slowly nnd far from then begins said know I am my happiness or I will re- There is nothing I so much insist upon as that there shall be no fighting Havel have not this very morning flogged a boy for striking I shall always do so. There must be no fighting while I am Here he clenched his member the judgment passed on the unfruitful tice it why it the The same sentence may be passed on us when we least think of it. It is not a tion with ns it was among the What will Become of men Christ has told and we must be- lieve for he came from no I should like to catch any of j when they Our Lord Jesus jou a You would have me to reckon continued have an- other most solemn duty to Here his voice became subdued and I roust warn you gaintt the foolish notions modern man can have the true pleasure of but he that is prepared for life as should I shall be able to say with St. me to die is touches as is or the single Composing Machine may be made double or and so and by means of seeting in eral type at n single cation of the ten 20, 30, 60 and more letters can be composed and therefore whole sentences be finished in great bers and of is of great importance in es of vast editions of and woiks generally that have a large The chine was completed by the inventor at the Imperial printing office of ths Court and State of this in the presence and with the untiring co-operation ol the distinguished of this imperial after several experiments had been in the course of about a The application and usefulness of the machine have been tested with the utmost scrutiny and it has been tri- Entirely different fiom one or two of its did not succeed to come to it is from appearance slender and light as if it had sprung from a steam engine of the whir to the opinion of one of the most com- petent will never be ed in fie simplicity of the principle of its And now the great typographical problem of this nium may be considered The distinguished Hungarian Peter Von of to our ged first in the solution of this His example was soon followed by England it France and of up the subject But all of them a- their undertaking after their attempts had proved fruitless for at The invention will henceforth cupy a place among the most tial of this distinguished And the name of the It is E. L. a young man of 26 of A native of until last had been ed as a manager in the estate of the chief master of the Count Von I say I When one sees how much of energy and ability is paralyzed by and how manj fail in life by to at- we are almost inclined to hold opinion with wish that the words I from the Tamerlane in his despair precious the jewel could we pick up gold arid jewels like the dust rind pebbles in the For er say in a worthy ambition suited to your nature and when ers sink disheartened by the way cheer them on with hope and if sure that are not struggling in the wrong direction TARTAR A writer in the Cincinnatti icle in describing the generation of Indiana hogs was which could the third row of corn from under a rail fence and out strip a fleet They have ned out before the and other superior breeds and when In- diana and Ohio sheep are amongst the things that thu stock of the country will be what we COST or ties of the ceremony in paper savs the expenditures that the preliminaries being I tne direction of the War Department the nuptials are celebrated in the following The covered with a hid for some time behind a screen in the comes forth and walks around with a grave and solemn while some young girls bring tur bread nnd honey the bridegroom quickly her and ex- changes which bears the name of betrothed She then returns behind the when the married women put on her thn cap of a which is much and supposed to be fascinating than that which she wore before the In the wh ri the bride and bridegroom are about re- the past fiscal arc stated to FIFTEEN MILLIONS OF than one-half tins whole expenses of the of on account of The Sentinel re- marks will prove even a greater drain upon the Treasury than thu Practice has made the South very perfect in the art of ing Uncle Sam's as seems the Mexico war fever blows a will be picked with the or some other Indian tribes at Southwest in order to p the bulk of our army The Florida war the the lady is obliged to pull some thirty millions of husband's ns a Texas iniquity will probably her subjection to his If the upon us a heavier becomes dissatisfied with he needs but tear off her cap of a and the sign is a complete The then immediately returns to her where she is received with this it appears that it is much easier to get than catch a Tartar If the cap tearing could be recognized as a legal divorce in our what a destruction of lace and lin would Madame Pajot and tho fashionable milliners rejoice exceedingly at the prospect of a brisk and anxious papas would tremble at the prospect of ing daughters returned on their If but one tenth part of thu sums squandered in these inglorious had been alied to tins enterprises A WORE TO mother is a She writes not the of empires or of nations on but she writes her own on the imperishable mind of her That tablet and that history shall remain when time shall be no That history each mother will meet and read with eternal joy or able woe in the far ages of This thought should weigh on the of every and render her deeply and of our Lake Lake navigation how many ful lives and how much would escaped AGAINST A writer in the Union is waging war the American by ting writers in opposition to its he has the ar- in for we fro ly confess that tariff is not u. British or one palatable to the advocates of British Will not this zealous admirer of British opinions give us some against our lie can easily do so and he such authority in the hope that it will us to abandon American why does he on the same urge us to abandon the Re- public at and return to the state of He will find plenty of English arguments to prove that this is the best thing for us to and really we might about well do the latter as the