Mount Carmel Register (Newspaper) - March 4, 1859, Mount Carmel, Illinois m 6fith'8 i - - OF Dotlar per Strictly in OF of Ten Lines or less first insertion 00 50 te payment will be exited in No Man a my dear my next Bul still to be of still to be stout of mv of those gd I creditor's name on his collar I and vou are a we owe no man a dollar 1. you saw in his wife and bis flaunting While we sat down to our coverless crust add a cup of I saw the stood in you tried your best to c I knew that the contrast reached your best to conceal you could not help but feel it knowing now that our scanty freed my nock from the You'll join my laugh and help me wo owe no man a dollar neighbor whose show has dazzled your fact is a wretched debtor I pity him oft from my very I wish that bis lot were the man is the veriest slave his dashing wife Will live in though ruin should he goes like a to the slaughter But he feels it the tighter every terrible collar I what would be could he say with That he owes no man a dollar but I'll tell you two hours I met him Sneaking away with a frightened if a had besot him fled froia a very worthy I met with the greatest Whom I galled br name and forced to he said he waA not at He held my last note I so I held him he freed my nock from the collar Then I shook his hand as I proudly I owe no man a dollar 1 I now you for you feel the the truth I have bean I knew that a downright honest that gentle breast was beating I To-morrow I rise with a giant's follow my daily labor j But ere we let us humbly our wretched next door neighbor And we'll pray for the time when all shall be the weight of the When the poorest shall lift up a voice and I owe no man a dollar STRANGE 8TORY. was on a miserable cold day in that the good bark in which I was second weighed anchor from the mud and commenced her voyage or the I had sailed with the Captain to the West on a former and had been asked bv bim to take the second mate's place this though I was only twenty-one years old at the I thought it was a good and accepted although He was a good there it iio denying but a bit of a and I al ways drank a good deal when in his He had been married just before our and his honeymoon was curtailed by the of our I saw his wife several times before we left for she was at and also came on board while we were lying in the She was a very pretty young and seemed to be too quiet for the I thought did not treat her as he ought to told tee that she was going to take a cottage at while her husband was homeward or stopped at any 1 when she shook hands with Good a happy voyage to i felt much to do her any and pitied her lonely situation more than her She had told me that her only an aged aunt we floundered acrois Bay of ran down the ia from leaving England with a north we were baking under with in the shade shown on our The skipper had shoved a couple of ip irons for very slight and seemed to be a greater brute than He was one of fellows who acted as an on so pleasant and he got afloat in the blue lie wasn't angel at least not the right sort of an jogged till we passed round the we gave it a wide and kept well off the to avoid the current that runs from the east dOwn the coast for seventy miles distant We were off about Gape when the northwest that we had carried with us from near South turned round and blew right in our we had plenty but a pocket handkerchief sort of this kept her head to the I had a guy made to the which it thf we then rode like a duck oh the 1 turned in as after being and said I had the morning the captain sent for told me not to speak abont what he had said last but that he had been told that his days were He to the in which he had put down that he had seen his wife come into the and that she spoke to and told him something about He then requested me to sign his statement in the and ordered me not to say a word to any of the men as long as he I told to think an thing about as duch things were only and were caused by the stom aoh being a little out of I did not think it at the though I thought it would him by telling him lay to all that the captain came on deck but spoke to no Jn the I went to ttk hii his a thing I never Mard of him doing He put it down and came on ordered me to get np the I went forward to see about and the skipper walked on to the the helm was still and no one there but was giving the men orders to go when I heard a crack and felt a jar through the whole I turned round and found the pitching had caused the boom of the trysail to break the guy that fastened it was swinging from side to side with every lurch of the I ran aft with all the and with great difficulty made it fast it took us some time to and I then went down to tell toe His cabin was just as I left it and no in I came but and asked for him on but no one had seen him The men said ho was on the when the guy gave there was a general call throughout the but the captain was not The first mate and I went on to the poop and looked well On the bulwarks near the stern there was a slight and close beside it a of there was no doubt that the boom in its first swing had knocked the skipper clean and the chances smashed some of his never saw him 'The first mate took the and I told him about the captain's he laughed at and told me I was a fool to believe in such and recommended me not to talk about it I quietly tore the leaf out of the and I have got it will show it to lie went down to his and brought me up tbe sheet of which I read and it hr hud We went on to the and returned to I had do the Brownville The Verr the We had yesterday the pleasure of Messrs. C. A. Dr. 8. W. Wimer and James who arrived at place direct from the gold They made the trip in having the gold on the 8th of arrived here on the first of lyin four these gentlemen we the roOot ble and reliable Mr. of the that left Lea worth last Dr. Kunkle is from Sioux and went out the Omaha Wimer is from St. of ex-Mayor Wi Mr. Hall is from gentlemen have prospe and specimens of the precious mi Mr. Lawrence is an old California and has bo hesitancy in pronouncing the Chi Greek mines if hot to those of Those now per Gold is found from tbe surface down to the bed a depth feet The only at is w want of But as several companies of competent capitalists are already organized ftir furnishing cannot longer remain an obstacle of any in Experience the that a man If we the list 6f rich men in we find nearly all of them m worth little 6t Girard was a poor The late Mk to the a country almost What is is Also of ahd begun had only a pair stout a Willing aad ft griod for his To with millionaires of the yet found to any is what is termed and quicksilver will necessarily have to be used to a considerable in collecting the finer and more valuable gold has been discovered to some and old miners are confident of finding in the But little prospecting to the time been done in the season of the year and the occupancy a preparing comfortable has been discovered in satisfactory along the base of the from New Mexico to Fort power is abundant on all the in that Cherry Long's Creek and Cache la There no necessity of freighting all the heavy of steam saw Pine timber of an excellent quality and in inexhaustible which at present is sawed out by is worth from f 125 to per 1000 City and only separated by the stream Cherry will if not and will be known as Denver At that place are already Greeted over three hundred and when these gentlemen material was on the ground for one hundred and other winch are in process of to be Ijy tbo of The soil a of examples will the other the sons of rich who life with the capital which so many poof jroung men frequently die It not be going too far to say that A large of such moneyed individuals fail or gradually eat up the d with which tuey commenced the reason is Brought np in too will as phrase to hard It is that they passed in the race of life by others with less but more thrift and for these after are worth more than money They make in afler it is they enable the possessor keep which most rich iaen pronounce to be more than the The young man who begins life with a resolution always to lay by part of his sure even without extraordinary gradually to acquire a especially habits of which tie resolution renders will make that a competence for him would be quite for a more extravagant It is what we even more than what we which leads us to He who enlarges his expenses as fast as his earnings must always be no matter what hfs abilities And content may be had on comparatively not in luxurious men find real Fruits of gentleman of Montgomery of fulfilling my of to is but not in captain's .so immediately I could I started to tell her I found her house from the address sho had given and walked once or twice up and down to consider all I should say to It was a difficult thing and one 1 did not much like doing having to relate the death of her women are inclined to think there is some neglect in if au accident to those they last I plucked up and knocked at the A servant and upon my asking if Mrs. Whurton were at she Wharton don't live lives here and she ain't at I asked if she could tell me where to fiad Mrs. and was informed by the maid she was a and knew but the baker over the she could tell went and asked the bak r s and she me that Mrs. Wharton had been nearly live and her aunt moved at this immediately inquired the of her ho h so to The formation of the and iti all by and the Railroad was the of stote has hod an In last 10 years railroads have made in Illinois than were in any other state in three times that more railroad power in Illinois than many Of states can to The profita derived people from this has in all things more any other keans dowe in quarter of a was but a years wheft state was indolently lingering est days of have Itf threatened ruin forever to the public ond the hope of gaining relief by means of an increased prosperity was but The prospect of the vast and fertile prairies being occupied by industrious and well paid farmers appeared as the plainest Public works were yet none would venture to engage in their The monuments of folly that a system of of which the state was had moss covered and warned enterprise to withhold ita resources and shut np its all things became Cities awakened to Farmers went to Villages Private capital began to and soon no one was heard to complain of hard U.S could be to make tbe oue of building stone and clay for bricik making are season of the trains are arriving con- and those who have been leaving igal of an old falling among for the Stares to procure of tTm class of at Nbw to return again in the of an excellent has been visited Louisville on business for a rel and after collecting a claim of named Francis of and after an ond to the young gentleman from Montgomery was induced to join a pleasant little and take a hand in ft small game of It is the old so often lie was to win or and then the and the genteel for such swept the table and pocketed of his The young man came this amount in one of the Louis ville but finally confessed his and secured the amount by mortgage on experience of this unfortunate young gentleman was something like that of the Hundred Years Pittsburg in an alluding to the one hundredth of Old Fort hundred years ago there was not a single white man in and Illinois what is now the most flourishing part of was as mountains of the It was not until 1769, that Uie of the gallant and adven turous left his home in North to become the first settler of The first pioneer of Ohio did not settle until yenis after this A hundred years ag to and the of the United States did not exceed a million and a half of A hundred for tbe and boys wore it hf displays groat astonishing this country ia the by the man and bf on this rock that It Ja came a real of rook tho great Frederick of was per 1 1 forming exploits which havo made with and immortal in and with his plaster of Paris Peak is and Pike's to be composed principally no country in which game abounds more black and white tailed black and grizzly mountain sheep and turkey and saje everything to drink and wt will be in demand and will pay well to out Ironi this portion which can be brought from New and at less price thau can be freighting from who has had great over u lying in tlie au i jon tiie thinks for heavy cattle told me. I put it doww in inv me but lor light loads and in onr then it blew great gi wore under close-reefed topsails fc night I was on the and finding it blowing harder than and the ship making very bad weather of I thought I wonld go and ask the skipper's leave to I dived down the and knocked before I received at last I heard his I opOned the and was about to report the eale but was stopped by the appearance of the He was as white as a his were like a Before X speak a he you did not what he but Beg tbe ship is making very bad tbe and see my wife as she came inT' I ' started at me for an then dropped OB his couch and have oa the first time that I had ever use sacred though the evil one's in his I then told him the when he told me to go and do as J best I went up and took all the the exception of the mizen J got and when 1 got back to tiie I found the date the same us that noted the as the one that the captain had seen her the I never was superstitious before nor am I alarmed now at the idea of seeing but still there is a queer sort of feeling comes over me when I think of that aa Farmer was Lowell News relates the following connected with the marriage Anna T. an accomplished New England with a substantial farmer Anna T. of by her contributions to attracted the attention of an educated farmer of who opened a correspondence with At length agreed to meet at a and if their on seeing each other for the first were not they would separate if II let her tell the story need not tell how an Ohio farmer first had his attention attracted to an occasional contributor to the Eastern or what motives first prompted him to address a note of interrogation to said to be followed by mutual questions and till tbe parties became desirous of The annals of romance narrate few briefer and I may say few more sensible No by moonlight no frowns of opposing no jealousies of rivals or Past the of the world around termed old bachelor and old had not yet relinquished our faith in human or lost the fervor of which intercourse with the world too often So having fully made up our minds that we were and ought to love each we and did love each The experience of three of married life has satisfied us that the majority of mankind are in the and we in the right I mean to say that we should learn to love mentally and morally and personally ut course mules arc He also thinks there will be no danger of the country with beef as is feared by on account of the presence of such an abundance of wild If the diggings prove as lucrative as there is every reason to believe they miners will not take the time to but prefer paying even large prices for beef at their cabin This to our sound Milk cows will be in great Indians are perfectly quiet and no danger from them need be as there are more than two white men to every Indian in that The gold region is in the and Cheyenne is needless to say that this encouraging and reliable news has given new impetus to the gold excitement in this Many who were before disposed to no longer and will be off on Albany gives tbe following summary of the meaning of Democracy about these used just now to mean a great many different things iu different In Pennsylvania it specific but in New England ad and in no duties at It means popular sovereignty in but in Washington it means federal aggrandisement It is for the Pacific Railroad lu but against it in It is for fishing bounties in but against them in It filibusters in though it denounces it iu -In Ohio it assumes to stand on the Cincinnati but iu Virginia it plants itself on the resolution of and in Carolina it will agree to nothing short of the Charleston resolutions of 1860, reserving the right to differ even ftom if it don't like All these warring factions claim to be a single because they have a name in sustaining a single handed contest with Austria and three great powers of A hundred years ago Napoleon was not and Washington was a modest Virginia and the of the history of two in - these great but dissimilar men took of his last and coming re- scarcely years ago tha United States was the most loyal part of the British and on the horizon no speck indicated the that he had deposited his money in asked the old and this was the son's I do not exactly remember in what I know it was a very good ones it a a scriptural It I let me it was tbe Pharaoh I of the Negro Chronique Parisienne contains the who imitates France in all and like and recently resolved to establish an academy of like the world renowned French But it was not easy to select the inhabitant of tbe empire who could write his name thinking himself So his decreed that 3,000 of his subjects who the reputation of being the most lettered of on a given assemble at his and be subjected to a literary test Whe they had he announced that the test was the writing of the word and that those who made no error in the should be members of the ink and paper were each of the 3000 people wrote t le and the judges of the land and bench of bishops were charged to examine the 3000 They proclaimed that 39 the canc had written the word that with a the remaining 2,961 having used an S. thirty-nine cried the we want I will be the fortieth member cried the Majesty will np doubt deign to submit the exclaimed and in a bold hand he wrote Citron with an The judges looked puzzled for a and glancing at each proclaimed that his had passed the The Emperor was thereupon amidst the enthusiasm of the a member of the Imperial with pardonable advice all young people to early life the habit of using good both in or speaking and and to as early among the first States of the Union in point of any use of slang words and and boasts of the largest The they live the more difficult city in the North-West Her wealth and of such language will and if the golden population are and her of the proper season for the which is not large for her | lion of be passed in ita the will be paid within tbe next eight at the of neglected education is present annual rate of payment No other very probably to talk slang for its resources Money is not to procure this the last ton in which period Every man has it in bis He has nearly all her railroads have been merely to use the language which he respect to these improvements she is the stead of the sUng which form his third State in the and is steadily taste from tbe best speakers and poete of the cing railroad system is not yet treasure up choice in his r. Evening and to habituate at the same the by the Prince and bombast which show they make Old Bourbon oat of Corn St Joseph is responsible for the following few weeks Messrs. Woodson of St shipped a hundred and twenty-five of Corn whiskey to parties in St It was delivered at that and the boat remaining there a two for a return tbe identical shipped there as Corn at the usual price for that were again placed on to come back having been in the as and While barrels were lying upon the one of the proprietors of the Sterling Mills of happened to be aboard of the when the Captain remarked to him that there same barrels that he had brought down ready shipped the brand having be Upon examination the private mark of Messrs. Woodson Co. was found upon Thus by a process known to dealers in St. and not laid down in the books upon this common Corn whisky was metamorphosed into and nir new Bun To in a late and ber a caU for a recipe I at the projecting power ef which with send one distances that of any piece of of wild blue flag as much At an of black cohosh three it has sent a 32-pound shot a of best let it stand a day or within a score of years established the greatest republic in the A hundred years ago there were but four newspapers iu engines had not been and railroads and telegraphs had not entered into the remotest conceptions of When we come to look back at it through the vista of history we find that the century which has passed has been allotted more important events in their bearing upon the of the worid than almost any other which has elapsed since the Pleasures of Holding one of the Editors of the at has thrown up lis position as chief clerk of the of the and returned to the He gives as his reasons for so what may not prove unprofitable food for the contemplation of many young men who look upon a Clerkship at Washington as a placo where fortunes are to be and eminent distinction He return with feelings of pleasure to the editorial after an absence of one A year in the public service at Washington has had the effect of convincing us that the private station is the post of pleasure and and we quit public office and without a single regret at the loss of its honors It seems strange that there should be such a fascination in those positions at Washington for the young men of our When they are but living gravosi in which the occupant buries his his and his No matter how how how he becomes metamorphosed into the pursuing the same never-changing until death sets him free No matter how the weary routine of official life upon his energies and It is enough to say that such a life did not suit and that we would while young and in sell out our future for an of per at the will of changing political two the last Westminster the following exquisite passage is old is the mellow autumn of a rich and glorious In the old nature has fulfilled her she loads him with her she fills him with the fruits of a well spent life and surrounded by his children and his children's she rocks him softly away to a grave to which he is followed with God forbid we should not call it but not the most beautifuL There is another rough and trodden with bleeding and aching the life of which the cross is the a battle which no follows this side the which the grave gapes to finish before the victory is and strange that it should be is the highest life of Look along the great names of there is none whose life has been other than iron The fence all the Pilgrims in rubbed rock is a ont Jw the touching it that are thrown of July Plymouth Rock is flw stone of the cellar wall of and the Liberty sits upon it with a sword in one aud the torch of freedom in the and if foes invade the shore of Plymouth at they never can in at low ley will throw this rock in their It ie a precious legacy the Past to the from it may be reckoned the Pilgrim's Evening ' Senator and the The senior of the at quite a likeness to and upon tms the of tSft New York Times tells the following who supposed he knew mine host very put up at the National the other Since this house has become the crack hotel at the it is quite full at this and the new comer was for the first sent to the upper floor to Coming down stairs the next a little ne met Cass who has a fine suit of in the stepped up to and in more and rapid than be if I'll stand it I You've put a the top of the somewhere lower interposing and you are mistaken in the person you are I am General of your Gen. it was my old friend Beg a thousand All a all a I assure General passed out of the but soon and as luck would have the stranger met him full in the face bnt in another This time he was he had just gone out So the stranger ped boldly slapped the General heartily and familiarly on the Tve got a rich sell to I met old Cass up just thought it was and began cursing him about my young you've met old Gats and hasn't been heard of than the of the Irish take a three times a day till nearly Then taper off gradually to one a day This is also it body has heard of the Italian who is creating such a as a Her fame is perhaps only second to that of Jenny the Indianapolis Citizen gives her the following first rate the celebrated Tuscan will be in Cincinnati on the 23d and 24tb. The translated into the Hoosier the are on the qui vive are keeping their eyes for this celebrated cantatrice donna assoluta absolutely an A No. 1 She is bound to create n furore amiable It is thought that the hearing her will be about a that is for a front seat If v wants to hear he or she will have to be quick about it and secure reserved as the onto to love and to pay dear for are taking all the best al in musical a she soft soaps her and sings i as doable without getting into the J into a Her she makes her voice are about as musical as a Bnt we shall to and not pursue this criticism furthen for no person who ip not au fati to iu musical is to dot to the it to that her always an encore it some more J and invariably bring down the we assure our timid it is a figurative foe tbe general the Kanawha Valley Star tells the following quite in an i a miose not make and solicited him to parchase a The man refused and gave as hia reason for so that he had he could not The that he was a married maOi ud he had no became to leave 00 of his Bibles with and not being bim offered to The down and seemed to ponder on Um to take to The it home read a She very and gave it only about half the book was the tbe other half was something The and went in search of the that he had boA was only latd iron and are starch is is There U no animation