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Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, August 18, 1841,
Ohio

Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, August 25, 1841,
Ohio

Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 01, 1841,
Ohio

Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 08, 1841,
Ohio

Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 08, 1841,
Ohio

Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 15, 1841,
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Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 22, 1841,
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Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, September 29, 1841,
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Norwalk Experiment Wednesday, October 06, 1841,
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Other Editions from Wednesday, January 03, 1844

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Maine

Lorain Republican Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Ohio

Tioga Eagle Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Pennsylvania

London Nonconformist Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

London Lloyd List Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

Commercial Daily List Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

London Morning Post Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

Church Intelligencer Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

Nonconformist Wednesday, January 03, 1844 ,
Middlesex

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Norwalk Experiment
Norwalk Experiment

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Norwalk Experiment

   Experiment, The (Newspaper) - January 3, 1844, Norwalk, Ohio                               S. L. HATCH J. M. 01- junior THE 21. HURON JANUARY 1844. WHOLE 437. poets tell us thut life is u Down which in youth all fully As brightly our tlie tbo bubbles oil the And that the bank are tunny Forever as ill summer But ah not lima has been youth tn ms Ka tlow crs li jx e bloomed along stream of life And if mv bark ruJe a quiet The too foan lias in iMer Ami niv as II dulli And Ule its But a a no river And men du as uben lime tlie Young People's THE adjust matter ami save the shedding or they had already measured the The Rev. Mr. was a veteran and were ready to place the erant preacher of the He relates sa'id of this ny incidents of his itinerant Among j dreadful deed he upon your own I them was the following I give in his j have acquitted myself of I then own words as much as fiom the area towards mv About four miles from an What my emotions as 1 turned FARMING IN What shall a as a do lo abolish it J It rests upon an accidental state of public a fictitious sentiment of Whose influence is mcire i the xx inter He has much lo do in the al in correcting or promoting such ler peculiar lo his his than Human laws have foiled to I in his in the woods and at the correct but Irer influence can do it. Let There is no need of his being He has the duelist as stained i a great deal to do for the promotion of his Let her repel him from her In the first place if the of OHIO 20. Petitions Mr. from the First Congregation of Free Will Huron for By the from Erie against thu running of Vet nut for a crown iif thai peanut to ue Hie immediately exc xx full a sterner a mile 1 well known as the scene of in What 1 thought must the as one who has escaped the the season him in let him think canal boats and other water craft on cral As 1 passed it one mottling i ei proceed Is there no expedient to Let her exert all the benign influence of her i a lucky for it is to the family j were severally and on my way to my appointment in that vent ill In a minutes otic or both virtues and her charms to bring into disgrace i that his and most important On motion of Mr. tho House 1 perceived among the trees a horse and these men may lie in accursed with I the murderous sentiment which tolerates a and 1 Let him took up the to repeal certain laws guarded by a solitary who the Can I not pluck them j and il cannot lie hing before the the first his friend and latins banking in and to revive and to be the My suspicions were as brands from the My spirit I lion the duellist and the assassin and let him thoughts and labors j extend the charters of certain hanks therein for the instruction and improvement of bis j In thu deep midnight and And I stern lot Hath been the of ilie The pily And danced MX portion it been tu and Amf struggle up life's a- n Hut il not The bow Of holy along And if fail and teurs Tim of u better day H And are nut as for no ray Of hope appears to clouded Sept. Iff but I rode About in a tumult of anxiety in a and will I met another con- just as the principals were taking j J four persons besides the and I was again on Standing i af Pete New hastening with all on the line between I -In 1 notorious My fears and I could the name of God 1 adjure you to stop this I for several years has been scarcely doubt that another scene of It must it 8lllh.v of Baring atrocities on tl was about to be enacted in those quiet him cried thu What was my duty in the 1 i der a fearful loo the tenacity of those exclaimed the appreciate and sentiments of honor which pre- but I demand of you to interfere no vailed in that section of the nnd I mote with our The seconds gave to the duel a character of i seized mis by the arms and compelled me lo ed to suppose that my Hut I warned them at every I could be yet I it my Never before did I feel so deeply ihe hazard duty to rebuke tho sin if I could not prevent I and value of thu human My remarks tge tlie curiosity of it j and in the name of ihe Lord I do were without except on ono of the it their curiosity of immediately wheeled about and returned friends of the younger is See that are well and tidily Sec that they go to and arc furnished suitable See thai their in useful ing and innocent amusements in- and citizens upon thu borders of i of I has al lasi come lo a violent On the 5lh a person against threats of press noi It is no failin stronger incentives and the most inent means to become learned and It Is generally from ignorance and in- difference or a that a mail of requested him to guard j I hastened my pace to escape the f i in or of Il is rather one 1 speed to the Tbu second carriage had arrived and 1 to a 1 rode attached my a horrible said cannot and he turned me from the then for cried one of the seconds near and throwing the driver a piece as he your commands his children to he or threading my way into the my them foi an improper and thoughts intensely agitated tu curiosity when about to present myself must and are not with the first 1'llu occasion admitted of I answer given must indued soon emerged into an oval space learn and use prudence and discretion in the surrounded on all sides In 1 company of who are not opposite extremity stood the on but on that of I boots drawn over their But guardians and j vests and hats eis would neglect lite best opportunity of their kerchiefs tied over and tightly if they love their children or it will be their pleasure to answer their not with a dry yes or bin in such a manner as will convey ihu them they will these opportunities of exercising the reflection of the child by en- belting their A friend and a surgeon conversing with while the seconds viete about midway between ing the dreadful Olio of the tho appeared but about years of His countenance expressive of but also it to propose questions on those of The other had a subjects with it is yet countenance but sinister and and he ed impatient to wreak his vengeance upon his I advanced immediately to the seconds and declared at once my character and ob- said my I am a minister of the I know not the merits of this but both my heart and my office require me lo bring a- boul a reconciliation between the parties if replied one of utmost has been done to effect without and this is no place to make farther any in any 1 is appropriate to prevent and in the sight of is the deed you are It must not In the name of the law prohibits the name of your the the name of God who looks down upon you in this solitary I you prevent it at at wash hands front the blood of these fiom the nnd refuse to in mutual My emphatic remonstrance had a tary They seemed not indisposed tu come lo if 1 could get the rence of the pi I passed to the oldest of And should these questions he of such a ture as should render their parents or in- unable lo tins should not make unwilling to confess ignorance upon the or to excuse the imperfections of human or to endeavor to make the en- that the answer to this question presupposes a knowledge which ho has nor can have at but that his application to the subject will bo well ed if he persevere The Lace that survives the tomb is one of the noblest of the If it has its it has likewise and when the hurst of is calmed into the gentle tear of then tho den anguish and the convulsive agony over the present ruins of all that we most is softened away into pensive meditation on all that was in the day of its Who would rnot such a sorrow from the that may sometimes a passing cloud over the bright hour of ga or spread a deeper sadness over the hour of yet who would exchange it ever for the song of sure or hutst of is a voice from the tomb than there is a remembrance of dead to wo turn even from lite charm of the thu next sound was lost in ihu explosion of the pistols 1 shrieked a voice of agony I The younger principal his hand to his came lo Whetstone's about twenty mile from and finding the door knocked for soon as Whetstone opened thu A the stranger a load of buckshot in his when Whetstone fell instantly Whetstone is to have robbed and killed more than twenty different sons within tlie last fifteen Ho was about sixty years of and was us a- gile as a and of an iron A citizen uf a rowly escaped being robbed and murdered by Pet some nine As hi riding along the Pete approached after presenting a demanded his money or preferring lo face shrieked and fell to the to llis ground I rushed to With ono hand he to the the fingers penetrating the while with the oilier he gasped his left which w as shattered with a horrid I turned with faintness from the Tho had passed through the of his crossing the ering the jugular and passing out the back part of the laying open one side of ihu and In this ghastly amid and shattered had he his grasp a tenacity which could not be Bleeding profusely and convulsive with he lay for al the most frightful I had ever The countenances of thu spectators expressed a conscious relief when it was announced by the surgeon death bad ended the derer and his parly lufl the One of thu company was despatched on mv horse to communicate the dreadful news The dead man was if blood and borne to tho cleansed from ately lo his I accompanied It stopped before a small hut elegant The drivel ran to the door and An elderly opened with frantic at the instant when we were lifting tho ly remains the She gazed for a as if and fell ing in the A servant moved into the and as passed with the and succeeded in after a chase of nine by making his horse jump a which the horse on which Whetstone was riding refused to Thu of are greatly re- at having gut rid of this Dec. 11. A melancholy case of is noticed in the Tho ceased u as a vonng man of named Robert C. aged 22 He was found dead in his roum at the chants Hu was of an find very sensitive On Thursday night in company with he into a difficulty led to a street and they all taken and put into the This with was duly published in one of the penny and it is supposed that this publication on nn ovor drove him to fatal act. He died from a large dusu of of Job The Iowa Standard of the This vidual who was lodged in Washington T. upon a of killing bogus lias been a lair and There were upwards of 50 witnesses at the manifested no as to his Lard Oil are at pre- sent 15 Lard Oil factories in in corps into a rear observed her sen. 10 UH in m ded on a as as her hapless i not supply a large ded on a as pale as her hapless We placed tho corpse on a the stiffened hand still grasping the when a young attired in and u iib a face delicately rushed into the room and her arms a- round weeping uncontrollable emo- and exclaiming with an agony of my dear Can il he The attendants bore her whose horse is that you are your daddy vou Uncle Pole Jonco aru the son of your I calculate 1 am. You see dad got lo he a and married ers so I reckon he's rny you are not far removed from a as aim more than three feel a- I think just as you Good Good You didn't come it that A hearted The Paris correspondent of the National Intelligencer that on the night of the 25th a farmhouse with nil its live His countenance became mole repulsive as I shall never forget the look of utter wretch 1 approached It was deeply pitted with the and there was upon it the most leer I ever saw on a human He had given the I edness she as they led her eves dissolving in and her bosom ed with her brothel's The unfortunate young man was of sought him by every consideration of j England Ho had settled in the town ity and morality to recall it. I referred of where his business had ihc youth and inexperience of his ed so well he invited bis mother and conciliatory disposition of the ter to reside with His borne endeared fearful consequences lo his by and temporal if he should and the withering remorse was a scene of unalloyed but in which must ever him if he should kill an evil hour he yielded lo a local absurd pre- the young He evidently thirsted fur sentiment of honor falsely so the blood of his hut observing which his education should have taught that his and the surgeon seconded my he with re- that he gave ihe challenge for ficient and that if those reasons him lo He was less excusable than his malicious for he lud more light and belter This one step ed him and his happy Ilo was in- he might recall but not the next day with the regrets of the whole 1 parsed to the I admonished him His poor mother never left the house till of the sin be was about to 1 re- she was carried lo the lo he laid by stock was by fire at furred to bis probable domestic and the side of her She died after a in the A girl Icn years old j the allusion touched his lie ious fever of two weeks throughout perished in the The calamity would ly wiped a tear from his said which she ceased not to implore the been much more terrible but for the most supernatural courage of the of tho Awakened from her sleep in a state of suffocation from tho smoke and ing her husband in the sarno she then carried him in her arms to a window at a further part of the and he was somewhat recovered induced him to make his escape through it. She then in like ner saved her upwards of years of and of her three She relumed for the but the poor child in seeking her safety in got in- volved and was Her body was after- wards found in ruins reduced lo a Scenes oil the kind of are hearts which would break if i with to her hapless son they knew I was I referred lo my with the seconds and the other and remarked that nothing was from hands of the she imagined kepi him concealed for their derous His sister lives but now necessary to effect a reconciliation poor and broken Her beauties and a retraction of the language which had of- energies have been wasted by and fended llis replied she is dependent on others for her daily planting bis foot firmly on the ground and i and Let the he de- to the duties of the and the calls uf social Having thing in order in the houso both as it respects tlie and in- wants let bis next at- bu devoted to the domestic animals of the bain and Sue that they aru well Keep thu stall Blanket ihu nnd if you do the same tn the so much the sure nf as warm a for Ilium as Give them straw beds to sleep Comfortable mals and give back thu best re- In the day time whun your children are at go into the and rut and out enough to keep a stuck of seasoned fuel This is Take an opportunity for good ing to convey to markut tu and tn miiko the necessary purchases for thu use of the In every farmer has enough lo do in and that xx ull done is often the most important nnd profitable labor of thu Keep do A letter from a person engaged in farming in ihu neighboring county nf says short limn since I was a tariff n friend of protective My ion is now 1 sue that its effect to levy contributions on the go into the pocket of ihu Thu same change which I bavo has also taken place among my and theie is now u tariff inuii among thn of Ulster We are much pained at finding tho tiller uf ihu suit su as this letter may ho objections to tbo present they must submit to it fur years tit The House bo in favor of mitigating but Ihu it is not consent lo tiny Within the next years farmers have an opportunity of thuir minds in philosophic which no doubt ilium to all of they Fur when they pay a round price fur a let them recollect that a liberal proportion of il goes lo help some sing of a build a did house and maintain a magnificent ibey calculate Ihu expense of their of let reflect that a part of it finds to the pockets of flourish on thu profits uf thuir iron minus and When they aiu templed to think sugar is lul reflect nearly half of what they pay fur it is a tax in favor of the When find themselves inclined lo grumble at the price of lut them sub- due I heir rising discontent by Ihu thought that xx hat is inconvenient for is fur c I for the good of When tbo are half inclined to think brats kettles loo let them remember that they aru j giving money to j it who driven their part of the domestic for but large aru large quantities atu shipped to New and other points at thu South and and a and heavy exists in New for ing the Woollen for purpose Lard Oil is admirably Seizure nf The of Philadelphia have made a seizure at a house in that city of two boxus a quantity worth About of counterfeit notes also some i oilier mailers of The entire apparatus belonged to a one of is in Eastern one and third at N. Y. j eign competitors out of thu market Ity the correspondent of the Intelligencer help ofthe Let in short Senate Chamber is to bo engraved after j coarser and buy of digraphs in ihe best style of and persuade their wives in patch their li m and These gentlemen have greater and in preparation a magnificent engraving ofthe give thanks that in a Senators in appropriate after the i paternal government home suming a look which would have been sub- lime in a better I have uttered nothing but the truth respecting that I have heard some uncertain reports of his the most probable of which that he died three years of yellow wood is cord replied the chopper greatest long has it been enquired the ious said the n sized ship do yon prefer al size a your and though I sink into the I will not I at New raging with tho horrors sanction character by a of Such way the local estimation of manner of some finest English This is a hold and beautiful and doubtless be Most miniatures fur this engraving obtained al gallery of these and theirs is an art arly suited lo the transfer of the strong aments of Senatorial The ving be a A ar- lisl is lo bo employed for An arc happy to re- cord instances as the Mr. Alfred of late firm of body of which firm promised their indebtedness in for ty cunts on the been recently Such are the philosophical considerations which duly and diligently applied by thu their hearts repine in secret at ihe apparent partiality and injustice uf thu reconcile them to their We shall take an have more to speak more at large of these considerations and their Bay Democrat Congressmen at ington sit upon splendid English at home they prate lo the ple home in- Our coon Representatives in ihe Ohio Mr. moved thai the the pending be indefinitely In support of this Mr. Exx ing spoke at in opposition lo ihu He That the repeals the existing on Second That it does not make the holders of. banks individually responsible for frauds and Third That it no provision for up the whole amount of capital stock in gold and before commencing Fourth It revives old banks thai haVe nnd repudiated Fifth That it confers upon exclusive and not ed by ihu and to the spirit of the Mr. his primary reason for op- posing the thu pending that it repeal the general on for protecting ihu people fiom bank Hanils and He spoke of tho immense losses people of this State had suffered fiom the failure of banks to pay their and the depreciation of the suspension of and gave a history of the course adopted by tho banks nf this state from an early Mi. Archbold Mr. E. in of length in favor of tho motion to postpone and against tho Mr. moved an adjournment j Mr. moved a call of the after having proceeded further proceedings under the call were dispensed The question on the indefinite ment of the being was Mr. Hawkins offered verbal a- which agreed Mr. moved lo amend Ijy inserting in the words gold and effect of which lie lo compel tho banks to have all their cap- ital slock paid in in gold Mr. Lawrence sustained bis amendment by some when the amendment was nays Mr. an amendment ing the individual for the debts of the Mr. Medbury moved on question the yeas and nays Tho House refused lo yeas nays Mr. moved a The question then taken on Mr. amendment and yeas nays as Fil- Martin nf White of and Clay Martin of White of and Mr. Lawrence offered an amendment viding for punishment in the to bu inflicted any director or officer who shall he convicted of embezzling the or fraudulently converting them to his Mr. Lawrence supported his amendment in a speech of considerable length by correct reasoning and great force of Mr. suggested that the for tho punishment of crimes would meet the case proposed lo be provided for by the and he referred lo the Statute ing the crime of Mr. supported the amendment at Mr. Sargent expressed himself in favor of the The best prayer that was I everi ing up the per cent. Mr. Joshua not wishing to be excelled in nf North patronizing the British 1 reasoned with increased but no appeal to his judgment or his heart could shake his desperate and I left him which I have nn doubt he would have shared under other circum- I What could I do farther 1 I pealed again to the first hut ho spurned mo with a cool I flew tn tho seconds and entreated them on any terms lo this bloody that scarcely an effort was I made to him lo Alas lor the 1 acknowledges tho receipt of Ofi from influence of It can lence by its dictates the laws of man and of and exalt murder to tho glory of Wreck af the of tho cers U. S. Steamship in a lettei to the True states that by menus with which they seal up the ments they send to their Such is the greatest curse that can fall any political is lo have among its of a it has been I and leading members a gang of eager When we how many hearts of cd that much whose whole souls seem to sisters and wives have been made ry is comparatively uninjured and he re- wrapped up in one of getting bleed shall ecd by this and deadly and that to tho amount ot j ccs or government we not invoke the influence of woman will be saved from the As true as Imt if the bankers would suffer to be tempted ho thought the dread of the halter would operate as a counteracting influence upon their The discussion ivas Messrs. Haw Coombs when tho question was nnd the ment nays After various other ineffectual attempts to the question was finally on tho the and as  

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