Watertown Chronicle (Newspaper) - January 5, 1853, Watertown, Wisconsin Y VOiL 80 JANUARY 5 1853 WHOLE NO 290 J A nock STORY of i SO S 00 e An additional 85 will be charged when iho paper delivered by the carrier One per year including paper 00 JJ column column rj orlem insertion SO For ouch insertion sa at rates law No ur discontinued until ar enrages are paid nl opium and other must Flnt Snow Fall SEABURG Notary Public and Lund Agent Win BRADLEY NOYES M O 7 Physician anil Surgeon Beaver tf H BOURNE Dealer in General Dry Goods and ionn Corner of Main nnd first streets L E BOOMER And at in D Jones Block W C M D in the Empire Block Win PORTER fc Proprietors of tlic United Slaten Hold Fox Dodge co D F WEYMOUTH Attorney nnd Counsellor nt Law Solicitor in ry and Notary Public Counsellor at ry and Notary Public WILLIAM BUTCHER Attorney awl Counsellor at taw and eery Milford co Si BAIRD Attorneys and at Low Dodge Dodge co FOUNTAIN ami Druggist and dealer in Paints Oils Dye Stuffs Attorney and Councilor Law Palmyra All to liis care and at- tended to Address JUDSON PRENTICE Surveyor of Dodge eo All to bin care promptly and correctly attended to P T J JONES Dealer in Dry Shelf Ware Ratu and Boots Shoes Leather ol tho One Price Store west of the CHARLES AIKEN will attend the Circuit and Supreme ConrtH of the state if Residence Little Green Lake co Ti chorab 5S J A HADLEY Deputy Clerk Circuit and Counly of ferson countv Declarations of intention taken is also iho acknowledgment ot deeds and other instruments PETERSON b MALDANER Dealers in Dry Groceries Crockery Booki nml Stationery Wines nnd Liquors Hardware Carpenters and Coopers Tools Nails Sash Glass Putty at the Dutch JACOB J EN OS Attorney and Counsellor at Law and Commissioner to take the proof of Deeds and other under seal to be used or recorded in the Mate of New York over Store W WH Candle Manufactory iho thai they arc manufacturing of TALLOW CANDLES Main ofthe river and ad or groin ared to do an unlimited amount of Merchant orn work Merchants anil having tlic addition of another Tha MOW had begun in the glooming And busily all tho night Had been heaping field and highway W ith a deep and Every pine nnd fir anil hemlock Wore ermine too dear for an earl And tho poorest twig ou an elm tree Was ridged inch deep with From sheds now roofed with Carara Came chanticleer's muffled crow j The were o swan's Ami fluttered dow n the snow I thought of a mound In sweet Auburn Where a little stood How the were folding it gently Ai did tlm In the wood Up spoke oar little Mable Saying Father what makes it 7 And 1 told of the good Allfather cares for us below Again I looked at the snow fall And thought of tho leaden sky That arched o'er oor first groat sorrow When thai mound high I remember the gradual That fell Jrom the cloud like snow Flake by Rake healing and hiding Tho scar of that deep stabbed woe And again o the child I whispered The enow that all Darling the merciful Father Alone can make it fall Then with eyes that saw not I kissed her And nhe kissing back could not know That MY kiss was given to her sister Folded close under tho snow arc prep to store cun bo id a market in Tor live Corn nnd Oats N C Sept 1852 Book OX tlic 1 8th insl nl sonic point between the tlic to Sr to and in Ti K Cut in Also Snitch from Mr Lecture OB Australia The following stolen of the lecture which Mr Meagher delivered before the young men's association on tho 7th waa made when the lecture was delivered in New York It will give reader but a very imperfect idea of the eloquent ner Tho great clock of the ticks in- audible in its inner court there at its ease hour after hour as if nothing apacial fur it or the world were passing The secrets of those eight grim towers are not ed Those two cannon there mounted wilh ancient gilt of his of am to Louis not yet soiled by touch of people haa nol yet stuck the green loaf in hia hat has not yet mounted the chair in the Palais Royale has not yet exclaimed we die like hunted sheep bounded into their bleating for cy where there is no Mirabeau has act jet exclaimed looking at the poor king entered with his jewels and his Behold the victim already adorned for the Marie Antoinette may still sit beneath canopy of purple velvet led with gulden liliet in the church of Notre Dame The nobles may still surround her in their black cloaks lace cravats ami feathered hats or trampling upon national cockade pledge her their swords in delirious festivities al Versailles Nut for another year will Madame do wife of the minister of foreign looking down from the gallery in the hall at Si Louis and checking the of Necker in her exultation whisper lo her You are wrong lo rejoice this much misery to France and lo ourselves The winds are slill in their but there are signs in the heavens and strange things have come to The parliament of Paris had passed a decree for the second lime against the tret tie catchet and for the recall of all exiled persons The Abbe de Sieyes had written erat are nothing What they to La Roche had interrupted the ol Aix who had said that tithes offerings of Christian piety ing the spontaneous offerings of Christian which there are now forty thous and law suits In thia realm The ora wore heard lo applaud in of rights drawn up by The had evacuated the city of New York The officers who served under fayette at and hat returned been every receiv ed with by philosophers Find ladies Necker hat recalled from exile and instructed to re pair the finances of the kingdom There was an enormous deficit in the so enormous lhal it Wiis called and just sale nt ASH nnd tlw for green H Jc Co CONCENTRATED Ac 12 old whiskey cheap by the bbl or gallon at the 369 New DUTCH T DRESS now JU just received of 5 article at For wear L KEGS Pore and Extra Leads 1 Linseed and 30 Paint tor sale cheap at the 269 DUTCH STUBS nnd ic for sale very low nt cotl JADTE6 Collars myi While dangerous path still before him But be- tween the waves which wets the rock upon which he first sprung there He haa reached the trees He grasps first swings himself to ond men to the third He haa gone The moving speck is lost in tha darkness of those Aipe Is that a The waves rocks are trees moan only when the storm is coming on towards the towards the no get lhan hand yet more distinct than cloud or silently far up there in the azure the climber has tupped the wall has mauled the eagle from his throne and now looks down upon and fur and wide mlo the hind they call ia him in the circling brest lies a noble lake mirroring the green glands which sleep in flowers upon its breast the black swans that sail across it uttering cries so mournful and musical and emu that speeds along fleetly lian the wild that ship with its white wings furled and lho red ng from peak which disappeared through lho gateway roek It is year twelve out charge of Capt Philip with six hundred on board and a guard of marines I wo hundred and fifty On of January 1788 the captain landed ran up the English ensign and read the tion constituting the colony of New South Eighteen years before Capt Conk casting anchor in a bay a few miles farther to the south possession of whole of the eastern coast in the name of George third king of Great Britain de- fender of the faith Mr Meagher then proceeded to give a graphic sketch of rise and progress of the colony up to the present day which dis- played the most minute research He ex- the tyranny practised in the early histo- ry of the colony until its power nnd ces have became gradually developed and il ban outgrown oppression and is in the of asserting its independence Mr Meagher then gave a plowing tion of the gold discovery He proceeded as Through that gateway in the rock ing steals fragrant with the flowers of the coral isles through which he tripped along the waters ofthe wild birds are on the native dog slinks away in the cold light to his hiding place among the dead trees The sleeper and Iho that is softer than ed regions of Arcadia moro fruitful lhan the sunny island from whose fields the daughter of Vesta wove her fairest garland but Ilia brow is hia eye inflamed his pulse beats anxiety impatience bewilderment a worid of care and wonder ia written in his look He has dreamt of gold Along thai road over blue mountains where a few years since a little band of brave in search of pasture for their sheep a multitude denser and more motley than that which treads the sands lo Mecca move on And now that river where the seamen the Calcutta a few years since had picked up glittering at cms but threw them away thinking it was mica ships straining with richer burdens than the Venetian aver bore are sing out lo sea With respect to thia dis- covery all the credit of it is due to Mr groves a colonist of New South Wales who his return from California at the end of IESO being greatly struck with the analogy lhal appeared to exist in the geological ture of the two countries was induced to en- the inquiry that lead to the ry The value of exports from tho port Melbourne from the gold discovery in No- 1851 amounted to ex- in value all gold imported into Europe from Mexico and South America in 11188 In 1812 the colony contained only souls acres in and under pasture Now it haa 000 of free people an export of an import of has some say sheep and for the discharge of her debts and liabilities bars upon barb of yellow metal piled in her mountains Yet with all this she is not at rest The led hand of England ia upon her Years they have petitioned and protested over and over again against of terrible and incalculable wrong of ing this fair land a penal in The curse continues the pestilence becomes intolerable In 1851 the five Wales Port Philip Auslralia New Zealand and Van Land entered in- to a solemn league ami covenant binding one lo Ibe other to resist by every means wilhin power the transportation of criminals to their They The convict officers and their as they aro it as a l does look as if it was copied from ling of Honor and victory His in a holy var crest of a full of us promise One of these To you the citizens of it be pleasing indeed to behold republic rising up to share with you the labors and of a future before which the con- of old-world shall be humbled and in light of which humanity shall grow strong if you had a secret In- of gone down to the goldon Pacific and ed as a bridesmaid in her jewels your est daughter has awaited the coming of the bridegroom The new comar traces hia de- scent which given lo you the tongue speak and sounder portions of the laws you reverence The now comer has had trials similar to those which taxed and roused the age of your The new comer has wealth and enterprise and growing tlie faculties qualify her lo enter wilhi you into relations of statesmanship and com- merce In these new communities ity restores itself One fair towards close of last summer 1 stood in a field that overlooked Hudson I struck with the ii per ess of the fruit which waived around me ami an delight It ed to me the most glorious I had seen many moat glorious winch the could bring forth That said one who by came from Egypt It ttad baen buried in the tombs of the lain with dead two years But ped in and locked within the amid il dies not Il lived in the under ly with death and now lhat the duut of kings has been dis- that they have been called und they elir thai the bandages have been removed and they see the seed gives forth life and fields rejoice in its And thus it is lhat the energies the in- the faith all the vitalities which have been crushed elsewhere have been en- tombed elsewhere in these virgin sails re- vive and thai which seemed moral becomes imperishable And it in the seed will multiply and borne back to the ancient land will make tho rejoice Children of the old world be of good Whilst in the homes of the Rhine the Seino the Danube and the the homes you have left the wicked seemed to prosper and spurious provide for offspring of the tyrant even to tho third and fourth Freedom strengthens herself in these new lands and in the midst of l 13 concentrates power by which the captive shall be redeemed and evil lord destroyed and lisk of the ev ia brought to a close I have said all which in a reasonable length of lime could be eaid upon subject I ventured lo place before you There are subjects which I might have chosen which might have ed mo you to me a source of less embarrassment There is subject which is moro in unison wilh my own But thai sub- ject Is sacred to me from the ruins which en- compass it and the partial with which it is enshrined And nol until the light of a better day dawns it shall I chose it for a theme with which to awaken your pub lie sympathies AND REALITY My lady had on her side three idols first and foremost Jove and supreme ruler was her lord All wishes of his were laws with her If he had a headache she wus ill frowned she trembled If he joked she smiled and was charmed If he went a hunting she was always at the window to see him ride away her tle son crowing on her arm or watch till his return She made dishes for his spiced his wine for him made the toast for his tankard at fast hushed the house when he slept in his chair and watched for a look when he woke If my lord wus not a proud of his beauty my lady adored She clung to his arm as he paced the The Danger of beint the Cnr On one the emperor met net the favorite actor at the French theater which his brain could never master and in and topped to speak to him waa the better of tho two quite separate j A group of persona quickly formed and from my lord although tied to him and no had the emperor again find this worshipped being was bul a sy then to admit the silent truth that it was she was superior and not arch her master that she had thoughts bound almost all people save a very happy few to work all our life My lord sat in his chair laughing his than the police came up and took Vernet In nearest for having to the emperor Vernet needed but to write a line to the director of the to clear I I rt m VI laugh cracking his joke bis face up the but with lady in her place over a- j he delayed muted race her two fair round his great one little bunds clasped her eyes were Something was at hand The were moving The tnp of the j world with the five were a ready bid Yes even the Of field figure of on lhat tall lenl dim in thickening list Far down in their tigo prison had only another year o stand and the great clock which ticked at ile cane hour after as if tailing special for il or world wore ing i ar down heir vaults rs hear muffled din aa of an In other quarter of earl away in the lue solitudes the event ia aking place Through a narrow gateway n a black wall of rock six hundred feet in a ship ia disappearing One by one he white wings vanish and aa the wall ses in a red ribband fluttering in the air ells the name of the king of which she is he messenger The stranger haa id There ia nothing to be but the wall before you stretching to the north and south for miles and miles There ia nothing lo be heard but the dull sound ofthe ow waves an they roll in against the vast rampart and muttering for a moment roll back again in the solitude of the Spring upon that rock that tough root above your footing a wall grown higher since you yon gaze upon it it lee it There life in black It the solitary Steady real a moment longer Tighten your hold the root Take heart the hunter of the along a more fatal path and the a crag nearer the Oa then apring to other Grasp the long to left aee lhat there? I too foot wa on your your hand in i you Now atab of it and you reach tars in undisputed hat destiny was pro pre have all her lay in the of her flocks ands through the streams af which hey drank Inevitable it is now The gold shortens road to it it by a thousand many superfluous ory chapters in her saved her perhaps many a a stag rering an exhausting Jolu which has caused many a toache has blistered many a hand has broken many a noble heart has wounded many a soul and clinging to it has brought the dust gold which has bought the integrity f the statesman and led wisdom captive which has silenced the longus of Hie and bought luscious flatteries ol poets gold for which in the gay of ashion many a fair and noble girl has ed the vow which her life to terness and locked upon hor radient neck the snake which her veina with ven om gold which has into the councils of the nation haa bred dissension among her chiefs has broken the seal moat secrets has forced the gates o her strongest has bought evi dence which hurried her apostles to the scaf fold bought the votes which her inheritance to her glory to a people gold which has led the it nil or garden and with a kiss betray ed the of the world gold which in ao many haa stepped with a Ithir tread or rioted which ha the lever the madness the in turns and Jn quick apy the swindler the jof blight beauty the baia fountain er tired looking at his face und wondering ut its perfection Her little son was his son and had his father's look curly hair Her daughter Beatrix was i is daughter und had his were here ever such beautiful eyes in the All house wna arranged so as bring him ease anil give him pleasure he liked the gentry round about to come and pay him court never or admiration for herself those who wanted to be well with the Indy must ad- nire him Nol her dress she wear a gown to rags because he md once liked it nnd if he brought her i broach or n ribbon would prefer it to nil most articles in her wardrobe My lord went to London every year for six It was not till he was out of sight that her face showed any sorrow and what a joy when he came back What preparations before his The fond creature had his arm chair nt the chimney lo put the dren in it and took at them there No- body took bis place at the table but his gainst never suspecting that his superior was there in calm resigned of manner with down cast eyes Twits this no doubt that for sadness in lady eyes and the plaintive vibrations of her voice Who does know of eyes lighted by love once where the fiame shines no morel of lamps extinguished once erly trimmed and tended 1 Every man has such in his house Such mementos make our chambers look blank and such faces seen in a day oust a gloom upon our sunshine So oaths tually sworn and invocations of heaven nnd priestly ceremonies and fond belief and love so fond and faithful that it er doubted but that it should live forever are all of no avail toward making love it dies in spite of and nnd I often thought there should be a visitation of the sick for it arid n funeral service and an extreme unction and an dbi in pace It has its course like all mortal ning progress and decay It buds and it blooms out into sunshine and it ers and ends Strephon and Chloe apart join in a rupture and ently you hear that Chloe is crying and has broken his crook across her back Con you mend it so as to show no marks of rupture f Not all the priests of hymen not nil tlie incantations to the gods can make it whole Much of the quarrels anJ hatred arise married people come in my mind from the husband's rage nnd revolt at discovering that hist slave and low who is to minister to all his wishes and is lo honor and obey his superior arid that tie and not she to be subordinate of the twain and in these controversies I think lay the cause of my lord's anger against his lady When he left her she began to think for herself and her thoughts were not in his favor After the illumination when the ia put out that anon we spoke of and by the common daylight you look nt the picture what a daub it looks what a clumsy effigy How many men and wives come lo this knowledge think you And if it be painful for n woman to find herself united for life lo a boor and ordered to lave and honor a lard it is worse still for the man himself perhaps whenever in his dim sion the idea dawns that his alave and drudge yonder is in truth his superior that the woman who does his bidding nnd submits to hie humor should be his lord that she can think a thousand things be- yond the power of his and thai in yonder head on the pillow site to him lie a thousand feelings teries of thought latent scorns and lions whereof he only dimly perceives the existence as they took out furtively from lier treasures of love doomed lo ish without a hand to gather them sweet fancies and images of beauty that would grow and themselves into flowers bright wit thut would shine like it be brought into the sun and the tyrant in possession crushes the outbreak of all these drives them hack like slaves into the dungeon and darkness and chafes without that his prisoner is rebellious and his sworn subject undutiful nnd ry So the lamp was out in Castle wood hull and the lord and lady there saw each other as they were Wilh her illness and altered beauty my lord's fire for hia disappeared with his selfishness and lessness her foolish fiction of love and was rent away Henry Esmond IN Whitsuntide afternoon there are now to be suen in tho summer gardens of St Petersburg and wailed till the evening's performance be- gan before he informed Gen of hit mishap Of course carriage waa sent to fetch him to the theater where he to perform in the second piece On his arrival there the general bitterly re- him for having carried the joke ao far for having mined a and bly a delay in the performance be Informed him at the same time that he fined a week's Veinet said nothing bul began very deliberately to When it was time for the second piece to begin Vernet was not ready The imperial ly were among the the public grew restless Vernet not yet dressed The manager went to hurry him Vernet seemingly absorbed in thought merely repli ed with perfect coolness That cost me three Next came the inspector and urged him to baste Three hundred was the sole reply he obtained Finally Gan self camo to hurry the lardy actor over whelmed him with reproaches entreated swore stamped with his feet and curbed in all sorts of Vernet would not be put out of his way but continued quietly to lay on the rouge stepped back a pace to study the effect then returned lo the glass and touched up the paint looking all the while straight before him Ready at last he hurried past the general to the door of his there turning round said he do you know that cost me three hundred When Vernet stepped upon the stage ho was re- with murmurs But lie nol the man lo be disconcerted by them and he ed with more spirit and humor than The emperor laughed immoderately and knowing what had occurred that having heen carefully concealed from him he to console his favorite for bad re ception went behind the scones between the acts to him iii most friendly ner and him if he could not do linn a pleasure in return far all the amusement he had afforded him replied the actor greatest favor you can do ma is never o accost me again in the street The em- looked ed color Vernet proceeded to relate in a humorous strain adventure with the lice and concluded by pointing lo the eral and Sire to complete my fortune I am fined three hundred The emperor convulsed with laughter ried back to his box to tell the to the and next day Vernet received the receipt far tha fine nut of the imperial purse and in his name a costly diamond as from Si A MAN W ia a young nan in this town who aays ha mm wld man in New York who waa vary cal of bis and who conveyed ail wishes and intentions In shortest number of syllables a verbal contract for a lot of coal with a merchant in ville Pa to be delivered OB or before a tain day he became impatient thinking it high time for aim to the coal on railroad and wrote to him shortest letter that ever appeared before that lime t J C Which See my caul on semicolon The letter duly received and the ing returned SIB G H That is to aay Coal on your coal ia on the road The aborted ever written Kent vidit vici it no touch to er of them An old Indy who waa apt to be troubled in her and rather withal informed the parson of pamh that oo a night aha dreamed ahc saw hor grandmother who had been dead for ten clergyman asked she had been eating O ualy half a said he if you had devoured tho er half you might probably bavo acoo your grandfather too A tall man who given to was told by a medical friend ho was ing by incites Thank Heaven said he I measure six feet and seven inches Advice for Winter daughters of the middling class ranged in long rows dressed in best and with cosily jowels Matrimony IB object of the display Uoung bachelors walk up and down tha line of damsels cally them as they pass Should their eye indicate that they have made a choice a friend of the young lady's slaps out of the rear rank joins the would be wooer informing him of the girl's circumstanced of her dowery of her housewifely qualities eel and obtains from him simitar information concerning himself Should they come to an understanding the match maker conducts her candidate to mother who hiin to her daughter invites him to her house and a wedding is the most usual result of the acquaintance thus Some may smile at this fact but the cynical will declare that tho tom is in reality by no means peculiar lo Russia silver tankard stood lore was present there as when my In a couple of years after that ty had befallen which had robbed lady Castlewood of a very littl Before long says Mrs Dennison of the Olive Branch we shall hear the of old bagpipes Up street and down he will go like an itinerant organ grinder There is no gelling rid of him with nies or silver or gold Still he has been known to leave the miserable cottage at sight of all three and if you would keep him dancing attendance only on red coal a warming his toes at lighted window panes or rubbing his fingers into crevices that let warm out put a of this magic preventive on the aill of every poor man's door Our word for it old winter will tune bis bagpipes 19 the sweetest music Ami now a little advice which give free of charge Or you may reward ua I'D that we'll take any quantity in exchange for our goods The cellars are hungry about this time and should be fed so lay in a good stock of wood coat and a large share of good nature They together grandly especially on a cold winter's day Gel just as many apples aa you can possibly afford nnd store them up with any quantity of cheerfulness You will appreciate them treat whan the old bagpipes play under your window and grand chinery in the upper air ie weaving shawls wrappers and ribbons and caps and threat cants for dame nature's shivering children If you have a merry company around you if eyes sparkle and cheeks glow and mother and Combustion Prof Graham of London tlic ahlo made a report to I he of tlic board trade on of of Ilia Amazon recently in a number of our foreign lla of thu of tlic in ono ruoin near of Tow or wasin with oil o lho rapidly [Jo haK known of dust also covered willi be Fires in oil stores engine be caused by such means Ground coal and lamp black if any oil to them should never be admit toil as whip's stores Oil cans and those containing pentine should never be slowed in a warm place as the liquid one volume in thirty by a rise of sixty ture A moderate beat the dency of coals to spontaneous combustion coals have taken fire in more than ono in- stance by being heaped against a heated wall The covering of wood with iron to protect it from lire is a dangerous practice for lho iron is a good conductor of beat and iho wood below it healed nearly as much at if it were not covered Wood by repeated ia brought to an extraordinary de- gree of and is liable to ignition Wood frequently ig- by long contact with iron pipes which conveyed hot water for healing Coals should be taken on board of a steamboat in a dry state and an vapor alwart rices before spontaneously they once he turned over when this vapor is Tim oil of gives vapor sufficiently il when heated to one hundred ami tun if mixed with air will contact with the flame of a Newly painted or tarred wood in to ho very quickly when exposed to of heat of two hundred nnd depress some lime and then with H ed lamp great care kbould be by loading in respect to stores which are liable to ignite spontaneously following is clipped from the Now York Tribune of the nit Wo have heard nays tho Re- public uf experiments with similar result in this city If tho thing is at all it must be through somo natural law Singular results are obtained in thin city from a very application of nervous fluid animal magnetism or whatever be lho to brute matter Let a parly of six or eight sit around a common pine table for twenty minutes to a half an hour with the palms of the hands held flat on top of the ia not ary that their minds should pay any attention to the and grandmother while you hold 1 or tho ordinary conversation bo Ihc newspaper snuggled down in thai cozy presently the becomes ao armchair and enjoying the small talk whal a happy being you are How good the roast apples smell I Down cotne the cumson all over them gold haa ft and joy and into a her beauty and her careless husband's heart if must be told my lady had found not only that her reign was r but that her successor appointed She hnd in that time at people do who suffer silently great mental pain antl learned much that she had never before She was taught by hitler teacher Misfortune A child mother of other children but two years back her lord was a God to her his words iher law his smiles her his zy commonplaces listened to eagerly if were words his wishes and freaks obeyed s devotion She had been my lord's chief slave and blind worshipper Some women besr further than this and submit not on- but unfaithfulness here this lady's allegiance had failed her Her spirit and disowned any mort First aKe to bear A CLEAR CASE OF Mr you said was in love do you know that reads a novel and writes poetry in hia day book when it should be Any other reason Yea sir without lather and very frequently mistakes tho of his coat fur the legs of his an error lhat he don't till to fallen the skirt his suspenders clear call next witness Stephen Hall a queer genius had made frequent lc hie troubled friend thai he would put an end to himself ing cold night he he would go out and freezo to death About o'clock he returned and snapping his relative the when 1 1 mean to lake a warmer than for A gentleman rode to a public house in the the TTi rjf i 11 l r a tie txA la ind e an oy an m otn te ore Quick Johny mother hand us the There all right at the baby's they are full of roast apples You shall have some Charley if mother don't say no Mother don't say so if it is baby's first in- to winter luxuries ao a bit of the yellow melts on his rosy lips He laughs and makes faces and every body else laughs and makes faces at him just for fun And outside old winter a flourish with hia bagpipes Hang up your golden by their crooked necks and at the same time hang up discontent by his crooked neck Don't cut Utter down tilt lie is needed far then quarter him and throw him to the If he strangle so much clear gain for have you nol heard belter is a dinner with herbs than a stalled ox and hatred List your doors and shut out wind and at the tame time shut envy nut of your heart Mend your and manners we were going to is room for improvement in every thing Lay in your sugar and and as much sweet per warranted nut to as will keep till spring Preserve y out peaches snd your equanimity Knep the mold from cheese your pork barrel and your memory the two former by being careful the latter by being Look over yoor and potatoes and overlook your your attention to ol your abundance to the poor By following these we will insure you a happy winter hargod with the mysterious fluid thai it be- to move Then rite from it away our chairs still holding you hands near hough it is not necessary to touch it and it ill urn around from end to end nnd even rapidly about the room without any agent on which excursions the ona mint bear it company or the current ia Token and the movement This ile experiment may easily be tried Il no faith and no outlay of physical or and the result with a table that is not too heavy fa pretty atire to fallow at least we have known of several n which it has been moat astonishingly The fact when ished must throw light on obscurities of mesmerism spiritual and all that unexplored of phenomena i I am replied the landlord my wife dead i an evidence of progress of a lain number of the Kentucky Tri- bune ia a copy of a of invitation to a ball not a hundred ia lhat la reaped iilly to attend a party at Ir T J i on of thia instant and we hope at youi will attend al 4 o'clock of rain very in their size from ona twenty-fifth to ono fourth of an inch in diameter In parting from the they precipitate decent till the resistance by tha air becomes equal lo their when they continue lo fall wilh uniform velocity which is therefore in a ratio to of Iho hence thunder and other showers in which tho aro pour down than a rain A drop of the part of an inch in falling through lho air would whon it had al uniform velocity only ft ly of feet and a half per while of in inch would acquire a ly of feet a half Chloroform is tu remove from the Tho hive a having n ow -i antl a al Tlic chloroform if put a lie Iwo cine of which to into contact with chloroform lube which not come into contact with the t small hole In the aide of tha box 4l owing inU the chamber ia Sited with fM they out into ft -i