You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Watertown Democrat

Show More

Other Editions of Watertown Democrat

Watertown Democrat Thursday, December 03, 1857,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, December 10, 1857,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, December 17, 1857,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, December 24, 1857,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, December 31, 1857,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, January 07, 1858,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Wednesday, January 13, 1858,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Wednesday, January 13, 1858,
Wisconsin

Watertown Democrat Thursday, January 21, 1858,
Wisconsin

Other Editions from Thursday, February 23, 1860

Appleton Motor Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Wisconsin

Pittsfield Berkshire County Eagle Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Massachusetts

Dawsons Fort Wayne Daily Times Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Indiana

Hornellsville Tribune Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
New York

New York Times Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
New York

Wellsboro Agitator Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Pennsylvania

Hamilton Weekly Hamilton Telegraph Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Ohio

Janesville Morning Gazette Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Wisconsin

Elyria Lorain County Eagle Thursday, February 23, 1860 ,
Ohio

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1860-02-23 for page-1
Watertown Democrat
Watertown Democrat

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Watertown Democrat

   Watertown Democrat (Newspaper) - February 23, 1860, Watertown, Wisconsin                                Watertown Jr EDITOR AND MORNING Second Story WATERTOWN WIS To WATERTOWN DEMO VOLUME YI WIS THURSDAY 23 1860 NUMBER 19 BLY IN ADVANCE OF ADVERTISING Eighth Cards One lines or t i Business Directory SAKLOW PEASE GREATEST MEDICAL I has located himself and is now prepared to on hand Bank of AJ OF THE AGE MR of has discovered in one of onr common pasture weeds a re- medy that EVERY KIND OF HUM OK from the i Worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple He has tried it in over eleven hundred eases and never foiled except in two cases both der humor lie hns now in his possession over one hundred certificates of its value all within twenty miles of Boston Two bottles are to cure a nursing sore mouth One to three bottles will euie the worst kind of bottles will clear the system of Two bottles are warranted to cure the worst canker in the mouth or stomach Three to five bottles are warranted to euro tho worst kind of Erysipelas One to two bottles are warranted to euro oil humor in the Eyes Two ure warranted to cure running o tho ears nnd blotches among the hair Four to Six bottles are warranted to cure cor- nnd ulcers One bottle will cure scaly eruption of the stin Two or three are warranted to cure worst kind of Two or bottles are warranted to cure the of rheumatism Three to four bottles ire warranted to cure eight bottles will cure the worst ii e i 4 always experienced from the first bottle nnd a perfect cure is warranted when the quantity is taken DEAE reputation of tho Medical iu all kind of humors is so well established bv the unanimous voice of all who have ever used it that I need not say thinz on the as the most skilful cians and the most careful Driifrgist in are unanimous in its praise In presenting the Medical Discovery to your notice I do it with a full knowledge of its tive power in relieving all and curing most ol those di-easos to which you arc so liable That most excruciating d to an THE LARK IN THE CAGE In tho city a lark against a wail Warbling out a cheerful Heedless of his cage's thrall Lark exclaimed a charming sparrow Lighting on a Prisoned in a space narrow thou sing so blithely still I Said the lark in accents ringing Sparrow I would you know That a lark in bondage singing Uulf forgets its wcory woe Sang not too hero in prisen Were 1 to escape borne day In the sky when I had risen Should I recollect my lay Soul confined in shell external Art thon not a radiant spark From tha spirit light supernal the lark Let thy spirit song to cheer thea In captivity arise till angels hear thee Chant it far above the skies AND A Mormonism is still in practical operation gst us On last Friday a tall with a complexion very LOVE At tho period when the Grenoble assembled at the Chateau de Vizille were preparing the revolution of 1789 Bernadotte then a seargent was quartered in that town tittle dreaming of his future eminence he passed his time between his ties in cards and He had ob- very few or rather none ol j house over with a view to considerable reputation among his he must by no means stop here of the material necessary to the comrades for his success in the latter art completeness of his domestic felicity best as the Thoughts on the Cause of the speech on the American Con- ciliation and on the Nabob of Debt Fox's Speech on the g that tripe Scrutiny the first part he i from with a couple pore over until he has n by heart On but his flack too smill tho Russian Armament and On the lo start with held forth as with one or two to an audience at a If The Sea is r jovial comrade He laughs wherever he goes His in the dimpling lines wrinkle hale repose t He himself down ut the leet of the bun Ami shakes ail over glee he would be a great orator he must go at once to the fountain head and be familiar every one of the orations of I fur granted that he knows those of Cicero by heart they are very beautiful but not very useful perhaps the Milo pro and one or two more but the His and made it a point of honor to sustain it text was Men is and Weemen is Plenty Brothern and the Sistern I want to say a few words about for my own sake but for yourn or men it and weemen An opportunity presented itself on the mous day of the tiles On day as is well known the women of Grenoble Greek must positively be the model and tis plenty merely it as bovs do to know the Mormonism is on that high old do at all he must enter principle which sez that H ami good for into the spirit of each speech thoroughly man to be alone and a mighty worse know the position of the parties follow for a woman Therefore if a own feels each turn of the argument and make the I good a company a good deal of d most chaste and H ought to make him feel an absolutely perfect an severe composition familiar to his mind His taste will improve every time lie billows foil faint on the arij repeats to for he should better The first principle of Mormonism is that woman air a yood tiling and the sec Cash 25.1854 Itf INSURANCE AGENCY CO N Y 300.000 8300.000 VT well established T Ull take nsl The will bhow of its consisting principally ol of iTre on all k of of the Company will thow the flourishing Mortgages m city worth amount Western Insurance and Trust Co CAPITAL Sse y C C- The Metropolitan Insurance Company NOW above Companies have complied IB cured as ii by n miracle your own temper is restored to its sweetness your from short nnd fret fill naps to calm and sweet and the Medical Discovery becomes iv fountain of blessing to your husband hold n the more advanced stapes 01 CANKER it extends to the stomach canning which is nothing but canker cm then to the mid creating n sinking crone and an enco even to tbe cares of your family INFLAMED Your food distresses 3 on and you cun only take certain kinds and even of does flourishing I not wet half the nourishment it contains as the i fluid of tho it up then loses its bloom low or greenish and your best day i nourishment your system becomes oq and U-c of your I follow a train 01 diseases I is peculiarly adapted to CURE tation of the heart pain in the the spine and small of the pain ot ip joint when you retire irregularity of tao bowels and also excruciating of dia eases tho PILES How thousands of yoor women are away a shore In the mirth of the mighty Sea 1 But the Wind is snd and restless And cursed with inward pain You may hark you will by valley or till But yon hear him still lie wails en lie barren mountains And shrieks on the wintry lie sobs in the and moans in tha And all over the tree Welcome aic both voices And I know not which is The laughter from the Ocean's hpi Or vV ind's unrtst There's a pang in rejoicing A iov in of pain And the Wind that saddens the Sea dens Are sinking the LAUGHTER LW I V I have all the fine passages by heart and ood principle is that you can t too he will learn how much may be done bj much of a good thing Wome is and a than a man and is necessary to smooth In roughness of hw character and good many pints a skillful use of a few words rejection of all superfluities view 1 hold a familiar knowledge of Dante jns a to be next to Demosthenes It is in lie t wome j to say that imitations of these models too much to do but sat each one to work won't do for our times First I do not some pint counsel anv imitation but only an over for you of the same spirit I or lm experience that nothing is half j for my good but for yourn for men so successful in these times f bad though ls they be as what has been formed on the i sald tenderer than man Greek models I usS a very poor instance I you needn't fee stuck up about it for own experience but I do i to be she was SC mounted on the roofs of their houses sailed the royal troops with a shower of tiles Bernadotte being engaged with his regiment in Rue was struck on the head by one of these projectiles and fell Ha was at first thought to be dead but manifesting some symptoms of life he was conveyed into a neighboring cafe and kid upon a table which is still preserved and shown He was not ever destined to the fate of Pyrrhus By degrees he began to recover and opening his eyes saw among the crowd who were L i f Lave tendering assistance a fair young 1 whose bright blue ware suffused tears and whose emotion was manifest the pain he appeared to suffer He raised awful sight Oh who can the worth Of sunny eyed and dimpled mirth How desolate would be the earth If it were not for Of nil the cures by man possessed To cheer the by grief oppressed none hath is That cun to laughter So for each ye endure Unless ye nourish it Ye have hand an easy cure Ha 1 ha 1 tis laughter Tin good for young tis good for rH It is more precious far than gold Then lough as long as you can hold for jolly laughter very poo in giving my own experience assure you that bolh in courts of law Parliament and even to mobs I have never made so much play to use a very modern phrase as when I was almost translating from the Greek I composed tho peroration of my speech for the Queen in the Lards reading and repealing Demosthenes for himself on his elbow and gazing at her seemed struck with her beau- ty After a little lime finding himself better he called for a of brandy and his regiment Quiet being at left no means unemployed to discover the fair unknown For three weeks he continued his romantic search when one day while pensively walking But how was she mada so Where did she gat it from 1 Why was ted out of the sidebone of a man and the ot a man is like tha of a part of Therefore as a women has three and a man only onu of courte bound to repay that tenderness h ing He watched her home and ing the next day found tha means of ob- access to her house and declaring i OF After tha treat of Tilik Uve loftiest the world Enthroned amid of tha most magnificent court of Europe he was virtually master of an ing the face ot with the exception of Russia Turkey aod with those two powers he waa on terms of cordial alliance To every knows reserved the imperial throne of France comprising fue France of the present day Belgium Piedmont and at one time tha whole of Northern Italy and part of many On his brothers and respectively the diadems of land Naples Spain Westphalia and whilst his Eugene he appointed viceroy of ludy Yet with this dominion he wat discontented As long as he had no sue to transmit to posterity ho fancied his power To con- solidate his throne then and to gratify the ambitious yearnings of his heart La formed the project of an alliance with tin imperial family of Austria And to this he discarded Josephine his long and faithful wife She retired to Malmaison a powerless ing woman a cast-off favorite without political friends or influence And he continued o rule the very emblem of power all Europe at his feet Millions of men ready to carry out his tightest caprice and his throne firmer than Gibraltar Who then would hare dreamed of the re- that time held in reserve A few short years more and Napoleon lay chained to St Helena's rock and Josephine lay sleeping peacefully beneath the sod The rule of the wfs over sceptres of France Belgium Holland Spain Italy and Westphalia had been transferred to hostile hands The only scion of the great man fallen tha Duke de King of Rome roamed a virtual prisoner in kis grandfather's palace at Vienna him the of a malady to which ha was early doomed to fall a victim The family name of the ambitious Napoleon figured in none of the courts of Europe The children of the discarded Josephine on the other hand were rising into and forming alliances with tha proudest blood in Europe Her son Eugene ready allied to the royal house of Bavaria t- T ti f J A HIO vm T his love The girl was named j fey man wilh daughter of sho was a and about -n him of his 1 Why exactly as she robs his pockets nowadays of his loose took advantage of him when lor BROUGHAM In whilo was at i bridge University he the lion of Loid the present End Grey It appears that Lord Ho wick spoke to his faiher with the highest of and that through this j source Lord Brougham was made with tlie great ability and vast j three or four weeks and I composed it twenty times over at least and I certainly succeeded in very extraordinary degree and far above any merit of This leads me to remark that though with writing beforehand is very was asleep until the habit of easy speech is acquired i r I man so is man more than woman therefore I won't sny any tiling more about the sidebone or the small change but invite you all to jine ray she was a and about eighteen years of age But there was a rival in the young of the town Not knowing how to dispose of him and being violently in love spoke of marriage thinking by that means to overcome all difficulties But he failed But as woman is more tender than All of tlie Win H f W Sept 5 a d request the citizens v to give him a k M Goods comprising Bonnets Ribbons French America Plumes Beads Fancy she from this disease nd d their next door neig know the 1 wish to impress old proverb An ounce i is better then u pound of cure Tn the MEDICAL DISCOVERY you have both the pro vent at ivo his great and good quality that it will never un- der anv do you any injury No of diet ever the vou can net and enough of it DIRECTIONS KOR per d over ten dessert spoon hi 1 Children from five to years tea spoon till As no to all tions talto sufficient to operate on the bowels twice a day KENNEDY Wa- and by Druggists generally yet after that ha can never too much this is quite clear It is no doubt and it is more difficult be- yond comparison than but it is necessary to perfect oratory and at any rate it is necessary to acquire the j correct diction But I go further i and say even to the end of a man's life he must prepare word for word for most j of his finer passages Mow would he be a j i orator -In of the Ai almost absolute of lime he was plain Henry Brougham not d lo jn free country having been raised to the r iia ivills this r-n and Peerage for than yearn later Brougham than wrote a ble letter to his old friend in which he mentioned how ably the son had been spoken of to him by Lord Grey and and taking for granted that he was to the bar w f T i rt fie LU LIIO vi tram for I'm a big shepherd out our his love and his he must dered his advice touching the he does not en your mind in ounce of j should use to become a great lawyer and above all a great orator He said But what I wish to inculcate Truj fact that the famous to oration in defence of Queen Caroline in 1821 been composed over twenty times at least points out the moral of is worth at all is worth doing well and that nothing great can be by speech or pen without previous study fact is of itself a very serious preparation with a view to tho great talent for j elaborate advice lo public speaking which your son happily contrasted with the general possesses is that he should cultivate that of Lord oratory talent in the only way in which t can shows a man's precept may differ the place second i Hock on Second sliest reach the height of the art and I wish to turn his attention lo two points I speak on this subject with the both of experience and tion I have made it very much my study in theory have written a deal upon it which may never see the light and something which has been published have meditated much and conversed much on j from I ways way and fare sumptuously every day on purple and fine linen When 1 first landed on the shores of the Great Silt Lake I wasn't rich in I had but one poor but men is and woman and a shepherd I beyin lo mv flock Weemen heard of us and of our lovin ways and they kept a in They come from tho North and they coma from the South they come from tho East and they come from the West they coma from Europe they come from ey and a few of em come from and from bein the miserable owner of one old yoe I tha joyful shepherd of a mighty flock with aright smarc of friskier snd fatter than nny body else's and I've still got room for a few more As I said I'm not talkin tickler for my benefit but for men is and is plenty Still I'd a rather you'd go along with me than not your fat one Amelie loved neither the citizen hero but the first was a watch maker and the other nothing at even a king of Sweden She preferred the shop to tiie haversack and finance of tha When heard her decision his fury knew no bounds He rushed to the house of his pre- tentions to the hand of Amelie and his rival to the sword The maker was nothing loth snd the parties met The citizen little accustomed to the usa of the weapon was soon severely hastened house of his mistress He had been there but a few minutes and had even forgotten the occurrence which had just taken place when a loud knocking was heard at the door It was the wounded lie brought thither apparently in a dying state She was overwhelmed with grief and horror and turning to Bernadotte loaded him with the severest reproaches and drove him from the house He saw her for the last time In a month be- came the wife of the when he heard it determined to the King was living with law under the title of Dake of berg His eldest son Augustus married Donna Maria in 1835 His younger son Prince Maximilian ried in 1839 the daughter of the Emperor Nicholas of Russia The eldest daughter of Eugene Beauharnais Josephine ed Oscar afterwards King of Sweden son of Bernadotte and successor to his father in 1844 The second Eugenie married the Prince of it will be remembered are the reigning house of Prussia only the are descended from a younger son of Rodolphus II whilst the boast of from the eldest son The third daughter Amelie married Don the of Brazil And the surviving son Louis Napoleon is now seated more firmly than his ancle imperial throne of France Thus at the present day the dants of Josephine are allied lo the of three Russia and Brazil and three kingdoms Portugal and Sweden without mentioning the connection with and the of royalty in lialy and Hortense's reign in Holland better evidence could bo adduced of the vanity of even imperial precept may his practice Lord Brougham spoke with a full mind and Tlth Don t hesi fore was never unprepared but some of his best speeches could not hare been l 1 prepared fern the of the casion which produced them and these Pastures and the high g have electrified his auditors To spenk where eaPer Street Bridge Liver IT is compounded entirely from Gums and has become an established Standard ine known and by all that used it and is B now resorted to in all Q lor which U has cured two reMe in my possession The dose must the X ual taking it on the Let the dictates your judgment guide sands within the last it with men have had some little I practical in it pared for much more than tried by a variety of laborious methods reading writing much translation composing in foreign languages and I hare lived in times when there were great orators among us therefore I reckon opinion liko a book as Edward Everett or dell Phillips does is feat of high culture and though it but have may be who will call Inert bv fault of as a speaker was j that he would deliver an Edinburgh view article upon his legs It dazzled it j it did it make llis among his hearers his and voie years who lad given up all hopes of worth listening to and rather because f brilliant j in it myself T 1 lit 1 and should have saved a world of trouble and much time had I started with a viction of its truth illustrate you ir the use of Com- al Stomach i Cholera Cholera inn flatulence 1 and lie used successfully as Ordinary if two or three lilt art Fire Insurance Company HARTFORD INCORPORATED IN 1810 81 Total Liabilities 50 Total SI THIS Company half old of the oldest in the United States nnd oldest in 1 of in a safe ana cannot do better than to m- R MOTT Agent Agent for Charter Oak Life Insurance in twenty if two or three U taken of use it arc giving their tc r testimony in its Brougham then proceeds to by his own course how to become a great speaker The extract is long but by far too important to be mutilated by ment 1 The first point is this the ning of the art is to acquire habit of easy speaking and in whatever way this can be had which individual oratorical displays but mare oratory is not eloquence no more than the fiz and sparkles of a wheel constitute a A COMMON CASE chance while you can the cf lean you jrass show you may caper in tha sunshine and lay down iu pleasant places and as you are in pretty good condition already in course of lime you shall be tho fattest of the flock Jine in jine in jino my train jine it now for men is and weemen is plenty Tha appeal was irresistible At the fat woman with the inoel had two or three others were on the fence with decided toward tbe Shepherd Jor AND is much com- fort iu the world of Qod and as much beauty in his works and as much ness in dispensations as admitted in- to the soul would inundate it with ec- stasy But many hearts are perverse There is more truth than poetry in the following sketch from the experiences of a country fact that more than they let gloomy thoughts and bitter one of that badly treated and worst paid j cies flow freely in and are almost jealous class of individuals would be willing to that a drop of strong consolation For Sale Mix Water in tJn and wallow both Price One per FAMILY CATHARTIC PILLS COM POUNDED FROM Pure Extracts and flit vp in Glat in any Pill is a gen tie but active Cathartic used in his practice 1 jthan twenty The in- from those who have the and the nation or accident will generally direct i on a stormy and may safely be allowed to do must be had Now I differ from Doctor want other doctors of rhetoric in say away off let him first of ali learn to speak easily and fluently as well as sensibly as he can no doubt but at any rate let him learu to speak This is to eloquence or good public i speaking what the being abla to talk in a child is to correct grammatical speech It is tha requisite foundation and on it you must build Moreover it can only be acquired young then let it by all means and at any sacrifice be hold of verify on oa The poor doctor is called from his bead hi with the stirring trickle through on this should deluge of Brethren il depends on which you to Ba satisfaction in their use forthwith But in acquiring it every sort a desirable and cheap of real estate of slovenly error will also be acquired It must be got by a habit of easy writing which Notice A Meeting ol fhc of Valley Company will bo held at the office of the in tho city or Milwaukee on the Wednesday succeeding the fifteenth day day of February next for the of for tho ensuing Br order of tlie Board of D C SMITH Secretary IS 1860 i C be done the in the reach of all Profession well that different Cathartics act on portions ot the tic with due fact been compounded from a of the more love of saving something at any are rate than of saying anything well lean and tie is needed you open wether you be in i tide of joy or It depends on to come right j whether your above or ka His child's j beneath whether your consolation or your i grief abounds Then why do you come He's They gin him num for How much have they given him 1 n deal Think he won't shoot her then to murder her husband and finally to blow out hia own Fortunately for his future be did neither Tha blue eyed heroine of thit alive decrepiJ wrinkled old woman a serrant at a com- mon inn and in a of abject poverty the circumstance many afterwards Ah said she in con- her story I douie better if I had married should have been a Queen now sir yes a Queen instead of waiting upon every body court and subjects and fine should have a Queen Ah I made a great sad mistake 1 I ought to have foreseen this for I asiura you sir Monsieur Bernadotte was oot common man I bad a kind of presentiment that something would what would you hare When we are young do not reflect wa are ambitious kingdoms and make fools of saying which she shed tears When asked whether had ever heird anything from him Never sir I have written to him teveral times since he became a king but has never retained any answer My band says it is because I did my letters Il very perhaps lie mny still feel annoyed at ray refusal If we were both fret again over it The Doctor pushes on through the In sickness we perceive our former faults snd wrong doings In sickness the mind and surveys itself with ment and regrets Us former Pliny said sickness was period of reflection and it would be well for us if we would on recovering I had any money I would go to Sweden Perhaps marry me or at anj rate give me his linen to mend Thai would be something after all From a diadem to a Love himself have conceived anything more romantic the most powerful of sata his whole heart on the hope of his family and and his object and all of in exile he leaves behind him but ona fickly son who flickers awhile and then dies out ingloriously leaving DO issue Whilst Josephens tha woman he discarded children seated in the palaces of kingdoms and And even when the indirect line of is restored to power it is reinstated in the person of whose descent from Josephine in both more direct and than from her ambitious and lord The only alliance which the can offset the ia the recent marring of Prince Napoleon to Uio daughter of Victor Emmanuel arid this was obtained solely through the intervention of a grand- son of Josephine 1 Such ia the of Y Putt OLD is said that dogs will eat everything except fox aai raven There are exceptions however one of ours old ed a raven with much gusto some ago All the other allowed harness to ba taken off they brought on board but old Jack will Mt permit himself to be unrobed when be very plainly threatens UM his teeth This canine oddity popular by constituting elf protecting head of the one of his tribe littered be took f t most uncomfortable position on top he caak our impromptu and prevented approach of all M A SMART Fox om A upon in meets with divers mishaps on the what we when sick and at length arrives at the house ot way the patient y He finds it all a light to bo seen Sylvius had ways ing a man fool He is a fool who seeks He knocks at the door but no answer that he is a fool who seeks He knocks furiously and at last a that which if found will do him more said proved hard cap appears at the chambet window and reading by a custom of talking much in j a woman's voice squeaks company bv in debating j Who's there with little attention to rule and j The doctor to be sure Yoi more love of saying something at any iary canal ana arc rate than of saying anything well lean leases where a suppose that more attention is paid to the matter ia to Pain and the manner of saying il yet still to say it ore r ttu whale from sudden cold easily ad libitum to be able to say what along course of you choose and whal you have to or this is tha Srst requisite to acquire which cry part Stama cJi Loint pain wight in all in Children nr Rheumatism Purifier of tho many to which flesh is heir too numerous to mention iu this advertisement tn 3 PRICE S DIMES The Liver and family nre by nnd sold by the nil S T W SANFORD M D everything sacrificed else must for the present be You sent for him Ob it's no matter doctor is better We got a little skeered kinder Gin him and he kinder sound but waked up How much did he swallow Only two drops Taint hurt him none Wonderful bad storm to night The doctor turns away buttoning up his overcoat under his throat to seek his larm than good he is it fool who having several ways to bring him lo his selects the worst one As mere erudition stands to real edge so does knowing stand to doing and being Action and stand above science Piety stands above theology a recent Arctic life Dr rui On I saw a curious instance of the sagacity of the Conscious that I was aiming at him he lucked hia tail under his cocked up his ears and endeavored to look M like hare as possible which is an animal com- worthless Another fact of kind occurred to me whilst being detained at a particular place where our favorite amusement was trapping wild Our mode of doing this was with a spring gun connected with a bail which touched produced explosion Ouis instance showed us that a fox from observation of a companions fate or from justice above jurisprudence health and experience bad gone dp to healing above medicine poesy tlie guni bit off the cord connected whl good freedom and above government Lieber 1 the next step is the grand vert this stylo of easy into chaste eloquence And hera there is but one rule I do earnestly entrant your son to and nightly before him the models First of all hs may look to the modern probably LM it will yon home again nrd tries to whistle away mortification acid anger whea tha voica Doctor 1 Doctor 1 What do you want You won't charge for the Purs truth like pure gold has been found unfit for circulation because men have discovered that it is far more con- venient to adulterate the truth than to re- fine themselves A man is the healthiest and tbe piest when he or happiness dogs bat for hii timely ou behalf of the I believe they would all been and devoured may do even than eat raven Jf Love of praise dwelli most in great and heroic spirits and it have generally most exquisite for it Libraries tbe shrines where all the of the ancient taints full of tnw virtue and that without delusion or are preserved and li is worthy of notice that are beat iq the of ment first are always batt dMt relate to mortality the bail and tha danger went and ate the meat in comfort And it is 4 common occurrence for fox to make a trench to tbe bait seite the bait and permit the charge to pass over his head Go down only upon one knee when yon aak the hand of young lady down on both If yon go p in to tbt boot It of Every taint ia and wha about be Tbe of III of England hat jurt ooma to warmly but on of who   

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!