Central Wisconsin, The (Newspaper) - November 15, 1860, Wausau, Wisconsin J W VOL 19 141 J W 4 U I H 11 V r K WAUSAU WHOLE HO 176 A JOH Printer an Aim give them I never the bit my heart warms to of An 014 OOM the press of notice i m county in Bit appointment A correspondent at Northern wa- tering thus bow ho onoe wt i twr I i ty M i i i j i j -j I it I U -i I i j t per not i lur Jones sixteen wait bant Vt thought that he would j suffered and was curod Down iu an inner of that At he WM VMM a flod it WM i worn the of tho it pressed to H you might turn each of its wrong out and discover therein yet that little contains kite history of a two volume sot in nonpareil solid I a of a it tolls where I wet my fate and a postscript in the tolls where our paths diverged She was fond of and correspondent though he hadn't thought of it dis- covered that hu had an ear but no voice Subsequent events led him to that his oars were much I But the nomination rival At had auj were from Ug died justice of the peace O youthful high ami boIJ That is tity brief sad story tolj v i n t 1 i r e D r y Mi r V J V K R L T M D thr G M i Mrs Captain Brown has ro- on account of her husband being hung in Virginia it fa said lots ijf wives of trying co persuade their poorer to pikes and Old tn CM a far mare down to him ia this catechism that he puts to a journeyman printer A sitting at the door 01 bis tavern ia tho PM by a tall thin Yankee who Lfl Wilt is emigrating westward on foot with a on dar over hut vat you want f Rest and ho printer and I V Yes supper and lodging if yoM A Jay vilte a few nights ago an was bidden of and remanded thought it hard that he be allowed rest in peace fellow years old the nonplussed his mother by it a man ia a Mister ain't a i according to tbe latest is a driving man He in puddling in stuncs and cash ia v i w longer proportionally than his was loud Well from long metro to short tho transposition to moot her by moonlight was quite natural In tha course of ono of those light in June T re- member the month perfectly am could the day were it gave her my and a ruby ring and a rod rose and gave me that glove you see there and said she'd always be my friend She is married now to a small lawyer in the of 111 t J replied you a peddler mit in your pack to stoal to sir Tarn no i A singing master too to A yat loves ta tc foot and hankies tor tan to make te shoes feet on the floor an4 the iMUf to the wife of try at county on Morts the 24 ult is til are A good adopted in other the oien are try again U in two permanent white torn what U now the State of the State born within Brut in my o sir or I shoes should have mended and has two and and the fever r i r soo anything in asked Briefless buc was the re- marries twice Kase he A H I- -I ut n vK v v r r r N vl r K i H of ay 30 hut a man chat iif a sf apt in ig as vre oar own it things go away then 3 it there ia a not on earth lion corn in near ripe it bows and than when grenn expended Is j is fur easier to i a knave than i like a gentleman would himself t ail he would to do that he to conceal Ft ivo our income in f n TTU shall purchase if in if j i i t ii i f ii s A r init 1 It i i r ii i i t I ommy my son what arc you your feet dangling in Trying to cold mrv so f more of those yon gave me day Why a young lady liko a of exchange she to bn when she arrives at Madam dragging in the mud what if u is i it fashion yon to remark 1 am my Nothing is remarkable I a in the contents of a barrel r by examining bend Franklin will Now to proceed to which it in shrs will mako her A MAX AND JOB YEARS OLD SAYS OF Ralph the Hill veteran has returned to his homo in Maine worse of his trip to Boston He writes a letter to the Boston Transcript describing his and thanking his friends for their courtesy and then adds following interesting account of Though I am in my one hundred a fifth year I run not past all fulness T split my own kindling wood and build my own fires I am the first nnc up in the morning and the first one in bed at night I never sleep or lay down in the day time bnt rise at five and retire at and this I continue summer and winter I have been temperate and for over thirty years I have tasted a drop of spirituous or even cider I was never in my life so as to require the attendance of a physician About twenty-five years ago I broke my thigh by failing on tho had a set it but this is the only time a ever attended mo I live on plain farmer's diet drink tea j and coffee and cat a very light per never eating meat after dinner f have no doubt it is owing to these abstemious and regular and the avoidance of medicine at all little book vat bodders the school until dey do vat you olvoost to got rid of Guess again sir no book agent A dentist the people's jaws at a dollar n snag and running mit my daughter I am no Phrenologist ton f Definite folks heads Jikxj so many No no Veil ten can yon be tell and you shall hare t best for supper a free a sent an to start mit in 4 aim nn disciple of Pans a professor the art pro serves all typographer aiyou Stone has country before right or know what they are OTer Ac it resident of the country under doctrine n Japan that through lite to be done is to be I and they State Se h reproach to the great the early ment anil Af i nan any other many to moth eave of Kentucky tbat of Danes had visited year 1060 and then visit this priest WM Marcus also slated that bolt mornin service ailments that prolonged I my life voted has been go for Washington for President and have voted at every Presidential election fince and hypo to vote at the next election Thia is tbe duty of ever freeman This letter which my iss written at my direction I hoy carefully read and approved and lign it with own hand A a man that print books and A man prints newspapers Jh ay ish it man newspapers Valk up a man votch prin Jab I vish I may be hot if I did not you vaa of a district schoolmaster who vorks for hottin around I vas him emotions of ats on seeing an Irishman are thus have never scon an Irishman without a series of emotions Whether he happens to be carrying the hod or making a speech whether he be breaking the head or ing the body of his friend whether he be clad in the national integument of corduroy the bar clime of he is still Many a poor woman I a nnd j finds nan dr him A a mtu of comes to it in a com lie not nn artist Ji n not ff is n t I 1 Ur I r jn th ing bnt A bod hrnak in of pit i V 11 venerable and j b flame Mint j i from tbn gentleman i wl and gushes of On oan insl snoa creature which can paint and play and dance it i a being who comfort and who can reason reflect snd feel and judge and who can assist him in if fairs lighten his sorrows purify his strengthen his principles ami educate bin children Such is the woman who w fit for a and the mistress of family i of former description may j figure in tbo room K and attention of tbo com- ia for to or to train up a a fly ym an ping A ho her nrl mend and of her on tbe tbo u is visit to heir apparent to the thn kingdom of the wich Islands Tho Ban antler date Kamnhnmoha is bb Tin lias woll nnd as highly with bis The wailed him skins symbolie in vency and the undiluted as gushing in his warm in bis as violent and unreasoning in his antagonism as when from the bosom of his mother isle be exhumed tbo succulent potato or it wielded the truculent or tw peaceful spade He is ari and a typo of tho race which has given to the world its no- orators poets i its loveliest women most mellifluous dialect and only bulls Ho is to bo Dr Cooper used to say tn hig Hov TO DO up often express a de- sire to how gloss produced on now linen bosoms and in dor to following Take of white gmn ble powder put it in pour pint or more of to desire let it stand all night in the morning from the cork A gum will dawns either white or of been washed i Syr you said the prisoner a the went you saw Why suspect him 5 my rooms without any rule without else to be obtained to the agent of tbe State Historical ciety who spont a with him published and will be iad in tbe of that de He was intelligent ed respected by all and laid down under the weight of more than years of worth This satisfied get a worth of hauy tiling for Tony humor will battle on the Is of Oot Gar engaged A wri present says I wen through tbe whole of the campaign ii I was present at Magen and was there foroe was estimated at The first which Taking of itans canie upon the surprise at three points of baa on the field a time the doubtful the itero in the and the enemy were driven back But ed to the charge and again the con- NOAT AND i ears as ow a book by the Name of the Decisif Battles Werry good The atween the and TOM SAYERS was Battle in in coarse arse Bin about and i test seemed suspended In: an even balance Three times Was tion of the taken and re- at the point of the But length after i 12 hours of hard the Neapolitans were routed on every side of the Garibaldians in killed and wounded was about that of the Neapolitans be- sides some prisoners The royalists in the engagement attempt- ed a but having failed it not likely wiu make Garibaldi has laurels and ad- they bad rmn islands and finally bad MO hickly populated country wl wople had received tUm them superior beina j tint several of their number together some Greek artisans and had been left there as a colony li this a rolic of the party Mexicans say visited them 400 renn before Cortex landed and them tho arts of life or it it a THR in TUB The Jews are active ia combining their strength in try A Board of delegates ot can Israelites has been Five new congregations hare during the year at Portland Oregon one at New wick N J one at St and two in New York The of consecrations of new rather exceeds the of worship have been at Fort Wayne Georgia Montreal Canada Pa lyn two at 6 I and three in New Only two books have ne in the Hebrew tongue in this the year There is said to be no si s n Morphy s mind to guide hji Jut that he makes them by iati won for The Too to Wun i on agin Won't be afraid young of a little dirt It dirt nothing at all offensive when viewed n little mi- kali upon that dirty on your coat and it undergoes n change soap Now t it with a littlo water an it is neither soup nor dirt That is not a vory odorous pile dirt yon Well scatter a little vor it and it is no longer you call dirty is worthy your as students of ry Analyse U t It will all itc into very makes broad and and a vcty I 1 II Jt ly parking f ffo i I 1 11 x whom nnd a idea of the wife of Irish who self hart given gratuitous bnt when Increased at ono day this week in worldly goods to think that 11 not tn giro ftir nothing 1 Oh I nay of lady that I Ing last night 80 all you were kissing dift if she her with or fuller's There is no tolling young what Is rfirt anil tin br ttr Absent on a of onoe fastened of prison lo him liko Fringe says kg wonld give naif ti an hM able to a jtan shin for a which makes it his home at ono f tho steam fire engine Louses in Chicago and wnich according the must be a He of- ten gives alarms runs to all the fires and Tribune says On night last this dog got up an especial on tbo apparent demand Nobody beard a bell or ia hoof but the dog insisted and kept up racket threatening to go nnd do rash if did not up ttmi fire at him but no iio bo still oyen turned him the house ah still ho and a dog way to be Finally o tho put to nn the forco th street and hoard for tho first tim tho Korth bejl A south at tbe time ir au of his ability a a Dixie's Landi The most popular tane since the publication of Old Folks at m the United States is the tion negro melody of Dixie's Land Throughout the Eastern States it is creating a perfect It is played and sung everywhere by brass binds string bands orchestras and is his tied by ragged urchins in the streets nnd by steamboats and forms one of the chief attractions iu the musical soirees of the parlor During the visit of the of to tho St Louis Fair it was alternated with Yankee God nnd the sound faintly too ly to call out tbe other machine on the south nnd west so tin U V Harris iu gKl to Jn out tile on street near all through the 01 that dog vote him a and fresh meat every day in the for the term of his natural life tt Throughout Missouri a total failure of to swarm he Summer just past is said to havi anil much peculation lit mime tiers wha a handed Ami who watched the f report that ittle bate worked the With Mid the don't never flame in- to tltn t did fed if from ktavtn ty ami hud multiplied not single swum has been observed of Philadelphia ed to the csn election fnr to tbe Hail airs of tho two At tho lute Douglas de- monstration at Indianapolis there wera eight brass bands with other in tho of this taking melody An is told in re regard to which lately at a St theatre The tra it when the curtain MB and the play Bnt the aud would not listen The cry o Dixie ran the house fron pit drowning the of the actor Ho made sovern to lie am left the The old manager With anger and in an excited voice exclaimed Gentlemen what means til this What do you on Well yon can't it md Dixie to night you'll auu If he calculates be does it after kk move Is made and if be pans as be- his moves it is to hai adversary in answer to a put to him he replied that the repression oh his mind after bk ad- move is made almost rays proved to be correct and that le played more by A sort of ion than from intellect So tree is bis that he is totally incapable ef the secret of his power to another person This power ap o other matters ng Mr Morphy was asked bow letters were in the nane of George Washington and without a moment's hesitation or calculation the correct answer sixteen WM given In reply to the question Mr Morphy said that he tbe com- bination by a kind of focal reflection is not ly an observance of the of society it is in reality ed on common sense and manly ing An uncourteous man is one of the greatest bores in tbe world He offends every body ami instead of be- ing treated with kindness and con- sideration by his neighbors be k generally intensely disliked and M language is sufficiently strong to ex- press his demerits To is simply to pay a proper to tho feelings of others A tho educated man is generally courteous The fact of his mind being liberalised teaches him the necessity of ing this virtue Benevolent men are always courteous tho desire to pleasure to others is sufficient ment for them to cultivate this good quality It is just As to be courteous as the reverse the time gone by when bluntness is taken an a lign of honesty It beeal found that dishonest men can blunt and AS well us turnout men and or deference to the feelings of others has to be a mark of A person who is habitually possesses but little ity nnu he nothing about wounding the feelings of others ex- cusing himself by that he ly he thinks No maw bound by any law to speak what he thinks is to put bis owa opinion whatever it may be to matter whether it wound nits of his dearest friend Of Ho retired to the snd he actor But it no use A for Dinie met him from rid after stuttering and stammering jr a few left the dropped the ami the piny ed further opinion n HT A of her Mid of am who lighter rest t thai brat he show mit rt It'll tbo truth bnt nan be done in a courteous will wound no one If sy were more practised it be of the Met Mutual all of be a edy than balf tbe now oppress as WHAT on m q nation by vote ot the of ples this to be With as King and T