Whitewater Register (Newspaper) - June 30, 1860, Whitewater, Wisconsin Every H. Mo. will be to office and mail sub- 3 I to those receiving their Carrier 00 per n in OF 1 to one of make a 91) 2 50 3 00 4 9m 6m Iy 00 N 00 I 10 00 I 16 00 20 so j 4 oo f o oo I 8 ou j la ia obi 112 au j 25''6o 75" 00 ai must be the or they witt be ami f e- and 60 Marriage No- half to bn paid fctr in their the of thoir uiti te t fan charge will be for not connected sue per be addressed to H. lo Walworth Wis. VOL. 4. MX CALENDAR FOB 1800. JUNE 30, can a wife from her are permitted by and aro not particularly Ths tiro to their trado from boing generally well educated and arc often by most singular custom among women is that of blackening the and or pulling out brows thoy are women also tio thoir and glo women ty oa NO. 171. COOK 8HKDD. in Pry and Ware No. 2 Central Main 8tn.fl, 162 J. M. r 4 and Hook hours from 7 to 0 A. 1 to 3 nml 7 to 9 P. M. F. J. Civil Notary n will anil written Uko lodgments tu IM- in and as for Hf mm in the negotiation of anil of in thin nnd tho Office fit of 165 P. At tlie is to and do nil it Carpenter nn abort ami mi- or made to JAN FEU MAH MAY o d f 13 14 19 23 0 3 14 17 The Republican delegated of tho electors of the United ia Con front r ic tltn will a number on application to tier tit I he T. east HI do of tbo 144 M. m all V. it'S 1'nrpct ami variety of fancy Storo in 1J4 OP I anil at current witli A K. 8. M T over tho o. MHI A Co. 13Hni4 M. and f in Dry nml conn rof Main First i IIP of tho County in- of is of Intuit by tho ami of oi and the public I on corner of Whitewater 1 is now open for public to tho wants oi ri J. M. f .it f Wis. far attended 116 A ol all kindi of Woolen ds of 100 Walworth tin ncK S. Wis. lur nil kinds of Foundry Plows on Ml to u rt on a of the M. osilo md in iic Store ou Main t. of rlu Oih l Cots j and First I IH Foreign cf ilt jilt in jji of t. B. mil in imd store S Central Wain THOMAS of done to 011 nest door to Mf How 1.3___ A. -t in Foreign 47 vention in of the we owe to our nnd our unite in the lowing 1. That the history of tho nation during the last four hus fully established the propriety anil of tho and thut the canses which into arc permanent in their tint i nnd moro over demand its peaceful nnd con- a. That tho of the principles gated in of and in the Federal all men arc created equal that they are endowed by their tor with certain inalienable that those ore nnd of that to secure these are instil among deriving their jusit powers from tint consent of tho is essential to the preservation of our and that the Federal tho Rights of and the Union of the must and shall bo 3. That to the Union of the States this nation owes HH unprecedented in its development of material its rapid of its and its honor and wo hold in abhorrence all schemes for from whatever source they Ami wo congratulate the country that no member of has the threats of Disunion so often made by Democratic members without mid with applause from their associates and we denounce those threats of in ease of a popular overthrow of their denying tho vital principles of free and us tin avowal of contemplated which it IH tho imperative duty of an nant People sternly to rebuke and forever 4. That the maintenance inviolate of rights of the and especially tho right of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions cording to its own judgment is essential to that balance ot on which the and endurance of our political and we de- the lawless armed of State or no matter under what pre- among the of 6. That tho present Democratic Administration has far in its subserviency to the exactions of a sectional especially evinced in its tions to force the infamous Constitution upon the people of Kansas in construing the personal relation between master and servant to involve an unqualified property in in its at- tempted on land and through thn intervention of Congress nnd of the Federal Courts of the extreme pretensions of a pure- ly interest and iti its general and unvarying of tho power entrusted to it hy a confiding 8. That tho justly with alarm the less extravagance which pervades every department of tho Federal that a return to rigid economy and is to Arrest the systematic plunder of the public tre by vored while the recent ments of frauds wtd at the show that an entire change is imperatively 7. That the new dogma that tho of its own carries Slavery into any or nil of thu tories of the United y is a dangerous at variance with the explicit provi ions of that instrument with contemporaneous and with legislative and judicial is in its and subversive of tho peace nnd harmony of tho 8. That tho normal condition of alt the territory of the United States is that of Thai ns our publican when they had abolished slavery in all our national ten ordained that no person should be deprived of or out duo process of it becomes our by whenever such legislation is to maintain provision of the Constitution against all to violate it and wo deny the of of a territorial or of to give legal existence to slavery in any ry of tho United 9. That we brand the recent reopening of the can slave under the cover of our national aided by perversions of judicial as crime against humanity and a burning shame to country To Little Minnie M. For Will yon keep that little 'Tis 'tis Yet it an offering To and May your heart remain as Aa nnd free us I know it full of Minnio Hy your cyo nnd A smilo nnd a gentle Minnio never givon in links no rust in As loaf by leaf Unfolds to May your lovo mid trust Tili your life's declining And angels your a foir Bear a type of my bud in your With my simple imme Yon the from my hair With gentle touch and And count the yours ere you nhall Bright silver threads among tho tlie while to hear me You'll think of again sonic Some I do not scorn the power of Nor count on years of fadeless But no will over Among those locks of mine laugh as gaily tis you You'll think of again some Somo Some dny f I shall not fis Your soft hand moves about rny I shall not slight your light And draw the long braida iny T he and And will not laugh that I know how long your loving hands Will linger with glossy When you shall my latest frown Of these thiek long and But you will see no touch of gray Adown their shining length And while your tears are falling hot Upon the lips You'll take from ono treasured And leave the to Remembering that I used to of thin again some The Sicilian i and etc. Whitewater ni v and and we call upon Congress to prompt and measures for the ion of that execrable 10. That in tho recent by their Federal of the of tbe legislatures of Kancas and prohibiting Slavery in we n illustration of the principle of and embodied in the and a demonstration of the fraud involved 11. That Kansas of bo immediately Admitted UN a State under the Constitution recently formed and adopted by her and accepted by of 12. while revenue for tiie support Of the general government by duties upon sound policy requires mien nil adjustment of theae imposts as to tho of the in- interests of the whole and we com- mend that of which cures to the liberal to mechanics rers an reward for their and en- ana to the nation commercial prosperity and 13. That we protest against any nale or alienation to others of the held by actual 8 ef of of the Prom the London Juno 5. Garibaldi has gratified and almost out- stripped public The the the the quick sion of decisive and the surrender of tho army have followed each other almost as rapidly as telegraphs could toll We sit and see it all pass rapidly and clap our growing impatient if the curtain tho is Id he let down between the This guerilla although now a great and tho supremo lender of two of still makes war like a guerilla That prompting which success stamps as wisdom and which failure brands as rashness in his tho only chance for With guns and and trained and regular Generals versed in regular strategy of modern warfare as with ardent destitute of everything but stout hearts and strong limbs as his Garibaldi had to do nil by or not at lie has done it. lie has forced his way into he has beaton the King's lie has driven them into their and he has obliged them to admit their by consenting to Fast upon the intelligence that the capitulation had been and that soldiers of the King's army were going forth under the pressure of tho patriotic bands which had beaten and surrounded comes the news that the capitulation had been that the forts and vessels havo again opened fire upon the that tbe insurgents havo resumed their arms and are swarming round tho that the city is and and against any view of tho Free Homes toad policy which regards the settlers aft paupers or suppliants for public and we demand the in Office rnor United States by Congress of the complete and satisfactory J measure which han already the 14. That tho National Republican party is opposed to any change in our Naturalization Laws or any State by which the of citizenship hitherto Recorded from foreign Is shall be abridged or and in favor of full and protection to the of of whether native or both home and 15. That by Congress for River and Harbor improvements of n National re- quired for the accommodation and security of an ex- aro by the by the obligation of to toet tbe lives and property of its That a Railroad to the Ocean is demanded by tho interests of tho whole the Government ought to render immediate and efficient aid in ite and preliminary a daily Mait be promptly having thus set forth mir and we invite tho of all however differing cm who agree with us in thoir affirmance and s Whitewater Jewelry JOHN T. on hand a stock of Silver-Plated Fanoy et and many other All of u hich I am offering for sale at low Every article warranted us the y of clone iu the best possible IH March 24, Notice to SUBSCRIBER informs his old friends that he once more engaged in the buying and he od to pay the Highest Cash Poj etc. who have stock for sale are requested to him of the as he is hv do tier by them than other buyer tn WILLIAM May 24, 100 .I v that amid tho devastation which is going on the troops are and even a General has gone over to the popular The procession of great events is rapid but unhappily we have them as yet only in Garibaldi is the ro for the present when steam and have so spoilt us for enduring the tardiness of old tidings that we if we got Caesar's celebrated quarrel with the comma which separates the vidi from the But when we have quenched our thirst for we yearn for a quiet enjoyment of tho Sicily is an is still Sicily is an island tho rounding waters of which are in possession of a fleet hostile to the Sicilian Wo cannot hope that the Neapolitan Government will be polite enough to forward the Sicilian accounts of those victories which shine to gaudily in their official That this rush of events is all chronicled and well described for us we arc tolerably sure but when these accounts will reach us it is im- possible to as from hour to hour we wait for from the information before us now we can under- stand that tho original positions of Garibaldi and tho Neapolitan Generals aro counter- It is Gen. Lanza's which is and it is Garibaldi's which is It cannot bo Although we want tbe speak for Lanza would never have proposed or con- sented to capitulate if he had any hopo of maintaining hie ground at order of the Court to remain and bombard the city is an order to remain and be de- This may suit the selfish policy of the Neapolitan He may prefer that his soldiers should be red-handed with the blood of his than return to Naples defeated ami to spread abroad in the King's own home dominions a practical contradiction of thoso fabled tories which had been posted up in the streets of Such a spectacle of defeat would bavo an ment to Better that they should do what massacre they could and then or better oven that they should go over to tbo than como home and proclaim by their presence that Garibaldi is ant and the Bourbon power it is said that there were of scudi in the Treasury It is certain that there are in the forts arms and stores to equip nil tie youth of to make the ao uncomfortable for Neapolitan of Francis might well believe happen what ing could bo much worse for him than the capitulation which had been signed by Gen. If M we bear it said were to be handed over to subject to the rights of the Xing of Naples and to orders aa to the destination cf there was not wanting irony should give nancy to this ing Gen. Lauza have said in de- fence that he brought men to surround the throne of his and to protect his continental dom nions from the attack which was certainly The docs not scf m to placo much value upon mon. Do evidently thinks that the army that could not or would not keep Garibaldi out of Sicily will cither want the power or tho will to keep thum out of We see in all this he nnd distrust of His hope from his own army being evident y the King of Naples now iu mendicant fashion to foreign Powers whoso sels ho has so and whose warnings ho treated with Ho hopes t la itt those fror i whom he would en- dure no intercession on behalf of his tured subjects wiil now when those subjects havo ri risen his monstrous tyran iy and hold them in their Ho has to and it was supposed for a moment at Turin that Austria had moved lown a body of troops to create a divi or oven to ish for Sicilian r connivance in this Such consistency did the rumor obtain tlint French regiments were marched to oint Their appearance called out tho and the two rival uniforms on co more for n moment faco to Of course the was without Even Austria is not quite so mad as o fight in such a cause as but the prompt movement of French troops shown how quickly any such enterprise would n We are nut able to say what verbal Austria may have her but she certainly is not prepared to sacr flee herself in order that ho may pursue his course of cruelty and at ho Francis next applied to the Ei of the French for an armed The telegraphed found the Ki nt and wo are assured that i received instant to tho tl at any interference of France in this conflict entirety out of the The is left his lie ca i hold his own against Garibaldi and ho has so justly there is non to help DETAILS OK TIJE IN From the May 30. At 2 y tho otic feelings of the wero gratified by the news that an official telegram had been received from Caj by Count tho of this cing that Garibaldi h id entered and that part of its had men against tho royal This telegram had been sent by of the ian who had left tho Sicilian Capitol whilst the roar of cannon and the rattling of musketry wore going From what I can gather nn Sicilian refugees and citizens of thia it seems that the storming of Palermo was begun by baldi at 4 o'clock on Si The Italian having concentrated ajl the forces he had at his disposal on the northern side of tho city during the preceding he boldly the own at a placo called runs of the lloyal had placed ft strong fend that important p. by troops of onco in the power of t to population of which crowds tl e lanes and streets of that roso to a and began to throw scorn anything they could lay hold upon the retiring columns of tho Neap Tho vessels then opened their fire upon the and a shower of shells began to fly over a. shower that lasted than eight The bombardment did produce any great effect on the and the Sardinian left Palermo three Neapolitan regiments had determined to join the ranks of the It seems that Col. tho chief of Garibaldi's was severely wounded in the bloody engagement of tho If and this is con- a great 3or Col. and Col. with his few pieces of had in succeeded in ting some of the other pieces had been deserted by tho frightened nnd were insufficiently attended to by the officers who hnd stuck to One company the name given Ar- which is unknown to me then to haVo arid to nailed not tho as they were but officers to tho where were found by tho advancing At Garibaldi and his men curried the whole line of the outer and the King's forces back into tho The of Palermo seeing the demoralized nnd then to throw up barricades and attempted an but tho forts the eight began at once to shell the streets The Consuls arid Commanders of the foreign in the who hail all assembled on the Commander Ad- miral opened a communication with Admiral of the Neapolitan protesting against tho Tho result of the negotiations that took place that the bombardment was discontinued at G o'clock in the just when the by which I have received these re- left the port filled with who J had been placed on board in a nnd without much attention to their At G o'clock the bombardment The Commander of the expresses the belief that it was not the but the position of Garibaldi's forces tho 1 hat formed the aim of Iho At 4 o'clock this portion was between the advanced redoubts thrown up by Gen. Lanza and the last houses of the whose gates had been and streets had been Gen. Lanza had taken up his position behind tho barricades of the inner circle of the streets of at di near nnd near the old Campo Hia army w. is and refused to renew the which the infantry in morning hud up with much courage and ping of tho The effects of this are more apparent from another practice which prevails with tho as with our would-be civilized that of painting the tipa with The ruddy of the out in or contrast of ttio gums and rouge of tho Japanese culled is made of and is in cups of n. a coal is it a lively red but it is put on thick ti deep let which is tho is tho re- The girls are wall formed nnd er and havo of that vivacity aim self-reliance in which come from a consciousness of derived from tho high regard in which they uro hold. In tho tual intercourse of friends and the women have their and rounds of iting and are kept up as briskly in Japan na in the United That in Effect of Popular Sove ted by Mr. From Mr. Speech iu Uw the large towns and cities of Japan there ii great it reasonable to for such a universal nw in nil great communities but it must said to tho credit of the Japanese during all the time of presence of he in tho bay of was none of the usual of on the part of tho sex iti thuir officers had lost their livos in attempting to in 7 to lines had taken place of with tho miscellaneous Women in Japan are but ween the license of European und of Asiatic we are told that the necessary oi which by wuy of throwing cull is to the South of all participation in what they tho of tbo That was thu ground un which Senator from Mississippi hie opposition to thu compromise of 1840. lie regarded a refusal io tho law as to iho Wilmot a refusal to by an act of Congress right to carry a 5 lave there as equivalent to tho proviso u to deny to a Territorial Legislature thu right to exclude slavery iw equivalent to nn II o at that timo that this doctrine did amount denial of southern and lut told people of Mississippi but they it. let us soo how far bis and suppositions have I infer that bo told tbo people Cor be it. a charge in his of indie against that I am hostile to southern I gavo into Garibaldi's officers as well as Thia partly collected from the mouths of wounded and terrified be incorrect in some in the I have reason fo believe it lo bo in cordance with About the tho restraint of Asiatic They aro at liberty to appear in and Mimo of the most esteemed writings in nese literature arc by but tho as is is somewhat behind tho practice of tho nnd women are sessed of no legal their testimony even not being admitted in courts of Jn the family they aro in perfect subjection to its male in whatever relationship he may eland to and on they leave thoir father's and arc adopted into that of tho Chastity in tlm and in the are virtues prompted by sense of nnd by the fear of inevitable doom of tho THEIR TO Suicide is very and is generally open the bowels by com mi ted by cutting in on the left-hand side Gen. Lanza of troops to de- it teas carried after n tremendous two gashes in the shape of a It if not in some cases Ly the The criminal who thus anticipates execution secures tho public sympathy and saving his property from and his family from Upon tho death of superiors or suicide is often committed as a mark of personal tion and It is common as a moans of escaping disgrace or poor Col. Nini Garibaldi's the whose death ia now wo best officers of A dated Nap which appears in tlie gives the lowing which s 'em doubtful and in- and must be with This was received fi jm persons on board of two steamers of the Royal who left Palermo yesterday at C tugging some sailing sh filled with and who arrived morning at the military port. 1 think it a necessary ure of precaution to sta e my source this is the itory at 4 o'clock in the Gen. Landi is said to have loft with men and four pieces of in s rder to attack a tery planted by Col. Or on the esplanade of the littlo placo callec near on the Turco between Gavini and This cannot quite as I think but I gave it at I received it. The outpost of the s were so runs tho description of tho by a man who bore tho co given in church paintings to Jet us I believe that the officer thus is Col tori who has soi ie to the conventional traits tho time to c ir He mitted the Neapolitan co umn to approach his position very close and en charged with the Only o reports of guns were then a massacre took place nothing but th bayonet and side arms being Sirto i's or whoever the officer seem not to have to more than 70 or 800. Gen. informed of the ec drew out his whole army in the as well as out- side the but did tot venture beyond the line of his Gen. di's force began at last to yield before the terrible impetus of the i but slowly J kept up the The patriot recklessly ing their movements in found themselves nearly loped by the Koyal Placed under t ie necessity to fice these or to br sten the day of which was in Palermo to be destined for a day or two Garibaldi seems to havo thought t his duty to accept the latter give the order for a general advance the whole advance was me on the part of the by terrible fir of however seams not to b ire had a very ly from want of good gunner's It was then 10 in tho ing Here the narrative htch b made to me of this eventful day more The following is miin substance of it The further advance of the insurgents took place in two ii quick baldi marching at the head trf one of these columns on tn an whore there appears to bo no er in his of says that all military civil offices under the aro when they have committed any to rip themselves though not till they have re- an order from tho court to that for if they wero to anticipate this their heirs would run the risk of being de- prived of their places and Isro disgrace attaches to such a and tho son succeeds to tho father's practice is so says that scarcely any notice is taken of such an The sons of all persons of quality exercise themselves in their for fivo or six with a view that they may perform the in case of with fulness and and they take a- much pains to acquire this as youth among us to become elegant cers or skillful hence tho found contempt of death which they in their earliest This disregard of which they prefer to the slightest dis- extends to tho very lowest among the It is in tration of this propensity to resort to that two high officers of the court met on the palace stairs and jostled each other One was an irascible and immediately demanded Tlie of a cablo represented that the was and tendered an ample remarking that no other could reasonably bo The irascible would not be appeased and finding that he could not voke tho other to a ho suddenly drew up his unsheathed his and cut himself open in the prescribed mode As a point of honor his adversary was under tho necessity of following tho accounts now state that the ble mode of harri or dis- as this practice of suicide is substitutes decapitation by the sword of relative for the old method of ripping THE There is one feature in tbo society of by which the superiority of the people to all other oriental nations is clearly Woman recognized as a and not merely treated as u sition ia certainly not as elevated as in those countries under the influence of the tian but the wife and daughter of Japan are neither the and household drudges of nor the purchased objects of the capricious lust of the harems of The fact of the non- existence of polygamy is a distinctive which pre-eminently characterizes the Japanese as the most moral and refined of all eastern The absence of this dc grading practice shows not only in the superior character of the but in thr natural consequence of tho greater lence of the domestic The Japanese always excepting the disgusting black teeth of those who arc are not As their by lips parted in smiling displayed a row of black set in bly corroded The married women of Japan enjoy the exclusive privilege of ing their which is done with a ture of vile including Slings oi iron and termed QAa yur or The Japanese work admirably well in and all tures are carried on in every part of the and some of them aro brought to such a degree of perfection us to Surpass those of tmy other part of tho Their lacquering in wood excels that of all other They work with in a mixture of gold and which they color blue or black in n man nor un- known Their silk and cotton goods aro well nnd they understand the art of making glass in all its Their steel swords nre unapproachable in and they make excellent mirrors of Paper is made from tho bark of the mulberry in great and of re- strength it is used not only for writing and and for wrapping up but for handkerchiefs and They are skillful in carving and and in the casting of metal which arc extensively used for Their iron tobacco and manufacturing aro frequently on n large em- ploying hundreds of Tho cities of and are the great scats of At aro mado and silk rics of lacquered and and at cotton goods and iron and at nearly every cies of is carried The people show tho greatest eagerness and tude for imitating all kinds of European and they are already well supplied with of native make from European and sold at a very Iron and brass cannon in tho This as might be naturally in- ferred from its is neither antly perfumed nor very It is so corrosive that in applying it lo the teeth it is necessary to protect the more delicate structure of the gums and for the mere touch of the odious stuff to tho flesh burns it at once into a purple gangrenous In spite of tho utmost care the gums become and their ruddy color and Wo should think that the practice waa hardly conducive to connubial and it would bo naturally inferred all tho kissing must be expended in the of This ia occasionally lout to the ive for it is not uncommon for some of the young Tadies to inaugurate the babit of blacking the teeth upon the European aro and the shells with tho latest Colt's revolvers and Sharp's rifles aro also mado by native and at Nagasaki works have been established for tho production of without European nnd a which has been successfully navigated from Nagasaki to Yeddo in nine entirely by nativo rnen and THEIR Tho ordinary dress of both sexes nnd of all ranks is very similar in differing chiefly in the and value of the those of tho higher orders be- ing generally of and of the lower ders of Jinen or The consists of a number of wide worn over each with tho family coat of arms woven or worked into the bnek and of the outer and nil fastened at the waist by a Tho sleeves are very long and and tho part of the sleeve that hangs bolow tho arm is mado to serve as a The women usually wear brighter colors than the and border their robes with gay embroidery and Upon occasions of full dress a cloak is together with a sort of trousers called Within doors socks are the only covering of the Shoes are worn of an awkward and inconvenient con- sisting of soles of straw matting or of on entering a bouso aro always taken off. Neither men or women wear any ering on their occasionally as a protection from They screen their faces from the sun by the which is ried by all by and Tho greatest peculiarity of Japanese Sa the the wearing of which is a mark of rank it is strictly prohibited to tho lower middling classes carry and the higher orders two which aro worn on the same one above THEIK The houses of the Japanese are nnd built of The walls are coated with a cement that gives them the appearance of In the windows tbo place of ia supplied by very tine strong which ia protected from tho rain by external wooden Verandahs encircle the nnd to almost every even in tho there is attached a rooms or made by copper shutters and a thick coating of arc numerous in tho in which men keep their Blocks of and private families their valuable etc. Fires are and from the combustible nature of tho common buildings aro often terribly Conflagrations consuming thousands of ses sometimes Polygamy ia not but the power of divorce on tbo part of the u only by the requisition that ho provide in a suitable manner for the support what baa F My wero incorporated into tho sures of and bin wero Hu the South been from ull tory acquired from What from tho House of now on your repealing slave code iit Mexico established by tho people si Ivcs t If is part the of the ii y that under vf tto delight to of New ici have and protected slavery in Under huee a tract of free territory more than fat timet the vf the State of Ncio Under been from the Grande to 1he of and from the line of the not up to UO hut tip to a half more territory you and and 1800 you to the line of deg. aO min. Tho fixed that its 1 it in 1818, and it ed here but rejected in the of 1'ou only up to and given territory up to 33 a and a half more than as and yoti you sny that this is a of nights f aro Iho of this which the Senator from as hostile to tho rights of the did you gut nny other were more palatable to your moro refreshing to your What other of free territory hua been into shire on the since the except in under the affirmed at If it be trite that this principle of conferred upon you all that territory has protected slavery in that northern aad you did not expect it to cannot you tin same principle further South when you come to acquire additional territory from Mexico Jf it be true this of has given to slavery all New which was on nearly Hide by will not same principle protect you in tho northern States of Mexico wben they aro they are now surrounded by slavo are several hundred miles further South have many degrees of greater nml have a and adapted to Southern Arc you not with practical Do you to from tho of tho to the Congress of the United to lle this question in When you district the people and to Con- with both Houses largely against you on this what sort of protection will you Whenever you ank a t lave coda from Congress to your tions in a Territory where tho do not want you will get thut sort of tion tho wolf gives to the lamb you will get that sort of hug that tbo grizzly bear gives tke Appealing to an anti-slavery to pass laws of with a view of forcing slavery upon an unwilling and people I of nil the mad that ever could devised by tho or by tho of the that which recognise tho right of to touch the institution of very either in States or the single provided in the Constitution for tho rendition of fugitive it the The Age of Leonard an English ItM been trying to discover ago of by counting the of made by thu annual overflowing of Mr. researches wero made by ing a number of ninety-five In the Nile in a line with and the cite of the ancient city of In every caso tho alluvium found to bo regularly divided into and the average of many In- that rate of vertical increase of sediment was about and one-half es per One of these ta sunk closo to tho great thic statue of Ramses at and it wai found that there wero nine feet and inches of Nilo between below tho surface ef ground and the lowest part of tho platform on which tho statuo Now thit ue has been by and er to have born created ii jours before and thin ad- ded to eives therefore during which the above mentioned depth of Bed i men t H rate of increase In strict accordance with the the measurement above alluded Below the pi form of stone on the the shaft was driven thirty-two but tbo lowest two feet consisted of ving thirty feet of true Nile to aa condition below the At the of the of at ft depth of thn four from the surface of the of pottery wero found in a good of nnd exhibiting considerable that thirty feet of covering these remains the of 1 be were deposited of and one-half per have in of pottery record of tho of B man before D. 1858, before the reign of M by j in u state of ad- van rd to bo abie to cUy Into harden It by jo Shore train oo m two hundred tod from the and of the repudiated in CMO is divorced by or for other sons recognized by the tribunals aa They will bring witb ha. DO claim husband for J wilt Vlp brine And under no