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Wisconsin Mirror

   Wisconsin Mirror (Newspaper) - March 4, 1856, Kilbourn City, Wisconsin                               A LAN SON to VOLUME I NEWPORT NUMBER Mirror in County Wis A HoLLYf and a 1.1 of sr 4.UO 10.00 10.00 15.00 10.00 15.00 15.00 10.00 Kii j lie v rules to bo paid A W I'm it Wuro itc Al i-l I M r A I R CO Win ai Hi Starr Smith Lewis N KW WIS I I Tin ami Cupper and Iron iV in Stoves Nt -I anil Hardware A Whittemore Co r anil in i ail U- HANDLER CLARK Caps Hoofs Shoes itc N u is A JENKINS Physician and Surgeon N KW I'D WIS 1 BOWMAN ai Law w is F Carpenter Joiner T in ItU ut any ami Plans fur anv ami all VAN 3 BC JVC I 1 WIS i Iii nl In ami V nl alt in a in Jan I I aac Ills on s ro r ii K noi Newport Wis I lie ul till i t ADAMS Ager Proprietor i i- will In in lit BOYS BY H M LAUD Out in every tempest Out in evory Buffeting the Wind and sturni and bail In the meadow mowing In the shadowy wood Letting in tue sunlight Whore the tall stood Every flitting moment Each skillful hand mo I were there ever boys 1 Though the bo callous Holding fust the plow Tho round cheek is ruddy And the open brow Has no lines mid furrows Wrought by evil hours For the heart keeps wholesome Trained it Nature's bowers Healthy hourly pastime The spirit never eloys Heaven bless the manly Honest farmers boys At the merry husking At the apple lice their hearts run over With genial harmless glee country maidens Blush with conscious bliss At whispered With n parting kiss Then tho winter evenings With their social joys Bless mo I they are pleasant Spoilt with fanners boys 1 CLIMATE Each year's growth of a tree is by j All names of the months of the year il a series of fibrous from which we can determine for every yoar the quantity of sun? shino to which the tree has been exposed also which hits been the sunny For the production of evory cubic inch of wood a certain degree of the chemical influence of the sunlight and calorific is essential Timber is produced by the tree absorbing through the bark and leaves the carbonic acid carbon and oxygen from the phere Under the influence of light the plant by its own vital forces carbonic acid In virtue of the force excited by solar influence the carbonic acid is decomposed and the oxygen is set free for the use of the animal kingdom generally and carbon goes to construct the woody structure of the plant If wo ignite wood it gives out light and heat from which wo can produce a certain amount of effect the same elements as from sunshine The quantity and chemical forces arising from combustion represent exactly that quantity is necessary to occasion the plant to grow The coal fields arc formed by the chemical decomposition of flora of a peculiar kind Vegetable lite idly decomposes under the conditions of a tropical swamp our coal is the produce of tropical forests We employ coal in operations we subject it to tion obtain from it a fluid which circulates through our streets and dwellings We ig- nite it and obtain hat light which was once derived from sunlight and solar heat which in countless rays has fallen upon these lands ere yet man had set his foot upon them in ages long past and Scientific Amer ART OF and the the week 8th All specific names of historical eras events remarkable and documents Prim 5th used in capitals are All titles or respect attached to names All in direct address as substitutes for specific names 7 3d All epithets joined to distinctive titles The art of milking well is not taught in a irry It requires long practice to milk hurry Prin 6th capitals are adjectives derived from specific names 2d All specifically of religious sects parties whether derived from SEC HI Prin 1st entire are used in 1st All of books running title of chapters sections and important Prin entire are used interchangeably Italics in 1st All terms to be names of things be described 3d entire are used in 1st All or sentences de- signed to emphatic inn tn ifi Cii tit n nn I 1 BOWMAN Ml 1 TK ir SOLD 1 MI OX TIME Wix III An idea generally prevails re- personal The dwellers in sunny South pity the Now because shiver in so cold a They in turn their stars that they are not wading in the snows nf Newfoundland 1 been led by observation and In whether the people of any ono have much if any advantage in tho mailer of climate over others Our of pleasure ami pain arc malcly connected with if not the principle of contrast in our idea of ature we loss regard to than to hi of warmth In tho report of one of exploring in the Northern Seas it Is said thai on a crow wore greatly elated with signs of a thaw risen to 40 dog below zero Having been subject to a much in- tenser decree of cold they felt as did the ioy whose father had administered to him i severe greatly refreshed It may well be doubted whether tho people Maine suitor mow from cold than do they of Virginia weather it is as much as it is with that tho people want is to tho line of governmental policy know what can be depended on ISo of tho weather Tho knowing that from the Middle of November to the middle of April I ho ground is to bo covered with snow and uninterrupted cold weather is to prevail ho wraps his fur cont about him inflates his lungs braces up his and thinks no more of tho cold than rugged bear Tho in tho Old Dominion on tho other hand regarding warm weather as the rule and as the exception makes no provision for tho latter But when tho thern blasts come us they will ho wraps his tig leaf coat about him seeks shelter within the enclosure of his airy mansion so as to exclude heat rather Thon there is which greatly favors the dwellers in latitude and therefore all the young people on a farm ought to be shown the labor should bo done It is quite this branch of the dairy should be particil- lurly attended to for a good milker obtains at least a quart more from the same cow than a poor milker The first lesson to be taught to young ple and kindness to the cows They be treated harshly in case the ess is properly commenced Cows that have been caressed and uniformly well treated are fond of having the milk drawn udder at time of ing for it gives from the of tho ducts Let young people be put to milking the Farrow cows as are soon and then loss from bad milking will bo less injurious the band should teml to the extremity of for the milk is then drawn easier They should be taught to milk as fust as possible More milk is always obtained by a rapid milker by a slow one They should therefore bo taught to think of nothing else While milking and no conversation must be SEC ITALICS entire are used interchangeably with 1st Headings divisions or paragraphs Printed entire are used m 1st phrases or sentences designed to bo i- Prin 4th entire are used in of books or documents given as Prin entire are used in ist newspaper's j few exceptions occurring for a distinct same is true of ples illustrative principles and ever thought of DEPEND j what that children? You go the a wheelwright he is making wheels and shafts say you enter a weaver wip cloth say he valuable you visit the smith's where find him making pickaxes hammers and plowshares and you is you salute these You house of a him Do Know what is He is minds VETERAN es has the honor of one of the oldest u native boni in ern S now re- siding in that in the enjoyment of a and he is wards of seventy-two years He taught school the past forty-seven years in the townships Mosa and Caradoc The last-named township now possesses inhabitants of fifty years of age who received instructions at his hands Stiles is a venerable old man and occupies his in a manner becoming his age There are few school teachers in who can boast of having worked so long and so devotedly in the educational vice of Free Press Stand tip here young man and let me to trusted alone to the contents father's or his or his influence for in Think that father has attained to em- rience by in- J n J J or that know acquiring nay WITH KINDNESS I once had a a clever man who came tome one day and said quire White I you to come and get your geese away what geese Did ever know so meim a he does not even to a sum in For reckon him all up top or top tp bottom it rio and there is nothing to set down and nothing to in the milk up close to tho cow ind WISCONSIN MIRROR Tin V X wilt Co Win 11 i t will i i N and thu They should sit rest trie left arm gently against her shank Their if she es her foot on account of occasioned by soreness of teats the nearer the milker sits to her mid the harder lie presses his left arm against her log the less risk will ho run of being injured Cows may be taught to give down their milk at they may be to hold it a long while and to be stripped in- definitely The best way is quick and hot use thn cow to a long stripping or an after farmer USE OF CAPITAL ITALIC LETTERS Hi I K 1 Ilir V ten ll I r C Mirror will not j and it u ill i inl tn lhr il and and lils all till in order to i will K I r V M i i ri tin carli in tlu cif its own if n will I IT the it him identified and them nil Mirror In r mid make wiser tho is covered there is but ittle The is dry and storms arc is no snow it tar otherwise The whole surface being covered with water evaporation is rapid and the Atmosphere is surcharged with vapor and tho peculiar which a March wind in England prevail during the winter months Agriculturally snowy region has ny advantages It is better for the soil to ho covered during the winter months That thore is any in the remark snow is tho poor man's I don't Hut certain it is that grasses and grains are by being thus protected Snow is nu conductor of caloric tho surface being protected from the cold of the heat from within dissolves tho frost and when tho snow disappears in spring is frimi the soil It is not uncommon to rind the growing before tbc snow is Fields are for plowing soon after they are so that stock will live and seed may be into tho ground nearly as wMU in Vermont as in Connecticut Then I fur lining business tho snowy regions have and greatly the advantage Lumbering is with I great difficulty carried on where them is no MIOW Tho lumbor lands in Maryland and Virginia would bo worth twice as much as they now are with northern winters for tho removal of tho lumber But I will say nu more lest I get up an emigration towards fanner in til Will carried into fail tho r u id T r will bo n price be in EFFECT OF LIGHT A plant will only grow under the of light The plant is placed in the soil in darkness when n chemical change takes place If a plant is deprived of it no longer forms wood The tity ol light tho growth of the plant MR EDITOR The following claims to be a simple attempt towards a tion and condensation of certain established principles As such and as such only it is commended to the notice of your readers with the hope that it may not be found of merit F s J LETTERS OF DISTINCTION SEC I CLASSIFICATION Prin 1st Letters according to their eral forms are ROMAN or ITALIC Prin Id Letters according to their forms arc CAPITALS or SMALL LETTERS Prin Sd Capitals and Italics are used to distinguish some parts of a composition above others CAPITALS SEC It INITIAL CAPITALS Prin first capitals ara used in tho firet word of 1st Every book discourse essay letter note or distinct piece of composition 2d chapter section paragraph distinct period or complete sentence 3d Every distinct head in the division of discourse when formally enumerated 4th Every direct and exact quotation Every line in poetry Prin 2d Important cap- j itals are used in 1st All words that represent tho leading subjects of discourse 2d All tho prominent words in the titles of books Prin Particular cap- itals arc used in 1st The words I and O Prin Specific are used in lAt All names of the Deity either direct or indirect and in the pronouns he and thou when as substitutes for his name 2d All individual names of.persons sects or parties 3d All names of things distinctly sented as persons I happened in a one day a class of very small boys and girls were reciting a lesson in metic It was about their first lesson Five from five leaves how many asked the teacher of a little girl some six years old After a moment's reflection she Five you make that said the Holding her little hands put toward him she five fingers on my and here are five on the other Now if 1 take the five fingers on my left hand away from the five on my right hand won't five The as say in this gion and was obliged to der at discretion Brinsley Sheridan who was alike for eloquence and once replied to a tailor who asked him for at least the interest on his It is not my interest to pay the principal nor my principle to pay the inter- est A man who had made a fortune by try and close economy in a retail business at length retired from trade and used to loan his money oil interest One day in midsummer a friend happened to say to him How pleasant it is to have such long bright days Why replied he these long days the interest comes in so They pick my pigs ears when they are eating and them away and I will not What can I says I must yoke them That I haye to do I do not see but they must run r If you do not tuko care of them I said the shoemaker in anger do you say Esquire I cannot now but I will pay you for all damages W said ho you'll find that a hard thing i goese The next news was that three of them were missing My children went and found them terribly mangled and dead and thrown into the bushes said I all keep still and let me Him In a few days the shoemaker's hogs broke into my corn I saw them but let them re- main along time At last I drove them all out and picked up the corn which they had torn down and fed them with it in the road up in has activity S You faculty requisite for the fortune is essential to the retaining of either of these Suppose father has the rocks n abundance if you earned anything for him you have no more business than a a if you to meddle with them of your industry he untold mischief And if the old is lavish of his cash towards you while allows you to while away your time you'd better leave run away sooner than be an imbecile worse through so corrupting an influence later you must learn to rely upon your own resources be V If you have become idle if you have en father's bread and butter and smoked cut a swell in father's buggy and tried to oil father's influence and reputation you might far been a poor canal boy the son of a or a indeed we would not swap with you the situation of a motherless ble objects you are that entirely oh parents gentleman dandy loafer What in the name of common sense are you thinking of Wake lip Go to work cither hands or your brains or both and Don't merely have it to boast you've grown up in father's you have vegetated as other greenhorns but let folks know that you count one Look about you faced do-nothing Who have worth and influence in Are they those who their way to their tion by their own True the old funds or personal influences secure the forms of respect but lose his property or die and what are you? A miserable bunch of flesh and bones that needs to be taken care we say wake up in the round at twice before the old him a generous lift in: how the lead and forever on being led and you have no idea how the will benefit Do this and our you will seem to breathe a ferent atmosphere possess frame tread a new earth wake to a new then you may begin to aspire to manhood Wisconsin farmer VISIT YOUR following re- marks are worthy of the attention of those You could not do a better thing Your boy has the idea that you care scarcely more than a fig's value about his progress there your girl thinks you are too busy about more important matters to worry about her tions Grammar is dry as dust to her Ge is tedious to her Arithmetic is n bore Reading is horrid Writing is her cial abomination If she speaks of either at table she is hushed up You talk of stocks and Senatorship of war and free trade The young ones learn to think their matters in comparison with yours But visit your school Hear a son recited Learn from their ers what their standing is in what they est fail in what they sits next them in the See how they compare in personal appearance er they look happy and at home If their school cannot but be interested in them and you avoid talking their matters subjects of home by this time the shoemaker came great haste after them Have you seen anything of iny hogs he Yes sir find them over yonder eating some bora which they tore in my your Yes said I hogs love corn know they were made to eat it How much mischief haye they done 0 not said I Well off he went to look and estimated the damage at a bushel and a half of corn said be shoemaker and I will pay you every cent of the damage The shoemaker blushed and went home The next winter when we came to settle the shoemaker was determined he would pay me formy corn said I I shall take nothing After some talk we parted but I met in a few days on the road and we fell into conversation in the most friendly ner But when I started on ho seemed loth to move and paused For a moment both of us were silent At last he I have something laboring on my Well what is Those geese I killed three of your geese and till know how I feel I am very and the tears came eyes O said I never mind I pose my geese were provoking 1 never took anything from him for it but when my cattle broke into his fields after this he seemed glad because he could show how patient he could be i said 1 to my children conquer A YOUNG TOBACCO CHEWER CURED 4th All specific names of places or geo- fit graphical 5th All common geographical joined to some proper name to make ii inore 6th All names of points ot compass as specific names of sections of country sation will certainly stimulate them to better better scholars of them By all means Go alone you You will always teacher unless he is a off if will be welcomed bv the work to teach people who can nothing without being man is slow to perceive his own ness of yourselves and you with kind ness where can conquer in no other way It may be doubted whether aad ood generally look upon amusement irith ie respect it deserves It is rather vith out allowed as aan low instead of as being a really good thing in itself Now the truth is that to one The following little gem by Alice Carey appears in the Louisville Journal MOTHERHOOD Bring me willows for my bair Wild and dewy from the wood GOD has me ray prayer O my baby he is good I Bring me bright and wild Bind them all about my head I am mother of a child Joy is bora is dead Tis if the rosebud hours Redding all my morning to Were blown out to perfect flowers Perfect yet of paler glow The growth of western cities is Twenty Ttwo years ago Gov Porter Pottawattamie treaty on the site of Chicago is now or five thousand population with at least one hundred trains arriving and departing Twenty years since had less than ten thousand population and now it amounts to one hundred And the end is not On board one day we away when one of the boys came with his hammock shoulder and as he passed the first lieutenant that he had a quid of tobacco in his mouth What have you got asked the lieutenant boil f Your much swollen No replied the boy there's nothing at all the matter O there must perhaps it is a bad Open your mouth and let me see Very reluctantly the boy opened his mouth which contained a large roll of tobacco lea I see I said the lieutenant pooi how you must Your mouth wants overhauling and your teeth cleaning I wish we had a dentist on board but as we have not I will operate Send the ar- morer up here with his tongs When the armorer made his appearance with his tongs the boy was compelled to open his month while the tobacco was extracted this rough instrument There said the lieutenant I'm sure that you must feel better already Yoi never could an appetite with such stuff in your mouth Now captain of the after guard bring a piece of old canvas and some sand and clean his teeth nicely The captain of the came for ward and grinning from ear to ear put th boys head between his his teeth well with sand and canvass for tw or three minutes There that will said the lieutenant Now my take some water an rinse out your you will enjo your breakfast It was impossible for yoi to have eaten anything with your mouth in that filthy condition When you are troub led in the same way again come to me an I will be your dentist The lad was com cured by ihc ridicule of this rence of the habit of tobacco Captain HAVE SOMETHING TO secret of all success in life of all greatness nay of happiness is to live for a purpose There are many persons always busy who yet have no great purpose in view They fritter away their energies on a hundred things never anything because never giving their attention to any one thing They are like butterflies that flit from spot to wealth while the ant who strictly keeps to a certain circuit around her hole gradually lays np stores for winter comfort Such persons are doomed to be dissatisfied to the end if they arc not er for they will find in the race of life they have been passed by all who have a pose It is not only the positive drones therefore but the faxy idler that make a blunder of for want of purpose work alf day becomes weary and listless it s a matter of much importance that be enlivened and cheered in the by gentle It is a right good thing for him to have social pleasure 10 have his eye or his car aad if possible month should be fitted vith laughter Indeed the fact that ment is congenial to man is proof that it for his good AT THE need not dear madam if caught you in the suds more joy to one wring dirt a pinafore to her wring le out of a forte or ave known ladies as they call o be iii a terrible state of a they were not dressed up a the to receive him Thay wooM urn red or palp and would be at their to know what to do vill tell the have been wicked enough to send word to the door that they vere not in We most speak against wrong feeling which prompta women to give but the impression that hey never wash or mend holes in their ngs Not a fig would we give for What good for but to keep glass case to look The mnn uch a one for a companion will rue the day of his choice and repent in dust and ashes Surely there are hindrances useful ashamed of it or to be BICHER WATER Since the birth of received that name and not a few have been written on it The ng is intended to freshet in UM Ohio river and is attributed to one Ward an Ohio Be not weary and I'll tell you Tell you are not weary Of the mighty swelling proudly Proudly swelling down the valley On the white wave he descended On the With him came the whirling Came with him the big Carue tlic rolling logs Came tie snags the Came the Came the fence Came the came the Came a pitching maM of plunder Big sticks little Swimming driving butting pitching Rolling piling thumping Heaving tumbling crashing Hither thither thia side that What a tumult What a roaring a surging What a mighty rush of waters What an array of destruction Coming down in wrath and fury down the handsome river Coming down Filled with raging mad with Rushing down to fight the big rats To the skulking wharf SAM SLICE oti ask again what is It ain't being idle a idle man or woman was ever py since the world began Eve was idle and that's the way she got tempted poor critter employment gives both appetite and tion Duty makes pleasure doubly sweet by contrast When tho harness is off if this work ain't too a critter likes to kick up his heels When pleasure is the business of life it ceases to be and when it's all labor and no play work like an unstuffed saddle cuts into the very bones Neither bor or idleness has a road that leads to has no room for the heart the other corrupts it Hard work is the the two for that has at all events sound sleep the other restless pillows and one is a er a curse and money ain't happiness that's clear as mud EQUESTRIAN EXERCISE FOR most experienced physicians agree that hack exercise is beneficial to all but more so to invalids and Tbo gentle motion of the chest the increase of respiration the gradual shifting of every drop of blood in the arteries the ant wings given to the spirits during an hour's gallop on 1 clear spring morning must der it an antidote for of the tal maladies We believe that equestrian exercise under judicious direction is of it- if timely commenced a cure for con- sumption There is no country on the globe where physical education is so much neglected as in the of which is that our males are dwarfs and our females little more than ix first printer in North America was Samuel Green The press then used procured by Her Joseph Glover who died in 1739 on his age to Massachusetts The Freeman's Oath was the first thing printed m 1839 the next an Almanac for New England made by one a and tte third the New England Version of the Psalms in afterwards printed Eliot's Bible and the laws of Massachusetts Plymouth and Connecticut AMUSEMENTS ASD set ourselves to drive out gross pastime of drinking by enticing the people to ments that ace at least harmless arid maybe positively cannot be too deeply the mind that application priee bs paid for acquisition aad lamt it absurd to expect learning: without H i i hope for a harvest where we bare net i   

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