USA > New Hampshire > Grafton County > Littleton > History of Littleton, New Hampshire, Vol. I > Part 44
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inslimitons, and in domestic practice, As the suresi remeily their uit aling l'hysicians can employ for tie more dangerous aflections of the langs," Also in miller Fases and for children it is safe, plusani ned cffulltnl to .enre in fui some of the most flattering testimonials we pr
The CHERRY PECTORAL Is manufactured by a practical Chemist, amit erere ounce of it on der lus own eye, with invariable cccaracy ant care. hi is sealul and protected by law from counterfeits, consequently end be relied on as nuine without ainheration
W'h bave endeavored here to furnishilie cour murony with u medbirine of such iusricsie superi oniy aud with as should vommend uself la their ronfiilenre- a remedy at onge safe,, spce [dy arul rifreinal whien this has hy repeated and countless trials proved uelf to be : and trust by great care in preparing it-with chemical accura cy, of uniform strength to pflord Physicians n new agent on which they can rely for the best resulis, and the affitted with a remeily that will do for them all that merticin. can ilo
Prepared aut sold by JAMES C ATEL Practimal and Amahvital Chemist,
Det, Mis otra brains
LETTER FROM FRANKLIN PIERCE
THE ISSUE.
"To Greece there has been a religious
revol: beaded by a fanatic priest caused
The Whigs appear determined to The Nashville (Tenn.) American, pab-
by the recent onder standing with the pa-
The following letter from our candi-
Greek chorch under his control
tution to participate with them in the and fuss, and tenthere. and a reflected
New Tlampshire, for twenty-five years ¡has been the trust anul stendieat ileno-
cratic State in the Union, Never hut once in all that time, has she fallered .-
Thecompliment paid her in the selection |table Asiill more common practice was to
that they muw be emptied as fast as they were filled as they could not stand. Sometimes the
is now conipilesc. There has lecu no [ses spared to have it made up in the must Durable ant Fashionnhile maoner. Gents FURNISHING DEPARTMENT how hlted with every articlo pertaining to the WARDROBE. OF MAN ! !
Ifany one wants a Suif brany Garinent made to measure, we are prepared to make on short nohice, any Style you might disire. Liery'Var. inent mede at our Establishment, will be war- ranted as recommendled
prevent it being Profitable to yourselves, as well us to us. Please call und examine for your selree, before l'un busing else where We also hate comarried with this establish"
A fellow having n spite of a sausage maker rushed inin his shop when_crow- | mnemi, carried on by W C. Woulson, With & ded with customers threw a lago dead cal on the counter :med said "Tlji makes
Jewelry Kusiam yada hept on band a large stock of Silver Ware, Clouds, & honey &c , such as are kept in the Conbiny In an Lout-
le wins man, and always on hamt and rends in Clean & repas Wabi lies of the most difficult kind in n Weilman liko meander,med_ani]Gilf The some to le fone mirfactory to those Inte may call upon him, for wluch we ask you l'al. ronage.
Also constantly on baad Bool & Stationery, such as School Books, And Miscelancons Ren-
PRIZE CHURN
Davis' Patent Self- Adjusting CHURN.
FOR Churning. Working. Gathering and Salling Buffer This is the Churn which greatly admirel by thousands Great Exhibition in London. It was the PRIZE CHURN
at itie World's Fair Prices .- $4, 85, 56
priests when makina to its requiresnent have been inoled in the street
compliance your will readily appreciate felence of list "Taylor ..
Boston, Einund Quincy, Esq., presiding!
the deep regnet I fell, in being compete.
But the country does not forget the
"They
Union, wants to know-who is Frank l'icreer there's a New Hampshire man
at the
in the next villugo who will tell all about
it is not doubted that the president will to sympathise and arms to strike .. proceed to carry out the decrees to their the cherished memories of the nolle
tallest extent The Duchess of Orleans after pro- with that of our fathers in the struggle flected on him by the results of that war.
testing against any cessation of the right. that followed the Declaration, the anni- of ber son in favor of legitimacy, has versary, which you are to commemorate
refired to the canton of Argins cotte throngiug with- the gmy Jams of
There is a romor from Lisbon that that day of general jutalve! So may
I'. donoerary of New York, at Tata-
many Ila'l on the Jil ist "-
resolution, of which my father was nulende, he trump In Vista
ference although'n Boston dning tuthing
Ti meste od this ocra-jun, they would re- "pood to yours "We are united; me are one and indubible." As his repre .! *ehlatire, I do not hesitate to declare Thess llis heart and soul were with the demente parfy n all its porit)- "L'aion and love of country" wie lur mollo. The recent Dominations of the Baltimore convention would have met with his highest approval. Mr. Pierer bas ever been a tratt personal friend tas the following in a slip :-
Shore, and Samoel Brown. He was debts; a burdenpoiue tanf; unconstitu-
discovered at The latter place and pursued
tional appropriations for spleniled pro-
whether he assiunes the title of King or Phelia; il is certain that he proposes
of a national debt; Savouring a tariff for revenue, an independent treasury, inter- ti rebuild'Jerusalem ond the Temple of
Salomon : there are to be chapels for all
LENDER TRADE IN THE NORTH
The scoundrel has been arrested, and is ; and last, but not least, ever extending
"Franklin Pierce, not only in the sun-
very fiens point-Charleston; the. New Schout of' the sune Chuch in se-sen 1
"mit for Gle W bolesale"and
gon before Scott reachual tht feld that the rights of the Suite- , the general gov- he sh led fur so reluctantly-siping ernmint . anil securing to every one hit
rests on a people, the source of all pow.
er-on the army the source of all force
whois an expenditure of 1493 milliun' out for the firm calablishment ol ounsti- wo the place he has been begging for du-
ring the last dozen years or more, sve his State. He has since his return becht
The Savannah Republican Union wnig of Thursday, says that the information
NEW HAMPSHIRE BOYS.
French legislative body was closed for on the 5th inst :-
the first session on Monday at 2 o'clock
On Fox river, commencing al Deporte abd including Wolf river and its tribola- riet, there are 55 saws in operation, prulacing aboot 20,000,000 feet
ting maufully and hour-tly upon the
William J. Bellows,
they will" nut yley the low, and the callml in 1847.
ple: Dot ouly words of checring werevent
ETTECTS OF MIGHT AND.
"An error which exerta a most pernicons tolinence Is the belief that the night nir 14 hgurious; this opinion binders the in. treduction of' ventilation teore than ul enors together. Now there Is not n juticle of proof nor linve we any renton whatever by believe that the atmosphere of oxygen nul miltugett ondergoes any chango during the night. dlut there Are cerinin causes in operation At tuight which exercise over os an injuriod- in- Ilence. We will investigale them In see il' closed doors und windows will shut them out or stop their operation -.- First in is known ihint there is a slight Increase of carbonic acid from plunla thuring the niglil, but this poison is gen- eraled in much larger quanhties from the lungs of Animals, and necumulated more in close rooms than in open nir .- It is therefore certain that nothing is gained in this respect by relus- Ing ventilation, The next difference brween night and day to be noticed, is the fuel, that sunlight exercises a most improtant influence on plants and also on animals; but ebutting out fresh air will uut restore his rnyw. Another fact That all bodies, quimale or inanimate, expose at the direct rays of' a clear sky, radioto beat with great mupidity and greatly reduced; and it is well known ilint it is dengerous to the health of inan for the temperature of their bodies to be rapidly nud greatly reduceit
But persons sleeping in & ventilated roon, even il' the windows are open, are not exposed to the direct rays if the clear sky (and the law does not apply to any other combination of' rireunistances) therefore, this frequent source of injury to persons exposed does not reach those in a sheltered house As to the anjury to be l'earel from neoll current of air, I would observe that it was gross care- lessness for any one to expose himself In this danger night or day, whether the house is ventillied. I believe flere is nol known any other cause winch can Is supposed to produce my special in- javivu- eneet at night and the least re- dertion weill -how that not one of thest- mentioned can by any possilulity injuir a person more in a ventilated than in an uaventilated house. Is therefore follow . thal the objection of the night air Leing injurious is utterly futile. The pure at- mostphere hins nothing whatever lo de wub rausing the death of a person ex- posed at night within the tropues; nor does it produce the cough of the con- suintive and asthmatic nor the languor and misery which the sick so frequently experience
These and other sufferings experi- enced more particularly at night are caused by carbone acid, absence of sun- liglet, rapiil reduction of temperature the air being saturated with moisture, Ke, and not by that wir withest which we canrot live thave aninuter: 1: + ab sun to suppose that fresh air supporte our life and destroyes our health at one nud the same time. The same thing cannot possess the utterly incompatibh character of' good and evil, of supper- ting life and ile-trying it. - JMhchanie's May
SATIN OFTBONE
A young fellow of exceedingly lirely and social temperament, one night re- turned home after a long walk throughi the wood-, and funnd as usual, a group of gossopping neighbors spinning mar- vellon- yarns by his father's fireside,- Intent of joining them he seateil him- >"If pensirely at at distance, with a coun- leunnec full of ticlancholy forebodings. . What's the matter?' inquireil one and ahother but received ro reply saves ~ lemn shake of the head
The niteation of the company was nl length arrested, when he gravely re- marked, .I saw the devil sitting upon a stinop teryneg. ne I came through the
"The devil weeping!' was the, sloud- taneous ejaculation, as with dr-temdeil eyes and hands upraised they started Troin their scal4
"True,' re-ponded the still inclauchol- ly youth. . He was werping for the kas of his traile. He says you can tell tore hes in twenty-four hours, than he can possibly circulile in a month, aml he shall be forced to luke up another line of bu-inces.
MY SPIRIT MOTHER
UY PMILE I PAYE
Twas a calm and sjuk 1 & vruing In ilw goblen suivian tage, Not n mitingi broke the silllicen Sie the foi off vesper chime- Not a ripide woke the waicis l'In their solt and dremny sleep Save na wiwen a falling leaffet
Khaul the borom of the derp
Moonlight, son nud pure and holy 'Trembling through the misty alr. Resting on the placid waters Like na angel smiling there Stars came down, awhile to linger On the peaceful ware asleep- Seeming, in their lush loos beauty I loating jerrels on the deep
Heaven and Earth the while sem bleading Gently mingling into one Till the world was robed in glory. As the spender of the sun
Oh, the save and hallowed beauty Of abat silent evening hour,
Gemly weoel my weary split, Byl's soft persuasive power. Far auny hom nught unholy. Till carth's rares no more were mine- Till one high and holy impulse Ruled alone my spirit's shrine
There amed the dicamy moonlight Cams a boty quirit great
And The words she sonty whispered 'T Inilied with bopo my scorning breast, For she bade me bear Life's lairdens All us weary weight of tears- Calmly, with no words of inurmut. Firbily, with no doubts of fears
Then, in roncs of "weelest musir, As the moonlight round her fell. Whispered she one lender blosing, Murroured she one fond farewell. Upward through the silvery radience "Of the clear and crystal nir,
Wilfully I enzed and wondered, As she slowly floated ibere.
Till a flood of golden gloty Closed around her pruhwny bright. And the woven starkght lud her As a mainle for my siglu Then I knew the angel vision Which bad blessed me na she smiled, WAS my own sweet - pire-mother. Watching our her way ward could
And I kncir amid the silence,
And the shadows brooding there- And I breathed my burdeord spinat Forh in deep and carne-i prayce, That my angel gust might botte Ever neat. to bless aud gutde, While my herk was wildly tossing Da Lifis duk tempestsous inde
OV'HI MINME.
"O itos wih reverent care those eyes, Their meck and sorrowing light hath fled : No trembling gleam ibrough me-is of icate From these dutmonit orbs will more be -lied
Draw dunn the ilno aod azure Iil;
No lock of mute, appcaling pain,
No picreing anguish gare on heaven, Will stike through those bloe do pibs again
Now gently smooth her soft brown hair. Shed not those gloss) br.vils away. Bei part the bright lucky round Ler brow, As suceily in her life they lay
Press oac soft kiss on those soft lips :, 'They thrill not now like flu kering fuino . They'll be'er unelose, in troubled dreams, To breathe ag sin thes cherished name. Bul peces them softly; stift ant cafet, They port not uab the sheper's Lavash Fear not to break the soft wa .cat Lafu by the kindly touch of druh
Wiap the white chrout alom her tweast No trembling theob shall stir its Juhl No wild emotions wake to life,
Withan thos bo. om suguy rutd
Fold tenderly her fair young; han ls, The heart benenh in stillness le > They'll never strive, with lightemel chesp. Agun to hush its nogurshed u es.
Oh ' Seire Int Ifif the storm that swept The bloom from this pale sleeper's brow And kera the pang that rent apart "The ho-om calmly shrou ked pow*
.
PARODY ON THE LAST HOSE prarthe OF SU THEP
Tis the ast eike of -nppl E. Ich stcanung alene,
All its bghit brown companions
Are butlerul and gone
Not the of its kindred, No rookie Is nigh,
To .kram on the planter, Or near its mate he ]
I'll not leave thee. thou lone one, To meet a cold fate, Since thy males nre all enten. Come lic on my plate. Thus kindly I11 balter,
Thi streaming sule o'er, And think of tby enceines*, When ihou ari no more.
They all cake must follow. Three times every day,
When bre.al. Fast as reals. They v mich au wy:
When hunger is mighty, And sickness is Down, No cake enn unhabit The table alene
To YOUNG MEN .- How, after the duties of
The members of the gossiping chib quietly retreated, and have since held the day are over do you employ your evenings? their mertings in some more secluded ; Thisisa question of importance. If you have no regular employment, no fixed porseits to en- gross your attention, and operate os'a stimuha If the following 14 nul ixacity true, perhaps lo the mind when unemployed, you must of ne- It might have hren cessity have many leisure and unoccupied hours "The story is related oto lawyer who hus intervals when lime will bang heavily on your
einre silnined emineneu in his profession. hands, and suggest the necessity of some menns
to relieve it of us weight. Tho very lime which
is dissipated in iMeness would, if devoteil lo
study, ennlde muny a young man to obtain cmi-
nence and distinction In some useful att
WHO WILL FOLLOW UIN ?- The R. I Tem-
fortunately there was a great press of business,
and he knew that this motion would be overrwl-
perance Advocare concludes an article on llon- E. A Hannegan's muriler of a brother-in-law, ina drunkce brawl as follows
ter, and consequently a fair price nad readly nale -N. \' Fare *
FACTS ABOUT MILE -Cream enn not rise ilin attention of his nuditory, and which
alwaya command admiration, even when
through a great depth ofmilk If milk is therefore
foot desired to retain ite erenm for a timo. it should they ilul not carry conviction; prompt in
decision, and firm in Netion; mud with n
vigorous intellect, Irained in the contests
becoming imporled to the bitter, Mr.S. suggests that the bag containing the cream bo jdneed in another bay or cloth of tho samo material. The value of tha
Ibet Lingualjugit .Tom"+-dey ahier to-molow' linve price-he stood in the balls of Congress
This forest would of course have been granted and in the halls of L'imperors ; was honored N by the court. wlors sympaibles were strongly | home, and howed to abroad You have self- ! is facilitateit by nee, and retanled by n depression feil withal lo an ardent love of country,
freper i-be hud so much alent be killed a brother ] of temperature At the usual temperature of the
But neither talents. nor dairy 50° l'athrenheit, all the cream will pruba-
firmness, nor si If-respect, nor pri-le, nor friends bly rise in 26 hours, hett at 74 -. it will all roer in
less than half that IN " and when milk is kept,
1. Italen1 * how ofich bwr I whipped you for you def) fare hy tampering with the wine cup. near the freering point, tho cream will rise very !
Dal it down, as you were sent the pangs
Iyi: " Tler case wasn't po-iporiil nur weil if that shout now lite singul mipente of fire.
AGRICULTURAL. THE DAINY-BUTTEN
As the only scaron Is now faltly upon de, # kw thoughts npun lutter making, empreint tef- vrence to the quantity which iony be made per cow, and the mode of duing it. inny be protita- bic, and we hope interesting Those persons
TuInner Cows kan frequently milked then ollesgive rich milk and consequently much
man partir or ceusare, but the judgment plate, 18. il seems to ne, mearly n matter of luis cotemporaries bar preceeded and of nute and convenience, on which piga
butter morning's milk un richer thas the pronounced the judytocot of history, and and men may honestly differ They
cirning's "The last drawn milk ofeach milking his name and laque will abed a fusture oughi then, to be judged charitably, At
any rate, pigs ure not filiby enough to
ni all vines and scasons, Is richer than the first upon bis country and will be fondly cher- cheir tobacco, nor lo poisen their breath' ished in the hearte of his countrywien, for long nges to come. Yes they will be by drioking whiskey. As lo personal
ART OF MOWING.
Il is extmly difficult to lay down rules for
using that very important implement of hus. Landry, the whythe, properly Mowing Is gen-
erally'regarded the most fatiguing labor of the deposited of the immortal spirit, skall rest If one chances to wallow a little in come
faim, and it le very rarely the cote thal we eee a under this dome for the last time, to lie --
perfectly casy and graceful mower, though we
hear a vast deal of bragging and self-commend-
come the witnesses of bis defeat in that fi- nal contest, when the migbliest fall be.
mire-holo deeper than his brethren, be never assumes an extra importance on that account; neither are his brethren
ed system of maasgement, end wish to elevate
lo the highest point of Improvement
Pukin, of Woodville, L. I, Inserted some years like all the works of man, leaving their still a bog ?- Ifhe is, we will treat him MBec In the New York Farmer and Nechanie broken fragmenta to tell the story of for- as such, And when a hog has no mer- Twenty years ago, good manngers were con- teni with one linndred lo one hundred and and te published of late in most of the ogricul- Tural papers in the country, are probably ins that announce decay nad dessolu- aristocratic air nor claims nny particular mier magnilicence, amid tho very ru- its of his own, he never puls on any twenty-five pounds per cow, of butter, The naudard has been going higher since, until now, Ilicious as con well be suggested on paper: tion.
The diaryman who makes Tier than one hundred Tat The mythe should hing unterally and
I was often with him during his last tions. "They understand full well tho'
casily, and os I have siad before, It must be
ilInes-, when the world and the thing, of common-al'llae maxim-"Every lub
the world wrre fal fading hway before most stand upon its own bottom." ===
much ho ded make. Ho usually has " a large ! At yon approach the Blanding grass, lel 1um. jle knew that the silver chord
"eows aro many of thein heders, and he did not commencemer, und let it stop the insont it has
expect much from them." or some similar ex- done its wnik Thus there is nothing lost by
back ward forward swing If the grass sinnds
ling that Ile who gave hina the right to
take away, in His own good time and manner.
After his duty to his Creator, and his Soa successful buslijiss inan differs entirely
anxiety for his family, his first care was from a man ot mere Intellect, a man who has ull
sorts of scaso leshles common sense-mind with
for his country, and the perservation ami perpetuation of the Constitution and the out any uuihorny over matter, on the one hand,
Union, dear to him in the hour of death and from the mupid unreasoning plodder, tho
as they were in the rigor of life-of man machine on the other. the timo was when that Constitution and Umnon, whoes de. business was busyness, and a mau got alang in
why sub results should not be priameil. repeat is on advanced position, without fa-
The Inings os to a winterseat of a few instan ligue
ces of successful management, wluch have come
Note -If you sning six Inches too far back.
gies, and had stimulateil those memora-
to our knowledge,-instance, which are worthy and six inches too for in pointing out, a) makes ble and powerful displays of eloquence
of being held up as examples before the thou- 24 inchies lo's " Then apply the same strength which he who witnessed can never for-
ends whohave never reached equally success- lo a sierlife forward motion, and you will gel, aud w bich no doubt 'ha-tened the 6
ful results. The instancesto which we refer, find it difficult for ordinary mowers to keep nal catastrophe which a Nation now de
may not be the most cemurkable winch have
plores, in a onanimly not less hunorbh
to themselves, det the memory of their
affections; and when we shall enter
that nou row valley through which he
has pussel before us, and while lead-
attachment had grown up between these to the judgment seat of God, may we bi
farmers in the same neigh Thood, wuhan ofem h other ull of whom tuve bert quae su. ecsoful in butter making. The first was our old friend, Lewis Fanns, o/ Luc, whn serciel year ago, sed to make eighty pounds pre cos from ho , well salve- &d and well managed. It. AIVuweser, since It out las dairy, and has 1 weg'a to good a lot a+ formerly I aring porel as ;En eral t . ineren e the number, to correspond with the increased size ofhis fim de la far made from wa think bear Luels cout a mizope of uvir gos Lundred and seventy w Leves the quantity Ilis dairy is now incpf .. ! to twenty-cight through the land, and which i- reminding Isthat we have higher duties to foti! by, fron ten and g. under respon-italitics lo enconate shan thune that mert us here, when ur who was in quest of a brother thul came on le fire him and seuled in sunse of the ilggings in day our hank upon his holy word and intake his loly tame, promising to the Faithful to that constitution which he atre us in his merey, and will witlulraw I'ai was a -trong, aililetie man; a ti ue Cattolie anil lidt never seen the in enor of a Protestant natch. It sras a pleasant Sabbath inonting talt tresier Ingalls mnet l'at who inquired thu rood is die post at church. logall' is a goal Nous main. He told l'at he was going in church himself, niut în ied his new-made acquaintance 'o korp hun company tlicher, bis p'uo of de-li- nhbon being a small Methodist meeting houst "There was a great revent there nl near hy. That time, and one of the deaenm fuho by the his services and renown to that final bar ninety-seven poondts of butter per cow . Hle where the lufty and the lowly wust all war was very. small iu stwur ] invited hotlni sicamaty, milked last season, fueleen cows, mal mile fo srl an average of ono hundred andl t. io lake an at in his pew, " Ile arripied ilu meet at Laat I do tet rise upon this mournful occa- feils during the spring from two to three qmarts Invitation and walked in, followed by l'u, who luokel in s un to find the aler, &c. After In was sented leturneit to brother t, und i in wlus per w lunch could be he Ird all arogurt, inquired of mical, a mixture uf cosa grund with the cob | sion to indulge in the language of paner- Sure, and Wir's this a herrie thanh ". und ents, per iny, until good fed is aforded in gyric. My regard for the memory of ' Itah / Bbl Inpills, 'ifyou speak n loud! w'med alicy will put you ool wduediately." ' Divila word will I spusk at ad at all repind l'al. The meeting was opened wul prever by the pastor I'at wis eyeing hun very clo-oly, when alone a of good cours, good for ! and good manager. ment Now who will unileriske to say that the 'y stem is not mjere profitable than that usually practised Those who hure to seec+sfully tried it have nodoubt upon the subject, and they are certainly are the best qualified lo judge lat us look n moment af the value of the pro. time, but who can never forget the im- ducts fiom these cows. There is no exact il ite pre -- ion he produced by the charms of lis conversation, the Irankness of his Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.