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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1656, holes into them had been sufficient to permit the Q. Mr. Allen, is it not Pesfoctiy cortein— os oer But, saya, my brother Cutting, how can thie be? Mr. Allen— Mauch obliged to , Mr. hall of | Sain of nature—that, things being | You say our machine is bad one, and yet clai of vention;” but Be coeita in which the cut-off closes the compensav.ion for its value. on aoe. There | tbat the jovelty Works have hed that matter under one for am ition, and Mr. Sickela le the engineer: bed tard yo and vanity #9) God in his providence does uot confer all his bless- 4 $ 32 i xs 4 fe ii 5 * M Ven he made only whee in ", more rapidly, is the more economical of coal? 4. | are two ‘inventions here—the the | coasideration, and are satisfied that by some ill luck { ings on any one man. To Mr. A and, asa cain , Antgenepns 4 not fll more { It is, athe’ peoportion that the speed of cloeing | steam valve instantly, to py ee the | they made a mistake in recommending this thing. crerkeving welts, influential frente, eee Poet moa cons their capaeity, while the ship ws | varies. ~ | other to regulate the time of effecting cut-off, | 1 assure you, ar. loves, it is the col, mista we | tion, and other gift—the power to do geod—sa radually sinking into the caverns of the relentley; Q. Did you not know, when you put this cut-off! | wheter the valve closes instantly or gradually. Al! | ever made, but the first time must pen to all | rich if used, so fatal if abuse ¥ Vihet are a t a horrible scene! There wr.s | on the Metropolis, that the engine would require | sides admit Mr. Sickels to have invented both of | accidents. We are now determined to use no cut-off | be to desire? The flocks and heel are Dian the power to lift tbe entire ship ons ef water in Por- | more coal than if the valve closed rapidly, as sug- | these improvements, and al! admit them both to he | berord half-stroke. cattle upon a thousand hills. Why a seine ty mimutes; there were the pumps to save skizy if | gested in the patent of Sickels? A. 1 did; but [} valuable. How much the first one will save over ir. Jopee—But this is ery eee Our en- | the little ewe lamb of this poor man. How I envy e hole bad been four times az con as it was, and | was not resporsible for patting that cut-off on the } the old plan is not in evidence, bot it is admitted to | gineer waa very particular it this, and told us | bim these blessings! How | would ae bed pny there one bupdred and fifty humas beings parished | Metropolis: Mr. Smith did that. gling sons of genius to my arms! How I wor be the most economical. How much the second one | that you had recommended the change yoursel’. because Mr. a eh who would perm‘t no What an answer! What humiliation! Is this the } will save, is in evidence; and that is not less than | The cut-off we now bave is an old tashioned Si ply their wants and aid their steps! How I w one to imstruct him, had such passages to those | same Mr. Allen who, a few hours before, was exalt- | four percent, and from that to ten. In ged cut-off, which goes up to balf-stroke only, and that th fige rich in the Inge of the ful ones, grow rich in bleasings grate! ia the one which we want improved on in the new | whose aspirations I had given to te day, and w! were practical I | ing himself and hie draughtsman pedestal | these inventions, the defendants, in order to os Ht not — that awful soere on / Ane ae pak patent ? H2 eacvinag pont y Bere ae the tiret, unt only use the cad a. oe you realy recommend us to retain that vous pen had mote Tat 1 abl Ren Sane enswer thi esterday, - sass 5 gain from to tel cen! ort in the 7) OO ee ee ee te Cora | emengayy,the, word of Cisear might have stood against | Cond, Woareny, Nhe? Gait they had taken thes ail | Mr. Allen--Not' precisely. Your machine has a coming: nt go backwards aid downwards, a3 now ‘ @ the sun in his eeiting. The history of this litigation has been written be- fore it was acted. It is the hi-tory of the litigation of Watt, with one exception, which is that Wart had some money and Sickels nove. Permit me to read’ itto you out of the work of !ourne on the steam. i ocean with their bot- changed—dri , | they would bave saved much more. So it terns ont | “dash pot;” we should call it a “ controlling ves- 4 ian tegen sunk the ae and =n ee ba plying are te Gate: - that they injure both the inventor and the public— | sel;” and we should exercise our “ sagucity” in ar- large enough to sink them in an hour i the engine | Vacced 10 loudly before, and to shit off on aio. | {Be che, by taking bia invention without compensa. | yaning he, time when ik would work. eos to ‘bad broken down; and yet they went safely, be | ther! A prevent F from gene : cause their pumps could take up the water out of Seated in bie banquet hall, surrounded by nig | Sellimy iti in ie and most valuable form—and | the Peony ar nd bc eccentricity of the tog: ‘the bilge and throw it ov without difficulty. | courtiers, the coward the con- ing to sell a patent right, ad- | gle joint in the mainmast, so as to constitute a i racitic conversa- to be inferior, i great price op one | “valve gear,” which we prefer to any cut off what- | engine:— yp ges Ge jared up the ghost of the murdered Ban murdered hand, and to su] treme of merit, whose re- } ever, Hh “which is a harmonious whole,” having By some informity of human vsiure, men who respect, tion about her: Her fate is shrouded in mystery | hot by his hand, but by another’s. With quivering ‘au tae cumel cee “po abrupt motion” or ‘sudden action.” Tis is orrors re nition such Bis outs able to asourens that one oirock abo | *erb,and starting, eye, he exclaimed to the pietnre | Seccheatle” engineers as Hartel, Smith, Horatio | very abicalt to explain, Mr. Jones, but you ander- the rights of other property, wil! o\1en seize without com- punction ‘upon that whitch bas sprang out of the b.ghest e sunk. s of mental exertion ; and of ufacturere, there ic . Allen, et id oinne genus. stand it? . order of ment } and of ai) mani ere, there. assume it to be within very reasonable limits, ‘and ie tea to Bt noe nove ae one ‘Thepcaneyant engi aid | But my brother Cutting says that we compluin | Mr. Jones assenis, of course, and retires, exclaim- | {8 BO Kind whose wares are aid ior wich us mich reiuc. Ot ax) aenienas of ryt D left this’ port her evgiue was so arranged by Mr- Seated here in thie hall, surrounded by hissatelites, | that Mr. Allen will not use our im: ment, not | ing, what a head! 4 = madien of teria den oe moar es ‘nan average forty-eight tons of coale | Horatio allen that she was liable at any time to | the coward conscience of this tyrant conjared up | that he does use it; and he added, with au air of do- ‘bus will Mr. Jones’ ship, and all others, be built | With the unwillingness paturn, to men who concerre tout Shi ‘vegan to run on ‘ke atts day of May, } swift destruction without the aid of ice or eny other { be ghost of 3,000 tons of coal doomed to a fiery de- | fiance, you cannot drive people to do anythias. | till this patent expires, without capacity to adjust | notning bad been done to earn voc rewards, ani many ina d maa until the of the suit on the | e ; and when we speculate upon her | #truction—not by his own decree, but another's ; } Pardon me, if you please, when I deny this charge } during the entire stroke; for Mr. Cutting tells us we | of them eagerly sougist {or Jenes.$0 bres the- part - of Jul; Aa 4 you cannot go in | probable fate, rational men n: would assign a | ad a8 be gazed upon it, like his prototype ef old, | We do pot complain of any such thing. We admit | copnot compel people to use our invention. And } greement into which thoy red. Tuey counte- this oe The a of coal consumed in this | cause they know of, rather than mn for one they do the exclamation came involuntarily, but with equal | the right of Mr. Allen to use anything he pleases ; | when the laws of nature assert their superiority over | 1 anced and supported & net 0 8 who left no means 2,880 ‘> "tod five cent of that | not know. The Pacific had had a Stevens’ cut-off | power— but we complain that Mr. Allen stands hetween us | the works of man, and some unfortunate steamer, | vntried to wrest Mr. Watt's invention from his grasp ; and: — ae ‘6a m4 is nal tb $720. Weinsist | from the drst,although Mr. Bickles had desired to pat Thou canst not say I did tt! and the public, who desire the best thing from | with a precious cargo of human lives, goes ashore so uae oe oe one e Sar yn eed in se that vou cannot give us Tee than that ‘amount, | omonelike the Baltic's. The performance of that c- | But that bound Zoes not clear the net. I hold you | whomsoever it may come ;—who care nothing for | Mr. Allen will think it very rea that theopinions | OPV er apmears to have entcrtatiicd eerious dune area which we demand under the evidence. "| chine, of course, was a failure, and Mr. Allen must | yet with a grasp of iron, and there is no escaye. | Mr. Allen or Mr. Sickels—who would not pay three | of the Novelty Works are not respected by | ,piiity to maintain bis rig! nwebinations of the But we are met by the other side with the objeo- remedy it. He would not duplicate the Sickels cut- | Another question, if you please: ‘ cents tribute to id the pompons magnificence | the storm “‘ tbat bloweth where it listeth.” reached a head {n 17 h year an ection was ‘tion that tins case comes within the rule referred t»; | off of the Baltic, her sister sh for the world; yet Q. Mr. Allen, have you not put similar cut-offs to | of the Novelty Works if they knew they were doing But Mr. Allen isnot the first gentleman who has jainst & Mr, Boll, by several of the mine- aad it will be your duty to decide that question. Is | be must have a drop valve € adjustable, and his } other people's veseels, where you have the control | !t—who are imposed upon by great swelling words | taken consolation in cursing the property of another, © yeprege Died, for (tie ervetion Of ameur.se op. iB tree or not taat Mn Sickels has a ded tart for | “ ity” worked it out. Now. ‘gentlemen, you | and *he responsibility ? A. 1 have. ot vanity te 4 sepene se roam We Rg on phi ers en — pe pemennt it himselt. 4 ae ee Verh nt uct fa penalty donb im ~ - & steam “opens think of that, gentlemen? How ‘t Mr. Allen, hng as the of coun- iched a ral rom his master’s war- Facceiien’in thea ao sustain thet chia Sir. Barto! of Philadelphia, Seen peli mniee okies atnosmaey: fee safe- bold the soeset The whole steamship interest is | try to disburse $800,000 2 year, under the name of } ren, and as be carried it along under his coat, he so- | m4! from tbe want o' precision |»: e specification; @ dis. party in interest with Merck & Son, one Of 226 | ty; because if the valve remains sbut till the mid- | euvordinated in order to sy Mr. Siekels’ inven. | mail pay, which is in fact a fund given by the people ized thus: “Oh, fat bonny, good for stow, | Dorrie Piet ne eee eo anaabee tect ak * oe it ile’ ion; and the merchants of all street, who have | for encouragement of American genius and for roast, good for 3; what a supper for | Si we ing es iceaphey Sens largest-machine making firms in that city, has been | dle of the stroke, and then opens and continues open | tion; a m 4 ¥ af Poctacaniprapentin. non ye gi p tees part eg ealied, and he proves that Mr. Sickels sold a cut off | for the remainder of the stroke, the engine will cer- | been used to look upon Mr. Allen as a miracle of | skill, has used it, a8 he admits, to suppress the best | Dinah ond the babies!” Just then ave & | bowever, called Huller and Hoa:l, thought this pitiuul for $259 to hit I. This is the witness who aj pealed | tainly go to pieces, with the most territic destrnc- | skill, must now feel gratitied at the reflection that | thing, and to advance his own private ends for the | hound, and was gone. Poor Sambo lool fully | objection of weight: though Lor f Justice Fyre and cir | basestof motives. Wee! u *. Bicl ving: ent, abd exc! : “Ob, go home, | Rooke looked upon itas immaicrial. As the Court wan fe the Court for ti against my -! and tion.” ff, however, on open the steam valve with | he hasbeen them to defeat Mr. Sickels, to their f moti Weclaim that Mr. Sickels havi at her for a moment, and exclaimed: “Oh, go h me, pO} : plained would positive desire 5 it th of all burned their | produced the best thing in the world, is, according } you half-starved, long-eared, pop-eyed, cotton-tail peer ee ae Ld pee A ol trip Peay have. <. Si Pols cat of Shapes What an arm: ee rset: commande, | to Mr. Allen’s own admission on this stand, one of varmint! you is enough to pizen any one to eat yn, plaint ever heard in a court since the year books | Mr. Allen, therefore, in order to escape the humilia- | what it takes to crush out one God given { the beneficiaries of this fund, and we charge that he | you is!” Gentlemen, do you think that Sambo’s es- divided looked equally, no. Judgm intellect! The of ing down Mr. Sickels to | bas heen defrauded out of his share of it, while the ite of the value of that rabbit under these cir- | Commenced anot} ton of using nor eel to epen the steam | inte! a megs ~— ‘ol.ina | public have suffered still more. If the proposal had | cumstances, should control the jury in assessing da- fea" Pe ire it ‘and Ma: in effect, rested upon and was raised bas been not less than $5,000,000—all | gone to Congress to pay these immense sumsto sweil je for ite theft? ‘ given for the pleintids. lumn of water confined i i coal, and burned up with the regularity | up the bursting bubble of Mr. Horatio Ailen’s vani- low trne to its first pattern is human natare! | Court of King’s Beuch, an 6 tons, one of which was of the laws of nature. Col. Borden’s share of the | ty, would it have been granted? You and I, gentle- | The story of a thousand years ago has its counter- | mous in supportipg the i ae patent admit the water when needed. alone bas been greater than $200,000. The } men, pay our share of this, and we know we | partto-day; and im the fable ot the jackdaw and { the cupidity of the litigious bighwaymen who aspired. the lower Allen nothing, at he does not pay | meant by it, We meant to eneoarage American ge- | peacock we have the type of this case. ‘The jack- | to letsico the robberies, ": incompreliensibie Sate enue aan ; but ite truits are all bis, as he sells } nius in the race for success, to produce the best re- | daw had plucked out of the peacock’s tail some bP Bg op bet he Pape the valve would rise ; and when suppresses Mr. Sickels, and comes to be |. sult, and we never thought that our trustee would bs | feathers, and fixed them in ite own. How he strut- i i b w bi r small cock sidered gineer instead of an engine buiider— | reduced to the humiliation of confessing in the wit- ] ted with these feathers which the richness of the | St¢mptipg to ral +h yew bu! from between ihe could ot belt the public Keow that Air. | ness box that be bad used that fund to suppress the | bird of Jove had farnished, and bow his little circls | {of to stcount for the biter bess ty when be attempted to prove Mr. Sickels ignorant | velves Eropped and 3 ade the inventions, and that all that is | best thing. rejoiced in his glory! If there had been engraving | mah throughout theee trials, who tried Dard to make it that the methoa of lowering the valv® as practiced | that barrel was full o! build the machines. But, manny er: And do we complain, that afier having in those days, jackdaw would have had a pic- | ciear that Mr. Watt bad ro right (o any patent whatever ! of think I overrate the cost of this war. Let | used all might naeadien against us, and dri. | ‘ure made of that plumage, with this inscription: | 1 Mr. Watt bad no such right. wbo in the mame of beaver: the detendant, was apphcabie to his invention, the wesxing . Sickels had had a caveat on file in the Patent Of- | Matter got fice ten years, describing that identical method in | choke, and ever had’ And of whatreal’gi(* would not universal Watt bad been dis- #3 gree . Allen on that subject. He had admit’ed | yen Mr. Sickles to the point of starvation, you now | “The w'sexpanding tail.” But the peacock It eut-of was the economical one, aud set op the miserable prices at which he was com- his feathers, and the jackdaw was arraigned | humanity have becn defraucr Pe ahd . . i couraged irom proceeding further at the commencement same used but worse than hen the engine “ raced its economy. to sell out his inventions to buy bread for his } before the other members of the flock. ‘True itis,” | oriietarcer ot imnroyement? & the steam engine, a ry oe A ok it Aising Ibis hoaree: that is, ran too fast, as it alwayn dass in a following Q. What is the loss on the Metropolis by slow } little ones, as a reason why you, pin Am in your —— F remsoie Phage oy w these feathers | i455 xiaaees spirit, That fovelt the battles of fg Die that M-. Sickles may have fled that caveat in a | 8ea—the pump hes to act with great speod; — A. Tdonotknow. — career of cruelty and ression, should pay no 4 ell f oF a ed " il of my friend | and which now evables us to wainiaia the arduous strug” sommambulic state, and have entirely forgot | and in all cases in working a pump quick- | (. Have you never seen the indicator cards from | more. It is for you, gentlemen, to say whether that well featbered bird; but 1 claim farnishing the | gie in which we are still epgexe. ith countries less op- fen it; but unless he did Me. Bartol exnitvted sis | ly, bow likely it is not to fll ‘with water! | her engine, which will inform you of that fact? A.I | plea shall prevail. moveable tail in which they are fixed, and I refer you fed with taxation; f0 thas vor the slender thread of eretion—the better pact of vaior—when le begged Trit did not fll the steam valve would not open till | have. Gentlemen, I cannot pass from the consideration | t° my we feathered friend to prove that he grew | Wall's prosperity, which a cour’: aw might have readi- protection from the gaze which “his wou. further down the sroke, and when it did open theen- | | Q. And did you never take fhe trouble to calculate | of ‘his ease withoat calling ap some of its incidents, —— Seaerteead todayion te ane SU petiedate ht kanes eek Wale goes, al’ i ‘uld almest certainl; to pieces, and a one em to see 2 A. Inever did. which stropger than test witnesses, re- a 4 my fo cotabilah 2, mies ade oe “Gotena: this was done to avoid the kel cutoff, which Mr. At this point I was interrupted by my triends on | cord the ae of guilty to our charges You recol- | the king bird, whose damaged plumage showed too Roe einen oneen ors ih Figen ya ute stopped, and I called Mr. Sickele to prove tuat { Aen admuta is the best. Now, gentlemen, did the | the other side, on I was about to proveed and show | lect, meD, that in putting in my evidence, { | Plainly whence they bad come. The well feathered | his progreat, only atimulaied his). wers to more acave there never-was a fixed Gt which thid was sold, | Pacific strike the ice, or did a fearful crash arouse | the exact quantity of loes, and was not allowed t0 | offered the letters patent granted to Mesers, Allen erm ote Pye palit he —_ mouth, nor | exertion. Pea nce ag cages mee | he peeng fame ade" t ge | Eee, hoes feteas any hanneeme' | rete and ey memo tk, harm | Roa mades tai dep ps ct | qi ttn Sl tnd for Drama Aan i x a , to a mean ’ re nce in such a case le by untill, 5? recors com) up his hour. er suc- benere es a ee fet at he ot — face, without an instant’s warning or a hope? 1 } this application of the machine—knew it when he | not by him whore title deed is Jonge to be intro- last avowed that the peacock had stolen the feathers | cess shall coun ear efforts, as it did his, is for you twetve-and-a-halt dollars i . | sbali not hnger there. The heart shrinks from the | put on the cut-off—hes the cards which show jast | duced. His Honor remarked that he su of | humeelf. The assemblage broke up in derision, leav- | 45 ‘The Tylinder of the a Be Ag fearful scene, and we shall never know till the bow much—and shuts his eyes to them and will not | course, the devendants would put in their patent, | ng the poor jackdaw explaining to coche Gentlemen, you have heard from his own lips the Ses eee oe tee etes | Se Meeemract ca, (OEE | Scag eemrmenteetteaetven omens | menial as ove geeee,s ood, Sek | fret ert cet ie cad pg” | Ge ornare, i tte a 0 5 jon, true nt on man fe woul . *, tention BO. ou recol i reply. ie wor! Bi Ww ee en de ener. 80 ended—I will not pursue it. eay that it was trifling? Would he not have had the | said no—that they bad considered it better to try | _ 1 am mes, gentlemen, by the extraordinary of the mart; Wehis holy cane’ in e since the world began. It is inscribed ‘a te ane Gold mockery of the Smabistered fod melanchl iy col em re ie me. death of the public benefactors of the last. We have learned it in our schoo! books, and we see it in deta ‘ A steamship ought to be defined in the dictionary | items to a hair, so as to prove that althongh he had | the cause on its merite, without introducing any | Ment that Mr. Sickels never did use the in Se Sine, ae pte Thema of uhoot $200 rota as a vessel that can neither sink nor burn, and none | levied contributions to su his war on Sickles, | extrinsic matter—that_ they had resolved to Seaptt with Se te Mai nd ys described in his showing chat when he could get anything it jene- | Should be permitted to go to sea till her capacity to bee had not been than the eommanity | fy the question as much as ‘poasible—that the only | Caveats an fore fendants ought to : pon rally was avout $200, which also paid for bis own | save herself has been tested. See how true this ix. t to pay to suppress a poor apprentice boy | question was whether the engine of the Metropolis | fay io & eet ms in Powe A Msrerrar atten i ts Her engine power can lit her weight in five mi- | who presumed to know more than theentire Novelty | was an infringement of cur patents, and that the: fine and ‘tention im adapting the invent: to | Oe east ot water, if eppliod,as"it-ought tobe in | Works? Yes, geatiemen, we would have hed all | Were reniy tetrad tot to tr two patenta agains: | 77th ihe contempt mhich it deserves; bat ce | our strecte. Our blood, grows hot with indignation But was this the fair price of the invention; and if | case of accident, to that ; and how could | that in very exact form, probably altered a lictle, as | each other. His honor then ruled out my offer, but | bas tavghtme a bitter lesson on that very point, in | ag we read the record of the past; but, like the not, why not? Mr. Sickels and Mr. alien hay both | she sink? Her boilers are a fire annihilator of the | the models were, so as not to operate against the | J gave notice that I should insist on introducing it } ‘is very court, in the case of the patent of 1542, | Pharisees of old, we bear witnu-s onto ourselves that been examined on this point, and the result exnivits grandest proportions, and her pumps can flood her | de'endants too strongly. i ._, | later inthe cause in another aspect—that is to em- | Where J despised such an argument and left it unan- | we are the sons of those who s:oved the prophets, a state of things in regard to the treatment of an in- | deck in an instant; and how can she bara? Bat so | | Now, gentlemen, what answer is there to allthis? | tradict Mr. Allen, and his Honor remarked tha: | SWered, and it killed my case. The answer is | for we let them die in oer midst. The story is soon ventor which is unparalleled in the records of this | long as such as Mr. Horatio Allen control the | My friends on the other side felt the crushing blow, | he would decide that question when it arose. iv | this: ‘The law requires the patentee to describe | told: toll—poverty—disease— contempt. much injured class of men—a state of facts which | Constractien of ships, and spend their encrgies and | avd endeavored to avoid it, but found unfortunately | cause went on, and | did introduce the patent with | the sag form of bis invention known to himself; the law's delay, must have astonished you beyond mevsare. and | time in contriving flow to avoid a patent, instead of | they did not know the facts as Mr. Allen did. He | crastung effect to contradict Mr. Allen in respect to | 90d the reason of that law is, that the pablic The insolence of office, and i rpurns which zm would never have believed if you had how to make a good ship, the lives of passengers krew that te was no use to fight, but they didn't, and Be question of tripping, to the intense of the pa bad Ley papery ge acd » That patient merit of the wi oriby take, © from mouth acto! never fe. ey rushes nee gene 5 they contract 4 Janch: " Sots ater ores mate his pent Mr. | Pardon me, gentlemen, for this digression; but I Thave seen a gallant mastiff, confident of his own When the delince weabin pieces, and became the | Yentor had put in his patent a worse form than the peer bh 4 5 Hager ny ® B prong yell mar nor Sickels found that they were universally rejected by | could not pass over the attempt of my bruther Cat- | strength, and utierly igpecass of the character of | most c mpieie wreck 1 ever saw in’ court, on cross- | best, he would bave committed @ fraud on the con- | Crare \0\i 1. Hen ROtly ieam cm: the’ dandlntioke the engine bailders— tae foremost amoay whom was | ting = ae the force ae Bree betore | the satmal he wns pinaliog ont ry he in- | examinatien of the aetenaens hlmoalt, i was neces- peal Gene omtwo Paeple @ false omg nye nd crema raps * be stood. “Disease has left its pallor the Novelty Works. By extraordinary exertions, | Jou, by giving a mistaken view of a private conver- | urred, thrown “ sleeping tiger. | sary to seize some plank to float survivors, | top, be should ‘im ‘ «<n hie cheek—poverty and carr its furrows on hie ithou od | sation between us, without vin myself from | Brave as unconsciousness of danger could him, } and all at once it was discovered that this 1» De 8 upon public the worse, ‘when page fe yp a ag bo on Tau gue wing to submit wo yo. | be rushed in, “Thore was a swaps yell, aud all was | patcat was the plank fr te crowning a ae ee er ak athens Hades that | Turned, How my ede tet ape and resul} tified bi , whether sach statem as I have ven | over. ie closing, my brother Stoaghton case chiet- ‘ i 7 with ‘ spall boats, and ha result Justified Miereprecents- | BRCMES. Tod to mabe is sa Geteece are rach ao | Brother Stooghacn begaa— ly om that, with a degree of boldness and with a sio- | degrades it to base'uses. My horse cam be ridden | uniton with hist | The wretched present faded from ——— hoo eg pe pled mem to exeite a amile or provoke ridicule, as my brother Q. Mr. Allen, considering the whole machine to- | cority of expression peculiar to him. But that piank | Without @ saddle, as well as with one—he is fit for vention x nominal » % Cutting ured them to do. and I believe do not | gether, as well the economy of coal as the working } will not swim, as iis Honor will tell you. both uses. A thief steals him out of my stable, and time Sag tmeey at, were mag ol oe risk much in suying that if Mr. Allen had been at | of the engine—are there not some difficulties in the | Another thing: In opening, uot a pond was said | Tides ey off bare back. He is arrested, and bis Mr. Sickels offered gratuitously al! his inventions to | his counsel's ear to-day, as he was yesterday, we | Sickels cut-off which compensate for the saving of | about the originality of the invention. That was { CODDSel proves by me, when poe donde gone “if my bis view; the long years of h pe deferred, of pover- ty, disease and death were gone, and the dream of bappier days rose before bis mind with all its pris- tine freshness. The temp.e of fame, whose r: t > domes have been #0 imperishaily traced on the liv- * t should have heard nothing about the Arctic or I'a- | coal’ s conceded, a8 wel it might 'e, for every witness of | Property, that I never rode the ik, but ch tee svat fra prin rei | ie, frat Gesicman Knows at 1” Kow the | | That ocwton, was wit: pie the pore ic | the dens uted that A. lois wan th a | ways wih sae nd rte, hat Thad laze | Mond hash Gforce and te ede wut the Novelty Works, who built the engines of that | whole story. Se : man wostd who eves berated a valve from ite | 1 105 thes way. What id plea that would | Music of the immortal choir, which ever sings the Tine, refued the offer. The resnit you all know: the Mr. Stoughton—Oh, no doubt Mr. Allen is a bad pis ra wan ths no pat ete tat Geos Sotho miter on 0 oxbet, ot soe gay po and a? y: @ splendid pl woul praise of genius in its cterval aisles. “I meant.” " broug’ ¥ i it | man. t a STechace aigedeand tok te Socom Dir. Dickerson—No, sir,no. Mr. Allen is not a | “muzzled” Mr. allen on that. He would have been | period of liberating by such means as these. When The facts of the case have fallen on your minds teuriy swainped the Collins line, then just gather. | bad man; but Cod made men for different pur- | a swift witness before the Baltic came home on her } the wreck occurred, however, another straw was | Dt to create unfeigned astonishment and wonder. said he, “to do a thing which. when the fight was over, and I had gone, should yet live. I meant to leave a record to my children which would not dis- ¥ Dollie : i 1 W ‘ : You, gentlemen, selected from the various walks of : constr . Mr. © - | poves,and did not intend Mr. Allen for an en- | first trip. But do spare Lim now! Well, gentlemen, | floating ncar by, and that was Bennett's engine on u, gentlemen, pel al , ing capital 10: ecm by this experience, and mete | gineet—-toat 1eall let ox hear Mr. Allen:— "| the Vispateh, ana Tennert as called. Of htm't so | lle, cannot comprehend the conduet of Mr. Horatio | frace them.” gentlemen, there you hare tha gigantic efforts to bring to his enterprise the ele- But, gentiemen, Mr. Allen was in this postion: A. There might be sucb a difficulty. not speak, except to make fa refiection—which 1«, | “en, api Others who have joined this crusade les which his genins planted, which bis mp o . scons, Le’ " | grentl - be had committed himself against this inveation ‘Yee, says brother Stoughton—that is it. The sud- | that when God permits a knave to live, he always | 9st Mr. Sickels: and I cannot let it without ae hhewat ae calies Sch ske cates caetaes np to the point of rejecting it from the Arctic, and | Cen closing of the valves creates the difliculty. | makes a foo', on tad the disposition to do mischief ring the explanation. In the production of an the Novelty Works to the last for tue best thing, | be axpired to the dignity of an engineer. If he ac- Then came my turn again: — ‘ may (ail of execution for the want of ability to guide Fk there are two classes of pérsons one = only surrendered when the majority of stock was | knowledged his error, it humbled the pride of the | @. Mr. Allen has the cut-off on the Daltie it. after bearing bis testimony his Honor ruled it | #2ct in their office and duties—the engine builder ife blood watered, have turned into ashes for him; but there is a hereafter where the robber cannot come— there is another little life which will breathe hix and oni; . 7 . d theengineer. The former is the man who mame when he is gone, and which will yet feel the ‘i tm, ane be tied hand and foot by | great establishment over which he pi d, at the | been out of order or needed repairs since it started’ | «ll cut, on the well settled principle of law, that am} 9? ‘ who owns ' Sag a oy scan de the feet of Horatio Aliea, | feet of a man who owned no spot of earth’ nor a | A. None except the ordinary engine repairs. abandoned iment nurts no one. ‘The patent | the shop, hires the men and makes the contract; the | J0¥ pmgy reettes Ss tn coat bar ae aa . Sickest dvtiar of money—end that was too wuch to do. Yet Q. 's there any more difienity in keeping the | jaws reward man who does the thmg—not him | !®tter the man who designs the work. Any one can Ercey coon the ine nt oy on the progress that Mr. Siek'es had made rendered | proper Sickels-cut-off in order than there is in Leep- | who has only proved, so far as he proves anyuing, be an engine builder who has money and chooses to Works; and the Arctic, built at the Noveiry | this plan neceseary to the art. An adjustible cut- | Ing such as the ome on the Metroplis iu o:der! | thar it cannot be done. That plank sunk. buy tools and skilled labor. It is noteven necessary friend of ths inventer. We are Lound ther i a bond of sgetann bat so T trust will wie be fv : c t _~ P d ti}l the grave breaks its links. I have sworw “ ‘ proce’ to | Off mast be had: and the lumber room of the No- | A. No sir. But these two eflorts, made in desperation, after | 10 that office that the person who exereises it should | 7°" i cont wy BM oa ‘veo faa die velty Werke contains . wilde:ness of pela aber. pow patleman, when you consider Yass Secu the efenee relled on bad failed, are ndmieston Se ee se learn tae Dames of thin mM and a eee Se ieonaly cr = oP ft = ad ib RP 7 the ‘Arete by the Novelty Warks | tions, produced in the effort to escape Mr. Sickels’ | of on the Daltle ha» ran some years, and that the | equal to a plea of guilty. freee " seen thant’? | with contempt. I now de there. Poses bere a moment and ys yoursslees if Me. paend | Meanwhile, there he stood at the | Mctrepolis bas broken down entirely ouve since she Gentlemen of the jury, the series of wrongs inflict | BT), “perfect motion,’ and the like; but these ca- bow, for Tkuew ihe mighty power neayed nak inst vy ice at that time. Oo t door, wanting bread, too happy to sell his | starteo, I think we will let tiie rest there. In ls { ed on this invention would have beem incomplete | cities do no horm,aud at times serve to impose on pore Mis sapdettle tote poobaonesd vclusions - invention for any price, to buy meai and fre for bis | ergument on this point, my brother Stoughtm | unleas surmounted by a specimen of meanness foere the ignorant for the real gold of knowledge. the very tran w30 bas since pirated it, and who | little ones. Remember, geutiemen, Mr. Allen ad- | dropped Mr. Alen and wok refuge in Mr. Uartol; | contemptible than ever has been seen before, in a borne a ene reason why Mr. Harper should pow seis up his own wrong in 1-49 a8 @ reason for | mite this to be the best: and yet ail this occurred, | but what a humidating necessity was that! Does | court of justice. You see, gentlemen, that the con- asked to write poetry like Byron, o novels tike a greater one now. Up to that time, however, [ | #¥ last the monntein labored again and brougnt | net Mr. Allen know-—Mr. ng by great engineet | troversy is not about a cuvof, nor yet about an ad bulwer, because he manutactures os am willing to admit that Mr. allen was «imply ig- | forth a mouse. Who is chargeable with its pater- | of W sll strcet~ the builder of the Adriatio—the eu- | justible cut-of—these thiogs are oid—but about an | Works with his tools and machinery, than there is norant of the sulject, and honestly thought this in | pity is now m doubt. The patent claims it asa | dcrser of the so-called Cloud engine, whose wondrous | adjustible cut off capable of adjustment while the | that the engine builder should know pa Ct ‘4 macl us, and f know from sad experience thai the law ie “‘still for the strong too weak, the weak too strong.” But I will never give up the pursuit as long as I ner so ad or energy to act. Others of my heart. My noble friend, whose invaluable advice and arvices I have had ore: 5: and | invoke for him charity | jolt invevtion; but Mr. Allen, with charucteristi: | powers had eclipsed both steam and air? And is it | engine is in motiongond at all points of the stroke, | 2 “team engine because his tools ines y =iasane oar if, however, youtedl say “tuk | mocesty, disclaims the bonor, and generously ai- fo my! © eee oa ai A machine to do tuat is justly considered very vaiu- by, ro oo Tasker ta te it tooue or the petal sat pont a thet culty in ex'ending it, the recollection of his oon | tributes it to Mr. Wells, who bas been promised a a | of your ownleocer’ Those answers of Mr. Allen are | able, and Mr. Ailen has flooded the country with en’ | creat scale of being which with God began, there | it® professors enjoy, to vindicate the right and re- bake the opuresscr, for, the sake of justice and ruth alone, a privilege rized nobly vsed, as he has sed it. Me 4 But, gentlemen, to you we must look for the fruits of our efforts. By yenr verdict you can re- pulee this injured man, and send him buck again pnt leg by EA the tender mercies of pressors. at no great matter. die, brokenbearted, every duy in our midst, cht lemwio eat cannot pow expla: Witness, and who bas sat bere in court doring the | the ones which his counsel say “«tung aad yet | pravings parading the “adjustible ent o! ” difie ance Gancen uaa te “mechines oun = trial, and who never took thestand. fut, zeutie- | be wou'd rather etibmit to the bive than explain Sreatiia.” Yon ah know b that this was an im. { 4 2° Created intelligence which approaches him in alleges to exist, ought to turn the sosle in his | men, there is the machine, and it is simply a servile | away their effect. least he sioald be thought ) pudent pretence: but it proves how valuable he | Wenity. Next to the mighty architect at whose io : copy of the Sickels patent, except in the lowe ing | to lean too much to his own side. An, gentlemen, | thought it to be, and how far he would dare to go in | bidding the vast machine of the universe came into Lint, gentlemen, Mr. Sickels applied this inven | of the valve, without enough noveity in detail to | tbe sting of thore answers is incurable. Mr. "en | order to veize it. Betore thia cause was half finish. —- Whore cunning band moulded the wondrous tion t4 the Haltic, and for eight years it nas weath- | Yary even the form of many of the devices: and | would have extracted it if he eould; but I sat | ed, mr. Allen saw this adjustible cut-of slide out of | ™¢chanism of our frames—he stands, creating out ered the etorm, aithough in the hands of the enemy, | when you come to read ickels’ caveut of I-14, | there, and he teit that! You. gentlemen, see bus a} bis giasp, like water through a sieve. What could of the airy fabric of the braia the magic forms which under the control of Mr. Allea himself. Onty $506 | in «hich he describes that method of low 4 e of the miserable condition of this affair, wt} he ao? ‘There was one revenge Le yet had—one | B¢Ver die. Look back upon the track of time, and « paid for that; “bet,” says Mr. Sickels, “tt was | when yeo reflect that Mr. Allen disclaims tha’ r Allen and i know it all; and in my presence | more irjury yet to be indicted and he seized the | "2#t *urvives its wreck. Here aud there upon wre pa gd ’ ‘ he would not dare to suy tat be had not eoinpelied | opportunity. He said that after all, the invention was } St™@nd @ solitary monument of literature, of marvel- 7 " Works, ol se his/ and thot Mr. Wells does not pare w attemp B0es on; oa Gab wall os - Sore baw ke saat claim it on the stand, although ostentationsly paraded | bis custemers to pay at least twenty per eeuton | net of much va.ue, and that in his opinion noengine } lus beauty, out of the millions of books which have Sones or lone, jote mation eck tell oy ge Onn Mr. ‘Alen, wbo depriced bim oat of another | by Mr. Allen frequently in his examination, you can- | their coal bills in order to sustain him on the pedes- | ought to be built to cutoff at more than half-stroke. dehghted their millions of men—survives to tell us not much ‘That flame of life is 4. ae wale at tbat {'me, and who reluctantly assented to | not fail to admire the wisdom of my learued ndversa- | tal «f ynpity which wealth has enabled iim to rio | T asked him whelber it was not very important in a J thatthe rest have perished; but every creation of | Ottiniim antl have mot foomes harness ene, ‘ ries, in refusing to permit me to prove. as | offered | and power to sustain. And | now give his connsel | Lead sea to cutoff longer than half-stroke, and he | the engineer, from the first dawn of day to the pre- oy pm ~~ Fy to do, that Mr. Bi ele showed these very details to | notice, as J bave given him notice. and J desire it to | paid that if it was the engine Ought to follew fall | SBt hour exists among us. As time rolis on it bat on the Metropolis | Mr. Allen himself. althoogh you must have been | be Lerelded to the world, that whenever Mr. Allen } stroke and not cut-off at all. I suggested that there | ¥iden# the circle, and adds giory to the memory of % of court at the | michi be such a state of weather that it would be | there whose works survive them. The names es, will prove | <iesirable to cat-of more than balf stroke, and yet | Of millions have perished, but the thoughts this one, set ap th Sickele now! by by gentiomen, that U cul 4 iret ye " so, | struck with the eMontery of the jauior couusei, | Wirles to deny this in court or tansh come p B frog hel ah -nyr who, in liis opening, reproached me witha failare to | ber or before the victims of his se “ m jen. If that cut off on the Baltic had broken—aye, | prove this fact, alter baving convioved bis Honor, | Jt out of bis own mouth without the aid of auotber | not waste the steam necessary to full#troke; but he me La will never die. Their blessings, if it bad but failed ina pm or nut, which could be | im a arpument, that it was emmpetent, and t Mr. Bartol's opinion on the matter I shall | genied the possibility. I thei ventured to express i - a and light, are now our ly repiaved in an hour, where would have been Mr. | that it ought to he ruled out, as it was +—It isn't possib) him to have an | the hope that Mr, Sickels bad not done the art of ;_ but ann ve reflect we know there was Sitkels' case now? Yet Mr. alien's abortions of When this infriogwment was produced and pat 0. his cave is an who once } engineering any rerious harm by giving engines the a en they did not exist, and that the this invention can go to pieces every year, and the } torward by the Noveity Works, there was an end of hed to the great T they walked } capacity to cutoff where the emergency might seem | °" engineer produced them all. Civilized hearth. Once before we were just as right, ond jost as sure as aow, and failed. But there is a wider significance to your verdict than this. You are desiding the most importunt cause which you ever heard. You are procaiming to the sons of genins, struggling against adversity and oppression. that there is a sanctuary of aifety for them—a refage for the hunted head—that e ——Power at thove bounds Stope and calls back her baitied hounds. il) Mr. Sickel’ chance to sell lis. He has told you his | out of church together,“ & very fine sermou, Do | to require; and it was a great relief t> me to hear | Men bave reared their monuments, and worship at depuplinta, Bre Ty omn bs endian Ti weommpntior- position r, a clerk in the Oust tor: "Quite likely,” 'was the ‘laconic reply," bit | that Ja Mr: Allen's judgment he had done no aerions | their shrine, ‘The ly temple, whose Totty ~-oF you are surrendering them to the tyrant's tory to hear irom Mr. Sturges, that, whea this cat | earning y biead—bimself struggli i d know it. mischief. arches sprang into the skies, above the trees of the er, and proclaiming that there ia no hope for that the Sickels cut off . forest, and the palaces of kings, erected by a great goed invention, notwithstanding Mr. | — NOW; SS ee ae all om nation and devoted to them, is the world’s tribute to nivsiom. because he says if it had been it | MEANS! +e age ‘hes it te tot give this | penins, the acknowledgment of the mastery of the gene into more general we. Let me | mrention ® he ‘- oon oan to fal! b Saeae tee maind. As I stood within its crystal wall: You ate the presideut of a company (ee ae ae ee ety which eeotred be Aine | into its gorgecus dome, the shadows of the mighty nis who have clulbed your money two | patent of Dr. Gickele. City, but Chick danas, | Getd im solemn pomp passed by. Archimedes, and cat. You go to the jest, and is now public property, bat which during | Pacon, and Watt ond Fulton, { Novelty Work Juttembeg, cngiie: and you have heard that | 18 lifetime was as loudly denounced by this of | Franklin and Toricelli, and a’ host of one em when wealth and cupidity combine against them, mp ge and vanity havoc, and let sli the dogs of war. Which will you do? We await your verdict in trembling suspense. pues a Before Hon. Judge Hoffman. eak, the boat was carried to her journey’s | poverty and want. What could he do ° a oation of Mr. Sickel’ invention, which | men of the differeut shops, of course, would obey vie! the geod Samaritan he ned of the Novelty Works, and adopt their aa Prom tts point of tame we have the Baltic ran. | chine: a dl ever the government, whi-n has been ning under the control of Mr. Ajleo, with this in- | Mr. Sickels’ customer ior a few vessels. transferred vention upon it, never breaking b= sae taking the | it« ws ° the qty yg Tat —_ Ee; e 1 7 i on, Sehels uppere, nhe pemy, ad place of show chip of the line at Washington, and ere of teas, © ten el oom Galvani, 1 immor- krowledged to be the most sue al ship of the | sold a right for - . ; jrates aa this oneis now: and this piece of awearin: INJUNCTION IN THE CASE OF “ BALM feet. “There was the invention iu its most pertect have Bo dual as a “a steer Mg gt PM = fy the aration fer that retreat. Let us follow | ‘3! cu Rh Soran gd their mighty mownes” | °F "Moreen ponies bee sa there ‘no stedie’ te, was ita one ei” Aye, gentionen, that ! eeenee J i are ushered, that you would” pre- = Fen Preshdses of a tteamehip the second ste». wire the farang cmamer, ton amet is Nov. 8.—The Judge ordered an absolute injunc- sémitted to you—and there ie’ « y rhe ral J ae then . Wi eat politeness of max r. Jones, of as ip company, is in- ¥ of tioa to issue in a suit bi —“" opti maaoner of | ot lora mam who ureds the necessaries of life, ) , ” po A consent | whet do you ay’ [id it ever occur to you, gentle- | 72) } 4) Vet at the same true informa you that the stupidity of men | ten. tbat the privilege to sue such a concern aa the f yeu deste bim to be responsible for the engine ridge, the proprietor of this celebrated article, gainst one of the first drnggista of this city— whose court into Mr. Allen's sanctum. Mr. Alien is a dif- feyent man there, gentlemen, from Mr. Allen in the bya rfy typ ahs out to thet. | be 4 naan t ttl 1 witness stand. There a crowd of draftemen can | ; y | Dame we for th “ f Works, when extended to a than without a | cu meet leave it to him to settle the plans You rf | ing. Who wonld not join that glorious brother hood? v the presont withhold—for the atvempt who are cailed © yecause they own engine | Novelty 7 see in his solemn face “solid chunks of wisdom " pt d that ar, is just about equai in valoe to the night of ap- | 2 iMdence of your own judgment whether y Ah, gentlemen, that path of glory is narrow and | to palm npon the public a ous ai building abope: vat it See ooo — Sead. 06 foe Zedioetal Rectety, eiven to frag | cu eupgest_ure not the best; and be re. | Which they never are permitted to cut out, and | jough, snd few there he who. have the strength to % gh pen same title, got uv by one Rice, of Boston, Janction isin the following worda:— wae eo stupid a8 worked, | answer be was then too stupid to constenet | When a pack of schoo air of offended virtne that he is not | Shieh, therefore, grow in size, The engine drivers, | climb it. Envy and Jealousy are too heavy a load had just collected a pile f 1 ho depend on his appointment, loange in the ant. - 8 oe; ey «lain ve coustracted this | of paving stones on the margin of the puddle, with ws the schemes of the young man, | ™' ; for thut steep ascent. Oppression and wrone have |~ Horrwax, Justice. . on wy te bey Be mo as a "whieh fs a cen to an aeae If it never did, | commend ckel*, of whom he has heard, but only ea ~ ‘ten wen phn a algae ig no pleco in that pure region. Wealth cannot buy, | o me by the oommpies beret ele Beles ny 4 wae bie duty to examine every voyaze of the ship. | the comparison to your pgm AL Bh bon oe lone are adopted, Whee ee ak? | pictures of « hong upon the walls, and inno. | ROWE! cannot command, even labor itself can’ | Midavit of the plainti?, that sufficient mroncde fe nen, I most be permitted to fol-*] ane jonreeit in his n order of injunction exi and here, cent and what weuld you be cently believe that all these marvels came ont of Mr. not insure access there, Wed given geaims must 1 hereby order tir he trustee of your friends, ond dare he learned brovber b ° f, @ inte ee digression concern | do. The fawyer of besiness will not listen without Y ap light the road, for its path is through the Cefendants, their - alhenes = toe soa on Pacith whee Tea fate still caste # fee—he cannot; and will you be » beggar? The risk of deciding against Horatio Allen, | A¥en® pe po dork shadow of poverty and care, of disgrace and | agents and servants soho ren ella or om rar a mlovm uver the entire country. What their story | few wen of menus you know, will sy they do not hen you know that he lias it in his pow ee Sas ewell bead cous carry al he vane’ contempt. Yet many who have stndied in the | tor sald, directly or indirectly, any preparation 28 to do with the case | cannot see, but as my | understand such things, and with the natural caution <e your engine fail’ Most certainly not; low one Mago schools of the world, and who coofound success with | compound manufactured A Y Preparation or hae to ac ght not to anlees you understand it your- | Put here, gentlemen, the ecene changes. Tiod fast foc that they can dare the fliht. They y ™ or by either of atrexiuced it for some purpose, | cf business men, will suggest that no donbt if your ° to refer te tois.| invention is yalowble the shops will buy it; but will ] them, or hy any other person or persone than the cone to afright- | acd. “all inventor@ think they have a great idle | | plaintiff or the firm of W. P. Fetridge «6 r the name, style or denomination of" balm of thet sand flowers,” or selling or offering for sale any preparation or compound having printed, written or stamped on the hotties containing the same the words “‘balm of thousand flowers,” or ha: i will wmewer bit. en the magic key of gold open the palaces ot melancholy business tal doom, and the ¥ oun tw Le opeved—but I have oie copversation say thet the lows Swekels out fectly. and then get the assent of your friends | hy the law to the stake of that stand till | was done k. MeanwhJe, whot becomes of Sickels ’ with bim, it was necessary to tarn out the contents ings. and command the adoration of the mult! one test to which I propes be bring this | of that ng on ely aa te you: a what a | tnde oe — Sy Of these is thia or vt fellow! if he only would de something useful Soppoee come person who, having conti- tegparly accoun! « xen" it was! He | ceferdant: who ves that the power of wealth for hee Peet as fing pp its. be might make a living dence in Mr. Allen's sii and integrity, has pur- | admvted be could not explain the difference be- | con secure his entrance. And how has he made the %; vat I did | What cam you do? Iespair and die! And that is ec om engine from him onder the representation | tween the two machines, with the models to help | effort? Ry ernahing those who stood before him in al \gnoranee of | what they count an who have robbed you. But a | that the best, and showld now bring an action | him to doit! But Mr. Jones is waiting, and let us | the path. By dragging down to the earth one of nich ought not | and when yon are gone, they will say.“ Poor fellow! | : using any label or wrapper, printis or devi - Stee sunk 18 aboet Sve brs coe trust. awaits my frietd, He bas | acaicet him, ond on the trial prove that he admitted | ilsten. ihe sone tf Semitic est teeeh, useee’ gwee o0 see nad Howat silen. The eee oe ta abot hours better fortune, A old spear to this } upcer cath in a court of justice that be knew when | Mr. Jones--Mr. Allen, I have come to order an | the portal, wesen cee 19 receive ‘him. Bat how ty the pientif or by the. tr of W. Pe ne were ol sr taut unde balt-and!veliere | cauce to tral st thiebor,t bave ai last brought them | ur cid the engine that it was not the best, and | engine for our ae ie Cate ers ell ue that | ienominions the failure! After the struggle of yer | Go. to designate oF distingniak: the Hah eiuse, © so then tro hows in motion. Now, gentlemen, | \ace to fece—the infringer and his vietim—and you | shev'd further en that it had cast him #50 a day | we must have your adjasti — , #0 that we can | the circle has been go you have not yet ad- | paration or compound usnilly know fon im of fon mast oaderstand that the ait pumps of the Arctic | have seen and fhe both. You hare heard | fer coal more than the best wonld have cost, set it at any eee one gives us trouble | venced & foot, and Bever can. The Thousand flowern nati the further order Gan ‘che abont sixty inehes in diameter and five feet | Mr, Horatio # the process hy which he | ‘nj pese you were on the jury, what would you say? | im a heavy sea, an Of yout rakaatis Reatly | glory you claim, is to have done an old thing ins | eonrt; and in cone of lence of thie " suoke sid thot the quantity of water they were ca- | has destroyed the market value of this patent, and | Such a case moy arise before this fight ia over, and | lost on a lee shor Jang Want of your valuable inven- | worse way then Bickel; and what In that? 1 will be liable to the puhishment there peveor! bel te of panping ont of that vessel was equal to | I wil! call it to your minds in the form in which it | | commend it to the legal contemplation of my | tion of adjustibil oe oe we ye — Sule bdken che once sink | PY MW —Dated New York, Nov. 8 a - ber cute weight im forty minutes, if the injection | was told:— learned friends on the other side, charge ue tor ite tise ? Alien permits Mr. Sickels to live, he at once sinks Mvniay Horses