Baraboo Republic (Newspaper) - June 21, 1856, Baraboo, Wisconsin 1 D K NOYES Proprietor ce in the Old Coort County Wisconsin Single Copy JVn Twenty Copies Thirty Village Subscribers 00 Payable always in advance ADVERTISING will bo inserted in Tun at the rates of the other published iii Wisconsin N W WHEELER ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW Baraboo county Wisconsin Office at the office of the County urer in tho old Court House B L PURDY Undertaker Secretary of the Bamboo Cemetery Slates to order Coffins every quality and style Attends to funerals AUo for MADISON 41 W S M ABBOTT v in and collecting WM H CLAKK at Law Solicitor in Chancery Feb 1855 YOL BARABOO SAUK CO SATURDAY JUNE 21 1.856 12 R DICKINSON NOTARY PUBLIC Iron Ion Sunk County Wis GEORGE H IRWIN CO WIS B L PURDY AGENT Will take risks against loss or damage by FIRE reliable first class Com- panies Madison Mutual Franklin Fire Marine City Insurance Company Madison Wis Pond du Lac Cleveland 0 NOYES at Law and Land Agent Baraboo Wis 0 C REMINGTON Attorney and Counselor at law WIS Office with the Sheriff in the Cour Ho us E G ATTORNEY AT LAW and General Land Reedsburg Co 2 BY HIRAM T MASON SAUK COUNTY WIS 10 r 11 3 11 K OF 1 H R I H I 11 The Pi having lately ami ed thm House say to the travelling ii now pi o pared to receive them and will Lo make and able Stabling and an attentive in attendance June 93 55 DELL HOUSE UY This House is large arranged and dious It recently been thoroughly re fitted We say to the traveling public try our hospitalities 118 D B T K CAMERON HORTON AND GENERAL Attorneys and Counselors at Law AND Smile City Sank Wis Will buy and sell lands and village property and transact all oilier business in the line of their profession Farms wild lands nnd village property for sale on commission R T HARVEY 4 1 i OR AT ami Solicitor ill Chancery Will the county mid cuit Sauk adjoining counties Also to collecting dobb Entering lands and locating ts taxes and Bounty Sank Ce Wisconsin Geo TV LaMu Milwaukee Grant Chicago ni ON THIRD STREET LACROSSE Will attend to p Mile and location of in Wisconsin mid Minnesota nnd col- business in all its branches Hon Madison Wis Clinton Co Bankers Ln Judge Andrew's Ohio J L Hewitt Co Cleveland Ohio HOP James Y S Valley Wk W H Whiting Valley N Y Hon Arthur Milwaukee Wis Hon T B Mayor City La Crossc Hon 0 C Point Wis Hon M S Gibson Banker Hudson Wis 7 Y M D Surgeon and Clothing B A M D inn Office Dolton in Wis n D S ALEXANDER consin at the house oi M Clark nl CHARLES COWLES M D PHYSICIAN al his residence Corner of Broadway ami Sixth streets Baraboo Wis 1 SURGEON DENTIST Dentistry Theodore Receiver U Wis Land Office C PAINTER GLAZIER PAPER HANGER will board at present at the orders be left by those wishing in my line Having tho ness of Painting A over since I was foui teen years of twenty-four experience in the business K April SO 1856 JAS F FLANDERS offers for sale tbe SAW MILL and situated one mile below village together 47 acres of Land In connection with the mill is a good Lath Mill and Shingle Machine lie will also sell with said Mill from half a million to a million feet of Pine Logs if one million is not enough he will sell two for he is sell liberal credit will be given J F FLANDERS Feb 15 1855 nl COOK i to the of itv thai they w ill for the of nil who may then professional Mid V in a Tooth Land and e in the Court House BARABOO LODGE No 34 OF AND ACCEPTED Staled Wednesdays on 01 before the full moon in each month a Room over C A Store All of the order visiting our place are invited to attend R JONES E- D LOWELL is OK Of- one south of Ohio where bushiest cull to his cave inch ni the collection ol debts taking ths k of Deeds Moi n-t the of sit in town 14 range 2 of Adams the county AMERICAN HOUSE P Wig DIVISION S OK T every at Hall in Ta vim s Bank south of the c n MCLAUGHLIN w i J K S Gallery Far agon Saloon R G CASE Proprietor Over Stoic The Rooms an- nul elegantly with id Lounges iU iei s Sardines Ti ipi Ac served at all hours Whore MB always found ready nil who nun him with a We most respectfully invite all who in want of a good calls OUR ROOMS corner of Birch and Fifth near Mr Taylor's residence whore we will do ov very best to suit you BUT AND SEE US ANYHOW Ladies please dress in dark colored o black drosses if you want n good pk lure Hours best for taking children fron 9 o'clock in the morning until 2 in th evening Gentlemen dress as you please and come when you JOHN SHOARDS Artist Baraboo May 30 56 For the Baraboo Republic THE SLAVE MOTHER AHD HER CHILD See tbat mother Gazing sadly on her child Hear the sobs she tries smother Bursting from her heart nigh wild Why such anguish such Breaking that poor mother's heart I will tell thee on Sho and that child must For the cuise of bondage binds her Down in cruel chains And for gold sho must deliver Up lior child to toil and paine Oh i wild her heart is But no hei eyes suffuse And t with gi ef is bi caking Yet her tears their aid refuse Tears she shed in countless When ai first his late she learned But her tours weie than useless And her guei their friendship Cniel master now behold her As lulls her child to sleep j Can you fiom her bosom sever That loved boy so mild and meek See her gazing wildly on him bright is hev eye Although no tears her eyelids dim Yet her bosom a sigh Sho ia thinking mayhap of pains flint in bondage he mast bear Foi woil she knows chains lurks witt cruel snare Must her dear boy from her be torn And in hands bo bold Must her poor heart with moura For his price in cursed gold Yes her babe must go to-morrow Shining gold the work hath done mother culm thy sorrow And to God commend thy son For God children's cry When affliction bows them low Their low prayers ascend on high Soon His might the know Although God's vengence cometh slow And waiteth long Yet sure his wrath at length will flow And its might will conquer wrong long Lath victims prayed For their wrongs to be And their Makei will surely aid All who ai e by wrong oppressed Still mother in thy God confide thy how theo low And though thy faith be sorely tiled Thou a love shall know And ye masters go find and read Of king drowning host Did not God his own armies load Spite of all that man couM boast Thon boasi not of power Trample not on right Lest God's wrath should on theo shower And his vengeance come with might THE OCEAN'S DEPTH A Thrilling Tale of an Ocean Diver The life of who explores the teries of tha sea is not perilous than Tha charm of terror bangs around it and the interminable sion of exciting events renders it dear to Is professors Not o the common direr of the East who can remain but for a fraction of time beneath the wave and rope fearfully among the rugged ocean mounds but to a depth in the civilized mode of diving who in his protective ar- mor may remain submerged for hours and wander with impunity for miles along unknown regions far below the sea To him are laid open the horrors of the watery creation and he may gaze upon such scenes as an Arabian story tells were presented to the fearful eyes of Abdallah To him the most thrilling of the upper world soem frivolous for in memory he retains thoughts that may well chill the soul with dread I am a diver from I am proud of my profession Where is such courage required as ii needed h is nothing to be soldier but I lorbear I will tell my story and leave others to judge concerning it An shipwreck occurred not swam swiftly by us they sported m the j water above us they raced and chased another in every direction Here a shoal of porpoises tumbled along in sy gambols there a grampus might be seen rising slowly the surface here an Immense number of smaller fish flashed past us there some huge ones with forms floated in the water lazily Sometimes three or four placed directly before at us and solemnly working their gills There they would remain till we came up close to them and then with a start they would dait away All this we were walking onward along bottom of the sea while above us like a black in the sky we could position in which death had found him Each one had sprung from liis chair at the shock of the sinking ship and with one common emotion all had started for the door But the waters of the sea had been too swift for them Lo wildly grasping the table others the beams others the sides of the they all stood Near the door was a of people heaped upon one on the floor ethers rushing over seeking madly to the out- let There was one who sought to ber over the table and there ing on to an iron post So strong each convulsive grasp that there hold had not yet been relaxed but each one slood and looked frantically lo the door see our boat moving slowly onward To the Tome to the surface of the water and now not more than a hundred yards before us ws could see tbe towering form of that ebony rock which had at first greeted our eyes from As yet we could not be tain that this was the place where the Marmion had struck But soon a round black object became discernable as glanced at the reeky base Bimmer struck my arm and I signed assent and we moved more quickly A few moments elapsed we had come nearer The black object now looked like the stern of a whose hull lay there Suddenly Rimmer struck me again long ago upon the wildest parts of the j and pointed upward Following the di Tie Conductor's Story From musings of a city railroad con- luctor we take the following excellent a gentlemen of coast of Newfoundland The tidings of this calamity reached the ears of sands but amid tbe crowd of which followed in quick succession it was soon forgotten Not by us however Wo found that the vessel had sunk upon a spot where the depth was by no means great and that a daring man might easily reach her She was a steamer called the Marmion and had been seen going suddenly down warning by some ermen near by She had undoubtedly struck a hidden rock and had thus been ia one moment destroyed I spoke to my associates of the plan and they approved it No time was lost in making the necessary preparations and a short time beheld us embarked in our small schooner for the sunkan There were six of us and we anticipated extraordinary success I was the leader and ed upon any exploit in which there was uncommon danger Not that the were cowards the contrary they were all brave men but I was gifted with a ness and n presence of mind of which the ethers were destitute As two persons were needed in order to explore the Mar mien I had selected as my companion a young fellow whoso steadiness and daunt less courage had several limes before been fearfully tested It a calm and pleasant day but thu southern and eastern horizon looked de- Small clouds were gathered there ill of aspect and ing fellows regular my comrade Simmer remarked to me Nevertheless we were not to be put off by a little cloudiness in the sky but bold ly prepared to venture So deep was the water that no vestige of a ship's mast remained above the rection of his hand I looked up and saw the upper surface of the water all foamy and in motion There was a momentary thrill through my it passed over We were in a dangerous condition A storm was coming on But should we turn back now when have died a thousand deaths than have ventured again so near the cabin I returned to tho fallen I far down and waited for death I no hope of escape then was to bY my end But the steamer gave a sudden again acted upon by the power waves She had been balanced upon lock in such a way that n slight of tho was sufficient tia over She creaked and groaned and and then turned upon her side I rose I clung to tho ladder F pressed the trap door open the steamer lay with her deck perpendicular to the ground I sprang out and touched the the sen It was in good time for a- ment after the mau went over Then a last effort I twisted iron fasting ol the weight which kept ma down 1 jerked ii It wag loosened if broke it fell In a moment I began ascend and in n faw minutes I wat ing on waler for air which pressed down for the diver's constitutes a buoyant mass which raises him up from the sea Thanks to heaven There was strong boat with niy bold bravo men They felt me raising they me came and saved had led from the horrid scene when I entered the cabin but remained in thu boat to lend his aid He never wont down but became a sea captain As for me I still go down but only vessels whose crews have been saved It is needless to add the Marmion was never again visited An Scene A SLAVE IN PLYMOUTH IN At the conclusion me they were They were at me all those dreadful those rible Eyes which the fire of life had been displaced by the chilling gleam of death Eyes which glared like the eyes of a maniac with 110 expression They froze mo with their cold and icy slare They had no meaning for the soul had And this made it still an uf a most extraordinary more horrible than it could have been in life for the contortion of their faces expressing fear horror despair whatever else the human soul may feel contrasting with the cold and glassy eyes made their vacancy yet more He upon the table seemed more fiendish than tbe others for his long black hair was disheveled and floated horribly down his beard and moustache all ened by the water gave him the of a demon Ob what woe and what unutterable agonies appeared m the despairing glance of those twisted into spasmodic contortions while the souls that lighted them were writhing were so near the object our and struggling lor life Already it lay before us We were close j I heeded not tho dangerous sea which it No I would not I signalized j even when wo touched the steamer had to Rimmer lo go and we still i slightly rolled Down in these awful kept our course Now the rock rose up us black rugged and dismal Its rough sides were known b tho action of the water and in some places were covered by plants and nameless ocean We passed onward We clambered over a spur which jutted from ths and there lay the steamer The sho lay upright with everything still standing She had gone right down and had in such a position among she slood upright hers though shelly other wharf We tushed eagerly along and clambered up her side There was a low moan in tho water which sounded I depths the swell would not be very strong unless it should increase with fury above But it had been tho I had not noticed it and the motion of the water began be lelt in these Suddenly the steamer was shaken rocked by the swell At this the were shaken and fell The heaps of people rolled asunder That demon on the table to make a spring directly towards me I fled were after me I thought out with no purpose but to escape 1 sought to throw oil my weights and rise My weights could not be pulled al idem with frantic exertions but of sermon yesterday morning the Rev Henry Ward announced to that he was about to nature lie won Kl by reading portion of the chapter of He accordingly read ihs Uth and verses of that chapter after ho proceeded to give a of the latter history of a girl Sarah by an appeal in behalf he had Iktety received was ho laid the daughter al a Southern planter acknowledged by himself us Ins own offspring and reared in his own family until his other daughter growing up had treated her to cruelly that she attempted lo escape She was lured and taken lo paternal ter made preparations o sell lior to the extreme South refusing dispose of her to any OHO who would mil her to remain in the neighborhood Many persons in tho vicinity her to be a most faithful efficient therefore valuable piece ol properly wore anxious to purchase her but her owner utterly refused to sell lo them his object being to have her removed to so great distance her relation to the of his could them no further mortification She wan ingly sold to a Southern man held her at but who finally consented to part with her for A ingly in our cars and told us of a swiftly could not them One of them I holder in Washington pitying the girl I bought her for the latter sum ly however selling on foota subscription to enable her to purchase her freedom he himself contributing another also a slaveholder gave and were finally obtained approaching danger was lo be dons must be clone speedily ried forward rushed to the in I went forward to descend into the hold I descended the ladder I walked into the engineer's room All was empty here all was water The of thu ocean had entered and were sporting with the works of man Suddenly I was led by an noise upon the deck The heavy footsteps of some one running as though in mortal fear or most ful haste sounded in my ears Then my heart throbbed wildly for it was ful thing to hear far down in the silent depths of the ocean H W LOWELL ill at nil mid nil in Ins lin in 11 workmanlike nml lor 1 nnd also intend to al of bodies from old lathe now ml A A Fsb 12 1852 nl THE undersigned would respectfully lie public is to do all kinds of such as proem ing WARRANTS under the Lite act of Congress LOCATING WARRANTS Entering for and selling improved and lands on commission selling and renting village Has lands improved find unimproved FOR SALS also village property in the village o Office in the Court D- K NO YES Bamboo Sauk Co Wis March 55 INSURANCE D K is Asent for the There ia no Insurance Co in west which lias as good a as this company They e never an since their organisation anecdote It is told by he old I was a merchant in William treet some lorly years ago there was a fellow who failed in business rather as we thought and James some others including self his creditors had a meeting to over- ook his Wo up his er and the account of turned to Well due Was this good Afraid it was all bad account of How about this Might get it doubtful A third very similar A ditto and so on showing a bad stale of things and recklessness in dealing wilh the accounts were rot large Presently wfl came to ths account of Messrs Carco well wore they Their some and if good would make something of a dividend Their names were unknown to at Were they foreigners Alter some preliminaries Hie debtor tell the truth I am ashamed to confess it but 1 have spoilt this amount frolicking with certain ladies whose society I hail beller have let alone and this account stands for Carnation Company Coach the old gentleman laughed as lip told me this We were gelling he end of the route and there was no limo to say more snid my friends lam satisfied that this firm of figures as largely in the face to point out the resting place of the it's only Rimmer Marmion We were therefore j I hurriedly ascended the deck by the to select the scene of operations according j outlet that appeared When I speak to the best of Durability Down went the Of hurry I speik of quickest of our schooner and I put on our j ment possible when encumbered with so of our as it did forty years This is really horse I ever said a countryman on view ing a Shetland pony Och an you ve seen but replied Barney its as has seen one as small as two uv the liKe uv that sure Two girls of entered an at the momenta citizen's fat wife was quilting it said one of there's beef mode going out saul the fat lady game coming diving armor We on our helmets tightly and screwed on the hose One by one each clumsy article was adjusted The weights wars hung and we were ready It looks terrible blackish baul Rimmer to me I replied gaily it's only a tle He uttered a low exclamation which sounded hollow from his cavernous helmet All I cried in a loud voice which they could not easily Then making the proper sign I swung over the side Down we went I first and Rimmer clase behind me It did not lake a long time for us lo reach bottom We found ourselves upon what seemed a broad downward toward the north Looking forward then a dim blank ob- ject arose which our experienced eyes knew lo be a lofty rock i mentioned lo Rimmer that we should proceed I cannot tell strangeness of sation felt by ona who first walks tom of the sea There were a thousand objects fitted to excite astonishment even in mind of him who has dared to do the deed a hundred times AH around us lay the plain covered by water but hero the eye could not far away as in the per air for the water in the distance grew opaque nnd seemed to fade away into misty There was ne sound except the incessant gurgle which was produced by the escape of air from the breast valve flash caused by our passage through the waters We ed on al pace for the armor which seems so clumsy up above is excellent below and offers little inconvenience to practiced Fishes in crowds were around Fishes of every shape and size met our eves no mailer w we turned They wrested off in my convulsive efforts but At tins snid Mr Batcher I received a letter asking if we could ths other still kept me down The anything towards making up lie rest of also was lying down still in my passage money lo which I replied that I much armor Bin this movement of mine was quick I I sprung out on the deck It was Ha stopped forward and iny arm He pressed ii a convulsive and pointed to ho cabin I attempted to go there He his foot i ml tried to hold me back He pointed to iho boat and implored me with frantic to gD np It is to witness the struck soul trying to express itself by signs It is see signs when no face is plainly visible and no voice is heard 1 could nol see his face plainly but his eyes through his heavy mask glowed like coals of lire I will I I sprang from He clasped his together but dared not follow Good I thought feat fill thing is here? scene can be so as to the soul of a diver I see for myself I walked forward 1 by the indoor I entered the forward saloon but saw A of contempt came lo me Rimmer shall not come with me again I Yet 1 was Down in the depths of sea there is only how solemn I paced the long saloon which had echoed ivay I this until I had exhausted my strength and almost my hope in vain forts o loosen the weight and slill the horror of that scene in the cabin rested upon me was Rimmer Then the thought flashed across me He nol here had returned Two weights lav near which seemed thrown off in terrible haste Yes Rimmer had gone I looked up there lay the boat tossing and rolling inong the waves I rushed down into the to go back so as to loosen my lube I had gone through passages and lay there for it was unrolled from above as I went on I went back in haste lo extricate myself I could slay here no longer for if all gold of Golconda was in the vessel I would nol slay in company with iho dreadful dead 1 lent wings to my feet I dawn the slairs into lower hold once more and retraced my steps through the passages I walked back to the place unto which I had al first II was dark a new feeling of horror shot through me I looked up The aperture was closed was it closed by mortal Had Rimmer in liU flight blindly thrown down the which I now remembered to have seen open when I descended Or had name fearful being from the demon who sprung towards I back in Bui 1 could nol wait here I must go t sprang up the ladder and tried lo raise the door It resisted my efforts I put my head against it mid tried to raise if the rung of the ladder broko be- neath me but he door was nut raised my lube canle down throu it partly opened and kept stion wound wire I seized a bar of iron and lo would promise nothing unless we could nee her here The gentleman stepped from liis and with an encouraging up ho led upon the platform young intelligent looking mulatto giri whom he presented lo the crowded ence as iho slave girl in She is apparently about twenty-three years aid probably white of very and modest appearance Mr seated her in a chair betide him while ho continued his She was here he said on her parole of honor She promised to jo back and must return either wild or without ihc rive hundred dollars which were yet necessary to make her a free woman A collection would ba trikon up and the re- sull would show their verdict this lime there hardly a dry eye in the whole immense congregation of nearly people Men wept and women shamefacedly but openly and without any at con- All seemed to bo touched to very heart One gentleman here rose and that the money be forthcoming make her free and that if necessary lie would be personally for entire amount This announcement wai received wilh hearty and long continued applause he audience being no longer abla to restrain feelings and Mr Bencher his approval of jubilant stars girl had up to this lima preserved tolt composure but when clip certainty declared thai should nil back to a life of Slavery she her face in her and the collectors passed among the audience the lUtes wore heaped up with tokens of sympathy ven the jewelry from her it and kepi for it was a strong j gly expanded by a sol and cast into the fund The amount collected on the spot which besides completing the lum pry it up I it slightly but there wag necessary lor the purchase of Sarah will no way lo gel it up further I looked also rescue her child boy af four round and found some blocks j wilh these who is now in bondage rhe scene block in to keep 1 had gained ever enacted ii this country the work was slow and laborious anil I ligious F Trib with the shrieks of the drowning j door little by litile placing a one of mosi remarkable and exciting gers Ah there arc thoughts which limes fill the soul which are only felt by those to whom scenes of sublimity nre miliar Thus thinking I walked to the and entered Oh God of Hud not my hand clinched door wilh a grasp which terror had made convulsive I should have fallen lo the floor I stood nailed to For there before me stood a crowd of men and in the last had worked a while before I had raised il four inches The sea rolled and more The submerged vessel felt in power and Suddenly ii wheeled over and lay upon ils side I ran around to gel on the deck o ry and lift up iho But when 1 came lo other knew il was im- for lute nol permit by he overwhelming for lube fastened lo the snot each in me 10 go so far I crs and fastened lo the spot in fCT It is a singular fact that look a of any without becoming dizzy But is still more he departs very somebody putt IIH arm her waist m ii t Vanity is R flower lint growl