Beaver Dam Argus (Newspaper) - March 8, 1861, Beaver Dam, Wisconsin BEAVER A 3 opposite W. To Clubs of be stut ut per City by 7o per OJF 2 oo 115 oo j go oo as oo 15 I 00 85 00 60 00 Tec or constitute a at Statute l at 50 cent over the above notices must be lor Iu otherwise we will not insert VOL. 1. BEAVER MARCH 8, 1861. la i; Milwaukee R. R. Time 24, 1SGQ.- EAST. Mail Express A M CMS A M A M A M Express 1'ass. Freight P M P M P M P M A M air v ith on the Horicon Ber K. A M M M M SJ A M P M r. P M 3 P M P M A M AM A M A M P M AM A M A M P M li and Beaver O. 5. W. Feaver dc I rave W is. For the BT Return to your dear Said a frail little with tearful For the all and mother's so And poor little Willie's he I gave him the last bit of bread that we had Yesterday dear you And you said when I gave you my last You would buy a big as white as the But you've forgot all about dear may And site laid her slight hand up on his For mamma says you mean to be But Iwe strayed away from all of us come dear come quickly I From the poisonous wine-cup that tempted you Let me be your Rood angel and lead you Back to your and loved ones so I will pray for you the long night Just as mother with her eyes full of If you will only be ns good and as As you used to in those brighter And tears came in the father's Tears of repentance that wash away And the frail little pleader led him the glow on her of an angel's at Bank of Front A. P. n nnd Sione I Front l S OI KON Office ever Dain be happy to see those who tbu of im nru at bis fiver the the re- an lient st. 4y AMOS j. i. Dodge For Sal aim G next done and ier attention given to di- Wis. i Ihe will be promptly the at all terms or firm for to them at F. FLOWS M BUSH NELL on a superior fo pvc unusually low TO S. 50-ly SALE STABLED hiK below the Stevens a of it sh 1o for will of Horses charts nod fair to u. j Exchange of on Street s open to the or of or him as he thinks us ua any firm iu Iho w 1" t lin reasonable terms and excellent iii can call for isc H of A. S. by the o MILL OF BT E. C O O L E OF THS RIGHT STATE OP DODGE CO WIS would cail the attention of farmers to manufactured in It has for liir four ami last year of as the best mill DOIT used ifc 3TL.uis Tw this mill will prove a great of the great ease whith which It is run grain it but from its xa That it will more than junr of frith the same is froze it ImB That it- is as cheap as tay caa and it is of the highest Anr arill it will agree Tn from ciU good Graham for it IB already ft grind in the an K Is i in having no to the iron last along be at four ai for For the Miss Fancy is very and strange to re- very true she to church on whan ahe has a style of and a love of a to and weak reads the moit thrilling romances of the sketches a babbles French a great the piano forte now receives calls from her fashionable friends entertains them iu a most fashionable and all the time preserves that which her elegant acquaintances tell hor is her chief at- what yonng lady could do We courteously leave the tion for their Miss is yery very very matter of fact able very For she often were fashioned for and I gladly appropriate them to useful And she had a heart to a that to lighten hor cares and was a to whom her cheery presence brought and to tha suffering and needy a helping and hearty God bless Indeed Miss was a treasure to liar OWD mid the world at could darn her father's very make cako ancl bread that was read news items cor- and her bible and be a blessing to till who came in contact with her womanly and We pray for many Miss to bless and SECOND BT T. B. must it. said the handsome little wife of Mr. don't pnt on that sober Did I put on a sober asked the with an attempt to smile that was anything but a sober as a man en trial for his it's as long as morul clear it and look as if you had at least one friend in the you men How much will it inquired Mr. Whitman with another effort to look cheerful and About forty was with just a little faltering in the lady's for she knew the would do yon think 1 um mude of Mr. man's countenance underwent a change of I said hia a little you look at as if I were an object of I don't think is kind of I've only had three silk dresses we were Amy Blight has had six or seven during the same and ev ery one of ber's cost more than I now you me but I wish you had a wife like some women I could I rather think you'd find out the difference before don't talk to me after this I'll bring you the money at ner that No ifs or bins if you The tenca is complete without Thank I'll go this afternoon and buy the So don't forget to bring the I was in yesterday and saw one of the sweetest patterns I er laid my eyes suits my slyle and I shall be inconsolable if it is You won't disappoint And Mrs. Whitman laid her soft white hand on ths arm of her and smiled with sweet in his you shall have the said Mr. turning off from his as sha thought a little and from her In Uis he had forgotten the usual ing the way it is always gaid Mrs. her whole changing as the closing street came upon her 8ay meney to and at once there is a cloud in She sat pouting and half dollars for a new the husband of thoughtless Mr. as he shut the doer after promised to paid Is it ex- claimed the little woman in blank aston while the blood mounted to her Then she sat down to Light be- gan to come into her Ai she sat thus a second letler for her settle Thompson's ceal don't know where the to come The coal is and more must 6, I'm Every fall be- This winter I did hops Jo get a little in but if silk dresses are to be the order of the there's an end to that devoutly to be wished for how I have always shrunk from steadily now it is closing me and my chest labors in if I could but disentangle myself while I have the strength of early and the bonds that hold me are If Ada could see as I I could only make her understand rightly my that is I And Mr. Whitman hurried his steps because heart beat and his were unduly Not a long time after Mr. Whitman left the city postmaster delivered a letter to his His wife examined the writing on the which was in a bold masculine and sard to self as she did wonder who this can be Something more than curiosity moved There her mind a vague feeling of as if the missive bore unpleasant news to her Tbe stamp showed it to be a city A few of such letters had come to his and she had noticed that ho wad them thrust them out remark into his pocket and became silent and sober Mrs. Whitman turned the letter over and over again in her in a ful and as she did the image of her sober faced nnd as he had become for most of the time of presented itself with unusual Sympathy stole into her said as the feeling afraid something is ing wrong with Placing the letter on the where ho could it when he came Mrs. Whitman entered upon some hold but a strange impression as of a weight lay on her sense of troubled dis- of her usual If the thought of Mrs. Whitman re- curred as was to the elegant silk dress which she was to become tlie owner on that she did not feel the proud satisfaction her vain heart only a short while thing of its beauty had I only knew what that letter she said half an hour after it had come her mind still feeling the pressure which had come down upon it so BS it seemed to She went to the took up the and examined the It gave her no 1: kept growing upon her were of a nature to trouble her husband He's a little mysterious of she said This idea affected her very grows more silent and she as under a kind of feverish be- came active in a new as it ami less interested in on around His coldness chills ma at and his irritation hurts She drew a deep Then with an almost vividness came before in her cheerful husband of three years her husband of has gone wrong with she said as the feeling grew can it The letter was in her may give me And with careful fingers she opened the not even breaking the so that she could seal it again if she desired to do so. There was a for and communication from the person sending the He was a this is not settled at he shall put the account in It has been standing for over a and I am tired of gutting excuse instead of the The was for a lady's which Mrs. Whitman had almost compelled her husband to homa said Mrs. aa she walked to the dear with her after you impatient admire yoar naw ha a faint effort to it something she He turned from her laft the A few moments she with a thoughtful her mind and her whole manner completely Then she went to her room and ed dressing to go Two hours later and we find her in a jewelry store on I say a word to She ad- dressed the owner of tbe who knew her very he and they ed to the lower end of the leng Mrs. Whitman drew from her pocket a lady's watch and them on the show same time THE The Chronicle tha following letter Georgia In View of that facts set it is needless to add that the writer is an NO DEBTS Not ene mats in ten can pay his Our wealthiest bankers are going to aad whole is fast going to anarchy and You may the the poor It is only when whitas this gro labor is scarce that they obtain em- Now that all their buildings public works all kinds and all workshops they cannot obtain a day's holding out the had taken from the addressed to her cannot afford to wear this my husband's circumstances are too ed. I tell you so It should er have been but a too yielded to ths importunities of a foolish young I say this to take the blame from meet the if you can do so in fairness to Take back ths nnd say how I shall pay you The jeweller dropped his eyes to The case took him a little by He stood for a then ing the snd he a and want to a desk near that He had corns for- ward and now presented her with the receipted His face wora a ant much shall I pay jou asked Whitman drawing out her book Tho watch is not have dons a very kind said with feeling ling along her hope you will uot think unfavorably of rny It's no fault of his that the has not been Good Mrs. Whitman drew her vail over and with light and a light heart from the The pleasure she had experienced on receiving her watch was not to bo compared with that now felt in parting with it. From tbe jeweller's she went to tha and paid the of twenty five from and settled for her last know you are dying to soa my new xo FOOD FOR There is not corn or to last a and the THE enough said Mrs. her drew her arm within his appearance that t over to our Steadily it i Come Don't han that its contents i as if von were afraid as on ma show it. Charles Whitman went his wife more like man on hia way to receive than in tion of a pleasant Ilia thoughts were my Ada become lost to he in his to TUB in n world of fashion snd She led him to a cushioned Her manner undergone The brightness of her had She took in a hurried from a and catching up a ed it on tha floor near and sitting down leaned upon and looking derly and lovingly into his Then she handed him the jeweler's Her voice i have to buy We are dent entirely on for all to and have the past The western merchants have refused all will not ship any produce unless the money is as the banks here cannot remit the proceeds of their even when So merchants and planters remit the or New-York both of which are r very hard to To create New York they must send their cotton Now They have stopped shipping to ton two months and stopped to Savannah since Fort has-been and are now shipping their cotton from the state by railroad to thence to and from thence to New They raise nothing here but and they must sell it They can't eat nor wear until after it is So the necessity of the South to sell is greater than to Their favorite King was to rule the world and bring the ing millions of Europe the to the feet of the is A country all its energies and capital to the raising of cotton has too many wants that must be supplied from a Come will must procure eorn and bacon from the their manufactured goods from the They cannot manufacture those goods as they have no manufactories of any consequence nor skilled labor to carry them The few northern mechanics that come here won't stay here as long as they are looked on- with suspicion and distrust and are held in estimation of the southerners as being no better than their They get what they from Europe as cheap as thay can from Jo not manufacture such required for the southern North as they goods as are SOUTHERN MERCHANTS WILL BUY AT Just of sending to Europe spokes and chines arid other saw and Irian hay and a hundred other bulky They can no more withheld their cotton from the or quiet tuie the meet such them of their own Tlie following took place in the head this before 11 its me after 11 its after 11'hV'a and to take care ef himself let his is he ivill lack a day of baing as know don't know and if I did it would help Is your husband an- he's He has worse Donnelly who was tied many members have you in a no boys at is re have boys enough to whip four loaves ef bread for ware you day Pat Doyle left for well I mind it. A shinier day niver gilded the sky of ould What was condition of yaur before more He said if I did hot give him a within two weeks blow brains was nt the time of jour a widower widower did you Ah now go away wid yer It's the likes of would taks tip A poor divil all legs and like a gick How me correspondent of York all Japanese can glory bj a days a i. te two at was to hare came to saa me. I showed and told tinia of will ha I toot ends the fire until they wore was iu the re again looking and have continued so or may the rue agant in process. lam unable fully whether be he more the last juices nto every or whether it the carbon isbed 1 am to full was not some eight burs it if rie beat was the ave been sooner if arid and A May I never I'd rather not live bring up a family on butter milk Here tbe dialogue shal coming to the conclusion he could er he did some future from Southern member of the Peace Convention to the Peace will be and the Union The results all in sy will be satisfactory to tha and probably close our labors ou says Fort Sumpter belched forth its guns on Washington's TAKE CARS OP or boots will wear much be and keep the feet if they are well with the mixture as one pint boiled two ounces one ounce one ounce of OAK leaves of the oak tree contain a much mineral and A few after a on as he saw no appearance of a He rose usual one morning kindled the When hanging on he a noise on purpose to She peeped over blankets and ex- tha He put on nia last clean and am gaum .to wash one to Mrs. had better wash me larger quantity of furnish an ash on is receipted you fluttered a how is What dees it He flushed and returned the watch and receipted the I would have paid for but ho said it was and asked nothing this is receipted ancl banding the other bills which she had she added do you like my Isn't it We leave the explanation and the scene that followed to the reader's If any fair like has been drawing too heavily on her for silks ding with than water will run up i amounting to are threatening to stop shipping their cotton and from the but thay keep doing it because they cant help They go where they can buy the cheapest and sell the Charleston mado every effort after the Jeh 11 Brown raid to secure the southern All the papers the country wera holding out inducements arguments to buy in but it wouldn't Our still go to the and if they buy iu has been what they purchase ted the North by Charleston you young inquired 8.9 per is considerably in than the aab produced by burning the As a therefore oak leaves are much more valuable than oak which is sometimes as a Illinois The Legislature ot a new Banking which designed afford and more Illinois has passed easily convertible than the old It provides that no stocks other those of the Stats of deposited as security for She issues banks ter It gives the State Auditor authority to wind np any U J II 1.1 an applicant for a private shall for thirty refuse replied tea years of ags I could draw at a at a hand cart loaded with at twenty of If I nn I believe I could draw the largest kind of a ancl is at a loss to realiza the a I content to draw let hsr try Ada's experiment in ly silks and but jewels may be very pleasant they are too dearly bought whon they come at tha price ef a mental disquietude band came in from the penny She i or Too often the gay young opened it without Another and another dunning paid is it She ed tbe It was a of dollars tor gaiters and which had been standing three or four will never said the and thrust the two letters into her pocket in a resolute From that hour until the return of her at dinner Mrs. Whitman did an unusual amount of thinking for her little She the moment he that the cloud had not passed from his is the money new he taking a small roll of bills from bis vest and handing them to Ada as he catria in. He did not kiss her aor smile in the old bright Bnt his voice was if not A. kiss and smile just then would have been more precious to the young wife khan a hundred silk She took the ey It is kind of you to Something in Ada's and manner caused Mr. Whitman to raise his a look of to her But she turned so that he could not read its He was graver more than usual anJ ate with scarcely an appearance wife wears thaw as the sign of these un- happy Tranquil hearts and sunny are too to be burdened and clouded bv weak and love of Keep this in ya fair who bars husbands in moderate Do not lot and pleasure oppress 4hem. Rich costly laces and gems are poer for smiling peace and hearts unshadowed by Take the lesson and live by rather than offer another in your own of the felly we are trying to expose nnd a salary and the bigger the ssid ONE walking Sown street last Sunday np with two negro aged respectively ten and fifteen Tho younger one carried uu ple in his and the one was using all his eloquence to obtain one bite of it. said tha younger one ona but don't you take any ona larger toek the opened a have been creditable to a pound and dowa oh ilie stars on the oilier Vide the little at the operation irr take the apple arid leave MB 'the THERE was a man in N on the morning of February 8. Pope was eut visiting his patients ike evening and got caught in the terrific snow sterm swept over western Now York ou that While endeavoring to reach the house of a Mr. near Verona he became loss his and finally con- cluded to shelter under a clump of Making his horse comfortable as .ie he turned over the cutter and crept under it. On his in the he that the which he had mistaken for a grora were the shade trees around the very house he had made ah to and where he would have mado very he only gone a dozen steps further and knocked at the OT CHARLESTON late latter from Charleston sad accident has of the foolishness of. the State in putting out all the lights at tha entrance of the James from with a cargo of and bound tempting to mako harbor the of. tbs in got among and soon went to four msn Were one man being The is so difficult to here Insurance cannot be effected en goods shipped mako good any depreciation of its Every cago and is required to point an who shall an office in one of those for of its at a not exceeding three-quarters of one per until and not exceeding one-half of and so the bank is to pay to tbe person making the interest upon tba notes at the rate of per cent and may be put into liquidation bv the State No bank is hereafter to be nor any more notes issued to any ono par cent a neglect refusal to of twenty-five thousand idea of it by taking a. map and tracing it and to in as. deposited Auditor to be considered evidence of tal iu .to be Sleeping The food passes from the stomach et the right its by going to sleep oii right Water and other fluids flow equably on a arid it requires lesef power to propel level than The ths blood tb of dy at sach successive and it is to see that the blood will be the rious parts the with greater with less of perfectly than could possibly be done if one portion of the body were a- horizontal On the other of the body the Wood does not it ia there and r a very little wa- up or die with the simply the blood coald not get brain If a person down on a level floor to portion of the at is lower thna the and discomfort is very the world head is elevated during ges leg of wood or a bunch of the civilized a and if pillow is too raising the head not blood enough carried to the the brain is and invigorated by the it receives from the blood it is not fed and suit is sleep during the and a waking up in without to be followed by a day of general inactivity of both mind and The healthful means is s by the pressure of tha head keeps four inches above nor should the be so soft as to allow the head to be ied in and excite gering oa turning The pillow should be enough to prevent sinking more than about throe of BE SET .TO project is in TO great hydraulic canal is to the water of which will afford water er for the establishment of half a dozen or Lawrences at or near ith five great lakes of St Michigan and Superior as mill and the Niagara river the hydraulic canal as a a very respectable water power may be Since communications may be had Niagara river and tha results are be annoyed by trappings of the as it not be brought nearer mile and a- half from the great x reader is curious to know where unless it shall have an actual cash will a claar ished in town or village ess than one unless at a county nor place town or ng no place of afr ter sixty days from the passage of the to be wound up by tho LOOK are tered broadcast over offering the ate price of this It is IBS proposition has hang Parson tor of 'the lie most Yor the J U iJ The Him hear nif dying Tennessee and along line the States of Missouri and through the Territory of the Cherokee through of State of a short distance of On sonth of. that ins there are about square Indian north about It the point on the At- where be- Carolina com- FIRST BLOOD IN THE Tlie has in tin ii pistol sv for South f i Ji breast snot him It that the pistol was supposed ta