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Burlington Weekly Burlington Gazette
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Burlington Weekly Burlington Gazette

   Weekly Burlington Gazette, The (Newspaper) - November 22, 1859, Burlington, Wisconsin                                THE II W. VOL. 1. Per 00. NOVEMBER 22, 1859. NO. 28. Burlington It at T morning W. I'll 1. in Miller's Geneva St For one Fur invariably in or ADV or ii 1 4w I I I i I 111.60 I I i of nix nr annum 50 cents per l fit the rates Wore the expiration of nl full rules Ail tat one month yearly be for or before fid of The of if to their regular not will will until ch 1 No for will for at all of Job in the mutest nn I of enn thin in for ut a H. W. I BLACKSMITH it now iln I of in mini- i- in best kll other June by bl J. tJ all you wint And wint it K. N. MI EMPORIUM OF takes pleasure in to of that he is still ou O Jj al In S T on the oi where lie is on in all its A good of nml nl ways on oi in u anil the latest F. 1S3U. JOSEPH SL fa tO AH Kinili at find ing to on find ut low U 18-30. Ijl C IS A R S I N U US to buy of Ool I. Borrows and Lends nil We MI nml pijn at any hit I nml in any will in in iii From IT Though the bowl nnd the With bo filled Though like Bo distilled Though song of their Tuko counsel fium caution Ami let them alone Lot tii urn Tuko counsel from caution And let them alone If 11 fliend have a scheme That Will biing jou two Oi a Though it like a fortune To other Take fiom Ami let it Let it Take council from And let it Tho of fortune 13ut slenderly flows got in a Ah sud AnJ It is So lot it Let it alone Bring sorrow So let it nml lo live t ut M II 1'ui.fl, oto always on for nt the lowest 1U.AKE, i unb No- 23, Wisconsin HOTEL II it I portion of Iho nml i- thti point lor the linos from various in of uf mid Hi lliB btM of fail not tV II anil in all Ibe improve I SINK'S ami of ISr TI IM TOll T on mill for Mil on the THE HEART HUMBLED liY CHANDLER in OoM Silver nml Pi- Kani y 131 M lin c and fully M2 Main wholesale unil retail in nml Fancy Sodn ami Lemon Ties nml of nil kinds OH to from s attended SALOON AND 11A A KY. is nnd pure nnd i constantly on W. BILLIARD M. T. HAY 1'rofrit.tor. filled ami all the necessary including the pr on A. C1 AT cocur Attorney Counsellor nt ll M T. J. n pairing to on short notice nnd C II M I S T A X U V O Importer and denier in AND lyl Wis. HARNESS 4 of Double JV knd and the of ou nnd ICM then for lyl A. A F. I. nml will 11 of tho erection of mills in nil its euro nnd if Wis. H. D. S U 11 G N D K N TIS T. F. Em- of i Van LI VERY anil always in iness to nil who may lyl UNION I- cents nnd nn tive ostler always in of the travelling public is respect fully CHARLES W. K U H A. U S in nnd Wis. A in Dry Drugs nnd nnd Quick nnd ready pny is our If you wish n Urge amount of goods for a small of bo sure and give us n. at our Cash Wis. 3. 3. carried to nnd f. om Free of Charts E. at 131 Main Jewelry lyl work of all kinds done ur with nml in n as well as a superior by C. All knuN of brick or stone done to and materials furnished if ME AND nt J at and Cigars of best THE had clown little Now England village oi It was a pretty place in two on whose mit the ash trees lifted their green anus to tho sty all the bright as if a or end out lovingly over tho white es nestled round tho one in tho But to night U wove a different A was upon tho A little snow and hail ivas upon its but not Chiefly it tho force of rushing winds J slinking the leafless ash hurling closed the bell in the old uh till it gave forth now and then a as if tho dond wore lulling own Many homes thure wore the wild seeno without seemed ljut to nigh- ton by the fmco the ed calm where smiling infants slept nnd through tho in the soft hush of er and happy children gathered round the knee of some father or grand- to hear again some simple or thoughtful ones looked into tho and from the embers bravo in which they were to dwell in coming over the shine of youth and Twenty years from now they look again in- to and see fair in which they had never come to with ruined windows and blackened twilight memory over And tho silence of death But in one house no stories were told to gladly listening soft slumbering babes to children's eager eyes ed into the It wus the liebt by in the village lofty gleaming white the with tho roof supported by massive No where did the ning fire burn but into it looked only two old worn nnd with tho shadows of grief and time upon their shrivelled two who had long that their youth's fair who looked back over waste fields of where not oven setting sun rays gilded their monuments built to their dead They sat there They had sat silently ever the darkness The well-furnished room was lighted only the and in the corners strange shadows seemed to with hands and white brows gleaming spectrally through the ward now ami wife looked anxious gaze then ed back again toward the and clasped her hands over the heart that hud learned through many tho hatd lesson of Judge Howard wag a In his native town where he had passed all his none stood higher in public Toward I he poor he his bors just and all ho was a will was whose habits His wife had come to know even in her Tho knowledge wna en- by her waiting and her His daughter C his had learned it and hor. father bo- came to her almost as much an object of fear as of And yut he loved those two with a more yielding natures could not have When his child was first put into his when her helpless hands groped blindly at his he fult the strong thrill tff love sweep over thd moment it swelled his irradiated his his but it did not permanently soften his As she grew to and her bright glancing in his path was thd fairest earth ever her singing voice the sweetest he never gratified har nor always yield to her reasonable wish At length came to She gave her heart to one whose father Judge Howard had James and ho had been young and a feud hud arisen between which Rufus Howard's stern nature lowed him neither to forget at lie had yel to learn the holler loftier than all the teaching of and the sons our Saviour lived and and died to of forgiveness of our enemies prayer for those who have used and His former enemy vms dead but not so tho It had been transmitted like real to the dead man's and so he for- bade his daughter to marry and sternly bade her choose between parents and She inherited her father's strong and she put her Laud in Richard and trent forth she would not have beun her father's child if she had From that for ten her name had been a forbidden ters she had written at first during her but had been sent baok and for years no voice of token Lad eomo to tell whether she was dead or Therefore the mother looked into tho corners in tho long and almost believed that she saw there tho faes for which her eis heart all long Judge loved his wife too if she had but known it Every outline of that sad waiting every of thit silver was to him than when bridal roses crowned the girl bride he had but his lips never soothed away the ness of that loving is a terrible he said rousing himself from his long lu the pause after his words you could hear how the wind shook the groaned among tho and sighed along the garden a terrible hia wife an- swered with a grant no poor soul inay be out in it I would take in my worst enemy on such a night as His worst enemy tut would ho have taken in his own child j the daughter with his blood in her fed once at his warmed at bis hearth 1 If this question crossed his wife's she gave it no I light tho she asked it is almost bed I had forgotten how long we were sitting in the I will read and then we shall be better in He drew towards him tho Bible which lay between the candles she had lighted it had been his for years to read in it nightly Somehow night the pages opened at tha ever new story of the prodigal Judge Howard read it through but his trembled as ho shut the lie and then as if his pride were still too strong to permit him to confess himself in the But he I do suppose that was ten for example to those who would seek to bo numbered with the children of He is our Father and his arms are ever open to tho My heart surely about She should not have beyed but do I never disobey and where should I be if He measured to mo the same measure that I have meted I er felt before how much I needed to be The mother's tears were falling still and could not There was silence for a and then again the Judge said nah and she looked up into his white moved could we Do you think she one my times I think she is I see Her on dark and it wears a look of heavenly In the winds I hear a voice that sounds like and she seems to tell me she has found But no face kindled is not I feel it in my God will let us see her yet once I am her I. shall cot die till my kisses have rested on ker my hand touched her I believe I have a grant and after words they both sat silently They had not hoard the outer door now a step sounded in the and tho door of the room sat was softly They both started they half ex- to see but it was only their next holding by the hand a She spoke in a half confused which did not little one came to my but I hadn't room to keep so I her over Will you take her in Come poor Who had heard Judge mil's voice so The littie girl seemed somewhat reassured Ly it. She crept to his knee anil lifted up her Whose were deep blue eyes Where had ho seen that liar shade uf hair like the shell of a ripe chestnut t Did not know those sweet the wistful the chin. His hands whose child arc yon What is name the little girl said the neighbor's grown somewhat quivering You cannot help that face It is a copy of one belonged once to the brightest and prettiest face in The old he looked very old shaken by the tempest in his strong heart as the wind shook the trees tho child into an eager hungry His aims closed round her as if he would hold her child luj burst like n sob from his and then he bent over At first his wife had stood by in mute her face almost white as the cap border which trembled around it. Now a thought pierced her quick and keen as a thrust of a She drew near and looked into the neighbor's she an orphan 1 Where is her mother The heard her and lifted up he is Have and tell me where is Before the women could an eager voice and from the hall where she had been lingering half in Judge Howard's one child came in. It was the mother's breast to which she tered and threw herself down at her father's me tried to but the Judge would not hear The angel at length troubled the his and the wave of healing overflowed his He saw now in its true the and unforgiving spirit which had been the sin of his He sank upon his his arms enfolding his daughter and her and his old wife crept to his side and knelt beside while from his lips Marsh as she closed the door and left tho now united family to this forgive us our as we forgive those who against Judge had not uttered it before foa ten After that night the wss not only tho but the happiest home in line had borne as sko could the burthen of her father's unforgiving and the weight ou her heart become too heavy to be she had started with her child for The stage had set her down that stormy night in her native and the forgiveness for which she had scarcely to had expended into a The old people could not ngain their and they summoned Huntly A soli he proved of whom any father might be and in the after years no ow brooded over the peaceful where once more children's feet danced around the and children's fancies built castles in the no until last darkness which should be but the above which shall rise of Reward Of Johnny Moore is the name of a bright or fourteen years of whoso invalid and widowed living on Morgan ho help's to support by the silo of and by such orders and small jobs as he may chance to fall in who re the hero of the pleasant and truthful incident wo are about to is extremely neat in his though his clothes have not always been of the and may have shown In patches and mended the result of both poverty and frugal In is just such a boy as we used to about ia Sunday school Yesterday bright and he was trudging along between Franklin Avenue and Washington when he chanced to stumble against a large pocket which he picked up and found to contain a large number of bank notes and While lie was meditating on the sudden riches he had and racking his youthful mind whether to seek for tho owner or conceal his good a gentleman rushed by him in an nervous which convinced the boy that he was looking for and ha thought ho knew whaU you lost anything asked my pocket book was the o i seen it Tho little he he kuow of a pocket book was it This led to an adjournment to a neighboring where the flushed and almost breathless individual of the first proceeded to say that the pocket book was a large black in bank bills and some a strip of red morocco binding underneath the being in- The description and Johnny's eyes snapped cheerfully as he placed the treasure just as he found into the stranger's and we opine there was greater juy lu that one act than could have purchased at the expense of a guilty Mr. Thomas hardly seemed to know which to feel for tho re- covery of his money and or gratitude to the lad and admiration of his Taking Johnny by the whose bounding heart knew not had ty this time tears into his the gentleman led him to a clothing store and him out from top to in a bran new Then proceeding to a jewelry he purchased a good silver upon which he directed to be ed these words Robert to little Johnny St. tember 3, 1850. is the best Not even content with the generous stranger placed in a purse five twenty dollar gold which he directed the lad to give his shall not attempt to pot tray the emotions of the If the quivering lips and choked tho smiles that so hard to get through the watery globes that bled in his failed to tell what was going on in the how shall we tell it. LOOK To loves to lade the wings of prayer with the choicest and chiefest Faith is key that unlocks and lets a flood of joy into the A admonishing her son told him he should never defer till morrow what ho could do The little urchin mother let's cat the rest of that plain pudding The Man Who Was To Mind Once on a time was a so surley and cross he never thought hii wife did anything right about one in ing lie home scolding and showing his teeth and ing a don't be so that's a good his morrow let us change onr go out with the mowers and you shall mind the h juse at Yes the husband thought that would do very He was quite he early the nest his goody took a scythe over her neck and went out into the hay field with the and began to mow but the man was to mind the house and do the work First of he wanted to churn the but when ho had churned he got very and went down to the cellar to tap a barrel of just when he had knocked in the buag nnd was patting the tap into the he heard the pig come into infi So off he ran up the cellar with the icj his as fast as hd to look after tha pig lest it should upset the churn but when he got and saw the pig had already knocked the churn and stood there rooting and grunting amongst the cream which was running all over the he got so wild he quite forgot the ale barrel and ran at the pig as hard as he He caught it just as it ran out and it a kiek that piggy dead on the Then all at once he remembered he had the tap in his hand but when he got down to the every drop of the ale had run Then he went into the dairy and found enough cream left to fill the churn for butter they must have for When he churned a he remembered that their milking cow was still shut up in the and had not had a bit to cat or a drop to all that though the sun was Then all at once he thought it was too far to take her down to the so he would just get her on the for the house you mutt was thatched with and A of sods was growing their house lay close up against a steep and he thought if he should lay a across tho back to tho thatch he'd easily the cow But still ho couldn't the for there was his little babe crawling about ou tho floor if I leave thought child is sure to upset So lie took the churn on his and went out with it but then he thought he'd better first water the cow before he turned Ler out on the so he took a bucket to draw water out of the but as ho stooped down at the nil the cream ran oat of the churn over his shoulders down into the Now it was near dinner time and he hadn't even got the butter yet so he thought he'd best boil the and filled the pot with water and hung it over the When ho had done he thought tho cow might fall off the thatch and break her legs or So he got up on the house top to tie her One end of the rope he made fast the and the other he cd down the chimney and tied around his own and he had to make haste for water now began to boil in the and he had to still grind tho So he began to grind away but while he was hard nt down fell the cow off the after and as she she dragged the man up the chimney the There he stuck and as tor the huog half way down the swinging half way between heaven and for could neither get down nor And now the goody had waited seven lengths and seven breadths for her husband to come and call her to dinner but never a call they At she thought she'd waited long enough and went But when she got there and saw the cow hanging in such nn ugly she ran up and cut the rope in two with her But as she did down came her husband out of the at the old dame came inside the en there she found him standing on- his head in the porridge The that walks the public And seta bar cap for all Mar catch the fool who turns to But men of sense avoid the  

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