Central Wisconsin (Newspaper) - June 17, 1857, Wausau, Wisconsin BY COJ in IN ADVANCE Volume I Wausau Marathon County Wisconsin Wednesday June 17 1857 Number 9 EVERY WEDNESDAY AX Co WIs BY ij oo Office on Street Building Two Dollar per annum m- Terms of ol one week weeks three 3.00 six months 6.00 year three months gtx months one year 13 months aix months one year three months six months one your ID Cards in the Directory not exceeding six lines per year Transient muat bo paid for in One square One One square One Ono square Quarter Quarter Quarter column column Half column One column One column Ono column 10.00 President Secretary of StaSo Cnss Secretary of Treasury Howoll Cobb Secretary of Interior Jacob Thompson Secretary of Nary Isaac Secretary of War John B Floyd Postmaster A V Brown Attorney John Black President John Speaker of the House Supreme Court Chief Justice Associate John McLean do to M do do John do do John A Campbell do do Puler V Daniel do do Samuel do do 1 do do Benjamin K Curtis do do Benjamin O Howard 17 8 Court for U for Dist Wisi A 0 Miller IT S District Attorney U S Marshal S V H R Doolittlo of Chas County In Congress 1st Dist John F Potter of 3d Dist C C Mineral Ft 3d 0 Oillinghural of Register Register Receiver Register Receiver Receiver POINT Joel C Squires Honry 0 Plowman LA Cyrus K Lord Theodore Rodolph John O Oils Abraham A G STATE ADMINISTRATION Governor Private Secretary Lieutenant Governor Secretary of State Assistant Sec Treasurer Assistant Treasurer Attorney General of Pub Ins Hank Bank State Prison Com Librarian Coles B F Hopkins Arthur McArthur John W Hunt Kuohn E Powers Wm U Smith A C Harry Wm M Dennis A Edward A Kruer Supreme Court Chief Justice Edward V Whiton Associate Justice A D do do O Colo Circuit Judges 1st District J M Keep Boloit Jil District Lovi Hubboll Chai 4th Dial Groon Bay Dist Sf M Colhron Mineral Pt Oih Dist W Chien Goo W Cato Dist Cotton Dist A L Collins Madison of state ciety K W Treasurer Samuel Marshall Secretary Goo O of County No S at ffi 1 Regular weekly meetings on Evenings at the Sons Hall on Third Street lET Members of other Divisions in cordially invited to meet with H KENNEDY W P L W SLOSSON Vf A WK R S F W Trim C W A GORDON M D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON on Main WISCONSIN S MARKS M D Physician and Surgeon on Main Street WISCONSIN WALTER D McINDOE Dealer in Dry Goods Groceries Hardware Clothing Boots Shews lints Cnps Flour Pork Lumber Shingles Corner of Main and Jackson streets Wan sau Wisconsin L in Dry Goods Groceries Hardware Clothing Boots ft Shoes Provisions Goods for and Shiir of Main fy Washington Sts Wis and wholesale in Dry Goods Groceries ant Clothing Hats am Cups Boots and Shoes Liquors Main St D A B BARNES Denier in Provisions Tools Groceries GootH Mmle Shoes Shingles Sec Main Street sin G N LYMAN Dealer in Dry Goods Groceries Provisions Crockery Glass Boots and Clothing Timber Lumber Logs Shingles nt his Third Street Wisconsin A WYLIE Dealers in Huge Tools Farming Utensils Crockery Groceries Provisions manner ol corner of Main and son Streets Wis KENNEDY CHASE ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office on Main Street WAUSAU WISCONSIN ani Counsellor 117 opposite tho Mom Street WAUSAU WISCONSIN THAYER at TUK WAUSAU WISCONSIN Having the Notary Public und Court they ore ed to tto all kimla of Conveyancing take testimony Also General Lomi M 1 W UT I PA UK J W TAW PARK VAN MYERS it ai the Post office STEVENS WAUSAU MARATHON CO WISCONSIN T H on 3d Street WISCONSIN J X BRANDS County Judge Clerk of the Court Sheriff Undor Attorney of Deeds H C Asa Garry Gso G Eli R Single James K Clork BM Lawrenee Ana Button Officers of the Town of Jacob Paff Rufus P Munson Town G Green Reuben M Welch tho Luman Peace Clerk S John F Geo eorge A Lawrence Luman Schools Eli R Alban Clark Benjamin K N O W U T O N CO WISCONSIN attend to all entrusted to him wider that name Knowlton April 15 lyl LUMAN rf fyt ox 1 WAUSAU WIS REUBEN M on Main Street W A I S A U WISCONSIN nf A K B SURVEYOR ef J I y t MARATHON CO Wis J W NOTARY PUBLIC attend to all in that line with and cy at the inj Main CHARLES A SINGLE of Farat Third house us Urge arid hud every attention will be paid lo lor their and convenience JOHN LE of and Washington Street i JET Thit house is near the well furnished and will be a pleasant stopping place lor ers Corner of i Second Bts WISCONSIN Situated as this house is in the ness part of the town the proprietor hopes by attention to the wonts of his guests to receive a liberal patronage 1 KNOWLTON HOUSE Known as the Loomis Stand This home halfway fiom vens Marathon C it has been fitted up anil is the house on the road The proprietor is an experienced landlord the wants of wilt to those who may avoir him with a call in such a manner as to give the best of satisfaction March 31 1 JSA U M WYLIE Proprietor This House is pleasantly and furnished and no pains will be spared to promote travelers Two large barns the of i uy Foot nf Main Street STEVENS POINT WISCONSIN E BENNETT Proprietor This first class House is large new com- thoroughly furnished Kvery willbe made the comfort ol guests at moderate charges wilt furnished at all times lur teams nl E Proprietor STREET Wautoma Wisconsin Stages leave this for the North and South daily Bucna Vista House By H BUENA VISTA WISCONSIN This House is large commodious and nnd well located on the main road from Point to Portage City and Good Stabling and effort to make the traveler comfortable accommodated with a good kail and the necessary trimmings lyl By K GRIFFIN OSHKOSH WISCONSIN This house has just been thoroughly re- wired nnd refitted and is equal to any in he State and baggage taken to and from the boat free of change nl EORGE W SWIFT Main St ai the head of f oral St Opposite the Railroad Fond du luggage carried to and rom the and can free of charge 1 Hotel Corner of Water Spring MILWAUKEE WIS The Captain is always on ID to attend o the wan of nl NATHAN JUDSON CARPENTER eV JOINER Builder ou WAUSAU WISCONSIN Will contract for and malct of Lumber j for same See fcc JOHN DOBBIE Builder I prepared lo do iaWa line eT and a Ifa will also r rent at tbe The Problem of Life with twilight the leaves of June are rife Let me forth inclined to ponder On the mysteries of life have Since the twinkling dawn of ages In the night of nameless Loi of golden arrows In the purple east atari While a field of airy roses Blooms the morning star Can ye tell me winged splendors Brighter than a poet's dreams Are ye actual or Is the great world what it Take away my nerves of And the mountains If there were no eye to see it Would yon star of love i Vainer still the voices Of the rich year wave or thunder soul that could not hear T Then are all out Rock-ribbed earth and rolling Arid the lights that live above us Beauties borrowed brain f Darker the dreary Blind for the If the mind of all is maker Who maker of the mind 1 All the laws have One ia nothing Sun and shadow both must mingle Weaving Nature's magic zonu God doth build galvanic circles Brains and senses are the poles two are together Conies the lightning flash of souls Durker glooms dreary Brain and are they What are time and space and matter the mind away 3 Will brute atoms blend in order Or shall chance direct their course T Can find their places Moved by automatic force the great whispers Sweetly in the breeze While a rain of molten jewels Singing patters through trees and solve the painful problem Not by study but with scorn Not to brook such barren torturs OR Man the heir of Time was born What he needs alone he knoweth Or may know by patient thought All are sunless secrets Which if profit The Faith of a Heart CHAPTER I All my long life I have known Miry Moore my life I loved her Our were old playmates and first cousins My first tion is of a boy in a red frock and morocco shoes rocking a in which reposed a sunny haired eyed baby not quite a year That boy was Church hat blue eyed baby was Mary Moore Later still I see myself at the la school house my little chaisa up lo the Mary might rida home Many a beating I gained on such occasions for other boys besides me liked her and she I was something of a flirt n in her pinafores How she camo tripping down the steps when I called her her blue eyes up to me low gaily out her merry That fairy No one but Mary bring her heart so soen to lei lips I fallowed that laugh from he of childhood till I grew an awkward blushing followed t through the healed noon of now when the freed of tge are silvering my hair aod many children climb my knee and call me felher I find memories of are strong and that even in my hairs I am following its aie When I warn fifteen great row of my life say biart I WM Mot 10 WM to put with Hary We to other for three long Thia to was Hkc a for Mary was like life to me But hearts are tough things after all I left college the fiuih arid vigor of my nineteenth year I was no longer awkward arid I had grown into a tall der stripling with a very good opinion of myself general and ular If I thought of Maty Moore to imagine how I would dazzle bewilder her with my good loots and wonderful thinking that she might bewilder me still more I was a sad coxcomb 1 but as youth and good looks have fied I trust I bf believed when I say has left An proposal was made to me at it I gave up nil of a I proposed to go to the Indies In my hurried visit home of saw nothing of Mary Moore She had gone to a boarding school at some and was not expected home till the following one sigh to the memory of my little then called man again In a as the cle whirled away from our a year or three at the very will return nud if Mary is as pretty as she used to be why then perhaps I may marry her And settled the future of a young lady not seen for four years I thought of the possibility of her refusing dreamed that she would not scend to accept rny offer But now I know that had Mary met me then sho would have ed me Perhaps in the might plenty of sport or of feeling the slightest interest iii should have perhaps found I wai mistaken India was my salvation not merely because of my my industry had ted the evil in my nature and made me a batter man When at the end years I prepared to return I said of the in myself I knew had taken They loved me as I to arid they shall find for the I nm better worth loving than formerly I packed up many a token from that land of romance and gold for the friends I hoped to meet The gift Mary Moore I selected with a ing heart It was a ring of rough virgin gold with my name and engraved was was nil nd yot that sight of the little toy thrilled mo as it upon the tip of my To the eyes of others it was but hi small plain circle thoughts perhaps by its elegance of the ful whita band that was to wear But to was embodied A loving a ful words of future home and a sweet smiling group of merry children to climb my those delights were within that ring of gold n Tall bearded and I at door of my father's house The light in the dows and the hum of conversation and cheerful laughter showed mr lhat company was assembled there I hoped my sister Lizzie would oome to the Joor and that I might greet iny no strange eye was looking curiously on But servant answered my were to merry in the parlor to heed tho lung absent one when ba asked lor admittance A bitter thought like this through my mind as I beared ike sounds from the parlor and saw the half suppressed smile upon the face I hesitated a moment before I made myself known or asked after the ily While 1 stood silent a strange apparition grew up before me Frow behind the servant peered out a small golden a tiny delicate form a sweet face with blue eyes vaa op to like those of ooa who tad aright opened my boyhood I started witk a rf is f pur I asked while the wondering held the door She lifted up her hand as if to shade her eyes I had thai very altitude in another in my boyhood many arid many a and And what I asked quickly Mary Moore lisped the child My heart sunk down like Here was an end to ill the bright and hopes of my youth and Frank Chetter rival who tried and tried in vain to my place besides the girl had succeeded at last had won her away from This was his child and 1 sank body beneath this And hiding nay face in my leaned against the my eyes wept tears of blood The little one at me grieved and amazed and put up her lip as if about to cry while tho perplexed servant stepped to parlor door and called s rny sister out to see who it could be that conducted so I heard a light step and a pleasant voice you wish to see my father I up Theie stood laced maiden of twenty not much changed the dear little sister I had well I looked at her a ahd then stilling the tumult of my heart by a mighty 1 opened my drois and don't you know met Harry oh my brother Harry she threw herself upon my wept as if her heart would break I weep ly into the lighted parlor and stood with her before them all There was a rush and cry of joy and then my father and mother sprang toward me and me home with heartfelt Oh sweet is such a greeting wanderer And as my dear old mother to my grasped my hand while Lizzie still clung beside me I felt that all was not yet lost and though another had secured liVs choicest blessing many a joy ed forme in this dear of home There were four other inmates of room had on my den entrance One was eyed child whom I had already seen and who now stood Frank Chester clinging to his hand Near stood Lizzie Moore eldest sister and in a distant corner to which she had hurriedly retreated when my name was spoken stood a tall and slender figure half hidden by the heavy window curlain that fell to the floor When the first greeting over Lizzie led me with a timid grace and Frank ter grasped my hand home my he said with the loud cheerful tones I bered so You have changed 83 that I never should have known you but no matter for heart is in the right I can you say lie is said my mother To be sure he older and graver and more tike a man than when ho but hi eyes and smite are the same as ever It is that heavy beard that changes him He is my boy Ay I answered sadly itm your boy Heaven help At the moment I felt it would have been a relief to have wept upon her bosom as I had done in in- fancy But I kept down the of my heart and the tremor of my lip and answered quietly as I looked in his full handsome have changed too Frank but 1 think for the brttrr yon for that he with a laugh My wife me I grow handsomer day His I hear that name and keep still have you scan my ha added lifting the infant in bis anna and bar cheek tell yon Harry ia soother in worM you think she looks very much as her mother used Very much I faltered cried Frank with a made me start violently have forgotten to introduce you to my wife I believe you and her used to be playmates in your young days and he slapped me on the back the sake of old times and because you were not here at the I'll give you leuf to kiss her mind old fellow you are never to repeat the she is and lor once I want to see how you will manage those ferocious of yours n the operation He pushed Lizzie laughing and blushing toward A gleam ol light and hope too dazzling 10 bear came over I cried out before I Not It must have betrayed my secret lo every one in the room But nothing wag Frank in general so was this lime silent I kissed the fair cheek of the young and hurried to tho silent figure looking out from the window low eager have you no come to give to the wanderer She turned and laid her hand in nine and murmured am glad lo see you here ry Simple yel how blest they made I not have np that moment lor an crown For there was the py home group and the dear home and there sweet Mary eyes 1 had dreamed of by night falling before the ardent gaze of mine and the sweet face I had so longed nnd prayed to aee was there before beautiful more womanly and more loving than I never knew tho ing of happiness till that moment Many years have passed since happy night hair that was dark and glossy then it fast grey I am growing lo be an old man and can look back to a long arid and I hope a well spent life Anil yet as it has been I would not recall a single day for the love that made my manhood so shines also upon me in my white Can this be At heart I am as young as ever And Mary with her bright hair parted smoothly from a brow that has a slight furrow upon it is still the Mary of my early daya To me she can never prow old nor change The heart her in infancy and sheltered her in the flush and beamy of womanhood can never cast her out till life shall cease to warm it Nor even love stilt Jives above show his colon If aa kia patients day K U la rsw sjp if ha don't it is II boat religion he is a hypocrite it bs he is an infield If of the popular of Uw it is lo calf r lo the judices of the to 811 bis els if he them rt is professional selfishness If be it ill the habit of baring it is he knows if lo having it on the that he understands hii own business he is afraid of his to his superiors If be gels pay fer his services he the np of being a gnat Wlo wouldn't besn M Chief Marshall was in habit of to market himself and carrying Home his purchases Frequently ha would oe seen returning home si with poultry in one hand and lies in the On one a fashionable young man from North who had recently removed to Richmond swearing violently because he could get no one to carry lionie his turkey Marshall stepped up and asking where he lived That's on my way I will it for you When they came to his house man said What shall I pay O said the Chief Justice it was on my way and no is that polite gentleman who brought home my turkey fur inquired the young man of a bystander replied he Ms John Marshall Chiel Justice of the United Why did he bring home my To give you a severe reprimand and to teach yon lo mind was the reply greatness never feels doing anything that is but a truely gieat man will er feel above helping himself own independence cf character de- pends on his being able to help self Dr when first business in Philadelphia wheeled home the paper which ha had purchased for his printing office on a wheelbarrow with his own bands A Doctor's Some of the ors and Emoluments of the Med- ical By an M D The following are some of the sweets of u Doctor's life If he visits a few of his customers when are well it is to gel his dinner if tie don't do so it is because he cares more about the fleece than the flock If ha goes 10 church regularly it is because he has nothing to do if he 11 is he has no respect for the Sabbath or religion If he to a poor person he keeps bad company il he passes them by he is a better man than other If he has a good carriage he is if he uses a poor one OR the score of omy he is deficient in necessary pride If he makes parties it is tit soft the people to gel their if he dont make them he U afraid of scent If his horse is fat il i because lie has nothing to do if ha il lean it if he isn't taken ore of H he drives fast it is to make think somebody is sick if he drives stow he has no in- terest in the welfare of If he dresses beat he is proud if be dees not he is wanting in j If he on the land he is fit for nothing but a farmer if don't ork it is ia loo lazy to be any thing If we don't a Dr to thing be lo Dr W says any thing aboat bad tetter let it if ne say aboM It Chief Justice Tanay la Old In the year 1810 in Virginia or Maryland a Methodist minister named Gruber was indicted on attempting lo create insubordination the slaves The proof showed lhat he had expressed opinions of evils of slavery and bad duty f master to treat their kindly and courteously at sessing immortal souls Mr Taney was engaged as counsel tor the r on J in his to jury the following language which contrasts with his decision in which lie says lhat a negro has no rights a man is bond to I continued Mr with be haJ a right lo say tnis T that is 01 law to So Ul is ha from the object of in any form of lhat ara prepared to the anil la if thu sania language here in the of and in the presence of who arc the of ibc law A hard indeed eompcti at to endure evil of a time t was us by another ration white we were yel ia a slate of colonial Il not be easily or suddenly Vet while it continues il a ou our national character and every real lover of freedom that it ba il must be gradually wipail away t loi Ibe meana by which owy ba beat obtained il aball U Iba itaM abaid some when we point lo the language held ia of seek lo aj Ibe galling ol and power the ed of the slave was Mr Is that part of sermon af I Lisa now T bias wilt net swer