Call Now! 1-888-845-2887 Hablamos Español

You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Depere Advertiser

Show More

Other Editions of Depere Advertiser

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, February 05, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, February 19, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, March 12, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, March 19, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, March 26, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, April 02, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, April 09, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, April 16, 1851,
Wisconsin

Depere Advertiser Wednesday, April 23, 1851,
Wisconsin

Other Editions from Wednesday, August 06, 1851

Milwaukee Daily Sentinel And Gazette Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Watertown Chronicle Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Wisconsin Free Democrat Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Weekly Wisconsin Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Wisconsin Banner Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Wisconsin Argus Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Prairie Du Chien Patriot Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Sheboygan Lake Journal Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Das Tagliche Banner Wednesday, August 06, 1851 ,
Wisconsin

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1851-08-06 for page-1
Depere Advertiser
Depere Advertiser

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Depere Advertiser

   Depere Advertiser, The (Newspaper) - August 6, 1851, Depere, Wisconsin                               S E BALDWIN CO DEPERE WISCONSIN AUGUST 6 1851 VOL 1 EVERY MORNING PUBLISHERS NO 22 The Advertiser It KVERY BY BALDWIN 4 WIS per annum if paid in advance or if paid during the year not paid during the year will be charged TERMS OV ADVERTISING One square one week 00 4 two weeks i 50 every subsequent week 25 one year g 00 One column one year 30 00 six months 20 00 Half column one year 20 00 six 1200 Business cards per an 5 00 Legal at the rates by law All casual advertisements must be pre- paid kinds of produce recieved -on POETRY BUSINESS DEPERE ADVERTISER Comer of Broadway and Cass Street BALDWIN SHREVE PROPRIETORS A Sacred Melody BY WM If yon bright stars which gem the night Be each a dwelling sphere reunite death torn Blunder here How it were at once to die And this blighted orb Mixed with soul to cleave the sky And away from itar to star But Oh dark how drear how lone Would Been the brightest world of bliss If wandering through each radiant one We failed to find the loved of If there no mere the ties should twine W hich death's cold hand alone can never hen these stars in mockery shine More as shine forever It cannot be each hope and fear That lights the eye or clouds the brow Proclaims there is a happier sphere Than bicak that holds us now There is a voice which sorrow hears When heaviest weighs life's gulling chain Tin heaven Dry thy lears The in heart meet again 1 Patrick Henry Thn following is pen of Rev Dr Alexander of Princeton Semi- nary From my earliest childhood I had been accustomed to hear of the eloquence of with the trial but said he My heart is Mr followed by a speaker so oppressed the weight of the a terwards noted in our national history I which rests upon me having the lives of three ing probably on the exertion which I may be able to make in their behalf here he turned to the prisoners behind that I do not feel able to proceed to-night I hope the court will indulge me and one n ean John Randolph of Roanoke but to his singular insight into the feelings of the common mind In- great causes he scanned his jury and formed his mental tl e aged orator did not remain to witness estimate on this basis he founded tt e debut of his young opponent peals to their predilections and character began by saying that he had It is what other advocates do in a lesser n ired that man more than any on whom degree A the gem newspaper the Yankee are an inquisitive people yet from the necessity which this engenders there is no person who the an of parrying and baffling in another than a Yankee We were quite tf a sun had shone but that now he was j When he knew that there were j amused recently by an account given by ci to differ with him But or religious men among the a city friend of a colloquy which came off Iph was suffering with the hoarseness he would most solemnly address himself in a country village through which he ich ol a cold and could scarcely utter an to their sense of right and would adroitly was traveling between himself and one of ive dible sentence All that is in bring in scripture citations If this the who manifested an itching pone the trial till morning The sion made by these few words was such by seeing them in print In the j the Encyclopedia about Henry's die was not offered he would lay bare the sensibility of patriotism Thus it was when he succeeded in rescuing the man who had deliberately shot down a bour who under the nance action and intonation of the inj to the platform and replying with ex- ker there was an intensity tr ordinary effect is pure fabrication The of feeling that all my doubts wert j fa -t is as above stated Henry returned ed never again did I question to his hoase as it unwilling to listen and Henry felt or only acted a feeling In- deed I experienced an instantaneous sympathy with him in the emotions he expressed and I have no doubt the same sympathy was felt by every hearer As a of course the proceedings requested a to report to him any suspicion of being a lory and who thing which might require in was proved to have refused supplies to a B it he made no reply nor did again pre- sent himself to the people I was amidst th crowd standing near to Creed lo then an eminent lawyer and after- brigade of the American army A learned and intelligent gentleman staled to me that he once Mr curiosity to pry into his affairs How tic exclaimed the latter bustling up to him as he alighted foe a tew moments at a I've seen you somewhere fore Oh was the answer no doubt I have been there often in my life Spose you are going ing the name of the place to be supplied go there regularly once every were deferred till the next morning I j wirds a judge who made remarks to those i ry's defence cfa man arraigned fora cap- j ital crime So clear and abundant was And you've just come was early at my post the judges were him during the speech declaring evidence that my informant was un- soon on the bench and the prisoners at things tint the old man was able to conceive any grounds of defence the bar Mr in his dotage It is much to be regretted i especially after the law had been ably E would to the j Patrick Henry On this subject there and men of this and adjoining existed but one opinion in the counties we now prepared with one of the BEST JOB OFFICES The power ot his eloquence was felt equally by the learned and the unlearned n the West with Competent and j No man who ever heard him speak on Workmen to execute all and every variety of JOB AMD FANCY PRINTING UTAH Orders In our line from Country ant business men will be promptly attended to S E BALDWIN S H BLODGETT COLEMAN AND SURGEONS All injuries and trill receive particular attention Office in Weiss new Buildings Buy Cherry St H A S COLEHAM T A B Justice of the find Land faithfully and promptly attend to all entrusted to hip Office next door to W Ketchum's Grocery rud Provision store July 30 WILLIAM WALLACE STEWART Attorney and at Law Notary lic for gau and made 111 Judge with a clear and dignified speech and presented the evidence to the jury Everything ed perfectly plain Two brothers and a brother-in-law met two other persons ter a slave supposed IQ be harboured by the brothers After some altercation and mutual abuse one of the brothers whose uame was John Ford raised a loaded gun which he was carrying and presenting it a statement so untrue should be placed before the jury by the attorney for 1 1 i i TTV to the breast nf one of the other shot er of conversation him dead in open day There was no l doubt about the fact Indeed it was not denied There had been no other any important occasion could fail to ad- mit his uncommon power over the minds of his hearers The occasions on which he made his greatest efforts have re- corded by Mr Wirt in his Life of ry What I propose in this brief article is to mention only what self more than half a century ihen a young man just entering on a in which good speaking was very important it was natural for me to observe the oratory of celebrated men I was to obtain the true secret of their er or what it was which enabled them to sway the minds of their hearers almost at their will than words It is pre- the late Rev James Hunt of that the opinion of every juror was j ry county Maryland The death made up from merely hearing the ed at the house of a son who lived on ny as Tom Harrey the principal tot river Mr Henry's residence Red ness who was as constable on the i was a few miles distant on the same siime occasion to be a Having been long a friend of the pieman For the clearer understanding eased Mr Henry attended funeral his brief article of what follows it must be observed that ami remained to dine with the company I observed the said constable in order to distinguish j on which occasion I was introduced to ry ago Being him from another of the name was com- hit i by Captain William Craighead who the For a long time ter Henry began lie never once adverted to the merits of the rase or the of the prosecution but went on into a most captivating and discursive on general topics expressing opinions in fect accordance with those of his hearers having fully succeeded in ing every impression of his opponents i speech he obliquely approached the sub- It an early period of my ministry and as occasion was offered dealt be ame my duly to preach the funeral forth stroks which seemed to tell upon the sei mon of Mr James Hunt the father of minds of the jury In this case it should in a work of such value and lel rity Patrick Henry had several sisters with on 3 of whom the wife of Col Meredith of New Glasgow I was acquainted Mrs M was not only a woman of un- piety but was in my opinion as eli quent as her brother nor have I ever t with a lady who equalled her in In executing a mission from the Synod of Virginia in the year 1794 I had to pass through the county of Prince ward where Mr Henry resided that he was to appear before the Circuit Court which met in that ty in defence of three men charged with murder I determined to seize the of observing for the E BALDWIN JUSTICK OF TJIE also attends faithfully to of this extraordinary orator all collections entrusted 10 him UB Attorney at I-iiw Depere May 28 CLARENCE C It was with some difficulty I obtained a seat in front of the bar where I could have a full view of the speaker as well as Attorney and at Law Solicitor in j hear him distinctly But I had to submit Chancery and General Land Agent Collection to a severe penance in gratifying my called Butterwood as he lived on Butterwood Creek As he descanted on the evidence he would often turn to Tom large t bold-looking with the Craigh hai been an elder in President Davies ch These gentlemen had been nds in Hanover and they now met great cordiality and seemed to have v castic look would call him by some name On in talking of olden times of so many years I of contempt this Butterwood r be permitted to express my views of this etc By such the extraordinary effects of Henry's expressions his contempt for the man 1 nee The remark is obvious in was communicated to the hearers I own plic ation not only to him but to all great I felt it gaining on me in spile of ray that we cannot ascribe these ter judgment so that before hev was fee s merely to their intellectual the impression was strong on my mind s or their cogent reasoning however that Butterwood Harvey was greit these conceptions and of the smallest credit This put on paper often fall dead They are however I found I could counteract the j ofu n inferior to the arrangements of men moment I had time for reflection The i wh jse utterances have little impression only part of the speech in which he his power of touching the feelings strongly was where he dwelt on the ir- ruption of the company into Ford's house in circumstances so perilous to the and the payment of Taxen promptly and v attended to Depere Wisconsin JACKSON LATIMER Physicians and Surgeons Depere J A JACKSON M D D M D S E BALDWIN Attorney and Counsellor at Law and Solicitor in Chancery Notary Public and for Massachusetts Connecticut and Missouri Of- fice at the Advertiser Office C: S Attorney and Counsellor at Law Solicitor in Chancery and Notary Public Depere Wig S SHREVE and Counsellor at Law and Solicitor in Office at the Advertiser Office R SAGER I r w solemn and deep earnestness Dealer in Groceries and and Flour Pork All of which goods j are the bent quality May 21 ALONZO BLOTE CO Wholesale and Retail in Dry Groceries Hardware Wines and Cigars Also Produce and Merchants De- pere D W Commission Merchant and Wholesale and Re- tail Dealer in Groceries und Provisions Liquors Glass Nails and Produce of all kinds FIRE FIRE J A OILMAN would respectfully inform the inhabitants of County that he is for the following Companies The Washington County Mutual and the Mutual Insurance Companies Also Thj Empire State Utica and Orleans Insurance For which he ia ready to receive 011 terms Jan 93 1831 the reasonable IX to return to his and ftr he has received above House and would re- invite a of Uia Travelling If Hood and a of of the curiosity lor the whole day was occupied with the examination of two witnesses in which Mr Henry was aided by two er lawyers In person Mr Henry was lean rather than fleshy He was rather above than below the comnion height but had a stoop in his shoulders which prevented him from appearing as tall as he really was In his moments of animation he had the habit of straightening his frame and ing to his apparent stature He wore a brown wig which exhibited no indication of any great care in the dressing Over his shoulder he wore a brown camlet cloak Under this his clothing was black the worse for wear The ex- pression of hiw countenance was that of His appeared to be always absorbed in what for the time occupied his attention His forehead was high and spacious and the skin face more than usually wrinkled for a man of fifty His eyes were small and deeply set in his head but were of a bright blue colour and kled much in their sockets In short Mr Henry's appearance had nothing very remarkable as lie sat at rest You might readily have mistaken him for a common planter who cured very little about 1 is personal appearance In manners he was uniformly respectful and courteous Candles were brought into the when the examination of the witnesses closed and the fudges put it to the option of the bar whether they would goon with the argument that night or adjourn until the next day Paul Carrington Jr the attorney for the State a man of large size and uncommon dignity of person and as also an fessed his willingness to proceed ately whilst the testimony fresh hi the minds of all Now for the 1 heard Mr Henry make anything of a speek though short it of one which I had peculiarly sired to have decided namely whether like a merely the pf fouling manner of ad- the court was profoundly Ho would be willing td proceed ry wife This appeal to the sensibility of he knew that all the jury stood in this over- whelming If the verdict could have been rendered immediately after this burst of he pathetic every man at least every impression It has indeed been often said both of and of Henry that their dis- coi when reduced to writing show po by the side of men who are no ato s Let me illustrate this by the tim my of one wham I remember as a friend of my youth General Posey a revolutionary officer who was one in command under Wayne in the exf edition against the Indians a man of observation and cool judgment He was be added the cause of truth prevailed over the art of the consummate orator Sit Down Sad Soul BY dawn sad soul and count The moments the sweet amount That's lost by sighing How many smiles score 1 Then laugh and no more For day is Lie down sad soul and sleep And no more measure The flight offline weep The loss ol leisure But here by this stream Lie down with us and dream Of starry treasure We dream do thou the same Wre lore forever We laugh yet few we The gentle Stay than till sorrow Then hope and happy skies Are thine forever Exactly sir you arc entirely right that is my place of residence Really now dew I spose you are a lawyer or may be trader or haps some other or Yes I have always pursued some of those professions Got business in the country I am this time engaged in ing I sec by your trunk you are from stirring in Yes men and horses and riages and a furious northeaster You don't say Well I declare now you are turnal cute What d'ye think they'll do Why sir it is my opinion that they'll either deliver him up to the claimant or let him free You've had a sight of rain in an awful sight of damage I Yes it wet all the buildings and made the streets damp Didn't old Fannil Hull get a Com- No they hauled it on to the mon under the Liberty Tree You're a circus chap I guess you are kinder foolin Pray Mister if it is ft civil question what might be your It might be Smith or but it is not by a long chalk The fact is sir I never had a name When I was born my mother was she forgot to name me and soon after 1 was swapped away through mistake for another boy and am now about applying to the Legislature for a name When f get it I will send it to you Good morning And so saying the speaker jumped into his carriage and drove off leaving Pry of the place scratching his head in THE HORSE BY HIS bewilderment and evidently in more The size position and motion of the ears than ere he had commenced his husband in the house would have been I in Attendance on the debates of that con- fer rejecting Harvey's testimony it not fori in which there were so many dis- hanging him forthwith It is unfortunate pla -s eloquence He of a horse arc important points Those catechisings rather small than placed not too far apart erect quick in motion indicate both breeding and spirit and if a horse is in th will generally possess both spirit The stretching the ear in con- trary directions shown that he is attentive to everything that is pissing around him and while he much fatigued A RESPONDENT long will it take me to reach habit of currying one ear forward and a pedestrian on the Jamaica if he do so on a journey he Pike on walk said the son interrogated he was understood the traveller repeated the question when the same answer was re- turned Fancying that the man was crazy le he is doing this he cannot be jlne moved on at an accelerated inin tit w mi jn ia pin o re T IO that the illusion of such eloquence is me that after the hearing of Patrick i II has that few Pf after ther traveller It 11 ses sleep without pointing one ear half hour I couldn't tell you and the other backward in order that they saw llow walked what sient and is soon dissipated by the He most celebrated speech in that cise of sober reason I confess however body he felt himself as fully persuaded that nothing which I then heard so the constitution as adopted would be me of power as the i our ruin as of his own existence speech of five minutes which he maoe when he that the trial might be postponed till the next day In addition to this it so happened that I heard the last speech which Mr Henry sub reflection restored his former judgment and his well-considered ion resumed its pi ce The power of Henry's eloquence was due first to the of his emotion may receive notice of the approach of ob- in any direction When horses or mules march in company at night those in front direct them backward and those you'd He lived near the Union course most probably The San Francisco Picayune says that the churches there have determined to in the middle of the turn them si more etre th be rally or whole i slow for country and thus to be actuated by one feeling which ever made It was delivered at Charlotte I and passion accompanied with a watches their general safety The ear of from the portico of the to an ity vvhich enabled him to assume at once assembly in the open air In the jny or passion which suited ican edition of the New Edinburg an account of and iis effects is given so charged with aggeration as to be grossly incorrect There is more truth in the statements contained in Mr memoir In point of fact the performance had little impression beyond the transient pleasure afforded to the friends of the tion and the pain inflicted on the anti- his former political Mr Henry came to the place with and was plainly destitute of his wonted vigour and commanding power The speech was nevertheless a noble fort such as could have proceeded from none but a patriotic heart In the course of his remarks Mr Henry tis is ly stated by Mr after speaking of Washington at the head of a numerous and well-appointed army where the American who will dare to lift his hand against the father of his country to point a weapon at the breast of the man who has so them to battle and to man cried I answered Mr Henry rising aloft in all his majesty and in a voice most solemn and penetrating do it in MtcH a attempt the iteel would m his nds Not lesu indispensible ly a matchless perfection of the gan of expression including the entire npp voice intonation pause ture attitude and indescribable play of cou In no instance did he ever inch Ige in an expression that was not in- the horse is one of the most beautiful parts about him and by few things is the per more easily indicated than by its tion The is more intelligible even than the eye and a person accustomed lo the horse can tell by the expressive motion j of that organ almost all he thinks or enjoy good ON MISS ANNA BREAD While belles their lovely graces spread And fops around them flutter I'll be content with Anna Bread And won't have any He is wise who can endure evil means When a horse lays his ears flat back on his neck he must assuredly is startly recognized as nature itself yet j meditating mischief the bystander sorre of his anil should beware of his head or his sorre of his penetrating and subduing tonts were absolutely peculiar and as in- as they were Tin se were felt by every hearer in all His mightiest feelings were sometimes indicated and communicated by long pause aided by an eloquent pec and some significant use of his fin The sympathy between mind and is inexplicable Where the neU of communication are open the ulty revealing inward passion and the of it sudden and visible the effects are extraordinary Let these of influence be repeated again and again arid all other opinions and ideas are who has so often led for he moment excluded the whole mind S and to An in- unison with that of the i the listener till from the censes is under an entire nati in Then perhaps the charm es the His ordinary state of owed much In play the ears will laid back but not so decidedly nor so long A quick change in their position and more particularly in the expression of the eye at the time will distinguish between playfulness and The the horse is ably acute A thousand vibrations of the air too slight to make any impression on the human ear are readily perceived by him well known to every hunting man that the cry of hounds will be re- cognised by the horse and his ears will be erect and he will all spirits and im- patience a considerable time before the rider is conscious of the least sound PRETTY NEAR owes all its zest to anticipation The promise of a shilling fiddle will keep a in happiness for a The fun con- with its possession will expire iir an hour Now what is true of boys is equally men All they fer in is the price of their Addles Pears are generally improved by ing on mountain ash Sulphur is valuable in preserving grapes etc from insects A drum like a cask of beer is except when it is on the tap Lard never spoils in warm weather if it is cooked enough in frying out Salt pork on board ship is the main and potatoes the main truck Corn meal should never be ground fine It injures the richness of it Turnips of small size nutritious matter that large have In feeding with corn fifty pounds ground go as far as a hundred pounds in the nel Ruta Baga is the only root thai in nutritious qualities as it i n in Rats and other verm in ere kept from grata by a of garlic when   

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!