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Fountain City Daily Herald Monday, July 24, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald Friday, July 28, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald Monday, August 07, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald Wednesday, August 16, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald Friday, August 18, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald Saturday, August 19, 1854,
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Fountain City Daily Herald

   Fountain City Daily Herald (Newspaper) - May 28, 1856, Fond Du Lac, Wisconsin                               FOND DU LAG KOYAT BUCK Editor WIB WEDNESDAY MORNING MAY 28 1866 T-o merchants and men who desire advertisements ins must hand them in by 8 o'clock each if have them appear the same day tittle Cratle BT M LOUISA It is an old fashioned little cradle The proud daughter in-law would scorn to have it in the nursery Her children deep in dainty cribs and the relic of olden times is pushed into a darkened corner away up in the garret It ia a autumnal outrage in the U S- Senate in tho history of our Government hu outrage been committed in the of our national Legislature than that Committed the person of the Hon CUAS in Senate Chamber last week by South Carolina bully We have really arrived at a period in national history calling for a decided and stand by all lovers of our free Institutions Look at our situation Here on the of a territory by a solemn compact once and ought always to have been consecrated to freedom we the most and relentless going on for the sole purpose of ing slavery there That is now fast approaching a civil which the most cold blooded murders are committed and outrages perpetrated which fiends could well conceive This hellish purpose of the slavery ists is also backed up and sustained by the ent National Administration which has for the past four years done little else than cover itself with infamy and bring disgrace upon us as a Nation But this is not the worst feature Tl e which is evinced OB the soil of Kansas seems to be but the reflection of a worse spirit at Washington No sooner are these outrages upon the rights of liberty brought to the consideration of our National Legislature than the same kind of Ruffianism bursts out there and the most brutal violence insult and injury is heaped upon those who stand up for right and justice It is time that the fires o Revolutionary patriotism were rekindled and the righteous indignation of the whole up to resist and put down such as are getting to be so common buth ia our tional Legislature on the soil of Kansan 11 seem that we have approached climax be- yond which our national liberty is in danger It is ardently to be hoped that all minor issues will be dropped aud all true patriots who regard honor welfare aud liberty of the Nation unit a common ground of opposition to the Rui fian influences which are now at work to plad curse of Slavery upon Kansas Proof as to Kansas The Albany Evening Journal in a brie article reviews the evidence thus far ad in relation to lUe iu Kan sas commuted by the invaders of that ter by virtue of Mr Whitfield claims his seat as a Delegate in Congress The following are the points proved so The illegal votes at the Polls of Kansas are proved not only by the evidence o those who stood by but by the confess ions of those who put them ia the ballo The assaults upon the and thei being driver from their seats with bowie knife are proved by the uy of the Judges themselves and their as The existence of a Secret Society in Mis souri sworn to establish Slavery in Kan sas even at cost of violence is by the acknowledgement of its own mem bars That armed of Missouri men se out for Kansas on the day before election is testified to by their Missouri friends an neighbors they arrived and committed th such days are full of memories and the old grandmother jg thinking She arises at and totters up aud up lofty flints of stairs she thro the rooms she gains the garret and sinks down beside that unsightly cradle bows her trembling head over it as it ratching the slumbers of a babe That old garret with one long beam of Another picture She is a widow now Her beloved sleeps with little Lizzie God knows how bereft she is to Him she looks for balm to Him she prays fir her dear children and meat of all for proud the passionate wilful Reginald Ah the mother's heartl How it goes with her children How it would tear every pang that they might be saved Yet how it is torn crushed broken by those she hits sheltered in her God pity mother heart thus against unlight streaming from the hign window nd the spider webs woven over the nd one singing lonesomely frui ome silent corner is a good place tc ream Memory is unfolding picture aft for grandmother to look upon She sees a cabin home It is in the ush summer time there are green boughs n the fire place and around the clock and over the mantel board There are shor white muslin curtains drawn the windows There are beds with a bureau between standing in the eastern part of room and a little stand with the bible and upon white fringed cover bene tne little ng glass There is her cupl wd with its and the pine scoured by her own hands And she si ting by window her foot ge y touching that same dear little cradle K ler lifted from her sewing now d then to see if that dear husband on her heart is coming How de- her heart is stirred to the of sweet thoughts It is her he darling Johnny sleeping in the cr yet have his dewy r hi but his dimpled arrus clasp her neck his velvet nestles her breast blue eyes look lovingly into her She is the young Another picture 0 God have a like veto awaits our harbor appropriations Altho presented in seperate bills and each standing on its own merits they are all merely works d to facilitate in ment the pale of the Constitution This is sham Democracy as illustrated and expounded by its chief priest President How much longer will the PLB of the North West consent to be to this car of crimes charged upon them it proved b those who rode in their wagons talke with them in their camps The official Census which the have taken copies of proves that there less inhabitants in the TerritOir than votes east at the polls Tie have prove that not one quartet of the who claim to have elected the ever slept two nights in the These facts being proved can any one unwillingness of the Free again as memory paints that sweet aby face She hears the the little bed of below the dow She the of the Virginia creepers playing upon the gra in the sunlight as the breeze stirs the long clasping arms that cling about the logs She hears the rivulet's ripple as it winds through mossy spots and the roots of the old sycamore whose shadows fall upon her roof She hears the birds ing away off in the woodlands She sees best of her dear husband coming home from his daily labor His step on the sill his merry voice speaks ter name and then little Johnny is clasped to heart Another picture She is a little older now It is winter there are of snow on the eaves and as far eye can look one unbroken mass of snow She heais the winds through the sycamore The flowers are dead the rivulet birds silent But there is a bright fire on the hearth and cabia home warm with its light Johnny is playing with father and a baby girl the little Lizzie in the cradle fragile she has dark eyes like her mother's only they wear a sadder sof er look and her smile seems sad also her hands are and thrown above her head and s in her sleep as if the angels were ing to her Another picture It is in the May month and all out of doors is so beautiful ers in the woodland birds in the land every where No there is sadness in the cabin There is another babe in the cradle It i- the blood of health flows jh its veins It is Why aro thj sad Johnny sits with his face den in his mother's bosom and she is bing the front is thing with white neighbor women are moving noiselessly about speak ing but little Lizzie is in her There is an empty grave waiting for its victim right up on the hill where cups dot the Dear little Joy that the angels took the home so early Another Johnny grown up nearly manhood Charlie is a stout me ry boy and tl ere are others about the The mother is a good deal older now Her hair is streaked a little with ail her furrowed ana her cheek very Tiie househ d altar is almost desolate Years have gone years No der the palsied hand trembles as it clasps cradle No wonder tears fall sunny beads once nestled No wonder the old cries out Father have for she feels the need of strength and love Johnny is still with her be is growing in the grave stricken in early womanhood when life seemed so bright Beautiful Grace is gone she knows not whither Beauty ber was a curse and she fled to a land with one fascinating as the serpent but already wedded Annie joined her fortunes to one unworthy and died far from her mother's home of broken heart into the gay world the grave ot and his bright head Louis the pet the at is winning himself a name beneath Italian skies the beautiful life of the painter is his own and his face is inspired aln st by associations about him Over the ocean do his mother's go to him Another it is too real The old empty She is living with Johnny in his costly home She is considered an intruder the and her first-born whom she has watched over and on her breast and loved so Mother is getting to be quite trouble some she is growing childish The old grandmother knows this and longs for the grave She has out lived all that makes life attractive God that weary almost worn out heart with His love and take her home H'm House of many mansions LATE BY NIGHT'S AMERICAN EXPRESS The President's Veto Message The President on the instant re- turned to the Senate the for the improvement of the St Clair Flats with the following SPECIAL MESSAGE To the Senate of the United I return herewith to the Senate in which it originated a entitled an act making an appropriation for deepening the over the St Clair Flats iu the State of and submit it r consideration be it is m my judgment liable to the objections to the prosecution of internal im- by the government which have already been presented by me in previous communications to Congioss In considering this under restriction that the of Congress to construct a work of internal improvement limited to cases in which the workis manifestly ful and proper for the execution ot some one or more of the expressly gated to the general I have not been able to find for the ex- any such relation unless it be to power to provide for the common de- fence because all which could be by it would be to afford a channel of feet depth and of so temporary a character that unless the work was done ly before the necessity for its use should arise it could not be relied on fot the vrs els of even the small draught the passage which it would permit Under existing circumstances therefore it cannot be considered as a means or the common and is to toother works to facilitate commerce and ute to the convenience and local prosperity of those more immediately not o be constitutionally and justly State Settlers a code of enactments those ng made by a Legislature fraud aud violence Sent Congress has given Dr Kane and hia companions the privilege of receiving from foreign faded Th ere are fair daughters and sons that have born unto ler since Lizzie Grace with her dazzling blue eyes and golden hahf with sad dark eyes like her sister Annie with her lips ever dewy with love and Reginald with eyes and brow so like his father's And Louis the youngest the t and the darling JU unbroken for long attained by the taxation of the people of the whole country Washington 19 1856 The message displays the President's profound ignorance of the commerce of our seas as well as his utter indifference LATEST FROM KANSAS CHICAGO May Tribune publishes ail based upon intelligence brought by those men recently from Lawrence from which we learn that a of Missourians made their appearance near Lawrence on Monday They were reinforced until they numbered nearly 400 men They bore flags and banners with nil devices except the stars and stripes of the United States During the forenoon the Committee of Safety sest a note lo the Marshal at the bead of this array assuring him that they would make no to any process he might wish to serve They asked of him protection of their lives and property He made no answer About 11 o'clock a Deputy Marshal with a force of 10 men tnade Ids summoned four men to assist him ia ing arrests and took G W Deitzler and G W Smith prisoners This took dinner at the Free State Hotel and after dinner removed their prisoners without lestation Sheriff Jones soon ailer made his appearance with 10 men he did not at- tempt any arrests but insultingly demanded all the public and private arms and gave the people five minutes to accede to his de- mand threatening in case of refusal to storm the town One was given up but the people refused to surrender their private arms In a- hour he ed with overwhelming and two pieces of artillery the work of destruction -o commence by a cannonade on the Free Slate and the Herald of printing office The former was demolished and the types of the latter were broken up and destroyed The women and children fled in all di- No time was given to save erty The Missourians through the streets like so many ing every man with death The Tribune's left at 8 o clock fifteen miles from Lawrence he saw a volume of smoke and a great light in that direction he lias no doubt but that the town is destroyed message that kft just before the departure of the boat says that several men had been killed by Jones party and their bodies were ing im the streets It is that Gen Pomeroy has been hung by the mob Gov Robinson is at in the of the authorities Shannon it is said is no more than a prisoner among the he is only a thing to sign witb One thousand or fifteen hundred rians are in the territory Reeder is posed to be in a place of safety he is daily expected here via Nebraska and The mob threatened to hang Robinson G W Brown and Deitzler all on one tree The free state men will a stand at peka and fight it out they are now ering in that point Atchison is the with the cannon used in the invasion The U S troops are not allowed from their quarters to tect the settlers A civil war rages on the frontier NEW YORK May 26 There was a large congregation at the Plymouth Church last evening to hear Rev H W Beecher who had announced in the P M that his sermon would refer to the peculiar condition of the country The outrages upon Hon Senator Sumner and the destruction of Lawrence were freely commented upon Several others from Brooklyn and New York spoke on the casion AYE their Concert January VT Having from a tour the Canadas and Eastern British Provinces re- announce to the ladies and gentlemen of this city that they will give oue of their CIAL EVENING'S at DARLING'S HALL ON WEDNESDAY EVENING MAY on which occasion they will introduce a new and ORIGINAL PROGRAMME consisting of songs Ballads Melodies Irish lads Recitations Ac embracing Mirthful and Comic THE KERSHAW FAMILY Numbering will be represented by JOSH himself from Rum Pint Admittance 25 cents Concert to commence at 6 P M Children in aims not invited H TUCKER Agent p R t at HARNESS BY Fine Harnesses JOHN Dealer and Manufacturer of Team Harnesses and Harnesses of all varieties styles and also Saddles Bridles Carriage Trimmings Lashes Ac Contacts takers and jobs gotten up to order m better style and ON MORE than can be done in any place this of cago Remember the sign of the big Collar 3 doors North of the Globe Hotel Fond du Lac May 27 1856 IN DU JUG WISCONSIN Watches on short notice and Just largi and lot of Watches and Jewelry which we sell very low for each 50 BOXES to the interests of the North West He talks of a twelve feet channel across the Flats as admitting the passage of of small draft only Such a channel would deep enough for any steamer and sail vessel on our Lakes There are very indeed that draw loaded over ten feet water The tenor cf thf President's objections to the St Okir Flats DO doubt that 100 Drum's Excelsior Figs Fresh Cocoa Nuts Extra Fam FLOUR 50 Boxes LEMONS and ORANGES Vinegar at CoV New Goods New Gravel Block Have just received an immense stock of BOOTS SHOES No 3 S Door All Styles and Varieties Till Spring Trader May 26 The city is filling with delegates to the Convention The delegates from ginia Louisiana Kentucky and Texas are all here are greatly by being placed out of doors it the summer months especially during gentle showers and such as have no other convenience may advantageously place them outside the windows may be syringed and washed in this po ition or may be sprinkled by a common watering pot allowing water to full on the plant with Yorker I s Gaiters Ladies Baiters Ties Slippen end kins Goiters Boott in great variety NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL May 15th 1856 m   

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