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Fountain City Herald Tuesday, November 09, 1852,
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Fountain City Herald Tuesday, January 11, 1853,
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Fountain City Herald

   Fountain City Herald (Newspaper) - January 30, 1855, Fond Du Lac, Wisconsin                               BUCK Editor and Proprietor 3 BOTAL OP ADVERTISING OM f 14 IK Barb 84 13 uav t fl IH In per cent like fi tu fan ruo JOB WORKt therein York and Uc t hundred n 5 hj Lawyer ilu Half 400 in ilu id Kimd ilu CHr LEWIS By THIS about 70 well porter tu administer In Ilig wants nf navel Ivn and in fond In IM Jan nil Fund du Lac WU X Itr c wl by liV Malci to Unl Mi mi form 1 -J no Tooth 1 It ill hi n u I the vi A mi t nu I in in in nil 2 al Law III I I and nl and 1 I A IMS nt on J It- IV l in up In M nf du DI- nnd thu du I M and in An fund tlu C 1 M f r c i n s Anil ir i-l Wharf daily Co n R i i u R n c n s f X A Agent IV Y U n to nil i Wn I IM linn i-l I'll I It I Sir New fi J f t S id Mil f I i in vl dtl Lite snoTiicn uU am is Si III nir Iv sn NEW YORK t D nil If A in inn nili I'm Mi- hrin St Wi U.S W II H fry St 111 Ijk J J J It 4 1 N V and JW I t W rum A fi W and n lit and iu vr H u 1 1 in K i v v M CLOCKS WATCHES JEWELRY Silver Silver Plated Ware I lh V I will limn v in fa I I itin BOUGHT IN NEW v o B x i Cull imil for Drr A liank of Fond Du Lac DU LAO r 1 i V A 31 A I M SILVER AND WABE Mirtil Free fer wd an them FOND DU LAC JAN 30 1855 NUMBER 12 IT In In htr to him ami tu her who eogH her from all currnt of with loving of ia truu woman cuing lu him to for- tunes and if could not win him from blal to with him my didst than Tu me from lh j Mt t Leave lo Where dancer may bolide Or my So light M frail a to try its And watch 1 Or win a fund weak girl Her round lo twine Only la bright halcyon bright by uf but of Burn to lliou iure Nut of tho and soul Which all To shrink in craven whon e'er Thy of life grew then ta bravu Iho That lower thy bark Vint rum thy iti Of anil Hy my ROOM be And will I will gu h iw temptation With an enslaving power And in iti spell in tut Thy heart nublo In all Thou nub would A with filled heart wai thine fur good or ill Tn Sty idol thou 1 less fondly dark with renamed thy Antl thy willi away all trait me nut am thy wile in and IQ lightly in my deep to remain lifu last Or hold eyes to mo A World of thy All run given bo that ml Ah no 1 1 it hut iho iit tliy soul My mu nut awny I nil I pledge my mu perjured bu i nut I And my heart In in own am I I from pait A Sweet Petersburg oi 2 1st We n in ono of our wbich y of who the of Ria a Plymouth on lasl ta which ho tu the Ivia of Lho Arctic the Almighty thus puur cut upon thu uf lliu fur purling If liu Out utterance ami without bo lily injury it must only Imn bu Uu a gang of like Such u in to u 1 liu neck and Dio of tin bo preserved When Virginia have a ami riten in five an ncrr to a hundred when her now useless riven shall be mado to work way from the mountain lo Iho over innumerable when them shall bo ami children nl home without sending them north when men no lunger Inku for bines and their sous nnd SILVER AND WAU f the Old aV Icr her king come buck to ii worthy of her fonnet Wl Wi 1 f f i nl rl..- Ic tin wn I Calumat Miil i- I t 1 mill I mu n tuny Lay l Fountain City Market lo lit ami I L Vund a full Ihv will vmi bj in All ul ihn will t well Ii uo Unt lilt l IIIA Me A lo I IH A X paid to ilu Lai Nuv ii J C in of nU Iu IMI ALLCOTT IUK 1 1 in to ry then such a ns this will mi gem In the men will point back to tho uf now prevalent anil their growth proudly by ilia distance which they shall from auch ami cannot our tbe editor of tha und him to our pew hu to SVc him very noi tilings very to his present d it ion In two most happy to show what can among of which Plymouth Church up antl tilt n if will accept the of a be I nnd a plata at tht of notorious of ho gi of wo to change n mt 111114 ni ttt i his ideas in to and b the tf ing and with a better lock of ideas than lu LM IVe nn b now on ha of the if 1 STOKE liberty of and of opinions Annual Jn Co At mUli he not that will k his would Jan 14 A may t Ith I Tlie Only agency All ed A MW t J K A J W After HMd ol Bayard Taylot in to tral of natural beauties of the great I soon fall into a travel which during euce of desert I at dawn every m my eyes with a handful of water aud drank a cup of bad struck laden I walked for two far in that 1 bearing of I speakable fascination in tbe ml the desert I often beheld within the wide ring of there was no living to be nu up in awful glory and it would been a act had i upon the aani and him sudden in the coloring of ths landscape on his lighting up of the dull into a warui golden hue and the ol nnd on the distant porphyry a morning miracle 1 behold awe Ths richness of this coloring made the desert beautiful it was loo brilliant fur The scenery so far from depressing inspired and led me 1 never felt of al nnd in such nnd roady to shout from morning till night from overflow of happy Tho nir is an of life ns sweet and ns pure and refreshing as that which the mnu breathed on the of crea tion You inhale tha unadulterated merits of for are no exhalations from earth tet or smoke and steam which from the abodes of men lo stain its purity This air even more than its silence and is tho secret cf one's attachment to tho desert It U a beautiful ol Iho cure of that Providence which leaves none of the wasto places of the somo 11 Ilia aspects of are wanting thera is no green no founi for the thirsty lip the shadow of a rock to shield the wanderer in the blazing lids upon the ncss his sweetest breath ing to tlie eye strength to I'm mo nnH tlie most joyous lo tho spirits A records of Greece nnd do exhibit a of ia con- in Iho following found upon a On tho SOth of October 1783 four I'll by lire and sword tlie fort for s whole day but ii owning four o'clock the com- of b fort delivered up his sword to tlie who stubbed him All ware out In sword A line of powder Inid from to the sea to bo lighted and blow the fortress in William Hntman who lay not far with of the in his body anid to liia wbn still lived to crawl lo line antl thus we wil completely wet the powder with blood and with lifa Unit in us save the fort and magazine and perhaps a of oar who are only alone had strength to accomplish the design His and evtn his ions had lives After this narrative are the following in WILLIAM HATMAN From fur Octuber The n specimen of Shanghai poetry The writer must sure a ken A friend somebody's I rarely tut but I'll lay on rgg Thai you who yon nay Tun saw nn mortal leg A to boat onr unby The Tendering of a swage in he his quarrel jutt ku unjust ill tripla and of brau A little girl who WM in tho car was by the accident on tha q nlJ bulow Burlington lately noticing alarm created among with tier end we killed t for tho Society tho devil beat Ms wife if he had Quota fur T An Indian being what ha did for living Oh roe sniJ a und Jo you jot paid for itt tinea me get a two Anc that mighty poor puj OU rut it's poor preaching Tim frosty of ago now Wood And her snowy your Anil you warning that within fow murt many you thort That out your life needs be In ponce nut in then survey ten inuit And bitur thu that's Sfr hara heard of a married couple who they were both of a hasty temper yet lived comfortably together by observing a rule on which they hod both mutually viz Never to be both angry at the same and that an ingenious and father was ia the habit of giving this advice 10 liis children when they were ono willi wi It father aad dumb and ti tion In n wife for from will thy future ot and on action like unto a of a mut can but THE WAR Such is the which give to tlie lowing article In our next number it is our purpose to follow it up a second 16 be ASD Within of two articles of moderate length it is our desire and to treat of in Present Condition and of that great empire may bo inter- to onr readers at thU po Hod and especially of as in iy throw light on the an J tlie present war u and in which England unu France avu taking ao remarkable a nnd to which Austria nnd bold relations ao interesting and It is with good meu ot n philosophical spirit who hare rand history not simply to know tlie but alda to the future vre beginning to the position great extent immense resources tmd ry strength of the in serious apprehension uf time empire which in Europu U greater by than a of n of miles thim nil rest of that Tho is fur double the purl in geographical having nearly if we add in America the of Nova wo shall find that empire contains seven ion of square miles is lillie leas of of the It it thu largest empire of which bus ever spoken That of not so nor will those of exander und com- pare population worth speaking of It b to those portions of Siberia that are seven to eight thousand ery to work In the mines sire in Ulu of criminals but to become of and cultivate the public hi ltd s But although Asiatic and American portions of tlie Russian empire will new a great population and are chiefly valuable for their mineral resources their nnd abundance of skins and fan which they yield it ia far otherwise with European part of H That raft country is now nearly Sequal to that of- nnd combined Ls capable of wilb ease two hundred millions n large portion of the of GO poor marshy lakes nnd in places and much of tbe southern sandr and sterile nnd in tbe southeast on which nothing grows save grass tlie cactus and small bushes yet there is a vast ei tent of land in central western and southwestern parts which is even now populous aud U to far morn su It is precisely ibis part of sea Russia ia the lowest country of nd Greece tlie largo in Europe Spain Germany Italy Turkey and G one How then if Russia be a pUin as it were of such great extent hai it hap that it was not sooner brought undt We will explain tint by calling attention of tha reader to the important fact that from very early within a few cniigration from greatly affected the interests and of the countries on and aide of Europe This tion Wkt tit for tbe reason that it and re- fur at rilT im it was lor long f frum V It 403 to of n thousand Witu all city which a great and proud half of that ar it ly superior to or aoj to place in ninth century which the Latin or from thf or was by whole tribes of head tji ed by bold chieftains who with thd latter and tip u sword in band into tedious as they triarch of of ia which U so s and even rapidly ad- iu population cation and everything etsa that belongs to civilization Tlie cold in the winter U not excessively aa it ia in tho Ii is tho wheat ryo barley oats buckwheat hemp of than those they quit Our old historians to these great emigrations crime from about or beyond lilack from about or beyond Caspian and the matter ended But it is now tled that a camo from the high of U Tartary is far from ami wii fertile or tho re the genial thu die in manner of living were to emigrate from timo to lime iu the hope uf finding better countries in the distant West or in Iho distant they did emigrate sometimes ami even recently in- to the On their way to they go ther or north of the Caspian and the apple tho pear the the plum Black Sjaa and iu it tha Don the traverse Asia Minor and the which luw into or the wus As as ii Caspian the mid the In it too rise the Lima Dwina of that na call which fall into resisted lliU of Kurt tuo Artie Ocean and was their church We have show why Ua preiullr U the of BrtT ilia faith aril so k I ia of the Greek Church with the U key anj why they muck in- thing city the highest wish in the of tlie Tartar era- si kr long lime cut direct intercourse between their an I yet they nut uf empire and i ir a la tuo of Onega nnd so as the and the into the gulf uf and On the oilier for as sin is her power is far from 1 l -i respect the empire iu her of Trajan when it had one and twenty exceeded M hich has yet rescind forit included Middle nnd Southern Northern and In the tea rivers are in the or Cor of various sizes On heir lower boats now to be seen ploughing their way and on some of them n number Larga portion as we rest of of this rust said than all the covered with primeval true of then nnd along ilia Oural governments or provinces have often ten and even HI II tlllu Asia ti e of India a the Mediterranean Scia Roman Never did 1 but i for thai of trio Seven Hillod City on iho Tiber was the tu of tho is fur f equal of On the contrary front its very northern ami tho in of it the Kns empire groat Willi ol province of no part ut empire south of 48 50 mill whilo its extreme m Hue is iu latitude Wo may say of it tlint ii of account fur ng lies I of and CU 10 degrees or 1112 miles in inciu.lc? Ibo of ihu until with tho ot Georgia we may includes it is four if not tuoro of population in the portion of tho there U a river which is not up ring tour mouths every winter whilst in tbe northern are rendered for the same from six to eight All the are closed for bj ice and ceases ring Ibat ol year As to the population of the very estimates by 57 up to It is evident that writers are by not looking at the Russian willi sufficient care for these dom include either modern or and in what call Tho or a but the forest and witle ia in ilia western confines of Ku sia proper ami about tho of lensk nn I further west But of us to more interesting though scarcely less subjects We HIT Uod has liis own as it wero written the on the very surface it- self of the great have nnd will long the history of Mountains and and anil lo even rivers contributed to tha aud creato states and l Persians ami this day tha who strut about the streets ut in lli the Turks the greal cf which Hut If us a at- the History of also of Reader von rer ai tho of If von Tou her it thore is at outset a mingling of ail the of and an fur some This it in cnt MV Albanian for ever t Marathon and Salami PI an i to l it had not been for our j what would have become of uro ronu 1 havo reason for I l ar m way Alexander thj and his in the Macedonian kingdom for two centuries nnd the for ny centuries more prevented the part of from being by Asiatic barbarism But it was not so with thu northeastern pait of is now called Kussin Greeks planted colonies in the and along nil north coast of the Sea ami those colonies flourished itt nnd cnj and the oil tho tho and ihu Mediterranean Hut no ther the kings nor lic of nor indeed the ol Romp nor even of or rest ami eTOr look possession uf its it uus then or the southern of it thou h it from and tho most delightful stream lows forth failing proper ful Just so Iu her early is all fn Uy an- 1 r was tu ba 1 terms if not at open wsr vith neigh The if the were i were uf different dialect and in some caoM among m than an tike Uy decrees f to the the the and in tary of era of Kief on tho or in he south OK tlic in the west i nn he Kith of these I n less distant than capital of 1 4 J lint wl on k uf po tion of it is absolutely to know lloy mean to include the whole t mj ire as it now stands or not for want of in this respect of seventh edition of tho have several errors serious ia cf lia same tiling was done by Hon Win H iu a speech lie de- livered in diked States a lew in which ho said the of i Jl Finland hu would not have been far an we in St 1840 Count the minister of the was kind enough to uive us from the books uf the Department ol tlie Interior as well from his own many st fur the warlike in the latter adventurous and addicted lo colonisation Widely bavo been the pursuits of men when congregated on large plains it has nut been found to bring ses under the government ambitious and which his de- if possessed of similar character may continue to hoKl Where there is but military pow yr is the only is lo the adh sion or rather of mankind in of Euphrates tho Tigris tho Yang ninny others of greater or extent this When hat it makes it possible lo bind men together in large nationalities by suitable political antl by strong and reciprocal too can bring under one and of the human which been sundered by hv ercu by seaa oceans for it can means of overcoming and as it were of good the railroad ship the of n common language ami a in religion the plaining of col- which employ as we see itt country and some others at the present day Mill be ill over the world at political governments vast extent and eino over largo of even j is considerable diversity of imago the history of Russia Inc not seem t j somo of those positions for though it is i plain a it biou reared only comparatively em Let us look al this for OLIO It U now not from It is fundamental to correct h story of the em- it is Russia in Europe may upon ages passed relative to the At I tact has lie us the empire lie safely put down at OLIO It U now probably not from 01 or about in country about as MS find having of OUO or provinces which once Iwlongetl lo the Counis of ami lo and of which beau to witLin the present It will be seen from this statement iu Moscow and the an be one plain the probably on iho earth The and southern portions of it for of inward from tho A-i tic Ocean and Black Sen are anj tha tral parts are scarcely more undulating most hilly have times Iroin tuL American pinions of Crouching to in point of empire must be very thin I populated In i even on the rise nre but liule worth for groat of the flowing their mineral Hshcries otl to tha southeast aud others to the and their furs and Siberia u tbe j west Moscow stands in what may be is the art of showing men j by signs regard them It from good improved by convening with good fit for cultivation Iy consider respectable u several gentlemen Russians and I nothing but a plain in nil diroc- wl o resided or yearn and they have giren us bpt one j is not only very level but it in regard lo that rant nod dreary t low so much so if it were made ft It in western and plain it has been that it would i Ilia ern portions of its gold nJ altitude of feet i other tlie Altri if were found that is any permanent t to it ft t in the east con- a id Tue result was tint no rier in direction of armed round Sea thu inio Thero was a gateway the and tlie mountains and no one lo it against such desolating before which he incipient civilization which spread out from timo lo time from the Greek nies on northern coasts of Sea ami in of timu the nies themselves a complete As for tribes of who did iho I some of the for ot and n pint of the modern into the valley of Danube one of the finest countries of rope Germany tracts of them iru to lie seen lo this Odin nn 1 his followers readied even n the southern potions of Sweden and Norway took of those mul laid the ot the j heir their mark in England France and pariions of Western But tba greater of wbo came like swarms of from nn old hive ami reached Europe by the route which wu have took coming capital of i set i kingdoms were al the of In nil is said to him boon n or came wilb a number of bjr sen ascending the I on Its the lake which the the of people venture to iroil 120 miles to the t and established there SB 1 sin r or hit uncle or carried on the government for lim The of I wni was of tho Court who gorod had thus northern and ot tho Sclavonic rice A of tlw Great was a of r of ier and in if the aro lo bo to Russia her present far is J Anna a Greek princess Through influx up their abode if abode i mav hu called constituting tile either of choice or on Kief and iho othe of j nearly Uw in ce t much in tho war of lo hit people but com- mitted the great uf vast between hit paramount ta him they roamed for a long period iu tents no civil but their caillo their she their goats and Tho chase and the ery much of their food for a long ncrioJ if MO may of them the notices of the and of those earlier and the of Lower havo lo give us at a fuller at war with each other and dic almost exception in their ner of life it is not that tho progress ol civilization tety of was 30 vast trans- country And yet was clt In the a of eity of it the of this had up into the northern portions of und tbe prevailing and form of it of ibe Ou other hand who kingdom or 1 M it long been nolle 1 from It however that the w di 1 the and minns their flit I of from but that by from It lint the of greater between the of j and of of Asiatic barb and J make to their afterwards of dominant in I b and make some advances for a was foil in i the and one of moat Itoman fict Christianity menis Ii tbe portion of Ilia country which on the Sen led further and further into the interior un- til after tho lapte of ten centuries iku very heart of tue arid ks spread up to tlie of the Sea and it was n very imperfect made it so they butler than barbarism and heathenism tei as a for and ter Whatever they they were dear to ho received and are dear lo J hey are no way disposed to either the of their or of And they fnt are in to the Church of Greece and of Greek of hatred and of war two tha same The Extern and in UN ninth century and in loath at points with other they bare ever but r rapidly in 4 of and did i sinns of many and Trent and nation About tho of Tartan route v al Cot to DM T and   

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