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Geneva Lake Mirror Thursday, February 09, 1860,
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Geneva Lake Mirror
Geneva Lake Mirror

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Geneva Lake Mirror

   Geneva Lake Mirror (Newspaper) - May 24, 1860, Geneva, Wisconsin                               S. too Per in VOL. 1. MAY 24, 1860. i NO. 17. WILL BE PUBLISHED lEvery AT Walworth S. J. Dewey's Dry Good en Main YOUNG BT ROBERT OF one in If nut three OF 1 00 14 three 5 00 S 00 one 1000 One fourth three 10 00 15 00 one year 20 00 half three 15 00 six 2U 00 3000 2000 30 00 5000 or a exceeding Paper l art? at half the Of- l be p When I was a it is no matter I admit 'twas a long time There were plenty of children with bouts then And the world turned round very slow At nine the old folks went through with their prayer And the children all went to their For they never took part in the old folks Till an idea came into their But now WP have dandies at Who strut in their swallow-tailed And but on the airs and vices of And squander their change and bank notes They top olf their cocktails and Trine with a though they grow very And they slap you over the While they say how do you do my old UP 110SCB at in their And talk about hoops and long Chattel con- on recently added to our Job Department a selection of nen rard vre call sill ou .la a aurt tasty Business in all at prices Wentworth AS is. C. M. at John T. District Attorney for socks Nor dreamed of intrigues and They chew gamble and And dunce all the polkas and With an easy and languishing That delights all the Bridgets and 0 I am frightened half out of With the hui ry and bustle and The by seems on iillo And goes round with a whizz and a we never go to the steady old And grow up and by degrees j For now rush on as if running a And the devil the hindmost would CADET'S With a shaking finger I pointed to the burden in my arms and stammered out something about the mother having been left the he exclaimed as his eye fell on the you pro in for and no I that woman after she got streaking it like mid away from the but I thought slu had her young one with You're nicely took in and done that's a what's to be done with the child I know I'am How far are you Boston to I guess you'll have to carry it as far as Then j ou can take it to one of the hospitals or asylums where at- tend to this sort of and leave it. Perhaps some of ladies will help you take care of it till we get to and the conductor passed lie went evidently he told the for heads began to nnd then men and boys came sauntering in from the other cars to see the fellow that had the baby left with Plenty of jokes were cracked at for every now and then I heard a regular and some such phrases as eh T a go Looks fatherly I was in My blood boiled furi- One minute I wanted to the next to kick every in the I suppose in my I gave the poor little thing in mr aims a gn for she C. L. tlie J. T. Justice of Farr ifc at D. C. M. Operative JBANK OF D. K. Will and OLD nnd SIL and uncurrent BANK re- mit proceeds at current and attend to all other matters to BANKING ou Groat Britian Continental for KLI Y. V. Mil. fUHl K ft Lake D. THIS is most pleasantly situated m the centre of the and i. fine view of the Lake and adjoining The ful for former spare no to merit Hi Geneva P. B. VIKO leaded commodious situated in the of the the coiner of Ma n and Centre takes in informing the Public lie will no to make it a. convenient for the Mr. B. respectfully share of public 5-tf March Fashionable W J x C done to on short Mr. n. a rf ftc I am a military ta private in the but an officer these many I have seen service in in on the and I bear of a was just a cadet at I was on my way home for the first time in three Early in the morning 1 took rny seat in the cars from Xew York to I wore my uniform and (I may own up was not so un- concious or indifferent as I to the many admiring glances young ladies be- stowed upon it and embryonic colonel or general Towards the middle of the forenoon an Irish woman got into the They were and not having the respect for the military which others had took what almost the unoccupied and by my I am or was a The woman was well clad and so I kept my In arms she held a young babe of six or eight It was a happy little I had a very unmanly and weakness for both babies and and it was so long since I had been se near to either that I petted and noticed this little creature not a At noon the train for fifteen Most of the passengers got I meant to have the novelty of a six o'clock dinner in so 1 did not stir from my Seeing I did the woman begged to know if I would hold her baby for a few minutes while she got I She put the child in my arms and ed. The moments passed away one by one the passengers returned when the bell a crowd came with a rush to resume their places the tive we were and horrors of horrors Where was that man My hair began to and the sweat to start from every still I hoping that the woman was trying to get through the other would come finally to assume her A quarter of an hour every body was quietly and still I held that People began to young ladies to I felt myself ah red as a The conductor passed through f stopped tered a quick little She in mv arms so and and and and looked up at me with such complacent t. I my anger dying out in spite of may as well be a man such a con- 1 was fable greeny to gut saddled in thU to be but that's my and not this poor little and T may as well brave it An for these ed let 'em So I settled my coolly to the care of my People after a while grew customed to see her in my and most of the afternoon she blent But how heavy she I to have a leaden weight heavier and heavier upon me. How on earth do men lug about their diy after day in the way they do For me I'm certain I'd rather though 1 never tried it. to my night rny baby and waked and hungry I began to cry a uncompromising People began to look curious to see what master nurse would do I tried every possible means to pacify the child rny my eagle I held it up to the I dandled I nearly ed it up side no Baby erly despised my miserable efforts to make it forget its needed and and cried louder and louder till at last I seemed to hold nothing but an A man could stand it no let alone a and I rose from my determined to appeal to some lady or woman for As I the some of the young ladies broke into their titter again the older ones looked out of tha and the men eyed me with a knowing sort of had not ray arms been they would have had a hit straight out from the One motherly looking person whom T approached transfixed me with a virtuous sort of that made me shake in my shoes as if I had committed the able I gave up in and was about to to my when a gentleman in the extreme end of the car beckoned me forward It was a little family the gentleman and his wife and a colored girl with who held their babe in her The gentleman and his wife weie both and ly heard about this baby from the said the as I came wife has been ever it to Can do anything for The lady leaned past you let me look at your a she asked it seemed to me the sweetest Atones I had ever She held out her arms and I laid the baby in I a young so How it cries What is the matter with don't unless it's I has had nothing to eat since that woman got in this I don't know what to do with little love exclaimed the a shame no wonder it cries She glanced at her own baby in her servant's at hir ing like any the sweet mother laid my baby on her beneath her and hushed its cries as if it had been her her yery flesh and Her husband and leaning for- ward as if to protect her from the gaze of made room for me with the I the affair tc told him my and found that my family was not unknown to As we I saw that his listening examined the dress of the child on her felt of its and finally some chains that held up its A little minature was set in the clasp of She looked at she am that the woman who this child in your care is not its In the first place no mother could do such a thing then this babe's clothing is of the most ex- make and and in these sleeve chains are two See ons a with the other a beau- evidently a Depend upon the child is a stolen or cams into her hands by some unfair What can be not be about the fate of this After the possibility or probability you have I shall not leave it in I will take it to my and advertise the If its rents are I shall be and if not I think my mother will care for the wish the meeting was safely The lady's eyes sparkled through 'T can't tell she how what you have and are seems to but I think you to noble to dread I will answer for the mother that has such a son if you ted her be quite oblivious of the fact that I She turned to him with a look that must have silenced the veriest grumbler in the We reached took a carriage and only at the hotel entrance did my new friends bid me bless said the noble as she gave me back my I should have knelt and kissed the hand of such a but my arms and I were then so awkward at baby tending that nothing else seemed a possible accomplishment at one and the same The clerk glanced suspiciously at me and my are Not a room to be I sent for the proprietor and again my name vouched for me. is it to have a family in the land where in the Mr. he you get that child I told the He shook his but said I sent for a chambermaid to come to my I begged of her to take the child and care for it during the At first sho would hear to I but my hand in my I gave her a lously large but I was young and She took the But sure not the young man that ud be baby j Holy Vargin My ud be ruined I assured her of the rectitude of my and sent her but she at my door in the ing before I had left my and nothing would induce her to keep her charge an- other NEXT BE HAPPY AS YOU Wife and are you tired and out of patience with your husband's and 3'our demand upon your time and attention Arc you tempted to speak out angry feelings to that but perhaps sometimes less or exacting husband of or to scold and fret at those sweet nnd beautiful little ones Do you and a fool I was to leave my father's where I lived at ease and in quiet Are by reason of the care and weariness of body wifehood and motherhood must forgetful of and ungrateful for their comforts and their joys Oh wife and what if a stroke should smite your husband and Jay him low What if your children should be from your arms and from your som What if there were no strong heart for you to lean What if theie were no soft little innocents to nestle in your and to love you or receive your love f How woi 1'. it be with you then Be patient and dear be unwearying and long dear for you know not how long you may with you your best and dearest know riot how long you may tarry with Let there be you to remember which will wring your heart with remorse if they leave you atone there be nothing for them to remember but and love unutterable if you are called to leave them by the Be be be tender of them for death will or them and And oh what would you do if you should be doomed to sit and forsaken through years Be happy as you even with all your trials for believe thou wife of a loving and true there is no lot in life blessed as thine Ax EXTRA scene took place on the steamer Baltimore just as she was leaving for A rough looking genious came on board with a powerful bull dog at his Walking directly to the individual ed to be the clerk I want to leave my dog in this here office till the boat starts I'm afraid somebody will steal can't do said the take him that's hut you're both dispositioned and he's kinder company for him roared the I don't think you're and you sit down here and watch that fellow sharp and the individual turned on his heels him out stranger if he's The dog lay there when the boat the clerk giving him the better part of his A fashionable young a few days went into a store in and ter a thorough examination of everything in the bought a dimes worth of thread which she ordered to be sent to her over a mile The tor procured an express the driver of which took the backed up to the lowered the delivered the and collected fifty the usual A Dr. Updegraff removed yesterday from one of the eyes of Mr. a living called a cus or It has been ing there for two and at times could be distinctly observed while moving in the watery portion of the When ed under the microscopy it presented a rious being an eighth of an inch in of a he id and tail resembling that of a common The doctor succeeded in removing it but when exposed to the atmosphere it im- mediately It can yet be seen the doctors The old lady who has a smart is now butter from the cream of his and iron rust removed by the article in then covering it wit or dip your in tillow  

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