Home League, The (Newspaper) - December 29, 1860, Hartford, Wisconsin A to tho of the Bail Boad Farm Mortgagors of the Friend of and the uncompromising foe of swindling PUBLISHED SATURDAY AT for Tin Copies or each and one to lue up of tho Additions may be to Clubs nt any All relating to tho of the bo to the All designed for the lor be addressed to A. M. 1 column Is 00_ so Too I 00 12 contract marktd time or Displayed cent and but ami and tint per for invariably in JOB Any E LEAGUE T J A- M. TJ VOL. 1. DECEMBER 29, 1860. NO. 21. POETRY promptly M low No. A. uf thin nru thn and third or ntS o'clock P.M. W. M J. O. OS O. of Hartford No. 142, held in 7 Hartford from tho fur for P.M. P. M. 10.45 P.M. P. M. L. M. THE SECESSION latt A GALK came lip from the fierce November But the ohip had felt such a storm And her still held And though the howling No of The passengers said trust our Tho staunch old The stood on tho he batter my watch below in the former I doubt if we'll weather The wind on the one side blows me The current auts me I'll just between them And seem to be forward ahead cried the watch on the up the first mate's order the ground the gers And the seas already board Tho foresail split in the angry gust In tlie hole tbo ballast shifted And an old tar Jackson steered We should thus have drifted iu nil of mill Also all bard Hartford I. 11. K. K. Vt. to the of chronic over tho tht 1 N O T A U V T. J B 1 C to Ac. to of for Bui the captain cried go ur helm And lie called to the all to the And we'll save her by Devotion Tho first mate hurled the trumpet down The old tars cursed To Hue the good ship helpless roll At the sport of wave and Tlie tattered sails arc all Yards and masts are started And the captain weeps and says his Till the hull be parted But Ood ia on the The crew are in The wave that washes the captain off Will save the Constitution Dec. BAYAUD Attorney tho Voat County County Office op 1 lib TUB WEIRD A BY AS or of Fruit d In Pry A uml nil of Storo tli 9 Hartford A promptly in and nt of Payment of promptly I. S. JACOn Vor in ihr will to all nrn tv their cars Solicitors in north JOHN ami Will to nu rii unit In 1KANPBH K PAUL A. of U L. A n. it. i In Dry A Co. do in lotion ou i Hartford Street of to or other in Milliner nail the Intent of of Millinery In Washington Comity Shop on Sumner Jnr nkc d nlao you run uo Anil what thn sin Bre for bring I'll looks for fifty I a close student at a young ambitious lad of somewhat but strong in and con- scious of My father was and un- that which the shallow thinkers call It a stormy day iu January the snow had fallen two feet and I started for my eight miles My father had written to me that ho wanted to see me he wanted .to give me injunctions not to forget my duties to him in the of his He needed not have sent I could I never forget hint or His desire to see growing out of a feeling that he might at any hour and to give counsel was but not his slightest wish was law to mo and I ted for sis I have on Weary trudging in an unknown snow Before I reached the I thought my body would tire out completely but it did accomplished it I ato my chatted awhile with my and went to bed in my old My father and mother I left in the gratified at my arrival and proud of me. I fell arose and dressed came into the took a scut be- tween my father and They looked surprised and enquired why I had left my bed Said I. nobody been here since I went to bed replied will somebody and that is why I left my at least I have dreamed there and the dream is uo illusion to but a fierce My father smiled as if incredulous yet as if he asked no braver or better defendant than his At this instant my a verv hoard a rap at the and stepped to it as t to in- quire who was aud what but instead opened the and iu cante a terrible gust of wind and the night was with them marched a walked half way from the door to the when she discovered and I evidently took her back Dy nif I saw the creature of my I knew that I was destined to a I grew in as I looked nt my dear father and she took a turned her back to the aud seated herself in the I kept my seat and appeared to give no attention to I are you inquired my that to you said does he live if you have a why do you not live at instead of gadding about such a night as fit only lor fiends to be abroad don't you set the North Kiver on fire said gaping from her chair and springing toward my at the back side of my and hissing through her teach you why I am My mother screamed and ran my father made an ineffectual attempt to get out of the but instantly resolved to take what awaited him and I of my seat as quick as the and as passed me on her way to my I struck her with ray fist a blow the but for her old cotton would have knocked ler down as it was it ed and gave me time to chairs out of the way and gather for a She and at me for a as if in a soliloquy to cross my path do you see if I don't settle you pretty and thrusting hand into her made a motion as if she would The motion it brought foam to my I struck her half a dozen blows as quick as Khe let dagger go and clenched me. Her fied me that I had found my in aud that my skill as a and my almost unparalleled ability .as a must I had learned pugilism of a clever and as to to that day I had never been thrown I knew felt the grip that I was dealing but I felt that my father and mother were relying on I grew stronger as I before and clenched and various attempts ourselves to what wrestlers call a the under arm aud it was no longer threw around hia and turned He fell on the a I intended to break his bones he unhooked his cloak had been unbuckled in the and leaped up like a I struck him before he was staggered grappled rny left hand and struck him called mother to open the door and as she did kicked him He swore be the death of mo. I told him to take himself out of the or T would put the Sheriff on and shutting the door in walked to my Now let your doubters tell me how I come to see this matter I had seeu and heard his threats to my dream before be came to the aud had awakened and to go and see to my father's safety and again to conquer himpin All the main features of the occurrence became took and by the impression they made on enabled I doubt save my father's Capture of another Hundred and five Is Toar now you And In this line I'll tutt forty faw doors north of the 1UI1 will find mo Tor of two u People's Meat THK ami ol Ify their old f rit the on In In custom of thOM who st thuir to old will with nil so far its o their IK 10th, 18M if you are to stay in my nothing if you are if I do not tell you you must leave my the house I should -like to see any one here try to put me if I call my men and throw yoa out neck and have not got any they arp all gone do yon know 1 I glanced at iny He wnn his courage ebbed not a helpless not able to get out of his strange for he had received not less than that verj week for large wheat and he saw before mm hug woa either a or a man whose object was I conic see that all this was rapidly passing through my but it did not bow him the ninth part of an So I sat peeled nothing of Sag had an quilted ted her and was belted a woman course I am question for you The correspondent of the Boston wri ing on-board the U. S. Const of under date of October 1st, gives the following of the capture of another saw no vessel of a suspicious character until the ning of September 25th, when at 7.30 p. a bark was no about five steering and about 80 miles from to the southward of the Congo We ly made all sail in she being very we did not bring her in range of our guns until 11 being at that lime about a mile and a Our chase guns were then brought to bear on her spars and but she did not heave to until four shots were three of which passed close and struck the water distance ahead of The fourth close to her arid cut away her and causing her to leave the as he through tear of being She was immediately boarded by Lieut. D. and sailing master T. H. with an armed Fairfax returning to the ship with her and crew as She proved o be the bark of New one day ut Manque and having on seven hundred and five African of whom a few were children and two Ired and fifty They are all ind in remarkable good She jailed from New York for the Coast on the 29th of June last first detained by the and put under heavy with John Latham as Jose Sanchey super- Morgan 1st John 2d Hans 3d and a crew of twelve and arrived at da Congo on 27th Here it is alleged by the first mate that Latham left the and that she was in charge by a giving the name of Ruiz who shipped a Spanish and sailed from the Congo on the 19th of arriving at the Manque Grande i- Jin POLITICAL says Noah the trans- fer of values in confidence of future The definition is a good In the view of many credit is an unmixed to others inexpressible While the one class continually de- other never tires of extolling its .It would be from this to conclude that the credit institutions and had both a debt and credit side in its and that in order to get at the true and certain on which side it we must fully examine the various its ges and its uses and And first of the or the tages of the I. It enables those who have actual tal which they cannot to loan it to those who can use it with advantage and Credit has its natural man has a capital which he has not desire or capital may exist in the form of money or other An- other man has ability and talents which he could successfully apply to capital if it. It for the interest of one and of the other to take One will thus get the use of his the other the full advantage of One can afford to the other wishes to receive a compensation for the use of a portion of One great advantage of wealth is then A considerable portion of the wealth of society being in the bauds of aged and infirm and unable or indisposed to employ tal inactive were there no all such wealth lie power in advancing production not only the owners but to It enables those who have no to enjoy the advantages of physical in the most simple is unable to effect anything out the use of The day laborer must have or the past in the shape of his hoe or The amount required in his case is so small that the most probably pos but if he did if he could not ob- he must manufacture the tool for before he hia days required in most every kind of to such an amount that he cannot be expected to possess though he has the energy and skill successfully to use it. directly or loans him his if lie is a farmer his factory it lie is his stock if he is a Thus secured the est possible production er of present labor to the power of past It increases the desire of tion because it gives what is accumulated greater The man who has retired from by means of its without trouble or help to build and carry on or engage in com- His circumstances do not allow him to apply to his his skill or but credit gives him a fair renumeration for their reproductive by ing what is in- creases the desire for There are also con- siderations of on count which the giving credit said to increase this It makes the possessor and the possession more One would feel unsafe if he carried hia fortune always with if judiciously be has little anxiety for himself or his If the foregoing propositions are credit gives a great to try and This needs no We now turn to the debtor side of the the disadvantages of the credit I. This system affords opportunity to the vicious and idle to rob the But when his goods are ready tor he must give a credit of six or eight take the risk of and be out of his money all that time or get his notes cashed at the is quite another T here is great h azard i n all and hare powerful friends or a large if he would manufacture at Great establishments eat up the smaller For if credit is it will naturally be en to the fewest since it would be more inconvenient to be obliged to look after the and standing of many small debtors than a few larger Every body knows Hence but very few persona hope ever to be able to transact their own They submit to their and settle down as laborers for This condition of thousands in this but tor the of the credit would occupy the independent and respectable position of dealers aud V. It imposes a on No. man can sell so low for credit as for three different because some debtors will pay him at all others Avill not pay him punctually he must be at the expense of keeping book For suming this delay and he must be and for he charges more for goods than he otherwise This is. a well-known principle of All who have not only to make good all that others do not but they must bear all the expense of credit of all the loss arising from delay of payment in the form a heavy charge and lay an enormous burden upon the ducing classes one under which they would be very restive if they knew its full It is a reasonable estimate that tlie sum total of commodities of every home and which are sold annually in the United is at least and that this amount on an three different It is also a low that the amount charged as each is 2J per making in all 71 per cent. The wholesale dealer or may charge but the retailer will charge the amount sold be and the per cent be total charge for credit be This is a sum to the whole national Yet as we doubt not is paid by tlie people every year for mostly ou articles of Causes all the bankruptcies that take This is No man can be a bankrupt who does not lake If no one promised to no one could ever Jail to Credit begets For example The manufacturer employs workmen and pays them at the end of six He thus compels them to give him credit for their they will obtain credit of the and all who furnish them with the means of in must buy on credit of the dealer and they of the im- porter and The fact that the manufacturer compelled the workmen to give him a credit of caused credits to the amount of Hence credit often gives rise to an almost endless scries of other Cut off of them and you prevent the consumers would no t ask of the whole of credits would be In presenting Our on this we would that credit may properly be considered as of three Private credit is that which is given to only chartered Public credit is confidence of future ment extended to the government of the state or Noble Blooded Horse Coming to Since it is not possible for the creditor ways to know the character and ability of the person to whom it must often happen that he will give credit to the and as a will incur In this way an incalculable amount of property Is constantly being transferred from one class of persons to without an Where credits are greatly in one phase or bV comes a branch of and annually pass in this VoVn the meritorious to the It holds out great temptations to ex- Men are very seldom guilty of any very great excess in their expenditures except on The greater part of the extravagance of mankind is in consuming now and Prof. in this the horse has arrived also announced that he become the owner of and sent to this the celebrated which he subdued and The account ot the Herald is as Cruiser is now a bright bay aud full sixteen hands well i slave port about 50 milea further on the 24tb, where she took on board her and sailed the same night at 11 p. we capturing her about 24 hours No pers or colors were found on She is a fine bark of 450 tons newly and besides slaves she had on board a quantity of palm oil and Her second and third and Charles cabin were sent to the United States in her as and six of the ish crew were sent in her to take care of the negroes until her arrival at where they are to bo pat and the slaves delivered to the agent for liberated Bev John ofter which the vessel la to proceed to Master T. H. Midshipman W B mate and eleven and three forming the prize crew from this sent to the United with the parting p 2 ah The Cosmopolitan Art Association haa and bis as the subject of iU annual engraving says thut Southern who talks Ihe the had better atrat up sing to pay hereafter present de- sires without estimating future This is particularly the ease with the Their hopes are buoyant they easily Batter themselves that they will be to pay at some future therefore take consume the property ot and tually mortgage their future This is one of the great evils of It es unproductive It leads to How many wild and foolish speculations are with money in hand We have never known an instance of any the rency of the bank is often used as the diate instrument of such hut trace the matter and it is found that credit originated Speculations in their verv operations on Credit is the parent of sack transactions always and It prevents the many participating in the profits of This is one of the gravest charges against tho credit But for we might say persons would n probably share in the of trade and whore olie now The vast sion of the credit system is one of the chie causes of the mammoth of the present If no credit was given by the trader or almost any man o decent abilities and fair character might do business on hia Thb lor easily accumulate capital to pay for his and he bad worked it article for with a neck little arching but the English blooded race When only years old he was the favorite the and beat all the other horses that run gainst He came out so much ahead that tlie owners of the other nags to think that something was the matter with heir and to further test the weights upon in that way in ured and were obliged to take him rom the He has been used but little any purpose since until Mr. Rarey took hold of For upwards of five years he was confined in his no one daring to His stall was about twenty feet with a ceiling fourteen feet His feed was thrown in to him by opening the upper part of a double door which opened into the those having charge of him would fight him off with a cane until another person would get the feed into the and we are informed that almost invariably ser would jn hia tussel close the door upon So ferocious was this horse that its owner gave orders several times to have him but the although not daring to enter the looked upon him as such a noble animal that they did not obey the but kept him in hopes that something would turn up and the world have the of him in some he being one of the stood holding Cruiser by the bit hour explaining to the Queen How i and the Queen patting the horse on the as if she pitted and said From KadM The Banking System of In the light of the present and price of exchange between Wisconsin and the Eastern our can mate to the value ot Wisconsin money as and Wisconsin banking institution M helps to commercial and business The Treasurer of county hai for exchange ou be wished to pay in Boston as interest on railroad This exchange cost tkw people of that ten and a half per cent. It is perfectly idle to say that the bills of Wisconsin Banks will bring the gold presented at their if the ex- penses of travel did cot eat up the expected the risk of a man's life in entering on such a is not thing to The La Crosse of evening has an abusing stint or limit a gentleman of this who was endeavoring to realize the gold fur MOM bills on the La Crosse They ened to tar and frather and give him the customary ride when dressed in such if he did cot immediately leave That paper says that he was frightened into compliance with their threats and maa tor doing what he had a perfect right to and which the banking law of our State vided and expected that he would is threatened with bodily and a and to be the with an unbroken this side of Lake And this same paper says banks are and have the confidence of the entire This is certainly the most substantial and the cheapest way of bank soundness that we have ever heard of. In proportion as the bank is the of having uu heads supposed that the way to demonstrate a was to count out gold when its bills were according to But the Wisconsin banking system is by threatening to break a man's and tar and feather if asks for the bank has promised banks have forfeited their character soon as such an act is. proved against The Legislature of this Stats should have the satisfaction of knowing how the banks in Lft aud other their this ia their A great responsibility rests upon this That the banks of Wisconsin and have an unmitigated to the people interests of lha they have given us rency which is good when there is no. sion for goodness in that and perfectly worthless when a good currency is wanted U equally We are not blaming the If we were hi that we should make the most out of it. They know how to take care of and can make money by passing off pro mises for have substitute for money which answers a good part of the time anil threats of feathers aud broken in addition to paper are considered a good tute in ticklish This will do well but it doea not help us pay our debts away from The attention of our is called the pernicious system of banking tolerated Wisconsin Oar banking lawe allows the circulation of trash which is called which is costs us one hundred cents on the dollar to ibid and which realizes us bat ninety we wish to pny our There would be good money enough in- were it not for this abundant which comes plentifully on floating cakes of in bills from Arctic there be enough in circulation to do all the business of the if they were not crowded out by the scrapings of pickers and paper Look at the ten millions of worth of wheat that has gone out of the State and which would have brought es without laden with golden if it were not for our pernicious banking which has turned the golden in lieu of every farmer has hoarded away the greasy and worthless paper of ois and Wisconsin this about to assemble does not enough for the people of this to pat a wholesale plundering of they will have their mission and the object of their Was there ever such a forbearing set of fools in the world as now inhabit this blessed They have what will bring the gold in their and they part with it for what they can hardly buy meanest thing in the world Will the lature appoint guardians for or five as currency that will bring us or what M better repeal alt laws upon this and ell commercial and then gold will obey the laws of business and ceme us as fast and as naturally ai the wheat comes out of the and the corn shows its yellow kernels through the governed to best blooded animals ip In this wild condition Rarey found no person having laid bands upon him for five and all the treatment that he had re- during that time was that of a cudgel I to keep him whilst the feed was thrown into hia tha very kind to develop hia vicious Mr. at first sight fearlessly undertook the task of ing and in three hours after he first go completely obtained control of that he placed a person on his and in short apace of time had him OR as a pet After separated the horae for months in the and manageable as i of ins private A Jew in a tarero in the town of Endingen saw a whom seemed to you good men with whom I had the pleasure to travel from Basal to on The merchant and Have my fellow since we much trade The instead of answer ing asked Did you make a good tion at the Fair If so I should li ke to pose to bet with you that I bet that cannot repeat three words after as I my The thinking a fear more or would make no difference to replied The Jew said Toe merchant replied The bagpipe was responded Jew bethought himself whew the mistake could be but the piece of chalk out of his made aid said sixpence tor Again the Jew The merchant The jew The Jew smiled he left onai HP OfO i to find iio to his this horse to royal 3B_r. the merchant you can me J t W