Wisconsin Chief, The (Newspaper) - March 20, 1861, Milwaukee, Wisconsin THE WISCONSIN PUBLISHED BY T. W. EMMA PEE IN tap 1861. the courtesy of the trom the and not by Ihe of thu of the we again a seat on nnd dip our nib iu hia We Have some throe and IH been no expense to thu What wr be left to if a winter exposed to is more than we can It has to to as a get our kit of but as aro improving and old letter backs lo sell for so small a Madison and was the current coin conversation when we Hist came the It is truly a to sen with nil deference to bitter authority than think its beauty has been There are other places as for it is many ol Sis many it d During the sion of the it a. more lively and its hotels ami houses fill Sometimes tho third house H unusually and cold victuals in If dull in the summer tho surrounding scenery ot lake and wooded make it a landscape ol quiet but picturesque The old Capitol looks and homespun by side of tbo towering grandly it. Thu grounds are Improved There a growth of native nnd of maple and elm which have been but else to relieve Ihe A generous sprinkling of groups ol would make rusting places for the eyu iu winter Our first sight of seven years took in the National Hag it lifted and unrolled in the breeze of a clear winter We ber thu thrill as wo saw it against the western and its folds bat hud in thu slanting It was ours We a stranger in a strange but among home Wo watched It by the hurt and until the overhead was throbbing with Ami while we an Indian stalked by like a reminding us that a State had leaped out of the and its lights burning where but a little while the of hU own lit up tho formt Wo did not then dream that so a time would witness that Insulted and dis- honored on our own waters and hi our own that the Union would But ever Hag U as in a rious will be the ensign of B t- that It should bj runt of our shuttered than that or compromises should write SLAV BUY ou that holy ground of As you near thu you can usually MILWAUKEE FT. MAECH WHOLE NO. 565. DO TICKLE The mass of are They ant from the ephemeral motives of the and live only for the The world a theater for got xip carried for thu sole gratification of their selfish This lifu U but the scenery tho fiom thu Look at their t Thu lust are torn out where have 1 in ot great Not during Senatorial not For the comfort of the and the benefit of the would suggest that a IM making it a of all who are mch to their coats made without own are uot proud or not as much so as wu have seen Now and then one ventures upon the extravagance of a shiny ooat or but the majority nre in a of so far as fashionable apparel is aud are Innocent of extra of wenr white shirt which luxury can hardly be indulged In at two and a half per Some of their tiles are sadly and we would that they vote a new one and charge it our Treasurer will fork over and Is a drunken hearse d the threw the corpse out upon the thu running and the tn man reeling bis way back to The whole says the one of the most revolting we ever heard Wa women must constituted differently men A word a we are our hearts aohe as If for a great Men feel or gu sa at If they tlm most of them would be slow to wound us LIKK the nf like the of truth moves its unintentionally help to opposition only np Its views shall please If HIH are well imrl thu characters well they cry 1" If they bias their or rut ire In any and hut suffer terribly from en- We willing to be tlemen gratify us I Say or do thins interesting or We'll make an effort to draw in onr brenth mid honor your mance with a laugh or with our You'll Iw highly honored organizations have had share of this the old fashioned down to those of the present A touch of like the lightning of n will cull thorn around with a Like the moths of a summer when the flame burns they seek a more attractive aa suddenly as they Are they not about aa worthless us the insists t It not the of great that the mass who see no or grandeur in their or It is not the fault of our ri form that this element forgi ts and deserts it its the mail of and terrible It would a thousand generations of people to endow one to give a Hues to the n to the a Warren or Hale to a Valley Forge to In other they might have enlisted for Freedom while It needed but epaulettes and bloodless but would when or life were to With that t bore is grand and stirring in the history of our there Is much Unit Is most They have ever been curst d with this shouting like heroes when the tide floods in. With Its ebb they are gone From our inmost we pity and despise host were never mure shadowy und they cnn Iw they deign to when they are called upon for a they Assure them that in one they can win glory anil a and may remain steadfast for a point them to a to be trodden in and sneak from the rendezvous like In one of the cities of this years tlw writer was to aid a fww spirits In flinging out the standard of our rallied it. Lodge after and more it names were on the From this sanw there now comes a nry for The organizations And one good brother Is that should be got up I And go the mass of Unit once were but carpet thn veterans of a summor the moths gather where the flame up 111 the full of ztal nnd leading the column with kindling eye and to-day off dead I What a worthless Bet of runaways What reason have we to suppose that would find a deeper or moro enduring in their hearts 1 And to catch this must have ntw there must be a new a new new conclude with the laughable which shall them again are the people who expect to great revolutions in public make the world better for their and give to and deeds which uhall make their Should they reach they will under ennui for the want of In the name of common how do those get along with their political or church Do they expect a pro. from yew to year 1 A new 1'latfonn. or a new way ot voting for their t Do they have new new etc. 7 How can they live good Christians and get to glory coin tor without new We have but little esteem Slowly at the emits At Tast they came in hosts as it by sprang nothing to interest whereupon they rise and and ladies 1 We this organization with our WH have sat here with great patience and dignity waiting to be You interested You amused We have been bnt von would We have been disappointed in this We hoped it would do something to gratify It has failed of its and we can no longer allow our liodi to remain Get up we'll come back and enjoy it. It is too much effort to move our legs and draw iu onr to not Iw stuffed with intellectual Good bye let 'em go 1 Let them seek gratification at the concert or nnd We nre hardly ready lo turn the Temperance reform into a employ to please those who have no higher aim than lo gratify their own selfish tastes with THE enemies of the Temperance cause have not done it the greatest From we always expect an opposition as less as Fattening upon the rottenness of wide spread they turn fiercely upon those who seek to ntay the march of the pestilence and the sanctuaries of heart and from is not the only crime against Those who claim to bear its standard and flight in are often the most to bti That d is ever ing in Ihe because those who bear seem to look upon the strife aa mere child's and wage it with the mock heroism of a militia It needs a hero to face the sneers which people themselves have furnished those who liata or Often does the cheek burn and the eye sink at what we hear from men who have learned to scorn those while ever to love and toil for a great persistently leave that reform without aid In every spot where aid is No great re- form ever ever so humiliated and injured by its prof ssed in their us has been that of None lias ever buen richer in none so pooi in And how it has ever survived and achieved its present interest and position in the has often been a mystery 10 people are a despicable set of Drive You are great in and big but when it to the you Yon sneak to the polls like whipped ours and we want you to It WHS a politician who was We did sneak of our teeth for against the petty demagogue of Ihe village but against these whose A L AWT EH an public In aa these greedy sponges who suck np everything within and hold it. They are ready to In all the interest which and never think that it Is their duty to give off of the They go to the Division or Lodge room like men and mailed in If they are not Into life and warmth by the burning currents from nobler than their tWr aw There la had made the taunt a truth and sped it like a heated through the powerless And so It is. At the day when men are chosen whose official duties pertain to the making or enforcement of rum inter- est is invariably true to cringing slaves in halter or the great mass nf Temperance on the an meekly led to the polls and do the bidding ol their we wonder that and that intelligent and thoughtful men in all despise and shun an association with and deem the cause itself a humbug 1 Take this mass in the matter of If documents are to be purchased and campaign a fund raised these and other thn call is ally responded At the they to lie ardent friends of Temperance men Tu tlw they are lavish with heroes in their tions of Yet few of them ever expend a or stand lire when a hand tussle is to come off. Is it to be wondered that we cannot the confidence aud re- spi ct of the mass of those who are to say nothing of our enemies I Qod forgive those are complacently strutting in tlw livery of oar and yet have never received or given a That they have given a profession to is not the worst against They have committed a great crime against it by so acting that the cause Is made a and shunned by who ever admit the value and necessity of its principles and enemies of onr may revile and oppose but they can never ignominy must come from those who bear its March 6, 1861, Mies EMMA your thu blew his trumpet hi vitiate a few weeks I. in an and for some inexplicable tor the Wisconsin I find upon that both yourself and brother all you possibly can to break down and the evil ol Such being a a Sense of self you know is tho of all human me to reason with in a aa and sive as rny injured feelings and abused profession will mo ior my aud lw silent that you may I any that if that and his fanatical had minded their own and I should now have been a resident of and iu the ment of a practice as a number of tbo legal But no sooner did that strous of Dow's become a than was a terrible and falling off of ness and and I was obliged to leave State or dio of I emigrated to this State in thu 1854, for the following reasons I heard that the the fall had expressed themselves at the ballot box iu ot the Maine but that the Legislators of the and patriotic than the had ed a deaf ear to their and with lasting honor to themselves refused to enact the of was very and I turned to Wisconsin as Cain turned to the land of Nod In a tew I here with the that the e. the men of had so far progressed in enlightened that minding their own business was considered a but I see that I am going to be I notice that almost every house that I enter the women talk loudly of and and every table has upon it the the consin or some other temperance forcibly reminding me that unless you temperance tolks stop and I shall have to pull up stakes I have been so somewhat but I now come directly to the Miss I and or as we lawyers to the course that yon and your brother are because it is a and violation of my and tional and see if I prove this declaration by those stubborn facts and In looking over my I found that three-fourths of my whole earnings sprung from that very wholesome and pleasant that you temperance folks would In all my have boun in oases that grew out of divorce tions of most all of the oases of criminal prosecution have come from that very Only a few days there occurred one of those delicate or between a man and his and which grew at length to a that it took a Judge from tho Capital and four lawyers to regulate this put a hundred lars in my pocket which I shouldn't have re- if it hadn't been for The husband would have plodded along through life no use to insipidly loving his if it hadn't been for The bottle made him negligent and The soul of his wife it is may have been almost the and joyous hopes of her girlhood may have sunk in gloom the home around which ablest patrons of the but rf dominion of paj yel of them are so ig don't Snow it. They don't interest as WB n doutt the reason that More nre engaged in crusade Lawyers always always will Iw more enlightened class than I know that a pi this place who aids and great reformation weakly the manent welfare of our from that of the ty M the would undoubtedly be lettered by the total disuse intoxicating so would If I had 1 would prove this be a metaphysical I mark that is not held to Hreat lawyer in They all know that thoir in Mug to owing move to their love of than their Jove of the people Clergy I should be ashamed with these when asked to take asocial I thank I a cold water No wonder lawyers of and don't anw and I hope that every ble member of the profession will frown upon any attempt to destroy a so and Banish liquor and our staunched down the of intemperance aad you destroy the in- of the most respectable your low You donu baft still duty to not allow me lent any your pardon fw having trembled me to subscribe Yours very JONATHAN t Attorney and Counselor at have a in England in the person of the Rev. John Selby has with Writ to produce stories Solomon and He calls his novel The of of opens in the style of whose famous horseman one to see arain was a calm evening and the moon shone obi through clouds that had covered the skv when the prince ot the infernal spirits and his subtle alighted on Mount beir in Further on in the Belial advices Satan tempt Job's on which that it is more in Belial's And then WB will willingly un- said if I my n ted to the ease with which tho woman than to the effect of my THE HIGHEST is THE HIGHEST TRUST Ihe spring of all great endeavor is a great trust pushing men forward to away froni the fastenings of out into struggle and and So Luther the 1 bull on tho burning and sets on So Commons goes in his little vessel far away from known and finds green world behind the So Hancock and trusting in thu everlasting right of and and the that echoes round tho g still rising in my I say that the highest power is the highest is Trust in the Lord with all thiae heart If sometimes happens that laay people are bnt that are useful or once clustered the love and affections of her young have become desolate and ed; misery may have made her hearthstone his and and and been the heritage of her but what is that to me Of it is I couldn't help it. The husband would and she couldn't bear it any She must have and I am called and of I have a moderate fee of one hundred Don't you see at that temperance and sobriety would spoil my business 1 Think that I am so foolish as to quarrel with my own bread and butter I once heard an attorney for the wealth that in a dozen oases of wives taking the surety of the peace against their every one on that Ihe violence which they suffered was only when their were in All these cases are grists to our I know a great Judge once that of the and retailers of ardent more than two-thirds reduce their families to and die Supposing the statement they do us lawyers more good by felling than by they are the A APPLICATION or a Chinese Christian family at a little the youngest of three on asking his father to allow him to be was told that he was too he might hill back if he made a profession when he was only a little lo this he made the touching reply has promised to carry the iambs in his As I am only a little it will be ier for Jesus to carry This logic of the heart was too much for the He took him with and the ilear i The whole family o which this child is the youngest all member of the Mission Church at IMPORTANT liquor law Of 1859 was decided constitutional by the Supreme Court in all its The opinion was rendered by in the case of the State George on appeal from the Floyd drouit The several clauses of the the Sunday that against selling to and to all We would call the attention of those engaged in the trade to I important State 25th man never agrees to anything without turning it so that he wav its dirty if he sweating the coin he pars for it If an offer to save hia soul for he would try to a sixpence with a hole in it. A gentleman sava to a great many things without stopping a shabby fellow is known by his cautk n in answering for fear of hia pocket or single riveted seam in a half moh iron plate is only forty as strong as ths plate and but as strong as an