North Western Times (Newspaper) - March 23, 1859, Viroqua, Wisconsin T A. 1. VIROQUA AND DE BADAX S 0 H U li J A O J ii I bo i I in ID 1.00 The of 1 otter Accepted are hold at Masonic in on evening ov tho Full in Brethren in good are to 2 21M H C C ASS Land Bad ax Co Will attend to ing on examining taking ai of All to their earn will meet with prompt attention Office in the Conrl i. County Clerk J H Clerk Circuit ef i I vr to 4 STAR Badax AL wilt be tint Hotel has changed hiniN been it is now e 461! a i Ji i 4. rt ion IT yoar 1.U0 10W 36 WEDNESDAY Innocent Amusements and Mr. noticed nu article in tlie Expositor a week or two the pen of the Editress of that I under the head of Gloom Cant vs. and Strange Yes I think it when we arrive at the full signification of those words as by the playing or innocent as they are and I think the proper place for vs. should be between the two latter not that I woul extra i f j will lor named T II u ii D H II mine F ia being and and Proprietor Hat tors himself tie In able to pive entire fai UUH to all who make house abi ding for a longor or shorter period All will leave or call at thin House Tor l wish 49tf C BAY SI ATE Uv S CHOW FIT F it prs attention paul to tbo comfort and con- i ol dels and Moulders A. B. in Pine Wood bar and lumber for at my Mill Hills ol Lumber sawed to 19 tt tni rul i t tli a it tli d ttiin 1 r HI i i i r 1 C. B. STEVEN S. in anil Iron Plows and Fanning and Door Trimmings in Forwarding and attention given to the day and night Do 106m M M i I Kill 11 r mill il I ti u t all null i with a ml n i ii ami in vJ Attorney and at enti tinted to him to FULLER a shop for tho of in all iti in the town ol Franklin Work in their line done promptly and in thn best manner 2 Ml of taken at market WM 4, 18o8 W V W ft o K 11 II Iff not fin i jud llm HI at and i i ill ol ti i I W all the branches mid r S A M tt t 1 M I t I n A II a anU according and Repairing H. and o o Office at my I if Wi on Shop Or and awl to St. U. WILLIAM 11. AUSTIN Court Counsellor at Law and Solicitor in Chani Co will Pay I to any other with 3 ti A. M. and 2.1 House Dealer tn Dry Made II a Capx and A Heady and small THE IDA S. P. Corner of Water and WIB A line of Omnibuses runs from that will convey to and from the aud to any part ol the L. M. Denier in Books and Hews and is Any Book not on hand can be obtained in one HENRY Attorney and Counsellor at and Chancery 13 tf Badax STATES C. P. A. 8. Corner of and Third conveyed to from tbe and S. W. 34, Homeopathic Physician and A A r j to separate and mini from or innocent not by any Math. but innocent 1 would I think they are not such aa are red I cto not wish to enter into any but would like to express my views in regard to thia as I think it ono of vital importance at the present crisis of especially in I would much rather have seen an article from tho writer extending religious and reproving our professors for not following more closely the precepts of our instead bf de- nouncing all who do not approve of Ler and views of and including our old gray-headed fathers and in whose piety I have the most implicit us all pharisees and would-be and of such sentiments should be expressed bv who professes lean bor when such views would have been very agreeable to mj when 1 would have si id there can be no harm in such things 1 am if of re- ligion practice But be to the Most I look these things in quite a different Things that I once loved I now and things that I once I now I cannot think that a person wlo has need a change of ami been born in Christ can tolerate such It is all true we have experienced this that which is in the bone will O be pretty apt to ooze out at the but when the matter is taken the natural consequence h out of the bone that the jores will be and of acting out our own tiue character or if there be any tiling 10 draw them as un invitation to the to the or tho we must resist I think it-a mode of to sit down and play cards until one or o'clock in tbe so late often to deprive them of the great ment and benefit of family an I doubt much whether their cot wonld not forbid them before their 6od asking him to bless th idle home they been to i nothing of for we conten that nothing is right unless you can as the of God upon it. ye do it to the honor and glory i It is not the good man with bia mirthful and funny nature is so constituted that it cannot resis but ia ever ready to yield hi the instruments of Rom. and while he is in th world and surrounded by worldly must become Rom. i again it K Dot him that we have and forebodings but who ma follow his tho young man fo whom you invite to 771 nocent with you that is so like tho eye of the serpent apt t lead him on step by step until tw bas be come a vagabond and an outcast from so A young friend of mine while surrounding the innocent in company with others for amusement was accosted by one who made hi living in that a professional gambler his hand on IMS said ho calling him by I commenced i profession just as you are and I know of several who are now drunkards that commenced the career in the same I know of one or two in our own Not that it is a necessary consequence by any mentis that good friends DOLLAR Of MARCH 23, 1859. NUMBER 12. step between the sublime and and ships venture But little boate should keep near I would not upon perpetrate or above desecrate things in a vain attempt at tho for it we follow our in- they will lead us but we must ever on our guard and get tho hence Math. You cannot make a thing that is wrong or a pleasurable because t is practiced from the highest to tbo in church and or merely it is which I regret to say is too true at the present many evils become popular because they are practiced by our lords of propriety and I some of our Christian friends often indulge in more bo- cause they think it is for iho real pleasure or relaxation of the mental or I would would these reformers they would do awny with tbo teachings of Christ and establish a religion of their which do very well to live am afraid will hardly stand by us in bour of I would rather see t indulge in gloom and two North on BOLLOCK Attot thao for by the sadness of tho countenance tha heart is made in the house of but the heart of the fool is in the of But we do melancholy er not think that in but is actuated by tbs true i see of the If writer not the moral or tian fortitude tip she has should these games must become con firmed or the moderate drink er become a but when there is so great a probability ing olit of those we professors of religion should shun as would a deadly not goon and participate in them and say sufficient unto tho day is the evil It is conclusive to my tbe whole tenor of tho that nothing but ihe promptings of a guilty conscience would have actuated the writer to express such She speaks of the innocence of dancing when it is well I have no objections on my part to those who wish to and feel like doing I believe in every one following the the dictates of their own con- science in or in any but I the heart of tho Christian should be set upon different and their thoughts and blowings run in a different they should not mingle with wordly in rheir and wild 1 know from experience that this ment is very and ex- and tends to lead our from the beauty and loveliness of our Creator to frivolous of this I cannot agree with the on this bo- ing one of the innocent from tLo fact that it is attended with many evils which I will not here but of the two evils I prefer tho I know there are times when the mind and body both require and tion from the busy cares of but I should ger of evils growing out that my ple may be a good instead of a bad W. My love I love and who shall dare To chide roe for That dear without care for the present or anxiety for I spent the of my Away back into the dim distance of the fancy I can hear the rumbling of tho olc and tho murmur of the pebbly brook as it flowed so gently I e 111 see the glassy lake surrounded by the hemlock anc and that most beautiful of u wood the which wore so faith fully mirrored in iho silvery sheen of its clear There is the on the holy Sabbath we bled to hear from the man of God the way of life and salvation by our once but UOT risen And in tho wo listened to tho vuco of our whose kind in- by some of us have been There is the where we daily and the sunny side where we used to play under the shade of the wide-spreading Kut the dearest spot of all is t lie little where I have so often sit and listened to the moaning of the wind among the stately imagining they were chanting a solemn requiem for tlie dead that lay so still and quiet at their Years have passed has tallen to And the have all fallen in Yet around that spot cluster the sweetest memories of my I love my hood home because my parents and ers and sisters are I it be- cause some of my schoolmates are And O. I it because somo of the dearest companions of my girlhood are there sleeping quietly grassy Although another home and other ob- have claimed my jet shall I or cease to love My CHILDHOOD any the Around turn may Such ia the moral fect of the excitement of but when this parted away the second is more be n now M likely to commit crime from utter as ho was before from fawned the horror of his now bunts upon him in all disgrace and which he has brought upon his all stand Km ip most aggravated rendered yet moru appal mg by tho tkat body am to vaiti the N. IT. A few I would not io. If i was a fwry sorry I am with great strong able swing an cr or hold the I word not round witi fairly petty 1 stauder ao opposing or give ta poor for tive office in regard or or my for i 1 WM an I For the N. Times Moral Effects of In adjusting tho most nicely arranged system of man's it is abundantly evident that his passions atvl appetites were designed to bo subjected to and to ftom the want of subjection all his misery and just in proportion to tho perfection in which it is doos he advance in happiness and in but it unfortunately is found that in all men in their present the forcos of the passions fire by far too great for the con- trolling influence of that guardianship to which they should bo subjected Hence it is necessary to strengthen influence i of reason and conscience by all tho con- I curring aids of of uf public and also by the sanctions of and even all these are frequently found insufficient to over- come the and lent and of brutal and sensual it n found that nothing has the power of these passions already too strong for the COD trot of tbe like tbe use uf ardent nothing ban the power in equal degree to the of drowa the advice of and surrender tbe man op of fierce and remorseless a be- reaved of ber meet a than a fool ia tie An aa anoe of be ever ho has tost the power of and that all tbe energies of self are prostrated within he al power to resist tbe temptation that H destroying and DM not total lect left to tho full of that he ban no vigor loft to his former of and active Tbe within him at lant a ana mitigated he will do rather than bear he wilt do rather than suffer hence you ui uf are the constant attendants of gambling partaken and ments of and not do yon find them ending inflicted nr Tn The Feb. President transmitted a message ning with his objections the to the several States providing colleges for the of agriculture and tlie mechanic Ho says that ding to the report of the Interior ment over six million acres be u hich at the minium for the some will amount to This MB was passed at a period of i and jt a law tho Treasury will be deprived of all iu which for the next year is ated at five million dollars from Unit Should the thirty-three States eater money market with thn land the necessarily lands would and considering tbe many land n the the Treasury be de- prived of so much ime ever arrive when tlw State menta can look to the to maintain thw of the diameter of both will Henco the i bo kept k that if land upon the it woold fit speculators to the injury ol active It U doubtful for the whether the proposed grant would duce to tho benefit of President argues that it intend ed by the of the m Congress to make in relation that the lands should be given avoids any attempt what portions of tbe public bfl and for what to the value settlement aod and of without violating the ease be oient unto the day ta Mr. Hurnl ha. a whether of ban a sanction on alt II a at i bere to the