Racine Advocate, The (Newspaper) - November 8, 1883, Racine, Wisconsin THE RACINE ADVOCATE IS PUBLISHED Two Dollars per Year The ADVOCATE Li tho and Best Medium in County e Address ADVOCATE GUILD Wii THE RACINE ADVOCATE STEAM JOB PRINTING KO WITHOUT ITS DUTY WITHOUT ITS ESTABLISHED 1842 RACINE WIS THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 1883 VOL HATES OF ADVERTISING the profundities of literature Her progress was wonderful and his interest and pride grew correspondingly In 1833 to the rites j father removed to Groton much to her Vor bn iho regret for it took her away from much loved TOR 2 00 of Column W Hull or Column c no Whole HU yOU MONTH i3 50 I of 00 one 11 Two o W Three 5 00 KOK MONTHS Unit or Column IS OH Whole Column 26 CO limitation is her absolute truthfulness She possessed a nice discernment of principles an unswerving loyalty to them when once Her judgements no bribe from her sex early associations from opportunities of i or her sphere nor from custom nor tradition Throe Ou TO uf a Column S 00 Column M SIX MONTHS Quarter of 00 Halt of Column 85 00 M 00 not lo Ure lines ptr jwr or for ill For Concerts to J OuU more half an In will be per cent on to inent for required OD yearly will In matter type ton par line for eich Insertion rht of advertiser limited to own Immediate Hnd all for the uf other perform n KI Advertisements Ac hig and meeting with learned people which Cambridge rind gave ir exchange tile of country life the homely duties of the farm ami the somewhat toilsome task of teaching her younger brothers The death of her father too came wilh great depriving her of his wise counsel and direction and his loving sympathy and also frustrating some of the cherished plans of her life On leaving Groton she Tlie place is associations with i arc most painful There darkened round us of my father's ill-judged exchange judged so far at least as regarded himself mother and myself all violently rent from ihc habits of our former life and cast upon toils for which we were unprepared there niy mother's health was impaired and mine destroyed there my father died there were undergone the miserable perplexities of a family that has lost its head hills are blended in my memory with hours of anguish us great as 1 am of for tin OLYMPIA BROWN During the season some of the ladies of Racine have heen studying the character of Margaret Fuller Her life was a remarkable lie and can not fail to be o interest to all It is that among the young and In the autumn of 1836 she went to Boston to teach and French in Mr j school also to form classes in German and after a year of successful in the Green street school Providence K I teaching it was but an easy step to those classes in conversation which for a time of our time there may be those who will who was for such ilic present is To the question wa- Margaret Fuller it may he answered was a living this world all its f beauty and glory its experiences of joy its victories and was ti her instrument for the enriching of lite soul live to eat drink and be merry lie lived to learn the mysteries of she universe to feel the nearness of the Divine Spirit to translate the language of the world and to declare its meaning in OUT human speach U for a more calm and faith in the divinity of my nature was her after listening to a discourse hy Ur Claiming Speaking of Shelly she sakl HaJ lie lived twenty years longer he would lave become a fervent Christian thus have the harmony which was necessary to him In referring to some which she could not quite solve she said 1 have in a glorious that shall make manifest perfect justice perfect wisdom She was an in- cessant reader nnd her delight was to enrich her mind with learning and by meditation and with the ripest scholars to attain a spiritual life She was in the highest seine of the term a scholar probably the most accomplished woman that America has yet produced Her learning made her the peer of the most cultured men of our country James Freeman Clark Channing Ralph Waldo were her intimate friends her studies listening with profit to her criticisms recognizing in her their equal and in maay things their superior of her SLe had a rude strength which if it could have been supported by equal health would have given her the efficiency of the strongest men She was well read in French Italian and German literature She understood Latin and Greek with Emerson she read the old English authors and with the brightest men and women of her day read thought her conversation bad in it a power lo charm whoever approached her a most devoted friend drawing all noble men and women to herself by an ir- Emerson of her she was an active in- companion und all the art nobleness of New England seemed related to her ind he lo it She drew to superior young man or young woman wilh v horn she came in contact and whole romances of life and love were confided to her and lived through in her and sympathy The maid at the hotel the children of the street the man of mature years and learning all confided to her their trials and sorrows and all found cordial sympathy and helpfulness Her love for children was noticeable they all found in her a most entertaining and appreciative friend Horace Greeley's little boy was her favorite it was concerning the death of this loved child that Mr Greeley wrote to Margaret during her stay in Italy you mourn for Rome fallen I weep for is dead Among her writings the work by which she will be remembered and which is really made Margaret center and the inspiration of a large circle of intellectual people who gathered her listening with rapt tion to her every word and entirely swayed by her remarkable power Later she was known as the regular and writer for the New York Tribune Concerning his arrangement Mr Greeley My acquaintance with ret Kuller was made through the pages of the Dial The lofty range and ability of that work and its richness of culture nnd ripeness of thought naturally filled the fit audience though few with a high estimate of those who were known as its con- and Yet it was the of Mrs that led me in the autumn of to offer her terms which were accepted for her sistance in the literary department of the Of her Summer on the lakes Mr Greeley It is one of the clearest and and most graphic delineations ever given of the great lakes and prairies and of the receding barbarism and the rapidly ing but rude which were contending for the possession of rich lands I consider the summer on the lakes unequalled especially in its pictures of the prairies and the sunnier aspects of pioneer life At last in 1846 the longed for to visit Europe presented itself and was eagerly she arrived at Liverpool in August and from that time on her stay in her letters are filled with most descriptions of distinguished people whom she met and nf places remarkable or beauty nr historic which visited At Rome she found constant subjects of interest not merely in the works of art and the relics of n former grandeur which interest the traveler upon ordinary occasions but in the condition of the people the enthusiasm for She wilted truth supremely both for herself and others She drew her companions on to surprising confessions She was the wedding guest to whom the long pent up story be told She extorted the secret of life which cannot be told without selling heart and mind in a glow In her summer on he lakes slie fays I trust by reverent faith to woo the mighty meaning of tlie scene perhaps foresee the Divine law by which a new order and new poetry may be evoked And this she did in every place She teaches us to find where the true thought the right idea the hidden life and having found to follow it to the end She bids us woo the mighty meaning of each scene and ever seek the Divine law by which a new order nnd a new poetry may be evoked Mechanical Instruction In the reply of E P Allia to G H relative to the accepting place with the committee of visitors at large to the State University Allis makes a brief but argument in favor of the introduction of mechanical instruction and practice ill tlie public schools By permission The Sentinel publishes the ter entire MILWAUKEE Wis Oct Geo Jf verbal message through your son asking if 1 would accept tho position of lurge to the State University duly re- understood him correctly it had a special view or aim to enlarge or the course of study and practice at the University in the arts While I appreciate the honor and thank you for the compliment the demands ot my private business upon ray time and thoughts ate such as to preclude my ing the place other than nominal tion and it is too important to be thus and I therefore respectfully decline Please permit me in this connection to ex- tho opinion that while such a course is ail important adjunct to the State Uni- versity I deem it of even tance iu our common schools Students from a university course of study will naturally seek positions as superintendents qr foremen in or factories The great body of our rank imd from boys without much preparation or education who from necessity or opportunity obtain ate positions iu the working force of shops ami whose almost only iu any branch is their four years apprenticeship to tho trade they essay to learn This schooling is good a trying one and ly the better ones rise to great skill it is necessarily narrow and confined to the one vocation of the shops liven the ones are handicapped through life from the want of any more general obtained A skillful in liny branch of the mechanic arts is a man of more ordinary natural mental ability and it is wrong Unit he should lie weighted through life wilh the want of a general practical English cation UB many such are Coming from families who depend upon persona daily work for subsistence they meat be- gin young mill cannot obtain LI com- education and then serve u long apprenticeship iu the shop to me there be in every public school whether in city a course of instruction and practice for all boys iu the use of hand tools such as the hammer saw plane square tile rule knife drill and indeed all tho simple hand-power tools and also instruction in all tho elementary branches of knowledge Such instruction and practice in this direction could be given iu our common schools would be very valuable to every recipient through life whether a practical mechanic or not would largely 1 determine which were fitted by talent or inclination to become skilled and would save them time and disappointment in with it a general school education in other branches I might enlarge upon this benefits of this preliminary ical instruction and in our com- mou schools but they will occur to yon and it is for me to say that it is the and necessary step in the er mechanical instruction of our sities and schools to such as choose to pursue the course further pardon this digression and again accept my thanks for your complimentary prefer Yours Respectfully P liberty the new life which just awaking j -which fitted by talent there Soon revolution hurst upon the country the streets of Rome ran with blood the heroes of liberty gave their lives for the j cause they loved brave and true men filled wilh a hope pressed forward sure for a lime of victory but alas this like so many other grand enthusiasms was destined to go out in darkness During this dreadful time Margaret with other Americans was compelled to remain in Rome She threw herself into tlie ol the hour shc worked un- for the liberal side both by her in- fluence and by her labors in the Many a time her life was in peril yet her bravery and devotion did not quail During her second winter in Rome she was married to Giovanni Marquis a man of great refinement of character an enthusiast for the liberal army The failure of the republican movement crushed the fortunes of ami after the surrender of Rome they set sail for America The whole journey was disastrous They had been but a few days at sea when the small pox made its appearance from which the captain died Finally the vessel arrived in sight of home in the a terrible gale during the night the vessel struck and i by morning was a mass of drifting sticks and in the surging waves is said that Margaret might have been but shc refused to be separated from her husband and her child preferring to die with them rather than to live without them This is he story briefly told of Margaret Fuller of greatest praise is her Woman in ks hcf and a part of her the Nineteenth Century written at a time when the modern ideas concerning women had but just to be promulgated It has the merit ot i while at the same time it contains all the principles involved in that great ment which is gradually opening colleges changing and customs equalizing wages opening new fields ol effort and little by little emancipating woman from a thralldom of thousands of years standing Margaret Fuller was born on the 23rd of May 1810 a lawyer a politician and unlike too many of the business men of Our day he took an personal interest in the education f his children he early discerned in of remarkable abilities and he re- solved to spare neither time nor money upon education He himself became her in- and In the hours after the Business of the day was over he sat with the child while shc read from Virgil or threaded he mazes of the Greek verb or penetrated Her character was of a peculiar nnd ab- normal the model we would present for but yet in illustration of what woman may do It was hers to go forward in the wilderness Reduce the Revenues There to be a universal demand for a reduction of the Government ues but no of sentiment is shown ns where the reduction shall lie made whisky and tobacco men want all In- ternal revenue taxes abolished some reduction in the duties 011 foreign iron some on foreign woolen goods To wipe out whiskey and tobacco taxes would reduce the revenues too much us cannot spare more than fifty its present income There is one article upon which a big duty is ied used by every which yields between forty and fifty millions per to bo put on the free list with Tea and The a list of new inventions lor which patents were recently granted to Wisconsin inventors reported by Erwin Benedict Patent Attorneys 390 East Wa- ter street Milwaukee C F Bierbach Milwaukee C Whitehall of sugar from sugar-cane sorgum maize and other plants 0 Honey Creek Evaporator for making and make straight i gar from saccharine O BATUMI 331 Main Street Bacine Wis NEXT DOOR TO WM R TATE in- V which is to i Honey Creek Lamp extinguisher of the stomach last of these 1 S-i n f ft T Trail crying prepare ye the paths for a nobler come after me in this free America With the larger opportunities of lo young woman of our time may present a more metrical evenly balanced though not less powerful character The distinguishes Margaret above all others nnd which is most worthy of Having made special preparations for the the citizens of Racine and Kenosha Counties to examine his choice selection of before making their purchases The stock consists in parts of Fine Steel Engravings Easels Japanese Wall Brackets for comers and sides Ladies Work Stands and Loxes Musical Albums Music Boxes Vases an exquisite line of Christmas Cards selected with great care Fine Stationery Books of all kinds including Standard German in that THE STOCK MUST be seen to be appreciated We nave such endless variety that we cannot them CHILDREN'S TOYS a large stock of all kinds I carry a full line of Catholic and Protestant Books and Goods On Account of the Depression in Trade AND IMMENSE STOCK ON HAND IN OUR an Prices will be made to suit Buyers Plumes and Tips in every Shade Bought direct from Manufacturers HATS TURBANS and In latest styles at reduced rates Turbans to Cents 500 PIECES RIBBON ALL SHADES 10 c SCARLET UNDERWEAR reduced to 75 c LADIES MERINO reduced to CHILDREN'S MERINO reduced to 20 and from New Auction received to-day at Bazar C BROWN HATTER 413 Main Street Racine AN New Stock of Winter Goods Purchased for cash and ho Call ami examine our of Caps Shirts Collars Neckwear Jewelry Canes Umbrellas Rubber and Gossamer Gaits etc HAVE IN STOCK THK Largest Assortment of Fine and Medium Furs WEST OF EXAMINE OUR STOCK BEFORE PURCHASING nnd get prices Climbing the Spiral Stairs in a Parsonage sbc said our children are ried and gone and I ait by our winter lire much ns did little ones dime to widen circle Life is like a we all tho time coming around Over the spot we started from only one degree up the stairs That ia a pretty ed her friend musingly gazing into the lowing which radiated a pleasant the many-windowed stove You know we stop toiling up the hill though Surely we cannot and for myself I don't find fault that necessity advance in life is not attended with calamity or suffering for I have had ruy share of that Not long since my health utterly broke down My system was fall of malaria became thoroughly disordered and my nerves were in a wretched state 1 at little and that without enjoying it and had no strength or ambition to perform even my light household duties Medical treatment lulled to reach the seat of the trouble Tho seemed to be weakness of all the vital until I had several attacks which my physicians pronounced to be acute con- A Milwaukee sheet nnd envelope B waukee How H Appleton Feeder for grinding rolls G B Root herst Apparatus for raising sels H Schnyler Sturgeon Bay Cotton and Hay Press W D Slauson Racine iras a desperate struggle and I was given up to die As the crisis had partially ed my husband heard of the merits of PARKER'S TONIC as an invigorant in just such cases as Mine I took it and felt its good effects at once It appeared to my body as though Insurance Real Estate Money loaners Die agency Slate in For prompt and ad- they have no equal All of the companies are old nnd strong Money to loan estate bought and sold Homo New York German American North American Pennsylvania North British London Onion Phoenix Connecticut Mutual Life Co New England Mass 1372 1 1303 Office 410 Main Street Wisconsin H S W H MILLEE HUGH GORTON Cor and PACKER OF DONE IN THE IUT ISO Close Figures for Cath Parties In need of Printing Boot Books or Ruling win to seud us orders solicited given tune Address A C Market Reports Thursday Nov 1 1883 Corrected weekly by Staple Eros F and Joseph Kowley On ATX Con 60 50 56 80 85 Bran Middling Patent Common 2.70 Winter 3.25 Winter retail 2.70 Buckwheat Jiye 1.75 Potatoes 35 2.50 Cows 4.00 i r 1 1 i 00 Lard Calves per Sheep Lambs Turkeys IU 3.00 15 Calf 17 1.73 Clover 7.00 Timothy Meeker Hedstrom i Co COAL WOOD DELIVERED Hard coal all per half ton -4.00 ton 2.00 SOFT COAT Briar Kincaid 6.00 For carrying in coal 40 cenU per ton WOOD Maple wood 4 li sawed cut 8.25 Half cord 4 ft 3.75 2 cuts 4.25 One quarter cord 4 ft 2.00 2 cuts 2.25 I 2.31 i and hard wood slabs one dollar per i cord less than maple i Pine slabs 5.00 sawed 6.00 Anil dealer iv kinds of Fresh Salt Meats Cured Hams AND BREAKFAST BACON FISH AND GAME In their Vessels Supplied at Reasonable Terms GO TO RAYMONDS 411 Main Street THE Best Base Burners IN THE MARKET AS THE Weal and Invincible rOR THE HOUSEHOLD THE Queen City anil STORK A wool at homo oy tJie Best before tlie ml Wo will siart Men women boys and everywhere lo work for ui li the You spare or your whole time to the No will pay well No one din to enormous pay by at once Costly aud terms free mide and A Co of new life hud come to me Taking no I continued to improve and am now in better health Ihan I have for long time from interview with the wife of Rev Perry Pastor of Baptist Church genteel lucrative agency business by which to a day can be earned send address once on postal to H C Wilkinson Co 195 197 Fulton St New York j of Coldbrook 4 Glass Wick At B Crockery store Try one NOVEMBER 5 Improved Infallible Cleaning Compound and Prevention or INCRUSTATION In STEAM BOILERS M MA Manufacturer M E cor Prospect Ave Lafayette Place WU In leu bbl M Ibs far 430 Tor SSft Ko or sent with Com- pound and to prove If to directions WHEREVER STEAM IS Manufacturers will Hnd It to It will 10 that U bo removed A great on and Wood Stema la good deal lens time Bolleri by being kepi from and expense on re- Ac and in running In the ule of a small ry 15 required o a nd remove it proved THE ONLY RELIABLE COMPOUND MANUFACTURED that Has done as It is free from adds or any other in- its that injurious to Iron r aad Oils alio Arctic Compound for hot henry bearings in Comet Cement for Steam Joints tn Boilen and METAL Iff H 0 Brudley Co Sole Northwestern Agents Steam Pipe and Boiler Covering it live the full Tabs for Sale We hiTe a large stock of different sizes and good quality of for sale cheap at the Advocate office lire just the thing for desk or office nw Call at tho Advocate counting i The West Point for 1883 1 N tho competent as ir ilic worM dome of iho iud in below elaborately engraved tlie bountiful contour of both upper and lower ii nf liy a new and blc improvement doors and solid Lho TO pre- vent by is Hie of perfection and beauty of nickel PIT is very nnd deep With In: allies M double not its with clinkers POT easily removed upper doors ITCH Thu for heating THE EYE AND EAR INSTITUTE Established foil tllO use or fuel i u no of in ibe severest Im- to very in oven Tlie Queen d Geneta Knr Pamphlet free French yes Inserted 10 s on receipt of THE DISEASES OF YOUTH and MANHOOD A GUIDE TO HEALTH WITHOUT MEDICINE A of 23 year's experience Don't l x your system hut this Book and avoid and Electric Mi It ex- 1 Price 2.1 ots THE PUBLISHER 234 Milwaukee Wis A M Manufacturer of Pressed Common BRICK and TILE Yard N Main Street Racine Address F N Manage Box 273 FOR OFFICES AND STORES Is the must heater known More burners is sold much price nnd heuts fully inch ol is radiating and all The QUEEN CITY Illuminated in nnd removes GRATE inn The for the Is point 10 nil of bard stores witli unr ventilated door thoroughly prevent mica THE mill easily removed and mid all very anil arranged so as to bu easily to examine before economy und con- hours Steam and Gas Fitting PLUMBING And Tin Roofing ESTIMATES Gimi to Architects on fur Richardson Boynton MACES AND