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Racine Democrat

   Racine Democrat, The (Newspaper) - April 19, 1858, Racine, Wisconsin                                A YEAR IN ADVANCE MCINE WIS MONDAY APRIL 19 1858 WHOLE SOB IBS MONDAY MOWING In Iho by Z C ouo yew lu 0 RAIES OK ADVERTISING or leu iqua 11 11 Mo Col Third of Col I DC 200 3 00 4 00 5 DO 1 74 100 1 00 S 00 9 W 4 W 00 19 OU 19 00 8 W WOO 15 00 io oo 41 00 13 00 18 00 30 00 21 CO U 00 In column fit your Notices and kupt on or ordinary 60 por cent ordinary I ftt statute not with directions will till and for accordingly the of JOB PRINTING if oil JUDD HALL iND AT and iu promptly and to nil up baker QIO B HALL BANK Corner of Main MILTON 123 H JOT over Bank JONES McCllEARY A JOHN W over Ike St Wli H A CO door north Dunk the J GILES A CLAUK corner South of JAMES nail In Dedi etc curried on In D A CO liay Lumbor Lumber Lath lei and lit unii kopt In a M W tilt twa uf ill prompt attention ff jUico in tho FRESH ARRIVAL Boots and Shoes i JOHN BECK THIS DAY a ami H of BOOTS AND A Knot 3 introduced in a tod to wear rur nd they b to bo J i u of 1 vrill t 1 w It- for IMS ilum il city if don't it you bo of thu VJ ouo of Union Hull jy 9 1 Jolm M P DENTIST r Mi to his on from to will lw manner tor KWl aud for and CITY Farming C B HUSTED INSURANCE BROKER ASB General Commission erchant In tuo with A XY A ON direct from the it by l Plain and Ornamental Painting Ornamental Painter mat on So 131 I MEW GOOD gl MILTON MOORE CO 123 MAIN STREET WOULD public to their Hack of Spring and Bummer Goods J of Of Alw NOW For tin on tho bj Kocky Mountain OB the Woit bj ihi Uw While tho Columbia on the Sou Ui uur to tho CIV you from wo go Ana It haro wo hero heat or cold Which folks and tho young old But our mild and could wiah U bo And li fresh from Whistling through tho and the tills mid houlth without one Our uru till coursed by A OR In cud music To give rest to the weary and to the End Aud without can bo hud For we the lu hill and mountain And take It from Its Aud of most beautiful wo can proudly boant on tho from to the They are in uor In summer dry But and rolling to thu eye And to perfection ouu barley rye acd And vt to thoy cannot well bo Our of pines And iv tourer of our our Aud nl look as od yon them We them into timber or any we CAQ Aud to thu to or Japan have a harbor hundred moro And linn right door And of all tho yet been The direct and natural to Puget Sound Then who can fail to pee onr future out HO buforo Kten now the of the world knocking at our door doubts and fears darling Kate's or three panes of glass extra in breaking stancy out the remainder of the already fractured This was what one making in fact just the noise MY OWN DEAR I am so sorry could not meet you as I promised I always try to keep my engagements know you dear fellow that I but aunt Spinela has actually forbidden me to go out unless she accompanies me Isn't it too bad I do not know what we shall do but I dare say you can find some way of seeing me soon are so good at doing queer you disguise yourself somehow and come to the house on some business don't frighten me by doing anything there's a I shall be very miserable till I see you again but I'm jure I can't help loving you can It isn't fault and I really don't believe there's any harm it for all aunt Spinela says and I do think she is a hateful ugly odious old the X Y Golden Prize Love and Strategy BY GEORGE ARNOLD creature I only but I won't tell you what till you come to see me you must do very you hear Meanwhile I am Yours and your only dear Tom KATIE Tom Beverly was foolish enough to kiss this letter a number of times and to the lady of his love in terras which to an impartial observer would read very like nonsense Then begun to consider the tion of a disguised visit which artful little proposed It a bad idea although perhaps somewhat difficult of execution for however well such things novels when you come to try on dear reader you will find as I have found now that they are rather ticklish pieces of business Fancy Tom Beverly then standing in his his wide apart Tom was one of his hands buried deeply in his pockets his who are always laboring under some mighty difficulty beset by several thousands of insurmountable obstacles But somehow or another ho always con- trived to overcome these troubles in the end aud Co please himself very well until another mighty difficulty arose before him and several other thousands of obstacles beset him Poor Tom I One of ais most brilliant misfortunes which occurred last winter heels over head in love with an ingly pretty girl 1 ilia young lollies who read this will sec nothing vory unfortunate in thut and many young gentlemen will con- sider it a very good place of fortune the more especially I state that the ex- pretty girl also fell hecla over head iu love with Tom But the exceedingly pretty girl had ao I say any The aunt Miss Spinela Thorn was a grim virgin of forty-eight as ugly as an unlimited number of as sour in her temper as can be imagined Tom was a jolly thoughtless who loved a good cigar a friendly glass of wine and a frolic as well us any man I know Therefore iliss Thorn and he were at sword's a tacit dec- of war was made by the spinster as soon as she heard of declaration of love which Tom the miscreant had made to niece Kate Fletcher Katie poor girl had beenadc-ptedby and had regarded hur as she had the which the spinster dragged her to some three nights per a sort of and necessary the good hoped to appreciate some time when she became good enough She had thought too when Tom lcy told her he loved her that it was very wrong of her not to be horrified as her aunt was at his wickedness and told him so She said she could never love him in return nnd in proof thereof she kissed him She tcld him to forget her and nve him one of her curls to assist lain in window and by au now smoking rap cocked meditatively over his right eye his cigar clenched nervously between his aud the doux lying open on the table before him in a brown study of ths deepest dye subject disguises Just at that moment a gruff voice of a decidedly foreign cried out di- the window Signifying incur language Glass put in An idea struck Tom He rushed to the he had mentioned Katie than he had expected and having got ready to put in the gloss which he no more knew how to do than he did how to got tired and threw disguise appearing as a gentleman should in respectable ments of broadcloth un velvet At this juncture he heard a step in the entry and doubting not that it was Katie's he started forward The door opened and there to his inconceivable horror stood Miss Thorn looking more grim aud than The ancient lady gave one and seeing only that the apparent glazier was at nil jumped at to a pet idea of hers namely that she was about being robbed bys burglar This idea prompted her to shriek out fire thieves help and to fall on the floor in a condition of syncope familiarly as fainting dead away Tom did not as he ought to have done throw water iu her face or apply burnt feathers to her nostrils On the contrary he darted from the io a state of ex- which drove nil thoughts of ex- planation out of his head lie nonplussed for the nonce and in quiet of bis lodgings in vain how to make up for the which had just occurred He was aroused from his however just before by a small boy who came with a note for him Of course it from Katie I don't think tbat the passion for gue exists in half so powerfully as it does in the other sex At nil I never saw a man who could begin to rival a woman in plots and In this case Tom was a loss his Imd thought the whole thing out like a flash Bless you there was n young lody who tried not Ion bonne mn fairy footstep at the door and in a moment clasped Katie in his ar- resting her as it were on a warrant from the court of Dan Cupid A stood just around the corner previously engaged by and in it he nnd Entie were soon snugly en- sconced and rolling away Two rooms the runaways for the rest of the night and in the morning a certain clergyman whom I might name if it were getting him in bad odor with his fellows for irregular proceedings tied the knot handsomely and received a bank Don't be inquisitive about its nation I don't know everything The couple then set out at once on their wedding tour and were joyfully re- by Tom's friends in a somewhat distant part of the country Lest my lady readers might accuse me of omitting particulars of an interesting character to them I will here say that Katie had prepared herself for the trip during the evening while the policeman was enjoying his sherry in the basement and that the who drove to the hotel had carried a small trunk from the hall where Turn had noiselessly con- it to his hack A month afterward brought back Mr and Mrs Beverley to the city and I am happy to say they nre still a ly respectable part of town enjoying life as only the married can enjoy it As for IMiss Spinela Thorn she knew nothing of this little escapade until she arose the morning after It was then that she learned the whole story with many additions and comments of nn imaginative nature frora the lips of the couk who I regret to say had informed herself of the particulars through that known but unjustifiable key hole of the kitchen door She however was altogether on her young missus side and would uot have spoilt the sport for nny consideration whatever g ago to find out who was I made a fc for the time being Ij the pret Miss Thorn fretted and fumed and threat of keeping her niece out of ty little property which she held was determined she shouldn't but iu the guardian but a brief days she had the whole secret out of me j tation with a Sawyer caused her to change ia spite of my teeth j her mind and allowing Katie Tom and And after that the coolness to the property to retire from her mind she say I never was good at that sort of thing you too 1 Oh was But my affairs are nothing to you dear reader Tom Beverly is the gentleman I'm t- fi t i i s plun that he The glazier ed to the basement door where Tom in a moment met him Here do you want iss Do you want to sell out your and coat too Yas der you vants mil mine box and mine You make some fool off me a the belief that the professed a professional burglar aud should work her up into such a state of alarm that she would consent to engage a policeman to stay in or about the house during the night or two following It is needless to say that Torn was to be the man and to remove nil obstacles Katie di- him where he might get a blue I coat and cap from the husband Thorn's couk who hud lately been a m I J II 3 u No no aid Tom L buy bcr if not useful body your bos glass putty nnd all j you and he pulled out bis port lad Bitten and sent note almost to signify his j d h own vill you the man was of j Hebraic Two dollars Oh mine Gott der bos was wort more as two dollars said Toui I'll give you three Not more Not a red cent and you arc a cal to ask Yell das iss very for der box rind der You can nicht find besser as in der whole city Will you take three dollars or leave before I kick you out Ach you get mad about him take der box And the extortionate glazier unstrapped his wares and received a three dollar therefor The next move on part was to presort the man with a hat and coat in re- turn own ragged but capacious ments which greasy and worn were far more appropriate to bis business than any of so doing him go never j elegant but somewhat seedy to see her again and to expedite his ture clung to him and wept so bitterly that poor Tom who among bis other ings had to stay with would be These little matters arranged Tom in- tic swindlers a note her m plain her that it was addressed to the cook's husband asking him to come to the house 1 Tom laughed inordinately at this gem as you or I might reader if we re- such an appeal But if the glazier idea was cue this wag far bettor and Tom was at the house within ten minutes after his dinner The mention of Miss nanie secured him a good reception fur the warm Hibernian heart had long overflowed with for the missus child and the band had often heard praises showered upon her generosity and beauty A pretext for a ball in police uniform quieted all apprehensions and a liberal offer for the hire of the coat and cap brought them Too plunged herself still more deeply into the dissipations of missionary and doleful Lotus hope that slic was ns happy after Mr and Mrs As this is the season of when to clean up and make things look for the approaching mer we copy from the last rican the following in respect to the best cheapest whitewashes both for the in- side outside of Take hal f a bushel of fresh whi te lime and slack it cold water in a tub or barrel ly thickened dissolve in the water ed to thin the lime two common suit stir it thoroughly add one quart of sweet milk and it is ready for use to put on with a brush This wash is for the outside of ings fences and is very Sonic put glue in whitewash and others flour and rice paste but these render it liable to scale off in very drp weather The above wash may bo made a cream color by the addition of ochre The above whitewash is all that can be desired for the interior of houses ing the salt it must be omitted as it tends to moisture French white is superior to lime washes for the ceiling of rooms as it is less liable to turn yellowish in color but it rubs out so it can not be used for side walls TOR arc four arguments for the truth of the The on record the the prophecies the third tlic the doctrine the fourth the moral of the penmen from Divine Thus is built upon these the power tho underman ling goodness the purity of Cod Tho Bible one of these things cither an invention of good good angels or bad men or bad or s God But it could not be tion of pood or angels they neither would nor could make book telling lies at the time sitting Thus suith the when they knew it nil to be their own inventions It could not be the invention of wicked men or for they could not make n book com- mands all duty which nil si as and which condemns The is Bible must be given by Divine Simpson LOSING FAMILY is nome thing exceedingly tender us well instructive in tho following which wo take from the Child's A few years ago a merchant failed in ness He went home one evening in great tation What is the matter asked wife I nm ruined I atn I have lost my he exclaimed pressing his upon his forehead ns if his brains were in a whirl I om left All baid his eldest boy ami And I too mid his little girl and ting her arms around hia neck I's repeated Eddie And you have your health said wife And your two hands to work snid his eldest and I holp you And your two feet carry you about And your two cyca to nee with said little Eddie And jou have said grand- mother And a good taid his wife Aud a heaven to go hia little girl And Jesus to come ncd fetch us est God forgive said the poor merchant bursting into tears I have not lost my nre the few thousands which I called my ili to those more precious things which God has left and he his family to his bosom nnd his wife with a thankful heart Ah no there are many things more precious gold and bank stocks these be in their place When the Central ica was foundering sea and purses of gold were strewn about the deck as worthless as tue merest the T Water the prayer bread it was worth its weight in gold if gold could have bought it The loss of property must not cloud the mind with a wicked of the great bless ings which arc behind No men should dea for no man as all until he has lost his integrity lost the mercy of God and lost his hope of at last InEA or a storm extant wan when Wiggins cune Rome How is teacher and had drunk much lemon or something Be- came into the room among wife ters and just then he tumbled over and fell on the floor After a while and naid Wife nre you hurt No you No wasn't it Si Scott never wrote better fitted to the human family in tics cf brotherhood The race of mankind wonld help each other From the that the mother binds the child's head till the moment that some kind assistant wipes the from brow of the dying we can help All therefore that need aid right to it of their fellow No ouo who the power of granting can refuse without guilt Tin ISLAND or CUBA There are sixty porta in last wore arrivals clearances will of the of this beautiful island which is not taore than half cultivated Hero sec what a good littls been Absence you've been away amusing yourself I've cleaned all your pipes air I'll be bound you wouldn't this this Meerschaum again It looki nice and clean now doesn't though you can't what a deal it took me to lake all tho color and dirt off assure jou I to scrape it ever 60 with an oyster Jarries looks very and gazing with eyes of despair on him favorite Meerschaum had five years hard to turns upon his and wipes away a tear It is with men ai with trees s if you lop off their finest branches they were ing their young life juice the wounds will be healed over with some rough boss odd and what might been a grand tree expanding into liberal shade is but a- whimsical trunk an irrita ting fault many an oddity has come of a hard sorrow has crushed and ed the nature just when it was into plenteous beauty and the trivial erring life which we visit with our blame mar but the unsteady motion of a- whose best is withered take the following rich sel from one of Dow short patent mons Man looks upon life just as he looks on is no living with them nnd he can't live without them He will longer to dry her tears and console her This he did and so effectually too that when he departed she was all smiles instead of tears and something was whispered between them about ing something that very like an an interview on the sly Yonng folks old folks it r But Fate wbo delights in playing character upon the said contrived to inform Thorn what danger her niece was old maid her foot down tbat nevermore foot her threshold took to knock tha private in on the poor little Katie tears were un- dried that evening for Tom the an unnecessary number of cigars and words will not do to print in such the de- livered little note Thomas Baverle j of another pri rat quite out of- this which 10 j leave the dreary A visit to the barber's where the razor freely used made a still further -t in the policemen and when guardianship of Spinela Thorn and Tom to become Mrs t dfl with If she would break a window in ld haye been willing to i j I n her be Would pass the house a j swcar to his however much he in inclined to swear at his given day in glazier could call him in TKcy could then together arid before Miss discover they At tha appropriate time Tom arrayed in a suit which might serve as necessary with tlie pulling set as a neighboring dock struct of Miss Thorn shouting in a i An upper window hastily land which The in was presence of move as f he moment i an of but Tom's logic prevailed of golden f mnn ur of the moment I f stay d eL departed and Tom two arrayed himself in them and looked like a them and rather than bc held remarkably dramatic sort of he will loose his coat tail nnd appropriately be in- kiss them for love and kiss them for lead- into a American opera and j ing him into trouble So with life He made to sing extraordinary roulades nud j partakes of its pleasures and then curses it shakes to arrest a gang of j for its pains gathers of hliss and 1 when their blossoms have faded he finds himself in possession of a bunch of briers which is all owing to a little incident which occurred in Paradise when mnn was as green as worm unsuspic- as a tree toad in a thunder He was told to increase and multiply and so accordingly increased and pled the world with a candidates for and one of them MERCANTILE QUESTIONS is double entry ing tho same What is single with but riot crediting the cash he pays for them What is to return What is a upon which often spend their entire fortune What is an draft wind What it-a of What note could make eccentricity The spinster having conception of the terror artd majesty of the law felt perfectly reassured by the presence of the fictitious and to imagine could befall her or hers while he wa's She him the spoons Were what doors locked what bells belonged to what rooms and a variety of other details which not being very jhe told him the kitchen fire with a inew What did object to that j upon sleep with Tomy it by but his changed g jier en- the fictitious heard a rAn named Pounder was found in the Race last evening dead either from drown ing or by book found near He o- drinking in Beloit Journal Gan D was more distinguished for gallantry in the field than for the Arc lie lav upon personal Complaining on certain occasion to tho Into Chief Justice U of tlie suffering he endured from tism that learned and humorous Under- took to prescribe a remedy You must dosire your he eaid to the General to place every morning by your bedside Hub three parts filled with warm wa- ter You will thea get into the tub sod ing previously provided with a pound of yellow soap you must rub your whole body with it immersing yourself occasionally in the at the end of of an con- clude the process by wiping dry with towels and scrubbing your with a flesh said the after n reflection upon what he had just heard this to me to be nothing moro cor than wishing my self rejoined the Judge in open to object ion BEIGGS Old deacon ii is re- for his closeness as Dickins mnn Barkis Ono bitter cold morning he bade the boys drive together all tne pig's were to be fattened for the market into the little yard just at the corner of tho house A pig was caught by one of the youngsters the Deacon with a pair uf pincers in and asharp knife in the other seized the unfortunate pig by the tail and cut it off close through the whole herd not pig with stump of a tail worked for his grandfather stood by in amazement hands in Jiin his body into a the cold Snd his jawing tlic outrage with clatter At he stuttered out 1 what nre you those tails Sober and solemn iris Briggs at he re- plied You will a rich man for you do not what is to be savin You ought to know my child it takes BUSHEL or AX OF TAit Cort haj gone to the coro growing of to the of tailless A Schoolmaster Me recently of guw whereupon of the larger rebelled tnd attempted to expel him Three aged came to the rescue with ticks of wood in dri ring the the The a one and simple but fev jind cordingly it eMier to get into them than to an Per Omo who was the Marietta Cincinnati some time ago for inviting a friend to ride over the road wilh he did not like to ride in the train alone has been by the But we see he is again the hero of another ad- venture which has been made Tho newspapers say and what they sny bo true you know that on a recent trip the of which this conductor had charge overtook a cripple limping along by the side of the track when onr hero tha conductor kindly invited him to get on and ride The wooden legged man thanked him and replied would rather not A That tor thinks of throwing his commit at never more tlian six day confident they will learn in that properly managed than they will in sufficient exercise Make it your own case Can you spend even eight hours a dny in study to any The mind becomes then nothing is How then can you suppose that the expanding faculties ot be for that length of timo to advantage to THE OF Jesus we gee no display himself of glory as we pour the contents of a goblet on him no exaltation willingly lot it all go the was by right his He stood in a dition and associated company and wore a common lived in the houses of tho the plain talents of good sense and speech and guided himself by the lamp of and veiled his in the homely guise of charity he after the foot and instructed the people in the unostentatious form of THE PARADISE sota is high A been introduced much principle Rome are have adopted in their colony This settlers from aU process of law for the re- covery of debts rA till wild I vish f also yawned the wide open as she for jou you There is a man era States who m chickens al   

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