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Republican Journal

   Republican Journal (Newspaper) - June 30, 1858, Columbus, Wisconsin                               the deducted from fa Q i t ft i i if t I COLUMBUS WIS WEDNESDAY JUNE SO NO 16 OK one or lean first Each cents One column by column Fora and quantity of matter it will be tho weekly unless 6 Yearly will have the ot altering or amending once every six without any CQ DO CO CO 00 KH W W O O o O o 3 o o o o 11 H Gg Stationery Ac of Deeds i I 1 Achilles Wilder and at Law STORK Ludington St s Convey and all business promptly attended to P D o w ATTORNEY AND AT LAW Columbus Wisconsin Block over Davies Axtell a Store business promptly attended conveyancing 32 It W PHYSIC IN Paine ard Store Columbus WIB AN CE Company t Street WISCONSIN Chartered Casb in MARINE FIRE POLICIES DPON AS AS OTHER GOOD COMPANIES DIRECTORS Ira B Wm A M Steever L W Kennedy E B GreenleAf Leonard Kennedy Joshua L M Tracy Geo Southwell Jr Lewis Blake LEON ARD KENNEDY President R P CADY Vice President I HOUSES E B Treas Hon A RANDALL F M WILDER Agent Wig of N Y allocated io rooms over Store A supply of Dental Stock on hand for the convenience of Mrs Brushes for anle 44 Jti A Products DeOm Columbus Wia Cash paid for all kinds of produce MASSASOIT INS COMPANY SPRINGFIELD MASS KO 8 AND 9 GOODRICH BLOCK Cash Company IB now fully organized and pre- pared to make Insurance against Loss or Damage by Fire on public or private buildings vessels on the or while in port furniture and generally on aa favorable terms aa tha nature of the risk will admit 3D I It 13 C O It S William Birnie O H Greenleaf Henry Gray A W Chapin C L Covell Augustus L Soule W and Carriage maker shop on Luding R W BANKING AND EXCHANGE OFFICE u WISCONSIN foreign and Domestic Exchange bough and sold promptly remitted c exchange notes mortgages and ties purchased and negotiated sold nnd located attention given to tbe sale of Real Estate and to conveyancing special deportee 12 per Allowed Phenix Insurance C MILWAUKEE WIS O C U Kellogg Wm Strickland P A Proud lit Win E B Birchard L A Mann M Newton Duncan McDonald L W Dean T C M S Sott Lester Daniel P C Lee Heory Totten Jacob O Alexander W A C M Agt O Alexander V Merchandise Furniture Vessels and their and other property against or by fire waa other com ponies JAB C B at of Columbus MILWAUKEE CITY WIS CHARTERED CASE PAID H L Palmer O B S 8 H J Wv D D Upham J A D H A Bade Victor Schutte Dyer E Prest W HOLLAND H L Palmar Atty Albert Bade Gen Agent jy Fire and risks taken at the rent rates JAS 0 BARNES Agent 19 at Bank of MASONIC LODGE NO 75 of and A V tf their meetings in Odd Fallows flail on Monday evening at or full in urn and two weeks of invited BLACK W M S E- Sec February F NO Q O F its regular at Fellows Thursday evening at SONSi l f t executed at Samuel S Day Chester J B Stephen O Henry Fuller Jr J B M B S SAMUEL S DAT J S PARISH D WEBSTER WILDER for Columbus and Or the great cause Springs from of Nature's NOT When a CURE is guaranteed IN ALL STACKS OF SECRET DISEASES NERVOUS DISEASES or ANB Soft PAINS IN AN- AT AND UPON BODY OR LIMBS Firs tir AND ALL A Of TUB SEXUAL Such as Nervous Loea of ry of Power General Weakness Dimness of with peculiar spots appearing before the eyes Loss ot Sight Livor Disease Eruptions upon the face Pain in the back and head Female irregularities and all improper discharges from It matters not from what cause the disease originated ever long standing or obstinate case recovery ia certain and m a shorter time than a permanent cure can bi eff by anv other treatment even after the disease has baffled the skill of eminent physician and resisted all of The medicines are pleasant without odor causing iio free mercury or During twenty years of practice I havo rescued from the jaws of thousands who in the last stages of the mentioned had been given up to die by their physicians which warrants ine in Promising to the afflicted who place themselves under my care a fect ind most speedy cure Secret diseases are the greatest enemies to health as they are the of consumption and many other diseases and should be a terror to the man family as a permanent cure is scarcely ever effected a rf the cases falling into the hands of incompetent persons who not only fail to cure the diseases but ruin tha fil- ling tbe system with mercury which with the hastens the sufferer into rapid tion But should the disease and the treatment not cause death speedily and the victim marries the disease is entailed upon the children who are bora with feeble constitutions and the current of life corrupted by a virus which betrays itself in Scrofula Tetters Ulcers Eruptions and other affections of the skin Eyes Throat and Lungs entailing upon them a brief existence of suffering and them to an early grave another formidable enemy to health tor nothing else in the dread catalogue of diseases causes destructive a dram upon the system drawing its thousands of victims through a few yeara of suffering down to an un- timely grave It destroys the Nervous System rapidly weares away the energies of life causes mental derangement prevents the proper of the system disqualifies for marriage society business and all earthly happiness and leaVes tha sufferer wrecked in body and mind to consumption and a train of evils more to be dreaded than death itself With the assure the unfortunate victims of Self-Abuse that a permanent and speedy cure can ba effected and with the abandonment of ruinous practices my patients caa be restored to robust vigorous health The afflicted are cautioned against use of Patent Medicines for there ingenious snares 10 the columns ot the public prints to catch and rob the unwary sufferers that millions have their constitutions ruined by tha vile compounds of quack ot the equally poisonous vented 1 have fully analyzed many of the so-called Patent Medicines and find that nearly all of con- tain Corrosive Sublimate which ia one of the strongest of mercury and a deadly poison which instead the disease dis- ables the system for life fourths of the patent nostrums now in uae are put up by unprincipled and sons who do not understand even the alphabet of the materia aud are equally ris destitute of any knowledge of the human system having one object only in view and that to money regardless of consequences Irregularities and of males and males treated on by ty years of practice and sanctioned by thousands of the remarkable cures Medicines with to any part of the united tes or by parties communicating their by letter Business correspondence strictly confidential All letters asking advice a postage stamp ADDRESS j Stf M D BOX tfo Office st old No HI I A E I1 HI A BY HARTZEL COPE MONSIEUR was and I hope still is a glover in a street of Paris of only secondary importance in the eyes of the fashionable He was short polite stout honest industrious irascible and slightly bald Indeed a small coterie of bis logical tuJ assumed the of a white ball concealed with rather indifferent success amid his thin crop of sandy hair Monsieur B was also Imprudent Who has access behind the counter My assistants Lament and Pierre Have they heard of the No I judged it bedt to inform the police of it first Very Have they been out since it No Have room in the house Yes Can we examine them without their Certainly Then wo will do so if you please Sophie was called in to attend the shop j j Our with the head ry to the was there and when he this he stepped quickly up to his brother officer and 1 Twenty thousand This then will suid him to Algiers 1 Certainly It is a pleasant country I but no I believe nevertheless I shal glad of a I'm so tired of said Mons Whiskers Before go you can do me a favor I shall be most happy to bo sieur 1 By simply stating whether you took five as usual and the official gentlemen and handled at Mons the Mons walked up stairs the other day and whether you paid examined The aent of very active in bis habits aa is often the caso was exam uea me or with impulsive people and his r r hid Hfl in shop partook of the acter prefigured in the antique simile of a pea on a hot shovel fierre Boutillier was his foreman salesman and occasional ing target In the latter capacity Pierre but seldom for he was a good fellow with that noble in its right place though the ugliest man out of Russia If the old wives rule that men and women's looks aro developed contrary to the apparent promise of infancy Pierre would have carried off the at any baby show contemporaneous with his earlier years though all the nations in the word always excepting Russia had contributed tors But though ugly there was in Pierre's eyes a kindling light that shone for those who looked for it He was the master snapped like a bon cracker Pierre was as hardy as a pastille Pierre there book-keeper and ier She was a distant relative of the ter She had beon taken inro the house a year before and developed that character for business which lies latent in so many women and which we slurp Yankees are only beginning to find out She also super- intended the domestic a flairs of of which only and she were members About twelve o'clock one day in June passed Monsieur and it just to me that I needed a pair of and that I had at Sophie was engaged uith a tali with Napoleonic moustaches u ho seemed to be urging objections to every pan of gloves more for of with the fair Sophie than for any other gave me my and said Monsieur Cup Fiench for Cope you Aill be glad to earn that my employer has raised my salary And very just of him I'm sure it was keys of his He examined the place minutely looked on the inside of a plaster statuette of under a bit of by Pierre's bed in the bed in boots the leaves of every where Result Next came room trunks first not locked Removal of articles of feminine wearing apparel designations unknown souvenirs of various kinds pincushions should be ed if onU for tho pour le Mouchoir speculation AVell then briefly novel by Georges Sard Bad sign Stay Arthur Bethink you what is on your lips arid think even ere you speak for thia anc this conversation so long postponed anc put off and hoped for yet dreaded is the pivot on which turns our future When it ends one of twb things must be chosen As it ends depends our mutual happiness Caroline what do you Simply what I say Between the bund and wife thero should arise no bar of distrust Perfect confidence in each other's fidelity perfect sincerity perfect love must flow from or it is a union not in heaven and when it is tho sooner it ia dissolved the better Your thoughts are in tho same channel aa my own Caroline we Aro you Will you answer ma one question Arthur Colburn What is answer That will depend upon what it is Think you a man will blindfold himself as ho en- ters a new country As one who does is who pledges himself to answer a question it ia put to him Put your hand upon your heart if dare and answer this question Do fully credit the insinuations in the linous letter you received Knot tbe five hundred francs at or if you doubt their a separation may any of that money to any Moils mused Would sion keep him any longer in a country where thero was no 1 Consider Monsieur it will not lengthen penalty in any considerable degree the sum is RO small Confession will gain jou before the aud besides you will an honest man from prison An honest man! lot us en- honesty by all means Specimens to Mons long opinion and paid my laundress twenty j be avoided But if you as before all novel reading and indeed most or thirty francs in that j God I insert them to be Arthur of any kmd is a foe to virtue though he Thank you Monsieur And our Col bum the time for us to part has cume said he knew gentlemen who had been j but hu overheard he was going to it from early youth who had apparently takeri no harm fiom it The police agent looka in tha book a twenty frano of the identical money so carefully laid bv for his rent yesterday lying mgly theie between the was hurt He loved his fy about the mischief of literature but was oat That affair of makes the seventh known I think 1 The paid with professional CHAPTER IV I AM if not didactic I avail Mrs Colburn paused Full five minuted elapsed before a During that period the husband paced the chamber I do noi doubt their truth Hive I not been a witness to the familar friendship grow ing up between you and this napes Have I not seen him your attendant at places of amusement il An- no t for so stunning and immediate Of to in ray on promenade and to a pi oof of it He was sony he had driven justification title me things so far lie might havn made the fhe Handsome I will answer you Y- search himself bis money set forth and I hope my story will seen mo with him alone and I hope my story will seen mo with As tho cavali that a character can illume of your cousin Katu Clifford ho is often i i i L r li rtr i nrl oa ju A n You have never tho cavalier in her The old was anv it were aa muddy abroad without me as sorry But he could not The of proverbs thrown into his society better You are too kind And his eyes lighted up at this appreciation of him No not at nil Now you must think of marrying in order to save your capital know search himself his money set forth the magnitude of tha crime to Sophie and saved her from future errors without j effaces and A biava deed ier company and as she seldom appears as a necessity I am Did my husband proceeding now to compound a in as as that spend fewer of his evenings at theclub and T devote more to liis wife ho would have no reason to complain Woman's sphere is with the home When out of it she herself and disci edit those with whom she is allied Tho flimsy excuse you give to account for Franca is nut so easy a matter aa nearer of But tho one on which I home The agent held up the note to the j pj as correct a3 tuQ For many us love and aie There is an accomplice i ona neither bright Indeed now do you become aware ofj step dewy hoht o else of the auctioneer catalogue Tho flimsy excuse you give to account for No how I cannot explain I your wich Chistia More make the airest They descended to the j 110 ideA of physical ib not calculated to deceive mo I beg your f I B j T 7 ti shop was just then to to us symmetrical and to the Tho police agent as of creation Exit lightly bemud the counter aud said co Mile will please to consider herself un- -I t der arrest and accompany me noise J do not believe Thero was a pause hare A Hush of in- mantled the face of the injured man stepped into Monsieur j To behold that she uttered an that in i was sufficient to cause the crimson tide i i i I j 3 i L i 1 Tha polished policeman But that was contrary to nature So arrest with the wbo harl ot- the department for the av st I Blanqua lfc waa and bow had he be- JL wn had Ah that would be pleasant but it is oc the iua of the thing YOU have a why you are chafed w h I the money came which had aul jn it was in- v j liy J right to know why you are charged with f to hen His 1 robbing your employer ot live j had for yeara Frances The proof is in my ex lain iu Austi ia ho h possible He looks over and the and I felt he was drawing able comparisons between his weak and goatee and the stylish whisker owner of tbe latter was his cane Sophie was and sank about pointing out subjects on the shelves and weeping on a chair behind the counter We withdrew our the ponce eves m a moment after and the next agent speak ot I took his leave Sophie One ot the notes was her meot and m a book added afn that the remainder of fieri e's story no better than that relative to to her His honesty He had sent plain the it could only be because he not Plainly he took the crime upon the ponce to it was ben went to her desk some ami i i as it that enhanced the crime mm Pierre reached his hat trom a peg step- li Fiench of it is still gt the a returned to leplace the goods came in from the workroom I bid him and i L j ned out from behind tje counter Pierre good morning touched my hat to u Sophie nnd went away I came at eight in the I had m a toie off the button of my and have Pierre or Sophie put it would be more dona by one of them than by the of a Sophie was in and was only too happy to be of tho slightest service to monsieur and fell info a con- versation with mademoiselle Presently there came in an elderly woman who Sophie on one sidy and you not have the goodness to take charge of twenty francs that I have I dare not let Paul see it he play it all away I know of no place to put so safe and convenient as in your hands mademoiselle for you can let me havd small portions of it as I want it 4 Why you are in luck Mother Trouette f you may say so I have ed for the gentleman three months on credit and thought 1 was about to lose all when my gentleman comes yesterday and pays all in a I bethink me of the bank for savings but that requites forms and wastes time pays I tho best bank says I is Sophie She is safe and I can run in any moment and get what 1 want of ray little deposit and she will keep account for me 1 Thank you for good opinion I will keep it with foi you Take a receipt Bah child I know nothing of receipts I am sure it will be all right in you? hands She said good-night and Sophie then finished mv glove Good-night monsieur Au revoir mademoiselle CHAPTER II MONSIEUR and a gentleman with hair cropped within an inch of his life an exasperating subject to fall in the wiy the and the of the interior of a muffin wais in a state of ex the white billiard bald among his hair had turned to red Ho was nil and galvanic gesticulations Tha lockles You have bean T I have been plundered Five hundred francs all in naw bills of tha B i nk of France laid aside for my rent hera pointing to a ledge over which tha shelves the packages of his wares were placed while I was gone for ao longer than tive quiet voice sate in Sophias nyes and those were of importance o him I 1 knew that Mile was innocent and 1 that if she allowed time Monsieur tha of the police and I R simply and I may as well j to geQ hpr to ftt at this moment that I took the money That f that would have was crime sufficient but I cannot suffer an on the innocent woman to go to prison loi my ot- fence knew that you were neither of you said the police The agent gave a little laugh and flom the How came the money in mademoiselle a room where is the remainder of 1 trave her a as a and Piene blushed aud the remainder 1 have sent to a friend in Austria in a letter mailed this morning And just after I had raised his taid the bewildered Sophia did Sot understand all this She was But she up when Piene mentioned tha gift of money to her That WES cot so 1 Monsieur the agent will understand that she now feels bound to say anything that will me You knew whether to be- lieve me or ber It is hardly possible that I would accuse myself uf a cume out of jest My frfith it is not much of a joke for you must go to with me Mons you will be responsible for the safe keeping of mademoiselle until news from the beaureau of police you de- tain her not as a criminal but a witness Diablo Pierre I do not believe said poor 1 I am extremely sorry my master that I do not your good The rascal was becoming as fluent as a lawver Allons Pierre They walked off How The rn the triangular slit in them showed me that it was dorte by an who has been the object of the attention of the department for a long time He with his cane which had little lance heade 1 iron in the end that he would thrust into package of bills a counter and so Sometimes a few would fall off a gor package than usual came to the end of his and fiora those thus left milked a theory of his manner of operating as and he at last successfully attempting a in a banking But why hid make tha To gam time and throw him off his Guard why did you not explain about the CHAPTER III WHAT a remarkable we have in the loom of the of lice a with whiskers moustaches cane aud swagger so much like the one that was talking a few days ago to Sophie that we could swear he WAS the man And we should not be committing It is the same fellow who ex- cited Pierre's envy and made Mile heart flutter for he w ao like acter in the Sand's novel there he s confused and loally Pierre so aisted that blushed he must me if at I took him at his wo id The evening ended About three months Sophie took Pierre at his word again She has not regretted it Sna presides now the books of it who lent you go to Paris I hope will get some of them and she thinks among the handsomest of My was A gentleman spoke to another Caught ia the act Yes with the notes on the end of his stick and he reached out for the cane of who handed it to him with a bow which was so politely the last speaker then thrust a minute sharp iance at tbe eud of tha caae through a piace cf papar and held it up the Tori A TRUE STORY BY EDGAR L VAN GASSED CHAPTER I Well it are a curse to mf oline I ie I to the altar one whom 2 hoped would give mo n of m her I strong and hopeful she waa young and I wan est and she of and anger to mount to her fore- head Dut to have the come from one who was her husband added a weight to the blow which sent the blood back thro her veins anJ left a pallor in Jts place At she had arisen and talked while facing Mr Colburn but ag the con- continued her strength gradually gave way and finally when so shamefully insulted and in such an unmanly manner she fainting to floor aa she fell a Jow and mournful cry Il was a wail from the depths of a bruised and crushed yet innocent CHAPTER II the rumor wont through the age that Arthur Colburn the rich fiom the city had wooed and won and was about to sved Miller surprise was expressed af her choice that he was not sufficiently wealthy on the contrary in a pecuniary point of view the match to was highly Her father was a man well-to-do in the world one who ed the farm on which he resided and which one equalled by none in the vicinity By he had saved up a snug little stun with which to dowry his daughters when tlw time for them to leave tha loof beneath which they weio born their childhood has passed and their maidenhood was rapidly developing Stem and ligid farmer Miller but no less ed and sincere than stein There were many round about who him in their night after because of deeds only heralded by the angels for he was one of thoso kind who let not even his right hand know his left hand did This than was not the reason why the village folks wondered at the approaching bridal of Canie Miller and Arthur Colburn Neither was it because he in age well nigh her father This to some might have a source of wonder But in our village and in this case it did not What then was the There had come from the great city mors of one who had far forgotten his duty as a bon as to off mother be- cause she waa enough to rebuke him in his principles and his of business The story floated about that she had lifted up her hands and said lie who liveth by ill-gotten gains and by defrauding the widow and the fatherless out of their rights and by grinding down the poor for the pittance they owed will surely have his reward And whon she so had spoken he took her by the arm and bade go her way and never appear iu his presence Q but what has this to do with our story True but when with this rumor is led the name of Arthur it has much to with it It was rumor but to look at the stern scowling features of Mr would be to think that it lived one on this broad and beautiful earth base enough to do such a deed he was the man And with those wbo aud loved the gentlo Miller theio was a tear that the union would not be a happy one But with the great majority of the gers the wealth of the suitor so their eyes and closed their they could see nor hear nothing derogatory to She character of the merchant Sd Carrie Miller became tho Ar- thur She loved him with all tho sincerity of a true woman his sive exterior and the rumors which musi have reached her ears But love in blind of a truth to the faults of its votaries Away to the great city she went to pre- side over the stately mansion and luxuriant of the merchant From the fresh air of the country to tho tainted phere of the town from the puro sky and green field and tho singing birds to tiie brick and mortar and the of the city She moved in higher circles dnd wtte a star in the horizon of fashion Her popularity spread and her name was ori the tongues of tha butterflies that flit to and fro in tho sunshine And went to his business He had ried solely for the sake of having a mistress in his mansion that object attained ho satisfied Of ho nothing Of affection he had heard it told iu story books but to him it had no interest for it was never on change Do you wonder tongue of scandal at last reached Caroline fralse tho rumors were but still they drifted to and not ae they should done to the depths of but wafted by the gales of envy dnd until they reached heaven of lior ess and then the peace of the innocent wife was destroyed Her husband devoted no time to trace tho slanders to their source but accepting them as truths ho proceeded to act them in the spirit of one who could turn bis mother our of doors he attacked uis wife aud charged her with crimes from which het pure heart shrunk with horror with acts from which she recoiled aa she would the of a viper So about the have given in our first chapter Thrae years on- ly had passed between the bridal tho estrangement three months after there was an entire lawful between Arthur Colburn and his wife Not because she had ceased to love him But she shrank from him in his course tho notoriety attendant upon it would have proved too baneful for her nature and so she yielded to the rent she could uot control and became di- But strange ns ic may seem atill ed hirri la not the love of a tery CHAPTER III Caroline returned to her house she was cordially by all her for- mer friends There no change in their toward her knew her to be innocent of wrong and They saw that she had and was schooling to ba strong and they placed no in tha way of stern duty So passed the months Bui at last the voice of an accusing conscience awoke m the bosom of Mr Colburn Slowly but surely he waa brought to feel that ha had un- manly unjust The conviction was forced upon him that his suspicions had been un- founded and that his wife was innocent of any breach of wifely or trust or or It was hard unyielding to forget his character in tho man It waa hard for him fo stoop from the pinacle of his self-esteem and humble himself before the olio ho had spurned the sting of conscience fulfilled its mission Thua it happened that one day there came to Caroline a letter from the city which read vVith mingled toolings of surprise and pleasure It was as I wronged you and I am ready to tor my fault By tha articles of either of us is fraa to marry tho that you injustice leads me to offer a al of vow a Will you come back to ino 1 homo you have line been desolate tho hour you crossed tia threshold 1 Oao you forgive me for the I dono yon 7 It HO write to ma tho newa and I will come for you If you cherish any and tha silence will interpreted a sign that we are irrevocably dered But thia I do not fear At least 1 hopo that it is not so If thia ia to be answered let It be noon Youre So the rose and the error bounded by its own angs died And hope and happiness sprang up in honit of Caroline Colburn Father Miller read the letter and shook liia head Hia daughter asked his but when he silence and she 1 Father if he harf erred to err is if he has suffered so have I If ho regrets the paat that aud fy duty joins hand with my love in bidding me to his And you will Well daughter you The of your house will never be against you But remember that your husband's were once and they may be a- And if sot Then return tb ua to go Back to no more I accept tho conditions Two days the merchants usual package of letters should haVe contained one addressed in the delicate hand writing of a lady But it did answer run ift this Coma to me aud I will return with you to our homo iu which I trust tho of repose and will outer tf itli dn to leave U J lovo you with all the Womanly nature is of else thia would not be to you signed by y our Placed in the charge of a boy to do erranda about tba chanced to be at the farm that   

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