Richland County Observer (Newspaper) - June 15, 1858, Richland Center, Wisconsin COUNTY ISRAEL AND in 111 Central in TERMS III HIGHLAND JUNE 28. i. o. OF a. T. ent ot Good moots every Wednesday in Union second G Members of this visiting nro cordially invited to meet with 119. C. W. W. D. W. S. MASONIC HIGHLAND F. A. M holds lions on Thursday on or before tho full moon ol each nt m this of are to J. A. 20th, 1858. COUNTY Land Agency Jl Attorney nt Notary nnd La id Ri makes it his mary to pay locate land procure n id to attend to all to it in tho Post comer ot Court nnd Center March 15th, 1868. 15 Abstract of Land Attorney at Notary nnd eral Wn K now preparing im Abstract of Title to all lands in said pmd lo making investigating paying Office in the Court Register ol A.C. nt IraS Attorneys at and Central will pr in all Courti ol thin Rive attention to the and of and prompt attention to all claims that limy bo loll with them for 3 F. Hon. Or Mineral Wis. John II M. Jool C A. c. and H. Attorney nml at General ot pd Attorney in nd Counselors it will attend to all intrusted to in n. A JAMi r Attorney at Solicitor in Land and Collecting Mineral Wis. il attention paid to in the U S. Land in and La yetto nnd in the Supremo nnd Federal Ono or both of them vt 111 attend each term of tho Circuit ot the land 20 of the nnd Notary nt 46 V. Deputy County Surveyor and Notary in prepared to subdivide in irregular will do the ol while Other solicited and ed to with propriety Direct llii blind Wu to L. April 1853. and of tho will Attend promptly to nil intrusted to ind acknowledgment of other hm Ho will attend to the payment of ining etc. Blanks ot nil kinds tn hand And N. B. December 1857. 2 Notary Public nnd Lund to nnd acknowledging Also to locating Land nil other to his K. V of In ready nt all times lo to tho duties of married on tho O. M. E. A. 1VOOD, in tic of Mill next block north of the Pool Dr. O. H. Wood will be found tho above named when not and his to the of Richland Center mad 9 DR. M. C. and tender to the ol Center and 23 May 4th, 1857. TAr prepared lo do plain and fancy printing notice A Word to the 1IY You rejoice lo think You in bu lor the gilt hat which jour hearts And in to H It to look nnd view from that happiness Which they nt as much Their faults not nor thulr virtues And should you lore your flod the more his smiles ho chose lo puss tho many And hring tho to hem does your i Ami ever Ui the the you would your do to And when looking on jour them to How can you talk ot joj and withhold such joy fiom MRS. R. M. don't you pily Mrs. nnd the tears storied from swollen what is tho 1 Aro you hick any of your family ot you bad none of I am bo only it is a week to-day since I hove closed my in Don't you pily mo 1" But I huve not learned the of jour If you are not you must some serious trouble to thus derange the order and harmony of your Pray what is it i just look at my see ey me swollen and I have bad thorn nnd these lilies for says he is lo get mo the handsomest drops he can find in the But do sit I declare this is making me so vous I am in danger of ting the due to my don't you pity me A shade of disgust mingled with a smile flitted over Mrs. face as she Mrs. I must confess I have no sympathy to for Mich useless and senseless If you saw n prison holding his hand in ihc flames uhon there was no for such a mad and no possible could from his so loudly for could you sympathize with him you are sobbed Mrs. 1 am sine that is no case can you give any reason for thus torturing Doesn't every lady who to go into genteel society Unit must submit the dictates of And a fashionable lette is considered quite incomplete emphatically answered Mrs. consider myself entitled to all the privileges of society for which my my knowledge of and my ad- vantages have filled mo. And I do not indulge in except a pic pin for fastening my jou combines utility with Mrs. was ihe insinuating Not at were I the possessor of it would not change my views on this tho' I must confess I consider a watch a very desirable But the practice of making incisions in the flesh wherein lo suspend Js but a relic of It with and it seems that it has ever been tolerated by tho enlightened dies of tho United I would as soon make an incision in my nasal organ nnd hang a jewel in as my do believe you ore Mrs. at I think the epithet would be more appropriate to But I have not given you all my reasons for adopting this You know I am troubled with a weakness in my head nnd nnd people and some I that the and wearing lings in will cuie this Was iho exclamation of Mrs. arc and obedience to them plain and and the allies attached to the her laws are But nature is nol an requiring torturing penances lo regain her Study her and faithfully obey and you will never need to resort to such barbarous modes to restore a affected organ to strength and The very pain you now suffer is dence conclusive nature ia not pleased with what you she protesting against it with all her So I think you Mrs. nature is against even though fashion is in your and whoever has studied fashion knows thai her are dom based upon or Is it not sure I don't for I never bestowed a thought upon the But my ears pain me so 1 be- lieve I would lake the rings out and let them heal if it wasn't for pointing Hat ry he has set his heart upon my appearing at Mrs. Maynard's party Wednesday with the handsomest pair of that he can I hope that the gratification of your vanity will repay you for your suffering and sleepless and consequent but re- I do not envy The ladies and did not meet again till the evening of Mrs. for which Mrs. Grey had suffered and anticipated so entered the with an air of pride and though the pendents swinging from her ears almost made her scream with She had expected to be a brilliant the charming center of a charmed but as the evening wore and she found herself quite as unattractive as usual in spile of her elegant and feeling sick and and quite disappointed and she entreated her husband to go home long before the other guests thought of When once in her she threw hoi self upon her couch and burst into my what is the ter kindly her the unhappy I wish I had never seen these hateful this is a novel way of expressing for so handsome a was the tarl but seeing his wife's distress apparently ho again kindly inquired the she I have so just to excite admiration at this that I must be eclipsed by Mrs. who hud the singularity and presumption to appear in a plain black with scarcely an it my that Mrs. Perry would not even have been honored with an invitation had not an acquaintance of Mrs. in her 1 am sure thut San who is one of the handsomest nnd richest men in our was vety attentive to your charming pshaw it was only because I happened in his stoic the other day and admired an elegant brocade and a magnificent he thinks to flatter my vanity and secure me for a regular But there was Professor and those two handsome young men that were with ed completely fascinated by Mrs. I declare I'm vexed out- But didn't you obtain an duction lo Professor Williams but he couldn't talk about any thing but books and the and I made a fool of myself on the He asked rne if I had lead Dr. Kane's and I of that ho had reference to some celebrated doctor that had perhaps made his advent in our and so I inquired of him to I declare you ought lo have seen the smile that came over his face when he told me that he referred to the Dr. who the Polar and died in consequence of his remarkable labors and I thought to remove the unfavorable impression I had by telling him I had been quite indisposed of had not read but hardly spoke to me and a few minutes after I hoard him talking with Mrs. ns though she was the greatest lady in thtl I was determined to redeem myself in the Professor's and once when I thought they talking about the I remarked that my husband was once a member of that and that I thought their ceremonies very imposing and their regalia very Professor Williams bit his and Mrs. Perry really felt in- I of the room and sent for She begged my pardon very and said did not intend any but were speaking of Longfellow's was going to but I. left the loom in such haste she was prevented from doing so. I declare I am mortified and completely my I get these books for you arid then you will be on an equal ing with Mrs. in that you are her in every her husband is only a and she goes into society looking like n take don't you I will go down lo ford's to-morrow and get will Certainly try and you f sol you are I fear for the The books were brought home anc conspicuously displayed on Mrs Grey's but they no marks of though they certain ly furnished topics of conversation for some time She talked ly of them without ever having reac a page in Mrs. Perry continued to go into society in plain without but the jewels of her mine won for her friendship and fume far more precious and enduring than gilded Life Peter Cartwright at the Astor Some church affairs made it sary for Mr. Cartwright to visit New York city some years and it was arranged for h im that iie should put up at the Aslor It was here that his brethren expected to meet his social and denominational ments had reference to the Astor House as his head When Mr. appealed at the there was nothing in woods appearance that to its proprietors his worthy position among the fathers of he requested to be shown to his he was cavalierly ed over to a servant to show him up Up stairs they Cartwright in amazement followed the servant in his apparently untiring amusement of the servant opened the door of an apartment in the attic and pointed it out to Mr. C. as his Father detained the servant while he should take a general of the inquiring if that was the room he was to at length appearing to be well he disposed of his and politely requested the servant to show him down stairs The servant preceded Father till reached at length Ihe street but before the servant could make his Peter inquired if he wouldn't please to show him So up they went and at last Peter found his and permitted tho servant to in The had little more than found himself down when Peter rang the bell In due up came the by this time panting with the unusual good I am sorry to lo trouble but I should be glad to see the if you will be kind enough to send him lo my And so down goes the to say to the clerk that a singular old chap in the upper story wanted him to come up to his And then tip goes the re you the clerk you will place me under great obligations to if you will show me the way down And once more down after Peter had taken another careful survey of the the clerk very politely inquired if there was any thing he could do for says my I would be greatly obliged to you for an ax says the in what do you propose to do with an ax thought I like to my way to my room It is needless to say that Peter wright was the lion of that week at the and that it was not further required of trimm climb up that less series of when his friends called to inquire 6r call upon they found him snugly en- sconced in one of the most the Reporters and Bowie The United Senate was a little startled the other out of its dullness and by ah A reporter carelessly his over- coat over the rear railing shuls off reporters Senate be- It chanced that in the of said there was a stout which impulse given to the thrown with some violence striking the blade in- to Senator Hammond's which was at that moment For a moment the Senators were startled out oT their and the went up to the and arrested the proprietor oT the Lut explanations he was There was never a ray of starlight in the Cave of Kentucky 1 only the glare of torches ever lit So there are many mea whose minds are moth underground and un- by of selfishness and army worm has appeared in immense numbers in wheat fields around You Know Place The old maps surface anterior to Vasco de Gama and are curious things to I was a maxim of the geographers ant navigators of that you know place ant they always observed it. In their either for the library or the what was then terra incognita was strangely laid Terror usurped the place of and hip flaming drag ons and hideous fully pictured on the line between the known and were a sion that their knowledge ended anc terror When Columbus set the dangers to be encountered by sea were lightly considered but fear of the monstrous human forms to be met and fought in the which he might could not be easily shaken off. Men were willing to sail down a the surface of as they was like the declivity of a and take the chances of re- turn but the chimera of monsters and offspring of the Evil to whom the barbarous lands were supposed to render the chief in the way of But for the patience and steadfast courage of the Great and anthropophagi would have and America remained The world is wiser now than Its knowledge of physical geography has been greatly Dragons and giants have lost their places in the and are found only in for the astonishment of ihe But the old tendency of the human mind to distrust what is new and fill with terrors the is as active as ever It has opposed every progressive step in morals and by which the race have been made wiser and and it was never more fully fell than political as daring in his sphere as Columbus on the enunciated a great truth in politics that the few in this Republic have er since been struggling to apply to the affairs and condition of But with what The dragons and guffins conjured up by terror stand in the and the truth that men are created free equal with certain inalienable among which arc the pursuit of is as far from its realization in our ment as 1776. The proposition to check the denial of the truth of our political and prevent its extension into lands now or to strike the shackles the bondmen and take away our national is like the projection of a new voyage in search of the Spice and men consult their old maps to learn What dangers they will be compelled lo As of they see in every corner which remains the figure of a monster that makes their hair stand on are ied and painted with fearful ics on the nnd men shrink from ihe encounter with such The untried is before them? and they are true to the old you know place Now and then an turous galleon pushes its prow where nothing has ventured Slate or community defies the thronging prophecies of dispels ihe fear that hung over the untraversed but to the masses of rors fill all space outside of their they move slowly and with even in the wake of the most intrepid of their The devotees of the new idea must labor and Time will disperse the illusions which fill the road by which they must and leave them free to press They will re- member what triumphs have been by toil and patience Until even an union Church and State was insisted upon as the only method by which and Religion could be When it was proposed to dissever the two and refer both to the guardianship of Ihe the charts were again What devils with horns and fallen what gibbering what countless multitudes of lost blocked up way in which the reform would Terrors filled the ono State after another ventured down the straits until all have passed through and not one desires to The phantoms conjured up by ance and distrust It is the task of this generation and the next to work out the in spite of the goblins that or our will see alt and anthropophagi driven out of the ical into fabled regions whence they The working days in erland are from fourteen to nineteen for five cents from sixteen to forty to The Fact of or is the ninth month in the Arabian calender and is kept as a Lent by the in obedience to the of Ihe As the Turkish month is the Ramazan runs through every season in the course of three and when it occurs in summer the laboring classes suffer severely from exhaustion and thirst This year it began on tho 15th o April of the Christian reckoning During this month every good Moslem is bound lo fast from the first ance of daybreak until He must abstain from smelling and all other unnecessary indulgences or pleasures of a worldly He is allowed to bathe but it is only on condition that he is not to plunge his head under lest some drops should enter his mouth or Some are even so scrupulous that they will not open their mouths to for fear of breathing the air too To make amends for this extreme generally feast alt night till the more rigid begin the fast again at mid Persons who are on a and soldiers in the time of war are not obliged to observe the fast during this month but then they are required to fast an equal number of days at a future Fasting ia so dispensed with in the case of nurses and of women who are The reason given by the an theologians for the month of madhan having been fixed upon for this purpose is that the Prophet re his first revelation in that that it was chosen by Mohammed on of its being spent by the ancient Arabs in revelry and mirth and excessive The characteristics of this of the Mohammedans are thus described The day is passed by the rich in sleep or in total Every the tion of and is forbidden to taste food or to smoke or take from sunrise to and very wretched do they squatting on their or at the without the favorite pipe in their mouths and having no other tion than counting their This fast in rigidly hove seen the boatmen Mr. lean on their oars almost fainting bat I never met with any one who professed to have instance in which they yielded to the temptation of violating the The moment of sunset of eagerly looked it is announced by the firing of It might be imagined that the first act of the hungry and thirsty would be to eat and drink but numbers of Turks may be their pipes ready and the fire to light them in their awaiting the welcome other gratification being poned for that of Inhaling the fragrant The night is passed in devo lional forms arid All the mosques are and all the the latter are crowded with drinking and listening lo singers and The minarets are and Ihe are crowded with the thee receive my son why did ihee not buy a new present one is certainly very the fact I left all my money in the bank at New thy economy is certainly what bank do not exactly remember in what know it was a very as it had a scriptural It let me was the Pharaoh I banks are very unsafe and thee had belter send for thy ey Son took a coughing my remit n a cily not long a member of the committee asked the members of a class which was under is the cause of tho saltness of the Soon one little gul raised her flushed the discovery which had flashed upon her may the proud thut the ex- should see the talent of their The little after ono or two tne sir This natural cause i a (I struck the is the name to worn by Ihe this spring for the lack of or They are made by drawing down little hair from the and forming hem into If any of the pretty young girls would like to have a fine moustache upon their upper they shall be just as soon has time o No one can get a passport in he Papal unless his curate certifies to nis Exemption of AN ACT relating to the exemption of homesteads from sale on ex- or other final The People of the represented in Senate and do enact Seclion 1. The owner of a stead under the laws of thu may remove or aell and convey the and such re mo rat or sale and conveyance shall render such homestead subject or liable lo forced sale on execution or other final process hereafter issued on any ment or decree of any court of or of the district court of United States for the State of sin against such nor any judgment or decree of any such court be a lien on such homestead for any purpose that act shall not be so construed aa to in any manner relate to judgments or decrees rendered on the foreclosure of mortgages either equitable or Sec. 2. On the death of owner of such homestead the same de- scend to his and she shall take and hold the same during her if freed from the incumbrance of uSl judgments and against the deceased or his except gages executed by Sec. 3. This act shall take and be in force from and after its Approved May 17th, 1858. High FriM of At a sheriff's sale a few in this fourteen ing to Stephen M. Richards and ilton P. aold for cash in or with three per as follows about 40 years and her two nine and and 3, 22, 19, 17, 14, 19, 70, Harriet 32, 10, 60, star lonf rany U O'er the of the and home of whether it is what they say of heaven being it can be pier than silting in Ihe over good jug of with a fiddle going I don't know a pleasure as comes up to Another honest fellow fancied thar heaven must be very like the room of the lady who had been kind to him the description is de- simple had me a sitting and it was just like heaven such a sight of and such a large dinner Hearts and English Mr. Choate was arguing a case before a full bench of the Supreme Court of when wishing to compliment Judge exclaimed I look upon the venerable Chief I am like a Hindoo be- fore his idol I know that he is very but I feel that he is very The general opinion that that the vainest of all birds is the We think ihe goose is the est. A when entering a barn through the invariably bobs his head to avoid hitting the Evidently every goose thinks himself at least fifteen feet la ide Sambo de where is the rake 1" de where are both bofe you to be berry dis a may say what yoo 'bout bad I had the bors as never pigs and mine hens come home mil der earr and todder day two of them come home I live in a constant endeavor fence against the infirmities of ill. other evils of by mirth being firmly persuaded thai every time a man but much more when he laughs it thing to this fragment of most remarkable of indecision we ever heard of wag hat of the man H ho sal up all because he could nol decide ake his coat or Ma First Judicial Jeep's resignation was to and lie will now hold on Hit the end of the the first quarter of ihe current only fifteen hundred white persons were added tAhe pop. of California by