Sheboygan Lake Journal (Newspaper) - June 21, 1854, Sheboygan, Wisconsin VOLUME 3 WISCONSIN WEDNESDAY JUNE 21 1854 THE SHEBOYGAN JOURNAL WEDNESDAY MORNING OF WIEK J MILLS OFFICE on Avenue licit of FIFTY additional will be village who receive papers per rier No discontinued unti all are paid the option of the BOOK and Printing done office on terms inserted at tlic usual rates Erie and Kalamazoo Railroad Bank THE will receive on their Hanking Houses the notes of Bunk AT and will also sell exchange on ilia ern cities for them nt tlie current rates The this will be nt its in New York city at of one percent discount BELT Milwaukee CO Si BELL BUTLER Fond clu Lac A L McCREA CO Sheboygan TAYLOR OFFICE ESTABLISHED IN SHEBOYGAN WISCONSIN Fenton it Co Clapp Kent Co Hopkins Co Co Hansom Co Stewart Stevens John C W Seymour A P and G N 7 Walker Son II J Window A Sunnier Co Levi Finch Lynde INSURANCE AGENCY Office in of Capital Life Company capital Original anil renewal Policies issued as here at the current rales Losses Marine or Firo Department HOME INSURANCE COMPANY Office No Wall St New York CASH CAPITAL SIMEON I LOOMIS President CHAS J MARTIN Simeon L Inte of the Hartford Then firm of firm of Kine Co Wm II Mullen firm of Co George Bliss firm of Bliss Amos R Eno firm of Oliver G lirm of Willari Levi P Sumo firm of Stone Starr Henry G Ely lirm of Ely Bowen James Low lirm of Low ret B firm of C B Hutch it co J B firm of J C Howe on Wm G Lambert firm of A Lawrence Ghas firm of Hulkley L Jr firm ol L Jr co Levi P Morton firm of Boche co A T firm of Dw ight co John G Nelson firm of Nelson en Chas P Baldwin firm of Baldwin Starr fc co George C Collins lirm of fc Collins D Morgan lirm of E U Morgan co Lucien D firm of Coman co Thomas Messenger firm of T U Messenger Thomas Cephas H Norton Norton Butler Hoyt Charlen Ely Stephen Paul firm of Boyd te B Bull firm of Alfred S Barnes lirm of A S co Roe Lockwood firm of R I Son Lucius Hopkins firm of Hopkins Allen co Cookej firm of L Cooke co Jns A Dwight firm of Brown Palmer 111 firm of k Newell Jolin H Swift lirm of Swift co Noble firm of fc Noble Ward A Work firm of Work N H block well firm of Slock well co Jus Humphrey firm of Barney Humphrey co Win T Hooker Continental Bank N Barney firm oi Wells Forgo co Homer Morgan firm of George fit co The undersigned is the agent of the Com- pany for NORTHERN WISCONSIN to receive applications issue renewal policies adjust and pay losses Juno 1854 N B WALLACE WATCHMAKER anil JEWELLER opposite the ren Hotel Just re- from N York a splendid stocK of Clocks Watches Jewelry and Fancy Goods Call and examine stock and prices REPAIRING done to order and neatness and dispatch JAMES HOG AN COMMISSION MERCHANT WHOLESALE DEALER IN Wines Liquors Sec on Pennsylvania Avenue Printing the just made extensive his deportment of JOB WORK ill a Printing in n ml with neatest on sonable Oh Cards of a variety of colors D Justice of Peace Notary requiring legal conveyances ami transact any and till busness by bustiers Office nearly opposite Davis s Wisconsin E Fox Cook Counsellor nnd Solicitor Office in Block Pennsylvania Avenue Wisconsin D Williams nnd William K Gorsline Attorney and Counsellor at Sheboygan Furniture W it L E MINOTT Avenue Charles Barber Shop on Penn Avenue opposite tho Warren El and Counsellor at Law and Solicitor in Chancery District Land nnd looting Deeds nil legal Fells Wis From N Y Commercial Advertiser The Belligerents in the East EitLer tbe Western powers yet hope and desire to bring Russia to terms without flooding Europe with the horrors of a fierce and protracted war and therefore pursue this protective rather than offensive system or appalled at the magnitude of their un- and perhaps discouraged by the unreliable nature of the support which they may expect from Turkey herself they are staving off the conflict that they may gain time for securing additional allies and re- sources There are some facts which favor the former supposition All qualifying taken into an account there yet is something inexplicable in tlie abstention of the Western powers from effective acts distinguished from preparations therefor They have not done anything that would hinder an honorable arrangement did the necessities or interests of Russia prompt her to that course Each has prepared for war the of Odessa could be attributed to a misunderstanding of the act of the sian Governor or at the worst be accounted a against the affair of Sinope The assaults on the Russian forts and troops on have all been made by And then the surrounding of Russia by a cordon of powers allied with France land and might he interpreted in- to a very strong hint that Russia had better come to terms without compulsion by arms Still the second supposition is the more probable England and France are ly unwilling to commence offensive tions Great as have been their tions those of Russia have been upon an equal scale While they supposed that their purpose was concealed from Uie Czar he has either read it or concealed his from them and has completed his belligerent provisions on a scale of surate magnitude The combined fleets and armies are therefore to be augmented and new allies are to be obtained Some leaking of Turkey also leads to the suspicion that the Western Powers have the reliability of the Turks as allies in war Private ters thence represent that there is little or no discipline in the camp that the soldiers officers tyrannical and ing that the credit of the Government is nt the lowest ebb and that emphatically is sick unto denth Public counts show that Government evinces all the and the jealousy and of a dant It will not surprise us if for months the affairs on tho Baltic Black Sea and the Danube remain in statu quo We have no idea that France and land will shrink from tl e a k they have un- They are probably now ing out renewed inducements to the Czar offering to Sweden the restoration of her territory in will secure her alliance Poland by and Prussia will be in arms Spain in her present troubles would be glad to join the alliance The small German states would bo compelled to take sides with them In other words it is quite possible we do not think it improbable that England and France will refrain from real earnest offensive long as possible in the hope of throwing a much larger allied force upon the scene of action and that they are conscious that with their present force they can do little more than keep the enemy's fleets within their harbors The N Y Courier Enquirer a letter from an American volunteer in the Turkish army written from Kars Asia Minor under date of April 14 to a friend in Constantinople The writer to entertain a very poor opinion of After giving a description of the condition of the troops stationed at Kars who he says are badly clad badly officered and not fed at he proceeds as Every day I am shown more more that cause of the Turks is utterly less indeed they only deserve to be beaten I blush to confess it but I hope tlie next mail may bring peace otherwise we are hopelessly lost and should tho Turks be de- not a Christian will remain alive for they now place so much confidence in them that a defeat would be considered their fault and we should be massacred to a man You wanted a true statement of the affairs in the army and here it is I came here full of enthusiasm but have lost Apathetic indolent and false people are undeserving of our thies The Government has no credit here the other day I took an order to the forage master from Gen G for forage for my ses but he would not except it The ba- ker has also refused further supplies of bread on credit Let tha Government pay me first Our men ate sick and at the rate of and twenty every day Of teen thousand five hundred men in Kars and villages around it fifteen hundred are in the hospital with typhus fever thing shows that the army is doomed to destruction and everything that I can see proves that the Turks deserve to be ed I only regret that I embarked my sympathies in their cause The history of the world is full of mony to prove how much depends upon industry pot an eminent orator has lived but is an example of it in tion to all this the almost universal feeling appears to be that industry can effect eminence is the result of accident and that every one must be content to re- main just happen to be Thus Who come forward as teachers i and guides suffer themselves to be satisfied with the most attainments and a miserable much as inquiring how they may rise higher much less making any attempt to Ware Rolling An Englishman wo was traveling on the Mississippi river told some rather tough stories about London thieves A nati chap named Case heard tives with a silent but expressive and then remarked that he thought the western thieves beat the London tors all hollow How enquired the Englishman with surprise Pray sir have you lived much in the Not a great deal I undertook to set up business at the Rapids a while ago but the rascally people stole nearly I had and finally a Welch miner ran oft with my wife Good said the j And you never hers Never to this day But that was not the worst of it Why what can be worse than stealing a man's Stealing his children I should said the implacable Case Yes a woman who hadn't any of her own abducted my younger ter and sloped and the Great did you see her do See Yes and she hadn't ten rods the start of me but she plunged into the hike and swam like r there wasn't a canoe to her with The Englishman laid in his chair and called for another mug of while Case smoked his cigar and credulous j friend at the same time most remorselessly shan't go nny further think at length observed the excited John Bull I should not advise any one to said Case quietly My brother once lived out there but he had to leave although his business was the best in the country What business was he in a And they stole his lumber i Yes and his too Yes Whole dozens of fine black of Old Grimes Hen At lost the speckled hen has gone That hen of hens the best She died without a aigh or groan While in her downy Thru summer's heat nnd winter's ten long yearn she lay At noon and eve oid Grimes an egg But none the She lind a nest behind the door All neatly lined with Her back brown anil sprinkled o'er With spots to grey almost yenrs of ngo young ami hale And like ukl turkey she One leather in aer tail The neighbor's did all was a gooiJ soul BY AUTHORITY LAWS OF THE UNITED STAT cultivated by them Provided They shall j prove up their rights according to such -a I rules and regulations as be prescribed J by the Secretary of the Interior and pay No A RESOLUTION certain umes and medals presented by her Brit- Majesty's government to the Uni- ted States Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives nf the United States of America in Congress assembled That for the same before the day that may be I fixed by the President's proclamation for the restoration of said lands to market Approved March 1854 No AN ACT to amend an act An act to divide the State of Arkansas into of tho United States accept tho of volumes nnd live of the Exhibition in London in two judicial approved March the third eighteen hundred and one Be it enacted the Semite mid Utilise United of And t On poic When e'er tho rain came down And dreadful She hill in Grimes hat Until tho slorm was She lived a pinin nnd life iSo higher wished 10 rise She flow at neighbor wife And both hec She never deigned the beau His face to look upon And loved hut one shrill crow Was heard at early dawn An cock who ufs had told His with n sigh From one that when ho of His master did deny When poor old speckle dosed her eye lie jumped the and He hid ihu poultry good hye And laid down and Kind render now we'll drop u tear To Grimes speckled hen It is lou ne'er shall look Upon her like again Library of Congress j n penitentiary is annexed it Resolved That a copy of tins resolution whom be to the British government in such manner as the President of the United States may see proper Approved 27 March 1S54 No JOINT RESOLUTION authorizing the convictions have or may be had to sentence convicts to undergo imprisonment in the penitentiary house of the State ted in tlie eastern judicial district in the same manner as though the penitentiary house was situated in the western judicial district of the State of Arkansas and the of the Treasury and Light Of Sevier and Sebastian in the said State are hereby added to and made a part of the western judicial district SEC And be it further enacted That when any shall be convicted in the district court for the western district of Ar- kansas of any offence committed after the passage of tins act the punishment or part of the punish men t whereof is bv the laws now existing the said ment or part of punishment shall he Sam Hooks Lucy's Gown AT ell jast as I was ready to start away j down comes Lucy to the keeping room with amis behind her a of the I to upon the site plan and mode f constructing the light on rocks and for other purposes find House of the United States of America in assembled That the Secretary of the Treasury and Board be and hereby are authorized to de- termine upon the site plan and mode of constructing the light house upon the basset rocks the southerly side of the entrance into Boston harbor And so much of the net approved August thirty-one eighteen hundred and fifty-two and the act j approved March third eighteen hundred and relative to the rebuilding NUMBER 37 custody of all merchandize stored in said warehouse and all the labor the so stored must bo performed by the oV proprietor of tho warehouse under the supervision of the of tho customs in of the same at the expense of tho aforesaid owner or And ded further That cellars and vaults of stores for storage ot wines and distilled spirits only and yards for the of coal mahogany and other woods ber may at the discretion of tho Secretary of tho Treasury be constituted bonded warehouses for the storage of such articles under tho same regulations and conditions us required in the storage of other dize the cellars or vaults aforesaid shall bo exclusively appropriated to wines or distilled spirits and shall have nci opening or entrance except the one from tha street on which separate and different locks of the custom house and the owner or of the cellars or vaults shall be SKC 2 And be it further enacted That unclaimed goods wares or merchandize re- quired by existing laws to bo sion of by collectors of tha customs may eel bo stored in any public warehouse owned or leased by the United States or in nny private bonded warehouse authorized by this act ami all charges for storage labor and other expenses accruing on any such goods wares or merchandize not to exceed in any ease the regular rates for such objects at the port in question must be paid be- fore delivery of thu goods on due entry thereof by the claimant or owner or if sol J as unclaimed to the import duties tho aforesaid charges shall be paid and imprisonment with hard j by the collector out of die proceeds ot tho labor for the same length of time and shall sale thereof beforo paying such proceeds m- be carried into effect as provided in the pre- i to tho treasury as required by existing SEC S And be it further enacted That nothing contained in the twenty-fifth tion of an not entitled An act to regulate hooks and eyes Man said she are you here yet 5 j thought YOU were an hour ago who'd thought that you were hereT j sais 1 Lucy my nut logs were carried off in a single night s OVer I shan't so no more shall j go home I agree with you alone under a wet bush for hours that is no fun but if Lucy was Get sais she talk nonsense Sam and jest fasten the other and the on Minot's Ledge as with the Indian tribes and with the provisions of this act j serve on the approved tieth of June eighteen hundred and True upon my honor sir lie tried every way to prevent it hired men to watch his i logs but it was all no use They'd whip eye of my frock will you logs em as as if there had been no one there steal em out of the out of tlie cove and even out of the ways Good Just to give you an they can steal out continued Case sending a sly wink to the listening company just to give you an you ever work in a saw mill Never my brother one dry bought an fine black walnut feet j jest stock couldn't three as the butt and not a knot in it He jf j to jt are hereby repealed Approved 27 March 1354 No JOINT RESOLUTION relativo to bids contained in the twentieth section of said act which provides for the ment of therein specified shall be construed to extend to any Indian ting said offences in tho Indian country or to Indian committing anv in And any collector of the customs is hereby authorised under such directions and lations as may be prescribed by the tary of the to sell upon duo no- tice at public auction any unclaimed wares or merchandize deposited in public warehouse whenever the may from round he back to me Well bids tor suj I took the hook in one hand and the eye in the other but arth and my eyes fairly snapped In never saw such a neck since I was raised It sprung right i out of breast and round and tapered up To the head like a four shall be construed to extend or apply j depreciation in value damage or to said Indian country any of the laws en- j other cause in the opinion of such collector acted for the District of Columbia and that be likely to prove on n sa e thereof to pay the duties storage and er charges if to remain in public store for the period now allowed by law ia he case of unclaimed goods SEC 3 And be it further enacted That before anv of tlie stores or cellars aforesaid -s il HJ if I i v f of clothing and country who has been punished 1 owned or occupied by private individuals -1 -1 shall bo used as a warehouse for dize imported by other merchants or ters the owner occupant or lessee thereof shall enter into bond in such stuns with such sureties as may be approved by the Secretary of the Treasury and United States nnd its of- harmless from or on account of any for provisions clothing and small stores for the use of the navy Resolved the Senate and House of of the United States of America assembled That all small stores for the use of navy may be if tile or in any case round and i tapered uf beat the most white and red rose i ever seen Lick 1 it made me all eves I move a tion of any contracts they mav have white person who shall hereafter set that the bids of persons wno mav have failed to comply with the je it further enacted That was determined to keep that log any how nnd he hired two Scotchmen to watch it all night Well they took a small de- of whiskey with them snaked the log np the above the mill and then sat down on the log to play just to keep them awake you see Twas a strous big log bark two inches thick Well as I was saying they played and drank whiskey night and as it be- oan to grow light they went to sleep of the log About a after daylight What ails you sais she that entered into with the United States or attempt t shall at the option of the department be st you don't hook it saii I Lucy my fingers 1 can't bundle to set lire to any house out stable or other building in that if than one bid be territory to whomsoever be- 11 thumbs that's a such things ns you can sais she make mother will be com in directly And at last I shut both my eyes and when I had done sais I ere is one thing I must say j she Connecticut to show my brother went over to the mill to see an neck as you have I never how they got on and the log was i of jt n my born And they setting on Setling on the bark The thieves had drove an iron wedge into the butt end which down hill and hitched a yoke of oxen on nnd pulled it right out leaving the for the interest of the government and the for not twenty-one nor health of the crews of the United States less two tiie most And you may stump shell and the setting astraddle of it fast asleep The Englishman here rose dropped his cigar stump into the spittoon and looking watch said he thought he would go on deck and see how far we'd be down tho river before morning Was Paul inclined to we ed of Mrs Partington as saw the old dame reading a grand rally at the corner of the grocery store ed us to wait a moment her specs Inclined to She sais she to produce another bold tongue as you have So there get along with you 1 All who have a mind to live long and healthy and die without sickness of body j or mind must immediately begin to live j temperately for such a regularity keeps the j humors of the body mild and sweet and suffers no gross vapors to ascend from j the stomach to hence the brain j of him who lives in that mannei enjoys such a constant serenity that he is always j perfectly himself Happily freed vessels to procure particular brands of Hour which arc known to keep best on distant stations the Bureau of Provisions and ing with the approbation of the Secretary Navy be and hereby is authorized to procure the same on the best terms in the market overt Approved 27 March 1S54 No SKC 5 And be it further enacted That any white person who shall make an assault upon nn Indian or other person or any in- dian who shall make an assault upon a white within said Indian country with a gun rifle sword pistol knife or any other deadly weapon with intent to kill or maim tho person so assaulted shall be deemed guilty of a and shall on conviction bo punished with confinement AN ACT for the relief of the United Mates md hard labor for not troops who were sufferers by the recent fivo than one year disaster to the steamship San Q And be that Be it enacted by the Senate and House jn cases upon indictment for y store sne of appetites and t she digested easif sonrs to j said she I contemplation of j of Representatives of the Untied States committed in said Indian country America in assembled That there to of said western district shall be paid under the direction of Arkansas now pending in the circuit President to each of the court of the United States for the eastern missioned officers musicians and district of Arkansas process for witnesses and her eyes rested upon the period at the becomes Tie seemed to be J meditating a full stop He was but he end of the last line till she seemed to be wasn't a nor an or an nor a demigod as some ofj em are all he wanted was an exercise of gradually enlightened with divine truth and expands itself to the lotions ing view of tha Power Wisdom and ness He then descends to Nature and knowledges her for the fair daughter of his sufferings and the use of an French eyes as to say Ah en rest him 1 exclaimed she as her eyes rose from the period at the bottom of the be and rested on the top of the But did he never get an office Mrs God and views her varied charms with sentiments of admiration joy and gratitude becoming the most favored of sublunary we asked replied she and we cied the tone of her voice had an expression of triumph in to be perceptible I'm an old says Cowper in one of his letters to Kurd I had once my j cer dancing days as you have now yet I could on mo steamship who was or board that vessel on the ion of her disaster at nnd to Lieutenant Francis Key Murray and any other or seaman of the United States navy who was on board the said steamship under orders a sum equal in a- mount to his pay and allowances for eight months SEC 2 And be It further enacted if anv such have be- from any cause risk loss or expense of any kind or tion connected with or arising from the de- posit or keeping of tho in tho warehouse aforesaid nnd all imports posited in any public or private authorized by this act shall be at tho soli and exclusive risk and expense of tho er or importer SEC 4 And be it further enacted That nil goods wares and which may be hereafter duly entered for housing under bond and likewise all like three drops of to a ful of yes he was put up one year i for a and got As j SQ much bv with flt he i a i we were about asking her opinion of the j -n aU the t New Ike came along whi of We are n ling Jordan and swinging a pint of mi k wh n bnt R in a tin pa around his head old fc wants to fees of all witnesses so summoned shall be paid by the United States 1 Approved 27 March No AN ACT to extend the warehousing tem by establishing private bonded and for other purposes Be it enacted Ly tlie Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled That Irom and after the passage of this act any goods wares or merchandise subject to duty with the exception of perishable articles also gun powder fire crackers and other explosive which shall have been duly en- id bonded for warehousing in con- lady forgot her politics in her solicitude about Ike spoiling his new cap A widower in a neighboring city upon said disaster his widow if one survive him nnd if not then his minor children it any there be shall be paid a sum in amount to six months pay and of the deceased And that the tered and bonded for con- may have or uy treaty stipulations minor children of those officers i with existing laws mav bo grant n free right of way over such and private who ted at the option of tho owner importer tury and for tho purpose of better bv this disaster or who died from consigned or agent at his expense and risk ing frauds upon the revenue on for- now remaining in warehouse un- der bond may continue in warehouse out payment of duties thereupon for a riod of three years from tho date of original importation and may be withdrawn for consumption on duo entry and payment of the duties and or upon entry for exportation without tho pay mont of at any time within the period in the latter case the goods to be subject only to the payment of such storage nnd ges as may be duo Provided That where the duties shall have been paid upon nny goods wares or entered for consumption said duties shall nol bo refunded on exportation of any such goods wares or merchandise without tha limits of the United And provided er That there shall be no abatement of the duties of allowance made for any injury damage loss or leakage by any goods wares or whilst deposited in any public or vate bonded warehouse established or by this act Sue 5 And be it further enacted That nny goods wares or merchandize duly en- fur warehousing may he withdrawn under bond without payment of the a bonded warehouse in any collection district of the United States and be trans- ported to a bonded warehouse in any other collection district within the same and re- warehoused thereat and any such or merchandize may ho so ted to their destination wholly by land or wholly by water or partly by land and partly by over such as tho Secretary of tho Treasury may prescribe and may likewise be over any for eigu territory the government of which have or shall by treaty The difference between a wise man and i fool doth not consist in this that the man knows much and the fool knows little killed ly determined to seek consolation for hi affections by promising to become his wife j I This change of prospect relieved him of the necessity of going abroad and accordingly Ons of most important but one or all preparation ceased A friend of fhe i Difficult things for a to be own a Pond disease in consequence thereof shall lowed pensions fn the same manner in all respects as if the said officers sioned and privates had in battle Approved 27 March 1S54 No i in anv iv public warehouse owned leased bv States or in the private warehouse of the importer the same being used exclusively for the storage of housed goods of his own importation or to his consignment or in a private warehouse used by the occupant or as a general warehouse for the storage of AN ACT for the relief of settlers on lands housed goods such place to be designated eign goods transported between the ports of the Atlantic and those of the Pacific overland through any foreign territory tho Secretary of tho Treasury be and is hereby authorized to appoint special sworn agents as inspectors of the customs to reside in said foreign territory where such goods may bo landed or embarked with power to the landing or shipping of all parties hereupon remarked Tha proverb to e own Ls miss is as ood as a but lay quiet m a plaiD a mss s as goo here a Miu is as good as three thousand to and bold it in miles lake wants mountains reserved for railroad purposes I On tho warehouse entry at the time of en- I goods passing coastwise between the ports enacted by the Senate and House taring such merchandize at the custom of the United States on the Pacific and At- United States of- Provided such private lantio and duty it shall bo under in Congress assembled That house shall bo used solely for purpose r on public lands which have been of storing warehoused goods and shall have erv settler be from market in con- boon previously approved by the Secretary No one ought to the feelings or insult the religious sessions of his There are some that live without nny de- ot i i at all and pass in tha world like settled thereon prior to such straws on a river do not go are al shall be entitled to preemption i minimum to the or and proposed railroads and who i of the Treasury ami have been placed in i ii i carried charge of 1 proper of the customs together with the owner and tor of tho shall have the regulations and instructions as tha Secretary of the may prescribe to guard the perpetration of any frauds upon tho rev nun Provided That the com- paid to said inspectors shall not in tho aggregate exceed five thousand per annum 1 m