Watertown Democrat (Newspaper) - June 10, 1858, Watertown, Wisconsin Watertown Democrat Jr D W EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR PUBLISHED THURSDAY Second Story WATERTOWN WATERTOWN T CITY To i TT V Ull U 1 V ELY IX ADVANCE 1 WATERTOWN JUNE 10 1858 NUMBER 34 OF One column per Half Quartet Eighth Business lines or time subservient Business Directory DR L S second AYER'S Cathartic SUGAR TO Bank building 3 J II and Counselors at Office over him by a from i foul i l others ns do WILLIAMS LEONARD at Law Office doors of Post Office on Second Street M X E WM a Surveyor Watertown Wis would inform the public is ready again todo ail surveying i in city as country with correctness All work warranted I found at STerlich Brothers where orders can be I left j LOUIS j Practical Architect arid Builder and Working Drawings of promptly executed at the lowest prices attention given to Druwin Virtues roil OF Sick j DR 7 C I havo reportedly of word any ecu they nt it tMy Bilious nnd Liver Complaints i OF THE D C 7 Frb Snu I have used your practice cv I ly i 31 D I an of Marine Dysentery Relax and Worms j LIT Co 10 DR Your uro the perfection of my wife more good 1 you Veen sick and for to lie at cot no commenced taking your cured hor by quantities of worms from her Lody They nnd of dysentery One of our kill it my wife cured him with two ut your I UK others around us paid from fire to doctors bills and lost without cured y I even then a sis yours 13 good ami will ORIGINAL HYMN nr JOHN On mid The car Time careers Ami once more Warmth to our Northern seas Balm in Hie vernal breeze to And all thing? green From below the And To fan the hallowed tires Here kindled Tho spirit that inspires The prayer the spirit from their As this day returns Conies forth to soe If in this ace of gold The Gospel here is Or faithful a- of old To liberty as of old thy I money I cannot even pay fora night's And seeing that the merchant at him he could I lain himself no longer but said sir do not refuse and the tears ran down his cheeks The merchant touched by his grief j and convinced by openness of his manner hesitated a moment and finally though I of the poor friendless took him to his horns A few days proved companion of her childhood Such i I the truth of the youth's story and he was constancy and love employed at once by his ncu benefactor 1 should so often be abused In course of rose by degrees un- til he became head clerk in the ATTEMPT TO read before the w York Historical Society at one of its rhaps now he who years I recent a paper which hcv maiden might of Lifo expression would steal into her lately laughing eye telling of something yet wanting to complete her happiness She was thinking perh ago hud won while she was surrounded by and luxury be dragging out the of his of ft to take ti A n tO n life in and distress es sue still poison This was of 1776 when had id llis jn York city luat u the r yours Mitre and throno So our spirits By prayer sonf To AnJ own ment of Mr Thompson also by iis j arm in tha favorite of I wealthy family of his employer whom ho resided loved i and he loved them in return as falher mother and sister For although diaries for it was Charles i powerful naval evening was somewhat In june rumors into when Mr Morton approached Helen The arm with a man whose dark i i i n w countenance raven hair and eyes tall straight form a native ot Lie en in of a Tory conspiracy They were to vise joining tha TO BY Fair pledges of a fruitful troa Why do you full no Your date is not past But you may stay here yet To blush and gently smile go nt last were ye horn An or And so to bid good pity Nature brought ya Merely to show your worth Aid lost you quite But you rs are 1 o vely Ic lives May read how things have Their end though ne'er ao brave And after they their like you awhile they Into the grave ALWAYS Mr of Orleans my Emma Thompson was almost as pretty as ments saun Helen yet he tho saloon While walking with a neighbor I beard a sweet plaintive voice singing that ful lover of The child was up stairs I knew it was a child's voice from its silvery softness I listened for a moment and then That child has a sweet voice Yes she returned my friend destroy the bridge at the upper I is always singing end of Manhattan Island so as to cvu off Always I passed that way the shore to Summer wis there in her fullness W P lid Counsellor at Law and dealerin JRea Estate Will invest money locate buy and Impurity ol the Blood land on commission and attend to all J r Himes Pastor of of legal 1 DK I your rills Eau Clair Co Wis nSi fy the the 1 ever HARLOW PEASE Wisconsin known and 1 can confidently friends BLESSED BB THY be thy of life and silver Thou thy creatures the long and God of stillness nnd of Of the desert and tbe Of reck river Blessed be thy forever f'.uni'iorei-t nor are they Of and ray That rises the azure Like of God of never Blessed be thy name forever said introducing Helen and then after conversing for a to tho opposite side of yet he i to the hitter and could but think of the j Who is that handsome young man yon former as a sisLor now introduced to j Five years had rolled by and he had i Mrs Morton of her i become proprietor of the I That is Mr Thompson of which he entered ES an j leans the richest merchant in that errand boy Mr Thompson having retired as was his father before him He arrived I from business Ono he was here but the day before yesterday fire the and setting on I shewing earth with flowers and the Washington and his staff and if necessary pat them to Such was the nature of rumors that an inquiry was ordered by the New York provincial congress and a of investigation appointed consisting of Philip Livingston Jay and Governeur Morris committee found Governor The with stars same sweet voice was trilling oh the Oh had I the wings of a clove I wonld This singer was in the yard I gazed upon the softness her sweet eyes like flying to the the fine expressive lips I felt r who was then board a vessel i that she would have her Wish in familiar with the j invited him to-night and if the im- family when Mrs Thompson after pression of features is not felt on steadfastly at Charles for some Helen's heart which has hitherto remarked how much Emma and he been so calous none ever will bo bled each other said her husband I have often observed it they look as ranch alike as Charles said his wif though they were really brother and sarcastically c was as the author I was through among whom David Mathews then Mayor of the city was pointed out as one who had paid out money enlisted men cured arms and made efforts to corrupt j He it Wit's 1 and a refuge in heaven r And if they are I suppose you will Washington's men offered five cease to regret your j gujne.is bounty 200 acres of land for a man 100 for chil his wife an j 50 for each Our lost little Mow I could not have been more like Emini turned away Your I never knew you j At first whon had any child beside said to Helen there appeared an air of when did he slight embarrassment about him but it he had died gradually wore Thompson then would I have conversation with u bu: course of it slid asked him if he had ever Mr Morton did not answer he only of the discoveries tlie lie was in Heaven and ho entered into a uru vivacity In tne BUTCHER Office she River Wa- is M F Kooma one door East of Plan Hotel Oils always on GILL Attorneys and Counsellors at E GILL 9 at Watertown 5 she ASA r nnd in ly afflicted and her hair onr cured and they have cared her AS Rheumatism Neuralgia and Gout from the Xer Dr f tkc TULASKI Tan 6 SlK I be for the relief your has me if I did net report my to yon A cold settled la my limbs and brought oil excruciating in taunts no as lef said Charles Ellision richly furnished parlor tad about by strangers car seldom feel liko a i where with some fashionable guests sat -n her two oldest daughters Lo the garden Yes I i I Mrs Morton und her nml and went forth in must he continued I rue no ore cares for j whv should they for the poor and a T Cilice at Je Bank of ORGANIZED and General Banking of the State COLLECTIONS ARCHITECTS CHAMBER BATON 5 Dec Dn 1 have cured by your Pills of Gout painful disease me for For Dropsy Plethora or Com- an active purge they lent For Costiveness or Constipation as a Dinner fill they are Fits Suppression even ness have been cured bv the ot Fills of the in r remedy ill hands in a pill firm that follow ila no j cury or CHEERY j FOK THE Of j COUGHS COLDS loved by ied Ills face in his hands ov the intensity of his fee-lings I said a clear silvery voice behind him and a hand was laid j on his shoulder started and turning round snid I yus Helen pardon me I spok You still if he is alive he may been in tha city before He replied that whose hard hearts he had been there when he was about and she years of aLre and he liad be- with several of his own age whose acquaintance he highly prized i Among those he mentioned was Charles in particular As he pronounced the name be bent his eye full upon her and perceived that she started while We took with us cur for a moment agitation was visibly 10 was scarcely four years i ed in hsr countenance After a was lost asked Charles said Mr Thompson about years ago I and Alary North for the benefit of our health some friends who resided in We arrived and he old and then our wiu om friends some timj sei out on our return home Anxious to prosecute our on our arrival in st jam boat to proceed im- I to tj safety Always Autumn came wild swan was turning towards the south the leaves were dropping the trees and spears of frost glittering among the grass Mathews was arrested with many was persons to the great alarm of the Tories whom took to flight the was that of a- young who had a shop on Broadway near the Bowling Forbes made disclosures and as tho result between twenty and thirty more arrests were made these were Thomas Hickey member of the Life Guard and Johnson and Green the orie a drummer and the other a fifor same corps confessed that Mathews had paid him sterling and Mathews admitted say ing that paid it reluctantly by order of Gov Hickey and his accomplices were arrested A strip of crape fluttered from the ter of the house where my little singer lived By the great white throne by tha river of eternal gladness she was striking her golden harp and singing the gushing of imperishable OF JOB The Book of Job is generally regarded as the most perfect specimen of the poetry of the Hebrews It is alike picturesque ir the delineation of individual phenomena and artistically skillful in the didactic ar- rangements of the whole work In all the into which the book of Job has been translated its images drawn from the natural scenery of tho lust leava a deep impression on the mind The Lord en the of waters on the ridges of the ing the force of wine Tirt morning red has colored tlw of- we imme dolphin on he I do Charles and my of the thin kin were the my surprise sometime the s j to us to no pay will be os person in this State A M B Ox Positive Pictures on Glass milE is now prepared to JL who wish with this new Tlie are some of the possess over They are Inker glass and by a now which renders them entirely permanent ind unalterable by air dampness or time iro visible in The tne metal plate is all and the ture stands out clear bold andean s a steel and fur the relief f consumptive in of tho We need riot to the of its every and every ol ne American Suites 01 it are on this not them V tlie suMU cat Willie it is the -t known to man fur he in out antidote ndl them find you will COOLED r S a larpre lot of of all forts and into which OT will be put up notice andin the best mariner April 38 SeUing off at THE CITY STORE is removed into to the Bank Building two doors north of the Watertown Bank and opposite the Exchange or J B of the above stock is now ior sale I WITHOUT TO COST as the whole must be sold by the coining spring room for new brine your money along as yon never had R better of getting as much for your ey as the Jewelry aa Usual forget the doors north ami have it ia store against Ilio tbem We have to believe the more y the sumptions it prevents than it cures it h} von anil euro your tiny are 10 them until no human can master ranker that on the eats of find us f remedy not do horei Q find Helen He still loves me I Charles with why leave us she said in a lender tone Helen you know I have beon already the cause of dissention in I be so any longer And you know whist treatment I havn received your mother find sister I borne it out of respect to your faiher and love for you hut I can bear it no I will go forth into tho world hopes of up a fortune and say Helen should successful and return will I will love you she said inter- thai and cabin but was on to cabin She 1110 and shi away I I had not i We tho boat but no be found and it struck us that he must have on shore the boat the wharf and was left behind How harrowing j were our to think that every ment was between pause ho I have made in- since my arrival respecting him and hear that ho has returned the his ingratitude by leaving his horse and no one knew whither Oh no sir do not that it an idle report He had reasons for leaving my house and her voice ble 1 and a tear stood in her eye then a gentleman advanced claim her hand fur last cotillion and the was abruptly terminated Charles resi full It is youth tbo and ned her but his heart the elapse of a few and manhood will form on the of June and the next Cay the the earth and variously formed the woman who kept the house which ing of the clouds as the hand of a holds the yielding clay The habits of animals are described for instance those of ass buffalo the eagla and the ostrich We see pure ether spread during the scorching heat of the south wind as a melting mirror over tha parched The poetic literature of the Hebrews is not deficient in variety of form for white Hebrew poetry breathes a tone of warlike from Joshua to the of the gleaner Ruth presents with a charming aad exquisite picture ot- nature the period of his for the East as ington occupied was taken into custody was a daughter of lei a noted innkeeper whose house is yet standing at the corner of Broad and Pearl streets tha same at which Washington in 1703 took his final leave under such impressive of the associates toils dangers and glory iliss was taken up on suspicion of complicity in the guilt but in fact was not only entirely in- nocent of it but proved the of convicting the facts about the poisoning The slight that on our knee in the full stately demeanor of tho man little while ago we can scarcely and it was guilty The wero these Hiokey and emigrant de- from where he lived some time very creditably Having enrolled in the But there with Charles Thompson no wonder I- us and our beloved child ha had unseen and been drowned determined on in New Orleans j scarce a in his pocket on leavin with her friends and j It was the following the ball 11 more dis- overboard However 1 tea and her could not see in the merchant of South poor who six years before had left them with to Washington and inquired his esteem But was Ha ed conspiracy to murder Washington and drew into it tha drummer and filer mentioned above Having resolved to ex- ecute his purpose by means of he All knew the di they know too tbe virtues lie i t ii i i t than to it is still made tlie it wn We no cost no rare no toil to produce it the most and thus those rely on U tie beit which our skill Kin for their cure PREPARED BY DR J C AYER Practical ana Lowell Mass AXO SOLD BY Mills L F ft WALDO Jons EICE and by in every town ir tbe U S OOyl will love you SMO smu QU her friends U was tlie tne Dan him Oh I will always love j tQ to and and Mr and Mrs Morton were you Charles 1 scare no pains or expense in trying to re- sitting in the former two said he and imprinting aj child or else discover his in discussing some private affairs j kiss upon her rosy he tore but and latter with her head resting upon her j away In another hour he had quitted undergone me apparently in deep thought The that house where he had spent so many on and it was servant cnt hippy days with Helen months before I recovered When I did letter He opened it and after having Philadelphia no could a few moments uttered an the her a confident arid soliciting her She desire to se Gen Washington was fond of reen and they in season loveliest of idyl t Cosmos HOPE The great orator grest painter tka the great statesman we all the children of Hope It was Hope that hung the lantern upon the ship of bus that brought to tidings of Paradise it Was Hope that waived the torch before Bacon ta the dark laboratory of it was Hope that supported the steps o Newton into the dim solitude of unknown worlds it was and never i lion of Both his companions looked j this arrangement a dish of OTT air Completely Preserved THE GREATEST AGE Charles Elliston was a dependent on the bounty of Mr Morton He had found i him one day when about four years old i about the streets of the city a lost child He kindly took him home and i used every endeavor to discover his parent all to no purpose At last finding his efforts were useless he raised and educated him as his own her husband Mrs Morton was of a proud and spirit and consequently could not bear one whose birth was so uncertain as j present of his father's j continued as a equipage with fiad on his It was that scattered the Persian before red and handed Mr Morton a between Hickey and the of it was the that the poison be sprinkled the purple hues of l served up in tha peas of discovered of our child have we heard anything up Seemingly overcome with the j by Hickey and then by the him but God be Charles he has ment of pleasing he j keeper placed on the General's table But us a son in you approaches his daughter and patting her aloof them she took the 3 But was there no mirk by which he on tha cheek could have been known if he been left behind as you first asked Charles eagerly Yes there was n ral aside and warning him thai the peas Come come i were disclosed the whole plot his life What fallowed maybe scar 01 a s teeth in own dear Charles has re- in the city and will bo here cheer up my and on his la ft wrist and besides he wore ho began to pace tho floor He is here lit She had diffused her two eldes Helen the youngest that of young Elliston some of this spirit into TO THE GREATEST A GE j bu a noble and kind and looked only with compassion on bat noble youth He was now 2 his neck with Chavles engraved in livery drove up to the door from with tears in a alighted here 11 said Mrs which a young gentleman alighted is Mr Thompson too how giad 1857 P R STORM 1857 COMMISSION of La Crease and Depot personally to sales of au all other and Also attention to purchasing ana lor- waf ding goods that may be ordered from tins AT Jen Co Lunk Co MOAK A PEABODY V D Esq Hon Wat J H Esq O J B VAM Esq lion WM It AT MILWAUKEE TO BBC Co JAMES H U or pOOr it or troubled i years Of age and the in- licad or oilier eruptions but l about jc o were heaped upon him he feh but would be cured It will also remove all It was true when Mr Morton pies from tho skin Prof Wood's Hair p chow the least dis- will do all this sec circular and tho was present none me uis respect toward him but omy served ANN to him feel it acutely in his arms presence It was on this very mentioned j first but been so often by that a new insult had been i How quackery and quack hair dyes I j a determined not to live was disposed to ein her eyes Then father said Charles to introduce them lo one another his arm and drawing from his bo- don't see why you his wife som a locket which he i Thompson's hip your j son an they stood next they were locked Mrs j though your Charles as you call lost him be as rich now as You know he left word that he was going to soe s she pronounced f day ou which he first loot in f y Orleans he was poor and the thousand another clay where lie was exposed to t quack remedies untill met you in I Nor WOUW have caused him one feeling fi Ull cai cc t beau for Mr Morton head now he was DJ found it Charles who entered easily presumed Hickey was arrested us said and immediately tried by a court martial The charges were mutiny and and of holding a dence with the enemies of the colonies These charges were proved and Hickey was convicted and sentenced to death This sentence was executed on the of June by Provost Marshal at eleven o'clock of tho forenoon upon between the encampments of the brigades of Gen Spencer and Lord In a letter of July 1st 1776 an writes Last Friday in the was executed in a field between the nels McDougall and camp summer over the of Titian breathed the solemn repose of heaven the divine heads of Raphael But Hope has a holier signification peaks very beautifully of Christian happiness being folded up in the bosom of In the of the good man indeed is naVer absent in the ness of winter and in the bloom of spring it is alike present to cheer to comfort and to exhort in each other's i lasl wovd a then turning to Emma he for ha he pressed to bosom a sister I mom be to an 1 i v ii r i wise that directed my steps to j tha the presence of my father's house It is Charles tnat soldier belonging to stands before you i his Excellency Gen Washington's With n shriek cf delight Helen for mutiny and conspiracy being one of herself into his arras and thoso who framed and was soon to have put while D C Flour Feed Store ready to buy and self all kinds of county some you gave me as induced of your my skepticism and reference I I call ana do most cordially and confidentially recommend its by all who would have their hair restored from or pray by reason of or age to color mid beauty nnd by all you rip person's who their hair beautiful and Very truly and yours SOLOMON It was near the close of a summer day that a steamboat touched the wharf i one of our Southern cities and from its crowded decks poured a stream of weary travelers eager once again to set foot upon laud Amongst the last who stepped on shore was a hand who bent his way toward splendid mansion or Morton It was the birth night ball of his lovely and accomplished daughter Helen given in honor of them what had Tlie joy eye of the hied girl as she hung fondly upon arm was equalled by iii execution that horrid plot of ing the staff officers securing the passes town on the arrival of the ministerial place of execution was near where now Grand and Christie streets intersect each other Thus by the fidelity of a was the lifa a moment corrupt as those A OF Milton makes religion the foundation of true greatness In promising take something that might be of use to his country he says f This not to obtained but by devout to thai nal Spirit that can enrich all utterance and knowledge aud sends out his seraphim with the hallowed fire of to touch and purify the lips of whona he To this must be added industrious and lect reading steady observation arid in- sight into all seemly and generous arts and affairs I says Lord Mr Justice Gould trying a case st and when had about two he Here are men in the box you cave Detroit arid when 1 trot it we co try it cm Mrs Mann's hair as the surest test ol It has done all assured mo it a stranger with which he her louk j who attempted to Section How deep was the bliss of i not have been the consequences that moment making amends by its de- Imps the death of Washington S for the long years of doubt and abr i the revolutionary arms her nineteenth youth with a valise in his birth day and the magnificent saloons were T talking from the thronged by the youth beauty elite the shipping of the metropolis all you a age to and hud no recommendations bribe her what to of neath their fervent there lurk of malice or envy d It was not long before Charles renewed again boyish vows ledged to Helen and the blushing girl for i it be that in a short time the attempt at Independence would followed That oner woman's to a sacred trust may hare changed the whole history of America little the fate of nations united at the altar mother I possessed of the slightest Yousa AMERICA ON BIS Stranger 0 you yoi laid one of eleven he has gone about business ho left his With A reporter oil in hii tad prepared to tba of Hip in entire for abandoned ah recent on Canton bj and forces Mat women's tor five yeart AKD BO BUL rork in and part an seisin Sorner cannot revail on but Uie use of his it has its donut to tlie of ct country for all of locks iron nd al best and all will to witli the utmost V and Ic rivaling the Mr Shelton Mackenzie went over Mr Besond opposite the Post Office wish mv quired At times in giddy whirl Bancroft's six volume critically and BiW tho excitement was past a of the of i have doxen ot on for nt Little back and him for Dan auger by ith be so familiar if you J ver Tlie in is raore justly to be that of him who is and der a and True eloquence consists it saying all that is proper and nothing more n our of a log wi er r te Did we not flatter of would