Waukesha Democrat (Newspaper) - October 1, 1850, Waukesha, Wisconsin VOL 3 WAUKESHA WIS OCTOBER 1 1850 NO 12 THE DEMOCRAT 18 PUBLISHED MORNING GEORGE BY in advance SI 00 if not paid within throe months H2 00 will be charged inserted at the usual rates ol Union No 3 meets on Tuesday at 2 lock in the afternoon at S of T Hall Prairie Lodge No 23 meets Tuesday evening Strangers members ot the order are invited to attend Division No 16 Regular ings on Monday evening of each week G Physician Surgeon at his residence on River st J Physician and at his residence at Inw Notary ho Wis noli titi in ruul i int A W at m tin mi in All woik I to it Cutting f o S A COOK AUDI in s it LHW anil c tier tli i V A f in I MI For Arthur's Hume TOO GOOD CREDIT BV T H icy K W al Luw Stono 13 W S it it ot Y to nuci ik i ther mid the OUN K iALl and ut Liw in M HAM Connie HIM At and Com t E and nl Law A IJ ill to Ix1 ID hin at Luv tice oi Peace in business lie will found nt e a u oi at Kcl DC MCI in M at his C Agent Wis iix n id D F M TODD TODD D T and 11 eon A am Struct Uie iN B Ho Medicines lot sale I v ui iase 1 u in: visT 111 il Krinil in OiiMids i u C UK uio i tSco ii GnN HUJ H K R iS 111 Dij G li I lie nlj -in nil- C Kt 1 ic 2 Kton it- is in i unit ani E B EST and Residence the Court House N B All pertaining to clone as usual in most approved and warranted equal iti point of and durability to in the United States and charges tit 20 1849 2 A GAIM offers his professional services to the inhabitants of nnd hopes oy an er elusive attention to the business of his to merit a continuance of former Davis Drus Store Residence at near Methodist Church August 3 1849 on ill leave on Monday Wednesday and Friday of each week lor Madison via Ottawa Palmyra Whitewater Cold Ft Atkinson bridge Christiana and Cottage Grove and arriving at Madison on the following days and by the same route leave Madison on the same days and reach Thursday and Saturday in lime for the Stage to Milwaukee ble and every attention paid to the comfort and convenience cf I H TURNER Live and Let Live F House Sign and carriage L ROBERT GILL Tenders his to the Public lor the liberal patronage taites the privilege of saying thai he is now bettor prepared than ever before to execute any order m his line of ness in manner thai cannot fail to sive faction imitations of wood and ble on glass ornamental painting Ac r Shop in Bacon's Stone Block near Bridge Feb 8 1850 Let me show yon one of the cheapest ces of cloth I have seen for six said a smiling to ii young married man whose income from i clerkship was in the neighborhood of hundred dollars Don't trouble yourself Mr re- plied the customer The silk and buttons are all 1 want Oh no trouble fit all Mr Jacobs no ble at all It is a pleasure for me to show my said the storekeeper drawing from n shelf the piece of cloth he had mentioned and throwing it upon the counter he added as he unfolded the glossy broad cloth and slapped his hand upon it ly there is something worth looking at and it's cheap as dirt Only our R yard and worth six every cent of it 1 bought it at auction yesterday at a great cheap enough remarked Jacobs half as he bent down to inspect the cloth but I've no money to spare now Don't any replied Edwards At least nol from men us you Jacobs looked up tuto the in some doubt ns to his Your credit is said Edwards ling I've no credit I never asked a man to trust me in my returned the tomer Til you to half that is in my said Jacobs feeling a hnle fluttered by a compliment like this I've no in the dry I'oods line to that extent of silk and a dozen of buttons for my wife are all that 1 require at present You want a new replied the ring storekeeper arid he laid hand upon the oi Jacobs coat and examined it closely Tli s one is getting rusty and threadbare A man like you should have some regard to his appearance Let me see Two y aids of this bountiful cloth will cost but eight dollars and won't send in your for Six months Eight dollars for a me broadcloth coat j Think of that of this kind don't grow on every tree While Edwards talked thus he was dis- play mg the goods he wished to sell in a way to let the rich surface catch the besl points ot light and his quick eyes soon him that Ins customer was becoming tempt cd cut you off a coat pattern he king up stick I know you it Don't hesitate about the mutter Jacobs did not stiy although the word WHS his tongue While he jet hesitated the coat pattern was measured off and severed tho piece it came i i a satisfied half tone fiorn the storekeepers lips And the greatest bargain jou ever had You svill want trimmings of As he spoke be turned to the shelves for padding lining silk and while Jacobs half bewildered stood looking on cut from one piece and another until the coat mings were all nicely laid out This done Mr Edwards faced his customer again bing his hands from an internal feeling of de- light and said You must have a handsome vest to go with this of course vest is a little remarked cobs as he glanced downwards at n garment which hail seen pretty fair service If that's tho best one you have it will nev er do to go with a new said Edwards in a decided lone Let me show you a ful piece of black satin And su the per went on tempting his customer until he sold him a vest and pantaloons in addition to the coat After he found no m selling him a silk dress for his wife Waving indulged himself with an entire suit he could not upon reflection think of passing by his wife who had been wishing for a silk dress lor more six months Can't think of any thing ed Edwards I shall be happy to supply whatever you want m my line Nothing more I answered Jacobs whose was already thirty-five dollars and lie had yet to pay for making his coat loons nud vest But you will want arious articles of dry goods In n family is something called for every day Tell Mrs Jacobs to send down for whatever she may need Never mind about the money Your is good with me lor any amount Air Jacobs went wife of what he had done woman was delighted wish you had tak n n piece of she We want sheets and pillow cases badly You can get a replied Jacobs We wont have to pay for it now Edwards will send the at the end of six months and it will be easy enough to pay for it then Oh yes easy enough responded the wife confidently So a piece of muslin was procured on the credit account But things did not stop there A credit account is too often like n breach in the stream is nt first but soon increases to a ruinous current Now that want had found a want became more clamorous than lefore a day passed that Mr or Mrs Jacobs did uot order something from the store not dreaming ple souls 1 that an alarmingly heavy debt was accumulating against them As to the income of Mr Jacobs it was not large He was as has been intimated a clerk in a wholesale store and received a ary of seven hundred dollars a His ily consisted of a wife three children and be had found it necessary to be prudent ia all his expenditures in order to make both ends meet Somewhat independent in he had never asked ere Jit with any one with whom he dealt and no one offering ii of six months under the new system L us see if his good credit has been of any real to nim It was so very pleasant to have things or for a little display without feeling that the drained the purse heavily And weak vanity on the J i- cobs was gratified by the flattering opinion jf his honesty entertained by Edwards tl e storekeeper His credit was le was proud of the fact But the day of rec approaching and at last it came Notwithstanding the credit at the dry gooi s store there was no more money in the yout g clerk's purse nt the end of six months thun t the beginning The cash that would e gone for clothing when necessity called fc r additions to the funnily wardrobe had been spent for things the purchase of which d have been omitted but for the that tie dollars were in the purse instead of in tl e hands and tempted needless expenditure As the end of six months credit approached the of Jacobs began to re t upon the dry goods and to be di turbed by u feeling of anxiety As to trn amount of this he was in some ty but be thought that it could not be than forty dollars That was a sum fc r him to owe as he had nothing and current expenses were fully up to his income It was now for the fir t time in his life that Jacobs pressure of debt and nt times is if it would almost suffocate him One evening he came home fooling moi J sober than usual He Imd thought of else all day besides his at the store O i meeting Ins wile he saw that something wrs wrong What ails said he Are you was the simple reply But her eye j dropped as she made it and her husband that lips slightly quivered Something is wrong said the band Tears stole to the wife's cheeks from neath her half-closed lubore i with the weight of some pressure Tell mo urged Jacobs if is wrong Your manner alarms me Am an of the children Oh no no Nothing of was ly answered Edwards ho 3 sent in his That was to be expected of course sai Jacobs with forced calmness The t was for only six months But liow much 13 the His voice was unsteady as he th question twenty And poo Mrs Jacobs burst into Impossible exclaimed the startled hus band There is some mistake A hundred nnd twenty is the And Mrs Jacobs it from her bosom Jacobs eagerly at the footing the long column of figures where were nu morals to the value of one hundred and twen It cant said in a troubled Edwards has a mistake So I thought when I first looked at th replied Mrs Jacobs recovering yet speaking in a sud voice But I am sorr to say it is all right I have been over am over it again and find an error Oh how foolish I have been It si easy to get things when no money had to bi paid down But I never thought of a bil like this Jacobs sat for somo moments his eye upon the floor He was thinking rapidly So much for a good he said a length taking a long breath What a fool have That cunning fellow Edwards has gone to the of me completely He knew that if he got me on his books hi would secure three dollars to one of my mou ey beyond what he would get under tht system One hundred and ty dollars in six Ah Are we happier now tor the extra dry goods we have Not a Our bodies have been a little better clothed and our love of dis- play gratified to some extent But has al that wrought a compensation for the pain o day of Poor Mrs Jacobs was silent Sadly returned Jacobs Living is expensive and I have six mouths to feed That being the said the employer as you have been to us and your vices are valuable we must add something to your salary You now receive seven hundred dollars Yes sii We will call it eight hundred and fifty A sudden light flashed into the face of the unhappy clerk which the employer already blessed in blessing another And it shall be for the last as well as for the coming year 1 will fill yon out a EDUCATION It is the vice of the age to substitute ing for educate tho head arid to tion more heavily in his bosom for the question suggested a discharge from his ness having been dull for some time I 1 1 was looking at your account forget lhat here js a more resumed the employer find that it is for js drawn op o ose Have you nothing at an c when does not f j Not a dollar I am sorry to returned thc to a vation of it and the child is solicited to re- flection when he is only capable of sensa- tion and emotion In infancy the attention and the memory are only excited strongly by things which impress the senses and move the and a father shall instil more solid and available instruction in an hour spent in the fields where wisdom and goodness are ex- seen felt than in a month spent in the study where they are in stereotyped aphorisms No p doubts that precocious chi dren in fifty cases for one are much the for a hundred and fifty dollars as the balance due you up to this day The feelings of Jacobs were too for him to trust himself with oral thanks as he received the check which his employer immediately filled up but his countenance fully expressed his grateful emotion A little while afterward the young man entered the store of Edwards who met him with a smiling face I've come to settle your snid Jacobs You needn't have troubled yourself about the storekeeper though is always acceptable The money was paid and the receipted when Edwards rubbing his hands an action peculiar to him when in a happy frame of mind And now what shall I show the young man's grave re- worse for the discipline have undergone home and told his she unreflecting lo the tempting inducement held out by Edwards he bad regulated his outgoes fey actual income By this means he aged to keep even with the world though cot to gain any advantages on the side of fortune us see how U was with him at the eud she repenting of her part in the folly they hue committed Tea time came but neither the nor wife could do much more than taste food That for a hundred and twenty dollars hao taken away their appetites The night that brought to neither of them n very re- freshing and 10 the morning awoke and little inclined foi conversation But one thought was in thc mind of of Edwards and one feeling in tho mind of his for her part in the work of embarrassment will you said Mrs Jacobs in o that was unsteady looking face with glittering eyes as she laid her hand upon his arm causing him to pause as he was about leaving the house I'm sure I dont replied the young man gloomily 1 shall have to see Edwards I suppose and ask him to wait But I'm sure I'd rather take a Good He'll sing a different For a moment or two longer the husband and wife stood looking at each other Then us each sighed heavily the former turned a way and left the house His road to business was past the store of Mr he now avoided the street in which he lived and went a whole block out of his way to do so am I to pay this murmured the unhappy pausing in his work for thc twentieth time aa he sat at his desk and ing hia mind up to troubled thoughts Just at this moment the senior partner in the establishment cotne up and stood beside him Well my young said he kindly how are you getting Jacobs tried to smile and look cheerful at he well But his voice bad in E touch of despondency Letma remarked the employer a pause your regular year is np to-day is i Yes replied Jacobs his heart sinking Don't say replied wards I've just got in a beautiful lot of spring goods I've no more money to answered Jacobs That's of no consequence Your credit is good for any amount A world too good I said Jacobs be- ginning to button up his coat with the air of a man who has lost his and feels disposed to look well that his purse doesn't follow in the same unprofitable direction Flow What do you mean asked the storekeeper My good has taken a hundred and twenty dollars oat of my replied cobs I don't understand said Edwards looking serious It's a very plain answered Jacobs This credit account at your store has induced myself and wife to purchase twice as many goods as we would otherwise have bought That has taken sixty dollars out of my et and sixty dollars more have been spent under temptation because it was in the purse instead of being paid out for goods credited to us on your books JSow do you under The storekeeper was silent Mr Edwards said cobs I have cash to spare I shall be happy to spend it with you but no more book accounts for me Wise will they be who profit by the rience of Mr Jacobs These credit accounts are a curse to people with moderate incomes and should never under any pretence be ed The mind seems to have been strained ami the foundations of insanity are laid When the studies of maturer years are stuffed into the head of a child people do not reflect on the anatomical fact that the brain of a man that the one is confirmed and can bear other is growing and requires re- pose to force the attention to abstract to load the memory with chronological and historical or scientific short to expect a child's brain to bear with impunity the exertions of a man's is just ns rational as money jt to tho same sort of exper on its muscles Tho first eight or ten years of life should to tho education of thc the formation of principles rather than to the acquirement of is usually termed ledge Nature herself points out such a course for the emotions are then the liveliest and not easily moulded being as yet ed by It is from this source that the of men arc hereafter to draw their sum of happiness or misery the action of the majority are under all circum- stances determined much more by feeling than by reflection in truth life presents an infinity of occasions where it it is essential to happiness that we should feel rightly very few whf re it ia at all necessary that we should think profoundly Up to the year of life very great changes are going on in the structure of the brain and demand therefore the utmost at- tention not to interrupt them by improper or over excitement Just that degree of should be given to the brain at this period as is necessary to its health and the best is oral instruction exemplified by objects which strike the senses It is perhaps unnecessary to add that at this period special attention should bo given both by parents and teachers to the is nothing more oar daily thun the power find inveteracy of habits insomuch that any decided propensity is strengthened by every act of indulgence and virtuous principle is more firmly established than be- fore by every new act of resolute obedience to its dictates The law which connects our actings of or of youth with the acter ot manhood is the identical law which connects our actings in time with our ter in eternity The wuy in which the al and spiritual discipline of youth prepares for n virtuous and and on the other baud the succession of cause and effect from a profligate youth and dishonest manhood to a disgraced and worthless old age just the succession also of cause effect Between the misdeeds find depravities of our on earth and our endurance of and Chalmers D D FinsT anxiety of ting something for their not enough for their entire support at least enough set them well afloat in very com- mon among parents This is and arises from parental weakness Educate your children well and you have done enough or them Teach them to depend upon their own this can only be done by Milling them upon their own resources in no other way can they acquire strength In setting a young man afloat on the wealth by his father is like tying bladders under the arms of a swimmer or rather one that cannot swim ten chances to one he will ose his bladders and his sole dependence and then where is Teach him while to swim a little with his own strength and then he will be prepared to enter the stream of life and take care of himself out any helps Under such he will be likely to buffet the waves far more success CHEMICAL ANALYSIS or the moir ot the London Chemical Society there is an interesting paper by Worrington on the analysis of tea in which be states that he has not only removed the of the coloring matter or glazing from green tea hot be has leen able to analyze the matter and ve it by chemical evidence to consist of Prussian and gypsum principally Sp that iii fact the ot green tea as it the indulge in a leverage of Chinese paint and might imitate the mixture by dissolving Prussian blue and of hot water The Chinese Jo not drink this painted only sell r PROFESSIONAL and which are the inquired a child of the showman you please my paid and have a right to choose development of ihc child Pure ar and free exercise arc indispensable and wherever either of those arc withheld the will be certain to extend selves the w hole future life The seeds of protracted and hopeless mg have in instances been sown in the con- of rho chi J simply through of great fundamental law and the time has come when the united voices of these innocent victims should ascend to the ears of every parent and every teacher in the land Give us free air and wholesome exercise leave us to develop our expanding energies in accordance with the laws of and full scope for the elastic and bounding impulses of our young Londun Quarterly Review THERE is A DESTINY THAT CHAFFS OUR ENDS Considerably more than half a tury ago there in a small borough in Scotland a poor widow who earned n humble but respectable livelihood for herself and only son by keeping a stall lor the sale of crockery ware in tho mm ket place It was a time when lived than they do now and although the word not been in- vented the thing implied by it was greatly in vogue The towns people then were not un- accustomed to the and rough jokes of a gentleman who had lately succeeded to an enormous property arid n peerage and was no particular surprise manifested when Into one evening the humble stall of the widow overturned in an after-dinner frolic the brittle ware it contained smashed upon the street The aggressor was Lord father of the Right Hon Mr Maule Next morning the proprietress of the stall waited upon his lordship nnd the claim for damages was soon settled to the satisfaction of all parties And now my good said the over- thrower of the crockery ware is there any thing else that lean do for The widow replied had an only son a sharp little fellow whom she would wish to see receiving a better education than lier ted means would enable her to bestow on him Lord at once promised the ry aid He as good as his word LiUle Josey sent for The intelligence and sharpness of the boy were readily recognized and highly commended and he was ot once placed ir an excellent school Such the curiously caused ment of a long career of industry and honor The little the poor son was no other than JOSEPH HUME one of the most distinguished members of England's ment of Old Globe following of Old tion ol the undoubtedly of tho c Id li Constitution 4 i 1 by Commodore win u she the tiM corvettes superior fore filch erf to old 32 Thf American ate WHS scientific nnd By no could either nf the British obtain n position to rake the Shift their aa would Old them zing both vessels During the instead hi a more tlic ing to I lie nun of his The tu the m unusual thing with Is The Lieutenant in to the tho fact bomd ship IMS struck Commodore the brittle is wnn SI F order the to strike up Dood e Here the Commodore took a pinch of Hid Better whip the other first elio Lieutenant taking the went to Jn a fow minutes the lowered the crois of Old to and stripes and the battle ended The somewhat rebuked his premature exultation upon the of the first rut her shy of his com- mand but beckoning to him s ud u smile ijuu the hand had bi tier strike up Yankee now In un that strain g in the breeze 03 no other than a Yankee can it urn the crew shouted forth ol victory no other u Yankee erew can Facts Swine We have received from Mr Rood of Adrian some facts in regard lo the of swine which are ot tance to farmer Mr R remarked that he bad ieng observed that old sows made much heavier than front young sews he related an instance which places the matter in a very striking light lie had two BOWS of the breed of w iich was year old aad the three tho former being out of the Both had a litter of on the same night acd as a part of bom litters were de- litten were pat together and nursed older sow The pigs of the younger ww were ising but they np were alike and awt they came of to older sow those of the young Former of i appointed to meet nt 12 Seven of them were b t tho came bustling in apologies for being t- quarter of nn hour behind lie lime The tune said he m iy without my 1 no iden of its being so A Quaker present snid Friend I urn not sure Unit thy gy It were n matter of thou shouldst have thine own of an hour but there seven besides whose time thou consumed tma in the whole to two hours nnd one of it only was own property HAROTO HEAT S M Van of this IK mm our of soil mg and rind a h sirres of ho has find n halt bush of spring The of rhe nest Camilla equal in every to winter The soil was simply over 11 rhr wheat on in will be troubled to beat tint i fiom their highest farms Japanese have a very efficient arid ohey the laws from a sense of honor rather than from force In tnc whole there is not a public executioner When a man commits crime that ia ad- judged worthy of death he receives an official notification that such a day is appointed for him tr die nt such an hour time always be- allowed the condemned to arrange his affairs At the appointed hour he his friends and bids them farewell and then rips open his own bowels If you cannot be happy in one way be py in mother and this faculty of disposition wants but little aid from philosophy for health and good humour are almost tho whole affair Many run about after felicity like an absent man seeking for bis it is on his head or in his hand Itis impossible to people understand their for it requires knowledge to perceive therefore he that can it hath it nol An Act to take the sense of the well said Partington if things ain't coming to a pretty pass these tures want to take everything away from a think they might have left alone there's precious little of em lo amire any so saying the old lady dropped and relapsed a profound choly A lawyer tire honors A brother of the bar reminded him of his error and he immediately apologized it the the heat of debate I called yoar honors take voar honors rick you fool what yon Hale after that rabbit when gun no lock Hush hush the rabbit don't know that snid n juvenile to an there goes pa with n yoke of to a sled my said the it h ry vulgar to say so yon should 9 mir of gentleman cows Attached to Robert ih Sir a pompous wbd undertook to bully an editor do TOO know tbat I take your paper t Pre no you do taka replied the of the of my honett lately about ki the moraine f He wbo without or confound him BM them an No sif f profits my ant