Whitewater Register (Newspaper) - December 17, 1859, Whitewater, Wisconsin PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY Hi 1ST IxT Editor and Proprietor Office Xo a Building Third Story CO WIS TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION THE will be furnished to Office and Mail at and to who receive their by the 00 per annum all be in advance To Clergymen and 00 per annum paper continued after the expiration of the time paid for TERMS OF ADVERTISING lints or less make a I 3w I 1 Sw 3m j ly 1 SI 00 j 00 2 ii 10 3 00 4 fiO G 00 J 10 00 00 3 j 4 00 I 6 Oi S 00 1 12 00 20 00 00 X 00 40 00 f ii under contract mutt be marked Iff vf or will bf continued and charged for until order fd out Di and fif 50 morf Deaths gratis bitt ond charged full rut's half Transient If paid for invariably in advance discontinuing before thf expiration of contracts urill be as aLw charge wilt and Notices not connected leith regular business not xrt'diny six year Each additional line Communications should be t H L Whitewater Wai worth Co VOL 3 WHITE WATER WIS SATURDAY DECEMBER 17 1859 NO 143 II FALL AND WINTER GOODS J M CROMBIE At his Store corner of MAIN AND FIRST STREETS XEW TRIBUTE pHE more than JL old and over Tiro Hundred Thousand every And Ternary of onr in what it beV uf rind whatever to in Virtue Industry and it wiSi to uf the Black but uf Wh tf Monopoly and on by Tuil rind certain reward that evil of in it full If policy of J mav needed IPO IE TRY The Burial Day of Irving i thti N V Tho of on Mi nii P pi o and rhe in the our sunni i we have a friend or tin 1 himself J L r E M n r r 1 1 S 1 tho attention of to SEASONABLE Adapted to for QUALITY CHARLES io V Salisbury late V C Cv IV ful ami liia Stock of j in of leaving children in fanner is too his most In while every other uf thru spirit the of other countries tho is t lie truly only the due ind of our internal t n of the the nf a from of j to of tlie Picnic and j to us calculated to the IS All kind of I timber Tickets nnd Cedar AKo for find manufactured V Horning Milwaukee which will be sold cheap Call and sue M P at Fort Atkinson Office nnd Railroad over the A corner of Mai of 135 m 4 M and ta Dry and Ac corner of Main and First 1.13 X 1 N R Y A 1C 1 X S Notary Public and Conveyancer County a Abstract of the the sale of by thu Air rut for the pale of Roal of ktc 11 O G FRANCIS and Retail in Dry No 2 Cen or tho lif intr of Thf ii Ii of find STYLE conflict d moment tnt f and fully MI and under a in thi if i bo erery of trul DRESS RICH BLACK SILKS French and English V f h the anil on the corner of Whitewater now for nnd of patronage T ar Attorney fvt Con- County for promptly to V SON of all of Cloth V Yarn for Wool ana nil ic Km at County Wi a large stock of MAN SPM FJA Rj NES CO and on Aii f 4 on It.iilroud a 1 in ce north the JOHN IJ Wholesale Surgical of the Mortar N 11 D n fee Store on Main J in all of Drain Strict nf The paid for Corn Jcc 1 X KELLOGG tlor at Law t of Main ami SHAWLS CLOTHS THE DOMESTIC STOCK ivor tin ljc vania h nearly every 1 a wherever he not Tree of the of the i i tiie of of People m tae find cannot that the T-e in accord once with the of and mail for fuller al rid shal and extended our itrn and onr ue mav haili -on an exponent of or as a mirror of the world We i not to nor in the nr of intelligence we i that fur enterprise H hy and in public Oil es to connive nt the of j or other prize j of a- a- proiriptit ide i but endeavor not 10 winle tite fortner The will bu it been while we constantly to j evi r feature day a critic on tho i The verdict of the tl cif on- the by j and We tin -o uhr in lieve the ra j influence of our to be ro aid I that nee through an incro.o.-'1 of onr YORK doar pa Xo or lit And loaves flock A on Nor by Bummer -hndoiv the fall where fled For he whose fancy e A A- a- tiie fair And the iud dell lln own forever lie with England's And the brave of Spain lore and hij brain in old arcade A- the Moorish fount at the To ruined beneath the An I and wit in lire now uith And How to hire life And bl 1 i ever writton His I sing were passed in writing the Life i of work completion of I u a low months sinoe Irving was fond of retirement nnd not avoiding yet found his in tlie and tions of of were proverbial and his friends as also whose regard for the thor led them to visit him were cordially welcomed and liberally entertained Con- of every nature was distasteful to him and in his own opinions ho never obtruded them upon others nor esteemed a less because lie from him He hud few or no animosities and to a large that greatest of nil Christian lie could something pood all men To his in the literary was always courteous and liberal and for the humblest I he ever had a kind word of encouragement I Their overlooked but failed not to acknowledge their Concerning his own productions he was ex- I modest but svas ever ready to praise j the works of another lie had lived down his assailants who in the outset of his I literary career had maligned him and he died he had long lived the most honored author of his time and an example to all writers A nation mourns his loss Thomas on Slavery Since tho in the house of have undertaken to establish -t i is brood What pensive charms As if with mid Our mutual pay he loved vu II a full heart awed to I air that fragrant with autumnal A veil of ind Inw the on of to patient tail alons Mi- I ike a rind in white art brnad crystal fio I- unusually embracing all the Left brands of SHIRTING CALICOES M H Grocer Ana funeral unit Produce Store on Street ill tin head of the Market Having of at all on a of the public patronage is 14 FLANNELS AnO in all of DOMESTIC GOODS THIIU'N'E n to l more 1 f an brook anu J Hollow fondly Ti n ii iy n t STEWART tmd in Foreign ami Domestic Mill of Also in of country J H J W I It KT ife and in Druff Stationery Wet and Dry Store No 3 Central Main THOMAS of Wagons Ac and all of done to ortler Simp on St door to ter fie Wolf factory 112 A TANNER fc Co t And 2 Commonwealth Whitewater Wholesale and Denier in Foreign ind Dry Groceries Crockery inK Cap- MiUiuery Tut Ware and cr annum i- mailed to ce 7 lul for -ix TORIC T iv and i tv mains the with C M r fir ml the i important We shall a- heretofore rrake XE a Literary I a- n find we are that it remain in of family Out Copy one i Copies one five Copies one Ten to Ten ovev to of great world Washington Irving Home poison otiose was 50 ever died more peace with tlie more revered than censorship and propose to ostra endorse Helper's Impending Crisis of the I their attention has been directed to i another incendiary publication of tho same sort which has hud extensive circulation in tho South We refer to Notes on wherein mav be found pp Vol the eloquent denunciation of There must doubtless be an unhappy on the manners of our people by the existence of slavery among The whole commerce between master and slave is a perpetual exercise of the most boisterous passions and most despotism on the one part and degrading submissions on the other Our children this and learn to imitate for man is an imitative animal This quality is all the germ of education in him his cradle to his grave he is learning to do what IIP sees others do If a parent could tind no motive either in his philanthropy or his self love for restraint the intemperance of passion toward slave it sould always be n cient one that his child is present But generally it is not sufficient The parent the child on catches the ments of wrath puts on the same airs in the circle of smaller slaves gives a to the worst of passions and thus nursed educated and daily exercised in ranny cannot but be hy it with peculiarities The man must be a prodigy who can retain manners and 1 morals undepraved by such And -i hat nutst the be loaded permitting one-half tho thus to trample the rights of the other transforms those into despots and into enemies destroys tha morals of the one part and the amor patria of tho er For if the slavo can have n country in this world it must be any other than that in which ho is born to live labor for an- Clark and His Work The Missouri Democrat talks to Sir Clark one of the Representatives from that State who opened the thus slavery agitation in Con- this a rude symbolic age such men as Benton Clay and Webster would be each represented in the net of slaying a gon fierce minotaur or other hideous expression of some such moral monster as Treason or Disunion But these illustrious characters furnish no model for imitation to a man of the mental calibre and moral status of John K Clark He is adequate to no manifestation of wisdom or patriotism A small demagogue lie is of being anything of a notoriety un- less he is wholly nn incendiary He is just the sort of man to bo used as n tool by the conspirators of the cotton States Tho ment in the House of representatives at Washington and the simultaneous ment at Richmond are parts of one plot It is evident that the Slave democracy have de- termined to adopt the same tactics in the forthcoming Presidential contest which them victory in the last The phantoms of secession and civil are invoked already and with a more elaborate diabolism than ever The press recommends the exclusion of Northern manufactures from the Southern market the Governor of among other equally patriotic ures recommends the Legislature of that State to admit foreign goods free of duty and in quarters propositions are made for a dissolution of the Union contingent on the election to the Presidency of the to a nOR of National Convention r This ihc whole plot There shall e permitted to rule the country t the United States Irving in his life other in v hich he must lock np the possessed no terror for him j of his nature contributes as far as de- I ly quietly and painlessly we may presume i on his individual endeavors to the I thu diver cord was loosed the bowl evanishment of human race or entail I broken lie whom all men loved and his own miserable condition on the endless lighted to honor passed away in fulness generations proceeding from him With of and now rests from his labors I the morals of the people industry iy Mr Irving was born in York on the in a warm climate no j thirteenth of April and consequently man will labor for himself who can make was in his seventy-seventh year at another for him This is so true that of his which occurred on the of tlie proprietors of slaves a very small O HT brought into till market of the very best I quality nnU nt j of the twenty of After ordinary school education he began in LOW AS THE FAMILY 1 men a per THE I 1 A lareo paper the i important topics of the tune fin the correspondence from nil of the New York ami Produce Market proportion indeed arc ever seen to labor And can the liberties of a nation be thought have removed their only ion in the minds of the ile that those liberties are the gift of of Old be contributed a That they are not to be violated but series of papers to the Morning Chronicle with his I tremble for my edited by his brother Irving These that God that were some years collected i his justice cannot sleep forever that be no trouble it so long as the Slave democracy ar The people of to be misgoverned by an oligarchy under pain of civil war Shall the American ple be debarred their Constitutional right of electing whom they The Slave de- must think that the great mass of the people are cowards when they attempt to play such a desperate game as this The Free Slates were indeed ed if they permitted the enemies of the Un- ion to dictate to them who shall or who shall not receive their votes The knows nothing of sections but it is very explicit upon the point of what tutes ix election to the Presidency The candidate who receives the vote of a majority of the electoral college or that ing the vote of a majority of the States is President as soon as ho takes the of of- fice and the term of his predecessor expires Yet what do we hear and scp The very men who harp continually on the of the Constitution who never weary of charging their opponents with perpetual of it openly propose to it and all things of which it is supposed to be the Palladium if the people dare to exercise Iho rights which it guarantees to them the free States habitually violate the as the Slave democracy alleges why docs it not make some of its lation a wait for the tion of the Republican nominee whose tion would necessarily bo in accordance with the Constitution It will not dissolve the Union because the Constitution is violated but because power and spoils are lost to it Were such base motives ever before appealed to for the purpose of inciting to insurrection or as the slavery propagandists think to revolution 1 Any person sending a club of or over his sixteenth year the study of the law but secure when we have even at that period much time in firm literary composition the signature people hc contributed a i and published in a book of il health two In ISO I in visited and traveled Such ering numbers nature and natural means only a resolution of the wheel of fortune a change of arc among possible that H may become probable by The almighty has j in with James K j no attribute which can take sides with us in I to b the bej Family Paulding and his brother William Irving such a contest The way I hope is i Newspaper published in the World Wo published the a of i preparing under the auspices of Heaven for whimsical and humorous papers In J X-s to I over n large part of the continent and Great constantly Britain in after his return to Xew and Retail ill Fancy anil Pry Groceries UoU nnd Hoof and Taper nnd Crockery and done both ami Merchant work Meat Mid feed for sale paid for Client Store and office No t Central T and Retail Dealer Groceries Stone Ware Boots ami Shoes Jcc Store on Main Street above Whitewater SURO J r li nt for lilt his licit tho of the nf this Conspir JUSTICE OP TIIE PEACE I H Kami of the rvace in 2d of L A street When not in tlie at tlie Law Solicitor in Chancery and Notary Office iu Metropolitan Blork Outer street EXCHANGE A F Knicht Main Street Whitewater This been repaired and and be kept with a reca 1 to the rants and comfort of n and the carry to Mid from the free of Charce and all the Stapes Stop at House HOUSE Corner of Main ind Good Liver in connection carry and to alul frora thc ELY attend to all in their line and warrant ork to satisfaction inserted teeth filled cleaned etc Office Store Main Street H S KIKIN YOUNG AMERICA Billiard Saloon and Restaurant tri S M CO WHITEWATER Bl F MABBETT CO DEALERS in ail kinds of Pine Lumber Timber Cedar A stock of thoroughly seasoned Lumber now hand Tho of onr Lumber or our be beaten in this part of the B hope to all in linp Tie has constantly on hand n large of year TERMS One Copy one S Three Copies one Five Ten Copies to one address Ally larger Si Copies to of subscriber And 3111211 nt a Twenty or wii be to an copy n of of one hundred the Tribune nil to fend the Thc Weekly Tribune to mav commence any time Terms in All to be addrcsi-ed to HORACE t Co i Tribune New York Wheat Growers Bank Corner Main nnd First Streets H F Cashier Boots Shoes Rubbers AND DOING BUSINESS j The an der the of the T Ot f Milwaukee and also on all the ana procured iur Its nutno: from tho and compri tind of nnd SHoeB HATS AND A large assortment thc Styles midc of tlie material and in the manner IX S M O R T LARGE COMPLETE STOCK or and Cheap Goods which tbe public ara requested to AND EXAMINE of Interest Allowed on Special 70 t Spink Co State of County ef Sparta K I Tinkham Co K Park Bank New York Bank ef America New Tork ifc Co Hon D W Secretary nf State papers his veritable and inimitable History of Xew York by appeared In 1810 lie engaged in cial business with two of his brothers who were largely interested in the Liverpool trade In during the war he edited the Analectic and at the same j time served as Colonel and Aid-de-Camp in the military staff of the Governor of this State At the close of the war Mr Irving went to Europe for the purpose of making a second and more extended but tha affairs of his mercantile house becoming deeply involved he obliged to forego his purpose In ISIS while ilr Irving commenced the which was published at about thc same time both in England and America The success of this charming work stimulated him to further and following closely after he published Bracebridge the j of a Tlie Conquest of and thc Life published in procured fur its authur one of the two gold medals awarded by George IV for eminence in historical lore other being given to In July Irving was ed by General Andrew Jackson Secretary ot Legation to the American Embassy at London which he until the re- turn of in 1831 This j pointment to the President by Mr Van Euren In the of presented to him the degree of LL D In 1832 after ar absence of seventeen j years ilr Irving returned to York i and resumed his literary labors on the field emancipation nnd that this is disposed in thc order of to be with consent of the masters rather than by their tion How A TOAD PULLS nw His writer in the North Carolina Farmer tells the following About the middle of July I found a toad on a hill of melona and not wanting him to leave around He appeared sluggish and not inclined to move Presently I observed him pressing his elbows against his sides rubbing ward He appeared so singular that I watched to see he was up to After a few smart rubs his skin began to burst open straight along his back said I old fellow you have done it but he ed to be unconcerned and kept on rubbing until he had worked down all his skin into folds on his sides nnd then grasping one hind leg with his hands he hauled oil one leg of his pants the same as anybody would then stripped thc other leg in the j same wav He then took his cast forward between his forelegs into bis mouth and swallowed it then by raising and i ering his head swallowing as his head came down he stripped off the skin underneath until it came to his forelegs and then ing one of these with the opposite hand by considerable pulling stripped oft the skin changing hands he stripped the other and by a slight motion of the head he drew it from the throat and swallowed the The operation seemed to be an agreeable one and occupied but a short time The Kew York correspondent of the New Orleans Crescent is evidently ed at the aspects of public opinion ut the North Hear Unless something is done unless there is a new and a grand rally the Presidential nominee of the Black Republicans who will assuredly be Seward will quietly walk over the course so far as New York is concerned Were the Presidential election held row II Seward would receive the electoral vote of this State by There is no sense in ignoring facts So far as the Democratic party is concerned to defeat Seward in it is dead If Seward is defeated at ull next year it will be done by the combination of a Conservative Opposition Nothing else an defeat U Seward The old Brown has actually strengthened the Black Republicans There is no question about it ut you have not seen the end of that ess Old Brown will be hung IIo de- erves it Nevertheless his hanging will urnish ammunition for pulpits and 500 Republican papers and if the thunder roll and if the whole North doesn't and I shall gladly mistaken As 1 said before there s no use in concealing tho truth A rather amusing scene was nt the Columbus 0 Post Office the other morning The editor of the Fact relates A rough uncouth looking customer inquired for a letter at the general delivery He received one and not being sure that i was for him he asked J V j L UU Vli U f Paper Print number nf contributions to the lines to mm ins j bocker Abbotsford an Abbey of Pi abroad for 5.1557 Ii To Rent HANDSOME ROOMS IN THE second f lory of the Brick Block on the clerk to read Brooks with his In February 1842 Jlr Irving pointed Minister to Spaia by John Tyler I in lie resided till bis expired in This appointment i was recommended to the President by ilr friend and neighbor General Aaron Ott IS 104 the corner of Main ind over of county who was inquire the Bank j a member of Congress in he collected materials and Lot for j for his Life of and his 1 Sew and Ilon'e nil acre lot which was published after his re- of land in iae of turn to this country in About this jer n-l his Oliver II L t G one of the most pleasing and letter comes a hoppin I take my pen in hand to inform you tha we are all well and hope are enjoin the same blessin I am sorry to hear that you been on another drunken shouted the listener stop 1 say that ere for me here your five cents and fork that ere over And a general laugh of the by slanders he vanished C H has been as n special contributor fo the Boston Watch FATAL Sunday morning i melancholy and grievous accident took at the house of Mr Mrs A Seaver who had just sat down to breakfast with heir little boy about six months old whom hey had fastened in a child's chair close up o the table While the father in the act of taking a knife from the little one's land which he had taken off tho fearful that ho might cul himself with it he child made a spring at a cup of hot ee the contents of which unfortunately capsized down his breast and stomach calding him so badly that death ensued in ess than ten a specimen of the utility of we give the following sharp dent was called up by tho worthy of a celebrated college and asked tlie tion can a man see without was the prompt answer How cried the amazed professor can a man see eyes t Pray sir how do you make that IJe can see with one re- plied the ready wilted youth and the whole shouted with delight at his triumph over metaphysics cast steel bell weighing pounds about put up in the cupola of the new school Presbyterian church in Pa It was manufactured by the Messrs Viewers Co Sheffield England by order through their house in York The sound of steel bells is eaid to be arly clear melodious and penetrating They cost from five to eight cents a than composition bells British Government are about to abolish the system of purchasing sions in its army The prices actually paid for a Lieutenant Colonelcy of n regiment of horse have ranged from to The actual holders in every case are to be reimbursed out of tho treasury for the chase money paid by them Religious Miscellany or YOUB com- plain of your training your em- ployment your hardships never fancy that you could be something if only a different lot and sphere assigned you God His own plan and He knows what you want a great deal better than you do The very things that you most cate as fatal or obstructions are probably what you most want What yon discouragements are probably God's opportunities and it ii nothing new that the patient should dislike his medicines or any certain proof that they are poisons F a truce to all such impatience Choke that devilish envy which gnaws at your heart because you arn not in the same lot with others bring down your soul or rather bring it up to receive will and do His work in your lot in your sphere of obscurity against your nnd then you shall find that your condition is never opposed to your good but really consistent with it Henco it was that an required converts to ubido each one in calling wherein lie was called to fill bis place till he opens a way by filling it to some the man to till his house of bondage with love and duty tha laborer to labor the woman to be a woman tho to show themselves men all to acknowledge God's hand in their lot and seek to co-operate with that good design which lie most assuredly for them There must bo a complete renunciation of self-will God and religion be cally first nnd the testimony that we please God must bo the element of our peace And disciple 1 have known who did not have it for his joy God was lending him on shaping his life for him bringing him along out of one moment into the next year by year How sacred how strong in repose how majestic how nearly divine n life thus ordered The thought of a life which is to be the unfolding in this manner of a divine plan is too beautiful too vating to one indifferent or heedless moment Living in this manner every turn of your experience will be n discovery to you of God every charge a token of His fatherly counsel ness trial suffering falls upon you your defeats losses injuries your outward state employment relations seems hard unaccountable or nature might these will see aro parts or constitutive elements in God's beau- anil good plan for you and as such are to be accepted with n smile Trust Godl have an implicit trust in God and these very things will impart the highest zest to life If you were in your own will you could not bear them nnd if you fall at any time into your own will they will break you down But the glory of your condition as a Christian is that you are in the mighty and good will of God Hence it was that called his hero Grent Heart for no heart can be weak that is in the confidence of God See how it was with Paul ing all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge enduring with sublime unspeakable sufferings casting rything behind him and following on to prehend that for which he was apprehended lie had a great and mighty will but no self- will therefore he was true lion of the faith Away then with all feeble complaints all meagre and mean anxieties Take your duty and bo strong in it as God will make you strong The harder it is the stronger in fact you will be Understand also that the great question here is not you will get but what you will become The greatest wealth you cnn ever get will be in yourself Take your burdens and troubles and losses and wrongs if como they and will as your opportunities knowing that God has girded you for greater things than these Oil to live out such a life God appoints how groat a thing it is I to do the duties bear tho adversities finish tho and then to say with Christ who of us will be It is finished paper on Jonathan Edwards in the new volume of the American Cyclopedia prepared br Bancroft tho historian and is an admirable appreciation of the mental and moral and the career of that great man It sums up as The great representative of this period of transition is Jonathan Edwards En- gland and New Jersey in the age following Edwards applied more thought to the sub- ject of religious philosophy and systematic theology than the same amount of tion in any other part of the world nnd his influence is discernible in every leading mind Bellamy find Hopkins were his pils Dwight was his Smalley Emmons und many others were ers through Hopkins his influence reached Kirkland and assisted to mould the ter of Channing Edmonds sums up tha old theology of New England nnd is the fountain head of the new The toils of a century turned the to which men had been driven for liberty to say their prayers into a garden of plenty pence and joyous activity he that will trace tho corresponding transition of Calvinism from a haughty self assertion of the doctrine of Election against the pride of oppression to its of love as the central point of its view of creation the duty of the ated he that will know the working of the mind of New England in middle of last century and the throbbing of its heart must give his days nnd nigh la to the study of Jonathan Edwards last Waldo Emerson ook the desk of Theodore Parker's church uid delivered an essay on Morals In renting of the power which devotion to a great idea or principle will accomplish in individual and out in society and the world he alluded to the recent events in the ifu of John Brown The desire of giving reedom to those who were in establishing a moral intellectual mental had lifted nn obscure Connecticut farmer into the regions of rent man and made nil others appear as men It hard he said to find n all so noble man as this who lad dared to sacrifice life to a principle A ew such men the speaker asserted had done more for the world than nil the tribe of intellectual men mankind has ever seen In this connection Mr Emerson ro- cited the following very appropriate poem A man there onmo none toll Hearing rt touchstone in his hand And nil things in land its unerring A thousand transformations From fair to from foul to fair Tlie golden he did not share scorn the clothes Of heirloom prized so Wore many changed to chips and clods And even statues of the poos Crumbled beneath its touch the people cried The the profit far Our suffice us as they arc We vrill not have them tried But since they not avail To check his unrelenting They seized him test How onr But they slew him with their words And in the fire the Its doings could not be overturned Its undoings restored And stop all They strewed his ashes breeze They little guessed each grain of these Conveyed the perfect charm the only to Brown was given in the Mississippi the 10th tilt by Mr Graham of the future introduction of a to abolish existing laws against the introduction o slaves from into the Stale arid to legalize the holding of blacks in bondage introduced from foreign countries will be a of the slave trade in defiance of the laws of the United States j rascally old bachelor a man be key of the day i admits that he was in the wrong nnd the lock of the night tat a Toman great popularity of may be inferred from the that P Putnam the publisher disposed of nearly volumes