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Wisconsin Tribune

   Wisconsin Tribune (Newspaper) - June 24, 1852, Mineral Point, Wisconsin                               00 fo 1 50 for a than jpr Payment to bt mad in Me ana Single five Produce of nil kinds received 011 market inserted ly tho year at per line Nn 1 Third ui Month 7 f lull IOWA WO sill of o'clock P H Point wts p AV JUSTICE to prop for and sn lit kx at Ibo or I he Court V Wn at mid nil A Kunil i CMIM KM ff nil Mineral Point f at Ihn of S lilt 1.1 Ur tbv rai for ii W f prompt ttt M 1 him lo bo Tl I UK P Wn nf slid M run lu tMI in w corn HUN AT and In ami Win Ihn cuit anil Iho Mi Any him wiM prompt Will NUI I'll M IN fir llm t Patent Point Itt o all nn Lhu ut Slid High su Puint IT conn f{ in fc High In M It il I l I M M T Hi II him JD PM VSI Point Mall un tilled t I Hot ly I f HA H U VN AMI Win f urt n KB uu 1 s t nml i null il w mill il wu lii mi I VV iH -I ilmn U iii ni luu i Wit I A T T x A T J A W r c Hi i n I I II i WISCONSIN TRIBUNE BY BLISS CHANEY MINERAL WIS JUNE 24 1852 VOL 35 WHAT IK A YE A in What it a year 1 fit but a wave On stream Which it that Account it but ti Tii but i single throb Of old iron Which now ami li with did What ij a year is but a turn Ol Time old wheel Or but a page upon book Which Death shortly seal Til but a step upon the road Which we must o'er A few more steps we walk weary road no moie What in a Tis but a breath Vrom Time old blown As rushing o'er the We hear hit Tis like the bubble wave Or upon iho As transient as the of mom the sun What is a Tis but n Of life's scene Youth's happy comes gaily on With lulls and green Next summer s spring Then autumn with u tear Then comes old and all Must liud their mere H OMM My father God rest liis When I two Ami lull midst world To my own A now ro Taught rne my Qs And ever in rny eais he You'll paddle your mvu canoe My home was no spot Of bright ami sunny hue Anil therefore I the homier luft To my canoe And world i roamed at large O'er land and ocean blue Anil though the struck olt was hard i paddled my own canoe For thus 1 argued man to man Is often times Then while with strength you're your own canue As partners in the strife for gain will pursue And leave you with youi debts To paddle your own And then no sympathy find From who They knew you lost first you To your own canoi But lone cherished olivet sought And kept in view A ol pure heart To paddle my own A friend she is in Her mine is We arc one I say I paddle rny own The of a Lilt There was a roguish merriment in the bright eye of Emma Lee as with her tle foot playing against a toft of flowers ibo regarded the face of her companion a fine looking youth who was reclining ou a rude near her laid the young man with a d iu bis tones it creature to much and I determined in future to treat ber mora gently and I longed for another opportunity jo show her some little kind attention It was month before hair again Tlie have always admired the resolution of an uncouth servant girl brought up in no very gentle way who went to live -.1 i W and then I met her in an assemblage of re T was the bright aud beautiful If I met her much I hoped I had expected to sec her pale aud sad ber mild eyes still beaming lovo upon me I1 entered the room and there I saw my in the midst of a group with auch a beam of i happiness on her brow as I had not icen seem to me that your attentions to C air for j knw wag cultivated 1 a love of the beautiful i i il c M iu w i i i Burned for she one who jv feelings and then her deportment lacked gay ety that exuberance of joy so of- ten the saddest I knew need have been surely you need not have given him that choice boquet The girl tried to draw in the corners of her pretty liule mouth and really to look sober but her was ill con- as aha answered I have bestowed extra tions it Would be strange had I not it was a rare occasion Frank flair ii a glorious looking creature and I feel sort of the moment I look at him Emma Lpe was left an orphan at an early nge and committed to tho love and care of a paternal uncle who indulged her almost Co weakness She was now but seventeen a beautiful generous ed creature but a witch of a coquet Frank was the only son of a friend of Mr Warner Emma's uncle and had also been his ward from infancy lie was a few yean older than Emma and possessed of all those graces of form and feature which constitute manly beauty And thus they grew up together com- panions in sports and studies and was it a wonder that young Cupid's wings should now them The doting un- cle saw it gladly for he ever had hoped that those sweet children the idols of his heart might when time had far enough run its bo united together in the holy bonds lie would fain love them as one cherished object Frequently had lie marked with pain dim perception of tho fitness ot things by determined to polish herself become every whit as graceful as her mistress Now here was a bor to perform a vast undertaking for a poor girl whose companions for years had been the pigs und cr's miserable whose love for inebriation led her to in How A voung mm meets sv pretty faca the ballroom in love with it courts it it goes to housekeeping with it and boasts of having a home to go to and a wife Tlie chances are uino to ten he has neither Her pretty gets to be becomes faded or fretted or as that face was all he wanted ait lie paid attention to all ho swore to love honur and gets sick of fiig trade knows a dozen faces e around her which he likes better gives up staying at with a mother home of evenings consoles with Out wj or lest tl 00 additional insertion 60 One year 10 W Half a column for six months 13 00 For yeur 18 One column six 8 Tor one year 30 On hat for iii that she Ira's peaceful joyous and happy j Of J low in filth and neglect her family for the poison of the girl whoso skin was and tanned to subjection and who in all probability was doomed to bor among pots and kettles for the residue her to little child approached the group and soon found her side During evening I devoted myself to her but she that to me was only pleasant gentle and ful she gave not one look of endearment though all was kindness 1 That night sleep was a stranger to me The next I called her It was long since I had been at home and she appeared surprised at meeting me More was she surprised when I she determined she would not do and accordingly flits set herself at and her first lessons were those of observation She saw much company unobserved she watched their manners somu of which her native good sense rejected the more pleasing she treasured up in her heart tlie Tlie mistress soon sees bringing ou the breakfast dishes a comely interesting girl with a careful watchful air her dark locks put tastefully back somewhat a la mode her dress re- out to her the torrent of my hidden love hcr answers respectful and th with all the passionate of feeling calm and sessed she answered It is too late now cigars and politics and looks up on his house as a very indifferent ing house A family of children grow up about him but neither he nor his face knows anything about training them they come up toys AD Whip Ou Thursday a attached to i Wa- gon a and daughter a young woman in the rustic of eighteen or fright at the ot and Third k opened and commenced spreading for a mail ruu down hill For the wagon the linen all the rearward attachment the horse did not appear to hold an affinity but like thu dog u pan at his tail put in bell licks tu outrun On ho went ing things as if they were of uo fully insured in a The old man gave lungs most and the young woman iu the bloom of eighteen or thereabouts xat as mutely to tho as a lonely L t rti 11 rl tr I will tell you all You know I we grow np together you remember nil your kindness to mo when a tiny thing and my confiding affection for you ly except by your side When I ceased to be a child all things changed with me passionate love and I doted hesitating correct Next she id prised at a modest request from the tored servant that by some means she may learn to read Pleased with this mark of intelligence bho devotes a little spare time caca day to the ment of this object and her pupil is no dull Almost imperceptibly by dint of care aud cleanliness the brown skin grew fair tuv on you Ana BnJ tlic h biu niU ut- fc n no many the wild of and her Of mighty feeling was upon my but ful love of tormenting the devoted Frank when it had 1 found it had swept T UJuw uu i tered that cruel jest themselves iu and 1 was obliged to return home That night my soul was a chaos of That night the whirlwind and the storm ALL S OUT He feared she was sapping the fountain of his love and that ere long ho would turn his heart from her and seek another bride This evening bo bad been sitting at the window of his library which overlooked the lawn where they were and had beard the teasing words of his niece and ed the painful expression ou the ance of Frank Aud as he heard it there was tho rush of agony painted on hia usually placid face For could have believed that that quiet and benignant countenance could undergone such a Aye it in alone in solitude that we act out our natures It in then that the volcano of tho soul emits its that the secret passions burst forth unrestrained that tlie watera of the great are ken up He rose quickly from his scat and idly paced the floor at length ho paused fane with hist hands and by says that convulsive effort lie became ness is like un be nothing in it but it our wonderfully IP It is tlie privilege and ure tlie men the wholesouled women to earn what possess lo work way through lile to be the of their own for- tune To kiss a pirl nml fiml your mouth filled with Red aria flowing on it is truly ID aid is all traces of my passionate love for you It was what might have been with others the sorrow of years concentrated in that night's agony And since then I have been happy I love jou Charles but it only as a friend I feel no reproach no but for you or for any er I feet not one spark of passionate flume She I gazed upon calm so still so sweet and beautiful In my soul's bitterness I felt that that calmness was no outward show There was no smothered flame tins fire wat fully extinguished and all in vain I tried to fan what I hoped might be its slumbering embers The scene was dunged the home where T had been so happy seemed a place in I could not bear to live und I a wanderer in foreign lauds Alter yeara of absence I returned and then I found my Mary the wife of as noble a man as was ever in own image Could I huve cherished out the whole Another young man becomes cd of a waits upon it to parties dances the polka with it ges billets Joux with it pops the question to it gets yes from it it lu the snn wods it calls it wife carries it home sets up an establishment with it duces it to Ids and says poor fel low that he too is married and 1.11 got a home It's Ho is tint married he has not got a home And he soon it out lie is in tho box but it is too lute to get out of it He might as well hope tu escape from his colon con- him and he has to grit and be it They praise he house the the cradle bible tlic and then bid tlie and who bands it morning As it bu bud known a good since ha and that fortune were falsely declared to be one Take another is smitten with of when babies dolls when boys and j or descending when men ami women spivd accelerated with every and so passes year after year anj not one quiet happy homely hour is known thro'- A a pair of ed hair never before had such and attire This young lady as she assuredly meant to be craved an hour her if we re- member after her work was over which privilege was wont lo re- tain aud in the peculiar occupation of which she was to be disturbed It way granted and her mistress thought no more of it until some months after when passing by her room the fancied she heard voices Curiosity to look by means of she beheld her in all the glory of I calls it so and we will What is the re- She seti her for them they take The delighted whiskers make an offer proffering themselves both in exchange for her one heart The dear n with such magnanimity closes the bargain carries home the prize shows it to pa and ma calls herself engaged to il thinks there were never such a of Curiosity prompted her whiskers before in a few they i i of a trap door 111 d there married yes world I and he evidently to think as well up to items his bolters of the when he made a wido long j at s boiler and a down He now began to the about like a in a wind und to proach declivity leading to tho river The waves they broke along the the oUi s fours and he for help Now cime the trial Thu daughter tlic lines from hit bauds affectionately him into the of the nmt pulling her strength upon one of the druw around the and herself and out in A crowd und a maid in the bloum of eighteen on her the river the old man ort of upset when lie broko tho wheel but ain't gut no sense when iiV I woman don't keer about tho river for I can like a and tie man ain't worth nothing in tnu water So saying untangling and arranging the trumpery anil when we toft she be- ar upon the aiiinial's stomach a cession of lunty kicks Cow e gin w one bus lung wurn I Wl I tfU o Uio nt IlL H ill 1.111 i will i I t u til IK ll V AT AND ru Mf It j y on i never sits KT Tlic purest joy experience in one we is to see pi'i -on a souice oi A member of lazy society feeling a fly an his jolly ml of it nil to to have rt calm again h is benign face assumed Us my heart my burning love of her and look of and then he went out ami joined the company of his niece and adopted son He sealed himself beside tho young inn n and extending his band to his beau- nieco he invited her to sit beside him 1 My said would you like this evening to listen to a story of my Yes Emma find since has been here I feel just like u love story and she a glance at and though you arc and have myself an innocent man I might have been my emotions were n reproach to me and I a- cain strove to forget them iu foreign del ings 1 A few years passed and tho failing stata df my father's brought me home again Mary's husband was dead she on the verge of the grave 1 felt now that I more sou her anil do no wrong and it wal tny blessed privilege to be standing at an her soul entered heavun Frank that fancied magnificence seated a holding in band a book and talking quite eloquently with an invisible captain she was honoring with her ago Presently she would get up managing her movements admirably bond ly as if some work of art in said captain's ghostly hand receive a com- with all the elegance of a lender nf the ton respond in a delicate manner arrange ber ebon curls with tip of her fan glide across the room with the tread of a princess fairly bewildered tho good lady above who not make out what it all Finally she bowed out with the greatest case imaginable then turning took up and her of A short honeymoon and then unlucky discovery that they are as unlike as chalk nnd cheese nnd not to made one tho all the priests pronounce them so iu Christendom In A inun in Philadelphia recently ried n woman under the impression that bovi had the but when lie found i INDIAN quart of milk three one ounce of table spoonfuls of brandy to tho taste much Indian meal an will make milk as thick us pap Vt hen thu milk boils Mir in the Indian meal till ills ened like pap then ndJ butter Set it oil to cool When cold in must have bueu well beatan and brandy are rv good brandy Make paste your plates above mixture aud iu it was not so he before I the and prayed for relief The following are the facts as elicited before the police court A man with a pair of whiskers cr a pair of with ly resembling a man to them before the bench with an accusation against Clementine Derby over the will not bear inio a deep disli lined paste ing sugar in the bottom of tlic ihu with them with and bake halt Mrs pint good cream To be or not to read in clear musical tones But mark tho conclusion of those of the complainant Abraham Millet had swindled him out of his sonal freedom by inducing him to marry strange proceeding the lady's the said Clementine who proved otherwise Millet who according to the one egg one ful uf halt Stir in till it If made of good will cake of bachelor uncle do manage toll us one i your mother the burn- You shall hear the story of my life said Mr seriously that which has tinged every thought of it with its own deep coloring a boy I knew a little ed She was a beautiful misery be tn all tilings ii tlie to trouble The difference happiness nml tlum is that lie who himself moat happy is Bm in the case is reverse 03 A editor of a it i tiii it Lund mny bo l l Now iy lit i WISCONSIN BY JOHN P i in It ihu hum A c will too ui J IIV i well I ui accniu in fn HIP mif tho of Un- lof s t of If yon to hare care perplexity and ing fascinating child it was my 1 with Whun site began to goto school I always called for tho aye I remember now that dimpled band which I used to bold in mine as I led her along tho way 1 There is no germ in the young spring that put out earlier budd than the bright of love and well I re- member bow proud I was and what a rush of deep and earnest feelings was there in my boyish heart when Mary's playmates would call her my little wife 1 She grow into girlhood and her tions for me a stronger character To every other she was kind and good but to me she betrayed all the fondness of au intense love I was of my en- tiro power over her and at tlie spoil in which I held her young affections Hut I that I loved her then and believed not my boyish passion anything but youthful friendship and often very Mulches The i the of the Republic Ai n proof of tin of tlie times in some parts kill only half a pig at s nine ICT A beautiful proverb runs thus With time the mulberry cornes satin Can any one anything less than a Ex- Yes an old of my love for her has been east oti her only child on you my own darling boy the son of my own soul's adoption tears in Hio of Lee as tab was closed and she stole to Howard's and placed her hand in hia ed from his travels and the very first day forwards ou close inspection to be a milk eight sugar to the laMo not knowing whn she the i homo in a vain storm ns any lant gentleman would have lone In the evening lie asked impatiently why bia mother's visitor did not appear have no visitor my she re- And pray who was that beautiful ture that I waited upon tn this very door Am I Are fairies yet? I certainly in all my journeys not met with so agreeable polished a lady and here she disappeared The woman in anguish ed to him that it was only their servant girl and him to restrain bis The old man saw his was no- declared that was and placing an affectionate hand upon head of his niece anil ing the worshiped face nf his ted son he returned to Im library land Transcript Tlie of never marrying C5 Tlu- virtue of iy temperance r lu lu u or ill hi k in M Him public f wmlor l SK oin I Call jini now IV all km u Man J I virtue of adversity n The mind may bd like body it is mart by the warmth of than of clothes Envy only merit anil tike a eye is offended everything is yy Tanners sons hud learn to hold the plough and feed the tlun to measure tape and count The should be tened with tears of joy of grief for the grave is the mausoleum that out from them forever with trouble and misery The lioy thai to ride a horse HIM OK BY J will tw lo tray her affection for me had I seen her give to another one of those deep glances which she bestowed digally on me then perhaps I should have discovered those depths of love which unknown were buried in om One night at a gay party with is no tree the sight of which j cites more tender emotions in heart i than the weeping willow It is out of place in a public looks ful when flourishing in luxuriant beauty on the borders of some winding stream or in some secluded spot which lias long becu of solitude and ty It is the emblem of sorrow and de- votion and forms s beautiful and ornament to a burying ground With its drooping foliage it appears to be looking back on the thising with the afflicted It one of the things which and hushes all tho angry passions of tho human heart Independent of the associations are inseparably connected with its ance there is no tree in our forests which presents an aspect more graceful and ly or whose branches are more divinity and no more adapted to the kitchen than were his mother's lain ornaments to a blacksmith's forgo And ho persisted in tho idea married her in spite of his en the haughty woman learned to bo as fond of her noble ter as her son was of his gifted Olive OF TO The New York and Krie road brought down in one day not long 4 Tire ham the man of whiskers had with Miss Derby at a reputable where the lady her temporary residence liml 11 fine suit of brown charming a due proportion of ind in her com- an innocent maidenly A good figure ami a fortune of forty isand including a rice plantation stocked with ninety-three negroes where out Some of these lions were visible to Mr Millet h'lt ho riro grounds tie negroes had been by him they were men ly ob of faith Miss tine gives him such a particular account ter nt a of butter one of one of nutmeg ur lo the to thicket the milk or i j n HOW Ac is confidently ban bcon into tlie man by the live nl common candlo in ul or aro tallow tauon from died of foul by which it is rendered unlit for viring in this A little morrow taken from tho bono jf a healthy or bullock anJ incited of the real in a nip ii fur chapped lips or Abraham was Making a profuse uf Oas with its reality After a rapid courtship i tiie on the and were married then geous The first weeping willow was England by tho He received from and observed the basket was Millet I found her out was merely a wig and when this was off her was ns naked as a sandy desert Sahara without ns a single oasis Her charming teeth were all porcelain her Mill lies chalk and her exquisite ure cotton wadding and as fcr her observed Mr ISO 000 Ibs of butter The let very I found she two of produce brought to tide children boarded nut in Jersey one oi water by this road is almost incredible which children a dingy ould en mid Mr i gently until the lather is and Her fine dried up is to thu and of the be still larger if the road was greater A Broome of the strength of the meaning of my words I gave light almost insulting jest It was more Iban she bear An ashy spread itself over her face county farmer us in December ho had been more than two weeks trying to send some produce which he was unable to do because the cars were so full before they reached Binghamton there was room for nothing more Since the opening of the road the consumers of farm produce in all the villages are bling at high prices What is their loss is the Every farmer along a lino of railroad to be a holder They would then look to our road and try to promote its interests aud thereby their own Chickens are now sent from Northern Ohio alive to the New York market where sell from 30 to 50 cents apiece We have known them in the Ohio i- i T He nave Known mum HI mu formed putting out shoot twig Q This ii only he planted fan garden It flourished to the the beginning of tho advantage a and sho leaned for support against the i uncommon in England have sprung- window near which she Boiton Jour i Grew sweet to sence and lovely to lie country growing out of tho completion eye and from this parent stock all the of tlie Eric Plow weeping willows which are by no means little follow that looks like lie had African blood in his veins Mr Millet pursuing the subject thoughts of the rice plantation nut and the ninety-three negroes afforded me know some comfort but it 1 dii covered that this ere plantation so confoundedly far out south that there was no coming and as for her niggers I guess that little I ihi headed chap that calls her mammy j ilm 1 pity jour cute Mr Millet will nfa piny lu be Telegraph being onu day in a of rain went fur in which an was at work I am Banister to him a of your time of life have no much Pain I have not tiny pain the man Yes you must have not culling your teeth i il ft iu a If from a c Wfl lint then lunch it H nut it int The nf pil r ur it Mayor but we can do nothing for you Your own imprudence brought you into this predicament You were in l such a 1 M of n hurry lo secure your fortune gul bit Abraham bit indeed and that by a woman that hasn't tooth in her head that she em call her own l liny for the dentist bought them from er was for them radish is now practising on stirrups In Switzerland one fourth of the land is un- der cultivation Jn France miner more than one half saddle of mutton soon as Bho recovered ft I saw her approach ber brother and per something ici hid ear they soon after left My smote me for having pained the and lonng ET Vou liave stolen my soul Mr Sickly to bis adored me my deal responded the lady -I am in the babit of picking up little things Settling a belong to said i with many a ID- The New says the first j left the Hall of Justice swallow-tailed coat old got to dis- A ot it Milly from M privilege that j Yankee iii Honor bul 1 a la sob I pleased him that he lurched the and used it for aboot to frighten fools with her yy wll No ite ob bell We habn t no bell in ar tlic n of of Lord John ot of wi   

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