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The Weekly Wisconsin from Milwaukee, Wisconsin • Page 6

Location:
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ISCCXNBESL When advertisers, pleaae nun. (ton the WEBK1F WISCONSIN. PARAGRAPHIC STATE SEWS. THEGREATGERMAN REMEDY MILWAUKEE, JULY 11,1888. A TBIP ABOUSb THE WORLD.

Mucb the Average Seen. Traveler the Pall Left London on May let, and traveled by evening train to Dover. The channel was somewhat loppy, as usual, but soup at.Calais buffat soon restored exhausted nature. Went on to Paris; monstrous fine town; the boulevards and Napoleon's tomb really worth seeing. Took a coupe to Marseilles, and put up at a hotel in the Cannebiere; a splendid street but very noisy.

Next day went oa board our steamer, and tooled quietly down the It doesn't differ much from the Atlantic, but is perhaps a trifle bluer. Touched Malta; fine old fortified place, though very There were once some Knights here, who seem to have been expelled by the English governor. Maltese lace is made here. Took in some new passengers, and then steamed to Alexandria. The town is called after 'Alexander the Great, who was apparent- lybornin the neighborhood; but it is not otherwise interesting.

Saw Pompey's Piliar, erected to commemorate bis victory over Cassar. The population consists principally of donkey-boys, whose charges are shamefully exorbitant Not being able to speak the or something of the compelled to submit to their extortions, but caught them a crack or two on the head with my cane by way of compensation. On to Suez, which turned out to be very hot, yet nothing at all compared the'Bed Sea. Slept on deck all. down the latter, and glad enough to get on shore again, even at Aden.

Officers quartered at Aden say it is a dull hole, which is easy to believe, for the country about consists chit fly of eand and rock. The people are Arabs- -a very filthy lot Officers' club, however, not half bad, and cook makes a capital curry. Landed mails, and proeeecfed immediately to Bombay. IndjgtloeB iiot seem quite so wealthy as we had always been led to expect it. Hotel accommodation bad, and natives mostly lean and not half dressed.

Landing at Bombay is a horrid bore, owing to the surl, and the boatmen charge absurdly. Some of the natives are Hindus and some Mohammedans, but as a whole a bad lot, I should Bay, and frightfully superstitious. Ban across to Calcutta, a long and tedious railway journey, stopping on the way at a place called Allahabad, where there is an underground temple. Turned aside to Agra and Delhi to see the handsome sort of a some other old native buildings; aVso to look up" pome fellows whom I useuto know at Marlborough. Club at Delhi very comfortable, but the hotel most ill-organized.

Calcutta is a realty finVtown and public buildings quite in the European style, driving about in cSrwges jtiat like the park or Begent Street. Sorry to leave such capital quarters for the Peninsula and Oriental way and spent a couple of in Chi- Oftgo lookin at hogs, cattle, warehouses, high buildings, numerous parks, a big water-pumping engine, a lighthouse off in the lake called a crib," and searching for the nuns of the great but found none. Chicago is a fast place about the size of Liverpool or Glasgow. It has a curious creature for a mayor, who makes -speeches praising hirnsolf every day, and the rabble rules i-. the town.

We spent a day at very- fine and a week in New York, a great city. America is a splendid country, with capital hotels and admirable railway arrangements, besides which the cigars are good; but from my observations in the States lam fully convinced that republican institutions won't hold water. Most of the people are tired of the republicans, as they themselves told me, though I didn't "quite unaer- stand their motives, as they nevertheless declared that they were ardent democrats. However, it is quite certain that before many years are over America will become a limited monarchy with an hereditary aristocratic class. We sailed from York in one of the finest Atlantic liners, and had a splendid passage to Liverpool.

In conclusion, I have ho hesitation in saying that there is nothing like travel to enlarge the mind and widen one's views of things generally, and that those who can't themselves go abroad will derive much from reading judicious books of other people'd voyages. Though, to be sure, "after this condensed summary of all that is worth seeing in foreign parts, it is difficult to understand why anybody else should ever wish to say the eame things over again, at greater length, and with no further important additions. MISHAPS. SIMPLE FAITH. steamer to Singapore, which is built on "an island in the straits.

The inhabitan ts are chiefly Chinese, Malays, Batch, and other foreigners, but tiie town looks prosperous, and the hotel was good. Brandy and seltzer is always taken iced; don't get Apollinaris here yet. Touched at Java, a Batch island, where they grow a good deaKof coffee, and then straight on to Yokohama. Japan is all round, the queerest place we have been to; the houses are half of them built of paper, and you go about the streets in a sort of Bath chair they call a jjnrikisha. However, the teahouses are really very pleasant, and I cordially approve of the dancing-girls.

Altogether Japan seems a very nice sort of straight- laced, and with plenty of fun going on everywhere. We had an excursion or two into the interior, stopping at delightful tea-houses and trying to chaff the natives, especially the girls. Once or twice some cf the fellows tried to cbafi us back, being foreigners to them; but, of course, that set us on our dignity, and we flatter ourselves a judicious application of British oak about their shoulders soon brought them to a sense of then- proper places. From Japan we steamed right across the Pacific, the longest and most tedious sea I ever had anything to do with. The steamers stop at Honolulu, better half-way over, where we staid for a fortnight.

This is a very oily little town, and the natives are extremely picturesque, but dying out rapidly. The mountain scenery is yery grand, and we saw a first-rate volcano with a -lake of fire in the middle. They make up delightful riding excursions to go to see it, and the half-caste ladies ride as well as men, and ore very pleasant society. Their mothers were' cannibals. Most things are cheap except liquors.

The next steamer took us on to San Francisco, magnificently situated," the guidebook says, at the portals of the boundless ocean." -Coming across we curiously lost a day, owing to a habit of counting the: sailors have on the one hundred and eightieth meridian, which I will explain in the appendix. San Francisco is called Frisco here; it is a fine town, with first-rate hotels, elevators, bars, and all the latest appliances of the most advroiced civilization. We went to the opera and heard Christina Pattftlini; quite a treat to be back in the cultivated world once more. After visiting the Chinese quarter, a dirty hole, which everybody in Frisao told us ought to be burned down immediately, we took a palace car for Sacramento. The big trees, which we also visited, are very large indeed; on one of the stumps they have made a platform for dancing, and a good many couples can dance without lisk of collision.

Salt Lake City is an interesting town built by the Mormons, folio-score of" Joe Smith, now dead; there is a large temple, not in very good architectural taste I should say, and an excellent theater. Mprmouism doesn't seem a bad sort of tiling, but the people are polygamiste, which, of course, is very shocking: and the Gentiles in the place are dreadfully prejudiced against it However, a Mormon elder with whom I conversed told me didn't think there was a noblei or pomcler set of men in the world than the Mormons; sad as he has been here ever since the massacre, as they call it, he must have had opportunities of judging. crossed America by the Pacific Ba2- NISE buildings burned at Astoria, Off gon, on the 2d inst Loss, $225,000. E. SCHULZE, a boy cf 15, received a bullet in the brain, at St.

Paul, on the 4th. shoe at South Abingdon, burned, on the 1st inst. Loss, 8175,000. PAWTUCKET, B. lost a dozen buildings by fire on the 1st inst The damage will amount to 8115,000.

AT Ivy, Ul.j Matthew Harlan and Patrick McMahon, harvest hands, were drowned while crossing a slough. JOHN WAI.COTT, David McCowan and William Barnes were suffocatedby black damp in a well near Lackawanna, on the 30th ult G. S. -CAMPBELL, a jeweler of Beverly, was. drowned on the 1st inst, while bathing.

He was to have been married the same evening. THE Daophin County, almshonse was burned on the 2d inst All of the inmates were saved. Loss, insurance, 630,000. AT a train on the Long. Island Boad struck a beer wagon, demolishing the wagon, killing Patrick Coyleand Peter Kruche and the THE small -excursion steamer Stranger with twenty-eight persons on board, capsized Tonawanda Creek, New York, On the 1st Four persons, all from Batavia; lost their lives.

MRS. GBOVEB, of No. 167 Summer Avenue, New York, wliile engaged hi A. Poor man's Tlieory of the Plan of janntan salvation. tBfll Nye in the TeiasSlf Up in Polk County, Wisconsin, not long ago, a man; who had lost eight children by diphtheria, while the ninth hovered between life and death with the same disease, went to the health officer of the town and asked aid to prevent the spread of the terrible scourge.

The health officer, was cool and collected. He did-not get excited over the anguish of the father whose last child was at that moment hovering upon the outskirts of Immortality. He calmly investigated the matter, and never for a moment lost sight of the-fact that he was a town officer and a professed Christian. "You ask aid, I undeistand," said he, "to prevent the spread of the disease, and also that the town shall assist you in procuring new and necessary clothing to replace that which you have been compelled to burn in order to stop the further inroads of diphtheria. Ainlright?" The poor man answered affirmatively.

"May I ask if your boys who died were Christian boys, and whether they their gospel opportunities and attended the Sabbath school, or whether they were profane and given over to Sabbath-breaking?" The bereft father said that his boys had never made a profession of Christianity; that they were hardly old enough to do so; and that they might have missed some gospel opportunities, owing to the fact that they were poor and hadn't clothes fit to wear to Sabbath school. Pbasibiyj. too, they had met with wicked companions and had been taught to swear; he could not nay but they" might have sworn, although he thought they would have turned out to be good boya had they lived. "I am sorry that the ease is so-bad," said the health officer. "I am led to believe that God has seen fit to visit you with affliction in order to express His divine disapproval of profanity, and I cannot help you.

It ill-becomes us poor, weak worms of the dust to meddle with the just judgments of God. Whether as an individual or as a quasi corporation, it is allow the Almighty to work out His great plan of salvation and to avoid all carnal interference with the works of God." The old man went back to his desolated home," 'and to. the bedside of his was stuffed with cotton in a way to obtain the exact outlines of the murderer's countenance, as well as the expression, sewed together and put in alcohol just as you see it now." The head looks as if it were merely cut from the body and placed in the jar, as the surgeon's stitches on the neck back of the head are not visible. The very sneer of the sensual month has been preserved, and the stubby'hairs of a week's growth that were onose upper lip when Guitean went on the gallows, are still there. The eye-balls are, of course, lacking in expression, but even they show but little shrinkage.

The nose is the only feature the shape of which has not been maintained. It is sunken in the middle as if it had'received a blow on. the bridge, but the cheeks, the chin, the month, eyebrows, eyelashes, hair, everything except the nose, are almost perfect in their life-like resemblance. only living child. 1 met him yesterday and he told me about it all.

"I ami not a professor of religion said he, "bat I tell you Nye, I don't believe that of health has used me right. Somehow I ain't her household duties, was fatally shot on the 2d inst. bjj. boys playing with a toy cannon in the street. ADESTETJCTIVE hail-storm passed over the country east of Fort Collins, OoL, on the 3d inst The hailstones were an inch in diameter and fell a depth of five inches in some places.

The state farm suffered severely and growing crops in the track of the storm were totally destroyed. The loss is estimated at DTHUXG the celebration at Montrose, on the 4th, H. H. Luehlum, a balloonist, attempted io make an ascension. When at the height of 40 trapeze rope caught in a tree, hurling him violently to the ground.

"He struck on a rock and sustained a fracture of the skull and internal injuries which, it is thought, will prove fata). A BBOAD wooden awning, extending over the sidewalk in front of No. 94 Broadway, St. Louis, fell with a crash on the 3d inst, carrying with it Solomon Gruen, his wife Minnie, Chas. Marx, aged 20, and Jacob Marx, aged 11; Solomon Gruen received injuries from which he died about midnight, and the two boys were badly injured.

Mrs. Grnen also received severe wounds. THE Conyngham and mines at Wilkesbarre, Pa. are now flooded. The watsr is over 200 feet deeo in the former.

The embankment supporting the main track of the Delaware and Hudson coal road has caved in, the track fallen down, and another house is in imminent danger. The inflow of water has been checked. It will take six weeks to pump the water from the mines. THE out-going City express on the Wabash Boad collided with a street car at the Boot Street corssing, near the southern limits of Chicago, on the night of the 1st inst, smashing it to fragments. The lamps of the car exploded and set fire to it Of thirteen persons in the car only one escaped unhurt, and it is believed two or three of the worst inj ured will die.

The accident occurred from the driver of the street car misunderstanding the signal of the man stationed at the crossing. THE Thunderbolt Express coming south on the New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio Bail way, due at Cincinnati at 8:30 P. on the 3d inst, half an hour behind time, and running fast to make up, struck a huckster wagon, in which were a family of six persons and a driver. Everyone except William Bertsch, the driver, was killed. Bertsch escaped with serious, though not fatal, injuries.

-The names of the killed are Henry Knacke, his wife and four children, John, aged 19; Annie, aged 16; Maggie, aged 13, nnd Lizzie, aged 7. Thb bodies of the victims were thrown in fragments on the grass by the roadside, where "they were picked up by the light of lanterns and brought to Cincinnati. Mrs. Knacke's head was severed from her body, and. all the victims of the disaster were horribly mutilated.

The engine was so besmeared with blood that it was sprinkled with flour to cover the stains. Kflled His Sister and Himself. YOBK, Jnly Wm. H. Seaman, aged 24, shot and killed hie sister Fanny, aged 28, and then killed himself, at Throgg's Neck.

West Chester County, It is believed he was worried about my little fellers that's gone. They was little fellers, anyway, and they wasn't posted on the plan of they was always kind and always minded me and their mother. If God is using diphtheria agin perfanity this seasoa they didn't know it: They was too young to know about it and I was too poor to take the papers, so 1 didn't know it nuther. I just thought that Christ was partial to little kids like mine, just the game as He used to be SjOOO years ago, when the country was new. I admit that my little shavers never went to Sabbath school much, and Lwasu't scholar enough to throw much light onto God's system of retribution, but! told 'em to behave themselves and they did, and we had a good deal of fun and the boys they was so bright, and equare, and cute that I didn't see how they could fall under divine wrath, and -I don't believe they did.

.1 could tell you lotsof smart little tricks that they used to do, Mr. Nye, but they wa'n'fr mean nor cussed. They wasjust frohcky and gay sometimes because they felt good. "Mindyou, I don't kick because I am left here alone in the woods, and the sun don't seem to shine, and the birds seem a little backward about singin' thig spring, and the house is so quiet, and she is still all the tune and cries in the night when she thinks I am asleep. All that is tough, Mr.

as the old Harry, it's so, and I ain't murmurin', but when the board of health says to me that the Ruler of the Universe is makiii' a tower of northern Wisconsin, mowiri' down little boys with sore throats because they say I- can't believe it I know that people who ain't familiar with the facts will shake their heads and say I'm a child of wrath, but I can't help it. All I can do is to go up there under the trees where them little graves is, and think how all-fired pleasant to me them little, short lives was, and how every one of them little fellers was welcome when he come, poor as I was, and howl.rastled with poor crops and pine stumps to buy cloze for 'em, and didn't care a cent for style as long as they was well. That's the kind of a heretic I am, and if God is. like a father that settles it. He wouldn't wipe out my family just to establish discipline, I don't believe.

The plan of creation must be on a bigger scale than that, it seems to me, or eke it's more or less of a fizzle. That board of health is better read than I am. It takes the papers, and can add up figures, and do lots of things that I can do, but when them fellers tells that they represent the town of Balsam Lake and the Kingdom of Heaven, my morbid curiosity is aroused, and I want to see their stiffyMts of election." Tiro Hundred Hainan Skulls. A letter from Bedfield, Dakota, 18th, says: About four and one-half miles south, on 'section 35, town 116, range 64, there has been discovered an old fort, from which there has been exhumed nearly two hundred skulls. On a high ridge about one hundred and fifty- feet higher than the railroad track, and one-half mile west, there is an old entrenchment nearly round and covering two acres.

These earthworks are six feet in width and the trenches on either side are three feet in width, and are now twelve to sixteen inches deep, and pair ties state that were evidently three feet deep when built. There are several spaces or openings in the entrenchment where light-artillery might have been used. At the south and at ati angle of forty-five degrees and for about fifteen feet length is another trench which would cover a person to the brow of the hill, and. then into a gulch to. a lake one- quarter of a mile away.

Having fully described the outline of the earthworks, we will now minutely describe the place where the human skeletons were found. At the west the inside ditch has been used, and in length bones have been found feet, up the. trench, and the searchers have failed to discover anything that could identify whose the bones Indians or white men. One singular thing is that there are no small bones found; neither are there any ribs or vertebrae discovered, and the W. 8.

LKSOOTT, Nflea, had serof- for thiitv years, and "LindEey'a Blocd Searcher Denied him. A Ghastfy Belie, Special to the Chicago It was a fact at first carefully concealed, and now known only toafeWj that Guitean's face and features were well as his bones. I was in the Medical-Museum'yesterday when a clerk, whom I have known intimately for several years, said tome: "Would you like to see Gniteau'sface Though somewhat puzzled as to the object of such a question, promptly answered in the affirmative. The clerk then led me into a room, where a number of large jars, filled with alcohol, to preserve various relics, were arranged on shelves, A cover was pulled from one of these, revealing the face of Gniteau, just as it looked when placed in the coffin. "That," said the clerk, "is the real face, hair, skin, eye-balls features of Charles Gniteau.

When his body was taken to the Medical Museum it was resolved not only to preserve but his actual features in the flesh. That was done byxnn- ning the knife-clear around the neck, splitting the skin in a straight line from the back of the neck to the top of the head, and tearing it off from the entire head, thus obtaining in one piece the scalp and skin covering the face. To lower jaws of nearly all are massive and double the size of the European in width and strength. Almost' every skull exhumed has the same side of the head smashed ia, and there are-many conjectures as to wh.it race of people they belonged. Some think that the bone's belonged to a party of men that were going to the western slope years ago, and that a large number were murdered and the party broken up; and what few survived turned back east.

Others say that, from the position in which the skulls are found, they must have been left for years where they were massacred, and afterward gathered into this trench and the dirt covered over them; and this theory seems to prevail, as there were seventeen skulls forced in to a space of eighteen square inches, some facing up, others down, and no other bones were found near them. Drifting Goose, an old sub-chief of the Sioux tnbe, was shown the skulls, but the interpreter could hot gain any-knowledge from him, as his tribe did not know anything about; them. to Marry and "When. (From a Sermon of Rev. Dr.

McKendree.l The lady should, in my opinion, be 20 or and the gentleman five years her senior. JPopr men 'cannot marry extravagant girls, who expect as good a home as their parents were only able to acquire after many years' toil. The deceit practiced on both sides is very gieat. The ugly suitor gets a tailor to hide" his deficiencies; the unsightly maiden calls in the aid of her rouge pot and milliner. Until recentlly marriage brokerage was carried on in France.

We Americans are guilty of the same thing in another way. Mothers sell daughters to the highest bidders and daughters sell themselves for gold to men -old enough to be their grandfathers. Such women would no- more choose honest mechanics for husbands than they would CDU- yiets from the penitentiary. There is no reason why women shouW not choose as well as men. At present the men have all the advantage.

No girl is fit to be a wife till she can, if necessary, cook a meal, make a dress and keep a house in order. Accomplishments are good, but a 'tired, husband would much prefer a good square meal. All-matches that are brought about by selfish motives are unholy, and women who marry for position or wealth, are just as gnilty as those who sell their virtue for a given sum. They are, in living a life of legalized prostitution. Marriages in which there is no adaptation are unlawful.

As oil and water will not unite without alkaline, so many a couple ore united by means of. gold. Such artificially-made matches are often broken. You may force alcohol and gum camphor to blend, but at presence of water the alcohol elopes and leaves the camphor a grass widow. In like manner a third party often steps in be- THE Elroy Tribune boasts of a strawberry, measuring 4 9-16 inches ia circumference.

ENOCH FABGO, at Lake Mills, has discovered a fine vein of white pipe clay in a marsh on his farm. THE Ouster monument has been shipped from the Montello quarries.to the fatal battle field on the Little Big Horn. MB. P. B.

PBOCTOB has sold theDe- pere News to Messrs. Chas. Proctor and Ed. S. White, who -will hereafter conduct it.

FBED BENCH had one of his feet half torn off at the Bacine basket factory, on the 2d by getting, it caught in a THE Wisconsin Pharmaceutical Association will hold its fourth annual meeting at La Crosse, August 14th, 15th, sndietb. A FivE-rEAB-piiD son of James Boyle, of Stebbinsyille, was killed recently by the fall of some logs under which he was looking for eggs. A WAREHOUSE belonging to the McLean Manufacturing at Janesville, was consumed by fire on the night of the 30th. Loss $1,000. THE hardware store of Daniel and Fred.

Kusel, Watertown, was robbed on the night of the 29th ult. of cutlery and revolvers to the extent of $250. HENBT DrsoN, of Union Grove, Bacine Comity, died on aged 103 years. He left three sons, one aged 80 and another 70. The third is somewhat younger.

DOANE, the canoeing Badger, found too many dead animals in -the Mississippi to make the voyage south of St. Louis agreeable. He traveled to New Orleans by JOHN SouiiF, Yabe Hollander, and CharlesFrench, fishermen, were drowned off Sheboygan on the 2d by the capsjz- ing of their boat in the tornado which swept over the lake in that vicinity. A MAN named Glaesel, residing in the town of Wausau, Marathon County, had his right leg so badly shattered by a punning accident that amputation above the. knee was necessary to save his life.

ABTICLES of incorporation of the St. Croix Bailway Company have been filed with the secretary of The proposed -line will run from Woodville, St. Croix County, to St. Croix Falls, Polk County, a distance of ninety miles. DANIEII D.

SMTTH, one of the pioneers of Washington County, died. suddenly at his 'home near Farmington, on the morning of the 29th ult Deceased was a native of Syracuse, N. and was nearly 88 years of age at the time of his death. A GrEBMANboy named Yeeger, aged 11, crawled under a lath-saw at the Michigan lumber mill to clean away the sawdust. His back came in contact with the cutting a gash seven inches long into the lung and severing three ribs.

He cannot recover, SOME wretch despoOed the cornerstone of St. Patrick's Church, Neenah, on Sunday night, in order to secure the $2.50 in coin deposited The papers which were placed under the sfone with the money were found in the- rear of the unfinished building. Two establishments, of La Crosse, Kose Bros, and P. A. Borresen, were swindled put of valuable jewelry by a party giving the of H.

Wing, who gave checks in payment on a bank where he had no funds. The former lost 8175 worth of diamonds and the latter $95 and a gold watch. THE two-story building known, as Music Hall, on Main Street, Fond du Lac, burned on the night of the 1st inst. The first floor was occupied by Cheney's hardware store and Gcetze's saloon; the second; floor as an armory by the Fond du Lac Guards. Loss on building End contents, partially insured.

CHEISTIANSON, a Bacine jeweler, FOR PAIN. Believes anil cares RHEUMATISM; Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, HE4DAOHE, TOOTHACHE, SORE QUINSY, SWELLINGS, SPRAIXS. Soreness, Cuts, Bruises, FKOSTBITES, BURNS, SCA1.DS, And all other bodily aches and pains. FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE, Soldbyall DrnsgistSiuKj Dealers. Directions in 11 languages.

The Charles A. Vogeler Co. (Smeouors to A. VOCEIXRi CO.) For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve suffering, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why! Bemuse the Mustang penetrates through skin and flesh to the very bone, driving out all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restoring the afflicted part to sound and supple health.

tween a badly assorted pair, with what result can ba easily Heen. None but those who have been united through pure motives, and deep, abiding love, have fulfilled; the conditions under which a and a woman may become husband and wife. A Whisky Sandwich the Philadelphia While -the prisoners were being removed to the van from the station house at Front and Masters Streets yesterday, Bober alias Copper "Henry, attempted to pass a loaf of bread to a red-nosed Ppliceman Sheppard intercepted the loaf; opened as though hinged. It had been hollowed out and contained, a bottle of lightning whisky. The edge of the loaf was neatly stitched with black cotton.

Henry was arrested and sent to the house pf correction. The police call the contrivance a whisky sandwich. Drowned at Eau Claire. EATJ GLAIBB, July -Late last evening a young man 19 years of age named Attuff Biddell, was drowned while bathing in the Chippewa. Biddell was ignorant of the art of swimming, and having ventured too far from the shore was.

taken with cramps and so lost his life. CHEAPEST fashion world, 120 large pages. 1,000 engravings each issue. single copies 15 cents. STHAWBBUXJE magazine in the pages new.

mnsic, 50 cents per -sear; -IT miT- Single copies ID CentB. BTHAWBBUXJE tJTXdH were added the eye-balls. This TKB, Market Bteeeta, Ehfladelplm becoming embarrassed, and fearing a descent of his creditors, literally gave his goods away, on, the 2d inst. The rush was tremendous. It is said that Christianson realized only $500 out of a stock representing a of 87,000.

He is now a wanderer, havnig left the scene of his downfall. PETEB WAMERSHEIM, an old resident of Fond du Lac County, was accidentally killed at Hinesberg on the 29th. He attempted to alight from vehicle, foot caught and he. fell, breaking -Deceased wss 70 years of age. By a singular coincidence his sister, a Mrs.

Damn, of Calumet, died at about the same hour. A BEECKENKinaE, dispatch of the 2d inst. says John Martin and Michael Mc.Mahon,- aged 17 and 20 respectively, were arrested here to day for a rape committed on Friday near Darlington, Wis. They that they are the men wanted, but say they did not commit the crime. The Sheriff of Lafayette County, will be here as soon as possible with a requisition." THE wife of John Morrison shot four times at Sheriff James Bedmond, of Florence County, at Florence on the 30th ult.

and was in turn, shot in the breast and the leg by him. Morrison isa hard case and his wife just as bad. He was arrested by Bedmond or a small misdemeanor, and she tried to Mil the officer in revenge. The woman is seriously wounded, but will recover. Morrison keeps a saloon and bawdy house.

LAST week an old man living in the town of Hamburg, Marathon went out to hunt the cows, but failed to return. His family, becoming alarmed, aroused their neighbors and for three days search was made by, a large party: of men, but of no avail. A short time after the. search had been abandoned his -body was discovered by a farmer who was looking for his cows. The old man had apparently lost his way and perished from hunger and exposure.

Wniiiisi TSDSLOW, an Englishman. was found dead near his house-, five miles from Baraboo, on the 1st hist. He was between 65. and 70 years oif age, a bachelor, the owner of a good farm and usually had considerable money in the hocse, where he lived alone, or about his person. Three shots were heard in the direction where the body was When the remains were discovered hogs had mutilated the face beyond recognition and the sight was sickening.

The house -was ransacked and everything goes to show that the old man was murdered for his mcney. Ward's Cream of Chalk Has given entire satisfaction, and I gider it the dentifrice I have ever seen. It the Cream of tooth powders. A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Cramps, Cholera, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Sprains AND Burns AND- Scalds, Toothache AND Headache, FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. COUNTERFEITS, A An excellent appetizing tonic ot eSQUisite naviMMinw iiHml exquisite nayor.now used ov woole T-orld, cures Dyspepsia, Diarrhoea, Fuver and Ague, ant 1 all disorderaof the DigoHive Organs.

A few drops impart a delicious flavor to a glass or liapagne, and to- all summer drinks. Try it, but beware of counterfeits. Askyonr. grocer or drnggist for the genuine article, manniactnred by JXIi. 3.

Q. B. SIEGERT SQKS. J.W.WUPPERMANN,SoleAgenV SncceUOT lo J. W.

lUncol, i 51 Broadway. N. T. 401 and 403 Cbestnnt Milwankee, TT-B Depot for Northweat. CANCEES PERMANENTLY CURED, Without the knife, by a new acd snccessfnl method.

Write for pamphlet with teBttoonisis. Adaress F. B. GOLL.Y, OT. 116 Grand Avenue, aillwaukee, WiB.

WantPli both Male snd Female for out new ndllieu HyBlllS book'Danghters of It tikes wonderfully. Price. Address ffossasx i Me. SARSAPARILLA cpres Ehenmatiam, Neuralgia, Bhetunatio Gout, General Debility, Catarrhrand all disorders caused by a thin and unporeriined or corrupted condition of the blood; expelling the blood poi- fona from the systeni. enriching and renewing Sup't JPubfio Schools of Jersey Cfly.

aptationtothe cnreof all diseases poor blood and weakened vitality-. It concentrated extract of SarsaparUla and blood pirrifyine roots, combined with. Iron, with. Iodide and ia the safest, most reliable and most economical blood purifler and blood-food that can be used. Inflammatory "ATEB'a SABSApiBttEA Ijaactirodmeof InSam- matory Bhemoatiam, with which I had suflered "Last March I was so weak from i ity thatlconldnot wait withootneip.

the advice of a friend, I commencea tamng before I had used three ever did ia my life. I and bottles I feltaa well as nave been at work now for two icinefb the world. 530W. Ifew Tort, July 10,1881. ATEEfB fttrrag' RnMfitfa 'griff Scrofulous Complaints, Erysipelas, Staff' icorm, Blotches, sores.

Soils. Tumors, taut of da San. It clears the blood of all impurities, aids digestion, stimulates- the-sctionot the bowels, and thoa restores vitality ami strengthens the whole system. PBEPABED BY CO.

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About The Weekly Wisconsin Archive

Pages Available:
8,605
Years Available:
1836-1899