Grand Traverse Herald, October 02, 1863

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Title

Grand Traverse Herald, October 02, 1863

Subject

American newspapers--Michigan.
Grand Traverse County (Mich.)
Traverse City (Mich.)

Description

Issue of "Grand Traverse Herald" Newspaper.

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Contributors to the newspaper.

Source

Microfilmed reproduction of this newspaper issue is held at the Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.).

Publisher

Bates, Morgan (1806-1874)

Date

1863-10-02

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

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Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.

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None

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PDF

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English

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Document

Identifier

gth-10-02-1863.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

GRAM) TRAVERSE HERALD.
VOL. V.

'J.TB A V E R S E

C I T Y , , M I C H . F R I D A Y , O C T O B E R 2,1863.

N O . 42.

MR. SEWARD'S DIPLOMATIC CIRCULAR. Mississippi river. But new and unforecen difficulties ston fired many buildingsfilledwith munjtions war, and
continually baffled tbe enterprise, and seemed to render abandoned n'large quantity bf railroad locomotive# and
Review of Recent Military Brents.—Prosperity of it impossible. Gen. Grant, who was'at tho head of tbe cars, which had been detained at that place by reason of
the States^-The Failing Cause of the Rebels.— department and of tbe Army of. the Tennessee, at length the railroads north, south, east nnd west of Jackson havProgress of Emancipation.
aisnmid tbe active command of the troops investipg the ing beqn previously cut by the Government forces.
From the New York Tribune.
stronghold, and these were adequately reinforced. The
Gen. Sherman now desisted frbm the pursuit of JohnrnKTi-ut NO. 39.
naval squadron on the .Mississippi, under command of ston and returned to Vicksburg, where a portion of tbe
Dm-xaTMENT OK STATU, f
Hear Admiral porter, was also steadily increased until army is enjoyingrepose,not more necessary than well
~TEBJ1S.
I;
WASUINUTOS. August 12, 1863. $
more
than
}00
armed
vcs»!fl
were
employed
upon
the
earned,
while others are engaged in expelling from the
Willy C«nt«, P a y a b l e Invar
8IB,—Whenever the United States bave couiplniued river, including many iron-clad gunboats of great power. vicinity of the Jlississippi roving bands of tbe insu.-gents
jly in a
BSM Inserted for One Dollar pat*s<ifiare(ten of the premalart-dectcep of.Grcat Britain aud France Part of the Gulf Squadron, opder Admiral Farragut, who infest its banks and fire from thence upon passing
liuei) for thttprst insertion, and twenty-Hve e«nU far each which accorded tbo character of a belligen,'ut to the in- gttliantly running tbe batteries,of Port Hudson undor a
It is reported that Johnston, with the troops
. subsequent Insertion. Yearly Advertlacmeut*4-$i0 for one surgents, the stotesmso of tl*se countries bave answered, fieree.fire, co-operatyd^witb tbe riv:r fleets. Laborious stoameK
at his command, now said to bo twenty-five thousand,
-square; $20 ror.threc squares; $30 for hidfa kolomn; and that from thti first they agreed in opiniou that the efl'vrU
and perwjvcring nttt^ipliwere tnadu to open an artificial has fallen back to Meridian, on the eastern horder of
$50 fur one column. Legal advertisements at the rates prescribed by liw: fifty cents pet folio of iOO Wordf. for the of the Qovcrtimcnt to mainUin the Union, and preserve channel for the river oppi»ite Vicksburg, as had been Mississippi,-'a hundred and twenty^ miles east of Vidcsflrst Insertion, and twentj-flvo cents for each subsegnent— the integrity of the Republic, could not be successful.— done with such signal succea at island No. 10. But tbe bUrg ; so thntthe State, whose misguided people were
K veryfigurecni£nt« a word. Figure workwithgut rules, 50 With o view to torrect tbis prejudgment of so vital a various canals, projected and executed, failed, and only amoug the earliest and most intemperate abettors of tho
per tent added. Role and figure work, doable price.
question, I addresed » circular letter lo tbo represen- a few small steamers, of no considerable power were thus insurrection, is virtually abandbned by its military
AH legal advertisements to bo paid for strictly In advance. tatives of the United States j.n foreign countricq
tbo enabled to pass tbe city. Combined land and naval ex14th day of April, 1862, in trbiob 1 reviewed ;be oper- peditions were also sent forth, which, with infinite pains
Ail M of Jtb Priating Naflj and Expefltiwsjj Ereotd.ations
of the war on'sea aud land, nnd presented tbo re- and endurance, attempted to turn tbo enemy's works by' After spending some months in organizing the Departsults whioh attended it dowrv to that period. Tbo pre- irrigating tbe various bayous and sluggish rivers, whose ment. and disciplining tho Dew levies whicb constituted
indice, which I attempted to remove, still remains, ai:d intricate network forms so singular a fuuture of tho mili- its force, Gen. Bnbks~made a rapid sod successful series
UJiTBD STATES USD OmCB IT mttEBE E fa it constitutes tbo basis of all that is designedly or unde- tary topography of tbe banks of the Mississippi. AU, of marches and coiitesfs. In which he drove tbe insttr:
signedly injurious to tbis coontry;in the policy of foreign these attempts having failed from physical obstacles gent troops out of the Attakapas and Tecbe regions,
nations The insurgents have becrf enabled to protract found to be insurmountable, (ien. Greot and Admiral well known as tbo richest portions of that very productheir resistance by meaos-of sympathy and aid they hnvo Porter at last put afloat armed steamers and steam- tive State, captured Alexandria and Donaldsonvillc, tho
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY O ^ C M M f r * reteived from abroad, and the.j e.xpectntion of farther transports, which ran through the fires of tho long line of seats of its fugitive seditions executive and legislative
nnd more eficctive foreign assistance ia now their cJ>ief shore batteries which tbe insurgents had erected at authorities, crossed the Mississippi at Baron Sara, and
Judge of Probate ...CURTIS FOWLER, Maptelon resource. A uew effort, therefore, to correct that pre- Vicksburg. and its chief supports, Warrentonand Grand their receiving an additional column which was ascendSheriff.........
F . DAME, traverse City, judice is demanded equally by a prujout concern for our GuIL At the same time tbe land, forces moved down, ing from Batoo Rouge, invested Port Hudson, whicB'
County Treasurer....-MORGAN BATES, Trav.CIt foreign relations, and by the paramount interutts of the right bank of the river I to a point b«?low Grand excluding Vicksburg. was the only remaining strongCounty Clerk.
JAMES P .
peace and homanity aVjhome. .] ,
Gulf, where ihcy crossed inithe steamers which had ef- hold of the Insurrection On tho great river.
Register of Deeds.....JAMES P.
Ip the battkaof August, J862, the Union forces suf- fected so dangerous a passage. Tho batteries of Grand
Proa. Attorney
..C. H . MA—-—
It will berememberedthat on the 22d iajf'df .Sepfered some severe and .appalling reverses. Iiut they re- Gulf for several' hoarsresisteda bombardment by the tember, 1862, tbe President issued a proclamation ireCircuit Court CMo...O> -H. MARSH.
sotted in the reunion of the' nrtriy which bad been called gunboats at short range, but they fell into tho hands of quiring tho insurgents tp lay down thpir arms and re'
UiU.'.SUI*
infromthe Peninsula, 1:below Richmond, with tho army tbe Admiral as soon as General Grant's forces appeared turn to their allegiance under the penalty that in all the
which'had its position birtwieri tbnt 'Mroiwly fortified behjudthcin. Gen. Grant, through a series of brilliant districts where tho insurrection should bo still maintainseat oftfto 1ti8nrrectio6"find^tfly'ctf^ifaT.' 'llfo vVi^ddW of waiKcuvres— with marches interrupted by desperate bat- ed with (be support of the people, bo would on the first
C. H . M A R S H ,
thisreanioD wassoon to be vindicateil. Th'o msui'jrcnt tles day by day, succeeded in dividing and separating the; of January then next proclaim as u military measure.
army,flashedwith its recent successes and expecting insurgent forces- He then attacked the chief auxiliary' ;the freedom of tbe slaves. Ijbe warning was generally
'•"""' :
'•••"A*®''
• !" •' •' ''f that a sympathetic interest of Slavenr would prodaco an column under Johnston, ami drove it out of Jackson, tho, rejected and defied, but the proclamation which it herUprising of the people of Miirylitrid mlta favor.' fttr'lhe capital of Mitswsippi. Having destroyed the, railroad alded was dnly issued. As the national armies advanced
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
first time crosBea tho Potomac nver. Harper's Perry, bridges and military stores there, General Grant turned
the u^urrectiouary territories, sjaves, in consider®-'
N O T A R Y P U B L I C A C O N V E T ^ N P . f c R , with many prisoner^,fellirito hia hands, rather throtfgb at once to the west. Numerous combats ensued, in all into
bio numbers, accepted their freedom and came under the
r r a rerse City, Grand Traverse County, Mlok.
aocidehts In prquiripg'its defewK, than because' it was' of which the loyal arms were successful. Loring, with protection of the tutional flag. Amidst the . great pre:
icdefoosible.
?vevcrthetoa.
thd
expectatioft'of
recrOlts
a
considerable
insurgent
forcc,
wis
driven'p£f
toward
the'
'
Offlceln Dwelling House.
. ••• 1'tf
judice aud many embarrassments ^bich attended a mea•igtiaffi' failed. Geb. McCkllub, commapding thff bow south-east, while Pemberton, after a loss of rixty pieces sure so new, and so divergent from the political habits of
consolidated forcoa bf the army of the' Potbmae, was re- of artillery and many prispners, regained his sue Iter, the country, froedmcn Wjth cominendaDlo "alacrity en^
J . O. l t A M H I l E I X ,
jibforced by frcBh levies from Pennsylvania, arid; by do- within the fortified lines o^ Vicksburg, with an army listed iu the Federal army., There was ini some quartachriientS'CBlltd in from thc rerighboring forta. Ho now reduced to between thirty thousand and forty thou- ters a painful inquiry about' tbeir moral capacity for serdrove the'insurgents from their-pocitiops at South Moon- sand men, Owing these movements the heavy batte- vice. That uncertainty jwas brought to • suddea end in
TBAVuKemCiTy,
tsJti atid Crampton'g Oap. '-Abont the riilddlo of Sop- ries of the insurgents whicb were established near the the siogo of Port . Hailaou. The newly .raised negro
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
tembier the two oDposhlg arfiflef confrftttted' each other mouth of the Yazoo river.: and whicb constituted an im- regiments exhibited all necessary valor and devotioQ iir
RKFEItKXCES:
at Sharpsbnrg, nnp n pitched hattle was
fought on the portant part of tho defensive system of Vicksburg, were th® military assaults which were made, with desperate
banks of the Antictam and Potomac. .1' It was well
taken and razod by Rear-Admiral Porter, who there- courage, and not without fearful lose, by General Banks.
fiwla !..• [||M Jl*» nilfit.'* |
II, W H l C . MSttit*
talDcd on both .sides. Men of one rac* *nd-' training1 upon sent a detachment of hU float up that important This protracted operation engaged nearly all of General
directed the ariiKs' whose Tanfc and file were sribrtan- tributary of tho Mississippi, and effectually destroyed Bank's available forces. While it was going on* insurtially of one blood, and nearly equal 'in numbers. Tbe tho numerous vessels and stores which Were found with- gent troops which were callcd up from Texas re-occuarrogant assnmption of,snporioil valor Attd heroism which in and upon its banks. Gjin. Grant, during these bril- pied much of the south-western po'rtion, of Louisiana
• • THAVKKSR Ortv
insurgents nad broogbt iivfo the -contest. and hkd liant operations, had necessarily operated by a moveable which he bad before reclaimed. The surrender of Port
B X C H A 1ST C a - ' E J S the
cherished thrdoghobt its oaVly stages, perished on that column.. Be now re-establitbed his commnnications Hudson, however, set bis amy? at liberty, and he baa
sanguinary field.' "ITie inshrgent army, shattered in tbe with the river fleets above as well as below Vicksburg,
THIBUOCSK 18 KOW OPEKKD FOR tUK BKSKFtT OF TBI conflict, abaoddbed the invdsioo of Maryland and sought invested the towo,' and. ignorant of the numbers inclosed already made considerable progress io restoring tbe notional authority thus temporarily displaced. .
refuge *bd opportunity to recover its washed strength ir wiUiin its defenses, , nttemptcd j an assault. Though
T U A f 3fc L
I C,
The .complete occnpntion of the Mississippi by tbo
1,11,; Virginia behind ftEfaccoitbtried hafrWT; tW Poromac.
bravely aud vigorously made, it was nevertheless unsucrxpCB TUB M-riVlfTBKBIBCf of
i '"'Whfid'Le« Wm8' thos attdrfpthig Maryland, theoqualK cessful He thereupon sat down Before the fortifica- national forces has eflcsctually divided the insorrec^obregioa into two nfltts, and among the important
c;ilARX.1SS W .
D A Y . bold and alarming enterprise of carrying the war through tions to redflce them by tho less, bloody, but sure me ary
features
of^this divisfto, ptie which, is pT tbe highest
Kentucky into .Omrf- was asiigned to 'Bragg, who way in tl^ods of siege. Pembcrtpu made a gallant'defense, hopGIVE HIM A CALLl
ot
practical significance, is that the field of military operaa w. i>. commatia of ®e' ijisrifgent arMT on the sonthom border ing for relief froro,,Jobn^tou. Strenuous effort^ were tions
ortyb insurrection is chiefly on the eastern side of
ofTenncssee. Ife, wjth jfrerrt rApidilV, moved from made by fhe chiefe at Richmond to enab|pJJ[obniston to
1
K
Traverse
' ~ :J . •***£. IChattanooga, turning the leftflankbt wo. Badl, and render that assistance. 'Ijhoy detached and sent' bid the river,, while its supplies have been' mainly drawn
--^-^ag'for.retofortemciitfe td the ^avery intpircd acu- troops from Bfugg's army on the frontier of Alabama, from tbo prairies of Arkansas and Texas, whicb stretch
:
ts which cxistcfl In Krttucky and Tenneawe, ditoct- and from Beauregard's, command in South Carolina, and away from the,western shore.- These prairies c*ri. lfy>
su W tho insurgents aritjk
,tor,nstnifce'
iedhii forces against lionisvillc and Cincinnati.' An ttp- in doing this th<j endiuicered both O^os^ armies. All
o in, t h efield,
/ " and. on tho other, band, arms and
rlslnf of-thb farmers of Ohio eonfrbntci abd turned away the capable free men of Mississippi were called to the
tie devastation frdm the latte^clty. •' • • Gen. Buell fol-rescue of the capital of their State, ond ty save tho ammunition can no longer be sent front tbo eastern manlowed4hc main column of hirasion, ootmnrched it cm stronghold of tbo treasonable Confederacy, «vbich was ufactories and deposits to forces employed or in gsfrir
the way to Louisville, and obliged it to take a dirbetion besieged within their limits. Moreover, tho besieged son in .tho west. Tbe value, of the acquisition of the
The two insurgent columns being united at post was in tbe very centip of the slavo population of Mississippi in this rccpoct was illustrated only a few
COflD STXBLIKS MiB WELL A1»H)|8M)S! eastward.
Perryville, were attacked by Qen. Buell. The battle, that Confederacy, and the President's Proclamation of days since iu the capture by Geo. Grant, near Natchcz,
THIS Is the largest Hotel! with the best accommodation! like all Of bur contest?, w*s obstiuato and bloody.-— Freedom would bo eoundWm thoir hearing if the strong- of 6,000 beeves ami 2,000 moles, which had crossed to
in the olty ; the leading Dally and Weekly Papors »re takNi " "gg/aTterficverelosses, retreated through a compara- hold should fall. But the effort required was too great tbo eastern bank, and at tho ssmo time many hundred
here, and no pains will be spared to make gde«so«mforUble(
thousand of cartridges and other stores which had just
and eleven yearti'residencehere wlH ensbfc tie to give rella- . ly barren region, and Su^l was obliged' to abandon for thtf demoralized and exhausted condition of tbo in- been landod at the western cud of the same ferry.
tbe pursuit by the complete Exhaustion of all eoUrccs of surgents, Johnston did pot arrive to raise the siege,
"ble Information relative to the tewureesof the country,
supply. The insurgent cotbmander crOeeed theOumber- nor did SUCCCRS attend any of the attempts from within A vigorous blockade has been maintained at Char34-lv
K.G
Una mountains and then marchiug westward, took' up a to break the skillfully drawn lines of Gen. Grant On leston, aud although fast steamers, of light draught and
position at Murfrbcsboro', fortified there, and proccodcd the 4th of July Gen. .Pemberton laid down his .arms and painted with obscure colors, occasionally succeed ^slipF A I R B A N K S '
to reirtft his wasted
'{! .
surrendered tho post, with thirty thousand' men, two ping through the blockading squadron in the morning
pieces of artillery, seventy thousand small arms, and evening twilight, many are destroyed and more arc
mAmiiim; . •
•• - TAB I)om and Price were ftt theia^ieperiod in com- hundred
maiid of yery couaperabW!fffri»s in Mlssi^ippi arid Ala- and ammunition sufficient for six years' defous?. This captured. An attack by thefleet,raadqon the 7th day
capture
was
asremarkableas the.famous one made by of April last, upon tho forts and battories'wbich .defend
}
i
t
h
e
'
55 <CJ -A. HM- E l S
the barbor, failed because the rope obstructions in the
,
grand invasion of tho lo^al. otfttfs wmfch' uie jcabal at Napoleon b't Ulm.
OS AUi KISDjS.
Oti tho tame day an insurgent attack upon General channelfouledthe screws of the iron-clads and compelled
Richmond had ik-creed.' "ITiia wai an attempt, as they
them, to retire nftor passing through the fire of the bat, Sold in Detroit by PARftAND * 8HELEY. called it, to deliver, but tu fact ,to subjugate Western Prentiss, at Helena, situhtcd on tbe west bank of the teries. Those vessels bore the fire ot the forts, although
Tennessee and Kentucky. Gcb. Rosecrans rowived the Missist-fppi, in tbe Staterof Arkansas, was repulsed with
• i; T2T- Be careful to buy only the genuipe.
assault of those, portions of the irisiir^ent forced' at Cor- tbe loss of many prisoners on the part of the assailants. scane defects of construction wero "r^vealed by the IcJanuary 23, IMS.
^
C-ly. inth, defeated them with gnat slaughter, nnd drove As if tbe anniversary so identified with the nation's jurips thoy received. The crews prfesod through an unthem backward, so that tbey heither reached nor ap- hopes was appointed to be peculiarly eventful Lee, who exampled cannonade with singular impunity. Not one
proached tbe region which they were appointed to in- had again entered Maryland, and passing through that life was lost on board of a mocitor.^The defects ^dis^ S T A W J S H K U
1 7 0 0 . vade!
Gen. Roeecrans, called to succeea Gen. Bnell :n State had approached the Susquenanna, threatening closed have been remedied, and an attack is now jo procommand of the Army of the Cumbei land, then entered Harrisburg, Pittsburg,(Philadelphia, and Baltimore, gress, with good prospects ol ultimate 6access, having
; t* y
PETER LORILL1RD*
^iashTille, which'the.insurigenia had befdrC ' invested in fell back, after pitched battles continued for three days for its object the redaction of tbe forts in the harbor by
SNOTP AND TOBACCO. MANUFACTURER
if*
>!«Knrviir. aoii
at Gettysburg, nnd resumed his retreat, with an army combined sea and land forces. We occupy more than
' ISfc18cfcftaslwi*
tbo even worse shattered than before, to his accustomed po- half of Morris Island with land forces, which, aided by
batteries afloat and batteries ashore, are pushing siege
(Formerly <2 Chambers Street JTe* York,)
sition on the Rappahannock.

iHc-v-aaiir,•
.
..
doWmid call thaattentioaof Dealera to the, articles of Jiiii jijfirwin saiynffniiy battle 7at Stone River, which gave On the 8th of J6ly the insurgent garrison at Port wotks up to Fort Wagner a strong earthwork whicb
manufacture, viz.:
poesession of! MurrreesborO: 'Bra^g ' ^treated to Hudson, 6,000 strong, after enduring ® long siege with has been twice osraulted with great gallantTT, but without
success. On the i?th of Jane, the Atlanta, which
BROWN SNTP*.
the
utmost
courage,
surrendered
unconditionally
to
Gen.
8helf>yville and Tallahoma, aid 1here a^itu Tested and
Macmbo;
entrenched A.' l<mg period of needed rest was now em- Banks ; and thus the Uoitcd States recovered from the was regarded by the insurgents as their most formidable
iOfurgents the last of tho numerous posts by which by iron-clad vessel, left Savannah, and came down the Wilployed
lyr-the
respective
parties
In'.'ihcrehsng
the
Naohftoebe*.
'Cohrse Rappee.
•trangUi and ' ^ t o t n e j i b u t this repose more than two years thdy had . effectually destroyed the mington river. The national ironclads Weehawken,
American Gentleman,
was broken W frequent gldiiijjajoS, and by cdvahy ex- navigation of the Mississippi. This great river, wbieh Capt John Rogers, and Nabant Commander John
•-.ifinmt
YELLOW SNUVT.' .
peditions, which penetrated hostile regions, sometimes in tyne of peace contributesrelativelyas much toward a Downs, were ic readiness to meet her. At 4 o'clock
hundred* of miles, and eflcclejd "breaches of railitarj. con- sufply or the wants of mankind as tho Nile did to thoBe M minutes the Atlantafireda rifle shot across tbe stem
Irish High Toast,' { f Freeh Scotch.
nectioua and a deatructiob of military stores upon an ex- wants in the time of the Roman Empire, is now again of the Weehawken. which strack near the Nahant At
or Lundyfoot,
j. ,
; , , , , tewaw) scale, wiife 'theiteptup the spirit of the twops, open to tbe inland comtberce of this country. Steamers 6:15 tbo Weebawkien, at a range of 300 yards, opened
Attention Is eslied to the Inge:reduction In prices and hardened them EijiisifO ,'eciicral and severe-, con- descend the river and its tributaries from tho navigable upon the Atlanta, whicb had then grounded. Tbe
ef Fine-Cut Chewing and Bmoklug Tobacco*, which wttl be fllcta
floodstothe Guir of Mexico. It is not to be doubted Weehawkenfiredfive*hot& four of which took effect on
fonnd of a Superior Quality.
. Vicksbu^ t h ^ remained iii the hands of the insur- that the insurgent losses in these operation® upon the the Atlanta. She surrendered at 5:30.
Our linos have not changed in North Carolina. All
•l/iiu - •'{ ' tin• ;TP®A.OO.O-,.
T'
•**!<£*! gents, tbe principal key" to thfe navigation of the Miss- Mnefenprn amount to 50,000 men and 300 pfeees of arSMOK1NO.
. B K t CVT CRBwi»4i_; '
SSUUtt. issippi river, a navigation which was confessed on all tillery, ® large portion of which were of heavy caliber.— attempts of the insurgents to recapture towns from which
JMUTP. A. L., or Main;' r l. - a Jag®
1
they had been expelled have been repulsed. Moch
Johnston's"army,
Which,
«t
the
time
of
tbe
surrender
sides
to
be
ab^Utely
ess?qtiat
.
to
the
United
States,
Wi,
Oavendlsn.ofSsHMt,
Spanish.
has been inflicted upon their cbmmuqicatioo*
Jtoii, '
Sweet Scented OMmeco, Caa aster, —1, when reopened by them,' fatal to the insurrection.— was advancing to threaten the besiege!*, at once fell damage
i''--N®s. t A» mixed, Tl* Poll Cav^ndi^
Turkish.
c duty of wresting that key from the inairgetrts had beck to Jackson, and iti was again drivea from that capi- and valuable military stores bate been destroyed by ex. . J ^ p m r a d onthc navy, with tbe aid of a considera- tal by a detachment which Geo. Grant bad committed peditions into tbe interior. North Carolina shows some
N. B«—A circular otprices witlhe'atot j)n appl»c*Uor. i ble land forcc thou encamped on the west bank of the to tho command of Gea Sherman. In retiring, John- symptoms of disaffection towara tbe insurgent league.—

Cfjc ®ntni) CraDcrst Sflcraii),

ISrUBLlSHSD BVKHY rKlDAV.Ar
Traverse City, Grand Travorac County, [Michigan
M O R G A N " B A T E S ,
BOITOB XXD STUJPBirrOB.

" Xttarurn aiti) ConuseUoi- at #ato,

Attorney & Oounssellor at Law.

GUNTONHOUSE
JAMES K . ' V u ^ T C m

m

Mibsisappi, Alaba- j however, the results have been more gratifying. Fifty falling back on Chattanooga, where bij wis perfectly lafe "what be'has doaoiand where he has dobe it. Strategy
Similar indications arc exhibited
/i

thousand square miles have: been reclaimed from \the from all Bragg could do. His lines of communication is seeing with the eye or tho mind and not of the body,
ma. Arkansas, and 'flajtas.
ind
General Rosecrans possesses in a remarkable
The situation on,tlie York and James Rivers has re- possession of the insurgents. On referring to the annex- were perfectly sccure, and he had plenty of ammunition degree. Believe i t his march is only stayed as the tormained uncbanired since, the withdrawal of] the army of ed map it wiil bo wen that siocc the freaking out of the and provisions in Chattanooga to stand a month's siege. rent is stayed, to gathc.' strength ; not obstructed—
The result is virtually n defeat to us, as we have lost
Gun. McCIellan from the Feninsala a yearf a»o. At- insurrection, the Government has extended iu former
As bo has found the enemy in force, so his own combitempt* by the insoiweuts to retake Williamsburg and sway over and through a region of two hundred thou- tremendously in material, not less than fifty pieces or ar- nations^!! be vaster, and those " wings " of his will,
Suffolk have.b«>cndefeated, bqt the garrisoji at tbo lat- sand square roilat af area as large as Austria or France, tillery falling icto the hands or the enemy, though Bragg by and by, bipod the enemy to death or to defeat

tor place has been withdrawn for purely military rer or the peninsula >)f Spain and , Portugal. The insur- ooly receipts for twenty. The rebel loss, in killed aoa
gents lost in the variousfieldand siege operations of the wounded, will exceed our own. In killed be has lost
goes to a mbre defensible Fine.
The President's Proclamation.
'
I have described, one-third of their double our number. Rosecrans is in no danger, but at Prom the New York Tribune. - ,
1 now return to ibe Army of the Potomac which wi month of July waicb
1
the time Mr. S. li ft Chattanooga, the danger to Burnforces.
.
left resting awl .refittiug after putting an ooJ to the first whole
I* Again, at a moment of public peril, the strong hand
Joffmon Davis, the leader of the sedition, has since bide was very imminent.
insurgent invasion of Maryland. , (Sf^nJ JMcCIellan re- proclaimed
of the President steadies the helm. Ibe Republic is
WASIUXOTON, Sept 23.
a le^y of all tho able-bodied men within his
crossed tlie Potomac and'cntered Virginia in November, military lines.
'I bl*. if carried, into effect, will exbaost The intelligence from Roeecrans to-day is brief. No beset b j conspirators plotting to weokeu its armitx—
aod obliged the invading forces under Lie to fall backbattle has been fought siOce Monday, and he wns abun- Foiled in attempts at open violence, they have resorted
ward to .Gordonsville, south -of the Rappahannock. the whole material of which soldiers can be made. The dantly able to hold hi* present position in and near Chnt- toinsidiou8 efforts under cover of the forms of justice.—
estimite the total number of conscripts thus
When the Army of the Potomac reachett Warren ton insurgents
Resistance to the Enrollment act comes through the
! .
J
be gained at iVotjo 70.000 to 95,000. Our armies now tanooga.
it was placed under command of Gen. Bnrnsldoi He to
Advices received by Government to day from the courts. Tho Habeas Corpus, which descended to us
the insurgents at all points with superior numinarched to Falmouth; hoping to cr<«sa this Rappahan- confront
A draft l'or-300,000 more is in progresw to re- headquarters of the Army or the Cumberland are to tho as the shield of personal liberty, is to-day, in tho bands
nock at Fredericksburg, and to move at oncc upon bers.
cffe«t that our wounded in the late three day's battles of traitors, tho two-edged sword of treachery and craft
Richmond. Delays, resulting from various causes, with- duce those wbcee terms of service have expired, and to have been conveyed to hospitals at Stevenson and Bridge- pointed at tho heart of the nation
Tlie President
out,faultof.the General, permitted the iusOrgcnts to Oc- Jll up the wasted ranks of our veteran regiments ; and port, Ala, and are thence taken to Nashville as fast as seizes i t and snspends it over their heads Courageousthe
people,
just
so
fast
as
the
evidence
of
the
necesatr
cupy 'the heights of Fredericksburg, dnd wUen. at leugfk. for that measure is received and digested, submit with they are physically able to be removed. The number ly and wisely be resolves that the liberty of the few, if
in December. Gen. Burnsfde crossed the Rappahanuock, cheerfulness to the'ascertained demamls. Our armies ot wounded recovered from thefielcVisnot officially stat- need be, shall be sacrificed for the moment in order to
bis assault upon Lee's weH. fortified position failed.— everywhere are woll equipped, abundantly fed and sap- ed, nor whether any are now in the bands of the enemy. esei ve the liberty of all for a time to come.
Gon. Hooker succcedcd to the coinmnud, 6nd it was not plied with all the means of transportation. The soldiers The wounded are supplied with .every comfort they doThe Proclamation suspending the habeas eorjrus is
until tie beginning oLMny that the condition - of the or two years' service bear themselves as veterans, aud *ire.
dated the 15th of this present month, and is issued in
|*
. . .
c
river aud roads permitted a renewal of offensive operaThe rebel newspapers give as names of thirteen i of pursuance of that provision of the Constitution .which,
show
greater
s-»adiness
in
every
conflict.
The
men.
tions: The General croascd the Rappahaunoek and. ac- accustomcd to the camp, and hardened by exercise and their Generals killed or wounded in the late battle against in cases of rebellion or invasion, permits the writ to be
cepted a battle, which proved equally sariguiuary Jo experience," make marches which would have been im- Rosecraus. Four of them belong to Lee's army, their suspended when the public safety requires it, and in
both parties, and unsuccessful to the Army of the Po- possible in tho beginning Of the contest The nation is names being as follows: Major General Hood, and Brig-: mrsuance also of tbo act of Congress, approved March
tomac. The heights of Fredericksburg Were captured becoming familiar with arms, and easily takes on the ha- adier Generals Woollortl, Gregg and Benning. Hood II, 1863, expressly empowering the President, with reby licit Sedgwick's corps, but the whole army was com- bits of war. Largo voluntary enlistments continually commanded the 3d divisiou of Longstreet'acorps; Wood- fereoce to the preseut rebellion, and during its coopellad to return to the north baDk of the; river. After augment onr military force. All supplies are abundant- ford the 5th brigade of | McLaw's division of .Larue' tinuancc. to putin force tho constitutional safeguard—
thj* battle, Lee, itifhc latter part of May; and in June, '|v and cheaply purchased within our lines. The country corps ; Gregg the 4th brigade of the 3d divisiou of In the opinion or the President the public safety rewithdrew his army. from Gen. Hooker's, front, awl ns- sliows no signs of Exhaustion Of money, material, or men. Swell's corpe ; and Benning the third brigade trader quires that io tbo cases vf persons held under the milicepding the south liank of the Rapidoo, toward the A requisition for 6,200 remount horses wasfilledand the Hood
tary or naval authority of toe United States, or in their
!
=
'
soorcca of the Rappahannock, entered the Shenandoah animals dispatched from Washington in four days. Our
There is positive information of the presence In North- custody as prisoners of war, or as spies, or as soldiers
Valley, and ouce more tempted the fortune of war by loan is purchased nt par by our own citizens, at the ern Georgia of a very considerable portion of l^o's drafted or enlisted, or as deserters, Or for offencos under
iurading.tho loyal Slates, A sevore cavalry Cngagu- average rate of 8i,200,000 daily. Gold sells in our army. Two divisions ont of three of Longstrett's corps the Enrollment act, the habeas corpus -should ha~'susinfuitatoeverly F,ord unmasked this movement The
were engaged, representing 42 regiments out or 63;that. pended, and the writ denied. And tho President thereArmy of the Potomac broke tip ifs campu and matched market at 123 to 128, while in the insurrectionary re- is. if tho entire corps were not present The8d division! fore, suspends and denies the writ la such cases throughit commands 1,200 per cent preraiam.
to the encounter. The militia ,of ^laryland, * P^nnsyl- ,gion
of Kwell's corps number twenty-five regiments. Toth*t' out the miration of the rebellion, tiniest the proclamaEvery
insurgent
port
is
either
blockaded,
besieged,
. vania and New York flew to arms, ;pnd kcupicd Balti- or'occupied by the national forces. The field of the wc hare positive information of sixty-6evenregimentsab- tion shall bh sooner modified or revoked. Magistrates,
more. Harrisburg, and the lino of the SumjuebounC.— projected Confederacy is divided by the Mjaisaapi.— stracted from Lee's army to reinforce Bragg.
attorneys aod all other civil officprsi as well as those in
The two armies met at' Geityt^nrg, in. Pennsylvania, All the fortifications on its banks arc in our hands and
the military and naval servioe, are required to take dismid utter a fierce contest of three dap'; duration, and its flood is patrolled by the national fleet
FROM THE ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND. tinct notice of this suspension, and give it fall efiect, and
terrible slaughter on both pides^tbe insnjrgenta recoiled
all citizens are to govern themselves accordingly.
Missouri,
Kentucky,
Delaware,
Maryland—all
slave
from the position held by Gen. Meade, who had been
The Battles of the 16th, 20th and Slsu—Tho VastNo citizen of New York needs to be told how urgent
Missouri
nesn of Rose Grans' Campaign, and his Master- was the necessity:for some dec&ivo action on th«. part or
then only four days in command of the Army of the States—support (he Federal Government
ly Strategy.
' Potomac. On. the Fourth of July, the d$y the surrender has alrcadv iu Convention ordained Jhc gradual aboli-the Government at this moment Numbers or enlisted
of Vicksburc, Lee retreated; passing through Gbam- tion of Slavery, to take effect at the expiration or seven Spccial Correspondence of the Chicago Evening Journal.
and diiafted den aod qrdoSorisrs.havc been daily' dis!
CHATTANOOGA, Sent 21. charged by writs of habeas corpus from 8tatc Courts,
bersburg anu llagerstown to WHIiamaport, where the yeant Four-fifths of Tebnea-ee, two thirds of Virginia,
Well, tbo telegraph juars out the vitals or tht cews and the prospect was presented that the Government
proper disnosi'tion to attack him was niado by Gen. the coasta and sopnds of North Carolina, half of MissMeade. Deceived conccrning tho ttatey of, the river, issippi and hair of Louisiana, with all their large cities, for yon daily, and leaves correspondents little but to pick wouldfinally,'bysuch means, be defrauded of the sersupposed to be rinfordable, Gcit, Meade, hourly expect- port or Alabama/and tb<r whole sea coast of Georgia np the fragments. Yop have the story of tho affair.? or vice bf thoosaods or men, ih this city alone, fo which it ,
ing reinforcements, delayed the attack a! day too long and South Carolina, and !no inconsiderable part or the Friday, the I8th ; how, at 11 o'clock a. m.. the enejuy wasrightfullyentitled. Elsewhere the samo process was
am! the'Insurgents, partly .by fording and partly by coast or Florida/arc held by the United States.' The bore .down upon the left wing—Geoeral Thomas; how going on. The decision of the Supremo. Court of the
flnatlag brfdge*,' succeeded In withdrawing across the insurgents,.with the slaves whom they yet hold in defi- our bravo fellows mado a grand fight of it reputriflg the United States, denying to State Conns the right to inriver by right, with their artillery nrnl a great part of ance oT the President's Proclamation, are now crowded enemy again and agaic, charging.them for a mil* and terfere in suchicajes, was defiantly disregarded by these
their baggage. Mnch of this baggage, to well as of the into the central and 6ontjiern portions of Virginia, North continuing the engagement for two hours ; how,, at two insubordinate tribunals, and to such-an extent that iu
plunder which Lee had collected, was destroyed by Carolina. Sonth Carolina. Georgia and Alabama, while p. m., the rebels attacked the divisions or Vaa,Clevp and order to assert tbo dignity, anfi defend jthft prerogatives
cavalry, or. thrown out of tie wfcgtmi to' make room for the pioneer slaveholding insurgents beyond the Mississ- Reynolds, the former falling back ^mtil the troobs were of that Court as weil.as to secure the execution of a
the wouutkjdwhom Lee carried off from the battle- ippi are cut off from t))0 main force. On the other fearfully disordered j how Generals Davis and Thomajy const itutiouallaw essential to tbo existence of the Refield. . He had buHed most of his Bead of the first day'* hapd. although jt is less than six months since the laws on left and right came; up to the terrible work- and, after public, tbo President found it necessary to Interpose his
TioflSitit at Gettysburg.' Tho remainder, together with and custom* of tie United States woidd allow n man of a fierce conflict regaioea the lost groaM,; how, at sun- constitutional Executive power. That he has done it
thWe who fellou the second and third days of tho battle, ^.frioari <Wscent to bearbrms In defence of' his country, set our line was established as before, along
reluctantly noue who know his reverence for all forms of
in all 4,500, Were buried by the victorious armyi^. there are now In'the field 22,000 regulariy eblisted, arm- Creek. You have heard, tbo, of the bcai
|aw and all personal rights will doubt But be bos
Many ttiomtahd-iristfrgents wounded and captives, fell od, equipjjed soldiers ofithat class,'while 50 regiments of ga loss in wounded, though the roll or the
te&ed it indispensable to tho public welfare, and the
into the hands'Of (Sen. Meade. It is m t ; doubted that 2,'000 each ar<3 in process of organization, and 62,800 of briefer than was feared.
Hi
yal^forih will bot merely acquiesoe In bis decision,
Yon hava the leading facts, also, of the terrible fight but ioyfallyrecognizein such an act pnejother evidence
this S^COIK! unsuccessful invasion cost' the insurgents the same class oire employed as tdamsters, laborers, and
40^000 men. Onr own loss was severe; for the strife camp-followcre.' These | facts show that, as the insuf- oT Saturday ami Sunday—yesterday—and whatever on* or hi» controlling purpose and uoallcrablkresolve,at all
was obstinate and deadly. General Meade crosyed the rection continues, the unfortunate servile population, losses, and they are sod, while you may l»ve-something hazards, and at any coat to save this imperilod RepubPotomac. Leetetired again to Gordonsville, Where ho which wife at tlie -beginning an element or strength, is to lament yon hare nothing io blush fbr., A more lic. '
• .
being transferred to the support or the Union.
splendid army never formed in lino of battle.
T
is noW understood to be iu front or ourforees.
You will nso the tacts presented Tb this paper in such
The rebels have gathered forces from every po»ble
' A Blast acaiast Jeff. Davis.
While the stirring events which have been related a W
HY us m3y be most effective to convince those who quarter, and for days,their troops have ; been^ poorin* From the Charleston Mercury, 8ept 6.
were occurring in the East and in (he Wist, Gen. seek
arenewal of commercial prosperity through the into Rome. Longstreet Johnston, Hill and Polk have
Rijtecrans advanced upon Bragg, who, with little fight:
Although carefully covered over with tbo- mantle of
ing, hastilv ubandonca his fortified positions of Shelby- restoration of peace in America, that the quickest and all contributed to swell their columns, aud yhile Bragg is. secrecy by Congress,- enough has been disclosed by stern
•vine and 1'ullahoma, in Southern Tenntesee. Gen. Rose- shortest way to gain that desirable end is to withdraw daily suflering from desertions. Tennesseeans and Ala- realities to show the total incompetency of President
andfavorfrom,tho insurgents, and to leave the bamians crumbling away Uka sand, yct tbe aoofsaions Davis to govern the slbirs of the Confederacy. He has
crmia took, and yet holds them,-while Bragg, with severe support
loss in a hurried retreat, has fallen back to Chattanooga. adjustment or 'our dobicstic controversies exclusively render the enemy a foimidable one, and it really.looks lost tbc confidence of both the army and the people; and
or the United States.
as If the grand battle of tbo war U to be fought, as has if on election to morrow were to come off for the .PresiIt |s understood that bis army had been already mnch with the people
I aim, sir, your obedient servant.
been so often predicted, in the Southwest The rebols dency, we believe that he would not get tbo vote of a •
weakened by detachmentsfrorjiit to rejnforee Johnston,
WILLIAJTH. SEWARD.
would readily abandon tho " Old Dominion " if only they single State io tbo Confederacy. .Yet If the Provisional
With a yiew to a raising of the siege of Vicksbnrg.
could repossess Tennessee and Kentucky, awl ,;t can Congress had done its duty—if the paswt, Coogresa '
' I must not overlook the operations of cavalry. Gen.
ROBECRAN'8 ARMY.
hardly be doubted that they will make, a determiood would do Its duty—President Davis could readily be driStoneman, in connection with the; movemeut upon
Chancellorevillc. made n rapid and ' effective passage Account of tho Rattles, of the 10th and 20th- stand and a-desperate struggle. But our army is strong ven ipto a course of efficiency. He is President of tho
in heart and hand, having a faith undimmed by a breath
through the ifisurgent country, from the Rappahannock
CUATTANOOUA, Sept 25. of doubt in Geoeral Rosocrans and gunpowder. He has Confederacy for six yean. The constitution baa not
to the York River, which will be remembered among
been proved to be inadequate to rectify his imbecilities.
pushed the columns iinto Georgia ; his trot has been He can ibe controlled sod directed a#,the king of Great
the striking achievements of the war. While our forces To the editor of the Chlpago Journal.
We have bad a terrible and bloody battle on Chicka- pitched and struck io the onward march, almost like the Britain is- That Government is a constitutional monwere operating against Vicksburg and Port Hudson.—
maugu
Creek,
Ga.
Ou
the
20th
and
21st
the
enemy
opening
and
closing
ofa
butterfly's
wing'..
Trace
his
Col. Grierson, with a force of 1,500 men, left Corinth,
archy, having co-ordioatc branches. In Great Britain,
on the northern border of tho Statu of Mississippi, and was badly punjshud. 'I"hc losses ou both sides ore very progress on the mop, aod count tho days in tho almanac. oo policy of the Government, no Cabinet advisers, can
Said he. to the lumber-makers ot Nashville, "givo me' stand against tbo expressed opinion of the House of
.
«
mado a? expedition in which he broko military commu- heavy.
We have withdrawn to Chattanooga at our leisure tho lumber for my bridge* and I wiU haveiCl
nications, destroyed stores, and effected captures through
Commons. Are the peopla less potent in the Confederthe length arid breadth of the 8tatc, and finally, without and in good ofder." "We are here in Chattanooga, and in ten days,"- and be, was as jtood as his wont .
ate States; through their representatives in Congress,
And bow did he do it T Without losing a paq or fir- than the people of Great Britain in. Parliament ? We
serious loss, joined the army of Gen. Banks, then engaged will how it, thus makibg the main object of the campaign
ing
a
gun,
he
entered
a
rebel
hpld
which
nature
and
art
a success.
io thp siege of Port Hudson.
douot believe i t Parliament has no power, like that
;
I
A. C. DCCAT, Lieut Col. hnd conspired to make impregnable. Plunge Bto the of Coogrefis, to pass a law iti spite or tne King's "veto ;
;
John Morgan, hitherto the most successful of the
eloomy clefts and clamber tho craw- mountains that ridge yet no King, sioce 1688, has dared to veto a bill, passed
CiscixxATi, Sept 24.
surcent partisans, recently passed around tho lines
this region as if the greater gods fod fallowed it for the by Parliament No King has dared to defy public opinMr.
Shanks,
correspondent
of
the
New
York
Herald,
Ge£ Burnsidc, crossed the States iof Tennessee and
growth offastnesses,and then thiuk by how adroit; ion In the appointment of the national counselors aod the
ICnhtrifhy T; moving northwar^and 'avoiding air large has arrived here from the battle-field of Chicamauga, very
a flank movement hfe laid it all open to his exulting lebodies of onr troops,.ho reached the Ohio river at Bran- where he witnessed the two day's fighting. He says the gions, arid yonr respect for masterly strategy will be commanders of armiw, setting up'peraonalfavoritismand.
*
* . *•'•
denburg, below Louisville, and seised two steamboats official reports of tho I battle from Washington are, in the wonderfully deepened Trace the whole story or this partisanship above efficiensy.. *
with which he crossed into ludiana. Thencfe proceeding main, totally false, and that really the Army of the Cum- conquering " Pilgrim's Progress" from Murfftesboroto t h e legislative power which Congress possesses, as
ropfdW eastward, untwisting' on the cfcnntry and impress- berland baa met with a defeat, which must put it upon Chattanooga ; go over the road with mie. and 1 take in to measures and men. can control the government and
. Ing hmWas his own gave out, he traversed a portion of the defensive-far some time to come.
force efficiency into the administration whether in the
Thomas' corps was really the only one which did any gradually, as I have tried to do, the immense difficulties appointment of Cabinet officers, commanders of armies
Indiana and nearly the whole breadth ofOhio, destroying
that stood like lions at every mile-stone ; roads the most
railroad stations and bridges, and plundering the de- fighting. Oii the first day it defeated Longstrect, with formidable to traverse, mountains to clamber, a railroad and bureau officers, or in the management of our diplofeii»clee> villages. The people rallies to arms under the terrible daughter, driving him in great confusion far to build before him, rivers to be bridged, the Tennessee macy, ourfinances,our military operations, our nrval
€alfi of their Governors. Some of (Ihem occupied the a mile, across the Chicamauga river. Longstrect, in to bo passed, his immense trains to be trailed after him preparations, and tbc efficiency of our bureaus of conhours' fight lost 1.0W men killed, and double that i l J . - f «,:i.w. Li\A tKn Aimrailffn trill
most Important points, whilo others ijarricaded the roads
a ITftn- scription, commissary stores, and quartermasters store*.
orbaugupon thorearofthe intruders. Morgan found wouuded. McCook'B ami Oritteudeu's corps, the same
But this pan nevey bo done by thow who look upon
no disaffected citizens to recruit his wasted rinks, and day. were both badly beaten, and the enemy broke the
President Davis as " our Moses.", Congress must asUHUIU UJUIUIVUU™.
'-"•-'"V
'
,
•when b r reached the Ohio his force was prevented from centre, driving Crittenden iu evry direction, ihe de- Utunooga—how
they rise in the ascending scale ! Aod sume its duties under the Constitution as-an independent
feat
of
this
part
or
the
lipe
causd
Thomas
to
abandon
crossing bv the jnmboats and drlvet. backward with
element of power. It must abandon tho idea that it is
then
when
yuu
thiak
about
Murfreesboro.
can
I
you,
wonvreat slauglter. His force was between 2,500 and 4,000 his Sold and WI back topr^tect his flank and re-estab- der that the man whose alchemy could. turo, defeat into onlv n secret bodyforregisteringthe Trill of the Presihorse, wiftueveral pieces of artillery. Only some 300 lish his line.' At the same time, tho enemy, not knowing triumph, should bdvc the lives pf the whole araiy tbrost dent It must be the people standing forth ro the hghtsucceeded inrecrowingtho Ohio and escaping into the what be had nccidcntly accomplished, failed to pursue willingly into his hands J " Why," said a toterian to me, of day. .clothed with the whole legislative power of the
wilds Of Western Virginia. Many perished in battles his advantage'and Wood and Negley went in ou the
on one oT those terrible days, when the rebels were Government and with tholr agent^he PresidenVinstroacd drinrilshcs, artd the remainder^ including Morgan centre and re-established that part of the line. The day everywhere
and we seemed nowhere, ' Rosey' came dash- Hental for their deliverance. Thst |our cause fill ultihimself, bis principal officers, and all hiB artillery, were was ours, though the enemy held the field Wo had ta- ing down through
the peltin {storm or lead, the big shot mately triamph we do not doubt in^pito of the incomfinally captured by the National force* An attempt has ken three pieces of artillery more than we had lost
petency of President Davis, and bis aiily and most disaslost been made by the insurgents to invade Eastern Ken- On the firtt day, Thomas had defeated Longstrect— cutting off trees a) sickles ct it cori), and waving his hat trous policy, by which the- Confederate 8tates have been,
he rode along tf»e lines, ctfed out, • Now boys, we're
tucky, which probably Was begun With a view to make a on tho secool, he saved the army of Rosccrans from an- as
them where we want thi nvT Got them where; we deluged with Wood; and covered over with suffering -and
diversion in favor of Morgan's escape, but the forcca, af- nihilation. From 10 to 12 on Sunday he fought the en- got
! 0 Who could ha b r e a m e d i t and then the misery. His'inefficiency and Yankee inefficiency will
ter penetrating as far as Lexington,; have been routed by emy, andrepulsedhim hi three charges when,findingau want them
wing swung around lite a mighty gate and shut both be overcome.
•aetachn'icnts from Gen. Burnside'e army. »nd pureued, assault vain, the enemy pushed forward on the right aod grand
But if PrttrideotDavis is to be treated as ¥ our Mothe enemyfromall hopc-of a victory they had haded
:-with the capture of mauj prisoners and of all their arUl- centre, and at the first charge, broko Crittenden's and out
ses," we really do not see the use of ConeresA If tbo
McCook's lines and touted their commands, driving won. Can you coocieve what love, admiration and er* people, through their representatives in Congress, are to
lery.
..
thnsiastn he inspired that day—what heroes be made in
them
in
disgraceful
panic
into
Rossville
aod
Chattanooexercise
oof power, but at the bidding of tbc Executive,
This review of tho campaign shows thftt qo' groat proa twinkling /
..
'
gress has. bceu made by onr arms in tho east The opYon may bear of repulse and railing back, but be sore Coogresa i^a nonentity. It is worec ; it is a tool of the
posing forces there have been too equally matched to al- ^Thomas, with his corps, stiH contested the day, and that General Rosecrans never takes a step backward no- Executive, py wbidi the constitution is practically overlow great advantages to accrue to either party, while tho was enabled, by the timely reinforcement of Granger, Ica triumph lies behind him. That be is master or the thrown, andla military dictatorship established in its
necunty of covering tho National capital in afl contin- to hold his position antQ nightfall covered his retreat to situation ; that he has under his eye all tbc vast theatre tftead. cbaracteruzid by a base assumption of power on
L '
part of the executive, »od a baser betrayal of trust on
orncleshas constantly testraioed onr generals and for- Rossville.
Mr. Shanks left fhefieldat 7 p. m. ou Sunday night of war—a theatre comparatively unknown in its details itbe part of Congress.

•UUJeu such bold and dangerous movements as nwaHy
t^the general reader, uo man can doubt who knows
wifiduct to brilliant mlliUry sncctss. In the West and Chattanooga at noon on Monday. Rosccrans was

E

i

TRAVERSE CITY.

I I o w the E i p t c M S o t b c i n f r A 6 0 « Q 0 9 was Dc*
B I I A S D R E T I I ' S F Q X 8 , N e w Style.
u .
J?*Hk A ~ i » W W ' V
M A X D E E T I I S P I ^ L S . NEW STYLE.'
. .
...
,;j L —
r
— ; T h e s c o u n d r e l X o j C S ^ i a s W c f i re-arrv>1eq a t S t L o u i s , j < Are infallible f o r coativencs* spasms, IOSJ of appetite, sick
T e r r i b l e C o U I s l o i i Oif t h e M i c h i g a n C e n t r a l
•n n ^
jo t h e c a l a b o o s e , M6twittisraiidfr.s' "Ills b r a g g a r t headache. giddiness, scti.e t>f uloating a f t e r luealt, dizziness,
A » d a n d d e p l o r a b l e a c c i d e n t o c c u r r e d l o ; o » e x c u r - p r e t e n s i o n s of i a n o c c u c e .
l i e Dlajred his c a r d s t h r o u g h - j drowsiness, mid c r a m p i n g paiqs, a n d all d i s o r d e r s of the ato,
,
,.r
•;
gion t r a i n on t h e M i c h i g a n C e n t r a l uR a i l r o a d. , t.between - o p t t h e w h o l e g a m e w i t E ' t b e - a a r o i t o e s s o f a n a d e p t ; b u t maeh u n j j ) 0 w r f l J
Ilia u m i e c e s a r y boldocas w a s t h e Haw in t h e p r o g r a m m e
O J j B o p MANY CA^TKS.
a n d 8 o ' c l o c k oo F r i d a y e v e n i n g , a t L a w t o o S t a t i o n
t h a t p r o v e d f a t a l a t l a s t . H e m i g h t easily h a v e e s c a p e d ;
j H f O r l g l n a l l e t t e r at 20J C t n a t S t r e e t N'cw York :
s o m e s e v e n t e e n m i l e s w e s t of K a l a m a z o o , b y w h i c h five
b m p e r h a p s , h e ^ m a g i n e d t h a t t h e fcxprcw C o m p a n y * • » .
j . t c . C o 0 K . , , u b l W M > f o f t h e state Banner, Benaiugwu.
p e r s o n s w e r e killed o u t r i g h t , a n d t w e n t y - t w o ' m o r e ' o r t h e only p a r t y d a m a g e d b y t h e r o b b e r y ; a n d a s it h a d V L
h e w a a „ t U c k c i l w l t b DYSPE1-SIA, a n d s u f f c r e d so
d
*"?• U w , ! » w
t o i h . u g to do
„.a!Iow.
fro:n
Bot a
lc o t r o o d c o u l d u
l e w d a n g e r o u s l y w o u n d e d . T b o a c c i d e n t w a s t h e result * & "
Che a c t i o n of t b o K * P ™ « C o m p a n y ,n rcleas- j ^
^ ^
a i l c 0 l a f o r t a U c s e c t i o n in
ot t b o m l s c b i e v l o u s i m p u l s e s o f . s o m o d r u n k e n r o w d i e s w i t h i t
i o g h i m i s s e v e r e l y c r i t i c i z e d . • T b e d e s i r e of t h e o f f i c e r s v
he Buir.irtd f r o m t h i s d r e a d f u l
w h o w e r e o n t h e tfajin, a n d t o w h o m t b o sevofrwt penal- t o r e c o v e r t h e m o n e y i s * e r t * nly <*e>.twMc. b u t t h i s , DO
a«j»®a«b.
^

d o u b t , could h d v e b e e n dund t h r o u g h - t h e l a w a n d t h e
j o a c h i c e r y of jiwtiqc, w i l b o n l t h e° Bpaj m
P cc1t i l i o u s k e e p i n g of
-H
'
*
"
JIs p e c i a l f a i t h w i t h tbfe t h j e f .
T b e m e t h o d of N o y c s ' d e t e c t i o n w a s b y w a t c h i n g h i m
t r a i n , c o n s i s t i n g of t w e n t y p a s s e n g e r c a r s a n d o n e e n g i n e , closely a t tliu' Hime t i m e t b * t bo w t e « p l p a r e u t l y t r u s t e d
s t a r t e d f r o m K a l a m a z o o , l o a d e d t o t h e i r f u l l c a p a c i t y t o h u n t t i p the r o ^ e a
I t was d i s c o v e r e d t h a t N o y e s
with people returning h o m e from the Michigan S t a t e had purchased a sponge a t a d r u g s t o r e , similar to t h a t
F a i r , b o u n d for Nilea and i n t e r m e d i a t e staUons.
" A t w i t h w h i c h t h e E x p r e s s ' - # ^ T ^ o ' o r t ^ o r m e d ; t h a t he
h a d also o b t a i n e d a [bottle o<:cloroform in C a r o n d o l e t , on. M a t t a w o n , t w e l v e miles t h i s s i d e of K a l a m a z o o , t b e r t f is
ly a d a y o r t w o b e f o r e t h e r o b b e r y ; ar.d t h a t h o h u n g
n d o w n g r a d e , e x t e n d i n g all t h e w a y t d L a w t o n , f o u r a r o u n d t h e E x p r e s s office and. v i c i o i j y ou t h e n i g h t of t h e
rallefrfurther
west
W h i l e comiug down This grade, e v e n t
N o y e s also e m p l o y ; 4 a n o t h e r m a n t o b u y a
-moucy. pretending
s o m e d r u n k e u r o w d i e a , n e a r t h e r e a r e f t d o f t h e t r a i n , c u t t r u n k , in w h i c h t o p a c k tlie
t h a t j t w a s t o n a c k q u i n i n e f o r rOuuing t h o S o u t h e r n
t h e b e l l - r o p e a n d pulled o u t t h e p i n t h a i h o l d s t h e c o u p b l o c k a d e , a n d h e set!t t h e ' t r u n k E a s t , w i t h a c h e c k c o r lings b e t w e e n t h e c a r s , d i v i d i n g t h e t r a i n , B e i n g tfjion
reipondingtd
t h e oatf f o u n d -in b i s possession^
Thc^a doWD g r a d e t h e e n g i n e e r d i d n o t d i s c o v e r t b o loss of a t h i n k w a s s t o p p e d aiid rfcturned,;, b y t e l « ^ r a b p i n g t b «
p o r t i o n o t b i s I r a i h , a n d d a s h e d o n t o L a w t o h . wlie^o h e n u m b e r of t h e c h e c k ; a n d o n S u n d a y the. t r u n k a r r i v e d a t
s t o p p e d i n a t r a i n . I n less t h a n t w o m i n u t e s t h e r e a r St.-Lfcuis. w a i i o i m e d t o t h e ' E r p r e s s officer a n d f o u n d t o
c o u t i f n the g i c a t o r ^of^l^rt'ot the itolen m o n e y — 8 1 1 , 0 0 0
p o r t i o n of 1 t h e t r a i n c a m e t h u n d e r i n g d o w n j t h e g r a d e
of it' b a v i o g b e e n p r o V l o w l y l j r ^ f e r e d , pairt o f i t Conc l o s c u p o n t h e f o r w a r d t r a i n . T h e e n g i n e e r i m m e d i a t e - oealed i n ^ t t e iient of a Bofu. «Ad p a r t o f i t b u r i e d ' in t h e
l y p u t o o s t e a m t o g e t o u t Of t h e w a y , a n d w i t h sflch c e l l a r of a h o u s e f r e q u e c t c d b y N o y e s . T h a t n a r t of i t
f o r c e t h a t t h e c o u p l i n g s b e t w e e n t h e e n g i n o p u d t b o c a r b u r i e d iu t h e c e l l a r w a s c o v ^ r f H ^ p w i t h a lotel of w o o d ,
tio d i v e r t s u s p i e i o n f f o m ' t h e . p l a b o o f e d n c e i i l m e n t .
b r o k e , a n d a d r e a d f u l collision i m m e d i a t e l y bnsnod.. T h e
t i e s of t b f l a w s h o u l d b e a p p l i e d .

T h e following are the

facts which w o have obtained from authentic, sourcts.—
A t h a l f p a s t s i x o ' c l o c k on F r i d a y

r e a r p o r t i o n of t h e
portion

with

such

train

dashed

force

evening,

into

n

tliu

that the two

forward-

ears

which

c a m e t o g e t h e r c l o e c d l n t o e a c h o t h e r , s h u t t i n g u p like a

| T h e following is a e t d o w a j i s t h e

relative

heating

val-

ttcs of d i f f e r e n t k i u d s Of A m e r i c a n w o o d : S h e l l b a r k h i c k o r y beiiig t a k e b ' as t h e ^ I g l j i x t s t a n d a r d ,

100 ;

piftjnt

t e l e s c o p e , c r a s h i n g t h e o c c u p a n t s a n d m a n g l i n g t h e m in

hickory, 9 5 ; white oak, J o ; white hazel, 72; appje-lree,

a horrible nianuer.

"tO; t e d oak 6 9 ; b l a c k Walubt, 6 6 ; w h i t e

baa c o m -

menced tho publication of a s e r i e s o f letters.on , A m e r i c a n finances a n d Resources, in t h e first of w h i c h

beech* .65 ;

( 2 ; b u t t e r u u t , 62*; w h i t u b i f c h , *49; w h i t e p i n e , 4Z

,,,

ex-

A careful o h j e i ^ a t i o n at jho Treasury department has

is

shoWn b y t h i s W r i t i n g s t a t e m e n t , t h a t " a t t h e c l o s e

of

disclosed tho t a c t t h a t of t h e fifty-cent p o s t a g e c u r r e n c y

the

e h d l i ) £ J u l y , 1st, 1 ^ 0 ; ioor

he

elm. 5 8 ; red p e d a r , - 4 0 j " w i i i { j h o r i y , ^ 5 ; yellow p o p l a r ,

I t s ,«uccess

plains and defends .Mr. C h m e ' s system.

publie. debt

w a s only £ G 4 , 7 G 9 , H ' i and S e c r e t a r y ' C o b b wa? borrowing n u > « X «

per. ^ n u i t t ^ O t i ' . t h e

J u l y i802T ' n t h e h f i d s t of a s t a p e n d o t n
deb^^a|i

ftt,B!W,2X1,000.

l s t ? of

rebdli6tv

and j j j . , C b j s o W l

dur

r^gp*^

tfce a v e r a g e r a t e ojf^tfte£«it-to i - 8 9 ^ . e e r i t . p e r a n n k i n .
J l f . W | J , k e r l o o k s ' f o r w a r d t o Uw tVpe . w t a p Uie .national
baxjks a o d c u r r e n c y will d i s p l a c e t b o t w b o l o
Fvstem ai«i c u r r e n c y .

State

l i e t h i n k s t h a t . t h t (gain

c V i n t i y b y bi8.chBu'gv;;wn'l l t i . t w c u t y j u l f j

baijk
to

the

b e .'nearly'

o q a a l to the c o s t of the,war.
T
• T h e l i r a i t f . ri
T h e Boston-Dally Advertiser says *
W o a r e informs

W

: H A V E J C S T l t E C n \ * < : u A \ l > A R E XO.V
opening, with weekly addition?, a large a n d v a r i e d
stock of K^nerai merchandise, such a \ i» lisw.lly k e p t by
ourselves, w h i c h is specially a d a p t e d to the wants of t k i »
rapidly g r o w i n g c o u n t r y ; all of which h a s b e c a sclccte'd
with especial care, both as lo quality, style and price, in ihe.
>>e»t m a r k e t s th# c o u n t r y affords, a n d which i s b e i n g and will'
lie oBfcred at r a t e s c o r r e s p o n d i n g ' w i t h , t h e lowest r e g a l s t "
rates f o r s i m i l a r g r a d e s of goods in the m e t r o p o l i t a n m a r - ?
k e t s abroad.
r v . .
, >'
i i " '<
T o a full e x a m i n a t i o n of p r i e e a ire would invite t h e a t t c n - tion o f m i r castomcrs, an.!-more p a r t i c u l a r l y t h o s e c o n t e m p l a t i n g a residence here, ass-'nrtng t h e m t h a t any i n f o r m a t i o n
compla.ut. when h e used t } U A * D U h r U ! S P I L L 8 . The flw.
nrblch we can g i v e . w i l l t » c h e e r f u l l y given ; k n o w i n g a s "we
! » * d W n o t e e e m to benefli b l ^ m u c h , lint the w o o p d prodo t h a t if fully u n d e r s t o o d all would avail t h e m s e l v e s of t h e
duccd * c h a n g e , a n d by tbo tiqic b e b a d taken six boxes, a
a d v a n t a g e s offered—which rnav be b e t t e r u n d e r s t o o d b y .
COMPLETE C U B E was e f l c e t f d . H e ssy* : - My dyspepsia n a m i n g the same as follows : No rents, no i n s u r a n c e , Jow.
f r e i g h t s , small expenses, (as cOtaparcd with most t o w n s )
as gone, a n d my e x p e r i e n c e »f nn e»riy d e a t h vftBiahea.'*
cash purchase?, best m a r k e t s , ncrferft fumillarity w i t h a n d
i
AKK KOU JflEW 8 T V L E .
l o n g cxperienco-in'this k i n d nf burfness, e n a b l i n g us t o knovr
I
ASK r o i t >JBW S T Y L E . • ; » '
j u s t w h e r e t o K» to p u r c h a s e ditlerent elastics of good* I " t h e
Principal OtBc-. N'o 29» C i i m i Bt.. NVw T o r k . F o r ML
b e s t possible a d v a n u g e .
1
We are thus p a r t i c u l a r t h a t all «tho read may k u d w ' o u r
by att respeetaMa dealer* in n y d i c i n a * .
'
position a u d a d v a n t a g e s ! a n d an e x a m i n a t i o n whiclr we invite, will prove t o the most casual o b s e r v e r t h a t we can eu-.
dorse e v e r y s t a t e m e n t mado in o u r c o l u m n .
O u r s t o c k of Dry G o o d s i s v e r y q o m p l e u , b o u g h t low. of
Read the universal
Answer
to this Questiont h e m o s t a p p r o v e d s t y l e s a n d makes, c o m p r i s i n g dre»» :
goods in DeLoins, Challie.-, Alpacc«B, S a x o n y Plaids, P r i n t s ,
BECAUSE
illack Silk*, Wool DcLainer, figured a n d plain black, a n d
I t i m p a r t s a natural black o r b r e w u .
white Plaids, Swiss Muslins, C h a m U e y s , G i n g h a m s . 4 c . , At. •
It Ooes n o t c r i s p or burn t l i e i i a i r .
DOMESTICS
Icidocs n o t soil th« fairest skio.

i .
B o u g h t at reduced r a t e s r Doubfc: a n d T w i s t C a s s i m e r e s .
It i r a p p l l e d in tent m i n u t e s .

Black and E a n c y Casimeres, F r e n c h S u m m e r C a w l l m e r e ^
TIIEBtFORE'
Y
o
r
k
MiUs
Cottonades,
plain a n d faney. W h i t t e n t o n l ' l a i d s .
'
T i e J l a n of1 T a s t e s p p r o v e s it.
Xankunetts, K e n t u c k y J e a n s , Tweeds, Mixtures, D e n i m s ,
Checks Apron a n d Miners, Ticks, i S h i r t i n g P r i n t s , D r i l l s ,
Those w h o .value fiiikcn Hail use it.
Cotton
F
l
a
n
n
e
l
s
.
W
o
o
l
F l a u n e l s , Brown Cottons, B l e a c h e d
The Ladies everywhere prefer it. (
C o t t o n s , Bags, Ac., Ac. ,
Tuose to whom tiiiie U valuable patronize it.
CLOTHING.
i i a u u i a c t o r o d by J . CUIST^lDOltO.«. Aston House, New
G e n t s fine silk lined Black Cloth Coats, very sopfcrior qual-1
Y'ork. Sold everywhere, and ^ppiied by all Hair D r e s s e r s .
ity, tine Black Casrimerci'ant*. F a n c y C a s i m e r e C o a t s , P a n t s ,
a n d Vests, 8 n m m e r Coats. Co'.tonado P a n t s a a d Goats.
.I ;;
I'rioc $1, $1 50 a n d $3 per t w i , a c c o r d i n g t o sire.
Onder-clothing, a full line G e n t s a n d L a d i e s Over S h i r t s
Cri«tadoroV •Kafir
a n d Alls. Oil Suits* I n d i a Rubber Coats, Wool, Union a n d
I s invhiiiable with h i s Dye. *s i t i m p a r t s t h o u t m o s t s o f t Cotton S o c k s iu v a r i e t y . CoUars.a U r g e a s s o r t m e n t . Cravats,,
ness, the must beautiful cl<iBs,iaiul great vitality t o the H a i r .
well assorted, T r u n k s , T r a v e l l i n g Bags. Valises, H u n t i n g
P r i c e . 50 cents, $1. a n d * 2 jJcr bottle, a c c o r d i n g t o *ize.
Bags, Umbreiles, R. It. Satchels, some very good, Ac., Ac.

b l a e k b i r c h , 6 2 } y e l l o w onk; 6 0 ; h a r d m a p l e 6 9 ; w h i t e

Our National Finances.
R o b e r t J . W a l k e r i s n o w iu E n g l a n d , a n d

Hannah, Lay & Co's Column
JXJlSrE 15, 1868.

1VBT IS CHEISTADORO3' 11 Mil DVE POPULAR ?

GEORGE. G. S. CAMPBELL,
'

CIVIL E K O I X E K U AKD SUBVEYOB,,

G H A N D T l i A V E l W K COTJ^JTJV, M l o h .
All Tsind* of S u r v e y i n g 'flone with p r o m p t n e s s a n d
dispatch.
i' >• •
\

M A P P I N G A N D PLATTINC3-

t h e n i a f e n f n e d i f f e r t o t c o u p t e r f e i t s , of t h e t w e n t y - B v c s Accurately and ricatiy e s c d u t e . l / I ' a t r o M g e n-Miectfulk
a o d t e n s t w o e a c h , a n d o f t&e fives one. T h e fifties find solicited. Offlee St t h e r e s i d e n c e of H. D. CAMPBELL, 811sr Lake. Mich.
twenty-fives, a r c , b e i n g f a p i ^ l y called in, p r e p a r a t o r y t o
S e p t e m b e r 17th, 1863.
|
.
• < '
t h e issue oft a new stylo of t h o s a m e d e n o m i n a t i o n s .
ESTATE OF T1IERON POST WICK, DECEASED
T h e F e d e r a l c o l u m n e n g a g e d in t h e r e c e n t S a b i n e tfTATIE OF M1CUIOAK, ^
,
, jF a e s e x p e d l t i o D h a s j o i h e d ^he u r m y w h i c h , i s m o v i n g
T H E P R O B A T E COURT FOR T H E
Cousrty of A n t r i m , holden a t the P r o Bate office ^ n SUk
Into T o x a s b y t h e o v e r l a n d , r o u t e t h r o u g h L o u i s i a n a . —
Rapids, on Monday* t h e f o u r t e e n t h day of S e p t e m b e r , in t h o
l > c ,triSip& a t latest a d v j c e i , w e r e m o v i n g r a p i d l y to- 'year one t h o n s a n d eight h u n d r e d a n d sixty-three. ,. P r e s e n t ,
V&rds B i a s h e a r C i t y a n d B e r w i c k B a y . T h e f o r c e i s a Solomon C a s « J u d g e of P r o b a t e : I n the m M t e r of top estate o f T h e r o n B o s t w i c k . dee|-ased. on.Tcsdlhg' a n d filing t h e
f o r i n i d a b l a o n e . a n d t h e o c c u p a t i o n of T e i a s b y i t l s c o n i - -H-tltion dnly verified or Mary E. BoStwick, praying" t h a t a n
i h s t r u m e u t pun>orttng t o !>etho last-will alid • tMUmenV. of
s i d c r c d a fixed f a c t . ' -aitJi >> . | n o / T
i
snid.deceased raay.be a d m i t t e d t o P r o b a t e ; T h e r e u p o n i t 4s
4 f
—M—|
»

..
01
T I I E NXW NATIONAL BAKE N O T E S — I t i s e x p e c t e d ordered that Thurs<lay. the fifteenth day of O c t o b e r n c x V

LADIES' WBAR.
Gloves,silk, lisle imd leather. How.-, - H a c k , -white, d a t e . ,
brown an<l blue, Cotton, union, m c t i u o a n d cashmere, * »
assorted ;. Magic Ruffiing, Tope t r i m m i n g , f u l l line i F i o n a s " !
ings, Swiss c a m b r i c a n d l i n e n ' ! ab"J, B d g i n g s t n tiireaA*,

Crinoline, a n i c e a s s o r t m e n t ; Ladies Drawers a n d V«*tt f
W r o u g h t Collars, In linen, cambric, a u d m u s l i n
Crotchet
B r a i d s ; m a r k i n g c o t t o n ; bom s t i t c h e d h a n d k e r e h e l f s H
plain l i n e n h a n d k e r c h i e f s ; d r e s s ' p a t t e r n s , a s s o r t e d t s e l l
be rage a n d tissue ; lace v e i l s ; Ladies k u i t s k l r t s ; haUJaoral.
skirts, n i c e l y assorted, s u m m e r styles : B r o c h e s h a j r h f - s t e t l i , delaine a n d wool shawls ; clo*ks ; l a d l e s ' e m b r o W f c i S
ed Setts.' low p r i c e a n d choice f Wish b l o n d ; black l a t e , !
figucrcd ; F r e n c h J a c o n c t ; s o f t c a m h r i c s . f o r l o d i e a ; uiar..
»-Ul«i; I n d i a cloth, Ac., A c . ,

d*> sold petition
. are r e q u i r e d
e d t b a l i t a p p e a r s f r o m oDiuiuI r e t u r n s a t , W a s h i n g t o n , livery b y t b e 1 6 t h of O c t o b e r . T h e 5s a n d 1 0 s a r e b e i n g all o t h e r persons interested in saidj1>« h o l d e n a t t h e
tjipear ot a s e s s i o n o f s a l d C o u r t t h e n
t h a t of 12."),00ft druftt-d men e x a m i n e d by -tho enrolling p r i n t e d b y t h o ' C o n t i n e n t a l E n g r a v i n g C o m p a n y , a n d t h e
•robate Office, in Elk U/ipidA a n d show cause, if any t h e r e
lie, why the prayer of the p e t i t i o n e r should not be granted.
1
0
0
s
a
n
d
50&
b
y
t
h
o
A
m
e
r
i
c
a
n
B
a
n
k
N
o
t
e
C
o
m
p
a
n
y
.
b o a r d s only .'>5,000 w e r e e x e m p t e d f r o m all c a h s e s . —
And it is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d tiiat Said p e t i t i o n e r give notice
of the pendency' of said i ^ l t i o l i ' s u d t h e hearlhtf t h e r e o f . ,
T h i s is less t h a n t h e p r o p o r t i o n o r m e n r e j e c t e d f r o m
T h e N a v y I j e p a r t m e n t b a s received d i s p a t c h e s recentby eatMtne a' copy of t h i s o r d e r t o be published Ut toe G r a n d
t h o e c w h o a p p l y a s racprpi^-l^r>^»
ly f r o m C h a r l e s t o n , b u t t h e i r c o n t e n t s a r e n o t a l l o w e d T'nrft-Tw Hc-nd<l. h newspaper,printed a t Traverse- ^ i t > , . w i d
circulating in said C o u n t y of: A n t r i m , for thrvfl sucecsslve
t h e result. 1 ^ which t h e G o v e r n m e n t obtains the servioo
<v
publicity."
0bk presMlt I a l l \ h e r c , i t is said, » only weeks previous t o said day <|f hearing.
o f » 0 . 0 0 0 men f r o m t h i s u u a i b e r , ie m o r e fcvorablo t h a n
1
uS O L O M O y CASE,
(A t r u e copy.)
precedes a s t o r m . "
'?t i ! ; "
J u d g e of P r o b a t e .
t h e ttioet woll-informed p e r s o n s h a d a n t i c i p a t e d . "
(40-3*.)
A private note from one at Chattanooga says:

•' R o -

roore a n d e x a g g e r a U o u s a r e j u s t now t h e o r d e r of t h e d a y .
D o a t b e l i e v e all y o u h e a r b u t w a i t l o r a u t h e n t i c r e p o r t s .
T b o lists of killed a n d w o u n d e d w i l l b e l o e g . b u t i t i s imp o s s i b l e t o tnako t h e m u p n o w .
ades,
.

regiments,

T h e report* f r o m b r i g -

a n d c o m p a n i e s will b e

sent

in

before

m a n y days.;'nna t h e n t h e p r e s s will b e f u r n i s h e d w i t h corr e c t lists.' "Many a r e n o w reported J t i l f e f . p c

woubded

w h o m o y t , u r u . n p a^l right. ^ O o r p c p t i o t } h e r e

i ^ very

f u l l of c o u r a g e a n d c o n f i d e n c e . "
T h e j e n d i n g of •' i m p o r t a n t

reports''

iijone

dispatch,

a o d t h e i r contradiction in tho next, is becoming an
T h e A r m y of, the

an-

Potomac

, is reported m o v i n g a n s t e a m e r s b y ono r e p o r t e r , a n d
encamped near Culpepper, by another.

'/One

Pbil«delpbia, eoptradlcts this

report.

contain

J > o r t e d ' t o h o v o b e e n fioid a t B r e s t .
T h e n e x t e l e c t i o n s in t h e loyal S t a t e s will

be

of P e n n s y l v a n i a , O h i o , I n j l a d a ' nj'd ''IrfWai w h ^ c h
p l a c e on tlie 1 3 t h o(October^

" * (joi-

those
takes

. ..:i' >

. T l i e a r c h i t e c t of t h e C a p i t a a t W a s h i n g t o n

author!will

i . T n R .CoioiKBCiAL C o u « * ' o k D c r i t o f f , w e a r e p r o u d .
f o s»iy;l3 n o ^ u f ^ n , t h e s u r e s t y i ^ ^ o s t s u h s t n o t i a l foundation.

N v o e s p e o s e h a s n c c a s p a r e d oo t h e p a r t of t h e

h e / t c o m m e r c i a l s c h o o l in t h e c o n o t r y .

Is,

the

very

F o r f o r t y dol-

a b s o - lars, a y o u n ^ m a r i r ^ e r v ^ s t b p e d u c a t i o n t l r s t

l u t e possession of t h o B a l t i m o r e a n d O h i o R a i l r o a d ,
t h e s e n d i n g of t r o o p s weatl mid a n n t h e r j d i s p a t c h ,

They

T h e rebcl l o a n ^ a s decnoT h e pirate F l o r i d a ^ !

a s p n ^ r i e t b h t ^ . i « ^ ^ ; 1 f i | l i a t ' ^ e ' t 6 n k it

dispatch

f r o m W a s h i n g t o n s a y a t h e G o v e r n m e n t Ijas t a k e n

W o h a v ^ l a t e r |advice8 f r o m E u r o p e .
tiothiug spocially i m p o r t a n t .
i d td 25 p e r cent, d i s c o u n t

and. t e s t b e pu^licaticm.ofithe.ntatevment t b a t i t h e d o m e
b e c o m p l e t e d b e f o r e t h e tjext session o f C o o g r e a s .

s t r o n g , a n d o u r offic^ r s a n d ||MO «t>. in g o o d h w i

n o y a n c e of t h e t e l e g r a p h .

At t h e rifcW - N a t i o n a l Ban)f n o t e s will b e r e a d y f o r

fits

hitn-

f o r f o r e v e r y d e p a r l m e t i t of b o s i n e a s l i f e . . W e c a r e n o t w h a t
f r o m m a y b e t h e . b ^ ^ C s ? . o r p ^ f i ^ o n \ o r r f ^ m a n — t h o infor-

O n e d i s p a t c h as- m a t i o n r e c e i v e d a t t h i s C o l l e g e w i l l b e a n a d v a u t a g o

serts t h a t Burns!de is still a t Kooxville, and another t h a t

h i m w h i e h c a n n o t "be r e e k o n ^ iu' d o l b ^ ;

h e h a s reached C h a t t a n o o g a .

m e n d t h e i n s t i t u t i o n t o all o a r : r e a d e r s

to

W ' - ; com-

throughout

the

T h e I o w a C i t y R e p u b l i c a n , of t h o 2 3 4 , s t a t e s t h a t a c - S t a t e , a n d especially t o pcirents w h o ' wish, t o . p l a c e t h e
t b o W a r D e p a r t m e n t f u t u r e ot t h e i r c h i l d r e n u p o n a s u r e basi& a n d - t h a t is,

ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE,
STATE O F MICHIGAN, )
GRAND THAVBBSK G ^ ' s i f v . \
In tbe matter of thi«- e s U t e o t Vi illlam R a n k i n late of
Grand Tmveive CoUnty." deceased.
'
' n' p
t
A T O T I C E IS H E R E B Y R I V E N T H A T BY VIRTliF. O F
1 1 a llcenee l o mo granted by t h o P r o b a t e C o u r t of t h e
County of Grand Traverse, 1 shall expose for sale a n d sell at
public auction, a t the f r o n t d o o r of t h e , C l e r k s office, ia the
village of Klk R a p i d s and C p u n t y of Antrim, oh Tuesday; toe
20th dav of October next, at ten o'clock. A. M„ all the right,
title and interest of said deecftsed. in a n d to the following
described pieces or p a r c e i a o f land Iving a n d being in t h e
County of Antrim, and Stale of Michigan, a n d known a n d
described a s follows, to w i t j :
.
.
The n o r t h west q u a r t e r of t h e south east q u a r t e r , the south
half of t h e north cast q u a r t e r and t h e n o r t h cast q u a r t e r of
toe north east q u a r t e r of t e c t i o n 6 t o w n s h i p twenty-aeven
a o r t h pf itange e i g h t west. |
T h e west half of toe n o r t h west q u a r t e r of section five
township twenty-seven north of range e i g h t w e s t
T h e n o r t h half of the ^ o r t h weal *)oarter, t h e north east
q u a r t e r of toe south tarit q u a r t e r of. section twenty-five,
township tweuty-eight n o r t h of range nine west.
L o t N o r t w o of section eleven township twenty-eight n o r t h
Of range nino west : I h e j t o u t h west q u a r t e r pf the north
west q u a r t e r of section twatve township twenty-eight north
of range nin<! west ; Lot No. o n e of section twenty-two ;
tlie south e a s t q u a r t e r of the n o r t h eftst q u a r t e r of section
twenty-one. a n d lot No. f o * r o f Section flftoentownship twenty-nioe north ot r a n g e nine west.
(3?^w.)
" . II. MARSH, - A d m i n i s t r a t o r .
; : r

SALE OF LANDS FOR DELINQUENT TAXES.

BOOTS AND SHOES.
Gents o x f o r d tics ; c o n g r e w garter* ; bollmeral a h o e x r
plow shoes ; calf brogans ; k i p s h o e s ; b r o g a n s ; c a r p e t a n a .
g o a t s l i p p e r s ; I n d i a n r u b b e r s ; calf* k i p anil, heavy poota j
ladies goat ballmoral boots ; b a U * s o t a l pebble calf b o o t s ;
love k i d . c o n g r e s s g a i t ^ r e ; laatiug «joiL«rea» ; . r i d M a c e j M d
eeie'd galterh ; ' k i d baglclni a n d a l f p a : c a r p e t aifd p l a s h
slips ; chllds c o p p e r t i p slioe* ; ; tofV ballmorKls ; t a s t i n g boots a n d r a c k s ; miaaes boots, full a s s o r t m e n t ;l»oya Shoes,
a s s o r t e d ; boys boots ; chkUa booh* nice a s s o r t m e n t . I s
the above goods we cau offer inducement.".

E

STOVES AND

HOLLOW

WARE.

F o r c s t o a k , M i n n e s o t a , ' - Y a n i e e Doodle, AlWon, B e a a t o p
Compsor, Volunteer, O r a t o r , 8 o M r e l g n , 'eoniMnatton -brink!
oven r e s e r v o i r t o p u d . w a r m i n g c l o s e t , - C o m W n » H p n : l ' l M « 5
Imporlal B r i n k
PWnftiS'MffiS
P r o m i w , C o p k a U t a r k . Cooking S l o t c s .
.
I n p s n o r a n d b o x s t o v t s i T"5y B o x , G e m . Peerless, B i v a f r
Locket. Idahoe, Casket, New"Plat* BtotSS, Double Door P l a t e
a n d P a r l o r Cook Stoves, w i t h a d d i t i o n s as occasion demand*.
Kettles, all sizes, f r o m 4 t o W gallona ; Bake k e t t l s s , , P o U ,
GROCERIES;
A full a n d complete a s s o r t m e n t , t o wKTsh we invito inapectlon.
' ' •
I
'•
/
S p i c e s in raw a n d g r o u n d material, of best S*r«dss.
• >
TOBACCO^i-Plug, fine c n t , w a o k l n g ; turklah, ttp-top Old
V i r g i n i a lump.
,
DYES^—Indigo, m a d d e r , e x t r a c t logwood, e n d b a r . blue
vitriol, camwood. c < y > p e ^ cochineal.
.'
F O R T H E TABLE.—Preserved peaches,' cherries, p i am*,
quinces, c a r r v n t s , gooseberries, r a s p b e r r y , c u r r e n t , g r a p e
a n d s t r a w b e r r y jellies, tomatoes, a p p l e t peaches, p r u n e s ,
chccse, c r a c k e v , d r i e d beef,
,
HARDWARE.
Nails f r o m 2's t o 60's, as Idw a s e a n b« b o u g h t elsewhere ;
i r o n , a full a s s o r t m e n t ; glass, all alias-, a x e s , broad, n a r r o w
a n d b o y ' s ; barn d o o r b i n g e s a n d rolls r a j c a U e . a n d t r a c e
chains, traps, table a n d p o c k e t cutlery! a f u l l line ; d o o r
t r i m m i n g s , complete stock ; c a r r i a g e h o f t a ; pad, cheat, i n t .
t r u n k , b o s . a n d do<& loekN a s s o r t e d ; c a r p e n t e r s tools, * f u l l
l l n e s h o e m a k e r * tools a n d finding*, good a s s o r t m e n t i
steelyards, balances, fiat i r o n s , g r u b hook*, s c y t h e s a n d
^ F A R M E R S TQOLB.—Shovels, spades, iioea, potato books',
forks. 2,3, a n d 4 t l n e d ; manure forks, schnffie hoes, g a r d e n
a n d h a y rake*, p o u n d e r v c o w belhr. a e ^ h e M t t b a a n d ^ c y t o e a .
grain a n d c h i l d r e n s eradles, p l a s t e r . lime. lliddlfl>_ F a n n i n g
Mills, l u m b e r wagons, l i g h t wagons, wagon seatfc w h i m a t r e e i ,
wheel barrows, road s c r a p c r s , plows, 1 a n d 2 h o r s e ; Steel
plow m o u l d s for s h o v e l plows, d r a g teeth, c u l t i v a t o r t e e t h
g r a b hoes,- p l a n t e r s h e a v y hoes, h a l f b u A e l b a s k e t s , ' w e l l
backets, c h a i n p u m p s , cistern p u m p s , Ac.
MEDICINES.
Ayers, Jaynea. Winslow's. Sawyer's. T h o m p s o n ' s , Sargmnt'a
•avis'. Kennedy's, e t c , p a t e n t m e d i c i n e # ; a s also p l l l r .
i n t m c n t s , oils, essences a n d e x t r a o w in v a r i e t y .
HARNESSES.
Single and doable, heavy a n d l i g h t h a r a w . e s , m e n ' s a n d
aide saddles, bridles, h a l t e r s , g i r t h s , m a r t i n gall*, e x t r a t u g s ,
straps, A c , Ac.
LEATHER.

COUNTY T R E A S U R E R ' S O F P I C E , >
ThavEBSE CiTT, A u g u s t 7.1863. S
V O T I C E I S 11EHHBY G I V E N T H A T T H E A N N U A L
I o w a h a s f u r n i s h e d t r o o p s i n e x c e s s oT ail calls m a d e u p - I t o give t b e m a s ^ n n d f b ^ ^ J ^ s t a p t i i d b ^ S f p ^ J s j e d n w i t i o n - I N BaU-a of D e l i n q u e n t T n x c * for Grand Tra,verse C o u n t y
']•<
[ D e t w i t Atlvtsrtiaer & T r i b u n e .
for the y e a r 1862. will be held a t toe office of t h e County
o n h e r , of 3 , 3 2 7 . a n d s i n c e t h e d a t e of t h a t e x h i b i t , t b o ' j i s ; ,
Tr e a s u r e r of paid Count}", In T r a v e r s e City, c o m m e n c i n g on
' n u m b e r o f e n i k t m c n t a Will s w e l l t h e s o r ^ h i s t o a b b o t s i x
T h e s a f e of " R t l r b a n k j ' S c a l e s t h e p r e s e n t y e a r , p a r - the F i r s t Monday In O c t o b e r n e x t , - a t 9 o'clock. A. M., a n d
o n t i n u i n g f r o m day to d&y until all t h e l a n d s are disposed
Cow hide, kip, calf a a d findings, a complete line ; lasts,
•thousand. H p a c o t h o R e p u b l i c a n ! t h i n k s t h e r e w i l l b e
t i c u l a r l y a t t h e W t X t , h a s bceii. l a r g e l y - in a d v a n c e of
i *
MORGAN BATES,
t
:gs, nails, knives, Ac-, A«-n o d r a f t in I t h r a . o n t o ' tto preSen^ o r & j r o f t h e War De(34-Sw) •»
Count} - T r e a s u r e r .
a n y p r e v i o u s y e a r .during.tbe .wliolo h i s t o r y of tins "Messrs.
Y A N K E E MOTIONS.
partment for f d r a f t
1 ' •' si
/-''j"' '
,
Dolls, cologne, h a i r oil, p o m a d e , h a i r r e s t o r a t i v e ami d y e s
F a i r b a n k s ' business, w h i c h s h o w s t b e unusual p r o s p e r i t y S A L E O F L A N D S F O R D E L I N Q U E N T T A X E S .
handkerchief perfumea, t o i l e t a n d s h a v i n g soaps, spectacle#
A s t o r y i s t o l d of a f a s t y o u n g m a n .at B o s t o n w b o ' r u n of f h o s c b r a n c h e s o f b u s i n e s s in w h i c h W e i g h i n g is doiiu-.
COUNTY TREASUREB-S O F F I C E . )
tobacco a n d snuff b o x e s 1 a n d poyebes, tneeiimaum a n a cornL i t r t E TaavxHSE. A u g u s t 1. 1863. S
on pipes, porte-monies, m o n e y bags, ladies J r a v e l l n g bags,
> 8 3i n0 . 0Ann
0 0 y a c h t , »w no nn «*IA
t b e h euarrtt nf
o f ail
an b e l r e s s . s p e n t a n d a l s o t h e i n c r e a s i n g ^ p o p u l a r i t y w i t h 1 t h e p u b l i c , of
lilda w g s , rattle*, toys! toy books, cdafpesses. b r u s h e s ,
- V T O T I C E I S H E R E B Y GIVEN T H A T T H E A>OiUAl.
.81,000 for boO<juetsal a singte p w t y , t o u g b t a n d g o t theao « ^ b r # t e ^ Scales^ ; j
i > Sales 6( D e l i n q u e n t T a x e s for E>fMET C o u n t y « o r t h e
s o r t e d , toy w a t c h e s .
t r u s t e d i n t h e m o r t tnisocUaneons m a n n e r , a m ! finally c f l t
year'1882, will be held at t h e office of the C o u n t y T r e a s u r e r
STATIONERY.
o f said County, a t L i t t l e Traveree. c o m m e n c i n g on the F i r s t
DIED, ';•••
.lapsed w i t h a d e b t of 8 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 o n b a b a o k .
R a t h e r a .. y.Ki .Y-1 : !• • :
L e t t e r , note, legal a n d c a p papers, e n v e l c ^ e s , a s s o r t e d .
Moudav in O c t o b e r next.;at 9 o ' c l o c k , A. M„ a n d c o n t i n u i n g
I n T r a v e r s e , C i t y . i»n SaturiS*)-night last. "A^1
pencils, p e n s . I n k , black and re4, sealing w a * . ,
fleet m o v i n g a n d i n d u s t r i o u s y o o t b t h a t .
daughter.cff TnojtAj|CtrrtKV,'6s^i, in t h e I 9 f t y » a r of h e r age. f r o m day to d a y . u n t i l aU;the l a n d s u M ^ j j o e e d o t ^
i
ROOKS.
.
(34-8w.)
'
Dep. Co. Treasurer.
V W A S H W o w . Se'pt. . 2 6 . ' t - T b e R e p i b B c a n f a y s t h e
S a n d c r ^ M e G o t f t - s Davis' MltcheTI's and C l a i V s ^ s e r i e s of
school book*, c h i l i s a n d a d u l t s miseellaJteois book*, M a n k
l'OH svi,i:.
P r e s i d e n t h a s received g l o r i o u s n e w s ' f r o m R o e e c r a n s ,
N
D
S
F
O
R
D
E
L
I
N
Q
U
E
N
T
T
A
X
E
S
books,
copy
books,
s
o
n
g
a
n
d
m
a
s
l
o
books,
some
f
o
r
s
c
h
ools.
SALE OF I
.
snuNi
b u t the details cannot b e stated.
*
COliNTY T R E A S U R E R ' S O F F I C E , >
TIN WARE.
/
'- ' 1
b F o r teruus, Ac., apply tc
T h o rebel a r m y , f r o m t h e l a t e s t t e l e g r a m s , h a s not,
FRED. KELLY.
O u r t i n s h o p is in A No. I rtinning Oltler a n d aU WOT*
H e r ^ d O f i l c a . ' T r a v e r k Cig*. S e p t . 11.1863.
O T I C E IS
i t a p p e a r s . m o B s t o d R o a c c r a n a in,his p r e s e n t p o s i t i o n . —
Sales of DefineJncnt T u x e s f o r Manistee C o u n t y f o r the F a r U l M 4
FURNITURE.
T b o r o is. i n W a s l i i n g t o n , a g e n e r a l q>irit of . c h e c r f u l A T H , - SIDING, C H E R R Y , OAK. M A P L E , ^ W H I T E y e a r 1861. wiU be h e . , at! t h e office of t h e C -o u n t,y '
A good a s s o r t m e n t c o n s t a n t l y on h a a d — o t f a i r prices. 1
a i d C o u n t y . i B .__
t h e vvilllage
i l U a g e nf
of Manistee, t h e Cou
C
Ash, a n d aU' M a d e of rfetaofled ^ i » « lamhfcr k e p t on o f s__
MSB regarding f u r t h e r m i l i t a r y m o v e m e n t s .
t b e t l r « Monda^ In October
W e find it I m p o s s i b l e t o h a r d l y cOm'menoa an otratawatlOB
h a n d ; a n d F r a m l n g t i m b e r . J o i s t s and S c a n t l i n g sawed f r o m of Manistee, c o m m e n c i n g
t w e n t y t o t h i r t y , f e e t in Vragth. a n d f o r sale a t t h e Mills of n e x t , a t 9 o ' c l o c k , A.M.,(and c o n t i n u i n g f r o m d a y t o d a y u n - of o u r s t o c k in »o s m a l l a space, a n d f o r a n y a d d i t i o n a l paeA o p e n collision fc r e p o r t e d t o b a W o c c u r e d b e t w e e n the s u b s c r i b e r .
til all tlve l a n d s a r c d i s p o s e d of.
, t i c s l a r s pleaae r a i l o n o r jmA t o :
. : 1 > na tan . * •
'
FKAXClSMcCORMJCK.
t b o I J n l o o u t e a n d rcbpte i t t B ^ « | n t a l . / of N 4 r t f c > C a r o GEO. W . BRYANTU I
i'
HANNAH. LAY * ; C O
(34-Sw.)
'
County Treasurer... • T y a v e i v C i t j r , Mich., i»ng.;15,1853.
,.35-U;
lina.
cording t o a late exhibit ffom

L

N

Doll Children.
No Tact can be plainer than thi?, that it
impossible
to judge correal; of tbe ceuios or intellectual ability ofthe foturc man, by tbu indications of cbildhjKid. Some
of tbe moat eminent men of all ages were remarkable ooly for dullness in their youth. Sir J r n c Newton, in bis
boyhood, was inattentive to irtody, and ranked venr low
in school untill the age of twelw. When Samuel Wythe,
tbe Dublin schoolmaster, .attempted tf> eduiatc llichard
Birtulev Sheridan, be pronounced the boy an 41 incorrigible dunce." The mother of Sheridan fully concurred
in this verdict, and declared him the most gtunid of her
sons. Goldsmith was dull in bis youth, nn6 Sbakspeare.
Gibbon, Davy, and Dryden do not appear t o have exhibited in tbeir childhood even tbe common, elements of
future snccrw. When Berzelins. the eminent Swedish
chemist, left school for the University, tb& words " Indifferent in behavl6r, and of doubtful hope," werfi scored
ogaiust bis name; und after he entered tbe University,
bo narrowly escaped being " turned back." Od» one of
bjs first visits to tbe laboratory, tfheq Tiinef eon years old,
be was taunted with the innuiry, whether he understood
tbe dlfiereuce betweeu'u laboratory and -a kitchen.—
Walter Scott had tbe credit of oavjng 'Mho thickest
skull in the scbool," though Dr. Blair told the teacher he
«ould discover many bright rays jof future: |eniu8, shining through that same " thick skull." MiKon and Swift
• were justly celobrated for their stupidity jin childhood.
The jjreat Isaai; Barrow's father used to say, that if it
pleased God to take from him any of bis. children, he
hoped it might be Isaac, as tho least' promising. C
as, tho 6rst mathamatician of bis age* was'so stupii
bit boyhood,, that his teacher coula make Nothing of him
till they tried him in geometry. Carraccf, tho celebrated painter, was so inapt in his youth, that, tbe masters
advised him to restrict his ambition to the grinding of
colors. " One of the most popular .authoresses of the
present day," says an English writer,' " could not road
when she was seven. Her mother whs rattier uncomfortable about it, but said that as everybody did learn with
opportunity, she suppose her child would do so at last
A t eighteen, ibis apparently slow genius paid the heavy
but inevitable debts of bcr father from tho jrofits of her
first work, and before thirty, bad published thirty vo!-t
nines." Dr. Scott, the commentator, could not compose
a theme when twelve years old; and even *t a later age,
Dr. Adani Clarke, after incredible effort Sailed to commit to memory a poem of a few Btanias ooly. A t ' nine
years of age, one who afterwards became a chief justice
in tbra country, was, duriog a wbolo winter, unable to
commit to memory a little poem found iri one of our
school books.
"
*
Labor and patience arc tbe wonder workers of man—
tbe waml with whose magic touch be changes dross into
gold, deformity into beauty, tfce desert ioto a garden,
and tho ignorant child into the venerable page. Let no
'outh be given np as an incorrigible dolt,; a victlm<flt ooy to be laid upon the alter of stupidity, until labor and
patience havo struggled with him long enbugh to ascertain whether indeed no is a " natural foofy" or whether
bis mind is merely enclosed in a bander shell than common, requiring only a little outward aid to escape from
its prison, into a vigorous and symmetrical life.

MANISTEE COUNTY.
(Condudtd from Supplement.)
Town 23 North of Range 16 W e s t

sharp, it is said, as a needle, Rebel or European war
vessels will meet tbeir match if ti dollisiob takes place
with our mighty ocean iron-claims. J
' ' [Scientific American.
T h e Treason of Vallandighnm.
Tbe following extraordinary statement is addressed to
the N . Y. Tiroes:
I "
Pnn^DKLPmA, Sept. 1.
Having just returned from tbe city of Richmond, Ya.,
where I have been tor over one year, I wish you Would
give the following publication in your valuable journal.
I have during my stay in Richmond, made the intimate
acquintanco of J . Lane, Captain of a company in the
Confederate army, -^-*on of Gen. J o e Lane, of Oregon.
who is well informed, and who assures mo that tbe late
invasion of tbe North by Leo and Morgan were upon
the earnest and undoubted representations of that true
Southern man, Vallandigham, Who assured Jeff Davis
and tys Cabinet that the North was ripe for a revolution
and only waitod the appearance of the Southern army to
proclaim for Jeff. Davis aod forsako Lincoln. Mr. Vallandigham's representations were corroborated by tho
tone of tho majority of tbe Northern journals, who sure,
iy would not denounce the Administration so boldly except by the assurance of having the masses, strongly in
their favor.
I have 'sent a copy of this note to tho Cincinnati Enquirer.
Respectfully, yours.
(Signed)
HXXRV RHBXNBUSH.

:

f .£§

j ppf

n 38 North of Range 10 W e s t

S » 5 ?

nei ot nwi
? 31 £nwi
or nw|
ni ot swi

111 i ffi
4 01
4 00
6 00

40 90 ^5 SI
40 90 5 30
60 90 7 60

uadjofuwlef
.15 160
S 43 31'JO 4 6? se| or
5 70 57 90 7 17
and! ot of «w{ •
. IS 80
1 71 17 DO, 2 79nei orne(
2 80 28 90 3 tM
LotSor
21 Ci 30 3 08 30 90 : 4 28 nei or s«i
2 4o 24 90 3 69
Lot S of
28 37 50 2 73 17 90 3 90 nw| of swi
2 45 24 90 3
Town 24 North of Range 16 "West
ni of nw|
4 90 49 90 6 39
oadiofLot Sof
33 <8
1 01 10 90 2 01 wi ofsei
22
4 !X) 49 90 6 29
undiof Lot4off
33 42
67 06 90 1 63 nei of
29 ICO
9 80 98 90 11 C8'
Town 21 North of Range 17 W e s t
Town 39 North of Range 10 W e s t
No.1
j 1 11
2 15 21 90 3 26 Lot No. 1 or
21 43 10 1 60 16 90 2 66
Lot No. 4
! 2 38 20 1 92 19 90 3 01 Lot No. 3 of
32 38 20 1 41 14
"* 90 2 45
Lot No, 1
10 30 *> 7 14 71 Ml 8 75 Lot No. 4 or
23 43 30- 1 60 16 90 2 66
Lot No. 2
10 36
2 53 25 90 3 68 Lot No. 6 ot
. 23 84 70 1 21 13 90 2 23
sej of
11 40
3 75 37 90 5 02 nei ^r nv. j
27 40
1 44 14 90 2 48 .
Town 22 North of Range 17 W e s t
se| ofswi
27 40
1 60 15 90 2 55
Ofnei
•'! 36 40
2 54 35 90 3 69 Lot No. 4 ot
38 55 50 1.92 19 90 3;01
wj of nei
36 80
2 05 20 90 3 15 Lot No. 5 of
.
28 45 65 1 56 15 90 2 B1
a) of s |
36 159 50 4 13 41 90 5 44 nwi of nwi
\
33 40
f 80 18 90 2 88
sei of nwi
Village at H a n u t e e .
35 40
3 00 30 90 4 20'
Lot No. 13
| 11
13 01 1 30 90 ) 5 21Lot No. 2 of
So 34 70 4 39 43 W & 72
Lot No. 14
I 11
11 50 1 15 90 13 55
Towu 34 North of Range 13 W e s t
Lot No. 3 or
4 33 75 1 35 12 90 3 37
ANNUAL T A X HALES.
Lot No. 4 or
4 09 30 1 50 16 90 2 55
HC| or sei
9 40
1 50 15 90 2 55
Fractional
21 9 65 32 03 90 1 23
LANVIXO, MICH., July lit, 1863. ,
Town 35 North of Range 13 West
O MUCH OF EACH OF THE FOLLOWING IJESCBIUED Lot No. 2 or
U
50
90
1 88 18 90 2 96
tract* or parcel* of land, Bltuatcd in the Conaty of E m Towu 31 North of Range 14 West.
met, delinquent for unpaid taxea, for the yearn mentioned
IV
3 37
95 9 90 1 94
below, an wtli be anfflclent to pay the taxes. Interest, and Lot No. 3 or
3
80
2
00 20 90 3 10
cbargea thereon, will be sold by tbe Treaaurer of naid County wl of nwi
Horrible Discovery a t Yicksbnrg.
3 47 10 1 20 12 90 2 22
on the first Monday of October next at inch public and con- Lot Not 1 of
3 37 20 l>6 9 90 1 95
A Vicksburg correspondent to the New York Tri- venient place as he shall select In Little T r a - Lot No. 2 of
wi
ofswi
3
80
2
00 20 90 3 10
bune writes: •• A horrible discovery baa just been made verse, the connty seat of said connty, according to th« Lot No. 4 of
3 31 20 83 8 90 1 80
on the rebel lino of fortifications. Quite a number of Statute in sach case made and provided.
nei ef sei
4 40
1 00 10 90 2 00
EH1L ANN EKE.
men have been engaged in repairing the rebel fort that
ne|
or
4
160
4
00 40 90 5 30.
Auditor General.
Lot No. 4 of
15 41
1 03 10 90 2 OT
wns blown up on the night of the 3d of June.
Iu the
1893.
Lot No. 1 or
18 67 40 1 45 14 90 2 49
course of their operations they have exhumed sixty or
Town 35 North of Range 4 W e s t
Lot No. 2 or
18
-43
30
1
10 11 90 2 11
eighty dead bodies found buried in tbe ruics of tbe Vort
SP >S
3 a « 2 Lot No. 1 ot
22 28 75 75 7 90 1 72
It seemes that while our miners were at work making an
Fractional
23 16
(13 6 90 1 59
entry into the side of the hill that was crowned by a rebTowu 32 North of Range 14 W e s t
el fort, a .'strong party of Jeff- Davis rebels Were set to wi«fiw{
21 Su
90
9 90 1 89
9 80
1 36 13 90 2 39 Lot No. 2 of ,
22 4 15 1 25 12 90 3 37
work sinking a counter mioet in the fort This party, eJ-of set
4 80
1 36 13 90 2 39 Fractional
27 29
63 60 6 25 90 69 65
9 40
68 06 90 1 64 Lot No. I of
consisting, it is said, of more than a hundred men, were nel ofbej
27 61 60 I 55 15 90 2 60
. 10 40
68 06 90 1 64 Lot No. 4 or
in tho mine when ours exploded, and those that were not nwi of nwt
ae|
or
33 160
4 00 40
" 90 6 30
net of
17 160
2 71 27 90 388
1
killed outright were buried aUvo. Some of tho exhum- e | ofnwj Anwl ofnwj
33 160
4 00 40 90 5 30
17 120
2 03 20 90 3 13 ae| or
34 80
2 00 20 90 3 10
ed bodies are terribly lacerated and mangled, while n | of set
; 17 80
1 36 13 90 2 39 wi or nwi
34 80
2 00 30 90. 3 10
others have not a mark or bruise Upon them.
Two
Town 36 North of Range 4 W e s t
34 39 40. I 00 10 90 2 00
1 40 60 71 «7 90 1 68 Lot No. 2 or
beads, one of a negro, have been dug up. They were ne| of ne|
34 38 90 Bt 09 90 1 96
1 40 52 68 06 90 1 64 Lot No. 3 Of
completely severed from the bodies, the latter having nw| of ne|
34 62 30 1 68 15 90 3 63
iornet
1 80
1 36 13 90 2 39 Lot No. 4 or
34 38 90 97 09
. 90 1 96
not yet been found The bodies are found in almost •W|>fawt
1 80
1 36 13 90 2 39
Town 30 North of Range 15 W e s t
every conceivable position—aome standing erect others nel °f nw|
1 40 45 68 06 90 1 64
9 48 80 3 13 31 90 4 84
sitting or lying, and in one instance tbe body was head • M Ofiwi
1 39 59 68 06 90 1 64 *1 of «ej
l. 2 40
68 06 90 1 64
downwards as if it had been caught in that position by SWiOfnwt
2 39 28 68 06 90 1 64
tbo crumbling earth while falliug headlong into tbe pit nw| Of ne|
sw| of nei
% 40
68 06 90 1 64
below.
CHAIN OF NATIONAL
se| of nw|
2 40
68 06 90 1 64
ne| of swi
* *0
68 06 90 1 64
l a n g u a g e of the American Flog
nw| of set
1 40
68 06 90 1 64 M E R C A N T I L E C O L L E G E S .
2 40
68 06 90 1 64
The following explanation of tbe colors and symbolic awiofsei
nfl| of
3 320 96 5 41 54 90 6 85
meaning of the " Stars and Stripes, was written by a ne{ of ne|
4- 40 32 68 06 *0-I 64
Mich., Merrill Block,
member of tbe old Continental Congress, to whom, with sei' of nei
4 40
68 06 90 1 64
others, was committed tho duty of selecting a Sag for the nw| of ne|
:
4 40 33 68 06 90 1 64 C o r n e r o f W o o d w e r i Sc Jfeffkrwon A v s n f t e s .
mr| of swi
11 40
68 06 90 1 64
infant confederacy:
HIS
INSTITUTION
FORMS ONE OP TWELVE COLofswi
11 40
C8 06 90 1 64
•' The stars of toe new flag represent tho Constellation se|
located in the following cities .*-J>etroit, New
T h e Negro Soldiers.
se| of nei
23 40
68 M M I N York,leges
Albaay, Bnttlo, Cleveland,Chicago, 8t. '
The London Morning Star, of August 12, in an art!- of States rising in the W e s t j The idea was taken from nw{ of iw|
34 40
68 06 90 1 64 Louis, Philadelphia,
Brooklyn,
Troy,
Portland
and Toronto.
Town 37 North of Range 4 W e s t
clo on the condition of military afliure iu this country, the constellation Lyra, which, in the hand of Orpheus,
A person holding a scholarship can attend"either at hi*
25 40
68 06 90 1 64 option.
speaking of tho possibility of a final decisive conflict, signifies harmony. The blue in the field was taken from nei of swi
Terms.
sei ofswi
25 40
68 06 90 1 64 Tuition payable in advance
and of the reasons (or content ia tho. act«al position of the edges of the Covenantor's banner to Scotland, signi- wj
by
or acholarahlp
ofsw*
25 80
1 86 13 90 3 39 $40 for foil term. Same coarse for parchaae
ficant of tlie leagno covenant of the United Cplouies
Ladles, $35.
the forces of tho Union, soys:
eiof sei
26 80
1 36 JS90 2 39 Students to enter at any time. Average
time to complete
" Tberois tbe more reason for such contentment since against oppression, involving tbo virtues of vfgilancc, sei of nw|
33 40
68 00 90 1 <4 the course, three months.
33 80
1 36 13 90 2 39
evenr day that tho decisive battle ia delated gives time pencverance and justice, 'pie stare were in a circle, e| ofsw|
A knowledge or the ordinary English branchea Is sufficient
33 80
1 36 13 «0 3 39 preparatory
for the development of that long latent power—tho ne- sVmboliriiig the perpetuity of the Union; tho ring, like a t o f n e i
to entering upon the course ot stady.
of
33 160
3 71 37 *0 3 88
gro. It can no longer be pretended tbafi the black man, too circling serpent of the Egyptians, signifying eterni- se|
J . H . GOLDSMITH, Resident Principal at Detroit.
SJ of nwi
34 80
1 38 13 90 3 39
ty.
The
thirteen
stripes
showed,
with
the*
stars,
tho
J. F. 8PALD1NG, Asaistaat.
•r wbetber partially educated in tbe freedom of tbe North
swi of
34 160
2.71 37 90 3 88 The most
thorough,
practical aad truly popular Colleges
or fresh escaped from the. dograding bondage of the number of the United Colonies, and denoted the subor- set of
34 160
3 71 27 *0 8 88
Over six thouund students have entered slnre
36 80
1 36 13 90 3 39 In America.
South, is a despicable ally. In the assault on Fort dination of the States to tbe Union, as well as equality el of net
eetabUshment^ which ia the best evidence or their
35 120
2 03 20 90 3 13 their
Wagner, as in the storm parties at. Fori .Hudson, the among themselves. The whole was the blending of tbo w| Ofswi and nei ofaw|
favor
with
the
pnbllc.
ofswi
35 40
68 06 90 1 64 PorfurthoT information pleiie call at College Booms,or
negro has proved himself a splendid sold«r. Tho color- various flogs previous to tho TJuion rag, viz : the red se|
nw| of sei
35 40
68 00 90 .164
Catalogue of 80 pages. For specimens of
ed regiments of Massachusetts and the Black Brigades flag of tbe armies and thd white of. floating battenes.— sw| of se|
35 40
68 06 90 1 64 aend for a aew
snclose letter stamp. Address,
raised from the plantations on tieMfssispppi or in Sou(h The red color, which in the Roman day was the signal el of sei
35 80
1 36 13 90 3 39 Pcnmanahip,
. BBYANT A 8THATTON, at either of the above Cities.
30 80
1 30 13 90 2 39 (Cat
Carol!on hatfe done more than light side by -side with of defiance, denotes daring, tbo blae fidelity, and the el ofswi
this
out
for
rqture rererence.)
IWJS
Town 35 North of Rango 5 W e s t
the citizen soidieraof tho North, They 1 have gono to flbite parity."
Lots 17 and 18 sub. dir. Lot 1 32 18 46 42 0490 1 36
thefront of tbe attacking column. Thuy, have dashed
Lot 22 sab. dlv. Lot 2
33 2 45 18 01 90 1 09
A
HuNt)RKi>
YEARS
IN
PRBOM.—This'is
a
lono
term
into the deadly breach. They have not quailed before
e | orLot24suh.div.ci ofsei 32 20
42 0490 136
! ' ,!
...
•••,•.: |j i.tho deadliest fire. They havo fought tood and hand of personal service, niore than equivalent to imprison- 01 of Lot 35 sub. di v. eiofsei 32 20
42 04 90 1 36
18 01 90 1 09
with men whose contempt changed on the sudden to dev- ment for life. But it is an actual sentence already pro- w aide Lot 20 snb. div ofLot t 32 9
Town 35 North of Range 6 W e s t
ilish hatred and pitilessftary. They haVe carried the nounced mid in process of execution upon the mob thfit
13 3 41 18 01 90 1 09
flag of the Union to tbo very month of Confederate can- filled New York with anxiety, peril and confusion 'only e side Lot 9 sub. div. Lot 2
A L B E R T W.; B A C O N ,
chaias 37 links c and w by )
(LL LOCATE LANDS, PAY TAXES, BUY OB SELL
non, and have.planted it on hoigbts where tfco storm of five week ago. Nineteen of the persons have been con- 23 ch
76 liaks u and s in Be S
on Commission—anO now- otters for sale,
shot would have beaten down the rod o f t u enchanter.— victed, in the Court of General Sessions, of participating cor. of Lot 10 sob* div. Lot 2 J13
46
18 01 90 1 03
They have thus conquered for themselves aud for tbeir in the riots. Tbe aggregate term of tho sentences pro- si Lot 27 sub. dlv. Lot 5
13
18 01 90 1 09.
Little T r a v e m Tillage.
race that which has so long uniustly been denied to them. nounced was 94 years, and an average of five years to a
4 Block t
I IS
16 0190.109 And Lots with or without Dwellings in Elk R a They h»TO added to their freedom, cqaHity. To the rioter!. The terms vary from Gftcon years to one month. Lot
pids, the Connty S e a t Of Antrim Coantr*
Lot
6
Block
2
13
.
18
01 00 1 09
rights of olti«enship they hnyj addejd sbciul dignity.— Finos to the amounts of$500 were also imposed. There
Addition to Little Traverse Tillage.
The above mentioned lands are located in Antrim, TraTney are now honored witl/tbc hatred : of thoeo who was but one acquittal, Dtkl to that Case it was proved Lot 42
13
18 01 00 1 09 verse, Leelanau, and Manftou Counties. Are among the
earliest and best selections with reference to soil, water, surhave hitherto contemncd them Tbe merchants of New that the man hnd been dragged into the riot and that be
SALE O F STATE T A X LANDS.
face and markets. They embrace farming Iu.ds, Tillage
York do not forget this in ttfeir gene rots resolutions to left as soon as he could escape. In one case the jury
sites, water powers, with or without improvements, aad the
aid tbo persecuted negroes of this City«j$ Even the cop* did not agree. Tbe number of indictments now pending
Auditor General's Office.
choicest localities for Propeller aad Steamer wooding staperhead corporation eannot overtook Itiio proposing to is large, and tho complaints aireadv made give promise
LAXSINO, KICK., July 1,1863. , tions, or wood furnishing stations for Chicago market All
rebuild at the public expense the Colored Orphan Asy- of on immense busiucss when the Court sits again in
OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT CERTAIN cm the great Lkke thtroaghrsro, aceessable to market* East
lands situated in the County of Kami ton, bid o(T to or West. Can be had iyfaoantMca to salt purchasers, and

lum. Neither is it forgotten by tbo warm hearted Irish- October.
the State for taxes of 1861, and previous years, and described at prices making It uWoltfect In preference to buying back
man who calls upon hi? fellow countrymfeo in New York
Old Professor S
was ono of the instructors of in statements which will In forwarded to the offlce of tho firom settlement
thetnse{vo8 to rebuild that cdifice, in viodication of their
Treasurer of said Connty. soqp time next month, will be sold
S T A T E LANDS.
collective honor. I«nstOf all is it forgotten by the Con. Darmouth college, years ago, and wa3 withal about as at pabllc auction, by said Treasurer, at the County Seat, on
Win sell choice lands, for. farming, fencing, cedar posts
federate authorities. A Ilicbmood letter makes it the blunt and straight-forward a specimen of humanity as the first Monday or October next at-the time and place and timber purposes, in all partsor the Const/; orwilise
object of Mr. Vice President Stereo's mission to Wash- over walkid, being considered a little crabbed by inti- designated tor the ordinary Tax Bales, if not prevloualy, dis- euro to parties State 'Lands of their selection on as Hbcraor at this Office, according to law.
terms aa can be purchased of the State.
ington to protest against arming tho negroes under the mates. Cue day in early summer he was taking his usu- posed
Said Htatementa contain a fall description of each parcel
J
threat of retaliation in kind. Seven hundred and fifty al stroll al-out tho village, keeping-his " eye out" for any or said landA and may be seen on application at the office or Travsrae City, July 11, 1863.
thousand negroes, wo are told, the Confederates could " fast'' student who might be '• off duty," when he met the County treasurer. '
N O T I CE .
bring into tbe field. ITow many would they take out of Mr. Page, a sturdy farnjer from East Hanover, • with a Lands struck off to the State for Taxes o( 1861, or other
T O L E N FBOM MAIL (OB 8UPPOSEDTO BH.) MILL
tary Bounty Land Warrant Act or 1655, No. 21987. issued
it ? How mAnv would returnVto the labor gang and the toad of wood, trudging along tbe road barefooted ; but years, at the Tax Sales in October last will be o(ftred sutyect
to the right or redemption prescribed by law, as well aa to to Robert H. Hag gal, or Bridgewater, Washtenaw Co^ Mich.,
he was n line representative of •' Nature's noblemen.''
slave cabin ? Arms are the pforogativo of freedmcn.
the right or parchaae or the State Bids atthls Office, prior to whose Post Office address la Clinton. Lesawa Co* Michigan.
•' Hallo I Mr. Page,"'growled the Professor, " I should the sale.
Never yet have slaves or serfs been coo verted into sol.
EMIL ANNEXE,
|
'
Auditor General.
diers and again reduced to servitude. The whole negro like to know if all tho people of Hanover go barefoot
manhood Of America may by degrees he invested with o d T
Offlce at Saline, and by tbe Deputy directed te Register of
ANNUAL T A X S A L E S .
Part of 'em do, n n | the relt on 'em mind their own
United States Land Office, Traverse City, Michigan. All perthe uniform aud firelock. But it o u s t be in the
sons are forbidden to purchase or trade for said Warrant aa
- catae of emancipation; And when the Confederates con- business," was the rather settling reply.
I intend to apply for a duplicate or said Warrant to the Penclude to emancipate their negroes they-will have no more
LAXSINO, Mien, Jnly 1st,
sion Office at Washington.
A
Goon
AtofcooTE
or
Gat.
LOOAN.—When
this
galMUCH OF EACH OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED
cause of quarrel with the Union."
BOBEBT M. BISDON.
lant officer was a Colonel at tho commencement of the 5 tracts orparcela or land, situated In the Connty or M a n Manistee, August 31,1863.
IW
rebellion, six companies of his corps becoming aggrieved I too, delinquentforunpaid taxes, for the year mentioned
; M i g h t r Iron Clad Frigates.
below, as will be mfflcientto pay tbe taxes interest and
T O A L L W H O ! I T M A T CONCERN.
The jrreat ocean iron clad frigates Dictator and Puri- at something, stacked arms and refused to do duty.
charges thereon, will be sold by the Treasurer ofaald
OTICE IS HEBEBY. GIYEN THAT AN .APPLICAtan, building at New York for the Uqited Slates navy, Tho Adjutant informed; Colonel Logan of the difficulty, Connty, on the first Monday ot
or October next at such
sw ' pabllc
tion will be presented to the Board of Supervisors at
enient place
plare as he
be shall select in SSt.
t . J a m e s . their meeting to be held at Ti*verse City, On the 12th day of "
have at last assumed the shape of complete vessels, and who on hearing i t exclaimed : " Stacked arms ? The and convenient
Island, the connty seat or said connty, according October, 1863, praying them to enact and provide for the
it is no exaggeration to sav that they iirpass anv craft devil tbev have I" Then pausing a minute, as he con•'
* snch
*- c—e made and provided.
ia
taking that part of Town 27 Range 9 West belonging to the
ever built there. The hulls are now; almost finished, sidered «ie emergency,: he eontgiued: " Well, Adjetant, to the Statute
EMIL ANNEKE,
Township or Traverse, and annexed to tbe Township, of
the tides being made with a more formidable armor than IU give 'em enough of stackingarms." Accordingly ho
Auditor General.
Whitewater ; a map or surrey«T which territory will be atformed the remaining four companies iu line with loaded
those of any other vessel The turrets win be of h
1843*
tached to the application.
mence magnitude, no toss than two fijef of iron being moiketK and stood them over the malcontents, whom ht
August 2«th. 1863.
Town 40 North of Range 8 W e s t
CHARLES BROOMHEAD. IV-8. BEBEE,
laid on with tbe usual woode* backing, in the most ap- compelod to stack and ,unstack arras for twelve hours.
8
F
§
WM. LA NO WORTHY,
OAB A. HAI.L,
proved style. These Teasels are to bc320 foet loag. 50 They didn't want to stack arms after that without special
NELSON A. HAM.,
nMlB. DUBGA,
feet wide, and will have 20 feet depth; of hold Their orders.
McKEN7.IE SIKRBILL
N.Tfc»GLKE,
engines are to have each twe upright ;cylinders of 100
D. B. SCOF1ELD,
UIEV JOHNSON,
Fractional
33 11 35 68 06 90 1 64
Eighty
National
Banks,
with
a
capital
of
$10,500,inches diameter, and 4 feet stroke oft piston. Their
WM. B. SCOFIELD,
PHILANDEB ODELL,
Town 37 North of Range 10 W e s t
000, have been authorised. The first instalment of cirJ8-4w.
•crews will bo 21 feet, 6 inches ia diameter ; pitch 82
Lot No. 2
11 62 75 3 07 30 90 4 37
feet Their boilers are six in number,: threo on each culating notes will be ready in October.
Lot No. 1
14 36 SO I 96 19 90 3 05
MORGAN B A T E S ,
Lot
No.
2
14
34
65
I
96
19
90
3
05
Bide, abd are of return tubular pattern.: They are ex-'
What wna the ancicat Nile in its early years ? Tbo nwi of mrf
14
40
2
2t
22
90
3
33
pected to" mrfke 20 miles an hour. Thpir bows are as Jnvo-Nilc.
1
ne| otnefll
15 40
2 31 33 90 3 33
H e r a l d 01Hc«, T r a v e r s e C i t y .

S

"i-

, M ! t |j *

BRYANT & STRATTOrrS

i

B r a n c h Located a t D e t r o i t ,

T

FtKAT. E S T A T E
GENERAL: LAX J) OFFICE,

11600 Acres of Choice Lands;

N

S

N

I if

if.

N O T A R Y ITTBLIC,

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