Grand Traverse Herald, January 31, 1862

Dublin Core

Title

Grand Traverse Herald, January 31, 1862

Subject

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

Description

Issue of "Grand Traverse Herald" Newspaper.

Creator

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

1862-01-31

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

Rights

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

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

gth-01-31-1862.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

GRAND TRAVERSE HERALD.
T R A V E R S E d l T Y , M I C H . F E I D J \ Y , JA.3STTJA.RY 31, 1862.

V O L . XV.

®j[t ,®ranii CroSjcrse Utnili),
IB PTBURUri) KVIRT rBIDAT, AT,
T r a v e r s e C i t y , G r a n d Trnvajp* C o n n t y , M i c h i g a n ,

MORGAN BATES,
'

BDITOB AHD inoi-BirroK.

T K K M S .
One Dollar »nd PtOj Call (xr aanam. p»r*b!e lorsrisblr lo tdTtnc*
A4rcrtitemenu lnwrl«4 for Ou Deltkr per mn«ro fun lln«] lw II*
Atmtmmgg-go

fcr

««'•<"'£«» J5*2£,2XS» S

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!•*») »dT«rtt»»yeoU mmbe p«ldfor<Irtctljln »d«»uce.
^ Ml KiA
Seartj ul Ei^itW; total.

DS1TED STiltS USD MICE it TEATS
tE CITY, llffl.
Register
L... i
Bflmirer....

.

;

MORGAN BATES.
HEPBEN GOODRICH.

^ GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY o r a c E R s r
O . . . . C U R T W F O W L E R , Mtpleton
W H . E . S Y K E S , Northport,
M O R G A N B A T E S , Tr*v. City.

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- T H E B O N MOSTWICR,'

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/

Tfr.
'

P E R R Y H ANN A H . Ti^. City.
G E O . K . S M I T H , Northport.

J . Or. R A M S D E L L ,

Attorney & Counsellor at Law,
OFFICE I* DAUB'S BLOCK,
Nortbport, Grand T w i m c County, Mich.
REFERENCES:
HOB. 0<K>. V*rt»n. CU'J, Sopr. Ct, Ji.lHon. Aortto

,

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t Z - jJostah
j f i S Tnmffr,
S L f i S y—
j « ^ i'lhfct.
^£^™
* C ^ n uO^Mtah.
Mlchil'
Tth " "" «—• » , B.t«.
Tr».r~5

C H A R G E S H. HOIJI>EN,

^ttornrj!, Counsellor anil Solicitor,
T!AX AND GENERAL AGENT,
NORTHPORT,
OK AND TRAVEBSB COUNTY, MICHIGANOffice Second Door Sooth of Union Dock.
21-ly

.1

C, H . M A R S H ,

^ttoifneii aul tattstUor at fate,
'
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
KOTARt" PUBLIC £ CONVEYANCER,
r r a verse C i t r » G r a n d T r a v e r s e C o n n t y , M i c h .
|
Offlitt In Dwelling House.
I-ly

j T. J. R A M S D E L L

3.ttornrj) aitif Counsellor at £ ato,
AND J

s o i j X c r r o K EN CBLAJ^CKRY,
.

I

NO. 4 FIRST STREET,
Maniatec. Michigan.

'

,

A-ISTE'W M A G A Z P N E .
ANNOUNCEMENT.

T

-

H E R E a r e periods In t h e w o r l d ' * history m a r k e d
by extraordinary and violent crises, n w n w the breaking forth of a volcano, or the. bursting of a storm on the
ocean. -The* etlses sweep awav in * moment the landmarks
of generations. They calf out freeli talent, and give to the
old * new direction. It is then that new ideas arc bom, new
theories developed. Such periods domaud fresh exponents,
•nd new men for expounder*..
.
This continent lias lately been convulsed by on upheaving
so sadden and terrible that the relations of *11 men and *11
classes to each othee arc violently distorted, and people look
about for the elements with which to sway the Mora and direct the whirlwind. Jnrtatprese.it we do not know what all
t h i s is to bring forth; but w» do not know that great results
mast flowjfrom such extraordinary commotions.
At * juncture so solemn and so important, there Is especial
need that die intellectual force or the country should be active and efficient. It is * time for great minds to speak their
thought* boldly, and to take, position as the advance guard.
To this end there is a spacingifttj uusuppHcjL It Ui tjiftt pf
an Independent Magazine, which shall be open to the first'
intellects of the land, and which Shall treat the issues pn£
seated, and to be presentedjtothe country, in a tone no way
mentoua subject that the present disturbed state of offidrs
heave to thu surface, and Which cannot be laid aside or neglected.
|
To meet this want, the uddeisigned annonnfe that early in
December next, »nd monthly thereafter, will be published,
under the Editorial charge of CHARLES GODFREY LELAND,
* New Maguzihe, entitled

The' Continental Monthly,

t« be devoted to Literature and National Policy.
In politics, It will advocate. With all thejforce at its command, measure* best adapted to preserve the oneness (nd integrity of the United States. It will never yield to the idea
disruption of thla Republic, peaceably or otherwise, and it
will dlscnss, with hoaesty and impartiality, what must be
must be o«-r« to save it.

In Literature, It will contain article* in both prose and
*«tsa of the most varied character, aad of the highest merit,
by the best writers and ablest thinkers ofthis country.
It will be liberal and progressive, withoot yielding to tbe
eMmera* and hopes beyond the grasp of the age, aod It wUl
eadeavor to reflect the feeliafca and interests of the American people, and to illustrate both their serious and humeroos
peculiarities. la short, n o pains will be spared to make it
\ tha Bepte^ntailte M*gnaln« frf the time.
The Continental Monlhty will he priated on Hac paper, »nd
in Uie b^ststyte of typography, aad each number will conUto ona hunieed and twelve royal octavo pages. ..
*jliiiMT T h r u dollars per year In ailvanca, (pottage paid
by the publishers:) two copies for five dollar*; three copies
J . r & "G'ILM ( S R E ? * A t o n m l t M r W t , Boston
;

|PUTim|r^^^^W.p»M'Tort
* '-0- "

.

RUtraad the Ceotiaeatal Magazine

M p i J I " T h i s ' H b J ^ o f l ^ r I s ^ s d t toinee the frienes of the two publication, te make eOWta to
wad thalr circulation.

N O . 9.

Hoar by hour the morning wore away, and although pecting that instant marches, reconuoissances, skirmishes,
Song.
tbe noisy children trooped in one after the other, awoke assaults, battles, will decide the issue of contest, and
Columbia's shores ore wild and wide—
• Columbia's hills are high.
the baby aud undid a great part of her work, still, by leave him should he survive, free to return to his home
And rudely planted side by side.
But
noon which brought dinner and her husband, things did and family within a few months at furthest.
Her forests meet the eye.
look a little civilized. Noon certainly did not bring a such-iB not tbe actual experience of war, save in the rare
But narrow must those shores be made.
large amount of-diuner that day, but looking across the instances wherein a Napoleon directs its operations. On
And low Columbia's hills, ontrary, nreperation is the never-ending still be ginAnd low her ancient forests laid.
flat, she saw John's manly form, and a glow passed over •'
Ere Freedom leaves her fields. .
trial of the patriot soldier's energies and delay tbe
her thin, shallow face, for in spite of their t^uromatic surFor 'tis the land, where, rude and wild,
j of his existence. H e has volunteered to fight for
roundings these two people loved each other a9 do not
Hhe play'd her gambols when a child.
many husbands and wives who live in stately dwellings. his country; but to fight effectively he must have arms—
And deep and wide her streams that Slow,
She took up the salt pork and potatoes, lifted the baby not anything that can be carried over the shoulder, but
Impetuous to the tide ;
into a high cljpir, aud wbon John, escorted by the three •fFective and expensive weapons. These cost heavily; but
And thick and green the laurels grow
dirt pie makers, came into the kitchen, he looked as mouey will not buy them when wanted in large quantities ,
On every river's bide.
if he thought she had done about as well as a woman they must be made and that is a work of time. Cannon,
But should a transatlantic host
couid do who had nothing to do with. But still she no- knapsacks, blankets, clothing, shoes, cartridges, provisPollute her waters fair.
We'll meet them on the rocky coast.
ticed the clond on his' face, noticed his careless answers ions, forage, medicines, aud au infinite variety of couvftlAnd gather laurels there :
to the children, and^aee-or twice detected a long, hard ieuccs of the march, thu camp, and the baltle-ii«ld, are
For, Oh ! Columbia's sons are brave.
breath, as if he wereMuakuig up some desperate resolve. required; and, wheu everything else- is provided, the
And free as ocean's wildest wave.
She tried to speak of it two or three times, but something number of wagons and horsee required to move the
The gales that wave her mountain piiie
sealed her lips, and h e a v e d her the effort. " F a n n y , baggage and artillery of a great Brmy is absolutely appalAle fragrant and serene ;
ling. Y e t the army cannot move Without its baggage,
our company, the Stark Rifles, are going to the war."
And never clearer sun did shine
She saw it all in a moment—the picture of h e r hus- its guns; nnd so, even wheu Use means of purchasing are
Than lights her valleys green.
But putrid uinsl those breezes blow.
band as she had seen him' years ago, before they had ample and thu work-shop at hand, it is the labor of
That sun must set in gore,
ever thought of being married, above his fellows on the mouths to fit an army of a hundred thoufaud men to take
Ere footsteps of a foreign foo
muster field in height r o t stooping low his proud head the field and move forward into a hostile country.
Imprint Columbia's shore.
But wan it always thus? a novice will naturally a s k j if
iu acknowledgement of ner timid bow. A u d theu another
For Oh ! her sons arc brave and free—
scejje took its place—that tall figure in the old familiar so. how have hostile countries, been rapidly traversed uwl
Their breasts beat high with liberty.
uniform, lying stained with dust and blood in a far-off- empires overthrown by military (orce aloiuj?
No, it has not always been liiua. T h e irop -dimer.ts ot
For arming boldest curassier
battle ground. Sbe looked ready to faiut but still he
We've mines of sterliug worth.
__i ancient army was uodiing to that of its modern succeswept on with his story.
For sword and buckler, spur and spear,
*' 1 knew it a week ago, France?-—knew it when .-the sory. T h e d i s c o v e r y ^ gunpowder bus enormously inEmbowell'd III the earth.
creased
tbo weight p e r man that aiust be borne along
And ere Columbia's sons resign
governor called out the regiment to which we belonged,
with un army expecting to fight. T h e Roman soldier.
The boon their father's won
but 1 dared not tell you,1"
The polished ore from every mine
marched with a weight on his back which no
N o word from the pale woman by his aide—only one
Shall glitter in the sun :
wild thought iu her brain. , Could sh®s not hold, keep modern army could be induced to shoulder; but bisweapFor bright's the bludc, and sharp the spear,
b e a w , and his misriles
hHSfiles were .few and of
back this man, her one earthly hope, from what seemed ons woree not heavy,
Our warriors to tlic battle be air.
small account Modern warfare (kdights ii
to her certain death? 1
If Britain boast the deeds she's done,
cannon, in costly aud weighty projectiles, in shelly round
" W e go to Concord Saturday," (and to-day is Thurs- shot, and grape, all costly Bud tedious in preparation *od
Display her trophies bright.
day, thought the stricken woman.) •' A t first 1 determin- enormous in aggregate w e i g h t T h e difference tells intAnd count her laurels bravely won
In well contested fight,
ed 1 wouldn't go, couldn't go, but when I v^ut to the
ensely in the titrie required for tbe proper opening and
Columbia can a band array
company meeting last night, and the squire r e a d . t h e
nidoct of a campaign.
.'
Will wrest the laurel wreath ;
President's call for help, my blood boiled and my hand
• With truer eye and steadier hand
T h e wondrous conquests of Alexander, Hannibal,
weui up with the rest. God only kuow& Fanuy, how- Julius Crnsar, and other great W8riorraof antiquity, were
Will strike the blow of death :
hard it is to leave you and the children, but 1 don't dare
For, whether on the land or sea,
the fruits of years of previous sttufy and preparation.—
Columbia's light is victory.
to be a coward. W h y , . Fauny, I couldn't ever show E a c h wielded the resources4fn powerful military state,
grandsire's old queen's arm to the boys again, if 1 turned which had armies trained to efficiency in former confllctK,
In purple streams let Gallia wade,
my back to my country now."
. And frantic in her mood,
••
and arsenals bursting with weapons aud stores prepared
With civil discord draw the blade
His great voice trembled, anil the wondering baby for the exigencies of war. 'J V overthrow of the Persian
And spill her country's blood.
iugbt a tear on its grimrny littlfcliaud, b u t there wasn't empire by Greek valor had been the passionate dream
Too dear the skill in arms is bbught
line that looked likt faltering in that stern face. T h e multitudes since the days pf -Xenophon und of ThcmistoWhere kindred life-bjood flows ;
wife's tears fell like summer rain,'but the works of her cles. So the carrying of_ war into the heart of Italy,
Colombia's sons are only taught
To triumph o'er their foes :
thrilled her, for the trdff blood'of the true old among the overborne allies and myriad slaves of the RoAnd then to comfort, sooth and save
i iu her veins, and It shamed her now that even mans, was the obvious dictate of Carthagiuian policy and
The feelings of the conquer'd brave.
for a second she had thought of holding back her dearest hate: the g e n i u s of Hannibal but gave direction and
and best, if liberty called. H a d she not listened when force to the National inspiration. T h e earlier crusuadre
he read how the Massachusetts troops were m
disastrous-failures, bccause it was mistakenly supin Baltimore, how Ellsworth was shot down like a dog, posed that numbers, enthusiasm, and valor, could bo reand didn't she know that this war would decide whether lied on for success in the absence; of a vast and complete
it
was
to
be
freedom
or
slavery
for
her
children?
H
e
The storm of war is spent.
provision of what is justly termed the material of war.—
Descending, like the welcome dove,
i all she had of strength in the world; h u t for his
W i t h o u t a well-organized and well-provided commissariat,
The olive branch present:
would not hold him back. She did not ueed t
„ a great and valiant army must speedily be dispersed by
And then will beauty's hand divine
words wherein to express her consent; but when be saw famine, proving a terror not so much to its foes as to its
The never failing wreath entwine.
her white lids stiffen iuto sternuess, he knew he had no
luntrymen.
k complainings ot hers to struggle with. There is
\ HEROISM IN H U M B L E L I F E .
—These suggestions are made to explain, not to exmuch time, couuting by hours, between Thursday cuse, the delays which have so taxed the public patience.
It BY AXNA 8AWTKB DOWNS.
Saturday, but there was much done in that poor Other nations, surprised by tbe sudden outbreak of war,
A J u o e m«a shone hot aud glaring on a low brown household, for a new I life possessed Frances Plummer.— have had t o creatc armies mid munitions; it has fallen to
iose. that stood very bear a sandy road, in oue of the. She did uot grow yoong again; ehc never did that this our lot to create generals as well. . Beside Gen. Scott,
districts of New Hampshire. N o t a tree nearer side of the grave; but she grew strong, f o r h e r ' s was the whose advanced age and physical infirmities rendered it
! nest field, which, by the way of compliment was baptism of fire. She listened while J ohn told her how impossible that he should take the field, wo had absolutely
could get along in his absence, how this and
The orchard," b u t "a few straggling morningno Koldier who had ever been proved capable of loading
.old assist her.-bow he should save every cent of his an army; ond of our few officers who had hod any conpay for her mid the Children; and without any shrinking siderable experience in subordinate positions, nearly uU
tress of the
she
told
him
in
clear,
full
tones
that
comforted
him,
even
r, told that even hero, were some dim, ill-widerforswore themselves and went overtotheenemy. Twiggy
d yearnings after beantiful objects. N e a r the broad amid the groans and diu of Bull Run, that he was to de- Lee, Beauregard, the two Johnstons, Mamuder, Rugjrwp
door-stone, three yellow-haired, chubby children ny himself uo comfott his pay would procure, for she
in short, all who have thus far achieved any distinctiofi
! making dirt pies, not one of them old enough to could work as well as he. Once, only, she broke dowD,
the Confederate armies—i-were in the service and pay
; the two miles that lay between them and the district when together they inspected h e r little stock of potatoes, of the Union until they saw tit to leave it for tbat Of the
"
there
was
euough
to
last
until
those
on
the
east
knoll
ol house. Inside t h e boose a sickly, discouraged
rebellion.
Bishop t'olk. Gen. Pillotf, Gen. G. W . Smith,
^ woman was trying to coax an obstinate baby of were ripe, and then, please God.r he would be with her and nearly all the lesser lights of treason, learned whatTheir eyes met, spite ever they know of the art of "war at the cost of tbe United
halt a year old t o go to sleep. " P o o r Mrs. Plummer!" again if he was with her at a!l.
as the neighbors called her, with no hands b u t h e r own their resolutely turning away from each other, and the States. On the other hand, Gens. McClellan, Burnside.
a n d other* of our present Military chiefs, were running
to do a chofe,—was it any wonder that the flies were bitter tears filled them.
Saturday came, and he went, apd she took up her
helping themselves to the remains of the slovenly breakrailroads when F o r t Sumter was cannonaded; Gen. Frefast; that the milk things still remained where her hus- mer's work alone, not without the hope and courage that mont was^ttending to his mining operations; a n d s o with
band left them before sunrise! that the attempt she had came frofti self-renunciation. W h e n she was the most most of o r chieftains. Prncticaljv, not only our rank
mode at washing only amounted to a m o s t confusing litter weary she remembered be? husband, toiling in the and file but onr Generals, our Colonels, our Engineers,
fif t u b s and soiled gurments, and that in the midst of it trenches -beneath a southern sui, aud no groan or. com- have been called from the pursuits of peaceful industry
all, obliged to sit down by the screaming chUd, she had plaint passed her lips. H e r little family lived decently, to make head in the tented field against the gigantic levonly heart enough to darn, disconsolately, the bee! of an thanks to her untiring industry, and even the Dearest ies and matured preparation of Slaveholding Treason.
"
that ought to have gone to"the rags months neighbor, who remarked the wonderful growth of the
Of course, grave mistakes have been committed and
potatoes and corn on the east knoll, did not dream that wnstcful expenditures incurred. H a d our Government
hours before she awoke that woman was hoeing jjnd correctly measured at the outset the force it was called
Plummer and John, h e r husband, had
weeding
them.
OncC
in
awhile
she
called
the
little
ones
to
encounter, it would never have called out Seventy-five
married six years, and everybody agreed that'they " had
' ' a hard row to hoe." T o be sure, his father left him to h e r j a n d read what she told them was a letter from Thousand Militia for a service of three months only—disold house, the rickety barn behind it, nnd one or two theiriather; but she was a poor reader of Writing, and missing them to their homes jnst when, at au enormoua
es of rocky, study soil; but even t h i s was not all paid what with that and her sobs, they did not always get the cost they had been qualified for effective service. N o r
for, and if it had been, it wouldn't have been worth much, full sense of the precious epistle. J u s t at sunset; on a would it have allowed N o r f o l k - j k b e seized, and its imfor as J o h n said, "There was not an acre of pasturing July day, the heart of the great north almost stopped its mense stores of cannon and mumtiort! opnropriated t o tbe
oil it," and his poor cow had to p i c k a p her scanty living beating, aud a darkness like that of midnight settledn up- uses of the rebellion, while its f&thful officers were compelled to burn the Armory at H a r p e r ' s Ferry in order. t «
most anywhere. But they married yonng, and M l of on os as We told the much exaggerated story of Bull —
damage if not destroy the efficiency of the small arms
hope, they thought the work of bfiilding up a modest Many men never ran from that fatal field, and a
there deposited. H a d it been deemed proper to station
fortune would not be too hard for them, somehow or them was J o h n Plummer. He was seen fighting i
handed
with
two
Georgian
Zouaves,
while
be
had
fi
a regiment of regulars at Manassas Junction the day
other they did n q t g e t along; they had had seasons; theed
to
his
belt
the
colors
of
his
regiment
H
e
fell
al
after Mr. Lincoln's inauguration, i t is quite possible that
farmers cut down the wages of their hired men, and when
the children began to come so fast, the wife grew weak but the colors still waved over him. And yet Mr. W i l - tbe Union might have been restored and its authority
$nd ailing, *nd J o h n found that as the years went by, liam Russell Bays there was no hand to hand fighting at vindicated before the first of Init September. There
, ..
.
have been grave mistakes and sad blunders committed on
they only made oat to get a poor living. T h e spring ol Bull Run.
1861, bad, however, looked a little better for them, for , They told the tale tenderly to the woman in the brown the side of the Union and its defenders ; let us not conJ o h n hail secured a small (arm two or three miles from house, and her heart met its death blow as tbey told; but ceal nor belittle them ; b a t let us thank God and take
she only caid, " H e would rather have died so than to courage in view of tbe fact t h a t in spite of tbem all. no
a n y on at halves; and he hopod by au
ithing in bis pocket wherewith to help to pay ruD, ami I would rather he would." In the years to acre of the thoroughly loyal States has ever yet been
off the mortgage. But in spite of this good fortune. come, if Freedom and T r u t h want tbem, there will be held by tbe rebels* while the revolters are threatened on
Frances as she sat rocking the cradle, thought h& hus- two sons of J o h n Plummer, who will leap as exultingly every side by tbffarmies and fleets of the Union. If we
rtr* not on the eve of straight and strong blows a t the
band had seemed anxious and silent for theTlast few to their call, and die as gladly at their bidding, •=
o f t h c rebellion, then appearances are uncommonly.
weeks, and her mind, always forboding. grew troubled their father,—thsnks to their mother's teaching.
ly deceptive. Let Europe refrain from intermeddlwith sense of some new grief befalling them. T h e stockWar a n d its Delays.
ing with as, and the triumphs of treason must be nea?
ing dropped from her fingers, and it was some minutes
before she discovered that her child had at last worried
their appointed conclusion.
BT HORACE CRKK1.Y.
itself into a restless slumber. Sbe got u p wekriediy, reA n emigrant to P o r t Natal, writing home to one of his
hKtanUy, and attempted te b r i n g some order o u t of the
s a y * — " W e are getting on finely here, and b a t e
" T h e heart-sicknere o f b o p e deferred" is a common
t h a t reigrted around ber. Per h ap s y o a tbiftk that
y Uid tbe foundation of a larger jaiL
id her husband were rather weak sort of bodies, experience not of individuals only, but of nations. Even
but if you ever tried t o g e t y o t t daily* bread off eighty in W a r , which would sewn a straightforward and decisive
T h e servant girls of the F r e e States cousume more
business,
delay
after
delay
ocsure
to
stifle
tbe
energy
and
two acre* of N e w I l u n p a h i r e rocks, with a boase
ilk nnd French goods than the whole Southern aristor*
and four babes for capital, you will have a little charity enthusiasm of a people. The young patriot g n u p s his
musket and hurnea t o the rendezvous of his regiment, «*-,
for that species of weakness.

&

Tip'"

&|e €ranit Crairicrse ^trralit.

v_4

i

chort? to share them with their aforetime opponents, thus
Tfce Democracy on the State of the I'nion.
PAPERS ON AFHICA-NO. 13.
showing them that they valued aftnionof the whole pooTho meeting of the self-styled Democratic party of the
- MORG-AJT B A T K S , K d r t o r nitri P r o p r i e t o r . pWfor the preservation of the Constitution above any
State of Indiana, held at 1 udianapolig on the 8th inst.
. OBO. TBOMTMIX.
T R A V E R S E CI*T Yt '
panizan advantage. It would, however, be folly tosav
an abstract or whoae proceeding we published last
OR ASS H E L P S .
FRID<
>AY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1862.
week, may be regarded as the initiatory st-p towards
th^t these movemeuts hove realized tho high hope of
Li the parts where I lived are uum :rous praries, called, resusciatiug the lifelessremainsof that i<artv throughout
'heir projectors. Not 8 few Democrats elected by Retin# Northern States. That it will l>o followed !<v a simA CHANGE IN THE CABINET.
publican votes, and who' could not have been ejected by the natives gross fielils. They ai 3 found both in the ilar movement iu Michipan^soou. there is liule reason to
Resignntfou of the Secretary of War, and Appointthev were I '°* ^ °p' Rn< 'i Somo are extensive, others small. doubt since the Free Press has already giv»-n an intiunder any other circumstances, have
ment of bis Successor.
:
.
I They are round much along the rivers, Coming up to mation of a contemp'atcd convention. T}10 Indiana cooThe Washington correspondent of. the New York installed, forgotten the source of tho r power, and, return-1
adopted
*1 of resolutions embodying
Tine*, telegraphs undbr date of Monday, Jantmry 13, ed: strictly partizan associations. This fact has verv uat- bai« of the stream, like a beautiful meadow, and stretch- {vention
in™ far back, at times, as Tar as the eye can extend. In ' a platTorni or principle
.
.
opon which the Democrat** follows: '• Washington was never more astounded thnn uc«lly maderepublieansdistrustful or Union movements
ic party of that State propose hereafter to stand, its
places
they
are
destitute
of
all
timl>er;
then
again
scatit was to-day. by the announcement that Secret:ry Cam- in the Tuture. Mr. Lincoln, however, hits signnli.Ted his
chief feature beinjf opposition to the National Adminiseron had retired from the W®X-partment, The thing attestation of confidence iu them, aud we incline to thiuk tering trees, cotton wood and others give pleasant var- tration. The first resolu\iob assumes thut --the L'uiou
iety to the landscape.
ond Constitution can only be preserved by the restora* was wholly unexpected, and no man wa3 more surprised lie will not bo disap|>oii>ted.
Those along the streams, especially nearer the sea, tion of the Democratic |>arty to power." " It needs but
The nomination of Mr. Stanton for a Cabinet position
than Mr. Cameron lnmseJC It secinfi that '.be change
a brief retrospect of -the eight years of Deu)ocrai-y unare
more
uft
to
be
low
and
wet,
with
elevation
here
made is wholly the work of the President. The first falls upon the country at a peculiar time. The selfish
<ler Pierce and Buchanan, to demonstrate how preposagitation of the subject iu Mr Lincoln's mind occurred last demagogues among the democracy were calling loudly and there. But they are aLso met with in the eoautry terous is this impudent eluim.
back,
as
beautiful
high.
dry.
rolling
prarie
as
any
oue
It is a matter of well putbenticated history, that
Thursday. Yesterday he had formed his conclusion, and fo^a partizau revival—they were re-affirming ol<| p!i
forms—rbaudying party catchwo/ils,' denouncing tlje Ad-need desire *o sec, with patches and strips of timber years ajro t.ho Northern Democrats entered into a baraddressed u note to Mr. Cameron informing him of itgain with their haughty aiid overbearing lenders at
.t.-rspei wl I
r
own
prarie
country.
ministration
and
opposing
the
war.
The
action
Lif
the
This note wnsreceived by Mr. Cameron last mght, and
the. South, and agreed to rule the destinies of this
These green fields are covered with a heavy burdeu nation
fur their common benefit, the slaveholders' inwas the fHHf^timnlioii he had that a change iu tLe Cub- President will be a sad drawback- opon their pli
ioet^nisdeteraUiied on. It is needless to deny that the Kven whe„ the hiuid was raised for a fonl blow the Ad- of wild grass, furnishing rich uasturage for the numer- tere-ts were- to lie protested at all hazards, and no deics
wild
animals
all
the
year.
They
are
not
subject
mand
which they could make, was refused, as' long as
—War Minister wrts surprised and agitated, but the Pres- naiiistration voluntarily tnrncil its cheek io the smitei
to the drouths of South Afrjco. turning them into their Northern Allies were'sure of receiving the readem assured himjof his persona! eood will by the tender Will these breeders of faction still find pretexts forthei
sandy deserts, but are always covered with grass, uu- ward or Southern support. So long ns a united South
•of the very houoVable position of Minister to Russia, iy partizan revival? Will they continue to assail the nets
and a divided North could be counted upou as a basis
"'if, m °tlves of an Administnition that offers them the less in the dry season the tire gets iu aud ruus over >f Democratic ascendency, everything went well with
place of Mr. Clay, who has desired to;be recalled.
them, which is often the case ; but theti. in a few lhem. They venture I to repudiate tho mn.it sa-redeOmW,o nro not. nllowed to know the reasons or the Pres- oliye branch? Can they continue to assert that the Adpaots, and to resort to (he most despotic- aud Uitrigl)•lays thvy will be again clothed with a
ident for tliis change, but we can safely vonturu the op- ministration that has given office to one of their own
beautiful carpet of green, tender grass, forming tho ' teons measures, to force their odious policy upon the
iuioii that it results from his conviction that the country members, is beut exclusively upon partizan objects? If
p-.-ople. As an evidence or this, we po'nt' to the remost delicious pasture that can be imagined.
p.-ai of tho Missouri Compromise, and to the outrages
d»sire.s and has long desired, achiingfc. It; would be t)ie appointment or Mr. Stantonnhsll draw the venomons
limes I loved to walk over them, they so strongly re- avuinst free government, perpetrated in Kansas, that
useless to deny, alao, that tl o'Presidetit and his friends fangs of these demagogues, andre-u.-surethe uurefl.
field orfrauduletiey.perjury aud .bloodshed. We, point
minded mo of the luxriaut meadows at homo.
tiflt that Mr. Camden has not been recently sympathiz- masses they hud spread so skdlful u net to catqh, and.
This grass grows to an almost incredible height and io the peculation uud Prime, the inerensi-d exponas, the
es; with tlic^rfmiiiislralion, l»ut, on f lie contrary, has shall more and more unite the people in support of the
bankrupt treasury wlvtfi the country win in its hui-.-ht in
size. When arrived, at maturity, it is as thick
material prosperity, th- Southern piratical expeditions
boeu in aciTvu empathy with politicians in Washingtoi Government in its efforts to preserve the Constitute
staud on the ground, ond from ten to twenty feet against Cuba and sister republics, which wen- permitted
who are wfalously awl bitterly opjKw.ng the President and th? act or Mr. Lincoln. unusual and experimental as it is.
high—the stalks ranging from one-fourth to three-fourths to go unchecked >—but more than this, we point to the
will have accomplished a glorious consummation.
his mi-asnrcs.
an inch in diameter. Now this is^pot "guess so' wide-spread and danmablo conspiracy planted *aiiil fosThere will bo some uneasiness among ultra Rcpubli
tered by the Democracy, having;its root in Mr. BuchanDemocratic Suite Convention.
•I have seen it, travelled through it, cut it down and an's Cabinet, and its branches wide-spread through every
caii Senators in coupling Stanton, i He has been a
A.Tew or tho old Democratic leaders in Detroit,
.•nsured it—and '-speak that I jdo' know." Throu; department orthp Government,—a conspiracy permitted
Democrat, and was a Cabinet Mjniste# nnder Mr. Hue- control the. Free Press, have issued a call Tor a Demch grass it is almost impossible for a man to press to ripen into a vast rebellion jiavintr for its object the
lianau. IIo was, however, loyql'and courageous, and, ocratic State Convention, to be held in Detroit on the
wa
}': and we could only get alopg, often, by reaclj.- overthrow and destruction of the Un on.. involving an
with Holt and. Black, saved all that was left of our Gov. oth of March next, to nominate candidates for the State
immense expenditure of blood and treasure, and intailing
? high with our sticks in our hands, horizontally upon
eminent when Mr. Lincoln coinu in.
the country a debt of countless millions, which can
officers to be voted for at the genera! election in Novem- and breaking or bending the grass over so that
only lie liquidated after years of oppressive taxation.
The appointment of Stanton as Secretory of! War gives ber next: The Free Press urges a , re-organization of
could crawl olong on the top of i t Tho whole praFor evidences of great imbecility, corruption on a
great pleasure, I find, to all officers of the .army. Tiiey' tli»t jmrty. on pro-slavery principles, and calls upou its
not thus covered. In places it is kept fed down more gigantic scale, a rebellion- mure cans-less, a treason
have confidence in his energy and plmik, and belie" ' adherents to draw strict pnrty lines.by the numerous wild cattle, deer, wild goats, &c„ more base, the dark records of human wt-akness ami dewill push,on the war.
pravity no-whore reveals. Yet "With ihisjdsiiuning reeord
The* real object of this movement" is to get up a party
other places, acres and miles are covered with before them, the reckless demagogues who are responsiThe JKorld't correspondent savs: Tiie resignation of in tho North to give secret aid ami comfort to Southern
such grass as I describe above.
ble for it all, now claim thaHhe Constitution and the
Secretary Cameron to-day caused much surpri.se lit Con- traitors—to divide the North that the South' may conIn tho dry season the fire often ruos through this Union con only be preserved through their restoration to
gress aridjbji the street, though minor had very* briefly qupr, destroy the Government, and extend Slavery
rrass. but it is so large, and there is so much green power. Was there ever a more sublime exhibition of
prepared the public a day or two bsfore Tor aome such throughout the whole country.' This is the "lire in the
impudence and presumption? DM infatuation ever carry
juice iu the stalks that it often only -burns off the men to a greater extremity t
— event. There is every variety of speculation as to the
' whi a the Free Press threatened last Spring. I«t leaves, aud so far affects the large stalks
But these Democratic Uivon preservers also; tell ns
probobla cause of Gen. Qumuron s retiring from tho Cub- it " fire away." The I-EOPI.E will stand firm and true to
break over at different heights from the ground, that the Republicans have fttlly demonstrated their inaluet, the most general one that be could not agree with the Government. They have not forgotten the vile
bility to conduct the Government through its present
crossing each other in every direction, thus making
President and (fen. McC'leftan as to' tile policy of con- treason of the Democratic party.nnderthe administration
difficulties. Where, we ask; is the evidence or the bold
complete tangle ; but through such a. jumble the only assertion ? Is it to be found ir. the history of the preducting the war. Gen. Cameron declines to answer the of James Buchanan; aud they will never trust that or an-,
path often runs, , and we have to press our way through sent Administration, from tho 4th or March last? W hat
numerous) inquires that are mado by oVer-nnsiou? friends. other parly again which builds upou the foundation of
as best we can—no pleasant task, I can assare my n-as the condition or the country when Mr. Liiico'ii as. He spent the evening at the residence if Colonel Forney, Humau Slavery.
sumed the duties of his office ? A might v. conspiracy,
readers, for I have travelled in just such roads.
whero'he niet many of his old political friends.
The Ouwnrd Movement.
When the grass grows to a moderate height—say which had been suffered to ripen for nion'ths nnder h*i»
Oar present relations with Europe are dec od highly
The Detroit Duily Advertiser of tlie 8th inst. says that from four tb six feet, the natives use it for thatching Democratic predecessors, broke out in'o open rebellion.
No
previous preparation had beeu made to quell I r The •
important and interesting; and, as Rua-hi seems tube a the nevvs far several days past affords cheering indications
their huts and a very nice thatched roof they know National Treasury was nearly empty, the army and navy
strong friendly power, the President was anxious that that our gi^nd army is on the eve of important move- hovv to put on.
of the country had been sent off to remote disW'-cs. the
fome one should act as Minister to the Court of St. ments. OnM^rd marches have been eommence<l at varCould tho large, heavy prarie plow be driven over nrms and munitions or war had been stolen from the
Government and transferred to Southern an-eitals' and
• Petersburg in whom he has entire confidence, who can ious points, all indicating a determination on the part of
these grass fields as in our couutrj-, they would make fort a. The National Capital tfiu swarming wftlttrnitorK
ably and fairlyreprctionthis views and aid our. cause in the Government to strike a telling blow upon the rebelmost superior farms, and very productive. As it it mid daily threatened with attack nnd destruction by reEurope. General Cameron accepted tlrn office of Secre- lious States. On Friday, a brigade left Cario and pro- the natives often burn them over and raise crops bel? iu arms. Are the prompt measures which were imtary of War with grea'l reluctance, prefcrring'his seat iu ceeiled down the Mississippi river eight miles, where the
but the roots of the grass remain undisturbed, and mediately adopted by the Administration to, save tho
Capitol from destruction and the assembling or an effithe Senaje, and has always declared bU intention to va- awaited tho rest of the expedition. The force, altogether, soon spring up again. They beed to be turned
cientarmy, and fitting out a hirgr navy to suppress the
cate the plaeo when the interests of the country should amounts to over sixty thoUsaud men. twelve dun-boats, uud subdued, as the little hoe cannot do i t
rebellion, -the repletion i>r the National Treasury, and
•(low,.and coutd have a proper successor. ;The gentle- thirty-eight mortar boats, and twenty-eight tugs and
tho restoration or the public credit meusiircs, which, inMR. BATEST SIR : I notice iu your paper of the 3rd magnitude and efficiency, probably have no paralV, unman selected, Edwiu M. Stanton, is a warm personal friend steamboats. So formidable a force cun scarcely fail of
-t a Table ol Measures that would be useful, if correct der the circumstances, in the history or the world.—are
of General Cameron, is front bis own State, aud accept- success ai whatsoever-point it may be! directed. The
ed the position at tho latter's solicitation. Mr. Stanton, Government has very prudently withheld from the publi but as it is, it may do harm. Presuming "you took it these evidences or inability on the part or the Administration to conduct the Government ? Admitting that
it wiH bo recollected, was 'Attorney-General toward the' all knowledge of its destination, which is only left tocoi from some or your exchanges ami published it, supposing tIwre
has been delay iu certain movements or the army,
conclusion of Mr. Buchnnan's administration: In taking jedture. Large forces are pouring into Western Ken- it correct, without proviug it thererore I take the liber- and that abuses have marked some or the tn;nsa -tiona
poiut out some oT the errors therein contained relating to contracts, abusesfor.which, in many cases.
the arduous position he sacrifices an immense private' looky destined South. Gen. Buruside'* great naval exbusiness to serve tho Government Tho appointment is pedition has also sailed from Fortress Monroe, to what and in Tact, the whole table is an error—not one or the Republicans are no more responsible than Democrats,
- -popular, ps.it is generally conceded he is a man of ster- point it is not intimated by the Government, but it is be- boxes therein mcutioued is correct according to our and which they do not justify, we ask where is there a
Government on the fa'-e or the earth which has demonling integrity, without any political affiliation to trammel lieVt;.! that it goes to reinibrcc General Sherman at Port standard ot measurement The Winchester Bushel , of strated higher administrative and executive nbjlity, or
his action So any cox Vhich may comd under^his sifjiei Royal. The army at Washington under General Mc- England is the standerd of the Western States, and con- that has proved itseir mor» capable to meet a great and
vision, wbile.be will prove an able counsellor in tho Cab- Cli'llan i.* in the most complete stute of preparation, aud tains 2,150 2-5 cubic inches. As the half-bushel is of the unexpected National exigency, than that whieh is cominet, and a most valuable officer in bisd.-partment The without jeopardy to tho National Capitul, we suppose most common use, i will give the dimensions of a box mitted to the present Republican Administration.
We ask our readers to,weigh well the issues that our
friends of Gen. Cameron claim that he pan well afford to large bodies of the well drilledtt-oopsin thut vicinity can that will-hold just that amount and
Democratic opponents are now about to thrust upon tho
A box Twelve inches by Eleven and One-fifth inches, people. It appears from the resolutions to which we
Jay aside his exhausting labors, having! accomplished so now bo spared and are in readiness to march on any given
have referred, that the general course of pol'ey of the
•ranch in tho organization and equipment of tho largest point at a moment's warning. Success must follow these and Eight inches, deep will hold just half-a-bushel
If it would not be too much of an intrusion I would I>emocratic party is not to be changed. The second rearmy ever assembled on the Americau continent
stupendous movements, and we hope for the honor of our
solution of the series fully endorses the priu -iples liereto%
The Detroit Tribune, iu commenting ou the resigna- army, and for the credit of the Government, they will be give th^mensions of all the boxes in your table ; but fore put forth at their national conventions, and under
tion of Mr. Cameron and the appofntmot of Mr. Stanton, promptly followed up by poshing forward at every point they are not important to the people, except perhaps which the enormities of tho past two administrations, to
saya.- The introduction of Hon. Ea'win M- Stanton into After the long aud apparently unnecessary delay iu pre- the half bushel. I will omit them and give the cubic which we have briefly glanced, haw been perp'-tratcd.
This party now asks, through its leailffps, to be restored
the Cabiaet is an act of political generosity aud niaguau- paration, should a succession of victories crown our arms, inches—commencing with the (jallon.
power as t In! only party capnWeof preserving the
The Gallon Measure, that.is,
imity thatfindsuo parallel iu the history of the. country.— the people must applaud the wisdom of the AdministraDry measure, contains
268 k 4-5 cub. inch. Union. If thev are to be * regarded as the Only conserMr. Stauton was a member of Mr. Buchanan's reformed tion, aud will take fresh courage for the future. The The
Peck contains
337 & 3-5 "
•• vators of the Union, Heaven save the murk.
•eabice*. a co-laborer with Pix and Holt He. as we long line of mnrch of our armies, and the track of our Hair Bushel
[Detroit Daily Advertiser.
1,075 & 1-5 "
«
understand, voted against fir. Lincoln, and has been in naval expeditions, ^re followed with the deepest interest The Bushel
2,150 & 2-5 '• "
Hie financial problem at Washington, through tho
3,225 & 3-5 " "
no. respect identified with the political views of tbo party and glowing hopes the peopk Events of the most The Half bbl. or II bushels
councils
or
the
Secretary
or
the Treasury, tlw Committee
6,451 & 1-5 •« "
•whose representative Mr. Lincoln is. He K However, a stirring character may bo looked for within the coming The bbl or 3 bushels
Ways and Means, Finance Committee oT the y- nate,
The above arc the cubic inches contained in the meadays.
.
^
man of acknowledged ability, and all alive with a sincere
and
the
hading
bankers
and
financiers or the Eastern
sures you gave, and which I deem of more practical use
dasiro to put down thus 'wicked rebellion and wulain the
Hundreds or thousands or loyal men in the North have,
cities, is. the Times' correspondent Bays, approaching a
Government in every accessary effortin that direction.— during many years, regarded Governor Blair and all mca to the public than tho dimentions of boxes, except the happy solntion.- The basis of the plan in this Congress
If politic*! questions should arise ta the Cabinet we are vho entertain his views, as traitors to the Union. They Hair bushel, which is about the only measure a man ever
immediately to pass a joiut resolution, pledging itself
not aware how fur Mr. Stanton's present views are in ae- h a « fought them for that reason and none other, aud Wants to make a box for, To convince you that your table to pass a bill levying'^axes to tba amount of one hundred
never will submit to the adoption or their policv by was an error, X annex the figures in cubic inches or the
cqrd wit^ those of the other members, but in calling Mr. they
the general government '
[Detroit Free P r » « ? ' boxes therein mentioned, and also the actual number or and fifty millions available from the loyal States, to be
Stantou tp the Cabinet, the Preddeut declares again, as
passed as soon as tlie details can be matured, which wiR
Ten hundreds or thousands of loyal men in the ifrorth inches in each of the measures. Yours,
hi* acts and appointments have often done hefoi^, and
secure the interest on the present loans, and pay off the
have Tor many years know.* that the leading men of the
A SUBSCRIBER.
wjti an emphasis louder than mere words. that in the
most pressing demands. The Government to issue ExcheDemocratic party were traitors, and yet they have neverA i n ^ t r a t i o n of tie Government he meditates no parThe new Democratic Common Council of, Detroit at quer Noets offivedollars and upward, with two years to
threatened to rebel against the Government because these
"tizan action.
bearing six pef cent interest to pay off present inmen were in power. They have sought by fair, consti- its first meeting turned every Repuolican out of office.—
^AHer all the poople have art- the .example ibtt Mr. tutional meats, to change the policy of the Government; The Free Press issued its mandate to that effect, and the debtedness. The banks will then come forward to make
Lincoln has followed." In New York anil Ohio they have and now that, they have succeeded, and these "loyal" order was obeyed. That paper set up a terrible howl a new loan on the terms of former ones.
joined together. Democrats and Republicans, ion the «ofe Democrats find themselves in a minority, tlfe President when President Lincoln removed a few Buchanan DemThe Senate Military Committee will aooa reports
question of fidelity to the Union and Constitution. In is boldly threatened with a Northern Rebellion! This ocrats who were in league with the Southern traitors.
bill for the construction of a new railroad from Georgetoth of theStates named, the Republicans could uog*«- is Free Prea Democracy! This is the party that is
Mr. Rodman, Chief Clerk of the Treasoiy Department, town to Baltimore, and thence, Via the Pennsylvania
tfonably have elected all the Sute offlcera, hat Sbtj going to 8ave lb© country! (Faugh!
died at Washington on the 15th inst.
Central to New York.

A ROOKTORp i s T a r e s . — ' : T I I E EXILES OP F L O R I D A , "

TRAVERSE CITY.

b y t h e ' H o n . J o s h u o R . G i d d i n g s , of O h i o .

m pnbliahad ttxrrlg to porwui.cc at l.w-

•..

a b l e a n d well k n o w n a u t h o r ^ x p o s ^ s t h e f r a u d , f a l- ^ h o o d ,

Thermometx'ical Register.

t r e a c h e r y a n d o t h e r c r i m e s Of p u b l i c m e n . w h o h a v e f o r
y e a r s p r o s t i t u t e d t h e p o w e r s of G o v e r n m e n t t o t h e p e r -

Traverse CItf

-Lai. 44:40

l&6i
7 A. M.
1 r. M.
Wednesday, J a n . 2J—12® above 0 . . 3 1 ° aliovo
T h u r s d a y , - ** 23—11®
,.ip
P rid ay.
" 24—Jo®
.&>
S a t u r d a y . . . , - . 2.'—28®
«
.7®=
S u n d a y , - . . • " '2n—11®
•«
..18®
M o n d a y , - . . - 17— 9 = below . , 2 0 ®
"*
T u e s d a y . . . M 2S—So 3 above . . 2 2 ® above

Tr. 7*
0 . . 3 f ° abov.
..32® "
' ,.'tv=> «
..28= "
. . <5® "
-.20®
•'
..31°abov.

p e t r a t i o n o f m u r d e r , a t t h e c o n t c m p l a t l o u of w h i c h o u r ,
h u m a n i t y r e v o l t s , f o r t h e solo

THK DKTROIT ' f t u B u i t B . — W e call a t t e n t i o n t o t h a

nd-

T h i s " p a p e r i s t o o well k n o w n t h r o u g h o u t t h e S t a t e t o req u i r e oily. commeiiilutfon Ironi us.

I t is un

of b u i l d i n g u p

c o u n t y of t h e

i t will b e sent |>ost p a i d
We

hope every true

A m e r i c a n will p u r c h a s e t h i s b o o k a n d

on r e c e i p t of t h e p r i c e — 8 1 . 0 0 .

become familiar

i t h a > ! i t s art pin fit t h e n - f u - n l o f n p a r t y in t h e ' N o r t h t o o t * « r v t ' | h < v o b l i g a t i o n of t h e C m s t i t n t i o n !

Are the

Kditm-s of t . V Fret- P r e m lost t o all s e n s e o f s h a n j i ; ?
Tli<i D i - t f o i t F r u e ' P n v s hay^ tliat t h e c o u n t r y ^an
I t d n h b t l e s s b e l ( e y w t h j t n t h e h n i r of t h e d o g w h i c h
wo«iu|5jsiflcu|je the b h e .

,

T b e PEOPI.E d o n ' t

.

A n y mnn w i t h f r o m five t o t e n dollars cap-

ital c a n m a k e g o o d w u g t s us c o u n t y a g e n t .
above.

A d d r e s s ap

Th<j r e b e l s iu K e n t u c k y a r e d e s t r o y i n g e v e r y t h i n g in
w h a t (hey s u p p o s e will b e t h e line of m a r c h of the F e d e r a l

c o n v e n e d in

E x t r a S e s s i o n a t L a n s i n g , a d j o u r n e d s i n e die on t h e
inat.

17th

.

The:Herald's despatch says:

of

Armyi

T h e L c g j f w b r e of t h i s S t a t e w h i c h w a s

'! N o t w i t h s t a n d i n g ' b e

THE GREAT

FAMILY NEWSPAPER
IT HAS SO IQUAL IS THE WIST.

a b s e n c e of a n y c a u s e f o r a e r i o u s n p p r e b e n i i o n s o f a T o r e i g n
w a r . i t i s t h e d e s i j h i of t h e G o v e r n m e n t a n d of t b e C o m m a u d i n j r - O e w r n ! , t h a t t h e M i l i t i a of all t b e loyal S t a t e s
shall b e fully a n d effectually organize*}, unit in t h i s connection Henttul McClellnnstronglv urges t h e organization
a n d p r e p a r a t i o n o^ a r t i l l e r y c o r p s in all fbfe s e a - p o r t a n d
l a k e tnwiwi w i t h n v i e w

t o h a v e in r e a d i n e s s f o r a n y

e m e r g . ' i i c v j a n e f f e c t i v o b o d y of well drilled a r t i l l e r y f o r
t h e d e f e n c e of n n r s e a p o r t s a n d coasts.
• " It- is d e s i g n e d t h a t t h e s e c o r p s shall bo p r o v i d e d b y
t h e Government with gnns and equipments,

and

to be

g a i d by t h * Dili ted S t a t e s w h e n e v e r Called into, a c t u a l
1

service. |

'

'

T h e rebel L a t t e r i e s a t
fired ittfn o n r small

raselii

Pensacola having repeatedly
F o r t P i c k e n s o p e n e d on

tbe

r e b e l s t e a m e r T i p i e s . w h i ^ h was l o a d i n g s t o r e s a t

the

n a v y y a r d on t h e first o f J a n u a r y .
r e s p o n d e d , a n d t h e firing w a s

T h e rebel batteries

continued until evening,

F w t P i c k i iw firing t h e last s h o t .

Tlie rebel guns were

well :iitm>d. a ltd m o A of t h e i r shell b u r s t i n s i d e o n r
O n l y 'one <jf Onr m e n , h o w e v e r ,

was wounded.

«vfen!Ug'o(jr firing s e t W a r r i n g t o n on

fire.

fort.

O n e of

o u r s h o t s m a d e a l a r g o b r e a c h in F o r t B a f a n o a s .
The

In the
confla-

g r a t i o n c o n t i n u e d all n i z h t . a n d t h e p i n e d w a s still b u r n i n g on t h a eveii'sijj of t h e 2 d I n s t .

AVhelt J h e R h o d e I s -

l a n d left t h e fire *taa s e e n a t a d i s t a n c e of 3& miles a t
I t I s intimate*! t h a t G e n e r a l M e C I e l l a a d e c l a r e s h i m self wlipllx'uii;ilile t o u s e t o a d v a n t a g e m o r e t h a n
t h i r d of tti-j o r g a t r i z e d c a v a l r y .
menU wilfdoubtless be

one-

T w e n t y o r t h i r t y regi-"

t r a n s f e r r e d t o t h e i n f a n t r y a^m,

w h e r e t h o y can lw used.

Only

One Dollar a Year.
THE DETROIT

G r e a t I n d u c e m e n t s to Clnbs.
TJic iDETBOIT W E E K L Y T R I B U N E is now ia its Tbiitecntlv Year. It is a Larger, Cheaper, and, f o r Michigan
r e a d e i s a Better Family Newspaper t h a n any New York or
o t h e r Eastern P a p e r published. It c o n t a i n s e i g h t pages of
SevcnjColumn* each, m a k i n g it larger t h a a the N>w York
T r i b u a e . - I t furniahe* to Michisan Readers all I m p o r t a n t
lienernl News, a« A i l l y and l a t e r tlisn any New York 1'aper.
and Telerrflphle,' Foreign, Domestic, Eastitrn and Horn" Mnr
k«t n ^ w a t h r e e o r f o u r d a y s l a t e r t h a n a n y N e w Y o r k
w e e k l y p a p e r ) which, with its Agricultural,iCommercUl.
Miaccliaaeuux, and Btate New* Departments,—giving, enrh
week, « a u r a m a r y of all i n t e r e s t i n g a n d i m p o r t a n t Local News
f r o m all parts or MleHlgan.—Its devotion to the Local and
G e n e i w l l n t e r e s t a of Michigan—give to Its columns Attract i o n s whkili c i t i z e n s of Michigan c a n n o t find in A N Y New
Y o r k b r oflipr Eastern Paper, a u d which ciinuot make it a
more t r e l c o m ^ v l a l t o r t o t h e Family Circle, the Farmer, Mec h s n i t . Merchant, or Professional man, and give to the I)KTROIT WEEKLVSfl-RIBUNE sui>erlor c l a i m s to their p it
ronage.
Regular, reliable correspondents with eacli of the Michigan
R e g t i i e n t s in t h e Army, a n d iu W a s h i n g t o n / w i l l c o n tin u e t o
give the Readers of TUB DETROIT TUIBI NK lull and accurate
"" uuiits of the wovomenta of our Michigan soldiers d n r i n e
war, a n d of tho doings of Congress. In t h i s featnrr, t h e
b o n e h is no s u p e r i o r in the State, aa it lias not in general interest or a m o u n t a n d variety of carefully-selected news
anil Fjamily reading, while the attention paid to -our own
Stat*- m u t t e r s makes it, f o r thc-Miclilcan reader, w h e t h e r farer, Biccbanic, or other, s u p e r i o r t o any E a s t e r n paj-er.

TERMS.

was confirmed

Cassiii.s M. C l a y , w h o r e s i g u s . h i s R u k i a n

Mission, i s

, iobconto h o m e . a n d t a k o t h e field a s a B r i g a d i e r G e n e r a l

L

E

S

T

A

T

The Detrpit l > a i l T r i b u n e

Best Markets & Lowest Kates

E

GOOD AND RELIABLE ARTICLES 1!

AND

LAND

OFFICE.

C H O I C E

A L B E R T W. BACON,
f T r r i l . l . IX)CATE I,ANDS, P A Y TAXES, B O t OR SEI L
V V on Commission—aud now offers for sale,

1 4 - 2 4 Acres of Choice IMIUI

Dt Lainff, Sfriicrs, CtUrfA^uij ILi/s, VJIIUJ, (like Sottcfc
tii^Lsics 1'tn.di; Idi^Lns.
KiLir, Urrs^r, tk, tk
H A N N A H , LAY & CO.

D

ANO a'lLL BBLJ. AS AGENT

1 8 5 0 Acres, oho, Choice and will S~lictid.
Also—13 Lots in tho Village o r E l k i l n p l d s ,
WITH OR w n m o i ' T DWEIXIXGS.
Tho above mentioucd Laijds an- in all parts of t h e Cour ty
Elk Lake, W h i t e w a t e r , O m c n i a and Trav. rs*1: s r e nmonjr thi
•arlicst and best seleeti«mA'witli refeieucc t o soil, water, surface, ami m a r k e - : embrace f a r m i n g Ijrn.lH. ViliHgc Sites an<1
Water Powers, with or without improveme nts, in quantitiei:o suit purchasers, and at prices making it an object. In preference to buying back from s e t t l e m e n t s .
22-1 y
Traverse C i t ; . May 1, I8IH.

i o c s ; .U llllx, Sui01l.ce Bixtlr , I < Ulllis L UCk, a.11pc,'i i l k ,
A | . i o n a u i i M i n n s " C j v c k , Snii ting I ' l i n u , Nmikeen Cotton
r lauueU. Wool FiiUtueU, i i i u » u i|Ud Uleuchtd Cottons, a f u l l
line, BagsVkC.
H A N N A H , LAY 4 CO.
* -Traverse C i t y , O o $ 1,13.11.• •! i
A D I I . S ' CI-OAES AM' LAI I»A- C i i r n n . vl o i t i . t WII.TR.)
J l*:. Ite.I C i > s l m e u > , hh< | s n * ' l .alfl.-, C.>l:adu tirey Ca»s.
ice BI'lcl)ott.klus und Cafnioiertls
.'• ! H
UL
A N N A H , LAY & OO.
Traverse City, Oct. 1. I b y f ; _

S

H A W L S , BAV STAT*, llH0cur,STEi.i.A, SCOTCH, (SIKOLE
ituu t i u u u e . ) G e n u ' a u d Child r e u s Shawla a n d MuOlcrs.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.

T r a v r r s e City. Oct. 1, lijCl.

tlaii-i.uMu-.F, Drag Teeth, Kioe e Pioniv Cable, Trace a n d
S
n a l u r C h a i n s l i i u f i i liookf uud Lli| lie h j tings, Wooden
l i N D B I E S — I I A K M : S » , C O I X A W , b u n I.ESETC^BASEETS.

r ; E O . O . B A T E S , I-'.sq.,

^ttomrj ar.i) <j cnntrllcr at fato,
NO ft I t M l W S BUCK.

- We havo now in S l o c k , • • »'•' 1
' '
E N G L I S H A N D /VMICIilCAK
1JK1N'X-S,

OMESTICS FOR WIXTEK OP isei—KEN

t

1

C H I C A G O . ILLINOIS.

.

Ware, Tiibo, 1'aiU, ChuriiK, Ladlcv, Ac., Ac., Infanta' Cradles,
Sash, Doois, Ac.
H A N N A H , L A Y Jk CO.
Traverse City, Oct. I, 1661. ;

w1

1IITE C O O D 8 Cambiie, m u s u n aud linen E d g i n g ;
iuHvrting a n d 1-lounclng. Teal 'ifaiead;
n d iInnsceirttiinngg ;
S i u y r n a a u d c o u o n E d g e a^nd
.
Musliu, e a m b i i c a n d p i q u » s u t t » o i Coilais and Sleeves:
Cambric, iuusiiu & tine M n l u s i f h a i i d - n i o n g b t Colin*-,
Mnsllnv—Naintooli, Hook, S*ii-» a n d C a m b r i c ;
Kieuck SKiu J a c o n e t ; J a c o n e t ;
C ^ s baried.Camhiic and Nainsook;
Wa»h Biond; EmbioideiQU C u r t a i h s ;
B i i l i i a u t e r , f u i n i lie t o i u e : '
T H I S O L D B S T A B L I S I I E D H O T E L , ( T H E FIltRT
Llticn, Li lien C s m b t i e a n d h e m stitched H ' t f k ' f t ;
1 in T r a v e r s e City,) siwiiucii uu F r o m Blioei, in the vioin
p r i n t e d borit, printed a n d plain OentV. H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
ly of the C o u r t House nudj public offices, is siill'open for the
C h i l d ' s printed, plain a n d hem s t i t c h e d l i n m H ' d k ' f s ;
•eception of the travelitig piililic. The P r o p r i e t o r r e t u r n
I'illow-Csm. C o t t o n ;
his l u a r t y t h a n k s for thu liberal p a t r o n a g e he h a s received,
L i n e n Table Coveis, by t b e p a t t e r n o r y a r d ;
m d assures the public t h a t no p a i n s will he spared t o make
Mareeiiles, printed ami P M u ; ,
his guests comfortable.
H i s c h a r g e s will correspond with
Linen. P l q n s binding, Mfglc Ruffilng;
'
the limes.
• '
I „ .
Linen and Cotton Bosoms—some vciy n i c e ;
Good a c c o m o d a t i o n s foil H o r s e s a n d Cattle.ma>25-26
M-.in>cillea y u i l t t — u l t e ;
. l'Ointfd Tape Trimming,for ladies'use;
STATE OF MI C ; i l t ; A N . |
;W
S o f t a n d heavy Musliu, f o r ladies s k i r t s a n d u n d e r c l o t h i n g .
E*»ET CO -*TV.
J
.
1
'
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO?
1'KOUATE CopKT OF SAII> C o i ' N v r
T r a v e r s e City, O c \ I, I f i f l .
T A SE^SION'-Ul' - T H E P R O B A T E COURT O F T H E
Couuty of Elumel, ho).ien at tlie T r o b a t e O J l c e iu I.ltjle
LACK
AND
LINING
SILK&—VEIL Ti6fe«E AND
1'raverse. on Monday, tho lutll di.y of December, A. D. l i f i l .
Beiage, CUIUS anil 'lassai*, Ve.vet a n d Silk R l b h e e e ,
Press nt, Hi nry (J. Uraveratet. JuO^e of I ' r o b a t c :
Berlin Wool, C r o c h e t Braid. Drees Buttons, Dress B i n d i n g .
In the m a t t e r of the Estate Of Gabriel Na-aon-ne-ga-bo-we. Fancy B e l t s Dress T r i m m i n g s Ac.
*
deceased. On rending and Oling the petition truly verifiedH A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
of Paul Keg-wed-os-smg aud Michael K - » a y , a m o n g Ollie.'
T r a v e r s e City, O c t 1, 1801. (
- - .
Ihiugs, t h a t lutters o. Adiuinisiration may be granted to sai.i
ijelivioners on the Estate of said Rabrit l Nn-gon-ne-mtlio we,
ABLE LINEN.—BKOWN LINEN TABLE-COVERS,
(hereupon it is ordered t h a t Monday, the '.'"th day of J a n u a i y .
Blaauni d diltu, W.>ol Table Covers, Doylca, N a p k i n s ,
D. lSt>2. at Ten o'clock A . M., l e a ^ i g n e d f o r h e a r i n g ssii: H u c k a b u c k Towels, Diaper, Cotton Tabling by the Yard.
petition, a n d t h a t the heirs a> law of s a i d , deceased, a n d nil
H A N N A H , LAY & CO.
other persons in-crested in said Esutte are r e q u i t e d to apT r a v e r s e City, Oct. 1, IflCl.
'
'37
pear at a session of said C o u r t , then to be liolden at the Pro
ADIES' PLAIN AND GLOVE KID U E E L E D
liale office, in tlie village of Little T r a v e r s e , In said county,
C
o
u
g
r
e
^
lloo.h,
Lst-.iuj,
C
o
n g u s * Boots, Sitie L a t e a n d
and show cause, If any there be. why t h e prayer,of the pptiF r o n t Lace B o o t s Balltnotai 'Boots, assorted Plippcis, Rnbilonera s h o u l d n o t be g r a i n e d .
;
i
And it is t u r t h c r ordered t h a t the s a j d petitioners, Paul t i e r s Cork Sole>, Ac.
H A N N A H , LAY A C O .
Keg-wcd-os'-sing a n d Micljael Ke^way-givc n o t i c e t o the peiT r a v e r s e City, Oct. 1,1W1. •
II
ns i n t e i e n e d in said Instate of the p e n d i n g of said petition
d the h e a r i n g thereof by c a u s i n g a copy of this o r d e r t o b.
R A 8 8 HE TILE'S, POUOELAI.V LINED KETTLES,—
published in the (irand Traverse ileruld, it I c i o g t h e near«s:
Ca>ss Men. Coeoa Casioi i n i , P o i n t e d Tape T r i m m i n g .
paper published to said village, lor three suc-'essive weeks Magic RuWing. Brjakfa.it Kelts—fur 26 c e n t s each, Razors,
- — - i o n s to said day of b e a r i n g .
Almond Soap, G r e e n A p p h s . Ac.
,
,
H E N R Y C. G R A V E R A E T ,
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
5-3 w
J u d g e of Probate.
averse C l y , O c t 1 . 1 W I .
'
IT

TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,
W E E K L Y
T R I B U N E .
I
A LARGER
W I L L I A M
F O W L E ,
Cheaper and Bcllfr Family Kwspapcr tha acy Sew M or
(FKONT STHEKT, KEAB COt'KT n o r S S , )
T R A V E R S E C . T V , MICHK5AN.
Eastern Paper,

I n Variably in advance—Single Copy, SI 50 a year.
Twpnty Copies.$20 00, and an E x t r a Copy t o the person
who f o r m s the Club.
t»y t h e S e n a t e ,
t h e g r n t i / V i i i g V o t c of 3 8 t o 2 — o n e of
F o r a Club of Fifty, we give three e x t r a Copies, or the Tri
u R c p n b l i e n n . v o t i n g agtiinst h i m s i m p l y Weekly Tribune.
F o r a Clnb o f O n e H u n d r e d , S i x E x t r a Copies, or t h e Daily
becair-« h o diil n o t p e r w u i a l l y k n o w h i m , a n d could n o t T r i b u n e .
The Low P i ice t o Clubs will n o t a d m i t of t h e p a y m e n t of
t h e r e f o r e con,-.-ientiotiHly r e c o r d himself jn bis f a v o r .
commissions to a g v n u , beyond the above terms. Our aim
T h e B o s t o n A d v e r t n K T c o n t r a d i c t s t h e s t a t e m e n t t h a t arid design i i t o f u r n i s h to Michigan r e a d e r s a M i c h i g a n
F a m i l y N e w s p a p e r , equal in size and general interest,
t h e r e h a t b e e n a d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n G e n . S h e r m a n a n d anil better, f o r th<w, than a n y New Y o r k or o t h e r Eastern
1
Paper, at the l o w e s t p r i c e p o s s i b l e t o c l u b s , as the menn"
•Commodore Dnpont.
''
of pr(-paring a n d f o r t i f y i n g i t s political f r i e n d s on S t a t e
i s s u e s a n d all q u e s t i o n s of State Policy a n d State AdminisF r o m P o r t R o y a l a n e x p e d i t i o n i s in p r d g r e ® a g a i n s t tration, a n d a s an i n d u c e m e n t to voluntary Effort on the part
B a v a n m i h . I t is under.-tood t h a t a land f o r c e of 1 0 , 0 0 0 of t h i Republicans of Michigan, f o r the general good, to get
u p Clubs and e x t e n d its circulation t o every organized townmen w a s t f y e n p a s r in it.
i
snip in the State. Republlcana! Rally t o t h e s u p p o r t of your
TU count)- and S t a t e papers.
8IH AIXKM M C N A B . — S i r Alk-n M c X a b h a s r e t u r n e d
P e r s o n s e n g a g i n g to get up Clnbs are requested to send in
s u b s c r i b e r s ' n a m e s as f a s t a s obtained, at $1.00 a year. Snl>h o m e , f r o m E u r o p e , t o r e s u m e his c o m m a n d o t t h e C a s c r i p t i o n s m a r c o m m e n c e at a n y time. P a y a l w a y s i n
nadian militia
a d v a n c e . "W lien u Clnb of Subscribers has been forwarded,
a d d i t i o n s have been made t o it on the same terms, whether
sent in by the person f o r m i n g it or Qot. It i s n o t uecessary
Mr. Adains. onr Minister to England, sends a despatch
th»t t h o m e m b e r s of a Club should reccjve their p a | * r s at tli"
b y Uie A r a b i a e t a t i n g t h a t t b e p r i v a t e e r S u m p t e r h a d same Postoffice.—Clergymen are supplied at the l o w e s t c l a b
rates.
Money may he forwarded bv mail; a t onr risk. Speb u r n e d t h r e e vessels, a n d w a s tbf-n a t C a d i z in S p a i n .
c i m e n Copies will-be s e n t free to all who desire them.
T h e n o m i n a t i o n of S i - c r e t a r y S t a n t o n

A

W e advise a n y p e r s o n in w a n t o f u g o o d m a p t o

s e n d 2fi c e n t s b y mail a n d t h e y will recoive t h e w o r t h
their money.

be

M v e d j o n l y b y t h e r e s u s c i t a t i o n of t h e D e m o c r a t i c 1 p a r t y .

J

B

c o m i t ^ n g e n t s t o sell in e a c h c o u n t y a n d o l f j r a g o o d discount^

'flO S D O W G W D S !
A. K. SPltAGUE.
28tf.

new

Prets

jpatilii-s l>y i m p l i c a t i o n . tht! S o u t h e r n R e b e l l i o n . a n d f a y

TROUBLE

GENERAL

olis, Ijid., h a s j u s t b e e n revised a n d t h o r o u g h l y c o r r e c t jrrows boKl- e d s o t h a t n o w |t is not only t h e most c o n v e n i e n t P o c k e t
;r e v e r v d n y in i t s t i y a s o n MJT
a j r a i i i f t t h e G o v e r n m e n t . I t W u f M a p . b u t t b e most c o r r e c t . T h e y a d v e r t i s e f o r
RA.SK T m u r f y x . — ' l V Dl e lt r o i l Free

think so.

R

W a r 51 up, r e c e n t l y p u b l i s h e d b y A s h e r & C o , I n d i a n a p -

t h e b e a t / f e w s p a p e r y it| t h e c o n n J n ' .

flict/dthe

NO

i t h t h e h i s t o r i c a l facts.
SOM^rrmKo NKW THAT IS WORTH 11 A v i s a — T h e

Wbii-h wiis bought for, a n d is peculiarly adapted to »b»
r e q u i r e m e n t s ot the P e o p l e of GI.AM' 1 I-.AV»:I».-I. uLd n d j e i i
ing Conritie* ; to wblcli—all 6uch a d d i t i o n s a l e k. ir.g made
its tue demands of our c c s t u m e r b may ;require. .Our advaeu g e s are n c o n d to none in the W t w r , snd we shall Invar
inbly posntPB ourselves of the a d v a n t a g e ot tlie

T r a v e r s e City, October R, 18G1.

a b l e unci

fearless «**R»>noif o i R e p u b l i c a n p r i n c i p l e * : a n d b n e of

1861.

F U L L & COMPLETE

Dress.Making nttended to during the W i n t e r .

T h e p u b l i s h e r s , A s h e r & Oo., of I n d i a n a p o -

lis. h u t , d e s i r e one a c t i v e a g e n t in e a c h

O F

We h a v e now i a Store a

B O N N E T S ,
S T O C K
Bwkanis, Joins, lisois Eilbots, Ftatktrs, Fkittre, VeilsBni-fitUi tie., lie.
GENERAL MERCHANDIZE,

b o u n d Sn c l o t h , c o n t a i n i n g six g o o d e n g r a v i n g s , a n d a b o u t
3:"i0 p a g e s .

F A L L

F A L L AND W I N T E R

I t i s a l a r g e 1 2 mo. volume,

F r e d S t a t e s ' t o sell this work,
v e r t i s r m t n l of t h e \ D e t r o i t T r i b u n e in a n o t h e r c o l u m n . —

purpose

t h a t i n s t i t u t i o n w h o s e s u p p o r t e r s now t h r e a t e n t h e very
existence of this republic.

Hannah, Lay & Co.'s Column.

L A D I E S ! L A D I E S It
CaJI »A4 JK BJ
.

T h j s is sub-

cS^s^a^aearsiK
sszfia&s'. soft alnitbioa lrltyy aa nhdi^sitiosr iccoaul nptrroydfuhcot ni oknl raenaddo ante tthhiast etvi me rey. lover
UKklHt
T b l U U m a r f t l . Leirt' M^-rttoenwnu lortbrtocomii
Itt

A

B

T
L

B

T H E CIRCUIT COURT FOIt T H E C O ' ' N T l ' OF MANIST E E , STATE O F MICHIGAN.
JAMES B O K N K M .
vs.
\ V n L'AM S . AMOS.

N

)

> IK ATTACHMENT.
)

O T I C E l-S HEREBY GIVEN, T H A T ON T H E N I N E
Utciitn . i s y o f November, A. I). Is61, a writ of attachm e n t was issued out of the Circuit C o u r t for the County o
Manistee, at; the Suit of J a m e s Uonnell, tlie alxive-uiMne'i
plaintiff, a g a i n s t the lunds, teneineiiK goods and chattels,
moneys a u d efleets of William S. Amos, the d<T< u d a n t abovenamed, f o r t h e snm of eleven hundred a n d e i g h t y seven dollars and ninety-four cents, whieh said w r i t was r e t u r n a b l e on
the third day of Deecmbcr. A, D. 18<
natnjl at
Fifth rfnv (1
2 0 w.

^ K O V I S I O N S , G s o c s a i K S Ac.—SFCAE,'IEA. C o r r t K ,
S . - K e s Cauuies, Soap, comuion a n d e i a s i v e ;
.
I l u s u r i t , E n g l i s h snd F r i m li p r e p a r e d ;
f o i l s Cream T a r t a r , Ginger, B a k i n g P o w d e r ,
Salaratus. S t a r c h , Yet mace III, Hops,
Tobacco,Snuff, Garden Seedii
' >
I lag Salt, Fine a n d Rock Salt, G l u e , A l u m ,
i n u i p a n d Lard Oil, Csstoi Oil,

P l a i n t i f f ' s Attorney.

A J O T I C E IS H E R E B Y . O I V E X , T H A T ALL C O P A R T
1 1 nerskip, ( e x c e p t i n g that Uist may arise f r o m a Contract
on the Allegan State Road,) between Henry I). Campbell a n d
Albert \V. Bacon is t h i s day dissolved by withdrawal of the
n n d e i s i g n t d . All c l a i m s a n d demands t h e r e f o r e due me, individually. will lie paid to me only.
Traverse City, J a n . 6th, 1802.
U-3t

C

L O T H I N G . — C O A IS, I ' A N ' i h . A E S l B . D R A W E R S ,
Under Shirts, S h i i ! > — f a n c y a n d .Plain, t ^ u s p e n d f a s ,
Over-Alls, aud J a c k e t s India RuM er snd Oil C o s t s a n d
JSckets. Wool, Uiiion and O i t t o n Socks, Cravats, Collara,
T r a v e l l i n g B a g s T r u n k s U m b r e l l a s Ac.
i":'
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
T r a v e r s e City. Oct. 1, I 8 f l .
.. , 27

Beef. H a m s a n d S h o u l d e r s , GodtUV.

T r a v e r s e City, 0c«. 1, ISf l .

A . W . BAOOK.

H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.

I s published M o r n i n g a n d Evening, and i s sent to all )>arts of
the states by t h e first mWI, express, railroad a n d o t h e r con
veysnces. g i v i n g t h e very latest T e l e g r a p h . Commercial.
B n c k e t i — P o t Covers—Small B l o c k s — R a t l i n e — S p r i n g BalMarine, Political a n d Genera] News, P o r e i g n and Domestic,
i t V /
apiece for live Copiex of No. SO, » ol.
ances—Patent Carpet L i n i n g — Ladiea' Rubber Boots—Beesi n n s — # 6 per year.
v
^
3, ( J n n e 28, l s e l , ) ; o f the ( i r a n d T r a v e r s e Herald, t o pcrfect
wax—Grand River Land P i a s t e r — G r a s s Seed, Ac., Ac.
w Piles. They must lie in a good state of preservation.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Herald Office* Traverse City, Dec. 13," 1861.
T h o P r e s i d e n t h a s a p p o i f l t e d M a j o r D o u b k d a y , of T h e D e t r o i t T r i - W e e k l y T r i b u n e
T r a v e r s e C i t y , Oct. 1.1 >61.
JT
I s published e v e r y Tuesday, T h u r s d a y a n d Saturday mornF o r t S u m t e r Tame a B r i g n d i e r - G e o o r a l .
'
ANKEE NO nous.—PERFUMERY, SOAPS, DEW
U I E W Y A X D O T T E R O L L I N G H I L L COMPA
ing, a n d s e n t by mail t o all parts, on the m o r n i n g of publicat r i f i c f . Gun C a p s C o m p a s s e s S n u f f and T a b a c c o B o x M .
NY have removed their S t o r e a u d Office t o ' t h e foot of
tion, at $3 00 p e r a n n u n i ; two copies, $5.00: five copies, t o
o n e address, Si0.00 ; ^ n d any l a r g e r n u m b e r at t h ^ s a m e rate. Woodward Avenue, where t h e y a r e p r e p a r e d to oflVr low F a n c y Pipes, S l l v r a n d Toy W a t c h e s F a n c y B o x e s , P u r s e a
F o r the Grand T r a v e r s e H e r a l d .
rates, n full s t o c k or P u r e L a k e S u p e r i o r M e r c h a n t Iron, all and Money b a g s Ladies', W o r k a n d P a n c y ' B a s k e t s , T a b l e I t c o n t a i n s all the l a t e s t n e w s of two days of the Daily. .
WJK> a a r * GOWS d o n o t p a y 1
made from Churcoal P i g : all sizes of R o u n d « n d Square, Mats. B r u s h e s of all k i n d s G u a r d s , C h a i n s , Ac.
Address,
n . B A R N S A C O . f ^ f r o m 1-4 to 5 i n c h : all sizes of F1 .t Bar, 1-2 to ' inch w i d e :
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
MR. BATSI : A b o u t one. y e a r a g o I b o u g h t a C o w f o r
Nos. 51 a n d 54 Shelby street, Detroit, > ic'h.
T r a v e r s e City, O c t 1 . 1 8 6 1 .
~
also, a full a s s o r t m e n t of S c r a p I r o n , made f r o m selected
Scrap. C h a i n s of all sizes, made from e x t r a refined Lake
$ 3 5 , .an e n o r m o u s p r i c e f o r a s e c o n d - r a t e one. S h e f b r selveO
S u p e r or Iron. Would i a v i t e p a r t i c u l a r a t t e n t i o n t o t h e C T O V E S , in v e r y l a r g e a
n l s h e ^ u s w i t h 1 4 0 p o u n d s of b u t t e r — w h i c h w o u l d b e
O
P
i
p
s
Zinc,
S
h
e
e
t
I
r
o
n
,
S
t
o
v
e
F
urniture. One. and T h r e e
'quality a n d ' w o r k of t h o same. Also, Rivets ol all sizes, the
Pail
K
e
t
t
l
e
s
Tin
W
a
r
e

»
c
o
m
p
l
e
t
e
l
i
n
e

S
O
,
S
O
,
4
0
,
aat
best in tlie market. Railroad Axlea made t o o r d e r .
w o r t h , S t one shilling per p o u n d — S e v e n t e e n Dollars and
W*
Y TO T t i s PUBLIC, THAT WS HAVE GOT O P *
The h i g h e s t price will be paid, e i t h e r in C a s h o r I r o n , f o r . 0 0 gallon Kettles.
F i f t y cents. T h e m i l k w a s w o r t h m o r e t h a n t h e b u t t e r
H A N S i H , L A Y A CO.
W r o u g h t I r o n S c r a p . CaU a n d see o r a d d r e s s .
T
r
a
v
e
r
s
e
C
i
t
y
,
O
c
t
1,
1861.
JT
G
R
I
S
T
M
I
L
I
.
to « .
WM. H. Z A B R I S K I E . Airent.
in operation, a a d are o n hand to do Custom-Work a t all
Detroit, A u g u s t IS, 18*1.
88-ly
W h a t i s t h e r e t o h i n d e r t b e F a n n e r s of G r a o d T r a - t i m e * ; a n d would say, we t h i n k t h a t we can do aa good work
T > E D 8 T E A D S . — T A B L E S , C H A I R S , ROCKERS, W A S H
l ) S t a n d s , Mattraaaes. Child's Beckers, H i g h Cliairs, Ac.
v e r a e in g e t t i n g rich, p a r t i c u l a r l y w h e n t h e i r c a t t l e c a n as a n y Milt in G r a n d Traverse. If you d o u b t i f t r y us, and
OOTS * SHOES AT WHOLESALE—H. P. BALD- T r a v e r s e City, O c t 1,18CL
see f o r yourselves ; a n d wonld any; t h s t w e keep o a r
H A N N A H , L A Y * OO.
g e t f a t o n U n d o S a m s a l m o s t endless g r e e n p a s t u r e d a r W I N A CO., No. 25 W o o d w a r d Avenue, Detroit.- We
o 5 e r to the trade, a large a n d complete stock of o u r own a n d
T A N N E R Y
k f A C K E B E L , TOHGTKS A S o r w n s , PBESKBVFD r r m m
i n g t h e s u m m e r m o n t h s , a n d in t h e w i n t e r c a n a l m o s t
E a s t e r n Manufacture. We assure c u s t o m e r s as LOT TKICES
in o p e r a t i o n , a a d T k a o n S h a r e s — a s usual I
i l F r u i t a s s o r t e d P i c k l e s , Ple-frulta, O y s t e r s , Sardiwew
a living browsing the tender twigs o f i a l k n timber.
a n d as favorable terms, as can be obtained in New Y o r k "< C i g a r a .
& NORRIS A BROTHERS.
iv E a s t e r n market. AH goods of t h e v e r y b e a t q u a l i t y .
H A N N A H L A Y t CO.
J a n u a r y I " , 1861.
, 8-ly
Detroit, A e g . 15,1861.
38-iy
Traverae City O c t I , 18(1
G e n . L a n e ' s right t o h i s s e a t in t h e S e n a t e h a s

confirmed by a vote of 2 4 to 16.

' |

NO 30.-'

been

j

T

NOTICE.

B

Y

M O F F JAS"!
Life Pills and Phoeiix Bitters. |

Trejwy.

I found m y Tresey m i l k i n g
In the blithesome s u m m e r morn,
W h e n t h e dew w i s b n t h e e!ov«r,
And the tassel on the c o r n .
Sweeter t h a n a n y red rose
i T h a y ' S ^ K g r t l e r ^ ;
And h e r bare feet i n t h e flowpi*!

ii
i



0 day of d a y s ! thy m e m o r y
- ' W i l l never, f a d e , i i o r pass-; i .
P a t c h e s of raowy violets •
W e r c c l o u d l n g all the grass,—
T h e j e a l o u s brook lay fretting
Between his bank* of most,
And shrugged hi* dlqAlcd shohlders
AH 1 lightly leapt 4 0 * * '•
Adown h e r c b l e k s ftbe blushes
Ran rippling.like a veil
; I n t o the bosom, warm a n d w h i t e
A s the milk within h e r f c a l l ;
As I told m y lovo t o Trctuy
In the blithesome s u m m e r m o r n .
When the dew wo* on the clover,
And the tassels on the c o r n .

J o h n S l i d e l l ^ lOO^OOO A c r e s o f L a n d i n I l l l h o l s '

! I I o w be obtained it.

f p H E S E ^ I I D I 0 I N " E 3 H A V E NOW IIEEN BEFORE T H E
A 'public f o r a period of t h i r t y y e a r i j a n d d u r i n g t h a t time
have m a i n t a i n e d a high c h a r a c t e r in a l m o s t every part of the
globe, f o r their e x t r a o r d i n a r y a n d imjnediate power of res t o r i n g p e r f e c t health to persons suffering u n d e r nearly every
k i n d of disease to which the h u m a n fniiue i s liable.
T h e following aro a m o n g tho d i s t r e s f s n g variety of h u m a n
diseases in which the V e g e t a b l e L I B M c d i c i u c s a r t well
known to be infallible:
D p s P B r e i s , by thoronglily cleansing; the first and second
stomachs, and oreatiug a flow of pure,!h<;althy bile', instead
of the stale and acrid" k i n d ; Flatulency, Loss of Appetite,
Hcartbufti, Headache, Restlessness, ill-Temper. Anxiety,Languor, a n d Melancholy, which are the' g e n e r a l symptom* of
Iiyspepsia. will vanish as a natural con^e<|uaiice iff its care.
CosrtvBSESS, by cleansing the whole length of t h e iatestines with a solvent process, a n d witHout violence; all Violent p n r g e s leave the bowels costivo w f th in two days.
PrvKBS of all kinds, by r e s t o r i n g the blond t o a regular
circulation, t h r o u g h the process of respiration in some ci
and; the t h o r o u g h solution .of a'l intestinal obstructioi
others.
J
>
The Life Medicines have been knowii to cure Rheumatism
p e r m a n e n t l y in three w e e k s and the <i|>ut in half that
by removing local inflammation f r o m the muscles and
m e a t s of the j o i n t s . .
IWofsiES of all kinds, by f r e e i n g apd s t r e n g t h e n i n g the
kidneys a n d b l a d d e r : they operate most delightfully on these
Important organs, a n d hence have eveij been found a certai
remedy f o r the worst cases of Gravel. |
Also WORMS, by dislodging f r o m tho t u r n i n g s of the bo*
e l t t h e slimy m a t t e r to which these c r e a t u r e s adhere.
Sci'BVX, Ulcers and I n v e t e r a t e Sores': liy the perfect puri
which these Life Medicines give to t'ld blood anil ail the h
mors.
SCORIH-TIC EarPTIONS, feud bad Complexions, by their alterative effect on the fluids that feed the skin, anil the morliiiT
s t a t e 61 w h i c h occasions all eruptive complaints, sallow,
cloudy. and o t h e r disagreeable c o m p l e t i o n s .
Tho use or the so Pills f o r a very aliqrt time, will effect
ekitlre cure ol Salt Rheum, and a s t r i k i n g improvement
thelclcarne8s of tho skin. Common Colds a n d Influenza w
always be cured by one dose, or by twij in the worst crises.
P i l E s — T h e o r i g i n a l proprietoV of j these Medicines w_.
c u r e d of H i e s of 35 y e a r s standing, by the nse of the Life
Medicines alone.
pgvuK AMD A o r K — F o r t h i s scourg^ of the Western Country, these Medicines will be found a safe, speedy, and certain
remedy. O t h e r medicines leave the System subject to ti return of tho disease—a cure by these nicdicinos is p e r m a n e n t
-try them, be satisfied, a n d 1)6 cured. \
B a r o f s FEVEIIS and I.rvrji COSH-MINTS—General Debility. L o s s o r ' A p p e t i t e and Diseases of Ftemales—the Medicine*
ha^e been used with t h e most beneficial results in cases ol
t h i s d e s c r i p t i o n : K i n g ' s Evil and Scrdfula in its worst f o r m s
yield t o the mild yot powerful actimi of these r e m a r k e t '
Medicines. N i g h t Sweats, N e r v o u s Debility, N e r v o u s Coi
jilaiuta of all kinds, Palpitation of t h e Heart, P a i n t e r ' s Ch
lie, are speedily cured.
J
P e r s o n s whose c o n s t i t u t i o n s are impaired by the injudi_.oms use of Mercury, will find theso medicines a perfect
cure, a s theryliever fail to eradicate (Vom the system all t h e
effects of Mercury, m u c h s o o n e r t h a n the most powerful p
p a r a t t o n s of SarsapariHa.

— ^
^T'P0
h't ° f " 1 0 S t ; L o a i 8 P e m o c r n t w r i t e s .
" « W l ' l o e TCcoHiicted t h a t a few y e a r s a g o o n e of t h e
m o s t s t u p e n d o u s f n i u d s e v e r k n o w n in* t h i s c o u n t r y w a s
p e r p e t r a t e d b y t h e p a w i n g of on a c t io C o n g r e a e k n o w n
a s t h e S w a m p L a n d A c t . T h i s a c t p r o v i d e d t h a t all t h e
x s w a m p l a n d s in c e r t a i u W e s t e r n S t a t e s should, o n c e r t a i n conditions, b e d o n a t e d t o t h e S t a t e s in w h i c h t h e y
were located, and t h e several States, by their subsequent
legislative e n a c t m e n t s , d o n a t e d t h e s e l a n d s t o t h e coufft i e s i n w h i c h t h e y m i g h t bo f o u n d .
| T h e c o u n t i e s e m p l o y e d ajreftta t o a s c e r t a i n w h a t a m o u n t
or t h e G o v e r n m e n t l a u d s t h e n v u c a t e d l w e r u s w a m p , ofleri * g fifteen c e n t s a n j j e r o f o r all t h e y c o u l d find. W i t h
fifteen c e n t s uiytiav
j n t h n i r eyea, t h e s e a g e n t s w e r e
blind to evwy'thiiiK but swamps, and under their dim
r i s t o o t h e m o s t u n d u l a t i n g p r a i r i e s , h i g h r i d g e s a n d knolls,
b e a n t i f a y g r o v i ' s a u d valleys, a s f e r t i l e a s t h e N i l e , all
alikfi p a s s e d u n n o t i c e d f o r s w a m p s .
Iu many places
w h o l e s e c t i o n s a n d tiers of sections, e m b r a c i n g t h o u s a n d s of a c r e s in a b o d y of t h e r i c h e s t a n d finest l a n d s
i n t j w world, w e r e r e p o r t e d s w a m p , mid w h e n t h e s e
a g e n t s h a d c o m p l e t e d t h e i r w o r k of i n i q u i t y , i t w a s asc e r t a i n e d t h a t t h e a g g r e g a t e ' a m o u n t of t h e land t h e y h a d
selected e m b r a c e d as m a n y s q u a r e miles as t h e w h o l e
S t a t e of M i s s o u r i . '
T h e p e o p l e b e c a m e i n d i g n a n t a n d w e r e l o u d in t h e i r
complaints at W a s h i n g t o n , offering to furnish evidence
t o t h e c o m m i s s i o n e r o i t h e G e n e r a l L a n d Office, t o s h o w
t h a t t h o G o v e r n m e n t h a d b e e n swindled. U n c l e " S a m
concluded t o receive t h e evidence, and therefore declined
t r a n s f e r r i n g his o w n e r s h i p b y t h e issuo of p a t e n t s t o t h o
c o u n t i e s or S t a t e s , u n t i l t h e e v i d e n c e c o u l d b e e x a m i n e d
i n r e g a r d t o t h e alleged fraud. P r i n t e d i n s t r u c t i o n s
w e r e issued f r o m t h e G e n e r t t l L a n d Office, a n d l a r g e l y
"• F o r Sal® by a l l ^ r u g g t a t s .
s»-iy
d i s t r i b u t e d t h r o u g h o u t all of t h o S t a t e s in w h i c h t h o
l a n d s h a d b e e n sclectod, o f f e r i n g i n d u c e m e n t s t o i n d i v i d N E W R E M E D I E S K O R
uals t o e x a m i n e t h e l a n d s a n d r e p o r t t l i e i r c h a r a c t e r , a n d
r e q u i r e d t h e land t o bo a c c u r a t e l y s u r v e y e d in f o r t y - a c r e
tracts by competent and disinterested surveyors. T h e
s u r v e y s w e r e c o m p l e t e d a t a h e a v y e x p e n s e of i n d i v i d u a l s
T O W A R D ASSOCIATION. P H I L A D E L P H I A . A BEJ L nevolent I n s t i t u t i o n eswbllsbed by special En d o w m e n t,
w h o had t h e nromise or t h e Government that they should
b e r e i m b u r s e d b y t h e p u r c h a s e of t h e s e l a n d s f r o m t h e for; the Belief of t h e S i c k a n d distressed, afflicted with Virul e n t a n d C h r o n i c Diseases, and especially for t h o Cure of
G o v e r n i n e n t a t o n e d o l l a r a n d twenty-fivo c e n t s p e r acre. Diseases of the Sexual Organs.
'Che p a r t i e s e n g a g e d in t h e c o n t e s t c o m p l i e d w i t h t h e i r
M E D I C A L ADVICE given gratis, by the a c t i n g Surgeon.
V A L U A B L E REPORTS on S p e r m a t o r r h o e a , and other HI'
instructions from tho Government, and t h e evidence
lines of t h e Sexual O r p m s , and on itho NEW REMEDIES
s h o w e d t h a t t h e ' f r a u d w a s of A : m a g n i t u d e h a v i n g n o
i p l ^ e d In thejDIspensnry, sent in sealed letter envelopes.
parallol in t h e h i s t o r y of t h q c o u n t r y .

NEW

STORE
AND ^

P K N S I O B I S
•AND

1

BOUNTY LAND.

N E W GOODS,

Attorney

Corner of W a k a z o o and Nagonabe 8ts.,

for C l a i m a n t s , Peasiou,
a n d P a t e n t Agent,

Bounty

Land

W A S H I N G T O N C I T Y , D . C.

N O R T H P O R T .

Revolutionary, Naval. Invalid ai d Half-pay P e n s i o n s and
Bounty Land procured lor those entitled.
Claims of
Military and Naval officers, Sutler*, C o n t r a c t o r s , 4 c . , a t t e n d e d
to before the proper d e p a r t m e n t s . A r r e a r s or Pay a n d P e n sions, a n d Prize-money obtained. P a t e n t s procured f o r I n
v e n t o r s ; Land W a r r a n t s bought, sold and located; old Land
P a t e n t s and Land Claims purchased, and titles to land g r a n t
ed for military services, investigated and prosecuted.
P e n s i o n s jirocured f o r wounded a n d disabled soldiers, seam e n , a n d marines of the p r e s e n t war, a n d for widows and orphan c h i l d r e n ol thosy who have died or been killed while in
service. Also, Bounty money a n d arrears of p a y for tb«
widows or other heirs of deceased soldiers.
:
Pensions,
RrvotrTioNAKT.—Officers and soldiers of the W a r of the
Revolution who served s i x m o n t h s or more, a n d t h e widows
of those who so served, are entitled to Pensions.
HAW-PAY.—The widows, or if no widows, the children under sixteen years of age, of officers and soldiers of the p r e s e n t
or any previous w-ar, who h a v e flied o r been killed while in
the sen-ice, are entitled to half-pay Pin&lons. '
. lsvAt.it>—All officers ariil soldiors who are disabled bv
reason of wounds received at disease contracted while in the
Hue of duty, us a soldier, at any period, are

T H E SUBSCRIBER H A S J U S T R E C E I V E D H I S WINTER
STOCK, CONSISTING O F

D R Y

C. C . T y C K E R ,

G O O D S ,

BOOTS AND SHOES,
Roafly-lVIade C l o t h i n g ,

Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
W h i c h he offers cheap f o r Cash or B a r t e r .
C. DAVIDSON, Agent.
N o r t h p o r t , D e c e m b e r 21," 1860.
4tf
P. S.—CASH PAID FOR FUBS.

JACKSON & W I L E Y ,
I H O N ( f c B R A S S
FOUNDERS

y office teamen, and m a r i n e s of
of wounds received in
service, a r c entitled „
______
the widow s or orphan
children of tlio*l\who are killed or die of wouuds received in
'ie service and in the l i n e of duty.
Bounty Land.
All persons who served fourteen days in tbe Revolution,
W a r of 1812, Mexican W a r / ; W h l s k y Insurrection. A r o s t o o k
War, Canadian F r o n t i e r l H m i i r U n e e s , or in a n v o f the Indian
Corner o f - F I f t h 4 W o o d b r i d g c Streets,
Wars since 1790, a r c onfitlcfl to 160 a c r e s of Bouuty L a n d ;
and all who served less than fourteen days are entitled, if they
were engaged in any battle or sklruiKh, or were on the m a r c h
for the purpose of e n g a g i n g in a M t t l c .
"i
W h e r e a soldier w h o served as above 1g dead, his widow, o r
no widow,'his child or c h i l d r e n wiiowcre u n d e r twenty-one
T / I 7 E ARE MANUFACTURING AND i U B P R E P A R E D
T t " i furnish, a t s h o r t notice. High PresHuru and Conduns- f e a r s of age on tho 3rd of March, 1855, are entitled to Bounty
f n g Engines, Tor Stationary. Marine a n d Mining purposes, of
Bounty Honey.
the most approved c o n s t r u c t i o n .
The heir* of all soldiers who h a v e volunteered d u r i n g the
Wo invite especial attention to onr Condensing Engines,
•esent war, for two or three years, or d u r i n g the w a r
particularly adapted for Flouring Mills, and o t h e r p u r p
id have died or been killed While !in the service,aie entitled
where economy of Fuel and regularity of motion . a r e HO , u dispensable. Tbe c o n d e n s i n g a p p a r a t u s for these e n g i n e s t o $100 Bounty money a n d such a r r e a r s of the soldier's pay
i s of tlic most simple and durable kind. These c o n d e n s i n g '* may have accrued t o the dates of t h e i r death.
H e will be pleased to correspond with those w h o desire t o
engines insure to Mines for Pumping, or for w o r k i n g StamtJ
engage in o b t a i n i n g t h e s e claims. He will send t h e m all neMills, the greutcst economy in fuel.
iaiy forms a n d instructions, ajid make a deduction of
Our facilities f o r filling o r d e r s for M i n i n g Machinery a r e
-half f r o m his usual fees. T o Ms regular c o r r e s p o n d e n t s
unsurpassed. Our P a t t e r n s embrace the largest variety of
p u m p s , s h e a v e s , g e a r i n g a n d s t a m p i n g m a c h i n e r y , he will send, d u r i n g the c o u t i n u a u e e o f the w nr, lists of killed
and wounded and deceased soldier* of Companies raised in
Ac., of the most approved construction.
their
vicinity, and k e e p t h e m advised or all law* a n d deciWe would call particular attention t o onr assortment of
- ,
'
P a t t e r n s for P u m p s with P l u n g e r Lifts, r a n g i n g f r o m 4 to 16 sions relating to claims.
inches diameter. Our combined Bucket and p l u n g e r pumps,
T h e r e ai
n file in t h e d e p a r t m e n t s m a n v suspended a n d
for supplying S t a m p i n g Machinery with water, a n d f o r o t h e r
rejected
claim:
.
<'
"
r
P
e
n
s
i
o
n
s
or
Bounty
U
i
i
d
.
which, tf prouses, give the most |>erfect satisfaction.
Our a s s o r t m e n t of Gearing, u p t o 12 feet d i a m e t e r , e n a b l e s uerly attended to by a c o m p e t e n t ut'ent in W a s h i n g t o n l ' c M i d
) t o meet o r d e r s for heavy or l i g h t Gearing, at the shortest be successrully prosecuted. He will be pleased t o take c h a r g e
of
such
claims
for
claimants
or
-their
attorneys,-upon
continnotice, w h i m s h e a v e s f r o m 1 t o 5 feot diameter. Manufacturers of H o d g e ' s p a t e n t s t a m p s . Oil Still Machinery, gent fees. His charges, If Successful, will lie moderate, and
of the most approved c o n s t r u c t i o n ; Building work, I r o n n o n e made in any case unless a Pension o r Land W a r r a n t is
p
r
o
c
u
r
e
d
.
H
a
v
i
n
g
a
large
n
u
m
b
e
r
of
rolls
a
n
d
r
e
c
o r d s of
Fronts, Columns, Caps, 4 c . , 4 c . , ; Illuminated Title f o r Sides c n ice in the New York, Pennsylvania, V i r g i n i a and Ohio
walks and Areas : Iron Fences, Verandahs, Stairs, 4 c . '
Volunteers and Militia of the War of 1812, and or the Regular
We arc sole licensees for P a t e n t F e n c i n g — p r i c e s varying
A
r
m
y
and
Kentucky
Volunteers
of
the
Indian
wars
or
ifoo—
from 75 c e n t s t o §'• per f o o t The largest assortment of F e n c e
•94, he is specially prepared to prosccutc claims f o r such serP a t t e r n s in the State.
vices.
Sole A g e n t s (or G i f f a r d ' s B o i l e r I n j e c t o r , which supP
a
r
t
i
c
u
l
a
r
attention
given
t
o
claims
before
t
h
e
G
enual
plies Boilers with water, without
use of P u m p s or other
Lnnd Office, u n d e r the I're-em|itIoa, Swamp Land a n d Gradumachinery, w h e t h e r the e n g i n e i t at rest or in motion.
B r a s s c o m p o s i t i o n c a s t i n g s f u r n i s h e d at short notice. ation Acts, a n d to the a d j u s t m e n t of P r i v a t e L a n d Claims.
Land
P
a
t
e
n
t
s
,
Duplicate
P
a
t
e
n
t
s
and
Exemplification
M
tbe
Bi.*CKsaiTniNO of all kinds. PATTKK.VS made t o order. Estir e c o r d s a n d files obtained for locators, preempton> e n d
J o h n Slidell was t h e n a S e n a t o r in C o n g r e s s , a n d w a s
mates, P l a n s and Specifications f u r n i s h e d when desired.
others. Claims a r i s i n g rrom c o n t e s t i n g e n t r i e s attended t o
;2ST-0rders from abroad will meet with p r o m p t attention.
f a m i l i a r ' w i t h t h e e v i d e n c e b e f o r e t h e C o m m i s s i o n e r of N»- 3, £
[th 8t., Philadelphia, P a .
28—ly
at tbe General L a n d office for Claimants o r t h e i r Attorneys.
t h o l a n d Office ; a n d k n o w i n g t h a t t h e c o u n t i e s h a d n o
All persons h a v i n g c l a i m s or any kind upon the GovernETROIT CITY FOUNDRY AND MACHINE
s o r t of show, h e c o n c e i v e d a p l o t for. i e c n r i o g t o himself
ment, or who believe they have claims, a n d all who-have old
S H O P . Steam E n g i n e s Mill Gearing, Mining Machinor disputed titles t o W e s t e r n , L a n d s arising rrom Military
a l a r g e a m o u n t of t h e s e lands, }>y d e f r a u d i n g t h e c o u n t i e s
ery, I r o n a n d Brass Castings, of ail k i n d s , to order, W<
I j u i d g r a n t s or otherwise ; also the heirs or all soldiers of
and t h e Government
H e t h e r e f o r e m a d e a p r o p o s i t i o n have a largo variety of P a t t e r n s , f o r b u i l d i n g purposes, tc
the Regular A r m y in t h e W a r of 1S£2, who served u n d e r e n t o o p e of t h e c o u n t i e s in Illinois, ( I r o q u o i s , I t h i n k , ) of- which we would invite the a t t e n t i o n of builders.
listinents Tor " f i v e y e a r s " or " d u r i n g the war," and the h e i r s
J . B. WILSON,
fering t o p a y fifty t h o u s a n d d o l l a r s f o r all of t h e s t a l l e d
or soldiers or the T e x a s Revolution or I83C, aro requested to
t of "
* • * ~
address h i m . N o c h a r g e f b r his services will be &ado iu any
s w a m p l a b d within the limit of said county, a h i o u n t i n g t o
unless a claim i s s u c c e s s i o n * prosecuted.
a b o u t ope hiindfed thousand acres, and a g r e e d t o
Detroit, Aug. 15, 1M1.
refers to Members of Congress, Officers or Government,
his chances. T h e proposition was accepted, and the
O n Atwatcr Street,
a n d o t h e r s who h a v e resided in Washington d a r i n g the l a s t
c o u n t y. m a d e a q. u i t c l a i m t o J o h nJ jSSlhi d e lHl T h e only " V f A Y H E V P S P R A C T I C A L B O O K - K E E P I N G ,
Fifteen y e a r s ; a h d when desired, w i l l name special referenin a n y State or Territory.
s t e p n o w t o b o t a k e n tQ c o m p l e t e h i s p r o g r a m m e , a n d t o 1 T X REVISED BmwoK.—This work oaibraces Single and
AddreaK—
m a k e his t i t l e f r o m t h e ; c o u n t y valid, w a s t o . s e c u r e t h e Doubly E n t r y , Commercial Calculations, a n d the Philosophv
a n q Morals of Business.
C H A R L E S C. (TUCKER,
{ u s a g e o f a n o t h e r a c t Of C o n g r e s s c o n f i r m i n g t h e o r i g i D E T R O I T — M K 3 H I G A N .
I t i s e x a c t l y what its name Indicates, and s h o u l d - b e in
W a s h i n g t o n , D. C .
n a l s w a m p land selection.
B y t h e a i d of m o n e y a n d
umon one in every s c h o o l . "
[ J o u r n a l of Education.
A T T H E ABOVE ESTABLISHMENT' A R E MANUPACt h e c o m p l i c i t y of a f e w m o r e m e m b e r s of t h a t d e l e c t a b l e
Unsurpassed in a i m p i i c i t y a n d perspicuity, a n d sufficient- Cx. t u r e d a n d f a m i s h e d , on s h o r t notice, of t h e best stock,
b o d y , s i m i l a r l y i n t e r e s t e d w i t h himself, j u s t u p o n t h e evo ly f u l l t o p r e p a r e t h e p u p i l for a n y d e p a r t m e n t of business.'
a f t e r the most a p p r o v e d models, and in the must t h o r o u g h
[Dr. Haven, in Zion's Herald, Boston.
manner, H i g h a n d Low P r e s s u r e S t a t i o n a r y Steam Engines,
o f t h e a d j o u r n m e n t of C o n g r e s s , t h e a c t w a s passed, a n d
The cheapest n n u best w o r k on B o o k k e e p i n g we have of all Sizes, Low P r e s s u r e Steam Engines, p a r t i c u l a r l y adaptJ o h n Slidell b e c a m e t h e o w n e r of o n e h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d
r Been."
[Michigan F a n n e r .
ed to I- l o u r i n g Mills, Or o t h e r uses w h e r e great economy of
(For Feeding Boilers,)
a c r e s of a s g o o d land a s t h o r e i s In t h e S t a t e of Illinois.
Tho c h a p t e r on t h o P h i l o s o p h y a n d Morals of Business, Fuel Is an object. Portable Steam E n g i n e s or all Sizes,—
. A s a n i n s t a n c e s h o w i n g t h e q u a l i t y of t h e l a n d s a n d t h e is well w o r t h the price of the book to a n y business man."
MADE Br
Railroad W o r k . Machine-Shop Tools and Fixtures, Irort
\
[ P r e s t o n ' s U. 8. B a n k Note Reporter.
m a g n i t u d e of t h o f r a u d , i t m a y b e p r o p e r h e r e t o s t a t e
F e n c e s , Verandahs, B a i l i n g , S t a i r s a n d Balconies Ornamen* The w o r k Is a deserved favorfte a m o n g students, and the tal Garden C h a i n s all k i n d s of Iron Castings, Mining Mat h a t a p r o m i n e n t C i r c u i t J u d g e in Illinois, o f l e r e d t o
i m p r o v e m e n t s now i n t r o d u c e d will go f a r to increase its c h i n e r y of e v e r y description, Blast F u r n a c e a n d Rolling-Mlll
Sole Manufacturers
and Licetum,
8 w a m
JSrSir •
P l a n d s in o n e c o u n t y , a m o u n t i n g t o p o p u l a r i t y . "
[Detroit Tribune.
Machinery Composition, Brass Castings, and F i n i s h e d work ;
8 0 , 0 0 0 a c r e s , a t five d o l l a r s p e r a c r e , c a s h , a n d t h e p r o F o r sale by
RATMONI) A LAPHAM.
i n c l u d i n g Steam Whistles, Oil P u m p s a n d Globes, Oil Cnps
Detroit, Au|f. 15,1801.
3s-jy
position was declined. S o m e of these same lands w e r e
a n d Cocks, Steam Cocks, and Bibb's Guage C o c k s ol different
afterwards appraised at twenty dollars per acre. T h e
patterns. Also, Mills, of every kind, driven by s t e a m or waN o r m a l U n i v e r s i t y a t B l o o m i n g t o n — t h e p r i d e of t h e
LANK BOOKS AND S T A T I O N E R Y . - T H I ter, e m b r a c i n g F l o u r , Grist and Saw Mills, Gangs, large ahd
pony, with latest i m p r o v e m e n t s ; Mnlay, Sash, Circular,
s u b s c r i b e r s bog leave t o a n n o u n c e to the C o u n t n - an
S t a t e — w a s b u i l t f r o m t h e p r o c e e d s of t h e s e lands. O n e
Lathe a n d S i d i n g Mills-^all put np r e a d y f o r nse, when d »
m a n w h o s p e n t t w e l v e m o n t h s e x a m i n i n g s w a m p l a n d s in C i t y Trade, t h a t tliey have on h a n d a verv full and complete sired, w h e t h e r at H o m e or abroad.
C o r n e r or F i f t h & W o o d b r i d g c S t s , Detroit, Mich.
assortment 0 r B l a n k B o o k s , S t a t i o n e r y a n d P a p e r ,
Illinois,; in c o m p l i a n c e -with t h e r e q u i r e m e n t s o f t h e G e n - V, bolesale a n d Retail, t o which they i n v i t e inspection by parAlso, r e p a i r i n g of all k i n d s of w o r k a n d Machinery, done
THK INJXCTOH is an a p p a r a t u s which may replace most ade r a l L a n d Office, t o a s c e r t a i n t h e i r qualitv, f o u n d d u r i n g tie# who desire t o purchase. We feel confident we can give with d<iag»ch a n d at low rates. Also, G e a r i n g a n d P a t t e r n s ,
of any sire, u p to seven feet in diameter, c n t by m e a n s of onr vantageously all the means hitherto used for supplying w a t e r
p e r f e c t satisfaction in goods and prices.
t h e whcjle of t h a t t i m e b a r e l y one t r a c t , " e m b r a c i n g fit
t
o
Steam
Bollera, w h e t h e r Stationary, Locomotive, Agriculommodious a n d eflfective Gear C u t t i n g Machine.
Also,
W e have on# ot the m o s t complete BOOK BINDERIES in
teen acres, t h a t had any claim to swamp, and t h a t was
tural, or Marine.
\
'Inns, Drawings and Specifications f o r Machinery;
the West, and are p r e p a r e d to m a n u f a c t u r e to o r d e r any and
ptooted_» c o r j
L o t llic n o l h o r i t i m t r y I b e p r e s e n t a I; styles of Blank Books. Newspapers, Music B o o k s and PeIts application d o e s away entirely i r t t h the necessity or
O n application, a c i r c u l a r will be sent 'gratis, conO I n i e r a l l i p o l S l i M b j v i r t n e of t i e c o n f o c M i J o a c t , riqdicals, b o u n d on the shortest notice, in t h e latest Btyle of t a i n i n g a list of p r i c e s a n d f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n .
p u m p s f o r feeding boilers, and tlicyrrrrfous m o v e m e n t s for
w
o
r
k
i
n
g
t
h
e
m
in
all
classes
ot
E
n
g
i
n
e , and, in tact, wheraCharles Kellogg & Co.,
a n d i t t r t a y b e m a d e t o a p p e a r t h a t t h o G o v e r n m e n t still the a r t .
ever a boiler is used a n d steam p r o d u c e d ; it is an s d j u n c t t o
No. 238, A t w a t c r S t r e e t , D e t r o i t .
RICHMOND 4 BACKUS.
la d
rW^*anlfr^,,tb("!?m^.BCK!'oT
e
>D Illinois, a n d
the boiler, a n d e n t i r e l v i n d e p e n d e n t or t h e E n g i n e , and i s
183 Jefferson Avenue.
realize
t h e
of
**
of t i e t e x t — - T h e w a y
put
in
operation
by
simply
o
p
e
n
i
n
g
c o n n e x i o n s with the
Detroit, Aug. 15, 1861.
38-ly
Boiler; a n d J i a v i n g no p a r t s In motion. I t is n o t l i a b l e t o
wear, nor otherwise t o get out of! o r d e r .
. }
T h e B l a c k jFlagi
^ 5 , S E J ® ° I ^ S T O T E WORKS-CAKSOJI it
The s i r e of this a p p a r a t u s is comparatively small, a n d Its
COMPANY. The u n d e r s i g n e d are prepared t o receive
application is r e n d e r e d especially easy by the fact t h a t i t
T h e Memphis Avalanche advocates the "Black Flair"
o r a e r * f o r t h e m a n u f a c t u r e of c ^ e r y variety of h e a t i n g a n d
can be placed in a n y position, vertical, horizontal, or otheri d e a in t h e f o l l o w i n g f e r o c i o u s l a n g u a g e >—
L O C A T E D A T D E T R O I T , S I C H M
c o o k i n g s t o v e s ; also, coal s t a t e s for s t o r e s and offices.
wise, n e a r to, or at a d i s t a n c e rrom the Boiler, a n d a t a n y
" W f | u n h e s i t a t i n g l y s a y t h a t t h o c a u s e o f j u s t i c e , t h a t These stoves are made f r o m the l a t e s t and most approved
ECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT reasonable h e i g h t above tbe level or the feed-water.
p a t t e r n s , a n d will b e sold at wholesale o r retaiL The attcnt h e c a u i e o f h m n a u i t y itself, d e m a n d s t h a t t ) 4 b l a c k flag
The a p p a r a t u s i s c o n n e c t e d with the Boiler by two pipes.
suite oi rooms, p r e p a r e d e x p r e s s l y tor t h e i r use, in Mert i o n o f citv a n d c o u n t r v dealers is especially invited, a s we
»« l e a d i n g rrom the s t e a m space, a n d the o t h e r conducted
rill Block, c o r n e r of J e f f e r s o n a n d W o o d w a r d A v e n u e s .
^
e x t e r m i n a t i o n a n d shall sell c h e a p e r t ^ a n they can buy in E a s t e r n m a r k e t s .
i the lowest c o n v e n i e n t p o i n t br the water s p a c e ; i t will
<leath shall b e p r o c l a i m e d a g a i n s t t h o h e l l i s h m i s c r e a n t s
Office, 180 W o o d w a r d Avenne.
o p e r a t e with s t e a m a t any usual pressure, and - it w i n supply
• h o p e r s i s t i n b o l l u t i n g o u r «Jil w i t h t h e i r c r i m e s . W e
GANSON 4 CO.
itself f r o m t h e hot well of a condensing E n g i n e .
IU.; Philadelphia, P a . ; St- Louis, M o , a n d N. Y. Ciiy.
Detroit, A u g . 15. 1861.
w f l s t o n t h e eflhsion of blood, w e wiB a r r e s t t h e h o r r o r s
ternfic
J . H. GOLDSMITH, Resident P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
T h e a d v a n t a g e s io be d e r f n i front t h e o a e o f t h i n
s l a u g h t e r oT t h e f o e , b y e x a m p l e s of
H. P . P E R R I N , S p e a c e r i a a P e n m a n .
owrwhalmniDg and unsparing rengeance.
W h e n OUver
HALL6CK-8
1 s t — T h e savlni5 of t f T f l r l r cost ot all P o m p s , u d t b e
T U l t l O N IN ADVANCE.
. V»;omw^l m a s a c r e d t h e g a r r i s o n o f D r o g h e d a , snfferimr
issortment of
p a r t s t o c o n n e c t theio with t h e E n g i n e a n d Boiler.
M a j a t o t o e s c a p e , h e j u s t i f i e d i t OB t h o g r o u n d t h a t •>o»ur HHMie v r o m i n g , suited t o t n e present season all nf
2 n d — T h e s a v i n g or the wear a n d t e a r of t h e s e p u m p s ,
h n p b j o e t , w a a t o b r i n g t h e w a r t o a c l o s e — t o s t o p t h e w h i c h to b e i n g oflfered a t p r i c e s A S T O N I S H I N G L Y LOW"
w h i c h , in L o c o m o t i v e s a n d o t h e r h i g h p r e s s u r e E n g i n e s is
a n d which m a s t be sold within 30 t o 60 days, t o m a k e r o o m
"
P e n m a n s h i p a l o n e , K l e s s o n s , $ 5 ; s i x m o a t h s , e v e n i n g » , $ 1 0 - very considerable.
e f f u s i o u o f b l o o d — a n d t h a t i t was, t h e r a f o r e a m e r c l f h l
tared
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