Grand Traverse Herald, November 28, 1862

Dublin Core

Title

Grand Traverse Herald, November 28, 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

1862-11-28

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.

Relation

None

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

gth-11-28-1862.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

(-KAMI TRAVERSE HERALD.
V O L . IV".

TRAVERSE

Clje <®raitb (Erabtrst llrralii,

C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , N O V E M B E R i S . 1865

GIVING A W A V T H E

BABY.

NO.

r>o

we s t o p p e d o moment f o r b r e a t h , and sure e n o u g h , we
T h e Eye ot the C r a b .
could h e a r b a b y s c r e a m i n g a l t h e t o p of h i s voice. W e
f r o m I>cc,, , week.
I S r c B U S H * D E V E R T FRIDAY. AT
A MOTHER h STORY
WCD! round t o t h e s i t t i n g - r o o m d o o r and k c o c k e d . T h e y
T r a v e r s e City, G r a n d Traverse County, Michigan

seemed half-frightened when tbey saw w h o it was, b u t
A c r e a t u r e t h a t d e p e n d * u p o n i t s own e x e r t i o n *
From the - Little Pilgrim M a r i n e . "
( a s k e d as in politely. A h i r e d nurse was w a l k i n g with " P " c , ' v « P?f °P»° " h i c b it feeds uia>t n«-ce>
" I t was t h e t h i r d d a y a f t e r m y h u s b a n d ' s f u n e r a l . ' j t h e child u p oud d o w n ' t h e floor, t r y i n g t o p a c i f y it. i l r s . i f * n l y b e ' u r n ^ h e d with p o w e r f u l e y e s , w h i c h are cap»*DITO*,AJID r a o r s i x T o a .
satd t h e widow, •• a n d I was so s t u n n e d b v bis sudden i L o r r i m e r had w e a r i e d herself out, a u d WHS lying on t h e ! b l e o i e x t e n d i n g t h e faculty of vision o x e r a v e r y large
1C
d e a t h t h a t I could d o n o t h i n g b u t sit and think o v e r it, lounge.
«T
1 b e « e y e s a n - a w i , on t h e f r o n t m a r g i n of the
T E R M S .
a n d t r y t o r e a l i z e how it could be so. Only the S u n d a y j " " C o m e to m o t h e r , ' W i l l i e said, a n d h« b r o u g h t t h e i c r a b ; P l a c c J •>[> loois.alks. and h a v i n g a p e c u l i a r nacren « . Dollar antf F i f t y Cant, par aannm. p a j a b l a tn»»rl»blr In > ( » » «
ou
A d r a r t l u m t n l a l n i e r w < U r ( » • Hollar p r i q n a r , | u n llaaa] for iba before, h e h a d been s i t t i n g w i t h me, w a t c h i n g t h e b a b y , little fellow to me at ouct*.
j ",un
" ' e i r grey-brwwu curfaCt-s
Ou e x a m i n a as b e s a t in tbo s u u s h i u e , la u g h in g und c l a p p i o g his lit-1
H o w h e c l u n g t o me. stfil s o b b i n g , vet smiling a | | , 1 0 1 1 wiih a g o o d p o c k e t leus, t h e f c y e s a r e seen to be
IM: S3U for U m iqna rea: $1c
I . - J 1 0 for ooa
La«al AdrartlMmanK at tin
•VI for OB* o l m
tie hands, a s the s h a d o w s of t h e t r e e s K e r e flung a c r o s s | t h e while t o find himself in my a r m *
'
i r o n i p o u m l ,. e.. f o r m e d of a g r e a t n u m b e r o r f u c e t a e a c h
r; BAy cants par folio o f 1U0 worda. f o r t h , S l l l l n t
0
V,S,0D
al>
ibuiiaant. K w j r S*ar«co«THa a wo
t h e b a r e floor, a n d moved by t h e passing breeze.
N o w I " ' I cannol give him up,' I said, at last, when 1 coidd i p*^®8>upi?
power
d »" communicating
lbeir
1
ralaa. 30 pai c a n t * 4 4 a 4 . Rnla an4 Stnra work.di
the c h i l d was s i t t i n g in the s a m e spot, the warm O c t o b e r | g e t my voice clear. • Y ou m a s t let me t a k e h i m h o m o . ' | "
,c"mD'')" °Pf"-' u e r v c he delicatu rais«-d
oiuatba paldfor»trict!yto Advance.
sun s t r e a m i n g in on his b r i g h t curls, a n d m a k i n g hira j
" 1 h e y evidently t h o u g h t me the silliest of women ; : lines causcd
' h e s e r r i e d r a n k s of these c o m p o u u d e y e s
look so p r e t t y — s o like a p i c t u r e ; b u t t h e f a t h e r was 1 h a t their cold w o r d s only made me the m o r e d e t e r m i n e d , i u 7 ; , \he o f ' g 1 0 of the p e c u l i a r lustre j u s t mculioiH'd.
-e s t a r t e d bback
we
** * e n too. t h a t t b e visual p o r t i o n of these o r g a n s
a n d we
a c k in less t h a n half an b o o r a f t e r w
e i
g o n e f r o m us forcvei
•. 1 c a r r y i n g t h e babv ; W i l l i e oflered t o help me. I
partially r o u n d t h e footstalks, so t h a t when t h e
" I t seemed t o me 1 must see h i s d e a r face once m o r e
— t h a t he would surely lift the l a t c h a n d come in. and b u t 1 felt as ' t h o u g h I could c a r r y hiin in my a r m s for- . c r e a t u r e p r o t r u d e s i u e y e s it can see o b j e c t s on all sides
fver.
; w i t h e q u a l ease. N o w . replace the c r a b in t h e w a t e r .
t a k e o u r child up, a n d say, as he i o often d i d — - M o t h e r ,
" W b o n I h a d laid h i m in b e d , now fast asleep, b u t j a n d w a l c h
>t e x h i b i t * the instinct w h i c h has been
w h a t would y o u t a k e for t h i s little b o t h e r V
A d v a n c i n g with
" E v e n t h e b a b y missed him, a n d would c o m e and still s o b b i n g , a n d reaching o o t his litUc bands, t o feel if i m p l a n t e d in its b e i n g by IU M a k e r .
stand a t my knee, calling • P u p a ! p a p a !' until I t h o u g h t I was t h e r e . 1 said, • Gou helping me. c o m e w h a t will, 1 i ' h e flowing t ' d e . a n d e v e r r e m a i n i n g w i t h i n a foot o r t w o
GBAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
o f ,b
will
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,
the
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r a b keeps i t s e a g e r i r a t c h for food, a n d
ray p o o r h e a r t would b r e a k . T h e t o o oldest c h i l d r e n
suffers few living t h i n g s t o pass w i t h o u t c a p t u r i n g t h e m .
J u d g e of P r o b a t e
C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mapleton w e r e a t school ; t h e r e s t w e r e out playing, s o t h a t I / never did.
t Sheriff
E . F . D A U B , T r a v e i y City,
• I need m tell y o u how wild w i t h j o y t h e rest of t b e | T h e whole n a t u r e of t h e a u i m a l s e e m s t o bo c h a n g e d
was q u i t e alone. B y a n d by t h e b a b y was t i r e d of his
County Treasurer
M O R G A N H A T E S , T r . v City.
c h i l d r e n w e r e when t b e y found the b a b y in bed u e x t while it is seeking i t s p r e y . T b e timid, f e a r f u l d e m e a n o r
play, and c a m e a n d g o t u p i u t o m y lup.
•County Clerk
T H E R O N BOSTW ICR,
which it assumes w h e n taken at a d i s a d v a n t a g e ' w h o l l v
m
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:
t
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little
fellow,
and
•• ' M a m m a cry ? — m a m m a m u s t n ' t h e lisped out,
R e g i s ter o T D e e d *
TIIERON BOSTWICK
and wiped m y wet face w i t h his little c h u b b y h a n d s ; f r o m that d a y f o r t h i t was t b e i r g r e a t e s t p l e a s u r e t o vatiiAes, a n d the a p p a r e n t l y u n g a i o ' v c r a b b e c o m e s foil
of life a n d spirit, a c t i v e a n d fierce a s t h e h u n g r y l e o p a r d ,
b a t I coald only hold b i m closer t o me, and' ( h e n cry a m u s e C h a r l i e nnd h a v e h i n j w i t h them.
" W h c u the a f f i i i r c a u i e lo be known, many blamed a n d uo less d e s t r u c t i v e a m o n g t b e saialler b e i n g s t h a t
m o r e bitterly.
f r e q u e n t t h e s a m e locality.
•' J a s t t h e n , M r . and M r s . L o r r i m e r d r o v e o p in t h e i r me, a u d many f a v o r s t h a t tr(y rich n e i g h b o r s m i g h t b a v e
h a n d s o m e c a r r i a g e . T b e v lived o o t f a r off and w e r e d o n e roe t h e y w i t h h e l d , I think, f o r my folly, as t h e y
Making a Needle.
o u r richest n e i g h b o r s .
W b e o I had i n v i t e d t b e m in, callcd it. B u t a few p o o r women like myself, t h a t b a d
N e e d l e s a r e m a d e of s t e e l w i r e . T h e w i r e is first c o t
a n d h a d d r i e d my t e a r s a little, t b e y ceemed a t a loss always nursed t h e i r own chDdren, s a i d I did right. W e
bad many trials, a n d o f t e n s a i r c e l y a c r u s t of b r e a d in b y s h e a r s , f r o m coils, i n t o t b e l e n g t h of t h e needles t o b e
bow t o b e g i n t h e c o n v e r s a t i o n , b n t C h a r l i e h a d slid
T B A V K H 8 K CITY,
a w a y f r o m m y side, s o d went and stood a t t h e lady's the bouse ; b u t o u r h a r d s h i p s b o u n d u s t h e m o r e closely m a d e . A f t e r a b a t c h af s a c h b i t s of w i r e h a v e b e e n c o t
off. t h e y a r e placed in a b o i f u r n a o e , a n d t h e n t a k e n o u t
GBAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
knee, a n d p o i n t i n g t o h e r h e a v y gold b r a c e l e t , s a i d — t o g e t h e r .
" All my c h i l d r e n p r o v e d c o m f o r t s and blessings t o aod rolled b a c k w a r d a n d f o r w a r d on a t a b l e till t b e y a r e
' P r e t t y , p r e t t y !' in his childish w a y . S h e t o o k it o f t
REFERENCES:
T h e y a r e now t o b e g r o u n d T b e needle
me. G o d took c a r e of o n e . f o r me ; b u t as W i l l i e said s t r a i g h t
and g a v e it t o htm, s a y i n g :
kuatin Blair. Uo*. Mich,
we k u e w t h a t i t was f o r the b e s t . T h e rest m a r r i e d in p o i n t e r t b e n t a k e s u p t w o d o z e n o r so of t h e w i r e s a n d
h O, Karfj. Auditor Oasart
" ' W o n ' t y o n c o m e t o be m y l i t t l e boy, C h a r l i e ?"
>o U l u C . ^ e a c h . Uanaln^.Mlch.
I-an«tii«;MIC
•' M y m o t h e r ' s h e a r t t o o k f r i g h t at once.
T b e y h o d the c o u r s c of time, and l e f t me ; b u t t h e p r o p of my old rolls t h e n b e t w e e n bis t h u m b a n d fingers, w i t h t h e i r ends
on
the
g
r
i
n
d
s
t
o
n
e
,
first
one
e
o
d
a
o
d
t
h
e
n
t
h
e other.—
— T i w S . C e o i e r ' . S a w Ol ftiporterljohn Vf l<oncyear, KM,. 1-aiulnj M
no children, a n d I seemed to feel as plainly a s if t b e y days, t b e one whose i n d u s t r y ond m a n a g e m e n t g a v e me
A Praf.of I-aw In M i c k Ualrerally. iUon.T. J . lUmadaU. MaslaWe. Mich.
b a d to!d me, t h a t t h e y h a d c o m e t o ask m e f o r one of t h i s plentiful and c o m f o r t a b l e home, baa n e v e r left m e N e x t is a m a c h i n e w h i c h flattens a n d g u t t e r s t h e h e a d s
of ten t h o a s a n d n e e d l e s io an h o u r .
N e x t comes the
since the day I g a v e h i m a w a y . "
mine.
p u n c h i n g of t h e eyes, by a boy, s o fast t h a t t b e e y e can
" ' N o , n o ; m o t h e r c o u l d n ' t s p a r e h i m , ' I said q u ic k h a r d l y k e e p p a c e w i t h bim. T h e s p l i t t i n g follow^ w h i c h
A Brove Boy.
ly s n a t c b i o g h i m away, almost r u d e l v , I fear.
is runoiuff a fine w i r e t h r o u g h a dozen, p e r h a p s of t k e t «
" • My dear woman,' began M r . Lorrimer, ' have you
F r o m the A m e r i e a a Messvnger.
twin needles. A woman w i t h a little anvif b e f o r e far
t h o u g h t s e r i o u s l y of t h e impossibility o f y o u r g e t t i n g
S O L I C I T O R IN C H A N C E R Y ,
W h e n I was a boy I livod a m o n g t h e G r e e n Moun- files b e t w e e n t h e b e a d s and s e p a r a t e s t h e m .
a l o n g w i t h five childen, u n d e r t w e l v e y e a r s "of a g e ' "
T h e y a r e now c o m p l e t e oeedles, b u t t h e y a r e r o u g h
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k C O N V E Y A N C E R .
h a s r e q u i r e d all y o n r h u s b a n d ' s e f f o r t s t o make a living tains of V e r m o n t ; in w i n t e r m a k i n g snow f o r t s a n d slidTbe hardening comesraext
ing d o w n thu s t e e p bills, a n d in s n m t n ' r and a u t u m n a n d rusty, a n d easily b e n t
Traverse City, Grand Traverse County, Mich.
f o r y o u — h o w can y o u h o p e t o d o it w i t h o u t h i m ?'
w a n d e r i n g o v e r t b e m o u n t a i n s looking a f t e r the b e a u t i - T h e y are h e a t e d io b a t c b c s in a f u r n a c e , a n d a b e t red
Office In l e v e l l i n g House.
1-ly
" • W e o f f e r , ' j o i n e d in h i s wife, ' t o t a k e t h e roost
h
o
t are t h r o w n i n t o a p a n of cold w a t e r .
N e a t they
helpless of y o u r little o n e s — t o give b i m all t h e a d v a n - ful t r o n t f r o m t b e b r o o k s . B u t my b r o t h e r m W i s c o n O u r h o u s e must be t e m p e r e d , a n d t h i s is done by rolling t h e m
t a g e s we would o a r own child ; a n d sorely y o o m u s t sec sin w r o t e to m e t o c o m e t o bim, and 1 w e n t
T h e polT h e backward and f o r w a r d ao a h o t metal plate
t h a t G o d ' s h a n d is in i t — t h a t t h r o u g h a s H e i n t e n d s t o was on what was t h e n called " B a x t e r ' s P r a i r i e . "
p r a i r i e was c o v e r e d w i t h flowers, and t b e m a n y c l e a r i s h i n g still r e m a i n s t o b e d o o e . O n a v e r y c o a r s e e f o t h
help y o n . '
lakes around a b o u n d in fish a n d d o c k s ; b u t o u r princi- needles are s p r e a d t o t b e n u m b e r of f o r t y o r fill j t h o u I need not tell y o n b o w long I w i t h s t o o d all t h e i r
s
a
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d
.
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y
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r
t
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e
n
j
,
oil
is
sprinkled
pal food was h o e c a k e a n d salt p o r k .
80L.I0iaX>K IN C H A N C E R Y ,
a r g u m e n t s . B u t a t last, o v e r c o m e by t h e i r e n t r e a t i e s ,
O n o of o u r n e i g h b o r s h o d n o m e a t for a l o n g time, and s o f t s o a p is d s o b e d o v e r ; t h e c l o t h i s r o l l e d h a r d
1
NO. i F I R S T STREET,
I c o n s e n t e d t o c o n s i d e r t h e m a t t e r . In t w o d a y s t b e y
acd g e t t i n g o u t of p o w d e r t h e y h a d on g a m e ; so o n e o p . and with several o t h e r s of t h e s a m e kind t h r o w s i n t o
Mnni»t«e. Mlohlgnn.
f o r m y answer. I n e v e r m e n t i o n e d t b e i r visit t o
day they sent u p t h e i r oldffji son, a b o y a b o u t t e n y e a r s a s o r t of wash p o t t o roll t o n n d f r o t w e l v e h o a r s o r
any of t h e c h i l d r e n , a n d I h a d c h a n g e d m y mind almost
old, for a piece of p o r k . A s he was ci r r y i n g it h o m e - more. T h e y c o m e o u t d i r t y e n o u g h , b u t a f t e r a rinsing
e v e r y h o a r since I b a d seen t h e m . A t last, convinced
wards, a n d g o i n g t o r o n g h a p i e c e of « >ods by " Silver in clean hot w a t e r , a n d tossing in s a w d u s t , t h e y b e c o m e
t h a t i t was f o r t h e c h i l d ' s good. I consented to give h i m
L a k e , " he h e a r d a r u s t l i n g of the l e a v t , in a t h i c k e t b y b r i g h t , a n d are ready t o b e s o r t e d a n d p u t o p f o r sale.
T a « andorsiifned would I n f o r m the ciUscns of Grand Tra- n p . W h e n I w e n t t o d r e s s h i m t o go, m y resolution al- t h e r o a d s i d e . H e s t o p p e o a n d l i s t e n e t j ^ i l l was still —
v e r s a a a d a d j o i n i n g counties, t h a t he Is prepared to attend most Tailed m e . I lingered o v e r e v e r y a r t i c l e I p u t ou
T h e H u m b o l d t Silver Mtaea.
A g a i n be p u s h e d forward, again t b e l**ves rustled bep r o m p t l y to all claims against the
bim, a n d m a d e e v e r y d e a r c u r l o v e r a n d o v e r b e f o r e I
h
i n d h i m and he t h o u g h t he h e a r d a stealthy s t e p —
The Sacrameoto Union publishes a n interesting letter
United State* for B o n n t y or Pensions.
could g e t i t t o please m e ; a n d I kissed t h e little w h i t e
AU offlccrs or s o l d i e r * disabled in the p r e s e n t war, e i t h e r s h o u l d e r s nntil t h e y w e r e all rosy. B a t a t l e n g t h he was, A g a i n be s t o p p e d ; e v e r y t h i n g was still e x c e p t t b e g e n - f r o m t b e H n r a b o l d t m i n i n g d i s t r i f ^ t o w h i c h 60 m u c h
tle d a s h of the waves u p o n the p e b b l y beach, a n d tbe
'h* disease incurred, o r w o n n d s r e c e i v e d In the service or the ready, and 1 t h o n g h t h e n e v e r looked so p r e t t y .
He
a t t e n t i o n h a s b e e n lately d i r e c t e d .
A m o n g other things
r a p i d b e a t i n g of his own h e a r t . H e d r e a d e d t o g o foru n i t e d States, in the line of t h e i r dntv are entitled to Pens i o n a ; also, the widows, o r m i u o r children of tbos<j who die was full of a n i m a t i o n , f o r b e was old e n o u g h t o k n o w w a r d . a n d he d a r e d not stay, for .be saw n i g h t was a p - t h e w r i t e r says ;
w h a t it m e a n t t o ' g o r i d i n g , ' a n d b e c l a p p e d h i s h a n d s
r
o
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estimated,
it
will
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a n d l a u g h e d aloud a t t h e horses, as t h e y w e r e d r i v e n u p .
owl of t h e h u n g r y wolf, gwd t h e s a v a g e b e a r and steal- to say t h a t f r o m ten t o fifteen h u n d r e d l e a d s h a r e b e e n
6m
T r a v e r s e City, May Sth, 18B2*
I h a n d e d h i m t o his ne-» m o t h e r , ( t h e c h i l d r e n s u p p o s e d
t h y c a t a m o u u t c a n e out from their dens. S o p i c k i n g u p s t r u c k w i t h i n t h e s p a c e c o m p r e h e n d e d in t b o m i n i n g ret h a t he w a s t o c o m e b a c k soon,) a n d h e n e v e r even
a club, h e a g a iff s t a r t e d h o m e w a r d . A g a i n c a m e t h e gion. Of this n u m b e r , inclusive a r e " e x t e n s i o n s . " A n d
looked at me. Oh, h o w j e a l o u s was m y a c h i n g h e a r t !
s t e a l t h y step b e h i n d him, n e a r e r a n d n e a r e r , until he s a w a l u r r t p r o p o r t i o n will d o n b t l e s s p r o v o " s p a r s " or "an" W h e n I c a m e b a c k into the bouse, t h e first t h i n g
a g a u n t and s a v a g e wolf c r e e p i n g a f t e r him. a n d he was gles
of original loads. B e s i d e s t h i s t h e r e a r e m a n y relv e y e fell o n was his c r a d l e . I could only t h r o w myh u r r i e d on still c l i n g i n g to his m e a t , t i e wolf was com- c o g n i z e d as - w i l d c a t " located simply for t h e p o r p o s e of
;lf on it, a n d s o b aloud. T h e n c a m e t b e t r i a l of t e l l i n g
ing n e a r e r a n d n e a r e r , aod m i g h t a t a n y m o m e n t s p r i n g t r a d e , n o a t t e m p t b e i n g m a d e t o w a r d s t b e i r d e v e l o p ( P t O S T RTttBtT, M A B COCBT BOCBB,)
t h e whole t r u t h to the children.
N o n e of t b e m s e e m e d
upon him.
ment.
B a t d i v i d e t h i s gross a m o u n t b y a l m o s t a n y figure
TRAVERSE CITY,MICHIGAN.
reconciled, a n d felt t h a t t h e w o r s t was t o c o m e when
Still t h e boy, t h o u g h be t r e m b l e d in e v e r y limb, dicf i n c r e d u l i t y m a v s s g g e s t . and y o u will still h a v e a residue
t b e t w o oldest should c o m e f r o m school. I almost d r e a d Ho
remembered
h a v i n g e n o u g h in eacfi district of t h o r o u g h p a y i n g Veins, n o t
H I S O L D E S T A B L I S H E D n o T E L , ( T H E FIRST e d t o m e e t t h e m , e s p e c i a l l y W illie ; he w a s like h i s fa-. n o t lose bis p r e s e n c e of mind.
In T r a v e r s e City.) situated on F r o n t S t r e e t , in the vieinonly
t
o
e
l e v a t e e a c h p l a c e t o t h e rank of a V i r g i n i a , b n t
h e a r d b i s f a t h e r say t h a t if a n y o n e f a c e d a wild animal
i t v of t h e C o n r t House a n d public offices. Is still open f o r the tber, so q u i e t a n d calm, o u t w a r d l y , b u t h i d i n g b e n e a t h a n d looked it s q u a r e in t b e e y e , it would not d a r e to at- t o m a k e t b e c o l l e c t i v e w h o l e t h e s o u r c e of m o r e wealth
r e c e p t i o n of the t r a v e l i n g p u b l i c . Tho P r o p r i e t o r r e t u r n s bis a p p a r e n t c o l d n e s s t h e strongest, d e e p e s t feelings —
t h a n ever tbe vast 6elds of M e x i c o a o d P e r o g l u t t e d t b e
hia h e a r t y t h a a k s for t h e liberal p a t r o n a g e he has received, B u t t h e o t h e r s went t o m e e t t b e m a s t h e y c a m e borne, tack b i m . H e t u r n e d a r o n n d and fac^d t b e h u n g r y wolf
a a d a s s u r e s t h e public t h a t no p a i n s will be spared to make a n d I w a s pleasantly d i s a p p o i n t e d in t h e w a y t h e o l d e s t and c o m m e n c e d walking b a c k w a r d s t o w a r d s his home, a v a r i c e of I he S p a n i a r d s w i t h . T b e a s s e r t i o n may s s
' " - c h a r g e s w i l l c o r r e s p o n d with
of i b e w a r m t h of e n t h u s i a s m . L o o k a t it, then, in
h i s guests c o m f o r t a b l e .
t o o k it. H e s e e m e d t o feel t h a t I b a d d o n e it f o r t h e still a long mile aud a half a w a y . A s t b e w o o d s g r e w
U s times.
.
..
d a r k e r t h e wolf c a m e n e a r e r , s l o w i n g his w h i t e t e e t h , t h e cold, calm l i g h t of business p h i l o s o p h y — a p p l y i t s r i
m i ) 25-16 b e s t , and t h a t be must hide his o w n s o r r o w f o r m y sake.
G o o d a c c o m o d a t i o n s f o r Hor«< i a n d Cattle.
w i t h t b e h a i r b r i s t l i n g u p o n bis b a c k .
T h e courageou.- gid maxims, a p p e a l t o t b e c r u c i b l e a n d t h e blow-]
•P'l*
H e was m o r e t b o n g h t f u l f o r m y c o m f o r t , g e n t l e r t h a n
b o y knew if h e g a v e u p nis p i e c e ot p o r k be w a s safe, — w h a t is t h e result T T h e a s s a y e r will tell y o u t h a t
— T , only v e r y still a n d g r a v e .
a n d could run h o m e unmolested, b u t b e knew t h e r e were scarcely an ounce of r o c k passes b i m in w h i c h t h e p r e
T b o d a y ended, as t h e l o n g e s t will at l a s t a n d i t
h u n g r y ones at h o m e a w a i t i n g his return. S o b a c k w a r d s sence of p r e c i o o s m e t a l s is not d e t e c t e d . H e r e is visible
c a m e t i m e t o g o t o b e d . I b a d t a k e n W illie t o s l e e p
he weut, s t e p by step. A s tbe wolf c a m e near, h e h i t t a n g i b l e e v i d e n c e t h a t can b e witnessed main' t i m e s a
JUST s a a i v s n — T H B
d o w n s t a i r s n e a r me. S i n c e his f a t h e r ' s d e a t h , t h e o t h e r
A b u t t o n of p r e c i o u s m e t a l is p r o d u c e d front an
b i m s q u a r e u p o n t h e he#d w i t h a s t o n e , when w i t h an day.
c h i l d r e n s l e p t j u s t a b o v e us.
Well, when I came to
a n g r y •' y e l p . " the wolf s p r a n g i u t o t h e t h i c k e t a n d set o u n c c t o a few o u u o e s of rock, a c c o r d i n g t o its quality,
lie down, t h e r e was the empty pillow
B a b y h a d al- o p a long a n d dismal howl
T h e b o y listened t o h e a r if as large as a s h i r t s t u d , a n d requiring but t b o a l e m b i c
w a y s laid his little r o s y face a s c l o s e t o m i n e a s h e could
t h e r e w e r e a n s w e r i n g bowls, a n d h e a r i n g none, t o o k and t b e die l o c o n s t i t u t e it t h e c u r r e n t m e d i u m of comg e t it, a n d s l e p t w i t h o n e little w a r m hand o n m y neck.
Multiply t b i s simple b u t s u g g e s t i v e result b y t b e
c o a r a g e ; but soon t b e s a v a g e beast, m a d d e n e d w i t h merce.
HXDR X J A - D I K S A N D M T S S K S ;
All m y grief b r o k e o u t a f r e s h w h e n I t h o n g h t of h i m . —
h a n g e r , c a m e a t h i m again.
W i t h h i s c l u b he g a v e him infinite a m o u n t t h a t lies u n d e v e l o p e d in t h e c h o i c e s t
W i l l i e raised u p a t last, a n d s a i d , e a r n e s t l y :
well d i r e c t e d blow b e t w e e n t h e eyes, w h i c h sent h i m ledges, t b e n allow t h e widest m a r g i n for difficulties of
" ' M o t h e r , it's C h a r l i e y o u a r e c r y i n g for, isn't i t f
r o n QENTS A K P BOYS, TOOKTHBR W1T11
h o w l i n g b a c k a g a i n into tbe t h i c k e t
A g a i n a n d a g a i n I s c p a r a t i o u . etc.. and y o u will h a v e results t h a t d w a r f
' " Y e s , 1 I a n s w e r e d , • 1 know i t s f o r t h e b e s t ; b u t
t h e c o n t e s t r e n e w e d ; many t i m e s did t h e s a v a g e | even t h e e s t i m a t e I h a v e v e n t u r e d . T h i s m o d e o f r e a
a n . O W F . I t S . S H A K E R S l
E T C .
o h I i t ' s so h a r d t o g i v e h i m u p . "
y e t c o w a r d l y a n i m a l m a k e a s p r i n g a t the lad, and many s o n i n g is l e g i t i m a t e and c o m e s h o m e — t b e a c c u r a c y
C A L L A M ) SBK F O B YOUBfiHLVES.
" ' M o t h e r , ' c o n t i n u e d t h e c h i l d . ' when f a t h e r died, t i m e s did t h e b r a v e b o y b e a t b i m off until a t last he the p r e m i s e s are within the e x e m p l i f i c a t i o n of ail.
we k n e w it w a s all for t h e best, b e c a u s e God t o o k fan
c a m e n e a r tbe log c a b i n of his p a r e n t s , w h e n t h e disapA. K. S^EACIIE.
J o h n Beal t j t e i n b e r g e r , the o n c e c e l e b r a t e d millionf r o m us ; b u t I h a v e b e e n t h i n k i n g e v e r since w e laid p o i n t e d wolf, w i t h a long a n d w a i l i n g h o w l , dashed a w a y
T r a v e r s e City. J a a e »rd. 18C1
d o w n b o w p o o r little C h a r l i e m u s t b e c r y i n g f o r you. i n t o t h o woods. T r e m b l i n g w i t h e x c i t e m e n t and w e t aire, and k n o w n a s B a r o n S t c i n b e r g e r . ' d i e d in p o v e r t y
a n d b o w G o d g a v e h i m t o us, t o l o v e h i m a n d k e e p h i m ; w i t h p e r s p i r a t i o n , t h e b o y d r o p p e d the m e a t u p o n t b e last week a t S t L o u i s . H e w a s a m a m m o t h s p e c u l a t o r
a a d now y o o h a v e g i v e n him a w a y .
I f he b a d m e a n t floor, c r y i u g . •• M o t h o r , I ' v e g o t i t " a n d fell e x h a u s t e d in cattle a n d c o t t o n , aad used t h e old U . 8 . B a n k t o for
b i m t o b e M r . a n d M r s . I«orrimer's: b a b y , w o u l d u ' t H e a t his m o t h e r ' s feet
' w a r d his s c h e m e s . I n his d a y s o( p r o s p e r i t y , b e aomca OOT o e a
VTa « o r u RAT t o TO* PPSUC,
h a v e g i v e n h i m t o t h e m at first *'
tiltriesgave d i n o e r s c o s t i n g 8 1 0 . 0 0 0 .
H e a m a v s c d a for
t o n e in C a l i f o r n i a , a f t e r b e b a d b r o k e n d o w n in t h e E a s t :
" T b e child's words carried m o r e w e i g h t with them
AMBUCAW H o n c r c u n B s . — O n e of t h e A m e r i c a n chab u t h a b i t s of d i s i p a t i o n i m p o v e r i s h e d a n d r u i n e d bim fit h a n all t h e a r g u m e n t s of rov rich n e i g h b o r s .
A f t e r racteristics
which m o s t s u r p r i s e d t h e g o o d - n a t u r e d M r .
nally.
; » o p e r a t i o n , a n d are on hand to d o ,C«U#oy.W«rk at all c o n s i d e r i n g a m o m e n t , I said, i m p u l s i v e l y :
T r o l l o p e , in h i s r e c e n t i o u r o e y t h r o u g h t h i s c o u n t r y , is
aimea ; a a d would nay, we t h i n k t h a t we can a« ss Rood work
" O h , if f only h a d h i m b a c k , h e s h o u l d n e v e r g o t h e i m p e r t u r b a b l e g o o d h u m o r a n d h o p e f u l n e s s of t b e
A b o y w h o b a d stolen s o m e a n c l e s w a sforgivenfor
as a n y Mill in Grand TMverse. If y o u d o a b t It. t r y na. and
a w a y again, n o m a t t e r b o w p o o r w e m i g h t b e . '
people. H e m e e t ? f r e q u e n t l y p e o p l e w h o a r e m i n e d by tbe r a t h e r i n g e n i o u s m a n n e r in w h i c h be e x c u s e d h i m s e l f .
« f o r y o u r s e l v e s ; and would say, t h a t we k e e p o u r
. ' T T » moon w a s s h i n i n g so b r i g h t l y Usat i t was al- t h e c a l a m i t i e s of t h e war. ' J ' b e y n e v e r w e e p , o r w r i n g T h e s c h o o l m a s t e r a«ked h i d w b s t h e h s d t o say for h i m m o s t a s l i g h t as d a y . a n d p r e s e n t l y W f f l i e said :
t b e i r hands, or tear t b e i r hi^ir. O n e man, f r o m w h o m self. t b e u r c h i n r e p l i e d . ' - T b e a p p l e s w e r e T o m s ; I d o n ' t
" ' M o t h e r , i t ' s only half a mile a c r o s s t h e Gelds, a n d t b e secessionists of Missouri b a d t a k e n c a t t l e a n d c r o p s , k n o w h o w he g o t t b e m ; now t b e y a r e mine, a o d h e d o n ' t
a oparatloa, aad T a n o a S h a r e s — a s aaoal!
t h e y w o n ' t g o t o b o d for a l o n g t i m e a t M r . L o r r i m e r ' s ; and all t h e f r u i t of I b e l a b o r o f y e a r s , merely remarked,
k n o w h o w I got t b e m .
C. KORRIS A BROTHERS.
let u s go a n d g e t C h a r l i e .
W h y , m o t h e r , I seem t o i n a q u i e t way, w h i l e h e p i c k e d h i s t e e t h w i t h a b o w i e
J a n u a r y IT, 186J.
bjear h i m c r y i n g now."
k n i f e . '• Y e s , t h e y h a v e b e e n k i n d e r r o u g h w i t h m e . " —
A man with a s c o l d i n g wife, v b e s i n q u i r e d respecting
" U r g e d b y t h e c h i l d ' s e n t r e a t i e s a n d t h e fond T h a t w a s all ; b e b a d n o l b i o g else t o s a y . M r . T r o l l o p e
h i s o c c u p a t i o n , said b e k e p t a h c t - b o a s e .
MORGAN BATES, j
;o
p r o m p t i n g s of my o w n h e a r t , J c o n s e n t e d .
I t h i n k ' L t h i n k s a genuine A m e r i c a n n e v e r c o m p l a i n s a n d n e v e r
p e v e r w a l k e d ^ half milo so q u i c k l y in m y life, a n d nei- despairs. W h a t e v e r h a p p e n s in t b e e x t e r n a l w o r k !
T o t e r m i n a t e a lawsuit sneedily b t h e a a x t b e s t t h i n s ,
jJjpr of ua spofcp n n t i l wp reacted t h e pumajoo.
T b e n says
T-, .i" t «Kh e — ] g alvsyi tltere."
••v-a Mr.
Mr T
t o n e v e r h a v i n g c o m m e n c e d it-""
H«re)d Olllso>Traysr* CUy, MipK

MORGAN'BATES,

11 Kinds of Job Printing Neatly and Eipeditwosh IitcnUd.

DNITE8 STATES 1AN
. D OCTl® AT TRAVERSE CITY. MICH.

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

Attorney & Counsellor at Law,

C. H . M A R S H ,

^.ttonuj] unit CorasrUor at 'Jato.

T. J. RAMSDELL

IkttorKtn aitir ^.ounscllor at ^ato,

BOUNTY & PENSIONS.

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TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,

W I L L I A M

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MONITOR AND UNION
HATS,
H A T S .

NOTICE.

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TANNERY

NOTARY PUBLIC,

<£lje (BrtUtNfrnbrat Utrali).

R a d i c a l i s m vtL C o n s e r v a t i s m .
1 iie A l i t o r of t h e G r a n d K j p i d ' s Eagle
a f l c r o u r own h e a r t . "
fearless and

right

U

a

man

I l e / s r a d i c a l , bold, out-spoken,

H e a r twint h e s a y s o n R a d i c a l i s m

and Conservatism.
ing truth :

Kfttfry sentence' is a ' c l e a r

und ring-

" I t is n s i g n i f i c a n t f a c t — i t is Ik* s i g n i f i c a n t
t h e lato e l e c t i o n s t h a t t h e r a d i c a l t i c k e t

fact—of

h a s evtryichcrr

b e e n successful : a n d t h % c o n s e r v a t i v e t i c k e t everywhere
defeated.

Half-way und timid

measures

have

w h e r e g o n e d o w n in t h e s h o c k of t h e c o n t e s t .

every-

In Mich-

igan, Massachusetts Miaiomi a n d Iowa: the Republicans
w e r e r a d i c a l i n t h e i r w a r policy, a n d p u t r a d i c a l men on
t h e i r t i c k c t a . ' T h e r e w a s no m i s t a k i n g t h e i r p o s i t i o n . —
T h e y were c h a r g e d with radicalism, and
t h e title a n J t h e issue.

they

accepted

T h e men of t h e i r r a n k s w h o w e r e

t h e most a n d w o r s t a b a s e d f o r t h e i r r a d i c a l a n d a b o l i t i o n
d o c t r i n e * were the m e n they selected t o b e their

stand-

ard bearers ; and they were t r i u m p h a n t

other

On the

h e u 1, t h e D e m o c r a c y l o w e r e d t h e i r flag, r e t r e a t e d f r o m
•heir position, and took a

middle ground

upon which

t h e y could f u s e w i t h c o n s e r v a t i v e s f r o m o t h e r

parlies ;

and they were badly defeated.
I n O h i o , Illinois. N e w Y o r k . N e w J e r s e y a n d I n d i a n a
t h e Democracy were radical.

T h e y took bold g r o u n d . —

T h e y w e r e o p e n a n d undisguised-

T h e r e w a s no c h a n c e

t o mistake their position ; while t h e Republicans

occu-

p i e d « half-way. a n d e c i d c d

away

platform,

nod

t h e i r p r i n c i p l e s t o o b t a i n t h e s u p p o r t t>f
t i v e s of o t h e r p a r t i e s .

fared
the

conserva-

H e r e t h e p e o p f c d e c i d e d in favor

nf t h e r a d i c a l D e m o c r a c y . . I t w a s a d e c i s i o n

against

h e s i t a t i n g , a c o v c r e d - u p . half-way, t i m i d policy.

a

Rather

than a wavering and irresolute policy—rather than even
n p a t r i o t i c c o n s e r v a t i v e r i g h t , t h e p e o p l e w e r e in
of t h e ' r a d i c a l w r o n g .

favor

"The massos h a v e a c c e p t e d t h o D o u g l a s s definition a n d
platform.

D o u g l a s s a i d t h e r e coulii b e n o m i d d l e g r o u n d ;

a n d t h e S e c t i o n s say t h a t t h e p e o p l e Will n o t h a v e
middle ground.

any

D o u g l a s said t h e r e can bo b u t t w o p a r -

t i e a n o w — p a t r i o t s and traitor*.

T h o people

c e p t e d ( b i s d e f i n i t i o n a n d issue

also ;

aud

have

ac-

where

the

R e p u b l i c a n s h a v e failed t o p u t u p a n o p e n . bold, u n a d u l t e r a t e d , radical, patriotic platform, they have elected the
torie*. nc''"'
T h o r e s u l t is a m a r k e d e x p o s i t i o n o r t h e feeling of t h e
p o p u l a r m i n d c o v e r i n g t h e w a r a n d i t s policy.
rismknd

It

is a

f o r radical m e a s u r e s nnd on e n d of t h e w n r , o n e

w a y Wf t o e o t h e r .

I t is an e m p h a t i c d e c l a r a t i o n t h a t t h e

w a r m e s t e i t h e r be fought qui a t onco,

on

the

radical

K e p a b l i c a n plan ; o r t h a t i t b e c o m p r o m i s e d a t o n c e , o n
t h e radical loc«>roco plan.

The

shilly-shally,

split-the-

diflerenco, balf-fight-und-hnlf-conciliatcj p o l i c y

w h i c h ha«

o b t a i n e d KO f a r in t h e c o n d u c t of t h e w a r . is t h o r o u g l i l y
played out, t h o r o u g h l y c o n d e m n e d e v e r y w h e r e .
c r u s h t h o r e b e l l i o n o r m a k e peaeo a t o n c e , is

Either

the voice

of t h e e l e c t i o n s ; u n d t h e P r e s i d e n t will d o well
t h i s lemon. .

to heed

O u r f r i e n d v a u d Jlie f r i e n d s o f t h e U n i o n will d o

well,

also, t o n o t e t h e fact, t h n t , w h e r e v e r t h o R e p u b l i c a n

po-

licy was r a d i c a l a n d u n d i s g h i i » d in f a v o r of c r u s h i n g t h e
rebellion, t h e r e i t was successful.

L e t tho R r p u b l i e a n s

of o t h e r S t a t e s l e a r n a l e s j o n f r o m M i c h i g a n ,
setts, I o w a and Missouri, aud

remember

Massachu-

t h a t f u s i o n , con-

s e r v a t i s m . hnlf-way m e a s u r e s a n d men a r e s u r e

t o b e d<v

to at e d h e r e a f t e r .

people a

I f y o n will

not

give

the

c h a n c e t o v o t e f o r c h r t i 3 h i n g t h o r e b e l l i o n , in n fori® a u d
m a n n e r t h a t c a n n o t bo

mistaken,

and

that

is r a d i c a l

e n o u g h t o rebuke t h o d e l a y s o f t h e w a r in ono w a y . t h e y
will a s s u r e d l y v o t e f o r r a d i c a l p e a c e measures, nnd so reb u k e t h e s h i l l y - s h a l l ^ j y i l i c y in a n o t h e r way.

T h e y mean

j u s t t h i s : I f we o n goiDg t o w h i p t h e r e b o l s

the

Gov

eruraent must nse every means, and p u t forth e v e r y energy t o ftuish t h o j o b , a n d d o it in radical style a n d
If we a r e not g o i n g to w h i p the

rebels,

then

b e e n t o o m u c h b l o o d Bhed a l r e a d y , nnd we

time.

t h e r e ha?

hod

better

s t o p n o w , b e f o r e a n y m o r e live# a r e - w a s t e d .
T h i a is t h e v o i c e t h e
room for d o u b t i n g it.

rocent

elections—there

I t expresses the

is n o

convictions

e v e r y m a n , o r e v e r y p a r t y , in t h e w h o l e N o r t h .
a r e t o crRsh t h e

rebellion,

every maq.

of every

e v e n r e b e l s y m p a t h i z e r s — w a n t s t o see it d o n e
thai tbo c u d may appear.

or

I f we
party
at

ouce.

I f wc a r e n o t g o i n g t o c r u s h

tho rebellion, cvety man, o f

every

p a r t y — e v e n rebel

•sympathisers a s well a s loyal m e n — w a n t s t o soc t h e w a r
s t o p a t o o c e , before tho S o u i b is

wasted

and despoiled

a n y f u r t h e r , a n d b e f o r e t h e N o r t h losses a n y
h e r y o u n g men.

more

of

T h e p e o p l e of M i c h i g a n , I o w a , M i s s o i -

ri, a n d M a s s a c h u s e t t s say : C b r u a h t h o
t h e p e o p l e of t h e o t h e r S t a t e s

would

rebellion

;

and

h a v e said so, t o o .

if t h e R e p u b l i c a n s h a d g i v e n t h e m a c h a n c e

by

putting

« p a radical. unconditional Republican t i c k c t
New York Legislature.
T h e Albany J o u r n a l of S a t u r d a y has
t a r n s of t h o A s s e m b l y , w h i c h m a k e s t h a t
sixty-five

Republicans to sixty-three

A Revolution In Trade.
C h i c a g o a n d N o r t h w e s t e r n R a i l r o a d h a s been

T h e Election.".
t e n of t h o u s a n d s . It was in v a i c t h a t t h e p a r t y of tl»I o t h e a b a o n e e o r h u n d r e d * of t b o o i n - L - of i.iyal men c o u n t r y b o r e u p manfully airaiust it. ami did all that in-:
Bay.-4— in t h e fie Id.-a v e r y Isrg-- m a j o r i t y of w h o m are R e p u b l i - c o u l d d o t o m i t i g i t a t e i t s effects. " W h a t is the •*< of
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T h i s will c r e a t e a d i v e r s i o n of a l a r g e p o r t i o n of the L a k e
t h e i r S t a t e t i c k e t s by suiall m a j o r i t i e s , in 1 !."• S t a t e s of f e v e r , in a w a r w h e r e i n t h e y a r e n o t p e r m i t t e d t o fight ?
S u p e r i o r t r a d e and t r a v e l f r o m D e t r o i t a n d Cleveland,
N e w Y o r k . P e n n s y l v a n i a . O h i o . I n d i a n a ni.d N o * J e r - — w h e r e i n n o t h i n g i s a c h i e v e d , b e c a u s e n o t h i n g i s reallv
a n d give it to Chicago.
sey. a n d to e l e c t a n t f j o r i t j in t h e jiext Coii.'ress.
a n d resolutely a t t e m p t e d ? — w h o s e p r o g r e s s is only
T h i s is n o t h i n g m o r e if :.t. a i i g h t h a v e b e e n ' e x p e c t e d , m a r k e d by d e a t h s in hospitals, and a u g m e n t a t i o n of <m"i
T h e a m o u n t of business w h i c h t h i s i m p r o v e m e n t will
L o v a l p u b l i c d e b t ? — w h e r e i n m o n t h a f t e r m o n t h d r a g s on i i m a t e r i a l l y assist a n d e r c a l o i* e n o r m o u s .
T h e t r a v e l f r o m t h e c i r c u m s t a n c e s aMendim: t h o e l e c t i o n s .
men h a v e l e f t t h e i r h o m e , m.d t n - i r fireside nr.d a b a n - t e d i o u s h o u r s t o no p u r p o s e , nnd w i t h no result ? " S u c h
w i t h L a k e S u p e r i o r will c o w flow t h r o u g h G r e e n B a y —
d o n e d f o r the, time t h e i r privileges'®.- f r e e m e n , ntvd g o n e , w e r e t h e q u e s t i o n s t h a t caused t h o u s a n d s of voters t o reT h e d i s t a n c e f r o m C h i c a g o t o M a r q u e t t e will be per- t o fight t h e b a t t l e s - i f t h e i r c o u n t r y while t h o s e less pa- f u s e i n v i n c i b l v t o a p p r o a c h the polls, n o m a t t e r how
f o r m e d in t h i r t y - s i x hours, m a k i n g t h i s t h e most desira- t r i o t i c h a v e staid at h o m e aiai w o r k e d f o r th.-ir p a r l y s t r o t i s l y u r g e d , a n d impelled o t h e r t h o u s a n d s t o vote
ble r o u t e p o s s i b l e t o t h e r i c h a n d e x t e n s i v e m i n i n g dis- anil v o t e d at the elections, t h i n e f W J r m ? t h e t r i u m n h of a g a i n s t t h e i r n o b l e r impulses a n d b e t t e r j u d g e m e n t — t o
t h e i r p a r t y o r e r t h e i n t e r e s t s nf t f c v r c o u n t r v .
T o wiv vote a c c o r d i n g t o t h e d i c t a t e s of d i s c o u r a g e m e n t ami
t r i c t s of t h e U p p e r P e n i n s u l a . T h e first d a y p a s s e n g e r s
t i n t su h a res fill ;s,a c o n d e m n a t i o n by "he p e c p i e of d e s p a i r
will p«ss f r o m C h i c a g o t o G r e e n B a y b y r a i l ; f r o m G r e e n t h e N o r t h , of t h e A d m i t . i g n i t i o n in the c o n d u c t of the
W e tell t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n roost earnestly t h a t t h e
B a y t o B a y de N o q u e t by s t e a m e r d u r i n g t h e n i g h t , and w n r . is a wilful a n d w a n t o n p e r v e r s i o n of t h o facts. I t is c o u n t r y c a n u o t e n d u r e a n o t h e r m o n t h ' s inaction of o u r
t h e n c e t h e n e x t d a y by s t a g e t o M a n f u e t t e .
S t e a m e r s not tru<-, f o r no one will d e n y t h a t if t h e s u f f r a g e s of t h e a r m i e s — t h a t a F e r n a n d o W o o d D i c t a t o r s h i p at t h e
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r t h , in t h o r o u g h s y m p a t h y , if not in open a l l i a n o
will ply in c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h i s linebetweei. M a r q u e t t e and
t h e r e s u l t w o u l d h a r e b e e n o v e r w h e l m i n g l y t h e r « v r r s e w i t h the J e f f D a v i s rebclliou ut t h e S o u t h , will iuevitablv
t h e p r i n c i p a l t o n u s on L u k e S u p e r i o r .
of w h a t it now is. F i d e l i t y t o t h e G o v e r n m e n t ran t h e resnit f r o m s u c h inaction. T h e w a r f o r the U n i o u mu-t
v e r y issue u p o n w h i c h t h e c o n t e s t w a s w a g e d . a n d t h e | b e f o u g h t o u t s p e e d i l y a n d resolutely, o r it will die o u t .
The National Debt.
position of o u r citizens, as s o l d i e m in tin Hold, is t h e best D e f e a t would be c a l a m i t y , b u t d e l a y i s r u i n .
A W a s h i n g t o n c o r r e s p o n d e n t of t h e N e w Y o r k Even-,
e v i d e n c e t h a t they a r e ou t h e side of t h e ( i o v e r u m e m on
ing Pott, says t h a t Mr; O h a s i . S e c r e t a r y of t h e T r e a - t h a t issne. a u d wou|.l h a v e F-O placed t h e m s e l v e s by their
Col. Broadihead'a Last Letter.
M a n y o f t h e f r i e n d s a n d a c q u a i n t a n c e s of t h e lafp Cot.
s u r y , i s so m a n a g i n g t h e a f f a i r s o f t h e D e p a r t m e n t as t o v o t e s in t h e late e l e c t i o n s , if t h e y b a d been g i v e n t h e
B r o a d h e n d h a r e e x p r e s s e d a g r e a t d e s i r e t o s e e h i s ia>t
e n a b l e him t o ceasc issuing p a p e r c u r r e n c y nt a n early o p p o r t u n i t y .
T h e s e political r e v e r s e s an- t h e r e f o r e n o t t o b e taken letter, w h i c h is generally k n o w n he w r o t e t o h i s wife
d a t e , if t h i s shall b e pos»ib!e. H e i s now g e t t i n g c l e a r of
by tin; p e o p l e or t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n e i t h e r as a c o n d e m - f r o m t h e f a t a l battle-field.
his remainder*.
W h e n t h e s e v e n - t h i r t i e s now p u t u p are n a t i o n - o f t h e war. or t h e v i g o r o u s m e a s u r e s by w h i c h it
I n t h o l a n g u a g e of a l o v i n g a o d s o r r o w i n g b r o t h e r .
sold, t h e ouly r e m a i n i n g o r i g i n a l stock will b e t h e fiveis p r o p o s e d t o c a r r y it.on in t h e f u t n r e .
If t h e y h a v e •• W h a t a noble s p i r i t he h a d ! A n d in t h o last s u p r e m e
H o entered
t w e n t y s i x p e r c e u t s . T h i s i s t o l-e m a d e t h e g r e a t p o . any s i g n i f i c a n c e a s b e a r i n g u p o n t h o s e u p o n w h o m t h e m o m e n t , h o w it t o w e r e d a b o v e m o r t a l i t y .
r e s p o n s i b i l i t y of c o n d u c t i n g t h e l r n r rests, t h e y s h o w e t e r n i t y like a t r u e c b r i s t a i n h e r o , n o t boastfully, not
pulnr G o v e r n m e n t I / i a n . I t is lielioved t h a t M r . C h a s e
t h a t t h e p e o p l e d e s i r e more rnrygy.
more vigor
t h a n recklessly, b u t w i t h o u t s h a m e und fear. D e a t h c a m e not
will not ask f o r a u t h o r i t y t o issue a n y m o r e seven-thirties,
tn him w i t h g l o o m a n d d a r k n e s s , b u t like a flameing sun.
has heretofore market! military operations.
or t w e n t y - y e a r six p e r cents. U n d e r t h e y c i r c u m s t a n T h e r e is g r e a t a n x i e t y on t h e p a r t of t h e masses of t h e d i s s i p a t i n g t h e m i s t s of h u m a n weakness, a n d s h o w i n g , . i n
c e s t h e few millions of s e v e n - t h i r t i e s anon t o b e sold will people, t o s e e t h e w a r b r o u g h t trr ft successful t e r m i n a - glorious l i g h t , h i s u n c o n q u e r a b l e d e v o t i o n t o h i s c o u n t r y
c o m m a n d c u r r e n t rates. I t i s all of t h i s kind o,'.stock the tion ; not by c o m p r o m i s e , r.ot b y p a t c h i n g np.n delusive a n d his friends. G r e e n b e t h e t u r f u p o n h i s g r a v e , a m i
p e a c e ; t h e y will s p e n d t h e i r last dollar a n d freely p o u r e v e r b l o o m i n g t h e flowers of love a n d m e m o r y t h a t
p u b l i c will g e t f r o m t h e T r e a s u r y D e p a r t m e n t .
o u t t h e i r last d r o p of b l o o d first ; h u t b y t h e f o r c c of s p r i n g f r e s h f r o m h i s l o n o r e d a s h e s a n d c l u s t e r a r o n u d
T h e revenue of t h e g o v e r n m e n t in 1863. it is e x p e c t - a rms— by t h e u t t e r c r u s h i n g out of the life of t h e rebel- bis n a m e : "
«
ed, will be n o t Tar ftorii $ 2 7 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 — S 2 0 0 000,f>00 l i o n a n d c o m p e l l i n g t h e rebels to lay d o w n t h e i r weaM * DtAREifr W i r e ; — I w r i t e t o y o u , m o r t a l l y w o u n d f r o m taxes, 8 6 0 , 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 f r o m duties, a n d 8 1 0 . 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 p o n s n u d s u b m i t t o t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n and t h e laws. * N o - ed, f r o m t h e battle-field. W e a r e a g a i n d e f e a t e d , a n d
t h i n g s h o r t o f t h i s -will satisfy, t h e m ; b u t t h e y wont t o e r e Hi is r e a c h c s y o u y o u r c h i l d r e n will b e fatherless.
f r o m p o s t office revenues. I t is said t h a t Mr. C h a s e
s e e it d o n e a t o n c e . T h e y are c o n f i d e n t of t h e i r s t r e n g t h
B e f o r e I die let me i m p l o r e t h a t , in s o m e w a y it mny
d o c s not e s t i m a t e t h e revenues f r o m tn.^e- h i g h e r t h a n a n d a b i l i t y t o d o it, a n d t h e y flslt t h a t t h e p o w e r s t h a t
bo s t a t e d t h a t G e n .
h a s b e e n o u t w i t t e d , "ami t h a t
8 1 5 0 . 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 , b u t nearly all t h e financial men c o n n e c t - be shall nse, if n e e d be, : h e whole of t h a t s t r e n g t h , in •'
is a t r a i t o r . H a d t h e y d o n e t b n i r d u t y a s I d i d
T h e y o r e mine, a n d h a d led a s I led, t h e d e a r old flag h a d w a v e d
ed w i t h t h e d e p a r t m e n t pttt it nt o r a b o v e S 2 0 0 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 . o n e m i g h t v e f f o r t t o c r u s h t h e r e b e l l i o n .
u n e a s y a n d dissatisfied .when t h e y s e e t h e i r t r e m e n d o u s in t r i u m p h .
T h e n a t i o n a l d e b t , w i t h a n i n c o m e of $ 2 7 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 .
e n e r g i e s f r i t t e r e d a w a y in idleness a n d u n i m p o r t a n t a n d
I w r o t e t o y o u y e s t e r d a y m o r n i n g . T o - d a y is S u n d a y ,
will not, one year from
note, be o n e t h o u s a n d millions, i n c o u c l u s i v e skirmisbe*.
L i k e t h e G i a n t in t h e p r i d e of a n d to-day I sink t o t h e g r e e n c o u c h of o u rfinalrest
a n d s o m e a b l e financiers p u t t h e figures a s low as e i g h t his s t r e n g t h , t h e y o r e e a g e r t o g r a p p l e w i t h a n d s t r a n g l e
I h a v e f o u g h t well, m y d a r l i n g , a n d s h o t in t h e e n d e a v it „
h u n d r e d millions. I t wi'l n o t cost m o r e t o s u p p o r t on t h e foe.
o r t o rally o u r b r o k e n battollions, I could h o v e e s c a p e d ,
N o w let t h e P r e s i d e n t b e not d i s h e a r t e n e d by t h e ac- b u t i would n o t till a l l h o p e was g o n e , a n d was s h o t a r m y of one million in 18C3 t h a n it did t o s u p p o r t an
c i d e n t a l reverses in t h e late e l e c t i o n s , b u t let h i m g i r d a b o u t t h e only one of o n r forces left on t h e
field.
Oui*
a r m y of 6 0 0 . 0 0 0 in 1862. f o r t h e reason t h a t the m o s t of himself anew for t h e conflict.
c a u s e is just, n n d otir G e n e r a l s , o o t t h e e n e m y ' s h a v e d e the m u s k e t s a n d c l o t h i n g a n d m u n i t i o n s of w a r ar.d vesL e t h i m o r i s e in t h e m a j e s t y cf t h e p o w e r w h i c h is f e a t e d u s
I n G o d ' s g o o d t i m e H e will g i v e us r i c t o r v .
g i v e n h i m by t h o C o n s t i t u t i o n .is C o i n m u n d e r - i n - C h i e f .
sels a r c p r o v i d e d .
A n d now g o o d - b y e . wife ond children.
3ring them
n n d w a g o t h e w a r ; w i t h all t h e e i ^ r g y of t h e m i g h t y peo- u p . as 1 k n o w y o u will io t h e f e a r o f G o d ond love f o r
M i c h i g a n keeps t h e t r u e fuith. T h e R e p u b l i c a n Uni- ple w h o h a v e p l a c e d t h e i r powei io his hands.
the S a v i o r . B u t for y o u a n d t h e d e a r o o e s d e p e n d e n t .
T b c A m e r i c a n ipeople love, at d a d m i r e a s t r o n g a n d I s h o u l d die b o p p y . I k n o w t h e b l o w will fall w i t h
on S t a t e t i c k e t is e l e c t e d b y 5 . 0 0 0 m a j o r i t y ; f o u r U n i o u
C o n g r e s s m e n a r e k n o w n t o be c h o s e n , nnd t h e o t h e r t w o b o l d muti. I t w a s t h e s e quali I i t s w h i c h m a d e G e n e r a l c r u s h i n g w e i g h t on you. T r u s t in him w h o g n v o m a n n a
D i s t r i c t s a r e o p e u t o c h a n c e , to f a r a s t h e returns inform J a c k s o n t h e i r i d o l . T h e r e was m a g i c in t h e words, iu t h e wildcrnesb.
when t h a t b r a v e t>ld m a n . w i t h ' b i s p e c u l i n r e m p h i s i s
us.
[N- Y. Tribune.
D r . N a s h is w i t h me. I t i s now o f t e r m i d n i g h t , a u d
s w o r e •• BY THK KTERSAL" \VI: should rejoicc t o .see I h a v e s p e n t m o s t of t h e n i g h t in s e n d i n g messages t o
T r u e enough. Michigan does " keep the true faith."
P r e s i d e n t L i n c o l n t a k e t h a t old m o r a l h e r o as bis m o d e l , you.
A n d if N e w Y o r k h a d " k e p t t h e t r u e f a i t h . " instead of a n d p r o s e c u t e t h e w a r w i t h a n e t e r g v c o m m e n s u r a t e w i t h
T w o bullets have g o n e t h r o u g h my chest, and directly
r u n n i n g off a f t e r f a s i o n a n d c o n s e r v a t i s m , s h e also would t h e m a g n i t u d e of t h e i n t e r e s t s n( stake, a n d t h e t r e m e n - t h r o u g h my lungs. 1 suffur b u t little"now, b u t at first t h e
H i s w o r k is plain p a i u was a c u t e . I h a v e w o n . t h e s o l d i e r ' s name, a n d a m .
be n Republican S t a t e to-day.
" M i c h i g a n k e e p s t h e d o u s p o w e r w h i c f j i t is h i s t o wield.
b e f o r e him. Th>j life of t h e ' g o v e s m e n t is t h r e a t e n e d ready t o m e e t n o w , as I m u s t a s o l d i e r ' s f a t e .
I hoj>e
t r u e f a i t h . " a n d calls i t b y t h e t r u e u a m e — R p u b l i c a n i s m
b y r e h e l l i o n . T h e U n i o n is s o u g h t t o be b r o k e n u p . — t h a t f r o m h e a v e n I m a y s e c t h i s g l o r i o u s old flag w a v e
— t h a t ' s w h a t ' s t h o m a t t e r h e r e . N e w Y o r k was a f r a i d
Y b o C o n s t i t u t i o n w h i c h he h a s s w o r n t o s u p p o r t , i s a g a i n o v e r t b c u n d i v i d e d U n i o u 1 h a v e l o v e d s o well.
o r a s h a m e d t o be r a d i c a l o r o u t s p o k e n — s o s h e •• k e p t s o u g h t t o be o v u ^ t h r o w n .
F a r e w e l l , w i f e and b a b e s , ond f r i e n d s . W e shall
t h o t r u e f a i t h " only o n t h e sly, a n d labelled it s o m e t h i n g
I t i s h i s d u t y t o defend a n d p r e s e r v e t h e m by all t h e meet a g a i n , ;
Y o n r loving
THORXTOS.
else, in h o p e s t h a t R e p u b l i c a n i s m in disguise would m e a n s w h i c h G o d a n d t h e p e o p t h a v e p l a c e d in his
c a t c h v o t e s — t h a t ' s w h a t ' s t h e m a t t e r t h e r e . W e w e r e h a n d s . T h o u g h all t h e e l e c t i o n s in a l l the S t a t e s s h o u l d
Letter of Gov* Ramsey t o President L i n c o l n .
h a v e g o n o in f a v o r of t h e rebel*, he should t n n i n e i t h e r i
n o t a s h s m e d of o u r R e p u b l i c a n i s m or o u r r a d i c a l i s m
G o v . R a m s e y , of M i a , h a s w r i t t e n t h e P r e s i d e n t n
t o t h e r i g h t h a n d nor t o t h e Icit, b u t w i t h o u t s t o p p i n g !
e i t h e r ; a n d we w o n . ' Y o n o f N e w Y o r k d e n i e d y o u r t o listen t o t h o s a w h o p r a i s e o r . t h o s e w h o b l a m e , h e l e t t e r u p o n t h e s u b j e e t of t h e d i s p o s i t i o n t o be m a d e
p a r l y in p u b l i c , like P e t e r , t h o A p o s t l e , t h o u g h y o u tri- s h o u l d m a r c h d i r e c t l y on in th£ d i s c h a r g e of his duty, in of t h e S i o u x a n d o t h e r I n d i a n t r i b e s iu t h a t S t a t e . —
ed t o a d h e r e t o it i n s e c r e t ; a n d y o u lost. T a k e a les- r e s c u i n g t h e G o v e r n m e n t f r o m i m p e n d i n g ruiu, in h i s , H o d e m a n d s a s a m e a s u r e of p r i m e necessity, w i t h o u t
own way, b u t in t h e s h o r t e s t pussible time. I f any man
son f r o m us. a n d d o n ' t b e a s h a m e d of y o u r n a m e h e r e a f s t n n d s in h i s w a y let h i m be fenrlessly t h r u s t asidu. who- w h i c h p e a c e or s e c u r i t y is i m p o s s t b l e , " t h e removal
ter. I f y o u a r e a s h a m e d of it y o u r s e l v e s , how can y o u e v e r he m a y b f . T h e people, vil! s u s t a i n t h e P r e s i d e n t of t h o w h o l e b o d y o f f j i d i a n s t o remote d i s t r i c t s , f a r
The

!MO BCT A.N H A T K 3 , ifylitoraiiil P r o p r i e t o r .
T R A V E H8/E C I T V J
FIUDAY MORNING/SOVEMBER 28. 18G2.

c o m p l e t e d t o i t s p r o p o s e d t e r m i n u s at G r e e n

e x p e c t o t h e r p e o p l e , w h o sec t h r o u g h y o u r thin d i s g u i s e
us easy its y o u d o y o u r s e l v e s , t o a d o p t
preciate

radicalism

it?

I f y o u de-

in p u b l i c , h o w c a n y o n e x p e c t t h e

p e o p l e t o v o t e f o r it in d i s g u i s e ?

I r y o u wish t o redeem

N e w York, erect the unconditional Republican banner;
s t e p b o l d l y u p o n t h e p l a t f o r m w h i c h t h e p e o p l e ratified
ill 1 8 6 0 , d o n ' t a c t a s t h o u g h y o u believed y o u w e r e mistaken when you elected Old
" t o n e down" your

Abe. and thai you

principles a

name, a n d y o u will s u c c e e d .
is played out.

would

little o r d i s c a r d y o u r

F u s i o n a n d u n i o u of p a r t i e s

A s D o u g l a s said, " T h e r e cau b e no mid

die g r o u n d t o s t a m i - u p o n . "

I f y o u w i s h t o win l i k e n

man. s t a n d n p like a m a n .

[Grand Rapids Eagle.

A t the worst

t h e R e p u b l i c a n s h a v e froui 1 7 t o 15,

with

p r o b a b i l i t y , w h e n t h e official

a r e m a d e u p of

returns

a

strong

b a v i b g 1 9 t o 13, w h i l e t h e H o u s e will s t a n d 6 2
publicans to 37 Democrats.

So that

Chandler,"—whom the Times,

hate

so

HOT '• p r o b a b l y d i s p o s e d of a s t o n
U. S. Senate.

the

the F r e e

Tratorious Democratic Leaders

Re-

" notorious
and

all

the

cordially,—is

re-election"

to the

T h e R e p u b l i c a n s of M i c h i g a n , p u r if ie d

by tho Democratic-Fusion movement,

stand

a

united

host, s t r o n g i n t h o m a i n t e n a n c e o f t h e i r p r i n c i p l e s and
correct

re-

body

stand

Democrats

As

t h e i r c o u n t r y , d e t e r m i n e d in

their

purpose never

desert or abandon their

nnd

f a i t h f u l representa-

true

tive men.

t h e R e p u b l i c a n s h a v e s i x t e e n m a j o r i t y in t h e S e u h t e .

to

fDet. Adv. and Trlb.

AN IKTELLIGKNT CANADIAN OPINION.—The

Toronto

t h e y will s e c u r e t h o r e t u r n o f a U n i o n i s t t o t h e U . S .

G l o b e t h i n k s ' t h a t , in v i e w of t h e t a c t of t h e U n i o n f o r c e s

S e n a t e , in p i a c e o f H o n , P r e s t o n K i o g .

b e i n g in possession o f all t h o C o n f e d e r a l s p o r t s , a s well a s

Tho

Senate

stands twenty-four Republicans t o e i g h t Democrats.

t h e c h i e f c i t i e s a n d rivers of t h e S o u t h e r n S t a t e s .

' A d a u g h t e r o f t h o p i r a t e S c m m e s i s n o w in s c h o o l in
Philadelphia, and.her mother and t w o sisters

resido

in

W a s h i n g t o n , w h i l e t h e f a t h e r is r o a m i n g t h e o c e a n , sink-

Eng-

land will n o t r e c o g n i r o t h e rebel g o v e r n m e n t until a f t e r i t
is

recognized

beyond our borders, under
lance."

thorough

military

surveil-

T h e P r e s i d e n t is told tGat t h e p e o p l e of

S t a t e •' will n o t t o l e r a t e t h e

the

p r e s e n c e in t b e n e i g h b o r -

h o o d of t h i s p e r f i d i o u s »nd c r u e l r a c e , in a n y n u m b e r s
or

conditions"—and

calls

upon him

to

agthorizo

the G e n e r a l c o m m a n d i n g t h i s d i s t r i c t t o t a k e

immedi-

a t e m e a s u r e s t o rid u s of t h e s e t r o u b l e s o m e a n d
gerous

neighbors,

after having subjected

dan-

to. capital

p u n i s h m e n t all c o n n e c t e d w i t h t h e o u t r a g e s u p o n o u r
people."

T h e s e v i e w s a r e fully c o n c u r r e d

tbe authorities, military and
have

a n y infiuuence

civil

who

in

are

by

likely

in m o u l d i n g t h e p o l i c y

cf

all
to
tbe

G o v e r n m e n t upon this question.

I n t h e M i c h i g a n S e n a t e t h e r e i s a tie, s i x t e e n
Unionists and sixteen R e p u b l i c a n s b e i n g elected
The
n o t o r i o u s C h a n d l e r , S e n a t o r f r o m M i c h i g a n , is p r o b a ble d i s p o s e d of a s t o . n r e - e l e c t i o n . [ C h i c a g o ' l i m e s .
" T h e M i c h i g a n S e n a t e " is NOT a tie.

a g a i n s t all o t h e r m e n i f j h e P r e s i d e n t will b u t p u t f o r t h
t h e p o w e r of t b a p e o p l e in t r a i l i n g the
rebellion.
Let
not o n e j o t n o r tittle of t h e policy of t h e P r e s i d e n t , or
of t h e a c t of Coiiigrefs for t h e c o n f i s c a t i o n of t h e p r o p e r ty of rebels, ami, t h e E m a n c i p a t i o n "of t h e slaves of r e b e l s
a s m«a5>i of p u t t i n g a n end t o tho r e b e l l i o n be a b a t e d :
b u t r a t h e r l e t t h e r e be a mot • fixed, i r r e v o c a b l e d e t e r m i n a t i o n t o i-nrry t h e m i u t o fuil effect. L e t t h e s e m e a sures fall s u d d e n l y , a n d w i t h c u s h i n g w e i g h t u p o n t h e
rebels, t h a t t h e y m a y s p e e d i l y l e a r n t h a t they ore to r e a p
no b e n e f i t f r o m t h e recent cl> c t i o n s in t h e N o r t h . —
T e k e f r o m t h e m t h i s h o p e , an i t h r o w t h e w h o l e f o r c c of
t h e N o r t h u p o n t h e m , iu ono o v e r w h e l m i n g n v a l a n c b e .
and t h o o v e r t h r o w Of t h e rebillion will b e a c c o m p l i s h e d .
3 [Lansing Republican.

in W a s h i n g t o n .

J a m e s M a d i s o n P o r t e r , S e c ' y of W a r u n d e r P r e s i d e n t

i j » g , b u n i i n g a o d d e s t r o y i n g e v e r y t h i n g t h a t c r o s s e s h i s T^rler, d i e d o n t h o 1 1 t h i o s t . a t E a s t o n . P e n o . a g c t l 6 9
p a t h b e a r i n g t h o flag o f t h e U a i t e d S t a t e s — t h e flag t h a t years. H e w n s t h e s o n of G e n . A n d r e w P o r t e r , o f t h e
p r e l e c t s b i s family.
T h i s a v e r y c o m m o n revolutionary
w a r , a n d himself s e r r e d in t h e w a r of 1 8 1 2 ,
thing among tho robber
c h i v a l r y " of t h e S o u t h .
a n d in v a r i o o s c i v i l s t a t i o n s .

The New York Election.
F r o m the N. Y. T r i b u n e .
N e v e r was a g r e a t a n d p a t r i c f i c p a r t y d o o m e d t o b e a r
n p a'gainpt s u c h a c o m b i n a t i o n of a d v e r s e influences a s
those with w h i c h t h e R e p u b l i c a n ? and Union W a r Dem o c r a t s s t r u g g l e d in o u r c o s i e s t of y e s t e r d a y .
They
w e r e c o m p e l l e d t o m e e t a t t h e polls
1. E v e r y p a r t i s a n of s l a v e r y a n d s y m p a t h i z e r w i t h t h e
S i a v e h o k l e r » ' rebellion ;
2. T h e g r e a t R n a w e l l i n g i n t e r e s t , o r g a n i z e d i n t o a political p o w e r , a h d l a v a i s h i n g f u n d s n s well as e f f o r t s , in
b e h a l f of t h e D e m o c r a t i c t i c k e t ;
3. T w o h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d v o t e r s •• w h o n e v e r v o t e d
a n y o t h e r t h a n t h e D e m o c r a t i c t i c k e t , a n d n e v e r will."
t h o u g h t h a t t i c k e t w e r e all m a d e u p of F e r n a n d o a n d
B e n W o o d s , a n d u n d i s g n i s e c j y f a v o r a b l e t o revolutionar y u s u r p a t i o n a n d di-'ipotism ;
• 4. Thousands whose god
m a m m o n , a n d w ho, finding
t h e w a r e x p e n s i v e , o r e anxibjns for p e a c e a t any p r i c e ;
5. E v e r y c o w a r d w h o feani b e i n g d r a f t e d ;
6 . E v e r y s n e a k w h o h a s In e n told t h a t S e y m o u r ' s elect i o n will relieve h i m f r o m Um p a y m e n t of w a r taxes, a n d
i s a c t u a l l y fool e n o u g h t o b e j c t e i t ;
7. T h e d e p r e s s i n g e f f e c t Oj t h e recent electious, a n d
t h e i r u n e x p e c t e d l y a d v e r s e -csults ;
8. T h e a b s e n c e , a t t h e s e ^ t of w a r . of a t least o n e
h u n d r e d t h o u s a n d of o u r b r a r c s t a n d best, t w o - t h i r d s of
t b c m a r d e n t R e p u b l i c a n s , a n d a g o o d s h a r e of t h e rem a i n d e r U n i o n W e r D e m o c r a t s of t h e s c h o o l of D i c k i n son. B a n c r o f t a n d T r e m a i n ;
9. G e n e r a l d i s s a t i s f a c t i o n tvitb t h e slow p r o g r e s s , o r
n o p r o g r e s s , of our! a r m i e s , a n d a w i d e - s p r e a a feeling
t h a t , t h r o u g h t h o m c a p a c i t j o r i n s e c e r i t y , of b u r militar y leaders, t h e b l o o d a n d t r v ^ s u r e of t h e loyal millions o r e
b e i n g sacrificed ia vain.
T h e loss t o G e n , W a r d ^ v o r t b a n d t h o U n i o n W o r
ticket, f r o m t h i s l a s t pourct a l o o e , must b e e s t i m a t e d b y

T b e C o m m i t t e e on F o r e i g n R e l a t i o n s ,
Congress,

recently

in t h e

made a report, in w h i c h

Rebel

occur*

the

following remarkable passage :
I t is gratifying to discover t h a t certain h i g h spirited
a n d intelligent D e m o c r a t s of t h e N o r t h e r n S t a t e have,
of late, b e c o m e e x c e e d i n g l y a c t i v e in t h e i r efforts t o difc o u r u g o enlistment, a n d s u p p r e s s t h e w a r s p i r i t a m o n g
t h e i r fellow citizens, a n d t h a t t h e i r h o n e s t a n d p a t r i o t i c
efforts h o v e b e e n o l r e a d j a t t e n d e d w i t h m a r k e d s u c c c t ? .
I t i s b e l i e v e d b y t h i s c o m m i t t e e t h a t t h e s e e f f o r t * will
result, u l t i m a t e l y , w i t h a w i t h d r a w a l of a n u m b e r of
S t a l e s f r o m t h e i r p r e s e n t c o n n e c t i o n w i t h o t h e r S t a l e s of
tbc N o r t h and East, aod t h u s enable us t o dictate terms
to the Federal Government from the great commercial
e m p o r i u m , t h r o u g h w h o s e influence, mainly, h a s t h i s
w i c k e d w a r u p o n t u t h u s f a r been k e p t in p r o g r e s s
I t is r u m o r e d t h a t F o r t D a r l i n g , below R i c h m o n d , h a s
been mail-clad with iron, a n d s t r e n g t h e n e d
b a s e wall of solid m a s o n r y .

by a heavy

A new f o r t h a s b e e n t b r o w c

u p n e a r t h e P o i n t of Shoals, i n t e n d e d f o r t w o g u n s
T h e V i c k s b u r g W h i g s a y s an e x t e n s i v e s e c r e t abolit i o n society h a s b e e n d i s c o v e r e d

in n o r t h e r n T e x a s -

I t s o b j e c t s a r e t o resist t h e c o n s c r i p t l a w a n d c o - o p e r a t e
w i t h t h e federal a r m y .
Gen. W m . O . B u t l e r , of K y . , w h o w a s t b e c a o d i d a i e
for Vice-President on the

Democratic ticket i n 18itf.

w i t h G e a C a s s , j o i n e d t h e rebel a r m y .

Natural enough

for a leading D e m o c r a t
Preparations for a combined

attack

on

aod Savannah are being gradually m a t u r e d

Ctarieatvu

and Washington dates of the 24th.
N o t h i n g of i m p o r t a n c e h a s t r a n s p i r e d , t h o u g h
The Rnnner County.
\ V e claim t h a t G r a n d T r a v e r s e is tbd Banner C o u n ' y
Only G I T v o t e s were polled, j and

n a m b e r G o v . B l a i r r e c e i v e d 5 1 8 , nnd S t o a t

events arc d o s e upon us.
m i e s c o n f r o n t e d by

bodies

of

(Organized

rebels.

Fr^lericksUnrg.

at

Falmouth.

Gen

T w o ) - e a r s a g o B l a i r ' s m a j o r i t y o v e r B a r " S u m n e r ' s c o q w is w i t h h i t i v
O u r F o r e i g n news in i n t e r e s t i n g . T h e F r e n c h K m p e r o r
W e are

r y w a s 2 0 3 — a g a i n of m o r e t h a n 1 0 0 p e r c f u t .
radical, o p this way.

CLOSE o r TIIK V O U ' M K . — T h e F o u r t h V o l u m e of t h e
HERALD will c l o s e on t h e 1 2 t h d a y of D e c e m b e r ;
t h e first n u m b e r of t h e F i f t h V o l u m e will b e
the 19th.
year, are
t h a t time.

issued

T h o s e w h o ' w ' u h to takp.tlie .paper
requested
Y o u all

and
on

another

t o send in t h e i r ; s u b s c r i p t i o n s b e f o r e
know o u r

r a l e of

p a y m e n t in a d -

vance.

h a s finally a s k e d K n g h i n d t o join h i m in a

proposal

m e d i a t i o n i s o u r war.

T h e leading

E n g l a n d dwlin-j.-s.

p o i n t s of E a r l R u s s e l l ' s reply a r e given.
S o u t h A m e r i c a is warlike, and reads

ranch

like

[CHICAGO

CO.

by

Permittion

of tie

T R A V E L S enrv.

CO

Authorities.)

THE PROPELLER

0

A L L E G H A N Y .

N17.E!) E S P E C I A L L Y TOR

Cnptain C. II. UoyotoB*

PKOTfectloS uK FAMILIES.

t t o this > ' j i n t i a i u , or a n y of It* authorized
I L L KUN REGULARLY BETW MEN C H I C A G O A
• ' g the Season. t o u c h i n g at Travn o f « M . it will I
i k e s tthe
h e ri o u n d trip iu In days, a
M the sum of h v s City both ws* s. She mitkes
- A c t tiUotbe Naval1
T r , T V r . , . City, e i t h e r fr.-t
or a n n w r v s r r r i . x oi m e v.
prior t o l i r e c u i b e r 5 d l y .
with t
Slat. t v , r , ; „ r d u r i n g i u w*>- In
(.rouortlon t h i s , Th"„^ w i a h i n p t » make
Com pant will in»ar» a « x | - r » » n HJhle »i» -to Mititary
^ i i h c r end ..f the roote.
0 l

of
ar. t h u s i-oablitij; ali prud;

home

Hannah, Lar ^ Co..
Idler—corner •>! Lstnber and Maxwel »trvet«. Chicago.
Chicago. Feh.-uarj 1st. IRCS.

fa I! In battle—<!i- u p p a r t i B g them.-

GUNTON HOUSE

i«« of bravery

two

R o d m a n s , p l a n t e d b a c k of F r e d o r i c k s b a r g , b u t o u r

heavy
bat-

T h o v h a v e b e e n run-

n i n g r a i l r o a d t r a i n s n i g h t ami d a y , w i t h d r a w i n g supplies

8 A E N I A
VIA

A

W A L L - S T R E E T , N. V .

T h e news f r o m

matters.
T h e rebels now h a v e t e n gun.s i u r l u l l i n g
teries completely command them.

»

T h e | ' j p i i l 8 CoMP.VN\

of t h a t c h a n g e s p f a s i n g l e d a y m a y b r i n j o n t h e i i n p c n d w g ,
battles. ; T h e v c a n s c a r c e l y I J C d e f e r r e d a w e e k .
Burn-

K8«IKA\CE

W I L L I A H S

ar-:

103—more

t h a n five t o o n e f o r t h e R e p u b l i c a n c a n d i d a t e , a n d a ma- s i d e i s b e f o r e
j o r i t y of 4 1 5 .

powerful

S N Y D E R .

great >

W c h a v e t h r e e i in m e n s :

BOUNTY

Cnpilal, •100,00V.

in receipt o f C h i c a g o p a p e r s : of t h e 2 5 t h . a n d N e w Y o r k j

T n Q u n T u r u i i IlniLs

of t h e S t a t e .

NATIONAL

T h e L a t e s t Bfews.
B v t h e arrival ol the Alleghany from Chicago we arc ,

TRAVERSE CITY.

the e
f u
d with KpiliiilJx.
ditchars-'il b i r whole duty to
(»od—bis f t
family.
O o r rate* f'>r insaraoqe a g a i n s t woun-1* a n d de
follows, to wit :
;ini •
( I ; oft a l u i n d r a i K j y U . l
against w
o( a

:

J A M E S

K . ' G U N T O N .

SOOD STABLING ASD WILL MCF.lt BEPS!

t h e i r mill a n d m a c h i n e r y f r o m F r e d e r i c k s b u r g t o R i c h m o n d .
• T i n # is tlie l a r g e s t Hotel, with the best a c f o m m o d a t i 6 r <
T h e rebel p i c k e t s on tUo F r e d e r i c k s b u r g s i d e a r e
h e r e , f o r t h e w i n t e r , on T h u r s d a y of t h i s w e e k .
They
te city ; the leading Daily and Weekly P a p e r s are I I I ' =
ire asiignabte—an- i n t e n d " '
Our rerUne.
. and no pains will Is spared t " make guests comfortabl» .
• theif care, support a n d r.
h a t e Sawed at t h i s otio mill," s i i u j c ^ I a y l a s t e l e v e n nnd a p p s t e d d o w n t o t h e b a n k of t h e r i v e r , w h i c h , until swol- to he as«ignei
ion wbirli ttiev are payable.
lief.
In
ease
tl
h a l f m i l l i o n s fccMf l u m b e r , f o r t h e Chictisro market.-— len b y t h i i r a i n , was n o t m o r e t h a n 10(1 y a r d * w i d e ;
" w
jwoiild
1* imjn
'
"
many in tho n e r v i e e a r t wuere it
o u l d !«•
T h e y h a v e a l r e a d y s e n t one h u n d r e d m e n t o t h e i r p i n e r i e s t h e y k e e p a s h a r p J M f e t o u t . t i n t d o n o t fire, o u r men r i d e for them to provide for their families lp tills way. the wile,
u t o w a t e r i t y p W w r t f e * a n d coavcr.*- f r e e l y with father, or brother, or any Individual f e e l i n g au interest in
on t h e B o a r d r a a n R i v e r , a n d i n t e n d t o e m p l o y a f o r c e of
the fatnllv of the soldier, may insure t h e m neainst w o u n d s or
death. What ean mortal man do nobler, than to present the
them.
t w o hundred there during the winter. ho receipts f o r revenue s t a m p s at t h e office of t h e family of the soldier with an i n s u r a n c e upon
against wouud<. t h u s a l o u c u placing thi
T h e B a r q n o W i n d o w nnd S c h o o n e r s M a n f c a n d A m e - C o m m i s s i o n e r of I n t e r n a ! R e v e n u e , f o r t h e w » k e n d i n g
The s u b s c r i b e r will give
suhatantiVl'charity towards the de|>endcnt families who will make actual seltl
lia.* a r e n o w l o a d i n g w i t h - l u m b e r for C h l e a p o , at t h e N o v . 21, a m o u n t e d t o m o r e t h a n § 2 , 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 .
of volunteers, that has been c o m m e n t e d by o a r wealthy citi- Brick, or Stone house, vali
w h a r v e s of H a n n a h , L a y & C o .
T h e d i s p a t c h e s l o c a t e a force of 0 0 , 0 0 0 r u b l e s p o s t e d
<1 will be continued by the w o r t h i e r p o r t i o n s of $4 for surveys, e t c . Said l o t s are in the n
iVh»t can our wealthy and pa / i o t i c < liiiena do, that of Traverse Citv. This part of the town lies at the head, an-!
. S K O W . — W e h a v e h a d several l i g h t flurries of snow, t o o p p o s e ttosocrans. b e l o w N a s h v i l l e . I n o u r d i s p a t c h will g o f u r t h e r t o increase c i l U t m e m > a n d aaaist tlje__Go'
between the two a r m s of the Bay. and has a f r o n t on a s r h
es s o m e little lig h t i s t h r o w n n p o n t h e p l a c e w h e r e P r i c e
Bay. and of the best soil f o r C a r d e n i n g . e t c . F o r p a r t i c u l a r rnnii iit, than in say t o our hardy I •nring n
b u t not e n o u g h t o cover t h e g r o u n d fairly.
please call at the Ufflce of the subscriber, at
may p o s s i b l y c h o o s e t o g i v e b a t t l e t o G r a n t .
T h e r e is will enlist. I will insure y - . i r tile untl
!7>(XI—$1,000. f o r tlie b-neflt of _rou family."
THE NKWSTAPKB QOISW.—The U t i c a H e r a l d a n d ObKAST T R A V E R S E CITY,
p l e u t y of a c t i v i t y iu t h e u f o v c n i e u t of I r o o p s b y r i v e r . —
The rate* of basis.npuh wbirtr t h i s C o m p a n y insure is
t i e o . W . H n n n t , Proprietor.
• server have curtailed t h e i r size considerably, r a t h e r than
the moi
A b i n t i s g i v e n of BOindthiug in p r o g r e s s iu A r k a n s a s , founded upon a seieutiftc statistical **lculaUoiii . of
J u n e 24th. 1S02.
Ulity of ware for the lastfiOOyears. a®d lei
' o t a reasonareduce.their price. T h e Buffalo Kxprcxs h a s raised its
N".
B.
T h i s offbr will l>e e x t e n d e d only 6 m o n t h s f r o m t h i s
it places the
n o t t o b e told of b y reporters a t t h i s j u n c t u r e .
ble margin for protit f o r tho Company. whtle
*
date.
G. W . B.
price about 25 p e r c e n t
T h e n e w s p a p e r s of I ' i t t a b u r g ,
uid d e s t i t u t i o n f r o m
T h e P r e s i d e d will a d h e r e t o his m e a s u r e f o r u n i v e r s a l families of those Insured beyond want
July 4-31-fim
ly or the vtelMitnde* of W ar.
P e o n . , h a v e d e c i d e d t o c h a r g e h i g h e r r a t e s f o r advertisee m a n c i p a t i o n , a n d seems t o h a v e a f r e s h a p p r e c i a t i o n of
t h i s is the only Insurance C o m p a n y in the l u i t e d b t a t e *
ments. T h e p r e s s generally must have m o r e income t o
t i n t was organized especially for t h U purpose.
i
t h e b e a u t i e s of K e u t u c k y l o y a l t y .
A d v a n t a g e s of t n s n r i n g i u this C o m p a n y .
m e e t t h e i r enhane^jfe^tpepses,' o r " k i c k ' t h e b u c k e t " —
G e n - M c C l e r o a n d ' a Mississippi r i v e r e x p i d i t i o n , it i s
1st. In t h : ca»e ot e i t i a - n s i u s u t b i g reins for their famiI t i s a c o m m o n t h t h g , in M i c h i g a n f o r c o u n t r y n e w s ,
s a i d , will b e r e a d y t o m o v e a b o u t t h e 5 t h of Decern- lies, if d r a t t e d : If no d r a f t takes place in the c o u n t y where
p a p e r s t o issue only half a s h f c t .
the insured reside-, half tlie i n s u r a n c e tnoney will be refunded.
''
G e n . P o p e , i t is said, is o r d e r e d t o S L L o u i s t o rew o m a n of r e s p e c t a b l e c h a r a c t e r , n a m e d J u 2nd.—Our insurance Iu r e g a r d to the d r a f t
1
the present draft, but all future ones.
lieve
G
e
n
.
C
u
r
t
i
s
.
I L L L O C A T E L A N D S . P A Y T A X E S . BUY A M '
lia S t o n e , d r o w n e d hersclCfat Lowell, o n t h e 3d inst.. on
3d.—Oor Company insure for a n y f u m desired, a c c o r d i n g
Sell on C o m m i s s i o n , a n d now h a s for sale as agent. *
Col. J . A . M u l l i g a n , t h e h e r o of L e x i n g t o n , h a s been
a c c o u n t of t h e g l o o m y p r t W c t s for e m p l o y m e n t .
She
to c i r c u m s t a n c e s of insured.
valuable improved Farms, on a n d n e a r t h e s h o r e s of Grand
4tii.—The men Who havfe in v e s t a l their capital in t h i s T r a v e r s e Bay. Also, 1,000 a c r e s of well-selected wild lands
m
a
d
e
a
B
r
i
g
.
G
e
n
.
h a d w o t k e d in i c o t t o n mill/until i t s t o p p e d , a n d t h e n
Company have beon well known t o | p e b a s i n e s s c o m m u n i t y in different parta of the c o u n t y of Grand Traverse, all-of
m a d e s o l d i e r s ' c l o t h i n g at K r v a t i o n p r j c e s until s h e lost
'
,
which is offered at reasonable prices. Also, h a v i n g been In
T h e P r o p e l l e r A l l e g h a n y m a k e s a n o t h e r t r i p t o f o r the past fourteen years.
6th.—The capital o i t h i s Coroparn will not bo employed in the business of L o c a t i n g public l a n d s in t h i s C o u n t y for the
all c o u r a g e a n d h o p e ^ ^ d f n e p r i c e p a i d b y c e r t a i n c o n S n r n i a .
S h e l e f t ' h e r e on T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n (yester- Banking »r Beal Estate operations, T>ut will r e m a i n In U. S. last 10 years, and b e i n g well a c q u a i n t e d with all h e choice
t a c t o r e is five c e n t f i r l i t a k i n g a soldier's s h i r t , a n d
Government S t o c k s , a n d will only be c o n v e r t e d so fast a s lands in the county he is prepared to assist new c o m e r s In sed a y ) , w i t h a full f e i g h l .
mav be accessary to l i e c t th-> llabllUirs of the C o m p a n y t o lecting f r o m tiovi r u m e n i L a n d s In t h i s or the a d j o i n i n g C o .
iodustrlOus woman-can^finishsa p a i r in o n e day-—making
,
. . .
O F F I C E at bis residence. E a s t T r a v e r s e C i t y .
T h e u c g r o slaves w h o a r e r u n i n t o C u b a b y t h e f r i g h t - the insured.
6 0 c e n t s Wage® p e r w e e k t ' T h i ^ J a m u r d e r So t h o first de6th.—'The Company are bound to take risks to no more
July 4-31 J i m
e n e d p l a n t e r s o f T e x a s a n d L a , a r e d e m o r a l i z i n g t h e C u . than $100,000.
gree.
Responsible acentsfwanted iu every eonntv in the United
b a n s l a v e s b y s i n g i n g L i n c o l n songs.
States. They must give references of s t r i c t i n t e g r i t y a n d
T h o L o u i s v i l l e J o u r n a l a n n o u n c e s t h o a r r i v i a l i*» t h n t
responsibility. T h o t e d e s i r i n g to bo insured w h e r e agents
F i f t e e n l o y a l Tcntiesseans h a v e e s c a p e d f r o m t h e rebel
AND
are not y e t a p p o i n t o i will r e m i t t o the Company, a t 69 Wall.
ft'ily.in irons, o f L j e u t , L . >Visc, a n e p h e w of H e o r y A .
C v .v.v *»vittes*'L a sum of money salUcient to cover
p r i s o n s ut A t a l a n t a , G a . , b y k n o c k i n g d o w n the sentinel
a r r e s t e d in C o l S h a n k ' s c a m p , a t Owettsboro,' K y . , a s t
in the uiuount desired to b e Ina
n
d
t
h
e
a
s
k
e
d
a
d
d
l
i
n
g
.
i f i t be » citEjen desiring t o insure * sum for his
spy.
H e c a m 2 i n t o c a m p u n d e r p r e t o n s o of selling a
family, in case he is a f t e r w a r d s drafted, he will, give hia name,
horse. Letfers..conclusively proving his true character,
C h i e f J u s t i c e T a n e y ' s h e a l t h i s s o f e e b l e t h a t he will » K e and residence. If it be a soldier, he will give name, age,
ALBERT W. BACOX,
i n c l u d i n g o n e in c y p h e r f r o m h i s u n c l c , w e r e f o u u d on )>e u n a b l e t o a t t e n d t h e N o v . t e r m of t h e c o u r t ut W a s h - and the Company 0 8 t h o R e g i m e n ! to which he belongs, the
number of the R e g i m e n t and State it is f r o m , also t h e resi- T " \ 7 1 L L L O C A T E I j l f . D S . I ' A Y T A X E S . BUY: O i l 6E1.I.
his person. x , •
.
ington.
l i e i s u p w a r d s of 9 0 y e a r s o l d .
dence of his family. If ft be wife, brother, lather, 6r friends V V on C o m m i s s i o n r - a n d now offers f o r sale,
of tlie familv thnt dosire to take ont an insurance upon the
M r . Steele, of N . Y . , a n d a n o t h e r D e m o c r a t i c C o n Q C „ R o s c c n m a h a s o r d e r e d t h e i m p r e s s i n g >f rebel nhsent soldier, t h e y will give his n3me a n d age, and also the
Companv. R e g i m e n t a n d State to v h i c h It belongs. The apANI» WILL SELL *8 SOKKT
p r e s s m a n e l e c t w h o a r e at W a s h i n g t o n , d e c l a r e t h b i ^ n e g r o e s f o r f a t i g u e d u t y . A l s o t h o o r g a n i z a t i o n of
plicant l ^ r t h c policy will also give the name a n d residence
p u r p o s o of (supporting t h e P r e s i d e n t a n d h i s A d m i n i s t r a p i o n e e r c o r p s o n h i s C o r i n t h plon.
of the wife or the person fur whose benefit the Insurance la
ocured.
' t i o n . iu all m e a s u r e s f o r t h e s p e e d y s u p p r e s s i o n of t h e reApplv
to.
or
ad«tfe«4,
7TB-OP THE 32D W i s . — T h e 3 3 d r e g i m e n t a t Momb e l l i o u . .VVi.V f t tbupe t g c o t k f i n c n a r e mu«Ji , n e a r e r t o
' SNYDER.': W I L L I A M S A Co..
Also—13 Lots In the Village o f Elk R a p i d s ,
phis. went R e p u b l i c a n b y 4 6 4 t o 1 4 5 D e m o c r a t i c .
O'.i Wall-street, N. Y.
radical RepublicansThari to the F e f n a n d o W b o d CopperWITH o a WtTIIOCT UWELUX08.
r
1*. S — M o n c v may be sent in registered letters, Ar by f
T h e above m e n t i o n e d L a n d s are in all p a r t s of t h e C o u n t y .
heads.
•esH, at our risk.
MARRIED,
Efk Lake. W h i t e w a t e r , O m e n t a a n d T r a v e r s e ; a r e a m o n g the
In Traverse, on Thursday evening, November 20th, 18C2,
N o t i c e s of t h e P r e s a .
e a r l i e s t a n d best s e l e c t i o n s with r e f e r e n c e t o s o l l , w s t c r , » u r
D ani el W h i t n e y a n early piAneer t o t h o W e s t a n d a n
h v Morgan Bate*, E«i)., Mr. A t a e w r S . BROOKS, to Miss ELLEN
facu. and m a r k e t : e m b r a c e F a r m i n g L a n d s . Village Sitcij and
• - T b i s t s a sound Company.'"
e s t i m a b l e m a n . d i e d a t G r e e n B a y o n t h e 4 t h inst.
H e XIARIA F a r t The iusurance of a c e r t a i n sum for one's family, is a pro- Water Powers, with or w i t h o u t i m p r o v e m e n t s . In q u a n t i t i ' s
to suU p u r c h a s e r s , and a t p r i c e s m a k i n g it an o b j e c t , in preb e c a m e a resident of IWiaebnrio lo 1819. a n d e n g a g e d in
that every m/ui should adopt in tbeaejrxlUoaJ
that v ^ u l d be respected and loved by his family f e r e n c e t o b u y i n g back f r o m s e t t l e m e n t s .
t h e I n d i a n F u r trade and
racrebandieing.
A t the time
22-1 y
T r a v e r s ; City. May 1. 1801.
in life, and gratefully remembered in death, will provido bi»
of his death, M r . W h i t n e y was the oldest white AmeriAME INTO T H E B N C L O S P R E OK T H E SUBSCRIBER, familv against w a n t . "
.——-N
...
,
.
t h e f i r s t f o f last woek. a m i d d l i n g alaeil B r i n d l e O o w ,
" A l l our most p r u d e n t citizens a n d soldiers a r c i n s u r i n g
c a n r e s i d e n t of t h e S t a t e .
tuvi> families in
,u ™ . . J drafted, " r
ice a n d nock altno.-t b l a c k ; s m a l l h o r n s — t h e riglit horn lops a competence to, their
**"
rvice ; it is thoojiiy safeguard in these critl_ little. Said cow has a good boll on. The owner can have killed, ic the
I t i s e v i d e n t t h a t p r o l a m s t i o n s o r e g o i n g o u t - o f fash
50-Dm.
her by p a y i n g f o r t h i s advertisement, and o t h e r c h a r £ «
cal times.'
MRP. A. V. CHURCHILL.
G e o . R o s e c r a n s f o r g o t t o i6soo"'btie oil a s s u m i n g c o m NOTICE.
Traverse, Nov. 6, 1802.
m a n d of t h e F e d e r a l f o r c e s in K e n t u c k y , w h i l e G e n
UNITED S T A T E S LAND O F F I C E ,
)
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS
TBAV^KRB CITY, Nov. 6,1HC2.)
B u r n s i d e p l e a d s g u i l t y t o a s i m i l a r omission. T h e s y m p N D . TJATENTB FOR ENTRIES MADE BETWEEN THE
t o m i s a f a v o r a b l e ono. H e n c e f r o t h let u s h a v e a " w o r d ^ y i L L BUY A S A W MILL. SEVEN ACRES O F L A^
a n d a small house, within half a milo of Little Tr a - I J-* itU day olMai'. l $ f i . and the 'Z'Jth day of M » , lftt.2, f o r
blow a t j f c c
rebels;^
t h e b l o w first"
verse Bay. A splendid c h a n c e f o i auotlier null by the mime Settlement ond Cultivation. u * d c r the G r a d u a t i o n A c t of
d a m . Npply soon f o r t h i s c h a n c e will h o t lx«t long.
I « u C U s t 4.18-54' have been r e c e i v e d ' a t t h i s Office, and the
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
Vi 3
W. I L P O R T E R
|
, r e h ; r c h y notified to eome forward immediately
A t J a c k s o n Miss., on t h o 5 t h inst., t h e r e w a s a terriBear River. E m m e t Co^ Nov. 24, 18C2.
<r ^
.'>0.3w. . a n d make the required pioof of " b e t t l e m e n t a n d Cultivs- C o r n e r o . ' W o o d w u r d Ac . T e i f t r s o a A v e n n e s .
fic e x p l o s i o n in a c a r t r i d g e m a n u f a c t o r y , b y w h i c h s o m e
• '• |

t i o n " and secure t h e i r respective P a t e n t s , because I f s a i d
r
i
^
H
l
S
INSTITUTION
FORMS O N E O F E I G H T C O L L E G E S
N
O
T
I
C
E
.
p
o
f
is
not
filed
within
a
limited
time,
the
Untenta
wilt
be
ro
f o r t y y o u n g w o m e n , g i r l s a n d boys, w e r e killed a n d t h e i r
1 located in the f o ! l o » i o g cities : , - D e t r o ! t , . V w l o r l .
B,IALL
TT K
0, D
r r ST 1
b o d i e a c o n s u m e d in t h e b u i l d i n g . A t e r r i b l e e x p l o s i o n
Philadelphia. Albany, Buffalo, C l e v e l a n d . C h l c a g o A St. L o u i s .
V
V
age
s
t
a
m
p
s
a
f
t
e
r
the
.th
j
^
^
t
t
l
e
m
e
n
t
and
caltlvation
c
o
n
t
e
m
p
l
a
t
e
d
by
the
Graduation
L
A
y
A
c
o
of s h e l l s p r e v e n t e d flic ax of t h e fire e n g i n e s .
Not
A person h o l d i n g a acholarshlp can a t t e n d s R b e r | a t h i s
option.
Terma.
•ingle one escaped from the building.
MORTGAGE SALE.
Tuition payable in advance by p u r c h a s e of s c h o l a r s b i r .
$40 for full term. S a m e conrse f o r l a d l e s , 825.
T h e S e c ' y of W a r h a s p r o m o t e d P r i v a t e A 1 ford T o w n . E F A U L T H A V I N G BEEN M A D E IN T H E CONDIS t u d e n t s to e n t e r at a n y t i m e . Average t i m e t o c o m p l e t e
N
O
T
I
C
E
.
t t l o n o f a ccrtain m o r t g a g e e x e c u t e d by Jlcnry Wnrburs e n d t o a L i e u t e n a n c y in t h e R e g u l a r A r m y for g a l l a n t
t h e eonrse, t h r e e m o n t h s .
'
L A N D O F F I C E AT T K A V E K S B CITY. MICH. >
I, t h e n of t h o T o w n s h i p o r Traverse, County of Grand
A knowledge of the o r d i n a r y English b r a n c h e s la a a f f i e l r r t
c o n d u c t in t h e b a t t l e s o n t h o P e n i n s u l a a n d in t h o recent
OcTOSKK, 1. 1#62.
\
T r a v e r s e and State ot Michigan, to Morgan Hales, ol Traverse
H E R E A S CONGRESS AT ITS LATE SESSION p r e p a r a t o i y to e n t e r i n g upon the c o u i s e of stud v.
te of Michigan, bearb a t t l e o r B u l l R u n , w h e r e h a w a s s e v e r e l y w o u n d e d , a n d City, C o u p t v of Grand Traverwe and
J . H. GOLDSMITH. Resident P r i n c i p a l a t U e l r o i '
passed an A c t which was approved on the l o t h of
i n g d a t o the* F i f t h day of N o v e m b e r , . . . ... y c a r of O u r Lord
J . F. S P A L D I N G . Assistant.
' l a y o n t h e field nine d a y s w i t h o u t f o o d o r w a t e r o r a l i e n - One Thousand E i g h t H u n d r e d and Sixty ue, a n d recorded
J u l v . l S c i T d o i r l n g " t h a t all t h a t portion of the present
The most thorough, practical end truly popular Colleges
•Cheboygan District." in the §tnte of Michigan, ^ I n g W e s t
o'clock, I \ M.. in
on the Fifth day of November. 18fil. "
of any k i n d .
nd Traverse County. of i,ake SichiKa}i. and South «f the line devidioir T o w n s h i p s in A m e r i c a . Over six t h o u s a n d s t u d e n t s h a v e e n t e r e d s i n c e
the office of the R e g i s t e r of Dveds of i
forty-one and forty-two North, i n c l u d i n g S u Martin a and t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h is t h e b e s t e v i d e n c e of t h e i r
ID
Liber
2
of
Mortgages,
at
pages
308
' T h e official c a n v a s s o f t h o v o t e s c a s t f o r d e J e g a t e s t o
f a v o r with the p u b l i c .
,
is claimed t o be due a t the date of t h i s notice, by the terras t h e a d j a c c n t islands n e a r the entrance to " Big.Bav De N o r ,
F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t C o l l e g e B o o m s , er
C o n g r e s s in D a k o t a T e r r i t o r y , g i v e s W m . J a y n e , R e p u b - • n d c o n d i t i o n s thereof, the sum of Mxtj-feix dollars ; aud no now f o r m i n g a jiart of the present Cheboygan District, and
subject to sale a ; Traverse City, in said State be.'and the same s e n d f o r a s e w C a t a l o g u e of 80 pages. F o r s p e c i m e n s «f
l i c a n , 1 6 m a j . o v e r J . B . S . T o d d , D e m , t h e p r e s e n t d e l - suit or p r o c e e d i n g a t l a w h a v i n g been instituted to recover
any p a r t of the debt s e e n r e d by said m o r t g a g e : Notice i s is hereby attached t o the - Lake S u p e r i o r D i s t r i c t . " and the P e n m a n s h i p . Jncloae l e t t e r s t a m p . A d d r e s s .
BRYANT A STKATTON. at e i t h e r of t h e a b o v e Cities« g a t t . M r . J a y n e will c o n s e q u e n t l y r e c e i v e t h o certifi- hcrebv given, t h a t by virtue of a power of sale contained in L a n d s t h e r e i n be subject to sale and e n t r y at the site of the
fCnt this out for future reference.)
.
11-ly
(
Land OIBco f o r said District, a n d whereas, Seqtion 2 of t h i s
' c a t e . M r . J a y n o is a t p r e s e n t t h e G o v e r n o r o r t h e T e r - said mortgage, a n d the s t a t u t e in such case made and pro,h
vided. t h e p r e m i s e s <lc*cribed in said mortgage, or so mueh act declares that it shall not take effect uulil three m c " «
thereof as mav Is; necessary t o satisfy the a m o u n t due oa said after the. date of its approval.
ritory.
• ' • ' ' :

Notice is hereby given t h a t on and a f t e r the ISth day of
mortgage, anil the coits, i n t e r e s t nnd e x p e n s e s of sale, toT h e s n f c c r i b e r offers f o r s a l e icon a c r e a flTcboie« a n d
J o h n F . P o t t e r , t h e b r a v e a n d f u t h f u l R e p n ^ e a t a t i v o g e t h e r w i t h a n A t t o r n e y ' s fee of Twenty-five dollars, specified October, instant, no f u r t h e r e o t i i e s or locations wiMbe made
well-selected hinds, h a v i n g been mostly located a t t h e first
in C o n g r e s s f i o m t h o M i l w a u k e e d i s t r i c t is t a l k e d or Tor in said mortgage, will be sold at public vendue, to tlie high at this office o« any l a n d s lying within the ttaits above oes- s e t t l e m e n t of the c o u n t r y , and many of ssid lands are border
e s t bidder, at the f r o n t d o o r of tho School House in Traverse cribed. and that all the l'lats. T r a c t Books, applications,
, D . S . S e a a t o r in placo of M r . D o o l i t t l o
T h e R e p u b l i - Citv, County of Gralid T r a v e r s e a n d Slate J or Michigan.—that d e c l a r a t i o n s a;.d papers p e r t a i n i n g to lands in t h a t portion ing on the Grand T r a v e r s e Bav. and in t r a c t s of f r o m SO to
300
acres ; some have small I m p r o v e m e n t s on, f a n d well
c a n s h a v o c o n t r o l o r t h e L e g i s l a t u r e , a n d c a n n o t m a k e a being t h e place f o r h o l d i n g the C i r c u i t C o u r t f o r t h o County of the p r e s e n t District, will I * sent to the Land Offl.
located f o r w o o d i n g purposes, with a good g r o w t h of beach
in which t h e p r e r o » c s V» be s o l d are s i t u a t e d — o n Saturday, M . r q o e t t e .
and m a p l e t i m b c r . i Also. 300 Town lots, s a d 30 P a r k Lot»
b e t t e r c h o i c o t h a u M r . P o t i o r , w h o s h a m e d t h e S o u t h e r n the S e v e n t h day of F e b r u a r y . 1861, at t e n o'clock in t h e forein
E
a
s t T r a v e r s e City, offered for sale at reasonable prices,
REUBEN GOODRICH, Beeeiver.
noon. S a i d premises a r c described as follows : All t h a t
J>nlly, B o g e r . A . P c y o r , . :
;
by
G e o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
certain piece or parcel of land situated lying and b e i n g in
J u l y 4-31-Cm
"
LAND FOR SALE.
T h e p r i c e of o n e d o l l a r In g o l d a t N . Y . . N o v . 1st, the County of Grand Traverse and State of Michigan, a n d
N T H E T O W N S H I P O F P E N I N S U L A . CONTAINING
d e s c r i b e d «« Ut" W e s t half of South E a s t q u a r t e r of Section
77 a c r e s o f » r * t rate L a n d , 20 - c » r s i m p r o v e d . 10 of
waa $ 1 . 3 0 ; a t R i c h m o n d , $ 2 . 5 0 .
T h u s , w h i l o t h e ad- Five (5) Town Twentv-»ev*n(27) N o r t h or R a n g e Eleven (111
which U seeded down in C W e r . House. B a r n K i d good
v a n c e in g o l d in t h e L o y a l S t a t e s i s 3 0 p e r c e n t , in , t h e W e s t , c o n t a i n i n g I p i t y a c r e s a c r e s a c c o r d i n g t o the United
1
g
StMeaanrvey thsrooC.
rebel S t a t c s . i t is 1 5 0 p e r o e n t
A n d even this does n o t
MORGAN BATES. Mortgagee.
T r a v e r s e Clty» Mick,
4M«
Land A g e n t aad Surveyor. T r a v e r s e City, Mlcb.
Dated Traversa City, N o v e m b e r 7. 186?. tf-lSw.
fairly m e a s o w our euperiosity id ctudit
LCKEKRI.SC.-Sri 1 annul), L a y

& C o . closed

DOO T o w n Lot-s O f f e r e d "Pre«t o .A.<-tual S e t t l e r s .

R E A L

E S T A T E

G E N E R A L LAND AGENCY.

;

GEO. W. B R Y A N T

W

R E A L
GENERAL

E S T A T E
LAND

OFFICE.

1424 Acre* <>f Choice LaiuUt;

1850 Acres, al-io Choice and. wett.Sflected.

C

BRYANT & STRATTON'S
CHAR OF SATH-lil.
M E R C A N T I L E
C O L L E G E S .
Branch



Loo.itod a t X l e t r o i t ,

"°, f £.rf\ ' . P"* " "

D

W

ItiOO A.cres of L a n d !

I

MoJifiAN BATES,
OF THE PEACE.

t s j l " " °°< *>""•mViwoKT«r-J U S T I C E

'

'

-J

£'" lQO<}

A Graphic Picture «f a Southern Empire.

and threw it upon the floor, with tho remark that " he
A Bride in the Land oj Homauce.
did not care a d
for the Portuguese." The Italian
What more nominally romantic tbftn an Oriental bride,
IT TUB REBELS BECOME WDEPENDEST
bill of lading was treated in a similar maimer, except a bride in Pereia! And yet see how Dickens describe*
that he considered it unworthy even of a remark Tak- her, in •' All tbe Year Round:"—
The London Daily Jfetn draws this picture of the ing up the British bill of lading, and looking at the seal,
A Persian bride, when first brought, is a queer little
character of the South,- and the probable consequences Semmes called upon Captain Welles with an oath, to exbody, fattened up with rice and sweetmeats for tbe occawhich would follow its achievement of " independence
plain it It was evidently the only one of the three he sion, and sadly besmeared with cosmetice. Collyrium
thought
it
worth
his
whilo
to
respect.
" As far as England ic concerned, we may judge from
has been put upon ber eyes to mak>< them sort and lan" W ho is this Borden ?" he inquired sneeringly. guishing. and they are also elongated by some mean?, so
the pait. Many people say, in excuse for their state of
mud about the wur, that they detest the Americans.— •* Have you ever seen him ?"
that tbey may have the shape or almonds. Her hair is
"
I
am
not
acquainted
with
him
;
but
I
have
seen
him
Very well; and what docs this mean T It means an asdred or a coal black by indigo, or of a reddish brown by
sociation of ideas' made up of trouble about search for once, when he came on board my vessel," replied Can- indigo and henna mixed with it according to ber fancy,
^
u r e a at sea, and brag about the Monroe doctrine, and tain Welles.
or that or the broker. Her eyebr< ws are plastered and
" Is be an Englishman—does he look like an English- painted so thickly. tl,at tbey look Hke a large piece or
threats of Caiuida, ifntTXaoders about our cruisers in the
THE LARGEST STOCK OF
Gulf, and outrage ou linn Juan, and the bullying of the man ?"
court-plaster cut into arches and stuck upon ber face.—
"
Yes,"
rejoined
jhe
captain.
General Hartleys, and the sharp practice of cabinets at
I say a large picce. because they are joined artificially by
" I'll tell yon what" exclaimed the pirate, this is a a thick line across the nose. Her cheeks are painted in
Washington, and aggressions ypon our seamen jn port
d Jjetty piece of busiuess—it's a d
d Yankee excessively bright colors, and two #biny locks of hair
and uuiverml rudeness to ou/ representatives in the d
8taie and to our Government through American repre- hash, and I'll settle i t w h e r e u p o n be proceeded to rob gummed topther and stui k flat on each side of them, in
the
vessel of whatever be wanted, including Capt the shape of a number sixes placed the wrong way. Her
sentatives in England. All/this, with impressions of
fllli baste ring, threats about oaba, an unrcpreaacd clan- Welles's proporty, to a considerable amount ; put the hands and feet,fingernail*, and toe nails, are dved a light
G E N E R A L
destine slave trade, and lynch pw, marauding in Kansas, crew in irons, removed them to the Alabama, and con- mahogany color with henna She has no more shape
brag about liberty together with tar and feathers, cow cluded by burning the vessel.
•nd figure than a bolster. Poor li tie thing ! she plays
These
facta
will
at
once
be
brought
before
the
British
hiding, slave-markets, hums/stock-breeding, and all the
Bucb tricks with herself generally, t jat at twenty the is
rest of it, these impressions combino to make up the sen- consul The preliminary steps have been taken. They an old woman, with her skin all shriveled and burnt up
tence expressed by thaljrtowal » Idetest the Americans." will also be furnished to the Portuguese consul, who an- by caustics and poisoned pricks of needles- This old nnnounces
his
intention
of
placing
them
before
bis
governBut for every element of this impreasiou Confederate
dersired creature waddh-s afcont tl» apartments of ber
•oeiety is auswereble. .Jtwaa the booth reigning at ment; and besides whatever action the Italian consul new lord in the finest and largest, bowses possible. She
Washington, the South importing negroes, the South here may choose to take, the parties iu Messina, to whom puts on a great many pair or then*, and is as proud or
ooveting Cuba and Canada, the South sending Walker the property lost on the Lauretta was consigned, will of the size of her legs as a British damsel is of the size of
crinoline.
tod Lopez into the territory of an ally to stir up insur- course ao what they can to maintain their own rights.
rection, the South Binding Gen. Harney to 8an Joan, The case is likely to attract more attention than all the
She wears a smart embroidered jacket with short
the south getting up tho Monroe doctrine, the South previous outrages of the Alabama, inasmuch as proper- sleeves, and a pretty cbemisetse, of some light white silk
lynching eiergyqieu, and buruing alive travellers sus- ty rigbu of the subjects of other nations are iuvolved, material, embroidered with gold threads; bat ber arms,
pected or disapproving slavery—the South is universal and the real character of Semmes aod his crew becomes and legs, and nock are bare. She haugs npon ber little
aggressor, bully; braggart, traitor, mischief-maker and manifest
person as many jewels, gold coins, and trinkets as she
BY PAR,
Some interesting facts are given by Captain Welles in can possibly get at She isespeciallv fond of peails and
thorough borei that'society was getting to detest more
t
•od more everj year. What follows, Tr this same 8outh regard to tbe Alabama, to which, however, we can onlv diamonds, but is pot particular as <o their beauty or valinflated with pride and revenge, could actually recover make a brief allusion. Tbe officers of the privateer are ue. A diamoud is a diamond for l^er, whatever its shape
principally southern men, but the crew ore nearly all or color may be. She is very fine, but never elegant—
her dominion T
The Dred Scott decision would be actively enforced, English and Irish. Tbey claim that they were shipped Her mind is entirely uncultivated. She has neither eduand the whole territory of the Uuion made slave soil, the by stratagem ; that they were told the vessel was going cation nor accomplishments; but she has a good deal or
EVEB BROUGHT TO TRAVERSE CITT .
popular vote would be overruled, or precluded, or prac- to Nassau, and now they are promised shares iu tbe flowery talk abont roees and nightingales, with an oudertically precluded, as hitherto in the South ; and rights captured property—not only the property taken, but current of strange roundabout wit drollery. There is an
of education, of free speech, and a free press, would be that which is burned, of which Semmes says he keeps an utter want or delicacy and modesty in her conversation
extinguished. Labor being discredited by the extension accurate account 'ITie bills are to be paid by the She knows a great many things which she ought not to
Pfoperism and degradation of tho free '• Confederate government,'' which Semmes, who en- know; and. child as she is in yean, she would outwit the
workers of the North would corrupt society to its core. forces discipline only by terrorism, declares will soon wisest man who ever wore a gray beard.
The concubinage of the Bouth would spread beyond the achieve its independence. Tho men suppose they are
CONSISTING OF
present dividing line, and the morals of the whole na- gaining fortunes—though some of them protest against
An Actor?* Advertising " D o d g e . "
tion would be in danger of becoming like those of tho tho cheat which has been practised upon them.
A member of the company or payers at Kallenbach's
slave states, which are grosser than can bo conceived of
theatre was to have a benefit nig^t; and the question
The Stores the Rebels got l a Kentucky.
in abr other part of Christendom. Every other nation
would be perpetually ou the verge of war, or engaged
A correspondedt of tbe Cincinnati Gazette writes as was bow to get together a good audience, as the asual
attendance at that place of amusement, even if it doublin It, becauso the slave power cannot abstain from ag- followes:
ed, would prodace far too slender » sum to satisTv tbeexgression, nor maintain i Is position by the arts of peace.
ctations of a benefit night. Accordingly, some days
Recently published documents have shown that Bragg*
We should see a retrograde period arrive more disasterfore the memorable evening, there appeared in all the
OM to civilization than the advent of the first Napoleon. and Kirby Smith's invasion was really intended to be
Berlin papers an avertiaement to tbe following effect:— ATUI more to, heretofore kept by them; ail
something
more
than
the
grand
foraging
expedition
H should see a buccaoeering nation burning the prof,
)

A
s
'

'

ai supposed i t
As a movement against Louisgress of political liberty into a mockerv, destroying the many had
" A gentlemaB who has a neice and ward possessing a
freedom of the sea and the security of territory, and the villoand Cincinnati, fand that now appears to have been a disposable property or fifteen thousand thaler*, togethProsperity of labor. We should see the natural law of tbe orignal intention,) of course it was a failure. Bnt in er with a mercantile establishment desires to find a
tbe
secondary
purpose
of
securing
stores
to
winter
their
industry and trade tampered with, civilization turned
young man who would be able to manage the business
back, a canting paganism set up in the name of Christi- army, and practical results they gained were well worth and become the hnsband of tho young lady. The possesanity, and the ofd world infested with the piracies of the the whole invasion, Over the whole region through sion of property or other qualidcations is no obje
new. in every department of politics of business, of terri- which we passed—up in fact to within less than twenty Apply to
torial possession and of intellectual and moral intercourse miles of Louisville—the rebels had kept every mill runHundreds and hundreds of letU poured in in reply
If the Confederates could prevail, and reinstate the spi- ning night and day.'had seized all tbe wheat and ground to this advertisement. On the Horning of the benefit
rit and policy of the South at Washington, it would be it bad driven or bleuphtered and packed all the hogs day each person who had sent a reply, received the fol- And before the great advance in moil
the greatest calamity that has befallen the world for cen- and beeves they could collect and well nigh cleared tbe lowing note: " The most important point is, of course
turies. lint it will not be. The American people will entire country of borsea Some portion or the stores that you should like one another. I and my neice are
oot permit It : and the rest of the world, once aware of they had thus collected was lost on tho retreat, but by going to Kallenbach's theatre this evening, and you can
kind* of Goods, to nut&e room for
the danger, will not endure i t
Tar the greater part was carried off in safety. Tbey just drop in upon us in Box No. V
came into the State in rags; tbey went out with all the
Of
course,
the
theatre
was
crammed.
AO
tbe
bosea,
linsey and jeans that tbe stores or Ceutnal and Southern
The Pirate Alabama.
which, they are compelled to build
Kentucky contained. A single merchant in Lexington all the best paying places in the house were Wed early
From the New York Evening Poet
had to sell tbem (that was the polite name for tho trans- io the evening with,a mostly male pubBc, got up in a
stvle which is seldom seen at t b j royal opera Itself.—
Some important facts have just been developed io re- action) a hundred and seven thousand dollars worth or Glasses were leveled on all sides in the direction of box
lation to the operations of the Rebel privateer Alabama, jeans. He received his pay in Rehel notes, and is now No. 1, and eyes were strained to catch tbe first glimpse
Wd the present and prospective action of tho British, and anxious to make his way down to Dixie to buy land. No or the neice, when *be should appear in company with
other foreign governments, whose citizens have lost pro- matter what becomes or the country, land, he thinks, her uncle. Bnt uocles are proverbiablly "wicked old
perty by the piracies of her commander. The depreda- can't depreciate as much as the notes.
A N O T H E R STORE.
In most cases this foraging was done in the politest men;'' and in the present case neither uncle nor aeicc was
tions of the vessel involve the rights of np less than three
to be found, and the disconsolate lovers—of a fortune
Earopono governments, England, Italy and Portugal, possible manocr. If a man only made no wryfecesabout were left to clear up tbe mystery as best they could.—
and are likely to become a subject of special interest to it, and professed entire willingness to trade, he was paid The theatre has not bad such an audience for years,
all maritime nations.
almost any price ho cboae to ask for what tbev took —
and, of course, tho chief person coocerned reaped a rich
Already the capture and burning of the ship Lafayette, But woe to tbe unlucky wigbt that declined to sell on any harvest by the trick."—[London paper.
WHICH WILL BE
which contained an Eoglish cargo, has been the occasion terms I '• What could he be but a traitor to the 8outh,
attempting
to
depreciate
the
Confederate
currency?"—
o f t correspondence between the British Consul at this
A COOL Wirt.—A few month I since, Mr. Bardum,
port. Mr. Archibald, and Rear Admiral Milne, com- Or course, he deserves no pay for anything, and of course
a widower, thought it was not wfej to sleep alone, esmanding tho British squadron on the American coast ; he was mercilessly stripped of everything.
If resistance was foolishly offered, there were plenty of pecially in cold weather, and be cast bis eyes around the
and it is stated (bnt we cannot vouch for the truth of the
statement) that the Admiral has despatched three war bayonets at hand. One old man, nearly eighty years of circle of his acquaintances until they fell upon Miss
age,
and
reputed
one
of
the
best
citizens
of
the
country
FILLED FULL OF
Nancy
Dunn, a lady rather verging on the old-maidish
vessels in pursuit of the pirate. The Consul has also, we
understand, communicated the facts of the case to the was shot dead, near Salviaa, for resisting a cavalry man order. She possessed a little property in her own right
Britiah Government and to Her Majesty's Minister at who had taken an innocent fancy to one or his horses.— ahd knew how to take care of it. Mr. Hardum threw
Washington. What action will be taken by the British Other cases only lacked some or the more atrocious her the handkerchief, and she graciousfy picked it up.—
details or this one. If men gave up their property with- They were married, but in lesB thsn two weeks there was
Government remains to be seen.
out objection, all was welL If they smiled on the thieves
in tbe house, all on account of the propertv
The Lafayette sailed from this port iwith a cargo of and said they liked the trade, tbey got paid in Rebel bickering
i
O
O
D
8 f
which the wife would not give up.
grain for Belfast, Ireland. The grain was owned by two currency. If they resisted tbey were shot.
One cold night after. Mr. and fira Hardum had reEnglish firms of this city, and the facts were properly
tired
to
rest,
the property subject was again diacumed,
certified on the bills of lading under the British national
and this time so unsatisfactory that Mr. Hardum sprang
How the Bank ol England was Broken Into.
e
6
seat The Lafavette was, however, a Bostqn vessel, and
from tbe^i&ii
wis commanded by Capt Saunders. The facte of the
The directors of the Bank of England bad a terrible
' I won't sleep with such a weman," he cried,
burning have been published.
fright a few weeks ago, on account or the summary inva- sleep alone."
As well as the two buildings already ocBut another case (that of the bark Lauretta) is about sion or the bullion room of the bank. It appears that
He left the room, but instead of opening the door
to be submitted for the consideration of the British au- the directors received on anonymous letter, stating that
lading
to
the
chambers,
he
opened
the
one
that
led
to
thorities, as well as those of Italy and Portugal. The the writer bad the means of access to their bullion room
•acU estaohsh a clear case of piracy. The Lauretta, Tbev treated the matter as a hoax, and took uo notice of the cellar. He took one step, and the next moment
cupied by w ; and wiU be
landed at the foot of tbe stairs. He bad scarcely gather
• which on board a cargo consisting principally or flour the letter. Another more urgent and specific letter fait ed
his scattered senses, when M n Hardum shouted—
and staves, was burned by Semmee ou the 28th of Octo- ed to arouse them. At length the writer offered to meet
" Mr. Hardum f"
ber. 8be was bound from this port for the Wand of them in the bullion at any hour they pleased to name—
" Well,'" growled the husband.
Madeira and the port of Messina io Italy. Nearly a lbey tbeo communicated with their correspondent
" How do you like vour bedfellow f" and with these
thousand barrels of floor, and also a large number of
„the^channel he had indicated, appointing " some words she closed the door and went to bed.
staves were shipped by Mr, H. J . Burden, a British dark midnight hour" for the rendezvous. A deputatiun
the courao of ten minutes the husband crawled into
subject residing in this city, to a .relative iu Funchal, from tho board, lantern in hand, repaired to tbe bullion hisInwife's
room
j' w I?"
kill of lading bore the British seal, affix- room, locked tbemsehtq in, and awaited the arrivial of
'• My dear." he said, in humblj tonea
ed by the consnl, to whom tho shipper was personally the mystenous correspondent Punctual to the hour a
' _ Wh «t is wanting ?" the wife anawered.
known. The other part of tbe cargc w u shipped by noi» was heard below. Some boards in the floor were
•"I think tbe property can renain in your name."
Chamberlain Phelps A Co., to tbe order of parties in without much difficulty dfsplaced, and in a few momenta
reigned after that confujsioa. Mrs. Hardum
Mtttina, and this property was also covered by tbe the Guy Fawkee of the Bank stood in tbe midst of the as- wasPeace
mistress of the position.
Italian consular certificates.
'
toonbed1 directors. His story was very simple and
The Portuguese Consul at this port also sent a pack- straightforward. An old drain ran under tbe bullion
as present prices in Eastern markets will
We should round every day of stiring action with an
under seal, to the authorise! at Madeira, besides roots, the existence of which had become known to him.
grnng a nght to enter the port, and sending an open bill and bj which be might have carried awav immense sums. evening of thought. We learn nothing from oar experience unless we muse ugon it
admit, for
Inquiry was made. Nothing had been abstracted, and
Captain Welles's account of the manner in which tbe directors rewarded the honesty and ingenuity of their
A general on the poiot of death, open ine hia eyes and
5 * ? d ? * * oe dt t J *58d 0o0c1 u m e n t s , and which he has anonymous correspondent—a working man, who had
k
°°'7 interesting, bu! gives an been^ employed in repairing the sewers—by a present of seeing a sonsuhatioo of three phyiociana who were standeneBent idea of the piratical intentions of the commaning dose by his bedside, faintly exclaimed, •• Gentlemen,
of the Alabama. The papers of the bark were, at
if yon Ifire by platoona, its all over with me !" and
R E A D Y
immediately expired.
d of Semmes, taken by Captain Welles on
When
stretched
upon
hia
bed,
in
the
agony
of
rout
it
labama. There was no American cargo,
was reported to Chatham that one of f h official subordi6
An«rican papers, except those of the
OOQ|:c
Eant Rauaoan,-The N. Y. Tribune says the Octoed an order impossible of execution.
•#, of ootxree, were not inquired into.— '*J?M*®
Q
Semmestook find the packet which borethe Portuguese TW1 him," Mid he, riaog up and marching across the ber earnings of the Erie Road hove been kept from the
room on his swollen feet his face streaming with perspirw l
* .*pd w i ^ . a a
which showed that he did not re- ation from tbe excruciating effort " tell him it is W a r - stockholders, bnt it is generally understood that they extahc,i B
1
ft**
as of the slightest consequence, ripped it open, der of one who treads npon impossibilities P

Hannah, Lay & Co's Column.

•WHAT WOULD turns

NOW RECEIVING,

MERCHANDISE,

EVERYTHING,

G

Bought for Cash,

' • A I f i

M t l ' n l i a l l



n l a a .

MAMA

—<r

-

f f l

T

1

SOLD AS L O W

{ȣk



° PT"" " »

HANNAH, LAY & CO,
O c t o b e r 1, * 8 6 3 .

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