Grand Traverse Herald, March 07, 1862

Dublin Core

Title

Grand Traverse Herald, March 07, 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

1862-03-07

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

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

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None

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PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

gth-03-07-1862.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

TRAYERSE


VOL. IV.

T R A V E R S E

CITY, MICH, P R I D A Y ,

M A R C H

7, 1 8 6 2 .

*0*0.^4.

tf ' P
always been frieods? (Laughter.) Hare you not a comThe Hoirae Hair.
mon literature, a common law, and do yon not speak the
In Professor Agasix's interesting paper ifi tto Atsame language? what better proof can you have that lantic Monthly, on the 'Methods of Study in natural
I IS MTBUtaiD EVERT nUDAT, AT
!
France is yo«r bast friend than by talking with the offi- History,' the second of the wries, we find this aner
TraveraeOity, Grand T m r a n CoutTi Michigan, j
cers of the French Navy, who worship England for the dote of an animal known to almost sfl ooufitry boy*
burningrecollectionsof TraGilgnr. The army, too, love
MOEGAN BATES,
A gentleman from Detroit has had the kindness to
'
EDITOR ARomorairroayon as a brother, for the staling lessons you taught them send me one of those long, thread like worms, (Gorat Waterloo. (Laughter und applause.) The merchants dius) found often in brooks, and called Home Hairs
XttRMS.
like you for voir having rivalled tbem everywhere in by the common people.
'f •
trade. Ana the priesthood almost adore you lor having
When first I received it it was coiled np in a clnw
done so much for their religion, and showered so often roll at the bottom of the bottle. Oiled With fresh wablessings on the head of their I'ope. (Applause and ter, that contained i t and looked more like a little
laughter.)
,
tangle of black sewing Silk than anything alia.' WishM « r 4 a m»fcrn<t •abMqmnt. E«rr W » « " a \*T*:. " y ™
" Have I not proved that Frar.ec must naturally be ing to unwind i t that I might examine its entire
your friend? If not. then 1 have another argument strong- length, I placed it in a large china basin filled' with
er yet The people must naturally admire, revere and water, and proceeded very gently to disentangle its
ill linJs tf M> Priit'iM Soil] ui I#UM1J luM.
There's only the sound of the lone sentry's tread
respect the nation that took their royal guest out of coils, when I perceived that the antoal had twisted
As be tnunps frpm the rock to the fountain ;
BeUerophoo and sent him to die, Parnafciua Kke. on a itself arouud a bundle of eggs, holding tbem fast in
Aad think* of the two in the low trundle-bed,
Fsr
away
in
the
cot
In
the
mountain.
rock in the Southern Ocean. (Hear.) Oh, yes! close embrace. In the process of unwinding, the tag*
OUTID STATE USD OFFICE ATttAYBS!CITY, HCL Hfc mnsket falls slack—his face, dark and grim, sterile
France is your friend. Read the Dcbatt, the Monitrut\ dropped away and floated to a little distance.; IJav.
. Grows gentle with memories tender.
Rerfster..........
'.....MOBOIK BATES.
And he mutters sprayer for the children asleep— La Prtue and the Comtiluliorul. Don't you see bow ing finally stretched it out to its foil length, perbap
Receiver..
REUBEN GOODRICH.
friendly they are? How different from the uatural com- half a yard, I sat watching to aee if this singular
"For their mother—may Heaven defend her.
ment* of your natural enemy America. A nation that being that looked like a long black thread io the waGRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
The mtan seems to shine just as brightly as then, takes twenty-three millions pf your manufactured goods, ter, would give any sigp of life. Almost im
That fight when tholove yet unspoken
1 1
and gives you forty-four millions of your raw material it moved toward the bundle of egg"
—1
CURTIS FOWLEB, Xapletoa
» of Probate
Lsaped up to hts lips, when love-murmured vows
WR. B. STKWTWirthport.
must naturally be your enemy.* Are we not always in- ed it began to saw itself through i
Were pledged to be e
ittwiw
MORGAN B A S M j T y - O i t y .
sulting you?
tic white mass, passing ooe end o. , .
.
.
CM..:
THERON BOSTWICK, •
" Read your papers—what aq outrage that was I
i t and then returning to make another stitch, as.it
r of Deed*
TRERGN BOgTWICR* "
teen years ago, now insulting to sell Erin, pale with were, till the eggs were at last completely entangled in
*> keep down the heart-swelling.
want, largejcargoes of food for nothing. (Loud applause.) an intricate net-work of coils. I t seemed to ibl almott
rJUiti9
r ^ . JERRT HANNAH, Trv. City.
Admitted, gross insult was offered by our having burnea impossible that this care or offspring could be Uie ReHe passes the fountain, the blasted plr
GEO. N. 8MITH, Northport.
The footstep is lagging and weary ;
down the City Hall to honor your officers in New York sult of instinct of affection in a creature of so low.an
Yet onward he goea, through the broa.
ai
the Atlantic cable. (Cheers.) But if I have failed organization, and I again separated it from the eggs,
Toward the shade of the forest so dr ,
J . Q. R A M S D E L L .
Hsrk I was it the night-wind thst rustled the leaves, to show that America is your natural enemy, observe ana placcd tbem at a greater distance, when the same
we outraged all rules of etiquette in the royal welcome we action was repeated.
Was It moonlight so wondfouslyflashing?
It looked like srifle—"Ha! Mary, good-bye !"
gave the sou of the noblest lady that ever sat upon the
On trying the experiments third ticfie, the
o m c i IK PAXBS BLOCK,
And the life-blood is ebbing and plsahlng.'
throne of a mighty people- (Ix>ud Cheers.) That insult of eggs haa become looeeoed, and a few of them drop"
North port. Grand Traverse C o n t r , Rich.
should never be forgotten. (Hear, hear.) This change ped off singly into the water. The efforta wblnb <h*
All qaietalong the Potomac to-night.
of position of France and America may show how un- animal made in frying to recover the mating ones,
No
sound
save
the
rush
of
the
river;
While softflills ue dew on the face of the dead— called for is this uprising of your people, civilisation is winding itsolf round and round tbem, but faQisg to
'
REFERENCES: , ' :
The picket's off doty forever.
barbarism when its result is anarchy.
bring into the fold with the rest because they were
" Americans want to^come out to your Exhibition next too small, and evaded all efforts to secure them, when
George F . Train's Last Speech.
year. (Cheera) How can they in 'the midst of war, once parted from the little compact mass, convinced me.
"foe eloquent Yonng American, George F. Train, re- when you will want to turn it iuto an exhibition of im- that ther^was a definite purpose in . ita attempts, And
proved fire-ari^s. Americans do not think that England tbst even u being so low in the scale of animal ^atfstcently laid the American side of the question be/ore
would be guilty of so dastardly an act as to Btrike a ence has some dim consciousness of a relation tO its
CHAKT.ES H . H O I . D B N ,
London audience, in a Ityle that will be remembered by nation
when it is down. (Hear.) It is unworthy or offspring. I afterwards unwound also i h e mass of
Jobn Bull. From his lecture we clip:
great England. If she agitates on this issue rest assured eggs, which, when coiled, up as 1 .first saw: it, made
no
apology would suffice. It looks to me merely a* a a roll of while substance about tlfe aire of A coffee
1? As yon have heard your aide, should yon like to heir
TAX AND GENERAL AGENT,
mine I (Yes.) Will you Jet me talk it right ont just ss ruse to get arms into Canada, to be prepared for European bean, and found that it consisted of a string of eggs,
NORTHPORT,
complications, and to take the advantage to lead the pas-4 measuring more than twelve feet in length, thejMgs
I feel? (Yes-J
.
OUAND TRAVERSE COUHTY, MICHIGAN.
4 Well, then, I think thai the war with America Ss sions of a strong people in order to keep up a weak min- being held together by some gelatinous substance t f i t
Offioe Second Door 6oath of Union Dock.
21-ly
the worst thing that could happen to your empire.. istry; but there will be no war. (Applause.) My instincts cemented tbem and prevented tbem from falling apart.
sometimPJ'are
prophetic, there wiH be no war: just thirty- Cutting this string acroai, and then placing a.^mall
America can shut her nation's gate and live; dose En„
C. H . MARSH,
land's door and she must starve. (No.) Yon are in no five years ago placards were posted all overthe kingdom, section under the microacbpe, I counted on ope jmrposition to go to war. England.!* not a mililary nation. with these words, ' Stop the Duke, run for gold.' The face of sach a cut from ,,eeventy to seventy-five eggs;
(Oh!) You have always fought with hired soldiers; Hes- remedy was powerful tho cure perfoot in fifty-eight and estimating the entire number ^ e g g s Acowiftng
ji '
ANB
sians in America, Swiss and Germans in the Crimea— hours the Duke was out of office, and the homo gnards to the number contained on such/*T"sar5oe, I found
i SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
that there were not less than eight million of eggi in
To-day you have not foHy thousand fighting men in youi did not shoot down the people. (Hear.)
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k C O N V E Y A N C E R , empire,
i
and what are fqrty thousand soldiers fighting foi
" Let as respect the dignity of onr respective laods: the whole string.
rrarerae City, Grand Traverse Coaatri Mich.
a shilling a day, against our two < million .who fight for respect each others pride, and do anything bat dishon. Office in D*Mlllng House.
'My the glory of the Jand? You are in no position for war. or each other rather than go to war. (Cheers.) If AmeriDeath of the Piwidentfa Friends.
never so weak as no*, and America pever so strong.— ca is wrong she is manly enough to maka it right (Hear.)
Alas.fortbe dead bona of honest friendship
T. J. R A M S D E I J L !
(Oh! and laughter.)
If England finds herself in error.'hbe is too proud to do goodlyfellowshipof noble fepiritsl Where are the good
" Here are some obstjnate tru^jj. It looks as though so mean a thing as to strike a nation she thinks is paral- fellows who werefriendlyat 8pringfield in happier days?
England was short of c^ru this year. Is that so? (Yea) ysed by domestic discord. Hurrah for America! Hur. Hardin's spirit went np through the marky canopy wfcoae
Ana Ireland is shortof potatoes? (Yes.) Then you have rah, then, for England. (Loud cheering.")
beautiful shadow hung over the battling legions at Bnena
elements of tamine in your land; famine means the imporj
SOLICITOR
Vista j Bissel passed from lingering pain to paradise,
NO. 4 FIRST STREET,
tation of 150,000,000 bbshels of grain! Where can you
honored in the highest by the State that be had hotfered;
materials in their Invisible State.
M a n l s t w . Minhfapmi.. .
j
get itt From France? *No; she is Bhort and the FafiIf a piece of silver is putin nitric acid, a clear and Douglas lies under the prarie sod in the dear old State,
boargh 8an Antonie will take care that Napoleon don't
whose
halfwtranged heart burned with more than the
get that taint of secession. Egypt is short this year. a%d ilorlcss ljquid, it is rapidly dissolved and vanishes from old love for him Wore be died ; Baker rests gloriously
the Baltic and Black Sea will ask nigher prices. -War the sight > The solution of silver will be mixed with in death, a precious offering to the spirit of Freedom to
ANNOUNCEMENT.
with America means starvation prices for .bread in Eng- water, ami to appearanco no effect whatever is produced. which through life his worthip was paid ; add Lincoln
Thus, in a pail of water we may dissolve and render inHERE are periods U the world's history marked land (hear) when millions of men are thrown out of em- visible more than' ten pounds worth of silver, lead and stands loocly in hts power, a Badder, silenter, greater men
by extra ordinary and violeat crises, sadden as the break- ployment • Never before did famine in corn and faminethan of old, tim<? beginning to sift its early snows upon
ing Wrth or * volcano, or the bursting 6f"a storm on the In Cotton occur the same year. England, then, cannot iron ; but every other metal can be treated in the same the blsckness of his hair, his heart beavv with t&fr sor«oesn. These crises sweep sway In a moment the landmarks go to war this year.
way, with similar results. When charcoal is burned,
of generation* They call ont fresh talent, and give to the
M
when candles are bufned, when papor is burned, thesn rows of a nation, bis mind and soul pledged to solemn
Then
look
to
Canada
Not
a
gun,
a
fort
or
defense
and self sbnegating effort to keep from detriment in Me
old a new directipn. Itls than that new Ideas are born, aew
a thousand miles of frontier! What protects the substances disappear and become invisible. In fact, hands tho costly treasure of constitutional government
theories developed, ftach periods demand freah exponents,
n for
ad new, men
Tor expounders.
expounders.
j
Canadian town? Can yon depend upon the Orangemen every material which is-visible can, by certain treatment,
V
; [Harper's Wetkfe
Thla
has lately be<
been convulsed by an upheaving of Toronto? The French Canadian of Montreal? And be rendered invisible. Matter which, HI one condition,
_ _ continent
„_JMenthaa
suddenSad
Sadterrible
terriblethat
thatthe
the relations of all men sad all are yon sure yon have not some belligerents nearer home is perfectly opaque and will not admit the least ray of
so>sudden
thee are viotaatlyalstarbed,
R a sain.
olaaaea to sack
ssch aothce
viola
. and .people
. look
light to pass through it, will in another form become
thaa-the
Canadian
shore?
Do
yon
not
think
that
woikahoat for the eleaenu with whloh to sway the storm ond.direot the whirlwind. Jnstat present we-do not know whataU mcn crying for bread make good materials for belliger- ouite transparent. The cause of this wonderful effect of The magnitude of Russia is unprecedented in the
thla ia » bring forth: but we do nottoaw that great results ents? And for yonr sake, look at Ireland before the war tne condition of matter ia utterly unexplainahle. Phi- tory of nations. Her vast proportions can only be shown
losophers do not even broach theories upon the subject, by a comparative statement
At a Jsactnre so solemn and s<»lmportyt thereis especial commenced! Is not O'Donoghue a belligerent? And much less do they endeavor to explain i t The subThe total area of the United States, the North and
need that the Intellectual force of the country should be ac- Sullivan, of the Nation? War with America means fight- stances dissolved in water or burned in the air are not,
tive and efficient. It is s time for great minds to speak their ing with your blood relations (Hear, hear.) What other
however,
destroyed or lost
thoughts boldly, and to take position «s the advsnce guard. people sends yon over a million a year in email bills of exTo thls4ad there is s special want nsSnppIled. It is. that of change to your emigrants? "Depend not too much upon
Bjf certain well-known weans they can be recovered,
•a IndeMndeat Magaaine, whioh shall bs open to the first yonr navy. Navies are deceptive. No worse investment and again be made visible ; some exactly in the same 120,850 square miles.—Thus the territorial extent of the
Intellects of the land, and whioh shall treat the, issues preUnited States is twentv-four times greater than thai of
sented, sad to be p resanted, to the oeantry, in s tone no wsy cah be found. There is no bar in America that will take state as they were before their invisibility; others, though the British Isles, and fourteen times creator than that of
not in the same state, can be shown in their elementary
tempered by partisanship, or inflaeac4d byfear,favor, or thethe " Warior." Twenty-eeven feet is too deep
France. Our whole area could be divided ioto about
hope of reward: which snail seise sad 'grapple with the moAmerica hasfivethousand fishing smacks, coasting condition; and thus it can be proved that having once 400 States of the area of Massachusetts. It ia moderate
menta <u subject that the present disturbed state of affairs
existed, it never ceases to exist although it can change
heave to the surface, and which cannot be laid asida or neg- packets, brigs, barques and ships that don't pay just now ita condition like the caterpillar, which becomes a chry- to say that the territory of our single contrtry is much
in regular trader They are ready for action, not as
lOCted. j
v
I
, 1 'I
larger than that which constitutes the Roman Empire
To meet this, want, the nnderslgaed'annonnce that early in pirates or privateers, but with regular commissions from salis. and then a gorgeous butterfly. If a pailful of the
December nezt'snd monthly thereafter, wiTI be published, the United States Navy. These vessels will not hug the solution of silver be cast into the stream, it is apparently when it was the greatest. But Russia is between
wader th* Editorial chance of CHARLES GOPFRKY LE- coast to meet your Agamemnons nor Warriors, but start lost by its dispersion in the water: but it nevertheless and three times larger tlian the United Staiee. Her
square miles in Europe and Asia, are 7.864.86L From
LAND, Esq., a Sew Magaalnf, entitled
for Australia, and India, and China, and tako yonr mer- continues to exist So when a bushel of charcoal is the continuity of tbe Empire, except Ruaam America,
chant shipping into a thousand eastern ports. What can bnrned in the stove, it disappears, in consequence of the it may be regarded as one great whole.
gas produced being mixed with the vast atmosphere;
you
do?
If
it
has
takfn
twenty
mcn-o£war
to
find
the
»• ho devoted to Lite rata re and National Policy.
In yetitic*, it will advocate, with all the force at Its com- Snmter and Nashville, how many ships wiil.it take to but the charcoal is still in the air. On the brigbest and
JOXKS AHD His PEPS.—Jones, beiag'a great lover of
mand, Measures best sdspted to presefrve the oneness and in- catch five thousand privateers? War with America sunniest day, when every object can be distinctly seen
tegrity W the United States. It will Sever yield to the Idea neans the destruction of British Commerce. (Oh!) It above the horison, hundreds of tons of charcool, in an in- dogs, bas a famous breeder, and the papa are in great
dterdsSisa ef this Bepahlic. peaceably or otlMnrte*. sad it neans more—civ!l war in this happy land (No.) Revo- visible condition, pervade the air. Glass is a beautiful demand among those who know and appreciate thpr
with
bo
wWHljws»
"•save
*hoaesty
" it. sadI IsapaftlalHy, what mnat111
lutions are contagions. Revolution in New Zealand, illustration of the transparency of a compound which, io quality..' Joocs has a great many friends, and whenever
must be dose
.—e to sava
In Lite rstare.
rstare, ItwmconUIn
ltwmeonUln articles
srticles In both prose
pi
and Revolution in Hungary, in Polaffl, in Italy, revolution truth, is nothing but a mixture of the rust of three any of them visit hhn, his enthusiasm for dogs leads htm
to boast of the breed of his owa Tbe result is, his
vstss 01
varas
of mo
the most v»ne«
varied ccharacter,
m n c w r , »uu
and ui
of the
u c highest merit.
men
in'Russia, revolution in America—and pray why do yon metak
hr the b^t writers and ablest thinkers of this country.
The power of matter to change ita conditions from friend makes him promise to save ooe of tbe pupe for
England?
It will be liberal sad progressive, without yielding to U except
him when tbe next litter is prodded. One aay Mra.
solid
capacity
to
limpid
transparency
cansca
some
rather
"
W
a
r
with
America
is
not
like
*
u
with
European
AhimerU and hopes beyond the gr|up «fthe age, and It wl
pbwere. It means the destruction "6f twenty-five millions puzzling phenomena. Substances increase in weight Jones inquired in a quiet way:. ™
"Jones, how many pups will that wonderful dog have?''
of Americans or victoiy. I wonld rather you wonld ex- without any apparent cause j for instance, a plant goea
"TTiree or four, perbape."
press no signs of appreciation or disapprobation mi til I on increasing in weight a hundred-fold for every atom
-Do you know bow many of tbe next fitter yon have
that is miwng from the earth in which it is growing.
have
painted
my
picture.
(Hear.)
Yonr
papers
are
t f i f f i S S w M J t e ^ ' y iri°nW wlntedon «ae paper, and
Now tho ample explanation of this is that leaves of promised to your frieods H
tn the best slffc af typography, ana each number will con- gailty of goading yon on to all the horors of brutal war, plants
"No."
.. • .
have the power of withdrawing the -invisible charand lead you to suppose that America is yonr bitterest
tain one hsndred sad twalve roysl octevo psges.
"You have already promised thirty-five."
TW«s»—Three dollars per year la sdvaace, (postsgapald enemy instead of your truest friend. Perhaps I can bring coal from the invisible: atmosphere, and restoring it to
"Well,* replied Jones, reddening slightly, and
fey Us publishers:) two copies forflvadollsrs; three copiesthe frontier closer'home by drawing another picture.
its risible state in some shape or other. The longs of
in^
with
considerable
vehemence,
"a man that woo*
* six
*- dollars.
'-liars, (postage unpaid.)
lor
" I will in a few wOrdff state who is your friend—who animals and a smokeless furnace change matter from ita
No. 110 Tremonl rtr<
1 . R . 8 ILMOBE,
r ~
is yodr enemy. WeU,'theb, France igyonr naratal friend? viable to its invisible state. The gilht-of fishes and the promise a friend a pap, is a mighty mean man."
w York;
•OTSAltNi.
Broadway, New
America yonr natural enemy. Of coarse the Americans learn of plants reverse this operation, rendering invisiThere have been rumors that Queen Victoria W
know that yonr great army of volunteers (cheers) is got ble or gaseous matter viable. Thus the balance in nature is maintained, althoug^-the continual change has leaning toward tbe church of Rome. T b e a t a f l l DW
np against your natural enemy, America!
Doners, (postage nnpsld.) This liberal oWu la made to labeen y i q g on long prior ft) the creation of the "extinct is that die is a Swedenborgian, and that berlaae ti
«aos the irinda of the two putJIeaUons to stake efforts to • "Let me show yon'the force of my ahmment in andied in that faith.
other Wfcy. Doing seven handred year* have yoo not
Mtead their clrenlstlon.

,

(Sranii Craberse llerali),

I

W#sr<

Attorney & Counsellor at Law,

^ttomej, CornisellorrailSoKritH,

^ttonuji aitir CnimsfUor at $Tatt,

•^Mtontij tntirti-owoelforat £ato,

.

ittEW.MAOAZIHE.

T

The Continental Monthly,

:/V

The PIckeuGnard.
• All qniet along the Potomac," they say
" Except now add then a stray picket
Is shot as be walk* on his beat to and fro
By a rifleman hid in the tbioket.
Tie nothing—* private or two, now and then.
Will not count in the new* of the battle ;
Not an officer lost—only oae of the men
Moaning ont, all alone, the death-rattle."
A1
l1l quiet along the Potomatf to-night.
Where the
sold' lie
" peaoefally dreaming;
*—
-ie soldiers
, Th^r^tenU
r tents In the
UMjrmp of the clear autumn moon.
the light of the watch-tire gleaming.
—.
11.—*"Titatrt*fnd

sefe laden wilh troops for the

-Of General

beeii lying in theirfclanlttUin'iha open air, or grt- throofh the nAht reftdy With the ftrst flwh of dawn to
Jng read* for breakfast ' Bpmediiaelv the whole divj»- rnakuT a brvacjtfn the n^-fieyeadr j |
a; a
f p D WBS " t i r
hrfcW migit turn up. ^
?5
twenty-row? hours a$*r.»he fcgiitH visited the *pot
to t u n y op the ti Astbtfrebejjf neare<fa>ur«. fore# they deployed and
Gba Grant's d&nl. styting
. „ thfff thc fiAt- fTnrmed in lins'bf battle.*tnafcing rhe most furious attack a^l saw tenrfthe brqte <§* A c t i v e * had been gilen
TODAY MORNING. MARCH 7, 1862.
ing i«d commenced and reinforcements were needed. upon the right; also sending their Mississippi sharp-shoot- for their country, lying upon the slope in front of the
pits. Behind the pita were several or the enemy
TbeOeet arrived within taro.ntilea of. tbe..Fort at 12; ers, us ooe of the Captains, now a prisoner, informed me, nfle
woo haaral!?nirr their attempt to O(C'^~- '"'- "'
o'clock on Thursday. "The Carondelet had been ordered to the left to throw the 11th and 20th regiments into
upon, I be creM
tb open tho bull a nine ^'cloek 'oir.'ChtJrBilajt7tnoruing. qontiis^bii,
V l1!' > ' T ' I f /
or
the
hill where the wounded had tklleu, tak who had
She advanced within a mile of the Fort ana opeued Ore.
It was about seven o'clock when the firing began on beeu taken to the hospital j.
* CONNECTED ACCOUNT OF TIIE WHOLE Sbftrwas quicklyresponded,to, and after firing 138 shots
the right aud in a,few minutes was running like a train
. TUB WSItRMPKR.
AFFAIR.'
was''obliged to retire,/ having received a .42-pound ball of powder on a floor, along the entire line. The rebels
Col. Unman was apprised during W o i g h t that tho
tlirdugt her port wde, ^trikittp^ Ui^ t8inn'steam pipe. advanced with determination—not in a regular line, but
"Particulars of tfce G«n-Boat Encasement on
She1 retired down stresm a coapSeOf,mfW4w Iti the after- in a guerilla mode—avuiling themselves of the trees and rebels were shout to jmn-iukT. by ategro who<.srap.«d
•*i«ug!c:
dir.
his lines. Soon oft^r daylight an .officcr. Major Cab
noon, after repairing tire damaji sTOtamW Tn'tbe first undulations of the ground. Their desire was to cut the to
bry,
apjieared .bearing a white flag and a pole from Coo.
she was again ordered to^LttJickr' Stttp fircd a num- division at the center, tnrn the regiments on the right Buckner
to G6ti.'Grant, proposing ft ceaStiob or W
W'ijMi. WHS UHSTWUTO « MNIMI sally,
biw of shofsr but without^ effect^ " l
composing Oglesby's brigade up against the creek aud tihtiea and the appoiniment of commissionera. As the
During Thursday night, G e n . ; ^ r ^ Sa(i a .conf^nce capture them. But their movements to that cud were
telegraph has given you the correspondence that followwjth Com. Foote, and it was decided to amilte; a more foiled. The regiment^ at the center being pressed, after ed,
1 need not insert i t
general bombardment tho next dky, Friday." The gal- standing a bot hre, begun gradually to fall back, which
The Day Sewed by 3jPaUacdn. Brigade
lant Commodore did not hesitate to deflate to his fellow rendered it necessary for Oglesby to do the same as he The victory was won, and Fort Donelson was ours
ofBcers that a far more difficult task was beforc him than seperated fromthe division, and the entire right wing of with its seventeen heavy size guns, its fortnight < field'
* f. _• and TayloiffiliaUeiy t
pieces,
itsfifteunthousand soldiers, its twenty thousand
had been presented iri the taking of Fort Henry. Chir '!>" division accordingly swung back, slowly at firSt. Dresof arms, its tents and ammunition—all wero unconreaders will understaijdfrom the descriptibns of localities, ser's and Schwartz's batteries were brought into position stand
ditionally oars.
H A L L A N I C H A R G E O F LAD' elsewhere
given what these difficulties were. Instead of as soon as possible, and for a while there was a very
Wild were the cheers,' loud were tho salutes-froin the
;
MAN'S BRIGADES ,
the low battery oathfe banks of the Tennessee, scarcely heavy fire, accompanied by continued rolls of musketry. fleet
and from Taylor's batteries when the Stare nnd
highor nbove the watir than the decks'of the gunboats,
And -now occurred one of those blunders common in
'*P*4»A Correspondence of the Chicago Tribohe.
the glorious old flag, wasflungto the breesc uptl\e upper batteries of Fort Donelson froWned down from warfare. Tbe enemy pressing bard upon ourforces,Gen. Stripes,
!
thc
ramparts or Fort Donelson.
.
'•
FORT ' DbsnjoK, Feb, 17, 1862. the bluff one hundred feet above the river.
McCleruand sent Major Brayman for reinforcements.—
I cannot give you the sights or the incidents. You
,v
atkJ 8tripea wave over Douefeon. I ©
Nevertheless/ there was no hanging back, nnd Com. Ho rode rapidly to' the rear uud came upon Col. Crurt's
must imagine them. Neither have I time to tell of tbo
'frfriy y cfyioy-ftrioutline of what has taken place to no- Foote and his officer^ were called upon to restrain by
^ i W U . r e a u ction. The telegraph has given TOO a •stringent orders the ardor of'their men, who burned to brigade, who moved forward, crossed the road, nnd came appearaneo ol the rebek in their mnfteolored, shabbv
JcU,pHrt m~hw only. Let me give a general review, opcrf the conflict" On steamed'the boats, and while at in rear of the 30th nnd 31st These regiments were lying clothes—their bedqnilts, pieces or •carpeting, corerlidi
Jg but a thousand incidents which would be of long ringe the enemy opened fire from their diddle bat- down and firing over the crest of a ridge. As Col. Crufl sacking, but thore wf wore, gloomy, downacttt.'Gamijroik'ijiterest. hai l tbe time^o give then). First, let teries—their first shots falling short—first a thirty-two, came in rear of them they rose to their feet, not knowing bled, apprehensive or the future, and yet" I think that
«e tfVto give ajfcscription • the defenses, for without then a sixty-four. Still all.was sileuce on board the gun- whether the force in their rear was friend or foe. The many of them were not serry that ttort.' was OO Cmore
attempt, all the features of the battle field boats, the dip of'whose paddles alone broke the' stillness 25th Kentucky, supposing them to be rebels, poured in fighting. .1 made,myself ut home among them, talked
a volley which did terrible exectftion. It jg not possible
. Tould not be understood. '
OPtheir approach. Thus fifteen minutes passed, which to ascertain how nyiny fejl under the fire, but it wassufli- with tfiem'freely. hehrd tlieir indignant ntteranto««Mj»t
v
Floyd, who had sneaked away with his
mri-.
• The. cimeht of the Cumberland river at Dover,
seemed a tardy hour to the impatient gunners. At last
but immedlktely at the town as ton as- the point was reached, and precisely at ten minutes to cient toMrow the entire division into disorder, and at ments, the 36th, 50th and 5Lst and a host of straottrs
•vofi'tbe stream, it leads towards the East, not nn abrupt 3 o'clock n. ra., a puff of while Smoke and the boom of once there was almost a panic. Some men took to their —offiefert many of them—who did sot betitate to desert
hoor
briidverffliv.
TIMHAMv
btedbtft ftgentlecurve. : The banks on thi West side h§r sixty-four came Worn the bow port, of the S t Louis heels, threw down their guns and equipments, and fled their men inthe
to the rear crying •• All is lost! We are cut to pieces!" midnight after1 an angry ajtercatihtj/as I Was inf.
arainftt! ewiated, but the hills are cut by numerous
The other boats quickly followed suit. -Such was the
ytuk.'/tito hills are about one hand red'met high, just difficulty of getting aiccurate range, that our first shots and similar expressions. Some of them fled to Port by a secession officer, betweep pillow, Floyd and
Abh elevations as ape to be sbbn in Egypt br along the fell wide of the mark:; but this was remedied speedily, llenrv, twelve miles distaut aud immediately the woods ner. I am also inform^ that about five thousand rebels
escaped, the boats bejbg leaded to the gn«rds. Forest's
JoWAJiKfair below, or North of the Town, and the engagement hfequinobecjimetmific. The enemy were filled with stragglers.
The enemy improved the opportunity and advanced I^msana cav^lij escaped on their horses along the .creek.
r.bert it aflxria knoo cleared, and planted with corn the poured their 32 and 64-poundera into our vessels with
jsadfeaam. If iafollybrie hundred fcet high, and the great effect and onr gunners returned with 8-inch shell upon Dresser's and Schwartz's batteries, capturing five Butfthe great bi/lk'br the Briny is mirs. Fifteen thousand
guns,
taking
possession
of
Gen.
McClernand's
headprisoners! What shall we do with themi
' ' « * ^ o q A h e North side is vely steep—too steep to be and 65-bound rifle balls,, with admirable precision, cheerOfcX. UBANtSORAND.AliJfT.jja,^s wowfed/ It was covered]WHS a ftrcaJ, which was clenr- ing us Ine^ fought their guns, and doing great execution quarters, and driving our forces nearly a mile and a half.
Theforcesunder Geu. Grant had beeu so hastily drawn
TOWlebfte work of intreticbing *m;gan. f There the Ou the enemy's works, dismounting their guns on the They had opened the gap: and not onlf that but had iu
tho joust driven us, captured five guuS, and had reason to together from the '' four .-quartern"'•} of the North-west,
roSflawt up their batteries for the defence of the river. lower batteries, and driving the rebels like frightened feel
that
the
day
was
theirs.
that
hardlv
any
two regiments had ever wet before under
^Bebra describing these, 1 rtaay say that there are sheep from their peni But the diagram will tell our
But now they committed s fatal mistake. Instead of the somo brigade organization. There were ih all fortv< 4 s e p a r a t e works—the Water batteries, the Tort, and readers wty* the first glance of the locality itself declared
ihefrearline of intreuchments. Commencing with the to the experienced eye of Commodore Foote. The gun- adhering to tho original plan, to escape, they resolved one regiments onhfautiy,: ten batteries or artillery, aiid
• water batteries, low down,' close upon the btyik, you see, boats were fighting against fearful odds, the long oblique to follow op their advantage by pursuit, cut us up1 and some twenty companies oT rnvalry. lliia targe force,
*
numbering 33,000 men (n.= before stated,) was divided
rifott stand in front or them, whit appeardto be a hole middle range ol beavv guns raked tho fleet terribly as capture the entire army.
I'hp tight had lasted nearly four hoars, and McCler- into three divisions, each division. iuto , three brigades,
inthe r dde bf thb blll. Cpon exaininutibn you Hud It to they came on, the angle giving them the least advantage
division was exhausted, besides they were out of and to'each brigade ^vna attached ft dde' trtdpokion oT
•tttnWfc bne '128u<pound rifled gun from Tretiegar works from tho plating: andjdefenses. At Fort Henry the boats nand's
ammunition,
artilleryaodcavalry. |)
'
M)
"^-'BiolApond, andftwo 32-ponnd howitzers; The rifled came up. exposing their only bows as the smallest mark
1
Mbfo'a fair pieceHf workmanship, and as tou run" your to the eoemv; here their broadsides were exposed. Soon A ' this juncture Gen. Wall&ce's division was thrown*
The Victor)'—its Resalu.
albng tho Bigh's, yoa cjui easily imagii>3 that it will alter the fight commtnced, a shot from the enemy's water n front They took up a position on the right, with
Our People have good I cause to'bo elated with the
'Wftdmull straigfct dowu the stream a mile!and a halfto ittory crrried awuyi theflag-staffof the^St Louis; al- CuptainTaylor'a battery in the center at the road, commanding it down the ridge to the bottom of h ravine.-i- Victory at Fort Donelson. TaWm by ItwH-it is tar the
\he"tRsumt level, plump into any boot It is an admiraMt the next shot took away the chimney-guvs of the
Mapositlon.
• • .- rame boat. But it was flag-staff for flagstaff; a few McClernaud's division was making upits scattered ranks, most brilliant resrit of the: War; taken ib connection with
^TOIhfcabove is a trench which is dug td the" side of minutes later away went tho bunting from the rebel ready, to support Wallace. It was row nearly one o'clock. the successes at Fort Henry and Roanoke Island; it is an
the hill, or rather which reus np it in a dbgonel, as ir fort, its staff cut by ti ball from-the 8 t Louis, who thus The rebels formed upon the ridge which Gen. McCler- argumf nt for the Union and the.iaiasoiof free Governnand' had occcpied through the night. They were flush- ment in this Western World,.which will tell npoq the
4«Sitti»pt : w« being made to construct » road. The ftvenged the indignity offered to herself.
~ ;MA fio steep that in teO rods' distance there is room | A little Inter and (he Louisiana was struck by a 64^ ed with success and descended the ri^ge with the expecta- pubb'c sentimcut or all Christendom. Indeed, w® are
t'oFelgbt 82-pounders. At the upper end of tho trench pound shot from the Tight of the middle tier of butteries, tion of rooting tho Yankees. As they came in range, not sure it is not the most singal Victory ever achieved
Taylor-opened
upon them with shell, grape and canister.
is a" Second 128-pomtdor.
whicb broke her rudider post rendering ber unmanage- They quailed before it, advanced at a slow pace, came to on this Continent Considering the powtioa or tho contendingforces-r-therelutive strength of the two armies—
Standing at any gun, J-ou can sec that all
able. At this time the boats were all uuder easy ateam.
brought to bear upon any object down the river ; that a iust stemming the current to prevent drifting. Another a halt and as the infhntry opened began to fall back.— the most impregnuble chnracter of tiio point attacked—
Cuuboatapprbaohmgcan ba raked from stem to stern, shot killed William ilinton, the pilot, in the pilot-house W allaco improved the moment moved on, drove them the tremendous ndvanta^s which the o^-ailotl hud over
before
bim,
regained
the
lost
grouud,
recovered
McClerassailants; what incident in the War ofthejleYoliitioD.
-anithat shot cau bo poured atraightiiuo her bows, point of the Carondelet nnd a 32-pounder, nearly the same inin tho war of 1812, or in the Wur with Mexico, reflected
jlank from the lower guns, and upon her dicks "a pfung. stant, came crashing into the pilot-house of the S t Louis, nand's tent and occupied the old ground.
This is only a brief note—conveying a general idea — more brilliant luster upon our National arms? The sur- JijjflreTroiu the big gun at the lop of thu. trench. The mortally wounding one of the pilots, F A- Riley, injurof the prowess of the troop* bf
of instances render or Cornwallis, wiyfch put a*end tp the War of
.
embanl&eut is welf constructed, ^nd from Ihe nature of ing two other pilots,!and also wounding the brave Com- I cannot speak
of
individual
bravery;
although
it
is
generally
admitted
Independence,
only gave us about twelve thousatxl pristhfi ground it is almost a casemate. A khot striking modore himself, across whoeo left foot a large fragment
oners—three thousaud less thai) were captured at Fort
below or above would do uo damage.
of a splintered oaken beam fell, severely crushing and that Taylor's battery saved the day.
J n ^ e r r i n g yourself to a gunboat, you would bruising^L Of the four in tho pilot-house at the" time,' ' The rebels might have escaped when Wallace was Donelson!
It is impossible to overestimate tho consequences of
rcajjiajt it would be next to an impossibility, to reach only one esbjped injury. I will add here that Commo- driving them buek, but by soeto fatuity they neglected
. ^ . j f e J ^ j g u n ut the upper end of this trenclv for, turn dore Foote'sHnjury is of such a nature that care for the; the opportunity and were agaio boxed up This made this glorious result. It Is a mere strutegvtical .point of
youthipr'sf^ to avoid the shot, you would still be 'wounded memberfreQuiresbta'to tfi« a crutch, which two distincrfights but the day was not thus to close.— view the blow must tell with crushing effect ipon. the
1
raked by some of the rebel guns. This was the river 'the brave officer regrets, saying tb&t but for this needed There was to be a semid display of cooluess, daring aud enemy;' Itpiefceshim irf bis most vital p o i n t l t breaks
. defense, and a.most admirable defense it, wa»—almost exposure no one would learn that he was hurt. He will determined bravery of the Union troops, fighting under up his line of defences. It rorapejs , tym to abandon a
series of points whicb he had spent many mouths in
imp«®»hle. a8 we found, in tho attempt to bombard it. soon be bn both his pins again, however. This mis- the Stars and Strijpei, resulting in a signal victory.
fcnq#W8#1»lt^B
the ridge, y«» seu Fort JJonel- chievous shot passed through the pilot-honse, and knock- The Iowa and Indiana boys composingLauman's brig- strengthiiig. It forces hint to fall baek oti posttioM which
W D T ^ o ^ g a b o u t 5 or 6 acres—au embankment with ed into pi one of thd wheels of the S t Louis, which, ade of Smith's division, were ready to do their part in are comparatively, defenceless—to make choice between
aducVoutsjde. The ditch is narrow and. the embank- like a sea bird with a broken wing, swnng round and crushing out rebellion, and Gea Grant decided that they staking all upon the hazards of a battle fought against
became utmianngable in the current Here, then, were should have on opportunity to »bow their valor. Directly an advancing foe.—foutrht without the shelter of elabor.bie. three vessels disableid—the Louisiana with her rudder west of Fort Donelson, and beyond tho breast-works ate defences—and absolute diwrganizatioiv 'It will compost shattered ; the Carondelet pilotless, and'the S t there was a ridge of land • uomng parallel to that on pel him, also, to choose between thp immediate evacuarunsYu the'rear of the hill, and on its" southern tide, a Louis with Iter wounded wheel—all ih a swift current, which the breust-works wtre ereoted. The distance tion or Columbus—{which is the gatewny to Mfempbis
spring bubbles from the ground, which supplied tho under the fire of the rebel batteries. To continue the across from ridge to ridge, a« near as I could judge from and New Orleans)—and, the danger of having his retreat
wurtjp&ding camp with" water1. At the northwest angle, |fightlonger was useless, and tho rudderless boats must a somewhat minute survey, is about forty rods. Ou the cut off nnd the forty thousand or so troops, uuder the
i cortam extended to the southwest, running along a | be called out of the fight. The brave crews saw this ne- outer ridge there were ten rifle pits, made of logs, with benign shepberdship or the Right Reverend General Polk,
fidgiof land, conforming to the undulations and varia- cessity nnwillingly, and burned to continue their advan- a shallow ditch behind, and the excavated earth thrown added to the list of Union trophies. Having lost Forts
tious.of tho grouud, to a creeS which empties into the tage gained. Commodore Foote said—" If they had up in frpnt The western slbpe of the ridge was quite Henry and Donelson. having been compelled to evacuate
rtftef aboVe the town of Dovcr. It is s i m b l y b r e a s t - not crippled my boats. 1 should have had possession of steep The distance to tlie.base was thirty rods, as I Bowling Green, Oilumbus can no longer be a city of
. worS Withft'shallow ditch inside It rnns through a JtheFort iq ten minutes more."1 The gunboats had pass- judged opening upon a meadow and cornfield. The slope Reftige to the seedy cohorts of tho sunny Sooth.
forestall the wav. Still further to the rear, is a .second led up toVitbin two hundred yards of the Fort^Tbe bad been a forest, but the rebels had used their axes
The moral effects of tho victory must be still more
ridge -upon which tire rebels had erected rifle pita near enemy had been driven from 4he lower battery, ana their aud cut down the trees, forming an abattis cot impassable, poteetial D must sound like a knell to the wicked contbeltfreslr, in rear of the town- add protecting the road fire had slackened perceptibly. But when disabled, the becduse the forest was not dead, but a serious obstruction spirators who hove brought the present calamity upon
whlia oomesiu from the southwest on a river lino—sim- engines were 6topped, gnd the boats floated from their to the advance of an army. It was desirable that the the country. It must carry panic and despair to every
ply il breaskwork.
position. The enemy saw what had happened, aud thev rebels should be driven out of their pits, for thev, in part Rebel hearth-stone and «;yory Rebel camp. It must conIt jwill be seen that the line was very extensive, and it rushed bock to their guns with the suuie speed with commanded Fort Donelson, lying abont sixty rods farther vince even tho most reckless that the doom oTthe Southneeded trat a Iglance fo sbe that there and been defective which they had deserted them, which is saying a great cast
ern Confederacy is scaled. It must set a deluded people
engfiieering. With ths force they, had there was too deal Their fire was redoubled, but our gunners did not
The pits were defended by one Mississippi, one Ken- to asking what is to be gained toy longer resisting a
rnoeb ground to look after. A more skillful engineer leave without a parting shot One heavy shell from thr tucky, aud one Teunesaee regiment, while other regi- Goveruuient at once the most paternal and the most ter*bttldtwre bpen selected commanding points on the Carondelet was seen to alight in the middle battery, and ments were in positiorf in the rear to support them.
rible to avenge wrongs the world ever saw.
ridge.and thas concentrated ttrength. Tie creck defend- iwith Its explosion, away from its carriage went a gun,
Cojw&iuican formed his brigade in the meadow, in
The influence upon Europe must also be sensible—
'®f[*Pntfa Wde,,although "WnAQ they fouud it conveni- and ioto-the air went "dnst, splinters and fragments of plain sight of the enemy, jpst beyond musket range, and Power after all, is the great Peace-maker. Show your
int tb leave they fouod it was jn the friy. With this rebel gunners, and the spot of the carnage was distinctly advanped
neighbor that you have a strong \psir of knockles'and
view, we are ready to look at ithe operations.
to be traced when tiro days later, the Stars and Stripes The 2d Kentucky held the center. Colonel Hcad't know how to use them, and be wilT^ very apt "to keep
Alter the capture of Fort Henry,. General Grant at floated over the captured Fort
Tennessee regiment the rebel right and the 1-ith Missis- on his good behavior. Foreign -Powers, seeing how tersootm possible moved across, the t*-eive mile strip of
The fleet retired In good order and anchored a little sippi the left flank. The Kentucky regiment was one of rible we can strike at our own kindred when they do, ns
t*Dd;pcftweeh<t be rivers, and invested thtf place by throw- over a mile and ft half below the fort Old men-of-war's the largest, best drifled and disciplined in tho rebel army. wrong, will be carerul how they tread on our corns. Bo»ng McClernaud'e divisiou upon the righi, at the creek, men say the fight wis the hottest they had ever seen.—
Col Lauman gave the 2d Iowa the honor of leading sides, tbeywillbe apt to pause beforerecognizinga ConejWdiog his pickets down to the river- bevood. Geu. Commodore Foote, who is no chicken, says tbo firins the charge. They moved across the meadow through federacy which is evidently already in articulo mortii.
w « i e » occupied the centre, [while Ueoerat'^mith do»- was the severest h&Jiad ever seen.
a little belt of woods, came to the base of the ,nill and
[Albany Evening Journal
•d'Bf'«ll-,eommmrieatioD with the oatside World "on the
Among tho most marked of the casualties on board met the leaden rain. But they paused not a moment—
N r
They then encountered the fallen trees, but instead of be!} ^lPar
I 0 **?
of hiKs almost one as the bursting of a rifled camion on tho Caroodelet
COLQNEI. WILCOX.—A correspondent] of the Evening
mile distauW from thg enemy's oater works-General
ing disheartened they seemed to feel new life aDd energy. Tribune says that Mr.Stanton, has promised to secure
THEXAND. FORCE EXOAOldS^STS O.V SATURDAY.
Smith's aud WalTbearmy made no move meat on Friday,of apy con- W ithout firing a shot, without flinching a moment of
•v
- l l w jftebete MiD iiatf' commnnication sequence, but waited any demonstration4iio rebels might faltering as their,ranksWere thinned, they rushed np the the release of CoL Wilcox the oext time an exchange of
with Cterkgvdle by tbe R i v e r , d M ^ ieqelved
reio. . . . were elated with .the repute of the gun- hill regardless of the fire in front or on theirflank,jump- equal rank should take place
make.
They
1
TeeinMtt attdsuM>Ke6t»y steamers.
. i boats, and undoubtedly concluded thattbey would either ed upon theriflepits and drove the.rebels down theeastBasing over all the^ skirmishing of Tueiday sod Wed' repulse-the army, oriif not that they would cnt their way ern'slope. They escaped into their inner line of defenses. Mr. Faulkner, late Minister to Fraocy, but now amoag
y.j.we
nesdi^y,:
we briefly
briefly notice
notice the
the gunboat
gunboat fight fight.
through and
and escape
escapeto
to Clarksville."
ClarksviUe.
CoL Lauman did not aeem it prudent to follow, but halt- e rebels, made a^peech at Martinsburg, Ya., in which
through
.
.
THE OtfNBOAT 1TWB*.
i Prepared to do either, as circumstances mightycciuc, ed hjs men and poured a deadly fire upon the foe, in he said the rebellion was a iailure, and he would advise
^*Nrj««J*)atM St. Louis, Louisville end Pittsburg,- left at six o'clock on Saturdav morning thev appeared in force, with four cannon behi id the works.
his friends to moke the best terms possible with the
Gall-do* the itfgbt of tfcfe 11th Inst, for the Oember- solid colnmn upon the road, which seems partly parallel
Then for^en minutes the fre was exceedingly severe.
luli River. Tbe St Loftis was theflag-ship—thevessel jto the creek, at McClernand's right It was a few mi»- I visited (fie spot on Sanday afternoon and found the United States.

. ., t
op hoard of which Commodore Foote remained On btcs past six when our pickets exchanged shots with gronad thick with bullets fired by the rebel*. The trees
Gen. Burnsde, at last accounts, was within thirty-five
t b » t h e Cones!oge was met ooming-down the: Ohio their skirnnshera.
...!. •. i|;;r: .
,
, were scarred and bore evidence on their limbs that ihe
«• tbfl'Lexington which had-been the moat i A portion of McOlernand's force was oo the right mde aim of the rebels had been mach too: high- CoL Lau- miles of Welden. The Richmond Enqujrer says that the
dMMtfwtheTeuaesee river affair. From Padicah bf the road, a portiou east of it, and some troops in it; man called bis men back to their rifle pits, and there citizens of. tho latter place were abandoning i t taking
the boat? acted as * convoy to the sixteon transport
!
and when the enemy advanced they were jnst as they tjaey lay down «pon their amis, holding the posjtioc with them their negrort and household goods.

- a

j

[rty-fivo (niles from Fort'

The Fort Donelson Victory)

OHJOA.GrO

.jXRAYgBSBOCTY,

8 A R N T A i Hagfttdl, Lay & Co.'tf Colttdm.

The Newaygo and North port State Rood Open from
.•<1 ./ J lYa*er-» Ctty to North part.
NOBTHPOET, March 1st. 1862.
F A L L O F 1861.
•jjji The old Settlers and Pioneers. learning that the State 1
TRAVERSE: CITY
''' We hate noW in Store a'
'Jmnufii 0"t u«.

Road ,was cat out and made-pugsablw- to T w u m ^ i t ) ,
a distijiioe of abont thirty ^nilei the Old Dt^icon. a man
THE
PROPELLER
TiNSitfmometrical
nearly 70 years ufape, took his cane aod started ou foot
A L L E G H A N Y
DjrptTut OCK*U> Vr /•
S T O C K
and alone to examine the route and doontry through the
Captain C. H. Boynton,
4 ...•r : U > t . 4 4 : 4 0 wildejpess, and the first day fie Ira veiled thirteen miles,
Traverse C U f . .
ILL RUN EEOOLARLY BETWEEN CHICAGO AND G E N E R A L M E R C H A N D I Z E ,
.
1M3 . • t*r, . •-,? *.1l.«/, ' I ' i M t
7 r. *. to the hist Wtne before entering the wilderness The
Port Barnia daring the Season, toochinc at Traverse
Wsdasaday. ;Frt. 36—249 abo»eO..«= above O..JO=abve. next day he went through to tbo City. Before he left City both ways. She mates the round trip in 10 daja, arriv- Which was bought for, afd is peculiarly adapted to ifcr
h.fkmHtny.i>r -v—np — . ..IT® - ing at Traveree City, either from Chicago or Sarnis, every requirements of the People of C.KA»» W T I W and adje-t
ing Counties; to which—all suctv auaitloae are being mac..
NorUfporthe left word for a tean» to come along ; and & dayi.
wur.
tof fa—»° - i i~.w -1*®
Saturday, ..Marcb 1— »= »• ...14= * ...17°
Those winhing U> make connection* with the AU.SOBINY astberiemaodBof our customers may require. Our a£vz.i
Rowtay.-.j
• 3—la® it r..V>° -M° " 1 the next day Capt. Nelsoq, Mr. Voice and wife, and the at either end of Uiu route, can do so by writing or telegraph- tages are seooml to none in the WSST, aqd we shall inv».
iably posoess ourselves of the"advantage of the
Monday,-.. M 8—29-=
r* ..tis
~ j Deacon's wife, started _for the City. The incidents of ing aa.
Tuesday..- •
4-.il°
..*6° I l a n n a b , Lay it Co.,
the-eilourwon are'thnsset'forih: Left -Nortbport F e b
of Lumber and Maxwel street*, Chicago.
28tb, ^t 6 o'clock a. tp-! came on without any aacident Office—cornet
Chicogo, February 1st, 1862.
n
.. InDUR tccF-^ns.—A. & Walworth, Esq, ouo of
GOOD AND RELIABLE ARTICLES !'
to a Piiblic House about 17 miles from Nortbport, and
our earliest pioneers, a gentlem^bf refinement, odaeastopp^d.for dinner and to bait the team. A description
LADIES! LADIES!!
tion and highly poetic"! temperament and imagination,
of the Hotel and its accommodations are thus described:
who has lived many yc-art. among the Indians, and is
Call aid «t tnj New • k • •>.
PKLNtTB,
T h e bouse! is about too JeSti square-—-built of small logs
thoroughly^acquainted wijlh their! manner?, customs and
D« Laitfs, MeriHofs, Cofcorgs, Saraij Pbids, Viltirs, Ctcice 8«!^
or poles'; it is abou^.Jburt feet hi?h ; had to enter on
traditions, fcave oar eitiwns a very interesting Lecture
Gio^haios,
D
c
m
e
s
L
i
c
Gin^hims,
Mtge, lokir, Btngt, 4LiU.
all-fours ; and in tho other end of the house there was a
laft Tuesday evening, oi the Indian tradition of the
B Q N N K T S ,
place, tp bjiUd,.afire with a hole left in the roof, (which
H A N N A H , LAY At CO.
Origin of their Race—ii^torsjwsed with some amusing
was covered with basswood bnrk) for the smoke to go Bofllfranls, JKICJS, Hoods, Eibfcdos, feathers, Tlewers, Veils,
anecdotes Hjlustrative of Iadisn'.charscter and peculiOMESTICS F O R WINTER o r IMI—KF>
out,' and there were two beds on pach side, made of
tncky Jcana, Summer StuOS, Denims, Duck.Stripa.TitV
arities. Wo_w£r*t that we have not spice to-duy for
Bead-Retts, Etf,, lit
Apron aud Miners' Check, Shirting Print*, Nankeen Cottc»
hemlock branches. Aftef building a fire, the company
. a more Extended Vjjotice of this purely origjual and
Flannels, Wool Flannels, Brown ,and Blcached Cottons, a full
partook o^a good^intierjjif cOld bam, cold' boiled beef;
line,
Baga,
4c.
Dress-Making
attended
to
during
the
W
i
n
t
e
r
.
iotanttly interesting .phantasm.
HANNAH, LAY A Oft.
cake andaheese, kc. There being a beautiful stream of
Travane City, Oct. 1,1801.
:
NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS! *
The Homestead "Bill.
"pure ^rfng'wife'ruhning near the. house, it afforded
A. K . « P R A G C E .
T A D I f c S ' CLOAKS AND LAPIJS' CLOTUR, (DOVSLS WUTD.
The Homestead RiU was tekem up in the House
plenty of theSesl of Adaita'c ale for man and beast After
JYJ French Caasimeres, Shepards' l'laids, Canada Grey C»-K
Traverse City, October fi, 18C1.
28tf.
2lst of Februatj. The question peudihg being to a littj§ rest.,aiid refreshment the pompaiiy gave their
Nice El'k Doeskins and Cassimeres.
HANNAH, LAT h CO.
re-epmmit the samfc to Committee on Pnblic Lands, namee and left ; and te there was no landlord to collect
H B A T J
E S T A T E
Trareree City. Oeu 1.1861.
: i- • . •!
wllhi lost factions to report instead of the Bounty Land the bills, they are still uripaid. As this was the first
A>*D
«
H/kWLS, BaTfiTATe, BROCHE, STELLA. {-cotcB. (SiKf. 1 r
Warrant Bill. Mr. Grow (tfeeSpeaker of the House) time that ladiefr had ever jtravellod do this road, it was
arid Double.) Uenta' and ChUdten's 8hawla and UnBe:«.
GENERAL
LAND
OFFICE.
calleti Mr, Washburn to the Chair. and taking the deemed important that they should give a miouto history
HANNAH, LAY A 00.
Traverse City, Oct. L 1861.
.
. floo«, spoke against the motion. He said that five of it for the encouragement of otbere that might waut to
titnts within the IjeHdn year* the Howe bad passed make a friendly visit; and as some things on the route
A L B E R T W. BACON,
a kill slmilaiOfcr'tbis, and by- tw*>-thirds when parties might be of interest, I Will mention them : The last
Halter Chains. Brush Hooks a_,
Ware, Tubs, Pails, Cburhs, Ladles, Ao., Ac., 11
were nearly balancod on nearly every other questioa bouse North of the Road is a log house, occupied by a
^osb, Doots,4c.
..
Bills, too, /& like character, had passed the. Senate. respectable and intelligent family by the name of Lindley
HANNAH, LAY 4 CO.
1 4 2 4 Acres of Choice laud#;
Traverse City, Oct. 1
He answered the objection that the public lands should —they came fieru last spring. There were a fow acres
• AND WILL SELL AS AGENT
be retained as a source of revenue. Mr, Grow argued chopped down and a small shanty, for which they paid
H I T E GOODS—
*
Cambric, mnsila and linen Edging;
in fator of giving homesteads to actual settlers. Spec- about thirty dollars. Thcv cleared off and planted corn,
Inserting and Vlouneiog, real Thread;'

1 8 5 0 Acre*, ah-o Choice and well Seulators should no longer be permitted to interrone potatoes, cucumbers, melons, &c. It" was June before
Smyrna snd cotton Edge and Insortiac; LQV/
lected.
Munlin, cambric and. piqaaeetUof Collars atdjk>»«»;
between the Government and actaal tiller* of the soil. the ground was ready to plaut; and they planted a numCambric, muslin 4 tine Maltese hand-wroujht Cellars;
Also—13 Lots in the Village of Elk Rapids,
Tbooe who have Socked to the standard of the country ber of kinds of seed corn, among which was the Yellow
Muslin*—Nainsook, Book, Swiss and Cambric, ,
wrrn OR WITROPT DWBLLIXCS. ' ' s : a
Fnock skirt Jaconet; Jaconet;
are deserving of more substantial reward than tears or Ohio Dont* King Phillip and Squaw corn, and it all The above mentioned Lands are in all part* of the County,
Cross-barred, Cambric snd Nainsook;
tor the dead aod thauks to the living. He earnestly got iipe t V Dent is sound, and makes the best meal Elk Lake, Whitewater, Omenta and Traverse; are-among the
Wash Blond; Embroidered Curtains; ,
Briiliantes, from Is. t« 3tW;
appealed to the House to pass the bill and consecrate of any kind ; and from live hills of cucuuibere they put earliest and best selections with reference to soli, water, iiurface, and market: embrace Farming Lands. Village Sites and
Linen, Linen Cambrioatid hem stitched H'dk'ft;
the public'land for homes to actual settlers who pros- up a; barrel and a half of pickles They said they never Water Powers, with or without improvements, in quantities
Printed bord, printed and plainflent'a HandkttSUs/i;
Child's printed, plain and nein stitched lines 8*4fc*lb;
pered jn^ife, that they may bo enabled to develop a saw vines so prolific in any country, althoug h they have to snit purtfhrtsnrs, and at prices making it an object, in preference to buying back from settlements.
,,
Pillow-Case Cotton;
higher, better aod nobler civilisation.
Traverse City. May 1, 1861.
*1-1 y
Linen Table Cover*, by the pattern e r yard f
lived in Indiana and Wisconsin, hut "they never saw
Marseilles, printed and plain;
vines do so well before, and corn was as good as they
Linen, Piqua Binding, Magic Buffiipg;
Mr. Bdward Forde, of BuSajo, sold a young setter to
G
l
i
O
.
G.
B
A
T
K
S
,
K
s
q
.

.
j
,
Linen and Cotton Bosoms—some very nWsi
ever raised in any countijy ; but the best of it all .was,
^ gentleman of New York city, who took him home
Marseilles Quilts—nice:
that when they came here they were all invalids, reduced
Pointed Tape Trimming, for ladies! us^ y
•^fith Mm in the railway cars. Hx days afterwards the
Soft and heavy Muslin, for ladies' skirts and under eletSiaf.
to walking skeletons, but now they have all got their
dog re-appeared at his former owner's residence in. Buflit 19, McCOEIlCK'S BUCK.
HANNAH, LAY 4 GO.
health, aud are well, rugged and hearty.
Traverse Cltj",Oct. 1,18C1.
.
.•
falo, somewhat reduced in Jlesh. fint otherwise te well as
C H I C A G O , 1LLINOIB.
The land, if it can be| determined by the growth of
L ACK AND LINING KILKS.—VEIL TISSDE ANP
flvisr. I t is pereuraed that he traveled all the way from
timber, is of the best quiaiity for farming' purposei It
Be
rage.
Cords
&nd
Tassals,
Velvet
and ,8ilk Ribbons,
CHANCERY
NOTICE.
New York to Buffalo on foot, a distance of fonr hundred
Berlin
Wool,
Crochet
Braid,
Dress
Buttons,
Press
Bindingis all dtj, bard land, no swoops on the whole route, and Wu.LARD E. STEAaSH 4
1
miles, through a country covered with cities, towns snd
1 In the Circolt Court .fcgr the Fancy Belts, Dress Trimmings, 4c.
the limber is hard maple, elm, basswood, beech, and CHARLES B.vs.GLOveR,
HANVAH. LAY
*«0.
f County of Grand Traverse In
:
roa^c, and over which he bad never pa-*ed but once, and
Traverse City, Oct. 1,1861.

;' •
some places ft few hemlock.' The jurfacu. until the MARY JANX LOUISA DUHOSS. j Chancery. . • t n r / •
that time in a railroad car.
State of Michigan—Ninth Judicial Circuit, in Chaacety.—
ABLE LINEN.—BBOWN LINEN TABLE-COVERR.
road turns East towardst tho Bay, |k. gently undulating,
Bleached ditto, Wool Table Covers, Doyles, Napkins,
The Lttlslatilre of Maine ha» passed an act tendering "but aRerieavihg the "freight of land dividing Upper
Hucknbuek Towels, Diaper, Cotton TahHng by the Yard."
Chancery.
It satisfactorily appearing to tho undersigned, Circuit Judge
HANNAH, LAV 4 00/
to the Federal Government a loan of whatever amount Carp or Traverse Lake from TraVerae Bay, it is broor said Ninth Judicial Circuit, by affidavit of Willard E. Traverse yity, Oct. 1,1861.
. .
.
or money may be required to exjjend^in the construction ken, but gop«lso'U- IfIthe Indian Reserve was off the Stearns, one of said complainants, that the above named deA DIES' P L A I N AND GLOVE K I D H E E L E D
aod completion of fortifications and works of national de- land it would sw>h be taken op, and good farms would fendant, Mary Jane Louisa Durosa is not a resident of this
Congress
Boots,
Lasting
Congress
Boots, Side Lace and
State, oa inotiouof E.C. Hinsdale,Solicitor for complainants,
fence within the botmdsriea of Maine, or for the protect- soon bo made oi» the, whole routfe. I would here say it Is ordered that tbe said defendant Mary Jane Louisa Du- Front Lace Boots, Ballmorai Boots, assorted glij$tr», Bch-,
of (he pure streams of' water between Northport and ress cause her appearance in thin cause to be entered within hers, Cork Boles, 4Q.
ion of her harbors and coasts.
HANNAH, LAY 4 CO:
three months from the date of this order ; and that in case of
Traverse City, Oct 1,1891.
City, that ."{V 'A .
her appearance she cause her answer to the said complainant's
OEDKKOKTO ST- LOUIS.—In General Orker N o 26 of
No clearer streams through richer valleys shine.
bill to be tiled, and a copy thereof to be served on the comRASS KETTLES, PORCELAIN LINED KETTLES.^plalnant's Solicitor w-ithin twenty days after service of a
the Adjutant-General of Illinois*.dated Eob. 20th, which
Nor drinks the Lake a purer wave than thine.
Chess Metr, Cocoa Castorlnc, Pointed Tape Trimming.
copy ofsald bill and notice of tnis order, and in default Magic Ruffiing, Breakfast Betta—for 25 cents each, Rarora,
OLT> SETTLER.
relates to vacating Camp Dpijgla^ Chicago, for the rethereof, that the said bill be taken as confessed by tbe aaid
C
Defendant, Mary Jane Louisa Duross.
liANNAH, LAV 4 CO.
Gordon, the slaver captain, was duly hung in New
And
it
is
ruither
ordered
that
within
twentv
days
the
said
Trave e City, OcL 1,1861.
;n
"The Twenty-third lnfsntryr^ol. James, A. Mulligan,
York on tho 21st This is the first case where the law Complainants cause a copy of this order io be published in
will procecd immediately by railroad to St. Ixiuis."
tho Grand Traverse Herald, a paper printed and published in
LOTHING.—COAT8. PANTS. V<E8TP, DRAWER?.
declaring the African slave trade piracy has been en- Traverse City, In said County of Grand Traverse, and that
Under bhirts, Shirts— Fsitey and Plain. 6usp«nd«r>.
the
said
publication
bo
continued
In
saii
paper,
at
least,
onto
Uver-AlU,
and
Jackets,
India
Rubber
and
Oil
Coats
and
The 8eaatij Committee on the District of Columbia re- forced. '••m. •
in each week for six successive weeks, or that they canse a Jackets, Wool, Union and Cottioh Socks, Cravato, Collar'.
ported a Wit for the emancipation of all the sWveu in the
Bugs, Trunks, Umbrellas, 4c,
Secretary Stanton has issued an order thanking Gen. copy oTthisordor to be personally served on the said defendant,
Mary
JanfS
Louisa
Duross,
at
least,
twenty
day*
before
HANNAH,
LAY
4
CO.
District of Columbia, with compensation tqloyal masters. Lander for his energy i t driving the rebels out of that
tho time above prescribed for herappearanre.
City, Oct. 1,1861.
-Tile biU providod for the app6intme(it of eomtni'ssioDers section of Virginia under his military jurisdiction.
P. J. LlTTLICJnHN, Circuit Judge.
FiOVISIONS, .GBOCEXIKS, 4c.—firoa*. Tm,'Ctfrp*•
Dated January 18,18C2.
who are to make proper assessment's.
Spices. Candles, Soap, common and erSalre;
It ia confidantly asserted tbatihe rebels are evacuating
1 certify that the above Is a true ropy of an order made In
Mustard,English and French prepared;
TFIERON" BOSTtVICK.
An official despatch from Gen. Hallock to McClellan. Colnmbus, fey., and that our forces are preparing to od- said canse.
Soda, Croajn Tartar, Ginger. Baking Powder, * r
Register in Chancery.
Salaratus, StarcK VemiaceUi, Hops,
states thst'Pricc has been driven from Missouri, and vance upon Memphis. >
Dated Feb. 3, 1802.
10-6w*
Tobacco, Snuff, Garden Seeds,
•that our forces are pushing his retreating army into ArBag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt, Gltie, Alujn,
In Congress the Senate refused to concur in the House
Lamp and Lard Oil, Castor Oil.
CHANCERY SALE.
kansas, oi^turing prisoners ami stores. The flag of the
Indigo. Yellow Ocbre^Chalk, Camwood,
amendments to tbp lej^l tender bill and a committee of STATE of Michigan—In the Circnit Court for tho County
.Uniooisagaiu floating over Arkansas,
Fluid, Molasses, Syrup, Vinegar,
j.
of (Jrand Traverse, In Chancery.
conference was appointed.
Beans. Pork, Meal. Flour, Oatmeal, Feed, Bran, .»
Sarah Parker, complainant against Ira A. Parker, Otis IBeef, Hams and Shoulders, Codfish,
.

The Tribune's despatch says; •• In well informed
Bowling Qreeu, Ky., has been evacuated by the rebels, White and -lames M. Burbeck, defendants. By virtue and In,
Hard
Bread,
Butter
Crackers,
Ijird,
, .
pursuance of a decree ofsald Court in said cause, bearing"
eles here U is positively ask«rtijd that Gen,'Fremont has oud is now in possession of General Mitchell.
Extract Lemon, Vaailli Rose. Peach.Pine -tpple/|f.
date the twentieth day of August, In the year 1861, I, the
HANNAH, LAY 4 CO.
'been fully [vindicated of all th-e charges brought against
subseribe^circuit Court Commissioner in and for said
Travorae City. Oct. 1,1861.
U
A strong UpioD feeling is reported to exist at Bich- county ol Grand Traverse, will expose for sale at public
lhis conduit of Missouri by the vote of the joint commitAuction to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the third day of •II f l S C E L L A N E O r s ITEMS.—Tarruto Gocass TO*
.
t e e of investigation. A highly important comniand is inond, 'Th<''
May next, at one o'clock in the afternoon, at the Conrt ROOBI l l i Sugar making—Ladies" and Ceius" Pkates,' «Morted—
l
In the village of Traverse City, in the said county, of Grand Door Spring*—Plane Irons—Bevels—-TTT} Square*—Hollow
Special to thcjCWCi»goJ+ib '®S
v4pdicated for him in the far We*"t. j
^ORT DOMKLSOX, Pebr If.—'IVO more regiments were Traverse, tho following described parcels of land, to wit : Adzes, Bed Pan—Kerosene Lantern,*" Olive Crocks—Well
Aspecilddespatch, Washiogton l 9th, saysQen. Ulysses c a p t u ^ to^aJCtoLthe ^nst of the. cntreuchments, and a Lot No. one of section twenty-si t, in township thirty-two Bnc'iets—Pot Cover?—Sm»ll BUick^—Ratiine—Spring BalNorth of Range eleven West, and the South-east one-fourth ances—Patent Carpet l.Tnlnif—Ladles' Rnl.berBootFr^Bee*,8. Grtnt, the btfroofFort Ddn^lsoo, hasboenhnunimous- number of rebel troops have come iu aud delivered them- of section twenty-three, in township thirtv-two North of wa.\—'irand River Land Plaster—Grass Peed, 4c., 4e." "
HANNAH. LAY 4 CO.
,ly confirmed as a Mmor-Geoeral by the Senate, an honor selves up. About 12,000 stand of small arms have been Range eleven West, situated in the township of Leelanau.
County of Leelanau, (attached to Grand Traverse County)
Traverse City, Oct. J, 186U
»'0W
Hconferred in t«timcry of hfsgallant c'o.Tlact in battle. taken. Many of thet rebel troops destroyed their arms, State of Michigan.
ami a large number frcrc thrown into'the river.
ANKER NOTIONS..—PERFVWETtY,SOAFBfjftw
Dated February twenty-first, A. D. 1802.
trittce, Gun Oapa Companaea. Snuff and Tobacco 8«j*ea.
C. 1L HOLDEN, Circuit Court Commissioner for the
A special to theTribonc, dated Cairo, 6ays only twenty'
Fancy Pipes, 8ilvr snd Toy H'atchcs,-Psney Boxes, 'Parte*
County of Grand Traverse.
remain of Company G. Eleventh Illinois, v h o were not
and Money Bags, Indies', \>'ork and Fancy Baskets. T»We
C. II. MARSH, Solicitor for Complainant.
Mats.Brtuhcli oT nil kind?, Guards. Chains. Ac.
lS-7w
Wiled wotftdeo or niisaing-, of the regiment u.it more than
a wocLDtfiYTO TH* Pnauc, TUAT WE HAVB GOT ora
HANNAH, Jf#t 4 C£.
,OM houdred and forty effective men (are left
Traverse City. Oct. 1,1861.

^jmSesS

F U L L & OOMPLETK

W

Best Markets & Lowest Rates

F A L L AND W I N T E R

D

S

W

SUtorntjr anil Comtstllor u( %ato,

B

T
L

B

C

P

NOTICE.

The Canadian journals say that Parliament will be
.convoked early in March, to provide for . the system of
.defeasesiiwommended by the Imperial Military Commis.sinners.'
*•
;

G R I S T

M I L L

,in operation, aod are od baad to do Custom-Work at all
timed; and would say, we think that we can do as good work
as any Mill in Grand Traverse. If voa doobt It, try us, an<5
ao^ for. yourselves; and would say, that we keep ou r

T A N N E R Y

.TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,

W I L L I A M

F O A V L E ,

Pall Kettles, Tin Ware-U complete lino—SO, 30,
60 gallon Kettles. ^
'
HANNAH, LAY 4 CO»
Traverse City,»0ct-1, 1861.
41

* ftool ib n6w higher than
has ,beeo for. forty-four in operation, and T a n on Share*—is osnal!
ED8TRADS^-TABLER, t-HATRS, ROCKEBS. WASH
H I S O L D E S T A I J I J I S H B D U O T E L , , T H K FIRST
I
'
'
C. NORRlS A BROTHERS, j
Stands, Mattrasses, Child's Bbcktrs, High Chairs. 4e.
•yearn., This Is owine to-the large demand for armygoods,
in Traverse Clty,~> situated oicFront Street, in the viein-'
Jtauary IT, I88t.'
, '
8-ly ity of the Court House snd publi: office*, is mill #pen for tbe TraverseCity. Oct. 1.18«L
HANNAH, LAYAgo.
and to^tk^advapccil prices of sotton.
reception of tho traveling jiubllc. The Proprietor returns
W e w , n
ATO
PTwcnty-fiw •five Cents i his hearty thaoks for the liberal )>*tronage he has received, I f A C K E R E L , ToKGi E.'i <k Sor>'ns,.PassiavjD ***•«
Mr. 8eirard is reported to haye said that he saw Indi- i j V / » / V «•»<•—' aplcce for five Copies of No.
No. SO, Vol. Iand assures the pubtle that no putnswtU tv spared to make i > | fruit, assorted Pickles, Pie-frulUj Oysters, Sasdjae*
3,
(Jtone
28,
ltWl.VoftM
Graad
Traverse
Herald,
ti
—Id, (to perfect his guests comfortable. His charges will 'correspond
with Cigars.
r
cations, id Great Britain and Europe, of a reaction favor,



•1
Pllea They must t)c in a good state of preservation, I «»;»,i_u. ! •
SUA? H A N N A H L A T
able to JJiia Government.
{Herald Office, Traverac City, Dep. 1^, 1861,4
TraverseCity Oct. 1. 1861

T

B

1'

NEW

Life Fills and Phoenix Bitters.

jt ,
BT QKO. * . BCTH, ik.
tfne m o r n i n g u fee rising day
S h o n e f r o m tbe bleat oelestial akiea*
H w e n ' a loveliest a a g e l stole a w a *
' Dpw&rroathe-ga&ofParadis*

T

At e v e n i n g as m y r o v i n g feet
T u r n e d f r o m the b w y wwrld aside,
I . d u n c c d t h a t boanteous one t o n» ~
' • w u t t a l angel f o r j A b r i d s .

STORE

P E N S I O N S
AND

N E W G O*O D S ,7

HESE MIDICINES H A V E NOW BEEN BEFORE T H E
publlo f o r a period of t h i r t y j e a n , and d u r i n g that time
h a v e m a i n t a i n e d a high c h a r a c t e r in almost every p a r t of the
globs, f o r t h e i r e x t r a o r d i n a r y a a d immediate power of res t o r i n g p e r f e c t health t o p e r s o n s suffrrin g n n d e r nearly every
C o r n e r of W a k a x o o a n d N a g o a a b e 8 U . ,
k i n d of disease to whieh the human f r a m e is liable.
Tbe following are a m o n g the d i s t r e s s i n g variety of h u m a n
diseases in which the V e g e t a b l e L i f e M e d i c i n e s are well
k n o w n t o be Infallible:
D r a r a n i a , by th o r o u g h ly c l e a n s i n g t h e first and second
stomachs, a n d c r e a t i n g a flow of pure, h e a l t h y bile, instead
of the stale a a d acrid k i n d ; Flatulency, Loss of Appetite, T H E SUBSCRIBER H A S J U S T R E C E I V E D H I S WINTER
H e a r tb u r n , Headache, Restlessness, Ill-Temper, Anxiety, Lan8 T 0 C K , CONSISTING O F
ior, a n d Melancholy, which are the general symptoms of
yspepsia, will vanish as a natural conaoqaance of its core.
OOSWVSKBSS, by o l e a a s i n g the whole length of the intestines with a solvent process, a n d without violence; all violent p u r g e s leave the bowels costivo w i t h i n two days.
F a v s a s of all k i n d s , by r e s t o r i n g t(io blood t o a r e g u l a r
circulation, t h r o u g h the process of respiration in some cases
and t h e t h o r o u g h f o l a u o n of all i n t e s t i n a l obstruction in

f a n O M Couple.
.•
• | F r « » t b e S s a F r a n c i s c o Mirror.
" T h e following aomowhat r e m a r k a b l e narative is related
b y a w e s t e r n lady, n o w o a a v i s i t t o tbi$ c i t y f r o m M a r i p o a a S h e j r l j e r a e i r a character. S h e has crossed t h e
p l a i o s £ w i c e — f i r s t in 1 8 4 9 d a r i n g w h i c h h e r h u s b a n d
p e r U K e d — a n d j* t h e first A m e r i c a n lady, w h o r e t u r n e d t o
/ — T S e e a s t b y t h e w a y o f t h e I s t h m u s of P a n a m a
8 h e is
a y n n i n a h e r o i n p — a fine s p e c i m e n df s t o a t - h e a r t e d
w e s t e r n w o m a n h o o d — a n d h e r a d v e n t u r e s in t h e w i l d s of
the unpeopled west have been numerous a n d exciting,
\
g o o d p o o p l e o l M a r i p o s a h a v e missed a lady f r o . . .
t h w r neighborhood, they a r e hereby apprised t h a t she is
R f c n f i j r t a w y l o c a t e d n t t h e b o a r d i n g h o u s e of M r s . N e s bi^, o n t h e c o r n e r Of M o n t g o m e r y a n d S u t t e r s t r e e t s , a n d
w a r n o t r e t u r n t o t b e m o u n t a i n s u n t i l H o l m e s , of t h e
( f c z e t t e , oeasos t o h a r r o w t h « h e a r t s ' o f M a r i p o s a mothM s b y c a l i n g t h e i r little b a b i e s " b r a t s . "
7 W e l l , w h i l e t h e j e a i n of w h i c h t h i s l a d r w a s a m e m b e r w a s f D c a m p c n a t JI p o i n t e n t h o H a m b o l t , w h e r e t h e
• w o
tratf-tttereects" t h e C a r s o n t r a c k of t r a v e l , s h e
v i s i t e d t h a i t e n t of a family, c o n s i s t i n g of a n elderly c o u p l e
a n d o n e c h i l d — a d a u g h t e r o f f o u r t e e n o r fifteen y e a r s . —
T h e o l d l a d y w s s s i t t i n g on a p i l e of b l a n k e t s , u n d e r t h e
c a n v a s e n c o u r a g i n g a m o s t d e t e r m i n e d a t t a c k of t h e
" • < $ * " ! While t h e m a s c u l i n e h e a d of a f f a i r s h a d p l a n t e d
h i m s e l f o n bis w o o d e n t o n g u e , a n d w a s s u c k i n g h i s p i p e
•as leisurely a s t h o u g h h e e x p e c t e d t o r e m a i d t h e r e forever. . A single glance developed the fact t h a t t h e r e was
a difficulty in t h a t little t r a i n of o n e w a g o n a n d t h r e e p e r sona, a n d t h a t i t h a d a t t a i n e d a q u i e t d e s p e r a t i o n b e y o n d
t h e reach of p e a c e f u l a d j u s t m e n t : T h r e e d a y s b e f o r e
they h a d pitched their teut a t the forks of the road, and
ai t h e y cohld not agree upon the route by which to enter
California, t h e r e they had remained. T h e husband expressed a p r e f e r e n c e f o r t b e C a r s o n r o a d — t h e wife f o r
t h e L e s s e n — a n d n e i t h e r would y i e l d . T h e wife d e c l a r e d
" h e w o u l d remain t h e r e all w i n t e r ; t h e h u s b a n d said h o
stjould b e p l e a s e d t o l e n g t h e n t h e s o j u r n t h r o u g h t h e

B

D R V

...
. . . . Inflammation f r o m the muscles and ligam e n t s of the joints.
" s o m a s of all kinds, by f r e e i n g a n d s t r e n g t h e n i n g the
leys a n d M a d d e r : they operate most delightfully on these
i m p o r t a n t o/gans, a n d hence have ever been f o u n d a ccrtain
r e m e d y f o r t b e w o r s t c s w s of GrsveL
Also WORMS, by dislodging f r o m the t u r n i n g s of the bowls t h e slimy m a t t e r to which t h e s e c r e a t u r e s adhere.
SCPKVX, u l c e r s a n d I n v e t e r a t e S o r e s : by the perfect p.urity
which t h e s e Life Medicines give t o tbe blood and all the ha-

G O O D S ,

Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
Whloh he oflera c h e a p f o r Cash or B a r t e r .
• C. DAVIDSON, Agent.
N o r t h port, December 1,1861.
4tf

P. S—CASH PAID FOR FURS.

JACKSON & W I L E Y ,
I R O N <fc B R A S S

FOUNDERS

s t a t e of w h i c h occasions all eruptive complaints, sallow,
*'oudy, and other disagreeable complexions.
The use of the*e Pills f o r a very s h o r t time, will effet
e n t i r e cure ot Salt Rheum, a n d a s t r i k i n g i m p r o v e m e n t in
the c l e a r n e s s of the skin. C o m m o n Colds a n d Influenza will
C o r n e r of F i f t h A W o o d b r i d g e S t r e e t s ,
always be c u r e d by one dose, or by two i n ' t b t worst cases.
P i t « » — T h e o r i g i n a l p r o p r i e t o r of these Medicines w
cured of Piles of 36 y e a r s s t a n d i n g , by t h e use of the Life
Medicines alone:
PKVEB AND A o u s — F o r t h i s s c o u r g e of the Western Country, these Medicines will be found a safe, speedy, a n d ccrtain
remedy. O t h e r m e d i c i n e s leave t b e system s u b j e c t to a re- T ^ T E ARE MANUFACTURING AND ARE P R E P A R E D
i i
«° furnish, a t a h o r t n o t i c e , High P r e s s u r e ar\d Condenst u r n of the disease—a cure by these medicines is p e r m a n e n t
ing Engines, for Stationary. Marine and Mining purposes, of
— t r y them, be satisfied, and be cured.
the most approved c o n s t r u c t i o n .
BILIOUS FBVSBS a n d U T I I COMPLAINTS—Oeneral Debit!We invite especial a t t e n t i o n t o o n r C o n d e n s i n g Engines,
. . L o s s of Appetite and Diseases of Females—the Medicines
particularly adapted for F l o u r i n g Mills, and o t h e r p u r p o s e s
have been used with tbe W s t beneficial results in cases of
this d e s c r i p t i o n : K i n g ' s Evil and Scrofula in Its worst f o r m s where economy of Fuel a n d regularity of motion are so in- i e l d to tbe mild y e t powerful action of these remarkable dispensable. The c o n d o n s i n g a p p a r a t u s for these e n g i n e s
ledlcines. N i g h t Sweats, N e r v o u s Debility, N e r v o u s Com- is of the most simple a n d durabie k i n d . These c o n d e n s i n g
p l a i n t s of all kinds, P a l p i t a t i o n of the Heart, P a i n t e r ' s CUo- i g i n c s insure t o Mines for P u m p i n g , o r f o r w o r k i n u S t a m p
His, the greatest econdmy in tael.
lie. 1 are speedily cured.
Our facilities f o r tilling o r d e r s f o r M i n i n g Mschinery a r e
P e r s o n s whose c o n s t i t u t i o n s are impaired by t h ^ injudic i o u s u s e of Mercury, w i l l , find these m e d i c i n e s a p e r f e c t unsurpassed. Our P a t t e r n s embrace the l a r g e s t variety of
cure, as they n e v e r fall t o e r a d i e o t e f r o m t h e system all tho p a a i p s , s h e a v e * , g e a r i n g : a n d s t a m p i n g m a c h i n e r y ,
<xc.t of the most approved c o n s t r u c t i o n .
eflTects of Mercury, m u c h s o o n e r t h a n the m o s t powerful preW e would call particular a t t e n t i o n to our assortment of
p a r a t i o n s of Sarsaparilia.
T a t t e r n s for P u m p s with P l u n g e r Lifts, r a n g i n g from t t o 16
W. B. MOFFAT.
inches diameter. Our combined B u c k e t a n d p l u n g e r pumps,
i. .
335 Broadway, New York;
s u p p l y i n g S t a m p i n g Machinery with water, a n d for other
F o r Bale by all Druggists.
^
39-ly
s, give the m o s t perfect satisfaction.
>ur a s s o r t m e n t of G e w l n g , np to 12 feet d i a m e t e r , e n a b l e s
N E W R E M E D I E S FOI{
to meet o r d e r s f o r heavy or l i g h t Gearing, a t the she
notice. W h i m s h e a v e s f r o m 1 t o 6 roet diameter. M « u u f a c t u r c r s o f J I o d g e ' s p a t e n t s t a m p s . Oil Still Machinery,
of t h o m b s t approved c o n s t r u c t i o n ; B u i l d i n g work, I r o a
Fronts, Cblumns, Caps, Ac., Ac.,; Hlnminated Title for SideT T O W A R D ASSOCIATION, P M L A D E L F H I A . A BE- walks a n d Areas : I r o n F e n c e * Verandahs, 8tairs, Ac. *
J L L nevoleui I n s t i t u t i o n established by special E n d o w m e n t,
W e are aole licensees for P a t e n t F e n c i n g — p r i c e s v a r y i n g
forltbe Belief of the S i c k a b d d i s t r e s s e d afflicted with Viru- from 7 S c e n t s to $ 5 p e r f o o t T b e l a r g e s t asftortaient of F e n c e
lent and C h r o n i c Diseases, and especially for t h e Cure of P a t t e r n s in t h o State,
^
Diseases of the S e x u a l O r g a n s .
* Sole A g e n t s f o r G i l f o r d ' s B o n e r I n j e c t o r , which supM E D I C A L A D Y l C E j r i v e n gratis. By the a c t i n g Surgeon.
plies Boilers with water, w i t h o u t t b e use of P u m p * e r other
VALUABLE REPORTS on S p e r m a t o r r h o e a , and other Di- machinery, w h e t h e r the e n g i n e i s at r e s t or in motion.
seases of t h e W u a l Organs, a n d o n t h e NEW REMEDIES
B r a s s c o m p o s i t i o n c a s t i n g s f u r n i s h e d nt s h o r t n o t i w .
emploved in t f $ Dispensary, s e n t i n sealed letter envelopes, BLACKSKIVHINO of all kinds. PATMRNS made t o order. Estifree of c h a r g e . Two or three S t a m p s for postage acceptable. mates, P l a n s a n d Specifications furnished wben desired.
Address, DR. J . 8 K I L L I X HOUGHTON, H o w a r d Association,
j S y O r d e r s from abroad f i l l meet with p r o m p t l t t e n t l o o .
Not 2, Sf N i n t h St., Philadelphia, P a .
28—ly

M A C H I N I S T S ,

Dflrtil, Sicilian, awsito MacLioc Shop 4 Michuna Central
Bail Load Companj.

SPERMATORRHOEA.

M

^ . ,
D e t r o i t , Ang. 18, 18C1.

Both .re lhing wilt 4 , | P dughler m
J o n s and Brown were taBrinir lately of a vonncr n W

M SMKSS

&

miu mentioned in . eertoin

Petrt.lt, Aug. 1&, 18eir
11

.

• •

a n d Milwaukee H. R. Depot.

T ^ H E DETHOrr STOVE WORKS—GAN80N A
J . COMPANY. T h o undbraigned are p r e p a r e d t o receive
o r d e r s f o r t h e m a n u f a c t u r e of e v e r y variety of h e a t i n g and
c o o k i n g s t o v e s ; also, coal stoves f o r s t o r e s a n d offices.
These stoves are m a d e from tho latest and m o s t approved
p a t t e r n s , a n d will be solfl a t wboleaaie or retail. T h e attention of city a n d c o u n t r y dealers i s especially invited a a J
shall sell c h e a p e r t h a n they can buy in E a s t e r n m a r k e S T
Office, 180 W o o d w a r d Avenue.

.

° A N 8 0 N *j£?y



to light contain

rff

w M c h i s b e i n g offered a t p r i c e s A 8 T 0 N 1 8 H I N G L Y LOW
a n d w h i c h m u s t be sold Within SO t o 60 da}-*, t o n a k e room'
r o r a heavy S p r i a g a n d Bummer Stock, BOW being manufac5 ^ ' , A " ' n * a n t of scjasonahle c l o t h i n g , wfll do well t o
168
S K D ™ ? " ' 1 ' " ' ' * "
'^fiSONAVEf r
? " , e i 8 c o r r t Ik G u u c a o s a ' R e p o r t of F a a W w » _
J u * r e c e i v e d — f o r sprinjTand s u m m e r of 1861.

Prtrott. A,g. 1^ 18all

n i j 5 . i l Ti i

rt

Ul[

tb.t tbe
™ tbe control

" " ' " " M . !

* 0 « G A N BATES,

Mc<M

"" • N O T A R Y P U B L I C ,
EUrald

Offloe, T r a v r a n o City Mioh.

oaaics KEIMK i COMPASYS
-

I R O N <fc B R A S S
F O U N D R Y
AVD

MACHINE SHOP,
,

C I T Y , I). Ci

Revolutionary. Naval, Invalid and Half-pay P e n s i o n s and
Bounty Land procured for those e a t i t M L
Claims of
Military and Naval officers, S u t l e r s , C o n n a c t o r s , Ac..attended
t o before the p r o p e r d e p a r t m e n t s . A r r e a r s of Pay a n d p e n
aions, and Prise-money obtained. P a t e n t s procured f o r In
v e c t o r s ; L a n d W a r r a n t s bought, sold a n d l o c a t e d : old Laod
P a t e n t s a n d L e a d Claims purchased, and titles t o land g r a n t
ed f o r military services, investigated aad prosesutad.
Pensions procured f o r wounded and disabled soldier?, sea
men, and marines of t h e p r e s e n t v a r . a n d for widows a n d or
phan children of t h o s e w h o have d i r t c r been killed while in
service. Also, Bounty money a a d a i r e a r s of pay for ti»
widows or o t h e r heirs of deceased soldiers.
Pensions.
R x v o t m o * Asr.—Officer* and soldiers of the W a r of th*
Revolution who s e r v e d six m o n t h s o r more, a a d t b e widow*
of those who s o served, are entitled t o I'can ions.
HALS-PAT.—The widows, o r if no widows, tbe children nnd e r sixteen y e a r s o f s g e , of officers snd soldiers of the p r e s e n t
or s n y previous wsr, who have died or been kilted Whit* in
t h e service, are entitled t o baif-pay Puagions.
INVALID.—All officers a n d soldiers whto are disabled by
reason of w o u n d s received or disease contracted w h i l e in the
service a n d in the line of duty, as a soldier, a t any period, a n
entitled t o Invalid Pensions.
any p e n o o . nre
NATAI—AH officers, p e t t y officers, seataen, a a d marines of
the nsvy, who are disabled by reason of wounds received in
service, s r e entitled to P e n s i o n s . Also the widowsor o r p h a n
children of those who a r t killed o r d i e of wonnda received l a
the service aad fa the Ii6e of daty.
Bounty Land.
All p e r s o n s w h o served fourteen days In tbe Revolution.
W a r of 1811 Mexican War, Whisky i n s u r r e c t i o n . Arostook
w ar, Canadian F r o n t i e r Disturbances, or i n s a y of the I n d i a n
W a r s since J790, ere entitled t o l e o a c r e s ol B o a a t y
and all w h o s e r v e d less than fourteen days are entitled, if t h e y
were engaged in any battle or skirmish, or w i n o a t h e m a r c h
for the purpose of e n g a g i n g in a battle.
Where a soldier who served as above i s dead, bis widow, or
no widow, bin child or children w h o were n n d e r t w e a t v - o o s
£ears of age oa the 3rd of March, 1K55, are untitled t o Bounty

Bounty Boaey.
Tbe heirs of all soldiers who h s v e volunteered d a r i n g tho
resent war, for. two or t h r e e years, o r d a r i n g the w a r
id bave died or been killed white in the * e r v i c * a i e e n t i t l e *
> $100 Bounty money a n d such arrears of tbe soldier's n o y
as may have accrued to t b e dates of their death.
H e will be pleased t o correspond w h h those w h o d e s i r e t »
engage in obtaining these claims. H e w i l l send t h e m all n e cessary forms and Instructions, and make s, deduction of
we-haJf from his w u a l fees. To' h i s regular c o r r e s p o n d e n t *
be will send, d n r i a v the c o n t i n u a n c e of tbe war, lists of killed,
• n d wounded s a d deceased soldiers of Compsnles raised in
t h e i r viclaity, a a d keep tbem> advised of aU laws ' a n d d e e t siona relating t o claims.
There are on H e in the d e p a r t m e n t s many suspended s a d
rejected claims for P e n s i o n s or B o a a t y Land, which, if urn
perly attended t o by a c o m p e t e n t s o e a t in Washington, «ouM
be toeceaafnlly prosecuted. He wilt bo pleased to t a k e c h a s g e
or s u c h claims for-ctsimants or t h e t r attorneys, a n o n e o n i i a
g e n t fees. His charges, if successful, will be moderate, a n d
none made in any ease unlesa a P e n a i o n or L a n d W a r r a n t I s
p r o c u r e d . H a v i n g a large n u m b e r of rolls a n d r e c o r d s of
service la t h e New York, Pennsylvania, V l r g i a i n a n d / O h i »
V o l u n t e e r s and Milhia of tho W a r of M J , s a d of the Regular
A r m y a n d Kentucky V o l u n t e e r s of the I n d l a a v s r s of 1790—
TMJie i s specially p r s p a r e d to prosecute claims f o r s a a h a t r
P s r t l c u l s r attention given t o e k H a e b e f o r e t h e G o s e r s l
l a n d O f f i c e , u n d e r the Pre-emption, Swamp Land a n d G r a d u ation Acts, and to the a d j u s t m e n t of Private L a n d C l a i m s L a a d P a t e n t s . Duplicate P a t e n t s and Exemplification o r t h .
r e c o r d s a n d files obtained tax locators, pre-emplors a a t f
others. Claims s r i f i n g f r o m c o n t e s t i n g s n t r i e s attended 'toa t the General L a a d office for Claimaata or t h e f r a t t o r n e y * .
All persons h a v i n g c l a i m s of any kind npon t h e Govern
mcnt, or w h o believe they have claims, and all w h o have o l «
or dlspntcd titles t o Western Lands n r i s f n g from l l f l f t s r v
Land g r a n t s or otherwise ; also t h e h e i r s of s l l soldiers o f
the Regal ar A r m y in t h e W a r ef 1812, who served u n d e r enlistments for "five y e a r s " or " d u r i n g the war," anid the h e i r s
of soldiers of tbe T e x a s Revoiation of IMC, are requested t o
address h i m . No c h s r g e for! his services wUl be made in a n y
case, unless a claim is sncccssfaHy prosecuted:
He refers to Members of Cbngress, O f f i n n or G o v e r n m e n t
and o t h e r s who h a v e r e s i d e d in Washington d u r i n g t h e lMt
F i f t e e n y e s r s ; and when desired, will name s p e c i a l r e f e r e n —
any State or TerrltoiT.
Address—
*
C H A R L E S C. TUCKER,
W a s h i n g t o n , D. C.

*"«•"
O n Atarater Street,

Just above the Detroit aiul Milwaukee
H. It. Depot.
DTCTROIT— IvnCHIGAJS-.

A

Land

and Patent Agent,

Ready-Made Clothing,

e Rheumatism

C.
C. "TUCKER,
for Claimants, Pension, B o m t y

W A S H I N G T O N

BOOTS AND SHOES,

ittramer following.
i On the morning of the fourth day, the wife broke a
__ sullen silence of thirty-six hours by proposing a division
~ »f the property, which consisted of two yoke Of cattle,
N>ce wagoo, and camp furniture, a smalT quantityof provisions, and 812 losilver. j The proposal was excepted,
sad forthwith the ptnuder was divided, leaving the wagon
to the old man, and tbe daughter to the mother. The
latter exchanged with u neighboring train the cattle belonging to her. for a pony and pack saddle, and piling the
daughter and her portion of the divided spo|l upon the
animal, sheresolutelystarted across the "deiert by the
lessen trail, wbifc tie old man silently yoked tie cattle
aad took the other route. Singular as this may seem, it
is nevertheless true It is among the many • occurrences
oflife/tranger than action. Orcourte both parties reached Oftfornla in safety. We-say <'of Course,^ for it
to scarcely possible that any obstacle, death included,
could have wriously interfered with the progress ofstuborooeea so sublime. Arriving at Sucramedto with her
daughter, the old lady readily found employment—for
women were less plenty than now, and subsequently opened
A Y H E W 8 PRACTICAL BOOK-KEEPING.
RCVISED Emnoif.—fThia work e m b r a c e s Single- a n d
a boardio# house, and in a few years amassed a handsome
E n t r y , C o m m e r c i a l Calcnlations, a n d the Philogophv
fortunes Two years ago she went to San Francisco, and Doubly
and Morals of Business.
the daughter, whose education had not been neglected. ^ I t is e x a c t l y w h a t i t s n a m e indicates, a n d should be in
WM married to one ofthe most Bubstantialiitizpns.
>mmon use in every s c h o o l . "
( J o u r n a l of E d u c a t i o n .
What has become of the old man t Tho wife had not •JDnsnrpassed in s i m p l i c i t y a n d pcrspicuitv, and sufficientseen or beard of him sioce they parted on the Hnmbolt ly lull to p r e p a r e the nupil f o r a n y d e p a r t m e n t of business."
. Havon, in ZIon's Herald, Boston.
They had li ved happily together as man and wife for ••The c h e a p e s t a n[dD rbest
w o r k on Bookkeeping we h a v e
years, and she somctimos reproached herself for the wil- o v e r s e e n . "
[Michigan Farmer.
fulness that seperated them after so long a pilgrimage to- " T h e c h a p t e r on the P h i l o s o p h y a n d Morals of Business,
gether through this rough life. But he waa not dead.— is well w o r t h the p r i c e of t h e book t p atty business m a n . "
[ P r e s t o n ' s U. 8, B a n k Note Reporter.
Ws cannot tfaee his course in California, however. All
a deserved f a v o r i t e a m o n g stfldents, and the
that »e know of him to that fortune had not smiled upon m pTr ohveewmoernkt sIsnow
i n t r o d u c e d will go fir to Increase i u
for
y ° a ? h e h f t d tolled without hope.— p o p u l a r i t y . "
[Detroit T r i b u n e .
of scarcely able to longer wiqld the pick
F o r sale by
RAYMOND A LAPHAM.
J8.ly
and shovel, be visited San Francisco, in the hope of ob- D e t r o i t , T u g . 15,1861.
taining employment hotter adapted to his wasted strength.
For three months heremainedidle after arriving here.
aM then for want of occupation became the humble re
Trade, t h a t they h a v e on band a v e r y full" and"
taiterofpeanuta aad oranges, with bis entire stock of aCity
s s o r t m e n t of B l a n k B o o k s , S t a t i o n e r y a n d P a p e r ,
trafice in a basket upon his arm. This was about six Wholesale a n d Retail, t o which t h e y Invite inspection by parmonths ago. A few weeks since, in passing the open ties who desire t o purchase. We feel c o n f id e n t we can give
dwrof a cottage in the southern part of the city, he ob- p e r f e c t s a t i s f a c t i o n in g e o d s a n d prices.
m o s t complete BOOK BINDERIES in
wsited a bdyiu the hall, and sloped to offer his merchan- 9We h8atv e one a of the
f ' ^ ? n . T 5 . r e , , . w e ^ t 0 uianufacture to order any a n d
dise. As he stepped upon the threshold, the lady ap- all,, -T
styles of Blank BookA Newspapers, Music Books and Peproached, and the old roan raised his eyes and dropped n q d l c a l a , bound a n the s h o r t e s t notice, in the latest style of
i A a d 00 wonder cith«wf 0 r she was his wife
RICHMOND A BACKUS.
—his •' oM "woman 1" 8ho recognized him, and throwing
'
- -183 Jeflferson Avenue.
up her aims in amaaemcnt, exclaimed: " Great Ood! Detroit,
Aug. 16, 1881.
'
;
jg.|y
John, is that y o u r •• All that to left of me,"repliedthe
old man.-With extended arms they approached Suddenly the oW lady s countenance changed, eld she stepped
back. "John, said sho, with a lo4k which might have
variety of P a t t e r n s , f o r b u i l d i n g purposes, to
beeawustrowi itotoearnestness, "how did you find tbe hwahvi ci ha wlarge
e would Invite the a t t e n t i o n of builders.
road? Miserable, Suky—miserable," replied
V j . B. WILSON,
'' MI or rood and alkali!" "Then 1 was
F o o t of R a n d o l p h S t r e e t , n e a r D e t r o i t

— . — ; i . . I ,

Attorney

N O H T I E P O H T .

ant me t M i b t o o
___r
j r stsy to ended her*.
k may n o t And heaven's gate alone,
*" l) I m s y e n t ^ r with her t h e r e .

**—•

BOUNTY LAND.

AND

T T H E ABOVE ESTABLISHMENT ARE MANUFACt a r e d a n d furnished, on s h o r t notice, of t h e best stock,
a f t e r the most a p p r o v e d models, a n d in t h e m o s t t h o r o u g h
ID an
, °® r / 1 1 ' B h and Low Pressure S t a t i o n a r y Bteam Engines,
2 . r e V < < > , r . M f e S T O r e 8 U a m Knglnc«, p a r t i c u l a r l y adapted to F l o u r i n g M l l l v o r o t h e r ose» where g r e a t economy o f
Fuel is an object. Portable 8to*m E n g i n e s of all 8izoe,—
Railroad Work. Machine-Shop Tools a n d F i x t u r e s , Iron
Fences, > e r a n d a h s , Railing, S t a i r s a n d Balconies Ornamental Garden Chairs, all k i n d s of Iron Castings, Mining Mac h i n e r y of e v e r y description, Blast F u r n a c e a n d Roliing-Mill
Machinery Composition, Brass Castings, and F i n i s h e d work :
i n c l u d i n g Steam Whistles* Oil P u m p s a n d Globes, Oil Cuna
and Cocks, Steam Cocks, a n d Bibb's Gnage C o c k s oi different
patterns. Also, Mills, of. every kind, d r i v e n by s t e a m or * a ter, e m b r a c i n g F l o u r , G r i s t a n d Saw Mills, Gangs, large a n d
nony, *?.Ti latest i m p r o v e m e n t s ; Mulay, 8aah, Circular,
Lathe and S i d i n g Mills—all put u p r e a d y f o r use, w h e n desired, w h e t h e r at H o m e or abroad,
Also, r e p a i r i n g of all kinds of irork a n d Machinery, d o n e
with despatch and at low rates. AJ HO. Gearing and P a t t e r n s ,
of any s u e , n p to seven f e e t in di imeter, c u t by m e a n s or our
commodious a n d effective Gear C u t t i n g Machine.
Also,
P i a n ^ Drawings a n d Specifications for Machinery.
On application, a c i r c u l a r will, be sent gratia, con"
i c e s and further informatir
. a r l c a K e l l o g g 4c C o . ,
No. 236, A t water Street, Detroit.

G I F F "A R D ' 8
PATENT SELF-ACTING
W A T E B INJECTOR,
(For F e e d i n g B M e r a , y
MADK a r

WM.

Sole

S E L L E R S &c C O . ,
Manufactmren

and Litentta,

P1SSSIIVASU AV«H AID hi SIKtl, POWtriU.
J A C K S O N & WILEY,

Agents, fflimim aiti) «®at|inisl3.
C o r n e r of F i f t h A W o o d b r i d g e

Detroit, Micb.

THE INJECTOR is an a p p a r a t u s which-a>4y replace m o s t a d vantageously all the m e a u s h i t h e r t o used for supplying w a t e r
to Steam Boilers, w h e t h e r Stationary, Locomotive, A g r i c u l tural, or Msrine.
I t s application d o e s away e n t i r e l y with t i e necessity of
p u m p s for f e e d i n g boilers, a n d t h ? varioaa m o v e m e n t s for
w o r k i n g t h e m in all classes ot E n g i u e , and, f a fcet, w h e n ever a boiler is used a a d steam p r o d u c e d ; i t l« a a n d j a a c t t o
the boiler, a n d entirely i n d e p e n d e n t of t b e E u g f a s , s a d tn
p u t in operation by simply o p e n i n g c o n n e x i o n s w i t h t h o
B o i l e r ; s n d h a v i n g n o parts in motion, It i s n o t UafcU I n
- e a r , n o r otherwise t o get out of order.
The s i r e of t h i s a p p a r a t u s i s comparatively small, a n d t*r
application is r e n d e r e d especially easy by t h e f a c t t h a t H
can be placed In a n y position, vertical, horizontal, o r o t h e r
wise, n e a r to, or at a distance" from tbe Boiler, a a d a t a n y
reasonable h e i g h t above the level of the feed-water.
T h e a p p a r a t u s Is connected with the Boiler by t w o pipes,

Mich., nerrill Block,
ne l e a d i n g f r o m t h e i t e a m space, snd t h e o t h e r c o n d u c t e d
C o r n e r o l W o o d w a r d dc J e i f b r r o n A r e n u e .
t o the lowest convenient point of the water s p a c e ; ttwiU
>operatewith steam at any usual pressure, a a d i t w i f t supply
H E D I 8 T I T U T I 0 N FORMS O N E O P E I G H T C O L L E G E 8 itself f r o m the h o t well of a condensing Engine.
located in the f o l l o w i n g cities :—Detroit, New York
Philadelphia. Albany, BuKUo, Cleveland. Chicago A SL Louis.'
T h e a d v a n t a g e s t o be derived f r o m the ase of t h i a
A person h o l d i n g a s c h o l a r s h i p ' c a n a t t e n d . e i t h e r a t his
A p p a r a t o s a r e l—
option.
Terms.
1 s t — T h e s a v i n g of t h e first cost of all P u m p s , a a d t h o '
p a r t s to c o n n e c t t b c m with t h e E n g i n e a n d B o i l e d
S
<7
of reholmhln,
2nd.—The s a v i n g of t h o wear a n d tear of t h e s e pumps.
f o r full term. 8 a m e course for Ladies, $25
"
itfves s n d
Ma.).
T- <
.
S t u d e n t s to e n t e r s t a n y t i m e . A v e r a g e t i m e to c o m 1p l e t e
the course, t h r e e m o n t h s .

BRYANT & STRATTON'S
CHAIN Of IMJfflU,
M E R C A N T I L E
.
C O L L E G E S .
B r a n c h Located at Detroit,

T

• V . h n T . h e . v , e n a V . o n . o f t h ® 1 4 a>peratine of the w a t e r admitted i n t o t h e Boiler b y the Boiler by t h e steam n e e d , t h u s
p r e v e n t i n g any appreciable loos of b « t
6 t b ^ - T h o a d v a n t a g e of b e i n g a b l e t o supply Boilers w t t t o n t s e t t i n g the Steam E n g i n e in m o t i o n ; thus, in all e w e a
o b v i a t i n g the e x p e n s e and.wear a n d t e a r of Donkey P u m p i n r
U i e i r ' a p p S c a ^ ^ r d l D g * " t h c s d v a n t a g e s usually s o u g h t in

F o r f a r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o<a
n pie t call a ! Collegt
s e n d. f o r a - Chtalogue.
—- Fo
J
Ik ASKING P w c n s , i t is n e c e s s a r y t o s t a t e t h e s t e a m presl e t t e r s t a m p . Address. "
s u r e a n d n o m i n a l h o r s e p o w e r of Boiler, or t h e s t e a m pres, r ° ? T 4 N T 4 STRATTON. a t e i t h e r o f t h e above Citien.
(Cut t h i s o u t f o r f u t u r e r e f e r e n c e . )
1 3 . ] - sure s n d the q u a n t i t y of water required p e r htrar.
J<^ly

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