Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, April 10, 1863
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
1863-04-10
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
Relation
None
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
gth-04-10-1863.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
GRAND TRAVERSE HERALI).
VOL. V.
T R A V E R S E
C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 10.18B3.
CIJE (Snnti Crabcrst Bcrali, ^^From a forthcoming
N O . 11
C o m b a t B e t w e e n a Gorilla nnd a L i o n .
Turning a little to the left he made room for me to draw j the nature both of the < liallenge cud the adversary. I »<i
work entitled "Adventures lo many up alongside of him. and I then discovered that we had | to resolve upon fightm g. altliouzli it would have trf en
Lands."
reached the inner edge of the brushwood, nnd that a easy for bim to escape b y springing into 0 < r e e - " r " **
My black guide, whose movements were as noiseless clear space, forming a small amphitheatre in tho forest upon his hinder hands (or feet), and standing erect, lot k
and gliding OS those of a snake, was about two yards in was before us. Au enormous tree, which seemed to | ing very like a large boi lied, long armed, short legp d
front of me, poshing gently bat swiftly on his hands and have overshadowed and destroyed every plant and shrub ( powerful negro, about six feet two inches in lwjght. '
MORGAN BATES,
» cballaii". •
knees through the tangle underwood and thorny creepers, within its rauge. occupied the centre, and formed the uttered his tremeudous acceptance of th
KQ1TOU AXD PKOrBlCTOU.
which made the entrance into the dense and gloomy re- dense canopy of this opening. A slight cestui* from the ' beating his breast at ih«;
itli his huge Gsts i '
T E S M S .
cesses of the primeval African forest almost impassable black hanler directed my attention to the foot of the I ternately, nnd producing >iinds like heavy blows u'|* •
O n e Dollar nnd Fifty Canto, Payobl*
to
the
hardiest
of
the
hnmau
race,
aDd
1
was
eugerlv
fol[kin
.-praiif
into
the
iuclosui •
'ant
of
the
woodi
;
but
be
at
the
same
tijuo
placed
ooe
|
a
base
drum.
When
"ii
rtablylnadvBiMHi.
ADVBBTIBIKCKTB inserted for One Dollar per sq»ure(ten lowing in the track which he had made, when suddenly
nd above his eyes, thereby iutimating to me that I | and stood bristliug bvfiu Liin. the gorilla dropped upc •
line*) for the first insertion. »nd twenty-five renu for each be paused, uttered a low, slight hiss, and placing his must shade mine before looking, lest the glare of them ;u . all four* again, with his
subsequent insertion. Yearly Advertisement#—$1(1 for one rignt hand behind him, made with it a gentle movement, the darkness should attract the attention of our game.— j eyes, which flamed like lire * e u through rubie-. lixi I
square; >10 for three squares; $3(1 for half a column: and warning me to be silent and cnutious.
Laying myself along mv double-barrelled rifle, I stalled | upon his dreadful enemy, mid his eyebrows working u |>
$50 for one column. Legal advertisements at' the rtites preHow long wc both remained motionless and hardly my eyes with botl^my Lands, and looked towards the i and down with inconreiv able rapidity, givinc to h *
scribed by law : fifty cents per folio of 100 word* for the
flrstinsertion. and twenty-fivo cents for each subsequent.— daring to draw a breath, I know not It may have been great tree. Sitting on the ground -cross-legged, with i couutenance a look of such demoniac ferocity, that 'i
Every figure counts a word. Figure work without rales, 50 five minntea It appeared to me as many hours.
I felt his back agaiust the trunk, his hands lying carelessly at j seemed to make the lion pau.-e ui l«-u,.l, if he d:d iu "•
' per cent added. Rulo and figure work, double pries.
neither fear nor apprehension of danger, but my anxiety his sides, with the palms turned u p and his head suok | quail.
All legal advertisements to be paid for strictly In advance. to obtain a sight or a living gorilla, and. if possible to down between his shoulders, in a dozing, if not sleeping j lAshinghis sides with hi.- uiil until In
hitnst 'f
get within shot of him, ana the hope that my black hun- state, was a huge male gorilla. His profile wan towarifc I to fury, the lion delivered his -a eond roar, as thong! i
ter had at length marked one, caused my heart to throb us. A t the opposite side of the amphitheatre, the tree his hoaor was concerned in outruoriug IIU less thuu ii •
with expectation so loudly, that in order to still it 1 was sometimes concealing them from our view, were n female vanquishing by his prowes- all antagonist ; ami. on bi
obliged to hold my breath forcibly until the sense of suf- •and a young male, feeding, and gathering some kind of part, the gorilla, albeit quo>rtiou> of honor seemed litU<
focation became unbearable, and it was with great dif- nuts, which the female occasionally carried and threw likely to be favored or eons idervd l.v him. accepted IH>
ficulty I repressed a spasmodic tendency to relieve the on the ground close to her doziug lord and master. I ! vertheless the preliminary contest of angry noise, and
Reglstei
MORGAN B A T l » .
Receiver
u
R E U B E N Q O O P j R I C H . oppressed lungs by a scream. A t length my guide mov- watched their proceedings for some time with intense in-1 uttered another roar as utU -rly demoniac and horrible,
ed forward, but so silently that bis progress was more terest At length the Fan made a sign of interrogation, | standing up again in order to deliver it freely, that the
like that of a shadow than of anything having life or which recalled me to a sense of our position, Wc were • lion crouched Bt opce to spr ing upon bim anu Wring tbo
~~^GRAND T R A V E R S E COUNTY O F F I C E R S .
weight in i t His hand was still carried behind him. the too far from our dangerous game to risk a shot at him, j question of superior prowess to the proof- A few short,
J u d g e o f P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mapleton open palm towards me, and every motion of the fingers which, if it onlv wounded without killing, would brine i swift steps—a bound of twenty feel—two or three sharp,
Sheriff
E . F . D A M E , Traverse City.
instinct with intelligence nnd warnings of'the presence of not only himself but possibly his vife and young hopeful snarling growls—and 1 cxpcc ted to see the two combatCounty Treasurer
M O R G A N B A T E S , Trav.City. danger the most imminent and deadly. The Fan (my
upou us before we could draw onother trigger.
It we ants locked in fatal embrace ! But it was not so.
C o u n t y Clerk
JAMES P . BRAND, ' '
guide was a sptondid specimen of that noblest of the Cen- startled him ooly, without hitting him, he might plunge
As the lion roue in his long bound, the gorilla sprang
R e g i s t e r of D e e d s
JAMES P . BRAND;
tral African tribes) again stopped. His palm expanded into the jungle and escape. W e could not lie there all j also, but more lightly ar.d higher, straight up iuto the
Pros. Attorney
C. H . MARSH,
• n
and I instantly paused. The ground shook with a slight day looking at him without doine anything, and we dare air. The lion struck upward to catch b i m ; the action
Circuit Court Com.-.C. Hi M A R S H ,
,
L. R. SMITH,
Elk Rapids. tremor. The air rivibrated around us nnd flutteringly
Coroners..
not attempt to hold council with one another, as the ] turned him over, aud he fell 1 leavily on his side, the gorR O B E R T L E E ; Cenarevllle. upon our ears, as the reader may have felt when the
lowest whisper would reach either the sleeping <
ilia dropping on him, striking him twice, aud tbeu springdeepest bass of a great organ is gently touched.
At waking members of the family.
ing eff with a sidling, jumping rnn, to n distance of sevO. H . M A K S H ,
first I did not perceive that the agitation was the result
A few moments of irrisolution terminated in my laying eral yards. Instantoniotu i«i hud been the encounter,
of sound, but as the vibration was passing away I dis- my rifle and taking a long and steady aim at 1he sine of both were severely wounded. T h e gorilla was bleeding
tinguished
a
low,
deep
roar,
and
found
that
some
terrible
paterfamilias.
It
was
difficult
to
cover
my
object,
for
a
from
the head and buck. T h e lion had a fearful gash
(
•
I . * beast, most probably either a lioo or a gorilla, was close nickering exhalation was rising from the entire surface across his ribs; and judging from the crushing sound of
at hand, and was cither conversing in alow tone with bis of the earth, through which the gorilla seenvd to be in the two blows which he had received, l thought that
SOLICITOR I S CHANCERY,
mate, or was uttering the < first notes of suspicion or perpetoal motion, iu and out of the sight of my rifle, up some of his ribs must have been broken. T h e lion rushN O T A R Y P U B L I C A C O N V E T A K C E R , alarm.
and down, flashing and waving, rising and falling, until I ed without a moment's pause at his adversary, but the
r r a v e r s e City, Grand Traverse County, Mich.
I had seen the nasty littlo birds which atleud the lost all confidence in my power of taking aim so near the agility of the gori'la was loo great to permit the lion to
Office in Dwelling Houso.
My
rhinoceros and perform for tbo deep folds of his thick ground, and, being a crack shot uuder ordinary circum- close at his pleasure For some minutes the inovemoots
but not insensible hide the duty which in civilized socie- stances. I had just resolved to risk everything by stand- of the lion in attack u»d of tho gorilla in avoidance,
ty is remitted to the small tooth comb. 1 knew how ing up and taking an open shot at him from the shoul- were almost to rapid for the eye to follow their evoluJ . Q. R A M S D E L L ,
sharp a watch and ward they keep over the safety of der, when a turn was given to my thoughts (and I must tions. At length the lion pansed, licwUdered by the
their liring feeding ground, and how they scream and dig confesa 1 got rather a turn myself) b- ( t h e sudden op- speed and activity Of his antagonist Instantly the goriltheir sharp and searching beaks into tho fierce brute g pcarance of a oew sportsman in the fo m of a black py- la sprang upon ami rolled hiin over with a single blow
T R A V E K S E C m i ,
ear wheu auything dangerous or strange approaches his thon, some thirty feet iu length, whic-t was coiled round upon themde of the head. Again the chase and avoidG R A N D TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
resting place ; nnd I feared least some such courtierly a small tree close to me, but which n * wrapt attention ance were resumed, but this time for a much longer
REFERENCES:
parasite of the woods might have attached itself to the to my game had prevented me from otwrving previously. space than before, the liou being resolved to catch the
Uo».n».»l.rtl».«!h.J.B«pr.Ct.S|.|HoB.iS.lljiBUIr. Gov. *'«h- .
service and the court of the Mthropodal apish monarch The python had unwound a few coils, and having thus nimble ape; but agaiu he was obliged t<» pau*1, aed
and was now whispering intoibis majesty's ear its sus- freed about ten or twelve feet ofjiis *>dy to enable him again ho wa« knocked over. When he tose he staggerpicions that certain barbariap invaders or low and vil-, to examine me aud my proceedings r « re closely, he was ed, whother from the effects of the terrific blows which
.ndfrotifLswlk Vlth.CMl»«r^Jrl TratsrMCHj.rsb S.ttW. My- lainous revolutionists of an inferior order of the gorilla
hanging within a yard of my face, hi; 1 w g black, forked he hod received, or from giddiness resulting from the gyspecies were trespassing" within the bounds which his tongue darting from his mouth, wrcving and retiring
rations in pursuit of tho gorilla, it was irnjioasible to demajesty had been graciously pleased to reserve as the again with the rapidity of lightning, m d his glittering cide; but he reeled, nnd fell off several steps to the right
limits of his owe exclusive domain. I listened, but no eye glancing from me to the rifle aa : i >ugh he wondered before he recovered sufficiently to prepare for another
particular note or chirp struck my ear. The silence was what sort of an animal it was, and rbetber it might charge. In tbo menu time the gorilla was dodging
almost appalling : so was the darkness of that portion of prove to be a more dainty morse! tbun I might myself around and bobbing up and down before him. as capturthe dense forest into which wo had penetrated.
Very be. I had a Persian scimitar, as kem as a razor, in my ed monkeys may be often seen to do in "their cages when
(FKOST STRKST, KKAB COCBT IIOTSKi) j
shortly after we had entered the woods the fierce glare bunting belt The snake iu his wnvings to ami fro persons are teasing them. Itoth lion and gorilla kept
TRAVERSE C1TV.MICHIGAN.
of the sun had ceased to penetrate to the ground except brought his neck ut times within a f< ot of my shoulder. up an incessant noise, growling, snarling, roaring and
r p H I S O L D E S T A B L I S H E D n O T E L , ( T f l E FIRST
intervals. The broad, loxurant upper foliage of I slid my right hand down to feel for t'te handle of my screaming, varying their tones in accordance with their
L in Traversa City,) situated on Front Street. In.the vicinity of the Court House and public offices, is still of«n forthe the mighty trees completely excluded the blaze of the sword, keeping my eyes fixed upoo tU jythou. 1 grasp- actions or sufferings ; and altogether nothing like a close
. ' _.i__ of
- r the
.i.» traveling
m r . i i n n public.
niiMir The
The Proprietor
I'roorietor returns
returns tropical gun, which shone down through a yellow atmos- ed and was drawing my weapon, wo »:eriog whether the had taken place, both were bleeding freely. The lioo B
recaption
bis hearty thanks for the liberal patronage ho has received, phere like the mouth of an open furnace, from a sphere snake or I would strike first, when both of us were star- right eye was either shut or ffonc, ond the gorilla was
and assure* the public-thatno pains will be sparefl to make of polished, glaring, redenncd brass. A t first there were tled by a terrific shriek, or rather a :<-rics of shrieks, as nearly scalped. The lion bad now learned so much of
his guests comfortable. His charges will correspbnd with cool, extensive forest glades, and vast avenues of gigantic if a strong rough woman was rending tho air in mingled his eoemy's strength and activity, that be tried several
feints to get within range. Htf lay down, bnt the gorilGood accommodations for horse s and cattle.
mayJS-lG trees, populoas and noisy with birds of gorgeous plumage rage ami pain.
but discordant voices ; than came closer stems and lesser
The python vanished as my awon' ew out.
la kept jumpiDg around him so near that he was obliged
growth of scions springing emulouslv up amidst the giant
The shrieks were uttered by tho 11 nale gorilla, who to spring round with equal alertness to avoid being taken
paroot of the woods. Thick .tangles of tough-stalked had gone some distance into the wo<< s while I was en- by surprise. He tried anothe.- rush, but he stopped sooncreepers intertwining with thorny plants, like briers of gaged, first with trying to aim at tl e male, and after- er than at first, and when the gorilla sprang upon bim to
gigantic growth, next barred our path in places which wards with watching the terrible rep ile. She bad ei- strike, the lion turned on his back and rcceivod bim
were thereby^made absolutely impenetrable. At length ther disturbed a lioo who was sleepi' •; away the efleets with teeth and claws.
after threading our way through tracks which the wild of a hearty supper, or had mot him HI bis way to the
The crisis of the battle had arrived.
Growls snarls,
animals had slightly made, we reached those darkest, cool depths of the forest, and had oe«vrlj" afforded him a shrieks, and roars came out in a demoniac chorus from a
densest portions of the wood where the F a n hunter knew morning repast She sprang into tt< nearest tree, utter- confused mass of twirling leaves ami dost: limbs, teeth,
THIS Is the largest Hotel, with the best accommodations that the gorrilla could be only found, if found at all.
ing at uic same time those startling inman cries which claws, blood nnd spring bodies, as though ten fighting
In the city; the leading Dally and Weekly Pacers are taken
Here, iu tho interpenetralia, the voices of the forest bad frightened away the python at j nearly unnerved beasts instead of two, were combntting amidst a whirlhere, and no pains will bespisred to make guests comfortable;
and eleren years' residence hero will enable me tq give relia- had altogether ceased. The hiss of a serpent, the twit- me. As to my guide, ho had not ser i my danger, and wind ! I became to excited that I could scarcely comble information relative to the resources of the country.
ter of a grasshopper or locust, the boot of an owl, or tho be was still watching the male goriU patiently awaiting mand myself. A crash as of smashing large bones, and
chatter of a stray monkey might indeed be occasionally my decision and expecting every it "ant the report of a h o m e d shriek ! The noise and fury of tho combat
li-Ir
K. G
heard, but such sounds were few and far between, and my rifle. The shrieks had startled im a little—not so were redoubled for a minute or two. Then came a paose.
they served rather to illustrate and mark the silence by much, however, as they had affectc me ; for he had The dust and cloud of leaves subsided. T h e lion wns
showing how exceptional and discordant with all things heard the like before, and he knew oy would be utter- uppermost. T h e left arm of the gorilla was across bis
STANDARD
j
around they were. The darkness, although nearly as ed the moment that cither a shot si aid be fired or the tremendoos mouth. It was the crunching of the bonbledeep as that of a starless night, was not night-like.
It female discover us by any chance, tat when a roar, bones of the fore-arm which 1 had heard.
His claws
was not thick and close nnd pitchy, provocative of closed that shook the ground on which wt »y, announced the were firmW Cxed in the gorilla's shoulder and head, but
eyes
and slumber ; it was a greenish black, living, uaturc of the danger from which tl female gorilla had be was himself nearly torn asunder and discmbowefed.
OF ALL KINDS, i startling, intelligent and wakeful, a s though the light so narrowly escaped, my Fan friend. >lack as ho was, Huge rents were in his body, and the feet of the gorilla
Sold in Detroit by FARRAND A d HE LEY.
were struggling to break through from the outside, and actnolly became pallid with fear 1
were buried in his loins: while the mighty right arm of
exciting hope that it would succeed raomentarily. The
The roar of the lion was ins tanth inswered by a deep- the ape was free, and would be active agaiu directly
£3" Be careful ti buy only the genuine.
eyes strained to pierce the vcrdint gioom. They seemed er, horser, louder and more savage tar. A sound so breath had been taken.
January 13, 1863.
to feel a power within them to become accustomed to expressive of anger, defiance and re titles*, savage, cruel
The final struggle quickly came. Up rose the cloud
it, and to dilate their pupils sufficiently to magnify the ferocity, 1 never heard.
ol I eaves-again ! Whirling, shrieking, bounding, strikfew attenuated rays which had floated into and lost them1 looked at the Fan, and smiled. He understood me ing, growling, struggling, groaning, tbe'donfnsed mass
; "AT TBI '
.i
selves in that leafy-roofed dungeon until they should be instantly. His limbs ceased to tre" ile. He eloecd his rushed hither and thither with increased velocity ! Over
T R A V E R S E CITY HOUSE.
made to illuminato its depths and unfold its secrets.
mouth with an effort, then grinned placed his fingers
and over it rolled, like a tangle of fighting demons, ontil
HE SUBSCRIBER WILL FAY THE HIGHEST PRICE, The pause which my guido now made was longer than oo his lipa, and turned to watch th combat which was it come uncomfortably near to where I ar^f my negro
In CASH, for raw Furs during the fur season.
the first one, but to me was not so painful. The oppres- now inevitable, and io the occureo i of which lay our guide were lying hid.
It swayed away from as, reHe has a quantity of
sion was necessariiy great, but my nerves were strung best hopes of safely.
turned again, rolled off. then back; and just as Fan and
INDIAN T A N N E D D E E R
Ml*INS,
more perfectly to endure it, and my expectation was
Scarcely thirty yards on our left.- lie lion had come I both sprang to our feet to escape from such dangerous
Which be will sell for CASH or exehtngs for Fur*. higher, more asBured and calm.
crashing through the jungle, and h ii cleared the close roximity, the combalaBta, locked in their deadly emN. B. Trappers will best consult their own interest by
T h e Fan looked round to see where I was.
The inner tangle with a bound. He DO stood full in sight race, came crashing against us. knocking us over, and
eklllag on blm before selling their Firs.
^ ^ 8TONE,
movement gave me pleasure, because I was then certain in the clear open, bi£ bead erect b . i mane standing up into a deep p i t which we had not w*n. falling upon us
that
my
progress
was
6o
completely
noiseless
that
even
and o u t all s t r a j ^ K like the hair rf au angry cat, mag- with a force which for «o instant deprived me of conTraverse City, Dee, 8, IMS.
3m»
the quick.ear of my savage friend had failed to detect nifying his appmeot bulk to coloss I proportions; his tail ciousness. Recovering mynelfhowever, I straggled CariYOUNG W I L D ROVER,
the crushing of a withered stick or k-af beneath me. As which at first stood nearly straight vas waving from side ously. fearing that even if the beasts had killed each other,
ILL STAND AT THE BTABLE OF CUTLER OER the black tamed his face to me. his eyes were the only to side. At length it struck h:« ri J> alternately on either I should be smothered under their bleeding carcases.—
malne. In Traverse City, from the first of April till the features that were distinctly visible. They appeared to
side with sounding blows, and he ittcred a longer and I kicked, struck, and tried to push the dreadful load away.
first of July, forthe Improvement of 8tock.
He Is a nark brown colt, was foaled at the farm of John be lighted up by a lurid firo within them ; and when bis more terrific roar than that which lie had given when The noise above was terrific, but I was able to distiogumh
head was sufficiently brought round to look upon me ful- the female gorilla had escaped from him.
Opposite to my own name amidst the uproar, and it struck mo that
ly, hl» eyes glared brightly and fiercely as those of
him was the male gorilla, now looting most unlike the
ill which it was pronounced was somewhat faroyal Bengal tigir. Mine most have looked similarly j uncouth.-«leepy figure wc had wet propped agnirrit the j miliar. 1 paused in my
to extricate myaclf and
upon bim. for be made a gesture of surprise with hand | tree.
j listened. Again and again my name was called loudly
lireed, and has trotted a mile tn 1.3*.
and countenance, then grinned, showing his brilliant!
At the fin,t shriek from bis mati the gorilla had sprung i distinctly and earnestly.
For terms, Ac., apply to
CCYLER GtRMAlNE.
lf~
Traverse City. jUrch
March «,
6,1863.
white teeth from ear to ear, and formed an O with his iuto life and sudden energy
Phujmg tbeltouckles of his j
John ! John ""
mouth, which I interpreted 03 au intimation that a goril- upper 'hands npon the ground,
. be
. . "bounded lightly into \ It was the voice of my wife whom I had left safely at
MORGAN BATES,
la, if not a whole family of those delicate monsters. «as the air to a surprising' height ris if from all his four ! home in London.
within view ) and bringing forward his rifle so as to see hands together, and coming dowc upon all four agaio.—
• John. J ohn ' Wake up will voo? Y o u V
H « r » M Ottlo* T r n v s r s e Oity, M i c h .
that the cap was right, he resumed bis cautious advance. W h e n the licw roared the gorilla 'lemcd to comprehend
(Continued on Fourth puff l
IB POBLI*rf*n HVtBV ratDATiAT
T r i m r s e City, Grand TraverteConntr*Michigan,
E
All Kinds of Job Printing Natlj ud Eiplitweslj Kriated.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE AT TEAVEB8E m, IICB.
^ttornrg anil c£oftnscUor at ;£ato,
Attorney & Counssellor at Law,
T R A V E R S E C I T Y HOUSE,
W I L L I A M
F O V L E ,
GUNTONHOtrSE
J A M E S K G U N T O N .
GOOD 8WBL1H6 AW WL1A AUID BM8!
L
F A I R B A N K S '
S
C
A
L
E
S
FURS! FURS! FURS!
T
E
W
N O T A R Y PUBLIC,
£|E 6rau5 Crabetst Haul*.'
- M O l l C r A N H A T K 8 , fC'lttor
09 you were so indefinite in your expressions I though
Gen. W ashington not only fought side by side with cide the destinies of the Republic. As for the svrength
you might mean when under Buchanan's administration negroes, bnt it is related that in one instance, upon "the of that party in tbe West on which the hope of punish-
ing New England is bnilt the case is more complicated
P p o p r i f t o r . as it was; almost his whole Cabinet were tainted'with tented field he shared his blanket and actually slept with than carclcss readers and listeners suppose.
treason, tod oper.ly rejoiced at every snecess of the plot a Dcgro. aud yet heftiaddignity, nobility and manhood
There ore great commercial cities iu tbe West; bat
laid against the Government of the U. K. » and it re- enough left to be stjled the Father of his Country ; first their commerce had uu agricultural basis. The decision
quires only common intelligence to know how this rebel- in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his coun- of tbe future lies with the agricultural element of the
population
; and this, as a rule, everywhere is iDfavorof
The KprinR Election.
lion has been carried out under the Democratic Cabinet trymen."
genuine popular sel(^government, and opposed to fdavvry
The Township Election passed off quietly, aud nothing in the days of Mr. J. Bucbanau. Mr. Floyd is one—
Onr Government never intended to make superior of- and all its belougiugs. The bulk ofthe uative agricultulike a full vote was polled—in thfa town not more than A Iicmocratic Cabinet Minister, in the War Iiepart- ficers of them, but to drill them iu regiments by them- ral population of the Western States is as soundly repul>half of the voters went to the polls. It is impossible to inent was co-operating With the rebels in arms by dis- selves, and have white officers ov;r them. I must con- lican as the yeomanry of New England; but it is largely
get oat a full vote in the Spring. The lumbermen have mantling our forts ; and a Democratic Cabinet Minister fess to you that 1 do dislike to hear a man who pours adulterated There is a considerable element from the
not then rcturi«_-d from their Camps in the Pineries; and (Mr. Toucey) was also aiding them by sending our ves- ont so much ridicule, contempt and denunciation upon a slaves States; Southern men who found no better prospects at home than the desperate and meloncboly lot of
•the fanners are bony iu making sugar.
sels of war into distant seas, that oor navy might not be weak ami unoflendiog race amougst us ; a race guilty of mean whites. These are the men who have excluded the
Two new Counties have been organised from what was here in the day of trial ; and Secretary Cobb so managed no crime but the color of their si ins and degrcdation ex- negro from the prairies, and who. when negroes come
Grand Traverse County last fall, taking thftjc-fonijths of to destroy the credit of the Government ; and to make tending back through long and veary centuries. Upon across the river too fast to be excluded, get up fines
our territory and two-thirds of the votes but we'art double success, a Democratic President, Mr. Buchanan, the head" of those poor people, (witless by the common against them, pay the fines and keep the poor fugitives
iu virtual slavery to work out the debt Many more are
still enabled to record, notwithstanding the Jight vote, a sent to the House that remarkable Message of the 4th consent of mankind of any part io oor great quarrel, is immigrants from Europe, as we shall see presently. The
Republican majority of425 in n poll of 250 votes. The of December. 1860. iu which he said that " it was un- being daily hurled a mass of vituperation Bnd of venom, more enlightened native population are well aware that
following is the result in this County asfnr as heard from: constitutional to coerce 9eccded States." That is to in some instances directly calculated and intended to ex- nothing can so promote their interests, and save them
TTHVCINC,
make war upon armed rebels who seize upon and con- cite against them the lawless violence of a class of white from au inundation of uegroes whom they do not want,
The entire Republican Statu ticktt received 7G and trol a State organization ; ami in most plaintive words men more ignorant aud degraded than themselves.— as the success ofthe North iu the present eoufiict with
its immediate cooscquencc of an organization of free lathe Copperhead ticket 11 voVes—Judge Littlejohn re- declared that " the sword was not placed in the hands Whence. and from what spirit come such efforts as bor in the Southern States which would carry all negroes
ceived 12. The Republican Town ticket was elected of Congress to preseve the Union by force." Cougress, these t Are we men or are we devils ? The negro rony to that congenial climate, and to occupations which are
•without opposition, as follows Supervisor. Elvin I- it wus admitted, might declare war, but not against reb- not be your equal or mine, but he is nevertheless a man ; familiar to them. Tbe extension of Confederate rule to
Spragur; Clerk, James 1*. Brand; Treasurer. Albert W. el* ! The substance of this was that the power to call made so by the same God and common Father of us all, tbe Western States would be the most fatal blow to
Western interests which could be imagined.
Bncon; Justices of the peace, Benjamin I>» Ashton aiid forth the Militia to execute the laws and to suppress and bound with as to that same great tribunal of the
To this conviction is to bo ascribcd the wooderful conWin. l'owle; Com. of Highways, Thos. A . Hitchcock ; insurrection could not be rightfully exercised against .hereafter, where with us he will be judged, not accord- version of Missouri to free labor principles, since the war
School Inspector, John H. Crumb; Constables, Joseph those infernal rebels. And, sir, this is what I should ing to the color of tho'skin, nor according to these petty broke out Yankee abolitionists themselves could not
Oliver, Charles I*. Downs, Archibald pattbrs and Rob- call, that the Admiuistration was rotten to its very core and false distinctions, bot according to the deeds done be more eager for emancipation than the slaveholders of
Missouri have shown themselves in the recent elections, in
ert MolGn.
and imbecile. Not the present Administration. Yet I hero in the body. We cannot trample upon tho rights which some of the largest owners of Degro property have
Whitewater.
admit that she was imbecile for uot calling more men at of the poorest and meanest member of the family of the united to carry emancipation candidates by largo majoriEntire Republican State ticket receives 46 votes and
the commencement of this war to put down these rebels. earth without inflicting a common wrong, and striking a ties. If there was any real danger of Confederate supre, •the.Copperhend ticket 15 vote*—llepub. majority, 31.—
macy, and of New Englond being excluded from the
But the magnitude of this wicked rebellion was uot then common blow upon humanity every where.
Union, these Western citizens would exert all thoir
'The Republicans run two tickets for ttwo tffficers, TruI hope you will not led offended for speaking my own
realized 1 suppose.
forces to secure tho completion of that freo labor s*stom
•man C. ScoGcId was elected supervisor on one ticket, and
What is this you so mnch complain of a< being un- plain and 0|>cii convictions in regard to these matters, in their region ofthe country which they have 60 well
•John Pulsipher, Treasure.- on the other. We haw not
bnt
otherwise,
I
hope
you
will
bo
profited
by
them.
begun.
No opening of waterways und railways to the
constitutional, and the laws arc thrown aside, Ac., and so
received the full returns, but all the officers,- aro RepubliEast will make the Western people indifferent to their
Believe me to remain your friend aod well-wisher.
disheartened and so discouraged in the service of the
cans.
control of tho Mississippi; but tho permananent closing of
A
J.
BI-ACKMRD,
U.S.
Interpreter.
United
States
?
How
do
you
expect
to
achieve
victories
Peninsnla. |
)
the Mississippi to any of the States which lie on its banks
is no more possible than to stop the Niagara by a wire ;
There was a spirited contest in this town and the Cop- over tho rebels since yon have such feelings ? How can
A Voice from England.
and there is no other Western interest which would Dot
perhead State ticket received two majoiityh but Elisha you fight for the Union while you have such n weight
From the Ixindon Daily New*. Feb. 19.
suffer
by the extentioh of the slave power, io proportion
P . Ladd, was re-elected Supervisor, and Curtis Fowler. on your mind against your own country, aud that, too,
The notion of late so much dwelt upon by the advo- as it prospers now under a free-labor system. The intelJr., Treasurer—both Republicans. We jiave not yet as an officer or Quartermaster in the U. S. Army t cates of the American Confederacy, of a restoration of ligent Northern settlers know this ; the immigrant South51 OA' can you perform your duty faithfully while you are the Union, with the omission of New England, is so wild ern settlers feel it to the core of their hearts. There relearned who the other Officers are. '
I
enraged against tho present Administration who is work, and absurd that it must be regarded hereafter as one of mains the foreign clement. The foreign element in tho
Bcitzonin.
' Tweuty-ouc votes were polled in this town—all Repub- ing for your good and for your country's good, to its best the mose desperate shifts of a losing cause. The idea whole nation is about II per cent; and, ax the bulk of
may have its attractions for imaginative people who like the immigration settles iu the free States, it is important
lican. Mr. Steele is rc-eJocted Supervisorability ? Most certainty men that will talk against the dwelling upon new and marvellous speculations; bnt those to observe how its desires tend in the question before us.
Crystal Lake remains to be heard from. • That will be "Administration are not fit to be favored with any com- who desire to form rational expectations, grounded on
Of this body of foreigners tho Irish are the most nuall Republican.
mission under such circumstances in which this great facts, may be satisfied by a little consideration that, of all merous, being no less than 43 per cent The letter from
issues of the controversy, nouo is so utterly improbable John Mitchell which has appeared in recent newspapers
A Disloyal Letter from nn Officer in the Federal Republic is placed. , Yet I do not think that this is *i as that Now England should be " left out in toe cold" throws some light on the question- That letter expresses
forethought of yours, as you have expressed jourself in while tho Middle and Western States join interests with
Army, and a Loyal Reply by an Indian.
surprise at the zeal with which Irishmen are fighting on
QUARTRRMASTHR'H OFPICR,
f
your letter ; but you have been duped by some bad in- the South.
•
,
both sides of the civil war. We all know that tho great
2 d . U . S . CAVALRY, F e b . i 9 , 1863. \
New England stands distinguished from the rest of the body of Irish in America are not tbo most enlightened of
fluence in the army, as 1 might safely say. too, by the
DEAR SUTEU,—Yours of the 20th nit, was received worshippers of Gen. McClellan.
Perhaps the blunder Republic by the homogeneronsyess of its poplation, and their nation; and most of them take no pains to conceal
three days since, but I have been unable tb answer it so
its consequent preservation of the principles on which that jealousy of negro laborers is tho mainspring of their
was
made
in
the
removal
of
Geu.
McClellan.
The
Adsoon as 1 could have wished, besides thfl army is in
the Republic was founded, nnd of the traditions of popu- action in the North, however it may be oo the Confederministration may have been wrong in many respects,— lar self-government as understood in the early days of. ate side. Among the least rational this passion leads to
statu quo, nothing at all taking place of importance.
Tho weather, since I last wrote you, has' prevented Because there have been blunders committed in the American independence. New England is also distinguish- the rowdyism of the Democratic party, and to insulting
-any movement taking place. It has. donei nothing but management of the war, are we to abandon our country ed by its rcligous and intellectual superiority, carried Abolitionists as the supposed champions ofthe negro.—
snow and rain nearly the wholo time, and the roads, and,
steadily on to pre-eminence from the old colonial days till tho Secessionist hands which, in Now York, defiled in tho
in fact, most of the ca7alry camps are in awrctched con- and our liberties ?
now. In considering the elements of tho present ques- dark hours tho fronts of the honses of citizens who illumiGood God ! is it to be supposed that because a cam- tion, therefore, we must speak ^f the Yankees proper, nated oo New Year's night, ate believed to U> part Iris!..
dition, tho mud ami water being about oie foot deep,
and in some places considerabty more. Virginin, that paign has not come np to the public expectation, we -are whose nickname is now applied by the Confederates to But those of the Irish who are intelligent enough to study
is. all this portion, is nothing but onn vast b a d hole, &c. therefore to lay down our arms and sue for peace at the the whole population of the Frfce States.
affairs for themselves must see that the way to clear the
Then speaking of his fellow soldiers : i " What thev foot of treason and traitors ? God forliid ! it will never
The New lfcglandcre are tho pride aod strong reli- North of negro competitors is for the South to be opencomplain most of is the non-payment of their pultry £13
ance of the American nation. Tnere is a good deal of ed to them as free looorers; aud that the spread of Cona month reguiarly, as it should be, also the sGetningly da
jealousy of them, and not a littlaenvy of their moral pow- federal role to the North would sink Irish laborers to
I auderstaod that there has been most strainious efforts er in the Republic; but whenever the real greatness of
insincerity of the Government iu appointing Generals
the miserable condition in which they aro now seen in the
who are only fit to command a corps, to tUe ehiefsiiip of made to demoralize the army of tho Potomac by the the nation, and its splendcd prospects have been boasted Slave States.
•
so large on army, and of removing the only one (Goorge crokers aud sympathizers of the Southern Rebellion, who of the substantia mate rial of the national pride and hope
The Gormaus come next aad they aro 25 per cent.'of
B. McClellan) who had tho full confidence of both jnen give aid and-isimfort to the enemy in so doing, and has been tho mind and character of Now England. The th6 immigrants. There interest is substantially the samo
and officers, and the necessary ability and talents to eonpower of that section has not l>oen concentrated within as that of the Irish, but the more evident as they aro
duct tho war to a speedy and successful termination." <tc. charging the Government with usnrpatiou and imbecili- its own bounds. All over the Union tho iutellectual pro- more devoted to the tillago of the soiL It is impossible
And thoo speaking for himself: " Glad indeed shall 1 ty, and howling about " Abolitiouists," both in public gress has been carried on by the New Englauders ; and to say much for the intelligence of the lower order of
be when released from what has become a i hateful bond. and private ; and condemning the President for his not a little of the material development also. Every- Germans; bnt they do not show themselves the aspirants
1 am disheartened and disgusted. The idea of placing Emancipation Proclamation as being unconstitutional where. the churches and schools have depended on the after plantations " stocked with fat DO grow" that tbe
a corsed pegrton a footing of social, moral aca political
piety and learning of New Fn^and clergy and teachers: Irish too often are; ajuJthey most be capable of underequality wjth Qie whites, ami now our wise counsellors and imbecile ; and demanding a change ofrnlera or com- and tho men who have introduced new arts or improved standing that tho mdte negroes arc engaged oo good
at tho Capital are going to have them for Mdiers. Let prcmitw with the people who arc in arms against the old. who have introduced indusTy into tho wilds, and es- terms in Southern tillage, the lets competition there must
them ; bnt I would advise them to pock thorn in boxes Gov.crn.uent and murdering onr people ; and demanding tablished civilization in the baibaric regions of the vast then be in the Northern labor market We know what
and preseyve them carefully, or we will take care of them the Constitution as it is, and the Union as it was, while Republic, have been Yankees. The migration of New the German settlers in Texas and in other cotton regions
in about tlie same manner as " secesh " did at Murfreesthey themselves first introduced a bill for the amend- England citizens to other parts of the Union has been so are like, how thoroughgoing is their antagonism to slaveJjoro.
.
great as to operate upon the nfind of the country more ry. The Germans who worthily represent their fatherDo yo\ij think now that I, II. T., will evar condescend ment of'.the Constitution of the U. S., that the Union to than any other infloenoe, howeVer prodigious the annual land arc natural allies of New England, in the North and
to salute And regard as a superior, or even an equal, a be divided into four sections, in such a manner that the immigration from (he Old World may at any time have iu the South. The British interest comes next being
colored officer. The idea is revolting and disgusting.— South mi gut soccde constitutionally according to its own been. Not less than 25 per ccot ofthe citizens of Con- about 23 per cent, of the immigration; and we trout we
I would sooner salute a monkey ffull grow«). The Con- legislative j.-overs ; bnt true Republicans did not submit necticut and Vermont have snrcad themselves over other need not stop to show that that interest is not likely to ofstitution has been violated, and the laws thrown aside,
8tatcs—a larger proportion than even Virginia and tho fer itself to the slave power. Alfthc rest of the world conand who that has an independent mind, do you suppose, to such a moustrous proposition ! And now they cry. the Carolina*, impoverished as thev are by slavery, have sent tributes little more than 7 per cent, to the immigration,
will fight long in such a caused
.£ #
Constitution oii it is, and the Union as it was. These forth, if their total population *s taken into account— and we need not analyze so small a proportion.
The object and Onion we enlisted for are thrown aside rebel sympathizers have thrown every obstacle and hin- Wherever they go these New Snglanders lead society in
On the whole it seems abundantly clear that mind and
—our dearest rights and privileges cast out» Pride is the drence in the course of the Administration to the end all itsjdepartments, and especially in those of religion, edu- matter favor the progressive, not the retrogressive cause.
only thing that has kept the men in tho field so long, but
cation, aud the tile higher arts of life. This being well Under the irritation of executive mistakes and the Bufferthat will ^ive out ere long, and the nigger worshippers that the North m^ght be brought into contemptable. understood throughout the country, we may imagine the ings of an ill-conducted war, a multitude of citizen? may
and imbeciles at Wnshi ngton and elsewhere will have to submission to the Southern traitors, and kiss the sword proud laugh with which the Y ankccs proper receive utter discoQtedt and menace, and be inclined to some per"paddle their own canoe." I am qujte w«il and should in the hands of that arch traitor in Richmond.
the proposal to exclude them from the new Union to be versenesB of mood; bnt this is a widely different thing from
be in tho best of spirits could I think that the war would
Why, sir, this Proclamation of the President (who is formed when the pro-slavery democratic party obtains succombing to the domination which has corrupted aod
end soon, and I be free. For to be bound down to such
the ascendency in the North. They know very well that disgraced the Republic enough already. If good is to
a concern as this has got to be, mucl} longer, would drive Commander-in-Chief ana' the head of the army and na- they will not choose to be exefuded, in the "first place; prevail over evil in that suffering country, it must be by
tion, who is the proper aod sole judge, and from whose and next that the nation will cot part with them. They the spit of New England ruling within it, and being reme crazy, &c„ &c
Oh I how glad and happy I shall feel when " rwwon " decision there is no appeal, save through the bloody tri- are the salt of the Republic as the slave-holding portion cognized as the trot glory of the Republic.
in both section# of our country resumes its sway. But I bunal of revolutiou or rcbelliiou) " is not a theory, but it is its corruption, and all good and enlightened citizens
am fearful, as time passes, that wo are gating further
will do them honor accordingly in tho day of settlement of
TEXAS.—The rebels in Texas are reported to be in a
is a war measure, so declared npon military necessity ; the present controversy.
away instead of nearer to tho end of it
.«
wretched condition. If whipped, they intend to invade
But I must conclude. Give my best Wishes aud bro- not a political platform, but the tolemn accomplished act
In computing the forces of the other native elements, Mexico, and eefnp a Republic under a French protectotherly regard to Andrew. Tell him he mufet write me, of the Government ; and it cannot be opposed without it must be remembered that the New England settelere
&0.. &c.
,:
!
have almost all withdrawn from the slaves States. They rate !
opposing the Government."
I remain your sincere and affectionate! brother,
What protection has treason to claim u.ider the Con- would have been allowed to remdin if they had desired it;
A special to the Tritwne say: " A3 vice have been rebut they began to .go North as soon as Secession became
II. T.
stitution or the just laws of the country, more than the certain. Those who could not. carry their property with ceived here from Cairo, indicating tha't the Yazoo expiNO, 1.;
ANSWER TO THE ABOVE LETTER.
man who is in the penitentiary, nor who have been com- them went without it; and those who coula not get away dition has probably proved successful, and that YicksLITTLE TRAVERSE, March 24. 1863.
mitted there for larceny, and enjoying but one right in iu comfort before tho war began have since fled, in such burg is practically ours."
MR. II. T.,—Dear Sir.—We received your letter not common with us—the right to breath God's air 1 What plight as might happen. Sucfy as could not escape form
REBEL NEGRO SOLDIERS.—'There can be doobt that
long since, and we were glad to hear from ytou as concern, comparison docs larceny bear to treason ? What js its now a strong Union element iH Texas, Arkansas and elsewhere.
negroes are now acting as cavarly pickets on the Raping to your health and fortune in thn Armj of tho Poto- comparative grade under the law f
The rest of tho native population of tho North has pahannock, in conjunction, aud intermingled wi th white
mac. But, sir, 1 must confess that I do n«t exactly liko
Yon also speak of negroes in a most despicable man- every reason to dread Southrcn ascendency, except that
the tone of your letter at. the closing parti of it. and I ner. which is the precise language of those pro-slavery section of the commercial wor?d which is in the service men.
think, sir, 6ucli remarks from a soldier, and more espe- broilers and demagogues of the North who sneered at of the Slave Power. That section makes such a noise as
LOVKKS or THE HOBRIBLC.—A Charleston journal says
the Democratic party in the {caboard States that we
cially an officer of the U . S . army, could' not have u every humane-and patriotic sentiment.
need not describe i t Its ovei-bearing, lawless and per- that tbe hotels io the city are filled with strangers of dis.
greater tendency to discourage tha enlistment in this
Is not a negro as good as a white man to stop a secuting spirit its audacity aid political Ignorance, its tinction who have come hither'to ecjoy the spectacle of
great struggle for National life.
f
i
corruption and intrigue, mark it as the tool and creature a promised battle to take place io that region ere long
rebel ball ?
In your previous letter when you use the word, or
For what reason do you find (or any body else) to of the Slave Power, distinct from Southern rowdyism on- This reminds us of tbe eccentric Englishman, who follow,
rather remarked, that " the Administration was rotten to blame our government for arming the negroes ? Did not ly bvjts residence on tho wrong side of the frontier, and ed everywhere the menagerie, in the hope of one day seeits dwper political guilt oo thut ground. The North has
tho core." I felt somewhat suspicion about your loyalty Washiogtoc and Jackson do the same in the Revolti- wibmitted to far too much encroachment from this body ing tbe lion bite off the head of the man who pot it in
and that you meant the present Administration. Y« |
of unworthy citixens; but they are not quite able to dc the month of the beast.
T R W E H 8~E P I T * ! r
FRIDAY MORNING, A P R I L 10J 1»C3.
M
<•
TRAVERSE CITY.
M t c k l a a e . TIK T s r l . f « u . » 4 all I-rrnf
ara p u b l i s h e d t h « r « l n l n p o r i a a n c e o f U « .
" p a i d o r d e r of D i s t r
favor Mary Leslie.
balance brought
balance due
ti
settlement,
T o p a i d T o w n s h i p «i
City...
•1863.
7.a. ».
March 1,
S2 0
2»o
17 c
15 0
16o
20 o
l«o
22 0
"to
"o
"o
17o
"
t.
-
3,
" «.
"
6,
" 8,
• 9.
" 10,
" 11.
u
Z
1 r.*..
19,
20,
21,
22.
23,
24,
25,
26,
*7.
28,
29.
SO,
31,
Jan. 19.
i*;
n®
3424-
u
17®
21 —
32 c
2(1®
32® 18C3.
IP® April 1.,
17® 1863.
Jan. 19.>.
32®
2!»®
36®
SO®
V*
30 e
20 o
39 a
25 0
»o
25-
233-,
2®
4337 0
28 0
30 o
!5e
38 0
«o
22 3
29 0
31 —
2337 c
33 0
Mb
26 0
28 0
"o
2228®
2S 0
"- 18,",
«•.
1H63.
.7 i" *
-36 —
32 0
20 c
2?®
21 0
" If
- 15,
" M.
"
"
«
"
"
"
"
"
•«
"
INT.
W I N T E R O F 1862 & 1863.
I 18U.
j A p r i l I,
I 1X112.
I A p r i l I. B y
Thermometrical ltcgister.
T n t T e r *
,
40 o
46c
13 0
31 0
310
i80
23 o
*>o
44®
20o
H a n n a h , L a y & Co's C o l u m n
;<j 'V) I IS6J
f.21 7 8 I J » n . i
32®
30®
34®
40®
39®
35®
26® 1*62.
20® April 1,,
3
«o
"o
o
7,"35®
, <= "
NEWATGO AXII NoBTifPOBT STATE ROAD.—A contract
•'for six miles, from the 84th to the 90th miles post, has
been let to Uoo. Loucks; and from tbe 90th to tljc 96th
•mile post, to William Monroe. The parties ore now at
ivork. The jobs to bo completed by tho. 1st of September next This will make a passable road to the Manistee River from Traverse City. A cootract will «oon
let to bridge the Manistee; aud then there only remains
•20 miles to connect with that part already completed—
giving a fair show soon to the outside world.
A p r i l I. H v a m o u n t d n e f i* I
N.> "
By a m o u n t of t a x r . i l l e c t c d o n
B o l l o f 1K62 A 3,
To a m o u n t paid Ccmetory Fund.
" a m o u n t loaned highway Fund
pur o r d e r of T o w n B o a r d .
" a m o u n t paid Township orders,
'• b a l a n c e ,
^ i • r ' i l ' l . I t . a m o u n t s r p e r ra»1
lM,:i
M1HUI ti
A p r ' . . I . 11 v l u a u i i t i l d u e i n C o
A p r i l I, Bv a m o u n t du-- i a t j o i
l«r;
K~nu.ii
II
22 »1 |
,v, ,
I
M I I X K T
H A Y .
7 " E H A V E F n U K i»K K | V | : T < » > V O, '
let H a y . f o r ^ i l e a ! a , v e r y r.-n«oii» :- ! e p
C. .NOItiin."
U
EST
Irt &
:Finnerly
ST»VKKE.\T OF s c u o o i
r r s f .
A p r i l 1, By b a l a n c e d u e o n s e t t l e m e n t .
JiMy 16, •' c a s h f r o m C o u n t y T r e a s u r e r
for Primary F u n d ,
1863.
J a n . 19, B y a m o u n t c o l l e c t e d q n t a x Uo'.i
o f 1 8 6 2 A 3.
1862.
A p r i l 2, T o c a s h p a i d o r d e r D i s t r i c t N o . I
, favor J. E. C u s h m a n .
28, " c a s h p a i d W a r r a n t D i s t r i c t N o .
1 f a v o r J . K. C t n l i t u a i i ,
J n l y 1C, " c a s h p a i d o r d e r o f " l > i * t r i - t N o .
\ U L L O W
with
Trarer*;
Township.
1 8 0 2 4 3.
Dr.
!
A p r i l 1, T o b a l a n c e o n h a n d a s p e r l a s t r e port.
H59 0 3
"
" cash Primary School Fund,
01 00 !
" a m o u n t o f T a r R o l l o f ISO J ,
SMS 52
J u l y 16, B y p a i d o r d e r 8 e h o o l D i s t r i c t N o .
1, P r i m a r y F u n d ,
A p r i l 3, '
N o . 20.
"
31.
Cr.
P R O V I S I O N ' S ,
1 : 'Ji: v r :•>.
"-x aKC-UM'-\u- s*"-• * . »
M.
I. Lr
•* iJ Sso,'
- -f-x- >•
,
- '
" paid Commissioners O r d e r to
Morgan
Bates,
advertising
1
Road Contract.
- paid Commissioners order to
T. D . H i l l a r y f o r s e r v i c e s as
Patbmaster,
"
" order School District N o . . l ,
f a v o r J . E. Cashman',
A p r i l 2 8 , " o r d e r S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . 31.
" p a i d w a r r a n t ofS c h o o l D i s t r i c t
N o . i,' f a r o r J . E . C u s h m a n ,
"
"
"
" paid Commissioner* order to
A. W. Bacon,
* paid Commissioners order to
Jos. Moody.
" p a i d o r d e r N o , 38,
" •
I"
•
" "
" "
"
"
-
" Ml
- MC
'j "
- *8,
'
'
"
" g a h l a u n d r y o r d e r s of D l a t r i c t
."
4 j>ail a u n d r y o r d e r s of D l a t r i c t
Feb.
4,
"
10,
As'sA
JOHNSON,
Complainant.
1,18
! pear
i .' i.rrTi.fyoiiN. c
J A M U s I'. B I I A M »
I. B y a m o n u t of 2 m i l l a n d S c h o o l
House tax transferred from
School Fund.
T o paid o r d e r f a v o r A, S, A d a m s .
" DK!
F.FAUI.T
Hem
Jos. Moody.
1*. i ' a r m e t e r ,
50
50
75
00
50
S*VLE.
HAVING
'
SI.HOOI. DISTRICT N o . S.
"
"
M c h . 2a, "
••
"
Wjn. Siuytcr.
R o b L lyenlic.
-
Geo. Leslie.
M a r y l/.-slie.
Pickles.- Pic-fruits,
IN T i l l :
CONDI
|
T r a v e r a e City. Dec. !
M 0
2 3 I'
p a i d o r d e r o f D i s t r i c t N o . C.
. favor H. Rutherford.
" p a i d o r d e r o f D i s t r i c t N o . A,
o a i N D TaaViiitsK c o t ' K T * .
A p r i l 1. T o b a l a n c e d u i H h o s e v e r a l F u n d s
on settlement.
" a t a o u n t of D e l i n q u e n t t a x . C o .
Orders aud rash paid over on
Dr.
12*2 23
HA.NNA'p, I.AY A CO.
1*62.
I T A O M l S s T I C S F O R * W I N T E R
O F
1803.—KEN|
tacky Jeans. S u m m e r StuffN Denims. Duck, Stripe.
Tick, Atiroo aud Mirers' Check. Shirting Prints. Nankeen
C o t t o n F l a n e e l s . W o o l F l a n n e l s , R r o w n C n d B l e a c h e d Covt o n s , a full l i n e . B a g s , A c .
IIA'NNAH, L A Y A CO.
1 r a v e r w e C i t y , D e e . 1, 1 8 0 2 .
n o s u i t o r p r o c e t - d i n g s at law h a v i n g
T A D I E S * C i o a t « a s n I. t n i e s ' C t o r n a , ( D o r s i a WIJITB i
" . i t uii) p a r i t h e r e o f , n o t i c e I - t h e r e - ' L i F r e n c h CasnlniereH. S h e p a r d s ' P l a i d s C a n a d a G r a y C a s s ,
i n on S a t u r d a v , t h e n i n t h d a y of May I N i c e B'lk D o e s k i n s a n d C a a s i m c r e s .
it C " ! . - . n o o n , a ! t h e E m m e l C o n n t y
H A N N A H , I.AY A CO.
l i e i l o r c f o r h n d i n g t h e <"lr< tilt I ' o u r t
T r a v e r s e C i t v . l i f t . 1. 1 8 6 ? .
T r a v e r s e , in s»,
n said a i o r t g a g e .
o much thereol i
e s s a r y : « s a t i s f y tb,- a t u o t i u t d u e o n s a i d 1
.
.
.
.
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
. D e c . 1, 1SI 2.
is d a t r . w i t h i n t e r e s t , at t h e r s t
a. l e g a l c o s t * a n d e x p e n s e s , a n d s
l u - e o l t w e n t y - U v d o l l a r s . o v . n a n t e . l t<- l«- p a i d I n s a i d n . . .
—
; g a g e : t h e witd p r e m i s e * l*-ing d e s c r i b e d in said m o r t g a g e a s , O
Half-Bushels. D r a g Teeth. Froc's Plows.Cable.Trace, and
i all t h o s e c e r t a i n t r a c t - o r p a r c e l s of l a n d situati' a n d N - m g i H a l t e r - C h a i n n B r u s h H o o k a , a n d E l i p t i r S p r i n g s , W o o d e n
in t h e C o n n t y of KIUUIPMU t h e S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , t o w i t ; [ W a r e . T u b s , P a i K
C h u r n s . L a d l e s , Ac., Ac., S a s h . D o o r - .
; E a s t h a l f of t h e s o u t b w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y - s i x ; t h e • A c .
! w e s t half of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r , t h e n o r t ' a e.ist q u a r t e r of
_
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e c . 1, lt»62.
| t h e s o a t h w e s t q u a r t e r a u d t h e n o r t h w e s t q u a r t e r of t h e ]
[ s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n thirtv-five : t h e - o u t h half an.l j
tfO 1 .
t h e s o u t h h a l f t»( t h e n o r t h w e s * q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y - f o u r , A | E D 1 C I N ' E S . — P I I X S ,
OINTMENTS,
LIN'AMENTS.
1 1 1 1
~ — ; a l s o t h e s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r a n d t h e r —*• » - - « • • • ••
" C -a s t o r O i l s . S a l t s , S u i p h n r . P a i n —K i• l l e r . S a r s a n a r i l U .
I e a s t q u a r t e r o f s o -tlon t h i r t y - t h r e e . all b e i n g in T o w n s h i p I M e d i c a l D i s c o v e r y . S a l t - R h e o m O i n t m e n t , S t r y c h n i n e , Ej-tj t h i r t y - « j v e n n o r t h ol K a n g e four, w st ; also t h e n o r t h frac- | W a t e r a n d S a l v e , A l o e s . V e i m i f a g e . Essences, E x t r a c t s , A e .
I t i o n a i h a l f o f s e c t i o n t h r e e , t l i e w— t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f o f t h e ,
H A N N A H , L A Y A Co.
J
'' n o r t h w e s t f r a c t i o u- a l q ,i t a r l c r o f s ,
ion two : the n o r t h c a s t ;
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D c c . I. 1*62.
' f r a c t i o" n a l qo un ao r t .e-rr sa nn.d! tt hh ee w
w ee s t h.s
half of the s o u t h went quar- 1
.
' t e r of s e c t i o n o n e . i n t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - s i x n o r t h o f r a n g e f o u r I r \ Y E
H T l ' F F S . — M A D D E R . INDIG<>. E X T R A C T O F
' west, a n J a l s o t h e w e s t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f of t h e n o r t h w e s t I 1 )
Ixigwood. Blue Vitrial. C o o o a r Copperas, C a m w o o d
f r a c t i o n a l q u a r t e r o f s e c t i o n s i x . ;n t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - s i x n o r t h ' C o c h i n e a l , A t . . A c .
o f r a n g e t h r e e w e s t , c o n t a i n i n g i n a l l fifU-en h u n d r e d a n d ,
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
v e n t y t w o a c r e s a n d 311(H) of a u «
Traverse City. Dec. 1.1862.
D a t e d F e b r u a r y 1st. I ^ ' H .
„
'
L E W I S AI.LKN. Mortcagei
) A F . R ItA O S B O r G H T BY
s i.AR.NEI', Attortjev,
HANNAH. LAY I
CO.
T r a e e c s e C a » y . I ' * c . 1. I A 6 1 .
ME
House tax
transferred from
School Fund.
•"eh- t . T o p a i d o r d e r f a v o r 11. I t u t l i e r f o r d
M c h . ID, "
"
•• F r a n c i s G r a t t i f o i e l .
Oysters,
! S a r d i n . s, C i g a n L
' I'sgfir"*-
" Henry Siuytcr,
" " I. S. Craine,
L A Y A CO.
B
iiie y e i i i o i i o n I-Oi i or, • t u o u s a n d • i g h l i u u
- t c m i r l Hr.nse. «»-ini
s
| f o r said E m m e t Coi
j of E i u m e t . I s h a l l M
A p r i l I, By b a l a n c e o n s e t t l e m e n t .
"
U'K
HANNAH,
T r : i v e r * c C i t y , D e c . 1, 1 8 6 2 .
E O S T E A D S . - T A B L E b , CHAIRS,KOCKERS, WASH
Stands, Mattrasscs. Child's Rockers, High Chairs, Ac.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D c c . 1, 1 8 0 2 ,
e d . a n d M.irj E. Bates
A H - . , , of 1 •>-tr< it. i n s a i d > t a t e . a n , l
t»-«-igbth d a y " J a n u a r y in t h e y e a r o n e j
r e d a n d s l a t y . >;i t h e u i f c c e «.f t b e R e g i s ; |
e t C o u n t y i n s a i d s t a t e , i n L i U e r A of
: i , 3 ' i M a n . ! 2 L :)->n w l i i . - h s a i d M o r t
i t o b » d i n - i t ('>•- d a t e o f t h i s n o t i c e t h e !
J a u . 31, By a m o u n t ot 2 m i l l a n d S c h o o l
House tax
transferred ffoui
School Fund,
"
T o p a i d o r d e r f a v o r A . Ii. C r n i n e .
"
"
HEKN
|
•idgi.
Register
M O K T f . A G E
G'fo. l a m kes,
Jos. Moody,
G. Airislie.
J n » . Itcriuilee.
i' I'armeter.
Jos. Moody.
1863
Ts*, Corrsr.
:
1 8 0 2 i :l. S c h o o l F u n d .
" 3 1 , B y p a i d C o u n t y T{«asut>l i n m i c n t tax"
" paid cash collected oa
o f 1 8 6 2 A 3.
1 no
CHOCERIES. A c . — S c a a n ,
Spices, Candies, Soap, common and eraslvt ;
Mustard, English and French prepared ;
,
Soda, C r e a m Tartar. Ginger, B a k i n g l'owder,
Salaratus, Starch, Vermacelli, H o p s
T o b a c c o , Snuff, G a r d e n Seeds,
Itag Salt. F i n e a n d Rock Salt. (line, A l u m .
'
L a m p a n d l a i r d Oil. C a s t o r Oil.
Indigo, Yellow Ochre, Chalk, C a m w o o d .
Fluid, Moladscs, Syrup. Vinegar,
Beans, Pork. Meal. Flour. Oatmeal. Feed. Bran.
Beef, H a m s a n d S h o u l d e r s , C o d f i s h .
Hard Bread, Buttct; Crackers, Lard,
E x t r a c t L e m o n , V a n i l l a , R o s e , P e a c h , P i n e A p p l e , Ac.
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
Traverse City, Dec. 1,1862.
> . at the village <
A i. v a n . i n I I I - C o u n t y of A l l e g a n , i n t h e M . . t - o f M i c h i g a n .
; o n t i l " .'i'h d a y . i f M - i r e k A . P . . 1V.3, 1 - T o r c H o n . K l a v l u s J .
Sugar making—Ladies'and Gents' Skates, assorted—
l.lttl. j n h n . C i r c u i t J t i d c ' - nt Cha:iil"»r*.
Door Springs—Plane Irons—Bevels—Try Squares—Hollow
, I
I t s a t i s f a c t o r i l y i p i i r . i r i i i g liiat t\ie d e f e n d a n t C h r i s t i a n
Adze*. Bed P a n s — K e r o s e n e L a n t e r n s — S t o v e C r o c k s — W e l l
I . ' i l l m o i l , is a n o n r e - u l - ' i i t of t i i i a M a t e b u t i s a r e s i d e n t of
Umket.«—i'ut Cover*—Small B l o c k s — R a t l i n e — S p r i n g Bal. t h e b l a b - o f T e a m « - c . ,<L; IUOIIOU O' L . H . M a r s b . o f t ' o u n s e l
ances—Patent Carpet Lining—Ladies' Rubber Boots—Beesf » r C o m p l a i n a n t . .1 i s - i r t f r« d t l \ n l s a i d d e f e n d a n t . C h r i s t i a n
w a x — t r a u d River Land Piaster—Grass Seed, Ac.. Ac.
I J o h n s o n , c a a « e ills a p | H - a r a n c e in t b ' « c a n s s
!.c- e n t e n - d
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
1
w i t h i n t h r e e m o n t h s f r o m t h e d a t e •>' t l i i « o r d e r , » n d t h a t i n
T r a v e r s e C i t y , D e c . 1. 18G2.
1
CUM u f h i a a p p e a r a n c e h e c a u s e l i i s a n a w e r t o t h e c o i i i p l a i n j a n t ' s b i l l t o c.i- i , l e d . a u d a c o p y o t n i » l u m a n s w e r t o b o s e r v e d -^n t h e r o i o i ' . a i u a u r s S . » . . c ; t o r . « t h i n t w e n t y d a y s a f t e r
s e r v i c e of s c!>[ > of «u..i I . " ' , a n . , i. ' . i i e o l t h i s o i d e r . a n d i n
Isalt ther.'o''.;:a» t h e " I ! Mil's* t .ken a s • '-iressed by t h e
'ork and Fancy Baskets TabU
• s a i d d e f e n d a n t , t ' h r i s t a i n J o h n « o n . a n d Ir l< f u r t h e r o r d e r e d
M a t s . B r u s h e s of all k i n d s . G u a r d s , C h a i n s , Ac.
•Hat w i t h i n t w e n t y d a y * t h o s a i d c o m i d a i n a i u c a u s e a c o p y of
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
t i l l s o r d e r t o in: p u i d i a h e d i a Hie G r a n d T r a v e r s * H e r a l d . »
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e c . 1. 1 8 0 2 .
n e w s p a p e r p r i n t e d u n d p u b i i a h e d at T r a v e r s e t'ily, Iu said
C . n n t v of f J - a n ! T r a v e r s e , a n d t h e srtid . . M i c i t i , •, u,
/ ^ x o v E S ,
A VERY LARGE ASSORTMENT JDST HE
t i n n e d i n s u l o p a p e r ii: o - a * . o n e . , m ea.-.i " • ' K r r - n *, i—ks
, 0 | v e J ) l'lpc, Zlne. Sheet Iron, Stove Furniture. One and
I i n s u c c e s s i o n , o r t h a t s h e c a u s e a < <q.. o l t l i i ^ o r d e r t o I r h r e - l > a i l Kettles, Tin W a r e — a complete l i n e — 2 0 , 3 0 ,
p e r s o n a l l y s e r . e.l o n t h e a a i d d y f e u d w t . U » r i * ; u n J o h n s o n . . 4 n < G O
Kettles.
w
R a I | o n
transfered
J-'und
per
u
19, " j S u X o r d e r of D l a t r i c t N o . C
favor F. Grattifoell.
" M i d order of Disti
'• « v o r J o s . M o o d y ,
Turkish.
JOIINSON. D e f e n d a n t .
ISK'J «V 3. t o C o n t g ' ' K u
" a m n u u t d u • o n :n.x
1 8 6 2 A 3, t o H i g h w a y I
"
•
Mch,
T i n 1'oil C a v e n d i s h .
wttlemen1
"- ?
«
iW;
" paid County Treasurer on T a x
B o l l f t 1861, .
" p a i d o r d e r N o . 40,
fc
"
"
L
O R D E R O F P U B L I C A T I O N .
MH IIH, » K , — N i n t h J u d i c i a l t j r e u i t . i n C h a n c e r y .
HettW raent.
"
J a n . 31,
P . A L.. 8 -!
I^'iK."'
1863.
A p r i l I, B y a m o u n t o i 7 m i l l m x t r a
ferrcd from School Fund.-
1
2
10
25
82
_
Shirts, Shirts—Fancy and Plain, Suapender;
Over-Alls, a n d Jackets, India ltubber and Oil Coats a n d
J a c k e t s , W o o l , U n i o n a n d C o t t o n S o c k s , C r a v a t s , Collar.^
Travelling Bags, Trunks, Umbrellas, Ac.
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y , D e c . 1, 1 8 6 2 .
ii in p r i c e
i e h w i l l Ii
A c i r c u l a r of p r i c e s w i l l h e s u n t o n a p p l i c a t i o n .
ll.Vly.i
24 0 0
1 50
. ;
S N U F F .
i ' r w h li'ouey lien ^ v u i i ,
. i'rcali S c o t c h .
T O B A C C O .
Treasurer,
t 1 mixed.
MARRIED.
Attlie residence of the brido's father by Rev. 8. Steele. Mr.
HENRY ALLEN, of White water, and Mis* CAKOUNK 11. I.XT.'ir, daughter of A. W. Langwortfiy, Esq.
Aecoont
arrangem
a n d largest F u r H o u s e s in N e w Y o r k , f o r t h e sale of all
| F u r s , a n d a r e p r e p a r e d t o p u r c h a s e all k i n d s of K u r a . a n d
cau afford l o a n d will pay t h e v e r y h i g h e s t r a t e s l o r t h e
s a m e . l i e i n e m b c r w e a r e in t h e m a r k e t .
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
I
Traverse City, Dcc. 1,18*2.
;
W - A t t e n t i o n i< c a l l e d t o t h e l a r g e
of F i t i " ( ! a t C h e w i n g a u d S m o k i n g T o b
f o u n d of a S u p e r i o r Q u a l i t y .
1863.
31. T o a m o u n t
ordered
(rotn C o n t i n g e n t
Town Board.
J a n . i f . B y p a i d o r d e r N o . .Hi.
HANGINCS,
his
I'emijirus,
Pui e Virginia.
N'achilucher.
Copenhagen.
Iligli Toa*t S c o t c h .
Irish High Toast
o r I.iindyfoot.
PAPKB
I.
York.'
a r t i c l e s of
S N I F F .
.
F i n e kappe--.
Coarse Itappue,
A m m c a i i Centlvman.
\\o have not heard from tho election in Litlanaw
4nd Antrim, except that Tberon Bostwick, Copjwrhead,
was dofeated for Clerk and Register in Antrim.
.
New
STATIONARY.
Trav.-r«e City, Dec.
a d d e d t o t h e i r a l r e a d y l a r g e S t o c k t h e i t e m of L e a t h e r :
l'p|KT, K i d . Calf, Sole. B i n d i n g s , Ac., as also a fair s u p p l y of
S h o e f i n d i n g s ; for sale a t a small a d v a n c e o v e r cost, for
t h e a c u o m m o d a t i o a of o u r C u s t o m e r s .
Please call and
examine.
H A N N A H , L A T A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e e . I. I V , I .
1 8 C h a m In-ra S t . ,
11RD1VN
. 1663.
/ A p r i l 1, B y l i a l a n o A f t n s e t t l e m e n t ,
THE LATEST NEWS.—We have no space for . a summary of the latest news. There is nothing of a startling
nature. Tho papers are filled with all sorts of rumo
nmopg them, an attack on Charleston, and preparatioas
for the evacuation of Richmond by the Rebel*
The
tronblea in Utah increase. Brigham Young is on the
Rampage. The policy of employing Negroc) in the
'iovcrnmcnt service is to be fully carried out.
In
17^(>0-
L O R I I X VIt D .
12 I ' b a r r . l / c r s S t r e e t ,
AND
11 A N N A U , l . A Y A C O .
Mil.-I
j
Xn i . i s n bzi >
W o u l d r a i l Uii' a t t e n t i o n o f D « a : e r i t>» t h e
Several articles iulcnded for this week's paper are
crowded out to make room for the Town Treasurer's
Report.
BACON
tJO.i|)
COMCO.
T r a v e r s e <!i«y. D e e .
I | )C O R K
To b a l a n c e ' d u e t h i s F u n d on sett le n s e a l .
•' p a i d M o r g a n B a t e s , p e r o r d e r
o / B o a r d of C o m m i s s i o n e r bill
printing.
'* p a i d T . D . H i l l a r y , p e r o r d e r
o f B o a r d of C o m m i s s i o n e r s f u r
services as P a t hmaster,
1862.
\ R O W ARE.
A Ft'l.l. AND r i W I P L K T E ASSOHTilers a n d A c r i c a l t u r . i l H a r d w a r e .
Alfo.
ilass. At.. Ac.
H A N N A H , L A Y A- C O
P e r . 1. 1
AND
r cheap."
HANNAH. LAY *
•• a m o u n t c o l l e c t e d o n t a x B o l l
or 1862 A I ,
'• a m o u n t l o a n e d f r o m C o n t i n g e n t F u n d p e r o r d e r of T o w n
Board,
HNl'l'F AND TOUACCO M A M FAfTURKR
LECTURE; ON GJMI-OGY.—Rev. Mr. Warren will deli,
vor his second lectoro on Friday evening, at hilf past
seven o'clock, at the School House in Traverse pity.
ANNUAL BEPOBT Df TOWNSHIP TRMJKER.
IUSIICH
By b a l a n c e o a scttlem<!iil.
STATEMENT O F HUiltWAY I
B y a r a t . d u e R ' d D i s , N o . 1 t;
i'E'l'liK
DEATH or MK. UKKE.VHAN.--WC learn that Preserve
D. Oreonman, of Whitewater, who enlisted in. Co. A,
"26th Regiment, died at Fairfax, Va., on ' the 2"th of
March. He was a very worthy man, and leaves a wife
and three children.
A . W.
I ' l l K n L i t e C K I B K B S AUK l i A P P Y T O A N N O U N C K :D
L t i n - i - i t i l e n s o f G r a n d Travor*-- a n d s t j j o i n i n f t O n n t u -.
t l . a t l . K j a r e MI f o r t u n a t e a s t o h a v e a v e r y i s r i c e < a d i » ®
j i l e u - ^^<,l k ,r M e r c h a n d i s e e s p e c i a l l y a d a p t e d l o t h e p a r H ' >.
d e m a n d ! ' of t h i s e o m m n n l t y
N e a r l y t h e w h o l e of w t u *h
. » « p u r c l i u s e d p r i o r t o t h e l u r R e a d v a n c e in a l l c l a s s e s • '
j Merelijhndise eani>ed b y t h e l e v y i n g of t b e E x e u , - T a x .
(Scpteminr.
A d d t o t h i s t h e f a c t t h a t t h e i r s t o e l i w a s pi
, i i . x « e d f o r '• C a s h ; " a n d t i n t o w i n K t o t h e a J v j i . t a g c a t , ' - . ,
i n a m e d t h e y a n ' s e i l i i f i ; m a n y g o o d s a s l o w a.- t h e y u u
' t m r c h a ^ e d in V e t r Y o r k o r B o s t o n , a u d all n p o n a « n :
I a d v a n c e o n p r e - e o t e o s t ; t h e l - e q e f l t s o f w h i c h t b e n,ist »ee a n d will of c o u r s e a v a i l hitaseli
a t t e n t i o u lo t h e f o l l o w i n g , as a s m a l l j :.ii
t . f o r s a l e o n t h e m o s t f a v o r a b l e t- r m - .- ( t e a
H A N N AM I. A Y A (
I
THE LAW WXCtSIKG WVBMLW CLAIMS.
(Cvncludrd
from
Fir it pare.)
'•
.
F o ri* myself, I p r o t e s t against a n d denounce
NATIONAL BOUNTY INSURANCE CO.
n i g h t m a r e , a u d h a v e fallen. o u t of b e d ! J, o h n ,...
. J o ! n V < ! o. j t h e i r Uva&ouabk: acts.
a r t s . I h a v e voted against t h e i r uieaCapital, 9100,000.
g e t u p d e a r ! Y o u ' v e d r a g g e d all t h e bcdclotfbcs d o w n , s u m
1 will d o no t o t h e end, I will d e n o u n c e t h e m
BOUNTY.
S N Y D E R ,
W I L L I A M S
4
CO
o n t h e floor w i t h y o u . . Y o u ' v e rolled yourtelf u p in ' a s long a,- t i o d give* me b r e a t h .
A n d I a m ready t o
BOUNTY IS OK THE NATURE OK A G I F T . OB
t h e m so t i g h t l y t h a t 1 c a n ' t get y o u out. Y o i f l l be srao- m e e t the t r a i t o r s themselves here or anywhere, and tight
gratuity
In this war $loo. a* a bounty, it due to the
(Orgoniltd
by P e r m i s s i o n of the .iutkoritiei.)
t h e r e d if y o u d o n ' t wake u p . O h d e a r ' oh d e a r me ! t h e m t o the d e a t h . [ P r o l o n g e d c h e e r s a n d shouts.]
widow or heirs of deceased soldiers and to discharged solW a k e o p y o u g r e a t s t u p i d , d o !"
;
i
1 said I p a i d 8 3 , 0 0 0 a y e a r taxes. 1 d o n o t say it to diers who shall serve for two years, or to the close of the
)
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
69
" B l e s s my soul !" said I. • " H o w j f o r t u o a t c — h o w b r a g of i t
I t i s my d u t y ; yes. M r . S p e a k e r , m y pri- was. if sooner ended. In caaes of deceased soldiers it is due:
c u r i o u s i t is, too, Uiat y o u should h a v e come t o my re*- j vilege t o d o i t
B u t some of the t r a i t o r s here, wuo' are Isti To the widow, if there b« one ; 2nd, To the children, if no T H I S COMPANY IS ORGANIZED ESPECIALLY KOU
widow ; 3d, To the father, mother, or brothers and sisters, as 1
THE PROTECTION OK KAMILIES.
c u c so o p p o r t u n e l y . I t was very k i n d of y o u , a n d so eou-1 w o r k i n g n i g h t a n d d a y t o g e t t h e i r miserable little bills the case may i«. provided thev be residents of the United
On the pavment to t h i s Company, or any of It* authorised
r a g e o u s besides ! W h e n d i d j o u a r r i v e o u t ?
D o y o u : a n d claims t h r o u g h t h e Legislature, t o t a k e money o u t States. Commissioned officers and soldiers discharged beagents, of tnc sum of $50, it will issue a certificate of insui
k n o w I was w o n d e r i n g , j u s t a s I was t u m b l i n g ' i n t o t h i s of the p i c k e t s of t h e people, are talking a b o u t high fore two years' » « r v | « . and their h r t r s in case of their death, ance, binding itself to psv to such person the sum of Kiv*
b o r r i e d p i t why the gorilla's wife d i d n ' t eonie to kit a>- taxes. T h e y are hypocrites, as well as t r a i t o r s . [ C h e e r s ] arc not entitled, as thv law now is. to any Bounty.
HrsDKan DoLLaBS, In case t h e j are drafted intiKthe Naval
PENSIONS.
ur Military Scrvice of the United States, prior to, December
sistance. Y o n k n o w s h e m i g h t h a v e done it easily and
T h e reason '.hat tliey p r e t e n d t o be afraid of high
i'en«ions were formerly an annual payment in considera- 31st. 1866, or during the war. In the same proportion this
safely e n o u g h , for t h e lion wouldn't h a v e let go h i s holJ, t a x e s is t h a t t h e y d o n o t w a n t t o vote mouey for t h e reCompanv will Inaure any person liable to do Military doty,
tion
of
past
services.
It
has
been
extended
iu
modern
times
a u d if s h e h a d s p r u n g on his b u c k she m i g h t h a v e e o a - : lief «>f the s o l d i e r * T h e y w a n t to e m b a r r a s s t h e Govto those who have become disabled, and to the dependent in any sum from $100 to $5,000, but not more than $5,000 on
b l c d h e r h u s b a u d t o freshen his g r i p . T h e y tnight h a v e ' e m i n e n t a u d s t o p the war. T h o v w a n t ' to aid t h e Se- heirs of those who lose their lives in scrvice. It is due In any one life. This Company also insures those in the ser
1
(|uickly s t r a n g l e d h i m b e t w e e c t h e m . I s it not c u — "
- u n-i o nsi s t-s t o» c o-n q u—o r our
tb«o»y~s —
t ... c a r e this " a r to soldiers disabled >n service in the line of duty.— vice, officers and privates, against wounds or death, during
in the R-I-J
field. fThey
•• M y goodness g r a c i o u s me 1" said m y ' w i f e i n t e r r u p t t a x e s ? T h e y are p i c a y u n e men, anyhow.
T h e y Of deceased soldiers it is dne : 1st. To the widow, if there be the present war, t h u s enabling all prudent soldiers to provide
iug m a
" W h a t stuff a u d nonsense a r e y o u t a l k i n g ??—
— .I pay no t a x e s ut all, a n d never did,, and n e v e r h o p e to, one : id. To the children u n d e r 15 years of age ; 3d, To the their families against want, in case they fall in battle—die—
mother dependent wholly or partly - 4th, To the sisters under or are so wounded as to be disabled from supporting them.—
L i o n s a n d gorillas !—fiddlesticks ! T h e r e " a r e gorillas a n d unless t h e y cnu m a n a g e to p l u n d e r t h e Gi
16 years, dependent wholly or partly upon any deceased sol- To the manly virtues of bravery and patriotism that railed
lions e n o u g h in t h e s t r e e t ! D r u c k e n women s c r e a m i n g J [ C h e e r s . ] T h i s is uu e x c u s e of t r a i t o r s .
dier who may be killed or dies of disease contracted or the soldier to the field. let him add the crowning excellence
a n d n a s t y men l i g h t i n g a n d t h e police t r y i n g t o t a k e t h e m
of a p r u d e n t provision for his family, lit ci
[ H e r e the S p e a k e r called for o r d e r in the galleries.]
vronnds received in service and in the line of duty.
R a t e s o f P e n s i o n s . — T o a non-commissioned officer,
off to t h e s t a t i o n . T h e noise t h e y made woke me, ami
M r . Speaker, e x c u s e me. I foel for my c o u n t r y in
t h e r e I found y o u snorting, g r u n t i n g and s t r a g g l i n g on (his her h o u r of d a n g e r ; I feel for h e r f r o m the t i p s of musician or private, if totally disabled, or to their widow or
dependent heir, if deceased, j n per month ; to 2d Lieutenants
y o u r b a c k , a n d t h e m o m e n t I t o u c h e d y o u , a w a y y o u my toes t o t h e e n d s of my hair. T h i i is the reason t h a t $15 ; 1st Lieutenant*. $17 : t » Captains, $20 ; to Majors,
Our rates for insurance against wounds and death are as
floundered o u t of t h e b e d , rolling yourself u p in t h e I speak as I do. I cannot h e l p i t
I a m bound t o tell $25 ; To Lieutenant Colonel* ami all higher grades, $30 per follows, to wit :
c l o t h e s , a n d d r a g g i n g t h e m all a w a y w i t h y o u .
Oh. t h e s e men, these disloyal men t o t h e i r t e e t h w h a t t h e y mouth. Kccs in I Vnsion cases are only $5.
$10 on a hundred
againat wounds.
j
$*
"
"
"
death.
d o n ' t sit on t h e floor there, like a g r e a t donkey, w i t h y o u r are, a n d w h a t t h e p e o p l e , t h e true loyal p e o p l e , think of
BACK PAY*
1 O a r certificates of insurance are aaalgnable—are Intended
n i g h t c a p on o n e side, l o o k i n g silly a n d ridiculous. D o t h e m . [ T r e m e n d o u s cheering.
The Speaker rapped
Is due to discharged soldiers to the time they are actually to be assigned to the family for their care, support and reg e t u p a n d help me set the c l o t h e s s t r a i g h t on t h e b e d njion the desk in uuison with t h e applause, a p p a r e n t l y to discharged. The undersigned have superior advantages for lief, in case the eventa occur unon which they are payable.
again."
s t o p it, b u t renllv t o a d d t o its volume, for t could see speedily collecting the nay and claims of discharged soldiers.
As many in the service are where it would be impoasible
Back Pay is due the widows or heirs of deceased soldiers in for them to provide for tbeir families in this way, the wife,
" W h a t lM said I. " W a s i t all a d r e a m , aud not e v e n by nis flushed c&oek a u d flashing eye t h a t his h e a r t was nearly the same order as liounty.
Tlie .father, mother, or father, or brother, or any Individual feeling an Interest in
m y noble F a n a reality."
w i t h the b r a v e and loyal old gentleman.]
other heirs need nut IK- residents of the United States.
the family of the soldier, may insure them against wounds or
" Y o u r fan, indeed ! " r e t o r t e d Mrs. S m i t h , b e g i n n i n g
M r . S p e a k e r , 1 h a v e said m y sav. I a m no s p e a k e r . —
death. W h a t can mortal man do nobler, than to present the
MINORS.
t o lose h e r placidity of temper. " I f y o u are BO w a r m as T h i s is the only spec-ch I h a v e made. A n d I d o not know
The War Department forbids the enlistment of minora family of tbe soldier with an insurance upon nls life, or
t o want a fan, y o u may sit u p h e r o a n d use b i n e .
I'll t h a t it deserves to b e callod a speech.
I could n o t sit under IB years of age.^ Ordinarily they will be rejected if agaisst wounds, thus at once placing them beyond the reach
of poverty, In case their p r o t e c t o r never returns. T h i s is a
lend i t t o y o u a n d welcome. B u t pleasd let m e h a v e t h e still any l o n g e r , and s e e these scoundrels a n d t i a i t o r s •uch enlistments are properly reported.
In all cases of Soldiers' Pay, Pensions, Bounty, and in fact system ol substantial charity towards the dependent families
b e d clothes, f o r I d o n ' t w a n t fanning.
M y t e e t h a r e work o u t t h e i r selfish s c h e m e s t o d e s t r o y t h e U n i o n . —
of volunteer*, that has been commenced by our wealthy citlc h a t t e r i n g w i t h t h e cold. T h e police h a v e taken all t h e T h e y h a v e my sentiments. L e t t h e m one and all make all Just claims and accounts against the Government, the sens, and will be continued by the worthier p o r t i o n s of
undersigned have the most perfect facilities for their most
fighting a n d s h o u t i u g a n d s c r e a m i n g gorillas and lions, t h e most of them. I a m r e a d y to b a c k u p all I say, and speedy collectiou.
them. What can onr wealthy and patriotic cltisens do, t h s t
male a n d female, to t h e s t a t i o n house. T h e W i s a r e in 1 repeat it, to m e e t t h e s e t r a i t o r s in a n y m a n n e r t h e y
Discharged Soldiers who have n o t got their pay we are dai- will go further to increase ealistmcnts and assist the Govt h e w a r d r o b e . Do, t h e r e ' s a.dear, g o t u p off t h e floor.
may choose, f r o m a p i u ' s point t o t h e m o u t h of a cannou. ly rendering the most important assistance to, besides seeing e r n m e n t , than tn say t o o n r hardy laboring m e n — " I f you
will enlist. I will Insure your life until you return, for $100
That's right."
A. W . H ,
[ T u m u l t u o u s applaus6, d u r i n g w h i c h t h e old gentleman that they secure all due them on transportation, subsistence, —$500^-$1.000, for the benefit of your family."
clothing, rations. .t<-.
. - a t d o w u a f t e r nc h a d g i v e n t h e desk a p a r t i n g whack.
T h e rates or basis u p o h which t h i s Company Insure i s
R a t i o n s . — S o l d i e r s are entitled to the cost price o f - r a Speech of a Drave old P a t r i o t .
j w h i c h s o u n d e d loud a b o v e the din of c h e e r s and clap- tlons in money while ni.sent ou, furloughs, or other compe- founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the mortality of wars for tbe last 600 years, and leaves but a reasonaI n the Illinois S e n a t e , lately, t h e following speech was ! p i n g of h a n d s . ]
tent authority, winch money we readily secure.
Government Vouchers, Itecrnlting, Quartermaster and ble margin for profit f o r the Company, while it places tho
d e l i v e r e d . T h e r e h a v e been m o r e p r e t e n t i o u s a n d l a b o r - 1
I n e v e r witnessed so m u c h e x c i t e m e n t in my life iu an
families of those insured bevond want and destitution from
e d e f f o r t s d u r i n g t h e p r e s e n t w a r . b u t none t i a t h a d ir. I assembly. M r . F u u k spoke w i t h a f o r c e of natural elo- Commissary Accounts accurately made u p at our office and
any or the vicissitudes of w ar.
collccted.
t h e m m o r e of t r u e n a t u r a l eloqucncc a n d fervent p a t r i o t - «|iiciicc, w i t h a conviction a n d truthfulness, with a "fervor
This is the only Insurance Company in the United States
All just Military and N'aval Contracts, Claims and Looses
i s m . W e s h o u l d liko t o h a v e seen a n d h e a r d the old | a n d passion t h a t w r o u g h t u p the galleries a n d even inem- adjusted and collc-'i--<l uu application, either by mall or in that was organized especially f o r this pnrpose.
m a n . • T h e r e p o r t is taken f r o m a W e s t e r n pppcr.
| U-rs on t h e floor,' to t h e h i g h e s t p i t c h of e x c i t e m e u L —
Advantages of Insniing i n this C o m p a n y .
UOBIKSON A BBOOKB,
" A g r e a t sensation was t h e n c a u s e d b y a a p e e c h d e - | H i s voice was h e a r d in t h e stores t h a t s u r r o u n d the
1st,—'n the case ol citizens i n s u r i n g sums for their famiAuthorized War Claim Attorneys,
livcrea b y M r . F u n k , one of t h e r i c h e s t f a r m e r s of t h e ! square, mid t h e p e o p l e c a m e flocking in from all q u a r lie«,'tf dratted: If no draft takes place in the county where
DRTKOIT, MICII,
S t a t e , a man w h o p a y s o v e r $ 3 , 0 0 0 p e r a n n u m in t a x e s , t.-r*.
In five m i n u t e s lie b a d ifti a u d i e u c e * t h a t p a c k e d
OFFICII—No. 141' JelTerson Aveuue. over Ives' Bank, op- the insured resides, half the Insurance money will be ret o w a r d the s u p p o r t of t h e G o v e r n m e n t . T t y l o b b y a u d t h e hall to its utmost c a p a c i t y . A f t e r he had c o n c l u d e d , posite Office U. S. Military Commander.
funded.
'
2nd.'—Our Insurance in regard to the draft covers n o t only
gallery were crowded with spectators
M r . , F u n k rose t h e R e p u b l i c a n menil>ors a n d s p e c t a t o r s rushed u p and
the'present drart, but all future ones.
t o o b j e c t t o t r i f l i n g resolutions w h i c h w e r e b e i n g iiitro-1 t o o k him l.y t h e hand t o c o n g r a t u l a t e him. T h e Demo3d,—Our Company insure for any sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
d u e e d by t h e D e m o c r a t s t o kill t j m o , ami s l a v e off a v o t e I c n i t s said n o t h i n g , b u t evidently felt t h e c a s t i g a t i o n they
to circumstances of insured.
u p o n t h e a p p r o p r i a t i o n s for t h e s u p p o r t of the S t a t e j w e r e receiving m o s t keenly, us m i g h t be seen f r o m their
4th.'—The men who have invested their capital In t h i s
S p l e n d i d Anil A p p r o p r i a t e H o l i d a y P r e s e n t ,
Government
l i e said :
\
j b l a n c h e d c h . r k s a n d restless andd uneasy gianc
Company have been well known to tbe business community
for the past fourteen years.
MR. SI-KAKEK,—I c a n sit iu m y s e a t uo l o u g c r a
HI 91 K • D E M O R E S T ' S
5th.<—The'capital of t h i s Company will not be employed iu
l l o w ii . t t a u F e e l s i n B a t t l e .
s u c h b o y s play
. vg o i n ,g on. These" men a r e triflir.g, with
Banking or BealEstato operations,"but will remain iA U. 8.
t h e b u s t i n t e r e s t s of t h e c o u n t r y .
T h e y 4>ouSd h a v e
T h e r e can lie n o t h i u g m o r e puzzling t h a n t h e analysis
Government Slocks, and will only, be converted so fast as
a o c a ' c a r s t o s e t off t h a i r hand*, o r t h e y a r c S e c e s s i o n i s t s of oue's feelings on u battle-field. Y o u c a n n o t d e s c r i b e
may be necessary to meet the liabilities of the Company to
H E EMBODIMENT OK PRACTICAL UTILITY, AND the i n f u r e d .
a n d t r a i t o r s at h e a r t .
t h e m satisfactorily to yourself or others.
T o march
a marvel of simplicity
makes the r u n n i n g atich very
6th.-*-The Company arc bound to take risks to no m o r e
1 say t h a t t h e r e a r e t r a i t o r s a u d Secessionists a t h e a r t steadily u p t o the m o u t h s of a hundred aanuon, while rapidly nnd perfect, uses a common needle, and will last a
than $100,000,
in t h i s S e n u t c . T h e i r a c t i o n s p r o v e it. T i t e i r s p e e c h e s tliev jiour out fire a n d smoke, and s h o t a n d shell in a lifetime. AttheN".-« York State Kair. its simplicity, efficienResponsible agents wanted in every county lo the I'uited
prove i t
T h e i r g i b e s a n d l a u g h t e r a n d c h c c i s h e r e s t o r m t h a t m o w s the men like grass, is h o r r i b l e beyond cy, and grest prai n.-al iitiliit. » a - oiufirrocd by the award of States. They must give references of strict integrity sod
tfie
First
Premium
nightly, w h e n t h e i r s p e a k e r s g e t u p iu t h i s h a l l a n d de- d e s c r i p t i o n — a p p a l l i n g . I t is a b s u r d t o say a man can
responsibility, Those deslriug to be insured where agents
It will gather, ltuflle. sliirr, tuck, run up breadths, etc., with are not yet appointed, will remit to tbe Company, at 6U Walln o u n c e t h e w a r a n d t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , p r o v e it.
d o it w i t h o u t f e a r . D a r i n g H a n c o c k ' s c h a r g e , a t F r e d a single or double thread oil any material adapted to the run- street, > . Y., (by express), a snm of money sufficient to cover
I c a n sit h e r e bo l o n g e r a u d not tell t h e s e t r a i t o r s w h a t e r i c k s b u r g . f o r a long distance the slope was s w e p t by ning stich. The thinnest, usually the most difficult to stitch
the Company's per centage ou the amount desired to be InI t h i n k of t h e m . A n d while so telllngri t h e m , I a m res- such a h u r r i c a n e of d e a t h t h a t we t h o u g h t every s t e p by other sewing machines, being se.wed the easiest. .' For sured ; and if it be a citizen desiring to insure a sum f o r his
pousiblc myself f o r w h a t I say. 1 stand u p o n m y own would lie our last, a n d 1 a m willing t o say, f o r One, that ladies' and children's apparel, and other articles made of fhmily, in case lie is afterwards drafted, he will, give his name,
b o t t o m . I a m r e a d y t o m e e t a n y man on t h i s floor, in I was p r e t t y b a d l y scared.
W h a t e v e r may b e said light fabrics, it will therefore be found almost invaluable.
age and residence. If it be a soldier, he will give name, ag*.
It is attached to tin- table like a sewing bird, aud having no and the Company or the Itegiment to which he belongs, the
a n y manner, f r o m a p i n ' s p o i n t t o t h e m o u t h of a caution, a b o u t - g e t t i n g used t o i t , " old s o l d i e r s s c a r c e l y d r e a d
tension, aud requiring no lubrication or change of stich, is
o p o n t h i s c h a r g e a g a i n s t theso traitors.
[ T r e m e n d o u s a b a t t l e equally with new ones.
B u t t h e most difficult always ready for operation, and such a marvel of simplicity number of the Regiment and State it is from« also the residence of his family. If i t be wife, (irother, lather, or friends
a p p l a u s e f r o m t h e g a l l e r i e s . ] I a m a n old man of sixty- t h i n g t o s t a n d u u d e r is t h e suspcusc while w a i t i n g , as we that a child of six or eight w a r s can undersruud it, and use of tbe family t h a t desire t o take out an insurance upon the
five.
I c a m e t o Illinois a p o o r boy. I h a w m a d e a lit- waited iu F r e d e r i c k s b u r g , d r a w n u p in line of b a t t l e ou it successfully.
Bbsent soldier, t h e y will give his name and age, a n d a l s o the
all 1iaV>-< I.- jet HIII ufi.rili-i.
Company, Regiment and State t o which it belongs. The »p
t l e S o m e t h i n g for myself a n d family.
I p a y § 3 . 0 0 0 a t h e e d g e of t h e field, w a t c h i n g t h e c o l u m n s fiio past u s ;
icb'nr
ed wit
plicant f o r t h e policy will also give the name and residence
y e a r in t a x e s . 1 a m willing to p a y $G,D00. a y e $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 a u d d i s a p p e a r in a cloud of smoke, while horses and men 1
xplicit direct
of the wife or the person for whose benefit the insurance is
[ g r e a t c h e e r i n g , t h e old g e n t l e m a n b r i n g i n g d o w n his uud c o l o r s g o down in confusiou, while all sounds a r e lost |
procured.
fist u p o n h i s d e s ^ w i t h a b l o w t h a t w o u l d - k n o c k down a in the s e r t i i m i u g of sbolls, the c r a c k i n g of musketry, the
Apply to, or address.
b u l l o c k , a n d c a u s i n g t h e ink-stand to b o u n c e a half doz- t h u n d e r of artillery, and k n o w i n g t h a t o u r t u r n c o m e s
SNYDEB, WILLIAMS & Co..
C'J Wall-street, N. Y.
e n inches in t h e air, J a y , I a m willing t o p a y my whole next, e x p e c t i n g every moment t h o w o r d " F o r w a r d . " I t
".'I the delivery .
P. 5.'—Money may be sent In registered letters, o r by exf o r t u n e , a n d t b c u g i v e my life t o save m y c o u n t r y f r o m b r i n g s a s t r a n g e kind of relief when '• F o r w a r d " c o m e s . —
s free of any E x p
press, at our risk.
t h e s e t r a i t o r s t h a r a r e s e e k i n g t o destroy it. [ T r e m e n d - Y o u m o v e mechanically with the rest. O n c e fairly iu
liber
illoss, or for full particulars, specirae
o u s c h e e r s a u d a p p l a u s e , which t h e B p e a k t r c o u l d not for it. y o u r sensibilities a r c s t r o n g l y bluoted, y o u c a r e
N o t i c e s of t h e P r e s s .
subdue. 1
|
c o m p a r a t i v e l y n o t h i u g a b o u t the s i g h t s t h a t s h o c k e d you if sewing, etc.. scud a stamn for return postage. Address,
•
MME. DKMOIIEST.
•• This Is a sound Company."
M r . S p e a k e r , y o u m u s t please e x c u s e n^e.
I could a t first ; men t o r n t o pieces b y c a n n o n s h o t becomes a '
47U Broadway, N. Y,
" Tbe insurance of a certain sum f o r one's family, Is a prun o t s i t longer in m y seat, ami calmly l i s t e n to t h e s e trai- m a t t e r of count-.
A t such u time, t h e r e comes a lateut j Every lady, mother, milliner and dress-maker, should hav
dence that every man should adopt In these critical times."
tors. M y h e a r t , t h a t c r i e s o u t for t h o l i v e s of o u r b r a v e sustenance f r o m w i t h i n us. o r a b o v e us, which no man |
" The man that would be respected and loved by his family
in life, and gratefully remembered in death, will provide h i s
v o l u n t e e r s in t h e field, t h a t t h e s e t r a i t o r s at h o m e a r e a n t i c i p a t e s w h o h a s not been in such a p l a c e b e f o r e and |
family against want."
d e s t r o y i n g b y t h o u s a n d s , would n o t let m e . M y h e a r t , w h i c h most men pass t h r o u g h life w i t h o u t kuowing any" A l l onr most p r u d e n t citizens and soldiers are i n s u r i n g
t h a t bleeds f o r t h e widows a n d o r p h a n s a t home, would t h i n g a b o u t
W h a t is it ? W h e r e d o e s i t c o m o f r o m ? I
a competence to their families In cane they are drafted, or
AND
i i o t let m e . Y e s , t h e s e villians a u d t r a i t o r s a n d Seceskilled. Ic the scrvice ; it is the only safeguard in these critiT h e -following instuuee of cunning on t h o p a r t of a b e a r
cal times."
60-9m.
sionists in t h i s S e n a t e [ s t r i k i n g h i s clcnchod fists on the
d e s k w i t h a b l o w t h a t m a d e t b o h o u s e r i n g : a g a i n , ] a r e is v o u c h e d for. as true, b y t h e K t P a u l U n i o n :
Kurly last s p r i n g while p a s s i n g along the bank of C r o w
k i l l i n g ray n e i g h b o r s ' boys, now fighting i u . the field. I
AIJBKHT~W. BACON,
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black
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d a r e t o toll t h i s t o these t r a i t o r s , t o t h e i r faces, nud t h a t
ILL I.OCATE LAN!*-. PAY T A X E S . BUY OR S E L L
I a m responsible for w h a t I say t o o n e o r all of t h e m . — q u i e t l y s e a t e d iu the river in t h e m i d s t of u w h i r l i n g
on Commission—and now offers f o r s a l e .
[ C h e e r s . ] L e t t h e m come on! r i g h t herti. I a m 6 5 e d d y . T a k i n g a s t a n d b e h i n d a tree. I watched the
y e a r s old, a n d I h a v e made u p m y m i n d to risk m y life course of e v e n t s . T h e r e sot old B r u i n fiat on bis r u m p ,
• right h e r e , o n t h i s floor, f o r m y c o u n t r y .
[ M r . F u n k h e a d e r e c t , fore p a w s e x t e n d e d , looking f o r all the world
s t o o d h e a r t h e l o b b y r a i l i n g his desk b e i n g one of the like a u a n t i q u a t e d s p e c i m e n of a n origual A f r i c a n . S o o n
r o w i m m e d i a t e l y in f r o n t o f i t
A c r o w d , a s he pro- his eyes twiukled a n d his p a w s t w i t c h e d uervously, and
c e e d e d , collected a r o u n d h i m , e v i d e n t l y w i t h t h e inten- t h e n a a u i c k g r a s p , a n d lo 1 u p c a m e a large s t u r g e a n
A l s o — 1 3 L o t s I n t b e V i l l a g e of E l k R a p i d s ,
tion of p r o t e c t i n g h i m f r o m violence, ir nefcessary. T h e firmly clutched. Old B r u i n reared himself aloft, a n d wadlast a n n o u n c e m e n t w a s r e c e i v e d w i t h g r e a t c h e e r i n g , a n d d l e d off t o s h o r e , no d o u b t highly g r a tif ie d w i t h the roThe above mentiotie-1 Lands are in all parts of t h e C o u n t y .
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
I saw m a n y a n e y e flash, a n d m a n y a c o u n t e n a n c e g r o w sulL N o w t h e p h i l s o s o p h y of the t h i u g is t h i s : S t u r - Elk Lake. W h i t e w a t e r , O i u e a i a a n d Traverse; are among the
g e o n s , in c o m m o u w i t h o t h e r kinds of fish, ascend t b o earliest and best selections with r e f e r e n c e to soil, water, sur- C o m e r o f W o o d w a r d At J e i l h r s o n A v e n u e s .
r a d i a n t w i t h t h e l i g h t of d e f i a n c e . ]
T h e s o men s n e e r e d a t C o l . M n c k , a- d a y or t w o a | a — d i f f e r e n t s t r e a m s d u r i n g t h e s p r i n g mouths, seeking suit- face, and m a r k e t : e m b r a c e F a r m i n g I-ands. Village Sites and
W h i l e n a v i g a t i n g Water Powers, with or without improvement*, in quantities r p H I S INSTITUTION FORMS O N E OF T W E L V E COLH o i s a little man ; b u t I a m a l a r g o man. I am a l a r g e able p l a c e s t o d e p o s i t e t h e i r s p a w n .
to s u i t purchaacrs. and at prices m a k i n g it an o b j e c t . i n pre- J . leges located In the following c i t i e s D e t r o i t , New
man. I a m ' r c a d y t o m e e t a n y of t h e m , i n i p l a c e of Col. t h e s t r o n g ttpples t h a t impede their ascent, t h e y o f t e n ference to buvlng hack f r o m s e t t l e m e n t s .
York. Philadelphia. Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland.Cbicago. St.
M o c k , I a m large c u o n g h f o r t h e m , a n d I h o l d m y s e l f g e t so tired as t o seek a n y convenient e d d y t o r e s t —
I r a v c r a e City. May 1, 1861.
22-Iy
Lonis, Brooklyn. Troy. Portland and Toronto.
r e a d y f o r t h e m now, a n d a t a n y time, ! [ C p c c r s f r o m the B e a r s seeui t o undertsaud this, and a c c o r d i n g l y take a
A person h o l d i n g a scholarship can attend either a t bis
s
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waters,
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galleries]
o
ption.
Terms.
M r . S p e a k e r , these t r a i t o r s oo t h i s flofor s h o u l d be t e m p o r a r y eddy. T h e t i r e d o u t fish unsuspectingly s h o o t s
T h e tfacic T i m e O b s e r v e r ,
i n t o t h e t r e a c h e r o u s s n a r e a n d is remorselessly g o b b l e d
p r o v i d e d w i t h h e m p e u collars. T h e y d e s e r v e t h e m .
T U I I N C A HUNT INC AND OPEN P A C E , OR LADY'S
T h e r deserve h a n g i n g , I say. [ r a k i n g h j s v o i c e a n d vio- u p by B r u i n .
S t u d e n t s to e n t e r at a n y t i m e . Average t i m e t o c o m p l e t e
J L J o r Gentleman's Watch combined, with P a t e n t Selflently s t r i k i n g t h e desk.1 T h e c o u n t r y would b e b e t t e r
t h e course, three m o n t h s .
A t a c o n c e r t lately g i v e n by t h e B a k e r family i n M a - winding improvement.
A k n o w l e d g e o t tbe o r d i n s r y English b r a n c h e s la s u f f i c i e n t
The New York Illustraw-J News, tlie leading pictorial paoff t o Swing t h e m up. I g o f e r h a n g i n g t h e m , a n d I son c o u n t y Illinois, a C o p p e r h e a d g o t i n t o a t e r r i b l e rage,
per of the United Slates, in its issue of J a n . 10th, 1863, on p r e p a r a t o t v t o e n t e r i n g upon tbe conrse of stndy.
d a r e t o tell t h e m so, right here, to t h e i r t r a i t o r faccs.—
kicked u p a d i s t u r b a n c e a n d left the h o u s e in a s w e a r i n g page 147, voluntarily Says :
J . H. GOLDSMITH. Resident P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
T r a i t o r s should b e h u n g . I t would bo Uju solvation of mvsion, a t t h e s i n g i n g of w h a t be called u " d — d A b o J . F. SPALDING. Assistant.
- We have been shown u pleasing novelty, of which the
t h e c o u n t r y t o h a n g t h e m . F o r t h a t reasou, I would
The most t h o r o u g h , p r a c t i c a l and t r n l y p o p u l a r C o l l e g e ,
It i s
lition song !" T h e s o n g was the •' S t a r S p a n g l e d Ban- Hubbard Bros., of t h i s eitv. are tlie sole importers.
rejoice a t i t
[ T r e m e n d o u s cbecring.J
,
called the - Magic Time Observer." and is a h u n t i n g and in America. O v e r a i x t h o n s a a d s t u d e n t s have e n t e r e d s i n c e
open-face watch combined.
This is one of the prettiest, t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , which is the best e v i d e n c e of tbeir
Mr. S p e a k e r , X b e g p a r d o n of t h e g e n t l e m e n in t h e
f a v o r with the p u b l i c .
T h e y h a v e u d i v o r c e c a s e in Iodimia. g r o w i u g o u t of most convenient, and decidedly the best and cheapest time: S e n a t e w h o a r c n o t t r a i t o r s , b u t t r u e , l o y a l men, f o r
For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t C o l l e g e B o o m s , o r
piece f o r general a n d reliable use. ever offered. I t has withw h a t I bavo s a i d I ouly i n t e n d i t a n d m e a n i t f o r Seces- t h e p e r s i s t e n c e of a wife with a p r e t t y foot a u d ooklo to
in it and connected with it- m a c h i n e r y , its own w i n d i n g ieBd for a new C a t a l o g u e or 80 pages. F o r s p e c i m e n s of
souists a t h e a r t . T h e y a r e here, in t h i s S e n a t e .
I see
n a s k a t i n g f r o l i c , w h e u t h e l i u s b a o d h a d r e f u s e d his attachment, rendertng a key entirely u n n e c e s s a r y . The penmanship, enclose l e t t e r s t a m p . A d d r e s s .
BRYANT A STRATTON. a t e i t h e r o t t h e a b o v e C i t i e s .
t h e m j o k e a n d smirk, a n d g r i n a t a t r u e (Union m a n . — assent. W c s u p p o s e t h e h u s b a u d feared s h e would s l i p cases of t h i s Watch are composed of two metals, the outer
{Cot t h i s o u t r o r r n t n r e r e r e r e n c e . )
i£ ] j
one being fine Kl carat gold. It has the improved ruby acB u t I defy them.
I s t a n d h e r e ready f o r t h e m a n d d a r e i u t o llie affections of some o t h e r m a n .
tion lever movement, and is warranted an accurate timet h e m t o c o m e o o . [ G r e a t ch.oering.j W h a t m a n w i t h
ATTENTION f
" C o m e here, m y dear, I w a n t t o ask y o u a b o u t y o u r piece."
• t h e h e a r t of a p a t r i o t could s t a n d t h i s treason a n y l o n g e r ?
Price, superbly engraved, per case of a half dozen. $J0< 00.
iter. X > « tell m e truly, h a s s h e g o t a b e a u ? "
The Cheapest J e w e l r y House in t k e World ! !
I b a v o s t o o d i t long e n o u g h . I will s t a n d it no m o r e - —
Sample Watches, in n«at morocco boxes, f o r those proposing
" N o , i t s t h o j a n d e r s s h e ' s g o t . t h o d o e t e r says so."'
4 , 3 1 8 PIECES OF ASSORTED JEWELRY FOR 8 5 0 .
lo buv at wholesale. $55. s e n t by express, with bill payable
! [ C h e e r s . ] J a n n o u n e o thcao m e n onjd t h e i r a i d e r s a n d
COMPLETE LIST OF F I N E GOLD, P L A T E D A N D
a b e t t o r s * s r a n k t r a i t o r s a n d S e c e s s i o n i s t s . H e l l itself
T h o s e w h o h a v e r e s o u r c e s w i t h i n themselves, a n d can on delivery. Soldiers must remit p a y m e n t in advance, as
we canpot collect from tho*e j 0 the Army. Address
Oreide Jewelry, a a n t f r e e . A d d r e s s
c o u l d no£ spew o u t a m o r e t r a i t o r o u s c r e w t h a n s o m e o f d a r o t o l i r e alone, w a n t f r i e n d s I h e least, b u t koow how to
HUBBARD BROS. Jfc CO.. SOLR l a r o R T t s x .
Ql,
J . A. S A L I S B U R Y . AOIXT.
t h e men n j i o d i s g r a c e t h i s I<cgi«/aturf, t h i s S t a t e , a n d prise" I hem the most.
?<with Cor. Nassau A J o h n 9U.. New T o r i .
>
P r o v i d e n c e . R. I.
A
A OEM FOR THE MILLION,
$ 5 SF.WTNfr MACHINE.
T
riEAJL, E S T A T E
GENERAL
LAXI> OFFICE.
W
BRYANT & STRATTON'S
CHAIN OF USTIMAl
1424 A cre-i of Choir* IAIIUI#;
M E R C A N T I L E
1850 Acre*, alto Choice mid wtll 6cC O L L E G E S .
hcted.
B r a n c h Located at Detroit,
The Perfection of Mechanism!
A
VOL. V.
T R A V E R S E
C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 10.18B3.
CIJE (Snnti Crabcrst Bcrali, ^^From a forthcoming
N O . 11
C o m b a t B e t w e e n a Gorilla nnd a L i o n .
Turning a little to the left he made room for me to draw j the nature both of the < liallenge cud the adversary. I »<i
work entitled "Adventures lo many up alongside of him. and I then discovered that we had | to resolve upon fightm g. altliouzli it would have trf en
Lands."
reached the inner edge of the brushwood, nnd that a easy for bim to escape b y springing into 0 < r e e - " r " **
My black guide, whose movements were as noiseless clear space, forming a small amphitheatre in tho forest upon his hinder hands (or feet), and standing erect, lot k
and gliding OS those of a snake, was about two yards in was before us. Au enormous tree, which seemed to | ing very like a large boi lied, long armed, short legp d
front of me, poshing gently bat swiftly on his hands and have overshadowed and destroyed every plant and shrub ( powerful negro, about six feet two inches in lwjght. '
MORGAN BATES,
» cballaii". •
knees through the tangle underwood and thorny creepers, within its rauge. occupied the centre, and formed the uttered his tremeudous acceptance of th
KQ1TOU AXD PKOrBlCTOU.
which made the entrance into the dense and gloomy re- dense canopy of this opening. A slight cestui* from the ' beating his breast at ih«;
itli his huge Gsts i '
T E S M S .
cesses of the primeval African forest almost impassable black hanler directed my attention to the foot of the I ternately, nnd producing >iinds like heavy blows u'|* •
O n e Dollar nnd Fifty Canto, Payobl*
to
the
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of
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race,
aDd
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eugerlv
fol[kin
.-praiif
into
the
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'ant
of
the
woodi
;
but
be
at
the
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placed
ooe
|
a
base
drum.
When
"ii
rtablylnadvBiMHi.
ADVBBTIBIKCKTB inserted for One Dollar per sq»ure(ten lowing in the track which he had made, when suddenly
nd above his eyes, thereby iutimating to me that I | and stood bristliug bvfiu Liin. the gorilla dropped upc •
line*) for the first insertion. »nd twenty-five renu for each be paused, uttered a low, slight hiss, and placing his must shade mine before looking, lest the glare of them ;u . all four* again, with his
subsequent insertion. Yearly Advertisement#—$1(1 for one rignt hand behind him, made with it a gentle movement, the darkness should attract the attention of our game.— j eyes, which flamed like lire * e u through rubie-. lixi I
square; >10 for three squares; $3(1 for half a column: and warning me to be silent and cnutious.
Laying myself along mv double-barrelled rifle, I stalled | upon his dreadful enemy, mid his eyebrows working u |>
$50 for one column. Legal advertisements at' the rtites preHow long wc both remained motionless and hardly my eyes with botl^my Lands, and looked towards the i and down with inconreiv able rapidity, givinc to h *
scribed by law : fifty cents per folio of 100 word* for the
flrstinsertion. and twenty-fivo cents for each subsequent.— daring to draw a breath, I know not It may have been great tree. Sitting on the ground -cross-legged, with i couutenance a look of such demoniac ferocity, that 'i
Every figure counts a word. Figure work without rales, 50 five minntea It appeared to me as many hours.
I felt his back agaiust the trunk, his hands lying carelessly at j seemed to make the lion pau.-e ui l«-u,.l, if he d:d iu "•
' per cent added. Rulo and figure work, double pries.
neither fear nor apprehension of danger, but my anxiety his sides, with the palms turned u p and his head suok | quail.
All legal advertisements to be paid for strictly In advance. to obtain a sight or a living gorilla, and. if possible to down between his shoulders, in a dozing, if not sleeping j lAshinghis sides with hi.- uiil until In
hitnst 'f
get within shot of him, ana the hope that my black hun- state, was a huge male gorilla. His profile wan towarifc I to fury, the lion delivered his -a eond roar, as thong! i
ter had at length marked one, caused my heart to throb us. A t the opposite side of the amphitheatre, the tree his hoaor was concerned in outruoriug IIU less thuu ii •
with expectation so loudly, that in order to still it 1 was sometimes concealing them from our view, were n female vanquishing by his prowes- all antagonist ; ami. on bi
obliged to hold my breath forcibly until the sense of suf- •and a young male, feeding, and gathering some kind of part, the gorilla, albeit quo>rtiou> of honor seemed litU<
focation became unbearable, and it was with great dif- nuts, which the female occasionally carried and threw likely to be favored or eons idervd l.v him. accepted IH>
ficulty I repressed a spasmodic tendency to relieve the on the ground close to her doziug lord and master. I ! vertheless the preliminary contest of angry noise, and
Reglstei
MORGAN B A T l » .
Receiver
u
R E U B E N Q O O P j R I C H . oppressed lungs by a scream. A t length my guide mov- watched their proceedings for some time with intense in-1 uttered another roar as utU -rly demoniac and horrible,
ed forward, but so silently that bis progress was more terest At length the Fan made a sign of interrogation, | standing up again in order to deliver it freely, that the
like that of a shadow than of anything having life or which recalled me to a sense of our position, Wc were • lion crouched Bt opce to spr ing upon bim anu Wring tbo
~~^GRAND T R A V E R S E COUNTY O F F I C E R S .
weight in i t His hand was still carried behind him. the too far from our dangerous game to risk a shot at him, j question of superior prowess to the proof- A few short,
J u d g e o f P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mapleton open palm towards me, and every motion of the fingers which, if it onlv wounded without killing, would brine i swift steps—a bound of twenty feel—two or three sharp,
Sheriff
E . F . D A M E , Traverse City.
instinct with intelligence nnd warnings of'the presence of not only himself but possibly his vife and young hopeful snarling growls—and 1 cxpcc ted to see the two combatCounty Treasurer
M O R G A N B A T E S , Trav.City. danger the most imminent and deadly. The Fan (my
upou us before we could draw onother trigger.
It we ants locked in fatal embrace ! But it was not so.
C o u n t y Clerk
JAMES P . BRAND, ' '
guide was a sptondid specimen of that noblest of the Cen- startled him ooly, without hitting him, he might plunge
As the lion roue in his long bound, the gorilla sprang
R e g i s t e r of D e e d s
JAMES P . BRAND;
tral African tribes) again stopped. His palm expanded into the jungle and escape. W e could not lie there all j also, but more lightly ar.d higher, straight up iuto the
Pros. Attorney
C. H . MARSH,
• n
and I instantly paused. The ground shook with a slight day looking at him without doine anything, and we dare air. The lion struck upward to catch b i m ; the action
Circuit Court Com.-.C. Hi M A R S H ,
,
L. R. SMITH,
Elk Rapids. tremor. The air rivibrated around us nnd flutteringly
Coroners..
not attempt to hold council with one another, as the ] turned him over, aud he fell 1 leavily on his side, the gorR O B E R T L E E ; Cenarevllle. upon our ears, as the reader may have felt when the
lowest whisper would reach either the sleeping <
ilia dropping on him, striking him twice, aud tbeu springdeepest bass of a great organ is gently touched.
At waking members of the family.
ing eff with a sidling, jumping rnn, to n distance of sevO. H . M A K S H ,
first I did not perceive that the agitation was the result
A few moments of irrisolution terminated in my laying eral yards. Instantoniotu i«i hud been the encounter,
of sound, but as the vibration was passing away I dis- my rifle and taking a long and steady aim at 1he sine of both were severely wounded. T h e gorilla was bleeding
tinguished
a
low,
deep
roar,
and
found
that
some
terrible
paterfamilias.
It
was
difficult
to
cover
my
object,
for
a
from
the head and buck. T h e lion had a fearful gash
(
•
I . * beast, most probably either a lioo or a gorilla, was close nickering exhalation was rising from the entire surface across his ribs; and judging from the crushing sound of
at hand, and was cither conversing in alow tone with bis of the earth, through which the gorilla seenvd to be in the two blows which he had received, l thought that
SOLICITOR I S CHANCERY,
mate, or was uttering the < first notes of suspicion or perpetoal motion, iu and out of the sight of my rifle, up some of his ribs must have been broken. T h e lion rushN O T A R Y P U B L I C A C O N V E T A K C E R , alarm.
and down, flashing and waving, rising and falling, until I ed without a moment's pause at his adversary, but the
r r a v e r s e City, Grand Traverse County, Mich.
I had seen the nasty littlo birds which atleud the lost all confidence in my power of taking aim so near the agility of the gori'la was loo great to permit the lion to
Office in Dwelling Houso.
My
rhinoceros and perform for tbo deep folds of his thick ground, and, being a crack shot uuder ordinary circum- close at his pleasure For some minutes the inovemoots
but not insensible hide the duty which in civilized socie- stances. I had just resolved to risk everything by stand- of the lion in attack u»d of tho gorilla in avoidance,
ty is remitted to the small tooth comb. 1 knew how ing up and taking an open shot at him from the shoul- were almost to rapid for the eye to follow their evoluJ . Q. R A M S D E L L ,
sharp a watch and ward they keep over the safety of der, when a turn was given to my thoughts (and I must tions. At length the lion pansed, licwUdered by the
their liring feeding ground, and how they scream and dig confesa 1 got rather a turn myself) b- ( t h e sudden op- speed and activity Of his antagonist Instantly the goriltheir sharp and searching beaks into tho fierce brute g pcarance of a oew sportsman in the fo m of a black py- la sprang upon ami rolled hiin over with a single blow
T R A V E K S E C m i ,
ear wheu auything dangerous or strange approaches his thon, some thirty feet iu length, whic-t was coiled round upon themde of the head. Again the chase and avoidG R A N D TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
resting place ; nnd I feared least some such courtierly a small tree close to me, but which n * wrapt attention ance were resumed, but this time for a much longer
REFERENCES:
parasite of the woods might have attached itself to the to my game had prevented me from otwrving previously. space than before, the liou being resolved to catch the
Uo».n».»l.rtl».«!h.J.B«pr.Ct.S|.|HoB.iS.lljiBUIr. Gov. *'«h- .
service and the court of the Mthropodal apish monarch The python had unwound a few coils, and having thus nimble ape; but agaiu he was obliged t<» pau*1, aed
and was now whispering intoibis majesty's ear its sus- freed about ten or twelve feet ofjiis *>dy to enable him again ho wa« knocked over. When he tose he staggerpicions that certain barbariap invaders or low and vil-, to examine me aud my proceedings r « re closely, he was ed, whother from the effects of the terrific blows which
.ndfrotifLswlk Vlth.CMl»«r^Jrl TratsrMCHj.rsb S.ttW. My- lainous revolutionists of an inferior order of the gorilla
hanging within a yard of my face, hi; 1 w g black, forked he hod received, or from giddiness resulting from the gyspecies were trespassing" within the bounds which his tongue darting from his mouth, wrcving and retiring
rations in pursuit of tho gorilla, it was irnjioasible to demajesty had been graciously pleased to reserve as the again with the rapidity of lightning, m d his glittering cide; but he reeled, nnd fell off several steps to the right
limits of his owe exclusive domain. I listened, but no eye glancing from me to the rifle aa : i >ugh he wondered before he recovered sufficiently to prepare for another
particular note or chirp struck my ear. The silence was what sort of an animal it was, and rbetber it might charge. In tbo menu time the gorilla was dodging
almost appalling : so was the darkness of that portion of prove to be a more dainty morse! tbun I might myself around and bobbing up and down before him. as capturthe dense forest into which wo had penetrated.
Very be. I had a Persian scimitar, as kem as a razor, in my ed monkeys may be often seen to do in "their cages when
(FKOST STRKST, KKAB COCBT IIOTSKi) j
shortly after we had entered the woods the fierce glare bunting belt The snake iu his wnvings to ami fro persons are teasing them. Itoth lion and gorilla kept
TRAVERSE C1TV.MICHIGAN.
of the sun had ceased to penetrate to the ground except brought his neck ut times within a f< ot of my shoulder. up an incessant noise, growling, snarling, roaring and
r p H I S O L D E S T A B L I S H E D n O T E L , ( T f l E FIRST
intervals. The broad, loxurant upper foliage of I slid my right hand down to feel for t'te handle of my screaming, varying their tones in accordance with their
L in Traversa City,) situated on Front Street. In.the vicinity of the Court House and public offices, is still of«n forthe the mighty trees completely excluded the blaze of the sword, keeping my eyes fixed upoo tU jythou. 1 grasp- actions or sufferings ; and altogether nothing like a close
. ' _.i__ of
- r the
.i.» traveling
m r . i i n n public.
niiMir The
The Proprietor
I'roorietor returns
returns tropical gun, which shone down through a yellow atmos- ed and was drawing my weapon, wo »:eriog whether the had taken place, both were bleeding freely. The lioo B
recaption
bis hearty thanks for the liberal patronage ho has received, phere like the mouth of an open furnace, from a sphere snake or I would strike first, when both of us were star- right eye was either shut or ffonc, ond the gorilla was
and assure* the public-thatno pains will be sparefl to make of polished, glaring, redenncd brass. A t first there were tled by a terrific shriek, or rather a :<-rics of shrieks, as nearly scalped. The lion bad now learned so much of
his guests comfortable. His charges will correspbnd with cool, extensive forest glades, and vast avenues of gigantic if a strong rough woman was rending tho air in mingled his eoemy's strength and activity, that be tried several
feints to get within range. Htf lay down, bnt the gorilGood accommodations for horse s and cattle.
mayJS-lG trees, populoas and noisy with birds of gorgeous plumage rage ami pain.
but discordant voices ; than came closer stems and lesser
The python vanished as my awon' ew out.
la kept jumpiDg around him so near that he was obliged
growth of scions springing emulouslv up amidst the giant
The shrieks were uttered by tho 11 nale gorilla, who to spring round with equal alertness to avoid being taken
paroot of the woods. Thick .tangles of tough-stalked had gone some distance into the wo<< s while I was en- by surprise. He tried anothe.- rush, but he stopped sooncreepers intertwining with thorny plants, like briers of gaged, first with trying to aim at tl e male, and after- er than at first, and when the gorilla sprang upon bim to
gigantic growth, next barred our path in places which wards with watching the terrible rep ile. She bad ei- strike, the lion turned on his back and rcceivod bim
were thereby^made absolutely impenetrable. At length ther disturbed a lioo who was sleepi' •; away the efleets with teeth and claws.
after threading our way through tracks which the wild of a hearty supper, or had mot him HI bis way to the
The crisis of the battle had arrived.
Growls snarls,
animals had slightly made, we reached those darkest, cool depths of the forest, and had oe«vrlj" afforded him a shrieks, and roars came out in a demoniac chorus from a
densest portions of the wood where the F a n hunter knew morning repast She sprang into tt< nearest tree, utter- confused mass of twirling leaves ami dost: limbs, teeth,
THIS Is the largest Hotel, with the best accommodations that the gorrilla could be only found, if found at all.
ing at uic same time those startling inman cries which claws, blood nnd spring bodies, as though ten fighting
In the city; the leading Dally and Weekly Pacers are taken
Here, iu tho interpenetralia, the voices of the forest bad frightened away the python at j nearly unnerved beasts instead of two, were combntting amidst a whirlhere, and no pains will bespisred to make guests comfortable;
and eleren years' residence hero will enable me tq give relia- had altogether ceased. The hiss of a serpent, the twit- me. As to my guide, ho had not ser i my danger, and wind ! I became to excited that I could scarcely comble information relative to the resources of the country.
ter of a grasshopper or locust, the boot of an owl, or tho be was still watching the male goriU patiently awaiting mand myself. A crash as of smashing large bones, and
chatter of a stray monkey might indeed be occasionally my decision and expecting every it "ant the report of a h o m e d shriek ! The noise and fury of tho combat
li-Ir
K. G
heard, but such sounds were few and far between, and my rifle. The shrieks had startled im a little—not so were redoubled for a minute or two. Then came a paose.
they served rather to illustrate and mark the silence by much, however, as they had affectc me ; for he had The dust and cloud of leaves subsided. T h e lion wns
showing how exceptional and discordant with all things heard the like before, and he knew oy would be utter- uppermost. T h e left arm of the gorilla was across bis
STANDARD
j
around they were. The darkness, although nearly as ed the moment that cither a shot si aid be fired or the tremendoos mouth. It was the crunching of the bonbledeep as that of a starless night, was not night-like.
It female discover us by any chance, tat when a roar, bones of the fore-arm which 1 had heard.
His claws
was not thick and close nnd pitchy, provocative of closed that shook the ground on which wt »y, announced the were firmW Cxed in the gorilla's shoulder and head, but
eyes
and slumber ; it was a greenish black, living, uaturc of the danger from which tl female gorilla had be was himself nearly torn asunder and discmbowefed.
OF ALL KINDS, i startling, intelligent and wakeful, a s though the light so narrowly escaped, my Fan friend. >lack as ho was, Huge rents were in his body, and the feet of the gorilla
Sold in Detroit by FARRAND A d HE LEY.
were struggling to break through from the outside, and actnolly became pallid with fear 1
were buried in his loins: while the mighty right arm of
exciting hope that it would succeed raomentarily. The
The roar of the lion was ins tanth inswered by a deep- the ape was free, and would be active agaiu directly
£3" Be careful ti buy only the genuine.
eyes strained to pierce the vcrdint gioom. They seemed er, horser, louder and more savage tar. A sound so breath had been taken.
January 13, 1863.
to feel a power within them to become accustomed to expressive of anger, defiance and re titles*, savage, cruel
The final struggle quickly came. Up rose the cloud
it, and to dilate their pupils sufficiently to magnify the ferocity, 1 never heard.
ol I eaves-again ! Whirling, shrieking, bounding, strikfew attenuated rays which had floated into and lost them1 looked at the Fan, and smiled. He understood me ing, growling, struggling, groaning, tbe'donfnsed mass
; "AT TBI '
.i
selves in that leafy-roofed dungeon until they should be instantly. His limbs ceased to tre" ile. He eloecd his rushed hither and thither with increased velocity ! Over
T R A V E R S E CITY HOUSE.
made to illuminato its depths and unfold its secrets.
mouth with an effort, then grinned placed his fingers
and over it rolled, like a tangle of fighting demons, ontil
HE SUBSCRIBER WILL FAY THE HIGHEST PRICE, The pause which my guido now made was longer than oo his lipa, and turned to watch th combat which was it come uncomfortably near to where I ar^f my negro
In CASH, for raw Furs during the fur season.
the first one, but to me was not so painful. The oppres- now inevitable, and io the occureo i of which lay our guide were lying hid.
It swayed away from as, reHe has a quantity of
sion was necessariiy great, but my nerves were strung best hopes of safely.
turned again, rolled off. then back; and just as Fan and
INDIAN T A N N E D D E E R
Ml*INS,
more perfectly to endure it, and my expectation was
Scarcely thirty yards on our left.- lie lion had come I both sprang to our feet to escape from such dangerous
Which be will sell for CASH or exehtngs for Fur*. higher, more asBured and calm.
crashing through the jungle, and h ii cleared the close roximity, the combalaBta, locked in their deadly emN. B. Trappers will best consult their own interest by
T h e Fan looked round to see where I was.
The inner tangle with a bound. He DO stood full in sight race, came crashing against us. knocking us over, and
eklllag on blm before selling their Firs.
^ ^ 8TONE,
movement gave me pleasure, because I was then certain in the clear open, bi£ bead erect b . i mane standing up into a deep p i t which we had not w*n. falling upon us
that
my
progress
was
6o
completely
noiseless
that
even
and o u t all s t r a j ^ K like the hair rf au angry cat, mag- with a force which for «o instant deprived me of conTraverse City, Dee, 8, IMS.
3m»
the quick.ear of my savage friend had failed to detect nifying his appmeot bulk to coloss I proportions; his tail ciousness. Recovering mynelfhowever, I straggled CariYOUNG W I L D ROVER,
the crushing of a withered stick or k-af beneath me. As which at first stood nearly straight vas waving from side ously. fearing that even if the beasts had killed each other,
ILL STAND AT THE BTABLE OF CUTLER OER the black tamed his face to me. his eyes were the only to side. At length it struck h:« ri J> alternately on either I should be smothered under their bleeding carcases.—
malne. In Traverse City, from the first of April till the features that were distinctly visible. They appeared to
side with sounding blows, and he ittcred a longer and I kicked, struck, and tried to push the dreadful load away.
first of July, forthe Improvement of 8tock.
He Is a nark brown colt, was foaled at the farm of John be lighted up by a lurid firo within them ; and when bis more terrific roar than that which lie had given when The noise above was terrific, but I was able to distiogumh
head was sufficiently brought round to look upon me ful- the female gorilla had escaped from him.
Opposite to my own name amidst the uproar, and it struck mo that
ly, hl» eyes glared brightly and fiercely as those of
him was the male gorilla, now looting most unlike the
ill which it was pronounced was somewhat faroyal Bengal tigir. Mine most have looked similarly j uncouth.-«leepy figure wc had wet propped agnirrit the j miliar. 1 paused in my
to extricate myaclf and
upon bim. for be made a gesture of surprise with hand | tree.
j listened. Again and again my name was called loudly
lireed, and has trotted a mile tn 1.3*.
and countenance, then grinned, showing his brilliant!
At the fin,t shriek from bis mati the gorilla had sprung i distinctly and earnestly.
For terms, Ac., apply to
CCYLER GtRMAlNE.
lf~
Traverse City. jUrch
March «,
6,1863.
white teeth from ear to ear, and formed an O with his iuto life and sudden energy
Phujmg tbeltouckles of his j
John ! John ""
mouth, which I interpreted 03 au intimation that a goril- upper 'hands npon the ground,
. be
. . "bounded lightly into \ It was the voice of my wife whom I had left safely at
MORGAN BATES,
la, if not a whole family of those delicate monsters. «as the air to a surprising' height ris if from all his four ! home in London.
within view ) and bringing forward his rifle so as to see hands together, and coming dowc upon all four agaio.—
• John. J ohn ' Wake up will voo? Y o u V
H « r » M Ottlo* T r n v s r s e Oity, M i c h .
that the cap was right, he resumed bis cautious advance. W h e n the licw roared the gorilla 'lemcd to comprehend
(Continued on Fourth puff l
IB POBLI*rf*n HVtBV ratDATiAT
T r i m r s e City, Grand TraverteConntr*Michigan,
E
All Kinds of Job Printing Natlj ud Eiplitweslj Kriated.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE AT TEAVEB8E m, IICB.
^ttornrg anil c£oftnscUor at ;£ato,
Attorney & Counssellor at Law,
T R A V E R S E C I T Y HOUSE,
W I L L I A M
F O V L E ,
GUNTONHOtrSE
J A M E S K G U N T O N .
GOOD 8WBL1H6 AW WL1A AUID BM8!
L
F A I R B A N K S '
S
C
A
L
E
S
FURS! FURS! FURS!
T
E
W
N O T A R Y PUBLIC,
£|E 6rau5 Crabetst Haul*.'
- M O l l C r A N H A T K 8 , fC'lttor
09 you were so indefinite in your expressions I though
Gen. W ashington not only fought side by side with cide the destinies of the Republic. As for the svrength
you might mean when under Buchanan's administration negroes, bnt it is related that in one instance, upon "the of that party in tbe West on which the hope of punish-
ing New England is bnilt the case is more complicated
P p o p r i f t o r . as it was; almost his whole Cabinet were tainted'with tented field he shared his blanket and actually slept with than carclcss readers and listeners suppose.
treason, tod oper.ly rejoiced at every snecess of the plot a Dcgro. aud yet heftiaddignity, nobility and manhood
There ore great commercial cities iu tbe West; bat
laid against the Government of the U. K. » and it re- enough left to be stjled the Father of his Country ; first their commerce had uu agricultural basis. The decision
quires only common intelligence to know how this rebel- in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his coun- of tbe future lies with the agricultural element of the
population
; and this, as a rule, everywhere is iDfavorof
The KprinR Election.
lion has been carried out under the Democratic Cabinet trymen."
genuine popular sel(^government, and opposed to fdavvry
The Township Election passed off quietly, aud nothing in the days of Mr. J. Bucbanau. Mr. Floyd is one—
Onr Government never intended to make superior of- and all its belougiugs. The bulk ofthe uative agricultulike a full vote was polled—in thfa town not more than A Iicmocratic Cabinet Minister, in the War Iiepart- ficers of them, but to drill them iu regiments by them- ral population of the Western States is as soundly repul>half of the voters went to the polls. It is impossible to inent was co-operating With the rebels in arms by dis- selves, and have white officers ov;r them. I must con- lican as the yeomanry of New England; but it is largely
get oat a full vote in the Spring. The lumbermen have mantling our forts ; and a Democratic Cabinet Minister fess to you that 1 do dislike to hear a man who pours adulterated There is a considerable element from the
not then rcturi«_-d from their Camps in the Pineries; and (Mr. Toucey) was also aiding them by sending our ves- ont so much ridicule, contempt and denunciation upon a slaves States; Southern men who found no better prospects at home than the desperate and meloncboly lot of
•the fanners are bony iu making sugar.
sels of war into distant seas, that oor navy might not be weak ami unoflendiog race amougst us ; a race guilty of mean whites. These are the men who have excluded the
Two new Counties have been organised from what was here in the day of trial ; and Secretary Cobb so managed no crime but the color of their si ins and degrcdation ex- negro from the prairies, and who. when negroes come
Grand Traverse County last fall, taking thftjc-fonijths of to destroy the credit of the Government ; and to make tending back through long and veary centuries. Upon across the river too fast to be excluded, get up fines
our territory and two-thirds of the votes but we'art double success, a Democratic President, Mr. Buchanan, the head" of those poor people, (witless by the common against them, pay the fines and keep the poor fugitives
iu virtual slavery to work out the debt Many more are
still enabled to record, notwithstanding the Jight vote, a sent to the House that remarkable Message of the 4th consent of mankind of any part io oor great quarrel, is immigrants from Europe, as we shall see presently. The
Republican majority of425 in n poll of 250 votes. The of December. 1860. iu which he said that " it was un- being daily hurled a mass of vituperation Bnd of venom, more enlightened native population are well aware that
following is the result in this County asfnr as heard from: constitutional to coerce 9eccded States." That is to in some instances directly calculated and intended to ex- nothing can so promote their interests, and save them
TTHVCINC,
make war upon armed rebels who seize upon and con- cite against them the lawless violence of a class of white from au inundation of uegroes whom they do not want,
The entire Republican Statu ticktt received 7G and trol a State organization ; ami in most plaintive words men more ignorant aud degraded than themselves.— as the success ofthe North iu the present eoufiict with
its immediate cooscquencc of an organization of free lathe Copperhead ticket 11 voVes—Judge Littlejohn re- declared that " the sword was not placed in the hands Whence. and from what spirit come such efforts as bor in the Southern States which would carry all negroes
ceived 12. The Republican Town ticket was elected of Congress to preseve the Union by force." Cougress, these t Are we men or are we devils ? The negro rony to that congenial climate, and to occupations which are
•without opposition, as follows Supervisor. Elvin I- it wus admitted, might declare war, but not against reb- not be your equal or mine, but he is nevertheless a man ; familiar to them. Tbe extension of Confederate rule to
Spragur; Clerk, James 1*. Brand; Treasurer. Albert W. el* ! The substance of this was that the power to call made so by the same God and common Father of us all, tbe Western States would be the most fatal blow to
Western interests which could be imagined.
Bncon; Justices of the peace, Benjamin I>» Ashton aiid forth the Militia to execute the laws and to suppress and bound with as to that same great tribunal of the
To this conviction is to bo ascribcd the wooderful conWin. l'owle; Com. of Highways, Thos. A . Hitchcock ; insurrection could not be rightfully exercised against .hereafter, where with us he will be judged, not accord- version of Missouri to free labor principles, since the war
School Inspector, John H. Crumb; Constables, Joseph those infernal rebels. And, sir, this is what I should ing to the color of tho'skin, nor according to these petty broke out Yankee abolitionists themselves could not
Oliver, Charles I*. Downs, Archibald pattbrs and Rob- call, that the Admiuistration was rotten to its very core and false distinctions, bot according to the deeds done be more eager for emancipation than the slaveholders of
Missouri have shown themselves in the recent elections, in
ert MolGn.
and imbecile. Not the present Administration. Yet I hero in the body. We cannot trample upon tho rights which some of the largest owners of Degro property have
Whitewater.
admit that she was imbecile for uot calling more men at of the poorest and meanest member of the family of the united to carry emancipation candidates by largo majoriEntire Republican State ticket receives 46 votes and
the commencement of this war to put down these rebels. earth without inflicting a common wrong, and striking a ties. If there was any real danger of Confederate supre, •the.Copperhend ticket 15 vote*—llepub. majority, 31.—
macy, and of New Englond being excluded from the
But the magnitude of this wicked rebellion was uot then common blow upon humanity every where.
Union, these Western citizens would exert all thoir
'The Republicans run two tickets for ttwo tffficers, TruI hope you will not led offended for speaking my own
realized 1 suppose.
forces to secure tho completion of that freo labor s*stom
•man C. ScoGcId was elected supervisor on one ticket, and
What is this you so mnch complain of a< being un- plain and 0|>cii convictions in regard to these matters, in their region ofthe country which they have 60 well
•John Pulsipher, Treasure.- on the other. We haw not
bnt
otherwise,
I
hope
you
will
bo
profited
by
them.
begun.
No opening of waterways und railways to the
constitutional, and the laws arc thrown aside, Ac., and so
received the full returns, but all the officers,- aro RepubliEast will make the Western people indifferent to their
Believe me to remain your friend aod well-wisher.
disheartened and so discouraged in the service of the
cans.
control of tho Mississippi; but tho permananent closing of
A
J.
BI-ACKMRD,
U.S.
Interpreter.
United
States
?
How
do
you
expect
to
achieve
victories
Peninsnla. |
)
the Mississippi to any of the States which lie on its banks
is no more possible than to stop the Niagara by a wire ;
There was a spirited contest in this town and the Cop- over tho rebels since yon have such feelings ? How can
A Voice from England.
and there is no other Western interest which would Dot
perhead State ticket received two majoiityh but Elisha you fight for the Union while you have such n weight
From the Ixindon Daily New*. Feb. 19.
suffer
by the extentioh of the slave power, io proportion
P . Ladd, was re-elected Supervisor, and Curtis Fowler. on your mind against your own country, aud that, too,
The notion of late so much dwelt upon by the advo- as it prospers now under a free-labor system. The intelJr., Treasurer—both Republicans. We jiave not yet as an officer or Quartermaster in the U. S. Army t cates of the American Confederacy, of a restoration of ligent Northern settlers know this ; the immigrant South51 OA' can you perform your duty faithfully while you are the Union, with the omission of New England, is so wild ern settlers feel it to the core of their hearts. There relearned who the other Officers are. '
I
enraged against tho present Administration who is work, and absurd that it must be regarded hereafter as one of mains the foreign clement. The foreign element in tho
Bcitzonin.
' Tweuty-ouc votes were polled in this town—all Repub- ing for your good and for your country's good, to its best the mose desperate shifts of a losing cause. The idea whole nation is about II per cent; and, ax the bulk of
may have its attractions for imaginative people who like the immigration settles iu the free States, it is important
lican. Mr. Steele is rc-eJocted Supervisorability ? Most certainty men that will talk against the dwelling upon new and marvellous speculations; bnt those to observe how its desires tend in the question before us.
Crystal Lake remains to be heard from. • That will be "Administration are not fit to be favored with any com- who desire to form rational expectations, grounded on
Of this body of foreigners tho Irish are the most nuall Republican.
mission under such circumstances in which this great facts, may be satisfied by a little consideration that, of all merous, being no less than 43 per cent The letter from
issues of the controversy, nouo is so utterly improbable John Mitchell which has appeared in recent newspapers
A Disloyal Letter from nn Officer in the Federal Republic is placed. , Yet I do not think that this is *i as that Now England should be " left out in toe cold" throws some light on the question- That letter expresses
forethought of yours, as you have expressed jourself in while tho Middle and Western States join interests with
Army, and a Loyal Reply by an Indian.
surprise at the zeal with which Irishmen are fighting on
QUARTRRMASTHR'H OFPICR,
f
your letter ; but you have been duped by some bad in- the South.
•
,
both sides of the civil war. We all know that tho great
2 d . U . S . CAVALRY, F e b . i 9 , 1863. \
New England stands distinguished from the rest of the body of Irish in America are not tbo most enlightened of
fluence in the army, as 1 might safely say. too, by the
DEAR SUTEU,—Yours of the 20th nit, was received worshippers of Gen. McClellan.
Perhaps the blunder Republic by the homogeneronsyess of its poplation, and their nation; and most of them take no pains to conceal
three days since, but I have been unable tb answer it so
its consequent preservation of the principles on which that jealousy of negro laborers is tho mainspring of their
was
made
in
the
removal
of
Geu.
McClellan.
The
Adsoon as 1 could have wished, besides thfl army is in
the Republic was founded, nnd of the traditions of popu- action in the North, however it may be oo the Confederministration may have been wrong in many respects,— lar self-government as understood in the early days of. ate side. Among the least rational this passion leads to
statu quo, nothing at all taking place of importance.
Tho weather, since I last wrote you, has' prevented Because there have been blunders committed in the American independence. New England is also distinguish- the rowdyism of the Democratic party, and to insulting
-any movement taking place. It has. donei nothing but management of the war, are we to abandon our country ed by its rcligous and intellectual superiority, carried Abolitionists as the supposed champions ofthe negro.—
snow and rain nearly the wholo time, and the roads, and,
steadily on to pre-eminence from the old colonial days till tho Secessionist hands which, in Now York, defiled in tho
in fact, most of the ca7alry camps are in awrctched con- and our liberties ?
now. In considering the elements of tho present ques- dark hours tho fronts of the honses of citizens who illumiGood God ! is it to be supposed that because a cam- tion, therefore, we must speak ^f the Yankees proper, nated oo New Year's night, ate believed to U> part Iris!..
dition, tho mud ami water being about oie foot deep,
and in some places considerabty more. Virginin, that paign has not come np to the public expectation, we -are whose nickname is now applied by the Confederates to But those of the Irish who are intelligent enough to study
is. all this portion, is nothing but onn vast b a d hole, &c. therefore to lay down our arms and sue for peace at the the whole population of the Frfce States.
affairs for themselves must see that the way to clear the
Then speaking of his fellow soldiers : i " What thev foot of treason and traitors ? God forliid ! it will never
The New lfcglandcre are tho pride aod strong reli- North of negro competitors is for the South to be opencomplain most of is the non-payment of their pultry £13
ance of the American nation. Tnere is a good deal of ed to them as free looorers; aud that the spread of Cona month reguiarly, as it should be, also the sGetningly da
jealousy of them, and not a littlaenvy of their moral pow- federal role to the North would sink Irish laborers to
I auderstaod that there has been most strainious efforts er in the Republic; but whenever the real greatness of
insincerity of the Government iu appointing Generals
the miserable condition in which they aro now seen in the
who are only fit to command a corps, to tUe ehiefsiiip of made to demoralize the army of tho Potomac by the the nation, and its splendcd prospects have been boasted Slave States.
•
so large on army, and of removing the only one (Goorge crokers aud sympathizers of the Southern Rebellion, who of the substantia mate rial of the national pride and hope
The Gormaus come next aad they aro 25 per cent.'of
B. McClellan) who had tho full confidence of both jnen give aid and-isimfort to the enemy in so doing, and has been tho mind and character of Now England. The th6 immigrants. There interest is substantially the samo
and officers, and the necessary ability and talents to eonpower of that section has not l>oen concentrated within as that of the Irish, but the more evident as they aro
duct tho war to a speedy and successful termination." <tc. charging the Government with usnrpatiou and imbecili- its own bounds. All over the Union tho iutellectual pro- more devoted to the tillago of the soiL It is impossible
And thoo speaking for himself: " Glad indeed shall 1 ty, and howling about " Abolitiouists," both in public gress has been carried on by the New Englauders ; and to say much for the intelligence of the lower order of
be when released from what has become a i hateful bond. and private ; and condemning the President for his not a little of the material development also. Every- Germans; bnt they do not show themselves the aspirants
1 am disheartened and disgusted. The idea of placing Emancipation Proclamation as being unconstitutional where. the churches and schools have depended on the after plantations " stocked with fat DO grow" that tbe
a corsed pegrton a footing of social, moral aca political
piety and learning of New Fn^and clergy and teachers: Irish too often are; ajuJthey most be capable of underequality wjth Qie whites, ami now our wise counsellors and imbecile ; and demanding a change ofrnlera or com- and tho men who have introduced new arts or improved standing that tho mdte negroes arc engaged oo good
at tho Capital are going to have them for Mdiers. Let prcmitw with the people who arc in arms against the old. who have introduced indusTy into tho wilds, and es- terms in Southern tillage, the lets competition there must
them ; bnt I would advise them to pock thorn in boxes Gov.crn.uent and murdering onr people ; and demanding tablished civilization in the baibaric regions of the vast then be in the Northern labor market We know what
and preseyve them carefully, or we will take care of them the Constitution as it is, and the Union as it was, while Republic, have been Yankees. The migration of New the German settlers in Texas and in other cotton regions
in about tlie same manner as " secesh " did at Murfreesthey themselves first introduced a bill for the amend- England citizens to other parts of the Union has been so are like, how thoroughgoing is their antagonism to slaveJjoro.
.
great as to operate upon the nfind of the country more ry. The Germans who worthily represent their fatherDo yo\ij think now that I, II. T., will evar condescend ment of'.the Constitution of the U. S., that the Union to than any other infloenoe, howeVer prodigious the annual land arc natural allies of New England, in the North and
to salute And regard as a superior, or even an equal, a be divided into four sections, in such a manner that the immigration from (he Old World may at any time have iu the South. The British interest comes next being
colored officer. The idea is revolting and disgusting.— South mi gut soccde constitutionally according to its own been. Not less than 25 per ccot ofthe citizens of Con- about 23 per cent, of the immigration; and we trout we
I would sooner salute a monkey ffull grow«). The Con- legislative j.-overs ; bnt true Republicans did not submit necticut and Vermont have snrcad themselves over other need not stop to show that that interest is not likely to ofstitution has been violated, and the laws thrown aside,
8tatcs—a larger proportion than even Virginia and tho fer itself to the slave power. Alfthc rest of the world conand who that has an independent mind, do you suppose, to such a moustrous proposition ! And now they cry. the Carolina*, impoverished as thev are by slavery, have sent tributes little more than 7 per cent, to the immigration,
will fight long in such a caused
.£ #
Constitution oii it is, and the Union as it was. These forth, if their total population *s taken into account— and we need not analyze so small a proportion.
The object and Onion we enlisted for are thrown aside rebel sympathizers have thrown every obstacle and hin- Wherever they go these New Snglanders lead society in
On the whole it seems abundantly clear that mind and
—our dearest rights and privileges cast out» Pride is the drence in the course of the Administration to the end all itsjdepartments, and especially in those of religion, edu- matter favor the progressive, not the retrogressive cause.
only thing that has kept the men in tho field so long, but
cation, aud the tile higher arts of life. This being well Under the irritation of executive mistakes and the Bufferthat will ^ive out ere long, and the nigger worshippers that the North m^ght be brought into contemptable. understood throughout the country, we may imagine the ings of an ill-conducted war, a multitude of citizen? may
and imbeciles at Wnshi ngton and elsewhere will have to submission to the Southern traitors, and kiss the sword proud laugh with which the Y ankccs proper receive utter discoQtedt and menace, and be inclined to some per"paddle their own canoe." I am qujte w«il and should in the hands of that arch traitor in Richmond.
the proposal to exclude them from the new Union to be versenesB of mood; bnt this is a widely different thing from
be in tho best of spirits could I think that the war would
Why, sir, this Proclamation of the President (who is formed when the pro-slavery democratic party obtains succombing to the domination which has corrupted aod
end soon, and I be free. For to be bound down to such
the ascendency in the North. They know very well that disgraced the Republic enough already. If good is to
a concern as this has got to be, mucl} longer, would drive Commander-in-Chief ana' the head of the army and na- they will not choose to be exefuded, in the "first place; prevail over evil in that suffering country, it must be by
tion, who is the proper aod sole judge, and from whose and next that the nation will cot part with them. They the spit of New England ruling within it, and being reme crazy, &c„ &c
Oh I how glad and happy I shall feel when " rwwon " decision there is no appeal, save through the bloody tri- are the salt of the Republic as the slave-holding portion cognized as the trot glory of the Republic.
in both section# of our country resumes its sway. But I bunal of revolutiou or rcbelliiou) " is not a theory, but it is its corruption, and all good and enlightened citizens
am fearful, as time passes, that wo are gating further
will do them honor accordingly in tho day of settlement of
TEXAS.—The rebels in Texas are reported to be in a
is a war measure, so declared npon military necessity ; the present controversy.
away instead of nearer to tho end of it
.«
wretched condition. If whipped, they intend to invade
But I must conclude. Give my best Wishes aud bro- not a political platform, but the tolemn accomplished act
In computing the forces of the other native elements, Mexico, and eefnp a Republic under a French protectotherly regard to Andrew. Tell him he mufet write me, of the Government ; and it cannot be opposed without it must be remembered that the New England settelere
&0.. &c.
,:
!
have almost all withdrawn from the slaves States. They rate !
opposing the Government."
I remain your sincere and affectionate! brother,
What protection has treason to claim u.ider the Con- would have been allowed to remdin if they had desired it;
A special to the Tritwne say: " A3 vice have been rebut they began to .go North as soon as Secession became
II. T.
stitution or the just laws of the country, more than the certain. Those who could not. carry their property with ceived here from Cairo, indicating tha't the Yazoo expiNO, 1.;
ANSWER TO THE ABOVE LETTER.
man who is in the penitentiary, nor who have been com- them went without it; and those who coula not get away dition has probably proved successful, and that YicksLITTLE TRAVERSE, March 24. 1863.
mitted there for larceny, and enjoying but one right in iu comfort before tho war began have since fled, in such burg is practically ours."
MR. II. T.,—Dear Sir.—We received your letter not common with us—the right to breath God's air 1 What plight as might happen. Sucfy as could not escape form
REBEL NEGRO SOLDIERS.—'There can be doobt that
long since, and we were glad to hear from ytou as concern, comparison docs larceny bear to treason ? What js its now a strong Union element iH Texas, Arkansas and elsewhere.
negroes are now acting as cavarly pickets on the Raping to your health and fortune in thn Armj of tho Poto- comparative grade under the law f
The rest of tho native population of tho North has pahannock, in conjunction, aud intermingled wi th white
mac. But, sir, 1 must confess that I do n«t exactly liko
Yon also speak of negroes in a most despicable man- every reason to dread Southrcn ascendency, except that
the tone of your letter at. the closing parti of it. and I ner. which is the precise language of those pro-slavery section of the commercial wor?d which is in the service men.
think, sir, 6ucli remarks from a soldier, and more espe- broilers and demagogues of the North who sneered at of the Slave Power. That section makes such a noise as
LOVKKS or THE HOBRIBLC.—A Charleston journal says
the Democratic party in the {caboard States that we
cially an officer of the U . S . army, could' not have u every humane-and patriotic sentiment.
need not describe i t Its ovei-bearing, lawless and per- that tbe hotels io the city are filled with strangers of dis.
greater tendency to discourage tha enlistment in this
Is not a negro as good as a white man to stop a secuting spirit its audacity aid political Ignorance, its tinction who have come hither'to ecjoy the spectacle of
great struggle for National life.
f
i
corruption and intrigue, mark it as the tool and creature a promised battle to take place io that region ere long
rebel ball ?
In your previous letter when you use the word, or
For what reason do you find (or any body else) to of the Slave Power, distinct from Southern rowdyism on- This reminds us of tbe eccentric Englishman, who follow,
rather remarked, that " the Administration was rotten to blame our government for arming the negroes ? Did not ly bvjts residence on tho wrong side of the frontier, and ed everywhere the menagerie, in the hope of one day seeits dwper political guilt oo thut ground. The North has
tho core." I felt somewhat suspicion about your loyalty Washiogtoc and Jackson do the same in the Revolti- wibmitted to far too much encroachment from this body ing tbe lion bite off the head of the man who pot it in
and that you meant the present Administration. Y« |
of unworthy citixens; but they are not quite able to dc the month of the beast.
T R W E H 8~E P I T * ! r
FRIDAY MORNING, A P R I L 10J 1»C3.
M
<•
TRAVERSE CITY.
M t c k l a a e . TIK T s r l . f « u . » 4 all I-rrnf
ara p u b l i s h e d t h « r « l n l n p o r i a a n c e o f U « .
" p a i d o r d e r of D i s t r
favor Mary Leslie.
balance brought
balance due
ti
settlement,
T o p a i d T o w n s h i p «i
City...
•1863.
7.a. ».
March 1,
S2 0
2»o
17 c
15 0
16o
20 o
l«o
22 0
"to
"o
"o
17o
"
t.
-
3,
" «.
"
6,
" 8,
• 9.
" 10,
" 11.
u
Z
1 r.*..
19,
20,
21,
22.
23,
24,
25,
26,
*7.
28,
29.
SO,
31,
Jan. 19.
i*;
n®
3424-
u
17®
21 —
32 c
2(1®
32® 18C3.
IP® April 1.,
17® 1863.
Jan. 19.>.
32®
2!»®
36®
SO®
V*
30 e
20 o
39 a
25 0
»o
25-
233-,
2®
4337 0
28 0
30 o
!5e
38 0
«o
22 3
29 0
31 —
2337 c
33 0
Mb
26 0
28 0
"o
2228®
2S 0
"- 18,",
«•.
1H63.
.7 i" *
-36 —
32 0
20 c
2?®
21 0
" If
- 15,
" M.
"
"
«
"
"
"
"
"
•«
"
INT.
W I N T E R O F 1862 & 1863.
I 18U.
j A p r i l I,
I 1X112.
I A p r i l I. B y
Thermometrical ltcgister.
T n t T e r *
,
40 o
46c
13 0
31 0
310
i80
23 o
*>o
44®
20o
H a n n a h , L a y & Co's C o l u m n
;<j 'V) I IS6J
f.21 7 8 I J » n . i
32®
30®
34®
40®
39®
35®
26® 1*62.
20® April 1,,
3
«o
"o
o
7,"35®
, <= "
NEWATGO AXII NoBTifPOBT STATE ROAD.—A contract
•'for six miles, from the 84th to the 90th miles post, has
been let to Uoo. Loucks; and from tbe 90th to tljc 96th
•mile post, to William Monroe. The parties ore now at
ivork. The jobs to bo completed by tho. 1st of September next This will make a passable road to the Manistee River from Traverse City. A cootract will «oon
let to bridge the Manistee; aud then there only remains
•20 miles to connect with that part already completed—
giving a fair show soon to the outside world.
A p r i l I. H v a m o u n t d n e f i* I
N.> "
By a m o u n t of t a x r . i l l e c t c d o n
B o l l o f 1K62 A 3,
To a m o u n t paid Ccmetory Fund.
" a m o u n t loaned highway Fund
pur o r d e r of T o w n B o a r d .
" a m o u n t paid Township orders,
'• b a l a n c e ,
^ i • r ' i l ' l . I t . a m o u n t s r p e r ra»1
lM,:i
M1HUI ti
A p r ' . . I . 11 v l u a u i i t i l d u e i n C o
A p r i l I, Bv a m o u n t du-- i a t j o i
l«r;
K~nu.ii
II
22 »1 |
,v, ,
I
M I I X K T
H A Y .
7 " E H A V E F n U K i»K K | V | : T < » > V O, '
let H a y . f o r ^ i l e a ! a , v e r y r.-n«oii» :- ! e p
C. .NOItiin."
U
EST
Irt &
:Finnerly
ST»VKKE.\T OF s c u o o i
r r s f .
A p r i l 1, By b a l a n c e d u e o n s e t t l e m e n t .
JiMy 16, •' c a s h f r o m C o u n t y T r e a s u r e r
for Primary F u n d ,
1863.
J a n . 19, B y a m o u n t c o l l e c t e d q n t a x Uo'.i
o f 1 8 6 2 A 3.
1862.
A p r i l 2, T o c a s h p a i d o r d e r D i s t r i c t N o . I
, favor J. E. C u s h m a n .
28, " c a s h p a i d W a r r a n t D i s t r i c t N o .
1 f a v o r J . K. C t n l i t u a i i ,
J n l y 1C, " c a s h p a i d o r d e r o f " l > i * t r i - t N o .
\ U L L O W
with
Trarer*;
Township.
1 8 0 2 4 3.
Dr.
!
A p r i l 1, T o b a l a n c e o n h a n d a s p e r l a s t r e port.
H59 0 3
"
" cash Primary School Fund,
01 00 !
" a m o u n t o f T a r R o l l o f ISO J ,
SMS 52
J u l y 16, B y p a i d o r d e r 8 e h o o l D i s t r i c t N o .
1, P r i m a r y F u n d ,
A p r i l 3, '
N o . 20.
"
31.
Cr.
P R O V I S I O N ' S ,
1 : 'Ji: v r :•>.
"-x aKC-UM'-\u- s*"-• * . »
M.
I. Lr
•* iJ Sso,'
- -f-x- >•
,
- '
" paid Commissioners O r d e r to
Morgan
Bates,
advertising
1
Road Contract.
- paid Commissioners order to
T. D . H i l l a r y f o r s e r v i c e s as
Patbmaster,
"
" order School District N o . . l ,
f a v o r J . E. Cashman',
A p r i l 2 8 , " o r d e r S c h o o l D i s t r i c t N o . 31.
" p a i d w a r r a n t ofS c h o o l D i s t r i c t
N o . i,' f a r o r J . E . C u s h m a n ,
"
"
"
" paid Commissioner* order to
A. W. Bacon,
* paid Commissioners order to
Jos. Moody.
" p a i d o r d e r N o , 38,
" •
I"
•
" "
" "
"
"
-
" Ml
- MC
'j "
- *8,
'
'
"
" g a h l a u n d r y o r d e r s of D l a t r i c t
."
4 j>ail a u n d r y o r d e r s of D l a t r i c t
Feb.
4,
"
10,
As'sA
JOHNSON,
Complainant.
1,18
! pear
i .' i.rrTi.fyoiiN. c
J A M U s I'. B I I A M »
I. B y a m o n u t of 2 m i l l a n d S c h o o l
House tax transferred from
School Fund.
T o paid o r d e r f a v o r A, S, A d a m s .
" DK!
F.FAUI.T
Hem
Jos. Moody.
1*. i ' a r m e t e r ,
50
50
75
00
50
S*VLE.
HAVING
'
SI.HOOI. DISTRICT N o . S.
"
"
M c h . 2a, "
••
"
Wjn. Siuytcr.
R o b L lyenlic.
-
Geo. Leslie.
M a r y l/.-slie.
Pickles.- Pic-fruits,
IN T i l l :
CONDI
|
T r a v e r a e City. Dec. !
M 0
2 3 I'
p a i d o r d e r o f D i s t r i c t N o . C.
. favor H. Rutherford.
" p a i d o r d e r o f D i s t r i c t N o . A,
o a i N D TaaViiitsK c o t ' K T * .
A p r i l 1. T o b a l a n c e d u i H h o s e v e r a l F u n d s
on settlement.
" a t a o u n t of D e l i n q u e n t t a x . C o .
Orders aud rash paid over on
Dr.
12*2 23
HA.NNA'p, I.AY A CO.
1*62.
I T A O M l S s T I C S F O R * W I N T E R
O F
1803.—KEN|
tacky Jeans. S u m m e r StuffN Denims. Duck, Stripe.
Tick, Atiroo aud Mirers' Check. Shirting Prints. Nankeen
C o t t o n F l a n e e l s . W o o l F l a n n e l s , R r o w n C n d B l e a c h e d Covt o n s , a full l i n e . B a g s , A c .
IIA'NNAH, L A Y A CO.
1 r a v e r w e C i t y , D e e . 1, 1 8 0 2 .
n o s u i t o r p r o c e t - d i n g s at law h a v i n g
T A D I E S * C i o a t « a s n I. t n i e s ' C t o r n a , ( D o r s i a WIJITB i
" . i t uii) p a r i t h e r e o f , n o t i c e I - t h e r e - ' L i F r e n c h CasnlniereH. S h e p a r d s ' P l a i d s C a n a d a G r a y C a s s ,
i n on S a t u r d a v , t h e n i n t h d a y of May I N i c e B'lk D o e s k i n s a n d C a a s i m c r e s .
it C " ! . - . n o o n , a ! t h e E m m e l C o n n t y
H A N N A H , I.AY A CO.
l i e i l o r c f o r h n d i n g t h e <"lr< tilt I ' o u r t
T r a v e r s e C i t v . l i f t . 1. 1 8 6 ? .
T r a v e r s e , in s»,
n said a i o r t g a g e .
o much thereol i
e s s a r y : « s a t i s f y tb,- a t u o t i u t d u e o n s a i d 1
.
.
.
.
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
. D e c . 1, 1SI 2.
is d a t r . w i t h i n t e r e s t , at t h e r s t
a. l e g a l c o s t * a n d e x p e n s e s , a n d s
l u - e o l t w e n t y - U v d o l l a r s . o v . n a n t e . l t<- l«- p a i d I n s a i d n . . .
—
; g a g e : t h e witd p r e m i s e * l*-ing d e s c r i b e d in said m o r t g a g e a s , O
Half-Bushels. D r a g Teeth. Froc's Plows.Cable.Trace, and
i all t h o s e c e r t a i n t r a c t - o r p a r c e l s of l a n d situati' a n d N - m g i H a l t e r - C h a i n n B r u s h H o o k a , a n d E l i p t i r S p r i n g s , W o o d e n
in t h e C o n n t y of KIUUIPMU t h e S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , t o w i t ; [ W a r e . T u b s , P a i K
C h u r n s . L a d l e s , Ac., Ac., S a s h . D o o r - .
; E a s t h a l f of t h e s o u t b w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y - s i x ; t h e • A c .
! w e s t half of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r , t h e n o r t ' a e.ist q u a r t e r of
_
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e c . 1, lt»62.
| t h e s o a t h w e s t q u a r t e r a u d t h e n o r t h w e s t q u a r t e r of t h e ]
[ s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n thirtv-five : t h e - o u t h half an.l j
tfO 1 .
t h e s o u t h h a l f t»( t h e n o r t h w e s * q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y - f o u r , A | E D 1 C I N ' E S . — P I I X S ,
OINTMENTS,
LIN'AMENTS.
1 1 1 1
~ — ; a l s o t h e s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r a n d t h e r —*• » - - « • • • ••
" C -a s t o r O i l s . S a l t s , S u i p h n r . P a i n —K i• l l e r . S a r s a n a r i l U .
I e a s t q u a r t e r o f s o -tlon t h i r t y - t h r e e . all b e i n g in T o w n s h i p I M e d i c a l D i s c o v e r y . S a l t - R h e o m O i n t m e n t , S t r y c h n i n e , Ej-tj t h i r t y - « j v e n n o r t h ol K a n g e four, w st ; also t h e n o r t h frac- | W a t e r a n d S a l v e , A l o e s . V e i m i f a g e . Essences, E x t r a c t s , A e .
I t i o n a i h a l f o f s e c t i o n t h r e e , t l i e w— t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f o f t h e ,
H A N N A H , L A Y A Co.
J
'' n o r t h w e s t f r a c t i o u- a l q ,i t a r l c r o f s ,
ion two : the n o r t h c a s t ;
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D c c . I. 1*62.
' f r a c t i o" n a l qo un ao r t .e-rr sa nn.d! tt hh ee w
w ee s t h.s
half of the s o u t h went quar- 1
.
' t e r of s e c t i o n o n e . i n t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - s i x n o r t h o f r a n g e f o u r I r \ Y E
H T l ' F F S . — M A D D E R . INDIG<>. E X T R A C T O F
' west, a n J a l s o t h e w e s t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f of t h e n o r t h w e s t I 1 )
Ixigwood. Blue Vitrial. C o o o a r Copperas, C a m w o o d
f r a c t i o n a l q u a r t e r o f s e c t i o n s i x . ;n t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - s i x n o r t h ' C o c h i n e a l , A t . . A c .
o f r a n g e t h r e e w e s t , c o n t a i n i n g i n a l l fifU-en h u n d r e d a n d ,
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
v e n t y t w o a c r e s a n d 311(H) of a u «
Traverse City. Dec. 1.1862.
D a t e d F e b r u a r y 1st. I ^ ' H .
„
'
L E W I S AI.LKN. Mortcagei
) A F . R ItA O S B O r G H T BY
s i.AR.NEI', Attortjev,
HANNAH. LAY I
CO.
T r a e e c s e C a » y . I ' * c . 1. I A 6 1 .
ME
House tax
transferred from
School Fund.
•"eh- t . T o p a i d o r d e r f a v o r 11. I t u t l i e r f o r d
M c h . ID, "
"
•• F r a n c i s G r a t t i f o i e l .
Oysters,
! S a r d i n . s, C i g a n L
' I'sgfir"*-
" Henry Siuytcr,
" " I. S. Craine,
L A Y A CO.
B
iiie y e i i i o i i o n I-Oi i or, • t u o u s a n d • i g h l i u u
- t c m i r l Hr.nse. «»-ini
s
| f o r said E m m e t Coi
j of E i u m e t . I s h a l l M
A p r i l I, By b a l a n c e o n s e t t l e m e n t .
"
U'K
HANNAH,
T r : i v e r * c C i t y , D e c . 1, 1 8 6 2 .
E O S T E A D S . - T A B L E b , CHAIRS,KOCKERS, WASH
Stands, Mattrasscs. Child's Rockers, High Chairs, Ac.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D c c . 1, 1 8 0 2 ,
e d . a n d M.irj E. Bates
A H - . , , of 1 •>-tr< it. i n s a i d > t a t e . a n , l
t»-«-igbth d a y " J a n u a r y in t h e y e a r o n e j
r e d a n d s l a t y . >;i t h e u i f c c e «.f t b e R e g i s ; |
e t C o u n t y i n s a i d s t a t e , i n L i U e r A of
: i , 3 ' i M a n . ! 2 L :)->n w l i i . - h s a i d M o r t
i t o b » d i n - i t ('>•- d a t e o f t h i s n o t i c e t h e !
J a u . 31, By a m o u n t ot 2 m i l l a n d S c h o o l
House tax
transferred ffoui
School Fund,
"
T o p a i d o r d e r f a v o r A . Ii. C r n i n e .
"
"
HEKN
|
•idgi.
Register
M O K T f . A G E
G'fo. l a m kes,
Jos. Moody,
G. Airislie.
J n » . Itcriuilee.
i' I'armeter.
Jos. Moody.
1863
Ts*, Corrsr.
:
1 8 0 2 i :l. S c h o o l F u n d .
" 3 1 , B y p a i d C o u n t y T{«asut>l i n m i c n t tax"
" paid cash collected oa
o f 1 8 6 2 A 3.
1 no
CHOCERIES. A c . — S c a a n ,
Spices, Candies, Soap, common and eraslvt ;
Mustard, English and French prepared ;
,
Soda, C r e a m Tartar. Ginger, B a k i n g l'owder,
Salaratus, Starch, Vermacelli, H o p s
T o b a c c o , Snuff, G a r d e n Seeds,
Itag Salt. F i n e a n d Rock Salt. (line, A l u m .
'
L a m p a n d l a i r d Oil. C a s t o r Oil.
Indigo, Yellow Ochre, Chalk, C a m w o o d .
Fluid, Moladscs, Syrup. Vinegar,
Beans, Pork. Meal. Flour. Oatmeal. Feed. Bran.
Beef, H a m s a n d S h o u l d e r s , C o d f i s h .
Hard Bread, Buttct; Crackers, Lard,
E x t r a c t L e m o n , V a n i l l a , R o s e , P e a c h , P i n e A p p l e , Ac.
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
Traverse City, Dec. 1,1862.
> . at the village <
A i. v a n . i n I I I - C o u n t y of A l l e g a n , i n t h e M . . t - o f M i c h i g a n .
; o n t i l " .'i'h d a y . i f M - i r e k A . P . . 1V.3, 1 - T o r c H o n . K l a v l u s J .
Sugar making—Ladies'and Gents' Skates, assorted—
l.lttl. j n h n . C i r c u i t J t i d c ' - nt Cha:iil"»r*.
Door Springs—Plane Irons—Bevels—Try Squares—Hollow
, I
I t s a t i s f a c t o r i l y i p i i r . i r i i i g liiat t\ie d e f e n d a n t C h r i s t i a n
Adze*. Bed P a n s — K e r o s e n e L a n t e r n s — S t o v e C r o c k s — W e l l
I . ' i l l m o i l , is a n o n r e - u l - ' i i t of t i i i a M a t e b u t i s a r e s i d e n t of
Umket.«—i'ut Cover*—Small B l o c k s — R a t l i n e — S p r i n g Bal. t h e b l a b - o f T e a m « - c . ,<L; IUOIIOU O' L . H . M a r s b . o f t ' o u n s e l
ances—Patent Carpet Lining—Ladies' Rubber Boots—Beesf » r C o m p l a i n a n t . .1 i s - i r t f r« d t l \ n l s a i d d e f e n d a n t . C h r i s t i a n
w a x — t r a u d River Land Piaster—Grass Seed, Ac.. Ac.
I J o h n s o n , c a a « e ills a p | H - a r a n c e in t b ' « c a n s s
!.c- e n t e n - d
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
1
w i t h i n t h r e e m o n t h s f r o m t h e d a t e •>' t l i i « o r d e r , » n d t h a t i n
T r a v e r s e C i t y , D e c . 1. 18G2.
1
CUM u f h i a a p p e a r a n c e h e c a u s e l i i s a n a w e r t o t h e c o i i i p l a i n j a n t ' s b i l l t o c.i- i , l e d . a u d a c o p y o t n i » l u m a n s w e r t o b o s e r v e d -^n t h e r o i o i ' . a i u a u r s S . » . . c ; t o r . « t h i n t w e n t y d a y s a f t e r
s e r v i c e of s c!>[ > of «u..i I . " ' , a n . , i. ' . i i e o l t h i s o i d e r . a n d i n
Isalt ther.'o''.;:a» t h e " I ! Mil's* t .ken a s • '-iressed by t h e
'ork and Fancy Baskets TabU
• s a i d d e f e n d a n t , t ' h r i s t a i n J o h n « o n . a n d Ir l< f u r t h e r o r d e r e d
M a t s . B r u s h e s of all k i n d s . G u a r d s , C h a i n s , Ac.
•Hat w i t h i n t w e n t y d a y * t h o s a i d c o m i d a i n a i u c a u s e a c o p y of
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
t i l l s o r d e r t o in: p u i d i a h e d i a Hie G r a n d T r a v e r s * H e r a l d . »
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e c . 1. 1 8 0 2 .
n e w s p a p e r p r i n t e d u n d p u b i i a h e d at T r a v e r s e t'ily, Iu said
C . n n t v of f J - a n ! T r a v e r s e , a n d t h e srtid . . M i c i t i , •, u,
/ ^ x o v E S ,
A VERY LARGE ASSORTMENT JDST HE
t i n n e d i n s u l o p a p e r ii: o - a * . o n e . , m ea.-.i " • ' K r r - n *, i—ks
, 0 | v e J ) l'lpc, Zlne. Sheet Iron, Stove Furniture. One and
I i n s u c c e s s i o n , o r t h a t s h e c a u s e a < <q.. o l t l i i ^ o r d e r t o I r h r e - l > a i l Kettles, Tin W a r e — a complete l i n e — 2 0 , 3 0 ,
p e r s o n a l l y s e r . e.l o n t h e a a i d d y f e u d w t . U » r i * ; u n J o h n s o n . . 4 n < G O
Kettles.
w
R a I | o n
transfered
J-'und
per
u
19, " j S u X o r d e r of D l a t r i c t N o . C
favor F. Grattifoell.
" M i d order of Disti
'• « v o r J o s . M o o d y ,
Turkish.
JOIINSON. D e f e n d a n t .
ISK'J «V 3. t o C o n t g ' ' K u
" a m n u u t d u • o n :n.x
1 8 6 2 A 3, t o H i g h w a y I
"
•
Mch,
T i n 1'oil C a v e n d i s h .
wttlemen1
"- ?
«
iW;
" paid County Treasurer on T a x
B o l l f t 1861, .
" p a i d o r d e r N o . 40,
fc
"
"
L
O R D E R O F P U B L I C A T I O N .
MH IIH, » K , — N i n t h J u d i c i a l t j r e u i t . i n C h a n c e r y .
HettW raent.
"
J a n . 31,
P . A L.. 8 -!
I^'iK."'
1863.
A p r i l I, B y a m o u n t o i 7 m i l l m x t r a
ferrcd from School Fund.-
1
2
10
25
82
_
Shirts, Shirts—Fancy and Plain, Suapender;
Over-Alls, a n d Jackets, India ltubber and Oil Coats a n d
J a c k e t s , W o o l , U n i o n a n d C o t t o n S o c k s , C r a v a t s , Collar.^
Travelling Bags, Trunks, Umbrellas, Ac.
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y , D e c . 1, 1 8 6 2 .
ii in p r i c e
i e h w i l l Ii
A c i r c u l a r of p r i c e s w i l l h e s u n t o n a p p l i c a t i o n .
ll.Vly.i
24 0 0
1 50
. ;
S N U F F .
i ' r w h li'ouey lien ^ v u i i ,
. i'rcali S c o t c h .
T O B A C C O .
Treasurer,
t 1 mixed.
MARRIED.
Attlie residence of the brido's father by Rev. 8. Steele. Mr.
HENRY ALLEN, of White water, and Mis* CAKOUNK 11. I.XT.'ir, daughter of A. W. Langwortfiy, Esq.
Aecoont
arrangem
a n d largest F u r H o u s e s in N e w Y o r k , f o r t h e sale of all
| F u r s , a n d a r e p r e p a r e d t o p u r c h a s e all k i n d s of K u r a . a n d
cau afford l o a n d will pay t h e v e r y h i g h e s t r a t e s l o r t h e
s a m e . l i e i n e m b c r w e a r e in t h e m a r k e t .
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
I
Traverse City, Dcc. 1,18*2.
;
W - A t t e n t i o n i< c a l l e d t o t h e l a r g e
of F i t i " ( ! a t C h e w i n g a u d S m o k i n g T o b
f o u n d of a S u p e r i o r Q u a l i t y .
1863.
31. T o a m o u n t
ordered
(rotn C o n t i n g e n t
Town Board.
J a n . i f . B y p a i d o r d e r N o . .Hi.
HANGINCS,
his
I'emijirus,
Pui e Virginia.
N'achilucher.
Copenhagen.
Iligli Toa*t S c o t c h .
Irish High Toast
o r I.iindyfoot.
PAPKB
I.
York.'
a r t i c l e s of
S N I F F .
.
F i n e kappe--.
Coarse Itappue,
A m m c a i i Centlvman.
\\o have not heard from tho election in Litlanaw
4nd Antrim, except that Tberon Bostwick, Copjwrhead,
was dofeated for Clerk and Register in Antrim.
.
New
STATIONARY.
Trav.-r«e City, Dec.
a d d e d t o t h e i r a l r e a d y l a r g e S t o c k t h e i t e m of L e a t h e r :
l'p|KT, K i d . Calf, Sole. B i n d i n g s , Ac., as also a fair s u p p l y of
S h o e f i n d i n g s ; for sale a t a small a d v a n c e o v e r cost, for
t h e a c u o m m o d a t i o a of o u r C u s t o m e r s .
Please call and
examine.
H A N N A H , L A T A CO.
T r a v e r s e C i t y . D e e . I. I V , I .
1 8 C h a m In-ra S t . ,
11RD1VN
. 1663.
/ A p r i l 1, B y l i a l a n o A f t n s e t t l e m e n t ,
THE LATEST NEWS.—We have no space for . a summary of the latest news. There is nothing of a startling
nature. Tho papers are filled with all sorts of rumo
nmopg them, an attack on Charleston, and preparatioas
for the evacuation of Richmond by the Rebel*
The
tronblea in Utah increase. Brigham Young is on the
Rampage. The policy of employing Negroc) in the
'iovcrnmcnt service is to be fully carried out.
In
17^(>0-
L O R I I X VIt D .
12 I ' b a r r . l / c r s S t r e e t ,
AND
11 A N N A U , l . A Y A C O .
Mil.-I
j
Xn i . i s n bzi >
W o u l d r a i l Uii' a t t e n t i o n o f D « a : e r i t>» t h e
Several articles iulcnded for this week's paper are
crowded out to make room for the Town Treasurer's
Report.
BACON
tJO.i|)
COMCO.
T r a v e r s e <!i«y. D e e .
I | )C O R K
To b a l a n c e ' d u e t h i s F u n d on sett le n s e a l .
•' p a i d M o r g a n B a t e s , p e r o r d e r
o / B o a r d of C o m m i s s i o n e r bill
printing.
'* p a i d T . D . H i l l a r y , p e r o r d e r
o f B o a r d of C o m m i s s i o n e r s f u r
services as P a t hmaster,
1862.
\ R O W ARE.
A Ft'l.l. AND r i W I P L K T E ASSOHTilers a n d A c r i c a l t u r . i l H a r d w a r e .
Alfo.
ilass. At.. Ac.
H A N N A H , L A Y A- C O
P e r . 1. 1
AND
r cheap."
HANNAH. LAY *
•• a m o u n t c o l l e c t e d o n t a x B o l l
or 1862 A I ,
'• a m o u n t l o a n e d f r o m C o n t i n g e n t F u n d p e r o r d e r of T o w n
Board,
HNl'l'F AND TOUACCO M A M FAfTURKR
LECTURE; ON GJMI-OGY.—Rev. Mr. Warren will deli,
vor his second lectoro on Friday evening, at hilf past
seven o'clock, at the School House in Traverse pity.
ANNUAL BEPOBT Df TOWNSHIP TRMJKER.
IUSIICH
By b a l a n c e o a scttlem<!iil.
STATEMENT O F HUiltWAY I
B y a r a t . d u e R ' d D i s , N o . 1 t;
i'E'l'liK
DEATH or MK. UKKE.VHAN.--WC learn that Preserve
D. Oreonman, of Whitewater, who enlisted in. Co. A,
"26th Regiment, died at Fairfax, Va., on ' the 2"th of
March. He was a very worthy man, and leaves a wife
and three children.
A . W.
I ' l l K n L i t e C K I B K B S AUK l i A P P Y T O A N N O U N C K :D
L t i n - i - i t i l e n s o f G r a n d Travor*-- a n d s t j j o i n i n f t O n n t u -.
t l . a t l . K j a r e MI f o r t u n a t e a s t o h a v e a v e r y i s r i c e < a d i » ®
j i l e u - ^^<,l k ,r M e r c h a n d i s e e s p e c i a l l y a d a p t e d l o t h e p a r H ' >.
d e m a n d ! ' of t h i s e o m m n n l t y
N e a r l y t h e w h o l e of w t u *h
. » « p u r c l i u s e d p r i o r t o t h e l u r R e a d v a n c e in a l l c l a s s e s • '
j Merelijhndise eani>ed b y t h e l e v y i n g of t b e E x e u , - T a x .
(Scpteminr.
A d d t o t h i s t h e f a c t t h a t t h e i r s t o e l i w a s pi
, i i . x « e d f o r '• C a s h ; " a n d t i n t o w i n K t o t h e a J v j i . t a g c a t , ' - . ,
i n a m e d t h e y a n ' s e i l i i f i ; m a n y g o o d s a s l o w a.- t h e y u u
' t m r c h a ^ e d in V e t r Y o r k o r B o s t o n , a u d all n p o n a « n :
I a d v a n c e o n p r e - e o t e o s t ; t h e l - e q e f l t s o f w h i c h t b e n,ist »ee a n d will of c o u r s e a v a i l hitaseli
a t t e n t i o u lo t h e f o l l o w i n g , as a s m a l l j :.ii
t . f o r s a l e o n t h e m o s t f a v o r a b l e t- r m - .- ( t e a
H A N N AM I. A Y A (
I
THE LAW WXCtSIKG WVBMLW CLAIMS.
(Cvncludrd
from
Fir it pare.)
'•
.
F o ri* myself, I p r o t e s t against a n d denounce
NATIONAL BOUNTY INSURANCE CO.
n i g h t m a r e , a u d h a v e fallen. o u t of b e d ! J, o h n ,...
. J o ! n V < ! o. j t h e i r Uva&ouabk: acts.
a r t s . I h a v e voted against t h e i r uieaCapital, 9100,000.
g e t u p d e a r ! Y o u ' v e d r a g g e d all t h e bcdclotfbcs d o w n , s u m
1 will d o no t o t h e end, I will d e n o u n c e t h e m
BOUNTY.
S N Y D E R ,
W I L L I A M S
4
CO
o n t h e floor w i t h y o u . . Y o u ' v e rolled yourtelf u p in ' a s long a,- t i o d give* me b r e a t h .
A n d I a m ready t o
BOUNTY IS OK THE NATURE OK A G I F T . OB
t h e m so t i g h t l y t h a t 1 c a n ' t get y o u out. Y o i f l l be srao- m e e t the t r a i t o r s themselves here or anywhere, and tight
gratuity
In this war $loo. a* a bounty, it due to the
(Orgoniltd
by P e r m i s s i o n of the .iutkoritiei.)
t h e r e d if y o u d o n ' t wake u p . O h d e a r ' oh d e a r me ! t h e m t o the d e a t h . [ P r o l o n g e d c h e e r s a n d shouts.]
widow or heirs of deceased soldiers and to discharged solW a k e o p y o u g r e a t s t u p i d , d o !"
;
i
1 said I p a i d 8 3 , 0 0 0 a y e a r taxes. 1 d o n o t say it to diers who shall serve for two years, or to the close of the
)
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
69
" B l e s s my soul !" said I. • " H o w j f o r t u o a t c — h o w b r a g of i t
I t i s my d u t y ; yes. M r . S p e a k e r , m y pri- was. if sooner ended. In caaes of deceased soldiers it is due:
c u r i o u s i t is, too, Uiat y o u should h a v e come t o my re*- j vilege t o d o i t
B u t some of the t r a i t o r s here, wuo' are Isti To the widow, if there b« one ; 2nd, To the children, if no T H I S COMPANY IS ORGANIZED ESPECIALLY KOU
widow ; 3d, To the father, mother, or brothers and sisters, as 1
THE PROTECTION OK KAMILIES.
c u c so o p p o r t u n e l y . I t was very k i n d of y o u , a n d so eou-1 w o r k i n g n i g h t a n d d a y t o g e t t h e i r miserable little bills the case may i«. provided thev be residents of the United
On the pavment to t h i s Company, or any of It* authorised
r a g e o u s besides ! W h e n d i d j o u a r r i v e o u t ?
D o y o u : a n d claims t h r o u g h t h e Legislature, t o t a k e money o u t States. Commissioned officers and soldiers discharged beagents, of tnc sum of $50, it will issue a certificate of insui
k n o w I was w o n d e r i n g , j u s t a s I was t u m b l i n g ' i n t o t h i s of the p i c k e t s of t h e people, are talking a b o u t high fore two years' » « r v | « . and their h r t r s in case of their death, ance, binding itself to psv to such person the sum of Kiv*
b o r r i e d p i t why the gorilla's wife d i d n ' t eonie to kit a>- taxes. T h e y are hypocrites, as well as t r a i t o r s . [ C h e e r s ] arc not entitled, as thv law now is. to any Bounty.
HrsDKan DoLLaBS, In case t h e j are drafted intiKthe Naval
PENSIONS.
ur Military Scrvice of the United States, prior to, December
sistance. Y o n k n o w s h e m i g h t h a v e done it easily and
T h e reason '.hat tliey p r e t e n d t o be afraid of high
i'en«ions were formerly an annual payment in considera- 31st. 1866, or during the war. In the same proportion this
safely e n o u g h , for t h e lion wouldn't h a v e let go h i s holJ, t a x e s is t h a t t h e y d o n o t w a n t t o vote mouey for t h e reCompanv will Inaure any person liable to do Military doty,
tion
of
past
services.
It
has
been
extended
iu
modern
times
a u d if s h e h a d s p r u n g on his b u c k she m i g h t h a v e e o a - : lief «>f the s o l d i e r * T h e y w a n t to e m b a r r a s s t h e Govto those who have become disabled, and to the dependent in any sum from $100 to $5,000, but not more than $5,000 on
b l c d h e r h u s b a u d t o freshen his g r i p . T h e y tnight h a v e ' e m i n e n t a u d s t o p the war. T h o v w a n t ' to aid t h e Se- heirs of those who lose their lives in scrvice. It is due In any one life. This Company also insures those in the ser
1
(|uickly s t r a n g l e d h i m b e t w e e c t h e m . I s it not c u — "
- u n-i o nsi s t-s t o» c o-n q u—o r our
tb«o»y~s —
t ... c a r e this " a r to soldiers disabled >n service in the line of duty.— vice, officers and privates, against wounds or death, during
in the R-I-J
field. fThey
•• M y goodness g r a c i o u s me 1" said m y ' w i f e i n t e r r u p t t a x e s ? T h e y are p i c a y u n e men, anyhow.
T h e y Of deceased soldiers it is dne : 1st. To the widow, if there be the present war, t h u s enabling all prudent soldiers to provide
iug m a
" W h a t stuff a u d nonsense a r e y o u t a l k i n g ??—
— .I pay no t a x e s ut all, a n d never did,, and n e v e r h o p e to, one : id. To the children u n d e r 15 years of age ; 3d, To the their families against want, in case they fall in battle—die—
mother dependent wholly or partly - 4th, To the sisters under or are so wounded as to be disabled from supporting them.—
L i o n s a n d gorillas !—fiddlesticks ! T h e r e " a r e gorillas a n d unless t h e y cnu m a n a g e to p l u n d e r t h e Gi
16 years, dependent wholly or partly upon any deceased sol- To the manly virtues of bravery and patriotism that railed
lions e n o u g h in t h e s t r e e t ! D r u c k e n women s c r e a m i n g J [ C h e e r s . ] T h i s is uu e x c u s e of t r a i t o r s .
dier who may be killed or dies of disease contracted or the soldier to the field. let him add the crowning excellence
a n d n a s t y men l i g h t i n g a n d t h e police t r y i n g t o t a k e t h e m
of a p r u d e n t provision for his family, lit ci
[ H e r e the S p e a k e r called for o r d e r in the galleries.]
vronnds received in service and in the line of duty.
R a t e s o f P e n s i o n s . — T o a non-commissioned officer,
off to t h e s t a t i o n . T h e noise t h e y made woke me, ami
M r . Speaker, e x c u s e me. I foel for my c o u n t r y in
t h e r e I found y o u snorting, g r u n t i n g and s t r a g g l i n g on (his her h o u r of d a n g e r ; I feel for h e r f r o m the t i p s of musician or private, if totally disabled, or to their widow or
dependent heir, if deceased, j n per month ; to 2d Lieutenants
y o u r b a c k , a n d t h e m o m e n t I t o u c h e d y o u , a w a y y o u my toes t o t h e e n d s of my hair. T h i i is the reason t h a t $15 ; 1st Lieutenant*. $17 : t » Captains, $20 ; to Majors,
Our rates for insurance against wounds and death are as
floundered o u t of t h e b e d , rolling yourself u p in t h e I speak as I do. I cannot h e l p i t
I a m bound t o tell $25 ; To Lieutenant Colonel* ami all higher grades, $30 per follows, to wit :
c l o t h e s , a n d d r a g g i n g t h e m all a w a y w i t h y o u .
Oh. t h e s e men, these disloyal men t o t h e i r t e e t h w h a t t h e y mouth. Kccs in I Vnsion cases are only $5.
$10 on a hundred
againat wounds.
j
$*
"
"
"
death.
d o n ' t sit on t h e floor there, like a g r e a t donkey, w i t h y o u r are, a n d w h a t t h e p e o p l e , t h e true loyal p e o p l e , think of
BACK PAY*
1 O a r certificates of insurance are aaalgnable—are Intended
n i g h t c a p on o n e side, l o o k i n g silly a n d ridiculous. D o t h e m . [ T r e m e n d o u s cheering.
The Speaker rapped
Is due to discharged soldiers to the time they are actually to be assigned to the family for their care, support and reg e t u p a n d help me set the c l o t h e s s t r a i g h t on t h e b e d njion the desk in uuison with t h e applause, a p p a r e n t l y to discharged. The undersigned have superior advantages for lief, in case the eventa occur unon which they are payable.
again."
s t o p it, b u t renllv t o a d d t o its volume, for t could see speedily collecting the nay and claims of discharged soldiers.
As many in the service are where it would be impoasible
Back Pay is due the widows or heirs of deceased soldiers in for them to provide for tbeir families in this way, the wife,
" W h a t lM said I. " W a s i t all a d r e a m , aud not e v e n by nis flushed c&oek a u d flashing eye t h a t his h e a r t was nearly the same order as liounty.
Tlie .father, mother, or father, or brother, or any Individual feeling an Interest in
m y noble F a n a reality."
w i t h the b r a v e and loyal old gentleman.]
other heirs need nut IK- residents of the United States.
the family of the soldier, may insure them against wounds or
" Y o u r fan, indeed ! " r e t o r t e d Mrs. S m i t h , b e g i n n i n g
M r . S p e a k e r , 1 h a v e said m y sav. I a m no s p e a k e r . —
death. W h a t can mortal man do nobler, than to present the
MINORS.
t o lose h e r placidity of temper. " I f y o u are BO w a r m as T h i s is the only spec-ch I h a v e made. A n d I d o not know
The War Department forbids the enlistment of minora family of tbe soldier with an insurance upon nls life, or
t o want a fan, y o u may sit u p h e r o a n d use b i n e .
I'll t h a t it deserves to b e callod a speech.
I could n o t sit under IB years of age.^ Ordinarily they will be rejected if agaisst wounds, thus at once placing them beyond the reach
of poverty, In case their p r o t e c t o r never returns. T h i s is a
lend i t t o y o u a n d welcome. B u t pleasd let m e h a v e t h e still any l o n g e r , and s e e these scoundrels a n d t i a i t o r s •uch enlistments are properly reported.
In all cases of Soldiers' Pay, Pensions, Bounty, and in fact system ol substantial charity towards the dependent families
b e d clothes, f o r I d o n ' t w a n t fanning.
M y t e e t h a r e work o u t t h e i r selfish s c h e m e s t o d e s t r o y t h e U n i o n . —
of volunteer*, that has been commenced by our wealthy citlc h a t t e r i n g w i t h t h e cold. T h e police h a v e taken all t h e T h e y h a v e my sentiments. L e t t h e m one and all make all Just claims and accounts against the Government, the sens, and will be continued by the worthier p o r t i o n s of
undersigned have the most perfect facilities for their most
fighting a n d s h o u t i u g a n d s c r e a m i n g gorillas and lions, t h e most of them. I a m r e a d y to b a c k u p all I say, and speedy collectiou.
them. What can onr wealthy and patriotic cltisens do, t h s t
male a n d female, to t h e s t a t i o n house. T h e W i s a r e in 1 repeat it, to m e e t t h e s e t r a i t o r s in a n y m a n n e r t h e y
Discharged Soldiers who have n o t got their pay we are dai- will go further to increase ealistmcnts and assist the Govt h e w a r d r o b e . Do, t h e r e ' s a.dear, g o t u p off t h e floor.
may choose, f r o m a p i u ' s point t o t h e m o u t h of a cannou. ly rendering the most important assistance to, besides seeing e r n m e n t , than tn say t o o n r hardy laboring m e n — " I f you
will enlist. I will Insure your life until you return, for $100
That's right."
A. W . H ,
[ T u m u l t u o u s applaus6, d u r i n g w h i c h t h e old gentleman that they secure all due them on transportation, subsistence, —$500^-$1.000, for the benefit of your family."
clothing, rations. .t<-.
. - a t d o w u a f t e r nc h a d g i v e n t h e desk a p a r t i n g whack.
T h e rates or basis u p o h which t h i s Company Insure i s
R a t i o n s . — S o l d i e r s are entitled to the cost price o f - r a Speech of a Drave old P a t r i o t .
j w h i c h s o u n d e d loud a b o v e the din of c h e e r s and clap- tlons in money while ni.sent ou, furloughs, or other compe- founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the mortality of wars for tbe last 600 years, and leaves but a reasonaI n the Illinois S e n a t e , lately, t h e following speech was ! p i n g of h a n d s . ]
tent authority, winch money we readily secure.
Government Vouchers, Itecrnlting, Quartermaster and ble margin for profit f o r the Company, while it places tho
d e l i v e r e d . T h e r e h a v e been m o r e p r e t e n t i o u s a n d l a b o r - 1
I n e v e r witnessed so m u c h e x c i t e m e n t in my life iu an
families of those insured bevond want and destitution from
e d e f f o r t s d u r i n g t h e p r e s e n t w a r . b u t none t i a t h a d ir. I assembly. M r . F u u k spoke w i t h a f o r c e of natural elo- Commissary Accounts accurately made u p at our office and
any or the vicissitudes of w ar.
collccted.
t h e m m o r e of t r u e n a t u r a l eloqucncc a n d fervent p a t r i o t - «|iiciicc, w i t h a conviction a n d truthfulness, with a "fervor
This is the only Insurance Company in the United States
All just Military and N'aval Contracts, Claims and Looses
i s m . W e s h o u l d liko t o h a v e seen a n d h e a r d the old | a n d passion t h a t w r o u g h t u p the galleries a n d even inem- adjusted and collc-'i--<l uu application, either by mall or in that was organized especially f o r this pnrpose.
m a n . • T h e r e p o r t is taken f r o m a W e s t e r n pppcr.
| U-rs on t h e floor,' to t h e h i g h e s t p i t c h of e x c i t e m e u L —
Advantages of Insniing i n this C o m p a n y .
UOBIKSON A BBOOKB,
" A g r e a t sensation was t h e n c a u s e d b y a a p e e c h d e - | H i s voice was h e a r d in t h e stores t h a t s u r r o u n d the
1st,—'n the case ol citizens i n s u r i n g sums for their famiAuthorized War Claim Attorneys,
livcrea b y M r . F u n k , one of t h e r i c h e s t f a r m e r s of t h e ! square, mid t h e p e o p l e c a m e flocking in from all q u a r lie«,'tf dratted: If no draft takes place in the county where
DRTKOIT, MICII,
S t a t e , a man w h o p a y s o v e r $ 3 , 0 0 0 p e r a n n u m in t a x e s , t.-r*.
In five m i n u t e s lie b a d ifti a u d i e u c e * t h a t p a c k e d
OFFICII—No. 141' JelTerson Aveuue. over Ives' Bank, op- the insured resides, half the Insurance money will be ret o w a r d the s u p p o r t of t h e G o v e r n m e n t . T t y l o b b y a u d t h e hall to its utmost c a p a c i t y . A f t e r he had c o n c l u d e d , posite Office U. S. Military Commander.
funded.
'
2nd.'—Our Insurance in regard to the draft covers n o t only
gallery were crowded with spectators
M r . , F u n k rose t h e R e p u b l i c a n menil>ors a n d s p e c t a t o r s rushed u p and
the'present drart, but all future ones.
t o o b j e c t t o t r i f l i n g resolutions w h i c h w e r e b e i n g iiitro-1 t o o k him l.y t h e hand t o c o n g r a t u l a t e him. T h e Demo3d,—Our Company insure for any sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
d u e e d by t h e D e m o c r a t s t o kill t j m o , ami s l a v e off a v o t e I c n i t s said n o t h i n g , b u t evidently felt t h e c a s t i g a t i o n they
to circumstances of insured.
u p o n t h e a p p r o p r i a t i o n s for t h e s u p p o r t of the S t a t e j w e r e receiving m o s t keenly, us m i g h t be seen f r o m their
4th.'—The men who have invested their capital In t h i s
S p l e n d i d Anil A p p r o p r i a t e H o l i d a y P r e s e n t ,
Government
l i e said :
\
j b l a n c h e d c h . r k s a n d restless andd uneasy gianc
Company have been well known to tbe business community
for the past fourteen years.
MR. SI-KAKEK,—I c a n sit iu m y s e a t uo l o u g c r a
HI 91 K • D E M O R E S T ' S
5th.<—The'capital of t h i s Company will not be employed iu
l l o w ii . t t a u F e e l s i n B a t t l e .
s u c h b o y s play
. vg o i n ,g on. These" men a r e triflir.g, with
Banking or BealEstato operations,"but will remain iA U. 8.
t h e b u s t i n t e r e s t s of t h e c o u n t r y .
T h e y 4>ouSd h a v e
T h e r e can lie n o t h i u g m o r e puzzling t h a n t h e analysis
Government Slocks, and will only, be converted so fast as
a o c a ' c a r s t o s e t off t h a i r hand*, o r t h e y a r c S e c e s s i o n i s t s of oue's feelings on u battle-field. Y o u c a n n o t d e s c r i b e
may be necessary to meet the liabilities of the Company to
H E EMBODIMENT OK PRACTICAL UTILITY, AND the i n f u r e d .
a n d t r a i t o r s at h e a r t .
t h e m satisfactorily to yourself or others.
T o march
a marvel of simplicity
makes the r u n n i n g atich very
6th.-*-The Company arc bound to take risks to no m o r e
1 say t h a t t h e r e a r e t r a i t o r s a u d Secessionists a t h e a r t steadily u p t o the m o u t h s of a hundred aanuon, while rapidly nnd perfect, uses a common needle, and will last a
than $100,000,
in t h i s S e n u t c . T h e i r a c t i o n s p r o v e it. T i t e i r s p e e c h e s tliev jiour out fire a n d smoke, and s h o t a n d shell in a lifetime. AttheN".-« York State Kair. its simplicity, efficienResponsible agents wanted in every county lo the I'uited
prove i t
T h e i r g i b e s a n d l a u g h t e r a n d c h c c i s h e r e s t o r m t h a t m o w s the men like grass, is h o r r i b l e beyond cy, and grest prai n.-al iitiliit. » a - oiufirrocd by the award of States. They must give references of strict integrity sod
tfie
First
Premium
nightly, w h e n t h e i r s p e a k e r s g e t u p iu t h i s h a l l a n d de- d e s c r i p t i o n — a p p a l l i n g . I t is a b s u r d t o say a man can
responsibility, Those deslriug to be insured where agents
It will gather, ltuflle. sliirr, tuck, run up breadths, etc., with are not yet appointed, will remit to tbe Company, at 6U Walln o u n c e t h e w a r a n d t h e A d m i n i s t r a t i o n , p r o v e it.
d o it w i t h o u t f e a r . D a r i n g H a n c o c k ' s c h a r g e , a t F r e d a single or double thread oil any material adapted to the run- street, > . Y., (by express), a snm of money sufficient to cover
I c a n sit h e r e bo l o n g e r a u d not tell t h e s e t r a i t o r s w h a t e r i c k s b u r g . f o r a long distance the slope was s w e p t by ning stich. The thinnest, usually the most difficult to stitch
the Company's per centage ou the amount desired to be InI t h i n k of t h e m . A n d while so telllngri t h e m , I a m res- such a h u r r i c a n e of d e a t h t h a t we t h o u g h t every s t e p by other sewing machines, being se.wed the easiest. .' For sured ; and if it be a citizen desiring to insure a sum f o r his
pousiblc myself f o r w h a t I say. 1 stand u p o n m y own would lie our last, a n d 1 a m willing t o say, f o r One, that ladies' and children's apparel, and other articles made of fhmily, in case lie is afterwards drafted, he will, give his name,
b o t t o m . I a m r e a d y t o m e e t a n y man on t h i s floor, in I was p r e t t y b a d l y scared.
W h a t e v e r may b e said light fabrics, it will therefore be found almost invaluable.
age and residence. If it be a soldier, he will give name, ag*.
It is attached to tin- table like a sewing bird, aud having no and the Company or the Itegiment to which he belongs, the
a n y manner, f r o m a p i n ' s p o i n t t o t h e m o u t h of a caution, a b o u t - g e t t i n g used t o i t , " old s o l d i e r s s c a r c e l y d r e a d
tension, aud requiring no lubrication or change of stich, is
o p o n t h i s c h a r g e a g a i n s t theso traitors.
[ T r e m e n d o u s a b a t t l e equally with new ones.
B u t t h e most difficult always ready for operation, and such a marvel of simplicity number of the Regiment and State it is from« also the residence of his family. If i t be wife, (irother, lather, or friends
a p p l a u s e f r o m t h e g a l l e r i e s . ] I a m a n old man of sixty- t h i n g t o s t a n d u u d e r is t h e suspcusc while w a i t i n g , as we that a child of six or eight w a r s can undersruud it, and use of tbe family t h a t desire t o take out an insurance upon the
five.
I c a m e t o Illinois a p o o r boy. I h a w m a d e a lit- waited iu F r e d e r i c k s b u r g , d r a w n u p in line of b a t t l e ou it successfully.
Bbsent soldier, t h e y will give his name and age, a n d a l s o the
all 1iaV>-< I.- jet HIII ufi.rili-i.
Company, Regiment and State t o which it belongs. The »p
t l e S o m e t h i n g for myself a n d family.
I p a y § 3 . 0 0 0 a t h e e d g e of t h e field, w a t c h i n g t h e c o l u m n s fiio past u s ;
icb'nr
ed wit
plicant f o r t h e policy will also give the name and residence
y e a r in t a x e s . 1 a m willing to p a y $G,D00. a y e $ 1 2 , 0 0 0 a u d d i s a p p e a r in a cloud of smoke, while horses and men 1
xplicit direct
of the wife or the person for whose benefit the insurance is
[ g r e a t c h e e r i n g , t h e old g e n t l e m a n b r i n g i n g d o w n his uud c o l o r s g o down in confusiou, while all sounds a r e lost |
procured.
fist u p o n h i s d e s ^ w i t h a b l o w t h a t w o u l d - k n o c k down a in the s e r t i i m i u g of sbolls, the c r a c k i n g of musketry, the
Apply to, or address.
b u l l o c k , a n d c a u s i n g t h e ink-stand to b o u n c e a half doz- t h u n d e r of artillery, and k n o w i n g t h a t o u r t u r n c o m e s
SNYDEB, WILLIAMS & Co..
C'J Wall-street, N. Y.
e n inches in t h e air, J a y , I a m willing t o p a y my whole next, e x p e c t i n g every moment t h o w o r d " F o r w a r d . " I t
".'I the delivery .
P. 5.'—Money may be sent In registered letters, o r by exf o r t u n e , a n d t b c u g i v e my life t o save m y c o u n t r y f r o m b r i n g s a s t r a n g e kind of relief when '• F o r w a r d " c o m e s . —
s free of any E x p
press, at our risk.
t h e s e t r a i t o r s t h a r a r e s e e k i n g t o destroy it. [ T r e m e n d - Y o u m o v e mechanically with the rest. O n c e fairly iu
liber
illoss, or for full particulars, specirae
o u s c h e e r s a u d a p p l a u s e , which t h e B p e a k t r c o u l d not for it. y o u r sensibilities a r c s t r o n g l y bluoted, y o u c a r e
N o t i c e s of t h e P r e s s .
subdue. 1
|
c o m p a r a t i v e l y n o t h i u g a b o u t the s i g h t s t h a t s h o c k e d you if sewing, etc.. scud a stamn for return postage. Address,
•
MME. DKMOIIEST.
•• This Is a sound Company."
M r . S p e a k e r , y o u m u s t please e x c u s e n^e.
I could a t first ; men t o r n t o pieces b y c a n n o n s h o t becomes a '
47U Broadway, N. Y,
" Tbe insurance of a certain sum f o r one's family, Is a prun o t s i t longer in m y seat, ami calmly l i s t e n to t h e s e trai- m a t t e r of count-.
A t such u time, t h e r e comes a lateut j Every lady, mother, milliner and dress-maker, should hav
dence that every man should adopt In these critical times."
tors. M y h e a r t , t h a t c r i e s o u t for t h o l i v e s of o u r b r a v e sustenance f r o m w i t h i n us. o r a b o v e us, which no man |
" The man that would be respected and loved by his family
in life, and gratefully remembered in death, will provide h i s
v o l u n t e e r s in t h e field, t h a t t h e s e t r a i t o r s at h o m e a r e a n t i c i p a t e s w h o h a s not been in such a p l a c e b e f o r e and |
family against want."
d e s t r o y i n g b y t h o u s a n d s , would n o t let m e . M y h e a r t , w h i c h most men pass t h r o u g h life w i t h o u t kuowing any" A l l onr most p r u d e n t citizens and soldiers are i n s u r i n g
t h a t bleeds f o r t h e widows a n d o r p h a n s a t home, would t h i n g a b o u t
W h a t is it ? W h e r e d o e s i t c o m o f r o m ? I
a competence to their families In cane they are drafted, or
AND
i i o t let m e . Y e s , t h e s e villians a u d t r a i t o r s a n d Seceskilled. Ic the scrvice ; it is the only safeguard in these critiT h e -following instuuee of cunning on t h o p a r t of a b e a r
cal times."
60-9m.
sionists in t h i s S e n a t e [ s t r i k i n g h i s clcnchod fists on the
d e s k w i t h a b l o w t h a t m a d e t b o h o u s e r i n g : a g a i n , ] a r e is v o u c h e d for. as true, b y t h e K t P a u l U n i o n :
Kurly last s p r i n g while p a s s i n g along the bank of C r o w
k i l l i n g ray n e i g h b o r s ' boys, now fighting i u . the field. I
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ILL I.OCATE LAN!*-. PAY T A X E S . BUY OR S E L L
I a m responsible for w h a t I say t o o n e o r all of t h e m . — q u i e t l y s e a t e d iu the river in t h e m i d s t of u w h i r l i n g
on Commission—and now offers f o r s a l e .
[ C h e e r s . ] L e t t h e m come on! r i g h t herti. I a m 6 5 e d d y . T a k i n g a s t a n d b e h i n d a tree. I watched the
y e a r s old, a n d I h a v e made u p m y m i n d to risk m y life course of e v e n t s . T h e r e sot old B r u i n fiat on bis r u m p ,
• right h e r e , o n t h i s floor, f o r m y c o u n t r y .
[ M r . F u n k h e a d e r e c t , fore p a w s e x t e n d e d , looking f o r all the world
s t o o d h e a r t h e l o b b y r a i l i n g his desk b e i n g one of the like a u a n t i q u a t e d s p e c i m e n of a n origual A f r i c a n . S o o n
r o w i m m e d i a t e l y in f r o n t o f i t
A c r o w d , a s he pro- his eyes twiukled a n d his p a w s t w i t c h e d uervously, and
c e e d e d , collected a r o u n d h i m , e v i d e n t l y w i t h t h e inten- t h e n a a u i c k g r a s p , a n d lo 1 u p c a m e a large s t u r g e a n
A l s o — 1 3 L o t s I n t b e V i l l a g e of E l k R a p i d s ,
tion of p r o t e c t i n g h i m f r o m violence, ir nefcessary. T h e firmly clutched. Old B r u i n reared himself aloft, a n d wadlast a n n o u n c e m e n t w a s r e c e i v e d w i t h g r e a t c h e e r i n g , a n d d l e d off t o s h o r e , no d o u b t highly g r a tif ie d w i t h the roThe above mentiotie-1 Lands are in all parts of t h e C o u n t y .
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
I saw m a n y a n e y e flash, a n d m a n y a c o u n t e n a n c e g r o w sulL N o w t h e p h i l s o s o p h y of the t h i u g is t h i s : S t u r - Elk Lake. W h i t e w a t e r , O i u e a i a a n d Traverse; are among the
g e o n s , in c o m m o u w i t h o t h e r kinds of fish, ascend t b o earliest and best selections with r e f e r e n c e to soil, water, sur- C o m e r o f W o o d w a r d At J e i l h r s o n A v e n u e s .
r a d i a n t w i t h t h e l i g h t of d e f i a n c e . ]
T h e s o men s n e e r e d a t C o l . M n c k , a- d a y or t w o a | a — d i f f e r e n t s t r e a m s d u r i n g t h e s p r i n g mouths, seeking suit- face, and m a r k e t : e m b r a c e F a r m i n g I-ands. Village Sites and
W h i l e n a v i g a t i n g Water Powers, with or without improvement*, in quantities r p H I S INSTITUTION FORMS O N E OF T W E L V E COLH o i s a little man ; b u t I a m a l a r g o man. I am a l a r g e able p l a c e s t o d e p o s i t e t h e i r s p a w n .
to s u i t purchaacrs. and at prices m a k i n g it an o b j e c t . i n pre- J . leges located In the following c i t i e s D e t r o i t , New
man. I a m ' r c a d y t o m e e t a n y of t h e m , i n i p l a c e of Col. t h e s t r o n g ttpples t h a t impede their ascent, t h e y o f t e n ference to buvlng hack f r o m s e t t l e m e n t s .
York. Philadelphia. Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland.Cbicago. St.
M o c k , I a m large c u o n g h f o r t h e m , a n d I h o l d m y s e l f g e t so tired as t o seek a n y convenient e d d y t o r e s t —
I r a v c r a e City. May 1, 1861.
22-Iy
Lonis, Brooklyn. Troy. Portland and Toronto.
r e a d y f o r t h e m now, a n d a t a n y time, ! [ C p c c r s f r o m the B e a r s seeui t o undertsaud this, and a c c o r d i n g l y take a
A person h o l d i n g a scholarship can attend either a t bis
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Terms.
M r . S p e a k e r , these t r a i t o r s oo t h i s flofor s h o u l d be t e m p o r a r y eddy. T h e t i r e d o u t fish unsuspectingly s h o o t s
T h e tfacic T i m e O b s e r v e r ,
i n t o t h e t r e a c h e r o u s s n a r e a n d is remorselessly g o b b l e d
p r o v i d e d w i t h h e m p e u collars. T h e y d e s e r v e t h e m .
T U I I N C A HUNT INC AND OPEN P A C E , OR LADY'S
T h e r deserve h a n g i n g , I say. [ r a k i n g h j s v o i c e a n d vio- u p by B r u i n .
S t u d e n t s to e n t e r at a n y t i m e . Average t i m e t o c o m p l e t e
J L J o r Gentleman's Watch combined, with P a t e n t Selflently s t r i k i n g t h e desk.1 T h e c o u n t r y would b e b e t t e r
t h e course, three m o n t h s .
A t a c o n c e r t lately g i v e n by t h e B a k e r family i n M a - winding improvement.
A k n o w l e d g e o t tbe o r d i n s r y English b r a n c h e s la s u f f i c i e n t
The New York Illustraw-J News, tlie leading pictorial paoff t o Swing t h e m up. I g o f e r h a n g i n g t h e m , a n d I son c o u n t y Illinois, a C o p p e r h e a d g o t i n t o a t e r r i b l e rage,
per of the United Slates, in its issue of J a n . 10th, 1863, on p r e p a r a t o t v t o e n t e r i n g upon tbe conrse of stndy.
d a r e t o tell t h e m so, right here, to t h e i r t r a i t o r faccs.—
kicked u p a d i s t u r b a n c e a n d left the h o u s e in a s w e a r i n g page 147, voluntarily Says :
J . H. GOLDSMITH. Resident P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
T r a i t o r s should b e h u n g . I t would bo Uju solvation of mvsion, a t t h e s i n g i n g of w h a t be called u " d — d A b o J . F. SPALDING. Assistant.
- We have been shown u pleasing novelty, of which the
t h e c o u n t r y t o h a n g t h e m . F o r t h a t reasou, I would
The most t h o r o u g h , p r a c t i c a l and t r n l y p o p u l a r C o l l e g e ,
It i s
lition song !" T h e s o n g was the •' S t a r S p a n g l e d Ban- Hubbard Bros., of t h i s eitv. are tlie sole importers.
rejoice a t i t
[ T r e m e n d o u s cbecring.J
,
called the - Magic Time Observer." and is a h u n t i n g and in America. O v e r a i x t h o n s a a d s t u d e n t s have e n t e r e d s i n c e
open-face watch combined.
This is one of the prettiest, t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , which is the best e v i d e n c e of tbeir
Mr. S p e a k e r , X b e g p a r d o n of t h e g e n t l e m e n in t h e
f a v o r with the p u b l i c .
T h e y h a v e u d i v o r c e c a s e in Iodimia. g r o w i u g o u t of most convenient, and decidedly the best and cheapest time: S e n a t e w h o a r c n o t t r a i t o r s , b u t t r u e , l o y a l men, f o r
For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t C o l l e g e B o o m s , o r
piece f o r general a n d reliable use. ever offered. I t has withw h a t I bavo s a i d I ouly i n t e n d i t a n d m e a n i t f o r Seces- t h e p e r s i s t e n c e of a wife with a p r e t t y foot a u d ooklo to
in it and connected with it- m a c h i n e r y , its own w i n d i n g ieBd for a new C a t a l o g u e or 80 pages. F o r s p e c i m e n s of
souists a t h e a r t . T h e y a r e here, in t h i s S e n a t e .
I see
n a s k a t i n g f r o l i c , w h e u t h e l i u s b a o d h a d r e f u s e d his attachment, rendertng a key entirely u n n e c e s s a r y . The penmanship, enclose l e t t e r s t a m p . A d d r e s s .
BRYANT A STRATTON. a t e i t h e r o t t h e a b o v e C i t i e s .
t h e m j o k e a n d smirk, a n d g r i n a t a t r u e (Union m a n . — assent. W c s u p p o s e t h e h u s b a u d feared s h e would s l i p cases of t h i s Watch are composed of two metals, the outer
{Cot t h i s o u t r o r r n t n r e r e r e r e n c e . )
i£ ] j
one being fine Kl carat gold. It has the improved ruby acB u t I defy them.
I s t a n d h e r e ready f o r t h e m a n d d a r e i u t o llie affections of some o t h e r m a n .
tion lever movement, and is warranted an accurate timet h e m t o c o m e o o . [ G r e a t ch.oering.j W h a t m a n w i t h
ATTENTION f
" C o m e here, m y dear, I w a n t t o ask y o u a b o u t y o u r piece."
• t h e h e a r t of a p a t r i o t could s t a n d t h i s treason a n y l o n g e r ?
Price, superbly engraved, per case of a half dozen. $J0< 00.
iter. X > « tell m e truly, h a s s h e g o t a b e a u ? "
The Cheapest J e w e l r y House in t k e World ! !
I b a v o s t o o d i t long e n o u g h . I will s t a n d it no m o r e - —
Sample Watches, in n«at morocco boxes, f o r those proposing
" N o , i t s t h o j a n d e r s s h e ' s g o t . t h o d o e t e r says so."'
4 , 3 1 8 PIECES OF ASSORTED JEWELRY FOR 8 5 0 .
lo buv at wholesale. $55. s e n t by express, with bill payable
! [ C h e e r s . ] J a n n o u n e o thcao m e n onjd t h e i r a i d e r s a n d
COMPLETE LIST OF F I N E GOLD, P L A T E D A N D
a b e t t o r s * s r a n k t r a i t o r s a n d S e c e s s i o n i s t s . H e l l itself
T h o s e w h o h a v e r e s o u r c e s w i t h i n themselves, a n d can on delivery. Soldiers must remit p a y m e n t in advance, as
we canpot collect from tho*e j 0 the Army. Address
Oreide Jewelry, a a n t f r e e . A d d r e s s
c o u l d no£ spew o u t a m o r e t r a i t o r o u s c r e w t h a n s o m e o f d a r o t o l i r e alone, w a n t f r i e n d s I h e least, b u t koow how to
HUBBARD BROS. Jfc CO.. SOLR l a r o R T t s x .
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J . A. S A L I S B U R Y . AOIXT.
t h e men n j i o d i s g r a c e t h i s I<cgi«/aturf, t h i s S t a t e , a n d prise" I hem the most.
?<with Cor. Nassau A J o h n 9U.. New T o r i .
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P r o v i d e n c e . R. I.
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A OEM FOR THE MILLION,
$ 5 SF.WTNfr MACHINE.
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LAXI> OFFICE.
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BRYANT & STRATTON'S
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1850 Acre*, alto Choice mid wtll 6cC O L L E G E S .
hcted.
B r a n c h Located at Detroit,
The Perfection of Mechanism!
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