Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, December 11, 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
1863-12-11
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-12-11-1863.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
T R A V E R S E GIT^T, M I C H . F R I D A Y , D E C E M B E R 11,1863.
¥ O L i V.
N O . 52.
through bis mind—and how he felt some band touch
A n Old Man's Story.
•ith'thi? children, went aightnp to him- and,
Villle, darling !" fellfaint- bifn. and an exquisite seuratioo cf pain ns if be wai dyWillie "scone ! oh, Wi!l;a, IVillie,
I am an old mao ; and yet it seeras a very ebort time
ing—and that was all he knew. How my mother wept
since 1 climbed the jail popular tree thai grww beipre the ing at b:s feet.
and KBiikid, aodclasped hint to ber b«>om, and cahed
My
sister
immediately
left
'.he
piano;
and,
with
tho
Yicariige, in search , of the itarling's jue^t. I cat) tiiocf
I hea:r the shoot that greeted ipy desctut ^-ith the long aid of some cold water, my mother was 'restored very him her darling Willio ! 1 need not tell you how my
Of course this put an end to the festivities, aixl poor father kissed him, and asked—aye. he tho klern
coveted jjrizc and feel again the crinaon | mouuting to
MORGAN'BATES,
,n> l»rii.J ,L ] .•
M - m o . r t i i t t t . ' ' b • ••••;'* my cLcefo as it'did when, turniug to the , Vicaiage, I the children weMs sojti On their way home, except Harry disciplinarian, asked—pardon of his own child. Willie.
— fiitigued with his long talk, fell asleep agam; bu
saw'aa exftreSStoo of pain ob the palefac^ of njy fall+cr
Afterwards ixiy mother told us. that, as she was endeavor- j a troubled, broken slumber.
His checks grew crj«M>n,
«SfifeBtbda if the study window.
I t MCrns (0 mft but yt*fwday ifuce I stojod in the cen- Ine'tfo amttw the group ofyotiOger childrtn, s'je beard land hts breath quick an hot, aud be trembled «>8 toougn
Willie's.yb?ee distinctly calling "Mamma ! mamma!" 1 he wasrery cold.
. ..
tre of that group lads, aiid now—
She iustantly got the key, as I have before related, and
Th<j doctor Came again—but this time he shook nis
. ._a'») for the flrst insertiotvand twenty-five pent* for cacb
" They are all gone, the yld Xjtqiliir fjo»s." .
went tip into the study. As r6ohai she opened the door hcad'ftnd-said there was no chance for him. My latoer
aafflaqtamttatetMfaki':o Yearly Advertlsementa—»10 for one
I)ick, ifaeSurgeon'.) sou.^ied tna'uy yt am jj;o in India.. she felt that the Window wot open by the rushing of the | and mother watched him oighfaud day,: but, ho grew
«,aUAK(U4Mt^r threo *4i»«cii; £30 tor lwlf 4 ooluma;,atid
$SQ for one column. r^gjJ advertisements at the rate« pre- Harvey Vernon, the bravest of tltem nlL was slain on tiie cold'fro-ty air past ber. The . fns?»mt she entered the worjc and worse. 2Cow be would talk of the wild bees
»orftwa by Urf t Bfiy eoaw per folio of i0» words, f"r the fields of Waterloo ; and when the village bells rang fur
ncst.bc had found a few days ago it> a bank in the wood
nrati/i«rtl!oa,ajdiWQ,nty'flv« cents for each1 :subM<]nrnt.—
iu
the Tictorjftbe rudest Wlotv in the village was touched rtwm she felt a tremor *e!tc heir ^ Why did not Willie —then he would t., f>ul ns if to play ; and then, whilst
Every llgore counts a word. PlRure, work wlflio
'thoyt^rulcs, 60. as he parked the Grange aryl snnr tbo blinds down, aud •pringtb mtet her ? irhe felt in a moment that Willie
was not therts!'Hie study lamp was 'flickering out ; my father covered bis face with his bands and tho big
p-jr WWN4M)'lt«te anil «S^/re wortr.- double p
knew of the brcakiog heart of okl Widow* Vernrti.
tears trickled throueh hia fingers in an agony of grief,ho
All legal advcrtisotneuU
advcriiKotntaU U>
to be
bepaid
paid for
forstrictly
strictlyiu advance.
there
stood
tny
father'"
e.vy
chair
opposite
a
table
on
It was a sad day for us at the Vicaragu, eapeelally for
would try to repeal-bis Latin, and failing to do so corEmily. My fulber'atayclio his library all day ; though. Which lay his'booka and manuscript*, and omongsi tbesu rectly, be would begin, again, sayiug in beseeching
lido cot-think he read a pigc in any uf his boclw—eviu poik- Willie'it soiled and hated Latin Grammar.
tones, '"Oh,! papa, forgive me !'I cannot."
Il-'
bust
have
climbed
do^m
the
side
of
the
old
house
baafavorites, Sophocles!and Horace.
Willie oied one morning, just as the old year was dyEttily and iny mother were iu my, mother's chamber by the aid of the ivy-items which jgrew up to. the pinna- ing amidst frost rind snow, repeating his latin lesson, as
ell the day. Froui that day Emily gradually drooped cles of the gables on to the top of the antique portico, my mother held his head, with, its splendid dark bftir
Willie,
and faded. Her beautiful face grew more exquisitely and from theucc have leaped to the ground.
looks on her botom, aud bis little.hand lay on my father's
Register..- -beautiful—her dark, <Ifcep eyes become more foil mid agile as a squirrel could easily have accomplished this.
Receiver...
~ Iu a few moments from the discovery <»f Willie's ab- trembling palm.
lustroun, but they wnndt rod restlessly, fls;though seeking,
aome mioing resting-plaw; be* golden buir (1 hate dtill "tence we—that K my mother and lather. Hairy and myMorbM N'cnronaneas.
G R A N D T R A V E R S E COUNTY OJFFICEB8.
two servants, one of them'old M*alter wh6 pa+
1 1
a thick lock of it amongst-on old : maus memories o f !
"
s of the .present day
The morbid n
„ appears il
f oioateiy
D a l t v lo>;«j Wiiliu—was out iu search o/-the uiitoing
'.
J u d g e of P r o b a t e . . . . C t / B T I B FOWliER,Vstd*loa other days '' the days of au!d lacg tyoc ") hunt; more i
say era I way3. It brings a man sometimes to that StarSlicriiT
. V . . . E . F . D A M E , fraveVw-C'Uy, carelessly about her shoulders, asid.ijer pu'.fi cheeks were.
County Treasurer
MORGAN B A T E S , Trav, City. eufTosed wljh a rosy tint that gradually deepened into ft. Tho snow w;m still tilling h'-avily, but by the light of tled state that the sudden opening of a uoor. the clash of
the falling firc-iron* or any little accident, pits him in
Coifntf Clerk
. . . . J A M E S P . BRANT),
"
burf/lnst crimson, white htr snect vaieo sank u'lswtt into the moon, whith was at full, we could see almost as dis- aflutter. How ucrvous the late Sir Kobert Peel must
Register of Deeds
JAMES P . B R ^ N D ,
"
| ,
a whisper- As.l lopUcd at her her startled beauty ti- tinctly as by daylightProa. Attorney
„..C» H . MABHHj "
Strifttgj to stiy, t^y mother went instinctively towards have been when, a week before his death, he wttit to tie
mindeu "*o of tho,lajig'unge 0;" the'book oiv molhi-r n i j
Circuit Court Cotn.-.C. H . KAMHj
"
Zoological Garden* and, .,when -a monkey suddenly
to rend to be*3is sl>o Tuy otl the ;couch in the ilrawing- dc •[> poo! t)f wat^r, l^neatf: the orchard wall, called by sprang upou his arm, the great «ud worthy man fainted I
jjh^ villagers the'Bbefc Too!—.•o calLU because of it*
treville.
om. Her •' facQ.wa= a.' the fnco of uoanwl.''
Auother phase of Oervonsuea ii, when a mab is brought
v Ah. nie l how l am wamlering frum 'ho cirenm- dipth.' NVaf if, aud ovordiadowiug ijt, grew an old to that state that the least tiolso or "tr<i^a oecnrret*o
'gharied
iborn-busli,
whi.
ii,
after
pauy
winter-*
frosts
aod
stonces I satdown to write about j; but yon mu<t for,, ©. H . M A R S H ,
T.i.i..
pro.-orvtd its vit.'.lify.' It, was' a pleasant seems to jar through the entire nervous system—to upgive an old man, for whenever I think of Emily it is almrfer; thCi Inroad, f.nhlikc P-'rns, with theic setting hi in,, as we say ; vvltu ho cau not coiumood hia
ivB BO. Let mo-fce—*y«A I remember perfcetlv.
rrattd !we^, loved to grow there, and in mental powers except in perfect slilluetii, or in t^e
It was Christmas Eve, in the roar 171>L nod the snow
chamlier nud at tbo writing table to which ho is ficcus-i .
11 ••'JO
•
*?"
,„!l A '
had been tailing heavily all day. blotting out the hedges llja; oM iLorr, a stjmmcjt or two U-f^re a uightiogale tomed j when in short, be gets fidgety, easily worried,
S O L I C I T O R IN CHANCERY,
hd'T
made
its
hannt, and suhg tlirough tho long, star-lit
and walls which etirround the Vicarage, and burying the
full of whims and fancier'which must be indulged and
S 0 T A K Y' I ' s 8 L I C t C 0 N V E T A N C E Ii,
snn-diul that W ilJie and I had carved with greut paius (lights, and Willie and I had laid awu&e,jfor hours lis- collide red, or he is quit.; out of sorts. Another phaao
teniug to i l
I'ravcrae City., Grand Traverse County, Mlcb.
during the long winter eyttMngs.
of the same morbid condition is when* liutnan_ being ,is
I
never,
even
now,
hear
the
song
of
tho
iiightingalo
I had come from my father's study, where 1 and Willie
OlBoe in Dwelling Uouse. .
My
Without thinking of my darling brother and the cham- impressed with vague, undefined fearS 1 that things are
had been having our usual iefsou in Latin. Willie was
ber in which ho slept. The villagers said it was hauut- going wrortg-Mhat hisi'ncorne will n(k meet the dea high spirited lad, of a very loving and adectiouate dis' upoa i t ; that his child's lungs are oiRcted s that
ed by something more than the'nightingale, but that I
lOaition ; though when excited, or when iu a passion,
•ntalpowors nroleaviuR him ; a state af foeling
lis temper was fearful to behold, and his ey't-3 Hashed ~^ver positively knew.
Well, I saw my "mother bend close dpwn to the water which i-hsdea rapidly off into positivo insanity.,, l t i d j w
with a strange light that maiio us all tremble except mv
• T R A . V K R S B CITY,
moment, ao'd then suddenly turn and j pick something when matters remain long in auy of the fashions which
father. I t was some lima before my father came down ;
have
been
described. I snppose' the natural tcrniination
*np
from
the
gro'tnd
at
the
foot
of
the
tbuni
bush.
,
She
UKVNB.TVt/LWmpjtf'IWfl" W *
but when ho did, wo heard him lock the study door ufheld it out a moment in the moonlight, and thert gave a must be disease of the heart, or a shock of partljrw*- dr
, • • JUiFJSEljSCBS:
.
ler him, and he came down alone.
-<
'wild cry of pain. It Was a little hairlkorchicf ofWillie's iiiiiaiiity iu the forraeitlmr of mama or idiocy. Numbers
11 P,I i-„, Xsrlla.rW.Sapi.ci-> inoD.Ao»«laB1»lf. Oor.Mlch/
He looked very4steru and angry ; he was in one of
edged with a peculiar kind of lat e whiijh she had put on of commotjfplace people who coo}d fefl very acutcly,. but
thoK moods whicb sometimes look, Qotscwion of him
who could not tell what they felt, have been worried in^o
when ho was disturbed. Though my father was always herscIC The water wasstijl and.ripples*—*ave "slight fatal heart disease by prolonged anxiety and, misery^—
fcvmor, whic h might be caused by tho breeze—aud re. ^ g ^ r f f c a w m ^lUh..UuJ**M»«»r . , T ' a W » | ? ^ r * k ^ " ^ ' I*?*' Hleut when in theae moods ; yet 1 always thought there flected tho qnk't sfafs in its dark face.
Kvery one knows bow paralysis laid its band ttipon Sir
was
a
vivid
resemblance
between
them
and
Willie's
outW
My father, who wa« a good swimmer and a stranger to Walterrico;t-—alwaysgreat, lastly beroiq, i'rotrncted
' I n i A V K1113 K C I T Y
'• •
»' J brflaks of passion.
• .-j ' ,
.
fear."qnictly took off his coat, and In a mymeut wa- anxiety how.to make the ends meet, with a large family
••W'illte will not come down to-night,' said i h e ; " 1
dowu at the bottom of the pool. I shiill never forget the -nd aii uncertaioTpcohie, drove Soufhey's firsts wife into
hare left him in the Btudy with a lesson that will keep
esprcsdoi of anxiety oft my mother's fhee ns she b*nt lunatic asylum ; and there is hardly a m6re tobehlog
rtJtllit ** i| 1 1 t« » .
<-•»
!
over the 'pool. Her large "dark*cyCs had something aw- story than of herfeara aud forbodingrthrorigh nertoos
THIS nncsR Ik i»ow; ofkxtai Vo*' -Irim Wflntrtf or- t o t SB
I thought I saw a tear Start from my mother's eye. as
ful in the intensity of their ga2? ; htr thiu white hands attacks year sifter year. Not less sod waa theend pf bar
•r 1 i , v v i c 1 1 *f & i ' t r u L i c ,
she turu«l her f a « to, the window «nd llookad out upon
were clasped convulsively upon her b<i-om ; her laps overwrought husband in blank vacuity ; nor the like e^d
the snow, which still continued to fall heavily.
VSUKIt'TlIK St-PEKtSTEN-UENCKOr
were drawn tightly across her small white teeth, and we of Thomas Moore. And perhaps the saddest "instance
I t was the anniversary of Emily's birthday, and we
could bear her breathe as though she hsa beeu ruuniug of thi? result of an overdriven nervods system, In Wceut
were expectiug a party of young friends (children of the
days, was the end of that nigged, houcftt, wonderful
lidly.' '
.
,
neighboring geutry) lo pass the evening at the vicarage.
?£• GIVE HIM A CALL.
^ ^
v»:.:-a, r:<c> .cabi^
It seemed an age'before my f?thc r reappeared ; but geuius, Hugh Miller. ; 4 i
It began to grow dark about four o'clock, and then
when'lie
«W>it,was
with
M
l
i
i
e
a
pqle,
bandsome
face,
our company began to arrive. There were first the chilXTnpuuctueil People.
Traverse City, M>y 13, 18".
«-tylooking njorc beflptiful tfian erer, lying 6a bis shoulders,
dren of bqni'ro liarcourt, who.came wrapped in soft fare
and his long darkjhair, which it always seemed a shame
Whnt bores they are—what havoc tbev mate w 'tb
ami shawls -in the old-fashioaed cosy family carriage
to cut, falling o'v/rhis arm. I think.I hear my mother's the precious moments of orii rly, sympathetic men of
with its couple of docile greys. Then came Harry Vwwild, de/fpaiiing cry now, at the distance of seventy bunnesj. A jii-rsou who Is faithless to hi* appointments
I10P,
and
his
sister
Emily
oud
Agnes
;
aud
aa
the
time
(
CIVIL ENGINEER ASD SURVEYOR,
(l harp fipardlf htoight in.hiy quiet study;
may not iutend to swindle people, but be dooi. To
wore on about a score of young people* were assembled
G R A N D T R A Y K R S E C O t r K T Y , Mlol».
have besml it on tJsiard ship, when thfc storm winds ba'
those who kivowjiow to turu time to . advaetage, every
at the Vicarage. It was a merry party.
My father
hour has an appreciftblo pecuniary value ; minulea, even
' All tlnda of Surveying douo with promptness and whom it would be an injgrticc to represent as an unkind thrown uiiike a father amongst UiC frOthihg waves ;
have heard it in oM continental catl-edrnh. above tl
are worth so much npicce. He who robs you of them,
dispatch.
f;a }ts
man, threw himself jutojhe spirit.,of our, merriment a*
ices of the choir, tho mnsic of the organ, and the might just as w«!i tab; co mnch money from your purse,
M A P P I N & A N D P l , . V r ' r i N « though he hud beeu one pf us. 'flie luraiture oxceptiug ..JSrltienhH
c'asMng
oftlia
bells.
'luc
act ir petty larceny.or grand larceny, according to
Accurately and neatly execatcd. PatruaspJ rcstieetfuilT the old-fashioned piano, had Keen removed aud the drawthought j heard it then!.My hither carried the amouul of tiaie ho compels you to waste, und the
Sw^Oillop aV$(r^dWc.,rf.y. > C^rufeLL, Sif- ing room had, by the fomoval j)f, a, partition, been ^..Ilu^h^d
Willie home, and old Walter aud tho other servant usthrown into Mie,,m$ing,a large aad counnqdibua room listed my mother. AViihe was instandy got to hod. and value of it, at a fair appraisal, to yourself or your family.
whh"h had been pleotifujly hung with holly,, and other the ordinary moans used for hi« restoration", while old TliO ouiy capita! of a large portion of tho community is
time. Their compensation is measured by the clock.—
cvergrh na- The red berries gleoraed like Uny masses of
Walter was sent off on the brown marc to the doctor's
1
fire beneath the dark gr^eu leaves, aud,here p:id there We heard tbo dull Iicnvv sound'of her hoofs upon tbo The moments of whicli promise-breakers cheat them,
my sister had ^-aceluliv arranged bunches of mauy cor Btiow, asshe wfcnt off at 'n swift paeo down the carriage may represent in fact the necessaries ol life, aud tho loss
of an hour may involve the privation of 0 loaf, or a joint,
lored ribbous. >
'j
,
WilSTANDARD
f
drtve. In a short time 6ho came back bringing the or some other article urgently reeded at home.
IS oboJfany inquiries were mnde for WiUi<), and for a
dy places any coafidencC in persons who are habitually
ment or two a shadow seemed oast upon the pleasure of
behind1 tin*. They scarcely nuecced in any enterprise.—
M*
mother
was
bending
over
Willie,
fend
nervously
th? cljihitto wbeu they were told,tbat Willie, the prc;sidTherefore,
for
your
own
sake,
as
well
as
for
the
tako
of
OF ALL Jvtfra.
iiw gp«U pf fuuin every juvenile partyj ^ould v$t be swaying herself backwards and forwards; when be came
•"isiia^elrelt t>y FARBAND A 8HELEY with them ,* but all feeling of disappoiutment. vanished tn ; 'tout she nro.-e imiueditclv. and with wil<\ flashing others—be punctual.
"
the time wore on—except from ouo genjJo. loving eyes.'-'exclnimed,:
WORK—The best k-ssob a father cau give his *on is
«'Oh! iioitiftj saTO my boy! Oh, Willie ! Willie,
Be cartful to buy oply
1
t h i l W o r k ; rtreogtheii yonr moral and mental fkcul^ 1 inew tliat my cotlicr was thinking of the dear boy darling7 Speak tome, my child."
January 13,
11 icvcr read David\ tlirilRng lament, •• Oh, Absalom tie* as you would strengthen your muscles by vigorous
in .the room above us, f^r WJlie wasiiny mother's favoritq. .She was thinking of.a handsome .face pressed my son, Absalom!" without thinking of my mother's cxcrciV. .Learn to conquer. circuutetanqcB : you are
then independent of fortune. The meu of athletic minds,
'
against the door, and of'a tiny ear close to the keyhole, great agony iii Willie's chamber.
The doctor was n remarkably skillM man ; but it who left their marks on the years iu which they lived,
lislyniug to the voices of Ihe merry groups below. Bhu
P E T E R LOBILL ARP.
Jioe w I^eso^ouuds would bo exquisite tortoro to the seemed a hopek-.i easel How'my mother's eager eyes were all trained in a rough school. They did not monct
n n U foltbwed all his movements.
their high positions by the help of levtrege ; tbey leap'
S i n i F P A X B TOBACCO M A X T F A C T U K K l ; prfsotie'^, Sh«' l^ue.w bow that quick cnger spirit "
At last when we wire just despairir^, Willie g-'n'ly ed iulo ch.iim, >grappled witb -the opposing rocks, avoidFret in the study ,above like a wild bird in a cage.
16 t£ 18 Chattbprs S t . ,
Sometimiail saw her whisper to my father—and then Opened his eyes—those magnificent eye^of his ! There ed avalanchcs, and wbeu tho goal was reached, felt that
(Formerly ii'''Chamtera BUfltt, New Tot*.)
but for the toil that bad strengthened ihem as they strove
wns
ftn
unspeakable
efisU«j
on
my-"-mother's
face,
thi
his face grew hard and dark, aud my mother's yet more
Wonld eallthe attention ofDealera to the artfeUa of bis
like' bf which I hawf icver>«rsince. and never cxpwt it could never have beeu attained."
MdippmeijL..'
:
awu»«acture,Tix.{
. •-•J' v . . *
My sister played with exceeding graec, some simpli to ««* asrain. I t was coming light when the doctor left
B U O W N B?JVFF.
The Cincinnuti Enquirer has at- last stated that Geneairs on the old. piano ; and then, tho hoys ckoa;Uig hs oftd WlIIH* wafi'i a refresh? r"rs!<Jer}.
The many tolored-W'.bow of Hope now htmg over ral Jackson' violated the Constitution by his arbitrary
their p^rttiers from the graceful U|itic.: maidens,, who
"n'n^RVppr?,
^'ParTOyrjftnia,
"" *"'* arrests at Nfcw Orleans. Thu« one after another, the
stood, with eager, blushjtJg faces aad besoecliing
b ^ the Vicarage, alas ! ycta to feitjo'a'jpiy. *
Coarse RapfiM," - " '
' I \ IWKItMhn,
reat
sOrtow.
Democratic party is detaminu th$ memory of its fatfcer*
^ ^:.:-lk«(^Otillrau,Vi '
iCtfpMAai
heath the holly in qcowier of the rooui, .the dance U'gj»a the iold rain'fhd darlrelonds of
After f n hour or two of sleep. WllhV nwtike. sr.. I t old , j . ^ o [ l j e r day the same jouroal undertook to prove that
W'hilit this was coiiig oti I saw my. lather put something
7ba. r.f-',:. I Y E L L O W SNI F F
idtpjjnymother's^ baud.., I l was,the study key.. With, a . v mother how he heard the sho^t' and laugher of the Jefferson,, the father of the an'.i-slovcry literature of
Toy t fco (eb,
^FwS W Hon?yB«w Scotch,
grpl^ul.snuk—oli. how sweet that smile was !—«ho Iwft children in the thawing room, and fcbw the mirac seem- America, was inconsistent and double-laced, and. was
afraid, and dated really" In favor Of the eoMlnuance and extension of slaveIrish IIiRliTonst,
Fresh Scotch.
the room. 1 stale after her to the foot of the wide, obi ed to Uinnt him r tud'how hlr
ortnindyfoot,— —— fashioned staixcaso ; Ijsaw her glide swiftly op ,-tb wot look where the shadows Iny in tlte library ; aodlicfw ry. Thns. to salt the emergencies of its present trea^ti.
.tW»'iA«*ntionis eallsd to the lsr*a radnctlnn iti prices si airs ; a^d I'conld h^ar when she tmjoeked the door . he watched the moon rise through thb poplars before the party reviles ail who e ver gave it character—all the
of FUa.CiiCbewlnK.aniSmQkias Tobacco^whio^ ^ U ; , b t and"*vhen she opened\i to pass iu tl£r moonlight ftrenm- the window, he was tempfed'to climb down the tvysaiuu it Las before worshiped.
j-,.1 ' ,W
fonnd of a Superior Quain#.
b r i s t l y thronch t h t doorwer cn to the dark laiidintn stems; and howhehad'wandored tp the B;ack l o o t
° !<»
TOFlAOtO. '
aud as it jrilon the fane of the; old clobk «h>°h stood and been tempted to spring across it to get a bunch oT
Tirt PATH TO Gr-Exixxta—Tuere are but two ways
Mostxa.
FISCE CCT ritKWINV,
nronxd.
crimson berries tbnt hmir from a brno -V 0:1 the other which lead to great aims and achievements—energy and
there, I saw it wanted a few minutes of ten o'clock.
8, Jaco
l,o nsj,
PrA.
1 bad not stood moau than a minute at tbe foot of the «?d&. thinking ho would give tlrem to Her; acd hoWhe perseverance. Lr-ergy is a rare gift—it provokes op.fliwl.
•. CavanrtUh. or 8w*et.
Spanish.
Ko. t .
Sweetaeeottd Qriip
.Stairs
stairs when
wnvu I1 heard
jieam my
my mother
moiaer cry
cty V Willio
»i turn .
Then
tucu 1 hi"l raised his footing and faflcu'
----- backwards into. the position, hatred, and reaction.
But perseverance 1MS
• X'oS'I A 5 mixed. Tin Foil Carenai.
heard a piercing stream, and she suddenly passed me, phnd Then he told her how he^rose to
j ^ f a o e - within the reach of every one. its powers increase wijh
Ju"
• '
Wr face white as tho mow that lay outside on the steps, cod how he was falling into * sweet and p.easant dumber its progress, and ills but rarely that It misses its aim
N . B.—A elroula»ofpriaa»wll!h«sa»t.
and, rushing into the room where my lather was~ playing at"the bottom, with thoughts of berpassm 0 dream 1
Clje 6nuD immsf IFlrruli),
'•'.v.- v
i«fO»Vw"*»,'*rw»ir r i i M T . ^ T i :
Traverse City, G r a n d Traverse County, Michigan
'•All Kinds of Job Printing Ntallj anJ EifditioWj fieculed.
LAND OFFICE AT TBAVEIMfi; Mil.
.
—
•
iilStWiCW Coiiiistlbijt
j . a. K.vifSpELiL.
Attorney & Counssellor at Law,
rsftfWS&i. 2 85. i'al.®
13 X C H A
CHARLES
Sstiiii.
N O E5 -
W.
DAY.
GEORGE G. S. CAMPBELL,
I ' A I R r B A>TICS'
. S C A L E S
ESTABLISHED
1760.
"""lasr;
CIJE <®ran?) Craurae iltraD).
M O B 9 A N BAkTKS, E U t o r n i u l P r o p r i e t o r .
T R A V E R S E CITY»
FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11. 18C3.
From Washington.
Special Dispatch to the Advertiser and Tribune.
,
.
MILITARY ATPAIR8.
WASBWOTOS, Dec. 2.—The President has received
advices of a very satisfactory nature from Gen. Meade.
No battle had been fought at 2 P . M. yesterday. It
seems now that Meade's receot advance has been but an
extensive reconnoissance in force, and that the rebels
have nowhere ventured out from behind their elaborate
network of fortifications to meet our army.
The stormiog of tb« ridge in the great battle before
Chattanooga on the 26th. is thus described by au officer
in a report to the War Department:
'• The storming of the ridge by our troops was one of
the greatest miracles ill military history. No man. who
climbs the asceut by any of the roads that wind along
its front, can believe that eighteen thousand men moved
upon its crumbling face, unless it was his fortune to
witness the deed. It seems os awful as a visible interposition of God. Neither Gen Grant nor Thomas intended it. Their orders were to carry the rifle-pits
along the base of the ridge and cat off their occupants,
but when this was accomplished the uncontrollable spirit
of the troops bore them bodily up impracticable steeps,
over bristling rifle-pits cn the crest, and the thirty cannon enfiladiug every gully. The order to storm appears
to have been given simultaneously by Gens. Sheridan and
Woo<l, because the men were not to be held back, hopeless us the attempt appeared to military prudence ; and,
besides, the Generals caught the inspiration of the men.
and were ready themselves to nndertuke impossibilities."
The Government received odvices from l'enuessee today, showing that I.oogstreet had abandoned the siege
of Knoxville, and was retreating towards Bristol and
into Virginia where the railroad connects with Richmond. This slip has been feared here in official quarters ever since the defeat of Bragg. It is considered,
however, quite certain that his force caunot reach Richmond in time to do much good in assisting Lee, who
seems to decline battle thus far.
Close of Volume F i f e .
This number closes the Fifth Year or the UKASD
TEA VERSE IIKBALI* The experiment of establishing a
newspaper in the wilderness has proved successful'; and
•we look back upon five years of humble effort to develop
the resources and encourage the settlement, growtftand
prosperity of a btautiful and fertile region of country,
with some degree of prido and satisfaction.
The grateit difficulty that we have had to encounter
and overcome, was an ill-founded prejudice against
Northern Michigan, and especially tbo Northern portion of the Lower Peninsula, which was fostered and encouraged for years by the old Steamboat Combination
outbeLakes, and by large 'speculator* in Western
lands. This, "in a great measure, haj been eradicated,
aud the tide of emi gration has turned in our favor. The
country will bear inspection, and almost every man who
has visited the region arouud Grand Traverse Bay has
boeu pleased with the country, and has acknowledged
that our representations of it were truthful. As evidence
of this the Books of the Land Office at Traverse City,
show that since the establishment of the Herald, 530
purchases have been made for cash, of lands in what was.
until last year, Grand Traverse County—but now Grand
Traverse, Antrim and Leelanaw—the tbreo Bay Counties ; and 678 entries under the Homestead Law in the
same counties with Manistee addod. This docs not include a large amount located with Warrants by actual
Extensive P o t t Office Robbery.
For upwards of a year past, complaints have been
settler*.
We have every reason to anticipate a large influx of made to the Post Office authorities that mouey letters
have been missed from the mails received at and sent
population next spring. Hannah, Lay & Co. will piaec from the Ann Arbor office. Time wore on. and the de• new Propeller on the Bay, wh'.ch in connection with predations became more numerous, and at last the attenPropellers at Nortbport, will giro us a daily line of tion of Mr. Van Vechten. Speciul Agent of the Post
communication with Detroit and Chicago. This is what Office Department, was cnlleu to the matter, who with
we have long needed, and will give a new impetus to bu- commendable promptness set about ferreting out the
guilty party. He visited tho several localities where
siness of every kind.
money was alleged to have been mai led, and from thence
We mark oat no new course in the1 future conduct of sent decoy letters, containing marked money.
Workin; diligently at Iris undertaking, he succeeded
the HERALD. It will pursue the even tenor of-its way,
giving a cordial and hearty support toj the Administra- in less than one week's time in locating the robber at tho
post office in Ann Arbor. Kccpiug a sharp lookout in
tion in all ita efforts to crush the Rabdlion. While the that vicinity, he.soon had cause to suspect one of the
.war continues, wc wash our hands of all CONSERVATISM. clerks employed there, named John Cornath, as being tho
'Desperate diseases require desperate remedies—not robber, aod at onco arrested him, at the same time inUpon searching tho
cataplasters. Tho CAUSE must bo removed before any forming him of his suspicions.
prisoner, $22 of the marked money was found npoc his
-disease can be cured. Slavery is tho cause of this Re- person, and a subsequent minute examination of his-resibellion, and Slavery must die. On this point we are de nee revealed $795 iu greenbacks carefully stowed
away in the cellar.
RADICAL.
These proofs against the prisoner were of course conW e have spent five of the happiest years of our life at
clusive, and he at once made a confession of his guilt to
Grand Traverse Bay, and wc close this volume with the tho detective, to whom be gave a lisUof thirteen money
expression of our best wishes for the health, happiness letters that he had robbed coatainiug in tho aggregate
and prosperity of all true and loyal mep, their wives and 8557.
Cornath was taken into custody on Wednesday morntbejr little ones.
'
ing and brought to this city. On Thursday ho was arThe Latest War New*.
raigned before Comoiifeioner Wilkins. plead guilty, and
The Captain of the Propeller Lady Franklin, which was committed to House of Correction to await his trial
arrived here on Sunday, from below, favored na with a before tho next term or the U. S. Court
The prisouer has been employed in the Ann Arbor
«opy of the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune of the 3d
office for upwards or two years, aud during tho greater
inst. We learn by it that theaitualion in Virginia is portion or that time it is supposed be has been engaged
still involved in considerablo-uncertaiatv. The two op- in the nerarious business above recorded. The precise
posing armies seem to be drawn up in Hoc of battle on amount taken by him is not, and probably -will not be
either side of Mile Run or Mile Creek, a small stream known, but it is estimated at over 81.000! Tho list or
letters given by him to Mr. Van Vechten, includes only
that, running in a'northerly direction, flows into the Ra- those that he could remember, so that it is more than
pidaa. Our army is on tho East bank of the stream, probable that tho amount or robberies above estimated
the enemy on the -West. The locality is some twenty will rail considerably short or the total money taken.—
miles due West from Fredericksburg, ;and about twelve Connected with this robbery there is a strange coinciConrath was detected by some or the same
miles Northest from Orange Court House. The latter dence.
marked money, that caused the arrest or young Ten
is about seventeen miles South from Culpepper and Eyck. who was convicted or robbing tho office in this
about five miles back from the Rapidan. 8ach was the city some time sinco.
P. 8.—Since the above was in type, Cornath has acposition of the two armies on Bunday, with every prospect of a general engagement on tho following day. To counted for two more letters containing $129, which
makes fifteen letters in all that he has robbed.
bring on an engagement Gen. Warrep, commanding tho
[Advertiser & Tribune.
.2d corps, attempted a flank movement on tho left, but
Learned of the Proclamafound the enemy too strongly ported, i Lee is reported How the Contrabands tion.
t o be acting altogether on tho defensive. Considerable
A correspondent or the Chicago Tribune writes that
skirmishing seems to have takou place on the 1st, and white at Fort Pillow he was attracted by a bright, inthen it was thought that the grand battle could not be telligent young woman, not over tliirtv years or age, who
came into the contraband camp with lier husband, from
deferred longer than the 2d. Reports from Rappahan- Arkansas. Her husband was a good looking fellow or
nock Station on Tuesday evening, however, state that -no eome five years older than his wire, was a carpenter by
firing was heard on that day. Rumors have been cir- trade, and was taken on board or the Brown as a steamculated in Washington to the effect that Meado had fal- boat hand. He had formerly lived in Louisiana, ood being smart, was taught by bis vouug mistress to read a
len back to Fredericksburg.
little. The former master he had lived with railed in
From Georgia we have no detailed accounts, but the business, and bis negroes had to be sold, among whom
droppings we get would indicate that Hooker pnrsucd was this man, whose name was Torn. Tom was parBragg to Ringold, a place eight miles this sido of Dal- chased by a trader, and sold to a planter living above
Little Rock. The planter was a c . dissipated man, and
ton, that a fight took place there, that our losses were when drunk, would often beat Tom.
One day, while
'heavy,-and that, having destroyed the town and the Tom's master had gone out with a poerrilla party, or
railroad for some miles, Gen. Hooker'; returned from the which he was a member. Tom was called to the house,
pursuit At Kuoxville considerable fighting seems to and spying a newspaper on the floor, which was t o r n picked it up and carried it to his cabin, aud by a fire of
have taken place within the past ten days, resulting in pine knots, at night, when the overseer had gone to bed,
•our favor. Forces have left Cumberland Gap to cut off l'om spelled out tho Proclamation of Mr. Lincoln. He
•Longstreet's retreat or attack him iu tho rear.
did not dare speak Df it to tho other negroes on the
plantation, but he told his wife, aud she gathered togeIt is stated that Gen. Meade crossed the Rapidan and ther tho little money she had saved up, and with a small
moved on Lee under positivo orders from tho War De- bundle of clothes the two run away the first dark night
t r i m e n t . the object beiug to harres* the rebel army and which offered, laying in the woods daring tho day time,
and traveling at night, until they reached our pickets
prevent them from sending reiuforceijjenta to Longstreet near Fort PiUow. The Proclamation was known, howIt having been ascertained beyond doubt that Burnside ever, mysteriously, and as mysteriously circulated, deswas safe, the necessity for tho movement was past, and pite the efforts of the planters to conceal it.
The Superintendent of contrabands at Fort Pickering,
Meade returned. This is the explanation or the return
given by high officials. Tho army is now at Brandy Memphis, tells the following story : During the month
or August last, a negro woman aud child came into
Station, on the, Orange and Alexandria Railroad, four camp and asked aid. She said she bad ran away from
miles south of the Rappahannock.
Noxubee county, Mississippi, as she had heard or the
Well informed parties entertain no other expectation freedom granted to tbc slaves by Mr. Lincoln, and that
now than that they will quietly settle down into winter she got tho information from her brother, who could
read, and he read it in a Southern newspaper. Being a
quarter*.
house servant, she heard the planters talk about the war
The capture of blockade runners: recently, off Wil- and read about the battles, and she would go out to the
pegro
quarters and tell her brother, and ho would slip off
mington. have so frighteoed the rebel authorities of North
in the night and tell the negroes on other plantations,
Carolina that tbry have let out the job
and get back in time for the morning calMo work. She
said that ever siuce the fight at Fort Sumter on the
breaking out of the war, the negroes were informed of
what the North was doing, and that they confidently expected to be free, and were not surprised when the Proclamation was issued. She said that tho negroes had
secret societies and met in the woods and caves, and had
signs and grips, and it was the duty or every member to
inform the lodges or what conversation he bad b^ard
among the white folks. She further stated that they
frequently got Northern as well as Southern newspapers
and that as a general thing the house servants were well
posted in all the phases of tho rebellion on both sides.
Many of the negroes who came iuto the contraband
camp seemed to have considerable money in gold and
silver. All this money was the fruits of their own hard
earning*, and not a dollar or Confederate scrip could be
found about tbem. One woman had hidden in her bosom, tied up in an old cotton handkerchief sixty-one dollars in gold and nine dollars in silver, all in halves and
quarters. Another had twenty dollars in five dollar gold
pieces, and fifteen dollars in silver tied up in a newspaper, aud as a coincidence, the newspaper was found to
be a copy or the New York Tribune, containing an account or the death or the lamented Ellsworth. These
too, had heard or the Proclamation, through the secret
negro societies or the South.
A Tunnel tinder Lake .Michigan.
- A contract for the construction ofn tunnel extending
some two miles under Lake Michigan at Chicago, for
the purpose or supplying the city with pure water, was
awarded a day or two since ; the lowest bid for completing the same being 8315,139. There were five,
other bids ranging ftom that figure up to a million or
dollar;. The mutter has been under dissensrion for
some months. The Times gives the following description
or tbc proposed work:
The coutract for a tunnel or five feet internal diameter, lined with brick, commencing at the prexnt Water
Works, and extending a distance of two miles under
Lake Michigan, at a direction nearly at right angles
to the shore line, and about two points to tho north or
due east. The tnonel is to be excovuled thirty-five feet
below tho bed of the lake, and to have four feet of dip
landward. A brick shuft is to be sunk ot the Water
Works and at the other extremity, a crib about eightyfive feet in diameter, is to be sunk and filled with stones,
an iron shaft of nine feet in diameter to be built inside
it, aue this crib and cylinder to bo afterwards surmounted by a ligbt-honso a# a guide to vessels and a protec*
tiou to tho works. Between this ami the sboro a number of intermediate shafts will be sunk similar in cong'.ruction to the outer one except that the cribs will not
bo quite so firmly built, and the cylinders will bo somewhat lighter. There will not bo less than one nor more
than four or these intermediates. The number will be
determined by tho circumstunees which develop themselves during the progress or the work. The contractors
have agreed to foruish as many as moy be required
without claiming extra. I'bo object in sinking tbem is
to enable the men to work in several different places at
once; they will be removed after thetuimel is completed
so as to present no obstruction to the navigation of the
lake. The tunnel will then be one continuous channel of
two miles in length. The water entering at that distance
from the shore may reasonably be expected to be clear
and free from those impurities which now iufect tho water supplied for city use. Strainers wjll be fixed over
the outlet to keep cut the fish which have ot times troubled us so extensively. The tptal area of the tunnel will
be nearly twenty square feet, an area amply large enough
to furnish water continuously to a city five or six times
the size or Chicago in the present day. Tho fell or four
feet toward the shore end of the tumiel will give complete
facilities for emptying it occasionally in cose of fouling,
and its permanence is aimed to be secured in tho most
satisfactory manner, the specifications beiug very explicit as to the mode of construction providing that eight
inches of brickn shall be laid all arouud it and that
these bricks shall be firmly iinbcded in the soil which
must be rammed and puddled, if uot otherwise sufficiently firm to fullfiil tho requirement of absolute solidity.
If this contract be faithfully executed there can be no
doubt that Chicago will have sccured\an unfailing sopplv
of pure water ample enough to supply her utmost news
for liftv vears to come and that few if any repairs will be
needed in the course of that time. Tho whole is tq be
completed in two years from the date or signiog the
contract.
Lord P a i m e n t o n ' s Speech.
The following were the remarks or Lord Palmerston
at tbc late Lord Mayor's Banquet wherein be refers to
American affairs :
"There have been occasions when it was tbc lot or
those who had to explain tho state of afl lire to congratulate yon on tbc tranquil condition or the civilized
world. I am afraid I cannot do that in the present
instance, for although I trust there is nothing in our
horixon which can grow into a cloud or war, yet we see
on all sides, in tbc for West and in tho distant East,
struggles going on of the most lamentable character, and
scenes enacted which makes ns shudder for humanity,
and excito our deep compassion for the countries in
which they are occurring. [Hear, hear ] Iu the far
West wc see a nation or the same race, the same language! the same religion, the same manners ond
the same literatarc as ourselves, split in two. slaughtering each other by hundreds or thousands and carrying on a contest, the result of which it is impocrible to
forwe, and the end or which now. after more than two
years' duration, he would be a bold man indeed who
ventured to predict, [ilenr, bear.] Lamenting that
state of things, the Government or this country have felt
it their duty not to yield either to the entreaties, or the
objurgations or the one part v or the other. [Cheers.]
Blandishments on the one side and threats on the other,
have equally been fruitless to effect our course. [Renewed checrs.] We have felt it oor duty to abstain from
taking any part in that deplorable conflict If, indeed,
we had thousbt it had been in our power to put an
end to it by friendly intervention, no efforts would have
been wanting to accomplish so holy an object [Cheers.]
But wcfrlt that our interference would have been vain,
and. we deemed it our duty—ond in that I am snre we
but "folio wed the wishes of the country—to maintain a
strict war&h and impartial neutrality. [Loud cheers.]
President Lincoln.
At a serenade given the other evening in New York
to Gen. Sickles, that distinguished soldier—well known
as having never been ©r the political party as Mr. Lincoln—paid the President a just and glowiug tribsie, as
follows :
•• How shall we restore the ^ost sovereignty or tbo
Union ? How shall we undo the foul wrong or the rebellion T There ore not a few who have qoiled before the
magnitude of the task. Of these, thank heaven, tho
President is not one. He whom the burden has most
bent has never faltered in heart or purpose. He is sustained. as is just, by the great masses or the Nation, by
the potential force of the Press, and the armies and fleet's
of the Union. Grapplicg with administrative questions
more difficult and delicate than ever before tried the sagacity and courage or oar statesmen, he has so borno
himself that every loyal heart acknowledges the candor,
ability and tact which signalize the character of our
First Magistrate. [Applause.] Tbot history will assign hira a conspicuous place among great rulers is no
longer doubtftil."
Tbc Washington correspondent or the Chicago Tribune, says the report or Judga Edmund*, Commissioner
of the General Land Office, will show that the following
Territories are rich in gold and silver : Idaho, Nevada,
Washington, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico.—
Arizona and Idaho are especially rich in gold. In the
former it is now being dug out with the rudest implement in astonishing quantities. There are also gold deposits in Utah, but the Mormons do all in their power
to prevent the settlement of the country by any other
than those or their faith. The richest mines yet found
in Arixona are on the branches of the River Colorado,
which runs into the Gnir or California.
The territories or Idaho, Colorado and Arizona havo
also large beds of coal.
Reports from General Glark, of Mexico, fully establish the truth of tho reports or rich deposits or gold in
Arizona.
The New York Tribune's Washington spocial 6sys :
The attention or the President and more prominent members or the Cabinet, and other gentlemen, has been
largely given or late to the consideration or tho important questions connected with the recall to the Union or
the truant Southern States, several or which may soon
be knocking at the door. The precise course to be
adopted is not yet determined. Several theories claim
tho President's ear ; but he is himseir engaged in maturing a practical plan by which to 6eeure reunion upon
the only practicable basis—the basis or freedom and
equality before the law—for all tho recent utterances
of the President, aud instructions to recently commissioned representatives of the Government in districts of
the South now in our possession, leave no doubt that tho
policy of tho Administration, to permit none oT tho vagrant States to come back with a slave constitution, is
fixed. The present discussion relates to the ways and
means ot effecting the result
The W ashingtoo correspondent or the Advertiser and
Tribune says that at no time sincb the opening or tho
war, has public confidence io the supremacy or the Government o:er the rebellion beeu so perfect snd general
as at this momeot This is due to tbo splendid victories
of tho Western army, tho forlorn condition of tbo rebel
Treasury and Commissariat and last though not least,
to the attitude or tho loyal States as declared st the recent elections. Nothing but inexcusable dissensions in
the National councils, and tardiness in the supply or
troops by tho States can prevent the early and final
overthrow or tho military power or the rebelfioq.
The Copperheads who moke eo muclr noise about tho
soldiers bciog permitted to vote, they seem to think
that the only right or the soldier wbicbthey are bound to
respect is the right to shoot ond be shot a t ; a man that
is willing to die that bis country may live, is according
to their doctrine, unfitted to declare through the ballo'.box who shall administer the precious legacy which be
is to leave for his children, consecrated as it is by bis
blood,and glorified as it will bo by bis devoted patriotism.
Some two millions orslaves are said to havo been
sent into Alabama and Georgia to keep tbem ont or the
reach or the Union army. When tbo army shall go ioto
those States, tbo masters or these slaves will probsbly
posh them Into Texas ; and there BANKS will find them
ready to render service to the cause or the Uoioo. Slavery is digging its own grave, and few will mourn at the
funeral.
WHY THE SOLDIERS VOTE AS THKT DO.—The Cincinnati Commercial says some have been perplexed with
the inquiry why the soldiers so generally vote o#e way ?
That is easily answered. Tbey have been so longio tbo
hab'it of shooting ono way that theytoald not so easily
break the habit when they come to tbt^poDs.
A meeting of prominent slaveholders or Tennessee,
thirty in number, recently resolved that in order to get
back into the Union again, they would be glad to give up
slavery, and therefore would favor emancipation without
asking any compensation for the liberated slaves.
Mrs. Finney, the wire of President Finney of Oberlin.
died at Syracuse last week. She was an elderly lady
and bad gone East for the purpose of recovering her
health.
,
Geo. Grant has captured within the past seven months
j i t the battle of Gettysburg the killed and wounded
was greater than the loss at Waterloo. At the latter four hundred and twelve rebel cannon, namely : 52 on
placeJheSollies and French together lost 40.000. At bis advance to Vicksburg, 300 at that place, and 60
Gettysburg the loss to the Union and rebel armies before Chattanooga.
amounted to 63,000.
Sixteen Parrot guns have been mounted on Johnson's
The fuH rote oT.Obio on Governor including the sol- Island, Lake Erie, in position where each battery sepdiers' vote, gives Governor Brough the mighty majority erately could sink any wooden fleet that should attempt
an entrance.
or 100,330!
r p p A
A
CTRSy.
fil'I'V'"
-
j
I m k « U n i t e d S t a t e s C i r c u i t C o o r t in B a l t i m o r e , o n j
—1 M o n d a y I a n , in t h e c a s e s of C h a n . H o w a r d , ffm. H . G a t -
NoiaAKCS.—Tbo G r a o d B u v c n . Y « c t is
d e s p i c a b l e p a p e r in M i c h i g a n .
fissions
ttic m o e t I c h e l l a m i J o h n \ V . I ) a v i a . l a t e P o l i c e
W b i l a load J i p i t a , pro-
B a l t i m o r e , a g a i n s t h i S e c r e t a r y of W a r . S i m o n
Came.
o f p i e t y a n d l o y a l t y , i t s c o l n m n a a r e m a i n l y fill-1 ron. t o r e c o v e r aevernlly. 8 2 0 . 0 0 0 - d a m a c ? 8 f o r t h e a n * *
e d w i t h filthy d r i p p i n g s f r o m t h o s e c e r t - p o o l s of t r e a s o n . , a n d i m p r i s o n . . , e n t of t h e p l a i n t i f f , in J u l y .
t h e C h i c a g o Times
i t i s t h e toady
a n d D e t r o i t Free
Prett.
and second-fiddle player.
t y sake, t h r o w off y o u r p i o u s m a n t l e
gutter. . •> > f
, •r
o r g e t out
in
the
of
Bay
wioter,"
the
Alpena ?
thereat
'•
^
T h e P r o p e l l e r L a d y Franklin arrived here on Snnday
last, and left on Monday evening, with a c a r g o
~ber,for Chicago.
.
.
o p e n c o u r t b y t h e c o u n s e l f o r t h e d e f e n d a n t , t h a t h e was
) hud n o p a r t in t h e a r r e s t a n d i m p r i s o u u i e u t of t h e
?'
of
lum-
J o h n Morgan, tho gncrrilla chief, w i t h s i r of bis Captains. h a s m a d e his e s c a p e f r o m t h e O h i o P e n i t e n t i a r y ,
a n d i s n o w in C a n a d a .
1 4 ,
1 8 6 3 .
I
B V E U V L A W I ,
and i».ugiit witn specii.! r e f e r e n t |.. the J o - . m ^
which we n o l d a l . c o m m i s s i o n o n l r a h o v c coM.
CHANCERY SALE.
STATE o r H i c u i c a s — T h e C i r c u i t C o u r t for the C o u n t y o f ,
Manistee. in C h a n c e r y .
l i e o n u E llBBits, C o m p l a i n a n t .
ire can offer ani>arall-led i n d a c c m i nta—buying as w<- d o of
the 11IPORTEKS UIRKCT for C A S H a n d in large . | u a n t i t i .
J o s t l - H HCKBLB,
THOMAS U v x a u t ,
G s o a o e W. FOES,
nr stuok will
very c o m p k u — C a a a i m e r s . S a t t i u e t s , K e t
MART H f « L E ,
ickv J e a n s . P i s i n and twilled tianocls, IJob-Roy*. Linsy:
J o n s U. l x i o x t s ,
'rockinirs.
JlMCS LrPINGTON,
T KT C R O C K E R Y
INT W O O L E N G O O D S
RAWLEIGH,
a U. SM
i.rl
S I'UHrfUANCE A N D liY V I R T U E O F A DKCREK <>f
the Circuit C o u r t for the Couuty of U a n i m c t . iu Ci.anoery
rnadc in tho above entitled cause, and b e a r i n g date the S a n d S t . A l b a n s b y reports t h a t a b o d y o f s e c e s s i o n i s t s in •ond day of May, In the y e a r one t h o w u n d «ight h u n d r n
and sixty. I. t h e undesigned, a ' s p e r t a t C.>ranjs«l.>ner, r.-si l
M o n t r e a l h a d p l a n n e d t o s e i s e F o r t M o n t g o m e r y , des- ieg iu the County aforesaid, and duly appointetl and i|uaiille>
t r o y t h e d r a w - b r i d g e a t R o n s c s P o i n t jrod p l u n d e r to ac-t a* such in the above entitled can«e, w i t l w l l at puhlii
aaotton u> t h e h i g h e s t bidder, ut the f r o n t door of liie HUH
P l a t t s b u r g a n d B u r l i n g t o n . I n f o r m a t i o n of s u c h « p l o t well !iou»c, in the Village of Manistee, In said County, oi
reached
G o v e r n o r S m i t h a n d C o l l e c t o r C/lnpp. T h e y Friday, t h e Twenty-second day of J a n u a r y , Iu the y e a r ont
thounand ei|{hl h u n d r e d u n d sixty-four, at ton o'clock in tin
c o m m u n i c a t e d w i t h t h e officer i n c b s f g c of F o r i M o n t - (orenoon of s i i d day, all i h o s e c e i t a i n p . c c c s or parcel* o
g o m e r y w h o s o o b h o d i t s g n n s r e a d y to g i v e t h e r e n e - land situated In t h o said C o u n t y df Manistee, in the s t a t e o
Michigan, a n d known a n d described as follows, to wit
gades a warm
reception.
1 ' b i s s c h e m e w a s p r o b a b l y Uot n u m b e r two of Hectioa o a o i n township t w c n y - o n e nortl
of range IT w e s t
'
_
•linked w i t h t h e J o h n s o n ' s Island p r o j e c t
;
' DAVID D 8EC0R.
Special C ^ m m i s a i o n r r .
T l i e rebels seem, t o b e fully p e r s u a d e d t h a t t h e m o s t : of
EMMONS & POXD,
Solicitor* a n d of C o a n a c l f o r C o m p l a i n a n t .
t h e fightbing d o n e in t h i s w a r hire r e s u l t e d in t h e i r f a v o r
Dated Manistee, NOT. J, \S(i3.
— a t l e a s t t h e y c o n t i n u e t o talk a s if i t h a d All their
( P r i n t e r ' s fees; $C 30.)
51-flw.
p a p e r s a r e foil o f t a l k a b o u t " t l i o i r v i c t o r i e s . " A n d y e t
CHANCERY SALE.
their Confederacy h a s shrivelletj and shrunk from t h e
" W O O X J
iy"» slid men
i rules.
Considerable excitemcnt w a s caused at Rouses P o i n t
possession of t h e most v i t a l s t r o n c b o l d in t h e i r b o r d e r s .
T h e W o r l d says : T h e F r e n c h irar steamer Milan has
just arrived at this p o r t from V e r a Cruz
via
Ilavanua.
S h e will r e t u r n d i r e c t l y t o t h o f o r m e r p o r t , h a v i n g b e e n
ordered to N e w Y o r k expressly t o take o u t t o Mexico
§ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 in g o l d , p u r c h a s e d o n a c c o u n t of t h e F r e n c h
' G o v e r n m e n t , b y t h e h o u s e of B e l m o n t Sc C o .
- T h e f u n e r a l s e r v i c e s of t h e l a m e n t o d
Major Scarritt,
w h i c h t o o k p l a c e a i P o r t H u r o n o n t h e 2 ' i d inst,
were
o f a u i m p o s i n g c h a r a c t e r . T h e y w o r e p a r t i c i p a t e d iu b y
t h e firemen, t h e m a s o u i c f r a t e r n i t y o f
Clair and N e w p o r t , the civic
generally.
Pori
dignitaries
Huron, St.
and
citizens
• .j*!.-Jii.w}«
M r . Z. C . P e a r s o n , o r H a l L E n g l a n d ,
a; s h i p
owner
a n d r e c e n t M a y o r of t h a t S e a p o r t , h a s b e c o m e b a n k r u p t ,
his deficit being over £ 2 1 2 , 0 0 0 ; h i s liabilities £6-15,000
—all o w i n g t o blockade ruuniug, ia w h i c h , h e h a d invested.
Served him right.
T h e a c t u a l n u m b e r of n e g r o t r o o p s in t h o field i s 48,l
000.
T h e r e a r e a l s o e m p l o y e d 5ri t h o a r m y , in ono
ca-
i p a c i l y a n d a n o t h e r , i n all, o n e h u n d r e d a n d s i x t h o u s a n d
ncgrots.
H o w THE C o . v r i n R . T E GAME WAS. PLAYED OX A LAWT K R . — A well d r e s s e d w o m a n c a l l e d a f e w - d a y s s i n c e on
a N e w p o r t l a w y e r , a n d rcpesenting h e r s e l f t o b e t b o w i f e
of C o l . B n r r j , of t h e 5 t h M a i n e , a s k e d t o bo s h o w n s o m e
e s t a t e , n o t o v e r SIO.OOO in v a l u e , t o s e l e c | f r o m . A f t e r
s o m e t r o n b l e s h e w a s s u i t e d , a n d ! g i v e d i r e c t i o n s for t h e
deed. Tho lawyer asking her for 8100-to
bind the
b a r g a i n , ; s h e p r o d u c e d a c h e c k f o r S^jSOO; o n t h e N e w
" E n g l a n d B o n k of B o s t o n . C o m p l e t e l y i m p o s e d u p o u ,
h e took her to the. N e w E n g l a n d Commercial Bank,
•where being i n t r o d u c e d t h e money w a s p s i d t o h e r . S h e
t h e n p a i d t h e 8 1 0 0 , left t o w n p e n d i n g t h e : p r e p c r a t i o n of
•hor p a p e r s , a n d h o s n o t g o n e b a c k . H e r ; hotel p e o p l e
w e r e s w i n d l e d also, t h e y let h e r g o w i t b o l a t p a y i n g h e r
b i l l . T h e c h e c k w a s for 8 2 5 , b u t hud been cleverly
altered.
WHAT
COPPERHEAD POLITICS b o
TOR A M A N — W e
t a k e i t for g r a n t o d t h a t t h e e d i t o r of t h e G r a n d R a p i d s
E a g l e . w h o is responsible f o r t h e f o l l o w i n g , h a s b e e n
-reading t h e F r e e Press.
j
W h e n a m a n e n t e r s t h e a r e n a of p r o - s l a v e r y , O o p p e r Tiend p o l i t i c s , a s an e d i t o r , h o i s o b l i g e d t o l e a v o
b e h i n d h i m , p f l o t e y e a r s , all t h e c h i v a l r y ' o f a g e n t l e m a n ,
all t h e h o n o r s of a m a n , all t h e t r u t h of a^ 6 h r t s t i a n . alt
t h e d e c e n c y of g o o d s o c i e t y , revel in p e r s o n a ! d e f e m a t i o n ,
insult, a b a s a . s l a n g a n d o b s c e n i t y , i r r e s p e c t i v e o f s t a t i o n ,
- c h a r e c t c r , ' a g o o r e v e n s e x . T h e h y e n a t h a t f a t t e n s on
t h e c a r c a s e s of a p l a g u e s t r i c k e n c i t y d o e s n o t p a u s e
t o distinguish b e t w e e n the b a b e and the crone, t h e maid e n a n d w a r r i o r , t h e t e n d e r i n n o c e n t a n d t h e t o u g h sinner.
W h y s h o u l d t h e a i d e r of t r e a s o n a h d t h e d e f e n d e r
o t slavery b e a n y more nice t
>•, - | V. •: *, - 3 -.v.
\
BRANDItETIl'S
PILLS.
Yon m a y r e c o v e r y o u r h e a l t h by t h o use at o t h e r remedies.
T o n may.neeover w i t h o u t a n y : b u t do n o t f o r g e t t h a t y o u
m a y die. a n d * h a t B r a n d r e t h ' a P i l l s could h a v e aaved you.—
For rememder that the
AWFUL PRINCIPLE OF DEATH,
w h e n y o n h a v e i t I n e x c e s a In y o u r s y s t e m , Is e v i d e n t t o y o u r
• n l m a l instincts. Y o a r c o u n t e n a n c e t e l l s y o u r f r i e n d s ; y o u r
d r e a m s a n d y o u r o w n h e a r t tell y o u .
Now, a t t h e s e t i m e s t h e r e I s no m e d i c i n e »o d e s e r v i n g of
y o n r c o n f l d e u c e as
BRANDRETU'S VEGETABLE UNIVERSAL PILLS,
t s t h e o n l y m e d i c i n e k n o w n t h a t can c e r t a i n l y save, w h e n all
t h e u s u a l I n d i c a t i o n s tell t h a t y o u m u s t d i e .
Mr. J o h n P u d a e y , S p r i n g f i e l d , Union C o . , X. J , h a s used
B R A N D R K T H ' S P I L L S f o r fifteen y e a r s In his family, a n d f o r
all h i s h a n d s : In w h i c h t i m e t h e s e P i l l s h a v e c u r e d t h e m of
Bllllousaffections, Maad^ehe,Rheumatism, F e f f t and Ague.
Measlea. W h o o p i n g C o u g h , a n d he says h e h a s n e v e r , k n o w n
t h e m t o fall. P r i n c i p a l Office, 294 C a n a l S t r e e t . New York.
g o l d by alt r e s p e c t a b l e d e a l e r s t » medicine*.
ASK F O B X E W STTLIS:
&
C o ' S
- * —
ColllUlTl
r—
5" *"
pi«inlifli> o r e l t h . . of ' h e m .
DC.
L a y
O C T O B E R 2 8 , 18(53.
D E A L E R S .
\ \ T E
HAVE J C s T l U X t l V E D
AND AUK N O
Y V o p e n i u g , with weekly additions, a large s a d varit
•rehandise
j t o c k of i i» specially J
of DEAL- | o u m e l t * *
" t u g iu a j rapidly gi
re. bolb'a* to quality, atvie %n<l p r i c e . in tii
j r e y ^ m p l e t e . t . . , k «f
l i iKr -uo m
r v i -i ai L
J Stable
- M w J D O ~-.oars It-il* . nitii ii.p.
(I C a p s Hoot* and Shoes, C l o t h i n g , Book* and Stationary, |*., t m a r ^
c o u n t r y affords, a n d » bicb i s Uiiug a u d » i .
Yankee Notion*. Hardware. Cutlery, Groceries, Confection-', be offered
*s c o r r e s p o n d i n g with the lo»»»t r f ^ u l a
ary. P a t e n t Medicines. Fine P e r f u m e r y , F a n c y Goods. Toys, r a l l , f „ r ,
g r a d e s of eood* in the m c t r o p v i . t a n m a :
At-. Ac.
, k e u abro.
n of p r i c
IO U I t L I N E O F H O O P
S K I H T S ' iioVof o u r c u ' l o m e r *
S a m . H o u s t o i v o f T e x a s , is s u r e l y d e a d t h i s t i m e .
b e g i n n i n g , a n d t h e i r last " g r e a t i v i c t o r y " h a s giver, us
HflIlI13.ll,
^
W M O L E S A X i E
wen;,
a u t h o r i s e d b y h i s c l i e n t t o say t h a t t h e l a t t e r ( i i e n . C a m
Monitor
over
lrtil,
finally d i s p o s e c of. T h o raits w e r e t a k e n f r o m t h e dtk-ke,
by cpnsent o f t n e plaintiffs'counsel, on t h e statement
r ; ; j*"j v > .,
W h a t h a s b e c o m e o f t b o " Thunder
D o n ' t It " Thunder
of w h i c h
F o r Christiani-
O O T O I B E T ^ .
Cotntnis!>oDers o f j T O
A FIVE LOT OF J E W E L R Y
it low rates, bought of the m u n u f u c t o r e r s direct.
TIN-WAREi
a n v t h i n - in
w e are p r e p a r e d t o furni«h on •
t h i s linenf the he*t w o r k m a n s h i p id ' i c a l i t r — a n d we liledce
ourselves to pi nee the rate* as lov a* t h e y ' c a n be bonpht
ork
und
stock.
anywhere, of the some quality of
OUIt STOOIC O F
Nails. Chain*. -Spring
< ' "HI I O I ' P I N G A X K S .
S l - i g h Shoes ; a u d Lumber..I w l i i u- . o l d at a suiull ad6maJt
ttd
NOTWITHSTANDING
r e m i n g l y h i g h p r i c e s of goods-, the f a r t s are. t h a t we
iw compelled t o j;o into the market and purchase, o
of sole could n o t i f i e s - t h a n 10 to 15 per c e n t , le
w.- are now able to oflVr our Slo.-k lor—which is a sa
>f no n u n e r i m p o r t a n c e to this rapidly g r o w i n g comtr
at a time when every dollar is so much needed.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
""'
>
, j 0 t h M | f f u „ u n d r t > w o d a l | » o n | d avail thcm>ei»,-« of tl.e
| * d r » . , U « e . o f f c r e d - T h i . h may be b e t t e r nndenrtood U
'
p n r c b a . e . , tot ir.a.ke:,., p e r f e c t f a m i l i a r i t y with and
long r x p t r i e u c o i u t h i s k.iu<! -I business, e n a b l i n g us t o k n o *
j u s t w h e r e t o go to p u r c h a s e different cla»i»e» of goo.ia to the
best possible a d v a n t a g e .
We are thue u a r t i c u f a r t h a t all w h o read may know o p p o s i t i o n a n d a u t a n t a g e s ' aud au e x a m i n a t i o n w h i c h a e l a
vile, will prove t o the uloi-t CRxi.nl o b s e r v e r that we can On
d o n e everv *;ateiEcnt made in onr c o l u m n .
Our . l o c k of Dry G o o d s is very complete, b o u g h t low. of
t h e mo»t a p p r o v e d styles and makes, c o m p u t i n g d r e s s
g o o d - in LVLains. Challies, A l p a c c a s , S a x o n y l'luids. Print*.
Black Silk*. Wool D e l . a i n e s tlguie.l a n d plain black a n d
white Piaid*. Swis- Mi)«lln*. Cliamt.reys, G i n g h a m s . 4 c . , Ae
DOMESTICS
Boojrht at r e d u c e d r a t e s : Double a n d T w i s t C a s s i m e r s a .
Black and E a u c y Casimere*. F r e n c h S u m m e r C a s t i m e r e s .
c Wbittenton Plaids,
York Mills Cotto'nades, plain a n d fancy,
I N a n k n n e t t s , Kentucky J e a n s T w e e d s , - M i x t u r e s , D e n i m s ,
Checks Apron a n d Miners. Ticks, S h i r t i n g P r i n w , Drills,
. C o t t o n F l a n n e l s Wool F l a n n e l s , Brown CoWous, B l e a c h s d
, C o t t o n s , B a g s Ac.. Ac.
CLOTHING.
! G e n t s fine silk lined Rlaek Cloth Coats.-very s o p e r i o r q u a l Ity. fine Black C a s s l m e r e p a n t a , Fancy Casimere CoatB. P a n t a ,
"I'd Vests, S u m m e r Coats. C o t t o n a d e P u n t s a n d Coats.
I I ' n d e r - c l o t h i n g , a fnli l i n e G e n t s a n d Ladles. Over S h i r t s
and Alls. Oil Suits, I n d i a Rubber Coats, Wool, Union a n d
Cotton Hocks in variety. Collars, a large a s s o r t m e n t . C r a v a t s ,
well a s s o r t e d , T r u n k s , T r a v e l l i n g Bags. Valises, H u n t i n g
Bags. Umbrelles, R. K. S a t c h e l s , some v e r y good, Ac., A c . .
7''
LADIES' WEAR.
G l o v e s silk, lisle and leather, Hose, black, white, a l a t ^
brown a n d blue. C o t t o n , union, m e r i n o a u d casbmorc, Bellaassorted ; Magic ltutUing, Tape t r i m m i n g , full l i n e : Flounc*
STAT« o r MICHIGAN—The C i r c u i t Court fur the County of | ,
i n g s Sw iss c a m b r i c a n d linen : also. K'dgings iu t h r e s d .
Manistee, iu Chancery.
cotton, s m y r i a ; cambric, swiss a n d silk ; C o t t o n Wash TrimWIUJAM 1. K i r , Complainant.
m i n g s colored a n d white, very p r e t t y : colored and w h i t e
Stays : colored a n d white •• S k i r t S u p p o r t e r * . " best ineko :
J o i t V I.»WR«NCE M c V r c r a u .
C r i n o l i n e , a nice a s s o r t m e n t ; Ladies D r a w e r s a n d Vesta ;
MICUAKL ENGELMANS.
ork
t
h
e
article
of
d
Hay
W r o u g h t Collars. In linen, c a m b r i c , . * u d m u s l i n ; C r o t c h e t
Defendants.
». of b<
e. Also Straw K n i w s
Braids : m a r k i n g c o t t o n ; h e m s t i t c h e d h a n d k e r c h e i f a ;
I PURSUANCE AND BY Y I R T U E OF A D E C R E E OK
H A N N A H , LAV A CO.
plain linen h a n d k e r c h i e f s : d r e s s p a t t e r n s , ' a s s o r t e d ; veil
the C i r c u i t C o u r t for the Oouuty of Manistee, in C h a n beragv and t i s s u e ; lace v o i t s ; Ladies k n i t s k l r t s ; b a l l m o r a l
cery. made in the above entrtled cause, and b e a r i n g dale the
skirts,
nicely a s s o r t e d , s u m m e r s t y l e s : Brochc s l i a w l a ;
Seventh dav of May, in t h o ^ o a r ona t h o u M n J e i g h t h u n d r e d
Stella, delaine and wool s h a w l s ; cloaks ; ladies e m b r o i d e r and sixty-three, I, tiie uo4eri«gnc<l, a speuial Commissioner,
ed
sell*, low p r i c e na n da cnoice
sells,
choice ; w
wasn
ash o
bm
l onnud : black
u « t » li a c e .
r e s i d i n g in the C o u n t y kforeeald, and duly a p p o i n t e d a n d • In Rat. F o i , Bewvvr, Otter, Ac., all b o u g h t of M:inufactort
tiguered
: F r e n c h j s e o n e t ; s o f t c a m b r i c s f o r ladle* ; n
qualilled t o a c t an such (n thu above entitle)] cause, will sell Agents.
s illea ; I n d i a cloth, Ac.. Ac.
at public a u c t i o n , t o t h i j i i g h c s t bidder, at the f r o n t d o o r of j
H A N N A H , LAY 4 CO.
t h e B u s w e l l House, iu trw»*,ilingo of Manlntee. in said County,
BOOTS AND SHOES.
on S a t u r d a y , tho twenty-third day of J a n u a r y , iu the year oue
T H E A M E R I C A N W.VTCII CO.
G e n t s o x f o r d tics : c o n g r e s s s a i t e r s ; ballmoral a h o e s ;
t h o u s a n d e i g h t h u n d r e d a n d sixty-four, at ten o'clock in the
fclow sh)s:s ; calf h r o g s n s ; k i p shoes ; b r o g a n s ; c a r p e t a n d
f o r e n o o n of s*id day, all those c e r t a i n peicos or p a r c e l s of W a t c h e s are now sold at a «ms!t a d v a n c e a>>
g
o
a
t
slipticrs
;
Indian
r u b b e t a ; calf, k i p a n d h e a v y b o o t s ;
jand s i t u a t e d in t h e ' C o u n t y of Maniateo, State of MtchiiMn.
• York I'.etail orii Cs, for the accomtnoi
ladies goat ballmoral b o o t s ; ballmoral pebble calf b o o t s j
a n d k n o w n a h d d e s c r i b e d as follows, to w i t :
keepers
love k i d c o n g r e s s g a i t e r s ; l a s t i n g c o n g r e s s ; side lace a n d
The s | or s e t of sec. 27, Lot 11n sec. 22, nt-J of n e j of nee.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
eeled
g
a
i
t
e
r
s
;
kid
b
u
s k i n s a n d slips ; c a r p e t a n d plush
22, n i of n w j of sec. 'J3. Lot 3 in sec. 10, Lots 2 aud 3 in see.
slips ; c b i l d s c o p p e r t i p s h o e s ; goat balltuorala ; l a s t i n g
28, the n e t of set of s e c I t , the s w j of n w i o f n e c 12. the n » i
boots a n d r a c k s ; misses boots, full a s s o r t m e n t ; boys s h o e s ,
of s w i of s e c 12, the n w i of s w i of sec Si. t h e s v j of .-»( ai
a
s
s
o
r
t
e
d
;
boys
boots
;
child* b o o t s n i c e a s s o r t m e n t . I n
*ec 3*. the s w j o f s c i o f s e c 3 4 , the s e i of
of «.-v 11 . nil
the above described lnnds lying In Town 21 N of Rung. 17 W. H o n t a g s J a c k e t s . G a r i b a l d i ' s and Spanish W a i s i s Children* the above goods we can otfcr i n d u c e m o u t s
A l s o , t h e following described l a n d s lying ia Town 21 N of H o o d s J a c k e t s , I a f a n t e e s Scarfs. C o m f o r t s , Ac., Ac., a large
STOVES AND HOLLOW WARE.
Range 16 W, via. : s w j of s e i of sec 2, the sitt of n e j of sec a s s o r t m e n t .
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
F o r e s t oak. Minnesota, Y a n k e e Doodle, Albion, S e n a t o r
8, t h e s w j of s e t of sec 10. t h e sei of n w i of vie H. the ^ e j of
C o m p e e r . Volunteer. O r a t o r , S o v e r e i g n , c o m b i n a t i o n b r i c k
n e i of sec 16, the n e i of sw{ of sec c, the sw t of « | ol net
oven r e s e r v o i r t o p and w a r m i n g closet. C o m b i n a t i o n P l a i n ,
•4, the n u i of n e i of sec
the n w i of nc{ of sec
the u« j of (
"Oh ! C n r r y me b a r k " t o the days of
I
m
p e r i a l Brick Oven, Imperial P l a i n Oven, C o m e t , P r i s o
sei of sec 5, the s | of t e i of sec 5, the swfll of nwlli of see j
1
P r e m i u m , C o n t e s t , Lark. C o o k i n g Stoves.
1*.
r
In parlor a n d b o * stoves ; Troy Bo*. Cent. P e e r l e s s Rival.
Also, the following described l a n d s l y i n g in Town 2'.
Locket.
Idahoe. Casket, Now P l a t e S t o v e s Double D o o r P l a t a
Range 16 W : Lot * In sec 22, Lot I i n s e o 21, the n e i o . u w t i
a n d Parlor Cook Stoves, with a d d i t i o n s as occasion d e m a n d s .
s e c 22, n w j of n e j Of sec 22, the sei of nei of see 13, the
H A N N A l l . LAY A CO.
K e t t l e s all s i z e s f r o m 4 t o U0 g a l l o n s ; Bake k e t t l e s P o t s
of s e j of sec 16. the s e i of s e i of sec 11. Sw{ »»l *wi ot see 12.
the swi of n w i of s e c 15. t h e sw{ of n w i of « c 16. the n e | ol
Ac.. Ac.
F o r novelties in
GROCERIES.
n w i of s e c 15, the nw{ of n e i of see 15. the n«i of sei ot see j
15. the s w | of sw'i of sec W. the s e i °f * ' i °f sec 2. the s w | |
j A full a n d c o m p l e t e a s s o r t m e n t , to» w h i c h we i n v i t a laof s w | of sec 35, the s j of n e | of sec 28. the n w i of n e j of see
spectlon.
well as a n y t h i n g in l h a t line,
28, the a«i of «wi of sec 2S. the nei of *e} of w e 31. the e j of <
; S p i c e s In raw aud g r o u n d material, of best grade*.
HA
All LAY A L
mt of
»w{ of s e c 14, the sei of nwfr of BCC 14. tho n w i of « « i of see
I T O B A C C O . — P l u g , Hue cut. t m o k i n g , t u r k i s h , t i p - t o p Old
11, the s e i of n w i ol sec 15, the *i of n e j of sec 15. the n e |
V i r g i n i a lump.
.
of n e i of sec 33, t h e n w i of n w i of sec 23, t h e n | of *» t of
DYKS.—Indigo, m a d d e r , e x t r a c t logwood, c u d b a r , blue
sec 12, the swi of nei of see 12. the *e| of n w i of see 12, the \
vitriol, camwood, c o p p e r u s , oOchlneal.
n w i of s w i s e c 27. the ne{ o f u e i of see 22.
j
rhich we have become so Justly noted. 600 pair o f t ! : I F O R T U L T A B L E . — P r e s e r v e d p e a c h e s c h e r r i e s , p l u m s ,
Also, t h e following d e s c r i b e d lauds lying Sn Town 22 N of i
I quinces, c u r r e n t s gooseberries, r a s p b e r r y , c u r r e n t , g r a p e
i- in t r a n s i t .
R a n g e 16 W . : t h o n e i of sec 2!>, the n w i of sue 28, thu n i of j
H A N N A H . LAY Ik CO, I aud »irntvberrv j o l l i e s t o m a t o e s , apples, peaches, p r u n e s
n e i of sec 28.
_
I
cheese, c r a c k e r s d r i e o beef,
Also, the following described land* lying In Town 22 N of |
HARDWARE.
Ladies Caaeimere IJnllmornl Booti,
Range 14 W : the s w i of s e t of sec 34. lot I In *ec 31. ihe s.-j!
'
Nail* f r o m 3 « t o 6 0 s , as low a* can be booght elsewhere ,
of nei of sec 34, the s - i of n e i of sec 20. e f l j of setij ot see '
r snowy weather, Shall I
1
i
iron, a full a s s o r t m e n t : glass, all s i r e s : axes, broad, n s r r o w
20, n w i Of s e i of sec 35, the s * i of the s e i of s e c 34, tiie e j o f
l a n d b o y ' s : barn door h i n g e s a n d rolleis ; cable and t r a c e
n e i or sec 34. the ne} of n w i of see 2«.
rhmns,"traps, table and p o c k e t cutlery, a full line : d o o r
Also, t h e following described land lying In Town 21 N j
t r i m m i n g s c o m p l e t e stock ; c a r r l s g e bolts : pad, chest, till,
R a n g e 13 W. : ihe e l of t e i of sec 8. lot i , seo 4. the « | of n e |
t r u n k , box. a n d d o o r l o c k s assorted : c a r p e n t e r s tools, a fnll
o f a e c 22, tho s i of n w i of sac W, » l of n w i of sec 10, the s » i
of n w j of sec 10, the sei of ne{ of sec 5, the n e j nf n w i ol
A nice a**ortinent of best make* and fashionable d e s i g n * ; line : s h o e m a k e r s tools a n d findlug*. good assorimen*. .
sec 24, the e{ of s e i "f n w j of sec 24. the e i of the »ej a n d
Ballmnral H . « e for Ladle* a n d C h i l d r e n : Ballmoral shoef s t e e l y a r d s b a l a n c e s fist i r o n s g r u b h o o k s s c y t h e s a n d
the w* of s w | of sec 13, the nei o f n e l l t of see | J .
for L a d i e s Mis.-cs a n d Children.
F A R M E R S TOOLS
S h o v e l s s p a d e s boes, potato h o o k s
Also, the following described l a n d s lying in Town ii N of
H A N N A l l , LAY A CO.
fork*. 2. 5. and 4 t i n e d ; m a n u r e f o r k s srhuffle b o e s g a r d e n
R a n g e 13 W . : Tho ne* of nei ot see 22, lot 2 iu see 1, lot 7 in
and IJ-JV rakes, p o u n d e r s cow b e l l s s c y t h e s n a t h s a n d scythe*,
sec 27, lot 2 In sec 11
A N E W F E A T U R E IN T H E M A R K E T ,
crain and r b . i d r e n s cradles, p l s s t e r . lime. Riddle's F a n n i n g
Also, the f o l l o w i n g described l a n d s lying in Town 21 N ol
j O f which we have a full a s s o r t m e n t . I* Gents and l.adie
Mills, luuiU-r w a g o n s l i g h t wagons, w a g o n s e a t s w h i f i l c t r e e s
K a u g e 17 W . : T h e ai of n w i of sec 34, the s w j of n e j
wheel b a r r o w s road s c r a p e r s p l o w s 1 a n d 1 borse J steel
Machine hemmed
13, lot I Sec IS, t h e s e j of M i of see IS, the wi of n e j <
plow m o u l d s f o r shovel plow*, d r a g teeth, c u l t i v a t o r t e e t h
24, the w i of sei of sec 24, the e i of nwi of sec 2t. the n w i of
g r u b b o e s p l a n t e r s h e a v y h o e s half bushel b a s k e t s , well
n w i of aec 24, lot 1 in sec 24, lot 2 in s e c 24, t h e sei of n6i of
: th'
All rb u c k e t s c hain pump*, c i s t e r n p u m p s , Ac.
sec 13, lot 1 In seo 23, t h e ne{ of seo 25, the w j of n e | of »cc
H
A
N
N
A
H
I.AY
A
•
35, t h e n e i of n e t of seo 35.
MEDICINES.
Also, the f o l l o w i n g d e s c r i b e d l a n d s l y i n g in T o w n 21 N
Avtrs. J a y n e s Wlnslow's Sawyer's Thompson's. Sargsnt's
a n g e IU W . : Lot 4 in sec 7. lot I in sec W
Davis'. K e n n e d y ' s etc_ p a t e n t m e d i c i n e s ; as also p i l l s
Also, the following described lands lying in Town 23 N
n stock a fair a - s o r t m c n l of the present style* o o i n t m e n t s , otis, e s s e n c e s a n d e x t r a c t s In v a r i e t y .
R a n g e 15 W. : T h e n w i of n w i of see S3, the w j of sei of s«*e
HARNESSES.
j a k s a n d at reasonable prices.
t h e . n o t of s e i of sec 34, the s | of n w i o f s e c 34, t b o n » J
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
S i n g l e a n d double, heavy a n d l i g h t harnesses, m e n ' s a n d
n w i of sec 34, the e i of n«i of sec
D A V I D D. SECOR, Special C o m m i s s i o n e r .
aide s a d d l e s b r i d l e s h a l t e r s girths, m a r t i n g a l l v e i i r a tuga.
T. J . R A M S D K L L S o l i c i t o r and of Counsel f o r C o m p l a i n a n t .
PII VLON'S N I G H T BLOOMING CEREU8,
s t r a p s Ac.. Ac.
D a t e d a t Manistee. Nov. 2,18ti3
LEATHER.
Of all p e r f u m e s ; the p e r f u m e f o r cither Ladle* or Centle
( P r i n t e r ' s fees, $30 30 )
61-6w
men are sold o n l y by
C o * hide, kip, calf a n d findings » c o m p l e t e line ; I s a u
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.. A g e n t s
p e £ S nails, knives. Ac.. Ac.
'
HAVE YOU
Y A N K E E NOTIONS.
A head of Hair, or W h i s k e r s or Moustaches, of an unbeitive a n d d y e s
c o m i n g color ?
.
.
ipectacle*
J u s t received 920 |»kg< of m e r c h a n d i z e p e r P r o p e l l e r A
DO YOU
•bacro a n d s n u f f b o x e s , and p o u c h e s tneersbaum and comleghany t h i s day, Oct. 20,1803.
Wish t o c h a n g a t h a t color t o a h a n d s o m e deep brown, or
mon pipe*, p o r t e - m o n i e s m o n e y b a g s ladles t r a v e l i n g bag*
II ANN AH, L A Y A CO
i child* b a g s r a t t l e s t o y s toy book*, c o m p a s " . wb r u s h e s
a p e r f e c t and n a t u r a l blaok, w i t h o u t i n j u r y t o the fibres, with| assorted, toy w a t c h e s .
T H I S S T A T E OF" T H E
. M A R K E T
o u t tronble o r i n c o n v e n i e n c e ? If so,
R
E
T
A
I
L
.
F
THE •SmiMSE MOM BlWJin TEtP,"
E
L a d i e s "Wool H o o d s ,
„7„ i S P I N N I N G
TO
EELS.
C o o k n n d P a r l o r Stove**
mm HoosE-sMi. LOG
\ LEG imm,
Ballniornl Skirts,
L.inen Pook«'t Handkerohiofrs.
LADIES CLOAKS.
Still
they Come.
STATIONERY.
for nearly all k i n d s of m e r c h a n d i s e Is and has been for the j
past t h i r t y days. M l ' C H E X C I T E D , a n d mo*t k i n d s of g o o d s j l e t t e r , n o t e , legal a n d c a p p a p e r s envelopes, a c s o r t a d .
have a d v a n c e d considerably ; especially for two week* past j p e n c i l s p e n s I n k . black a n d red. sealing w a x .
h a s thl* state of t h i n g s been more t h a n usually n o t l e t b l o :
BOOKS.
a n d tirTdran u n p r e c e d e n t e d d e m a n d and an unusually limitB a n d e r ' s McGnffy's Davis' Mitchell's and C l a r k ' s s e r i f * of
-•
- ' A - school b o o k s c h i l d * a n d . d u l l s m i s c e l l a n e c - —
books, copy b o o k s sonjc a n d m u s i c b o o k s »
c o m i n g forwSrd to make t h e i r r e q u i s i t i o n s f o r t h e use of o u r 1
TIN WARE.
M a n u f a c t u r e d by J . C R I S T A DORO, 6 Aston House. New i m m e n s e ar*ntes.the result has been to cause an increased
No. 1 r u n n i n g o r d e r a n d all w o r k
firjnnesa which necessarily m u s t c o n t i n u e until w i n t e r (now j
Y o r k . Sold e v e r y w h e r e , a n d applied by all H a i r Dressers.
FURNITURE.
s o X o o n A t ft^nd) seta In.
P r i c e 91, S I 50 a n d $3 p e r box, a c c o r d i n g to s i r e .
A
good
a
s
s
o
r
t
m
e
n
t
c
o n s t a n t l y on h a n d — a t f a i r p r i c e * .
C r u t a d o r o ' t t XXair P r e s e r v a l i v e .
Is Invkluable w i t h h i s Dye. as it i m p a r t s the u t m o s t softWe find i t i m p o s s i b l e t o h a r d l y c o m m e n c e a:
OCR L A T E S T A D V I C E S s h o w a still l a r g e r a d v a n c e in i of o n r «tock in so *mall a ( p a c e , a n d f o r a n y a d d i t i o n a l p a r
ness, the m o s t b e a u t i f u l gloss, a n d g r e a t vitality to the Hair.
I l i s a j a r * plea** call on or s e o d t o
Pric*, 40 c e n t s , *1. and is p e r bottle, a c c o r d i n g t o *lze
all d a a a e * of Merchandise
B i i S i H L i Y A OO.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
THEN YOU
M u s t n s e CRISTADOHO'S E X C E L S I O R D Y E which is
the only harmless, certain, i n s t a n t a n e o u s a n d truly n a t u r a l
H a i r Dye i n the w o r ld .
SHOULD YOU
D o u b t th.-se s t a t e m e n t s , try the article, a n d if it fails denounce it
VERY LATEST.
Beplrming
late,
j
- • .J
I a b o u t t o g i r o h i m * iixpCTce, w h e n
Helen stayed
my |
TO T H E LADIES OF AMERICA »
! One Hundred Dollars Reward!
I b e g a n life b y r u n n i n g a w a y f r o m borne. B o l i e a u . w e a r e i b a n d , mid c r i e d o u t in t W o l d s t y l e —
^
i E T O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS.
F o r a Medicine t h a t will c u r e
t o l d was d r i v e n i n t o h i s c a r e e r b y t h e h a n d of fate a n d :
" H e y , D o : * l d , moo, d i n o a y e ken y e ' r o l d f r c a ' s V
j L y 0 N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROP.I COUGHS,
-•
•
M• »- -•
« . .. .
* i '!•*>
lit.
_•!_ I
T i n
IMA|'>U1 I*#. itri >i j l n n i c l t i n p n l
J t ff**'- D
l lo«nn a« ll dr i
t h e p e c k of a t u r k e y . A t iia s t a r t e d in jlfe w i t b . n o o t h - '
Tiio man looked up iwostonishinenL
L Y O N S PER IODIC At, DROPS.
|
INFLUENZA,
o r CBBSO oiid c a p i t a l t h a n c o o l d s w o r d , j a u d w h i c h b e j I / i o n . H i s arua&riocDi a t c u t a p p e a r a n c e w a s t i e i j u t c n c u J, T O N ' S 1'EiUODlCAL DROPS.
T I C K L I N G ID t h e T H R O A T ,
p a l m e d off f o r t h e d i v i n e w e a p o n of H a h ; a n d B o b c # - b y i t s style ; a n d i t w a s w i t h t h e g r e a t e s t difficulty t h a t
WHOOPING COUGH,
p i e r r e o w e d b i s p o l i t i c a l c a r e c r t o w e t t i n g his stockiogis. w e c o u l d i n d u c e h i m t o e n t e r o u r c a m a g u ami utiawer
O r ralicvi
CONSU*TiVE COUGH,
THE OBEAT FAMILY REMEDY 1
a n d t h e r e h c u r d " w o r d s w h i c h b u r n . " w h i c h fired h i s o u r n u m e r o u s q u e r i e s a s t o o u r old f r i e n d s .
THE OHEAT FAMILY REMEDY I
s o u l . o o d d e t e r m i n e d h i s c o u r s c i i r life. M y r u n n i n g a w n y j
D i f f e r e n t men s t a r t iu life d i f f e r e n t ways.
I 'believe
a a q u l e k as
THE GREAT FAMILY REMEDY !
f r o m h o m e a r o s e f r o t n a m i n o r m o r t i f i c a t i o n , c a u s e d b y J t h a t m i n e , h o w e v e r is t h e only i n s t a n c e o n r e c o r d of a
carrying a pretty girl over the brook, j
. gentleman w h o owes h i s w e a l t h and happiness t o rolling
THE GREAT FAMILY REMEDY !
D o n a l d L e a n a n d myself w e r e g o o d friend.', a t f o u r t e e n > o v e r w i t h a p r e t t y g i r l in a s t r e a m of w a t e j .
y e a r s of a g e , a n d we b o t h regarded w i t h littlu m o r e t h a n (
O Y E K JFIVE T H O U S A N D B O T T L E S
L Y O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
friendship, pretty, Heleu G r a h a m , " our oldest girl W E S T ' S
I M P R O V E D
P U M P .
h a r e been sold in i t s native town, and n o t a single i a s t a a e *
LYON S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
a t s c h o o f . " * W e romped and danced t o g e t h e r , and this
of its failure is k n o w n .
«
. ;y
l a s t e d f o r s u c h a t i m e , t h a t i t i s w i t h f e e l i n g s of b e wil- A n t i - F r e e z i n g , D o u b l e - a c t i n g , F o r c i n g a n d L i f t i n g L Y O N S P E R I O D I C A L D R O P S
We h a r e , in o u r possession, a n y q u a n t i t y a! certificates,
L Y O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
d e r m e n t t h a t I l o o k b a c k u p o n t h e m y s t e r y of t w o l o v e n .
s o m e of t h e m f r o m
c o n t i n u i n g f r i e n d s . B u t ( u c t i m e w a s t o c o m e w h e n ' P H E S E P U M P S H A V E NOW BEEN IX G E N E R .
EMINENT PHYSICIANS.
1 a n u m b e r of y e a r s , a n d Rive better
j e a l o a s y lit h e r s p a r k in m y b o y i s h b o s o m , a n d blew
ARB BETTER THAN PILLS
other. and are r e c o m m e n d e d aa the best
who have used it In their practice, a n d gtved it the proem:
i t j n t o ' a c o n s u m i n g flame.
ARE B E T T E R T H A N P I I . L L
and o t h e r e m i n e n t E n g i n e e r s . W e can
n c n c c over any other cumpoutuL
W e l l d o I r e m e m b e r h o w a n d w h e n t h e " • g r e e n - e y e d " u s i n g t h u m . a n d g u a r a n t e e .that all will rcieomaicUil liu-m.—
ARE BETTER T H A N PILLS
I
t
d
o
e
saot dry n p n COUG-H,
p e r p e t r a t e d t h i s i n c e n d a r y d e e d . I t was o n a c o l d O c t o - T h e y a r e m o r e silnpio in c o n s t r u c t i o n . a n d work «:a>i> r. and
ARE BETTER T H A N P I L U
' f c r o v e n i n g , w h e n H e l e n , D o n a l d , a n d toyself w e r e re- cost U-»» UIKU aii others.
^ loosens It, so as to enable the p a t i e n t t o e x p e c t o r a t e fro*
" O u r r e a d e r s will find tlic double-acting. i m p r o v e d Puiup
turning with our parent* from a neighboring \ a m l e t .
TWO OR T H R E E DOSES W I L L INVARIABLY CURE
A s wo a p p r o a c h e d a f o r d w h e r e t h e w i t e r r a n SQJIIJ- of J . D. West A Co.. o a c of the best in Hi* m i r k , L l i i« very
I'S Periodical Drops are
simple, works to a charm, so that a n y c h i l d may _U*e it ;
T I C K U N U IN T H E I H K O A l " .
w h a t h i g h e r thau ankle deep, w e proposed to c a r r y
T H E ONLY F L U I D P R E P A R A T I O N
t h r o w s a steady.
I J" Bottle h a s often completely c u r e d the most
H e l e n a c r o s s a s w e w e r e a c c u s t o m e d t o w i t h h a n d s iu- the coldest exposures.
T H E ONLY FLUID PREPARATION
witht e r w o v e n " c h a i r f a s h i o n , " a n d t h u s c a r r i e d o u r p r e t t y j knowingly, and give t h e t e s t i m o n y of
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t the knowledge o request of t b * p r o p r i e t o r * . "
p a s s e n g e r o v e r t h e b r o o k . J u s t a s wo w e r e in t h e midand y e t . t h o u g h it is so s i n e a p d speedy in Its o p e r a t i o n , il ls
T H E ONLY F L C I D P R E P A R A T I O N
[ N . Y. E v e n i n g POM. J u l y I»1
perfectly harmless, b e i n g purely vegetable. I t l» very agree
d l e of t h o w a t e r — w h i c h w a s c o l d e n o u g h t o h a v e f r o z e n j
a n d may be a d m i n i s t e r e d t o c h i l d r e n of
a n y t h i n g l i k e f e e l i n g o u t of b o y s lea* i i n r d v t h a n o u r T h i s m a r c e r t i f y t h a t I have been o s i n p , at ray iimrnfac toever
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specific
s e l v e s — a f a i n t p a n g of j e a l o u s y n i p p e d m y h e a r t
Why
y, (or the "last loot years, C V o i ' a i m p r o v e d P u i u ; > . " I
•s of C R O U 1 ' w o will g u a r a n t e e a cure. If taken la
i t was I know uot, for we had c a r r i e d H e l e n across the
low have in o#c i b w o of said ptilJil'.'. otic of wliirh i-. k e p t . for irregularities, c h a l l e n g e s the worhl to p r o d u c e an e q u a l ; season.
oustunUy at work, 21 h o u r s e a c h day, wive s u n d i r »> and they are. In the most obstinate cases.
b r o o k ere now without emotjou, b u t this evening I
N o F a i u l l f ^ h p u l d bo w i t h o u t i t .
t h o u g h t o r f a n c i e d t h a t H e l e n g a v o D o n a l d an u n d u e h a s been r u n n i n g f o r the p a s t t w o f e a r * . I p r o n o u n c e ihetn,
It i s within-thc reach of all. the p r i m b e i n g
u n h e s i t a t i n g l y , t h o bent p o t n p s that have boon b r o u g h t to my
p r e f e r e n c e b y c a s t i n g h e r a r m a b o u n d bis n e c k , w h i l e s h e uotl«e, h a v i n g used many o t h e r s previously. They uio simple
O N L Y 25 C E N T S .
RKLI ABI.fi, A N D S C R E TO D O GOOD 1
s t e a d i e d h e r s e l f o n m y s i d e b y h o l d i n g t h e c u f f of u\y
i t h e i r c o n s t r u c t i o n , and u o t easily dinacranged.
And if an I n v e s t m e n t a n d t h o r o u g h trial does not " b a c k
R E L I A B L E ; A N D S U R E T O D O G O O D 1 J>" the al>o*e s t i t e m e n t . t h e Jnoney w|lt be r e f u n d e d .
N. V - O c t . 10.1869.
J ABtS A. V> KBB.
jacket
Wo
N o flattie c a n b u r n s o a u i c k , o r w i t h W> little f u e l a s
R E I . I A B L E , A N D S U R E T O D O G O O D ! say t h i s ^ k n o w i n g its merits, u a d f e e l i n g confident t h a t o n e
trial will s<
home In c •ery h o u s e h o l d .
jealousy.
Before we had r e a d i e d the opposite bank, I J . D. WEST 4 Co. :
R E L I A B L E , A N D S U R E TO DO GOOD 1
Ve are pleased t o s t a t e t h a t the P u m p s wn have had of
i»o not waste away w i t h Conghitigv when so small
w i s h e d D o n a l d a t t h o " b o t t o m of t h e s i n . '
Being nai. about a y e a r ago. have been in c o n s t a n t use, l'i h o u r s
e s t m e n t will c u r e —
*—
turally impetuous, I burst o u t w i t h —
:h day, s n c f r a l e e f o r t h # u « of o u r Woolen F a c t o r y , about
Druggist in town, »
" Y o u n e e d tia h a n d s a e g i n g e r l y , H e l e n , a s if y c 130 gallons p e r m i n u t e . T h e y w o r k w i t h b u t littlu power, A N D C A N N O T D O H A R M ,
nine ccrtlficstes of ci
• inpared with p u m p s we h a v e used before, a u d do_ not get A N D C A N N O T D O H A R M ,
C. •!. CI.ARK.
f e a r e d a f a . ' 1 c a n a y e c a r r y y e l i g h t e r t h a n D o n a l d can
it of repair, a n d are satisfactory in all respects. \ ours. i t .
WHOI.MSIJ; pttt'Giii'T,
c a r r y h a l f of y e . "
«
A N D C A N N O T DO H A R M ,
OFActcui-NG Coscra.
N E W II A YEN, C O N N ,
Hurptised nt tho vehemence of my tone, our queen
• V ' 'PropHtlnk
AND CANNOT DO HARM,
i n t e r p o s e d w i t h an admission t h a t w e w e r e b o t h strong,
For s a l s by D r u g g i s t s iu city, c o u n t r y , a n d e v e r y w h e r e .
a Club, J a n . ::
SOLON KOBJNSKIK o tho F a r
a n d t h a t .she h a d no i d e a of s n a r i n g m y p o w e r .
But
sxibly afford
F o r sale at Wholesale, by
* '
No f a r m e r who on as a w on o r cinicru e
D. S. B A R N E S & CO., New Yor*,
D o n a l d s "ire w a s k i q d l e d , a n d h o u t t e r l y d e n i e d t h a t 1 , JO w i t h o u t an i r o n p u m p . It s h o u l d be a i o n c e a s o c u o u
IF T H E DIRECTIONS ARE A D H E R E D TO
G. C. G O O D W I N * CO., Boston,
w a s a t a l l q u a l i f i e d t o c o m p e t e w i t h h i m in f e a t s of m o r a l a u d f o r c e p u m p — a p e r f e c t little tire e n g i n e — s u c h a one
jm
FARR.VND. S U E E L E Y A CO.. D e t r o i t .
IF T H E DIRECTIONS ARE A D H E R E D TO
k
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West's
Improved
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courage. O n such t o p i c s boys aro generally emulous,
because 1 h a p p e n t o k u o w i t . . .
t o be very simple,
I F T H E DIRECTIONS A R E A D H E R E D TO
a n d b v t h e t i m e we r e a c h e d t h e o p p o s i t e b a n k , i t w a s durable, powerful a n d cheap, a n d i t d o n ' t freeze up. n o r get
T O ALE TO W H O M IT MAY CONCERN..
settled t h a t t h o p o i n t s h o u l d bo d e t e r m i n e d b y o u r s i u g l y o a t of o r d e r onco a y e a r . .
. I i n o w this, a u d t h i n k I
I F T H E DIRECTIONS A R E A D H E R E D TO 1
may bo doing the f a r m e r s good by Breaking of i t . . . A
^ J O T I C E I S H E R E B Y G I V E N T H A T AN A P I ' L i C A
b e a r i n g H e l e n a c r o s s t h e f o r d iu o u r a r m s .
tlon will be p r e s e n t e d t o the Board of S u p e r v i s o r s ol
H e l e n Was t o d e t e r m i n e w h o h a d c a r r i e d h e r m o s t boy 10 years old can w o r k it, and throw a c o n t i n u o u s inchand-a-qaarter s t r e a m . . . I t can be m a d e t o work in deep S A F E A T A L L T I M E S !
G r a n d T r a v e r s o County, at t h u i r m e e t i n g t o bo - M i d ' S t
e a s i l y , a n d I s e t t l e d w i t h m y s e l f p r i v a t e l y in a d v a n c e , t h a t
Traverse City, on Tuesday, ihe 5th day of J a n u a r y ,
Dwells aa well as i if shallow onus."
the one w h o h a d obtained tho p r e f e r e n c e w o u l d really
SAFE AT ALL TIMES 1
l s o t , p r a y i n g them t o e n a c t and provide f o r t a k i n g the
b e t h e p e r s o n w h o s t o o d h i g h e s t in h e r ' a f f e c t i o n s . T h o
T o w n s h i p 27 N o r t h of Range 13 West, t h a t now belongs to '
the A e u 1 Yvrk
Obtcrver,
SAFE AT ALL TIMES !
the T o w n s h i p of Crystal Luke, a n d o r g a n i s e the same into a
reffectiou s t i m u l a t e d mo t o e x e r t e v e r y effort, a n d I verily
Wv h a v e b a d in use f o r m o n t h s p
T o w n s h i p t o be called ALMIRA. A m a p or survey of the
S A F E A T A L L 'CIMES !
b e l i e v e t o t h i s d a y , t h a t 1 c o u l d h a v e c a r r i e d D o n a l d a n d wliicb h a s g i v e n US m o r e satisfaction a . a force an
lifting
t e r r i t o r y or T o w n s h i p t o bo effected, will aceompuny and bu
H e l e c on c i t h e r a r m like f e a t h e r s . B u t I m u s t n o t a n t i - p u m p t h a u any wc have ever used. I t i s one of gre .
a t t a c h e d to t h e a p p l i c a t i o n
,
. '
a n d well a d a p t e d f o r s h i p ' s decks, m i l OR. factors'-., greencipate!.
Dated November 9. 1S';3.
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The M i n i n g C h r o n i c l e a u d
A- P . W h u c l o c k ,
J . D . Ayera.
A . J . BnrWU,
W e suffered all t h e p a r t y t o pass quietly
a l o n g , houses,, g r a p e r i e s , Ac-, « c .
wrapped around each bottle, a n d have the written signature
H a l l w a y J o u r n a l savs :
W m . Roosa.
A n d r e w Roosa.
Edward M s i s s n .
a n d t h e n returned H e l e n w i t h t h o u t m o s t c a r e I c a r r i e d
I t Is r e c o m m e n d e d f o r its e x t r e m e s i m p l i c i t y of construc- of DR. JNO. L. LYON u p o n t h e m .
Lafayette P r a t t ,
David C. Brvan,
David Fuller,
h e r like a n i n f a n t t o ' t h e m i d d l e o f t h e Water. ' J e a l o u s y t i o u . g r e a t tUcng'.h, a u d c o n s e q u e n t d u r a b i l i t y a n d cheapS. A. P r a t t .
.
Elijah P r a t t .
Alfred Wtttkrd, i
h a d i n s p i r e d a w a r m e r love, a d d i t w a s , w i t h f e e l i n g s un- n e s s pf r e p a i r . There,1s no slutting b o x — t h e p r e w i r e b e i n g
Warren Hoxie,
.Sanford Fuller,
S. A. Manslleld.
k n o w n W o r e t h a t I e m b r a c e d h e r b e a u t i f u l f o r m , a n d held by a c u p packing, like that upon the w o r k i n g piston,
George Fuller.
A d d i s o n White.
G. H. William*.
N
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N
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S
A
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E
G
E
N
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w o r k i n g i u j i cylinder, fitted f o r the purj>obi} w i t h i n the upJ a m e s Hlgglns,
J . B. M a n w a r l n g ,
H i r a m Ilowen,
felt t h e p r e s s u r e o f h e r c h e c k n g a i n s U n i u o .
Ail went
per air c h a m b e r — w h i c h we thin!; a g r e a t Improvement, a i
Orlne Foster,
Amasa MafHllslrf,
N O N E O T H E R S A R K G E N U I N E ! Sylvester Cole,
s w i m m i n g l y o r r a t h e r w a d i u g l y f o r a m i n u t e . B u t a l a s in utufUIng i s s o liatilo t o be d e r a n g e d , a n d leak u n d e r s t r o n g
J o b n 11, Lake,
J a m e a M . Fuller,
P, W McCrea.
NONE OTHERS ARK GENUINE !
t h e v e r y d e e p e s t p a r t o f t h e f o r d , I t r o d on a t r e a c h e r o u s pressure, to say n o t h i n g of t b o loas bv t r i c t i u u i n c i d e n t
C. L l h k l e t t e r ,
Zlna P r a t t ,
A W. Heather,
b i t of w o o d w h i c h r e s t e d , I s u p p o s e on a s m o o t h s t o n e . t h e r e t o . It has aluo two air c h a m b e r * : t h u s the action of t h e
(50-4w.)
N O N E O T H E R S A R E G E N U I N E ! M. t i . Follett
0 * c r X r o l l e d , b e a r i n g H e l e n w i t h m e , b o r d i d wo r i s e •alvc i s c u b h i o n e d u p o n b o t h sides V-y air— ]»iev. n t i n g waterh a m m e r , and vacum-thump. The valves are very accVssible.
ti|l fairly soaked f r o m bead t o foot.
' simply a n d cheaply repaired. They work much easier
STRAY H E l F E R i
.
I n e e d n o t d e s c r i b e t h e t a u n t s of D o n a j d o r t h e m o r e t h a n a n y p u m p we h a v e e v e r seen ; the 4 i n c h cylinder be- B E W A R E O F C O U N T E R F E I T S !
a c c u s i n g s i l c o c e of H e l e n .
B o t h b e l i e v e d t h a t I h a d "ng worked by c h j l d r c u iu wells 100 feat deep, a n d as tluiy
AKEN UP BY ME ABOUT SLX WEEKS AGO.
B E W A R E OF COUNTERFEITS !
f a l l e n f r o m racro w e a k n e s s , a n d m y iijral d e m o n s t r a t e d ire e x t r e m e l y c h e a p a s well as s i m p l e a n d s t r o n g , we freely
n e a r P i n e River, on the Ncwsygo Road, a Brown H e i f e r
BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS !
about t h r o e y e a r s old- T h e o w n e r Is ftqucsted t o prOVu
h i s s u p e r i o r a b i l i t y b y b e a r i n g h e r a d i s t a n c e ou o u r homo- recommend t h e m .
property, pay c h a r g e s a n d take her away.
w a r d p a t h . A s w e a p p r o a c h e d t h e h o u s e , H e l e n , feelBEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS !
fl.
Gi. N'.ck L. I.. 1800.
H E N R Y II R U T H E R F O R D .
ing dry and bettor humored, a t t e m p t e d to conciliate me.
I have im-d t h i s p u m p f o r o n e s u m m e r a:
Traverse, D e c e m b e r ! , 1803.
51-tfw
B u t I p r e s e r v e d a m o o d y s i l e u c c . 1 w a s m o r t i f i e d b e - posed t o the North-West wind c o m i n g o n Ulg Isiai
Sound, being tliocoldest posslbk exposure, t
yond redress.
They c e r e all those i l l s t o which the female s y s t e m is s u b j e c t
T h a t n i g h t I p a c k e d u p a f e w t h i u g s a n d r n a a w a y . did it freeze, u o r were we u n a b l e at any t i m e to p u m p I
cd with d i s p a t c h and a degree of c e r t a i n t y which n o t h i n g but
with great ease.
U- B. MCILYA
My boyish miud, sensativo aud iritutcd. exaggerated the
n scientifically compounded Bold preparation could reachn e g a t i o n w h i c h i t h a d recived, a n d p r o m p t e d me t o
• We.
T h e u n d e r s i g n e d , hi i-uig tc
b e t t e r r e s u l t s t h a n g e n e r a l l y a t t o u d s u c h i r r e g u l a r i t i e s . c h e e r f u l l y r e c o m m e n d t h e m a s simple, d u r a h
I w e n t t o E d i n g b t i r g w h e r e I f o u n d a o a n c l e , a k i n d - 'In r a i s i n g and t h r o w i n g Water, a n d for t h e i r ease of action, T S E N O O T H E R i
h e a r t e d , c h i l d l e s s m a n , w h o g i n d l y g a v o m c a p l a c e in h i s s e c a r i t y a g a i n s t frost, a n d low price, wo believo t h e m supe- U S E N O O T H E R I
r i o r t o all o t h e r s .
h o u s e , oncf e m p l o y e d m e in b i s b u s i n e s s . W e a l t h flowed
W a a i t r a L E L i i i n . Met. Hotel New York.
USE NO O THER !
Mich., Merrill Block*
upon him. 1 becamo bis partner—went abroad—resided
J . W. PoMEkov. \ o n k e r t . N. V.
USE NO OTHER !
C o r n e r o l ' W o o d w a r l Ac J o i l e r a o n A v e n u e * .
f o u r y e a r s o u t h e c o n t i n e n t , a n d E n a l y returned t o S c o t -
C O E ' S
C O U G H BALSAM.
£3
STUBJ3011N C O U G H ,
'fVcwV
T
B R Y A N T & STRATTON*S
CHAIN OF NATIONAL
; f.
MERCANTILE COLLEGES.
3Sranch L o c a t e d at Detroit,
l a n d r i c h , e d u c a t e d , io s h o r t , e v e r y t h i n g b u t m a r r i e d .
O n e e v e n i n g w h i l e a t a ball in G l a s g o w , I w a s s t r u c k
b y a l a d y o f u n p r e t e n d i n g a p p e a r a n d ' , w h o s o remarkable
b e a u t y a u d h i g u - t o n e d e x p r e s s i o n i n d i c a t e d a m i u d of
m o r e than ordinary power. I was introduced, b u t the
S c o t t i s h n a m e s h a d long been unfamiliar t o my e a r , and
I could not c a t c h hers.
I t wos H e l e n something, and
t h e r e w a s s o m e t h i n g ' in t h o face, t o o , t h a t s e e m e d f a m i l i a r — s o m t h i n g s u g g e s t i v e of p l e a s u r e a n d p a i n .
B u t w e b e c a m e well a c q u a i n t e d t h a t e v e n i n g . I learn« d w i t h o u t difficulty h e r history. S h e was
from
the
conhtry, h a d b e e n e d u c a t e d , h e r parents had lost
t h e i r p r o p e r t y , a n d s h e w a s n o w g o v e r n e s s of a f a m i l y of
the city.
'
,
[. .
I w a s f a s c i n a t e d w i t h h e r flpnversaiiou, a n d was cont i n u a l y reminded of h e r g r a c e feud relmment of
manner
t h a t s h e w a s c a p a b l e of m o v i n g w i t h d i s t i n g u i s h e d
success in a f a r h i g h e r s p h e r e t h a n t h a t w h i c h f o r t u n e seeme d to have allotted her.
I was uaturally not talkative,
n o r p r o n e t o c o n f i d e n c e ; b u t t h e r e "was t h a t in t h i s
y o u n g lady which inspired b o t h , a o d ' I conversed with her
as I never conversed w i t h any person;
H e r questions of
the various countries which 1 was familiar indicated a
remarkable
k u o w l e d g e of l i t e r a t u r e , i n d a n i n c r e d i b l e
s t o r e of i u f o t m a t i o n .
W e p r o g r e s s e d in i n t i m a c y , a n d 8 3 o u r c o n v e r s a t i o n
t u r n e d on t h e c a u s e w h i c h i n d u c e d s i m a n y t o l e a v e
t h e i r n a t i v e land, I l a u g h i n g l y remarked t h a t I o w e d m y
o w n t r a v e l s t o f a l l i n g w i t h a p r e t t v girl i n t o a f o r d .
I h a d h a r d l y s j w k e n t h e s e w o r d s ejre t h o b l o o d m o u n t e d t o h e r face, and was succco d e d b y a r e m a r k a b l e palen e s s . I a t t r i b u t e d i t t o t h o h e a t of t h e r o o m — l a u g h e d
— a n d n t h e r r e q u e s t p r o c e e d e d t o relate m y f o r d a d v e n t u r e with Helen G r a h a m , pointing in glowing colors tho
amibility of m y l o v e
H e r m i r t h d u r i n g t h e recital b c c a m c i r r e p r e s s i b l e . A t
the conclusion she remarked ;
;• M r . R o b e r t s , i s i t p o s s i b l e t h a t y o u h a v e f o r g o t t e n
J N O . MESSUKEAV
N. Y
PoiliMCS l.» WHENCE. W e s t c h e s t e r
F o r my d r o p s stand before the world a s the r e plus u l t r a of
C a m b r i d g e Mlnc.N. C'.. J u n e 13, I S O .
all remedies, . f o r t h o cure of all diseases of the k i d n e y s a n d
C e n t s , — T h e p u m p which I o r d e r e d fj>r onr Mine is re- bladder, Leucorcoh, Prolapsus, a n d t h o mild, but positive
ceived a u d put to w o f k Jo our uudorlay . - t u f . . wiiic-i we are
of all irregularities.
s i n k i n g . We find t h a t one man will wi;h case lift
gallons
p e r m i n u t e W c l i f t e d in three a n d a p i l f h o o r s all the water in tho s h a f t , w h i c h meu-tsres seven by t w e l v e feet a n d 30
feet d e e p , and it was f u i l when we c o m m e n c e d . It answer.!
DO N O T BE I M P O S E D U P O N
our e x p e c t a t i o n s in e v e r y respect, a n d o a r w o r k m e n are
DO NOT BE IMPOSED U P O N
h i g h l y pleased with it. It will do g r o a t s e r v i c e w i t h but
trilling e x p e n s e l o r ropnirs
DO NOT B E IMPOSED U P O N
Yours, respectfully.
E l a n HIUCINS.
DO NOT B E IMPOSED U P O N
We havo p l e n t y more such certificate!, b a t t h i n k t h e r e are
e n o u g h F o r Pumps, llo»e. P i p e , e t c , a d d r e s s or r a i l upon
York, P h i l a d e l p h i a , A l b a n y , Bufialo, C l c t c ' . n u d , C h i c a g o ,
Louis,Brooklyn. Troy, Portland and Toronto.
,
A p e r s o n h o l d i n g a s c h o l a r s h i p Can a t t e n d e i t h e r a l liis
option.
'
Terms.
T u i t i o n p s y a b l e in a d v s n i e by p n r c l i e ; e of s c h o l s ; s L i p
6til for f u l l t e i m . t a m e course tor L a d l e s , S ' i k
Students t o cater at any tiiue. Average time t o complete
the course, t h r e e m o n t h s .
A k n o w L - d g - o f t h e o r J i n a r y E n g l i s h l , r a n c h e s if a u f f i c i c n
p r e p a r a t o i y t« e n t e r i n g u p o n the course of s t u d y .
J . H. GOLDSMI'I H . R e s i d e u t P r i n c i p a l S t D e t r o l i .
J . F. SPALDINO, Assisunt.
The most thorough, practical and truly popnltr Collrpts
in Am?>lca. O v e r s i x t h o u s a n d s t u d i u t e h a v i e n t c t c d t i n e
j p : WEST A c o ,
their establishment, which is the Lest evidence o l t b t i r
III! r.roa.lwar, N Y.
by those who have o t h e r p r e p a r a t i o n s , which tbev desire ti
f s v o r w i t h The p u b l i c .
palm off u p o n the i tn-ngth of the popularity of my Drop*,
F o r f n r t h c r i n f o r m a t i o n please e k l t a t C o l l e g e T o c n i s . c r
end t h e i r own n o s t r u m s , t h u s appropriate sei.d f o r a aew C a t a l o g u e e l ,b0 p a g e s . P o r s p e c i m e n * < !
o themselves Iihe c o n s t a n t d e m a n d for m y P e r i o d i c a l P e i . m i n a h i p , i n c l o s e l e t t e r s t s m p . A C d r e s s . •
B R Y A N T A S T R A T T O N , nt a l t h c r o l t h e a b o v e C i t i e s .
Drops, a s a m e d i u m for selling s o m e t h i n g t h a t is w o r t h l e s s
( C u t t h i s o u t f o r future relerence.;
^S-ly
(
and inefficient. B n t when the Druggist yon apply t o has not
AVING JUST RETURNED FROM THE OUTRIDE got thcio. o t h e r make h i m buy t h e m f o r you,
world, we aro p r e p a r e d n o t only to enli,:Uten the ladies
e Dollar t o the nearest g e n e r a l wholeaale agent, w h o will
as r e g a r d s F a l l a n d Winter S t y l e s ol Jlvliuels, i i a t s . Cica .s.
AND
Dressss. &c.. but also to f u r n i s h our cust. iuers with vcrv r e t u r n you a bottle by r e t u r n E x p r e s s
m a n y articles w h i c h wc h a v e lately added t " w r stock, stich
You will thus save voorselrca trouble and o b t a i n relief
as Cloves, H a n d k e r c h i e f s C o t l a r s 4>re-s T r i m m i n g s of differe n t k i n d s . H o o d s Nubias, Worsted I'odersleeves, C h i l d r e n - f r o m the g r e a t e s t F«uia!e Regulator of the N i n e t e e n t h CenS k a t i n g Caps, I^tdieH a n d Child reus Bklmoral Hose, Belts.
Shawl an<l l l a i r Pins, F a n c y Cloak Triinings, B t n o u s , Pic.-. tury.
Needles, Thread, Ac., .Vc.
"TTTTILL IXM3ATB L A N D S . P A Y T A X E S . B U Y O R 8E1.1.
Over 25.100 Bottles of t h i s tnedlefne h a r e been sold w i t h i n
We h a v e a l s o L a d i e s C l o t h s , .and a Wheeler A W i l j o n
W
o n C o m m i s s i o n — a n d now o f f e r s f o r s a l e .
the last six m o n t h s , a n d every L a d y t h a t h a s nsed t h e m , b u t
Sewing Machine enables us to n j S n f a c t n r e Cloaks t o o r d e r
D t i ' s s C a t t i n g a n d Mnkinn. S h i r t Mailing and all k i n d s of for t h s n a t u r e of the cure, would f u r n i s h a s with h e r s w o r n
s e w i n g a n d m a c h i n e s t i t c h i n g d o n e ' w i t h a v i e w to s e l l
certificate of their efficacy. I t t a k e s but one Dollar t o make A n d L o t s w i t h o r w i t h o u t D w e l l i n g s i n F J k R a customer*. Give us a call and o x a m i n t o u r stock ami prices.
the e x p e r i m e n t , a n d I appeal t o t h o s e of y o u r sex w h o are
ADA K. S l ' K A O G E .
pids, the Connty S c a t of A n t r i m County.
MARY F_ BOSTWICK.
snfferinc—trill you waste away when a s i n g l e Dollar will
T h e above m e n t i o n e d l a n d s a r e lodatcd i n A a t r i m . T r a
T r a v e r s e City, Nov:, IMS.
50-3m.
give you i n s t a n t r e l l e t
r e r s e Leelanau, and Manitou C o u n t l e a .
Are among th*
e a r l i e s t and best s e l e c t i o n s with refcrcrfce t o soli, w a t e r , s u r A T H , SIDING, CHERRY, OAK. MAPLE, WHITE
P r e p a r e d solely by Dr. J j r o . L . L r o x . P r a c t i c i n g Physi- f a c e to* m a r k e t s .
T h e y e m b r a c e f a r m i n g lat.ds. r i l l s c e
^ s h , a n d all k i n d s of s e a s o n e d ^'ine l u m b e r k e p t on
sites, water powers, w i t h o r w i t h o u t I m p r o v e m e n t s , a n d t h e
h a n d ; a n d F r a m i n g timber, J o i s t s a n d S c a n t l i n g sawed f r o m cian.
choicest localities for Propeller and Steamer wooding sts
P r i c e $1 p e r bottle.
t w e n t y t o t h i r t y f e e t in l e n g t h , and f o r sale a ! the Mills of
t i o n s . or wood f u r n i s h i n g s t a t i o n s f o r C h i c a g o m a r k e t . A ' l
I gazed an instant,
remobered—and
was dumb-founded. the subscriber.
C. G. C L A R K 4 CO..
on t h e ffr<-xt L a k e t h o r o u g h f a r e , a c c e s s a b l e t o m a r k e t s
T h e lady w i t h w h o m 1 h o d b e c o m e acquainted was H e l GEO. W . B R Y A N T .
Duroorsrs.
I or West. C a n be h a d iu q u a n t i t i e s t o s o l t p h r c b a s e r a , a n d
T
r
a
r
s
r
s
e
CHy.
Mich.,
A
u
g
.
IS.
1863.
S5-Gm*
e n G r a h a m herself.
New H a v e n . C o n a .
j at p r i c e s m a k i n g i t s n o b j e c t In p r e f e r e n c e to b u y i n g b a c k
I h a t e , o n d so d o y o u reader, t o needlessly p r o l o n g a
I
General
A
g
e
n
t
s
f
o
r
United
S
t
s
t
e
s
s
a
d
C
t
n
a
o
a
s
.
NOTICE.
atorv.
W e were soon m a r r i e d — H o f e n and I m a d e o u r
STATE M T O » .
Wholesale D e s l e r s s n d t b s T r a d e supplied a t t h a P r o p r i e - ,
b r i d a l t o u r t o t h e old p l a c e . A s wo a p p r o a c h e d in o u r
n E I*O6T 0 F F I C E AT T R A V E R S E C I T Y , W I L L BE
\ r m sell c h o i c e l a n d * , f o r f a m i n g , f e n c i n g , c e d a r r 0 " "
{ p e n on S u n d a y s between the h o u r s of half post twelve j t o r ' s p»iess. by
s n d t i m b e r purpose®, in a l l p a r t s of t h e C o u n t y < or will #e
c a r r i a g e , I g r e e t e d a s t o u t follow w o r k i n g in a field, w h o
L
O
R
D
4
SMITH
a
n
d
half
past
one,
P.M.,
a
n
d
a
t
no
o
t
h
e
r
time
f
r
o
m
a
n
d
a
f
t
e
r
'
c
u
r
e
t
o
p
a
r
t
i
e
s
S
u
t
e
L a n d s of t h e i r s e l e c t i o n on s s l i b e r a
s e e m e d t o bo a b e t t e r s o r t of a l a b o r e r , o r p e r h a p s a
t h i s date.
WBOLCSAIS D a r o m s r i .
t e r m " u can be p u r c h a s e d o f t h s S M M .
small farmer, b y i n q u i r i n g some p a r t i c u l a r s
relating
to
C R MARSH. P H
?rsi«r«> Ollf.
" • IMi.
31 l-sk» P t r e e v Ckieago, IH
t h e n e i g h b o r h o o d . " H e a n s w e r e d well e n o u g h , a n d I w a s
T r a v e r s e City, D e c I. l W 3 .
51 J »
mc t"
J . D . WEST & C o . :
i ' a l l a n d " W i n t e r o f 18(53 & 4-.
N E W G O O D S for thio I ^ A 1 > I E S .
H
R E A L
GENERAL
E S T A T E S
LAND
• -JL.
OFFICE
A L B E R T W. B A C O N ,
11600 Acres of L*hoice Jaiuhj
L
T
¥ O L i V.
N O . 52.
through bis mind—and how he felt some band touch
A n Old Man's Story.
•ith'thi? children, went aightnp to him- and,
Villle, darling !" fellfaint- bifn. and an exquisite seuratioo cf pain ns if be wai dyWillie "scone ! oh, Wi!l;a, IVillie,
I am an old mao ; and yet it seeras a very ebort time
ing—and that was all he knew. How my mother wept
since 1 climbed the jail popular tree thai grww beipre the ing at b:s feet.
and KBiikid, aodclasped hint to ber b«>om, and cahed
My
sister
immediately
left
'.he
piano;
and,
with
tho
Yicariige, in search , of the itarling's jue^t. I cat) tiiocf
I hea:r the shoot that greeted ipy desctut ^-ith the long aid of some cold water, my mother was 'restored very him her darling Willio ! 1 need not tell you how my
Of course this put an end to the festivities, aixl poor father kissed him, and asked—aye. he tho klern
coveted jjrizc and feel again the crinaon | mouuting to
MORGAN'BATES,
,n> l»rii.J ,L ] .•
M - m o . r t i i t t t . ' ' b • ••••;'* my cLcefo as it'did when, turniug to the , Vicaiage, I the children weMs sojti On their way home, except Harry disciplinarian, asked—pardon of his own child. Willie.
— fiitigued with his long talk, fell asleep agam; bu
saw'aa exftreSStoo of pain ob the palefac^ of njy fall+cr
Afterwards ixiy mother told us. that, as she was endeavor- j a troubled, broken slumber.
His checks grew crj«M>n,
«SfifeBtbda if the study window.
I t MCrns (0 mft but yt*fwday ifuce I stojod in the cen- Ine'tfo amttw the group ofyotiOger childrtn, s'je beard land hts breath quick an hot, aud be trembled «>8 toougn
Willie's.yb?ee distinctly calling "Mamma ! mamma!" 1 he wasrery cold.
. ..
tre of that group lads, aiid now—
She iustantly got the key, as I have before related, and
Th<j doctor Came again—but this time he shook nis
. ._a'») for the flrst insertiotvand twenty-five pent* for cacb
" They are all gone, the yld Xjtqiliir fjo»s." .
went tip into the study. As r6ohai she opened the door hcad'ftnd-said there was no chance for him. My latoer
aafflaqtamttatetMfaki':o Yearly Advertlsementa—»10 for one
I)ick, ifaeSurgeon'.) sou.^ied tna'uy yt am jj;o in India.. she felt that the Window wot open by the rushing of the | and mother watched him oighfaud day,: but, ho grew
«,aUAK(U4Mt^r threo *4i»«cii; £30 tor lwlf 4 ooluma;,atid
$SQ for one column. r^gjJ advertisements at the rate« pre- Harvey Vernon, the bravest of tltem nlL was slain on tiie cold'fro-ty air past ber. The . fns?»mt she entered the worjc and worse. 2Cow be would talk of the wild bees
»orftwa by Urf t Bfiy eoaw per folio of i0» words, f"r the fields of Waterloo ; and when the village bells rang fur
ncst.bc had found a few days ago it> a bank in the wood
nrati/i«rtl!oa,ajdiWQ,nty'flv« cents for each1 :subM<]nrnt.—
iu
the Tictorjftbe rudest Wlotv in the village was touched rtwm she felt a tremor *e!tc heir ^ Why did not Willie —then he would t., f>ul ns if to play ; and then, whilst
Every llgore counts a word. PlRure, work wlflio
'thoyt^rulcs, 60. as he parked the Grange aryl snnr tbo blinds down, aud •pringtb mtet her ? irhe felt in a moment that Willie
was not therts!'Hie study lamp was 'flickering out ; my father covered bis face with his bands and tho big
p-jr WWN4M)'lt«te anil «S^/re wortr.- double p
knew of the brcakiog heart of okl Widow* Vernrti.
tears trickled throueh hia fingers in an agony of grief,ho
All legal advcrtisotneuU
advcriiKotntaU U>
to be
bepaid
paid for
forstrictly
strictlyiu advance.
there
stood
tny
father'"
e.vy
chair
opposite
a
table
on
It was a sad day for us at the Vicaragu, eapeelally for
would try to repeal-bis Latin, and failing to do so corEmily. My fulber'atayclio his library all day ; though. Which lay his'booka and manuscript*, and omongsi tbesu rectly, be would begin, again, sayiug in beseeching
lido cot-think he read a pigc in any uf his boclw—eviu poik- Willie'it soiled and hated Latin Grammar.
tones, '"Oh,! papa, forgive me !'I cannot."
Il-'
bust
have
climbed
do^m
the
side
of
the
old
house
baafavorites, Sophocles!and Horace.
Willie oied one morning, just as the old year was dyEttily and iny mother were iu my, mother's chamber by the aid of the ivy-items which jgrew up to. the pinna- ing amidst frost rind snow, repeating his latin lesson, as
ell the day. Froui that day Emily gradually drooped cles of the gables on to the top of the antique portico, my mother held his head, with, its splendid dark bftir
Willie,
and faded. Her beautiful face grew more exquisitely and from theucc have leaped to the ground.
looks on her botom, aud bis little.hand lay on my father's
Register..- -beautiful—her dark, <Ifcep eyes become more foil mid agile as a squirrel could easily have accomplished this.
Receiver...
~ Iu a few moments from the discovery <»f Willie's ab- trembling palm.
lustroun, but they wnndt rod restlessly, fls;though seeking,
aome mioing resting-plaw; be* golden buir (1 hate dtill "tence we—that K my mother and lather. Hairy and myMorbM N'cnronaneas.
G R A N D T R A V E R S E COUNTY OJFFICEB8.
two servants, one of them'old M*alter wh6 pa+
1 1
a thick lock of it amongst-on old : maus memories o f !
"
s of the .present day
The morbid n
„ appears il
f oioateiy
D a l t v lo>;«j Wiiliu—was out iu search o/-the uiitoing
'.
J u d g e of P r o b a t e . . . . C t / B T I B FOWliER,Vstd*loa other days '' the days of au!d lacg tyoc ") hunt; more i
say era I way3. It brings a man sometimes to that StarSlicriiT
. V . . . E . F . D A M E , fraveVw-C'Uy, carelessly about her shoulders, asid.ijer pu'.fi cheeks were.
County Treasurer
MORGAN B A T E S , Trav, City. eufTosed wljh a rosy tint that gradually deepened into ft. Tho snow w;m still tilling h'-avily, but by the light of tled state that the sudden opening of a uoor. the clash of
the falling firc-iron* or any little accident, pits him in
Coifntf Clerk
. . . . J A M E S P . BRANT),
"
burf/lnst crimson, white htr snect vaieo sank u'lswtt into the moon, whith was at full, we could see almost as dis- aflutter. How ucrvous the late Sir Kobert Peel must
Register of Deeds
JAMES P . B R ^ N D ,
"
| ,
a whisper- As.l lopUcd at her her startled beauty ti- tinctly as by daylightProa. Attorney
„..C» H . MABHHj "
Strifttgj to stiy, t^y mother went instinctively towards have been when, a week before his death, he wttit to tie
mindeu "*o of tho,lajig'unge 0;" the'book oiv molhi-r n i j
Circuit Court Cotn.-.C. H . KAMHj
"
Zoological Garden* and, .,when -a monkey suddenly
to rend to be*3is sl>o Tuy otl the ;couch in the ilrawing- dc •[> poo! t)f wat^r, l^neatf: the orchard wall, called by sprang upou his arm, the great «ud worthy man fainted I
jjh^ villagers the'Bbefc Too!—.•o calLU because of it*
treville.
om. Her •' facQ.wa= a.' the fnco of uoanwl.''
Auother phase of Oervonsuea ii, when a mab is brought
v Ah. nie l how l am wamlering frum 'ho cirenm- dipth.' NVaf if, aud ovordiadowiug ijt, grew an old to that state that the least tiolso or "tr<i^a oecnrret*o
'gharied
iborn-busli,
whi.
ii,
after
pauy
winter-*
frosts
aod
stonces I satdown to write about j; but yon mu<t for,, ©. H . M A R S H ,
T.i.i..
pro.-orvtd its vit.'.lify.' It, was' a pleasant seems to jar through the entire nervous system—to upgive an old man, for whenever I think of Emily it is almrfer; thCi Inroad, f.nhlikc P-'rns, with theic setting hi in,, as we say ; vvltu ho cau not coiumood hia
ivB BO. Let mo-fce—*y«A I remember perfcetlv.
rrattd !we^, loved to grow there, and in mental powers except in perfect slilluetii, or in t^e
It was Christmas Eve, in the roar 171>L nod the snow
chamlier nud at tbo writing table to which ho is ficcus-i .
11 ••'JO
•
*?"
,„!l A '
had been tailing heavily all day. blotting out the hedges llja; oM iLorr, a stjmmcjt or two U-f^re a uightiogale tomed j when in short, be gets fidgety, easily worried,
S O L I C I T O R IN CHANCERY,
hd'T
made
its
hannt, and suhg tlirough tho long, star-lit
and walls which etirround the Vicarage, and burying the
full of whims and fancier'which must be indulged and
S 0 T A K Y' I ' s 8 L I C t C 0 N V E T A N C E Ii,
snn-diul that W ilJie and I had carved with greut paius (lights, and Willie and I had laid awu&e,jfor hours lis- collide red, or he is quit.; out of sorts. Another phaao
teniug to i l
I'ravcrae City., Grand Traverse County, Mlcb.
during the long winter eyttMngs.
of the same morbid condition is when* liutnan_ being ,is
I
never,
even
now,
hear
the
song
of
tho
iiightingalo
I had come from my father's study, where 1 and Willie
OlBoe in Dwelling Uouse. .
My
Without thinking of my darling brother and the cham- impressed with vague, undefined fearS 1 that things are
had been having our usual iefsou in Latin. Willie was
ber in which ho slept. The villagers said it was hauut- going wrortg-Mhat hisi'ncorne will n(k meet the dea high spirited lad, of a very loving and adectiouate dis' upoa i t ; that his child's lungs are oiRcted s that
ed by something more than the'nightingale, but that I
lOaition ; though when excited, or when iu a passion,
•ntalpowors nroleaviuR him ; a state af foeling
lis temper was fearful to behold, and his ey't-3 Hashed ~^ver positively knew.
Well, I saw my "mother bend close dpwn to the water which i-hsdea rapidly off into positivo insanity.,, l t i d j w
with a strange light that maiio us all tremble except mv
• T R A . V K R S B CITY,
moment, ao'd then suddenly turn and j pick something when matters remain long in auy of the fashions which
father. I t was some lima before my father came down ;
have
been
described. I snppose' the natural tcrniination
*np
from
the
gro'tnd
at
the
foot
of
the
tbuni
bush.
,
She
UKVNB.TVt/LWmpjtf'IWfl" W *
but when ho did, wo heard him lock the study door ufheld it out a moment in the moonlight, and thert gave a must be disease of the heart, or a shock of partljrw*- dr
, • • JUiFJSEljSCBS:
.
ler him, and he came down alone.
-<
'wild cry of pain. It Was a little hairlkorchicf ofWillie's iiiiiaiiity iu the forraeitlmr of mama or idiocy. Numbers
11 P,I i-„, Xsrlla.rW.Sapi.ci-> inoD.Ao»«laB1»lf. Oor.Mlch/
He looked very4steru and angry ; he was in one of
edged with a peculiar kind of lat e whiijh she had put on of commotjfplace people who coo}d fefl very acutcly,. but
thoK moods whicb sometimes look, Qotscwion of him
who could not tell what they felt, have been worried in^o
when ho was disturbed. Though my father was always herscIC The water wasstijl and.ripples*—*ave "slight fatal heart disease by prolonged anxiety and, misery^—
fcvmor, whic h might be caused by tho breeze—aud re. ^ g ^ r f f c a w m ^lUh..UuJ**M»«»r . , T ' a W » | ? ^ r * k ^ " ^ ' I*?*' Hleut when in theae moods ; yet 1 always thought there flected tho qnk't sfafs in its dark face.
Kvery one knows bow paralysis laid its band ttipon Sir
was
a
vivid
resemblance
between
them
and
Willie's
outW
My father, who wa« a good swimmer and a stranger to Walterrico;t-—alwaysgreat, lastly beroiq, i'rotrncted
' I n i A V K1113 K C I T Y
'• •
»' J brflaks of passion.
• .-j ' ,
.
fear."qnictly took off his coat, and In a mymeut wa- anxiety how.to make the ends meet, with a large family
••W'illte will not come down to-night,' said i h e ; " 1
dowu at the bottom of the pool. I shiill never forget the -nd aii uncertaioTpcohie, drove Soufhey's firsts wife into
hare left him in the Btudy with a lesson that will keep
esprcsdoi of anxiety oft my mother's fhee ns she b*nt lunatic asylum ; and there is hardly a m6re tobehlog
rtJtllit ** i| 1 1 t« » .
<-•»
!
over the 'pool. Her large "dark*cyCs had something aw- story than of herfeara aud forbodingrthrorigh nertoos
THIS nncsR Ik i»ow; ofkxtai Vo*' -Irim Wflntrtf or- t o t SB
I thought I saw a tear Start from my mother's eye. as
ful in the intensity of their ga2? ; htr thiu white hands attacks year sifter year. Not less sod waa theend pf bar
•r 1 i , v v i c 1 1 *f & i ' t r u L i c ,
she turu«l her f a « to, the window «nd llookad out upon
were clasped convulsively upon her b<i-om ; her laps overwrought husband in blank vacuity ; nor the like e^d
the snow, which still continued to fall heavily.
VSUKIt'TlIK St-PEKtSTEN-UENCKOr
were drawn tightly across her small white teeth, and we of Thomas Moore. And perhaps the saddest "instance
I t was the anniversary of Emily's birthday, and we
could bear her breathe as though she hsa beeu ruuniug of thi? result of an overdriven nervods system, In Wceut
were expectiug a party of young friends (children of the
days, was the end of that nigged, houcftt, wonderful
lidly.' '
.
,
neighboring geutry) lo pass the evening at the vicarage.
?£• GIVE HIM A CALL.
^ ^
v»:.:-a, r:<c> .cabi^
It seemed an age'before my f?thc r reappeared ; but geuius, Hugh Miller. ; 4 i
It began to grow dark about four o'clock, and then
when'lie
«W>it,was
with
M
l
i
i
e
a
pqle,
bandsome
face,
our company began to arrive. There were first the chilXTnpuuctueil People.
Traverse City, M>y 13, 18".
«-tylooking njorc beflptiful tfian erer, lying 6a bis shoulders,
dren of bqni'ro liarcourt, who.came wrapped in soft fare
and his long darkjhair, which it always seemed a shame
Whnt bores they are—what havoc tbev mate w 'tb
ami shawls -in the old-fashioaed cosy family carriage
to cut, falling o'v/rhis arm. I think.I hear my mother's the precious moments of orii rly, sympathetic men of
with its couple of docile greys. Then came Harry Vwwild, de/fpaiiing cry now, at the distance of seventy bunnesj. A jii-rsou who Is faithless to hi* appointments
I10P,
and
his
sister
Emily
oud
Agnes
;
aud
aa
the
time
(
CIVIL ENGINEER ASD SURVEYOR,
(l harp fipardlf htoight in.hiy quiet study;
may not iutend to swindle people, but be dooi. To
wore on about a score of young people* were assembled
G R A N D T R A Y K R S E C O t r K T Y , Mlol».
have besml it on tJsiard ship, when thfc storm winds ba'
those who kivowjiow to turu time to . advaetage, every
at the Vicarage. It was a merry party.
My father
hour has an appreciftblo pecuniary value ; minulea, even
' All tlnda of Surveying douo with promptness and whom it would be an injgrticc to represent as an unkind thrown uiiike a father amongst UiC frOthihg waves ;
have heard it in oM continental catl-edrnh. above tl
are worth so much npicce. He who robs you of them,
dispatch.
f;a }ts
man, threw himself jutojhe spirit.,of our, merriment a*
ices of the choir, tho mnsic of the organ, and the might just as w«!i tab; co mnch money from your purse,
M A P P I N & A N D P l , . V r ' r i N « though he hud beeu one pf us. 'flie luraiture oxceptiug ..JSrltienhH
c'asMng
oftlia
bells.
'luc
act ir petty larceny.or grand larceny, according to
Accurately and neatly execatcd. PatruaspJ rcstieetfuilT the old-fashioned piano, had Keen removed aud the drawthought j heard it then!.My hither carried the amouul of tiaie ho compels you to waste, und the
Sw^Oillop aV$(r^dWc.,rf.y. > C^rufeLL, Sif- ing room had, by the fomoval j)f, a, partition, been ^..Ilu^h^d
Willie home, and old Walter aud tho other servant usthrown into Mie,,m$ing,a large aad counnqdibua room listed my mother. AViihe was instandy got to hod. and value of it, at a fair appraisal, to yourself or your family.
whh"h had been pleotifujly hung with holly,, and other the ordinary moans used for hi« restoration", while old TliO ouiy capita! of a large portion of tho community is
time. Their compensation is measured by the clock.—
cvergrh na- The red berries gleoraed like Uny masses of
Walter was sent off on the brown marc to the doctor's
1
fire beneath the dark gr^eu leaves, aud,here p:id there We heard tbo dull Iicnvv sound'of her hoofs upon tbo The moments of whicli promise-breakers cheat them,
my sister had ^-aceluliv arranged bunches of mauy cor Btiow, asshe wfcnt off at 'n swift paeo down the carriage may represent in fact the necessaries ol life, aud tho loss
of an hour may involve the privation of 0 loaf, or a joint,
lored ribbous. >
'j
,
WilSTANDARD
f
drtve. In a short time 6ho came back bringing the or some other article urgently reeded at home.
IS oboJfany inquiries were mnde for WiUi<), and for a
dy places any coafidencC in persons who are habitually
ment or two a shadow seemed oast upon the pleasure of
behind1 tin*. They scarcely nuecced in any enterprise.—
M*
mother
was
bending
over
Willie,
fend
nervously
th? cljihitto wbeu they were told,tbat Willie, the prc;sidTherefore,
for
your
own
sake,
as
well
as
for
the
tako
of
OF ALL Jvtfra.
iiw gp«U pf fuuin every juvenile partyj ^ould v$t be swaying herself backwards and forwards; when be came
•"isiia^elrelt t>y FARBAND A 8HELEY with them ,* but all feeling of disappoiutment. vanished tn ; 'tout she nro.-e imiueditclv. and with wil<\ flashing others—be punctual.
"
the time wore on—except from ouo genjJo. loving eyes.'-'exclnimed,:
WORK—The best k-ssob a father cau give his *on is
«'Oh! iioitiftj saTO my boy! Oh, Willie ! Willie,
Be cartful to buy oply
1
t h i l W o r k ; rtreogtheii yonr moral and mental fkcul^ 1 inew tliat my cotlicr was thinking of the dear boy darling7 Speak tome, my child."
January 13,
11 icvcr read David\ tlirilRng lament, •• Oh, Absalom tie* as you would strengthen your muscles by vigorous
in .the room above us, f^r WJlie wasiiny mother's favoritq. .She was thinking of.a handsome .face pressed my son, Absalom!" without thinking of my mother's cxcrciV. .Learn to conquer. circuutetanqcB : you are
then independent of fortune. The meu of athletic minds,
'
against the door, and of'a tiny ear close to the keyhole, great agony iii Willie's chamber.
The doctor was n remarkably skillM man ; but it who left their marks on the years iu which they lived,
lislyniug to the voices of Ihe merry groups below. Bhu
P E T E R LOBILL ARP.
Jioe w I^eso^ouuds would bo exquisite tortoro to the seemed a hopek-.i easel How'my mother's eager eyes were all trained in a rough school. They did not monct
n n U foltbwed all his movements.
their high positions by the help of levtrege ; tbey leap'
S i n i F P A X B TOBACCO M A X T F A C T U K K l ; prfsotie'^, Sh«' l^ue.w bow that quick cnger spirit "
At last when we wire just despairir^, Willie g-'n'ly ed iulo ch.iim, >grappled witb -the opposing rocks, avoidFret in the study ,above like a wild bird in a cage.
16 t£ 18 Chattbprs S t . ,
Sometimiail saw her whisper to my father—and then Opened his eyes—those magnificent eye^of his ! There ed avalanchcs, and wbeu tho goal was reached, felt that
(Formerly ii'''Chamtera BUfltt, New Tot*.)
but for the toil that bad strengthened ihem as they strove
wns
ftn
unspeakable
efisU«j
on
my-"-mother's
face,
thi
his face grew hard and dark, aud my mother's yet more
Wonld eallthe attention ofDealera to the artfeUa of bis
like' bf which I hawf icver>«rsince. and never cxpwt it could never have beeu attained."
MdippmeijL..'
:
awu»«acture,Tix.{
. •-•J' v . . *
My sister played with exceeding graec, some simpli to ««* asrain. I t was coming light when the doctor left
B U O W N B?JVFF.
The Cincinnuti Enquirer has at- last stated that Geneairs on the old. piano ; and then, tho hoys ckoa;Uig hs oftd WlIIH* wafi'i a refresh? r"rs!<Jer}.
The many tolored-W'.bow of Hope now htmg over ral Jackson' violated the Constitution by his arbitrary
their p^rttiers from the graceful U|itic.: maidens,, who
"n'n^RVppr?,
^'ParTOyrjftnia,
"" *"'* arrests at Nfcw Orleans. Thu« one after another, the
stood, with eager, blushjtJg faces aad besoecliing
b ^ the Vicarage, alas ! ycta to feitjo'a'jpiy. *
Coarse RapfiM," - " '
' I \ IWKItMhn,
reat
sOrtow.
Democratic party is detaminu th$ memory of its fatfcer*
^ ^:.:-lk«(^Otillrau,Vi '
iCtfpMAai
heath the holly in qcowier of the rooui, .the dance U'gj»a the iold rain'fhd darlrelonds of
After f n hour or two of sleep. WllhV nwtike. sr.. I t old , j . ^ o [ l j e r day the same jouroal undertook to prove that
W'hilit this was coiiig oti I saw my. lather put something
7ba. r.f-',:. I Y E L L O W SNI F F
idtpjjnymother's^ baud.., I l was,the study key.. With, a . v mother how he heard the sho^t' and laugher of the Jefferson,, the father of the an'.i-slovcry literature of
Toy t fco (eb,
^FwS W Hon?yB«w Scotch,
grpl^ul.snuk—oli. how sweet that smile was !—«ho Iwft children in the thawing room, and fcbw the mirac seem- America, was inconsistent and double-laced, and. was
afraid, and dated really" In favor Of the eoMlnuance and extension of slaveIrish IIiRliTonst,
Fresh Scotch.
the room. 1 stale after her to the foot of the wide, obi ed to Uinnt him r tud'how hlr
ortnindyfoot,— —— fashioned staixcaso ; Ijsaw her glide swiftly op ,-tb wot look where the shadows Iny in tlte library ; aodlicfw ry. Thns. to salt the emergencies of its present trea^ti.
.tW»'iA«*ntionis eallsd to the lsr*a radnctlnn iti prices si airs ; a^d I'conld h^ar when she tmjoeked the door . he watched the moon rise through thb poplars before the party reviles ail who e ver gave it character—all the
of FUa.CiiCbewlnK.aniSmQkias Tobacco^whio^ ^ U ; , b t and"*vhen she opened\i to pass iu tl£r moonlight ftrenm- the window, he was tempfed'to climb down the tvysaiuu it Las before worshiped.
j-,.1 ' ,W
fonnd of a Superior Quain#.
b r i s t l y thronch t h t doorwer cn to the dark laiidintn stems; and howhehad'wandored tp the B;ack l o o t
° !<»
TOFlAOtO. '
aud as it jrilon the fane of the; old clobk «h>°h stood and been tempted to spring across it to get a bunch oT
Tirt PATH TO Gr-Exixxta—Tuere are but two ways
Mostxa.
FISCE CCT ritKWINV,
nronxd.
crimson berries tbnt hmir from a brno -V 0:1 the other which lead to great aims and achievements—energy and
there, I saw it wanted a few minutes of ten o'clock.
8, Jaco
l,o nsj,
PrA.
1 bad not stood moau than a minute at tbe foot of the «?d&. thinking ho would give tlrem to Her; acd hoWhe perseverance. Lr-ergy is a rare gift—it provokes op.fliwl.
•. CavanrtUh. or 8w*et.
Spanish.
Ko. t .
Sweetaeeottd Qriip
.Stairs
stairs when
wnvu I1 heard
jieam my
my mother
moiaer cry
cty V Willio
»i turn .
Then
tucu 1 hi"l raised his footing and faflcu'
----- backwards into. the position, hatred, and reaction.
But perseverance 1MS
• X'oS'I A 5 mixed. Tin Foil Carenai.
heard a piercing stream, and she suddenly passed me, phnd Then he told her how he^rose to
j ^ f a o e - within the reach of every one. its powers increase wijh
Ju"
• '
Wr face white as tho mow that lay outside on the steps, cod how he was falling into * sweet and p.easant dumber its progress, and ills but rarely that It misses its aim
N . B.—A elroula»ofpriaa»wll!h«sa»t.
and, rushing into the room where my lather was~ playing at"the bottom, with thoughts of berpassm 0 dream 1
Clje 6nuD immsf IFlrruli),
'•'.v.- v
i«fO»Vw"*»,'*rw»ir r i i M T . ^ T i :
Traverse City, G r a n d Traverse County, Michigan
'•All Kinds of Job Printing Ntallj anJ EifditioWj fieculed.
LAND OFFICE AT TBAVEIMfi; Mil.
.
—
•
iilStWiCW Coiiiistlbijt
j . a. K.vifSpELiL.
Attorney & Counssellor at Law,
rsftfWS&i. 2 85. i'al.®
13 X C H A
CHARLES
Sstiiii.
N O E5 -
W.
DAY.
GEORGE G. S. CAMPBELL,
I ' A I R r B A>TICS'
. S C A L E S
ESTABLISHED
1760.
"""lasr;
CIJE <®ran?) Craurae iltraD).
M O B 9 A N BAkTKS, E U t o r n i u l P r o p r i e t o r .
T R A V E R S E CITY»
FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11. 18C3.
From Washington.
Special Dispatch to the Advertiser and Tribune.
,
.
MILITARY ATPAIR8.
WASBWOTOS, Dec. 2.—The President has received
advices of a very satisfactory nature from Gen. Meade.
No battle had been fought at 2 P . M. yesterday. It
seems now that Meade's receot advance has been but an
extensive reconnoissance in force, and that the rebels
have nowhere ventured out from behind their elaborate
network of fortifications to meet our army.
The stormiog of tb« ridge in the great battle before
Chattanooga on the 26th. is thus described by au officer
in a report to the War Department:
'• The storming of the ridge by our troops was one of
the greatest miracles ill military history. No man. who
climbs the asceut by any of the roads that wind along
its front, can believe that eighteen thousand men moved
upon its crumbling face, unless it was his fortune to
witness the deed. It seems os awful as a visible interposition of God. Neither Gen Grant nor Thomas intended it. Their orders were to carry the rifle-pits
along the base of the ridge and cat off their occupants,
but when this was accomplished the uncontrollable spirit
of the troops bore them bodily up impracticable steeps,
over bristling rifle-pits cn the crest, and the thirty cannon enfiladiug every gully. The order to storm appears
to have been given simultaneously by Gens. Sheridan and
Woo<l, because the men were not to be held back, hopeless us the attempt appeared to military prudence ; and,
besides, the Generals caught the inspiration of the men.
and were ready themselves to nndertuke impossibilities."
The Government received odvices from l'enuessee today, showing that I.oogstreet had abandoned the siege
of Knoxville, and was retreating towards Bristol and
into Virginia where the railroad connects with Richmond. This slip has been feared here in official quarters ever since the defeat of Bragg. It is considered,
however, quite certain that his force caunot reach Richmond in time to do much good in assisting Lee, who
seems to decline battle thus far.
Close of Volume F i f e .
This number closes the Fifth Year or the UKASD
TEA VERSE IIKBALI* The experiment of establishing a
newspaper in the wilderness has proved successful'; and
•we look back upon five years of humble effort to develop
the resources and encourage the settlement, growtftand
prosperity of a btautiful and fertile region of country,
with some degree of prido and satisfaction.
The grateit difficulty that we have had to encounter
and overcome, was an ill-founded prejudice against
Northern Michigan, and especially tbo Northern portion of the Lower Peninsula, which was fostered and encouraged for years by the old Steamboat Combination
outbeLakes, and by large 'speculator* in Western
lands. This, "in a great measure, haj been eradicated,
aud the tide of emi gration has turned in our favor. The
country will bear inspection, and almost every man who
has visited the region arouud Grand Traverse Bay has
boeu pleased with the country, and has acknowledged
that our representations of it were truthful. As evidence
of this the Books of the Land Office at Traverse City,
show that since the establishment of the Herald, 530
purchases have been made for cash, of lands in what was.
until last year, Grand Traverse County—but now Grand
Traverse, Antrim and Leelanaw—the tbreo Bay Counties ; and 678 entries under the Homestead Law in the
same counties with Manistee addod. This docs not include a large amount located with Warrants by actual
Extensive P o t t Office Robbery.
For upwards of a year past, complaints have been
settler*.
We have every reason to anticipate a large influx of made to the Post Office authorities that mouey letters
have been missed from the mails received at and sent
population next spring. Hannah, Lay & Co. will piaec from the Ann Arbor office. Time wore on. and the de• new Propeller on the Bay, wh'.ch in connection with predations became more numerous, and at last the attenPropellers at Nortbport, will giro us a daily line of tion of Mr. Van Vechten. Speciul Agent of the Post
communication with Detroit and Chicago. This is what Office Department, was cnlleu to the matter, who with
we have long needed, and will give a new impetus to bu- commendable promptness set about ferreting out the
guilty party. He visited tho several localities where
siness of every kind.
money was alleged to have been mai led, and from thence
We mark oat no new course in the1 future conduct of sent decoy letters, containing marked money.
Workin; diligently at Iris undertaking, he succeeded
the HERALD. It will pursue the even tenor of-its way,
giving a cordial and hearty support toj the Administra- in less than one week's time in locating the robber at tho
post office in Ann Arbor. Kccpiug a sharp lookout in
tion in all ita efforts to crush the Rabdlion. While the that vicinity, he.soon had cause to suspect one of the
.war continues, wc wash our hands of all CONSERVATISM. clerks employed there, named John Cornath, as being tho
'Desperate diseases require desperate remedies—not robber, aod at onco arrested him, at the same time inUpon searching tho
cataplasters. Tho CAUSE must bo removed before any forming him of his suspicions.
prisoner, $22 of the marked money was found npoc his
-disease can be cured. Slavery is tho cause of this Re- person, and a subsequent minute examination of his-resibellion, and Slavery must die. On this point we are de nee revealed $795 iu greenbacks carefully stowed
away in the cellar.
RADICAL.
These proofs against the prisoner were of course conW e have spent five of the happiest years of our life at
clusive, and he at once made a confession of his guilt to
Grand Traverse Bay, and wc close this volume with the tho detective, to whom be gave a lisUof thirteen money
expression of our best wishes for the health, happiness letters that he had robbed coatainiug in tho aggregate
and prosperity of all true and loyal mep, their wives and 8557.
Cornath was taken into custody on Wednesday morntbejr little ones.
'
ing and brought to this city. On Thursday ho was arThe Latest War New*.
raigned before Comoiifeioner Wilkins. plead guilty, and
The Captain of the Propeller Lady Franklin, which was committed to House of Correction to await his trial
arrived here on Sunday, from below, favored na with a before tho next term or the U. S. Court
The prisouer has been employed in the Ann Arbor
«opy of the Detroit Advertiser and Tribune of the 3d
office for upwards or two years, aud during tho greater
inst. We learn by it that theaitualion in Virginia is portion or that time it is supposed be has been engaged
still involved in considerablo-uncertaiatv. The two op- in the nerarious business above recorded. The precise
posing armies seem to be drawn up in Hoc of battle on amount taken by him is not, and probably -will not be
either side of Mile Run or Mile Creek, a small stream known, but it is estimated at over 81.000! Tho list or
letters given by him to Mr. Van Vechten, includes only
that, running in a'northerly direction, flows into the Ra- those that he could remember, so that it is more than
pidaa. Our army is on tho East bank of the stream, probable that tho amount or robberies above estimated
the enemy on the -West. The locality is some twenty will rail considerably short or the total money taken.—
miles due West from Fredericksburg, ;and about twelve Connected with this robbery there is a strange coinciConrath was detected by some or the same
miles Northest from Orange Court House. The latter dence.
marked money, that caused the arrest or young Ten
is about seventeen miles South from Culpepper and Eyck. who was convicted or robbing tho office in this
about five miles back from the Rapidan. 8ach was the city some time sinco.
P. 8.—Since the above was in type, Cornath has acposition of the two armies on Bunday, with every prospect of a general engagement on tho following day. To counted for two more letters containing $129, which
makes fifteen letters in all that he has robbed.
bring on an engagement Gen. Warrep, commanding tho
[Advertiser & Tribune.
.2d corps, attempted a flank movement on tho left, but
Learned of the Proclamafound the enemy too strongly ported, i Lee is reported How the Contrabands tion.
t o be acting altogether on tho defensive. Considerable
A correspondent or the Chicago Tribune writes that
skirmishing seems to have takou place on the 1st, and white at Fort Pillow he was attracted by a bright, inthen it was thought that the grand battle could not be telligent young woman, not over tliirtv years or age, who
came into the contraband camp with lier husband, from
deferred longer than the 2d. Reports from Rappahan- Arkansas. Her husband was a good looking fellow or
nock Station on Tuesday evening, however, state that -no eome five years older than his wire, was a carpenter by
firing was heard on that day. Rumors have been cir- trade, and was taken on board or the Brown as a steamculated in Washington to the effect that Meado had fal- boat hand. He had formerly lived in Louisiana, ood being smart, was taught by bis vouug mistress to read a
len back to Fredericksburg.
little. The former master he had lived with railed in
From Georgia we have no detailed accounts, but the business, and bis negroes had to be sold, among whom
droppings we get would indicate that Hooker pnrsucd was this man, whose name was Torn. Tom was parBragg to Ringold, a place eight miles this sido of Dal- chased by a trader, and sold to a planter living above
Little Rock. The planter was a c . dissipated man, and
ton, that a fight took place there, that our losses were when drunk, would often beat Tom.
One day, while
'heavy,-and that, having destroyed the town and the Tom's master had gone out with a poerrilla party, or
railroad for some miles, Gen. Hooker'; returned from the which he was a member. Tom was called to the house,
pursuit At Kuoxville considerable fighting seems to and spying a newspaper on the floor, which was t o r n picked it up and carried it to his cabin, aud by a fire of
have taken place within the past ten days, resulting in pine knots, at night, when the overseer had gone to bed,
•our favor. Forces have left Cumberland Gap to cut off l'om spelled out tho Proclamation of Mr. Lincoln. He
•Longstreet's retreat or attack him iu tho rear.
did not dare speak Df it to tho other negroes on the
plantation, but he told his wife, aud she gathered togeIt is stated that Gen. Meade crossed the Rapidan and ther tho little money she had saved up, and with a small
moved on Lee under positivo orders from tho War De- bundle of clothes the two run away the first dark night
t r i m e n t . the object beiug to harres* the rebel army and which offered, laying in the woods daring tho day time,
and traveling at night, until they reached our pickets
prevent them from sending reiuforceijjenta to Longstreet near Fort PiUow. The Proclamation was known, howIt having been ascertained beyond doubt that Burnside ever, mysteriously, and as mysteriously circulated, deswas safe, the necessity for tho movement was past, and pite the efforts of the planters to conceal it.
The Superintendent of contrabands at Fort Pickering,
Meade returned. This is the explanation or the return
given by high officials. Tho army is now at Brandy Memphis, tells the following story : During the month
or August last, a negro woman aud child came into
Station, on the, Orange and Alexandria Railroad, four camp and asked aid. She said she bad ran away from
miles south of the Rappahannock.
Noxubee county, Mississippi, as she had heard or the
Well informed parties entertain no other expectation freedom granted to tbc slaves by Mr. Lincoln, and that
now than that they will quietly settle down into winter she got tho information from her brother, who could
read, and he read it in a Southern newspaper. Being a
quarter*.
house servant, she heard the planters talk about the war
The capture of blockade runners: recently, off Wil- and read about the battles, and she would go out to the
pegro
quarters and tell her brother, and ho would slip off
mington. have so frighteoed the rebel authorities of North
in the night and tell the negroes on other plantations,
Carolina that tbry have let out the job
and get back in time for the morning calMo work. She
said that ever siuce the fight at Fort Sumter on the
breaking out of the war, the negroes were informed of
what the North was doing, and that they confidently expected to be free, and were not surprised when the Proclamation was issued. She said that tho negroes had
secret societies and met in the woods and caves, and had
signs and grips, and it was the duty or every member to
inform the lodges or what conversation he bad b^ard
among the white folks. She further stated that they
frequently got Northern as well as Southern newspapers
and that as a general thing the house servants were well
posted in all the phases of tho rebellion on both sides.
Many of the negroes who came iuto the contraband
camp seemed to have considerable money in gold and
silver. All this money was the fruits of their own hard
earning*, and not a dollar or Confederate scrip could be
found about tbem. One woman had hidden in her bosom, tied up in an old cotton handkerchief sixty-one dollars in gold and nine dollars in silver, all in halves and
quarters. Another had twenty dollars in five dollar gold
pieces, and fifteen dollars in silver tied up in a newspaper, aud as a coincidence, the newspaper was found to
be a copy or the New York Tribune, containing an account or the death or the lamented Ellsworth. These
too, had heard or the Proclamation, through the secret
negro societies or the South.
A Tunnel tinder Lake .Michigan.
- A contract for the construction ofn tunnel extending
some two miles under Lake Michigan at Chicago, for
the purpose or supplying the city with pure water, was
awarded a day or two since ; the lowest bid for completing the same being 8315,139. There were five,
other bids ranging ftom that figure up to a million or
dollar;. The mutter has been under dissensrion for
some months. The Times gives the following description
or tbc proposed work:
The coutract for a tunnel or five feet internal diameter, lined with brick, commencing at the prexnt Water
Works, and extending a distance of two miles under
Lake Michigan, at a direction nearly at right angles
to the shore line, and about two points to tho north or
due east. The tnonel is to be excovuled thirty-five feet
below tho bed of the lake, and to have four feet of dip
landward. A brick shuft is to be sunk ot the Water
Works and at the other extremity, a crib about eightyfive feet in diameter, is to be sunk and filled with stones,
an iron shaft of nine feet in diameter to be built inside
it, aue this crib and cylinder to bo afterwards surmounted by a ligbt-honso a# a guide to vessels and a protec*
tiou to tho works. Between this ami the sboro a number of intermediate shafts will be sunk similar in cong'.ruction to the outer one except that the cribs will not
bo quite so firmly built, and the cylinders will bo somewhat lighter. There will not bo less than one nor more
than four or these intermediates. The number will be
determined by tho circumstunees which develop themselves during the progress or the work. The contractors
have agreed to foruish as many as moy be required
without claiming extra. I'bo object in sinking tbem is
to enable the men to work in several different places at
once; they will be removed after thetuimel is completed
so as to present no obstruction to the navigation of the
lake. The tunnel will then be one continuous channel of
two miles in length. The water entering at that distance
from the shore may reasonably be expected to be clear
and free from those impurities which now iufect tho water supplied for city use. Strainers wjll be fixed over
the outlet to keep cut the fish which have ot times troubled us so extensively. The tptal area of the tunnel will
be nearly twenty square feet, an area amply large enough
to furnish water continuously to a city five or six times
the size or Chicago in the present day. Tho fell or four
feet toward the shore end of the tumiel will give complete
facilities for emptying it occasionally in cose of fouling,
and its permanence is aimed to be secured in tho most
satisfactory manner, the specifications beiug very explicit as to the mode of construction providing that eight
inches of brickn shall be laid all arouud it and that
these bricks shall be firmly iinbcded in the soil which
must be rammed and puddled, if uot otherwise sufficiently firm to fullfiil tho requirement of absolute solidity.
If this contract be faithfully executed there can be no
doubt that Chicago will have sccured\an unfailing sopplv
of pure water ample enough to supply her utmost news
for liftv vears to come and that few if any repairs will be
needed in the course of that time. Tho whole is tq be
completed in two years from the date or signiog the
contract.
Lord P a i m e n t o n ' s Speech.
The following were the remarks or Lord Palmerston
at tbc late Lord Mayor's Banquet wherein be refers to
American affairs :
"There have been occasions when it was tbc lot or
those who had to explain tho state of afl lire to congratulate yon on tbc tranquil condition or the civilized
world. I am afraid I cannot do that in the present
instance, for although I trust there is nothing in our
horixon which can grow into a cloud or war, yet we see
on all sides, in tbc for West and in tho distant East,
struggles going on of the most lamentable character, and
scenes enacted which makes ns shudder for humanity,
and excito our deep compassion for the countries in
which they are occurring. [Hear, hear ] Iu the far
West wc see a nation or the same race, the same language! the same religion, the same manners ond
the same literatarc as ourselves, split in two. slaughtering each other by hundreds or thousands and carrying on a contest, the result of which it is impocrible to
forwe, and the end or which now. after more than two
years' duration, he would be a bold man indeed who
ventured to predict, [ilenr, bear.] Lamenting that
state of things, the Government or this country have felt
it their duty not to yield either to the entreaties, or the
objurgations or the one part v or the other. [Cheers.]
Blandishments on the one side and threats on the other,
have equally been fruitless to effect our course. [Renewed checrs.] We have felt it oor duty to abstain from
taking any part in that deplorable conflict If, indeed,
we had thousbt it had been in our power to put an
end to it by friendly intervention, no efforts would have
been wanting to accomplish so holy an object [Cheers.]
But wcfrlt that our interference would have been vain,
and. we deemed it our duty—ond in that I am snre we
but "folio wed the wishes of the country—to maintain a
strict war&h and impartial neutrality. [Loud cheers.]
President Lincoln.
At a serenade given the other evening in New York
to Gen. Sickles, that distinguished soldier—well known
as having never been ©r the political party as Mr. Lincoln—paid the President a just and glowiug tribsie, as
follows :
•• How shall we restore the ^ost sovereignty or tbo
Union ? How shall we undo the foul wrong or the rebellion T There ore not a few who have qoiled before the
magnitude of the task. Of these, thank heaven, tho
President is not one. He whom the burden has most
bent has never faltered in heart or purpose. He is sustained. as is just, by the great masses or the Nation, by
the potential force of the Press, and the armies and fleet's
of the Union. Grapplicg with administrative questions
more difficult and delicate than ever before tried the sagacity and courage or oar statesmen, he has so borno
himself that every loyal heart acknowledges the candor,
ability and tact which signalize the character of our
First Magistrate. [Applause.] Tbot history will assign hira a conspicuous place among great rulers is no
longer doubtftil."
Tbc Washington correspondent or the Chicago Tribune, says the report or Judga Edmund*, Commissioner
of the General Land Office, will show that the following
Territories are rich in gold and silver : Idaho, Nevada,
Washington, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico.—
Arizona and Idaho are especially rich in gold. In the
former it is now being dug out with the rudest implement in astonishing quantities. There are also gold deposits in Utah, but the Mormons do all in their power
to prevent the settlement of the country by any other
than those or their faith. The richest mines yet found
in Arixona are on the branches of the River Colorado,
which runs into the Gnir or California.
The territories or Idaho, Colorado and Arizona havo
also large beds of coal.
Reports from General Glark, of Mexico, fully establish the truth of tho reports or rich deposits or gold in
Arizona.
The New York Tribune's Washington spocial 6sys :
The attention or the President and more prominent members or the Cabinet, and other gentlemen, has been
largely given or late to the consideration or tho important questions connected with the recall to the Union or
the truant Southern States, several or which may soon
be knocking at the door. The precise course to be
adopted is not yet determined. Several theories claim
tho President's ear ; but he is himseir engaged in maturing a practical plan by which to 6eeure reunion upon
the only practicable basis—the basis or freedom and
equality before the law—for all tho recent utterances
of the President, aud instructions to recently commissioned representatives of the Government in districts of
the South now in our possession, leave no doubt that tho
policy of tho Administration, to permit none oT tho vagrant States to come back with a slave constitution, is
fixed. The present discussion relates to the ways and
means ot effecting the result
The W ashingtoo correspondent or the Advertiser and
Tribune says that at no time sincb the opening or tho
war, has public confidence io the supremacy or the Government o:er the rebellion beeu so perfect snd general
as at this momeot This is due to tbo splendid victories
of tho Western army, tho forlorn condition of tbo rebel
Treasury and Commissariat and last though not least,
to the attitude or tho loyal States as declared st the recent elections. Nothing but inexcusable dissensions in
the National councils, and tardiness in the supply or
troops by tho States can prevent the early and final
overthrow or tho military power or the rebelfioq.
The Copperheads who moke eo muclr noise about tho
soldiers bciog permitted to vote, they seem to think
that the only right or the soldier wbicbthey are bound to
respect is the right to shoot ond be shot a t ; a man that
is willing to die that bis country may live, is according
to their doctrine, unfitted to declare through the ballo'.box who shall administer the precious legacy which be
is to leave for his children, consecrated as it is by bis
blood,and glorified as it will bo by bis devoted patriotism.
Some two millions orslaves are said to havo been
sent into Alabama and Georgia to keep tbem ont or the
reach or the Union army. When tbo army shall go ioto
those States, tbo masters or these slaves will probsbly
posh them Into Texas ; and there BANKS will find them
ready to render service to the cause or the Uoioo. Slavery is digging its own grave, and few will mourn at the
funeral.
WHY THE SOLDIERS VOTE AS THKT DO.—The Cincinnati Commercial says some have been perplexed with
the inquiry why the soldiers so generally vote o#e way ?
That is easily answered. Tbey have been so longio tbo
hab'it of shooting ono way that theytoald not so easily
break the habit when they come to tbt^poDs.
A meeting of prominent slaveholders or Tennessee,
thirty in number, recently resolved that in order to get
back into the Union again, they would be glad to give up
slavery, and therefore would favor emancipation without
asking any compensation for the liberated slaves.
Mrs. Finney, the wire of President Finney of Oberlin.
died at Syracuse last week. She was an elderly lady
and bad gone East for the purpose of recovering her
health.
,
Geo. Grant has captured within the past seven months
j i t the battle of Gettysburg the killed and wounded
was greater than the loss at Waterloo. At the latter four hundred and twelve rebel cannon, namely : 52 on
placeJheSollies and French together lost 40.000. At bis advance to Vicksburg, 300 at that place, and 60
Gettysburg the loss to the Union and rebel armies before Chattanooga.
amounted to 63,000.
Sixteen Parrot guns have been mounted on Johnson's
The fuH rote oT.Obio on Governor including the sol- Island, Lake Erie, in position where each battery sepdiers' vote, gives Governor Brough the mighty majority erately could sink any wooden fleet that should attempt
an entrance.
or 100,330!
r p p A
A
CTRSy.
fil'I'V'"
-
j
I m k « U n i t e d S t a t e s C i r c u i t C o o r t in B a l t i m o r e , o n j
—1 M o n d a y I a n , in t h e c a s e s of C h a n . H o w a r d , ffm. H . G a t -
NoiaAKCS.—Tbo G r a o d B u v c n . Y « c t is
d e s p i c a b l e p a p e r in M i c h i g a n .
fissions
ttic m o e t I c h e l l a m i J o h n \ V . I ) a v i a . l a t e P o l i c e
W b i l a load J i p i t a , pro-
B a l t i m o r e , a g a i n s t h i S e c r e t a r y of W a r . S i m o n
Came.
o f p i e t y a n d l o y a l t y , i t s c o l n m n a a r e m a i n l y fill-1 ron. t o r e c o v e r aevernlly. 8 2 0 . 0 0 0 - d a m a c ? 8 f o r t h e a n * *
e d w i t h filthy d r i p p i n g s f r o m t h o s e c e r t - p o o l s of t r e a s o n . , a n d i m p r i s o n . . , e n t of t h e p l a i n t i f f , in J u l y .
t h e C h i c a g o Times
i t i s t h e toady
a n d D e t r o i t Free
Prett.
and second-fiddle player.
t y sake, t h r o w off y o u r p i o u s m a n t l e
gutter. . •> > f
, •r
o r g e t out
in
the
of
Bay
wioter,"
the
Alpena ?
thereat
'•
^
T h e P r o p e l l e r L a d y Franklin arrived here on Snnday
last, and left on Monday evening, with a c a r g o
~ber,for Chicago.
.
.
o p e n c o u r t b y t h e c o u n s e l f o r t h e d e f e n d a n t , t h a t h e was
) hud n o p a r t in t h e a r r e s t a n d i m p r i s o u u i e u t of t h e
?'
of
lum-
J o h n Morgan, tho gncrrilla chief, w i t h s i r of bis Captains. h a s m a d e his e s c a p e f r o m t h e O h i o P e n i t e n t i a r y ,
a n d i s n o w in C a n a d a .
1 4 ,
1 8 6 3 .
I
B V E U V L A W I ,
and i».ugiit witn specii.! r e f e r e n t |.. the J o - . m ^
which we n o l d a l . c o m m i s s i o n o n l r a h o v c coM.
CHANCERY SALE.
STATE o r H i c u i c a s — T h e C i r c u i t C o u r t for the C o u n t y o f ,
Manistee. in C h a n c e r y .
l i e o n u E llBBits, C o m p l a i n a n t .
ire can offer ani>arall-led i n d a c c m i nta—buying as w<- d o of
the 11IPORTEKS UIRKCT for C A S H a n d in large . | u a n t i t i .
J o s t l - H HCKBLB,
THOMAS U v x a u t ,
G s o a o e W. FOES,
nr stuok will
very c o m p k u — C a a a i m e r s . S a t t i u e t s , K e t
MART H f « L E ,
ickv J e a n s . P i s i n and twilled tianocls, IJob-Roy*. Linsy:
J o n s U. l x i o x t s ,
'rockinirs.
JlMCS LrPINGTON,
T KT C R O C K E R Y
INT W O O L E N G O O D S
RAWLEIGH,
a U. SM
i.rl
S I'UHrfUANCE A N D liY V I R T U E O F A DKCREK <>f
the Circuit C o u r t for the Couuty of U a n i m c t . iu Ci.anoery
rnadc in tho above entitled cause, and b e a r i n g date the S a n d S t . A l b a n s b y reports t h a t a b o d y o f s e c e s s i o n i s t s in •ond day of May, In the y e a r one t h o w u n d «ight h u n d r n
and sixty. I. t h e undesigned, a ' s p e r t a t C.>ranjs«l.>ner, r.-si l
M o n t r e a l h a d p l a n n e d t o s e i s e F o r t M o n t g o m e r y , des- ieg iu the County aforesaid, and duly appointetl and i|uaiille>
t r o y t h e d r a w - b r i d g e a t R o n s c s P o i n t jrod p l u n d e r to ac-t a* such in the above entitled can«e, w i t l w l l at puhlii
aaotton u> t h e h i g h e s t bidder, ut the f r o n t door of liie HUH
P l a t t s b u r g a n d B u r l i n g t o n . I n f o r m a t i o n of s u c h « p l o t well !iou»c, in the Village of Manistee, In said County, oi
reached
G o v e r n o r S m i t h a n d C o l l e c t o r C/lnpp. T h e y Friday, t h e Twenty-second day of J a n u a r y , Iu the y e a r ont
thounand ei|{hl h u n d r e d u n d sixty-four, at ton o'clock in tin
c o m m u n i c a t e d w i t h t h e officer i n c b s f g c of F o r i M o n t - (orenoon of s i i d day, all i h o s e c e i t a i n p . c c c s or parcel* o
g o m e r y w h o s o o b h o d i t s g n n s r e a d y to g i v e t h e r e n e - land situated In t h o said C o u n t y df Manistee, in the s t a t e o
Michigan, a n d known a n d described as follows, to wit
gades a warm
reception.
1 ' b i s s c h e m e w a s p r o b a b l y Uot n u m b e r two of Hectioa o a o i n township t w c n y - o n e nortl
of range IT w e s t
'
_
•linked w i t h t h e J o h n s o n ' s Island p r o j e c t
;
' DAVID D 8EC0R.
Special C ^ m m i s a i o n r r .
T l i e rebels seem, t o b e fully p e r s u a d e d t h a t t h e m o s t : of
EMMONS & POXD,
Solicitor* a n d of C o a n a c l f o r C o m p l a i n a n t .
t h e fightbing d o n e in t h i s w a r hire r e s u l t e d in t h e i r f a v o r
Dated Manistee, NOT. J, \S(i3.
— a t l e a s t t h e y c o n t i n u e t o talk a s if i t h a d All their
( P r i n t e r ' s fees; $C 30.)
51-flw.
p a p e r s a r e foil o f t a l k a b o u t " t l i o i r v i c t o r i e s . " A n d y e t
CHANCERY SALE.
their Confederacy h a s shrivelletj and shrunk from t h e
" W O O X J
iy"» slid men
i rules.
Considerable excitemcnt w a s caused at Rouses P o i n t
possession of t h e most v i t a l s t r o n c b o l d in t h e i r b o r d e r s .
T h e W o r l d says : T h e F r e n c h irar steamer Milan has
just arrived at this p o r t from V e r a Cruz
via
Ilavanua.
S h e will r e t u r n d i r e c t l y t o t h o f o r m e r p o r t , h a v i n g b e e n
ordered to N e w Y o r k expressly t o take o u t t o Mexico
§ 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 in g o l d , p u r c h a s e d o n a c c o u n t of t h e F r e n c h
' G o v e r n m e n t , b y t h e h o u s e of B e l m o n t Sc C o .
- T h e f u n e r a l s e r v i c e s of t h e l a m e n t o d
Major Scarritt,
w h i c h t o o k p l a c e a i P o r t H u r o n o n t h e 2 ' i d inst,
were
o f a u i m p o s i n g c h a r a c t e r . T h e y w o r e p a r t i c i p a t e d iu b y
t h e firemen, t h e m a s o u i c f r a t e r n i t y o f
Clair and N e w p o r t , the civic
generally.
Pori
dignitaries
Huron, St.
and
citizens
• .j*!.-Jii.w}«
M r . Z. C . P e a r s o n , o r H a l L E n g l a n d ,
a; s h i p
owner
a n d r e c e n t M a y o r of t h a t S e a p o r t , h a s b e c o m e b a n k r u p t ,
his deficit being over £ 2 1 2 , 0 0 0 ; h i s liabilities £6-15,000
—all o w i n g t o blockade ruuniug, ia w h i c h , h e h a d invested.
Served him right.
T h e a c t u a l n u m b e r of n e g r o t r o o p s in t h o field i s 48,l
000.
T h e r e a r e a l s o e m p l o y e d 5ri t h o a r m y , in ono
ca-
i p a c i l y a n d a n o t h e r , i n all, o n e h u n d r e d a n d s i x t h o u s a n d
ncgrots.
H o w THE C o . v r i n R . T E GAME WAS. PLAYED OX A LAWT K R . — A well d r e s s e d w o m a n c a l l e d a f e w - d a y s s i n c e on
a N e w p o r t l a w y e r , a n d rcpesenting h e r s e l f t o b e t b o w i f e
of C o l . B n r r j , of t h e 5 t h M a i n e , a s k e d t o bo s h o w n s o m e
e s t a t e , n o t o v e r SIO.OOO in v a l u e , t o s e l e c | f r o m . A f t e r
s o m e t r o n b l e s h e w a s s u i t e d , a n d ! g i v e d i r e c t i o n s for t h e
deed. Tho lawyer asking her for 8100-to
bind the
b a r g a i n , ; s h e p r o d u c e d a c h e c k f o r S^jSOO; o n t h e N e w
" E n g l a n d B o n k of B o s t o n . C o m p l e t e l y i m p o s e d u p o u ,
h e took her to the. N e w E n g l a n d Commercial Bank,
•where being i n t r o d u c e d t h e money w a s p s i d t o h e r . S h e
t h e n p a i d t h e 8 1 0 0 , left t o w n p e n d i n g t h e : p r e p c r a t i o n of
•hor p a p e r s , a n d h o s n o t g o n e b a c k . H e r ; hotel p e o p l e
w e r e s w i n d l e d also, t h e y let h e r g o w i t b o l a t p a y i n g h e r
b i l l . T h e c h e c k w a s for 8 2 5 , b u t hud been cleverly
altered.
WHAT
COPPERHEAD POLITICS b o
TOR A M A N — W e
t a k e i t for g r a n t o d t h a t t h e e d i t o r of t h e G r a n d R a p i d s
E a g l e . w h o is responsible f o r t h e f o l l o w i n g , h a s b e e n
-reading t h e F r e e Press.
j
W h e n a m a n e n t e r s t h e a r e n a of p r o - s l a v e r y , O o p p e r Tiend p o l i t i c s , a s an e d i t o r , h o i s o b l i g e d t o l e a v o
b e h i n d h i m , p f l o t e y e a r s , all t h e c h i v a l r y ' o f a g e n t l e m a n ,
all t h e h o n o r s of a m a n , all t h e t r u t h of a^ 6 h r t s t i a n . alt
t h e d e c e n c y of g o o d s o c i e t y , revel in p e r s o n a ! d e f e m a t i o n ,
insult, a b a s a . s l a n g a n d o b s c e n i t y , i r r e s p e c t i v e o f s t a t i o n ,
- c h a r e c t c r , ' a g o o r e v e n s e x . T h e h y e n a t h a t f a t t e n s on
t h e c a r c a s e s of a p l a g u e s t r i c k e n c i t y d o e s n o t p a u s e
t o distinguish b e t w e e n the b a b e and the crone, t h e maid e n a n d w a r r i o r , t h e t e n d e r i n n o c e n t a n d t h e t o u g h sinner.
W h y s h o u l d t h e a i d e r of t r e a s o n a h d t h e d e f e n d e r
o t slavery b e a n y more nice t
>•, - | V. •: *, - 3 -.v.
\
BRANDItETIl'S
PILLS.
Yon m a y r e c o v e r y o u r h e a l t h by t h o use at o t h e r remedies.
T o n may.neeover w i t h o u t a n y : b u t do n o t f o r g e t t h a t y o u
m a y die. a n d * h a t B r a n d r e t h ' a P i l l s could h a v e aaved you.—
For rememder that the
AWFUL PRINCIPLE OF DEATH,
w h e n y o n h a v e i t I n e x c e s a In y o u r s y s t e m , Is e v i d e n t t o y o u r
• n l m a l instincts. Y o a r c o u n t e n a n c e t e l l s y o u r f r i e n d s ; y o u r
d r e a m s a n d y o u r o w n h e a r t tell y o u .
Now, a t t h e s e t i m e s t h e r e I s no m e d i c i n e »o d e s e r v i n g of
y o n r c o n f l d e u c e as
BRANDRETU'S VEGETABLE UNIVERSAL PILLS,
t s t h e o n l y m e d i c i n e k n o w n t h a t can c e r t a i n l y save, w h e n all
t h e u s u a l I n d i c a t i o n s tell t h a t y o u m u s t d i e .
Mr. J o h n P u d a e y , S p r i n g f i e l d , Union C o . , X. J , h a s used
B R A N D R K T H ' S P I L L S f o r fifteen y e a r s In his family, a n d f o r
all h i s h a n d s : In w h i c h t i m e t h e s e P i l l s h a v e c u r e d t h e m of
Bllllousaffections, Maad^ehe,Rheumatism, F e f f t and Ague.
Measlea. W h o o p i n g C o u g h , a n d he says h e h a s n e v e r , k n o w n
t h e m t o fall. P r i n c i p a l Office, 294 C a n a l S t r e e t . New York.
g o l d by alt r e s p e c t a b l e d e a l e r s t » medicine*.
ASK F O B X E W STTLIS:
&
C o ' S
- * —
ColllUlTl
r—
5" *"
pi«inlifli> o r e l t h . . of ' h e m .
DC.
L a y
O C T O B E R 2 8 , 18(53.
D E A L E R S .
\ \ T E
HAVE J C s T l U X t l V E D
AND AUK N O
Y V o p e n i u g , with weekly additions, a large s a d varit
•rehandise
j t o c k of i i» specially J
of DEAL- | o u m e l t * *
" t u g iu a j rapidly gi
re. bolb'a* to quality, atvie %n<l p r i c e . in tii
j r e y ^ m p l e t e . t . . , k «f
l i iKr -uo m
r v i -i ai L
J Stable
- M w J D O ~-.oars It-il* . nitii ii.p.
(I C a p s Hoot* and Shoes, C l o t h i n g , Book* and Stationary, |*., t m a r ^
c o u n t r y affords, a n d » bicb i s Uiiug a u d » i .
Yankee Notion*. Hardware. Cutlery, Groceries, Confection-', be offered
*s c o r r e s p o n d i n g with the lo»»»t r f ^ u l a
ary. P a t e n t Medicines. Fine P e r f u m e r y , F a n c y Goods. Toys, r a l l , f „ r ,
g r a d e s of eood* in the m c t r o p v i . t a n m a :
At-. Ac.
, k e u abro.
n of p r i c
IO U I t L I N E O F H O O P
S K I H T S ' iioVof o u r c u ' l o m e r *
S a m . H o u s t o i v o f T e x a s , is s u r e l y d e a d t h i s t i m e .
b e g i n n i n g , a n d t h e i r last " g r e a t i v i c t o r y " h a s giver, us
HflIlI13.ll,
^
W M O L E S A X i E
wen;,
a u t h o r i s e d b y h i s c l i e n t t o say t h a t t h e l a t t e r ( i i e n . C a m
Monitor
over
lrtil,
finally d i s p o s e c of. T h o raits w e r e t a k e n f r o m t h e dtk-ke,
by cpnsent o f t n e plaintiffs'counsel, on t h e statement
r ; ; j*"j v > .,
W h a t h a s b e c o m e o f t b o " Thunder
D o n ' t It " Thunder
of w h i c h
F o r Christiani-
O O T O I B E T ^ .
Cotntnis!>oDers o f j T O
A FIVE LOT OF J E W E L R Y
it low rates, bought of the m u n u f u c t o r e r s direct.
TIN-WAREi
a n v t h i n - in
w e are p r e p a r e d t o furni«h on •
t h i s linenf the he*t w o r k m a n s h i p id ' i c a l i t r — a n d we liledce
ourselves to pi nee the rate* as lov a* t h e y ' c a n be bonpht
ork
und
stock.
anywhere, of the some quality of
OUIt STOOIC O F
Nails. Chain*. -Spring
< ' "HI I O I ' P I N G A X K S .
S l - i g h Shoes ; a u d Lumber..I w l i i u- . o l d at a suiull ad6maJt
ttd
NOTWITHSTANDING
r e m i n g l y h i g h p r i c e s of goods-, the f a r t s are. t h a t we
iw compelled t o j;o into the market and purchase, o
of sole could n o t i f i e s - t h a n 10 to 15 per c e n t , le
w.- are now able to oflVr our Slo.-k lor—which is a sa
>f no n u n e r i m p o r t a n c e to this rapidly g r o w i n g comtr
at a time when every dollar is so much needed.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
""'
>
, j 0 t h M | f f u „ u n d r t > w o d a l | » o n | d avail thcm>ei»,-« of tl.e
| * d r » . , U « e . o f f c r e d - T h i . h may be b e t t e r nndenrtood U
'
p n r c b a . e . , tot ir.a.ke:,., p e r f e c t f a m i l i a r i t y with and
long r x p t r i e u c o i u t h i s k.iu<! -I business, e n a b l i n g us t o k n o *
j u s t w h e r e t o go to p u r c h a s e different cla»i»e» of goo.ia to the
best possible a d v a n t a g e .
We are thue u a r t i c u f a r t h a t all w h o read may know o p p o s i t i o n a n d a u t a n t a g e s ' aud au e x a m i n a t i o n w h i c h a e l a
vile, will prove t o the uloi-t CRxi.nl o b s e r v e r that we can On
d o n e everv *;ateiEcnt made in onr c o l u m n .
Our . l o c k of Dry G o o d s is very complete, b o u g h t low. of
t h e mo»t a p p r o v e d styles and makes, c o m p u t i n g d r e s s
g o o d - in LVLains. Challies, A l p a c c a s , S a x o n y l'luids. Print*.
Black Silk*. Wool D e l . a i n e s tlguie.l a n d plain black a n d
white Piaid*. Swis- Mi)«lln*. Cliamt.reys, G i n g h a m s . 4 c . , Ae
DOMESTICS
Boojrht at r e d u c e d r a t e s : Double a n d T w i s t C a s s i m e r s a .
Black and E a u c y Casimere*. F r e n c h S u m m e r C a s t i m e r e s .
c Wbittenton Plaids,
York Mills Cotto'nades, plain a n d fancy,
I N a n k n n e t t s , Kentucky J e a n s T w e e d s , - M i x t u r e s , D e n i m s ,
Checks Apron a n d Miners. Ticks, S h i r t i n g P r i n w , Drills,
. C o t t o n F l a n n e l s Wool F l a n n e l s , Brown CoWous, B l e a c h s d
, C o t t o n s , B a g s Ac.. Ac.
CLOTHING.
! G e n t s fine silk lined Rlaek Cloth Coats.-very s o p e r i o r q u a l Ity. fine Black C a s s l m e r e p a n t a , Fancy Casimere CoatB. P a n t a ,
"I'd Vests, S u m m e r Coats. C o t t o n a d e P u n t s a n d Coats.
I I ' n d e r - c l o t h i n g , a fnli l i n e G e n t s a n d Ladles. Over S h i r t s
and Alls. Oil Suits, I n d i a Rubber Coats, Wool, Union a n d
Cotton Hocks in variety. Collars, a large a s s o r t m e n t . C r a v a t s ,
well a s s o r t e d , T r u n k s , T r a v e l l i n g Bags. Valises, H u n t i n g
Bags. Umbrelles, R. K. S a t c h e l s , some v e r y good, Ac., A c . .
7''
LADIES' WEAR.
G l o v e s silk, lisle and leather, Hose, black, white, a l a t ^
brown a n d blue. C o t t o n , union, m e r i n o a u d casbmorc, Bellaassorted ; Magic ltutUing, Tape t r i m m i n g , full l i n e : Flounc*
STAT« o r MICHIGAN—The C i r c u i t Court fur the County of | ,
i n g s Sw iss c a m b r i c a n d linen : also. K'dgings iu t h r e s d .
Manistee, iu Chancery.
cotton, s m y r i a ; cambric, swiss a n d silk ; C o t t o n Wash TrimWIUJAM 1. K i r , Complainant.
m i n g s colored a n d white, very p r e t t y : colored and w h i t e
Stays : colored a n d white •• S k i r t S u p p o r t e r * . " best ineko :
J o i t V I.»WR«NCE M c V r c r a u .
C r i n o l i n e , a nice a s s o r t m e n t ; Ladies D r a w e r s a n d Vesta ;
MICUAKL ENGELMANS.
ork
t
h
e
article
of
d
Hay
W r o u g h t Collars. In linen, c a m b r i c , . * u d m u s l i n ; C r o t c h e t
Defendants.
». of b<
e. Also Straw K n i w s
Braids : m a r k i n g c o t t o n ; h e m s t i t c h e d h a n d k e r c h e i f a ;
I PURSUANCE AND BY Y I R T U E OF A D E C R E E OK
H A N N A H , LAV A CO.
plain linen h a n d k e r c h i e f s : d r e s s p a t t e r n s , ' a s s o r t e d ; veil
the C i r c u i t C o u r t for the Oouuty of Manistee, in C h a n beragv and t i s s u e ; lace v o i t s ; Ladies k n i t s k l r t s ; b a l l m o r a l
cery. made in the above entrtled cause, and b e a r i n g dale the
skirts,
nicely a s s o r t e d , s u m m e r s t y l e s : Brochc s l i a w l a ;
Seventh dav of May, in t h o ^ o a r ona t h o u M n J e i g h t h u n d r e d
Stella, delaine and wool s h a w l s ; cloaks ; ladies e m b r o i d e r and sixty-three, I, tiie uo4eri«gnc<l, a speuial Commissioner,
ed
sell*, low p r i c e na n da cnoice
sells,
choice ; w
wasn
ash o
bm
l onnud : black
u « t » li a c e .
r e s i d i n g in the C o u n t y kforeeald, and duly a p p o i n t e d a n d • In Rat. F o i , Bewvvr, Otter, Ac., all b o u g h t of M:inufactort
tiguered
: F r e n c h j s e o n e t ; s o f t c a m b r i c s f o r ladle* ; n
qualilled t o a c t an such (n thu above entitle)] cause, will sell Agents.
s illea ; I n d i a cloth, Ac.. Ac.
at public a u c t i o n , t o t h i j i i g h c s t bidder, at the f r o n t d o o r of j
H A N N A H , LAY 4 CO.
t h e B u s w e l l House, iu trw»*,ilingo of Manlntee. in said County,
BOOTS AND SHOES.
on S a t u r d a y , tho twenty-third day of J a n u a r y , iu the year oue
T H E A M E R I C A N W.VTCII CO.
G e n t s o x f o r d tics : c o n g r e s s s a i t e r s ; ballmoral a h o e s ;
t h o u s a n d e i g h t h u n d r e d a n d sixty-four, at ten o'clock in the
fclow sh)s:s ; calf h r o g s n s ; k i p shoes ; b r o g a n s ; c a r p e t a n d
f o r e n o o n of s*id day, all those c e r t a i n peicos or p a r c e l s of W a t c h e s are now sold at a «ms!t a d v a n c e a>>
g
o
a
t
slipticrs
;
Indian
r u b b e t a ; calf, k i p a n d h e a v y b o o t s ;
jand s i t u a t e d in t h e ' C o u n t y of Maniateo, State of MtchiiMn.
• York I'.etail orii Cs, for the accomtnoi
ladies goat ballmoral b o o t s ; ballmoral pebble calf b o o t s j
a n d k n o w n a h d d e s c r i b e d as follows, to w i t :
keepers
love k i d c o n g r e s s g a i t e r s ; l a s t i n g c o n g r e s s ; side lace a n d
The s | or s e t of sec. 27, Lot 11n sec. 22, nt-J of n e j of nee.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
eeled
g
a
i
t
e
r
s
;
kid
b
u
s k i n s a n d slips ; c a r p e t a n d plush
22, n i of n w j of sec. 'J3. Lot 3 in sec. 10, Lots 2 aud 3 in see.
slips ; c b i l d s c o p p e r t i p s h o e s ; goat balltuorala ; l a s t i n g
28, the n e t of set of s e c I t , the s w j of n w i o f n e c 12. the n » i
boots a n d r a c k s ; misses boots, full a s s o r t m e n t ; boys s h o e s ,
of s w i of s e c 12, the n w i of s w i of sec Si. t h e s v j of .-»( ai
a
s
s
o
r
t
e
d
;
boys
boots
;
child* b o o t s n i c e a s s o r t m e n t . I n
*ec 3*. the s w j o f s c i o f s e c 3 4 , the s e i of
of «.-v 11 . nil
the above described lnnds lying In Town 21 N of Rung. 17 W. H o n t a g s J a c k e t s . G a r i b a l d i ' s and Spanish W a i s i s Children* the above goods we can otfcr i n d u c e m o u t s
A l s o , t h e following described l a n d s lying ia Town 21 N of H o o d s J a c k e t s , I a f a n t e e s Scarfs. C o m f o r t s , Ac., Ac., a large
STOVES AND HOLLOW WARE.
Range 16 W, via. : s w j of s e i of sec 2, the sitt of n e j of sec a s s o r t m e n t .
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
F o r e s t oak. Minnesota, Y a n k e e Doodle, Albion, S e n a t o r
8, t h e s w j of s e t of sec 10. t h e sei of n w i of vie H. the ^ e j of
C o m p e e r . Volunteer. O r a t o r , S o v e r e i g n , c o m b i n a t i o n b r i c k
n e i of sec 16, the n e i of sw{ of sec c, the sw t of « | ol net
oven r e s e r v o i r t o p and w a r m i n g closet. C o m b i n a t i o n P l a i n ,
•4, the n u i of n e i of sec
the n w i of nc{ of sec
the u« j of (
"Oh ! C n r r y me b a r k " t o the days of
I
m
p e r i a l Brick Oven, Imperial P l a i n Oven, C o m e t , P r i s o
sei of sec 5, the s | of t e i of sec 5, the swfll of nwlli of see j
1
P r e m i u m , C o n t e s t , Lark. C o o k i n g Stoves.
1*.
r
In parlor a n d b o * stoves ; Troy Bo*. Cent. P e e r l e s s Rival.
Also, the following described l a n d s l y i n g in Town 2'.
Locket.
Idahoe. Casket, Now P l a t e S t o v e s Double D o o r P l a t a
Range 16 W : Lot * In sec 22, Lot I i n s e o 21, the n e i o . u w t i
a n d Parlor Cook Stoves, with a d d i t i o n s as occasion d e m a n d s .
s e c 22, n w j of n e j Of sec 22, the sei of nei of see 13, the
H A N N A l l . LAY A CO.
K e t t l e s all s i z e s f r o m 4 t o U0 g a l l o n s ; Bake k e t t l e s P o t s
of s e j of sec 16. the s e i of s e i of sec 11. Sw{ »»l *wi ot see 12.
the swi of n w i of s e c 15. t h e sw{ of n w i of « c 16. the n e | ol
Ac.. Ac.
F o r novelties in
GROCERIES.
n w i of s e c 15, the nw{ of n e i of see 15. the n«i of sei ot see j
15. the s w | of sw'i of sec W. the s e i °f * ' i °f sec 2. the s w | |
j A full a n d c o m p l e t e a s s o r t m e n t , to» w h i c h we i n v i t a laof s w | of sec 35, the s j of n e | of sec 28. the n w i of n e j of see
spectlon.
well as a n y t h i n g in l h a t line,
28, the a«i of «wi of sec 2S. the nei of *e} of w e 31. the e j of <
; S p i c e s In raw aud g r o u n d material, of best grade*.
HA
All LAY A L
mt of
»w{ of s e c 14, the sei of nwfr of BCC 14. tho n w i of « « i of see
I T O B A C C O . — P l u g , Hue cut. t m o k i n g , t u r k i s h , t i p - t o p Old
11, the s e i of n w i ol sec 15, the *i of n e j of sec 15. the n e |
V i r g i n i a lump.
.
of n e i of sec 33, t h e n w i of n w i of sec 23, t h e n | of *» t of
DYKS.—Indigo, m a d d e r , e x t r a c t logwood, c u d b a r , blue
sec 12, the swi of nei of see 12. the *e| of n w i of see 12, the \
vitriol, camwood, c o p p e r u s , oOchlneal.
n w i of s w i s e c 27. the ne{ o f u e i of see 22.
j
rhich we have become so Justly noted. 600 pair o f t ! : I F O R T U L T A B L E . — P r e s e r v e d p e a c h e s c h e r r i e s , p l u m s ,
Also, t h e following d e s c r i b e d lauds lying Sn Town 22 N of i
I quinces, c u r r e n t s gooseberries, r a s p b e r r y , c u r r e n t , g r a p e
i- in t r a n s i t .
R a n g e 16 W . : t h o n e i of sec 2!>, the n w i of sue 28, thu n i of j
H A N N A H . LAY Ik CO, I aud »irntvberrv j o l l i e s t o m a t o e s , apples, peaches, p r u n e s
n e i of sec 28.
_
I
cheese, c r a c k e r s d r i e o beef,
Also, the following described land* lying In Town 22 N of |
HARDWARE.
Ladies Caaeimere IJnllmornl Booti,
Range 14 W : the s w i of s e t of sec 34. lot I In *ec 31. ihe s.-j!
'
Nail* f r o m 3 « t o 6 0 s , as low a* can be booght elsewhere ,
of nei of sec 34, the s - i of n e i of sec 20. e f l j of setij ot see '
r snowy weather, Shall I
1
i
iron, a full a s s o r t m e n t : glass, all s i r e s : axes, broad, n s r r o w
20, n w i Of s e i of sec 35, the s * i of the s e i of s e c 34, tiie e j o f
l a n d b o y ' s : barn door h i n g e s a n d rolleis ; cable and t r a c e
n e i or sec 34. the ne} of n w i of see 2«.
rhmns,"traps, table and p o c k e t cutlery, a full line : d o o r
Also, t h e following described land lying In Town 21 N j
t r i m m i n g s c o m p l e t e stock ; c a r r l s g e bolts : pad, chest, till,
R a n g e 13 W. : ihe e l of t e i of sec 8. lot i , seo 4. the « | of n e |
t r u n k , box. a n d d o o r l o c k s assorted : c a r p e n t e r s tools, a fnll
o f a e c 22, tho s i of n w i of sac W, » l of n w i of sec 10, the s » i
of n w j of sec 10, the sei of ne{ of sec 5, the n e j nf n w i ol
A nice a**ortinent of best make* and fashionable d e s i g n * ; line : s h o e m a k e r s tools a n d findlug*. good assorimen*. .
sec 24, the e{ of s e i "f n w j of sec 24. the e i of the »ej a n d
Ballmnral H . « e for Ladle* a n d C h i l d r e n : Ballmoral shoef s t e e l y a r d s b a l a n c e s fist i r o n s g r u b h o o k s s c y t h e s a n d
the w* of s w | of sec 13, the nei o f n e l l t of see | J .
for L a d i e s Mis.-cs a n d Children.
F A R M E R S TOOLS
S h o v e l s s p a d e s boes, potato h o o k s
Also, the following described l a n d s lying in Town ii N of
H A N N A l l , LAY A CO.
fork*. 2. 5. and 4 t i n e d ; m a n u r e f o r k s srhuffle b o e s g a r d e n
R a n g e 13 W . : Tho ne* of nei ot see 22, lot 2 iu see 1, lot 7 in
and IJ-JV rakes, p o u n d e r s cow b e l l s s c y t h e s n a t h s a n d scythe*,
sec 27, lot 2 In sec 11
A N E W F E A T U R E IN T H E M A R K E T ,
crain and r b . i d r e n s cradles, p l s s t e r . lime. Riddle's F a n n i n g
Also, the f o l l o w i n g described l a n d s lying in Town 21 N ol
j O f which we have a full a s s o r t m e n t . I* Gents and l.adie
Mills, luuiU-r w a g o n s l i g h t wagons, w a g o n s e a t s w h i f i l c t r e e s
K a u g e 17 W . : T h e ai of n w i of sec 34, the s w j of n e j
wheel b a r r o w s road s c r a p e r s p l o w s 1 a n d 1 borse J steel
Machine hemmed
13, lot I Sec IS, t h e s e j of M i of see IS, the wi of n e j <
plow m o u l d s f o r shovel plow*, d r a g teeth, c u l t i v a t o r t e e t h
24, the w i of sei of sec 24, the e i of nwi of sec 2t. the n w i of
g r u b b o e s p l a n t e r s h e a v y h o e s half bushel b a s k e t s , well
n w i of aec 24, lot 1 in sec 24, lot 2 in s e c 24, t h e sei of n6i of
: th'
All rb u c k e t s c hain pump*, c i s t e r n p u m p s , Ac.
sec 13, lot 1 In seo 23, t h e ne{ of seo 25, the w j of n e | of »cc
H
A
N
N
A
H
I.AY
A
•
35, t h e n e i of n e t of seo 35.
MEDICINES.
Also, the f o l l o w i n g d e s c r i b e d l a n d s l y i n g in T o w n 21 N
Avtrs. J a y n e s Wlnslow's Sawyer's Thompson's. Sargsnt's
a n g e IU W . : Lot 4 in sec 7. lot I in sec W
Davis'. K e n n e d y ' s etc_ p a t e n t m e d i c i n e s ; as also p i l l s
Also, the following described lands lying in Town 23 N
n stock a fair a - s o r t m c n l of the present style* o o i n t m e n t s , otis, e s s e n c e s a n d e x t r a c t s In v a r i e t y .
R a n g e 15 W. : T h e n w i of n w i of see S3, the w j of sei of s«*e
HARNESSES.
j a k s a n d at reasonable prices.
t h e . n o t of s e i of sec 34, the s | of n w i o f s e c 34, t b o n » J
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.
S i n g l e a n d double, heavy a n d l i g h t harnesses, m e n ' s a n d
n w i of sec 34, the e i of n«i of sec
D A V I D D. SECOR, Special C o m m i s s i o n e r .
aide s a d d l e s b r i d l e s h a l t e r s girths, m a r t i n g a l l v e i i r a tuga.
T. J . R A M S D K L L S o l i c i t o r and of Counsel f o r C o m p l a i n a n t .
PII VLON'S N I G H T BLOOMING CEREU8,
s t r a p s Ac.. Ac.
D a t e d a t Manistee. Nov. 2,18ti3
LEATHER.
Of all p e r f u m e s ; the p e r f u m e f o r cither Ladle* or Centle
( P r i n t e r ' s fees, $30 30 )
61-6w
men are sold o n l y by
C o * hide, kip, calf a n d findings » c o m p l e t e line ; I s a u
H A N N A H . L A Y A CO.. A g e n t s
p e £ S nails, knives. Ac.. Ac.
'
HAVE YOU
Y A N K E E NOTIONS.
A head of Hair, or W h i s k e r s or Moustaches, of an unbeitive a n d d y e s
c o m i n g color ?
.
.
ipectacle*
J u s t received 920 |»kg< of m e r c h a n d i z e p e r P r o p e l l e r A
DO YOU
•bacro a n d s n u f f b o x e s , and p o u c h e s tneersbaum and comleghany t h i s day, Oct. 20,1803.
Wish t o c h a n g a t h a t color t o a h a n d s o m e deep brown, or
mon pipe*, p o r t e - m o n i e s m o n e y b a g s ladles t r a v e l i n g bag*
II ANN AH, L A Y A CO
i child* b a g s r a t t l e s t o y s toy book*, c o m p a s " . wb r u s h e s
a p e r f e c t and n a t u r a l blaok, w i t h o u t i n j u r y t o the fibres, with| assorted, toy w a t c h e s .
T H I S S T A T E OF" T H E
. M A R K E T
o u t tronble o r i n c o n v e n i e n c e ? If so,
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THE •SmiMSE MOM BlWJin TEtP,"
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TO
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C o o k n n d P a r l o r Stove**
mm HoosE-sMi. LOG
\ LEG imm,
Ballniornl Skirts,
L.inen Pook«'t Handkerohiofrs.
LADIES CLOAKS.
Still
they Come.
STATIONERY.
for nearly all k i n d s of m e r c h a n d i s e Is and has been for the j
past t h i r t y days. M l ' C H E X C I T E D , a n d mo*t k i n d s of g o o d s j l e t t e r , n o t e , legal a n d c a p p a p e r s envelopes, a c s o r t a d .
have a d v a n c e d considerably ; especially for two week* past j p e n c i l s p e n s I n k . black a n d red. sealing w a x .
h a s thl* state of t h i n g s been more t h a n usually n o t l e t b l o :
BOOKS.
a n d tirTdran u n p r e c e d e n t e d d e m a n d and an unusually limitB a n d e r ' s McGnffy's Davis' Mitchell's and C l a r k ' s s e r i f * of
-•
- ' A - school b o o k s c h i l d * a n d . d u l l s m i s c e l l a n e c - —
books, copy b o o k s sonjc a n d m u s i c b o o k s »
c o m i n g forwSrd to make t h e i r r e q u i s i t i o n s f o r t h e use of o u r 1
TIN WARE.
M a n u f a c t u r e d by J . C R I S T A DORO, 6 Aston House. New i m m e n s e ar*ntes.the result has been to cause an increased
No. 1 r u n n i n g o r d e r a n d all w o r k
firjnnesa which necessarily m u s t c o n t i n u e until w i n t e r (now j
Y o r k . Sold e v e r y w h e r e , a n d applied by all H a i r Dressers.
FURNITURE.
s o X o o n A t ft^nd) seta In.
P r i c e 91, S I 50 a n d $3 p e r box, a c c o r d i n g to s i r e .
A
good
a
s
s
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r
t
m
e
n
t
c
o n s t a n t l y on h a n d — a t f a i r p r i c e * .
C r u t a d o r o ' t t XXair P r e s e r v a l i v e .
Is Invkluable w i t h h i s Dye. as it i m p a r t s the u t m o s t softWe find i t i m p o s s i b l e t o h a r d l y c o m m e n c e a:
OCR L A T E S T A D V I C E S s h o w a still l a r g e r a d v a n c e in i of o n r «tock in so *mall a ( p a c e , a n d f o r a n y a d d i t i o n a l p a r
ness, the m o s t b e a u t i f u l gloss, a n d g r e a t vitality to the Hair.
I l i s a j a r * plea** call on or s e o d t o
Pric*, 40 c e n t s , *1. and is p e r bottle, a c c o r d i n g t o *lze
all d a a a e * of Merchandise
B i i S i H L i Y A OO.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
THEN YOU
M u s t n s e CRISTADOHO'S E X C E L S I O R D Y E which is
the only harmless, certain, i n s t a n t a n e o u s a n d truly n a t u r a l
H a i r Dye i n the w o r ld .
SHOULD YOU
D o u b t th.-se s t a t e m e n t s , try the article, a n d if it fails denounce it
VERY LATEST.
Beplrming
late,
j
- • .J
I a b o u t t o g i r o h i m * iixpCTce, w h e n
Helen stayed
my |
TO T H E LADIES OF AMERICA »
! One Hundred Dollars Reward!
I b e g a n life b y r u n n i n g a w a y f r o m borne. B o l i e a u . w e a r e i b a n d , mid c r i e d o u t in t W o l d s t y l e —
^
i E T O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS.
F o r a Medicine t h a t will c u r e
t o l d was d r i v e n i n t o h i s c a r e e r b y t h e h a n d of fate a n d :
" H e y , D o : * l d , moo, d i n o a y e ken y e ' r o l d f r c a ' s V
j L y 0 N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROP.I COUGHS,
-•
•
M• »- -•
« . .. .
* i '!•*>
lit.
_•!_ I
T i n
IMA|'>U1 I*#. itri >i j l n n i c l t i n p n l
J t ff**'- D
l lo«nn a« ll dr i
t h e p e c k of a t u r k e y . A t iia s t a r t e d in jlfe w i t b . n o o t h - '
Tiio man looked up iwostonishinenL
L Y O N S PER IODIC At, DROPS.
|
INFLUENZA,
o r CBBSO oiid c a p i t a l t h a n c o o l d s w o r d , j a u d w h i c h b e j I / i o n . H i s arua&riocDi a t c u t a p p e a r a n c e w a s t i e i j u t c n c u J, T O N ' S 1'EiUODlCAL DROPS.
T I C K L I N G ID t h e T H R O A T ,
p a l m e d off f o r t h e d i v i n e w e a p o n of H a h ; a n d B o b c # - b y i t s style ; a n d i t w a s w i t h t h e g r e a t e s t difficulty t h a t
WHOOPING COUGH,
p i e r r e o w e d b i s p o l i t i c a l c a r e c r t o w e t t i n g his stockiogis. w e c o u l d i n d u c e h i m t o e n t e r o u r c a m a g u ami utiawer
O r ralicvi
CONSU*TiVE COUGH,
THE OBEAT FAMILY REMEDY 1
a n d t h e r e h c u r d " w o r d s w h i c h b u r n . " w h i c h fired h i s o u r n u m e r o u s q u e r i e s a s t o o u r old f r i e n d s .
THE OHEAT FAMILY REMEDY I
s o u l . o o d d e t e r m i n e d h i s c o u r s c i i r life. M y r u n n i n g a w n y j
D i f f e r e n t men s t a r t iu life d i f f e r e n t ways.
I 'believe
a a q u l e k as
THE GREAT FAMILY REMEDY !
f r o m h o m e a r o s e f r o t n a m i n o r m o r t i f i c a t i o n , c a u s e d b y J t h a t m i n e , h o w e v e r is t h e only i n s t a n c e o n r e c o r d of a
carrying a pretty girl over the brook, j
. gentleman w h o owes h i s w e a l t h and happiness t o rolling
THE GREAT FAMILY REMEDY !
D o n a l d L e a n a n d myself w e r e g o o d friend.', a t f o u r t e e n > o v e r w i t h a p r e t t y g i r l in a s t r e a m of w a t e j .
y e a r s of a g e , a n d we b o t h regarded w i t h littlu m o r e t h a n (
O Y E K JFIVE T H O U S A N D B O T T L E S
L Y O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
friendship, pretty, Heleu G r a h a m , " our oldest girl W E S T ' S
I M P R O V E D
P U M P .
h a r e been sold in i t s native town, and n o t a single i a s t a a e *
LYON S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
a t s c h o o f . " * W e romped and danced t o g e t h e r , and this
of its failure is k n o w n .
«
. ;y
l a s t e d f o r s u c h a t i m e , t h a t i t i s w i t h f e e l i n g s of b e wil- A n t i - F r e e z i n g , D o u b l e - a c t i n g , F o r c i n g a n d L i f t i n g L Y O N S P E R I O D I C A L D R O P S
We h a r e , in o u r possession, a n y q u a n t i t y a! certificates,
L Y O N ' S P E R I O D I C A L DROPS
d e r m e n t t h a t I l o o k b a c k u p o n t h e m y s t e r y of t w o l o v e n .
s o m e of t h e m f r o m
c o n t i n u i n g f r i e n d s . B u t ( u c t i m e w a s t o c o m e w h e n ' P H E S E P U M P S H A V E NOW BEEN IX G E N E R .
EMINENT PHYSICIANS.
1 a n u m b e r of y e a r s , a n d Rive better
j e a l o a s y lit h e r s p a r k in m y b o y i s h b o s o m , a n d blew
ARB BETTER THAN PILLS
other. and are r e c o m m e n d e d aa the best
who have used it In their practice, a n d gtved it the proem:
i t j n t o ' a c o n s u m i n g flame.
ARE B E T T E R T H A N P I I . L L
and o t h e r e m i n e n t E n g i n e e r s . W e can
n c n c c over any other cumpoutuL
W e l l d o I r e m e m b e r h o w a n d w h e n t h e " • g r e e n - e y e d " u s i n g t h u m . a n d g u a r a n t e e .that all will rcieomaicUil liu-m.—
ARE BETTER T H A N PILLS
I
t
d
o
e
saot dry n p n COUG-H,
p e r p e t r a t e d t h i s i n c e n d a r y d e e d . I t was o n a c o l d O c t o - T h e y a r e m o r e silnpio in c o n s t r u c t i o n . a n d work «:a>i> r. and
ARE BETTER T H A N P I L U
' f c r o v e n i n g , w h e n H e l e n , D o n a l d , a n d toyself w e r e re- cost U-»» UIKU aii others.
^ loosens It, so as to enable the p a t i e n t t o e x p e c t o r a t e fro*
" O u r r e a d e r s will find tlic double-acting. i m p r o v e d Puiup
turning with our parent* from a neighboring \ a m l e t .
TWO OR T H R E E DOSES W I L L INVARIABLY CURE
A s wo a p p r o a c h e d a f o r d w h e r e t h e w i t e r r a n SQJIIJ- of J . D. West A Co.. o a c of the best in Hi* m i r k , L l i i« very
I'S Periodical Drops are
simple, works to a charm, so that a n y c h i l d may _U*e it ;
T I C K U N U IN T H E I H K O A l " .
w h a t h i g h e r thau ankle deep, w e proposed to c a r r y
T H E ONLY F L U I D P R E P A R A T I O N
t h r o w s a steady.
I J" Bottle h a s often completely c u r e d the most
H e l e n a c r o s s a s w e w e r e a c c u s t o m e d t o w i t h h a n d s iu- the coldest exposures.
T H E ONLY FLUID PREPARATION
witht e r w o v e n " c h a i r f a s h i o n , " a n d t h u s c a r r i e d o u r p r e t t y j knowingly, and give t h e t e s t i m o n y of
T
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t the knowledge o request of t b * p r o p r i e t o r * . "
p a s s e n g e r o v e r t h e b r o o k . J u s t a s wo w e r e in t h e midand y e t . t h o u g h it is so s i n e a p d speedy in Its o p e r a t i o n , il ls
T H E ONLY F L C I D P R E P A R A T I O N
[ N . Y. E v e n i n g POM. J u l y I»1
perfectly harmless, b e i n g purely vegetable. I t l» very agree
d l e of t h o w a t e r — w h i c h w a s c o l d e n o u g h t o h a v e f r o z e n j
a n d may be a d m i n i s t e r e d t o c h i l d r e n of
a n y t h i n g l i k e f e e l i n g o u t of b o y s lea* i i n r d v t h a n o u r T h i s m a r c e r t i f y t h a t I have been o s i n p , at ray iimrnfac toever
b
r
o
u
g
h
t
before
the
public,
a
n
d
as
a
diuretic
a
n
d
specific
s e l v e s — a f a i n t p a n g of j e a l o u s y n i p p e d m y h e a r t
Why
y, (or the "last loot years, C V o i ' a i m p r o v e d P u i u ; > . " I
•s of C R O U 1 ' w o will g u a r a n t e e a cure. If taken la
i t was I know uot, for we had c a r r i e d H e l e n across the
low have in o#c i b w o of said ptilJil'.'. otic of wliirh i-. k e p t . for irregularities, c h a l l e n g e s the worhl to p r o d u c e an e q u a l ; season.
oustunUy at work, 21 h o u r s e a c h day, wive s u n d i r »> and they are. In the most obstinate cases.
b r o o k ere now without emotjou, b u t this evening I
N o F a i u l l f ^ h p u l d bo w i t h o u t i t .
t h o u g h t o r f a n c i e d t h a t H e l e n g a v o D o n a l d an u n d u e h a s been r u n n i n g f o r the p a s t t w o f e a r * . I p r o n o u n c e ihetn,
It i s within-thc reach of all. the p r i m b e i n g
u n h e s i t a t i n g l y , t h o bent p o t n p s that have boon b r o u g h t to my
p r e f e r e n c e b y c a s t i n g h e r a r m a b o u n d bis n e c k , w h i l e s h e uotl«e, h a v i n g used many o t h e r s previously. They uio simple
O N L Y 25 C E N T S .
RKLI ABI.fi, A N D S C R E TO D O GOOD 1
s t e a d i e d h e r s e l f o n m y s i d e b y h o l d i n g t h e c u f f of u\y
i t h e i r c o n s t r u c t i o n , and u o t easily dinacranged.
And if an I n v e s t m e n t a n d t h o r o u g h trial does not " b a c k
R E L I A B L E ; A N D S U R E T O D O G O O D 1 J>" the al>o*e s t i t e m e n t . t h e Jnoney w|lt be r e f u n d e d .
N. V - O c t . 10.1869.
J ABtS A. V> KBB.
jacket
Wo
N o flattie c a n b u r n s o a u i c k , o r w i t h W> little f u e l a s
R E I . I A B L E , A N D S U R E T O D O G O O D ! say t h i s ^ k n o w i n g its merits, u a d f e e l i n g confident t h a t o n e
trial will s<
home In c •ery h o u s e h o l d .
jealousy.
Before we had r e a d i e d the opposite bank, I J . D. WEST 4 Co. :
R E L I A B L E , A N D S U R E TO DO GOOD 1
Ve are pleased t o s t a t e t h a t the P u m p s wn have had of
i»o not waste away w i t h Conghitigv when so small
w i s h e d D o n a l d a t t h o " b o t t o m of t h e s i n . '
Being nai. about a y e a r ago. have been in c o n s t a n t use, l'i h o u r s
e s t m e n t will c u r e —
*—
turally impetuous, I burst o u t w i t h —
:h day, s n c f r a l e e f o r t h # u « of o u r Woolen F a c t o r y , about
Druggist in town, »
" Y o u n e e d tia h a n d s a e g i n g e r l y , H e l e n , a s if y c 130 gallons p e r m i n u t e . T h e y w o r k w i t h b u t littlu power, A N D C A N N O T D O H A R M ,
nine ccrtlficstes of ci
• inpared with p u m p s we h a v e used before, a u d do_ not get A N D C A N N O T D O H A R M ,
C. •!. CI.ARK.
f e a r e d a f a . ' 1 c a n a y e c a r r y y e l i g h t e r t h a n D o n a l d can
it of repair, a n d are satisfactory in all respects. \ ours. i t .
WHOI.MSIJ; pttt'Giii'T,
c a r r y h a l f of y e . "
«
A N D C A N N O T DO H A R M ,
OFActcui-NG Coscra.
N E W II A YEN, C O N N ,
Hurptised nt tho vehemence of my tone, our queen
• V ' 'PropHtlnk
AND CANNOT DO HARM,
i n t e r p o s e d w i t h an admission t h a t w e w e r e b o t h strong,
For s a l s by D r u g g i s t s iu city, c o u n t r y , a n d e v e r y w h e r e .
a Club, J a n . ::
SOLON KOBJNSKIK o tho F a r
a n d t h a t .she h a d no i d e a of s n a r i n g m y p o w e r .
But
sxibly afford
F o r sale at Wholesale, by
* '
No f a r m e r who on as a w on o r cinicru e
D. S. B A R N E S & CO., New Yor*,
D o n a l d s "ire w a s k i q d l e d , a n d h o u t t e r l y d e n i e d t h a t 1 , JO w i t h o u t an i r o n p u m p . It s h o u l d be a i o n c e a s o c u o u
IF T H E DIRECTIONS ARE A D H E R E D TO
G. C. G O O D W I N * CO., Boston,
w a s a t a l l q u a l i f i e d t o c o m p e t e w i t h h i m in f e a t s of m o r a l a u d f o r c e p u m p — a p e r f e c t little tire e n g i n e — s u c h a one
jm
FARR.VND. S U E E L E Y A CO.. D e t r o i t .
IF T H E DIRECTIONS ARE A D H E R E D TO
k
n
o
w
n
a
s
••
West's
Improved
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courage. O n such t o p i c s boys aro generally emulous,
because 1 h a p p e n t o k u o w i t . . .
t o be very simple,
I F T H E DIRECTIONS A R E A D H E R E D TO
a n d b v t h e t i m e we r e a c h e d t h e o p p o s i t e b a n k , i t w a s durable, powerful a n d cheap, a n d i t d o n ' t freeze up. n o r get
T O ALE TO W H O M IT MAY CONCERN..
settled t h a t t h o p o i n t s h o u l d bo d e t e r m i n e d b y o u r s i u g l y o a t of o r d e r onco a y e a r . .
. I i n o w this, a u d t h i n k I
I F T H E DIRECTIONS A R E A D H E R E D TO 1
may bo doing the f a r m e r s good by Breaking of i t . . . A
^ J O T I C E I S H E R E B Y G I V E N T H A T AN A P I ' L i C A
b e a r i n g H e l e n a c r o s s t h e f o r d iu o u r a r m s .
tlon will be p r e s e n t e d t o the Board of S u p e r v i s o r s ol
H e l e n Was t o d e t e r m i n e w h o h a d c a r r i e d h e r m o s t boy 10 years old can w o r k it, and throw a c o n t i n u o u s inchand-a-qaarter s t r e a m . . . I t can be m a d e t o work in deep S A F E A T A L L T I M E S !
G r a n d T r a v e r s o County, at t h u i r m e e t i n g t o bo - M i d ' S t
e a s i l y , a n d I s e t t l e d w i t h m y s e l f p r i v a t e l y in a d v a n c e , t h a t
Traverse City, on Tuesday, ihe 5th day of J a n u a r y ,
Dwells aa well as i if shallow onus."
the one w h o h a d obtained tho p r e f e r e n c e w o u l d really
SAFE AT ALL TIMES 1
l s o t , p r a y i n g them t o e n a c t and provide f o r t a k i n g the
b e t h e p e r s o n w h o s t o o d h i g h e s t in h e r ' a f f e c t i o n s . T h o
T o w n s h i p 27 N o r t h of Range 13 West, t h a t now belongs to '
the A e u 1 Yvrk
Obtcrver,
SAFE AT ALL TIMES !
the T o w n s h i p of Crystal Luke, a n d o r g a n i s e the same into a
reffectiou s t i m u l a t e d mo t o e x e r t e v e r y effort, a n d I verily
Wv h a v e b a d in use f o r m o n t h s p
T o w n s h i p t o be called ALMIRA. A m a p or survey of the
S A F E A T A L L 'CIMES !
b e l i e v e t o t h i s d a y , t h a t 1 c o u l d h a v e c a r r i e d D o n a l d a n d wliicb h a s g i v e n US m o r e satisfaction a . a force an
lifting
t e r r i t o r y or T o w n s h i p t o bo effected, will aceompuny and bu
H e l e c on c i t h e r a r m like f e a t h e r s . B u t I m u s t n o t a n t i - p u m p t h a u any wc have ever used. I t i s one of gre .
a t t a c h e d to t h e a p p l i c a t i o n
,
. '
a n d well a d a p t e d f o r s h i p ' s decks, m i l OR. factors'-., greencipate!.
Dated November 9. 1S';3.
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The M i n i n g C h r o n i c l e a u d
A- P . W h u c l o c k ,
J . D . Ayera.
A . J . BnrWU,
W e suffered all t h e p a r t y t o pass quietly
a l o n g , houses,, g r a p e r i e s , Ac-, « c .
wrapped around each bottle, a n d have the written signature
H a l l w a y J o u r n a l savs :
W m . Roosa.
A n d r e w Roosa.
Edward M s i s s n .
a n d t h e n returned H e l e n w i t h t h o u t m o s t c a r e I c a r r i e d
I t Is r e c o m m e n d e d f o r its e x t r e m e s i m p l i c i t y of construc- of DR. JNO. L. LYON u p o n t h e m .
Lafayette P r a t t ,
David C. Brvan,
David Fuller,
h e r like a n i n f a n t t o ' t h e m i d d l e o f t h e Water. ' J e a l o u s y t i o u . g r e a t tUcng'.h, a u d c o n s e q u e n t d u r a b i l i t y a n d cheapS. A. P r a t t .
.
Elijah P r a t t .
Alfred Wtttkrd, i
h a d i n s p i r e d a w a r m e r love, a d d i t w a s , w i t h f e e l i n g s un- n e s s pf r e p a i r . There,1s no slutting b o x — t h e p r e w i r e b e i n g
Warren Hoxie,
.Sanford Fuller,
S. A. Manslleld.
k n o w n W o r e t h a t I e m b r a c e d h e r b e a u t i f u l f o r m , a n d held by a c u p packing, like that upon the w o r k i n g piston,
George Fuller.
A d d i s o n White.
G. H. William*.
N
O
N
E
O
T
H
E
R
S
A
R
E
G
E
N
U
I
N
E
w o r k i n g i u j i cylinder, fitted f o r the purj>obi} w i t h i n the upJ a m e s Hlgglns,
J . B. M a n w a r l n g ,
H i r a m Ilowen,
felt t h e p r e s s u r e o f h e r c h e c k n g a i n s U n i u o .
Ail went
per air c h a m b e r — w h i c h we thin!; a g r e a t Improvement, a i
Orlne Foster,
Amasa MafHllslrf,
N O N E O T H E R S A R K G E N U I N E ! Sylvester Cole,
s w i m m i n g l y o r r a t h e r w a d i u g l y f o r a m i n u t e . B u t a l a s in utufUIng i s s o liatilo t o be d e r a n g e d , a n d leak u n d e r s t r o n g
J o b n 11, Lake,
J a m e a M . Fuller,
P, W McCrea.
NONE OTHERS ARK GENUINE !
t h e v e r y d e e p e s t p a r t o f t h e f o r d , I t r o d on a t r e a c h e r o u s pressure, to say n o t h i n g of t b o loas bv t r i c t i u u i n c i d e n t
C. L l h k l e t t e r ,
Zlna P r a t t ,
A W. Heather,
b i t of w o o d w h i c h r e s t e d , I s u p p o s e on a s m o o t h s t o n e . t h e r e t o . It has aluo two air c h a m b e r * : t h u s the action of t h e
(50-4w.)
N O N E O T H E R S A R E G E N U I N E ! M. t i . Follett
0 * c r X r o l l e d , b e a r i n g H e l e n w i t h m e , b o r d i d wo r i s e •alvc i s c u b h i o n e d u p o n b o t h sides V-y air— ]»iev. n t i n g waterh a m m e r , and vacum-thump. The valves are very accVssible.
ti|l fairly soaked f r o m bead t o foot.
' simply a n d cheaply repaired. They work much easier
STRAY H E l F E R i
.
I n e e d n o t d e s c r i b e t h e t a u n t s of D o n a j d o r t h e m o r e t h a n a n y p u m p we h a v e e v e r seen ; the 4 i n c h cylinder be- B E W A R E O F C O U N T E R F E I T S !
a c c u s i n g s i l c o c e of H e l e n .
B o t h b e l i e v e d t h a t I h a d "ng worked by c h j l d r c u iu wells 100 feat deep, a n d as tluiy
AKEN UP BY ME ABOUT SLX WEEKS AGO.
B E W A R E OF COUNTERFEITS !
f a l l e n f r o m racro w e a k n e s s , a n d m y iijral d e m o n s t r a t e d ire e x t r e m e l y c h e a p a s well as s i m p l e a n d s t r o n g , we freely
n e a r P i n e River, on the Ncwsygo Road, a Brown H e i f e r
BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS !
about t h r o e y e a r s old- T h e o w n e r Is ftqucsted t o prOVu
h i s s u p e r i o r a b i l i t y b y b e a r i n g h e r a d i s t a n c e ou o u r homo- recommend t h e m .
property, pay c h a r g e s a n d take her away.
w a r d p a t h . A s w e a p p r o a c h e d t h e h o u s e , H e l e n , feelBEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS !
fl.
Gi. N'.ck L. I.. 1800.
H E N R Y II R U T H E R F O R D .
ing dry and bettor humored, a t t e m p t e d to conciliate me.
I have im-d t h i s p u m p f o r o n e s u m m e r a:
Traverse, D e c e m b e r ! , 1803.
51-tfw
B u t I p r e s e r v e d a m o o d y s i l e u c c . 1 w a s m o r t i f i e d b e - posed t o the North-West wind c o m i n g o n Ulg Isiai
Sound, being tliocoldest posslbk exposure, t
yond redress.
They c e r e all those i l l s t o which the female s y s t e m is s u b j e c t
T h a t n i g h t I p a c k e d u p a f e w t h i u g s a n d r n a a w a y . did it freeze, u o r were we u n a b l e at any t i m e to p u m p I
cd with d i s p a t c h and a degree of c e r t a i n t y which n o t h i n g but
with great ease.
U- B. MCILYA
My boyish miud, sensativo aud iritutcd. exaggerated the
n scientifically compounded Bold preparation could reachn e g a t i o n w h i c h i t h a d recived, a n d p r o m p t e d me t o
• We.
T h e u n d e r s i g n e d , hi i-uig tc
b e t t e r r e s u l t s t h a n g e n e r a l l y a t t o u d s u c h i r r e g u l a r i t i e s . c h e e r f u l l y r e c o m m e n d t h e m a s simple, d u r a h
I w e n t t o E d i n g b t i r g w h e r e I f o u n d a o a n c l e , a k i n d - 'In r a i s i n g and t h r o w i n g Water, a n d for t h e i r ease of action, T S E N O O T H E R i
h e a r t e d , c h i l d l e s s m a n , w h o g i n d l y g a v o m c a p l a c e in h i s s e c a r i t y a g a i n s t frost, a n d low price, wo believo t h e m supe- U S E N O O T H E R I
r i o r t o all o t h e r s .
h o u s e , oncf e m p l o y e d m e in b i s b u s i n e s s . W e a l t h flowed
W a a i t r a L E L i i i n . Met. Hotel New York.
USE NO O THER !
Mich., Merrill Block*
upon him. 1 becamo bis partner—went abroad—resided
J . W. PoMEkov. \ o n k e r t . N. V.
USE NO OTHER !
C o r n e r o l ' W o o d w a r l Ac J o i l e r a o n A v e n u e * .
f o u r y e a r s o u t h e c o n t i n e n t , a n d E n a l y returned t o S c o t -
C O E ' S
C O U G H BALSAM.
£3
STUBJ3011N C O U G H ,
'fVcwV
T
B R Y A N T & STRATTON*S
CHAIN OF NATIONAL
; f.
MERCANTILE COLLEGES.
3Sranch L o c a t e d at Detroit,
l a n d r i c h , e d u c a t e d , io s h o r t , e v e r y t h i n g b u t m a r r i e d .
O n e e v e n i n g w h i l e a t a ball in G l a s g o w , I w a s s t r u c k
b y a l a d y o f u n p r e t e n d i n g a p p e a r a n d ' , w h o s o remarkable
b e a u t y a u d h i g u - t o n e d e x p r e s s i o n i n d i c a t e d a m i u d of
m o r e than ordinary power. I was introduced, b u t the
S c o t t i s h n a m e s h a d long been unfamiliar t o my e a r , and
I could not c a t c h hers.
I t wos H e l e n something, and
t h e r e w a s s o m e t h i n g ' in t h o face, t o o , t h a t s e e m e d f a m i l i a r — s o m t h i n g s u g g e s t i v e of p l e a s u r e a n d p a i n .
B u t w e b e c a m e well a c q u a i n t e d t h a t e v e n i n g . I learn« d w i t h o u t difficulty h e r history. S h e was
from
the
conhtry, h a d b e e n e d u c a t e d , h e r parents had lost
t h e i r p r o p e r t y , a n d s h e w a s n o w g o v e r n e s s of a f a m i l y of
the city.
'
,
[. .
I w a s f a s c i n a t e d w i t h h e r flpnversaiiou, a n d was cont i n u a l y reminded of h e r g r a c e feud relmment of
manner
t h a t s h e w a s c a p a b l e of m o v i n g w i t h d i s t i n g u i s h e d
success in a f a r h i g h e r s p h e r e t h a n t h a t w h i c h f o r t u n e seeme d to have allotted her.
I was uaturally not talkative,
n o r p r o n e t o c o n f i d e n c e ; b u t t h e r e "was t h a t in t h i s
y o u n g lady which inspired b o t h , a o d ' I conversed with her
as I never conversed w i t h any person;
H e r questions of
the various countries which 1 was familiar indicated a
remarkable
k u o w l e d g e of l i t e r a t u r e , i n d a n i n c r e d i b l e
s t o r e of i u f o t m a t i o n .
W e p r o g r e s s e d in i n t i m a c y , a n d 8 3 o u r c o n v e r s a t i o n
t u r n e d on t h e c a u s e w h i c h i n d u c e d s i m a n y t o l e a v e
t h e i r n a t i v e land, I l a u g h i n g l y remarked t h a t I o w e d m y
o w n t r a v e l s t o f a l l i n g w i t h a p r e t t v girl i n t o a f o r d .
I h a d h a r d l y s j w k e n t h e s e w o r d s ejre t h o b l o o d m o u n t e d t o h e r face, and was succco d e d b y a r e m a r k a b l e palen e s s . I a t t r i b u t e d i t t o t h o h e a t of t h e r o o m — l a u g h e d
— a n d n t h e r r e q u e s t p r o c e e d e d t o relate m y f o r d a d v e n t u r e with Helen G r a h a m , pointing in glowing colors tho
amibility of m y l o v e
H e r m i r t h d u r i n g t h e recital b c c a m c i r r e p r e s s i b l e . A t
the conclusion she remarked ;
;• M r . R o b e r t s , i s i t p o s s i b l e t h a t y o u h a v e f o r g o t t e n
J N O . MESSUKEAV
N. Y
PoiliMCS l.» WHENCE. W e s t c h e s t e r
F o r my d r o p s stand before the world a s the r e plus u l t r a of
C a m b r i d g e Mlnc.N. C'.. J u n e 13, I S O .
all remedies, . f o r t h o cure of all diseases of the k i d n e y s a n d
C e n t s , — T h e p u m p which I o r d e r e d fj>r onr Mine is re- bladder, Leucorcoh, Prolapsus, a n d t h o mild, but positive
ceived a u d put to w o f k Jo our uudorlay . - t u f . . wiiic-i we are
of all irregularities.
s i n k i n g . We find t h a t one man will wi;h case lift
gallons
p e r m i n u t e W c l i f t e d in three a n d a p i l f h o o r s all the water in tho s h a f t , w h i c h meu-tsres seven by t w e l v e feet a n d 30
feet d e e p , and it was f u i l when we c o m m e n c e d . It answer.!
DO N O T BE I M P O S E D U P O N
our e x p e c t a t i o n s in e v e r y respect, a n d o a r w o r k m e n are
DO NOT BE IMPOSED U P O N
h i g h l y pleased with it. It will do g r o a t s e r v i c e w i t h but
trilling e x p e n s e l o r ropnirs
DO NOT B E IMPOSED U P O N
Yours, respectfully.
E l a n HIUCINS.
DO NOT B E IMPOSED U P O N
We havo p l e n t y more such certificate!, b a t t h i n k t h e r e are
e n o u g h F o r Pumps, llo»e. P i p e , e t c , a d d r e s s or r a i l upon
York, P h i l a d e l p h i a , A l b a n y , Bufialo, C l c t c ' . n u d , C h i c a g o ,
Louis,Brooklyn. Troy, Portland and Toronto.
,
A p e r s o n h o l d i n g a s c h o l a r s h i p Can a t t e n d e i t h e r a l liis
option.
'
Terms.
T u i t i o n p s y a b l e in a d v s n i e by p n r c l i e ; e of s c h o l s ; s L i p
6til for f u l l t e i m . t a m e course tor L a d l e s , S ' i k
Students t o cater at any tiiue. Average time t o complete
the course, t h r e e m o n t h s .
A k n o w L - d g - o f t h e o r J i n a r y E n g l i s h l , r a n c h e s if a u f f i c i c n
p r e p a r a t o i y t« e n t e r i n g u p o n the course of s t u d y .
J . H. GOLDSMI'I H . R e s i d e u t P r i n c i p a l S t D e t r o l i .
J . F. SPALDINO, Assisunt.
The most thorough, practical and truly popnltr Collrpts
in Am?>lca. O v e r s i x t h o u s a n d s t u d i u t e h a v i e n t c t c d t i n e
j p : WEST A c o ,
their establishment, which is the Lest evidence o l t b t i r
III! r.roa.lwar, N Y.
by those who have o t h e r p r e p a r a t i o n s , which tbev desire ti
f s v o r w i t h The p u b l i c .
palm off u p o n the i tn-ngth of the popularity of my Drop*,
F o r f n r t h c r i n f o r m a t i o n please e k l t a t C o l l e g e T o c n i s . c r
end t h e i r own n o s t r u m s , t h u s appropriate sei.d f o r a aew C a t a l o g u e e l ,b0 p a g e s . P o r s p e c i m e n * < !
o themselves Iihe c o n s t a n t d e m a n d for m y P e r i o d i c a l P e i . m i n a h i p , i n c l o s e l e t t e r s t s m p . A C d r e s s . •
B R Y A N T A S T R A T T O N , nt a l t h c r o l t h e a b o v e C i t i e s .
Drops, a s a m e d i u m for selling s o m e t h i n g t h a t is w o r t h l e s s
( C u t t h i s o u t f o r future relerence.;
^S-ly
(
and inefficient. B n t when the Druggist yon apply t o has not
AVING JUST RETURNED FROM THE OUTRIDE got thcio. o t h e r make h i m buy t h e m f o r you,
world, we aro p r e p a r e d n o t only to enli,:Uten the ladies
e Dollar t o the nearest g e n e r a l wholeaale agent, w h o will
as r e g a r d s F a l l a n d Winter S t y l e s ol Jlvliuels, i i a t s . Cica .s.
AND
Dressss. &c.. but also to f u r n i s h our cust. iuers with vcrv r e t u r n you a bottle by r e t u r n E x p r e s s
m a n y articles w h i c h wc h a v e lately added t " w r stock, stich
You will thus save voorselrca trouble and o b t a i n relief
as Cloves, H a n d k e r c h i e f s C o t l a r s 4>re-s T r i m m i n g s of differe n t k i n d s . H o o d s Nubias, Worsted I'odersleeves, C h i l d r e n - f r o m the g r e a t e s t F«uia!e Regulator of the N i n e t e e n t h CenS k a t i n g Caps, I^tdieH a n d Child reus Bklmoral Hose, Belts.
Shawl an<l l l a i r Pins, F a n c y Cloak Triinings, B t n o u s , Pic.-. tury.
Needles, Thread, Ac., .Vc.
"TTTTILL IXM3ATB L A N D S . P A Y T A X E S . B U Y O R 8E1.1.
Over 25.100 Bottles of t h i s tnedlefne h a r e been sold w i t h i n
We h a v e a l s o L a d i e s C l o t h s , .and a Wheeler A W i l j o n
W
o n C o m m i s s i o n — a n d now o f f e r s f o r s a l e .
the last six m o n t h s , a n d every L a d y t h a t h a s nsed t h e m , b u t
Sewing Machine enables us to n j S n f a c t n r e Cloaks t o o r d e r
D t i ' s s C a t t i n g a n d Mnkinn. S h i r t Mailing and all k i n d s of for t h s n a t u r e of the cure, would f u r n i s h a s with h e r s w o r n
s e w i n g a n d m a c h i n e s t i t c h i n g d o n e ' w i t h a v i e w to s e l l
certificate of their efficacy. I t t a k e s but one Dollar t o make A n d L o t s w i t h o r w i t h o u t D w e l l i n g s i n F J k R a customer*. Give us a call and o x a m i n t o u r stock ami prices.
the e x p e r i m e n t , a n d I appeal t o t h o s e of y o u r sex w h o are
ADA K. S l ' K A O G E .
pids, the Connty S c a t of A n t r i m County.
MARY F_ BOSTWICK.
snfferinc—trill you waste away when a s i n g l e Dollar will
T h e above m e n t i o n e d l a n d s a r e lodatcd i n A a t r i m . T r a
T r a v e r s e City, Nov:, IMS.
50-3m.
give you i n s t a n t r e l l e t
r e r s e Leelanau, and Manitou C o u n t l e a .
Are among th*
e a r l i e s t and best s e l e c t i o n s with refcrcrfce t o soli, w a t e r , s u r A T H , SIDING, CHERRY, OAK. MAPLE, WHITE
P r e p a r e d solely by Dr. J j r o . L . L r o x . P r a c t i c i n g Physi- f a c e to* m a r k e t s .
T h e y e m b r a c e f a r m i n g lat.ds. r i l l s c e
^ s h , a n d all k i n d s of s e a s o n e d ^'ine l u m b e r k e p t on
sites, water powers, w i t h o r w i t h o u t I m p r o v e m e n t s , a n d t h e
h a n d ; a n d F r a m i n g timber, J o i s t s a n d S c a n t l i n g sawed f r o m cian.
choicest localities for Propeller and Steamer wooding sts
P r i c e $1 p e r bottle.
t w e n t y t o t h i r t y f e e t in l e n g t h , and f o r sale a ! the Mills of
t i o n s . or wood f u r n i s h i n g s t a t i o n s f o r C h i c a g o m a r k e t . A ' l
I gazed an instant,
remobered—and
was dumb-founded. the subscriber.
C. G. C L A R K 4 CO..
on t h e ffr<-xt L a k e t h o r o u g h f a r e , a c c e s s a b l e t o m a r k e t s
T h e lady w i t h w h o m 1 h o d b e c o m e acquainted was H e l GEO. W . B R Y A N T .
Duroorsrs.
I or West. C a n be h a d iu q u a n t i t i e s t o s o l t p h r c b a s e r a , a n d
T
r
a
r
s
r
s
e
CHy.
Mich.,
A
u
g
.
IS.
1863.
S5-Gm*
e n G r a h a m herself.
New H a v e n . C o n a .
j at p r i c e s m a k i n g i t s n o b j e c t In p r e f e r e n c e to b u y i n g b a c k
I h a t e , o n d so d o y o u reader, t o needlessly p r o l o n g a
I
General
A
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e
n
t
s
f
o
r
United
S
t
s
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s
s
a
d
C
t
n
a
o
a
s
.
NOTICE.
atorv.
W e were soon m a r r i e d — H o f e n and I m a d e o u r
STATE M T O » .
Wholesale D e s l e r s s n d t b s T r a d e supplied a t t h a P r o p r i e - ,
b r i d a l t o u r t o t h e old p l a c e . A s wo a p p r o a c h e d in o u r
n E I*O6T 0 F F I C E AT T R A V E R S E C I T Y , W I L L BE
\ r m sell c h o i c e l a n d * , f o r f a m i n g , f e n c i n g , c e d a r r 0 " "
{ p e n on S u n d a y s between the h o u r s of half post twelve j t o r ' s p»iess. by
s n d t i m b e r purpose®, in a l l p a r t s of t h e C o u n t y < or will #e
c a r r i a g e , I g r e e t e d a s t o u t follow w o r k i n g in a field, w h o
L
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4
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a
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half
past
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P.M.,
a
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L a n d s of t h e i r s e l e c t i o n on s s l i b e r a
s e e m e d t o bo a b e t t e r s o r t of a l a b o r e r , o r p e r h a p s a
t h i s date.
WBOLCSAIS D a r o m s r i .
t e r m " u can be p u r c h a s e d o f t h s S M M .
small farmer, b y i n q u i r i n g some p a r t i c u l a r s
relating
to
C R MARSH. P H
?rsi«r«> Ollf.
" • IMi.
31 l-sk» P t r e e v Ckieago, IH
t h e n e i g h b o r h o o d . " H e a n s w e r e d well e n o u g h , a n d I w a s
T r a v e r s e City, D e c I. l W 3 .
51 J »
mc t"
J . D . WEST & C o . :
i ' a l l a n d " W i n t e r o f 18(53 & 4-.
N E W G O O D S for thio I ^ A 1 > I E S .
H
R E A L
GENERAL
E S T A T E S
LAND
• -JL.
OFFICE
A L B E R T W. B A C O N ,
11600 Acres of L*hoice Jaiuhj
L
T
Document Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Newsprint
Text
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