Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, July 31, 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
1863-07-31
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
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None
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PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
gth-07-31-1863.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
GRAND TRAVERSE HERALD.
T R A V E R S E CI^TY, M I C H . F R I D A Y , J U L Y 31^1803.
VOL. V.
F o r toe Grand Traverse Herald.
Pscudo Democratic Comistency. •
®|e <gmh Crabtat SftaKi,
IB rUBLlflHXn BVBBT WMBAT.A*!
Traverse City, G r a n d Traverse Cownty, Michigan
•MOBGAN'BATES,
U I T O B AJTO PBOPBIIIOB.
T K R M 8 .
O n e D o l l a r a n d BHffcjr C e n t * , F a y n b l * i n v a riably In ndTanoe.
• „
.
AnVBBTiSBMBxrs i n s e r t e d f o r O M D o l l a r p e r s q u a r e (ten
l i n e s ) f o r t h e Crst i n s e r t i o n , Bnd twenty-five c t p t s f o r each
s u b s e q u e n t i n s e r t i o n . Yearly A d r e r t l s e m e n t e — $ 1 0 f o r one
s q u a r e ; $20 f o r t h r e e s q u s r e s ; $30 f o r half a < o l u m n ; « p d
$ 5 0 f o r o n e c o l u m n . L e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s a t t h e r a t e s jiifea c r i b e d b y l a w ; fifty c « n U per folio of 100 words, f o r t h V
flrstinsertioa,
a n d tsrenty-five cent* f o r each s u b s e q u e n t ly very f i g u r e c o u n t s a word. . F i g u r e w o r k w i t h o u t rales, 60
p e r c e n t a d d e d . B a l e a n d figure work, d o a b l e price.
All l e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s t o be paid f o r s t r i c t l y in a d v
No. 1.
FBIBXD BATE.",—This seem* t o be a good t i m e t o c o n t r a s t
le action of t h i s Simeon-pure p a r t y with the claim* they
urge so venomously u p o n P r e s i d e n t L i n c o l n ; t o enable y o u r
r e a d e r s t o meet t h e m with solid a r g u m e n t s on ail point*.—
The P. D e m o c r a t s will observe t h a t I am again Rreatly indebted to their Bible f o r my t e x t s , a n d t o the f a t h e r of t r u e
Democracy a n d to hcuiest Old Hickory f o r m y a r g u m e n t s .
LIBERTY o r SI-EBCU AND TOE PBEHS.
Pscudo D e m o c r a t i c o r g a n s a n d leaders claim the u t m o s t
liberty to discourage the people a n d to e m b a r r a s s the gove r n m e n t in c a r r y i n g on t h e n a r ; a n d t o e n c o u r a g e the rebels to persevere in killing Yankees, by all m e a n s t r u e or
false. They invoke heaven a n d earth t o help t h e m damn
Gen. Burnsido a n d act the people a g a i n s t Lincoln f o r arresti n g Vallandigbam who had octaaily persuaded the t r a i t o r s of
southern Illinois, l u d i a n a , a n d many in O h i o to a r m themselvos f o r r e s i s t i n g the draft, a n d h a d fired r e v o l v e r s at t h e
Soldiers' Home, filled with invalid aoldicrs ; at the residon"
of m a n y loyal p e r s o n s j and at a m o t h e r w i t h h e r child
in h e r a r m s w h o s e head they grazed w i t h a ball, when Gen.
Bascal s t o p p e d them, r e t u r n i n g f r o m t h e i r C o n v e n tio n , by
p l a n t i n g h i s c a n n o n a c r o s s t h e railroad a n d t o o k n e a r l y
fifteen h u n d r e d revolvers and a g r e a t many k n i v e s from
them. And now—to Bhow t h e i r i n d l g n a t l o a at t h i s vile
t r a i t o r ' s arrest, who boasted, irihis last speech, t h a t ho h a d
always voted, in Congress, a g a i n s t e v e r y g r a n t of men and
money to carry on the war—they h a v e actually n o m i n a t e d
h i m for Governor of Ohio, (governor Seymour, of N. Y ,
aald, i n his last message, t h a t g r e a t e s t State must " p a u s e "
W ° p ) g r a n t i n g men a n d money for the war till L i n c o l n
s t o p s m a k i n g arrests for t r e a s o n a b l e s p e e c h e s a n d p r i n t i n g .
B u t t h e loyal masses of the E m p i r e , S t a t e r e f u s e t o pause.—
Those who had j u s t r e t u r n e d at the e x p i r a t i o n of t h e i r t e r m .
r u s h i n g back again t o c o n t i n u e f i g h t i n g the battles of
freedom, and t h o u s a n d s of o t h e r s a r c f o l l o w i n g in t h e i r
wake, voluntarily. W h a t will t h e G o v e r n o r do with his disobedient subjects ? Will he call t h e m baok ? Rather an ngiy
r e b u k e t o a G o v e r n o r w h o h a s j u s t t a k e n t h e first step on
ladder. Bnt there i s no r o o m f o r m o r e evidence
t h a t Pseudo Democrats claim u n lim ite d liberty t o ensure the
of the rebellion, by speech a n d the P r e s s . I n short,
t h e y c o n t e n d that no person s^all DC p r e v e n t e d d o i n g any
t h i n g e x c e p t i n g c o m m i t t i n g actual, treason which consist*
in actually doing some o v e r t a c t ; a n d t h a t , even, in t h i s
case, t r a i t o r s shall bo t r i e d l>y t h o s e w h o m they havo made
t r a i t o r s at their homes.
'
{.
Now behold how P . D e m o c r a t s s u p p o r t liberty of speech
a n d t h e P r e s s for o t h e r s
Ever slncc t h e rebellion was ina u g u r a t e d a t G u a p t e r , t h t y h a v e m o s t stroftuoualy contended that f o r every s o u t h e r n rebel that is h u n g , a n Abolitionist
should dangle a t t h e . o t h e r o n d of the r o p e .
F o r what ?
Ana, Solely tor e x e r c i s i n g t h i s v e r y liberty of speech a n d
t h e I'res®—forj?rogposticating w h a t h a s actually come t o
in c o n s e q a e n c e of Slavery a s d for calling o u r glorious.
U. 8 . Constitution an a g r e e m e n t with d e a th and a c o m p a c t
w i t h h e l l , " b e c a u s e i t r e c o g n i s e s slavery. T h e Abolitionists
' did, and n e v e r proposed to do any t h i n g b n t agitate
slavery b y speech a n d t h e i'ruas till t h e p e o p l e should peacefully abolish It—th«j a r e now—resistant* almost to a m a n . —
A n d f o r tills a g i t a t i n g P . Derpftcrats woaid h a n g t h e m no
doubt, If they had the power. W h a n Wendell P h i l i p s was
Btoned I n C i n c i n n a t t i for lecturing on slavery the D e t r o i t
F r e e P r e s s of March 2G, 1902, said,—•-Mr. Philips h a s n o t a
p t r t i c l e o f o u r s y m p a t i i y f o r t h e t r e a t m e n t he received at
Cincinnattl. H e did n o t g e t o n e tenth part of h i s d e s e r t s 1"
A g a in , w h e n Phillps^vaa r e f u s e d t h e use of Y o u n g M e n ' s
in Detroit, tho Free Press, said, March 29, 1862,—" I t
would canso u s less pain t o see t h a t beautiful edifice, the
Y o n n g Men's Hal!, laid in ashes t h e n it would to know t h a t
s o large, i n t e l l i g e n t a n d Influential a body of o a r citizens
w e r e s o lost t o all self-respeot a n d a l l senso of p a t r i o t i c duty,
t o i n v i t e a traitor, w h o sliamefnlly boasts of b Is treason, t o
leotnre t o o u r citizens on a n y s a l j e c t 1" If actiona are allowed t o testify, t h e E d i t o r s h a v e changed places with
P h i l i p s who gives both time a n d money to c o n q u o r the
bels, while t h e y dolall t h e y can t o p r e v e n t it.
In the last
m e n t i o n e d article the F r e e P r e s s continues,—" If such a
(as Wendell P h i l i p s ) i s t o be allowed b y t h e officers of tho
G o v e r n m e n t to peaceably p r e a c h s u c h disunion s e n t i m e n t s ,
Wq know no g o o d r e a s o n why Yaacqy a n d Toombs, or C o b b
and W i g f a l l m a y n o t also bo p e r m i t t e d to come a m o n g
a n d p r e a c h t h e i r t r e a s o n to .the p u b l i c 1" Mind, the Free
P r e s s is a r g u i n g a g a i n s t the g o v e r n m e n t p e r m i t t i n g abolit i o n i s t s preaching 1 w h a t it calls treason, a n d h a s advocated
h a n g i n g t h e m f o r d o i n g so. N o w t h i s p r e a c h i n g treason to
t h e people a n d m a k i n g traitors of h o n e s t persous, is exactly
w h a t the G o v e r n m e n t h a s sfepped Vallandigbam doing a
the very time when b a n d s of t h o t r a i t o r s he had made w e r
a r m i n g themselves all around h i m for active o p e r a t i o n s
a n d the F r e e P r e s i n o w denounces the a c t daily, with all the
venoin of a t r u e C b p p e r h e o i B n t May 28, 18C3, the F r e e
P r e s s s a i d , — " T h o views of Vallandlgham have n o t h i n g
w i t h t h o question.
T h e s a m e feeling would h a v e been
aroused if Mr. G r e e l e y or W e n d e l l P h i l i p s h a d been arrested
a n d t h r o w n i n t o p r i s o n f o r e x e r c i s i n g the r i g h t s guaranteed
to t h e m u n d e r t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n , " Mind, all t h i s time the
F r e e P r e s s was e d i t e d by Walker, Taylor a n d Barns who
trol It now.
I t is indeed probeblo t h a t t h e same feelings would have
been aroused if Gjrtictay o r p h i l i p s ^ a d been arrested f o r
p r e a c h i n g " t r e a s o n " (?) by peaceable'means ; b u t n o t in the
m i n d s of pseudo D e m o c r a t s . I t s e e m s m u c h easier f o r t h e
leopard t o o h a n g e h i s s p o t s t h a n f o r t h e m t o become truly
loyal a n d c o n s i s t e n t citizens.
They have uniformly and
continually a d v o c a t e d b a n g i n g of Abolitionists ( a n i o n *
whom inost of t h e m class al! Republicans), a n d e n c o u r a g e d
mobs t o p r e v e n t t h e i r a d d r e s s i n g t h e people a g a i n s t slavery.
The a t t e n t i o n ol the F r e e P r e s s e d i t o r s h a s no ' d o u b t been
called t o t h e i n c o n s i s t e n c y of thieir c o n d u c t ; a n d t o Smooth
it over they considered i t necessary t o publish t h e above
r e n u n c i a t i o n or or apology {or i t ; but the cloven foot still
s t i c k s o u t a n d the h o r n s of a t le a s t i m p l i e d treason still
b r i s t l e ; and w i l l c o n t i n u e t o d o s o u n t i l they cease \<i try
a l a r m and discourage the people's enlisting, by c o n t i n u i n g
t o h a r p v o o n the. w a r debt, u p o n t h e impossibility of conq u e r i n g t h e rebefvupon the c o n j u r e d o p ( u t t e r l y false) dan-
Al Kiids «f Job Priitiig NeaUy Expeditwsh ExemUd.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE AT, TRAVERSE CITY, IICII.
Register
Receiver
MORGAN BATE8.
REUBEN GOODRICH.
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
J u d g e of P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I 8 F J ^ E R . M a p T c t o n
S h e r i f f . . . . . . . ; . ; - - . — B . F . D A M B , Traverae t i l y .
County Treasurer
MORGAN BATfMjTrar.City.
C o u n t y Clerk.
JAMES P. BgAND,
, A
Register ol Deeds
5E8„P.'«?S^
'
,
Proa. Attorney
C. H . M A ^ i
Circuit Court Com.-.C. H . M A R S H ,
*
Coroner*
L. R. SMITH,
ElkBspids.
R O B E R T L E E , Ccntreville.
O. H . M A R S H ,
aitii Conrafttor
at
**D
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k D O N V E T A N O E R ,
Traverse City, Grand Traverse County, Mich.
Offlce In D w e l l i n g H o u a e .
1-ly
J . Or. R A M S D E L L ,
Attorney &OounsselloratLaw,
TRAVKR9K orrv,
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
REFERENCES:
! ! » 0,o.
J . B,vr-ct. J.IIIOO.
— . J . n . . . y , C.mst^n, 1. " ~ - I — f L U « r K ^ L . U h . l * M l a t . *W>
TKAVTCRSB o r r v
E X C H A N G E .
THIS HOUSE IB NOW Ol'RSKn TOR Tire BEXKFIT O* THE
T E A V E I i l S G
P U B
i j ^ O j
t-KDBKTJlB BVrBBJKTBBDBVCBOJ'
CHARLES
W.
- i r GIVE HIM A
DAY.
CALL. J f £
a w. D.
T r a v e w e Olty, May l y i B M .
.
GTJNTONHOTJSE
J A M E S K . OTJaSTTOK-.
(ON STABLIHfi MIDTOlAMD BEDS*
T U B l a t h . U ™ « t H0..1. with tail
in the c i t y ; t h e leading D u l y and Weekly Pape ™
h e r e a n d no p a i n s will be s p a r e d t o make g n c a u c p m f o r t a b l o ,
a n d elevnn y e a » ' re?lden«« h e r e wlU enable me t o gjVe reliab l e i n f o r m a t i o n r e l a t i v e t o t h e reaoureel' o f C i e c o u n t r y .
fr
J >
-Jd-ly
K t
G
FAIRBANKS'
STANDARD
O
A
L
E
S
O P ALL KINDS.
S o l d i n D e t r o i t by ? A R R A N D A 8 H E L E Y .
B e c a r e f u l t o buy only t h e g e n u i n e .
C-ly.
J a n u a r y 33, 1803.*
ESTABLISHED
1760-
P E T E R LOIULLVRD,
S N U F F AND TOBACCO MANUFACTURER
1 0 it i s C h a m b e r s S t . ,
' ( F 9 r m e r l y 42 Chambera 8 t r t e t , New York,)
W o u l d call the a t t e n t i o n of Dealers t o t h e articles of h i s
manufacture, vis-:
BROWN
u — . w
"
S
U
i
^rtefetieman,
SNl'FF.
Demlgros,
1>Q
Nachltoehw,
Copenhagen.
Y E L L O W SNUXFr
Honey Dew S c o t c h ,
F r e s h H o n e y Dew 8 c o t c h ,
Freeh Scotch. ,
I r i s h H i g h Toast,
or L u a d y f o o t ,
ZST A t t e n t i o n is called t o t h e l a r g«ec r e d u c t i o n i n prh.«>
w h i c h will be
o f Fine-Cut CheWlng a n d 8 m o k i n g T'obaccos,
ob
f o u n d of a S u p e r i o r Q u U l t f .
TOBACCO.
HOdM.
FIKB COT CltKwlNQ.
&.Jago
I/fng.
P . A. U , o r plain,
Kj 1
Cavendish, or Sweet,
. .
v_ j
S w e e t S c e n t e d Oronoco, Canaster,
No*.'I A 3 m i x e d .
T i n F o i l Cavendish.
Turkish
Granulated.
•JT. B . — A c l r t n l a r of p r i c e s w i l l b e a c n t on a p p l i c a t i o n .
Pcotcb.
N O . 33.
g e r t h a t Lincoln i s g o i n g t o abolish the privilege of voting for approval ; and George E Pujgh, now on the ticket with
a n d become a despot, and upon many o t h e r equally foolish Vallandlgham for L i e u t e n a n t Governor o r O h i o , said : " Sir.
topics—all of which they know tlo be u t t e r l y void of a n y I r e g r e t the necessity for s u c h ; legislation ; but wherever
slavery exists as an Institution,;laws of t h a t c h a r a c t e r m o s t foundation.
be adopted." (See Con. Globe, A p p e n d i x , p 610). A n d all
a f t e r the inauguration of B u c h a n a n — t h e last g r e a t tho big d o g s and little whiffcte ojf tho D e m o c r a t i c party j v i p leader of the P Democracy, especially of the s o u t h e r n w i n g ed A m e n , " let's have i t for Kansas 1" B u t f r o m t h i s Demo
—lie consented t h a t all n o r t h e r n p a p e r s t h a t said any t h i n g party the Noble Douglas led awyy a vast t r a i n of true demoa g a i n s t slavery, m i g h t (should) be destroyed by S o u t b e n i c r a t s ; a n d for so d o i n g was r e a l o u t or the party * y the old
Postmasters, which is t a n t a m o u n t t o abolishing the freedom leaders. However, since he is fsonehia followers—the t h e n
of the Press, for b u t few p a p e r s could live a single y e a r with- comeouters—are like " the lostBhecpof the the house of Isand it is t o be feared many of t h e m h a v e returned t o
cirrulation by mail.
W h e r e were t h e Copperhead
sticklers f s r the f r e e d o m of the P r e s s t h e n ? Did any person their vomit.
,
IL R. 8 .
ever hear any of t h e m say or write a single word in defence
A Black Snake a n d a Copperhead.
of t h e Constitutional right of f r e e d o m of the Press, t h e n , in
Tulltics makes s t r a n g e bed fellows, but the snecics or bed
times of peace ? No ! I t was indispensable to t h e success o l fellow p o s s e s s d by Mr. A n d r e t i s of Virginia, the leader of
t h e late New York"mob, who is, HO thoroughly e n d o r s e d by
the rebellion, inaugurated by t h a t 1'. Democratic administrathe Copperhead prints, was perfectly astonishing. It was not
tion, t o keep the loyal southern people in dark and total Igno- s u r p r i s i n g that Mr. A n d r e w s , ; of Virginia, when a r r e s t e d ,
rance of the fact t h a t our goveraracnt had actually ofltered should have had his pockets stuffed w i t h Confederate shluthem greater favors t h a n they had e v e r asked (as was ac- pla.-u.rs. I t does n o t surprise lis to learu t h a t he ha» been
instrumental in f u r n i s h i n g the rebels with vessels a n d proknowledged by the rebel Vice-President. Stephen, in t h e i r visions. These were qualilicaCons indisjiensable to a leader
secession Convention,) so that they m i g l i t b " the more eas)ly of a mob o p p o s i n g the G o v e r n m e n t . We are n o t oven enwhipped into the Slaveholders' rebellion by falsehood and tirely surprised t o l o a m t h a t Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, when
arrested, was found in a brothel, b u t w e do a c k n o w l e d g e to
force.
a large degree of a s t o n i s h m e n t t h a t his bed-fellow was a ncNo person who will reason candidly upou the facts adduc- gro-weneh.
,
Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, eta t h a t m e m o r a b l e Tuesday,
ed above, can avoid c o n c l u d i n g t h a t t h e 1>. Democratic leaders a r c opposed t o the f r e e d o m of Speech a n d the P r e s s f o r ha rangued the mob of brutes, Urging t h e m on to f r e s h s c e n e s
of bloody cruelty. D u r i n g th« day ho presided over the deany.party or person that would employ t h e m t o oust or keep struction of a charitable insti»ition erected for the benefit
t h e m from office, oven in t i m e s of peace when no immediate o r o r p b a n e d colored children. ' S c o r e s or negroes were tramh a r m conld result f r o m abuse. • B u t they are utterly opposed plod upon, butchered in cold Wood and b a n g e d t o trees a n d
to all suspension or r e g u l a t i o n of t h i s freedom, a n d consider lamp-posts at tho i n s t i g a t i o n df Mr. Andrews, of Virginia.—
H i s h a t r e d of the n e g r o was Intense, a n d well nigh p a w i n g
it Unconstitutional to s u s p e n d it, only when t h o i r owti loa- beller. The s i g h t of one t u r n e d bis blood t o gall, and bo
ders fall u n d e r t h e ban for its disloyal use.
N o m a t t e r if could not rest u n t i l be h a d butchered h i m . H i s dislike t o
t b e i r l e a d e r s e n c o u r a g e treason and t h u s p r o t r a c t the rebel- e v e n - t h i n g of A f r i c a n d e s c c n t would have satisfied any Copperhead. Alaric was not mods t h e s c o u r g e of Bome t h a n
lion, a n d by so doing sacrifice t h o u s a n d s of lives (as t h e y Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, t h e » o u r g e of tiic n e g r o . His h a t e
have already done). No m a t t e r if t h e y excite rebellion
was fearful, exquisite, a n d refined, a i d at night when ho reh o m e a n d t h u s Invite s o u t h e r n rebels to invade and devas- tired exhausted with u r g i n g tlfclr s l a u g h t e r , h e found sweet
repose from his tolls in tho artns or a negro wonclu
tate tho free States, a n d even o n d a n g e r the only pure dornoAnd the Copperheads a n d N o r t h e r n secessionists endorse
cretic government on e a r t h — t h e world's last h o p e of free- Mr. Andrews, of V i r g i n i a , t n 4 b i s course.
Involuntarily,
dom ; they still contend t h a t It Is u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l t o inter- the question arises—How manv more of the C o p p e r h e a d s a n d
n
e
g r o haters are a d d i c t e d t o N r . Andrews' e c c e n t r i c i t i e s ?—
fere with t h e i r nefarious schemes. Yea ! they declare every
Is their hatred of t h o Africau<Tlk« his, b o u n d e d by the m e r e
a c t that tends to procrastinate t h e i r own reconciliation w i t h m a t t e r of gender ? I f so, t h e n i s the g r e a t work o r amalgarebel slaveholders, and consequently p o s t p o n e s t h e i r g e t t i n g mation, which t h e y so s t u d l o i s l y c h a r g e u p o n t h e Abolitionists, likely to bo accomplished w i t h o u t t b e a i d o f t h e latter;
Into ofiice'and power again, Unconstitutional.
They
nounoc i t unconstitutional t o confiscate t h o rebols p r o p e r t y , and the A f r i c a n race proper, t o bo c x t i n c t in a few genera•weaken t h e m and s t r e n g t h e n ourselves by t a k i n g t h e i r
slaves and employing t h e m t o fight o u r battles ; because, by
c o n t e n d i n g for slavery tbe^r h o p e t o reconcllo themselves
the slaveholders without whose aid t h e y almost despair of
g e t t i n g into power and restoring the g o v e r n m e n t o
u n d e r Pierce a n d Buchanan. To-be sure, t o k e e p t h e i r followers (loyal Douglas Democrata) hoodwinked, they p r e t e n d
t o bo in favor o f « n b d u i u g t h e rebellion by c o n q u o r i n g the
rebels and by p r a i s i n g the s o l d i e r s ; but all t h e i r o t h e r measures are I n t e n d e d , snd do t e n d directly a n d powerfully, t o
m a k e the rebellion sncoesafuL O h 1 ye loyal Dougtaa Democ r a t s ! why do you still follow B r e c k c n r i d g e l e a d e r s who are
t r a i t o r s no less t h a n h e Is ? '
T o be sure " l i b e r t y of speech and of tho P r e s s is the Pallad i u m of L i b e r t y , " a n d when otnployed loyally by way of candid reasoning a n d p o i n t i n g o a t t h e mistakes, e r r o r s or misdeeds, oven or t h e P r e s i d e n t (ps t h e abolitionists, whoso pap e r s I read for years, employe^! it,) it m u s t bo sustained by
means and a t all times, f o r liberty can n o t l o n g exist withi t ; and no prominent peiSson or political party, except
t h e D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y Bnd th^lr s o u t h e r n rebel " b r e t h r e n "
h a s ever denied or even^ a t t e m p t e d t o restrain It in our
country, in time of peace, since o u r revolution or the Presidency of the elder A d a m s ; and no person h a s p r o h i b i t e d i t
in t i m e s of war, oxcept General J a c k s o n whose noble example Bumalde a t t e m p t e d t o imitate for t h e same reason. When
reasoning is e x h a u s t e d t h i s liberty h a s done all t h e good i t
do ; and, in time of rebellion, w h e r e candid loyal reas o n i n g e n d s a n d s e d i t i o n , baaed on s u b t e r f u g e a n d on conj u r i n g u p false a l a r m s a n d Issues, begins, t h e i n d u l g e n c e in
t h i s latter o a g h t t o be suppressed, t h o u g h Lincoln thinks
b e s t t o indulge i t until It becomes Indispensably n e c e s s a r y
t o prohibit It, as e m a n c i p a t i o n finally did. B e i o r e t h e N. Y.
Tribune joined the D e m o O i j g a n s l n their c r y against
government. General McClcllan cxcluded.it f r o m the army
a n d arranged m a t t e r s for the! almost exclu&ivc circularion of
the mean N. Y. Herald, t i e a e r a l Grant, who is now claimed
as a democrat by all antl-ad A i n i s t r e t l o n papers, p u t a Chicago Times e d i t o r Iflto State's P r i s o n .
No h u e or c r y V a s
raised against these Demo. Generals by P. Demo, leaders ;
b a t some or t h e i r o r g a n s t h ? n suggested the installation or a
Military Dictator, and McClellan as a fit person to be Installed.
;
The P . D e m o c r a t i c p a p e r s are publishing e x t r a c t s in defense or u n l i m i t e d freedom of Speech arid or the Press, rrem
a late speech of F r a n k l i n Ptercc. T h i s is the sairre Pierce
w h o was P r e s i d e n t of the U. 8 . w h e n the slaveholders murdered the e m i g r a n t s f r o m t h e F r e e Slates Into Kansas, witho u t the least opposition, b u t with . b i s e x p r e s s apologies f o r
t h e m and t a c i t s a n c t i o n . — H i e same Pierce w h o supported
the men t h a t destroyed newspapers only for asserting t h a t
the grand m a j o r i t y or the settlers in K a n s a s were tree state
men, and t h a t tho slaveholders bad carried t h e elections by
fraud, which w a s proved t n j e by a C o m m i t t e e or Congress.—
The same P i e r c e w h o dispensed a c o n v e n t i o n or treemen
peaceably assembled to draft a n d s u b m i t to Congress a Constitution, by s e n d i n g a troo j of U. 8. soldiers t o do the dirty
work.—Yes ! t h i s i s the sawe F r a n k l i n Pierce with whose
sanction the b o g u s legislature or Kansas, elected by votes taken f r o m a C i n c i n n a t t l Begistry. passed the following law.—
And i a n o t t h i s little (Great}) P i e r c e a very fit advocate t o
come forward now, a n d advocate rreedom of speech and of
tho P r e s s ror Copperheads, but intentionally for no body else!
Here is the law
• 8 B C . l t H a n y free p e r s o n , by s p e a k i n g o r liy w r i t i n g
assert or m a i n t a i n t h a t perse a s have not the right t o hold
slaves in t h i s T e r r i t o r y , or shall i n t r o d u c e i n t o t h i s Territory,,
print, publish, w r i t e or ciraulate. or causo to be introduced,
published or circulated In t h i s T e r r i t o r y , any book, p a p e r
magazine, p a m p h l e t or circular, c o n t a i n i n g any deuial o r the
right of persons to hold slaves in t h i s Territory, such person
shall be guilty o r relony, a n d punished by i m p r i s o n m e n t a t
h a r d labor for a term or n o t less t h a n t w o y e a r s . "
A t the first Session, 34 Congress the Kansas code, of which
the section j u s t q u o t e d is a p a r t , came before the C. 8. Benate
li
° M r Andrews, of Virginia, WSB fastidious a n d o r i g i n a l in
hi* choice. W h a t was repugBant a n d horrible in the black
masculine became e n t i c i n g Bkd lovable In t h e black femin i n e ; a n d t h i s model C o p p e r p e a d In t h s embraces of h i s
Congo D u l c i n e a attained supreme felicity. How many m o r e
happy C o p p e r h e a d s are there!? We are constrained t o believe Mr. Andrews, or Virginia, is n o t an isolation, tor b e
has f o u n d plenty of friends wfio are r u s h i n g t o his defense.
The natural historian infetrms u s t h a t the C o p p e r h e a d
a n d tbe black anake are ofleq f o u n d together, b u t we d o n o t
remember t h a t the C o p p e r h e a d seeks tho f e m i n i n e black
snake. The same peculiarity may obtain in t h e h i g h e r t y p e *
which i s the only h y p o t h e s i s w« can assume f o r t h i s s t r a n g e
ufT.iir. Mi-. Andrews, of Virginia, an K. F . V „ a chivalrous
S o u t h r o n , a n a t f t e of tho s u f l n y South, a l e a d e r or the New
Y o r k Democracy, a bosom M e n d of F e r n a n d o Wood, an « .
p o n n d e r of D e m o c r a t i c principles, a s t a u n c h uncompromisi n g foe of negroes, rivalling t h e Chicago T i m e s In Negrophobia, rising a g a i n s t the G o v e r n m e n t f o r recognizing the n e g r o
as a h u m a n being, u r g i n g ou;ana h e l p i n g t h o u s a n d s of frenzied b r u t e s t o m u r d e r s n d b u t c h e r negroes, f o u n d in a bed
in a brothel s l e e p i n g in the a r m s of a n e g r o c y p r i s n !
The Strength of Women.
F r o m the Atlantlo Monthly.
W e m u s t hold h a r d t o thfc conviction t h a t n o t merely dec e n t health, b u t oven a h i g h ' physical t r a i n i n g Is a t h i n g
thoroughly practicable for bbth sexss. If a y o u n g girl can
Ure o u t h e r p a r t n e r i n a danee, i f a delicate woman can c a n y
her baby twice a s long aa b->< athletic husband (for certainly
there is n o t h i n g in the g y m t i s l u m moVo amazing t h a n t h s
m o t h e r ' s left arm,) t h e n It ia evident t h a tti»efemaleframe
c o n t a i n s m u s e n j a r power, or*, its equivalent, t h o u g h ft may
take m u s i c or m a t e r n i t y to taring ft o u t B u t o t h e r induce- • , u a n d t h o resulta do n o t a d m i l of
merits h a v e proved- sufficient;
question. The Oriental b a y a d e r e s , f oa rre nt r at i.n^e„d
from c h i l d h o o d s s g y m n a s t s ; t h e y carry h e a v y l a r s on t h e f t
heads t o i m p r o v e s t r e n g t h , gait snd figure ; t h e y fly h i t s *
to a c q u i r e - statuesque a t t i t n d e s a n d g r a c e f u l s u r p r i s e s
.
t h e y m u s t learn t o lay the bi<ck of the h a n d flat a g a i n s t the
wrist t o partially bend the a t m in both d i r e c t i o n s a t the elbow. s n d . inclining tho whole person Backward f r o m the w a i s t ,
t o sweep the floor with t h e i r h s l r . 8o a m o n g ourselves, the
g r e a t sthletic resources of U e female f r a m e are vindicated bv
every equcstrain goddess o t the circus, every pet o f t h e b s l l e t T h o s e airy n y m p h s h a v e been educated for t h e i r vocation by a n a m o u n t of physical fatigue which t h e i r dandy ad-
Infinitely superior t o that of o r d i n a r y women, w o n d e r f u l l y
a d a p t i n g t h e m n o t only to the e x t r a o r d i n a i v , b u t t o the common perils of h e r s e x . " wltlf t h a t h a p p y u n i o n or p o w e r a n d
pliability m o s t to be desired." " T h e i r occupation d e m a n d s
an a s i o u n t o r i o n g continued m u s c u l a r energy of t h e severest
c h a r a c t e r little recognized »r understood by tbe c o m m u n i t y |
a n d his description of t h e i r h s b i t u a l Immunity in t h e o r d e a l s
or womanhood renind* one b r t h e descritlon of savage tribes.
But ft is really a Bingular retribution f o r our prolonged offwi.
ccs against the body, when »ur s a i n t s w e t h u s compelled t o
take tiiclr models from the I reputed slnnera—prize fighters
b e i n g propounded ss missionaries for the men and o p e r a
dancers for the women.
:
WILL D a s s a v t I T — " I give a n d bequeath t o Mary, my wife,
t h o sum of o n e h u n d r e d pomids a year, aaid an old f a r m e r .
• Is t h a t written down, m e o r t e r ?
- Yes," said tho l a w y e r , " b u t s h e i s n o t old; s h e may m a r r y
W o n ' t you m a k c a n ^ c h a n g e i n ' t h a t case ? M o s t p e o l C ain.
P
' D o t h e y ? " said the f a n r n r , " wall, w r i t e a g a i n , a n d ray.
t h a t If my wife m a r r i e s again. 1 will give and bequeath to her
the sum or two h u n d r e d p o j n d s s j'ear. That'll do, won I ft
B1
- ' w b v , ? f t ' s double tho s u m she would h a v e i r s h e remained
u n m a r r i e d . " said t h e lawyei; - it Is generally the other wsy
— t h e legacy i s lessened i r the widow m a r r i e s a g a i n . "
" Ay," said the former, «Jbut h i m as gets h e r will desarve
PaiKTXR'a TAIJ:.—Every Profession k a s technical terms,
and of course the p r i n t e r s h a v e n " s m a t t e r i n g , . w h i c h l s
only intelligible t o t b e c r a f L T h e foliowii^ is_f * — i m * "
ffiZ
K
ft
w o u l d ^ c t m to the unin-
rnt
S - a U r f m - ^ < 5 ^
the m u r d e r of t h a t n i g g e r j o u commenced resterd^ay. ISet n p
the r u l n s o f G u v a n d o t t e ; d f r t r i b u t e t h e small p o x . , you need
1
n o t finish that m u t i n y : putithe
P i t c h t h a t p i i n t o hell, a n d then g o to the devil a n d he will
a satanical a r t .
•
T b e siege or V l e k s b u r g commenced on the J1 st of May, and
l i s t e d until the 4th or J u l y , j u s t forty-one d a y s .
Por the Grand Traverse Herald.
The New Regiments.
i Sraenrex OK A Cori-ERiiKAn COMMISSION.—In January
Pre»s' Perseverance in reassertThe Adjutant General of.tbe State, by d r ctioo of
! last the Legislature of Illinois passed, by a strict party The Detroit Free ing
Falsehood.
the Governor, has issued the followiug order :
M O l l G A N B A T E S , E J d i t o r a n d P r o p r i e t o r . (Dcroocrasic) vote, a bill appropriating $10,000 to tbc
FRIKND BATKS,—Notwithstanding tbc assertion has
AKJTTAKT GKNKRAL'S Orncs, t
relief of the Illinois soldiers wounded at Vicksburg and been often proved false, the Free Press still insists that
DCTROIT, June 10, 1863. $
TRAVERSE CITVi
GHN KRAL ORDERS No. 14.
Murfreesboro, and appointed three commissioners to dis- the Republicans brought ou the Rebellion by refusing to
F R I D A Y MORNING, J U L Y 31. 18C3.
It being of the utmost importance for tho good of the
tribute the money, and iu person see that the soldiers adopt the Crittenden Compromise ; and some loyal Deservice and for the cffijeocy of the troops from this
wants are relieved; that they make a report, under oath, mocrats still believe it true. It may be proper to lay State, that the Regiments and Batteries now in the field
Tbo Grand Rapids Eagle says that there .arc those to tbc General Assembly, setting forth in what manner before your readers irrefutable evidence of the falsehood should be strengthened by recruiting in the State for
who do not believe there will be a drafu-who TWnk the the money has decn expended—how mam soldiers, nam- from the rebel Vice-President, Stephens, himself
In that purpose, therefore 5t is ordered :
1
I. That no more new Regiments be raised within the
late victories lave ended the war, or that the ptospec- ing them and their companies and regiment -, bavo been tbc Georgia Secession State Convention in 1861. A. HState until farther orders ; that no commissions will be
tive victory over Lee will end it. To all 6uch we desire relieved—the commissioners to have three dollar* a day Stephens said :
given to any officer for any new organization, nor will
to *oy that the draft hasalieady begun, and that 450,000 each while engaged in tho work- On the 13th of Janany
Stale boucty bo paid to men enlisting for any such
•' When we see our lovely South desolated by the demoro men are called for. As fast as the enrollment lists uary the §10,000 was paid them in gold. They imme- mon of war, which this act of yours will inevitably invite organization.
II. That all recruiting in tho State shall, until further
of the several States are made out the draft begins, aud diately sold it at thirty-nine per cent, and pocketed the and call forth ; when our green fields of waving harvests
that without any warning. The first warning the people premium. The minutes of one commissioner, submitting shall be trodden down by the murderous soldiery aud orders, be for men for tlie Regiments and Batteries now
fiery car of war sweeping over our land : our temples of in the field, and all ijteu enlisting, therefore, will have
of thi/Statc will get will be the order to begin. Orders a report ol bis " expenses," shows that he incurred a to- justice laid in ashes ; all the horrors and desolation of choice or Regiments, otid will be entitled to the usual
have already been received by Provost Marshal Bailey, tal expense of one thousand four hundred and forty live war upon us ; who but this convention will be respon- Government and State i bounties.
The Officers now recruiting for their respective Regito harry up his lists; a^d. occordingly, lost week, he em- dollars in distributing one thousand one hundred and six- sible for it f
We quote farther :
Pause, I entreat you. and consider for a moment ments and Batteries, ar^ urgently requested to use every
ployed four ladies in addition to his other force of clerk? ty eight dollars.
what reasons you can give that will even satisfy your- exertiou to speedily procure men to add to their now
in copying the enrollment lists.
'
much
denleted ranks, i
The editor or the Compiler, a Democratic paper pub- selves in calmer moments—what reasons you can give
About 1,800 men will be drafted, probably, from this
By order of the Co»monder-in-Chier,t.(
lished at Gettysburg, has been sent-to Fort McIIenry.— to your fellow citizens in the calamity tbot it will bring
'
J x o . ROUKRTSC.X, A d j . Gen.
Congressional District, and that within i six weeks cerupon us ? What reasons can you give to the nations of
It appears that Mrs. Beuhler. the wife of the Postmas- the earth to justify it ? They will be the calm and deThis order suspends recruiting for the new regiments
tainly, probably within four weeks, possibly next week.
ter, had secreted n number or Union soldiers in her house, liberate judges in the case ! And to what causo or one for the present We lire quite certain, however, that
Tbo sure way to escape it is to volunteer—to raise the
these
regiments
will
be
filled
up, shortly, as the Governsome or whom were wounded. Upon the re-occupation overt act can you name or point, on which to rest the
men at oueoby voluntary enlistments.
or the towu by tbc rebels, the editor aforesaid disclosed plea of justification ? What right has the North assailed ? ment needs, and must have, a very large oxtensioo ot the
The war is not eloaod yet. Even if Lee is entirely
What interest of the South has been invaded 1 What cavalry arm of service. Meantime, a!) those who choose
the fact to one or their officers, and at the same time justice has been denied ? And what claim founded in can enlist in the old n^rimcnts, or all arms, and thus be
used up—us wo hope be will be and believe ho may bo
designated points where arms and liquor could Ite' found. justice and right has been withheld ? Can either of you certain or escaping th« conscription. We should be re—the war will not be ended—it will, linger out this year,
to-day name one governmental act of wrong deliberately joiced to see all the regiments—new and old—promptly
at least. There will bo ne great battles, it is wry like,
The medical men of Paris recommend tbo following and purposely done by the government of Washington, filled up. especially those from this Congressioual Disly, but there will he guerrilla hunts, places to occupy, way or administering caster oil to children: The quan- of which the'South has a right to complain ? I challenge. trict whose already proud reputation would thereby
eclipse that orall other portions oT tho Uoioo, for its
forts to be built and occupiod, the country to be overrun tity or oil prescribed is poured into a small eartheru pan the answer ?
patriotic response to the demands or tho government, and.
and disarmed, &e.
over a moderate fire, an egg broken iuto it, and stirred
•' N ow, for you to attempt to overthrow such a gov- the necessities of the Republic. [Grand Rapids Eagle.
Out of this 4G0,000, howover, it ia-silpposcd that 150,so as to form what cooks call buttered eggs ; when ernment as this, under which we have lived for more
Official Despatches from Com. Porter.
000 will escape the service by paying $300, or by dis- it is done, a little salt or sugar, or a few drops of orange than three-quarters or a century—in which we have
FLAG SUIPIBLACICHAWK, o r r VICKSBVRO, (
ability, -and by exemption from all causes, so that the water, or some currant jelly, should be added. The sick gained our wealth, our standing as a notion, our domesJuly 18,1863. $
tic
safety
while
the
elements
of
peril
are
around
us,
with
Government docs oot really cxpect to get into the field child will eat it eagerly, and never discover the fraud.
Srn.—I have tho hdnor to inform you that the expepeace
and
tranquility,
accompanied
with
unbounded
only about 300,000 actual soldiers from the conscription.
dition I scut into Red. River.region, is very successful,'
A disastrous fire occurred at Lansing, on the uigbt of prosperity and rights unassailed—is the height of mad- ascending the Black nod Tensas Rivers, running parallel
This addition to our armies, besides tlie levies of ucgro
the 9tb inst It commenced in the rear of the cabinets ness, folly aod wickedness. to which I can neither lend with the Mississippi. ; Lieat Commander Sclfridge made
troops to be raised, will mako the fall Of tbc rebellion abmy sanction nor my vote !"
the head of navi(Ration on Tensas Lake and Bayou Macon,
furniture shop orG. W. Swift, and destroyed that buildsolutely certain.
But here follows an extract from a letter submitted to 30 miles above y icksi)urg, ond within five or six miles
ing and stock, also, the machine-shop or Mr. S., his loss
the British government by the three rebel Commission- of the Misfl'ssippi River. The enemy was taken comThe Conspiracy*
is 82000; no insuraure. H. L. Baker's chair shop, and
pletely by surprise. The rebeb that have ascended to
The Chicago Journal of the 26th says that it ts belief T. D. Billings' dwelling house, which stood adjacent, ers sent over to solicit intervention :—
It was from no fear that the slaves would be liber- that region will be obliged to move further bock from
ed—and there appears to be official reason for the opin. were also burned with most or their contents.
H. L. ated that Secession took place. The very party in pow- tho river, if not go a#oy altogether.
Lieut. Commander 'Selfridge divided his forces on
ioo—that the invasions of Lee and Morgan and the Baker's loss was 8500 ; no insurance. T. B. Billing's er has proposed to guarantee slavery forever in the
New York riot wore parts of a general programme loss was 82,500; insurance 81,500.
States, if the South would but remain in'the Union. Mr. transports which had been carrying stores to Walker's
Lincoln's Message proposes no freedom of the slove, but army, and has escape^ up some of the narrow streams.—
agreed upon by the Northern Cppperhead leaders and
Ho
sent the Manitou nnd Rattler up Little Red River
A Salt company has been organized at S t Clair, in- announces subjection of his owner to the Union—in
the Southern rebel chiefs, for creating in the ioyal States
(a small tributary of the Blook,) onp the Forest Rose
cluding 15 energetic citizens, with a capital .stock or other words, to the will of the North. Even after tho and Petrel up the Tepsaa. The night was dark and it
a formidable revolution against the Government
battle
of
Bull
Run,
both
branches
of
the
Congress
at
The movements of Leo and Morgan and the New 820,000, or which 8-1000 has been paid in. Operations Washington passed resolutions that the war is only wag- was raining very harti Tho Manitou and Rattler sucto be immediately commenced on a form south of Pine ed in order to uphold that (pro-slaver}-) Constitution, and ceeded in capturing tbe rebel steamer Louisville, one of.
York riot happening at abouf the same time, and that
to enforce the laws (many of them were pro-slavery,) ond tholorgest and perhaps best steamers in western waters.
time, too, when the feeling against the draft \ras at its river and near the bank or the S t Cloir.
out of 172 votes in the Lower House, tney received all Up the Tensas the Forest Rose or Petrel captured the
. height, is a coincidence that indicates strongly the
AMALGAMATION.—The Free Press, orDetroit is like but two, and in the Senate all but one vote."
>» steamer Elmira, loaded with stores of sugar acd rum for
the rebel army.
istencc of the alleged conspiracy, and that these move- all other Democratic papers, harping upon the amalgaWM. L YAJSOKY.
Finding that tho steamers which had conveyed Gen.
ments were but the beginning of an attempted revolution matibn or the races. The Advertiser k Tribune gives
(Signed.)
P. A Rosi,
Walker's army had returned up the Washita* the expeA DUDLEY MAXN.
a t the North—a revolution that was designed to be ac- it a sharp hit by showing that on editor or that paper
dition started up that; river ond came suddenly npoq two
Southern
Commissioners
to
England.
complished by an invasion by the Southern traitors, ond is an actual amalgamationist, having married a squaw.
rebel steamers, but the rebels set them on fire and they
In bis recent speech before the Boston League, Hon. were consumed One steamer, loaded with ammanitiou,
the complicity and co-operatioo of Northern copperheadsA Copperhead named Johnson, in Adams, Hillsdale Edward Everett declared that •' had the Crittenden escaped above the fort at Harrisbarg, which is a very
For our part, we have never doubted for an instant,
strong work and unassailable with wuoden gunboats.—
since the outbreak in New York, that that disgracefhl county, attempted to protect from arrest a deserter from Compromise been adopted, it would not have averted
Jt is on an elevation #f over 100 fcet high. There are
Deputy Provost the war."
and outrageous affair was; in a groat measure, the work an Ohio regiment, on the 10th inst
water batteries of heavy guns.
Marshal
Leanord
captured
the
deserter,
after
a
se
The truth is, up to 1859, the Democratic party had
of Southern emissaries and their Northern sympathizers.
Lieut Selfridge was fortunate enough, however, tostruggle; and subsequently, by the Dupty Sheriff's aid, conceded to the Southern Slaveholders all they asked, hear of a large quantity of ammunition that had lately
Morgan and his Men.
he seized Johnson and lodged him in jail, although
and even tendered them special privileges unasked.— been hauled from Natchez and deposited at Trinity,
The capture of a large portion ol Morgan's plunderers sistcd by his wife with a loaded revolver.
Slavebolding Presidents could remoin in office eight neatly due west of Natchez, acd from whence stores of.
provisions, cattle, guns and ammunition are transported.
is an eveat of no ordinary consequence in: tho future.
years, and fill nearly all tho most lucrative situations in
He captared 15.0ft0 rounds of smoothbore ammuniOn 4th of July uigbt, two drunken men slept together
The amountor damage done by this band since tho bethe Administration with their ot*cn obsequious minions, tion, 10,000 rounds Enfield ammunition, 224 rounds o f
ginning of the war surpasses all estimate. It has de- in a barn in Buffalo, N. Y., and towards morning, the while no Northern freeman could be President longer fixed ammunition,,#! hogsheads of sugar, and 50 barrels
more
sober
ooe
piled
upon
his
companion
two
heavy
Teed
stroyed untold millions of property, cut rail road lines
than four years.
Buchanan decided that there was no of salt ; all belonging to the Confederate Government
Walker's ormy is Wt almost without ammunition.
and telegraphic communications without limit and kept boxes, o strew cutter, aod a pltW to keep him worm.
power granted in the Constitution to resist any of the
The officers hove *hown great energy in this expedi1he people oftwo States in a condition of constant excite- Tho next morning lie was found suffocated to death from Slaveholders' behests ; and they thought they had action and have met with no mishaps. They procured a
ment and terror. Most of Morgan's men have been dis- the heavy pressure.
quired unlimited and despotic control of Northern free- good deal or information by which future movement*
ciplined to their work and were moro formidable than
The white Captain and all our negro soldiers caught men. But the rapid enlightenment of the rank and file will be regulated The people in that eectioa are very
-tenfold the same number of rebel infantry. Their cap- by the rebels at Milliken's Bend, were hung hy orders of the party, made the tenure of office by the leadiug hostile to the Govcrtment—rank rebels.
*
1 bavp the honor to be, Ac.,
tare is probably n mure serious loss to the enemy than of Gen. Taylor, son of old Zock, who drew up his com- doughfaces precarious ; and to conciliate their constiDAVID D. PORTER.
tho thousaods of rebels kiRcd at Gettysburg.
Should mand to witness the execution. An orderly-sergeant io tuency. these doughfaecs were compelled to resist the T o H o n . GIDEON WELLES. '.
Morgan himself escope he will find himself for months charge of some plantation negroes was also hung.
slaveholders' encroachments upon free institutions ; and The Three Hundred Dollar C l a n * — T h e Case
virtually without a command and wholly incapable of
Plainly State* by a Life-Lorn* Democrat.
did so under the leadership of the great (not little)
Pemberton, in his first letter from beleagured VicksThe
following
is
an
editorial
of
the
Philadelphia
Ledserioua mischisf. Large portions of Kentucky and Tengiaut—Douglas The Slaveholders hated Douglas no
nessee f t the,same time will bo released from tho intimi- burg, Appealing to Grant said that bis supplies would less than Lincoln, and in the overwhelming vote or both ger and Transcript, bf the 15th inst, an oat ana out Democratic sheet or tlfit city :
dation of his presence, free by Word and act to aid in re- enable him to hold out indefinitely. But as soon as he conjoined, tbey saw the Scepter unmistakably departing
" And what is all this rioting about T Tbc draft—and
had capitulated he drew upon our stores for 30.000 rastoring the reign of the constitution ond laws.
from slavery forever. This appears to have been the for the alleged reason that the law of Congress authoriztions.
true state of the case. The majority of the democratic ing it fovors ooe cli»« who ore able to boy their exempFOHKTOK NEWS.—In the House of Commons on the
SALT AT CORUNNA.—The Shiawassee American says, party, under Douglas, resisted the further encroach- tion to the prejudice or those supposed to bo unable to
13th, Roebuck withdrew his motion for the recognition
raise the requisite 8300. By the operation of the law,
of tho South, yielding bis own feelings to the wishes of the Corunnasalt well has reached n depth of 960 feet ments of slavery upon freedom no less than did tho Re- it is argued that the army will necessarily be composed
and the brioc exhibits a strength of £5 degrees by the publican party, and, in addition to this, uuder Bucban- of those least able to leave their families to join its ranks.
Lord Palmerston.
8alometer.
nn they had suffered the now rebels to prepare for war to Now this is not the'purpose or effect of the 8300 exempPolmerston^aid Roebuck did right in withdrawing
tion. Directly thejreveree is true. Hod there been no
Brine was reached at t h e ^ i t well iu Lansing, on the a much greater extent than tbey would likely be permit- reasonable sum fixed for exemption, the cost of a three
tho motion ar.d he hoped this would bo the last time when
any member of Parliament would make use of this inter- 14th inst., at the depth of 640 feet It is found in white ted to do again, uuder any subsequent Administration years' substitute would run up. as it did a year ago, from
and
the
rebellion
would
have
been
as
certain
under
five hundred to fifteen hundred dollars—a sum quhc besandstone,
being
the
upper
stratum
of
the
Saginaw
salt
course with any foreign sovereign, such proceedings beDouglas'as under Lincoln's Administration. Henco it yond the power of i very large-portion of the communirock.
. ing extremely Irregular.
ty to command, fione but. thd exclusive few could
Gold
has
risen
ic
Richmond
to
oino
hundred
per
coat.
m
m
evide.1
i
h
^
the
Denwmtie
party
i.
«
much
to
O'Donohue protosted against Roebuck's bitter hostility
have commanded substitutes at sufeh figures. Instead of
to the North. He believed Roebuck and his friends premium, and wheat is to ten dollars per bushel Tho* blame for bringing on the Eebelhoo as the Kepublio«» the present 8300 Exemption working oppressively on the
and even more so, becausc they enabled the rebels laboring classes, it.was especioBy designed for their
were actuated by the belief that the destruction of the figures are a great deal more reliable than any other inprotection, and actually does put them as nearly on a
to
prepare
for
i
t
by
withdrawing
the
garrisons
from
the
Union would be a great advantage to Eogland.
He formation we have, as to the sinking condition of the ConU. S. fortifications, ond implements or war from the footing with the most favored as is practicable. Tbc
federacy.
should consider it the greatest calamity in the world.
object or the draft 5s men. not money : and in order to
Arsenals, as well as by scattering our Navy and Army soften the rigors of Conscription, Congress has said that
A letter from Winchester, Tennessee, or the 18th, over regions where they could be ol no use, nor be reaSerious Indian troubles are anticipated on the plains
any drafted man may get o substitute ou tho best terms
or Kansas and Nebraska this season. The deputy sur- confirms the capture of Huntsville, with three hundred dily recalled. Without such preparation the rebellion he can. but he shall not be forced to nay more than three
hundred dollars. Thus is the man ot small means proveyors write from Fort Kearney that a force of seven prisoners ond 1,200 horses ond mules. General Stanley. wonld have been postponed.
H. R S.
tected from the competition of those of greater means,
thousand Indians, or various tribes, have determined to •Bragg's army is reported reduced bv desertion to 18
who could, but for the 8300 limit outbid bim in tbo
WASHINGTON, July 25.
or
20,000.
' wage war on the Pawnees, who bare the reputation of
The Nationat Republican of this p. m.. states that pos- purchase or a substitute. No conscription law can ever
THK MICHIGAN TROOPS.—Gov. Blair and Adjt. Gen. itive information has been received here that Lee has be popular, bccaulc it is necessarily more or less arbitrabeing the meanest thievos on the plains. Thev have
ry
; but the present law is probably as lenient and equitbeen making incursions on their neighbors, who have Robertson, have lately returned from a brief visit to the been delaying on the Potomac to enable him to get
able as any such law can be, ond is certainly not obnoxiresolved to chastise them. The tribes declare they will field. The entire force are said to be in good condition away safely with tbc plunder he bad collected in MoryJand and Pennsylvania, and because bis forces have been ous to the censure raised against i t os favoringone class
make war with tbc whites if they are, interfered with
nnd in excellent spirits.
gathering the cropffln the Shanandoah Valley.
He is to the prejudice of another. . With a proper disseminacarrying their designs into execution.
A lady residing in Cambridge. Masi, has sent three now moving towards Richmond with immense trains of tion orthe truth of this matter, and the observance or a
supplies; the necessity of procuring which was increased liberal patriotic sfirit by those who remain at home, iu
Admiral Porter reports the success of the Rod River sons to the war, two of whom have been killed in by the foil of Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and is now making ample provision for the care and comfort ol debattle, and the third diod from sickness. A fourth son intensified by the cutting of the Tennessee & Virginia pendent families, whose head may be called to take the
expedition. Several rebel steamers, containing
Railroad, which was a great medium for procuring sup- hazards and hardships of a battle-field, a better underammunition, &c., were captured, Tho rebels destroyed was drafted.
standing must sooa be reached and the low allowed to
plies for Lee's army.
two Of their steamers to prevent them fulling iuto out
A general confiscation of rebel property in Missouri
take its course unobstructed, to the great strengthening
hands. Walker's rebel army is loft almost without any has been commenced bv United States Marshal T. B.
The mob in Troy looked after their Copperhead friends orthe army, the speedy resusciation or confideuce, ami
ammunition.
Wallace.
the eventual revival of all business."
promptly, releasing the prisoners from the jail.
Cljeferni!Craberst $trali).
• • • « •
• » «
TRAVERSE OITY.
MANISTEE COUNTY.
(Concluded
from
Foutth
Page.)
I i | ? if fc
; P ft
t h e C h i c a g o T r i b u n e of t b e 2 7 t b .
T h e rebel m a r a u d e r and
i t o u , delinquent for unpaid t a x e s for the year* mentioned
below. a» will I * sufficient to p s y the t a x e s Interest, and
charge* thereon, wiU be sold by the Trea*urer of said
County, on the fir«t Monday of October next, at such puhlic
and convenient place as he shaB select in S t . J a m e s ,
B e a v e r I a l n n d , the county seat of said county, according
the Statute in such case made a n d provided.
EMIL ANNEKE,
Auditor General.
34 vo 4 67
1862.
17 W) 1 7 9
30 SO 4 2«
T o w n 4 0 N o r t h of R a u c e 8 W e s t
27.90 3 W
T o w n 2 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t
M V S
-i
~ O
T h e V « r Latest New*.
W o a r c i n d e b t e d t o S m i t h B a r n e s , E s q . , for a c o p y of
brigand. Gen.
'11
M o r g a n , b i s nnili of n w | of
IS ICO
3 13
15 80
1 72
staff a n d all h i s f o r c e s h a v e b e e n c a p t u r e d b y G e n . S h a c - u n d i of e | of s w i
L o t 3 or
*1 C* »0 3 08
k e l f o r d , w h o a n n o u n c e s i t officially t h u s : " B y the^Wess- L o t 3 of
28 57 50 3 73
T o w n 24 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t .
i n g of A l m i g h t y G o d , I h a v e s u c c c e d e d in c a p t o K c g
13 u
lot
10 90
G e n . J o h n A - M o r g a n , C o l . C l a r k e , a n d t h e b a l a n c e of u n d i of Lot 3 of
u n d i ° f t o t 4 of
33 43
G7 06 30
his command, amounting t o 400 prisoners."
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 17 W e s t .
' I ' M
2 16 21 #0
* J a c k s o n , Miss., is in full p o s s e s i o n of t h e F e d e r a l Island No. 1
Lot No. 4
2 38 20 1 92 l'JSO
foreca. '..
Lottto.1
*10 30 20 7 14 7 1 9 0
.10 J«
2 J3 « 90
T b c n e w s f r o m t h e A r m y ot t h e P o t o m a c i s n o t Tory L o t S o . 2
sei of Bwf
11 40
3 78 37 90
d e t a i l e d , and<M)ll w e a r s a v e r y v a g u e s i r .
Ixje is pro-
•
3 ol
1 63
*
??
s.
? ~
?
S?
§3
o
^
Hannah, Lay 5c Co's Columu
J U N E 13, 1863.
W
l H A V E J U S T R E C E I V E D AND A R E NO.Vopening, with weekly additions, • large and varied
Stock of general merchandise. «abh as Is usually k e p t by
ourselves. Which i s specially adapted to the wants of t h i s
'idly growing c o u n t r y ; all or: which h a s l**en seic-ted
th especial rare, both as to quality, style and price. In the
best markets tha c o u n t r y affords,.and which i s b e i n g a n d will
he offered at rates c o r r e s p o n d i n g with the lowest regular
ratea for similar grades of g o o d s l n the metropolitan mark e t s abroad.
J
To a full examination of price< we wonld invite the attention of our customers, a n d more {particularly those contemplating a residence here, asaurlr.fr t h e m that any information
which wc can give, will \<e e-heerfnlly given ; k n o w i n e as we
do that if fully understood all w j u l d avail themselves of the
advantages offered—which m a * be better understood byn a m i n g t h e s a m e as follows : Nd rents, n o inanrancc, low
freights, small exi>en*e*. (aa compared with most town»>
cash purchases, best msrkets. I l e r f e c t familiarity with a n d
long experience in this kind of t)n*inCss, enabling u* to know
ju.it where to go to purckaso different classes of goods to UKpossible advantage.
e are t h u s [ a r t i c u l a r that a l l who r e ail may k n e w onr
t i o n a n d advantages ; and op examination which we tnwill prove to tho mo*t easajd o b s e r v e r t h a t we can cndot-so every rtntement made l n ^ f * r colnmn.
Our f t o e k of Dry Good* la ve?y complete, bonght low. of
he most approved styles arid make#, c o m p i l i n g d r e s s
oods in DeLains. Chaliies, A l p t c c s s . Saxony Maids, P r i n t s .
J l a c k S i l k » . W..o1 DrLslines, f l j c r e j nbd plain black a n d
white Plaid*. t»wi«» Muslinc, C h i m b r e y s , (iingbams, Ac., Ac.
3
1 25
08
1 I
T o w n 3 7 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 0 W e s t
I I 52 75 3 07 30 90 4 2;
U 36 30 I 96
19 90 3 0!
14 34 65 1 96
19 80 3 O.'
14 40
2 21 22 90 3 33
Town 22 North of Range 17 West.
15 40
/ 2 21 22 90 3
b a b l y o n t h e Retreat t o w a r d s C u l p e p p e r , a t d M e a d e i s *ej o f n e j
T o w n 3S N o r t h of l t a n g e 10 W e s t
*'
* "
30 80
2 C5 2 » ! « :
40 90 5
nej o U w |
s t r a i q i n g e v e r y n e r v o t o c u t off his R i c h m o n d c o m m u n i - W i C ie»
ISO 159 60 4 13 41 90 I
40 90 5 30
40
n i of si
cations and give battle. A n engagement is reported,
MM
7 59
Village of Manistee.
D{ Of HW|
,11
13 01 1 30 !'0 l!
sei of
probably with the rear guard. Our cavalry are doingj
11 '
11 60 1 1 5 9 0 13 45 nei of n e j
2 fco 28 l>0 3 'J
c x c c l l e n t w o r k h a r a s s i n g h i s flanks a n d c a p t u r i n g h i s
a e j »r ac t
HALE O F S T A T E TAX LANDS.
nwi of s w j
plunder.
n i of n w j
T h e c a p t u r e o f H u n t s v i l l e is c o n f i r m e d a n d a d d s t o
»3 80
wi of s. J
s 'JO U t
!*• 160
9 SO
m i of
U n c l e S a m ' s books 300 m o r e prisoners.
T o t v n 3 9 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 0 W e s t
N e i t h e r t h e W a r n o r N a v y D e p a r t m e n t * h a v e receivLot No. 1 of
»1 43 l o 1 CO 16 00 2 cr,
for T a x e s of 1861, a n d previous >cah>, and described in
11 s» 20 1 41 14 90
DOMESTICS
e d anything f r o m Charleston later than the l ^ t b i n s t
merit* which will be forwarded to the office of the Treasurer Ix>t N6. S or
S3 43 30 1 80 16 JO 2 66
of said County, BpoiC time u e j t month, will 1* sold ut public l/>t No. 4 of
Bougi.t at reduced rate^ : D f u b l c a n d T w l i t Casslmeres,
G e n . B l u n t , w i t h a small f o r c e h a s w h i p p i d 5 , 0 0 0 re12 'JO 2 23
13 34 70 1 21
suction, by fold Treasurer, at tl(e county seat, on the first Jlon- Lot No. 5 of
Black and E a n c y Casimeres. J'reocli S u m m e r Caasimerca,
27 40
1 44 14 90 2 4* York Mills Cottonade*. plain a j d fancy. Whittcnton Plaids,"
bels a t E l k Creek, near F o r t Gibson.
•day of October next, at the t l i i u and. place designated for the n e j o f o w j
16 ;«) 2 65
£7 40
1 60
ordinary T a x S a l e s if n o t previously disposed of at tbUOllicc, s c j o f f w j
Nunkuuctu", Kentucky J e a n s . , Twtods, Mixtures, Denims,
H o n . J o b o ' J . C r i t t e n d e n , of K e n t u c k y , i t d e a d .
Lot No. 4 of
Ifrt 55 50 1 92 19 90 3 01 Checks Apron and Miners, T i t k s . S h i r t i n g P r i n t s . Drills,
a c c o r d i n g t o law.
Lot No. S of
M 45 bh 1 66 15 90 2 61 Cotton Flannels, Wool Flaonefe, r»rown Cottons, Bleached
M e x i c o w a s d e c l a r e d an e m p i r e o b t h e 1 3 t h .
MaxiSaid s t a t e m e n t s contain a full description oi . . . . . . r —
nwi of nwi
M- 40
1 80 18 90 2 b8 Cottons, Ilags, Ac., Ac.
of
said
lands,
a
n
d
may
be
eebn
on
application
at
the
office
•
m i l l i a n o f A u s t r i a , w a s p r o c l a i m e d e m p e r o r , if Le will
30'JO 4 20
rei of nwi
W 40
3 00
of the County Treasurer.
CLOTHIKG.
l'5 34 70 4 39 43 90 5 72
a c c e p t ; if n o t , N a p o l e o n will s e l e c t one.
Lands s t r u c k off t o the State f o r taxes of 1861. or other l/>t No. 2 of
Gents fine (ilk lined Black Cloth Coat*, very s u p e r i o r qualT o w n 3 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
years, at the T a x Bales in October l;i*t„will be offered subject
ity, fine Black CassimercPinto.! Fancy Casimerc Coats, P a n t s ,
4 32 75 1 25 I
' N E W F o T A i o t r t — W C return t h a n k s t o A b n c r L c s l t y t o the right of redemption prescribed by law, as well a* to tin' I/Ot No. 3 of
id Vests, S u m m e r Coats. Cottouade P a n t s a n d Coats.
r i g h t of p u r c h a s e of the b t a t e Bid* at thii* Offii e prior t " the ixit No. 4 of
4 39 SO 1 60
16 90 2 55
?
Undcr-clothing. a full line G i n t s a n d Ladies, Over Shlrto
f e r a b a s k e t of n o w P o t a t o e s of a c h o i c e v a r i e t y .
As
.
EMII. A N N E K E .
J of se(
9 40
1 50
10 •-•0 2 55
,
Auditor General
Fractional
SI
9 C5
32 03 90 1 2. and Alls, Oil Snitx, India B u l s x r Coats, Wool, Union nnd
p o t a t o e s a r c r a t h e r late t h i s Beason, t h e y a r e Really a
Cotton Socks in variety. C o l l a * . a large a s s o r t m e n t Cravats,
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
i a x u r y ot t h i s t i m e .
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
l 2 96 well assorted, Trunks, Travelling Bags. Valises, H u n t i n g
Lot No. 2 of
J l 60 90 1 88 1
Bags, UmbreUes, a i t Satchels, some very good, Ac., Ac.
T o w n 3 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 14 W e s t .
GRAIN ELKVATOBS IN C«ICAOO.4—Another, i m m e n s e
. . 1 94
LADIES) WEAR.
95
3?
Lot No. s o
G r a i n E l e v a t o r , said t o t b o l a r g e s t in t h o w o r l d , h a s j u s t
2 00 20 90 3 10
Gloves, silk, lisle a n d l e a t h i r , IIosc, black, white, , slate,
O MUCH O F E A C H O F T H E FOLLOWING DESCRIBED wi of nwi
12
90
2
22
brown a n d blue. Cotton, nnlonj merino and cashmere. Belts,
Lot
No,
l
of
b e e n finished a t C h i c a g o , a n d still a n o t h e r , of e q u a l size,
t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s of land, situated In the County of E m 9 90 1 95 assorted ; Magic Ruffling, Tni-t t r i m m i n g , full lino : FlouncI-ot
No.
2
of
i s n e a r l y c o m p l e t e d . T h e y h a v e been b u i l t in t h e most m e t . delinquent for unpaid taxes, f o r the years m e n t i o n e d
20 90 3 10 iugs, Swiss c a m b r | c a n d l i i e n : also, E d g i n g s in t h r e a d ,
below, aa will bo s u f f i c i e n t . t o pay tho taxes, interest, and Wi o f s w i
8 90 1 80 cotton, srayria. cambric, SM ISSI and silk ; Cotton Wash Trims u b s t a n t i a l m a n n e r , a n d a r e f u r n i s h e d t h r o u g h o u t w i t h charges thereon, will be sold}>y the Tr e a s u r e r of said County Lot No. 4 of
1
10 90 2 00 mings, colored and white, v e j y pretty ; colored and w h i t e
4 40
n e j of s e |
t h e m o s t p e r f e c t q i a c b i o e r y , i n c l u d i n g a l a r g e n u m b e r of on the first Monday of Octobor n e x t nt such public and con40 90 6 30 Stays ; colored and white " S ^ i r t S u p p o r t e r s . " best m a k e ;
4 160
n
e
t
of
venient place as h e , shall
select in L i t t l e
Tra10 90 2
1 0
Crinoline, a nice a s s o r t m e n t ; Ijtdies Drawers and Vests ;
[13 41
F a i r b a n k s ' 5 0 0 B u s h e l H o p p e r Scales, w h i c h i n s u r e s v e r s e * the -county seat of said county, a c c o r d i n g to tha Lot No. 4 of
18 57 40 I 45 14 90 "
W r o u g h t Collars, in linen, cambric, nnd muslin ; C r o t c h e t
Lot No. I of
c o r r e c t w e i g h t t o b u y e r s a n d s e l l e r s , of g r a i n .
T h e Statute in such case made a n d provided.
>18 4 3 30 1 10 11 90 2 11 Braids ; m a r k i n g c o t t o n ; kern stitched h a n d k e r c h e i f s :
Lot No. 2 of
EMIL ANNEXE,
122 28 75
75
7 90 1
plain linen handkerchiefs ; flrei-s patterns, assorted ; Tell
L
i
t
No.
1
of
a m o a c t o f g r a i n w h i c h c a n b e h a n d l e d in t h e s e E l e v a t o r s
Auditor General.
;23 16
63
6 90 1 59 borage and tissue ; lace v e i l s ! Ladles knit skirt* ; ballmoral
Fractional
1862.
in a single d a y is e n o r m o u s . T h o increased p r o d u c t i o n
skirts, nicely assorted, s u m m e r styles ; Broche shawls ;
T o w n 3 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 14 W e s t
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 4 W e s t .
9 90 1 89 stclla, delaine a n d wool sliuwl* ; cloaka ; ladies embroiderof g r a i n in t h e N o r t h w e s t Is p e r h a p s s h o w n in no w a y
0
°
;2l 36
> 5
15 1 25 12 90 2 27 ed setta, low price a n d choice ; wash b l o n d ; black lace,
m o r e c l e a r l y t h a n b y t h o r a p i d I n c r e a s e in C h i c a g o of
55
62 60 6 25 90 69 65 figucred ; F r e n c h j a c o n e t ; s i f t cambrics, f o r l a d i e s ; marc
Lot No. 1 ..
61 CO 1 55 , 15 90 2 60 s-illes ; I n d i a cloth, A&, Ac.,
t h e facilities f o r receiving a n d s h i p p i n g i t
4 of
p
33 160
4 00 40 90 6 30
BOOT8 AND SIIOE8.
I 36 13 00
3 80
BCSIHKSS EDUCATION.—'The f o r e m o s t in s t a n d i n g , of w i of swi
133 160
4 00 40 90 A 30
1 36 13 no
4 80
e i of s e j
! 34 80
2 00 20 90 3 10 Gents o x f o r d ties ; e m i g r e s gaiters ; U l l m o r a l s h o e s ;
w i of n w j
t h e I n s t i t u t i o n s w h i c h g i v e t o t h o s t u d e n t a c o m p l e t e n e t of n e i
r,u or. yn
40
34 80
2 00 20 90 ,3 10 plow shoes ; calf hrogsn* ; U p shoes ; b r e g a n s ; carpet a n d
w
i
of
swj
10 40 "
OH 90
b u s i n e s s e d u c a t i o n / i s B r y a n t a n d S t r a t t o n ' s C h a i n of n w j of n * i
•34 39 40 1 00 10 90 2 00 goat s l i p p e r s ; Indian rubbort ; calf, k i p and heavy boots ;
i/Ot
No.
1
of
.17 160
2 71 27 90
pebble calf boot* ;
n e i of
34 38 90
97 09 90 1 96 ladies goat ballmoral boots J ballmoral
i n
Lot No. 2 of
National Mercantile College*
F r o m t h r e e t o f o u r e i of n w i A nwi ot n' .
17 120
2 03 20 90
& c o n g r e s s ; sido lace a n d
34 62 30 1 58 15 90 2 63 glove kid congress g a i t e r s ; V
17 80
36 13
13 90
90 2 39 l<ot No. 3 of
: 17
80
11 36
m o n t h s s p e n t ih o n e of t h e s e i n s t i t u t i o n s s u f f i c e s t o e n - n J of aei
^34 38 90
97 09 90 1 96 heeled gaiters ; k i d buskins tand s l i p s : c a r p e t a n d plush
LotNo. 4 of
slips ; childs c o p p e r t i p shoes ; c o a t ballmorala ; l a s t i n g
T o w n 3 6 N o r t l i of R o u g e 4 W e s t
Town
30
North
of
Range
15
West
a b l e t h e g r u d u a t o t o a s s u m e a p o s i t i o n in t h e c o u n t i n g
boots a n d c a c k s ; mlsaes l>o»ts, full a s s o r t m e n t ; l>oy» s h o e s ,
07 90 1 68
n e i «f n e |
e| of s«{
: 9 49 KO 3 13 31 90 4 34
assorted ; b o y s boots ; c h i l i s boots, nlco a s s o r t m e n t ;In
GS 06 90 1 04
r o o m — t o e n g a g e in m c r c a n t i l o p u r s u i t s s u c c e s s f u l l y , a n d n w i of n e i
the above gooda w e can offer I n d u c e m e n t ^
30 13 90 2 39
s i of n e i
t e c o n d u c t b u s i n e s s of a n y k i n d s y s t e m a t i c a l l y a n d u p
•JO 13 90 2 J 9
w i of nwi
S T O V E S A N D H O L L O W WABJB.
68 06 90
c o r r e c t p r i n c i p l e s , T h i s C h a i n of C o l l e g t s p u b l i s h e s
n e i of n w i
G
T
t
A
?
T
D
T
R
A
V
E
R
S
E
W
O
O
D
L
A
N
D
S
F
O
R
S
A
L
E
.
08 06 90 1 64
F o r e s t oak, Minnesota, Yfcnkee Doodle, AlblotL Sebator
riw* of n w |
s c r i e s of t e x t b o o k s t h a t h a v e j j e e n i n t r o d u c e d a n d u
T H R E E IIUNPItED ASt> E I G H T ACRES, I N ONE Compeer, Volunteer. Orator,. Sovereign, c o m b i n a t i o n b r i e *
68 06 90
s w i of n w i
L bodv. of choice Wood Laad, o n the Peninsula, in Grand oven reservoir top nnd w a n t i n g c l o s e t Combination P l a i n ,
68 OS 90
becoming very popular throughout the coantiy.
u w i of n e i
68 OG 90 1 C4 Traverse Bay, seven miles fro«i Traverse City, f r o n t i n g half Imperial Brick Oven, Imperial Plain Oven. C o n ^ t , P r U e
s w i of ne{
68 06 90 1 6. a mile on the West nay at tho entrance of Bower",, llaibor. P r e m i u m , C o n t e s t Lark. C o i k i n g Stove*. •
S o r r o w IIOOT MANCFACIURK.—There i s a s t r o n g p r e - s e i of n w i
,'
68 06 90 1 W It Is prote'ctcj from prevailing w i n d s by the H a r b o r on the
In parlor a n d box stoves ;jTroy Box. Gen,"Peerless. TOval.
j u d i c e a g a i n s t a r t i c l e s of A m e r i c a n m a n u f a c t u r e , a n d n e i of awi
There is L o c k e t idahoc. C a s k e t N e w ; P l a t e S t o r c N Double D o o r Plate
0G t>0 1 64 North snd by a large Island in f r o u t o n the West.
n w i of a*!j u s t l y , too, in m a n y eases, b u t n o t so w i t h D e l x i n d & swi of sei
2 40
68 06 90 1 64 deep water all along on the f r e n t within 8 or 10 rods of the and Parlor Cook Stoves, w l t i addjtion* a s occasion d e m a n d s .
shore,
and
the
beaching
ground
is
good.
This,
land
(wliic.i
S 320 96 5 41
KcttlcB, all sixes, from 4 to W g a l l o n s ; Bake kettles. Pots,
C o . '* Chemical
Solera tut.
T h i s j s t h e j b e s t n r t i e l e In nfii of
is of a choice n u l l i t y for f a r m i n g purposes, well watered
4 40 32
66
n e i of n e j
with s p r i n g s and small stream-".) i s haavily timbered with
GROCERIES.
e x i s t e n c e f o r c o o k i n g p u r p o s e s - y e t manjr f a m i l i e s a r e se{ of nc{
h a r d maple, beech, rock elm. white a*h, linden, a n d - s o m e
A foil and complete agferfaMnt, i which we Invite i n u s i n g E n g l i s h s o d a , w h e n t h i s s a l e r n t u s is m u c h b e t t e r , n w i of n e j
cedar
:
l.ut
the
leading
t
i
m
b
e
r
is
h
a
r
d
or
sugar
maple.
I*
11 40
08 06 90 1 64
n w i of s w i
spection.
'•>•.{
—<«63 06 90 1 04 will cut from forty t o fifty c o r d s of " C h i c a g o body wood,
I I 40
• a n d b y u s i n g i t y o u jiro p a t r o n i z i n g h o m e p r o d u c t i o n . Spices in raw and ground material, of best grade*.
of s w i
or
SO
cords
of
"Stoamlioat
wood
"
t
o
t
h
o
acre,
two-thirds
of
68
06
90
1
64
23 40
of n e i
TOBACCO.—Plug, fine c d t smoking, turkisb, tip-top Old
F o r salo e v e r y w h e r e .
j
1 l which would be hard maple. T h e r e is a good mill-Stream
24 40
u w i of swi
V i r g i n i a lump.
•
.
. . . . .
nnd
water
power
on
the
premises.
Pricc,
«ix
dollars
per
T o w n 3 7 N o r t h of R a n g e 4 W e s t
DYES.—Indigo, m a d d e r , e x t r a c t logwood, cudbar, blue
T h e N e w Y o r k p o l i c e a r c b a g g i n g v a s t q u a n t i t i e s of
06 90 I 64 acre—cash. For f u r t h e r particulars, address
vitriol, camwood, copperus,!tochincaL
n e j of s w i
MORGAN BATES.
p l u n d e r t a k e n b y t h e r i o t e r s , a n d a r r e s t s (of l e a d e r s of,
06 90 1 64
26 40
F O B T H E TABLE.—Pre*erved peaches, cherries, plnms.
s e i of swi
Register of the I /and Office at Traverse Citj% Mich.
13 90 2 39
26 80
quinces, c u r r e n t s goosctt+ries, raspberry, c u r r e n t grape
a n d p a r t i c i p a n t s in. t b o r i o t c o n t i n u e t o lye m a d o doily.
wi of Swi
30- tf.
Traverse
City.
J
u
l
y
8,1863.
13 00 2 39
26 80
a n d strawberry jellies, tomatoes, apples, peaches, p r u n e s ,
e i of sci
0(J90 1 64
33 40
- A new C a t h e d r a l i s a b o n t t o b e e r e c t e d in H a v a n a , s e t of nwi
cheese, crackers, dried beef,
N
O
T
I
C
E
.
13 90 2 39
33 80
b u i l t w h o l l y of i r o n , t h e e s t i m a t e d e o s t o f w h i c h i s 8 1 , - ' e i of s w i
HARDWARE.
UNITED S T A T E S LAND O F F I C E ,
13 90 2 39
33 80
s i of n e i
000,000.
^
. '
!
TRAVEKKR CITY, J o l y
186S.
Nails f r o m 21> t o c o ' s , as l^w as can be bought elsewhere ;
27 90 3 88
33 160
s e i of
A T E N T S FOR ENTHIES MADE BETWEKN T H E iron, a foil a s s o r t m e n t ; g l i i s , all sizes ; a x e s broad, nnrrow
34 (SO
13 90 2 39
F r o m P o r t H u d s o n — O f f i c i a l D i s p a t c k c s f r o m G e n . s i of n t r i
16th
day
of
J
u
n
e
,
1862.
and
the
10th
day
of
Nov.
1802,
f
o
r
and
boy's
:
barn
door
h i n g « and rollers ; cable and t r a c e
27 90 3 f-8
34 160
sw{ of
27 90 3 8S Hcttlcinent o n d Cultivation, u n d e r t h e Graduation A c t of c h a i n s ' t r a p s , tablo a n d p»ckct cutierj-. a full Une : d o o r
.'W 160
HKADQCARTRBO D t P A B T U p T O P T i r e G c t P ,
13 90 2 39 August 4, lnoI" have been received at t h i s ORice. and t h e trimmings, complete stock ( c a r r i a g e bolts ; pad, chest, t u t
35 80
e{ of nc{
1 4 t h A r m y Corps, P o r t Hudson, J u l y 10.
p
u
t
c
h
a
s
e
r
s
are
hereby
notified
to
come
forward
immediately
t
r
u
n
k
,
box,
and
d
o
o
r
l
o
c k s ^."sorted ; carpenters tools, a full
20
90
3
13
35 120
w i ol swj
of Swi
T o Maj. Gen. H a l l e c k : !
'
. . . .
06 90 1 64'and make the required proof "f " Settlement a n d Cultiva- line : shoemakers tools sr.d findings gbod a s s o r t m e n t ;•
s e i of s w i
8 r a : — I h a v e t h e h o n o r t o i n f o r m y o u , t h a t w i t h t h i s n w j of ge{
06 90 1 64 tion,"'and secure their respective Pairiits, lieca--.se If said steelyards, b a l a n c e s flat H r o n s g r u b hooks, s c y t h e s a n a
proor
is
not
filed
within
a
limited
time,
the
P
a
t
e
n
t
s
will
be
1
''
t h e r e f e l l i n t o o u r h a n d s o v e r 5 , 5 0 0 p r i s o n e r s , ; i o c l o d i n g swi of aei
r e t u r n e d t o the General L a a d Office, a n d will t h n s be liable " ' F A R M E R S T O O L ? . — S h a r d s s p a d e s h o e ^ p o t a t o h o o k s ,
.15 80
o n o M a j o r G e n e r a l , o n e B r i g a d i e r G e n e r a l , 2 0 p i e c e s e i of s e i
to be cancelled for n o n - p e r f o r m a n c e of the conditions of forks, 2.3. a n d 4 tined ;. mixture forks schnfflc hoes, g a r d e n
1 30
30 80
h e a v y a r t i l l e r y , five C o m p l e t e b a t t e r i e s , n u m b e r i n g 3 1 o j of s w i
settlement and cultivation c o n t e m p l a t e d by the Gradual'
a n d hay r a k e s pounders, c l w bells, scythe s n a t h s and scythes,
Town 35 North of Range .6 West
pieces, field a r t i l l e r y , a g o o d s u p p l y of p r o j e c t i l e s f o r lino L o t t l 7 a n d J 8 s S h . d l v . L o t I 32 1* 45
i.-raln a n d Children* c r a d l e ! plaster, Iliac, Riddle's F a n n i n g
42 f>4 90 I 3r, A r t or August 4, 1S34.
MORGAN BATES, R«gi»tei
Mills, lumber w a g o n s l i g h t wagons, wagon s e a t s whiffietrces.
a n d h e a v y guns, 4 4 . 8 0 0 p o u n d s c a n n o n p o w d e r , 5 , 0 0 0 Lot 22 sub. div. Lot 2
32
2 45
I S 01 B0 1 0 9
3O^R..
KEUBEN
G
o
O
D
K
l
C
d
.
Rcceive
wheel barrows, r«sd *cr.\f»!rs, p l o w s 1 a n d 2 h o r s e ; Steel
s t a n d a r m s , 1 5 0 , 0 0 0 r o u n d s ' s m o l l a r m a m m u n i t i o n , b c - e i of Lot 21 sol., (liv. e i of s e i :I2 20
42 04 99 1 3 6
plow moulds for shovel p'.cfcvs d r a g teeth, cultivator teeth
o i o f L o t 2 5 s u l j . d l v . c l of s e i 32 20
42 »4 90 1 3«
s i d e a a s m a l l n m o n n t of s t o r e s o f v a r i o u s k i n d s .
r n i b h o e s planters heavy! h o e s half bushel b a s k e t s well
9
18 01 90 1 0 '
W o c a p t u r e d a l s o t w o s t e a m e r s , o n e of w h i c h i s v e r y w side L o t 20 s u b . div of lx>t 1.12
m c k e t s chain pumps, cistern p u m p s 4 c .
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 6 W e s t
v a l u a b l e . T b e y will b o o f g r c o t s e r v i c e a t t h i s t i m e .
MEpICINES.
0 side Lot 9 sub. d i v . Lot 2
13
3 41
IS 01 90 1 0i>
MARY JAXB I-OI-ISA Dt-K'jfs and At.r.x
N . P . BANKS, M a j . G e n .
A v e r s J a y n c s Winslow'4 S a w y e r ' s T h o m p s o n ' s S a r g a n t ' s .
2 chains 37 links, c and w by f
1* TIIK C m c t - i r C o r n r for the County
J a v V , K e n n e d y ' s etc„ jsitent medicines ; as iU*o p i l l s
3 ch 75 l i n k s n and s in se >
In Chaneery.
•. of Lot 10 sub. div. L o t 2 J J8
45
13 01 90 1 09
olntmcute. o i l s osacncci a n d e x U a c U j n vnr»ety.
PROBATE ORDER.
STATK oi MlCltlOAN
s i Lot 27 sub. d i r . Lot 5 |
1?
18 ol 90 1 0 9
S T A T E O F MICHIGAN, ;
' HAHN ESSES. •
suit pending in the Ci
Little Traverse Village.
Cot'KTT o r GKAND TRAVXI-.SE. S
T r a v e r w . in C h s n c e r y .
Singl"'and dooble, heav# and l i g h t harnesses, m e n ' s a n d
13
18 0 1 9 0 I 09
T A SESSION O F T H E P R O B A T E COURT F O R T H E L o t 4 Block 1
* BATISFACTORfLY APPEARING TO T H E UXDER- side s a d d l e s b r i d l e s h a l t e f s g i r t h s martijigalls. e x t r a tnp*.
'
IS
1" 0 1 3 0 1 0 9
County of Grand Traverse, h o l d e n at'the I'robatc Office, Lot 6 B l o c k *
Blgned, C i r c u i t C o u r t Commissioner f o r the C o u n t y of s t r a p s A t , Ac.
j
•
Addition to Little Traverse Village.
in t h e T o w n s h i p of Traverse, on daUirdav, the E i g h t e e n t h d a y
t h e solici.
rand Traverse, by affidavitof J . G. Ramsdell.
LEATHER.
13
18 01 90 1 09 >rs for said Complainants, tr h a t the above
o f j u l y In t h e y e a r one thousand e i g h t h u n d r e d a n d sixty- L o t 42
led defendant*
J
t h r e e : p r e s e n t C u r t i s Fowler, J u d g e of P r o b a t e . I n t h e
Cow hide, "_ip. calf a n d findings, a complete line ; last*,
Mary J a n e Louisa i»uro and Alexander
•*
~ *H. F r e e r , are not
S
A
L
E
O
F
S
T
A
T
E
T
A
X
L
A
N
D
S
.
m a t t e r of the estate of William Ilan^in.
residents of t h i s State. J n motion of J . 0 Ramsdell, Solici-' p e g s n a i l s k n i v e s Ac.. A t .
On reading a n d filing the petition, duly verified, of C h a r l e s
for the C o m p l a i n a n t s it is ordered that t h e said DefendA u d i t o r Gencsral's Office. )
Y A N K E E NOTIONS.
H. Marsh, A d m i n i s t r a t o r , p r a y i n g to bo empowered a n d
a n t s Mary J u n e Louisa P u r o s s and Alexander H. Freer, causc
LAKSIKU, Mica.. J u l y 1, lsi>3. \
D o l l s cologne, h a i r oil, todmade. h a i r restorative and dyes
licensed t o sell Real Estate, or so m u c h thereof, a s will bo
their appearance t o l-e entered in t h i s cause w ithin three
O
T
I
C
E
i
s
H
E
R
E
B
Y
GIVEN
T
H
A
T
C
E
R
T
A
I
N
sufficient for t h o p a y m e n t o f t h e debts d u e - a g a i n s t said esm o n t h s from the date of t h i s order, a n d that in case of their handkerchief perfumes, toilet and s h a v i n g s o a p s spectacle*
l
a
n
d
s
situated
in
the
County
of
M
a
n
l
t
o
u
,
bid
oil
to
tobacco
and
sunff
b o x e s a(ul p o u c h e s m e e r s h a u m and comtate a n d the c h a r g e s of a d m i n i s t e r i n g t h e s a m e ; T h e r e u p o n
appearance thev and e a r h or t h e m cause their answers to
I t la o r d e r e d , that Saturday, t h e Twenty-second day of An- t h e B u t e for t a x e s of 1861, a n d p r e v i o b s y e a r s , and d e s c r i b e ! said C o m p l a i n a n t ' s bill t o bo tiled a n d a copy thereof to be mon pipes, porte-tnonies money b a g s ladies traveling bags,
g u s t next, at Ten o'clock In the forenoon, be assigned for t h o in s t a t e m e n t * which will be f o r w a r d e d t o t h e office of the served on the C o m p l a i n a n t ' s Solicitor within twenty days childs bags, r a t t l e s toyfv toy b o o k s c o m p a s s e s b r u s h e s
Tr
e
a
s
u
r
e
r
of
said
County,
s
o
m
e
t
i
m
e
n
e
x
t
m
o
n
t
h
,
will
be
sold
assorted, toy watches.
h e a r i n g of s a i d petition, a n d t h a t the hclre at law or said
a f t e r service of a copy of said bill and notice of this
deceased, a n d Vl o t h e r p e r s o n s interested In said estate are a t public auction, by said Treasurer, at t h e C o u n t y S c a t on nnd in default thereof that the said Bill bo taken -is- "confessed
STATIONERY.
"
r e q u i r e d to a p p e a r at a session of paid C o u r t , t h e n t o be hol- the first Mondav of O c t o b e r next, n t the time and place bv the said Defendants.
Letter, note, legal a n d leap p a p e r s e n v e l o p e s assorted, d e n a t tho P r o b a t e Office. In the T o w n s h i p of Travente a n d designated for the ordinary T a x Sales, if not previously dis' And it is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d ; t h a t within twenty days, ' b e said
posed
of
a
t
t
h
i
s
Office,
a
c
c
c
r
d
i
n
g
t
o
law.
«•
p e n c i l s p e n s Ink; Mack abd r e i scaling wax.
show cause, if any there be, why thi» p r a y e r of the p e t i t i o n e r
Complainants cause a cony of thl* o r d e r to »* published in
Said
s
t
a
t
e
m
e
n
t
s
c
o
n
t
a
i
n
a
fiyl
d
e
s
c
r
i
p
t
i
o
n
of
each
parcel
s h o u l d n o t be granted ; A n d i t la farther o r d e r e d t h a t said
^OOKS.
of said lands, and may bo s®«u o n application at the office of t h e Grand T r a v e r s e H e r a i d , a paper p r i n t e d and published in
titioner give notice t o the p e r s o a s interested in said esTraverse Citv. in said County o r G r a n d Traverse, and t h a t the
S a n d e r X M o G u f f y ' s D a r t s ' M i t c h e l l ' * and Clark's aerlejt of
te, of the pendency of said petition, a n ^ t h e h e a r i n g there- t h e C o u n t y Treiiafirer.
I ^ n d s s t r u c k off t o the State f o r T a x e s of 1861. or o t h e r satd publication be continued in wrid p a p e r at least once in *cbool b o o k s c h i l d s a n d i l u l t * miscellaneous b o o k s blank
of, by c a u s i n g a copy o f t h i s o r d e r t o be published in t h e
each week tor six successive weeks, or that they cause » copy b o o k s copy b o o k s so,ng a|<I m u s i c b o o k s some for schools.
G r a n d T r a v e r s e Herald, a newspapeir printed and c i r c u l a t i n g years, at the T a x Sales in O c t o V r l a s t w i l l be offered subject of this o r d e r t o be personally served on the said Defendant*.
TIJi W A R E .
in said C o u n t y of Grand Traverse, f o u r successive weeks pre- t o t h e right of r e d e m p t i o n prescribed by law, as well as t o Mary J a n e Louisa D u r o s s a n d Alexander H. Freer, at least
the r i g h t of p u r c h a s e of t h e State B i d s a t t h i s Office, p r i o r to
O u r tin ahop lain A N o j l r u n n i n g o r d e r a n d all w o r k
vious t o said day of hearing.
twenty davs before the time above prescribed f o r t h e i r apthe sale.
E M I L ANNEKK,
( A t r u e copy.)
CURTIS FOWLER. J u d g e of P r o b a t e .
guaranteed.
A u d i t o r General.
I
FU*MTURE.
A g o o d s * s o r t m e n V c o n 4 * n t l y on hand-=-at f a i r p r i c e s .
T H E R E A S MY W I F E HARRIET, H A S L E F T MY
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
V V bed and board w i t h o u t any J n s t cause o r p r o v o c a t i o n ,
We find it impossible tojhardly c o m m e n c e a n e n u m e r a t i o n
of our stock In *0 small a space, a n d for a n y a d d i t i o n a l po>I f o r b i d all p e r s o n s h a r b o r i n g or t o u t i n g h e r o n m y a c c o u n t
n s I will pay n o d e b t s of h e r c o n t r a c t i n g after t h i s date.
ticulars please call on or t o a d to
:. RAMSDELL. Sol. and of Counsel f o r Complainant,
^
FBBEMANO. J A C K S O N .
i H A N N A H . L A Y Ac C O .
led. J u n e 9, IHtS( P r i n t e r ' s fees $ 8 25.) •" 27-Cw.
5 t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s o f i a n d , situated in the C o u n t y of M a n T r s v o i * , J u l y 15,1863,
SI4w«
3 26
3 01
R 75
3 6*
5 02
Fractional
Lot No. 2
LotNo. I
Lot No. 2
nwt or nwi
neiofucfii
S
i 1?
If
TO WOOD DEALERS.
S
P
r
A
N
S
•r
•':
.
r
V
\J
/
y
O T I C E IS H E B E B Y G I V E N T H A T CKB-
u i n lands situated in the County of G r a n d
T r a v e r s e , bid off to the State f o r T a x e s of 1801,
a n d previous year®, a n d described in statement*
which will be forwarded t o the office of t&aTreas u r e r of aaid County, s o m e t i m e n e x t month, will
be sold a t public Auction, by ssid Treasurer, at
the county seat, on the flrst Monday of October
next, at the t i m e a n d place designated f o r the
ordinary T a x Sales, if not previously disposed of
a t t h i s Office, s c c o r d l n g to Isw.
Said atatcmenta contain a full description of
each parcel of said lands, and may be seen on
application fit the office of the Couaty Treasurer.
Lands s t r u c k off t o the State f o r t a x e s of 1861.
or o t h e r years, at the Tax Sales in Octobcr last,
will be offered sutyect to the r i g h t of r e d e m p t i o n
prescribed by law, as Veil as to tho r i g h t of purohase of the State Bids at t h i s Office p r i o r to the
sale.
EMIL A N N E X E .
A u d i t o r General.
2 8 North
of Range
i St'f
if t
I if I If ^
e i or nefli
18 80
7 98 7 9 M 9 60
n i of s w i
26 80
4 91 49 90 6 30
nwi
31 160
15 62 1 56 90 18
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 0 West.
LotN'o. 2 or
35 37 75 1 69 16 M 2 64
Town 3 2 North
of Range
1 0 West.
w | or nei
7 80
1 72 17 90 2 79
Fractional 3
8 42 18 1 62 15 M 2 57
Fractional 4
8 20 69
80 0 S M ; 1 7 8
Town 2 6 North
of Range
1 1 West.
ne{ or n w i
1 42 18 2 97 29 90 4 16
n w i or n e i
1 41 92 2 77 27 90 3 94
a i or nwi
I 80
6 01 60 90 7 51
n e i or swi
1 *0
1 55 2 1 00 3 37
wiorawi
1 80
3 42 34 M 4 66
LotNo. Sot
6 43 60 2 05 20 90 3 15
swfliornwi
6 38 27 2 00 20 90 3 10
nefli
6 11 04
46 04 M ; 1 40
e i ofawfU
7 80
3 47 34 90 4 71
nwfli « r swfli
-7 37 98 1 75 17 90 2 82
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
swfli or uwflj
7 38 02 1 58 16 M 2 63
e i or sei
8 80
3 47 34 M 4 71
A u d i t o r G e n e r a l ' s O f f i c e , )•
swi o r s e i
8 40
1 76
17 90 2 82
LANSING, Mich., J u l y 1st, 1863. j
Si or swi
8 80
2 71 27 90 3 88
O MUCH O P E A C H O F T H E FOLLOWING n i or nwi
17 8 0
2 71 27 90 3 88
described tracts or parcels of land, situated swfli or swfli
30 39 37 1 36
13 90 2 39in the C o u n t y of G r a n d T r a v e r s e , delinquent e i o r s e {
31 80
3 47 3 4 M 4 71
for unpaid taxes, f o r t h e years m e n t i o n e d below, swi or set
31 40
1 76 17 90 2 82
as will be sufficient t o pay t h o taxes, interest, a n d
Town 2 7 North
of Range
1 1 West.
c h a r g e s thereon, will be s o l d by the Treasurer s w i of nei
1 40 05 1 94 IB 90 3
of said County, on the first Monday of October
s e i or n w i
1 40
- 1 94 IB 90 3 03
next, a t s u c h public and c o n v e n i e n t place as he Wi o t n w i
27 80
4 96 49 90 6 35
shall selsot in T r a v e r s e C i t y , the county scst swi
27 160
0 90 99 M i l 79
of said couaty, a c c o r d i n g to the Statute Irf s u c h
e i or n e i
28 80
4 96 49 M 6 35
• a s e wado a n d provided.
s i or s w i
29 80
3 95 39 00 6 24
EMIL ANXEKE,
nei o f n e i '
31 40
1 65 16 M 2 60
A u d i t o r General.
L o t No. 1 Of
31 36 75 1 85 18 M 2
1860. '
Town
2 8 North
of Range
1 1 West.
Town - 2 7 North
of Range
9 West.
Lot No. 3
9 22
83 0 8 9 0 1 81
LotNo. 4
9 22
83 08 M 1 81
L o t No. 4
16 28
83 0 8 M 1 81
c
3 I
S
| H
E
•
§
r ?
s§ g
P
si orsei
17 80
8 15 8 1 M '•» 86
•
r f
L o t No. 4
21 33
1 67 16 uO 2 73
s e i of n e i
1 40
1 3 7 . . M M 2 81 L o t No. 1
33 48
1 60 1,6 90 2 66
I Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 1 West.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 1 West.
s w i of a c i
- 1 4 0
1 26 60 00 2 C6
nwi or n e i
10 40
1 78 17 90 2 86
Village
of North
Unity.
s i of L o t 1
11 25
I 23 22 90 3 35
Lots.
Blk.
LotNo. 1
23 15
45 0 4 M 1 39
3
66
01
90
01 Lot No. 4
27 57
1 78 17 M 2
12
119
18
07 90 1 16 w i o t s e i
27 80
2 67 26 M 3 83
Lot No, 3
27 33
1 24
12 M 2 2«
1862,
e i or nwi
34 80
2 68 26 90 3 84
Town 2 9 North
of Range
5 West.
Town 3 1 North
of Range
1 1 West.
e i or nwi
10 80
3 09 30 90 4 29
Fractional
12
75
02
90
92
Fractional
13
2 85
15 01 W 1 06
nwi
22 160
6 21 62 M 7 73
n i of eel
a 67 36 M 4 03
Town 3 2 North
of Range
1 1 West.
6TTi Of SWj
14 40
' 1 85 18 00 2 93 s e i or swi
10 40
1 93 19 90 3 02
s c i of a e i
;>:!« 40
. . .
V-9S
18 90 2 93 s w i o r s e i
10 40
1 93 19 M 3 02
Town
North
of Range
5 West.
L o t No, 6
27 39 60 2 38 23 90 3 51
1
60 06 90 1 66
ei o f s e l
36 80
3 68 36 M 4 94 E p t or s w i ot SWi 34
n w i or n e i
34 40
8 16 81 90 9 87
Town
2 5 North
of Range
6 West.
Town
2 6 North
of Ranee
1 2 West.
sei
7 1C0
7 37 73 90 9
s e i or n e i
7 40 t
1 75 17 90 2 82
Town 2 5 North
of Range
7 West.
2« "0
3 47 34 90 4 71
w | of n e j
19 80
3 67 36 90 4 93 w i or n e i
e
i
o
r
n
w
i
24
80
3
47
34 90 4 7l
Town
3' > North
of Range
7 West.
s e i or SCi
25 40
1 36 13 M ! 39
19 80
3 67 36 98 4 93
s i of n e i
Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 2 West.
s c l of nwi
19 40
1 86
18 98 2 93
•
1
or
nei
7
80
2
71
27
90 3 88
n e j of swi
. 10 10
1 9(
18 90 2 93
I I 160
6 86 68 90 8 44
n | of sc^
19 81
3 67 36 9« 4 93 s w i or
Town
2 8 North
of Range
1 2 Wesf.
Town
2 5 North
of Range
8 West.
L
o
t
No.
2
of
I
40
2
23
22
90
3 35
Lot No. 1 of
8 33 78 1 60
15 W 2 55
24 80
4 45 44 90 6 79
aei o f a w i
15 40
1 85 1 8 M 2 03 s i or nei
n e i or s w i
24 40
2 22 22 90 3 34
Town
2 8 North
of Range
8 West.
ni otsei
24 80
4 45 44 90 fo79
Lot No. 8 of
18 31 34 1 08 10 90 4 08
SWi o r s e i
36 40
1 26 12 90 2 28
Town. 2 3 North
of Range
8 Weft.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 2 West.
swfli of xwtu
7 31 01 1 46 .14 90 2
ondiorfractor
8 l l 85
40 04 90 1 34
Lot No. 4 ot
7 57 37 2 72 27 90 3
u n d i or L o t N o ' l
9 70 75 6 25 62 90 6 67
wi.ofnwj
12 80
2 70 27 M 3 93 L o t N o . 1 * or lake 19 22
89 08 90 1 87
Lot No. 1 of
18 59 87 2 88 28 90 4 06
LotNo. 2
10 39
1 43 14 M 2 47
L o t No. 1 of
19 55 45 2 67
26 90 3 83
Town 2 8 North
of Range
1 3 West.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
8 West.
nefli o r n e i
.
6 41 34 1 40 14 90 2 44
L o t N o . 1 of
18 20
70 07 00 1 67 s e i o r
18 160
4 15 4 1 M 5 46
w< of nwfli
18 80
2 76 27 SO 3 93
Lot No. 2 of
28 39 60 1 34 13 M 2 37
. Town 3 1 North
of Range
1. West.
LotNo. t o r
28 39 61 1 34 13 M 2 37
sw{ of sw{
5 40
1 ft 13 90 2 41 e i o r s e i
29 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
e i ol n e i
28 80
2 15 . 21 00 3 26
Town
2 9 North
of Range
1 3 West.
Town
2 7 .North
of Range
9 West.
L o t N o . l or
4 37 84
69 06 M 1 65
niofsei
2 8a
5 23 52 00 6 65 L o t No. 4 or
4 61 10 1 29 12 M 2 31
s e i of s w i
2 40
2 01 20 00 3 11 e i o r n w i
6 80
2 77 27 90 3 94
n i of nefli a n d >
nei ° r nei
9 40
69 [06 M 1 65
s c i of nefli
\ 6 126 19 8 79 . 87 90 10 56
Town 3 0 North
of Range
1 3 West.
s w i of nc.{
9 40
< 05 40 00 5 35 Lot No. l o t
31 30 60
62 05 M 1 4 7
wi o f n e i
20 80
2 71 27 M 3 88 L o t No. l o r
32 25 :
62 05 M 1 47
Lot No. 2 or
32 23
62 05 M 1 47
Lot N o - 3 o t •
32 43 20
86 08 90 1 84
L o t N o . 2 of
Lot No 4 o r
32 57 15 1 04
10 90 2 04
nwfli o f n w f l j
2 31 27 1 01
s w i or
32 160
3 46 34 M 4 70
s w j °f nei
4 40
2 74
si orsei
32 80
1 73 17 M 2 80
6 138
5 82
. 3 3 13 M
35 03 M 1 28
I-ot No. 2 of
11 36 80 1 93 19 M 3 02 F r a c t i o n a l
Town
2 5 North
of Range
14 West.
•12 40
2 11 21 »0' 3 22
a w i of n w i
L o t ! of
n w i or n w i
14 40
1 36 13 M 2 49
Lot 3 or
15 63 85 3 77 37 80 5 04
Town
2 6 North
of Range
14 West.
L o t N o . 1 of
23 45 75 1 28 12 M ' 2 30 u n d i of w i or n e i 25 80
1 36
I S M 2 39
L o t No. 2 a n d 3
23 116 65 2 96 29 M 4 14 w i o r n e i
26 80
2 72 27 M 3 89
L o t No. 2
U
64 45
16 #0 2 75 u n d i o r < 4 o r s e i 35 80
1 36 13 M 2 39
swi o t s w i
24 40
08 fro 1 82
Town
28 North
of Range
14 West.
26 40
nei o f n e i
33 M 4 61 nei or
9 160
6 54
65 M 6 99
s w i of n w i
4 «
46 W 6 01 L o t N o l l o r
10 39 85 1 38 13 M 2 41
s i of n e i
6 23 52 00 6 65 e i o r n w i
14 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
w i of soi
4 03 40 80 5 33 e i o r n e i
15 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
n i of aci
6 75 67 M 8 32 s w i o r s e i
18 40
1 01 10 M 2 04
Wi of a w i of sei
30 . 20
„
1 69 16 BO J T5 e i o r n e i
19' 8q
3 77 27 M 3 94
Town
2 9 North,
of Range
9 West.
s e i or n e i
30 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t N o . 1 of
9 27 17 1 06
s i or n w i
21 80
2 77 27 90 3 51
n w i of sci
" ""
s e i or aci
23 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t No. 1 of
1L 13 11
0600 1 00 si o f a w i
28 80
2 78 27 M 3 95
Lot No. 2 of
11 61 76 2 93 29 B0 4 12 sei o r s e i
29 40
1 38 1 3 M 2 41
16 4b
1 89 18 SO 2 97 e i or n e i
n w i of awi
32 80
2 07 20 M 3 17
s w i of nwf*
15 40
1 41 14 90 2 45 n e i or
33 160
4 15 4 1 M 6
Lot K o . f i of
16 49 73 2 37 2390 3 50
Town 29 North
of Range
14 West.
nwi of a c i
Fractional
17
5
13 0 1 M 1 04
Lot No.tf 0 of
21 44
_. r , - .. • i o r n e i
28 80
2 77 27 90 3 94
L o t N o . 1° of
22 94 49 7 76 77Sd 9 43 swi or n w i
28 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t N o . Sof
28 SI 36 3 24 32 90 4 46 Lot No. 2 or
29 M 14 1 3 8
13 M 3 41
L o t N o . 3 of
28 5 74 3 16 " . 4 37
" sefli o r s e i
30 65 M 1 73 171M 3 80
Town 35 North
West.
L o t No. 1 of
31 37
1 28 1 3 M 2 80
s i of swi
37 M 3 93 wi o r s e i
31 80
3 77 ; 37 M 3 94
niofnwi •
~„ —
2 78 2 7 9 0 3 93
w
Totcn 2 5 North
of Range
1 5 West.
Town
2 6 North
of Range
1 0 West.
neiornei
6 41 91 1 79 17 90 3
Lot No. 1 of
2 19 47
81 08fM 1 79 nwfli or n w i
7 39 67 1 68 16 M 2 74
L o t No. 2 of
2 46 0 8 M K
•18 90 2 93 swfli or nwfli
7 3» 63 1 68 16 90 2 74
L o t No. 3 or
2 40 70 1 76 17 M 2 82 awi of n w i
8 40
1 49
14 M 2 63
LotNo. 4of
2 31 71 1 23 12 M 2 25 w i of n e i
8 80
2 98 29 M 4 17
L o t No. 12 of
2 13 75
61 06 M 1 67 e i of n w i
'
8 80
2 93 29 M 4 17
2 40
1 76 17i90 - 2 82
n e i of M i
Town
2 6 North
of Range
15 West.
L o t No. 1 or
3 48 71 1 85 18 90 2 93 L o t No. 2 or
8 30 35 1 33 13 M 2 36
L o t No. 2 or
3 26 02
86 08;M 1 84 s e i or
33 160
5 44 64 M 6 88
L o t No. 3 or
3 14 82
46 04 90 1 40
Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 5 West.
3 61 29 1 94 19 90 3 03
L o t No. 4 o t
I M 20 2 39 23 M 3 52
39 99 1 76 17 90 2 S2 Lot No. 4 of
L e t No. 5 or
11 26 35 1 14 1 I I M 2 15
51 68 1 M 19 90 3 03 Lot No. 1 of
Lot No. 6 or
12 40
1 60
10 M 3 66
3 34 2
1 5 9 0 2 63 n e i or n w i
Lot N o . , 7 or
Town 2 9 North
of Range
1 5 West.
18 90 2 93
3 19 58 1 8
I-ot No. 8 of
24 29
52 0 S M 1 4 7
3 40 07 1 7
17 90 2 82 L o t N o . 1 o f
L o t No. 9 or
0 8 M 1 73
3 20 86
Town 2 5 North
of Range
1 6 West.
Lot No. 10 6f
nefli or n w i
w i or swi
1 80
3 42 34 90 4
s e i or n w i
1 70
17 90 "2 77
nei o f n e i
. 11 40
3 40
1 75 IT 90 2
s e i or s w i
nei or soi
U 40
170
17 9 & 2 77
4 40
\ 75
17 M 2 81 s w i o r s e i
sei. o r - n e i
i l 40
1 70
17 % 1 77
I-ot No. 3 or
4 38 M 1 75 17 M 2 82 «ei o r e e i
12 40
1 70
17 M 2 77
L o t N o . 11. oT
10 18 65
81 08 M 1 7 9 n w i or n e i
13 40
1 70
17 M 2 77
L o t N o . I I of
10 24 35
97 0a M 1 96 -Lot No. 1 or
14 4 2 36" 1 82 18 90 2 M
Lot No. 13 of
10 24 10
87 09i90 1 9 6 I-ot NO. 2 or
14 28 85 1 21 13 M 2 23
10 80
3 42 34 M 4 66 L o t N o . T o r
e.i. or nwi
14 3 0 10 1 38 13 M 2 41
7 W n 2 7 North
of Range
1 0 West.
neiornei
14 40
1 70
17 M 3 77
tf»'i or sei;
11 40
2 61 26 M 3 77 Lot No. 3 or
14 75 58 3 42 34 90 4 C6
S
£ >§
*
S>
. i vi i 1%
II t
is an
W W
it: ...
Totcn
1 0 West.
2 5 North
of Range
t ft
I if
16 West.
i " E
* H
i l *•
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g * 6 W e s t
• I II I If ?
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t
f
* i|
5
« S
I-Ot No. 4 or
u 39 68 1 68 16 M 2 74n i of sei
15 80
1 11 11 M 2 12 Lot No. 1 of
88 08 M 1 86
i
33 4 65
Lot N». 1 or
23 65 82 2 82 28 M 4 00n i o r s w i
15 SO
1 11 1 1 M 2 12 Lot No. 3 or
12 60 6 71 67 M 8 38
sw( o r s w i
15 40
65 05 M 1 50 se{ o t s w i
10
5 03 50 M 6 43
Town 2 6 North of Range
1 6 West.
n
i
o
r
n
e
i
17
M
2
21
2
2
M
3
33
swi
o
t
s
w
i
10
42 04 M 1 36
e i or s e i
34 80
<3 42 34 M 4 66
17 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 w i of nei
to
84 08 M 1 82
neiornei
34 40
1 46 14 M 2 SO s i o r s e i
u n d i a * i or n w i 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 n i of s e i
50
84 08 90 1 82
Tillage of C a t H e a d .
u n d i n w i oT s w i 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 n e i of swi
to
43 04 M 1 36
L o t N o . 25
28
20 03 M 1 13
u n d i e i or n e i
21 80
111
11 M 2 12 Lot No. 2 ot 93 09 M 1 92
Lot No. 7
29
29 02 90 1 21
'
undi *wi or nei 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 L o t N o . 3 o t
8 40 3 05 30 M 4 25
Village of L e l a n d .
ei or sei
21 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 n w i o t s w i
10
5 03 50 M C 43
Lots 11,12 a n d n i )
w i or sei
21 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 s c i o t n w i
40
6 03 50 90 6 43
of 7 and 8 block 4 f
3 32 33 90 4 55 u n d i n w i o t nwi 22 40
55 05 M 1 50 s e i of sei
3 35 33 90 4 58
net or swi
22 40
111
1 1 M 2 12 n e i of
1 27 12 M 2 29
Village of Xorthport.
35 160
& 12 51 M 6 53
28 80
2 21 22 M 3 83 s w i of
j
04 M 1 39 e i o r s e i
Lot No. 5 oi
35 40
32 03 90 1 25
28 80
2 21 22 M s 33 s e i of n w i
" » 7
" « 34
04 M 1 39 e i Of n e i
35 40
32 03 M 1 25
55 05 M 1 50 s w i of n w i
- "49
3d st 34
31 03 90 1 24 U&di s w i of-nei 28 40
36 SI
i n
28 80
I 11
11 90 2 12 Lot No. 1 of
45 04 M I 39 u n d i w i o t s e i
17 M 2 84
36 14 80
29 02 M 1 21
30 80
111
11 M 2 12 Lot No. 2 ot '.
59 05 M 1 54 u n d i e i o r n e i
36 16 70
u n d i n w i of c e i 50 40
55 05 M 1 50 Lot No, 3 o t f
08 M 1 78
L o t N o . 29 and
36 25
1 20 12 90 2 22
30 40
55 05 90 1 50 Lot No. 4 o t i
74 07 M 1 71 u o d j s w i o r s e i
31 on 5th s t 34
36 49
u n d i sei or swfli 30 40
2 21
22 M 3 SS I-ot No. 7 ot
63 M 7 M
L o t N o . 36 and
28 30 1 80 18 9(
KWfli or swfli
30 39 77 1 10
11 M 2 11 Lot No. 8 o t
38 on 4tli a t
34
u n d i w i or n e i
32 80
1 11
11 90 2 12
Lots 42 6th st
34
T o w n 2 1 { N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t
Lot 46 E side
T o w n ' 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 7 W e s t
nwi ot sei
2 40
17 M 2 79
30 03 M 1 23 sei or nefli
34
Warren
1 80
1 11
1 1 M 2 12 w i o t n w i
3 45 34 90 4 69
6 80
74 07 90 1 71 nefli or nwfli
34
, F 4 t h st
1 43 38 1 21
12 M 2 23 n e i of n e i
23 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
30 03 M 1 23
I-ot 23 4th »t
34
n i of nei
24 80
3 45 34 M 4 09
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 7 W e s t
30 03 90
Lot 32 5th st
34
24 80
3 45 34 90 4 69
swi or s w |
9 40
I 10 11 M 2 11 n i of n w i
59 05 90 1 54 e i o r s e i
34
Lot 40 4th st
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of!
gt 1 5 W e s t
25 80
2 21 22 M 3 33
31 03 90 1 24 sei or n e i
I-ot 22 A 24 5th * 34
26 40
1 10 11 M 2 11 s w i of nwfli
2 28 22 M 3 40
5 00 50 M C 40 e | o r s e i
Lot 49 A G 4 tli st 54
26 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 w i o f s w i
6 80
4 55 45 90 5 M
38 03 <M 1 31 nwi o t s e i
1-ot 31 A D 3d Ht 34
26 40
111
11 90 2 12 e i or sei
4 56 46 M 6 M
Village of
n w i ot s c i
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 8 W e s t
2 28 22 M 3 40
4
2 43 24 M 3 57
Lot 6 B 104
8 40
« 83 6 8 M 8 14
sBi or nwi
24 40
111
1 1 M 2 12. n w i of n w i
I-ot 11 B 113
Improvement
T o w n 2 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 8 W e a t
of
10 40
6 69 65 M 8 41
nwfli of n e i
1 41 27 1 1 5
11 M 2 16 s w i of sei
A lot b e g i n n i n g
ne{ of n e j
13 40
5 40 54 M 6 84
a
i
or
swfli
2
80
2
21
22
M
3
S3
at the S E cor. of
13 8o
10 79 1 07 M 12 76
sei or n e i
30 40
1 11
1 1 M 2 12 s i o t s e i
Lot 6 in Waka13 40
nei o t s e i
5 40 54 M 6 84
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 9 W e s t
zoovilic, thenco
14 40
swi ot n w i
5 40 54 M 6 84'
aiolawi
27 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 n w i ot s w i J
E to the shore
14 40
5 40 5 4 M 6 84
S | 07 n w i
27 80
2 21
22 M 3 33 swi o t s e i
ot Gr'd Trav.
14 40>
04 90 1 39
Bay, thcnce N
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
14 40
nei ot sci
'
2 76 27 M 3 93
a l o n g t h o shore
swi or n w i
3 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 n w i of s w i :
15 48
7 20 72 M 8 82
o t aaid Bay H
nwi o r s w i
3 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 w i of sei
16 80
14 40 1 44 M 16 74
roda, thence W
sei or n e i .
4 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 s i of sei / •
U 80
11 61 1 15 M I S 66
t o tho E lino ot
nei or s e i 4 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 s i of s e i /
13 89 1 38 M 16 17
Wakazoovi lie.
s w i or s w i
4 40
87 0 8 M 1 85 sefli of n w i !
19 39 08
47 04 90 1 41
t h t n e e S t o the
nwi o r s w i
9 40
87 0 8 M 1 85 nwfli of nwfli
19 44 40 2 12 21 M 3 23
w li or
nf n
w ii
placc of begineiornwi
10 80 . 3 45
34 M 4 6 9 as w
nw
23 37 40 4 M
48 M i 18
1
47
14
902
51
ning.
•3
8W{ or n w i
10 40
1 72
17 00 2 79 sei ot swi
23 40
41 04 90 1 35'
Lots.
ei orswi
13 80
3 45 34 90 4 69 n i or n e i
24 80
7 67 76 M 9 33
1 20 12 M 2 22 w i or s w i
11.12 a n d 13
3
' 3 80
3 45
34 M 4 69 s w i ot s e i
34 40
38 03 M 1 31
45
04
M
1
35
s | orsei
14 80
3 45
3 4 9 0 4 69 sei Of
69 05 M 1 M noi o t s e i
47
3
14 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 e i of swi35 80
14 20 1 42 M 16 68
1 19 11 M 2 20 n e i o r s w i
71,72, 73,74
3
22 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 L o t o N o . 1 4 of 26 118 76 1 23 12 M 1 35
1 08 10 90 2 08 n e i or
80. 81, 82, A 83
3
23 ICO
6-17
6 1 M 0 58 sei of n w i
36 40
1 65 16 M 3 71
1 48 14 M 2 62 BWior
84, 85,80,87,88,89,93 3
23 1C0
6 17 6 1 M 6 58 nwi"t>f swi
26 40
41 04 M 1 3 5
74 07 M 1 71 n i o t s e i '
95, 96,97, 98, 99
3
23 80
2 76
27 M 3 93 s w i o t a c j ' ; >
74 07 90 1 71 w i o t s w i of n w i 24 *20
100, 101,102.103,104 3
87 0 8 M 1 8 5
n e i of n w i
S
1 30 13 M 2 .33 si or n w i
106, 106, 107, 108 3
24 80
S 45
34 M 4 69 swi of s w i ;
59 05 M 1 54 n e i ot nwi
70 and 90
3
24 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 L o t N o . 6 e x c e p t >
29 and 33
3
2 23 22 M 3 35 e i o r sei or n w i
24 20
87 0 8 9 0 1 85 W 3 a c r e s '
] 27 45 30 7 57 76 M 9 22
75
3
74 07 90 1 71 n w i o t
26 160
5 62 65 9 0 6 97. u n d i s w i o ( s w i 29 40
1 19 11 M 2 20
-4 M I
4 45
61
3
ni otswi
26 80
3 45
34 M 4 69 u n d i n e i o t f a e i
31 40
79 07 M 1" 76
08 90 1 56
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
. a n d i nwi of n w i 32 40
79 07 M 1 76
Mason's Addition.
23 40
ofli or n w i
4 83 73 5 42 54 M 6 8& nei ot n w i
2 56 25 M 3 71
H
1 48 14 M 2 52 w i o t s e i
34 40
15 80
10 05 1 0 0 M 1 1 95 a w i o t s w i
" " 03 M 1 35
L o t No- 2 of
16 39 30 2 06 2 0 M 3 16
T o w n S 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t
SALE OF 8TATE TAX LANDS.
Lot No. 4 ot
21 49 33 4 03 4 0 M 5 33 Lot No. 1 of
29 61
6 12 61 M 6 63
s e i of s e i
• 21 40
3 31 33 90 4 54
T o w n 2 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t ,
A u d i t o r G e a e r a l ' s Officc,
)
Lot No. 1 of
22 38 35 2 M
20 M S 10 n n d i o t L t s >, A 6, 31 66 70 2 14 31 M 3 25
LAMSI.SU, MICH.. J u l y 1. 1863. S
Lot No. 2 of
22 39 M 2 07
2 0 90 3 17
O T I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN T H A T CEB
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t
Lot No. 3 of
22 53 20 2 75 27 M 3 92
tain lands situated in tile county or M a n 07 M 1 74
22 80
4 20 4 2 90 5 52 n e i of
i s t e e , bid off t o the State ror T a x e s or 1861, a n d Wi ot n e i
33 03 M 1 25
Lot No. 1 of
23 65 15 8 34
83 M 10 07 s i of n w i previous years, and described in s t a t e m e n t s
sei o f n e i
15 01 90 1 0C.
Lot
No.
3
of
23
47
35
4
M
45
M
5
89
which w i u be rorwarded to t h o officc o r t h e Treawi of sei
33 03 M 1 26
Lot
No.
2
of
27
39
6
24
62
M
7
76
s u r e r or said county, sometime n e x t i^puth,
S3 03 00 1 20
27 36
7 19 71 90 8 ~ w i of s w i
will be sold at public auction, by said Treasar- L o t N o . 9 o t
s e i of s w i
15 01 M 1 06
L o t No. 10 of
27 15 15 a 17 3 1 0 0 4 .
or, at t h o county seal, on the first Monday or OcM
19 M 3 05
27 63 30
66 05 90 1 51 s c i or sei
tober next, a t the time a n d place designated for Lot No. 8 o t
29 02 M 1 21
L o t N o . 1 of
28 49 46 6 11 "&L00 6 52 s w i o r s e i
the ordinary T a x Sales, ir not previously disposn w i of s e i •
37 03 M 1 SO
L
o
t
No.
2
of
28
49
50
7
46
74
M
9
10
ed or a t t h i s Office, a c c o r d i n g t o law.
37 OS M 1 30
n e i of n e i
28 40
4 20 42 M 6 52 a i o t s e i .
Said s t a t e m e n t s contain a rull description or
85 0 8 M 1 83
L o t No. 9 of
28 67 87 6 68 66 M 7 14 Si O t s w i
each parcel ot said lands, a n d may be seen on
41 04 M I 35
29 40
5 03 60 M 6 43 n e i of s w i
application at the office or the C o u n t y Treasurer. ns{ of s e |
80/
37 03 M 1 30
37
Lot No. 8 of
31 38 50 3 70 37 M 4 87 s i of sei
L a n d s s t r u c k off to the State ror T a x e s or
9 50
44 04 M 1 38
Lot No. 1 a f
n
i
o
f
n
e
i
31
80
01
6
62
66
M
8
18
1861, or o t h e r years, at the Tax Sales in Octobcr
35 40 1 30 12 M 2 22
n i Ot nwfli
31 80 01
77 07 M 1 74 L o t N o . 3 t f
last, will be offered subject t o tho r i g h t or re39 3 0
68 U 6 M 1 64
32 40
1 91 19 M S 0 0 L o t N o . 5 a t
d e m p t i o n prescribed by law, as well as to the L o t N o . l o t
0 9 M 1 93
L o t N o . 2 or
32 34
1 66 16 M 2 61 •4 or s e i J
r i g h t or purchase or the 8 t a t e Bids at t h i s Office
20 M 3 12
swi o t n w i
32 40
2 28 22 M 3 40 Lot No. 4
p r i o r t o * l " —*" *
37 OS M 1 30
c i or nwi
34 80.
10 37 1 OS M 13 30 n i or n e i '
M i of s e i 16 01 M 1 07
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t ,
s w i of s e i 16 01 M 1 07
sei o t
3 ICO
6 89 68 M 8 47
n w i of swfc
16 01 M 1 07
wfli ot n w i
4 78 80 3 45 34 M 4 69
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
nei of. n e i ,
18 0) 00 1 09
wi o r s w i
4 80
3 45 3 4 M 4 69 sei of n w i !
29 02 M 1 21
nwi otsei
6 40
1 72 17-M 2 79
Auditor G e n e r a l ' s Office, j
n w i of nei38 03 M 1 31
si otswi
6 80
3 45 34 00 4
LANSING, MICH., J u l y 1st, 18>>3. {
10 1M
n i of n i
76 07 P0 1 7 3
.. — . 2
si
o
t
s
e
i
6
80
S
45
34
9
0
4
O MUCH OF E A C H 0 ? T H E FOLLOWDK
10 40
n e i of s w i
si
o
t
s
w
i
6
80
3
46
34
M
4
69
described t r a c t s or parccls or land, situated
11 160
07 M 1 73
ni-of n i
s i ot n e i
6 80
3 46 34 M 4 69 n e i of n e i
13 40
41 04 M 1 35
Siotnwi
680
346
34 M 4 6 9 awi of n w |
1 71 17 M 2 70
6 44 88 1 72 ' 17 M 2 79
will be sufficient ' t o p a v ^ t h e taxes, interest, n e i o t n w i
16 40
3 46. 34 9# 4 69
sei o t n e i
7
80
3 46 34 M 4 69 Lo« No. 6 f f
d charges thereon, will Be sold by the Treasur- n i ot nei
18 N 74 1 21 12 80 2 23
8 80
3 45 34 M 4 69 L o t N o , 7 i f
er said County, on the first Monday or October n i o t n w i
M 18 20 1 04 10 M 1 04
n e i ot
8 160
6 89 68 M 8 47
n e x t , at such public a n d c o n v e n i e n t place
n w i of s e i 1
19 40
1 72' 17 M 2 70
9 80
3 45 34 M 4 69
shall select in M a n i s t e e , the county seat o f n i o t n w i
19 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
sei o f n e i |
9 40
1 72 17 M 1 79 nwfli of
said county, a c c o r d i n g t o t h e S t a t u t e in s u c h swi o t n w i
19 167 84 6 89 « 8 M 8 47
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t
case made and provided.
Beiofaei
1 38 13 M 2 41
EMIL A N N E K E
21
M
swi o t s e i
440
4 97 49 00 6 34 s i o f a w i
69 06 M 1 66
A u d i t o r General.
34
48 3 44 M 38 82
Siotnwi
6 80
2 64 28 90 3 80 s i of n e i .
1862.
22 40
25 87 2 58 M 29 35
ni otswi
580
2 64 26 M 3 80 n w i of s w i
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 5 W e s t
swi o t n e i
0.40
5 03 60 M 6 43 s w i of a w i
22 40
1 72 17 90 2 19 a
s
w
i
°
f
*wf
35
03 M 1 2 8
sei
of
swi
8
40
6
68
66
M
8
24
T
29 40
wi o r s e i
8 80
13 43 1 34 M 16 67 n w i of s e i
35 03 M 1 28
29 80
1 71 17 M 2 79
nwi of swi
8 40
6 68 66 M 8 24 e i of s w i ; * •
7.
30
40
1
72
17 M 2 79
w
i
of
nwi
8
60
13
43
1
34
M
15
67
n
e
i
of
n
w
|
J* S"
9
30 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
80
10 05 1 00 9 0 1 1 95 n e i of net;
14 M 2 46 e i of n w i
n w f lj or nwfli
30 40
i n
—
U 80
6 62 66 M 8 18 n w i of s e i
17 M 2 79
11 M 2 12 w i o f n e i
n w i or nwi
30
43
63
1
38
13
M 2 41
e
i
of
nei
11
80
6
62
66
M
8
18
n
w
i
of
nwfli
7 40
11 M 2 12
swi of n w i
32 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
>7 40
38 03 M 1 3 1 n e i of n w i
11 90 2 12 sei of swi
7 40
nei or sei
32 40
17 M 2 79
17 40
38 03 90 1 3 1 s w i of n e i
41 87 1 16 11 M 2 17 nei ot s w i
nwfli or swfli
e
i
o
t
n
w
i
17
80
83
08
M
1
8
1
T
o
w
®
2
2
N
o
r
t
h
of
R
a
n
g
e
1
6
W
e
st
7 41 60 1 16 11 90 2 17
svrfli of BWfli
17 80
13 43 1 34 M 15 67
30 40 93 1 13 11 90 2 14 « i o t n e i
nwfli or nefli
11 1M
6 96 69 M 8 55
18 43 67 4 19 41 M 6 50 sei of
30 40 7 « 5 13 11 M 2 14 swfli of swfli
3 4 8 34 M 4 72
swfli o f n w t l i
s i of sei
J
swfli
of
nwi
18
'43
98
34
OS
M
1
27
30 80
S 21 22 90 3 31
3 48 34 M 4 72
e i of swi
18 80
64 06 M 1 60 n i or n e i
30 40 63 1 12 11 90 2 IS e i of sei
nwfli of swfli
38 03 M 1 31
24 M
18 . 40
33 03 M 1 35 s i o t s w i ;
30 40 48 1 11 11 M .2 12 s w i of sei
swfli of swfli
24 40
19 01 M 1 10
s w i o r aei
sci ot swi
18 40
32 03 M 1 25
18 01 M 1 09.
Town 2 2 North
oj Range
5 West.
24 38 79
neiotnei
19 40
33 03 M 1 26 n e i o t s w i
19 01 M 1 10.
n e i of n e i
33 40
111
11 M 2 12 s c i of nei
19 39 47
31 03 M 1 24 nwi of n « i
38 03 M 1 31
« i of s e i
34 80
2 21 22 M 3 3 3 swfli of n e i
19 33 42 4 92 49 90 6 31 w i of n w j
1 67 16 M 2 73.
'
T o w n 2 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 5 W e s t
s w i of s e i
19 40
6 68 66 M 8 24 n i of
77 07 M 1 74
26 160
<
s w | or swi
i s 80
" 1 10 1 1 9 0 2 11 s i o r s w i
19 82 20
79 07 M 1 76 s e i or
1 97 19 M 3 06
26 40
nwi orsei
13 40
1 11 11 M 2 12 —
•
19 39 37 5 03 60 M 6 43 nei o t s w |
65 06 M 1 61
28 1M
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 6 W e s t
19 37 23
36 03 M 1 29 n w i of ,
79 07 M 1 76
n e i of
23
153
35
1
56
15
M
2
60
1
40
1
U
s e i or sci
31 70 88 3 55 35 M 4 M
25 M
1! 0 1 M 1 02 s i of n w i 6 48 68 1 35
nwfli or nwfli
31 40
18 0 1 M 1 09
No. 6 o r
2G 46
1 05 10 M 2 05 s e i o f n e i
7 40
1 10,
nwi orswi
31 71 04 3 70 37 M 4 97
n i ot n w i
26 80
8 26 82 M 9 98 wi o t n w |
22 90 3
11 80
n i or nwfli
32
40
21
02 M 1 13,
Lot No. 1 o r
27 32 95'
32 03 M 1 26 sw{ o t n w i
u n d i n i or se{
33 40
1 75 17 M 3 82
n i ot n e i
27 80
5 03 5 0 M 6 43 n e ] of n w i
L o t N o . 1 ot
11 25 10
3 48 34 M 4 7 2
nei o r awi
27 40
41 04 M 1 3 5 n i o f n e |
11 2'J 70
Lot No. 2 oT
9
96
99 M 11 85
34
160
nwi otsei
27 64
41 04 M 1 35 n i of n i :
46 0 4 M 1 40
ei orsei
35 80
L o t No. 2 or
27
16
41 04 M 1 35 n i of n e £
12 80
2 20 23 90 3 32
w i of s e i
35 34
Lot No 5 of
27 17 40 2 45 24 M 3 59 Lot No. 1, of
r: .-i
e i or n e i
5
16
51
M 6 57
L o t No. 3 a n d 7
27 33 71 4 21 42 M 6 53 w i o f nwi
18 01 M 1 09
sw i or nei
35 40
27 56 10 7 07
7 0 M 8 67 n e i ot n » i
22 M 3 33 L o t No, 6 of
e i of nei
g e 16 W e s t
T o w n 2 3 > i o r t h of
27 40
5 03 60 M 6 43
11 90 2 1 2 n w i or swi
nwi ornei
13 40
2 53 25 90 3 67
2 160
28 27
2 79 27 96 3 96 u n d i of mi of
L o t No. 2 or
14 . 37 80 1 04 10 90 3 04 Lot No. 1 ot
1 45 24 M 3 69
3 160
28 80
3 31 33 M 4 64 u n d i ol <wi of
11 00 2 12 n i o r n e i
sei ot nwi
3 167 79 2 30 23 M 3 43
28 4 0
41 04 M 1 36 u n d i of Swi of
ilOO 3 12 n e i o t sci
n e i or n e i
05 M 1 5 3
28 80
83 0 8 M f 81 u n d- | o f L , N o . 1 4 37 80
2 2 M 3 33 n i o t s w i
n i of n w i
21 80
08 M 1 82
4
34
60
28 14 56 1 45 14 M 2 49 u n d i of i o t No. 2
4 42 44 M 5 76 L o t N o . 2 or
'J! 1C0
n e i or
07 M 1 69
30 80
84 0 ^ M 1 82 u n d i of - o t N o . S 4 34 60
22 96 3 13 Di o r n e i
e i or n e i
08 M 1 78
4
37
60
30 40
51 0 5 M 1 4 6 n n d i o f ' -ot No. 4
2 2 M 3 S3 sei o r s e i
w i or n e i
08
M 1 85
9
40
M
30 40
51 05 M I 46 n n d i of -ot No. 1
22 90 3 33 s c i o t n e i
i t ] or n w i
09 M I 93
9
44
70
30 40
51 05 M 1 46 n n d i of -ot No. 2
11 M 2 12 Bei of s w i
si of nei
6
47
54 M 6 91
10
320
' \ l of
34 40 77
51 05 M 1 46
11 M 2 12 swfli of s w i
n e i of n e i
3
43
34
M 4 67
10
160
32 40
43 04 M 1 36
11 90 2 12 SWi of s e i
nwi otnei
Conelwled
on Third
Page.)
32 80
84 0 8 M ' 1 82
n{ of sci
22 90 3 33 e{ Of sef
<
N
Town
A u d i t o r G e n e r a l ' s Officc, ?
LAXKNO, MICH, J a i r 1 lifts. (
1
. SALE OF STATE T A X LANDS.
N
S
>s
:? s-g ?
5 £
T R A V E R S E CI^TY, M I C H . F R I D A Y , J U L Y 31^1803.
VOL. V.
F o r toe Grand Traverse Herald.
Pscudo Democratic Comistency. •
®|e <gmh Crabtat SftaKi,
IB rUBLlflHXn BVBBT WMBAT.A*!
Traverse City, G r a n d Traverse Cownty, Michigan
•MOBGAN'BATES,
U I T O B AJTO PBOPBIIIOB.
T K R M 8 .
O n e D o l l a r a n d BHffcjr C e n t * , F a y n b l * i n v a riably In ndTanoe.
• „
.
AnVBBTiSBMBxrs i n s e r t e d f o r O M D o l l a r p e r s q u a r e (ten
l i n e s ) f o r t h e Crst i n s e r t i o n , Bnd twenty-five c t p t s f o r each
s u b s e q u e n t i n s e r t i o n . Yearly A d r e r t l s e m e n t e — $ 1 0 f o r one
s q u a r e ; $20 f o r t h r e e s q u s r e s ; $30 f o r half a < o l u m n ; « p d
$ 5 0 f o r o n e c o l u m n . L e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s a t t h e r a t e s jiifea c r i b e d b y l a w ; fifty c « n U per folio of 100 words, f o r t h V
flrstinsertioa,
a n d tsrenty-five cent* f o r each s u b s e q u e n t ly very f i g u r e c o u n t s a word. . F i g u r e w o r k w i t h o u t rales, 60
p e r c e n t a d d e d . B a l e a n d figure work, d o a b l e price.
All l e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s t o be paid f o r s t r i c t l y in a d v
No. 1.
FBIBXD BATE.",—This seem* t o be a good t i m e t o c o n t r a s t
le action of t h i s Simeon-pure p a r t y with the claim* they
urge so venomously u p o n P r e s i d e n t L i n c o l n ; t o enable y o u r
r e a d e r s t o meet t h e m with solid a r g u m e n t s on ail point*.—
The P. D e m o c r a t s will observe t h a t I am again Rreatly indebted to their Bible f o r my t e x t s , a n d t o the f a t h e r of t r u e
Democracy a n d to hcuiest Old Hickory f o r m y a r g u m e n t s .
LIBERTY o r SI-EBCU AND TOE PBEHS.
Pscudo D e m o c r a t i c o r g a n s a n d leaders claim the u t m o s t
liberty to discourage the people a n d to e m b a r r a s s the gove r n m e n t in c a r r y i n g on t h e n a r ; a n d t o e n c o u r a g e the rebels to persevere in killing Yankees, by all m e a n s t r u e or
false. They invoke heaven a n d earth t o help t h e m damn
Gen. Burnsido a n d act the people a g a i n s t Lincoln f o r arresti n g Vallandigbam who had octaaily persuaded the t r a i t o r s of
southern Illinois, l u d i a n a , a n d many in O h i o to a r m themselvos f o r r e s i s t i n g the draft, a n d h a d fired r e v o l v e r s at t h e
Soldiers' Home, filled with invalid aoldicrs ; at the residon"
of m a n y loyal p e r s o n s j and at a m o t h e r w i t h h e r child
in h e r a r m s w h o s e head they grazed w i t h a ball, when Gen.
Bascal s t o p p e d them, r e t u r n i n g f r o m t h e i r C o n v e n tio n , by
p l a n t i n g h i s c a n n o n a c r o s s t h e railroad a n d t o o k n e a r l y
fifteen h u n d r e d revolvers and a g r e a t many k n i v e s from
them. And now—to Bhow t h e i r i n d l g n a t l o a at t h i s vile
t r a i t o r ' s arrest, who boasted, irihis last speech, t h a t ho h a d
always voted, in Congress, a g a i n s t e v e r y g r a n t of men and
money to carry on the war—they h a v e actually n o m i n a t e d
h i m for Governor of Ohio, (governor Seymour, of N. Y ,
aald, i n his last message, t h a t g r e a t e s t State must " p a u s e "
W ° p ) g r a n t i n g men a n d money for the war till L i n c o l n
s t o p s m a k i n g arrests for t r e a s o n a b l e s p e e c h e s a n d p r i n t i n g .
B u t t h e loyal masses of the E m p i r e , S t a t e r e f u s e t o pause.—
Those who had j u s t r e t u r n e d at the e x p i r a t i o n of t h e i r t e r m .
r u s h i n g back again t o c o n t i n u e f i g h t i n g the battles of
freedom, and t h o u s a n d s of o t h e r s a r c f o l l o w i n g in t h e i r
wake, voluntarily. W h a t will t h e G o v e r n o r do with his disobedient subjects ? Will he call t h e m baok ? Rather an ngiy
r e b u k e t o a G o v e r n o r w h o h a s j u s t t a k e n t h e first step on
ladder. Bnt there i s no r o o m f o r m o r e evidence
t h a t Pseudo Democrats claim u n lim ite d liberty t o ensure the
of the rebellion, by speech a n d the P r e s s . I n short,
t h e y c o n t e n d that no person s^all DC p r e v e n t e d d o i n g any
t h i n g e x c e p t i n g c o m m i t t i n g actual, treason which consist*
in actually doing some o v e r t a c t ; a n d t h a t , even, in t h i s
case, t r a i t o r s shall bo t r i e d l>y t h o s e w h o m they havo made
t r a i t o r s at their homes.
'
{.
Now behold how P . D e m o c r a t s s u p p o r t liberty of speech
a n d t h e P r e s s for o t h e r s
Ever slncc t h e rebellion was ina u g u r a t e d a t G u a p t e r , t h t y h a v e m o s t stroftuoualy contended that f o r every s o u t h e r n rebel that is h u n g , a n Abolitionist
should dangle a t t h e . o t h e r o n d of the r o p e .
F o r what ?
Ana, Solely tor e x e r c i s i n g t h i s v e r y liberty of speech a n d
t h e I'res®—forj?rogposticating w h a t h a s actually come t o
in c o n s e q a e n c e of Slavery a s d for calling o u r glorious.
U. 8 . Constitution an a g r e e m e n t with d e a th and a c o m p a c t
w i t h h e l l , " b e c a u s e i t r e c o g n i s e s slavery. T h e Abolitionists
' did, and n e v e r proposed to do any t h i n g b n t agitate
slavery b y speech a n d t h e i'ruas till t h e p e o p l e should peacefully abolish It—th«j a r e now—resistant* almost to a m a n . —
A n d f o r tills a g i t a t i n g P . Derpftcrats woaid h a n g t h e m no
doubt, If they had the power. W h a n Wendell P h i l i p s was
Btoned I n C i n c i n n a t t i for lecturing on slavery the D e t r o i t
F r e e P r e s s of March 2G, 1902, said,—•-Mr. Philips h a s n o t a
p t r t i c l e o f o u r s y m p a t i i y f o r t h e t r e a t m e n t he received at
Cincinnattl. H e did n o t g e t o n e tenth part of h i s d e s e r t s 1"
A g a in , w h e n Phillps^vaa r e f u s e d t h e use of Y o u n g M e n ' s
in Detroit, tho Free Press, said, March 29, 1862,—" I t
would canso u s less pain t o see t h a t beautiful edifice, the
Y o n n g Men's Hal!, laid in ashes t h e n it would to know t h a t
s o large, i n t e l l i g e n t a n d Influential a body of o a r citizens
w e r e s o lost t o all self-respeot a n d a l l senso of p a t r i o t i c duty,
t o i n v i t e a traitor, w h o sliamefnlly boasts of b Is treason, t o
leotnre t o o u r citizens on a n y s a l j e c t 1" If actiona are allowed t o testify, t h e E d i t o r s h a v e changed places with
P h i l i p s who gives both time a n d money to c o n q u o r the
bels, while t h e y dolall t h e y can t o p r e v e n t it.
In the last
m e n t i o n e d article the F r e e P r e s s continues,—" If such a
(as Wendell P h i l i p s ) i s t o be allowed b y t h e officers of tho
G o v e r n m e n t to peaceably p r e a c h s u c h disunion s e n t i m e n t s ,
Wq know no g o o d r e a s o n why Yaacqy a n d Toombs, or C o b b
and W i g f a l l m a y n o t also bo p e r m i t t e d to come a m o n g
a n d p r e a c h t h e i r t r e a s o n to .the p u b l i c 1" Mind, the Free
P r e s s is a r g u i n g a g a i n s t the g o v e r n m e n t p e r m i t t i n g abolit i o n i s t s preaching 1 w h a t it calls treason, a n d h a s advocated
h a n g i n g t h e m f o r d o i n g so. N o w t h i s p r e a c h i n g treason to
t h e people a n d m a k i n g traitors of h o n e s t persous, is exactly
w h a t the G o v e r n m e n t h a s sfepped Vallandigbam doing a
the very time when b a n d s of t h o t r a i t o r s he had made w e r
a r m i n g themselves all around h i m for active o p e r a t i o n s
a n d the F r e e P r e s i n o w denounces the a c t daily, with all the
venoin of a t r u e C b p p e r h e o i B n t May 28, 18C3, the F r e e
P r e s s s a i d , — " T h o views of Vallandlgham have n o t h i n g
w i t h t h o question.
T h e s a m e feeling would h a v e been
aroused if Mr. G r e e l e y or W e n d e l l P h i l i p s h a d been arrested
a n d t h r o w n i n t o p r i s o n f o r e x e r c i s i n g the r i g h t s guaranteed
to t h e m u n d e r t h e C o n s t i t u t i o n , " Mind, all t h i s time the
F r e e P r e s s was e d i t e d by Walker, Taylor a n d Barns who
trol It now.
I t is indeed probeblo t h a t t h e same feelings would have
been aroused if Gjrtictay o r p h i l i p s ^ a d been arrested f o r
p r e a c h i n g " t r e a s o n " (?) by peaceable'means ; b u t n o t in the
m i n d s of pseudo D e m o c r a t s . I t s e e m s m u c h easier f o r t h e
leopard t o o h a n g e h i s s p o t s t h a n f o r t h e m t o become truly
loyal a n d c o n s i s t e n t citizens.
They have uniformly and
continually a d v o c a t e d b a n g i n g of Abolitionists ( a n i o n *
whom inost of t h e m class al! Republicans), a n d e n c o u r a g e d
mobs t o p r e v e n t t h e i r a d d r e s s i n g t h e people a g a i n s t slavery.
The a t t e n t i o n ol the F r e e P r e s s e d i t o r s h a s no ' d o u b t been
called t o t h e i n c o n s i s t e n c y of thieir c o n d u c t ; a n d t o Smooth
it over they considered i t necessary t o publish t h e above
r e n u n c i a t i o n or or apology {or i t ; but the cloven foot still
s t i c k s o u t a n d the h o r n s of a t le a s t i m p l i e d treason still
b r i s t l e ; and w i l l c o n t i n u e t o d o s o u n t i l they cease \<i try
a l a r m and discourage the people's enlisting, by c o n t i n u i n g
t o h a r p v o o n the. w a r debt, u p o n t h e impossibility of conq u e r i n g t h e rebefvupon the c o n j u r e d o p ( u t t e r l y false) dan-
Al Kiids «f Job Priitiig NeaUy Expeditwsh ExemUd.
UNITED STATES LAND OFFICE AT, TRAVERSE CITY, IICII.
Register
Receiver
MORGAN BATE8.
REUBEN GOODRICH.
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
J u d g e of P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I 8 F J ^ E R . M a p T c t o n
S h e r i f f . . . . . . . ; . ; - - . — B . F . D A M B , Traverae t i l y .
County Treasurer
MORGAN BATfMjTrar.City.
C o u n t y Clerk.
JAMES P. BgAND,
, A
Register ol Deeds
5E8„P.'«?S^
'
,
Proa. Attorney
C. H . M A ^ i
Circuit Court Com.-.C. H . M A R S H ,
*
Coroner*
L. R. SMITH,
ElkBspids.
R O B E R T L E E , Ccntreville.
O. H . M A R S H ,
aitii Conrafttor
at
**D
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k D O N V E T A N O E R ,
Traverse City, Grand Traverse County, Mich.
Offlce In D w e l l i n g H o u a e .
1-ly
J . Or. R A M S D E L L ,
Attorney &OounsselloratLaw,
TRAVKR9K orrv,
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
REFERENCES:
! ! » 0,o.
J . B,vr-ct. J.IIIOO.
— . J . n . . . y , C.mst^n, 1. " ~ - I — f L U « r K ^ L . U h . l * M l a t . *W>
TKAVTCRSB o r r v
E X C H A N G E .
THIS HOUSE IB NOW Ol'RSKn TOR Tire BEXKFIT O* THE
T E A V E I i l S G
P U B
i j ^ O j
t-KDBKTJlB BVrBBJKTBBDBVCBOJ'
CHARLES
W.
- i r GIVE HIM A
DAY.
CALL. J f £
a w. D.
T r a v e w e Olty, May l y i B M .
.
GTJNTONHOTJSE
J A M E S K . OTJaSTTOK-.
(ON STABLIHfi MIDTOlAMD BEDS*
T U B l a t h . U ™ « t H0..1. with tail
in the c i t y ; t h e leading D u l y and Weekly Pape ™
h e r e a n d no p a i n s will be s p a r e d t o make g n c a u c p m f o r t a b l o ,
a n d elevnn y e a » ' re?lden«« h e r e wlU enable me t o gjVe reliab l e i n f o r m a t i o n r e l a t i v e t o t h e reaoureel' o f C i e c o u n t r y .
fr
J >
-Jd-ly
K t
G
FAIRBANKS'
STANDARD
O
A
L
E
S
O P ALL KINDS.
S o l d i n D e t r o i t by ? A R R A N D A 8 H E L E Y .
B e c a r e f u l t o buy only t h e g e n u i n e .
C-ly.
J a n u a r y 33, 1803.*
ESTABLISHED
1760-
P E T E R LOIULLVRD,
S N U F F AND TOBACCO MANUFACTURER
1 0 it i s C h a m b e r s S t . ,
' ( F 9 r m e r l y 42 Chambera 8 t r t e t , New York,)
W o u l d call the a t t e n t i o n of Dealers t o t h e articles of h i s
manufacture, vis-:
BROWN
u — . w
"
S
U
i
^rtefetieman,
SNl'FF.
Demlgros,
1>Q
Nachltoehw,
Copenhagen.
Y E L L O W SNUXFr
Honey Dew S c o t c h ,
F r e s h H o n e y Dew 8 c o t c h ,
Freeh Scotch. ,
I r i s h H i g h Toast,
or L u a d y f o o t ,
ZST A t t e n t i o n is called t o t h e l a r g«ec r e d u c t i o n i n prh.«>
w h i c h will be
o f Fine-Cut CheWlng a n d 8 m o k i n g T'obaccos,
ob
f o u n d of a S u p e r i o r Q u U l t f .
TOBACCO.
HOdM.
FIKB COT CltKwlNQ.
&.Jago
I/fng.
P . A. U , o r plain,
Kj 1
Cavendish, or Sweet,
. .
v_ j
S w e e t S c e n t e d Oronoco, Canaster,
No*.'I A 3 m i x e d .
T i n F o i l Cavendish.
Turkish
Granulated.
•JT. B . — A c l r t n l a r of p r i c e s w i l l b e a c n t on a p p l i c a t i o n .
Pcotcb.
N O . 33.
g e r t h a t Lincoln i s g o i n g t o abolish the privilege of voting for approval ; and George E Pujgh, now on the ticket with
a n d become a despot, and upon many o t h e r equally foolish Vallandlgham for L i e u t e n a n t Governor o r O h i o , said : " Sir.
topics—all of which they know tlo be u t t e r l y void of a n y I r e g r e t the necessity for s u c h ; legislation ; but wherever
slavery exists as an Institution,;laws of t h a t c h a r a c t e r m o s t foundation.
be adopted." (See Con. Globe, A p p e n d i x , p 610). A n d all
a f t e r the inauguration of B u c h a n a n — t h e last g r e a t tho big d o g s and little whiffcte ojf tho D e m o c r a t i c party j v i p leader of the P Democracy, especially of the s o u t h e r n w i n g ed A m e n , " let's have i t for Kansas 1" B u t f r o m t h i s Demo
—lie consented t h a t all n o r t h e r n p a p e r s t h a t said any t h i n g party the Noble Douglas led awyy a vast t r a i n of true demoa g a i n s t slavery, m i g h t (should) be destroyed by S o u t b e n i c r a t s ; a n d for so d o i n g was r e a l o u t or the party * y the old
Postmasters, which is t a n t a m o u n t t o abolishing the freedom leaders. However, since he is fsonehia followers—the t h e n
of the Press, for b u t few p a p e r s could live a single y e a r with- comeouters—are like " the lostBhecpof the the house of Isand it is t o be feared many of t h e m h a v e returned t o
cirrulation by mail.
W h e r e were t h e Copperhead
sticklers f s r the f r e e d o m of the P r e s s t h e n ? Did any person their vomit.
,
IL R. 8 .
ever hear any of t h e m say or write a single word in defence
A Black Snake a n d a Copperhead.
of t h e Constitutional right of f r e e d o m of the Press, t h e n , in
Tulltics makes s t r a n g e bed fellows, but the snecics or bed
times of peace ? No ! I t was indispensable to t h e success o l fellow p o s s e s s d by Mr. A n d r e t i s of Virginia, the leader of
t h e late New York"mob, who is, HO thoroughly e n d o r s e d by
the rebellion, inaugurated by t h a t 1'. Democratic administrathe Copperhead prints, was perfectly astonishing. It was not
tion, t o keep the loyal southern people in dark and total Igno- s u r p r i s i n g that Mr. A n d r e w s , ; of Virginia, when a r r e s t e d ,
rance of the fact t h a t our goveraracnt had actually ofltered should have had his pockets stuffed w i t h Confederate shluthem greater favors t h a n they had e v e r asked (as was ac- pla.-u.rs. I t does n o t surprise lis to learu t h a t he ha» been
instrumental in f u r n i s h i n g the rebels with vessels a n d proknowledged by the rebel Vice-President. Stephen, in t h e i r visions. These were qualilicaCons indisjiensable to a leader
secession Convention,) so that they m i g l i t b " the more eas)ly of a mob o p p o s i n g the G o v e r n m e n t . We are n o t oven enwhipped into the Slaveholders' rebellion by falsehood and tirely surprised t o l o a m t h a t Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, when
arrested, was found in a brothel, b u t w e do a c k n o w l e d g e to
force.
a large degree of a s t o n i s h m e n t t h a t his bed-fellow was a ncNo person who will reason candidly upou the facts adduc- gro-weneh.
,
Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, eta t h a t m e m o r a b l e Tuesday,
ed above, can avoid c o n c l u d i n g t h a t t h e 1>. Democratic leaders a r c opposed t o the f r e e d o m of Speech a n d the P r e s s f o r ha rangued the mob of brutes, Urging t h e m on to f r e s h s c e n e s
of bloody cruelty. D u r i n g th« day ho presided over the deany.party or person that would employ t h e m t o oust or keep struction of a charitable insti»ition erected for the benefit
t h e m from office, oven in t i m e s of peace when no immediate o r o r p b a n e d colored children. ' S c o r e s or negroes were tramh a r m conld result f r o m abuse. • B u t they are utterly opposed plod upon, butchered in cold Wood and b a n g e d t o trees a n d
to all suspension or r e g u l a t i o n of t h i s freedom, a n d consider lamp-posts at tho i n s t i g a t i o n df Mr. Andrews, of Virginia.—
H i s h a t r e d of the n e g r o was Intense, a n d well nigh p a w i n g
it Unconstitutional to s u s p e n d it, only when t h o i r owti loa- beller. The s i g h t of one t u r n e d bis blood t o gall, and bo
ders fall u n d e r t h e ban for its disloyal use.
N o m a t t e r if could not rest u n t i l be h a d butchered h i m . H i s dislike t o
t b e i r l e a d e r s e n c o u r a g e treason and t h u s p r o t r a c t the rebel- e v e n - t h i n g of A f r i c a n d e s c c n t would have satisfied any Copperhead. Alaric was not mods t h e s c o u r g e of Bome t h a n
lion, a n d by so doing sacrifice t h o u s a n d s of lives (as t h e y Mr. Andrews, of Virginia, t h e » o u r g e of tiic n e g r o . His h a t e
have already done). No m a t t e r if t h e y excite rebellion
was fearful, exquisite, a n d refined, a i d at night when ho reh o m e a n d t h u s Invite s o u t h e r n rebels to invade and devas- tired exhausted with u r g i n g tlfclr s l a u g h t e r , h e found sweet
repose from his tolls in tho artns or a negro wonclu
tate tho free States, a n d even o n d a n g e r the only pure dornoAnd the Copperheads a n d N o r t h e r n secessionists endorse
cretic government on e a r t h — t h e world's last h o p e of free- Mr. Andrews, of V i r g i n i a , t n 4 b i s course.
Involuntarily,
dom ; they still contend t h a t It Is u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l t o inter- the question arises—How manv more of the C o p p e r h e a d s a n d
n
e
g r o haters are a d d i c t e d t o N r . Andrews' e c c e n t r i c i t i e s ?—
fere with t h e i r nefarious schemes. Yea ! they declare every
Is their hatred of t h o Africau<Tlk« his, b o u n d e d by the m e r e
a c t that tends to procrastinate t h e i r own reconciliation w i t h m a t t e r of gender ? I f so, t h e n i s the g r e a t work o r amalgarebel slaveholders, and consequently p o s t p o n e s t h e i r g e t t i n g mation, which t h e y so s t u d l o i s l y c h a r g e u p o n t h e Abolitionists, likely to bo accomplished w i t h o u t t b e a i d o f t h e latter;
Into ofiice'and power again, Unconstitutional.
They
nounoc i t unconstitutional t o confiscate t h o rebols p r o p e r t y , and the A f r i c a n race proper, t o bo c x t i n c t in a few genera•weaken t h e m and s t r e n g t h e n ourselves by t a k i n g t h e i r
slaves and employing t h e m t o fight o u r battles ; because, by
c o n t e n d i n g for slavery tbe^r h o p e t o reconcllo themselves
the slaveholders without whose aid t h e y almost despair of
g e t t i n g into power and restoring the g o v e r n m e n t o
u n d e r Pierce a n d Buchanan. To-be sure, t o k e e p t h e i r followers (loyal Douglas Democrata) hoodwinked, they p r e t e n d
t o bo in favor o f « n b d u i u g t h e rebellion by c o n q u o r i n g the
rebels and by p r a i s i n g the s o l d i e r s ; but all t h e i r o t h e r measures are I n t e n d e d , snd do t e n d directly a n d powerfully, t o
m a k e the rebellion sncoesafuL O h 1 ye loyal Dougtaa Democ r a t s ! why do you still follow B r e c k c n r i d g e l e a d e r s who are
t r a i t o r s no less t h a n h e Is ? '
T o be sure " l i b e r t y of speech and of tho P r e s s is the Pallad i u m of L i b e r t y , " a n d when otnployed loyally by way of candid reasoning a n d p o i n t i n g o a t t h e mistakes, e r r o r s or misdeeds, oven or t h e P r e s i d e n t (ps t h e abolitionists, whoso pap e r s I read for years, employe^! it,) it m u s t bo sustained by
means and a t all times, f o r liberty can n o t l o n g exist withi t ; and no prominent peiSson or political party, except
t h e D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y Bnd th^lr s o u t h e r n rebel " b r e t h r e n "
h a s ever denied or even^ a t t e m p t e d t o restrain It in our
country, in time of peace, since o u r revolution or the Presidency of the elder A d a m s ; and no person h a s p r o h i b i t e d i t
in t i m e s of war, oxcept General J a c k s o n whose noble example Bumalde a t t e m p t e d t o imitate for t h e same reason. When
reasoning is e x h a u s t e d t h i s liberty h a s done all t h e good i t
do ; and, in time of rebellion, w h e r e candid loyal reas o n i n g e n d s a n d s e d i t i o n , baaed on s u b t e r f u g e a n d on conj u r i n g u p false a l a r m s a n d Issues, begins, t h e i n d u l g e n c e in
t h i s latter o a g h t t o be suppressed, t h o u g h Lincoln thinks
b e s t t o indulge i t until It becomes Indispensably n e c e s s a r y
t o prohibit It, as e m a n c i p a t i o n finally did. B e i o r e t h e N. Y.
Tribune joined the D e m o O i j g a n s l n their c r y against
government. General McClcllan cxcluded.it f r o m the army
a n d arranged m a t t e r s for the! almost exclu&ivc circularion of
the mean N. Y. Herald, t i e a e r a l Grant, who is now claimed
as a democrat by all antl-ad A i n i s t r e t l o n papers, p u t a Chicago Times e d i t o r Iflto State's P r i s o n .
No h u e or c r y V a s
raised against these Demo. Generals by P. Demo, leaders ;
b a t some or t h e i r o r g a n s t h ? n suggested the installation or a
Military Dictator, and McClellan as a fit person to be Installed.
;
The P . D e m o c r a t i c p a p e r s are publishing e x t r a c t s in defense or u n l i m i t e d freedom of Speech arid or the Press, rrem
a late speech of F r a n k l i n Ptercc. T h i s is the sairre Pierce
w h o was P r e s i d e n t of the U. 8 . w h e n the slaveholders murdered the e m i g r a n t s f r o m t h e F r e e Slates Into Kansas, witho u t the least opposition, b u t with . b i s e x p r e s s apologies f o r
t h e m and t a c i t s a n c t i o n . — H i e same Pierce w h o supported
the men t h a t destroyed newspapers only for asserting t h a t
the grand m a j o r i t y or the settlers in K a n s a s were tree state
men, and t h a t tho slaveholders bad carried t h e elections by
fraud, which w a s proved t n j e by a C o m m i t t e e or Congress.—
The same P i e r c e w h o dispensed a c o n v e n t i o n or treemen
peaceably assembled to draft a n d s u b m i t to Congress a Constitution, by s e n d i n g a troo j of U. 8. soldiers t o do the dirty
work.—Yes ! t h i s i s the sawe F r a n k l i n Pierce with whose
sanction the b o g u s legislature or Kansas, elected by votes taken f r o m a C i n c i n n a t t l Begistry. passed the following law.—
And i a n o t t h i s little (Great}) P i e r c e a very fit advocate t o
come forward now, a n d advocate rreedom of speech and of
tho P r e s s ror Copperheads, but intentionally for no body else!
Here is the law
• 8 B C . l t H a n y free p e r s o n , by s p e a k i n g o r liy w r i t i n g
assert or m a i n t a i n t h a t perse a s have not the right t o hold
slaves in t h i s T e r r i t o r y , or shall i n t r o d u c e i n t o t h i s Territory,,
print, publish, w r i t e or ciraulate. or causo to be introduced,
published or circulated In t h i s T e r r i t o r y , any book, p a p e r
magazine, p a m p h l e t or circular, c o n t a i n i n g any deuial o r the
right of persons to hold slaves in t h i s Territory, such person
shall be guilty o r relony, a n d punished by i m p r i s o n m e n t a t
h a r d labor for a term or n o t less t h a n t w o y e a r s . "
A t the first Session, 34 Congress the Kansas code, of which
the section j u s t q u o t e d is a p a r t , came before the C. 8. Benate
li
° M r Andrews, of Virginia, WSB fastidious a n d o r i g i n a l in
hi* choice. W h a t was repugBant a n d horrible in the black
masculine became e n t i c i n g Bkd lovable In t h e black femin i n e ; a n d t h i s model C o p p e r p e a d In t h s embraces of h i s
Congo D u l c i n e a attained supreme felicity. How many m o r e
happy C o p p e r h e a d s are there!? We are constrained t o believe Mr. Andrews, or Virginia, is n o t an isolation, tor b e
has f o u n d plenty of friends wfio are r u s h i n g t o his defense.
The natural historian infetrms u s t h a t the C o p p e r h e a d
a n d tbe black anake are ofleq f o u n d together, b u t we d o n o t
remember t h a t the C o p p e r h e a d seeks tho f e m i n i n e black
snake. The same peculiarity may obtain in t h e h i g h e r t y p e *
which i s the only h y p o t h e s i s w« can assume f o r t h i s s t r a n g e
ufT.iir. Mi-. Andrews, of Virginia, an K. F . V „ a chivalrous
S o u t h r o n , a n a t f t e of tho s u f l n y South, a l e a d e r or the New
Y o r k Democracy, a bosom M e n d of F e r n a n d o Wood, an « .
p o n n d e r of D e m o c r a t i c principles, a s t a u n c h uncompromisi n g foe of negroes, rivalling t h e Chicago T i m e s In Negrophobia, rising a g a i n s t the G o v e r n m e n t f o r recognizing the n e g r o
as a h u m a n being, u r g i n g ou;ana h e l p i n g t h o u s a n d s of frenzied b r u t e s t o m u r d e r s n d b u t c h e r negroes, f o u n d in a bed
in a brothel s l e e p i n g in the a r m s of a n e g r o c y p r i s n !
The Strength of Women.
F r o m the Atlantlo Monthly.
W e m u s t hold h a r d t o thfc conviction t h a t n o t merely dec e n t health, b u t oven a h i g h ' physical t r a i n i n g Is a t h i n g
thoroughly practicable for bbth sexss. If a y o u n g girl can
Ure o u t h e r p a r t n e r i n a danee, i f a delicate woman can c a n y
her baby twice a s long aa b->< athletic husband (for certainly
there is n o t h i n g in the g y m t i s l u m moVo amazing t h a n t h s
m o t h e r ' s left arm,) t h e n It ia evident t h a tti»efemaleframe
c o n t a i n s m u s e n j a r power, or*, its equivalent, t h o u g h ft may
take m u s i c or m a t e r n i t y to taring ft o u t B u t o t h e r induce- • , u a n d t h o resulta do n o t a d m i l of
merits h a v e proved- sufficient;
question. The Oriental b a y a d e r e s , f oa rre nt r at i.n^e„d
from c h i l d h o o d s s g y m n a s t s ; t h e y carry h e a v y l a r s on t h e f t
heads t o i m p r o v e s t r e n g t h , gait snd figure ; t h e y fly h i t s *
to a c q u i r e - statuesque a t t i t n d e s a n d g r a c e f u l s u r p r i s e s
.
t h e y m u s t learn t o lay the bi<ck of the h a n d flat a g a i n s t the
wrist t o partially bend the a t m in both d i r e c t i o n s a t the elbow. s n d . inclining tho whole person Backward f r o m the w a i s t ,
t o sweep the floor with t h e i r h s l r . 8o a m o n g ourselves, the
g r e a t sthletic resources of U e female f r a m e are vindicated bv
every equcstrain goddess o t the circus, every pet o f t h e b s l l e t T h o s e airy n y m p h s h a v e been educated for t h e i r vocation by a n a m o u n t of physical fatigue which t h e i r dandy ad-
Infinitely superior t o that of o r d i n a r y women, w o n d e r f u l l y
a d a p t i n g t h e m n o t only to the e x t r a o r d i n a i v , b u t t o the common perils of h e r s e x . " wltlf t h a t h a p p y u n i o n or p o w e r a n d
pliability m o s t to be desired." " T h e i r occupation d e m a n d s
an a s i o u n t o r i o n g continued m u s c u l a r energy of t h e severest
c h a r a c t e r little recognized »r understood by tbe c o m m u n i t y |
a n d his description of t h e i r h s b i t u a l Immunity in t h e o r d e a l s
or womanhood renind* one b r t h e descritlon of savage tribes.
But ft is really a Bingular retribution f o r our prolonged offwi.
ccs against the body, when »ur s a i n t s w e t h u s compelled t o
take tiiclr models from the I reputed slnnera—prize fighters
b e i n g propounded ss missionaries for the men and o p e r a
dancers for the women.
:
WILL D a s s a v t I T — " I give a n d bequeath t o Mary, my wife,
t h o sum of o n e h u n d r e d pomids a year, aaid an old f a r m e r .
• Is t h a t written down, m e o r t e r ?
- Yes," said tho l a w y e r , " b u t s h e i s n o t old; s h e may m a r r y
W o n ' t you m a k c a n ^ c h a n g e i n ' t h a t case ? M o s t p e o l C ain.
P
' D o t h e y ? " said the f a n r n r , " wall, w r i t e a g a i n , a n d ray.
t h a t If my wife m a r r i e s again. 1 will give and bequeath to her
the sum or two h u n d r e d p o j n d s s j'ear. That'll do, won I ft
B1
- ' w b v , ? f t ' s double tho s u m she would h a v e i r s h e remained
u n m a r r i e d . " said t h e lawyei; - it Is generally the other wsy
— t h e legacy i s lessened i r the widow m a r r i e s a g a i n . "
" Ay," said the former, «Jbut h i m as gets h e r will desarve
PaiKTXR'a TAIJ:.—Every Profession k a s technical terms,
and of course the p r i n t e r s h a v e n " s m a t t e r i n g , . w h i c h l s
only intelligible t o t b e c r a f L T h e foliowii^ is_f * — i m * "
ffiZ
K
ft
w o u l d ^ c t m to the unin-
rnt
S - a U r f m - ^ < 5 ^
the m u r d e r of t h a t n i g g e r j o u commenced resterd^ay. ISet n p
the r u l n s o f G u v a n d o t t e ; d f r t r i b u t e t h e small p o x . , you need
1
n o t finish that m u t i n y : putithe
P i t c h t h a t p i i n t o hell, a n d then g o to the devil a n d he will
a satanical a r t .
•
T b e siege or V l e k s b u r g commenced on the J1 st of May, and
l i s t e d until the 4th or J u l y , j u s t forty-one d a y s .
Por the Grand Traverse Herald.
The New Regiments.
i Sraenrex OK A Cori-ERiiKAn COMMISSION.—In January
Pre»s' Perseverance in reassertThe Adjutant General of.tbe State, by d r ctioo of
! last the Legislature of Illinois passed, by a strict party The Detroit Free ing
Falsehood.
the Governor, has issued the followiug order :
M O l l G A N B A T E S , E J d i t o r a n d P r o p r i e t o r . (Dcroocrasic) vote, a bill appropriating $10,000 to tbc
FRIKND BATKS,—Notwithstanding tbc assertion has
AKJTTAKT GKNKRAL'S Orncs, t
relief of the Illinois soldiers wounded at Vicksburg and been often proved false, the Free Press still insists that
DCTROIT, June 10, 1863. $
TRAVERSE CITVi
GHN KRAL ORDERS No. 14.
Murfreesboro, and appointed three commissioners to dis- the Republicans brought ou the Rebellion by refusing to
F R I D A Y MORNING, J U L Y 31. 18C3.
It being of the utmost importance for tho good of the
tribute the money, and iu person see that the soldiers adopt the Crittenden Compromise ; and some loyal Deservice and for the cffijeocy of the troops from this
wants are relieved; that they make a report, under oath, mocrats still believe it true. It may be proper to lay State, that the Regiments and Batteries now in the field
Tbo Grand Rapids Eagle says that there .arc those to tbc General Assembly, setting forth in what manner before your readers irrefutable evidence of the falsehood should be strengthened by recruiting in the State for
who do not believe there will be a drafu-who TWnk the the money has decn expended—how mam soldiers, nam- from the rebel Vice-President, Stephens, himself
In that purpose, therefore 5t is ordered :
1
I. That no more new Regiments be raised within the
late victories lave ended the war, or that the ptospec- ing them and their companies and regiment -, bavo been tbc Georgia Secession State Convention in 1861. A. HState until farther orders ; that no commissions will be
tive victory over Lee will end it. To all 6uch we desire relieved—the commissioners to have three dollar* a day Stephens said :
given to any officer for any new organization, nor will
to *oy that the draft hasalieady begun, and that 450,000 each while engaged in tho work- On the 13th of Janany
Stale boucty bo paid to men enlisting for any such
•' When we see our lovely South desolated by the demoro men are called for. As fast as the enrollment lists uary the §10,000 was paid them in gold. They imme- mon of war, which this act of yours will inevitably invite organization.
II. That all recruiting in tho State shall, until further
of the several States are made out the draft begins, aud diately sold it at thirty-nine per cent, and pocketed the and call forth ; when our green fields of waving harvests
that without any warning. The first warning the people premium. The minutes of one commissioner, submitting shall be trodden down by the murderous soldiery aud orders, be for men for tlie Regiments and Batteries now
fiery car of war sweeping over our land : our temples of in the field, and all ijteu enlisting, therefore, will have
of thi/Statc will get will be the order to begin. Orders a report ol bis " expenses," shows that he incurred a to- justice laid in ashes ; all the horrors and desolation of choice or Regiments, otid will be entitled to the usual
have already been received by Provost Marshal Bailey, tal expense of one thousand four hundred and forty live war upon us ; who but this convention will be respon- Government and State i bounties.
The Officers now recruiting for their respective Regito harry up his lists; a^d. occordingly, lost week, he em- dollars in distributing one thousand one hundred and six- sible for it f
We quote farther :
Pause, I entreat you. and consider for a moment ments and Batteries, ar^ urgently requested to use every
ployed four ladies in addition to his other force of clerk? ty eight dollars.
what reasons you can give that will even satisfy your- exertiou to speedily procure men to add to their now
in copying the enrollment lists.
'
much
denleted ranks, i
The editor or the Compiler, a Democratic paper pub- selves in calmer moments—what reasons you can give
About 1,800 men will be drafted, probably, from this
By order of the Co»monder-in-Chier,t.(
lished at Gettysburg, has been sent-to Fort McIIenry.— to your fellow citizens in the calamity tbot it will bring
'
J x o . ROUKRTSC.X, A d j . Gen.
Congressional District, and that within i six weeks cerupon us ? What reasons can you give to the nations of
It appears that Mrs. Beuhler. the wife of the Postmas- the earth to justify it ? They will be the calm and deThis order suspends recruiting for the new regiments
tainly, probably within four weeks, possibly next week.
ter, had secreted n number or Union soldiers in her house, liberate judges in the case ! And to what causo or one for the present We lire quite certain, however, that
Tbo sure way to escape it is to volunteer—to raise the
these
regiments
will
be
filled
up, shortly, as the Governsome or whom were wounded. Upon the re-occupation overt act can you name or point, on which to rest the
men at oueoby voluntary enlistments.
or the towu by tbc rebels, the editor aforesaid disclosed plea of justification ? What right has the North assailed ? ment needs, and must have, a very large oxtensioo ot the
The war is not eloaod yet. Even if Lee is entirely
What interest of the South has been invaded 1 What cavalry arm of service. Meantime, a!) those who choose
the fact to one or their officers, and at the same time justice has been denied ? And what claim founded in can enlist in the old n^rimcnts, or all arms, and thus be
used up—us wo hope be will be and believe ho may bo
designated points where arms and liquor could Ite' found. justice and right has been withheld ? Can either of you certain or escaping th« conscription. We should be re—the war will not be ended—it will, linger out this year,
to-day name one governmental act of wrong deliberately joiced to see all the regiments—new and old—promptly
at least. There will bo ne great battles, it is wry like,
The medical men of Paris recommend tbo following and purposely done by the government of Washington, filled up. especially those from this Congressioual Disly, but there will he guerrilla hunts, places to occupy, way or administering caster oil to children: The quan- of which the'South has a right to complain ? I challenge. trict whose already proud reputation would thereby
eclipse that orall other portions oT tho Uoioo, for its
forts to be built and occupiod, the country to be overrun tity or oil prescribed is poured into a small eartheru pan the answer ?
patriotic response to the demands or tho government, and.
and disarmed, &e.
over a moderate fire, an egg broken iuto it, and stirred
•' N ow, for you to attempt to overthrow such a gov- the necessities of the Republic. [Grand Rapids Eagle.
Out of this 4G0,000, howover, it ia-silpposcd that 150,so as to form what cooks call buttered eggs ; when ernment as this, under which we have lived for more
Official Despatches from Com. Porter.
000 will escape the service by paying $300, or by dis- it is done, a little salt or sugar, or a few drops of orange than three-quarters or a century—in which we have
FLAG SUIPIBLACICHAWK, o r r VICKSBVRO, (
ability, -and by exemption from all causes, so that the water, or some currant jelly, should be added. The sick gained our wealth, our standing as a notion, our domesJuly 18,1863. $
tic
safety
while
the
elements
of
peril
are
around
us,
with
Government docs oot really cxpect to get into the field child will eat it eagerly, and never discover the fraud.
Srn.—I have tho hdnor to inform you that the expepeace
and
tranquility,
accompanied
with
unbounded
only about 300,000 actual soldiers from the conscription.
dition I scut into Red. River.region, is very successful,'
A disastrous fire occurred at Lansing, on the uigbt of prosperity and rights unassailed—is the height of mad- ascending the Black nod Tensas Rivers, running parallel
This addition to our armies, besides tlie levies of ucgro
the 9tb inst It commenced in the rear of the cabinets ness, folly aod wickedness. to which I can neither lend with the Mississippi. ; Lieat Commander Sclfridge made
troops to be raised, will mako the fall Of tbc rebellion abmy sanction nor my vote !"
the head of navi(Ration on Tensas Lake and Bayou Macon,
furniture shop orG. W. Swift, and destroyed that buildsolutely certain.
But here follows an extract from a letter submitted to 30 miles above y icksi)urg, ond within five or six miles
ing and stock, also, the machine-shop or Mr. S., his loss
the British government by the three rebel Commission- of the Misfl'ssippi River. The enemy was taken comThe Conspiracy*
is 82000; no insuraure. H. L. Baker's chair shop, and
pletely by surprise. The rebeb that have ascended to
The Chicago Journal of the 26th says that it ts belief T. D. Billings' dwelling house, which stood adjacent, ers sent over to solicit intervention :—
It was from no fear that the slaves would be liber- that region will be obliged to move further bock from
ed—and there appears to be official reason for the opin. were also burned with most or their contents.
H. L. ated that Secession took place. The very party in pow- tho river, if not go a#oy altogether.
Lieut. Commander 'Selfridge divided his forces on
ioo—that the invasions of Lee and Morgan and the Baker's loss was 8500 ; no insurance. T. B. Billing's er has proposed to guarantee slavery forever in the
New York riot wore parts of a general programme loss was 82,500; insurance 81,500.
States, if the South would but remain in'the Union. Mr. transports which had been carrying stores to Walker's
Lincoln's Message proposes no freedom of the slove, but army, and has escape^ up some of the narrow streams.—
agreed upon by the Northern Cppperhead leaders and
Ho
sent the Manitou nnd Rattler up Little Red River
A Salt company has been organized at S t Clair, in- announces subjection of his owner to the Union—in
the Southern rebel chiefs, for creating in the ioyal States
(a small tributary of the Blook,) onp the Forest Rose
cluding 15 energetic citizens, with a capital .stock or other words, to the will of the North. Even after tho and Petrel up the Tepsaa. The night was dark and it
a formidable revolution against the Government
battle
of
Bull
Run,
both
branches
of
the
Congress
at
The movements of Leo and Morgan and the New 820,000, or which 8-1000 has been paid in. Operations Washington passed resolutions that the war is only wag- was raining very harti Tho Manitou and Rattler sucto be immediately commenced on a form south of Pine ed in order to uphold that (pro-slaver}-) Constitution, and ceeded in capturing tbe rebel steamer Louisville, one of.
York riot happening at abouf the same time, and that
to enforce the laws (many of them were pro-slavery,) ond tholorgest and perhaps best steamers in western waters.
time, too, when the feeling against the draft \ras at its river and near the bank or the S t Cloir.
out of 172 votes in the Lower House, tney received all Up the Tensas the Forest Rose or Petrel captured the
. height, is a coincidence that indicates strongly the
AMALGAMATION.—The Free Press, orDetroit is like but two, and in the Senate all but one vote."
>» steamer Elmira, loaded with stores of sugar acd rum for
the rebel army.
istencc of the alleged conspiracy, and that these move- all other Democratic papers, harping upon the amalgaWM. L YAJSOKY.
Finding that tho steamers which had conveyed Gen.
ments were but the beginning of an attempted revolution matibn or the races. The Advertiser k Tribune gives
(Signed.)
P. A Rosi,
Walker's army had returned up the Washita* the expeA DUDLEY MAXN.
a t the North—a revolution that was designed to be ac- it a sharp hit by showing that on editor or that paper
dition started up that; river ond came suddenly npoq two
Southern
Commissioners
to
England.
complished by an invasion by the Southern traitors, ond is an actual amalgamationist, having married a squaw.
rebel steamers, but the rebels set them on fire and they
In bis recent speech before the Boston League, Hon. were consumed One steamer, loaded with ammanitiou,
the complicity and co-operatioo of Northern copperheadsA Copperhead named Johnson, in Adams, Hillsdale Edward Everett declared that •' had the Crittenden escaped above the fort at Harrisbarg, which is a very
For our part, we have never doubted for an instant,
strong work and unassailable with wuoden gunboats.—
since the outbreak in New York, that that disgracefhl county, attempted to protect from arrest a deserter from Compromise been adopted, it would not have averted
Jt is on an elevation #f over 100 fcet high. There are
Deputy Provost the war."
and outrageous affair was; in a groat measure, the work an Ohio regiment, on the 10th inst
water batteries of heavy guns.
Marshal
Leanord
captured
the
deserter,
after
a
se
The truth is, up to 1859, the Democratic party had
of Southern emissaries and their Northern sympathizers.
Lieut Selfridge was fortunate enough, however, tostruggle; and subsequently, by the Dupty Sheriff's aid, conceded to the Southern Slaveholders all they asked, hear of a large quantity of ammunition that had lately
Morgan and his Men.
he seized Johnson and lodged him in jail, although
and even tendered them special privileges unasked.— been hauled from Natchez and deposited at Trinity,
The capture of a large portion ol Morgan's plunderers sistcd by his wife with a loaded revolver.
Slavebolding Presidents could remoin in office eight neatly due west of Natchez, acd from whence stores of.
provisions, cattle, guns and ammunition are transported.
is an eveat of no ordinary consequence in: tho future.
years, and fill nearly all tho most lucrative situations in
He captared 15.0ft0 rounds of smoothbore ammuniOn 4th of July uigbt, two drunken men slept together
The amountor damage done by this band since tho bethe Administration with their ot*cn obsequious minions, tion, 10,000 rounds Enfield ammunition, 224 rounds o f
ginning of the war surpasses all estimate. It has de- in a barn in Buffalo, N. Y., and towards morning, the while no Northern freeman could be President longer fixed ammunition,,#! hogsheads of sugar, and 50 barrels
more
sober
ooe
piled
upon
his
companion
two
heavy
Teed
stroyed untold millions of property, cut rail road lines
than four years.
Buchanan decided that there was no of salt ; all belonging to the Confederate Government
Walker's ormy is Wt almost without ammunition.
and telegraphic communications without limit and kept boxes, o strew cutter, aod a pltW to keep him worm.
power granted in the Constitution to resist any of the
The officers hove *hown great energy in this expedi1he people oftwo States in a condition of constant excite- Tho next morning lie was found suffocated to death from Slaveholders' behests ; and they thought they had action and have met with no mishaps. They procured a
ment and terror. Most of Morgan's men have been dis- the heavy pressure.
quired unlimited and despotic control of Northern free- good deal or information by which future movement*
ciplined to their work and were moro formidable than
The white Captain and all our negro soldiers caught men. But the rapid enlightenment of the rank and file will be regulated The people in that eectioa are very
-tenfold the same number of rebel infantry. Their cap- by the rebels at Milliken's Bend, were hung hy orders of the party, made the tenure of office by the leadiug hostile to the Govcrtment—rank rebels.
*
1 bavp the honor to be, Ac.,
tare is probably n mure serious loss to the enemy than of Gen. Taylor, son of old Zock, who drew up his com- doughfaces precarious ; and to conciliate their constiDAVID D. PORTER.
tho thousaods of rebels kiRcd at Gettysburg.
Should mand to witness the execution. An orderly-sergeant io tuency. these doughfaecs were compelled to resist the T o H o n . GIDEON WELLES. '.
Morgan himself escope he will find himself for months charge of some plantation negroes was also hung.
slaveholders' encroachments upon free institutions ; and The Three Hundred Dollar C l a n * — T h e Case
virtually without a command and wholly incapable of
Plainly State* by a Life-Lorn* Democrat.
did so under the leadership of the great (not little)
Pemberton, in his first letter from beleagured VicksThe
following
is
an
editorial
of
the
Philadelphia
Ledserioua mischisf. Large portions of Kentucky and Tengiaut—Douglas The Slaveholders hated Douglas no
nessee f t the,same time will bo released from tho intimi- burg, Appealing to Grant said that bis supplies would less than Lincoln, and in the overwhelming vote or both ger and Transcript, bf the 15th inst, an oat ana out Democratic sheet or tlfit city :
dation of his presence, free by Word and act to aid in re- enable him to hold out indefinitely. But as soon as he conjoined, tbey saw the Scepter unmistakably departing
" And what is all this rioting about T Tbc draft—and
had capitulated he drew upon our stores for 30.000 rastoring the reign of the constitution ond laws.
from slavery forever. This appears to have been the for the alleged reason that the law of Congress authoriztions.
true state of the case. The majority of the democratic ing it fovors ooe cli»« who ore able to boy their exempFOHKTOK NEWS.—In the House of Commons on the
SALT AT CORUNNA.—The Shiawassee American says, party, under Douglas, resisted the further encroach- tion to the prejudice or those supposed to bo unable to
13th, Roebuck withdrew his motion for the recognition
raise the requisite 8300. By the operation of the law,
of tho South, yielding bis own feelings to the wishes of the Corunnasalt well has reached n depth of 960 feet ments of slavery upon freedom no less than did tho Re- it is argued that the army will necessarily be composed
and the brioc exhibits a strength of £5 degrees by the publican party, and, in addition to this, uuder Bucban- of those least able to leave their families to join its ranks.
Lord Palmerston.
8alometer.
nn they had suffered the now rebels to prepare for war to Now this is not the'purpose or effect of the 8300 exempPolmerston^aid Roebuck did right in withdrawing
tion. Directly thejreveree is true. Hod there been no
Brine was reached at t h e ^ i t well iu Lansing, on the a much greater extent than tbey would likely be permit- reasonable sum fixed for exemption, the cost of a three
tho motion ar.d he hoped this would bo the last time when
any member of Parliament would make use of this inter- 14th inst., at the depth of 640 feet It is found in white ted to do again, uuder any subsequent Administration years' substitute would run up. as it did a year ago, from
and
the
rebellion
would
have
been
as
certain
under
five hundred to fifteen hundred dollars—a sum quhc besandstone,
being
the
upper
stratum
of
the
Saginaw
salt
course with any foreign sovereign, such proceedings beDouglas'as under Lincoln's Administration. Henco it yond the power of i very large-portion of the communirock.
. ing extremely Irregular.
ty to command, fione but. thd exclusive few could
Gold
has
risen
ic
Richmond
to
oino
hundred
per
coat.
m
m
evide.1
i
h
^
the
Denwmtie
party
i.
«
much
to
O'Donohue protosted against Roebuck's bitter hostility
have commanded substitutes at sufeh figures. Instead of
to the North. He believed Roebuck and his friends premium, and wheat is to ten dollars per bushel Tho* blame for bringing on the Eebelhoo as the Kepublio«» the present 8300 Exemption working oppressively on the
and even more so, becausc they enabled the rebels laboring classes, it.was especioBy designed for their
were actuated by the belief that the destruction of the figures are a great deal more reliable than any other inprotection, and actually does put them as nearly on a
to
prepare
for
i
t
by
withdrawing
the
garrisons
from
the
Union would be a great advantage to Eogland.
He formation we have, as to the sinking condition of the ConU. S. fortifications, ond implements or war from the footing with the most favored as is practicable. Tbc
federacy.
should consider it the greatest calamity in the world.
object or the draft 5s men. not money : and in order to
Arsenals, as well as by scattering our Navy and Army soften the rigors of Conscription, Congress has said that
A letter from Winchester, Tennessee, or the 18th, over regions where they could be ol no use, nor be reaSerious Indian troubles are anticipated on the plains
any drafted man may get o substitute ou tho best terms
or Kansas and Nebraska this season. The deputy sur- confirms the capture of Huntsville, with three hundred dily recalled. Without such preparation the rebellion he can. but he shall not be forced to nay more than three
hundred dollars. Thus is the man ot small means proveyors write from Fort Kearney that a force of seven prisoners ond 1,200 horses ond mules. General Stanley. wonld have been postponed.
H. R S.
tected from the competition of those of greater means,
thousand Indians, or various tribes, have determined to •Bragg's army is reported reduced bv desertion to 18
who could, but for the 8300 limit outbid bim in tbo
WASHINGTON, July 25.
or
20,000.
' wage war on the Pawnees, who bare the reputation of
The Nationat Republican of this p. m.. states that pos- purchase or a substitute. No conscription law can ever
THK MICHIGAN TROOPS.—Gov. Blair and Adjt. Gen. itive information has been received here that Lee has be popular, bccaulc it is necessarily more or less arbitrabeing the meanest thievos on the plains. Thev have
ry
; but the present law is probably as lenient and equitbeen making incursions on their neighbors, who have Robertson, have lately returned from a brief visit to the been delaying on the Potomac to enable him to get
able as any such law can be, ond is certainly not obnoxiresolved to chastise them. The tribes declare they will field. The entire force are said to be in good condition away safely with tbc plunder he bad collected in MoryJand and Pennsylvania, and because bis forces have been ous to the censure raised against i t os favoringone class
make war with tbc whites if they are, interfered with
nnd in excellent spirits.
gathering the cropffln the Shanandoah Valley.
He is to the prejudice of another. . With a proper disseminacarrying their designs into execution.
A lady residing in Cambridge. Masi, has sent three now moving towards Richmond with immense trains of tion orthe truth of this matter, and the observance or a
supplies; the necessity of procuring which was increased liberal patriotic sfirit by those who remain at home, iu
Admiral Porter reports the success of the Rod River sons to the war, two of whom have been killed in by the foil of Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and is now making ample provision for the care and comfort ol debattle, and the third diod from sickness. A fourth son intensified by the cutting of the Tennessee & Virginia pendent families, whose head may be called to take the
expedition. Several rebel steamers, containing
Railroad, which was a great medium for procuring sup- hazards and hardships of a battle-field, a better underammunition, &c., were captured, Tho rebels destroyed was drafted.
standing must sooa be reached and the low allowed to
plies for Lee's army.
two Of their steamers to prevent them fulling iuto out
A general confiscation of rebel property in Missouri
take its course unobstructed, to the great strengthening
hands. Walker's rebel army is loft almost without any has been commenced bv United States Marshal T. B.
The mob in Troy looked after their Copperhead friends orthe army, the speedy resusciation or confideuce, ami
ammunition.
Wallace.
the eventual revival of all business."
promptly, releasing the prisoners from the jail.
Cljeferni!Craberst $trali).
• • • « •
• » «
TRAVERSE OITY.
MANISTEE COUNTY.
(Concluded
from
Foutth
Page.)
I i | ? if fc
; P ft
t h e C h i c a g o T r i b u n e of t b e 2 7 t b .
T h e rebel m a r a u d e r and
i t o u , delinquent for unpaid t a x e s for the year* mentioned
below. a» will I * sufficient to p s y the t a x e s Interest, and
charge* thereon, wiU be sold by the Trea*urer of said
County, on the fir«t Monday of October next, at such puhlic
and convenient place as he shaB select in S t . J a m e s ,
B e a v e r I a l n n d , the county seat of said county, according
the Statute in such case made a n d provided.
EMIL ANNEKE,
Auditor General.
34 vo 4 67
1862.
17 W) 1 7 9
30 SO 4 2«
T o w n 4 0 N o r t h of R a u c e 8 W e s t
27.90 3 W
T o w n 2 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t
M V S
-i
~ O
T h e V « r Latest New*.
W o a r c i n d e b t e d t o S m i t h B a r n e s , E s q . , for a c o p y of
brigand. Gen.
'11
M o r g a n , b i s nnili of n w | of
IS ICO
3 13
15 80
1 72
staff a n d all h i s f o r c e s h a v e b e e n c a p t u r e d b y G e n . S h a c - u n d i of e | of s w i
L o t 3 or
*1 C* »0 3 08
k e l f o r d , w h o a n n o u n c e s i t officially t h u s : " B y the^Wess- L o t 3 of
28 57 50 3 73
T o w n 24 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t .
i n g of A l m i g h t y G o d , I h a v e s u c c c e d e d in c a p t o K c g
13 u
lot
10 90
G e n . J o h n A - M o r g a n , C o l . C l a r k e , a n d t h e b a l a n c e of u n d i of Lot 3 of
u n d i ° f t o t 4 of
33 43
G7 06 30
his command, amounting t o 400 prisoners."
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 17 W e s t .
' I ' M
2 16 21 #0
* J a c k s o n , Miss., is in full p o s s e s i o n of t h e F e d e r a l Island No. 1
Lot No. 4
2 38 20 1 92 l'JSO
foreca. '..
Lottto.1
*10 30 20 7 14 7 1 9 0
.10 J«
2 J3 « 90
T b c n e w s f r o m t h e A r m y ot t h e P o t o m a c i s n o t Tory L o t S o . 2
sei of Bwf
11 40
3 78 37 90
d e t a i l e d , and<M)ll w e a r s a v e r y v a g u e s i r .
Ixje is pro-
•
3 ol
1 63
*
??
s.
? ~
?
S?
§3
o
^
Hannah, Lay 5c Co's Columu
J U N E 13, 1863.
W
l H A V E J U S T R E C E I V E D AND A R E NO.Vopening, with weekly additions, • large and varied
Stock of general merchandise. «abh as Is usually k e p t by
ourselves. Which i s specially adapted to the wants of t h i s
'idly growing c o u n t r y ; all or: which h a s l**en seic-ted
th especial rare, both as to quality, style and price. In the
best markets tha c o u n t r y affords,.and which i s b e i n g a n d will
he offered at rates c o r r e s p o n d i n g with the lowest regular
ratea for similar grades of g o o d s l n the metropolitan mark e t s abroad.
J
To a full examination of price< we wonld invite the attention of our customers, a n d more {particularly those contemplating a residence here, asaurlr.fr t h e m that any information
which wc can give, will \<e e-heerfnlly given ; k n o w i n e as we
do that if fully understood all w j u l d avail themselves of the
advantages offered—which m a * be better understood byn a m i n g t h e s a m e as follows : Nd rents, n o inanrancc, low
freights, small exi>en*e*. (aa compared with most town»>
cash purchases, best msrkets. I l e r f e c t familiarity with a n d
long experience in this kind of t)n*inCss, enabling u* to know
ju.it where to go to purckaso different classes of goods to UKpossible advantage.
e are t h u s [ a r t i c u l a r that a l l who r e ail may k n e w onr
t i o n a n d advantages ; and op examination which we tnwill prove to tho mo*t easajd o b s e r v e r t h a t we can cndot-so every rtntement made l n ^ f * r colnmn.
Our f t o e k of Dry Good* la ve?y complete, bonght low. of
he most approved styles arid make#, c o m p i l i n g d r e s s
oods in DeLains. Chaliies, A l p t c c s s . Saxony Maids, P r i n t s .
J l a c k S i l k » . W..o1 DrLslines, f l j c r e j nbd plain black a n d
white Plaid*. t»wi«» Muslinc, C h i m b r e y s , (iingbams, Ac., Ac.
3
1 25
08
1 I
T o w n 3 7 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 0 W e s t
I I 52 75 3 07 30 90 4 2;
U 36 30 I 96
19 90 3 0!
14 34 65 1 96
19 80 3 O.'
14 40
2 21 22 90 3 33
Town 22 North of Range 17 West.
15 40
/ 2 21 22 90 3
b a b l y o n t h e Retreat t o w a r d s C u l p e p p e r , a t d M e a d e i s *ej o f n e j
T o w n 3S N o r t h of l t a n g e 10 W e s t
*'
* "
30 80
2 C5 2 » ! « :
40 90 5
nej o U w |
s t r a i q i n g e v e r y n e r v o t o c u t off his R i c h m o n d c o m m u n i - W i C ie»
ISO 159 60 4 13 41 90 I
40 90 5 30
40
n i of si
cations and give battle. A n engagement is reported,
MM
7 59
Village of Manistee.
D{ Of HW|
,11
13 01 1 30 !'0 l!
sei of
probably with the rear guard. Our cavalry are doingj
11 '
11 60 1 1 5 9 0 13 45 nei of n e j
2 fco 28 l>0 3 'J
c x c c l l e n t w o r k h a r a s s i n g h i s flanks a n d c a p t u r i n g h i s
a e j »r ac t
HALE O F S T A T E TAX LANDS.
nwi of s w j
plunder.
n i of n w j
T h e c a p t u r e o f H u n t s v i l l e is c o n f i r m e d a n d a d d s t o
»3 80
wi of s. J
s 'JO U t
!*• 160
9 SO
m i of
U n c l e S a m ' s books 300 m o r e prisoners.
T o t v n 3 9 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 0 W e s t
N e i t h e r t h e W a r n o r N a v y D e p a r t m e n t * h a v e receivLot No. 1 of
»1 43 l o 1 CO 16 00 2 cr,
for T a x e s of 1861, a n d previous >cah>, and described in
11 s» 20 1 41 14 90
DOMESTICS
e d anything f r o m Charleston later than the l ^ t b i n s t
merit* which will be forwarded to the office of the Treasurer Ix>t N6. S or
S3 43 30 1 80 16 JO 2 66
of said County, BpoiC time u e j t month, will 1* sold ut public l/>t No. 4 of
Bougi.t at reduced rate^ : D f u b l c a n d T w l i t Casslmeres,
G e n . B l u n t , w i t h a small f o r c e h a s w h i p p i d 5 , 0 0 0 re12 'JO 2 23
13 34 70 1 21
suction, by fold Treasurer, at tl(e county seat, on the first Jlon- Lot No. 5 of
Black and E a n c y Casimeres. J'reocli S u m m e r Caasimerca,
27 40
1 44 14 90 2 4* York Mills Cottonade*. plain a j d fancy. Whittcnton Plaids,"
bels a t E l k Creek, near F o r t Gibson.
•day of October next, at the t l i i u and. place designated for the n e j o f o w j
16 ;«) 2 65
£7 40
1 60
ordinary T a x S a l e s if n o t previously disposed of at tbUOllicc, s c j o f f w j
Nunkuuctu", Kentucky J e a n s . , Twtods, Mixtures, Denims,
H o n . J o b o ' J . C r i t t e n d e n , of K e n t u c k y , i t d e a d .
Lot No. 4 of
Ifrt 55 50 1 92 19 90 3 01 Checks Apron and Miners, T i t k s . S h i r t i n g P r i n t s . Drills,
a c c o r d i n g t o law.
Lot No. S of
M 45 bh 1 66 15 90 2 61 Cotton Flannels, Wool Flaonefe, r»rown Cottons, Bleached
M e x i c o w a s d e c l a r e d an e m p i r e o b t h e 1 3 t h .
MaxiSaid s t a t e m e n t s contain a full description oi . . . . . . r —
nwi of nwi
M- 40
1 80 18 90 2 b8 Cottons, Ilags, Ac., Ac.
of
said
lands,
a
n
d
may
be
eebn
on
application
at
the
office
•
m i l l i a n o f A u s t r i a , w a s p r o c l a i m e d e m p e r o r , if Le will
30'JO 4 20
rei of nwi
W 40
3 00
of the County Treasurer.
CLOTHIKG.
l'5 34 70 4 39 43 90 5 72
a c c e p t ; if n o t , N a p o l e o n will s e l e c t one.
Lands s t r u c k off t o the State f o r taxes of 1861. or other l/>t No. 2 of
Gents fine (ilk lined Black Cloth Coat*, very s u p e r i o r qualT o w n 3 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
years, at the T a x Bales in October l;i*t„will be offered subject
ity, fine Black CassimercPinto.! Fancy Casimerc Coats, P a n t s ,
4 32 75 1 25 I
' N E W F o T A i o t r t — W C return t h a n k s t o A b n c r L c s l t y t o the right of redemption prescribed by law, as well a* to tin' I/Ot No. 3 of
id Vests, S u m m e r Coats. Cottouade P a n t s a n d Coats.
r i g h t of p u r c h a s e of the b t a t e Bid* at thii* Offii e prior t " the ixit No. 4 of
4 39 SO 1 60
16 90 2 55
?
Undcr-clothing. a full line G i n t s a n d Ladies, Over Shlrto
f e r a b a s k e t of n o w P o t a t o e s of a c h o i c e v a r i e t y .
As
.
EMII. A N N E K E .
J of se(
9 40
1 50
10 •-•0 2 55
,
Auditor General
Fractional
SI
9 C5
32 03 90 1 2. and Alls, Oil Snitx, India B u l s x r Coats, Wool, Union nnd
p o t a t o e s a r c r a t h e r late t h i s Beason, t h e y a r e Really a
Cotton Socks in variety. C o l l a * . a large a s s o r t m e n t Cravats,
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
i a x u r y ot t h i s t i m e .
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
l 2 96 well assorted, Trunks, Travelling Bags. Valises, H u n t i n g
Lot No. 2 of
J l 60 90 1 88 1
Bags, UmbreUes, a i t Satchels, some very good, Ac., Ac.
T o w n 3 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 14 W e s t .
GRAIN ELKVATOBS IN C«ICAOO.4—Another, i m m e n s e
. . 1 94
LADIES) WEAR.
95
3?
Lot No. s o
G r a i n E l e v a t o r , said t o t b o l a r g e s t in t h o w o r l d , h a s j u s t
2 00 20 90 3 10
Gloves, silk, lisle a n d l e a t h i r , IIosc, black, white, , slate,
O MUCH O F E A C H O F T H E FOLLOWING DESCRIBED wi of nwi
12
90
2
22
brown a n d blue. Cotton, nnlonj merino and cashmere. Belts,
Lot
No,
l
of
b e e n finished a t C h i c a g o , a n d still a n o t h e r , of e q u a l size,
t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s of land, situated In the County of E m 9 90 1 95 assorted ; Magic Ruffling, Tni-t t r i m m i n g , full lino : FlouncI-ot
No.
2
of
i s n e a r l y c o m p l e t e d . T h e y h a v e been b u i l t in t h e most m e t . delinquent for unpaid taxes, f o r the years m e n t i o n e d
20 90 3 10 iugs, Swiss c a m b r | c a n d l i i e n : also, E d g i n g s in t h r e a d ,
below, aa will bo s u f f i c i e n t . t o pay tho taxes, interest, and Wi o f s w i
8 90 1 80 cotton, srayria. cambric, SM ISSI and silk ; Cotton Wash Trims u b s t a n t i a l m a n n e r , a n d a r e f u r n i s h e d t h r o u g h o u t w i t h charges thereon, will be sold}>y the Tr e a s u r e r of said County Lot No. 4 of
1
10 90 2 00 mings, colored and white, v e j y pretty ; colored and w h i t e
4 40
n e j of s e |
t h e m o s t p e r f e c t q i a c b i o e r y , i n c l u d i n g a l a r g e n u m b e r of on the first Monday of Octobor n e x t nt such public and con40 90 6 30 Stays ; colored and white " S ^ i r t S u p p o r t e r s . " best m a k e ;
4 160
n
e
t
of
venient place as h e , shall
select in L i t t l e
Tra10 90 2
1 0
Crinoline, a nice a s s o r t m e n t ; Ijtdies Drawers and Vests ;
[13 41
F a i r b a n k s ' 5 0 0 B u s h e l H o p p e r Scales, w h i c h i n s u r e s v e r s e * the -county seat of said county, a c c o r d i n g to tha Lot No. 4 of
18 57 40 I 45 14 90 "
W r o u g h t Collars, in linen, cambric, nnd muslin ; C r o t c h e t
Lot No. I of
c o r r e c t w e i g h t t o b u y e r s a n d s e l l e r s , of g r a i n .
T h e Statute in such case made a n d provided.
>18 4 3 30 1 10 11 90 2 11 Braids ; m a r k i n g c o t t o n ; kern stitched h a n d k e r c h e i f s :
Lot No. 2 of
EMIL ANNEXE,
122 28 75
75
7 90 1
plain linen handkerchiefs ; flrei-s patterns, assorted ; Tell
L
i
t
No.
1
of
a m o a c t o f g r a i n w h i c h c a n b e h a n d l e d in t h e s e E l e v a t o r s
Auditor General.
;23 16
63
6 90 1 59 borage and tissue ; lace v e i l s ! Ladles knit skirt* ; ballmoral
Fractional
1862.
in a single d a y is e n o r m o u s . T h o increased p r o d u c t i o n
skirts, nicely assorted, s u m m e r styles ; Broche shawls ;
T o w n 3 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 14 W e s t
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 4 W e s t .
9 90 1 89 stclla, delaine a n d wool sliuwl* ; cloaka ; ladies embroiderof g r a i n in t h e N o r t h w e s t Is p e r h a p s s h o w n in no w a y
0
°
;2l 36
> 5
15 1 25 12 90 2 27 ed setta, low price a n d choice ; wash b l o n d ; black lace,
m o r e c l e a r l y t h a n b y t h o r a p i d I n c r e a s e in C h i c a g o of
55
62 60 6 25 90 69 65 figucred ; F r e n c h j a c o n e t ; s i f t cambrics, f o r l a d i e s ; marc
Lot No. 1 ..
61 CO 1 55 , 15 90 2 60 s-illes ; I n d i a cloth, A&, Ac.,
t h e facilities f o r receiving a n d s h i p p i n g i t
4 of
p
33 160
4 00 40 90 6 30
BOOT8 AND SIIOE8.
I 36 13 00
3 80
BCSIHKSS EDUCATION.—'The f o r e m o s t in s t a n d i n g , of w i of swi
133 160
4 00 40 90 A 30
1 36 13 no
4 80
e i of s e j
! 34 80
2 00 20 90 3 10 Gents o x f o r d ties ; e m i g r e s gaiters ; U l l m o r a l s h o e s ;
w i of n w j
t h e I n s t i t u t i o n s w h i c h g i v e t o t h o s t u d e n t a c o m p l e t e n e t of n e i
r,u or. yn
40
34 80
2 00 20 90 ,3 10 plow shoes ; calf hrogsn* ; U p shoes ; b r e g a n s ; carpet a n d
w
i
of
swj
10 40 "
OH 90
b u s i n e s s e d u c a t i o n / i s B r y a n t a n d S t r a t t o n ' s C h a i n of n w j of n * i
•34 39 40 1 00 10 90 2 00 goat s l i p p e r s ; Indian rubbort ; calf, k i p and heavy boots ;
i/Ot
No.
1
of
.17 160
2 71 27 90
pebble calf boot* ;
n e i of
34 38 90
97 09 90 1 96 ladies goat ballmoral boots J ballmoral
i n
Lot No. 2 of
National Mercantile College*
F r o m t h r e e t o f o u r e i of n w i A nwi ot n' .
17 120
2 03 20 90
& c o n g r e s s ; sido lace a n d
34 62 30 1 58 15 90 2 63 glove kid congress g a i t e r s ; V
17 80
36 13
13 90
90 2 39 l<ot No. 3 of
: 17
80
11 36
m o n t h s s p e n t ih o n e of t h e s e i n s t i t u t i o n s s u f f i c e s t o e n - n J of aei
^34 38 90
97 09 90 1 96 heeled gaiters ; k i d buskins tand s l i p s : c a r p e t a n d plush
LotNo. 4 of
slips ; childs c o p p e r t i p shoes ; c o a t ballmorala ; l a s t i n g
T o w n 3 6 N o r t l i of R o u g e 4 W e s t
Town
30
North
of
Range
15
West
a b l e t h e g r u d u a t o t o a s s u m e a p o s i t i o n in t h e c o u n t i n g
boots a n d c a c k s ; mlsaes l>o»ts, full a s s o r t m e n t ; l>oy» s h o e s ,
07 90 1 68
n e i «f n e |
e| of s«{
: 9 49 KO 3 13 31 90 4 34
assorted ; b o y s boots ; c h i l i s boots, nlco a s s o r t m e n t ;In
GS 06 90 1 04
r o o m — t o e n g a g e in m c r c a n t i l o p u r s u i t s s u c c e s s f u l l y , a n d n w i of n e i
the above gooda w e can offer I n d u c e m e n t ^
30 13 90 2 39
s i of n e i
t e c o n d u c t b u s i n e s s of a n y k i n d s y s t e m a t i c a l l y a n d u p
•JO 13 90 2 J 9
w i of nwi
S T O V E S A N D H O L L O W WABJB.
68 06 90
c o r r e c t p r i n c i p l e s , T h i s C h a i n of C o l l e g t s p u b l i s h e s
n e i of n w i
G
T
t
A
?
T
D
T
R
A
V
E
R
S
E
W
O
O
D
L
A
N
D
S
F
O
R
S
A
L
E
.
08 06 90 1 64
F o r e s t oak, Minnesota, Yfcnkee Doodle, AlblotL Sebator
riw* of n w |
s c r i e s of t e x t b o o k s t h a t h a v e j j e e n i n t r o d u c e d a n d u
T H R E E IIUNPItED ASt> E I G H T ACRES, I N ONE Compeer, Volunteer. Orator,. Sovereign, c o m b i n a t i o n b r i e *
68 06 90
s w i of n w i
L bodv. of choice Wood Laad, o n the Peninsula, in Grand oven reservoir top nnd w a n t i n g c l o s e t Combination P l a i n ,
68 OS 90
becoming very popular throughout the coantiy.
u w i of n e i
68 OG 90 1 C4 Traverse Bay, seven miles fro«i Traverse City, f r o n t i n g half Imperial Brick Oven, Imperial Plain Oven. C o n ^ t , P r U e
s w i of ne{
68 06 90 1 6. a mile on the West nay at tho entrance of Bower",, llaibor. P r e m i u m , C o n t e s t Lark. C o i k i n g Stove*. •
S o r r o w IIOOT MANCFACIURK.—There i s a s t r o n g p r e - s e i of n w i
,'
68 06 90 1 W It Is prote'ctcj from prevailing w i n d s by the H a r b o r on the
In parlor a n d box stoves ;jTroy Box. Gen,"Peerless. TOval.
j u d i c e a g a i n s t a r t i c l e s of A m e r i c a n m a n u f a c t u r e , a n d n e i of awi
There is L o c k e t idahoc. C a s k e t N e w ; P l a t e S t o r c N Double D o o r Plate
0G t>0 1 64 North snd by a large Island in f r o u t o n the West.
n w i of a*!j u s t l y , too, in m a n y eases, b u t n o t so w i t h D e l x i n d & swi of sei
2 40
68 06 90 1 64 deep water all along on the f r e n t within 8 or 10 rods of the and Parlor Cook Stoves, w l t i addjtion* a s occasion d e m a n d s .
shore,
and
the
beaching
ground
is
good.
This,
land
(wliic.i
S 320 96 5 41
KcttlcB, all sixes, from 4 to W g a l l o n s ; Bake kettles. Pots,
C o . '* Chemical
Solera tut.
T h i s j s t h e j b e s t n r t i e l e In nfii of
is of a choice n u l l i t y for f a r m i n g purposes, well watered
4 40 32
66
n e i of n e j
with s p r i n g s and small stream-".) i s haavily timbered with
GROCERIES.
e x i s t e n c e f o r c o o k i n g p u r p o s e s - y e t manjr f a m i l i e s a r e se{ of nc{
h a r d maple, beech, rock elm. white a*h, linden, a n d - s o m e
A foil and complete agferfaMnt, i which we Invite i n u s i n g E n g l i s h s o d a , w h e n t h i s s a l e r n t u s is m u c h b e t t e r , n w i of n e j
cedar
:
l.ut
the
leading
t
i
m
b
e
r
is
h
a
r
d
or
sugar
maple.
I*
11 40
08 06 90 1 64
n w i of s w i
spection.
'•>•.{
—<«63 06 90 1 04 will cut from forty t o fifty c o r d s of " C h i c a g o body wood,
I I 40
• a n d b y u s i n g i t y o u jiro p a t r o n i z i n g h o m e p r o d u c t i o n . Spices in raw and ground material, of best grade*.
of s w i
or
SO
cords
of
"Stoamlioat
wood
"
t
o
t
h
o
acre,
two-thirds
of
68
06
90
1
64
23 40
of n e i
TOBACCO.—Plug, fine c d t smoking, turkisb, tip-top Old
F o r salo e v e r y w h e r e .
j
1 l which would be hard maple. T h e r e is a good mill-Stream
24 40
u w i of swi
V i r g i n i a lump.
•
.
. . . . .
nnd
water
power
on
the
premises.
Pricc,
«ix
dollars
per
T o w n 3 7 N o r t h of R a n g e 4 W e s t
DYES.—Indigo, m a d d e r , e x t r a c t logwood, cudbar, blue
T h e N e w Y o r k p o l i c e a r c b a g g i n g v a s t q u a n t i t i e s of
06 90 I 64 acre—cash. For f u r t h e r particulars, address
vitriol, camwood, copperus,!tochincaL
n e j of s w i
MORGAN BATES.
p l u n d e r t a k e n b y t h e r i o t e r s , a n d a r r e s t s (of l e a d e r s of,
06 90 1 64
26 40
F O B T H E TABLE.—Pre*erved peaches, cherries, plnms.
s e i of swi
Register of the I /and Office at Traverse Citj% Mich.
13 90 2 39
26 80
quinces, c u r r e n t s goosctt+ries, raspberry, c u r r e n t grape
a n d p a r t i c i p a n t s in. t b o r i o t c o n t i n u e t o lye m a d o doily.
wi of Swi
30- tf.
Traverse
City.
J
u
l
y
8,1863.
13 00 2 39
26 80
a n d strawberry jellies, tomatoes, apples, peaches, p r u n e s ,
e i of sci
0(J90 1 64
33 40
- A new C a t h e d r a l i s a b o n t t o b e e r e c t e d in H a v a n a , s e t of nwi
cheese, crackers, dried beef,
N
O
T
I
C
E
.
13 90 2 39
33 80
b u i l t w h o l l y of i r o n , t h e e s t i m a t e d e o s t o f w h i c h i s 8 1 , - ' e i of s w i
HARDWARE.
UNITED S T A T E S LAND O F F I C E ,
13 90 2 39
33 80
s i of n e i
000,000.
^
. '
!
TRAVEKKR CITY, J o l y
186S.
Nails f r o m 21> t o c o ' s , as l^w as can be bought elsewhere ;
27 90 3 88
33 160
s e i of
A T E N T S FOR ENTHIES MADE BETWEKN T H E iron, a foil a s s o r t m e n t ; g l i i s , all sizes ; a x e s broad, nnrrow
34 (SO
13 90 2 39
F r o m P o r t H u d s o n — O f f i c i a l D i s p a t c k c s f r o m G e n . s i of n t r i
16th
day
of
J
u
n
e
,
1862.
and
the
10th
day
of
Nov.
1802,
f
o
r
and
boy's
:
barn
door
h i n g « and rollers ; cable and t r a c e
27 90 3 f-8
34 160
sw{ of
27 90 3 8S Hcttlcinent o n d Cultivation, u n d e r t h e Graduation A c t of c h a i n s ' t r a p s , tablo a n d p»ckct cutierj-. a full Une : d o o r
.'W 160
HKADQCARTRBO D t P A B T U p T O P T i r e G c t P ,
13 90 2 39 August 4, lnoI" have been received at t h i s ORice. and t h e trimmings, complete stock ( c a r r i a g e bolts ; pad, chest, t u t
35 80
e{ of nc{
1 4 t h A r m y Corps, P o r t Hudson, J u l y 10.
p
u
t
c
h
a
s
e
r
s
are
hereby
notified
to
come
forward
immediately
t
r
u
n
k
,
box,
and
d
o
o
r
l
o
c k s ^."sorted ; carpenters tools, a full
20
90
3
13
35 120
w i ol swj
of Swi
T o Maj. Gen. H a l l e c k : !
'
. . . .
06 90 1 64'and make the required proof "f " Settlement a n d Cultiva- line : shoemakers tools sr.d findings gbod a s s o r t m e n t ;•
s e i of s w i
8 r a : — I h a v e t h e h o n o r t o i n f o r m y o u , t h a t w i t h t h i s n w j of ge{
06 90 1 64 tion,"'and secure their respective Pairiits, lieca--.se If said steelyards, b a l a n c e s flat H r o n s g r u b hooks, s c y t h e s a n a
proor
is
not
filed
within
a
limited
time,
the
P
a
t
e
n
t
s
will
be
1
''
t h e r e f e l l i n t o o u r h a n d s o v e r 5 , 5 0 0 p r i s o n e r s , ; i o c l o d i n g swi of aei
r e t u r n e d t o the General L a a d Office, a n d will t h n s be liable " ' F A R M E R S T O O L ? . — S h a r d s s p a d e s h o e ^ p o t a t o h o o k s ,
.15 80
o n o M a j o r G e n e r a l , o n e B r i g a d i e r G e n e r a l , 2 0 p i e c e s e i of s e i
to be cancelled for n o n - p e r f o r m a n c e of the conditions of forks, 2.3. a n d 4 tined ;. mixture forks schnfflc hoes, g a r d e n
1 30
30 80
h e a v y a r t i l l e r y , five C o m p l e t e b a t t e r i e s , n u m b e r i n g 3 1 o j of s w i
settlement and cultivation c o n t e m p l a t e d by the Gradual'
a n d hay r a k e s pounders, c l w bells, scythe s n a t h s and scythes,
Town 35 North of Range .6 West
pieces, field a r t i l l e r y , a g o o d s u p p l y of p r o j e c t i l e s f o r lino L o t t l 7 a n d J 8 s S h . d l v . L o t I 32 1* 45
i.-raln a n d Children* c r a d l e ! plaster, Iliac, Riddle's F a n n i n g
42 f>4 90 I 3r, A r t or August 4, 1S34.
MORGAN BATES, R«gi»tei
Mills, lumber w a g o n s l i g h t wagons, wagon s e a t s whiffietrces.
a n d h e a v y guns, 4 4 . 8 0 0 p o u n d s c a n n o n p o w d e r , 5 , 0 0 0 Lot 22 sub. div. Lot 2
32
2 45
I S 01 B0 1 0 9
3O^R..
KEUBEN
G
o
O
D
K
l
C
d
.
Rcceive
wheel barrows, r«sd *cr.\f»!rs, p l o w s 1 a n d 2 h o r s e ; Steel
s t a n d a r m s , 1 5 0 , 0 0 0 r o u n d s ' s m o l l a r m a m m u n i t i o n , b c - e i of Lot 21 sol., (liv. e i of s e i :I2 20
42 04 99 1 3 6
plow moulds for shovel p'.cfcvs d r a g teeth, cultivator teeth
o i o f L o t 2 5 s u l j . d l v . c l of s e i 32 20
42 »4 90 1 3«
s i d e a a s m a l l n m o n n t of s t o r e s o f v a r i o u s k i n d s .
r n i b h o e s planters heavy! h o e s half bushel b a s k e t s well
9
18 01 90 1 0 '
W o c a p t u r e d a l s o t w o s t e a m e r s , o n e of w h i c h i s v e r y w side L o t 20 s u b . div of lx>t 1.12
m c k e t s chain pumps, cistern p u m p s 4 c .
T o w n 3 5 N o r t h of R a n g e 6 W e s t
v a l u a b l e . T b e y will b o o f g r c o t s e r v i c e a t t h i s t i m e .
MEpICINES.
0 side Lot 9 sub. d i v . Lot 2
13
3 41
IS 01 90 1 0i>
MARY JAXB I-OI-ISA Dt-K'jfs and At.r.x
N . P . BANKS, M a j . G e n .
A v e r s J a y n c s Winslow'4 S a w y e r ' s T h o m p s o n ' s S a r g a n t ' s .
2 chains 37 links, c and w by f
1* TIIK C m c t - i r C o r n r for the County
J a v V , K e n n e d y ' s etc„ jsitent medicines ; as iU*o p i l l s
3 ch 75 l i n k s n and s in se >
In Chaneery.
•. of Lot 10 sub. div. L o t 2 J J8
45
13 01 90 1 09
olntmcute. o i l s osacncci a n d e x U a c U j n vnr»ety.
PROBATE ORDER.
STATK oi MlCltlOAN
s i Lot 27 sub. d i r . Lot 5 |
1?
18 ol 90 1 0 9
S T A T E O F MICHIGAN, ;
' HAHN ESSES. •
suit pending in the Ci
Little Traverse Village.
Cot'KTT o r GKAND TRAVXI-.SE. S
T r a v e r w . in C h s n c e r y .
Singl"'and dooble, heav# and l i g h t harnesses, m e n ' s a n d
13
18 0 1 9 0 I 09
T A SESSION O F T H E P R O B A T E COURT F O R T H E L o t 4 Block 1
* BATISFACTORfLY APPEARING TO T H E UXDER- side s a d d l e s b r i d l e s h a l t e f s g i r t h s martijigalls. e x t r a tnp*.
'
IS
1" 0 1 3 0 1 0 9
County of Grand Traverse, h o l d e n at'the I'robatc Office, Lot 6 B l o c k *
Blgned, C i r c u i t C o u r t Commissioner f o r the C o u n t y of s t r a p s A t , Ac.
j
•
Addition to Little Traverse Village.
in t h e T o w n s h i p of Traverse, on daUirdav, the E i g h t e e n t h d a y
t h e solici.
rand Traverse, by affidavitof J . G. Ramsdell.
LEATHER.
13
18 01 90 1 09 >rs for said Complainants, tr h a t the above
o f j u l y In t h e y e a r one thousand e i g h t h u n d r e d a n d sixty- L o t 42
led defendant*
J
t h r e e : p r e s e n t C u r t i s Fowler, J u d g e of P r o b a t e . I n t h e
Cow hide, "_ip. calf a n d findings, a complete line ; last*,
Mary J a n e Louisa i»uro and Alexander
•*
~ *H. F r e e r , are not
S
A
L
E
O
F
S
T
A
T
E
T
A
X
L
A
N
D
S
.
m a t t e r of the estate of William Ilan^in.
residents of t h i s State. J n motion of J . 0 Ramsdell, Solici-' p e g s n a i l s k n i v e s Ac.. A t .
On reading a n d filing the petition, duly verified, of C h a r l e s
for the C o m p l a i n a n t s it is ordered that t h e said DefendA u d i t o r Gencsral's Office. )
Y A N K E E NOTIONS.
H. Marsh, A d m i n i s t r a t o r , p r a y i n g to bo empowered a n d
a n t s Mary J u n e Louisa P u r o s s and Alexander H. Freer, causc
LAKSIKU, Mica.. J u l y 1, lsi>3. \
D o l l s cologne, h a i r oil, todmade. h a i r restorative and dyes
licensed t o sell Real Estate, or so m u c h thereof, a s will bo
their appearance t o l-e entered in t h i s cause w ithin three
O
T
I
C
E
i
s
H
E
R
E
B
Y
GIVEN
T
H
A
T
C
E
R
T
A
I
N
sufficient for t h o p a y m e n t o f t h e debts d u e - a g a i n s t said esm o n t h s from the date of t h i s order, a n d that in case of their handkerchief perfumes, toilet and s h a v i n g s o a p s spectacle*
l
a
n
d
s
situated
in
the
County
of
M
a
n
l
t
o
u
,
bid
oil
to
tobacco
and
sunff
b o x e s a(ul p o u c h e s m e e r s h a u m and comtate a n d the c h a r g e s of a d m i n i s t e r i n g t h e s a m e ; T h e r e u p o n
appearance thev and e a r h or t h e m cause their answers to
I t la o r d e r e d , that Saturday, t h e Twenty-second day of An- t h e B u t e for t a x e s of 1861, a n d p r e v i o b s y e a r s , and d e s c r i b e ! said C o m p l a i n a n t ' s bill t o bo tiled a n d a copy thereof to be mon pipes, porte-tnonies money b a g s ladies traveling bags,
g u s t next, at Ten o'clock In the forenoon, be assigned for t h o in s t a t e m e n t * which will be f o r w a r d e d t o t h e office of the served on the C o m p l a i n a n t ' s Solicitor within twenty days childs bags, r a t t l e s toyfv toy b o o k s c o m p a s s e s b r u s h e s
Tr
e
a
s
u
r
e
r
of
said
County,
s
o
m
e
t
i
m
e
n
e
x
t
m
o
n
t
h
,
will
be
sold
assorted, toy watches.
h e a r i n g of s a i d petition, a n d t h a t the hclre at law or said
a f t e r service of a copy of said bill and notice of this
deceased, a n d Vl o t h e r p e r s o n s interested In said estate are a t public auction, by said Treasurer, at t h e C o u n t y S c a t on nnd in default thereof that the said Bill bo taken -is- "confessed
STATIONERY.
"
r e q u i r e d to a p p e a r at a session of paid C o u r t , t h e n t o be hol- the first Mondav of O c t o b e r next, n t the time and place bv the said Defendants.
Letter, note, legal a n d leap p a p e r s e n v e l o p e s assorted, d e n a t tho P r o b a t e Office. In the T o w n s h i p of Travente a n d designated for the ordinary T a x Sales, if not previously dis' And it is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d ; t h a t within twenty days, ' b e said
posed
of
a
t
t
h
i
s
Office,
a
c
c
c
r
d
i
n
g
t
o
law.
«•
p e n c i l s p e n s Ink; Mack abd r e i scaling wax.
show cause, if any there be, why thi» p r a y e r of the p e t i t i o n e r
Complainants cause a cony of thl* o r d e r to »* published in
Said
s
t
a
t
e
m
e
n
t
s
c
o
n
t
a
i
n
a
fiyl
d
e
s
c
r
i
p
t
i
o
n
of
each
parcel
s h o u l d n o t be granted ; A n d i t la farther o r d e r e d t h a t said
^OOKS.
of said lands, and may bo s®«u o n application at the office of t h e Grand T r a v e r s e H e r a i d , a paper p r i n t e d and published in
titioner give notice t o the p e r s o a s interested in said esTraverse Citv. in said County o r G r a n d Traverse, and t h a t the
S a n d e r X M o G u f f y ' s D a r t s ' M i t c h e l l ' * and Clark's aerlejt of
te, of the pendency of said petition, a n ^ t h e h e a r i n g there- t h e C o u n t y Treiiafirer.
I ^ n d s s t r u c k off t o the State f o r T a x e s of 1861. or o t h e r satd publication be continued in wrid p a p e r at least once in *cbool b o o k s c h i l d s a n d i l u l t * miscellaneous b o o k s blank
of, by c a u s i n g a copy o f t h i s o r d e r t o be published in t h e
each week tor six successive weeks, or that they cause » copy b o o k s copy b o o k s so,ng a|<I m u s i c b o o k s some for schools.
G r a n d T r a v e r s e Herald, a newspapeir printed and c i r c u l a t i n g years, at the T a x Sales in O c t o V r l a s t w i l l be offered subject of this o r d e r t o be personally served on the said Defendant*.
TIJi W A R E .
in said C o u n t y of Grand Traverse, f o u r successive weeks pre- t o t h e right of r e d e m p t i o n prescribed by law, as well as t o Mary J a n e Louisa D u r o s s a n d Alexander H. Freer, at least
the r i g h t of p u r c h a s e of t h e State B i d s a t t h i s Office, p r i o r to
O u r tin ahop lain A N o j l r u n n i n g o r d e r a n d all w o r k
vious t o said day of hearing.
twenty davs before the time above prescribed f o r t h e i r apthe sale.
E M I L ANNEKK,
( A t r u e copy.)
CURTIS FOWLER. J u d g e of P r o b a t e .
guaranteed.
A u d i t o r General.
I
FU*MTURE.
A g o o d s * s o r t m e n V c o n 4 * n t l y on hand-=-at f a i r p r i c e s .
T H E R E A S MY W I F E HARRIET, H A S L E F T MY
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
V V bed and board w i t h o u t any J n s t cause o r p r o v o c a t i o n ,
We find it impossible tojhardly c o m m e n c e a n e n u m e r a t i o n
of our stock In *0 small a space, a n d for a n y a d d i t i o n a l po>I f o r b i d all p e r s o n s h a r b o r i n g or t o u t i n g h e r o n m y a c c o u n t
n s I will pay n o d e b t s of h e r c o n t r a c t i n g after t h i s date.
ticulars please call on or t o a d to
:. RAMSDELL. Sol. and of Counsel f o r Complainant,
^
FBBEMANO. J A C K S O N .
i H A N N A H . L A Y Ac C O .
led. J u n e 9, IHtS( P r i n t e r ' s fees $ 8 25.) •" 27-Cw.
5 t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s o f i a n d , situated in the C o u n t y of M a n T r s v o i * , J u l y 15,1863,
SI4w«
3 26
3 01
R 75
3 6*
5 02
Fractional
Lot No. 2
LotNo. I
Lot No. 2
nwt or nwi
neiofucfii
S
i 1?
If
TO WOOD DEALERS.
S
P
r
A
N
S
•r
•':
.
r
V
\J
/
y
O T I C E IS H E B E B Y G I V E N T H A T CKB-
u i n lands situated in the County of G r a n d
T r a v e r s e , bid off to the State f o r T a x e s of 1801,
a n d previous year®, a n d described in statement*
which will be forwarded t o the office of t&aTreas u r e r of aaid County, s o m e t i m e n e x t month, will
be sold a t public Auction, by ssid Treasurer, at
the county seat, on the flrst Monday of October
next, at the t i m e a n d place designated f o r the
ordinary T a x Sales, if not previously disposed of
a t t h i s Office, s c c o r d l n g to Isw.
Said atatcmenta contain a full description of
each parcel of said lands, and may be seen on
application fit the office of the Couaty Treasurer.
Lands s t r u c k off t o the State f o r t a x e s of 1861.
or o t h e r years, at the Tax Sales in Octobcr last,
will be offered sutyect to the r i g h t of r e d e m p t i o n
prescribed by law, as Veil as to tho r i g h t of purohase of the State Bids at t h i s Office p r i o r to the
sale.
EMIL A N N E X E .
A u d i t o r General.
2 8 North
of Range
i St'f
if t
I if I If ^
e i or nefli
18 80
7 98 7 9 M 9 60
n i of s w i
26 80
4 91 49 90 6 30
nwi
31 160
15 62 1 56 90 18
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 0 West.
LotN'o. 2 or
35 37 75 1 69 16 M 2 64
Town 3 2 North
of Range
1 0 West.
w | or nei
7 80
1 72 17 90 2 79
Fractional 3
8 42 18 1 62 15 M 2 57
Fractional 4
8 20 69
80 0 S M ; 1 7 8
Town 2 6 North
of Range
1 1 West.
ne{ or n w i
1 42 18 2 97 29 90 4 16
n w i or n e i
1 41 92 2 77 27 90 3 94
a i or nwi
I 80
6 01 60 90 7 51
n e i or swi
1 *0
1 55 2 1 00 3 37
wiorawi
1 80
3 42 34 M 4 66
LotNo. Sot
6 43 60 2 05 20 90 3 15
swfliornwi
6 38 27 2 00 20 90 3 10
nefli
6 11 04
46 04 M ; 1 40
e i ofawfU
7 80
3 47 34 90 4 71
nwfli « r swfli
-7 37 98 1 75 17 90 2 82
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
swfli or uwflj
7 38 02 1 58 16 M 2 63
e i or sei
8 80
3 47 34 M 4 71
A u d i t o r G e n e r a l ' s O f f i c e , )•
swi o r s e i
8 40
1 76
17 90 2 82
LANSING, Mich., J u l y 1st, 1863. j
Si or swi
8 80
2 71 27 90 3 88
O MUCH O P E A C H O F T H E FOLLOWING n i or nwi
17 8 0
2 71 27 90 3 88
described tracts or parcels of land, situated swfli or swfli
30 39 37 1 36
13 90 2 39in the C o u n t y of G r a n d T r a v e r s e , delinquent e i o r s e {
31 80
3 47 3 4 M 4 71
for unpaid taxes, f o r t h e years m e n t i o n e d below, swi or set
31 40
1 76 17 90 2 82
as will be sufficient t o pay t h o taxes, interest, a n d
Town 2 7 North
of Range
1 1 West.
c h a r g e s thereon, will be s o l d by the Treasurer s w i of nei
1 40 05 1 94 IB 90 3
of said County, on the first Monday of October
s e i or n w i
1 40
- 1 94 IB 90 3 03
next, a t s u c h public and c o n v e n i e n t place as he Wi o t n w i
27 80
4 96 49 90 6 35
shall selsot in T r a v e r s e C i t y , the county scst swi
27 160
0 90 99 M i l 79
of said couaty, a c c o r d i n g to the Statute Irf s u c h
e i or n e i
28 80
4 96 49 M 6 35
• a s e wado a n d provided.
s i or s w i
29 80
3 95 39 00 6 24
EMIL ANXEKE,
nei o f n e i '
31 40
1 65 16 M 2 60
A u d i t o r General.
L o t No. 1 Of
31 36 75 1 85 18 M 2
1860. '
Town
2 8 North
of Range
1 1 West.
Town - 2 7 North
of Range
9 West.
Lot No. 3
9 22
83 0 8 9 0 1 81
LotNo. 4
9 22
83 08 M 1 81
L o t No. 4
16 28
83 0 8 M 1 81
c
3 I
S
| H
E
•
§
r ?
s§ g
P
si orsei
17 80
8 15 8 1 M '•» 86
•
r f
L o t No. 4
21 33
1 67 16 uO 2 73
s e i of n e i
1 40
1 3 7 . . M M 2 81 L o t No. 1
33 48
1 60 1,6 90 2 66
I Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 1 West.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 1 West.
s w i of a c i
- 1 4 0
1 26 60 00 2 C6
nwi or n e i
10 40
1 78 17 90 2 86
Village
of North
Unity.
s i of L o t 1
11 25
I 23 22 90 3 35
Lots.
Blk.
LotNo. 1
23 15
45 0 4 M 1 39
3
66
01
90
01 Lot No. 4
27 57
1 78 17 M 2
12
119
18
07 90 1 16 w i o t s e i
27 80
2 67 26 M 3 83
Lot No, 3
27 33
1 24
12 M 2 2«
1862,
e i or nwi
34 80
2 68 26 90 3 84
Town 2 9 North
of Range
5 West.
Town 3 1 North
of Range
1 1 West.
e i or nwi
10 80
3 09 30 90 4 29
Fractional
12
75
02
90
92
Fractional
13
2 85
15 01 W 1 06
nwi
22 160
6 21 62 M 7 73
n i of eel
a 67 36 M 4 03
Town 3 2 North
of Range
1 1 West.
6TTi Of SWj
14 40
' 1 85 18 00 2 93 s e i or swi
10 40
1 93 19 90 3 02
s c i of a e i
;>:!« 40
. . .
V-9S
18 90 2 93 s w i o r s e i
10 40
1 93 19 M 3 02
Town
North
of Range
5 West.
L o t No, 6
27 39 60 2 38 23 90 3 51
1
60 06 90 1 66
ei o f s e l
36 80
3 68 36 M 4 94 E p t or s w i ot SWi 34
n w i or n e i
34 40
8 16 81 90 9 87
Town
2 5 North
of Range
6 West.
Town
2 6 North
of Ranee
1 2 West.
sei
7 1C0
7 37 73 90 9
s e i or n e i
7 40 t
1 75 17 90 2 82
Town 2 5 North
of Range
7 West.
2« "0
3 47 34 90 4 71
w | of n e j
19 80
3 67 36 90 4 93 w i or n e i
e
i
o
r
n
w
i
24
80
3
47
34 90 4 7l
Town
3' > North
of Range
7 West.
s e i or SCi
25 40
1 36 13 M ! 39
19 80
3 67 36 98 4 93
s i of n e i
Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 2 West.
s c l of nwi
19 40
1 86
18 98 2 93
•
1
or
nei
7
80
2
71
27
90 3 88
n e j of swi
. 10 10
1 9(
18 90 2 93
I I 160
6 86 68 90 8 44
n | of sc^
19 81
3 67 36 9« 4 93 s w i or
Town
2 8 North
of Range
1 2 Wesf.
Town
2 5 North
of Range
8 West.
L
o
t
No.
2
of
I
40
2
23
22
90
3 35
Lot No. 1 of
8 33 78 1 60
15 W 2 55
24 80
4 45 44 90 6 79
aei o f a w i
15 40
1 85 1 8 M 2 03 s i or nei
n e i or s w i
24 40
2 22 22 90 3 34
Town
2 8 North
of Range
8 West.
ni otsei
24 80
4 45 44 90 fo79
Lot No. 8 of
18 31 34 1 08 10 90 4 08
SWi o r s e i
36 40
1 26 12 90 2 28
Town. 2 3 North
of Range
8 Weft.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
1 2 West.
swfli of xwtu
7 31 01 1 46 .14 90 2
ondiorfractor
8 l l 85
40 04 90 1 34
Lot No. 4 ot
7 57 37 2 72 27 90 3
u n d i or L o t N o ' l
9 70 75 6 25 62 90 6 67
wi.ofnwj
12 80
2 70 27 M 3 93 L o t N o . 1 * or lake 19 22
89 08 90 1 87
Lot No. 1 of
18 59 87 2 88 28 90 4 06
LotNo. 2
10 39
1 43 14 M 2 47
L o t No. 1 of
19 55 45 2 67
26 90 3 83
Town 2 8 North
of Range
1 3 West.
Town
3 0 North
of Range
8 West.
nefli o r n e i
.
6 41 34 1 40 14 90 2 44
L o t N o . 1 of
18 20
70 07 00 1 67 s e i o r
18 160
4 15 4 1 M 5 46
w< of nwfli
18 80
2 76 27 SO 3 93
Lot No. 2 of
28 39 60 1 34 13 M 2 37
. Town 3 1 North
of Range
1. West.
LotNo. t o r
28 39 61 1 34 13 M 2 37
sw{ of sw{
5 40
1 ft 13 90 2 41 e i o r s e i
29 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
e i ol n e i
28 80
2 15 . 21 00 3 26
Town
2 9 North
of Range
1 3 West.
Town
2 7 .North
of Range
9 West.
L o t N o . l or
4 37 84
69 06 M 1 65
niofsei
2 8a
5 23 52 00 6 65 L o t No. 4 or
4 61 10 1 29 12 M 2 31
s e i of s w i
2 40
2 01 20 00 3 11 e i o r n w i
6 80
2 77 27 90 3 94
n i of nefli a n d >
nei ° r nei
9 40
69 [06 M 1 65
s c i of nefli
\ 6 126 19 8 79 . 87 90 10 56
Town 3 0 North
of Range
1 3 West.
s w i of nc.{
9 40
< 05 40 00 5 35 Lot No. l o t
31 30 60
62 05 M 1 4 7
wi o f n e i
20 80
2 71 27 M 3 88 L o t No. l o r
32 25 :
62 05 M 1 47
Lot No. 2 or
32 23
62 05 M 1 47
Lot N o - 3 o t •
32 43 20
86 08 90 1 84
L o t N o . 2 of
Lot No 4 o r
32 57 15 1 04
10 90 2 04
nwfli o f n w f l j
2 31 27 1 01
s w i or
32 160
3 46 34 M 4 70
s w j °f nei
4 40
2 74
si orsei
32 80
1 73 17 M 2 80
6 138
5 82
. 3 3 13 M
35 03 M 1 28
I-ot No. 2 of
11 36 80 1 93 19 M 3 02 F r a c t i o n a l
Town
2 5 North
of Range
14 West.
•12 40
2 11 21 »0' 3 22
a w i of n w i
L o t ! of
n w i or n w i
14 40
1 36 13 M 2 49
Lot 3 or
15 63 85 3 77 37 80 5 04
Town
2 6 North
of Range
14 West.
L o t N o . 1 of
23 45 75 1 28 12 M ' 2 30 u n d i of w i or n e i 25 80
1 36
I S M 2 39
L o t No. 2 a n d 3
23 116 65 2 96 29 M 4 14 w i o r n e i
26 80
2 72 27 M 3 89
L o t No. 2
U
64 45
16 #0 2 75 u n d i o r < 4 o r s e i 35 80
1 36 13 M 2 39
swi o t s w i
24 40
08 fro 1 82
Town
28 North
of Range
14 West.
26 40
nei o f n e i
33 M 4 61 nei or
9 160
6 54
65 M 6 99
s w i of n w i
4 «
46 W 6 01 L o t N o l l o r
10 39 85 1 38 13 M 2 41
s i of n e i
6 23 52 00 6 65 e i o r n w i
14 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
w i of soi
4 03 40 80 5 33 e i o r n e i
15 80
2 77 27 M 3 94
n i of aci
6 75 67 M 8 32 s w i o r s e i
18 40
1 01 10 M 2 04
Wi of a w i of sei
30 . 20
„
1 69 16 BO J T5 e i o r n e i
19' 8q
3 77 27 M 3 94
Town
2 9 North,
of Range
9 West.
s e i or n e i
30 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t N o . 1 of
9 27 17 1 06
s i or n w i
21 80
2 77 27 90 3 51
n w i of sci
" ""
s e i or aci
23 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t No. 1 of
1L 13 11
0600 1 00 si o f a w i
28 80
2 78 27 M 3 95
Lot No. 2 of
11 61 76 2 93 29 B0 4 12 sei o r s e i
29 40
1 38 1 3 M 2 41
16 4b
1 89 18 SO 2 97 e i or n e i
n w i of awi
32 80
2 07 20 M 3 17
s w i of nwf*
15 40
1 41 14 90 2 45 n e i or
33 160
4 15 4 1 M 6
Lot K o . f i of
16 49 73 2 37 2390 3 50
Town 29 North
of Range
14 West.
nwi of a c i
Fractional
17
5
13 0 1 M 1 04
Lot No.tf 0 of
21 44
_. r , - .. • i o r n e i
28 80
2 77 27 90 3 94
L o t N o . 1° of
22 94 49 7 76 77Sd 9 43 swi or n w i
28 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
L o t N o . Sof
28 SI 36 3 24 32 90 4 46 Lot No. 2 or
29 M 14 1 3 8
13 M 3 41
L o t N o . 3 of
28 5 74 3 16 " . 4 37
" sefli o r s e i
30 65 M 1 73 171M 3 80
Town 35 North
West.
L o t No. 1 of
31 37
1 28 1 3 M 2 80
s i of swi
37 M 3 93 wi o r s e i
31 80
3 77 ; 37 M 3 94
niofnwi •
~„ —
2 78 2 7 9 0 3 93
w
Totcn 2 5 North
of Range
1 5 West.
Town
2 6 North
of Range
1 0 West.
neiornei
6 41 91 1 79 17 90 3
Lot No. 1 of
2 19 47
81 08fM 1 79 nwfli or n w i
7 39 67 1 68 16 M 2 74
L o t No. 2 of
2 46 0 8 M K
•18 90 2 93 swfli or nwfli
7 3» 63 1 68 16 90 2 74
L o t No. 3 or
2 40 70 1 76 17 M 2 82 awi of n w i
8 40
1 49
14 M 2 63
LotNo. 4of
2 31 71 1 23 12 M 2 25 w i of n e i
8 80
2 98 29 M 4 17
L o t No. 12 of
2 13 75
61 06 M 1 67 e i of n w i
'
8 80
2 93 29 M 4 17
2 40
1 76 17i90 - 2 82
n e i of M i
Town
2 6 North
of Range
15 West.
L o t No. 1 or
3 48 71 1 85 18 90 2 93 L o t No. 2 or
8 30 35 1 33 13 M 2 36
L o t No. 2 or
3 26 02
86 08;M 1 84 s e i or
33 160
5 44 64 M 6 88
L o t No. 3 or
3 14 82
46 04 90 1 40
Town
2 7 North
of Range
1 5 West.
3 61 29 1 94 19 90 3 03
L o t No. 4 o t
I M 20 2 39 23 M 3 52
39 99 1 76 17 90 2 S2 Lot No. 4 of
L e t No. 5 or
11 26 35 1 14 1 I I M 2 15
51 68 1 M 19 90 3 03 Lot No. 1 of
Lot No. 6 or
12 40
1 60
10 M 3 66
3 34 2
1 5 9 0 2 63 n e i or n w i
Lot N o . , 7 or
Town 2 9 North
of Range
1 5 West.
18 90 2 93
3 19 58 1 8
I-ot No. 8 of
24 29
52 0 S M 1 4 7
3 40 07 1 7
17 90 2 82 L o t N o . 1 o f
L o t No. 9 or
0 8 M 1 73
3 20 86
Town 2 5 North
of Range
1 6 West.
Lot No. 10 6f
nefli or n w i
w i or swi
1 80
3 42 34 90 4
s e i or n w i
1 70
17 90 "2 77
nei o f n e i
. 11 40
3 40
1 75 IT 90 2
s e i or s w i
nei or soi
U 40
170
17 9 & 2 77
4 40
\ 75
17 M 2 81 s w i o r s e i
sei. o r - n e i
i l 40
1 70
17 % 1 77
I-ot No. 3 or
4 38 M 1 75 17 M 2 82 «ei o r e e i
12 40
1 70
17 M 2 77
L o t N o . 11. oT
10 18 65
81 08 M 1 7 9 n w i or n e i
13 40
1 70
17 M 2 77
L o t N o . I I of
10 24 35
97 0a M 1 96 -Lot No. 1 or
14 4 2 36" 1 82 18 90 2 M
Lot No. 13 of
10 24 10
87 09i90 1 9 6 I-ot NO. 2 or
14 28 85 1 21 13 M 2 23
10 80
3 42 34 M 4 66 L o t N o . T o r
e.i. or nwi
14 3 0 10 1 38 13 M 2 41
7 W n 2 7 North
of Range
1 0 West.
neiornei
14 40
1 70
17 M 3 77
tf»'i or sei;
11 40
2 61 26 M 3 77 Lot No. 3 or
14 75 58 3 42 34 90 4 C6
S
£ >§
*
S>
. i vi i 1%
II t
is an
W W
it: ...
Totcn
1 0 West.
2 5 North
of Range
t ft
I if
16 West.
i " E
* H
i l *•
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g * 6 W e s t
• I II I If ?
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t
f
* i|
5
« S
I-Ot No. 4 or
u 39 68 1 68 16 M 2 74n i of sei
15 80
1 11 11 M 2 12 Lot No. 1 of
88 08 M 1 86
i
33 4 65
Lot N». 1 or
23 65 82 2 82 28 M 4 00n i o r s w i
15 SO
1 11 1 1 M 2 12 Lot No. 3 or
12 60 6 71 67 M 8 38
sw( o r s w i
15 40
65 05 M 1 50 se{ o t s w i
10
5 03 50 M 6 43
Town 2 6 North of Range
1 6 West.
n
i
o
r
n
e
i
17
M
2
21
2
2
M
3
33
swi
o
t
s
w
i
10
42 04 M 1 36
e i or s e i
34 80
<3 42 34 M 4 66
17 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 w i of nei
to
84 08 M 1 82
neiornei
34 40
1 46 14 M 2 SO s i o r s e i
u n d i a * i or n w i 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 n i of s e i
50
84 08 90 1 82
Tillage of C a t H e a d .
u n d i n w i oT s w i 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 n e i of swi
to
43 04 M 1 36
L o t N o . 25
28
20 03 M 1 13
u n d i e i or n e i
21 80
111
11 M 2 12 Lot No. 2 ot 93 09 M 1 92
Lot No. 7
29
29 02 90 1 21
'
undi *wi or nei 21 40
65 05 M 1 50 L o t N o . 3 o t
8 40 3 05 30 M 4 25
Village of L e l a n d .
ei or sei
21 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 n w i o t s w i
10
5 03 50 M C 43
Lots 11,12 a n d n i )
w i or sei
21 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 s c i o t n w i
40
6 03 50 90 6 43
of 7 and 8 block 4 f
3 32 33 90 4 55 u n d i n w i o t nwi 22 40
55 05 M 1 50 s e i of sei
3 35 33 90 4 58
net or swi
22 40
111
1 1 M 2 12 n e i of
1 27 12 M 2 29
Village of Xorthport.
35 160
& 12 51 M 6 53
28 80
2 21 22 M 3 83 s w i of
j
04 M 1 39 e i o r s e i
Lot No. 5 oi
35 40
32 03 90 1 25
28 80
2 21 22 M s 33 s e i of n w i
" » 7
" « 34
04 M 1 39 e i Of n e i
35 40
32 03 M 1 25
55 05 M 1 50 s w i of n w i
- "49
3d st 34
31 03 90 1 24 U&di s w i of-nei 28 40
36 SI
i n
28 80
I 11
11 90 2 12 Lot No. 1 of
45 04 M I 39 u n d i w i o t s e i
17 M 2 84
36 14 80
29 02 M 1 21
30 80
111
11 M 2 12 Lot No. 2 ot '.
59 05 M 1 54 u n d i e i o r n e i
36 16 70
u n d i n w i of c e i 50 40
55 05 M 1 50 Lot No, 3 o t f
08 M 1 78
L o t N o . 29 and
36 25
1 20 12 90 2 22
30 40
55 05 90 1 50 Lot No. 4 o t i
74 07 M 1 71 u o d j s w i o r s e i
31 on 5th s t 34
36 49
u n d i sei or swfli 30 40
2 21
22 M 3 SS I-ot No. 7 ot
63 M 7 M
L o t N o . 36 and
28 30 1 80 18 9(
KWfli or swfli
30 39 77 1 10
11 M 2 11 Lot No. 8 o t
38 on 4tli a t
34
u n d i w i or n e i
32 80
1 11
11 90 2 12
Lots 42 6th st
34
T o w n 2 1 { N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t
Lot 46 E side
T o w n ' 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 7 W e s t
nwi ot sei
2 40
17 M 2 79
30 03 M 1 23 sei or nefli
34
Warren
1 80
1 11
1 1 M 2 12 w i o t n w i
3 45 34 90 4 69
6 80
74 07 90 1 71 nefli or nwfli
34
, F 4 t h st
1 43 38 1 21
12 M 2 23 n e i of n e i
23 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
30 03 M 1 23
I-ot 23 4th »t
34
n i of nei
24 80
3 45 34 M 4 09
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 7 W e s t
30 03 90
Lot 32 5th st
34
24 80
3 45 34 90 4 69
swi or s w |
9 40
I 10 11 M 2 11 n i of n w i
59 05 90 1 54 e i o r s e i
34
Lot 40 4th st
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of!
gt 1 5 W e s t
25 80
2 21 22 M 3 33
31 03 90 1 24 sei or n e i
I-ot 22 A 24 5th * 34
26 40
1 10 11 M 2 11 s w i of nwfli
2 28 22 M 3 40
5 00 50 M C 40 e | o r s e i
Lot 49 A G 4 tli st 54
26 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 w i o f s w i
6 80
4 55 45 90 5 M
38 03 <M 1 31 nwi o t s e i
1-ot 31 A D 3d Ht 34
26 40
111
11 90 2 12 e i or sei
4 56 46 M 6 M
Village of
n w i ot s c i
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 8 W e s t
2 28 22 M 3 40
4
2 43 24 M 3 57
Lot 6 B 104
8 40
« 83 6 8 M 8 14
sBi or nwi
24 40
111
1 1 M 2 12. n w i of n w i
I-ot 11 B 113
Improvement
T o w n 2 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 8 W e a t
of
10 40
6 69 65 M 8 41
nwfli of n e i
1 41 27 1 1 5
11 M 2 16 s w i of sei
A lot b e g i n n i n g
ne{ of n e j
13 40
5 40 54 M 6 84
a
i
or
swfli
2
80
2
21
22
M
3
S3
at the S E cor. of
13 8o
10 79 1 07 M 12 76
sei or n e i
30 40
1 11
1 1 M 2 12 s i o t s e i
Lot 6 in Waka13 40
nei o t s e i
5 40 54 M 6 84
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 9 W e s t
zoovilic, thenco
14 40
swi ot n w i
5 40 54 M 6 84'
aiolawi
27 80
2 21 22 M 3 33 n w i ot s w i J
E to the shore
14 40
5 40 5 4 M 6 84
S | 07 n w i
27 80
2 21
22 M 3 33 swi o t s e i
ot Gr'd Trav.
14 40>
04 90 1 39
Bay, thcnce N
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
14 40
nei ot sci
'
2 76 27 M 3 93
a l o n g t h o shore
swi or n w i
3 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 n w i of s w i :
15 48
7 20 72 M 8 82
o t aaid Bay H
nwi o r s w i
3 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 w i of sei
16 80
14 40 1 44 M 16 74
roda, thence W
sei or n e i .
4 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 s i of sei / •
U 80
11 61 1 15 M I S 66
t o tho E lino ot
nei or s e i 4 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 s i of s e i /
13 89 1 38 M 16 17
Wakazoovi lie.
s w i or s w i
4 40
87 0 8 M 1 85 sefli of n w i !
19 39 08
47 04 90 1 41
t h t n e e S t o the
nwi o r s w i
9 40
87 0 8 M 1 85 nwfli of nwfli
19 44 40 2 12 21 M 3 23
w li or
nf n
w ii
placc of begineiornwi
10 80 . 3 45
34 M 4 6 9 as w
nw
23 37 40 4 M
48 M i 18
1
47
14
902
51
ning.
•3
8W{ or n w i
10 40
1 72
17 00 2 79 sei ot swi
23 40
41 04 90 1 35'
Lots.
ei orswi
13 80
3 45 34 90 4 69 n i or n e i
24 80
7 67 76 M 9 33
1 20 12 M 2 22 w i or s w i
11.12 a n d 13
3
' 3 80
3 45
34 M 4 69 s w i ot s e i
34 40
38 03 M 1 31
45
04
M
1
35
s | orsei
14 80
3 45
3 4 9 0 4 69 sei Of
69 05 M 1 M noi o t s e i
47
3
14 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 e i of swi35 80
14 20 1 42 M 16 68
1 19 11 M 2 20 n e i o r s w i
71,72, 73,74
3
22 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 L o t o N o . 1 4 of 26 118 76 1 23 12 M 1 35
1 08 10 90 2 08 n e i or
80. 81, 82, A 83
3
23 ICO
6-17
6 1 M 0 58 sei of n w i
36 40
1 65 16 M 3 71
1 48 14 M 2 62 BWior
84, 85,80,87,88,89,93 3
23 1C0
6 17 6 1 M 6 58 nwi"t>f swi
26 40
41 04 M 1 3 5
74 07 M 1 71 n i o t s e i '
95, 96,97, 98, 99
3
23 80
2 76
27 M 3 93 s w i o t a c j ' ; >
74 07 90 1 71 w i o t s w i of n w i 24 *20
100, 101,102.103,104 3
87 0 8 M 1 8 5
n e i of n w i
S
1 30 13 M 2 .33 si or n w i
106, 106, 107, 108 3
24 80
S 45
34 M 4 69 swi of s w i ;
59 05 M 1 54 n e i ot nwi
70 and 90
3
24 40
1 72
17 M 2 79 L o t N o . 6 e x c e p t >
29 and 33
3
2 23 22 M 3 35 e i o r sei or n w i
24 20
87 0 8 9 0 1 85 W 3 a c r e s '
] 27 45 30 7 57 76 M 9 22
75
3
74 07 90 1 71 n w i o t
26 160
5 62 65 9 0 6 97. u n d i s w i o ( s w i 29 40
1 19 11 M 2 20
-4 M I
4 45
61
3
ni otswi
26 80
3 45
34 M 4 69 u n d i n e i o t f a e i
31 40
79 07 M 1" 76
08 90 1 56
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 3 W e s t
. a n d i nwi of n w i 32 40
79 07 M 1 76
Mason's Addition.
23 40
ofli or n w i
4 83 73 5 42 54 M 6 8& nei ot n w i
2 56 25 M 3 71
H
1 48 14 M 2 52 w i o t s e i
34 40
15 80
10 05 1 0 0 M 1 1 95 a w i o t s w i
" " 03 M 1 35
L o t No- 2 of
16 39 30 2 06 2 0 M 3 16
T o w n S 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t
SALE OF 8TATE TAX LANDS.
Lot No. 4 ot
21 49 33 4 03 4 0 M 5 33 Lot No. 1 of
29 61
6 12 61 M 6 63
s e i of s e i
• 21 40
3 31 33 90 4 54
T o w n 2 4 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 5 W e s t ,
A u d i t o r G e a e r a l ' s Officc,
)
Lot No. 1 of
22 38 35 2 M
20 M S 10 n n d i o t L t s >, A 6, 31 66 70 2 14 31 M 3 25
LAMSI.SU, MICH.. J u l y 1. 1863. S
Lot No. 2 of
22 39 M 2 07
2 0 90 3 17
O T I C E IS HEREBY GIVEN T H A T CEB
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 6 W e s t
Lot No. 3 of
22 53 20 2 75 27 M 3 92
tain lands situated in tile county or M a n 07 M 1 74
22 80
4 20 4 2 90 5 52 n e i of
i s t e e , bid off t o the State ror T a x e s or 1861, a n d Wi ot n e i
33 03 M 1 25
Lot No. 1 of
23 65 15 8 34
83 M 10 07 s i of n w i previous years, and described in s t a t e m e n t s
sei o f n e i
15 01 90 1 0C.
Lot
No.
3
of
23
47
35
4
M
45
M
5
89
which w i u be rorwarded to t h o officc o r t h e Treawi of sei
33 03 M 1 26
Lot
No.
2
of
27
39
6
24
62
M
7
76
s u r e r or said county, sometime n e x t i^puth,
S3 03 00 1 20
27 36
7 19 71 90 8 ~ w i of s w i
will be sold at public auction, by said Treasar- L o t N o . 9 o t
s e i of s w i
15 01 M 1 06
L o t No. 10 of
27 15 15 a 17 3 1 0 0 4 .
or, at t h o county seal, on the first Monday or OcM
19 M 3 05
27 63 30
66 05 90 1 51 s c i or sei
tober next, a t the time a n d place designated for Lot No. 8 o t
29 02 M 1 21
L o t N o . 1 of
28 49 46 6 11 "&L00 6 52 s w i o r s e i
the ordinary T a x Sales, ir not previously disposn w i of s e i •
37 03 M 1 SO
L
o
t
No.
2
of
28
49
50
7
46
74
M
9
10
ed or a t t h i s Office, a c c o r d i n g t o law.
37 OS M 1 30
n e i of n e i
28 40
4 20 42 M 6 52 a i o t s e i .
Said s t a t e m e n t s contain a rull description or
85 0 8 M 1 83
L o t No. 9 of
28 67 87 6 68 66 M 7 14 Si O t s w i
each parcel ot said lands, a n d may be seen on
41 04 M I 35
29 40
5 03 60 M 6 43 n e i of s w i
application at the office or the C o u n t y Treasurer. ns{ of s e |
80/
37 03 M 1 30
37
Lot No. 8 of
31 38 50 3 70 37 M 4 87 s i of sei
L a n d s s t r u c k off to the State ror T a x e s or
9 50
44 04 M 1 38
Lot No. 1 a f
n
i
o
f
n
e
i
31
80
01
6
62
66
M
8
18
1861, or o t h e r years, at the Tax Sales in Octobcr
35 40 1 30 12 M 2 22
n i Ot nwfli
31 80 01
77 07 M 1 74 L o t N o . 3 t f
last, will be offered subject t o tho r i g h t or re39 3 0
68 U 6 M 1 64
32 40
1 91 19 M S 0 0 L o t N o . 5 a t
d e m p t i o n prescribed by law, as well as to the L o t N o . l o t
0 9 M 1 93
L o t N o . 2 or
32 34
1 66 16 M 2 61 •4 or s e i J
r i g h t or purchase or the 8 t a t e Bids at t h i s Office
20 M 3 12
swi o t n w i
32 40
2 28 22 M 3 40 Lot No. 4
p r i o r t o * l " —*" *
37 OS M 1 30
c i or nwi
34 80.
10 37 1 OS M 13 30 n i or n e i '
M i of s e i 16 01 M 1 07
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t ,
s w i of s e i 16 01 M 1 07
sei o t
3 ICO
6 89 68 M 8 47
n w i of swfc
16 01 M 1 07
wfli ot n w i
4 78 80 3 45 34 M 4 69
ANNUAL TAX SALES.
nei of. n e i ,
18 0) 00 1 09
wi o r s w i
4 80
3 45 3 4 M 4 69 sei of n w i !
29 02 M 1 21
nwi otsei
6 40
1 72 17-M 2 79
Auditor G e n e r a l ' s Office, j
n w i of nei38 03 M 1 31
si otswi
6 80
3 45 34 00 4
LANSING, MICH., J u l y 1st, 18>>3. {
10 1M
n i of n i
76 07 P0 1 7 3
.. — . 2
si
o
t
s
e
i
6
80
S
45
34
9
0
4
O MUCH OF E A C H 0 ? T H E FOLLOWDK
10 40
n e i of s w i
si
o
t
s
w
i
6
80
3
46
34
M
4
69
described t r a c t s or parccls or land, situated
11 160
07 M 1 73
ni-of n i
s i ot n e i
6 80
3 46 34 M 4 69 n e i of n e i
13 40
41 04 M 1 35
Siotnwi
680
346
34 M 4 6 9 awi of n w |
1 71 17 M 2 70
6 44 88 1 72 ' 17 M 2 79
will be sufficient ' t o p a v ^ t h e taxes, interest, n e i o t n w i
16 40
3 46. 34 9# 4 69
sei o t n e i
7
80
3 46 34 M 4 69 Lo« No. 6 f f
d charges thereon, will Be sold by the Treasur- n i ot nei
18 N 74 1 21 12 80 2 23
8 80
3 45 34 M 4 69 L o t N o , 7 i f
er said County, on the first Monday or October n i o t n w i
M 18 20 1 04 10 M 1 04
n e i ot
8 160
6 89 68 M 8 47
n e x t , at such public a n d c o n v e n i e n t place
n w i of s e i 1
19 40
1 72' 17 M 2 70
9 80
3 45 34 M 4 69
shall select in M a n i s t e e , the county seat o f n i o t n w i
19 40
1 38 13 M 2 41
sei o f n e i |
9 40
1 72 17 M 1 79 nwfli of
said county, a c c o r d i n g t o t h e S t a t u t e in s u c h swi o t n w i
19 167 84 6 89 « 8 M 8 47
T o w n 2 2 N o r t h of R a n g e 1 4 W e s t
case made and provided.
Beiofaei
1 38 13 M 2 41
EMIL A N N E K E
21
M
swi o t s e i
440
4 97 49 00 6 34 s i o f a w i
69 06 M 1 66
A u d i t o r General.
34
48 3 44 M 38 82
Siotnwi
6 80
2 64 28 90 3 80 s i of n e i .
1862.
22 40
25 87 2 58 M 29 35
ni otswi
580
2 64 26 M 3 80 n w i of s w i
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 5 W e s t
swi o t n e i
0.40
5 03 60 M 6 43 s w i of a w i
22 40
1 72 17 90 2 19 a
s
w
i
°
f
*wf
35
03 M 1 2 8
sei
of
swi
8
40
6
68
66
M
8
24
T
29 40
wi o r s e i
8 80
13 43 1 34 M 16 67 n w i of s e i
35 03 M 1 28
29 80
1 71 17 M 2 79
nwi of swi
8 40
6 68 66 M 8 24 e i of s w i ; * •
7.
30
40
1
72
17 M 2 79
w
i
of
nwi
8
60
13
43
1
34
M
15
67
n
e
i
of
n
w
|
J* S"
9
30 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
80
10 05 1 00 9 0 1 1 95 n e i of net;
14 M 2 46 e i of n w i
n w f lj or nwfli
30 40
i n
—
U 80
6 62 66 M 8 18 n w i of s e i
17 M 2 79
11 M 2 12 w i o f n e i
n w i or nwi
30
43
63
1
38
13
M 2 41
e
i
of
nei
11
80
6
62
66
M
8
18
n
w
i
of
nwfli
7 40
11 M 2 12
swi of n w i
32 40
1 72 17 M 2 79
>7 40
38 03 M 1 3 1 n e i of n w i
11 90 2 12 sei of swi
7 40
nei or sei
32 40
17 M 2 79
17 40
38 03 90 1 3 1 s w i of n e i
41 87 1 16 11 M 2 17 nei ot s w i
nwfli or swfli
e
i
o
t
n
w
i
17
80
83
08
M
1
8
1
T
o
w
®
2
2
N
o
r
t
h
of
R
a
n
g
e
1
6
W
e
st
7 41 60 1 16 11 90 2 17
svrfli of BWfli
17 80
13 43 1 34 M 15 67
30 40 93 1 13 11 90 2 14 « i o t n e i
nwfli or nefli
11 1M
6 96 69 M 8 55
18 43 67 4 19 41 M 6 50 sei of
30 40 7 « 5 13 11 M 2 14 swfli of swfli
3 4 8 34 M 4 72
swfli o f n w t l i
s i of sei
J
swfli
of
nwi
18
'43
98
34
OS
M
1
27
30 80
S 21 22 90 3 31
3 48 34 M 4 72
e i of swi
18 80
64 06 M 1 60 n i or n e i
30 40 63 1 12 11 90 2 IS e i of sei
nwfli of swfli
38 03 M 1 31
24 M
18 . 40
33 03 M 1 35 s i o t s w i ;
30 40 48 1 11 11 M .2 12 s w i of sei
swfli of swfli
24 40
19 01 M 1 10
s w i o r aei
sci ot swi
18 40
32 03 M 1 25
18 01 M 1 09.
Town 2 2 North
oj Range
5 West.
24 38 79
neiotnei
19 40
33 03 M 1 26 n e i o t s w i
19 01 M 1 10.
n e i of n e i
33 40
111
11 M 2 12 s c i of nei
19 39 47
31 03 M 1 24 nwi of n « i
38 03 M 1 31
« i of s e i
34 80
2 21 22 M 3 3 3 swfli of n e i
19 33 42 4 92 49 90 6 31 w i of n w j
1 67 16 M 2 73.
'
T o w n 2 3 N o r t h of R a n g e 5 W e s t
s w i of s e i
19 40
6 68 66 M 8 24 n i of
77 07 M 1 74
26 160
<
s w | or swi
i s 80
" 1 10 1 1 9 0 2 11 s i o r s w i
19 82 20
79 07 M 1 76 s e i or
1 97 19 M 3 06
26 40
nwi orsei
13 40
1 11 11 M 2 12 —
•
19 39 37 5 03 60 M 6 43 nei o t s w |
65 06 M 1 61
28 1M
T o w n 2 1 N o r t h of R a n g e 6 W e s t
19 37 23
36 03 M 1 29 n w i of ,
79 07 M 1 76
n e i of
23
153
35
1
56
15
M
2
60
1
40
1
U
s e i or sci
31 70 88 3 55 35 M 4 M
25 M
1! 0 1 M 1 02 s i of n w i 6 48 68 1 35
nwfli or nwfli
31 40
18 0 1 M 1 09
No. 6 o r
2G 46
1 05 10 M 2 05 s e i o f n e i
7 40
1 10,
nwi orswi
31 71 04 3 70 37 M 4 97
n i ot n w i
26 80
8 26 82 M 9 98 wi o t n w |
22 90 3
11 80
n i or nwfli
32
40
21
02 M 1 13,
Lot No. 1 o r
27 32 95'
32 03 M 1 26 sw{ o t n w i
u n d i n i or se{
33 40
1 75 17 M 3 82
n i ot n e i
27 80
5 03 5 0 M 6 43 n e ] of n w i
L o t N o . 1 ot
11 25 10
3 48 34 M 4 7 2
nei o r awi
27 40
41 04 M 1 3 5 n i o f n e |
11 2'J 70
Lot No. 2 oT
9
96
99 M 11 85
34
160
nwi otsei
27 64
41 04 M 1 35 n i of n i :
46 0 4 M 1 40
ei orsei
35 80
L o t No. 2 or
27
16
41 04 M 1 35 n i of n e £
12 80
2 20 23 90 3 32
w i of s e i
35 34
Lot No 5 of
27 17 40 2 45 24 M 3 59 Lot No. 1, of
r: .-i
e i or n e i
5
16
51
M 6 57
L o t No. 3 a n d 7
27 33 71 4 21 42 M 6 53 w i o f nwi
18 01 M 1 09
sw i or nei
35 40
27 56 10 7 07
7 0 M 8 67 n e i ot n » i
22 M 3 33 L o t No, 6 of
e i of nei
g e 16 W e s t
T o w n 2 3 > i o r t h of
27 40
5 03 60 M 6 43
11 90 2 1 2 n w i or swi
nwi ornei
13 40
2 53 25 90 3 67
2 160
28 27
2 79 27 96 3 96 u n d i of mi of
L o t No. 2 or
14 . 37 80 1 04 10 90 3 04 Lot No. 1 ot
1 45 24 M 3 69
3 160
28 80
3 31 33 M 4 64 u n d i ol <wi of
11 00 2 12 n i o r n e i
sei ot nwi
3 167 79 2 30 23 M 3 43
28 4 0
41 04 M 1 36 u n d i of Swi of
ilOO 3 12 n e i o t sci
n e i or n e i
05 M 1 5 3
28 80
83 0 8 M f 81 u n d- | o f L , N o . 1 4 37 80
2 2 M 3 33 n i o t s w i
n i of n w i
21 80
08 M 1 82
4
34
60
28 14 56 1 45 14 M 2 49 u n d i of i o t No. 2
4 42 44 M 5 76 L o t N o . 2 or
'J! 1C0
n e i or
07 M 1 69
30 80
84 0 ^ M 1 82 u n d i of - o t N o . S 4 34 60
22 96 3 13 Di o r n e i
e i or n e i
08 M 1 78
4
37
60
30 40
51 0 5 M 1 4 6 n n d i o f ' -ot No. 4
2 2 M 3 S3 sei o r s e i
w i or n e i
08
M 1 85
9
40
M
30 40
51 05 M I 46 n n d i of -ot No. 1
22 90 3 33 s c i o t n e i
i t ] or n w i
09 M I 93
9
44
70
30 40
51 05 M 1 46 n n d i of -ot No. 2
11 M 2 12 Bei of s w i
si of nei
6
47
54 M 6 91
10
320
' \ l of
34 40 77
51 05 M 1 46
11 M 2 12 swfli of s w i
n e i of n e i
3
43
34
M 4 67
10
160
32 40
43 04 M 1 36
11 90 2 12 SWi of s e i
nwi otnei
Conelwled
on Third
Page.)
32 80
84 0 8 M ' 1 82
n{ of sci
22 90 3 33 e{ Of sef
<
N
Town
A u d i t o r G e n e r a l ' s Officc, ?
LAXKNO, MICH, J a i r 1 lifts. (
1
. SALE OF STATE T A X LANDS.
N
S
>s
:? s-g ?
5 £
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