Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, April 24, 1863
Subject
American newspapers--Michigan.
Grand Traverse County (Mich.)
Traverse City (Mich.)
Description
Issue of "Grand Traverse Herald" Newspaper.
Creator
Contributors to the newspaper.
Source
Microfilmed reproduction of this newspaper issue is held at the Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.).
Publisher
Bates, Morgan (1806-1874)
Date
1863-04-24
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
Relation
None
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
gth-04-24-1863.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
GRAND TRAVERSE HERALD.
T R A V E R S E
VOL. V.
®j[£ <Srani Crab'tra
>
l i r B t u u i D ITMT r*!Wt,*i
Traverse'Clty, G r a n d Traverse County, Michigan
MORGAN BATES,
EDIT OB l i m FmOPWBTOB.
T E R M S .
O n e D o l l a r a n d F i f t y C o n t * , X^ayaljlo i n v a riably In advanoe.
ADVEBTISBJIENTS Inse r t e d f o r Ono Dollar p e r s q u a r e (ten
l i n e s ) f o r t h o t i n t insertion, a n d twenty-fire cent* f<jr each
• n h a e q a e n t i n s e r t i o n . Yearly Advertisements—$10 f o r one
s q u a r e ; $20 for three s q u a r e s ; $30 f o r half a c o l u m n ; and
$ 5 0 f o r ono c o l u m n . Legal advertisements a t the rates pres c r i b e d by l a w ; fifty c e n t s p e r folio of l O O w s r d s , for t h e
It r a t i n s e r t i o n , a n d tirenty-five c e n t s f o r each subscqhenL—
E r e r y figure 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 r u l e * SO
p e r c e n t a d d e d . R u l e a n d figure work, double price.'
All l e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s W be paid f o r atriotljr in a d v a n c e .
T h e Old and the N e w .
" A m o n g the articles received by tha Washington Sanitary Commission lately, was a g o o d and patriotic old lady's tri-.
bote, to belaid on the altor of h e r country, bearing t h i s inn c r i p t l o n : ' T h e s e *ocks were spun and knit by Mrs. Xerhali
Clapp, ninety-six year* old. whose hands in youth were engaged In moulding bullet* in the Revolutionary War. Keep the
toes of these socks toward* the-Rebela.' "
« Keep the toes of these socks towards the Rebels,''
E a c h stitch is a link to the past.
W h e n the bolts of a hoary oppression
•Gainst freedom's new temple are east;
B u t those clouds rolled aw*y in the gleaming,
And peace set her bow in the sky,
And the azure of hope strctchcd it* arches.
O'er the spot where the tempest swept by;
Never t h o u g h t of defeat
Clogged our forefather's feet.
As they followed fall.bard on the Briton'* retreat.
All Iliads of Job Friatiig Ntttli ani Erjdit'wuslj Eicated.
" Keep the toe* of these sbeks toward* the rebel*."
A new storm is howling to-day;
B u t the flag with its stars Is still blazing.
Our pillar of fire in its fray:
Theheaven* are bowed with uew thunder,
Swart blackness has shrouded the blue.
And the blossoms are wet in the noontide.
And red with war's death-dripping dew.
But no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clogs our patriot feet,
As we rally to follow the rebel* retreat.
UNITED STATES LAP OFflCE AT fEATQSI CITY, HIGH.
G R A N D T R A V E R S E COTJHTY O F F I C E R S .
J n d * e o f P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mhpleton
Sheriff
- - I . . . - E . F . D A M E , TraverscTCity,
C o u n t y T r e a s u r e r . . . . M O R G A N B A T E S , Twv.Clty.
cCoo uu nn t y C
c ileerrKk
".JAMES P. B R A U « ,
R e g i s t e r ol D e e d s
JAMES P. BRAND,
Pro*. Attorney
C. H . MARSH,
Circuit Court Com...C. H . MARSH, _
.
Coroner*
I- R. SMITH,
S l k Rapids.
£
R O B E R T L E E , Cent^evlUe.
O. H . M A R S H ,
^.ttovneji sntii 'CottttstUor at
AND
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
V
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k C O N V E Y A N G E R ,
rravcrac City, Grand Traveree Co«n»y,Micb.
•Office i n Dwelling Houao.
•
' M*
J . G. R A M S D E L L ,
attorney & Counssellor at Law,
T R A V E R S E CITY,
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
REFERENCES:
^^^nBaagahiEsaSSB*:^
TRAVEKSE CITY HOUSE,
BY
W I L L I A M
F O W L E ,
(K80KT SVHKHT, VICAR COCBT HOCSE.)
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
r
KS8S!iB^S5SS!«~~ r
PHB f l R S T
the vicln
i t v of the C o u r t H o u s e oadipubllc offices, is*till open f o r tho
r e c e p t i o n of tho " r a v e l i n g public. The P r o p r i e t o r returns
h i s h e a r t y t h a n k s f o r tho l i b e r a l patronage he has,received,
a n d assures the publio tbBt no pains will be s p a r e d t o make
hi* guests c o m f o r t a b l e . H i s c h a r g e s will c o r r e s p o n d with
floqS a c c o m m o d a t i o n * f o r h o r a e s a n d c a t t l e ,
tnay25-36
GUNTONHOUSE
J A M E S K - GITISrTOJSr.
cm STABUSS ra wni MM M i
n t h e ~ e i t y ; t h e l e a d i n g Daily.and Weekly I V p e r s ^ r e taken
i . ™ u k » p a i n s rflbo.jASirt
a n d eleven year*' re*ioencfl here will enable mo-to give reliable i n f o r m a t i o n relative t o t h e r e s o u r c e s or the c o u n t r y .
J. K. G
51-ly
"A
F A I R B A N K S '
• STANDARD
O
^•SSBK
A I J !E3
OF ALL KINDS.
S
Sold In D e t r o i t by F A R R A N D * SHELKY.
J
j y r - Be c a r e f u l to buy'Only the gennioe. 4
:
J a n u a r y 13, IMS.
j
C-fy.
FURS! FURS! FURS!
T 1 J A V E R 8 K C I T Y H O U S K r p H E SUBSCRIBER W I L L P A Y T H E H l O H t S T PRICE,
JL In C x a n , f o r raw F n « d u r i n g t h e f u r s e a s o h .
He h a s a q u a n t i t y or
HSTDIA.N" T A N N K U
D E E R
SICtNS,
W h i c h h e wlU »ell f o i CASH o r e * c h * n » for F o r *
Jf B. T r a p p e r * will best c o n s u l t t h e i r own I n t e r e s t by
e a i l i n g on h i m b e f o r e s e l l i n g t h e i r F u r s .
^ ^ STONE,
3m
T r a v e r * e C l t y , D e c , 8, I B M .
*
YOUNG WILD RQVEB, |
"TTTTILL STAND AT T H E STABLE OP
W
m*i°«- i« Traverse City, from the flnrt o f April Ull the
first of July, f o r t h # i m p r o v e m e n t of Stock, j
. . .
H e i s * d a r k brown colt, was foaled at the f j r m ° f J°W»
Bully, In Canada, o n the 15th J u n e , 1859; was sired b y * lid
Rover, an i m port ed horse w h o h a s trotted hi* mile in - - y a n d h a s t h e r e p u t a t i o n of b e i n g the beat Stock-horse in Upp e r Canada. Hi* dam Ik a b r i g h t bay, almost a t h o r o u g h
b r e e d , and h a s t r o t t e d a m l l e in i S i .
:
F o r t e r m s , 4 c . , apply t o
CUYLER d E R M A l N E .
1MB.
T r a v e r s e City. March t ,
MORGAN BATES,
—
N O T A R Y PUBLIC,
H«rald
OlHut Traverse Oityj Mich.
•• Keep'the toes of these socks towards the rebels.''
C a n n t treason'* foul rag i* unfarrled.
Where *tandard long since kissed the sunlight.
The hope o f a c r o w n wearied world !
Ho '. f o r t h with our glorified b a n n e r !
Bear i t back t o i u place 'mongst the stars !
And no 1 till (in ocean of freemen
Submerges the « Star* and the Bare 1"
v . .
. .
N O . 19.
C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 24,1868.
Iliiu.nli(
n f
—e watchword to-day !
What Is death t o a people's dishonor !
W h a t were life neath a vandal control !
" O n 1 on !" s h o u t s t h e voice of the nation,
. God speed you to victory** goal !
I.et no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clog y o u r g a t h e r i n g feet,
A t y e c r o w d' ' r i t h y o u r legions tho rebels df feat.
- Keep the t o f s of these sock* towards the rebels.''
Though between roll the river of death,
And the blasting slrrocco or conflict
Sweep on with the pestilent breath !
Soon beeind the grim peaks of disaster,
A new sun of freedom shall rise,
And tho m id n ig h t murk of oppression
Be chased from our purified skies!
Oh ! no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clog our fetterless feet.
A s we follow, victorotu, therebels'retreat.
Jeff.'Davis' Dream.
O n e day, a s h o r t t i m e a g o , while s i t t i n g in a h o t e l iu
R i c h m o n d , V t u a t o t a l s t r a n g e r t o e v e r y one in t h e c i t y ,
I t o o k op a dnily p a p e r for t h o p u r p o s e of p a s s i n g a w a y
a n idle h o u r , a n a f o r my f u r t h e r c o m f o r t I s e a t e d myself
in | h e recess of a ' b a y w i n d o w , a n d w a s t h u s wholly hidden f r o m t h e v i e w of a n y one w h o c h a n c e d t o e n t e r the
r o o m . I w a s t h e o n e solitary o c c u p a n t of t h e r o o m , anil
h a d b u t j u s t b e c o m e i n t e r e s t e d in t h e latest n e w s w h e n I
h e a r d t h e d o o r of the r o o m o p e n a n d t h e f o o ts te p s of
t w o pfcrsbns a p p r o a c h i n g . T h e y s e e m e d t o b e t a l k i n g
confidentially t o g e t h e r , a n d 1 t h o u g h t it m y d u t y t o
m a k e known m y p r e s e n c e b y some sign, so t h a t I m i g h t
n o t h e a r a n y t h i n g n o t i n t e n d e d for m y e a r , b u t o n p e e r ing i n t o the room, imagine my surprise when I recognised in t h e o e c u p a n l s J e f f . D a v i s 4nd his t r a i t o r f r i e n d ,
T o o m b s , of G e o r g i a . I h e s i t a t e d no longer, b u t s e t t l e d
myself b a c k in m y s e t a n d b e n t e v e r y e n e r g y t o listen t o
t h e c o n v e r s a t i o n w h i c h was c a r r i e d on in a low t o n e .
B u t , ' s a i d T o o m b s , M r . Davis, y o u m u s t n o t g i v e way
t o t h e v a g a r i e s of y o n r b r a i n . C o m e , tell m e all a b o u t
t h i s w o n d e r f u l d r e a m , a n d , m y w o r d f o r it, y o u will feel
b e t t e r a f t e r t h e recital. D a v i s , rising, t u r n e d t h e k e y
in t h e door, a n d r e a m i n g h i s s e a t c l o s e b y T o o m b s ,
g a v e t h e following version of t h e d r e a m t h a t d i s t u r b e d
him. ( t J a i d h e , 1 b a d a p a r t y of f r i e n d s t o s u p p e r last
night, w h o p r o l o n g e d t h e i r visit t o a late h o u r .
I ate
heartily during the e v e n i n g and experienced a strange
feeding of heaviness b e f o r e r e t i r i n g .
My room, you
k n o w , i s well supplied w i t h l a r g o windows, a n d t h e
n i g h t b e i n g a splendid one, I lay on m y b a c k g a z i n g on
t h e heavens, s p a r k l i n g as i t w e r e w i t h d i a m o n d s , a n d r u m i n a t i n g o n t h e destiny of t h e C o n f e d e r a c y . H o w long
I c o n t i n u e d t h u s I k n o w not, b u t s te a lin g o v e r m y senses,
a s i t a p p e a r e d t o . m e , instantly c a m e a c l e a r e r p e r c e p tion o f o u r cause from t h e beginning. I t h o u g h myself
in W ashington, in t h a t r o o m w h e r e w e all m e t t h a t n i g h t
t b p e r f e c t o u r plan for t h e d e s t r u c t i o n of t h e g r e a t R e public. I t h o u g h t t h a t you were there, Toombs, and
B r e c k i n r i d g e a n d all t h e " r e s t , a n d I s e e m e d t o live o v e r
a g a i n t h e closing s c e n e s w h i c h w e r e e n a c t e d in C o n gress, a n d I w a s s t a r t l e d f r o m t h e c o n t e m p l a t i o n b y a
low, d e e p , solemn voico closc b y m y p i l l o w , sayiug,
" J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , J e f f e r s o n D a v i s !" T h i s w a s t h e b e ginning. I s t a r t e d a n d l o o k e d a r o u c d t o see w h o i t w a s
t h a t s p o k e in t h o s e a w f u l tones, and a cold chill of h o f t o r c r e p t o v e r m o as I s a w a d i m , s h a d o w y figure d i s i p p e a r in t h e distance. P r e s e n t l y my g a z e b e c a m e fix»•§, a n d b e f o r e m e p a s s e d t h e w h o l e S o u t h e r n land, o n e
S U t e n f t e r another*. M a r y l a n d h e a v i n g a n d t06sing as
u p o n t h o w a v e s of t h o ocean, d o u b t i n g w h i c h w a y t o
p l u n g e - ; V i r g i u i a h a d a smiling e x t e r i o r , b u t t h o roost
d e a d ? # d n m o j u g h a t e r a n k l i n g in h c a r i > e a r t ; G e o r g i a ,
c r a z y w i t h t h e e n o r m o u s w e i g h t of h e r t S n s a n d h e r passions, a n x i o u s t o g i v e t h e m v e n t in t h e w a r m b l o o d of
t h o N o r t h e r n h e a r t , a n d so p a s s e d t h e y all, one. a f t e r t h e
o t h e r , t l # last a p p e a r i n g still m o r e hellish J h a n t h e f i r s t
N 6 sooner were these ended, t h a n by some singular
c h a n g e in m y p o s i t i o n I i m a g i n e d myself s t a n d i n g on
t h e t o p <>f B a n k e r H i l l , a n d o n c e t h e p a n o r a m a of t h e
N o r t h . B u t w h y e n t e r i n t o t h e details of t h i e v i s i o n ?
f o r I saw t h e m in all t h e b e a u t y of t h e i r f r e e system ;
t h e c h i l d r e n on t h e i r w a y t o school, t h e old p e o p l e t o
t h e noon-dnv p r a y e r - m c c t i n g . t h e f a r m e r in tho fiela, a n d
t h e scholar in h i s stndy. A l l t h i s p a s s e d r a p i d l y b e f o r e
w e , and I felt a fire i a my h e a r t t h a t t o m y d i s o r d e r e d
brain threatened t o consume m e entirely.
Again the
s c e d e c h a n g e d , a n d ' I f o u n d -myself on a h e i g h t overlooki n g C h a r l e s t o n h a r b o r , j u s t a t the*" p r e c i s e m o m e n t t h e
S t a r of t h e W e s t w a s a t t e m p t i n g t o c a r r y p r o v i s i o n s t o
t h e s t a r v i n g g a r r i s o n w i t h i n , I s a w t b e > a t a l s h o t fired
f o r c i n g h e r t o return, a u d my h e a r t s u n k w i t h i n me as 1
h e a r d t h a t d e e p , solemn v o i c e close beside me, say,
" J e f f e r s o n Davis, J e f f e r s o n D a v i s ! t h i s i s y o u r p r e p a r a tion for t h e h a l t e r ! " A g a i n , I saw a n o t h e r fleet sail t o
the relief of s u m t e r — s a w t h e b o m b a r d m e n t a n d i t s tali.-—
Once m o r e I i m a g i n e d myself s t a n d i n g on t h o s u m m i t of
B u n k e r Hill, a n d t h e whole N o r t h lay s p r e a d o u t a t m y
feet, and, my G o d ! tho c h a n g e t h a t h a d c o m e o v e r t h i s
land. W h o r e , f r o m t h i s very s p o t a n d e x t e n d i n g o u t t o
its f a r t h e s t c o m e r , t h e r e was a h u r r y i n g t o a n d f r o , m e n
s h o u l d e r i n g t h e i r m u s k e t s a n d all t e n d i n g t o o n e p o i n t
W a s h i n g t o n . My"eyes fairly b l a z e d f r o m m y h e a d w h e n
f r o m t h e c l e a r blue s k y a b o v e me, I h e a r d once m o r e
again t h e m y s t e r i o u s voice r i n g i n g in my ears, " J e f f e r son Davis, J e f f e r s o n D a v i s ! behold t h e a r m e d legions of
the N o r t h , see t h o a g o a v of p a r t i n g , see t h o miser,- a n d
desolation t h a t a r e t o follow !" M y l i m b s t r e m b l e d us 1
h e a r d those awful tones. M y b r a i n reeled a n d I fell
h e a d l o n g f r o m m y position.
A t t h i s p o i n t J e f f D a v i s s t o p p e d t a l k i n g a n d wiped
the cold s w e a t f r o m his b r o w . T o o m b s r e m a r k e d t h a t i t
most w o n d e r f u l d r e a m , m o s t woudcrlul, when J e f ferson resuming said, " I t h o u g h t t h a t my fall w a s n o t
sadden, b u t t h a t I o c c u p i e d some m o n t h s ki m y descent, a n d d u r i n g t l l o s e ' m o n t h s I could see t h e McCleilan A n a c o n d a t i g h t n i u g i t s fold all a r o u n d t h e C o n f e d e r a
cy. a u d I felt t h e c e r t a i n t y t h a t all was lost, a n d wo
should bo c r u s h e d io o n e c o m m o n d e s t r u c t i o n .
I gaw
t h e c a p t u r e o f F o r t s H e n r y a n d Donelson, and a thrill of
h o r r o r c r e p t o v e r m e , as 1 saw t h e t r a i t o r t o the N o r t h
and S o o t h , F l o y d , steal a w a y in t h o d a r k n e s s of tho*
night, leaving t h e rest t o d e s t r u c t i o n .
A l l along t h e
liues 1 saw o u r a r m i e s possessed of fearful d r e a d , firing
from N a s h v i l l e t o C o l u m b u s ; s a w t h o b a t t l e of P e a
R i d g e , a n d almost in t h e t w i n k l i n g of an e y e t h e g r e a t
a r m y of t h e P o t o m a c , in all i t s m i g h t y p r o p o r t i o n s a p peared b e f o r e m e , a n d I felt t h a t all was l o s t
Again
the solemn voico r a n g i n m y ears, " J e f f e r s o n Davis, t h y
doom is s e a l e d — m e e t thy r e w a r d N o sooner were
t h e s e w o r d s u t t e r e d t h a n in t h o distance 1 b e a r d a n unearthly s h o u t i n g a n d yelling, t h a t g r a t e d on m y feelings
like red h o t i r o n d r a w n t h r o u g h e v e r y p o r t i o n o f m y b o dy. Soon t h e r o . c a m o in s i g h t w h a t I f o u n d t o m y h o r r o r to be a b o d y of i m p s sent f r o m t h e b o t t p m l e s s p i t t o
b r i n g mc t o j u d g m e n t . P l a c i n g themselves a r o u n d a n d
u n d e r my body, wo descended r a p i d l y t o w a r d s H a d e s . —
S o o n we found o u r s e l v e s l a n d e d on a b a r r e n r o c k iu t h e
m o s t desolate p l a c e possible f o r y e n t o i m a g i u e .
Stepp i n g round t o ono angle, i t disclosed t o my view a w i d e
e u t r a o e e a n d all around i t g r e w t h o m o s t b e a u t i f u l flowers, and I s e e m e d t o b e a r t h o m o s t b e a u t i f u l s o u n d s
imaginable. O n o of m y g u a r d s h e r e s p o k e t o m e a n d
said, " C h i l d of m o r t a l i t y , follow !" H o led t h e w a y a n d
I followed closely. I t was n o t l o n g b e f e r e t h e b e a u t y of
t h e e n t r a n c e passed away and all b e c a m e d a r k , d r e a r y
a n d desolate. Traveling" w h a t s e e m e d t o m c a g r e a t distance, we a t last c a m e t o a g r e a t i r o n d o o r j ' t h e nails
upon which seemed t o s p a r k l e a n d b l a z e w i t h s o m e intense h e a t w i t h i n . H e r e s a t a n elderly i m p a s d o o r k e e p e r a n d l»y his s i d e was a v e r y large b o o k , in w h i c h
were w r i t t e n in l e t t e r s of fire t h e n a m e s of all t h e damned w h o p r e c e d e d mc.
" . C h i l d of sin,*" s p o k e t h o old
man, " w h o a r t t h o u ?" a n d I a n s w e r e d •' verily my
b r a i n reels a n d 1 kuow c o t " " C h i l d o f sin, tell me b y
what u a m e t h o u wast known on e a r t h ? and I answ ered,
J e f f e r s o n D a v i s . " N o sooner h a d 1 u t t e r e d t h i s n a m e ,
t h a n t h o imps, w i t h a h o r r i b l e , n e v o r t o bo forgotten
screech, s p r a n g ^ o a d i s t a n t c o r n e r , arid stood s t a r i n g
w i t h g l e a m i n g eyeballs, t h a t seemed t o l o a t h e m c w i t h o
m o s t t r e m e n d o u s l o a t h i n g . I t r i e d t o a p p r o a c h them,
b u t t h e y would not p e r m i t i t s e e m i n g fearful of a n y cont a c t w i t h me. H o r r o r s t r i c k e n nod a m a z e d a t t h i s cond u c t of t h o s e I t h o u g h t would b e my friends, I r e t u r n e d
t o t h o d o o r w h i c h - 1 now found open. N o sooner h a d I
entered t h a n t h e d o o r closed w i t h a h e a v y sound, a n d I
h e a r d rolling a u d rolling in t h e distance my name, a s I
was t h u s i n t r o d u c e d iu t h e socioty of t h e d a m n e d . Onw a r d a n d o n w a r d 1 found myself ..traveling ; a n d e v e r
a n d anon, as I p a s s e d b y somo p o o r w r e t c h w r i t h i n g in
all t h o misery of t h e l o s t 1 w o u l d t u r n m y e y e s t o c a t c h
o n e lootc of s y m p a t h y , one g l a n c e of c o m m i s e r a t i o n for
m y fate, b u t in vain. All s e e m e d t o look u p o n mo w i t h
a d r e a d f u l h o r r o r , and p o i n t i n g t h e i r b u r n t fingers of
scorn as I passed, w h i s p e r e d to e a c h o t h e r , " H e l l is disg r a c e d ! H e l l is d i s g r a c e d !" H u r r y i n g f a s t e r on, I a t
last f o u n d myself b e f o r e a n open door, p r i n t e d o v e r h e a d
in letters'of fir(^^ie words, " E n t e r a u d receive thy
d o o m ! " I e n t e r e d , a n d t h e r e iu t h e middle of a l a r g e
a p a r t m e n t w a s raised a t h r o n e of living fire, a n d u p o n it
sat t h e m o s t a w f u l b e i n g 1 cv£r b e h e l d .
O n his h e a d
was a c r o w n of living s c o r p i o n s a n d a r o u n d bis neck a n d
coiled in his b o s o m was t h e d e a d l y r a t t l e s n a k e .
I had
b u t a s h o r t t i m e t o look ; when, in a v o i c e of t h u n d e r ,
h e said t o mo, " W h o a r t t h o u ? "
A n d t h r o u g h the
long arches, t h r o u g h w h i c h I h a d passedp-xauie t h o answer, • ' J e f f e r s o n D a v i s . J e f f e r s o n D a v i s i i l e l l is disg r a c e d . cast h i m p u t . " T r a n s f i x e d w i j h - f i o r r o r , the D e vil seemed t o g a z e uporfTncTrtwiLiH^a v o i c e of a w f u l
d e p t h a n d hardness, spid t o m e , '• J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , o n c e
u p o n a t i m e . 1 w h o set h e r o J a i l o r of t h e d a m n e d , —
b i l i o u s t o be s o m e t h « g _ g r e a t e r t h a n t h e g r e a t e s t ,
b e l l e d a n d was cast f o r t h N a n d this s e n t e n c e w a s p a s s e d
u p o n m e : " T o sink d o w n t o H e l l , a n d h a v e d o m a i n
o v e r all the iniquity of t h o world, u n t i l a g r e a t e r t h a n I
should b e released aud m y d o m i n i o n g i v e n t o h i m . J e f ferson Davis, long h a v e I w a i t e d , l o n g h a v e 1 t e m p t e d ,
b u t in vain, until to-day y o n a p p e a r e a b e f o r e m e loaded
d o w n w i t h a c r i m e t h a t even 1 s h u d d e r to' see in y o n . —
J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , " said be, r i s i n g , 4 t a k e m y s e a t a n d
c r o w n . " A s h e n t t e r e d t h o s e a w f u l w o r d s my b l o o d
seemed t o f r e e z e in my veins, a n d t h e most h o r r i d wail
of a g o n y rose f r o m t h e m y r i a d of tjie d a m n e d , a n d w i t h a
s h o u t I a w o k e , t r e m b l i n g in o v e r y limb, a ccld pesperation all o v e r mc, a n d b r o a d d a y l i g h t s t r e a m i n g in t h r o u g h
m y windows. T h o sceoe s e e m e d so real, a n d m y d o o m
so p r o p h e t i c , t h a t i t p r e y e d u p o n me like a c a n k e r , a n d
I find myself u n a b l e t o c a s t i t o f f "
D a v i s h e r e ceased s p e a k i n g , a n d t h e y b o t h r o s e a n d
unlocked t h e d o o r a n d c a m e o u t a n d a s t h e y passed I
c a u g h t a glimpse of t h e m , a n d never, till t h e d a y of m y
d e a t h , shall I forget t h e h a g g a r d , c a r e - w o r n faces of
those two traitors,
A s EDITOR.—The c o m p o n e n t p a r t s of an e d i t o r a r e
defined t h u s : T h e constitution o f a h o r s e , o b s t i n a c y of a
mule, i n d e p e n d e n c e of a w o o d - s a w y e r , p e r t i n a c i t y of a
dun. e n d u r a n c e of a s t a r v i n g anaconda, i m p u d e n t * of a
beggar, and an entire resignation to t h e most confounded of all e a r t h ) * t r e a d - m i l k
Louisiana Getting Her « Rights."
T h e N e w O r l e a n s E r a of the 1 3 t h inst, p u b l i s h e s a
irrativo of rebel b a r b a r i t y in t h e p a r i s h of S t T a m many, Louisiana, w h i c h m o r e t h a n confirms all p r e v i o u s
s t a t e m e n t s of the suffering a m o n g t h o , p e o p l e of t h e
S o u t h a n d the t y r a n n y of t h e C o n f e d e r a t e rule.
The
E r a derives its information from a refugee, who, with
his wife and t w o children, one of w h o m lie c a r r i e d in his
arms, by long a n d weary m a r c h e s , succeeded in reaching
P e a r l R i v e r , a n d t h e n c e ' e s c a p e d b y a c a n o e t o t h e seac o a s t and so reached N e w Orleans. W e q u o t e :
1
«IK WAY THE 1-EOl'l.E LIVE.
T h e p e o p l e of S t T a m m a n y h a v e been living f r o m
h a n d t o m o u t h foi a b o u t a y e a r . T h e C o n s c r i p t i o n law
has d r i v e n a l l t h e m a l e s t o seek refuge in t h e woods.
while their p o o r women a n d c h i l d r e n a r e left a t h o m e ,
on the v e r y v e r g e of s t a r v a t i o n .
R e b e l officers scour
the c o u n t r y coutinually w i t h blood-h.onods, e n t e r h o u s e s
w i t h o u t c e r e m o n y , s e a r c h e v e r y rwjbk mid c o r n e r , and. if
t h e terrified w o m e n p r o t e s t aguiost their rudeness, t h e y
a r c kicked o u t of t h e i r own h o u s e s a n d coarsely assailed
a n c f c u r s e d b y t h e s e b r u t a l minions of J e f f D a v i s .
T h e p e o p l e s u b s i s t entirely o n c r a c k e d corn, w h i c h is
p a r c h c a a n d eaten d r y , f o r b r e a d , a n d soaked in h o t wat e r f o r coffee. Occasionally t h e y g e t hold of a little
f r e s h m e a t ; b u t a s t h e r e i s not a p a r t i c l e of s a l t t o b e
h a d s h o r t of a d o l l a r a spoonful, t h i s m e a t c a n n o t b o *
k e p t , a n d is v e r y u n p a l a t a b l e w i t h o u t s a l t
riEnjSlNli CONFEDERATE MOXEV.
ID t h i s s t r o n g h o l d of'tlio C o n f e d e r a c y t h e n o t e s issued
by t h n t so-callcd G o v e r n m e n t a r e n o t c u r r e n t , e x c e p t as
- m e d i u m for t h o rich m e n t o p a y t h e i r , d e b t s t o t h e
p o o r . T h e latter c a n n o t use t h i s m o n e y f o r a n y t h i n g . —
Ono d e a l e r in all s o r t s of little n o t i o n s refused t o give
five cents' w o r t h of t o b a c c o for a t e n d o l l a r bill, saying
t h e w h o l e bill was n o t w o r t h five cents.
T h o whole
c o u n t r y is b a r e of s a l t s u g a r , molasses, flour, b a t t e r , vegetables—in fact, everything except c r a c k e d j c o r n .
" ui'E.vr BEET."
/
T h e r e b e i n g n o sait, t h e r o v i n g b a n d s of g u r r i l l a s a n d
o t h e r a r m e d p a r t i e s , whose chi^f business seems t o b e t o
m o v e f r o m p l a c e t o placo i i N w r c h of c o n s c r i p t s a u d
chickens, a r e c o m p e l l e d t o resort t o b u r n i n g beef t o c u r e
it
T h i s is d o n e in t h i s way : T h e fresh meat i s c u t
i n t o thin slices and p n t on h o t coals, w h e r e i t remains until i t i s q u i t e b u r n t I t is t h e n p a c k e d in k u a p s a c k s and
c a r r i e d w i t h .them on t h e i r m a r c h e s . W h e n t h e stock
e x h a u s t e d t h e y levy on a n o t h e r a n i m a l , w h e r e v e r o n e
t o b e f o u n d . T h i s food, w i t h c o r n coarsely jjrouod
a n d unsifted, is said t o b e w h a t t h e r e b e l s o l d i e r s Subsist
'•
*
.
J
THE FAMILIES OF VOLLNTEEltS AM) COJiSCKIrtS.
T h e s e a r c represented as Iming e n t i r e l y destitute.-—
T h e y go w a n d e r i n g f r o m one p l a n t a t i o n t o a n o t h e r , begg i n g f r o m t h o lordly e x e m p t s a little c o r n meal t o k e e n
soul a n d b o d y t o g e t h e r . T h e y a r e freoucutly r u d e l y d r i ven a w a y w i t h o u t assistance, b e i n g t o l a t h a t i t is w r o n g
t o e u c o u f i i e e b e g g i n g . F o r u few m o n t h s a s o r t of b o u n ty was p a i d t h o s e u n f o r t u n a t e people, b u t t h a t h a s been
d i s c o n t i n u e d , a n d now t h e y a r e left e n t i r e l y d e s t i t u t e .
DESTITUTE OK Cl/mriXC.
T h e w o m e n a n d c h i l d r e n a r e a l m o s t w i t h o u t clothes.
C o t t o n c a r d s c a u u o t be h a d a t a u y p r i c e .
While the
women h a d t h e s e they m a d e c o t t o n y a r n , w h i c h t h e y
s p u n i n t o c o a r s e cloth, w h i c h a n s w e r e d v e f y wclL T h a t
s o u r c e o f supply, like a l m o s t e v e r y t h i n g else, h a s b e e n
c u t off. T h e s e ' p o o r , h u n g r y , h a l f - c l o t h e d w o m e n a u d
c h i l d r e n , h a v i n g been d e p r i v e d of t h e i r n a t u r a l p r o t e c t o r s b y t h e i n e x o r a b l e c o n s c r i p t i o n law, now w a n d e r
a b o u t ' f r o m placo t o place, s u b j e c t t o all tho j o o r s a n d insults of t h e rich, w h o a r e k n o w n t o e n t e r t a i n g r e a t cont e m p t for " p o o r white t r a s h . 3
H a r d Times in
Richmond.
T h e following e x t r a c t f r o m a l o t t e r w r i t t e n by a y o u n g
woman s o j o u r n i n g at R i c h m o n d , V i r g i n i a , t o a f r i e n d iu
B a l t i m o r e , will s h o w t o w h a t e x t e n t t h e p e o p l e a r e suff e r i n g in t h e r e b e l c a p i t a l .
T h e l e t t e r w a s recently
seized iu u rebel mail :
" R i c h m o n d , M a r c h 11, 1 8 6 3 . — J ' e r h a p s y o u would
like t o know how we p o o r s t a r v e d o a t rebels g e t a l o n g
in t h i s e n v i a b l e city. P o s s i b l y , if y o u h a v e y o u r , pock e t s lull of C o n f e d e r a t e i}ote3 ; b u t w o e if y o n h a v e n o t .
T h e necessities of life a r e allin t h e b a n d s of s p e c u l a t o r s ,
and you dare,not m u r m u r a t any price they dare t o ads.
Y o u must iay y o u r p u r s e a t t h e i r f e e t a n d t h a t _ t o o . i a
t h e most bumble manner. L e t me give y o u a brief idea
a s t o t h e p r i c e s w h i c h articles c o m m a n d in t h o C o n f e d e r a t e c a p i t a l : D r y g o o d s L h a v e ceased t o b u y s o m e t i m o
s i n c e , b u t I will mention t h a t c o m m o n calicoes c o m m a n d
$ 2 25 p e r y a r d ; fine p l a i d s $ 1 0 per y a r d ; a silk dreas
f r o m $ 1 0 0 t o $ 2 M > ; kid gloves $ 7 t o $ 1 0 p e r p a i r ;
g e n t l e m e n ' s b o o t s f r o m $ 5 0 t o $ 7 5 p e r p a i r ; uniform
c o a t s $ 1 0 0 e a c h . U n d e r t h o h e a d of provisions I q u o t e
a s follows : T u r k e y s $ 1 5 t o $ 2 5 e a c h ; e g g s $ 2 p e r
dozen ; . m e a t $ 1 2 5 p e r p o u n d ; b u t t e r $ 3 5 0 t o $ 5
per p o u n d ; coffee $ 4 p e r p o u n d ; t e a $ 1 5 t o $ 2 5 p e r
p o u n d . Y e s t e r d a y 311 a u c t i o n firm sold a lot of miscellaneous g o o d s a t e v e n h i g h e r p r i c e s t h a n t h o s e w h i c h 1
h a v e q u o t e d . F o r instance, bonDCt f r a m e s s o l d _ f o r $ 1 2
e a c h , a n d a fine b o n n e t c o s t s y o u f r o m $ 4 0 t o $ 7 5 . "
A BLOODY QCAKREL
IS
FAMIIO.NIO.XABL* L I F F _ — . I n
N e w Y o r k city, recently, a m a n n a m e d B r o w n i n g commenced a suit a g a i n s t a ' W a l i s t r e e t b r o k e r , f o r c r i m i n a l
a c q u a i n t a n c e w i t h b i s wife. T h o wife m a d e a n d p u b lished an a f f i d a v i t e x o n o r a t i n g t h e b r o k e r , a n d c h a r g i n g
h e r "husband w i t h a n a t t e m p t t o b l a c k maiL W h e n
B r o w n i n g r e a d i t b e w a s seized w i t h u n c o n t r o l a b l e f n r y .
h u n t e d u p t h e w o m a n a n d told h e r s h e m u s t d i e .
She
d e c l a r e d t h a t s h e d i d n o t k n o w t h e c o n t e n t s of t h e affidav i t s h e h a d s u b s c r i b e d , a n d t h e b r o k e r ' s lawyer h a d misrepresented
it to her.
B r o w n i n g d i d n o t believe t h e
s t o r y . D r a w i n g a bowie-knifo h o a t t e m p t e d t o c u t h e r
t h r o a t . S h e seized I'ue w e a p o n a n d w r e s t e d it f r o m h i m ,
t h o n g h h e r h a n d was Dearly s e v e r e d . H e d r e w a pistol
a n d s n a p p e d i t a t b e r a s s h e fled, b u t t h e c h a r g e d i d n o t
e x p l o d e . S h e t o o k r e f u g e in > l a w y e r s office. H e p u r - i
sued h e r w i t h a knife in h i s b a n d , b u t was s e i z e d o t f o r c
h e could d 6 her auy h a r m , a n d e j e c t e d .
Subsequently
h e w a l k e i f u p a n d d o w o in f r o n t of t h e residence of t h e
b r o k e r f i r several hour?, w i t h a loaded revolver, w a i t i n g
for h i m tV m a k e his a p p e a r a n c e . F i n a l l y , b e was p o t
u n d e r arrcStf. H e still v o w s t h a t b e will be r e v e n g e d a t
t h e first o p p o r t u n i t y .
t
receipts and expenditures, you are respectfully refer- C|t <§raitb C.rairttst |tcralii!V. the
red to the, Directors who keep the accounts. If they
MgBGAJf B A T ! 9 , M
1
„ ^ ,
a
p
r
„ ^ S :
TRAVERSE CITJJ
FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 24, 1863.
Leelaaaw County—Official.
This newly organized County, which j comprises the
townships of Centerville, Glen- Arbor, and Ijeelanau, and
which formed a part of Grand Traverse last Fall, has
done quite as well as we expected on the- State ticket—
though she might and would have done better if qucs-'
tioua of local interest bad not been mixtd with the canvass. A majority of IOC in a poll of 302 votes is all
that we c«uld reasonably atk ; and the only drawback
to a complete Republican triumph is the defeat of Mr.
Quackenbush, for Clerk and Register, who lows his
•election, on local and persona] grounds, by 12 votes. The
following is the result :
,f
cannot explain it, I know not who can. Probably not
over half of the Directors in the State make their accounts exactly balance. The reported expenditures in
the State exceed the reported receipts, by more than
thirty thousand dollars. The former are believed to be
nearest correct For instance, district No. 3, Uelana*.
reports $115 91 expended, but nothing received. I
fancy that Jeff Davis* Treasurer would like to put himself under the tuition of such a district; for how to pay
money without receiving any, is an art belonging only to
School Directors.
,
Deducting the amount on hand, and adding $12 paid
Inspectors from townships, there appears to have been
expeuded in the County for all school purposes, $1588
07. From this deduct the Primary School monev, and
wc have $1305 72 that came directly from the peeplc
— taxes and rntebills. This is a petty sum for so great
— object It is but $1 56 for each child. This shows
the economy of our public school system ; but in the
now Counties the expense is of course comparatively
greater than in tbo old.
The
little
— ratebills in Grand Traverse
. . . . v i w were
y i v reduced
icuuceu aa m
ue
from the previous year ; but are still $280 70 too much
States. The rebel stronghold on the Mississippi, Colun>- to boeo enabled to meet us in force wherever m>
Pi 0 W together wit
'thTi^rt>n H »'
" . "
* Memphis, presented ourselves, and by which alone thev have been
hands.
commercial city of the State, fell into able to feed and supplv their armies.
rhc autumn of 1861 had w i t n ^ ,H«
LUC uipiure 01 iwanoaic island apd >ewhere, Beaufort •Ul
"ueiw iv may uu auvisaoie to striice.
r o f ' , . con » a n d by 'he redaction of the important
These decisive measures we are actuallv executing or
fort Pulaski, controlling the entrance to the Savannah preparing to execute. The successes and conquests we
River; of Fort Clinch, controlling the harboi and rail- hare already described, have carried us through the preroad depot of Fornaodina; of Fort Marion, at St Augus- liminary stages, and the blows we now strike—each one
tine. By the first named operations we acquired control of them that succeed*—will reach the very vitals or the
of the spacious inland waters of North Carolina (Albe- rebellion. Let any one look upon the map, and these
marle and Pamlico sounds), and their adjaceut shores, truths will be apparent.
and of one of her two important seaport*—Beaufort—
Bv the last we made ourselves masters of the rich sea
A Day of Fasting and Prayer.
islands and important Harbors extending along the coast
from Charleston to S t John's; leaving in the possession
A PROCLAMATION BY T H E PRESIDENT OP T H E U . 3 .
of the rebels, on the Atlantic coast, but two harbors,
Charleston and Wilmington.
Whereas the Senate or tho United States, devoutly
But the brilliant
uriuinui triumphs
inumpns of
01 our
our army
armyand
and navy
navy elaeelse- ' c C 0 K l l ' z ' n g the supreme authority and just government
ASSOCIATE JtVncE OF THE SUPREME COCK
Itfiri! were
wpre surpassed
cnrnaeowl by
Kr
fh/» capture or
«.f the
»l.~ great city or
. # ° r -Almighty
where
wuens
oy mo
tbo
Almighty
God, in all the affairs or men and nations,
K
the
Gulf,
tlie
denot
orthe
prpatVnlW
nftKo
:
r*1-«:— requested
.-J.t-.
James V. Campbell. (Rep.)..202—mai...,106
the GulC the depot of the great Valley of the Mississippi has. by
resolution,
the T,
President to
to designate
designate
wj- lC
auiuuuu,
requebieo
me
rresioent
d
Uand Johnson,
gg
—New Orleans; an achievement which, estimated by the Mand
set anart
opart aa dav
day fnr\**tinn»l
forNational prayer and humiliaimportance of the conquests and the noble daring of its tion.
C I R C U I T J l ' D O K — X I X T H DISTRICT.
execution, is scarcely, surpassed in history. By this imAnd whereas it is tho duty of nations as well as of
1
Z B S f f l S S f '""P'
203—maj
104
portant conquest we obtained «*otrol of a large portion men, to own their dependence upon the overruling power
Flavins J . Littlejohn,
99
or
and
accomplished toe
the mo6t
mo6t important
important anc
and or Uod, to confers their sins and transgressions, in bum"! Louisiana,
")",S1U"U< a!
" 1 nccompnsned
REOEXTS or T H E C J f l V K O I I T * .
difficultfitfintoward* nhtnimnrr Krml.nl „ F | U U : : : : ble sorrow, yet with assured hope that genuine repenRepublican ticket straight,
201— m a j . . . . 106
tance will lead to mercy and pardon, and to recoraito
•Copperhead ticket, straight,
S8
mony with the genius orour free institutions, to raise the sacola. with the forte yet held by the rebels.
the sublime truths announced in the Holy Scripture® and
In
whole by, tax,
FOR (SHERIFF.
, . and make the schools free. Such au step
siep
- 'he
--- hastily
v sketched military and
"mi naval
ua>ui operati
uiJL-niu ons
ODS proven by history, that thoso nations only are bJtaed
n r r t n l r l ...1J
» , *«._ t
. . .
f Tt tceuni dl ii n C T1i n ,t h fe* w
W M I IhrAnrrk tltn
.P
1 .1
whoso
God is the Lord :
Seventy- "
8, »
e s t through the States or Arkansas,
Edward Priori, (Kep.)
; S l j l — m . j . . . . 91 would add largely
o - v to
— tho
. " . . attendance
i n u u u u w o iat
o ischool.
uUW.
M
ninA more,voIumes
MAM >".i.
—1reported in• tbo libraries.
...
Missouri, luuiie^^ce
Tennessee unu
and j^eniucny,
Kentucky, aod
and in
in the
the Atlantic
Atlantic . And insomuch as
we know that,
iu«i, bv
oy his
nis divine
divine law,
law, nanaErastus Bates,
JJQ
nine
are
There' .U.5.MJUU,
frA.n Hatteras to Florida, and
_.J on
-- the Guir tions, like "IUIVIUUULS,
individuals, ure
are suojected
subjected to punishments and
seaboard from
J U D G E OP TROBATB. '
appears to have been fine inouey nnportioned by the from Pensacola to the month or the Mississippi, we real- chastisements
c h o s l i v n u i n t f i iin
n t this
K i s hworld
r A p l i t mmay
a t . Wn
L justly
. . l _ r fcar
..
A«
wo*.not
that
JohnE. Fisher, (Rep.)
204—maj...
County Treasurer, but the Inspectors'of Centerville and ly made conquests as vast as it often fall to the lot or theB fhe' awfol woiauiiiy
calamity ui
of civil
civil war,
war, wnicn
which now
now at
desolates tho
James M. Burbuk,
hnt a nnni«Km»
—L.
'aod. mav
may ho
be but
punishment
ni inflicted upon us for our
Whitewater alone, make any report of the same. No most power and warlike nations to make in so short - - -. land,
riod oi
of time. Woo pusned
pushed our conquests by
—.landi through
.•
, presumptuous sins, to tho needful end or our nationCOUNTY T B E A S U R E R .
Director reports any received or paid out
I/vlanaw noq
v
'"" ual " JU »» » wnoie people r w e have
Joko I. Millar. (Rep.)
19"—maj
5G voted $25 for libraries^ thb spring election, and tbo Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee, to the very bouoda- :i *.ieD,a
ries or the Gulf States; obtained control of the Mississippi J P
or the cboicests bounties or Heaven. We have
Walter W . Barton,
i4|i
Inspectors report an increase of 41 volumes in the town River, except about 200 miles; occupied the coasts or
preserved, those many years in peace and prosperi<\
COUNTY C L E R K .
lu
Georea—a large
larm> J' :» e have
numbers, weann
wealth and
and power
power asr
•/
library. That the people will find it money well invest- North
... Carolina,
v ^ u i . u a , South
uuuui Carolina
v^aronua and
auu ueorga—a
^ 6grown
" " in uuuioers,
Lorenzo D. Qdackenbush, (Rep.)... 1^3
n
..jrtion
of
Louisiana;
seised
every
important
fort
and
,°
other
nation has ever grown. But we havo forgotteo
Gerhard Verfurtb,...
1<4—maj.... 11 ed, I have not the least doubt—provided the boob are harbor in the rebel territory, save three (Wilmington, the gracious baud which preserved us in peace, and mulgood.
tl
llud aad
REGISTER OP D E E D S .
Cbarleston and Mobile,) reducing to a corresponding ex- P. .
enriched and strengthened us ; and we have
By a late enactment the district and township BoHrds tent the labors or tho blockading squadron ; captured T a " , 'y imagined, in tho deceitfulness or our hearts, that
Lorenzo D. Quackenbusb, (Rep.)... 1(52,
Gerhard Verfurth
174^-maj
12 are hereafter to uso annually—unless otherwise directed fourteen pormaneot sea coast forts, among which were n" thesa blessings were produced by some superior wisd o m Bnd
the
largest
on
the
Southern
coast,
such
as
Pulaski,
Barvirtue
or our own. Intoxicated with unbroken
by
a
vote
or
tho
people—all
the
library
money
on
hand,
P R d S E C U T I N O ATTORNEY.
8UCCC
«. w c have become too selfsufficicnd to reel the neand to purchase or the State extractor. By doing this raucas, McRae, Jackson, and St. Philip, Following
K' J X H
•- 2 0 7 - r a j . . . . 84
theso conquests was the reduction or Yorktown and tho
of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to
B. J . Brooks,
123
they will get the books mnch cheaper and much better evacuation or Norfolk, by which the waters or James P™}"t0 the God that made us !
OIR(.TTT COURT COMMISSIONER.
bound, than ir purchased elsewhere ; and thev cannot aim
and York
Rivers were laid open to our fleets, and the
behooves
then, to bumble
KnmKio ourselves before the
i orit uivers
,Dt'HOOVes Qus,
s. men,
denrived of
of the
the facilities
fncilitip* furnished
fnrnicl.nri by a« great
™,_. navy ofil;Dcied
» „ < Power, to confess our national sins and to pray
™ 0 - T n M I , (Rep.)
211—maj
rebels deprived
impose a bod book upon tho young ; the list from which rebels
f o r lemeoc
J . Brooks,
121
yard,
and
compelled
to
destroy
their
only
means
of
menm
?
y and forgiveness.
they select, comprising about 700 volumes, being pre
ucinir
acing
our
fleets
in
Hamnton
Hampton
Unniic
Roads—the
tho
Merrimac.
Now
therefore
in
compliance
with the request and
COUNTY SURVEYOR.
'
pared by the State Board of Education.
fully concurring in the
of tho
ora RESOURCES.
'>"'7
tne views or
the Senate, I do, by this
' T T W " 1 ("*•>
203—maj
In conclusion, let me implore the people oryonryoung
11
a , C aand
n
h o rns^,i..:.
d
my*proclamation,
doiraate
.u.
We
c have
naie carried on, shall cany
carry on and conclude this T
/ . d f l ! K
1 *s e it ,^, pr# rtt TTi,
a y , the
John Porter,
lj|
County to keep up their schools, employ good teachers, war. without touchingone dollar of- thee aaccumulated
c c » m u l . t ecapl » » f U " % » ' A p " l , 1864 a,a<l.Jof™ti»»alb«o,ili,li„ 0 ,
CORONERS.
• . , at'. the
' rasting,
fastintr. andprayer.
and nraver. 1do
I do hereby
hnmSv num»i
nii
re^ertaH"the"J^bte
raiso tho avorago to at least six months per annum, and ital or the country. We are already astonished
George Ray. (Rep.)
202
to
abstain
from
their
ordinary
secular
pursuit*,
aod
to
whatever else they may do, let not tho education or the revenue now being raised from the taxation oTour dally
Georgo N. Smith, (Rep.)
207
productions, and yet we do not begin t o ' realize the unite, at their several places of public worship and their
young be neglected.
Q JJ g
Moses Tnikham, (Dem.)
132
amount to be yielded by the system already adopted, or respective homes, in keeping the day holy to the Lord,
John Ilartuug, (Dcm.)
133
, T H E WAR F O R T H E UNION.
the extent to which that system may be enlarged, with- and devoted to tho humble discharge of the religions '
out imposiug any grieveous burdens upon the people- duties proper to tbe solemn occasion. •
and Prospect, of the any burdens to which they will not cheerfully submit to
All this being dono in sincerity and truth let us then
For the Grand Trtverw Herald. The Results of the Pust
,hc
Report
of
the
Comrest humbly in the hope, authorized by tbe Divino teachaccomplish
the object intended.
Primary School Education In Grand Tin verse
mittee OR the Condnct of the War.
County.
No government can long carry on a,war which must ings, that the united crv of the Nation will bo heard on
Yonr Committee think it better to submit the testi- be sustained by the accumulated capital or tho country, high, and answered witbtilessings, no less than tbo parMOROAN BATES, ESJ —Dear Sir,—When our nation mony which they have taken in relation to the conduct
and there is scarcely a limit to the time war may bo pro- don of our national sins, and restoration of our nowdil a s sent a million man to the field to fight nearly an or the War, without criticism to any considerable ex- secuted by a Government whose credit is pustained by vided aod suffering country to its former happy condiequal number of rotwla, we waDt to know daily what they tent or military plans or movements, leaving each reader the revenues, derived by the accumulated wealth or the tion or unity and peace.
to rorm bis own conclusions from the testimony, and such country.
In witness whereor, I have hereunto set my hand, and
are doing, and what progress they arc making in putting opinions or competent military men as it ma* contaia
caused tho scol or the United States to be fixod.
R E B E L DEFENCES.
, -down the rebellion. Such information keeps our syraV)®.* '®0|f k» ck ?™ r the struggle of the'past two
DODO at the City or Washington this thirtieth day or
Every
dollar
tho
rebels
have
expended
or
can
expend
.pathies and energies in fnll action, and enables us better years, they reel that although wc have not accomplished
March, ID the year of our Lord one thoosaud
in this rebellion has heeu and must continue to be drawn
to determine what to do in the future, to carry the work all that we hoped and expected within the time, still the from their accumulated capital. Their intercourse with
f u & | eight hundred and sixty-three, and or tbe independence or the U. a the eighty-scven'h.
to a successful termination. 80 in our warfare with great progress made gives us fall assurauce of final sue- foreign nations has been almost whoRy suspended, all
ABRAnAB LINCOLN.
, 'gnorance, it is not eaoagh tbat\ the jieople establish
When the Government took its first activo steps to- their industrial interests have been paralyzed, and there y the President,
schools and employ an army of teachere. and send them wards resisting the rebellion, tho rebels had been for is no source from which they can derive revenue or
WILUAM H. SEWARP, Secretary or State.
to the field. They should know what these teachers are , T l - ? . ? , ° n t ! ? a - ! i V u l y j a i , ( l 0 I , C D l y m a k i l , S preparations means for the maintenance or tho war, except by depriving
people
or
their
property,
day
after
day,
and
year
afThe Battle of Fredericksburg.'"
doing—what they anj doing to sustain tiem—what the to resist its authority and dory its jurisdiction. Thft- had ter year, 60 long
ule w
a r 8shall continne,
war
thus reducing
usurped the control ortho machinery of one State Gov , ' k Z T
'
' T 5 as ,the
„T' *:0
—»
No part of the report of the Committee on the Con-!
o povertv
them. lto
„-k:„i. the
.uresults from year to war are. They nee* the itati.tic*. ernment arter another, aud thus over awed tbo loval nen. Hi
.P°^ e r t y and want.
" * D t Thiaian
This is a tr.nl,
trnth which
doct oftho War, is more interesting than that relating
.By looking thus at what they have done, (heyrosyrealize pie or those States. They had even so for control of^be
Thev h^d°hl? n a d c to
i * P a a i a S t o re- to the repulse of Gen. Burnside at Fredericksburg. Tbe
??
P ?
, hehevo that an export important facts which they reveal, and which the people
better what they ought to do.
Beside-* thirty years Federal Government itself, as to make it not onlv icnui i f ^7 '
°" n"®"; , ^ i c h ' b o ™ r I d w . o a I d ^ obligeTto have thus far beeD entirely ignorant, set at rest the two
hence when your County shall huvo its twenty or thirty esce. for the time being, in measures for iUown d S '
tion,. but
to 1that
Thev
had seized
seized f 3 ' ' W °n
the richest revenue ever realized questions as to who was responsible for the defeat at that
, 1 end.
inev
i to
"• contribute
7 Ti .
thousand inhabitants, and has becomo-^hat disinterest- Bnd4 taken
• the
• arms' i ca'ud
y bad
bad
seized Vj
by uany
Governmeot, ana
and mat
that liir tne
tho federal
Federal Uovernment
Government
v viuiuruineni,
mtothcir possession
munitions
>uld attempt
attemnt interference
intprforenM* with
nr!»K its
;t.~ exportation,
.-.r
. t . . time, and why Gen. Franklin was subsequently so sudthey
ed men predict it will be—one of the moit inviting por- or war or the Government. They scattered' and demoral- fhould
denly removed. The entire plan of tho battlo hinged on
could command the armies and navies or Europe to fiirht
tions oftho s u t e , it will interest its citiaeus to go bacic
8001 th
oTthe workP
° " a V > t 0 t h u m a , t d i s t a n t parts their bat'les for them. How bitter must be their disap- the penetration of the left wing or tho army to the rear
or the rebel position, thus compelling the enemy to evaoto the files of the Grind Travorso Heralij, edited by the
pointment
as
thoy
apply,
with
their
own
hands,
tbe
torch
' ^ r e was trea.«on in tho Executive, mansion, treason
uate the ridge, that constituted the main line or tbo deveteran printer, Morgan Bates, and see bow the foundain tho Cabinet, treason in the Senate and /lloasc or Rc- which consigns it to ashes, and then arc compelled to fence. The order or Gen. Burnside specified that at Itatt
t i o n of edncation were being laid in 1862. For these preecntatives, treason in the army and unvy, treason in supply to their leaders, from their other property, the
one divisioo, tcrll rvpported, should be detailed to carry
reasons I send you the more important eristics of the every deportment, bureau and offieo connectad with the moans to sustain tho rebellion ! Their currency has al- the bights near tbo Slassaponax. Gen. Franklin chose
most ceased to be regarded, even by themselves, as the
schools in the several townships of your bounty for the Government. When the sew Administration came into representative
tbQauUlest division in his corps, thaUor Gen. Meade,
or value.
and failed to make the leatt provition fpr its rupport.
past year. You wiU ere long be in receipt of the Re power, it was necessarily compelled to adopt its measures
Conscription has exhausted their people, and the
with the greatest cautiou, scarcely knowingfriendfrom
port or thcSuperintAdent of Poblic Institution for 1B62, roe. An urmy nod navy Had to be creatcd. There was wealth which long years of uninterrupted prosperity, under Or course the result was. that Meade syvastly inferior
force was driven back, withoat accomplishing tho least
>n which, on pago 76, in a condensed form, you will find scarcely a battallion of loyal natioual troops to protect the best Government the world ever saw, and placed in thing. Gen. Burnside, learning or tbe pettv force that
the statistics oftho State, arid in the appendix the statis- the capital; and the fii>t sense orsecurity felt in the cani- their hands, has already been expended, and they are had attacked the rebels, ordered Franklin to" attack with
now
struggling
on
with
the
vain
hopo
that
disscntions
talwM wheu the volunteer troops entered it, summoned
his entire command. Tbis order the officer refuted to
tics of the Counties, but not of the Towtihips.
from their homes for it protection. At the same time among ourselves or foreign intervention may save them obey, assigning as a reason that it . as to late. The reit was with great difficulty that the loyal people could from that rnin which they see clearly impending over sult was the failure or tbe attack and the final retreat of
make themselves believe that any serious resistance to them. Every day. must show them more and more clear- our forces. The Committee state that tbo testimony
iUie authority of the Government would bo attempted.*— ly that on neither or these sources can they rely for help. of every witness shows that Franklin's aeticft was the
ITfaere was not wanting those who confidently Ported 1 be utter scorn and contempt with which every man in sole cause or Our defeat, and that it was this considerathat it was but an outburst of disappointed partizan spi- the loyal States who proposes any adjustment or the con- tioff that induced his removal by tbe Administrations
rit, which they predicted would yield to an exhibition or test.except the absolute, unquallified. and unconditional Franklin is another example or the discriminating choice
No. ofSehooU
rorce, and a determined and united spirit on the nart of subjugation of every rebel in tho land to the Constitution or General McClellan in his selection or general officers.
No. of children between 5 and 20
23i II is .! I.-.;
•>o. thai attended aehool
the
people of the loyal States to surprcss iL Instead of and the laws, is held by every officer and soldier in our
104 81
[Advertiser k Tribune.
No. of volume* In Llbrtn","".".!!
such all easy suppression, we hive spent two years, al- army, and every ioval man in tbe country, must-banish
V*lo« or School Hou«».......
The inventory or tbe estate or tho late Stephen A.
most IU warfare.^ We have thrown into the field a mil- from their minds the last ray of hope from that source.
No.of MaleUacher*..J........
lion or men. \ \ e havo poured out our resources like wa- Thorc-actiou.wTiichfollowedthe recent manircstations ora Douglas has been filed at Chicago. It covers a largo
No. or Female Teachers.
Total racelpto for the rear '
ter, and we find ourselves still engaged iu the fearful willingnpss on the part or a few secession sympathizers number of pieces or real estate-valued in the aggregate
-•••T-.'.U
to oiler terms of.compromise must convince them that
Paid Uate TeachoraJ..'
straggle.
at several hundred thousand dollars, but there are incumPaid Female Tcacbers.
The events of tho past two years are too fresh in the they have no allies in the loyal States on whom they can
Total expendlturca
^ ^ •.•.{33
rely; and the present condition of affaire in Europe must brances upon it equal to the apprised value or tbe entire
memories of all torequirerecapitulation.
[NoTt.—For the convenience or our talie we nmK .K.
forever crush that Take and delusive hope vhicV they property. Mr. Douglas left no personal estate that caa
WHAT THE W A R ' H A S ACCOOTUSIIEIX
have heret9tore entertained, and the intervention or Eu- be found.
\ our Committee will, howevfer, briefly call attention ropean powers might enable them to accomplish what
In the previous ye«r, 1861, these towps .(aside from to tho ract that, to the commencement of active military they knew foil well they can never attain unaiood.
The health of tbe Pope isfast railing. His physicians
Milton, not reported} reported 14 districts, and 672 and naval operations id the winter and spring or 1862. alT U B TASK B E F O R E US.
say he cannot survive more than a few weeks. There is
children ; making an increase ofchildretj or over 22'per most uninterrupted suciceas for eight months attended all
We now see clearly what wb have to d a We must a sad smile almost constantly upon his wasted features.
oar operations, resulting in vnrt conquest* The tricent in 1862. .The increase or attendance at school was umphs or the navy at Hatteras. Port Rom I, and Fort obtain the unterruptod control or the Mississippi. We He reTuses nearly all tbe remedies prescribed for him.—
32 per cent Tbo average length or the t schools fell off Menry, were followed Iby the victories and conouest? must reach those great railroad arteries—the one bor- To a council of physicians sent him b j tbe Empress Eodering tho Atlantic seaboard, the other strcachinir
half a month ; mid was nearly two moeths below the Of tho army at Miil Spring. Fort Donelson and Roanoak through the \irginia and Tennessee Valleys to tbe west genia, be said: " There is no use trimming a lamp which
n n was
.
trenched from the Rebel prasp,
overage or the State. There were two tetf male, and . n f l r t T ' ^ p
has no oiL"
aod the Rebel armies driven into Arkansas, where thev and south. AV e must, as soon as possible, take the few
three wore female teachers employed than in 1861, and were defeated in a pitched ba'.tli at I'ea Ridge.
seaports remaining in possessions of tbe rebels, BAD STATE or Tinxcs.—Throe-fifths of the adult white
' Pfortified
Ut i
cut
it off from all external sources of food and arms, and
8218 50 less Mid to the former, and $1*5*36. more to
population of California ar? men without wives. Four
have siirro:irvU>il if h r f n m «
«ho latter. .'
[ J
voltcd States seized her n r a t rii-prs lnirl
from all aovters. at tbe same time severing into isolated out or every five white men are bachelors, and from neIfyou u k ^ n explanation of tho di$c4pa.:ey Mween
cessity; for while there are 183,856 white men iu the
G™'ti
State, there are only 48,149 womcp.
•sssssfte&ss - c
«
T R A V E R S E OITY.i
T«« O i i i D T u r i u i
BEBXLD la l b * O I B e l a l F a p t r f a r U » S T C M I M *
C o a a t i s t at Ursn-1 T r * T « r w .
Hnuluro,
r k . t ^ r u «rf>
;;j H a n n a h , L a y & Go's C o l u m n
iy o f h e r o l d f r i e n d * a t l l i e t
Wj City, will cost about 8500,000.
V
.
uD ou Cu &»——
that place,Vlth more than ordinary I
' p a g e d- I. .n. t e a c h i n g n i
SOOCCK4. H e r t e r r a h a d a l m o s t c l o n e d , w h e n s h e w a s s e i z e d ;
Ith t y p h o i d f.'ver, w h i c h p r e v a i l e d w i t h g r e a t fatality is
. . . p a s s e d at the (x-ceut 6ession of
,
Legislature levying a tax of ono dollar uj>on every dog. j
of Vr^ih«*U?-law of whatever size or pretensions, in the Slate.
I A* she wet her sister, she saiij, " I have c — — •"
TO THE PUBLIC
OF
G K A N D
T R A V E R S E ,
Arc.
Apportionment of Township Library Moticy.
i t h t h e D e r t r o v - " Y ^ E TAKE ri.EASl-RE IN CAl.LTNG_THE ATTEK
jled
The following is the apportionment made by the
T h e c i t i z c n s of V i c k s b u r g h a v e , in m a n y p l a c e s d u g j
1 ) u r i n e t h e t w o w o e k a t h w she^
o loved Christ,
County Treasurer on the 10th inst., of the money which h o l e s i n t o w h i c h t h e y c a n retreat d u r i n g a b o m b a r d m e n t - a b ' o u t d t ( U L M l 1 p r e i J a n t f i o n ' f o r i
T o t h e m slie e x p r e s s e d
uiion h e r S a v i o u r a n d o f W A R . w h i c h is b e i n g f e l t i
l
o
has been paid into the Treasury for fines during the past T h e b i r T i c l i f f s render i t a n e a s y m a t t e r . 1
h
«
t h r o w h * r *'
still in t h e l o w of a <leur
a b s e n c e of MIIM l o v e d o n e . o r w o r v
•
;
1
|
w i l l i n g n e s s t o Hie.
year, and which belongs to the Township Libraries :
o n e f r o m tii« h o m e c i r c l e , it is, a s i
a n d keenly too, in t h e v e r y l a r g e
$ 3 76
Centerville
0 Scholars, 4 cents 7 mills
a
s
l
e
e
p
.
f 1 02 He has reduced the allowance of the Snllanc-ss some'
Crystal Lake
24'
1 tliouubt I saw my f a t h e r ADVANCE I N P R I C E S
i 2 96 8110,000 per annum. She will probably bowstrin-r tira.
Glen Arbor
65
riviir.
He Btretched toward;
10 24
Leelanau
218
m o - t t e n d e r n e s s . s a i d , • Cotn<
O r *11 k i n d * o f M E R C I I A M U S E s u c h a * a r e « i i t e d t o
1 55 ALWAYS GET THE BIXT.—Especially ii| getting Salcrait I t n u . - t h a v e y o u O r s t . ' "
Megeeza
i r j n u o l t h i n r \ | i i d l v g r o w i n B c o m r a n n i t y . a n d i t L« a '
,co s h e m a J c . w a , t o r e p e a t - The tail ii.tejligj.it
' 7 52 9—ns the best costs but a trifle for a year's supply, and
(fVru: s a i l - f a c t i o n t o l«- a i . I e t o ( n u m e r a t e t h e f o l l o w i n g f i
Peninsula
hiid, t o w h i c h w e r e s p e c t f u l l y »olicit a t t e n t i o n . l»oIievincj
5 73 the good costs but a little more than the poor. The
Traverse
,1 f»tL*-r
t h a t wbic.S
n o t h i n e d o w e all u ' k e s o d e e p a n i n t e
Whitewater,
|«-rnonal!y i n t e r e s t s o u r s e l v e s .
best goes further than the poor, and u much more heali tv
I !' y t h r ' l . o r
sdvaiica
Keeling c o n f i d e n t t l m t h e r e m u s t be
$37 10 thy. We can recomend the Chemical Saleratus to be
I f ! si
n i l c l a w s of
] jirav t h t L o r d i a y s o u l l o t a V v "
the best.
. j c t h l u g t o u c h i n g i y l e a u t i f u l i n t h i s r e t u r n iER
NISTH JUDICIAL DISTHICT.—'The contest between Corn,
jVIc'i'cli'anclise a n d W a r e s
t h e jainil ia t h e h o a r of U e a t t t o t h o h o l y t h i n g * o f l b
Lieut. O'Neill, of the old 69th New York ( Irish) regi- iff
well and Littlejohn, for Circuit Judge, is so1 close that
obildiuiod.
It flirgta, o r t a r n s w i t h l o a - . l i i n j r . from a l l o t l i c r
n in t h e E A S T E R N M A R K E T S in A u g u » l a n d S e p t u m d rcxai inlier o n l y these.
H o w o r a l In p a r e n t * t o
f I sr.".', vre a v a i l e d o u r s e l v e s o f t h e o p p o r t u n i t y t o p u r it will be impossible to tell which is elected until we pet ment, now on the Rappahannock, writer to his sister :—
give to
fail
wly
• largely against time of need, a n d as our impression*
Our
colore
arc
merely
a
bucdle
of
blood-stained
silk
the Official Canvass. The chances appear rather in faf r a z r a a c e of i l c a v e n . L e t t h e y o u t h a n d t h e m i d lieen m o r e t h a n v e r i f i e d , w e a r e n o w s o s i t u a t e d as t o
t a r e of < l e f i i i u g t h e m e m o r y o r w e a k e n i n g t h e
it p r o f i t a b l e t o o n r s e l v e s b u t e s p e c i a l l y m a k e
i onli
vor of Littlejohn. Grand Traverse, Leelauaw, and An- rags tied on a broken pole, as a dozen Wattles arc dam- dI ml ep3r e( jye. dM lo-nj t of
t h e l.oly t r u t h s t h e y h a w l e a r n e d in t h e i r e a r trim give Cornwell 253 maj.; Muskegon (reported) 130 ; aging to a pieco of silk cloth." A whole history is told • n i l d h o o d . T h e h o u r i« c o m i n g w h e n t h e s e , a t i o v e a l l
Hi:,, H i i l in- p r c L - i o u s . I t i s s w e e t t o t h e d y i n g s o u l t b r o - i g h
these few lines.
Oceana, 26—total 409. Allegan and Ottawa gite LittleL
A
R
G E B E N E F I T S
. . r a v e r u r a h y u n i t o h e a r a g a i n tl>o v o i c e o f . p a r e n t s , a n d
john 410—leaving Mason, Manistee, Mecosta and NewayIConuaunlcatcd.
NEW PAPER STOCK.—It is believed that hop-vines will f o e l t h o i r l o v e .
o oar many Customers and friends.
go to hear from. There is a rumor that Newaygo has giv- furnish a good quality of pulp for printing paper. Mr.
T h a t us a result w e are e n a b l e d to m a k e , p r i c e s o a m a n y
MILLET HAY.
en Littlejohn a small majority, though it gives 130 major- Lapbam, of Herkimer Co., N. Y., has made somo satisk i n d s of g o o d s a t a s
T y y K HAVE FOUR oil FIVK TONS OK i O O D >111.ity for Republican Supreme Judge.
factory experiments, and uow advertises for five tons of
onaLie price. E n q u i r e of
t H a y . t o r s a l e al
i l U U I S i UKOTUKltS.
HA O W
R A T E S
Til* NEST COXOUESS.—The Republicans will have a the vines, to be manufacturcd into pap«r.
clear working majority in the Next House of Represen17G0At the late Commou Pleas Court, in Belmont county, E S T A B L I S H E D
tatives, and the Senate is largely Republican.
Ohio, W m. P . Simpson, a member of the Belmont Ittr,
PETER LOKILI.\Rb,
sentenced to the Penitentiary forfiveyears for horse
THE 8TATE.—The Republican majority iti this StMe
SNUFF AND TOBACCO MANUFACTURER
will exceed 10.000—a gain of about three thousand since stealing. Simpson had been twice elected Sheriff of the
1 0 ti 1 8 C h a m b e r s S t . ,
county, and has served one term in the-Senate of Ohio.
( K ' i r m e r l y 42 C h a m K r e S t r e e t . N e w Y o r t . )
the election lost October.
W o a l d call t h e n t t e n t i o a of D e a l e r s t o t h e
articles of
NEW
YORK
THUS
OR
BOSTON,
HAK1SG A SAV1SG OF
-
his
Vfo have received the first number of •••''Our Camp
aiaaulai'U
COUNTY CANVASS.
20 T O 25 P E K C E N T
B R O W N
S N U F F .
Statement Of Votes given for State Officers.
Journala
neatly executed paper published by the Of.
JJemigros
y.
We, tho undersigned Chairman and Secretary of the' U afci anbeo Itul-pCC,
fleers of the 26th Regiment. Lieut. Charles Hi Holden,
T h a t m a u y k i n d s of goodsHire n r j i m a .
County
Canvass,
held
at
the
office
of
the
County
Cierk,
C o a r s e r.«.pi« e,
Nachitocues,
or this County, is one of its Editors. It is G|led with inatTraverse Oily, in the County of Grand Traverse,
American'SentU-uieii.
Copenhagen.
teresting matter pertaining to that Regiment. ( Success Michigan, on the Fourteenth day ol April, A. P.. 18G3,
Y E L I J O W
S N U F F .
to " Our Camp Journal."
for the purpose of determining the votes given for Stattj g e o t e l i .
Hinev Pew Scotch.
Officers on the Sixth day of April. A. I)., 1863. have
t o a s t Scotch,
K r e s h H o n e y Dew S c o t c h ,
THE STRAITS OP MACKINAW OPEN.—WO>aw a gentle- declared toe following as the result of their invcstigi
Irish H i g h Toast,
Fresh Scotch,
or i.undyfoot.
man on Monday last, who passed through the ^traits on tion :
THAN W E CAN
A
t
t
e
n
t
i
o
n
i
s
c
a
l
l
e
d
t
o
t
h
o l a r g e r e d a c t i o n in p r i c e s
The whole number of votes given for Associate Justice
Saturday, on the Wenona. There was considerable
of F i n e - C u t C h e w i n g und i w o k i u g i o b a c c o s , w h i c h w i l l be
of the Supreme Court was-two hundred and siirty-st
floating ice, but vessels and propellers werd working and they were given for the following persons, one hun- f o u n d '.if n S u p e r i o r Q u a l i t y .
R
E
P
L
A C E T H E M ^
Ton.vcco.
through. He saw the Alleghany in the StnaiU on Satur- dred and aiuety-eight lot James V. Campbell and s
;c.
n . V K C C T CIIKW1.N0.
nine for Dnvid Johnson.
day, working her wny through.
r . A. U . o r p l a i n .
S. J a g o
Long.
A
n
d
a
s
o
u
r
p
o
s
i
t
i
o
n places us where we necessarily are
The whole number oi votes given for Circuit Judge
Cavendish, or Sweet.
Spanish,
apprised of these facts, we should onlv d o o n r friend* justice
Sweet R e n t e d Orinoco.
Canaster,
• Tho Medical Hoard, convened to make pnl^s for ex. of the Ninth Circuit, was two hundred and sixty-seven,
I £ 'J m i x e d .
^ T i n Foil Cavendish.
T u r k i s h . to lay t h e m a t t e r before t h e m . F o r the benefit of s u c h w a ,
empts for disability under tho Conscriptipn Act, has and they were given for the followiugporsons, one hunw
o
u
l
d
n
a
m
e
t
h
e
f
o
l
l
owing t
-•initiated.
dred aud ninety-four for William I. jjoruwell, seventy— A c i r c u l a r of p r i c c s w i l l b e s e n t o n a p p l i c a t i o n .
closed its proceed ibgs and laid a report before the Secre. two for Flayius J. Iittlejohu, and oixj for Josephus Lit(U-lj.)
tarv of War.
tlejohn.
The whole number of votes given for Regents of the
O R D i a t OK PITB UIC ATION,
Je&.Davis is blind in one eye, and likoly t
University was two thousand one hundred and thirty-six. i S r i T K O K M i C K H U S ' . — N i n t h . I u d i c i n i " C i r c n i t , i n C h a n c e r y .
and they were given for the following persons, one huti- i
ANSA JOHNSON, C o m p l a i n a n t .
otbo* by a
OF NEARLY ALL KINDS,
dred and nighty eight for Henry C. (Knight, one hunC i t u t s T i a N JOHNSON. D e f e n d a n i dred and ninety-eight for Thomas D.1 Gilbert, one hunT H E LATEST NEWS.
i
dred and ninetj-cight for Edward C. Walker, one hun- ' U I T P E N D I S C . I N T H E C I R O I / I T C O f U t T F O I t T H F .
CL
O
'1UIN G,y HA It WA H B,
>
C
o
u
n
t
v
o
f
G
r
a
n
d
T
r
a
v
e
r
i
e
.
i
n
C
i
i
a
n
c
e
n
.
u
t
t
h
e
v
i
l
l
a
g
e
o
f
dred and ninety-eight for J. Eastman! Johnson, one hunFrom Charleston.
U e g a u . i n t h e C o n u t y ..f A i l - g a l . , iu t h e h l a t e o f M i c h i g a n ,
NEW YORK, April 14.—The steamer ArajJo has ar- dred and ninety-eight for Guorge Wijlard, one hundred n t v i t h i l a v o f M a ' e l i , A . D . . 1< :S. I i e f o r e H o n . F l a v i n s J .
and ninety-eight for Jamea A Sweezey. one hundred
IRON, N A I L S , '
rived from Port Royal, 11th, via Charleston Bar.— and ninety-eight for Alvah Sweetzerj and one hundred SIttt lscajtoi bs fna. cCt ot 'rrirluyi t JBrp. id»g-ea r tnntu C ht ha amt b etrh*e. d e f e n d a n t , C h r i s t ! :
Among her passengers are Gen. Truman Seymour and apd ninety-eight for Thomas J. 'Joslii), sixty-nine for Oli- . j i i i i i o n . i s a n » i i - r e * i d e u t o j l l i i s S t a l e b u t i s a r e s i d e n t of
•e S t a t e ' Of T e n n e s s e e . <>n m o t i o n of
U. Marsh, of C f i i u s e l
ver
C.
Comstock,
sixty-nine
for
William
A.
Moor.,
i>taf£ Gen- Gordon, M. de Lcbourg, French .Consul at
,r f o m p l a i n a n t , i l l s o r d e r e d t h a t s a i d d e f e n d a n t . C h r i s t i a n
sixty-nine for Zina Pitcher, sixty-niue for Charles A.
entered
Charleston.
CAS81MERES, BATTINET8, CROCKERY,
of this
The New South, of tho 11th inst., snya'thc fight was Richmond, sixty-oino for Nathaniel A Baleh, sixty-nine
i tho
mplsi
for Adam L. Roof, sixty-nine for Elijah F. Uurt, sixty,
. c o p y of h i s s a i d a h s n e r t o t»resumed oo tho 10th, but with what result it could uot nino for Joseph Coulter.
,
•oli-itor, w i t h i n t w : r y days aft
Furniture, Tobacco,
,
We, tho Chairman and Secretary, of the Board o' es ed rovni c Iehoe fcao mc opptya o f a
ascertain It adds, that Fort Sumter i» prohablj
>ili, a n d n o t i c e o f t h i s o r d e r , a n d
Canvassers do herebv certify that the "hove is a correct d e f a a l t t h e r e o f t h a t f t h i l i d b i l l b e t a k e n a s c o n f e s s e d b y t h e
breached by this time.
C b r i s t a i n J u h n s o n , a n d It is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d
said defend.i
The Purser or tho Arago in his report tays IronsideB statement of the result of said Canvujs.
i, ty , ! a \ s t l i e r a i d c o m p l a i n a n t c a u s a n c o p y o r
CURTIS FOWI.EII, Chnirman.
that within l
• p u b l i s h e d ill t h e G r a n d T r a v e r s e H e r a l d , a
and six iron-clads were still off Charleston Bar on
t!-.N o r d e r t '
JAJIES P. BRAKP, Secretary.
t e d a n d p u b l i s h e d a t T r a v e r s e C i t y , ill s a i d
ilth.
d Traverse, and the said publication be eonC o u n t y of
;
of
Votes
by
least o n c e in e a c h w e e k l o r s i * w e e k s
Nothing has transpired since the bombardment of the
fled i l l M
STATIONARY
cfc BOOKS,
i be
7th.
aid defc-n
,«i!y - e r
Gen. Hunter and army would leave for Port Royal
HARNESSES, WALL PAPER, HATS k CAPS.
the next day.
" A word to the trisc Is snfGcicnt."
NEW YORK, April 14.—Southern mlviaus per the
Argus, state that the iron-clad Patapasco went to Port
Royal, was there repaired, and again returned to service.
Associate Justice.
NAM of the vessels except the Keokuk wcito seriously J a m e s V. C a m p b e l l
M O R T t J A U K f
injured The rest of the fleet lay insido of / Charleston D a v iCd i r cJ uo iht nJ ns od gn e. ., . .
THF. CONDIJ - ^ K F A l ' L T ll.t VIN'i ^I'Ki'N J
Flavins J. I.iltlejohn,
Bar, on Saturday evening.
Josepluis Littlejohn
•anil < i c h ' l i ' m - T H A N " E V E R B E F O R E . W H I C H W I L L R E H ' R C H A S E D
of D e c e m b e r , i n t h - y e n r o f "UT l / - n
Port of the land forces had sailed for Port Royal.
W i l l i a m I. C o r u w e l l
nte of M a c o m b
R
e
g
e
n
t
s
o
f
S
t
a
t
e
C
n
l
v
o
m
i
t
y
,
HJO design of attacking Charleston is not yet abandonM a r y H. H a t e s
4(i|TClzr ! ' •
iry C . K n i g h t
ed, and the coafidcuce of our naval officer^ is in no deF O R
C i J . S U
mas D. Gilbert,
Edward C. Walker,
gree ,Shaken.
J. Eastman Johnson
I
The Arago brings the following intelligence : The G e o r g e W i l l a r d
,
li s a i d M o r t ;
gunboat Washington ran aground on tho Sth inst in J a m e s A . S w o e a e y ,
» notice the
gftgi ilie: e
Alvah Sweeter.
sand nine h u n d r e d stii^lbirty
Broad River, near Port Royal Ferry. Thu E. B. Hale T h o m a s J . J o s i i n
f o r t v - n i n e c«-tits: nnfl n o s u i t o r p r o c e e d i n g s at l a w h a v i n g
went to her assistance, but to no purpose- The rebels O l i v e r C . C o a a s t o c k
b e e n i n s t i t u t e ' ! t o recover a n y p a r t t h e r e o f , n o t i c e i« t h e r e William A. Moore.
f o r e i i e r e i - y d i v e r t t l i n n o n S a t u r d a y , t h e n i n t h d a y o f Mi»y
brought down a light battery, and firing pn her, a chance i n a P l t e b e r ,
n e x t a* t - u o ' r i -cii i n t i n - f o r e n o A n . n t t h e E m m e t . C o u n t y
AND WITH THE
ehot struck her magazine, causing the destruction of the N a t h a n i e l A B a i c b
LESS RATES
COTTON GOODS
....
• .. • j
aF'm.-a.rsrisrzEiL.s,
Boots and Shoes,
FULLY COMPLETE
BEST MARKETS
gunboat. Two men were killed, two martaity wounded,
and eight slightly, all of the 3rd R. I. Artillery.
WASHIXOTOK. April 14.—A special dispatch to the
Post says tho Government is making preparations *for a
draft to fill up the old regiments which hava been deplet.
ed by the casualties of the service. The State of New
York will be among the first called upon for fresh troope
The report is current iu English circles bp re that Mr.
Seward sent on Saturday a second dispatch to Great
Britain, io which he said tven more flatly than
pervious dispatch, that unless the British government
prevented, tho vessels of war now constructing in its ports
from sailing out it would; bo a breach of trust of the
friendly relations existing between Great ! Britain and
this country, of which the.United States jcould hardly
(ail to take notice.
The report that Lieut Col. Kimball, offthe Hawkins
Zouaves, was shot by Gen. Corcoran sfc* disobedience
of orders, was prevalent at Fortress Monr<*y>u Sunday.
I t is certain (hat Kimball died in somcju^terious way-
M
C h a r l e s A. "Richmond
A d a m L. R o o f .
Elijah F. Bart
J o t a p b Cotiltrr
D I E D ,
I n G l e n A r b o r , A p r i l 13,18C3, a f t e r i
i l l n e s s of a b o u t t h r e e m o n t h s , Mrs. 1-s
ol Francis McCany, aged t i years.
O B I T U A R Y .
D i e d F e b . 20tb, a t t h e teaider.ee of h e r b r o t h e r - i n - l a i r . M r .
G . M a n i g a n , n e a r W e l l i n g t o n . l>a., J l i s s I s a b e l l a I . F i f e , i n
the ?2d y e a r of her age.
T h i s y o u n g l a d y w a s a s i s t e r o f Mtfe. J o s e p h G . T h o m a s o f
Salem, Ohio, and o f W R U n n H. Fife, ofLittle T r a v e r s e . Mieb.
M o s t ofh e r fife w a s s p e n t in S a l e m find v i c i n i t y .
She was
t h e y o u n g e s t of t w e l v e c h i l d r e n , a n u m b e r that, i r x i u n b r o ken, until hor sudden and unexpected death.
After h a v i n g m s d e very considerable a d v a n c e m e n t in stud y i n t h e S c l c c t s c h o o l of t h e M e s s r s H o l e , of D a m a s c u s , s h e
e n t e r e d t h e F e m a l e S e m i n a r y , of , W a s h i n g t o n , w h e r e s h e
g r a d u a t e d w i t h h o n o r i n a c l a s s o t t w e n t y , S e p t e m b e r , ISC I .
O f this clasg four a l r e a d y lie iu t h e cold a n d silent g r a v e .
Soon after leaving Washington, s h e removed with her mot h e r t o Tyner, Indiana. Lost s u m m e r she visited h e r bister,
Mrs.Thomas, when h e r chgaging manners ami peculiarly
h e a l t h f u l a p p e a r a n c e w e r e rcmarkeU by all h e r friends.
In
S e p t e m b e r s h e left S a l e m for W a s h i n g t o n , anil h a d t h e ' p l e a -
C o u r t l i u u s e . V«-:iig t h e p h , o r f o r h o l d i n g tl.«- C i r e t . i t C o u r t
f „ r said K t n m r t ("aisnly, in U ; t ! e T r a v e r s e , i n said C o u u t y
of E m m e t , i s h a l l i w l i a t p u b l i c a u c t i o n t o t h e h i g h e « t b i d d e r ,
t h e p r e m i s e * d e s c r i b e d iu said «iortzai.'e or s o m u c h t h e r e o f
as shall be n e c e s s a r y to satisfy the a m o u n t d u e on said
m o r t g a g e a t t h i - d a t e . With interest, a t t h e
rate
of t e n p e r
c e n t |.er a n n u m , legal costs and e x p e n s e s , a n d a n A t t o r n e y s
fee of t w e n t y - l i v e d o U a r * c o v e n a n t e d t o he p a i d i n f.iid m o r t g a g e ; t h a ^ a i d p r e m i s e * b e i n g descrilwd in said m o r t g a g e as
all t h o s e c e r t a i n t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s of l a n d «itu ite a n d b e i n g
i n t h e C o u n t y o f E m m e t . I n t h o S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , t o w i t :
E a s t half of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y . » i x ; the
w e s t h a l f o f t h o s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r , t h e n o r t h e a s t q u a r t e r of
t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r a n d t h e n o r t h w r s t q u a r t e r of t l K
s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r of u r c t l o n thirtv-fivc ; t h e s o u t h half a n d
t h e s o u t h h a l f of t h e n o r t h w e s t q r - j r t e r o f s e c t i o n t h i r t y - f o u r ,
also t h e s o u t h eaat q u a r t e r a n d t h e s o o t h h a l f of t h e n o f t n
e a s t q u a r t e r of s o c t i o n t h i r t y - t h r e e , all b e i n g i n T o w n s h i p
t h i r t v - s e v e n n o r t h of R a n g e four, w e s t
alio tho n o r t h fract i o n il I n t f f o f - e c t i o n t h r e e , t h e w e s t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f o f t h e
n o r t h west fractional q u a r t e r of s-vtion two : t h e n o r t h e a s t
f r a c t i o n a l q u a r t e r a n d t h e w e s t h a l l of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n o n e , in t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - f i x n/>rth o f , r a n g e f o u r
srest, a n d also t h e went p a c t i o n a l half of t h e n o r t h w e s t
f r a c t i o u s ! q u a r t e r o f s c c ' J o n s i x , in t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - a i x n o r t h
of r a n g e t h r e e west, c o n t a i n i n g i n all fifteen h u n d r e d a n d
1
s e v e n t y t w o a c r e s $j>d 3 1 - 1 * 0 o f a n a c r e m o r e o r l e s s .
D a t e d F e b r u a r v 1st. 1 W 3 .
LEWIS ALLEN, Mortgagee.
S EARNED. Attornev.
( P r i n t e r ' s f e w S I " 60- N
(91!w.^
U T M O S T
C A R E .
Relieving, as we do, t h a t t h e successful m e r c h a n t la h e
w h o k e e p s i n a d v a n c e o f t h e w a n t s of h i s c u s t o m e r s , w e shall
SPA-EE
To always have o n
hand
JSTO P A . I 1 V S
such
goods as
the
wants of the
Country
Seem to Demand,
EX CELLED
B Y NONE
In the country, and our Warc-Rooros are not equalled, w o
• h a l l reasonably e x p e c t , w i t h t b e s p e c i a l a d v a n u g e s a b o v e
e n u n c i a t e d , t o h a v e I h e p a t r o n a g e of all t h o s e w h o b e l i e v e
t h a t - a p e n n y saved is aa good as two e a r n e d . "
H A N N A H ,
e C i t y , A p r i l . IS, 1653-,
L A Y
4
C O .
Retrospection.
An old m i u . s a t by the collage fire,
And be watched the children p U y ;
And a t e a r stole down bia aged check,
But be wiped i t n o t a w a v ;
F o r bia thoughts had wandered back agaii
To the scenes of other year*.
And his spirit h a d found a g l a d r e l i e f
In the falling of Ma tears.
\.
Again be played on the dear old beartli.!
And hq h e a r d a mother's voice,
And t h e gentle tones fell on hi# e a r *
And they made bis h e a r t rejoice;
Again he joined in tbo blind man'jj bud".
And the game of bide and seek,
And be heard bis little sister's voice,
So get) tie, s o f t a n d meek.
. Then in t h e shade by the woodland dell,
l i e t a U with bis picture book.
,
Or wandered to seek some wild .bird's n t s t
That b a n g o'er t h e r i p p l i n g brook.
Till, tirod a n d weary of boyhood's p|ay.
He turned t o b i s home again.
By the rustic stile and the broken bridge.
And tho abady old green lane.
•
And thus the old man s a t and muj-ed.
And the tears fell down big cheek.
And a happier hour it wag to him
Than the old man's tongue could speak,
Y
™ h e k n e w ' t W B S b 0 * 8 P e a s a n t dream*
T h a t t o o soon had passed o'er—
That b U e y e s w e r o d i m a n d his lock* wore gray,
And he should bo y o u n g no rcort.
e r t y . I n the absence of C o n g r e s s , a n d in t h e e x t r e m e
peril of t h e c o u n t r y , w i t h t h e plain provision or t h e Cons t i t u t i o n before h i m w h i c h a llo w s t h e suspension w i t h o u t
Darning t h e s u s p e n d i n g power, h e did e x a c t l y w h a t W i l liam I I I , w h a t any c l e a r - s i g h t e d and honest s u p r e m e exec u t i v e officer, would instinctively h a v e done. A t j t h e same
time h e gammoned C o n g r e s s a n d d i r e c t l y u p o c assembling laid the case b e f o r e t h e m in a f e w w o r d s of simple
g o o d sense, w h i c h w e r e - p r o d u c e h e r e a s most t i m e i y a n d
wise, a n d i n d i c a t i v e of t h a t candor and s a g a c i t y w h i c h
are n o t less r e m a r k a b l e i n t h e P r e s i d e n t t h a n his u n s w e r v i n g fidelity, n o t only t o t h e laws, b u t also, what i s
t o u s a n u n a c c u s t o m e d s p e c t a c l e in t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n of
the P r e s i d e n t i a l office, not t o t h e s p i r i t of the laws.
•• T h e w h o l e of t h e laws w h i c h w e r e r e q u i r e d t o b e
faithfully e x e c u t e d w e r e b e i o g resisted, a n d (ailing of exe c u t i o n in nearly one-third o f t h e States. M u s t t h e y be allowed t o finally fail o f e x e c u t i o n , even h a d it been p e r f e c t l y
c l e a r ' t h a t , b y t h e use of t h e m e a n s necessary t o t h e i r execution, some single law m a d e in s u c h e x t r e m e tenderness of
the citizen's l i b e r t y t h a t p r a c t i c a l l y i t r e l i e v e s m o r e o f t h e
guilty t h a n t h o innocent, should, t o a v e r y limited e x t e n t ,
be violated I
T o s t a t e t h e question m o r e directly, a r e
all t h e l a w s but one t o g o unexecuted, a n d t h e Governm e n t itself g o t o pieces Test t h a t ODO b e violated ? E v e n
in s u c h a c o s e , . w o n l d n o t tho official o a t h bo broken, if
t h e G o v e r n m e n t should b e o v e r t h r o w n , w h e n i t ' i s believed t h a t d i s r e g a r d i n g tho single law would tend to pres e r v e i t J B a t i t was n o t believed t h a t t h i s question
was p r e s e n t e d . I t w a s n o t believed t h a t any law was
r i o l a t e d . T h e p r o v i s i o n of the C o n s t i t u t i o n t h a t •• the
p r i v i l e g e o f t h e w r i t of habeas corpus shall n o t be suspended unless w h e n , in cases of rebellion or iuvasion,
the p u b l i c s a f e t y may reauire i t , " is e q u i v a l e n t t o a provision—is a p r o v i s i o n — t h a t s u c h p r i v i l e g e may be susp e n d e d , w h e n , in cases of rebellion o r invasion, tho p u b lic s a f e t y does require i t
I t w a s d e c i d e d t h a t we h a v e
a case o f rebellion, a n d t h a t p u b l i c s a f e t y does r e q u i r e
t h e qualified suspension o f t h e w r i t w h i c h was authorized t o b e m a d e . N o w It i s insisted t h a t Congress, and
n o t t h e . E r e c u t i v c , be vested with t h i s p o w e r . B u t tho
C o n s t i t u t i o n itself i s silent a s t o w h i c h , o r w h o is t o exercise t h i s p o w e r ; a n d a s t h e provisions a r a plainly made
f o r a d a n g e r o u s emergency, it c a n n o t b e believed t h a t
t h e f r a m e r e of t h e i n s t r u m e n t i n t e n d e d t h a t in every case
t h o d a n g e r should r u n i t s c o u r s e n n t i l C o n g r e s s could b e
called t o g o t h e r ; tfye very a s s e m b l i n g of w h i c h m i g h t b e
p r e v e n t e d , a s was intenflod in t h i s case, b y the rebellion.
H o t h e n s u b m i t s all necessary legislation u p o n the subj e c t t o " t h e b e t t e r j u d g e m e n t " of Congress, aud Cong r e s s h a s responded b y t h e a c t w h i c h p a t r i o t s of t h e
M a r s h a l l K a n e rehool d e c l a r e t o bo s u b e r s i v c of all t h e
l i b e r t y of t h o citizens t o c o n s p i r e a g a i n s t the unity a n d
e x i s t e n c e of t h e nation.
T h e w h o l e question is most t h o r o u g h l y a n d exhaustively discussed in M r . F i s h e r s •• T r i a l or the C o n s t i t u t i o n . "
THE LAW COMtSMG COVEENMEM CLAlIS.
NATIONAL
BOUNTY
INSURANCE
CO.
Capital, $100,000.
BOUNTY.
BOUNTY 16 OP T H E N A T C B E O F A G I F T , OB
gratuity. I n this war $100, aa a bounty, is doe to the
widow or heirs of deceased soldier* and t o discharged soldiers who shall serve for two years, or to the close of the
wa*.if sooner ended. In cases of deceased soldiers i t i a d a e :
let. To the widow, if there be one ; 2nd, T o the children, if i
widow ; 3d,- To the father, mother, or brothers a n d listers,
the case may be, provided they b« residents of the United
States. Commissioned officer* a n d soldiers discharged before two years' sirvice. and their heirs in case of their death,
are n o t entitled, as the law now is, to any Bounty.
PENSIONS
Pensions were formerly an annaal p a y m e n t in consideration of past services. It has been extended in m o d e m times
to those who bavo become disabled, and to the dependent
heirs of those who lose their lives in service. I t i» dne '
this war to soldiers disabled in service in the line of dnty.
Of,deceased soldiers it is duo : 1st, T o the widow, if there be
one : 2d, To the children u n d e r t 5 years of tgo ; 3d, To the
mother dependent wholly or partly ; 4th, To fee sisters n n d e r
l i years, dependent wholly or partly upon any deceased sol
dier who may be killed or dies of disease contracted
wounds received in service and in the line of dnty.
H a t e s o f P e n s i o n s . — T o a non-commissioned offlcer,
musician or private, if totally disabled, or to thair widow or
dependent heir, if deceased, $8 per month ; to 2d Lieutenants
$15 ; 1st Lieutenants, $17 ; to Captains, $10 ; to Majors,
$25 ; To Lieutenant Colonels and all h i g h e r grades. $30 per
m o n t h . Pees in Pension cases are only $5.
BACK PAY.
Is due to discharged soldiers to the time t h e y are actually
discharged. The undersigned have superior advantages f o r
speedily collecting the i>ay and claimsof discharged soldiers.
Back Pay is due the widows or heirs of deceased soiaiers
nearly the same order as Bounty.
Tbc father, mother.
Other heirs need not be residents of the United 8tates.
MINORS.
The War Department forbids the e n l i i t m e n t of minors
n n d e r I S years of age. Ordinarily they will be rejected
such enlistments are properly reported.
In all cases of Soldiers' Pay, Pensions, Bounty, and in fact
all j u s t claims and accounts agalust i h e Government, the
undersigned have the most perfect facilities f o r theii
Speedy collection.
•*
Discharged Soldiers who have not got their pay we a r c daily rendering the most important assistance to, besides seeing
lhat they secure all d a e t h e m on t r a n s p o r t a t i o n , aubsistenee,
clothing, rations, Ac,
R a t i o n s . — S o l d i e r s are entitled t o the cost price of
tions in money while absent on] furloughs, or other competent authority, which money we readily secure.
Government Vouchers, Recruiting, Quartermaster and
Commissary Accounts accurately made u p at our office and
collected.
All j u s t Military a n d Naval Contracts, Clainw and Losses
adjusted and collected OQ application, either by mail or "
person, to
ROBINSON A BROOKS,
Authorized War Claim •Attorneys,
S N Y D E R ,
A
(Organized
19,
W I L L I A M S
by Permission
k
Cl).
of the .lutkorilits,}'
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
GO
On the payment to this Company, or any of Ita authorised
agents, o f t h e sum of$S0, it will Usnc a certificate of insurance, binding itself t o pay to such person the sum of F i v *
BC.VDRKD DOLLIRS, in case t h e y a r e drafted into the Nava 1
or Military Service o f t h e United States, prior to December
31st. 1866, or during the war. In the same proportion t h i s
Company will insure any person liable to do Military dnty,
in any sum from $100 t o $5,000, but not more than $5 ooo on
any one life. T h i s C o m p a n y also insures those in t h e service, officers and privates, against wounds or death, during
the present war, thus enabling all p r u d e n t soldiers to provide
their families against want, in case they fall in battle—die—
or are so wounded as to be disabled from supporting them.
'
To the manly virtues of bravery and patriotism that calied
the soldier to the field, let him add the crowning excellence
of a p r u d e n t provision f o r his family, in case he never return. then will he be remembered with gratitude, as one t h a t
discharged his whole duty t o his God—his country—his
family.
Our rates for insurance a g a i n s t wounds a n d death are a t
follows, t o w i t :
$10 on a hundred
—
against wounds.
"
"
"
— . . . . . —......
"
death.
Our certificates of insurance are assignable—are i a t e a d e d
to be assigned to the family for their care, support a n d relief, in caao the events occur upon which they are payable.
A s many in the service are where It would be impossible
for them to provide for their families in this wav, the wife
father, or brother, or any. Individual feeling a n ' i n t e r e s t l n
the family of the soldier, may insure them against wounda or
death. What can mortal man do nobler, than to present the
family of the soldier with an insurance upon bis l i b , or
agaisst wounds, thus at once placing them beyond the reach
of poverty, in case their p r o t e c t o r never returns. This i s a
system of substantial charity towards the dependent families
of volunteers, t h a t has been commenced by our wealthy citizens, and will be continued by the worthier portions o r
them. What can our wealthy a n d patriotic citizens do, t h a t
will go f u r t h e r to increase enlistments and assist the Gove r n m e n t , than t n say t o o u r hardy laboring men " i r y o n
will enlist. I Will insure y o u r life until you return, for $100
—$500—$1,000, for the benefit of your family."
The rates of basis upoh which t h i s Company Insure i s
founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the mortality of wars for the last 600 years, and leaves bnt a reasons
ble margin f o r profit for the Company, while it places tho
families of those insured beyond want and destitution from
• niy
v nof
f thi*
l r l « v l l m l p « n of
f \VW
nr
thovvicissitudes
This is the only Insurance Company in the United Btates
t h a t was organized especially for this purpose.
T h e Barber's Ghost, f
A gentleman t r a v e l i n g in one of t h o e a s t e r c S t a t e s ,
s o m e y e a r s a g o , called a t a t a v e r n , a n d r e q u e s t e d entert a i n m e n t for the n i g h t . T h e l a n d l o r d i n f o r m e d h i m t h u t
it waa o a t of bid p o w e r t o a c c o m m o d a t e h i m . a s h i s h o u s e
was already foil
H e persisted, a s h i m s d f a n d horeo
w e r e e x h a u s t e d w i t h t r a v e l i n g . A f t e r m u c h solicitation,
t h o landlord consented t o h i s s t o p p i n g , p r o v i d e d ho would
s l e e p tn a c e r t a i n r o o m t h a t h a d not b e e n o p c o p i c d f o r a
long t i m e , in c o n s e q u e n c e of a belief t h a t i t was h a u n t e d
b y t h e g h o s t of a b a r b e r , w h o w a s r e p o r t e d t o h a v e been
m u r d e r e d in t h a t r o o m some y e a r s before.
'* y « * y w e f t ? says t h e man, " I ' m n o t a f r a i d of g h o s t s . "
A f t e r h a v i n g r e f r e s h e d himself, h e i n q u i r e d of t b o landlord how a n d in w h a t manner, tho r o o m in w h i c h he was
t o lodgo was h a u n t e d . T h o l a n d l o r d replied t h a t s h o r t l y
a f t e r t h e y retired t o rest an u n k n o w n v o i t e w a s h e a r d
a s k i n g in a t r e m b l i n g a n d p r o l o n g e d a c c e n t : •' D o you
want to g e t s h a v e d ?
, ;i
" W e l l , replied t h o m a n , " if ho 'comesihe m a y shave
mo."
I
H e t h e n requested t o b e s h o w n t o t h e a p a r t m e n t , in
g o i n g t o w h i c h he was c o n d u c t e d t h r o u g h a l a r g e r o o m
A d v a n t a g e s of I n s m i n g i u t h i s C o m p a n y .
where wereaeated a g r e a t n u m b c r o f p a t t o o i a t o g a m b l i n g
1st.—In the case oi citizens i n s u r i n g svtns f o r their famit a b l e , f e e l i n g n g r e a t c u r i o s i t y w h i c h a l m o s t every o n e
lies, if d r a n e d : If no draft takes place in tho county where
DETROIT, MICL,
possesses, a f t e r h a v i n g h e a r d g h o s t s t o r i e s , h o carefully
Ornot—No. 149 Jefferson Avcuue. over Ives' Bank, op- t h e insured resides, half the insurance money will be refunded.
posite Office U. S. Military Commander.
searched e v e r y c o r n e r of his r o o m , b u t c o u l d discover no2nd.—Our insurance in regard t o the d r a f t covers n o t o n l y
t h i n g b u t thff usual f u r n i t u r e of t h o a p a r t m e n t . H o then
the present draft, but all future ones.
lay d o w n a n d ; i n a few m i n u t e s i m a g i u e d h e i h e a r d a voice
HUMAN REMAINS DISCOVERED AT P O J H - B I I . — G a l i g n a n i
3d.—Oar Company insure for any sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
saying:—
(
i circumstances of insured.
p u b l i s h e s t h e f o l l o w i n g c a r i o u s s t o r y : A v e r y interest4th.—The m e n who have invested their c a p i t a t In t h i s
" Do you xxi-n-t
to be sh-ao-e-d
t" i n g d i s c o v e r y h a s j u s t been m a d e bv M. Florell'i, tho inSplendid nnd Appropriate dlolidny Present.
Company have been well known to the business c o m m a a i t y
H o a r o s e f r o m h i s b e d a n d s e a r c h e d e v e r y p a r t of t h o s p e c t o r o r t h o e x c a v a t i o n s a t P o m p e i i . W h i l e d i g g i n g
f o r the past fourteen years.
room, b u t coold d i s c o v e r a o t h i n g . H e again w e n t t o b e d , a t a d e p t h of from e i g h t t o ten feet t h o p i c k a x e s t r u c k
SiaiE. D E M O R E S T ' S "
5th.—The capital or this Company will a o t be employed la
b u t n o sooner: h a d he b e g u n t o composo; himself t o sleep, into a littlo m a a s ' o f c o i n s a n d jewels.
M . Florelli t h e n
KCNNING 8TICH
Banking or Real Estate operations, but will remain in U. R.
than the question was
repeated.
H e agtfin a r o s e a n d c p n t i n e d t h e e x c a v a t i o n w i t h t b o g r e a t e s t care, removG o v e r n m e n t Stocks, a n d will only be converted so fast as
may be necessary t o meet the liabilities of the Company t o
w e n t t o t h o w j n d o w , f r o m w h i c h q u a r t e r t h o sound ai
i n g t h e e a r t h g r a i n b y g r a i n , a n d . a f t e r s o m e labor, wa3
the insured;
, p e a r e d t o proceed, a n d stood silent. A f t e r a few m< rewarded
b y t h e d i s c o v e r y in t h o h a r d e n e d a ^ e s of t h e
. . makes the' r u n n i n g *tich> very
6th.—The Company ai •e bonnd t o take risks t o no m o r e
mcnta of sospenac, h e a g a i n h e a r d t b o s o u n d distinctly, p e r f e c t m o u l d of a m a n in a l y i n g p o s t u r e , t h e ekio of rapidly and perfect, uses a common needle, and will last a t h a n $100,000,
lifetime. A t the New York State Pair, i t s simplicity, efficiena n d convinced t h a t - i t c a m e f r o m w i t h o u t , he o p e n e d t h e w h o m h a d d r i e d up, b u t t h e s k e l e t o n remained i n t a c t
Responsible agents wanted In every county in the United
cy,
a
u
d
great
practical
utility,
was
confirmed
by
the
award
of
w j n d o w , w h e n t h o q u e s t i o n w i s repeated fiill'in his ear, M . F l o r e l l i caused p la s te r of P a r i s t o bo poured into t h e
States. They m u s t give references of strict i n t e g r i t y a n d
the Pirst Premium.
responsibility,
Those desiring to be insured where a g e n u
w h i c h s t a r t l e d h i m n o t a ' i i t t l e . U p o n a m i n u t e e.xami- torm o r t h o P o m p e i m n , a n d t h o c a s t i n g s u c c e e d e d p e r It will gather. Raffle, shirr, tack, ran up breadths, etc., with a r e not v e t a p p o l n t e d , will remit to the Company, at 69 Wallnation, however, h o o b se r v e d t h a t t h o i h n b i o f ' a l a r g e oak fectly w i t h t h e e x c e p t i o n of t w o f r a g m e n t s of un a r m
single or double thread on any materia! adapted t o the run- street, N. Y , (by express), a sum of money sufficient to cover
t i w , w h i c h stood u n d e r t h e window, p r o j e c t e d so n e a r a n d a leg, w h e r e t h e inoald w a s i n c o m p l e t e .
T h e cast ning stlch. The thinnest, usually the most difficult t o s t i t c h the Company's per ceijtage on tbo a m o u a t desired t o be int h o hOnso t h a t e v o r y b r e a t h o f wind, t o a lively i m a g i n a - o r t h e m a n ' s of t h e g r e a t e s t p r e c i s i o n ; t h e m o u s t a c h e , by other sewing machines, being sewed th«j easiest. For sured ; and if It be a ciUzen desiring t o insure a sum for his
ladies' a n d children's apparel, and o t h e r articles- made of family, in case he is afterwards drafted, he will, give his n a m e ,
t i o n , m a d e a noise resembling t h o i n t e r r o g a t i o n : —
t h e fotds of t h e d r e s s a n d t h e s a n d a l s a r e a d m i r a b l e de- l i g h t fabrics, it will t h e r e f o r e be found almost invaluable.
age a n d residence, i n t b e a soldier, he will give name, a g e ,
" D o y o u w a n t be s h a d e d ? "
fined.
T h e rumous q u e s t i o n of t h e T h c s s a u r u i n of G r o It Is attached t o the table like a sewiog bird, and h a v i n g
and the Company o f t h e Regiment t o w h i c b h c belongs, the
H a v i n g satisfied himself tlmt t h e g h o s t was n o t h i n g n n v m a a n d G r e v i n s is n o w d e c i d e d ; t h e R o m a n s did
usion, a n d requiring no lubrication or c h a n g e of stich, is number of the Regiment and State i t is from, also the resim o r e n o r loss t h a n t h e l i m b of a t r e e c o m i n g in c o u t a c t w e a r d r a w e r s . A l s o archaeologists will be delighted at always ready for operation, and such a marvel of simplicity dence of bis family. If it be wire, brother, father, or f r i e n d s
w i t h t h e h o u s e , fce a g a i n w e n t t o b e d a n d a t t e m p1 t e d t o d i s c o v e r i n g t h e manner, in w h i c h t h e ancients fastened that a child of s i x or e i g h t y e a r s can u n d e r s t a n d it, a n d ~
of the family that desire to take out an insurance u p o n t h o
successfully.
mtf n c l n o n h n f n , f l n
.f I 1 i '
absent soldier, t h e y will give his name and age, and also the
c e t asleep, b u t was annoyed bL .y. p e a l1_s of
laufchter ' o r vol- t h e i r sandals, a n d at seeing t h e heel o r a shoe: completely
It is not at all liable t o get out of order.
Company, Regiment and State t o which it belongs. The apleys of o a t h s a n d curses f r o m t h e r o o m w l i t r e t h e gam- p r o t e c t e d w i t h iron.
/
Each maob!no is put up in a n e a t box, accompanied with plicant f o r t h e policy will also give the name a n d residence
b l e r s were assembled, a n d c o n c l u d e d t o t a r n t h e g h o s t
full and e x p l i c i t directions, and twenty'flve needles.
of
tho wife or the person for whose benefit the insurance I s
hi
Sent to any addre.-s in the United States on receipt of
^ 7 }°
» own a d v a n t a g e . h e t o o k a s h e e t f r o m
procured.
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c o r r e s p o n d e n t from t h e
, Apply to, or address,
t h e h e d w r a p p e d i t aroun^l hiin, a n d t h r o w i n g n towel b a t t l e fiold. s p e a k i n g o r t h e effects o f a p a s s i n g riffie ball, order, inclosing the amount, or may be collected by E x p r e s s
on delivery of tbo machine.
SNYDER, WILLIAMS 4 Co..
oVer-his a r m , w e n t t o t h e r o o m of t h e g a m b l e r s , a n d
When the money i» sent with the order a n d ' r e g i s t e r e d ,
69 Wall-street, N. Y.
t h r o w i n g t h e d o o r w i d e ' o p e n , s t a l k e d in, asking, ii
guarantee its safe receipt and the delivery of j h e machine,
B u t t h o m o s t s i n g u l a r thing, a n d w h i c h I d o Dot re-Money may be sent in registered letters, or by ext rem ul ous r o i c o , —
V
anywhere within 2000 miles free of any Express charges.
press, at our risk.
m e m b e r t o h a v e h e a r d m e n t i o n e d h e r e t o f o r e , is t h e efVery liberal a r r a n g e m e n t for agencies.
• ' D o y o u w a n t t o bo s h a v e d f
forts o r thoeo balls u p o n t h e ^atmosphere t h r o u g h which
See MIRROR o r FASHIONS, o r for full particulars, specimen
T e r r i f i e d a t t h e s n d d e n a p p e a r a n c e of t h e g h o s t , t h e t h e y p a s a
N o t i c e s of t h e P r e s s .
T h e passage o f o n o i m m e d i a t e l y across y o u r of sewing, etc., send a s t a m p for r e t u r n postage. Address,
g a m b l e r s w e r e t h r o w n i n t o t b o g r e a t e s t confusion, a n d race is followed b y a m o m e n t a r y s e n s a t i o n o r d e a d l y
MME. DEMOREST,
T h i s is n s o u n d C o m p a n y . "
t u m b l e d p e l l raell o v o r e o e h o t h e r , a n d d a w n stairs,
473 Broadway, N. Y.
* Tho i n s u r a n c e of a certafn sum for one's family, Is a prus i c k n e * . T h e a i r aeeraa t h i c k , stifling a n d putrid. like
their hurried: attempts to escape.
!
Every lady, mother, milliner and dress-maker, should have dence t h a t every man should adopt in these critical times."
t h a i o f a newly o p e n e d vault, a c c o m p a n i e d b v an o d o r o r
" The man that would be respected and loved by bis family
O a r g h o s t b e a t a h a r r i e d retreat t o his r o o m a n d was c e r t a i n k i n d s o r f a n g i f o u n d in t h e woods, a n d n e v e r wil- one of these valuable sewing machines.
in life, and gratefully remembered in death, will provide h i s
t r o u b l e d no m o r e t h a t n i g h t w i t h g a m b l e r s or m y s t e r i o u s lingly d i s t u r b e d b y e i t h e r man o r b e a s t
I should like
family agaiust want."
noises, ft t h e m c r n i n g be f o u n d t h e u t m o s t e x c i t e m e n t t o HIOW ir a n y one elso h a s felt this, or is i t a peculiar
" All our most p r u d e n t citizens a n d soldiers a r c i n s n r i n g
a n d a l a r m prevailed in t b o h o u s e , on a c c o a g t of t h o a p - f a n c y of m y own T
AND
a competence to t h e i r families in case they are drafted, or
p e a r a n c e of the g h o s t ; and in a n s w e r t o an i n q u i r y of t h o
killed, le the service'; it is t h e o n l y safegnard ia these critical times."
50-9m.
l a n d l o r d ' s replied t h a t ttto g h o s t h a d c o t t r o u b l e d him,
IXVKXTIOK o r BOOTS AND S n o g s . — B o o t s a r e said to
a n d d e p a r t e d entirely u n i n s p e c t e d , a f t e r q n i e t l y eatinir
h a v e been i n v e n t e d b y t h e C a r r a n s .
T h e y w e r e first
6
h i a breakfast.
•
m a d o o f l e a t h e r , a f t e r w a r d s or biiass a n d iron, a n d w e r e
t T T I L L LOCATE LANDS. P A Y TAXES, BUY OR 8ELI
proof against cut or thrust. I t was from this Ilomcr
V V on Commission-<-aad now ofTer* f o r sale,
T b a H a b e a s Cornos—An Excellent Article t h a t
called t h o G r e e k s b r a z e n footed.": F o r m e r l y in F r a n c o a
E v e r y b o d y O u g h t to< R e a d ,
g r e a t foot w a s m u c h e s t e e m e d , a n d the l e n g t h o f t h e s h o o
From H a r p e r ' s Weekly.
in t h e foorteenth c e n t u r y w a s a faark of distinction —
G e n t l e m e n ' w h o , in d e n o u n c i n g t h o bill relating t o - t b o
1 ho s h o e s of a p n n c e were t w o e n d a half feet l o n e •
habeas corpus, d e c l a i m a b o u t C h a r l e s I los'ng h i s b e a d
t h o s e of a b a r o n t w o f e e t a n d t h o s e of a k n i g h t eighteen
f o r d i s r e g a r d i n g t h o w r i t , e t c . , e h o a l d b e v e r y s u r e of
their historv before beginning t h e orations.' T h e RevoAlso—13 Lots i n the Village o f E l k K a p l d i
lution t h a t killed C h a r l e s a n d b a n i s h e d h i s son J a m e s ,
WITH OB WITIIOCT nWELLlXCS.
\
^
TRICK.—Several U n i o n p r i s o n e r s
The above m e n t i o n e d L a n d s a r c in all p a r t s of t h e C o u n t y ,
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
confined a t R i c h m o n d , b u r n e d t h e i r f a c e s w i i h red-hot
Elk l^ike, W h i t e w a t e r , O m e n t a and T r a v e r s e ; are a m o n g the'
h0V
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g o t transfer- earliest a n d beat
best iselections with reference t o soil, water, snr- C o r n e r o f " W o o d w a r d Ac . T e f l b r e o n A v e n u e e .
- ttwAedeni
p - ,
red r r o m t h e L i b b v p r i s o n t o a pest-house, whence, n o t face, a n d m a r k e t :
brace F a r m i n g„ Lands. Village Sites and
- t h o first yoar or W i l l i a m ' s reign. I n 1699, w h e n I r e aler
b e i n g closely w a t c h e d , t h e y m a d o t h e i r escape, a n d rearh- ^ '
Powers, with or without i m p r o v e m e n t s , in q a a a t i t i e s
B I S I N S T I T U T I O N FORMS ONE* OP T W E L V E COL
1
land w»s in o p e n rebellion, a c o n s p i r a c y a g a i n s t t h o K i n g oil A up llr.no
' I to suit p u r c h a s e r s , and at prices m a k i n g it a n o b j e c t , In
l e g e s located in the following cities -—Detroit, New
w a s discovered b y E n g l a n d , a n d t h e l e a d e r s w e r e a r r e s t Y o r k , Philadelphia, Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland,Chicago, St.
e d b y o r d e r of W i l l i a m . H o t h e n a t o n c o a p p e a l e d t o P a r Louis, Brooklyn, Troy, P o r t l a n d and Toronto.
No d o u b t a t h o u s a n d political o p i n i o n s must n a s s a w a v
liament for advice, t h e r e b y a c k n o w l e d g i n g t h a t t b o a c t
A person h o l d i n g a s c h o l a r s h i p c a n a t t e n d e i t h e r a t b i s
m u s t be p r o r o d b y t h e m . T h e house thankfed h i m , e m - as d r e a m s , w h i c h o u r a n c e s t o r s a n d ourselves h a v e woroption.
Terms.
s h i p p e d a s revelations.
p o w e r e d h i m to a r r e s t for a l i m i t e d time, all persons he
The Magic Time Observer,
T n i l i o n p a y a b l e in a d v a n c e by p u r c h a s e of s c h o l a r s h i p .
£st
s u s p e c t , a n d rejected a n a m e n d (0 f o r full t e r m . Same course f o r Ladies, $25.
I t i s a c o m m o n t h i n g w i t h somo p e o p l e t o fancy t h a t
m e n t t h a t it s h o u l d n e v e r b e c o m e a p r e c e d e n t
S t n d e n t s t o e n t e r at a n y t i m e . Average t i m e t o c o m p l e t e
t h e course, t h r e e m o n t h s .
T h u s the S n g l i s h law if t h a t t h e p r i v i l e g e of t h e w r i t n o t h i n g can b y a n y p o s i b i h t y bo v e r v i m p o r t a n t a b o u t w i n d i n g improve
The New Y o r k Illustrated News, the leading p i c t o r i a l paA knowledge of the o r d i n a r y E n g l i s h b r a n c h e s Is s u f f i c i e n t
i s t o b e s u s p e n d e d b v t h e c o n s e n t of t h e w h o l e G o v e r n - w h i c h t h e y a r e p e r m i t t e d t o k n o w n o t h i n g
per of the United States, in its issue of J a n . 10th, 1863, o n p r e p a r a t o r y to e n t e r i n g upon the-course of stndy.
m e n t e x e c u U v e a n d legislative. O r . a s B l a q k s t o n e s t a t e s
page-f"47. voluntarily says :
J. B . G O L D S M I T H . R e a i d e n t P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
it :
I t is P a r l i a m e n t only, or l e g i s l a t i v e i p o w e r . t h a t
W i s d o m i s an ocean t h a t h a s n o s h o r e ; its p r o s p e c t is.
J . F. SPALDING, A s s i s t a n t .
" W e h a v e been shown a pleasing novelty, of which t h e
w h e n e v e r i t sees p r o p e r , c a n a u t h o r i z e , t h o C r o w n , b y sus- n o t t e r m i n a t e d b y a h o r i z o n ; i t s : c e n t r e is e v e r y w h e r e ' Bubbard Bros., of t h i s city, are the solo» i m p o r t e r s .
T h e most thorough, practical and truly popular Colleges
I t is
called the " Magic T i m e O b s e r v e r . " and is a b u n t i n g a n d . J A m e r i c a . O v e r a i x t h o u s a n d s t u d e n t s h s v e e n t e r e d s i n c e
p e n d i n g t h e habeas corpus a c t for a s h o r t a n d l i m i t e d a n d i t s c i r c u m f e r e n c e n o w h e r e . 1
open-face watch combined. T h i s is one of t h e p r e t t i e s t , t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h i s t h e b e s t e v i d e n c e of t h e i r
t i m e , to i n p n s o n s u s p e c t e d p e r s o n s w i t h o u t g i v i n g a n y
most convenient, and decidedly the best a n d cheapest time- f a v o r w i t h t h e p n b l l c .
reasoo for s o l o i n g . T h e nation p a r t s with its liberty
B e n e v o l e n c e d o e s n o t m e a s u r e its c h a r i t i e s t o o nicely. piece f o r g e n c r a l and reliable use, ever offered. I t h a s w i t h P o r f n r t h e r Information please c a l l a t C o l l e g e R o o m a . o r
f o r a while in o r d e r t o p r e s e r v e i t forever.",
T h o c k u d s n e v e r s e n d d o w n t o ask t h e g r a s s a n d p l a n t s in i t a n d c o n n e c t e d with its machinery, its own w i n d i n g s e n d f o r a new C a t a l o g u e of 80 p a g e s . F o r s p e c i m e n s o r
T h o E n g l i s h p r a c t i c e h a s b e e n in t h e a b s a n c o or P a r - how m u c h they, n e e d ; t h e y rain f o r t h e relief o f t h e i r own
t*chment, rendertng a key entirely u n n e c e s s a r y . The P e n m a n a h i p . ? n c l o s e l e t t e r s t a m p . A d d r e s s .
se* of t h i s y a t c h are composed of two metals, the o u t e r
BRYANT * STRATTON. a t e i t h e r of t h e a b o v e C i t i e s .
h a m e n t , or even w h i i e u w a s i n session, wljen t h o case'
(Cu
t thiaout for futare reference.)
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acd e m a n d e d i n s t a n t a c t i o n , t h e M i n i s t e r s h a v e suspended
tion lever m o v e m e n t , a n d i s w a r r a n t e d an a c c u r a t e t i m e t h e p r i v i l e g e of t h o w r i t a n d t h e n a s k e d c o n s e n t of P a r Po
piece."
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ATTENTION !
T 0 ' * ^ 0 8 0 "»J I bority u p o n t h e s u b j e c t j is c o n c e d e d himself, b n t , finding a p o t ' o f gold, went m e r r i l y home.
P r i c e , superbly e n g r a v e d , per case o f a half d o s e n , $204 00
The Cheapest Jewelry House in the World M
to bo a o p r e m e , a n d whoso sanction is retrospective in i t s B a t ho w h o h a d h i d d e n t h e p o t ^ e n t a n d h u n g himself" Sample Watches, in neat mofacco boxes, f o r t h o s e p r o p o s i n g
4 . 3 1 8 r n c c E s OP ASSORTED JEWELRY r o s 8 5 0 .
operation.
f
buv at wholesale. $35. s e n t by e x p r e s s , w i t h bill payable
i delivery. Soldiers m u s t remit p a y m e n t i n , a d v a n c e a s
COMPLETE L I S T O F F I N E GOLD, P L A T E D A N D
c c a n n o t collect f r o m those In the Army. Address
G e n i n s m a k e s i t s o b s e r v a t i o n s fc s h o r t h a n d ; t a l e n t
Oreide J e w e l r y , s e n t f r e e . A d d r e s s
l a b precedent u d l o ' t h i ' t S i U o T r f M S K J S M X
H U B B A R D BROS. 1: CO., SOLE I x r o R T Z a s ,
w r i t e s t h e m o a t a t length.
J . A. S A L I S B U R Y . AGIST.
South Cor. Nassau & J o h n S w . , Vew-Y*vk.
P r o v i d e n c e , R. L -
A GEM FOR
ss
THE MILLION,
S E W I N G MACHINE:.
FLEJAL E S T A T E
GENERAL
LAND
OFF IE.
ALBERT~\V. HACON,
1424 Acre# of hoic e Txnuh;
1 8 5 0 Acre#, also Choice and well <S<f-
lected.
BRYANT & STEATTON'S
C1US #i SATiOIAL ^
M E R C A N T I L E
C O L L E G E a
B r a n c h L o c a t e d ;i,t D e t r o i t ,
T
The Perfection of Mechanism!
T R A V E R S E
VOL. V.
®j[£ <Srani Crab'tra
>
l i r B t u u i D ITMT r*!Wt,*i
Traverse'Clty, G r a n d Traverse County, Michigan
MORGAN BATES,
EDIT OB l i m FmOPWBTOB.
T E R M S .
O n e D o l l a r a n d F i f t y C o n t * , X^ayaljlo i n v a riably In advanoe.
ADVEBTISBJIENTS Inse r t e d f o r Ono Dollar p e r s q u a r e (ten
l i n e s ) f o r t h o t i n t insertion, a n d twenty-fire cent* f<jr each
• n h a e q a e n t i n s e r t i o n . Yearly Advertisements—$10 f o r one
s q u a r e ; $20 for three s q u a r e s ; $30 f o r half a c o l u m n ; and
$ 5 0 f o r ono c o l u m n . Legal advertisements a t the rates pres c r i b e d by l a w ; fifty c e n t s p e r folio of l O O w s r d s , for t h e
It r a t i n s e r t i o n , a n d tirenty-five c e n t s f o r each subscqhenL—
E r e r y figure 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 r u l e * SO
p e r c e n t a d d e d . R u l e a n d figure work, double price.'
All l e g a l a d v e r t i s e m e n t s W be paid f o r atriotljr in a d v a n c e .
T h e Old and the N e w .
" A m o n g the articles received by tha Washington Sanitary Commission lately, was a g o o d and patriotic old lady's tri-.
bote, to belaid on the altor of h e r country, bearing t h i s inn c r i p t l o n : ' T h e s e *ocks were spun and knit by Mrs. Xerhali
Clapp, ninety-six year* old. whose hands in youth were engaged In moulding bullet* in the Revolutionary War. Keep the
toes of these socks toward* the-Rebela.' "
« Keep the toes of these socks towards the Rebels,''
E a c h stitch is a link to the past.
W h e n the bolts of a hoary oppression
•Gainst freedom's new temple are east;
B u t those clouds rolled aw*y in the gleaming,
And peace set her bow in the sky,
And the azure of hope strctchcd it* arches.
O'er the spot where the tempest swept by;
Never t h o u g h t of defeat
Clogged our forefather's feet.
As they followed fall.bard on the Briton'* retreat.
All Iliads of Job Friatiig Ntttli ani Erjdit'wuslj Eicated.
" Keep the toe* of these sbeks toward* the rebel*."
A new storm is howling to-day;
B u t the flag with its stars Is still blazing.
Our pillar of fire in its fray:
Theheaven* are bowed with uew thunder,
Swart blackness has shrouded the blue.
And the blossoms are wet in the noontide.
And red with war's death-dripping dew.
But no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clogs our patriot feet,
As we rally to follow the rebel* retreat.
UNITED STATES LAP OFflCE AT fEATQSI CITY, HIGH.
G R A N D T R A V E R S E COTJHTY O F F I C E R S .
J n d * e o f P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mhpleton
Sheriff
- - I . . . - E . F . D A M E , TraverscTCity,
C o u n t y T r e a s u r e r . . . . M O R G A N B A T E S , Twv.Clty.
cCoo uu nn t y C
c ileerrKk
".JAMES P. B R A U « ,
R e g i s t e r ol D e e d s
JAMES P. BRAND,
Pro*. Attorney
C. H . MARSH,
Circuit Court Com...C. H . MARSH, _
.
Coroner*
I- R. SMITH,
S l k Rapids.
£
R O B E R T L E E , Cent^evlUe.
O. H . M A R S H ,
^.ttovneji sntii 'CottttstUor at
AND
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
V
N O T A R Y P U B L I C k C O N V E Y A N G E R ,
rravcrac City, Grand Traveree Co«n»y,Micb.
•Office i n Dwelling Houao.
•
' M*
J . G. R A M S D E L L ,
attorney & Counssellor at Law,
T R A V E R S E CITY,
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICH.
REFERENCES:
^^^nBaagahiEsaSSB*:^
TRAVEKSE CITY HOUSE,
BY
W I L L I A M
F O W L E ,
(K80KT SVHKHT, VICAR COCBT HOCSE.)
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
r
KS8S!iB^S5SS!«~~ r
PHB f l R S T
the vicln
i t v of the C o u r t H o u s e oadipubllc offices, is*till open f o r tho
r e c e p t i o n of tho " r a v e l i n g public. The P r o p r i e t o r returns
h i s h e a r t y t h a n k s f o r tho l i b e r a l patronage he has,received,
a n d assures the publio tbBt no pains will be s p a r e d t o make
hi* guests c o m f o r t a b l e . H i s c h a r g e s will c o r r e s p o n d with
floqS a c c o m m o d a t i o n * f o r h o r a e s a n d c a t t l e ,
tnay25-36
GUNTONHOUSE
J A M E S K - GITISrTOJSr.
cm STABUSS ra wni MM M i
n t h e ~ e i t y ; t h e l e a d i n g Daily.and Weekly I V p e r s ^ r e taken
i . ™ u k » p a i n s rflbo.jASirt
a n d eleven year*' re*ioencfl here will enable mo-to give reliable i n f o r m a t i o n relative t o t h e r e s o u r c e s or the c o u n t r y .
J. K. G
51-ly
"A
F A I R B A N K S '
• STANDARD
O
^•SSBK
A I J !E3
OF ALL KINDS.
S
Sold In D e t r o i t by F A R R A N D * SHELKY.
J
j y r - Be c a r e f u l to buy'Only the gennioe. 4
:
J a n u a r y 13, IMS.
j
C-fy.
FURS! FURS! FURS!
T 1 J A V E R 8 K C I T Y H O U S K r p H E SUBSCRIBER W I L L P A Y T H E H l O H t S T PRICE,
JL In C x a n , f o r raw F n « d u r i n g t h e f u r s e a s o h .
He h a s a q u a n t i t y or
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•• Keep'the toes of these socks towards the rebels.''
C a n n t treason'* foul rag i* unfarrled.
Where *tandard long since kissed the sunlight.
The hope o f a c r o w n wearied world !
Ho '. f o r t h with our glorified b a n n e r !
Bear i t back t o i u place 'mongst the stars !
And no 1 till (in ocean of freemen
Submerges the « Star* and the Bare 1"
v . .
. .
N O . 19.
C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 24,1868.
Iliiu.nli(
n f
—e watchword to-day !
What Is death t o a people's dishonor !
W h a t were life neath a vandal control !
" O n 1 on !" s h o u t s t h e voice of the nation,
. God speed you to victory** goal !
I.et no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clog y o u r g a t h e r i n g feet,
A t y e c r o w d' ' r i t h y o u r legions tho rebels df feat.
- Keep the t o f s of these sock* towards the rebels.''
Though between roll the river of death,
And the blasting slrrocco or conflict
Sweep on with the pestilent breath !
Soon beeind the grim peaks of disaster,
A new sun of freedom shall rise,
And tho m id n ig h t murk of oppression
Be chased from our purified skies!
Oh ! no t h o u g h t of defeat
Clog our fetterless feet.
A s we follow, victorotu, therebels'retreat.
Jeff.'Davis' Dream.
O n e day, a s h o r t t i m e a g o , while s i t t i n g in a h o t e l iu
R i c h m o n d , V t u a t o t a l s t r a n g e r t o e v e r y one in t h e c i t y ,
I t o o k op a dnily p a p e r for t h o p u r p o s e of p a s s i n g a w a y
a n idle h o u r , a n a f o r my f u r t h e r c o m f o r t I s e a t e d myself
in | h e recess of a ' b a y w i n d o w , a n d w a s t h u s wholly hidden f r o m t h e v i e w of a n y one w h o c h a n c e d t o e n t e r the
r o o m . I w a s t h e o n e solitary o c c u p a n t of t h e r o o m , anil
h a d b u t j u s t b e c o m e i n t e r e s t e d in t h e latest n e w s w h e n I
h e a r d t h e d o o r of the r o o m o p e n a n d t h e f o o ts te p s of
t w o pfcrsbns a p p r o a c h i n g . T h e y s e e m e d t o b e t a l k i n g
confidentially t o g e t h e r , a n d 1 t h o u g h t it m y d u t y t o
m a k e known m y p r e s e n c e b y some sign, so t h a t I m i g h t
n o t h e a r a n y t h i n g n o t i n t e n d e d for m y e a r , b u t o n p e e r ing i n t o the room, imagine my surprise when I recognised in t h e o e c u p a n l s J e f f . D a v i s 4nd his t r a i t o r f r i e n d ,
T o o m b s , of G e o r g i a . I h e s i t a t e d no longer, b u t s e t t l e d
myself b a c k in m y s e t a n d b e n t e v e r y e n e r g y t o listen t o
t h e c o n v e r s a t i o n w h i c h was c a r r i e d on in a low t o n e .
B u t , ' s a i d T o o m b s , M r . Davis, y o u m u s t n o t g i v e way
t o t h e v a g a r i e s of y o n r b r a i n . C o m e , tell m e all a b o u t
t h i s w o n d e r f u l d r e a m , a n d , m y w o r d f o r it, y o u will feel
b e t t e r a f t e r t h e recital. D a v i s , rising, t u r n e d t h e k e y
in t h e door, a n d r e a m i n g h i s s e a t c l o s e b y T o o m b s ,
g a v e t h e following version of t h e d r e a m t h a t d i s t u r b e d
him. ( t J a i d h e , 1 b a d a p a r t y of f r i e n d s t o s u p p e r last
night, w h o p r o l o n g e d t h e i r visit t o a late h o u r .
I ate
heartily during the e v e n i n g and experienced a strange
feeding of heaviness b e f o r e r e t i r i n g .
My room, you
k n o w , i s well supplied w i t h l a r g o windows, a n d t h e
n i g h t b e i n g a splendid one, I lay on m y b a c k g a z i n g on
t h e heavens, s p a r k l i n g as i t w e r e w i t h d i a m o n d s , a n d r u m i n a t i n g o n t h e destiny of t h e C o n f e d e r a c y . H o w long
I c o n t i n u e d t h u s I k n o w not, b u t s te a lin g o v e r m y senses,
a s i t a p p e a r e d t o . m e , instantly c a m e a c l e a r e r p e r c e p tion o f o u r cause from t h e beginning. I t h o u g h myself
in W ashington, in t h a t r o o m w h e r e w e all m e t t h a t n i g h t
t b p e r f e c t o u r plan for t h e d e s t r u c t i o n of t h e g r e a t R e public. I t h o u g h t t h a t you were there, Toombs, and
B r e c k i n r i d g e a n d all t h e " r e s t , a n d I s e e m e d t o live o v e r
a g a i n t h e closing s c e n e s w h i c h w e r e e n a c t e d in C o n gress, a n d I w a s s t a r t l e d f r o m t h e c o n t e m p l a t i o n b y a
low, d e e p , solemn voico closc b y m y p i l l o w , sayiug,
" J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , J e f f e r s o n D a v i s !" T h i s w a s t h e b e ginning. I s t a r t e d a n d l o o k e d a r o u c d t o see w h o i t w a s
t h a t s p o k e in t h o s e a w f u l tones, and a cold chill of h o f t o r c r e p t o v e r m o as I s a w a d i m , s h a d o w y figure d i s i p p e a r in t h e distance. P r e s e n t l y my g a z e b e c a m e fix»•§, a n d b e f o r e m e p a s s e d t h e w h o l e S o u t h e r n land, o n e
S U t e n f t e r another*. M a r y l a n d h e a v i n g a n d t06sing as
u p o n t h o w a v e s of t h o ocean, d o u b t i n g w h i c h w a y t o
p l u n g e - ; V i r g i u i a h a d a smiling e x t e r i o r , b u t t h o roost
d e a d ? # d n m o j u g h a t e r a n k l i n g in h c a r i > e a r t ; G e o r g i a ,
c r a z y w i t h t h e e n o r m o u s w e i g h t of h e r t S n s a n d h e r passions, a n x i o u s t o g i v e t h e m v e n t in t h e w a r m b l o o d of
t h o N o r t h e r n h e a r t , a n d so p a s s e d t h e y all, one. a f t e r t h e
o t h e r , t l # last a p p e a r i n g still m o r e hellish J h a n t h e f i r s t
N 6 sooner were these ended, t h a n by some singular
c h a n g e in m y p o s i t i o n I i m a g i n e d myself s t a n d i n g on
t h e t o p <>f B a n k e r H i l l , a n d o n c e t h e p a n o r a m a of t h e
N o r t h . B u t w h y e n t e r i n t o t h e details of t h i e v i s i o n ?
f o r I saw t h e m in all t h e b e a u t y of t h e i r f r e e system ;
t h e c h i l d r e n on t h e i r w a y t o school, t h e old p e o p l e t o
t h e noon-dnv p r a y e r - m c c t i n g . t h e f a r m e r in tho fiela, a n d
t h e scholar in h i s stndy. A l l t h i s p a s s e d r a p i d l y b e f o r e
w e , and I felt a fire i a my h e a r t t h a t t o m y d i s o r d e r e d
brain threatened t o consume m e entirely.
Again the
s c e d e c h a n g e d , a n d ' I f o u n d -myself on a h e i g h t overlooki n g C h a r l e s t o n h a r b o r , j u s t a t the*" p r e c i s e m o m e n t t h e
S t a r of t h e W e s t w a s a t t e m p t i n g t o c a r r y p r o v i s i o n s t o
t h e s t a r v i n g g a r r i s o n w i t h i n , I s a w t b e > a t a l s h o t fired
f o r c i n g h e r t o return, a u d my h e a r t s u n k w i t h i n me as 1
h e a r d t h a t d e e p , solemn v o i c e close beside me, say,
" J e f f e r s o n Davis, J e f f e r s o n D a v i s ! t h i s i s y o u r p r e p a r a tion for t h e h a l t e r ! " A g a i n , I saw a n o t h e r fleet sail t o
the relief of s u m t e r — s a w t h e b o m b a r d m e n t a n d i t s tali.-—
Once m o r e I i m a g i n e d myself s t a n d i n g on t h o s u m m i t of
B u n k e r Hill, a n d t h e whole N o r t h lay s p r e a d o u t a t m y
feet, and, my G o d ! tho c h a n g e t h a t h a d c o m e o v e r t h i s
land. W h o r e , f r o m t h i s very s p o t a n d e x t e n d i n g o u t t o
its f a r t h e s t c o m e r , t h e r e was a h u r r y i n g t o a n d f r o , m e n
s h o u l d e r i n g t h e i r m u s k e t s a n d all t e n d i n g t o o n e p o i n t
W a s h i n g t o n . My"eyes fairly b l a z e d f r o m m y h e a d w h e n
f r o m t h e c l e a r blue s k y a b o v e me, I h e a r d once m o r e
again t h e m y s t e r i o u s voice r i n g i n g in my ears, " J e f f e r son Davis, J e f f e r s o n D a v i s ! behold t h e a r m e d legions of
the N o r t h , see t h o a g o a v of p a r t i n g , see t h o miser,- a n d
desolation t h a t a r e t o follow !" M y l i m b s t r e m b l e d us 1
h e a r d those awful tones. M y b r a i n reeled a n d I fell
h e a d l o n g f r o m m y position.
A t t h i s p o i n t J e f f D a v i s s t o p p e d t a l k i n g a n d wiped
the cold s w e a t f r o m his b r o w . T o o m b s r e m a r k e d t h a t i t
most w o n d e r f u l d r e a m , m o s t woudcrlul, when J e f ferson resuming said, " I t h o u g h t t h a t my fall w a s n o t
sadden, b u t t h a t I o c c u p i e d some m o n t h s ki m y descent, a n d d u r i n g t l l o s e ' m o n t h s I could see t h e McCleilan A n a c o n d a t i g h t n i u g i t s fold all a r o u n d t h e C o n f e d e r a
cy. a u d I felt t h e c e r t a i n t y t h a t all was lost, a n d wo
should bo c r u s h e d io o n e c o m m o n d e s t r u c t i o n .
I gaw
t h e c a p t u r e o f F o r t s H e n r y a n d Donelson, and a thrill of
h o r r o r c r e p t o v e r m e , as 1 saw t h e t r a i t o r t o the N o r t h
and S o o t h , F l o y d , steal a w a y in t h o d a r k n e s s of tho*
night, leaving t h e rest t o d e s t r u c t i o n .
A l l along t h e
liues 1 saw o u r a r m i e s possessed of fearful d r e a d , firing
from N a s h v i l l e t o C o l u m b u s ; s a w t h o b a t t l e of P e a
R i d g e , a n d almost in t h e t w i n k l i n g of an e y e t h e g r e a t
a r m y of t h e P o t o m a c , in all i t s m i g h t y p r o p o r t i o n s a p peared b e f o r e m e , a n d I felt t h a t all was l o s t
Again
the solemn voico r a n g i n m y ears, " J e f f e r s o n Davis, t h y
doom is s e a l e d — m e e t thy r e w a r d N o sooner were
t h e s e w o r d s u t t e r e d t h a n in t h o distance 1 b e a r d a n unearthly s h o u t i n g a n d yelling, t h a t g r a t e d on m y feelings
like red h o t i r o n d r a w n t h r o u g h e v e r y p o r t i o n o f m y b o dy. Soon t h e r o . c a m o in s i g h t w h a t I f o u n d t o m y h o r r o r to be a b o d y of i m p s sent f r o m t h e b o t t p m l e s s p i t t o
b r i n g mc t o j u d g m e n t . P l a c i n g themselves a r o u n d a n d
u n d e r my body, wo descended r a p i d l y t o w a r d s H a d e s . —
S o o n we found o u r s e l v e s l a n d e d on a b a r r e n r o c k iu t h e
m o s t desolate p l a c e possible f o r y e n t o i m a g i u e .
Stepp i n g round t o ono angle, i t disclosed t o my view a w i d e
e u t r a o e e a n d all around i t g r e w t h o m o s t b e a u t i f u l flowers, and I s e e m e d t o b e a r t h o m o s t b e a u t i f u l s o u n d s
imaginable. O n o of m y g u a r d s h e r e s p o k e t o m e a n d
said, " C h i l d of m o r t a l i t y , follow !" H o led t h e w a y a n d
I followed closely. I t was n o t l o n g b e f e r e t h e b e a u t y of
t h e e n t r a n c e passed away and all b e c a m e d a r k , d r e a r y
a n d desolate. Traveling" w h a t s e e m e d t o m c a g r e a t distance, we a t last c a m e t o a g r e a t i r o n d o o r j ' t h e nails
upon which seemed t o s p a r k l e a n d b l a z e w i t h s o m e intense h e a t w i t h i n . H e r e s a t a n elderly i m p a s d o o r k e e p e r a n d l»y his s i d e was a v e r y large b o o k , in w h i c h
were w r i t t e n in l e t t e r s of fire t h e n a m e s of all t h e damned w h o p r e c e d e d mc.
" . C h i l d of sin,*" s p o k e t h o old
man, " w h o a r t t h o u ?" a n d I a n s w e r e d •' verily my
b r a i n reels a n d 1 kuow c o t " " C h i l d o f sin, tell me b y
what u a m e t h o u wast known on e a r t h ? and I answ ered,
J e f f e r s o n D a v i s . " N o sooner h a d 1 u t t e r e d t h i s n a m e ,
t h a n t h o imps, w i t h a h o r r i b l e , n e v o r t o bo forgotten
screech, s p r a n g ^ o a d i s t a n t c o r n e r , arid stood s t a r i n g
w i t h g l e a m i n g eyeballs, t h a t seemed t o l o a t h e m c w i t h o
m o s t t r e m e n d o u s l o a t h i n g . I t r i e d t o a p p r o a c h them,
b u t t h e y would not p e r m i t i t s e e m i n g fearful of a n y cont a c t w i t h me. H o r r o r s t r i c k e n nod a m a z e d a t t h i s cond u c t of t h o s e I t h o u g h t would b e my friends, I r e t u r n e d
t o t h o d o o r w h i c h - 1 now found open. N o sooner h a d I
entered t h a n t h e d o o r closed w i t h a h e a v y sound, a n d I
h e a r d rolling a u d rolling in t h e distance my name, a s I
was t h u s i n t r o d u c e d iu t h e socioty of t h e d a m n e d . Onw a r d a n d o n w a r d 1 found myself ..traveling ; a n d e v e r
a n d anon, as I p a s s e d b y somo p o o r w r e t c h w r i t h i n g in
all t h o misery of t h e l o s t 1 w o u l d t u r n m y e y e s t o c a t c h
o n e lootc of s y m p a t h y , one g l a n c e of c o m m i s e r a t i o n for
m y fate, b u t in vain. All s e e m e d t o look u p o n mo w i t h
a d r e a d f u l h o r r o r , and p o i n t i n g t h e i r b u r n t fingers of
scorn as I passed, w h i s p e r e d to e a c h o t h e r , " H e l l is disg r a c e d ! H e l l is d i s g r a c e d !" H u r r y i n g f a s t e r on, I a t
last f o u n d myself b e f o r e a n open door, p r i n t e d o v e r h e a d
in letters'of fir(^^ie words, " E n t e r a u d receive thy
d o o m ! " I e n t e r e d , a n d t h e r e iu t h e middle of a l a r g e
a p a r t m e n t w a s raised a t h r o n e of living fire, a n d u p o n it
sat t h e m o s t a w f u l b e i n g 1 cv£r b e h e l d .
O n his h e a d
was a c r o w n of living s c o r p i o n s a n d a r o u n d bis neck a n d
coiled in his b o s o m was t h e d e a d l y r a t t l e s n a k e .
I had
b u t a s h o r t t i m e t o look ; when, in a v o i c e of t h u n d e r ,
h e said t o mo, " W h o a r t t h o u ? "
A n d t h r o u g h the
long arches, t h r o u g h w h i c h I h a d passedp-xauie t h o answer, • ' J e f f e r s o n D a v i s . J e f f e r s o n D a v i s i i l e l l is disg r a c e d . cast h i m p u t . " T r a n s f i x e d w i j h - f i o r r o r , the D e vil seemed t o g a z e uporfTncTrtwiLiH^a v o i c e of a w f u l
d e p t h a n d hardness, spid t o m e , '• J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , o n c e
u p o n a t i m e . 1 w h o set h e r o J a i l o r of t h e d a m n e d , —
b i l i o u s t o be s o m e t h « g _ g r e a t e r t h a n t h e g r e a t e s t ,
b e l l e d a n d was cast f o r t h N a n d this s e n t e n c e w a s p a s s e d
u p o n m e : " T o sink d o w n t o H e l l , a n d h a v e d o m a i n
o v e r all the iniquity of t h o world, u n t i l a g r e a t e r t h a n I
should b e released aud m y d o m i n i o n g i v e n t o h i m . J e f ferson Davis, long h a v e I w a i t e d , l o n g h a v e 1 t e m p t e d ,
b u t in vain, until to-day y o n a p p e a r e a b e f o r e m e loaded
d o w n w i t h a c r i m e t h a t even 1 s h u d d e r to' see in y o n . —
J e f f e r s o n D a v i s , " said be, r i s i n g , 4 t a k e m y s e a t a n d
c r o w n . " A s h e n t t e r e d t h o s e a w f u l w o r d s my b l o o d
seemed t o f r e e z e in my veins, a n d t h e most h o r r i d wail
of a g o n y rose f r o m t h e m y r i a d of tjie d a m n e d , a n d w i t h a
s h o u t I a w o k e , t r e m b l i n g in o v e r y limb, a ccld pesperation all o v e r mc, a n d b r o a d d a y l i g h t s t r e a m i n g in t h r o u g h
m y windows. T h o sceoe s e e m e d so real, a n d m y d o o m
so p r o p h e t i c , t h a t i t p r e y e d u p o n me like a c a n k e r , a n d
I find myself u n a b l e t o c a s t i t o f f "
D a v i s h e r e ceased s p e a k i n g , a n d t h e y b o t h r o s e a n d
unlocked t h e d o o r a n d c a m e o u t a n d a s t h e y passed I
c a u g h t a glimpse of t h e m , a n d never, till t h e d a y of m y
d e a t h , shall I forget t h e h a g g a r d , c a r e - w o r n faces of
those two traitors,
A s EDITOR.—The c o m p o n e n t p a r t s of an e d i t o r a r e
defined t h u s : T h e constitution o f a h o r s e , o b s t i n a c y of a
mule, i n d e p e n d e n c e of a w o o d - s a w y e r , p e r t i n a c i t y of a
dun. e n d u r a n c e of a s t a r v i n g anaconda, i m p u d e n t * of a
beggar, and an entire resignation to t h e most confounded of all e a r t h ) * t r e a d - m i l k
Louisiana Getting Her « Rights."
T h e N e w O r l e a n s E r a of the 1 3 t h inst, p u b l i s h e s a
irrativo of rebel b a r b a r i t y in t h e p a r i s h of S t T a m many, Louisiana, w h i c h m o r e t h a n confirms all p r e v i o u s
s t a t e m e n t s of the suffering a m o n g t h o , p e o p l e of t h e
S o u t h a n d the t y r a n n y of t h e C o n f e d e r a t e rule.
The
E r a derives its information from a refugee, who, with
his wife and t w o children, one of w h o m lie c a r r i e d in his
arms, by long a n d weary m a r c h e s , succeeded in reaching
P e a r l R i v e r , a n d t h e n c e ' e s c a p e d b y a c a n o e t o t h e seac o a s t and so reached N e w Orleans. W e q u o t e :
1
«IK WAY THE 1-EOl'l.E LIVE.
T h e p e o p l e of S t T a m m a n y h a v e been living f r o m
h a n d t o m o u t h foi a b o u t a y e a r . T h e C o n s c r i p t i o n law
has d r i v e n a l l t h e m a l e s t o seek refuge in t h e woods.
while their p o o r women a n d c h i l d r e n a r e left a t h o m e ,
on the v e r y v e r g e of s t a r v a t i o n .
R e b e l officers scour
the c o u n t r y coutinually w i t h blood-h.onods, e n t e r h o u s e s
w i t h o u t c e r e m o n y , s e a r c h e v e r y rwjbk mid c o r n e r , and. if
t h e terrified w o m e n p r o t e s t aguiost their rudeness, t h e y
a r c kicked o u t of t h e i r own h o u s e s a n d coarsely assailed
a n c f c u r s e d b y t h e s e b r u t a l minions of J e f f D a v i s .
T h e p e o p l e s u b s i s t entirely o n c r a c k e d corn, w h i c h is
p a r c h c a a n d eaten d r y , f o r b r e a d , a n d soaked in h o t wat e r f o r coffee. Occasionally t h e y g e t hold of a little
f r e s h m e a t ; b u t a s t h e r e i s not a p a r t i c l e of s a l t t o b e
h a d s h o r t of a d o l l a r a spoonful, t h i s m e a t c a n n o t b o *
k e p t , a n d is v e r y u n p a l a t a b l e w i t h o u t s a l t
riEnjSlNli CONFEDERATE MOXEV.
ID t h i s s t r o n g h o l d of'tlio C o n f e d e r a c y t h e n o t e s issued
by t h n t so-callcd G o v e r n m e n t a r e n o t c u r r e n t , e x c e p t as
- m e d i u m for t h o rich m e n t o p a y t h e i r , d e b t s t o t h e
p o o r . T h e latter c a n n o t use t h i s m o n e y f o r a n y t h i n g . —
Ono d e a l e r in all s o r t s of little n o t i o n s refused t o give
five cents' w o r t h of t o b a c c o for a t e n d o l l a r bill, saying
t h e w h o l e bill was n o t w o r t h five cents.
T h o whole
c o u n t r y is b a r e of s a l t s u g a r , molasses, flour, b a t t e r , vegetables—in fact, everything except c r a c k e d j c o r n .
" ui'E.vr BEET."
/
T h e r e b e i n g n o sait, t h e r o v i n g b a n d s of g u r r i l l a s a n d
o t h e r a r m e d p a r t i e s , whose chi^f business seems t o b e t o
m o v e f r o m p l a c e t o placo i i N w r c h of c o n s c r i p t s a u d
chickens, a r e c o m p e l l e d t o resort t o b u r n i n g beef t o c u r e
it
T h i s is d o n e in t h i s way : T h e fresh meat i s c u t
i n t o thin slices and p n t on h o t coals, w h e r e i t remains until i t i s q u i t e b u r n t I t is t h e n p a c k e d in k u a p s a c k s and
c a r r i e d w i t h .them on t h e i r m a r c h e s . W h e n t h e stock
e x h a u s t e d t h e y levy on a n o t h e r a n i m a l , w h e r e v e r o n e
t o b e f o u n d . T h i s food, w i t h c o r n coarsely jjrouod
a n d unsifted, is said t o b e w h a t t h e r e b e l s o l d i e r s Subsist
'•
*
.
J
THE FAMILIES OF VOLLNTEEltS AM) COJiSCKIrtS.
T h e s e a r c represented as Iming e n t i r e l y destitute.-—
T h e y go w a n d e r i n g f r o m one p l a n t a t i o n t o a n o t h e r , begg i n g f r o m t h o lordly e x e m p t s a little c o r n meal t o k e e n
soul a n d b o d y t o g e t h e r . T h e y a r e freoucutly r u d e l y d r i ven a w a y w i t h o u t assistance, b e i n g t o l a t h a t i t is w r o n g
t o e u c o u f i i e e b e g g i n g . F o r u few m o n t h s a s o r t of b o u n ty was p a i d t h o s e u n f o r t u n a t e people, b u t t h a t h a s been
d i s c o n t i n u e d , a n d now t h e y a r e left e n t i r e l y d e s t i t u t e .
DESTITUTE OK Cl/mriXC.
T h e w o m e n a n d c h i l d r e n a r e a l m o s t w i t h o u t clothes.
C o t t o n c a r d s c a u u o t be h a d a t a u y p r i c e .
While the
women h a d t h e s e they m a d e c o t t o n y a r n , w h i c h t h e y
s p u n i n t o c o a r s e cloth, w h i c h a n s w e r e d v e f y wclL T h a t
s o u r c e o f supply, like a l m o s t e v e r y t h i n g else, h a s b e e n
c u t off. T h e s e ' p o o r , h u n g r y , h a l f - c l o t h e d w o m e n a u d
c h i l d r e n , h a v i n g been d e p r i v e d of t h e i r n a t u r a l p r o t e c t o r s b y t h e i n e x o r a b l e c o n s c r i p t i o n law, now w a n d e r
a b o u t ' f r o m placo t o place, s u b j e c t t o all tho j o o r s a n d insults of t h e rich, w h o a r e k n o w n t o e n t e r t a i n g r e a t cont e m p t for " p o o r white t r a s h . 3
H a r d Times in
Richmond.
T h e following e x t r a c t f r o m a l o t t e r w r i t t e n by a y o u n g
woman s o j o u r n i n g at R i c h m o n d , V i r g i n i a , t o a f r i e n d iu
B a l t i m o r e , will s h o w t o w h a t e x t e n t t h e p e o p l e a r e suff e r i n g in t h e r e b e l c a p i t a l .
T h e l e t t e r w a s recently
seized iu u rebel mail :
" R i c h m o n d , M a r c h 11, 1 8 6 3 . — J ' e r h a p s y o u would
like t o know how we p o o r s t a r v e d o a t rebels g e t a l o n g
in t h i s e n v i a b l e city. P o s s i b l y , if y o u h a v e y o u r , pock e t s lull of C o n f e d e r a t e i}ote3 ; b u t w o e if y o n h a v e n o t .
T h e necessities of life a r e allin t h e b a n d s of s p e c u l a t o r s ,
and you dare,not m u r m u r a t any price they dare t o ads.
Y o u must iay y o u r p u r s e a t t h e i r f e e t a n d t h a t _ t o o . i a
t h e most bumble manner. L e t me give y o u a brief idea
a s t o t h e p r i c e s w h i c h articles c o m m a n d in t h o C o n f e d e r a t e c a p i t a l : D r y g o o d s L h a v e ceased t o b u y s o m e t i m o
s i n c e , b u t I will mention t h a t c o m m o n calicoes c o m m a n d
$ 2 25 p e r y a r d ; fine p l a i d s $ 1 0 per y a r d ; a silk dreas
f r o m $ 1 0 0 t o $ 2 M > ; kid gloves $ 7 t o $ 1 0 p e r p a i r ;
g e n t l e m e n ' s b o o t s f r o m $ 5 0 t o $ 7 5 p e r p a i r ; uniform
c o a t s $ 1 0 0 e a c h . U n d e r t h o h e a d of provisions I q u o t e
a s follows : T u r k e y s $ 1 5 t o $ 2 5 e a c h ; e g g s $ 2 p e r
dozen ; . m e a t $ 1 2 5 p e r p o u n d ; b u t t e r $ 3 5 0 t o $ 5
per p o u n d ; coffee $ 4 p e r p o u n d ; t e a $ 1 5 t o $ 2 5 p e r
p o u n d . Y e s t e r d a y 311 a u c t i o n firm sold a lot of miscellaneous g o o d s a t e v e n h i g h e r p r i c e s t h a n t h o s e w h i c h 1
h a v e q u o t e d . F o r instance, bonDCt f r a m e s s o l d _ f o r $ 1 2
e a c h , a n d a fine b o n n e t c o s t s y o u f r o m $ 4 0 t o $ 7 5 . "
A BLOODY QCAKREL
IS
FAMIIO.NIO.XABL* L I F F _ — . I n
N e w Y o r k city, recently, a m a n n a m e d B r o w n i n g commenced a suit a g a i n s t a ' W a l i s t r e e t b r o k e r , f o r c r i m i n a l
a c q u a i n t a n c e w i t h b i s wife. T h o wife m a d e a n d p u b lished an a f f i d a v i t e x o n o r a t i n g t h e b r o k e r , a n d c h a r g i n g
h e r "husband w i t h a n a t t e m p t t o b l a c k maiL W h e n
B r o w n i n g r e a d i t b e w a s seized w i t h u n c o n t r o l a b l e f n r y .
h u n t e d u p t h e w o m a n a n d told h e r s h e m u s t d i e .
She
d e c l a r e d t h a t s h e d i d n o t k n o w t h e c o n t e n t s of t h e affidav i t s h e h a d s u b s c r i b e d , a n d t h e b r o k e r ' s lawyer h a d misrepresented
it to her.
B r o w n i n g d i d n o t believe t h e
s t o r y . D r a w i n g a bowie-knifo h o a t t e m p t e d t o c u t h e r
t h r o a t . S h e seized I'ue w e a p o n a n d w r e s t e d it f r o m h i m ,
t h o n g h h e r h a n d was Dearly s e v e r e d . H e d r e w a pistol
a n d s n a p p e d i t a t b e r a s s h e fled, b u t t h e c h a r g e d i d n o t
e x p l o d e . S h e t o o k r e f u g e in > l a w y e r s office. H e p u r - i
sued h e r w i t h a knife in h i s b a n d , b u t was s e i z e d o t f o r c
h e could d 6 her auy h a r m , a n d e j e c t e d .
Subsequently
h e w a l k e i f u p a n d d o w o in f r o n t of t h e residence of t h e
b r o k e r f i r several hour?, w i t h a loaded revolver, w a i t i n g
for h i m tV m a k e his a p p e a r a n c e . F i n a l l y , b e was p o t
u n d e r arrcStf. H e still v o w s t h a t b e will be r e v e n g e d a t
t h e first o p p o r t u n i t y .
t
receipts and expenditures, you are respectfully refer- C|t <§raitb C.rairttst |tcralii!V. the
red to the, Directors who keep the accounts. If they
MgBGAJf B A T ! 9 , M
1
„ ^ ,
a
p
r
„ ^ S :
TRAVERSE CITJJ
FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 24, 1863.
Leelaaaw County—Official.
This newly organized County, which j comprises the
townships of Centerville, Glen- Arbor, and Ijeelanau, and
which formed a part of Grand Traverse last Fall, has
done quite as well as we expected on the- State ticket—
though she might and would have done better if qucs-'
tioua of local interest bad not been mixtd with the canvass. A majority of IOC in a poll of 302 votes is all
that we c«uld reasonably atk ; and the only drawback
to a complete Republican triumph is the defeat of Mr.
Quackenbush, for Clerk and Register, who lows his
•election, on local and persona] grounds, by 12 votes. The
following is the result :
,f
cannot explain it, I know not who can. Probably not
over half of the Directors in the State make their accounts exactly balance. The reported expenditures in
the State exceed the reported receipts, by more than
thirty thousand dollars. The former are believed to be
nearest correct For instance, district No. 3, Uelana*.
reports $115 91 expended, but nothing received. I
fancy that Jeff Davis* Treasurer would like to put himself under the tuition of such a district; for how to pay
money without receiving any, is an art belonging only to
School Directors.
,
Deducting the amount on hand, and adding $12 paid
Inspectors from townships, there appears to have been
expeuded in the County for all school purposes, $1588
07. From this deduct the Primary School monev, and
wc have $1305 72 that came directly from the peeplc
— taxes and rntebills. This is a petty sum for so great
— object It is but $1 56 for each child. This shows
the economy of our public school system ; but in the
now Counties the expense is of course comparatively
greater than in tbo old.
The
little
— ratebills in Grand Traverse
. . . . v i w were
y i v reduced
icuuceu aa m
ue
from the previous year ; but are still $280 70 too much
States. The rebel stronghold on the Mississippi, Colun>- to boeo enabled to meet us in force wherever m>
Pi 0 W together wit
'thTi^rt>n H »'
" . "
* Memphis, presented ourselves, and by which alone thev have been
hands.
commercial city of the State, fell into able to feed and supplv their armies.
rhc autumn of 1861 had w i t n ^ ,H«
LUC uipiure 01 iwanoaic island apd >ewhere, Beaufort •Ul
"ueiw iv may uu auvisaoie to striice.
r o f ' , . con » a n d by 'he redaction of the important
These decisive measures we are actuallv executing or
fort Pulaski, controlling the entrance to the Savannah preparing to execute. The successes and conquests we
River; of Fort Clinch, controlling the harboi and rail- hare already described, have carried us through the preroad depot of Fornaodina; of Fort Marion, at St Augus- liminary stages, and the blows we now strike—each one
tine. By the first named operations we acquired control of them that succeed*—will reach the very vitals or the
of the spacious inland waters of North Carolina (Albe- rebellion. Let any one look upon the map, and these
marle and Pamlico sounds), and their adjaceut shores, truths will be apparent.
and of one of her two important seaport*—Beaufort—
Bv the last we made ourselves masters of the rich sea
A Day of Fasting and Prayer.
islands and important Harbors extending along the coast
from Charleston to S t John's; leaving in the possession
A PROCLAMATION BY T H E PRESIDENT OP T H E U . 3 .
of the rebels, on the Atlantic coast, but two harbors,
Charleston and Wilmington.
Whereas the Senate or tho United States, devoutly
But the brilliant
uriuinui triumphs
inumpns of
01 our
our army
armyand
and navy
navy elaeelse- ' c C 0 K l l ' z ' n g the supreme authority and just government
ASSOCIATE JtVncE OF THE SUPREME COCK
Itfiri! were
wpre surpassed
cnrnaeowl by
Kr
fh/» capture or
«.f the
»l.~ great city or
. # ° r -Almighty
where
wuens
oy mo
tbo
Almighty
God, in all the affairs or men and nations,
K
the
Gulf,
tlie
denot
orthe
prpatVnlW
nftKo
:
r*1-«:— requested
.-J.t-.
James V. Campbell. (Rep.)..202—mai...,106
the GulC the depot of the great Valley of the Mississippi has. by
resolution,
the T,
President to
to designate
designate
wj- lC
auiuuuu,
requebieo
me
rresioent
d
Uand Johnson,
gg
—New Orleans; an achievement which, estimated by the Mand
set anart
opart aa dav
day fnr\**tinn»l
forNational prayer and humiliaimportance of the conquests and the noble daring of its tion.
C I R C U I T J l ' D O K — X I X T H DISTRICT.
execution, is scarcely, surpassed in history. By this imAnd whereas it is tho duty of nations as well as of
1
Z B S f f l S S f '""P'
203—maj
104
portant conquest we obtained «*otrol of a large portion men, to own their dependence upon the overruling power
Flavins J . Littlejohn,
99
or
and
accomplished toe
the mo6t
mo6t important
important anc
and or Uod, to confers their sins and transgressions, in bum"! Louisiana,
")",S1U"U< a!
" 1 nccompnsned
REOEXTS or T H E C J f l V K O I I T * .
difficultfitfintoward* nhtnimnrr Krml.nl „ F | U U : : : : ble sorrow, yet with assured hope that genuine repenRepublican ticket straight,
201— m a j . . . . 106
tance will lead to mercy and pardon, and to recoraito
•Copperhead ticket, straight,
S8
mony with the genius orour free institutions, to raise the sacola. with the forte yet held by the rebels.
the sublime truths announced in the Holy Scripture® and
In
whole by, tax,
FOR (SHERIFF.
, . and make the schools free. Such au step
siep
- 'he
--- hastily
v sketched military and
"mi naval
ua>ui operati
uiJL-niu ons
ODS proven by history, that thoso nations only are bJtaed
n r r t n l r l ...1J
» , *«._ t
. . .
f Tt tceuni dl ii n C T1i n ,t h fe* w
W M I IhrAnrrk tltn
.P
1 .1
whoso
God is the Lord :
Seventy- "
8, »
e s t through the States or Arkansas,
Edward Priori, (Kep.)
; S l j l — m . j . . . . 91 would add largely
o - v to
— tho
. " . . attendance
i n u u u u w o iat
o ischool.
uUW.
M
ninA more,voIumes
MAM >".i.
—1reported in• tbo libraries.
...
Missouri, luuiie^^ce
Tennessee unu
and j^eniucny,
Kentucky, aod
and in
in the
the Atlantic
Atlantic . And insomuch as
we know that,
iu«i, bv
oy his
nis divine
divine law,
law, nanaErastus Bates,
JJQ
nine
are
There' .U.5.MJUU,
frA.n Hatteras to Florida, and
_.J on
-- the Guir tions, like "IUIVIUUULS,
individuals, ure
are suojected
subjected to punishments and
seaboard from
J U D G E OP TROBATB. '
appears to have been fine inouey nnportioned by the from Pensacola to the month or the Mississippi, we real- chastisements
c h o s l i v n u i n t f i iin
n t this
K i s hworld
r A p l i t mmay
a t . Wn
L justly
. . l _ r fcar
..
A«
wo*.not
that
JohnE. Fisher, (Rep.)
204—maj...
County Treasurer, but the Inspectors'of Centerville and ly made conquests as vast as it often fall to the lot or theB fhe' awfol woiauiiiy
calamity ui
of civil
civil war,
war, wnicn
which now
now at
desolates tho
James M. Burbuk,
hnt a nnni«Km»
—L.
'aod. mav
may ho
be but
punishment
ni inflicted upon us for our
Whitewater alone, make any report of the same. No most power and warlike nations to make in so short - - -. land,
riod oi
of time. Woo pusned
pushed our conquests by
—.landi through
.•
, presumptuous sins, to tho needful end or our nationCOUNTY T B E A S U R E R .
Director reports any received or paid out
I/vlanaw noq
v
'"" ual " JU »» » wnoie people r w e have
Joko I. Millar. (Rep.)
19"—maj
5G voted $25 for libraries^ thb spring election, and tbo Missouri, Kentucky and Tennessee, to the very bouoda- :i *.ieD,a
ries or the Gulf States; obtained control of the Mississippi J P
or the cboicests bounties or Heaven. We have
Walter W . Barton,
i4|i
Inspectors report an increase of 41 volumes in the town River, except about 200 miles; occupied the coasts or
preserved, those many years in peace and prosperi<\
COUNTY C L E R K .
lu
Georea—a large
larm> J' :» e have
numbers, weann
wealth and
and power
power asr
•/
library. That the people will find it money well invest- North
... Carolina,
v ^ u i . u a , South
uuuui Carolina
v^aronua and
auu ueorga—a
^ 6grown
" " in uuuioers,
Lorenzo D. Qdackenbush, (Rep.)... 1^3
n
..jrtion
of
Louisiana;
seised
every
important
fort
and
,°
other
nation has ever grown. But we havo forgotteo
Gerhard Verfurtb,...
1<4—maj.... 11 ed, I have not the least doubt—provided the boob are harbor in the rebel territory, save three (Wilmington, the gracious baud which preserved us in peace, and mulgood.
tl
llud aad
REGISTER OP D E E D S .
Cbarleston and Mobile,) reducing to a corresponding ex- P. .
enriched and strengthened us ; and we have
By a late enactment the district and township BoHrds tent the labors or tho blockading squadron ; captured T a " , 'y imagined, in tho deceitfulness or our hearts, that
Lorenzo D. Quackenbusb, (Rep.)... 1(52,
Gerhard Verfurth
174^-maj
12 are hereafter to uso annually—unless otherwise directed fourteen pormaneot sea coast forts, among which were n" thesa blessings were produced by some superior wisd o m Bnd
the
largest
on
the
Southern
coast,
such
as
Pulaski,
Barvirtue
or our own. Intoxicated with unbroken
by
a
vote
or
tho
people—all
the
library
money
on
hand,
P R d S E C U T I N O ATTORNEY.
8UCCC
«. w c have become too selfsufficicnd to reel the neand to purchase or the State extractor. By doing this raucas, McRae, Jackson, and St. Philip, Following
K' J X H
•- 2 0 7 - r a j . . . . 84
theso conquests was the reduction or Yorktown and tho
of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to
B. J . Brooks,
123
they will get the books mnch cheaper and much better evacuation or Norfolk, by which the waters or James P™}"t0 the God that made us !
OIR(.TTT COURT COMMISSIONER.
bound, than ir purchased elsewhere ; and thev cannot aim
and York
Rivers were laid open to our fleets, and the
behooves
then, to bumble
KnmKio ourselves before the
i orit uivers
,Dt'HOOVes Qus,
s. men,
denrived of
of the
the facilities
fncilitip* furnished
fnrnicl.nri by a« great
™,_. navy ofil;Dcied
» „ < Power, to confess our national sins and to pray
™ 0 - T n M I , (Rep.)
211—maj
rebels deprived
impose a bod book upon tho young ; the list from which rebels
f o r lemeoc
J . Brooks,
121
yard,
and
compelled
to
destroy
their
only
means
of
menm
?
y and forgiveness.
they select, comprising about 700 volumes, being pre
ucinir
acing
our
fleets
in
Hamnton
Hampton
Unniic
Roads—the
tho
Merrimac.
Now
therefore
in
compliance
with the request and
COUNTY SURVEYOR.
'
pared by the State Board of Education.
fully concurring in the
of tho
ora RESOURCES.
'>"'7
tne views or
the Senate, I do, by this
' T T W " 1 ("*•>
203—maj
In conclusion, let me implore the people oryonryoung
11
a , C aand
n
h o rns^,i..:.
d
my*proclamation,
doiraate
.u.
We
c have
naie carried on, shall cany
carry on and conclude this T
/ . d f l ! K
1 *s e it ,^, pr# rtt TTi,
a y , the
John Porter,
lj|
County to keep up their schools, employ good teachers, war. without touchingone dollar of- thee aaccumulated
c c » m u l . t ecapl » » f U " % » ' A p " l , 1864 a,a<l.Jof™ti»»alb«o,ili,li„ 0 ,
CORONERS.
• . , at'. the
' rasting,
fastintr. andprayer.
and nraver. 1do
I do hereby
hnmSv num»i
nii
re^ertaH"the"J^bte
raiso tho avorago to at least six months per annum, and ital or the country. We are already astonished
George Ray. (Rep.)
202
to
abstain
from
their
ordinary
secular
pursuit*,
aod
to
whatever else they may do, let not tho education or the revenue now being raised from the taxation oTour dally
Georgo N. Smith, (Rep.)
207
productions, and yet we do not begin t o ' realize the unite, at their several places of public worship and their
young be neglected.
Q JJ g
Moses Tnikham, (Dem.)
132
amount to be yielded by the system already adopted, or respective homes, in keeping the day holy to the Lord,
John Ilartuug, (Dcm.)
133
, T H E WAR F O R T H E UNION.
the extent to which that system may be enlarged, with- and devoted to tho humble discharge of the religions '
out imposiug any grieveous burdens upon the people- duties proper to tbe solemn occasion. •
and Prospect, of the any burdens to which they will not cheerfully submit to
All this being dono in sincerity and truth let us then
For the Grand Trtverw Herald. The Results of the Pust
,hc
Report
of
the
Comrest humbly in the hope, authorized by tbe Divino teachaccomplish
the object intended.
Primary School Education In Grand Tin verse
mittee OR the Condnct of the War.
County.
No government can long carry on a,war which must ings, that the united crv of the Nation will bo heard on
Yonr Committee think it better to submit the testi- be sustained by the accumulated capital or tho country, high, and answered witbtilessings, no less than tbo parMOROAN BATES, ESJ —Dear Sir,—When our nation mony which they have taken in relation to the conduct
and there is scarcely a limit to the time war may bo pro- don of our national sins, and restoration of our nowdil a s sent a million man to the field to fight nearly an or the War, without criticism to any considerable ex- secuted by a Government whose credit is pustained by vided aod suffering country to its former happy condiequal number of rotwla, we waDt to know daily what they tent or military plans or movements, leaving each reader the revenues, derived by the accumulated wealth or the tion or unity and peace.
to rorm bis own conclusions from the testimony, and such country.
In witness whereor, I have hereunto set my hand, and
are doing, and what progress they arc making in putting opinions or competent military men as it ma* contaia
caused tho scol or the United States to be fixod.
R E B E L DEFENCES.
, -down the rebellion. Such information keeps our syraV)®.* '®0|f k» ck ?™ r the struggle of the'past two
DODO at the City or Washington this thirtieth day or
Every
dollar
tho
rebels
have
expended
or
can
expend
.pathies and energies in fnll action, and enables us better years, they reel that although wc have not accomplished
March, ID the year of our Lord one thoosaud
in this rebellion has heeu and must continue to be drawn
to determine what to do in the future, to carry the work all that we hoped and expected within the time, still the from their accumulated capital. Their intercourse with
f u & | eight hundred and sixty-three, and or tbe independence or the U. a the eighty-scven'h.
to a successful termination. 80 in our warfare with great progress made gives us fall assurauce of final sue- foreign nations has been almost whoRy suspended, all
ABRAnAB LINCOLN.
, 'gnorance, it is not eaoagh tbat\ the jieople establish
When the Government took its first activo steps to- their industrial interests have been paralyzed, and there y the President,
schools and employ an army of teachere. and send them wards resisting the rebellion, tho rebels had been for is no source from which they can derive revenue or
WILUAM H. SEWARP, Secretary or State.
to the field. They should know what these teachers are , T l - ? . ? , ° n t ! ? a - ! i V u l y j a i , ( l 0 I , C D l y m a k i l , S preparations means for the maintenance or tho war, except by depriving
people
or
their
property,
day
after
day,
and
year
afThe Battle of Fredericksburg.'"
doing—what they anj doing to sustain tiem—what the to resist its authority and dory its jurisdiction. Thft- had ter year, 60 long
ule w
a r 8shall continne,
war
thus reducing
usurped the control ortho machinery of one State Gov , ' k Z T
'
' T 5 as ,the
„T' *:0
—»
No part of the report of the Committee on the Con-!
o povertv
them. lto
„-k:„i. the
.uresults from year to war are. They nee* the itati.tic*. ernment arter another, aud thus over awed tbo loval nen. Hi
.P°^ e r t y and want.
" * D t Thiaian
This is a tr.nl,
trnth which
doct oftho War, is more interesting than that relating
.By looking thus at what they have done, (heyrosyrealize pie or those States. They had even so for control of^be
Thev h^d°hl? n a d c to
i * P a a i a S t o re- to the repulse of Gen. Burnside at Fredericksburg. Tbe
??
P ?
, hehevo that an export important facts which they reveal, and which the people
better what they ought to do.
Beside-* thirty years Federal Government itself, as to make it not onlv icnui i f ^7 '
°" n"®"; , ^ i c h ' b o ™ r I d w . o a I d ^ obligeTto have thus far beeD entirely ignorant, set at rest the two
hence when your County shall huvo its twenty or thirty esce. for the time being, in measures for iUown d S '
tion,. but
to 1that
Thev
had seized
seized f 3 ' ' W °n
the richest revenue ever realized questions as to who was responsible for the defeat at that
, 1 end.
inev
i to
"• contribute
7 Ti .
thousand inhabitants, and has becomo-^hat disinterest- Bnd4 taken
• the
• arms' i ca'ud
y bad
bad
seized Vj
by uany
Governmeot, ana
and mat
that liir tne
tho federal
Federal Uovernment
Government
v viuiuruineni,
mtothcir possession
munitions
>uld attempt
attemnt interference
intprforenM* with
nr!»K its
;t.~ exportation,
.-.r
. t . . time, and why Gen. Franklin was subsequently so sudthey
ed men predict it will be—one of the moit inviting por- or war or the Government. They scattered' and demoral- fhould
denly removed. The entire plan of tho battlo hinged on
could command the armies and navies or Europe to fiirht
tions oftho s u t e , it will interest its citiaeus to go bacic
8001 th
oTthe workP
° " a V > t 0 t h u m a , t d i s t a n t parts their bat'les for them. How bitter must be their disap- the penetration of the left wing or tho army to the rear
or the rebel position, thus compelling the enemy to evaoto the files of the Grind Travorso Heralij, edited by the
pointment
as
thoy
apply,
with
their
own
hands,
tbe
torch
' ^ r e was trea.«on in tho Executive, mansion, treason
uate the ridge, that constituted the main line or tbo deveteran printer, Morgan Bates, and see bow the foundain tho Cabinet, treason in the Senate and /lloasc or Rc- which consigns it to ashes, and then arc compelled to fence. The order or Gen. Burnside specified that at Itatt
t i o n of edncation were being laid in 1862. For these preecntatives, treason in the army and unvy, treason in supply to their leaders, from their other property, the
one divisioo, tcrll rvpported, should be detailed to carry
reasons I send you the more important eristics of the every deportment, bureau and offieo connectad with the moans to sustain tho rebellion ! Their currency has al- the bights near tbo Slassaponax. Gen. Franklin chose
most ceased to be regarded, even by themselves, as the
schools in the several townships of your bounty for the Government. When the sew Administration came into representative
tbQauUlest division in his corps, thaUor Gen. Meade,
or value.
and failed to make the leatt provition fpr its rupport.
past year. You wiU ere long be in receipt of the Re power, it was necessarily compelled to adopt its measures
Conscription has exhausted their people, and the
with the greatest cautiou, scarcely knowingfriendfrom
port or thcSuperintAdent of Poblic Institution for 1B62, roe. An urmy nod navy Had to be creatcd. There was wealth which long years of uninterrupted prosperity, under Or course the result was. that Meade syvastly inferior
force was driven back, withoat accomplishing tho least
>n which, on pago 76, in a condensed form, you will find scarcely a battallion of loyal natioual troops to protect the best Government the world ever saw, and placed in thing. Gen. Burnside, learning or tbe pettv force that
the statistics oftho State, arid in the appendix the statis- the capital; and the fii>t sense orsecurity felt in the cani- their hands, has already been expended, and they are had attacked the rebels, ordered Franklin to" attack with
now
struggling
on
with
the
vain
hopo
that
disscntions
talwM wheu the volunteer troops entered it, summoned
his entire command. Tbis order the officer refuted to
tics of the Counties, but not of the Towtihips.
from their homes for it protection. At the same time among ourselves or foreign intervention may save them obey, assigning as a reason that it . as to late. The reit was with great difficulty that the loyal people could from that rnin which they see clearly impending over sult was the failure or tbe attack and the final retreat of
make themselves believe that any serious resistance to them. Every day. must show them more and more clear- our forces. The Committee state that tbo testimony
iUie authority of the Government would bo attempted.*— ly that on neither or these sources can they rely for help. of every witness shows that Franklin's aeticft was the
ITfaere was not wanting those who confidently Ported 1 be utter scorn and contempt with which every man in sole cause or Our defeat, and that it was this considerathat it was but an outburst of disappointed partizan spi- the loyal States who proposes any adjustment or the con- tioff that induced his removal by tbe Administrations
rit, which they predicted would yield to an exhibition or test.except the absolute, unquallified. and unconditional Franklin is another example or the discriminating choice
No. ofSehooU
rorce, and a determined and united spirit on the nart of subjugation of every rebel in tho land to the Constitution or General McClellan in his selection or general officers.
No. of children between 5 and 20
23i II is .! I.-.;
•>o. thai attended aehool
the
people of the loyal States to surprcss iL Instead of and the laws, is held by every officer and soldier in our
104 81
[Advertiser k Tribune.
No. of volume* In Llbrtn","".".!!
such all easy suppression, we hive spent two years, al- army, and every ioval man in tbe country, must-banish
V*lo« or School Hou«».......
The inventory or tbe estate or tho late Stephen A.
most IU warfare.^ We have thrown into the field a mil- from their minds the last ray of hope from that source.
No.of MaleUacher*..J........
lion or men. \ \ e havo poured out our resources like wa- Thorc-actiou.wTiichfollowedthe recent manircstations ora Douglas has been filed at Chicago. It covers a largo
No. or Female Teachers.
Total racelpto for the rear '
ter, and we find ourselves still engaged iu the fearful willingnpss on the part or a few secession sympathizers number of pieces or real estate-valued in the aggregate
-•••T-.'.U
to oiler terms of.compromise must convince them that
Paid Uate TeachoraJ..'
straggle.
at several hundred thousand dollars, but there are incumPaid Female Tcacbers.
The events of tho past two years are too fresh in the they have no allies in the loyal States on whom they can
Total expendlturca
^ ^ •.•.{33
rely; and the present condition of affaire in Europe must brances upon it equal to the apprised value or tbe entire
memories of all torequirerecapitulation.
[NoTt.—For the convenience or our talie we nmK .K.
forever crush that Take and delusive hope vhicV they property. Mr. Douglas left no personal estate that caa
WHAT THE W A R ' H A S ACCOOTUSIIEIX
have heret9tore entertained, and the intervention or Eu- be found.
\ our Committee will, howevfer, briefly call attention ropean powers might enable them to accomplish what
In the previous ye«r, 1861, these towps .(aside from to tho ract that, to the commencement of active military they knew foil well they can never attain unaiood.
The health of tbe Pope isfast railing. His physicians
Milton, not reported} reported 14 districts, and 672 and naval operations id the winter and spring or 1862. alT U B TASK B E F O R E US.
say he cannot survive more than a few weeks. There is
children ; making an increase ofchildretj or over 22'per most uninterrupted suciceas for eight months attended all
We now see clearly what wb have to d a We must a sad smile almost constantly upon his wasted features.
oar operations, resulting in vnrt conquest* The tricent in 1862. .The increase or attendance at school was umphs or the navy at Hatteras. Port Rom I, and Fort obtain the unterruptod control or the Mississippi. We He reTuses nearly all tbe remedies prescribed for him.—
32 per cent Tbo average length or the t schools fell off Menry, were followed Iby the victories and conouest? must reach those great railroad arteries—the one bor- To a council of physicians sent him b j tbe Empress Eodering tho Atlantic seaboard, the other strcachinir
half a month ; mid was nearly two moeths below the Of tho army at Miil Spring. Fort Donelson and Roanoak through the \irginia and Tennessee Valleys to tbe west genia, be said: " There is no use trimming a lamp which
n n was
.
trenched from the Rebel prasp,
overage or the State. There were two tetf male, and . n f l r t T ' ^ p
has no oiL"
aod the Rebel armies driven into Arkansas, where thev and south. AV e must, as soon as possible, take the few
three wore female teachers employed than in 1861, and were defeated in a pitched ba'.tli at I'ea Ridge.
seaports remaining in possessions of tbe rebels, BAD STATE or Tinxcs.—Throe-fifths of the adult white
' Pfortified
Ut i
cut
it off from all external sources of food and arms, and
8218 50 less Mid to the former, and $1*5*36. more to
population of California ar? men without wives. Four
have siirro:irvU>il if h r f n m «
«ho latter. .'
[ J
voltcd States seized her n r a t rii-prs lnirl
from all aovters. at tbe same time severing into isolated out or every five white men are bachelors, and from neIfyou u k ^ n explanation of tho di$c4pa.:ey Mween
cessity; for while there are 183,856 white men iu the
G™'ti
State, there are only 48,149 womcp.
•sssssfte&ss - c
«
T R A V E R S E OITY.i
T«« O i i i D T u r i u i
BEBXLD la l b * O I B e l a l F a p t r f a r U » S T C M I M *
C o a a t i s t at Ursn-1 T r * T « r w .
Hnuluro,
r k . t ^ r u «rf>
;;j H a n n a h , L a y & Go's C o l u m n
iy o f h e r o l d f r i e n d * a t l l i e t
Wj City, will cost about 8500,000.
V
.
uD ou Cu &»——
that place,Vlth more than ordinary I
' p a g e d- I. .n. t e a c h i n g n i
SOOCCK4. H e r t e r r a h a d a l m o s t c l o n e d , w h e n s h e w a s s e i z e d ;
Ith t y p h o i d f.'ver, w h i c h p r e v a i l e d w i t h g r e a t fatality is
. . . p a s s e d at the (x-ceut 6ession of
,
Legislature levying a tax of ono dollar uj>on every dog. j
of Vr^ih«*U?-law of whatever size or pretensions, in the Slate.
I A* she wet her sister, she saiij, " I have c — — •"
TO THE PUBLIC
OF
G K A N D
T R A V E R S E ,
Arc.
Apportionment of Township Library Moticy.
i t h t h e D e r t r o v - " Y ^ E TAKE ri.EASl-RE IN CAl.LTNG_THE ATTEK
jled
The following is the apportionment made by the
T h e c i t i z c n s of V i c k s b u r g h a v e , in m a n y p l a c e s d u g j
1 ) u r i n e t h e t w o w o e k a t h w she^
o loved Christ,
County Treasurer on the 10th inst., of the money which h o l e s i n t o w h i c h t h e y c a n retreat d u r i n g a b o m b a r d m e n t - a b ' o u t d t ( U L M l 1 p r e i J a n t f i o n ' f o r i
T o t h e m slie e x p r e s s e d
uiion h e r S a v i o u r a n d o f W A R . w h i c h is b e i n g f e l t i
l
o
has been paid into the Treasury for fines during the past T h e b i r T i c l i f f s render i t a n e a s y m a t t e r . 1
h
«
t h r o w h * r *'
still in t h e l o w of a <leur
a b s e n c e of MIIM l o v e d o n e . o r w o r v
•
;
1
|
w i l l i n g n e s s t o Hie.
year, and which belongs to the Township Libraries :
o n e f r o m tii« h o m e c i r c l e , it is, a s i
a n d keenly too, in t h e v e r y l a r g e
$ 3 76
Centerville
0 Scholars, 4 cents 7 mills
a
s
l
e
e
p
.
f 1 02 He has reduced the allowance of the Snllanc-ss some'
Crystal Lake
24'
1 tliouubt I saw my f a t h e r ADVANCE I N P R I C E S
i 2 96 8110,000 per annum. She will probably bowstrin-r tira.
Glen Arbor
65
riviir.
He Btretched toward;
10 24
Leelanau
218
m o - t t e n d e r n e s s . s a i d , • Cotn<
O r *11 k i n d * o f M E R C I I A M U S E s u c h a * a r e « i i t e d t o
1 55 ALWAYS GET THE BIXT.—Especially ii| getting Salcrait I t n u . - t h a v e y o u O r s t . ' "
Megeeza
i r j n u o l t h i n r \ | i i d l v g r o w i n B c o m r a n n i t y . a n d i t L« a '
,co s h e m a J c . w a , t o r e p e a t - The tail ii.tejligj.it
' 7 52 9—ns the best costs but a trifle for a year's supply, and
(fVru: s a i l - f a c t i o n t o l«- a i . I e t o ( n u m e r a t e t h e f o l l o w i n g f i
Peninsula
hiid, t o w h i c h w e r e s p e c t f u l l y »olicit a t t e n t i o n . l»oIievincj
5 73 the good costs but a little more than the poor. The
Traverse
,1 f»tL*-r
t h a t wbic.S
n o t h i n e d o w e all u ' k e s o d e e p a n i n t e
Whitewater,
|«-rnonal!y i n t e r e s t s o u r s e l v e s .
best goes further than the poor, and u much more heali tv
I !' y t h r ' l . o r
sdvaiica
Keeling c o n f i d e n t t l m t h e r e m u s t be
$37 10 thy. We can recomend the Chemical Saleratus to be
I f ! si
n i l c l a w s of
] jirav t h t L o r d i a y s o u l l o t a V v "
the best.
. j c t h l u g t o u c h i n g i y l e a u t i f u l i n t h i s r e t u r n iER
NISTH JUDICIAL DISTHICT.—'The contest between Corn,
jVIc'i'cli'anclise a n d W a r e s
t h e jainil ia t h e h o a r of U e a t t t o t h o h o l y t h i n g * o f l b
Lieut. O'Neill, of the old 69th New York ( Irish) regi- iff
well and Littlejohn, for Circuit Judge, is so1 close that
obildiuiod.
It flirgta, o r t a r n s w i t h l o a - . l i i n j r . from a l l o t l i c r
n in t h e E A S T E R N M A R K E T S in A u g u » l a n d S e p t u m d rcxai inlier o n l y these.
H o w o r a l In p a r e n t * t o
f I sr.".', vre a v a i l e d o u r s e l v e s o f t h e o p p o r t u n i t y t o p u r it will be impossible to tell which is elected until we pet ment, now on the Rappahannock, writer to his sister :—
give to
fail
wly
• largely against time of need, a n d as our impression*
Our
colore
arc
merely
a
bucdle
of
blood-stained
silk
the Official Canvass. The chances appear rather in faf r a z r a a c e of i l c a v e n . L e t t h e y o u t h a n d t h e m i d lieen m o r e t h a n v e r i f i e d , w e a r e n o w s o s i t u a t e d as t o
t a r e of < l e f i i i u g t h e m e m o r y o r w e a k e n i n g t h e
it p r o f i t a b l e t o o n r s e l v e s b u t e s p e c i a l l y m a k e
i onli
vor of Littlejohn. Grand Traverse, Leelauaw, and An- rags tied on a broken pole, as a dozen Wattles arc dam- dI ml ep3r e( jye. dM lo-nj t of
t h e l.oly t r u t h s t h e y h a w l e a r n e d in t h e i r e a r trim give Cornwell 253 maj.; Muskegon (reported) 130 ; aging to a pieco of silk cloth." A whole history is told • n i l d h o o d . T h e h o u r i« c o m i n g w h e n t h e s e , a t i o v e a l l
Hi:,, H i i l in- p r c L - i o u s . I t i s s w e e t t o t h e d y i n g s o u l t b r o - i g h
these few lines.
Oceana, 26—total 409. Allegan and Ottawa gite LittleL
A
R
G E B E N E F I T S
. . r a v e r u r a h y u n i t o h e a r a g a i n tl>o v o i c e o f . p a r e n t s , a n d
john 410—leaving Mason, Manistee, Mecosta and NewayIConuaunlcatcd.
NEW PAPER STOCK.—It is believed that hop-vines will f o e l t h o i r l o v e .
o oar many Customers and friends.
go to hear from. There is a rumor that Newaygo has giv- furnish a good quality of pulp for printing paper. Mr.
T h a t us a result w e are e n a b l e d to m a k e , p r i c e s o a m a n y
MILLET HAY.
en Littlejohn a small majority, though it gives 130 major- Lapbam, of Herkimer Co., N. Y., has made somo satisk i n d s of g o o d s a t a s
T y y K HAVE FOUR oil FIVK TONS OK i O O D >111.ity for Republican Supreme Judge.
factory experiments, and uow advertises for five tons of
onaLie price. E n q u i r e of
t H a y . t o r s a l e al
i l U U I S i UKOTUKltS.
HA O W
R A T E S
Til* NEST COXOUESS.—The Republicans will have a the vines, to be manufacturcd into pap«r.
clear working majority in the Next House of Represen17G0At the late Commou Pleas Court, in Belmont county, E S T A B L I S H E D
tatives, and the Senate is largely Republican.
Ohio, W m. P . Simpson, a member of the Belmont Ittr,
PETER LOKILI.\Rb,
sentenced to the Penitentiary forfiveyears for horse
THE 8TATE.—The Republican majority iti this StMe
SNUFF AND TOBACCO MANUFACTURER
will exceed 10.000—a gain of about three thousand since stealing. Simpson had been twice elected Sheriff of the
1 0 ti 1 8 C h a m b e r s S t . ,
county, and has served one term in the-Senate of Ohio.
( K ' i r m e r l y 42 C h a m K r e S t r e e t . N e w Y o r t . )
the election lost October.
W o a l d call t h e n t t e n t i o a of D e a l e r s t o t h e
articles of
NEW
YORK
THUS
OR
BOSTON,
HAK1SG A SAV1SG OF
-
his
Vfo have received the first number of •••''Our Camp
aiaaulai'U
COUNTY CANVASS.
20 T O 25 P E K C E N T
B R O W N
S N U F F .
Statement Of Votes given for State Officers.
Journala
neatly executed paper published by the Of.
JJemigros
y.
We, tho undersigned Chairman and Secretary of the' U afci anbeo Itul-pCC,
fleers of the 26th Regiment. Lieut. Charles Hi Holden,
T h a t m a u y k i n d s of goodsHire n r j i m a .
County
Canvass,
held
at
the
office
of
the
County
Cierk,
C o a r s e r.«.pi« e,
Nachitocues,
or this County, is one of its Editors. It is G|led with inatTraverse Oily, in the County of Grand Traverse,
American'SentU-uieii.
Copenhagen.
teresting matter pertaining to that Regiment. ( Success Michigan, on the Fourteenth day ol April, A. P.. 18G3,
Y E L I J O W
S N U F F .
to " Our Camp Journal."
for the purpose of determining the votes given for Stattj g e o t e l i .
Hinev Pew Scotch.
Officers on the Sixth day of April. A. I)., 1863. have
t o a s t Scotch,
K r e s h H o n e y Dew S c o t c h ,
THE STRAITS OP MACKINAW OPEN.—WO>aw a gentle- declared toe following as the result of their invcstigi
Irish H i g h Toast,
Fresh Scotch,
or i.undyfoot.
man on Monday last, who passed through the ^traits on tion :
THAN W E CAN
A
t
t
e
n
t
i
o
n
i
s
c
a
l
l
e
d
t
o
t
h
o l a r g e r e d a c t i o n in p r i c e s
The whole number of votes given for Associate Justice
Saturday, on the Wenona. There was considerable
of F i n e - C u t C h e w i n g und i w o k i u g i o b a c c o s , w h i c h w i l l be
of the Supreme Court was-two hundred and siirty-st
floating ice, but vessels and propellers werd working and they were given for the following persons, one hun- f o u n d '.if n S u p e r i o r Q u a l i t y .
R
E
P
L
A C E T H E M ^
Ton.vcco.
through. He saw the Alleghany in the StnaiU on Satur- dred and aiuety-eight lot James V. Campbell and s
;c.
n . V K C C T CIIKW1.N0.
nine for Dnvid Johnson.
day, working her wny through.
r . A. U . o r p l a i n .
S. J a g o
Long.
A
n
d
a
s
o
u
r
p
o
s
i
t
i
o
n places us where we necessarily are
The whole number oi votes given for Circuit Judge
Cavendish, or Sweet.
Spanish,
apprised of these facts, we should onlv d o o n r friend* justice
Sweet R e n t e d Orinoco.
Canaster,
• Tho Medical Hoard, convened to make pnl^s for ex. of the Ninth Circuit, was two hundred and sixty-seven,
I £ 'J m i x e d .
^ T i n Foil Cavendish.
T u r k i s h . to lay t h e m a t t e r before t h e m . F o r the benefit of s u c h w a ,
empts for disability under tho Conscriptipn Act, has and they were given for the followiugporsons, one hunw
o
u
l
d
n
a
m
e
t
h
e
f
o
l
l
owing t
-•initiated.
dred aud ninety-four for William I. jjoruwell, seventy— A c i r c u l a r of p r i c c s w i l l b e s e n t o n a p p l i c a t i o n .
closed its proceed ibgs and laid a report before the Secre. two for Flayius J. Iittlejohu, and oixj for Josephus Lit(U-lj.)
tarv of War.
tlejohn.
The whole number of votes given for Regents of the
O R D i a t OK PITB UIC ATION,
Je&.Davis is blind in one eye, and likoly t
University was two thousand one hundred and thirty-six. i S r i T K O K M i C K H U S ' . — N i n t h . I u d i c i n i " C i r c n i t , i n C h a n c e r y .
and they were given for the following persons, one huti- i
ANSA JOHNSON, C o m p l a i n a n t .
otbo* by a
OF NEARLY ALL KINDS,
dred and nighty eight for Henry C. (Knight, one hunC i t u t s T i a N JOHNSON. D e f e n d a n i dred and ninety-eight for Thomas D.1 Gilbert, one hunT H E LATEST NEWS.
i
dred and ninetj-cight for Edward C. Walker, one hun- ' U I T P E N D I S C . I N T H E C I R O I / I T C O f U t T F O I t T H F .
CL
O
'1UIN G,y HA It WA H B,
>
C
o
u
n
t
v
o
f
G
r
a
n
d
T
r
a
v
e
r
i
e
.
i
n
C
i
i
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.
u
t
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h
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a
g
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f
dred and ninety-eight for J. Eastman! Johnson, one hunFrom Charleston.
U e g a u . i n t h e C o n u t y ..f A i l - g a l . , iu t h e h l a t e o f M i c h i g a n ,
NEW YORK, April 14.—The steamer ArajJo has ar- dred and ninety-eight for Guorge Wijlard, one hundred n t v i t h i l a v o f M a ' e l i , A . D . . 1< :S. I i e f o r e H o n . F l a v i n s J .
and ninety-eight for Jamea A Sweezey. one hundred
IRON, N A I L S , '
rived from Port Royal, 11th, via Charleston Bar.— and ninety-eight for Alvah Sweetzerj and one hundred SIttt lscajtoi bs fna. cCt ot 'rrirluyi t JBrp. id»g-ea r tnntu C ht ha amt b etrh*e. d e f e n d a n t , C h r i s t ! :
Among her passengers are Gen. Truman Seymour and apd ninety-eight for Thomas J. 'Joslii), sixty-nine for Oli- . j i i i i i o n . i s a n » i i - r e * i d e u t o j l l i i s S t a l e b u t i s a r e s i d e n t of
•e S t a t e ' Of T e n n e s s e e . <>n m o t i o n of
U. Marsh, of C f i i u s e l
ver
C.
Comstock,
sixty-nine
for
William
A.
Moor.,
i>taf£ Gen- Gordon, M. de Lcbourg, French .Consul at
,r f o m p l a i n a n t , i l l s o r d e r e d t h a t s a i d d e f e n d a n t . C h r i s t i a n
sixty-nine for Zina Pitcher, sixty-niue for Charles A.
entered
Charleston.
CAS81MERES, BATTINET8, CROCKERY,
of this
The New South, of tho 11th inst., snya'thc fight was Richmond, sixty-oino for Nathaniel A Baleh, sixty-nine
i tho
mplsi
for Adam L. Roof, sixty-nine for Elijah F. Uurt, sixty,
. c o p y of h i s s a i d a h s n e r t o t»resumed oo tho 10th, but with what result it could uot nino for Joseph Coulter.
,
•oli-itor, w i t h i n t w : r y days aft
Furniture, Tobacco,
,
We, tho Chairman and Secretary, of the Board o' es ed rovni c Iehoe fcao mc opptya o f a
ascertain It adds, that Fort Sumter i» prohablj
>ili, a n d n o t i c e o f t h i s o r d e r , a n d
Canvassers do herebv certify that the "hove is a correct d e f a a l t t h e r e o f t h a t f t h i l i d b i l l b e t a k e n a s c o n f e s s e d b y t h e
breached by this time.
C b r i s t a i n J u h n s o n , a n d It is f u r t h e r o r d e r e d
said defend.i
The Purser or tho Arago in his report tays IronsideB statement of the result of said Canvujs.
i, ty , ! a \ s t l i e r a i d c o m p l a i n a n t c a u s a n c o p y o r
CURTIS FOWI.EII, Chnirman.
that within l
• p u b l i s h e d ill t h e G r a n d T r a v e r s e H e r a l d , a
and six iron-clads were still off Charleston Bar on
t!-.N o r d e r t '
JAJIES P. BRAKP, Secretary.
t e d a n d p u b l i s h e d a t T r a v e r s e C i t y , ill s a i d
ilth.
d Traverse, and the said publication be eonC o u n t y of
;
of
Votes
by
least o n c e in e a c h w e e k l o r s i * w e e k s
Nothing has transpired since the bombardment of the
fled i l l M
STATIONARY
cfc BOOKS,
i be
7th.
aid defc-n
,«i!y - e r
Gen. Hunter and army would leave for Port Royal
HARNESSES, WALL PAPER, HATS k CAPS.
the next day.
" A word to the trisc Is snfGcicnt."
NEW YORK, April 14.—Southern mlviaus per the
Argus, state that the iron-clad Patapasco went to Port
Royal, was there repaired, and again returned to service.
Associate Justice.
NAM of the vessels except the Keokuk wcito seriously J a m e s V. C a m p b e l l
M O R T t J A U K f
injured The rest of the fleet lay insido of / Charleston D a v iCd i r cJ uo iht nJ ns od gn e. ., . .
THF. CONDIJ - ^ K F A l ' L T ll.t VIN'i ^I'Ki'N J
Flavins J. I.iltlejohn,
Bar, on Saturday evening.
Josepluis Littlejohn
•anil < i c h ' l i ' m - T H A N " E V E R B E F O R E . W H I C H W I L L R E H ' R C H A S E D
of D e c e m b e r , i n t h - y e n r o f "UT l / - n
Port of the land forces had sailed for Port Royal.
W i l l i a m I. C o r u w e l l
nte of M a c o m b
R
e
g
e
n
t
s
o
f
S
t
a
t
e
C
n
l
v
o
m
i
t
y
,
HJO design of attacking Charleston is not yet abandonM a r y H. H a t e s
4(i|TClzr ! ' •
iry C . K n i g h t
ed, and the coafidcuce of our naval officer^ is in no deF O R
C i J . S U
mas D. Gilbert,
Edward C. Walker,
gree ,Shaken.
J. Eastman Johnson
I
The Arago brings the following intelligence : The G e o r g e W i l l a r d
,
li s a i d M o r t ;
gunboat Washington ran aground on tho Sth inst in J a m e s A . S w o e a e y ,
» notice the
gftgi ilie: e
Alvah Sweeter.
sand nine h u n d r e d stii^lbirty
Broad River, near Port Royal Ferry. Thu E. B. Hale T h o m a s J . J o s i i n
f o r t v - n i n e c«-tits: nnfl n o s u i t o r p r o c e e d i n g s at l a w h a v i n g
went to her assistance, but to no purpose- The rebels O l i v e r C . C o a a s t o c k
b e e n i n s t i t u t e ' ! t o recover a n y p a r t t h e r e o f , n o t i c e i« t h e r e William A. Moore.
f o r e i i e r e i - y d i v e r t t l i n n o n S a t u r d a y , t h e n i n t h d a y o f Mi»y
brought down a light battery, and firing pn her, a chance i n a P l t e b e r ,
n e x t a* t - u o ' r i -cii i n t i n - f o r e n o A n . n t t h e E m m e t . C o u n t y
AND WITH THE
ehot struck her magazine, causing the destruction of the N a t h a n i e l A B a i c b
LESS RATES
COTTON GOODS
....
• .. • j
aF'm.-a.rsrisrzEiL.s,
Boots and Shoes,
FULLY COMPLETE
BEST MARKETS
gunboat. Two men were killed, two martaity wounded,
and eight slightly, all of the 3rd R. I. Artillery.
WASHIXOTOK. April 14.—A special dispatch to the
Post says tho Government is making preparations *for a
draft to fill up the old regiments which hava been deplet.
ed by the casualties of the service. The State of New
York will be among the first called upon for fresh troope
The report is current iu English circles bp re that Mr.
Seward sent on Saturday a second dispatch to Great
Britain, io which he said tven more flatly than
pervious dispatch, that unless the British government
prevented, tho vessels of war now constructing in its ports
from sailing out it would; bo a breach of trust of the
friendly relations existing between Great ! Britain and
this country, of which the.United States jcould hardly
(ail to take notice.
The report that Lieut Col. Kimball, offthe Hawkins
Zouaves, was shot by Gen. Corcoran sfc* disobedience
of orders, was prevalent at Fortress Monr<*y>u Sunday.
I t is certain (hat Kimball died in somcju^terious way-
M
C h a r l e s A. "Richmond
A d a m L. R o o f .
Elijah F. Bart
J o t a p b Cotiltrr
D I E D ,
I n G l e n A r b o r , A p r i l 13,18C3, a f t e r i
i l l n e s s of a b o u t t h r e e m o n t h s , Mrs. 1-s
ol Francis McCany, aged t i years.
O B I T U A R Y .
D i e d F e b . 20tb, a t t h e teaider.ee of h e r b r o t h e r - i n - l a i r . M r .
G . M a n i g a n , n e a r W e l l i n g t o n . l>a., J l i s s I s a b e l l a I . F i f e , i n
the ?2d y e a r of her age.
T h i s y o u n g l a d y w a s a s i s t e r o f Mtfe. J o s e p h G . T h o m a s o f
Salem, Ohio, and o f W R U n n H. Fife, ofLittle T r a v e r s e . Mieb.
M o s t ofh e r fife w a s s p e n t in S a l e m find v i c i n i t y .
She was
t h e y o u n g e s t of t w e l v e c h i l d r e n , a n u m b e r that, i r x i u n b r o ken, until hor sudden and unexpected death.
After h a v i n g m s d e very considerable a d v a n c e m e n t in stud y i n t h e S c l c c t s c h o o l of t h e M e s s r s H o l e , of D a m a s c u s , s h e
e n t e r e d t h e F e m a l e S e m i n a r y , of , W a s h i n g t o n , w h e r e s h e
g r a d u a t e d w i t h h o n o r i n a c l a s s o t t w e n t y , S e p t e m b e r , ISC I .
O f this clasg four a l r e a d y lie iu t h e cold a n d silent g r a v e .
Soon after leaving Washington, s h e removed with her mot h e r t o Tyner, Indiana. Lost s u m m e r she visited h e r bister,
Mrs.Thomas, when h e r chgaging manners ami peculiarly
h e a l t h f u l a p p e a r a n c e w e r e rcmarkeU by all h e r friends.
In
S e p t e m b e r s h e left S a l e m for W a s h i n g t o n , anil h a d t h e ' p l e a -
C o u r t l i u u s e . V«-:iig t h e p h , o r f o r h o l d i n g tl.«- C i r e t . i t C o u r t
f „ r said K t n m r t ("aisnly, in U ; t ! e T r a v e r s e , i n said C o u u t y
of E m m e t , i s h a l l i w l i a t p u b l i c a u c t i o n t o t h e h i g h e « t b i d d e r ,
t h e p r e m i s e * d e s c r i b e d iu said «iortzai.'e or s o m u c h t h e r e o f
as shall be n e c e s s a r y to satisfy the a m o u n t d u e on said
m o r t g a g e a t t h i - d a t e . With interest, a t t h e
rate
of t e n p e r
c e n t |.er a n n u m , legal costs and e x p e n s e s , a n d a n A t t o r n e y s
fee of t w e n t y - l i v e d o U a r * c o v e n a n t e d t o he p a i d i n f.iid m o r t g a g e ; t h a ^ a i d p r e m i s e * b e i n g descrilwd in said m o r t g a g e as
all t h o s e c e r t a i n t r a c t s o r p a r c e l s of l a n d «itu ite a n d b e i n g
i n t h e C o u n t y o f E m m e t . I n t h o S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , t o w i t :
E a s t half of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n t h i r t y . » i x ; the
w e s t h a l f o f t h o s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r , t h e n o r t h e a s t q u a r t e r of
t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r a n d t h e n o r t h w r s t q u a r t e r of t l K
s o u t h e a s t q u a r t e r of u r c t l o n thirtv-fivc ; t h e s o u t h half a n d
t h e s o u t h h a l f of t h e n o r t h w e s t q r - j r t e r o f s e c t i o n t h i r t y - f o u r ,
also t h e s o u t h eaat q u a r t e r a n d t h e s o o t h h a l f of t h e n o f t n
e a s t q u a r t e r of s o c t i o n t h i r t y - t h r e e , all b e i n g i n T o w n s h i p
t h i r t v - s e v e n n o r t h of R a n g e four, w e s t
alio tho n o r t h fract i o n il I n t f f o f - e c t i o n t h r e e , t h e w e s t f r a c t i o n a l h a l f o f t h e
n o r t h west fractional q u a r t e r of s-vtion two : t h e n o r t h e a s t
f r a c t i o n a l q u a r t e r a n d t h e w e s t h a l l of t h e s o u t h w e s t q u a r t e r of s e c t i o n o n e , in t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - f i x n/>rth o f , r a n g e f o u r
srest, a n d also t h e went p a c t i o n a l half of t h e n o r t h w e s t
f r a c t i o u s ! q u a r t e r o f s c c ' J o n s i x , in t o w n s h i p t h i r t y - a i x n o r t h
of r a n g e t h r e e west, c o n t a i n i n g i n all fifteen h u n d r e d a n d
1
s e v e n t y t w o a c r e s $j>d 3 1 - 1 * 0 o f a n a c r e m o r e o r l e s s .
D a t e d F e b r u a r v 1st. 1 W 3 .
LEWIS ALLEN, Mortgagee.
S EARNED. Attornev.
( P r i n t e r ' s f e w S I " 60- N
(91!w.^
U T M O S T
C A R E .
Relieving, as we do, t h a t t h e successful m e r c h a n t la h e
w h o k e e p s i n a d v a n c e o f t h e w a n t s of h i s c u s t o m e r s , w e shall
SPA-EE
To always have o n
hand
JSTO P A . I 1 V S
such
goods as
the
wants of the
Country
Seem to Demand,
EX CELLED
B Y NONE
In the country, and our Warc-Rooros are not equalled, w o
• h a l l reasonably e x p e c t , w i t h t b e s p e c i a l a d v a n u g e s a b o v e
e n u n c i a t e d , t o h a v e I h e p a t r o n a g e of all t h o s e w h o b e l i e v e
t h a t - a p e n n y saved is aa good as two e a r n e d . "
H A N N A H ,
e C i t y , A p r i l . IS, 1653-,
L A Y
4
C O .
Retrospection.
An old m i u . s a t by the collage fire,
And be watched the children p U y ;
And a t e a r stole down bia aged check,
But be wiped i t n o t a w a v ;
F o r bia thoughts had wandered back agaii
To the scenes of other year*.
And his spirit h a d found a g l a d r e l i e f
In the falling of Ma tears.
\.
Again be played on the dear old beartli.!
And hq h e a r d a mother's voice,
And t h e gentle tones fell on hi# e a r *
And they made bis h e a r t rejoice;
Again he joined in tbo blind man'jj bud".
And the game of bide and seek,
And be heard bis little sister's voice,
So get) tie, s o f t a n d meek.
. Then in t h e shade by the woodland dell,
l i e t a U with bis picture book.
,
Or wandered to seek some wild .bird's n t s t
That b a n g o'er t h e r i p p l i n g brook.
Till, tirod a n d weary of boyhood's p|ay.
He turned t o b i s home again.
By the rustic stile and the broken bridge.
And tho abady old green lane.
•
And thus the old man s a t and muj-ed.
And the tears fell down big cheek.
And a happier hour it wag to him
Than the old man's tongue could speak,
Y
™ h e k n e w ' t W B S b 0 * 8 P e a s a n t dream*
T h a t t o o soon had passed o'er—
That b U e y e s w e r o d i m a n d his lock* wore gray,
And he should bo y o u n g no rcort.
e r t y . I n the absence of C o n g r e s s , a n d in t h e e x t r e m e
peril of t h e c o u n t r y , w i t h t h e plain provision or t h e Cons t i t u t i o n before h i m w h i c h a llo w s t h e suspension w i t h o u t
Darning t h e s u s p e n d i n g power, h e did e x a c t l y w h a t W i l liam I I I , w h a t any c l e a r - s i g h t e d and honest s u p r e m e exec u t i v e officer, would instinctively h a v e done. A t j t h e same
time h e gammoned C o n g r e s s a n d d i r e c t l y u p o c assembling laid the case b e f o r e t h e m in a f e w w o r d s of simple
g o o d sense, w h i c h w e r e - p r o d u c e h e r e a s most t i m e i y a n d
wise, a n d i n d i c a t i v e of t h a t candor and s a g a c i t y w h i c h
are n o t less r e m a r k a b l e i n t h e P r e s i d e n t t h a n his u n s w e r v i n g fidelity, n o t only t o t h e laws, b u t also, what i s
t o u s a n u n a c c u s t o m e d s p e c t a c l e in t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n of
the P r e s i d e n t i a l office, not t o t h e s p i r i t of the laws.
•• T h e w h o l e of t h e laws w h i c h w e r e r e q u i r e d t o b e
faithfully e x e c u t e d w e r e b e i o g resisted, a n d (ailing of exe c u t i o n in nearly one-third o f t h e States. M u s t t h e y be allowed t o finally fail o f e x e c u t i o n , even h a d it been p e r f e c t l y
c l e a r ' t h a t , b y t h e use of t h e m e a n s necessary t o t h e i r execution, some single law m a d e in s u c h e x t r e m e tenderness of
the citizen's l i b e r t y t h a t p r a c t i c a l l y i t r e l i e v e s m o r e o f t h e
guilty t h a n t h o innocent, should, t o a v e r y limited e x t e n t ,
be violated I
T o s t a t e t h e question m o r e directly, a r e
all t h e l a w s but one t o g o unexecuted, a n d t h e Governm e n t itself g o t o pieces Test t h a t ODO b e violated ? E v e n
in s u c h a c o s e , . w o n l d n o t tho official o a t h bo broken, if
t h e G o v e r n m e n t should b e o v e r t h r o w n , w h e n i t ' i s believed t h a t d i s r e g a r d i n g tho single law would tend to pres e r v e i t J B a t i t was n o t believed t h a t t h i s question
was p r e s e n t e d . I t w a s n o t believed t h a t any law was
r i o l a t e d . T h e p r o v i s i o n of the C o n s t i t u t i o n t h a t •• the
p r i v i l e g e o f t h e w r i t of habeas corpus shall n o t be suspended unless w h e n , in cases of rebellion or iuvasion,
the p u b l i c s a f e t y may reauire i t , " is e q u i v a l e n t t o a provision—is a p r o v i s i o n — t h a t s u c h p r i v i l e g e may be susp e n d e d , w h e n , in cases of rebellion o r invasion, tho p u b lic s a f e t y does require i t
I t w a s d e c i d e d t h a t we h a v e
a case o f rebellion, a n d t h a t p u b l i c s a f e t y does r e q u i r e
t h e qualified suspension o f t h e w r i t w h i c h was authorized t o b e m a d e . N o w It i s insisted t h a t Congress, and
n o t t h e . E r e c u t i v c , be vested with t h i s p o w e r . B u t tho
C o n s t i t u t i o n itself i s silent a s t o w h i c h , o r w h o is t o exercise t h i s p o w e r ; a n d a s t h e provisions a r a plainly made
f o r a d a n g e r o u s emergency, it c a n n o t b e believed t h a t
t h e f r a m e r e of t h e i n s t r u m e n t i n t e n d e d t h a t in every case
t h o d a n g e r should r u n i t s c o u r s e n n t i l C o n g r e s s could b e
called t o g o t h e r ; tfye very a s s e m b l i n g of w h i c h m i g h t b e
p r e v e n t e d , a s was intenflod in t h i s case, b y the rebellion.
H o t h e n s u b m i t s all necessary legislation u p o n the subj e c t t o " t h e b e t t e r j u d g e m e n t " of Congress, aud Cong r e s s h a s responded b y t h e a c t w h i c h p a t r i o t s of t h e
M a r s h a l l K a n e rehool d e c l a r e t o bo s u b e r s i v c of all t h e
l i b e r t y of t h o citizens t o c o n s p i r e a g a i n s t the unity a n d
e x i s t e n c e of t h e nation.
T h e w h o l e question is most t h o r o u g h l y a n d exhaustively discussed in M r . F i s h e r s •• T r i a l or the C o n s t i t u t i o n . "
THE LAW COMtSMG COVEENMEM CLAlIS.
NATIONAL
BOUNTY
INSURANCE
CO.
Capital, $100,000.
BOUNTY.
BOUNTY 16 OP T H E N A T C B E O F A G I F T , OB
gratuity. I n this war $100, aa a bounty, is doe to the
widow or heirs of deceased soldier* and t o discharged soldiers who shall serve for two years, or to the close of the
wa*.if sooner ended. In cases of deceased soldiers i t i a d a e :
let. To the widow, if there be one ; 2nd, T o the children, if i
widow ; 3d,- To the father, mother, or brothers a n d listers,
the case may be, provided they b« residents of the United
States. Commissioned officer* a n d soldiers discharged before two years' sirvice. and their heirs in case of their death,
are n o t entitled, as the law now is, to any Bounty.
PENSIONS
Pensions were formerly an annaal p a y m e n t in consideration of past services. It has been extended in m o d e m times
to those who bavo become disabled, and to the dependent
heirs of those who lose their lives in service. I t i» dne '
this war to soldiers disabled in service in the line of dnty.
Of,deceased soldiers it is duo : 1st, T o the widow, if there be
one : 2d, To the children u n d e r t 5 years of tgo ; 3d, To the
mother dependent wholly or partly ; 4th, To fee sisters n n d e r
l i years, dependent wholly or partly upon any deceased sol
dier who may be killed or dies of disease contracted
wounds received in service and in the line of dnty.
H a t e s o f P e n s i o n s . — T o a non-commissioned offlcer,
musician or private, if totally disabled, or to thair widow or
dependent heir, if deceased, $8 per month ; to 2d Lieutenants
$15 ; 1st Lieutenants, $17 ; to Captains, $10 ; to Majors,
$25 ; To Lieutenant Colonels and all h i g h e r grades. $30 per
m o n t h . Pees in Pension cases are only $5.
BACK PAY.
Is due to discharged soldiers to the time t h e y are actually
discharged. The undersigned have superior advantages f o r
speedily collecting the i>ay and claimsof discharged soldiers.
Back Pay is due the widows or heirs of deceased soiaiers
nearly the same order as Bounty.
Tbc father, mother.
Other heirs need not be residents of the United 8tates.
MINORS.
The War Department forbids the e n l i i t m e n t of minors
n n d e r I S years of age. Ordinarily they will be rejected
such enlistments are properly reported.
In all cases of Soldiers' Pay, Pensions, Bounty, and in fact
all j u s t claims and accounts agalust i h e Government, the
undersigned have the most perfect facilities f o r theii
Speedy collection.
•*
Discharged Soldiers who have not got their pay we a r c daily rendering the most important assistance to, besides seeing
lhat they secure all d a e t h e m on t r a n s p o r t a t i o n , aubsistenee,
clothing, rations, Ac,
R a t i o n s . — S o l d i e r s are entitled t o the cost price of
tions in money while absent on] furloughs, or other competent authority, which money we readily secure.
Government Vouchers, Recruiting, Quartermaster and
Commissary Accounts accurately made u p at our office and
collected.
All j u s t Military a n d Naval Contracts, Clainw and Losses
adjusted and collected OQ application, either by mail or "
person, to
ROBINSON A BROOKS,
Authorized War Claim •Attorneys,
S N Y D E R ,
A
(Organized
19,
W I L L I A M S
by Permission
k
Cl).
of the .lutkorilits,}'
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
GO
On the payment to this Company, or any of Ita authorised
agents, o f t h e sum of$S0, it will Usnc a certificate of insurance, binding itself t o pay to such person the sum of F i v *
BC.VDRKD DOLLIRS, in case t h e y a r e drafted into the Nava 1
or Military Service o f t h e United States, prior to December
31st. 1866, or during the war. In the same proportion t h i s
Company will insure any person liable to do Military dnty,
in any sum from $100 t o $5,000, but not more than $5 ooo on
any one life. T h i s C o m p a n y also insures those in t h e service, officers and privates, against wounds or death, during
the present war, thus enabling all p r u d e n t soldiers to provide
their families against want, in case they fall in battle—die—
or are so wounded as to be disabled from supporting them.
'
To the manly virtues of bravery and patriotism that calied
the soldier to the field, let him add the crowning excellence
of a p r u d e n t provision f o r his family, in case he never return. then will he be remembered with gratitude, as one t h a t
discharged his whole duty t o his God—his country—his
family.
Our rates for insurance a g a i n s t wounds a n d death are a t
follows, t o w i t :
$10 on a hundred
—
against wounds.
"
"
"
— . . . . . —......
"
death.
Our certificates of insurance are assignable—are i a t e a d e d
to be assigned to the family for their care, support a n d relief, in caao the events occur upon which they are payable.
A s many in the service are where It would be impossible
for them to provide for their families in this wav, the wife
father, or brother, or any. Individual feeling a n ' i n t e r e s t l n
the family of the soldier, may insure them against wounda or
death. What can mortal man do nobler, than to present the
family of the soldier with an insurance upon bis l i b , or
agaisst wounds, thus at once placing them beyond the reach
of poverty, in case their p r o t e c t o r never returns. This i s a
system of substantial charity towards the dependent families
of volunteers, t h a t has been commenced by our wealthy citizens, and will be continued by the worthier portions o r
them. What can our wealthy a n d patriotic citizens do, t h a t
will go f u r t h e r to increase enlistments and assist the Gove r n m e n t , than t n say t o o u r hardy laboring men " i r y o n
will enlist. I Will insure y o u r life until you return, for $100
—$500—$1,000, for the benefit of your family."
The rates of basis upoh which t h i s Company Insure i s
founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the mortality of wars for the last 600 years, and leaves bnt a reasons
ble margin f o r profit for the Company, while it places tho
families of those insured beyond want and destitution from
• niy
v nof
f thi*
l r l « v l l m l p « n of
f \VW
nr
thovvicissitudes
This is the only Insurance Company in the United Btates
t h a t was organized especially for this purpose.
T h e Barber's Ghost, f
A gentleman t r a v e l i n g in one of t h o e a s t e r c S t a t e s ,
s o m e y e a r s a g o , called a t a t a v e r n , a n d r e q u e s t e d entert a i n m e n t for the n i g h t . T h e l a n d l o r d i n f o r m e d h i m t h u t
it waa o a t of bid p o w e r t o a c c o m m o d a t e h i m . a s h i s h o u s e
was already foil
H e persisted, a s h i m s d f a n d horeo
w e r e e x h a u s t e d w i t h t r a v e l i n g . A f t e r m u c h solicitation,
t h o landlord consented t o h i s s t o p p i n g , p r o v i d e d ho would
s l e e p tn a c e r t a i n r o o m t h a t h a d not b e e n o p c o p i c d f o r a
long t i m e , in c o n s e q u e n c e of a belief t h a t i t was h a u n t e d
b y t h e g h o s t of a b a r b e r , w h o w a s r e p o r t e d t o h a v e been
m u r d e r e d in t h a t r o o m some y e a r s before.
'* y « * y w e f t ? says t h e man, " I ' m n o t a f r a i d of g h o s t s . "
A f t e r h a v i n g r e f r e s h e d himself, h e i n q u i r e d of t b o landlord how a n d in w h a t manner, tho r o o m in w h i c h he was
t o lodgo was h a u n t e d . T h o l a n d l o r d replied t h a t s h o r t l y
a f t e r t h e y retired t o rest an u n k n o w n v o i t e w a s h e a r d
a s k i n g in a t r e m b l i n g a n d p r o l o n g e d a c c e n t : •' D o you
want to g e t s h a v e d ?
, ;i
" W e l l , replied t h o m a n , " if ho 'comesihe m a y shave
mo."
I
H e t h e n requested t o b e s h o w n t o t h e a p a r t m e n t , in
g o i n g t o w h i c h he was c o n d u c t e d t h r o u g h a l a r g e r o o m
A d v a n t a g e s of I n s m i n g i u t h i s C o m p a n y .
where wereaeated a g r e a t n u m b c r o f p a t t o o i a t o g a m b l i n g
1st.—In the case oi citizens i n s u r i n g svtns f o r their famit a b l e , f e e l i n g n g r e a t c u r i o s i t y w h i c h a l m o s t every o n e
lies, if d r a n e d : If no draft takes place in tho county where
DETROIT, MICL,
possesses, a f t e r h a v i n g h e a r d g h o s t s t o r i e s , h o carefully
Ornot—No. 149 Jefferson Avcuue. over Ives' Bank, op- t h e insured resides, half the insurance money will be refunded.
posite Office U. S. Military Commander.
searched e v e r y c o r n e r of his r o o m , b u t c o u l d discover no2nd.—Our insurance in regard t o the d r a f t covers n o t o n l y
t h i n g b u t thff usual f u r n i t u r e of t h o a p a r t m e n t . H o then
the present draft, but all future ones.
lay d o w n a n d ; i n a few m i n u t e s i m a g i u e d h e i h e a r d a voice
HUMAN REMAINS DISCOVERED AT P O J H - B I I . — G a l i g n a n i
3d.—Oar Company insure for any sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
saying:—
(
i circumstances of insured.
p u b l i s h e s t h e f o l l o w i n g c a r i o u s s t o r y : A v e r y interest4th.—The m e n who have invested their c a p i t a t In t h i s
" Do you xxi-n-t
to be sh-ao-e-d
t" i n g d i s c o v e r y h a s j u s t been m a d e bv M. Florell'i, tho inSplendid nnd Appropriate dlolidny Present.
Company have been well known to the business c o m m a a i t y
H o a r o s e f r o m h i s b e d a n d s e a r c h e d e v e r y p a r t of t h o s p e c t o r o r t h o e x c a v a t i o n s a t P o m p e i i . W h i l e d i g g i n g
f o r the past fourteen years.
room, b u t coold d i s c o v e r a o t h i n g . H e again w e n t t o b e d , a t a d e p t h of from e i g h t t o ten feet t h o p i c k a x e s t r u c k
SiaiE. D E M O R E S T ' S "
5th.—The capital or this Company will a o t be employed la
b u t n o sooner: h a d he b e g u n t o composo; himself t o sleep, into a littlo m a a s ' o f c o i n s a n d jewels.
M . Florelli t h e n
KCNNING 8TICH
Banking or Real Estate operations, but will remain in U. R.
than the question was
repeated.
H e agtfin a r o s e a n d c p n t i n e d t h e e x c a v a t i o n w i t h t b o g r e a t e s t care, removG o v e r n m e n t Stocks, a n d will only be converted so fast as
may be necessary t o meet the liabilities of the Company t o
w e n t t o t h o w j n d o w , f r o m w h i c h q u a r t e r t h o sound ai
i n g t h e e a r t h g r a i n b y g r a i n , a n d . a f t e r s o m e labor, wa3
the insured;
, p e a r e d t o proceed, a n d stood silent. A f t e r a few m< rewarded
b y t h e d i s c o v e r y in t h o h a r d e n e d a ^ e s of t h e
. . makes the' r u n n i n g *tich> very
6th.—The Company ai •e bonnd t o take risks t o no m o r e
mcnta of sospenac, h e a g a i n h e a r d t b o s o u n d distinctly, p e r f e c t m o u l d of a m a n in a l y i n g p o s t u r e , t h e ekio of rapidly and perfect, uses a common needle, and will last a t h a n $100,000,
lifetime. A t the New York State Pair, i t s simplicity, efficiena n d convinced t h a t - i t c a m e f r o m w i t h o u t , he o p e n e d t h e w h o m h a d d r i e d up, b u t t h e s k e l e t o n remained i n t a c t
Responsible agents wanted In every county in the United
cy,
a
u
d
great
practical
utility,
was
confirmed
by
the
award
of
w j n d o w , w h e n t h o q u e s t i o n w i s repeated fiill'in his ear, M . F l o r e l l i caused p la s te r of P a r i s t o bo poured into t h e
States. They m u s t give references of strict i n t e g r i t y a n d
the Pirst Premium.
responsibility,
Those desiring to be insured where a g e n u
w h i c h s t a r t l e d h i m n o t a ' i i t t l e . U p o n a m i n u t e e.xami- torm o r t h o P o m p e i m n , a n d t h o c a s t i n g s u c c e e d e d p e r It will gather. Raffle, shirr, tack, ran up breadths, etc., with a r e not v e t a p p o l n t e d , will remit to the Company, at 69 Wallnation, however, h o o b se r v e d t h a t t h o i h n b i o f ' a l a r g e oak fectly w i t h t h e e x c e p t i o n of t w o f r a g m e n t s of un a r m
single or double thread on any materia! adapted t o the run- street, N. Y , (by express), a sum of money sufficient to cover
t i w , w h i c h stood u n d e r t h e window, p r o j e c t e d so n e a r a n d a leg, w h e r e t h e inoald w a s i n c o m p l e t e .
T h e cast ning stlch. The thinnest, usually the most difficult t o s t i t c h the Company's per ceijtage on tbo a m o u a t desired t o be int h o hOnso t h a t e v o r y b r e a t h o f wind, t o a lively i m a g i n a - o r t h e m a n ' s of t h e g r e a t e s t p r e c i s i o n ; t h e m o u s t a c h e , by other sewing machines, being sewed th«j easiest. For sured ; and if It be a ciUzen desiring t o insure a sum for his
ladies' a n d children's apparel, and o t h e r articles- made of family, in case he is afterwards drafted, he will, give his n a m e ,
t i o n , m a d e a noise resembling t h o i n t e r r o g a t i o n : —
t h e fotds of t h e d r e s s a n d t h e s a n d a l s a r e a d m i r a b l e de- l i g h t fabrics, it will t h e r e f o r e be found almost invaluable.
age a n d residence, i n t b e a soldier, he will give name, a g e ,
" D o y o u w a n t be s h a d e d ? "
fined.
T h e rumous q u e s t i o n of t h e T h c s s a u r u i n of G r o It Is attached t o the table like a sewiog bird, and h a v i n g
and the Company o f t h e Regiment t o w h i c b h c belongs, the
H a v i n g satisfied himself tlmt t h e g h o s t was n o t h i n g n n v m a a n d G r e v i n s is n o w d e c i d e d ; t h e R o m a n s did
usion, a n d requiring no lubrication or c h a n g e of stich, is number of the Regiment and State i t is from, also the resim o r e n o r loss t h a n t h e l i m b of a t r e e c o m i n g in c o u t a c t w e a r d r a w e r s . A l s o archaeologists will be delighted at always ready for operation, and such a marvel of simplicity dence of bis family. If it be wire, brother, father, or f r i e n d s
w i t h t h e h o u s e , fce a g a i n w e n t t o b e d a n d a t t e m p1 t e d t o d i s c o v e r i n g t h e manner, in w h i c h t h e ancients fastened that a child of s i x or e i g h t y e a r s can u n d e r s t a n d it, a n d ~
of the family that desire to take out an insurance u p o n t h o
successfully.
mtf n c l n o n h n f n , f l n
.f I 1 i '
absent soldier, t h e y will give his name and age, and also the
c e t asleep, b u t was annoyed bL .y. p e a l1_s of
laufchter ' o r vol- t h e i r sandals, a n d at seeing t h e heel o r a shoe: completely
It is not at all liable t o get out of order.
Company, Regiment and State t o which it belongs. The apleys of o a t h s a n d curses f r o m t h e r o o m w l i t r e t h e gam- p r o t e c t e d w i t h iron.
/
Each maob!no is put up in a n e a t box, accompanied with plicant f o r t h e policy will also give the name a n d residence
b l e r s were assembled, a n d c o n c l u d e d t o t a r n t h e g h o s t
full and e x p l i c i t directions, and twenty'flve needles.
of
tho wife or the person for whose benefit the insurance I s
hi
Sent to any addre.-s in the United States on receipt of
^ 7 }°
» own a d v a n t a g e . h e t o o k a s h e e t f r o m
procured.
S
A
IE B
U
A
K
,° M ' ?
/
—
c o r r e s p o n d e n t from t h e
, Apply to, or address,
t h e h e d w r a p p e d i t aroun^l hiin, a n d t h r o w i n g n towel b a t t l e fiold. s p e a k i n g o r t h e effects o f a p a s s i n g riffie ball, order, inclosing the amount, or may be collected by E x p r e s s
on delivery of tbo machine.
SNYDER, WILLIAMS 4 Co..
oVer-his a r m , w e n t t o t h e r o o m of t h e g a m b l e r s , a n d
When the money i» sent with the order a n d ' r e g i s t e r e d ,
69 Wall-street, N. Y.
t h r o w i n g t h e d o o r w i d e ' o p e n , s t a l k e d in, asking, ii
guarantee its safe receipt and the delivery of j h e machine,
B u t t h o m o s t s i n g u l a r thing, a n d w h i c h I d o Dot re-Money may be sent in registered letters, or by ext rem ul ous r o i c o , —
V
anywhere within 2000 miles free of any Express charges.
press, at our risk.
m e m b e r t o h a v e h e a r d m e n t i o n e d h e r e t o f o r e , is t h e efVery liberal a r r a n g e m e n t for agencies.
• ' D o y o u w a n t t o bo s h a v e d f
forts o r thoeo balls u p o n t h e ^atmosphere t h r o u g h which
See MIRROR o r FASHIONS, o r for full particulars, specimen
T e r r i f i e d a t t h e s n d d e n a p p e a r a n c e of t h e g h o s t , t h e t h e y p a s a
N o t i c e s of t h e P r e s s .
T h e passage o f o n o i m m e d i a t e l y across y o u r of sewing, etc., send a s t a m p for r e t u r n postage. Address,
g a m b l e r s w e r e t h r o w n i n t o t b o g r e a t e s t confusion, a n d race is followed b y a m o m e n t a r y s e n s a t i o n o r d e a d l y
MME. DEMOREST,
T h i s is n s o u n d C o m p a n y . "
t u m b l e d p e l l raell o v o r e o e h o t h e r , a n d d a w n stairs,
473 Broadway, N. Y.
* Tho i n s u r a n c e of a certafn sum for one's family, Is a prus i c k n e * . T h e a i r aeeraa t h i c k , stifling a n d putrid. like
their hurried: attempts to escape.
!
Every lady, mother, milliner and dress-maker, should have dence t h a t every man should adopt in these critical times."
t h a i o f a newly o p e n e d vault, a c c o m p a n i e d b v an o d o r o r
" The man that would be respected and loved by bis family
O a r g h o s t b e a t a h a r r i e d retreat t o his r o o m a n d was c e r t a i n k i n d s o r f a n g i f o u n d in t h e woods, a n d n e v e r wil- one of these valuable sewing machines.
in life, and gratefully remembered in death, will provide h i s
t r o u b l e d no m o r e t h a t n i g h t w i t h g a m b l e r s or m y s t e r i o u s lingly d i s t u r b e d b y e i t h e r man o r b e a s t
I should like
family agaiust want."
noises, ft t h e m c r n i n g be f o u n d t h e u t m o s t e x c i t e m e n t t o HIOW ir a n y one elso h a s felt this, or is i t a peculiar
" All our most p r u d e n t citizens a n d soldiers a r c i n s n r i n g
a n d a l a r m prevailed in t b o h o u s e , on a c c o a g t of t h o a p - f a n c y of m y own T
AND
a competence to t h e i r families in case they are drafted, or
p e a r a n c e of the g h o s t ; and in a n s w e r t o an i n q u i r y of t h o
killed, le the service'; it is t h e o n l y safegnard ia these critical times."
50-9m.
l a n d l o r d ' s replied t h a t ttto g h o s t h a d c o t t r o u b l e d him,
IXVKXTIOK o r BOOTS AND S n o g s . — B o o t s a r e said to
a n d d e p a r t e d entirely u n i n s p e c t e d , a f t e r q n i e t l y eatinir
h a v e been i n v e n t e d b y t h e C a r r a n s .
T h e y w e r e first
6
h i a breakfast.
•
m a d o o f l e a t h e r , a f t e r w a r d s or biiass a n d iron, a n d w e r e
t T T I L L LOCATE LANDS. P A Y TAXES, BUY OR 8ELI
proof against cut or thrust. I t was from this Ilomcr
V V on Commission-<-aad now ofTer* f o r sale,
T b a H a b e a s Cornos—An Excellent Article t h a t
called t h o G r e e k s b r a z e n footed.": F o r m e r l y in F r a n c o a
E v e r y b o d y O u g h t to< R e a d ,
g r e a t foot w a s m u c h e s t e e m e d , a n d the l e n g t h o f t h e s h o o
From H a r p e r ' s Weekly.
in t h e foorteenth c e n t u r y w a s a faark of distinction —
G e n t l e m e n ' w h o , in d e n o u n c i n g t h o bill relating t o - t b o
1 ho s h o e s of a p n n c e were t w o e n d a half feet l o n e •
habeas corpus, d e c l a i m a b o u t C h a r l e s I los'ng h i s b e a d
t h o s e of a b a r o n t w o f e e t a n d t h o s e of a k n i g h t eighteen
f o r d i s r e g a r d i n g t h o w r i t , e t c . , e h o a l d b e v e r y s u r e of
their historv before beginning t h e orations.' T h e RevoAlso—13 Lots i n the Village o f E l k K a p l d i
lution t h a t killed C h a r l e s a n d b a n i s h e d h i s son J a m e s ,
WITH OB WITIIOCT nWELLlXCS.
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p o w e r e d h i m to a r r e s t for a l i m i t e d time, all persons he
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m e n t t h a t it s h o u l d n e v e r b e c o m e a p r e c e d e n t
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t h e course, t h r e e m o n t h s .
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per of the United States, in its issue of J a n . 10th, 1863, o n p r e p a r a t o r y to e n t e r i n g upon the-course of stndy.
m e n t e x e c u U v e a n d legislative. O r . a s B l a q k s t o n e s t a t e s
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J. B . G O L D S M I T H . R e a i d e n t P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
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W i s d o m i s an ocean t h a t h a s n o s h o r e ; its p r o s p e c t is.
J . F. SPALDING, A s s i s t a n t .
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open-face watch combined. T h i s is one of t h e p r e t t i e s t , t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h i s t h e b e s t e v i d e n c e of t h e i r
t i m e , to i n p n s o n s u s p e c t e d p e r s o n s w i t h o u t g i v i n g a n y
most convenient, and decidedly the best a n d cheapest time- f a v o r w i t h t h e p n b l l c .
reasoo for s o l o i n g . T h e nation p a r t s with its liberty
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