Grand Traverse Herald, January 02, 1863

Dublin Core

Title

Grand Traverse Herald, January 02, 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

1863-01-02

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

Rights

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

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None

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PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

gth-01-02-1863.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

T B A V E E 8 E C I T Y , M I C H . F E I D A Y , J A N U A R Y 2,1863.

VOL. V.

N O . S.

At the usual hour of midnight, accordingly, when the pay them without confusion. AD election for a
door fiuw opqn and the spectre, bearing a lamp and a j President shall at ooce be held, everybody voting except
i
„r 1
] . . . . A . M H A A
V , n ' c o t » A i ) . K n t K K i n those
WKA have
K n v p shown
a K m r n animosity
n n i T i f w i t v to
t o the
t h e sunny
R u n n y South.—
South.—
hoochV, of
keyp, made
itn appe&rancc, hc'seLied%both
his (KACA who
pistols,
when fortunately, as hisfingerwas on. the point Francc shall be driven oat of Mexico by the consolidatYou have put the children to bed, Alice,—
Traverse City, Grand Traverse County, Michigan,
of touching tiie trigger, he perceived that the apparition ed armies, the expense so managed that the North may
Maud and Willi* and Rose;
pay
it
without
further
trouble.
Upon
these
terms
They have lisped their sweet "Our Father."
was no other than the daughter of his host, a young and
MORGAN BATES, f
And sunk to their night's repose.
pretty girl, evidently walking in her sleep. Preserving confederacy will become a peaceful fellowman."
K D I T O K AMD TVLOTUTTOXI

Did they think Of me, dear AliceT
"Hem!" says the conservative chop " What you
the strictest silence, he watcned her aet aofiv the light,
>y think of mc, and say, _
place the keys carefully on the chininey-pk'ice and retire ask is perfectly reasonable. 1 will consider the matter
T,KBM8.
. ,
as hire
p
to the opposjte bed, which as it afterwan£ proved, she after the manner of a dispassionate democrat, and return
On* D o l l a r a n d Hpfljr
« r a W e i,lva"
you
my answer in a few days."
r
1
had often occupied during the life-time offcer late moth^y«iiTw££Si |n«wted for 0«> Dollar per •qtwrt (tea
Here I hastily stepped up, and says I, " But are yon
er, who slept in tbe, room.
Hast) for the first insertion, and twenty-Arc cents .for caeh
No sooner had she thoroughly compoeet Jborself, than not going to consult toe President at all about it, my
sabseqnent insertion. Yearly AdvMiHemenU-tlO far one
square: $20 for three square#; $30 for,half a column-, and
And Maud with her curls of gold;
the officer, after locking the door of the rtotn, went in Jupiter Toiians?"'
r
$3o for one column. Legal advertisements at the rata. preAnd Willie, so gay and Sprightly,
search of her father and t«vera 1 competent wtnesses, in- " The President ? the President ? savs the conservascribed by law fifty cent* per toUoUif WO w o ^ fw the
So merry and full of glee;
cluding tbe water baliff of tho district, who had been one tive chap with a vague look. " Hem !" says he, •' I
fl rat insertion, and twenty-«ve cents tor eaoh subsequent.—
Oh, my heart yearns to enfold ye.
of the loudett in circulating the rnmore concerning the redly forgot all about the President 1"
Everyfigurecounts a word. Figure irork without yules, 50
My " smiling group of three !"
The democratic organization, my boy, in its seal to
Haunted Ina The poor girl was found qiiietlv sleeping
par cent added. Rule and figure work, double price.
I can bear the noisy daj^ Alice;
All legal advertlsomentstobepeld for strictly inadtanee.
in bed, and her terror on awaking in the dreadful cham- •nefit its distracted country, is occasionally like that
The camp life gay and wild,
ber afforded«uflicieut evidence to all preseut of tho state eminent fire company injtbe Sixth word, which nobly
Shuts from my yearning bosom
usurped
with its nose the terrible^usint-ss of putting out
The thoughts of wife and child.
of somnambulism in which she had been entranced.
But when the night is round me,
From that time the spcctrc was seen no-more ; proba- a large conflagration, but never remembered, until its
And under its strong beams
bly because the landlord's daughter removed shortly af- beautiful machine was all in position, that another comI gather my cloak around mc,
terwards to a home of her own; and the tales of horror pany of fellowfiremenhad exclusive possession of all the
1 dream auch long, sad dreams !
so freely circulated to the bewilderment ot the poor water-works.
I think of the pale young wife, Alice,
He8ulster
MORGAN BATBS.
neighbors, ended in the simple story of a ypung girl walk- "
REUBEN GOODRICH.
Who looked up in my face
Wonderful Naval Invention——Great Thing*
ing in her sleep.
Whon the drum beat at evening
Forthcoming.
And called me to myplsee.
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
From the N. Y. Tribune, 11th.
Taking an Account of Stock.
I think of three sweet birdlings
Left in the dear homf-nest.
The Navy Department of tbe United States has boon
From the N. Y. Tribune. ,
And my soul is sick with longMrgs*
Let us—for the end of the year approaches—take a Very cautious about believing in the great •' discoveries"
That will not be at rest.
hurried account of stock, and see just where wo stand : that inventors made daily. The meet astounding of all,
County Treasurer
?$££££
Oh, when will the war be over, Alice 1
County Clerk.
- JAMBS P . BRAND,
(
I. The Confederates, though they recently invaded however, is now in course of developement, by authority
Oh,
when
shall
J
behold
Register of D«<»s--.. JAMBS F . BRAND,
M
Maryland in force, and have made petty r^ids into Penn- of Secretary Welles. It is no less than an apparatus
Rose with her pure, white forehead,
Proa. A t t o r n e y . — H . MARSH,

sylvania, Ohio, Indiana, etc.. do not hold at this hour a which will, it js said, destroy iron-clads, tbe most imAnd Maud with hsrcurls of gold;
Circuit Court Com.- C. H. MAR>|H,
, ^
And Will, so gay and sprightly,
single foot of territory outside of what 'they claim as pregnable of them being as unprotected against it aa a
So merry and full of glee,
their own, por do they seriously threaten.to acquire any. wooden Tessel against a 500-pound balL The inventor
And more than all the dearwifo
' II. After having for some months desperately con- is no '' outsider." Ho is fth engineer in tho pay of the
Who bore these babes to me?
tested the great State of Missouri, fonght many impor- Government, has been in the Naval Engineer Corps for
C. H . M A R S H ,
God guard and keep you all, Alice,
tant battle* therein—6ome of tbcm successfully—they years, and while attached to tho man-of-war Kcatsoge,
God guard and keep me too;
have been driven out of it, so that only 3»o or thiee in the Mediterranean, conceived tho idea, which, if
For if only one were missing.
guerrilla bands of no importanco now luriS in its swamps practicable, willrevolutionizeeven the latest modes of
What would the other do?
AXJ>
Oh, when will the war be over,
orforests,and occasionally steal out to jommit depre- naval warfare. The genttfknan alluded to was recalled
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
And when shall I behold
from the Mediterranean and arrived here some weeks
dations. t
Those whom I love so dearlv,
N O T A R Y P U B L I C & C O N V E Y A N OEB,
III. Kentucky has in like manner been in good part ago. He visited the Navy Department, and laid before
Safe in the dear homo-fold.
Traverse C^ty, Grand Traverae County, Mich.
nnder rebel domination, not only last winter, but again a somewhat incredulous Board tho nature of his extraordinary plan. What pros and- cons transpired during
two
months
ago.
Now
they
are
wholly
impelled
from
it,
THE
R
R
S
r
O
X
P
E
.
Offico in iWeiling House.
1-ly
the interview, it is impossible to say, but the result of
I have put the children to bed, Harry,—
and likely to remain so.
Rose and Willie and Maud;
IV. Tennessee is one of the States mtfst important to the investigation thickens the plot," and puts scientiThey have sung their hymns together,
the Blavehbldera' Confederacy. Half of jt, including the fic and inventive curiosity ou the tip-toe of exciteoicntAnd whispered their prayer to God.
two most important cities, Nashville and-Memphis, have So far from being scouted at as was currently prophesied
Then Rose said, gently smiling,
-Come Willie and Maud now aay
been held lor the Union throughout tho ,iast six months, tbe inventor's scheme is to get a fair and impartial trial,
God bless the dear, sweet father,
and we are on the point of trying to reoaim the residue. and an iron-clad man-of-war, now in course of construcFather
so
far
away."
V. Virginia is the most populous StAe belonging to tion, has been turned over to him that he may haVo his
( f B O K T HTKKET, NEAR COUBT HOC BE,)
And auch a glad trust arose, Harry,
Jeff's Confederacy, and includes his .nutropolk Very machine 9xed to his satisfaction.
TRAVERSE CITY,'MICHIGAN.
In this sad heart of mine.
The inventor is First Assistant Engineer James W. nearly half of it is now in Union hands including tho
For I felt that God would keep you
• ESTABLISHED HOTEL,(THE FIBBT
cities of Norfolk and Wheeling, while itj chief fortress, Whittaker, of New Jersey. He entered the Navy in
Safe in hia hand divine.
« Citvl situated on Front 8trcet, IB the violaMonroe, has never yet seen a rebel flag ^floating from its 1857. und mode his first cruise in the steam-corvette
And I kissed their pure, young foreheaes
tt* nf the court House and public offices, is still "P*S f° r
Brooklyn
in 1859. Ho is considered a clever 'Profeswalls. Wo expect to have a good deal Wore of it beAnd gaidi" He is over all f
7 4 u a n ofuTe ti^v^inK public. The P r o p e r , w w r n s
sional man by his compeers, some of whom doubt tbe
He counteth the hair of your heads, darling*.
fore the yiar is out.

hlshearty thanks for the liberal patronage he has received
And noteth the sparrow's fall."
und assures the Jmblio that no pains will be apteed J o r o s e
VL Of North Carolino, the Union his held Albema- genuineness of his weapon.
hia guests comfortable. His charges will comnptttd witji
Of course the greatest exchement prevails in scientific
Then I sung them to their sleep, Harry,
rie and the connected Sounds, with thek islands and tbe
With hymns all trust and love,
beach outgido, Ports Hatteras and Macon, the cities of circles as to the result of tho experiments. The iron^Oood'nocOniWtidttttMW for horeeB and cattta. • m>y26-30
And I knew that God was listening
Newborn kind Washigton, with a consi3erable strip of clad war steamer Ozark, building in Peoria, I1U is to be
From his gTaclous throne above.
the main land, for several months, almost without insis- provided with tho new nnparatn=, and it is said that the
And since that calm, sweet evening,
tence. We hold also the water line of transit thence to Warrior or Globe woula cot stand an hour before her
I have felt so happy, dear,
when her novel batterv is arranged. No one know*
And so have the children, Harry,
Hampton (Boads through the Dismal 8*nmp Canal.
A!n>
They seem to know no fear.
VII. Of South Carolina we hold tho-Sea Islands, in- what the invention 'is like—whether it is to be a gun, or
They talk of vour coffltag home, Harry,cluding tie forts built by therebelsto ffuard tbe entrance projectile, or a ram—but even the wisest men in the
service do not donbt that its effect on naval matters will
As something sore to be;
to Bort itoyal Inlet or Sound.
I list to their childish prating*.
V i n . Of Georgia we have long hod Port Pulaski, be of the mostrevolutionarycHarauter. A letter from
Nor care to check their glee.
commanding the water way to Savannat, and the Islands the Mediterraneaq fleet to which Mr. Whittaker was
A L B E R T W. BACON,!
For oh, 'tie a caifte so noble.
attached, states that uot an individual on board the
of
Tybee,
St
Simmons,
kc.,
are
actually
or
virtually
in
And you so brave and true,
A. LOCATE LASB9, PAV TAXES, BOT OB SHU.
And God protects his Own, Harry,
our possession. The whole coast, with its inlets and Kearsagc believes that his experiment will prove vis;
n Commission—and now offers for sale,
ionary. It will probably bo tested in a few months.
And surely will watch o'er you.
months of rivers, is in our possession.
IX. Nearly all the seaports of Florida—Pensacola,
So keep up a brave, good heart, Harry !
The New Way to Pay Old
St
Augustine.
Ac.,—have
long
been
in
Union
handa—
Gen. Butler
God
willing—end
He
knows
best—
AXD WILL SKLL AS AOENT
. j
Debts.
We'll welcome you, wife and happy,
All the fortifications also—Fort Picke-is. Fort Taylor,
Back to tbe dear home-nest
A correspondent of the Boston Traveller, writing from
the Torlagas—are and ever have been-Uuion.
And Maud and Rose and WlUio
X. OfTexas, we have Galveston an^ most of tbe sea- New Orleans, says that, in the month of October, a
Shall yet w'th moistened eye.
ports. We can take the residue whetf we choose, with manufacturingfirmin Massachuset ts despatched a vouilg
Give thanks to the dear, good Father,
Also—13 LoU In the Village or Elk Rapids,
man to New Orleans to collect ajQebt, which had been
While yoq stand tearful by.
little effort.
wirn OK wrrnocr DWELLISOS.
XI. Of Louisiana, wo hold Fort St Philip trod Jack- outstanding against a mercantile house in that city ever
A Tale of Terror.
son, which guard the ascoat of the .Mississippi, with aince the outbreaking of tho rebell on. The house was
The above mentioned Lands are in all parts of the i
At
the
"
Crow
Inn,"
at
Antwerp,
some
years
ago.
New Orteans, the chief mnrt of the sou_hwest and a large still engaged in business, and he w aited upon them with
elk Lake Whitewater, Omenla and Traverse; at* among the
earliest and-best selections with reference W soiUwswr. sur- white spectre was seen bearing a lamp in one hand and area of the adjacent sugar-growing region ; and we have his instructions.
face, and market; embrace Farming Irfndii.VniaKeSltfSand bunch of keys in the others—this unpleasant visitor was held the city and the forts more than lialf a year undisThe debt was freely acknowledged ; bat when the
^K&5powerfcViUi or without improvement*.in quantities seen by a variety of travelers pasing along a corridor.
young man asked for payment or in arrangement thejr
to saltpurchasers, aad atpricea making.itan object,in pre- Nothing would satisfy the neighbors thatan unfortunate
' " x i ' Z Wo hoSd^a considerable strip bf Northern Mis- answered him with a fierce invert ivo against the Aboliference to buying bock froqi settlements.
traveler had not been at some period or other, dis- sissippi. and have a victorious army there ready to fight tionists as the cause of the war. They concluded the
,y
•seClty.May 1,1M1.
"
patched in that fatal room by one of the previous all comers, only the rebels insist oi> being goers in- tirade with the declaration that it was their steadfast
landlords of tho house; the hotel gradually obtained the
purpose not to settle that or any othor debt $ne the
i
name of the " Haunted Inn," and ceased to be frequent- stead.
North until the matter at issue between tho two secx n i . Ditto as to Arkansas.
ed by its old patrons.
XIV. We have quiet possession c >-all Now Mexico tions had beeufinallyadjusted, when they would pay the
The
landlord,
finding
himself
on
the
brink
of
ruin,
deW l WOULD S A T TO T B I P C « U C , TUAT W l » A V t COT
and Arizona, which, one year since, v„ere mainly in the entire amount with interest being fully able to meet all
termined to sleep in the haunted room, with a view of possession of a triumphant rebel forct.
their obligations.
proving tho groundlessness of the story. To make the
They were inexorable to further appeals. The young
O R - I S T M I L X J
XV. This is also the fact as to the'Indian Territory.
matter sore, as he said, he caused the hcstler to bear
It thus appears that noarly one thirvl of the population. man, however, was not to be baffled by Southern sharpIn operation, and are on band to do Custom-Work at sll him company, on pretence of requiring a witness to the
times • i and would say, we think that we can do as good work absurdity of tho report; but in reality from cowardice.— and more than a third of the area claimed by the Con- ers. He immediately proceeded to the offios of GenBntler,
and made his business known. The delinquent
federacy. are to-day Under the Union control, most of it
aa anyMlU in Orand Traverse. If you doubt it, try us, and
At dead* of night, however, jdst as the two men were com- won by hard fighting within the past. year. New Or- Southerners were summoned to appear at headquarters
M , h r yeuraelves ; and would say, that wc keep our
posing themselves to sleep in one' bed—leaving another leans. "St. Louis, Louisville, Memphis; Galveston. Santa without delay.
Which was in the room untenanted—the door flew open Fe, Lexington, Norfolk, Newborn, Peusacola—all these
" You know this gentleman ?" demanded the Geneand in glided the white spectre!
are claimed as belonging to tho Confederacy, and most ral.
in operation, and T a n on Shares—as usual!
Without attempting to ascertain what it might at•- Yes, sir," answered one of tho merchants.
C. N0RRI8 Jc (BROTHERS. tempt on approacning the bed. towards which it direct- or them have been held by it ; but <they are now all
Union. < More than one million peop'e who were under •• He has a claim, be says, against your honors," said
:
8-1
ed its coarse, tho two men rushed naked f.-om the room; tbe Confederate flag a year ago, now." peacefully repose the General.
January 17.18CJ.
r
and by the alarm they created, confirmed more fully than under the Union eagles. And we at • just on tho point
" Yes, sir," was the reply. " The debt was incurred
ever the evil repute of the house.
o r " marching on " with larger and: better disciplined by us in the regular course of business."
Unable longer to sustain the cost of so unproductive armies then ever before.
•• What is the condition or your purse f inquired
an establishment, the poor landlord advertised for sale
Butler. " Are you able to pay the amount ?"
the house io which he and his father before him were
Yes," answered the other, hesitatingly, "we are
Tft.Vlta'-f'i.T'-m HiVP on r
A
New
Peace
Proportion.
who will make actual settlement or build tftereen a Frame. born and had passed their lives. But bidders were as
to meet all our debta"
Brick, or Btone house, rained at notte*Rthap $100, paying scarce as customer^! the iim remained on sale for nearly
Orpbeus C. Kerr writes from Washington the folfow- able
" Well, gentlemen,said the General, "then your
Si forsurvevs, etc. 8aid lot* are in the tsoat desirable part
ingaccount of another peace prop6^tion:
a
year,
during
which,
from
time
to
time
the
spectre
recouree
is plain. My advice is, that you arrange this
«t Traverse City. This part of;lhatowaJlest the 1heaifl, and
The
confedracy
hastily
put
on
a
puir
of
white
cotton
tietween the two arms of the Bay, aad ,haa a fropt « each appeared.
matter without onnecessary delay,"
J * •
,

Bay, and ot tho bestaoii for Gardening, etc. lor, particulars At length an officer of tbe garrison, who had formerly gloves, and says "he:
This suggestion or General Butler impressed the mer"Am
I
addressing
the
democratic
organization.
n)ease call at the OBce of tho subscriber, at ,
frequented the bOuso, moved to compassion in favor of
chants so forcibly, that they re-considered their former
"You address a large Kentucky branch !" says tho determination, and paid the full amount of the debt the
the poor host undertook to clear up the mystery by
• EAST T R A V E R S E OITY,
Conservative chap, pulling out the raffles.
same day/
Geo. W. Bryant, Proprietor. sleeping in the aforesaid chamber: nothing doubted that
"
Tlien."
says
the
confedracy,
*1
am
prepared
to
the whole was a trick of some envious neighbor, desirous
Other merchants and persons in New Orleans, whi
of deteriorating the value of the freehold in order to be- make ah indirect proposition for pt-a.ee. My name is wore indebted to Northern men. have adopted the sanv*
Mr. Lamb, by which the democratic organization has
come a parchascr.
. always known the injured confedrac?, and I propose the coarse, and liquidated their obligations.
His offer having been gratefully nocepted, the captain
took up his quarters in the fatal room, with a bottle of following terms: Hostilities shall at once cease, and the
A new Bank, of$500,000 capital, is soon to be stait
MORGAN BATES,
wine and a brace of loaded pistols on the table before two armies shall bo consolidated ntjcr the title or the od in Ann Arbor, the stock hanng all been sobecribed
him, determined to fire at whatever object might ecter confederate state forces. The war aebts of the North
and South shall be united that tbe North maybe able to
the room.
XSerold OfBeo T i a v w r s e City, l t l o h .

C|e (Srani Crabcrsr gtmli),
18 y r i L i n t l D X T K K T T*\v/kt,

The Soldier's Dream of Home.
B T CABOLINB A. MASON.

AT

Ill Ink «l IA Pri!t'»s Hollj iri EiprfHirolj taoW.

OSITH) STATES LHHOTlffl H mVEBt Cffl, Ilffl.

HOBEBT lSi:, S S f f i

S.ttcrrnrM uttiJi Counsellor at ICato,
!

TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,

W I L L I A M

R E A L

FOAVLE,

E S T A T E

GENERAL LAND OFFICE.

1424- Aaron of Choice lands;

1850'Acres,also Choice and well Selected,

NOTICE.

TANNERY

!"

5 0 0 T o w a L o t s Offered F r e e
to A-otual Settlers.

N O T A R Y ±>TJBLIC,



;—

^

i1

i

Baa |

g

From the Army «f the Potomac.
bled our troops during the day. Here it lay during the
NEW YORX, DOC. 19.—Dispatches from tbe Army of
night Sykes division of Batter find's Corps followed
the betwceo Griffin and Humphrey to
front, but arrived the Potomac say six hundred of our dead were buried on
M O E O A . N B A . T K 3 , Jffidttor m i d P r o p r i e t o r .
too late for actioo. Thus ended the couflict between Wednesday and four hundrcdand fifteen today. Nearly all tbe dead were found stripped of their clothing, and
our right aod the Rebel left
"
TRAVEH8B CITYi
lying naked ou the ground.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14, 1862.
THE BATTLE ON THX LETT
FRIDAY MORNING, J A N U A R Y », 1863.
* From official reports it is thought the proportion of
The following is received from your correspondents
The lines of Gen. Franklin, as fo rmed for the attack, killed to the wounded, in the late battle, is smaller than
at Frederickptmrgh :
represented an obtuse angle, one Jne of which—Gen. any battle during the war.
Tiro Official Stale Canvaw.
FREDERICKSBURG, Saturday Dec. 13—11 P. M.
Reynold's Corps—extended diagonally from the river
In Gen. Reynold's corps, the official report of losses i»
Tbe offieialijUte cauvass is published Bltir's majori- Last evening, a General Council of War attended by back. Smith s corpo in a line parallel with the river as follows; Gen. Doubleday's division, 100 ; Gen. Giball the grand division, corps, and divisions commanders, and formed on the right of Wilcox's. corps.
The exty it 6.614 over 8lou». The Eepablican decrease in the
was held at a late bour, at Gen. Sumner's Headquarters, treme left was three miles from Predericksburg, and the bon's division, 1,160 ; Gen. Mead's division, 1,480—
vote is 18,090; the locofooo decrease, 5,119. The Repub- at which Geo. Burnside submitted and explained bis
total, 2,830.
right rtfthe left Grand Division was- less than two mites
HEADQUARTERS, ARXT or POTOMAC, Dec. 19—Evenlicans have, therefore, sent to tha war aboat 18,000 vot- plan for tb» general attack he proposed to make to-day from the town. The extent of Gen. Franklin's lines then
ing.—All has been guiet to-day except two shots fired to
upon the position of tbeenemy. The plan comprised a was more than a mile from the right to the left.
ers; *nd the locofocos about 5,000.
disperse the gathering of bands of rebels on the plain
Tbe first fire was made by tbe skirmishers of the 13th opposite. Tbe enemy strongly picket the river alonjour
Browr, Dem„ in elected Member of tlia State Board simultaneous advance of our whole line upon tbe enemy's
strong positions on the hills in front of the left and riebt
of Education, from an error in printing -{be lie publi- Grand Divisions, which were to be carried by sudden Massachusetts in oar frout They had moved cautiously front

in advance ofourMiiies for half a mile, when discovering
Official reports of our losses in the late battle make
can ticket*, by whjch Edicin Dorsch recelvod 13,864 assaults upon the stronghold, of select bodies of troops. the enemy's pickets^bey fired upon tbem. Cannonadvotes, and Edward Dorsch 55.119. Drown's majority It was in seeping with the well-known boldness aod dash ing soon commenced lo earoest. A scattering musketry the number less than reported, being less than 1,400
killed
and
8,000 wounded. A large portion of tho
of its author, but some doubts were expressed in the fire continued from the flrst-odvahce, .about 9 o'clock,
over Edward Dorsch is 6,834.
wounded were but slightly hurt We lost 800 prisooers
Council of the practicability by a number of those in atFor Congressmen tbe majorities aro as follows :• 1st tendance. All. however, expressed their readiness to till noon, and with occasional lull$ The cannouadiugs and took ss many.
was heavy and severe.
i
district—Boaman, Rep., 192 majority over Pennimau, Io- undertake anything ordered by the Commnnder-itvOrders to advance having been received, Gen. GibFrom Haahvillo.
cofoco; 21 district—Upson, Rep., 2,762 majority over Chief, and the necessary instructions were given to com- bon's snd Gen. Meade's.divisions were directed-to adNEW YORK. Dec. 19.—A spocial Nashville dispatch,
Turner, locpfoco; 3d district—Longyear, Rep., 850 maj. mence a general movemebt upon the euemy with day- vance upon the enemy in the woods and upon the hill, dated the 18th, to the Tribune, says : Gen. Dodge, with
light. The fog that kept the valley of the river and
over Granger, iocofoco; 4th district—'Kellogg, Rep., the adjacent heights from view every day this week, holding tho position if support should come to them, bis cavalry has been fighting Forrest all dav in the
abandoning it in case they should be too severely press2,705 maj. pver Church, Iocofoco—two counties not,- re- again prevented tbe commencement of operations at tbe
vicinity of Corinth. Forrest has 4,000 and Dodge
ed.
]
2,500 cavalry. Tbe latter has five pieces of artillery,
turned; 5th district—Baldwin, Iocofoco 264 msjority stated time. Fortunately, however, it cleared away
Now came the most successful and determined effort
Morgan is reported moving to cat off the LouisTille
early
in
the
day.
and
about
10
o'clock,
orders
were
diover Trowbridge, Rep.; 6th district—Drigjia. Rep., 239
on this part of our lioe. The attack was made from tbe
rected to the Generals commanding the right aud left point of intersection of tho angle formed by oar Knes al- and Nashville Railroad.
maj. over Moore, Iocofoco—1,007 imperfect] votes being
It is reported that Van Dom, with 5,000 men, has arGrand Divisions to prepare to charge immediately the ready referred to. This point was nearest to the woods,
rejected, of which 663 wero for Driggs, and 344 for works respectfully assigned to them.
rived at Stevenson. Ala., to Join Bragg.
and tbe enemy's shells were flying thickly about i t Kirby Smith iareported moving towards Lebanon to
Moore.
THK BATTLE ON THE RIGHT.
Gibbon's Division and the Pennsylvania Reserves adsupport
Morgan.
Republicans, S; locofocos, 1.
Gen. Sumner bad selected French's Division of Geo. vanced boldly towards the works of the enemy. They
The whole force of Rebels in Tennessee is estimated
Tbo highest Republican majority given by any one Couch's corps for the advance of the attacking column. pushed determinedly through the brushwood and bushes at 70,000.
on
the
grove
of
cedars,
aud
through
these
up
the
bills
county is that given by Hillsdale county—1,613 maj. Orders to uiovo from its position in the streets of FrederTbev hsd 25,000 at Murfreesboro. Their ootpo*t*
ioksburg next to the river to tho outskirts of the town, towards the breastworks of the enemy. Tbe works were arc about ten miles from Nashville.
for Blair.
form a lino of battle by brigades and preceded by a cloud carried, many prisoners capftired.^and the crest of the
Rosecrans has dismissed a large number of officers for
bill gained, uot, however, without a heavy loss. Gen.
ANWNTKRKSTINO LECTURE.—Rev. Mr. Warren, of of skirmishers, move at a double qnick upoa the first line Gibbons has fallen, wounded in the arm, while leadiug drunkenness and disobedience ,of orders.
Gen. French was necessarily
Elk Rnpids, entertained a full audience hero, on Monday of tho enemy's works.
his
command
to
tbe
attack.
The
works
of
tbe
enemy
at
From Cairo.
.j,'
obliged to march bis troops in solid columns in parallel
evening last, with a graphic and highly entirjaining ac- streets. As soon as the head columns bad emerged from this point were gained, but not held. The enemy unCAIRO, Dec. 19.—A train from Jacksou to Columbus
count of his capture by the Rebels, and' ten. months im- tha lower into the higher portions of the streets, the fortunately, possessed tbe strength to coticentrate over- was fired into to-day by guerrillas. No damage.
whelming numbers of fresh troops upon tho threatened
prisonment in Richmond and New Orleans, i l i e was a enemy's batteries opened upon them from several points. poiut, and for all the valor of those who survived and all
An arrival from Vicksburg reports tbe rebels vigorprivate in the celebrated company of Students from Ober- Upon reaching the outskirts of the town, the order was the sacrifices of those who fell, the, position bad to be-' ously fortifying that place. Report says they have axgiven to deploy, but stone and other fences prevented its
lin College, which fornied a part of th<> 7th Regiment ready execution. During tho delay thus caused, the abandoned, and our troops were compelled to fall back tended their works back from the river eight miles—
1
to
the
plain.
\
Ohio Volunteers. [
troops were exposed to on enfilading fire which taxed
In the meantime Gen. Doubleday had been constantly Seventy guns arc mounted oo the river, 200 in all.
His account of the expo iili<fo of that Regiment ioto the advance of the troops most severely.
The citizens, for some time, have been busy ih packing
The line being formed at last, about noon the order to pushing the enemy upon the left A most determined
the mountains of Western Virginia, his capture, and the
advance was given. The line moved up and over a low resisteuce was made by the enemy as skirmishers and furniture and goods, preparatory to an evacuation of the
vicissitudes of ten months imppsoqment in Richmond aud
With
reserves
and
artillery.
The
ire
which,
duriog
the
place,
upon the opening of the anticipated Federal at r
range of elevations, and down toward the foot of the
New Orleans, sccured tbe clofee attention ol^his audience hills on which tbo enemy's breastworks were situated, forenoon was kept up on the left told of the most se- tack.
for nearly two hours, withoot_any manifestations of im- from houses, rifle-pits, barricades, across the roads and vere fighting. For full a mile the enemy was pressed
Cotton
burning is still kept up by tbe guerrillas.
back, contesting the ground inch 4;.« inch, receiving and
patience. He drew a cheerful rather than lugubrious other shelter. Tbe rebel sharpshooters now opened from inflicting heavy loss. The CDemy fell back upon his deGen. Hnrlbut has ordered drinking houses and saloons
picture of his hardships, and/is evidently, disposed to all sides, with fearful effect The vigor of the fire of fenses and tbe'advantage gained wad Indecisive.
at
Memphis
closed immediately. Persons Tfohtjqg the
tho rebel artillery also steadily increased, and when the
During three successive advances and checks along order directly or indirectly wille be severely punished.
look upon the snnny side^-of life. We were highly line reached the foot'6f the second range of hills, a perpleased with the Lectufw and Lecture, and regret that fect hail of lead fell upon i t
Tbe advance, however, the center and left grand division, uninterrupted shelling
was kept up by the rebel batteries-upon the bodies of
I t is very easy to denonnce tbe Administration fop the
we havo nirt timo to give a more extended noticc of wad continued until within a few hundred yards ol the troops at different points of the plain. At a large stone
fail'.nre at Fredericksburg, but is clear the Administracrest of the hill, when a rapid succession of terrific volboth.
(
leys from long lines of rebel infantry, suddenly rising in mansion near the center of our line, used as a field hospi- tion has done its best to make a success come from untotal
doring
tbe
day.
an
incessant
fire
was
directed.
Near
PRESENTATION.—The 26thRegimcm of Michigan In- front of their works, checked i t * From the position this building Gen. Bayard found kn untimely death.— ward events. The real cause of non-success dates back'
they had gained, our troops now exchanged round after
fantry has gone to Dixie's land. Before leading Jackson, round with the enemy, nntil their ammunition became A shell struck him while sitting Wider a tree within a to those sunny September and October days, wbea the
tbe officers of the Regiment wishing to express their ap- exhausted, and the line fel1 back some distance, leaving few yards of Gen. Frnnklin, in the leg, without exploding. broken and dispirited rebel army, driven from Maryland
His leg was nearly torn off, and he died in the course of
pursued its unobstructed way, collected supplies, cared
preciation of the_untirhig efforts of Mrs, Gov. BLAIR in nearly one-half of its number oo the field, to make room
the evening.

relieving the sick and otherwise contributing to their' for Gen. Hancock's Division.
Toward the middle of tbe aftrtrnoon the firing along for its wounded, re-inforced its ranks, and our army lay.
This division advanced, likewise formed in parallel
comfort, purcty&ed. and presented to* tier a beautiful' lines of brigades. I t moved forward steadfastly up to the lines of tbe Left Grand Divi$on grew weaker and idle until the winter rain ad cold succeeded the glorious
black horse, with silver plated harness,,' an; elegant side the point whore French's had received its check, when gradually nettled intoa comparative RilL Shortly before .Indian Summer, l t may be that those lost opportunisunset, however, the firing on the extreme left was again
saddle, o:i(f a blaukct of the most costly kind. They it wag also stopped by the murderous fire of the rebel renewed with increased vigor, am" kept up until after ties will never bo regained. Tbe Administration order-,
marched to the Governor's residence, where the preson- infantry and artillery. For two hours it alternately re- dark. At 5J o'clock it gradually died afray, and at 6 ed they should not be lost An insubordinate General
plied to the enemy's musketry, and attempted to make its
:
ut the head of the army defied that order, and we have a,
tation was made by L t Col Wells, after which they way up to the range of hills. Although unable to ad- o'clock it had entirely ceased.
00 the left as well as on tbe rijbt the battle came Winter campaign and a prejiarcd enemy before os.
were invited in, and partook of a sumptuous repast.
vance, and continually losing numbers, it fongbt until its
[Detroit Advertiser.
ammunition gave out, when it was relieved by Howard's short of our expectations. We gained some ground but
failed
to
realize
our
object
of
the
dav's
work—namely,
A clcrtyman of Manchester gives tha following instan- division, and retired nearer tbe towa
Tbo news that the expedition of Gen. Banks bad pawHoward's command went into action about 5 o'clock. tho dislodgement of the enemy from the iutrenched posice? 83 examples of the suffering of the English manufacturtion on the heights overlooking the plain, held by the
ing classes :—Ho says that he found in* one house nine One after the other of its brigades was advanced to the Left, and the town, occupied by tbe Right Division.— ed Port Royal on its way South, causedjvery general disfront, hut like those of French and Hancock's, did not
persons who had b?en without fire forj seven days, succeed in reaching the enemy's works. Tbo last of it, New efforts, new sacrifices of life,- will be required to appointment T i e impression that-it was designed to.
and whose only food for that timo bad deen six lbs under Gen. Sally, was Ordered to charge up the hill accomplish it. By far tbe severest fighting occurred on cojopperate with movements against Richmond, was very
the right All the General- thi., participated in the bat- general. A few insisted that it was going to Charleston
of oatmeal; irnrtotbet were ten person* who had liv- with the bayonet, and moved forward in most gallant
tle Of Antietam say that to-day's coutest on this portion
ed a week on eighty oents: in the' next house were style, but was checked, as all the other troops had been. of tbe line exceeded it in intensity. The rebels bad our or Savannah; but Weldoo or Petersburg were the places Shortly after French's Division had moved to the ateight.grown persons, the wife having just producted tack, Sturgis's Division of Wilcox's Corps advanced troops at u disadvantage. Their-infuntry fought princi- toward which the popular instincts seemed to poipt, wjthtwins; there was no food in the house! one of the over a parallel road on the left of our right, upon the pally uudi-r cover, while their artillery had it all their singular unanimity. And what is singular enough,
owu way from its elevated position. On the right it was tbe Rebels themselves were of tbe same impression. .We
twins had died, and there was no meant of burying works and butteries covering the enemy'srightflank.—
found impossible to bring any of our artillery into action,
i t In a fourth dwelling, the children were trying to It experienced tho same difficulties in forming, in con- for want of proper positions in the earlv part of the day. published yesterday a panic article from a Richmond pasequence
of
obstructions
on
the
groud,
as
French's,
keep themselves alive bo potato skins. j
nntil late in tbo afternoon, when a single battery. Phil- per, wherein it was ominously predicted that the " Vanbut pushed forward with the utmost determination haltlip'si was employed in sections from high points of the dals" were about to concentrate their entire strength
A copy of a letter written by Jacob Thompson, ing only at tiroes to open its way for musketry. It streets or the town. At least sixty pieces played npon against tbe Confederate Capital. Bat our Government
reached within eighty yards of the crest of the hill it
the Secretary of tbe loterior under Buchanan, has aimed to take, but having been fearfully weakened in our right from the enemy's batteries during the greater seems to have had other objects in view.' Banks is going
just been obtained from bis letter book, lately cap- number? during its advance, had to halt. I t held the portion of the day.
1 found it impossible to obtain anything like a reliable to Mobile, or New Orleans, or Texas, or somewhere.—
tured, in which he gloriously describes the prospects for point gained for three hours. Notwithstanding it was
estimate of our losses up to tbe * moment of closing. I But wherever he goes, we may depend npon it, that he
Confederate success as early as the fall; of 1860, and thus confronted bv vastly superior numbers of infantry, and have questioned nearly all the corps and division com- will make his mark. He is one of the few thoroughly
alludes to Bucbanin: " H e is the truest friend to the enfiladed by batteries on each flank—even after its am- manders, but they were unable to give even approximate "live'' men of the war.
Alb. Eve Jour.
munition had all becu spent, it did not give way, but
South I have ever- known from the. North. He is a firmly held its ground until properly relieved shortly be- figures. Tbe right suffered mostneavily and lost nearly
The denunciations of the Democratic Press now centre
jewel and a man."
fore sunset When Howard's Division moved to the two-thirds more than the left.
front, the last of the available force of Couch's corps,
The return of Burnsido to Fahnouth caused a general upon Gen. Butler. The Chicago Times calls him " the
The printers of Paris, who were coadqmnedjto differ- forming our extreme right, was employed. Of Wilcox's feeling of disappointment But Tjre should be grateful American Hoynau." The Warid attributes to Mm every
ent punishments io conscience of a strike, have made corps, Getty's Division, which had been held in reserve that he had the sagacity nnd cootage to do so. if it was crime in tbe calendar. The rest of the Tory pack will
during
the
day,
was
all
that
were
at
command,
after
apparent that he could not with the force of his com- soon be in full howl at bis heels. His offence is, that he
-an uniqne present to their advocate, M. Berryer.—
Stnrgis had become exhausted by the severity of its
They have printed on vellum the orations of Bossuct, protracted struggle. Bums having been sent early in the maod, successfully contend with she enemy. And it re- has attached penalties to rebellion—that he has bung a
quired courage to retreat—"more courage than to conAnd have produced a book in a style of magnificence mdrningto establish connection between tho left and tin«e the fight This it is quite uvideot he could have man for tearing down tbe American flag—that be ba»
to be unequalled for typogarphical excellence. In or- right, and not being within ready march.
done for days. And he might,* perhaps, finally have confiscated rebel property, pat rebel slaves to work for
Fortunately,
however,
Buttcr'field's
corps
of
Hooker's
der that no other copy should exist, the forms > ere
succeeded in forcing the enemy from his entrenchments.
Grand Division, which was acting as a reserve to the But success would have been too expensive, if, to socure the Government and thrown all tbe influence of bis rule
immediately broken up.
on tbe.side of loyalty against treason. Only traitors' csn
right, as Stoneman's was to the left, came to the rescue, it, thirty or forty thousand lives had to be sacrificed.
During the fighting on Friday at Fredericksburg. when the energies of WiUcox'a and Couch's corps had
Nor are we disposed to find .fault with him tor having complain ot his Administration. Loyality has found it a
been nearly spent I t had commenced moving across made the attempt to dislodge the enemy. Neither the shield and snpport He has been too wise to be^cbeatRev. Arthur B. Fuller, chaplain of the {sixteenth Mass. the river, over tbe upper and middle bridges, as soon as
array nor the people would have been content bad he re- cd by rebels, to firm to be over-awed by tbem.' There
Regiment, and well known aa the army correspondent the advance of Coucn s and Wilcox's troops furnished
fused to do so. Like his predecessor, under similar cirof the Boston Journal, got permission to take the room for it in the lower part of the town. It had all cumstances. he tried ; and the y*ial furnished now proof have been no rebel raids in his deparment. Always vicmusket of a sick soldier, and joining in a charge was moved across between four and five o'clock. Shortly of the indomitnble courage of our gallant troops, and torious—always capable, he has given to New Orieaus
before
dark
Humphrey's
and
Griffin's
Divisions
were
ortbe generalship and strength of the enemy—whose hope security and order such as this city has never known un(ihot dead. Mr. Fuller was the brotbir of Margaret
dered to advance to the front and relieve the troops of it doubtless was. that Gen. Buniside would exhaust his der any cthsr Administration. [Detroit Adv. ATrib.
Fuller Ossoli.
Gen. Couch on the right and Gen. Wilcox on the left.— army in a protracted and perhiios fruitless attempt to
They reached tbe front and formed in line _pust before
Grand Traverse County is entiited to tbe Banner —
The House of Representatives resolvo^ that the inter- sunset, and at once charged upon the enemy s works.— dislodge him from his impregUiiblc position. This he
has not done ; and, although sh»ring in the general dis- At tho late election she out stripped every other
cat ou the pablic debt mast be paid io coin. This is a Humphrey's division cumo within a short distance of
appointment, we thank him for i t
There are pther county in the State in ber Republican majorities.
film step toward maintaining tbe public credit, alike pru- them, and Griffin's reached tbe poiut held by Sturgis, rdads to Richmond, if this is imjwssable ; and some of
[Marshall Statesman
dent and honorable, and refuting in a prompt manner the which respective positions they have since occupied.— those roads will vet be discovert d and used—leaving the
calpmnics of foreign ill-wishers, who have predicted that During their advance tho fire from the rebel artillery Rebel army on t i e Fredericksburg heights to blow their
The population of Washington is reported by tbe Secreached the highest intensity of the whole day, but fingers through the winter, in their bleak entrenchments.
which Congress has avoided. The vote stood 81 to 2 4 ceased shortly after nightfall.
retary of the Interior t o ^ e at present 100,000, an .in| Albany Eve. Journal.
crease of - 40,000 since the commencement of the
8'imultaneous with the advance of Griffin and HumThe weather is warm and pleasant j Everybody is
phrey, Getty's Division moved from its position up tbe
John S. Rarcy, the horse tatter, has been sent to the war.
aighing for snow.
valley of a little stream skirting the town and advanced Army of the Potomac by Ga cral Halleck,, to inquire
to the base of the hill, occupied by the rebel batteries
Tbe Hoc® of Representative?, by a vote of 78^0 57.
HOK. 2. CHANDLER will accept our thanks for three on the extreme right, driving the Rebel infantry from into the sanitary condition of iti horses, and to suggest
endorsed tbe Emancipation Proclamation.
koond volumes of the Congressional Globe.
behind n stone wall, from which they had greatly trou- some svstTn to check the mc tality among them.

€|f (SranH Crabftse ^tralii.

T H E BATTLE AT- FREDERICKSBURG.

Graphic

and Connected Description of
Fighting.
Special Despatch to the N. Y. Tribune.

7
T a o o r s wtbf-hti

w e r e ti>6 2 3 d , 2 4 t b ; 2 5 f b , 2Gth oi*l 2 8 ( h

.ja.m

Coonecticut,.

1 5 t h a n d ,lGUt Jtfcw H a m p s h i r e , a n u m b e r from Massan d ijtjikom
n than the
•cbuaetts, t w o f r o m M a i b o a n d s e v e r a l f r o m N e w T o r * . p r e c a r i o u s c om
I f , • i M I ;. .
t •
.[ '
sent time.
L i e u t . F r a n k B r o wnell, o f t l * s I t e g n ! a r A r m y , w h o rec o i v e d h i s c o m m t s s l o o f o r s h o o t i n g J a c k s o n , t h e n i o r d cte r of C o t - K U s w o r t h , is d i a l l e d
b y a t h r o a t #od loog

f r o m acU'yo a c r v i c e

affection, . w h i c h

prevent* him

speaking above a whisper.

T h e stories relative t o Gen. B a n k s having landed
o u t foundation hi fact.

rebel

capital at the pre-

J O B S LAWRBXCS MCVICKAB.
NATHAN E.VGKUJAS.N,

any

WILUAX J . K i r ,
IlKNJ AVIV McVfCtA*.
JOHN M. L o o m s ,
J A.l a L e w

entirely! w i t h -

I n reply t o a question a h o o t his

d e s t i n a t i o n , S c c r e t a i y S t a n t o n replied, " B a n k * will l a n d
in a good place."

made In the above entitled case, a n d bearing date the TwentyC o u j E c r . — T . C- A b b o t , | f o ^ i w r l y fifth day of 8opU|nber. In the y e a r one thousand eight hund r e d and ai«y-W,o, I, t h « nu'derrfgned, a .ipecial CommisP r o f e s s o r of H i s t o r y a n d E n g l i s h L i t e r a t u r e in t h e •loncr rvuMinR in the County aforvaaid, a n J duly, appointed
M i c h i g a n A g r i c n l t n r a l College, h a s b e e n o d a n i f n o r a l y end qualified to a c t ax such ip tho a t r a r e entitled c a i s e , will
aell at public auction, to tho highest bidder, at t h e f r o n t door
e l e c t e d P r e s i d e n t of t h a t i n s t i t u t i o n .
[
of the lSuswell Hotel, (that being the last place of h o l d i n g
C o u r t for said Connty.l in tho Village of Manistee, in aaid
MIUTAKT S c n o o u — T h e y o u n g men of G r a n d B a p i d s County. -on Thursday, tho -Sixteenth day of February, iu the
y e a r one ihou&and eight hundred and sixty-three, a t ten
a r e a b o u t o r g a u i z i o g a m i l i t a r y school, t o ; l e a r n t h e o'clock in the forcnoon-of said day. all those certain p i c e s o r
o r d i n a r y drill a n d b a t t a l i o n m o v e m e n t s . T h i s tS in o r - p a r c e l s of land situated in the County of Manistee and Suite
o f Michigan) anil known and described as follows, to wit :
d e r t o b o ready f o r a n y e r o o r g e n c y .
L o t No. 4. Section 2 2 ; . L o t No. 1, Section 21 ; n c j of n w j
and n w j of a e j of S e c tio n T» caty-iwo, all in Townsliip Z'i is.
T h e P r e s i d e n t ' h a s n o m i n a t e d t o t h o S c o a t o H o n . o f I t / 1 5 V ; Lot No. Six o f Section Eleven, Town 2 1 N . l t .
C a l e b B . B m i t h , a t p r e s e n t S e c r e t a r y of t h e I n t e r i o r , (17) Seventeen W a s t : L o t K o . ? , i e c . 5, Town 20 N, of.jil.17
W : t » t 2, sec. 2. Town 22 N. K, 13, W ; n e | of net uf sec.
t o b e J u d g e of t h e D i s t r i c t C o u r t of t h e U n i t e d - S t a t e a 22, Town 22, N. of R. 15, W ; l^it 2. see. 11. Town 22 N, B. 13,
W : M { of u e j sec. 13, Town 22 N. B. l i W ; Lot No. 7, sec.
f o r t h e D i s t r i c t of I n d i a n a .
I " , T o w n 22 N. a . 1 3 W ; s e j of »oJ sec. 11. Town 22 N. « .
16 W ; sw< of s w j See. 12, Town 22 N. It.15 W ; s e j or s c |
P o r p u i T i o x o r CHICAGO,—A carefully t a k e n c q t t s n j of and »wi of s w j see, 15, Town 22 N. 11. 15 W ; the BW{ of
t h e c i t y o f C h i c a g o , j u s t c o m p l e t e d , s h o w s t h e p o p u l a - tvi ace. 15, Towtl 21 N . B. 15 W ' the n e t of u w i a h d n w j
of ne< sec. 15. Town 22 N. It. 15 W ; the net o f s e j sec. 15,
t i o n d u r i n g t b e ' p o s t t w o y e a r s h a s i n c r e a s e d ' 2 7 j " 6 8 . - — Town 22 N. H. 16 W ; the gwi of s w j pea. U , Town 22 N.
. 15 W ; and se* of »ei » e c . ; V Town J i T*. a 15 W.
I n 1 8 6 0 it w a s 109, 262. ' N o w i t i s 1 3 7 , 0 3 0 .
Dated Manistee, December 22«3, A. I).. 1SG2.
T. J . BAMSDEI.L
T h e t n r u t c A l a b a m a turns u p again.
A d v i c e s frfcm
Special Commissioner.
t h e W e s t Indies convey the tantilizing information t h a i
W. W . CABPENTER.
Solicitor
a
n
d
of
Coucael
for Complainant.
s h e h a d returned t o M a r t i n i q u e , w h e r e s h e wasj' t a k i n g
(Prlntsr-a t e e » $ 1335.)
,
a b o a r d a s u p p l y of c o a l f r o m . a B r i t i s h " o e u l ^ a T j v e s s e l
' AowroLTciui

FOB TUB LAXCASHIRR ^ H u u V n - E s . — N e w
alone, h a s raised 8 1 7 5 , 0 0 0 f o r t h ?

of ^ L a n c a -

has jffolj^il i b e

a m o u n t t o . o n e f o u r t h ol a m i l l i o n /
B i o POTATO*!—'The e d i t o r ^ f t h e

A l t a ! California

has been presented with a B a c k V potatoes,
i n g t b r e o only, e a c h w e i g h i n g 2 9 p o u n d s !
i s Btft" a •' small p o t a t o " c o u u t r j f

pontaioCalifornia

> •*-

f h o life of G a r i b a l d i i s l S i d t o b e in i m m i n e n t dang e r f r o m h i s w o u n d in t h e iustcp, w h i c h is shopving a l a r m ing symptoms, the e f f e c t o f i k d surgery.
I n t h e S e n a t e o n t h e 1 6 t h a n army, bill w a s reported
f r o m t h e C o m m i t t e e of W a y s a n d M e a n s a p p r o p r i a t i n g
$1*31,000,000 f o r t h e y e a r e n d i n g J u n o 1 8 6 ^ .
STATC U * m i a s m - . — - T h e r e a r e now 5 6 2

students at

t h e 8 t a t e University, A n n Arbor"—188 in f b o College
' classes, 2 1 9 in t h o fl>w class, 2 5 5 i n t h e M e d i c a l class.
W n m o L v \ * m a n a A . — C o n g r e s s h a s a d m i t t e d iWesiern
V i r g i n i a Into t h e Union a ea State.

W e s t e r n Virgtoii

t a k e s t h e p l a c e of V i r g i n i a t h a t w a s .

i

J e f f D a v i s evidently d o n ' t like the looks o f thiogs
t h e Southwest, and so has gone o u t to "
ters.

(

regulate"

H e w a s last h e a r d of a t M u r f r c e s b o r o . ;

hi

mat-

*

FORT MOKIIOK, D c c . 1 9 . — G e n , F o s t e r ' s f o r c e h a v e
t a k e n K i n g s t o n , N . C-, c a p t u r i n g five h u n d r e d p r i s o n e r s
a n d e l e v e n p i e c e s of a r t i l l e r y .
T h e President has sighed

t h e order'removing Gen.

W o o l from tho command ut Baltimore.

GO". S c h e n c k

h a s b e e n a p p c i u t e d h i s sncecsBor. - :
A c o u p l e w e r e m a r r i e d in B a n g o r , M e . , a , d a y o r t w o
since, w h e r e t h o b r i d e w a s 71 and t h e g r o o m
Tffi» BLOOKAOR.—JOur b l o c k a d i n g

fleet

83.

has captured

a b o u t $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 w o r t h of prizes, n i o g t l y E n g l i s h ^ ^

FUBS! FURS! FURS!

BOUNTY.
BOUNTY I S O F - T H E N A T U R E O F A GIFT, O B
gratuity. I n t h i s w a r $100, as a bounty, ia due to t h e
widow o r l i e i r a of d e c e a s e d soldiers and to discharged pol
die re who shall serve for two years, or t o the close of th<
was, if sooner ended. I n cases of deceased soldiers it is d u e :
1st, T o the widow, if there be one ; 2nd. To the children, If no
widow ; 3d, To the father, mother, or b r o t h e r s and sisters, at
tho ease may be, provided they tw residents of . t h e United
States. Commissioned offii^nt and soldiers discharged before two years' a-jrvice. a n d their heirs in case of t h e i r death,
are not entitled, as the law now is. to any Bounty.
.
PENSIONS.
.
Pension# were formerly an annual p a y m e n t in' s considcration of p a s t services. It h a s been extended in modern times
to those w h o have become disabled, and t o the dependent
heirs of t h o s e who lose their lives in service. I t is due in
t h i s war t o soldiers disabled >n service in the line of d u i j v Of decoaseil soldiers i t i s due : 1st, To the Widow, if there be
one : 2d, T o the c h i l d r e n nndor 15 years of age ; 3d, T o the
mother d e p e n d e n t wholly or partly ; 4th. T o the sisters under
16 years, dependent wholly or partly upon any decessed soldier who may be killed or dies or disease contracted or
w o u n d s received In service and in t h e line of dnty.
R a t e s o f P e n s i o n s . — T o a non-commissioned officer,
m u s i c i a n or private, if totally disabled, or t o their widow or
d e p e n d e n t heir, if deceased. $8 per month ; to 2d Lieutenant*
S l F ; W Li on tenants, $17 ; ' t o Captains, MO ; to Majors,
$25 : T o Lieutenant Colonels and all h i g h e r grades, $30 p e r
month. F e e s in P e n s i o n cases arc only $5.
BACK PAY.
I» due t o discharged soldiers to the time they are actually
dischargod. The undersigned h a v c ^ u p e r i p r »dvsnt-iges for
speedily c o l l e c t i n g t h e p s y and claims of discharged soldierx.
Back Pay i s due the w i d o w a j o r h e i * of deceased s o l d l r nearly t h e same order as Bounty.
The father, mothc
o t h e r h e i r s noed n o t be residents or tho United States.
., . . s ;• ^ >,r
MINOKH.
1
1
The W a r U e h s r t m e n t forhiife the e n l i s t m e n t - o f minors
u n d e r l H y t s r s of age.' Ordinarily they will be rejected If
anoh enllstmenta arc properly
reported.
In all c a s e s or Soldiers 1 Pay, Pensions, Bounty, and in feet
all j u s t c l a i m s and a c c o u n t s a g a i n s t the Government, the
nnderaignofi have t h a most perfect f a c i i i t i f s ' f o r their most
speedy collection.
Discharged Soldiers who have n o t got their pay we arc daily r e n d e r i n g the moat Important assistance to, besides seeing
that they sccurc all due t h e m on transportation, subsistence,
clothing, rations, Ac,
R a t i o n s . — S o l d i e r s are entitled to tho cost price of rations in m o n e y while absent on,furloughs, or other compet e n t a u t h o r i t y , which money we readily secure.
G o v t r f i m e n t Vouchers, Recruiting. Quartermaster and
Commissary A c c o u n t s accurately made u p at our office and

A

A GEM FOR

'

i'"'"

(Organized
0

by

W I L L I A M S
Permission

of

t

CO.

Ike jluthoritie*,}

W A L L - S T R E E T , X. Y .

jr p m s

1 l o c a t e d a t U J e t r o i t ." ij 1o n

69

COMPANY I S ORGANIZED B P E C I A f . t Y F O R

THE PROTECTION OF FAMILIES.
the p a y m e n t to lhi» Company, or a n y of its a i r t h o r i w f

M i c h r j Merrill B l o c k ,
„ agents ol iho sum of $50. It will isauc a certificate of inter
n g i t a e i r t o p a y t o a u c h person the w a r o f F m
:>I " W o o d w a r d & J e t U » r w £ h A v n n u c . f a n c e . b i n d lDOU-ASS,
in casf they »rv drafted into the Naval

'

R E A L

E S T , V T E

G E N E R A L liAND AGENCY.
GrttO. W . B R Y A . N T

GUNTON HOUSE
BT

3m»

Splendid and

r

THIS is t i e largest Hotel, with t h o best a c c o m m o d a t i o n s
in tho city I the leading Daily a n d Weekly P a p e r s are taken
hero, and no pains will be spared to mako g teste comrortable;
nod eleven y e a r s ' residence hero will e n a b e me to give relia.
ble information relative t o the resource* of the c o u n t r y .
24-ly
J. K. G

THE MILLION,

Appropriate Holiday Present.

of

$r> S E W I N G MACHINE,.

^

Advantages of Insuring in

thta C o m p a n y .

I r t t — I n the case oi citizen* i n s u r i n g sums for their families, if d r a t t e d : If no d r a f t takes place in tho county whers
t h e i n s u r e d resides, half the insurance money will be refunded.
'
2nd.—Our Insurance in r e g a r d to t h e d r a f t cdvers n o t only
t h e present draft, but all f u t u r e ones.
3d.—Our Company insure for any sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
, c i r c u m s t a n c e s of insured.
4th.—The men who h a v e invested their capital in t h i s
C o m p a n y have been well known to the business community
f o r the past fourteen years.
5th.—The capital o r t h l s Company will not be employed in
H a n k i n g or Ileal Estate operations, but will, r e m a i n in U. 6 .
G o v e r n m e n t Stocks, a n d will only be c o n v e r t e d so fBst •*
m a y be necessary to meet the liabilitiee of the Company t o
t h e Insured. - •
r.th.—The Company are bound to take risks to no more
t h a n $100,000, •—
"
.
Responsible a g e n t s wanted in every county iu the United
references «of' s t r i c t i n t e g r i t y a n d
S t a t e s . They m u s t g i " -. —'-•»«»»"
Those
desiring t o bn Insured w h e r e a g e n t s
responsibility,
"n--• —
t h e C o m p a n y , ' n t 69 Wallt t t r e t , ii. Y.," (by oxpre'ss). a SUM" of money sufficient t o c o v e r
t h e C o m p s n v ' s per ccntnge on Iho a m o u n t desired to. be insured : and'if I t be a citiu'tt d e s i r i n g to insure a sum f o r h i s
family, in case he is afterwards drafted, he will, give his naine,
age and residence. I f It be a soldier-, he will give name, age,
a n d the Coinpsnv of t h e Regiment t o which h e belongs, t h '
n u m b e r of the R e g i m e n t and Stato it is f r o m , also t h e residence of his ramily. U it be wife, b r o t h e r , lather, or f r i e n d s
of the family that dosire t o take o u t a n Insurance unon the
a b s e n t soldier, tlicy will give his name a n d age, and also the
Company, Regiment and State to w h i c h ' i t belongs. T h e applicant tor the policy will also Rive ;bo name a n d r e s i d e n c e
o f t h e wife or tho person for whose benefit the insurance is
procureu.
• ..

Apply to. o r address,
SNYDER, W I L L I A M S A Co..
69 Wall-street, N. Y.
P. R — M o n e y may be s e n t in registered lottera, o r b y express, at onr risk.

J A M E S K . GTJKTQyi:.
GOOD STAElSG tt't WIU A1EE0 BEDS! / <

NOTICE TO EXEMPTS UNDER T H E DRAFT.
M M E .
D E M O R E ST' 8
H E UNDEBSIONEC, S H E R I F F O F GRAND T R A RUNNING BT1CU
r e r s e ' County, and ej-oltlcio C o m i n i s d o n b r , hereby
c i t e s notice t o the I n h a b i t a n t s of the Townships of Benronls,
H E - EMBODIMENT OiF I P R A C T I C A L UTU.ITY, AND
-Crystal Lake, Glen A T W , Centerville, I«el»n*o, i Megeewe,
a m a r v e l of simplicity ; makes the r u i i u l n g stieh very
Milton, P e n i n s u l a , T r a v e r s e a n d Whitewater,', t h a t bo b s s
appointed T h u n d a r t ' t b e 8th day of January, 1863, Tor rapidly and perfect, uses a common needle, and will las',
h e a r i n g t h o s e who m a r elalin to be exempt, at hla offlee in lifetime. A t the New York State Fair, i t s simplicity, officiei
, , a n d g r e a t p r a c t i c a l utility, was conilrmcd by the sward •
T r a v e r s e City, and will c o n t l n a e the h e a r i n g fr<hn day t o
day, f o r t e n d s y s . All w h o do n o t appear w i t h i n t h a t time
ic F i r s t P r e m i u m .
.
.
...
It will g a t h e r . Ruffle, shirr, tnck. run u p breadths, etc., w i t h
-will bo r e t u r n e d t o the A d j u t a n t General a s sukjeet to *ua single o r double t h r e a d on any material adapted t o the runD r a f t Dr. B. P . ASllTON h a s been a p p o i n ^ P a n r - o n .
n i n g atlclu The thinnest, u s u a l * the most difficult to s t i t c h
by o t h e r Sewing machines, being acwAl t h e e a s i e s t h o r
T r a v e r s e City, Dec. 24, IB62..
ladicg' a n d c h i l d r e n ' s apparel, and o t h e r articles made or
NOTICE
l i g h t fabrics. It will th e r e f o r e be found almost invaluable.
I t is a t t a c h e d to t h e table like a s e w i n g bird, a n d h a v i n g —
T S H E R E B Y Q l ^ E J C T H A T T H E UNDERSIGNED FREEI h o l d e r s of the Towhshlp of Milton a n d Megoczce, will make tension, a n d r e q u i r i n g n o lubrication o r c h a n g e of stich, i s
application to the Board of Snpervirora of tlranfl Traverse always r e a d y f o r operation, a n d s u c b a marvel of aimplicity
County, a t t h e i r n e x t itaectltig. to a l w r the bonndary l|n« or t h a t a child of si* or eight years can undorsrand it, and ueo
It successfully.
the t o w n s h i p of Aliltoi>,M f o l l o w s :
. I t i s n o t at all liable t o get out of order.
C o m m e n c i n g ht the p o i n t where t h e p r e s e n t N o r t h line
of said township Intersects T o r c h I^ike, t o run «£st on said . B a c h machine is p u t u p !a a h e a t box, a c c o m p a n i e d w i t h
l i n e u n t i l It i n t e r s e c t a r a n g e line, between r a n g e s seven a n d full a n d e x p l i c i t d i r e c t i o n s and twenty-five needles.
Sent to » a y a d d r e s s In the United States on receipt or an
eight, thence south on said r a n g e li«e u n t i l It i n t e r s e c t s
order, Inclosing the amount, or may bo collected by E x p r e s s
t i o n l i n e r u n n i n g east a n d west betweon-rfectlos t h i r t e e n
twenty-four I n t o w n s h i p twenty-eight, north of rtnge n u m b e r on d e l i v e n ' of t h e m a c h i n e .
W h e n tfie money "is s e n t w i t h the o r d t r a n d registered, wo
e i g h t w e s t , t h e n e e west o n said line t o the abol-e o r R o u n d
I J S * , t h e n c e north on shore of said Lake to J # ' n p r e s e n t guarantee i t i safe receipt a n d "the delivery of" t h e machine,
anywhere w i t h i n 2000 miles free or a n y E x p r e s s charges.
boilliarTlIne nt mouth of T o r c h River.
v e r y liberal a r r a n g e m e n t f o r agencies.
m i i o n . Nov,
n u > , 2Sth.
*.•»«. IMS.
•out.
Milton.
Seo M n u t o a o r FasaioNS.jor f o r full particulars, specimen
LUCIUS A. T H A Y E R ,
ALCT, ICAMPBKLU
D A V I D H. PARKS,
J A M E S P . BRAND,
CUARt.ES.mn.LY,
SIMEON ANDREW,
473 Broadway, N. Y.
GEOROEIiUKB.
E v e r y lady, mother, milliner a n d dreas-r taker, should have
CHANCET H A L L

J O H N :M. GODDARD. one of these valuable i e w i o g macljinea.

T

*

Capital, *100,000.

•—
«r Military Service of the United States, p r i o r t » D e e t m t » r
or during the w w . In tt>e « m c p r - . p w t i o * this
' r p i IS INSTITUTION f O l ' M S O N E O F ElCillT COLLEGER j
iill insure any peruoii liable to do Mi.itary duty,
1 loe:,t<-di». the- follow-in,t eitic.-.,:—IK'UoiU New > o r k . 1J-"
from $100 to $5.000.. but not mon- than $ 6 J 0 6 i.n
Philadelphia. ATl,aoj,
* } W v e l j f n « ? 0 « < * g o 4 6 t . f.ooH. »»
...ir. T h i s Company also insures those in the »trA person bt>1ding a scli^Ianih l p can a t t e n d e i t h e r at hU vic<-. oOtcrrs and privates, against wounds or death, u a t i o g
tlie
present
war. t h u s e n a b l i n g all p r u d e n t soldiers to proviri.
option.
Ten*
T u i t i o n pa'jfaMf in a i ! r - n c e X % p n r e h a a e of scholarship. their famlll, s azalnst want, in case they f i l l in l i t t l e — i h —
or an- so u o u n d e d a s t o be disabled f r o m s u p p o r t i n g t h r m . ~ $4ii for rull tiTm. S,,mc . ',u*w l o > L a d i e s , $25.
J.—.
T
o
the
manly
virtues of bravery a n d patriotism t h a t called
S«<ident« t o e n t e r at any time. A ' e r s g e UmeAff comple>
the soldier to the field, let him add the crowning exceilenca
the course, tliree m o n t h s .
;/ ' .
p r u d e n t provision for his family, in case he never re"A knowledge ot the o r d i n a r y E n g l i s h l>rM|&e»,is s u f l l c i t m
It
urn.
then
will
he be remembered with gratitude, as one that
p r e p a t a t o t y u , e n t e r i n g upon the cottTsc^r^
' 'charged his whole duty to hia God—his country—hi»
J . II. GOLDSMITH, R e s i d e n t r
J . F.jSPALDING, Assistant. *
Our
rate*
for
insurance a g a i n s t wounds a n d death are as
lost t h o r o u g h , p r a c t i c a l a n d t r o l j j;upular College?
In America. Over six thousand s t u d e n t s h , i r e e n t e r e d ^ince 'follows, to wit :
$10 on s h u n d r e d
agulnst wonndd.
t h e i r establishment, which Is the best e t t d e n c e or t h e i r
$5
"
••
"
death. 1
" vor with tlie p o b l i f .
.
.

Oor certificates of insurance ere assignable—are intended
F o r f u r t h e r infor,uaUon please call at Colle-ge B o o m s , .
t o be assigned t o the family for their care, support a n d resend lor a ae»- Catalogue of SO pages. F o r s.'K-elmens
lief,
in
case
the
events
occur
upon
which
they
are payable.
penmanship,'inclose letter stamp. . "
As m a n y in tlie service are where it Would be Imposs.ble
o f t h # aV>ov«
BBVAvr A SytATTON. ateith
f o r them to provide for their families in t h i s way, the wife,
• C<'t t h i s o u t l o r T u t u r e r c f e r e u r e .
father, or brother, or any individual foeliug an i n i e r e s t t n
the family of the soldier, may insure t h e m a g a i n s t wounds or
death. W h a t can mortal man do nobler, than to present th»
familv of tlie soldier with an insuranco upon his lire; or
,AKl>
agaisst rfounds. thns at o n c e p l a c i n g them beyond the teach
or povertv. in case their p r o t e c t o r n e v e r returns. T h i s Is »
system ol' substantial charity towards the dependent families
' volunteers, t h a t h a s U-en commenced by o a r wealthy cltiis, a n d will be continued by the worthier p o r t i o n s of
t h e m . What can o n r wealthy and patriotic r i t i w n s do, t h a t
will go f u r t h e r to increase ealistments and assist tho Gov[ T I L L -LOCATE LANDS, PAY T A J F A BUY AND e r n m e n t , than tn say to our hardy Isboriug m e n — " I f y o u
. v *'»ll
Commission, a n d now has roi sale as agent. B •ill e n l i s t . 1 will insure y o u r life untfl you return, for $100
valuable improved Farms, on and near the h o r e s or Grand
—$1,000, for the benefit of your family."
Traverse lljv. Alsti. 1.000 s e r e s of wcllne.hctcd wild lands
Th i rates of basla upoh which t h i s Company insure i s
in different "parts of the county of G r a n d , T r a v e r s e , all of f o u n d e d n p o n a scientific statistical calculation of the morwhich Is offered ut reasouable prices. A l « , h a v i n g been in tality or wars for the last COO years, a n d leaves but a reasonathe business or Locating publltf l a n d s In U>U Comity ror t!w ble t n a r g i n for profit f o r the Company, while it places the
Isst JO years; and being well acquainted wfch all he c h o i c e families of those insured beyond w a n t a n d destitution f r o m
l&ndsin the-county h e is prepared t o assist tyow comers In seiv of the vicissitudes of W ar.
lecting rroni Government 1-ands in t h i s or tl|e a d j o i n i n g Co.
T h i s is the only Insurauce Company In the United S t a t u
OPPirP
hid nniEilMrp. IJWI Traverse C i t j .
t h a t was organlxed especially f o r this p u r p o r t .

° ° A U J w t M i i i t a r y and N a v f l C o n t r a c t * . O a i r n s a n d Losses
AI.TUS
iiywMeiSsibd t i4btlect5d on application, either by p a l l or iu
. , T B A " V B K 8 K
C I
per«to>>


ROBINSON 4 B B 0 0 K 8 .
r p i r a SOBSCBIBBB W I L L P A Y T H S HIGHEST I'iflCE,
Authorised War Claim Attorneys,
i . in CASH, f o r raw P u r e d o l i n g the fUr »e»ton.
D r r a o i T , Mien,
He h a s a q u a n t i t y of
Om«-B—No. 149 Jqffcrson A,veune. over Ives' Bank, optTtfDLAJS" X^JNTSTKX) D E E R
SlfccNP,
posite Office U. a Military C o m m a n d e r .
•Which ha will aell f o r C A S H or e x c h a n g e for F o r i
'
J t B i T r a p p e r s Will beat consult t h e i r owj» intercat by
. ^ U l u g - h i m before sel.ing t h e i r F u r .
, ^ ^
Traverse City, Dec, P, 1862.

L

... .

S N Y D E R .

THE LAW COXCERNISG GOVEBNMEN
. T CIMMS.

Y o r k City,

raftering

s h i r e . , .£JJO w h o l e . c o u n t r y p r o b a b l y

'Brand

.
C H A N C B B Y S U E . - T/j A
STATS o r MICHIGAN—The Circuit Court f o r tTitf Coanty of
Manistee, in C h a n c e r y .
j LCSTKB SEITOS, C u n p l a i n a n : .
ICorm>i

' j

w h e r e n e a r R i c h m o n d a r e BOW seen t o b e

CHiBHMIWil
M E R C A N T I L E
C O X i L £ 3 G - £ : S .

ii t o b e ' j n ^ u e h m o r e

icy o | t h

irATimru isoimTt IWCRAXCE co.

•B1,

RxpRDrfrafc.—•Tbe'rogirheot*

w h i c h left N e w Y o f k e l t y ' O h d e r e o m m a i u l o f G e n . B a n k s

NOTICELAND O F F I C E A T T H A Y E R S l CITY. Mien.

W

O C T O B C 1 . 1K62.

H E R E A S CONGRESS AT ITS LATE SESSION
passed an A c t w h i c h w a s n p p r o v i \ qn the 16th of
J o lv , 1 8 C 2 , i k - d r i n g " t h a t nil t h a t p o r t i i a or the present
•Cheboygan District," in Gie State or MliiJigno, W i n g W c « t
or I,a»c Mitliigao, and South of tho l i n e d l / i d i n g T o w n s h i p s
forty-one Mid forty-two North. iucju41ng' Si. Maj-tin's and
the Adjacent Islands near t h c . e n t r a n c e to - Big B«y De h o c ,
now f p r m i f g o p a r t of the present Cheboygan District, and
sul<ject to Hole at T r a v e r s e City, in said Stal e be, a n d the same
is hereby astuohed to t h o " Lako Supcrioi>))i#'.rici," Bad the
Lands tlientin bokUbjucl to sale and efttrj^ i t the hite of tlie
Land OIHc» f o r said District, a n d wheroai>, Section 2 of t h i s
a c t declares t h a t it shall n o t take effect
after the d*te or its approval.
.
. . . .
Notice is lie re by given that on and a f t e r the l o t h daj; of
Oi tobor. Instaut, n o furUtcc c u t r i e s or !o<5:.tloni 'ill be made
at t h i s office of any l a n d s lying within the liuii above described, and that all the Plativ T r a c t Bosk*, ipplicatious.
portf —
d c c l a ^ a t l o f ^ oi.d p a p e r s p e r t a i n i n g t o lau Is In tthat
h a t portion
o t t l i e present District, will bfc s e n t ' *j |U" • L a n d Office
Marquette, Lake Superior
MORGAN BA'tES. Register.
REUBEN GOODRICH, Receiver

N o t i c e s of t h e

Presa.

T h i s Is a sound C o m p a n y . "
- The insurance of a certain sam for one's family,Is a prudence t h a t every man should a d o p t in t h e s e c r i t i c a l times.'
•• The inUn that would t e respected apd loved by h i s family
Y VIRTUE O F O N E WRIT' O F EXI'SOUTION ISSUED in life, snd gratefully remembered ih death, w^ll provide b i s
\
outoCVu'i u n d e r the seal of tlio Cire, alt Court, for pi» family a e a l n s t w a n t . "
" A l l o u r most p r u d e n t citizens nnd soldiers are i n s u r i n g
County of Grand Traverse, and State of Michigan, to mo directed and delivered against tho goods and cliatwls, lands and a competence to their families in case they arc d r a f t e d , or
tenement* of H. R. Hate, I havosolxwl a n d levied upon all »hc kilied, ic the scrvice ; i t is tbo only safeguard in tbcse oritlM-9
m.
r i g h t , UtU and i n t e r e s t of t h q s a i d d e f e n t ^ n t I n a n d t o {he cal timen."
following real estate, viz :
(
MORTGAGE SALE.
T h e n o r t h - e a s t q u a r t e r of the soulii-ta^t q u a r t e r a n d the
aoutb-«a.-*t q u a r t e r of the sou'Ji-cast q u a r i f r or section twenE F A U L T HAVING BEEN MADE I N T H E CONDIty-one (21:}, town twenty-nine (29}, n o r t h ' or r a n g e t e n OO)
tion or a certain mortgage executed by Henry Warborwest, whiph I shall offer (or sale at public i u c t i o n , or vendue, ton. then or the T o w n s h i p or Traverse, County of Grand
as the la«r directs, a t the front door of t h j C o u r t Room in the Travcrso n n d S t a t e ot Michigan, to Morgan Bates, of T r a v e r s e
village oPTravenia City, t h a t being the n.i>co for h o l d i n g t l i o City. County of Grand Traverse and S t a t c o f Michigan, beat*
Circuit C o u r t for the County of Grand "1 r.iveme, on Saint day, ing date tlie F i f t h day of November, in the year or O n r Lord
> o'clock in 'the One Thousand E i g h t H u n d r e d and Sixtv-one, and recorded
L.D.. 1863. s
on the Fifth day nt November, 1861, at 4 o'clock, P. M- In
E. K. OA ME. Sheriff.
the ofiicc or the Register or Deeds or Grand T r a v e r s e County,
SherifPs office. Traverse City, Sep. 2bt! "38SJ.
in Liber 2 of Mortgages, at {.ages 30s and ao9. on which there
( P r i n t e r ' s feea 8426.)
is claimed t o lie due at the dale o l t h i s notice, by tne t e r m s
and condition" thereof, the rum of>lxty-¥lS dollars ; and no
NOTICE.
suit or proceeding s t l a w h a v i n g been Instituted t o recover
nr.v' p a r t or the debt s e c u r e d by said m o r t g a g e ; N o t i t a la
|
UNITED S T A T E S L j r N D O F F I C E
TaavEKRKCltT. Nov. 6, 1H6U.
he'rebv given, that by virtue o> a power of sale contained tn
said mortgage, a n d the statute in such ease made a n d proA T E N T S FOR ENTRIES MAD. 11 B E T W E E N tylE
Stli ilsy orMav, 1S0A a n d the TJth <?>..v of May, 1862, for vided, the premise* described in said mortgage, or 80 much
S e t t l e m e n t ond C i l t i v n t i o n , u n d e r th(£ Graduation Act or t h e r e o r a * may be necessary t o satisfy tho a m o n n t d o e o o s t l d
A u g u s t 4.1S44'have been received s t • nis Oflice. a n d .the mortgage, and the costs, interest and e x p e n s e s of sale, topurchasers aro hereby notified to come irwiird immeditt*ly gether with an Attorney's r « or Twenty-fave dollars, epecified
a n d make the r e q u i r e d pi oof of •• J-eWftanent and Cui^ivs- in said mortgage, will bo sold »t public vendue, t o the hightion," and secure t h e i r respective Paten s , because if said est bidder, at the front door of the Bchool H o w e In T r a v e r s e
p r o o r i s n o t filed within a limited time, V P a t e n t s will be Cltv C o u n t v of Grand T r a v e r s e a n d State of Michigan,—that
retarded t o t h e General L a n d Office. ari< .will t h u s be liable b e l n c the place for holding the C i r c u i t C o u r t f o r the County
t o be cancelled 1 for non-pcrforinauce « t h e c o n d i t i o a a or In which the premises t o So sold are . i t u a t e d - o n Saturday,
settlement and cultivation c o n t e m p l a t e ^ by tlie Graduation the Seventh day of February, 1663. at ten o clock In t h e fore
noon Said premises are described a s follows : All that
A c t of A u g u s t 6,"1854.
'
.
certain piece or parcel o f l a u d Situated lying and Iwlng in
MORGAN BA'IES, Rngister.
the County of Grand Traverse and S t a t e of Michigan, snd
47-6w.
REUBEN GOUDRlCil, Receiver.
described as the West half of 8 o n t h E a s t q u a r t e r of Section

— - m(27) N o r t h of R a n g e Eleven (111
Five (5) Town
Twenty-K
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLAR*
c o r d i n g to the United
tVcst.containing Eighty acre
I L L BUY A S A W M I L L KE\ K!< ACRES O F LAND States survey thereof.
1
a n d a email house, w i t h i n h a l f , * mile of Little ( T r a '
MORGAN BATES, Mortgagee.
verse Bay. A splendid c h a a c e f o r a n o t h e r mill by tho same
Dated T r a v e r s e City, N o v e m b e r 7,1862.
47-lIw
dam. S p p l y soon for t h i s chance will | 0 t last long,
r r
• w . H. PORTBR.
Bear R i v e r , E m m e t C o ^ N o r . 2 4 , 1 8 6 1 *
50-3w.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
STATB o r MictnisAM,
?Mi

B

D

P

W

1 6 0 0 .Acres'of L a n d !

r

f T H E TOWN O F TRAVERSE WHJh F I N D T H E TOLL
ready at tho Treasurer's Office. G o t i j r l e h ' a Buildings
A: W. BACON, [OWN TBE*SVR»*
Traverse City, Dec. 11, 1S62- 'i

tyOHGAN IiATES,
J U S T I C E O F TH35 P E A C E ,
Traverse CHy, Ulch.

The s u b s c r i b e r offers f o r *£& ICC0 a c r e s of choice a n d
weil-sriected lands, h a v i n g U-en moetlv located a t the first
s e t t l e m e n t of the country, and many of " i < n a n d « are border
i n g on the Grand T r a v e r s e Bay, and In t r a c t s ef f r o m SO V»
300 a c r e s - some, h a v e small Improvements on, (and well
located for wooding p u r p o s e * w i t h a good g r o w t h o f , b e a c h
a n d mati'.e t i m b e r ^ AUo. 3(K» Town lota, a n d SO P a r k U U
in E a s t T r a v e r s e City, offered for sale at reasonable p r i c e s ,
^
G e o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor,
j u l y 4-31-€m


[ F r o m the C o n t i n e n t * ! Monthly
Wheri'the eaglets' tender wing* are feathered
T h e old o g l e s crowed t h e m f r o m tho nest i
Dowft t h e y .flatter till t b a i r
„,
S t r e n g t h to l i f t t h e m to the g r a n i t e c r e s t
'
Of MM bills,their
*

Still the eagles watch from o u t the eyrie
O n the mountains, t h e i r y o u n g helra to s c r e e n ;
The old lions on the bot sand-prairie.—
If some peril t r a c k their cub,—unseen.'
I'
Stealthler t h a t the Bedouin, glide between.

(Organized

H A N N A H , L A Y & CO

H A V E ADDED T O T H E R

AXD

G E N E R A L L A N D AGENCY.
GEO. W . B B Y A N T
[ T I L L LOCATE LANDS, P A Y TAXES, BUY AND
. v sell on Commission, a n d now h a s f o r sale as agent, 6
valuable improved F a r m s , on a n d n e a r the shores of Grand
Traverse Bay. Also, 1,000 a c r e s of well-selected wild lands
in different p a r t s of the c o u n t y of Grand Traverse, all of
whioh i s offered at reasonable prices. Also, h a v i n g been in
t h e b u s i n e s s of L o c a t i n g public l a n d s in t h i s County for the
last 10 years, a n d being well a c q u a i n t e d with all h e c h o i c e
lands In the connty he i s prepared to assist new comers In sel e c t i n g f r o m G o v e r n m e n t L a n d s in t h i s or the a d j o i n i n g Co
O F F I C E at his residence, E a s t Traverse City.
JnJy 4-31-6m

H e b a t h bid t h e everlasting presence.
Of his Godhead f r o m t h e world he made,
Veiled b i s i n c o m m u n i c a b l c essence
I n t h i c k d a r k n e s s of thick clonds arrayed.
On o n r bold s e a r c h flashing t h r o u g h toe Shade.

W h i l e we lean, and creep, a n d beg In moans.
And base k n e e l i n g c r a m p s onr k n i t t e d bones.

Already

CHAIN OF MTlMiAl
M B H . C A N T I L E 5
C O L L . E & B 8 -

' If p e r c h a n c e It m«jr be w h e a t or darnel,
Bitter berb* to medicine a wrong.
S t i n g i n g t h ! s t l f < r o f e a d a haunted charfcel,
Or rich winds to make us glad a n d strong,—
F i t t i n g f r n i t s t h a t to cach mood belong..

UPPER,

ITEM OF

KID,

OALF,

BINDINGS,

B r a n c h Located at Detroit,

SOLE,

die,

M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,

.

C o r n e r o f " W o o d w a r d Ac J e f f b r n o n A v e n u e s .
A S ALSO A

N o I we will not stoop, a n i fawn and f o l l o ^ ;
There arc victories for a u r h a n d s to win.
R o c k s to rive, a n d stubborn glebes to mellow.
Outward t r i a l s league*! t o foes w i t h i n ; |
Eart h a n d self tp%ponfy f r o m sin.
j
snd igrflvel,
S t o o p i n g lowly to a low t h o u g h t ' s door,I
Aa if Heaven were .straitened to a hovel,
All Its star-worlds s e t to rise no more.
And onr genius had no w i n g s to soar.

i

LEATHER:

BRYANT & STRATTON'S

S t r e n g t h la given us, and a field for labor,
Boandleaa vigor a n d a boundless field;
Not t o e a t the harvests of our neighbor,
Bot our own fate's rcaplng-hoek to wield—
G a t h e r i n g only what; onr l a n d s may y ield.

lar$e Stock
THE

,

T r o t h s bequeathed ns are for lores to a c t i o n ;
N o l f o r grave-stones fane a n d alter jftaqd,
T e m p t i n g men to wait the resurrection t
"Or old p r o p h e t s f r o m their sunsets fcrao|d,—
Bather mile-stones towards t h e 1,'romlitd Land.
O i r d your m a n t l e s a n d b i n d y o u r sandals,t
Bach man m a r c h i n g by his own blrtb-star; [
G o d wilUcrown us when those g l i m m e r i n g oandles
SweH tb suns as f o r t h we t r a c k t b c m far,—
KufcslAat bear o n r t h r o n e a n d victory-bannered car.
The Papei Panic.!
T h e r e i s n g e n e r a l a g i t a t i o n n o d t c f p i d s t i o n 4n t h e
n e w s p a p e r w orl d. A c o m e t , t h r e a t e n i n g t o k n o c k t h e
w o r l a i n t o pi. n o v e r c r e a t e d g r e a t e d c o n f u s i o n a m o n g
t h e ancients, t h a n t h e r i s e of p a p e r in t h o w o r l d j a s t
m e n t i o n e d . T h e g r e a t q u e s t i o n among- n e w s p a p e r men
' i s t h e q u e s t i o n oT e x i s t e n c e . P u b l i s h e r s a r e d e p e n d e n t
o u ( a n d o f t e n c l o t h e d in) r a g s , a n d r a g s a r e now est.—
G o T e r n m e n t is dependent u p o n taxes, and editors and
p u b l i s h e r s figure l a r g e l y u p o n t h o l a x l i s t
B a g Picke d — s u d d e n l y swollen i n t o i m p o r t a n t p O T s o t a g e s — t h o u g h
busy as rata a b o u t the gutters or tho cities' streets, don't
a m o u n t t o a d r o p in t h e b u c k e t of d e m a n d , i P r i n t i n g
p a p e r h a s g o n e u p , a n d t h o t o p m o s t r o u n d of t h e l a d d e r
[s still o u t o f s i g h t i n — n o t t h e p r i n t e r ' s h e a v e n , p r o b a b l y . W h a t a flutter a n d s c r a m b l e t h e r e 1B t o w a r d off
t h e final c r a s h . C h i c a g o dailies h a v e h o i s t e d t h e m s e l v e s
' n p o n ten dollar a y e a r s t o o l s — o u t of t h e * w e t , " p e r h a p s .
P a p e r s t h a t u s e d t o c o m e t o us p r i n t e d u p o n t h e w h i t e s t
a n u glossiest m a t e r i a l , w i t h t h e i r b l a c k , s h i n i n g l e t t e r s ,
l o o k i n g l i k e s h o w e r s o f j e t s on b e d s of p e a r l , w i t h fine
broad margins, a r e now shrunken and p i n c h e d and dingv
like M i s s o u r i rebels in • • b u t t e r n u t . " W e e k l i e s a r e t a d poling into semi-monthlieeand semi monthlies into monthlies. T b o r e is-ltttle talk n o w of new '• d r e s s e s " or now
" h e a d s , " b u t b y w a y of p a r e n t h e i s i s peopW -nro requested to understand t h a t worn types w i t h lopg and disfigure d f a c e i s a m o d e s t b e g r a r , repeating In p a n t o m i n o t h e
unheeded appeals that distracted editdre h a v e been uttering for months. N o t a few papers have already been crashe d t o d e a t h in t h e g e n e r a l s c r a m b l e , a o d j t b e c i r c u l a t i o n
of o t h e r s i s b e c o m i n g s o i m p a i r e d t h a t d f a t h will p r o b i
b l y ensue.
(Prairie Farmer.
- P * m c n SLAYM.—'The N e w O r l e a t s c o r r e s p o n d e n t o r
t h o N e w Y o r k l i m e s h a s t h e f o l l o w i n g : " O n e of t h e
m o s t interesting and significant t h i n g s , i a this connection,
i s t h e f a c t t h a t a few d a y s a g o a d e l e g a t i o n of slaves b e l o n g i n g t o M a r s h a l l W h i t e , o n e of t h e oldest a n d w e a l t h i e s t p l a n t e r s of t h e p a r i s h of S t B e r n a r d below t h e c i t y ,
called t o see G e n , S h e p l e y , a n d a s k e d , a* c i t i K n s , f o r nn
a u d i e n c e of t h o G o v e r n o r of t h e S t a t e .
T h e request
w a s g r a n t e d , a n d t h e s e m e n informed." t b o G e n e r a l t h a t
they came for freedom; t h e y said t h e i r j e l l o w servants
iu o t h e r p l a c e s w e r e all l e a v i n g t h e i r ;
and they
w i s h e d t o i m p r o v e t h e i r c o n d i t i o n , btat t h a y i t w a s n o t
clear to t h e m h o w was tho best way t o do i o . T h e y emp h a t i c a l l y m i d , h o w e v e r , t h a t t h e y d i d M y i n t e n d t o lab o r much, i f t h e y could help it, w
a n d t h e y c o n c l u d e d t h e i r requests a n d j l f o t e s t s b y a s k i n g
t h a t if t h e y remained p c a c a b l y a t h o n f a t h e y m i g h t h a v o
f a i r w a g e s s e c u r e d t o t h e m f o r t h e i r Bert-icies.
Genoral
S h e p l e y t r e a t e d t h e m a t t e r w i t h gra n d c o n f e r r i n g w i t h G e n e r a l B u t l e r , p«
tod t o theao men t o make terms with
c o n s e n t e d t o h a v e a p a r t o e r s h i p t ii
t h o s e m e n haTe g o n e t o w o r k ; n o t a s si

__ located in the following c i t i e s D e t r o i t , New York.
Philadelphia, Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago 4 SL Louis.
A person h o l d i n g * scholarship can a t t e n d e i t h e r a t his
o p tio n .
Terms.
4
Tuition payable in a d v a n c e by purchase of scholarship,
$40 f 6 r full t e r m . S a m a course for I n d i e s , *25.
S t n d e n t s to e n t e r a t a n y t i m e . A v e r a g e time t o c o m p l e t e
the course, t h r e e m o n t h s .
A knowledge of the o r d i n a r y English b r a n c h e s is sufficient
p r e p a r a t o r y to e n t e r i n g u p o n the course of study.
J . I I . GOLDSMITH, Resident P r i n c i p a l a t D e t r o i t .
J . F . SPALDING, A s s i s t a n t
The m o s t t h o r o u g h , p r a c t i c a l and t r u l y p o p u la r Colleges
in A m e r i c a . Over s i x t h o u s a n d s t u d e n t s have e n t e r e d since
t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h Is t h e b e s t evidence of t h e i r
favor with the public.
F o r f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t College Rooms,
s e n d f o r a new C a t a l o g u e of 80 pages. F o r s p e c i m e n s of
Pcnmanahlp, inclose letter stamp. Address,
BRYANT A STRATTON. a t e i t h e r of t h e above Cities.
(Cut this ont for f u t u r e reference.)
13-ly

FAIB

S U P P L Y OF

O

V

E

SMALL

R

ADVANCE

C O S T

OCTOBER, I , 1 8 6 2 .

CONGRESS

AT

ITS

LATE

PLEASE CALL AND

SESSION

W
p a s s e d a n A c t which was approved on the 16th of
J u l y , 1862, d e s i r i n g " t h a t all t h a t portion of t h e p r e s e n t
, ' C h e b o y g a n District," In the 8tate of Michigan, lying West
of Lake Michigan, a n d South of the l i n e d e v i f l n g Townships
f o r t y - o n e a n d forty-two North, I n c l u d i n g St. Martin's' and
t h e a d j a c e n t Islands near; the e n t r a n c e t o " B i g B a r D e Noc,"
now f o r m i n g a p a r t of the present Cheboygan District, and
s u b j e c t t o sale at Traverse City, in said S t a t e be, and t h o same
-is h e r e b y a t t a c h e d to the " L a k e S u p e r i o r District," and the
I j i n d a t h e r e i n be subject to sale a n d e n t r y a t t h e site of the
L a n d Office f o r said District, a n d whereas, S e c tio n I of t h i s
act d e c l a r e s t h a t i t s h a l l n o t t a k e effect u n t i l three m o n t h s
a f t e r the date, of ita approval.
Notice i s hereby g i v e n t h a t on a b d a f t e r the 15th day of
O t t o b c r , Instant, no f n r t h e r entries or locations will bo made
a t t h i s office o r any l a n d s lying w i t h i n the limlta above described, and t h a t all t h e Plata, T r a c t Books, applications,
*"
"*
| n t h a t portion

STATU

OK MICUIOAK,

CO.

CO.

by P e r m i s s i o n of the Jhitkoritia.)
WALL-STREET, N. Y.

60

Advantages of Insnring in

this Company.

1 s t — I n the case of cltlsens I n s u r i n g sums f o r their ftmt>
Ilea, if d r s t t e d : If no d r a f t takes plaoe In the county w h e r e
the i n s u r e d resides, half the I n s u r a n c e money will be refunded.
2nd.—Onr Insurance ia regard >o the d r a f t c a v e r s not o n l y
the present draft, b u t all future ones.
3d.—Our Company insore for a n y sum desired, a c c o r d i n g
> circumstances of Insured.
4th.—The men who b a r e invested t h e i r capital In t h i s
Company have been well k n o w n t o t h e business c o m m u n i t y
th.—The capital of thia Company will n o t be employed in
Banking or Real Estate operatioas, but will r e m a i n in U. &
a t Stocks, and will only be c o n v e r t e d so f s s t s s
rcssary to meet the liabilities of the Company t o
the'insured.
.
. . .
6th.—'The Company a r e b o u n d t o t a k e risks t o n© m o r e
isn $100,000,
Responsible a g e n t s w a n t e d h i e v e r y county In t h e U n i t e d
States. They m u s t give references of s t r i c t I n t e g r i t y a n d
responsibility, Those desiring to be insured w h e r e a r e n t e
are n o t yet appointed, will remit t o the Company, a t 69 Wallstreet, N. Y , (by express), a s u m eT money sufficient t o c o v e r
the Company's p e r c e n U g e on t h o a m o u n t desired t o be insured ; a n d if It be a citizen desiring to insnre a sum f o r h l a
family, ia case he 1a afterwards dratted,, he will, give his n a m e ,
age a n d residence.. If It be a soldier, he will give nsme, a g e ,
a n d t h e Company or the R e g i m e n t t o which be belongs, t h e
number of the Regiment
also .the
r e s«i Reglm * a n d State
' * H 1 , *f r o m , -A—•
v. —
dence of bis
If i„t —
be wife, b r o t h e r , !ather,or f,r i e n d s
his family. —
of the family t h• a t desire to take ont a » Insurance u p e e t t
absent soldlei.
soldier, t h e y will give h i s n s m e s n d s g e , a n d also t b .
Company! Regiment and StsRe
State to which It b e l e n n . The ap— give
' " " t thhee iname ana r e s i d e n c e
p u c a n i l o r t h e policy will also
of the wife or the.person for w h o i benefit the insurance 1*
procured.
Apply to, o r address,
SNYDER, WILLIAMS A Co.,
69 Wall-street, N. Y.
p . S.—Money may be seoi-in r e g i s t e r e d letters, a r b y e x press, a t our rinkj. '

EXAMINE.

HANNAH, LAY & CO.

FURS!!
TRAPPERS,

ATTENTION!

! /

HANNAH, LAY & CO.
SHERIFF'S

k

For the aocommodation of our'm Ctcstomerd-

NOTICE.
L A N D O F F I C E AT T R A V E R S E CITY. MICH.
-ITTHEBBAS

INSURANCE

W I L L I A M S

:D ESPE<
FAMILH
>r a n y of l u a u t h o r i s e d
agents, of the s u m of $50, i t will issue a certificate of . i n s u r ance, b i n d i n g itself to pay to such person t h e sum of FIVK
HCNDRED DOLLARS, la case they are drafted into the Naval
or Military Service of the United States, p r i o r to D e t e m b e r
Slst. 1866, or d u r i n g t h e war. I n t h e same p r o p M t i e n t h i s
Companv will insure any person liable to do Military duty,
in any sum f r o m $100 to $5,000. but n o t more than $5,000 on
a n y one life. T h l s C o m p a n y also insures t h o s e l a t h e service, officers a n d privates, a g a i n s t w o u n d s or d e a t h , d u r i n g
the present wsr, t h u s ensblln g a l l p r u d e n t soldiers to provide
their families against w a n t , in ease they fall in battles-die—
or are so wounded s s to be disabled f r o m s u p p o r t i a g them.—
T o the manly virtues of b r a v e r y a n d patriotism t h a t called
the soldier to the field, let h i m add the c r o w n i n g excellence
of a p r u d e n t provision f o r his family, in case he nover ret u r n . t h e n will he be r e m e m b e r e d with gratitude, as one t h a t
discharged his whole duty t o bis God—his e o n n f r y — b i s
family.
Our rates for insurance a g a i n s t w o n n d s a n d d e a t h are a s
follows, to w i t :
$10 on a h u n d r e d
against w o u n d s .
$5
••
"
....1

death.
O u r certificates of Insurance are assignsble—are I n t e n d e d
j bo assigned t o the family (Or their c a i e , s u p p o r t s n d relief, in ease the events occur u p o n which t h e y are payable.
As many In the service are w h e r e It wonld be Impossible
f o r them to p r o v i d e f o r t h e i r f s a i l i e s in t h i s way, t h e wife,
father, or brother, or s n y individual feeling an i n t e r e s t In
t h e fsmily of the soldier, may l n s a r e them against w o u n d s o r
death. W h a t can mortal m a n do nobler, t h a n to p r e s e n t t h e
family of the soldier with a n Insurance u p o n b i s life, o r
s g s i s s t wounds, t h u s at once placing t h e m beyond the r e a c h
of poverty. In case their p r o t e s t o r never r e t u r n s . T h i s i s a
system of substantial charity towards the dependent families
of volunteers, t h a t has been commenced by o n r wealthy cltlsens, and will be continued by t h e w o r t h i e r p o r t i o n s of
them. W h a t can o u r wealthy and patriotic citizens do, t b s t
will go f u r t h e r to Increase eaMstmeats snd assist the Gove r n m e n t , t h a n tn say to o n r h a r d y laboring m e n — " I f y o n
will e n l i s t I will i n s u r e y o u r life until you r e t a r n , l o r $100
—$500—$1,000, for the benefit ef y o u r family."
The rates of basis u p o h which t h i s Company i n s u r e la
founded npon a scientific ststistiesl calculation of the mortality of wars for the last 600 y e a r s , a n d leaves b u t a reasonable margin f o r profit for t h e Company, while It places t h e
families of t h o s e insured beyond want and destitution f r o m
a n y of the vicissitudes of W ar.
T h i s is the only Insurance Company In the United S t a t e s
t h a t was organised especially for t h i s p u r p o s e .

Shoe Findings;
FOR SALE AT A

BOUNTY

Capital, #100,000.
8 N Y D E R ,

0

r i B A L E S T A T E

We are left t o bottle, n o t forsaken,
Watched in secret by our awful S i r e ; I •
l / t f t to conquer, lest o u t spirits weaken,:
And forget to wrestle a n d aspire,
• '
F i n d i n g all t h i n g s p r o m p t e r i t h a n desire.

NATIONAL

A NEW FEATURE.

J A M E S K ^ G U N T O N .
0)01) STABLDG AND IBL AIKD BEDS!

S o the noblest of earth'a creatures noblo
A r e cast forth to find their way a l o n e , .
go our m a n h o o d , in ite day of trouble,
Is.but crowed from the s h e l t e r i n g zone
And broad love-wings, to achieve its t h r o n e .

While such power a n d scope to n s are given,
W h o shall bind u s to t h e t r i u m p h - c a r
Of some victor soul, before u s driven.
Earlier hero in t h e w o r t a n d war,
Him to mimic, h u m b f r and afar?

Hannah, Lay & Co's Column.

THIS Is t h e l a r g e s t H o t e l with the best a c c o m m o d a t i o n s
in the city ; t h e tesding Daily and Weekly P a p e r s are taken
here, and no p a i n s will lie spared to make guests comfortable:
a n d eleven y e a r s ' residence here will enable m e to give reliable i n f o r m a t i o n relative t c **— «
24-ly

F o r t h t h e ; lash him, t h o u g h be growl d<
O'er the s a n d v a n t e to pursue 61s gain/— |
S h a g g y Nimrod of the desert plain ! j j .



GtTNTON HOUSE

SALE.

>

GRAND TBAVEKSS Covtrrr,
i
Y V I R T U E O F ONE W R I T O F E X E C U T I O N ISS_
out of a n d u n d e r the seal of t h e ClrcMlt Codrt, for the
C o u n t y of G r a n d Traverse, a n d State of Michigan, to me' directed and delivered against the goods and chattels, lands a n d
t e n e m e n t s o f H . R . M a t e ; I h a v e seized and levied upon all the
r l r t i t , t i t l e and i n t e r e s t of the said d e f e n d a n t In and t r " "
f o l l o w i n g real estate, viz :
T h e north-east q u a r t e r of t h e south-east q u a r t e r and the
south-east q u a r t e r of t h e south-east q u a r t e r of section twenty-one (21), town twenty-nine (29), n o r t h of r a n g e ten (10)
west, w h i c h I shall offer for sale a t p n b l i o a u c t i o n , or vendue,
aa t h e law directs, at the f r o n t door of the C o u r t Room In the
village of Traverse City, l h a t b e i n g the place f o r h o l d i n g the
C i r c u i t C o n r t f o r the Countv of Grand Traverse, on Saturday,
the 24th day of J a n u a r y , A. v., 1863, at two o ' c l o c k In the
a f t e r n o o n of said day.
E F. DAME, Sheriff
S h e r i f f ' s office. T r a v e r s e City, Sep. 28th, 1S62.
( P r i n t e r ' s fees $4 25.)

P

FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS
I L L B U Y A HAW MILL, SEVEN ACRES O P LAND
a n d a s m a l l house, within h a l t a mile . o f Little Trov e r s * Bay. A splendid chance f o r a n o t h e r mill by t h e sams
d a m ; Npply soon f o r t h i s c h s n c e will not last long.
W, H. PORTERJ p e r annum, compositors
r i | r . . - T
B e a r River, E m m e t Co., Nov. 24,1862.
50-Sw.
9 2 60 p e r day, press girls 8 3 * cento p4r day. T h e price
of p r i n t i n g p a p e r , s u c h a s t h e G o v e r n m e n t uses, h a s
TAX PAYERS
increased 100 p e r cent, w i t h i n a few woeks, and the
T N T H E TOWN O F T R A V E R S E W I L L FIND T H E R O L L
t a b l i s h m o n t will r e q u i r e a n a p p r o p r i a t i o n o f 8 1 5 0
1 ready a t t h e Treasorer'a Office, G o o d r i c h ' s Building.
A: W. BACON. T o w * TREASFRER
m o r e f o r t h e u f t x t y e a r , if t h o p a p e r . f a t o i n e . c o n t i n m
T r a v e r s e City, D e c . 11,1862.
L a w y e r W M wWle e n t e r i c h i s c o l d b e d o n a c o l d
winter n i g h t exclaimed, " Of all t h o w a y s of g e t t i n g a
living, t h e w o r s t a m a n c o u l d follow w o u l d b e g o i n g
a b o u t t o w n tench n i g h t s a s t h i s a n d , g e t t i n g i n t o b e d l o r
Traverse Ctty, JBtk.

W

MORGAN BATES,

JUSTICE OF T H E PEACE,

Press,

Have itia<h arrangements with one of tht

3

NOTICE.
•ED 8 T A T E 8 L
T R A V E a R i C r r r , Nov. 8, 1862. S
A T E N T S FOR E N T R I E S MADE B E T W E E N T H E
5 t h day of May, 18t>"2. a n d the 29th d a y of May, 1862, for
S e t t l e m e n t ond Cultivation, u n d e r the G r a d u a t i o n A c t ef
A u g u s t 4,1854' h a v e been received at t h i s Office, a n d the
p u r c h a s e r s are hereby notified to come forward immediately
a n d m a k e the r e q u i r e d p i o o f of - Settlement a n d Cultivat i o n , ' ' a n d secure t b e i r r e s p e c t i v e P a t e n t s , becanse ir said
proof i s n o t Hied w i t h i n a limited time, the P a t e n t s will be
r e t u r n e d to the General Land Office, a n d will t h u s be lisble
to be cancelled for n o n - p e r f o r m a n c e of the conditions of
s e t t l e m e n t and cultivation c o n t e m p l a t e d by the Graduation
A c t Of A u g u s t 5,1854,
]
MORGAN BATES. Register.
47-Cih
R E U B E N GOODRIC 3 , Receiver.

N o t i c e s of t k e

T h i s Is a s o u n d C o m p a n v . "
" The i n s u r a n c e of a certain sum f o r o n e ' s family. Is a prudence t h a t every man should adopt in tbesc critical t i m e s . "
" The man t h a t wonld be respected a n d loved by bis family
in life, and gratefully remembered In death, will provide h i s
family against w a n t . "
- A l l onr most p r u d e n t citizens a n d soldiers are I n s u r i n g
s competence to their families ia case they are d r a f t e d , o r

O L D E S T A N D

L A H G U S T

FUR HOUSES
IN N E W

YORK,

MORTGAGE SALE.
E F A U L T HAVING BEEN MADE IN T & E CONDI
lion o f a c e r t a i n mortgage executed by H e n r y Warburton, t h e n of t h e T o w n s h i p of Traverse, County of Grand
Traverse a n d State of Michigan, t o Morgan B a t e s ot T r a v e r s e
City, C o n n t y of Grand Traverse and State of Michigan,, bearing date t h e F i f t h d a y of N o v e m b e r , in t h e y e a r of O n r L o r d
One Thousand E i g h t H u n d r e d a n d Sixty-one, a a d recorded
on the F i f t h dav o f N o v e m l i e r , 1861, a t I o'clock, P . M , In
the office of t h e R e g i s t e r of Deeds of Grand Traverse County,
In L i b e r 2 of Mortgages, at pages 308 and 309, on which t h e r e
is claimed to be due at the date of t h i s notice, by the terms
a n d conditions thereof, the m m of slxty-slx dollars ; and n
suit or p r o c e e d i n g a t l a w h a v i n g been instituted t o r e c o v e r
mortgage ; Notice is
any p a r t of, t h e debt s e c u r e ! by said
aa
hereby given, t h a t b r virtue of a. power of sale c o n t a i n e d in
said mortgage, a n d t h e statute in such case m a d e a n d provided, the premises descrl jed in said m o r t g a g e / o r so much
thereof as may be necesaary to satisfy the a m o u n t due on l a i d
mortgage, and t h e costs. Interest a n d e x p e n s e s of sale, to-

D

For the sale of all FURS, and are prepared to purchase all

K I N D S OF F U R S ,
And can afford to and will pay the
V E R Y

H I G H E S T

R A T E S F O R T H E 8 A M H.

e s t bidder, at the f r o n t d o o r of t h e School H o u s e l a TraverseCity, C o u n t y of Grand Traverse and B u t e of Michigan^—that
being the place f o r h o l d i n g t h e C l r c n l t C o n r t f e r the Connty
the S e v e n t h day or F e b r u a r y , 1865. a t ten o'clock in t h e foren o o n . Said p r e m i s e s are described as f o l l o w s : All t h s t
certain rpiece or parcel of land s i t u a t e d lying a n d b e i n g in
«.o u n t. y of G r a n d T r a v e r s e a n d
J D
, . , . .of
1 U
I.VI...
the C
State
Michigan,
ai
described a s t h e W e s t halif of S o u t h E a s t q u a r t e r of S e c t h
F i v e (5) Town Twenty-«ei-en(27) N o r t h of R a n g e E l e v e n (11)
W e s t , c o n t a i n t n g E i g f c Q u c r e s acres a c c o r d i n g to the U n i t e d
8

REMEMBER

WE ARE

IN IRE



BATES. i l o r t g . K — .
0
E
0
A
D a t e d T r a v e r s e City, N o v e m b e r 7,1862.
47-13W.

1 6 0 0 .Acres of L a n d !
"

M A H K . B T .

i '' ' ' '
HANNAH, LAY & COD e c e m b e r 18, 1862.

T h e subscriber offers tor sale 1600 a c r e s of c h o i c e a n d

located f o r w o o d i n g puri»oses, w i t h * good g r o w t h of b e a c h
and maple t i m b e r . ) AIss, 300 Town lots, s n d 30 P a r k L o t s
in E a s t T r a v e r s e C i t y , offered f o r sale at r e a s o n a b l e p r i c e s .
G e o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
j u l y 1-31-6 m

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