Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, November 25, 1859
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
1859-11-25
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
Relation
None
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
gth-11-25-1859.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
v o l . . H.
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , N O V E M B E R 25, 1859.
Cte ©&w Craterse ilfriR). .
T h e D o g t h a t f i o e s I n for t h e R i g h t .
- Now t h a t y o u r u p p e r and bottom dog.
And y o u r outside d o g in the fight
Hav|e each had their poet—let pie be heard,
F o r the dog t h a t goes in f o r the right.
1
IS rCBLIhHBft BVBBY FBIOAY, AT
City, G r a n d Traverse County,, Michigan,
Tturmo
MORGAN BATES,
m r r o B AMP TBOTBIETOB.
4
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-372TCjt,'MS.
10
t• AOTMTmUlTI
yy.i Ja wSffife
rysT;
M to* O a a D o u u * HI K««™ <«•» llo«)tortte
r
£?l
^swraiaiar
tor tit*flnl tpMrttai.
kUlbittnn.
.
il U if M Priiliig NtitJj and Eipcjjtiwsl; EnaW.
"
l i e will die, sometime, and then you must know,
l l a v i n g fought, while be lived, a good fight.
Ho will go, w i t h o u t fail, where too good dogs g o ;
Will the dog t h a t goes in for the r i g h t
T H t f K O N BOifTWICK,
N'DTABY PUBLIC,
OLERK AND REGISTER,
.
Grand Traverse County, Michigan,
WIU gtiw pmoMl mttratioa to tlx'
PAYMENT O F TAXES,
T j o m t i o n o f " 3L/nn<V« a t T r a v e r s e C i t y . L a n d
. O f f l o o , 8 « l e o f M . 33. L a n d " W a r r a n t o , a n d ,
« G e n o r a l -Airenoy B u a i n u s n .
OflM in Copt lloeM, Tn<rera« Clljr, Mich..
: >>>
-1,|*
VM. H. PARKS,
- Attorney a t L a w u d Solicitor in Chancery,
' Q r o n d Haven-, Michigan,
Will a t t e n d C o u r t and'to Collection* in t h e counties of Grand
Traverse, Manisteq, Mason a n d Oceftna.
25-lj*
. LAND WARRANT
AND
TAX-PAYING AGENCY.
Traverse (Sly, Grand Traverse Cwaty, lick
H E N R Y D.~CAMP B E L L .
T A * J > W A R R A N t S OOXSTANTI.Y ON JTAND FOR
1 J sale or location; I n v e s t m e n t s m t d e ; T a x e s paid on nonTe*ident Utads; Redediption of lands;sold for taxes, &nd purchase of I4nda a f i a x sale's.
A n d will always g i r o the moat careful a t t e n t i o n to t h e interest* of myjCorrespondeote, and ln,lil>eriilHy, p r o m p t n e s s a n d
accuracy of buidpcs* transactions, woald qoart comparison
with a n y Agency In «lie country.
T r a v i j m C i t y , May 27, MM,
i9-flm
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
MORGAN B A T E S
^ 1 1 a* opened aii Ofllce at Traverse City, Grand T r a v e r s e Co.,
t h e United Stales L a u d Office i& located i t this place ; a n d
particular'attention will fee paid to locating Land W a r r a n t s ,
inventing m o n e y in G o v e r n m e n t Lands, i m p a r t i n g Information relative to the general feature*,.resource* a n d advantages of the Gr*nd Traverse country, the p a y m e n t of taxes,
and the transaction of any-Agency, business with wblcli b e
n a y b? entrusted.
REFERENCES.
•v
i
AWrKrO.a.ral, |
Herald Office. Traverse City. Kov. 3,1858.
;
]
'
n3
MOROAX BATES,
N b T A B Y PUBLIC,
• / S t e r o i d Offloe, S r a v e r s e City, M i o h j
TRAVERSE OITY HOUSE,
"WILL J A M P C W L E ,
(rRONT HTKEET, NEAR COl fiT HOfSE,)
• X ^ I A V K R S K C I T Y , BUCHIGA^Nr.,
.
ty of t h e Court House and public offices, i s still open . . . _
reception of the travuiiqg .public. The P r o p r i e t o r return*
hj» hearty t h a n k s for t b ^ lihbf^l.llftroaagQ he has received,
— •*
res thftpufiliu tUat 'no pWnS * ill Tie spared t o maVe
a comfortable. ! Ilia charges irfll correspond with
Good »cc6mmodatio:is f o r H o r s e s a n d C i U l e .
49tf
GUNTON HOUSE,
JAMES K.GUNTON,
'J
,
(HOCTIt OF BOABDMAN B1VBB.)
*
T r a v e r s e City, Michigan.
HIS ITEW AND COMFORTABLE HOUSE IS
T
new ready t o receive Its guests, being fitted in full, with-1
o a t regard to cast, so as to m a k e I t t h e m o s t dcsiiable of any
Hotel ratti* Count)-.
. J . K.G. oaing one o | tho earliest settlers in the Coanty, i s
able t o give any information necessary t o parties wishing t o
. locate lands, or otherwise." j B o h a s a Pleasure Boat, Hkiffo
and F i s h i n g Tackle o f ever*" description f o r hire. Those in
search of health or recreation will find t h i s a very desirable
place of resort.
T r a v q i i e C i t y , October 2 l , 1850.,
<S-ly
JAMES K. GTJNTON,
Practical. Builder and Draughtsman,
tjpared to make Plana and Specifications for all olsse
Iplngs also execute a l l kind* or w o r k connected Wit!
on liberal terms.
S Doors, P a t a u a n d Nails,
and for sale.
Alljorder™ V C a b i n e t W o r k a i d U n d e r t a k i n g will be
executed oi
- a s h o r t notice.
jJL- K
u1l f1WI
o r p|W>.
w t patronage,
K ,j 0
0 .. ,; t1hUaUn1kUfU
|MUVU«g> t a k e s t h i s opportonity o f ' s o l i c i t i n g a b o n t l n u a n c e or the
Trev«r»e City. November >5.1859.
i-u
• F R U I T TREES.
*Ue subscriber o t f t r t f o r s a l e a variety o f e n g r a f t e d
•Apple Trees, PoaoK Tre.ee,Four Tree*, P l a m
T r e e s a titl ' C J h o r r y T r e e s .
A t i e lot of S c e d l i a g PXXCH T a x a s , three y e a r s old, w h i c h
« f good size, and healthy.
flk Baylds. Moft », l m .
u rauNXirroaaceuoDiBP
Balldlng, opposite I L C * . B .
l.iy
So h e r e ' s a bumper, with health and success,
To the d o g that's my h e a r t h delight,
The noble d o g ^ t h e generous dog—
The dog t h a t goes in for the r i g h t
The Kidnapped Boy.
A s h o r t t i m e a g o a respectable, dressed m a n walked
a w o r k i n g - j e w e l l e r ' s s h o p . H o was a b o n t t h e m i d dle a g e , o f daric o r r a t h e r s a u - b n r p t c o m p l e x i o n , of e a s y
m a n n e r s a n d of a gentlemanly a p p e a r a n c e . T h e p r o p r i e t o r of t h e s h o p was e n g a g e d in t r a n s a c t i n g b a s i o e s s w i t h
a n eld«rly lady w h o w a s a t t i r e d in m o n r n i n g . S h e h a d
called r e s p e c t i n g s o m e - r e p a i r s t o b e d o n e t o h e r w a t c h ,
w h i c h . w a s on t h e c o u n t e r , a n d w a s t h e s u b j e c t o f c o u v e r .
sation b e t w e e n h e r a n d t h o j e w e l l e r . T h e s t r a n g e gcot l e m a n , t o o well m a n n e r e d t o i n t e r n p t t h e b u s i n e s s a m u s e d himself b y e x a m i n i n g several a r t i c l e s in t h e s h o p ; b u t
t h e m a s t e r , a f t e r r e q u e s t i n g t h e lady t o e x c u s e h i s l e a v i n g
h e r f o r a m o m e n t , a c c o s t e d the s t r a n g e r a n d i n q u i r e d his
p l e a s u r e . T h e s t r a n g e r t h e n d r e w f r o m h i s n e c k b y a black
r i b b o n , a small p o c k e t case, w h i c h h e o p e n e d , a n d t o o k
t h e r e f r o m an a n c i e n t l o o k i n g c r i m s o n v e l v e j c u s h i o n ; t h i s
cushion m i g h t h a v e f t y m o d a m o d e l for a c u p i d ' s h e a r t ;
i t w a s m o r e o V e r encased i n silver filigree w o r k , w h i c h
t r a c e d t h e o u t l i n e s of s e v e r a l similiar s h a p e d h e a r t s , and
m a n y o t h e r devices. O n p r e s e n t i n g t h e c u s h i o n t o the
jeweller, t h e s t r a n g e r o b s e r v e d t h a t a l t h o u g h t h o a r t i c l e
seOmed a trifle,, i t s v a l u e t o h i m w a s a b o v e p r i c e , a n d t h a t ,
a s i t hacksustaioed a f l i g h t i n j u r y , h e w a s a n x i o u s t o h a v e
it c d r c f u D y . r e p q j r e d T h e lady in b l a c k h a d n o t s e e n t h e
f a c e of t h e s t r a n g e r , b u t w h e n t h e ieweller l e f t h e r t o w a i t
u p o h him, s h e o c c u p i e d herself w i t h l o o k i n g a t t h e bijou
in a glass case on t h e c o u n t e r . - W h i l e t h e g e n t l e m a n was
a d d r e s s i n g t h o jeweller, . h e held o u t .tho c u s h i o n in his
fingers, a n d a s he w a s a b o u t t o p a s s i t f r o m h i s h a n d , t h e
lady t u r n e d r o u n d a n d instantly fixed h e r e y e s u p o n t h e
c u s h i o n ; s h e seizeed t h e g e n t l e m a n ' s a r m , h e r w h o l e f r a m e
trembling from agitation; she u t t e r e d ' a shriek, and then
'feU lifeless i n t o t h e a r m s of t h e s t r a n g o r . S h e w a s i m m e d i a t e l y r e m o v e d i n t o a n a d j o i n i n g p a r l o r , a n d in o s h o r e
t i m e k i n d n e s s h a d successfully, a p p l i e d t h e r e q u i r e d r e s to .
ratives. N o w followed e x c l a m a t i o n s a n d q u e s t i o n s a n d
explanations, in r a p i d succession. I n a word, a m o t h e r
h a d f o u n d a long lost s o u ! T h o tale i s b r i e f .
_ '
S o m e t h i r t y - f i v e y e a r e ago, a g e n t l e m a n a n d l a d y w i t h
tWo c h i l d r e n , a b o y a n d a girl, t o o k u p t h e i r residenco in
a small village in M o n m o u t h s h i r e ; t h e s p o t w a s one of
t h 6 i c d e l i g h t f u l o n e s f o r w h i c h t h i s c o u n t r y is j u s t l y celeb r a t e d r t h e v a r i e t i e s of hill a n d dale, w o o d a n d w a t e r ;
w e r e h e r e beheld in p r o s p e c t t h a t c o m b i n e d t h e s o f t w i t h
t h e p i c t u r e s q u e , a n a w e r e n e v e r g a t e d u p o n b u t with
p l e a s u r a b l e e m o t i o n . T h e income of t h i s c o u p l e w a s ^ o t
l a r g e , b u t a m p l e f o r the' e x i g e n c i e s of ' c o m f o r t , a n d even
e l e g a n c e , t h o u g h i n a d e q u a t e t o a n o s t e n t a t i o u s style of
living. • T h e gentleman h a d a n i n t e r e s t in a mercantile
houso in L o n d o n , in w h i c h c o n c e r n h e was a Bleeping
p a r t n e r ; this establishment w a s the destination he intende d f o r h i s son. H o h a d also some p r o p e r t y in the funds,
w i t h w h i c h h e p u r p o s e d p o r t i o n i n g ofT h i s d a u g h t e r .
A f t e r h e h a d t h u s p r o video f o r h i s children, h e Would still
.have a sufficiency t o i n s u r e h i m a n d h i s wife "ease a n d
c o p f o r t i n t h e i r old age. T h e d a u g h t e r w a s n o w seven
y e a r s of a g e , t h e son five, a n d t h e p a r e n t s w e r e a t t h a t
t i m e of life w h e n a n i n c r e a s e of f a m i l y is n o t c o m m o n .
B o t h boy and girl were educated by the father, whoss chief
p u r s u i t s w e r e o f l i t e r a r y c a s t " I t was usual for t h e y o u n g s t e r s t o h f v e a h o l i d a y o n c e a Week, w h e n t h e y e i t h e r
went to spend tho day a t tho house o f a a e i g b b o r who had
a family of t w o b o y s itod a girl, of similar age, or t h e i r
playmates came and s p e n t t h e day with t h e m a t their
father 1 !) h o u s e . I t h a p p e n e d o n o n e occasiou t h e b o y
m a d e one tho9e weekly visits alone, h i s Bister h a v i n g f r o m
some caose or other, been detained at home.
I t w ^ h i t h e m o n t h of S e p t e m b e r , a n d t h e b o y left his
c w f s h o u s e a t t h o close of a s fine a n a u t u t n n a l e v e n i n g
e v e r g l o w e d i n t h e wefitern h e a v e n s a n d b e a u t i f i e d t h e
fe of t h e e a r t h . B u i t h e q u i e t .loveliness of t h e scene
..4«ja f a i t h l e s s h a r b i n g e r t o t ^ e p a r e n t s of t h e b o y , f o r i t
b e t o k e n e d n o t t h e s w e e t s e r e n i t y of a c o q t e n t e d m i n d , b u t
t h e wild fitfuloess o f d e s p a i r — t h e y -never s a w t h e i r b o y
again!
. >
D i l i g e n t i n q u i r i e s in e v e r y c o r o e r . o f t h o c o u n t r y , the
s e a r c h e s of woods, d r a g g i n g of p o n d s a n driver,rewards
f o r restoration, a n d p r o s e c u t i o n for d e t e n t i o n ; in fine, all
t h a t p a r e n t a l l o v e c o u l d d e v i s e — a n d w h a t will i t n o t de<
viso ID so hapiesB an e m e r g e n c y ? — w o n p u t i n t o a c t i o n , b u t
alas, w i t h o u t success.
Y e a r r o l l e d a f t e r year,, b u t n o t i d i n g s of t h e lost- child
e v e r r e a c h e d t h e e a r s of t h e fond a n d m o u r n i n g p a r e n t s .
T h e father was observed always t o carry a b o u t h i m an
a i r of a b s t r a c t i o n t h a t m a d e h i m a p p o a r solitary in t h e
m i d s t of a c r o w d J a n d h e n e v e r l o o k e d u p o n a c h i l d b u t
h i s e y e s w e r e seen r e a d i n g t h e l i n e a m e n t s of i t s face.
T e n y e a r s a f t e r t h e f a t a l event, h e witnessed t h e d e a t h of
big d a u g h t e r , w h o d i e d b y t h e h a n d of t h a t fell d e s t r o y e r
of y o u t h a n d b e # i t y , p u l m o n a r y c o n s u m p t i o n . T h i s
second s h o c k h e s u r v i v e d b u t ' a f e w y e a r s j b u t h e l e f t boh i n d him. a wife w h o h a d developed all t h o s e v i r t u e s of
h e r Bex w h i c h e n a b l e d a w o m a n , a l b e i t o f - k e e n e r sensibilities, t o e o t n f b r t a n d h e l p t h e h u s b a n d in t h e h o u r of
s o r r o w a n d s ic k n e s s . S h e s u r v i v e d him, a n d b o r e h e r
b e r e a v e m e n t s w i t h t h e meekness of a c h r i s t i a n a n d t h e
gentleness of a w o m a n ; s h e n e v e r a f t e r w a r d s a p p e a r e d b u t
tik t h e s a b l e h a b i l i m e n t s of grie?- a n d t h u s h e r o u t w a r d
p e r s o n h a r m o n i s e d w i t h h e r s o r r o w i n g h e a r t S h e lived
in d o s e retirement, a n d s e l d o m w e n t b e y o n d t h e b o u n d a r i e s of h e « w o o t e d walks, l o r t h e y w o o e d b e r i n t o a m u s i n g recollection o f t h e i n f a n t d a y s o f . h e r children, p e r
;i n t o
•'
l i e loves bis «a4«, and he loves his bon£.
But he'H not so selfish quite,
As t o care for no other but himself;
N o t t h e dog that goes in for the right.
d i s t a n t f r i e n d s u r g e d h e r t o forsake M o n m o u t h s h i r e forever, ftfr t h e i r h o p e i w e r e .that a t o t a l c h a n g e of sceoe
would p r o d u c e a c h a n g e of habite, a n d a m o r e lively enj o y m e n t of life. B u t n o ; s h e loved t o linger o u t h e . s p o t
sainctified b y h e r e n d e a r m e n t s as a wife a n d m o t h e r , a n d
s h e fondly i n d u l g e d a h o p e t h a t h e r b o y li ved, a n d would
some day be restored t o her longing arms. H e r hope
was a t t a c h e d t o t h e h e a r t b y one of t h o s e i m p e r c e p t i b l e
t h r e a d s w h i c h t h e m i n d a l m o s t unconsciously weaves
w h e n s u r r o u n d e d b y d e s p a i r ; f o r if t h a t t h r e a d w e r e visible it would a p p e a r f r a i l iudeed, a n d q u i t e u n a b l e t o suitt a i n t h e slightest s h o c k ; n e v e r t h e l e s s i t s t e x t u r e is of t h a t
elastic tenacity w h i c h while i t yields t o t h e s e v e r e s t s t r a i n !
n e v e r breaks, b u t r e c o v e r s its w o n t e d position, a n d r e t a i n s
i t s firm h o l d o n t h e h e a r t Until d e a t h s e v e r s t h e cOrd t h a t
life could n o t b r e a k .
B u t the boy—now tho m a n — h e a r him. H e hasaditti
recollection of t h e events of his c h i l d h o o d . H e well rem e m b e r s t h e e v e n i n g ' w h e n he w d s returning h o m e f r o m
t h o h o u s e of h i s p l a y m a t e s ; he remembers walking a l o n g
w i t h a m a n , a n d a w o m a n in a red cloak, a n d t h a t w h e n
h e c r i e d h e w a s t h r e a t e n e d t o h a v e his h e a d c u t Off if h e
d i d n o t k e e p silent a n d g o a l o n g tfuiefly, as he w o u l d n o t
b e h u r t ; f o r r.e was b e i n g taken t o s e e h i s p a p a a n d m a m m a ,
w h o b a d g o n e o u t v i s i t i n g a n d h a d s e n t t h e man a n d w o man for him- S o m e s u c h n a r r a t i v e i s vividly i m p r e s s e d
on h i s remembrance a n d h a s e v e r b e e n f l o a t i n g in Iris
mind. H o nlso remembers r e s i d i n g f o r s e v e r a l m o n t h s
in a l a r g e s e a p o r t t o w n , b u t was n e v e r allowed t o g o o u t
f r o m t h e houso w h e r e h e lived, e x c e p t a t n i g h t , a n d t h e n
only-in c o m p a n y w i t h t h e m a n o r w o m a n . H e recollects
v e r y well t h e p e r s o n w h o saw h i m f r e q u e n t l y in t h a t honsc,
b e c a u s e he was very k i n d t o hirri,' a n d a t l e n g t h t o o k
h i m oO b o a r d a ship. T h e first t o w n h e remembers
a b r o a d w a s K i n g s t o n , in J a m a i c a , w h e r e h e believes, h e
r e m a i n e d a b o n t nine y e a r s w i t h t h e p e r s o n w h o t o o k h i m
but
T h i s individual w a s t h e o w n e r of a large store, a n d '
t h e l a d was employed in lis business. D u r i n g t h i s t i m e
h i s e d u c a t i r n w a s n o t totally n e g l e c t e d , a s h i s p a t r o n
t o o k some p l e a s u r e in i m p r o v i n g h i s r a i d i n g a n d w r i t ing. / • , ' ..
.
H a v i n g f r e q u e n t l y e x p r e s s e d a desire f o r t h e sea s e r vice, o u r y o u n g h e r o was b o u n d a p p r e n t i c e t o o m e r c h a n t c a p t a i n , w h o s e vessel t r a d e d b e t w e e n t h e A y e s t I n d i a I s l a n d s a n d t h o p o r t s of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s anil S o t j t h
A m e r i c a . I n t h i s vessel h e remained e i g h t y e a r s , a n d
h a d b e c o m e so f a r a f a v o r i t e of t h o c a p t a i n , t h a t t h e last
y e a r h e k e p t his a c c o u n t s , a c t e d in some m a n n e r a s his
sooetary, a n d was rapidly a d v a n c i n g in h i s affections,, w h e n
d e a t h b r o k e t h e connection. T h e c a p t a i n died in N e w
Y o r k . H e n o w t h o u g h t of visiting E n g l a n d , b u t n o t
w i t h a n y s p e c i a l i n t e n t i o n of s e e k i n g h i s p a r e n t s , a s h o
h a d b e e n a s s u r e d b y t h e person w h o t o o k h i m t o J a m a i c a t h a t h e w a s a n o r p h a u , b u t h a d been t a k e n c a r e of in
e a r l y i n f a n c y b y t h e benevolence of a l o d v a n d gentleman,
and" h a d b e e n rent t o sea t o g e t a livelihood a s b e s t he
could.* H o w e v e r a s he could n o t readily o b t a i n a s u i t a ble s i t u a t i o n o n b o a r d a J J r i t i s h vessel, f o r w h i c h m o r e o v e r h e w a s n o t very anxious, as t h e t i m e s h a d been and
w e r e likely t o c o n t i n u e v e r y t r o u b l o u s , h e s u c c e e d e d In
g e t t i n g i n t o a m e r c h a n t ' s o'fflce in N e w Y o r k , w h e r e b e
b e g a n a t n v e r y s u b o r d i n a t e post. B e i n g of temperate
a n d p e r s e v e r i n g h a b i t s , h p . b e c a m e in five y e a r s a c o r r e s p o n d i n g c l e r k . H e w a s rising r a p i d l y in t h o scale of a d v a n c e m e n t , w h e n o n e of h i s b r o t h e r clerks m a r r i e d a
d a u g h t e r of the m e r c h a n t and was i m m e d i a t e l y taken i n t o
p a r t n e r s h i p . H i s elevation c a u s e d t h e new p a r t n e r t o
assume some c o n s e q u e n t i a l aire, which 1 discomfit t e d t h e
p e a c e of t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t , a n d e n d e d in o u r h e r o ' s s e p a ration f r o m t h e h o u s e . H e a f t e r w n r d s filled a n o t h e r
responsible s i t u a t i o n in N e w Y o r k , when, a f t e r t w o y e a r ' s
service, h e a c c e p t e d a l u c r a t i v e offer t o s u p e r i n t e n d a
m e r c h a n t ' s offico In N e w Orleans, a n d s u b s e q u e n t l y h a d
b e c o m o a p a r t n e r in t h e coucern, a n d a c c u m u l a t e d a m o d e r a t e f o r t u n e . F o r . t h e l a s t .ten y e a r s he h a d a g r o w i n g
desire t o visit E n g l a n d , a n d a t l e n g t h h e resolved on i t s
gratification. A b o u t t h r e e m o n t h s a g o he landed in
L i v e r p o o l ; a n d a f t e r s o j o u r n i n g in t h a t t o w n a n d L o n d o n
s o m e s i x weeks, he visited B r i s t o l F r o m t h e a p p e a r a n c e
o f s o m o of t h e p u b l i c b u i l d i n g s in Bristol, p a r t i c u l a r l y t h e
E x c h a n g e , h e Was convinced t h a t B r i s t o l w a s t h e P o r t
w h e n c e he h a d sailed f r o m E n g l a n d
A f t e r spending a
f o r t n i g h t a t Clifton, h e d e t e r m i n e d o n returning t o L i v e r p o o l t h r o u g h S o u t h W a l e s b y w a y of M o m h o u t h s h i r e ,
a n d it was in t h e p a t h of his m o t h e r . T h e recognition
h a s b e e p d e s c r i b e d ; b u t t h e History of t h e meahs, namely,
t h e cushion, remains t o b e tofd.
W h e n t h e hapless b o y w a s k i d n a p p e d from h i s home,
h e h a d t h e c u s h i o n e a s e in h i s p o c k e t ; h e k n e w i t was
d e a r l y prized b y his m o t h e r , a n d h e h a d o f t e n h e a r d h e r
say i t h a d b e e n g i v e n h e r b y h e r g r a n d m o t h e r . I n t h e
silver filigree w o r k t h a t enclosed t h e cushion, w a s t r a c e d
in a circle t h e c h r i s t i a n name of b i s g r a n d m o t h e r , a n d t h e
words, " k e e p t h i s in r e m e m b r a n c e of m e . "
T h e b o y m a n a g e d t o preserve t h e cushion, a n d a s h e
g r e w ,to m a n h o o d his affection f o r t h e relic b e c a m e s t r o n g e r . T h i s little m e m e n t o of t h e d a y s of his c h i l d h o o d
p e r h a p s served t o fix t h e remembrance of t h e m m o r e
n h n l y in h i s m i n d O f late y e a r s h e w o r e i t in h i s bosom,
suspended f r o m h i s neck b y a p l a c k ribbon. O n a s c e n d i n g t h e s t e p s of t h e far-famod W i n d Cliff, his f o o t slipped,
h e fell a g a i n s t o n e of t h e stone steps, a n d d a m a g e d t h e
filigree w o r k t h a t encased t h e cushion.
O n h i s a r r i v a l i t the' first t o w n i n h i s r o u t e , h e h a s t e n e d t o t h e s h o p o f a w o r k i n g jaweller. " T h e reader a l r e a d y
k n o w s t h e s e q u e l ; his m o t h e r cast h e r e y e s u p o n t h e relic,
read h e r m o t h e r ' s name, a n d t h e n e v e r - f o r g o t t e n words,
" K e e p t h i s in r e m e m b r a n c e of me." S h e felt as n o n e b t f t
m o t h e r s can feel, b u t a s no m o r t a l c a n describe,' a n d the
e v e a i n g of h e r old a g e will b e s m o o t h e d b y t h e affectiona t e a t t e n t i o n s of a b e l o v e d i b n t long-lost s o n .
OCT o r W o a t — T h e r e is a m o u r n f u l t r o t h w h i c h
m a n v will a p p r e c i a t e , in t h e following e x t r a c t from " Bulls,
and "Bears"—a s t o r y w h i c h h a s j u s t b e e n completed in t h e
Atlantic Monthly:
. . .
. •• T o a . m a n o u t of e m p l o y m e n t , p r o s c r i b e d , marked,
t h e r e is n o t h i n g so terrible as t h i s i m p e n e t r a b l e of t b e
elose r a n k s of s o c i e t y a r o u n d h i m . E v e r y busy man
s e e m s t o h a v e found his p l a c e ; e a c h l o c k s s t e p w i t h h i s
n e i g h b o r , a p d t h e vast procession moves on. Once o u t of
t h e s e r r r t f i ' o r d e r t h e u n h a p p y w r e t c h can n e v e r resume
his position. H e finds himself t h e f i f t h wheel of a c o a c h ;
t h e r e is n o t h i n g f o r h i m to d o — n o p l a c e f o r h i m a ^ t h e
bountiftal b o a r d w h e r e o t h e n a r e f e d H e m a y s t a r v e
o r d r o w n himself aa h e l i k e s ; t i e w o r l d h a s n o u s e f o r a a d
w i l l n o t mias h i m . "
isra.i.
A h Overwhelming Speech hy a W i d o w .
H o n . G e o . N . B r i g g s , e x ^ G o v e r o o r of M a s s a c h u s e t t s
delivered a
temperance
a d d r e s s some time s i n c e , in t h e
c o u r s e of w i n c h h e related the following a n e c d o t e w i t h
thrilling effect:
M r . B r i g g s said, t h i s question of t h e i n t r o d u c t i o n of
i n t o x i c a t i n g d r i n k s a s s u m e d a s o m e w h a t p r a c t i c i a l form,
n o t m a n v y e a r s since, in a t h r i v i n g b o r o u g h of Pennsylv a n i a T h e i n h a b i t a n t s h a d assembled a« was t h e i r u s u a l
I c u s t o m , t o d e c i d e w h a t n u m b e r , if any, of licenses the t o w n
p e t i t i o n f o r f r o m t h e C o u n t y C o u r t f r o m w h e n c e t h e y wore
i s s u e d T h e r e was a full a t t e n d a n c e .
O n e of t h o m o s t recpectable m a g i s t r a t e s of t h e b o r o u g h
presided, a d d u p o n t h e p l a t f o r m w e r e s e a t e d a m o n g o t h e r s
t h e c l e r g y m a n of tbe village, o n e of h i s dcaeons, a n d th*
physician.
A f t e r t h e m e e t i n g h a d been called t o o r d e r , one of
t b e m o s t respectable c i t i z e n s of t h e b o r o u g h rose a n d
after a short speech, moved'that the b o r o u g h petition for
t h e usual n u m b e r of licenses.
T h e y h a d b e t t e r license g o o d men, a n d let t h e m sell.
T h e p r o p o s i t i o n seemed t o m e e t w i t h almost universal fav o r . I t was an e x c c l l a n t w a y t o g e t a l o n g q u i e t l y ; a n d
o n e a n d t h e n a n o t h e r , in t h e i r t u r n expressed a h o p e t h a t
Such a c o a r s e would b e a d o p t e d .
T h e P r e s c d e n t was a b o u t t o p u t t h e q u e s t i o n t o t h e
m e e t i n g , w h e n an o b j e c t rose in a d i s t a n t p a r t of t b *
b u i l d i n g , a n d all o r e s w e r e i n s t a n t l y t u r n e d in t h a t direct i o n : I t w a s a n old w o m a n , p o o r l y c l a d ; a n d whose c a r e w o r n c o u n t e n a n c e w a s t h e p a i n f u l index of n o l i g h t
suffering.
A n d y e t t h e r e w a s s o m e t h i n g in t h e Dish of t h a t b r i g h t
eye, t h a t told she h a d b e e n w h a t sbo w a s n o t now. S h e
addressed t h e P r e s i d e n t , a n d s a i d w i t h his permission; s h e
wished t o sav a few w o r d s to t h e m e e t i n g . S h e h a d c o m e ,
because s h e "had h e a r d t h a t t h e y w e r e t o (fecide t h e lioenes
quCstiob. •'
• L.
•
Y o u , gaid s h e , all k n o w w h o I am. Y o u Once k n e w
md t h e Mistress of t h e b e s t e s t a t e s in t h e b o r o u g h . I o n c e
hod a h u s b a n d a n d five s o n s ; a n d w o m a n n e v e r h a d a
k i n d e r h u s b a n d — m o t h e r n e v e r h a d five b e t t e r o r m o r e
a f f e c t i o n a t e sons. B u t w h ^ e a r e t h e y n o w ? D o c t o r , T
ask Where d r e t h e y n o w ? I n y o n d e r y a r d a r e six g r a v e s
filled b y t h a t h u s b a n d a n d t h o s e five sons, i a n d o h ! t h e y
a r e all "drunkards g r a v e s . D o c t o r , h o w c a m e t h e y t o b e
d r u n k a r d s ? Y o u would c o m e a n d d r i n k w i t h t h e m , a n d
y o u told t h e m t h a t temperate d r i n k i n g would* d o t h e m
good
A n d y o u too, sir, a d d r e s s i n g t h e clergyman, w o u l d o o m e
and drink with my h u s b a n d and m v sons thought they
m i g h t d r i n k w i t h ' s a f e t y , b e c a u s e t h e y > s a w y o u drink.
D e a c o n , y o u sold then} r u m w h i c h m a d e t h e t a d r u n k a r d s .
Y o u h a v e n o w g o t m y f a r t n a n d and all m y p r o p e r t y , a n d
y o u g o t i t all b y r u m . A n d rfw, s h e said, 7 h a v e d o n e
m y e r r a n d t go b a c k to t h ^ p o O r boilse, f o r t h a t i s m v
h o m e . Y o u , reverend s i r , y o u d o e t o r a n d y o n d e a c o n I
shall n e v e r m e e t again, u n t i l I m e e t y o d a t t h e b a r of G o d
w h e r e y o u will m e e t my r a i n e d a n d lost h u s b a n d , a n d t h o s e
fiVe sons, who, t h r o u g h y o u r taeahs a n d influence, fill the'
d r u n k a r d s g r a v e . T h e old w o m a n s a t d o w n - ^ p e r f t c t
silence prevailed, until b r o k e n b y t h o P r e s i d e n t w h o j - e s s
to p u t Uio q u e s t i o n to t h e meetings—shall We p e t i t i o n t h e
C o u r t to issue license to t h i s b o r o u g h t b e e n s u i n g y e a r ?
a n d t h e n one u n b r o k e n , " N o r w h i c h m a d e t h e v e r y
walls r e - e c h o w i t h t h o sound, told t h e result of t h e old
w o m a n ' s appeal.
The Singing Student B o y .
M a n y y e a r s a g o a s t u d e n t b o y w a s seen a n d h e a r d id
t h e s t r e e t s of an a n c i e n t t o w n . s i n g i n g . H e w a s a stout,
plainly dressed boy, b u t h i s f a c e w a s p a l e , a n d h i s eyea
w e r e s i d a n d tearfoL H i s v o i c e w a s m o s t musical, a o d
t h e s o n g s h e s a n g w e r e b e a u t i f u l words, a n d a b o u t s a c r e d
igs. E v e r y time h e finished a song, h e s t e p p e d to a
house, a n d g a r e a g e n t l e t a p . W h ® i t was O p e n e d h e
said in gentle t o n e s :
tv
P l e a s e g i v e a p o o r s t u d e n t b o y a morsel, of b r e a d "
Begone with tnee! thou beggar's child," was t h e
r o u g h reply t h a t m e t his car, a s t b e p o o r c h i l d s h r a n k
f r o m t h e steps.
>
'
T h u s d r o v e frOm d o o r to door, h e sang his s w e e t songa
until bis b o d y was w e a r y a n d h i s h e a r t s a d S c a r c e l v
a b l e to stand, he a t last t u r n e d his s t e p s h o m e w a r d .
S t r i k i n g h i s n o b l e f o r e h e a d w i t h nis h a n d , b e s a i d :
" I m u s t g o h o m e t o m y f a t h e r ' s house a n d bo c o n t e s t
to live b y t h e s w e e t of m y b r o w . P r o v i d e n c e baa n o
l o f t i e r destiny for me. I h a v e t r o d d e n o u t i t s p a t h s bV
aiming higher.".
..
-.J u s t a t t h a t m o m e n t U r s u l a C o t t a , a b u r g e r ' s wife w h o
h a d h e a r d his songs and seen him d r i v e n from a n e i g h b o r ' s d o o r , felt h e r h e a r t y e a r n w i t h p i t y towards t b e
helpless b o y . S h e Opened h e r d o o r , b e c k o n e d to t h e
y o u n g singer, a n d smilod sweetly u p o q h i m , a n d in toner
t h a t s o u n d e d like heavenly melodies t o h i s ears, s a i d :
" C o m e in, p o o r boy, and refresh thyself a t m y t a b l e ! "
H a p p y little singer!- H o w he enjoyed t h a t 'deliclooa
meal. A n d w h e n t b e good d a m e a n d h e r h u s b a n d told
h i m . to m a k e t h e i r house his home, h i s h e a r t m e l t e d
W i t h e v e s half blinded w i t h team, be looked in t h e face
of his f r i e h d , a n d s a i d :
.
! 'i .
. " I shall now p u r s u e my s t u d i e s w i t h o u t b e i n g obliged
to b e g ray b r e a d from g r u d g i n g hands. J shall h a v e y o u
sir, for a f a t h e r and y o u s w e e t U r s u l a f o r a m o t h e r .
. M y h e a r t will once m o r e learn to love: I shall b e h a p p i e r t h a n I can express."
i
A f t e r t h a t day t b e s i n g i n g b o y s t u d i e d h a r d a n d w a d
Y e a r s a f t e r w a r d s t h e world b e a r d of h i m , f o r i t w a s b e
w h o o t t e r e d his voice a g a i n s t P o p C r y a n d b e c a m e t h e
chief of t h a t R e f o r m a t i o n w h i c h g a v e a n open B i b l e <e
t b e world- H i s n a m e w a s M a r t i n L u t h e r .
SCOLD i s o . — A little g i r l , n o t six y e a r s of age, s c r e a m e d
o u t t o h e r little b r o t h e r , w h o w a s p l a y i n g in t h e m u d
B u b , TOO good-for-nothing little- sc^mp, come right i n t o
t h e house t h i s m i n u t e , o r I w i l l b e a t y o u till t h e aim) am»
Off"
ft
t<: . ..r; v'tn-:? : f • I ' , i.
( . 5 ' £ L"
" W h y , Angelina, Angelina, d e a r what do j o u m e s s ?
w h e r e did y o u learn s u c h talk? e x c l a i m e d t h e m<
mother, who stood talking w i t h a f r i e n d
A n g e l i n a ' s childish r e p l y . w a s a g q
t h i s m a n n e r of s p e a k i n g to c h i l d r e n
. J; r > , , , .
" W h y , m o t h e r , j o a see w e w e r e playing, e n d b e ' a n r
little b o y , a n d I ' m scolding)him j u s t a s y o n d i d m e t W
:
morning; that's
,
A h o m e w i t h o u t a g i r i in it, i s o i l * h a l f b l e s s e d ; i t is
a n o r c h a r d w i t h o u t blossoms, a n d a i p r f o g w i t h o u t song-
(Soil Cratase $eralir.
.Kortfw Oml Tnm
O.i Climate.
'.-
llllilv
^ daring the night, the snow-crust coo tracts, and j transportation lines—the ' Boating palace' of the Lakes—
| , . p t a o m e b o M o a «»»n «*) « «•
,5nL!!!r,
-Since tbc ertaUlshmnt otyoiit ex«l-if. t e . .
., p
U « g n " I U i l ™ « l I r a * n ™ * H u * ) b o m i toRTlhi..
.w .
_1_,,rat n-ti-u- thundering ot ice.
. •
and withal managing with snch consummate skill—carrylent paper, we have
ave been favored
farored with several articles
...
-mg e v e _ e S f t S over their lines and stimulating tl«t
lb» S«c4im« Vmll-J R*publl<
OScUl
Pnta
G&£S£3£££i
HuilM
) Manito^Ajpena,
Cheboygan, VSES*
Emmet
bearing upon the climate of this sectioo of the country,
Michigan—Its Advantage* to the Emigrant.
publication of everything, connected with their interest
—bnt especially praising the beauty* and txccDencc- brbut it seems to me that some causes which contribute
B T A LOCAL CONTRIBUTOR.
their tenninii. I will not say but the articles in
MOBOAK BATBS. EDITOR.
largely to modify our climate have been thus tar ignored,
DEAR SIR: In presenting to you tho advantages of yond
may be truthful, for I fully appreciate our Noblc
and I propose, with yonr leave, to review some of the Michigan for Emigration. 1 will first briefly allude to the question
TBAVERBE CITY*
West; I will only sav that were our own fair Peninsu!:
causes that have operated to our disadvantage, keeping brought asfavorablybefore the emigrant of this Continent
positions
which
your
correspondents
have
taken.
One
is
FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1839.
us
in
a
backward
condition
as
compared
with
the,
newer
with respect to the influence of the surrounding Lakes
as well as the Old World, We should receive our share or
North-Western States.
attention. The effort oCour State in 1849 to establish an
on our temperature. One of your correspondents has
i.
Our Second Volume.
The first settlements, were made bv the French, and
Agency in New York, and its miserable failure,
This js the .first number of the Second Volume of the alluded to the fact that our lakes do modify our climate, possessed all the peculiarities of French settlements on Emigrant
may be named as another circumstance affecting our repTTcpn.iv To t&osewho have taken H during the first but the how, tho modus operandi, ho has not told us. the continent—thc. massess taking no part in public affairs utation. The Hoa Mr. Thompson brought talent and
year, w^ deem it unnecea<ary to say one word as to the Our atmosphere is characterised by two qualities which leaving e verything to the Priest and Trader. Michigan energy to the task. He fally appreciated tho difficulty of
presented unusual advantages to the Fur Trader; her
manner In which it will be conducted the ensuing year, are seldom found united in the interior or any continent, seven hundred andfifty,miles of lake coast her numerous the position. One o( his earliest efforts was to bring our
before the world in her true light A pamphlet
or th« principles which it will advocate. What it has humidity, and purity. While the moist atmosphere of streams rising in the iuterior,freefromrapidsand obstruc- State
was published and extensively circulated in the OH N\ orld.
been, it will continue to be. Perhaps more energy will very mapy sections of <lur country is heavily charged with tions to navigation by the canoe, inhabited by numerous It created a favorably impression, which winfollowedup
be infused into it, and perhaps not We make no poisonous malaria, and conveys into the human system and powerful tribes of Indians she presented a capital by his visit to the Old W orld, and some or oor flourishing
field for trade in peltries. Detroit, the metropolis, exerpledger on. that score But 41* we anticipate an increased bilious diseases, and agues, until the poor sufferer shakes ted an immense influence to prevent the settlement orthe German settlements are the result But thefactsset forth
subscription list of£r that of last year, in. view of the his energy, if not his life, all away, wc have here a climate, inferior of the State. The Priest bad no motive tb en- by him were so much at variance with common opinion,
that extraordinary efforts were made by interested parties
important and exciting Presidential Campaign of 1860^ equally as moist as theirs, yet as pure as th'at of ainy courage the settlement of tho interior; tho Trader was to brand his statements as falsehoods. And what is mo>i
and os titis number will be road by many who have never mountain region in the country. Now for the cause. It directly interested to prevent i t and used every means to strange no effort has since been made to doTerid the truth.
prevent
any
correct
impressions
getting
abroad
as
to
the
—In this connection, I shall mention the fraudulent surwell known that the character and quantity of rain
before tahen the papfer, a word to them may not be in-'
value of the interior as an agricultural district An old
depend upon the atmosphere. .All bodies are expanded trader said to roe a short time since:' •' Wc used to dis- veys of much or the central portions or our state, by
appropriate.
which millions or acris arc put down as Swamp that are
—Wten, one year ago, we commoaced the publication by heat, and contracted by cold, and the solarraysopera- courage everybody who talked of settling in the Territoiy as
finelands as any we have. Bnt these lauds have been
of the HUBALD, wo did SO with a fixed determination to ting upon lakes, pools, marshes Ac., rarifies tho surface- by telling them that the interior was one vast swamp, ceded to the State, and are. now offered to the actual setmake it a permanent institution of Grand Traverse water until it becomes fog or vapor, when by theforceof that there was onlv a mile and n hair just a'• •< the river tler free of co*;, in quantities of 40 acres to head or each
that was fit for cultivation."
.j
.
. /
County. It required no extraordinary vision to foresee gravitation,—wfrch causes denser bodies to fall, and
In 1814 Congress appropriated 2,000.000 acres for family.
~ I will not dwell longer on, this unpleasant theme.
tho foture growth and prosperity of a region of country thus displaces) and forces upward the lighter—it rises, military Bounty Lands, and the SurveyoMJencral, Edw.
3 difficulties under which we have labored are
for-which Nature has done so much, when its. peculiar and in this state is absorbed by the air, which thus be- Tiffin, was directed to have this quantity surveyed and chargeable to ourselves. The selfishness always exhibited
agricultural and commercial advantages wert fairly made comes saturated, in a manner .analagous to that in which located in the Territoiy or Michigan. Surveyors wdh> by our commercial metropolis,—tho ' Penny wiso ami
sent on and some weeks were spent in this manner, when
known. The rfany causes which have Conspired to re- a sponge absorbs water in its simplest Mate. In this thev returned to the settlements, reporting that it was pound foolish' policy wh'ith I wn sorry to say, has nol
tard its settlement wore rapidly disappearing, one after state it is carried about by the wind-currents in various impossible to survey the Territory, owing to its swampy yet been abandoned—her efforts to make Michigan n
highway instead or a garden, she ought by this time to
another, and it only,remainedto set forth its claims to directions until the atmosphere becomes of a lower tem- character. They represented, tho wholo country as a see the folly oC This state of things has been well underpubEc notice in a truthful and proper light,-to cause a perature, (and of course diminished in volume,) when the succession or sand ridges and swamps—the swamps were stood for years by many or our best citizens, and the wargrassy
and
or
that
character
that
a
man
would
sink
several
tide of emigration toflowin upon uaequal to that which vapor is condcnscd, and forced ont just as by squeezing inches in water, while the portion .before and behind him ning voice has been raised tide and again; but from
causes hard to be <!xplained our! people have kept ou in
/to sjieedily populated and enriched 'the country farther a saturated sponge its volume is diminished, and the
would rise to a corresponding height; that tho ridges their usual indifferent cousre, willing to be slandered, till
wast,, which does not in reality, posBeas one half the ter forced out Now, it is very easytosec that the atmos- were sterile and covered with a stunted growth of oak, a time has arrived that this state or things can no longer
natural advantages of the Grand Traverse country—by phere'is certain to be impregnated, in some degree, by and that not one acre in a hundred, if one in a thousand, exist. The magnificent endowtlieitf by Congress or the
fit for cultivatiop. This report was made to'Mr. State with lands for Railroad purposes, the efforts or the
which wo mean the County of Grand Traverse proper, whatever impurities there may be in tho water which was
Crawford, Secretary of War, and President Madison!
and the unorganized counties of Leelanau and Antrim, is thus absorbed. All the noxious effluvia which - - - made the peculiar topographical features or Michigan State by a system or State Roads, make it impossible that
ir advantages shall longer be Unknowu.
(the'latter on the East, and the former on the West side from decaying vegetable matter, and tho unhealthy |
Territory the subject ot a special Message, and recommen- In my next I shall attempt a general description or
of Grand Traverse Bay,) which are attached to it for which omanatc from the filth which abounds, are carried ded that the location or the Bounty Lands bo changed to sonje of the most advantageous | portions or the Lojvcr
judicial and municipal purposes. In addition to a fine, in this manner intb the air, and by it borne to the lungs of some morefavorablelocality; consequently the tract
Peninsula, and their adaptability to itnmediateemigration.
located in Arkansas.
•Yours, &c-,
L.M. N.
pure, healthy climate and rich soil, it possesses unrivaled the inhabitants or surrounding places. Here wc are afterword
It is common even now to meet intelligent men from
winter communication, being washed by Lake Michigan surrounded by no marshes, prairies, or vegetable deposits other States who say that Michigan is unfitforsettlement
The Present Position of the Demoracy.
on ihe West, Lake Huron on the East, (if we include or any kind, but by tho largest bodies or fresh water on and refer us to the above cited fact for their authority.
In concluding his Wooeter speech, Gov. Corwin took
Emmet and Cheb6ygan,) the Straits of Mackinac on the tho globe, and these waters or great depth, and a degree They will admit that clearing and draining may have im- occasion to remark upon the condition orthe Democracy
proved it some: but still, 'Michigan is a low, swampv
N<ftb, and Grand Traverse' Bay in the centre, which is oT purity u^ri v'alfed by any large bodies of water in other State.' The editor or ono or the leading New York in Ohio—Ho Baid in his own inimitable wpy;
My objection to you my brother Democrats, is that you
forty miles long, ten wide, and abounds in Bafe and com- countries. T h e prevailing winds orthisscction arc forced newspapers once said to the writer: ' It is useless for you change your opinions so often. You recollect the concodious natural harbors. We have not been disappointed to travel from 70 to 200 miles across the bosom or these to attempt to recommend Michigan as a good State f I versation that Jacob, the Patriarch," had with his childin our anticipations and design. Tho HERALD is firmly waters before reaching us, and, consequently, not only know better. Yours is a mean State; the most ot your ren around him, when he wad going to dio. The last
are low and swampy. Your climate is bod; ypn words he ever intended to utter, and that he over did uttter.
established—has paid its way handsomely thefirstyear— receive no impurity with tho moisture which they extract lands
con't raise fruit' He would admit that 4 there was son*? were a description or thc,peculiar characteristics of his
mkFits course is joyously onward. Tho Cash System, from them, but while fanning their waves, actually part good land on the two Railroads crossing our State, bat sons.
I have seen the ffiftnocratic party working right
which we adopted in the start and'have rigidly adhered with much or whatever impure exhalations they may have that was-the exception.' And FO general is this impres- against Its own interests; I have thought of that lesson
sion entertained among the publishers of eastern newspa- ho gave when ho said Ephraini was a " cake not turned
to,[has worked to a charm. At the close of the year become chargtd befortf reaching their shores.
we'are indebted to nobody, and nobody is indebted to us The vicinity or these large bodies or water also*, tends pers, that it is difficult to get an article published doing over," that is to say he was not very well baked. Another
•justice to the State. They meet us with tho same story
tpr^subscriptions—and we have a shot in the locker.
to equalize tho temperature. Perhaps every farmer —' Your* it a poor State, and if you want any adver- of them describes some of my Democratic friends very
accurately, as unsteady iri their proposes," liko Mr.
To mnkc/known the resources of this beautiful and knowB that in a cellar which frost has entered, vegetables tisements you must pay for them.'
. . .
Douglas, who used to bring in bills with .tho Wilmot
Michigan has had an occasional streak or good hick. Proviso attached and put them before tho Honse and
fiertileregionof country, has been and will continue to be may bo protected by placing a tub, or other vessel cona'teading feature of t % journal; and to this end we taining water, near them, until aTtcr tho water is frozen. The system or Military Roads adopted by tho General advocate them, while it wc now speak or it to him -he falls
Government opened and carried with them settlements into a state or syncope. Dpuglas is like that other son
earnestly solicit communications from those who are in In the country around us the same principle is operating into the interior: and but for an undno ambition on tho
of. Jacob, Reuben, " unstable as water, you will not excel."
the habit of writing, and verbal^fncts from thoso who are on a larger wale. When water is exposed to a low tem- part or officc-seekcrs in the Territory, which led them to Poor Reuben! Ttero are a great many Reubens among
not, on evecy'snbject that will tend to this result. Ever^ perature, the surface isfirstcooled, and becoming hoarier, a premature admission into tho Union, the svstem would my Democratic bretheren and when I remember how the
item of a local character, worthy of note, will be gladly sinks. This causes a lower portion to rise to the surface, have been carried out and every part or the Territory so hard handed and honest Democrats or this country have
opened that the false impressions as to onr interior would been working with a system of politics that is against
.Received. Our business necessarily confincs us closely to which, in its turn, cools, sinks, and gives place to another have
been dissipated, tinder the healthfal influence 01 their own interests, 'denying that the Whigs or Republiour office, (for we are compelled to practice the most stratum to pass through tho same process. Thist process the system alluded to, South-eastern and Southern Mich- cans would do. any thing to improve their condition, I can
rigid economy in the conduct of our business, and per- continues until all the water, from the surface to the bot- igan becamo well Bottled, and everv thing promised a think' or nothing butanother son of Jacob, •' Lssachur is
form much of the mechanical labor with our own hands,) tom, is reduced to a temperature or 39 degrees. K it speedy development Under the Influence otflushtime*, an old labored ass." Poor Is»achar!
Mind, I have said nothing to abuse you. 1 am only
and we have»not the time and opportunity to gather up be cooled still more, it ceases to shrink, and expands, or from 1834 to 1837, Michigan became the scene or the
wildest Land Speculation, from the effects or which it has trying to describe how patient you are, brethren, after
many items which would be read by those abroad who bocomes lighter. Consequently it must remain on the neverfallyrecovered.
the burden has been put upon your back, and there you
are eagerly seeking information relative to this country. surface, whore it is soon cooled down to 3 2 ° , and, then,
A system or internal improvements that would have stand looking your master right in tho face, sBaking your
We- hope our friends throughout the county will bear as fast as the latent heat is expelled,freezes,and becomes ruined any of the older States was inaugurated. Three ears m you say to your master, " Don't kill me, bnt if you
solid.- The deeper the reservoir or water, the longer it grand lines or Railroad across the State were commenced will yon may. . (Long continued Laughter,) You must
this in rinndby the State; a grand Canal to connect the two Dikes; a
The HERALD is also a political journal, of the genuine will take to freeze the surface, and tho greater the area shorter Canal to connect two or her Rivers, and systems quit i t 1 tell you!
Republican stripe. It fully endorses the Philadelphia or surrounding air that will be tempered thereby; and ir of Slack Water Navigation on all bar little rivers; cities
The Mnlrtram Verified.
Of late years, says the N: Y. Tribune, even the cxistPlatform of 1856, and strenuously opposes any compro- it is very deep an entire winter is not sufficienttoabstract built far in advaUce of general settlements; a Banking inmise with tho Slave Power. We not only oppose the the latent heat (equalto.140=,) from its different strata, stitution in every insignificant village; and 'paper cities' teuce or the Maelstrom on the coast or Norway has been*
at the junction of any two mill brooks, in which lots were doubted. The ancient accounts or this terrible power arc
extension of Slavery beyond its present limita in the and ^educo it all to a solid. In our great lakes, soundings sold in many eastern towns. Land speculation to such an .doubtlessfabulous,but M. Hagerup, Minister of the NorStates,' but we swear eternal hostility to every kind of oTfrom 300 to 600 feet are frequent and a depth aT 7 P extent that all the lands in the vicinity orreallyadvantage-'' Svegian Marine, has recently given a reliable account of
tyranny orer the mind of man. In the great Conflict or feet has beenfoundin Lake Superior. The presence of ous locations, and on the borders oT set dements were taken i t in reply to some questions from a correspondent of tint
I860, betwoen Right snd Wrong—Freedom and 8tavery these vast bodies of water, then, has a tendency to give for miles, and too to the luckless emigrant thatfoundhim- Boston Record. The vast whirt is caused by /he
setting in and out of the tides between Lofoden ana Mosshut in by the awfal scourge.
—we shall strike for Freedom and tho Right Our first us not only a moist bnt a uniform temperature: hence it selT
The crash or 1837 came; our public works stopped; ken, and is most violent half way between ebb and flood
choice for Preadent is WILLIAM H. SKWARD, but we is, that in autumn, the interior is visited by frosts much Railroads and Canals, Slack Water Navigation, Cities, tide. At flood and ebb tide it disappears for abont half
shall cordially support any sound Republican who'may egrHer than along the shores of tho lakes, and bays. In Banks, Paver City Swindles, all went by the board. an hour, but begins with the moving of the waters. Largo
be nominated at the Republican National Convention-^ this connection, allow me to refer to a phenomenon of But our Michigan statesmen kept up courage: eastern vessels may pass over it solely in serene weather, but in
land-owners believed tho embarrassment to be only tem- a storm it is perilous to tho largest craft. Small boats
Slaveholder never\ froqnent occurrence in the winter season,—the thUnderipg porary and held on to their lands, which constitute an are not safe pear it at any time or its strongest action in
Wi^h theseremarks,we-aquare away and sail out upcpN of the ice. One of your correspondents, (Mr. Slawson,) effectual barrier to tho choice lands in the rear; taxes any weather. The whirls in the Mslstoro do not « we
attempted, last February, an explanation of the pheno- were unpaid by.many; and tax-titles (the worst curse
tie waters%f Public Opinion.
once supposed, draw vessels under the water, but by their
menon. He supposed it to be be occasioned by the con- all, as it entails litigation to an unlimited extent) crept: violence; theyfillthem with water or dash them upon the
Short-Sighted Policy. •
upon us. Feeble attempts were made for several years, neighboring shoals. M. Hagerup says:
fined
air
"
under
the
ice,
as
it
is
expelled
from
such
water
Did it ever occur to thoeo who advocate the re-opening
by our statesmen, to carry out some of the Public Works,
" In winter, it not unfrequcntly happens that, at sea a
of the African Slave Trade, that sueftan event would do by freezing, and mustremainthere until its accumulated till our credit was entirely exhuasted. The bureting-up bank or clouds showB a west storm, with heavy sea to be
moreto,hasten the downfall of the Slave Power than all buoyancy is sufficient to lift and break the ice, when it of all the moneyed institutions of the State brought loss prevailing there, while farther 00 tho coast tho- clear, air
that 00 tho iasido of the West-tjord (east side of
. other cause* oombined? Were it not for its atrocity, we will escape through thefissuresso made." Now, as this and ruin to many, and a general feeling or discontent crept shows
in upon our people. Great numbers were anxious to sal Lofodeo) the wind blows from tho land, and sets out
should certainly advocate' this measure as the surest and solution is not quite satisfactory to me, I will propose and get away; hence, if perchance a man came into their through the tjord from tho east. In such cases, espeanother. It is generally supposed that water famishes
speediest method of extirpating Slavery from the counneighborhood, every effort was made to secure him as a cially an approach to the Mdstorm is in the higbort det y . Look at it: In "Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, an exception, to tho rule that bodies are contracted by purchaser or neighbor. He was told there was no other gree dangerous, for the stream and under current from
cold. This is truo of water while passing from a fluid township in the.State fit for a white man to live in—and opposite directions work there together to make the
Ken tacky, Missouri, and a large portion of Tennessee,
ten to one he was discouraged at so dismal a prospect whole passage one angle boiling cauwroo. At sach times
slave-labor is unprofitable. The system is only continued to a solid state, but when once it has become solidified, any (I speak from personal experience. I came to the State appear the mighty whirls, which have given it the name
• because money can be made by.rairing, negroes, as wo of farther diminution or temperature causes, it to contract in 1842; was delightodwith what I saw ofit but wasted to of Matlstrotn, (that is the whirling or grinding stream,)
J t h e r e is no other substance, which ia known to believe that only a small part of the State could ever be and in which no craft whatever can hola its coarse. For
the North raise cattle, for a inaitafc* Tie sugar and
cotton growing 8tates are suppliedwith slaves by the shrink so rapidly under tho influence of increasing cold, settled, and resolved that just as soon as I could get monev a steamer, it is then quite, inadvisable to attempt tint
to go farther West I would do so. In 1848 I passage of of the MiristronTduring a winter storm, ami
above mentioned stock-raising States, and' theae will ad- as ice. Aatlfe cold increases, then the ice is gradually enough
brought into a state of tension, and this strain continues found the moans and time to visit Illinois and Wisconsin; for a sailing vessel \t may also be bad enongn in time of
here to Slavery just so long as they can find a good
I saw the best portions of those States and came to the summer, should there fall a calm or a light wind, whereby
ket and make money by the operation. Re-open the until it iarelievedby a sudden giving way at the point of deliberate conclusion that Michigan "(even allowing there the stream becoucs greater, than^the wind, tearing the
.
African Slave Trade, glut the Southern market with least strength. The water then rises, and freezes, in the were tracts of worthless lands) was, all things considered, vessel no longer under command.''
to either of theml
abnrea from abroad, and you make Virginia;-Maijiand, cracks, so that when the weather moderates, tho surface preferable
lSc> peculiar feeling engendered by this state of things A "wee bit of a boy" astoHshed his mother a few days
Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, and, perhaps, Temtasee, of ice becomes too largo for the area it covers, and throws jtaSsl'os ail Iikmaelite»—eTtTj man s hands was against sine*. She bad occasion to chastise him slightlyforsome
Free States, of: their own wQl and by their own' act vp lines of ridges. To the same cause, is owing the his neighbor. The correspondence of the Michigan set- offence he had committed. Chariy 611 very auietiy in his
for some minutes afterwards, no doubt thinking very
Where then is the PoKtical Power of the Save States? peculiar cracking that may sometimes be heard during tlers with their easternfriends,from1838 to 1845 was of
profoundly. At last he spoke. •" Mraer, I wish P a d
Paradise!
<Jooeforever-and with H goes the'Patriarchal Institu- cold nights in winter on land. The surface of the mow
But perhaps the most active agency operating against grt anosaer housekeeper; I've got tired or « e ^
by
thawing
and
freezing,
has
previously
formed
a
crust
•ti on. fcr with no power to extend itaelt and no cootroDthe Stlte from 1837 to the present time, is the great wound!*
' injg voice in the Nafional Corneals, it would speeffly fie. —or if you please a thin sheet of ice,—and as the cold
Ma. BATES:
TRAVERSE CITY.
No M a t l - N o New*.
O u r b r e t h r e n of t h o t y p e a n d q u i l l will s y m p a t h i z e
w j t h us w h e n we tell t h e m t h a t t h e l a t a * p a p e r we h a v e
ruccfved f r o m any q u a r t e r is of t h e 5th l o s t , t h r e e d a y s
before t h e elections hi N e w Y o r k , Wisconsin and t h e
C i t y , of D e t r o i t
We
h e a r d v e r b a l l y , last w e e k , t h a t
those elections h a d all g o n e Republican, b u t we h a v e no
details.
T h e mail_failed u s l a s t w e e k — i t h a v i n g failed i6
connect at
Mnnintee—and
w i t h e m p t y bags.
the
carrier came
through
T h e r e i s no use in f r e t t i n g a n d scold-
i n g a b o u t it* t h o u g h i t i s p r o v o k i n g t o g o t o press w i t h o u t a n i t e m of n e w s f r o m , t h o o u t s i d e wo r l d .
Perhaps
w e shall!get accustomed t o it before Spring, but we
d o n ' t l i l a ( t o c o m m e n c e o u r lessons so e a r l y in t h o season.
•
TUB W R A T H E R . — W h e n all o t h e r t o p i c s fail, t h i s i s
generally a reliable o n e t o fall b a c k o n ; b u t f r o m t h e
p r e s e n t u n s e t t l e d a s p e c t , i t is n o t safe t o say m u c h even
on t h i s s u b j e c t . . W e h a r e h a d several
flurries
of s n o w
b u t no s l e i g h i n g ; a n d n ^ V e r y cold w e a t h e r — t h e l o w e s t
«" i l w . A
T
tango being
~ hen) are »t
'
S t r a n g i n d i c a t i o n s of a- h e a v y fall of snow, a n d wo anti-
b e d e c k e d w i t h f e a t h e r s , s k u n k skia=, bells, b e a d s , e w a n d
nose rings, ribbon* Ac., T h e i r t a s t e f o r p a r t i n g a n d
ornaments is l a r r i y dewjloped. T h e eagle feather, which
i s w o r n b y n o n e b u t t h e w a r r i o r * , s h o w s ' t h a t h o h a s bfcen
i n a conflict w i t h h i s e n e m y . E a c h f e a t h e r i n d i c a t e s «
s c a l p t a k e n f r o m Wi e n e m y ' s h e a d . O f t h e s e feathers t h e y
a r e v e r y p r o u d . T h e s k u n k skin i s w o r n o n c o c h ankle— 1
b y n o n e b u t t h e b r a v e s . E v e r e o n e t h a t e n l i s t s is e n t i t l e d
t o a s k u n k skin. W e n o t i c e d s o m e w i t h l a r g e b e a r clawn
h u n g a r o u n d t h e i r n e c k s a n d some w i t h l i e a v y t r i n k e t s
banging t o their e a r n T h e i r original e n e r g y and 6crcen e s s a r e s c a r c e l y viaiMe. W e n o t i c e d o n e c h i e f whoJc
a p p e a r a n c e b r o u g h t t o recollection t h e a c c o u n t w e h a v e
read of s a v a g e w a r r i o r s . H i s n a m e is O-squa-ba-dis,
i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of w h i c h m e a n s " a r u n - r u n .
l i e is
of t h e W i s c o n s i n b a n d , T h o a g e n t s a y s h e is t h e moet
r e s o l u t e a m o n g t h e m . H e is s t r a i g h t , tall, a n d h a s a most
p e n e t r a t i n g eve. H i s c h o e k b o n e s a r e h i g h , m o u t h l a r g e ,
a n d l i p s t h i c k . H i s l o o k Li s a v a g e . W e p r e n a m e h e
woukf be a terrible man to encouuter. A s a race thev
a r e s u b d u e d , a n d fear t h o w h i t e m a n . T h e y d i s d a i n t o
w o r k . T o w o r k as d o e s t h e w h i t e m a n is t o o g r e a t a e o n - desccnsion f o r t h e i r l o f t y s p i r i t . W h i l e a t t h e p a y m e n t ,
they danced the pipe, war. tieggiog, and medicinc dances.
I u t h e war dance they-go t h r o u g h similar movements to
t h o s e in b a t t l e ; T h e w a r r i o r s m n k e s p e e c h e s , t e l l of the
N E W GOODS. !
CONSUMPTION -CURED I
DR. CHURCHILL'S DISCOVERY.
•
i W in Chester's G e n u i n e P r e p a r a t i o n o f t h e C h e m i cally Pore Compound of t i e
GOODS, GROCERIES,
!
of LIME and S O D A ,
j
, Original); discovered and prescribed by D r . J . F . CHCECB:!.'
|
of P s r i i as s-Kpccidc HeUi«dy for (
W E H A T E NOW OPENED
•
T h e L a r g e s t S t o c k oi"
.
'
H YPOPHOSPHITES
CONSUMPTION!
r p H E EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS OBTAINED I N . A M U !e
the KKUges
Pulmonary D
Disease
' * of Voinootij
i M M bby Dr. C h o r c h i l i ' s V t w
C
^ » Trtauneat—
the H
H^TOPHOSRHITEB
—the
Y P 0 P H 0 8 P . H I T E B O f LIME AND SODA
>r b r o u g h t to t h i s m a r k e t : which * n-lll he h i i i i . i i , , —removes all remaining doubt as to the inestimable value n '
»'
| this Discover?. Consumption is no longer to bo regarded L*
offer at «nch prices as will accord reasonably with the TIMES. ; an incurable malady.
i r ® P L
o
"\7" X
I S
X
O
"TNT
H A N N A H . L A V 4 CO. ;,
Traverse City, Nov- .25,1859.
Uf
, t i v e d e l a y a m o i u e n t to t r y W I t t s U i e l r last hope."'
——
______—
—
Dr. Churchill tfays: •
r — !
E X T R A O R D I N A l t Y S A L E O F
- I a m a n x i o u a t i t a t t h a H r e o r n o a r H i T a s a h o n l d be b r o n s r ___________
, an speedily as poss.'ble, into universal use, a* I *xow t h a t the y
il H ; V A / F I T . H
f
will prove n o t only as sure a Itemed)- iu' Consumption as Qni
"
' irlne is in I n t e r m i t t e n t Fever, butalao us elKctaaJ a Preaerrs
A. i l n o CiOI,!}
P K X C I L w i t h G O I . T ) P K N ! live as Vaccination ia Small P o * .
i>ttnoh<Ml,
o instance h a v * I found the r e m e d y fail to p r o d s r e
c , c o - w i n g t h a t could i eaaonablv he expected from iu '
- Out of twenty-two a r s e s la t h e t h j r d »r l a s t stage, trtat« C
A n c l ii 1 ' H K M I U M U i e i i o h p u r o l u i w i ' w o r t h at my Dispensary, during the past year, e i g h t hareconapleteiy
recovered, eight have died, a n d six are R i l l u n d e r treatment.
lYom
Such a result is altogether unparalleled in the annals of a r c i clne."
jKfr- This Remedy i s the m o s t powerfBl.Generator of JJIoo--:
known, and la equally efficacious In all forms of Debility.
Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous -Diseases, Chlorosis, Dyspepsia,
and from the universal satisfaction given to all who have —or whatever depends on deficient .vitality of the system.
patronized our house, we take pleasure in saying t h a t we now
Winchester's GenuiB* Preparation
consider our business raiKLT a n d rEB*ANRNTI.Y established. is put up in large bottles with t h e following words blown in
Wis wish it understood that this is No LOTTERY, but a fair the gloss: - Da. J . F. C n c a c m i x ' s Y r r o r u o s r a i T a s o r Liisr.
and legitimate sale. In which each p n r c h a s e r gets t h e valne AND SODA. J . WINCHESTER, NEW Y o a * . " Each bottle has
of his or her money in » G o l d P e n c i l w i t h G o l d P e n also, a FAC-smiLK signature.
a t t a c h e d , or it G o l d L o c k e t , worth $5 e»ch, which can- . T*tT- No o t h e r can he relied on s s the pare Hypophospfeiu:.
not lie bouglit at any retail store f o r the same price: and in Unless perfectly pure, they are uot o n l y useless, bat positively
addition to the purchase, each person receives a P r e m i u m injurious. No i a o x or other drug s h o u l d be combined witii
o f J e w e l r y , not less in value than $2, and II may be worth them, or taken at the same time.
*3, 5, # , 10. IS, 20, 30,5(1, or even $200!
5QT- Price $2 00, or three bottles f o r $5 00,-with full d i c tions for use. A liberal discount to phyalcfans and the trade.
The DKT SALTS-furnished to the professiosk Single bottles
in concentrated solution sent by mail, w h e n apeolally ordered.
V'e propose to let a person know what Premium he will r
Sold wholesale and retail at the Sole General Depot In t h e V.
ve before sending hi* money. Any Lady or (ientlemv
S. 43 J o h n street. Let no one deceive you, but p u r c h u s and
d e s i r i n g one of the above articles, can Jirst send us their
use onlv " W i n c h e s t e r ' s P r e p a r a t i o n . " ) "
.
name and address, s l a t i n g whether they want the Pencil and
for. C h u r c h i l l ' s W o r k o n C o a s o n a p U o n .
Pen, or l/ocket, and we will make their selection, a n d i n f o r m
t h e m by return mail what premium they are entitled to. They is now ready, a n d will he sent gratis to every Consumptive or
Nervous sufferer in the United States, o n r e c e i p t of twelve
- m t h e n have the privilege of. s e n d i n g f o r it if they clioosc.
Our P r e m i u m s arc distributed in a fair and honorable man- cents In stamps t o cover expense of postages. . Also, ctrcn
sr. a n d as soon as t h e n a m e , of the p u r c h a s e r Is received lars e n d alt requisite information w i t h o u t c h a r g e . Let no
one delay, f o r time is precious In so fatal a m a l a d y as Conwith the$->, his Pencil and P e n a n d P r c i n l n m , or (Sold Locket
sumption. Address,
J . WINCHESTER,
a n d Premium, are pot u p in a safe m a n n e r and sent to the
A m e r i c a n a n d F o r e i g n Agency,
by mail, f r e e of postage. Our p l i n , from long experiftt.tl*
A t JJ o
n lhi tni straet,
n t r . , 1 New
\ D W York.
43
l the above business, hns given g e n e r a l satisfaction, as
F o r sale by
each p u r c h a s e r CIUI sell or trade the above.articles for all they
MORGAN BATES.
cost him, and retain the pren<i»m g r a t i s .
"Herald Office. Traverae CityIf, however, any person should feel disposer! to" send lis
f
G O L D L O C K E T for S 5 ,
h
5 °
*™
k e a s h o k c themselves w i t h s a v a g e g l o r y , while t h o s e assembled around^respond with a g u t t e r a l sound resembling
c i p a t e a n e a r l y run of g o o d s l e i g h i n g .
" u g h ! u g b ! " T h e p i p e d a n c e consists in o n e p e r s o n s
o u t w i t t i n g o r e x c e l l i n g a n o t h e r in d a n c i n g , m a k i n g g r i m fcUiLKn;—The s c h o o n e r Perry
Hannak,
C a p t Cana n y t h i n g t h e y c h o o s e t o u n d e r t a k e , so t h a t i t
field, sailed f o r C h i c a g o o n T u e s d a y e v e n i n g , w i t h a shall o c c a s i o n a l a n g l u I t s o m e t i m q e x t e n d s i n t o blackc a r g o of l u m b e r , t o H a n n a h , L a y & C o .
T h i s is h e r g u a r d i s m .
' T h e b e g g i n g d a n c e c o n s i s t s in g o i n g t o the h o u s e of
K s t trip, tor t h e seasou.
t h e w h i t e m a n . a n d bfcfore his d o o r , gt> t h r o u g h v a r i o u s
T h o b a r k Shepherd,
s a i l e d on W e d n e s d a y , f o r s a m e m o v e m e n t s of t h e i r b o d y a n d feet a c c o m p a n i e d b v t h e
p o r t , w i t h l u m b e r , it) H a n n a h , L a y & C o .
I n d i a n drum, until t h e y g e t something. T h e medicine
d a n c e is v e r y g r a v e . D u r i n g i t s p e r f o r m a n c e o f f e r i n g s
Messrs. H a n n a h , L a y & C o . h a v e closed one of t h e i r a r e made, t o t h e *' G r e a t S p i r i t " T h e y m o v e in a circle,
Mills f o r t h e w i n t e r , a n d t h e o t h e r will b e s h u t d o w n in w i t h a s h o r t , q u i c k s t e p , k e e p i n g u p t h e w h i l e a k i n d of
a few d a y s .
A c t i r e p r e p a r a t i o n s a r o b e i n g m 4 d o f o r m o n o t o n o u s s o n g , w i t h t h e b e a t i n g of a d r u m . T h c v h a v e
s e n d i n g t h o l u m b e r m e n t o t h 6 P i n e r i e s , a n d w e e x p e c t t h e i r dishes of s o u p , w h i c h t h e y bold, a n d a f t e r t b e ' d a n c e
cut
Occasionally l o n g s j i e c c h e s a r e m a d e .
t o see a g e n e r a l s t a m p e d e t h i t h e r w a r d n e x t w e e k .
T h e y also e n g a g e t o a g r e a t e x t e n t in g a m i n g , of w h i c h
t h e y h a v e s e v e r a l k i n d s nil called ta-dc-yunk- ( g a m b l i n g . )
Indian Payment.
^
T h e g a m e of fifty is mostly played b y y o u n g people.
T h e B a y f i e l d , ( W i s . ) Presi, gi ves U f t H b S r o f a g g r a p h i c
I n p l a y i n g i t t h e y h a v e a w o o d e n b o w l in w h i c h t h e y
a n d i n t e r e s t i n g d e s c r i p t i o n of a n I n d i a n Psfvment, w h i c h , h a v e s c v e n u small picces of d u c k bills, o n e s i d e p a i n t e d
, in t h e a b s e n c e of all news, o c c a s i o n e d b y t h o failure of a d i f f e r e n t c o l o r f r o m t h o o t h e r . H e w h o t u r n s t h e
t h e m a i l , w e t r a n s f e r t o t h d c o l u m n usually d e v o t e d t o m o s t c o l o r wins. T h e moc-ca-dn-nnt-ta-de-wiu, o r m o c c a s i n g a m e , Ls t h e m o s t i u t c r e s t i n g . W h e n p l a y i n g t h i s
news items. .
•
I
•
game a m a t pr blanket is spread upon tho ground and
T h e G o v e r n m e n t a n n u i t i e s wtiro, u n t i l 1856, m a d e a t a r o n n d i t t h e g a m b l e r s sit. T h e y h a v e b a l k o r b u l l e t s
L a P o i n t e , L a P o i n t e c o u n t y . T h e t r e a t y s t i p u l a t e s one of w h i c h is m a r k e d , a n d a m o c c a s i n for e a c h balL
t h a t t h e p a y m e n t m u s t b e m a d e on e a c h r e s e r v e , h e n c e i t s T h e j u g g l e r h a s all t h e "balls in h i s h a n d , imd places all
c h a n g e \o_ O d a n a h . T h e T o r c h L a k e , W i s c o n s i n , Chip- - t h e m o r none, j t u * a s h o chooses, n n d c r t h o m o c c a s i n j « w a R i v e r , L a k e C o u r t e r e i l l e , L a k e -du F l a m b e a u , S t no m o r e t h a n one; u n d e r a m o c c a s i n . A f t o r h e d e p o s i t s t h e i r money, in advance, they enn rely upon being as fairlyC r o i x , B a d R i v e r , - a n d L a P o i n t e b a n d s of t h o GIT a t t h e m , bo o p e n s h i s h a n d , t o s h o w w h e t h e r h e lias placed dealt with HS t h o u g h they had made previous application. ' *
And if a n y o n e isdissatislicd with t h e i r - p u r c h a s e , i
" CJhippowa ( d r p r o p e r l y O j i b w a ) N a t i o n a r e p a i d a t t h e all u n d e r or n o t
T h e ono t h a t g a m e s w i t h h i m is t h e
unbiassed jiyrson cum|ietcnt to Judge says the articles a
miasm or vegetable decay. T h i s ex halation'li
.
a b o v e n a m e d .place.
gnosscr. I f he h a p p e n s t o t u r n t h e m o c c a s i n u n d e r w h i c h
worth more t h a n the money paid t o r them, and in some cases action of solar heat un w e t soil, s a d -rises with tho %atery vi
T h e n u m b e r of I n d i a n s p a i d h e r e is a b o u t 3 , 3 0 0 , ,is t h e marRed boll, he .then i s t h e j n g g l e r . If h e misses,
TEX, or even FORTY times the amonnt, let such person re- por from it. While the sun i« below the horizon t h i s v a p o r
T h e s e a r e only a small p o r t i o n of t h e O j i b w a n a t i o n . T h e t h e j u g g l e r w i n s j u s t a s m a n y as t n e r c o r e m o c c a s i n s t u r n the goods, and wc.will freely refund the money.
lingers near tho earth s surface, and t h o virus Is taken with i t
p r e s e n t a n n u i t i e s a c c r u e t o t h e m f r o m t h e lost t r c a t v m a d e f r o m t h e o n e h o t u r n s to t h e o n e u n d e r w h i c h is t h e m a r k Hot some will ask (as many have.l how can wo afford to t h r o u g h the lungs i n t o the blopd. There it acts as an Irritaa t L a P o i n t e , &2pt- 30, 1 8 5 4 , b v Messrs. H e n r v C . Gil- e d balL I f h e d o e s n o t p u t all t h e balls u n d e r , t h e g u e s s e r give so ranch f o r so little money? In answer, we say, t h a t all t i n g poison on the internal viscera a n d e x c r e t i n g o r g a n s of
b e r t , D a v i d C . H e r r v m a n , a n d H o n . . H o n r y J L R i c o . h a s t h e p r i v i l e g e of t u r n i n g o n e m o c c a s i n b e f o r e h o who are acquainted with the J e w e l r y business know t h a t ' the body, T h e liver becomes t o r p i d and fails t o secrete n o t
there i s scarcely on article of Jewelry purchased at a retail only t h i s virus, but olao ,lhe bile f r o m the blood. Both t h e
T h e t r e a t y n e x t p r e c e d i n g wus m a d e in 1842, a n d will e x - gpesses,
r h e y do n o t l o o k a t t h e m o c c a s i n s , b u t w a t c h store npon which there is n o t a protit of from 100 to -100 per v i r u s and the bile accumulate in the c i r c u l a t i o n , s a d produce
p i r e in 1857. T h e first treat)-, w h i c h w a s m a d e a t S t . one n n o t h c r . A n e x p e r t p l a y e r w i t h un u n a c c u s t o m e d p e r cent, on m a n u f a c t u r e r s ' p r i c e s .
.
violent constitutional disorder. . T h e spleen, the kidneys and
We being A g e n t s for the Manufacturers, have adopted t h i s the stomach sympathise with t h e liver, a n d become disordered
P e t e r s , M i n n e s o t a iu 1837, h a s e x p i r e d . A f t e r 1 8 7 4 t h a i e j u g g l e r , caii tell b y t h o m o v e m e n t of t h e e r e u n d e r w h i c h
wiU b o n o m o r e p a y m e n t s m a d e to t h e I n d i a n s , a s t h e y m o c c a s a n is t h e m a r k e d balL T h e y tally "with sticks, a n d plan o f ' d i s p o s i n g rif o u r goods, rather t h a n selling to Coun- also. Finally, the i n s t i n c t of o u r organism, aa if In a n attry Dealers on time, and t a k i n g the uncertainty of collecting t e m p t to exp«l the noxions fusion, c o n c e n t r a t e s the w h o l e
h a v e n o rtioro I a m i s t o solL - T h o g o v e r n m e n t is n o w in t h e g u m e is as m a n y a s tliev a g r e e u p o n . A t t h i s g a m e
o u r bills;
. p o s s e s i o n of all t h e i r territory, E x c e p t t h e reserve, w h i c h t h e y c a n play f o r a n y t h i n g , a n d h a v e b e e n k n o w n t o play*
By t h i s arrangement, we b r i n g the p u r c h a s e r in direct com• a c c o r d i n g l y t o t h o l a s t t r e a t y , a f f o r d to e a c h single o r f o r a w a g e r of $ 3 , 0 0 0 . '1 hey a l i o g a m b l e w i t h t h e c a r d s munication with tho manufacturer, a n d the profits t h a t a r c the c e n t r a l -organs *
m a r r i e d pereOD, oyfg t w e n t y - o n e y e a r s of,age a t t h o d a t e of t h o w h i t e m a n . T h e ku-kut-tu-o-dc-win, o r " g r e a t made by the dozen hands t h r o u g h which Jewelry h a s to pass, CniLt- But ib t h i s e
in which tile blood leaves the c e n t r a l o r g a n s a n d rqshes t o
o f t h e t r e a t y , e i g h t y a c r e s . T h e G o v e r n m e n t is now l o c a t - b e a r g a m e , " is o r i g i n a l w i t h t h e m , a n d i s t h e i r g r e a t e s t wc give' to the p u r c h a s e r in Premiums, as above stated.
* We- t h e r e f o r e offer the following Inducement to persons the surfscc, as If in a n o t h e r effort t o expel t h e i r r i t a t i n g .i n g t h e I n d i a n s on t h e B a d R i v e r reserve. <Thcy will n o t g a m e , b c c a u s e it i s p l a y e d on a g r a n d e r scale. I t is s i m - a c t i n g a s A g e n t s f o r us:—
poison thr.ough t h a t other great excretory—the a k i n . In lh>s
r o c e i v e t h e i r p a t e n t s u n t i l t h e P r e s i d e n t s o t s fit t o g r a n t i l a r to t h e m o c c a s i n g n m e , only l i e a r ' s p a w s a r o used
Any person s e n d i n g irs S2S f o r o n r goods, will receive a also it fails, a n d the system abandons the s t t e m p t exhausted,
Pencil ami l ' e n . and Premium, or Locket a n d P r e m i u m , free. a n d wsits for the recovery of s t r e n g t h t o repeat the hopeless
t h e m . I t w o u l d b o i n j u d i c i o u s to g r a n t t h e m t h e i r p a t e n t s
Kor f u r t h e r inducements, see Circular.
effort a n o t h e r day; These are the fits or paroxysms or F e v e r
now, e x c e p t i n g to a f e w ; f o r m a n y w o u l d t r n d o t h e i r land
A m o n g our P r e m i u m s aro articles suitable for l . a d i e f a n d and A g u e . Such constitutional disorder will of eonrae u n d e r .
j
W h o Encourages Insurrectiont
f o r a j u g of s k i t - a - w a - b o u (whisky).
Centlemen, s u c h as
•
mine t h e health if i t is ilot removed.
O n e chief a f t e r a n o t h e r , e a c h w i t h his a t t e n d a n t s a p " C u r s e s , l i k e c h i c k e n s , c o m e h o m e t o r o o s t , " a n d lies
Wc have labored to find, a n d have fount}, an a n t i d o t e .
p e a r s b e f o r e t h e a g e n t H a v i n g s o m o k n o w l e d g e of return t o p l a g u e t h e i r inventors. T h e s la v e h o ld e r s und
A y e f s A | t i 6 Cttre, *
politeness, t h e y t a k e off t h e i r E a t s or t u r h a n s , a s t h e c a s a t h o D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y a r e p r o v i n g t h e s e t r i t e t r u t h s by
which neutralizes t h i s malarious poison In the blood, and
Gold Sleeve B u t t o n s , Gold W a t c h K e y s ,
m a y b e / ami a r e s e a t e d . T h o i n t e r i o r c h i c f s p r e s e n t t h e t h e i r e x p e r i e n c e .
(•OLD S H I R T STUDS—plain and with s e t t i n g s : (rOLl> KciHP stiniuhrtes the l i v e r t o expef it from the body. As i t s h o u l d .
so i t does, cure t h i s afflicting disorder with p e r f e c t certainty.
n u m b e r of t h e i r b a n d s in small s t i c k s of wood, e a c h s t i c k
E v e r since the R e p u b l i c a n organization begun th^v
P i s s — n e w style; Gold l l r e a s t P i n s , California Diamond
And U does more, or r a t h e r does w h a t is of more service t o
Pius, Cold l l i n g s Ac-, Ac.
r e p r e s e n t i n g a p e r s o n . T h o p r o c e s s of t a k i n g t h e c e n c o s h a v o d e l i b e r a t e l y a n d p e r s i s t e n t l y m i s r e p r e s e n t e d its c h a r w s u b j e c t to t h i s Infection. If taken In season it expels
i s s h o r t . , T h o c c n c u s b e i u g t a k e n , t h o b u n d l e s a r e t h e n a c t e r . A H i t s p l a t f o r m s a n d jleclaratioiw, t h e life-loDg
•urn the system as It is absorbed, nnd t h u s keep* those w b "
m a d e up, o n e f o r e a c h single, p e r s o n , a n d . o n s f o r e a c h a c t i o n of i t s m e m b e r s , s h o w t l i a t i t c o n t e m p l a t e s outy
it free from its a t t a c k s : keeps t h e system In health t h o o j h
We have ISOLD WATOHKS, Florentine, Mosaic, Cold Stone exposed t o the disease. Consequently i t n o t only c u r e * b u t
family. I f a n y fiunilv consists of t w o pai tics, e a c h p a r t y legal, p e a c e f u l a n d c o n s t i t u t i o n a l m e a s u r e s — n e i t h e r i n t e r Cameo, Garnet and Coral Breast Pins and Ear Rings, ({old
protects
from, the g r e a t variety of affections which are Indureceives a b u n d l e . 'Pheso b u n d l e s consist of a b l a n k e t o r f e r i n g w i t h S l a v e r y in t h e S t a t e s , n o r c o u n t e n a n c i n g m o b
Bracelets, Gold Sleeve-Buttons. <>old Belt Slides,
ced by t h i s i u i i l i g n a n t i n f l u e u c e . s u c h s a l U ' m i U e n t F e v e r . C h i l l
Gold Rings, Ac. Ac.
b l a n k e t * p i e c e s of b r o a d c l o t h , calico, ranslin, a f e w m a d e violence a n y w h e r e — y e t i t s D e m o c r a t i c o p p o n e n t s h a v e
F e v e r , Dumb, or Masked Ague, Periodical II' sdache, or Biln p c l o t h s f o r t h e men, hoes, axes, p o w d e r - h o r n s , t r a p s , p e r t i n a c i o u s l y insisted - t h a t i t w a s a n A b o l i t i o n P a r t y , A u t o — P i a n o s Mrlodeons, Musical Boxes, Accordeons, Ac. lons Headache. Bilious Fevers,Neuralgia, Rhemnstism, G o u t .
Unexceptional References given whenever required.
I l i n d n e s s , Toothache, Earache, C s t s r r h , Asthms, Palpftstloa.-.
Ac., Gubs, p o w d e r , s h o t lead, p e r c u s s i o n caps, stoves, s e e k i n g t o l i b e r a t e t h e s l a v e s b y fire und s w o r d ; h a v e
A G E N T S WAXTED for every p a r t of the Country.
'ainfUl Affections of the Spleen, Hysterics, Colic, ParalT)ri.».
c o o k i n g utensils, Ac., a r e d i s t r i b u t e d t o a few i u e a c h t r u m p e t e d t h i s K<T t h r o u g h t h e i r n e w s p a p e r s , s h o u t e d i t
X. B.—In s e n d i n g y o u r names, write the State. County and
ind Paintul Affections of the S t o m a d i and Bowels, all of
tribe; . ' .
C
in t h e i r p u b f i c m e e t i n g s , i n s e r t e d it i a t h e i r resolutions,
Town plainlv, so as to a v o i d l e t t e r s being miscarried.
vhich, when arising f r o m this csuse, will be found to assume
ADDRESS,
A N G L E 6c C O .
W h e n t h e census-Is t a k e n , b u n d l e s p r e p a r e d a n d t h e reiterated
i t i n t h e i r c o n v e r s a t i o n a t h o m e a n d a b r o a d , in
nore or less the i n t e r m i t t e n t type. T h i s " A g u e Cnrt-""te»"
1 0 a C A N A L STREET, (Old No.) noves the cause o r these derangements, snd cures the disease.
I n d i a n s p r e s e n t , t h e p a y m e n t c o m m e c e s . T h e a g e n t , w i t h t h e streets, a t t h e t a b l e a n d b y t h e fireside, u n t i l i g n o r n u t ,
New York.
T h i s it accomplishes by stimulating the excretorlcs t o ext h e b a g s o f g o l d a n d s i l v e r ( a b o u t 8 7 . 0 0 0 ) . b e f o r e h i m , u n e d u c a t e d n e g r o slaves a t t h e S o u t h , h a v i n g t h u s d i n n e d
.tel the virus f r o m the s y s t e m ; and these o r g a n s by degree^
s i t s a t a q o p e n i n g i n a s u i t a h l r p l a c e in t h e w a r e h o u s e , d a i l y i n t o t h e i r care, b y t h e i r masters, h a v e c o m e t o b e iiecoiue habited t o do t h i s their office of their own accord.—
o u t of w h i c h b e h a n d s t h e m o n e y t o e a c h o n e , a s h e c o m e s lieve i t ! S l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s c r e a t e d t h e i n s u r r e c l l c n c e arises w h a t we term acclimation. Time may accomin a n s w e r to his pamo, w h i c h i s a n n o u n c e d b y a c r i e r , t i o n of 1 8 3 " , b y t h e i r lying s t o r i e s a b o u t FREMONT, w h i c h
plish the same end, but often life i s n o t l o n g enough, o r Is
s i s s t a t i o n e d j u s t o u t s i d e t h e o p e n i n g . W h e n t h e e n c o d r a g e d t h e i r s l a v e s t o e x c e p t ami prej>are f o r t h e r p H E R E P U B L I C A N A S S O C I A T I O N O F WASH- sacrificed in the' attempt, while t h i s Ague C u r e " d o e s it at
p e r s o n receives h i s m o n e y h e touches t h e t o p of t h e clerkfe c o m i n g o f a l i b e r a t o r . T h e - s l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s a r e X IXGTON are h a v i n g prvpaied a n d published a series of once, a n d with safety. We have g r e a t reason to tttlieve t h i s
is a surer as well as safer remedy tor the whole class o r disPolitical
T
r
a
c
t
s
,
u
n
d
e
r
the
supervision
of
the
Congressional
jcll, w h i c h Is &n a c k n o w l e d g m e n t of t h e reception of c o n t i n u a l l y p o t t i n g t h e i d e a of i n s u r r e c t i o n i n t o t h e h e a d s
eases which are caused by the miasmatic infection, t h a n s m
p a y . , T h e c l e r k k o e p s a c c o u n t of t h e p a y m e n t m a d e of t h e i r c h a t t e l s b y t h e s e a b s u r d fictions w h i c h the l a t t e r Republican Executive Committee, which it is earnestly ho)>cd other which h s s been discovered; a a d It liss still anothei
the. f r i e n d s of the Republican cause will take immediate
to e a e a one. A f t e r g i v i n g h i s receipt, -he receives his a c c e p t a s t r u e . I f t h e y will t h u s sow t h e w i n d , w h o can
I m p o r t a n t a d v a n t a g e to the public, w h i c h i s t h a t It i s chear
s te p s to have p u t ii\ general circulation.
, well as good. .
b u n d l e a n d leaves, w h e n a n o t h e r c o m e s u p . T h o chief, be s u r p p a t f r t h a t t h e y reap, e v e r y y e a r o r t w o , w h i r l w i n d ?
They are f u r n i s h e d a t the cheap rate of seventy-live c e n t s
Prepared by Dr. J . C. Ayer A Co.,I/)well,Mass. P r i c e O n *
w h o i s p t c a e n t a n d witnesses t h o p a T m e n t o f h i s b a n d . ? t h c n I f t h e r e is now, a s t h e y assert, a n y w i d e - s p r e a d cou=piracy per hundred copies, free of postage.
Dollar p e r bottle.
The following tracta have already been p u b l i s h e d :
g i v e s a r e c e j p t f o r t h e w h o l e b a n d , b y t o u c h i n g t h e c l e r k ' s a m o n g t h e slaves, s l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s a r e i t s c r e a t o r
Ayei*a C h e r r y P e c t o r a l .
T
r
a
c
t
No.
I.
HOW
W
E
A
R
E
GOVERNED.—Iteing
an
expea
T h i s lsXhe p r o c e s s of t h e p a y m e n t D u r i n g t h e i r a n d fomeliters.
T h e y m a d l y a n d blindly e n d a n g e r t h e
pose of the F r a u d s and E x p e n d i t u r e s of the present has won f b r itsolr s u c h a Renown for the cure of every r a r i e t y
s U y a t t h e p a c i n g spronnd t h e y a r e s u p p l i e d w i t h p o r k s a J e t ^ ^ h e i r o w n h o m e s b y t h e i r pcridstent political
Administration f o r party purposes.
a n d flonr b y t h e G o v e r n m e n t T h o s e w h o a r e n o t p r e s e n t
Tract No. 2. L A N D S FOR T H E LANDLESS.—Being a combeen employed.- A s it h a s l o n g b e e n (n constant use throng?,
a r e p a i d j b v t h o c h i c l s a n d otEere. D u r i n g t h o p a y m e n t ,
plete analysis of the votes on the Homestead Bill.
N o r i s i t t h e b l a c k s alone w h o m tlie D e m o c r a t i c P a r t y
out this section, we need not do more t h a n a s s u r e the p e o p V
trader*, w h o m t w t h a v e license, a r o p r e s e n t w i t h t h e i r c n c o u r a g c s t o d e e d s of v i o l e n c e . W i t h i n t h e p a s t f e w Tract No. 3. T H E - A T T I T U D E O F N A T I O N A L P A R T I E S lt* quality la k e p t np t o t h e best It e v e r has keen, a n d t h a t ••
IN' RESPECT TO A P A C I F I C RAILROAD.
g o o d s , p o m e of t h o t r a d e r s d e a l h o n o r a b l y w i t h t h e L v y e a r s i t h a s lent i t s s a n c t i o n t o lawless e n t e r p r i s e s of e v e r y
Tract No. 4. T H E SLAVE TRADE.—Showing t h a t the pro- may tie relied on t o d o f o r t h e i r relict all it h a s ever-bee '
d i a n s , b u t m a n y c a r e little f o r t h e i r welfare. W h i s k e y is s o r t
B o r d e r invasions, fillibuster e x p e d i t i o n s , lynch law
round to do.
ceedings
a
n
d
debates
d
u
r
i
n
g
t
h
e
last
session
of
the
late
•' t h f r I n d i a n ' s ruliL -mr
A rex's C a t h a r t i c Fills,
T h e y—
will t-r a d*e a n y t•*h i-n g t-h e y h* a v e , t o s u p p r e s s discussion, b r u t a l i t y a n d d i s c u s s i o n a m o n g
Congress indicate a most marked deterioration of moral
sesoraPuygsitivr"-"-'— '
o r give u y price for i t
A f t e r all t h e v i g i l a n c e o n t h e C o n g r e s s m e n , violence a t election, Sx-, t h u s m i n i s t e r i n g
s e n t i m e n t a t the South in respect to the A f r i c a n Slave
. . . — Jvspepsla; tor J a
Trade, a n d are fearfully ominous, oi the n e a r approach of
p a r t o f t h o a g e n t a n d o t h e r s , w h i s k e y i s s m u g g l e d i n a m o n g t o t h e v i l e s t p a a n o o s , e n c o u r a g i n g c o n t e m p t f o r law, a n a
the time when, at any rate-in the Gulf States, t h a t h i t h e r t o g e s t i o n ; f ^ r H e a d a c h e : f o r t h e c a r e o t D y s e n t e r y : f o r a Fo '
t h e m . T h e m o n e y t h e y r e c e i v e soon passes i n t o t h e p o c k e t resort t o t h e b l a d g e o n , t h e pistol a n d t h e bowie-knife.
universally repmbmeii traffic will bo a» heartily sustained S t o m a c h : for t h e c u r e of Ervsipelas; f o r t h e P i l e s ; for t c
core of S c r o f u l a ; for all Scrofulous Complaint*; tor the cu->
• of t h e c h o - m o . k e - m o n , ( w h i t e m a n . ) H e , a n d n o t t h e In- H e r e a r e t h e m a d m a n B r o w n , a n d c r a z y c r e w , e n d a n g e r a s ia the institution of slavery itself.
• d i n , f e c e i ves t h e benefit of t h e a n n u i t i e s . T h e a n n u i t i e s i n g t h e lives a n d p r o p e r t y of i n n o c e n t p e o p l e b y a n insane T r a c t NOL 5. OVERLAND R O I T E K TO . T H E P A C I F I C — of R h e u m a t i s m : for Diseases or t h e S k i n ; for the cure C
Liver C o m p l a i n t ; t o r D r o p ^ J f b r t h e core of Tetter,Tumn
THE EUTTERF1ELD CONTRACT.
-are a e u r s e to t h o I n d i a n ; b u t t h i s is no reason w h y t i e o u t b r e a k . B u t w h o m o d e B r o w n a m a d m a n b y m u r d e r a n d Salt R h e u m ; f b r W o r m s ; f o r t h e cure of G o u t : f o r a P i
.white m a n s h o u l d t a k e a d v a n t a g e of h i m .
i n f r h i s s o n s ? W h o t a n g h t t h a t c r a z y c r e w to' b a n d to- Tract No. 6. OPPOSITION OF T H E SOUTH TO T H E DE- n e r P i l l ; for the c u r e ot N e u r a l g i a ; Tor pnrifVIng t h e bloc -i
VELOPMENT OF OREGON AND OF WASHINGTON
M a n y p e r s o n s a t t e n d to s e e a n d l e a r n t h e h a b i t s a n d g e t h e r w i t h a r m s in t h e i r b a n d s a s t h e m o s t e f l e c t i v e w a y
They a r e sugar-coated, ito t h a t the most sensitive can t*'.
TERRITORY—THE INTERESTS O F T H E WEST.
iem pleasantly, a n d t h e y are the best aperient in the wo,M
- c h a r a c t e r of t h e I n d i a n . F o r t h i s t h e r e i s a ' g o o d
t o a c c o m p l i s h p o l i t i c a l p u r p o s e s ? T h e b o n i e r - r u f f i a n s of
In the German- Language.
r sll the purposes o t a family physic.
p o r t e a i t y . l i k e t h e J e w s of old, w h o c a m e f c e f t all
K a n s a s a n d t h e D e m o c r a t i c A d m i n i s t r a t i o n a t W a s h i n g - T r a c t No. 2. L A N D S F O B T H E LANDLESS.—$1.50 per 100
P r i c e 23 cents p e r B o x ; Six"Boxes l o r One Dollar.
copies.
T
i t t h e l a n d to a t t e n d to t h e i r feasts a t J e r a ^ f e m , U w , l n All orders should be addressed to
<Uans a s s e m b l e from all p a r t s o f t h e i r territory, to a t t e n d • T h e c l a w i e f a b J e r e 4 t e s t h a t b e w h o w e n t o u t a n d s o w G r e a t n u m b e r s or Clergymen, Physicians, Statesmen, a n d
LEWIS CLEPHANE,
t h e r p a f a e n t w h i c h t h e r regard a s a festivity o f g r e a t i m - e d d r a g o n s ' , teeth s u d d e n l y f o u n d h i m s e l f s u r r o u n d e d b y a
S e c r e t a r y National Republican Association. i e m i n e n t personages, have l e n t their n a m e s to c e r t i f y t h e 'cn
,
paralleled
uaefolness of these rcmediess, but onr space Ve*c
p o r t a n c e . T h e y c o m e m ^ M t i V e c o s t u m e , w i t h t h e i r b o w s ' c r o p of a r m e d m e n . B u c h a n a n a n d P i e r c e h a v e b e e n sowwill n o t p e r m i t the Insertion ot them. The A g e n t s 1 * V .
R O I ' N D S 4k L A N G D O I f f l
'nw, wigWama, g u m a i ) d t r i n k e t s . T h e i r fiiceBaro
i n g d r a g o n s ' t e e t h s e v e n y e a r s . T h e i r e n c o u r a g e m e n t of
n a m e d rtlrnlsh g r a t i s our American Almanac in w h i c h « V
S o m e h a v e a h i d e o u s a p p e a r a n c e , a n d s o m e l a w l e s n e » - a n d v i o l e n c e i s h u r r y i n g o n e locality a f t e r
'
p
i
»
e
n
;
also with fell deseriptionsi>f t h e a b o T e c o t t p l s ' n - - 1
T e i W O t o n ' i s 1 iwiatly tmi
b y t b e m . " f W e a n o t h e r i n t o a c s n e s of a n a r c h y , f o r w h i c h t h e o n i y sure,
— — " be follewod f o r t h e i r c u r e .
e t h a t w h i t e p e r s o o s , w h o a r e acQoetottied s p e e d y a n d p e r m a n e n t c a r e i s t h e p e a c e f u l t r a n s # * , k t t h e
i r | v T l a n 4 o l p h Street, Chicago, III.
Do
n
o
t
l
i
put off by, unprincipled jleslers ^ t h o t h e r y
fcco, a s asi i m p r o v e m e n t o a n a t u r e , a f t e r n e x t e l e c t i o n , o f t h e r e i n s of G o v e r a a e B t f r o m t h e itw*-ROUNDS
A
LANQDON
a
r
e
.snthprized
to.receive
Advep-J
p
a
r
a
t
i
o
n
s
they
make
more
prdflt on. The sJdk w a i t t h e f f . :
" H w o u l d b e c o m e s o d i s g u s t e d t h a t t h e y cile h a n d s t h a t h o l d t h e m , i n t o ' t h e g r a f p o f m e n w h o
trsementS^o'r t h i s a n d all ttMeafflhr N e w j W i e H o f «be C I S , i aid there is for tbeaL an4 they s b o a U i t , , ; .
t h e p r a c t i c e . A l l -wear a b l a n k e t , i n n e i t h e r d e a l in mOb v i o l e n c e thetflBetTCB, n o r will p e r m i t and. are the
. O N L Y a a, d. E X C L U S I V E Agents
i*. our remedies
». »ra for sal
- i j e by
, T. & P A R B A N T ,
f oIr —
t h e majority ji All
flfiek as c l o s e a s a snail i a a sheD. i T l ^ j r ' a w I t t o b e a t t e m p t e d b y o t h e r s . ' ' 5
of th'ow In the N o r t a A ( w « , * < '
- '
'
aww
ap22
l9.Hr- A
ijtihj'r. OJ s j i T i
« Q
T O
$ 2 0 0 !
]NTo M o n e y R i s k e d !
of
Gentlemens' Gold and Silver Watches, Guld Vest and Guard Chains
F O R L.ADIES,
%
Now is the Time to Circulate
Documents.
E
ADVERTISING AGENCY,
. "ssssssssa i v.
- { '.'They « * t h « Wgiat and U»« h « t
- Of <v«rythlng that grows.
MUM* C O . , HAS NOW
WT w
•»»•- —
'a
sssortment of Lake
O n M n TMR
l l tsizes
l f P I ft!at greatly reduced rates.
and Scrap
Iron, rtfof aall
t h e Lake Soperior Bar Iron gold by tho Company, m all
made from Charcoal Pig, and U tar better than the Iron made
from Hard Coil, ana their Lake Superior Merchant Iron u
the only Iron told in this market, that - is made in this manner.
Their Merchant Scrap Iron is ail made from selected Scrap
and will bear comparinon with "the Best Iron made in the
ngaperior
f
C
And when a mammoth cheese is cot.
. The largest pumpkin, longest beet,'
And other garden staff
U blown into the sanctum by
An editorial p«!t
. The biggest bng will speak to tbsm.No matter how they dress—
A shabby^oat is nothing—if
Yoo own a,printing press.
At Ladies' Fairs they're almost hogged ,
Bjr pretty gHs,yo« know,
That they mav crack up everything
-The ladies hate to show.
And Urua they get a blow-oat free
°WVandOtt» Boiling Mill Company and Eureka Iron Company drafta taken at par in exchange for Iron or any indebtcd- u s to the Company.
.
Manufactured Iron also giren in exchange for good Scrap
Iron.
»~°
r , d t o
" «
iatoka.
Store corner Woodward Avenue and Congress-*t.
n3
P
B
\ T A I 1 H D U N C K L E E ti C O . , 74 WODDWARD AVEJ > | nue/Wbolesale and Retail Healers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Carpets, Floor OU Cloths, Paper Hangings,
Feathers and House Furnishing Goods^—We woold-partienlariy inrit* the attention of the public to the following Goods,
which we have in great variety of styles and prices: Broche
Shawls, long and square ; Bay State do. do. d o . W a t e r l o o do.
do. do.; Gentlemen's do. do. do.; Mantillas, beautiful styles:
Black, Fancr, Poulard, Bayadere and Moire Antique Silks;
French and English Merinoe*, plain and figured ; Paramettw,
Delaines, in great variety ; Valencia Plaids and Stripes ; A£lwool Plaids; Alpacas: Flannels; Sattinetts; Broadcloths; Damasks; Blankets; I.inens; Embroideries; Hosiery; Gloves;
Ribbons; Prints; Cinghame, Ac., Ac.
Carpet Department.
Velvet, Brussels, Crenelle, S Ply, I Ply, Superfine, Cotton
and Wool, Carpets; Druggets, Stair Rods Oilcloth. Window
Shades, Lace and Mhriin Curtains Curtain Fixtures, Feathers,
Paper Hangings Ac., &e.
.
•
We havq many other styles of Goods, which will be offered
to suit.the times.
.
*
O O K F O R T H E T I M E S t t — T H E EXII.ES OP
FLORIDA BY JOSHUA *. OlBKUrtK.—lllsstrrtcd with 6
Volume, limo. 520 pp. Price 51.—
'h eminent ability, the crimes'-ommitagainst the Maroons who ted from
Souti Carolina and other Slave States,seeking protection under Spanish laws. It show*'bad faith exercised towards the
Indians of Florida, and is found to present a true view of tha
long-fought Florida War, which * * , In truth, A * A B I OR
SLAVERY.
• j.F r o m OoTrroof CUM—, of O h i o .
Gentlemen—Acoept my thanks for a copy of "The Exiles
of Florida." I have read the book with great interest sn<
much instruction. It sets in a striking light an important
portion of our history, and clearly reveals the eocret spring*
by which successive administrations .were,moved in a Pairs of
ETeat moral and political consequence. The distinguished
author has especially entitled himself to thejhjnka of e very
lover of freedom, justice, and honorable administration.^*
ti-scing and exhibiting the eVil influences of slavery in h»
transactions which he narrates. No one, it seems to me, can
arise from perusing this work without deepened convictions
of the wrong bt slavelsSldinp, and the. necessity of oarneM
and persistent effort for the deliverance or our National Government from the contrrfl of the slave power.
Columbus, July 12,186R"
. . ^ P. CHASI.
REPUBIJCAN8 READ IT! Copies sent bv susil on receipt
of One Dollar.
F O I x f i S , FOSTER A CO.,
KAVMONK,
Pullshers, Columbus, Ohio.
Detroit. Agent for Michigan.
tON F O U N D R Y . — T H E UNDEB81GNE1) ARB PREStttfonary .
• pared
y u r c u to
w furnish,
l u i u i a u , «at oshort
u u n »notice,
»»»>, —
Gearing Warehouse Hoisting Apparatus, and all
Iron Work. Repair work on Propeller*, Steamers and .Saw A M E R I C A N WATCHES.—A PPLETON. TRACV A
Mills, executed promptly and thoroughly. C listings—every J\_ Co, WAJ.TH.4I1, Mass., Manufseturers of PATENT LEVER WATCHfea—These superior Watches are made by the
aid of new and original machinery, expressly.dcsigi e l
We are prepared to execute orders of any size for Brass and cure, with a low paice, a fine, substantial, durable anc
Componition-Castings, promptly. .
.
j
formly reliable tnne keeper. The; movements are m
Oil Globes, Oil Cups Valves Journal Boxes. (.ndgc Cocks, construction, and are pronounced by the highest authorities
Cylinder Cocks, Steam Whistles for Steamboat*. locomotives ' be faultless lu principle and quality, and have been proved
and Mills, Bolls for Factories. Steamers and Locomotivetvunthe most exacting tests to be reliable and unfailing in ac- O U N - L I G H T G A S W O R K S * FOR THE MANVFAC
uon. These watches are manufactured entirely from the O TORE OF ILLUMINATING GAS, for the use of Privali
der eight hundred pounds.
The reason C ^ S u s T t h e y write
crude materials, in a single establishment, hy- connected and Houses. Public Buildings, Villages, -Towns, Ac—Patented
• And other, people read.
IKON RAILING AND VERANDAHS.
uniform processes—the manufactory being organised upon August, 185«.—The principle or the invention consistt in tho
no an:
A^ A m e r i c a n T r a d i t i o n .
We
are prepared to expeute all orders for Iron Railing fo the same svstcru that has been adopted in tho production of peculiar construction of the Itetdri, whereby Gss is most
Private Building*, Chnrchcs, Public Squares, and for CKraeti theunequiled American fire-arms, which enables us lo pro- quicklv, easily and economically generated from Rosin, Oil,
One offlie most interestineincidentain the early hiaduces movement at one-half the price of any foreign move- Tallow' and refuse Grease of any kind, and produoing. for
ry Lots.
t o i j of new England, is the deliverance of the frontier
Corner of Fifth and Woodbridge-stt., opposite Machine ment of the same quality: and we guarantee the perfect about eighty cents, as much light as a thousand feet of ordi" •.
. •
t o * a oTHadley from an attack of abarbaroos native tribe. Shop of Michigan Central .Railroad, Detroit.
performance, for ten years, of every watch manufactured by us. nary coal Gas.
JACKSON A WILEY.
"A long course or experiments at the hands of u-.e inventor,
All foreign watchcs arc made by baud, the Amcncan watchT h f Indian war of King Phillip—tho-saddest page in the
c.- being the only onfcs made by machinery upon a uniform who has iiad many years experience In Gas manufacturing, ss
. n n . l i ot the colonies—had just commenced;—and theini n B A N K E R S , LAND AGENTS AND BUSINESS MEN. system throughout. Nearly ali hand-made watches arc de- well as by ourselves and others, has placed the Invention be- • ..
' A
a. Son's,
n
. . Map
I f . . . Publishers,
D n l . l f n l i a M Stationers, Eflgravers
VllcnwrK
habitants-or Hadley, alarmed by the threatening aspect
vbnd
all
doubt
of
l
u
practicability.
-The
public
tuny
be
confective, and are continually getting out of order. In many
offihe times, had, on the first Sentetnber, 1675, assembl- and lithographers, 2Q9, Main6treet,Buffalo,'N. V , » verSage'
« i u w , parts of thfe country It Is impossible to -find good watch re- fidently assured that it js at once Uie most simple and useful
pairtr*. and watch repolrlng is always uncertain and expen- f any thing of the kind ever before constructed.
ed b their humble place of worship, t o implore the aid of
_
.
....
, . with sive. Tho introduction of American watches disposes of this
The present object ot the proprietors is to dispose or city,
the-Almighty, and t o humble themselves before H i m in a
difficulty, and country merchants, as well, as watch dealers, county and state Rights, on the most favorable tcrma, and to
solemn fast All at once, the terrible war-whoop WM
; /
can keep watches as a p a r t of their miscellaneous stock, and immediately introduce the works Into general use.
heard, and tho ehnrch surrounded by a bloodthirsty band branches of Steel, Copper and Stone Engravjng, as well,as thus supply their customers with a new staple, which may be
Works Trom 100 r«-ct capacity-and tipwards, are now in
of aaVages; while the intent, the aged, the bedridden—ell Cfayon Work (of tho finest description, we guarantee satisfac- used as any other article, without mystery or bumbng. _Sold readiness by DUDLEY A HOLMES, manufacturers* Detroit
as
well
as
every
thing
connected
with
the
"Sun-Light
Gss
tion
all
cases.'
„
.
,
„
•
,
^
by the trade generally, and by BOBBINS & A PPLETON,
who had ;been unable to attend service, were a,t the mercy
Particular atttntion paid to Bank and Commercial work,
•
General Agents, 15 .Maiden Lane, N. Y. Works," which Will be supplied by them at,all the principal
of the tomahawk and scalping knife.- A t that period, so suth a* "Checks, Drafts, Notes CertlficaWs of Deposit and
points in the Union, to parties purchasing territory.
uncertain were the movements of the Indians, that it was Stock, Coupon Bond^ letter, Note and Bill Heads, Envelopes,
Persons or small capital, and particularly Gas Utters, by
H A G N I F I C E N T WORK.-MILE^STANDlSH ILcustomary for a select number of the stoutest and bravest Ac. Maps; Portraits, Shdw 'Cards Ac.. Lithographed and
LUSTRATED—a. volume of Photographs from original making an investment In the rigfit to use the "Sun-Light Gss
drawings,tiy John W. Ehninger,illustrative «f the CduitsMp Works," will bo certain or an immediate remuneration.
among the dwellers in the frontier towns to carry their printed in the most delicate colors by a new process.
fSf All- communications In the premises directed to tha
For the convenience of the business community in this vi- of Miles Standish, by Henry W. I-ongfellow. There will be
weapons with them, even to the hoofje of prayer; and now,
;
cinity, we have established an agency with Mr. John W. eight or ten large Photographs of the most exquisite charac- undersigned will meet prompt attention.^ ^
infeontternation and contusion these armed men of Had- Green, at the offlce of the Detroit Daily Advertiser, 2131 Jefter, executed by Bradr. with intersected cream-calotcdSeaves
tafsallied forth t o defend themselves and families. But, ferson Avenue.
Treasurer tor Proprietors.
u3
J. SAGE A S()N>.
(containing th# descriptive text,Vthe w"holc to be .bourfd in
No. 77 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan.
unfortunately, the attack had been too sudden and well
quarto morocco covers, with bevelled ?nd gilt edges.
O O T S , S H O E S A N D B U B B E H S , AT WHOLEEarly orders are solicited, n* the slow process of preparing
pilnnAd; t>y/> Tr^im™ harinSLrtly gained pOSBSBion tho town
A B E W ' S D E T R O I T B R E W E R Y , FIRST STREET
B.VLE ONLY.—Wo have received from the Manufactubefore they aunounded the church; and posted on every rers.iiboQt 1,000 cases BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS, or all the Photographs (nothing being done in cloudy weather) will
between Lsrued and Congress st^ets, Detroit, Mi«b.—
prevent the immediate issue, of a second edition, and conse.
spot of vantage-ground, their bullets told with fatal effect the desirable kinds, and have also on hand u few thousand tiuently only those ordered in advance can be proyiscd.
The undersigned having r6-puwhaaed "Tlie Institntioji tor
upon tho bewildered and disheartened colonists. A t this pairs of OUr own manufacture.
'
Price Six'Doilars. Specimens to be seen and subscriptions the dissemination of uscrnl drinks,* has enlarged end rejnv«>nated it in the most thorough manner, makihg it now tho
Wo shall continue to manufacture and to receive almost
crisis, there suddenly appeared among them a man, toll
most extensive BREWERY IN THE WEST, with facilltlea.ror
" "»"•
FBAKGIB RAYMOND,
and erect of stature, o u m and venerable in aspect, with daily additions—so aa to keep our stock at all times large snd
producing the finest and most delicate grades or Malt Liquors;
Complete- Confining ourselves to the Jobbing trade exclujj
90 Woodward Avenue.
long gray hair falling on his shoulders. Rallying the re- sively, we can Offer facilities un_fquilled j n ^ D ^ i t , at^ 2;and is now prepared to famish the various qualities or Ale*.
• treating townsmen, he issuod brief and distinct orders in Woodkard Avenue.
H. P. BALDWIN A CO.
H A W 8 CUTLERY AND EDGE TOOL' WORKS, t o o t Porter and Brown Stout, for draught and bottling, at prtoe»
R e m a n d i n g voice, and with coil and Boldiery precisor Brush street, under tbo Fulton Iron Works, Detroit, M. ranging from 90 to §10 per battel »
Detroit, Nov. If 185A
Extra line and StosJc Ales brewed to order.
Cutlerv, Surgeon's Instruments, Coopers' and Carpenters
iob!—-The influence which, in moments of peril and diffiAU Packages extra, which, when returned to tl»e Brewery
I P O R T A N T T O P R I N T E R S A N D P U B L I S H - Tools, Axes or every description, Planing nnd Tobacco Maculty, a master mind nssumes over his less rifted follows,
ERS.—We have now on hand, and constantly receiving. - chine Knives, Trusses, Ac., made to order or a s u ^ r i o r
- in. good order, will bo paid for at same prices as chargcd.
wjas well exemplified on thifi occasion. T h e s t r a n g e r s very large stock of Book and News Paper of all sixes. W
The attention or private ramilles,and customers lu general,
is
particularly called to the EXCELJS10R CREAM ALB. Old
commands were implicitly obeyed by men whoi until that »re Agents for nine or the best Mills in the oouhtrv. which
Razors, Knives.'Scissors, Surgeon's Instruments, steel. Iron
instant, had nevw seen him. H e divided the colonists gives u* a-chauco to compete and undersell any establishment and Brass Ware, polished and repaired in a manner to give friends and new may be assured of the superior finality and
fiavor
of these beverages, nnd nil are Invlted to call and samin
the
West,
ani>
would
say
that
wo
sell
print.papcr
chcapei
sati»ractl«n to his customers.
into two bodies; placing one in the most advantageous
ple
for themselves. AH orders, with the money enclosed,
and a-bctter article than can be found in this-market: Also
left at the office, corner of Brush street and Jelifcra k sheltered position, to return the Are or the enemy, wo have Just received a largo invoice of lino Monnillus.— sonOrders
Avenue, will l>e promptly attended to, where samples msy will receive prompt attention.
a S i hold them in check, while tho other, by a . circuitous Please call and see for yourselves at
Malt and Hops for sale at the lowest market rates.^ ^
bC
J. L. CABKW.
PEASE A FULLER'S, No. 210 Jefferson
rSSU, h e l e 4 under cover of thq smoke, to a desperate
Reforences klndlv permitted to Messrs. Edmunds, North A
Detroit^ Nov. 1,1868.
Co., J. B. Wayne A.'Co., Geo. Doty, Doctors ,\llen A-Bat well.
charge on the Indian rear. The red men, thus surprised
E A D Y - H A D E CLOTHING AND GENTLEMEN'S
Detroit, Jan. 1853.; .
- 1 V
itt turn, and placed between two fires, were immediately
FURNISHING GOODS, at the Clothing Emporium of ItI C H M O N D S & BACKUS.—PR1CMIUM ACCOUNT
defeated and p a t t o flight, leaving many of their jaunted
Book Manuractory and Book-Binderv, No. 183, Jefferson
A P E R W A R E H O U S E . - O N HAND ANp FOR SALE HALLOCK, No 108, Jefffrson Avenue, Detroit Where may
^arriore. deadupon the field; and the town ofHadley was Avenue.—Account Books or every description made to order,
cither at Wholesale or retail. thcfollowingdeRcriptionsor be found a very large", Weih and, desirable stock of tha above
•foi« saved from conflagration, and its inhabitants .from ot soperior paper and workmanship, at lower prices than, paper,-viz: Imperial, 8upcr Royal, Royul, Me/liam, Demy, goods Just manufactured under his immediate inspection, and'
heretofore.
Warranted
to
give
satisfaction
in
every
particuCrown,
Flat Cap and Folio Post Gap, Letter, Ugal, Sermon, embracing one or the most extenalte assortment*ever before
massacre. The first moments after tho unexpected vicoffered in this market
' ,
Bill and Kote Paper In every variety.
•
•
tory were passed in anxious enquiries, affectionate meet- lar.Commercial Printing, Ruling and Binding,
Seated I
Among his stock will be found every kind and description
Book and Print Papers ot all colors and rizes. Manilla,
JtigB and heartfelt congratulations; then followed thanks order.
pf Garment suitable for Fall snd Winter wear.
Rap. and Straw Wrapping Paper or all s'r.cs and weights.
•
From the low priced and cheaper gTades to the most nns
The subscriber having had an experience of
aad p r a i » t o God, and then,the deliverer was eagerly
Receiving our paper direct from the Manufacturer* we
and rashlonsWe' Rarments—ail of which have been manufaoenabled to offer them at as low prices a« any In this market
•ought for. W h e r e was het All had seen him an in- years, reels assured that they
turedwlth the utmost care and WAMAKrtDtofeivesAUsn^tion.
quality or workmanship.
KAGS—Wanted inexchango for Goods or Cash..
stant before; b u t now.he had disappeared; nor was ever and
.11 persops desirous or purchasing afther.at \S HOLESALE
Orders from Banks, Merchants. Mauuracturcrs and Railroad
FRANCIS RAYMOND.
' S e n again. One or t w o among the people could have Companies, respectfully solicited.
RETAIL arc respectfully Invited Co call and eiamlne his
13
90 Woodward Avenue.
extensive stock, whlcli shall be offered at prices uniformly
told who ho was, b u t t h e y prudently hdd: their peace.
nS
H. HALLOCK.
- M. Howard Webster, O I N G E R ' S S E W I N G MACHINES—IMPORTANT TO
lrm^_rr
v.
Amid the dense forests and mighty rivers of America,
the stern piety of tho Puritans had acquired an imagina- ^ Detder In Foreign and Domestic Hardware, Housekeep- O THE PUBLIC.—A new Family Sewing Machine, cam- T
H . A L L I S O N , IMPORTER OF IMPROVED RA1Ling Articles, Mechanics' Tools, Stoves, Grates, Tin and Jap- ming the lawst improvements, at Uief extreme low; price of
tive cast almost unknown in the mother country; andthds,
f j . road Watches, cased in beautifal styles, warranted exA Ware, Drain Tile, Ac. Agent for the American and
1FT1* DOLLARS.
unable to account for the sodden advent and disappearance —..opean Law Agency ot Lit* A Kapp, No. 7 Nassau street
Tlie in Ices of all our standard machines have wen greatly cellent time-keepers: do do Swiss M l jewelled, levers in
6 f t h e delivering stranger, the people of Hadlev belived New York—for tho recovery of Debts Legacies and Inheri- reduced. SINGER'S SEWJNG MACHINES, it Is well known; every style." GOLD PENS.—I continue manufacUirlng Pens
though dearer in price, have always ticen cheaper In tact, or every desirable pattern. These penshave received aBilver
/-.that he was an angel sont from God, in answer to their tances in Europe and the United Slates.
Medal and Diploma at the Michigan State Fair,and are.notU;
Remittances made to all parts of Germany, wltlj safety and
prayers, to rescue them from the heathen enemy. W i t h dispatch. No. 201 Jefferson avenue, lCearsley'fc Block, Detroit, considering what they will do, than any other. The prices be surpassed by any, Pens in : market Also dealer in FINE
are now reduced so that all must lie satisfied. Call and exthe traditions of thfe Indian war of 1675, that belief has Mich.
JEWELRY. SILVER-WARE, and FANCY GOODS.
amine the new machines at tlie low prices.
,.
I have an experienced Jeweller, capable or making new
been handed down to our own day, and it'was only a few
WILLIAM PORTER, Agent
S
A
G
E
&
S
O
N
S
,
MAP
PUBLISHERS,
STATIONERS,
133 Jefferson Avenue, Detroit
years ago, on the banks of the pleasant Kennebec, that
*°F1TTIN0'ST0NES and Diamond Work, and Fire Gilding
• Engravers and Ltthopraphera, 209 Main street Buffalo,
» fair descendant of the redoubtable Cftptain Church re- N. Y;, ovir Sage's Piano Rooms.—Wo are prepared to execute
and
Galvanizing done at short notice.
H E A P F U R N I T U R E W A R E H O U S E . — T H E UN
lated t o the -writer the foregoing legend as an indisputable •II work entru«ted to us with promptness and despatch, and
WATCH REPAIRING—Being a practical workman,,>11
dersiencd offer their extensive stock of Goods, consistinstance of a supernatural dispensation of Providence. - on as favorable terms us any establishment in the-country. ing of ull Kinds FURNITURE AND UPHOLSTER!, to the r work entrusted to my care, will be ear^ully-attended to.
GOLD
PENS re-pointed, at fifty cents. Pens sent by mail
Combining
all.
thb
dintrent
branches
or
Steel,
Copper
and
! T h e story, however, is a historical fiat and latterly has
customers and the public generally, at the lowest possible
by the Cash, will be promptly attended to.
embellished more than one popular work of fiction. Sir Stone Engraving, as wbll as Gray on Work or the finest de- rates. Being prepared to meet all orders in ourline or busi accompanied
J. H. ALLISON, Jefferson Aveaue.
n3
scription; ire guaranteo satisfaction In all cases.
ness, we would advise buyers to call upon us before buying,
;W(liter Scott, who allowed little to escape him, alludes'to
Maps, Portraits, Show Cards Ac., Lithographed and printed elsewhere;as w« intend not to bo undersold by any firm in
dt in •' Peveril of the P e a k ; Cooper has made use of itan 1 « t h » » o s t delicate colors, by a new process.
E
T
R
O
I
T
OTEAM D V E I N G E S T A B L U H .
•
nS
the west All work warranted.
MENT, No. 10 Congress-st, East—A. C. ALEXAKDKK
[••The Borderots; and Oliver Newman, the last poem or
CABINET MAKERS' ASSOCIATION.
would most re«|>ectfully Intimate that, more follv to accflmA P E R . - - W K ARE PREPARED TO SUPPLY AT MILL
221 Jo7crson Avenue. Detroit
Sonthcy, is partly founded on the eventful history of
modate the wants or the patronising public, and his large inprices, all sizes und weights of "Print and Book Paper:—
William Gone, the delivering angel of the inhabitants of also Ledger Paper, Flat and Folded*Paper, Letter, Cap and
crease or business be has adopted tho improved faclUt* which
OOK8—SELJ-'-MADB MEN—By C. B. Seymour.
Hadley.
'
Commercial Note, Wrapping and Tissue Paper, Fancy and
Future Lire, or Scenesin Another World; by Geo. Wood. Steam gives to the Art or Dyeing, having recently fitted upStrfple Stationery in great variety.
The Ministry or Lift; by the author of Ministering Children. for that purpose. He now Dyes by Steam, every description
or Silks Satins, Velvet Crapes and 'Merinos, producing th*
100 tons of Rags wanted in excKonge.
The
K.
N.
Pepper,
and
other
Condiments
pot
up
for
general
} A religious paper, speaking^'dancing, says it isfrivomost brilliant colors and best style or finish that every article '
RICHMONDS A BACKUS,
j Ions and corrupting. Tnis is a common error with a certain
will admit or. Shawls or every variety Dyed snd Cleaned.
u3
Detroit Mich.
Tho Tenant House, or Epiber* troxo Poverty's Hearthstone.
class, of religionists, and shows their ignorance and folly.
The Witches of New York, by Doesticks.
U T A Y H E W S SELF-ADJUSTING, SMOKE, STORM ANP
S . C U T H B E R T & C O . . Wholesale Druggists and
Isabella Orslni; by the author or Beatrice Conci.
Nothing is frivolous which is innocent and pleasant, and
M VENTILLATING CHIMNEV^CAP.—Maybew'sChimney
• Grocers, No's 102 and lOOVoodward avenue, Detroit
Vernon Grover, or Hearts as They Are.
adapted to promote healthy actio? Persons who are have in store and offer to the Trade, a large stock of Sugar,
Cap prevents Chimneys from smoking: it precludes storms
Frederick the Great; by CarMe.
| capable of being corrupted by dancing will certainly find Ssrup, Molasses, Fish, Fruit, Spices Nuts, Liquors, Drugs,
from entering them; it lessens the liabilities tofiresfroiu
Dora Dean; by Miss Mary J. Holmes.
their burning out: it protects their tops from the wastes oi
i some much more effective mode t o become so if this ^ Cordage, Paints, Oils Dve Stuffs, Naval Stores Window Glass With a variety or others too numerous to enumerate.
the weather, and serves as an ornamcntul finish.
Ac., Ac. ]' 1 — ;
"*
denied to them. Dancing.among the very young is usrt
. . . . M . W. CAMTIK. sale; by
Persons desirous of securing the right or mannraetjire, Or
J. 8. CtrrmKitT,.
conducted under the eye of discreet seniors; and well
' H
^
of sale, or botfc in Cities Count!?*, States or Territories, in
oateti adulte need no supervision in dancing b u t th
T W I N E H O U S E . ~ W i l l a r d Harvey A Co..
O E T S A N D P O E T R Y O P VERMONT—EDITED any part of the United States not already disposed ot, will
common cense and their own self respect But si]
JL Lane, and 17 Cedir street. New York. Hemp, Cotton ^ by Abbey H. Hemingway. The design or this work is to furnished with a descriptive circular, by addressing theiU£
Flax and Linen Twines Imported and Manufactured Cordage, represent the general poctic literature of \ ermont from its dersigned, snd by designating the terrltonr they desire, they
dancing could in any case be perverted, so may every
Cotton, Jute, Manilla and American Hemp Rope.TarredStuff, early settlement to the present period. The selections are will also be furnished with the terms ot sale.
rise be. If we are t o do nothing till it i s impossible
IRA MAYHEW, Patentee, Albion, Mich.
Fishing Lines Gilling
" i . — * wi.i, —^ .11 fathered from the most reliable sources and will especially
" e r r in doing it, what will there be for any one to do?
Manufactured and for sale, in Dfctroft. by
kinds of Cords and Lin
A s to dancing we will spoak from, some observation
. n3
DUDLEY A HOLMES. 77 Woodward A v e
U Y P . H I N C H M A N tc. C O . , Dealers in Groceries
and practice, and sum op the judgement formed of it,
and Provisions Paints.Oil* Twines Canvas Anchors r
B L A C K & C O . , OPTICIANS, ANT) MAKERS OF X U S T P U B L I S H E D , A TEXT BOOK OF VEGETABLE
j thus: Dancing satisfies the demand of nature for action.
#J and Animal-Physiology, designed for the use orSchools.
and Chains Tar, Pitch, Rosin .Oakum, Ac. A complete stock
: I t i s action for both mind and body. I t is action which or Ship Chandlery aad the above named articles always on J L / . Optical and Philosophical Apparatus No. 250 Jefferson Seminaries and Colleges by Henry Goa^ilby.!M D . Professor
Avenue, invite ail those suffering from defective sight to inbegins, goes on, and ends with the attainment of an o b j e c t hand and for sale very low, at *6 Woodbridge street Detroit, spect their assortment of greatly improved Pereaoopic Grrs- of Vegetable and Animal Physiology snd Entomology ln the
I t h r i n g s the human figure into its proper position, and Michigan,
ttl and Pebble Spectacles which are highly endowed with State Agricultural College of Michigan, embellished with upwards of « 0 Illustaatlons. Although designed mainly for
develops the power ana use of the muscles. I t is asocial
H . L O V E L L , (Successor to D. Crosby & Co.) Whole- the property or improving vision. Also, all kinds of Tele- Colleges and Scliools this book will be found invaluable to
not a solitary pleasure. I t is an Innocent and refining
. sale and Mtd reUil dealer in Watches Clocks Jewelry, scopes Microscopes Electric Machines Drawinglnstruments
n
the general reader, and should find « p'ac* i n '" ver T
pleasure, becanse i t brings both sexes t o b e acquainted Fancy Goods Plated Ware, Combs ButtonsThread.Ae. No. Ac., constantly on hand.
and private Ubrary. The beautr of the wood en gravings^at
with each other, and improves the manners of both. I t 79 Woodward avenue, opposite Holmes A Co. Detroit Mich.
and their style
H E C Y C L O P A E D I A O P W I T A N D H U H O R . - - so plentifully adorn this work, fa remarkable,
WatchM, Clo.ckg;and Jewelry repaired and wairanted.
-s
llow ,n<1
bloe figures on
is accompanied b y music, which is one ofthemostelevatContaining choice and characteristic selections from the eminently peculiar; whits red. r *
I R E S I D E E D I T I O N O F W A V E R L Y N O V E L S , writings or the most eminent Humorista of America, Scot- dead black ground. By their distinct"*** they have eBcikd
! tag and grateful pleasures known t o .pan- Dancing is a
W
T
unanimous
admiration.
For
sale
oy
now
tompUte,
fail
acts
to
bo-had
ot
Und,!rc1ud n d E.BIU.4 t j " j , | f J 5 ? c ' g ° E A S ^
dictate of nature. I t has been
solemn by savage
'FRANCIS RAYMOND.
Detroit Nor. 1,1668.
DOUGHTY. STRAW A CO.,
Detroit Nov. 1.1868.
warriors; a mode of exalted worship among w e pious;
n>.,- t .., j L . . , %
...
, K o . H J y o o d » V d Ave.
13 ,
30 Woodward Avenue, Detroit,
one manner of showing social gratification among digni-i taries. I t has found its proper place a t last, in being a
I M E ' S PATENT FIRE and BURGLAR PRQOF^SAFTO,
—These Safes are a combination ofWrought andCWlled
[ social, rational, elegant amusement, which R i g h t s those J T L Theraas Bo
Iron, two inches thick. The Wrunjht Iron
who engage la it, and t h o w w h o are spectators.
and the ChlHed Iron hardneas; the safrs be In g w r a n t e d Drill thtnir in that l i n s are inrttad t o give him a ealL Hsringth*
raqpqgrfc—A NEW SUPbeat of workman, he can saJsly guaranty M t f a f o ^ o ^ a *
I ProoC AU other Fire Proof Safes are made of Sheet Irwn.
I t is ft.sad commentary upon the course of instruction
TY, STRAW A CO,
8. R. WOOLLEY. A g e n t at C. A A. Ives' Banking O f t * . C >
p a n t e d in young ladies' schools, that the graduates selDrtrolt NOT. 1,1W8.
"jTvJoJ.tji,,.
SOT. 1,1868.
dom know kow to dtdin* an offer of marriage.
SBASs F S W e s r /
.
„
T°
A
B
r
R
J
P
C
S
P
C
D
B
J
G
R
F
R
T
OF civiLiZATrtnr nr iMOLAirD-By H.
L
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , N O V E M B E R 25, 1859.
Cte ©&w Craterse ilfriR). .
T h e D o g t h a t f i o e s I n for t h e R i g h t .
- Now t h a t y o u r u p p e r and bottom dog.
And y o u r outside d o g in the fight
Hav|e each had their poet—let pie be heard,
F o r the dog t h a t goes in f o r the right.
1
IS rCBLIhHBft BVBBY FBIOAY, AT
City, G r a n d Traverse County,, Michigan,
Tturmo
MORGAN BATES,
m r r o B AMP TBOTBIETOB.
4
|
'
-372TCjt,'MS.
10
t• AOTMTmUlTI
yy.i Ja wSffife
rysT;
M to* O a a D o u u * HI K««™ <«•» llo«)tortte
r
£?l
^swraiaiar
tor tit*flnl tpMrttai.
kUlbittnn.
.
il U if M Priiliig NtitJj and Eipcjjtiwsl; EnaW.
"
l i e will die, sometime, and then you must know,
l l a v i n g fought, while be lived, a good fight.
Ho will go, w i t h o u t fail, where too good dogs g o ;
Will the dog t h a t goes in for the r i g h t
T H t f K O N BOifTWICK,
N'DTABY PUBLIC,
OLERK AND REGISTER,
.
Grand Traverse County, Michigan,
WIU gtiw pmoMl mttratioa to tlx'
PAYMENT O F TAXES,
T j o m t i o n o f " 3L/nn<V« a t T r a v e r s e C i t y . L a n d
. O f f l o o , 8 « l e o f M . 33. L a n d " W a r r a n t o , a n d ,
« G e n o r a l -Airenoy B u a i n u s n .
OflM in Copt lloeM, Tn<rera« Clljr, Mich..
: >>>
-1,|*
VM. H. PARKS,
- Attorney a t L a w u d Solicitor in Chancery,
' Q r o n d Haven-, Michigan,
Will a t t e n d C o u r t and'to Collection* in t h e counties of Grand
Traverse, Manisteq, Mason a n d Oceftna.
25-lj*
. LAND WARRANT
AND
TAX-PAYING AGENCY.
Traverse (Sly, Grand Traverse Cwaty, lick
H E N R Y D.~CAMP B E L L .
T A * J > W A R R A N t S OOXSTANTI.Y ON JTAND FOR
1 J sale or location; I n v e s t m e n t s m t d e ; T a x e s paid on nonTe*ident Utads; Redediption of lands;sold for taxes, &nd purchase of I4nda a f i a x sale's.
A n d will always g i r o the moat careful a t t e n t i o n to t h e interest* of myjCorrespondeote, and ln,lil>eriilHy, p r o m p t n e s s a n d
accuracy of buidpcs* transactions, woald qoart comparison
with a n y Agency In «lie country.
T r a v i j m C i t y , May 27, MM,
i9-flm
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
MORGAN B A T E S
^ 1 1 a* opened aii Ofllce at Traverse City, Grand T r a v e r s e Co.,
t h e United Stales L a u d Office i& located i t this place ; a n d
particular'attention will fee paid to locating Land W a r r a n t s ,
inventing m o n e y in G o v e r n m e n t Lands, i m p a r t i n g Information relative to the general feature*,.resource* a n d advantages of the Gr*nd Traverse country, the p a y m e n t of taxes,
and the transaction of any-Agency, business with wblcli b e
n a y b? entrusted.
REFERENCES.
•v
i
AWrKrO.a.ral, |
Herald Office. Traverse City. Kov. 3,1858.
;
]
'
n3
MOROAX BATES,
N b T A B Y PUBLIC,
• / S t e r o i d Offloe, S r a v e r s e City, M i o h j
TRAVERSE OITY HOUSE,
"WILL J A M P C W L E ,
(rRONT HTKEET, NEAR COl fiT HOfSE,)
• X ^ I A V K R S K C I T Y , BUCHIGA^Nr.,
.
ty of t h e Court House and public offices, i s still open . . . _
reception of the travuiiqg .public. The P r o p r i e t o r return*
hj» hearty t h a n k s for t b ^ lihbf^l.llftroaagQ he has received,
— •*
res thftpufiliu tUat 'no pWnS * ill Tie spared t o maVe
a comfortable. ! Ilia charges irfll correspond with
Good »cc6mmodatio:is f o r H o r s e s a n d C i U l e .
49tf
GUNTON HOUSE,
JAMES K.GUNTON,
'J
,
(HOCTIt OF BOABDMAN B1VBB.)
*
T r a v e r s e City, Michigan.
HIS ITEW AND COMFORTABLE HOUSE IS
T
new ready t o receive Its guests, being fitted in full, with-1
o a t regard to cast, so as to m a k e I t t h e m o s t dcsiiable of any
Hotel ratti* Count)-.
. J . K.G. oaing one o | tho earliest settlers in the Coanty, i s
able t o give any information necessary t o parties wishing t o
. locate lands, or otherwise." j B o h a s a Pleasure Boat, Hkiffo
and F i s h i n g Tackle o f ever*" description f o r hire. Those in
search of health or recreation will find t h i s a very desirable
place of resort.
T r a v q i i e C i t y , October 2 l , 1850.,
<S-ly
JAMES K. GTJNTON,
Practical. Builder and Draughtsman,
tjpared to make Plana and Specifications for all olsse
Iplngs also execute a l l kind* or w o r k connected Wit!
on liberal terms.
S Doors, P a t a u a n d Nails,
and for sale.
Alljorder™ V C a b i n e t W o r k a i d U n d e r t a k i n g will be
executed oi
- a s h o r t notice.
jJL- K
u1l f1WI
o r p|W>.
w t patronage,
K ,j 0
0 .. ,; t1hUaUn1kUfU
|MUVU«g> t a k e s t h i s opportonity o f ' s o l i c i t i n g a b o n t l n u a n c e or the
Trev«r»e City. November >5.1859.
i-u
• F R U I T TREES.
*Ue subscriber o t f t r t f o r s a l e a variety o f e n g r a f t e d
•Apple Trees, PoaoK Tre.ee,Four Tree*, P l a m
T r e e s a titl ' C J h o r r y T r e e s .
A t i e lot of S c e d l i a g PXXCH T a x a s , three y e a r s old, w h i c h
« f good size, and healthy.
flk Baylds. Moft », l m .
u rauNXirroaaceuoDiBP
Balldlng, opposite I L C * . B .
l.iy
So h e r e ' s a bumper, with health and success,
To the d o g that's my h e a r t h delight,
The noble d o g ^ t h e generous dog—
The dog t h a t goes in for the r i g h t
The Kidnapped Boy.
A s h o r t t i m e a g o a respectable, dressed m a n walked
a w o r k i n g - j e w e l l e r ' s s h o p . H o was a b o n t t h e m i d dle a g e , o f daric o r r a t h e r s a u - b n r p t c o m p l e x i o n , of e a s y
m a n n e r s a n d of a gentlemanly a p p e a r a n c e . T h e p r o p r i e t o r of t h e s h o p was e n g a g e d in t r a n s a c t i n g b a s i o e s s w i t h
a n eld«rly lady w h o w a s a t t i r e d in m o n r n i n g . S h e h a d
called r e s p e c t i n g s o m e - r e p a i r s t o b e d o n e t o h e r w a t c h ,
w h i c h . w a s on t h e c o u n t e r , a n d w a s t h e s u b j e c t o f c o u v e r .
sation b e t w e e n h e r a n d t h o j e w e l l e r . T h e s t r a n g e gcot l e m a n , t o o well m a n n e r e d t o i n t e r n p t t h e b u s i n e s s a m u s e d himself b y e x a m i n i n g several a r t i c l e s in t h e s h o p ; b u t
t h e m a s t e r , a f t e r r e q u e s t i n g t h e lady t o e x c u s e h i s l e a v i n g
h e r f o r a m o m e n t , a c c o s t e d the s t r a n g e r a n d i n q u i r e d his
p l e a s u r e . T h e s t r a n g e r t h e n d r e w f r o m h i s n e c k b y a black
r i b b o n , a small p o c k e t case, w h i c h h e o p e n e d , a n d t o o k
t h e r e f r o m an a n c i e n t l o o k i n g c r i m s o n v e l v e j c u s h i o n ; t h i s
cushion m i g h t h a v e f t y m o d a m o d e l for a c u p i d ' s h e a r t ;
i t w a s m o r e o V e r encased i n silver filigree w o r k , w h i c h
t r a c e d t h e o u t l i n e s of s e v e r a l similiar s h a p e d h e a r t s , and
m a n y o t h e r devices. O n p r e s e n t i n g t h e c u s h i o n t o the
jeweller, t h e s t r a n g e r o b s e r v e d t h a t a l t h o u g h t h o a r t i c l e
seOmed a trifle,, i t s v a l u e t o h i m w a s a b o v e p r i c e , a n d t h a t ,
a s i t hacksustaioed a f l i g h t i n j u r y , h e w a s a n x i o u s t o h a v e
it c d r c f u D y . r e p q j r e d T h e lady in b l a c k h a d n o t s e e n t h e
f a c e of t h e s t r a n g e r , b u t w h e n t h e ieweller l e f t h e r t o w a i t
u p o h him, s h e o c c u p i e d herself w i t h l o o k i n g a t t h e bijou
in a glass case on t h e c o u n t e r . - W h i l e t h e g e n t l e m a n was
a d d r e s s i n g t h o jeweller, . h e held o u t .tho c u s h i o n in his
fingers, a n d a s he w a s a b o u t t o p a s s i t f r o m h i s h a n d , t h e
lady t u r n e d r o u n d a n d instantly fixed h e r e y e s u p o n t h e
c u s h i o n ; s h e seizeed t h e g e n t l e m a n ' s a r m , h e r w h o l e f r a m e
trembling from agitation; she u t t e r e d ' a shriek, and then
'feU lifeless i n t o t h e a r m s of t h e s t r a n g o r . S h e w a s i m m e d i a t e l y r e m o v e d i n t o a n a d j o i n i n g p a r l o r , a n d in o s h o r e
t i m e k i n d n e s s h a d successfully, a p p l i e d t h e r e q u i r e d r e s to .
ratives. N o w followed e x c l a m a t i o n s a n d q u e s t i o n s a n d
explanations, in r a p i d succession. I n a word, a m o t h e r
h a d f o u n d a long lost s o u ! T h o tale i s b r i e f .
_ '
S o m e t h i r t y - f i v e y e a r e ago, a g e n t l e m a n a n d l a d y w i t h
tWo c h i l d r e n , a b o y a n d a girl, t o o k u p t h e i r residenco in
a small village in M o n m o u t h s h i r e ; t h e s p o t w a s one of
t h 6 i c d e l i g h t f u l o n e s f o r w h i c h t h i s c o u n t r y is j u s t l y celeb r a t e d r t h e v a r i e t i e s of hill a n d dale, w o o d a n d w a t e r ;
w e r e h e r e beheld in p r o s p e c t t h a t c o m b i n e d t h e s o f t w i t h
t h e p i c t u r e s q u e , a n a w e r e n e v e r g a t e d u p o n b u t with
p l e a s u r a b l e e m o t i o n . T h e income of t h i s c o u p l e w a s ^ o t
l a r g e , b u t a m p l e f o r the' e x i g e n c i e s of ' c o m f o r t , a n d even
e l e g a n c e , t h o u g h i n a d e q u a t e t o a n o s t e n t a t i o u s style of
living. • T h e gentleman h a d a n i n t e r e s t in a mercantile
houso in L o n d o n , in w h i c h c o n c e r n h e was a Bleeping
p a r t n e r ; this establishment w a s the destination he intende d f o r h i s son. H o h a d also some p r o p e r t y in the funds,
w i t h w h i c h h e p u r p o s e d p o r t i o n i n g ofT h i s d a u g h t e r .
A f t e r h e h a d t h u s p r o video f o r h i s children, h e Would still
.have a sufficiency t o i n s u r e h i m a n d h i s wife "ease a n d
c o p f o r t i n t h e i r old age. T h e d a u g h t e r w a s n o w seven
y e a r s of a g e , t h e son five, a n d t h e p a r e n t s w e r e a t t h a t
t i m e of life w h e n a n i n c r e a s e of f a m i l y is n o t c o m m o n .
B o t h boy and girl were educated by the father, whoss chief
p u r s u i t s w e r e o f l i t e r a r y c a s t " I t was usual for t h e y o u n g s t e r s t o h f v e a h o l i d a y o n c e a Week, w h e n t h e y e i t h e r
went to spend tho day a t tho house o f a a e i g b b o r who had
a family of t w o b o y s itod a girl, of similar age, or t h e i r
playmates came and s p e n t t h e day with t h e m a t their
father 1 !) h o u s e . I t h a p p e n e d o n o n e occasiou t h e b o y
m a d e one tho9e weekly visits alone, h i s Bister h a v i n g f r o m
some caose or other, been detained at home.
I t w ^ h i t h e m o n t h of S e p t e m b e r , a n d t h e b o y left his
c w f s h o u s e a t t h o close of a s fine a n a u t u t n n a l e v e n i n g
e v e r g l o w e d i n t h e wefitern h e a v e n s a n d b e a u t i f i e d t h e
fe of t h e e a r t h . B u i t h e q u i e t .loveliness of t h e scene
..4«ja f a i t h l e s s h a r b i n g e r t o t ^ e p a r e n t s of t h e b o y , f o r i t
b e t o k e n e d n o t t h e s w e e t s e r e n i t y of a c o q t e n t e d m i n d , b u t
t h e wild fitfuloess o f d e s p a i r — t h e y -never s a w t h e i r b o y
again!
. >
D i l i g e n t i n q u i r i e s in e v e r y c o r o e r . o f t h o c o u n t r y , the
s e a r c h e s of woods, d r a g g i n g of p o n d s a n driver,rewards
f o r restoration, a n d p r o s e c u t i o n for d e t e n t i o n ; in fine, all
t h a t p a r e n t a l l o v e c o u l d d e v i s e — a n d w h a t will i t n o t de<
viso ID so hapiesB an e m e r g e n c y ? — w o n p u t i n t o a c t i o n , b u t
alas, w i t h o u t success.
Y e a r r o l l e d a f t e r year,, b u t n o t i d i n g s of t h e lost- child
e v e r r e a c h e d t h e e a r s of t h e fond a n d m o u r n i n g p a r e n t s .
T h e father was observed always t o carry a b o u t h i m an
a i r of a b s t r a c t i o n t h a t m a d e h i m a p p o a r solitary in t h e
m i d s t of a c r o w d J a n d h e n e v e r l o o k e d u p o n a c h i l d b u t
h i s e y e s w e r e seen r e a d i n g t h e l i n e a m e n t s of i t s face.
T e n y e a r s a f t e r t h e f a t a l event, h e witnessed t h e d e a t h of
big d a u g h t e r , w h o d i e d b y t h e h a n d of t h a t fell d e s t r o y e r
of y o u t h a n d b e # i t y , p u l m o n a r y c o n s u m p t i o n . T h i s
second s h o c k h e s u r v i v e d b u t ' a f e w y e a r s j b u t h e l e f t boh i n d him. a wife w h o h a d developed all t h o s e v i r t u e s of
h e r Bex w h i c h e n a b l e d a w o m a n , a l b e i t o f - k e e n e r sensibilities, t o e o t n f b r t a n d h e l p t h e h u s b a n d in t h e h o u r of
s o r r o w a n d s ic k n e s s . S h e s u r v i v e d him, a n d b o r e h e r
b e r e a v e m e n t s w i t h t h e meekness of a c h r i s t i a n a n d t h e
gentleness of a w o m a n ; s h e n e v e r a f t e r w a r d s a p p e a r e d b u t
tik t h e s a b l e h a b i l i m e n t s of grie?- a n d t h u s h e r o u t w a r d
p e r s o n h a r m o n i s e d w i t h h e r s o r r o w i n g h e a r t S h e lived
in d o s e retirement, a n d s e l d o m w e n t b e y o n d t h e b o u n d a r i e s of h e « w o o t e d walks, l o r t h e y w o o e d b e r i n t o a m u s i n g recollection o f t h e i n f a n t d a y s o f . h e r children, p e r
;i n t o
•'
l i e loves bis «a4«, and he loves his bon£.
But he'H not so selfish quite,
As t o care for no other but himself;
N o t t h e dog that goes in for the right.
d i s t a n t f r i e n d s u r g e d h e r t o forsake M o n m o u t h s h i r e forever, ftfr t h e i r h o p e i w e r e .that a t o t a l c h a n g e of sceoe
would p r o d u c e a c h a n g e of habite, a n d a m o r e lively enj o y m e n t of life. B u t n o ; s h e loved t o linger o u t h e . s p o t
sainctified b y h e r e n d e a r m e n t s as a wife a n d m o t h e r , a n d
s h e fondly i n d u l g e d a h o p e t h a t h e r b o y li ved, a n d would
some day be restored t o her longing arms. H e r hope
was a t t a c h e d t o t h e h e a r t b y one of t h o s e i m p e r c e p t i b l e
t h r e a d s w h i c h t h e m i n d a l m o s t unconsciously weaves
w h e n s u r r o u n d e d b y d e s p a i r ; f o r if t h a t t h r e a d w e r e visible it would a p p e a r f r a i l iudeed, a n d q u i t e u n a b l e t o suitt a i n t h e slightest s h o c k ; n e v e r t h e l e s s i t s t e x t u r e is of t h a t
elastic tenacity w h i c h while i t yields t o t h e s e v e r e s t s t r a i n !
n e v e r breaks, b u t r e c o v e r s its w o n t e d position, a n d r e t a i n s
i t s firm h o l d o n t h e h e a r t Until d e a t h s e v e r s t h e cOrd t h a t
life could n o t b r e a k .
B u t the boy—now tho m a n — h e a r him. H e hasaditti
recollection of t h e events of his c h i l d h o o d . H e well rem e m b e r s t h e e v e n i n g ' w h e n he w d s returning h o m e f r o m
t h o h o u s e of h i s p l a y m a t e s ; he remembers walking a l o n g
w i t h a m a n , a n d a w o m a n in a red cloak, a n d t h a t w h e n
h e c r i e d h e w a s t h r e a t e n e d t o h a v e his h e a d c u t Off if h e
d i d n o t k e e p silent a n d g o a l o n g tfuiefly, as he w o u l d n o t
b e h u r t ; f o r r.e was b e i n g taken t o s e e h i s p a p a a n d m a m m a ,
w h o b a d g o n e o u t v i s i t i n g a n d h a d s e n t t h e man a n d w o man for him- S o m e s u c h n a r r a t i v e i s vividly i m p r e s s e d
on h i s remembrance a n d h a s e v e r b e e n f l o a t i n g in Iris
mind. H o nlso remembers r e s i d i n g f o r s e v e r a l m o n t h s
in a l a r g e s e a p o r t t o w n , b u t was n e v e r allowed t o g o o u t
f r o m t h e houso w h e r e h e lived, e x c e p t a t n i g h t , a n d t h e n
only-in c o m p a n y w i t h t h e m a n o r w o m a n . H e recollects
v e r y well t h e p e r s o n w h o saw h i m f r e q u e n t l y in t h a t honsc,
b e c a u s e he was very k i n d t o hirri,' a n d a t l e n g t h t o o k
h i m oO b o a r d a ship. T h e first t o w n h e remembers
a b r o a d w a s K i n g s t o n , in J a m a i c a , w h e r e h e believes, h e
r e m a i n e d a b o n t nine y e a r s w i t h t h e p e r s o n w h o t o o k h i m
but
T h i s individual w a s t h e o w n e r of a large store, a n d '
t h e l a d was employed in lis business. D u r i n g t h i s t i m e
h i s e d u c a t i r n w a s n o t totally n e g l e c t e d , a s h i s p a t r o n
t o o k some p l e a s u r e in i m p r o v i n g h i s r a i d i n g a n d w r i t ing. / • , ' ..
.
H a v i n g f r e q u e n t l y e x p r e s s e d a desire f o r t h e sea s e r vice, o u r y o u n g h e r o was b o u n d a p p r e n t i c e t o o m e r c h a n t c a p t a i n , w h o s e vessel t r a d e d b e t w e e n t h e A y e s t I n d i a I s l a n d s a n d t h o p o r t s of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s anil S o t j t h
A m e r i c a . I n t h i s vessel h e remained e i g h t y e a r s , a n d
h a d b e c o m e so f a r a f a v o r i t e of t h o c a p t a i n , t h a t t h e last
y e a r h e k e p t his a c c o u n t s , a c t e d in some m a n n e r a s his
sooetary, a n d was rapidly a d v a n c i n g in h i s affections,, w h e n
d e a t h b r o k e t h e connection. T h e c a p t a i n died in N e w
Y o r k . H e n o w t h o u g h t of visiting E n g l a n d , b u t n o t
w i t h a n y s p e c i a l i n t e n t i o n of s e e k i n g h i s p a r e n t s , a s h o
h a d b e e n a s s u r e d b y t h e person w h o t o o k h i m t o J a m a i c a t h a t h e w a s a n o r p h a u , b u t h a d been t a k e n c a r e of in
e a r l y i n f a n c y b y t h e benevolence of a l o d v a n d gentleman,
and" h a d b e e n rent t o sea t o g e t a livelihood a s b e s t he
could.* H o w e v e r a s he could n o t readily o b t a i n a s u i t a ble s i t u a t i o n o n b o a r d a J J r i t i s h vessel, f o r w h i c h m o r e o v e r h e w a s n o t very anxious, as t h e t i m e s h a d been and
w e r e likely t o c o n t i n u e v e r y t r o u b l o u s , h e s u c c e e d e d In
g e t t i n g i n t o a m e r c h a n t ' s o'fflce in N e w Y o r k , w h e r e b e
b e g a n a t n v e r y s u b o r d i n a t e post. B e i n g of temperate
a n d p e r s e v e r i n g h a b i t s , h p . b e c a m e in five y e a r s a c o r r e s p o n d i n g c l e r k . H e w a s rising r a p i d l y in t h o scale of a d v a n c e m e n t , w h e n o n e of h i s b r o t h e r clerks m a r r i e d a
d a u g h t e r of the m e r c h a n t and was i m m e d i a t e l y taken i n t o
p a r t n e r s h i p . H i s elevation c a u s e d t h e new p a r t n e r t o
assume some c o n s e q u e n t i a l aire, which 1 discomfit t e d t h e
p e a c e of t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t , a n d e n d e d in o u r h e r o ' s s e p a ration f r o m t h e h o u s e . H e a f t e r w n r d s filled a n o t h e r
responsible s i t u a t i o n in N e w Y o r k , when, a f t e r t w o y e a r ' s
service, h e a c c e p t e d a l u c r a t i v e offer t o s u p e r i n t e n d a
m e r c h a n t ' s offico In N e w Orleans, a n d s u b s e q u e n t l y h a d
b e c o m o a p a r t n e r in t h e coucern, a n d a c c u m u l a t e d a m o d e r a t e f o r t u n e . F o r . t h e l a s t .ten y e a r s he h a d a g r o w i n g
desire t o visit E n g l a n d , a n d a t l e n g t h h e resolved on i t s
gratification. A b o u t t h r e e m o n t h s a g o he landed in
L i v e r p o o l ; a n d a f t e r s o j o u r n i n g in t h a t t o w n a n d L o n d o n
s o m e s i x weeks, he visited B r i s t o l F r o m t h e a p p e a r a n c e
o f s o m o of t h e p u b l i c b u i l d i n g s in Bristol, p a r t i c u l a r l y t h e
E x c h a n g e , h e Was convinced t h a t B r i s t o l w a s t h e P o r t
w h e n c e he h a d sailed f r o m E n g l a n d
A f t e r spending a
f o r t n i g h t a t Clifton, h e d e t e r m i n e d o n returning t o L i v e r p o o l t h r o u g h S o u t h W a l e s b y w a y of M o m h o u t h s h i r e ,
a n d it was in t h e p a t h of his m o t h e r . T h e recognition
h a s b e e p d e s c r i b e d ; b u t t h e History of t h e meahs, namely,
t h e cushion, remains t o b e tofd.
W h e n t h e hapless b o y w a s k i d n a p p e d from h i s home,
h e h a d t h e c u s h i o n e a s e in h i s p o c k e t ; h e k n e w i t was
d e a r l y prized b y his m o t h e r , a n d h e h a d o f t e n h e a r d h e r
say i t h a d b e e n g i v e n h e r b y h e r g r a n d m o t h e r . I n t h e
silver filigree w o r k t h a t enclosed t h e cushion, w a s t r a c e d
in a circle t h e c h r i s t i a n name of b i s g r a n d m o t h e r , a n d t h e
words, " k e e p t h i s in r e m e m b r a n c e of m e . "
T h e b o y m a n a g e d t o preserve t h e cushion, a n d a s h e
g r e w ,to m a n h o o d his affection f o r t h e relic b e c a m e s t r o n g e r . T h i s little m e m e n t o of t h e d a y s of his c h i l d h o o d
p e r h a p s served t o fix t h e remembrance of t h e m m o r e
n h n l y in h i s m i n d O f late y e a r s h e w o r e i t in h i s bosom,
suspended f r o m h i s neck b y a p l a c k ribbon. O n a s c e n d i n g t h e s t e p s of t h e far-famod W i n d Cliff, his f o o t slipped,
h e fell a g a i n s t o n e of t h e stone steps, a n d d a m a g e d t h e
filigree w o r k t h a t encased t h e cushion.
O n h i s a r r i v a l i t the' first t o w n i n h i s r o u t e , h e h a s t e n e d t o t h e s h o p o f a w o r k i n g jaweller. " T h e reader a l r e a d y
k n o w s t h e s e q u e l ; his m o t h e r cast h e r e y e s u p o n t h e relic,
read h e r m o t h e r ' s name, a n d t h e n e v e r - f o r g o t t e n words,
" K e e p t h i s in r e m e m b r a n c e of me." S h e felt as n o n e b t f t
m o t h e r s can feel, b u t a s no m o r t a l c a n describe,' a n d the
e v e a i n g of h e r old a g e will b e s m o o t h e d b y t h e affectiona t e a t t e n t i o n s of a b e l o v e d i b n t long-lost s o n .
OCT o r W o a t — T h e r e is a m o u r n f u l t r o t h w h i c h
m a n v will a p p r e c i a t e , in t h e following e x t r a c t from " Bulls,
and "Bears"—a s t o r y w h i c h h a s j u s t b e e n completed in t h e
Atlantic Monthly:
. . .
. •• T o a . m a n o u t of e m p l o y m e n t , p r o s c r i b e d , marked,
t h e r e is n o t h i n g so terrible as t h i s i m p e n e t r a b l e of t b e
elose r a n k s of s o c i e t y a r o u n d h i m . E v e r y busy man
s e e m s t o h a v e found his p l a c e ; e a c h l o c k s s t e p w i t h h i s
n e i g h b o r , a p d t h e vast procession moves on. Once o u t of
t h e s e r r r t f i ' o r d e r t h e u n h a p p y w r e t c h can n e v e r resume
his position. H e finds himself t h e f i f t h wheel of a c o a c h ;
t h e r e is n o t h i n g f o r h i m to d o — n o p l a c e f o r h i m a ^ t h e
bountiftal b o a r d w h e r e o t h e n a r e f e d H e m a y s t a r v e
o r d r o w n himself aa h e l i k e s ; t i e w o r l d h a s n o u s e f o r a a d
w i l l n o t mias h i m . "
isra.i.
A h Overwhelming Speech hy a W i d o w .
H o n . G e o . N . B r i g g s , e x ^ G o v e r o o r of M a s s a c h u s e t t s
delivered a
temperance
a d d r e s s some time s i n c e , in t h e
c o u r s e of w i n c h h e related the following a n e c d o t e w i t h
thrilling effect:
M r . B r i g g s said, t h i s question of t h e i n t r o d u c t i o n of
i n t o x i c a t i n g d r i n k s a s s u m e d a s o m e w h a t p r a c t i c i a l form,
n o t m a n v y e a r s since, in a t h r i v i n g b o r o u g h of Pennsylv a n i a T h e i n h a b i t a n t s h a d assembled a« was t h e i r u s u a l
I c u s t o m , t o d e c i d e w h a t n u m b e r , if any, of licenses the t o w n
p e t i t i o n f o r f r o m t h e C o u n t y C o u r t f r o m w h e n c e t h e y wore
i s s u e d T h e r e was a full a t t e n d a n c e .
O n e of t h o m o s t recpectable m a g i s t r a t e s of t h e b o r o u g h
presided, a d d u p o n t h e p l a t f o r m w e r e s e a t e d a m o n g o t h e r s
t h e c l e r g y m a n of tbe village, o n e of h i s dcaeons, a n d th*
physician.
A f t e r t h e m e e t i n g h a d been called t o o r d e r , one of
t b e m o s t respectable c i t i z e n s of t h e b o r o u g h rose a n d
after a short speech, moved'that the b o r o u g h petition for
t h e usual n u m b e r of licenses.
T h e y h a d b e t t e r license g o o d men, a n d let t h e m sell.
T h e p r o p o s i t i o n seemed t o m e e t w i t h almost universal fav o r . I t was an e x c c l l a n t w a y t o g e t a l o n g q u i e t l y ; a n d
o n e a n d t h e n a n o t h e r , in t h e i r t u r n expressed a h o p e t h a t
Such a c o a r s e would b e a d o p t e d .
T h e P r e s c d e n t was a b o u t t o p u t t h e q u e s t i o n t o t h e
m e e t i n g , w h e n an o b j e c t rose in a d i s t a n t p a r t of t b *
b u i l d i n g , a n d all o r e s w e r e i n s t a n t l y t u r n e d in t h a t direct i o n : I t w a s a n old w o m a n , p o o r l y c l a d ; a n d whose c a r e w o r n c o u n t e n a n c e w a s t h e p a i n f u l index of n o l i g h t
suffering.
A n d y e t t h e r e w a s s o m e t h i n g in t h e Dish of t h a t b r i g h t
eye, t h a t told she h a d b e e n w h a t sbo w a s n o t now. S h e
addressed t h e P r e s i d e n t , a n d s a i d w i t h his permission; s h e
wished t o sav a few w o r d s to t h e m e e t i n g . S h e h a d c o m e ,
because s h e "had h e a r d t h a t t h e y w e r e t o (fecide t h e lioenes
quCstiob. •'
• L.
•
Y o u , gaid s h e , all k n o w w h o I am. Y o u Once k n e w
md t h e Mistress of t h e b e s t e s t a t e s in t h e b o r o u g h . I o n c e
hod a h u s b a n d a n d five s o n s ; a n d w o m a n n e v e r h a d a
k i n d e r h u s b a n d — m o t h e r n e v e r h a d five b e t t e r o r m o r e
a f f e c t i o n a t e sons. B u t w h ^ e a r e t h e y n o w ? D o c t o r , T
ask Where d r e t h e y n o w ? I n y o n d e r y a r d a r e six g r a v e s
filled b y t h a t h u s b a n d a n d t h o s e five sons, i a n d o h ! t h e y
a r e all "drunkards g r a v e s . D o c t o r , h o w c a m e t h e y t o b e
d r u n k a r d s ? Y o u would c o m e a n d d r i n k w i t h t h e m , a n d
y o u told t h e m t h a t temperate d r i n k i n g would* d o t h e m
good
A n d y o u too, sir, a d d r e s s i n g t h e clergyman, w o u l d o o m e
and drink with my h u s b a n d and m v sons thought they
m i g h t d r i n k w i t h ' s a f e t y , b e c a u s e t h e y > s a w y o u drink.
D e a c o n , y o u sold then} r u m w h i c h m a d e t h e t a d r u n k a r d s .
Y o u h a v e n o w g o t m y f a r t n a n d and all m y p r o p e r t y , a n d
y o u g o t i t all b y r u m . A n d rfw, s h e said, 7 h a v e d o n e
m y e r r a n d t go b a c k to t h ^ p o O r boilse, f o r t h a t i s m v
h o m e . Y o u , reverend s i r , y o u d o e t o r a n d y o n d e a c o n I
shall n e v e r m e e t again, u n t i l I m e e t y o d a t t h e b a r of G o d
w h e r e y o u will m e e t my r a i n e d a n d lost h u s b a n d , a n d t h o s e
fiVe sons, who, t h r o u g h y o u r taeahs a n d influence, fill the'
d r u n k a r d s g r a v e . T h e old w o m a n s a t d o w n - ^ p e r f t c t
silence prevailed, until b r o k e n b y t h o P r e s i d e n t w h o j - e s s
to p u t Uio q u e s t i o n to t h e meetings—shall We p e t i t i o n t h e
C o u r t to issue license to t h i s b o r o u g h t b e e n s u i n g y e a r ?
a n d t h e n one u n b r o k e n , " N o r w h i c h m a d e t h e v e r y
walls r e - e c h o w i t h t h o sound, told t h e result of t h e old
w o m a n ' s appeal.
The Singing Student B o y .
M a n y y e a r s a g o a s t u d e n t b o y w a s seen a n d h e a r d id
t h e s t r e e t s of an a n c i e n t t o w n . s i n g i n g . H e w a s a stout,
plainly dressed boy, b u t h i s f a c e w a s p a l e , a n d h i s eyea
w e r e s i d a n d tearfoL H i s v o i c e w a s m o s t musical, a o d
t h e s o n g s h e s a n g w e r e b e a u t i f u l words, a n d a b o u t s a c r e d
igs. E v e r y time h e finished a song, h e s t e p p e d to a
house, a n d g a r e a g e n t l e t a p . W h ® i t was O p e n e d h e
said in gentle t o n e s :
tv
P l e a s e g i v e a p o o r s t u d e n t b o y a morsel, of b r e a d "
Begone with tnee! thou beggar's child," was t h e
r o u g h reply t h a t m e t his car, a s t b e p o o r c h i l d s h r a n k
f r o m t h e steps.
>
'
T h u s d r o v e frOm d o o r to door, h e sang his s w e e t songa
until bis b o d y was w e a r y a n d h i s h e a r t s a d S c a r c e l v
a b l e to stand, he a t last t u r n e d his s t e p s h o m e w a r d .
S t r i k i n g h i s n o b l e f o r e h e a d w i t h nis h a n d , b e s a i d :
" I m u s t g o h o m e t o m y f a t h e r ' s house a n d bo c o n t e s t
to live b y t h e s w e e t of m y b r o w . P r o v i d e n c e baa n o
l o f t i e r destiny for me. I h a v e t r o d d e n o u t i t s p a t h s bV
aiming higher.".
..
-.J u s t a t t h a t m o m e n t U r s u l a C o t t a , a b u r g e r ' s wife w h o
h a d h e a r d his songs and seen him d r i v e n from a n e i g h b o r ' s d o o r , felt h e r h e a r t y e a r n w i t h p i t y towards t b e
helpless b o y . S h e Opened h e r d o o r , b e c k o n e d to t h e
y o u n g singer, a n d smilod sweetly u p o q h i m , a n d in toner
t h a t s o u n d e d like heavenly melodies t o h i s ears, s a i d :
" C o m e in, p o o r boy, and refresh thyself a t m y t a b l e ! "
H a p p y little singer!- H o w he enjoyed t h a t 'deliclooa
meal. A n d w h e n t b e good d a m e a n d h e r h u s b a n d told
h i m . to m a k e t h e i r house his home, h i s h e a r t m e l t e d
W i t h e v e s half blinded w i t h team, be looked in t h e face
of his f r i e h d , a n d s a i d :
.
! 'i .
. " I shall now p u r s u e my s t u d i e s w i t h o u t b e i n g obliged
to b e g ray b r e a d from g r u d g i n g hands. J shall h a v e y o u
sir, for a f a t h e r and y o u s w e e t U r s u l a f o r a m o t h e r .
. M y h e a r t will once m o r e learn to love: I shall b e h a p p i e r t h a n I can express."
i
A f t e r t h a t day t b e s i n g i n g b o y s t u d i e d h a r d a n d w a d
Y e a r s a f t e r w a r d s t h e world b e a r d of h i m , f o r i t w a s b e
w h o o t t e r e d his voice a g a i n s t P o p C r y a n d b e c a m e t h e
chief of t h a t R e f o r m a t i o n w h i c h g a v e a n open B i b l e <e
t b e world- H i s n a m e w a s M a r t i n L u t h e r .
SCOLD i s o . — A little g i r l , n o t six y e a r s of age, s c r e a m e d
o u t t o h e r little b r o t h e r , w h o w a s p l a y i n g in t h e m u d
B u b , TOO good-for-nothing little- sc^mp, come right i n t o
t h e house t h i s m i n u t e , o r I w i l l b e a t y o u till t h e aim) am»
Off"
ft
t<: . ..r; v'tn-:? : f • I ' , i.
( . 5 ' £ L"
" W h y , Angelina, Angelina, d e a r what do j o u m e s s ?
w h e r e did y o u learn s u c h talk? e x c l a i m e d t h e m<
mother, who stood talking w i t h a f r i e n d
A n g e l i n a ' s childish r e p l y . w a s a g q
t h i s m a n n e r of s p e a k i n g to c h i l d r e n
. J; r > , , , .
" W h y , m o t h e r , j o a see w e w e r e playing, e n d b e ' a n r
little b o y , a n d I ' m scolding)him j u s t a s y o n d i d m e t W
:
morning; that's
,
A h o m e w i t h o u t a g i r i in it, i s o i l * h a l f b l e s s e d ; i t is
a n o r c h a r d w i t h o u t blossoms, a n d a i p r f o g w i t h o u t song-
(Soil Cratase $eralir.
.Kortfw Oml Tnm
O.i Climate.
'.-
llllilv
^ daring the night, the snow-crust coo tracts, and j transportation lines—the ' Boating palace' of the Lakes—
| , . p t a o m e b o M o a «»»n «*) « «•
,5nL!!!r,
-Since tbc ertaUlshmnt otyoiit ex«l-if. t e . .
., p
U « g n " I U i l ™ « l I r a * n ™ * H u * ) b o m i toRTlhi..
.w .
_1_,,rat n-ti-u- thundering ot ice.
. •
and withal managing with snch consummate skill—carrylent paper, we have
ave been favored
farored with several articles
...
-mg e v e _ e S f t S over their lines and stimulating tl«t
lb» S«c4im« Vmll-J R*publl<
OScUl
Pnta
G&£S£3£££i
HuilM
) Manito^Ajpena,
Cheboygan, VSES*
Emmet
bearing upon the climate of this sectioo of the country,
Michigan—Its Advantage* to the Emigrant.
publication of everything, connected with their interest
—bnt especially praising the beauty* and txccDencc- brbut it seems to me that some causes which contribute
B T A LOCAL CONTRIBUTOR.
their tenninii. I will not say but the articles in
MOBOAK BATBS. EDITOR.
largely to modify our climate have been thus tar ignored,
DEAR SIR: In presenting to you tho advantages of yond
may be truthful, for I fully appreciate our Noblc
and I propose, with yonr leave, to review some of the Michigan for Emigration. 1 will first briefly allude to the question
TBAVERBE CITY*
West; I will only sav that were our own fair Peninsu!:
causes that have operated to our disadvantage, keeping brought asfavorablybefore the emigrant of this Continent
positions
which
your
correspondents
have
taken.
One
is
FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1839.
us
in
a
backward
condition
as
compared
with
the,
newer
with respect to the influence of the surrounding Lakes
as well as the Old World, We should receive our share or
North-Western States.
attention. The effort oCour State in 1849 to establish an
on our temperature. One of your correspondents has
i.
Our Second Volume.
The first settlements, were made bv the French, and
Agency in New York, and its miserable failure,
This js the .first number of the Second Volume of the alluded to the fact that our lakes do modify our climate, possessed all the peculiarities of French settlements on Emigrant
may be named as another circumstance affecting our repTTcpn.iv To t&osewho have taken H during the first but the how, tho modus operandi, ho has not told us. the continent—thc. massess taking no part in public affairs utation. The Hoa Mr. Thompson brought talent and
year, w^ deem it unnecea<ary to say one word as to the Our atmosphere is characterised by two qualities which leaving e verything to the Priest and Trader. Michigan energy to the task. He fally appreciated tho difficulty of
presented unusual advantages to the Fur Trader; her
manner In which it will be conducted the ensuing year, are seldom found united in the interior or any continent, seven hundred andfifty,miles of lake coast her numerous the position. One o( his earliest efforts was to bring our
before the world in her true light A pamphlet
or th« principles which it will advocate. What it has humidity, and purity. While the moist atmosphere of streams rising in the iuterior,freefromrapidsand obstruc- State
was published and extensively circulated in the OH N\ orld.
been, it will continue to be. Perhaps more energy will very mapy sections of <lur country is heavily charged with tions to navigation by the canoe, inhabited by numerous It created a favorably impression, which winfollowedup
be infused into it, and perhaps not We make no poisonous malaria, and conveys into the human system and powerful tribes of Indians she presented a capital by his visit to the Old W orld, and some or oor flourishing
field for trade in peltries. Detroit, the metropolis, exerpledger on. that score But 41* we anticipate an increased bilious diseases, and agues, until the poor sufferer shakes ted an immense influence to prevent the settlement orthe German settlements are the result But thefactsset forth
subscription list of£r that of last year, in. view of the his energy, if not his life, all away, wc have here a climate, inferior of the State. The Priest bad no motive tb en- by him were so much at variance with common opinion,
that extraordinary efforts were made by interested parties
important and exciting Presidential Campaign of 1860^ equally as moist as theirs, yet as pure as th'at of ainy courage the settlement of tho interior; tho Trader was to brand his statements as falsehoods. And what is mo>i
and os titis number will be road by many who have never mountain region in the country. Now for the cause. It directly interested to prevent i t and used every means to strange no effort has since been made to doTerid the truth.
prevent
any
correct
impressions
getting
abroad
as
to
the
—In this connection, I shall mention the fraudulent surwell known that the character and quantity of rain
before tahen the papfer, a word to them may not be in-'
value of the interior as an agricultural district An old
depend upon the atmosphere. .All bodies are expanded trader said to roe a short time since:' •' Wc used to dis- veys of much or the central portions or our state, by
appropriate.
which millions or acris arc put down as Swamp that are
—Wten, one year ago, we commoaced the publication by heat, and contracted by cold, and the solarraysopera- courage everybody who talked of settling in the Territoiy as
finelands as any we have. Bnt these lauds have been
of the HUBALD, wo did SO with a fixed determination to ting upon lakes, pools, marshes Ac., rarifies tho surface- by telling them that the interior was one vast swamp, ceded to the State, and are. now offered to the actual setmake it a permanent institution of Grand Traverse water until it becomes fog or vapor, when by theforceof that there was onlv a mile and n hair just a'• •< the river tler free of co*;, in quantities of 40 acres to head or each
that was fit for cultivation."
.j
.
. /
County. It required no extraordinary vision to foresee gravitation,—wfrch causes denser bodies to fall, and
In 1814 Congress appropriated 2,000.000 acres for family.
~ I will not dwell longer on, this unpleasant theme.
tho foture growth and prosperity of a region of country thus displaces) and forces upward the lighter—it rises, military Bounty Lands, and the SurveyoMJencral, Edw.
3 difficulties under which we have labored are
for-which Nature has done so much, when its. peculiar and in this state is absorbed by the air, which thus be- Tiffin, was directed to have this quantity surveyed and chargeable to ourselves. The selfishness always exhibited
agricultural and commercial advantages wert fairly made comes saturated, in a manner .analagous to that in which located in the Territoiy or Michigan. Surveyors wdh> by our commercial metropolis,—tho ' Penny wiso ami
sent on and some weeks were spent in this manner, when
known. The rfany causes which have Conspired to re- a sponge absorbs water in its simplest Mate. In this thev returned to the settlements, reporting that it was pound foolish' policy wh'ith I wn sorry to say, has nol
tard its settlement wore rapidly disappearing, one after state it is carried about by the wind-currents in various impossible to survey the Territory, owing to its swampy yet been abandoned—her efforts to make Michigan n
highway instead or a garden, she ought by this time to
another, and it only,remainedto set forth its claims to directions until the atmosphere becomes of a lower tem- character. They represented, tho wholo country as a see the folly oC This state of things has been well underpubEc notice in a truthful and proper light,-to cause a perature, (and of course diminished in volume,) when the succession or sand ridges and swamps—the swamps were stood for years by many or our best citizens, and the wargrassy
and
or
that
character
that
a
man
would
sink
several
tide of emigration toflowin upon uaequal to that which vapor is condcnscd, and forced ont just as by squeezing inches in water, while the portion .before and behind him ning voice has been raised tide and again; but from
causes hard to be <!xplained our! people have kept ou in
/to sjieedily populated and enriched 'the country farther a saturated sponge its volume is diminished, and the
would rise to a corresponding height; that tho ridges their usual indifferent cousre, willing to be slandered, till
wast,, which does not in reality, posBeas one half the ter forced out Now, it is very easytosec that the atmos- were sterile and covered with a stunted growth of oak, a time has arrived that this state or things can no longer
natural advantages of the Grand Traverse country—by phere'is certain to be impregnated, in some degree, by and that not one acre in a hundred, if one in a thousand, exist. The magnificent endowtlieitf by Congress or the
fit for cultivatiop. This report was made to'Mr. State with lands for Railroad purposes, the efforts or the
which wo mean the County of Grand Traverse proper, whatever impurities there may be in tho water which was
Crawford, Secretary of War, and President Madison!
and the unorganized counties of Leelanau and Antrim, is thus absorbed. All the noxious effluvia which - - - made the peculiar topographical features or Michigan State by a system or State Roads, make it impossible that
ir advantages shall longer be Unknowu.
(the'latter on the East, and the former on the West side from decaying vegetable matter, and tho unhealthy |
Territory the subject ot a special Message, and recommen- In my next I shall attempt a general description or
of Grand Traverse Bay,) which are attached to it for which omanatc from the filth which abounds, are carried ded that the location or the Bounty Lands bo changed to sonje of the most advantageous | portions or the Lojvcr
judicial and municipal purposes. In addition to a fine, in this manner intb the air, and by it borne to the lungs of some morefavorablelocality; consequently the tract
Peninsula, and their adaptability to itnmediateemigration.
located in Arkansas.
•Yours, &c-,
L.M. N.
pure, healthy climate and rich soil, it possesses unrivaled the inhabitants or surrounding places. Here wc are afterword
It is common even now to meet intelligent men from
winter communication, being washed by Lake Michigan surrounded by no marshes, prairies, or vegetable deposits other States who say that Michigan is unfitforsettlement
The Present Position of the Demoracy.
on ihe West, Lake Huron on the East, (if we include or any kind, but by tho largest bodies or fresh water on and refer us to the above cited fact for their authority.
In concluding his Wooeter speech, Gov. Corwin took
Emmet and Cheb6ygan,) the Straits of Mackinac on the tho globe, and these waters or great depth, and a degree They will admit that clearing and draining may have im- occasion to remark upon the condition orthe Democracy
proved it some: but still, 'Michigan is a low, swampv
N<ftb, and Grand Traverse' Bay in the centre, which is oT purity u^ri v'alfed by any large bodies of water in other State.' The editor or ono or the leading New York in Ohio—Ho Baid in his own inimitable wpy;
My objection to you my brother Democrats, is that you
forty miles long, ten wide, and abounds in Bafe and com- countries. T h e prevailing winds orthisscction arc forced newspapers once said to the writer: ' It is useless for you change your opinions so often. You recollect the concodious natural harbors. We have not been disappointed to travel from 70 to 200 miles across the bosom or these to attempt to recommend Michigan as a good State f I versation that Jacob, the Patriarch," had with his childin our anticipations and design. Tho HERALD is firmly waters before reaching us, and, consequently, not only know better. Yours is a mean State; the most ot your ren around him, when he wad going to dio. The last
are low and swampy. Your climate is bod; ypn words he ever intended to utter, and that he over did uttter.
established—has paid its way handsomely thefirstyear— receive no impurity with tho moisture which they extract lands
con't raise fruit' He would admit that 4 there was son*? were a description or thc,peculiar characteristics of his
mkFits course is joyously onward. Tho Cash System, from them, but while fanning their waves, actually part good land on the two Railroads crossing our State, bat sons.
I have seen the ffiftnocratic party working right
which we adopted in the start and'have rigidly adhered with much or whatever impure exhalations they may have that was-the exception.' And FO general is this impres- against Its own interests; I have thought of that lesson
sion entertained among the publishers of eastern newspa- ho gave when ho said Ephraini was a " cake not turned
to,[has worked to a charm. At the close of the year become chargtd befortf reaching their shores.
we'are indebted to nobody, and nobody is indebted to us The vicinity or these large bodies or water also*, tends pers, that it is difficult to get an article published doing over," that is to say he was not very well baked. Another
•justice to the State. They meet us with tho same story
tpr^subscriptions—and we have a shot in the locker.
to equalize tho temperature. Perhaps every farmer —' Your* it a poor State, and if you want any adver- of them describes some of my Democratic friends very
accurately, as unsteady iri their proposes," liko Mr.
To mnkc/known the resources of this beautiful and knowB that in a cellar which frost has entered, vegetables tisements you must pay for them.'
. . .
Douglas, who used to bring in bills with .tho Wilmot
Michigan has had an occasional streak or good hick. Proviso attached and put them before tho Honse and
fiertileregionof country, has been and will continue to be may bo protected by placing a tub, or other vessel cona'teading feature of t % journal; and to this end we taining water, near them, until aTtcr tho water is frozen. The system or Military Roads adopted by tho General advocate them, while it wc now speak or it to him -he falls
Government opened and carried with them settlements into a state or syncope. Dpuglas is like that other son
earnestly solicit communications from those who are in In the country around us the same principle is operating into the interior: and but for an undno ambition on tho
of. Jacob, Reuben, " unstable as water, you will not excel."
the habit of writing, and verbal^fncts from thoso who are on a larger wale. When water is exposed to a low tem- part or officc-seekcrs in the Territory, which led them to Poor Reuben! Ttero are a great many Reubens among
not, on evecy'snbject that will tend to this result. Ever^ perature, the surface isfirstcooled, and becoming hoarier, a premature admission into tho Union, the svstem would my Democratic bretheren and when I remember how the
item of a local character, worthy of note, will be gladly sinks. This causes a lower portion to rise to the surface, have been carried out and every part or the Territory so hard handed and honest Democrats or this country have
opened that the false impressions as to onr interior would been working with a system of politics that is against
.Received. Our business necessarily confincs us closely to which, in its turn, cools, sinks, and gives place to another have
been dissipated, tinder the healthfal influence 01 their own interests, 'denying that the Whigs or Republiour office, (for we are compelled to practice the most stratum to pass through tho same process. Thist process the system alluded to, South-eastern and Southern Mich- cans would do. any thing to improve their condition, I can
rigid economy in the conduct of our business, and per- continues until all the water, from the surface to the bot- igan becamo well Bottled, and everv thing promised a think' or nothing butanother son of Jacob, •' Lssachur is
form much of the mechanical labor with our own hands,) tom, is reduced to a temperature or 39 degrees. K it speedy development Under the Influence otflushtime*, an old labored ass." Poor Is»achar!
Mind, I have said nothing to abuse you. 1 am only
and we have»not the time and opportunity to gather up be cooled still more, it ceases to shrink, and expands, or from 1834 to 1837, Michigan became the scene or the
wildest Land Speculation, from the effects or which it has trying to describe how patient you are, brethren, after
many items which would be read by those abroad who bocomes lighter. Consequently it must remain on the neverfallyrecovered.
the burden has been put upon your back, and there you
are eagerly seeking information relative to this country. surface, whore it is soon cooled down to 3 2 ° , and, then,
A system or internal improvements that would have stand looking your master right in tho face, sBaking your
We- hope our friends throughout the county will bear as fast as the latent heat is expelled,freezes,and becomes ruined any of the older States was inaugurated. Three ears m you say to your master, " Don't kill me, bnt if you
solid.- The deeper the reservoir or water, the longer it grand lines or Railroad across the State were commenced will yon may. . (Long continued Laughter,) You must
this in rinndby the State; a grand Canal to connect the two Dikes; a
The HERALD is also a political journal, of the genuine will take to freeze the surface, and tho greater the area shorter Canal to connect two or her Rivers, and systems quit i t 1 tell you!
Republican stripe. It fully endorses the Philadelphia or surrounding air that will be tempered thereby; and ir of Slack Water Navigation on all bar little rivers; cities
The Mnlrtram Verified.
Of late years, says the N: Y. Tribune, even the cxistPlatform of 1856, and strenuously opposes any compro- it is very deep an entire winter is not sufficienttoabstract built far in advaUce of general settlements; a Banking inmise with tho Slave Power. We not only oppose the the latent heat (equalto.140=,) from its different strata, stitution in every insignificant village; and 'paper cities' teuce or the Maelstrom on the coast or Norway has been*
at the junction of any two mill brooks, in which lots were doubted. The ancient accounts or this terrible power arc
extension of Slavery beyond its present limita in the and ^educo it all to a solid. In our great lakes, soundings sold in many eastern towns. Land speculation to such an .doubtlessfabulous,but M. Hagerup, Minister of the NorStates,' but we swear eternal hostility to every kind of oTfrom 300 to 600 feet are frequent and a depth aT 7 P extent that all the lands in the vicinity orreallyadvantage-'' Svegian Marine, has recently given a reliable account of
tyranny orer the mind of man. In the great Conflict or feet has beenfoundin Lake Superior. The presence of ous locations, and on the borders oT set dements were taken i t in reply to some questions from a correspondent of tint
I860, betwoen Right snd Wrong—Freedom and 8tavery these vast bodies of water, then, has a tendency to give for miles, and too to the luckless emigrant thatfoundhim- Boston Record. The vast whirt is caused by /he
setting in and out of the tides between Lofoden ana Mosshut in by the awfal scourge.
—we shall strike for Freedom and tho Right Our first us not only a moist bnt a uniform temperature: hence it selT
The crash or 1837 came; our public works stopped; ken, and is most violent half way between ebb and flood
choice for Preadent is WILLIAM H. SKWARD, but we is, that in autumn, the interior is visited by frosts much Railroads and Canals, Slack Water Navigation, Cities, tide. At flood and ebb tide it disappears for abont half
shall cordially support any sound Republican who'may egrHer than along the shores of tho lakes, and bays. In Banks, Paver City Swindles, all went by the board. an hour, but begins with the moving of the waters. Largo
be nominated at the Republican National Convention-^ this connection, allow me to refer to a phenomenon of But our Michigan statesmen kept up courage: eastern vessels may pass over it solely in serene weather, but in
land-owners believed tho embarrassment to be only tem- a storm it is perilous to tho largest craft. Small boats
Slaveholder never\ froqnent occurrence in the winter season,—the thUnderipg porary and held on to their lands, which constitute an are not safe pear it at any time or its strongest action in
Wi^h theseremarks,we-aquare away and sail out upcpN of the ice. One of your correspondents, (Mr. Slawson,) effectual barrier to tho choice lands in the rear; taxes any weather. The whirls in the Mslstoro do not « we
attempted, last February, an explanation of the pheno- were unpaid by.many; and tax-titles (the worst curse
tie waters%f Public Opinion.
once supposed, draw vessels under the water, but by their
menon. He supposed it to be be occasioned by the con- all, as it entails litigation to an unlimited extent) crept: violence; theyfillthem with water or dash them upon the
Short-Sighted Policy. •
upon us. Feeble attempts were made for several years, neighboring shoals. M. Hagerup says:
fined
air
"
under
the
ice,
as
it
is
expelled
from
such
water
Did it ever occur to thoeo who advocate the re-opening
by our statesmen, to carry out some of the Public Works,
" In winter, it not unfrequcntly happens that, at sea a
of the African Slave Trade, that sueftan event would do by freezing, and mustremainthere until its accumulated till our credit was entirely exhuasted. The bureting-up bank or clouds showB a west storm, with heavy sea to be
moreto,hasten the downfall of the Slave Power than all buoyancy is sufficient to lift and break the ice, when it of all the moneyed institutions of the State brought loss prevailing there, while farther 00 tho coast tho- clear, air
that 00 tho iasido of the West-tjord (east side of
. other cause* oombined? Were it not for its atrocity, we will escape through thefissuresso made." Now, as this and ruin to many, and a general feeling or discontent crept shows
in upon our people. Great numbers were anxious to sal Lofodeo) the wind blows from tho land, and sets out
should certainly advocate' this measure as the surest and solution is not quite satisfactory to me, I will propose and get away; hence, if perchance a man came into their through the tjord from tho east. In such cases, espeanother. It is generally supposed that water famishes
speediest method of extirpating Slavery from the counneighborhood, every effort was made to secure him as a cially an approach to the Mdstorm is in the higbort det y . Look at it: In "Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, an exception, to tho rule that bodies are contracted by purchaser or neighbor. He was told there was no other gree dangerous, for the stream and under current from
cold. This is truo of water while passing from a fluid township in the.State fit for a white man to live in—and opposite directions work there together to make the
Ken tacky, Missouri, and a large portion of Tennessee,
ten to one he was discouraged at so dismal a prospect whole passage one angle boiling cauwroo. At sach times
slave-labor is unprofitable. The system is only continued to a solid state, but when once it has become solidified, any (I speak from personal experience. I came to the State appear the mighty whirls, which have given it the name
• because money can be made by.rairing, negroes, as wo of farther diminution or temperature causes, it to contract in 1842; was delightodwith what I saw ofit but wasted to of Matlstrotn, (that is the whirling or grinding stream,)
J t h e r e is no other substance, which ia known to believe that only a small part of the State could ever be and in which no craft whatever can hola its coarse. For
the North raise cattle, for a inaitafc* Tie sugar and
cotton growing 8tates are suppliedwith slaves by the shrink so rapidly under tho influence of increasing cold, settled, and resolved that just as soon as I could get monev a steamer, it is then quite, inadvisable to attempt tint
to go farther West I would do so. In 1848 I passage of of the MiristronTduring a winter storm, ami
above mentioned stock-raising States, and' theae will ad- as ice. Aatlfe cold increases, then the ice is gradually enough
brought into a state of tension, and this strain continues found the moans and time to visit Illinois and Wisconsin; for a sailing vessel \t may also be bad enongn in time of
here to Slavery just so long as they can find a good
I saw the best portions of those States and came to the summer, should there fall a calm or a light wind, whereby
ket and make money by the operation. Re-open the until it iarelievedby a sudden giving way at the point of deliberate conclusion that Michigan "(even allowing there the stream becoucs greater, than^the wind, tearing the
.
African Slave Trade, glut the Southern market with least strength. The water then rises, and freezes, in the were tracts of worthless lands) was, all things considered, vessel no longer under command.''
to either of theml
abnrea from abroad, and you make Virginia;-Maijiand, cracks, so that when the weather moderates, tho surface preferable
lSc> peculiar feeling engendered by this state of things A "wee bit of a boy" astoHshed his mother a few days
Delaware, Kentucky, Missouri, and, perhaps, Temtasee, of ice becomes too largo for the area it covers, and throws jtaSsl'os ail Iikmaelite»—eTtTj man s hands was against sine*. She bad occasion to chastise him slightlyforsome
Free States, of: their own wQl and by their own' act vp lines of ridges. To the same cause, is owing the his neighbor. The correspondence of the Michigan set- offence he had committed. Chariy 611 very auietiy in his
for some minutes afterwards, no doubt thinking very
Where then is the PoKtical Power of the Save States? peculiar cracking that may sometimes be heard during tlers with their easternfriends,from1838 to 1845 was of
profoundly. At last he spoke. •" Mraer, I wish P a d
Paradise!
<Jooeforever-and with H goes the'Patriarchal Institu- cold nights in winter on land. The surface of the mow
But perhaps the most active agency operating against grt anosaer housekeeper; I've got tired or « e ^
by
thawing
and
freezing,
has
previously
formed
a
crust
•ti on. fcr with no power to extend itaelt and no cootroDthe Stlte from 1837 to the present time, is the great wound!*
' injg voice in the Nafional Corneals, it would speeffly fie. —or if you please a thin sheet of ice,—and as the cold
Ma. BATES:
TRAVERSE CITY.
No M a t l - N o New*.
O u r b r e t h r e n of t h o t y p e a n d q u i l l will s y m p a t h i z e
w j t h us w h e n we tell t h e m t h a t t h e l a t a * p a p e r we h a v e
ruccfved f r o m any q u a r t e r is of t h e 5th l o s t , t h r e e d a y s
before t h e elections hi N e w Y o r k , Wisconsin and t h e
C i t y , of D e t r o i t
We
h e a r d v e r b a l l y , last w e e k , t h a t
those elections h a d all g o n e Republican, b u t we h a v e no
details.
T h e mail_failed u s l a s t w e e k — i t h a v i n g failed i6
connect at
Mnnintee—and
w i t h e m p t y bags.
the
carrier came
through
T h e r e i s no use in f r e t t i n g a n d scold-
i n g a b o u t it* t h o u g h i t i s p r o v o k i n g t o g o t o press w i t h o u t a n i t e m of n e w s f r o m , t h o o u t s i d e wo r l d .
Perhaps
w e shall!get accustomed t o it before Spring, but we
d o n ' t l i l a ( t o c o m m e n c e o u r lessons so e a r l y in t h o season.
•
TUB W R A T H E R . — W h e n all o t h e r t o p i c s fail, t h i s i s
generally a reliable o n e t o fall b a c k o n ; b u t f r o m t h e
p r e s e n t u n s e t t l e d a s p e c t , i t is n o t safe t o say m u c h even
on t h i s s u b j e c t . . W e h a r e h a d several
flurries
of s n o w
b u t no s l e i g h i n g ; a n d n ^ V e r y cold w e a t h e r — t h e l o w e s t
«" i l w . A
T
tango being
~ hen) are »t
'
S t r a n g i n d i c a t i o n s of a- h e a v y fall of snow, a n d wo anti-
b e d e c k e d w i t h f e a t h e r s , s k u n k skia=, bells, b e a d s , e w a n d
nose rings, ribbon* Ac., T h e i r t a s t e f o r p a r t i n g a n d
ornaments is l a r r i y dewjloped. T h e eagle feather, which
i s w o r n b y n o n e b u t t h e w a r r i o r * , s h o w s ' t h a t h o h a s bfcen
i n a conflict w i t h h i s e n e m y . E a c h f e a t h e r i n d i c a t e s «
s c a l p t a k e n f r o m Wi e n e m y ' s h e a d . O f t h e s e feathers t h e y
a r e v e r y p r o u d . T h e s k u n k skin i s w o r n o n c o c h ankle— 1
b y n o n e b u t t h e b r a v e s . E v e r e o n e t h a t e n l i s t s is e n t i t l e d
t o a s k u n k skin. W e n o t i c e d s o m e w i t h l a r g e b e a r clawn
h u n g a r o u n d t h e i r n e c k s a n d some w i t h l i e a v y t r i n k e t s
banging t o their e a r n T h e i r original e n e r g y and 6crcen e s s a r e s c a r c e l y viaiMe. W e n o t i c e d o n e c h i e f whoJc
a p p e a r a n c e b r o u g h t t o recollection t h e a c c o u n t w e h a v e
read of s a v a g e w a r r i o r s . H i s n a m e is O-squa-ba-dis,
i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of w h i c h m e a n s " a r u n - r u n .
l i e is
of t h e W i s c o n s i n b a n d , T h o a g e n t s a y s h e is t h e moet
r e s o l u t e a m o n g t h e m . H e is s t r a i g h t , tall, a n d h a s a most
p e n e t r a t i n g eve. H i s c h o e k b o n e s a r e h i g h , m o u t h l a r g e ,
a n d l i p s t h i c k . H i s l o o k Li s a v a g e . W e p r e n a m e h e
woukf be a terrible man to encouuter. A s a race thev
a r e s u b d u e d , a n d fear t h o w h i t e m a n . T h e y d i s d a i n t o
w o r k . T o w o r k as d o e s t h e w h i t e m a n is t o o g r e a t a e o n - desccnsion f o r t h e i r l o f t y s p i r i t . W h i l e a t t h e p a y m e n t ,
they danced the pipe, war. tieggiog, and medicinc dances.
I u t h e war dance they-go t h r o u g h similar movements to
t h o s e in b a t t l e ; T h e w a r r i o r s m n k e s p e e c h e s , t e l l of the
N E W GOODS. !
CONSUMPTION -CURED I
DR. CHURCHILL'S DISCOVERY.
•
i W in Chester's G e n u i n e P r e p a r a t i o n o f t h e C h e m i cally Pore Compound of t i e
GOODS, GROCERIES,
!
of LIME and S O D A ,
j
, Original); discovered and prescribed by D r . J . F . CHCECB:!.'
|
of P s r i i as s-Kpccidc HeUi«dy for (
W E H A T E NOW OPENED
•
T h e L a r g e s t S t o c k oi"
.
'
H YPOPHOSPHITES
CONSUMPTION!
r p H E EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS OBTAINED I N . A M U !e
the KKUges
Pulmonary D
Disease
' * of Voinootij
i M M bby Dr. C h o r c h i l i ' s V t w
C
^ » Trtauneat—
the H
H^TOPHOSRHITEB
—the
Y P 0 P H 0 8 P . H I T E B O f LIME AND SODA
>r b r o u g h t to t h i s m a r k e t : which * n-lll he h i i i i . i i , , —removes all remaining doubt as to the inestimable value n '
»'
| this Discover?. Consumption is no longer to bo regarded L*
offer at «nch prices as will accord reasonably with the TIMES. ; an incurable malady.
i r ® P L
o
"\7" X
I S
X
O
"TNT
H A N N A H . L A V 4 CO. ;,
Traverse City, Nov- .25,1859.
Uf
, t i v e d e l a y a m o i u e n t to t r y W I t t s U i e l r last hope."'
——
______—
—
Dr. Churchill tfays: •
r — !
E X T R A O R D I N A l t Y S A L E O F
- I a m a n x i o u a t i t a t t h a H r e o r n o a r H i T a s a h o n l d be b r o n s r ___________
, an speedily as poss.'ble, into universal use, a* I *xow t h a t the y
il H ; V A / F I T . H
f
will prove n o t only as sure a Itemed)- iu' Consumption as Qni
"
' irlne is in I n t e r m i t t e n t Fever, butalao us elKctaaJ a Preaerrs
A. i l n o CiOI,!}
P K X C I L w i t h G O I . T ) P K N ! live as Vaccination ia Small P o * .
i>ttnoh<Ml,
o instance h a v * I found the r e m e d y fail to p r o d s r e
c , c o - w i n g t h a t could i eaaonablv he expected from iu '
- Out of twenty-two a r s e s la t h e t h j r d »r l a s t stage, trtat« C
A n c l ii 1 ' H K M I U M U i e i i o h p u r o l u i w i ' w o r t h at my Dispensary, during the past year, e i g h t hareconapleteiy
recovered, eight have died, a n d six are R i l l u n d e r treatment.
lYom
Such a result is altogether unparalleled in the annals of a r c i clne."
jKfr- This Remedy i s the m o s t powerfBl.Generator of JJIoo--:
known, and la equally efficacious In all forms of Debility.
Asthma, Bronchitis, Nervous -Diseases, Chlorosis, Dyspepsia,
and from the universal satisfaction given to all who have —or whatever depends on deficient .vitality of the system.
patronized our house, we take pleasure in saying t h a t we now
Winchester's GenuiB* Preparation
consider our business raiKLT a n d rEB*ANRNTI.Y established. is put up in large bottles with t h e following words blown in
Wis wish it understood that this is No LOTTERY, but a fair the gloss: - Da. J . F. C n c a c m i x ' s Y r r o r u o s r a i T a s o r Liisr.
and legitimate sale. In which each p n r c h a s e r gets t h e valne AND SODA. J . WINCHESTER, NEW Y o a * . " Each bottle has
of his or her money in » G o l d P e n c i l w i t h G o l d P e n also, a FAC-smiLK signature.
a t t a c h e d , or it G o l d L o c k e t , worth $5 e»ch, which can- . T*tT- No o t h e r can he relied on s s the pare Hypophospfeiu:.
not lie bouglit at any retail store f o r the same price: and in Unless perfectly pure, they are uot o n l y useless, bat positively
addition to the purchase, each person receives a P r e m i u m injurious. No i a o x or other drug s h o u l d be combined witii
o f J e w e l r y , not less in value than $2, and II may be worth them, or taken at the same time.
*3, 5, # , 10. IS, 20, 30,5(1, or even $200!
5QT- Price $2 00, or three bottles f o r $5 00,-with full d i c tions for use. A liberal discount to phyalcfans and the trade.
The DKT SALTS-furnished to the professiosk Single bottles
in concentrated solution sent by mail, w h e n apeolally ordered.
V'e propose to let a person know what Premium he will r
Sold wholesale and retail at the Sole General Depot In t h e V.
ve before sending hi* money. Any Lady or (ientlemv
S. 43 J o h n street. Let no one deceive you, but p u r c h u s and
d e s i r i n g one of the above articles, can Jirst send us their
use onlv " W i n c h e s t e r ' s P r e p a r a t i o n . " ) "
.
name and address, s l a t i n g whether they want the Pencil and
for. C h u r c h i l l ' s W o r k o n C o a s o n a p U o n .
Pen, or l/ocket, and we will make their selection, a n d i n f o r m
t h e m by return mail what premium they are entitled to. They is now ready, a n d will he sent gratis to every Consumptive or
Nervous sufferer in the United States, o n r e c e i p t of twelve
- m t h e n have the privilege of. s e n d i n g f o r it if they clioosc.
Our P r e m i u m s arc distributed in a fair and honorable man- cents In stamps t o cover expense of postages. . Also, ctrcn
sr. a n d as soon as t h e n a m e , of the p u r c h a s e r Is received lars e n d alt requisite information w i t h o u t c h a r g e . Let no
one delay, f o r time is precious In so fatal a m a l a d y as Conwith the$->, his Pencil and P e n a n d P r c i n l n m , or (Sold Locket
sumption. Address,
J . WINCHESTER,
a n d Premium, are pot u p in a safe m a n n e r and sent to the
A m e r i c a n a n d F o r e i g n Agency,
by mail, f r e e of postage. Our p l i n , from long experiftt.tl*
A t JJ o
n lhi tni straet,
n t r . , 1 New
\ D W York.
43
l the above business, hns given g e n e r a l satisfaction, as
F o r sale by
each p u r c h a s e r CIUI sell or trade the above.articles for all they
MORGAN BATES.
cost him, and retain the pren<i»m g r a t i s .
"Herald Office. Traverae CityIf, however, any person should feel disposer! to" send lis
f
G O L D L O C K E T for S 5 ,
h
5 °
*™
k e a s h o k c themselves w i t h s a v a g e g l o r y , while t h o s e assembled around^respond with a g u t t e r a l sound resembling
c i p a t e a n e a r l y run of g o o d s l e i g h i n g .
" u g h ! u g b ! " T h e p i p e d a n c e consists in o n e p e r s o n s
o u t w i t t i n g o r e x c e l l i n g a n o t h e r in d a n c i n g , m a k i n g g r i m fcUiLKn;—The s c h o o n e r Perry
Hannak,
C a p t Cana n y t h i n g t h e y c h o o s e t o u n d e r t a k e , so t h a t i t
field, sailed f o r C h i c a g o o n T u e s d a y e v e n i n g , w i t h a shall o c c a s i o n a l a n g l u I t s o m e t i m q e x t e n d s i n t o blackc a r g o of l u m b e r , t o H a n n a h , L a y & C o .
T h i s is h e r g u a r d i s m .
' T h e b e g g i n g d a n c e c o n s i s t s in g o i n g t o the h o u s e of
K s t trip, tor t h e seasou.
t h e w h i t e m a n . a n d bfcfore his d o o r , gt> t h r o u g h v a r i o u s
T h o b a r k Shepherd,
s a i l e d on W e d n e s d a y , f o r s a m e m o v e m e n t s of t h e i r b o d y a n d feet a c c o m p a n i e d b v t h e
p o r t , w i t h l u m b e r , it) H a n n a h , L a y & C o .
I n d i a n drum, until t h e y g e t something. T h e medicine
d a n c e is v e r y g r a v e . D u r i n g i t s p e r f o r m a n c e o f f e r i n g s
Messrs. H a n n a h , L a y & C o . h a v e closed one of t h e i r a r e made, t o t h e *' G r e a t S p i r i t " T h e y m o v e in a circle,
Mills f o r t h e w i n t e r , a n d t h e o t h e r will b e s h u t d o w n in w i t h a s h o r t , q u i c k s t e p , k e e p i n g u p t h e w h i l e a k i n d of
a few d a y s .
A c t i r e p r e p a r a t i o n s a r o b e i n g m 4 d o f o r m o n o t o n o u s s o n g , w i t h t h e b e a t i n g of a d r u m . T h c v h a v e
s e n d i n g t h o l u m b e r m e n t o t h 6 P i n e r i e s , a n d w e e x p e c t t h e i r dishes of s o u p , w h i c h t h e y bold, a n d a f t e r t b e ' d a n c e
cut
Occasionally l o n g s j i e c c h e s a r e m a d e .
t o see a g e n e r a l s t a m p e d e t h i t h e r w a r d n e x t w e e k .
T h e y also e n g a g e t o a g r e a t e x t e n t in g a m i n g , of w h i c h
t h e y h a v e s e v e r a l k i n d s nil called ta-dc-yunk- ( g a m b l i n g . )
Indian Payment.
^
T h e g a m e of fifty is mostly played b y y o u n g people.
T h e B a y f i e l d , ( W i s . ) Presi, gi ves U f t H b S r o f a g g r a p h i c
I n p l a y i n g i t t h e y h a v e a w o o d e n b o w l in w h i c h t h e y
a n d i n t e r e s t i n g d e s c r i p t i o n of a n I n d i a n Psfvment, w h i c h , h a v e s c v e n u small picces of d u c k bills, o n e s i d e p a i n t e d
, in t h e a b s e n c e of all news, o c c a s i o n e d b y t h o failure of a d i f f e r e n t c o l o r f r o m t h o o t h e r . H e w h o t u r n s t h e
t h e m a i l , w e t r a n s f e r t o t h d c o l u m n usually d e v o t e d t o m o s t c o l o r wins. T h e moc-ca-dn-nnt-ta-de-wiu, o r m o c c a s i n g a m e , Ls t h e m o s t i u t c r e s t i n g . W h e n p l a y i n g t h i s
news items. .
•
I
•
game a m a t pr blanket is spread upon tho ground and
T h e G o v e r n m e n t a n n u i t i e s wtiro, u n t i l 1856, m a d e a t a r o n n d i t t h e g a m b l e r s sit. T h e y h a v e b a l k o r b u l l e t s
L a P o i n t e , L a P o i n t e c o u n t y . T h e t r e a t y s t i p u l a t e s one of w h i c h is m a r k e d , a n d a m o c c a s i n for e a c h balL
t h a t t h e p a y m e n t m u s t b e m a d e on e a c h r e s e r v e , h e n c e i t s T h e j u g g l e r h a s all t h e "balls in h i s h a n d , imd places all
c h a n g e \o_ O d a n a h . T h e T o r c h L a k e , W i s c o n s i n , Chip- - t h e m o r none, j t u * a s h o chooses, n n d c r t h o m o c c a s i n j « w a R i v e r , L a k e C o u r t e r e i l l e , L a k e -du F l a m b e a u , S t no m o r e t h a n one; u n d e r a m o c c a s i n . A f t o r h e d e p o s i t s t h e i r money, in advance, they enn rely upon being as fairlyC r o i x , B a d R i v e r , - a n d L a P o i n t e b a n d s of t h o GIT a t t h e m , bo o p e n s h i s h a n d , t o s h o w w h e t h e r h e lias placed dealt with HS t h o u g h they had made previous application. ' *
And if a n y o n e isdissatislicd with t h e i r - p u r c h a s e , i
" CJhippowa ( d r p r o p e r l y O j i b w a ) N a t i o n a r e p a i d a t t h e all u n d e r or n o t
T h e ono t h a t g a m e s w i t h h i m is t h e
unbiassed jiyrson cum|ietcnt to Judge says the articles a
miasm or vegetable decay. T h i s ex halation'li
.
a b o v e n a m e d .place.
gnosscr. I f he h a p p e n s t o t u r n t h e m o c c a s i n u n d e r w h i c h
worth more t h a n the money paid t o r them, and in some cases action of solar heat un w e t soil, s a d -rises with tho %atery vi
T h e n u m b e r of I n d i a n s p a i d h e r e is a b o u t 3 , 3 0 0 , ,is t h e marRed boll, he .then i s t h e j n g g l e r . If h e misses,
TEX, or even FORTY times the amonnt, let such person re- por from it. While the sun i« below the horizon t h i s v a p o r
T h e s e a r e only a small p o r t i o n of t h e O j i b w a n a t i o n . T h e t h e j u g g l e r w i n s j u s t a s m a n y as t n e r c o r e m o c c a s i n s t u r n the goods, and wc.will freely refund the money.
lingers near tho earth s surface, and t h o virus Is taken with i t
p r e s e n t a n n u i t i e s a c c r u e t o t h e m f r o m t h e lost t r c a t v m a d e f r o m t h e o n e h o t u r n s to t h e o n e u n d e r w h i c h is t h e m a r k Hot some will ask (as many have.l how can wo afford to t h r o u g h the lungs i n t o the blopd. There it acts as an Irritaa t L a P o i n t e , &2pt- 30, 1 8 5 4 , b v Messrs. H e n r v C . Gil- e d balL I f h e d o e s n o t p u t all t h e balls u n d e r , t h e g u e s s e r give so ranch f o r so little money? In answer, we say, t h a t all t i n g poison on the internal viscera a n d e x c r e t i n g o r g a n s of
b e r t , D a v i d C . H e r r v m a n , a n d H o n . . H o n r y J L R i c o . h a s t h e p r i v i l e g e of t u r n i n g o n e m o c c a s i n b e f o r e h o who are acquainted with the J e w e l r y business know t h a t ' the body, T h e liver becomes t o r p i d and fails t o secrete n o t
there i s scarcely on article of Jewelry purchased at a retail only t h i s virus, but olao ,lhe bile f r o m the blood. Both t h e
T h e t r e a t y n e x t p r e c e d i n g wus m a d e in 1842, a n d will e x - gpesses,
r h e y do n o t l o o k a t t h e m o c c a s i n s , b u t w a t c h store npon which there is n o t a protit of from 100 to -100 per v i r u s and the bile accumulate in the c i r c u l a t i o n , s a d produce
p i r e in 1857. T h e first treat)-, w h i c h w a s m a d e a t S t . one n n o t h c r . A n e x p e r t p l a y e r w i t h un u n a c c u s t o m e d p e r cent, on m a n u f a c t u r e r s ' p r i c e s .
.
violent constitutional disorder. . T h e spleen, the kidneys and
We being A g e n t s for the Manufacturers, have adopted t h i s the stomach sympathise with t h e liver, a n d become disordered
P e t e r s , M i n n e s o t a iu 1837, h a s e x p i r e d . A f t e r 1 8 7 4 t h a i e j u g g l e r , caii tell b y t h o m o v e m e n t of t h e e r e u n d e r w h i c h
wiU b o n o m o r e p a y m e n t s m a d e to t h e I n d i a n s , a s t h e y m o c c a s a n is t h e m a r k e d balL T h e y tally "with sticks, a n d plan o f ' d i s p o s i n g rif o u r goods, rather t h a n selling to Coun- also. Finally, the i n s t i n c t of o u r organism, aa if In a n attry Dealers on time, and t a k i n g the uncertainty of collecting t e m p t to exp«l the noxions fusion, c o n c e n t r a t e s the w h o l e
h a v e n o rtioro I a m i s t o solL - T h o g o v e r n m e n t is n o w in t h e g u m e is as m a n y a s tliev a g r e e u p o n . A t t h i s g a m e
o u r bills;
. p o s s e s i o n of all t h e i r territory, E x c e p t t h e reserve, w h i c h t h e y c a n play f o r a n y t h i n g , a n d h a v e b e e n k n o w n t o play*
By t h i s arrangement, we b r i n g the p u r c h a s e r in direct com• a c c o r d i n g l y t o t h o l a s t t r e a t y , a f f o r d to e a c h single o r f o r a w a g e r of $ 3 , 0 0 0 . '1 hey a l i o g a m b l e w i t h t h e c a r d s munication with tho manufacturer, a n d the profits t h a t a r c the c e n t r a l -organs *
m a r r i e d pereOD, oyfg t w e n t y - o n e y e a r s of,age a t t h o d a t e of t h o w h i t e m a n . T h e ku-kut-tu-o-dc-win, o r " g r e a t made by the dozen hands t h r o u g h which Jewelry h a s to pass, CniLt- But ib t h i s e
in which tile blood leaves the c e n t r a l o r g a n s a n d rqshes t o
o f t h e t r e a t y , e i g h t y a c r e s . T h e G o v e r n m e n t is now l o c a t - b e a r g a m e , " is o r i g i n a l w i t h t h e m , a n d i s t h e i r g r e a t e s t wc give' to the p u r c h a s e r in Premiums, as above stated.
* We- t h e r e f o r e offer the following Inducement to persons the surfscc, as If in a n o t h e r effort t o expel t h e i r r i t a t i n g .i n g t h e I n d i a n s on t h e B a d R i v e r reserve. <Thcy will n o t g a m e , b c c a u s e it i s p l a y e d on a g r a n d e r scale. I t is s i m - a c t i n g a s A g e n t s f o r us:—
poison thr.ough t h a t other great excretory—the a k i n . In lh>s
r o c e i v e t h e i r p a t e n t s u n t i l t h e P r e s i d e n t s o t s fit t o g r a n t i l a r to t h e m o c c a s i n g n m e , only l i e a r ' s p a w s a r o used
Any person s e n d i n g irs S2S f o r o n r goods, will receive a also it fails, a n d the system abandons the s t t e m p t exhausted,
Pencil ami l ' e n . and Premium, or Locket a n d P r e m i u m , free. a n d wsits for the recovery of s t r e n g t h t o repeat the hopeless
t h e m . I t w o u l d b o i n j u d i c i o u s to g r a n t t h e m t h e i r p a t e n t s
Kor f u r t h e r inducements, see Circular.
effort a n o t h e r day; These are the fits or paroxysms or F e v e r
now, e x c e p t i n g to a f e w ; f o r m a n y w o u l d t r n d o t h e i r land
A m o n g our P r e m i u m s aro articles suitable for l . a d i e f a n d and A g u e . Such constitutional disorder will of eonrae u n d e r .
j
W h o Encourages Insurrectiont
f o r a j u g of s k i t - a - w a - b o u (whisky).
Centlemen, s u c h as
•
mine t h e health if i t is ilot removed.
O n e chief a f t e r a n o t h e r , e a c h w i t h his a t t e n d a n t s a p " C u r s e s , l i k e c h i c k e n s , c o m e h o m e t o r o o s t , " a n d lies
Wc have labored to find, a n d have fount}, an a n t i d o t e .
p e a r s b e f o r e t h e a g e n t H a v i n g s o m o k n o w l e d g e of return t o p l a g u e t h e i r inventors. T h e s la v e h o ld e r s und
A y e f s A | t i 6 Cttre, *
politeness, t h e y t a k e off t h e i r E a t s or t u r h a n s , a s t h e c a s a t h o D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y a r e p r o v i n g t h e s e t r i t e t r u t h s by
which neutralizes t h i s malarious poison In the blood, and
Gold Sleeve B u t t o n s , Gold W a t c h K e y s ,
m a y b e / ami a r e s e a t e d . T h o i n t e r i o r c h i c f s p r e s e n t t h e t h e i r e x p e r i e n c e .
(•OLD S H I R T STUDS—plain and with s e t t i n g s : (rOLl> KciHP stiniuhrtes the l i v e r t o expef it from the body. As i t s h o u l d .
so i t does, cure t h i s afflicting disorder with p e r f e c t certainty.
n u m b e r of t h e i r b a n d s in small s t i c k s of wood, e a c h s t i c k
E v e r since the R e p u b l i c a n organization begun th^v
P i s s — n e w style; Gold l l r e a s t P i n s , California Diamond
And U does more, or r a t h e r does w h a t is of more service t o
Pius, Cold l l i n g s Ac-, Ac.
r e p r e s e n t i n g a p e r s o n . T h o p r o c e s s of t a k i n g t h e c e n c o s h a v o d e l i b e r a t e l y a n d p e r s i s t e n t l y m i s r e p r e s e n t e d its c h a r w s u b j e c t to t h i s Infection. If taken In season it expels
i s s h o r t . , T h o c c n c u s b e i u g t a k e n , t h o b u n d l e s a r e t h e n a c t e r . A H i t s p l a t f o r m s a n d jleclaratioiw, t h e life-loDg
•urn the system as It is absorbed, nnd t h u s keep* those w b "
m a d e up, o n e f o r e a c h single, p e r s o n , a n d . o n s f o r e a c h a c t i o n of i t s m e m b e r s , s h o w t l i a t i t c o n t e m p l a t e s outy
it free from its a t t a c k s : keeps t h e system In health t h o o j h
We have ISOLD WATOHKS, Florentine, Mosaic, Cold Stone exposed t o the disease. Consequently i t n o t only c u r e * b u t
family. I f a n y fiunilv consists of t w o pai tics, e a c h p a r t y legal, p e a c e f u l a n d c o n s t i t u t i o n a l m e a s u r e s — n e i t h e r i n t e r Cameo, Garnet and Coral Breast Pins and Ear Rings, ({old
protects
from, the g r e a t variety of affections which are Indureceives a b u n d l e . 'Pheso b u n d l e s consist of a b l a n k e t o r f e r i n g w i t h S l a v e r y in t h e S t a t e s , n o r c o u n t e n a n c i n g m o b
Bracelets, Gold Sleeve-Buttons. <>old Belt Slides,
ced by t h i s i u i i l i g n a n t i n f l u e u c e . s u c h s a l U ' m i U e n t F e v e r . C h i l l
Gold Rings, Ac. Ac.
b l a n k e t * p i e c e s of b r o a d c l o t h , calico, ranslin, a f e w m a d e violence a n y w h e r e — y e t i t s D e m o c r a t i c o p p o n e n t s h a v e
F e v e r , Dumb, or Masked Ague, Periodical II' sdache, or Biln p c l o t h s f o r t h e men, hoes, axes, p o w d e r - h o r n s , t r a p s , p e r t i n a c i o u s l y insisted - t h a t i t w a s a n A b o l i t i o n P a r t y , A u t o — P i a n o s Mrlodeons, Musical Boxes, Accordeons, Ac. lons Headache. Bilious Fevers,Neuralgia, Rhemnstism, G o u t .
Unexceptional References given whenever required.
I l i n d n e s s , Toothache, Earache, C s t s r r h , Asthms, Palpftstloa.-.
Ac., Gubs, p o w d e r , s h o t lead, p e r c u s s i o n caps, stoves, s e e k i n g t o l i b e r a t e t h e s l a v e s b y fire und s w o r d ; h a v e
A G E N T S WAXTED for every p a r t of the Country.
'ainfUl Affections of the Spleen, Hysterics, Colic, ParalT)ri.».
c o o k i n g utensils, Ac., a r e d i s t r i b u t e d t o a few i u e a c h t r u m p e t e d t h i s K<T t h r o u g h t h e i r n e w s p a p e r s , s h o u t e d i t
X. B.—In s e n d i n g y o u r names, write the State. County and
ind Paintul Affections of the S t o m a d i and Bowels, all of
tribe; . ' .
C
in t h e i r p u b f i c m e e t i n g s , i n s e r t e d it i a t h e i r resolutions,
Town plainlv, so as to a v o i d l e t t e r s being miscarried.
vhich, when arising f r o m this csuse, will be found to assume
ADDRESS,
A N G L E 6c C O .
W h e n t h e census-Is t a k e n , b u n d l e s p r e p a r e d a n d t h e reiterated
i t i n t h e i r c o n v e r s a t i o n a t h o m e a n d a b r o a d , in
nore or less the i n t e r m i t t e n t type. T h i s " A g u e Cnrt-""te»"
1 0 a C A N A L STREET, (Old No.) noves the cause o r these derangements, snd cures the disease.
I n d i a n s p r e s e n t , t h e p a y m e n t c o m m e c e s . T h e a g e n t , w i t h t h e streets, a t t h e t a b l e a n d b y t h e fireside, u n t i l i g n o r n u t ,
New York.
T h i s it accomplishes by stimulating the excretorlcs t o ext h e b a g s o f g o l d a n d s i l v e r ( a b o u t 8 7 . 0 0 0 ) . b e f o r e h i m , u n e d u c a t e d n e g r o slaves a t t h e S o u t h , h a v i n g t h u s d i n n e d
.tel the virus f r o m the s y s t e m ; and these o r g a n s by degree^
s i t s a t a q o p e n i n g i n a s u i t a h l r p l a c e in t h e w a r e h o u s e , d a i l y i n t o t h e i r care, b y t h e i r masters, h a v e c o m e t o b e iiecoiue habited t o do t h i s their office of their own accord.—
o u t of w h i c h b e h a n d s t h e m o n e y t o e a c h o n e , a s h e c o m e s lieve i t ! S l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s c r e a t e d t h e i n s u r r e c l l c n c e arises w h a t we term acclimation. Time may accomin a n s w e r to his pamo, w h i c h i s a n n o u n c e d b y a c r i e r , t i o n of 1 8 3 " , b y t h e i r lying s t o r i e s a b o u t FREMONT, w h i c h
plish the same end, but often life i s n o t l o n g enough, o r Is
s i s s t a t i o n e d j u s t o u t s i d e t h e o p e n i n g . W h e n t h e e n c o d r a g e d t h e i r s l a v e s t o e x c e p t ami prej>are f o r t h e r p H E R E P U B L I C A N A S S O C I A T I O N O F WASH- sacrificed in the' attempt, while t h i s Ague C u r e " d o e s it at
p e r s o n receives h i s m o n e y h e touches t h e t o p of t h e clerkfe c o m i n g o f a l i b e r a t o r . T h e - s l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s a r e X IXGTON are h a v i n g prvpaied a n d published a series of once, a n d with safety. We have g r e a t reason to tttlieve t h i s
is a surer as well as safer remedy tor the whole class o r disPolitical
T
r
a
c
t
s
,
u
n
d
e
r
the
supervision
of
the
Congressional
jcll, w h i c h Is &n a c k n o w l e d g m e n t of t h e reception of c o n t i n u a l l y p o t t i n g t h e i d e a of i n s u r r e c t i o n i n t o t h e h e a d s
eases which are caused by the miasmatic infection, t h a n s m
p a y . , T h e c l e r k k o e p s a c c o u n t of t h e p a y m e n t m a d e of t h e i r c h a t t e l s b y t h e s e a b s u r d fictions w h i c h the l a t t e r Republican Executive Committee, which it is earnestly ho)>cd other which h s s been discovered; a a d It liss still anothei
the. f r i e n d s of the Republican cause will take immediate
to e a e a one. A f t e r g i v i n g h i s receipt, -he receives his a c c e p t a s t r u e . I f t h e y will t h u s sow t h e w i n d , w h o can
I m p o r t a n t a d v a n t a g e to the public, w h i c h i s t h a t It i s chear
s te p s to have p u t ii\ general circulation.
, well as good. .
b u n d l e a n d leaves, w h e n a n o t h e r c o m e s u p . T h o chief, be s u r p p a t f r t h a t t h e y reap, e v e r y y e a r o r t w o , w h i r l w i n d ?
They are f u r n i s h e d a t the cheap rate of seventy-live c e n t s
Prepared by Dr. J . C. Ayer A Co.,I/)well,Mass. P r i c e O n *
w h o i s p t c a e n t a n d witnesses t h o p a T m e n t o f h i s b a n d . ? t h c n I f t h e r e is now, a s t h e y assert, a n y w i d e - s p r e a d cou=piracy per hundred copies, free of postage.
Dollar p e r bottle.
The following tracta have already been p u b l i s h e d :
g i v e s a r e c e j p t f o r t h e w h o l e b a n d , b y t o u c h i n g t h e c l e r k ' s a m o n g t h e slaves, s l a v e h o l d e r s t h e m s e l v e s a r e i t s c r e a t o r
Ayei*a C h e r r y P e c t o r a l .
T
r
a
c
t
No.
I.
HOW
W
E
A
R
E
GOVERNED.—Iteing
an
expea
T h i s lsXhe p r o c e s s of t h e p a y m e n t D u r i n g t h e i r a n d fomeliters.
T h e y m a d l y a n d blindly e n d a n g e r t h e
pose of the F r a u d s and E x p e n d i t u r e s of the present has won f b r itsolr s u c h a Renown for the cure of every r a r i e t y
s U y a t t h e p a c i n g spronnd t h e y a r e s u p p l i e d w i t h p o r k s a J e t ^ ^ h e i r o w n h o m e s b y t h e i r pcridstent political
Administration f o r party purposes.
a n d flonr b y t h e G o v e r n m e n t T h o s e w h o a r e n o t p r e s e n t
Tract No. 2. L A N D S FOR T H E LANDLESS.—Being a combeen employed.- A s it h a s l o n g b e e n (n constant use throng?,
a r e p a i d j b v t h o c h i c l s a n d otEere. D u r i n g t h o p a y m e n t ,
plete analysis of the votes on the Homestead Bill.
N o r i s i t t h e b l a c k s alone w h o m tlie D e m o c r a t i c P a r t y
out this section, we need not do more t h a n a s s u r e the p e o p V
trader*, w h o m t w t h a v e license, a r o p r e s e n t w i t h t h e i r c n c o u r a g c s t o d e e d s of v i o l e n c e . W i t h i n t h e p a s t f e w Tract No. 3. T H E - A T T I T U D E O F N A T I O N A L P A R T I E S lt* quality la k e p t np t o t h e best It e v e r has keen, a n d t h a t ••
IN' RESPECT TO A P A C I F I C RAILROAD.
g o o d s , p o m e of t h o t r a d e r s d e a l h o n o r a b l y w i t h t h e L v y e a r s i t h a s lent i t s s a n c t i o n t o lawless e n t e r p r i s e s of e v e r y
Tract No. 4. T H E SLAVE TRADE.—Showing t h a t the pro- may tie relied on t o d o f o r t h e i r relict all it h a s ever-bee '
d i a n s , b u t m a n y c a r e little f o r t h e i r welfare. W h i s k e y is s o r t
B o r d e r invasions, fillibuster e x p e d i t i o n s , lynch law
round to do.
ceedings
a
n
d
debates
d
u
r
i
n
g
t
h
e
last
session
of
the
late
•' t h f r I n d i a n ' s ruliL -mr
A rex's C a t h a r t i c Fills,
T h e y—
will t-r a d*e a n y t•*h i-n g t-h e y h* a v e , t o s u p p r e s s discussion, b r u t a l i t y a n d d i s c u s s i o n a m o n g
Congress indicate a most marked deterioration of moral
sesoraPuygsitivr"-"-'— '
o r give u y price for i t
A f t e r all t h e v i g i l a n c e o n t h e C o n g r e s s m e n , violence a t election, Sx-, t h u s m i n i s t e r i n g
s e n t i m e n t a t the South in respect to the A f r i c a n Slave
. . . — Jvspepsla; tor J a
Trade, a n d are fearfully ominous, oi the n e a r approach of
p a r t o f t h o a g e n t a n d o t h e r s , w h i s k e y i s s m u g g l e d i n a m o n g t o t h e v i l e s t p a a n o o s , e n c o u r a g i n g c o n t e m p t f o r law, a n a
the time when, at any rate-in the Gulf States, t h a t h i t h e r t o g e s t i o n ; f ^ r H e a d a c h e : f o r t h e c a r e o t D y s e n t e r y : f o r a Fo '
t h e m . T h e m o n e y t h e y r e c e i v e soon passes i n t o t h e p o c k e t resort t o t h e b l a d g e o n , t h e pistol a n d t h e bowie-knife.
universally repmbmeii traffic will bo a» heartily sustained S t o m a c h : for t h e c u r e of Ervsipelas; f o r t h e P i l e s ; for t c
core of S c r o f u l a ; for all Scrofulous Complaint*; tor the cu->
• of t h e c h o - m o . k e - m o n , ( w h i t e m a n . ) H e , a n d n o t t h e In- H e r e a r e t h e m a d m a n B r o w n , a n d c r a z y c r e w , e n d a n g e r a s ia the institution of slavery itself.
• d i n , f e c e i ves t h e benefit of t h e a n n u i t i e s . T h e a n n u i t i e s i n g t h e lives a n d p r o p e r t y of i n n o c e n t p e o p l e b y a n insane T r a c t NOL 5. OVERLAND R O I T E K TO . T H E P A C I F I C — of R h e u m a t i s m : for Diseases or t h e S k i n ; for the cure C
Liver C o m p l a i n t ; t o r D r o p ^ J f b r t h e core of Tetter,Tumn
THE EUTTERF1ELD CONTRACT.
-are a e u r s e to t h o I n d i a n ; b u t t h i s is no reason w h y t i e o u t b r e a k . B u t w h o m o d e B r o w n a m a d m a n b y m u r d e r a n d Salt R h e u m ; f b r W o r m s ; f o r t h e cure of G o u t : f o r a P i
.white m a n s h o u l d t a k e a d v a n t a g e of h i m .
i n f r h i s s o n s ? W h o t a n g h t t h a t c r a z y c r e w to' b a n d to- Tract No. 6. OPPOSITION OF T H E SOUTH TO T H E DE- n e r P i l l ; for the c u r e ot N e u r a l g i a ; Tor pnrifVIng t h e bloc -i
VELOPMENT OF OREGON AND OF WASHINGTON
M a n y p e r s o n s a t t e n d to s e e a n d l e a r n t h e h a b i t s a n d g e t h e r w i t h a r m s in t h e i r b a n d s a s t h e m o s t e f l e c t i v e w a y
They a r e sugar-coated, ito t h a t the most sensitive can t*'.
TERRITORY—THE INTERESTS O F T H E WEST.
iem pleasantly, a n d t h e y are the best aperient in the wo,M
- c h a r a c t e r of t h e I n d i a n . F o r t h i s t h e r e i s a ' g o o d
t o a c c o m p l i s h p o l i t i c a l p u r p o s e s ? T h e b o n i e r - r u f f i a n s of
In the German- Language.
r sll the purposes o t a family physic.
p o r t e a i t y . l i k e t h e J e w s of old, w h o c a m e f c e f t all
K a n s a s a n d t h e D e m o c r a t i c A d m i n i s t r a t i o n a t W a s h i n g - T r a c t No. 2. L A N D S F O B T H E LANDLESS.—$1.50 per 100
P r i c e 23 cents p e r B o x ; Six"Boxes l o r One Dollar.
copies.
T
i t t h e l a n d to a t t e n d to t h e i r feasts a t J e r a ^ f e m , U w , l n All orders should be addressed to
<Uans a s s e m b l e from all p a r t s o f t h e i r territory, to a t t e n d • T h e c l a w i e f a b J e r e 4 t e s t h a t b e w h o w e n t o u t a n d s o w G r e a t n u m b e r s or Clergymen, Physicians, Statesmen, a n d
LEWIS CLEPHANE,
t h e r p a f a e n t w h i c h t h e r regard a s a festivity o f g r e a t i m - e d d r a g o n s ' , teeth s u d d e n l y f o u n d h i m s e l f s u r r o u n d e d b y a
S e c r e t a r y National Republican Association. i e m i n e n t personages, have l e n t their n a m e s to c e r t i f y t h e 'cn
,
paralleled
uaefolness of these rcmediess, but onr space Ve*c
p o r t a n c e . T h e y c o m e m ^ M t i V e c o s t u m e , w i t h t h e i r b o w s ' c r o p of a r m e d m e n . B u c h a n a n a n d P i e r c e h a v e b e e n sowwill n o t p e r m i t the Insertion ot them. The A g e n t s 1 * V .
R O I ' N D S 4k L A N G D O I f f l
'nw, wigWama, g u m a i ) d t r i n k e t s . T h e i r fiiceBaro
i n g d r a g o n s ' t e e t h s e v e n y e a r s . T h e i r e n c o u r a g e m e n t of
n a m e d rtlrnlsh g r a t i s our American Almanac in w h i c h « V
S o m e h a v e a h i d e o u s a p p e a r a n c e , a n d s o m e l a w l e s n e » - a n d v i o l e n c e i s h u r r y i n g o n e locality a f t e r
'
p
i
»
e
n
;
also with fell deseriptionsi>f t h e a b o T e c o t t p l s ' n - - 1
T e i W O t o n ' i s 1 iwiatly tmi
b y t b e m . " f W e a n o t h e r i n t o a c s n e s of a n a r c h y , f o r w h i c h t h e o n i y sure,
— — " be follewod f o r t h e i r c u r e .
e t h a t w h i t e p e r s o o s , w h o a r e acQoetottied s p e e d y a n d p e r m a n e n t c a r e i s t h e p e a c e f u l t r a n s # * , k t t h e
i r | v T l a n 4 o l p h Street, Chicago, III.
Do
n
o
t
l
i
put off by, unprincipled jleslers ^ t h o t h e r y
fcco, a s asi i m p r o v e m e n t o a n a t u r e , a f t e r n e x t e l e c t i o n , o f t h e r e i n s of G o v e r a a e B t f r o m t h e itw*-ROUNDS
A
LANQDON
a
r
e
.snthprized
to.receive
Advep-J
p
a
r
a
t
i
o
n
s
they
make
more
prdflt on. The sJdk w a i t t h e f f . :
" H w o u l d b e c o m e s o d i s g u s t e d t h a t t h e y cile h a n d s t h a t h o l d t h e m , i n t o ' t h e g r a f p o f m e n w h o
trsementS^o'r t h i s a n d all ttMeafflhr N e w j W i e H o f «be C I S , i aid there is for tbeaL an4 they s b o a U i t , , ; .
t h e p r a c t i c e . A l l -wear a b l a n k e t , i n n e i t h e r d e a l in mOb v i o l e n c e thetflBetTCB, n o r will p e r m i t and. are the
. O N L Y a a, d. E X C L U S I V E Agents
i*. our remedies
». »ra for sal
- i j e by
, T. & P A R B A N T ,
f oIr —
t h e majority ji All
flfiek as c l o s e a s a snail i a a sheD. i T l ^ j r ' a w I t t o b e a t t e m p t e d b y o t h e r s . ' ' 5
of th'ow In the N o r t a A ( w « , * < '
- '
'
aww
ap22
l9.Hr- A
ijtihj'r. OJ s j i T i
« Q
T O
$ 2 0 0 !
]NTo M o n e y R i s k e d !
of
Gentlemens' Gold and Silver Watches, Guld Vest and Guard Chains
F O R L.ADIES,
%
Now is the Time to Circulate
Documents.
E
ADVERTISING AGENCY,
. "ssssssssa i v.
- { '.'They « * t h « Wgiat and U»« h « t
- Of <v«rythlng that grows.
MUM* C O . , HAS NOW
WT w
•»»•- —
'a
sssortment of Lake
O n M n TMR
l l tsizes
l f P I ft!at greatly reduced rates.
and Scrap
Iron, rtfof aall
t h e Lake Soperior Bar Iron gold by tho Company, m all
made from Charcoal Pig, and U tar better than the Iron made
from Hard Coil, ana their Lake Superior Merchant Iron u
the only Iron told in this market, that - is made in this manner.
Their Merchant Scrap Iron is ail made from selected Scrap
and will bear comparinon with "the Best Iron made in the
ngaperior
f
C
And when a mammoth cheese is cot.
. The largest pumpkin, longest beet,'
And other garden staff
U blown into the sanctum by
An editorial p«!t
. The biggest bng will speak to tbsm.No matter how they dress—
A shabby^oat is nothing—if
Yoo own a,printing press.
At Ladies' Fairs they're almost hogged ,
Bjr pretty gHs,yo« know,
That they mav crack up everything
-The ladies hate to show.
And Urua they get a blow-oat free
°WVandOtt» Boiling Mill Company and Eureka Iron Company drafta taken at par in exchange for Iron or any indebtcd- u s to the Company.
.
Manufactured Iron also giren in exchange for good Scrap
Iron.
»~°
r , d t o
" «
iatoka.
Store corner Woodward Avenue and Congress-*t.
n3
P
B
\ T A I 1 H D U N C K L E E ti C O . , 74 WODDWARD AVEJ > | nue/Wbolesale and Retail Healers in Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, Carpets, Floor OU Cloths, Paper Hangings,
Feathers and House Furnishing Goods^—We woold-partienlariy inrit* the attention of the public to the following Goods,
which we have in great variety of styles and prices: Broche
Shawls, long and square ; Bay State do. do. d o . W a t e r l o o do.
do. do.; Gentlemen's do. do. do.; Mantillas, beautiful styles:
Black, Fancr, Poulard, Bayadere and Moire Antique Silks;
French and English Merinoe*, plain and figured ; Paramettw,
Delaines, in great variety ; Valencia Plaids and Stripes ; A£lwool Plaids; Alpacas: Flannels; Sattinetts; Broadcloths; Damasks; Blankets; I.inens; Embroideries; Hosiery; Gloves;
Ribbons; Prints; Cinghame, Ac., Ac.
Carpet Department.
Velvet, Brussels, Crenelle, S Ply, I Ply, Superfine, Cotton
and Wool, Carpets; Druggets, Stair Rods Oilcloth. Window
Shades, Lace and Mhriin Curtains Curtain Fixtures, Feathers,
Paper Hangings Ac., &e.
.
•
We havq many other styles of Goods, which will be offered
to suit.the times.
.
*
O O K F O R T H E T I M E S t t — T H E EXII.ES OP
FLORIDA BY JOSHUA *. OlBKUrtK.—lllsstrrtcd with 6
Volume, limo. 520 pp. Price 51.—
'h eminent ability, the crimes'-ommitagainst the Maroons who ted from
Souti Carolina and other Slave States,seeking protection under Spanish laws. It show*'bad faith exercised towards the
Indians of Florida, and is found to present a true view of tha
long-fought Florida War, which * * , In truth, A * A B I OR
SLAVERY.
• j.F r o m OoTrroof CUM—, of O h i o .
Gentlemen—Acoept my thanks for a copy of "The Exiles
of Florida." I have read the book with great interest sn<
much instruction. It sets in a striking light an important
portion of our history, and clearly reveals the eocret spring*
by which successive administrations .were,moved in a Pairs of
ETeat moral and political consequence. The distinguished
author has especially entitled himself to thejhjnka of e very
lover of freedom, justice, and honorable administration.^*
ti-scing and exhibiting the eVil influences of slavery in h»
transactions which he narrates. No one, it seems to me, can
arise from perusing this work without deepened convictions
of the wrong bt slavelsSldinp, and the. necessity of oarneM
and persistent effort for the deliverance or our National Government from the contrrfl of the slave power.
Columbus, July 12,186R"
. . ^ P. CHASI.
REPUBIJCAN8 READ IT! Copies sent bv susil on receipt
of One Dollar.
F O I x f i S , FOSTER A CO.,
KAVMONK,
Pullshers, Columbus, Ohio.
Detroit. Agent for Michigan.
tON F O U N D R Y . — T H E UNDEB81GNE1) ARB PREStttfonary .
• pared
y u r c u to
w furnish,
l u i u i a u , «at oshort
u u n »notice,
»»»>, —
Gearing Warehouse Hoisting Apparatus, and all
Iron Work. Repair work on Propeller*, Steamers and .Saw A M E R I C A N WATCHES.—A PPLETON. TRACV A
Mills, executed promptly and thoroughly. C listings—every J\_ Co, WAJ.TH.4I1, Mass., Manufseturers of PATENT LEVER WATCHfea—These superior Watches are made by the
aid of new and original machinery, expressly.dcsigi e l
We are prepared to execute orders of any size for Brass and cure, with a low paice, a fine, substantial, durable anc
Componition-Castings, promptly. .
.
j
formly reliable tnne keeper. The; movements are m
Oil Globes, Oil Cups Valves Journal Boxes. (.ndgc Cocks, construction, and are pronounced by the highest authorities
Cylinder Cocks, Steam Whistles for Steamboat*. locomotives ' be faultless lu principle and quality, and have been proved
and Mills, Bolls for Factories. Steamers and Locomotivetvunthe most exacting tests to be reliable and unfailing in ac- O U N - L I G H T G A S W O R K S * FOR THE MANVFAC
uon. These watches are manufactured entirely from the O TORE OF ILLUMINATING GAS, for the use of Privali
der eight hundred pounds.
The reason C ^ S u s T t h e y write
crude materials, in a single establishment, hy- connected and Houses. Public Buildings, Villages, -Towns, Ac—Patented
• And other, people read.
IKON RAILING AND VERANDAHS.
uniform processes—the manufactory being organised upon August, 185«.—The principle or the invention consistt in tho
no an:
A^ A m e r i c a n T r a d i t i o n .
We
are prepared to expeute all orders for Iron Railing fo the same svstcru that has been adopted in tho production of peculiar construction of the Itetdri, whereby Gss is most
Private Building*, Chnrchcs, Public Squares, and for CKraeti theunequiled American fire-arms, which enables us lo pro- quicklv, easily and economically generated from Rosin, Oil,
One offlie most interestineincidentain the early hiaduces movement at one-half the price of any foreign move- Tallow' and refuse Grease of any kind, and produoing. for
ry Lots.
t o i j of new England, is the deliverance of the frontier
Corner of Fifth and Woodbridge-stt., opposite Machine ment of the same quality: and we guarantee the perfect about eighty cents, as much light as a thousand feet of ordi" •.
. •
t o * a oTHadley from an attack of abarbaroos native tribe. Shop of Michigan Central .Railroad, Detroit.
performance, for ten years, of every watch manufactured by us. nary coal Gas.
JACKSON A WILEY.
"A long course or experiments at the hands of u-.e inventor,
All foreign watchcs arc made by baud, the Amcncan watchT h f Indian war of King Phillip—tho-saddest page in the
c.- being the only onfcs made by machinery upon a uniform who has iiad many years experience In Gas manufacturing, ss
. n n . l i ot the colonies—had just commenced;—and theini n B A N K E R S , LAND AGENTS AND BUSINESS MEN. system throughout. Nearly ali hand-made watches arc de- well as by ourselves and others, has placed the Invention be- • ..
' A
a. Son's,
n
. . Map
I f . . . Publishers,
D n l . l f n l i a M Stationers, Eflgravers
VllcnwrK
habitants-or Hadley, alarmed by the threatening aspect
vbnd
all
doubt
of
l
u
practicability.
-The
public
tuny
be
confective, and are continually getting out of order. In many
offihe times, had, on the first Sentetnber, 1675, assembl- and lithographers, 2Q9, Main6treet,Buffalo,'N. V , » verSage'
« i u w , parts of thfe country It Is impossible to -find good watch re- fidently assured that it js at once Uie most simple and useful
pairtr*. and watch repolrlng is always uncertain and expen- f any thing of the kind ever before constructed.
ed b their humble place of worship, t o implore the aid of
_
.
....
, . with sive. Tho introduction of American watches disposes of this
The present object ot the proprietors is to dispose or city,
the-Almighty, and t o humble themselves before H i m in a
difficulty, and country merchants, as well, as watch dealers, county and state Rights, on the most favorable tcrma, and to
solemn fast All at once, the terrible war-whoop WM
; /
can keep watches as a p a r t of their miscellaneous stock, and immediately introduce the works Into general use.
heard, and tho ehnrch surrounded by a bloodthirsty band branches of Steel, Copper and Stone Engravjng, as well,as thus supply their customers with a new staple, which may be
Works Trom 100 r«-ct capacity-and tipwards, are now in
of aaVages; while the intent, the aged, the bedridden—ell Cfayon Work (of tho finest description, we guarantee satisfac- used as any other article, without mystery or bumbng. _Sold readiness by DUDLEY A HOLMES, manufacturers* Detroit
as
well
as
every
thing
connected
with
the
"Sun-Light
Gss
tion
all
cases.'
„
.
,
„
•
,
^
by the trade generally, and by BOBBINS & A PPLETON,
who had ;been unable to attend service, were a,t the mercy
Particular atttntion paid to Bank and Commercial work,
•
General Agents, 15 .Maiden Lane, N. Y. Works," which Will be supplied by them at,all the principal
of the tomahawk and scalping knife.- A t that period, so suth a* "Checks, Drafts, Notes CertlficaWs of Deposit and
points in the Union, to parties purchasing territory.
uncertain were the movements of the Indians, that it was Stock, Coupon Bond^ letter, Note and Bill Heads, Envelopes,
Persons or small capital, and particularly Gas Utters, by
H A G N I F I C E N T WORK.-MILE^STANDlSH ILcustomary for a select number of the stoutest and bravest Ac. Maps; Portraits, Shdw 'Cards Ac.. Lithographed and
LUSTRATED—a. volume of Photographs from original making an investment In the rigfit to use the "Sun-Light Gss
drawings,tiy John W. Ehninger,illustrative «f the CduitsMp Works," will bo certain or an immediate remuneration.
among the dwellers in the frontier towns to carry their printed in the most delicate colors by a new process.
fSf All- communications In the premises directed to tha
For the convenience of the business community in this vi- of Miles Standish, by Henry W. I-ongfellow. There will be
weapons with them, even to the hoofje of prayer; and now,
;
cinity, we have established an agency with Mr. John W. eight or ten large Photographs of the most exquisite charac- undersigned will meet prompt attention.^ ^
infeontternation and contusion these armed men of Had- Green, at the offlce of the Detroit Daily Advertiser, 2131 Jefter, executed by Bradr. with intersected cream-calotcdSeaves
tafsallied forth t o defend themselves and families. But, ferson Avenue.
Treasurer tor Proprietors.
u3
J. SAGE A S()N>.
(containing th# descriptive text,Vthe w"holc to be .bourfd in
No. 77 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan.
unfortunately, the attack had been too sudden and well
quarto morocco covers, with bevelled ?nd gilt edges.
O O T S , S H O E S A N D B U B B E H S , AT WHOLEEarly orders are solicited, n* the slow process of preparing
pilnnAd; t>y/> Tr^im™ harinSLrtly gained pOSBSBion tho town
A B E W ' S D E T R O I T B R E W E R Y , FIRST STREET
B.VLE ONLY.—Wo have received from the Manufactubefore they aunounded the church; and posted on every rers.iiboQt 1,000 cases BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS, or all the Photographs (nothing being done in cloudy weather) will
between Lsrued and Congress st^ets, Detroit, Mi«b.—
prevent the immediate issue, of a second edition, and conse.
spot of vantage-ground, their bullets told with fatal effect the desirable kinds, and have also on hand u few thousand tiuently only those ordered in advance can be proyiscd.
The undersigned having r6-puwhaaed "Tlie Institntioji tor
upon tho bewildered and disheartened colonists. A t this pairs of OUr own manufacture.
'
Price Six'Doilars. Specimens to be seen and subscriptions the dissemination of uscrnl drinks,* has enlarged end rejnv«>nated it in the most thorough manner, makihg it now tho
Wo shall continue to manufacture and to receive almost
crisis, there suddenly appeared among them a man, toll
most extensive BREWERY IN THE WEST, with facilltlea.ror
" "»"•
FBAKGIB RAYMOND,
and erect of stature, o u m and venerable in aspect, with daily additions—so aa to keep our stock at all times large snd
producing the finest and most delicate grades or Malt Liquors;
Complete- Confining ourselves to the Jobbing trade exclujj
90 Woodward Avenue.
long gray hair falling on his shoulders. Rallying the re- sively, we can Offer facilities un_fquilled j n ^ D ^ i t , at^ 2;and is now prepared to famish the various qualities or Ale*.
• treating townsmen, he issuod brief and distinct orders in Woodkard Avenue.
H. P. BALDWIN A CO.
H A W 8 CUTLERY AND EDGE TOOL' WORKS, t o o t Porter and Brown Stout, for draught and bottling, at prtoe»
R e m a n d i n g voice, and with coil and Boldiery precisor Brush street, under tbo Fulton Iron Works, Detroit, M. ranging from 90 to §10 per battel »
Detroit, Nov. If 185A
Extra line and StosJc Ales brewed to order.
Cutlerv, Surgeon's Instruments, Coopers' and Carpenters
iob!—-The influence which, in moments of peril and diffiAU Packages extra, which, when returned to tl»e Brewery
I P O R T A N T T O P R I N T E R S A N D P U B L I S H - Tools, Axes or every description, Planing nnd Tobacco Maculty, a master mind nssumes over his less rifted follows,
ERS.—We have now on hand, and constantly receiving. - chine Knives, Trusses, Ac., made to order or a s u ^ r i o r
- in. good order, will bo paid for at same prices as chargcd.
wjas well exemplified on thifi occasion. T h e s t r a n g e r s very large stock of Book and News Paper of all sixes. W
The attention or private ramilles,and customers lu general,
is
particularly called to the EXCELJS10R CREAM ALB. Old
commands were implicitly obeyed by men whoi until that »re Agents for nine or the best Mills in the oouhtrv. which
Razors, Knives.'Scissors, Surgeon's Instruments, steel. Iron
instant, had nevw seen him. H e divided the colonists gives u* a-chauco to compete and undersell any establishment and Brass Ware, polished and repaired in a manner to give friends and new may be assured of the superior finality and
fiavor
of these beverages, nnd nil are Invlted to call and samin
the
West,
ani>
would
say
that
wo
sell
print.papcr
chcapei
sati»ractl«n to his customers.
into two bodies; placing one in the most advantageous
ple
for themselves. AH orders, with the money enclosed,
and a-bctter article than can be found in this-market: Also
left at the office, corner of Brush street and Jelifcra k sheltered position, to return the Are or the enemy, wo have Just received a largo invoice of lino Monnillus.— sonOrders
Avenue, will l>e promptly attended to, where samples msy will receive prompt attention.
a S i hold them in check, while tho other, by a . circuitous Please call and see for yourselves at
Malt and Hops for sale at the lowest market rates.^ ^
bC
J. L. CABKW.
PEASE A FULLER'S, No. 210 Jefferson
rSSU, h e l e 4 under cover of thq smoke, to a desperate
Reforences klndlv permitted to Messrs. Edmunds, North A
Detroit^ Nov. 1,1868.
Co., J. B. Wayne A.'Co., Geo. Doty, Doctors ,\llen A-Bat well.
charge on the Indian rear. The red men, thus surprised
E A D Y - H A D E CLOTHING AND GENTLEMEN'S
Detroit, Jan. 1853.; .
- 1 V
itt turn, and placed between two fires, were immediately
FURNISHING GOODS, at the Clothing Emporium of ItI C H M O N D S & BACKUS.—PR1CMIUM ACCOUNT
defeated and p a t t o flight, leaving many of their jaunted
Book Manuractory and Book-Binderv, No. 183, Jefferson
A P E R W A R E H O U S E . - O N HAND ANp FOR SALE HALLOCK, No 108, Jefffrson Avenue, Detroit Where may
^arriore. deadupon the field; and the town ofHadley was Avenue.—Account Books or every description made to order,
cither at Wholesale or retail. thcfollowingdeRcriptionsor be found a very large", Weih and, desirable stock of tha above
•foi« saved from conflagration, and its inhabitants .from ot soperior paper and workmanship, at lower prices than, paper,-viz: Imperial, 8upcr Royal, Royul, Me/liam, Demy, goods Just manufactured under his immediate inspection, and'
heretofore.
Warranted
to
give
satisfaction
in
every
particuCrown,
Flat Cap and Folio Post Gap, Letter, Ugal, Sermon, embracing one or the most extenalte assortment*ever before
massacre. The first moments after tho unexpected vicoffered in this market
' ,
Bill and Kote Paper In every variety.
•
•
tory were passed in anxious enquiries, affectionate meet- lar.Commercial Printing, Ruling and Binding,
Seated I
Among his stock will be found every kind and description
Book and Print Papers ot all colors and rizes. Manilla,
JtigB and heartfelt congratulations; then followed thanks order.
pf Garment suitable for Fall snd Winter wear.
Rap. and Straw Wrapping Paper or all s'r.cs and weights.
•
From the low priced and cheaper gTades to the most nns
The subscriber having had an experience of
aad p r a i » t o God, and then,the deliverer was eagerly
Receiving our paper direct from the Manufacturer* we
and rashlonsWe' Rarments—ail of which have been manufaoenabled to offer them at as low prices a« any In this market
•ought for. W h e r e was het All had seen him an in- years, reels assured that they
turedwlth the utmost care and WAMAKrtDtofeivesAUsn^tion.
quality or workmanship.
KAGS—Wanted inexchango for Goods or Cash..
stant before; b u t now.he had disappeared; nor was ever and
.11 persops desirous or purchasing afther.at \S HOLESALE
Orders from Banks, Merchants. Mauuracturcrs and Railroad
FRANCIS RAYMOND.
' S e n again. One or t w o among the people could have Companies, respectfully solicited.
RETAIL arc respectfully Invited Co call and eiamlne his
13
90 Woodward Avenue.
extensive stock, whlcli shall be offered at prices uniformly
told who ho was, b u t t h e y prudently hdd: their peace.
nS
H. HALLOCK.
- M. Howard Webster, O I N G E R ' S S E W I N G MACHINES—IMPORTANT TO
lrm^_rr
v.
Amid the dense forests and mighty rivers of America,
the stern piety of tho Puritans had acquired an imagina- ^ Detder In Foreign and Domestic Hardware, Housekeep- O THE PUBLIC.—A new Family Sewing Machine, cam- T
H . A L L I S O N , IMPORTER OF IMPROVED RA1Ling Articles, Mechanics' Tools, Stoves, Grates, Tin and Jap- ming the lawst improvements, at Uief extreme low; price of
tive cast almost unknown in the mother country; andthds,
f j . road Watches, cased in beautifal styles, warranted exA Ware, Drain Tile, Ac. Agent for the American and
1FT1* DOLLARS.
unable to account for the sodden advent and disappearance —..opean Law Agency ot Lit* A Kapp, No. 7 Nassau street
Tlie in Ices of all our standard machines have wen greatly cellent time-keepers: do do Swiss M l jewelled, levers in
6 f t h e delivering stranger, the people of Hadlev belived New York—for tho recovery of Debts Legacies and Inheri- reduced. SINGER'S SEWJNG MACHINES, it Is well known; every style." GOLD PENS.—I continue manufacUirlng Pens
though dearer in price, have always ticen cheaper In tact, or every desirable pattern. These penshave received aBilver
/-.that he was an angel sont from God, in answer to their tances in Europe and the United Slates.
Medal and Diploma at the Michigan State Fair,and are.notU;
Remittances made to all parts of Germany, wltlj safety and
prayers, to rescue them from the heathen enemy. W i t h dispatch. No. 201 Jefferson avenue, lCearsley'fc Block, Detroit, considering what they will do, than any other. The prices be surpassed by any, Pens in : market Also dealer in FINE
are now reduced so that all must lie satisfied. Call and exthe traditions of thfe Indian war of 1675, that belief has Mich.
JEWELRY. SILVER-WARE, and FANCY GOODS.
amine the new machines at tlie low prices.
,.
I have an experienced Jeweller, capable or making new
been handed down to our own day, and it'was only a few
WILLIAM PORTER, Agent
S
A
G
E
&
S
O
N
S
,
MAP
PUBLISHERS,
STATIONERS,
133 Jefferson Avenue, Detroit
years ago, on the banks of the pleasant Kennebec, that
*°F1TTIN0'ST0NES and Diamond Work, and Fire Gilding
• Engravers and Ltthopraphera, 209 Main street Buffalo,
» fair descendant of the redoubtable Cftptain Church re- N. Y;, ovir Sage's Piano Rooms.—Wo are prepared to execute
and
Galvanizing done at short notice.
H E A P F U R N I T U R E W A R E H O U S E . — T H E UN
lated t o the -writer the foregoing legend as an indisputable •II work entru«ted to us with promptness and despatch, and
WATCH REPAIRING—Being a practical workman,,>11
dersiencd offer their extensive stock of Goods, consistinstance of a supernatural dispensation of Providence. - on as favorable terms us any establishment in the-country. ing of ull Kinds FURNITURE AND UPHOLSTER!, to the r work entrusted to my care, will be ear^ully-attended to.
GOLD
PENS re-pointed, at fifty cents. Pens sent by mail
Combining
all.
thb
dintrent
branches
or
Steel,
Copper
and
! T h e story, however, is a historical fiat and latterly has
customers and the public generally, at the lowest possible
by the Cash, will be promptly attended to.
embellished more than one popular work of fiction. Sir Stone Engraving, as wbll as Gray on Work or the finest de- rates. Being prepared to meet all orders in ourline or busi accompanied
J. H. ALLISON, Jefferson Aveaue.
n3
scription; ire guaranteo satisfaction In all cases.
ness, we would advise buyers to call upon us before buying,
;W(liter Scott, who allowed little to escape him, alludes'to
Maps, Portraits, Show Cards Ac., Lithographed and printed elsewhere;as w« intend not to bo undersold by any firm in
dt in •' Peveril of the P e a k ; Cooper has made use of itan 1 « t h » » o s t delicate colors, by a new process.
E
T
R
O
I
T
OTEAM D V E I N G E S T A B L U H .
•
nS
the west All work warranted.
MENT, No. 10 Congress-st, East—A. C. ALEXAKDKK
[••The Borderots; and Oliver Newman, the last poem or
CABINET MAKERS' ASSOCIATION.
would most re«|>ectfully Intimate that, more follv to accflmA P E R . - - W K ARE PREPARED TO SUPPLY AT MILL
221 Jo7crson Avenue. Detroit
Sonthcy, is partly founded on the eventful history of
modate the wants or the patronising public, and his large inprices, all sizes und weights of "Print and Book Paper:—
William Gone, the delivering angel of the inhabitants of also Ledger Paper, Flat and Folded*Paper, Letter, Cap and
crease or business be has adopted tho improved faclUt* which
OOK8—SELJ-'-MADB MEN—By C. B. Seymour.
Hadley.
'
Commercial Note, Wrapping and Tissue Paper, Fancy and
Future Lire, or Scenesin Another World; by Geo. Wood. Steam gives to the Art or Dyeing, having recently fitted upStrfple Stationery in great variety.
The Ministry or Lift; by the author of Ministering Children. for that purpose. He now Dyes by Steam, every description
or Silks Satins, Velvet Crapes and 'Merinos, producing th*
100 tons of Rags wanted in excKonge.
The
K.
N.
Pepper,
and
other
Condiments
pot
up
for
general
} A religious paper, speaking^'dancing, says it isfrivomost brilliant colors and best style or finish that every article '
RICHMONDS A BACKUS,
j Ions and corrupting. Tnis is a common error with a certain
will admit or. Shawls or every variety Dyed snd Cleaned.
u3
Detroit Mich.
Tho Tenant House, or Epiber* troxo Poverty's Hearthstone.
class, of religionists, and shows their ignorance and folly.
The Witches of New York, by Doesticks.
U T A Y H E W S SELF-ADJUSTING, SMOKE, STORM ANP
S . C U T H B E R T & C O . . Wholesale Druggists and
Isabella Orslni; by the author or Beatrice Conci.
Nothing is frivolous which is innocent and pleasant, and
M VENTILLATING CHIMNEV^CAP.—Maybew'sChimney
• Grocers, No's 102 and lOOVoodward avenue, Detroit
Vernon Grover, or Hearts as They Are.
adapted to promote healthy actio? Persons who are have in store and offer to the Trade, a large stock of Sugar,
Cap prevents Chimneys from smoking: it precludes storms
Frederick the Great; by CarMe.
| capable of being corrupted by dancing will certainly find Ssrup, Molasses, Fish, Fruit, Spices Nuts, Liquors, Drugs,
from entering them; it lessens the liabilities tofiresfroiu
Dora Dean; by Miss Mary J. Holmes.
their burning out: it protects their tops from the wastes oi
i some much more effective mode t o become so if this ^ Cordage, Paints, Oils Dve Stuffs, Naval Stores Window Glass With a variety or others too numerous to enumerate.
the weather, and serves as an ornamcntul finish.
Ac., Ac. ]' 1 — ;
"*
denied to them. Dancing.among the very young is usrt
. . . . M . W. CAMTIK. sale; by
Persons desirous of securing the right or mannraetjire, Or
J. 8. CtrrmKitT,.
conducted under the eye of discreet seniors; and well
' H
^
of sale, or botfc in Cities Count!?*, States or Territories, in
oateti adulte need no supervision in dancing b u t th
T W I N E H O U S E . ~ W i l l a r d Harvey A Co..
O E T S A N D P O E T R Y O P VERMONT—EDITED any part of the United States not already disposed ot, will
common cense and their own self respect But si]
JL Lane, and 17 Cedir street. New York. Hemp, Cotton ^ by Abbey H. Hemingway. The design or this work is to furnished with a descriptive circular, by addressing theiU£
Flax and Linen Twines Imported and Manufactured Cordage, represent the general poctic literature of \ ermont from its dersigned, snd by designating the terrltonr they desire, they
dancing could in any case be perverted, so may every
Cotton, Jute, Manilla and American Hemp Rope.TarredStuff, early settlement to the present period. The selections are will also be furnished with the terms ot sale.
rise be. If we are t o do nothing till it i s impossible
IRA MAYHEW, Patentee, Albion, Mich.
Fishing Lines Gilling
" i . — * wi.i, —^ .11 fathered from the most reliable sources and will especially
" e r r in doing it, what will there be for any one to do?
Manufactured and for sale, in Dfctroft. by
kinds of Cords and Lin
A s to dancing we will spoak from, some observation
. n3
DUDLEY A HOLMES. 77 Woodward A v e
U Y P . H I N C H M A N tc. C O . , Dealers in Groceries
and practice, and sum op the judgement formed of it,
and Provisions Paints.Oil* Twines Canvas Anchors r
B L A C K & C O . , OPTICIANS, ANT) MAKERS OF X U S T P U B L I S H E D , A TEXT BOOK OF VEGETABLE
j thus: Dancing satisfies the demand of nature for action.
#J and Animal-Physiology, designed for the use orSchools.
and Chains Tar, Pitch, Rosin .Oakum, Ac. A complete stock
: I t i s action for both mind and body. I t is action which or Ship Chandlery aad the above named articles always on J L / . Optical and Philosophical Apparatus No. 250 Jefferson Seminaries and Colleges by Henry Goa^ilby.!M D . Professor
Avenue, invite ail those suffering from defective sight to inbegins, goes on, and ends with the attainment of an o b j e c t hand and for sale very low, at *6 Woodbridge street Detroit, spect their assortment of greatly improved Pereaoopic Grrs- of Vegetable and Animal Physiology snd Entomology ln the
I t h r i n g s the human figure into its proper position, and Michigan,
ttl and Pebble Spectacles which are highly endowed with State Agricultural College of Michigan, embellished with upwards of « 0 Illustaatlons. Although designed mainly for
develops the power ana use of the muscles. I t is asocial
H . L O V E L L , (Successor to D. Crosby & Co.) Whole- the property or improving vision. Also, all kinds of Tele- Colleges and Scliools this book will be found invaluable to
not a solitary pleasure. I t is an Innocent and refining
. sale and Mtd reUil dealer in Watches Clocks Jewelry, scopes Microscopes Electric Machines Drawinglnstruments
n
the general reader, and should find « p'ac* i n '" ver T
pleasure, becanse i t brings both sexes t o b e acquainted Fancy Goods Plated Ware, Combs ButtonsThread.Ae. No. Ac., constantly on hand.
and private Ubrary. The beautr of the wood en gravings^at
with each other, and improves the manners of both. I t 79 Woodward avenue, opposite Holmes A Co. Detroit Mich.
and their style
H E C Y C L O P A E D I A O P W I T A N D H U H O R . - - so plentifully adorn this work, fa remarkable,
WatchM, Clo.ckg;and Jewelry repaired and wairanted.
-s
llow ,n<1
bloe figures on
is accompanied b y music, which is one ofthemostelevatContaining choice and characteristic selections from the eminently peculiar; whits red. r *
I R E S I D E E D I T I O N O F W A V E R L Y N O V E L S , writings or the most eminent Humorista of America, Scot- dead black ground. By their distinct"*** they have eBcikd
! tag and grateful pleasures known t o .pan- Dancing is a
W
T
unanimous
admiration.
For
sale
oy
now
tompUte,
fail
acts
to
bo-had
ot
Und,!rc1ud n d E.BIU.4 t j " j , | f J 5 ? c ' g ° E A S ^
dictate of nature. I t has been
solemn by savage
'FRANCIS RAYMOND.
Detroit Nor. 1,1668.
DOUGHTY. STRAW A CO.,
Detroit Nov. 1.1868.
warriors; a mode of exalted worship among w e pious;
n>.,- t .., j L . . , %
...
, K o . H J y o o d » V d Ave.
13 ,
30 Woodward Avenue, Detroit,
one manner of showing social gratification among digni-i taries. I t has found its proper place a t last, in being a
I M E ' S PATENT FIRE and BURGLAR PRQOF^SAFTO,
—These Safes are a combination ofWrought andCWlled
[ social, rational, elegant amusement, which R i g h t s those J T L Theraas Bo
Iron, two inches thick. The Wrunjht Iron
who engage la it, and t h o w w h o are spectators.
and the ChlHed Iron hardneas; the safrs be In g w r a n t e d Drill thtnir in that l i n s are inrttad t o give him a ealL Hsringth*
raqpqgrfc—A NEW SUPbeat of workman, he can saJsly guaranty M t f a f o ^ o ^ a *
I ProoC AU other Fire Proof Safes are made of Sheet Irwn.
I t is ft.sad commentary upon the course of instruction
TY, STRAW A CO,
8. R. WOOLLEY. A g e n t at C. A A. Ives' Banking O f t * . C >
p a n t e d in young ladies' schools, that the graduates selDrtrolt NOT. 1,1W8.
"jTvJoJ.tji,,.
SOT. 1,1868.
dom know kow to dtdin* an offer of marriage.
SBASs F S W e s r /
.
„
T°
A
B
r
R
J
P
C
S
P
C
D
B
J
G
R
F
R
T
OF civiLiZATrtnr nr iMOLAirD-By H.
L
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