Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, December 12, 1862
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
1862-12-12
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
Relation
None
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
gth-12-12-1862.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
m i B TRAVERSE HERALD.
CRAVEK8E
VOX,. I V .
CITY.
M I C H . F R I D A Y } D E C E M B E R 12, 1862.
N O . 52-
Longfellow's New Poem.
I n i i w d : t h i g h , and h r o o j r b t it d o w n w i t h t h e d e s p e r a t e . HTOS. T h e c x h o o s t i o n a n d w n s e o ' intolerable rtlir^'
The followinft line poem hv Profciwor Lonef«l!»w appears | f o r c e of a man . t f n i r t h a l v ^ t r e m i t y u p o n t b o head of t h e m i c h t b e in a m e a s u r e r e m o v e d b y a s i n g l e d r a u g h t t f o f
in the December uumlier of the Atlantic. It fc the first pul>- wolf on m y cSde.
H e ' t u m b l e d o v e r on his b a c k , a n d j a c a n t e e n filled w i t h tire n e b s o u p r o a n l t i a g f r o m t h e #'llabed by hliu ainee Hie ra.l a c r i d e n t which l)r<iCRht MICU !
h a v e b e e n c o m p l e t e l y , lution of a half nonce in u p i n t of w a t e r . A bnif ouaci
w t J afterward' fi^nd ' o
m o u r n i n c to hi- o u s e . —
i ama^b'-d. A s t s t o p p e d tt> r e g a i n m y pistof, I w a s as- • repnjK-nt« t h e w h o l e a m o u n t of n a f r i r o e n t in a p o u n d
THE CUMBERLAND.
| tooished to
my c o m p a n i o n coolly t h r u s t one of his ' f r e s h b-^-f
T h e m e t h o d of p r e p a r a t i o n is v e r y w m p h
At a n c h o r in H a m p t o n Hnads we lay.
j arm* into t h e wolf s m o n t h , a n d a< coolly, w i t h t h e di". I a n d i s t h u s describe d b y I ) r . N i c h o l s :
a n i r o r . XKD r n o i n i r r o * .
On bourd of the Cumberland slonp-of-trir:
d h a n d , d r a w i n g t h e knife, w i t h a d e e p a n d Abort |
•• T h e w h o l e p r o c e w consists in t a h i n p l e a n ' b e e t ft*"
And at timet f r o m the fortress acroas tbo km
TJfiitJUB. •
•(
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.
a
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;
of
b
o
n
e
n
n
d
fat,
c h o p p i n g it fine a s w h e n used a s s a o s t
The alarum of <1. u m s ewent past
OB« DrilM >n« "«»r f<o«* P " « ? « » • p»7»w- ln»«n«HI> IB
Or a-bugle-blast
j a r r t s t f d uty utteutioiL l^owkins r u u u d , I saw a n o t h e r . g e s o r minoe m e a t , a n d m i x i n g it w i t h iL« o w n w e i g h t
f r o m die camp 'in- shore.
I wo'f actually fajteueii on the off horse- b y the n e c k . T b e - cold w a t e r .
It is t h e n slowly L e a l ' d t o boiling, nnfl » n » « « . £ • » • « « • ' ' • ! « * ! . r < w i j
d r i v e r was b e t w e e n m e a n S I be wolf,
f i e cried
GiVo ' lowed t o b o i l b r i s k l y for a m o m e n t or two. w h e n it i
Then far away to the Sooth appose
. . H l - a ' b . Uw: flflr Will per folio of III" wn,e».tank* flf«4ln*rtlo».»IHl
A little IVntbero; snow-white smoke.
me the pfatid V I did so. find t b e p o o r b o r s e w a s f r e e . — j s t r a i n e d t h r o u g h a c o t i o n c l o t h t o s e p a r a t e t h e c o a p n l a
»w«»«T-8»«iwM»fotnMh«»!JMail0i>l. F-'"> IrnrrroniiU y w 1 , Hicn"
And n e knew thnt th- iron xblp of o u r fooa
S*> atan w e r e w e ; for t h e o t b t r wolf r a n ofl'. followed by j e d a l b u m e n a n d Cbriu.
1'be e v a p o r a t i o n t o d r y n o s a of
T,
" l i t . 30 p«r
-ork-.-t»*Srr,k«
K i t steadily rtrcriBR it» rnura' <
the one woUi t h e b r o k e u leg. T b e wolf last s h o t «•«! • tb«- s o l u t i o n m u s t be c o n d u c t e d a t a low t e m p e r a t u r e b '
t u m b l i n g a m o n g lb.- snow. T h e d r i v e r b a n d e d me t h e > a w a t e r b a t h or i s l c a m h e a t T h e p o w d e r is reafflly
Of our ribs of oak.
pistol t o p u t r i g h t a n d b e g g e d a n o t h e r s h o t at t h e s o l u b i e in w a t e r , a n d nearly e i g h t jK-r c e n t in a l c o h o l —
Down upoa.'w huatilv runs.
I t s d e j r t w of !mliibility in a l c o h o l is a test of i t s genuitxb r u t e . T h i s finished t h e e n g a g e m e n t .
Silent and sallen. the floating f o r t :
uess of t h e e x t r a c t . If a l e w q u a n t i t y t h a n 7 5 o r 8 0 p e r
i can n o w tell bow I (e|t. I c o u l d s c a r c e l y realize o
Then conn » a pn3" of smoke from bcr (run*.
And leap* the terrible death.
cent is soluble, it should be r e g a r d e d a s ' s p u r i o u s o r i »
g r e a t d e l i v e r a n c e . T b e 4r>ver s e c u r e d t b o c a r c a s e s
W i t h f l e i y breath.
perfectly prepared "
the sledge, nnd w h e n w e r e a c h e d t h e s t a t i o n 1 was coi
Hexidtei.
l-'rora each open poru
W h e n p r o p e r l y d r i e d i t will k e e p for m o n t h s . —
pletely e x h a u s t e d f r o m t h e r e a c t i o n of t h e s t r o n g e x Receiver. Wc a r e not idle, but send her »tralght
citement.
My friend ol t o e t w e n t y s t o n e c h u c k l e d m u c h E n o u g h can r>e s t o r e d in an o r d f n a r y w a t d b foh t o S0«Defiance hack in a full broadside I
(IBAM* TRAT&R8E COUNTY OJ'FICBP*.
s o l d i e r a week. A n o r d i n a r y p o r c e l a i n lined k e t
at his own t r i c k a p o n t b e wolf be bad killed. I n s t e a d of t
A s bail ritlioundH from a roof ol slate,
tie
p u t t i n g his a r m i n t o t h e a n i m a l ' s open m o u t h , as 1 s u p - 1 h o l d i n g a gallon ia sufficient for t h e p r e p a r a t i o n of UK
lb-bound* our heavier bail
posed, be h a d stuffed i n t a i t t h e loose s l e e v e s of bis g r e a t 1e x t r a c t . T o d r y t h e solution p u t t h e k e t t l e i n t o a larOf the m o n s t e r ' s bide.
s h e e p s k i n coat, t h e r e b y g e t t i n g p l e n t y of t i m e t o c u t t h e g| e r vessel c o n t a i n i n g hot water. " W i t h b u t little t r o p b k
on t h e p a r t of t h e i r f r i e n d s almost e v e r y soldier m i g h t he
C o u n t y Clerk
.
monster's t h r o a t
His otfn arm was untouched.
"
" S t r i k e y o n r Has!" the rebel cries.
I S( K
O .uNn' B
R e g i s t e r o l l ) « c i l > . . ... .T. IlIU
iK
" «W• T" W I P K i ,"
p r o v i d e d w i t h s o m e of t h i s v a l u a b l e n u t r i m e n t
In his a r r o g a n t old plantation strain.
tbe p o o r horse's neck and s h o u l d e r w e r e much torn.
p£S». A U p r n o r .
C; II.
^U^prt.
" N « v e r ! " o u r gallant Morris rapHes;
A l t e r c o n s u m i n g on e n o r m o u s q u a n t i t y of t e a a n d p a r t j
Circuit Court Com. C. II. IIOLI>r.N.
- Is is better to s i n k t h a n to y i e l d ! "
provisions, v l e f t t b e s t a t i o n , a n d w i t h o u t m e e t - 1
Liberality in Baalneaa.
Coroners
- • - P E R R ^ H A N N A H , T r * . City.
And
the
whole
air
pooled
1
G l i O . N . S M I T H , .Nor>l>port.
ing m o r e a d v e n t u r e s , e x c e p t several d i g g i n g s o u t . a r r i v i s n o g r e a t e r mistake, s a p a c o t e m p o r a r j . t h a t
With the cheers of o u t men.
e d at J a r o s l a v a t e i g h t 0 clock, h a v i n g a c c o m p l i s h e d j R
hdsim a „ c a B make, t h a n t o b e m e a n In h i s
Then, like a kraken huge a n d black.
a b o u t t h i r t y miles in t h i r t e e n ' h o a r s .
Next morning we In e £ &
A l w a y s t a k i n g t h e half cent, and n e v e r retornine
She crushed oor ribn In her iron g r a s p !
found ourselves p o p u l a r c h a r a c t e r s in t h o t o w n .
T h e I a W | l l f o r ( h o d 0 n . , r 8 be h a s m a d e a n d is m a k i n g .
Soeh
Down went tbe Cumberland all a wreck,
d r i v e r ' * t o u p u e had n o t been idle. M y r e v o l v e r u n d e r - , a p o l i c v i s v c r y m u c i , like t h e f a r m e r ' s , w h o sows t h r e *
"With a sudilea s h u d d e r of death.
went many an e x a m i n a t i o n . T b e g o v e r n m e n t or local re-1 J ) e c j . s off%ed w h e r e h e o u g h t t o h a v e s o w n fire, n t d its a
TRA.V?J»eM^Jrt»V. fAnd the c a n n o u ' s breath
F o r h e r dyitig gasp.
H a r d for a d e a d wolf is t h r e e roubles, w h i c h we claimed recompense
recompense ffoorr ttbbee leanness
leanness ol
of bis
bis soul
son! only
only gge t s ten
^ GRAND TRAVERSE C0TJNTY, JflCH.
Sod received for t h r e e . S o t h e wolves, i u s t e a d of killing he m i g h t h a v e got fifteen b u s h e l s of g r a i n .
N e x t morn, a s the aun rose over the bay.
BBFKBEN'to:
r '•«
a
s , p a i d n u r travelling e x p e n s e s . T b e f o u r t h a n i m a l I
Still floated our flag at the mainmast bead.
E v e r y b o d y h a s h e a r d "of t h e p r o v e r b of " p e n n y wis*
Lord, how beautiful w a s the day !
Caused t o be s k i n n e d , f o r p r e s e r v a t i 1, a s a r e m e m b r a n c e and p o u n d foolish." A l i b e r a l e x p e n d i t u r e in t h e w a y ,
UlKln. Ch. J. R«P'- O- M ! n O T \M; U , a J"*'V,i^ u ,! t GL.T«l
Every waft of air
of the g r e a t e s t p e r i l 1 w a s e v e r in.
ol business i s a l w a y s s u r e t o b e a c a p i t a l i n v e s t m e n t —
Was a whispered prayvr,
— Jailftb Taroar,
~ IU' " " [Mo**?"1 Kal»- " * " M « *;"TMmiuin. nmpw H t m
T h e r e a r e p e o p l e in t b e world w h o a r e s h o r t - s i g h t e d
Or a d i r g e for tho.deait
,
.
.
.
e n o u g h t o b e l i e v e t h a t t h e i r i n t e r e s t can b e b e s t p r c I w ^
Ho I brave hearts t h a t went dowb In t h e seas!
I t h a s long b e e n n o t o n o u s t h a t w h e n t h e D e m o c r a t s n ) 0 t c £ b v
a n t j d i n g i n g t o all t h e y c a n g e t s n d
Ye are at peace in the i r o a U e d stream.
fccUl possession of C o n g r e w t i o t r e e b t a t e c o u l d get a d n e v c r | e { t i f 1 R V c e n t slip t h r o u g h t h e i r fingers.
H o t brave land ! with heart* like these,
B i t t e d into t h . j U n i o n unless it c a m e w i t h a D e m o c r a t i c
^ #
^
found-other
things.bethj
u wj|, ^
Thy flag, t h a t I s rout In twain.
orgai.i7J.tion, or w a s p a i r e d off with a b l a v e S t a t e . W tth .
e q u t d — t h a t h e w h o is t b e most l i b e r a l is m o s t . «nc
Shall b e one a g a i n ,
And w i t h o u t a seam ! 1
t h e p r o s p e c t o f a D e m o c r a t i c m a j o n t y a g a i n in the c c ^ i u b u s i n c s ^
Of c o u r s e wc d o n o t m e a n i t t o b e
T
V> ,f0 .. ;
' Ajm
7
H
o
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.
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*
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.
„
d
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ou>n
should
b
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o
d
i
x
o
.
in
111.
expeodiIlin r
SOLICITOR IN CHANCER-K, j
Adventure w i t h tbe Wolves i n Rnsnia.
ofllie N o r l h « h i l e » e t , » ™ i b o p o m r .
lores : but that h e s b o u l d show t o hiscostomere. I f h e I,
W O T A B Y P U B L I C k C 9 N V E V A N C E R,
A w r i t e r in Alt the Year Round g i v e s tbe foifowi&g
\VR b a r e now a t t a c h e d to t h o b u i o o t h e T e r r i t o r i e s . t r a d o r , o r t o tb{*e w h o m . b o m a y b e d o i n g a n ^ k i w i dl
T r a v e r s e City* G r a n d Traverse C o u n t y , Mich.
a c c o u n t of a n a r r o w e s c a p e he h a d in au a t t a c k b y wolves of D a c o t a h . N e b r a s k a . C o l o r a d o , N e w M e x i c o . U tah,
well a i s c ^
b u s i o e s a w i t ^ tj,,,
a l i his transaction*, a s
. . . . . . . , O l B f t c ^ D w e l l i n g House.
. I-lSf
w b i l o m a k i n g a slodgu j o u r n e y on a t o u r f r o m t h e V o l - N e v a d a a n d \ \ a s h i n g t o n , seven m a l l , t h e w h o l e o f w b o s f
ja,
reUtio^
h c acknowledges the everlasting fact that
ga to J a r o d a v :
O o r e r m e n t a l e x p e n s e s a r c p a i d out o f t h e n a t . o u a l t r e a - l h c r e
^ u 0 ^ ^ a n e n t p r « p e r i t y or go.od M i n g in
\ l I b i s p o i n t in o u r j o u r n e y t h e d r i v e r s o n t t b e b l o o d s n r y
I bese 1 e r r . l o r . e s b « e he following a m o u n t of Q p o m m u n i | w h ' o r c h e n e f i t s W n o t reciprocal.
d a q c i n g t h r o u g h m y r e i n s ' b * t b o a l a r m i n g c r y of WppUilton w h e u tho c e n s u s of I 8 6 0 « • » t a k e . . : C o l o r a W ( J
o f i n M a n o c a w b « r o t r a d e r have onjoyed tbr
• ' V o l k a ! v o l k a !" Wol%-cs! i olves ! I s p r a n g f r o m ray
D a c o t a h i , 5 i 6 , N e b r a s k a - 8 . 8 4 1 , N e v a - p f o f j | g 0 f h u n d r e d s of d o l l a r s ' w o r t h of t r a d e , a n d y e t
seat, a n d l o o k i n g a h e a d , s a w , s i x g r e a t , g a u n t and n o d n 1 « . J 6 4 ; N e w M e x i c o 8J.OOO . L t t h 4 0 , 6 9 9 , \ \ ash- , . e x h i b i t e d n o t t h e slightest d i s p o s i t i o n t o r e c i p r o
' AWI»
t aVL
d o u b t h u n g r y wolves, s i t t i n g e x a c t l y in o u r w a y . a t a , n e t o „ 11,16b. N o n e of t h e s e h a v e t h e p o p u l a t i o n re- c a U . e m i , o t b e M l l a 1 l c s l a n l o u n t .
X o w . w h a t m u s t ne
S U l o l C I T O K J N O H A N C K j R Y j
d i s t a n c e of a b o u t a h u n d r e d y a r d s or less.
O u r h o r s e s q u . r e d by t h e r a t i o of
. .
NO. * FIRBT fiTHBET. - ri - representation.
N e w Mexico has
simply tho
f()|loK f n j m ^
B c n a f M ,
w h y ,
b a d h u d d l e d t h e m s e l v e s t o j v t b e r , t r e m b l i n g in every oiioe b e f o r e m a d e a p p l i c a t i o n f o r a d m i « i o n as a F r e e ) o g s o f f
tir.^nrtnc
> Manlwlwo- MtoWtauv. ;
Hui
m , | i u i n , i„ t h e loss o t t r e d e . w h i c h
l i m b a n d r e f u s e d t o stir, U e s h o u t e d nnd bawled, b n t .State, a n d would no d o u b t d o so a g a . n If t h e r e w e r e a n y m ) d e r #
h a v e b e e n retained,
re*llbcraj
M1,Uln,
t b e w o l v e s also refused t o s t i r
My f a t f r i e n d , g a t h e r i n g c h a n c e for admission
T lm case of L tah is auo.nalous,
litl he pra(.tice of
m e n seem t o be. t o m a k e as
.. l a r g o h a n d f u l of b u y f r o m t b e s l e d g e b o t t o m , rolled it and c a n n o t be t r e a t e d of at p r t s c t o t
Such n o n e .
t le s h o w in t h e wav of bosiiXJsB its p o s i b l e .
i n t b I he form o f a bail, a n d h a n d e d i t t o m e . tcuying.
C o l o r a d o had 3 6 . S 3 8 i n h a b i t a n t s t w o y e a r s a g o
It j f a |r#i|(ir<
^
a p p e a r a n c e 0f his
in. with lhe
m a t c h . " 1 u n d e r s t o o d h i m a t o n c c . T h e d r i v e r man" j " t h e m a i n p a t h w a y o f e m i g r a t i o n , a n d is r i c h ,» K l o r c
dilapi^
K > w t h i n ( r s r o u n ( 1 h i m t, i n „ worn-out
a g e d , by a w f u l lushing (ltd noo-nooing, t o g e t t h e bot^os g o l d mitH» a n d I n o r e ejiwIT a c c e s s i b l e t l . i i . C a l i f o r u . a .
p r o m p t l y t o aH.»lait®» a g a i n s t the
.
,
,
d i r t y i o t d i t i o . L T o hav.j i t o t h e r w i s e it w e n d
dl,lc<.
ou.. u n t i l wo e n m o w i t h i n a s h o r t d i s t a n c e of o u r e n e m i e s . or any or t b e o t h e r g o l d fields. T h e r e h a s b e e n a large ^
U n i t e d S t a t w for B o u n t y o r T e n d o n s .
pain'
# d o | ^ r { m w h i t c w a d h i a u d p c r i i a p , Qve f o r
A U o f c - f t r s q r s o l d U r e d U a b U d i n the p r e s c p l w*r cl.bcr B y t h i s t i m e I h a d s o c c e o d e d in s e t t i n g Ore t o the e m i g r a t i o n to it e v e r y y e a r , a n d t h e r e can be little ;
<]
f
d
o
l
l
a
r
s
b
e
s
i
d
e
s
for
c
l
c
a
n
m
g
u
p
a
n
d pntr
all
a
e
w
h* d i M r w o n w i 6 r w o u n d s received J n t b s c u r j j i c of the ball of bay, a n d j u s t a s it b e g a n t o b l a z e o u t well. I t h r e w d o u b t t h a t it has now fujly e n o u g h p o p u l a t i o n t o e n t i t l e
t j t
thj
jn onl(.r
A n ( ) s o h ) . p l o d s on a B d loses h u b H n l u ^ ^ a t i A. i u flic line of t h e i r d u t y . a r e Entitled t o Pen- it in a m o n g t h e m . I t f o r k e d like a c h a r m .
I n s l n u i l y it t o admission as a S t a t e . I t is q u i t e as p o p u l o u s a n d as d r o < j s o f d ( I | | a r g - w o r t h of c u s t o m for t b e w a n t of a t t e i v
r
•JMST
tll8"Wld6i»s.-o M i n o r t M M r t * ' o f fh«>* w h o «•!«
t h e w r e t c h e s p a r t e d , t h r e e on e a c h side, a n d s k u l k e d off well o r g a n i z e d as O r e g o n , a n d m u c h m o r e s o t h a n some
t o t b m , m M v n s . w b l | e hi, more sagacious neighbor,
u . SIM.
c . H. JIOIJJEN, X i W ^ - V n alowly a t r i g h t angles, t h e i r t a i l s d r u g g i n g a s if t h e y were of j b e S o u t h e r n a n d W e s t e r n S t a t e were when a d n w „ d k,vi
„„
l b t ti
0
b e a t e n eUrs. O n dashqd o u r b r a v e t e a m — l a s h , l a s h — ted.
C o l o r a d o , ' w e t b i u k . o u g h t t o b e a d m i t t e d a t tbe
^ *cs»
taiwyOlll,
»!»•'• .
,•
B p r 0 K { x . r 0 Q J business.
000, n o o .
e n s u i n g session,
^
A n o t h e r will spend no money in any w a y t o m a k e b n " H u r r a h !" I - d ( A n e d , w i t h a l i g h t e n e d h e a r t ; •' w e
N e b r a s k n , two y e a r s ?go> h a d 2 8 , 8 4 1 i n h a b i t a n t s , a n d
f o r f e a r he shall n o t g e t it b a c k a g a i n
Consea r e snfo t h i s t i m e , t h a n k God."'
b e i t i g on t h e Missouri yivor, a d j a c e u t t o t h e S t a t e s of q u e n t l y h e s e n d s o u t no c i r c u l a r s , d i s t r i b u t e s n o bauri•' S C - . > •
" W a i t : look b a c k , ' ' said fat-sides.
l o w a . Minnesota a n d M issouri, of c o u r s e m a s t i n c r e a s e bills, publishes no ndveru.-cincnts : b u t s ta d o w n croakI d i d so, a n d I s a w t b e wolves, w h o h a d j o i n e d e a c h f a s t e r t h a n a n y o t h e r t e r r i t o r y e x c e p t C o l o r a d o .
Its ; M ? a l , 0 , „ l b e hard tiro.*—moaning over t h e f n i u r e p r o f .,
"(T«ONt ftTiyiKT.NKAli COt?Ut not-'B^i)
© t l W ' a g o i u in tho c e n t e r of t h e t r a c k , p a u s i n g a s if t o case is not as s t r o n g as t h a t of t h e Js'.tcr. b n t a bill p . c I u f n o t e s l o pay. no money, ami no t r a d e : a n d c o m e s
T U A Y ^ U E C I T Y , MICHIGAN,
d e l i b e r a t e . O u r h o r w e w e r e g o i n g a t t h e i r u t m o s t should be passed p r o v i d i n g for t h e admission of t h e tor- j u ; i ( w h , . « . he m i g h t e x p e c t "to c o m e — s h o r t , whilo hi?
, i h e d r i v e r S t a n d i n g u n a n d o s i u g lash a n d v o i c e r i t o r y a s a S t a t e when i t s p o p u l a t i o n shall r e a c h 4 0 , 0 0 0 n e i g h b o r , following in a d i f f e r e n t t h i c k , d o i n g all t h a t i s
rr\ttlS OLt» ESrTABLISHEDIIOTEt,(TnBFraST ws piet eh dall
h i s m i g h t , t o u r g o tliom on t o t b e s t a t i o n , t h e n T h e n t h e people of the T e r r i t o r y could Uike a c e n s u s ol necessary t o b e d o u t t o m a k e business, h i s b a s i n e t s ;
l
( iiv 1 «lt«atc<l on Hr«»nt8tr«i>t, in t h e viciui»T of t h e C o u r t H o u s e a n d public o B r e s , i» still open fOr t h e o n l y a b o u t a mi!o and a half a h e a d , L u c k i l y t b o r o a d o r their own, p r o v e t h e f a c t a n d c l a i m admission.
^
! 8 „ t s h o r t b u t h a s m o n e y t o loon ; a n d i t w o u l d b e j u s t
t
r
a
c
k
ax f a r u s wu could soe, w a s f r e e f r o m d r i f t , a n d o o r
By the admission of N^'W Mexico. C o l o r a d o nnd N e v a - b k e h i m to g e t t w e l v e p e r cent, p e r h a p s m o r e , f o r t h e
S
, r t t o trtvenu* W
^
h o p e Was t h a t we could g a i n t h n s t a t i o n b e f o r e t h e wolves, d a , we could r e d u c e the n u m b e r of o a r T e r r i t o r i e s t o a s e of it ; a n d w e should not b l a m e h i m f o r d o i n g tlo.
ehoiild t h e y p o r s u e us. L o o k i n g b a c k j u s t a s w o t u r n e d four, d i m i n i s h t h e o u t l a y f r o m the n a t i o n a l t r e a s u r y , enT h e Inct is. t i m e s huve c h a n g e d . T h e m a n n e r o f don b e n d iu t h e t r a c k , 1 saw t b e w h o l e pack in s w i f t pnr- l a r g e t h e s t r e n g t h ol t h e F r e e S t a t e s a n d give a
repre
b u s i n e s s is d i f f e r e n t now f r o m w h a t it used t o b e . —
gnit. 1
. u-i.'
^ O ^ V o e a m o d i H o n f f o r llOr»cs a n d C a t t l e .
W»as-W
s f n t n t i o u t o people w h o now h a v e no voice in the na- ( t w o u l d be just a» foolish t o insist u p o u d o i n g business
I b a d o f t e n b e e n told t h a t w o l v e s will n o t a t l a r k a tiotottl C o n g r e s s . T h e l a t t e r p o i n t is one of no m e a n im M O W in t h e old f a s h i o n e d way as it w o u l d b e t o insist
p a r t y unless in u l a r g e p a * k . 8 i x w o r e n o large p a c k ,
ortuncc, for t h e s e seven T e r r i t o r i e s now c o n t a i n 220.- j u p o l , i r u v e i m g w i t h an ox t e a m i n s t e a d of b y r a i l r o a d ;
yet- h e r o t b e y were, c o m i n g t o a t t a c k us ; t h e r e was now
95 p e o p l e w h o a r e totally u n r e p r e s e n t e d , t a k i n g merely j t ( ) E ( , t
having it
b v n | , j f a s h i o n e d s t a g e s i u s t e a d of
no d o n b t ' a b o n t t h a t
H a n g e r t h r o u g h a lor.g a n d w - l h e c e n s u s of I 8 6 0 a s p n r guide. IT a c e n s u s of t h e m I b r o u g h t l.y tlie liKhtn iig t e l e g r a p h . T h e t i m e s d e m a n d
jqrt Aitwrith-l-nnt . ^
•»cre w i n t e r , must h u v e m a d e t h e m d a r i n g .
W i t h t h e were t a k e n now t h e uupibi-r would tnj nc:>r 4 0 0 . 0 0 0 .
j , m . n of enlargi-d. l i b e r a l , e n e r g c t i c fouls—m<-n w h o will
cbtwcioosness of a n i m p o o d i t u r d * n t b - 8 t r u g g l e . I p r e p a r e d
T h e s e j « o p ! e a r e all as loyal as a n y of t h e i n h a b i t a n t s j j . e < , p o p w ; t b l b e W f i r ) , i
;t goes : m m of h e a r t s , t o o .
fortbo
result.
My t h o o g b t s went f o r one m o m e n t t o my of t h e F r e e N a t e s , and, h a v e a r i g h t t o s h a r e in o u r do-1 w b o n o t o n | y
t o c o ahead tnemselves, but take
w i f e ultd c h i l d r e n : fi>r a n o t h e r , t o t h e g r e a t I)ispos«-r l i b e r a t i o n s iti s a n ^ * o y . T h e y h a v e left c o m f o r t a l j l e I p i e a - u r e i n w e i n g o t h e r s s u c c e e d , a n d w h o h a v e p u b h c
of e v e n t s . T h e n , t h r o w i n g off m y s h e e p s k i n coat, s o a s h o m e s e l s e w h e r e t o b A v e the perils of t h e wilderness. \ S Ir) 1 [ j t , .
a n d rejoice
o ' h t o d o s o m e t h i n g for,
F O B l«A')IES
MI9CK6:
n o t t o i m p e d e t h o f r e e a c t i o n of m y a r m s a n d legs, I a n d run o p n e w c o m m u n i t i e s r e m o t e f r o m f r i e n d l y nid 1p r o s p e r i t y of t h e p e o p l e .
p p r a n g o n t h e froilt s e n t beside t b e d r i v e r , b u t w i t h m y ami it becomes us t o
recognize
them at the earliest
batik 4o t h e horses, a n d ray fuco t o t h e e n e m y . I s a i d t o p r a c t i c a l m o m e u t . T h i s w a s lhe c o n s i d e r a t i o n u r g e d in j
FOR OWTtt A*n Bb*B, WK!KyKKn ^ l T H l ;
T H E LARGEST DIAKOND IS So am
AMERICA.—The
h u d r i v e r : " T h e y a r e c o m i n g b r o t h e r ; d r i v e fast b u t t h e case of O r e g o n .
W h i l e we h a r e t h e m a j o r i t y in | B o s t o n T r a v e l l e r says t h a t tlie l a r g e s t d i a m o n d in t h i s
H T - O W E R S . 3 H A K E 1 1 B . B T C . tsteadily.
I h a v e six b u l l e t s in t i n s pistol. D o n ' t m o v e C o n g r e s s nnd an A d m i n i s t r a t i o n t o >.id us. we s h o u l d
c o u n t r y is now on e x h i b i t i o n a t a j e w e l e r ' s s t o r e i n
f r o m yt>ur s e a t ; b n t d r i v e r i g h t in t h e c e n t e r of t b e not neglect t h e o p p o r t u n i t y of d o i n g w h a t we can for o n r
O A l i AND «EB FOB Y001!S>SLVES.
t h a t citv.
It is r e p o r t e d t o bavb been f o u n d a y e a r s i n c e
t r u c k . " M y fat c o m p a n i o n sat still in his corner, a n d b r e t h r e n in t h e s e n e * T e r r i t o r i e s , for t h e time rnaj c o m e
1
in S t o k e c o u n t y , in the n o r t h e r n p a r t of N o r t h Carolina,
n e i t h e r m o w ! o r s p o k e ; I s a w t b e b l a d e of m y buor- when i t will b e difficult for its t o d o so.
M o r e o v e r , on the V i r g i n i a b o r d e r , n e a r t h e B i n e R i d g e , a n d i a tbe
| '. •." : "5.;: I.*I> J s s'a < - ; i :-a, ';4.;K.8)P«^CEE.
Traverse. Cily. J u n e 3rd. 1802.
k n i f c g l e a m i n g in b i s h a n d .
the a d m i s s i o n of t h e s e new S t a t e s would g i v e n s six m o r e routrh w e i g h e d 2 3 J c a r a t ' , a n d s i n c e c u t t i n g w e i g h s n e a r
The" Track Had b e c o m e worse, so t h a t t h e h o r s e s S e n a t o r s and I h r e e m o r e v o t i n g m e m b e r s of tbe l o w e r ly 12 c a r a t s . I t s t r u e v a l u e i t is difficult t o e s t i m a t e , b n t
[Philad. N o r t h American.
1 it p r u b a d l y may be f o u n d s o m e w h e r e b e t w e e n $ 1 0 , 0 0 0
could n o t m a i n t a i n t h e i r p a c e . I n a s h o r t t i f n c t h e H o u s e of C o n g r e s s .
b e s i d e t h e sleafle ; t b e h o r s e s s t r a i n e d
and 8 1 3 , 0 0 0 , a n d b n t f o r t w o almost i n a p p r e c i a b l e spot*.
w » w o u t D BIT r o T n n P e w . t t . , T * « . * # BVTKOOT o u n O o f w i , k e e p i n g t h c t r t e t a n c e . .Cot in forcing o o r way j
Eitract of Fh** f o r A,?rt,l?"^<wKrl.,
I t ^ ' s l o i w w o o i d l * w o r t h m o r e . I n s i i e ' i t approa'cbea
QTroegh a d r i f t w e e t t m c t o a w a l k i n g p a c e , a n d t h e first | ^ Dr. J. 11. N i c h o h h r i n g s j o n o t i c e h . t
h
e
|
^
^
•
1 1
1
a ,areo ^
jt
wblf OT t n / i f c t e mndu a A i s b a t t h e " l i o n * n e x t h i m — [ S n r g i c a l J o u r n a l an a r t i c l e for t h e s u s t e n a n c e of s o l d i e r s j n large p l u m s t o n e in l e n g t h b a t ts d e a j w r
.1
almost a s q u a r e o n t h e face, w i i h r o u n d e d c o r n e r s ,
i s o p e r a t i o n , a n A a r e o n hah<t v> d o f J u s t W U - W o ' * * * * ' ' T h e p i s t o l w a s w i t h i n a foot a n d h a l f o f h i s h e a d w h e n 1 *hicl» is w o r t h y of v e r y g e n e r a l a t t e n t i o n , r i z : d n e .
t h e r o u g h it w a s a b o u t s q u a r e . E a c h of t b e f a c e s b a d
rttanT: an.T wonld nay. we t h i a k t h a t w e i c s a tki ea|K«od w o r k Rrqd. i n d t h e ball wcrut t h r o u g h his b r a i n .
1 s h o u t e d 1 e x t r a c t of f l e s h — a n o a r i j h i n g , easily «sf»mi!ate<l ' o o d .
t o b e g r o u n d d o w n s e p a r a t e d ) as it was unsafe t o c b i p off
»» a n y M1U lit Q t n a d T r a t o r s e - lf y«u i « ^ , t t . ^ry w , m»u my t r i u m p h 'th E n g l i s h V'my c o m p a n i o n e c h o c d it w i t h a t h e most c o n c e n t r a t e d form.
I t i s especially r a l o a b l e
c o r n e r s for fear oT c r a c k i n g t b e stone. T b e cost of t b e
« # • f<*r y n a f i e l v e a j - a n d would »*j|, U»at wfc l|«ey ^
, /.
•• B r a v o f". T h e s c c o n d wolf r e c e i v e d m y second fire in for severely w o u n d e d s o l d i e r s a s a r e s t o r a t i v e ; w i t h a l i t - line s a n d used f o r t h i s p u r p o s e was o v e r 8 1 0 0 . a n d t k o
It is a
t W let;, w h i c h m o s t h a v e s h a t t e r e d t h e bone, for hc t!c wine it i m m e d i a t e ^ r e r i v w t h e i r s t r e n g t h t o t a l c h a r g e for t b e w o r k will b e 8 1 5 0 0 m o r e o r lew.
dropped behind instantly.
•• B r a v o f w a s a g a i n c r i e d p r e p a r a t i o n well k n o w n t o chemist.^ a n d i s h i g h l y n>1 a o p e r a t i o n , a n d T A B OO S h a r e s - a . usual I.
from the corner.
B i t t h e s a m e m o m e n t was t h e mo- com mended bv Lei b i g for p r o v i s i o n i n g s h i p s a n d forW h e n you doubt b e t w e e n t w o words, choose tbe
C . KORHIS Jf B W T H B B f t . .
tresses
in
o
r
d
e
r
t
o
p
r
e
s
e
r
v
e
t
b
e
h
e
a
l
t
h
of
t
h
e
c
r
e
w
o
r
garment of o u r g r e a t e s t p e r i l . M y p i s t o f fell i n t o t h e sledge,
Esebe*
where f r e s h m e u t s and vegetables a r e p l a i n e s t the commonest, the most idiomatic.
M M M y l T . l S t t . -. , v ! + T - . ' 1 - ' / . i
as, w i t h a s o d d e n jolt, o u r h b r a - s floundered u p t o t h e i r ri«on. in
.Mi) l a I!
— I ? >.|
— r r f
-jTt- bellies i o a d e e p d r i f t ; t h e n t h e y c a m e t o a d e a d s t o p , wanting. I t i s said t o b e n9cd in t h e F r e n c h a n d Aus- fine w o r d s 05 y o n w o u l d r o o g e ; love s i m p l e onea as
y o o would aa'tivc r o s e s o n y o n r chocks. L e t na m e UM
MORGAJI BATKS,,P
]
a n d t h e r e w a s a wotf a t e a c h s i d e of t h e s l e d g e , a t t e m p t - trian a r m i e s , w i t h t b e a p p r o v a l o f t h e m o s t e m i n e n t military s u r g e o a s .
I t s u s e a m o n g t b e w o u n d e d o r t b e b a t - p l a i n e s t a n d s h o r t e s t w o r d s t h a t will g r a m m a t i c a l l y a n d
Jr
ing t o g e t Ut
gracefully express our meaning.
•' M y b l u d g e o n still r e m a i d e d .
W i t h b o t h b a n d s T tle-field m i g h t b e the* m e a n s of s a v i n g m a n y v a l u a b l e
H « r o i d O M T O » T r a v « n * « C i t y , "Mioli.
: l
ti* FuBwtsnci) Evnstv FWPJ»Y, AT
T r a v e r s e City, G r a n d Traverse Countyt JBichlcttn
M O E G A N iBATES,,
•aasaasnsws seams sttcssaaK %bstss-
0 Kills of Job Priilisg Sail; jul EipdilMBflji tieciUd.
DKITED
mm us# OTOUT rnvmcttv, jicn.
ass*
tsassr^mmuM^-
j . a . mAitsDF.i.J-..
A t t o r n e y & Counsellor a t L a w ,
3WSSS^«'»C4aeSlHISXSBt
•^ttorntji aiti) Counsellor at Sato,
. T.J..KAMSX3KM. .
1
Comts tllor trt Ijito,
BOUNTY & PENSIONS.
T H A V E B S E C I T Y HOUSE,
WIX.Jjl.A-M
M O N I T O R 1
MONITOR AND UNION
ffivrs,
P A I . M
H A T S ,
NOTICE, ,
ORIS
!
M T L J b
N P T A 3 . ? T J C"BTJ3C.
f
that, during the roarof esch of tbe battles at the Fort New when be fired, be did not fire so as to kill anybody—
'?
i / The Case of Texas.
Dim. Birch Coolie, and Wood Lake, they were alone, that as to bis name, the Indians give that name" to any
dj [From the Louisville (Kcatuckj) Joorni!.)
who enters just into a boa« where many are kilLbok at the history of Texas. At her earnest cn- within bullet shot, roasting and eating coru and beef all person
M O R G A N H A T K 3 , K d l t o r a m l Proj>rie|t>r treatv, she was annexed to the United States at the ex- day. A pry-looking warrior wished the commission to led, or who toncbes one of the number (which is tht
believe that he felt so bad at tbe fort, to see the Indians truth) aud that be got tbe name in this way; the Indian^
nse
of
a
bloody
and
costly
war
with
Mexico
and
at
the
TB AVERSECITYl
way to New Ulm came to his house on the roail
irful risk of a civil war in our own country—a war fire upon the whites, that be immediately laid there and on tbeir
FRIDAY MORNING, DKCKMBKR 12, 1862.
the fort, end forced him to accompany them—th«>
wbieh, unfortunately, has since taken place. We did went to sleep, and did qpt wake until tbe battle was over. to
tbey came near a house they made bim enter thv
everything for Texas as a member of our Coufedracy Several of the worst characters, who had been it) a'l the when
house
first—that
he saw there an old man at breakfuM
_.j, " .
Proclamation.
battles,
after
they
bad
coHfe*ed
the
whole
thing,
wound
t
that a great and powerful Government could do for a
with bis family, whom l>e only struck on tbe shoulder
*
ITKAfT TO TAKl PLACE MWmVM.Y DEC. SOTH. State. We spent millions in defending her against the up by saying they were members of tbe church.
It was provvd^u one old cut-nosed Indian that, on the with the back of his hatchet then the Indians marched
Indians. Two years ago we were about to expend a
To ike prople of Ike State of Mitkigan :
and killed them—and from that time|they gave bim this
he haa shot 4 white man, and butchered with
I t is essential to tlie maintenance of the honfcr of the vast amount in constructing a national roil road throughHe entered upon many other details, and
ber whole length in the d.rection of the P . e i f . e - .
ft**""
W W *
ebilfanjMd another. appellation.
Bute by meeting its obligations to the Federal Govern- 0M
with such candor that those who beard him, instead c>r
work that would have poured boundless riches into her that.he had killed u l n e W
detaining
theirfeelingsof detestation became prepossessed
ment, that the qaota of the troop? required of 'Michigan lap and e>.lted her to the loltiest height or |.TOperitj.- ; Mao. of tho« engaged hi the Patv.lJ, mirder ha.-e
P.t»,lle started frotn Jo. Eeynolds p i ^ . in his favor. It is not at all improbable tbut he may b<*
under the coll for 600,000 men. should be speedily fur- But. with an ingmtitude that has few if.nparallelsin hu- been r.ed
man history, afa ehni* to go into this horrid rebellion. ]ju»l above I W \Vood. for >ew Dto, ™>
— » • os guilty as tbe worst It is rumored that there is other
nished. 1 hove felt great confidence that this (might
ing of the outbreak, with three young ladies and two evidence against him at New Ulm, but if there is nomdoDe without resort to draft, bnt it will be impossible at and now let her suffer the consequence of her course.
other men, and on the way they were attaked bv the imprisonment is severe enough io view of the Krest ser
Tbo bistery or Texas is indeed on illustration of tli<- Indians. Patville was killed near the wagon, and the vice be rendered the commission in their investigation.
the rate enlistments have been making for the feat mouth
and more. „ The number required of «ch 'town and sublimo of treachery, faithlessness ar.d ingratitude.— other men ot tho edge of the woods, while trying to He has been the means of briuging to iustice a laipnumber of tbe savages, in every instance but two. histt' ward in the State has been assigned apon the principle Wfr found her in beggary end want. She was without escape. One of tbe girls was wounded, ond oil three timonv being substantiated by tbe subsequent admissiontoken prisoners and brought to Red Wood. Here
of giving credit for nil recruits furnished since the first friends, without character, without credit. She came to the three were all abused by the Indians; one. a girl of the Indian himself.
her destitution and asked us to allopt her. We of fourteen, by seventeen of the wretches, and woundHis observations and memory were remarkable. Not
of July last. Substantial justice in this respect has been
done toward alL To be exact was impeftsibte, and to took pity on her.; took her out of tbe cold ; nursed and ed tbe young lady tq such an extont that she died tbe least thing had escaped his eye or ear. Such a fellow had a doubled barreled gun, another a single barrel
go back of the first of July was impracticable, both be- dressed her; introduced her into decent society ; taught that night Jo. Campbtil, a half-breed ventured to ed, another a long one. another a short one. another a
place her in a grave, but he was told if he did the
cause the ordef of the Secretary of War .did dot autho- her the manners of civilised life ; learned her to respect same for any other bodies which were lying exposed, laoce, and another nothing at all. One denied that b«
rise i t ; and bccause there was no reliqble .record by herself; defended her against her old masters ; 1 ven his iife would pay the forfeit The two other young was at tbe fort Godfrey saw bim there prepairing his
went
to
war
for
her
;
and
made
her—that
was
so
lately
ladies were reclaimed at' camp Release, and sent to sons for battle, and recollected that he painted the face
which such credit conld be made up with any chance of
friendless and outcast—an houored member of our their friends, after jguffering indignities worse tbau of one red and drew a streak of green over the pyct.—
11
faimcsR
\4'
'
.
i
death, and ot which humanity ^hoddere and sickens. Another denied that he made a certain statement to GodNotional
household.
It is, therefore, indispensable.that tho j so v«jral towns,
Others have been tried who belong to .a bond of frey, whicb he testified to. •• What," said Godfrey,
NOT was this all. Wo spent millions in constructing
and wards of cities, shoald furnish tho nutnfcer of reeight that separated themselvs from the msin body "don't you recollect you said it when you had
lighthouses
and
harbors.
We
kept
a
considerable
army
which attacked the fort in tho second battle, and went your band upon my wagon and your foot resting -pn the
cruits assigned to them, and I toko this occasion to assure the people that unless the men arfc finished by on her borders to protect her against tbe Indians. Wc towards St. Peter, burning the church, and the Swan wheel." To another, whom ho charged with aamittiug
mado it safe for emigrants to settle on her soil.
Lake House, and other buildiugs ond murdering and that he had killed a child by striking it with his spear
voluntary enlistment they will be taken l>y the draft.
plundering. They attacked one party ond killed nil over the head, and who denied i t said: "Don't you reFor the purpose of,still giving abundant opportunity treated her with all the foolish indulgence shown toward the men und theu one of them caught hold of a young member of showing me tbe spear was broken, nnd saying
a
spoilt
child.
to fill tho quota oTt& State by voluntary enlistment, regirl to take her as his property, when tbo mother re- you had broken it in striking the Child!" To another,
And what was her return t An attempt on tbe life sisted and endeavored to pull her away. The Indian^ who said he had a lame urm at New Ulm, and couldn't
cruiting will t*o continued as follows : -t - }
of
ber
benefactor
!
An
alliance
witMhe
enemies
of
her
theu shot the mother dead, and wounded the girl, who fire a gun, and who bad such a bad gun that he could
1st- RecruiJj wilrteVceived for Dew I remanents now
fell upon the ground, apparently lifeless- One Indian not havefiredit if ho desired, be replied: " You say you
forming in the State, and for all the old ' regiments now first, bdst and only friend. An endeavor to tear down thought she was dead, aud told her first captor ti could uot fire and had a bad gun. Why don't you "tell
in the Bold, Until, and including, tho 29|h dijy of Decem- the old mansion that had given her shelter.
raise her clothes, which he attempted to do. Modest; the court the trouble! I sow you go to take tho gun of
berate
conspiracy
to
overthrow
the
Government
whose
strong in death, revived the girl, and she attempted an Indian who was killed, and-'fire two abots; aba then
ber Mxlfi These must bo cnjistcd for the term of three
protection she hod sought ond upon whoso bonoties she to prevent it, bat as she did so, the other Indian yon borrowed mine, and shot with it; and then you made
years or during tho war. j
,
raised his tomahawk and dashed out her brains—u ~3 reload i t aud then you fired again."
2nd. From the l»t to th^l6tl> dnys of December next, had fed.
1 might enumerate numberless instances of this kind in
The fruits of her treachery are rapidly ripening. She blessed fate in comparison with that which otherwise which bis assumed recollection would cause hit truthfulvolunteer recruits will bo f&cived fo|- okl regiments
was designed for ber.
has
already
suffered
much
for
her
crimes
;
she
is
desAn old raan. shrivelled up to 9 mummy, one of the ness to be doubted, if he had not been fully substantiated.
-only, to tervefor nine month*, in pursuouof of the Act
tined to suffer more. The progress of civilization with- criers on the Indian camp was also tried, ond two It was a study to watch bim, as be sat in court (canning
» of Cougress.
1
the face of every man who came in, with tbe eye of a cat
boys testified against him.
3rd. Oh the 30th (ftt^af December 1 next, the draft in her borders was 'suddenly arrested. She became little
One of them a German, ond rcmarkobly intelligent about to spring.* He is a providence, specially designatWill commence, and proceed until the requisite number is speedily the prey of anarchy, violence and brutality.
for his years, picked him out from among many others ed as an instrument of justice.
Law and order becamc a mockery and o force. Justice ot
camp Release, and had him arrested, and dogged
obtained in all those^to^na and wards which shall then
and Equity were ruthlessjy trampled under foot A him until he was placed in jail, and when be was
Taxing Bank Note*.
b"s found delinquent.
From the Washington Republican.
forth to be tried, with the eye and fierceness of
Less than fourthousaud men are now required to fill reign of Terror" supplanted the mild sway of the led
Tbe idea of suppressing, by the imposition of practia hawk, aud as if he feared every instant that he
Federal
power.
Ruffians
and
bondidts—gamblers
and
ffici on tiro quota of the Stutc, and I carn^tlj hope that
cally
prohibitory
stamp unties, all paper money, except
would escape justice.
tfiey will bo found to come forward cheerfully and enlist cutthroat*—seized tbo reins of Government. Life ceasThese boys belonged to a large party, who came from ths t issued by the national authority, is being discussed
for tke war as ell our troops thus far have, done. And cd to be safe. Property became the prize of the strong- above Beaver Creek to within a few miles of tbe fort, by the press."03 the period for the meeting of Congress
est hand. All that was sacred ond all that was of good whom the Indians met there, aud told them it they would approaches.
1 dtaire this not so much became there is apything disIt will be opposed, of course, by the large and octive
go back with them from where they came from, and
creditable in/l^ drift, as because it is exceedingly desira- report were trampled under foot The halter and tbe give up their teams, they should not be harmed. When interest connected with tfie banks of issue. The city
Mo that aUtho troops from Miehignu jshojld stand OD stake became tho instruments of irresponsible power.
they got some distance from them they fired into them banks, as a general ruHs,have but few notes in circulaIt
is
proposed
to
put
an
end
to
this
barbarous
regency
and killed one man and a number of women, taking the tion, and rely for tboir profits mainly upon deposits.—
llur samefooGogin the army- Let the people of Michigan make one more loyal and vigorous i'ffort and the en —to save her from her own madness—to bring her back rentainder prisoners with the children. The old wi*etch But the country banks, which are numerous and Influto tho allcgiance from which she wandered, and substi- was made to stand up, looking cold und impassable, and eutird, although with small capitals, and oftentimes with
fire number required cau bo obtained, and tho high reas solid as a stODe, the boys likewise standing, placed op- no real capital may be expected to resist the expected
patation of tho Stnto for patriotism anfl promptness will tute law for anarchy. The work has been already nobly posite, gating at each other for a moment, when otje of chauge with great vehemence.
commenced—Galveston has been captured—Sabine Bay the hoys said: "lsaw that man shoot a man while be
It will not be an agreeable one to tbe Governments
he maintained.
.
has•••been brought withio oar possession—a Provisional was on bis knees at prayer," and the other boy said :
of nome States, which derive large revenues from taxAUSTIN BLAIR.
Governor has been appoined—an expedition is on foot saw that man shoot my mother."
ing the privilege of the circulation now eqfoyed by the
, . Dated JaeksotvNor. 29th. 1862.
banks.
This method of taxation has afforded nearly all
There
was
a
subject
for
a
painter.
The
beholders
which will, it is hopei speedily bring her within the
Secure Homestead p.
could scarcely keep their hands from the throat of the the public incoroc ol Massachusetts for many years past,
pale of tbe Union.
[Albany Eve. Journal.
end is an important item in tbe budgets of other State*.
Tho Homestead Low will go into effect i>n the first or
mammy.
THE TRIAL OF THE INDIANS.
Another wasrecognized^>y Mrs. Hunter as the Indian It will not t*j given np without reluctance.
next month. Every man can obtain W0 OCTOS of land for
The elements of resistance to tho proposed
new policv
of their Guilt—Their Negro Comrade wbo8hot her husband, and then took out bis knitfe and
r
12 paid down. There are several jhundred thousand Evidence
shorter
their Principal Witness Against Them.
offered to cut his throat in he presence, bat finally de. a^rrcs of choice farming lands in the Trnvcite City Land From the St. Paul Pioneer, 17th.
Governsisted, and carried her awot in captivity.
District, within a radius of twenty miles from Grand
CAMP SIBLEY, LOWKR AGENCY, N o v . 7, 1862.
The female sex wasrepresentedio the person of one ment, to reach afterfinancialrelief in whateTor direcTraverse Boy, subject to entry under thw low. The
Our ambulatory military campaign, which commenced squaw, who, it was charged, killed two children. Tbe only tion it may be found.
climato is beallhy and delightful, the soil rich and fertile, its session at Camp Release, for the trial of the •' mulatto, evidence against ber was camp rumor to that effect among Tbe relierto be obtained by taking to itself *i» sole
the Indians, so she wos discharged Her arrest had one power of issuing paper mooey, is large, and promptly
'he water pure, und tho timber of the best quality.— mixed bloods ond Indians," engaged in the Sionx raids, good effect, os she admitted she had taken some silver nvailable. If bsnk notes were taxed out ol existence.
has closed its labors and been relieved from duty.
Several thousand families can find a|| tho advantages
Four hundred and ninety-eight cases have been dispos- spoons across the river, and ninety dollars in gold, which $500,000,000 of Treasury notes might be circulated
here of health, soil, timber, climato «n(f wafer, that they ed of, 'so you con see tho calendar of the commission was she had turned over to on Indian, who, being qu'.'Stioned without injuty, and that large amount of tbe national
concerning it. admitted the fact, and turned tho more- debt might be carried, not merely without interest but
can by going to the far-west, with tho Additional and a formnble one.
with the positive gain of tbe annual lo& of notes by wear
At Camp Release, or Sibley, a tent served for a court over to the General.
more Important one of an easy access to jthe best marAll ages were represented, from boyish fifteen up to and tear, shipwrecks, conflagrations, and the varioua acrocm, but hero more comfortable accommodations were
I t ^ for their surplus products.
obtained in a log building, formerly occupied by a half old men scarcely able to walk, or speak; who were " fifty cidents by which circulating notes disappear. If this
The Land Office for this District is' at Traverse City, breed named La Batte, for unromantic kitchen purposes, years old." to use the language of one, " a long time ago, gain be computed also little as 0De-tenth of 000 per cent,
at tho head of Grand Traversa Bay. aud< in the very but henceforth to pass into history and bo immoralized. and then they 6topped counting." Two of these old gen- per annnm, it would amount to $500,000 upon 8500,were "otice brought io together, who were direct 1)00.000.
<
n' T :• %t
heart of a r i d and beautiful country^ The officers will But to return to the commission. The business hos tlemen
'lhree hundred millions are now authorized by law.—
opposites in physiognomy—the face of one running all to
freely and ehtCTCuIly Smpurt to thcee who arc desirous of boon dispatched with cele rity, as many os forty cases be- nose, which terminated sharply, giving him the pointed Two hundred millions more would only suoply the place
ing tried per day in some instances.
locating, all tho Information in their power, and every
Hie prisoners were brought in, chaincd together by expression, while that of the other was perfectly flat, of the banks notes which are now in circulatioo. And,
aud about two feet broad, and fully illustrated (which I io addition to this, as the war is now being pressed ip
facility they can ft actual settlers. Now is the time to
charges which were preferred by Gen. Sibley, read to always considered as a fable.) tbe fact that pereous being that " more vigorous style," for which tbe Democracy
swore Homes.
titem through tho interpreter, Antoine Frinier, and then, in existence who couldn't open or shut their eyes and have to long clamored, we shall soon increase the field
iHcrcase tho Price of Legal Advertisement*.
allsr being exhorted to tell the truth, and not equivocate, month at tbe same moment This specimen wos appar- for the circulation of Treasury notes quite ooe-half, by
When tho Legislature fixed the price of legal adver- each was asked as to the extent of bis participation in the ently asleep the whole time, with his lower jaw down, and tbe conquest of the rebel States.
To whatever extent it may be proved by experience
closed eyes wos his moral condition, he hod to be
tising, newspapers could be published at from oue half outrages, ond if necessary, witness* were cooled against os
if there was any doubt of his guilt, or as to punched up every two minutes, when the President of to bo expedient to circulate such notes, they constitute a
tp two-thirds the present cost of miuafictaring themi him. Then,
his being- a willing participant in the outrage^ he was al- the commission was interrogating him, as be|wished to form of national debt calculated to increnae'tbe strength
ood tho rates of advertising wore then considered ridi- lowed to call witnesses in nis favor Perbops this rr.oy look in his eyes, so that his rat-trap was kept in contin- of tbe national Government WbUe a large national
culously low. The United States has always paid • fifty soem. to those who were not on the ground, an unjusti- ual motion, eyes and mouth alternately opening and shut- stock debt may strengthen the British Government, it
would present in this country, a constant temptation and
per cent higher rates than those fixed' by law in this fibly summaiT mode of proceeding; but it ivas as lengthy ting with • jerk.
Another weazen-face, shaggy-haired, lank specimen of inducement to schemes of breaking the Union up.
Stale. The State of New York, sOrte years ago, raised au examination as necessity would permit, and ' whatever many winters, with green goggles, loekicg more like the
It is not so with a debt'existiog in tbe form ot Treanecessity," I should think that in at leost two-thirds of
the price to seventy-five cents per foljo for tho first in- the cases the prisoners admitted that they fired, but in devil than anything human; 1 should have run from him sury circulating notes, diffused everywhere, from tbe nasertion, and thirty-seven and u half cents for each sub- more instances, insist that it was o'ily two or three shots, in tbe night had be been a " good Indian" in times of ture of them, and interesting everybody, to the amooot
of
such notes, to uphold the power from which tbey depeace,
in
a
reasonoble
probability
that
he
was
satanio—
sequent one—$>cing 60 per cent higher than legal rates and that no one was killed—about as valid an excuse os
horns and a tail were all that were necessary to make the rive thwr value. Every man with a Treasury note in
here. Owing to the greatly enhanced price of every- oneof them offered, who possessed of on irresistible imhis pocket, bsa an inducement to be a patriot, and it is
pulse to accumulate property, that a horse which he took personification.
thing connected with the printing busiricss. there are was only o very little one: ond that a pair of oxen which
The prisoners were generally cold ond unimpassioned, much better to have that inducement on the right side,
few; if any, .papers in this State which ate paying cur- he captured was for hi* wife, who wnnted a pair. In re- and. strange to say. many averred that the shot from a than on the wroog side.
rent expenses. They must increase ,their rate of sub- gard to the third who did not odmit that theyfired,their long distance in the fights, made them cowards—on unSenator Chandler.
common,admission
for an Indian to make.
reasonsfornot doiDg so wens equallyreijmrkahleand asscription and advertising or die ; and we can see
Tbe result of our recent election has apparently fixed
But the greatest institution of the commission And the
good reason why legal advertisements should bo exempt sumed a different form every day. One day all the elder- observed of all observers, was the negro Godfrey.— the standing of Mr. Chandler, beyond any kind of quesly men, who were io tbe vigor of: manly strength, said
from tbe goneral appreciation." Wc;hope the Legisla- that their hair was too gray to go inlo battle; tbeyoong He was the first tried His reputation wos damning — tion: The Democrats and Soreheads, made the re-electure, which will convenc in January next, will tako this meu, aged from eighteen to twenty-five, insisted that they It was said that he had killed more than any Indian, ond tion of Mr. Chandler and Gov. Blair, tbe only test et tbe
late election, and theacople to whom tbey appealed, by.
subject into consideration, and deal justly and fairly with were too young, and their hearts too weak to face fire.— been the most brutal in atrocity among the brutal, and every art that a treacbSous heart could bring to the
the bravest and foremost in battle, and had acquired the
the Press. No public man ever lost anything by doing The next day would develop tho fact that great was the name of O ta-cle (ho that kills many.) on account 6f the aid of tbe demagogue, have signally rebuked tbetn.
number aud terrible the condition of those who were
No more active, honest and effective supporters of the
writhing it; agony, with tho bclly-acbc. on tho top of a great number of his victims.
These statements favored the ratural prejudices against Administration and Government, In their effort* to put
Wo throw out this suggestion with the hope that big hill. A small army avowed that tbcv had erect undown rebellion, can be fonnd in tbo country, than the
somo of our more favored and influential cotemporarics der a wonderfully capatioas stone (which nobody but his color, to o white heart and be would have been two gentlemen, upon whom the leading soreheads made
tbemrelvs ever saw,)ot the battle of the fort, and did not Ivnchod; when we canght him with the Indians, at camp such desperate and unscrupulous war. and as GOT. Blair
will tryat the subject elaborately.
emerge therefrom daring tbe fights; and » sufficiency for Release, had tbo soldiers been permitted to a c t as citi- bas bceD fully sustained at the polls, so we have 00 doubt
j—}
zens would have acted. When brought before the com
Secretary Chase has signified io ah indirect way. two small armies stoatly called upon the Great Spirit mission, he frankly admitted being ot the battle of New that Senator Chandler will receive, st tbe hands or the
and the boaveni ond the earth (pitting
next Legislature, the reward die for his/dirt ingulihed
that he win bo a candidate for U, & Sonator from (Wakan-tonka)
tbe latter emphatically with the hand.) to witness thst Ulm and tbe Fort, and firing, and also that be hod ac- and laborious serricra j* the cava pf We .country.
OJrto, In case that Ben Wade canpol possibly be 1 they were of the temperament so phlegmatic, a disposi- quired tbe name ofO-to-cIe by the 8ionx; but said be
[Marshall Statesman.
cWtKed
tion go unsocial, and an appc titc so xoracions nod greedy, was forced to go with the laiicas or he kiDefl, and that
br (Sranii Crabttsc
E
HHERIKVM SALE.
N A T I O N A L B O Us
NT
t vY I N S U R A N C E C O .
j c e n s u s returns ; a resume of o u r i n t e r n a l i m p r o v e m e n t s , I
STATS OF M t c m o * x ,
>
I full a n d r e l i a b l e s t a t e m e n t s c o n c e r n i n g t h e c o p p e r , i r o n I
C a p i t a l ) •IOO.OOO.
<;RANU TBAVITIO«« C W - S T T . y""
i a n d l u m b e r i n t e r e s t * of t h « S t a t e , A c
T b e u follows a
Y
VIRTUE
O
K ONE WRIT op EXECUTION tsscBr»
S
N
Y
D
E
R
.
W
.
j
J
L
L
I
A
M
S
4
C
O
.
^ O a . i » a T a j y « * * U«yjL» U U« UtkUl f«P«i
j c o n c i s e h i s t o r y of e a c h c o u n t y o f t h e S t a t e — a n invaluao a i o f and u n d e r th* ne»l of t i e C i r c u i t Court, (or «h»
(Organized
fry
f ' e r m r w i o * of tkt Authorities.)
| b l e c o m p i l a t i o n — t o o t h e r w i t h e n a l p h a b e t i c a l list of i
C u a a i y of G r a n d Traverse, a n d Slat* -of Michigan, to me 2i
na r r r i ' d and delivered against the goodnaod c h a t t e l s l a n d s aart
( t h e P o s t offices, n n d n n u m b e r of o t h e r v a l u a b l e fea0
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
t r v m e n u of II. R. Hate, 1 h a v e n e i z e ^ a n d levied n p o n all t i '
H e a - c u r e s . T h e n e x t in o r d e r i s a h i s t o r i c a l a n d t y p o g r a p h y
R n J a j d i m — W e ' W e nil in a f a i r * Ar t o p A t < I
lijjiit, t t t k and intereat of the said d e f e n d a n t In and t o t . . '
to! s k e t c h of e v e r y c i t y a n d village in t h e S t a t e , a c c o m • f H I S COMPAQ"? I ? ORGANIZED P P E C H U . T F O B * "
i n * real ei
"
y e a , 1f t h e ^ l 4 t e a p w a i h t o g of t f o Gospc-l" W l W e u s
1
TDK PBC^ECtfH>K OK KAMI MRS.
niud w i t h uu a l p h a b e t i c a l " list of professions, trades,
and »>.'
On the p a v m e n l t o i b i v C o m p a n y . o r a n y of iw a u t h o r u e d
.
in twent h e r e . R e * ; M r . CRUMB, of t h e C o n g r e g a t i o n a l C ' h n r c b .
t . " jn each.
T h i s d e p a r t m e n t would of itself be
tent*, of the «u(u of
in-.uf » certiQcateof i n . o r .
twenty-nine ( » ) , north of range ten (1'"
a y o u n g m a o of p l e a s i n g a n d p o p u l a r a d d r e s s , With r e - e n o u g h t o f o r m a v a l u a b l e a n d m e r i t o r i o u s w o r k , b u t
i o f F I V E west, n-bich 1 shall offer f o r Kale a t p o b l l c auction, or v e n d n f .
h e . l a n d i n g itrtolf to pay u, sTKh I«r*on th.
e v e n s e r e t h e l a b o r s or t h e i n d e f a t i g a b l e c o m p i l e r d o not
o
t
h
e
Naval
rvniiEii Do I . M M . In cam?.they an- drtiiiea
finement, e d u c a t i o n , b r a i n s a n d u n o s t e n t a t i o u f p'i*ty. U s
a* the l a * direct*, at the f r o n t door of the C o a r t K o o m in ti*c o m e t o a h a l t , f o r i t is s u c c e e d e d by a Cassi&ed Busir Military Service of the l&itwl S l a t " . p r i o r to iJeceroU-r village o f T r a v e r a e Cltv. that b e i n g the place for h o l d i n g the
settled h e r e w i t h a v i e w . o f e s t a b l i s h i n g - a C h w c l i n D < 1 n e s s D i r e o t o r y , c o n t a i n i n g a c o m p l e t e list of firms a n d 3 t r t . 1WU,, or dnrinn tiie w»,f. In the M oe proportion thin Circuit Court f o r t h e County of Grand Traverse, on S a t n r d v .
m a k i n g t h i s b i s " p e r m a n e n t reoidencc. I ? e will d o u b t l e s s i n d i v i d u a l s e n g a g e d in all t h e v a r i o u s t r a d e s a n d profes- Cumpanv will inaure any |».r«ou liable t > do MillUr.v doty. the 24th day of J a n u a r y . A. P.. 1«€S, at two o'clock in the
from SI0O to ^ 0 0 0 , tiut not
—
a f t e r n o o n of said dav.
e n c o u n t e r s o m e r o u g h p a s s a p r c , b u t p a t i e n c e , perse- s i o n s in t h e S t a t e , a r r a n g e d a l p h a b e t i c a l l y , b y post-offices.
c. T h l s C o t n p a a j »l»o iftsnre- those in the «erE. F . DAME. Sheriff
•t and privates.
wound* or death, d a r i n g
v e r a u c o a n d a " h o p e f u l t r u s t in P r o v i d e n c e . '• h a v e b e e n T h i s d e p a r t m e n t c o m p r i s e s o v e r o n e h u n d r e d p a g e s of
Sheriff"* office. Traverse City, Sep. IHth, IMS.
.
the present war. thoa enai^lng all p r u d e n t soldiera to provide
fioe type.
-(Printer'*fees MIS.)
f
known t o overcome greater obstacles than thof# which
t
h
'
i
r
families
against
wan».
in
caae
tbey
fall
>n
b
a
t
t
l
e
—
d
u
—
T h e w o r k , while i t will p r o v e i n v a l u a b l e as a b o o k o r
or
are
M
>
woundod
a»
to
be
diaabled
from
s
u
p
p
o
r
t
i
n
g
them.—
beset b i s pathway.
r e f e r e n c e Jo e v e r y h u s i n e f t man is i m p o r t a n t as a tadt
To the manly virtue- or bitivery and patriotism that called
R e v . M r . MCALLHTICK, of t h e * M e t h o d i s t i C h u r c h , m e c u m of t h e . r e s o u r c e s ,and m a t e r i a l w e a l t h of o u r the Mildier to the field, l.-t . iim add t h e c r o w n i n g excellcnea
S t a t e . I n t h i s r e g a r d it will s u p p l y a w a n t t h a t h a s of a prodent provision f o r his family, in case he n e v e r rep r e a c h e s h e r e a n J a t t h e O l d Mission q l t e r n f r t e f r .
BV
a» one t h a t |
_
e j a b e r t d with gratitude, an
been severely felL H e r e t o f o r e t h e r e h a v e been given in turn. then will he be r e n iicLbbertd
o £ to his God—hi* c o u n t r y — h i s | J A M E S
I C .
G X J T S T O I S .
•
T r a m BKASS K I L L E D . — T h r e e block l i i « * * e r c killt a n g i b l e s h a p e t o t h e reading p u b l i c only a few out- d t c h a r g v d ht* whole dol
*
.
e d in t h i s t o w n s h i p on T u e s d a y of last wcefc, b y A l l e n c r o p p i n g s o t t h e u u e q u a k d resources of M i c h i g a n ; we familv.
Our rated f o r Insurance tgain.it w o u n d s a n d deaui
A n d e r s o n , B e n j a m i n B r o w n a u d C y r o n u s M . P o t t e r . — b a v e n o w t h e w h o l e m i n e laid b a r e , in all its w o n d e r o u s follows, to wit :
. a g a i n s t wouads.
e x t e n t a n d i n c o m p o r a b l o richness.
f l o on a h u n d r e d . . . . . .
Tnin i s t b c l a r g e s t Hotel, with the best a c c o m m o d a t i o n t
T b e y w e r e a b o u t a mile a n d a h a l f f r o m t h e d w e l l i n g of
^
..
"
death.
[Detroit Advertiser & Tribune.
in the city ; the leading Daily a n d Weekly P a p e r * are t a k e "
Our certificates of insurance arc assignable—are intended here, and no p a i n s will be spared to m i k e guests c o m f o r t o b > .
J ^ X « < t e r a o n , b e t ^ j e n there and C r o o k e d , I w j ^ .
The
to be as«igned t o the family f o r their care, support and re- and eleven y e a r s ' residence here wil! enable me t o give relia
N
a
t
i
o
n
a
l
F
i
a
a
n
c
a
i
a
n
d
t
h
e
L
o
c
a
l
B
a
n
k
a
.
largest weighed a b o u t t w o h u n d r e d potind*—tho others
lief, in ease the events occur unon which they are payable.
ble i n f o r m a t i o n relative to the resources of the c o u n t r y .
F r o m t h e .Ch ic a g o Tribune.
As piauy la the service (ire w h e r e it would be impoas.blcw e r e a b o u t half g r o w n . T h e y w e r e c h o i c e c n t f i ; .
i l ly
J . K . C.
W e a s s u m e t h a t t h e financial n e e d of t h e G o v e r n - for them to provide for tli V ir b » H « U f "
'ft
QUARTERLY M R K T I K Q — t h » V l c a a > - T h o Firfet Q a a t c i
m e n t a t t h i s time, a d m i t t i n g , u s nil men m u s t , t h a t a p r e - father, or brother, or any individual feeling a u interest in
the family of the soldier, may insure thera against wonnds
ly M e e t i n g f o r T r a v e r s e C i t y will b o held nt tlte S c h o o l s e n t r e t u r n t o s p e c i e p a y f n e u t s is impossible, is t h o powd
e
a
t
h
.
What
e
a
a
m
o
r
t
a
l
*
H o u s e , o n S a t u r d a y and. S u n d a y n e x t
S e r v i c e r — e r t o issue e v i d e n c e s of d e b t nud p r o m i s e s t o p a y . w h i c h family of the soldier with
while t h e y will b e a r i n t e r e s t e n o u g h t o m a k e t h e m u o t against wound*, thu* at or
.
Saturday at 2 o'clo$|
ft*.
\ j_
The subscriber will give o n e Town l/ot free to each p e r s e n
u n o c c c p t a b l e a m o n g t h e p e o p l e ut l a r g e as a n invest- of poverty, in case their protector never returns. T h i s S a
who will make actual settlement, oV build t h e r e o n a F r a m r .
A SLAVE 8OLDIER.—The O b e r l i u N e w s j a y s l t h a l J a s . m e n t f o r t h e i r s u r p l u s c a p i t a l , will n o t e n t e r i n t o c i r c u - system ol substantial c h a t t y towards the deimndent families p r i c k , or Stone house, valued at not lesa t h a n $100, p a y i n g
of volunteers, that ha* t * f n commenced by our wealthy cltilation
a
s
m
o
n
e
y
a
n
d
swell
t
h
e
value
of
c
u
r
r
e
n
c
y
now
: J L Stone, a private i n j u j g a r t o n ' s Battery, o( Barm-tt's
t e n s , and will be continued by the worthier p o r t i o n s ol St for surveys, etc. Said lots are in the m o s t desirable part
uiloat, w h i c h t h e l a r g e p r i c e s s h o w is excessive.
T h e them. What can onr wealthy a n d patriotic citizen* do, that of Traverse City. This part of the t o w n lies at the head, Mi'l
• A r t i l l e r y R e g i m e n t , ^ h o dffcd in h o s p i t a l a t Nashvillo,
i n g e n u i t y of financiers will b e g r i e v o u s l y t a x e d t o devise
-ill c o further to increase c a l i s t i n e n u and a.«ist the Gov- between the two arm* of the Bay. a n d haa a f r o n t na each
T o n n . , o u t h e 2 5 t h p f O c t . , wui^ a •• w b i t o j slave."
l i e t h e form of d e b t t h a t will m e e t b o t h i n d i c a t i o n s a n d rerument, than tn say t o our hardy laboring m e n — " If you Bay. and or the best soil for G a r d e n i n g , etc. F o r p a r t i c u l a r s
please call at the Office of t h e •ubscriber, at
w a s b o r n a n d r a i s e d ;jrp s l a v e jn K e n t u c k y . -j T h i r t e e n lieve t h e n a t i o n a l e x c h e q u e r , w i t h o u t l a y i n g t h e g r o u n d will e n l i . t . 1 will insure yaur life until vou return, for 5100
—*500—Sl.OfO. for the b»nelit of your family.
EAST TRAVERSE CITY,
w
o
r
k
Car
t
h
o
r
u
i
n
of
t
h
e
business
p
e
o
p
l
e
.
W
bile
t
h
e
y
years ago he ran away from his master and cirnc north.
•.» of basis u p o h which t h i s Company Insure Is
G e o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
a r e t o w o r k n p o n t h e p r o b l e m t h u s p r e s e n t e d , w e w a r n founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the
B e i n g a m a s o n b y t r a d e , h e ttund w o r k a n d V h o m e in
J u n e I t t h i 1861.
.
t h e m t h a t n o p l a n w h i c h k e e p s o p t h e c o m p e t i t i o n b e - tality of wars for the last tJOO years, and leave* Hut a r e a
N. B. T h i s offer will be e x t e n d e d only 6 m o n t h s f r o m tti*
O b e r l i n . w h e r e h e leaves a
a n d five ' c h i l d r e n , w i t h a t w e e n t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e local b a n k s in 0 a busi- ble margin for profit for the Company, while it place* the
date,
W . B»
families of those insured bevond want and destitution from
little h o m e p a r t l y p a i d f o r d u r i n g t h e s t r u g g l i n g y e a r s of ness of m a k i n g p a p e r money, will h a v e a n y s a t i s f a c t o r y
July 4-31-6m
>
any of the vicissitudes of W nr.
h i s f r e e d o m . H e w a s so w h i t e / t h a t few s u s p e c t e d h i m t o result ; o n d t h u t t o h o p e f o r t h e h a r m o n i o u s w o r k i n g of
T h i . i a t l i e o n l y Insurance Company in the C n i t e d S u t e *
imy s c h e m e t h a t m a y b e devised, t h e r e m o v a l of b o o k t h a t was organized especially for tbi* p u r p o s e .
b e of A f r i c a n ; d e s ^ t , a n d ^ P t h o a p w h o k n e w t h e f a c t
c u r r e n c y o u t of t h e c h a n n e l s of t r a d o , b y s o m e safe a n d
A d v a n t a g e s of Insnring in this C o m p a n y .
ASH
s c a r c e l y a n y w e r e awaije t h a t h e h a d b e e n n s l a v e .
g r a d u a l b u t s t r i n g e n t a n d effective proccss, is a necessity
Igj. jn th,* c a w ol citizens i n s u r i n g ium« for their famit h a t c a n n o t bo o v e r l o o k e d . A s w e h a v e said many t i m e s lies, if d r a f t e d : If no draft takes
N p r Y O I I K . — T h e official m a j o r i t y f o r Sjeytoour i a t h o
before* t h e r e is n o w a y in w h i c h t h i s removal can b e ef- t h e i n s u r e d resides, half tho li
B t a t o i q 1 0 . 5 7 1 . T h e a v e r a g e P e m o c r a j i c ^ n n j o r i j y i s e - . 4 ~ 2 « : i k A n ( IVA M I . A H A P i l u t i f r t i - f l F i t m p n l n n d n n ftpfected w i t h o u t t h e a c t i o n of t h o g o v e r n m e n t , a n d no
2nd.—Our Insurance In regard to tho d r a f t c o v e r s n o t only
1<M>45.
T h e g r e a t e s t n u m b e r of v o t e s c a s t was f o r t i o n p r o m i s e s s o m u c h a s a law of C o n g r e s s heavily t a x the present draft, but all f u t u r e oneI L l « 1/OCATE LANDS. P A T T A X E S , - B U Y A K P
u desired, a c c o r d i n g
3d.—dur Company insure for any
I j c u t . G o v . , f o o t i n g u p 6 0 4 , 1 3 0 . b e i n g 7 1 , 0 3 6 less t h a n ing b o n k issues. S n c h a law m u s t be t h e c o r n e r s t o n e
sell on Commission, a n d now haa for aale a* a g e n t . «
of
a
n
y
legislation
t
h
a
t
m
a
y
b
e
h
a
d
in
t
h
i
s
m
a
t
t
e
r
.
W
e
to
circumstances of Insured.
•aluable improved F a r m s , oa a o d a e a r the shore* of Geaod
t h e v o t e f o r P r e s i d e n t in 1 8 6 0 . of w h i c h the fteptiblicaoa
men w h o have invested their capital In thi* rravcrse Bay. Also, 1.000 a c r e s pf w e l U e l e e t e d wild land*
tnke early occasion, t h e n , t o w a r n t h e C o n g r e s s m e n of
Company have been we)l known to the business c o m m u n i t y in dim.-rent p a r t s of t h o county of Grand Traverse,, sal r>f
loee 6 5 , 5 4 2 a n d t b e d e m o c r a t s
ft.484.
f 'jt
•
t h o W e s t , t h a t , w h i l e i t will be a d m i t t e d in W a s h i n g for the past fourteen yetirs.
. . . . .
,
. .
which is offered at reasonable prices. Also, b a v l a g baen In
6th.—The capital of tliis Company will not be employed in the business of L o c a t i n g public l a n d s l o thla C o u n t y f o r t h '
T h e f a s h i o n a b l e t h i e v e s of P h i l a d e l p h i a r e c e n t l y h o l d ton, a n d p e r h a p s b y t h e ; b a n k s themselves, t h a t the
g o v e r n m e n t only s h o u l d m a n u f a c t u r e p a p e r w h i c h h a s BankiiiL? or Real Estate oporations. but will remain in U. 8 . last 10 years, and being well »cqnalnted with a l l h e cholc*
a ball, f o r t h o b e n e f i t of one o f t h e i r n u m b e r w h o h a d g o t
t h o l e g a l a t t r i b u t e s of money, no t a x - l a w t o u c h i n g bank G o v e r n m e n t Stocks, ami will onlv IM c o n v e r t e d so fast us lands In the county he is prepared to assist new comere la seinto
te^tb>JE^timoro.
' T h i e v i n g is n o w ; . r e d a c e d t o c u r r e n c y c a n b e passed w i t h o u t a l o n g a n d a r d n o u s m B V ^ necessary to meet the liabilities of the Company to lecting f r o m Govertinicnt L a n d s in t h i s or the s d j o l o i a g Co.
O F F I C E at hi* r t s l d e o e e . E a s t T r a v e r s e City.
the insured. ^
a a t i & r i t t , ' a n d d o n e o n . t t t e a ^ s o c i a ' j o i p r i n c i p l e , in s t r u g g l e a g a i n s t t h e a g g r e g a t e b a n k i n g interest of all the
bound to take risks t
Oth.—The Company
July 4-31-Om
Atlantic Slates. Bank currency, bank credits and bank | t h 4 n J I f t ( | 0 0 0 i
i o u r l a r g e cities.
i n f l u e n c e s a r e so i d e n t i f i e d w i t h t h e business, social eco-1 ^ s p o n s i b l e agents wanted in every c o u n t y in the United
B o t h H o u s e s of t h e N e w S o u t h W a l e s L e g i s l a t u r e n o m y a n d p o l i t i c s of Ihe E a s t , t h a t a revolution so com- s u n * . They uiu.t give reference* o f B i r l c t
•tug i TRAVERSE CITjga t F:
B
GUNTONHOUSE
coon mim m WELL MEED BEDS \
5 0 0 T o w n L o t s O f f e r e d Fre**
t o -A-cfrual S e t t l e r s .
R E A L E S T A T E
GENERAL LAND AGENCY.
G E O . AV. B E Y A N T
W
R E A L
. h a r e passed *
bill
granting,
five
thousaad
l a n d f o r e x p e r i m e n t s in c o t t o n g r o w i n g .
Association a r e selecting f a r m s nnd
«rttioot> - " r t S - V
acres
The
of
Cotton
comeeucing
op-
-
T h e U . S . signal c o r p s in V i r g i n i a b a s e
jirovided with t b o ^ o o s t
just been
powerful spy gnoses
known
t o t h e s e r v i c e , a n d c a n d i s c e r n t h e m o v e m e n t s of forc e s n o a r l y fifty m i l e s a w a y .
The Platte Co. (Mo.)
Conservator,
f e s h , h a s t h e u a m e of C . L .
notoriously
Vallandtgham
sc-
d i sp la y e d
for the; P n * i d c ® c r ia:. 1864, l e m w M w r tjjqv h e (Vall a u d i g f i ' m t ) i s tBC lfiader oT the" g r e a t cOpservatitiS a n d
triumphant Democracy.
:•
T h e official v o t e of O r e g o n , f o r G o v e r n o r s h o w s 3 , 5 8 9
m a j o r i t y f o r G i b b s , O n i o n w a r c a n d i d a t e ; a n d for Congressman, 3,177 majority for McBride,
Ho
received
3,632.
6,800
Union
War.—
rotes; W a i t , - S e c a h Democrat
T h e Legislator® contained 9 Uniotj majority on
j o i n t ballot, a s shown by t h e election
of B e n j a m i n
H a r d i n g . t o . t b e U . S. S e n a t e in p l a c e p f
S e c e s s i o n i s t . H e n S t a r k . ' *"
F.
the ^notorious
w-' - l . - ' i - | J i
E U T h a y e r , of M a s s a c h u s e t t s , is
again
pushing
his
scheme for colonising F l o r i d a with a loyal whito population.
G e n . H u n t e r , w h o f a v o r s t h e plan, mys
t h a t a few
t h o u s a n d s t a l w a r t e m i g r a n t s c a n t a k e f c a r e of F l o r i d a , '
a n d will n e e d n o m i l i t a r y p r o t e c t i o n .
A s q n a d of D a k o t a h C a v a l r y , n u m b e r i n g ten, u n d e r
C a p t . M i n e r , h a d a s k i r m i s h w i t h t h i r t y I n d i a n s , on t h e
1st o f . N o v . , b e t w e e n J ^ n c t o n a n d L e o n i k F a l l C i t y . —
O d e Indian C b i n f w * ^ k ? I l e d and several wounded.
cavalry came out unharmed.
g r e a t dismay.
Oor
T h e s a v a g e s s c a t t e r e d in
GENERAL LAND OFFICE.
W
1424 Acres of Choice Lands;
1850 Acres, also Choice and well Selected.
FURS! FURS! FURS!
GTJjSTTOlt"" H O T J S E .
BRYANT & STRATTOrTS
CJffi OF M5AI
M B R C A N T I J ^ H
t
T iT •E S G - E 3 S .
P
B r a n c l i L o c a t e d a t jDetroit.
Traverse City. Doc, 8, JH6J.
A few brasB s i x p o u n d m i s s i o n a r i e s h a v e
been sent t o the T ' a m t O r y for the donierslon
E S T A T E
p r o t e i n i c a s t o c « t til t h i s a n o n . " « « c r e d i t s ao.l I
tta Comptw.
AND
t h e s e influences o p b y t h o roots, a n d s u b a l i t n t e l o r t b e m i
N« y ' J, lV express., a sum of money sufficient to cover
t h e c u r r e n c y of t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e c r e d i t s a n d a c - : ( b e c o m p a u v ' s per c c n u g e on the amount desired t o be lntnnl c a p i t a l i t h a s t o loan, c a n n o t b e c a r r i e d t b r o n g l i , „ u r c d : and'if it be a nitizen desiring to iusnre a s u m for his
w i t h o u t a p r o l o n g e d a n d p e r h a p s a b i t t e r contenst. B a t j family, in c « e he is
*7^'^^e'naili'e age
A L B E R T W. BACON,
the power t o inaugurate and accomplish that revolution
» a d Company of the Regiment to which he belongs. Oie
i s i n d i c a t e d if n o t p r o v e d b y t h e n a t i o n a l e x i p e n c y . ! I i ( i m l > < . r
I L L LOCATE LANDS. P A Y T A X E S , BOY O B 8 1 U l h ( l R o ^ m e j n and s t n t e it is f r o m , at«o the resih e n c e x e t r u s t t h o t n o W e s t e r n man will s h r i n k f r o m j , , u n c c o ( h i s ( a m j i . , if it be wife, b r o t h e r , l a t h e r , o r friends
on Commission—and now offer* f o r sale,
r
t h o f a t h f u l p e r f o r m a n c e oT t h o d u t y n p o n h i m . T h e sal- j „f ,he (umlly tlmt desire t » vikcouiui
" f T {?
soldier, t h e *y w
l l l civ<
- - h i -.
... i
T.
v o l i o c of t h e c o u n t r y is of g r e a t e r m o m e n t t h a n t h e i r - • »absent
w n t M.ldier.
-*111
m
g«.
Company. Regiment and State to which <t belong*. The apJtKD WILL SXLI. AS AOENr
s u r a n e e of p r o f i t t o A c b a n k s ; t h e p r o g r e s s of t h e wa
plicant for the policy r " ! -I"" f i v e the n w i n residence
d e p e n d s u p o n t h e s o u n d n e s s of t h e n a t i o n a l finances
of t h e wife or the person for whose benefit the in*urance is
a n d aS t h e chief o b s t a c l e in t h e w a y of t h e w o r k i n g of procured.
Appb'
to.
°
r
address.
a n y financial p l a n i s t h e p r e s e n c e of o l a r g o volume of
B NY PER, WILLIAMS A Co..
Also—13 L o t s In the Village o f E l k R » p i 4 o «
bank currency, the banks must give way.
Since they
6» Wall-street. JT. Y
WITB o a w i m o u r DWELLING*.
fify
•
w e r e in v e n te d , t h e y h a v e b e e n a f r i g h t l u l e n r s e u p o n t h e
•Money may be sent in registered letters, or by >
The above m e n t i o n e d L a n d s are in all part* of t h ^ C o u n t y ,
business p r o s p e r i t y of the people.
If t h e y a r e squeezed press, at our risk.
«
•'
Elk
U k e . Whitewater. O m e n i a nnd T r a v e r s e ; arfc a m o n g t h '
t o d e a t h in t b e p r e a s u r e c r e a t e d b y t h e war. t h e g r e a t
N o t i c e * of t h e P r e s s .
earliest and best selection* w i t h r e f e r e n c e t o s o u , water, surrevolution,
n o t h a t t e r w h a t i t s p o l i t i c a l r e s u l t , will not
face and m a r k e t : embrace F a m i n g Lands, Village 8Ite« a n d
This is a sound C o m p a n y . "
.
b e whofly w i t b o n t g o o d Trait. S o let o u r W e s t e r n memThe insurance of i« certain ran for one'* family, is a pru- Water Powers, with or without i m p r o v e m e n t s , in q u a n t i t i e s
dence t h a t ever)- man should adopt In these critical t i m o ^ "
b e r s o f C o n g r e s s p r e p a r e for w h a t i s b e f o r e t h e m .
to suit p u r c h a s e r s , and at p r i c e i m a k i n g It an o b j e c t , i n pre- The Ulan that would bo respected and loved by his family f e r e n c e t o b u y i n g back f r o m s e t t l e m e n t s .
»-lj
in life, a n d gratefully r e m e m b t r t d in death, will provide his
T r a v e r s e C i t y . M a y 1. 1801.
MARRIED,
A t N o r t h p o r t Nov. 16tK by the Rev. a Steele. W i L o e a F. ^ ' u i ^ o n ^ m o s f p r u d e n t citizen* and soldiers are Insuring
STESI^SOU of the efflciaUng Clergyman, a n d Mis* MARTIU a c o m p e t e n c e to their families in c . s c tbey are drafted. —
i . Votes, both of Northport.
t is the only safeguard in these critiAlso, by tho name, D f c . «th, a t Northport, UEOROB b. killed, ie the s
H o o r u o , Eso., a n d Miss WBALTUV A. McCt.ELi.Asn, both of
the f o r m e r place.
NOTICE,
UNITED S T A T E S L A N D O F F I C E .
TnAVEitscCiTv, N o v . « , 1*;J.
A T E N T S FOR F.N'TUIKS MADE BETWEEN T H E
Stli dav of May. lWiJ. and the !3th day of May. 1862. for
Kettlcment'oad Cultivation, n n d e r the Graduation A c t o
August 4,1H.'.4" have been received at this Office, and th<
--.L P
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
purchaser* are hereby notified to come forward immediate^
d u r i n g the. flir F
and make the required pit>"f o f ' • Settlement and C ulllva C o r n o r o f W o o d w a r d Ac J e l f t r s o n A v e n u e * .
H e h a s a q u a n t i t y of
tion." and secure their respective 1'aients. because If soi.
I N D I A N T A N N E D D E E R
SKINS,
proof iH not Hied within a l i m i t - d time, the P a t e n t s will be
H
I
S
INSTITUTION
FORMS O N E O F E I G H T C O L L E G E S
^ . . . . « — I • . . 1... i lencral
l . m p n i ! lI ^J illlld' ! Office,
Ofli<
i a b k T 1 located in the following c i t l e * D e t r o i t . New Y o r t .
W h i c h he will sell f o r CASH or e x c h a n g e for Kur
i
i* of I A
N. B. T r a p p e r * wiU best consult their own interest 1
in-|>erformanc
Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago A S t l
ion contempt: •d by the Graduation
calling o n h i m before selling their Fans.
A person h o l d i n g a *chol*r*bfp can a t t e n d e i t h e r a t b i t
n . H. RTONE,
of t h e
TAX PAYERS
r T H E TOWN OF TUAVEICsE. WILL F I N D T H E ROLL
ready at t h e Treasurer's C f i c e . U o o d r i c h ' s Building.
] A. W. BACON, TOWN TKKASI'UEB
t r a v e r s e City. D e c . 11* 1SG2.
F
t e d - s k i n s t o t h e p a t h of p e a c e .
W e tako. g r e a t p l e a s u r e in a n u o Q n c i n t t h a t C l a r k ' s
M y j r t n S t a t e l 0 a « ; t t e c r b a r left t h t j h a n d s of t h e binde#, a n d V o o w l f e a d y f o r d e l i v e r y t o
fcbaeribers.
A
h a s t y i n s p e c t i o n of i t s c o n t o n U ofTords t h e most conv i n c i n g p r o o f t h a t t h e w o r k will m o r e t h a n realite tb<
h i g h e x p e c t a t i o n s t h a t h a v e b e e n formed of i t
T h e p u b l i s h e r , a s o u r readers a r e a w a r e , i s C h a r l e s F .
C l a r k , E s q . . t h e c o m p i l e r of o u r e x c e l l e n t C i t y D i r e c t o rv,.and. w i t h respect-to t h e Q a i e t t e e r i t (a dilficoK t o d *
t e r a i n e w h e t h e r h e h a s e a r n e d t h e g r e a t e r d e g r e e of c r e dit for t h e liberality and e n t e r p r i r e w h i e h have dictated
t h e g e n e r a l p l a n of t h o (5*prk, o r t h c s j a t c r a a t i c a n d a d m i r a b l e m a u n e r in w h i c h i t h a s b e e n c a r r i e d f o r w a r d t o
completion. In either point it h a s never been surpasse d , a n d r a r e l y if e v e r e q u a l l e d b y a n y o t h e r w o r k of t h e
kind.
T b p m e c h a n i c a l e x e c u t i o n o f t h e G o x r t l c e r is o w x c c p t i o n a b l e . h - e ^ n t a i n s o v e r 6 0 0 octtrtro : p a g e s , e x e r a s i v c
of b a d n e s s c a r d s , ond is c m b e l l s h e d ^rith a l a r g e n u m b e r
of s p i r i t e d a n d b e a u t i f u l e n g r a v i n g s of n l s c e s of p u b l i c
i n t c r e t t In v a r i o u s citiea a n d vilages of t h o S t a t e , chiefly
edaeakiooal and benevolent I n s t i t u t i o n . ^ I U p r i a c t p a l
c o h t e n t s c o m p r i s e a w6H-wHtlen ; h i s t o r y of t h e S t a l e ; a
c a r e f u l l y p r e p a r e d a n d v a ^ l M a C o mp i l a t i o n frost ^tbQi
r
NOTICE
l H E R E B Y GIVEN, T H A T T H E UNDERSIGNED FREEh o l d e n ^ o f t h e Township of Milton a u d Megectce, will make
application to t h e Board ol Supervifont of Grand Traverse
County, a t their n e x t meeting, lo alter t h e boundary line of
the t o w n s h i p of Milton, a s follows :
C o m m e n c i n g at the . poiot w h e r e the present l y r t h line
of said township intersect* T o r c h Lake, t o run east on *aid
lino until It i n t e r a e c u range line, between r a n g e s seven and
eight, thence south on said r a n g e lino until it i n t e r s e c t s section line r u n n i n g e a s t a n d west between section t h i r t e e n and
twenty-four in township twenty-eight, north of range n u m b e r
e i g h t west, t h e n c e west o n said line to the shore of Round
Lake, thence north on s h o r e of said Lake to join present
bouudry line a t m o u t h of T o r c h River.
Milton, Nov, aiith.1663.
L U C I C S A. T H A Y E R .
ALEX. CAMPBELL
J A M E S P. BRAND.
DAVID H. PARKS,
SIMEON ANDREW,
C H A R L E S HOLLY,
MARY JOHNSON.
GEORGE LUKE.
D. Eh CUSHMAN.
CHANCEY HALL.
ROBERT COM1TON.
J O H N M. GODUARD.
FRESH FISH.
n e SUBSCRIBER H A S COMMENCED H I S WINTER
Season of Fiahing. a n * ia prepared t o f u r n i s h tho citiz e n s of Traverse City with f r e s h o r salt fish e v e r y d a y .
' . - m i r a n o H W?7n
!i
G. E. BROWN.
Teav«Me City, Deo. 4; 1 W Z - . - tn '•.
T
NOTICE.
LANI) O F F I C E AT T R A V E R S E CITY. MICH. )
O c T o a m , 1. 1862.
S
H E R E A S CONGRESS AT I T S L A T E SESSION
passed an Art which was approved ou t h e liith of
July. 1862. d e s i r i n g - t h a t all that portion of the present
•Chebovgun District,'' in the S t s t c of Michigan, lying West
of Lake Michigan, a n d South of the line d e r i d i n g Township*
forty-one and forty-two North, i n c l u d i n g St. Martin's a n d
the a d j a c e n t Islands near the entrance to - Big Bav D* N o r ,
now f o r m i n g a p a r t of tho present Cheboygan District, and
subject t o sale at Tjravrn«e City, in said State be. and the t a m e
I* hereby a t t a c h e d to t h e " Lake S u p e r i o r D t a t H c O and the
Land* therein be subject to aale and e n t r y at the ei.e of the
Land Office for said District, a n d whereas, s e c t i o n 2 of tbi
a c t declare* t h a t it shall not t a k e effect u n t i l three m o n J
a f t e r the date of its approval.
.
Notice is hereby given that on and after th* 15th _ d ^ ol
October, instant, np f u r t h e r cntrie* or locations will
at this office of any lands lying within the limit* ab<
cribed, and that all the 1,'lais. Tract Books, apjrii cations,
land* in
in that
d e c l » r j j | o n * . ai.d p a p e r s nertaininR U. land*
t h a i portion
the I.and Office at
« r t h ? ^ r e * e n t District, will be sent
U a r q a c t u . Lake
. B l T [ K
W
j>th>n.
Terms.
Tuition payable in advance by p u r c h a s e of s c h o l a r s h i p .
10 f o r full t e r m . Samo course for iAdic*, $25.
S t u d e n t s to e n t e r at a n y time. Average time t o c o m p l e t e
the course, three m o n t h s .
K knowledge of t h e o r d i n a r y English b r a n c h e s i s sufficient
o r e S a r a t o t y t o e n t e r i n g n p o n the course Of *tndv. :
J . IL GOLDSMITH. Resident P r l o c l p f l at D e t r o i t .
J . F. SPALDING, A s s i s t a n t .
'
,
The mo?t t h o r o d g h , p r a c t i c a l a n d t r u l y p o p u l a r College#
i America. Over six t h o u s a n d s t u d e n t * h s v e e n t e r e d s i n c e
t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h 5s the best e v i d e n c e of t h e i r
f a v o r w i t h t h e public.
For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t College Rooms, or
• e n d for a new C a t a l o g u e of 80 pages. F o r a p e c l m e n s . o l
enmanship, inclose l e t t e r stsmp.
Address.
BRYANT A BTRATTON. at e i t h e r of t h e a b o v e Cities.
( C u t t h i s out f o r f o t j H t f ^ e f e r e n e e . )
13.ly
1 6 0 0 A c r e s of L a n d !
*
T h e subscriber offers f o r «ale 1600 a c r e s of c h o i c e a n d
j e l l - s e l e c t e d lands, h a v i n g b r e n mostlv located at t h e 0r*1
s e t t l e m e n t of the c o u n t r y . *nd many of said l a n t o are borderi n g on the Grand T r a v e r s e Bay, a n d in tract* of froza &O taj
J00 acre* - aome have small improvement* on. ( s n d well
located for w o o d i n g purpose*, with a good g r o s h b of b e a e n
and maple timber.) Also. 300 Town lota, s o d 3« F s r k L o U
REUBEN GOODRICH, Re«eiver. in E a s t Traverse City, offered for sale a t reawrnobte price*G * o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
july 4-31 -Cm
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS
* 1 T I L L BUY A SAW MILL. SEVEN ACRES OF I . A N D
W
Mid a small bona., within half a mile of Little TraMORGAN BATES,
verse Bay. A splendid chance for a n o t h e r mill by the san
d a m . Npply soon for thi* c h a n c e w i l l n o ^ ^ ° ^ " B T E R
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,.
Bear River, E r i m e t Co.. Nov. I t , 18«1.
M-Jw.
Traverse City, HIeh.
Tke Ac*.
Hannah, Lay & Co's Column.
H h W we may Do,
contractors, if such there were, availed, themselves to any
extent of tbe building material closest at band. We noNo human being can be isolated and self-sustained/—
ticed several guns, most of which were partially embed- The strongest aud bravest aud most •hopeful have yet,
ded in the earth or rubble forming tbe ceuter of the wall; acknowledged or unacknowledged, to themselves, moone bore an inscription recording tuat it was cast In tbe incuts of biingrj?«oul-yc«rn.tig* for companionship and
reign of Won Lee, the last Emperor but one of the Nliog sympathy, i or tue want of this, what wrecks of hudynasty; in must therefore have been upward of260 years manity lie strewn about us.
Youth wu-ted for the
old. aod was evidently fashioned after un English model. mocking semblance of friendship. Adrift at the merev
A great many of tbe lowers are in a decayed state, and of chance, for the grasp of a true firm hand, and a kindthe interiors of son** of them, having been cleared of de- ly loving heart, to couiisel. It is aSbctmg to see bow
brit were converted into gardens and graineries.
, < strong is this yearning, so fatal to IU possessor, if not
The Chinese speak,of tbe wonderful structure a* tbe guided rigbllv. wieh a life anchor if safely placed.—
10.01)0 k*e old wall, and appear to consider it extremely •• Friendless f" What «tragedy may be hidden in that
T H E LARGEST STOCK OF
natural that strangers desire to visit it; the sight amply one little word. Non& to labor for ; none to weep or
repays one for tbe troubles and difficulties of the journey; smile with ; nobe to care whether we lose or win in
Last and nearest step U
and when the fact i* realized that for thousands of miles life's struggle. A kind word or a smile, coming to such
this extraordinary product of masonic art pursues its ser- an onr unexpectedly at some such crisis of life, how of" C h a l k Your Bobbins." j
pentine course, all other so-called wonders of the world ten has it been the plauk to tbe drowning man, lacking
Every one knows tbat old Sir Robert Peel, father of (iide by comparison with this lasting memento of a
whii/h he mart rarely have perished. These, surely, we
the late Prime Minister of Enplnml, and .grandfather of pot's folly and tbe involuntary labor of a submissive peo- mo^ bestow as we pass those less favored than ourselves,
'tije present iiftroiket, mode hip woney by tbe oottoa spto- ple.
[Once a W eek.
O E I S T E H A 3 L .
whose souls are waiting for our sympathetic recogniID ifc'o (*rfy part of km farcer -h»» ibasiness was
tion.
not remarkably extonsive. but sudjtenly he j made a treHow to Detect Altered Treasury Notes.
me^dous start and digtnnce<l all hisrijals- l l f gre<
An Aaeedote of Pope.
The followingdirections for detecting altered Treasury
meusely rich, as we all'know, but we do not ail know the
Oueday as Pope was engaged in translating the
Notes may be valuable to those who are lucky enough to ' Iliad,' became to a passage which be nor his assistant
lacky nccidont to ,*rhich be was indebted jfor his
get any of them, as couterfeit fifties and hundreds, raised could interpret. A stranger wbo stood by, iu bis bummom wunlth.
In tha early .davs of the cotton (pinning machinery, a from oues and two* are becoming quite common:—
ble garb, very modestly suggested that, as he bad some
V The ones and boudred* are so totally dissimilar
deal of (rouble used to be caused by filaments of
little acquaintance wim Greek, perhaps he could asBist
Cdtton adhereing to the bobbing, or tape?, Which then tbe main features, that whatever skill or ingenuity n
them. •- Try it P said Pope, with the air of a boy who
formed portions of looms. These OlametUs accumulating, be brought to bear by figures tbat indicate the valui of is encouraging a monkey to eat red pepper.
•• T
aoon clo^gi-d the wheels and other parts of the machin- the note, no change is likely in the most skillful artistic an error in thn print.'" said tbe stranger, looking at tbe
rtiona. The portrait ofSecrutary Cbasc, in an oval text " Read Us ir there was no interrogation point at
ery anil rendered in necessary tbat they fljonld be clear.roe in the extreme left hand upper corner, of tbe one eud or tbe liue, and you have tbe meaning at once."—
ed, which involved frequent stoppages and much loss.
The groat desideratum was to Jud out itome plan of dollar note, is its distinct, exclusive characteristic. In Pope's assistant improved upou this hint, aud rendered
preventing this clogging by the cotton, an<) £j>r Robert, the one hundred dollar note, occupying a like position tbe passage without difficulty. Pope was chargined f
or Mr.Ponl, as he yttfShijii. spent vast sojns in experi- on tbe npper left corner, tbe prominemt device is the fig- ho could never endure to be 6urpa«ed in anything.—
ments. He employed some of the ablest, machinists in nro of an eagle, without spread wings. These distinc- Turuiug to the stranger, be said, in a sarcastic tone,
tbe kingdom—among- them Jymea Watt—.who suggested tions «nn easily be remembered. Between the twos and " W ill you please tell roe what an interrogation ia f
various corrections, but in spite of all they could do. the fifties there are points of resemblance, especially 03 the " Why. sir,"said the stranger, scanning the ill-shaped
inconvenience remained—the potion would adhere to the portrait of the first Secretary of the Treasury. Alexander Poet, •• it is a little crooked, coctemptible tbhig that
Hamilton, is common to both denominations, aud and is asks questions."
bobbins, and the evil Bppearad to bo insurmountable.
. Of course these delays seriously effected ! thf wages of tbe only prominent pictorial device .upon either. A
E V E R BROUGHT TO TRAVERSE CPTT,
the operajives. who, on Saturday's generally camoshort in glance at the position of this portrait upon the two dolT h e r Bar t
lar
note shows tbat tbe oval frame of the picture rests opproportion to the stoppages during the previous days.—
Wbo are " they?" Who are tbe cowled Monks, the
It was noliced however, that Ane man always drew his pn the extreme lower edge of the note, tbe main title, hooded Friars, who glide with shrouded races in tbe profull pay—his work was ulwa/s accomplished—»-in fact bis "The United States." being above the picture : whereas session t»r life, muttering iu an uuknowu tongue, words or
loom never had to stopovfiile every other iu the factory in the fifty the portrait is placed in the upper part of the strange import? Wbo are theyf The midnight assaswas idle. Mr. Peel was Wormed of this, and knew there note, nearly at the top. while the words of the main title sins or reputations, who lurk in tbo by-ways or society,
CONSISTING OF
ranst.bo a secret somewbpre. ,It was important that it are separated by it. Tbe word "United" is npon the with tongues sharpened by invention, and envenomed by
left, and ' States" upon the right of the portrait. The malice; to draw the blood oftunooeoco, and, byena-like,
Amid'bo discovered if-possible.
'
The man was watched, but all to no purpose, his difference iu the backs of the twos and fiitles is so marked to banquet on the dead? Wbo are tbey? They are a
workmen trfod.to "pump" him, bnt tber ^ouMu't; »t thit observation of that of tbe two, with its two concen- multitude no man can number—black stolid, familiar of
tric rings and its two broad band of geometric engrar- the inqnistion of slander, searching for victims in efery
lwtv34r. Peel sent for the man irtto bis prirate office.
He jtfii a rough Lancashire man—unahje to read or ing, would be readily remembered as an exclusive figure, city, town and village, wherever humanity throbs, or the
write—a little better inwed than a mere animal. He as totally unlike that of the fifty or any other note issued ashes or mortality rest. Give me the bold brigand, who
aqfered tbe pawnee" palling bis forelock, and shuffl- by the government.
thunders ulong the highways with flashing weapons, that
ing on the groawl with his great clumsy wioodco shots.
cut tht sunbeams as well as the shades. Give me the
"•"'Dlck. Buid'Mr. Peel, "Ferguson, the'overlooker,
l l o w the Turka Smoke.
pirate who uururls the black flag and shows the plunk And more toy heretofore Icept by them; ail
tnUs moyour bobbfns are always clean—ia tbat so?"
which your doomed feet must tread; but save me from
From tbe N. Y. Journal of Commerce.
" E o s M.agtjr 't be."
Tbe Turks undoubtly understand bow to smuke better the They-sayers or society, whose knives are bidden in a
••Well, Dick, how do you manage it—have yon any than any other nation. They do not seem to be harmed velvet sheaib. whose bridge of death is woven in flowers,
objection to let roe knowf"
by it, since thev live to healthy old age in the constant and wbo spread with invisible poison, even tbe spotless
V" Why, Master Pill, 't be a soart o' sac ret loike, ye use of tho weea ; but whether harmed or not. they evi- whiteness of tbe winding sheet.
aee. and If ol told, *t others'd know's moch 4 o'»" repli- dently excel all other people in tbe luxury. We have aled Dick with a cunning grin.
AxoTiiKa WABKIXO ABOUT REBRL IBOX-CLADB.—A
ready remarked that the Turk uses a clean clay pipe.—
"Of course, Diijk, 1*11 give you somethiag if you'll He also u.»es a long wooden stem. This is tho important London correspondent of the Boston Commercial
taQjoe—and if you mako all tbe looms in the factory work characteristic of the chibouk, and the theory of the thing Bulletin writes : " It is well you are just completing a
a* smoothly as yours."
T :
fleet
of '• Monitors " You are likely to need them be- And before the great advance in mo»t
ia this : All woody fibres in buruing are decomposed
"Ev'ry one'n them. Master Pill."
giving off quantities of water, or of oxygen and hydro- fore long. Workmen are engaged uight aud du£ on tbe
".\yelC what shall I give "youf Name your price, gen, which compose water. This water passes off in Mersey, on the Clyde, and elsewhere, in building some
Dick, arid let me have voar secret."
.
steam or vapor, having fn solution tbe nicotine and other twenty iron-clads. which are to see service in American
kind* of Goods, to make room for
Dick grinned, scratched and shook his great bead, and component parts of the tobacco. What is commonly waters. Thev are intended to convey vessels into South•hnffled for a few minnutea, wbilo Mr. peel anxiously called the '• oil " in a pipe is ninety-nine buudredtb purls
ports. This I kuow to be a fact. My information is
awaited bis reply. The cotton lord thought he would probdirect
from
those
in
confidence
with
tbe
promoters.
I
water. It cannot but be evident that this hot water or
which, they are compelled to build
kbftr ask a hundred ponuds or so. which ho would most
steam, passing as it does directly from the fire to the can see only ono way or preventing a good oeul or miswillingly have given him. Presently Dick said:—
mouth when one smokes a short pipe or a cigar, is un- chief. Every port for which they are designed ought to
" Well, Master Pill, I'll tell 'ee all atx-ut jt, ir yon'll comfortable, if not unwholesome. A long wooden ftem.
the power of tbe American Government before
're me—a quart o'beor a day as long'as I'm iu the three to five feet in length, with a large bore, is there- these ngly monsters can cross tbe Atlantic. Then you
ills—you'll save tbat ten."
fore advantageous in this respect, that jt permits the might welcome them as effective aids iu future operaMr. Peel rather thought he should, au<j quickly agreo- smoke to rest in the tube some time before it is taken tions. To disarm suspicion, it is popularly given out
«J to the terms.
into the mouth. It deposits its steam, and a large part tbat this iion fleet is being built for the Chinese Gov" T o n shall havo it, Dick, and a half gallon every Sun- of the nicotine, in the wooden tube, and the smoker takes ernment : bnt I need hardly tell you tbnt Mr. Mason and
day Ihtoibe bargain."
into bis lips a dry smoke. The Turks clean these stems bis friends form one ot tbe chief contracting parties."
••Well, then," said Dick, first looking cautiouly around daily with strong coffee. They prefer tbe wood of tbe
A PI.ACK rou EVERYTHING.—Iu attaching postage
tO»e* that no one was near—" this it W (tod putting jessamine of tbe wild cherry to all olhers, although tbey
b&lipe close to Mr. Peel's ear, be whispered: "Cbalk make, pipe stems or every'wood. Indeed it is not uo- stamps to letters, correspondents should bs enrefal to put
them in tbe upper right hand corner or t|ie envelope,
ypnr bobbins!"
. ».
W H I C H WILL BB
common for a luxurious Tnrk to send out for the branch
"That indeed was a great aecret. Dick bad been in^tbe of a lnrgu rose bush, have bis Bervant bore the stem with leaving a margin ol tbe sixteenth part of an inch above
and also on tbe right of the stamp. Carelessness in this
habit of fartively chalking bis bobbins, which simple contbe ever ready gi mblet and string, ond then band the particular results In qvnch embarrassment in the process
trivance bad effectually prevented the adherence of the pipe to his guest bloomiug with fragrant roses. Jessacotton. As the bobbins were white tha chalking had mine and cherry stems cost iu tbe Turkish bazaars from orbtamping. especially in large post officies, while it is
fonnd thut even this comparatively -trifling matter prove®
eacaped detection.
one to ten and even fifteen dollarseacb.
It is on the
Mr. Peel w u a sagacious man and saw through the af- stem and tbe mouthpiece that the expense is wasted — the most formable obstacle in adpting machinery tt> postFll_L_ED FUL.L. O F
marking and conceiting—the want of uniformity In tbe
fair at a glance. Ho at once patented the invention—
Tbe ombcr mouthpiece is In itself costly—choice amber, precise locality of thci postage stamp, preventing the rebad "chalking''machinery contrived, and soon took the
milky and delicate in color, being worth %lmost its
tad in the cotton spinning department. j This was the weight in gold in Oriental countries ; and the mouth- quired oespatch even in an otherwise successful machine.
foundation of bis princely fortune It is bat right to add piece is ornamented with jewels, according to the wealth Above all thiugs. don't put your stamps on tbe back of
the letter, which is sometimes <l<fre, as, in the harry of
that ^0 pensioned off Dick handsomely.
of tho proprietor. Thus, a mouthpiecc worth teu or mailing, tbe evidence or prepayment is liable to be overtwenty thousand dollars may be frequently seen, while looked, and the letter "held for postage," and poSBibly
The Great Wall of China.
the
bowl
of
the
pipe
is
worth
but
a
tenth
of
a
ctnt
For a short distance on either side Of the Lo-wan Pass
perform a trip to the .postal cemetery at Washington.—
tbe wall is comtrncted of brick with rubble^in the cenIn addressing letters..leaving ample space at the top of
Take Cnro ot tho Feet.
ter; but further uway it ia conposed almost wholly of
the envelope to allow'room for tbe post-mark, without
stone; iu fact, whatever material w « closest at hand
Of all parts of tbe body," says Dr. Robertson, "there interfering with the superscription which is often renderwpold appear to bare been mado nso of. Thus, as at is not ono which onght to be so carefully attended to as ed illegible by unavoidably stamping over it in whole or
Ae weU a* the two building* already octhe spots wo visited, granite abounded in groat profusion, tbe feet." Every person knows from experience that in part
[Holbrook's United States MaiL
the construction of the wall it was made tbe r prin- colds and manv other diseases which proceed from colds,
cfpal ingredient, and for miles the wall consists of large, ore attributable to cold feet. Tbe feet are at sncb a disMORTGAGE S A L E .
shapeless masses of granite, smoothed ouly on the outside. tance from " the wheel at the cistcrn " of the system,
cupied by ue; and will be
W e obaerved only one tower built only > of stone—they that tbe circulation of the blood may be very easily
EFAULT HAVDJO BEEN MADE IN THE CONDIbeing with this exception, composed of brick, with foun- checked there. Yet, for all this, and although every
tiun ot a certain mortgage executed by Henry Warburthen of the Township of Tia»f7*e, Coouty or Grand
dations 6f hown etoue. The higtb of th? wall from the person of common sense should be aware of the truth of
top of tbe parapet is about seventeen feet ten inches at which we bavd stated, there is no part of the human
most psrt% though occasionally, where ithe parapet is body so much trifled with as the feet. The yonng and ing date the Fifth day of November, in the year of Oar Lord
highest, it measured eighteen feet six itxjhes: its breadth would be genteel footed, cramp their toes ami feet into Oac Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-one, and recorded
if thirteen feet, and tbe higth of tbe parapet five feet thin-eolcd, bone-pinchiug bonis and shoes, in order to on the Fifth day of November, 186), at i o'clock, P.
la
four Inches. The towers are thirty*one feet three inches display ueat foet, in the fashionable sen* of the term.— the office of tbe Register of Deeds ofOrand Traverse County,
In I.Sber 1 of Mortgages, at pages 308 and 309. on which there
high, and twenty-eight feet one inch brotyi. . The parapet There is one great evil, against which every person la
claimed to be due at the date of this notice, by the terms
ia both crenelated and loop-holed, and tha towers are should bo on their gnord, and it is one which is not of- aod conditions thereof, the snm of sixty-six dollars ; and no
ptafeed for the discharge of some projectile. From any ten guarded against—we mean the changing of warm unit or proceedldg atlaw having been 'instituted to recover
elevated site the scenery will repay one for tho trouble of for cold shoes or boots. A change is often made from any part of the debt secured by aat<, mortgage ; Notice is
UOtntj clear streams are seen meandering down the poss- thick to thin soled shoes, without reflecting upon the hereby given, that by virtue o»-a pefrer of sale contained in
mortgage, and the statute in such case made and proet, whilst on erery side, and loomiug far m the distance, consequences which might ensue. In cold weather said
vided, the premises described In said mortgage, or so much a# present prices in Eastern market* wih
•re a toccession of brown hilltops, with sfnall patches boots and shoes of good thick leather, both in soles and thereof as may be necesaary to aatisfy the amount due on said
«o|y under ctilthralion. Droves of pack mtfles are seen uppers, should be worn by aJL Water-tights are not
irtgage. wd the coats, intercut and expenses of sale, toMing and retiming, tho former unladen; and. the latter good if they are air-tights also ; India rubber over- gether wUft'an Attorney's fee of Twenty-flve<lollar*,ipeei8ed
admUyfor
-Scfagiog a small kind of brushwood, which [tbe borders shoes should never be worn except in wet splashy wea- in said mortgage, will be sold at pabllc vendue, to tbe blgb'
t bidder, at the front door Of the School House in Traverse
i*n> instead of tbe millet stick in nse oo the plain, whilst ther, and then not very long at once. It is hurtful to v.ty,
County of Grand Traverse aod State of Michigan,—that
wild abundance are scattered Innumerable ash, poplar. the feet to wear any covering that is air-tight over being the place for holding the Circuit Court for the Comity
them, and for'this reason India rubber should be worn In which toe premises to be sold are situated—on 8aturday,
Qflkhoots branch oat from tbe wall in pcqnional plac- as seldom as possible. No part of the body should be the Seventh day of February, 1863. at ten o'clock in the foree t ' For their construction it is difficult) in every case to allowed to have a covering that entirely obstructs the noon. Said premises are described as follows: All that
piece or parcel of land situated lying and being in
•sign amason; tbe UtUetown dt Lo-won Eu is complete- pa«ago or carbonic acid gas from the poraa of the skin certain
the County of Grand Traverse and State of Michigan, and
ly encircled by one, and on opposite sides a double wall °otward, and fbe moderated passage or air inward to the described as the West |iair#r8oBlh Bast quarter of Section
windsnpward with tteppriipoa in nearty parallel lines. skin. Life ran be destroyed in a very __
short time by e»- Five (5) Town TwentTrseven(I7) North ol Bangs Eleven (11)
1
. i_ -i—i ,L— **-"
*
"
Good warm Wc3t,containiBg Eighty acres acrea according to the Ualud
States anrvey the reot
are conservaMOBOAN BATES, Mortgagee.
finned oar sannlqi that ip.tb£ fRctiQOO' the wall, the tors of health, and consequently human bap
bappuscn.
Dated Traverse City, November T, I K 1
47-lSw. O c t o b e r 1, 1 8 6 S .
Infancy I * bloating spring,
Violet strewn and blossoming,
April's wiubine, April's nUn,
April ne'er to come again.
. Boyhood I suu-kiss'd snmmer boar*,
fragrant with a thosand flowers,
Hmiiinz 'neath a tearless sky.
,
Cbaslng life's bright butterfly.
Manhood 1 in atumnal soil.
Rich iu russet golden fruit.
God stamped, noble, tender, true.
Harvest of preceediug two.
NOW RECEIVING,
MERCHANDISE,
K
BY FAB,
EVERYTHING,
Bought for Cash,
6
A N O T H E R STORE,
D
•
SOLD AS L.OW
R.EAT>Y P A Y .
HANNAH, LAY & 00.
CRAVEK8E
VOX,. I V .
CITY.
M I C H . F R I D A Y } D E C E M B E R 12, 1862.
N O . 52-
Longfellow's New Poem.
I n i i w d : t h i g h , and h r o o j r b t it d o w n w i t h t h e d e s p e r a t e . HTOS. T h e c x h o o s t i o n a n d w n s e o ' intolerable rtlir^'
The followinft line poem hv Profciwor Lonef«l!»w appears | f o r c e of a man . t f n i r t h a l v ^ t r e m i t y u p o n t b o head of t h e m i c h t b e in a m e a s u r e r e m o v e d b y a s i n g l e d r a u g h t t f o f
in the December uumlier of the Atlantic. It fc the first pul>- wolf on m y cSde.
H e ' t u m b l e d o v e r on his b a c k , a n d j a c a n t e e n filled w i t h tire n e b s o u p r o a n l t i a g f r o m t h e #'llabed by hliu ainee Hie ra.l a c r i d e n t which l)r<iCRht MICU !
h a v e b e e n c o m p l e t e l y , lution of a half nonce in u p i n t of w a t e r . A bnif ouaci
w t J afterward' fi^nd ' o
m o u r n i n c to hi- o u s e . —
i ama^b'-d. A s t s t o p p e d tt> r e g a i n m y pistof, I w a s as- • repnjK-nt« t h e w h o l e a m o u n t of n a f r i r o e n t in a p o u n d
THE CUMBERLAND.
| tooished to
my c o m p a n i o n coolly t h r u s t one of his ' f r e s h b-^-f
T h e m e t h o d of p r e p a r a t i o n is v e r y w m p h
At a n c h o r in H a m p t o n Hnads we lay.
j arm* into t h e wolf s m o n t h , a n d a< coolly, w i t h t h e di". I a n d i s t h u s describe d b y I ) r . N i c h o l s :
a n i r o r . XKD r n o i n i r r o * .
On bourd of the Cumberland slonp-of-trir:
d h a n d , d r a w i n g t h e knife, w i t h a d e e p a n d Abort |
•• T h e w h o l e p r o c e w consists in t a h i n p l e a n ' b e e t ft*"
And at timet f r o m the fortress acroas tbo km
TJfiitJUB. •
•(
•
i
c
u
t
.
a
c
r
o
s
s
hid
tbrn-iL
A
p
e
c
u
l
i
a
r
c
r
y
a
m
o
n
g
t
h
e
h
o
r
a
e
s
;
of
b
o
n
e
n
n
d
fat,
c h o p p i n g it fine a s w h e n used a s s a o s t
The alarum of <1. u m s ewent past
OB« DrilM >n« "«»r f<o«* P " « ? « » • p»7»w- ln»«n«HI> IB
Or a-bugle-blast
j a r r t s t f d uty utteutioiL l^owkins r u u u d , I saw a n o t h e r . g e s o r minoe m e a t , a n d m i x i n g it w i t h iL« o w n w e i g h t
f r o m die camp 'in- shore.
I wo'f actually fajteueii on the off horse- b y the n e c k . T b e - cold w a t e r .
It is t h e n slowly L e a l ' d t o boiling, nnfl » n » « « . £ • » • « « • ' ' • ! « * ! . r < w i j
d r i v e r was b e t w e e n m e a n S I be wolf,
f i e cried
GiVo ' lowed t o b o i l b r i s k l y for a m o m e n t or two. w h e n it i
Then far away to the Sooth appose
. . H l - a ' b . Uw: flflr Will per folio of III" wn,e».tank* flf«4ln*rtlo».»IHl
A little IVntbero; snow-white smoke.
me the pfatid V I did so. find t b e p o o r b o r s e w a s f r e e . — j s t r a i n e d t h r o u g h a c o t i o n c l o t h t o s e p a r a t e t h e c o a p n l a
»w«»«T-8»«iwM»fotnMh«»!JMail0i>l. F-'"> IrnrrroniiU y w 1 , Hicn"
And n e knew thnt th- iron xblp of o u r fooa
S*> atan w e r e w e ; for t h e o t b t r wolf r a n ofl'. followed by j e d a l b u m e n a n d Cbriu.
1'be e v a p o r a t i o n t o d r y n o s a of
T,
" l i t . 30 p«r
-ork-.-t»*Srr,k«
K i t steadily rtrcriBR it» rnura' <
the one woUi t h e b r o k e u leg. T b e wolf last s h o t «•«! • tb«- s o l u t i o n m u s t be c o n d u c t e d a t a low t e m p e r a t u r e b '
t u m b l i n g a m o n g lb.- snow. T h e d r i v e r b a n d e d me t h e > a w a t e r b a t h or i s l c a m h e a t T h e p o w d e r is reafflly
Of our ribs of oak.
pistol t o p u t r i g h t a n d b e g g e d a n o t h e r s h o t at t h e s o l u b i e in w a t e r , a n d nearly e i g h t jK-r c e n t in a l c o h o l —
Down upoa.'w huatilv runs.
I t s d e j r t w of !mliibility in a l c o h o l is a test of i t s genuitxb r u t e . T h i s finished t h e e n g a g e m e n t .
Silent and sallen. the floating f o r t :
uess of t h e e x t r a c t . If a l e w q u a n t i t y t h a n 7 5 o r 8 0 p e r
i can n o w tell bow I (e|t. I c o u l d s c a r c e l y realize o
Then conn » a pn3" of smoke from bcr (run*.
And leap* the terrible death.
cent is soluble, it should be r e g a r d e d a s ' s p u r i o u s o r i »
g r e a t d e l i v e r a n c e . T b e 4r>ver s e c u r e d t b o c a r c a s e s
W i t h f l e i y breath.
perfectly prepared "
the sledge, nnd w h e n w e r e a c h e d t h e s t a t i o n 1 was coi
Hexidtei.
l-'rora each open poru
W h e n p r o p e r l y d r i e d i t will k e e p for m o n t h s . —
pletely e x h a u s t e d f r o m t h e r e a c t i o n of t h e s t r o n g e x Receiver. Wc a r e not idle, but send her »tralght
citement.
My friend ol t o e t w e n t y s t o n e c h u c k l e d m u c h E n o u g h can r>e s t o r e d in an o r d f n a r y w a t d b foh t o S0«Defiance hack in a full broadside I
(IBAM* TRAT&R8E COUNTY OJ'FICBP*.
s o l d i e r a week. A n o r d i n a r y p o r c e l a i n lined k e t
at his own t r i c k a p o n t b e wolf be bad killed. I n s t e a d of t
A s bail ritlioundH from a roof ol slate,
tie
p u t t i n g his a r m i n t o t h e a n i m a l ' s open m o u t h , as 1 s u p - 1 h o l d i n g a gallon ia sufficient for t h e p r e p a r a t i o n of UK
lb-bound* our heavier bail
posed, be h a d stuffed i n t a i t t h e loose s l e e v e s of bis g r e a t 1e x t r a c t . T o d r y t h e solution p u t t h e k e t t l e i n t o a larOf the m o n s t e r ' s bide.
s h e e p s k i n coat, t h e r e b y g e t t i n g p l e n t y of t i m e t o c u t t h e g| e r vessel c o n t a i n i n g hot water. " W i t h b u t little t r o p b k
on t h e p a r t of t h e i r f r i e n d s almost e v e r y soldier m i g h t he
C o u n t y Clerk
.
monster's t h r o a t
His otfn arm was untouched.
"
" S t r i k e y o n r Has!" the rebel cries.
I S( K
O .uNn' B
R e g i s t e r o l l ) « c i l > . . ... .T. IlIU
iK
" «W• T" W I P K i ,"
p r o v i d e d w i t h s o m e of t h i s v a l u a b l e n u t r i m e n t
In his a r r o g a n t old plantation strain.
tbe p o o r horse's neck and s h o u l d e r w e r e much torn.
p£S». A U p r n o r .
C; II.
^U^prt.
" N « v e r ! " o u r gallant Morris rapHes;
A l t e r c o n s u m i n g on e n o r m o u s q u a n t i t y of t e a a n d p a r t j
Circuit Court Com. C. II. IIOLI>r.N.
- Is is better to s i n k t h a n to y i e l d ! "
provisions, v l e f t t b e s t a t i o n , a n d w i t h o u t m e e t - 1
Liberality in Baalneaa.
Coroners
- • - P E R R ^ H A N N A H , T r * . City.
And
the
whole
air
pooled
1
G l i O . N . S M I T H , .Nor>l>port.
ing m o r e a d v e n t u r e s , e x c e p t several d i g g i n g s o u t . a r r i v i s n o g r e a t e r mistake, s a p a c o t e m p o r a r j . t h a t
With the cheers of o u t men.
e d at J a r o s l a v a t e i g h t 0 clock, h a v i n g a c c o m p l i s h e d j R
hdsim a „ c a B make, t h a n t o b e m e a n In h i s
Then, like a kraken huge a n d black.
a b o u t t h i r t y miles in t h i r t e e n ' h o a r s .
Next morning we In e £ &
A l w a y s t a k i n g t h e half cent, and n e v e r retornine
She crushed oor ribn In her iron g r a s p !
found ourselves p o p u l a r c h a r a c t e r s in t h o t o w n .
T h e I a W | l l f o r ( h o d 0 n . , r 8 be h a s m a d e a n d is m a k i n g .
Soeh
Down went tbe Cumberland all a wreck,
d r i v e r ' * t o u p u e had n o t been idle. M y r e v o l v e r u n d e r - , a p o l i c v i s v c r y m u c i , like t h e f a r m e r ' s , w h o sows t h r e *
"With a sudilea s h u d d e r of death.
went many an e x a m i n a t i o n . T b e g o v e r n m e n t or local re-1 J ) e c j . s off%ed w h e r e h e o u g h t t o h a v e s o w n fire, n t d its a
TRA.V?J»eM^Jrt»V. fAnd the c a n n o u ' s breath
F o r h e r dyitig gasp.
H a r d for a d e a d wolf is t h r e e roubles, w h i c h we claimed recompense
recompense ffoorr ttbbee leanness
leanness ol
of bis
bis soul
son! only
only gge t s ten
^ GRAND TRAVERSE C0TJNTY, JflCH.
Sod received for t h r e e . S o t h e wolves, i u s t e a d of killing he m i g h t h a v e got fifteen b u s h e l s of g r a i n .
N e x t morn, a s the aun rose over the bay.
BBFKBEN'to:
r '•«
a
s , p a i d n u r travelling e x p e n s e s . T b e f o u r t h a n i m a l I
Still floated our flag at the mainmast bead.
E v e r y b o d y h a s h e a r d "of t h e p r o v e r b of " p e n n y wis*
Lord, how beautiful w a s the day !
Caused t o be s k i n n e d , f o r p r e s e r v a t i 1, a s a r e m e m b r a n c e and p o u n d foolish." A l i b e r a l e x p e n d i t u r e in t h e w a y ,
UlKln. Ch. J. R«P'- O- M ! n O T \M; U , a J"*'V,i^ u ,! t GL.T«l
Every waft of air
of the g r e a t e s t p e r i l 1 w a s e v e r in.
ol business i s a l w a y s s u r e t o b e a c a p i t a l i n v e s t m e n t —
Was a whispered prayvr,
— Jailftb Taroar,
~ IU' " " [Mo**?"1 Kal»- " * " M « *;"TMmiuin. nmpw H t m
T h e r e a r e p e o p l e in t b e world w h o a r e s h o r t - s i g h t e d
Or a d i r g e for tho.deait
,
.
.
.
e n o u g h t o b e l i e v e t h a t t h e i r i n t e r e s t can b e b e s t p r c I w ^
Ho I brave hearts t h a t went dowb In t h e seas!
I t h a s long b e e n n o t o n o u s t h a t w h e n t h e D e m o c r a t s n ) 0 t c £ b v
a n t j d i n g i n g t o all t h e y c a n g e t s n d
Ye are at peace in the i r o a U e d stream.
fccUl possession of C o n g r e w t i o t r e e b t a t e c o u l d get a d n e v c r | e { t i f 1 R V c e n t slip t h r o u g h t h e i r fingers.
H o t brave land ! with heart* like these,
B i t t e d into t h . j U n i o n unless it c a m e w i t h a D e m o c r a t i c
^ #
^
found-other
things.bethj
u wj|, ^
Thy flag, t h a t I s rout In twain.
orgai.i7J.tion, or w a s p a i r e d off with a b l a v e S t a t e . W tth .
e q u t d — t h a t h e w h o is t b e most l i b e r a l is m o s t . «nc
Shall b e one a g a i n ,
And w i t h o u t a seam ! 1
t h e p r o s p e c t o f a D e m o c r a t i c m a j o n t y a g a i n in the c c ^ i u b u s i n c s ^
Of c o u r s e wc d o n o t m e a n i t t o b e
T
V> ,f0 .. ;
' Ajm
7
H
o
u
s
e
.
„
*
m
i
«
t
look
a
b
o
u
t
u
s
a
n
d
p
r
o
l
e
c
l
d
i
e
i
n
t
e
r
e
s
t
s
.
„
d
t
h
a
t
a
ou>n
should
b
e
p
r
o
d
i
x
o
.
in
111.
expeodiIlin r
SOLICITOR IN CHANCER-K, j
Adventure w i t h tbe Wolves i n Rnsnia.
ofllie N o r l h « h i l e » e t , » ™ i b o p o m r .
lores : but that h e s b o u l d show t o hiscostomere. I f h e I,
W O T A B Y P U B L I C k C 9 N V E V A N C E R,
A w r i t e r in Alt the Year Round g i v e s tbe foifowi&g
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b e i t i g on t h e Missouri yivor, a d j a c e u t t o t h e S t a t e s of q u e n t l y h e s e n d s o u t no c i r c u l a r s , d i s t r i b u t e s n o bauri•' S C - . > •
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l o w a . Minnesota a n d M issouri, of c o u r s e m a s t i n c r e a s e bills, publishes no ndveru.-cincnts : b u t s ta d o w n croakI d i d so, a n d I s a w t b e wolves, w h o h a d j o i n e d e a c h f a s t e r t h a n a n y o t h e r t e r r i t o r y e x c e p t C o l o r a d o .
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d e l i b e r a t e . O u r h o r w e w e r e g o i n g a t t h e i r u t m o s t should be passed p r o v i d i n g for t h e admission of t h e tor- j u ; i ( w h , . « . he m i g h t e x p e c t "to c o m e — s h o r t , whilo hi?
, i h e d r i v e r S t a n d i n g u n a n d o s i u g lash a n d v o i c e r i t o r y a s a S t a t e when i t s p o p u l a t i o n shall r e a c h 4 0 , 0 0 0 n e i g h b o r , following in a d i f f e r e n t t h i c k , d o i n g all t h a t i s
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h i s m i g h t , t o u r g o tliom on t o t b e s t a t i o n , t h e n T h e n t h e people of the T e r r i t o r y could Uike a c e n s u s ol necessary t o b e d o u t t o m a k e business, h i s b a s i n e t s ;
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ehoiild t h e y p o r s u e us. L o o k i n g b a c k j u s t a s w o t u r n e d four, d i m i n i s h t h e o u t l a y f r o m the n a t i o n a l t r e a s u r y , enT h e Inct is. t i m e s huve c h a n g e d . T h e m a n n e r o f don b e n d iu t h e t r a c k , 1 saw t b e w h o l e pack in s w i f t pnr- l a r g e t h e s t r e n g t h ol t h e F r e e S t a t e s a n d give a
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p a r t y unless in u l a r g e p a * k . 8 i x w o r e n o large p a c k ,
ortuncc, for t h e s e seven T e r r i t o r i e s now c o n t a i n 220.- j u p o l , i r u v e i m g w i t h an ox t e a m i n s t e a d of b y r a i l r o a d ;
yet- h e r o t b e y were, c o m i n g t o a t t a c k us ; t h e r e was now
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H a n g e r t h r o u g h a lor.g a n d w - l h e c e n s u s of I 8 6 0 a s p n r guide. IT a c e n s u s of t h e m I b r o u g h t l.y tlie liKhtn iig t e l e g r a p h . T h e t i m e s d e m a n d
jqrt Aitwrith-l-nnt . ^
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j , m . n of enlargi-d. l i b e r a l , e n e r g c t i c fouls—m<-n w h o will
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T h e s e j « o p ! e a r e all as loyal as a n y of t h e i n h a b i t a n t s j j . e < , p o p w ; t b l b e W f i r ) , i
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t o c o ahead tnemselves, but take
w i f e ultd c h i l d r e n : fi>r a n o t h e r , t o t h e g r e a t I)ispos«-r l i b e r a t i o n s iti s a n ^ * o y . T h e y h a v e left c o m f o r t a l j l e I p i e a - u r e i n w e i n g o t h e r s s u c c e e d , a n d w h o h a v e p u b h c
of e v e n t s . T h e n , t h r o w i n g off m y s h e e p s k i n coat, s o a s h o m e s e l s e w h e r e t o b A v e the perils of t h e wilderness. \ S Ir) 1 [ j t , .
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n o t t o i m p e d e t h o f r e e a c t i o n of m y a r m s a n d legs, I a n d run o p n e w c o m m u n i t i e s r e m o t e f r o m f r i e n d l y nid 1p r o s p e r i t y of t h e p e o p l e .
p p r a n g o n t h e froilt s e n t beside t b e d r i v e r , b u t w i t h m y ami it becomes us t o
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FOR OWTtt A*n Bb*B, WK!KyKKn ^ l T H l ;
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h u d r i v e r : " T h e y a r e c o m i n g b r o t h e r ; d r i v e fast b u t t h e case of O r e g o n .
W h i l e we h a r e t h e m a j o r i t y in | B o s t o n T r a v e l l e r says t h a t tlie l a r g e s t d i a m o n d in t h i s
H T - O W E R S . 3 H A K E 1 1 B . B T C . tsteadily.
I h a v e six b u l l e t s in t i n s pistol. D o n ' t m o v e C o n g r e s s nnd an A d m i n i s t r a t i o n t o >.id us. we s h o u l d
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f r o m yt>ur s e a t ; b n t d r i v e r i g h t in t h e c e n t e r of t b e not neglect t h e o p p o r t u n i t y of d o i n g w h a t we can for o n r
O A l i AND «EB FOB Y001!S>SLVES.
t h a t citv.
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| '. •." : "5.;: I.*I> J s s'a < - ; i :-a, ';4.;K.8)P«^CEE.
Traverse. Cily. J u n e 3rd. 1802.
k n i f c g l e a m i n g in b i s h a n d .
the a d m i s s i o n of t h e s e new S t a t e s would g i v e n s six m o r e routrh w e i g h e d 2 3 J c a r a t ' , a n d s i n c e c u t t i n g w e i g h s n e a r
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t h e r o u g h it w a s a b o u t s q u a r e . E a c h of t b e f a c e s b a d
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1 s h o u t e d 1 e x t r a c t of f l e s h — a n o a r i j h i n g , easily «sf»mi!ate<l ' o o d .
t o b e g r o u n d d o w n s e p a r a t e d ) as it was unsafe t o c b i p off
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I t i s especially r a l o a b l e
c o r n e r s for fear oT c r a c k i n g t b e stone. T b e cost of t b e
« # • f<*r y n a f i e l v e a j - a n d would »*j|, U»at wfc l|«ey ^
, /.
•• B r a v o f". T h e s c c o n d wolf r e c e i v e d m y second fire in for severely w o u n d e d s o l d i e r s a s a r e s t o r a t i v e ; w i t h a l i t - line s a n d used f o r t h i s p u r p o s e was o v e r 8 1 0 0 . a n d t k o
It is a
t W let;, w h i c h m o s t h a v e s h a t t e r e d t h e bone, for hc t!c wine it i m m e d i a t e ^ r e r i v w t h e i r s t r e n g t h t o t a l c h a r g e for t b e w o r k will b e 8 1 5 0 0 m o r e o r lew.
dropped behind instantly.
•• B r a v o f w a s a g a i n c r i e d p r e p a r a t i o n well k n o w n t o chemist.^ a n d i s h i g h l y n>1 a o p e r a t i o n , a n d T A B OO S h a r e s - a . usual I.
from the corner.
B i t t h e s a m e m o m e n t was t h e mo- com mended bv Lei b i g for p r o v i s i o n i n g s h i p s a n d forW h e n you doubt b e t w e e n t w o words, choose tbe
C . KORHIS Jf B W T H B B f t . .
tresses
in
o
r
d
e
r
t
o
p
r
e
s
e
r
v
e
t
b
e
h
e
a
l
t
h
of
t
h
e
c
r
e
w
o
r
garment of o u r g r e a t e s t p e r i l . M y p i s t o f fell i n t o t h e sledge,
Esebe*
where f r e s h m e u t s and vegetables a r e p l a i n e s t the commonest, the most idiomatic.
M M M y l T . l S t t . -. , v ! + T - . ' 1 - ' / . i
as, w i t h a s o d d e n jolt, o u r h b r a - s floundered u p t o t h e i r ri«on. in
.Mi) l a I!
— I ? >.|
— r r f
-jTt- bellies i o a d e e p d r i f t ; t h e n t h e y c a m e t o a d e a d s t o p , wanting. I t i s said t o b e n9cd in t h e F r e n c h a n d Aus- fine w o r d s 05 y o n w o u l d r o o g e ; love s i m p l e onea as
y o o would aa'tivc r o s e s o n y o n r chocks. L e t na m e UM
MORGAJI BATKS,,P
]
a n d t h e r e w a s a wotf a t e a c h s i d e of t h e s l e d g e , a t t e m p t - trian a r m i e s , w i t h t b e a p p r o v a l o f t h e m o s t e m i n e n t military s u r g e o a s .
I t s u s e a m o n g t b e w o u n d e d o r t b e b a t - p l a i n e s t a n d s h o r t e s t w o r d s t h a t will g r a m m a t i c a l l y a n d
Jr
ing t o g e t Ut
gracefully express our meaning.
•' M y b l u d g e o n still r e m a i d e d .
W i t h b o t h b a n d s T tle-field m i g h t b e the* m e a n s of s a v i n g m a n y v a l u a b l e
H « r o i d O M T O » T r a v « n * « C i t y , "Mioli.
: l
ti* FuBwtsnci) Evnstv FWPJ»Y, AT
T r a v e r s e City, G r a n d Traverse Countyt JBichlcttn
M O E G A N iBATES,,
•aasaasnsws seams sttcssaaK %bstss-
0 Kills of Job Priilisg Sail; jul EipdilMBflji tieciUd.
DKITED
mm us# OTOUT rnvmcttv, jicn.
ass*
tsassr^mmuM^-
j . a . mAitsDF.i.J-..
A t t o r n e y & Counsellor a t L a w ,
3WSSS^«'»C4aeSlHISXSBt
•^ttorntji aiti) Counsellor at Sato,
. T.J..KAMSX3KM. .
1
Comts tllor trt Ijito,
BOUNTY & PENSIONS.
T H A V E B S E C I T Y HOUSE,
WIX.Jjl.A-M
M O N I T O R 1
MONITOR AND UNION
ffivrs,
P A I . M
H A T S ,
NOTICE, ,
ORIS
!
M T L J b
N P T A 3 . ? T J C"BTJ3C.
f
that, during the roarof esch of tbe battles at the Fort New when be fired, be did not fire so as to kill anybody—
'?
i / The Case of Texas.
Dim. Birch Coolie, and Wood Lake, they were alone, that as to bis name, the Indians give that name" to any
dj [From the Louisville (Kcatuckj) Joorni!.)
who enters just into a boa« where many are kilLbok at the history of Texas. At her earnest cn- within bullet shot, roasting and eating coru and beef all person
M O R G A N H A T K 3 , K d l t o r a m l Proj>rie|t>r treatv, she was annexed to the United States at the ex- day. A pry-looking warrior wished the commission to led, or who toncbes one of the number (which is tht
believe that he felt so bad at tbe fort, to see the Indians truth) aud that be got tbe name in this way; the Indian^
nse
of
a
bloody
and
costly
war
with
Mexico
and
at
the
TB AVERSECITYl
way to New Ulm came to his house on the roail
irful risk of a civil war in our own country—a war fire upon the whites, that be immediately laid there and on tbeir
FRIDAY MORNING, DKCKMBKR 12, 1862.
the fort, end forced him to accompany them—th«>
wbieh, unfortunately, has since taken place. We did went to sleep, and did qpt wake until tbe battle was over. to
tbey came near a house they made bim enter thv
everything for Texas as a member of our Coufedracy Several of the worst characters, who had been it) a'l the when
house
first—that
he saw there an old man at breakfuM
_.j, " .
Proclamation.
battles,
after
they
bad
coHfe*ed
the
whole
thing,
wound
t
that a great and powerful Government could do for a
with bis family, whom l>e only struck on tbe shoulder
*
ITKAfT TO TAKl PLACE MWmVM.Y DEC. SOTH. State. We spent millions in defending her against the up by saying they were members of tbe church.
It was provvd^u one old cut-nosed Indian that, on the with the back of his hatchet then the Indians marched
Indians. Two years ago we were about to expend a
To ike prople of Ike State of Mitkigan :
and killed them—and from that time|they gave bim this
he haa shot 4 white man, and butchered with
I t is essential to tlie maintenance of the honfcr of the vast amount in constructing a national roil road throughHe entered upon many other details, and
ber whole length in the d.rection of the P . e i f . e - .
ft**""
W W *
ebilfanjMd another. appellation.
Bute by meeting its obligations to the Federal Govern- 0M
with such candor that those who beard him, instead c>r
work that would have poured boundless riches into her that.he had killed u l n e W
detaining
theirfeelingsof detestation became prepossessed
ment, that the qaota of the troop? required of 'Michigan lap and e>.lted her to the loltiest height or |.TOperitj.- ; Mao. of tho« engaged hi the Patv.lJ, mirder ha.-e
P.t»,lle started frotn Jo. Eeynolds p i ^ . in his favor. It is not at all improbable tbut he may b<*
under the coll for 600,000 men. should be speedily fur- But. with an ingmtitude that has few if.nparallelsin hu- been r.ed
man history, afa ehni* to go into this horrid rebellion. ]ju»l above I W \Vood. for >ew Dto, ™>
— » • os guilty as tbe worst It is rumored that there is other
nished. 1 hove felt great confidence that this (might
ing of the outbreak, with three young ladies and two evidence against him at New Ulm, but if there is nomdoDe without resort to draft, bnt it will be impossible at and now let her suffer the consequence of her course.
other men, and on the way they were attaked bv the imprisonment is severe enough io view of the Krest ser
Tbo bistery or Texas is indeed on illustration of tli<- Indians. Patville was killed near the wagon, and the vice be rendered the commission in their investigation.
the rate enlistments have been making for the feat mouth
and more. „ The number required of «ch 'town and sublimo of treachery, faithlessness ar.d ingratitude.— other men ot tho edge of the woods, while trying to He has been the means of briuging to iustice a laipnumber of tbe savages, in every instance but two. histt' ward in the State has been assigned apon the principle Wfr found her in beggary end want. She was without escape. One of tbe girls was wounded, ond oil three timonv being substantiated by tbe subsequent admissiontoken prisoners and brought to Red Wood. Here
of giving credit for nil recruits furnished since the first friends, without character, without credit. She came to the three were all abused by the Indians; one. a girl of the Indian himself.
her destitution and asked us to allopt her. We of fourteen, by seventeen of the wretches, and woundHis observations and memory were remarkable. Not
of July last. Substantial justice in this respect has been
done toward alL To be exact was impeftsibte, and to took pity on her.; took her out of tbe cold ; nursed and ed tbe young lady tq such an extont that she died tbe least thing had escaped his eye or ear. Such a fellow had a doubled barreled gun, another a single barrel
go back of the first of July was impracticable, both be- dressed her; introduced her into decent society ; taught that night Jo. Campbtil, a half-breed ventured to ed, another a long one. another a short one. another a
place her in a grave, but he was told if he did the
cause the ordef of the Secretary of War .did dot autho- her the manners of civilised life ; learned her to respect same for any other bodies which were lying exposed, laoce, and another nothing at all. One denied that b«
rise i t ; and bccause there was no reliqble .record by herself; defended her against her old masters ; 1 ven his iife would pay the forfeit The two other young was at tbe fort Godfrey saw bim there prepairing his
went
to
war
for
her
;
and
made
her—that
was
so
lately
ladies were reclaimed at' camp Release, and sent to sons for battle, and recollected that he painted the face
which such credit conld be made up with any chance of
friendless and outcast—an houored member of our their friends, after jguffering indignities worse tbau of one red and drew a streak of green over the pyct.—
11
faimcsR
\4'
'
.
i
death, and ot which humanity ^hoddere and sickens. Another denied that he made a certain statement to GodNotional
household.
It is, therefore, indispensable.that tho j so v«jral towns,
Others have been tried who belong to .a bond of frey, whicb he testified to. •• What," said Godfrey,
NOT was this all. Wo spent millions in constructing
and wards of cities, shoald furnish tho nutnfcer of reeight that separated themselvs from the msin body "don't you recollect you said it when you had
lighthouses
and
harbors.
We
kept
a
considerable
army
which attacked the fort in tho second battle, and went your band upon my wagon and your foot resting -pn the
cruits assigned to them, and I toko this occasion to assure the people that unless the men arfc finished by on her borders to protect her against tbe Indians. Wc towards St. Peter, burning the church, and the Swan wheel." To another, whom ho charged with aamittiug
mado it safe for emigrants to settle on her soil.
Lake House, and other buildiugs ond murdering and that he had killed a child by striking it with his spear
voluntary enlistment they will be taken l>y the draft.
plundering. They attacked one party ond killed nil over the head, and who denied i t said: "Don't you reFor the purpose of,still giving abundant opportunity treated her with all the foolish indulgence shown toward the men und theu one of them caught hold of a young member of showing me tbe spear was broken, nnd saying
a
spoilt
child.
to fill tho quota oTt& State by voluntary enlistment, regirl to take her as his property, when tbo mother re- you had broken it in striking the Child!" To another,
And what was her return t An attempt on tbe life sisted and endeavored to pull her away. The Indian^ who said he had a lame urm at New Ulm, and couldn't
cruiting will t*o continued as follows : -t - }
of
ber
benefactor
!
An
alliance
witMhe
enemies
of
her
theu shot the mother dead, and wounded the girl, who fire a gun, and who bad such a bad gun that he could
1st- RecruiJj wilrteVceived for Dew I remanents now
fell upon the ground, apparently lifeless- One Indian not havefiredit if ho desired, be replied: " You say you
forming in the State, and for all the old ' regiments now first, bdst and only friend. An endeavor to tear down thought she was dead, aud told her first captor ti could uot fire and had a bad gun. Why don't you "tell
in the Bold, Until, and including, tho 29|h dijy of Decem- the old mansion that had given her shelter.
raise her clothes, which he attempted to do. Modest; the court the trouble! I sow you go to take tho gun of
berate
conspiracy
to
overthrow
the
Government
whose
strong in death, revived the girl, and she attempted an Indian who was killed, and-'fire two abots; aba then
ber Mxlfi These must bo cnjistcd for the term of three
protection she hod sought ond upon whoso bonoties she to prevent it, bat as she did so, the other Indian yon borrowed mine, and shot with it; and then you made
years or during tho war. j
,
raised his tomahawk and dashed out her brains—u ~3 reload i t aud then you fired again."
2nd. From the l»t to th^l6tl> dnys of December next, had fed.
1 might enumerate numberless instances of this kind in
The fruits of her treachery are rapidly ripening. She blessed fate in comparison with that which otherwise which bis assumed recollection would cause hit truthfulvolunteer recruits will bo f&cived fo|- okl regiments
was designed for ber.
has
already
suffered
much
for
her
crimes
;
she
is
desAn old raan. shrivelled up to 9 mummy, one of the ness to be doubted, if he had not been fully substantiated.
-only, to tervefor nine month*, in pursuouof of the Act
tined to suffer more. The progress of civilization with- criers on the Indian camp was also tried, ond two It was a study to watch bim, as be sat in court (canning
» of Cougress.
1
the face of every man who came in, with tbe eye of a cat
boys testified against him.
3rd. Oh the 30th (ftt^af December 1 next, the draft in her borders was 'suddenly arrested. She became little
One of them a German, ond rcmarkobly intelligent about to spring.* He is a providence, specially designatWill commence, and proceed until the requisite number is speedily the prey of anarchy, violence and brutality.
for his years, picked him out from among many others ed as an instrument of justice.
Law and order becamc a mockery and o force. Justice ot
camp Release, and had him arrested, and dogged
obtained in all those^to^na and wards which shall then
and Equity were ruthlessjy trampled under foot A him until he was placed in jail, and when be was
Taxing Bank Note*.
b"s found delinquent.
From the Washington Republican.
forth to be tried, with the eye and fierceness of
Less than fourthousaud men are now required to fill reign of Terror" supplanted the mild sway of the led
Tbe idea of suppressing, by the imposition of practia hawk, aud as if he feared every instant that he
Federal
power.
Ruffians
and
bondidts—gamblers
and
ffici on tiro quota of the Stutc, and I carn^tlj hope that
cally
prohibitory
stamp unties, all paper money, except
would escape justice.
tfiey will bo found to come forward cheerfully and enlist cutthroat*—seized tbo reins of Government. Life ceasThese boys belonged to a large party, who came from ths t issued by the national authority, is being discussed
for tke war as ell our troops thus far have, done. And cd to be safe. Property became the prize of the strong- above Beaver Creek to within a few miles of tbe fort, by the press."03 the period for the meeting of Congress
est hand. All that was sacred ond all that was of good whom the Indians met there, aud told them it they would approaches.
1 dtaire this not so much became there is apything disIt will be opposed, of course, by the large and octive
go back with them from where they came from, and
creditable in/l^ drift, as because it is exceedingly desira- report were trampled under foot The halter and tbe give up their teams, they should not be harmed. When interest connected with tfie banks of issue. The city
Mo that aUtho troops from Miehignu jshojld stand OD stake became tho instruments of irresponsible power.
they got some distance from them they fired into them banks, as a general ruHs,have but few notes in circulaIt
is
proposed
to
put
an
end
to
this
barbarous
regency
and killed one man and a number of women, taking the tion, and rely for tboir profits mainly upon deposits.—
llur samefooGogin the army- Let the people of Michigan make one more loyal and vigorous i'ffort and the en —to save her from her own madness—to bring her back rentainder prisoners with the children. The old wi*etch But the country banks, which are numerous and Influto tho allcgiance from which she wandered, and substi- was made to stand up, looking cold und impassable, and eutird, although with small capitals, and oftentimes with
fire number required cau bo obtained, and tho high reas solid as a stODe, the boys likewise standing, placed op- no real capital may be expected to resist the expected
patation of tho Stnto for patriotism anfl promptness will tute law for anarchy. The work has been already nobly posite, gating at each other for a moment, when otje of chauge with great vehemence.
commenced—Galveston has been captured—Sabine Bay the hoys said: "lsaw that man shoot a man while be
It will not be an agreeable one to tbe Governments
he maintained.
.
has•••been brought withio oar possession—a Provisional was on bis knees at prayer," and the other boy said :
of nome States, which derive large revenues from taxAUSTIN BLAIR.
Governor has been appoined—an expedition is on foot saw that man shoot my mother."
ing the privilege of the circulation now eqfoyed by the
, . Dated JaeksotvNor. 29th. 1862.
banks.
This method of taxation has afforded nearly all
There
was
a
subject
for
a
painter.
The
beholders
which will, it is hopei speedily bring her within the
Secure Homestead p.
could scarcely keep their hands from the throat of the the public incoroc ol Massachusetts for many years past,
pale of tbe Union.
[Albany Eve. Journal.
end is an important item in tbe budgets of other State*.
Tho Homestead Low will go into effect i>n the first or
mammy.
THE TRIAL OF THE INDIANS.
Another wasrecognized^>y Mrs. Hunter as the Indian It will not t*j given np without reluctance.
next month. Every man can obtain W0 OCTOS of land for
The elements of resistance to tho proposed
new policv
of their Guilt—Their Negro Comrade wbo8hot her husband, and then took out bis knitfe and
r
12 paid down. There are several jhundred thousand Evidence
shorter
their Principal Witness Against Them.
offered to cut his throat in he presence, bat finally de. a^rrcs of choice farming lands in the Trnvcite City Land From the St. Paul Pioneer, 17th.
Governsisted, and carried her awot in captivity.
District, within a radius of twenty miles from Grand
CAMP SIBLEY, LOWKR AGENCY, N o v . 7, 1862.
The female sex wasrepresentedio the person of one ment, to reach afterfinancialrelief in whateTor direcTraverse Boy, subject to entry under thw low. The
Our ambulatory military campaign, which commenced squaw, who, it was charged, killed two children. Tbe only tion it may be found.
climato is beallhy and delightful, the soil rich and fertile, its session at Camp Release, for the trial of the •' mulatto, evidence against ber was camp rumor to that effect among Tbe relierto be obtained by taking to itself *i» sole
the Indians, so she wos discharged Her arrest had one power of issuing paper mooey, is large, and promptly
'he water pure, und tho timber of the best quality.— mixed bloods ond Indians," engaged in the Sionx raids, good effect, os she admitted she had taken some silver nvailable. If bsnk notes were taxed out ol existence.
has closed its labors and been relieved from duty.
Several thousand families can find a|| tho advantages
Four hundred and ninety-eight cases have been dispos- spoons across the river, and ninety dollars in gold, which $500,000,000 of Treasury notes might be circulated
here of health, soil, timber, climato «n(f wafer, that they ed of, 'so you con see tho calendar of the commission was she had turned over to on Indian, who, being qu'.'Stioned without injuty, and that large amount of tbe national
concerning it. admitted the fact, and turned tho more- debt might be carried, not merely without interest but
can by going to the far-west, with tho Additional and a formnble one.
with the positive gain of tbe annual lo& of notes by wear
At Camp Release, or Sibley, a tent served for a court over to the General.
more Important one of an easy access to jthe best marAll ages were represented, from boyish fifteen up to and tear, shipwrecks, conflagrations, and the varioua acrocm, but hero more comfortable accommodations were
I t ^ for their surplus products.
obtained in a log building, formerly occupied by a half old men scarcely able to walk, or speak; who were " fifty cidents by which circulating notes disappear. If this
The Land Office for this District is' at Traverse City, breed named La Batte, for unromantic kitchen purposes, years old." to use the language of one, " a long time ago, gain be computed also little as 0De-tenth of 000 per cent,
at tho head of Grand Traversa Bay. aud< in the very but henceforth to pass into history and bo immoralized. and then they 6topped counting." Two of these old gen- per annnm, it would amount to $500,000 upon 8500,were "otice brought io together, who were direct 1)00.000.
<
n' T :• %t
heart of a r i d and beautiful country^ The officers will But to return to the commission. The business hos tlemen
'lhree hundred millions are now authorized by law.—
opposites in physiognomy—the face of one running all to
freely and ehtCTCuIly Smpurt to thcee who arc desirous of boon dispatched with cele rity, as many os forty cases be- nose, which terminated sharply, giving him the pointed Two hundred millions more would only suoply the place
ing tried per day in some instances.
locating, all tho Information in their power, and every
Hie prisoners were brought in, chaincd together by expression, while that of the other was perfectly flat, of the banks notes which are now in circulatioo. And,
aud about two feet broad, and fully illustrated (which I io addition to this, as the war is now being pressed ip
facility they can ft actual settlers. Now is the time to
charges which were preferred by Gen. Sibley, read to always considered as a fable.) tbe fact that pereous being that " more vigorous style," for which tbe Democracy
swore Homes.
titem through tho interpreter, Antoine Frinier, and then, in existence who couldn't open or shut their eyes and have to long clamored, we shall soon increase the field
iHcrcase tho Price of Legal Advertisement*.
allsr being exhorted to tell the truth, and not equivocate, month at tbe same moment This specimen wos appar- for the circulation of Treasury notes quite ooe-half, by
When tho Legislature fixed the price of legal adver- each was asked as to the extent of bis participation in the ently asleep the whole time, with his lower jaw down, and tbe conquest of the rebel States.
To whatever extent it may be proved by experience
closed eyes wos his moral condition, he hod to be
tising, newspapers could be published at from oue half outrages, ond if necessary, witness* were cooled against os
if there was any doubt of his guilt, or as to punched up every two minutes, when the President of to bo expedient to circulate such notes, they constitute a
tp two-thirds the present cost of miuafictaring themi him. Then,
his being- a willing participant in the outrage^ he was al- the commission was interrogating him, as be|wished to form of national debt calculated to increnae'tbe strength
ood tho rates of advertising wore then considered ridi- lowed to call witnesses in nis favor Perbops this rr.oy look in his eyes, so that his rat-trap was kept in contin- of tbe national Government WbUe a large national
culously low. The United States has always paid • fifty soem. to those who were not on the ground, an unjusti- ual motion, eyes and mouth alternately opening and shut- stock debt may strengthen the British Government, it
would present in this country, a constant temptation and
per cent higher rates than those fixed' by law in this fibly summaiT mode of proceeding; but it ivas as lengthy ting with • jerk.
Another weazen-face, shaggy-haired, lank specimen of inducement to schemes of breaking the Union up.
Stale. The State of New York, sOrte years ago, raised au examination as necessity would permit, and ' whatever many winters, with green goggles, loekicg more like the
It is not so with a debt'existiog in tbe form ot Treanecessity," I should think that in at leost two-thirds of
the price to seventy-five cents per foljo for tho first in- the cases the prisoners admitted that they fired, but in devil than anything human; 1 should have run from him sury circulating notes, diffused everywhere, from tbe nasertion, and thirty-seven and u half cents for each sub- more instances, insist that it was o'ily two or three shots, in tbe night had be been a " good Indian" in times of ture of them, and interesting everybody, to the amooot
of
such notes, to uphold the power from which tbey depeace,
in
a
reasonoble
probability
that
he
was
satanio—
sequent one—$>cing 60 per cent higher than legal rates and that no one was killed—about as valid an excuse os
horns and a tail were all that were necessary to make the rive thwr value. Every man with a Treasury note in
here. Owing to the greatly enhanced price of every- oneof them offered, who possessed of on irresistible imhis pocket, bsa an inducement to be a patriot, and it is
pulse to accumulate property, that a horse which he took personification.
thing connected with the printing busiricss. there are was only o very little one: ond that a pair of oxen which
The prisoners were generally cold ond unimpassioned, much better to have that inducement on the right side,
few; if any, .papers in this State which ate paying cur- he captured was for hi* wife, who wnnted a pair. In re- and. strange to say. many averred that the shot from a than on the wroog side.
rent expenses. They must increase ,their rate of sub- gard to the third who did not odmit that theyfired,their long distance in the fights, made them cowards—on unSenator Chandler.
common,admission
for an Indian to make.
reasonsfornot doiDg so wens equallyreijmrkahleand asscription and advertising or die ; and we can see
Tbe result of our recent election has apparently fixed
But the greatest institution of the commission And the
good reason why legal advertisements should bo exempt sumed a different form every day. One day all the elder- observed of all observers, was the negro Godfrey.— the standing of Mr. Chandler, beyond any kind of quesly men, who were io tbe vigor of: manly strength, said
from tbe goneral appreciation." Wc;hope the Legisla- that their hair was too gray to go inlo battle; tbeyoong He was the first tried His reputation wos damning — tion: The Democrats and Soreheads, made the re-electure, which will convenc in January next, will tako this meu, aged from eighteen to twenty-five, insisted that they It was said that he had killed more than any Indian, ond tion of Mr. Chandler and Gov. Blair, tbe only test et tbe
late election, and theacople to whom tbey appealed, by.
subject into consideration, and deal justly and fairly with were too young, and their hearts too weak to face fire.— been the most brutal in atrocity among the brutal, and every art that a treacbSous heart could bring to the
the bravest and foremost in battle, and had acquired the
the Press. No public man ever lost anything by doing The next day would develop tho fact that great was the name of O ta-cle (ho that kills many.) on account 6f the aid of tbe demagogue, have signally rebuked tbetn.
number aud terrible the condition of those who were
No more active, honest and effective supporters of the
writhing it; agony, with tho bclly-acbc. on tho top of a great number of his victims.
These statements favored the ratural prejudices against Administration and Government, In their effort* to put
Wo throw out this suggestion with the hope that big hill. A small army avowed that tbcv had erect undown rebellion, can be fonnd in tbo country, than the
somo of our more favored and influential cotemporarics der a wonderfully capatioas stone (which nobody but his color, to o white heart and be would have been two gentlemen, upon whom the leading soreheads made
tbemrelvs ever saw,)ot the battle of the fort, and did not Ivnchod; when we canght him with the Indians, at camp such desperate and unscrupulous war. and as GOT. Blair
will tryat the subject elaborately.
emerge therefrom daring tbe fights; and » sufficiency for Release, had tbo soldiers been permitted to a c t as citi- bas bceD fully sustained at the polls, so we have 00 doubt
j—}
zens would have acted. When brought before the com
Secretary Chase has signified io ah indirect way. two small armies stoatly called upon the Great Spirit mission, he frankly admitted being ot the battle of New that Senator Chandler will receive, st tbe hands or the
and the boaveni ond the earth (pitting
next Legislature, the reward die for his/dirt ingulihed
that he win bo a candidate for U, & Sonator from (Wakan-tonka)
tbe latter emphatically with the hand.) to witness thst Ulm and tbe Fort, and firing, and also that be hod ac- and laborious serricra j* the cava pf We .country.
OJrto, In case that Ben Wade canpol possibly be 1 they were of the temperament so phlegmatic, a disposi- quired tbe name ofO-to-cIe by the 8ionx; but said be
[Marshall Statesman.
cWtKed
tion go unsocial, and an appc titc so xoracions nod greedy, was forced to go with the laiicas or he kiDefl, and that
br (Sranii Crabttsc
E
HHERIKVM SALE.
N A T I O N A L B O Us
NT
t vY I N S U R A N C E C O .
j c e n s u s returns ; a resume of o u r i n t e r n a l i m p r o v e m e n t s , I
STATS OF M t c m o * x ,
>
I full a n d r e l i a b l e s t a t e m e n t s c o n c e r n i n g t h e c o p p e r , i r o n I
C a p i t a l ) •IOO.OOO.
<;RANU TBAVITIO«« C W - S T T . y""
i a n d l u m b e r i n t e r e s t * of t h « S t a t e , A c
T b e u follows a
Y
VIRTUE
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j c o n c i s e h i s t o r y of e a c h c o u n t y o f t h e S t a t e — a n invaluao a i o f and u n d e r th* ne»l of t i e C i r c u i t Court, (or «h»
(Organized
fry
f ' e r m r w i o * of tkt Authorities.)
| b l e c o m p i l a t i o n — t o o t h e r w i t h e n a l p h a b e t i c a l list of i
C u a a i y of G r a n d Traverse, a n d Slat* -of Michigan, to me 2i
na r r r i ' d and delivered against the goodnaod c h a t t e l s l a n d s aart
( t h e P o s t offices, n n d n n u m b e r of o t h e r v a l u a b l e fea0
W A L L - S T R E E T , N. Y .
t r v m e n u of II. R. Hate, 1 h a v e n e i z e ^ a n d levied n p o n all t i '
H e a - c u r e s . T h e n e x t in o r d e r i s a h i s t o r i c a l a n d t y p o g r a p h y
R n J a j d i m — W e ' W e nil in a f a i r * Ar t o p A t < I
lijjiit, t t t k and intereat of the said d e f e n d a n t In and t o t . . '
to! s k e t c h of e v e r y c i t y a n d village in t h e S t a t e , a c c o m • f H I S COMPAQ"? I ? ORGANIZED P P E C H U . T F O B * "
i n * real ei
"
y e a , 1f t h e ^ l 4 t e a p w a i h t o g of t f o Gospc-l" W l W e u s
1
TDK PBC^ECtfH>K OK KAMI MRS.
niud w i t h uu a l p h a b e t i c a l " list of professions, trades,
and »>.'
On the p a v m e n l t o i b i v C o m p a n y . o r a n y of iw a u t h o r u e d
.
in twent h e r e . R e * ; M r . CRUMB, of t h e C o n g r e g a t i o n a l C ' h n r c b .
t . " jn each.
T h i s d e p a r t m e n t would of itself be
tent*, of the «u(u of
in-.uf » certiQcateof i n . o r .
twenty-nine ( » ) , north of range ten (1'"
a y o u n g m a o of p l e a s i n g a n d p o p u l a r a d d r e s s , With r e - e n o u g h t o f o r m a v a l u a b l e a n d m e r i t o r i o u s w o r k , b u t
i o f F I V E west, n-bich 1 shall offer f o r Kale a t p o b l l c auction, or v e n d n f .
h e . l a n d i n g itrtolf to pay u, sTKh I«r*on th.
e v e n s e r e t h e l a b o r s or t h e i n d e f a t i g a b l e c o m p i l e r d o not
o
t
h
e
Naval
rvniiEii Do I . M M . In cam?.they an- drtiiiea
finement, e d u c a t i o n , b r a i n s a n d u n o s t e n t a t i o u f p'i*ty. U s
a* the l a * direct*, at the f r o n t door of the C o a r t K o o m in ti*c o m e t o a h a l t , f o r i t is s u c c e e d e d by a Cassi&ed Busir Military Service of the l&itwl S l a t " . p r i o r to iJeceroU-r village o f T r a v e r a e Cltv. that b e i n g the place for h o l d i n g the
settled h e r e w i t h a v i e w . o f e s t a b l i s h i n g - a C h w c l i n D < 1 n e s s D i r e o t o r y , c o n t a i n i n g a c o m p l e t e list of firms a n d 3 t r t . 1WU,, or dnrinn tiie w»,f. In the M oe proportion thin Circuit Court f o r t h e County of Grand Traverse, on S a t n r d v .
m a k i n g t h i s b i s " p e r m a n e n t reoidencc. I ? e will d o u b t l e s s i n d i v i d u a l s e n g a g e d in all t h e v a r i o u s t r a d e s a n d profes- Cumpanv will inaure any |».r«ou liable t > do MillUr.v doty. the 24th day of J a n u a r y . A. P.. 1«€S, at two o'clock in the
from SI0O to ^ 0 0 0 , tiut not
—
a f t e r n o o n of said dav.
e n c o u n t e r s o m e r o u g h p a s s a p r c , b u t p a t i e n c e , perse- s i o n s in t h e S t a t e , a r r a n g e d a l p h a b e t i c a l l y , b y post-offices.
c. T h l s C o t n p a a j »l»o iftsnre- those in the «erE. F . DAME. Sheriff
•t and privates.
wound* or death, d a r i n g
v e r a u c o a n d a " h o p e f u l t r u s t in P r o v i d e n c e . '• h a v e b e e n T h i s d e p a r t m e n t c o m p r i s e s o v e r o n e h u n d r e d p a g e s of
Sheriff"* office. Traverse City, Sep. IHth, IMS.
.
the present war. thoa enai^lng all p r u d e n t soldiera to provide
fioe type.
-(Printer'*fees MIS.)
f
known t o overcome greater obstacles than thof# which
t
h
'
i
r
families
against
wan».
in
caae
tbey
fall
>n
b
a
t
t
l
e
—
d
u
—
T h e w o r k , while i t will p r o v e i n v a l u a b l e as a b o o k o r
or
are
M
>
woundod
a»
to
be
diaabled
from
s
u
p
p
o
r
t
i
n
g
them.—
beset b i s pathway.
r e f e r e n c e Jo e v e r y h u s i n e f t man is i m p o r t a n t as a tadt
To the manly virtue- or bitivery and patriotism that called
R e v . M r . MCALLHTICK, of t h e * M e t h o d i s t i C h u r c h , m e c u m of t h e . r e s o u r c e s ,and m a t e r i a l w e a l t h of o u r the Mildier to the field, l.-t . iim add t h e c r o w n i n g excellcnea
S t a t e . I n t h i s r e g a r d it will s u p p l y a w a n t t h a t h a s of a prodent provision f o r his family, in case he n e v e r rep r e a c h e s h e r e a n J a t t h e O l d Mission q l t e r n f r t e f r .
BV
a» one t h a t |
_
e j a b e r t d with gratitude, an
been severely felL H e r e t o f o r e t h e r e h a v e been given in turn. then will he be r e n iicLbbertd
o £ to his God—hi* c o u n t r y — h i s | J A M E S
I C .
G X J T S T O I S .
•
T r a m BKASS K I L L E D . — T h r e e block l i i « * * e r c killt a n g i b l e s h a p e t o t h e reading p u b l i c only a few out- d t c h a r g v d ht* whole dol
*
.
e d in t h i s t o w n s h i p on T u e s d a y of last wcefc, b y A l l e n c r o p p i n g s o t t h e u u e q u a k d resources of M i c h i g a n ; we familv.
Our rated f o r Insurance tgain.it w o u n d s a n d deaui
A n d e r s o n , B e n j a m i n B r o w n a u d C y r o n u s M . P o t t e r . — b a v e n o w t h e w h o l e m i n e laid b a r e , in all its w o n d e r o u s follows, to wit :
. a g a i n s t wouads.
e x t e n t a n d i n c o m p o r a b l o richness.
f l o on a h u n d r e d . . . . . .
Tnin i s t b c l a r g e s t Hotel, with the best a c c o m m o d a t i o n t
T b e y w e r e a b o u t a mile a n d a h a l f f r o m t h e d w e l l i n g of
^
..
"
death.
[Detroit Advertiser & Tribune.
in the city ; the leading Daily a n d Weekly P a p e r * are t a k e "
Our certificates of insurance arc assignable—are intended here, and no p a i n s will be spared to m i k e guests c o m f o r t o b > .
J ^ X « < t e r a o n , b e t ^ j e n there and C r o o k e d , I w j ^ .
The
to be as«igned t o the family f o r their care, support and re- and eleven y e a r s ' residence here wil! enable me t o give relia
N
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i
o
n
a
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F
i
a
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c
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d
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L
o
c
a
l
B
a
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k
a
.
largest weighed a b o u t t w o h u n d r e d potind*—tho others
lief, in ease the events occur unon which they are payable.
ble i n f o r m a t i o n relative to the resources of the c o u n t r y .
F r o m t h e .Ch ic a g o Tribune.
As piauy la the service (ire w h e r e it would be impoas.blcw e r e a b o u t half g r o w n . T h e y w e r e c h o i c e c n t f i ; .
i l ly
J . K . C.
W e a s s u m e t h a t t h e financial n e e d of t h e G o v e r n - for them to provide for tli V ir b » H « U f "
'ft
QUARTERLY M R K T I K Q — t h » V l c a a > - T h o Firfet Q a a t c i
m e n t a t t h i s time, a d m i t t i n g , u s nil men m u s t , t h a t a p r e - father, or brother, or any individual feeling a u interest in
the family of the soldier, may insure thera against wonnds
ly M e e t i n g f o r T r a v e r s e C i t y will b o held nt tlte S c h o o l s e n t r e t u r n t o s p e c i e p a y f n e u t s is impossible, is t h o powd
e
a
t
h
.
What
e
a
a
m
o
r
t
a
l
*
H o u s e , o n S a t u r d a y and. S u n d a y n e x t
S e r v i c e r — e r t o issue e v i d e n c e s of d e b t nud p r o m i s e s t o p a y . w h i c h family of the soldier with
while t h e y will b e a r i n t e r e s t e n o u g h t o m a k e t h e m u o t against wound*, thu* at or
.
Saturday at 2 o'clo$|
ft*.
\ j_
The subscriber will give o n e Town l/ot free to each p e r s e n
u n o c c c p t a b l e a m o n g t h e p e o p l e ut l a r g e as a n invest- of poverty, in case their protector never returns. T h i s S a
who will make actual settlement, oV build t h e r e o n a F r a m r .
A SLAVE 8OLDIER.—The O b e r l i u N e w s j a y s l t h a l J a s . m e n t f o r t h e i r s u r p l u s c a p i t a l , will n o t e n t e r i n t o c i r c u - system ol substantial c h a t t y towards the deimndent families p r i c k , or Stone house, valued at not lesa t h a n $100, p a y i n g
of volunteers, that ha* t * f n commenced by our wealthy cltilation
a
s
m
o
n
e
y
a
n
d
swell
t
h
e
value
of
c
u
r
r
e
n
c
y
now
: J L Stone, a private i n j u j g a r t o n ' s Battery, o( Barm-tt's
t e n s , and will be continued by the worthier p o r t i o n s ol St for surveys, etc. Said lots are in the m o s t desirable part
uiloat, w h i c h t h e l a r g e p r i c e s s h o w is excessive.
T h e them. What can onr wealthy a n d patriotic citizen* do, that of Traverse City. This part of the t o w n lies at the head, Mi'l
• A r t i l l e r y R e g i m e n t , ^ h o dffcd in h o s p i t a l a t Nashvillo,
i n g e n u i t y of financiers will b e g r i e v o u s l y t a x e d t o devise
-ill c o further to increase c a l i s t i n e n u and a.«ist the Gov- between the two arm* of the Bay. a n d haa a f r o n t na each
T o n n . , o u t h e 2 5 t h p f O c t . , wui^ a •• w b i t o j slave."
l i e t h e form of d e b t t h a t will m e e t b o t h i n d i c a t i o n s a n d rerument, than tn say t o our hardy laboring m e n — " If you Bay. and or the best soil for G a r d e n i n g , etc. F o r p a r t i c u l a r s
please call at the Office of t h e •ubscriber, at
w a s b o r n a n d r a i s e d ;jrp s l a v e jn K e n t u c k y . -j T h i r t e e n lieve t h e n a t i o n a l e x c h e q u e r , w i t h o u t l a y i n g t h e g r o u n d will e n l i . t . 1 will insure yaur life until vou return, for 5100
—*500—Sl.OfO. for the b»nelit of your family.
EAST TRAVERSE CITY,
w
o
r
k
Car
t
h
o
r
u
i
n
of
t
h
e
business
p
e
o
p
l
e
.
W
bile
t
h
e
y
years ago he ran away from his master and cirnc north.
•.» of basis u p o h which t h i s Company Insure Is
G e o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
a r e t o w o r k n p o n t h e p r o b l e m t h u s p r e s e n t e d , w e w a r n founded upon a scientific statistical calculation of the
B e i n g a m a s o n b y t r a d e , h e ttund w o r k a n d V h o m e in
J u n e I t t h i 1861.
.
t h e m t h a t n o p l a n w h i c h k e e p s o p t h e c o m p e t i t i o n b e - tality of wars for the last tJOO years, and leave* Hut a r e a
N. B. T h i s offer will be e x t e n d e d only 6 m o n t h s f r o m tti*
O b e r l i n . w h e r e h e leaves a
a n d five ' c h i l d r e n , w i t h a t w e e n t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e local b a n k s in 0 a busi- ble margin for profit for the Company, while it place* the
date,
W . B»
families of those insured bevond want and destitution from
little h o m e p a r t l y p a i d f o r d u r i n g t h e s t r u g g l i n g y e a r s of ness of m a k i n g p a p e r money, will h a v e a n y s a t i s f a c t o r y
July 4-31-6m
>
any of the vicissitudes of W nr.
h i s f r e e d o m . H e w a s so w h i t e / t h a t few s u s p e c t e d h i m t o result ; o n d t h u t t o h o p e f o r t h e h a r m o n i o u s w o r k i n g of
T h i . i a t l i e o n l y Insurance Company in the C n i t e d S u t e *
imy s c h e m e t h a t m a y b e devised, t h e r e m o v a l of b o o k t h a t was organized especially for tbi* p u r p o s e .
b e of A f r i c a n ; d e s ^ t , a n d ^ P t h o a p w h o k n e w t h e f a c t
c u r r e n c y o u t of t h e c h a n n e l s of t r a d o , b y s o m e safe a n d
A d v a n t a g e s of Insnring in this C o m p a n y .
ASH
s c a r c e l y a n y w e r e awaije t h a t h e h a d b e e n n s l a v e .
g r a d u a l b u t s t r i n g e n t a n d effective proccss, is a necessity
Igj. jn th,* c a w ol citizens i n s u r i n g ium« for their famit h a t c a n n o t bo o v e r l o o k e d . A s w e h a v e said many t i m e s lies, if d r a f t e d : If no draft takes
N p r Y O I I K . — T h e official m a j o r i t y f o r Sjeytoour i a t h o
before* t h e r e is n o w a y in w h i c h t h i s removal can b e ef- t h e i n s u r e d resides, half tho li
B t a t o i q 1 0 . 5 7 1 . T h e a v e r a g e P e m o c r a j i c ^ n n j o r i j y i s e - . 4 ~ 2 « : i k A n ( IVA M I . A H A P i l u t i f r t i - f l F i t m p n l n n d n n ftpfected w i t h o u t t h e a c t i o n of t h o g o v e r n m e n t , a n d no
2nd.—Our Insurance In regard to tho d r a f t c o v e r s n o t only
1<M>45.
T h e g r e a t e s t n u m b e r of v o t e s c a s t was f o r t i o n p r o m i s e s s o m u c h a s a law of C o n g r e s s heavily t a x the present draft, but all f u t u r e oneI L l « 1/OCATE LANDS. P A T T A X E S , - B U Y A K P
u desired, a c c o r d i n g
3d.—dur Company insure for any
I j c u t . G o v . , f o o t i n g u p 6 0 4 , 1 3 0 . b e i n g 7 1 , 0 3 6 less t h a n ing b o n k issues. S n c h a law m u s t be t h e c o r n e r s t o n e
sell on Commission, a n d now haa for aale a* a g e n t . «
of
a
n
y
legislation
t
h
a
t
m
a
y
b
e
h
a
d
in
t
h
i
s
m
a
t
t
e
r
.
W
e
to
circumstances of Insured.
•aluable improved F a r m s , oa a o d a e a r the shore* of Geaod
t h e v o t e f o r P r e s i d e n t in 1 8 6 0 . of w h i c h the fteptiblicaoa
men w h o have invested their capital In thi* rravcrse Bay. Also, 1.000 a c r e s pf w e l U e l e e t e d wild land*
tnke early occasion, t h e n , t o w a r n t h e C o n g r e s s m e n of
Company have been we)l known to the business c o m m u n i t y in dim.-rent p a r t s of t h o county of Grand Traverse,, sal r>f
loee 6 5 , 5 4 2 a n d t b e d e m o c r a t s
ft.484.
f 'jt
•
t h o W e s t , t h a t , w h i l e i t will be a d m i t t e d in W a s h i n g for the past fourteen yetirs.
. . . . .
,
. .
which is offered at reasonable prices. Also, b a v l a g baen In
6th.—The capital of tliis Company will not be employed in the business of L o c a t i n g public l a n d s l o thla C o u n t y f o r t h '
T h e f a s h i o n a b l e t h i e v e s of P h i l a d e l p h i a r e c e n t l y h o l d ton, a n d p e r h a p s b y t h e ; b a n k s themselves, t h a t the
g o v e r n m e n t only s h o u l d m a n u f a c t u r e p a p e r w h i c h h a s BankiiiL? or Real Estate oporations. but will remain in U. 8 . last 10 years, and being well »cqnalnted with a l l h e cholc*
a ball, f o r t h o b e n e f i t of one o f t h e i r n u m b e r w h o h a d g o t
t h o l e g a l a t t r i b u t e s of money, no t a x - l a w t o u c h i n g bank G o v e r n m e n t Stocks, ami will onlv IM c o n v e r t e d so fast us lands In the county he is prepared to assist new comere la seinto
te^tb>JE^timoro.
' T h i e v i n g is n o w ; . r e d a c e d t o c u r r e n c y c a n b e passed w i t h o u t a l o n g a n d a r d n o u s m B V ^ necessary to meet the liabilities of the Company to lecting f r o m Govertinicnt L a n d s in t h i s or the s d j o l o i a g Co.
O F F I C E at hi* r t s l d e o e e . E a s t T r a v e r s e City.
the insured. ^
a a t i & r i t t , ' a n d d o n e o n . t t t e a ^ s o c i a ' j o i p r i n c i p l e , in s t r u g g l e a g a i n s t t h e a g g r e g a t e b a n k i n g interest of all the
bound to take risks t
Oth.—The Company
July 4-31-Om
Atlantic Slates. Bank currency, bank credits and bank | t h 4 n J I f t ( | 0 0 0 i
i o u r l a r g e cities.
i n f l u e n c e s a r e so i d e n t i f i e d w i t h t h e business, social eco-1 ^ s p o n s i b l e agents wanted in every c o u n t y in the United
B o t h H o u s e s of t h e N e w S o u t h W a l e s L e g i s l a t u r e n o m y a n d p o l i t i c s of Ihe E a s t , t h a t a revolution so com- s u n * . They uiu.t give reference* o f B i r l c t
•tug i TRAVERSE CITjga t F:
B
GUNTONHOUSE
coon mim m WELL MEED BEDS \
5 0 0 T o w n L o t s O f f e r e d Fre**
t o -A-cfrual S e t t l e r s .
R E A L E S T A T E
GENERAL LAND AGENCY.
G E O . AV. B E Y A N T
W
R E A L
. h a r e passed *
bill
granting,
five
thousaad
l a n d f o r e x p e r i m e n t s in c o t t o n g r o w i n g .
Association a r e selecting f a r m s nnd
«rttioot> - " r t S - V
acres
The
of
Cotton
comeeucing
op-
-
T h e U . S . signal c o r p s in V i r g i n i a b a s e
jirovided with t b o ^ o o s t
just been
powerful spy gnoses
known
t o t h e s e r v i c e , a n d c a n d i s c e r n t h e m o v e m e n t s of forc e s n o a r l y fifty m i l e s a w a y .
The Platte Co. (Mo.)
Conservator,
f e s h , h a s t h e u a m e of C . L .
notoriously
Vallandtgham
sc-
d i sp la y e d
for the; P n * i d c ® c r ia:. 1864, l e m w M w r tjjqv h e (Vall a u d i g f i ' m t ) i s tBC lfiader oT the" g r e a t cOpservatitiS a n d
triumphant Democracy.
:•
T h e official v o t e of O r e g o n , f o r G o v e r n o r s h o w s 3 , 5 8 9
m a j o r i t y f o r G i b b s , O n i o n w a r c a n d i d a t e ; a n d for Congressman, 3,177 majority for McBride,
Ho
received
3,632.
6,800
Union
War.—
rotes; W a i t , - S e c a h Democrat
T h e Legislator® contained 9 Uniotj majority on
j o i n t ballot, a s shown by t h e election
of B e n j a m i n
H a r d i n g . t o . t b e U . S. S e n a t e in p l a c e p f
S e c e s s i o n i s t . H e n S t a r k . ' *"
F.
the ^notorious
w-' - l . - ' i - | J i
E U T h a y e r , of M a s s a c h u s e t t s , is
again
pushing
his
scheme for colonising F l o r i d a with a loyal whito population.
G e n . H u n t e r , w h o f a v o r s t h e plan, mys
t h a t a few
t h o u s a n d s t a l w a r t e m i g r a n t s c a n t a k e f c a r e of F l o r i d a , '
a n d will n e e d n o m i l i t a r y p r o t e c t i o n .
A s q n a d of D a k o t a h C a v a l r y , n u m b e r i n g ten, u n d e r
C a p t . M i n e r , h a d a s k i r m i s h w i t h t h i r t y I n d i a n s , on t h e
1st o f . N o v . , b e t w e e n J ^ n c t o n a n d L e o n i k F a l l C i t y . —
O d e Indian C b i n f w * ^ k ? I l e d and several wounded.
cavalry came out unharmed.
g r e a t dismay.
Oor
T h e s a v a g e s s c a t t e r e d in
GENERAL LAND OFFICE.
W
1424 Acres of Choice Lands;
1850 Acres, also Choice and well Selected.
FURS! FURS! FURS!
GTJjSTTOlt"" H O T J S E .
BRYANT & STRATTOrTS
CJffi OF M5AI
M B R C A N T I J ^ H
t
T iT •E S G - E 3 S .
P
B r a n c l i L o c a t e d a t jDetroit.
Traverse City. Doc, 8, JH6J.
A few brasB s i x p o u n d m i s s i o n a r i e s h a v e
been sent t o the T ' a m t O r y for the donierslon
E S T A T E
p r o t e i n i c a s t o c « t til t h i s a n o n . " « « c r e d i t s ao.l I
tta Comptw.
AND
t h e s e influences o p b y t h o roots, a n d s u b a l i t n t e l o r t b e m i
N« y ' J, lV express., a sum of money sufficient to cover
t h e c u r r e n c y of t h e g o v e r n m e n t a n d t h e c r e d i t s a n d a c - : ( b e c o m p a u v ' s per c c n u g e on the amount desired t o be lntnnl c a p i t a l i t h a s t o loan, c a n n o t b e c a r r i e d t b r o n g l i , „ u r c d : and'if it be a nitizen desiring to iusnre a s u m for his
w i t h o u t a p r o l o n g e d a n d p e r h a p s a b i t t e r contenst. B a t j family, in c « e he is
*7^'^^e'naili'e age
A L B E R T W. BACON,
the power t o inaugurate and accomplish that revolution
» a d Company of the Regiment to which he belongs. Oie
i s i n d i c a t e d if n o t p r o v e d b y t h e n a t i o n a l e x i p e n c y . ! I i ( i m l > < . r
I L L LOCATE LANDS. P A Y T A X E S , BOY O B 8 1 U l h ( l R o ^ m e j n and s t n t e it is f r o m , at«o the resih e n c e x e t r u s t t h o t n o W e s t e r n man will s h r i n k f r o m j , , u n c c o ( h i s ( a m j i . , if it be wife, b r o t h e r , l a t h e r , o r friends
on Commission—and now offer* f o r sale,
r
t h o f a t h f u l p e r f o r m a n c e oT t h o d u t y n p o n h i m . T h e sal- j „f ,he (umlly tlmt desire t » vikcouiui
" f T {?
soldier, t h e *y w
l l l civ<
- - h i -.
... i
T.
v o l i o c of t h e c o u n t r y is of g r e a t e r m o m e n t t h a n t h e i r - • »absent
w n t M.ldier.
-*111
m
g«.
Company. Regiment and State to which <t belong*. The apJtKD WILL SXLI. AS AOENr
s u r a n e e of p r o f i t t o A c b a n k s ; t h e p r o g r e s s of t h e wa
plicant for the policy r " ! -I"" f i v e the n w i n residence
d e p e n d s u p o n t h e s o u n d n e s s of t h e n a t i o n a l finances
of t h e wife or the person for whose benefit the in*urance is
a n d aS t h e chief o b s t a c l e in t h e w a y of t h e w o r k i n g of procured.
Appb'
to.
°
r
address.
a n y financial p l a n i s t h e p r e s e n c e of o l a r g o volume of
B NY PER, WILLIAMS A Co..
Also—13 L o t s In the Village o f E l k R » p i 4 o «
bank currency, the banks must give way.
Since they
6» Wall-street. JT. Y
WITB o a w i m o u r DWELLING*.
fify
•
w e r e in v e n te d , t h e y h a v e b e e n a f r i g h t l u l e n r s e u p o n t h e
•Money may be sent in registered letters, or by >
The above m e n t i o n e d L a n d s are in all part* of t h ^ C o u n t y ,
business p r o s p e r i t y of the people.
If t h e y a r e squeezed press, at our risk.
«
•'
Elk
U k e . Whitewater. O m e n i a nnd T r a v e r s e ; arfc a m o n g t h '
t o d e a t h in t b e p r e a s u r e c r e a t e d b y t h e war. t h e g r e a t
N o t i c e * of t h e P r e s s .
earliest and best selection* w i t h r e f e r e n c e t o s o u , water, surrevolution,
n o t h a t t e r w h a t i t s p o l i t i c a l r e s u l t , will not
face and m a r k e t : embrace F a m i n g Lands, Village 8Ite« a n d
This is a sound C o m p a n y . "
.
b e whofly w i t b o n t g o o d Trait. S o let o u r W e s t e r n memThe insurance of i« certain ran for one'* family, is a pru- Water Powers, with or without i m p r o v e m e n t s , in q u a n t i t i e s
dence t h a t ever)- man should adopt In these critical t i m o ^ "
b e r s o f C o n g r e s s p r e p a r e for w h a t i s b e f o r e t h e m .
to suit p u r c h a s e r s , and at p r i c e i m a k i n g It an o b j e c t , i n pre- The Ulan that would bo respected and loved by his family f e r e n c e t o b u y i n g back f r o m s e t t l e m e n t s .
»-lj
in life, a n d gratefully r e m e m b t r t d in death, will provide his
T r a v e r s e C i t y . M a y 1. 1801.
MARRIED,
A t N o r t h p o r t Nov. 16tK by the Rev. a Steele. W i L o e a F. ^ ' u i ^ o n ^ m o s f p r u d e n t citizen* and soldiers are Insuring
STESI^SOU of the efflciaUng Clergyman, a n d Mis* MARTIU a c o m p e t e n c e to their families in c . s c tbey are drafted. —
i . Votes, both of Northport.
t is the only safeguard in these critiAlso, by tho name, D f c . «th, a t Northport, UEOROB b. killed, ie the s
H o o r u o , Eso., a n d Miss WBALTUV A. McCt.ELi.Asn, both of
the f o r m e r place.
NOTICE,
UNITED S T A T E S L A N D O F F I C E .
TnAVEitscCiTv, N o v . « , 1*;J.
A T E N T S FOR F.N'TUIKS MADE BETWEEN T H E
Stli dav of May. lWiJ. and the !3th day of May. 1862. for
Kettlcment'oad Cultivation, n n d e r the Graduation A c t o
August 4,1H.'.4" have been received at this Office, and th<
--.L P
M i c h . , Merrill B l o c k ,
purchaser* are hereby notified to come forward immediate^
d u r i n g the. flir F
and make the required pit>"f o f ' • Settlement and C ulllva C o r n o r o f W o o d w a r d Ac J e l f t r s o n A v e n u e * .
H e h a s a q u a n t i t y of
tion." and secure their respective 1'aients. because If soi.
I N D I A N T A N N E D D E E R
SKINS,
proof iH not Hied within a l i m i t - d time, the P a t e n t s will be
H
I
S
INSTITUTION
FORMS O N E O F E I G H T C O L L E G E S
^ . . . . « — I • . . 1... i lencral
l . m p n i ! lI ^J illlld' ! Office,
Ofli<
i a b k T 1 located in the following c i t l e * D e t r o i t . New Y o r t .
W h i c h he will sell f o r CASH or e x c h a n g e for Kur
i
i* of I A
N. B. T r a p p e r * wiU best consult their own interest 1
in-|>erformanc
Buffalo, Cleveland, Chicago A S t l
ion contempt: •d by the Graduation
calling o n h i m before selling their Fans.
A person h o l d i n g a *chol*r*bfp can a t t e n d e i t h e r a t b i t
n . H. RTONE,
of t h e
TAX PAYERS
r T H E TOWN OF TUAVEICsE. WILL F I N D T H E ROLL
ready at t h e Treasurer's C f i c e . U o o d r i c h ' s Building.
] A. W. BACON, TOWN TKKASI'UEB
t r a v e r s e City. D e c . 11* 1SG2.
F
t e d - s k i n s t o t h e p a t h of p e a c e .
W e tako. g r e a t p l e a s u r e in a n u o Q n c i n t t h a t C l a r k ' s
M y j r t n S t a t e l 0 a « ; t t e c r b a r left t h t j h a n d s of t h e binde#, a n d V o o w l f e a d y f o r d e l i v e r y t o
fcbaeribers.
A
h a s t y i n s p e c t i o n of i t s c o n t o n U ofTords t h e most conv i n c i n g p r o o f t h a t t h e w o r k will m o r e t h a n realite tb<
h i g h e x p e c t a t i o n s t h a t h a v e b e e n formed of i t
T h e p u b l i s h e r , a s o u r readers a r e a w a r e , i s C h a r l e s F .
C l a r k , E s q . . t h e c o m p i l e r of o u r e x c e l l e n t C i t y D i r e c t o rv,.and. w i t h respect-to t h e Q a i e t t e e r i t (a dilficoK t o d *
t e r a i n e w h e t h e r h e h a s e a r n e d t h e g r e a t e r d e g r e e of c r e dit for t h e liberality and e n t e r p r i r e w h i e h have dictated
t h e g e n e r a l p l a n of t h o (5*prk, o r t h c s j a t c r a a t i c a n d a d m i r a b l e m a u n e r in w h i c h i t h a s b e e n c a r r i e d f o r w a r d t o
completion. In either point it h a s never been surpasse d , a n d r a r e l y if e v e r e q u a l l e d b y a n y o t h e r w o r k of t h e
kind.
T b p m e c h a n i c a l e x e c u t i o n o f t h e G o x r t l c e r is o w x c c p t i o n a b l e . h - e ^ n t a i n s o v e r 6 0 0 octtrtro : p a g e s , e x e r a s i v c
of b a d n e s s c a r d s , ond is c m b e l l s h e d ^rith a l a r g e n u m b e r
of s p i r i t e d a n d b e a u t i f u l e n g r a v i n g s of n l s c e s of p u b l i c
i n t c r e t t In v a r i o u s citiea a n d vilages of t h o S t a t e , chiefly
edaeakiooal and benevolent I n s t i t u t i o n . ^ I U p r i a c t p a l
c o h t e n t s c o m p r i s e a w6H-wHtlen ; h i s t o r y of t h e S t a l e ; a
c a r e f u l l y p r e p a r e d a n d v a ^ l M a C o mp i l a t i o n frost ^tbQi
r
NOTICE
l H E R E B Y GIVEN, T H A T T H E UNDERSIGNED FREEh o l d e n ^ o f t h e Township of Milton a u d Megectce, will make
application to t h e Board ol Supervifont of Grand Traverse
County, a t their n e x t meeting, lo alter t h e boundary line of
the t o w n s h i p of Milton, a s follows :
C o m m e n c i n g at the . poiot w h e r e the present l y r t h line
of said township intersect* T o r c h Lake, t o run east on *aid
lino until It i n t e r a e c u range line, between r a n g e s seven and
eight, thence south on said r a n g e lino until it i n t e r s e c t s section line r u n n i n g e a s t a n d west between section t h i r t e e n and
twenty-four in township twenty-eight, north of range n u m b e r
e i g h t west, t h e n c e west o n said line to the shore of Round
Lake, thence north on s h o r e of said Lake to join present
bouudry line a t m o u t h of T o r c h River.
Milton, Nov, aiith.1663.
L U C I C S A. T H A Y E R .
ALEX. CAMPBELL
J A M E S P. BRAND.
DAVID H. PARKS,
SIMEON ANDREW,
C H A R L E S HOLLY,
MARY JOHNSON.
GEORGE LUKE.
D. Eh CUSHMAN.
CHANCEY HALL.
ROBERT COM1TON.
J O H N M. GODUARD.
FRESH FISH.
n e SUBSCRIBER H A S COMMENCED H I S WINTER
Season of Fiahing. a n * ia prepared t o f u r n i s h tho citiz e n s of Traverse City with f r e s h o r salt fish e v e r y d a y .
' . - m i r a n o H W?7n
!i
G. E. BROWN.
Teav«Me City, Deo. 4; 1 W Z - . - tn '•.
T
NOTICE.
LANI) O F F I C E AT T R A V E R S E CITY. MICH. )
O c T o a m , 1. 1862.
S
H E R E A S CONGRESS AT I T S L A T E SESSION
passed an Art which was approved ou t h e liith of
July. 1862. d e s i r i n g - t h a t all that portion of the present
•Chebovgun District,'' in the S t s t c of Michigan, lying West
of Lake Michigan, a n d South of the line d e r i d i n g Township*
forty-one and forty-two North, i n c l u d i n g St. Martin's a n d
the a d j a c e n t Islands near the entrance to - Big Bav D* N o r ,
now f o r m i n g a p a r t of tho present Cheboygan District, and
subject t o sale at Tjravrn«e City, in said State be. and the t a m e
I* hereby a t t a c h e d to t h e " Lake S u p e r i o r D t a t H c O and the
Land* therein be subject to aale and e n t r y at the ei.e of the
Land Office for said District, a n d whereas, s e c t i o n 2 of tbi
a c t declare* t h a t it shall not t a k e effect u n t i l three m o n J
a f t e r the date of its approval.
.
Notice is hereby given that on and after th* 15th _ d ^ ol
October, instant, np f u r t h e r cntrie* or locations will
at this office of any lands lying within the limit* ab<
cribed, and that all the 1,'lais. Tract Books, apjrii cations,
land* in
in that
d e c l » r j j | o n * . ai.d p a p e r s nertaininR U. land*
t h a i portion
the I.and Office at
« r t h ? ^ r e * e n t District, will be sent
U a r q a c t u . Lake
. B l T [ K
W
j>th>n.
Terms.
Tuition payable in advance by p u r c h a s e of s c h o l a r s h i p .
10 f o r full t e r m . Samo course for iAdic*, $25.
S t u d e n t s to e n t e r at a n y time. Average time t o c o m p l e t e
the course, three m o n t h s .
K knowledge of t h e o r d i n a r y English b r a n c h e s i s sufficient
o r e S a r a t o t y t o e n t e r i n g n p o n the course Of *tndv. :
J . IL GOLDSMITH. Resident P r l o c l p f l at D e t r o i t .
J . F. SPALDING, A s s i s t a n t .
'
,
The mo?t t h o r o d g h , p r a c t i c a l a n d t r u l y p o p u l a r College#
i America. Over six t h o u s a n d s t u d e n t * h s v e e n t e r e d s i n c e
t h e i r e s t a b l i s h m e n t , w h i c h 5s the best e v i d e n c e of t h e i r
f a v o r w i t h t h e public.
For f u r t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n please call a t College Rooms, or
• e n d for a new C a t a l o g u e of 80 pages. F o r a p e c l m e n s . o l
enmanship, inclose l e t t e r stsmp.
Address.
BRYANT A BTRATTON. at e i t h e r of t h e a b o v e Cities.
( C u t t h i s out f o r f o t j H t f ^ e f e r e n e e . )
13.ly
1 6 0 0 A c r e s of L a n d !
*
T h e subscriber offers f o r «ale 1600 a c r e s of c h o i c e a n d
j e l l - s e l e c t e d lands, h a v i n g b r e n mostlv located at t h e 0r*1
s e t t l e m e n t of the c o u n t r y . *nd many of said l a n t o are borderi n g on the Grand T r a v e r s e Bay, a n d in tract* of froza &O taj
J00 acre* - aome have small improvement* on. ( s n d well
located for w o o d i n g purpose*, with a good g r o s h b of b e a e n
and maple timber.) Also. 300 Town lota, s o d 3« F s r k L o U
REUBEN GOODRICH, Re«eiver. in E a s t Traverse City, offered for sale a t reawrnobte price*G * o . W . B r y a n t , Proprietor.
july 4-31 -Cm
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS
* 1 T I L L BUY A SAW MILL. SEVEN ACRES OF I . A N D
W
Mid a small bona., within half a mile of Little TraMORGAN BATES,
verse Bay. A splendid chance for a n o t h e r mill by the san
d a m . Npply soon for thi* c h a n c e w i l l n o ^ ^ ° ^ " B T E R
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,.
Bear River, E r i m e t Co.. Nov. I t , 18«1.
M-Jw.
Traverse City, HIeh.
Tke Ac*.
Hannah, Lay & Co's Column.
H h W we may Do,
contractors, if such there were, availed, themselves to any
extent of tbe building material closest at band. We noNo human being can be isolated and self-sustained/—
ticed several guns, most of which were partially embed- The strongest aud bravest aud most •hopeful have yet,
ded in the earth or rubble forming tbe ceuter of the wall; acknowledged or unacknowledged, to themselves, moone bore an inscription recording tuat it was cast In tbe incuts of biingrj?«oul-yc«rn.tig* for companionship and
reign of Won Lee, the last Emperor but one of the Nliog sympathy, i or tue want of this, what wrecks of hudynasty; in must therefore have been upward of260 years manity lie strewn about us.
Youth wu-ted for the
old. aod was evidently fashioned after un English model. mocking semblance of friendship. Adrift at the merev
A great many of tbe lowers are in a decayed state, and of chance, for the grasp of a true firm hand, and a kindthe interiors of son** of them, having been cleared of de- ly loving heart, to couiisel. It is aSbctmg to see bow
brit were converted into gardens and graineries.
, < strong is this yearning, so fatal to IU possessor, if not
The Chinese speak,of tbe wonderful structure a* tbe guided rigbllv. wieh a life anchor if safely placed.—
10.01)0 k*e old wall, and appear to consider it extremely •• Friendless f" What «tragedy may be hidden in that
T H E LARGEST STOCK OF
natural that strangers desire to visit it; the sight amply one little word. Non& to labor for ; none to weep or
repays one for tbe troubles and difficulties of the journey; smile with ; nobe to care whether we lose or win in
Last and nearest step U
and when the fact i* realized that for thousands of miles life's struggle. A kind word or a smile, coming to such
this extraordinary product of masonic art pursues its ser- an onr unexpectedly at some such crisis of life, how of" C h a l k Your Bobbins." j
pentine course, all other so-called wonders of the world ten has it been the plauk to tbe drowning man, lacking
Every one knows tbat old Sir Robert Peel, father of (iide by comparison with this lasting memento of a
whii/h he mart rarely have perished. These, surely, we
the late Prime Minister of Enplnml, and .grandfather of pot's folly and tbe involuntary labor of a submissive peo- mo^ bestow as we pass those less favored than ourselves,
'tije present iiftroiket, mode hip woney by tbe oottoa spto- ple.
[Once a W eek.
O E I S T E H A 3 L .
whose souls are waiting for our sympathetic recogniID ifc'o (*rfy part of km farcer -h»» ibasiness was
tion.
not remarkably extonsive. but sudjtenly he j made a treHow to Detect Altered Treasury Notes.
me^dous start and digtnnce<l all hisrijals- l l f gre<
An Aaeedote of Pope.
The followingdirections for detecting altered Treasury
meusely rich, as we all'know, but we do not ail know the
Oueday as Pope was engaged in translating the
Notes may be valuable to those who are lucky enough to ' Iliad,' became to a passage which be nor his assistant
lacky nccidont to ,*rhich be was indebted jfor his
get any of them, as couterfeit fifties and hundreds, raised could interpret. A stranger wbo stood by, iu bis bummom wunlth.
In tha early .davs of the cotton (pinning machinery, a from oues and two* are becoming quite common:—
ble garb, very modestly suggested that, as he bad some
V The ones and boudred* are so totally dissimilar
deal of (rouble used to be caused by filaments of
little acquaintance wim Greek, perhaps he could asBist
Cdtton adhereing to the bobbing, or tape?, Which then tbe main features, that whatever skill or ingenuity n
them. •- Try it P said Pope, with the air of a boy who
formed portions of looms. These OlametUs accumulating, be brought to bear by figures tbat indicate the valui of is encouraging a monkey to eat red pepper.
•• T
aoon clo^gi-d the wheels and other parts of the machin- the note, no change is likely in the most skillful artistic an error in thn print.'" said tbe stranger, looking at tbe
rtiona. The portrait ofSecrutary Cbasc, in an oval text " Read Us ir there was no interrogation point at
ery anil rendered in necessary tbat they fljonld be clear.roe in the extreme left hand upper corner, of tbe one eud or tbe liue, and you have tbe meaning at once."—
ed, which involved frequent stoppages and much loss.
The groat desideratum was to Jud out itome plan of dollar note, is its distinct, exclusive characteristic. In Pope's assistant improved upou this hint, aud rendered
preventing this clogging by the cotton, an<) £j>r Robert, the one hundred dollar note, occupying a like position tbe passage without difficulty. Pope was chargined f
or Mr.Ponl, as he yttfShijii. spent vast sojns in experi- on tbe npper left corner, tbe prominemt device is the fig- ho could never endure to be 6urpa«ed in anything.—
ments. He employed some of the ablest, machinists in nro of an eagle, without spread wings. These distinc- Turuiug to the stranger, be said, in a sarcastic tone,
tbe kingdom—among- them Jymea Watt—.who suggested tions «nn easily be remembered. Between the twos and " W ill you please tell roe what an interrogation ia f
various corrections, but in spite of all they could do. the fifties there are points of resemblance, especially 03 the " Why. sir,"said the stranger, scanning the ill-shaped
inconvenience remained—the potion would adhere to the portrait of the first Secretary of the Treasury. Alexander Poet, •• it is a little crooked, coctemptible tbhig that
Hamilton, is common to both denominations, aud and is asks questions."
bobbins, and the evil Bppearad to bo insurmountable.
. Of course these delays seriously effected ! thf wages of tbe only prominent pictorial device .upon either. A
E V E R BROUGHT TO TRAVERSE CPTT,
the operajives. who, on Saturday's generally camoshort in glance at the position of this portrait upon the two dolT h e r Bar t
lar
note shows tbat tbe oval frame of the picture rests opproportion to the stoppages during the previous days.—
Wbo are " they?" Who are tbe cowled Monks, the
It was noliced however, that Ane man always drew his pn the extreme lower edge of the note, tbe main title, hooded Friars, who glide with shrouded races in tbe profull pay—his work was ulwa/s accomplished—»-in fact bis "The United States." being above the picture : whereas session t»r life, muttering iu an uuknowu tongue, words or
loom never had to stopovfiile every other iu the factory in the fifty the portrait is placed in the upper part of the strange import? Wbo are theyf The midnight assaswas idle. Mr. Peel was Wormed of this, and knew there note, nearly at the top. while the words of the main title sins or reputations, who lurk in tbo by-ways or society,
CONSISTING OF
ranst.bo a secret somewbpre. ,It was important that it are separated by it. Tbe word "United" is npon the with tongues sharpened by invention, and envenomed by
left, and ' States" upon the right of the portrait. The malice; to draw the blood oftunooeoco, and, byena-like,
Amid'bo discovered if-possible.
'
The man was watched, but all to no purpose, his difference iu the backs of the twos and fiitles is so marked to banquet on the dead? Wbo are tbey? They are a
workmen trfod.to "pump" him, bnt tber ^ouMu't; »t thit observation of that of tbe two, with its two concen- multitude no man can number—black stolid, familiar of
tric rings and its two broad band of geometric engrar- the inqnistion of slander, searching for victims in efery
lwtv34r. Peel sent for the man irtto bis prirate office.
He jtfii a rough Lancashire man—unahje to read or ing, would be readily remembered as an exclusive figure, city, town and village, wherever humanity throbs, or the
write—a little better inwed than a mere animal. He as totally unlike that of the fifty or any other note issued ashes or mortality rest. Give me the bold brigand, who
aqfered tbe pawnee" palling bis forelock, and shuffl- by the government.
thunders ulong the highways with flashing weapons, that
ing on the groawl with his great clumsy wioodco shots.
cut tht sunbeams as well as the shades. Give me the
"•"'Dlck. Buid'Mr. Peel, "Ferguson, the'overlooker,
l l o w the Turka Smoke.
pirate who uururls the black flag and shows the plunk And more toy heretofore Icept by them; ail
tnUs moyour bobbfns are always clean—ia tbat so?"
which your doomed feet must tread; but save me from
From tbe N. Y. Journal of Commerce.
" E o s M.agtjr 't be."
Tbe Turks undoubtly understand bow to smuke better the They-sayers or society, whose knives are bidden in a
••Well, Dick, how do you manage it—have yon any than any other nation. They do not seem to be harmed velvet sheaib. whose bridge of death is woven in flowers,
objection to let roe knowf"
by it, since thev live to healthy old age in the constant and wbo spread with invisible poison, even tbe spotless
V" Why, Master Pill, 't be a soart o' sac ret loike, ye use of tho weea ; but whether harmed or not. they evi- whiteness of tbe winding sheet.
aee. and If ol told, *t others'd know's moch 4 o'»" repli- dently excel all other people in tbe luxury. We have aled Dick with a cunning grin.
AxoTiiKa WABKIXO ABOUT REBRL IBOX-CLADB.—A
ready remarked that the Turk uses a clean clay pipe.—
"Of course, Diijk, 1*11 give you somethiag if you'll He also u.»es a long wooden stem. This is tho important London correspondent of the Boston Commercial
taQjoe—and if you mako all tbe looms in the factory work characteristic of the chibouk, and the theory of the thing Bulletin writes : " It is well you are just completing a
a* smoothly as yours."
T :
fleet
of '• Monitors " You are likely to need them be- And before the great advance in mo»t
ia this : All woody fibres in buruing are decomposed
"Ev'ry one'n them. Master Pill."
giving off quantities of water, or of oxygen and hydro- fore long. Workmen are engaged uight aud du£ on tbe
".\yelC what shall I give "youf Name your price, gen, which compose water. This water passes off in Mersey, on the Clyde, and elsewhere, in building some
Dick, arid let me have voar secret."
.
steam or vapor, having fn solution tbe nicotine and other twenty iron-clads. which are to see service in American
kind* of Goods, to make room for
Dick grinned, scratched and shook his great bead, and component parts of the tobacco. What is commonly waters. Thev are intended to convey vessels into South•hnffled for a few minnutea, wbilo Mr. peel anxiously called the '• oil " in a pipe is ninety-nine buudredtb purls
ports. This I kuow to be a fact. My information is
awaited bis reply. The cotton lord thought he would probdirect
from
those
in
confidence
with
tbe
promoters.
I
water. It cannot but be evident that this hot water or
which, they are compelled to build
kbftr ask a hundred ponuds or so. which ho would most
steam, passing as it does directly from the fire to the can see only ono way or preventing a good oeul or miswillingly have given him. Presently Dick said:—
mouth when one smokes a short pipe or a cigar, is un- chief. Every port for which they are designed ought to
" Well, Master Pill, I'll tell 'ee all atx-ut jt, ir yon'll comfortable, if not unwholesome. A long wooden ftem.
the power of tbe American Government before
're me—a quart o'beor a day as long'as I'm iu the three to five feet in length, with a large bore, is there- these ngly monsters can cross tbe Atlantic. Then you
ills—you'll save tbat ten."
fore advantageous in this respect, that jt permits the might welcome them as effective aids iu future operaMr. Peel rather thought he should, au<j quickly agreo- smoke to rest in the tube some time before it is taken tions. To disarm suspicion, it is popularly given out
«J to the terms.
into the mouth. It deposits its steam, and a large part tbat this iion fleet is being built for the Chinese Gov" T o n shall havo it, Dick, and a half gallon every Sun- of the nicotine, in the wooden tube, and the smoker takes ernment : bnt I need hardly tell you tbnt Mr. Mason and
day Ihtoibe bargain."
into bis lips a dry smoke. The Turks clean these stems bis friends form one ot tbe chief contracting parties."
••Well, then," said Dick, first looking cautiouly around daily with strong coffee. They prefer tbe wood of tbe
A PI.ACK rou EVERYTHING.—Iu attaching postage
tO»e* that no one was near—" this it W (tod putting jessamine of tbe wild cherry to all olhers, although tbey
b&lipe close to Mr. Peel's ear, be whispered: "Cbalk make, pipe stems or every'wood. Indeed it is not uo- stamps to letters, correspondents should bs enrefal to put
them in tbe upper right hand corner or t|ie envelope,
ypnr bobbins!"
. ».
W H I C H WILL BB
common for a luxurious Tnrk to send out for the branch
"That indeed was a great aecret. Dick bad been in^tbe of a lnrgu rose bush, have bis Bervant bore the stem with leaving a margin ol tbe sixteenth part of an inch above
and also on tbe right of the stamp. Carelessness in this
habit of fartively chalking bis bobbins, which simple contbe ever ready gi mblet and string, ond then band the particular results In qvnch embarrassment in the process
trivance bad effectually prevented the adherence of the pipe to his guest bloomiug with fragrant roses. Jessacotton. As the bobbins were white tha chalking had mine and cherry stems cost iu tbe Turkish bazaars from orbtamping. especially in large post officies, while it is
fonnd thut even this comparatively -trifling matter prove®
eacaped detection.
one to ten and even fifteen dollarseacb.
It is on the
Mr. Peel w u a sagacious man and saw through the af- stem and tbe mouthpiece that the expense is wasted — the most formable obstacle in adpting machinery tt> postFll_L_ED FUL.L. O F
marking and conceiting—the want of uniformity In tbe
fair at a glance. Ho at once patented the invention—
Tbe ombcr mouthpiece is In itself costly—choice amber, precise locality of thci postage stamp, preventing the rebad "chalking''machinery contrived, and soon took the
milky and delicate in color, being worth %lmost its
tad in the cotton spinning department. j This was the weight in gold in Oriental countries ; and the mouth- quired oespatch even in an otherwise successful machine.
foundation of bis princely fortune It is bat right to add piece is ornamented with jewels, according to the wealth Above all thiugs. don't put your stamps on tbe back of
the letter, which is sometimes <l<fre, as, in the harry of
that ^0 pensioned off Dick handsomely.
of tho proprietor. Thus, a mouthpiecc worth teu or mailing, tbe evidence or prepayment is liable to be overtwenty thousand dollars may be frequently seen, while looked, and the letter "held for postage," and poSBibly
The Great Wall of China.
the
bowl
of
the
pipe
is
worth
but
a
tenth
of
a
ctnt
For a short distance on either side Of the Lo-wan Pass
perform a trip to the .postal cemetery at Washington.—
tbe wall is comtrncted of brick with rubble^in the cenIn addressing letters..leaving ample space at the top of
Take Cnro ot tho Feet.
ter; but further uway it ia conposed almost wholly of
the envelope to allow'room for tbe post-mark, without
stone; iu fact, whatever material w « closest at hand
Of all parts of tbe body," says Dr. Robertson, "there interfering with the superscription which is often renderwpold appear to bare been mado nso of. Thus, as at is not ono which onght to be so carefully attended to as ed illegible by unavoidably stamping over it in whole or
Ae weU a* the two building* already octhe spots wo visited, granite abounded in groat profusion, tbe feet." Every person knows from experience that in part
[Holbrook's United States MaiL
the construction of the wall it was made tbe r prin- colds and manv other diseases which proceed from colds,
cfpal ingredient, and for miles the wall consists of large, ore attributable to cold feet. Tbe feet are at sncb a disMORTGAGE S A L E .
shapeless masses of granite, smoothed ouly on the outside. tance from " the wheel at the cistcrn " of the system,
cupied by ue; and will be
W e obaerved only one tower built only > of stone—they that tbe circulation of the blood may be very easily
EFAULT HAVDJO BEEN MADE IN THE CONDIbeing with this exception, composed of brick, with foun- checked there. Yet, for all this, and although every
tiun ot a certain mortgage executed by Henry Warburthen of the Township of Tia»f7*e, Coouty or Grand
dations 6f hown etoue. The higtb of th? wall from the person of common sense should be aware of the truth of
top of tbe parapet is about seventeen feet ten inches at which we bavd stated, there is no part of the human
most psrt% though occasionally, where ithe parapet is body so much trifled with as the feet. The yonng and ing date the Fifth day of November, in the year of Oar Lord
highest, it measured eighteen feet six itxjhes: its breadth would be genteel footed, cramp their toes ami feet into Oac Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-one, and recorded
if thirteen feet, and tbe higth of tbe parapet five feet thin-eolcd, bone-pinchiug bonis and shoes, in order to on the Fifth day of November, 186), at i o'clock, P.
la
four Inches. The towers are thirty*one feet three inches display ueat foet, in the fashionable sen* of the term.— the office of tbe Register of Deeds ofOrand Traverse County,
In I.Sber 1 of Mortgages, at pages 308 and 309. on which there
high, and twenty-eight feet one inch brotyi. . The parapet There is one great evil, against which every person la
claimed to be due at the date of this notice, by the terms
ia both crenelated and loop-holed, and tha towers are should bo on their gnord, and it is one which is not of- aod conditions thereof, the snm of sixty-six dollars ; and no
ptafeed for the discharge of some projectile. From any ten guarded against—we mean the changing of warm unit or proceedldg atlaw having been 'instituted to recover
elevated site the scenery will repay one for tho trouble of for cold shoes or boots. A change is often made from any part of the debt secured by aat<, mortgage ; Notice is
UOtntj clear streams are seen meandering down the poss- thick to thin soled shoes, without reflecting upon the hereby given, that by virtue o»-a pefrer of sale contained in
mortgage, and the statute in such case made and proet, whilst on erery side, and loomiug far m the distance, consequences which might ensue. In cold weather said
vided, the premises described In said mortgage, or so much a# present prices in Eastern market* wih
•re a toccession of brown hilltops, with sfnall patches boots and shoes of good thick leather, both in soles and thereof as may be necesaary to aatisfy the amount due on said
«o|y under ctilthralion. Droves of pack mtfles are seen uppers, should be worn by aJL Water-tights are not
irtgage. wd the coats, intercut and expenses of sale, toMing and retiming, tho former unladen; and. the latter good if they are air-tights also ; India rubber over- gether wUft'an Attorney's fee of Twenty-flve<lollar*,ipeei8ed
admUyfor
-Scfagiog a small kind of brushwood, which [tbe borders shoes should never be worn except in wet splashy wea- in said mortgage, will be sold at pabllc vendue, to tbe blgb'
t bidder, at the front door Of the School House in Traverse
i*n> instead of tbe millet stick in nse oo the plain, whilst ther, and then not very long at once. It is hurtful to v.ty,
County of Grand Traverse aod State of Michigan,—that
wild abundance are scattered Innumerable ash, poplar. the feet to wear any covering that is air-tight over being the place for holding the Circuit Court for the Comity
them, and for'this reason India rubber should be worn In which toe premises to be sold are situated—on 8aturday,
Qflkhoots branch oat from tbe wall in pcqnional plac- as seldom as possible. No part of the body should be the Seventh day of February, 1863. at ten o'clock in the foree t ' For their construction it is difficult) in every case to allowed to have a covering that entirely obstructs the noon. Said premises are described as follows: All that
piece or parcel of land situated lying and being in
•sign amason; tbe UtUetown dt Lo-won Eu is complete- pa«ago or carbonic acid gas from the poraa of the skin certain
the County of Grand Traverse and State of Michigan, and
ly encircled by one, and on opposite sides a double wall °otward, and fbe moderated passage or air inward to the described as the West |iair#r8oBlh Bast quarter of Section
windsnpward with tteppriipoa in nearty parallel lines. skin. Life ran be destroyed in a very __
short time by e»- Five (5) Town TwentTrseven(I7) North ol Bangs Eleven (11)
1
. i_ -i—i ,L— **-"
*
"
Good warm Wc3t,containiBg Eighty acres acrea according to the Ualud
States anrvey the reot
are conservaMOBOAN BATES, Mortgagee.
finned oar sannlqi that ip.tb£ fRctiQOO' the wall, the tors of health, and consequently human bap
bappuscn.
Dated Traverse City, November T, I K 1
47-lSw. O c t o b e r 1, 1 8 6 S .
Infancy I * bloating spring,
Violet strewn and blossoming,
April's wiubine, April's nUn,
April ne'er to come again.
. Boyhood I suu-kiss'd snmmer boar*,
fragrant with a thosand flowers,
Hmiiinz 'neath a tearless sky.
,
Cbaslng life's bright butterfly.
Manhood 1 in atumnal soil.
Rich iu russet golden fruit.
God stamped, noble, tender, true.
Harvest of preceediug two.
NOW RECEIVING,
MERCHANDISE,
K
BY FAB,
EVERYTHING,
Bought for Cash,
6
A N O T H E R STORE,
D
•
SOLD AS L.OW
R.EAT>Y P A Y .
HANNAH, LAY & 00.
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