Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, April 12, 1861
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
1861-04-12
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-04-12-1861.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
GRASP TRAVERSE HERALD.
VOL. III.
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 12, 1861.
N O . 19.
\l
Clje <§r$itii Crabtnt fteaUi,
MY DAUGHTER MINNIE.
a sternness which had Deter failed to terrify. But the that omioous air of of grave nmtery whiab strikes into
A few years ago—well, it ia not less than forty—my child, though she trembled like ao aspen at first brought the eool of the loving. I moved about M l of fear and
u r u i u n u p m r ranuT, AT
little home-flock was led, in the matter of years, by daugh- her father's spirit to the rescue, and, in the strength of guilty distress. The lymutoaia became m e n and more
Traverse Oitf, Grand Traverse C o n t r , Michigan, ter Minnie—a pretty name, I always thought Minnie lore and innocence, looked into her father's angry race at alarming—she was sinking. I waa called to her bedride.
waa a goed child, and, being the first-born, waa half ma- leogth with perfect composure.
as to that of my first dying chOd. As 1 beat over the
MORGAN* BATES,
I must not repeat the words that followed—they shall white face, almost traodaoent with i *
teriel in her management of the latter-comerf,even down
'
KOTOS AND r*Or*IETOIU
never be written—and would to God tbey never had been by eyes all imdimmed by illnw. my MinnU guve me the
to little " Pigeon, ,r the latest and tiniest of them alL
spoken!
.
The picture of Minnie is iust as fresh in my memory
old-time glance of love, and throwing up ber haods as if
__
, T E R M S .
as though the forty years which have simmered and evap- " Minnie had given him her heart, and would give him to clam my neck, said faintly, but oh! so earut*U>orated since bad been weeks instead. Bat it is a fathers her hand. How could the help it? Even her father's
"K&B me, father!"
eye that looks over these years at Minnie, and the beauty anger should cot prevent her fulfilling her word; for was 1 Mbt down to my daughter, my firstborn, and m wept
«>fb*4 by U«; en? c«U »*r foUa oT 100 worts.torib» tnl IsMTtton. u>4may be half fancy—a sort of affectional illusion. Those not Jemmy Brun worthy, and was not her father's anger longtigether—the strong father and the faintly-breathmg
• Wl i n w m > n i i > n l m i » l I»«7 4nn»«onh » w i t r\gx— we love are transparent, you know—we who lore them unreasonable and unjust? All this she said to me with
wmk wMb—tratal,ao f t Mat O-Ud- adssad Bm-work.4mkU»V
. AM U«%1 t4inMnBMii MSSSS yldftrmlqlTlBsdT—».
the deep calmness of a perfect heroine, while 1 stood there What do you think Minnie did? Why she got well
look through into the heart, and then imagine it ia v
dmost as much astonished as angiy.
face-tint and surface-light of which we are thinking.
again, and in two mouths was as musical as a lark, and a*
,r
This much I know: Minnie was the best, most affection- " Wife, it's all up with Minnie, said L striding nto gay. looking after the little Minnie like a pretty mother aa
ate, and wildest of daughters—one of those spirited but the sitting-room, and breaking in upon a most comfortable as she was.
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
industrious litUe creature upon whose enterprise and tact rternoon reverie, only releived by the solemn ticking of
However, the ice was fairly broken, and I was anr old!
the clock and the busy click of the knitting-needles.
the greatest and strongest of us will involuntarily lean.
fatherly-self ever after. Minnie even ventured, after a
J a t o of Probate....CURTIS FOWLER, Mapleton.
" Lord, what's the matter?" and the ball of yarn rolled time, to make merry at my expense over the fact that not
v
"Minnie, ahalllwantfiveor six breadths in this skirt?"
Sheriff..............
—•
•cross the floor, while aflower-poton the window fell only was Jemmy Brun^he best of husbands, but one ef
her mother would say.
C a n t y Tieasenr.
Coaatr Clerk..
.THERON BOSTW'lCK,
Looking up, with just a little knitting of the forehead, spilling and crashing on the bricks outside; "
the well-known of American writers.
toe flower-pot—tell me quick—you lode as
Register of Deed*—THERON BOSTWICK,
after a moment's thought Minnie would answer:
I think I was a very great fool
Pro*. Attorney
--C. H . HOLDEN. Northport
sheet"
|
" I think five will do, mother,"—and five j£ was.
Circuit Coant Com.-C. H. HOLDEN.
"Minnie has promised to marry that seal
1 can hear, even now, the voice of Minnie'a mother,—
Sensations of Taking Chloroform.
Coroner.
P E R R Y HANNAH, Trv. City.
GEO. N. SMITH, Northport she has been gone twenty years, dear heart!—calling from 'teof us; she says she will to me—in the
A correspondent of the San Francisco Wtekly Mirror
lolute commands."
,
the head of the stairs:
rives the following vivid description of the sensations b*
Thereupon I walked the floor, wife staring at
CHARLES H. HOLDEN,
"Minnio! Say—Minnie!"
felt while under the intoxication of chloroform, in w e b
wiile.
"What mother?"
he had been placed for the purpose of having a diver ef
" IT! never forgive her—never."
" What shall we have for dinner, to-day?"
iron extracted from his eye:
" Husband, stop and think. He—"
"You are tired, mother; let's have a little ham and
TAX AND GENERAL AGENT.
" 1 won't stop and think. I say 111 never forgive ber: " My lastsane recollection is of the surgeon applying
some
eggs,
with
some
peas
from
the
garden,
and
bread"
NORTHPORT,
the handkerchief to my mouth ; then the room began to
and I won't Call ber in."
That settled the bill of fare.
CRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
Wife left the room in search of Minnie. She was gone magnify to gigantic proportions; a common lamp was
And so it was through the livelong day; for, in all the
Office Becond Door Bonth of Unlon,Dock.
ll-ly
transformed to a candelabrum, more luminous and costly
domestic polity, Minnie, though only Prime Minister, ataig while; from which circumstances I have always than
ever lighted the grandest cathedral in the world
nad the suspicion that she spent the time in soothings and
C. H . M A R S H ,
possessed fully legal power.
At this time—this forty years ago—I was of course In (|Omfortings scarcely to be considered abetting my view The surgeon became a giant of prodigious magnitnde.
the prime of life, and full of the cares and responsibilities <if the case. At length they returned—both tearful— holding a huge, gleaming knife, with a single blow of
AXD
.
which cluster and cling to one's manhood. 1 was largely Yife sat down together a constrained group—Minnie very which lie might have severed me. The sound of voice*
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
engaged in active buisness, received some alight evidences tearful, bat very sweet and beautiful The interview' was in the room seemed like the clamorings^f a vast multitude during the burning of a city, and a sign-board,
Traverse City, Grand T r a v e l * County, Michigan, of public confidence, saw a large family coming up about short and those wore the closing words.—
Office in Dwelling House.
83-ly me—from all of which my natural positiveness and force j "Father, I have always been a dutiful child—you will screeching outside, conveyed the idea of a furious mob
lo me that justice. But I love this mja. You grant that collected 10 the street for my execution. On entering
of character received more or less strengthening.
room I had noticed a large cat sitting asleep on a
One night, when the last candle had been extinguished, his charactcr is unimpeachable, but you forbid our mar- the
shelf, which turned its head lazily toward me and then
and all was hushed, my wife said, with some anxiety of *iare becauscyou have a prejudice against him. I love resumed its slumbers ; this,creature became a hideous,
aa honor you, father. You cannot doubt that; but '
tone:
vampirelike
monster, with gicst fiery eyes, and with
this case I must follow the dictates of my own heart."
Husband, I feel uneasy about our Minnie.',
(FKONT STREET, NEAR COURT HOCSZ,)
Do so if you will; but remember, your father will fangs and claws like *bst were fabled to belong to the
Minnie? Why, what's the matter—is she sick?" «
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
griffin, walking round, and blowing fetid breath on me,
sver forgive you."
No, she isn't sick, but—"
Thus ended the interview—wife sobbing distressfully, and pressing its frightful paws on my breast But the
B?t what, wife?"
I ^ H I S OLD ESTABLISHED HOTEL,(THE FIRST
worst of all was a collection of gigantic men sharpening
L In Traverse City.) situated on Front Street. In the vicinWhy, Minnie is—I mean she seems to,be—well, I'm Minnio weeping quietly, and I sitting glum and angry.
ity of the Court House and public offleks, is still open for the afraid she likes Jemmy Brun."
Minnie kept ber word, and became the wife of Jemmy instruments for my dissection ; I could hear the whirring
of the stone and tho shrieking of the highly-tempered
reception of the trac-eliue public. The Proprietor return*
"Jemmy Brun! She'd better not" And I leaped to urun.
his hearty thinks for the liberal patronage he has roceived,
did not forbid them the house, as most angry father's knives, as the grinders laugbea at the intended dissection.
i and assures the public that no paias will be spared to make the floor and walked to the window. " Jemmy Brun and areI said
to do; but I told Minnie again that she had lost One was more jocose and heartless than the rest; be
/
>, hi* guests comfortable. His charges will correspond with our Minnie!—a pretty match!"
" I was afraid you would be disturbed, dear; but don't my love and care. Then I was so foolish as to see Jem- was my implacable enemy ; we had quareled and fought
ihe times.
Good accomodations for Horns sad Cattle.
«9tf take it too much to heart, husband I dare say we can my Brun, and, in a very silly speech, informed him that about a schoolmate love. Presently I felt tbeir keen
nut a stop to i t " And motherly sobs came from the pil- since be was taking my daughter from her father without knives at every joint; I shrieked and screamed, b)a»
r v d Y f l t WANT WHISKERS!
his eonsent he need expect no gifts or favors now or pbemed and besought my tormentors, but still the
DO YOU W A N T WHISKERS?
" Put a stop to itl I guess I will. Jemmy Brim and henccforth: She would not be allowed to share in the instruments hissed through my quiveringfleshand grated
family inheritance, nor should I render the least assistance along every bone. I am sntisfied that all these emotions
our Minnie! I guess I will put a stop to it!"
DO YOU W A N T A MUSTACHE?'
And who was Jemmy Brun? A young man of some if thry "should come to want" I shall never forget the were experienced within a moment after the first inhale- •
two year's residence in the neighborhood, of good habits, queer look tho young man gave me—a glance in which tion which began the process of stupefaction. So swiftDO YOU WANT A MUSTACHE?
so far as 1 know, but altogether and diametrically oppos- pride seemed almost vainly struggling with a cluster of are the evolutions of thought when sense is subdued and
when the phantom monarch of dreams leads the 60«1
ed to my taste, to my ideal of manliness. I had always mirth-sparkles,
"Very well, sir; we will try and not - come to want."' through the endless avenues, swifter in its journeying*
worshiped buisiness tact and enterprise. It had taken me
That was all he £aid; but tho cool self-possession of than the short-lived fire which falls from tbe womb of an
when a penniless boy, and brought me up through numoverburdened
cloud.
berless difficulties to a position of influence. That which his manner made me feel as though I bad undertaken to
CELEBRATED
" But a gradual revolution of mental perception sac
was found in my nature when young was thus nourished drive a nail and had pounded my fingers.
I had always been demonstrative toward my children— ceeded ; those frightful specters began to recede ; the
and rooted through all the after years of straggle ripenthe elder as well as the younger. Minnie had never lost men and knives began lo diminish; the cat returned
ing into triumph.
natural proportions, and crept slowly away; the
The young man was of a literary turn of mind; had her right to her father's knee, nor did 6he ever meet me to
__ .
For the Whiskers and Hair.
voices became less harsh and threatening, and the noise
taught in an academy; was a writer, it was said for one in.the morning or part from mo at uight without a kiss. in tbe street was subdued to unbroken silence. I looked
This wae denied her now. Poor child! it was the sorest
or
two
periodicals.
There
waa
an
air
of
sentiment
about
'|>HK SUBSCRIBERS TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNO- him, inhislookB and manners, which came precisely with- trial of all. Once or twice she clung tearfully to roe in into a universe of light with nothing visible, untill onL ing to+trrCituens of the United Statee, that they have
distinct forms appeared on tbe horizon, coming toward
obtalnedthe Agency for, and are now enabled to offer to the in the scope of my contempt I had known it in others my sternness, And, reaching up to clasp my neck with her me and defining themselves as tbey came. One was my
Ameyfcan public, the above justly celebrated and world-re- —in strong buisness men—this utter contempt for the white arms, Incd to bend my lips to hers. No. I prommother, clad in grave-clothes, but as she Beared, her
--tfowned article
i
least possible manifestation of sentiment; for those unthrif- ised her never a kiss while 1 lived.
ty follows who have never an eye for business, but hang Women aao strange creatures. There was wife, who habiliments changed to the fabrics which glittered iu the
prophet's vision when he looked over the •' great congrein prepared by I)r.t£ P. BELLISGHAM, an eminent physician upon the skirts of thought, clasp imagery, and ride upon had entirely Sympathized with me as I supposed, abso- gation which no man could number." Directly she stood
rhythm. You may sec it now every day in commercial lutely giving aid and comfort to our recreant daughter. by me ; and, recognizing every feature, 1 saw that each
of London, and U warranted to bring out a thick set of
houses. It springs, I think, from the absolute antagon- 1 verily believe that, long before the wedding-day came, ace-mark was gone ; her cheeks were fresh as tbe young
W H I S K E R S OR A M U 8 T A C H E ,
she was as thoroughly interested in the whole aSair as
In from three to six weeks. This article is the only one of ism of fact and fancy—of the figures which dot the pages though Minnie had been about to marry the best buisness girl's when she first blushes at the whispered words of
the kind used by the French, and in London 'sad Paris It is of tho ledger and those which illume the lines of the poet man in town. Little use was it for mo to tighten up my love, and, stooping to kiss me, the apparition went out
"The Muses frowned on me," said a German poet "for
in universal use.
U I H beautiful, economical, soothing, yet stimulating com- keeping account books." Undoubtedly. Nor is the knight purse-strings, and direct that the child should have no leaving another, more beautiful and youthful; it was the
pobad, aptiag as if by magic upon tho roots, causing a beau- of the balatice sheet less intolerant towards those misera- marriage outfit of wardrobes, pillow-cases, counterpanes, figure of my young wife, who died in the birth of ber
tlfftfgrowth of luxuriant balr. If applied to the scalp, it will
and the thousand and one etceteras in which mothers first child. Sho held an in(apt in her arms who reached
tana baldness, and cause to spring up in place of the bald ble fellows whoso entire stock in trade can be stored with- take such pride and pleasure. In spite of me, but sur- down and ran his tiny fingers through ray hair, bnt when
awts a fine growth of new hair. Applied according to dl- in a very little cavity just behind the frontal bone.
tried to take him in my arms, infant and mother were
IMOUOM, it will turn rod or towy hair to dark, and restore
good wife bad a time of it cooling me down, and reptitiously, Minnie wa§ well provided for. I am sure. I Igone.
Strange, that I felt no disappointment; I knew
Jray hair to Its original color, leaving It soft, smooth and preventing tho adoptioo of most violent measures. Even remember that >ho"shopman's bills for some ten months
flexible. The " ONOCSST" is an Indispenslble article In every when I bad formally surrendered to her superior discre- after seemed unusually full, both in number of items and they were but pictures that hung in tbe galleries of a
gft>tlttaan'* toilet, and after one week's use they would not
father's heart Everything changed to an existence of
tion, I chafed at times like a bear in harness. If wife bad footing of column: and 1 shrewdly suspected that wile had indescribable pleasure : I laughed and danced like-ooo
for any consideration be without it
The subscribers are the only Agents for the article in the not been almost a Rarey in tact I should certainly have nrranged with the tradesman to" have articles scattered mad with the 'exhiliration of unexpected deliverance from
along through the months. She was alwayS'a good finanUnited States, to whom all orders must be addressed.
broken into pluneings even sooner than I did.
torture; the air came into my lungs gratefully as the
Price OKC DOLLAR a box—for sale by sH-Druggists and Miunie was taken one day into solemn conference by cier.
Dealers; or a box of the *OSGVKNT" (warranted to have the her mother, with only pussy in tho door-way as auditor.
The ceremony was performed in church I was pres- up-gushing of cool water to tbe lips of a thirsty drinker.
desired effcct) will be seat to any who desire U, by mail (diThe aroma of celestial gardens seemed about me; I
rect), securely packed, on receipt of price and postage, But tho child, though she blushed very much, moved ent lest my absence might give too great notoriety to the believed that I was in the territory of souls, and wondered
family
jar.
Useless.
The
whole
town,
having
lotigrincc
about from seat to seat and tore pieces of paper into bits,
$1.18. Apply to or address
how any one should fear to die. I could hear sounds in
HORACE L. HEGEMAN A CO,
declared that she was heart-whole yet—" as why shouldn't been made acquainted with the state of affaire,—thebrides the street but they seemed to prolong and swell like tbe
Diircoisrs, Ac.,
be ?—for Jemmy Brun had never said a word to her beauty and the bridegroom's popularity—set many eyes sound of a great organ. Millions of symmetrical creatures
18-6m*
24 William Street. New York. she
ou me with the sparkle of criticism in them.
which any man might not have said to any maiden."
" H e needn't look so Favago-like," muttered a gruff old passed in review, along a horifon of silver and gold, and
So wife'and 1 got easy again.
yet I was conscious that they were but the creaturea o f \
But what should I see ooe evening at twilight while yoeman behind me: there ain't a likelier young feller any distorted imagination.
sauntering out under the shadows of my own grove of for- where hereabout than Jemmy Brun; ana, though Minnie
be purty as a pink, it's a good match, I say a real even
est oaks not far from the house, but twofiguresflitting
'• Presently I became conscious of returning sense;
^LOCATED AT DETROIT, MICH.,
slowly hither and thither amongst the distaot trees. Like bargain—so."
Long, long months went by after the marriage—tedi- my limbs felt unwieldly and of too great proportions to
ECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT a knave as I was, I Bat on the ground and watched them
moved by the strengthening will; my eyes opened
suite ol rooms, prepared expressly for their use, in Mer- —watching them nervously, glaringly, till I saw Jemmy is. unhappy months to me. "l knew I was being soured be
and
began to discern objects returning to natural dimenrill Block, corner of Jefferson and Woodward Avenues.
Brun give Minnie a kiss on her lips, and look lovingly after by the self-imposed restraint on the affectional part of my sions, and I began to comprehend the conversation of
jgr~ A scholarship Issued from Detroit College will be good
nature. Minnie came to her old home sometimes. Once
in Cleveland, Ohio; Buflklo, N. Y.: Albany) {i- Y.; Chicago, her as she slipped away.
persons
in the room. Tbe whole operation had not
or twice she begged for the return of the old love, the
I
was
reclining
upon
the
sward
by
her
path.
Deter. 111.; Philadelphia, Pa.: 6 t Louis, Mo., and N. Y. Citv.
occupied half an hour, but I had lived centuries of indeJ. H. GOLDSMITH, Resident Principal at Detroit mined to meet and confront her there, I sat and watched old home-kiss. No. My daughter was happy with her hus- scribable horrors, and emotions of happiness which ate
band,
happy
in
her
new
home.
But
I
saw
very
plainly
1L P. PERRIN, Spenceriaa Penman.
her coming.
incomprehensible to the sane and wakeful mind. My
TUITION IN ADVANCE.
Certainly Minnie's face never wore that expression be- that the bliss of the old homo was lost to her.
Perpetual Scholarship good in all our Colleges, including fort.
Nearly two veare went back into the past, shadowed in sight was preserved, and the fragment of steel is in my
It was not gleeful, but it was radiant and her eyes,
Business Penmanship, $40.
possession, which, like the key of S t Peter, unlocked
Penmanship alone, 15 lessons, $8; six months,evenings,$10. which were bent on the ground, and hence only visible as this manner, wfeen a little human blossom was laid in its celestial splendors and opened a Pandora box of belHab
*•* Our Standard of Penmanship, la the good old Spen- she came very near me, had a light and depth that I cradle. A little, struggling wee thing—another Minnie. imagery, which, even now, scares me from dreams to
Mriaa.
never saw before. She passed me-, so utterly wai the child Poor mo! Here was a new inflbenre to be stemmed, as Midden and trembling wakefulness.
G. A. O."*
The most thorough and practical sad truly popular Colboats stem another gust and another wave But I bracin her own emotions.
legs In America. Nearly four thousaadstndente have entered absorbed
«' Minnie!" I said, in a tooe which startled myself scarce- ed myself; and, when I had been forced into Minnie's chamslnoe their establishment which Is the beat evidence of their
At the marriage of tbe young Earl of Iincoln with'
ber, stood over the pale child with the little one on her
ly less than the child.
favor with the public.
For further information call at College Rooms, or send for
" Oh'" and she sprang from the path as though the arm, and heard the taint voicc add to the sweetly-beseech- Mrs. Hope, the jewelry worn by the bride cost qpwacda.
new Catalsgae of 80 pages. For specimens of Peamanehip, sound had been a rattle among the gross.
ing look, "Do kiss me, father!" I shook my head and of £12,000, and consisted of a bandaome bead-ornament
•acloao letter stamp. Address.
of diamonds, and a diamond necklace. Mr. Hope, it is
I raisedWseJf slowly—I am m y slow when very angry went out.
BRYANT, STRAITON. A Co,
Ooe day a strange change come over the young mother said, gives the Countess of Lincoln £6,000 a year pm
and, atMding stiffly before her, glowered down
At either «f th# above Cities.
(Out this out for fatare reference.)
60-ly into her eye*—Minnie's beautiful loving eyes—with alarming the experienced, and giving to the physician, money, and the use of sn Irish estate.
A8 MsrfU Prialing Hatij vAfapftinhEicoM
S
Xttomeji, Comrsflbr aittf Solicitor,
^ttornq aitlr Counsellor at Jfato;
" TRAVERSE OITY HOUSE,
WILLIAM
FOWLE,
BELLINGHAM'S
STIMULATING ONGUENT.
T h e Stimulating Onguent
• §rpit, Stratton & Co.'s
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
R
•
• • • • • •
rx i ^ban'r 1
for th. Grand T n n m
. The Ymj Latest New.Yotk u d W u U a c t o . Hew.Evening Journal.
P A P E H 8 OV A1ERICA-NO. 5.
T t o old favojite entered
eote
upon its Thirty-Second Vol. £
ai
L. • ->K* YORK. March 29.
A r a n ' s letter in the3lia»s states that the French anc
umo on the 2 2 N nit
'
It The
Editor says: " I t may be
BT Rfcv. GBO. THOMPSON
Endish govermhents arifittfbg tat a' powerful fleet of
pleasant to ourfjriends to know that at no .tintt has its
war steamers for the UifltcdBtates. The suggest ioc came
TRft V i : B 8 F # I T
raoDccno.wr coxrixckn—SCOAB CASK.
"£frculationl)ee'h as large as during"the last three months.
* . T v.
J.,
,
„
, from England. France will furnish three of the first cla*.
T
FRIDAY MORNING. A P R I L 12, 1861.
In my last I showed that the Cotton Culture can be frigata. a « U h e E o ^ u h continent will perhaps be larecr
For thi|
grateful, Jcsa because of tho abundant
c o n d u c t e d in Africa,
A f r i c a , with much
rnnrh greater
r n w W advantage,
. ^ r a n f n m i than
Itian The
'I'Knfljwt
trill nsail
i l wilit
AMUW Sjiitiu"
CA.:.. ;is- alio
-K pn.
fleet will
with BAAIAII
sealed orders.
*he"9w««ip L a i d Koad Law.
'
pecuniary retnra w^ich it secures to the treasury of the
in this country. The same is true of Sugar • Cane. / I t paring to send a formidable force to the Gulf of Mexico,
Wntove not •yetL sec a copy of the Swamp Land establishment, th^n beea09e,of the assurance which it
grows in Africa naturally, and can be cultivatrd to any though not working in concert with France and England
, , .
.<
. . .
. . .
.
. . .
.<r»l.
ik.l n... I.I.
L.
i
_»il
.,1
J:.
affords
us
that
our
labors
have
not
been
altogether
disLaw U amended by the last Legislature, bat we find
Specialtiest.cbes from Washingtoa say'Elisha Whitextent desirable with th^ greatest ease. Once
tasteful to the Republicans of the State.
tlesey acceptrthe first cqntrollership
ihefi*ttlt
There U oo truth io the statement that troops have
•' One of the pleasautest features in the history of the it grows on continually. If sot cut, it keeps sprouting
Instead of three ComraiMtpoerftto; tecfc roftd tretboriwd
and
spreading
like
fing,
so
that
from
one
piece,
in
a
few
been
ordered to land at Fort Pickets
h ^ f t a t law, it prof ides fot- only one.. The law yeits him Journal, is the steadfastness with which its early patrons
The Post's special correspondent says J o W G . Palfrv
years, rods will be covered. If cut when mature, it
wiq|ia tbe.pd'wfer now p b ^ s s & n j j IBc BoanLofthree. adhere to i t We have upon our book3 th^ names of
has
been appointed Postmarter at Boston.
immediately
sprouts
again,
and
produces
another
crop
The opinion is almost universal now that an extra sesFor all the roads than thoaoau&orized by the first seo- many of its original subscribers, and many hundreds who
by the time the year comes round. So that there is uo sion of Congress will-be called, to consider tho operation
iion of the act at 1859. located on private lands, the inherit -the principles, partialities and virtues of those
trouble of planting every year. All that the planter has of the new tariff, and the state of the Treasury.
dataage found and certified by the Oommisioners is to be who first bade us «' God speed" in our humble efforts, but
Orders hare gone Westto confiscate all goods introto
do,
is
to
cut
the
cane
every
year,
grind
and
boil
itpaid'by the county in which such lauds lie. The Com- who have loyg since gone to their rest In such houseHere, it will be seen, is a vast saving of labor. And duced into the Southern ports without the pAvment of
the regular United States dbties.
missioner is authorized to locate the road on any private holds, the Journal is received less as a newspaper than as
then
the
cane
grows
very
much
larger
than
in
this
It is now said that Fort Pickens was reinforced more
laad'OOt'ibcluded within an incorporated citv or village, an old friend; and is welcomed perhaps, more because
country, producing, of course, much more to the acre. than a-week ago, and that several hundred United Stale*
of its past-time memories than because of any real
and estimate-the same, to be paid as above
Io Liberia.I saw large fields of 25 to 50 acres of cane, troops were taken in from vessels off in tho stream, by
T^heterm of the Commissioner shall continue for three excellence in itself. But that it is so. welcomed, is inex- standing very thickly in rows from 10 to 18 feet high, small boats in tho night The Southern Commissioner*
y#»r* .unless the road for which he is appointed shall be pressibly gratifying; and it is more our ambition to and from one and a quarter to two inches in diameter. however doubt the truth of the report, and profess to have
assurances from the Government to the contrary.
sooner Completed- The State officers, except the Super- have it always thus welcomed by happy Households than
And men were jusft beginning to plant there. Since I
The Quaker
City, from Havana, on Monday, has a
intendent of Public Instruction, are constituted a Board that it should bo recognised as the successful organ of was there, men who badfiftyacres now have one hundred, rived,
j i1
y of Control,'with power to suspend any road that may be any party.
Much excitement exists at Havana on tho subject of
and
the
business
is
being
successfully
carried
on.
"The Journal will continuo to be, what it has always
cotnmeuccd under this act at their pleasure, and direct
the
annexation
of
San Domingo to Spain. It seems the
When I was there (1856) there were many horse-power
a rc-survey with a view to a more fit and convenient Been our desire to make it—a Family Paper. And sugar mills, but since they have steam sugar mills, and system of Spanish emigration has been goiug on in that
island, the emigrants boiog instructed, when tho proper
locality. The Commissioners appointed by the Governor although old age is proverbially slow to promise, this
c exporting sugar and syrup of a fine quality.
time arrived to boistthe Spanish flag and invoke toe proare each required to give five thousand dollars bonds for may say : Those who have been able to tolerate it in
Undoubtedly, Liberia will bo heard from in years to tection of Spaitf This wits done on the 16th, much to
the faithful performance of their duties. No more than the past will have no just cause to be displeased with it in come in the sugar trade, and we wish the new and young the astonishment of tha blacks aud the natives.
the
future."
When the news reacl\ed Havana the frigate Blanca.
* the value of six hundred and forty acres of land in the
Republic all possible success, especially as the North
fioj/cf Peninsula,, and twice that amount in the Upper,
GEO. DAWSON.—We are gratified to learn that our will need the sugar, if the south bolts and rets up for fully armed, with a large number of regular troops, was
dispatched, sailing on tha 23fl. Two 6crew frigates will
H .to.be expended upon each mile of road, nor more than old friend and former associate' in tho Detroit Daily herself, (for we wont have her sugar then.) A man who soon follow, with 5.000 regulars. .
fjor hundred thousand in alL The contractor may at his Advertiser, GKO. DAWSOX, now one of the Editors and had long lived in Africa, as also in the West Indies, and
A large naval and military force of 10,000 men is said
option take s»tomp land instead of the value of it for his Proprietors of the Albany Evening Journal, has been in the South of this country, testified that the cane flour- to be on the way from Spain.
It is stated that llayU will soou share the s:
contract^ When the Commissioner shall certify that appointed Postmaster at Albany. He has a host* of ished in Africa much better tbun in the West Indies or
Domingo, with the consent of Franco.
two consecutive miles of road have been completed, ttyj friends in Michigan who will rejoice at his good fortune. in this country.
It is said that a million of dollarsis en route from Snain
contractor is entitled to a certificate for two sections of
to
aid the metallic circulation of the Island. Sugar qutet.
The
natives
do
not
cultivate
the
cane
to
make
sugar,
SALARIES or FOBBIOX MINISTERS.—The salaries of tho
Ijind,- to bo given him by the Commissioner of the Land
.; 1 -WAWJMOTOX, March 29.
Ministers to London and Paris arc $17,500 each ; toMad- but they generally hare little, patches in their yards,
During the late executive session ofthe Senate, we fine
OfBeo, Jf he or they shall demand it, and a certificate for
rid, Berlin, Vienna, S t Petersburgh, Pokin, Turin, Mexi- merely to eat or chew.
about 400 nominations were confirmed, nearly fifty of
tho balftnce due him when the whole shall be completed.
It grows well on lowlands, or high—in clay, or sandy which were sent in by the President vcstcrdav. *
and Rio Jnueiro, 012,000: to Santiago and Lima, 810If the contractor shall' prefer the money, the -{State
The Postcfficfli department, under the provisions of the
000; to all other courts, 87,500, The Consuls at Lond- soil. (And this is true of the Cotton.) And there are
Treasurer is required to pay tho amount duu him from
recently enacted law, has restored the mail service beon and Liverpool have a salar/of 87,.200: at Rio Janeiro thousands of miles of the West Coast of Africa, extendtween Georgetown and Lexington, Mo. The service is
any money arising from the sale of swamp lands in .tho
Havana find Havre, £6,000/at Calcutta, Paris and Jap- ing hundreds of miles interior where cane can be thus to be six times a week.
Treasury. Or if there be no money in the troagtiry the
an, 85,000, at Hong-Kong, AJexanJrin. &>o-chow, Vera cultivated, and millions of natives who would gladly
Gen. Wm. Hicliy was elected astistant-Seereturv of
Auditor General is directed to draw his warrant on, the
Cruz, Panama and Callao, S3,500;
Frankfort work in cultivating it if the business wa3 started by the Senate.
treasury, payable to order, jvith interest until paid.
Asberry Dickens retains hit position.
Constantinople, Tripoli, Tangier, Amoy, Nipgbo, Lahaina capitalists, and a market formed so that they could sell i t
The government has sent to Florida for witnesses in the'
Besides the four hundred thousand acres of land approAfrica, when fairly developed, can supply the world Armstrong court martial.
and Valparaiso, 83,000.
'
priated for State roads, there are appropriated two
with' sugar and cotton.
At a Cabinet meeting this morning, the threatening
OHIO SENATOR.—Hon. John Sherman, elected U. S.
hundred thousand acres ior draining and reclaiming the
And as the Gospel and civilzation shall advance among events at the South occupied their attention.
hinds ia tho Lower Peninsular, under the direction of Senator in place or Gov. Chase, was qualified and took that people,-they will engage in.the culture of these
The Impost Contest.
the: Beard of Control. When contractors may elect to his seat in the Senate on U|e 23rd ult He is elected for things for exportation. They certainly have ttoi finest
Whether Fort Sumter shall be evacuated or not, the
inkcjand instead of money, they are authorized to select the full term^of six years.
country in tho world for the production of sugar,-cotton, authority of the General Government will very soon have
it in any county in tho State from lands which havo not
J nm es M. Edmunds.
and othrr things; it only needs to be cultivated; and to be vindicate! The duties ujK>n all foreign goods now
previously been located.
The resignation by>Jfldgo Edmunds of the office ofCity cultivated it will be as light and truth spread abroad— reaching Savannah. Charleston, New Orleans, Arc., are
I t will bo seen that four hundred thousawLacTSTof Controller, which he hash«jd for the past two years, pre- as thn slave trade is broken np and the people are taught required to bo paid to those holding allcgianee to the
Southern Confederacy, These duties aggregate more
sents
us
a
suitable
opportunity
for
expieasing
our
gratifi• wamp lands hare been appropriated to Stato roods, md
and encouraged 'to labor ; nt|d as lawful
than 820,000 per dny: and to this extent, the GenenU
two hundred thousand acres for drainage ana reclama- cation nt tho good fortune whicKmude that step ncccs- stretches her friendly assistance to a people who liaxi. Government is pqteticnlly paying attribute to those in
saty, and the regret we feel that tlie-eitv is hereafter to be
tion, making six hundred thousand acres in all. At the deprived of so faithful and valuable aVuitblic officer, tho
^ — e n rebellion agtfffut itsuuthoritv!
From this sotiree alone—iucludipg the money stolen by
minimum price fixed by law, this, is equivalent to an Republican party of so efficient JnH-mSucnual a member,
An Outside View of the Gains of Secession.
/Louisiana aud passed over to the Confederacy—more tliaii
conceded
appropriation of 8750,000 for these two objects. If the and the community of so good a /-itizen. It
a million of dollars, in solid gold, has gone into the rebel
The London Saturday Ilevietc ihus concludes,
money or land be faithfully expended, it will be of by all who have had an opportunely to form coi
treasury!
By the time fixed for the new Tariff to go inment that Judgo Edmunds has discharged the
incalculable advantage directly to Northern Michigan, duties of tho office he has just resigned, with ability and "and impartial article upon- "The Motives Of
to operation, nearly two millious of dollars will hove thus
and of very great general benefit to the whole Stato- fidelity He has been unwcaricihin his efforts to advante After remarking upon the probable profit toj
passed iuto^fce hands of those who have thrown off their
lggers, allegiance to the Unioo.
Much will depend on the character of the men selected the best interests of the city, amythose efforts havo been whites of the South, ill '• free trade and cl
'I his, of course, cannot be quietly permitted. To do so
successful in an eminent degree His selection as Com- tho writer says:
a* cdnimissioners by the Governor.
would bo to succumb to traitors, aiid dishonor the Govmissioner of the Land Officehasgiven general satisfactionAnd yet one might have thought that
ernment.
Fort Sumter.
and we have no doiiSuiiilHie will justify the confidence strong appetite for gam would hardly have bli
But, unpalatable as is tho contemplation of what lias
The Washington correspondent of the New York shown in his ability and integrity by the President, in white men of the Southern States to" the great
been, what will be is fraught with infinitely greater misTribune, under date of March 2C, says that Capt. Fox. the position for which he has been selected. We trust tho great risk which they are about to incur. To four chief, unless prevented by decisive nctiori." After the 1st
that it will be found as profitable as it is honorable to him
who visited Fort Sumter on thG requisition of the War and that at the end of his term of service he will return minds, the loss would be so enormous as to far outwfigh ofMay, the rates of duty'will be mueh lower at the Gulf
auy pecuniary gain. They would at once cease to
department, has returned to Washington and reported to his old home and hi* old friends, improved in fortune belong to one of the greatest nations of the world, and State'ports than elsewhere. The difference will be so
tha result.of his mission. He had a plan for introducing and in health. Judge E, left for Washington to assume sink into member* of « comparatively small State, with great that the entire Northwest would find it to their ad- '
vantage to purchase their imported goods at New Orleans
rc-cnforccmcnts, which hjid boon submitted to members the duties of his new office last evening.
no history, no renown, no prestige. * All the traditions rather than at New York. It is a moderate calculation
[Detroit Advertiser.
that gather aroWd the great North American people, to say that the cousnmcrs of full one half of such goods
of the Cabinoif-atidVaaf regttaotTris measurably practiand of which thatjpeopls has been so'proud, would cease would find themselves in this catagory.
i-ablolbuydwondod w&hrtho WBbatiiiity if not certainty
Humiliation of Mississippi.
to be theirs. But if patriotic pride does not sway them,
If this bo so, a new clas* CT '• Coercionifts" will very
of collision, which.«Hwitatcd^hff\cbief objection to its
The Brandon (Miss.) Republican, in speaking of the still we cannot uelp wondering at their readiness to incnr
adoption. H^MSjperfbctly famuiar with all the approaches success of Major Hawkins, who went to Illinois to get the heavy 'axntM w hi oil a separate Confederacy must soon take the field. The cc/fccrvativc merchants of thS
cities of the seaboard will not-like to sec their trade thus
to tlwJiWjopr onSWleston, having peen long connected corn for persons who were likely to starve, holds the entail. It will bo necjs^aarv for them to maintain a fleet diverted. They will therefore, be found in sympathy with
and. an army,
imkts46cy
cfioose to be exposed
'rith Urp.coast survey*, and had practical experience as following language:
.
.
.
... to insults
........... d, e Administration, whose purpose it is to' trausfer th*
ffrom
r e r otheir
l h e ' N6rthtjrn
r ^ r t M n , neighbor..
neighbor., The
riio whole
.hole cost
cost of
o f tthe
h e C o«tan OOiccnfor the liolf Sl.te.from >ho niarU. rflllthewntnander df onffyof^AspjirW all's steamers. His
•' From this letter it will be seen that the citizens of civil
administration, hitherto divided between the North
.-chenJo did not.cohjcmplntc any serious danger in running Springfield, the home of Lincoln, have contributed one and the South, will fall upon them. But more than all ccs which have been erected by the Government, in New
Orleans, &c., to tho quarter-decks of armed Frigates, to
thousand
bushels
of
corn,
and
that
much
more
will
be
this, '.here yitho risk that, should civil war break out, be stationed nt the entrances of the Harbors.
the ^fijauntlct of the batteries on the islands which guard
contributed to relieve tho distress of the poor in this,
the choM<0U but only in landing the men and provisions section. \ How humiliating to every Mississipian, to the negroes might take part in it against their masters ;
This will.be alegitimato exercise of authority. If bipod,
and that in any ease, the neighbourhood of a free State, shed shall result from i t the Gqyernment will not be the
at Suwtcr, after it had been reached. If a fire was know":that after cursing and denouncing tho people of
whose enmity to slavery has been ebflamed by these
c penou upon his transports from Fort Moultrie or the tfiiS North as our people have been in the habit of dissensions, will render insubordination and desertions aggressor. There will I* no invasion. It will be but the
simple exercise of an unquestioned right—the collection
cthflrpa^teries, it would be necessary for Sumter to denouncing them, we are compelled turn arouud and beg far more frequent amonff-the'slavcs.
,of imposts belonging to the people.
4hem for bread, and they in torn are trying to kill us
" No event of our day has been half so wonderful a«
•ihiucfe them in order to dischargo the re-euforcement wl(h kindness, by treating our agent with the greatest
W ill the authorities of the Confederate States interfere t
Any 4f'empt, therefore, looking to that object would respect, aud not only giving him more than he asked, the one before us. Who, a priori, could have believed Perhaps so. They are making preporatiohs for such an
that in the nineteenth century a new State should be
almost ioevitubly load to bloodshed, and before reurting but paying for the sacks to put it in—.It certainlv places organized, by the grandsons of Englishmen, safely on the emergency, and avow their purpose to resist any and every
to it," .the Administration "would be constrained to expect us io a verv humiliating position,Nind we heard Major principle of preserving and extending a system of slaveiy 1 attempt to treat them otherwise than ns an independent
and sovereign power—whether that attempt be made on
thatalfernaiive. Even if successful without great loss of Hawkins abused for going there and"t>5ggiflg corn : but A more ignoble basis for a great Confederacy it is im- serf or land.
we say he has done right, and thonsandi of starving possible to conceive, nor one in the long run more
life, nothing, would bo gained but tho retention of
Here, then, and not at Fort Sumter, is to be the point
children, widows and orphans will bless him for his efforts precarious. Thfc permanent renunciation of sound
fortress which has only local valuo in protecting Charles- to keep them from perishing with hunger. Some 'nar- principles and nhtural laws must, in due time, bring of probable collision. In this collecting the revenue,
row-minded. contemptible demagogues say that the' ruin. No great career car. be before the Southern quite as well as by holding an insolated Fort at a fearful
ton, -and is of no national moment whatever.
expenditure of treasurer and blood, can tho authority of
Capt. Fox is folly impressed with tho courage, inte- citizens of Illinois givo us corn becausc they fear us, and States, bound together solely by the tie of bavin? a the Government be vindicated.
wish to get on good terms with us agaitL We bdieve
grity and siucArity of Major Anderson, with whom, they are actuated by phrely Christian motives, and that working class of liegro bondsmen. Assnredly, it will be
This will be no blockade. That as the law of blocktho Northern Confederacy, based on the principle of ade is now construed, is nearly on impractical impoatir.owe*er,>his communication was necessarily limited, as they have purer and better hearts than those who make
freedom/' with a policy untainted t>y crime, with a free bility on a coast line of thousands ofmiles. It will involve
Gov/tfiekers sent Cupt. Hartstcin, lato of our Navy, as such charges."
working class of ivhito men, that will be the one to go us in no controversy with foreign powers; and may be
ir, e^Eort\rith him to the Fort, who kept within ear-shot
on and prosper,' and become the leader of the New carried out as easily as a floating lightship can be mainA HOWL AT NORTHERN Miami AN.—The, .disunion
turit)g.mpst;0^the interview, or, at least. Dear enough organ at Detroit is in deep tribulation because the World."
tained in Boston harbor.
»
If this much of " Coercionr is not practicable, then the
* to prevent any frc? communication. B e considers that Legislature has not departed from the swamp land policy
From the official reports, | it appears that the whole
the Fort can be reinforced either by a military opora- inaugurated by the Republican Legislature of 1859. It ammount of revenue collected at all the ports in the Se- Government is at an end. And those who shall coml«t
such an exercise of authority, most adopt the heresy of
tron. 'Which, of course, would require a force not at the howls pitifully over the fact that additional appropria- ceded States durirp the last fiscal year, ending June 30, the Tribnno, that the Gulf States have the samerightto
tions hare bett'a made, t'nd^new roads projected for
'iiapqfeil or the President, or by the strategy already Northern. Michigan, both in the upper and lower penin- 1860. wa9 only $b,491,757, or about ODe-twenticth ofthe set up an independent Government to-day that the Amerireferred to, with its attendant hazards of a desperate sula. Lot it howl. Trie people that live in the new revenue collected in all the port3 of the Vijited States.— can Colonics had to scpcratc from Great Britian in -76.
conflict. Tho supply of provisions now .in the garrison counties understand the propriety, ami necessity of these As thesa States comprise about ooe-«ixth of the Union
Albany Evening Journal.
will probably enable Major Anderson to sustain his com- appropriations, and so long as these lands are used for
iu territory and population, their share of the annual exSowt DRUNK.—The Nashville (Term.) Patriot says that
mand reasonably until the 15th of April. From all the
'ng up the country, and bringing actual Settler* upon
:
*cU jlisclojed by this investigation, it is manifest that
that have hitherto been an eye-sore to the people, penditures of the.Government could not have been less Senator Wigfall, of Texas, has been so drunk for the last
*'ortSumter must be abandoned, or civil war inaugurated. and an incubus upon the growth and prosperity of the than thirteen mil ions. Tbey will lose, then, nearly ten three months, that '• he couldn't hit tha ground with his
Capt. Fox fc cautious, intelligent and well-informed, and State, it will be a very harmless pastime for the Free millions by separation, even, if they collect and appropri;
hat."
was brought to the notice of tho Govepwfnt^by Mr. Press to devote its'cn'.umns to attacks upon these appro- ate as much revenue by customs as before. They will
Aspinjvall and some of,the principal shirk)wners*of New priatious, and upon the vital interests of the new counties. find, however, that the sum «f 83,491,757 will not go very
AruovuxvENT or Tim SENATE.—The U. S. Senate
York and Boston.
'
[Port Huron Press.
far toward supporting a Government
adjourned tine die on the 28th ult
~
tor and
&
\
""' T R A V E R S E CITY,
JUDGE M C I * ^ J / - A W a s h i n g t o n c o r r e s p o n d e n t o f t h e
A l e x a n d r i a Gap^Tte, s a y s : " O o e of t h e warmest a d m i r e r s
A o v r t n i n t t t r a ^ — T w o o o I o M i a ef-HsiryAfe,
Advertisements will be found on the fourth page.
k CoJ
ot J u s t i c e J o h V M c L e a n of t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t , i n f o r m s
m e t h a t t h e h e a W a J t t t e e m i n e n t J u r i s t i s fast declining,
TRAVERSE CITY LAXD O m c x . - — T h e P r e s i d e n t h a s ; a n d t h a t rerfous a p p r e h e n s i o n s a r e e n t e r t a i n e d t h a t he
a p p o i n t e d , a n d t h e S e n a t e c o n f i r m e d , MORGAN BATES, will n o t be a b l e t o resume his seat on t h e b e n c h . T h i s
R e g i s t e r , a n d REUBEN GOODRICH, R e c e i v e r , of t h e U. S. will be p a i n f u l intelligence t o the- n u m e r o u s friends o f
;
L a n d Office a t T r a v e r s e City. T h e s e a p p o i n t m e n t s w e r e t h e J u d g e . )
-t i : /
l
j
'
f
•
m a d e a n d confirmed on t h e 2 5 t h of M a r c h .
"ATTENTION, YOUNG M E N ! " — W e p e r c e i v e , b y t h e
I t is peculiarly g r a t i f y i n g t o u s t o learn, f r o m u n d o u b t - a d v e r t i s e m e n t of Messrs. H o r a c e L H e g e m a n k Qo., of
e d a u t h o r i t y , t h a t t h e M i c h i g a n D e l e g a t i o n in C o n g r e s s N e w Y o r k , t h a t t h e renowned " S t i m u l a t i n g O n g u e n f i i
unanimously
recommended our appointment
v e n t e d b y D r . B e l l i n g h a m for a T i e a l d y stimulation in t h e
NAVIGATION—From t h e p r e s e n t i n d i c a t i o n s { r e t h i n k
t h a t N a v i g a t i o n will n o t b e open o n t h o B a y aoonftr t h a n
the 2 0 t h i n s t
•<
JUDICIAL EUCTIO.V.—'The Official m a j o r i t y
c o u n t y f o r RANDOLPH MANNING, for A s s o c i a t e J u s t i c e
of t h e 8 a p r e r f t e . C o u r t , i s 200.
T h e Returns from Me-
geezec, M i l t o n , W h i t e w a t o r a n d Glen A r b o r , f o u r s t r o n g
R e p u b l i c a n T o w n s , d i d n o t c o m e in.
s y e l l e d t h e m a j o r i t y t o o v e r 300.
action V
T h e y would h a v e
W h e r e is t h a t
m a r k e t confided *o t h e i r a g e n c y .
T h e h i g h reputation of
t t y s a r t i c l e in L o n d o n , P a r i s , a n d o t h e r cities of E a r d p e ,
t o h a v e b e e n fully justified b y e x p e r i e n c e in
country.
all classes.
W e find t h a t i t s p r a i s e s a r e
re-echoed
among
A few w e e k s a r e s a i d t o p r o v e its almost
m a g i c a l influences u p o n t h e b e a r d o r whiskers.
B r i t i s h volunteers h a v e made s y [ b t r e e use of i t a s t o att r a c t t h e a t t e n t i o n of T h e L o n d o n P u n c h . S e e advertise-
M r . - R . W . S m i t h o f P e n i n s u l a h a s slips of t h e E n g l i s h
Call in
season.
THE MCKINNET DEFALCATION.—The B o a r d of S t a t e
_ crease the circulation and advertising patronage of the
HERALD in Grand Traverse County, with a view «o enlarging
the paper at the commencement of a new volume, and for this
reason will rcceive County Orders at par for Subscription! 1 ,
Advertising and J o b Work, onti) f a r t h e r notice.
MORGAN BATES.
Herald Office, Traverse City. April 4,1861.
18-tf
A u d i t o r s , on s e t t l e m e n t of t h e a c c o u n t s of J o h n M c K i n -
S T O R E ,
N E W GOODS,
Mead the Following,
A N D BE NOT SATISFIED,
BOT COSE AW) CONVINCE YOfc'JMEL* Or
THE r o i x o w c c o PACTS:
P I R S T . T h a t
•*. j AND
Hitchcock, Campbell & Bacon,
New Arrangement. KEEP
CONSTANTLY ON HAND A GESEBAI AS
sortment of
V
Groceries, Provisions, l)ry Goods, Hartttoare, Clothing,
T O TE E P U B L I C
g r o w t h of b e a r d o r whiskers, h a s now h a d i t s A m e r i c a n
m e n t of Messrs. H e g e m a n k Co., in M o t h e r column.
G o o s e b e r r y , Li l ac, a n d R o s e sp r o u t s, of t h r e e o r f o u r
varieties, t o g i v e a w a y t o a n y w h o m a y w a n t
N K W
And, in fact, a n y t h i n g the wants of the country d a * a r e
which they sell cheap f o r
In Ibvoerj^ Gitj, and on atf parts of
R E A D Y PAY,
'
Grand Traverse Bay, we wotdd re*- believing the nimble dime t e t t e r than the lazy s h i l l i n g
. T pectfuUy announce
S E C O N D L Y , That
pay the higheat market price f o r all kinds of P r o i u s e : .
T H
E
F
A C T , WTbey
h e a t , R y e , C o r n , Oats, B u c k w h e a t , Beans, Pi*..,
THAT WE H A | - E NOW MOVED INTO
New and Spacious Store,
Barley, Grass Seed, Poultry, P o r k a n d Beef.
(Dressed o r e n foot,) S h i n g l e s a n d C o r d Wood.
TRAPPERS will do well to give them a call before s t l f t a g
FURS
•e filling to repletion with ALL KINDS OF
>ds and Wares
T H r R D L Y . T k t
..
By the a i d of experienced workmen, they have opened a n w
A N T E D , IMMEDIATELY. AT THE HERALD
. Office, an A p p r e n t i c e t o t h e P r i n t i n g B u s i n e s s .
A steady, industrious boy, from 15 to 17 years old, who has a which ai adapted to the wants of the s u r r o u n d i n g eonntry
t h e S l a t e in t h e s u m of $ 8 1 , 6 4 1 , 2 0 ; t h a t t h e y d e m a n d e d Common School education, and a fair share of common sense,
o f h i m i m m e d i a t e p a y m e n t of t h e said a m o u n t , b u t t h a t will find a good home, have kind treatment, a n d ' a n excellent
AND ARE r U T A U D TO DO
opportunity to learn the trade. March 15,1861..RE or MAY RE called for from t i n t to time.
h e neglefcted t o m a k e a n y p a y m e n t on t h e same. H e is
therefore declared a defaulter t o that amonut.
Of
Rny^descration,
on s h o r t notice. Also keep on hand an
woold brisfly call the attention of the p u r s h a s i n g pabof GREILICK A SON', is this day dissolved by mutual
PRESIDENT PRO. TEH. or THE SKX^TR.—-Senator F o o i e , - » n t
GODFREY GREILICK.
Iron, Sap P a n s , 15-30-60 Gallon Kettles, Plow*.
JOSEPH GREIUCK.
of Vermont;'* b t f b e e n elected P r e s i d e n t Pro. Tern, of
Axes, H o e s . D r a g - T e e t h , Sleds, Ox-C art s, Oxlie to the following
Centreville, March 15,1861.
l"-3w*
Yokes, Whlllietrecs, A c .
t h e U . &*Senate. I n case of t h e d e a t h o r disability of
In Bhort, all kinds of F a r m i n g I m p l e m e n t s ; and will e a r
t h e P r e s i d e n t a n d V i c o P r e s i d e n t , t h o P r e s i d e n t pro.
particular attention to
Blacksmith Shop,
n e y , late 8 t a t e T r e a s u r e r , d e c l a r e s t h a t he is i n d e b t e d t o
CUSTOM WORK,
tern, of t h e S e n a t e w o u l d b e P r e s i d e n t of t h e U n i t e d
F R U I T
T R E E S .
P O I N T S .
W E HAVE A-
S t a t e s . S u c h a c o n t i n g e n c y , however, h a s n e v e r o c c u r r e d
10 Varieties of Apples,
s i n c e t h e f o r m a t i o n of o u r G o v e r n m e n t
12
.**
• ' D w n r f Pcnra,
'"
"
" Peaches,
T h e T e x a s L e g i s l a t u r e h a s passed a resolution a p p r o v Cherries,
Plants,
i n g of t h e C o n v e n t i o n a c t d e p o s i n g G o v . H o u s t o n .
Q u i n c e s , G r a p e s , S i b e r i a n C r a b A p p l e s , A c . , dec.
A bill h a s passed t o rai^e a regiment of m o u n t e d rifleThese Trees are of tho choicest kinds, h i ought in last Fall
in order to have them on hand for early Spring setting.
men for frontier protection.
JAMES M. BURBECK.
S i n c e t h e d e p a r t u r e of t h o F e d e r a l t r o o p s , t h o I n d i a n s
Northport, March 16,1851.
IT*
in l a r g e n u m b e r s ' h a v e b e e n d e v a s t a t i n g t h e f r o n t i e r , kill-
IVEW S T O R E ;
-'•* ' /
IN THE MAIN, A
T- J- R A M S D E L L
i n g a n d d r i v i n g b a c k t h e settlers.
JSMtoritcij am) Counsellor at $ato,
T h e s t e a m e r s D a n i e l W e b s t e r a n d G e n e r a l R u s k , sailfrom Brazos on tho 20th, with tha F e d e r a l troops.
SOLICITOR I N C H A N C E R Y ,
NO. 4 FIRST 8TREET,
Muiilfttoc. Miohijmn.
A m e m b e r of t h e M i s s o u r i L e g i s l a t u r e recently p r o posed t o h a v e t h e S t a t e p r i n t i n g p e r f o r m e d b y c o n v i c t
l u b o r ; b u t u p o n an i n v e s t i g a t i o n i t w a s found t h a t t h e r e
w a s n o t t h e n , a n d n e v e r h a d been a p r i n t e r in t h e Missouri
State Prison.
BOOTH PARDONED.—Sherman M . B o o t h , of Milwaukee*
w h o w a s convicted-of rescuing a f u g i t i v e s l a v e [rom t h e
U . 8 . M a r s h a l in t h a t c i t y , a n d w h o h a s b e e n
prison for some time, was pardoned b y M r
GLEN' A R B O R ,
Propeller of Our Own,
WOULD HEREBY CIVK XOTICB THAT TBE
Our Own Trade,
LINE OF PllOPELLERS,
direct to Chicago; thus l i v i n g us GREAT ADVANTAGES
R u n n i n g between OGDENSBURG and CHICAGO, will call
at this place DAILY, d a r i n g the coming season of navigat i o n , t o receive wood.
The above Line consists of the ProT h e revenue f r o m c u s t o m s a t N e w O r l e a n s i s s t a t e d f i l e r s
V
B
u
ckeye, Michigan, Ontario, Ogdensburg, Wiscon' a t 8 3 5 , 0 0 0 d a i l y . E f f o r t s will be m a d e t o c r o w d i m p o r t s
sin, Empire, Prairie State and Clevejaud;
t h e r e , u n d e r t h e l o w tariff, a n d t h e P r e s i d e n t h a s n o m o d e
and for safety and regularity of trips is not equalled bv at
6f p r e v e n t i o n w i t h o u t c a l l i n g C o n g r e s s t o g e t h e r .
other Line OR the Lakes.
>
DASCOMB, TODD & COT h e P o n t i n e G a z e t t e e of t h e 2 2 d inst., s t a t e s t h a t t h e
It-Cm
Proprietors of Wood Yard.
previous to his
retirement
f r o m office.
H o n . R , E". T r o w b r i d g e baa j u s t r e l u m e d f r o m t h e Cleve- MANISTEE. MANISTEE C O U N T Y , )
STATE OF MICHIGAN,.
land W a t e r Core.
A m j c A N T s / b r O r r i C E . — I t i s stated t h a t n o less t h a n
15,0D0_applrrations f o r P o s t - O f f i c e a p p o i n t m e n t s h a v e
b e e n a l r e a d y Qled in t h e F a s t - O f f i c c D e p a r t m e n t .
T h e T r e m o n t H o u s e in-Chicago, a b o n t 4 0 0 feet s q u a r e ,
is b e i n g raised f r o m i t s foundation b y 5 , 0 0 0 s c r e w y w o r k e d by 5 0 0 men.
BWAXTS, STOATON k
G o u i s i t r r n ' s MERCANTILE Coir
o b j e c t of t h i s I n s t i t u t i o n is t o i m p a r t a t h o r o u g h b u i i r f s i h d u c a t i o i ) , s u s t a i n i n g t h e same' r e l a t i o n t o
t h e profession of a c c o u n t a n t s h i p t h a t law, medical, a n d
t h e o l j j y a l s c h o o l s do t o t h e several p r o f e s s i o n s they h a v e
in v i e w A T h e c h a i n of Colleges, of w h i c h t h i s is n b r a n c h ,
h a v e .supplied a w a n t l o n g felt, b o t h b y t h e buisness comm u n i t y a u d t h o s e d e s i r i n g t o c n t e r bnisncss, a n d w e can
f a l l y i n d o r s e t h e o p i n i o n of i t s n u m e r o u s p a t r o n s , b o t h in
t h i s c i t y a n d elsewhere, t h a t A i r t h o a r o o g h n e s s a n d p r a c t i c a b i l i t y i t s t a n d s unrivalled b y a n y s i m i l a r I n s t i t u t i o n
c i t h e r west o r east.
[Detroit Free Press.
IHTBRISTINO.—If h o u s k e e p e r s really u n d e r s t o o d t h e
g r e a t d i f f e r e n c e t h a t e x i s t s b e t w e e n d i f f e r e n t b r a n d s of
S a l e r a t u s , a s t o quality, p u r i t y , a n d c o n s e q u e n t r e l i a b i l i t y
a n d h e a l t h f u l n e s s , - t h e y w o u l d not l o n g b e
b e s t that is manufactured.
Do Land k
without the
Co.'a S a l c r a t u s
costs you no more than any of the inferior articles which
are in.the market.
H e is using a n e w process of refining
S a l e r a t o s , by w h i c h all i m p u r i t i e s a r e removed. T h i s p r o cess i s in nse a t no o t h e r e s t a b l i s h m e n t in t h e c o u n t r y . —
T h e q u a l i t y of t h e S a l e r a t u s p r o d u c e d b y t h i s p r o c e s s
v c r y j n p c r i o r , a n d i t is f a s t b e c o m i n g very p o p u l a r w i t h
intelligent housewives.
Jtoi
ORDER OP PUBLICATION.
Q T A T E O F M I C H I G A N ' . — T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O . for the C o n a t v of Grand Traverse. I n Ciianciry. .
N i n t h Judicial Circuit—In Chancery. Suit p e n d i n g in the
Cironlt Codrt f o r t h ? County of Grand Traverse, In Chancer*-,
at Traverse City, on tho 10th 3av of March, l'gfiL Sarah
Parker, Complainant, vs. Ira A. Parker, Otis L. White and
J a m e s M. Burbeck, defendants.
It satisfactorily appearing to this,Court that the above defendant, Ira A. Parker. Is a non-resident of t h i s State, but a
resident of the Province of Canada, On motion of C. H.
Marsh, Solicitor for the Complainant, It is ordered t h a t the
said defendant, Ira A. Parker, caqae his appearance to be entered in 4his cause, a n d notice thereof served upon the complainant's Solicitor, within three m o n t h s from the date of this
o r d e r ; and In case of hi* appeamncc. that he cause bis answer t o complainant's bill to be Bled, a n d - a copy thereof
served upon said complainant's Solicitor, w i t h i a t w e n t v ita**
a f t e r service of a copy of said bill of.cotnplaint: a n d "in ife-
sale,
8 be will - come-in" on the first of May.
R. W. SMITH.
.
MARRIED,
I n T r a v e m City, on the Id test, by Rev. J . W. Robinson,
Olendlnaing, of Frankfort, Mich, a n d Miss
Hellen F . 8b or sr. ol t h i s vUlage.
i i a & t m J
IMt
>
•
S. BARISTS,
own, and who has f o r s e j e r a i yeara.purchased goods of tl
BEST HOUSES in NEW-YORK and BOSTON, and who w
continue t o do so for o ^ r firm from time to t i m e ; t h u s e
for Shelling Corn, Grinding Corn a n d Cob, a n d all kind* efCoarse Grains, will be run expressly in a
C U S T O M
T R A D E .
F o r the accommodation or the
F
A
R
M
E
R
S
.
SEED GRAINS,
o r A U , KOiDS, AND
F E E D
M E A L,
will be kept constantly on band a n d for aale by the 100 1>».
My
NEW
STORE
AND
^
,
N E W GOODS,
C o r n e r o f W a l t a z o o a n d N a g on a be S t a . ,
N O R T H P O R T .
T H E SUBSCRIBER H A S J U S T RECEIVED H I S W I N T t *
8TOCK! CONSISTING OP
D R . Y
Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
Which he oflers cheap for Cash o r Barter.
r . a—CASH FAIC j/tm FOBS.
NORTHPORT IS RISING!!
T h i s is E v i d e n t ! S i n c e
L. M. & W P . S T E E L E & Co.
HAVE INTRODUCED A LAIUiE AND T H E
ONLY STOCK
abling us t o lay down onr goods
M Uw a* a'uy Home in Chicago;^ j r , J ^ p - Q S & M E D I C I N E S
the consumer—first, TRAVELING E X P E N S E S ;
BPcon-1, IX)SS O F TIME; and lastly and mainly, the ENORMOUS AMOUNT neeessirily added to cover HIGH RENTSI
and cx]>cnack of the Chicago merchant.
We shall make an E S P E C I A L HFFORT to keep so c
plete a stock t h a t
'
Any Dealers on the Bay
will be enabled to purchase of u s . i n quantities t o suit, f o r ]
only a SMALL A D V A N C E
COST end a aommlssion t o r i
handling.
!
would remark, that o m i n g t o w a c t of room we have been
unable t o keep many t h i n g s in t h c S ' l i n c , which NOW, f r o m i
| our increased room, a n d the
'
TO BE FOUND IN T H E COUNTY.
ALSO—A CHOICE v i a i r r v o r
FAMILY GROCERIES
ASD
— , - ,
T r T
•
IN WHICH THEY ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD..
I Iniimat^personal acquaintance of our Mr.
Harm witji the thousand and one d*- ;
G i v e TJs a Call!
wands necessary to a Lady's tcants, " • * — P h y s i c i a n s ' P r e s c r i p t i o n s C n r r f u l l r - C o m -
j
in future T R f a n d k e e p ANY and ALL THINGS
j they may require.
• X. B. ANYTHING not in o u r regular line that I j u i i e . or
c i t t i c n s may want,
s we aball ubold e u r s e l v e s in readiness to
1 J™"' ™ " " " » * • » •'
Register in Chancery.
That
A NEW
METALLIC MILL,
G O O D S ,
Neio- York, jioston, Cincinnati or Chi-BOOTS AND SHOES.
> cago. .
Keady-Made Clothing,
T o the Ladies,
fence in cacb week f o r six successive Week*, or that the
plainant cause a copy thereof to-be served personaUy upon
said defendant, l r a A. Parker, at least twenty days bofor
"
before the
time above prescribed f o r said defendant's appearance.
C H A R L E S H. HOLDEN,
Circuit Court Commissioner
I n a a d fbr Grand Traverse County,
r *1
«
.
Michigan.
I herehr^rv.hft th/^L
^
01,51
OX-SHOEIJYG.
WE HAVE
Abundant Advantages
M R .
Manufactured
Peninsula April 10,1861.
Ovr Refits are ^Nothing. i
FOR PURCHASING GOODS IN
the Probate Office, in Manistee, the 23d
day of Marob, A. D. 1361, F r f s e n t , George J . Dorr, Judgo of
Probate:
In the m a t t e r of the Estate of Francis Barrett, deceased.
On reading and filing of t^e petition, duly verified, of J o h n
Canfletd, Administrator of said Estate, i t appearing by tuiil
i J'
i
*
—• sufficient personal estate in ''
,nds of tfie administrator, to pay the debts outstanding
long residence in the country we have becomi
against the deceased, and the expense* of Administration,
and that it is necessary t o sell the whole, or some portion,
well acquainted with the:wants of the public.
of the Real Estate for the payment of such debts ;
Therefore, all persons interested in said estate are ordered
to appear before t^e Judgo of Probate, at the County Clerk's
we have associated with us in the Mercantile Droffice, in Manistee, nn Saturday, the 18th day of May n e x t , ,
a m i n e o'clock, A. M., to show cause why a'lieenne should I
not.be granted to t h e aforesaid Administrator to svll so much ' partmcnt of
of the Real Estate as shall be necessary In pay such debts.
'
And that t h i s o r d e r be published i n . t h e Grand Traverse
Herald, four successive weeks.
. I n testimony whereof 1 have hereunto s'et m y hand
the seal of the Probate Court, at Manistee, t h i s twenty third
day of March, A. D. 1861.
w h o for sixteen years ha*'been extensively engaged in a b
GEORGE J . DORR.
18-<w.
__
J u d g e of Prol>:
sineas whose requirements were of t h e same nature
o-
a n d for sale a t wholesale a t F a i r p o r t , M o n r o e C o » N . Y .
T h e p r i n c i p a l g r o c e r * a l s o wholesale i t
over any one having to P A Y FREIGHTS.
PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY,
—T OF THE PROBATE OOOUT OF SAID
D o L a n d k Co.'t S a l e r a t u s i s f o r
sale b y m o s t g r o c e r s a n d s t o r e k e e p e r s .
JJYD
R0VNING IN
Northern Transportation Co.'s
lying in
WE HAVE A.
. . . . M A R C H , 1861.
D A S C O M B , T O D D <S^CO.
Buchanan,
NEW STOCK;
HORSE
F O U R T H L Y ,
'
H A N N A H , L A T It CO.
T r a v e r s e City, May 28, 1860.
pounded.
U M. & W. F. STEELE A CO.
Northport, Dee 1 1 , 1 ««o.
tO m
MORGAN BATES,
N O T A R Y PUBLIC,
H e r a l d Otlioo, T r a v e r s e C i t y
Mich.
reflection e n o u g h to t i e w t h i n g s s o b e r l y , t h i s g r e a t
speech of M r . S e w a r d will b e c e l e b r a t e d a s o n e of t b e
ooblest instances o f m o r a l a n d m o r a l l y wise self-modulac o ^ i m m t a ^ ' e d d r e * f r o m » ' v o l u n t e e r d e l e g a t i o n of tion to peas t h e s t r a i t s of a difficult occasion t h a t h a s
B e p u b l i c a n s , Mr. S e a w a r d i s r e p o r t e d to h a r e said, e m b e e u given b y h u m a n s t a t e s m a n s h i p . "
rabstantinlly, feat » f r e e d o m i s n o t b o w i n d a n g e r , " t h a t
" f r e e d o m is a h r a j r i i n t h i U n i o n , " s a d t h a t s i n c e t h e
U n i o n i s in d a q g e r , t b e first c a n of all g o o d citizens
should b e to g u a r d a n d p r e s e r v e t h a t I n t b e sense in
v U c h M r . S e a w a r d used t h e s e j f o r d s , t h e y h a v e a p r o f o u n d a n d f a r - r e a c h i n g significance. U s i n g " F r e e d o m "
to d e n o t e • free a n d p o p u l a r g o v e r n m e n t , g u a r d i n g b y
l a w t h e r i g h t s a n d l i b e r t i e s o f t h e individual, w h o can
d o u b t ' t h a t t h e Violent d i s r u p t i o n of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s
m i g h t p u t in j e o p a r d y t h e v e r y e x i s t e n c e o f s u c h a
g o v e r n m e n t u p o n t b i s g f l t i f i n e o t ? I t i s indeed easy to
s a y t h a t if t h e f r e e l H a t e s i h o u l d . j e m a l n u n i t e d a n d h a r monious. t h e y m i g h t h a v e a h i g h e r a n d m o r e p r o s p e r o u s
d e v e l o p m e n t a s ^ s e p a r a t e C o n f e d e r a c y t h a n is possible
u n d e r a political t ^ n i o n w i t h S l a v e r y . I t i s eSsy t o a s s e r t
An a p e r i e n t a n d Stomacic preparation of IRON' purified of
t h a t in t n e e v e n t o f , t h e secession of all t b e slave S t a t e s , Oxygen and Carbon by comboatloa in Hydrogen. Sanctiont h e f r e e S t a t e s would r e m a i n u n i t e d a n d h a r m o n i o u s .
ed by the highest"Medical Authorities, both in Europe and
B u t b y t h e v e r y l a w of R e p u b l i c a n communities, r i ^ a l
the United 8tates, and prescribed in their practice.
p a r t i e s w o u l d a t o n c e arise in tbe n e w C o n f e d e r a c y ;
The experience of thousands daily proves t h a t no preparad e m a g o g u e i s m would t a k e a d v a n t a g e of sectional i n t e r e s t s ,
tion of I r o n c a n be compared with i t Impurities of the
a r r i y t n g f h e East' against t b e W e s t , tbe Atlantic coast
a g a i n s t t h e P a c i f i c , t h e c o r n a n d r a i l w a y i n t e r e s t s of thQ blood, depression of vital e n e r g y , pale a n d otherwise aickly
valley of t h e Mississippi d e m a n d i n g f r e e t r a d e , a g a i n s t complexions indicate its necessity In almost eTery conceivat h e m i n i n g a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g i n t e r e s t s of P e n n s y l v a n i a ble case.
I n n o x io u s in aH maladies in which It haa been tried, it has
a n d Massachusetts, c l a m o r o u s f o r a p r o t e c t i v e tariff.
T h e f o r e i g n policy of t b e C o n f e d e r a c y , as well a s i t s proved absolutely curative in each of the following cominternal economy, would g i v e occasion f o r c o n f l i c t i n g plaints, vis:
p a r t i e s ; a n d in view of the p a s t c o u r s e of t h e m e r c a n t i l e
I n Debility, Nervous Affections, E m a c i a t i o n ,
a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g i n t e r e s t s u p o n t h e q u e s t i o n of Slavery, D y s p e p s i a , C o n s t i p a t i o n , D i a r r h e a , D y s e n t e r y , I n a n d t h e social, m o r a L a n d politieal d e g r a d a t i o n o f a c i p i e n t C o n s u m p t i o n , S c r o f u l o u s T u b e r c u l o s i s , S a l t
g r e a t p a r t of t h o p o p u l a t i o n t h a t would form t h e s o u t h e r n R h e u m , M i s m e n r t r u n t i o o , W h i t e s , C h l o r o s i s , L i v e r
b e l t of a N o r t h e r n C o n f e d e r a c y , i t i s q u i t e conceivable C o m p l a i n t s . C h r o n i c H e a d a c h e s , R h e u m a t i s m , I n t h a t should t h e late D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y b e c o m e d o m i n a n t t e r m i t t e n t F e v e r s , P i m p l e s o n t h e F a c e , i t c .
. in s u c b a C o n f e d e r a c y , i t s first a c t w o u l d b e to t e l l o u t
In cases of GINESAL DEBILITY, whether the result of acute
t h e G o v e r n m e n t t o its old S o u t h e r n t a s k m a s t e r s u p o n disease, or'of tbe continued diminution of nervous and must e r m s m o r e f a v o r a b l e to S l a v e r y t h a n a n y e x t o r t e d 1 f r o m cular energy from netTous complaints, one trial of this ret b e p r e s e n t U n i o n , e v e n u o d e r t b e d e g r a d i n g adminis- storative has proved snccessful t o an e x t e n t which no descript r a t i o n s of P i e r c q a n d B u c h a n a n !
tion nor written attestation would r e n d e r credible. Invalids
Or, t h e process of d i s i n t e g r a t i o n o n c e b e g u n , w h o can
so long bed-ridden as to have become forgotten in their own
p r e d i c t t h a t i t would s t o p a t t h e d i v i d i n g line b e t w e e n
neighborhoods, have suddenly re-sppeared in the busy world
t h e slave S t a t e s a n d t h e f r e e t S h o u l d therey, b e a Gulfas if j u s t returned f r o m protracted travel in a distant land.
S t a t e C o n f e d e r a c y , a n d a B o r d e r - S t a t e Confederacy,
w h a t should b i n d e r a f u r t h e r subdivision Into E a s t e r n , 8 o m e very signal instances of t h i s kind are attested of female
^Middle a n d W e s t e r n C o n f e d e r a c i e s t B u t s u c h divisions, Sufferers, emaciated victims of apparent marasmus, sanenfeebling t h e f o r c e s of l i b e r t y , n e c e s s i t a t i n g s t a n d i n g guineous exhaustion, critical changes, and that complication
armies, p r o v o k i n g civil war, e n t a n g l i n g t h e S t a t e s w i t h of n e r v o u s ' a n d dyspeptio aversion to air and exercise ffor
which the physician h a s no name.
foreign military alliance, w o u l d i m p a i r t h e vitalit.F r e e d o m a n d lead to i t s final o v e r t h r o w . L o o k i n j
I n N a a v o c s AFFECTIONS of all kinds, and for reason
F r e e d o m in t h i s c o m p r e h e n s i v e sense, w h o will <
miliar to medical men, the operation of t h i s preparation of
affirm t h a t t h e g r e a t I n t e r e s t of H u m a n i t y involved in f r e e i r o n must necessarily be salutary, for, unlike the old oxides,
g o v e r n m e n t u p o n t h i s soil, is n o t s a f e r in t h e "Union, it is vigorously tonic, without being e x c i t i n g and overheathonestly a n d faithfully m a i n t a i n e d n n d e r t h e C o n s t i t u - i n g ; and gently, regularly aperient, even in the most obstition, t h a n i t would b e In a s e p a r a t e N o r t h e r n C o n f e d e r - nate cases of costivencss without ever being a gastric purgaacy, liable t o b e r e n t b y factions, o r compelled to
tive, or inflicting a disagreeable sensation.
m a i n t a i n a hostile f r o n t t o w a r d s i t s S o u t h e r n n e i g h b o r ?
I n this latter property, a m o n g others, which makes it s e
T o say the least, t h e difficulties of t h e q u e s t i q p c h a l l e n g e remarkably effectual and p e r m a n e n t a remedy f o r PILES, upon
a most thoughtful consideration for M r . Seward's b n e f
which it also appears t o e x e r t a distinct and 'specific action,
b u t p r e g n a n t utterances.
by dispersing the local t e n d e n c y which forms them.
L o o k i n g a t " F r e e d o m " u n d e r t h e speeifio f o r m of t h e
In DYSPEPSIA, Innumerable a s are its causes, a single box
e m a n c i p a t i o n of t h e slaves, can a n y man d o n b t t h a t t h e i r
of these, Chalybeate Pills h a s often sufficed for the most hapeacable emancipation—whether by moral coercion or
p e c u n i a r y c o m p e n s a t i o n — m i g h t b e s o o n e r a c c o m p l i s h e d bitual CMes, i n c l u d i n g the attendant COSTITEVES?.
I n unchecked DIARRHOBV, even when advanced to D r s r s in t b e U n i o n t h a n o a t of i t ? T h e i r e m a n c i p a t i o n b y a
b l o o d y insurrection v e r y likely w o u l d o c c u r s o o n e r o u t TKRY, confirmed, emaciatiiig, and apparently malignant, the
of t b e U n i o n t h a n t h e i r p e a c e f u l e m a n c i p a t i o n u n d e r t b e effects h a v e been equally decisive and astoalshlng.
I n t h e local pains, loss of flesh a n d s t r e n g t h , debilitating
Union. B n t w h o t h a t a e s i r e s t b e b e s t welfare of b o t h
the r a o e s involved in s l a v e r y , w o u l d p r e f e r & bloody cough, and r e m i t t e n t hectic, which generally indicate IKCIi n s u r r e c t i o n to a p e a c e a b l e e m a n c i p a t i o n 1 T b e s a y i n g FIRST COSSTJIFTIO*, t h i s remedy has allayed the al»rm of
of M r . S e w a r d t h a t " F r e e d o m is a l w a y s in t h e U n i o n ,
friends and physicians, in several very gratifying and intermay t h e r e f o r e b e a d i c t u m of t h e w i s e s t political philoso- e s t i n g Instances.
phy, a n d t h e t r u e s t d e v o t i o n t o F r e e d o m itself.
In S c a o r t ' L o t s TCBEBCCLOSIS, this medicated iron has had
B u t t h e r e i s m o t h e r view in w h i c h his r e m a r k h a s f a r more than the good effect of the most cautiously balanced
g r e a t significance. S l a v e r y h a s m a i n t a i n e d i t s political preparations of Iodine, without any of the well known liaa s c e n d a n c y b y r e p r e s e n t i n g t h a t t h e p u r p o s e s of t h e bilities.
p a r t y of F r e e d o m w e r e hostile t o t h e U n i o n . I t n o w
The attention of females c a n n o t be too confidently invited
s e e k s t o b r i n g a b o u t t b e d e s t r u c t i o n of t h e U n i o n a s t h e to t h i s remedy and restorative, in the cases peculiarly affectresult of t h e t r i u m p t b of t h a t p a r t y , and, t o lay t h e ing them.
. r e s p o n s i b i l i t y a n d t h e o d i u m of i t s d e s t r u c t i o n a t t b o
In RHEUMATISM, both chronic and inflammatory—in the
d o o r of t h e first R e p u b l i c a n A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . B y t h i s latter, however, mora decidedly—it h a s been invariably well
course t h e slave i n t e r e s t s e e k s t o o r g a n i z e a n e w . p a r t y , reported, both as alleviating pain and reducing the swellings
and stiflhess of the j o i n t s a n d muscles.
o r to ieooaSt>nct t h e b r o k e n D c m o c r a d y , uponOl^Kbasis
In IXTKRXITTF.VT FEVERS it must necessarily be a great
of fidelity to t h e U n i o n a n d t h o Constitution. B u t t h o remedy and energetic restorative, and its progress In the new
settlements of the West, will probably be one of high rer
R e p u b l i c a a p a r t y h a v e always claimed t o b e f a i t h f u l
and usefulness.
the Union and t h e Constitution. M r . Liucoln w a s
. No remedy has ever bcen discovcred In the whole history
elected t o d e s t r o y t b o U n i o n , c i t h e r b y p r e c i p i t a t i n g i t s
of medicine, which exerts such prompt, happy, and fully redissolution o r b y b e c o m i a g accessory t o i t a f t e f t h e r a
storative effect*. Good appetite, complete digestion, rapid
H e was e l e c t e d t o p r e s e r v e b o t h F r e e d o m ajra t h e Unit
acquisition of s t r e n g t h , with an unusual disposition for actb y r e s t o r i n g t h e - A d m i n i s t r a t i o n of t b e G o v e r n m e n t t o ive and cheerful exercise, Immediately follow its use.
P u t u p in n e a t flat metal boxes containing 50 pills, price
t h e p r i n c i p l e s of t b e C o n s t i t u t i o n . I f n o w r - h e s h o u l d
50 cents per b o x ; f o r sale y druggists and dealers. Will be
r a s h l y d i s c a r d t h e U n i o n on t h e one h a n d o r on t h e sent free to any address on receipt of the price. All letters,
o t h e r should a t t e m p t - t o m a i n t a i n i t by \j>rpcipi tatr
order*, etc., should be addressed to
R . B . L O C K E tc C o . , G e n e r a l A g e n t s ,
( M M u r e s of f o r c e , — a w a r t h a t would n o t carry w i t h it
J7
-'y
2 0 CEDAR ST., NEW YOR
jibe moral a e n t i m e u t of t h e N o r t h , — h e would t h r o w his
, / A d m i n j 8 t r a t i o i } i n t o t h e p o w e r of t h o e n e m i e s of f r e e d o m ,
J/ w h o b y c l a m o r i n g f o r t h e U n i o n or a g a i n s t a civil w a r
f p r o v o k e d b y rashness, would s e c u r e for themselves t h e
DR. CHURCHILL'S DI8COYERY.
A n e x t P r e s i d e n t i a l election, a n d t h e c o n s e q u e n t s u b j u g a -
D' MOTT'S
PILLS'^ IRON.
CONSUMPTION CURED!
| tion of f r e e d o m t o slavery. W e believe t h a t M r . S e w a r d
foresaw all t h i s , a n d t h a t h i s g r e a t s p e e c h in t b o S e n a t e
was f r a m e d in t h e s p i r i t of wi sd o m a n d p a t r i o t i s m
m e e t e i t h e r of t h e s e contingencies. H e s o u g h t t o p r e s e r v e t h e U n i o n f o r F r e e d o m , b y t h r o w i n g t h e responsibility for d i s r u p t i o n , o r for civil w a r w h e r e i t p r o p e r l y
b e l o n g s — u p o n t h e p a r t y of slavery. O n e of t n e ' most
s a g a c i o u s m i n d s in t h e c o u n t r y , long p u b l i c l y c o m m i t t e d
t o t h e a b o l i t i o n of slavery, h a s given u s a v i e w of t h a t
6peech, w h i c h , t h o u g h n o t sent f o r p u b l i c a t i o n , w e
cannot withold from o u r readers.
Referring to the
I n d e p e n d e n t ' s n e w of " M r . S e w a r d ' s T r u e P o s i t i o n , '
this, w r i t e r s a y s : —
" I w a n t to say h o w m u c h I w a s g r a t i f i e d b y t b e a p p r e c i a t i v e a r t i c l e o n G o v . S e w a r d in t h e I n d e p e n d e n t of
February 1 4 t t
I t h i n k b i s late s p e e c h h a s o e e n m o s t
unjustly, rnosr unintelligently d e a l t w i t h . P e o p l e w e r e
l o o k i n g t o h i m in a k i n d of foolish e x p e c t a t i o n t h a t b e
c o a H settle t h e n a t i o n b y a s p e e c h ! N o b o d v else could
do i t , b n t certainly S e w a r d m u s t b e able. NoDCsense!
I t w a s n o t in t h e p o w e r of a mortal, e v e n if h e w e r e close
u p o n t h e r a n k of a d e m i g o d . H e could issue n o phillipic,
m a k e no o n s l a u g h t right o r l e f t — n o t h i n g plainly w a s t o
b e d o n e in t h a t fashion. H e could offer no c o m p o u n d i n g
m e a s u r e — f i r e a n d w a t e r c o u l d a s easily b e q u i e t e d b y a
m a r r i a g e . W h a t J t h e n could h o d o w i t h a s p e e c h ?
N m r was a n o r a t o r in a closer p i n c h . S e e , then, h o w
adroitly a n d w i t h w h a t masterly skill b e leveled h i s a i m
to t b e occasion. W h a t h e i s a f t e r i s p l a i n a s t b e son.
v i a , to smooth a w a y e x a s p e r a t i o n s , a n d g a i n time f o r
t h e w o r k of salvation. T h e r e was never a finer, g r a n d e r
a c t of st at esm ansh i p in t h e wo r l d . I b e l i e v e i t h a s really
h a d more effect t h a n a n y o t h e r s p e e c h delivered in t b e
B y it, t o g e t h e r w i t h G e n . S c o t t ' s soldierly
""•a for a s h o w of f o r c e , t b e tide h a s , I think,
been tamed, a n d t b e s o p h o m o r e rebellion i s g e t t i n g
r a p i d l y sobered. W h e n i t i s weB o v e r , a n d m e n g e t
Winchester's Genuine Preparation of the Chemically P u r e C o m p o u n d of the
HYPOPHOSPHITES
of L I M E and SODA,
Originally discovered a n d prescribed by Dr. J . F. CHCBCBILL
of P a r i s as a Specific Remedy for
CONSUMPTION!
Price—Two Dollars a Bottle.
T
H E E X T R A O R D I N A R Y RESULTS OBTAINED IN A L L
t h e stages of Pulmonary Disease by Dr. Churchill's new
T r e a t m e n t — t h e H Y P O P H O S P H I T E S OF LIME AND SODA
—removes all remaining d o u b t as to the Inestimable value of
t h i s Discovery. Consumption is no l o n g e r to be regarded
a n incurable malady.
'
Many h u n d r e d s of physicians have already adopted t h i s
t r e a t m e n t with almost invariable success. Let no Consumpt i v e delay a m o m e n t to t r y it. I t i s t h e i r last h o p e !
F o r sale by
MORGAN BATES,'
81
Herald Office, Traverse City.
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
MORGAN BATES
Has opened an Office at Traverse City,'Grand Tr a v s r w
Michigan, f o r the transaction o f a
General Agency Business.
The United States L a n d Office is located at t h i s p l « ~ • and
particular attention will be paid to locating Land W s r A n t s ,
investing money In Government Lands, Imparting information relative t o the general features, resources and advantages of tho Grand Traverse country, the payment of taxes,
t a d the transaction of a n y Agency business with which he
y be'entrusted.
SKI
H i t Ji M . H o « rit . Aanv0nml
Ats
ZJ'?T -
lD,
Hannah, Lay & Co.'s Column.
FARMERS
ATTENTION!!
FARM PRODUSE.
H ANN A H , LAY A C O .
^
ILL PURCHASE. AND P A Y T H E HIGHEST PRICE
the market will w a r r a n t , f o r
W
F A R M PRODUCE,
solute h o m e market f o r e v e r y t h i n g raised.
ODS A * WHOLESALE—
in oaarter, half and whole b o x e s ;
GrORaisins,
Tallow and S t e a r i n s Candles, by the b o s ;
Sugar, by the barrel or 100 lbs,;
Soap,-by t n e b o x ;
Ing Powders, by the b o x ;
Matches, by the gross;
Toys, N o t i o n s ;
Tobacco, Fine Cut, by the half barrel;
Tobacco, Smoking, by the half barrel;
P l u g Tobacoo, by the 50 lbs. or b u t t ;
Soda, by the 50 lbs. o r k e g ;
Brown Cotton, by the 3 t o 5 pieces;
S h i r t i n g Stripe, by the I t o 5 pieces;
Cream Tartar, by the 5 to 20 lbs,;
Tea, by the SO lbs. t o half c h e s t ;
Pork, by the barrel;
Hams and Shoulders, by the 100 lbs.;
Prints, a choice assortment, by the 2 t o l a piece*:
Flannels;
Mosquito B a r s , b y the iplecc;
Nails, by tbe keg, assorted;
Salt, by the barrel;
Coffee, by the 30 t o 100 lba.;
Ground Cofifee, by the 20 to 50 l b s . ;
Butter C r a o k e r s 30 lbs. t o bbl.;
Hard Bread;
Boston Biscuit;
Soda C r a c k e r s ;
Pipes, by the b o x ;
Figs, by the d r u m ;
Brooms, by the dozen;
Currants, by the 20 lbs. t o hslf barrel;
Prunes, by the 20 t o 100 lbs.;
Dried Apples, by the 100 lbs or barrel;
Gun Caps, by the 1000;
Shot, by the bag.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e City Nov. 30,1860.
52
W'
HITE GOODSCambric, muslin a n d linen E d g i n g ;
Inserting and Flouncing, real T h r e a d :
Smyrna and "cotton Edge and Inserting;
Muslin, cambric and p i q u a setts of Collars a n d Sleeves;
Cambric, muslin A fine Maltese hafid-wrought Collars;
Muslins—Nainsook, Book, Swiss and Cambric;
Frenok skirt J a c o n e t ; J a c o n e t ;
Cross-barred, Cambric a n d Nainsook;
Wash Blond; Embroidered C u r t a i n s ;
B r i l l i a n t c s f r o m Is. t o 30c;
Linen, Linen Cambric and hem stitched H'dk'fs;
P r i n t e d bord, printed and plain Gent's. Handkerchiefs;
Child's printed, plain and hem stitched linen H ' d k ' f s ;
Napkins, Doylcs, Pillow-Case Cotton;
Linen Table Covers, by the pattern or y a r d ;
Marseilles, printed and plain;
Linen, Linen Diaper; Piqua Binding;
Linen and Cotton Bosoms—somo very n i c e ;
Marseilles Quilts—nice;
Traverse City1, Nov. 30,1860.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
TAOMESTlCS FOR WINTER OP 1880J L / R e d , blue a n d gray twilled a n d plain Flannels;
White, pinl( and Bob Bioy plain F l a n n e l s ;
Cunton Flannels, brown, slate a n d bleached;
Sattinets, P. & M. C a s r i m e r e s , S h e e p ' s G r a y ;
F a n c y and black Cassimcres:
Kentucky J e a n s , Duck, D e n i m s ;
Apron a n d m i n e r ' s check. Stripes;
S h i r t i n g prints and fancy s h i r t i n g Flannels;
BlackDoc*kiu Cassimcres;
,
' Black and blue c l o t h s ;
\
Brown and bleached Cotton—a nice assortment;
Ticking. Bays, Linsey Woolsey, Ac.
.11
IV*
HANNAH,
LAY A CO.
Traverse C i t f , Nov. 30,1860.
D1
Hannah, Lay Ic Co.'s Column
G.
Black, Fancy a n d C n l o a P
Summer Coats, P a n t s and V est*, a full line, i s fee
T e r r Latest Style.
White, Fancy. Check a n d stripe S h i r t s ;
Gentlemen's Linen, Leopold and Byron Collars;
Overcoats, a foil line;
•, /
Kent J a c k e t s ;
^
He am leas Coats and Overcoats:
Blue a n d White OveralU;
Kenty a n d Flannel Drawers;
Flannel and K n i t S h i r t s ;
Suspendera a n d Gloves;
India Rubber a n d Oil OveralU a n d L e c g i n s ;
Wool. Cotton and Uniou Socks;
Black a n d F a n c y 811k C r a v a t s ;
Gingham, Flag and Turkey Red H a n d k e r a h i s *
Silk Pocket and Neck H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Pocket Knives, Razors, Strops,
Lather Boxes and Brushes,
Tobacco Boxea a n d Pouches.
C o m p a s s e s Rules, I and 2 feet.
HANNAH. LAY k CO
Traverse City, Nov, 30,18C0.
n
YANKEE NOTIONS-
Compasses, t w e z e r s toy watchei
W a t c h guards and fob c h a i n s ;
Fancy and compass watch keys;
Gun capf G. D. Cax a n d water p r o o f ;
itazor s t r o p s assorted;
Shawl p i n s n e c k l a c e s e a r d r o p s ;
Breast p i n s assorted, bracelets, w s f o r s :
Kid, bead and leather purses;
l e a t h e r b a g s for l a d l e s ' A s e ; W a l l e t s p o r t e m o o s i e s ia<ellible i n k ;
Cologne, rose oil, bear's o i l i
Prince of Wales, kiss-me-quick and Wiudaor soap;
Almond, honey, au»-flower and Yankee aosp;
8ilver aoap, f o r cleaning allvcr ware, Ac.;
T h e r m o m e t e r s leather belts:
Fancy, morocco a n d ailk belts;.
Carpet binding, s n a f f b o x e s
Tobacco b o x e s a complete asa't, some vary fias;
Pumpkin, pomegranate, heart and strawberry eateries:
S h a r i n g b o x e s meerchaum pipes;
Shawl pins, aasorted k i n d s ;
Crumb, cloth, hair, nail, tooth, scrub, blacking, kers*.
broom a n d paint b r u s h e s ;
Dead s h o t katharion, t r l c o p h c r o u s ;
Measuring t a p e s very Superior a n d reliable;
P o c k e t c o m p a s s e s of best m a k e r s ;
A few allver watchet—good time-keepers;
W r i t i n g d e s k s portable fancy work-boxes for l a d i e s
HANNAH. L — " "
Traverse City, Nov. 30, lPf.O.
M
EDICINEK—
Brandreth's Pills;
Ayers' P i l l s ;
Moflkt's P i l l s ;
J a y n c s ' Pills;
J a y n e s ' Alterative;
Jayncs' V e r m i f u g e ;
Ayrea' Cherry P e c t o r a l ;
Rneubarb; Cudbar;
Mexican L i n i m e n t ;
P e r r y Davis' Pain K i l l e r ;
Sanda'Sarsaparilla;
Sawyer'a Ext. Bark for F e v e r and A g u e ,
Kennedys'Medical Discovery;
S u g a r Lead;
Gum Gulac;
Roae W a t e r ;
Castor Oil;
Epsom Salts;
Sulphur:
Lac Sulphur (for Hair-dye;)
Cod Liver O i l ;
„
H A N N A H , LAY A CO,
T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30, I860.
u
LIGHT FOR T H E MILLION—WE
WOULD ES-
PECIALLY call the attention of this community t« o n *
t h i n s of all otbera in which they should he a n d c o n s e q u e n t l y
aro interested, to w i t : that a G o o d L i g h t is one of tb's
greatest dcsidcVatums to lie obtained—snd t h a t a f t e r C a r e
I b l E x p e r i m e n t , an articlo has been introduced and d e m o n s t r a t e d b e y o n d a ( j n e s t i o n o f d l o n b t , to be t b .
BEST, CHEAPEST, SAFEST. MOST ECONOMICAL sntl
EQUABLE light yet known, (pas only excepted.) Snch an
srticle we have the pleasure of I n t r o d u c i n g In t h i s community, and which, with
Lamps, Shades and Fixtures,
we now have pn exhibition and for sale, and of t h e VKKT
Coburghs; F r e n c h Merinoes; all wool De Laines; Mohairs; BEST quality. Call a n d Inspect our KEROSENE LAMPS.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Alpacas; fancy wosted plaids; P a t t e r n Goods of lateststyles;
Traverse City. Nov 30.1860.
«
carefully selected; Balmoral and knit s k i r t s ; Ladies' vests
and drawers; hoop skirts,wool hoods, underslcevcs, Ac.; printO R H O U S E K E E P E R S - K N I V F - S AND FORKS. •
ed Coburgns; Silk Valvas; choice printed wool J)e Laines
S p o o n s Carvers and Steels,
and flannels for Zouave J a c k e t s .
Brooms,
P
a
i
l
s
TUIK,
Washboards,
3
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Scrub, Shoe, Clothes a n d Whitewash B r a s h e s
Traverse City, Nov. 30, 1860.
52
L a d l e s L o o k i n g G l a s s e s Carrfet T a c k s Bath Brie*.
F
B
O O T S A N D S H O E S . — M E N ' S BOOTS. SHOES,
Congr
Traverse City, J u n e 1,18C0.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
It
1 ? O R T H E K I T C H E N — C R O C K E R Y , a fall l i n e i.
GLASSWARE, an assortment,
. Milk P a n s Pails and S t r a i n e r s
Coffee Pots, Tea Post, D i p p e r s Skimmers, Ac.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Traverse City. Nov 30. IMP.
ihOCH,
_ . i' Boots and .
Misses Bootees and Gaiters,
Childs' Cacks, Shoes, Bootees, copper-toed, Ac.
L a d i e s ' s c a m l e e s s p g h e e l and heeled side-lace Gaiters:
O F I 6 H E R X E W L - W E H A V E ON HAND AN ASSeamless Bellmoral and Cong, heavy Gaiters a n d Over
s o r t m e n t of seaming and watertwine. Trout and common
Gaiters; -Stainless Slippers;
F i s h H o o k s Gllllng twine from 25 to 40 feet. P a t e n t spesrs.
Men's very nice seamless Over-Shoes a n d Legginfcs;
T
r
o
l
l i n g Hooks of various p a t e r n s F i s h Lines Trolling Lines,
Over-Shoes coming to the k n e e s ;
S
i
n
k
e
r s , Cane P o l e s Ac.
llangor moose-skin long leg S h o e - P a c s ;
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
Montreal l o n g leg Shoe-Pacs;
Traverse p i t y . Nov. 30, 1860.
Men's I n d i a robber long leg Boots.-v
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
H E E T I R O N FOR SUGAR P A N S - l a r g e size;
Traverse City, Nov. 30, V8C0.
62
5 Pall S u g a r K e t t l e s ;
30 Gallon S u g a r Kettles;
ARDWARE—
60 Gallon' do
do. a full a s s o r t m e n t .
Nails. German Steel, Glass, Putty, Screws, ,
„
*
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Axes, A x Helves, Locks, Latches. Hammers,
Traverse City, Dec. 14,1860.
j..
Chisels, Augers, Hand, Buck and Croaa-cut Saws,
Draw-knives. Hinges, Cable, Trace a n d Halter Chains,
T F 8 T R E C E I V E D FROM NEW-YORK, A SMALL
F r y and Sauce Pans, Masons' Trowels,
tJ lot of very fine S p e c t a c l e s .
Chopp|ng-knIves, Hand and Boys' Axes,
.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Hair, 1 and 2 foot Rules,
Traverse City, J a n . 10. Inn I.
g
Steelyards, S p r i n g and Counter Scales,
Flat, round and taper Files,
E L A N D ' S 8 A L E R A T F K — T H E BEST ARTICLE
Horse Rasps, Cloat Nails, Square Horse Cards,
in use—for s a l t in Traverse City only by
Cnrry-Combs and Horse-Brushes
NNAH, LAY A CO.
T r a p s of various kinds.
Traverse City, Dec. 14,1860.
J-7
S
H
D
se City, Nov. 30,1860.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
G'
R O C E R I E S . A c . — S U G A R , TEA, COFFEE,
Spices, Candles, Soap, common and eraaive;
Mustard, English a n d F r e n c h p r e p a r e d ; .
Soda, Cream Tartar, Ginger, Baking Powder.
Salarajtus, Starch, YennaciUl, Hops,
Tobacbo, Snuff; Garden Seeds,
Bag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt, Glue) Alum.
L a m p a n d Lard Oil, Castor Oil,
B e a n ^ Pork, Meai, Flour, Oatmeal. F e e d , Brae.
Beer. Hama a n d Shoulders, Codfish,
Hard Bread, Butter Crackers, Lard,
Traverse City, Nov. 30, I860.
H A N N A H , LAY
• j g L A N K ^ D E E D S A N D MORTGAGES—
Traverse
H
A R N E S S , SINGLE A N D DOUBLE—an a s s o r t m e n t ;
L i n e s H a a e S t r a p s Hold-back S t r a p s G i r t h s Breast
a n d Rein Snaps.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Travcrae City, Dee. 14, I860.
J.y
— •» A L U l A r r . n . i
Paper, a n d Buff Curtaining, Bordering, Ac.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30,1860.
D
O
K N O W
g]
W H E R E TO GET A NICE, W E L L
S E L E C T E D a s s o r t m e n t of Goods? If not, call on
H A S N A H , L A Y A CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Nov- 30, I860.
82
G
™
O ™ WOBHEES, S B 0 5 P B C H ERS, Spoke S h a v e s Spoke Augura, Small b r i g U I r o n
for
Traps.
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
Traversa City. Dec. 14. I860.
j.y
H
A T 8 A N D C A P S - P R I N C E O P WALE8, Beanleae.
Zouave, Pearl a n d Black Wool F n r H a t s
Navy, S e a m l e s s Velvet, P l a s h a n d Cloth C a p s '
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
VOL. III.
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I D A Y , A P R I L 12, 1861.
N O . 19.
\l
Clje <§r$itii Crabtnt fteaUi,
MY DAUGHTER MINNIE.
a sternness which had Deter failed to terrify. But the that omioous air of of grave nmtery whiab strikes into
A few years ago—well, it ia not less than forty—my child, though she trembled like ao aspen at first brought the eool of the loving. I moved about M l of fear and
u r u i u n u p m r ranuT, AT
little home-flock was led, in the matter of years, by daugh- her father's spirit to the rescue, and, in the strength of guilty distress. The lymutoaia became m e n and more
Traverse Oitf, Grand Traverse C o n t r , Michigan, ter Minnie—a pretty name, I always thought Minnie lore and innocence, looked into her father's angry race at alarming—she was sinking. I waa called to her bedride.
waa a goed child, and, being the first-born, waa half ma- leogth with perfect composure.
as to that of my first dying chOd. As 1 beat over the
MORGAN* BATES,
I must not repeat the words that followed—they shall white face, almost traodaoent with i *
teriel in her management of the latter-comerf,even down
'
KOTOS AND r*Or*IETOIU
never be written—and would to God tbey never had been by eyes all imdimmed by illnw. my MinnU guve me the
to little " Pigeon, ,r the latest and tiniest of them alL
spoken!
.
The picture of Minnie is iust as fresh in my memory
old-time glance of love, and throwing up ber haods as if
__
, T E R M S .
as though the forty years which have simmered and evap- " Minnie had given him her heart, and would give him to clam my neck, said faintly, but oh! so earut*U>orated since bad been weeks instead. Bat it is a fathers her hand. How could the help it? Even her father's
"K&B me, father!"
eye that looks over these years at Minnie, and the beauty anger should cot prevent her fulfilling her word; for was 1 Mbt down to my daughter, my firstborn, and m wept
«>fb*4 by U«; en? c«U »*r foUa oT 100 worts.torib» tnl IsMTtton. u>4may be half fancy—a sort of affectional illusion. Those not Jemmy Brun worthy, and was not her father's anger longtigether—the strong father and the faintly-breathmg
• Wl i n w m > n i i > n l m i » l I»«7 4nn»«onh » w i t r\gx— we love are transparent, you know—we who lore them unreasonable and unjust? All this she said to me with
wmk wMb—tratal,ao f t Mat O-Ud- adssad Bm-work.4mkU»V
. AM U«%1 t4inMnBMii MSSSS yldftrmlqlTlBsdT—».
the deep calmness of a perfect heroine, while 1 stood there What do you think Minnie did? Why she got well
look through into the heart, and then imagine it ia v
dmost as much astonished as angiy.
face-tint and surface-light of which we are thinking.
again, and in two mouths was as musical as a lark, and a*
,r
This much I know: Minnie was the best, most affection- " Wife, it's all up with Minnie, said L striding nto gay. looking after the little Minnie like a pretty mother aa
ate, and wildest of daughters—one of those spirited but the sitting-room, and breaking in upon a most comfortable as she was.
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.
industrious litUe creature upon whose enterprise and tact rternoon reverie, only releived by the solemn ticking of
However, the ice was fairly broken, and I was anr old!
the clock and the busy click of the knitting-needles.
the greatest and strongest of us will involuntarily lean.
fatherly-self ever after. Minnie even ventured, after a
J a t o of Probate....CURTIS FOWLER, Mapleton.
" Lord, what's the matter?" and the ball of yarn rolled time, to make merry at my expense over the fact that not
v
"Minnie, ahalllwantfiveor six breadths in this skirt?"
Sheriff..............
—•
•cross the floor, while aflower-poton the window fell only was Jemmy Brun^he best of husbands, but one ef
her mother would say.
C a n t y Tieasenr.
Coaatr Clerk..
.THERON BOSTW'lCK,
Looking up, with just a little knitting of the forehead, spilling and crashing on the bricks outside; "
the well-known of American writers.
toe flower-pot—tell me quick—you lode as
Register of Deed*—THERON BOSTWICK,
after a moment's thought Minnie would answer:
I think I was a very great fool
Pro*. Attorney
--C. H . HOLDEN. Northport
sheet"
|
" I think five will do, mother,"—and five j£ was.
Circuit Coant Com.-C. H. HOLDEN.
"Minnie has promised to marry that seal
1 can hear, even now, the voice of Minnie'a mother,—
Sensations of Taking Chloroform.
Coroner.
P E R R Y HANNAH, Trv. City.
GEO. N. SMITH, Northport she has been gone twenty years, dear heart!—calling from 'teof us; she says she will to me—in the
A correspondent of the San Francisco Wtekly Mirror
lolute commands."
,
the head of the stairs:
rives the following vivid description of the sensations b*
Thereupon I walked the floor, wife staring at
CHARLES H. HOLDEN,
"Minnio! Say—Minnie!"
felt while under the intoxication of chloroform, in w e b
wiile.
"What mother?"
he had been placed for the purpose of having a diver ef
" IT! never forgive her—never."
" What shall we have for dinner, to-day?"
iron extracted from his eye:
" Husband, stop and think. He—"
"You are tired, mother; let's have a little ham and
TAX AND GENERAL AGENT.
" 1 won't stop and think. I say 111 never forgive ber: " My lastsane recollection is of the surgeon applying
some
eggs,
with
some
peas
from
the
garden,
and
bread"
NORTHPORT,
the handkerchief to my mouth ; then the room began to
and I won't Call ber in."
That settled the bill of fare.
CRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
Wife left the room in search of Minnie. She was gone magnify to gigantic proportions; a common lamp was
And so it was through the livelong day; for, in all the
Office Becond Door Bonth of Unlon,Dock.
ll-ly
transformed to a candelabrum, more luminous and costly
domestic polity, Minnie, though only Prime Minister, ataig while; from which circumstances I have always than
ever lighted the grandest cathedral in the world
nad the suspicion that she spent the time in soothings and
C. H . M A R S H ,
possessed fully legal power.
At this time—this forty years ago—I was of course In (|Omfortings scarcely to be considered abetting my view The surgeon became a giant of prodigious magnitnde.
the prime of life, and full of the cares and responsibilities <if the case. At length they returned—both tearful— holding a huge, gleaming knife, with a single blow of
AXD
.
which cluster and cling to one's manhood. 1 was largely Yife sat down together a constrained group—Minnie very which lie might have severed me. The sound of voice*
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
engaged in active buisness, received some alight evidences tearful, bat very sweet and beautiful The interview' was in the room seemed like the clamorings^f a vast multitude during the burning of a city, and a sign-board,
Traverse City, Grand T r a v e l * County, Michigan, of public confidence, saw a large family coming up about short and those wore the closing words.—
Office in Dwelling House.
83-ly me—from all of which my natural positiveness and force j "Father, I have always been a dutiful child—you will screeching outside, conveyed the idea of a furious mob
lo me that justice. But I love this mja. You grant that collected 10 the street for my execution. On entering
of character received more or less strengthening.
room I had noticed a large cat sitting asleep on a
One night, when the last candle had been extinguished, his charactcr is unimpeachable, but you forbid our mar- the
shelf, which turned its head lazily toward me and then
and all was hushed, my wife said, with some anxiety of *iare becauscyou have a prejudice against him. I love resumed its slumbers ; this,creature became a hideous,
aa honor you, father. You cannot doubt that; but '
tone:
vampirelike
monster, with gicst fiery eyes, and with
this case I must follow the dictates of my own heart."
Husband, I feel uneasy about our Minnie.',
(FKONT STREET, NEAR COURT HOCSZ,)
Do so if you will; but remember, your father will fangs and claws like *bst were fabled to belong to the
Minnie? Why, what's the matter—is she sick?" «
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
griffin, walking round, and blowing fetid breath on me,
sver forgive you."
No, she isn't sick, but—"
Thus ended the interview—wife sobbing distressfully, and pressing its frightful paws on my breast But the
B?t what, wife?"
I ^ H I S OLD ESTABLISHED HOTEL,(THE FIRST
worst of all was a collection of gigantic men sharpening
L In Traverse City.) situated on Front Street. In the vicinWhy, Minnie is—I mean she seems to,be—well, I'm Minnio weeping quietly, and I sitting glum and angry.
ity of the Court House and public offleks, is still open for the afraid she likes Jemmy Brun."
Minnie kept ber word, and became the wife of Jemmy instruments for my dissection ; I could hear the whirring
of the stone and tho shrieking of the highly-tempered
reception of the trac-eliue public. The Proprietor return*
"Jemmy Brun! She'd better not" And I leaped to urun.
his hearty thinks for the liberal patronage he has roceived,
did not forbid them the house, as most angry father's knives, as the grinders laugbea at the intended dissection.
i and assures the public that no paias will be spared to make the floor and walked to the window. " Jemmy Brun and areI said
to do; but I told Minnie again that she had lost One was more jocose and heartless than the rest; be
/
>, hi* guests comfortable. His charges will correspond with our Minnie!—a pretty match!"
" I was afraid you would be disturbed, dear; but don't my love and care. Then I was so foolish as to see Jem- was my implacable enemy ; we had quareled and fought
ihe times.
Good accomodations for Horns sad Cattle.
«9tf take it too much to heart, husband I dare say we can my Brun, and, in a very silly speech, informed him that about a schoolmate love. Presently I felt tbeir keen
nut a stop to i t " And motherly sobs came from the pil- since be was taking my daughter from her father without knives at every joint; I shrieked and screamed, b)a»
r v d Y f l t WANT WHISKERS!
his eonsent he need expect no gifts or favors now or pbemed and besought my tormentors, but still the
DO YOU W A N T WHISKERS?
" Put a stop to itl I guess I will. Jemmy Brim and henccforth: She would not be allowed to share in the instruments hissed through my quiveringfleshand grated
family inheritance, nor should I render the least assistance along every bone. I am sntisfied that all these emotions
our Minnie! I guess I will put a stop to it!"
DO YOU W A N T A MUSTACHE?'
And who was Jemmy Brun? A young man of some if thry "should come to want" I shall never forget the were experienced within a moment after the first inhale- •
two year's residence in the neighborhood, of good habits, queer look tho young man gave me—a glance in which tion which began the process of stupefaction. So swiftDO YOU WANT A MUSTACHE?
so far as 1 know, but altogether and diametrically oppos- pride seemed almost vainly struggling with a cluster of are the evolutions of thought when sense is subdued and
when the phantom monarch of dreams leads the 60«1
ed to my taste, to my ideal of manliness. I had always mirth-sparkles,
"Very well, sir; we will try and not - come to want."' through the endless avenues, swifter in its journeying*
worshiped buisiness tact and enterprise. It had taken me
That was all he £aid; but tho cool self-possession of than the short-lived fire which falls from tbe womb of an
when a penniless boy, and brought me up through numoverburdened
cloud.
berless difficulties to a position of influence. That which his manner made me feel as though I bad undertaken to
CELEBRATED
" But a gradual revolution of mental perception sac
was found in my nature when young was thus nourished drive a nail and had pounded my fingers.
I had always been demonstrative toward my children— ceeded ; those frightful specters began to recede ; the
and rooted through all the after years of straggle ripenthe elder as well as the younger. Minnie had never lost men and knives began lo diminish; the cat returned
ing into triumph.
natural proportions, and crept slowly away; the
The young man was of a literary turn of mind; had her right to her father's knee, nor did 6he ever meet me to
__ .
For the Whiskers and Hair.
voices became less harsh and threatening, and the noise
taught in an academy; was a writer, it was said for one in.the morning or part from mo at uight without a kiss. in tbe street was subdued to unbroken silence. I looked
This wae denied her now. Poor child! it was the sorest
or
two
periodicals.
There
waa
an
air
of
sentiment
about
'|>HK SUBSCRIBERS TAKE PLEASURE IN ANNOUNO- him, inhislookB and manners, which came precisely with- trial of all. Once or twice she clung tearfully to roe in into a universe of light with nothing visible, untill onL ing to+trrCituens of the United Statee, that they have
distinct forms appeared on tbe horizon, coming toward
obtalnedthe Agency for, and are now enabled to offer to the in the scope of my contempt I had known it in others my sternness, And, reaching up to clasp my neck with her me and defining themselves as tbey came. One was my
Ameyfcan public, the above justly celebrated and world-re- —in strong buisness men—this utter contempt for the white arms, Incd to bend my lips to hers. No. I prommother, clad in grave-clothes, but as she Beared, her
--tfowned article
i
least possible manifestation of sentiment; for those unthrif- ised her never a kiss while 1 lived.
ty follows who have never an eye for business, but hang Women aao strange creatures. There was wife, who habiliments changed to the fabrics which glittered iu the
prophet's vision when he looked over the •' great congrein prepared by I)r.t£ P. BELLISGHAM, an eminent physician upon the skirts of thought, clasp imagery, and ride upon had entirely Sympathized with me as I supposed, abso- gation which no man could number." Directly she stood
rhythm. You may sec it now every day in commercial lutely giving aid and comfort to our recreant daughter. by me ; and, recognizing every feature, 1 saw that each
of London, and U warranted to bring out a thick set of
houses. It springs, I think, from the absolute antagon- 1 verily believe that, long before the wedding-day came, ace-mark was gone ; her cheeks were fresh as tbe young
W H I S K E R S OR A M U 8 T A C H E ,
she was as thoroughly interested in the whole aSair as
In from three to six weeks. This article is the only one of ism of fact and fancy—of the figures which dot the pages though Minnie had been about to marry the best buisness girl's when she first blushes at the whispered words of
the kind used by the French, and in London 'sad Paris It is of tho ledger and those which illume the lines of the poet man in town. Little use was it for mo to tighten up my love, and, stooping to kiss me, the apparition went out
"The Muses frowned on me," said a German poet "for
in universal use.
U I H beautiful, economical, soothing, yet stimulating com- keeping account books." Undoubtedly. Nor is the knight purse-strings, and direct that the child should have no leaving another, more beautiful and youthful; it was the
pobad, aptiag as if by magic upon tho roots, causing a beau- of the balatice sheet less intolerant towards those misera- marriage outfit of wardrobes, pillow-cases, counterpanes, figure of my young wife, who died in the birth of ber
tlfftfgrowth of luxuriant balr. If applied to the scalp, it will
and the thousand and one etceteras in which mothers first child. Sho held an in(apt in her arms who reached
tana baldness, and cause to spring up in place of the bald ble fellows whoso entire stock in trade can be stored with- take such pride and pleasure. In spite of me, but sur- down and ran his tiny fingers through ray hair, bnt when
awts a fine growth of new hair. Applied according to dl- in a very little cavity just behind the frontal bone.
tried to take him in my arms, infant and mother were
IMOUOM, it will turn rod or towy hair to dark, and restore
good wife bad a time of it cooling me down, and reptitiously, Minnie wa§ well provided for. I am sure. I Igone.
Strange, that I felt no disappointment; I knew
Jray hair to Its original color, leaving It soft, smooth and preventing tho adoptioo of most violent measures. Even remember that >ho"shopman's bills for some ten months
flexible. The " ONOCSST" is an Indispenslble article In every when I bad formally surrendered to her superior discre- after seemed unusually full, both in number of items and they were but pictures that hung in tbe galleries of a
gft>tlttaan'* toilet, and after one week's use they would not
father's heart Everything changed to an existence of
tion, I chafed at times like a bear in harness. If wife bad footing of column: and 1 shrewdly suspected that wile had indescribable pleasure : I laughed and danced like-ooo
for any consideration be without it
The subscribers are the only Agents for the article in the not been almost a Rarey in tact I should certainly have nrranged with the tradesman to" have articles scattered mad with the 'exhiliration of unexpected deliverance from
along through the months. She was alwayS'a good finanUnited States, to whom all orders must be addressed.
broken into pluneings even sooner than I did.
torture; the air came into my lungs gratefully as the
Price OKC DOLLAR a box—for sale by sH-Druggists and Miunie was taken one day into solemn conference by cier.
Dealers; or a box of the *OSGVKNT" (warranted to have the her mother, with only pussy in tho door-way as auditor.
The ceremony was performed in church I was pres- up-gushing of cool water to tbe lips of a thirsty drinker.
desired effcct) will be seat to any who desire U, by mail (diThe aroma of celestial gardens seemed about me; I
rect), securely packed, on receipt of price and postage, But tho child, though she blushed very much, moved ent lest my absence might give too great notoriety to the believed that I was in the territory of souls, and wondered
family
jar.
Useless.
The
whole
town,
having
lotigrincc
about from seat to seat and tore pieces of paper into bits,
$1.18. Apply to or address
how any one should fear to die. I could hear sounds in
HORACE L. HEGEMAN A CO,
declared that she was heart-whole yet—" as why shouldn't been made acquainted with the state of affaire,—thebrides the street but they seemed to prolong and swell like tbe
Diircoisrs, Ac.,
be ?—for Jemmy Brun had never said a word to her beauty and the bridegroom's popularity—set many eyes sound of a great organ. Millions of symmetrical creatures
18-6m*
24 William Street. New York. she
ou me with the sparkle of criticism in them.
which any man might not have said to any maiden."
" H e needn't look so Favago-like," muttered a gruff old passed in review, along a horifon of silver and gold, and
So wife'and 1 got easy again.
yet I was conscious that they were but the creaturea o f \
But what should I see ooe evening at twilight while yoeman behind me: there ain't a likelier young feller any distorted imagination.
sauntering out under the shadows of my own grove of for- where hereabout than Jemmy Brun; ana, though Minnie
be purty as a pink, it's a good match, I say a real even
est oaks not far from the house, but twofiguresflitting
'• Presently I became conscious of returning sense;
^LOCATED AT DETROIT, MICH.,
slowly hither and thither amongst the distaot trees. Like bargain—so."
Long, long months went by after the marriage—tedi- my limbs felt unwieldly and of too great proportions to
ECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT a knave as I was, I Bat on the ground and watched them
moved by the strengthening will; my eyes opened
suite ol rooms, prepared expressly for their use, in Mer- —watching them nervously, glaringly, till I saw Jemmy is. unhappy months to me. "l knew I was being soured be
and
began to discern objects returning to natural dimenrill Block, corner of Jefferson and Woodward Avenues.
Brun give Minnie a kiss on her lips, and look lovingly after by the self-imposed restraint on the affectional part of my sions, and I began to comprehend the conversation of
jgr~ A scholarship Issued from Detroit College will be good
nature. Minnie came to her old home sometimes. Once
in Cleveland, Ohio; Buflklo, N. Y.: Albany) {i- Y.; Chicago, her as she slipped away.
persons
in the room. Tbe whole operation had not
or twice she begged for the return of the old love, the
I
was
reclining
upon
the
sward
by
her
path.
Deter. 111.; Philadelphia, Pa.: 6 t Louis, Mo., and N. Y. Citv.
occupied half an hour, but I had lived centuries of indeJ. H. GOLDSMITH, Resident Principal at Detroit mined to meet and confront her there, I sat and watched old home-kiss. No. My daughter was happy with her hus- scribable horrors, and emotions of happiness which ate
band,
happy
in
her
new
home.
But
I
saw
very
plainly
1L P. PERRIN, Spenceriaa Penman.
her coming.
incomprehensible to the sane and wakeful mind. My
TUITION IN ADVANCE.
Certainly Minnie's face never wore that expression be- that the bliss of the old homo was lost to her.
Perpetual Scholarship good in all our Colleges, including fort.
Nearly two veare went back into the past, shadowed in sight was preserved, and the fragment of steel is in my
It was not gleeful, but it was radiant and her eyes,
Business Penmanship, $40.
possession, which, like the key of S t Peter, unlocked
Penmanship alone, 15 lessons, $8; six months,evenings,$10. which were bent on the ground, and hence only visible as this manner, wfeen a little human blossom was laid in its celestial splendors and opened a Pandora box of belHab
*•* Our Standard of Penmanship, la the good old Spen- she came very near me, had a light and depth that I cradle. A little, struggling wee thing—another Minnie. imagery, which, even now, scares me from dreams to
Mriaa.
never saw before. She passed me-, so utterly wai the child Poor mo! Here was a new inflbenre to be stemmed, as Midden and trembling wakefulness.
G. A. O."*
The most thorough and practical sad truly popular Colboats stem another gust and another wave But I bracin her own emotions.
legs In America. Nearly four thousaadstndente have entered absorbed
«' Minnie!" I said, in a tooe which startled myself scarce- ed myself; and, when I had been forced into Minnie's chamslnoe their establishment which Is the beat evidence of their
At the marriage of tbe young Earl of Iincoln with'
ber, stood over the pale child with the little one on her
ly less than the child.
favor with the public.
For further information call at College Rooms, or send for
" Oh'" and she sprang from the path as though the arm, and heard the taint voicc add to the sweetly-beseech- Mrs. Hope, the jewelry worn by the bride cost qpwacda.
new Catalsgae of 80 pages. For specimens of Peamanehip, sound had been a rattle among the gross.
ing look, "Do kiss me, father!" I shook my head and of £12,000, and consisted of a bandaome bead-ornament
•acloao letter stamp. Address.
of diamonds, and a diamond necklace. Mr. Hope, it is
I raisedWseJf slowly—I am m y slow when very angry went out.
BRYANT, STRAITON. A Co,
Ooe day a strange change come over the young mother said, gives the Countess of Lincoln £6,000 a year pm
and, atMding stiffly before her, glowered down
At either «f th# above Cities.
(Out this out for fatare reference.)
60-ly into her eye*—Minnie's beautiful loving eyes—with alarming the experienced, and giving to the physician, money, and the use of sn Irish estate.
A8 MsrfU Prialing Hatij vAfapftinhEicoM
S
Xttomeji, Comrsflbr aittf Solicitor,
^ttornq aitlr Counsellor at Jfato;
" TRAVERSE OITY HOUSE,
WILLIAM
FOWLE,
BELLINGHAM'S
STIMULATING ONGUENT.
T h e Stimulating Onguent
• §rpit, Stratton & Co.'s
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
R
•
• • • • • •
rx i ^ban'r 1
for th. Grand T n n m
. The Ymj Latest New.Yotk u d W u U a c t o . Hew.Evening Journal.
P A P E H 8 OV A1ERICA-NO. 5.
T t o old favojite entered
eote
upon its Thirty-Second Vol. £
ai
L. • ->K* YORK. March 29.
A r a n ' s letter in the3lia»s states that the French anc
umo on the 2 2 N nit
'
It The
Editor says: " I t may be
BT Rfcv. GBO. THOMPSON
Endish govermhents arifittfbg tat a' powerful fleet of
pleasant to ourfjriends to know that at no .tintt has its
war steamers for the UifltcdBtates. The suggest ioc came
TRft V i : B 8 F # I T
raoDccno.wr coxrixckn—SCOAB CASK.
"£frculationl)ee'h as large as during"the last three months.
* . T v.
J.,
,
„
, from England. France will furnish three of the first cla*.
T
FRIDAY MORNING. A P R I L 12, 1861.
In my last I showed that the Cotton Culture can be frigata. a « U h e E o ^ u h continent will perhaps be larecr
For thi|
grateful, Jcsa because of tho abundant
c o n d u c t e d in Africa,
A f r i c a , with much
rnnrh greater
r n w W advantage,
. ^ r a n f n m i than
Itian The
'I'Knfljwt
trill nsail
i l wilit
AMUW Sjiitiu"
CA.:.. ;is- alio
-K pn.
fleet will
with BAAIAII
sealed orders.
*he"9w««ip L a i d Koad Law.
'
pecuniary retnra w^ich it secures to the treasury of the
in this country. The same is true of Sugar • Cane. / I t paring to send a formidable force to the Gulf of Mexico,
Wntove not •yetL sec a copy of the Swamp Land establishment, th^n beea09e,of the assurance which it
grows in Africa naturally, and can be cultivatrd to any though not working in concert with France and England
, , .
.<
. . .
. . .
.
. . .
.<r»l.
ik.l n... I.I.
L.
i
_»il
.,1
J:.
affords
us
that
our
labors
have
not
been
altogether
disLaw U amended by the last Legislature, bat we find
Specialtiest.cbes from Washingtoa say'Elisha Whitextent desirable with th^ greatest ease. Once
tasteful to the Republicans of the State.
tlesey acceptrthe first cqntrollership
ihefi*ttlt
There U oo truth io the statement that troops have
•' One of the pleasautest features in the history of the it grows on continually. If sot cut, it keeps sprouting
Instead of three ComraiMtpoerftto; tecfc roftd tretboriwd
and
spreading
like
fing,
so
that
from
one
piece,
in
a
few
been
ordered to land at Fort Pickets
h ^ f t a t law, it prof ides fot- only one.. The law yeits him Journal, is the steadfastness with which its early patrons
The Post's special correspondent says J o W G . Palfrv
years, rods will be covered. If cut when mature, it
wiq|ia tbe.pd'wfer now p b ^ s s & n j j IBc BoanLofthree. adhere to i t We have upon our book3 th^ names of
has
been appointed Postmarter at Boston.
immediately
sprouts
again,
and
produces
another
crop
The opinion is almost universal now that an extra sesFor all the roads than thoaoau&orized by the first seo- many of its original subscribers, and many hundreds who
by the time the year comes round. So that there is uo sion of Congress will-be called, to consider tho operation
iion of the act at 1859. located on private lands, the inherit -the principles, partialities and virtues of those
trouble of planting every year. All that the planter has of the new tariff, and the state of the Treasury.
dataage found and certified by the Oommisioners is to be who first bade us «' God speed" in our humble efforts, but
Orders hare gone Westto confiscate all goods introto
do,
is
to
cut
the
cane
every
year,
grind
and
boil
itpaid'by the county in which such lauds lie. The Com- who have loyg since gone to their rest In such houseHere, it will be seen, is a vast saving of labor. And duced into the Southern ports without the pAvment of
the regular United States dbties.
missioner is authorized to locate the road on any private holds, the Journal is received less as a newspaper than as
then
the
cane
grows
very
much
larger
than
in
this
It is now said that Fort Pickens was reinforced more
laad'OOt'ibcluded within an incorporated citv or village, an old friend; and is welcomed perhaps, more because
country, producing, of course, much more to the acre. than a-week ago, and that several hundred United Stale*
of its past-time memories than because of any real
and estimate-the same, to be paid as above
Io Liberia.I saw large fields of 25 to 50 acres of cane, troops were taken in from vessels off in tho stream, by
T^heterm of the Commissioner shall continue for three excellence in itself. But that it is so. welcomed, is inex- standing very thickly in rows from 10 to 18 feet high, small boats in tho night The Southern Commissioner*
y#»r* .unless the road for which he is appointed shall be pressibly gratifying; and it is more our ambition to and from one and a quarter to two inches in diameter. however doubt the truth of the report, and profess to have
assurances from the Government to the contrary.
sooner Completed- The State officers, except the Super- have it always thus welcomed by happy Households than
And men were jusft beginning to plant there. Since I
The Quaker
City, from Havana, on Monday, has a
intendent of Public Instruction, are constituted a Board that it should bo recognised as the successful organ of was there, men who badfiftyacres now have one hundred, rived,
j i1
y of Control,'with power to suspend any road that may be any party.
Much excitement exists at Havana on tho subject of
and
the
business
is
being
successfully
carried
on.
"The Journal will continuo to be, what it has always
cotnmeuccd under this act at their pleasure, and direct
the
annexation
of
San Domingo to Spain. It seems the
When I was there (1856) there were many horse-power
a rc-survey with a view to a more fit and convenient Been our desire to make it—a Family Paper. And sugar mills, but since they have steam sugar mills, and system of Spanish emigration has been goiug on in that
island, the emigrants boiog instructed, when tho proper
locality. The Commissioners appointed by the Governor although old age is proverbially slow to promise, this
c exporting sugar and syrup of a fine quality.
time arrived to boistthe Spanish flag and invoke toe proare each required to give five thousand dollars bonds for may say : Those who have been able to tolerate it in
Undoubtedly, Liberia will bo heard from in years to tection of Spaitf This wits done on the 16th, much to
the faithful performance of their duties. No more than the past will have no just cause to be displeased with it in come in the sugar trade, and we wish the new and young the astonishment of tha blacks aud the natives.
the
future."
When the news reacl\ed Havana the frigate Blanca.
* the value of six hundred and forty acres of land in the
Republic all possible success, especially as the North
fioj/cf Peninsula,, and twice that amount in the Upper,
GEO. DAWSON.—We are gratified to learn that our will need the sugar, if the south bolts and rets up for fully armed, with a large number of regular troops, was
dispatched, sailing on tha 23fl. Two 6crew frigates will
H .to.be expended upon each mile of road, nor more than old friend and former associate' in tho Detroit Daily herself, (for we wont have her sugar then.) A man who soon follow, with 5.000 regulars. .
fjor hundred thousand in alL The contractor may at his Advertiser, GKO. DAWSOX, now one of the Editors and had long lived in Africa, as also in the West Indies, and
A large naval and military force of 10,000 men is said
option take s»tomp land instead of the value of it for his Proprietors of the Albany Evening Journal, has been in the South of this country, testified that the cane flour- to be on the way from Spain.
It is stated that llayU will soou share the s:
contract^ When the Commissioner shall certify that appointed Postmaster at Albany. He has a host* of ished in Africa much better tbun in the West Indies or
Domingo, with the consent of Franco.
two consecutive miles of road have been completed, ttyj friends in Michigan who will rejoice at his good fortune. in this country.
It is said that a million of dollarsis en route from Snain
contractor is entitled to a certificate for two sections of
to
aid the metallic circulation of the Island. Sugar qutet.
The
natives
do
not
cultivate
the
cane
to
make
sugar,
SALARIES or FOBBIOX MINISTERS.—The salaries of tho
Ijind,- to bo given him by the Commissioner of the Land
.; 1 -WAWJMOTOX, March 29.
Ministers to London and Paris arc $17,500 each ; toMad- but they generally hare little, patches in their yards,
During the late executive session ofthe Senate, we fine
OfBeo, Jf he or they shall demand it, and a certificate for
rid, Berlin, Vienna, S t Petersburgh, Pokin, Turin, Mexi- merely to eat or chew.
about 400 nominations were confirmed, nearly fifty of
tho balftnce due him when the whole shall be completed.
It grows well on lowlands, or high—in clay, or sandy which were sent in by the President vcstcrdav. *
and Rio Jnueiro, 012,000: to Santiago and Lima, 810If the contractor shall' prefer the money, the -{State
The Postcfficfli department, under the provisions of the
000; to all other courts, 87,500, The Consuls at Lond- soil. (And this is true of the Cotton.) And there are
Treasurer is required to pay tho amount duu him from
recently enacted law, has restored the mail service beon and Liverpool have a salar/of 87,.200: at Rio Janeiro thousands of miles of the West Coast of Africa, extendtween Georgetown and Lexington, Mo. The service is
any money arising from the sale of swamp lands in .tho
Havana find Havre, £6,000/at Calcutta, Paris and Jap- ing hundreds of miles interior where cane can be thus to be six times a week.
Treasury. Or if there be no money in the troagtiry the
an, 85,000, at Hong-Kong, AJexanJrin. &>o-chow, Vera cultivated, and millions of natives who would gladly
Gen. Wm. Hicliy was elected astistant-Seereturv of
Auditor General is directed to draw his warrant on, the
Cruz, Panama and Callao, S3,500;
Frankfort work in cultivating it if the business wa3 started by the Senate.
treasury, payable to order, jvith interest until paid.
Asberry Dickens retains hit position.
Constantinople, Tripoli, Tangier, Amoy, Nipgbo, Lahaina capitalists, and a market formed so that they could sell i t
The government has sent to Florida for witnesses in the'
Besides the four hundred thousand acres of land approAfrica, when fairly developed, can supply the world Armstrong court martial.
and Valparaiso, 83,000.
'
priated for State roads, there are appropriated two
with' sugar and cotton.
At a Cabinet meeting this morning, the threatening
OHIO SENATOR.—Hon. John Sherman, elected U. S.
hundred thousand acres ior draining and reclaiming the
And as the Gospel and civilzation shall advance among events at the South occupied their attention.
hinds ia tho Lower Peninsular, under the direction of Senator in place or Gov. Chase, was qualified and took that people,-they will engage in.the culture of these
The Impost Contest.
the: Beard of Control. When contractors may elect to his seat in the Senate on U|e 23rd ult He is elected for things for exportation. They certainly have ttoi finest
Whether Fort Sumter shall be evacuated or not, the
inkcjand instead of money, they are authorized to select the full term^of six years.
country in tho world for the production of sugar,-cotton, authority of the General Government will very soon have
it in any county in tho State from lands which havo not
J nm es M. Edmunds.
and othrr things; it only needs to be cultivated; and to be vindicate! The duties ujK>n all foreign goods now
previously been located.
The resignation by>Jfldgo Edmunds of the office ofCity cultivated it will be as light and truth spread abroad— reaching Savannah. Charleston, New Orleans, Arc., are
I t will bo seen that four hundred thousawLacTSTof Controller, which he hash«jd for the past two years, pre- as thn slave trade is broken np and the people are taught required to bo paid to those holding allcgianee to the
Southern Confederacy, These duties aggregate more
sents
us
a
suitable
opportunity
for
expieasing
our
gratifi• wamp lands hare been appropriated to Stato roods, md
and encouraged 'to labor ; nt|d as lawful
than 820,000 per dny: and to this extent, the GenenU
two hundred thousand acres for drainage ana reclama- cation nt tho good fortune whicKmude that step ncccs- stretches her friendly assistance to a people who liaxi. Government is pqteticnlly paying attribute to those in
saty, and the regret we feel that tlie-eitv is hereafter to be
tion, making six hundred thousand acres in all. At the deprived of so faithful and valuable aVuitblic officer, tho
^ — e n rebellion agtfffut itsuuthoritv!
From this sotiree alone—iucludipg the money stolen by
minimum price fixed by law, this, is equivalent to an Republican party of so efficient JnH-mSucnual a member,
An Outside View of the Gains of Secession.
/Louisiana aud passed over to the Confederacy—more tliaii
conceded
appropriation of 8750,000 for these two objects. If the and the community of so good a /-itizen. It
a million of dollars, in solid gold, has gone into the rebel
The London Saturday Ilevietc ihus concludes,
money or land be faithfully expended, it will be of by all who have had an opportunely to form coi
treasury!
By the time fixed for the new Tariff to go inment that Judgo Edmunds has discharged the
incalculable advantage directly to Northern Michigan, duties of tho office he has just resigned, with ability and "and impartial article upon- "The Motives Of
to operation, nearly two millious of dollars will hove thus
and of very great general benefit to the whole Stato- fidelity He has been unwcaricihin his efforts to advante After remarking upon the probable profit toj
passed iuto^fce hands of those who have thrown off their
lggers, allegiance to the Unioo.
Much will depend on the character of the men selected the best interests of the city, amythose efforts havo been whites of the South, ill '• free trade and cl
'I his, of course, cannot be quietly permitted. To do so
successful in an eminent degree His selection as Com- tho writer says:
a* cdnimissioners by the Governor.
would bo to succumb to traitors, aiid dishonor the Govmissioner of the Land Officehasgiven general satisfactionAnd yet one might have thought that
ernment.
Fort Sumter.
and we have no doiiSuiiilHie will justify the confidence strong appetite for gam would hardly have bli
But, unpalatable as is tho contemplation of what lias
The Washington correspondent of the New York shown in his ability and integrity by the President, in white men of the Southern States to" the great
been, what will be is fraught with infinitely greater misTribune, under date of March 2C, says that Capt. Fox. the position for which he has been selected. We trust tho great risk which they are about to incur. To four chief, unless prevented by decisive nctiori." After the 1st
that it will be found as profitable as it is honorable to him
who visited Fort Sumter on thG requisition of the War and that at the end of his term of service he will return minds, the loss would be so enormous as to far outwfigh ofMay, the rates of duty'will be mueh lower at the Gulf
auy pecuniary gain. They would at once cease to
department, has returned to Washington and reported to his old home and hi* old friends, improved in fortune belong to one of the greatest nations of the world, and State'ports than elsewhere. The difference will be so
tha result.of his mission. He had a plan for introducing and in health. Judge E, left for Washington to assume sink into member* of « comparatively small State, with great that the entire Northwest would find it to their ad- '
vantage to purchase their imported goods at New Orleans
rc-cnforccmcnts, which hjid boon submitted to members the duties of his new office last evening.
no history, no renown, no prestige. * All the traditions rather than at New York. It is a moderate calculation
[Detroit Advertiser.
that gather aroWd the great North American people, to say that the cousnmcrs of full one half of such goods
of the Cabinoif-atidVaaf regttaotTris measurably practiand of which thatjpeopls has been so'proud, would cease would find themselves in this catagory.
i-ablolbuydwondod w&hrtho WBbatiiiity if not certainty
Humiliation of Mississippi.
to be theirs. But if patriotic pride does not sway them,
If this bo so, a new clas* CT '• Coercionifts" will very
of collision, which.«Hwitatcd^hff\cbief objection to its
The Brandon (Miss.) Republican, in speaking of the still we cannot uelp wondering at their readiness to incnr
adoption. H^MSjperfbctly famuiar with all the approaches success of Major Hawkins, who went to Illinois to get the heavy 'axntM w hi oil a separate Confederacy must soon take the field. The cc/fccrvativc merchants of thS
cities of the seaboard will not-like to sec their trade thus
to tlwJiWjopr onSWleston, having peen long connected corn for persons who were likely to starve, holds the entail. It will bo necjs^aarv for them to maintain a fleet diverted. They will therefore, be found in sympathy with
and. an army,
imkts46cy
cfioose to be exposed
'rith Urp.coast survey*, and had practical experience as following language:
.
.
.
... to insults
........... d, e Administration, whose purpose it is to' trausfer th*
ffrom
r e r otheir
l h e ' N6rthtjrn
r ^ r t M n , neighbor..
neighbor., The
riio whole
.hole cost
cost of
o f tthe
h e C o«tan OOiccnfor the liolf Sl.te.from >ho niarU. rflllthewntnander df onffyof^AspjirW all's steamers. His
•' From this letter it will be seen that the citizens of civil
administration, hitherto divided between the North
.-chenJo did not.cohjcmplntc any serious danger in running Springfield, the home of Lincoln, have contributed one and the South, will fall upon them. But more than all ccs which have been erected by the Government, in New
Orleans, &c., to tho quarter-decks of armed Frigates, to
thousand
bushels
of
corn,
and
that
much
more
will
be
this, '.here yitho risk that, should civil war break out, be stationed nt the entrances of the Harbors.
the ^fijauntlct of the batteries on the islands which guard
contributed to relieve tho distress of the poor in this,
the choM<0U but only in landing the men and provisions section. \ How humiliating to every Mississipian, to the negroes might take part in it against their masters ;
This will.be alegitimato exercise of authority. If bipod,
and that in any ease, the neighbourhood of a free State, shed shall result from i t the Gqyernment will not be the
at Suwtcr, after it had been reached. If a fire was know":that after cursing and denouncing tho people of
whose enmity to slavery has been ebflamed by these
c penou upon his transports from Fort Moultrie or the tfiiS North as our people have been in the habit of dissensions, will render insubordination and desertions aggressor. There will I* no invasion. It will be but the
simple exercise of an unquestioned right—the collection
cthflrpa^teries, it would be necessary for Sumter to denouncing them, we are compelled turn arouud and beg far more frequent amonff-the'slavcs.
,of imposts belonging to the people.
4hem for bread, and they in torn are trying to kill us
" No event of our day has been half so wonderful a«
•ihiucfe them in order to dischargo the re-euforcement wl(h kindness, by treating our agent with the greatest
W ill the authorities of the Confederate States interfere t
Any 4f'empt, therefore, looking to that object would respect, aud not only giving him more than he asked, the one before us. Who, a priori, could have believed Perhaps so. They are making preporatiohs for such an
that in the nineteenth century a new State should be
almost ioevitubly load to bloodshed, and before reurting but paying for the sacks to put it in—.It certainlv places organized, by the grandsons of Englishmen, safely on the emergency, and avow their purpose to resist any and every
to it," .the Administration "would be constrained to expect us io a verv humiliating position,Nind we heard Major principle of preserving and extending a system of slaveiy 1 attempt to treat them otherwise than ns an independent
and sovereign power—whether that attempt be made on
thatalfernaiive. Even if successful without great loss of Hawkins abused for going there and"t>5ggiflg corn : but A more ignoble basis for a great Confederacy it is im- serf or land.
we say he has done right, and thonsandi of starving possible to conceive, nor one in the long run more
life, nothing, would bo gained but tho retention of
Here, then, and not at Fort Sumter, is to be the point
children, widows and orphans will bless him for his efforts precarious. Thfc permanent renunciation of sound
fortress which has only local valuo in protecting Charles- to keep them from perishing with hunger. Some 'nar- principles and nhtural laws must, in due time, bring of probable collision. In this collecting the revenue,
row-minded. contemptible demagogues say that the' ruin. No great career car. be before the Southern quite as well as by holding an insolated Fort at a fearful
ton, -and is of no national moment whatever.
expenditure of treasurer and blood, can tho authority of
Capt. Fox is folly impressed with tho courage, inte- citizens of Illinois givo us corn becausc they fear us, and States, bound together solely by the tie of bavin? a the Government be vindicated.
wish to get on good terms with us agaitL We bdieve
grity and siucArity of Major Anderson, with whom, they are actuated by phrely Christian motives, and that working class of liegro bondsmen. Assnredly, it will be
This will be no blockade. That as the law of blocktho Northern Confederacy, based on the principle of ade is now construed, is nearly on impractical impoatir.owe*er,>his communication was necessarily limited, as they have purer and better hearts than those who make
freedom/' with a policy untainted t>y crime, with a free bility on a coast line of thousands ofmiles. It will involve
Gov/tfiekers sent Cupt. Hartstcin, lato of our Navy, as such charges."
working class of ivhito men, that will be the one to go us in no controversy with foreign powers; and may be
ir, e^Eort\rith him to the Fort, who kept within ear-shot
on and prosper,' and become the leader of the New carried out as easily as a floating lightship can be mainA HOWL AT NORTHERN Miami AN.—The, .disunion
turit)g.mpst;0^the interview, or, at least. Dear enough organ at Detroit is in deep tribulation because the World."
tained in Boston harbor.
»
If this much of " Coercionr is not practicable, then the
* to prevent any frc? communication. B e considers that Legislature has not departed from the swamp land policy
From the official reports, | it appears that the whole
the Fort can be reinforced either by a military opora- inaugurated by the Republican Legislature of 1859. It ammount of revenue collected at all the ports in the Se- Government is at an end. And those who shall coml«t
such an exercise of authority, most adopt the heresy of
tron. 'Which, of course, would require a force not at the howls pitifully over the fact that additional appropria- ceded States durirp the last fiscal year, ending June 30, the Tribnno, that the Gulf States have the samerightto
tions hare bett'a made, t'nd^new roads projected for
'iiapqfeil or the President, or by the strategy already Northern. Michigan, both in the upper and lower penin- 1860. wa9 only $b,491,757, or about ODe-twenticth ofthe set up an independent Government to-day that the Amerireferred to, with its attendant hazards of a desperate sula. Lot it howl. Trie people that live in the new revenue collected in all the port3 of the Vijited States.— can Colonics had to scpcratc from Great Britian in -76.
conflict. Tho supply of provisions now .in the garrison counties understand the propriety, ami necessity of these As thesa States comprise about ooe-«ixth of the Union
Albany Evening Journal.
will probably enable Major Anderson to sustain his com- appropriations, and so long as these lands are used for
iu territory and population, their share of the annual exSowt DRUNK.—The Nashville (Term.) Patriot says that
mand reasonably until the 15th of April. From all the
'ng up the country, and bringing actual Settler* upon
:
*cU jlisclojed by this investigation, it is manifest that
that have hitherto been an eye-sore to the people, penditures of the.Government could not have been less Senator Wigfall, of Texas, has been so drunk for the last
*'ortSumter must be abandoned, or civil war inaugurated. and an incubus upon the growth and prosperity of the than thirteen mil ions. Tbey will lose, then, nearly ten three months, that '• he couldn't hit tha ground with his
Capt. Fox fc cautious, intelligent and well-informed, and State, it will be a very harmless pastime for the Free millions by separation, even, if they collect and appropri;
hat."
was brought to the notice of tho Govepwfnt^by Mr. Press to devote its'cn'.umns to attacks upon these appro- ate as much revenue by customs as before. They will
Aspinjvall and some of,the principal shirk)wners*of New priatious, and upon the vital interests of the new counties. find, however, that the sum «f 83,491,757 will not go very
AruovuxvENT or Tim SENATE.—The U. S. Senate
York and Boston.
'
[Port Huron Press.
far toward supporting a Government
adjourned tine die on the 28th ult
~
tor and
&
\
""' T R A V E R S E CITY,
JUDGE M C I * ^ J / - A W a s h i n g t o n c o r r e s p o n d e n t o f t h e
A l e x a n d r i a Gap^Tte, s a y s : " O o e of t h e warmest a d m i r e r s
A o v r t n i n t t t r a ^ — T w o o o I o M i a ef-HsiryAfe,
Advertisements will be found on the fourth page.
k CoJ
ot J u s t i c e J o h V M c L e a n of t h e S u p r e m e C o u r t , i n f o r m s
m e t h a t t h e h e a W a J t t t e e m i n e n t J u r i s t i s fast declining,
TRAVERSE CITY LAXD O m c x . - — T h e P r e s i d e n t h a s ; a n d t h a t rerfous a p p r e h e n s i o n s a r e e n t e r t a i n e d t h a t he
a p p o i n t e d , a n d t h e S e n a t e c o n f i r m e d , MORGAN BATES, will n o t be a b l e t o resume his seat on t h e b e n c h . T h i s
R e g i s t e r , a n d REUBEN GOODRICH, R e c e i v e r , of t h e U. S. will be p a i n f u l intelligence t o the- n u m e r o u s friends o f
;
L a n d Office a t T r a v e r s e City. T h e s e a p p o i n t m e n t s w e r e t h e J u d g e . )
-t i : /
l
j
'
f
•
m a d e a n d confirmed on t h e 2 5 t h of M a r c h .
"ATTENTION, YOUNG M E N ! " — W e p e r c e i v e , b y t h e
I t is peculiarly g r a t i f y i n g t o u s t o learn, f r o m u n d o u b t - a d v e r t i s e m e n t of Messrs. H o r a c e L H e g e m a n k Qo., of
e d a u t h o r i t y , t h a t t h e M i c h i g a n D e l e g a t i o n in C o n g r e s s N e w Y o r k , t h a t t h e renowned " S t i m u l a t i n g O n g u e n f i i
unanimously
recommended our appointment
v e n t e d b y D r . B e l l i n g h a m for a T i e a l d y stimulation in t h e
NAVIGATION—From t h e p r e s e n t i n d i c a t i o n s { r e t h i n k
t h a t N a v i g a t i o n will n o t b e open o n t h o B a y aoonftr t h a n
the 2 0 t h i n s t
•<
JUDICIAL EUCTIO.V.—'The Official m a j o r i t y
c o u n t y f o r RANDOLPH MANNING, for A s s o c i a t e J u s t i c e
of t h e 8 a p r e r f t e . C o u r t , i s 200.
T h e Returns from Me-
geezec, M i l t o n , W h i t e w a t o r a n d Glen A r b o r , f o u r s t r o n g
R e p u b l i c a n T o w n s , d i d n o t c o m e in.
s y e l l e d t h e m a j o r i t y t o o v e r 300.
action V
T h e y would h a v e
W h e r e is t h a t
m a r k e t confided *o t h e i r a g e n c y .
T h e h i g h reputation of
t t y s a r t i c l e in L o n d o n , P a r i s , a n d o t h e r cities of E a r d p e ,
t o h a v e b e e n fully justified b y e x p e r i e n c e in
country.
all classes.
W e find t h a t i t s p r a i s e s a r e
re-echoed
among
A few w e e k s a r e s a i d t o p r o v e its almost
m a g i c a l influences u p o n t h e b e a r d o r whiskers.
B r i t i s h volunteers h a v e made s y [ b t r e e use of i t a s t o att r a c t t h e a t t e n t i o n of T h e L o n d o n P u n c h . S e e advertise-
M r . - R . W . S m i t h o f P e n i n s u l a h a s slips of t h e E n g l i s h
Call in
season.
THE MCKINNET DEFALCATION.—The B o a r d of S t a t e
_ crease the circulation and advertising patronage of the
HERALD in Grand Traverse County, with a view «o enlarging
the paper at the commencement of a new volume, and for this
reason will rcceive County Orders at par for Subscription! 1 ,
Advertising and J o b Work, onti) f a r t h e r notice.
MORGAN BATES.
Herald Office, Traverse City. April 4,1861.
18-tf
A u d i t o r s , on s e t t l e m e n t of t h e a c c o u n t s of J o h n M c K i n -
S T O R E ,
N E W GOODS,
Mead the Following,
A N D BE NOT SATISFIED,
BOT COSE AW) CONVINCE YOfc'JMEL* Or
THE r o i x o w c c o PACTS:
P I R S T . T h a t
•*. j AND
Hitchcock, Campbell & Bacon,
New Arrangement. KEEP
CONSTANTLY ON HAND A GESEBAI AS
sortment of
V
Groceries, Provisions, l)ry Goods, Hartttoare, Clothing,
T O TE E P U B L I C
g r o w t h of b e a r d o r whiskers, h a s now h a d i t s A m e r i c a n
m e n t of Messrs. H e g e m a n k Co., in M o t h e r column.
G o o s e b e r r y , Li l ac, a n d R o s e sp r o u t s, of t h r e e o r f o u r
varieties, t o g i v e a w a y t o a n y w h o m a y w a n t
N K W
And, in fact, a n y t h i n g the wants of the country d a * a r e
which they sell cheap f o r
In Ibvoerj^ Gitj, and on atf parts of
R E A D Y PAY,
'
Grand Traverse Bay, we wotdd re*- believing the nimble dime t e t t e r than the lazy s h i l l i n g
. T pectfuUy announce
S E C O N D L Y , That
pay the higheat market price f o r all kinds of P r o i u s e : .
T H
E
F
A C T , WTbey
h e a t , R y e , C o r n , Oats, B u c k w h e a t , Beans, Pi*..,
THAT WE H A | - E NOW MOVED INTO
New and Spacious Store,
Barley, Grass Seed, Poultry, P o r k a n d Beef.
(Dressed o r e n foot,) S h i n g l e s a n d C o r d Wood.
TRAPPERS will do well to give them a call before s t l f t a g
FURS
•e filling to repletion with ALL KINDS OF
>ds and Wares
T H r R D L Y . T k t
..
By the a i d of experienced workmen, they have opened a n w
A N T E D , IMMEDIATELY. AT THE HERALD
. Office, an A p p r e n t i c e t o t h e P r i n t i n g B u s i n e s s .
A steady, industrious boy, from 15 to 17 years old, who has a which ai adapted to the wants of the s u r r o u n d i n g eonntry
t h e S l a t e in t h e s u m of $ 8 1 , 6 4 1 , 2 0 ; t h a t t h e y d e m a n d e d Common School education, and a fair share of common sense,
o f h i m i m m e d i a t e p a y m e n t of t h e said a m o u n t , b u t t h a t will find a good home, have kind treatment, a n d ' a n excellent
AND ARE r U T A U D TO DO
opportunity to learn the trade. March 15,1861..RE or MAY RE called for from t i n t to time.
h e neglefcted t o m a k e a n y p a y m e n t on t h e same. H e is
therefore declared a defaulter t o that amonut.
Of
Rny^descration,
on s h o r t notice. Also keep on hand an
woold brisfly call the attention of the p u r s h a s i n g pabof GREILICK A SON', is this day dissolved by mutual
PRESIDENT PRO. TEH. or THE SKX^TR.—-Senator F o o i e , - » n t
GODFREY GREILICK.
Iron, Sap P a n s , 15-30-60 Gallon Kettles, Plow*.
JOSEPH GREIUCK.
of Vermont;'* b t f b e e n elected P r e s i d e n t Pro. Tern, of
Axes, H o e s . D r a g - T e e t h , Sleds, Ox-C art s, Oxlie to the following
Centreville, March 15,1861.
l"-3w*
Yokes, Whlllietrecs, A c .
t h e U . &*Senate. I n case of t h e d e a t h o r disability of
In Bhort, all kinds of F a r m i n g I m p l e m e n t s ; and will e a r
t h e P r e s i d e n t a n d V i c o P r e s i d e n t , t h o P r e s i d e n t pro.
particular attention to
Blacksmith Shop,
n e y , late 8 t a t e T r e a s u r e r , d e c l a r e s t h a t he is i n d e b t e d t o
CUSTOM WORK,
tern, of t h e S e n a t e w o u l d b e P r e s i d e n t of t h e U n i t e d
F R U I T
T R E E S .
P O I N T S .
W E HAVE A-
S t a t e s . S u c h a c o n t i n g e n c y , however, h a s n e v e r o c c u r r e d
10 Varieties of Apples,
s i n c e t h e f o r m a t i o n of o u r G o v e r n m e n t
12
.**
• ' D w n r f Pcnra,
'"
"
" Peaches,
T h e T e x a s L e g i s l a t u r e h a s passed a resolution a p p r o v Cherries,
Plants,
i n g of t h e C o n v e n t i o n a c t d e p o s i n g G o v . H o u s t o n .
Q u i n c e s , G r a p e s , S i b e r i a n C r a b A p p l e s , A c . , dec.
A bill h a s passed t o rai^e a regiment of m o u n t e d rifleThese Trees are of tho choicest kinds, h i ought in last Fall
in order to have them on hand for early Spring setting.
men for frontier protection.
JAMES M. BURBECK.
S i n c e t h e d e p a r t u r e of t h o F e d e r a l t r o o p s , t h o I n d i a n s
Northport, March 16,1851.
IT*
in l a r g e n u m b e r s ' h a v e b e e n d e v a s t a t i n g t h e f r o n t i e r , kill-
IVEW S T O R E ;
-'•* ' /
IN THE MAIN, A
T- J- R A M S D E L L
i n g a n d d r i v i n g b a c k t h e settlers.
JSMtoritcij am) Counsellor at $ato,
T h e s t e a m e r s D a n i e l W e b s t e r a n d G e n e r a l R u s k , sailfrom Brazos on tho 20th, with tha F e d e r a l troops.
SOLICITOR I N C H A N C E R Y ,
NO. 4 FIRST 8TREET,
Muiilfttoc. Miohijmn.
A m e m b e r of t h e M i s s o u r i L e g i s l a t u r e recently p r o posed t o h a v e t h e S t a t e p r i n t i n g p e r f o r m e d b y c o n v i c t
l u b o r ; b u t u p o n an i n v e s t i g a t i o n i t w a s found t h a t t h e r e
w a s n o t t h e n , a n d n e v e r h a d been a p r i n t e r in t h e Missouri
State Prison.
BOOTH PARDONED.—Sherman M . B o o t h , of Milwaukee*
w h o w a s convicted-of rescuing a f u g i t i v e s l a v e [rom t h e
U . 8 . M a r s h a l in t h a t c i t y , a n d w h o h a s b e e n
prison for some time, was pardoned b y M r
GLEN' A R B O R ,
Propeller of Our Own,
WOULD HEREBY CIVK XOTICB THAT TBE
Our Own Trade,
LINE OF PllOPELLERS,
direct to Chicago; thus l i v i n g us GREAT ADVANTAGES
R u n n i n g between OGDENSBURG and CHICAGO, will call
at this place DAILY, d a r i n g the coming season of navigat i o n , t o receive wood.
The above Line consists of the ProT h e revenue f r o m c u s t o m s a t N e w O r l e a n s i s s t a t e d f i l e r s
V
B
u
ckeye, Michigan, Ontario, Ogdensburg, Wiscon' a t 8 3 5 , 0 0 0 d a i l y . E f f o r t s will be m a d e t o c r o w d i m p o r t s
sin, Empire, Prairie State and Clevejaud;
t h e r e , u n d e r t h e l o w tariff, a n d t h e P r e s i d e n t h a s n o m o d e
and for safety and regularity of trips is not equalled bv at
6f p r e v e n t i o n w i t h o u t c a l l i n g C o n g r e s s t o g e t h e r .
other Line OR the Lakes.
>
DASCOMB, TODD & COT h e P o n t i n e G a z e t t e e of t h e 2 2 d inst., s t a t e s t h a t t h e
It-Cm
Proprietors of Wood Yard.
previous to his
retirement
f r o m office.
H o n . R , E". T r o w b r i d g e baa j u s t r e l u m e d f r o m t h e Cleve- MANISTEE. MANISTEE C O U N T Y , )
STATE OF MICHIGAN,.
land W a t e r Core.
A m j c A N T s / b r O r r i C E . — I t i s stated t h a t n o less t h a n
15,0D0_applrrations f o r P o s t - O f f i c e a p p o i n t m e n t s h a v e
b e e n a l r e a d y Qled in t h e F a s t - O f f i c c D e p a r t m e n t .
T h e T r e m o n t H o u s e in-Chicago, a b o n t 4 0 0 feet s q u a r e ,
is b e i n g raised f r o m i t s foundation b y 5 , 0 0 0 s c r e w y w o r k e d by 5 0 0 men.
BWAXTS, STOATON k
G o u i s i t r r n ' s MERCANTILE Coir
o b j e c t of t h i s I n s t i t u t i o n is t o i m p a r t a t h o r o u g h b u i i r f s i h d u c a t i o i ) , s u s t a i n i n g t h e same' r e l a t i o n t o
t h e profession of a c c o u n t a n t s h i p t h a t law, medical, a n d
t h e o l j j y a l s c h o o l s do t o t h e several p r o f e s s i o n s they h a v e
in v i e w A T h e c h a i n of Colleges, of w h i c h t h i s is n b r a n c h ,
h a v e .supplied a w a n t l o n g felt, b o t h b y t h e buisness comm u n i t y a u d t h o s e d e s i r i n g t o c n t e r bnisncss, a n d w e can
f a l l y i n d o r s e t h e o p i n i o n of i t s n u m e r o u s p a t r o n s , b o t h in
t h i s c i t y a n d elsewhere, t h a t A i r t h o a r o o g h n e s s a n d p r a c t i c a b i l i t y i t s t a n d s unrivalled b y a n y s i m i l a r I n s t i t u t i o n
c i t h e r west o r east.
[Detroit Free Press.
IHTBRISTINO.—If h o u s k e e p e r s really u n d e r s t o o d t h e
g r e a t d i f f e r e n c e t h a t e x i s t s b e t w e e n d i f f e r e n t b r a n d s of
S a l e r a t u s , a s t o quality, p u r i t y , a n d c o n s e q u e n t r e l i a b i l i t y
a n d h e a l t h f u l n e s s , - t h e y w o u l d not l o n g b e
b e s t that is manufactured.
Do Land k
without the
Co.'a S a l c r a t u s
costs you no more than any of the inferior articles which
are in.the market.
H e is using a n e w process of refining
S a l e r a t o s , by w h i c h all i m p u r i t i e s a r e removed. T h i s p r o cess i s in nse a t no o t h e r e s t a b l i s h m e n t in t h e c o u n t r y . —
T h e q u a l i t y of t h e S a l e r a t u s p r o d u c e d b y t h i s p r o c e s s
v c r y j n p c r i o r , a n d i t is f a s t b e c o m i n g very p o p u l a r w i t h
intelligent housewives.
Jtoi
ORDER OP PUBLICATION.
Q T A T E O F M I C H I G A N ' . — T H E CIRCUIT COURT
O . for the C o n a t v of Grand Traverse. I n Ciianciry. .
N i n t h Judicial Circuit—In Chancery. Suit p e n d i n g in the
Cironlt Codrt f o r t h ? County of Grand Traverse, In Chancer*-,
at Traverse City, on tho 10th 3av of March, l'gfiL Sarah
Parker, Complainant, vs. Ira A. Parker, Otis L. White and
J a m e s M. Burbeck, defendants.
It satisfactorily appearing to this,Court that the above defendant, Ira A. Parker. Is a non-resident of t h i s State, but a
resident of the Province of Canada, On motion of C. H.
Marsh, Solicitor for the Complainant, It is ordered t h a t the
said defendant, Ira A. Parker, caqae his appearance to be entered in 4his cause, a n d notice thereof served upon the complainant's Solicitor, within three m o n t h s from the date of this
o r d e r ; and In case of hi* appeamncc. that he cause bis answer t o complainant's bill to be Bled, a n d - a copy thereof
served upon said complainant's Solicitor, w i t h i a t w e n t v ita**
a f t e r service of a copy of said bill of.cotnplaint: a n d "in ife-
sale,
8 be will - come-in" on the first of May.
R. W. SMITH.
.
MARRIED,
I n T r a v e m City, on the Id test, by Rev. J . W. Robinson,
Olendlnaing, of Frankfort, Mich, a n d Miss
Hellen F . 8b or sr. ol t h i s vUlage.
i i a & t m J
IMt
>
•
S. BARISTS,
own, and who has f o r s e j e r a i yeara.purchased goods of tl
BEST HOUSES in NEW-YORK and BOSTON, and who w
continue t o do so for o ^ r firm from time to t i m e ; t h u s e
for Shelling Corn, Grinding Corn a n d Cob, a n d all kind* efCoarse Grains, will be run expressly in a
C U S T O M
T R A D E .
F o r the accommodation or the
F
A
R
M
E
R
S
.
SEED GRAINS,
o r A U , KOiDS, AND
F E E D
M E A L,
will be kept constantly on band a n d for aale by the 100 1>».
My
NEW
STORE
AND
^
,
N E W GOODS,
C o r n e r o f W a l t a z o o a n d N a g on a be S t a . ,
N O R T H P O R T .
T H E SUBSCRIBER H A S J U S T RECEIVED H I S W I N T t *
8TOCK! CONSISTING OP
D R . Y
Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
Which he oflers cheap for Cash o r Barter.
r . a—CASH FAIC j/tm FOBS.
NORTHPORT IS RISING!!
T h i s is E v i d e n t ! S i n c e
L. M. & W P . S T E E L E & Co.
HAVE INTRODUCED A LAIUiE AND T H E
ONLY STOCK
abling us t o lay down onr goods
M Uw a* a'uy Home in Chicago;^ j r , J ^ p - Q S & M E D I C I N E S
the consumer—first, TRAVELING E X P E N S E S ;
BPcon-1, IX)SS O F TIME; and lastly and mainly, the ENORMOUS AMOUNT neeessirily added to cover HIGH RENTSI
and cx]>cnack of the Chicago merchant.
We shall make an E S P E C I A L HFFORT to keep so c
plete a stock t h a t
'
Any Dealers on the Bay
will be enabled to purchase of u s . i n quantities t o suit, f o r ]
only a SMALL A D V A N C E
COST end a aommlssion t o r i
handling.
!
would remark, that o m i n g t o w a c t of room we have been
unable t o keep many t h i n g s in t h c S ' l i n c , which NOW, f r o m i
| our increased room, a n d the
'
TO BE FOUND IN T H E COUNTY.
ALSO—A CHOICE v i a i r r v o r
FAMILY GROCERIES
ASD
— , - ,
T r T
•
IN WHICH THEY ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD..
I Iniimat^personal acquaintance of our Mr.
Harm witji the thousand and one d*- ;
G i v e TJs a Call!
wands necessary to a Lady's tcants, " • * — P h y s i c i a n s ' P r e s c r i p t i o n s C n r r f u l l r - C o m -
j
in future T R f a n d k e e p ANY and ALL THINGS
j they may require.
• X. B. ANYTHING not in o u r regular line that I j u i i e . or
c i t t i c n s may want,
s we aball ubold e u r s e l v e s in readiness to
1 J™"' ™ " " " » * • » •'
Register in Chancery.
That
A NEW
METALLIC MILL,
G O O D S ,
Neio- York, jioston, Cincinnati or Chi-BOOTS AND SHOES.
> cago. .
Keady-Made Clothing,
T o the Ladies,
fence in cacb week f o r six successive Week*, or that the
plainant cause a copy thereof to-be served personaUy upon
said defendant, l r a A. Parker, at least twenty days bofor
"
before the
time above prescribed f o r said defendant's appearance.
C H A R L E S H. HOLDEN,
Circuit Court Commissioner
I n a a d fbr Grand Traverse County,
r *1
«
.
Michigan.
I herehr^rv.hft th/^L
^
01,51
OX-SHOEIJYG.
WE HAVE
Abundant Advantages
M R .
Manufactured
Peninsula April 10,1861.
Ovr Refits are ^Nothing. i
FOR PURCHASING GOODS IN
the Probate Office, in Manistee, the 23d
day of Marob, A. D. 1361, F r f s e n t , George J . Dorr, Judgo of
Probate:
In the m a t t e r of the Estate of Francis Barrett, deceased.
On reading and filing of t^e petition, duly verified, of J o h n
Canfletd, Administrator of said Estate, i t appearing by tuiil
i J'
i
*
—• sufficient personal estate in ''
,nds of tfie administrator, to pay the debts outstanding
long residence in the country we have becomi
against the deceased, and the expense* of Administration,
and that it is necessary t o sell the whole, or some portion,
well acquainted with the:wants of the public.
of the Real Estate for the payment of such debts ;
Therefore, all persons interested in said estate are ordered
to appear before t^e Judgo of Probate, at the County Clerk's
we have associated with us in the Mercantile Droffice, in Manistee, nn Saturday, the 18th day of May n e x t , ,
a m i n e o'clock, A. M., to show cause why a'lieenne should I
not.be granted to t h e aforesaid Administrator to svll so much ' partmcnt of
of the Real Estate as shall be necessary In pay such debts.
'
And that t h i s o r d e r be published i n . t h e Grand Traverse
Herald, four successive weeks.
. I n testimony whereof 1 have hereunto s'et m y hand
the seal of the Probate Court, at Manistee, t h i s twenty third
day of March, A. D. 1861.
w h o for sixteen years ha*'been extensively engaged in a b
GEORGE J . DORR.
18-<w.
__
J u d g e of Prol>:
sineas whose requirements were of t h e same nature
o-
a n d for sale a t wholesale a t F a i r p o r t , M o n r o e C o » N . Y .
T h e p r i n c i p a l g r o c e r * a l s o wholesale i t
over any one having to P A Y FREIGHTS.
PROBATE COURT OF SAID COUNTY,
—T OF THE PROBATE OOOUT OF SAID
D o L a n d k Co.'t S a l e r a t u s i s f o r
sale b y m o s t g r o c e r s a n d s t o r e k e e p e r s .
JJYD
R0VNING IN
Northern Transportation Co.'s
lying in
WE HAVE A.
. . . . M A R C H , 1861.
D A S C O M B , T O D D <S^CO.
Buchanan,
NEW STOCK;
HORSE
F O U R T H L Y ,
'
H A N N A H , L A T It CO.
T r a v e r s e City, May 28, 1860.
pounded.
U M. & W. F. STEELE A CO.
Northport, Dee 1 1 , 1 ««o.
tO m
MORGAN BATES,
N O T A R Y PUBLIC,
H e r a l d Otlioo, T r a v e r s e C i t y
Mich.
reflection e n o u g h to t i e w t h i n g s s o b e r l y , t h i s g r e a t
speech of M r . S e w a r d will b e c e l e b r a t e d a s o n e of t b e
ooblest instances o f m o r a l a n d m o r a l l y wise self-modulac o ^ i m m t a ^ ' e d d r e * f r o m » ' v o l u n t e e r d e l e g a t i o n of tion to peas t h e s t r a i t s of a difficult occasion t h a t h a s
B e p u b l i c a n s , Mr. S e a w a r d i s r e p o r t e d to h a r e said, e m b e e u given b y h u m a n s t a t e s m a n s h i p . "
rabstantinlly, feat » f r e e d o m i s n o t b o w i n d a n g e r , " t h a t
" f r e e d o m is a h r a j r i i n t h i U n i o n , " s a d t h a t s i n c e t h e
U n i o n i s in d a q g e r , t b e first c a n of all g o o d citizens
should b e to g u a r d a n d p r e s e r v e t h a t I n t b e sense in
v U c h M r . S e a w a r d used t h e s e j f o r d s , t h e y h a v e a p r o f o u n d a n d f a r - r e a c h i n g significance. U s i n g " F r e e d o m "
to d e n o t e • free a n d p o p u l a r g o v e r n m e n t , g u a r d i n g b y
l a w t h e r i g h t s a n d l i b e r t i e s o f t h e individual, w h o can
d o u b t ' t h a t t h e Violent d i s r u p t i o n of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s
m i g h t p u t in j e o p a r d y t h e v e r y e x i s t e n c e o f s u c h a
g o v e r n m e n t u p o n t b i s g f l t i f i n e o t ? I t i s indeed easy to
s a y t h a t if t h e f r e e l H a t e s i h o u l d . j e m a l n u n i t e d a n d h a r monious. t h e y m i g h t h a v e a h i g h e r a n d m o r e p r o s p e r o u s
d e v e l o p m e n t a s ^ s e p a r a t e C o n f e d e r a c y t h a n is possible
u n d e r a political t ^ n i o n w i t h S l a v e r y . I t i s eSsy t o a s s e r t
An a p e r i e n t a n d Stomacic preparation of IRON' purified of
t h a t in t n e e v e n t o f , t h e secession of all t b e slave S t a t e s , Oxygen and Carbon by comboatloa in Hydrogen. Sanctiont h e f r e e S t a t e s would r e m a i n u n i t e d a n d h a r m o n i o u s .
ed by the highest"Medical Authorities, both in Europe and
B u t b y t h e v e r y l a w of R e p u b l i c a n communities, r i ^ a l
the United 8tates, and prescribed in their practice.
p a r t i e s w o u l d a t o n c e arise in tbe n e w C o n f e d e r a c y ;
The experience of thousands daily proves t h a t no preparad e m a g o g u e i s m would t a k e a d v a n t a g e of sectional i n t e r e s t s ,
tion of I r o n c a n be compared with i t Impurities of the
a r r i y t n g f h e East' against t b e W e s t , tbe Atlantic coast
a g a i n s t t h e P a c i f i c , t h e c o r n a n d r a i l w a y i n t e r e s t s of thQ blood, depression of vital e n e r g y , pale a n d otherwise aickly
valley of t h e Mississippi d e m a n d i n g f r e e t r a d e , a g a i n s t complexions indicate its necessity In almost eTery conceivat h e m i n i n g a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g i n t e r e s t s of P e n n s y l v a n i a ble case.
I n n o x io u s in aH maladies in which It haa been tried, it has
a n d Massachusetts, c l a m o r o u s f o r a p r o t e c t i v e tariff.
T h e f o r e i g n policy of t b e C o n f e d e r a c y , as well a s i t s proved absolutely curative in each of the following cominternal economy, would g i v e occasion f o r c o n f l i c t i n g plaints, vis:
p a r t i e s ; a n d in view of the p a s t c o u r s e of t h e m e r c a n t i l e
I n Debility, Nervous Affections, E m a c i a t i o n ,
a n d m a n u f a c t u r i n g i n t e r e s t s u p o n t h e q u e s t i o n of Slavery, D y s p e p s i a , C o n s t i p a t i o n , D i a r r h e a , D y s e n t e r y , I n a n d t h e social, m o r a L a n d politieal d e g r a d a t i o n o f a c i p i e n t C o n s u m p t i o n , S c r o f u l o u s T u b e r c u l o s i s , S a l t
g r e a t p a r t of t h o p o p u l a t i o n t h a t would form t h e s o u t h e r n R h e u m , M i s m e n r t r u n t i o o , W h i t e s , C h l o r o s i s , L i v e r
b e l t of a N o r t h e r n C o n f e d e r a c y , i t i s q u i t e conceivable C o m p l a i n t s . C h r o n i c H e a d a c h e s , R h e u m a t i s m , I n t h a t should t h e late D e m o c r a t i c p a r t y b e c o m e d o m i n a n t t e r m i t t e n t F e v e r s , P i m p l e s o n t h e F a c e , i t c .
. in s u c b a C o n f e d e r a c y , i t s first a c t w o u l d b e to t e l l o u t
In cases of GINESAL DEBILITY, whether the result of acute
t h e G o v e r n m e n t t o its old S o u t h e r n t a s k m a s t e r s u p o n disease, or'of tbe continued diminution of nervous and must e r m s m o r e f a v o r a b l e to S l a v e r y t h a n a n y e x t o r t e d 1 f r o m cular energy from netTous complaints, one trial of this ret b e p r e s e n t U n i o n , e v e n u o d e r t b e d e g r a d i n g adminis- storative has proved snccessful t o an e x t e n t which no descript r a t i o n s of P i e r c q a n d B u c h a n a n !
tion nor written attestation would r e n d e r credible. Invalids
Or, t h e process of d i s i n t e g r a t i o n o n c e b e g u n , w h o can
so long bed-ridden as to have become forgotten in their own
p r e d i c t t h a t i t would s t o p a t t h e d i v i d i n g line b e t w e e n
neighborhoods, have suddenly re-sppeared in the busy world
t h e slave S t a t e s a n d t h e f r e e t S h o u l d therey, b e a Gulfas if j u s t returned f r o m protracted travel in a distant land.
S t a t e C o n f e d e r a c y , a n d a B o r d e r - S t a t e Confederacy,
w h a t should b i n d e r a f u r t h e r subdivision Into E a s t e r n , 8 o m e very signal instances of t h i s kind are attested of female
^Middle a n d W e s t e r n C o n f e d e r a c i e s t B u t s u c h divisions, Sufferers, emaciated victims of apparent marasmus, sanenfeebling t h e f o r c e s of l i b e r t y , n e c e s s i t a t i n g s t a n d i n g guineous exhaustion, critical changes, and that complication
armies, p r o v o k i n g civil war, e n t a n g l i n g t h e S t a t e s w i t h of n e r v o u s ' a n d dyspeptio aversion to air and exercise ffor
which the physician h a s no name.
foreign military alliance, w o u l d i m p a i r t h e vitalit.F r e e d o m a n d lead to i t s final o v e r t h r o w . L o o k i n j
I n N a a v o c s AFFECTIONS of all kinds, and for reason
F r e e d o m in t h i s c o m p r e h e n s i v e sense, w h o will <
miliar to medical men, the operation of t h i s preparation of
affirm t h a t t h e g r e a t I n t e r e s t of H u m a n i t y involved in f r e e i r o n must necessarily be salutary, for, unlike the old oxides,
g o v e r n m e n t u p o n t h i s soil, is n o t s a f e r in t h e "Union, it is vigorously tonic, without being e x c i t i n g and overheathonestly a n d faithfully m a i n t a i n e d n n d e r t h e C o n s t i t u - i n g ; and gently, regularly aperient, even in the most obstition, t h a n i t would b e In a s e p a r a t e N o r t h e r n C o n f e d e r - nate cases of costivencss without ever being a gastric purgaacy, liable t o b e r e n t b y factions, o r compelled to
tive, or inflicting a disagreeable sensation.
m a i n t a i n a hostile f r o n t t o w a r d s i t s S o u t h e r n n e i g h b o r ?
I n this latter property, a m o n g others, which makes it s e
T o say the least, t h e difficulties of t h e q u e s t i q p c h a l l e n g e remarkably effectual and p e r m a n e n t a remedy f o r PILES, upon
a most thoughtful consideration for M r . Seward's b n e f
which it also appears t o e x e r t a distinct and 'specific action,
b u t p r e g n a n t utterances.
by dispersing the local t e n d e n c y which forms them.
L o o k i n g a t " F r e e d o m " u n d e r t h e speeifio f o r m of t h e
In DYSPEPSIA, Innumerable a s are its causes, a single box
e m a n c i p a t i o n of t h e slaves, can a n y man d o n b t t h a t t h e i r
of these, Chalybeate Pills h a s often sufficed for the most hapeacable emancipation—whether by moral coercion or
p e c u n i a r y c o m p e n s a t i o n — m i g h t b e s o o n e r a c c o m p l i s h e d bitual CMes, i n c l u d i n g the attendant COSTITEVES?.
I n unchecked DIARRHOBV, even when advanced to D r s r s in t b e U n i o n t h a n o a t of i t ? T h e i r e m a n c i p a t i o n b y a
b l o o d y insurrection v e r y likely w o u l d o c c u r s o o n e r o u t TKRY, confirmed, emaciatiiig, and apparently malignant, the
of t b e U n i o n t h a n t h e i r p e a c e f u l e m a n c i p a t i o n u n d e r t b e effects h a v e been equally decisive and astoalshlng.
I n t h e local pains, loss of flesh a n d s t r e n g t h , debilitating
Union. B n t w h o t h a t a e s i r e s t b e b e s t welfare of b o t h
the r a o e s involved in s l a v e r y , w o u l d p r e f e r & bloody cough, and r e m i t t e n t hectic, which generally indicate IKCIi n s u r r e c t i o n to a p e a c e a b l e e m a n c i p a t i o n 1 T b e s a y i n g FIRST COSSTJIFTIO*, t h i s remedy has allayed the al»rm of
of M r . S e w a r d t h a t " F r e e d o m is a l w a y s in t h e U n i o n ,
friends and physicians, in several very gratifying and intermay t h e r e f o r e b e a d i c t u m of t h e w i s e s t political philoso- e s t i n g Instances.
phy, a n d t h e t r u e s t d e v o t i o n t o F r e e d o m itself.
In S c a o r t ' L o t s TCBEBCCLOSIS, this medicated iron has had
B u t t h e r e i s m o t h e r view in w h i c h his r e m a r k h a s f a r more than the good effect of the most cautiously balanced
g r e a t significance. S l a v e r y h a s m a i n t a i n e d i t s political preparations of Iodine, without any of the well known liaa s c e n d a n c y b y r e p r e s e n t i n g t h a t t h e p u r p o s e s of t h e bilities.
p a r t y of F r e e d o m w e r e hostile t o t h e U n i o n . I t n o w
The attention of females c a n n o t be too confidently invited
s e e k s t o b r i n g a b o u t t b e d e s t r u c t i o n of t h e U n i o n a s t h e to t h i s remedy and restorative, in the cases peculiarly affectresult of t h e t r i u m p t b of t h a t p a r t y , and, t o lay t h e ing them.
. r e s p o n s i b i l i t y a n d t h e o d i u m of i t s d e s t r u c t i o n a t t b o
In RHEUMATISM, both chronic and inflammatory—in the
d o o r of t h e first R e p u b l i c a n A d m i n i s t r a t i o n . B y t h i s latter, however, mora decidedly—it h a s been invariably well
course t h e slave i n t e r e s t s e e k s t o o r g a n i z e a n e w . p a r t y , reported, both as alleviating pain and reducing the swellings
and stiflhess of the j o i n t s a n d muscles.
o r to ieooaSt>nct t h e b r o k e n D c m o c r a d y , uponOl^Kbasis
In IXTKRXITTF.VT FEVERS it must necessarily be a great
of fidelity to t h e U n i o n a n d t h o Constitution. B u t t h o remedy and energetic restorative, and its progress In the new
settlements of the West, will probably be one of high rer
R e p u b l i c a a p a r t y h a v e always claimed t o b e f a i t h f u l
and usefulness.
the Union and t h e Constitution. M r . Liucoln w a s
. No remedy has ever bcen discovcred In the whole history
elected t o d e s t r o y t b o U n i o n , c i t h e r b y p r e c i p i t a t i n g i t s
of medicine, which exerts such prompt, happy, and fully redissolution o r b y b e c o m i a g accessory t o i t a f t e f t h e r a
storative effect*. Good appetite, complete digestion, rapid
H e was e l e c t e d t o p r e s e r v e b o t h F r e e d o m ajra t h e Unit
acquisition of s t r e n g t h , with an unusual disposition for actb y r e s t o r i n g t h e - A d m i n i s t r a t i o n of t b e G o v e r n m e n t t o ive and cheerful exercise, Immediately follow its use.
P u t u p in n e a t flat metal boxes containing 50 pills, price
t h e p r i n c i p l e s of t b e C o n s t i t u t i o n . I f n o w r - h e s h o u l d
50 cents per b o x ; f o r sale y druggists and dealers. Will be
r a s h l y d i s c a r d t h e U n i o n on t h e one h a n d o r on t h e sent free to any address on receipt of the price. All letters,
o t h e r should a t t e m p t - t o m a i n t a i n i t by \j>rpcipi tatr
order*, etc., should be addressed to
R . B . L O C K E tc C o . , G e n e r a l A g e n t s ,
( M M u r e s of f o r c e , — a w a r t h a t would n o t carry w i t h it
J7
-'y
2 0 CEDAR ST., NEW YOR
jibe moral a e n t i m e u t of t h e N o r t h , — h e would t h r o w his
, / A d m i n j 8 t r a t i o i } i n t o t h e p o w e r of t h o e n e m i e s of f r e e d o m ,
J/ w h o b y c l a m o r i n g f o r t h e U n i o n or a g a i n s t a civil w a r
f p r o v o k e d b y rashness, would s e c u r e for themselves t h e
DR. CHURCHILL'S DI8COYERY.
A n e x t P r e s i d e n t i a l election, a n d t h e c o n s e q u e n t s u b j u g a -
D' MOTT'S
PILLS'^ IRON.
CONSUMPTION CURED!
| tion of f r e e d o m t o slavery. W e believe t h a t M r . S e w a r d
foresaw all t h i s , a n d t h a t h i s g r e a t s p e e c h in t b o S e n a t e
was f r a m e d in t h e s p i r i t of wi sd o m a n d p a t r i o t i s m
m e e t e i t h e r of t h e s e contingencies. H e s o u g h t t o p r e s e r v e t h e U n i o n f o r F r e e d o m , b y t h r o w i n g t h e responsibility for d i s r u p t i o n , o r for civil w a r w h e r e i t p r o p e r l y
b e l o n g s — u p o n t h e p a r t y of slavery. O n e of t n e ' most
s a g a c i o u s m i n d s in t h e c o u n t r y , long p u b l i c l y c o m m i t t e d
t o t h e a b o l i t i o n of slavery, h a s given u s a v i e w of t h a t
6peech, w h i c h , t h o u g h n o t sent f o r p u b l i c a t i o n , w e
cannot withold from o u r readers.
Referring to the
I n d e p e n d e n t ' s n e w of " M r . S e w a r d ' s T r u e P o s i t i o n , '
this, w r i t e r s a y s : —
" I w a n t to say h o w m u c h I w a s g r a t i f i e d b y t b e a p p r e c i a t i v e a r t i c l e o n G o v . S e w a r d in t h e I n d e p e n d e n t of
February 1 4 t t
I t h i n k b i s late s p e e c h h a s o e e n m o s t
unjustly, rnosr unintelligently d e a l t w i t h . P e o p l e w e r e
l o o k i n g t o h i m in a k i n d of foolish e x p e c t a t i o n t h a t b e
c o a H settle t h e n a t i o n b y a s p e e c h ! N o b o d v else could
do i t , b n t certainly S e w a r d m u s t b e able. NoDCsense!
I t w a s n o t in t h e p o w e r of a mortal, e v e n if h e w e r e close
u p o n t h e r a n k of a d e m i g o d . H e could issue n o phillipic,
m a k e no o n s l a u g h t right o r l e f t — n o t h i n g plainly w a s t o
b e d o n e in t h a t fashion. H e could offer no c o m p o u n d i n g
m e a s u r e — f i r e a n d w a t e r c o u l d a s easily b e q u i e t e d b y a
m a r r i a g e . W h a t J t h e n could h o d o w i t h a s p e e c h ?
N m r was a n o r a t o r in a closer p i n c h . S e e , then, h o w
adroitly a n d w i t h w h a t masterly skill b e leveled h i s a i m
to t b e occasion. W h a t h e i s a f t e r i s p l a i n a s t b e son.
v i a , to smooth a w a y e x a s p e r a t i o n s , a n d g a i n time f o r
t h e w o r k of salvation. T h e r e was never a finer, g r a n d e r
a c t of st at esm ansh i p in t h e wo r l d . I b e l i e v e i t h a s really
h a d more effect t h a n a n y o t h e r s p e e c h delivered in t b e
B y it, t o g e t h e r w i t h G e n . S c o t t ' s soldierly
""•a for a s h o w of f o r c e , t b e tide h a s , I think,
been tamed, a n d t b e s o p h o m o r e rebellion i s g e t t i n g
r a p i d l y sobered. W h e n i t i s weB o v e r , a n d m e n g e t
Winchester's Genuine Preparation of the Chemically P u r e C o m p o u n d of the
HYPOPHOSPHITES
of L I M E and SODA,
Originally discovered a n d prescribed by Dr. J . F. CHCBCBILL
of P a r i s as a Specific Remedy for
CONSUMPTION!
Price—Two Dollars a Bottle.
T
H E E X T R A O R D I N A R Y RESULTS OBTAINED IN A L L
t h e stages of Pulmonary Disease by Dr. Churchill's new
T r e a t m e n t — t h e H Y P O P H O S P H I T E S OF LIME AND SODA
—removes all remaining d o u b t as to the Inestimable value of
t h i s Discovery. Consumption is no l o n g e r to be regarded
a n incurable malady.
'
Many h u n d r e d s of physicians have already adopted t h i s
t r e a t m e n t with almost invariable success. Let no Consumpt i v e delay a m o m e n t to t r y it. I t i s t h e i r last h o p e !
F o r sale by
MORGAN BATES,'
81
Herald Office, Traverse City.
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
MORGAN BATES
Has opened an Office at Traverse City,'Grand Tr a v s r w
Michigan, f o r the transaction o f a
General Agency Business.
The United States L a n d Office is located at t h i s p l « ~ • and
particular attention will be paid to locating Land W s r A n t s ,
investing money In Government Lands, Imparting information relative t o the general features, resources and advantages of tho Grand Traverse country, the payment of taxes,
t a d the transaction of a n y Agency business with which he
y be'entrusted.
SKI
H i t Ji M . H o « rit . Aanv0nml
Ats
ZJ'?T -
lD,
Hannah, Lay & Co.'s Column.
FARMERS
ATTENTION!!
FARM PRODUSE.
H ANN A H , LAY A C O .
^
ILL PURCHASE. AND P A Y T H E HIGHEST PRICE
the market will w a r r a n t , f o r
W
F A R M PRODUCE,
solute h o m e market f o r e v e r y t h i n g raised.
ODS A * WHOLESALE—
in oaarter, half and whole b o x e s ;
GrORaisins,
Tallow and S t e a r i n s Candles, by the b o s ;
Sugar, by the barrel or 100 lbs,;
Soap,-by t n e b o x ;
Ing Powders, by the b o x ;
Matches, by the gross;
Toys, N o t i o n s ;
Tobacco, Fine Cut, by the half barrel;
Tobacco, Smoking, by the half barrel;
P l u g Tobacoo, by the 50 lbs. or b u t t ;
Soda, by the 50 lbs. o r k e g ;
Brown Cotton, by the 3 t o 5 pieces;
S h i r t i n g Stripe, by the I t o 5 pieces;
Cream Tartar, by the 5 to 20 lbs,;
Tea, by the SO lbs. t o half c h e s t ;
Pork, by the barrel;
Hams and Shoulders, by the 100 lbs.;
Prints, a choice assortment, by the 2 t o l a piece*:
Flannels;
Mosquito B a r s , b y the iplecc;
Nails, by tbe keg, assorted;
Salt, by the barrel;
Coffee, by the 30 t o 100 lba.;
Ground Cofifee, by the 20 to 50 l b s . ;
Butter C r a o k e r s 30 lbs. t o bbl.;
Hard Bread;
Boston Biscuit;
Soda C r a c k e r s ;
Pipes, by the b o x ;
Figs, by the d r u m ;
Brooms, by the dozen;
Currants, by the 20 lbs. t o hslf barrel;
Prunes, by the 20 t o 100 lbs.;
Dried Apples, by the 100 lbs or barrel;
Gun Caps, by the 1000;
Shot, by the bag.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e City Nov. 30,1860.
52
W'
HITE GOODSCambric, muslin a n d linen E d g i n g ;
Inserting and Flouncing, real T h r e a d :
Smyrna and "cotton Edge and Inserting;
Muslin, cambric and p i q u a setts of Collars a n d Sleeves;
Cambric, muslin A fine Maltese hafid-wrought Collars;
Muslins—Nainsook, Book, Swiss and Cambric;
Frenok skirt J a c o n e t ; J a c o n e t ;
Cross-barred, Cambric a n d Nainsook;
Wash Blond; Embroidered C u r t a i n s ;
B r i l l i a n t c s f r o m Is. t o 30c;
Linen, Linen Cambric and hem stitched H'dk'fs;
P r i n t e d bord, printed and plain Gent's. Handkerchiefs;
Child's printed, plain and hem stitched linen H ' d k ' f s ;
Napkins, Doylcs, Pillow-Case Cotton;
Linen Table Covers, by the pattern or y a r d ;
Marseilles, printed and plain;
Linen, Linen Diaper; Piqua Binding;
Linen and Cotton Bosoms—somo very n i c e ;
Marseilles Quilts—nice;
Traverse City1, Nov. 30,1860.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
TAOMESTlCS FOR WINTER OP 1880J L / R e d , blue a n d gray twilled a n d plain Flannels;
White, pinl( and Bob Bioy plain F l a n n e l s ;
Cunton Flannels, brown, slate a n d bleached;
Sattinets, P. & M. C a s r i m e r e s , S h e e p ' s G r a y ;
F a n c y and black Cassimcres:
Kentucky J e a n s , Duck, D e n i m s ;
Apron a n d m i n e r ' s check. Stripes;
S h i r t i n g prints and fancy s h i r t i n g Flannels;
BlackDoc*kiu Cassimcres;
,
' Black and blue c l o t h s ;
\
Brown and bleached Cotton—a nice assortment;
Ticking. Bays, Linsey Woolsey, Ac.
.11
IV*
HANNAH,
LAY A CO.
Traverse C i t f , Nov. 30,1860.
D1
Hannah, Lay Ic Co.'s Column
G.
Black, Fancy a n d C n l o a P
Summer Coats, P a n t s and V est*, a full line, i s fee
T e r r Latest Style.
White, Fancy. Check a n d stripe S h i r t s ;
Gentlemen's Linen, Leopold and Byron Collars;
Overcoats, a foil line;
•, /
Kent J a c k e t s ;
^
He am leas Coats and Overcoats:
Blue a n d White OveralU;
Kenty a n d Flannel Drawers;
Flannel and K n i t S h i r t s ;
Suspendera a n d Gloves;
India Rubber a n d Oil OveralU a n d L e c g i n s ;
Wool. Cotton and Uniou Socks;
Black a n d F a n c y 811k C r a v a t s ;
Gingham, Flag and Turkey Red H a n d k e r a h i s *
Silk Pocket and Neck H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Pocket Knives, Razors, Strops,
Lather Boxes and Brushes,
Tobacco Boxea a n d Pouches.
C o m p a s s e s Rules, I and 2 feet.
HANNAH. LAY k CO
Traverse City, Nov, 30,18C0.
n
YANKEE NOTIONS-
Compasses, t w e z e r s toy watchei
W a t c h guards and fob c h a i n s ;
Fancy and compass watch keys;
Gun capf G. D. Cax a n d water p r o o f ;
itazor s t r o p s assorted;
Shawl p i n s n e c k l a c e s e a r d r o p s ;
Breast p i n s assorted, bracelets, w s f o r s :
Kid, bead and leather purses;
l e a t h e r b a g s for l a d l e s ' A s e ; W a l l e t s p o r t e m o o s i e s ia<ellible i n k ;
Cologne, rose oil, bear's o i l i
Prince of Wales, kiss-me-quick and Wiudaor soap;
Almond, honey, au»-flower and Yankee aosp;
8ilver aoap, f o r cleaning allvcr ware, Ac.;
T h e r m o m e t e r s leather belts:
Fancy, morocco a n d ailk belts;.
Carpet binding, s n a f f b o x e s
Tobacco b o x e s a complete asa't, some vary fias;
Pumpkin, pomegranate, heart and strawberry eateries:
S h a r i n g b o x e s meerchaum pipes;
Shawl pins, aasorted k i n d s ;
Crumb, cloth, hair, nail, tooth, scrub, blacking, kers*.
broom a n d paint b r u s h e s ;
Dead s h o t katharion, t r l c o p h c r o u s ;
Measuring t a p e s very Superior a n d reliable;
P o c k e t c o m p a s s e s of best m a k e r s ;
A few allver watchet—good time-keepers;
W r i t i n g d e s k s portable fancy work-boxes for l a d i e s
HANNAH. L — " "
Traverse City, Nov. 30, lPf.O.
M
EDICINEK—
Brandreth's Pills;
Ayers' P i l l s ;
Moflkt's P i l l s ;
J a y n c s ' Pills;
J a y n e s ' Alterative;
Jayncs' V e r m i f u g e ;
Ayrea' Cherry P e c t o r a l ;
Rneubarb; Cudbar;
Mexican L i n i m e n t ;
P e r r y Davis' Pain K i l l e r ;
Sanda'Sarsaparilla;
Sawyer'a Ext. Bark for F e v e r and A g u e ,
Kennedys'Medical Discovery;
S u g a r Lead;
Gum Gulac;
Roae W a t e r ;
Castor Oil;
Epsom Salts;
Sulphur:
Lac Sulphur (for Hair-dye;)
Cod Liver O i l ;
„
H A N N A H , LAY A CO,
T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30, I860.
u
LIGHT FOR T H E MILLION—WE
WOULD ES-
PECIALLY call the attention of this community t« o n *
t h i n s of all otbera in which they should he a n d c o n s e q u e n t l y
aro interested, to w i t : that a G o o d L i g h t is one of tb's
greatest dcsidcVatums to lie obtained—snd t h a t a f t e r C a r e
I b l E x p e r i m e n t , an articlo has been introduced and d e m o n s t r a t e d b e y o n d a ( j n e s t i o n o f d l o n b t , to be t b .
BEST, CHEAPEST, SAFEST. MOST ECONOMICAL sntl
EQUABLE light yet known, (pas only excepted.) Snch an
srticle we have the pleasure of I n t r o d u c i n g In t h i s community, and which, with
Lamps, Shades and Fixtures,
we now have pn exhibition and for sale, and of t h e VKKT
Coburghs; F r e n c h Merinoes; all wool De Laines; Mohairs; BEST quality. Call a n d Inspect our KEROSENE LAMPS.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Alpacas; fancy wosted plaids; P a t t e r n Goods of lateststyles;
Traverse City. Nov 30.1860.
«
carefully selected; Balmoral and knit s k i r t s ; Ladies' vests
and drawers; hoop skirts,wool hoods, underslcevcs, Ac.; printO R H O U S E K E E P E R S - K N I V F - S AND FORKS. •
ed Coburgns; Silk Valvas; choice printed wool J)e Laines
S p o o n s Carvers and Steels,
and flannels for Zouave J a c k e t s .
Brooms,
P
a
i
l
s
TUIK,
Washboards,
3
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Scrub, Shoe, Clothes a n d Whitewash B r a s h e s
Traverse City, Nov. 30, 1860.
52
L a d l e s L o o k i n g G l a s s e s Carrfet T a c k s Bath Brie*.
F
B
O O T S A N D S H O E S . — M E N ' S BOOTS. SHOES,
Congr
Traverse City, J u n e 1,18C0.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
It
1 ? O R T H E K I T C H E N — C R O C K E R Y , a fall l i n e i.
GLASSWARE, an assortment,
. Milk P a n s Pails and S t r a i n e r s
Coffee Pots, Tea Post, D i p p e r s Skimmers, Ac.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Traverse City. Nov 30. IMP.
ihOCH,
_ . i' Boots and .
Misses Bootees and Gaiters,
Childs' Cacks, Shoes, Bootees, copper-toed, Ac.
L a d i e s ' s c a m l e e s s p g h e e l and heeled side-lace Gaiters:
O F I 6 H E R X E W L - W E H A V E ON HAND AN ASSeamless Bellmoral and Cong, heavy Gaiters a n d Over
s o r t m e n t of seaming and watertwine. Trout and common
Gaiters; -Stainless Slippers;
F i s h H o o k s Gllllng twine from 25 to 40 feet. P a t e n t spesrs.
Men's very nice seamless Over-Shoes a n d Legginfcs;
T
r
o
l
l i n g Hooks of various p a t e r n s F i s h Lines Trolling Lines,
Over-Shoes coming to the k n e e s ;
S
i
n
k
e
r s , Cane P o l e s Ac.
llangor moose-skin long leg S h o e - P a c s ;
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
Montreal l o n g leg Shoe-Pacs;
Traverse p i t y . Nov. 30, 1860.
Men's I n d i a robber long leg Boots.-v
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
H E E T I R O N FOR SUGAR P A N S - l a r g e size;
Traverse City, Nov. 30, V8C0.
62
5 Pall S u g a r K e t t l e s ;
30 Gallon S u g a r Kettles;
ARDWARE—
60 Gallon' do
do. a full a s s o r t m e n t .
Nails. German Steel, Glass, Putty, Screws, ,
„
*
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Axes, A x Helves, Locks, Latches. Hammers,
Traverse City, Dec. 14,1860.
j..
Chisels, Augers, Hand, Buck and Croaa-cut Saws,
Draw-knives. Hinges, Cable, Trace a n d Halter Chains,
T F 8 T R E C E I V E D FROM NEW-YORK, A SMALL
F r y and Sauce Pans, Masons' Trowels,
tJ lot of very fine S p e c t a c l e s .
Chopp|ng-knIves, Hand and Boys' Axes,
.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Hair, 1 and 2 foot Rules,
Traverse City, J a n . 10. Inn I.
g
Steelyards, S p r i n g and Counter Scales,
Flat, round and taper Files,
E L A N D ' S 8 A L E R A T F K — T H E BEST ARTICLE
Horse Rasps, Cloat Nails, Square Horse Cards,
in use—for s a l t in Traverse City only by
Cnrry-Combs and Horse-Brushes
NNAH, LAY A CO.
T r a p s of various kinds.
Traverse City, Dec. 14,1860.
J-7
S
H
D
se City, Nov. 30,1860.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
G'
R O C E R I E S . A c . — S U G A R , TEA, COFFEE,
Spices, Candles, Soap, common and eraaive;
Mustard, English a n d F r e n c h p r e p a r e d ; .
Soda, Cream Tartar, Ginger, Baking Powder.
Salarajtus, Starch, YennaciUl, Hops,
Tobacbo, Snuff; Garden Seeds,
Bag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt, Glue) Alum.
L a m p a n d Lard Oil, Castor Oil,
B e a n ^ Pork, Meai, Flour, Oatmeal. F e e d , Brae.
Beer. Hama a n d Shoulders, Codfish,
Hard Bread, Butter Crackers, Lard,
Traverse City, Nov. 30, I860.
H A N N A H , LAY
• j g L A N K ^ D E E D S A N D MORTGAGES—
Traverse
H
A R N E S S , SINGLE A N D DOUBLE—an a s s o r t m e n t ;
L i n e s H a a e S t r a p s Hold-back S t r a p s G i r t h s Breast
a n d Rein Snaps.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Travcrae City, Dee. 14, I860.
J.y
— •» A L U l A r r . n . i
Paper, a n d Buff Curtaining, Bordering, Ac.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30,1860.
D
O
K N O W
g]
W H E R E TO GET A NICE, W E L L
S E L E C T E D a s s o r t m e n t of Goods? If not, call on
H A S N A H , L A Y A CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Nov- 30, I860.
82
G
™
O ™ WOBHEES, S B 0 5 P B C H ERS, Spoke S h a v e s Spoke Augura, Small b r i g U I r o n
for
Traps.
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
Traversa City. Dec. 14. I860.
j.y
H
A T 8 A N D C A P S - P R I N C E O P WALE8, Beanleae.
Zouave, Pearl a n d Black Wool F n r H a t s
Navy, S e a m l e s s Velvet, P l a s h a n d Cloth C a p s '
H A N N A H , L A Y A CO.
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