Grand Traverse Herald, March 22, 1861

Dublin Core

Title

Grand Traverse Herald, March 22, 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

1861-03-22

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-03-22-1861.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

GRAND TRAVERSE HERALD.
VOL. III.

T B A V E E S E C I T Y , M I C H . F E I D A Y , M A R C H 22, 1861.

C|e.®ranii Craberst ^gLerali,
IS PUBLISHED r V E R T TRIDAY, AT

Traverse City, G r a n d Traversa County,

Michigan,
While Revolution abakea the world.
Its flame* 'round dynasties are curled.
And monarchs from their thrones are hurl'd—
God save t h i s U n i o n !
*

MORGAljKBATES,
EDITOR A X j / r n b p s i r r o * .
T K I J M 8 .
O M .OOUU u d Fifty C«nM p»r innum.
a S r u l a S l r la ritun
A4TMIMOUBU I n n r M lur O H Dollar ptr n u n I n UBM]for|S«
i n « Uuutleo, and m o t j - S r . oraUforn t h >ab**qa«al I t — "

A A . a m w n f D t o - t l O far o ~ for

While g a t h e r i n g clouds portently frown.
And distant muffled thundefs sound.
And gleaming bolts are falling 'round—
'
God aave the UnlonI

B i f l » S ' l v U w ? Bftj e n t a p n f e b * of*R»
*" - - . * e h Hbarqaani. E r t r f S c a n e o s n f i a wart, r i o i a
« n t < w added. Bala and 8fara wvrk. dookla prlca
• u paidfor•Irtcllj In adr

While States essay with ruthless hand
To rend a p a r t that aacred band
Which jolna in one t h i s mighty l a n d God save the Union 1

U Kinds of M Prating Neatlj ud Eipfditioclj EittuttA
GRAND TRAVERSE COUNTY OFFICERS.

While Secession Bounds are rife,
And traitors hold the wreaking knife.
Eager to take the Nation'* life—
"God save the U n i o n !

J u d g e o f P r o b a t e . . . . C U R T I S F O W L E R , Mapleton.
Sheriff
1
W M . E . S Y K E S , Nortbport.
County Treasurer
M O R G A N B A T E S , Tr*v. City.
County Clerk...
THERON BOSTWICK,
Register of D e e d * — T H E H O N B 0 8 T W I C K ,
"
Pros. Attorney
l . C . H . H O L D E N , North port.
Circuit Count Com...C. H . H O L D E N ,
Coroner*
P E R R Y H A N N A I I , T r r . City.
G E O . I f . S M I T H , North port.

CHA11LE5 H. H O L D E N ,

Sttorntg, Counsellor an^ Solicitor,

/

y

TAX AND GENERAL AGENT,
NORTHPORT,
C. H . M A R S H ,

3Utoritf|] aixiJ .Counsellor at $ato,

From those clandestine wily foes
Who would ita happiness oppose
With stealthy step and covert blow*—
God save the Union!

SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
T r a v e r s e C i t y , G r a n d T r a v e r s e C o u n t y , Mifchlgan,
Office in Dwelling House.
8J-ly

F r o m civil w a r a n d mutual broil,
F r o m international turmoil,
Staining with blood her virgin s o i l God save the Union!

MORGAN BATES,

JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
'

TUAVEBSE CITY, MICHIGAN.

Land, Tax, and General Agency.
MORGAN BATES
U M opened an Office at T r a v c w e City, Gran.d Traverse Co..
Michigan, for the transaction of a

G e n e r a l Agency

Business.

T h e United State* Land Office is l o e a t / d V tty« p l a c e ; and
p a r t i c u l a r attention will bo paid to locating L a n d Warrants,
inverting money in Government,Land*, i m p a r t i n g information relative t o the general features, r i s o u r c c s and advantage* of the Grand Traverse country, the p a y m e n t of taxes,
a n d tho t r a n s a c t i o n of any Agency business with which he
Hay be entreated.
REFKBMCKS.
lino. Whltnar -lona., Aadllor Oaoaral.) , „

(•hartaaW.rfaUM.KM



l l r 2

While n o n e may tell what doom awaits,
W h a t fiend ia lurking a t the gatca
Of t h i s great family of States—
God aave the U n i o n ! .
Christened in o u r Fathera' blood.
Firmly haa this Union stood
A g a i n s t the world'a despotic fiood—>
God save the Union!

GUAND TRAVERSE COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
Office S e c o n d Door South of Union Dock.
>l-ly

%

^

While we the about* of Treason hear.
While cravens pale with guilty fear.
And patriots abed the b u r n i n g tear—
God save the U n i o n !

If f o r the wrongs which she ha* done.
T o chasten h e r thou hast begun,
Let J u d g m e n t reach the guilty one—
But .save, 0 aave the Union!
B^eak, 0 break t h a t galling c h a i n !
F r o m that fool and dismal stain
Which long h a s been her c r y i n g shame,
God save the U n i o n !
F r o m all e r r o r a n d all crime,
8ave and make h e r wholly t h i n e .
Now, henceforth a n d f o r all time,
God aave the Union!
Traverse City.

lion. J M. Howard. A t t o r o j Oanaral, j p , troll.



rterald

INDIAN JUGGLING.

Office, Traverae City. N o r . 3,1M8.

TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,
TVILLIAM

FOWLE,

(FRONT STBEKT, BEAR CO CRT BOCSK.)

TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.

THIS OLD ESTABLISHED HOTEL,ITHE FIRST

in T r a v e r s e City,) situated on F r o n t S t r e e t , in the vicini t y of t h e C o u r t House and public offices, i* still open for tho
reception of t h e traveling public. The Proprietor returns
bia h e a r t v t h a n k s for the liberal patronage he has received,
a n d aasurea the public t h a t no painawill be spared t o make
h i s gucxts comfortable.
Hia c h a r g e s will correspond with
i h e times.
.....
...»
Good accomodations f o r H o r s e s a n d Cattle.
«9"

$rptt, Stratton & Co.'s'

COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
LOCATED AT DETROIT, MICH.,

R

'

ECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT

suite ol rooms, prepared expressly f o r their use, in Merrill Block, corner of J efferaon a n d Woodward Av e n u e s.
Mr A scholarship issued from Detroit College will be good
in Cleveland, O h i o ; Buffalo, N . Y . ; Albany. N. Y . : Chicago,
III.: Philadelphia, P a . ; fit. Louis. Mo., a n d N. Y{ City.
3. H. GOLDSMITH, Roaident Principal at Detroit.
H. P. PERRIN, Spencorian P e n m a n .
TUITION IN ADVANCE.
P e r p e t u a l Scholarship good In all our Colleges, Including
Business Penmanship, *40.
P e n m a n s h i p alone, 25 lessons,$6; six month*, evening*, Sin.
% • O u r S t a n d a r d of P e n m a n s h i p , i s the good old Spen-

T h e m o s t t h o r o u g h and practical and t r u l y . p o p u l a r Coll e g s In America. Nearly four thousand students have entered
s i n c e their eatabllshment, which la t h e beat evidence of their
f a v o r w i t h the public.
F o r f u r t h e r information call at College Rooms, or send Tor
now Catalogue of 80 pages. F o r s p e c i m e n s of Pcnmanahip,
• n d o s o letter s t a m p . A d d r e s s
'
BRYANT, STRATTON, 4 C o At'clther of the above Cities.
' (Out t h i s out for; f u t u r e reference.)
60-ly

CONSUMPTION CURED!
DR. CHURCHILL'S DISCOVERY.
Winchester's Genuine Preparation of the Chemicaliy Pure Compound of the

HYPOPHOSPHITES

. Wonderful Mental Illusions a n d Tricks.
T h e f o r t of C a l c u t t a , c o m m o n l y k n o w n a s F o r t W i l liams, i s ono of t h e most splendid a n d convienent m i l i t a r y
e s t a b l i s h m e n t s t o b e fotinu in a n y q u a r t e r of t h e g l o b e .
It is very spacious and somewhat resembles the T o w e r of
London, in t h a t i t consists of v a r i o u s s t r e e t s a n d s q u a r e s ,
a d a p t e d f o r d i f f e r e n t m i l i t a r y p u r p o s e s . O n all s i d e s it
i s g u a r d e d b y a h i g h and s t r o n g l y b u i l t r a m p a r t , w h i c h
s u r r o u n d e d in i t s t u r n b y a b r o a d a n d d e e p fosse, o v e r
which are placed drawbridges, leading to the principal
g a t e - w n j s . A r r i v e d in C a l c u t t a , a r a w griffin, of course
1 w e n t t& i n s p e c t t h e lions, and, a m o n g o t h e r s , t h e F o r t
T h e f o r t is o f t e n t h e s c e n e of a n i m a t e d festivity, from
t h e presence of n a t i v e j u g g l e r s , renowned f o r t h e i r s u r p r i s i n g skill a n d d e x t e r i t y . T h e p e r f o r m a n c e s of these
s t r a n g e p e o p l e h a v e b e e n so o f t e n d e s c r i b e d , t h a t I shall
Only make m e n t i o n of a few, for o t h e r w i s e I m i g h t t i r e t h o
reader.
O n e of t h e m s t r u c k m e a s b e i n g c u r i o u s f r o m i t s
h a v i n g a s t r o n g resemblenco t o t h o feats recorded in sacred history, as having been performed by the magicians
of E g j p t , in t h e t i m e of Moses, a n d in t h e p r e s e n c e of
P h a r a o h . I n d e e d , as i t is well k n o w n t h a t t h e H i n d o o
t r i c k s h a v e b e e u b a n d e d d o w n f r o m t h e most d i s t a n t ages,
f r o m f a t h e r t o son. t h e r e is little w o n d e r t h a t such a
l a r i t y c a n e x i s t T h e p a r t i c u l a r trick alluded t o , is
a p p a r e n t c o n v e r s i o n of a b r a s s coin i n t o a snake.
T h e j u g g l e r g a v e me t h e c o i n t o hold, a n d t h e n s e a t e d
himself; a b o u t five y a r d s f r o m me, o n a small r u g , f r o m
"which h e n e v e r a t t e m p t e d t o m b v e d u r i n g t h e w h o l e p e r formance. I s h o w e d trie "coin t o seyeral p e r s o n s w h o w e r e
close beside me, on a f o r m in f r o n t of t h e j u g g l e r . A t a
sign f r o m h i m , 2 not only g r a s p e d t h e coin 1 held firmly
in m y right h a n d , b u t c r o s s i n g t h a t h a n d w i t h equal t i g h t ness w i t h my l e f t , I enclosed t h e m b o t h as firmly a s I
could b e t w e e n my knees. Of c o u r s e I was positively cert a i n t h a t t h e small coin w a s w i t h i n my d o u b l e fists. T h e
j u g g l e r t h a n b e g a n a s o r t of i n c a n t a t i o n , a c c o m p a n i e d by
a m o n o t o n o u s a n d d i s c o r d a n t k i n d of recitative, a u d rep e a t i n g t h o words, Kam, S a m m u , d u r i n g s o m e minutes,
l i e t h e n suddenly s t o p p e d , a n d still k e e p i n g his s e a t m a d e
a q u i c k m o t i o n w i t h his right b a n d , a s if t h r o w i n g s o m e t h i n g a t me, g i v i n g a t t h e s a m e t i m e a puff w i t h his
mouth.
A t t h a t instant I f e l t m y h a n d s u d d e n l y distend, a n d
b e•comc
c o m e p a r t l y o p e n , w h i l e I e x p e r i e n c e d "a sensation as
:ifr a. cold ball
i.-n of d o u g h , o r s o m e t h i n g equally
» — * • . . s—o rf.t nasty,
n..h.

a n d d i s a g r e e a b l e w a s now b e t w e e n my palms. I s t a r t e d
t o m y feet in a s t o n i s h m e n t also t o t h e a s t o n i s h m e n t of
o t h e r s , a n d o p e n e d m y hands, found t h e r e no coin, b u t t o
of L I M E and HODA,
. Originally discovered and prescribed by Dr. J . F. CHURCHILL my h o r r o r a n d a l a r m (for of all c r e a t e d t h i n g s I detest
a n d l o a t h e t h e g e n u s ) I s a w a y o u n g snake, all alive-oh!
of Paria aa a Specific Remedy f o r
a n d of all s n a k e s in t h e world, a cobra-di-capello, f o l d e d ,
o r r a t h e r coiled, r o u n d l y u p . I t h r e w i t instantly t o t h e
grOund, t r e m b l i n g w i t h r a g e a n d fear, as if a l r e a d y b i t b y
Price*—Two Dollar* a Bottle.
t h o d e a d l y reptile, w h i c h b e g a n i m m e d i a t e l y t o p r a w l
HE EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS OBTAINED IN ALL
a l o n g t h e g r o u n d , t o t h e a l a r m a n d a m a z e m e n t of e v e r y
the stages of P u l i n o n a r r Disease by Dr. Churchill'* new
oepresent
T r e a t m e n t - S h e I I Y P O P H O S P I I I T E S O F LIME AND SODA
T h e j, uOg Tg l e r, D
n o w g o t u p f o r t h e first t i m e s i n c e b e h a d
—removes all remaining doubt as to the inestimable value of
t h i s Discovery. Consu mp t i o n la n o l o n g e r t o be regarded aa s a t down, a n d c a t c h i n g h o l d of t h e s n a k e d i s p l a v e d i t s
l e n g t h , w h i c h w a s n e i r l y t w o f e e t ; — t w o feet all b u t an
a n i n c u r a b l e malady.
. . . . . .
Many hundred* of phyntclana h a v e already, adopted thi* inch, a n d a half. H e t h e n t o o k i t c a u t i o u s l y b y t h e tail,
t r e a t m e n t with almost invariable aucceaa. Let n o Coniump- a n d o p e n e d h i s m o u t h t o i t s widest e x t e n t let t h e h e a d of
ttve delay a m o m e n t t o try it. It la t h a i r last h o p e !
t h e snake d r o p into i t and deliberately commenced t o
F o r Bale by
MORGAN BATES.
swallow t h e a n i m a l , till t h e c o d of t h e t a i l only w a s v i a II
Herald Offloe, Traveraa City.

CONSUMPTION!

T

N O . 16.

b l e ; t h e n m a d e a s a d d e n gulp, t h e w h o l e of t h e s n a k e was
A H o n Story.
a p p a r e n t l y swallowed. A f t e r t h i s h e c a m e u p t o t h e
P r i n c e , a t a m e lion on b o a r d a ship, b a d a k e e p e r
Spectators, a n d o p e n e d his m o u t h wide, p e r m i t t e d u s t o w h i c h h e w a s m u c h a t t a c h e d ; t h e k e e p e r g o t d r u n k o f
l o o k i n t o h i s t h r o a t b u t no snake o r snake's tail was r i s i - day, a n d a s t h e c a p t a i n n e v e r f o r g a v e t h e crime, t h e keepb l e ; ii was seemingly d o w n his t h r o a t a l t o g e t h e r .
e r w a s o r d e r e d t o b e flogged; t h e g r a t i n g w a s rigged o s
D u r i n g t h e r e m a i n d e r of t h e p e r f o r m a n c e s , we n e v e r t h e m a i n d e c k , o p p o s i t e PriDce's den, a n d cased w i t h i r o n .
s a w t h i s snake a g a i n , n o r d i d t h e man p r o f e s s h i s a b i l i t y W h e n t h e k e e p e r b e g a n t o s t r i p . P r i n c e rose gloomilv
t o make it r e - a p p e a r ; b u t h e p e r f o r m e d a n o t h e r s n a k e f r o m h i s c o u c h , a a d g o t a s near t o h i s friend as possible";
t r i c k , w h i c h s u r p r i s e d us v e r y m u c h . H e t o o k from a on b e h o l d i n g his b a r e b a c k , h e w a l k e d a r o u n d the dec.
b a g a n o t h e r cobra-di-capello, a n d , w a l k i n g i n t o the c e n t c r a n d w h e n he saw the b o a t s w a i n inflict t h e first lash, b i t
of t h e room, e n c l o s e d i t iu his h a n d s in a folded s t a t e . — e y e s s p a r k l e d w i t h fire, a n d h i s s i d e s r e s o u n d e d w i t h t h e
he waved, or s h o o k t h e m f o r some t i m e in t h i s c o n d i t i o n , s t r o n g a n d q u i c k b e a t i n g of his taiL A t last w h e n tb<and t h e n o p e n e d h i s fists, when, h e y ! p r e s t o ! — t h e snake b l o o d b e g a n t o flow f r o m t h e u n f o r t u n a t e man's back, a n d
was gone, and in its p l a c e a p p e a r e d s e v e r a l small ones, t h e c l o t t e d " c a t s " j e r k e d t h e i r g o r y k n o t s close t o thwhich he suffered t o fall f r o m h i s hands, w h e n t h e y glid- lion's den, h i s f u r y b e c a m e t r e m e n d o u s ; h e r o a r e d w i t h a
ed, w i t h t h e i r p e c u l i a r u n d u l a t i n g m o v e m e u t , a l m o s t like v o i c e of t h u n d e r , s h o o k t h e s t r o n g b a r s of his p r i s o n a s
t h e w a v e s of t h e sea, a b o u t t h e floor.
if t h e y h a d been o t i e r s , a n d ' f i n d i n g h i s efforts t o b r e a k
W h i l e s t a y i n g in M a d r a s , b e f o r e c o m i n g h o m e , a p a r t y loose unavailing, h e rolled a n d s h r i e k e d in a m a n n e r • a.<
of j u g g l e r s c a m e f o r w a r d on o n e occasion t o a c t punlicly terrific as it is possible t o c o n c e i v e .
iu t h o y a r d of t h e b a r r a c k s t h e r e . M a n y h u n d r e d s of
T h e c a p t a i n , f e a r i n g t h a t h e m i g h t b r e a k loose, o r d e r p e o p l e of all kinds, d i f f e r e n t ages, b o t h sexes, a n d v a r i o u s e d hi* m e n t o load a n a present at P r i n c e . T h i s t h r e a t redenominations, i n c l u d i n g t h e soldiery in g a r r i s o n , assem- d o u b l e d hi& r a g e , a n d a t last t h e c a p t a i n desired t h e keepbled t o witness t h e e x h i b i t i o n , a n d s o m e little t e m p o r a r y er t o b e c a s t off, a n d t o g o in t o h i s f r i e n d . I t is impo&si a r r a n g e m e n t s w e r e m a d e , t o e n a b l e e a c h a n d e v e r y o n e ble t o d e s c r i b e t h e j o y e v i n c e d b y t h e lion; h e lickea w i t h
t o see a n d h e a r convieully. T h e l e a d e r of t h e j u g g l e r s , g r e a t c a r e t h e mangled a n d b l e e d i n g b a c k of t h e cruelly
w h o w e r e all, of c o u r s e , n a t i v e s of H i n d o s t a n , requested
t r e a t e d s e a m a n , caressed him w i t h his paws, w h i c h h e
t h e c o m n a n d i n g officer t o p l a c e a g u a r d of m e n a r o u n d folded a r o u n d the k e e p e r , aB if to d e f y a n y one renewing
t h e scene of d i s p l a y — a p r e c a u t i o n w h i c h was a d o p t e d , a s i m i l a r t r e a t m e n t ; a n d it was only a f t e r several h o u r s
a n d w h i c h p r o v e d t o b e a very w i s e one. T h e floor of t h a t P r i n c e would allow t h e k e e p e r t o q u i t bis p r o t e c t i o n
t h e c o u r t be i t o b s e r v e d , w a s c o m p o s e d of s a n d — f i n e and r e t u r n a m o n g t h o s e w h o h a d so b a r b a r o u s l y dealt w i t h
a n d well t r o d d e n . Oil t h i s g r o u n d t h e n , a f t e r s o m e pre- h i m .
liminary t r i c k s of an i n f e r i o r kind, one man was l e f t alone
Prort Music.
w i t h a little girl, t h e l a t t e r s e e m i n g a b o u t e i g h t o r nino
y e a r s of a g e . B e s i d e t h e m stood a tall, n a r r o w b a s k e t
was once belated in C a n a d a on a fine w i n t e r d a y ,
t h r e e o r f o u r feet h i g h , b y little m o r e t h a n a f o o t in w i d t h , a n d w a s riding o v e r t h e h a r d snow on t h e m a r g i n of a
a n d o p e n e d all t h e way u p . N o o t h e r o b j e c t a n i m a t e d wide lake, w h e n t h e m o s t f a i n t a n d m o u r n f u l wail t h a t
or inanimate, a p p e a r e d on the g r o u n d .
could b r e a k a solemn silence s e e m e d t o p a w t h r o u g h m e
A f t e r a s h o r t period, s p e n t ' b y t h e man c o n v e r s i n g w i t h l i k e a d r e a m . I s t o p p e d m y h o r s e a n d listened. F o r
t h e little girl, he s e e m e d t o g e t angry, a n d b e g a n t o rail s o m e t i m e I could n o t satisfy myself w h e t h e r t h e musin
Joudly at h e r , f o r t h e neglect of s o m e wish of his. T h e was in t h e air o r in m y own b r a i n . I t h o u g h t of t h e piuc
child a t t e m p t e d t o s o o t h e hint, b u t he c o u t i n u e d t o s h o w forests w h i c h w a s n o t f a r off; b u t t h e t o n e was n o t h a r p an increased d e g r e e of i r r i t a t i o n a s b e w e n t , u t l e n g t h lash- like a n d t h e r e f a s n o t a b r e a t h of wind. T h e n i t swelled
ing himself i n t o s u c h a p p a r e n t f u r y , t h a t t h e f o a m actual- a n d a p p r o a c h e d ; a n d t h e n i t s e e m e d t o b e miles a w a y in
ly stood u p o n h i s lips, a u d b e i n g n a t u r a l l y possessed of a m o m e n t ; a n d again i t m o a n e d , a s if u n d e r m y very leet.
an exceedingly u n p r e p o s s e s s i n g face, h e looked, t o t h e I t was, in f a c t a l m o s t u n d e r m y f e e t
I t was the voice
w h i t e s p e c t a t o r s a t l e a s t a s like a d e m o n e s c a p e d f r o m of t h e w i n d s i m p r i s o n e d u n d e r t h e pall of ice s u d d e n l y
D a n t e ' s Inferno, as m i g h t IKS. F i n a l l y h i s r a g e s e e m e d cast o v e r t h e m DV t h e p e r e m p t o r y p o w e r of the; f r o s t t o r e a c h t h a t b o i l i n g poiut, j u s t c a p a b l e of a n y t h i n g , a n d N o b o d y t h e r e h a d m a d e a i r holes, f o r t h e p l a c c w a s a
seizing hold of h e r , h e p u t h e r b e n e a t h t h e b a s k e t ; or, w i l d e r n e s s ; a n d t h e r e w a s no e s c a p e for t h e winds, w h i c h
r a t h e r , h e i n v e r t e d the b a s k e t c o m p l e t e l y o v e r h e r p e r - m u s t m o a n on till t h e s p r i n g w a r m t h should release t h e m .
son. S h e was t h u s h e m m e d in, a n d e n t i r e l y a t h i s m e r c y . T h e y were f a s t e n e d d o w n in silence; b a t t h e y would come
H a v i n g t h u s disposed of h e r , in s p i t e of t b e c h i l d s s c r e a m s o u t w i t h a n explosion, when, in some still n i g h t a f t e r *
a n d eutreaties, ttie m a n d r e w his s w o r d ( T u l w a h . ) w h i c h w a r m s p r i n g d a y , t h e ice would b l o w u p , a n d m a k e a
was as b r i g h t a n d polished as t h e s u r f a c e of a V e n e t i a n c r a s h a n d a r a c k e t from s h o r e t o s h o r e . S o I was told
m i r r o r of a few c e n t u r i e s b a c k , a n d h e a p p e a r e d as if at m y h o s t ' s t h t t e v e n i n g , w h e r e I a r r i v e d w i t h somea b o u t t o w r e a k s o m e f u r t h e r evil on t h e o b j e c t of h i s i r e ; t h i n g of t h e sensation of a h a u n t e d m a n . I t h a d b e e n
a u d a f t e r some m o m e n t s , d u r i n g w h i c h he t a l k e d t o t h o some time b e f o r e t h e t r u e i d e a s t r u c k me, a n d meanwhile
child a n d t o himself as if j u s t i f y i n g his a n g e r , h e d i d t h e rising a n d falling m o a n m a d e my. very h e a r t thrill
actually a t last p l u n g e his s w o r d d o w n i n t o t h e basket, againand d r e w it o u t d r i p p i n g w i t h blood, or a t least b l o o d Moral Roaslon.
red drops.
A w a y w a r d son of t h e K m c r a l d Isle, " left t h e b e d a n d
T h e child's s c r e a m s w e r e p i t e o u s , a n d h e a r t r e n d i n g in
t h e e x t r e m e , b u t all, ail in v a i n ; f o r t h e m a n p l u n g e d his b o u r d , " w h i c h h o a n d M a r g a r e t , his wife, h a d o c c u p i e d .
d r i p p i n g w e a p o n a g a i n a n d y e t a g a i n i n t o t h e b a s k e t in f o r a l o n g while, a n d s p e n t his time a r o i n d r u m shope,
w h i c h she was confined. A s h e did so, the s c r e a m s of the w h e r e he was ulways on h a u d t o c o u n t himself •' i n " whomM a r g a r e t w a s dissatisfiw r e t c h e d v i c t i m b e c a m e f a i n t e r a n d f a i n t e r b y degrees, e v e r a n y one would s t a n d t r e a t
q u i v e r i n g a n d q u a v e r i n g like t h e last few w h i s p e r s of a ed w i t h t h i s s t a t e of things, a n d e n d e a v o r e d t o g e t h e r
u y i n g b r e e z e ; till a t leugth t h e y a l m o s t entirely ceased, h u s b a n d h o m o a g a i n . W e shall see how s h e p r o c e e d s :
" N o w , P a t r i c k , h o n e y , will y o u c o m e b a c k ? "
a u d then, as e v e r y one s a t h o r r o r - s t r i c k e n a u d breathless,
" No, I won't come back."
a n d scarcely k n o w i n g w h e r e t o look, o r w h i c h way t o t u r n ,
" A n d w o n ' t y o u comc b a c k f o r t h e love of y o u r c h i l d t h e n , a f a i n t low sigh, d r a w n o u t like t h e e x p i r i n g n o t e s
of a n / E o l i a n h a r p , w a s distinctly h e a r d b y e v e n - o n e r e n ? "
"
N o , M a r g a r e t , n o t f o r t h e love of t h e c h i l d r e n . "
in t h a t h u s h e d assemblage, till it t o o , ceased, a n d all was
• • A n d won t y o u c o m e b a c k f o r t h e love of m y s e l f ? "
still—still a s au I n d i a n m o o n - t i d e ; 6tiller, a u d y e t m o r e
•• Divil a b i t — ' w a y w i d y e . "
still,—still as d e a t h . T h e c h i l d ' s voice w a s h u s h e d forM a r g a r e t t h o u g h t she would t r y one m o r e i n d u c e m e n t
e v e r ; was h u s h e d in t h e lullaby of d e a t h .
W lien t h o man seemed t o h a v e c a r r i e d his r a g e t o t h e u f - T a k i n g a p i n t b o t t l e of w h i s k e y f r o m h e r p o c k e t a n d holdinost e x t r e m i t y , w a r n e d b y the looks of t h e soldiery, t h a t i n g it up, s h e s a i d :
• • A u d y o u wiil c o m c b a c k f o r a d r o p of t h e w h i s k y ? "
i t would b e as well t o close t h e e x h i b i t i o n w i t h o u t delay,
" A h , m e d a r l i n , " s a i d P a t , u n a b l e t o w i t h s t a n d t lh e
h o . r a i s e d h i s bloody s w o r d f o r a m o m e n t b e f o r e t h e eyes
of t h e assembly, a n d t h e n s t r u c k t h e b a s k e t s m a r t l y w i t h t e m p t a t i o n , " i t ' s y e r s e l f t h a t will always b r i n g me horn*
i t w h i c h , falling o v e r on i t s side, left exposed t h e place a g i n — y e h a s s u c h a w i n n i n g w a y w i d y e — I U c o m e M a r w h i c h it h a d b e f o r e c o v e r e d . Conceive t h e d i s m a y a n d g a r e t . '
M a r g a r e t d e c l a r e s t h a t P a t j j c k was reclaimed b y
a s t o n i s h m e n t — t h e u n b o u n d e d a s t o n i s h m e n t of t h e s p e c t a t o r s , when in place of t h o e x p e c t e d c o r p s e of t h e little girl, •• n f t r a l s u a s i o n . "
w h i c h e v e i y one present e x p e c t e d t o see t h e r e , for t h e e c h o
O n e ol M r . L i n c o l n ' s S t o r i e s .
of h e r e x p i r i n g s i g h seemed still t o float tremulously in
T h e following is one of M r . Lincoln's stories. T h e s e be
t h e a i r , we s a w — g u e s s reader! b u t y o u will n o t g u e s s
r i g h t if y o u guessed for a week ofSuu'days. W e l l , then, tells o f t e n in p r i v a t e c o n v e r s a t i o n , r a r e l y in hi* s p e e c h e s :
•• I o n c e knew a g o o d s o u n ^ c d u r c h m a n , w h o m w e l l call
w e s a w n o t h i n g — o b l a n k , a n e m p t y space, void of substance, a n i m a t e o r i n a n i m a t e ; b a r e , bald a s a t r u e believer's B r o w n , w h o was o n a c o m m i t t e e t o e r e c t a b r i d g e o v e r *
head. N o t h i n g b u t t h e j i a t sand of t h e c o u r t - y a r d . No> very d a n g e r o u s a u d r a p i d river. A r c h i t e c t a f t e r a r c h i t e c t
vestig® of dress, o r a n y o t h e r t h i n g t o i n d i c a t e t h a t t h e failed, and a t last D r o w n s a i d h o h a d a fr&cnd n a m e d J one*
g i r l h a d e v e r b e e n t h e r e . T h e a m a z e m e n t of the b e h o l d - w h o h a d built several bridges, a n d could build t h i s . - *
e r s was. if possible, r e n d e r e d m o r e intense, when, a f t e r t h e • L e t ' s h a v e h i m in. said t h e Otimraktee.' I n c a m e J o o e s ^ —
lapse of a few seconds, t h e identical little girl c a m e bound- ' C a n y o u b u i l d t h i s b r i d g e , s i r ? ' ' Y e s , ' replied J o n e s ;
i n g f r o m t h e side of the c o u r t - y a r d — i t scemeTi f r o m a m o n g • I could build a b r i d g e t o t h e infernal regions, if necest h e s p e c t a t o r s f e e t — a n d clapped t h e j u g g l e r r o u n d t h e sary." T h e s o b e r c o m m i t t e e w e r e h o r r i f i e d ; b u t when
knees, w i t h e v e r y s i g n of affection, w i t h o u t t h e s l i g h t e s t J o n e s retired. B r o w n t h o u g h t i t b u t f a i r t o defend his
f r i e n d . ' I k n o w J o n e s so w e l l . ' s a i d he, ' a n d h e i s s o
m a r k s of h a v i n g u n d e r g o n e a n y i n j u r y w h a t e v e r .
*
Mind, t h i s w a s n o t p e r f o r m e d in a r o o m , o r on a s t a g e , h o n e s t a uian a n d s o g o o d a n a r c h i t e c t t h a t if he s t a t e s
like t h a t of P r o f e s s o r A n d e r s o n , t h e W izard of t h e N o r t h s o b e r l y a n d positively t h a t he can build a b r i d g e t o H a d e s
w h o is n o w a t N i b l o ' s G a r d e n , replete w i t h c o n t r i v a n c e s , — w h y , 1 believe iL B u t I h a v e m y d o u b t s a b o u t t h »
a n d pitfalled w i t h trap-doors. N o ! n o ! T h e n it would a b u t m e n t on the infernal side.' ' S o , ' L i n c o l n a d d e d ,
h a w been a n easy f e a t ; b u t t h i s was an o p e n c o u r t - y a r d , • w h e n p o l i t i c i a n s said t h e y could h a r m o n i z e t h e N o r t h a s well k n o w n t o t h e s p e c t a t o r s , a s t o t h e p e r f o r m e r s ; t h e e r n a n d S o u t h e r n w i n g s o f t h e D e m o c r a c y , w h y , I believe
feat p e r f o r m e d in t h e c e n t r e of a c o u r t e v e r y p o i n t ^f t h e t h e m . B u t 1 h a d my d o u b t s a b o u t t h e a b u t m e n t on t h e
c i r c u m f e r e n c e of w h i c h was c r o w d e d w i t h s p e c t a t o r s , w h o S o u t h e r n s i d e . "
n e v e r f o r a n i n s t a n t took t h e i r e y e s off t h e p e r f o r m e r s . —
A Candid Mind.
A s t o t h e n o t i o n of a s u b t e r r a n e a n passage, t h e v e r y
n a t u r e of the g r o u n d p u t t h a t o u t of t h e q u e s t i o n ; a n d b e N o t h i n g s h e d s s o fine a l i g h t u p o n t h e h u m a n mind as
sides. t h a t n o t h i n g of the k i n d e x i s t e d was m a d e plain t o c a n d o r . I t was called w h i t e n e s s b y t h e a n c i e n t s f o r ita
all w h o c h o s e t o satisfy themselves on t h a t p o i n t b y look- p u r i t y ; a n d it a l w a y s won t h e e s t e e m d u e t o most a d m i r a i n g a t t h e scene of t h e p e r f o r m a n c e s w h e n t h e y h a d closed. ble of t h e v i r t u e s . H o w e v e r s o u g h t for o r p r a c t i c e d , aQ
E v e r y o n e was s u r e t h a t t h e J ) h i l d h a d b e e n p o t below t h e felt t h e p o w e r a n d c h a r m s of i t s influences. T h e man
b a s k e t a n d t h a t s h e did n o t get o u t of i t in t h e n a t u r a l w a y ; w h o s e o p i n i o n s m a k e t h e d e e p e s t m a r k u p o n his fellow
b u t she d i d g e t o u t a n d h o w ? I c a n n o t say, t h o u g h t h e r e man, w h o s e influence is t h e most l a s t i n g and efficient,
can b e n o d o u b t t h a t i t w a s a c c o m p l i s h e d b y some skillful whose f r i e n d s h i p i s instinctively s o u g h t w h e r e all o t h e r s
manoeuvre.
h a v e p r o v e d fiiithless, ia not t h e m a n of brilliant p a r t s , o r
flattering
t o n g u e , or splendid genius, or c o m m a n d i n g
W a s i t t h e e g g or t h e c h i c k e n t h a t flret m a d e its a p p o * e r ; b u t h e w h o s e lucid c a n d o r o r ingenious t r u t h
p e a r a n c e on t h i s t e r r e s t r i a l g l o b e ? I n o t h e r words, d i d
t r a n s m i t t h e h e a r t ' s real feelings p u r e a n d w i t h o u t r e f r a c t h e first c h i c k e n c o m e o u t of an e g g , o r d i d t h e first e g g
tion. T h e r e a r e o t h e r q u a l i t i e s w h i c h a r e m o r e showy,
c o m e o u t of a c h i c k e n ?
>
a n d o t h e r t r a i t s t h a t h a v e a h i g h e r p l a c e iD t h e world'*
A y o u n g l a d y says t h e reason s h e c a r r i e s a p a r a s o l is, c o d e of h o n o r , b u t none b e a r b e t t e r n o r g a t h e r leas t a r n i s h
t h a t t h e sun i s of masculine g e n d e r , a n d she c a n n o t w i t h - b y use, o r claim a d e e p e r h o m a g e in t h a t silent reverence
s t a n d his a r d e n t g l a n c e s
w h i c h t h e m i n d must p a y t o t r u t h .

Clje (Bratii Crabtrsc Ucralli.

service or labor. The clause I now read is as plainly ao constituted that no party can reach to the audacity of to administer the Government as it came into his hands,
within tho Constitution as any other of its provisions:
doing this. Think, if you can, of a single instance in and to transmit it unimpaired to his successor.
Jfo person held to service or labor in one State under tbe which a plainly written provision of the Constitution has
Why riiould there not be a patient confidenco in tbo
laws thereof, escaping into another, in consequence of any ever been denied. If by the mere force of numbers a
law or legislation therein, shall be discharged from such ser- majority shall deprive a minority of any clearly written ultimate justice of the-people? Is there any better or
TRAVERSE CITY:
equal hope in tbe world? In our present differences is
vice or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of tbe party
Constitutional
right
it
might
in
a
moral
point
of
view
to whum such services or labor may tic due.
eitherjiarty without faith of being in the right? If the
P B I P A Y MORNING, MARCH 82, 1861.
It was intended by those who made it, for the reclaim- justify revolution. It certainly would if such right was a Almighty Ruler of nations, with his eternal truth and
ing of what wo call fugitive slaves, and such Seing tbe vital one. But such is not the case. Tbe vital right of justice, be on yoor side of the North or on y-ar side of
For Aksociatc Justice of the Supreme Court
minorities
and
of
individuals
are
B
O
plainly
assured
to
the Sooth, that truth and justice will surely prevail, by
intention of the law. is the law all member.) of Congress
RANDOLPH MANNING.
swear their support to, when they swear to support the them by affirmations and legations, guaranties and pro- tbe judgment of this great tribunal among the great
whole Constitution, and to this proposition »3 much as hibitions in tbe Constitution that controversies never arise American people. By the frame of the government unMr. Lincoln's Cabinet.
concerning them. But no organic law can CTCT be framThe following gcntlebien bare been couflrmed by the to any other, that slaves whose cases come within tbe ed with a provision especially applicable to every ques- der which wc live, this same people have wisely given
their public servants bat little power for mischief, and
terms of this clause shall be delivered up on their unaniSenate as the Members of Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet:
mous oath. There is some difference or opinion whether tion which may occur in practical administration. No have with equal wisdom provided for the return of that
Secretary of Stair—WILLIAM II. SKWAKD, of New this clause should be enforced by National of State au- foresight can anticipate, nor any document of reasonable little to their hands at very short intervals. While >b«
length
contain
expressed
provisions
for
all
possible
quespeople retain their virtue and vigilance, no administraYork
thority, but surely that difference is not a very material
tions. Shall fugitives from labor l>e surrendered by na- tion can. by any extreme wickedness ami folly, vety seriSecretary of the Treatury—SALMON P. CKAST, ofone.
If the slave is to be surrendered it can be of but little tional or Slate authorities? Hie Constitution does not ously injure the government in the short spacc oi four
Ohio.
f
consequence to him or the others by which authority it expressly say. Must Congress protect slavery in the ter- years.
Secretary of War—Staox CAKKKON, of Pennsylva- is done; and should any one, in any case, be content that ritories? The Constitution does not expressly pay. I-'rom
My countrymen, one und all. think calmly and well upnia.
. i i f .
his oath shall be kept for a merely unsubstantial contro- questions of this class spring all our Constitutional con- on this whole subject Nothing valuable can be lost bv
troversies, and we divide upon them into majorities and taking time. If there be an object to hurry any of yo'n
Secretary of the JYttry—GmEos W'WJ.EJ, of Con- versy as to how it shall be kept? Again, in any law up- minorities. If tbe minority will not acquiese, the majority
in hot haste to a step which you would never take "deon this subject ought not all safeguards of liberty known
necticut
t .
in civilized and human jurisprudence to be introduced, must, or the government cease. There if no alternative liberately, that object will be frustrated by taking time,
Poitmaitcr-lie*erai—MoxTvoMT.uT BI.AIR. of Mary- so that a freeman may not bo in anv case surrendered as for continuing the government, but acquiescence, one but no good obiect can be frustrated by i t Such of
side or the other.
you
as are now dissatisfied, still have the old Constitution
land.
j,'.
<
a slave? And might it not be well at the same time to
If tbe minority in such a case will secede rather than
Secretary af the Interior—CAI.KH B. SMITH, of In- provide by law for the enforcement of that clause in tbe acouiese, they make a precedent which will in time ruin unimpaired on the sensitive point, and the laws of Tour
own making under i t The new administration will have
Constitution which guaranties that the citizens of each
diana.
and divide them, for a minority of their own will secede no immediate power, if it would, to change cither. If
State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities
Attorney-General—EDWARD BATHS, of Missouri.
from them, whenever a majority refuses to be controlled it were admitted that you who are dissatisfied, hold tho
of citizens iu their several Slates?
any por- right side of the dispute, there still is uo single reason
I take the official oath to-day with no mental reserva- by such a miuority. For instance, why may not
INAUGURATION OF MR. LINCOLN.
tion of a new confederacy, a year or two hem*1, arbitrari- for precipitate action. Intelligence, patriotism. Christion, aud with no purpose to construe the Constitution or
ly secede again, precisely as portions of the presnit UnThe Inauguration of ABRAHAM LINCOLK as the thir- laws' by any hypercritical rules, and while 1 do not choose ion now claim to secede from i t All who cherish disun- tianity, and a firm reliance on llini who has never forsaken this favored land, are still competent to adjust, in
now to specify particular acts of Congress as proper to
teenth President of the United States, took pljce at
bo enforced, 1 do suggest that it will be much safer for ion sentiments are now being educated to the exact tem- the best way, all our present difficulties. In your bonds,
Washington on the 4th inst The ceremonics were con- men in official and private statious to conform to and per of doing this. Is there such perfect idonty of interests ray dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine, is the
among
the
Slates
to
compose
a
new
Union,
as
to
produce
momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not
ducted in accordance with the Programme published in abide by those acts which stand unrepealed, than to vioharmony only, and prevent a secession?
assail you. You can have no conflict without being
tho HERALD lost week. Every thing passed off quietly late any of them, trusting to find impunity in having them
Plainly, the central idea of secession is the essence of yourselves the aggressors. You have no oath registered
held
to
be
unconstitutional.
It
is
seventy-two
years
since
and pleasantly, The Inaugural Address was delivered
anarchy. A majority held in restraint by Constitutional in Heaven to destroy the Government while I shall have
the first inauguration of a President under our National
ia the presence of one hundred thousand people, who Constitution. During that jieriod fifteen different ami checks, and a limitation always changing easily with de- the most solemn one to prewrve. protect and defend It.
liberate changes of popular opinions and sentiments is the I am loth to close; wc are not .enemies, but friends; we
received it with enthusiastic shouts of applause.
greatly distinguished citizens have in succession adminisonly true sovereignty of a free people. Whoever rejects
After the reading of tho Address the Oath of Office tered the executive branch of the government. They it, does of necetsity, fly to an anarchy ,or despotism. Una- must not be enemies; though pasaion may have strained
it must not break our bonds of union.
was administered by Chief Justice Taney.' Tho Presi- have conducted it through many perils, and generally with nimity is impossible. The rule of the minority, as a perThe mystic chords of memory stretch from every batgreat success. But with all this scope for precedent. I
dent then took a s-jat in a carriage with Mr. Buchanan, now enter upon the same task for the brief constitutional manent argument, is wholly inadmissible. So, rejecting tle field and patriot grave to "every-living heart and
and was escorted to the White House, where, in the term of four years, under great and peculiar difficulties.— the majority principle, anarchy or despotism in some hearthstone all over this broad land," and will yet swell
form, is all that is left.
the
chorus of the Union when again tonched, as surely
main ball, Sir. B. bade his successor a cordial adien, ex- Disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore mentioned,
I do not forgvt the position assumed by some, that
pressing the hope that his Administration might .become is now formidably attempted. I hold that, in contempla- Constitutional objections are to be decided by the Su- they will be. by tho better Angels of onr nature.
tion
of
universal
law
and
of
the
Constitution,
the
Union
a happy one.
preme Court; nor do I deny that such decisions must be An Knglith View of tbe Dot? of the Republican
of these States is perpetual. Perpetuity is implied, if not
Party.
Thea followed a public reception, which continued for expressed in the fundamental laws of all national govern- binding in any ease to the parties to a suit, as to the
The National Review, one of tho English quarterlies,
object of that suit. While they are entitled to a very
several hours.
ment It is safe to assert that no government proper high respect and consideration in all parallel cases, by all thus concludes an article on "The Slave States and the
The! Inaugural Address gives general- satisfaction to ever had provisions in its organic law for its own termina- other departments of the Government and while it is American Union:"
everybody except the Secessionists. The Albany Eve- tion.^. Continue to execute all the exprosned provisions obviously possible that such decisions may be erroneous
" A heavy responsibility now rests upon the Republiof our national constitution, and the ("irion wiil endure
ning Journal speaks of it iu the highest terms of praise, forever, it being impossible to destroy it except by some in any given rase, still the evil folio ving it. being limited can party; anil the eyes of all Europe are on them. Tho
to that particular ease, with the chance that it may be recent Presidential election may, we mny well hope, be a
f and the New York Tribune says that there is but one action not provided for in the instrument itself.
overruled, and nerer become a precedent for other ea-es. turning point iu the history of the Union", if that party are
Again, if tho United States be not a government propopinion in all political circles a^'ti} its ability, directness
can better be borne than could the evils of a different corogeons anil firm in the discharge of their political duty.
and purpose. As a state paper, it far exceeds the ex- er, but an association of States under the nature of a eon- practice. At the same time the candid citizens must con- For the first time since the dissolution of the old federaltract merely, can i t as a contract, be peaceably unmade
pectations of bis friends, and at once settles any |>.vssing by less than all tho parties who made it? One party to fess that, if the policy of the Government upon the vital ist party of Gen. Hamilton, has a political organization
doubt concerning his success as Chief Magistrate. Every a contract may violate i t break il. so to sjK-ak, but "does question, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably in the United States been explicity based on on a weighty
fixed by the decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant political principal For the first'since tbe declaration of
word of it has the ring of true metal, nnd no suspicion it not require all to lawfully rescind it?
they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in independence has it been based on one that is not only
Descending from those general principles, we find the
has crossed any mind nt all familiar with Mr. Lincoln's
weighty, but noble, capable of rousing the deepest enthuproposition that in legal contemplation, the Union is per- personal action, the people will have ceased to lie their sia-ni in the public mind. Let the Republicans rememoriginal mode of thought and expression in regard to its
own rulers to that extent, and practically resign the govpetnnl, confirmed by tho history of the Union itself. The
inspiration. In the whole history of tho Government no Union is much older than the Constitution. It was form- ernment into the hands of that eminent tribunal; nor is ber that they are the servants of that prirciple, not its
patrons, and have neither power or right to compromise
Inaugural over delivered is likely to be. more universally ed in fact, by the articles of association in 1774. It was there in this view any assault upon the Court or the it as they please. If they wish to wipe out the disgraceJudges. It is :i duty from which they may not shrink to
read, or to produce a profounder impression. Not a matured and continued by the Declaration of Independ- decide eases properly brought before them. It is no fault ful stains which the administration of Polk, of Fillmore,
syllable of djssent has been uttered among the Republi- ence, in 1776. It was further matured, and the faith of of theirs, if others sock to turn their decisions to politi- of Pierce and of Buchanan have left upon the history of
ali the then thirteen States expressly pledged and engagcans. Conservatives who apprehended too strong ex- ed that it should be pcr|ietual. by the articles of Confed- cal purposes. One section of our eountrv believing slave- the Union; if they wish to redeem their country from the
ry is right and ought to be extended, while the other be- discredit which the annexation of Texas, the Mexican
pression, felt their nerves braced, aud were exultant eration in 177H, nnd finally in 1787.
, lieves it is wrong and ought not to be extended; this is war. the civil war in Kansas the attempts on Cub*.
over its decisive but proper tone. Everybody left tho
One of the declared objects for repairing and establish- | the only subsiautial dispute. The fugitive slaw clause Mexico aud Nicaragua: the official,blindness of the Exeground realizing that nt last there was a man ia the I'rc- ing the Confederation, was to form a more perfect Union I in the Constitution, and the law for the suppression of cutive to the slave trade, the conspiracy to legalize slavesicjcncy who was honest, true and courageous. Southern —-by one or by a part only of the States. ('an it be law- the foreign slave trade, are as well enforced, |>erhaps, as ry in the territories, and the gross corruption of reccnt
fully possible the Union is less than before, the Constitumen like Wigfall regarded it a3 significant of coercion, tion having lost the vital element of perpetuity? It fol-! any law can ever be in a community where the moral government have attached to the government of tbe Unitsense of the people imperfectly supports the law itself.— ed States—let them remember that success, least of all
and telegraphed to Jefferson Davis and tho leading Se- lows from these views, that no Slate. U|>OJ. its own nitre
The body of the people abide by the dry legal obligation speedy success, is notthe touchstone of true service: that
cessionists to prepare for war. While they dcprecate motion, can lawljillv get out of tho Union, that resolves j in both casus, and a few break it in each. This, I think, they will have donfc far more for the nation bv keeping
and
ordinances
to
tint
effect,
are
void,
and
that
acts
of
|
tho sentiments expressed by Mr. Lincoln, they do honor
cannot be perfectly cured, and it would liecome worse in themselves perfectly free to use every constitutional pow.
to his frankness. Many of the prominent Union men at violence within any State or States against the authority both casvs after the separation of the section, than be- er which the Union possesses for the institution of slaveof the United States, are insurrectionary or revolutionary. I fore. The foreign slave trade, now imperfectly suppress- ry, even though years should elapse be-fore they can take
tho South admit that he could pursue no other course, according to circumstances. I, therefore, consider that
ed, would be imiierfectly revived, without restriction in a single effectiWilstcp for that end—than if, by patching
and believe that the alternative of peace or war is faTrly in vHr of the Constitution, nnd law?, the Union is tin-1 one section, while fugitive slaves, now only partially , np a shameful reconcilation with the southern state-, they
win for Mr. Lincoln the questionable praise of being
presouted. It may serve to bring the country to a pro- broken, and to tho extent of my ability I shall take care.! would not be surrendered at all by the other.
Physically shaking wc cannot separate. We cannot quite as safe a President ns Mr. Buchanan, and the unper appreciation of the dangers which.menace tlu Union as the Constitution expressly enjoins o'n me, that the laws
of tho Union be faithfully executed iu all the States. Do- {remove our respective sections ftom each other, nor build que-tiovalile shame of having sacrificed, for the sake of
through the efforts of designing conspirators.
ing this I deem to be only a simple duty on my part, and, an impassible wail between them. A husband and wife an unreal armistice, the only condition which ran ever
I shall perform it so far as practicable, unless mv. right-!
'INAUGURAL ADOREKH OF MR. LINCOLN, ful masters, the American people, shall withhold the re- may be divorced and go out of the presence of nnd be- secure a genuine Union—which can ever can;* the states
yond the reach of eacu other; but the different purts of of America to be united at heart as well as in name—
President of the United State*.
quisite means, or in some authoritative manner direct tbe ' our country cannot do this. They cannot but remain which can ever cement theui by any deeper tic than the
contrary. 1 trust this will not bo regarded as a menace , face to face, and intercourse, either amicable or hostile, eonrs«i compromise oLOiternal interests and commou
FELLOw-CrrizEXs or TJIS UXTTEO STATES: In compli- but only-a declared purpose of the Union that it will] must continue bciwocti them. 1- it then more advanta- fears."
ance with a custom, as old as tho government itself, I ap- Constitutionally defend and maintain itself.' In doing this j geous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
Mr. Lincoln Twenty-five Year* Ago.
pear before you to address you briefly, and to take, in there need be no bloodshed or violence, and there shall Can aliens make treaties better than friends can make
• your presence, the oath prescribed bv tho Constitution be none, unless it he forced on the National authority.—1 laws? Can treaties be more faithfuliy enforced between j The Springfield (111.) State Journal says:
• Nearly a quarter a century ago. here in Springfield,
of the United states, to be taken by Ab President before The power confided to me will be used to hold, occupy aliens than laws can among frit-ads?
M
r.
Lincoln,
as we quote from tbe speech in tbe file* of
he enters on the cxecntion of his office;
and posses.? the property and places belonging to the gov- \ Sup|H«c you go to war, you cannot* fight always, and
I do not consider it necessary nt present, for me to dis- ernment to collect duties nnd imposts, bnt beyond what' when, after much loss on both sides and no gain on either, this Journal, gave utterance to these memorable and procuss those matters of administration abont which there may be necessary for these objccts, there will" tie no in-' you cease fighting, the identical questions as to terms of phetic words:
Manv fn-e countries liave lost their libertv, and curs
is no speciaPanxiety or excitement. Apprehensions seem vasion, no using of force against or among people anv-! intercourse are agaiu upon yon. This country, with its
to exist among the people of tho Southern States, that where. Where hostility to the U. S., in any entire locality J institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit, it. .When- may lose hers; Imt if she shall, be it my proudest plume,
bythe accession of a Republican administration, their shall bo so great nnd so uuiversal as to prevent competent ever they shall prove weary of the existing government, not that 1 was the last todeseit bnt that 1 never deserted
property, their peace and personal security are to be en- resident citizens from holding federal offices, there will be they can exercise their constitutional rights in amending, her. I know thai tue great volcano nt Washington,
dangered, There haJ never been any reasonable cause no attempt to force obnoxious strangers among the peo- or their revolutionary rights to distncmtier or overthrow aroused aud directed by theovil spirit that reigns there,
for such apprehensions. Indeed the most ample evidence ple for that object. While the strict legal right may exist i t I cannot be ignorant of the fact that many worthy is belching forth the lavy of political corruption in a
to the contrary, has all the while existed and been open in the government to enforce the exercise of these offices, nnd patriotic citizens are desirous of having the NatioOal current broad and deep, which is sweeping with frightful
to their inspection. It is found in nearly all the published the attempt to do so would he so irritating and so nearly Constitution amended. While I make no recommenda- velocity over the whole length nnd breadth of the land,
speeches of him who now addresses you. I do but ouote impracticable withal, that I deem it better to forego for tion of amendment. I fully rvcoguizc the full authority of bidding fair to leave no unscathed no green spot or living •
from one of those speeches, when I declare that I have a time the uses of such offices. The maiis, unless repell- the people over the whole subject to be exercised in thing, while on its bosoms are riding like demons on the
no purpose, directly or indirectly, to interfere with the ed. will be forwarded in all points of the Union—so far as either of the modes prescribed in the instrument itself waves of hdi. the imps of that evil spirit.and fiendishly
institution of slavery in the States where it exists. I be- possible the people everywhere will have a sense of per- and I should, under existing circumstances, favor rather launtiag all those who are there to resist its destroying
lieve I have no lawful right to do so, and I have no iu- fect security, which is most favorable to calm thoughts than oppose a fair opportunity being afforded to act course with the hopelessness of their efforts; mid knowing
this. 1 cannot deny that all may be swept away. Broken
inclination to do so. Those who nomiuatcd and elected and reflections. The course herein indicated will be fol- upon it.
by it. 1 to may be; bow to it I never wifl. The possibility
mo; did -so with the fuU knowledge that I had made this lowed unless current events and experiences shall show a
1 will venture to add that to me the Convention mode
and many similar declarations, and tad never recalled modification or change to lie proper, and in every case seems preferable, in that it deems amendments to origi- that we may full in the struggle ought not to deter us from
them. More than this, they placed iu the platform for and exigency my best discretion will be exercised accord- nate with the jieople themselves, instead of onlv permit- the support ofacuose which we believe to be just It shall
my acceptance, as a law to themselves and to me, tho clear, ing to circumstances actually then existing? and I hope ting them to take or reject propositions originated bv not deter me. If ever I feel t lie sool within me elevate
emphatic resolution, which I now reanr
for a peaceful solution of the National troubles and res- others not especially chosen for the purpose, und which and expand to those dimensions uot wholly unworthy of
RESOLVEB; That tbe msintalnanee ln^io]ate of the rights of toration of the fractional sympathy and affection. Xbat might not precisely suit as they would wish others to its Almighty Architect, it is when I contemplate tbo
cause of my country, deserted by all the world beside,
the But cs, and especially therifrhtsufca>h State to order and there are persons in one section or another who seek to accept or refuse.
control its own domestic institutions according to its own
aud I standing up boldly alone; nnd hurling defiance at
I understand a proposed amendment to the Constitution her victorious oppressors.
judgment exclusively, is essential to the balance of power on destroy the Union at all events, and are glad of any prewhich tho perftctiuu of our political fabric depends; nnd wo text to do i t I will neither affirm nor deny. But if there (which afbcndmcut. however, I have not seen) has jiassed
"Here, without contemplating consequences, before
dcuounce t?ie lawless Invasion by an arriicd force of the gov- bo such I need address theiflno word. To those however Congress to the effect that the Federal Government shall
ernment of a ny State or Territory, no matter under what pre- who really love the Union mny I not speak? Before enter- never interfere with the domestic institutions of the heaven, and in the face of the fcorld, 1 swear eternal fidelity
text, as anion,? t)>e greatest of crimes. ]
ing upon so grave a matter "a3 the destruction of our States, including that of fiersons held to service and labor. to the just eaUM-,. an I deem if. of the land of my life, my
I now reiterate tho sentiment, and in doing so I onlv national fabric, with all its benefits, its memories and To avoid misconception of what I have said, I depart liberty, ami my love. And who that thinks with roe wiil
press upon the public'nttention tho most conclusive evi- hopes, would it not be wise to ascertain previously why from my purpose not to speak of particular amendments not fearlessly adopt the catli that I take? Let none falter
dence of which ihe case is snsceptjbje, that the prosperi- we do so? Will you. hazard so desperate a step while so far as to say that holding such a provision to DOW be who thinks that lie is right and we may sncceed. But if,
«- 1y, peace and security of no section, are to be in any wise there is any possibility that any portion of the ills you implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its after all, wc shall fail, be it so. We still shall have the
consolation of Say ing to our consciences, and to the do, endangered, by the now incoming administration. I add fly from have no real, existence? Will you while the being made express ^nd perfectly irrevocable.
parted shade of our count ly's freedom, that tbe cause, aptoo) that all the protection which consistently with the certain ills you fly froiii, risk the commission of so fearThe Chief Magistrate derives his authority from the
Constitution and the laws can bo given, will be chccrfullv ful a mistake? Ali profess to be content in the Union if people, and they have conferred none upon him to fix Use proved of our judgment and adored of our hearts, in disgiven to all the States when lawfully demanded, for what- all Constitutional rights can be maintained. Is it true terms for tbe separation' of the States. The people aster, in chains, in death, wc never faltered in defending."
ever cause, as cheerfully to one section as another. There then that right plainly written in the Constitution has themselves alone can do this if they choose, but the ExThe feeling among the diplomatists is, that the Inaais much controversy about the delivery of fugitives from been denied? 1 think not Happily the human mind is ecutive, as such, has nothing to do with i t His duty is* gural will be very acceptable to the European Powers.
MOEHAK BATKS. EDITOR.

TRAVERSE CITY.

H o r a t i o J . K i n g will p r o b a b l y b o a p p o i n t e d S e c o n d
Assistant Postmaster-General

A » r « * n n n ( E M r K — T w o col a ran » of IUKXAII, I , i t 1 Co.a
Advertisements will be found on the fourth page.
AJKJDT rue

G i l b e r t K o d m a n is t h e l e a d i n g c a n d i d a t e f o r C h i e f
C l e r k s h i p of t h e T r e a s u r y D e p a r t m e n t .

WEATHER.—We h a v e h a d seventeen w e e k s

of u n i n t e r r u p t e d g o o d sl e i g h i n g , a n d i t is a s g o o d now
W a t a n y t i m e d a r i n g the w i n t e r .

^ Col

one t h a w in all t h a t t i m e , a n d t h a t d i d n o t destroy t h e

I f t h e E d i t o r of t h e N e w a y g o Republican

t o c l o t h e his a b u s e in t o l e r a b l e E n g l i s h ?
Influential p a r t i e s a r c pressing P h i l i p D o r s b e i m e r f o r
J u d g e W i l m o t , and oth-

ers, are urging S. N . P e t t i s for Governor or Nebraska.
f ! a r l S c h u r z will d o u b t l e s s h a v e t h e S a r d i n i a n Mission,
Mr. B u r l i n g a m e . t h e only o t h e r a p p l i c a n t , h a v i n g w i t h d r a w n in his f a v o r . A . M . C l a p p , o r the Buffalo E x press, is t o bnve t h e B u f f a l o Postofliee.
J
A m o t i o n h a s been m a d e iu t h e S o u t h e r n C o n g r e s s t o
inquire into the expediency or prohibiting t h e introduction i n t o t h e S t a t e s or t h e C o n r e d e r a c y of a n y n e g r o e s
f r o m the N o r t h e r n S l a v e S t a t e s , e x c e p t t h o s e b r o u g h t
T h i s is designed t o ' coerce' Vir-

ch

ztzarjzafr f- -» *
uu

uia nssuining

t h e c h a r g e of t h e T r e a s u r y , s h o w t h a t t h e r e a r c f u n d s on
t o t h e a m o u n t of 8 C , 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 .

B e s i d e this, t h e

enrront receipt from the Customs amount to 880,000
dailv.
T h e W a r D e p a r t m e n t received l e t t e r s f r o m M a j . A n derson, d a t e d t h e 4 t h i u s t , b u t tbey c o n t a i n e d n o t h i n g of
special importance.

T h e most friendly feelings exist be-

t w e e n him and t h e S o u t h C a r o l i n a a u t h o r i t i e s .

Postal

f a c i l i t i e s are still o p e n t o him, a n d p r i v i l e g e s of m a r k e t i n g t o n limited e x t e n t still c o n t i n u e . '
Jofr

A

WORD TO GROCERS.—Always k e e p t h e p u r e s t SaJ-

e r a t n s t o b e f o u n d in t h e m a r k e t .

Y o u r c u s t o m e r s should

b e ablo t o supply themselves w i t h a p e r f e c t l y p u r e a n d
h e a l t h f u l article.

TO THE PUBLIC

1

H

D . B . D e L o n d «fc C o . ' s C h e m i c a l Sal-

e r a t u 3 will g i v e p e r f e c t s a t i s f a c t i o n t o the m o s t f a s t i d i o u s
housekeeper.

M a n u r a c t u r e d a n d f o r sale a t wholesale

j ) . B. D e L a n d & Co., F a i r p o r t . M o n r o e C o , N . Y .
" . " f n n

u c

1U.\.

O T A T E O F M I C H I G A N . — T H E CIRCUIT COURT
v . . r i . ' ° J , a ? , / , o f <;rBnd
I " Chancery.
Ninth J u d i c i a l' Circuit—In
«'rri..«—IU Chancery.
v u a u c r r y . Suit
f u n rpending I
i r i l l l t t( oonrt
n r t for the
forth..

»»•-_.
Circuit
County „of/ / Grand
T r a v e. r ^ . l n Chancerv.
?, V * ' V e J ? ° , ' ? • o n , h c » c t h d»y of March. lsOl. Sarah
1 arker. Complainant, vs. I n A. Parker. Otis 1 . White and
ames M. Hurbeck, defendants,

- D a v i s has o r d e r e d G e n . P e l e p G . L B e a u r e a r d .

C h a r l e s t o n nt o n c e a n d t a k e c o m m a u d of the forces now
r a i s e d a n d t o b e raised for t h e investment or F o r t S u m p —
.
T u t FIBST MINUTER.—Illinois has B r a w n t h e first di-

lhc

I t is u n d e r s t o o d t h a t M r . L i n c o l n will d e c l i n c uny conference with the Commissioners from the Southern Con.
f e d e r a c y , on t h o g r o u n d t h a t h e
S t a t e s a s still in t h e U n i o n .

regards

t h e secediuir

N o n o m i n a t i o n is y e t m a d e of a successor t o G e n e r a l
Twiggs.

T h o P r e s i d e u t h a s M a j o r A n d e r s o n u n d e r ad-

visement, b u t t h e p r o b a b i l i t i e s favor Col. S u m n e r .

Groods and Wares

»!Ts o r l i g h t d r a f t , h a s been formed
can b e e n e u t e d a t a n y time;

b y Gen. S c o t t , a n d

rejected by t h e L o n Carolina

" I h a v e looked with a n x i e t y and d e e p i n t e r e s t for one
w o r d on tho o t h e r side o r t h e question, b u t in vain- t h e r e
h a s been no line p r i n t e d t h a t would show t h a t t h e r e was
a n y o t h e r side. U u v e r s a ! c o n d e m n a t i o n w a s p r o u o u o e e d a g a i n s t us: a n d T a m forced t o believe, w h a t m y circle
o r a c q u a i n t a n c e would seem t o confirm, t h a t t h e r e is n o t
one man in h u g l a n d e x c e p t myself, w h o u p h o l d s t h e no-

C U S T O M



NE W

L I N E O F I»KOI'F.LLKIiS,
5TSK H i t ? " J CBICAOO. win ,.II
. thi* plaee O A I L ^ , during the e o m i n c season of naviirn.

(Corner of W a k a r o o and N a g o n a b e Sta.,

N O R T H P O R T .

WE HAVE

- A . h i i n d a n t .A«lvt1111<• t j ^ e s

The above L i n e cou.-iinu of the I'ro-

T H E PITBSPRIBER HAP J C S T R E C E I V E D HIS W7XTCT
STOCK. C0XSI8T1XG OK

h^.reV ^ i C f a < ? ° t a r i o ' OKdensbunr, Wiscon
sin, Kmptre, Prairie State and Cleveland;

EOR P t ' R C H A S I S O C U 0 D 8 FX

D R Y

Xl<jadyAlJide O l o t h i n p

Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,

ts of lh> pnl.li.-_

Which he Offer* cheap for Cash or Ilartec.

thi
rV',on- d"'-v verllied- T"*re«
Awi-ke-be-gosh and Ceorgc T. Wendell, prayiift. amom: o t h - r ' '
thingss that tetters of Adminintration mav
granted t-. > ii.i
petiju.ner- on the estate of Michael A*h-k'e-he-g„sh : thereui- '
DIWI.H.r.M
AloMjRy, the tin-t day of April. A. |
d
'
,.n fcn
Jn1 I i
t I M "' ,
f»r hearing -aid
'
heirs at law of «uid deceased, an.! Al
person* interested in said estate are requir. il to in " ho for sixteen yean. ha»
engaged
M m 1 1 t ' o u r t . then to bo hoi den at the |»ro I
— - Jfll.e, in haid village of I.ittle Traverse, in said Conntv I ness WIIOKO n-<]uiri-mcnt>
f M
, i
f
fcJ,
I
T
, / " ! ' . l h c r e
why the p r a v e r «f
h ul<i n o t
rn.
and
who
has
f
o
r
s
c
l
e
r
a
l
years
pnrrhx-eii
goods of the
. 1 J T . I . .I
" "
' * granted. And it i» f u r t h e r or
d. red that the p e t i t i o n e r s 1 h e n sa A»h-ke-l>e-gosh u n d T
"*""T WOCSES in .VEW.yoitK and llOSTfl.V. and » h o will
W endell, give notice t o the ,,-raon Interested in M « "
of the pendency of said petition and the hearing thereof by
c a a s i n g a copy of Uiia o r d e r to be published in tho Cranil
ling us t o lay down nnr goods

C
s„r,K. .
.
*
.Northport, llei-eml>er 31. IRso,

-1-v I/nr a* any Hou^f in Chicago;

1 "it'll:
^ this0...?10

th.t .dmlnu-

w'the I"t'''' t*'T '« ud acquaintance of our Mr.
»'"« H't tfioiunmd and OK df'• KtKivt order-1 '"""djftuct'ssart/ to a Zadds wanl*

n
Eranl,-d A n d i t
H r y ' r , ^ , a n r t t h i m t o bo,icre
b e was a
H e f u r t h e r claims t h a t h i s n a m e w a s chamrcd,
7 i t l v p . s m . ' S l l t 0 0 w s e e k t o reclaim h i m f r o m
b o n d a g e . H e a r r i v e d a t M o u n d city s i x o r e i g h t w e e k s
pabli.licd in t h e G ^ ^ a v U c r w R H c ™ J $ f a ' n e l t f l l a p ^ r i ^
a g o , a n d s e c o r e d e m p l o y m e n t a t t h e m a r i n e ways. H e was
g * orally recogmrea as . a w h i t e m a n , a n d by s o m e was
>
t h o u g h t a m a g n i f i c e n t feDow.

-

T o t h e Toadies,

S • S K . - S

TBy

I
-

°

""

Wp AXV

ll 1 ' : ; ' X , r f ' | n l , " ' , i l n i '

tha

'

I - * " " or

D A V

" > « O R f . Acant.

i'- S . — C A S H I ' A I D F O R F U R S .

M R . S. BAFUVS,

"...
nn-yious to .aid ilas
HEXHV (!. (JIlAVKRABT. JB..
U-lt*
Judgft of P:
E S T A T E O F W I L L I VM M c G l ' I W F A H .
STATE OK MICHIGAN-.
V
or
Y
g T ° r « a i x i . TKAVKRSB.

G O O D S ,

BOOTS AND SHOES,

Arw- ) oi'k, liaston, Cincinnati or Chicago.

DASCOMB. TODD \- CO..
Proprietor* of Wood Yard.

.22S53I2S."

STORE

N E W GOODS,

Ottr Rent * air Xothing.

Northern Transportation Co.'s

,, ,

n. S.

M E A L ,

over a n j une h a r l n f to I'AV F H E h i H T S .

WOl'LIl HRREHV OIVK NUTICK THAT TIIK

'' w u " ' l -

E

d l r e r t t o Chi^*«o: ihn« giving n . C.KE VT ADVAXTACES'

M A R C H , 18BI.

D A S C O M B , T O D D & Co

tion
Client

T I t A I ) K.

M

O F A LI. K1KD8, AXD

Our Own Trade,

SOLICITOH I X C1XAXCF.IJV
XO. I FIRST STREET,
NkmiiMtee. Mioliia.-,,,.
GLK.V A R B O R ,

-A. R

vi'l be ke pt constantly o n hand a n d for sale by the 100 Iks.

Stote'"
self-do v o t e d a c t i o n of m y b e l o v e d
.1 save to the co,,*i,tn««r—Sr-t. Tli.t V E L I S C E X P E N S E S :
rond, I.OSS O P TIME: and lastly and mainly, the ENORi8
' ° U r S o u t h e r n C o n f w l e r a c y , if organize*!,
»CS AMOPNT necessarily added to c o w r HIGH REXTS
would find no s v m p a t h v o.its>de o r itself in all t h e civilized
| and expenses of the Chicago merchant.
world. I t would bo reganled a n d t r e a t e d as t h e Ishnw-1 \
r A „ 8 1 ^ W I O X , 9 F T I I E P R O B A T E COI RT
.
shall make an E S P E C I A L E F F O R T t a keep
u^ -m.
X IUI
for the v/ouiur
Connty 01
of uUrraannddTravcri
Tra—
o f nations.
j plete a stock that
Office in t h e v l l l a g e of Traverse City
day of March, in the y e » j I8C.1:
Any Dealers on the Bay
C . ^ i t T K h ° ' - * . W l , I T K ^ - A e c o r d i n e to the Cairo
Present, Ct UTIS POWLKR. J u d g e o f P r o h a t e . In the matter
1
0f
'laantllies to suit, for
of William U i c i X i d S S i d .
' o n l l ' T SVAIT ' AV, n) ; t Y v o T
X"ctteef . I c a r y *££• a l i a 8 " e n r y J o n e s , o l l h ,
J handling.
A N t ^ o n C.O&T a n d a c o n m l c s i e n for
t h e p r o p e r t y of W . C. F a u l k n e r . o f T i p p a h c o u n t y , Miss-'
On reading and filing the petition, duly verified, of J a n e
issippi, was a r r e s t e d o n t h e 7 t h in M o u n d Citv, a n d delivtrat
on
ot
said
estate
raqy
Ism
n
t
e
d
to
U*car
A.
Stevens

1
e r e d o v e r t o the c u s t o d y of b i s m a s t e r . Mr. Lee. alias M r
r u,n
Thereupon it is ordered t h a t Wednesday, the ad day o f '
7, — " —
"
» c h ^ v e been
to
" | ,18 M W . L i t 0 ? n n - a n d i r t b c m a t t e r w e r e t o April. A. I). 1961, at one o'clock, P. M.. be assigned for h l a r
3 n v ,things
I n , ke.-p
* ? mm.iny
- h n ^ 1,1 , b p i f
" l i ' c h .NOW, from
b e d e t e r m i n e d wholly b y c o l o r a n d a p p e a r a n c e , some folks m g s a d petition, and that the h e i r s nt law of £ i d d e crea«-<i
increasid —
room. ana
an>l the
eaW. I
room,
tne
and
all
other
i>ersons
interested
in
said
estate.
.might j o i n h i m in the conclusion. H e s a y s t h a t h i s p a r e n t s
r.™. " " ; '
in sain eL
...
a
>e, 01
t o a n n e a r n t aa
-ill" ,,r . . r i
. 1. . . .
• f P T " * Session or said C o u r t then to be holden at the 1
r>
'
Y""
Vf our J\l\
i ^ i n
h
'
d y i n e w h e n he w a s very y o u n g , left
. . . I
/ . / 7 1 ' I J I ' . . . , V 7 . J7.
J | . ..
— 1 _
V
,
h i m in c h a r g e of a slaveholder of A l a b a m a , w h o raided
mulatto.

P O t r m n H L Y , That
METALLIC MILL,

KU.VXIXC IX

A l ; V | J S ? I i r O F T H E P R O B A T E COI R T
£ 1 ' " r »>e < o n n t r of Emmet, bolden at Little T m w
....
TUB NKW S ^ A T R . — T h i s b o d y , w i t h t h o s e from t h e Tuesday, the 2tith J a y of February, in the year of ij u > Lord'ou. "
ihon«and eight hundred and sixty-ones c c e d i n g S t a t e s out, will s t a n d 2 9 R e p u b l i c a n s t o 2 0 DePn-M-nt, Henry (J. Graveraet, J r . . J u d g e of Probate. In (he
matter of the estate of Miihacl Ash-ke-i«-go»h. deeen.e.1
mocrats.

d o n T i m e s ) in t h o C h a r l e s t o n M e r c u t y . R e f e r r i n g t o t h e

Tliat

Blacksmith 8hop,

Propeller of Our Own,

2Vttornqj nnJr Coniisrllor at jfato,

Miss Lane, the niecc or M r . Buchanan, celobrated the

les iu a c o m m u n i c a t i o n ( w h i c h w a s

-•

SKF.r> G R A I N S ,

Carlisle, a ' brilliant' l a w y e r o r W a s h i n g t o n City.

g e n e r a l c o n d e m n a t i o n or t h o c o u r s e of S o u t h
p r o n o u n c e d l y the E n g l i s h p r e s s he s a y s :

p

WE HAVE A

close of h e r u n c l e s a d m i n i s t r a t i o n b y m a r r y i n g J a m e s

Solitary and Alone.
A S o u t h C a r o l i n i a n in E n g l a n d , p o u r s o n t his t r o u b -

ura ,n

By the aid of experienced workmen, they have opened a c « *
dt|ilcd lo the * » n t a of the * n r r o u a d i n g c#untry

N E W STOCK;

lQC

A plan o r relieving F o r t S u r a p t c r b y m e a n s or s t c a m -

FURS

;«SavSi&Fc™i»tra:^

Which we are Ailing to repUtion with AI.I. KINDS OK

P O I N T S .

S e n a t e a s C h a i r m a n o r t h e C o m m i t t e e on F o r e i g n

Relation?, r a t h e r t h a n t o a c c e p t t h e a p p o i n t m e n t o r Minister t o England.

S E C O N D L Y , That
They pay Uie highest market price f o r all kinda of l>rodn*«:
W heat, R y e , C o m , Oata, B u c k w h e a t , B e a a a , P a s s .
B a r l e y , G r a s s Keed, P o u l t r y , P o r k a n d B e e f ,
(L>re*Kd o r e n f o o t , ) S h i n g l e , a n d C o r d Woo<J.
T R A P P E R S will do well to give t h e m a call before MlNsg

CUSTOM WORK,

It is rumored t h a t Senator S u m n e r prefers to remain
,n

T,

T H A T WE H A V E N O W MOVED INTO

T . .J. R A M S D E L I .

.

O

uw t - u ( u i p i
and ARE or MA\ UK called for fro* t 1 r « »r> time.
A K D A l t E r i i K P A K E D TO DO
«•
. aid defendant, Ira A. Parker, cause his appearanee to IK- enln ,h s
., '
and notice thereof served upon the comI lalnant s Solicitor, within three mouth* from the date of this
We would
!y call the •Mention of t l * p n r t h a s i a g paborder; and in case of his appearance, that he cause hi* ana n y deacriptlon, on s h o r t notice. Also keep on hand a a
swer to c o m p l a i n a n t s hill to he tiled, and a copy thereof
served upon said complainant's Solicitor, within twenty d a n .
ron, S a p P a n s , 15-30-00 Gallon Kettles, P l o w . ,
lie t o the f o l l o w i n g
after service of a copy or said bill of c o m p l a i n t ; and in deAxes, l l o e n . l l r a g - T e c t h , S l e d a , O x - C a r t s , O x fault thereof, that the bill of complaint tiled in this cause be
^ ° k e » , H'hifHetreem A c .
taken as confessed by said defendant, I r a A Parker
And it
ta>
>»" * i " P V
hr r ^ „ r . 0 r r ' r c d ' , b a ! . t t c ? ' , } u f , h i s " r J " u ' published in
the ttrand Traverse Herald, a newspaper printed in said
HORSE
JMD
OX SHOEIJVG.
county of Grand Traverse, witliin twenty days f r o m the date
« E HAVE A
an
i V h , t ( . h o Pu'-lic.tiou l i continued at l Z "
once in i *i li week for six successive weeks, or that tho «-omplainant cause a copy thereof to bo served personally upon
tw , , .CK^n
' I r a , ^ ,!',uk,r.
least twenty days before she
A NEW
time above proscribed tor said defendant's nmie'araucc.
CHARLES II. HOLDEX.
Circuit Court Coiuraissiomr
In and for Grand Traverse Counlv.
IN T H E MAIN". A
r o a ^ e ' r ™ i n ° r , l r . M i n d l D R C o r n B n < 1 c°* , n d * " klD«>» « (
L oarse ( i r a i n s will bo r u n c x p r t t i l y in a
O. H. MARSH, Solicitor for Complainant.
th l lhe
nil
f ,
* , l r v t '* » true eo,,y of the origi
nal order now recorded iu this uOlce.
For the accommodation of the
,t. . t
T l i E R O X BOSTWICK.
*
Register in Chancery.

p l o m a t i c prize in t h e p e r s o n o r N . B. J u d d , us M i n i s t e r \ V u n ? e T u ^ •ny' „, ^ M r l ! ^ V ^ i ' J T A. ^1 J i' itil-.
! ; J I1EI "KKKAAII . I '
A , . i . r a ~ . A P « T l , l , f e , 0 , h e P r i n t l " K Business.
t o B e r l i n , l l e r m a n u K r e i s m a n of C h i c a g o g d e s as S e c - A
sie.Klj. industrious hoy. from 13 to 17 years old who hu.« a
Common School education, and a fair s h a r e of common MI...
retary or Legation.
win find a Rood home, have kind treatment, and an e \ . - t l l e n i
opportunity to learn the trade. March I.'., IS',1.
F r e d e r i c k W . S e w a r d , son of t h o S e c r e t a r y or State,
a n d one or t h e E d i t o r s o r t h e A l b a n y E v e n i n g J o u r n a l !
t h o S e n a t e , as A s s i s t a n t S e o r e t a r y o r S t a t e .

A

NEW STORE;

r e c c u t M a j o r in tho U . 8 . Kngineer C<irp«, t o p r o c e e d t o

h a s been a p p o i n t e d b y t h e P r e s i d e n t a h d conGrmed b y

F

TtEADY PAY,
believing the n i m b l e dime better than the laiy shilling.

Our New and Spacious Store,

ssaa?.£

u j u v i w i lur inr coiup

E

A N D B E N O T SATISFIED,
COSE AND CONVINCE YOURSELF OF
T H
E FOLLOWING FACTS:

K ™El«.mJ'SriKTI-T 0 S B i M > 1 GESEUt. AS.
Groceries, Provisionj, Jjry Goods, Hardwart, Clothing,
°'a'
'•»"<

In 2raver*e City, and on all part*
Grand Trav*rne Bay, we vxrnld respectfully announce

rhich ari

h a n d a p p l i c a b l e t o t h e c u r r e n t e x p e n s e s of t h e G o v e r n ment

Official d i s p a t c h e s f r o m M e x i c o a n n o u n c e the a p p o i n t m e n t of G e n . U r a g a as Knvoy to W a s h i n g t o a

Read the Following.
BUT

p
I R 8 T , That
Hitchcock, Campbell & Bacon.

iVeto Arrangement.

M r . L i n c o l n h a s requested M r . C a m e r o n t o a p p o i n t
Col. E l l s w o r t h C h i e r C l e r k o r t h e W a r D e p a r t m e n t .

must p e r -

« s t in g r o w personal a t t a c k s on M r . SEWARD, will h e n o t
so f a r g r a t i f y t h e f r i e n d s or t h a t g r e a t a n d g o o d

•»"

AND

J o h n A J o n e s , of Illinois, h a s b e e n a p p o i n t e d S u p e r i n t e n d e n t pf S t a t i s t i c s in t h e S t a t e D e p a r t m e n t

indications of a b r e a k - u p , a n d w e a n t i c i p a t e an e a r l y

— — -

N E W GOODS,

F r e m o n t will d o u b t l e s s b e a p p o i n t e d M i n i s t e r t o

J o h n A . Kasson, of Ohio, h&a been a p p o i n t e d F i r s t
Ajaistaai PosUnaster-GeoeraL

and. pleasant S p r i n g . W i n t e r must h a v e played h e r last
and best t r u m p on M o n d a y . T h e g a m e is u p .
I

in b y a c t u a l settlers.
g i n i a i n t o secession.

S T O R E ,

T h e r e h a s b e e n only

d e i g h i n g . L a s t S u n d a y a n d M o n d a y w e r e t h e coldest
d a y s we h a v e e v e r k n o w n h e r e . T h e r e a r e n o w s t r o n g

N a v a l Officcr a t N e w Y o r k .

N E W

NORTHPORT IS RISING!!
T l i i s i s K v i i l c n r ! Siiic-e

L. M. & W. F. STEELE & Oo.
H A \ E IXTBODLCED A i.AKGE AND T H E

ONLY STOCK

IJ1 U ' ( ; s & M E D I C 1 N E S
Tli BE FOUND IS T H E COUNTY.

FAMILY GROCERIES
P R O V I S I O N S ,
Di W H I C H THEY ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD. .

G i v e TJs a Call!
*•

-Physicians* Fn*rription« Carefully C o m pounded.
vI - M. A W. F. S T E E L E A CO.
Northport, Dee I t . I»ft0.
26-nt
MORGAN BATES^

NOTARY PUBLIC, <>«<-»-. T n . v - . « . C M t ^

M U K

T

1
H a n n a h L a y & Co.'s Column

•ffftnnnli, L a y & Co.'s Column.

D" MOTT'S

»T JCJHM o. j r u i T T i t * .
The day la b r e a k i n g in the E a s t of which t*« p r o p h e t s told.
Now brighten* op the tftjol Time, the Christian Age of Gold;
Old Might t o B i g a t is yield lag. battle blade t o clerkly pen.
E a r t h ' s Monarclis v t h e r people, a n d b e t Serfs stand op as
Ken;
,
'
-r,-~
The isles rejoice together, in a day are Nations born.
And the slave walks free in Tunis, a n d by Stambool's Golden
Horn)

FARMERS

ATTENTION!!

FARM PRODUCE.

G

I I A N N A H , L A Y It C O .
ILL PURCHASE. AND PAY T H E HIGHEST P R I C E
the market will warrant, for

PILLS ^ IRON.

la this, oh, count r y me n of m i n e ! a day for a s to sow
The soil of new-gained empire with slavery's seeds of woe?
To ieed with o a r fresh life-blood the Old World's cant-off

W

F A R M PRODUCE,

verrd at Traverse C i t y — W h e a t Oats. Cora. Ry». Barley.
' Pease, Potatoes, Onions, Roots, Ac. Ac.—thus m a k i n g an ab! solute h o m e market for e v e r y t h i n g raised.
52

A s a p e r i e n t and Stomaeir preparation of IRON puriflcd ol
GODS AT WHOLESALE—
Dropped, like some m o n s i e r o u s early birth, f r o m the tired lap
Oxygen and Carbon by combustion in Hydrogen. Sanction- V J Raisins. In quarter, half a n d whole boxes;
of t i m e t
Tallow aiul
T o ran anew the evil race the old lost nations ran.
ed by the highest Medical Authorities. both in Europe and j
Sugar, by the barrel or loo lbs,;
And die, like them, of unbelief of God and w r o n g of m a n .
the United States, and prescribed in their practice.
Soap, by the b o x ;
Great Heavens! is t h i s our mission? Ends in this the prayers
Baking Powders, by the b o x ;
T h e e x p e r i e n c e of thousands dally proves that no prrpara- :
and tears,
, ,
Matches, by the gross;
T h e toll, t h e strife, the watching*, of o a r younger, better tion of I r o n can be compared with it. Impurities of the |
Toys, Notions;
blood, depression of vital energy, pale and otherwise sickly i
Tobacco, Pine Cut. by the half barrel
Still, a T t h e O l d World rolls in light, shall our* In shadow tarn.
Tobacco. Smoking, by the half barrel
A be amicus Chaos, cursed of God, t h r o u g h outer darkness complexions indicate i t s necessity in almost every concelva-.
Plug Tobacco, by the 50 lbs. or butt;
borate
.
.
ble o
- ' by
' the
" 50 lbs. or
- - k- -e -g-;
Soda.
Where the far nations looked f o r light, ^blaknesB in the air.
I n n o x i o u s in all maladies in which it has been tried, it has
Where f o r the words of hope t h e y listened) the long wail or
proved absolutely curative in each of the following comShoes and Boots, by the doz. or hf. doz. pairs
despair!
I
*
Brown Cotton, by the 3 to 5 pieces-.
plaints, viz:
The crisis preasss on u s : fac* to face with a s it stands.
S h i r t i n g Stripe, by the 3 to 5 piece*;
I n Debility* Nervous Affections, E m a c i a t i o n ,
With solemn lips ol question, like t h e Sphinx in Kgypt'i
Cream Tartar, by the 5 to SO lbs,;
Dyspepsia, Constipation, D i a r r h a a . Dysentery, Insands!
Thi s day we fashion Destiny, our web of fate we s p i n ;
cipient Consumption, Hcrofulous Tuberculosis, Salt
Tea. by th<
Thi s day for all hereafter choose we holiness or sin;
P o r k , by the barrel;
R h e u m , Miamemrtrnatlon, W h i t e s , Chlorosis, Liver
Even now from starry GerUlm, or Ebal's f l o u d y crown.
Hams and Shoulders, by the 100 l b s . ;
Complaints. Chronic Headache*, Rheumatism, I n We call the dews of blessing or the bolts of c a r s i n g down.
Prints, a choice assortment, by the 1 tc
y all for which the Martyr* bore their agony and s h a m e ;
t e r m i t t e n t Fevers, P i m p l e s on the P a c e , i c .
Flannels;
y all the warning words of t r u t h with which the p r o p h e t s
Mosquito Bars, by tho piece;
of GKXEKAL DEBILITV. whether the result of acute
Nails, by the keg, assorted;
disease, or of the c o n t i n u e d diminution of nervous and musSalt, by the barrel;
i t c i r f a i n t a n d trembling beams "across the Slackness of the cular energy from nervous complaints, one trial of t h i s reCoffee, by the 30 to 100 lb*.;
storative has proved successful to an e x t e n t which no descrip('.round {-offer, by the 20 to 50 lbs.;
Past:
And In the awful name of Him who for e a r t h ' s freedom died. tion nor written attestation would render credible. Invalids
Butter Cracker*. 30 lbs. t o bbl.;
O h , y e P e o p l e ! o h , my Brothers! let us choose the righteous
Hard Bread;
so long bed-ridden an t« have become forgotten In their own
.Side!
Boston Biscuit:
neighborhoods, have suddenly re-appeared in the busy world
Soda Cracker?:
So a o U ! the N o r t h e r n pioneer go joyful on his way,
if
Just
returned
from
protracted
travel
in
a
distant
land.
Pl]>e*, by the b o x ;
T o t * d Penobscot's w a t e r s to Ban Francisco bay,
Pigs, by the d r u m ;
An4 make the rugged places smooth, and sow the vales with Some very signal instances of t h i s kind are attested of female
Brooms, bv the dozen;
grain.
Sufferers, emaciated victims of apparent marasmus, sanCurrants,
by the 'in lbs. to Jialf b a r r e l :
And bear, with Law and Liberty, the Bible in his t r a i n ;
guineous exhaustion, critical change!., and that complication
Prunes, by the 20 to loo lbs.;
The mighty West shaU bless the Bast, and sea shall answer
Dried Apples, by the 100 lbs or barrel;
of
nervous
and
dyspeptic
aversion
t<>
air
nud
exercise
for
sea.

(«un
Caps,
by the 11)00;
And mountain u n t o m o u n t a i n : PK AMI Gov, FOB W« AKE F a i l
which the physician has no name.
Shot, by the bag.
In N m v o r s A r r r c r i o N S o f all kinds, and for reasons faHANNAH. LAV A CO.
Tiger Chnsc by Baboons.
Traverse City Nov. 30, 18H0.
miliar to medical men, the operation of this preparation of
T h e following Account of a t i g e r c h a s e i s e x t r a c t e d
iron must necessarily tic salutary, for, unlike the old oxides. I
r||ITK GOOI)8f r o m the N o r t h L i n c o l n S p h i n x , a regimental p a p e r p u b it Is vigorously tonic, without being e x c i t i n g and o v e r h e a t - j y y c a m b r i c ,
din and linen E d g i n g :
lished a t G r a h a m ' s T o w n . T h e w r i t e r , a f t e r a l l u d i n g t o
J n g ; a n d gently, regularly aperient, even In the most ohsti- •
Inserting
"
icing, real T h r e a d ;
h i s r p o r t i n g e x p e r i e n c e s of all kinds, a n d in all q u a r t e r s
.... . . .
Edge and Inserting;
nato cases of costivenes* without ever being u gastric p u r g a - '
of t h e g l o b e , d e c l a r e s t h a i h e n e v e r witnessed so norel or
Muslin, < unbric and piqua setts of Collars and Sleeves:
tive,
or
inflicting
a
disagreeahle
sensation.
intensely e x c i t i n g a c h a s e a s t h a t a b o u t t o b e d e s c r i b e d :
muslin A tine Maltese hand-wrought Collars:
In t h i s latter property, a m o n g others, which makes It s*
Muslins- •Nainsook. Book, Swiss and C a m b r i c ;
" N o t l o n g a g o , I .spent a f e w d a y s at P o r t B r o w n , a
•t; J a e
small m i l i t a r y p o s t on t h e b a n k s of t h e G r e a t F i s h R i v e r , remarkably effectual and p e r m a n e n t a remedy for P i t a s , upon
.... .. Cambric and Nainsook:
w h e r e m y f r i e n d W . w a s s t a t i o n e d . O n e e v e n i n g , as m y which It also appears to e x e r t a distinct and specific action,
Wash Blond: Embroidered Curtain*;
f r i e n d a n d I w e r e returning h o m e a f t e r a s o m e w h a t fa- by dispersing the local t e n d e n c y which forms them.
Brilliant* -, from Is. to 30c;
In DvsrEPSt*. innumerable as are its cause*, » -ingle box
t i g u i n g d a y ' s b u c k s h o o t i n g , we w e r e s t a r t l e d b v h e a r i n g
Linen, I.inen Cambric and hem stitched H'dkV,:
Printed bord, printed and plain Gent's. Handkerc
t h e m o s t e x t r a o r d i n a r y n o i s e n o t far f r o m us. I t s e e m e d of these Chalybeate Pills has often sufficed for the moat haChild's printed, plain and hem P i t c h e d linen HM
a s if all t h e d e m o n s in t h e infernal regions h a d b e e n un- bitual cases, including the a t t e n d a n t ('OSTIVXNKSS.
N a p k i n s lloylc*Pillow-Case Cotton;
chained, a n d were amusing themselves by trying t o frightI n unchecked DIAKHIIOEA, even when advanced t o DTSKNLinen Table'Covers, bv the pattern or y a r d ;
• u u s p o o r m o r t a l s b y t h e i r h o r r i d yelling. \ \ e s t o o d in TKRT, confirmed, emaciating, and apparently malignant, the
Marseille?, printed and p l a i n ;
Linen, Linen D i a p e r ; P i q u a Binding;
b r e a t h l e w e x p e c t a t i o n , n o t k n o w i n g w h a t could pos- effects have been equally decisive a n d astonishing.
I.inen and Cotton Bosoms—some very nice;
sibly bo t h e causo of t h i s d i a b o l i c a l r o w , w i t h all s o r t s of
In the local pains, loss of flesh and s t r e n g t h , debilitating
Marseille* y u i l t a — n i c e ;
s t r a n g e c o n j e c t u r e s flashing in o u r minds. N e a r e r a n d cough, and remittent hectic, which generally indicate I s c i Tape Trimming, for ladii
n e a r e r t h e y e l l i n g a n d s c r e e c h i n g a p p r o a c h e d , a n d presladies' skirts and u n d e r clothing.
y Mi.'
1 th- •
nd It
J. this
medy h
r Cos*
ently t h e causo b e c a m e v i a b l e t o o u r a s t o n i s h e d e y e s . —
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
friends and physicians, in several very g r a t i f y i n g and inter |
. 30. 18C0.
y
S o m e t h r e e o r f o u r h u n d r e d y a r d s t o o u r right, u p o n t h e
e s t i n g instances.
b r o w of a small hill, a s p o t t e d l e o p a r d ( c o m m o n l y called
OM
ME
E lS T I C S F O R W I N T E R O P I 8 « 0 In S c n o m u i r s T r i U H W i o s t s , this ncdicated iron has had ; 1 ~ \ O
in t h i s c o u n t r y a t i g e r , t h o u g h m u c h smaller th«
and gray twilled and plain F l a n n e l s ?
far more than the good effect of the I
White, pir tk a n d B»b Hoy plain Flannel*;
l o r d of t h e I n d i a n j u n g l e s j c a m e in view, b o u n d e d a l o n g
if the well known lis- j
aunci*, brown, slate and bleached;
w i t h all t h e s p e e d a n d e n e r g y of d e s p a i r , w h i l e close be- preparations of iodine, w i t h o u t any
Sattinets. F. A M. Casslmeres. S h e e p ' s G r a y ;
h i n d h i m followed a n e n o r m o u s p a c k of b a b o o n s f r o m bilities.
Fain v and black Caxsimeres;
100
coniidenUy
Invited
I
The
attention
of
females
cannot
bi
whose t h r o a t s proceeded the demoniacal sounds that, had
Kentucky J e a n s , Duck. D e n i m s ;
Apron a n d m i n e r ' s ch>-ck, Stripes;
a few seoonda b e f o r e , so s t a r t l e d us. O u r e x c i t e m e n t in to t h i s remedy and restorative, In th« canes peculiarly affect- j
S h i r t i n g print* and fancy i>|iirting Flannels;
t h e c h a s e , a s y o u m a y suppose, w a s intense. O n went ing them.
-ukDorski "
In RIIKI'MATISX, both chronic and inflammatory—in the !
t b o t i g e r , m a k i n g f o r t h e river, t h e b a b o o n s following like
Black
loth*;
latter,
however,
more
decidedly—it
has
been
invariably
well
avenging demons, and evidently gaining g r o u n d y i o n
t h e i r n e a r l y e x h a u s t e d foe, t h o u g h t h e i r e x u l t a n t yells reported, both as alleviating pain and r e d n c l n g t h c swellings •
gee mod e a c h m o m e n t t o i n c r e a s e ltis t e r r o r a n d s p e e d . — and stiffness of the j o i n t s and muscles.
52
. ::o, 1 SCO.
T h e y r e a c h e d t h e s t r e a m , tbe; t i g e r still a f e w y a r d s in
In ISTEBMITTBKT FKCKHS It must n e c s s a r i l y be a great

S

a d v a n c e , and, w i t h a t r e m e n d o u s b o u n d , h e c a s t himself
into its m u d d y waters and made for the opposite b a n k . —
T h e n e x t m o m e n t h i s p u r s u e r s in a d m i r a b l e c o n f u s i o n ,
w e r e » t r u g g l i n g a f t e r h i m , a n d as t h e t i g e r (now f e a r f u l l y
e x h a u s t e d ) clombered on t h e land again, tbo largest and
s t r o n g e s t of t h o b a b o o n s w e r e c l o s e a t h i s heels, t h o u g h
m a n y o f t h e p a c k ( t h e old, t h o y o u n g , a n d t h e weakly,)
w e r e s t r u g g l i n g in t h e w a t o r . I n a f e w m o m e n t s all h a d
p a s s e d f r o m o u r s i g h t b e h i n d t h e b r o w of t h e o p p o s i t e
t a n k ; b u t t h e i r i n c r e a s e d yelling, n o w s t a t i o n a r y b e h i n d
t h o hill, t o l d u s t h a t t h e t i g e r h a d m e t h i s d o o m , a n d t h a t
their s t r o n g arms and j a w s w e r e t e a r i n g him limb from
l i m b . A s t h o e v e n i n g w a s f a r a d v a n c e d , a n d w e w e r e still
s o m e miles f r o m home, w e d i d n o t c r o s s t h e r i v e r t o b e
i n a t t h e d e a t h ; b u t n e x t m o r n i n g , a few b o n e s , a n d scatt e r e d f r a g m e n t s of flesh a n d skin, s h o w e d w h a t h a d b e e n
t h e t i g e r s f a t e . O n o u r return h o m e w e w e r e told b y
some D u t c h g e n t l e m e n t h a t s u c h h u n t s a r e n o t u n c o m m o n
w h e n a t i g e r is rash e n o u g h t o a t t a c k t h e y o u u g b a b o o n s ,
w h i c h o f t e n h a p p e n s . A l l t h e s e c r e a t u r e s f o r miles r o u n d ,
a s s e m b l e a n d p u r s u e t h e i r e n e m y w i t h r e l e n t lets f u r y t o his
d e a t h . S o m e t i m e s t h o c h a s e lasts f o r d a y s ; b u t i t i n v a r iably closes w i t h t h e d e s t r u c t i o n o r t h e t i g e r — a s t r i k i n g
i n s t a n c e t h a t t h e i d e a of retribution is n o t confined t o m a n
•lone."
I t may b o a consolation to " stuck u p " people, whose
g r e a t e s t b o a s t is t h a t t h e v h a v e n e v e r e n g a g e d in any useful e m p l o y m e n t ; t o bo t o f d of t h e following f a c t s ;
W a s h i n g t o n w a s a s u r v e y o r a n d former.
G r e e n was a b l a c k s m i t h .
W a r r e n was a physician.
Sumplcr was a shepherd.
M a r i o n was a f a r m e r , a s w e r e also P u t m a n , A l l e n a n d
Stark.
H a n c o c k was a s h i p p i n g m e r c h a n t .
T r u m b u l l was an a r t i s t
A r n o l d , w h o , t h o u g h a t r a i t o r , was a b r a v e man a n d a
g o o d g e n e r a l , was a bookseller a n d d r n g g i s t
H e n r y Cloy was a miller's a p p r e n t i c e .
Harrison was a farmer.
Filltnorc was a clothier.
Hamlin was a printer.
D o u g l a s was a c a b i n e t maker.
L a s t , b u t n o t least, A b r a h a m Lincoln w a s a r a i l s p l i t t e r .
M a n s h o u l d rather o c c u p y h i s f a c u l t i e s in c o m p r e h e n d i n g t h e t r u t h s a n d o b l i g a t i o n s a n d p o s s i b i l i t i e s of t b e
p r e s e n t lite, in rightly e s t i m a t i n g t h e s c o p e a n d c l a i m s of
t h e p a s s i n g h o u r , t h a n in c u r i o u s l y j r f y i n g a f t e r remote
s e c r e t s w h i c h b e a r n o p r a c t i c a l p a r t in d e c i d i n g h i s d a i l y
h a p p i n e s s o r in m o u l d i n g his final destiny.
T h e p a s t w a s infinitely m o m e n t o u s while w e w e r e in i t ;
t h # f u t u r e will b e so w h e n wo a r e in i t ; b u t n o w t h a t w e
a r e here, a n d t h a t life, w i t h i t s e x p e r i e n c e d realities, a n d
w i t h i t s o f l e r i n g possibilities, is h e r e , t h o p r e s e n t alone
s h o o l d b o r e g a r d e d a s really of c o m m a n d i n g i m p o r t a n c e

remedy and energetic restorative, and its progress in the n>
settlements of the West, will probably be one of high renov
and usefulness.
"So remedy has ever been discovered in the whole hi*to
medicine, which e x e r t s such prompt, happy, and fully i
itntive effects. Good afUietite. complete digestion, r a p
acquisition of strength, with an unusual disposition for HI
ive and cheerful exercise, immediately follow its use.
P u t up in neat flat metal boxes c o n t a i n i n g 50 pill*, pri
50 c e n t s per b o x ; for salc.y d r u g g i s t s and dealers. Will
nt f r e t ' t o any address on receipt of the price.
All lette
rders, etc., should be addressed to
It. B . L O C K E K C o . , G e n e r a l Agents,
2My

j Q O

Ft'l.l, LINE OF CHOICE FALL
nd English makers, from T cents
i|; choice American print* De l.aim-s;
i r g h s : French Merino**; all wool He Inline*; Mohairs;

t.'OODS—
J j \RR EE S M
H ttOOl

fully selected; Balmoral and knit s k i r t s ; Ladies' vests
drawers; hoop skirts,wool hoods, undcrsleeve*. Ac..: priuto b u r g h s : Silk Vulvas; choice printed wool De Laines
flannels for Zouave J a c k e t s .
HANNAH. LAY A CO.
ND
J J OOOO TT 88 A
AN
I S H O E S , — M E N ' S BOOTS, SHOES,

20 CEDAR ST.. NEW YOKE.

NTLEMEN'S CLOTHING AND WTUBHIING GOODS.
Business, Sack and Fancy Coats and \ eats;
Black. Fancy and Union Pants.;
Summer Coats. P a n t s andV est*, a full line, la • »
Very L a t e s t S t y l e .
White, Fancy, Check and stripe S h i r t s ;
^
Gentlemen's l . i m u . Leopold and Byron Collars
Overcoats, a full line;
Kent J a c k e t s ;
Seamless Coats and OvercoatsBlue and White Overalls;
Kenty and Plannel Drawers;
Flannel a n d Knit Shirts;
Suspenders a n d Gloves;
India Rubber and Oil Overalls and L e g g i n a ;
Wool, Cotton and Union Socks;
Black and Fancy Silk C r a v a t s ;
Gingham. Flag and Turkey lied Handkerahiats
Silk Pocket a n d Neck H a n d k e r c h i e f ! ;
Pocket Knives, Razor*. Strops.
Lather Boxes and Brushes,
Tobacco Boxes a n d Pouches.
Compasses, Rules, 1 and 1 feet.
H A N S All. LAY A CO
Traverse City. Nov, SO. 1S60.
«

.YANKEE NOTIONS—
L
C o m p a r e s , twezers. toy watches;
Watch guard* and fob c h a i n s ; '
Fancy and compass « a t c h keys;
Gun caps G. I). Cax and water proof;
Razor strops, assorted:
,
Shawl pins, necklaces, ear drop*;
Breast pins, assorted, bracelets, wafer?:
Kid, bead and leather purses;
Leather bags, for ladies' use:
Wallets, porte monaie*. indellible ink :
Cologne, rose oil, bear's oil;
Prince of Wales, kiss-me-quick and Windsor M i p :
Almond, honey, sun-tlower and Yankee «uap;
Silver soap, for cleaning silver warv, l c . ;
Thermometers, leather t e l l e :
Fancy, morocco and silk belt>;
Carpet binding, snnft boxes.
Tobacco boxes, a complete a s s t . some \ e r y floe;
Pumpkin, pomegranate, heart and atrawberry t i a t r i c s .
Shaving boxes, m c e n hsum pip**:
Shawl pins, assorted k i n d s ;
Crumb, cloth, hair, nail, tuoth, scrub, blacking, horse.
broom and paint brushes;
Dead shot katharion, t r i c o p h e r o u s ;
Measuring tapes, very superior and reliable;
Pocket c o m p a r e s , of be*: m a k e r s ;
A f t w silver watcher—good time keepers;
W r i t i n g detiks, portable fancy work-boxes, f o j ladles.
HANNAH. LAY A CO.
Traverse City. Nov. 30. lS'iti.
1)

J a y n e s ' Pills;
J a y n e s ' Alterative;
Jaynes' V e r m i f u g e :
Avres' Cherry P e c t o r a l ;
Rheubarh; C u d b a r ;
Mexican L i n i m e n t ;
P e r r y Davis' Paia Killer;
Carbonate of Vagnesia;
Reed ft C u t l e r s Pulmonary Balsam:
Bands' Sarvaparilla;
Sawyer's Ext. Bsrk for Fever and A g o t ;
Kennedys' Medical Discovery;
Sugar Lead;
Gum Guiac;
Hose W a t e r :
Castor Oil;
Epsom S a i l s ;
Sulphur;
Lac Sulphur (for Halr-dve;)
Cod Liver Oil;
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30,1*60.
call the attention of t h i s community u .
t h i n g of all others in which they should be and c o n s e q u e n t l y
are interested, to w i t : that n G o o d L i g h t is one of th'e
greatest desideratums t " be obtained—and that a f t e r C a r c fttl E x p e r i m e n t , an article has been introduced and d e m o n s t r a t e d b e y o n d a q u e s t i o n o f d o n b t . to 1* t h *
BEST, CHEAPEST. SAFEST. MOST ECONOMICAL and
EQUABLE light yet known, (ga» only excepted.) Such a n
article we have the pleasnre of Introducing in this c o m m u nity, and which, witn

Lamps, Shades and Fixtures,

we now have on exhibition and for sale, and of the VERY
BEST qualitv. Call and inspect our KEROSENE I.AMl'H.
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
Traverse City, Nov 30, I860.
St

Broom*. Pails, Tulm, Washboard*.
Scrub, Shoe, Clothes and Whitewash Brushes,
U d l e s . Looking G l a r e s , Carpet Tacks, Bath Brick.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Traverse City, J u n e 1, IsCO.
it

YOU WANT WHISKERS?
DO Y O U W A N T

DO YOU

WANT

WHISKERS*

DO YOU

WANT

A MUSTACHE?

BELLLNGHAM'S

n d Strainers,
its. Tea Fort, Dippers, Skimmers. Ac.
HANNAH. LAY A CO.
'. Nov 30, iseo.

|

A MUSTACAE?

C h i l d s ' Cack*. Shoe*. II
U d i e s ' seamless *pg tie
Seamless Bellmorul an>

j

MmiVreaUong leg Sho.
Men's India rubber Ion

CELEBRATED

STIMULATING ONGUENT.

Fisli Hook*. Gilling twine
Trolling Hooks of variou
Sinkers, Cane Poles, Ac.

Men's very nice scamle

j

raverse City. Nov. SO, 1 »

Traverse City. Nov. 30,
HANNAH, LAY A CO.

For the Whiskers and Ilair.

T

HE SUBSCRIBERS T A K E P L E A S U R E IN ANNOl'NG- j
ing to the Citizens of the Uuited Statee. that they have i
obtained the Agency for, and are now enabled to offer'to tbe 1
American public, the above justly celebrated and world-renowned article

T h e S t i m u l a t i n g Oii<ruent

I s prepared by Dr. C. P. RBLUMUUAM. an eminent physician
of London, and is warranted to b r i n g out a thick set of
W H I S K E R S
OR
A M U S T A C I I E ,
in f r o m three to six weeks. This article ig the only one of
the kind used by the F r e n c h , and in I-ondon and I'aris it is
in universal use.
It is a beautiful, economical, s o o t h i n g , y e t stimulating componnd. acting as if by magic upon the roots, causing a beautiful growth of l u x u r i a n t hair. If apnlb'd to the scalp. It will
cure baldness, and cause t o s p r i n g u p in place of the bald
spots a flno growth of new h a i r . Applied according to direction*. it will t u r n red or towy h a i r to dark, and restore
gray hair t o its original color, leaving it soft, smooth and
flexible.
The " O s o f K v r " is an lndis|>en»ib!e article in every
gentleman's toilet, and aftef one week's use they would not
f o r any c o n s p i r a t i o n be without it.
The subscribers are the only Agents for the article in the
United States, to whom all orders must lie addressed.
P r i c e 0%s DOLLAR a box, and Postage IS cents.
A box of the "ONGVKXT" will be sent t o a n y who desire it,
by mail, securely packed, on receipt of price and p»stage,
($1.15.) Apply t o or address
HORACE L HEGEMAN A C O .
P i r o o w n , Ac..
15
2 i William S t r e e t , New York.

Half. I

Spn

it Rule*

r File*.
S'uil.s. Square Horne Cards.
C o r n -Combs and Horse Brushes,
Trap* of various kind*.
Shot el* and Tongs. Nut Crackers. Bird Cage*.
Skates. Sleigh Bella. Coffee Mills. Ac. Ac.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
>.1*0.
T r a v e r s e City. N o .
Flat. r<

G

R O C E R I E S , A c . — . s C G A R . TEA. COFFER,
udles
and ei
Mustard.English and F r e n c h p r e p a r e d ;
Soda. Cream Tartar. Ginger, Baking Powder.
alarums. S t a r c h . Vermacilli, Hops,
T'olwcco, Snuff. Garden Seeds,
Bag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt. Glue, Alnm,
Lamp and Lard Oil. Castor Oil.
Indigo, Yellow Ochre, Chalk. Camwood,
Fluid. Molasses, Syrup. Vinegar.
Beans, Pork. Meal. Flour. Oatmeal. Feed. Bran.
Beef. Hams'and Shoulders, Codfish,
Hard Bread, Butter Crackers, Lard,
E x t r a c t Lemon, Vanilla. Rose, Peach. Pine A pnle.
H A N N A H , LAY" A C
Traverse City. Nov. SO. ls&O.

B

L,
F o r saleby
Traverse City, Nov. 30,18W.

H A N N A H , LAY A CO.

O I I E E T I R O N FOR SUGAR PANS—large aire;
ii
'• Pail S u g a r Kettles;
30 Gnllrrn Sugar Kettles;
c.O GaBon do
do. a full assortment.
HANNAH. LAY A CO.
Traverse City, Dec. 14. 1860.
2-y

«• City, J a n . lo. l s « i .

HANNAH, LAY A CO.

D

E L A N D ' S N A L E H A T l ' X — T H E B I S T ARTICLE
in use—for sale in Traverse City only bv
H ««K-,
HANNAH,
LAY A CO.
Trnverso City. Dec. i t . ISIIO.

* City, Dec. 14. lxco.
Paper, and Buff Curtaining. Bordering. Ac.
HANNAH, LAY A CO.
Traverse City. Nov. SO, IWo.
51
'SELECTED

AH ERE TO GET A NICE. W E L L
iortment of Good*? If not, call on
H A N N A H , LAY A CO.
SJ

Traverse City, No •-30,1R60.

UN WORKERS, SHOE P I N C H - '
. Spoke Shave*. Spoke Augurs, Small bright Iron
Chains for Trap*.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
Traverse City. Dec. 14, 1SC0.
2-y

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Newsprint

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  1. http://localhistory.tadl.org/files/original/d1d2fdaf9925a3c6a34c57cdbd3a1e7a.pdf