Dublin Core
Title
Grand Traverse Herald, February 08, 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
1861-02-08
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-02-08-1861.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
i
T n 7m_' f K "'
VOL: III.
N O . lO.
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I I I A Y , F E B R U A R Y ft, 1861.
its
to an unconstitutional purpose. A class of politiciani | Argentine Confederation, Loo Choo, Japtn^Brunsw.ck.
of New England set up this theory and attempted to prac- Persia, Baden, Belgium, and Paraguay. NevtrCbelff
tice upon it in our war with Great Britain. Mr. Jefler- \ the United States, within their entire existence under
S P E E C H OF HON. W H . I I . 8 E W A R D ,
T r a r e n c City, Grand Traverse County, Michigan, | Delivered in tbe U. 8. Senate anuary 12tb, 1861. son did not hesitate to say that States must be kept with-1 the Federal Constitution, have had flagrant wart with cB
in their constitutional sphere by impulsion, if they could , Iv four States, two of which were insignificant, power*
j Mr PRESIDE-VT, Congrees adjourned
sunimor amid not be held .there
. by
.- attraction. Secession was then hclu : on the coast of Barbary, and have had direct hoetilitie •
M'O R G A N B A T E S ,
to be inadmissible in the face of a public enemy. But j amounting to reprisals, against only two or three tr.orr
. EDITOR JISD rKorsirron.
, auspices of National aBuodaoce. contentment, tranquil-11®
so iu all and they are now at peace with the whole world. If th*
it)' and happiness. I t was re-assembled this winter in if it is untenable in one ease, it is necessarily
•«!!
TKBMU.
other*.
I
fully
admit
the originality, the sovereignty, , Uuion should be divided into only two confederacies,
the,presence of derangement of business and disturbance
« n . Ool'.sr M < f i f t y C M U r o n n n . p t y i b l . *W*rt»bl» la « ' M "
A 4 , » r t : « c m c n u Inaartcd (or O u Dollar p<r «qu»rj f u n l l n w ] fcr the of public as well as private credit, and in the faco of se- and the independence of the several States within their . each of them would need to make as many treaties f * ; ?
3 o i WMrtlnn. u i i w e n i j - C r * c e n utorM e * • • b o w i a e a t IwrOon.
Ttirty
. u » m l » o i s « o u - * 1 0 for an* UJ«U>. »S) far Ibroc «<iu*rT»;
for
Utf •
ditious combinations to overthrow the Union The alarm sphere. But I hold the Federal Government to be equal- ; huve now ; and. of course, would be liable to give •*» rya•
u d f V ) for one column. L»r»l ujrrnlfmrau
»l
r . l f i prrarm is appaling; for union is not more the body than lib- ly original, sovereign and independent within its sphere. i0\ causes of war a.- we do now. But wo know, from the
4 b y U«r; fifty c o m . per «W) of 100 wordo.farIbo B r * ln»«rtkm. s o d
- - « T . c m u for « « h tuhwqiicBt. I'try
O j o r f C o a o u * word. F l « v n
erty is the soul of tbe nation. The American citizen And the Government of the State can no more hbtolvc [sad experience of other nations, that disintegration, ,brcc
rlihont rain. SO par c o s t oddod Rnlo «nd I n n * • * » . double price.
has been accustomed to believe the. Republic immortal the peoplo residing within its limits from allugiancu to | begun, inevitably continues uutil cvou*tbc greatest etf.piT"
OK>I • d v o r t t M m c s K n a s i bo poidfor» W c i l y In * l ? » » c <
He shrinks from the sight of convulsions indicative of its the Union, than the Government of the Uniou can ab- crumbles into many pnrtv Each confederation th^t fcfcait
All Kinds #f Job Printing Neatly and Eijditiwsly'EieflM sudden death. The report of our condition has gone over solve them from allegiance to the State. The Constitu-' ultimately arise out of the ruin bf the Union will liave nathe seas, and we who have so long and with so much tion of the United States, and the laws made in pursuance rcs^ity for as many treaties as we now have, and will ir
complacency ttudied the endless agitations of society in thereof, are the supreme law of the land, paramount to j cur liabilities for war us often as we do now, bV breaking
C H A R L E S H. H O L D E N ,
the Old World, believing ourselves exempt from such dis- all legislation of the States, whether made under the con- UICIIL It is the multiplication of treaties, and the want
turbances. now, in onr turn, seem to bo falling into a mo- stitution, or by oven their orgauic conventions. The j of confederation, that make? war the normal conditio'.'
Union can be dissolved, not by secession, with or with-1 of society in 'Western Europe and Spanish America —
j meiitous and disastrous revolutioo,
TAX AND GENERAL AGENT*
I 1 know how difficult it is to decide, amid so many and out armed force, but only the voluntary consent of tbe It is uuion that, notwithstanding our world-wide intcrNORTIIPORT,
i so various couuself, which ought to be and even what people of the United States, collected in the manner pro-11 course, inafces peace the habit of the American jieople
I will not descend so low as to ask whether new eonfe<!
GRAND,TRAVERSE COUNTY. MICHIGAN.
can be done. Certaioly, however, it i-> time for every scribed by the Constitution of the United States.
Congress, in the present case, ought not to be so im- j eracies would be able or willing to bear the grievous exOffice Second Door South of Onion Dock.
21 - Jv j Senator to declare himself L therefore, following tbe ex• j ample of tbe noble Senator from Tcunessec, [Mr. J ohn- passive. It ought, if it can, to redress any real griev- pense of maii.tainint: the diplomatic relation* which oao
*~
. C. H . M A R S H ,
l son,] avow my adherence to tbe Union in its integrity, anccs of the offended States, and then it ought to supply i not be dispensed with, except by withdrawing from forj and with all its parts, with tny friends, with my party, th® President with all tho means necessary to maintain j eign commerce.
i with my Stale, with my country, or without either, as the Union in the full exhibition and discreet exercise of: Our Federal Government is better a Mo to avoid gi*
,11 >•
yp
I they may determine, in every event, whether of peace or its authority. Beyond this, with the proper activity on j ing just causes of war than scveruiconfederacies, l»ecauw'
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
of war, with overy consequence of honor or dishonor, of the part of* the Executive, the responsibility of saving | it can conform the action of all the States to compacts
T r a w t e City, Grand Traverse County, Michigan. life or death Although I lament the occasion, I hail tho Union belongs to the people, and they are abundant- j It can have only one construction, Ad only one trihuri'
Office in Dwelling House.
32-ly
"
i to pronounce that construction of every treaty. Local
with cheerfulness the duty of lifting up my voico among ly competent to discharge it.
I propose, therefore, with great deference, to address ana temporary interests and passions, or ]>cn>oual cupiddistracted debates, for my whole country and its inestimamysclf to the countiy upon the momemtous subject, ask-1 ity and ambition, and drive small confederacies, or Slate.,
T. J. R A M S D E L L
ble Union.
hitherto the exhibitions of spirit and resolution hero, ing a hearing, not less from the people within what are i more easily than a great republic, into indiscreet viola-_
as elsewhere, have been chiefly made on the side of die- called the seceding, than from tnoso who reside withiu I tious of treaties.
asn
The Uuited Stales bein£ a great and formidable powunion. I do not regret this. Disuniou is so unexpected the adheriug States.
s o L t c r r o u IN C H A N C K H Y ,
Union is an old, fixed, settled habit of the American ; IT. can always secure favorable and satisfactory treaties
and so uunatural that it must plainly reveal itself before
NO. 4 FIRST STREET.
its presence can be realized. I like best, also the cour- people, resulting from convictions of its necessity, aud j Indeed, every treaty we have was voluntarily Wade. Small
Manistee. Mlchifisn.
therefore
not
likely
to
be
hastily
discarded.
The
early
,
confederacies,
or States, must take such treaties as they
age that rises slowly under tbe pressure of severe provocaiiou. If it be a Christian duty to forgive the strauger States, while existing as colonies, were combined, though i cun get. and give whatever treaties ure exacted. A h i
MORGAN BATES,
even t«evcnty times seven ofTeuscs, it is the highest patri- imperfectly, through a common allegiance to the British initiating, or even un unsutisfactpry treaty, is a chronic
'
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
otism to endnre without complaint tho passionate way- Crown. " When that allegiance ceased, no one wns so . cause of foreign war.
of wars resulting from unjustifiable can
wardness of political brethren so long as there is hope presumptuous as to suppose political existence compatible . The chapter
T BAY ERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
, J :in cas^of division, amplify
with disunion; and therefore, on the sr ' day "that they jses, would,
— " , ! r " itself it projvor
that they may come to a belter mind.
I think it is easy to pronounce vhat measures or con- declared themselves independenti they proclaimed them- i fiou to the number of new confederacies, and their trritaliuct will not save the Union. I agree with the honor- selves :dso confederated States. Experience in war and | bililv. Our disputes with CSreat Britain about Oregon,
1776 to 1787, only convinced thetn of the i th2 boundnrv of Maine, the patriot insurrection in Cnn.if
able Setialor from North Carolina [Mr. Clingman] that in peace from
MORGAN BATES
ssily of
c converting that loose Confederacy into a more j da, and the Wand of Sau Juan; the border strifes bclis* <i|>en«d an Office at Travfrae City, Grand TraverstsC"., mere elogiums will not save it. Yet I think as prayer necessity
xt and
an jierpetual Unioa They acted with a cool- j tween Texas and Mexico, tho incursions of the late Wi!brings us nearer to God, though it cannot move'him to- perfect
Michigan, for the transaction of a
conduct of those J, liani Walker
_ 7 S —into ,Mexico and Ceutral America;. all these.
wards us.*60 there is healing and saving virtue in every ncss very different from tho intemperate muuuui
General, Agency business.
who now on one side threaten, and tho.se who ontheotb- were CUM-S in which war was preveuted only by the linThe United States Land Office is located ut this placc; and word of devotion to the Uuion that is spokeu, and in eve- er rashly defy disunion. They considered tho continuance pcrturbabiliU' of the Federal Governmellt.
particular attention will lie paid to locating Laud Warrant, ry aigh that its danger draws forth. I.'know, at least, of the Union as a subject comprehending uothing^ess
This Government gives not only fewer causes of war,
investing monev in Government Lands, imparting informa- tual, like virtue, it derives strength from every irrevertion rt'latlve to" the general features, resources and advan- ent act that is committeed, and every blasphemous phrase than the safety and welfare of all the parts of which tbe whether just or uujust, than smaller confederacies would;
i •p i of the Grand Traverse eotintiV, the payment of taxes, that is uttered against it.
country was composed, and the fate of an empire in ma- J but it always has a greater ability to accommodate thetn
1
»:id the transaction of-Any Agency businos* with whicli.be
The ~Union
' 'cannot* bo
* saved by mutual criminations j ny respects the most interesting in tho world I enter I by the exercise or more coolness and courage, the use of
our In- entrusted.
HBFKHtsSCK*.
ling onr respective share of responsibility for the I upon the subject of continuing tho Union now, deeply more various and more liberal trteaus, and the aisplav, if
concern;
Hon. Whitney Jon»», Auditor (ietwral. i
Ohavtoa W. trailer, K»q.
„
<
uiviuii evils. He whose conscience
acquits him will nat-1 impressed with the same generous and loyal conviction, need be, of great force. Every one kwws how jilac.v
present
cons^i
Uoiu
Hnjrsrd, A U o n r t y G n x r o L < n ,
ii.
urally be slow to accuse others whose co-operation he i How could it be otherwise, when, instead of only thir- i ble we ourselves are iu controversies with Groat Baitain
Jlcrald Office. Travepc City. Npv. 3. 1 ^ .
^
.^S $ J needs. History only can adjust the great account.
| teen, the country is now composed of thirty-three parts; France and Spain ; and vet how^Kactlntr we have been
A continuance of the debate ou the constitutional pow-1 and the empire embraces, instead of only four millions, in our intercourse with New Granada, Paraguay and . *n
Juan de Nicaragua.
er of Congress over the subject of SIivery in the 'Ierri-1 no less .than thirty millions of inhabitants.
Mr. President, no ouc will dispute our forefather.1
tories will not save the Union. The opinions of parties j The founders of tho Constitution, moreover, regarded
aqd sections on that question have become dogmatical, t tho Uniou as no mere national or American interest— maxim, that the common safety of all is the safety of each
and it is this circumstance that has produced the exist- J On the contrary, they confessed with de«p sensibility that of the States. While Ihev remain united the Federal
I F R Q > T 8TREKT, NKAK COl'KT HOl S f c )
•rnmcnt combines all the materials,
and all the force.
ibg alienation. A truce, at least during the debate on | it seemed to them to have been reserved for the poople
.
'
TRAVERSE CITY. jIlCIIIGAN.
the "Union, is essential to
reconciliation.
] of this country to decide whether societies of men are of the several States; orgunize their defenses, on one gen
Tho Union cannot bp saved by proving that Secession i really capable of establishing good government upon re- | oral principle; harnioniies and assimilates them witb ofl«
T H I S OLD ESTABLISHED H O T E L , THE FIRST
1 Hi Traverse'City,) situated ou Front Street, in the viuiii- is illegal or unconstitutional Persons bent on that fear- flection mid choice, or whether they are forever destined | system; watches for them with a single eye, which i'
itvotthe Court Hoaso and public offices, is utill open for the ful step will not stand long enough on forms of law to be to depend for their political constitutions on accident and | turns in all directions, and moves all agents under the
reception, of the traveling public. The Proprietor returns dislodged ; and loyal men do not nee<f such narrow ground fotce. They feared, therefore, that their failure to con-1 control of one Executive head. A nation so constituted,
hit hearty thanks for the liberal patronage lie has received, to stand upon.
•
tinue and perfect the Union would be n misfortune to the is safe against assult or even insult.
.
and assures tVpublic that no pains will hfc spared to make
I fear that little more will bo gained from discussing nations. How much more, sir, would its overthrow now j W ar produces always, a speedy cxhanslion of taonex
M« guesU comfortable. His chfcrgts' will correspond with
1
the right of the Federal Government to coerce seceding be a calamity to mankind!
i a,, d a severe strain upon credit . l*he treasuries
ihe time*.
Upod accomodations for Horses and Cattle.
Mil
States into obedience. If disunion is to go on, tbisqucsSome form of our Government is indispensiblo here as ; credits of small confederacies would often prove madction will give place to the more practicable one, whether elsewhere. Whatever form we have, every individual quale. Those of the I nion are always ainii.e.
any seceding States have a right to coerce the remaining j citizen aud every State must cede to it some natural rights, | I have thus fur kept oat of view the reJatiohs which
members to acquiesce in a dissolution.
\ to invest the Government with the requisite power. The | must arise between the confederacies themselves. T at**
1 dread, as in my innermost soul I abhor, civil war.— i eimple question, therefore, for us now to decide, while'j would be small and inconsiderable nations bordering op
I do not know what the Union would be worth if saved , laying aside all pique, passion, aud prejudice, is: whetb- ..each other, and therefore, according to all political phi
" L O C A T E D AT D E T R O I T , MICH.,
bv the use of the sword. Yet,- for all this. I do not agree er it conduces more to the interests of the people of this j losopby, natural enemies. In addition to the many treaECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT with
"*
"
* with a desire to avert that great calam- country to remain, for the general purposes of peucc and j ties which each must make with foreigu powers, and tb>
those
who,
suite oi room", prepared expr«*iilT fortireir use. in Merity, advise a conventional or unopposed separation, with war, commerce, inlaud and foreign, jiostal communica- causes of war which they would ^givc by ^violating them
rill Block, corner of JeaVrsou and Woodward Avenues.
A iti-hoUmhip issued from Detroit folic#'. «ill bo good a view to what they call a reconstruction. It is enough lions at home and abroad, the care and disposition of the each of tho confederacies must also maintain treaties with
in Cleveland, Ohio: BuflUio, N. Yr; Albaiiy. N. Y.: Chicago, for me, first, that in this plan, destruction goes before re- public, domain, colonization, the organization and admis- all the others, and so be liable to give tbcm frequent 'of111.; l'hiUtilvlphia. l'a.: Su Louis, Mo., anil N'. ^• City.
construction ; and seconaly that the strength of the vase sion of new Slates, and generally, the enlargement of em- fense. They Would necessarily have different interests re
J. II. GOLDSMITH, Resident Principal at Detroit.
in which the hopes of the nation are held consist chiefly pire, one nation under our present Constitution, tbnn it suiting from their establishment of differed policies of
H. I'. PERR1N, Spencerlan I'Atunn.
would be to divide themselves into separate coufedera- revenue, of mining, manufacture, and navigation, of imin its remaining unbroken.
TUITION IN ADVANCE.
migration. and perhaps the sla^y trade. Each would
Perpetnal Scholarship pood in all our Colleges, including
Congressional compromises are not likely to save the cies or States.
with
Unsiness Penmanship, $it).
Our country remains now as it was it n ^ - ^ o m p oitised
s e d j stipulate
stip
. . . foreign
- .natious for advantages peculiar t«
Unioa I know, indeed, that tradition favors this form
Penmauship alone.25lessons,%&: six months, evenings.SlO. of remedy. But it is essential to its success, in any case, not of detached and distant territories, but of one whole i itself and injurious to its rivals.
f
•»* Oor Standard of Penmanship, is the good old Spenwell-conuected and fertile region, lying within thetetnpe- j If, indeed, it were necessary that the Union should he
that
there
be
found
a
preponderating
mass
of
citizens,
so
serian.
The ill081 thorough and praclic.al and truly popular Col- far neutral on the issue which separates parties, that they rate zone, with climates and soils hardly more various broken up, it would be in the lost degree haportant th-**
legsfti Amerira. Nearly fourthonsand students have entered can intervene, strike down clashing weapons, and compel than those of France or of Italy. This slight diversity the new confederacies to be formed should be as nearly
*inc« their esMbliflimcut,
which Is the best evidence of their an accommodation. Moderale concessions are not cus- qnickens and amplifies manufacture and commerce. Onr as possible cqnal in strength and power, that mutual fear
favor with the public.1
and mutualre»|HHt might inspire them withcaution again.-'
For further Information call at College Rooms, or send for tomarily asked by a force with its guns in battery ; nor rivers and valleys, as improved by art. furui.-h us a sys- mutual offense. But such equality could not be long main
new Catalogue of 80 pages. For spccimcus of penmanship, are liberal concessions apt to be given by an opposing tem of highways nnequafed iu the world. The different
tained:
scale
forms uofi labor,
l u u u i , iif
i eslaver}"
i u i t i j were
" i n not
n u i jiervcrted to
. » j purposes
* - . |#v.-.«
. .
. one
— confederacy would arise in the
.
i t of poenclose letter stamp. Address.
force not less confident of its own right and its own IUIIIM
BUY ANT. STRATTON. A Co..
of political umbition, need not constitute an element of j litiial importance, and the other would view it t henceAt either of the above Cities. strength. I think, also, that there is a prevailing convic- strife in tho confederacy.
/pre
»forward with envy. and a;-prehension.
.Jealousies wouel
tion
thut
legislative
compromises
which
sacrifice
honestOut this ont for future reference.)
SO-lv
Notwithstanding recent vebcmeiu expressions and man-1 bring ou frequent ami rcta.ialory wars, and all these warly cherished principles, while they anticipate future exigencies, even if they do not assume extra constitutional ifestations of iutoleranco in some quarters, produced by. from the jicculiar circnmstanees of the rrrjfcderacitpowers, are less sure to avert imminent evils than they inten* partisan excitement, we are. in fact a homogen-. would liave tlie nature and character of ci vil war. Dis*^
are certain to produce ultimately even greater dangers. eons people, chiefly of one stock, with assessioos well us-; lution. therefore, is. for *he jicopic of this ceur.tr*. p«J' D R . C H U R C H I L L ' S DISCOVERY.
Indeed, Mr. President, 1 think it will be wise to dis- similated. We have, practically, ouly one language, one I jietual cjvii war. To mitigate it and obtain occasions,
Winchester's Genuine Preparation of the c h e m i - card two prevalent ideas or prejudices, namely: First, religion, one system of Government and manners and rest, what elm- could they accept but the <-^>tem of ad
cally Pure Compound of the
that the Union is to be saved by somebody in particular; customs common to all. Why, then, shall we not remain 'justing the balance *>f power which has obf cned :n r.u
' rope, in which the few strong nations dictate the verand secondly, that it is to be saved by some ennuing and henceforth an hitherto, one people?
ThefireC*"objectof every human society is safetv and | terms on which all the others shall !>o content to lire,
insincere compact of pacification. If I remember rightly, I said something like this here so long ago as 1850, security, for which, if wed be, they will, and I hey must , When this hat .-ful system should fail at last, foreign na• of LIME and SODA,
sacrifice every other. This security is of two k'tids; one . tious would intervene, now In favor of one and then in
Origlaallv discovered and prescribed by Dr. J. F. Oiirr.cnii.t. and afterwards in 1854.
The present danger discloses itseir in this form. Dis. exemption from foreign aggressions and infue'iee; the aid of another; and thus our country, h'.iv.ngcxpel.eda
of Paris as a Specitic Remedy for
relapse in';.contented citizeus have obtained political power in cer- other, exemption from domestic tyranny ami red lion. ^ j Kuro[iean IK>WI s from the continent '
nd, like ftah
Foreign wais come from cither violations of treaties .an iigg"*gi 1 form i.f colonial c
tain States, and they are using this authority to overdomestic violence. The Union has thus far, proved Turkey, India and China bccoi _• the tueatrv of transathrow
the
Federal
Government
They
delude
themselves
Price—Two Dollars a Bottle.
with a belief that the State power they have acquired itself mi almost perfect shield against such war.-. The lantie intervention and rapacity.
r
If. however, we jrant to th" new confederacies ar CTp H E EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS OBTAINED IN ALL enables them to discharge themselves of allegiance to United States, contiuually enlarging their diplomatic acX the stage* of Pulmonarv Disease by Dr. Churchill's new the whole Republic. The honorable Senator front Illi- quaintance. have now treaties with Frame, the Nether- ••iniition from complications among each oth-.-r ami with
Treatment—the 1IYP0PH0SPHITES OF LIME AND SODA nois [Mr, Douglas] says we have a right to coerce a State, lands, Great Britain. Sweden. Prussia, Spain, Russia, foreign Stales, still there is too much reason to believe
—removes all remaining doubt as to the Inestimable value of but we cannot The" President says that no State has Denmark, Mexico. Brazil, Austria, Turkey. Chili. S:am, that not OR"' of them could long maintain a Republican
this Discovery. Consumption is ao longer to lie regarded as
a right to secede, but we have no constitutional right to Muscat Venezuela Peru, Greece, Sardina, Equador, form of Government. Universal suffrage, and the . aban Incurable malady.
. . .
Many hundreds of physicians have already adopted this make war against a State. The dilemma results from Hanover, Portugal, New Granada, Hesse Cassel, Wnr- sence of a standing army are essential to the Republican
treatment with almost Invariable success. Let no Consump- an assumption that those who. in such a case, act against temburg, China Bavaria Saxony. Nassau. Switzerland, system. Tho world ba» yet to sec a single self-^stainin?
tive delay a moment to try it. It Is their last hope!
the Federal Government, act lawfully as a State; although Mecklenburg, Scbwerin, Guatemala, the Hawaian Is- State of that kind, or even any confederation of sucH
For sale by
"
MORGAN BATES.
States, except car owa Canada le&is on Great Britain
31
Herald Office, Traverse City. "manifestly they have perverted the power of the State lands, San Salvador, Borneo, Costa Rica Bremen, the
ifraberst $fralif,
.
I
7110 U n i o n
^
Dangers.
E V E R T >KJDAY. * T
Attorney Catrasedcr ani) Solicitor,
Attorney anb Counsellor at £ato,
A
Xttornaj 'aiil Counstllor 111 Sato,
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
R
lro
TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,
W I L L I A M .FOWLEJ
f r S Spte & io.'s \ '
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
R
(
CONSUMPTION CURED!
I I Y P O P H O S P H T PES
CONSUMPTION!
m.
confederacies? ThOAmericac man- temper, have been j o mil
it to tb* changes of society
not unwillinglv, and
itssriand is guarantied
tacle. I h a v i seen it enter aa an- juSion that it d * i e s ii .
rations of empiri J
~A
csted mooarchial 8ta . Our owo experiment _
.
thly, 1 hold myself r**dy bow, as always bcrctolite mine an. JUl tke world wofder- tions and altos evmi «t iatqffei
far been raoceajfal ;
1 by thficoatittal addition
to vote.for any properly fcnartfcd laws which shall
it, arid tafted of i t Salvos 81 artillery, from fort* o«rthrow by Stile authorities or. Intervention of t! .
new 8tates, the '
each of-the Member* of the
d and reduced. No Obe, W
lipping in fte harbor, saluted its flag. Prince# Federal Government" Cousi<Jerablc masses, even in tbe bo deemed necessary to prevent mutual invasion of State*
Union is constantly .....
course, can foretell the way and manner ef travel; but and princesses and merchants paid it homage, and all the free States interested in the ouccess of these misrepresent-' by citizens of other States, and punish those who shall aid
history indicates with unerring certainty the end people btasmd it as a harbinger of hope for their own ations as a means of psrtiaan strategy, have lent their sym-1 and abet them.
which the Several confederacies would reach. Licen- ultimate freedom. I imagine now the same coble vessel pathy to the party claiming to be aggrieved. While the. Fifthly. Notwithstanding the argument of the gallant
tiousness wouk^rewfer life intolerable ; and tbev would again entering tho same haven. The flag of thirty-threo result of the election brings the Republican party necev J Senator from Oregon [General Lane], I remain of the
noooer or later purchase tranquility and domestic safety stars and thirteen stripes has been hauled down, and in sarily info tho foreground in resisting disunion, tbe pre opinion that physical bouds, such as highways, railroad,,
is. run .up, which flaunts the device of a judices against them which I have described, have depriv-1 riven and canals, are vastly more powerful for holding
by the surreodai of liberty, and yield themselves up to its place a
lono star or a palmotto tree. Men ask, " W h o is the ed them of the cooperations of many good and patriotic civil communities together than any mere convention.-,
the protection of military despotism.
Indulge* B$ r |iK In ode or two details under this head stranger that thus steals into our waters?" Tbe answer citizens. On a complex issue between the Ropabliean : though written on parchment or engraved upon iron. I
contcraptously
given
ia, " She comes from one of the ob- party and the disunionists, although it involves the direct I remain, tborefore. constant to my purpose to secure, if
Firat: It is.Qblj sixty day* since this disunion movement
national calamities, the result might be doubtftil; for the • possible, the construction of two Pacific railways, on*
began
those who arc engaged in it have can- scure republics of North America. Let us pass
Lastly, public liberty, our own peculiar liberty, must Republican party is in a large part of tbe Union. But on i of which shall connect the ports around the mouths of the
vaaed With portentous freedom the possible re-combinato live. And such n a direct issue, with all who cherish tbe Union on one I Mississippi, and tbe other towrjs on tbe Miasouri and thr
tions of the States when dissevered, and the feasible alli- languish for a time, and then ccase
liberty!
Free
movement
even
where
through
our
own
side,
and all who desire its dissolution bv force on the Lakes, with the harbors on our We?
rt estern coast
ances or these re-combinations with European nations—
If, in the expression of these views, I have not proposalliances as unnatural, and which would prove altimatcly land and throughout the worltf; free speech, free- press, other, the verdict would be prompt and almost unanim pestilential to society here as that of the Tlascalans free suffrage; the freedom of even" subject to vote on mous. I desire thus to simplify tbe issue, and for that ed what is desired or expected by many others, they wi.ll
witn the Spaniard, who promised them revenge npon their every law, and for or against every agent who expounds, purpose to seperate^ from it all collateral questions, and do me tbe justice to befieve that 1 am as far from having
administers or executes Unsuitable and jealous confed- relieve it of all partisan passions and prejudices.
suggested what in many respects would have been in haraaciont enemies, the Aztecs.
I consider 4he idea of the withdrawal of the GulfStatas, mony with cherished convictions oT my own. I learned
Secondly. Tlie Disunion movement arises portly out eracies, constantly apprehending assaults without and
of a dispute over tbe common domain of the United States. treason within, formidable only to each other and con- and their permanent reorganization with or without others early from Jefferson that in political affairs we cannot alHitherto the Unton has confined this controversy within temptible to all besides; how lonir will it be before, on in a distinct confederacy, as a means of advantage to ways do what soems to us absolutely best Those with
the bounds of political debate by referring i t with all the plen of public safety, they will surrender all this in- themselves, so ecrtainly unwise, and so obviously impossi- whom we must necessarily act entertaining different views,
other national ones, to the arbitrament of tne ballot-box. estimable and unequaled liberty, and accept the hateful ble of execution, when the purpose is understood, that I have the power and right of carrying them into practice
dismiss it with the discussion I haw already incidentally We must be content to lead when we can. and to follow
I >ooa any one suppose that disunion would fransier tbe und intolerable espionage of military despotism?
And now, Mr. President, what isthe cause for this sud- bestowed upon i t
•hen we cannot lead; and if we cannot at any time do for
" hole domain to either party, or that any umpire than
den and eternal sacrifice of so much safety, greatness, hapThe case is different, however, in regard to the other ur countiy all the good that we wish, we must be satij
war would, after dissolution, be invoked?
piness
and
feeedom?
H
a
w
foreign
nations
combined,
subjects which 1 have brought, in this connection, before fied with doing her all the good that we can.
Thirdly. This movement arises, in another view, out
Uaviog submitted my own opinions on this great criof the relation of African slaves to the domestic popula- and arc they coming in rage Upon us? No. So far from the Senate.
Beyond a doubt Union is vitally important to the Re- sis, it remains only to say that I shall cheerfully lend to
tion or the countrv. Freedom is to them, as to all man- their being enemies, there is not a nation on earth that is
kind, tho chief object of desire. Hitherto, under the not an interested admiring friend. Even the London publican citizens of the United States; but it is just as the Government my best support in whatever prudent
Times,
by
no
means
partial
to
us,
savs:
important
to
the
whole
people.
Republicanism
and
Unoperation of tho Union, they have practicallv remained
yet energetic effcrts it shall make to preserve tho public
•• It is quitu possible that the problem of u Democratic ion are, therefore, not convertible terms. Republicanism peaeo and to maintain and preserve the Union ; advisi'/norant of the controversy, especially of its bearing on
themselves. Can we hope that flagrant civil war shall Republic may be solved by its overthrow in a few days is subordinate to Union, ns everything else is. and ought ing, only, that it practice, as far as possible, the utmo-t
to be—Republicanism, Democracy, every other political moderation, forbearance and conciliation.
wage among ourselves in their very presence, and vet that in a spirit of folly; selfishness and short-sightedness."
lias the federal government become tyranical or op- name and thing, are all subordinate—and they ought to
titty will remain stupid and idle spectators? Does history
And now. Mr, President what are tbe auspices of the
f'iniiah us any satisfactory instruction upon the horrors pressive; or even rigorous or unsound? Has the consti- disapper, in the presence of the great question of Union. country? I know that we are in the midst ef alarms
of civil war omong a people so brave, aud so intent in tution lost its spirit and all at once collapsed into a lifelew So far as I am concerned, it shall be so; it would be so, and somewhat exposed to accidents unavoidable in sea
purpose as we ore: It is a rare chimera which suggests letter? No; the federal government smiles more benig- if the question were sure to bo tried ns it ought only to sons of tempeatuoas passions. . W e already have disornn aggravation of these horrors beyond endurance, when, nantlv, and works to-day more beneficently than ever.— be determined, by the peaceful ordeal of the ballot. It der, and violence has be<run. I know not to what extent
< n cither side, there shall occur (be intervention of an The constitution is even the chosen model for the organ- shall l>e so all the more, since there is on one side prepar- it may go. Still my faith in the constitution and tho
edness to refer it to the arbitrament of civil war. 1 have Union abides, because my faith in the wisdom and viruprising ferocious African slave population of four, or ization of the newlv rising confederacies.
The occasion js tlie election of a Prcsidcnt|of the United Such faith in the Republican system of ours, that thcro ia tue of the American people remains unshaken. Coolness
>•:x, perhaps twenty millions?
Toe opraioiH of mankind change, and with them the States who is unacceptable to a portion of the people.—' no political good which I desire, that I am not content to calmness and resolution are elements of their character.
policies of natrons. One hundred year ago, all tho com- I state the case accurately. There was no movement of seek through its peaceful forms of administration, without They have been temporarily displaced : bnt they are remercial European States were engaged in transferring ne- disunion before the ballots which expressed that choice invoking revolutionary action.
appearing. Soon enough. I trust for safety, it will b«If others shall invoke that form of action to oppose seen that sedition and violence are only local and tempogro slaves from Africa to this hemisphere. To-day all were cast Disunion began as soon as the result was anthose States are firmly set iu hostility to the extension, nounced. The justification assigned was that Abraham and overthrow government they shall not, so far as it de- rary, and that loyality and affection to the Union are
mid to the practicc o'f slaver)-. Opposition to it takes Lincoln had been elected, while the succea of either bne pends on me, have the excuse that I obstinately left myself the natural sentiments of the whole country. Whatever
two forms: one European, which is simple, direct aboli- of three otlier candidates would have beeu acquired in. to be misunderstood. In such a case I can afford to meet dangers there shall be, there will be tha determination
tion; effected if need oc, by compulsion ; the other Ame- Was the election illegal? No; it is unimpeachable. Is prejudice with concilation; exaction with concession to meet them ; whatever sacrifices, private or public,
rican, which seeks to arrest the African slave trade, and the candidate personally offensive? No; he is a man of which surrenders no principle, and violenoe with the right shall ba needful for the Union, they will be made. I
resist the entrance of domestic slavery into the Territo- unblemished virtue and amiable manners. Is nn election band of pence.—Therefore, sir, so far as tho abstract feel sure that the hour has not come for this great nation
ries where it is yet unknown, while it leaves the disposi- of President an unfrequent or extraordinary transaction? question whether, by the Constitution of thp United to fall. This people, which has been studying to become
tion of existing slavery to the considerate action of the No; we nevor had a Chief Magistrate otherwise designat- States, the bondman who is made such by the laws of the wiser or better as it has grown older, is not perverse
States by which it is retained. It is tho Union that re- ed than by such election, and that form of choice is re- States, is still n man or only property, I answer that with- and wicked enough to deserve so dreadfhl nnd severe n
stricts the opposition to slavery in this country within newed every four years. Does any one even propose to in that State, tho laws on that subject are supremo; that punishment as dissolution. The Union has not yet accomthese limits. If dissolution prevail, whatguarauteeshall change the mode ofappointing the ChicfMagistrate? No; when he has escaped from that State into another, the plished what good for mankind was manifestly designed
there bo against tho full development here of the fearful election by universal sufferage, as modified by the Con- Constitution regnrds hifn as n bondman who may not, by by nim who appoints tbe seasons and prescribes tho
nnd uncompromising hostility to slavery which elsewhere stitution,^ tbe one crowning franchise of the American ony law or regulation of that State, be discharged from duties of States and Empires. No. sir; if we are cast
pervades the world, and of which tho recent invasion of people. To save it they would defy the world. Is it ap- his service, bnt shall be delivered up on claim, to the down by faction to-day. it would rise airain and reappear
prehended that the new President will usurp despotic party to whom his service is due. While prudence and in all its majestic proportions to-morrow. I t is the only
Virginia was an illustration?
Mr. President I have designedlv dwelt so long on the powers? No; while he is of all men the most unambit- justice would combine in persuading yon to modify tho Government that can stand here. Woe! woe! to the
probable effects of disunion upon tlie safety of the Ame- ious, he is, by the partial success of those who opposed acts of Congress on that subject so hs not to oblige pri- man that madly lifts his hand agninst it. It shall conrican people as to leave me little time to consider the his election, subjected to such restraints that he cannot vate persons to assist in their execution, and to protect tinue and endure : and men. in after timed, shall declare
other evils which must follow in its train. But practical- ithont their consent, appoint a minister, or even a police freemen from being, by abuse of the law, carried into that this jreneration, which saved tbe Union from such
ly tbe loss of safety involves every other form of public agent, negotiate a treaty, or procure the passage of a law, slavery, I agree that oil laws of tbe States, whether free sudden and unlooked for dangers, surpassed in magnacalamity. When'once the guardian angel has taken flight and can hardly draw a musket from the public arsenals to Stafos or slave States, which relate to this claSs of persons, nimity even that one which laid its foundations in the
defend his own pcrsoa
or any other recently coming from or resident in other eternal principles of liberty, justice nnd humanity.
everything is lost
What, thed, is the ground of discontent? It is that States, and which laws contravene the Constitution of the
Dissolution would not only arrest but extinguish the
greatness of our country, . Even if scpnrfitc confedera- the disunionists did not accept as conclusive, the argu- United States, or nnylawof Congress passed iiiconformity The Mlmla'jpui River Blocknded—A Batter)- Er«
rcted sit Vicksbarc—Outrages on 8leamb->at Right*.
•ijes could exist and endure, they could severally preserve ments which were urged in behalf of the sucessful candi thereto, ought to be repealed.
Mr. Branch, in his place in Congress, denied the teleSecondly. Experience in public affairs has confirmed
no share of the common prestige of tho Union. If the date iu the canvass. This is all. Were their owu arguconstellation is to be broken up, tho stars, whether scat- ments against him more satisfactory to his supporters?— my opinion, that domestic slavery, existing in nny State, graph report that cannon were planted on the bank of
tered Widely aparC or grouped in small clusters, will thence- Of course they were not: they conld not be. Does the is wisely left by the Constitution of tbe United States ex- the Mississippi to intercept passing steamboats. But
forth slied forth feeble, glimmering nnd lurid lights.— Constitution, in letter or spirit require or imply that clusively to the care and management and disposition of that report is true, nevertheless, as will be seen by the
Nor will great achievements bo possible for the new con- the arguments of one party should be satisfactory to the that State; and if it were in my power. I would not alter
federacies. Dissolution would signalize its triumph by other? No; that is impossible. What is the Constitu. the Constitution in that respect. If misapprehension of following: From th« XrarWf Aralanrtu, Jan. 17.
acts of wantonness which would shock and astound the tional remedy for this iuveitable dissatisfaction. Renew- my position needs so strong a remedy, I am willing to
Just above Vicksburg. by direction of Gov. Pettus, a
•world. It would provincialize Mount Vernon and give ed debate and ultimate rehearing iu a subsequent election. vote for an amepument to the Constitution, declaring that battery has been erected, and every boat hailing from
this Capital over to desolation at the very moment when Have the now successful majority perverted power to it shall not, by any future amendment be so altered as to North of Mason and Dickson's line is compelled to ronnd
the dome is rising over our heads that was to be crowned purposes of oppression? No; they have never before confer on Congress a power to abolish or interfere with to, and give an -account of themselves The Impcriol.
with tho statuo of Liberty. After this thcro would re- held power. Alas! how prone we are to undervalue priv- slavery in*anv State.
from this port, passed there dnrin? the night, and was
Thirdly. 'While I think that Congress has exclusive forced to land at th" behest of a twelve-pound shot fired
main for disunion no act of stupendous infamy to bo com- ileges bnd blessings. How gladly, how proudly, would
mitted. No petty confederacy that'shall follow tho Uni- tho people of any nation in Europe accept, on such terms and sovereign authority to legislate on all subjects what- across ber bows. Of conrse she was all right and went
as
we
enjoy
it,
the
boon
of
electing
a
Chief
Magistrate
ever, in the common territories of the United States; and on. The new Republic is goiug to work in earnest.
ted States can prolong, or even renew, the majestic drains of national progress. Perhaps it is to be arrested every four years by free, equal ana universal suffrage!— while I certainly shall never, directly or indirectly, give
r « m lh» JlraiphU Appeal. Jan. XT,
'becanse its sublimity is incapable of continuance. Let flow thankfully would they cast aside all their own sys- my vote to establish or sanction slavery in snch territories,
The orders of the Governor of Mississippi to place a
it be so, if wo have indeed' Dccome degenerate. After tems of government, and accept this republic of ours, or any where else in the world, yet the question what con- battery of guns at Vicksburg for the purpose of hailing
with
all
its
shortcomings
and
its
disappointments,
mainstitutional laws sholl nt any time be passed in regard to
Washington ami the inflexible Adoifts,' Henry, aud .the
steomers and causing them to land, have been complied
peerless Hamilton, Jefferson, and tho majestic Clay, tain it with their arms, and cherish it in their hearts! Is the territories, is, like every other question, to be deter- with, as we learn from one of the clerks of the Si mood*,
Webster, aud the acute Calhoun, Jeckson, aud the mod- it not the very boon for which they supplicate God with- mined on practical grounds. I voted for enabling acts in who informs us that four guns are placed ut the foot of the
est Taylor, nnd Scott, who rises in greatness audcr the out ceasing, and even wage war, with intermission only the cases of Oregon, Minnesota and Kansas, without be- bluff, a quarter of a mile above the wharf-boat; that while
burden of yeurs, and Fulton, aud Whitney, and Morse, resulting from exhaustion? How strango are the Jimcs ing able to secure in them such provisions as I would the Simonds lay there on ber trip up the river, blaakeet
in which we live! The coming spring season, on one side have prefered; and yet I voted wisely. So now, I am well
• havo all performed their parts, let the curtain fall!
ridges were fired to bring to and cause to hind tbe GlaWhile listening to tlieso debates I have sometimes for- of the Atlantic, will open a general conflict waged to ob- satisfied that under existing circumstances, a happy and diator, the Imperial and p . A. Tylar. and that it was
gotten njyself ip marking their contrasted effectsuporrthe tain, through whatever indirection, just such a svstcra as satisfactory solution of the difficulties in the remaining understood that if the snrontons were not attended to the
ours:
and
on
this
side
of
the
Atlantic
within
tlie
same
territories
would
be
obtained
by
similar
laws,
providing
page whs customarily stands on the dias before me, and
next gun would be shotted. The object of the suvcillancithe venerable Secretary wJ;o sits behind me. The youth parallels of latitude, it will open on fraternal war, waged for their organization, if such oriranization were other- has not been made known.
exhibits intense but pleased emotion in the excitoment in a moment of frenzied discontent to overthrow and an- wise practicable. If. therefore. Kansas were admittedas
rroa Uie Mrmpbte Krentef Ar*t„. Jan. IU
while at every irreverent word that is ottered against the nihilate the same institutions. Do men. indeed, li7eonly a State under the Wyandotte Constitution, as I think she
Cincinnati steamboat men have been thrown into a fc
Union, the eyes of the aged man are soffused with tears. for themselves, to revenge their own wrongs, or to gratify onght to be, and if the organic laws of all the other ter- ver from tbe Governor of Mississippi ordering cannon
Let him weep no more. Rather rejoice, for yours has their own ambition? Rather do not men live least of ail ritories could be repealed, I could vote to authorize the
and
a
military
company to Vicksburg to hail all Bteam
heen a lot of rare felicity. Vou have seen and been a for themselves, and chiefly for posterity and for their fel- organization and admission of two new States which should
boats passing.
part of all tbe greatness of your country, the taweriog low-men? Have the American people, then, become all inclnde them, reserving the right subdivisions of them
The Abolition journals of Cincinnati howl over it and
of
a
sudden
unnatural
as
well
as
unpatriotic
T
And
will
whenever
necessary
into
several
convicn
ent
States;
but
I
national greatness of all the world. Weep only Vou, and
are greatly incensed. We would like to sec them help
x-eep with nil the bitterness of anguish, whp. arc j « t they disinherit their children of the precious estate held .do not find that such reservations could be constitution- themselves.
-topping on tlie threshold of life; for that greatiiess^r- only in trust for them, and deprive tnc world of the best ally made. Without them, the ulterior embarrassments
From «H» Bnffaitt Courier
shes prematurely and exists not for you, nor for me, nor hopes it has enjoyed since the human race began its slow which would result from the hasty incorporation of states
In addition to the above, we have tbe nevs that a bat
and painful, yet needful and wisely appointed progress? of such vast extent «md various interests and character tery of sixteen thirty-two pounders has been erected at
for any that shall come after us.
Here I might close my plea for tbe American Union; would outweigh all the immediate advantages of such
The public prosperity! how could itsurvive the storm?
Memphis. The free navigation of tbe Mississippi is a
fte elements are industry in the culture of everv fruit - but it is necessary, if not to exhaust the argument at least measure.
right we have paid for and must have, come what will
But if tbe meosures were practicable, I would prefer a
mining of all tbe metals : commerce at home and on eve- to exhibit tho whole case. The disunionists, consciously
unable
to
stand
on
their
mere
disappointment
in
tbe
different
couree.
namely:
When
the
eccentric
movements
ry sea; material improvement that knows no abstacle
THK CHAMJJKTOS CUSTOM HOUSE.—By the statstics ar
of secession and disunion shall have ended in whatever companying the last report of the Secretary of 'be Trcn>,
and has no end ; invention that ranges throughout the cent election, have attempted to enlarge their ground.
'Jomnin of nature ; increase of knowledge as broad as the More than thirty years there has existed a considerable— form that end may come, and the angry excitments of the
though not heretofore a formidable—mass of citizens ii hour shall have subsided, and calmness once more shall nrr. it appears that the Costom House at Charleston. S
human mind can explore ; perfection of art as
human genius can reach; and social refinement working certain States situated near or around the delta of the have resumed its accustomed sway over tbe public mind, C., has already cost the National Government more than
for tbe renovation of the world. How could our succcs- Mississippi, who believe that the Union is less condu then, and not till then—one. two "or three years hence—I 82,000,000, although it is still unfinished, and more than
coni prorecute tn&e noble objects in the midst or bru- ivc to the welfare and greatness of those States than a should cheerfully advise a convention of the people, to be $.*>00,000 would be required to complete it. This is one
talizing civil conflict? What guarantees will capital in- smaller confederacy, embracing only slave States, would assembled in pursuance of the Constitution, to consider
of the baitding3 which tbe Seceders seized upon at the
vested for such purposes bnvc, that will outweigh the be. This ciass has availed itself of tbe discontents result- and decide whatever any and what amendments of tbe orpremium offered by political and military ambition?— ing from the election to put into operation the machinery ganic national law ought to be made. A Republican now outset of their movement and the Pelmet to flag now
I have heretofore been a member of other parties waves over it in triumph.
What leisure will the citizen find for study or invention, of dissolution long ago prepared and waifmg only for oci? a r t under the reign of conscription ; nav, what in- casion. In other States there is a soreness because of the exiiding in rov day—I nevertheless hold and cherish as I
Tlie Preadout elect will be escorted to Washington
n-rest in them will socielj fee! when fear and hate shall want of sympathy in the free States with the efforts of havfi always (lone, the principle tbot this government exhare taken possession of the national mind? L*t the mi- slaveholders for tho recapture of fugitives from service. istis in its present form only by the consent of tbegovern- by the Springfield (III.) Zouaves, in spite of threats com
source. This companv "is composed of young
ner in California take heed; for its golden wealth willbe- In all tho slave States there is a restiveness resulting from ed, and that it is as necessary as it is wise to resort to i j„_ f r o m
, ,
,
.
• sine tbe prize of a nation that can command the roost iron, the resistance which hn^ been so determinedly mado with- the'people for revisions of the organic law when tbe
fto
»bo bare for some monlf. p r t ton m i c r ,he infjet the borderer take care, for the Indian will again lurk in the Inst few years, in the free States, to the extension m u E . n d d . n w r a o r t t e S t a l ^ r i a i n l y t n . n s r f o d
powers
delegated
by
it
to
the
public
authorities.
Nor
I
stmctioo
of
Col.
Ellsworth, and in drill they are said to
t;ound his dwelling. Let tho pioneer cotne back into of slavery in the common territories of the Unitee States.
tne denser settlements/, for the railroad the post-road and The Republican party which cast its votes for the success- ought the suggestion to excite surprise. Government in • be fully equal to the genuine eriginal Zouaves.
... ,,
.
The telegraph udvancei not one furlong farther int<^ the fid Presidential candidate on the ground of that policy, ony form is a machine; this is the most complex one that,
R e
h a
I » b l ™ »nh«
" "I*™*1 " " " " "
'vilderncss. With standing armies consuming the sub- has been allowed, practically, no representation, no utter- tbe mind of man has ever invented, or tko U d of m i l i
rrance of our people «n the land, and our navy and our ance by speech or through tho press, in the slave States: has ever framed. Perfect as it is, it ought '.o be expect-11 inendfltion in behalf of Mr. Colfox as Postmas'.sr-Genercl
postal steamers withdrawn from tbe ocean, who will pro- while its policy, principles and sentiments, and even its ed that it Will, at least as often a3 once in a century, re- which has been transmitted to Mr. Lincoln.
-iDuru n
T
TODAY
> < ymuaxH^iriii. kriiro*- >
„ , V P « « 1 ! r t TY~,
Read the Following.
'
' man, latety excused himself for his present coarse, seen*
* i i l l B ™ °PP°* ili °'' <° 1 * Sooth. on tie grouid Ui<i tie
! secessionists deserted him, and if he had shown any farther
MORNING, F E B R U A R Y 8, MM.
.
t0 & v „
Thermometrical lteRistor.
|Bc4ns »<"» <***"';• ^ inptMhri fa
The Vice-President h u ordered the Secretary of the
Trsvo—City
u t . UM
1861.
7 A.M.
1 r. i .
Wednesday,Jan.23.. 9°abort fl - 2 1 s shore 0.
Thursday.. " 24..2*
-.34
1
Friday
- 25.. 18
«
-.20
"
rtsturiisy... " 26.. 3
«
..32
»
.^nday.... '• 27. .34
Monday.
29r.24
"
T u e * d a y . • • 39..22
"
44
Wednesday " 30..10
Thursday.. « 31.. 13
••
Friday..'. .Feh... 1.. I below
Haturday.. " 2.. 20 shove
Sunday
- "3..10
Monday...•,»
4.. 20
Tuesday..1-, f 5..24
..
..28
..10
..14
SNOW.—We have'a superabundance <>f snow.
more than three feet deep on the level.
!
Our columns have been so overburtheoed with long
Messages and speeches for several weeks past that we have
had little room for any thing else.
Now that wo are
through with them, we shall be enabled hereafter to furnish oar usual variety of miscellaneous, local and general
news matter.
-.
'
Tcr.—Prom present indications we shall be under the
necessity of sending to Detroit for a summer supply of ice.
We don't manufacture the article up in this " cold, bleak
mid inhospitable region." Navigation has not been
f lo*ed up to this time ; and if Grand ' Traverse1 Bay
should freeze over, it will not remain closed more than
two or three weeks.
Summary of Secession N e w *
Mr. Crittenden has made a speech in the Senate in
which he fook the position that the Union must be preserved at all hazzards, either by peaceable meansor force,
and that force used against the lawless citizens of a Government is not coercion of a State.: The speech was unexpected, .and created great sensation.
(Jeorgia has parsed the Ordinance of Secession, by a
rote of 208 to 89. A resolution was adopted to cohtinuo the preseut postal and reveuuo system until otherwise ordered, and also to continue all the federal officers.
A. H. Stevens and H. V. Johnson voted against Secession, but subsequently pigned the Secession Ordinance.
All the U. S- Senators from Florida, Alabama and
Mississippi, withdrew from the Senate on the 28th ult.
The Kentucky Legislature has passed a resolution by
a vote of 87 to 6, declaring in view of men and money
tendered by several Northern States to the General Government, that the people of Kentucky, uniting with their
brethren of the South, will resist such an invasion of the
soil of the South at all hazards and to the last extremity
The traitors have erectod batteries at Memphis and
•other points on the Mississippi river, and compel'sll
••teainboats from tbo North to come-to and give an ac•ciijht of themselves.
A boat from Fort Suropter has been fired upon from
(tho battery on Sullivan's Island, in Charleston harbor,
find ooe man wounded.
J e t t Davis is talked of as Piosident of the Southern
i S c ° " e t0„c0°U,'»e " " ' " S " > « ^
-ceded 8eoators, until the question whether their seats are
not, shall be determined by the Senate.
Even the South Carolina Senators, names are still called daily, the Senate never having received any official information of their resignation.
General Scott, it is said, has recently received information which increases his zeal to defend the Federal Capital. Governor Hicks, private secretary had an interview with him, the consequence of which has been an Increase to the force. In addition to the other United
States troops, three companies of the Flying Artillery will
be there on the Fourth of March.
IXPIANA U. S. SENATOR.—Henry S. Lane was inaugurated Governor of Indiana on the 14th of January, and
on the 17th he was elected by the Legislature U. S. Senator for six years from the 4th of March next He resigned the Governorship, and 0 . P . Morton, LieutenantGovernor, was sworn in as Governor.
AXI> B E N O T SATISFIED.
B I T COMB AND CONVINCE I O U I R L 1 OF
T H E rOLLOlTOVB P A C T S :
P I R S T . T h a t
Hitchcock, Campbell $ Bacon,
jVetr Arrangement. K
Groceries, Provisions, Dry Goods, Hard
EEP OONKTANTLY ON HAND A GENERAL AS
Kurtmsat of
TO THE PUBLIC
In Traverse City, and on att parts of
Grand 1 haverHay, we wor/J/i w X
pectfully announce
T
H
E
F
A
O
THAT WE HATE NOW MOVED INTO
Our New and Spacious Store,
Which we are Biting to repletion with ALL KINDS OP
Goods and Wares
wire, Clothing,
And. In fact, anvthing the wants of the country demand ,
which thay sell cheap for
R E A D Y
P A Y ,
believing the nimble dia^e better than the lajy alilling.
S B C O K I X > L Y , That
They pay the highest market nriqc for all kinds of Frodsaa:
Wheat, Rye, Corn, Oats, Ltnckwheat, Beans, Pans.
Barley i O rasa-Seed, P o u l t r y , PorV and Beef,
(Dressed or on foot,) Nhk'ngles a n d CordWood.
TRAPPEIS will do well to give tht m a call before
FURS
elsewhere, as their Eastern arrangement* give skem an advantage over other buyers in the County.
T H I R D L Y ,
That
By the aid of experienced workmen, they have opened • t n
Mr. Collamer, of Vermont, has introduced a bill into
the U. S. Senate to authorize the President to declare which arc'adapted to the want* of the surrounding country
the ports in which forcible resistance to the laws of the
ytfc:. >
."
Union is threatened, no longer ports of entry for the and A1IE or MAY BE called for from time to time.
asp ABC rairAKED TO DO
United States, and also to suspend the mail service, until
such time as the officers of the law may safely discharge ' -We would briefly call the attention of the purchasing pub- of any. description, on short notice. Also keep on hsnd ait
assortment or
their duties,
- "v.?:" !
Iron, S a p P a n a , 16-30-60 Gallon Kettle*, Plows,
Axes, Hoes. Drag-Teeth, Sleds, Ox-Carts, OxThe Maine Legislature has passed the Joint Resolutions lic to the following
Yokes, Whiffletrees, See.
tendering the President all the resources of Maine, both
In short, nil kinds of P a n n i n g Implement*; snd will r »»
psrticulsr
attention to
in'men and money, for tho maintance of the Union and
P O I N T S .
the enforcement of the laws.
HO RUE AND OX-SHOEING.
WE HAVE A
•Timothy 0 . Howe, Republican, has bceh elected TJ
F O U R T H L Y , That
S. Senator from Wisconsin, for six years from the 41
A NEW
of March next.
Blacksmith Shop,
CUSTOM WORK,
SctctnK.—H. McAlpin, Esq., a lawyer, of Port Huron, committed suicide by shooting himself on the 2-ltlj
ult
A merchant in New York refused to soil fifty tous of
lead when he learned that it was destined for Florida.
The Union sentiment of North Carolina advanced the
Bonds of that State, in Wall st, from 74 to 80.
Mr. Holt baa been confirmed by the Senate as Secretary of War.
NEW STORE;
IN THE MAIX, A
N E W STOCK:
Propeller of Our Own,
The bill to admit Kansas into the Union has passed the
U . S . Senate.
Our Own Trade,
" D. B. 1)K LAND & Co.'s Saleratns, forever," shouted
Kate, as she ran up the stairs, followed by Bridget with
a freshly baked pan of biscuit in her hands. " De Land's
Saleratus forever." They were indeed tempting, and no direct to Chicago; thus giving ua GREAT ADVANTAGES
wonder that the girls were delighted with their first expcriinent with tbis favorite of housekeepers. ThisSalera- over any one having to PAY FREIGHTS.
tus is perfectly pure, healthful, reliable, and of uniform
quantity. Manufactured and for sale at wholesale by D1
Our Rents are Nothing.
B. De Land k Co., Fairport, Monroe Co., N. Y. Sold
also by all dealers.
METALLIC MILL,
for Shelling Corn, Grinding Corn and Cob, and all kinds ef
Coarse Grain* will be run expressly in a
CUSTOM TRADE.
For th« accomodation of the
P
A
R
M E R S .
S E E D GRAINS,
OP ALL KlfiDS, .ASI)
F E E D
MEAL.,
will be kept constantly on band and for sale by the lfXl It*,
or ton.
HITCHCOCK, CAMPBELL k BACON.
Traverse City Dec. 1; 1WK>.
My
NEW
STORE
AND
N E W GOODS,
Corner of Wakaxoo and N ago a nbe Sta.,
N O R T H P O R T .
Effect of Secasion on Commerce.
TJKlf
The Secessionists confidently expected that their moveTHE SUBSCRIBER HAS JUST RECEIVED HI6 WINTER
-A.bundant A d v a n t a g e s
Fort.MeRea, in Florida, has been invested and guns mert would produce great commercial distress in New
STOCK, CONSISTING OF
•mounted toy the allied forces of Florida,1 Alabama and York, and predicted that "grass would grow in its streets."
; .i/ FOR PURCHASING GOODS IX
Apprehensions
of
such
results
have
beeu
largely
felt
in
the
Mississippi.
D R Y
G O O D S ,
citv itselt
. Tho Governor of. Louisiana, in his Message to tho Legbut to the discomfiture of the Traitors, it is their own
islature on-the 22d January, says: " All hopes are at an Trade that suffers, instead of that of New York. They Neto- York, Boston, Cincinnati or Chi-end that tbe.diaunsioo between the North and tho'South have praoticaily closed the port or Charleston, and arc
cago.
Rearly-Made Clothing,
is to be heated. There is no longer any doubt of the pursuing a policy which is destroying business at Mobile
wisdom of (hat policy which demands that the conflict and New Orleans. The refusal of United States ClearanFrom onr long residence in the country we have become
ces, the doubtful authority of the Collectors to receive
shall come and shall be settled now."
duties, the.removal of buoys and lights, the obstructions
The Alabama Legislature has adopted resolutions re- placed in the channels, nil tend to turn away vessels from well acquainted wjth the wants-of tho public.
Which he offers cheap for Caah or Barter.
those ports and compel them to seek safer and more cerfilling their JlepreeeatatrVes in Congress.
And now wo have associated with us iu the Mercantile DeC. DAVIDSON, Agent.
CoL Hugec. of tke.army, formerly of South Carolina, tain profits in the harbors of the North. Hence ships
that nave heretofore traded at Soutern ports now go to
Northport, December SI, ^860.
M
- i ' m . * JX/ ! .
is the chosen leader-xif the traitors who contemplate an New York; and Southern produce, debarred of its usual
partment of our firm,
attack on Washington »City.
exit by sea, comes North by the Mississippi and the rail.
P. S — C A S H P A H ) FOR FURS.
Every effort will be made to shape the Southerp Gov- ways to be finally exported from here. The volume of
M R . . Sf. B A R N S ,
ernment aa soon as practicable, with a view of presenting exports from New York is now immense and increasing
NORTHPORT IS RISING!!
this cause. All branches of trade feel a reviving
•a formidable organization before the 4th of March. It from
impulse; specie is accumlating; stocks are rising, and a who fot sixteen years has been extensively engaged in a buis to be called the Confederacy of North America. The cheerful feeling again begins to prevade business circles.
T h i s is E v i d e n t ! S i n c e
present Constitution of the United States will be adopted, In fact the madness of the Secessionists is directly tend- siness whose requirements were of the same nature as our
L . M . & W . P . S T E E L E & Oo.
with an amendment extending -the period of naturaliza- ing to build up ihe trado of New York, which they exand Who has for several years purchased goods of the
pected to destroy. On the other hand stagnation, debt
HAVE INTRODUCED A LARGE AND THE
tion to twenty-one years.
BEST HOUSES in NEW-YORK and BOSTON, and who will
and distress rergn in seaports of the Seceding States, and
Jeff. Davis has been appointed Commander-in-Chief of must inevitably continue to do so as long as they lend ontlnue to do so forourfinn from time to time; thus «pONLY STOCK
the Mississippi forces,
themselves to the service of Treason.
j abling us to lay down our goods
[Albany Evening Journal.
Gov, "Brown, on the 24th 3 an nary, at tho head of 7(
As Low as amy House in Chicago;
iroops. demanded the surrender of the U. S. Arsenal at
and save to the consumer—first, TRAVELING EXPENSES: D R U G S & M E D I C I N E S
P R O B A T E NOTICE.
Augusta, Ga. II is demand was complied wi th, the troops STATE OF MICHIGAN.
)
second, LOSS OF TIME; and lastly and mainly, the ENORTO BE POUND IN THE COUNTY.
Coil NT V OF KM MKT. S
in charge saluting tho U. 6. flag before hauling it down.
MOUS AMOUNT necessarily adOed to cover HIGH RENTS
T A SESSION O F T H E P R O B A T E COURT
A t Pens&cola, Florida, the volunteers are engaged in
for the Countv of Emmet, bolden at Little Traverse, on and expenses of the Chicago merchant.
ALSO—\ eaoice v
We shall make an ESPECIAL EFFORT to keep so com
mounting and arranging their cannons, carpenters are Monday, the 14th day of January, in the year of our Lord
one thoupand eight hundred and sixty one ;
plete a stock that
making scaling ladders, and the utmost bustle prevails.
Preeent. Hcnty S. Graveraet, Jr., Jndge of Probate. In the
Any Dealers on the Bay
The United States steamer Wyandotte is anchored matter of the estate of Joseph Wa-wa-se-mah, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition, duly verified, of Helen will be enableil to purchase of us, in quantities to siHt, for |
Westward ofJFori Piekens, under-the guns of the F o r t Ne-bah-a-mo-qua.and A. J. Blackbird, praying, among other only a SMALL ADVANCE on COST and a commission for |
handling,
'
,
i
*•'**
./or the purpose, it is supposed, to assist Lieut Slimmer.
x
j T o t h e X«adies,
_
,.
AU pilots ha*re been notified thnt they may bring U. S, Thereupon it is ordered that Monday, the fourth day of
would
that owing to want of room wc have been I P
R
O
V
I
S
I
O
N
S
war vessels inside of the harbor, if a vessel carry a flag March, A. D. 1861, at ten o'clock, A. M.. be assigned for hear- we
*
ing said petition, and that the heirs at law of said deceased unable to keep many things in their line, which NOW, from (
of truce.
! IN WHICH THEY ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD.
md all other persons interested in said estate, are required our increased room, and the
Gov. Moore; Commander-in-Chiaf of the army and to appear at a Session of said Court, then to be holden at the Intimatepersonal acquaintance of our Mr. j
Probate Office, in the village of Little Travese, in said counnavy of Louisiana,:lhas issued orders to the Balize pilots ty,
Bams with the thousand ami one fie- i
G i v e TTs a C a l l !
and show causr, if any there be. why the prarer of the
j»ot to pilot any American vessel of war over the bar ot petitioner* should not he granted. And*it is further ordermands necessary to a Ladifs wants,
ed,
that the said petitioners, Helen Ne-bah-a-tnoqua and A.
N. B.—Physicinni* Prescriptions Cnrefnlly Com<lie mouth of the Mississippi, under the severest penal- J. Blabkbird,
tare TRY and keep ANY and ALL THINGS
give notice to tho persons interested in said we shall in fntui
pounded.
ties.
Estate, of the pendency of Mid petition ajd the hearing they may require.
L. 1L A MT. P. STEELE & CQ
thereof, by causing a copy of thin order to be published in
2&m
N. B. ANYTHING not in our regular line that Ladies or) Northport, Dec H, 18G0.
There is beyond question a strong increasing Union the Grand Traverse Herald, it being the nearest paper pub- citizens
may want, we shall hold ourselves in readiness to j
MORGAN B A T E S ,
i A I'"
•wntiment in Maryland. Most of the Representatives and lished to said Village, for three successive weeks previous to send for; and shall be mopt happy to do so at any and all j
Little Traverse, Jan. 14. 1861. times.
' •"
I
Senators from that State think it will be very difficult to said day of hearing. Dated
HENRY G. GRAVERAET. JR..
N O T A R Y iPTTBLIC,
H A N N A H , L A Y & CO- ,
9-jw
Judge of Probate.
A a g her into secession.
Traverse City Kay 2S, I860.
!
H e r a l d Ofliov, T r a v e r s e Citjr M i o h .
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
A
FAMILY GROCERIES
W\
Ds MOTT'S
,
i ' <L3WMW'ew»»e*»iV m«.to eight
^Bgarogaartef,,
pi
W
| TTkriTmh, Lay ft Co/s Ck?ltnnn. j Hannah, Lay & CO.'B Column.
l
^
*
T w e r # r a i n t o sigh o'er error* p a c t ;
...Tfc^Anit of aires or aonal
Onr aoIdler beard the threatening b i n t
W h a t t h o u g h their angry cry la fang
Acroaa the bowling wave,—
They stnltc the air with idle tongue
The g a t h e r i n g n o r m who tenure:
Enough of s p e e c h ! the t r u m p e t ring*:
Bo silent. D»tient. caliiv—
God help t h e m it tbe tempest Swings
The pine against the p a l m !
(
Onr toilsome r e a m h a r e made « s t a m v ;
Our strength has slept unfelt;
The furna c e Arc Is slow t v
flame
c
T h a t b i d s o u r ploughshares melt;
Tin hard to loae Qio bread they win
In spite of Nature's frowns,—
T o drop the iron thread* we apin
That weave onr w e b of towns.
To aee tbe rustling turbines stand
jBefore the emptied flames, To fold the arm» that flood the land
With river* fnwn their looms,—
R u t h a r d e r s t i l t for t h o s e who learn
T h f J r n t h forgot s o l o n g :
]
Vfben once the s H u n W r i n g paaSfon» burn.
The peaceful are t b « a t r o n g !
And save our brothers ere tbey ah rick J
" We played with n o r t h e r n flre!."
The eagle holds his mountain h e i g h t , - '
Revelations of a Slave Trader.
.HIE FATE or TUX GLQEIA. . . . .
...
'
TJie scenes d e s c r i b e d a s h a v i n g t a k e n plaoe on b o a r d
t h e c l i p p e r G l o r i a , with h e r d r u n k e n c a p t a i n a n d c r c w ,
a r t m a s t d r e a d f u l t o c o n t e m p l a t e . T h e t n b j o i o o d relates
t o t h e c a t a s t r o p h e o f t h i s vessel. T h c s m u g g l e r g o e s on
to My:
•"; » >
•• A n t t h i s was t o b e m y last t r i p o n ' t h e b l o o d stained
Gloria. H a r d l y w e r e we o u t a f o r t n i g h t bofore it was
discovered t h a t o a r roystering c r e w h a d neglected t o
c h a n g e t h e sea w a t e r , w h i c h h w j served as o u r ballast,, in
the l o w e r casks, a n d w h i c h o a j & t to h a v e been r e p l a c e d
w i t h f r e s h w a t e r in A f r i c p . W e w e r e d r a w i n g f r o m t h e
last a u k s , b e f o r e t h i s d i s c o v e r y w u s m a d e ; a n d t h e horr o r of o u r s i t u a t i o n s o b e r e d C a p t a i n H u t z . H e g a v e
o r d e r s to h o i s t t h e p r e c i o u s r e m n a n t a b a f t t h e m a i n g r a t ing a n d - m a d e m c c a l c u l a t e h o w Jong i t would sustain
r h e c r c w a n d c a r g o . I f o u n d '.hat half a gill a d a y w o u l d
hold o u t t o t h e S p a n i s h m a i n ; a n d i t was d e c i d e d t h a t , in
o r d t r t o save o u r c a r g o , w e w o u l d allow t h e slaves half a
j-ill, a n d t h e c r e w "a gill e a c h day. T h a u b e g a n a t o r t u r e
worse Uian d e a t h t o tlio b l a c k s . P e n t I n t h e i r d u n g e o n s
t o t h e n u m b e r of n e a r l y five h u n d r e d , t h e y s u f f e r e d cont i n u a l t o r m e n t . O u r c r e w a n d d r i v e r s w e r e unwilling t o
allow even, t h e half gill p e r diem, a n d q u a r r e l e d fiercely
o v e r thejr^QWU s t i n t e d nations. O u r c a r g o h a d b c e u s t o w e<tj90 t h e p l a t f o r m s c l o s e r t h a n , I e v e r s a w slaves s t o w e d
b e f o r e o r « n c e * I n s t e a d of l o w e r i n g b u c k e t s of w a t e r t o
t h e m , a s was c u s t o m a r y , i t b e c a m e necessary t o p o u r t h e
w a t e r . i n t o half-pint m e a s u r e s . T h o e o f a r t h o r e s t from t h e
g r a t i n g never g o t a d r o p , a n d b e c a m e r a v i n g m a d for
drink'. P r e s e n t l y , d i s e a s e s of different k i n d s a d d e d t o
t h e i r misery. F e v e r s a h d fluxes m a d e t h e air r e e k w i t h
poison; a n d d e a t h s followed so fast, t h a t in a s h o r t t i m e ,
a t l e a s t a h u n d r e d m e u a n d w o m e n w e r e shackled t o dead
p a r t n e r s . O u r c a p t a i n a n d c r e w a s well a s myself, d r a n k
h a r d , b u t t h i r s t a n d disease k e p t d o w n all licentiousness.
M a t t e r s g r e w w o r n , daily, f o r - t h e d e a d wore n o t t h r o w n
o v e r b o a r d , t u o f t h e H v l n g s e r v e d w i t h w a t e r , o r e v e n food,
e x c e p t t h e r o t t e n y a m s t h a t could b e reaohed w h o r e t h e y
lay.; A t last C a p t a i n R u i x o r d e r e d t h 6 h a t c h e s d o w n ,
a n d s w o r e h e would m a k e t b e r u u o n o n r r e g u l a r w a t e r
rations a n d t a k e t h e c h a n c e s of h i s s t o c k . T h a t n i g h t we
•-aroused, a n d satisfied, o u r t h i r s t w h i l s t t h e n e g r o e s suffocated b e l o w . N e x t m f l h i i n g c a m e a s t o r m , w h i c h d r o v e
us on o u r w a y a h u n d r e d k n o t s T w o d a y s a f t e r w a r d , B o l t a n d f o u r of t h e men wore
laken s u d d e n l y ill, w i t h a d i s e a s e t h a t baffled m y medical
k n o w l e d g e . T h e i r tongues swelled, a n d g r e w b l a c k ; their
flesh t u r n e d yellow, a n d in six h o u r s t h e y w e re d e a d . T h e
first m a t e w e n t n e x t a n d t h r e e o t h e r s of t h e crew, a n d a
b l a c k d r i v e r w h o m b o d y b c c a m e l e p r o u s w i t h yellow {pots.
I b e g a n to n o t i c e a s t r a n g e f e t i d smell, p r e v a d e d t h e vessel, a n d a l o w , h e a v y f o g : o n d e c k a l m o s t like s t e a m . —
T h e n the horrid'truth became a p p a r e n t Our rotten negros
w i d e r t hlee h a t c h e s h a .d wg e n.e r a t e a t hbo
e p li a g u e , a n d' i"t "was
a malaria, or death-mist; t h a t I saw rising. A t t h i s time
a S o a r m e u b n t t h r e e , a n d myself, b a d been a t t a c k e d ; a n d
-wc a b a n d o n e d t h e - G l o r i a , in h e r l o n g b o a t t a k i n g t h e
r e m n a n t of w a t e r , a s a c k of b i s c u i t a n d a r u m b r e a k e r ,
w i t h w h a t g o l d d u s t a n d o t h e r v a l u a b l e s wo could h a s t i l y
g a t h e r u p . W e l e f t n i n e of o u r late c o m r a d e s d e a d , and
five l y i n g o n t h e G l o r i a ' s d e c k . A f t e r r o w i n g f o r t w o
days, w e s t r u c k a c u r r e n t , a n d in t h r e e d a y s t n o r e w e r e
d r i f t e d t o t h e island of T o r t o l i a , ono of t h c ' L e c w a r d Isles.
" W e m a d e a l a n d i n g on t h e r e e f s , a n d w e r e p i c k e d u p b y
-on*e fishermen.
R
M
E
R
S
In 8 c R 0 F r u > t ' s Tt.-BiBCfLOSis.thls medicated iron has bad
far more than the good cflect of t h e most cnntiouslv balanced
preparations of iodine, w i t h o n t any of the well known liabilities.
The attention of females c a n n o t be too confidently invited
to t h i s remedy and restorative* in tbe cases peculiarly affecting t h e m . .
In RIIEVM \TISM. both c h r o n i c a n d inflammatory—in the
lattcf, however, more decidedly—it has l*ren invariably well
reported, both as alleviating pain ami r e d u c i n g the swellings
and stiffness of the j o i n t s and muscles.
In INTERMITTENT F^V^KS It must necessarily, bo a . g r e a t
remedy BD<1 onerjjetiorestorative, ar>lIts progress I n tlM new
settlements' of the AVcst, will probably lie o n c o f h r g h renown
and usefulness.
No remedy has e v e r lieen discovered in the whole history
of medicine", which exerts such prompt, happy, and fully restorative effects. Good appetite, complete digestion, rapid
acquisition of strength, with an unnsual disposition for active and cheerful exercise, immediately follow its use.
P u t u p In neat flat metal boxes c o n t a i n i n g AO pills, price
50 c e n t s per b o x ; for sale y d r u g g i s t s and dealers. Will lie
sent free t o any address On"receipt of the price. • All letters,
orders, etc., should be addressed to
R . H . L O C K E Ac C o . , G e n e r a l A g e n t * ,
27-1 v
20 C
.. X m
GRAY,
BLUE
5 Pail S u g a r Kettles:
30 Gallon S u g a r Kettles;
CO Gallon do
do. a full a s s o r t m e n t
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Dec. 14. 1860.
2-y
RUITS—ioo
BARRELS CHOICE WINTER APPLES
f o r sale by the barrel or buahel.
Cider by the barrel.
HANNAH,.LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov. 30, I860.
y.
U A L L O F 1 8 0 0 — C H O I C E WINTF.BFRUIT—1243AR
1
rels Apples, hand picked, f o r Winter use, for sale cheap |
by the "barrel
i r r e l or bushel
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e Citj-, Nov. 30, I860.
T
O F I S H E R M E N — W E H A V E ON HAND AN Ass o r t m e n t of seaming and watc
Fish Hooks, Gilling twine from 25
T r o l l i n g H o o k s of various
Sinkers,-Cane Poles, ftc.
HANNAH, LAY ft CO
T r a v e r s e City. Nov. 30, 1
J
U S T R E C E I V E D FROM NEW YORK, A SMALL
lot of very fine S p e c t a c l e s .
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
POISON.—Hall's J o u r n a l of H e a l t h says, if a p e r s o n
Traverse City, J a n . 10,1861.
6
s w a l l o w s poison d e l i b e r a t e l y , o r b y c h a n c e , i n s t e a d of
b r e a k i n g o u t i n t o m u l t i t u d i n o u s a n d i n c o h e r e n t exclamaH O I C E F R E N C H M E R I N O E S , BY THE PAT I
t i o a a , d i s p a t c h some o u e for t h e d o c t o r ; meanwhile, r u n
TERN, f o r $1 p e r yard.
t o t h e k i t c h e n , g e t h a l f # glass of w a t e r in a n y t h i n g t h a t
HANNAH, LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. N o v . 30,1860.
52
Is h a n d y , p n t i n t o it a t c a s p o o u f u l of salt a n d a s m u c h
g r o u n d m u s t a r d , s t i r i t a u i n s t a n t c a t c h a firm hold of
t h e p e r s o n ' s nose, t h e m o u t h will soon fly o p e n — t h e n
d o w n w i t h t h e m i x t u r e , a n d in a s e c o n d o r t w o u p will
Traverse City. Dec. 14, 1860.
come the poisoa
T h i s will a n s w e r in a l a r g e n u m b e r of
e s s e s t h a n a n y t h i n g else. I f b y t h i s t i m e t b e p h y s i c i a n
A R N E S S , SINGLE AND DOUBLE—an a s s o r t m e n t :
h a s n o t a r r i v e d , m a k e t h e p a t i e n t swallow t h e w h i t e of an
Lines, H a m e Straps, Hold-back Straps, Girths, Breast
e g g , followed b y a c u p of s t r o n g coffee, a s a n t i d o t e s for and Rein Snaps.
H A N N A H , I .AY ft CO.
a n y poison t h a t r e m a i n s in t h e s t o m a c h , b e c a u s e t h e s e
Traverse City, Dec.-14, I860.
'
J-v
p u r i f y a l a r g e n u m b e r of p o i s o n s t h a n a n y o t h e r accessible
article.
. . iculeR. School a n d Work Baskets, open round Work |
G e n e r a l S c o t t i s t h e l a r g e s t m a n in t h e A m e r i c a n ser- Baskets, Table mats, ftc.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO. |
vice. H e is six f e a t six i n c h e s tall, a n d w e i g h s t w o h u n T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30,1HC0.
52
d r e d a n d s i x t y pottnds.
l i e is s e v e n t y - f o u r y e a r s old, y e t
h i s h e a l t h i s g o o d , a n d his w h o l e Bystem i s a p p a r e n t l y rig. S p o k e S h a v e s Spoke A u g u r s Small bright I r o n !
o r o u s — m u c h of w h i c h is o w i n g d o u b t l e s s t o h i s v e r y C h a i n s for Traps.
H A N K AH, LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Dec. I t . I860.
3->
C
H
T
I
O
Q E S T L E * K « ' 8 C L O T H I N G AXI) Fl RVIftll-
N ! t \
? u * i n « M , * » k a n d 'Fancy. C o a t .
, and U n ^ n Pants.;
Summer Coats. P a n t s and V e s t s a full l i n t , ia Ike
Very L a t e s t S t y l e .
White. Fancy, Check and stripe l-hirts; .
Gentlemen's Linen, I x o p o l d acd Byron Collars
Overcoats, a full ltn»;
Kent J a c k e t s ;
t * u u l e * a Coats and Overcoats
Blue and White Overalli;
Kenty a n d Flannel Drawer*;
Flannel and K n i t S h i r t s ;
Suspenders and Gloves;
India Rubber a n d Oil Overalls and Legxin*;
Wool, Cotton and Union Socks;
Black a n d Fancy Silk C r a v a t s ; .
Gingham. Flag and Turkey Red U a n d k e r e h i c ' . ;
Silk Pocket and Neck H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Pocket Knives. Razors, Strop*.
Lather Boxes and Brushes.
Tobacco Boxes and Pouches.
Compasses, Rules, 1 and 2 fei v.
verse City. Nov. 30, lHCft.
H A S N A I I . LAY A CO
|»
Watch guards and fob c h a i n s ;
Fancy aud compass n a t c h keys;
Gun caps G. 1). Cax and water proof;
Kazor strops, a s s o r t e d ;
Shawl pins, necklaces, ear d r o p s ;
Breast piba, assorted, bracelets, w a f e r s :
Kid, bead and leather purses:
l e a t h e r bags, for ladies' u*e:
Wallets, porte nionait-s, indellibic ink;
Cologne, rose oil. War's oil;
P r i n c e of Wales, kiss-me-quick and W i n d s o r *is»f
Almond, hooey, suu-fio«er and Yankee s o a p ;
Silver soap, for cleuuing >ll\er war*. Ac.;
Thermometer*, leather belts:
Fancy, morocco and silk belts:
Carpet binding, snnfl" boxes.
Tobacco boxes, a complete ass'l. some very fine;
Pumpkin, pomegranate, heart and strawberry t n n t i f i
. Shaving boxes, mecrvhuuiu pipes;
Shawl pins, assorted k i u d s ;
Crumb, cloth, hair, nail, t*«ih, s r r u h , blacking, h»r»s
broom a n d paint l u u s h r s ;
Dead s h o t kathariou, t r i e o p h e r o u s :
Measuring U]M'S, very superior and reliable;
Pocket compasses, of best m a k e r s ;
A few silver vvatcbe.—good time-kcepcr»;
Writings desks, portable fancv work-bi.Xes, for ladiss.
H A N N A H , I.AY A CO.
•averse City, Nov. 30, IStti.
i!
W
HITE UOOD8—
Cambric, muslin a n d linen E d g i n g ;
Inserting and Flouncing, real T h r e a d :
Smyrna and cotton Edge and I n s e r t i n g ;
Muslin, c a m b r i c and piqua s e t t s of Collars and Sleeves:
Cambric, muslin A line Maltese hand-wrought Collars;
Muslins—Nainsook, Book, Swiss and C a m b r i c ;
Frenck skirt J a c o n e t ; J a c o n e t :
Cross-barred, Cambric and N a i n s o o k :
Wash Blond; Embroidered Curtains;
Brilliantcs, f r o m la. t o 3Uc:
Ninon, Linen Cambric and hem stitched H'dk'fs;
Printed bord, printed and plain Gent's. H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Child's printed, plain and hem stitched linen H ' d k ' f s ;
Napkins, Doyles, Pillow-Case C o t t o n :
Linen Table Covers, by the p a t t e r n or y a r d :
Marseilles, p r i n t e d and plain;
Linen, L i n e n D i a p e r ; P i q u a B i n d i n g :
Linen and Cotton Bosom.—some veryMarseilles Quilts—nice;
Pointed! Tape Trimming, for ladies' use
S o f t and heavy Muslin, for ladies' skirts a n d II
H A N N A H . LAY A (.
Travel p City. Nov. 30. lRfiO.
and fancy knit shirts; drawers, check, striped, fancy
a n d white s h i r t s ; Bosoms and collars, of all latest makes,
H A N X \ H . LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r e i City, Nov. 30.1BG0.
52
F
N
Pork, by the barrel;
Hams and Shoulders, by the 100 l b s . ;
Prints, a choice assortment, by the 2 to 10 piece*;
Flannels;
Mosquito Bars,by the piece;
Nails, by th« keg! assorted ;
Salt, by the barrel:
Coffee, by the 30 t o 100 lbs.;
Ground Coffee, by t b e 20 to,'SO I h s ^
Butter Crackers, 30 lbs. to hbl.;
Hard Bread:
Boston Biscuit;
Soda C r a c k e r s :
Pipes, by the b o x ;
Figs, by the d r u m ;
Brooms, by the d o z e n :
Currants, by the 20 lbs. to' half b a r r e l :
Prunes, by the 20 to 100 lbs.:
Dried Apples, by tbe 100 lbs or barrel:
Gun Cape, by the 1600;
Shot, by the bag.
H A N S AH, f.AY * CO.
raversc Qity Nov. 30. 1~>0.
52
ME
Moflat's P i l l s ;
Jayu<
Pills;
>* . l i t e r a t i * r ; •
Javnes" V e r m i f u g e ;
Ayrea' Cherry P e c t o r a l ;
Rhcubarb; Cndbar;
Mexican L i n i m e n t ; .
P e r r y Davis' Pain K i l l e r ;
Carbonate of Magnesia:
Heed A Culler's Pulmnuaiy Rultani:
Sands' Suntapnriljn; ,
•
Sawyer's Ext. Hark for F e v e r and A g u e ;
Kennedys'Medk'ul Discover';
S u g a r Lead;
'
I loae W a t e r ;
Castor Oil;
Epsom S u l U ;
Sulphur:
IJIC S u l p h u r (for Jlair-dye
C o d t h r Oil:
H A N N A H . LAY ft CO
* City. Nov. :w, iMio.
Red, blue and gray twilled and plain Flannels;
White, p i n k and Bob Roy plain F l a n n e l s ;
Cunton Flannels, brown, slste aud bleached;
flattinets, F. ft M. CasslmeresiSheep's G r a y :
•immunity to o n e
Fancy und black Casslmeres; .
| ihiug o f all others in which they should lie s n d c o n s e q u e n t l y
Kentucky Jeans, Duck, Denims;
are Interested; to w i t ; that a G o o d L i g h t is one of this
Apron and m i n e r ' s check. Stripes:
j greatest desideratum* to be obtained—ami t h a t a f t e r C a t w
S h i r t i n g p r i n t s a n d fancy shirting F l a n n e l s ;
. j ftil E x p e r i m e n t , nn article has been Introduced snd d e Black Doeskin Cassimeres;
'
m o n s t r a t e d b e y o n d n q u t - ' i u n o f d o a b t , t o be t h s
Black and b l u e ' c l o t h s :
, BEST, C H E A P E S T , S.vKKST, MOST ECONOMICAL and
Brown and bleached Cotton—a nice a s s o r t m e n t :
| EQUABLE light yet known, (gas only excepted.I S u c h aw
Ticking. Bays, l.insey Woolsev, Ac.
article we have the pleasure of i n t r o d u c i n g in t h i s romrnuHANNAH. LAY A- CO.
,2 | ijit.v, und which, with
Traverse City, Nov. 30, I860..
D
RESS GOODS—A
SHIRTS—RED.
E
Raisins, in quarter, half and whole b o x e s :
Tallow and Stearins Candles, by t h e b o x :
Sugar, by the barrel or loO lbs,;
Soap, by the b o x ;
. Baking Powders, by the b o x ;
Matches, by the gross;
Toys, Notions;
Tobacco, Fine Cut, by tbe half barrel;
Tobacco, Smoking, by the half barrel;
P l u g Tobacco, by the 60 lbs. or b u t t :
Soda, by the 50 lbs. or k e g :
Apples;
Shoes a n d Boots, by the d o t . or hf. do*. pa«ri
Brown Cotton, by the 3 to o pieces;
S h i r t i n g Stripe, by the 2 to 5 pieces;
Cream Tartar, by t h e 5 to 20 lbs,,
:o caution all persons against harborint a f t e r this date.
,
DAVID V. L A i m A B E K "
5-fiX
Northport, January. 1 1861.
F L A N N E L
T
delivered at Traverse City—Wheat, Oats. Corn. Rye. Barley, (
Pease, Potatoes, Onions, Roots. 4 c . Ac.—thus making an ab- |
solute home market for e v e r y t h i n g raised.
->2 j
In unchecked I)i.
TERV, confirmed, emaciating, and apparently malignant, the
effects have been equally decisive a n d astonishing.
In the local pains, loss of flesh anil s t r e n g t h , debilitating
cough, and remittent hectic, which generally Indicate I s c t PIBST Ca.WMiT)OM, t h i s rempdy has allayed the alarm of
f r i e n d * and physicians, in s e v e r a l very g j a t i C i n g and intei-
E N S
T
FABM PRODUCE,
A s aperient a n d Stomacic preparation of IRON' purified el
Oxygen and Carbon by combustion in Hydrogen. Sanctioned by the highest Medical Authoritiea, both in Europe and
th« United States, and prescribed in their practicc.
The experience of thousands daily proves t h a t po preparation of I r o n can be compared with it. Impurities of the
blood, depression of vital energy, pale and otherwise sickly
complexions indicate its necessity in almost every conceiva- I
ble ease.
I n n o x i o u s ID all maladies in which it has been tried, it has
proved absolutely curative in each of the following c o m - !
plaints, viz:
In Debility, Nervous Affections, E m a c i a t i o n , .
Dyspepsia, Constipation, Dlarrhcca, Dysentery, I n - j
cipient C o n s u m p t i o n , Scrofulous Tuberculosis, Salt
R h e u m , MLismenstruation, W h i t e s , Chlorosis, Liver
Complaints. Chronic Headaches, Rheumatism, Int e r m i t t e n t F e v e r s , P i m p l e s o n t h e F a c e , ftc.
In esses of GKSKKAI. DKBILITV. whether the result of acute
disease, or of (be continued diminution of nervous and mus-1
cular energy f r o m nervous c o m p l a i n t s oue trial of tbis restorative has proved successful to a&extent which no description' nor written attestation would r e n d e r c r e d i h l c . Invalid*,
so long bed-ridden as to have bccome forgotten in their owp
neighborhoods, have suddenly re-appeared in the busy world
as if j u s t returned f r o m protracted travel in a distant land.
Some very signal instances of this kind are attested of female
Sufferers," emaciated victims of a p p a r e n t marasmus, sanguineous exhaustion, critical changes, and that complication
of nervous and dyspeptic aversion to air and exercise for
which the physician has no name.
In NBRVotra A r r s c T i o H s of all kinds, and for reasons fsrailiar to medical men, the operation of this preparation of
Iron must necessarily be salutary, for, unlike tbe old oxides,
it i s vigorously tonic, without being e x c i t i n g and overheating; and gently, regularly aperient, even in the most obstinate cases of costiveifess w i t h o u t ever b e l u g a gastric purgative, or inflicting a disagreeable sensation.
I n this latter property, among others, which makes it sa
remarkably effectual a n d permanent a remedy for 1'n.Ks, upon
which It also appears to e x e r t a distinct and specific action,
by dispersing the local t e n d e n c y which forms them.
In D i r s r j t r s i s , Innumerable as are its causes, a single box
M
A
A P y
O n m
(^.1="
FA
R M PP R
O D U1C
E.
iws
PILLS'^ IRON.
'
A
. C
I I A N N A I 1 , L A Y ft C O .
ILL PURCHASE. AND PAY T H E HIGHEST PRICE ;
the m a r k e t will w * " '
^ V U p k d ^ h e r one# S g ' o l i l n W I n e
J y ? " , ' \ 3 ^ b ^ m h e i w ' S t S ^ S w 5 l o i * » ' m a y 8hiB«.
i ,,_- tVe have a country yet.
F
v
Lamps, Shades and Fixtures,
FULL LINE OF CHOICE FAL
Prints, of A m e r i c a n a n d English makers, from • cen
we now have o n e x h i b i t i o n a n d for sale, and of the V E R T
to one shilling per y a r d ; choice A m e r i c a n p r i n t s De Lainei
BEST quality. Call and inspect our KEROSENE LAMPS.
Coburghs; F r e n c h Mcrinoes; all wool De Laines; Mohair.H A N N A H . L A Y ft CO.
Alpacas; fancy wosted plaids: Pattern Goods of latest sty Id
Traverse City. Nov 30. I»6n.
*J
•arcfully selected; Balmoral and knit s k i r t s ; Ladii
a n d d r a w e r s ; h o o p f s k l r t s w o o l hoods,underslceves, Ac.; prinl- X T
T)
P A R T I C U L A R A T T E N T I O N IN F N J
1
1
'
*—•*
jol« De iI alines •j i i • I ) • V1TED to our a s s o r t m e n t of Men's Heavy W
Mittens. Gloves sud Socks. Also, Boys' Woo) Mittens; Child r e n ' s Muffatters a n d Fancy S t o c k i n g s : not-ffcfgettiriir * n i r s
H A N N A H . LAY ft (
assortment of Wool Yaru. in u variety of shade* and qualities.
Traverse City, Nov.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e City. Nov. SO. 18t.O. •
ft;
Rubbers and Overshoes, Ladle's' Boo
Gaiters, Bnskin«, Slips, Ties, Rubbers,
Overshoes, Carpet Shoes,
Boys' Boots apd Shoes,
Misses Bootees and Gaiters,
Childs' Cacks, Shoes, Bootees, copper-toed. Ac.
Ladies' seamless s p g heel and heeled side-lace G a i t e r s :
Seamless Bellmoral and Cong, heavy Gaiters and Over
Gaiters; Seamless Slippers;
Men's very nice seamless Over-Shoes a n d L e g g i n g s ;
Over-Shoes coming to the knees;
Baugor moose skin long leg S h o e - P a c s ;
Montreal long l«-g Shoe-Pacs;
Men's India rubber long leg Boot*.
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30. 18H0.
>
52
H
A R D W A R E —
Nails. G e r m a n Steel. Glass, Putty. Screws.
Axes, A x Helves. Looks. Latches. Hammers.
Chisels, Augers, Hand, Buck and Cross-cut Saws.
Draw-knives, Hinges, Cable, Trace and Halter Chains.
F r y snd Sauce P a n s Mason.-' Trowels,
"
Ch'opping-knives, Hand and Boys' Axes,
Half. 1 and 2 foot Rules.
Steelyards, S p r i n g and C o u n t e r Scales,
Flat,"round and taper Files,
Horse Rasps, Gloat Nails, S q u a r e Horse Card*.
Curry-Combs and Horse-Brushes,
Trap's of various k i n d s
Shovels and Tongs, Nut Crackers, Bird Cagc«,
Skates, Sleigh Bells. Coffee Mills. Ac. Ac.
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. JO, I860.
52
Mustard, English and F r e n c h prepared;
Soda, Cream Tartar, Ginger, Baking Powder.
Salaratus, Starch. Vermacilli, Hops.
Tobacco, Snuff Garden Seeds,
Bag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt. Glnc, Alum,
Lamp a n d Lard Oil, Castor Oil,
Indigo, Yellow Ochre, Chalk, Camwood,
Fluid, Molasses. Syrup. Vinegar,
Beans, P o r k . Meal. Flour, Oatmeal. Feed, Bran.
Beef, Hams a n d S h o u l d e r s Codfish.
Hard Bread, Butter Crackers. Lard,
E x t r a c t Lemon.Vanilla. Rose. Peach, Pine Apple, fte.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30.1S00.
„
T
- A F U L L ASSORTMENT—Such as Drums, whlsrattlcH. whips, dogs, squirrels, geese, docks,roosters, cats, norscn.cn. Horses wagons, d u m p i n g carts, e l e p h a n t s ,
animals, T r a n s p a r e n t Slates, fancy China Mugs and Buckets,
l o c o m o t i v e s , t r a i n s of Cam. Ac., Ac.,—call a n d e x a m i n e for
the Holidays.
H A N N A H L A T A CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30. Isuti.
SJ
IB'
L A N K E T 8 — W I I I X 4 MACKINAC, ROCKDALE. 10 t
»l-4. Plain and fane* l l o r i Blankets, H e m p carpeting—
H A N N A H , MAY A CO.
F
' O R H O U S E K E E P E R S — K N I T E H AND FORKS,
S p o o n s Carvers and Steels,
Brooms, Pails. Till*, Washboards,
erub. Shoe. Clothes and Whitewash Brushes,
Traverse City, Nov 30, I860.
B
S'
HAWLS—
Bay State. Indian, Chenieile a n d Children's Shawls;
Canada and Chenieile Scarfs;
Comforters, Mufflers,fte.,fte.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov.30, 1860.
52
> a full line.
Toy Books a n d P r i m e r s . Slates a n d Pencils.
Pass B o o k s Envelopes. Fancy Cards.
Harmonicas. J e w s Harps,
F i s h Hooks, Sinkers, L i n e s ftc.
HANNAH, LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30.1860.
5T
P
A P E R HANGINGS—WALL
PAPER, C U R T A I N
Paper, and Buff Curtaining. Bordering. Ac.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov. 50, I860.
-•>2 :
LANK D E E D S AND MORTGAGE*—
lF o r saleby
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
•
52
Traverse City, Nov. ', i-e».
H A N N A H . LAY ft CO.
S
ie City. Nov- 50. I860.
5?
T n 7m_' f K "'
VOL: III.
N O . lO.
T R A V E R S E C I T Y , M I C H . F R I I I A Y , F E B R U A R Y ft, 1861.
its
to an unconstitutional purpose. A class of politiciani | Argentine Confederation, Loo Choo, Japtn^Brunsw.ck.
of New England set up this theory and attempted to prac- Persia, Baden, Belgium, and Paraguay. NevtrCbelff
tice upon it in our war with Great Britain. Mr. Jefler- \ the United States, within their entire existence under
S P E E C H OF HON. W H . I I . 8 E W A R D ,
T r a r e n c City, Grand Traverse County, Michigan, | Delivered in tbe U. 8. Senate anuary 12tb, 1861. son did not hesitate to say that States must be kept with-1 the Federal Constitution, have had flagrant wart with cB
in their constitutional sphere by impulsion, if they could , Iv four States, two of which were insignificant, power*
j Mr PRESIDE-VT, Congrees adjourned
sunimor amid not be held .there
. by
.- attraction. Secession was then hclu : on the coast of Barbary, and have had direct hoetilitie •
M'O R G A N B A T E S ,
to be inadmissible in the face of a public enemy. But j amounting to reprisals, against only two or three tr.orr
. EDITOR JISD rKorsirron.
, auspices of National aBuodaoce. contentment, tranquil-11®
so iu all and they are now at peace with the whole world. If th*
it)' and happiness. I t was re-assembled this winter in if it is untenable in one ease, it is necessarily
•«!!
TKBMU.
other*.
I
fully
admit
the originality, the sovereignty, , Uuion should be divided into only two confederacies,
the,presence of derangement of business and disturbance
« n . Ool'.sr M < f i f t y C M U r o n n n . p t y i b l . *W*rt»bl» la « ' M "
A 4 , » r t : « c m c n u Inaartcd (or O u Dollar p<r «qu»rj f u n l l n w ] fcr the of public as well as private credit, and in the faco of se- and the independence of the several States within their . each of them would need to make as many treaties f * ; ?
3 o i WMrtlnn. u i i w e n i j - C r * c e n utorM e * • • b o w i a e a t IwrOon.
Ttirty
. u » m l » o i s « o u - * 1 0 for an* UJ«U>. »S) far Ibroc «<iu*rT»;
for
Utf •
ditious combinations to overthrow the Union The alarm sphere. But I hold the Federal Government to be equal- ; huve now ; and. of course, would be liable to give •*» rya•
u d f V ) for one column. L»r»l ujrrnlfmrau
»l
r . l f i prrarm is appaling; for union is not more the body than lib- ly original, sovereign and independent within its sphere. i0\ causes of war a.- we do now. But wo know, from the
4 b y U«r; fifty c o m . per «W) of 100 wordo.farIbo B r * ln»«rtkm. s o d
- - « T . c m u for « « h tuhwqiicBt. I'try
O j o r f C o a o u * word. F l « v n
erty is the soul of tbe nation. The American citizen And the Government of the State can no more hbtolvc [sad experience of other nations, that disintegration, ,brcc
rlihont rain. SO par c o s t oddod Rnlo «nd I n n * • * » . double price.
has been accustomed to believe the. Republic immortal the peoplo residing within its limits from allugiancu to | begun, inevitably continues uutil cvou*tbc greatest etf.piT"
OK>I • d v o r t t M m c s K n a s i bo poidfor» W c i l y In * l ? » » c <
He shrinks from the sight of convulsions indicative of its the Union, than the Government of the Uniou can ab- crumbles into many pnrtv Each confederation th^t fcfcait
All Kinds #f Job Printing Neatly and Eijditiwsly'EieflM sudden death. The report of our condition has gone over solve them from allegiance to the State. The Constitu-' ultimately arise out of the ruin bf the Union will liave nathe seas, and we who have so long and with so much tion of the United States, and the laws made in pursuance rcs^ity for as many treaties as we now have, and will ir
complacency ttudied the endless agitations of society in thereof, are the supreme law of the land, paramount to j cur liabilities for war us often as we do now, bV breaking
C H A R L E S H. H O L D E N ,
the Old World, believing ourselves exempt from such dis- all legislation of the States, whether made under the con- UICIIL It is the multiplication of treaties, and the want
turbances. now, in onr turn, seem to bo falling into a mo- stitution, or by oven their orgauic conventions. The j of confederation, that make? war the normal conditio'.'
Union can be dissolved, not by secession, with or with-1 of society in 'Western Europe and Spanish America —
j meiitous and disastrous revolutioo,
TAX AND GENERAL AGENT*
I 1 know how difficult it is to decide, amid so many and out armed force, but only the voluntary consent of tbe It is uuion that, notwithstanding our world-wide intcrNORTIIPORT,
i so various couuself, which ought to be and even what people of the United States, collected in the manner pro-11 course, inafces peace the habit of the American jieople
I will not descend so low as to ask whether new eonfe<!
GRAND,TRAVERSE COUNTY. MICHIGAN.
can be done. Certaioly, however, it i-> time for every scribed by the Constitution of the United States.
Congress, in the present case, ought not to be so im- j eracies would be able or willing to bear the grievous exOffice Second Door South of Onion Dock.
21 - Jv j Senator to declare himself L therefore, following tbe ex• j ample of tbe noble Senator from Tcunessec, [Mr. J ohn- passive. It ought, if it can, to redress any real griev- pense of maii.tainint: the diplomatic relation* which oao
*~
. C. H . M A R S H ,
l son,] avow my adherence to tbe Union in its integrity, anccs of the offended States, and then it ought to supply i not be dispensed with, except by withdrawing from forj and with all its parts, with tny friends, with my party, th® President with all tho means necessary to maintain j eign commerce.
i with my Stale, with my country, or without either, as the Union in the full exhibition and discreet exercise of: Our Federal Government is better a Mo to avoid gi*
,11 >•
yp
I they may determine, in every event, whether of peace or its authority. Beyond this, with the proper activity on j ing just causes of war than scveruiconfederacies, l»ecauw'
SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY,
of war, with overy consequence of honor or dishonor, of the part of* the Executive, the responsibility of saving | it can conform the action of all the States to compacts
T r a w t e City, Grand Traverse County, Michigan. life or death Although I lament the occasion, I hail tho Union belongs to the people, and they are abundant- j It can have only one construction, Ad only one trihuri'
Office in Dwelling House.
32-ly
"
i to pronounce that construction of every treaty. Local
with cheerfulness the duty of lifting up my voico among ly competent to discharge it.
I propose, therefore, with great deference, to address ana temporary interests and passions, or ]>cn>oual cupiddistracted debates, for my whole country and its inestimamysclf to the countiy upon the momemtous subject, ask-1 ity and ambition, and drive small confederacies, or Slate.,
T. J. R A M S D E L L
ble Union.
hitherto the exhibitions of spirit and resolution hero, ing a hearing, not less from the people within what are i more easily than a great republic, into indiscreet viola-_
as elsewhere, have been chiefly made on the side of die- called the seceding, than from tnoso who reside withiu I tious of treaties.
asn
The Uuited Stales bein£ a great and formidable powunion. I do not regret this. Disuniou is so unexpected the adheriug States.
s o L t c r r o u IN C H A N C K H Y ,
Union is an old, fixed, settled habit of the American ; IT. can always secure favorable and satisfactory treaties
and so uunatural that it must plainly reveal itself before
NO. 4 FIRST STREET.
its presence can be realized. I like best, also the cour- people, resulting from convictions of its necessity, aud j Indeed, every treaty we have was voluntarily Wade. Small
Manistee. Mlchifisn.
therefore
not
likely
to
be
hastily
discarded.
The
early
,
confederacies,
or States, must take such treaties as they
age that rises slowly under tbe pressure of severe provocaiiou. If it be a Christian duty to forgive the strauger States, while existing as colonies, were combined, though i cun get. and give whatever treaties ure exacted. A h i
MORGAN BATES,
even t«evcnty times seven ofTeuscs, it is the highest patri- imperfectly, through a common allegiance to the British initiating, or even un unsutisfactpry treaty, is a chronic
'
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
otism to endnre without complaint tho passionate way- Crown. " When that allegiance ceased, no one wns so . cause of foreign war.
of wars resulting from unjustifiable can
wardness of political brethren so long as there is hope presumptuous as to suppose political existence compatible . The chapter
T BAY ERSE CITY, MICHIGAN.
, J :in cas^of division, amplify
with disunion; and therefore, on the sr ' day "that they jses, would,
— " , ! r " itself it projvor
that they may come to a belter mind.
I think it is easy to pronounce vhat measures or con- declared themselves independenti they proclaimed them- i fiou to the number of new confederacies, and their trritaliuct will not save the Union. I agree with the honor- selves :dso confederated States. Experience in war and | bililv. Our disputes with CSreat Britain about Oregon,
1776 to 1787, only convinced thetn of the i th2 boundnrv of Maine, the patriot insurrection in Cnn.if
able Setialor from North Carolina [Mr. Clingman] that in peace from
MORGAN BATES
ssily of
c converting that loose Confederacy into a more j da, and the Wand of Sau Juan; the border strifes bclis* <i|>en«d an Office at Travfrae City, Grand TraverstsC"., mere elogiums will not save it. Yet I think as prayer necessity
xt and
an jierpetual Unioa They acted with a cool- j tween Texas and Mexico, tho incursions of the late Wi!brings us nearer to God, though it cannot move'him to- perfect
Michigan, for the transaction of a
conduct of those J, liani Walker
_ 7 S —into ,Mexico and Ceutral America;. all these.
wards us.*60 there is healing and saving virtue in every ncss very different from tho intemperate muuuui
General, Agency business.
who now on one side threaten, and tho.se who ontheotb- were CUM-S in which war was preveuted only by the linThe United States Land Office is located ut this placc; and word of devotion to the Uuion that is spokeu, and in eve- er rashly defy disunion. They considered tho continuance pcrturbabiliU' of the Federal Governmellt.
particular attention will lie paid to locating Laud Warrant, ry aigh that its danger draws forth. I.'know, at least, of the Union as a subject comprehending uothing^ess
This Government gives not only fewer causes of war,
investing monev in Government Lands, imparting informa- tual, like virtue, it derives strength from every irrevertion rt'latlve to" the general features, resources and advan- ent act that is committeed, and every blasphemous phrase than the safety and welfare of all the parts of which tbe whether just or uujust, than smaller confederacies would;
i •p i of the Grand Traverse eotintiV, the payment of taxes, that is uttered against it.
country was composed, and the fate of an empire in ma- J but it always has a greater ability to accommodate thetn
1
»:id the transaction of-Any Agency businos* with whicli.be
The ~Union
' 'cannot* bo
* saved by mutual criminations j ny respects the most interesting in tho world I enter I by the exercise or more coolness and courage, the use of
our In- entrusted.
HBFKHtsSCK*.
ling onr respective share of responsibility for the I upon the subject of continuing tho Union now, deeply more various and more liberal trteaus, and the aisplav, if
concern;
Hon. Whitney Jon»», Auditor (ietwral. i
Ohavtoa W. trailer, K»q.
„
<
uiviuii evils. He whose conscience
acquits him will nat-1 impressed with the same generous and loyal conviction, need be, of great force. Every one kwws how jilac.v
present
cons^i
Uoiu
Hnjrsrd, A U o n r t y G n x r o L < n ,
ii.
urally be slow to accuse others whose co-operation he i How could it be otherwise, when, instead of only thir- i ble we ourselves are iu controversies with Groat Baitain
Jlcrald Office. Travepc City. Npv. 3. 1 ^ .
^
.^S $ J needs. History only can adjust the great account.
| teen, the country is now composed of thirty-three parts; France and Spain ; and vet how^Kactlntr we have been
A continuance of the debate ou the constitutional pow-1 and the empire embraces, instead of only four millions, in our intercourse with New Granada, Paraguay and . *n
Juan de Nicaragua.
er of Congress over the subject of SIivery in the 'Ierri-1 no less .than thirty millions of inhabitants.
Mr. President, no ouc will dispute our forefather.1
tories will not save the Union. The opinions of parties j The founders of tho Constitution, moreover, regarded
aqd sections on that question have become dogmatical, t tho Uniou as no mere national or American interest— maxim, that the common safety of all is the safety of each
and it is this circumstance that has produced the exist- J On the contrary, they confessed with de«p sensibility that of the States. While Ihev remain united the Federal
I F R Q > T 8TREKT, NKAK COl'KT HOl S f c )
•rnmcnt combines all the materials,
and all the force.
ibg alienation. A truce, at least during the debate on | it seemed to them to have been reserved for the poople
.
'
TRAVERSE CITY. jIlCIIIGAN.
the "Union, is essential to
reconciliation.
] of this country to decide whether societies of men are of the several States; orgunize their defenses, on one gen
Tho Union cannot bp saved by proving that Secession i really capable of establishing good government upon re- | oral principle; harnioniies and assimilates them witb ofl«
T H I S OLD ESTABLISHED H O T E L , THE FIRST
1 Hi Traverse'City,) situated ou Front Street, in the viuiii- is illegal or unconstitutional Persons bent on that fear- flection mid choice, or whether they are forever destined | system; watches for them with a single eye, which i'
itvotthe Court Hoaso and public offices, is utill open for the ful step will not stand long enough on forms of law to be to depend for their political constitutions on accident and | turns in all directions, and moves all agents under the
reception, of the traveling public. The Proprietor returns dislodged ; and loyal men do not nee<f such narrow ground fotce. They feared, therefore, that their failure to con-1 control of one Executive head. A nation so constituted,
hit hearty thanks for the liberal patronage lie has received, to stand upon.
•
tinue and perfect the Union would be n misfortune to the is safe against assult or even insult.
.
and assures tVpublic that no pains will hfc spared to make
I fear that little more will bo gained from discussing nations. How much more, sir, would its overthrow now j W ar produces always, a speedy cxhanslion of taonex
M« guesU comfortable. His chfcrgts' will correspond with
1
the right of the Federal Government to coerce seceding be a calamity to mankind!
i a,, d a severe strain upon credit . l*he treasuries
ihe time*.
Upod accomodations for Horses and Cattle.
Mil
States into obedience. If disunion is to go on, tbisqucsSome form of our Government is indispensiblo here as ; credits of small confederacies would often prove madction will give place to the more practicable one, whether elsewhere. Whatever form we have, every individual quale. Those of the I nion are always ainii.e.
any seceding States have a right to coerce the remaining j citizen aud every State must cede to it some natural rights, | I have thus fur kept oat of view the reJatiohs which
members to acquiesce in a dissolution.
\ to invest the Government with the requisite power. The | must arise between the confederacies themselves. T at**
1 dread, as in my innermost soul I abhor, civil war.— i eimple question, therefore, for us now to decide, while'j would be small and inconsiderable nations bordering op
I do not know what the Union would be worth if saved , laying aside all pique, passion, aud prejudice, is: whetb- ..each other, and therefore, according to all political phi
" L O C A T E D AT D E T R O I T , MICH.,
bv the use of the sword. Yet,- for all this. I do not agree er it conduces more to the interests of the people of this j losopby, natural enemies. In addition to the many treaECENTLY REMOVED TO THE NEW AND ELEGANT with
"*
"
* with a desire to avert that great calam- country to remain, for the general purposes of peucc and j ties which each must make with foreigu powers, and tb>
those
who,
suite oi room", prepared expr«*iilT fortireir use. in Merity, advise a conventional or unopposed separation, with war, commerce, inlaud and foreign, jiostal communica- causes of war which they would ^givc by ^violating them
rill Block, corner of JeaVrsou and Woodward Avenues.
A iti-hoUmhip issued from Detroit folic#'. «ill bo good a view to what they call a reconstruction. It is enough lions at home and abroad, the care and disposition of the each of tho confederacies must also maintain treaties with
in Cleveland, Ohio: BuflUio, N. Yr; Albaiiy. N. Y.: Chicago, for me, first, that in this plan, destruction goes before re- public, domain, colonization, the organization and admis- all the others, and so be liable to give tbcm frequent 'of111.; l'hiUtilvlphia. l'a.: Su Louis, Mo., anil N'. ^• City.
construction ; and seconaly that the strength of the vase sion of new Slates, and generally, the enlargement of em- fense. They Would necessarily have different interests re
J. II. GOLDSMITH, Resident Principal at Detroit.
in which the hopes of the nation are held consist chiefly pire, one nation under our present Constitution, tbnn it suiting from their establishment of differed policies of
H. I'. PERR1N, Spencerlan I'Atunn.
would be to divide themselves into separate coufedera- revenue, of mining, manufacture, and navigation, of imin its remaining unbroken.
TUITION IN ADVANCE.
migration. and perhaps the sla^y trade. Each would
Perpetnal Scholarship pood in all our Colleges, including
Congressional compromises are not likely to save the cies or States.
with
Unsiness Penmanship, $it).
Our country remains now as it was it n ^ - ^ o m p oitised
s e d j stipulate
stip
. . . foreign
- .natious for advantages peculiar t«
Unioa I know, indeed, that tradition favors this form
Penmauship alone.25lessons,%&: six months, evenings.SlO. of remedy. But it is essential to its success, in any case, not of detached and distant territories, but of one whole i itself and injurious to its rivals.
f
•»* Oor Standard of Penmanship, is the good old Spenwell-conuected and fertile region, lying within thetetnpe- j If, indeed, it were necessary that the Union should he
that
there
be
found
a
preponderating
mass
of
citizens,
so
serian.
The ill081 thorough and praclic.al and truly popular Col- far neutral on the issue which separates parties, that they rate zone, with climates and soils hardly more various broken up, it would be in the lost degree haportant th-**
legsfti Amerira. Nearly fourthonsand students have entered can intervene, strike down clashing weapons, and compel than those of France or of Italy. This slight diversity the new confederacies to be formed should be as nearly
*inc« their esMbliflimcut,
which Is the best evidence of their an accommodation. Moderale concessions are not cus- qnickens and amplifies manufacture and commerce. Onr as possible cqnal in strength and power, that mutual fear
favor with the public.1
and mutualre»|HHt might inspire them withcaution again.-'
For further Information call at College Rooms, or send for tomarily asked by a force with its guns in battery ; nor rivers and valleys, as improved by art. furui.-h us a sys- mutual offense. But such equality could not be long main
new Catalogue of 80 pages. For spccimcus of penmanship, are liberal concessions apt to be given by an opposing tem of highways nnequafed iu the world. The different
tained:
scale
forms uofi labor,
l u u u i , iif
i eslaver}"
i u i t i j were
" i n not
n u i jiervcrted to
. » j purposes
* - . |#v.-.«
. .
. one
— confederacy would arise in the
.
i t of poenclose letter stamp. Address.
force not less confident of its own right and its own IUIIIM
BUY ANT. STRATTON. A Co..
of political umbition, need not constitute an element of j litiial importance, and the other would view it t henceAt either of the above Cities. strength. I think, also, that there is a prevailing convic- strife in tho confederacy.
/pre
»forward with envy. and a;-prehension.
.Jealousies wouel
tion
thut
legislative
compromises
which
sacrifice
honestOut this ont for future reference.)
SO-lv
Notwithstanding recent vebcmeiu expressions and man-1 bring ou frequent ami rcta.ialory wars, and all these warly cherished principles, while they anticipate future exigencies, even if they do not assume extra constitutional ifestations of iutoleranco in some quarters, produced by. from the jicculiar circnmstanees of the rrrjfcderacitpowers, are less sure to avert imminent evils than they inten* partisan excitement, we are. in fact a homogen-. would liave tlie nature and character of ci vil war. Dis*^
are certain to produce ultimately even greater dangers. eons people, chiefly of one stock, with assessioos well us-; lution. therefore, is. for *he jicopic of this ceur.tr*. p«J' D R . C H U R C H I L L ' S DISCOVERY.
Indeed, Mr. President, 1 think it will be wise to dis- similated. We have, practically, ouly one language, one I jietual cjvii war. To mitigate it and obtain occasions,
Winchester's Genuine Preparation of the c h e m i - card two prevalent ideas or prejudices, namely: First, religion, one system of Government and manners and rest, what elm- could they accept but the <-^>tem of ad
cally Pure Compound of the
that the Union is to be saved by somebody in particular; customs common to all. Why, then, shall we not remain 'justing the balance *>f power which has obf cned :n r.u
' rope, in which the few strong nations dictate the verand secondly, that it is to be saved by some ennuing and henceforth an hitherto, one people?
ThefireC*"objectof every human society is safetv and | terms on which all the others shall !>o content to lire,
insincere compact of pacification. If I remember rightly, I said something like this here so long ago as 1850, security, for which, if wed be, they will, and I hey must , When this hat .-ful system should fail at last, foreign na• of LIME and SODA,
sacrifice every other. This security is of two k'tids; one . tious would intervene, now In favor of one and then in
Origlaallv discovered and prescribed by Dr. J. F. Oiirr.cnii.t. and afterwards in 1854.
The present danger discloses itseir in this form. Dis. exemption from foreign aggressions and infue'iee; the aid of another; and thus our country, h'.iv.ngcxpel.eda
of Paris as a Specitic Remedy for
relapse in';.contented citizeus have obtained political power in cer- other, exemption from domestic tyranny ami red lion. ^ j Kuro[iean IK>WI s from the continent '
nd, like ftah
Foreign wais come from cither violations of treaties .an iigg"*gi 1 form i.f colonial c
tain States, and they are using this authority to overdomestic violence. The Union has thus far, proved Turkey, India and China bccoi _• the tueatrv of transathrow
the
Federal
Government
They
delude
themselves
Price—Two Dollars a Bottle.
with a belief that the State power they have acquired itself mi almost perfect shield against such war.-. The lantie intervention and rapacity.
r
If. however, we jrant to th" new confederacies ar CTp H E EXTRAORDINARY RESULTS OBTAINED IN ALL enables them to discharge themselves of allegiance to United States, contiuually enlarging their diplomatic acX the stage* of Pulmonarv Disease by Dr. Churchill's new the whole Republic. The honorable Senator front Illi- quaintance. have now treaties with Frame, the Nether- ••iniition from complications among each oth-.-r ami with
Treatment—the 1IYP0PH0SPHITES OF LIME AND SODA nois [Mr, Douglas] says we have a right to coerce a State, lands, Great Britain. Sweden. Prussia, Spain, Russia, foreign Stales, still there is too much reason to believe
—removes all remaining doubt as to the Inestimable value of but we cannot The" President says that no State has Denmark, Mexico. Brazil, Austria, Turkey. Chili. S:am, that not OR"' of them could long maintain a Republican
this Discovery. Consumption is ao longer to lie regarded as
a right to secede, but we have no constitutional right to Muscat Venezuela Peru, Greece, Sardina, Equador, form of Government. Universal suffrage, and the . aban Incurable malady.
. . .
Many hundreds of physicians have already adopted this make war against a State. The dilemma results from Hanover, Portugal, New Granada, Hesse Cassel, Wnr- sence of a standing army are essential to the Republican
treatment with almost Invariable success. Let no Consump- an assumption that those who. in such a case, act against temburg, China Bavaria Saxony. Nassau. Switzerland, system. Tho world ba» yet to sec a single self-^stainin?
tive delay a moment to try it. It Is their last hope!
the Federal Government, act lawfully as a State; although Mecklenburg, Scbwerin, Guatemala, the Hawaian Is- State of that kind, or even any confederation of sucH
For sale by
"
MORGAN BATES.
States, except car owa Canada le&is on Great Britain
31
Herald Office, Traverse City. "manifestly they have perverted the power of the State lands, San Salvador, Borneo, Costa Rica Bremen, the
ifraberst $fralif,
.
I
7110 U n i o n
^
Dangers.
E V E R T >KJDAY. * T
Attorney Catrasedcr ani) Solicitor,
Attorney anb Counsellor at £ato,
A
Xttornaj 'aiil Counstllor 111 Sato,
Land, Tax, and General Agency.
R
lro
TRAVERSE CITY HOUSE,
W I L L I A M .FOWLEJ
f r S Spte & io.'s \ '
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE,
R
(
CONSUMPTION CURED!
I I Y P O P H O S P H T PES
CONSUMPTION!
m.
confederacies? ThOAmericac man- temper, have been j o mil
it to tb* changes of society
not unwillinglv, and
itssriand is guarantied
tacle. I h a v i seen it enter aa an- juSion that it d * i e s ii .
rations of empiri J
~A
csted mooarchial 8ta . Our owo experiment _
.
thly, 1 hold myself r**dy bow, as always bcrctolite mine an. JUl tke world wofder- tions and altos evmi «t iatqffei
far been raoceajfal ;
1 by thficoatittal addition
to vote.for any properly fcnartfcd laws which shall
it, arid tafted of i t Salvos 81 artillery, from fort* o«rthrow by Stile authorities or. Intervention of t! .
new 8tates, the '
each of-the Member* of the
d and reduced. No Obe, W
lipping in fte harbor, saluted its flag. Prince# Federal Government" Cousi<Jerablc masses, even in tbe bo deemed necessary to prevent mutual invasion of State*
Union is constantly .....
course, can foretell the way and manner ef travel; but and princesses and merchants paid it homage, and all the free States interested in the ouccess of these misrepresent-' by citizens of other States, and punish those who shall aid
history indicates with unerring certainty the end people btasmd it as a harbinger of hope for their own ations as a means of psrtiaan strategy, have lent their sym-1 and abet them.
which the Several confederacies would reach. Licen- ultimate freedom. I imagine now the same coble vessel pathy to the party claiming to be aggrieved. While the. Fifthly. Notwithstanding the argument of the gallant
tiousness wouk^rewfer life intolerable ; and tbev would again entering tho same haven. The flag of thirty-threo result of the election brings the Republican party necev J Senator from Oregon [General Lane], I remain of the
noooer or later purchase tranquility and domestic safety stars and thirteen stripes has been hauled down, and in sarily info tho foreground in resisting disunion, tbe pre opinion that physical bouds, such as highways, railroad,,
is. run .up, which flaunts the device of a judices against them which I have described, have depriv-1 riven and canals, are vastly more powerful for holding
by the surreodai of liberty, and yield themselves up to its place a
lono star or a palmotto tree. Men ask, " W h o is the ed them of the cooperations of many good and patriotic civil communities together than any mere convention.-,
the protection of military despotism.
Indulge* B$ r |iK In ode or two details under this head stranger that thus steals into our waters?" Tbe answer citizens. On a complex issue between the Ropabliean : though written on parchment or engraved upon iron. I
contcraptously
given
ia, " She comes from one of the ob- party and the disunionists, although it involves the direct I remain, tborefore. constant to my purpose to secure, if
Firat: It is.Qblj sixty day* since this disunion movement
national calamities, the result might be doubtftil; for the • possible, the construction of two Pacific railways, on*
began
those who arc engaged in it have can- scure republics of North America. Let us pass
Lastly, public liberty, our own peculiar liberty, must Republican party is in a large part of tbe Union. But on i of which shall connect the ports around the mouths of the
vaaed With portentous freedom the possible re-combinato live. And such n a direct issue, with all who cherish tbe Union on one I Mississippi, and tbe other towrjs on tbe Miasouri and thr
tions of the States when dissevered, and the feasible alli- languish for a time, and then ccase
liberty!
Free
movement
even
where
through
our
own
side,
and all who desire its dissolution bv force on the Lakes, with the harbors on our We?
rt estern coast
ances or these re-combinations with European nations—
If, in the expression of these views, I have not proposalliances as unnatural, and which would prove altimatcly land and throughout the worltf; free speech, free- press, other, the verdict would be prompt and almost unanim pestilential to society here as that of the Tlascalans free suffrage; the freedom of even" subject to vote on mous. I desire thus to simplify tbe issue, and for that ed what is desired or expected by many others, they wi.ll
witn the Spaniard, who promised them revenge npon their every law, and for or against every agent who expounds, purpose to seperate^ from it all collateral questions, and do me tbe justice to befieve that 1 am as far from having
administers or executes Unsuitable and jealous confed- relieve it of all partisan passions and prejudices.
suggested what in many respects would have been in haraaciont enemies, the Aztecs.
I consider 4he idea of the withdrawal of the GulfStatas, mony with cherished convictions oT my own. I learned
Secondly. Tlie Disunion movement arises portly out eracies, constantly apprehending assaults without and
of a dispute over tbe common domain of the United States. treason within, formidable only to each other and con- and their permanent reorganization with or without others early from Jefferson that in political affairs we cannot alHitherto the Unton has confined this controversy within temptible to all besides; how lonir will it be before, on in a distinct confederacy, as a means of advantage to ways do what soems to us absolutely best Those with
the bounds of political debate by referring i t with all the plen of public safety, they will surrender all this in- themselves, so ecrtainly unwise, and so obviously impossi- whom we must necessarily act entertaining different views,
other national ones, to the arbitrament of tne ballot-box. estimable and unequaled liberty, and accept the hateful ble of execution, when the purpose is understood, that I have the power and right of carrying them into practice
dismiss it with the discussion I haw already incidentally We must be content to lead when we can. and to follow
I >ooa any one suppose that disunion would fransier tbe und intolerable espionage of military despotism?
And now, Mr. President, what isthe cause for this sud- bestowed upon i t
•hen we cannot lead; and if we cannot at any time do for
" hole domain to either party, or that any umpire than
den and eternal sacrifice of so much safety, greatness, hapThe case is different, however, in regard to the other ur countiy all the good that we wish, we must be satij
war would, after dissolution, be invoked?
piness
and
feeedom?
H
a
w
foreign
nations
combined,
subjects which 1 have brought, in this connection, before fied with doing her all the good that we can.
Thirdly. This movement arises, in another view, out
Uaviog submitted my own opinions on this great criof the relation of African slaves to the domestic popula- and arc they coming in rage Upon us? No. So far from the Senate.
Beyond a doubt Union is vitally important to the Re- sis, it remains only to say that I shall cheerfully lend to
tion or the countrv. Freedom is to them, as to all man- their being enemies, there is not a nation on earth that is
kind, tho chief object of desire. Hitherto, under the not an interested admiring friend. Even the London publican citizens of the United States; but it is just as the Government my best support in whatever prudent
Times,
by
no
means
partial
to
us,
savs:
important
to
the
whole
people.
Republicanism
and
Unoperation of tho Union, they have practicallv remained
yet energetic effcrts it shall make to preserve tho public
•• It is quitu possible that the problem of u Democratic ion are, therefore, not convertible terms. Republicanism peaeo and to maintain and preserve the Union ; advisi'/norant of the controversy, especially of its bearing on
themselves. Can we hope that flagrant civil war shall Republic may be solved by its overthrow in a few days is subordinate to Union, ns everything else is. and ought ing, only, that it practice, as far as possible, the utmo-t
to be—Republicanism, Democracy, every other political moderation, forbearance and conciliation.
wage among ourselves in their very presence, and vet that in a spirit of folly; selfishness and short-sightedness."
lias the federal government become tyranical or op- name and thing, are all subordinate—and they ought to
titty will remain stupid and idle spectators? Does history
And now. Mr, President what are tbe auspices of the
f'iniiah us any satisfactory instruction upon the horrors pressive; or even rigorous or unsound? Has the consti- disapper, in the presence of the great question of Union. country? I know that we are in the midst ef alarms
of civil war omong a people so brave, aud so intent in tution lost its spirit and all at once collapsed into a lifelew So far as I am concerned, it shall be so; it would be so, and somewhat exposed to accidents unavoidable in sea
purpose as we ore: It is a rare chimera which suggests letter? No; the federal government smiles more benig- if the question were sure to bo tried ns it ought only to sons of tempeatuoas passions. . W e already have disornn aggravation of these horrors beyond endurance, when, nantlv, and works to-day more beneficently than ever.— be determined, by the peaceful ordeal of the ballot. It der, and violence has be<run. I know not to what extent
< n cither side, there shall occur (be intervention of an The constitution is even the chosen model for the organ- shall l>e so all the more, since there is on one side prepar- it may go. Still my faith in the constitution and tho
edness to refer it to the arbitrament of civil war. 1 have Union abides, because my faith in the wisdom and viruprising ferocious African slave population of four, or ization of the newlv rising confederacies.
The occasion js tlie election of a Prcsidcnt|of the United Such faith in the Republican system of ours, that thcro ia tue of the American people remains unshaken. Coolness
>•:x, perhaps twenty millions?
Toe opraioiH of mankind change, and with them the States who is unacceptable to a portion of the people.—' no political good which I desire, that I am not content to calmness and resolution are elements of their character.
policies of natrons. One hundred year ago, all tho com- I state the case accurately. There was no movement of seek through its peaceful forms of administration, without They have been temporarily displaced : bnt they are remercial European States were engaged in transferring ne- disunion before the ballots which expressed that choice invoking revolutionary action.
appearing. Soon enough. I trust for safety, it will b«If others shall invoke that form of action to oppose seen that sedition and violence are only local and tempogro slaves from Africa to this hemisphere. To-day all were cast Disunion began as soon as the result was anthose States are firmly set iu hostility to the extension, nounced. The justification assigned was that Abraham and overthrow government they shall not, so far as it de- rary, and that loyality and affection to the Union are
mid to the practicc o'f slaver)-. Opposition to it takes Lincoln had been elected, while the succea of either bne pends on me, have the excuse that I obstinately left myself the natural sentiments of the whole country. Whatever
two forms: one European, which is simple, direct aboli- of three otlier candidates would have beeu acquired in. to be misunderstood. In such a case I can afford to meet dangers there shall be, there will be tha determination
tion; effected if need oc, by compulsion ; the other Ame- Was the election illegal? No; it is unimpeachable. Is prejudice with concilation; exaction with concession to meet them ; whatever sacrifices, private or public,
rican, which seeks to arrest the African slave trade, and the candidate personally offensive? No; he is a man of which surrenders no principle, and violenoe with the right shall ba needful for the Union, they will be made. I
resist the entrance of domestic slavery into the Territo- unblemished virtue and amiable manners. Is nn election band of pence.—Therefore, sir, so far as tho abstract feel sure that the hour has not come for this great nation
ries where it is yet unknown, while it leaves the disposi- of President an unfrequent or extraordinary transaction? question whether, by the Constitution of thp United to fall. This people, which has been studying to become
tion of existing slavery to the considerate action of the No; we nevor had a Chief Magistrate otherwise designat- States, the bondman who is made such by the laws of the wiser or better as it has grown older, is not perverse
States by which it is retained. It is tho Union that re- ed than by such election, and that form of choice is re- States, is still n man or only property, I answer that with- and wicked enough to deserve so dreadfhl nnd severe n
stricts the opposition to slavery in this country within newed every four years. Does any one even propose to in that State, tho laws on that subject are supremo; that punishment as dissolution. The Union has not yet accomthese limits. If dissolution prevail, whatguarauteeshall change the mode ofappointing the ChicfMagistrate? No; when he has escaped from that State into another, the plished what good for mankind was manifestly designed
there bo against tho full development here of the fearful election by universal sufferage, as modified by the Con- Constitution regnrds hifn as n bondman who may not, by by nim who appoints tbe seasons and prescribes tho
nnd uncompromising hostility to slavery which elsewhere stitution,^ tbe one crowning franchise of the American ony law or regulation of that State, be discharged from duties of States and Empires. No. sir; if we are cast
pervades the world, and of which tho recent invasion of people. To save it they would defy the world. Is it ap- his service, bnt shall be delivered up on claim, to the down by faction to-day. it would rise airain and reappear
prehended that the new President will usurp despotic party to whom his service is due. While prudence and in all its majestic proportions to-morrow. I t is the only
Virginia was an illustration?
Mr. President I have designedlv dwelt so long on the powers? No; while he is of all men the most unambit- justice would combine in persuading yon to modify tho Government that can stand here. Woe! woe! to the
probable effects of disunion upon tlie safety of the Ame- ious, he is, by the partial success of those who opposed acts of Congress on that subject so hs not to oblige pri- man that madly lifts his hand agninst it. It shall conrican people as to leave me little time to consider the his election, subjected to such restraints that he cannot vate persons to assist in their execution, and to protect tinue and endure : and men. in after timed, shall declare
other evils which must follow in its train. But practical- ithont their consent, appoint a minister, or even a police freemen from being, by abuse of the law, carried into that this jreneration, which saved tbe Union from such
ly tbe loss of safety involves every other form of public agent, negotiate a treaty, or procure the passage of a law, slavery, I agree that oil laws of tbe States, whether free sudden and unlooked for dangers, surpassed in magnacalamity. When'once the guardian angel has taken flight and can hardly draw a musket from the public arsenals to Stafos or slave States, which relate to this claSs of persons, nimity even that one which laid its foundations in the
defend his own pcrsoa
or any other recently coming from or resident in other eternal principles of liberty, justice nnd humanity.
everything is lost
What, thed, is the ground of discontent? It is that States, and which laws contravene the Constitution of the
Dissolution would not only arrest but extinguish the
greatness of our country, . Even if scpnrfitc confedera- the disunionists did not accept as conclusive, the argu- United States, or nnylawof Congress passed iiiconformity The Mlmla'jpui River Blocknded—A Batter)- Er«
rcted sit Vicksbarc—Outrages on 8leamb->at Right*.
•ijes could exist and endure, they could severally preserve ments which were urged in behalf of the sucessful candi thereto, ought to be repealed.
Mr. Branch, in his place in Congress, denied the teleSecondly. Experience in public affairs has confirmed
no share of the common prestige of tho Union. If the date iu the canvass. This is all. Were their owu arguconstellation is to be broken up, tho stars, whether scat- ments against him more satisfactory to his supporters?— my opinion, that domestic slavery, existing in nny State, graph report that cannon were planted on the bank of
tered Widely aparC or grouped in small clusters, will thence- Of course they were not: they conld not be. Does the is wisely left by the Constitution of tbe United States ex- the Mississippi to intercept passing steamboats. But
forth slied forth feeble, glimmering nnd lurid lights.— Constitution, in letter or spirit require or imply that clusively to the care and management and disposition of that report is true, nevertheless, as will be seen by the
Nor will great achievements bo possible for the new con- the arguments of one party should be satisfactory to the that State; and if it were in my power. I would not alter
federacies. Dissolution would signalize its triumph by other? No; that is impossible. What is the Constitu. the Constitution in that respect. If misapprehension of following: From th« XrarWf Aralanrtu, Jan. 17.
acts of wantonness which would shock and astound the tional remedy for this iuveitable dissatisfaction. Renew- my position needs so strong a remedy, I am willing to
Just above Vicksburg. by direction of Gov. Pettus, a
•world. It would provincialize Mount Vernon and give ed debate and ultimate rehearing iu a subsequent election. vote for an amepument to the Constitution, declaring that battery has been erected, and every boat hailing from
this Capital over to desolation at the very moment when Have the now successful majority perverted power to it shall not, by any future amendment be so altered as to North of Mason and Dickson's line is compelled to ronnd
the dome is rising over our heads that was to be crowned purposes of oppression? No; they have never before confer on Congress a power to abolish or interfere with to, and give an -account of themselves The Impcriol.
with tho statuo of Liberty. After this thcro would re- held power. Alas! how prone we are to undervalue priv- slavery in*anv State.
from this port, passed there dnrin? the night, and was
Thirdly. 'While I think that Congress has exclusive forced to land at th" behest of a twelve-pound shot fired
main for disunion no act of stupendous infamy to bo com- ileges bnd blessings. How gladly, how proudly, would
mitted. No petty confederacy that'shall follow tho Uni- tho people of any nation in Europe accept, on such terms and sovereign authority to legislate on all subjects what- across ber bows. Of conrse she was all right and went
as
we
enjoy
it,
the
boon
of
electing
a
Chief
Magistrate
ever, in the common territories of the United States; and on. The new Republic is goiug to work in earnest.
ted States can prolong, or even renew, the majestic drains of national progress. Perhaps it is to be arrested every four years by free, equal ana universal suffrage!— while I certainly shall never, directly or indirectly, give
r « m lh» JlraiphU Appeal. Jan. XT,
'becanse its sublimity is incapable of continuance. Let flow thankfully would they cast aside all their own sys- my vote to establish or sanction slavery in snch territories,
The orders of the Governor of Mississippi to place a
it be so, if wo have indeed' Dccome degenerate. After tems of government, and accept this republic of ours, or any where else in the world, yet the question what con- battery of guns at Vicksburg for the purpose of hailing
with
all
its
shortcomings
and
its
disappointments,
mainstitutional laws sholl nt any time be passed in regard to
Washington ami the inflexible Adoifts,' Henry, aud .the
steomers and causing them to land, have been complied
peerless Hamilton, Jefferson, and tho majestic Clay, tain it with their arms, and cherish it in their hearts! Is the territories, is, like every other question, to be deter- with, as we learn from one of the clerks of the Si mood*,
Webster, aud the acute Calhoun, Jeckson, aud the mod- it not the very boon for which they supplicate God with- mined on practical grounds. I voted for enabling acts in who informs us that four guns are placed ut the foot of the
est Taylor, nnd Scott, who rises in greatness audcr the out ceasing, and even wage war, with intermission only the cases of Oregon, Minnesota and Kansas, without be- bluff, a quarter of a mile above the wharf-boat; that while
burden of yeurs, and Fulton, aud Whitney, and Morse, resulting from exhaustion? How strango are the Jimcs ing able to secure in them such provisions as I would the Simonds lay there on ber trip up the river, blaakeet
in which we live! The coming spring season, on one side have prefered; and yet I voted wisely. So now, I am well
• havo all performed their parts, let the curtain fall!
ridges were fired to bring to and cause to hind tbe GlaWhile listening to tlieso debates I have sometimes for- of the Atlantic, will open a general conflict waged to ob- satisfied that under existing circumstances, a happy and diator, the Imperial and p . A. Tylar. and that it was
gotten njyself ip marking their contrasted effectsuporrthe tain, through whatever indirection, just such a svstcra as satisfactory solution of the difficulties in the remaining understood that if the snrontons were not attended to the
ours:
and
on
this
side
of
the
Atlantic
within
tlie
same
territories
would
be
obtained
by
similar
laws,
providing
page whs customarily stands on the dias before me, and
next gun would be shotted. The object of the suvcillancithe venerable Secretary wJ;o sits behind me. The youth parallels of latitude, it will open on fraternal war, waged for their organization, if such oriranization were other- has not been made known.
exhibits intense but pleased emotion in the excitoment in a moment of frenzied discontent to overthrow and an- wise practicable. If. therefore. Kansas were admittedas
rroa Uie Mrmpbte Krentef Ar*t„. Jan. IU
while at every irreverent word that is ottered against the nihilate the same institutions. Do men. indeed, li7eonly a State under the Wyandotte Constitution, as I think she
Cincinnati steamboat men have been thrown into a fc
Union, the eyes of the aged man are soffused with tears. for themselves, to revenge their own wrongs, or to gratify onght to be, and if the organic laws of all the other ter- ver from tbe Governor of Mississippi ordering cannon
Let him weep no more. Rather rejoice, for yours has their own ambition? Rather do not men live least of ail ritories could be repealed, I could vote to authorize the
and
a
military
company to Vicksburg to hail all Bteam
heen a lot of rare felicity. Vou have seen and been a for themselves, and chiefly for posterity and for their fel- organization and admission of two new States which should
boats passing.
part of all tbe greatness of your country, the taweriog low-men? Have the American people, then, become all inclnde them, reserving the right subdivisions of them
The Abolition journals of Cincinnati howl over it and
of
a
sudden
unnatural
as
well
as
unpatriotic
T
And
will
whenever
necessary
into
several
convicn
ent
States;
but
I
national greatness of all the world. Weep only Vou, and
are greatly incensed. We would like to sec them help
x-eep with nil the bitterness of anguish, whp. arc j « t they disinherit their children of the precious estate held .do not find that such reservations could be constitution- themselves.
-topping on tlie threshold of life; for that greatiiess^r- only in trust for them, and deprive tnc world of the best ally made. Without them, the ulterior embarrassments
From «H» Bnffaitt Courier
shes prematurely and exists not for you, nor for me, nor hopes it has enjoyed since the human race began its slow which would result from the hasty incorporation of states
In addition to the above, we have tbe nevs that a bat
and painful, yet needful and wisely appointed progress? of such vast extent «md various interests and character tery of sixteen thirty-two pounders has been erected at
for any that shall come after us.
Here I might close my plea for tbe American Union; would outweigh all the immediate advantages of such
The public prosperity! how could itsurvive the storm?
Memphis. The free navigation of tbe Mississippi is a
fte elements are industry in the culture of everv fruit - but it is necessary, if not to exhaust the argument at least measure.
right we have paid for and must have, come what will
But if tbe meosures were practicable, I would prefer a
mining of all tbe metals : commerce at home and on eve- to exhibit tho whole case. The disunionists, consciously
unable
to
stand
on
their
mere
disappointment
in
tbe
different
couree.
namely:
When
the
eccentric
movements
ry sea; material improvement that knows no abstacle
THK CHAMJJKTOS CUSTOM HOUSE.—By the statstics ar
of secession and disunion shall have ended in whatever companying the last report of the Secretary of 'be Trcn>,
and has no end ; invention that ranges throughout the cent election, have attempted to enlarge their ground.
'Jomnin of nature ; increase of knowledge as broad as the More than thirty years there has existed a considerable— form that end may come, and the angry excitments of the
though not heretofore a formidable—mass of citizens ii hour shall have subsided, and calmness once more shall nrr. it appears that the Costom House at Charleston. S
human mind can explore ; perfection of art as
human genius can reach; and social refinement working certain States situated near or around the delta of the have resumed its accustomed sway over tbe public mind, C., has already cost the National Government more than
for tbe renovation of the world. How could our succcs- Mississippi, who believe that the Union is less condu then, and not till then—one. two "or three years hence—I 82,000,000, although it is still unfinished, and more than
coni prorecute tn&e noble objects in the midst or bru- ivc to the welfare and greatness of those States than a should cheerfully advise a convention of the people, to be $.*>00,000 would be required to complete it. This is one
talizing civil conflict? What guarantees will capital in- smaller confederacy, embracing only slave States, would assembled in pursuance of the Constitution, to consider
of the baitding3 which tbe Seceders seized upon at the
vested for such purposes bnvc, that will outweigh the be. This ciass has availed itself of tbe discontents result- and decide whatever any and what amendments of tbe orpremium offered by political and military ambition?— ing from the election to put into operation the machinery ganic national law ought to be made. A Republican now outset of their movement and the Pelmet to flag now
I have heretofore been a member of other parties waves over it in triumph.
What leisure will the citizen find for study or invention, of dissolution long ago prepared and waifmg only for oci? a r t under the reign of conscription ; nav, what in- casion. In other States there is a soreness because of the exiiding in rov day—I nevertheless hold and cherish as I
Tlie Preadout elect will be escorted to Washington
n-rest in them will socielj fee! when fear and hate shall want of sympathy in the free States with the efforts of havfi always (lone, the principle tbot this government exhare taken possession of the national mind? L*t the mi- slaveholders for tho recapture of fugitives from service. istis in its present form only by the consent of tbegovern- by the Springfield (III.) Zouaves, in spite of threats com
source. This companv "is composed of young
ner in California take heed; for its golden wealth willbe- In all tho slave States there is a restiveness resulting from ed, and that it is as necessary as it is wise to resort to i j„_ f r o m
, ,
,
.
• sine tbe prize of a nation that can command the roost iron, the resistance which hn^ been so determinedly mado with- the'people for revisions of the organic law when tbe
fto
»bo bare for some monlf. p r t ton m i c r ,he infjet the borderer take care, for the Indian will again lurk in the Inst few years, in the free States, to the extension m u E . n d d . n w r a o r t t e S t a l ^ r i a i n l y t n . n s r f o d
powers
delegated
by
it
to
the
public
authorities.
Nor
I
stmctioo
of
Col.
Ellsworth, and in drill they are said to
t;ound his dwelling. Let tho pioneer cotne back into of slavery in the common territories of the Unitee States.
tne denser settlements/, for the railroad the post-road and The Republican party which cast its votes for the success- ought the suggestion to excite surprise. Government in • be fully equal to the genuine eriginal Zouaves.
... ,,
.
The telegraph udvancei not one furlong farther int<^ the fid Presidential candidate on the ground of that policy, ony form is a machine; this is the most complex one that,
R e
h a
I » b l ™ »nh«
" "I*™*1 " " " " "
'vilderncss. With standing armies consuming the sub- has been allowed, practically, no representation, no utter- tbe mind of man has ever invented, or tko U d of m i l i
rrance of our people «n the land, and our navy and our ance by speech or through tho press, in the slave States: has ever framed. Perfect as it is, it ought '.o be expect-11 inendfltion in behalf of Mr. Colfox as Postmas'.sr-Genercl
postal steamers withdrawn from tbe ocean, who will pro- while its policy, principles and sentiments, and even its ed that it Will, at least as often a3 once in a century, re- which has been transmitted to Mr. Lincoln.
-iDuru n
T
TODAY
> < ymuaxH^iriii. kriiro*- >
„ , V P « « 1 ! r t TY~,
Read the Following.
'
' man, latety excused himself for his present coarse, seen*
* i i l l B ™ °PP°* ili °'' <° 1 * Sooth. on tie grouid Ui<i tie
! secessionists deserted him, and if he had shown any farther
MORNING, F E B R U A R Y 8, MM.
.
t0 & v „
Thermometrical lteRistor.
|Bc4ns »<"» <***"';• ^ inptMhri fa
The Vice-President h u ordered the Secretary of the
Trsvo—City
u t . UM
1861.
7 A.M.
1 r. i .
Wednesday,Jan.23.. 9°abort fl - 2 1 s shore 0.
Thursday.. " 24..2*
-.34
1
Friday
- 25.. 18
«
-.20
"
rtsturiisy... " 26.. 3
«
..32
»
.^nday.... '• 27. .34
Monday.
29r.24
"
T u e * d a y . • • 39..22
"
44
Wednesday " 30..10
Thursday.. « 31.. 13
••
Friday..'. .Feh... 1.. I below
Haturday.. " 2.. 20 shove
Sunday
- "3..10
Monday...•,»
4.. 20
Tuesday..1-, f 5..24
..
..28
..10
..14
SNOW.—We have'a superabundance <>f snow.
more than three feet deep on the level.
!
Our columns have been so overburtheoed with long
Messages and speeches for several weeks past that we have
had little room for any thing else.
Now that wo are
through with them, we shall be enabled hereafter to furnish oar usual variety of miscellaneous, local and general
news matter.
-.
'
Tcr.—Prom present indications we shall be under the
necessity of sending to Detroit for a summer supply of ice.
We don't manufacture the article up in this " cold, bleak
mid inhospitable region." Navigation has not been
f lo*ed up to this time ; and if Grand ' Traverse1 Bay
should freeze over, it will not remain closed more than
two or three weeks.
Summary of Secession N e w *
Mr. Crittenden has made a speech in the Senate in
which he fook the position that the Union must be preserved at all hazzards, either by peaceable meansor force,
and that force used against the lawless citizens of a Government is not coercion of a State.: The speech was unexpected, .and created great sensation.
(Jeorgia has parsed the Ordinance of Secession, by a
rote of 208 to 89. A resolution was adopted to cohtinuo the preseut postal and reveuuo system until otherwise ordered, and also to continue all the federal officers.
A. H. Stevens and H. V. Johnson voted against Secession, but subsequently pigned the Secession Ordinance.
All the U. S- Senators from Florida, Alabama and
Mississippi, withdrew from the Senate on the 28th ult.
The Kentucky Legislature has passed a resolution by
a vote of 87 to 6, declaring in view of men and money
tendered by several Northern States to the General Government, that the people of Kentucky, uniting with their
brethren of the South, will resist such an invasion of the
soil of the South at all hazards and to the last extremity
The traitors have erectod batteries at Memphis and
•other points on the Mississippi river, and compel'sll
••teainboats from tbo North to come-to and give an ac•ciijht of themselves.
A boat from Fort Suropter has been fired upon from
(tho battery on Sullivan's Island, in Charleston harbor,
find ooe man wounded.
J e t t Davis is talked of as Piosident of the Southern
i S c ° " e t0„c0°U,'»e " " ' " S " > « ^
-ceded 8eoators, until the question whether their seats are
not, shall be determined by the Senate.
Even the South Carolina Senators, names are still called daily, the Senate never having received any official information of their resignation.
General Scott, it is said, has recently received information which increases his zeal to defend the Federal Capital. Governor Hicks, private secretary had an interview with him, the consequence of which has been an Increase to the force. In addition to the other United
States troops, three companies of the Flying Artillery will
be there on the Fourth of March.
IXPIANA U. S. SENATOR.—Henry S. Lane was inaugurated Governor of Indiana on the 14th of January, and
on the 17th he was elected by the Legislature U. S. Senator for six years from the 4th of March next He resigned the Governorship, and 0 . P . Morton, LieutenantGovernor, was sworn in as Governor.
AXI> B E N O T SATISFIED.
B I T COMB AND CONVINCE I O U I R L 1 OF
T H E rOLLOlTOVB P A C T S :
P I R S T . T h a t
Hitchcock, Campbell $ Bacon,
jVetr Arrangement. K
Groceries, Provisions, Dry Goods, Hard
EEP OONKTANTLY ON HAND A GENERAL AS
Kurtmsat of
TO THE PUBLIC
In Traverse City, and on att parts of
Grand 1 haverHay, we wor/J/i w X
pectfully announce
T
H
E
F
A
O
THAT WE HATE NOW MOVED INTO
Our New and Spacious Store,
Which we are Biting to repletion with ALL KINDS OP
Goods and Wares
wire, Clothing,
And. In fact, anvthing the wants of the country demand ,
which thay sell cheap for
R E A D Y
P A Y ,
believing the nimble dia^e better than the lajy alilling.
S B C O K I X > L Y , That
They pay the highest market nriqc for all kinds of Frodsaa:
Wheat, Rye, Corn, Oats, Ltnckwheat, Beans, Pans.
Barley i O rasa-Seed, P o u l t r y , PorV and Beef,
(Dressed or on foot,) Nhk'ngles a n d CordWood.
TRAPPEIS will do well to give tht m a call before
FURS
elsewhere, as their Eastern arrangement* give skem an advantage over other buyers in the County.
T H I R D L Y ,
That
By the aid of experienced workmen, they have opened • t n
Mr. Collamer, of Vermont, has introduced a bill into
the U. S. Senate to authorize the President to declare which arc'adapted to the want* of the surrounding country
the ports in which forcible resistance to the laws of the
ytfc:. >
."
Union is threatened, no longer ports of entry for the and A1IE or MAY BE called for from time to time.
asp ABC rairAKED TO DO
United States, and also to suspend the mail service, until
such time as the officers of the law may safely discharge ' -We would briefly call the attention of the purchasing pub- of any. description, on short notice. Also keep on hsnd ait
assortment or
their duties,
- "v.?:" !
Iron, S a p P a n a , 16-30-60 Gallon Kettle*, Plows,
Axes, Hoes. Drag-Teeth, Sleds, Ox-Carts, OxThe Maine Legislature has passed the Joint Resolutions lic to the following
Yokes, Whiffletrees, See.
tendering the President all the resources of Maine, both
In short, nil kinds of P a n n i n g Implement*; snd will r »»
psrticulsr
attention to
in'men and money, for tho maintance of the Union and
P O I N T S .
the enforcement of the laws.
HO RUE AND OX-SHOEING.
WE HAVE A
•Timothy 0 . Howe, Republican, has bceh elected TJ
F O U R T H L Y , That
S. Senator from Wisconsin, for six years from the 41
A NEW
of March next.
Blacksmith Shop,
CUSTOM WORK,
SctctnK.—H. McAlpin, Esq., a lawyer, of Port Huron, committed suicide by shooting himself on the 2-ltlj
ult
A merchant in New York refused to soil fifty tous of
lead when he learned that it was destined for Florida.
The Union sentiment of North Carolina advanced the
Bonds of that State, in Wall st, from 74 to 80.
Mr. Holt baa been confirmed by the Senate as Secretary of War.
NEW STORE;
IN THE MAIX, A
N E W STOCK:
Propeller of Our Own,
The bill to admit Kansas into the Union has passed the
U . S . Senate.
Our Own Trade,
" D. B. 1)K LAND & Co.'s Saleratns, forever," shouted
Kate, as she ran up the stairs, followed by Bridget with
a freshly baked pan of biscuit in her hands. " De Land's
Saleratus forever." They were indeed tempting, and no direct to Chicago; thus giving ua GREAT ADVANTAGES
wonder that the girls were delighted with their first expcriinent with tbis favorite of housekeepers. ThisSalera- over any one having to PAY FREIGHTS.
tus is perfectly pure, healthful, reliable, and of uniform
quantity. Manufactured and for sale at wholesale by D1
Our Rents are Nothing.
B. De Land k Co., Fairport, Monroe Co., N. Y. Sold
also by all dealers.
METALLIC MILL,
for Shelling Corn, Grinding Corn and Cob, and all kinds ef
Coarse Grain* will be run expressly in a
CUSTOM TRADE.
For th« accomodation of the
P
A
R
M E R S .
S E E D GRAINS,
OP ALL KlfiDS, .ASI)
F E E D
MEAL.,
will be kept constantly on band and for sale by the lfXl It*,
or ton.
HITCHCOCK, CAMPBELL k BACON.
Traverse City Dec. 1; 1WK>.
My
NEW
STORE
AND
N E W GOODS,
Corner of Wakaxoo and N ago a nbe Sta.,
N O R T H P O R T .
Effect of Secasion on Commerce.
TJKlf
The Secessionists confidently expected that their moveTHE SUBSCRIBER HAS JUST RECEIVED HI6 WINTER
-A.bundant A d v a n t a g e s
Fort.MeRea, in Florida, has been invested and guns mert would produce great commercial distress in New
STOCK, CONSISTING OF
•mounted toy the allied forces of Florida,1 Alabama and York, and predicted that "grass would grow in its streets."
; .i/ FOR PURCHASING GOODS IX
Apprehensions
of
such
results
have
beeu
largely
felt
in
the
Mississippi.
D R Y
G O O D S ,
citv itselt
. Tho Governor of. Louisiana, in his Message to tho Legbut to the discomfiture of the Traitors, it is their own
islature on-the 22d January, says: " All hopes are at an Trade that suffers, instead of that of New York. They Neto- York, Boston, Cincinnati or Chi-end that tbe.diaunsioo between the North and tho'South have praoticaily closed the port or Charleston, and arc
cago.
Rearly-Made Clothing,
is to be heated. There is no longer any doubt of the pursuing a policy which is destroying business at Mobile
wisdom of (hat policy which demands that the conflict and New Orleans. The refusal of United States ClearanFrom onr long residence in the country we have become
ces, the doubtful authority of the Collectors to receive
shall come and shall be settled now."
duties, the.removal of buoys and lights, the obstructions
The Alabama Legislature has adopted resolutions re- placed in the channels, nil tend to turn away vessels from well acquainted wjth the wants-of tho public.
Which he offers cheap for Caah or Barter.
those ports and compel them to seek safer and more cerfilling their JlepreeeatatrVes in Congress.
And now wo have associated with us iu the Mercantile DeC. DAVIDSON, Agent.
CoL Hugec. of tke.army, formerly of South Carolina, tain profits in the harbors of the North. Hence ships
that nave heretofore traded at Soutern ports now go to
Northport, December SI, ^860.
M
- i ' m . * JX/ ! .
is the chosen leader-xif the traitors who contemplate an New York; and Southern produce, debarred of its usual
partment of our firm,
attack on Washington »City.
exit by sea, comes North by the Mississippi and the rail.
P. S — C A S H P A H ) FOR FURS.
Every effort will be made to shape the Southerp Gov- ways to be finally exported from here. The volume of
M R . . Sf. B A R N S ,
ernment aa soon as practicable, with a view of presenting exports from New York is now immense and increasing
NORTHPORT IS RISING!!
this cause. All branches of trade feel a reviving
•a formidable organization before the 4th of March. It from
impulse; specie is accumlating; stocks are rising, and a who fot sixteen years has been extensively engaged in a buis to be called the Confederacy of North America. The cheerful feeling again begins to prevade business circles.
T h i s is E v i d e n t ! S i n c e
present Constitution of the United States will be adopted, In fact the madness of the Secessionists is directly tend- siness whose requirements were of the same nature as our
L . M . & W . P . S T E E L E & Oo.
with an amendment extending -the period of naturaliza- ing to build up ihe trado of New York, which they exand Who has for several years purchased goods of the
pected to destroy. On the other hand stagnation, debt
HAVE INTRODUCED A LARGE AND THE
tion to twenty-one years.
BEST HOUSES in NEW-YORK and BOSTON, and who will
and distress rergn in seaports of the Seceding States, and
Jeff. Davis has been appointed Commander-in-Chief of must inevitably continue to do so as long as they lend ontlnue to do so forourfinn from time to time; thus «pONLY STOCK
the Mississippi forces,
themselves to the service of Treason.
j abling us to lay down our goods
[Albany Evening Journal.
Gov, "Brown, on the 24th 3 an nary, at tho head of 7(
As Low as amy House in Chicago;
iroops. demanded the surrender of the U. S. Arsenal at
and save to the consumer—first, TRAVELING EXPENSES: D R U G S & M E D I C I N E S
P R O B A T E NOTICE.
Augusta, Ga. II is demand was complied wi th, the troops STATE OF MICHIGAN.
)
second, LOSS OF TIME; and lastly and mainly, the ENORTO BE POUND IN THE COUNTY.
Coil NT V OF KM MKT. S
in charge saluting tho U. 6. flag before hauling it down.
MOUS AMOUNT necessarily adOed to cover HIGH RENTS
T A SESSION O F T H E P R O B A T E COURT
A t Pens&cola, Florida, the volunteers are engaged in
for the Countv of Emmet, bolden at Little Traverse, on and expenses of the Chicago merchant.
ALSO—\ eaoice v
We shall make an ESPECIAL EFFORT to keep so com
mounting and arranging their cannons, carpenters are Monday, the 14th day of January, in the year of our Lord
one thoupand eight hundred and sixty one ;
plete a stock that
making scaling ladders, and the utmost bustle prevails.
Preeent. Hcnty S. Graveraet, Jr., Jndge of Probate. In the
Any Dealers on the Bay
The United States steamer Wyandotte is anchored matter of the estate of Joseph Wa-wa-se-mah, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition, duly verified, of Helen will be enableil to purchase of us, in quantities to siHt, for |
Westward ofJFori Piekens, under-the guns of the F o r t Ne-bah-a-mo-qua.and A. J. Blackbird, praying, among other only a SMALL ADVANCE on COST and a commission for |
handling,
'
,
i
*•'**
./or the purpose, it is supposed, to assist Lieut Slimmer.
x
j T o t h e X«adies,
_
,.
AU pilots ha*re been notified thnt they may bring U. S, Thereupon it is ordered that Monday, the fourth day of
would
that owing to want of room wc have been I P
R
O
V
I
S
I
O
N
S
war vessels inside of the harbor, if a vessel carry a flag March, A. D. 1861, at ten o'clock, A. M.. be assigned for hear- we
*
ing said petition, and that the heirs at law of said deceased unable to keep many things in their line, which NOW, from (
of truce.
! IN WHICH THEY ARE NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD.
md all other persons interested in said estate, are required our increased room, and the
Gov. Moore; Commander-in-Chiaf of the army and to appear at a Session of said Court, then to be holden at the Intimatepersonal acquaintance of our Mr. j
Probate Office, in the village of Little Travese, in said counnavy of Louisiana,:lhas issued orders to the Balize pilots ty,
Bams with the thousand ami one fie- i
G i v e TTs a C a l l !
and show causr, if any there be. why the prarer of the
j»ot to pilot any American vessel of war over the bar ot petitioner* should not he granted. And*it is further ordermands necessary to a Ladifs wants,
ed,
that the said petitioners, Helen Ne-bah-a-tnoqua and A.
N. B.—Physicinni* Prescriptions Cnrefnlly Com<lie mouth of the Mississippi, under the severest penal- J. Blabkbird,
tare TRY and keep ANY and ALL THINGS
give notice to tho persons interested in said we shall in fntui
pounded.
ties.
Estate, of the pendency of Mid petition ajd the hearing they may require.
L. 1L A MT. P. STEELE & CQ
thereof, by causing a copy of thin order to be published in
2&m
N. B. ANYTHING not in our regular line that Ladies or) Northport, Dec H, 18G0.
There is beyond question a strong increasing Union the Grand Traverse Herald, it being the nearest paper pub- citizens
may want, we shall hold ourselves in readiness to j
MORGAN B A T E S ,
i A I'"
•wntiment in Maryland. Most of the Representatives and lished to said Village, for three successive weeks previous to send for; and shall be mopt happy to do so at any and all j
Little Traverse, Jan. 14. 1861. times.
' •"
I
Senators from that State think it will be very difficult to said day of hearing. Dated
HENRY G. GRAVERAET. JR..
N O T A R Y iPTTBLIC,
H A N N A H , L A Y & CO- ,
9-jw
Judge of Probate.
A a g her into secession.
Traverse City Kay 2S, I860.
!
H e r a l d Ofliov, T r a v e r s e Citjr M i o h .
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Hardware, Groceries and Provisions,
A
FAMILY GROCERIES
W\
Ds MOTT'S
,
i ' <L3WMW'ew»»e*»iV m«.to eight
^Bgarogaartef,,
pi
W
| TTkriTmh, Lay ft Co/s Ck?ltnnn. j Hannah, Lay & CO.'B Column.
l
^
*
T w e r # r a i n t o sigh o'er error* p a c t ;
...Tfc^Anit of aires or aonal
Onr aoIdler beard the threatening b i n t
W h a t t h o u g h their angry cry la fang
Acroaa the bowling wave,—
They stnltc the air with idle tongue
The g a t h e r i n g n o r m who tenure:
Enough of s p e e c h ! the t r u m p e t ring*:
Bo silent. D»tient. caliiv—
God help t h e m it tbe tempest Swings
The pine against the p a l m !
(
Onr toilsome r e a m h a r e made « s t a m v ;
Our strength has slept unfelt;
The furna c e Arc Is slow t v
flame
c
T h a t b i d s o u r ploughshares melt;
Tin hard to loae Qio bread they win
In spite of Nature's frowns,—
T o drop the iron thread* we apin
That weave onr w e b of towns.
To aee tbe rustling turbines stand
jBefore the emptied flames, To fold the arm» that flood the land
With river* fnwn their looms,—
R u t h a r d e r s t i l t for t h o s e who learn
T h f J r n t h forgot s o l o n g :
]
Vfben once the s H u n W r i n g paaSfon» burn.
The peaceful are t b « a t r o n g !
And save our brothers ere tbey ah rick J
" We played with n o r t h e r n flre!."
The eagle holds his mountain h e i g h t , - '
Revelations of a Slave Trader.
.HIE FATE or TUX GLQEIA. . . . .
...
'
TJie scenes d e s c r i b e d a s h a v i n g t a k e n plaoe on b o a r d
t h e c l i p p e r G l o r i a , with h e r d r u n k e n c a p t a i n a n d c r c w ,
a r t m a s t d r e a d f u l t o c o n t e m p l a t e . T h e t n b j o i o o d relates
t o t h e c a t a s t r o p h e o f t h i s vessel. T h c s m u g g l e r g o e s on
to My:
•"; » >
•• A n t t h i s was t o b e m y last t r i p o n ' t h e b l o o d stained
Gloria. H a r d l y w e r e we o u t a f o r t n i g h t bofore it was
discovered t h a t o a r roystering c r e w h a d neglected t o
c h a n g e t h e sea w a t e r , w h i c h h w j served as o u r ballast,, in
the l o w e r casks, a n d w h i c h o a j & t to h a v e been r e p l a c e d
w i t h f r e s h w a t e r in A f r i c p . W e w e r e d r a w i n g f r o m t h e
last a u k s , b e f o r e t h i s d i s c o v e r y w u s m a d e ; a n d t h e horr o r of o u r s i t u a t i o n s o b e r e d C a p t a i n H u t z . H e g a v e
o r d e r s to h o i s t t h e p r e c i o u s r e m n a n t a b a f t t h e m a i n g r a t ing a n d - m a d e m c c a l c u l a t e h o w Jong i t would sustain
r h e c r c w a n d c a r g o . I f o u n d '.hat half a gill a d a y w o u l d
hold o u t t o t h e S p a n i s h m a i n ; a n d i t was d e c i d e d t h a t , in
o r d t r t o save o u r c a r g o , w e w o u l d allow t h e slaves half a
j-ill, a n d t h e c r e w "a gill e a c h day. T h a u b e g a n a t o r t u r e
worse Uian d e a t h t o tlio b l a c k s . P e n t I n t h e i r d u n g e o n s
t o t h e n u m b e r of n e a r l y five h u n d r e d , t h e y s u f f e r e d cont i n u a l t o r m e n t . O u r c r e w a n d d r i v e r s w e r e unwilling t o
allow even, t h e half gill p e r diem, a n d q u a r r e l e d fiercely
o v e r thejr^QWU s t i n t e d nations. O u r c a r g o h a d b c e u s t o w e<tj90 t h e p l a t f o r m s c l o s e r t h a n , I e v e r s a w slaves s t o w e d
b e f o r e o r « n c e * I n s t e a d of l o w e r i n g b u c k e t s of w a t e r t o
t h e m , a s was c u s t o m a r y , i t b e c a m e necessary t o p o u r t h e
w a t e r . i n t o half-pint m e a s u r e s . T h o e o f a r t h o r e s t from t h e
g r a t i n g never g o t a d r o p , a n d b e c a m e r a v i n g m a d for
drink'. P r e s e n t l y , d i s e a s e s of different k i n d s a d d e d t o
t h e i r misery. F e v e r s a h d fluxes m a d e t h e air r e e k w i t h
poison; a n d d e a t h s followed so fast, t h a t in a s h o r t t i m e ,
a t l e a s t a h u n d r e d m e u a n d w o m e n w e r e shackled t o dead
p a r t n e r s . O u r c a p t a i n a n d c r e w a s well a s myself, d r a n k
h a r d , b u t t h i r s t a n d disease k e p t d o w n all licentiousness.
M a t t e r s g r e w w o r n , daily, f o r - t h e d e a d wore n o t t h r o w n
o v e r b o a r d , t u o f t h e H v l n g s e r v e d w i t h w a t e r , o r e v e n food,
e x c e p t t h e r o t t e n y a m s t h a t could b e reaohed w h o r e t h e y
lay.; A t last C a p t a i n R u i x o r d e r e d t h 6 h a t c h e s d o w n ,
a n d s w o r e h e would m a k e t b e r u u o n o n r r e g u l a r w a t e r
rations a n d t a k e t h e c h a n c e s of h i s s t o c k . T h a t n i g h t we
•-aroused, a n d satisfied, o u r t h i r s t w h i l s t t h e n e g r o e s suffocated b e l o w . N e x t m f l h i i n g c a m e a s t o r m , w h i c h d r o v e
us on o u r w a y a h u n d r e d k n o t s T w o d a y s a f t e r w a r d , B o l t a n d f o u r of t h e men wore
laken s u d d e n l y ill, w i t h a d i s e a s e t h a t baffled m y medical
k n o w l e d g e . T h e i r tongues swelled, a n d g r e w b l a c k ; their
flesh t u r n e d yellow, a n d in six h o u r s t h e y w e re d e a d . T h e
first m a t e w e n t n e x t a n d t h r e e o t h e r s of t h e crew, a n d a
b l a c k d r i v e r w h o m b o d y b c c a m e l e p r o u s w i t h yellow {pots.
I b e g a n to n o t i c e a s t r a n g e f e t i d smell, p r e v a d e d t h e vessel, a n d a l o w , h e a v y f o g : o n d e c k a l m o s t like s t e a m . —
T h e n the horrid'truth became a p p a r e n t Our rotten negros
w i d e r t hlee h a t c h e s h a .d wg e n.e r a t e a t hbo
e p li a g u e , a n d' i"t "was
a malaria, or death-mist; t h a t I saw rising. A t t h i s time
a S o a r m e u b n t t h r e e , a n d myself, b a d been a t t a c k e d ; a n d
-wc a b a n d o n e d t h e - G l o r i a , in h e r l o n g b o a t t a k i n g t h e
r e m n a n t of w a t e r , a s a c k of b i s c u i t a n d a r u m b r e a k e r ,
w i t h w h a t g o l d d u s t a n d o t h e r v a l u a b l e s wo could h a s t i l y
g a t h e r u p . W e l e f t n i n e of o u r late c o m r a d e s d e a d , and
five l y i n g o n t h e G l o r i a ' s d e c k . A f t e r r o w i n g f o r t w o
days, w e s t r u c k a c u r r e n t , a n d in t h r e e d a y s t n o r e w e r e
d r i f t e d t o t h e island of T o r t o l i a , ono of t h c ' L e c w a r d Isles.
" W e m a d e a l a n d i n g on t h e r e e f s , a n d w e r e p i c k e d u p b y
-on*e fishermen.
R
M
E
R
S
In 8 c R 0 F r u > t ' s Tt.-BiBCfLOSis.thls medicated iron has bad
far more than the good cflect of t h e most cnntiouslv balanced
preparations of iodine, w i t h o n t any of the well known liabilities.
The attention of females c a n n o t be too confidently invited
to t h i s remedy and restorative* in tbe cases peculiarly affecting t h e m . .
In RIIEVM \TISM. both c h r o n i c a n d inflammatory—in the
lattcf, however, more decidedly—it has l*ren invariably well
reported, both as alleviating pain ami r e d u c i n g the swellings
and stiffness of the j o i n t s and muscles.
In INTERMITTENT F^V^KS It must necessarily, bo a . g r e a t
remedy BD<1 onerjjetiorestorative, ar>lIts progress I n tlM new
settlements' of the AVcst, will probably lie o n c o f h r g h renown
and usefulness.
No remedy has e v e r lieen discovered in the whole history
of medicine", which exerts such prompt, happy, and fully restorative effects. Good appetite, complete digestion, rapid
acquisition of strength, with an unnsual disposition for active and cheerful exercise, immediately follow its use.
P u t u p In neat flat metal boxes c o n t a i n i n g AO pills, price
50 c e n t s per b o x ; for sale y d r u g g i s t s and dealers. Will lie
sent free t o any address On"receipt of the price. • All letters,
orders, etc., should be addressed to
R . H . L O C K E Ac C o . , G e n e r a l A g e n t * ,
27-1 v
20 C
.. X m
GRAY,
BLUE
5 Pail S u g a r Kettles:
30 Gallon S u g a r Kettles;
CO Gallon do
do. a full a s s o r t m e n t
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Dec. 14. 1860.
2-y
RUITS—ioo
BARRELS CHOICE WINTER APPLES
f o r sale by the barrel or buahel.
Cider by the barrel.
HANNAH,.LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov. 30, I860.
y.
U A L L O F 1 8 0 0 — C H O I C E WINTF.BFRUIT—1243AR
1
rels Apples, hand picked, f o r Winter use, for sale cheap |
by the "barrel
i r r e l or bushel
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e Citj-, Nov. 30, I860.
T
O F I S H E R M E N — W E H A V E ON HAND AN Ass o r t m e n t of seaming and watc
Fish Hooks, Gilling twine from 25
T r o l l i n g H o o k s of various
Sinkers,-Cane Poles, ftc.
HANNAH, LAY ft CO
T r a v e r s e City. Nov. 30, 1
J
U S T R E C E I V E D FROM NEW YORK, A SMALL
lot of very fine S p e c t a c l e s .
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
POISON.—Hall's J o u r n a l of H e a l t h says, if a p e r s o n
Traverse City, J a n . 10,1861.
6
s w a l l o w s poison d e l i b e r a t e l y , o r b y c h a n c e , i n s t e a d of
b r e a k i n g o u t i n t o m u l t i t u d i n o u s a n d i n c o h e r e n t exclamaH O I C E F R E N C H M E R I N O E S , BY THE PAT I
t i o a a , d i s p a t c h some o u e for t h e d o c t o r ; meanwhile, r u n
TERN, f o r $1 p e r yard.
t o t h e k i t c h e n , g e t h a l f # glass of w a t e r in a n y t h i n g t h a t
HANNAH, LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. N o v . 30,1860.
52
Is h a n d y , p n t i n t o it a t c a s p o o u f u l of salt a n d a s m u c h
g r o u n d m u s t a r d , s t i r i t a u i n s t a n t c a t c h a firm hold of
t h e p e r s o n ' s nose, t h e m o u t h will soon fly o p e n — t h e n
d o w n w i t h t h e m i x t u r e , a n d in a s e c o n d o r t w o u p will
Traverse City. Dec. 14, 1860.
come the poisoa
T h i s will a n s w e r in a l a r g e n u m b e r of
e s s e s t h a n a n y t h i n g else. I f b y t h i s t i m e t b e p h y s i c i a n
A R N E S S , SINGLE AND DOUBLE—an a s s o r t m e n t :
h a s n o t a r r i v e d , m a k e t h e p a t i e n t swallow t h e w h i t e of an
Lines, H a m e Straps, Hold-back Straps, Girths, Breast
e g g , followed b y a c u p of s t r o n g coffee, a s a n t i d o t e s for and Rein Snaps.
H A N N A H , I .AY ft CO.
a n y poison t h a t r e m a i n s in t h e s t o m a c h , b e c a u s e t h e s e
Traverse City, Dec.-14, I860.
'
J-v
p u r i f y a l a r g e n u m b e r of p o i s o n s t h a n a n y o t h e r accessible
article.
. . iculeR. School a n d Work Baskets, open round Work |
G e n e r a l S c o t t i s t h e l a r g e s t m a n in t h e A m e r i c a n ser- Baskets, Table mats, ftc.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO. |
vice. H e is six f e a t six i n c h e s tall, a n d w e i g h s t w o h u n T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30,1HC0.
52
d r e d a n d s i x t y pottnds.
l i e is s e v e n t y - f o u r y e a r s old, y e t
h i s h e a l t h i s g o o d , a n d his w h o l e Bystem i s a p p a r e n t l y rig. S p o k e S h a v e s Spoke A u g u r s Small bright I r o n !
o r o u s — m u c h of w h i c h is o w i n g d o u b t l e s s t o h i s v e r y C h a i n s for Traps.
H A N K AH, LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Dec. I t . I860.
3->
C
H
T
I
O
Q E S T L E * K « ' 8 C L O T H I N G AXI) Fl RVIftll-
N ! t \
? u * i n « M , * » k a n d 'Fancy. C o a t .
, and U n ^ n Pants.;
Summer Coats. P a n t s and V e s t s a full l i n t , ia Ike
Very L a t e s t S t y l e .
White. Fancy, Check and stripe l-hirts; .
Gentlemen's Linen, I x o p o l d acd Byron Collars
Overcoats, a full ltn»;
Kent J a c k e t s ;
t * u u l e * a Coats and Overcoats
Blue and White Overalli;
Kenty a n d Flannel Drawer*;
Flannel and K n i t S h i r t s ;
Suspenders and Gloves;
India Rubber a n d Oil Overalls and Legxin*;
Wool, Cotton and Union Socks;
Black a n d Fancy Silk C r a v a t s ; .
Gingham. Flag and Turkey Red U a n d k e r e h i c ' . ;
Silk Pocket and Neck H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Pocket Knives. Razors, Strop*.
Lather Boxes and Brushes.
Tobacco Boxes and Pouches.
Compasses, Rules, 1 and 2 fei v.
verse City. Nov. 30, lHCft.
H A S N A I I . LAY A CO
|»
Watch guards and fob c h a i n s ;
Fancy aud compass n a t c h keys;
Gun caps G. 1). Cax and water proof;
Kazor strops, a s s o r t e d ;
Shawl pins, necklaces, ear d r o p s ;
Breast piba, assorted, bracelets, w a f e r s :
Kid, bead and leather purses:
l e a t h e r bags, for ladies' u*e:
Wallets, porte nionait-s, indellibic ink;
Cologne, rose oil. War's oil;
P r i n c e of Wales, kiss-me-quick and W i n d s o r *is»f
Almond, hooey, suu-fio«er and Yankee s o a p ;
Silver soap, for cleuuing >ll\er war*. Ac.;
Thermometer*, leather belts:
Fancy, morocco and silk belts:
Carpet binding, snnfl" boxes.
Tobacco boxes, a complete ass'l. some very fine;
Pumpkin, pomegranate, heart and strawberry t n n t i f i
. Shaving boxes, mecrvhuuiu pipes;
Shawl pins, assorted k i u d s ;
Crumb, cloth, hair, nail, t*«ih, s r r u h , blacking, h»r»s
broom a n d paint l u u s h r s ;
Dead s h o t kathariou, t r i e o p h e r o u s :
Measuring U]M'S, very superior and reliable;
Pocket compasses, of best m a k e r s ;
A few silver vvatcbe.—good time-kcepcr»;
Writings desks, portable fancv work-bi.Xes, for ladiss.
H A N N A H , I.AY A CO.
•averse City, Nov. 30, IStti.
i!
W
HITE UOOD8—
Cambric, muslin a n d linen E d g i n g ;
Inserting and Flouncing, real T h r e a d :
Smyrna and cotton Edge and I n s e r t i n g ;
Muslin, c a m b r i c and piqua s e t t s of Collars and Sleeves:
Cambric, muslin A line Maltese hand-wrought Collars;
Muslins—Nainsook, Book, Swiss and C a m b r i c ;
Frenck skirt J a c o n e t ; J a c o n e t :
Cross-barred, Cambric and N a i n s o o k :
Wash Blond; Embroidered Curtains;
Brilliantcs, f r o m la. t o 3Uc:
Ninon, Linen Cambric and hem stitched H'dk'fs;
Printed bord, printed and plain Gent's. H a n d k e r c h i e f s ;
Child's printed, plain and hem stitched linen H ' d k ' f s ;
Napkins, Doyles, Pillow-Case C o t t o n :
Linen Table Covers, by the p a t t e r n or y a r d :
Marseilles, p r i n t e d and plain;
Linen, L i n e n D i a p e r ; P i q u a B i n d i n g :
Linen and Cotton Bosom.—some veryMarseilles Quilts—nice;
Pointed! Tape Trimming, for ladies' use
S o f t and heavy Muslin, for ladies' skirts a n d II
H A N N A H . LAY A (.
Travel p City. Nov. 30. lRfiO.
and fancy knit shirts; drawers, check, striped, fancy
a n d white s h i r t s ; Bosoms and collars, of all latest makes,
H A N X \ H . LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r e i City, Nov. 30.1BG0.
52
F
N
Pork, by the barrel;
Hams and Shoulders, by the 100 l b s . ;
Prints, a choice assortment, by the 2 to 10 piece*;
Flannels;
Mosquito Bars,by the piece;
Nails, by th« keg! assorted ;
Salt, by the barrel:
Coffee, by the 30 t o 100 lbs.;
Ground Coffee, by t b e 20 to,'SO I h s ^
Butter Crackers, 30 lbs. to hbl.;
Hard Bread:
Boston Biscuit;
Soda C r a c k e r s :
Pipes, by the b o x ;
Figs, by the d r u m ;
Brooms, by the d o z e n :
Currants, by the 20 lbs. to' half b a r r e l :
Prunes, by the 20 to 100 lbs.:
Dried Apples, by tbe 100 lbs or barrel:
Gun Cape, by the 1600;
Shot, by the bag.
H A N S AH, f.AY * CO.
raversc Qity Nov. 30. 1~>0.
52
ME
Moflat's P i l l s ;
Jayu<
Pills;
>* . l i t e r a t i * r ; •
Javnes" V e r m i f u g e ;
Ayrea' Cherry P e c t o r a l ;
Rhcubarb; Cndbar;
Mexican L i n i m e n t ; .
P e r r y Davis' Pain K i l l e r ;
Carbonate of Magnesia:
Heed A Culler's Pulmnuaiy Rultani:
Sands' Suntapnriljn; ,
•
Sawyer's Ext. Hark for F e v e r and A g u e ;
Kennedys'Medk'ul Discover';
S u g a r Lead;
'
I loae W a t e r ;
Castor Oil;
Epsom S u l U ;
Sulphur:
IJIC S u l p h u r (for Jlair-dye
C o d t h r Oil:
H A N N A H . LAY ft CO
* City. Nov. :w, iMio.
Red, blue and gray twilled and plain Flannels;
White, p i n k and Bob Roy plain F l a n n e l s ;
Cunton Flannels, brown, slste aud bleached;
flattinets, F. ft M. CasslmeresiSheep's G r a y :
•immunity to o n e
Fancy und black Casslmeres; .
| ihiug o f all others in which they should lie s n d c o n s e q u e n t l y
Kentucky Jeans, Duck, Denims;
are Interested; to w i t ; that a G o o d L i g h t is one of this
Apron and m i n e r ' s check. Stripes:
j greatest desideratum* to be obtained—ami t h a t a f t e r C a t w
S h i r t i n g p r i n t s a n d fancy shirting F l a n n e l s ;
. j ftil E x p e r i m e n t , nn article has been Introduced snd d e Black Doeskin Cassimeres;
'
m o n s t r a t e d b e y o n d n q u t - ' i u n o f d o a b t , t o be t h s
Black and b l u e ' c l o t h s :
, BEST, C H E A P E S T , S.vKKST, MOST ECONOMICAL and
Brown and bleached Cotton—a nice a s s o r t m e n t :
| EQUABLE light yet known, (gas only excepted.I S u c h aw
Ticking. Bays, l.insey Woolsev, Ac.
article we have the pleasure of i n t r o d u c i n g in t h i s romrnuHANNAH. LAY A- CO.
,2 | ijit.v, und which, with
Traverse City, Nov. 30, I860..
D
RESS GOODS—A
SHIRTS—RED.
E
Raisins, in quarter, half and whole b o x e s :
Tallow and Stearins Candles, by t h e b o x :
Sugar, by the barrel or loO lbs,;
Soap, by the b o x ;
. Baking Powders, by the b o x ;
Matches, by the gross;
Toys, Notions;
Tobacco, Fine Cut, by tbe half barrel;
Tobacco, Smoking, by the half barrel;
P l u g Tobacco, by the 60 lbs. or b u t t :
Soda, by the 50 lbs. or k e g :
Apples;
Shoes a n d Boots, by the d o t . or hf. do*. pa«ri
Brown Cotton, by the 3 to o pieces;
S h i r t i n g Stripe, by the 2 to 5 pieces;
Cream Tartar, by t h e 5 to 20 lbs,,
:o caution all persons against harborint a f t e r this date.
,
DAVID V. L A i m A B E K "
5-fiX
Northport, January. 1 1861.
F L A N N E L
T
delivered at Traverse City—Wheat, Oats. Corn. Rye. Barley, (
Pease, Potatoes, Onions, Roots. 4 c . Ac.—thus making an ab- |
solute home market for e v e r y t h i n g raised.
->2 j
In unchecked I)i.
TERV, confirmed, emaciating, and apparently malignant, the
effects have been equally decisive a n d astonishing.
In the local pains, loss of flesh anil s t r e n g t h , debilitating
cough, and remittent hectic, which generally Indicate I s c t PIBST Ca.WMiT)OM, t h i s rempdy has allayed the alarm of
f r i e n d * and physicians, in s e v e r a l very g j a t i C i n g and intei-
E N S
T
FABM PRODUCE,
A s aperient a n d Stomacic preparation of IRON' purified el
Oxygen and Carbon by combustion in Hydrogen. Sanctioned by the highest Medical Authoritiea, both in Europe and
th« United States, and prescribed in their practicc.
The experience of thousands daily proves t h a t po preparation of I r o n can be compared with it. Impurities of the
blood, depression of vital energy, pale and otherwise sickly
complexions indicate its necessity in almost every conceiva- I
ble ease.
I n n o x i o u s ID all maladies in which it has been tried, it has
proved absolutely curative in each of the following c o m - !
plaints, viz:
In Debility, Nervous Affections, E m a c i a t i o n , .
Dyspepsia, Constipation, Dlarrhcca, Dysentery, I n - j
cipient C o n s u m p t i o n , Scrofulous Tuberculosis, Salt
R h e u m , MLismenstruation, W h i t e s , Chlorosis, Liver
Complaints. Chronic Headaches, Rheumatism, Int e r m i t t e n t F e v e r s , P i m p l e s o n t h e F a c e , ftc.
In esses of GKSKKAI. DKBILITV. whether the result of acute
disease, or of (be continued diminution of nervous and mus-1
cular energy f r o m nervous c o m p l a i n t s oue trial of tbis restorative has proved successful to a&extent which no description' nor written attestation would r e n d e r c r e d i h l c . Invalid*,
so long bed-ridden as to have bccome forgotten in their owp
neighborhoods, have suddenly re-appeared in the busy world
as if j u s t returned f r o m protracted travel in a distant land.
Some very signal instances of this kind are attested of female
Sufferers," emaciated victims of a p p a r e n t marasmus, sanguineous exhaustion, critical changes, and that complication
of nervous and dyspeptic aversion to air and exercise for
which the physician has no name.
In NBRVotra A r r s c T i o H s of all kinds, and for reasons fsrailiar to medical men, the operation of this preparation of
Iron must necessarily be salutary, for, unlike tbe old oxides,
it i s vigorously tonic, without being e x c i t i n g and overheating; and gently, regularly aperient, even in the most obstinate cases of costiveifess w i t h o u t ever b e l u g a gastric purgative, or inflicting a disagreeable sensation.
I n this latter property, among others, which makes it sa
remarkably effectual a n d permanent a remedy for 1'n.Ks, upon
which It also appears to e x e r t a distinct and specific action,
by dispersing the local t e n d e n c y which forms them.
In D i r s r j t r s i s , Innumerable as are its causes, a single box
M
A
A P y
O n m
(^.1="
FA
R M PP R
O D U1C
E.
iws
PILLS'^ IRON.
'
A
. C
I I A N N A I 1 , L A Y ft C O .
ILL PURCHASE. AND PAY T H E HIGHEST PRICE ;
the m a r k e t will w * " '
^ V U p k d ^ h e r one# S g ' o l i l n W I n e
J y ? " , ' \ 3 ^ b ^ m h e i w ' S t S ^ S w 5 l o i * » ' m a y 8hiB«.
i ,,_- tVe have a country yet.
F
v
Lamps, Shades and Fixtures,
FULL LINE OF CHOICE FAL
Prints, of A m e r i c a n a n d English makers, from • cen
we now have o n e x h i b i t i o n a n d for sale, and of the V E R T
to one shilling per y a r d ; choice A m e r i c a n p r i n t s De Lainei
BEST quality. Call and inspect our KEROSENE LAMPS.
Coburghs; F r e n c h Mcrinoes; all wool De Laines; Mohair.H A N N A H . L A Y ft CO.
Alpacas; fancy wosted plaids: Pattern Goods of latest sty Id
Traverse City. Nov 30. I»6n.
*J
•arcfully selected; Balmoral and knit s k i r t s ; Ladii
a n d d r a w e r s ; h o o p f s k l r t s w o o l hoods,underslceves, Ac.; prinl- X T
T)
P A R T I C U L A R A T T E N T I O N IN F N J
1
1
'
*—•*
jol« De iI alines •j i i • I ) • V1TED to our a s s o r t m e n t of Men's Heavy W
Mittens. Gloves sud Socks. Also, Boys' Woo) Mittens; Child r e n ' s Muffatters a n d Fancy S t o c k i n g s : not-ffcfgettiriir * n i r s
H A N N A H . LAY ft (
assortment of Wool Yaru. in u variety of shade* and qualities.
Traverse City, Nov.
H A N N A H . LAY A CO.
T r a v e r s e City. Nov. SO. 18t.O. •
ft;
Rubbers and Overshoes, Ladle's' Boo
Gaiters, Bnskin«, Slips, Ties, Rubbers,
Overshoes, Carpet Shoes,
Boys' Boots apd Shoes,
Misses Bootees and Gaiters,
Childs' Cacks, Shoes, Bootees, copper-toed. Ac.
Ladies' seamless s p g heel and heeled side-lace G a i t e r s :
Seamless Bellmoral and Cong, heavy Gaiters and Over
Gaiters; Seamless Slippers;
Men's very nice seamless Over-Shoes a n d L e g g i n g s ;
Over-Shoes coming to the knees;
Baugor moose skin long leg S h o e - P a c s ;
Montreal long l«-g Shoe-Pacs;
Men's India rubber long leg Boot*.
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30. 18H0.
>
52
H
A R D W A R E —
Nails. G e r m a n Steel. Glass, Putty. Screws.
Axes, A x Helves. Looks. Latches. Hammers.
Chisels, Augers, Hand, Buck and Cross-cut Saws.
Draw-knives, Hinges, Cable, Trace and Halter Chains.
F r y snd Sauce P a n s Mason.-' Trowels,
"
Ch'opping-knives, Hand and Boys' Axes,
Half. 1 and 2 foot Rules.
Steelyards, S p r i n g and C o u n t e r Scales,
Flat,"round and taper Files,
Horse Rasps, Gloat Nails, S q u a r e Horse Card*.
Curry-Combs and Horse-Brushes,
Trap's of various k i n d s
Shovels and Tongs, Nut Crackers, Bird Cagc«,
Skates, Sleigh Bells. Coffee Mills. Ac. Ac.
HANNAH. LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. JO, I860.
52
Mustard, English and F r e n c h prepared;
Soda, Cream Tartar, Ginger, Baking Powder.
Salaratus, Starch. Vermacilli, Hops.
Tobacco, Snuff Garden Seeds,
Bag Salt, Fine and Rock Salt. Glnc, Alum,
Lamp a n d Lard Oil, Castor Oil,
Indigo, Yellow Ochre, Chalk, Camwood,
Fluid, Molasses. Syrup. Vinegar,
Beans, P o r k . Meal. Flour, Oatmeal. Feed, Bran.
Beef, Hams a n d S h o u l d e r s Codfish.
Hard Bread, Butter Crackers. Lard,
E x t r a c t Lemon.Vanilla. Rose. Peach, Pine Apple, fte.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30.1S00.
„
T
- A F U L L ASSORTMENT—Such as Drums, whlsrattlcH. whips, dogs, squirrels, geese, docks,roosters, cats, norscn.cn. Horses wagons, d u m p i n g carts, e l e p h a n t s ,
animals, T r a n s p a r e n t Slates, fancy China Mugs and Buckets,
l o c o m o t i v e s , t r a i n s of Cam. Ac., Ac.,—call a n d e x a m i n e for
the Holidays.
H A N N A H L A T A CO.
Traverse City, Nov. 30. Isuti.
SJ
IB'
L A N K E T 8 — W I I I X 4 MACKINAC, ROCKDALE. 10 t
»l-4. Plain and fane* l l o r i Blankets, H e m p carpeting—
H A N N A H , MAY A CO.
F
' O R H O U S E K E E P E R S — K N I T E H AND FORKS,
S p o o n s Carvers and Steels,
Brooms, Pails. Till*, Washboards,
erub. Shoe. Clothes and Whitewash Brushes,
Traverse City, Nov 30, I860.
B
S'
HAWLS—
Bay State. Indian, Chenieile a n d Children's Shawls;
Canada and Chenieile Scarfs;
Comforters, Mufflers,fte.,fte.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov.30, 1860.
52
> a full line.
Toy Books a n d P r i m e r s . Slates a n d Pencils.
Pass B o o k s Envelopes. Fancy Cards.
Harmonicas. J e w s Harps,
F i s h Hooks, Sinkers, L i n e s ftc.
HANNAH, LAY ft CO.
T r a v e r s e City, Nov. 30.1860.
5T
P
A P E R HANGINGS—WALL
PAPER, C U R T A I N
Paper, and Buff Curtaining. Bordering. Ac.
H A N N A H , LAY ft CO.
Traverse City. Nov. 50, I860.
-•>2 :
LANK D E E D S AND MORTGAGE*—
lF o r saleby
H A N N A H , LAY A CO
•
52
Traverse City, Nov. ', i-e».
H A N N A H . LAY ft CO.
S
ie City. Nov- 50. I860.
5?
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