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^3?M3OJR, FEIDAY, MAECH 24=, 1865. TSTo. 1OO1 blishedevery Friday mornings in Ihethird story of rick block,coraar of Maiu and Huron Sts., ANN OR, fc»h- Kutrauceun Huron Street,oppositcthe B. POND, Editor acd Publisher Terms, OO a Year In Advance. t ( lrcrtl*l"K—One square (1*2 lines or less), one l_ ;5cents; throe weeks $1.50 ; and 25 cents foi f / 75ce; ; ini!ertion there t fter. less than three months. One s tPtfO square 3 mos $4.00 njuare 6 mos 6.00 quare 1 year tt.00 ; 6 raos 8 00 1 year 12.00 Quarter col. 1 year $-0 Half column 6'mos 20 Half column 1 year 35 One column 6 moB. 36 One column 1 year 60 r*rds in Directory , not to exceed fuur lines, $4,X)0 ^^rtiwr/i 'to the extentofftquarter column,regu- i through the J'tat, will be eutitleU to have thtir [jjjiittDirectory without extra charge. .^ Xtlvertisements unaccompanied by •written or -u^iirectioaa willbe published until ordered out, r g g y a<lv"ertUem<MUs, tirat insertion, 50 cents per cents per folio for each subsequent icsertion. t is added to an advertisement the ^ ( t, j e will be charged therfame as job Printing—V.-imphlets. Hand BLIIH.Circulars, r.Ai BaH Tickets, Latvia, Bl;mks, Hill Heads, and ffir'ratie'tiesof Plain and Fancy Job Printing,execu- *J #;[i, promptness, and in the be=t style. 3 \SV have a Rubles Rotary Caril Press, and «T»rioty of the lat.-st style.- of Card type which Bibles us to print Cards of all kinds in the neatest ' Mibhstyle and cheaper than any other house in th ;, T Business eafAsfertnen of all avocations and pro riiiioni, Ball, Wedding and Visiting Cards, printed on 'hort notice. Call and see sampled BOOK BlNDIffGU-Comiectertwith the Office is a «-v Bindery in cbaVfje of two competent workmen D C. H. MILLEN. EALER in Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, &c. &c 9»i»15treet, Ana Aibor. PHILIP BACH. rvEALEKS in Dry Goods, Groceries , Boots & Shoes Ufee.,Main st., Ann Arbor. '"~liISDON~&llENDERdONr~ nEXCF.RS in tinfdttH \J goods, En Ware, la t»v&, house furnishing , New Block, Mam st. S. G. TAYLOR, D EALER in Hats, Caps, Furs, Rohes, Gente'Furuish- d E id M i S t t A Ab in; Hoods, etc. lliebigaa. 9t p, , , East side Main Street. Ann Arbor, A. J. SUTHERLAND, A r the New York Life Insurance Company, Oifice OD Huron street- Also has on hand a stock .1 (fca naM »pim»ce.t sewing machines. 885tf ""GEORGEllSCHEii. M EAT MARKET—Huron Street-General dealer in Fresh and Salt Meats, Beef, Mutton, Pork, Hams, Poultry, Lard, Tallow, & c , Sec. " HIRAM J7BEAKES ~~ A TTOft^UY and Counsellor at Law, .aid Solicitor in Chancery. Offico in City Hall Uiock, over Webster's Boot Store. T & BREAKEY. P HYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Onicc at theresi deuce of Or. Leivitt, north side of Iiurun, two door.s Kit or Division street- "MTGUITERMAN & co. f HOI.ES.VLK and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of Ready-Mad3 Clothing. Importers of Cloths, Cas- liiaere*, Uoeskius, &c., No. 5, Phoenix Block, Main st. ' WM. WAGNER. D EALER in Rt'ady Made Clothing, Cloths. Cussimeres, and Vest ings, Hat?, Caps, Trunks, Carpel Bags, ft|C., plianix Block, Main street. NIL ADMIRARI. liy JOIIX o. SAXE, When Horace in Veuduaian groves Was sciibblin^r w |t or dipping "ilassic," Or singing those delicious loves Winch after a^es reckon classic, He wrote one day—'twas no vagary— These famous words : —JVii Admirari! " Wouder fit nothing!"—said the bard; A kingdom's fall, a nation's rising, A lucky or a losing card, Are really not M all surprising, However, men on manners vary, Keep cool and calm ; Nil admirari! If kindness meet a cold return ; li' i'rietidsliip prove a dear delusion ; If love, neglected, cease to burn, Or die untimely of profusion, Such lessons well may make us wary. But needn't shock ; Nil admirari ! Docs disappointment follow gain1 Or wealth eluile the keen pursuer 1 Does pleasures cud in poignant pain ? Does fame disgust the lucky wooer. Or haply prove perversely chary 1 'Twas ever thus ; Nil admirari '. Does January wed with May, Or ugliness consort with beauty 1 Does Piety forget to pray % And, heedless of connubial duty, Leave faithful Ann for wanton Mayi 'Tis the old tale ; Nil admirari! Ah ! when the happy day we reach "When proinisers are no'er deceivers ; When yiarsons practice what they preach, And seeming saints are all believers,— Then the old maxim you may vary, And say no mure, Nil udmiray ! SLAWSON &SON. pROCERS, Provision andCommission Merchants, and \J Dealers in W#*er Lime, Land P!a*t(>r, and Plaster o( Paris, one door ea^t of Cook's Hotel. S0OTT & LOOMIS. iMBHOTYpK and Phntngraph Artist, in the rooms /lover Campion's Clothing store, Phoenix Block. Per- f»ctiatUfacti"n given. ~c. B. PORTERT" MRGEON DENTIST. Office Corner of Main and Huron u streets, over Back & Pieriou'ts £tore. Ail callB I'lmptlyatU-nded to Ap.rl859 MACK & SCHMID. D EALERS in Foreign and Domestic Dry Good. Groce- ries, Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, Crockery, fcc, Corner of Main &Liberty sts. ANDREW BELL. D KALRR ia Groceries, I'rovinions, Flour, Produces: Xc, &c, ci.'i'uer Main and Washington Streets, inn Arbor. The highest market prices paid lor country produce. 8bG M. C. STANLEY^" Photograplaic Artist. Coraer M«in and Huron Streets, ADU Arbor, Mich, PHOTOGRAPHS, AMBROTYPES, &c. &c, inthe latest stylep,and every effort made to give satis- fiction. 956tf D.~DEFO11EST. nrUDLESALR and retail dealer iu Lumherj Lath, Shingles, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Water Lime, Grand Si'er Plaster, Plaster Paris, and Nails ofallsizes. A -lUnd peTfectassortment of the above, and all other ^h of buildinK materials constantly on hand at the »«stpo3siblo rates, on Detroitst.,a few rodri from the Jiilro^d Depot. Also operating extensively in the itent Cement Roofing. LUM¥lER~YARD! C. KRAPF, Hu » lnrje » n 4 w( .n stocked Lumber Yard, on Jeffer- lon Street, in I be South part of the City, and will keep tomUntlj- on hand an excellent variety of LUMBER, 11 00( SHINGLES, LATH, &o. •nich win be sold as low a« can be affor^ledin this Wrket. <te»litjr and prices Huch that no one need gotoDe- 1 A House With all the Modern Conve- niences. Nehemiah Pollard was an army con- tractor. He furnished pork for the wes- tern department, and of course he got rich by it. At the eod of two years of that kind of business, he found himself worth half a million. People began to call him Mr. Pollard, instead of "old Pollard" and " Miah," and slee meo inwhite neck cloths, called on him with loug subscription papers. Mrs. Pollard had discovered her im- portance some time previously. Drv goods clerks held the doors open for her now, who, three years before would have seen her drop a dozen parcels in the mud and shirt the skirt of her dress in the door forty times, without coming to the rescue. Sfce was consuhed about sewing societies, and appealed to in be- lalf of Foreign Miemqns, and Bible So- cieties, aud Sanitary Commissions, and r opinion was quoted among her 'riends as we (juote from a statute book. Mrs. Pollard awoke suddenly to a knowledge of the fact that it illy be- came their altered circumstances to live n a one story wooden house, in a re mote part of the city, with none of the lonveniences and improvements. They owed it to the children, she said, to in- labit a house with all the modern con- veniences, and see something of the world. Nehemiah figured his greenbacks, looked wise, and coincided. So a house was taken. I t would be tedious to relate all the particulars of the furnishing, much of which was done liy contract. The house was large and commodious. There was a library, conservatory, parlor, drawing- room, diuing halls aud a model kitchen. It was heated with a furnace, lighted with gas, there was a dumb waiter; in short it was a house with all the modern conveniences. The library was stocked by a stationer, who received orders to be sure the books were well bound, and mostly in red backs; the conservatory was filled by a florist, and Mrs Pollard stipulated only that there be plenty of hollyhocks and poppies. than the tropics. How do youfixthis darned thing, Pegay, 'o 300I it off V " I don't kuow," cried his wile, "I'll rtaft for Jane." " The deuce you will !" said Mr. Pol- lard, glancing at his stant attire, "you go to bed—I'll manage it. I'll set the sink over the hole, and that'll keep thu heat out. All right." •' Put out the gjy," said his wife from the bed. " Put out the dickens ?" criuJ trey husband angrily—"here I'va blowtd and blovved, till I'mfitto bust, and the confounded thing only dances uwav the fastor ! I can't snuff it out neither ! I wouldn't give a taller dip lor a million of those jiggers !" '' Turn it off." advised Mrs. Pollard. " Turn it, inde- d ! where'll you turn it to, I wonder 8 Ha ! I've done it 1 I've switched it out with my sleevu !" " Wall, don't get into bed with your hands smutty, but wash 'em, there's hot and cold water, you know. Such a ^ouvonience." "Jupiter Ammon! I've took tho skin off from that hand! "Why, the water's bilin ! I'll try the cold—zounds ! how it smarts !" and muttering to him- self, Mr. Pollard completed his ablu- tion and got into bed. Sometime in the night, Mrs. Pollard awoke. She felt chilly and damp. Sho put out her hand and felt only water. " The Lord of mercy !" screamed she, " Wi.ke up Miah ! there's aflood.Its got clean up in the chamber, and we J Pdllmd l;iid down his weap- on, and the two shook huiicU. "It's all owing to tbis confoiiuded house," siiid Nehemiah, "f don't kn >w no inoiu a jout the new.-fangled thing thau the mau in the moon. But I've got some first rate uognao in the cellar. You'll keep dark, Mr.' Police." " Upon honor, tquife." Mr. Pollard hud the locks taken off his doort 1 , and the water pipes removed the next, day. He has lived in li;i own house nearly a year now, but ho carries u tallow 'dip' to bed with him, and wash- es his face aud hands ut the kitchen sink. hll- Wo shall all be drowned to death! and light a light." git up inn Arber, Dec. «th, 1864. CONRAD KRAPF: OSBtt NEW MUSIC STORE PertODs wishing to buy Pianos or IMEelodeons, «Wd go to WILSEY'g MUSIC STORE, before pur •"">g elsewhere. Hewill warrant satisfaction to pwchaMrii ,»nil take: *ho hi pleasure in referring to thftse tTlSTDEBSOLD When all was ready the family moved in. Mrs. Pollard sailed about the rooms like a queen ; but her husband looked absolutely frightened as ho surveyed the premises. " By golly, Peggy," he exclaimed, "If this ere ain't a little too fine for us ; I feel like a cat in a strange garret—yes by golly, like two cats. There's a dozen things here that I don't know the names of. What's them gilt things stuck up in the corner, with the bare-legged children with goose wiogs on their backs ?" " Land sakes, Mi. Pollard, them's cor- nishes, and the pijens is angels, and you'll oblige me by caliiug me Margaret in future." " Why, I didn't know that was your name," cried Mr. Pollard in wonder. " Peggy is the vulgar for Margaret, sir!" "Well, I declare, live and larn." " Do take your feet off from that ot- toman, and don't lean }'our head against the paperhanging. Like enough its greasy." " Shouldn't wonder. Pork packing's rather a greasy business." "Mr. Pollard, if you'll never allude to your business agaiu, I'll be thankful. It is vulgar to bring home your shop withyou." " Why, who has brought one home ?" " Do bo more careful Mr. Pol- lard, you've smashed the varnish off from that teaty tete, and now you're bobbing your head against the chanti- cleer." '' I'll go to bed, that's what and see if I can't have some Mr. Pollard jumped out with a loud slosh, then jumped in, then out again, propelled by a vigorous kick from his better half. " What in creation is it?"*cried he, dashiug about in the vein attempt to find his clothes. " Ah, ah ! its just struck me, 1 did'tfixthat water spout right after I washed my hands ! I re- member I couldn't stop it from running. Confound the convenience !—And there ain't no matches or caudle ! Wall, I can tind my way ; I'll go down to the kitchen and bail us out!" He reached the stairs safely, took a step forward, and brought up in the hall below on his head, which felt as though a whole cotton factory had set up its mitchinery inside of it. Directly ho recovered himself and proceeded ou his way. He went into the kitchen, fjund the pail, and turned to go__back. The door was fast. He pulled aud kicked it with all bis might, but he only wasted his strength. Then he remembered that all the doors in the house had spring locks, aud ho bad neg lected to take out the key when he came in, so, of course, he was a prisoner ! Pollard was mad. It was bad enough to be washed through with a prospect of getting immediately dried, but to stand there on the cold January night, with no garment on but his robe de ?iuit, was a little to much. He hallooed and kicked and banged among the pots andkettles and tin paus. He shouted murder and thieves at the top oi his voice, and knocked his worst corn wretchedly against the rango. Maddened by the pain, he seized the poker, and flew at the grated windows, through which he soon made a hole large enough to shout murder Out of. In a moment a policeman's rattle was heard ; and directly quite a force of " stars" congregated out3ide the win- dow. Struct He. The oil fever gives rise to somo morous features of human nature, cannot vouch for the utter truthfulness of the following, but havo received it as genuine : " A couple of gentlemen of means were for a long time desirous of invest- ing their spare cash iu soma one of the oil enterprisesjif th« age. The stocks of those in full- blast or successful oper- ation, were held so high that the gen- tlemen concluded to risk an investment in one "under the augur," or well iu process of boring. Tho agent of the new concern had his place of business iu Wall street, New York; the property was in the oil region of Western Penn- sylvania. " On making tho twentieth or fin:il call upon the broker, to inquire more fully into the matter, a lad stepped in and handed the Rgeut a telegraph mes- sage. Hastily glancing at it, ho said : " Gentlemen, I give you just three min- utes to accept or decline my offer for the property." The two heads went to- gether, two tongues spoke twosentences, and, turning, they notified the broker that the property was their own. The money was paid, the stocks transferred, when one of the gentlemen said to the agent,: "Have you any objection to the showing of that telegraph riiesSagd ?" " Certainly not," sard tho bland agent, and, taking it, they read : PKTKOI.ECM BAYOU, Jan. —, 1865. "Harafine Candle, Esq : " Bored eighty feet, struck a sperm whale's hem), spouting i] a a t the rate of fifteen barrels p<jr minute. SPEKM KmiiisEXE, Agent. It is needless to say that the fortunes of our two friends were made.—Provi- dence Press. The Bible. OLD TESTAMEXT. No. of books, No. of chapter, No. of verses, No. of words, A Visit to Longfellow. "\Vu remained in our cuiriago a Ddmauts, while my kind conductor on terod tlu h-ouaj to\ nsk if its msinter would receive us. He Inn suffered a most awful bi ruavoiuont*—a btrguwj- inout tlio bitterest that oan afjlict a ten- dor and loving heart; and lie lived now Do You Want a Boy Sir?" lew ' ''^" )'"" Vl ''' Uit a ^''V, «ir V" s:iid Q«6rg4tj u little fellow scarcely eight years old, to a. ch tk ii; a largo oflice. " Waut it hr.y ? Why who wants to Retaliation. HEADQL'AB.'XEBN I.\ T(IK FIBLD, > Feb. 27, lStB. 5 Ma J' Oen - W - ?• Sherman, U. S. Army : GRNKHAL—Your communication g ; in ahiic st entire seclusion among his cilJrcn, however— in pence, eoiiSR>?tftig himself in tlit? piiltiviitiori of goc ' tors, Uh(] 'ho accomplishment via w >i k. W parlor, man ef taste and c'ultuVe. Aiwn he oani'j iu, simply dressed, hij long whi'c beard floating upon his th<; little " I do, tir, u replied George, g g p brenst, a liflbuliful and patiuiichal man, but. u* ! Mi tired out and pensive look- ing— ah ! arid ditiereut from him w.o'psc cheery face and gallant port are so la- rrriliax iu tlie portrait of twenty years sin-je. He seemed to have let his beanl giow, not i(i ;;ccm-dauce wuh a vain fashion, but for the sake of aomuv, as the-nion of the East do. But when I heard hownoblv he bore UM uuijer his great loss, and how, sieudfas'ly he went about his appointed tasks, I remember- ed how David the King, undue arj afflic- tion as cruel, gave over grieving, say- ing: " While the child was yet, alive, I tasted and wept; for 1 said whocan l hh Gd engaged ':" asked tho smart-looking lny 24\% (list, reached mo tu day. Iu i r.Lrk. looking with a puzzled glance tit ' }* ou state that it has beeu officiary ro' ' ported that your foraging partial were " murdered" utter capture, uud you fn> on to Bay thnt you hat] " ordwed a simi- lar number of prisoners in your hands to be disposed of in liko manner." 'J h.;t is to say, you have ordered a number ol Confederate soldiers to bo " murdered." You characterize vo'irordoriu proper terms, for the public, voice, even in your own country, where it seldom dares to •xpress itself iu vindication uf truth, houor or justice, will surely agree with y<>u in pronouncing; you gu ity of mur- der, if your order is carried out. Be- iore dismissing this portion of your let- icr, I b;^g to assure you for evert/ sol- dier if mine " murdered" Ly you 1 nhall Look Lore, gentlemen, ' cried the man, speaking to his follow el .i !->. " hoio is a regular Goliath I o entered a pretty' Tibr.;ry ' Vv ' ;l " ls lo ^ » porter, I suppose. Look strown with al. the litter of & ,^t WitW r rho clerks gathered in great glee about poor George, who stood, full of jjiirpwse, before thorn, and was ; tell whether God will be me, that the child may live ? h i d he is dead, Can I is to But HOW wherefore should I fast? I shall return to Dting himback ain ? not 39 929 23,214 592.439 I'll do, peace, I M. 'lie I ast or Wi-st, -The latent SHEET MUSIC for sale, PIANO \t\ pM.. or, Dec. »7th, 1864. ALV1N WILSEY. 98'Jtd 50,000. s AND Alsohev SALE! tOIS, worth from »l,000 t er.il improved FARMS. hain't allowed to touch nothing here. Mr. Pollard put his threat into execu- tion, but his wife followed him closely up the stairs. '' Mind the stair carpet, Mr. Pollard, there I hemmed it," cried she, as Ne hemiah caught his foot in the binding, stumbled, aud fell entirely to tho foot of the stairs, breaking the hall glass, and tearing the coat skirt entirely oft. He picked himself up with muttering expletive? and gained his chamber. The : servant had already lighted the gas, aud I j 1 J 'opened the register. "ied Mr. P., "its hotter What's the row ?" queried a police- " What do you mean by kicking up such a row this time of night ?" Pollard threw a kettle of apple sauce at his head, but the grating prevented it from taking effect. " Desperate fellows inside there," muttered the policeman, " It's best to be cautious, we might get into diffi- culty." " Let me out, or I'll be the death of ) e !" roared Nehemiah, waxing desper- ate, " I'll shoot every mother's son of ye!" " Pollard! Pollard ! Miah !" called Mrs. Pollard from the entry, "do COUK- ! what in the world is tho matter? The house is full of thieves and murderers ! I've heard 'em a yelling for an hour/' " Let 'em yell and be blasted ! I'll be the death of the whole of 'em if you don't let me out of this !" " Don't kill anybody ? It's wicked ! remember the commaudmeot!" entreat- ed Mrs. Pollard. " Open the door !" roared a police- man from the outside. " Open it yourself!" cried Nehemiah. " What are you doing in there?" "None of your business!" said cut- hero. '• Burst it in !" commanded the po- lice; and after a Bhort struggle, the door flew from the hinges, and the light of a bull's eye penetrated the place. " That's the villian ! seize him !" said the leader, ' on with the bracelets ! nev- er mind what ho says ! We'll show him No;.'of letter, 2,728,100 The middle book is Proverbs. The middle chapter is job xxix. The middle verse would be 2d Chron- icles, Xx 17, if one more, and Terse 18th if there were one less. The word and occurs 35,543 times. The word Jehovah occurs 6,855 times. The shortest verse is 1st Chronicles, i 25. The 21st chapter of the 7th chapter of Ezra contains all the letters of the alphabet. The 19th chapter of 2d Kings and the 37th chapter of Isaiah are alike. NEW TESTAMENT. No. of books, 27 No. of chapters, 260 No. of verses, 7,950 No. of words, 181.258 No. of Letters . 838,580 The middle book is Thessalonians The middle chapter is Romans, xvii., if there were a chapter less, aud xvi., if there were a chapter more. The middle verse is Acts xvii. 17. The shortest verse is in John xi. 35. OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT. No. of books, 06 No. of chapters, 1,189 No. of verses, 31,173 No of words, 773,097 No. of letters,. 3,556,080 The middle chapter and the least one in the Bible is Psalms cxvii. The middle verse is Psalms cxvii. 18. These are interesting facts. John Jay and the Infidels. John Jay, when ambassador to France, was once in a company of infi dels at Paris. They talked on reckless- ly, venting their spite at the Bible. Juy was silent. It troubled them. He did not pronounce their shibboleth. They could not go on while that grave, just, true man sat there a silent spectator, a sort of solemn judge, riveting at last their gaze. No wonder his bearing forced them to speak, and when they ask- ed, as if to relieve themselves of their confusion and provoke his acquiescence, ' Do you believe in Jesus Christ? 1 ' his go to him, hut he shall me." Aud this man's loss had greater than that of twenty children. After a while he grew quite cheerful, and we chatted, to me, themost delight- ful gossip I ever had. in my life. He gave me u oigar, and he smoked one likewise. Some one in England had sent him an album full of photographs of English men of letters, and I was proud and glad to find th;r iniuo was among tho number, and 1 hat. lie tee*}** nized me by it—prouder than though I hid been bidden to s'und before a bitig. 1 rose at la^t loth to depart, and left him there, sorrowlul but not desolate, qvia mitltum amavit. I shall never see him again, but 1 shall never forget that 1 have been permitted to touch the hand and to listen to the discourse, full of calm, and wise, and gpeofte thing-of a noble Americuu tn:iH— of him who wrote the •'ViMaj/n BUcksmiih, ; ' and '' Evitngeline ;"—of him wlio-e life has been blameless, whose record is pure, whose name is a sound of fame to all people.— Geo. Aug. Sn/a. *The wriier rpfers fo Itift death'of £ongfell6w*s wifv, which uccuriofl in 16til, uu.iiM- the fcllpwifiry etrcum- suu.c.-s : She was scaling fruit c:ins when tlu- wax took, lieu, and falling upon her dr.jss set il instantly in (lames. Brery effort was made bj her husband, who chanr.d to hv oear, to extinguish it, but unauocess- fujiy, RW\ death eusiud. pp , therefore unconscious of aayieason why he should be made an onjebtcf sport. " What can you do?" usked ono. '' You can po-t book>, of course," said another " Carry a ba'e of goods onyour back, ch ?" cried a third. " Hush, young gentlemen," said tho elderly bookkeeper at the desk, after viewing George through his spectacles, " Hush Don't make sport of the child. Let me talk to him." Then speaking to George in kindly tones, he said, "You are too young to be engaged, my chihl. Whosent you here?" '•1 came, myself, sir. My father and mother are gone to heaven. My aunt is poor, and I want to earn something to help her. Won't you please tako m sir v > The simple story, told in it way tha showed how earnest the boy was, no only checked the sport of the clerks but brought tears to their eyes. They looked on the delicate child before then with pity and respect, and one of them Trial by Jury- John P. Hale has lost his seat in tho with impunity." " I tell vou I am in mv own house . and all others of his style, that he cau- i silence had prepared the way for his cou- not break into people's houses and steal j fusing and confounding answer. " I do, and I thank God that I do." He was silent at the right time, aud spoke at the right time, and when he spoke said tho right thing. !£§- When James T. Brady first opened a lawyer's office in New York, he took a basement room which had been previously occupied by a cobbler. He was somewhat annoyed by the previous occupant's callers, and irritated by the fact that he had few of his own. One day an Irishman entered. " The cob- bler's gone, T see," he said, " I should think he had," tartly responded Brady. " And what do ye sell ?" he asked, look- ing at tho solitary table and a few law books. "Blockheads," responded JBrady. 11 Begorra," said tho Irishman, "you thundered Pollard, "and "I'll beat the braius out of the whole of ye, if ye don't make yourselves skeeree ! Peg- gy! Peggy! come and help me!" The kitchen door flew open, and Peg- gy's yellow flannel night cap appeared. "Oh lordy !'' cried she. "I can't oan't come in afore all them men with my night-cap ou. Wais a mianit till I fix my head." Nehemiah hud seized ft long handled frying pan, aud was laying about him with a will. The leader of the police began to see the point. He brought tho lante.ru to bear on tho face of our iriend. "I beg your pardot), Esquire Pollard, it was all a mistake." Senate, and has most likely given up the idea ofgettiug the French mission. He therefore thinks he can afford to speak the truth. He recently took occasion to denounce the sy&tfem of arbitrary ar- rests, which has made the administration so infamous. Hear him : " If trial by jury is overthrown in this country, take the rest. I-would not lift my hand nor open urv mouth, nor coun sel one of my constituents to shed a drop of blood, or a dollar of treasure, if the Constitution is to be preserved emas- culated of this safe-guard of liberty. In these times, wheu so much is demanded, and so much is at stake, with a geuer ous confidence I would give to the ad ministration almost everything that they want 1 . I wnnld consent, and I have consented, that the habeas corpus may be suspended, and that ua^-aordinary tri bunala may be erectocr'and instituted for the trial of everybody that voluntar- ily c mes forward and connects himsolf with the public service. But, sir, if you are going to throw a drag-net over the land, if you are going to bring in this whole people, and subject them to tho penalties that may be inflicted by mili- tary tribunals and t.hesu court martials, then the last step in the humiliation vA degradation of the country is taken and we shall be left fit ins'.rutnents for any despotism that the bold and the lawless may see proper to establish over us." US" Cornelius O'Dowd, in the last Blackwood, indulges in a humorous pro test against populuriziug science, esp;ci ally as it affects Mrs. O'Dowd. 'He comes home and finds that estimable lady iu tears, because sho has learned at tho Scientific Congress, thnt the coal fields cannot last over twelve thou^nd years, aud the earth's eras: is a t* teenth of an inch thinner than it was at the time of Moses. And then ho asks, " What right has Sir David Brewster or Professor Faraday to fill my wife's bread with speculations about the first man ? I am, or at least ought to be, the first man to her." But even this is not so bad as this dismal infoimatiou thrust upon him regarding the constituents of which both are composed, " I do not desire to have it impressed upon me so forcibly that I am only a compouud of neutral salts, gelatine, fibrine and adi- pose matter. It is no pleasure to ine to regard Mrs. O Dowd as a vehicle for p niacing a shillin the rest to ^ ^o. He then took the money and eriog it to George, said : "You are too small to be of any use k h on tho desk, askec i example; they die off y take this grown a hi f here, my good boj. But money, and when yen have e bit, prhaps we may find something for you to do." U-. orge looked at the money with out ottering to touch it. " Why don't yo :skod the clerk. ''1'h'ase, sir, I'm take the monevi" not a beggar bny,' said George; "I want to earn something to help my auut to keep me, for she is little fellow," said give you the very kind "You are a noble the 'Senior clerk. money not because wo think you"a beg- gar, but because we like your spirit Such a boy as you will not easily bo come a beggar Take the money, my boy, and may God bless you, and give yon and your aunt better days." I like George's spirit in this affair It was noble, brave, and self-reliant be- yond his years. It was the spirit that makes poor boys grow into useful anc successful men. It made George do thi>; for in after years that litt e boy became a noted artist, whose praise was spokeu by many tongues. All children should cherish a desire to do all they can tor themselves and to support themselves by'their own labor as early as possible Those who lean on father and mother for everything will find it hard work to get along by and by, as they may have to do when their parents die. Those who early learn to rely upon themselves will have little difficulty in earning their own living. Learn, therefore, to help yourselves—always taking care to do so under the advice and with the consent of your good par- ents and guardians.— Young Reaper. Isaiah and Andy Johnson, et al. The telegraph informs us, with orac ular brevity, thati-'Uhe President on Saturday took tho oath of office with his hand on the open Bible, according to custom. Mr. MiJdleton, the clerk of the Supreme Court, had opened it, but without premeditation, at the 5th chapur of Isaiah." The chapter COD- taius the following eminently appropri- ate verses : COXCEUNIXG ANDY JOUNSOX. 11. Wo unto them that rise up early in the mcraiug, that they may follow strong drink ; that continue uutil night, until wine inflames them. OX TIIE INAUGURATION BALL. 12. Aud the harp and the viol, the tabret, the pipe, and wine are in their feasts; but they regard not the work of the Lord, neither consider the tion of his hands. 12. Therefore my people aregone into captivity, because they have no knowledge; aud their honorable men are fami-hed, and their multitude dried up with thirst. 14. Therefore hell hath enlarged her- self, and opeued her mouth without measure, aud their glory aud their mul- titude, and their pomp, and he that re- joiceth, shall descend iuto it. WITH REGARD TO SHODDY. 8. Wo unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till there be no place, that may be placed alone in the midst of the earth. ANDY JOHNSON AGAIN. . Wo unto them that are mighty opera- to drink wine, and me u of strength to mingle strong drink. 23. Which justify the wioked for re- ward, and tako away the righteousness the righteous from him. The Rochester papers (where vor. On the whole it is decidedly must be doing u mighty fine busmess- b e s t v a r i u t f lho , e U)mal0 / ye hob 1 got but ouc lck" I k y '' i of lime, various carbonates and an appreciable portion oi arsenic." The Cook's Favorite. This variety is a very vigorous grower, ripens very early, and is prolific. The foliage is "of a handsome light green. It j t h e ^raftis now being enforced) say is an improved sort of Hie apple tomato, i- tnut tl ' 1 ' tlmt> RWB to men in which to giving a larger proportion of large hand- j re P orl **ftfi>i '"(-'ing drafted j s limited to suiue apple-shaped fruit, than any of the , ten d: '- vs ' llluJ t!mt F]H nas ordered that common sorts; the fruit ripening to the i Wlt ''' n 1 ' ir(!e ( ' ; '. vs after reporting, all stem, and being full meated. The to- I who liro "t^'-pted *'mdl be put in matoesaroof fine size, and of goodflu-j f " 1IU UIK1 ''"'warded to Klmira. vor. On the whole it is decidedly tho have executed at once twoof yours, giv- ing, in all cas-'.s, prelerence to any offi- cers who may be in my hands. In reference to the statement you make regarding the death of your fora- gers, I have only to say that I know nothing of it; that no orders giveu by me authorize the killing of prisoners af- ter capture, and that I do uot believo that my men killed any of yours, except under circumstances inwhich it was* perfectly legitimate aud proper they should kill thorn. It is a part of the system of tho thieves whom you designate as your torageM to fire tho dwellings of thosu citizens whom they linve robbed. To check this inhuman system, which is justly execrated by every civillized nation, I have directed my men to shoot down all of your men who are caught burning houses This order shall re- main in force as long as vou disgrace the profession of arms by allowing your men to destroy'private dwelling's. You say that I cannot, of course, question your right to forage on the country. " It is a right as old aa histo- ry." I do not, sir, question this right. But there is a right older evou than this, and ono more inalienable—the right that every man has to defend his home and to protoet those who are dependent upon him, and from my heart I wish that every old man and boy in my coun- try who can fire a gun, would shoot down, as he would a wild beast, the men who are desolating their land, burning their houses, and insulting their women. You are particular in defining and claiming " war rights." May I ask you if you enumerate among them thb right to fire upon a defenceless city without notice ; to burn that city to the ground after it had been surrendered by the authorities, who claimed, though in vaiD, that protection which is always ac- corded in civilized warfare to non-com- batants, to fire the dwelling houses of citizens, after robbing them, and to per- petrate even darker crimes thau these —crimes too black to be mentioned. You have permitted, if you have not ordered, the commission of these offen- ces against humanity and the rules of war. You fired iuto the city of Colum- bia without a word of warning. After its surrender by the Mayor who de- manded protection to private property, you laid the whole city in ashes, leaving amid its ruins thousands of old men and helpless women and children, who are likely to perish of starvation and ex- posure. Your line of march can be traced by the lurid light of burning houses, ^ad in more than one house- hold there is au agony far more bitter than that of death. The Iudian soulped his victim regard- less of sex or age, but with all his bar- barity he always respected the persona of his female captives; Your soldiers, more savage than the Indian, insult those whose natural protectors aro absent. In conclusion, I have only to request :hat whenever you have any of my men ' disposed of," or " murdered," for the ermsjappear to be synonymous with you, ,'ou will let me hear of it, in order that [ may know what action to tako in the natter. Iu the meanti.ne I shall hold 56 of your men as hostages for those whom you have ordered to be executed. . amyours, etc. WADE HAMPTON, Lieut. Ben. THE EXTENT OI? TOABI-I?II.—The ex- ent to which toadyism oan be carried is ldmirably illustrated in the Herald's ao- jount of the Inauguration ball in whioh he following reference is made to Mm. Jncoln: Mrs. Lincoln romained seated iu [ueeuly state. IShe was dressed in white atin, richly embroidered, aud wore a )oint lace shawl Her uecklaco and ear- ings were of diamonds. Her hair waa arranged with a fall of curls and with ilver ornaments and while artificial .owers. Hei rounded arms and dimpled houlders were displayed, and hur face sore the expression which assured all observers that she was the wife of the 'resident. Nobody could mistake Irs. Lincoln. Sho was every inch a 'residentess. uui- g gy ye hob 1 got but ouc lck." Ula| . kuti Why is a dull book like eternity? d it t d You read it to no end. THB BLUE 1VIIM;E (-JAP*.- -The "gaps" n the Blue Bidae Mountains, through n army can puss, are .seven in number; V'estall's eight miles from Harper's ferry ; Snicker's twenty-sour miles rom the Perry, through which passes ho Alexandria and and Harper's Ferry urnpiko ; ^.sjiby's,] thiry eight miles rom Harper's Ferry, through which lasses a branch pike from Alexandria to Winchester, Four ecu miles below \shby's is Manassa? Gi'P, through which runs the railroad; eight miles below is Chester's Gap—a road, nut much travelled, passes through it ; twen- ty miles still further down is Thorton's Oap, through whioh the supplies for Lee's army were hauled in wagons from GordoDoville and

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Page 1: FEIDAY,media.aadl.org/documents/pdf/michigan_argus/michigan_argus_18650324.pdf · " Wi.ke up Miah ! there's a flood. It s got clean up in the chamber, and we J Pdllmd l;iid down his

^ 3 ? M 3 O J R , F E I D A Y , M A E C H 24=, 1865. TSTo. 1OO1

blishedevery Friday mornings in Ihe th i rd story ofrick block,coraar of Maiu and Huron Sts., ANN

OR, fc»h- Kutrauceun Huron St ree t ,opposi tc the

B. POND, Editor acd PublisherTerms , $£ OO a Y e a r In A d v a n c e .

t(lrcrtl*l"K—One square (1*2 lines or less), onel_ ;5cents; throe weeks $1.50 ; and 25 cents foi

f /7 5 c e ; ;ini!ertion t h e r e t f t e r . less t h a n t h r e e m o n t h s .

One stPtfO

square 3 mos $4.00njuare 6 mos 6.00quare 1 year tt.00

; 6 raos 8 001 year 12.00

Quarter col. 1 year $-0Half column 6'mos 20Half column 1 year 35One column 6 moB. 36One column 1 year 60

r*rds in Directory , not to exceed fuur lines, $4,X)0

^^ r t iwr / i 'to the extentof ft quarter column,regu-i through the J'tat, will be eutitleU to have thtir

[jjjiittDirectory without extra charge.. ^ Xtlvertisements unaccompanied by •written or-u^iirectioaa willbe published until ordered out,

r g g ya<lv"ertUem<MUs, tirat insertion, 50 cents percents per folio for each subsequent icsertion.

t i s added to an advertisement the^ (t, j e will be charged therfame as

job Printing—V.-imphlets. Hand BLIIH.Circulars,r.Ai BaH Tickets, Latvia, Bl;mks, Hill Heads, andffir'ratie'tiesof Plain and Fancy Job Printing,execu-*J #;[i, promptness, and in the be=t style.

3 \SV have a Rubles Rotary Caril Press, and«T»rioty of the lat.-st style.- of Card type which

Bibles us to print Cards of all kinds in the neatest'Mibhstyle and cheaper than any other house in th;,T Business eafAsfertnen of all avocations and proriiiioni, Ball, Wedding and Visiting Cards, printed on'hort notice. Call and see sampled

BOOK BlNDIffGU-Comiectertwith the Office is a«-v Bindery in cbaVfje of two competent workmen

DC. H. MILLEN.

EALER in Dry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, &c. &c9»i»15treet, Ana Aibor.

PHILIP BACH.rvEALEKS in Dry Goods, Groceries , Boots & ShoesU fee., Main st., Ann Arbor.

'"~liISDON~&llENDERdONr~nEXCF.RS in tinfdttH\J goods, E n Ware, la

t»v&, house furnishing, New Block, Mam s t .

S. G. TAYLOR,

DEALER in Hats , Caps, Furs , Rohes, Gente 'Furuish-d E id M i S t t A A bin; Hoods, etc.

lliebigaa. 9t

p , , ,East side Main Street . Ann Arbor,

A. J. SUTHERLAND,A r the New York Life Insurance Company,

Oifice OD Huron street- Also has on hand a stock.1 (fca naM »pim»ce.t sewing machines. 885tf

""GEORGEllSCHEii.

M EAT MARKET—Huron S t ree t -Genera l dealer inFresh and Salt Meats, Beef, Mutton, Pork, Hams,

Poultry, Lard, Tallow, & c , Sec.

" HIRAM J7BEAKES ~~

ATTOft UY and Counsellor at Law, .aid Solicitor inChancery. Offico in City Hall Uiock, over Webster's

Boot Store.

T & BREAKEY.

PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Onicc at theres ideuce of Or. Leivitt, north side of I iu run , two door.s

Kit or Division street-

"MTGUITERMAN & co.

f HOI.ES.VLK and Retail Dealers and Manufacturersof Ready-Mad3 Clothing. Importers of Cloths, Cas-

liiaere*, Uoeskius, &c., No. 5, Phoenix Block, Main st .

' WM. WAGNER.

DEALER in Rt'ady Made Clothing, Cloths. Cussimeres,and Vest ings, Hat?, Caps, Trunks, Carpel Bags, ft|C.,

plianix Block, Main street.

NIL ADMIRARI.liy JOIIX o. SAXE,

When Horace in Veuduaian grovesWas sciibblin^r w | t or dipping "ilassic,"

Or singing those delicious lovesWinch after a^es reckon classic,

He wrote one day—'twas no vagary—These famous words : —JVii Admirari!

" Wouder fit nothing!"—said the bard ;A kingdom's fall, a nation's rising,

A lucky or a losing card,Are really not M all surprising,

However, men on manners vary,Keep cool and calm ; Nil admirari!

If kindness meet a cold return ;li' i'rietidsliip prove a dear delusion ;

If love, neglected, cease to burn,Or die untimely of profusion,

Such lessons well may make us wary.But needn't shock ; Nil admirari !

Docs disappointment follow gain 1Or wealth eluile the keen pursuer 1

Does pleasures cud in poignant pain ?Does fame disgust the lucky wooer.

Or haply prove perversely chary 1'Twas ever thus ; Nil admirari '.

Does January wed with May,Or ugliness consort with beauty 1

Does Piety forget to pray %And, heedless of connubial duty,

Leave faithful Ann for wanton Mayi'Tis the old tale ; Nil admirari!

Ah ! when the happy day we reach"When proinisers are no'er deceivers ;

When yiarsons practice what they preach,And seeming saints are all believers,—

Then the old maxim you may vary,And say no mure, Nil udmiray !

SLAWSON & SON.pROCERS, Provision and Commission Merchants, and\J Dealers in W#*er Lime, Land P!a*t(>r, and Plastero( Paris, one door ea^t of Cook's Hotel .

S0OTT & LOOMIS.iMBHOTYpK and Phntngraph A r t i s t , in the rooms/lover Campion's Clothing store, Phoenix Block. Per-f»ctiatUfacti"n given.

~ c . B. P O R T E R T "MRGEON DENTIST. Office Corner of Main and Huronu streets, over Back & Pieriou'ts £tore. Ail callBI'lmptlyatU-nded to Ap.rl859

MACK & SCHMID.DEALERS in Foreign and Domestic Dry Good. Groce-

ries, Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, Crockery,fcc, Corner of Main & Liberty s ts .

ANDREW BELL.DKALRR ia Groceries, I'rovinions, Flour, Produces:

Xc, &c , ci.'i'uer Main and Washington Streets,inn Arbor. The highest market prices paid lor countryproduce. 8bG

M. C. STANLEY^"Photograplaic Artist.

Coraer M«in and Huron Streets, ADU Arbor, Mich,

PHOTOGRAPHS, AMBROTYPES, &c. &c,inthe latest stylep,and every effort made to give satis-fiction. 956tf

D . ~ D E F O 1 1 E S T .nrUDLESALR and retai l dealer iu Lumher j La th ,™ Shingles, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Water Lime, GrandSi'er Plaster, P las ter Par i s , and Nails o fa l l s i zes . A-lUnd peTfectassortment of the above, and all o ther^ h of buildinK materials constant ly on hand a t t h e»«stpo3siblo ra tes , on D e t r o i t s t . , a few rodri from t h eJiilro^d Depot. Also opera t ing extensively in t h e• itent Cement Roofing.

LUM¥lER~YARD!C. KRAPF,

Hu » lnrje » n 4 w ( .n stocked Lumber Yard, on Jeffer-lon Street, in I be South par t of the City, and will keeptomUntlj- on hand an excellent variety of

LUMBER, 11 00(SHINGLES,

LATH, &o.•nich win be sold as low a« can be affor^ledin thisWrket.

<te»litjr and prices Huch that no one need gotoDe- 1

A House With all the Modern Conve-niences.

Nehemiah Pollard was an army con-tractor. He furnished pork for the wes-tern department, and of course he gotrich by it. At the eod of two years ofthat kind of business, he found himselfworth half a million.

People began to call him Mr. Pollard,instead of "old Pollard" and " Miah,"and slee meo in white neck cloths,called on him with loug subscriptionpapers.

Mrs. Pollard had discovered her im-portance some time previously. Drvgoods clerks held the doors open for hernow, who, three years before would haveseen her drop a dozen parcels in themud and shirt the skirt of her dress inthe door forty times, without coming tothe rescue. Sfce was consuhed aboutsewing societies, and appealed to in be-lalf of Foreign Miemqns, and Bible So-cieties, aud Sanitary Commissions, and

r opinion was quoted among her'riends as we (juote from a statute book.

Mrs. Pollard awoke suddenly to aknowledge of the fact that it illy be-came their altered circumstances to liven a one story wooden house, in a re

mote part of the city, with none of thelonveniences and improvements. They

owed it to the children, she said, to in-labit a house with all the modern con-

veniences, and see something of theworld.

Nehemiah figured his greenbacks,looked wise, and coincided.

So a house was taken.I t would be tedious to relate all the

particulars of the furnishing, much ofwhich was done liy contract. The housewas large and commodious. There wasa library, conservatory, parlor, drawing-room, diuing halls aud a model kitchen.It was heated with a furnace, lightedwith gas, there was a dumb waiter; inshort it was a house with all the modernconveniences.

The library was stocked by a stationer,who received orders to be sure the bookswere well bound, and mostly in redbacks; the conservatory was filled by aflorist, and Mrs Pollard stipulated onlythat there be plenty of hollyhocks andpoppies.

than the tropics. How do you fix thisdarned thing, Pegay, 'o 300I it off V

" I don't kuow," cried his wile, "I ' l lrtaft for Jane."

" The deuce you will !" said Mr. Pol-lard, glancing at his stant attire, "yougo to bed—I'll manage it. I'll set thesink over the hole, and that'll keep thuheat out. All right."

•' Put out the gjy," said his wifefrom the bed.

" Put out the dickens ?" criuJ treyhusband angrily—"here I'va blowtdand blovved, till I'm fit to bust, and theconfounded thing only dances uwav thefastor ! I can't snuff it out neither ! Iwouldn't give a taller dip lor a millionof those jiggers !"

'' Turn it off." advised Mrs. Pollard." Turn it, inde- d ! where'll you turn

it to, I wonder 8 Ha ! I've done it 1I've switched it out with my sleevu !"

" Wall, don't get into bed with yourhands smutty, but wash 'em, there's hotand cold water, you know. Such a^ouvonience."

"Jupiter Ammon! I've took thoskin off from that hand! "Why, thewater's bilin ! I'll try the cold—zounds !how it smarts !" and muttering to him-self, Mr. Pollard completed his ablu-tion and got into bed.

Sometime in the night, Mrs. Pollardawoke. She felt chilly and damp. Shoput out her hand and felt only water.

" The Lord of mercy !" screamed she," Wi.ke up Miah ! there's a flood. Itsgot clean up in the chamber, and we

J Pdllmd l;iid down his weap-on, and the two shook huiicU.

"I t ' s all owing to tbis confoiiudedhouse," siiid Nehemiah, "f don't kn >wno inoiu a jout the new.-fangled thingthau the mau in the moon. But I'vegot some first rate uognao in the cellar.You'll keep dark, Mr.' Police."

" Upon honor, tquife."Mr. Pollard hud the locks taken off

his doort1, and the water pipes removedthe next, day. He has lived in li;i ownhouse nearly a year now, but ho carriesu tallow 'dip' to bed with him, and wash-es his face aud hands ut the kitchensink.

hll-Wo

shall all be drowned to death!and light a light."

git up

inn Arber, Dec. «th, 1864.CONRAD KRAPF:

OSBtt

NEW MUSIC STOREPertODs wishing to buy

Pianos or IMEelodeons,« W d go to WILSEY'g MUSIC STORE, before pur

•"">g elsewhere. He will warrant satisfaction topwchaMrii ,»nil take:*ho hi pleasure in referring to thftse

tTlSTDEBSOLD

When all was ready the family movedin.

Mrs. Pollard sailed about the roomslike a queen ; but her husband lookedabsolutely frightened as ho surveyed thepremises.

" By golly, Peggy," he exclaimed, "Ifthis ere ain't a little too fine for us ; Ifeel like a cat in a strange garret—yesby golly, like two cats. There's a dozenthings here that I don't know the namesof. What's them gilt things stuck up inthe corner, with the bare-legged childrenwith goose wiogs on their backs ?"

" Land sakes, Mi. Pollard, them's cor-nishes, and the pijens is angels, andyou'll oblige me by caliiug me Margaretin future."

" Why, I didn't know that was yourname," cried Mr. Pollard in wonder.

" Peggy is the vulgar for Margaret,sir!"

"Well, I declare, live and larn."" Do take your feet off from that ot-

toman, and don't lean }'our head againstthe paperhanging. Like enough itsgreasy."

" Shouldn't wonder. Pork packing'srather a greasy business."

"Mr. Pollard, if you'll never alludeto your business agaiu, I'll be thankful.It is vulgar to bring home your shopwith you."

" Why, who has brought one home ?"" Do bo more careful Mr. Pol-

lard, you've smashed the varnish offfrom that teaty tete, and now you'rebobbing your head against the chanti-cleer."

'' I'll go to bed, that's whatand see if I can't have some

Mr. Pollard jumped out with a loudslosh, then jumped in, then out again,propelled by a vigorous kick from hisbetter half.

" What in creation is it?"*cried he,dashiug about in the vein attempt tofind his clothes. " Ah, ah ! its juststruck me, 1 did't fix that water spoutright after I washed my hands ! I re-member I couldn't stop it from running.Confound the convenience !—And thereain't no matches or caudle ! Wall, Ican tind my way ; I'll go down to thekitchen and bail us out!"

He reached the stairs safely, took astep forward, and brought up in thehall below on his head, which felt asthough a whole cotton factory had setup its mitchinery inside of it.

Directly ho recovered himself andproceeded ou his way. He went intothe kitchen, fjund the pail, and turnedto go__back. The door was fast. Hepulled aud kicked it with all bis might,but he only wasted his strength. Thenhe remembered that all the doors in thehouse had spring locks, aud ho bad neglected to take out the key when he camein, so, of course, he was a prisoner !

Pollard was mad. It was badenough to be washed through with aprospect of getting immediately dried,but to stand there on the cold Januarynight, with no garment on but his robede ?iuit, was a little to much.

He hallooed and kicked and bangedamong the pots and kettles and tin paus.He shouted murder and thieves at thetop oi his voice, and knocked his worstcorn wretchedly against the rango.

Maddened by the pain, he seized thepoker, and flew at the grated windows,through which he soon made a hole largeenough to shout murder Out of.

In a moment a policeman's rattle washeard ; and directly quite a force of" stars" congregated out3ide the win-dow.

Struct He.The oil fever gives rise to somo

morous features of human nature,cannot vouch for the utter truthfulnessof the following, but havo received itas genuine :

" A couple of gentlemen of meanswere for a long time desirous of invest-ing their spare cash iu soma one of theoil enterprisesjif th« age. The stocksof those in full- blast or successful oper-ation, were held so high that the gen-tlemen concluded to risk an investmentin one "under the augur," or well iuprocess of boring. Tho agent of thenew concern had his place of businessiu Wall street, New York; the propertywas in the oil region of Western Penn-sylvania.

" On making tho twentieth or fin:ilcall upon the broker, to inquire morefully into the matter, a lad stepped inand handed the Rgeut a telegraph mes-sage. Hastily glancing at it, ho said :" Gentlemen, I give you just three min-utes to accept or decline my offer forthe property." The two heads went to-gether, two tongues spoke two sentences,and, turning, they notified the brokerthat the property was their own. Themoney was paid, the stocks transferred,when one of the gentlemen said to theagent,: "Have you any objection tothe showing of that telegraph riiesSagd ?"" Certainly not," sard tho bland agent,and, taking it, they read :

PKTKOI.ECM BAYOU,

Jan. —, 1865."Harafine Candle, Esq :

" Bored eighty feet, struck a spermwhale's hem), spouting i]a a t the rate offifteen barrels p<jr minute.

SPEKM KmiiisEXE, Agent.It is needless to say that the fortunes

of our two friends were made.—Provi-dence Press.

The Bible.OLD TESTAMEXT.

No. of books,No. of chapter,No. of verses,No. of words,

A Visit to Longfellow."\Vu remained in our cuiriago a

Ddmauts, while my kind conductor onterod tlu h-ouaj to\ nsk if its msinterwould receive us. He Inn suffered amost awful bi ruavoiuont*—a btrguwj-inout tlio bitterest that oan afjlict a ten-dor and loving heart; and lie lived now

Do You Want a Boy Sir?"lew ' ''^" ) '"" Vl'''Uit a ^''V, «ir V" s:iid

Q«6rg4tj u little fellow scarcely eightyears old, to a. ch tk ii; a largo oflice.

" Waut it hr.y ? Why who wants to

Retaliation.HEADQL'AB.'XEBN I.\ T(IK FIBLD, >

Feb. 27, lStB. 5MaJ' O e n - W- ?• Sherman, U. S. Army :

GRNKHAL—Your communication

g ;in ahiic st entire seclusion among hiscilJrcn, however— in pence, eoiiSR>?tftighimself in tlit? piiltiviitiori of goc 'tors, Uh(] 'ho accomplishment viaw >i k. Wparlor,man ef taste and c'ultuVe.

Aiwn he oani'j iu, simply dressed,hij long whi'c beard floating upon his

th<; little" I do, tir,u replied George,

g g pbrenst, a liflbuliful and patiuiichal man,but. u* ! Mi tired out and pensive look-ing— ah ! arid ditiereut from him w.o'psccheery face and gallant port are so la-rrriliax iu tlie portrait of twenty yearssin-je. He seemed to have let his beanlgiow, not i(i ;;ccm-dauce wuh a vainfashion, but for the sake of aomuv, asthe-nion of the East do. But when Iheard how noblv he bore UM uuijer hisgreat loss, and how, sieudfas'ly he wentabout his appointed tasks, I remember-ed how David the King, undue arj afflic-tion as cruel, gave over grieving, say-ing: " While the child was yet, alive,I tasted and wept; for 1 said who can

l hh Gd

engaged ':" asked tho smart-looking l n y 24\% (list, reached mo tu day. Iu ir.Lrk. looking with a puzzled glance tit ' }*ou state that it has beeu officiary ro'

' ported that your foraging partial were" murdered" utter capture, uud you fn>on to Bay thnt you hat] " ordwed a simi-lar number of prisoners in your handsto be disposed of in liko manner." 'J h.;tis to say, you have ordered a number olConfederate soldiers to bo " murdered."

You characterize vo'irordoriu properterms, for the public, voice, even in yourown country, where it seldom dares to• •xpress itself iu vindication uf truth,houor or justice, will surely agree withy<>u in pronouncing; you gu ity of mur-der, if your order is carried out. Be-iore dismissing this portion of your let-icr, I b; g to assure you for evert/ sol-dier if mine " murdered" Ly you 1 nhall

Look Lore, gentlemen, ' cried theman, speaking to his follow

el .i !->. " hoio is a regular Goliath Io entered a pretty' Tibr.;ry ' Vv ' ; l" l s l o » porter, I suppose. Look

strown with al. the litter of & , ^ t WitWrrho clerks gathered in great glee

about poor George, who stood, full ofjjiirpwse, before thorn, and was

;tell whether God will beme, that the child may live ?h i dhe is dead,Can I

is toBut HOW

wherefore should I fast?I shall

return toDting him back ain ?

not

39929

23,214592.439

I'll do,peace, I

M.

'lie Iast or Wi-st,

-The latent SHEET MUSIC for sale, PIANO

\t\pM.. or , Dec. »7th, 1864.

ALV1N WILSEY.98'Jtd

50,000.s AND

Also hev

SALE!tOIS, worth from »l,000 ter.il improved FARMS.

hain't allowed to touch nothing here.Mr. Pollard put his threat into execu-

tion, but his wife followed him closelyup the stairs.

'' Mind the stair carpet, Mr. Pollard,there I hemmed it," cried she, as Nehemiah caught his foot in the binding,stumbled, aud fell entirely to tho foot ofthe stairs, breaking the hall glass, andtearing the coat skirt entirely oft.

He picked himself up with mutteringexpletive? and gained his chamber. The

: servant had already lighted the gas, audI j 1 J

'opened the register."ied Mr. P., "its hotter

What's the row ?" queried a police-" What do you mean by kicking upsuch a row this time of night ?"

Pollard threw a kettle of apple sauceat his head, but the grating preventedit from taking effect.

" Desperate fellows inside there,"muttered the policeman, " It's best tobe cautious, we might get into diffi-culty."

" Let me out, or I'll be the death of) e !" roared Nehemiah, waxing desper-ate, " I'll shoot every mother's son ofye!"

" Pollard! Pollard ! Miah !" calledMrs. Pollard from the entry, "do COUK- !what in the world is tho matter? Thehouse is full of thieves and murderers !I've heard 'em a yelling for an hour/'

" Let 'em yell and be blasted ! I'llbe the death of the whole of 'em if youdon't let me out of this !"

" Don't kill anybody ? It's wicked !remember the commaudmeot!" entreat-ed Mrs. Pollard.

" Open the door !" roared a police-man from the outside.

" Open it yourself!" cried Nehemiah." What are you doing in there?""None of your business!" said cut-

hero.'• Burst it in !" commanded the po-

lice; and after a Bhort struggle, thedoor flew from the hinges, and the lightof a bull's eye penetrated the place.

" That's the villian ! seize him !" saidthe leader, ' on with the bracelets ! nev-er mind what ho says ! We'll show him

No;.'of letter, 2,728,100The middle book is Proverbs.The middle chapter is job xxix.The middle verse would be 2d Chron-

icles, Xx 17, if one more, and Terse 18thif there were one less.

The word and occurs 35,543 times.The word Jehovah occurs 6,855 times.The shortest verse is 1st Chronicles,

i 25.The 21st chapter of the 7th chapter

of Ezra contains all the letters of thealphabet.

The 19th chapter of 2d Kings andthe 37th chapter of Isaiah are alike.

NEW TESTAMENT.

No. of books, 27No. of chapters, 260No. of verses, 7,950No. of words, 181.258No. of Letters . 838,580The middle book is ThessaloniansThe middle chapter is Romans, xvii.,

if there were a chapter less, aud xvi., ifthere were a chapter more.

The middle verse is Acts xvii. 17.The shortest verse is in John xi. 35.

OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT.

No. of books, 06No. of chapters, 1,189No. of verses, 31,173No of words, 773,097No. of letters,. 3,556,080The middle chapter and the least one

in the Bible is Psalms cxvii.The middle verse is Psalms cxvii. 18.These are interesting facts.

John Jay and the Infidels.John Jay, when ambassador to

France, was once in a company of infidels at Paris. They talked on reckless-ly, venting their spite at the Bible. Juywas silent. I t troubled them. He didnot pronounce their shibboleth. Theycould not go on while that grave, just,true man sat there a silent spectator, asort of solemn judge, riveting at lasttheir gaze. No wonder his bearingforced them to speak, and when they ask-ed, as if to relieve themselves of theirconfusion and provoke his acquiescence,' Do you believe in Jesus Christ?1' his

go to him, hut he shallme." Aud this man's loss hadgreater than that of twenty children.

After a while he grew quite cheerful,and we chatted, to me, the most delight-ful gossip I ever had. in my life. Hegave me u oigar, and he smoked onelikewise. Some one in England hadsent him an album full of photographsof English men of letters, and I wasproud and glad to find th;r iniuo wasamong tho number, and 1 hat. lie tee*}**nized me by it—prouder than though Ihid been bidden to s'und before a bitig.1 rose at la^t loth to depart, and lefthim there, sorrowlul but not desolate,qvia mitltum amavit. I shall never seehim again, but 1 shall never forget that1 have been permitted to touch thehand and to listen to the discourse, fullof calm, and wise, and gpeofte thing-ofa noble Americuu tn:iH— of him whowrote the •'ViMaj/n BUcksmiih,;' and'' Evitngeline ;"—of him wlio-e life hasbeen blameless, whose record is pure,whose name is a sound of fame to allpeople.— Geo. Aug. Sn/a.

*The wriier rpfers fo Itift death'of £ongfell6w*s wifv,which uccuriofl in 16til, uu.iiM- the fcllpwifiry etrcum-suu.c.-s : She was scaling fruit c:ins when tlu- waxtook, lieu, and falling upon her dr.jss set il instantly in(lames. Brery effort was made bj her husband, whochanr .d to hv oear, to extinguish it, but unauocess-fujiy, RW\ death eusiud.

pp ,therefore unconscious of aayieason whyhe should be made an onjebtcf sport.

" What can you do?" usked ono.'' You can po-t book>, of course,"

said another" Carry a ba'e of goods on your back,

ch ?" cried a third." Hush, young gentlemen," said tho

elderly bookkeeper at the desk, afterviewing George through his spectacles," Hush Don't make sport of the child.Let me talk to him." Then speakingto George in kindly tones, he said,"You are too young to be engaged, mychihl. Who sent you here?"

'•1 came, myself, sir. My father andmother are gone to heaven. My auntis poor, and I want to earn somethingto help her. Won't you please tako msir v >

The simple story, told in it way thashowed how earnest the boy was, noonly checked the sport of the clerksbut brought tears to their eyes. Theylooked on the delicate child before thenwith pity and respect, and one of them

Trial by Jury-John P. Hale has lost his seat in tho

with impunity."" I tell vou I am in mv own house .

and all others of his style, that he cau- i silence had prepared the way for his cou-not break into people's houses and steal j fusing and confounding answer. " I do,

and I thank God that I do." He wassilent at the right time, aud spoke atthe right time, and when he spoke saidtho right thing.

! £ § - When James T. Brady firstopened a lawyer's office in New York,he took a basement room which had beenpreviously occupied by a cobbler. Hewas somewhat annoyed by the previousoccupant's callers, and irritated by thefact that he had few of his own. Oneday an Irishman entered. " The cob-bler's gone, T see," he said, " I shouldthink he had," tartly responded Brady." And what do ye sell ?" he asked, look-ing at tho solitary table and a few lawbooks. "Blockheads," responded JBrady.11 Begorra," said tho Irishman, "you

thundered Pollard, "and "I'll beat thebraius out of the whole of ye, if yedon't make yourselves skeeree ! Peg-gy! Peggy! come and help me!"

The kitchen door flew open, and Peg-gy's yellow flannel night cap appeared.

"Oh lordy !'' cried she. " I can'toan't come in afore all them men withmy night-cap ou. Wais a mianit till Ifix my head."

Nehemiah hud seized ft long handledfrying pan, aud was laying about himwith a will.

The leader of the police began to seethe point. He brought tho lante.ru tobear on tho face of our iriend.

" I beg your pardot), Esquire Pollard,it was all a mistake."

Senate, and has most likely given up theidea ofgettiug the French mission. Hetherefore thinks he can afford to speakthe truth. He recently took occasionto denounce the sy&tfem of arbitrary ar-rests, which has made the administrationso infamous. Hear him :

" If trial by jury is overthrown in thiscountry, take the rest. I-would not liftmy hand nor open urv mouth, nor counsel one of my constituents to shed adrop of blood, or a dollar of treasure, ifthe Constitution is to be preserved emas-culated of this safe-guard of liberty. Inthese times, wheu so much is demanded,and so much is at stake, with a geuerous confidence I would give to the administration almost everything that theywant1. I wnnld consent, and I haveconsented, that the habeas corpus may besuspended, and that ua^-aordinary tribunala may be erectocr'and institutedfor the trial of everybody that voluntar-ily c mes forward and connects himsolfwith the public service. But, sir, if youare going to throw a drag-net over theland, if you are going to bring in thiswhole people, and subject them to thopenalties that may be inflicted by mili-tary tribunals and t.hesu court martials,then the last step in the humiliation vAdegradation of the country is taken andwe shall be left fit ins'.rutnents for anydespotism that the bold and the lawlessmay see proper to establish over us."

U S " Cornelius O'Dowd, in the lastBlackwood, indulges in a humorous protest against populuriziug science, esp;cially as it affects Mrs. O'Dowd. 'Hecomes home and finds that estimablelady iu tears, because sho has learned attho Scientific Congress, thnt the coalfields cannot last over twelve thou^ndyears, aud the earth's eras: is a t*teenth of an inch thinner than it was atthe time of Moses. And then ho asks," What right has Sir David Brewster orProfessor Faraday to fill my wife's breadwith speculations about the first man ?I am, or at least ought to be, the firstman to her." But even this is not sobad as this dismal infoimatiou thrustupon him regarding the constituents ofwhich both are composed, " I do notdesire to have it impressed upon me soforcibly that I am only a compouud ofneutral salts, gelatine, fibrine and adi-pose matter. It is no pleasure to ine toregard Mrs. O Dowd as a vehicle for

pniacing a shillinthe rest to ^^o. He then took the money anderiog it to George, said :

"You are too small to be of any usek h

on tho desk, askeci example; they die

off

ytake thisgrown ahi f

here, my good boj. Butmoney, and when yen have ebit, prhaps we may find something foryou to do."

U-. orge looked at the money without ottering to touch it.

" Why don't yo:skod the clerk.

''1'h'ase, sir, I'm

take the monevi"

not a beggar bny,'said George; "I want to earn somethingto help my auut to keep me, for she is

little fellow," saidgive you the

very kind"You are a noble

the 'Senior clerk.money not because wo think you"a beg-gar, but because we like your spiritSuch a boy as you will not easily bocome a beggar Take the money, myboy, and may God bless you, and giveyon and your aunt better days."

I like George's spirit in this affairIt was noble, brave, and self-reliant be-yond his years. I t was the spirit thatmakes poor boys grow into useful ancsuccessful men. It made George dothi>; for in after years that litt e boybecame a noted artist, whose praise wasspokeu by many tongues. All childrenshould cherish a desire to do all theycan tor themselves and to supportthemselves by'their own labor as earlyas possible Those who lean on fatherand mother for everything will find ithard work to get along by and by, asthey may have to do when their parentsdie. Those who early learn to relyupon themselves will have little difficultyin earning their own living. Learn,therefore, to help yourselves—alwaystaking care to do so under the adviceand with the consent of your good par-ents and guardians.— Young Reaper.

Isaiah and Andy Johnson, et al.The telegraph informs us, with orac

ular brevity, thati-'Uhe President onSaturday took tho oath of office withhis hand on the open Bible, accordingto custom. Mr. MiJdleton, the clerkof the Supreme Court, had opened it,but without premeditation, at the 5thchapur of Isaiah." The chapter COD-taius the following eminently appropri-ate verses :

COXCEUNIXG ANDY JOUNSOX.

11. Wo unto them that rise up earlyin the mcraiug, that they may followstrong drink ; that continue uutil night,until wine inflames them.

OX TIIE INAUGURATION BALL.

12. Aud the harp and the viol, thetabret, the pipe, and wine are in theirfeasts; but they regard not the work ofthe Lord, neither consider thetion of his hands.

12. Therefore my people are goneinto captivity, because they have noknowledge; aud their honorable menare fami-hed, and their multitude driedup with thirst.

14. Therefore hell hath enlarged her-self, and opeued her mouth withoutmeasure, aud their glory aud their mul-titude, and their pomp, and he that re-joiceth, shall descend iuto it.

WITH REGARD TO SHODDY.

8. Wo unto them that join house tohouse, that lay field to field, till therebe no place, that may be placed alonein the midst of the earth.

ANDY JOHNSON AGAIN.

. Wo unto them that are mighty

opera-

to drink wine, and meu of strength tomingle strong drink.

23. Which justify the wioked for re-ward, and tako away the righteousness

the righteous from him.

The Rochester papers (where

vor. On the whole it is decidedlymust be doing u mighty fine busmess- b e s t v a r i u t f l h o , e U ) m a l 0 /ye hob 1 got but ouc l ck" I k

y ' '

i of lime, various carbonates andan appreciable portion oi arsenic."

The Cook's Favorite.This variety is a very vigorous grower,

ripens very early, and is prolific. Thefoliage is "of a handsome light green. I t j t h e ^raft is now being enforced) sayis an improved sort of Hie apple tomato, i- t nu t t l '1 ' t l m t > RWB to men in which togiving a larger proportion of large hand- j r e P o r l **ftfi>i '"(-'ing drafted j s limited tosuiue apple-shaped fruit, than any of the , t e n d : ' - v s ' l l l u J t ! m t F]H n a s ordered thatcommon sorts; the fruit ripening to the i W l t ' ' ' n 1 ' i r ( ! e ( ' ; '.vs after reporting, allstem, and being full meated. The to- I w h o l i r o "t^'-pted *'mdl be put inmatoesaroof fine size, and of good flu- j f"1IU UIK1 ''"'warded to Klmira.vor. On the whole it is decidedly tho

have executed at once two of yours, giv-ing, in all cas-'.s, prelerence to any offi-cers who may be in my hands.

In reference to the statement youmake regarding the death of your fora-gers, I have only to say that I knownothing of it; that no orders giveu byme authorize the killing of prisoners af-ter capture, and that I do uot believothat my men killed any of yours, exceptunder circumstances in which it was*perfectly legitimate aud proper theyshould kill thorn.

I t is a part of the system of thothieves whom you designate as yourtorageM to fire tho dwellings of thosucitizens whom they linve robbed.

To check this inhuman system, whichis justly execrated by every civillizednation, I have directed my men to shootdown all of your men who are caughtburning houses This order shall re-main in force as long as vou disgracethe profession of arms by allowing yourmen to destroy'private dwelling's.

You say that I cannot, of course,question your right to forage on thecountry. " It is a right as old aa histo-ry." I do not, sir, question this right.But there is a right older evou thanthis, and ono more inalienable—the rightthat every man has to defend his homeand to protoet those who are dependentupon him, and from my heart I wishthat every old man and boy in my coun-try who can fire a gun, would shootdown, as he would a wild beast, the menwho are desolating their land, burningtheir houses, and insulting their women.

You are particular in defining andclaiming " war rights." May I ask youif you enumerate among them thb rightto fire upon a defenceless city withoutnotice ; to burn that city to the groundafter it had been surrendered by theauthorities, who claimed, though in vaiD,that protection which is always ac-corded in civilized warfare to non-com-batants, to fire the dwelling houses ofcitizens, after robbing them, and to per-petrate even darker crimes thau these—crimes too black to be mentioned.

You have permitted, if you have notordered, the commission of these offen-ces against humanity and the rules ofwar. You fired iuto the city of Colum-bia without a word of warning. Afterits surrender by the Mayor who de-manded protection to private property,you laid the whole city in ashes, leavingamid its ruins thousands of old menand helpless women and children, whoare likely to perish of starvation and ex-posure. Your line of march can betraced by the lurid light of burninghouses, ^ad in more than one house-hold there is au agony far more bitterthan that of death.

The Iudian soulped his victim regard-less of sex or age, but with all his bar-barity he always respected the personaof his female captives; Your soldiers,more savage than the Indian, insult thosewhose natural protectors aro absent.

In conclusion, I have only to request:hat whenever you have any of my men' disposed of," or " murdered," for theermsjappear to be synonymous with you,,'ou will let me hear of it, in order that[ may know what action to tako in thenatter. Iu the meanti.ne I shall hold56 of your men as hostages for thosewhom you have ordered to be executed.. am yours, etc.

WADE HAMPTON, Lieut. Ben.

THE EXTENT OI? TOABI-I?II.—The ex-ent to which toadyism oan be carried isldmirably illustrated in the Herald's ao-jount of the Inauguration ball in whiohhe following reference is made to Mm.Jncoln:

Mrs. Lincoln romained seated iu[ueeuly state. IShe was dressed in whiteatin, richly embroidered, aud wore a)oint lace shawl Her uecklaco and ear-ings were of diamonds. Her hair waa

arranged with a fall of curls and withilver ornaments and while artificial.owers. Hei rounded arms and dimpledhoulders were displayed, and hur facesore the expression which assured allobservers that she was the wife of the'resident. Nobody could mistakeIrs. Lincoln. Sho was every inch a'residentess.

uui-

g gyye hob 1 got but ouc lck." U l a | . k u t i

Why is a dull book like eternity?d i t t dYou read it to no end.

THB BLUE 1VIIM;E (-JAP*.- -The "gaps"n the Blue Bidae Mountains, throughn army can puss, are .seven in number;

V'estall's eight miles from Harper'sferry ; Snicker's twenty-sour milesrom the Perry, through which passesho Alexandria and and Harper's Ferryurnpiko ; ^.sjiby's,] thiry eight milesrom Harper's Ferry, through whichlasses a branch pike from Alexandria toWinchester, Four ecu miles below\shby's is Manassa? Gi'P, throughwhich runs the railroad; eight milesbelow is Chester's Gap—a road, nutmuch travelled, passes through it ; twen-ty miles still further down is Thorton'sOap, through whioh the supplies forLee's army were hauled in wagons fromGordoDoville and

Page 2: FEIDAY,media.aadl.org/documents/pdf/michigan_argus/michigan_argus_18650324.pdf · " Wi.ke up Miah ! there's a flood. It s got clean up in the chamber, and we J Pdllmd l;iid down his

| f t> : . • '

Tax.B l.-UHY JJjfl U

« a hi igtoa, Marcii 8, l><Bis:—Coiaplarota bave beea

If . .- i ;.:,• M to luo m inner in which jii,.. !iie hsturos ii'ivo been raade in mmyL1 >ITcction districft iu the Uuitcii State*, |i> :u o.'iKV:\':icg jours amoug others. I tis in the poir&r tf Iwt assessor, :tnd it isnisii I i« tiuty, t ) require all persona wiiomay Irava filed affidavits that they werei: >t in po.--'«i:.-.sioii of 1660 income for 1862and 1S63—where ho supposes thofttaUttr^Qt to bo fratr.tuleut—to appearMure him, and explain and rectify theirK-MI ITS or offid;ivii«.

It. U rea*0D«LJj that persons whosefamily txpensoa were over §5,000 per\ ear iniist have a taxable income, andyet it is known that periims who havejived it a rate requiring an expenditurerf from 5,000 to $5,000, liavo muda af-ticfaTitu Uiat their incomes did uotiiiiiuutii. to $660 per year ia tlia years

1 referred to. All suuu returns are pie-errouoous, aud in many

robably fraudulent.O.Ler pciouL.3 engagutl in trade of

kinds have assumed their iuftiium to have liuou some certain sum,without taking an inventory. Othersbare iii«(l<» grea'er deductions than isxliowed by l*w, f-uch as expenses of la-bor and machinery, and new building*.Where FUCII returns are made underoiruumstr.nces which show that thereWas a deliberate intent to mislead tlierspc-sor, or evude tho payment of theproper tax, they ought to be reassessed[•j the assessor.. For through a moremistaken return after it has been ex-uwined, any fraudulent return may beinquired into at any tiina. No mancan benefit by his own wrong, and notime eau cure what is void or voidabloby rwiscm of fraud.

' Wiiere a tax payer comes forwardand makes a voluntary auioudniout ofliis former return, with the statementthat ho mudo au improper return uude:'an hocest misapprehension of the law,iind ?ou are satisfied thiit be vraa notitsofted to th'B course by fear of detec-tion, }ou can rec&iva bis returD if youarc fully satisfied of its correctness,without the addition of any penalty.j>ut when upon investigation youfind a pyr+'oj clearly guilty of bar-ing purposely muda ehort returns, youShould, if the return WAS made sinceJuly, 1SC4, assess the hundred per cent,penalty for fraud, and in addition shouldreport the oase to to the Colleotor forgsph aorion as he deems fit.

Very respectfully,

JOSEPH LEWIS,Commissioner.

ANN A J T I M . n i ^ T T T ! M ; C H .

FRIDAY MOBNIHG! MAECH 24,1865.

SE 0 5? Xliii CITY.

DEf^OGRAT!C_STATE TICKET:For SegsaU <>f the Univcrsiiy,

EBBNEZES WSfcLS,OLIVEll C. COMSXOCK.

Boston Wool MarketThe wool market ia dull and depres-

sed, witb a further decline in rates oftome 2s3o. Western consignors arenow pressing tbei? stocks with as muohpoi tinaoil? as they exhibited a shorttime ago ia withholding them ; and un-der these circumstances, it is cf butlittle use for Eastern owners to holdback in »o effort to keep up the market.With tlie present diminutive supply ofd i l b b hiWith tlie p r e e t ppydomestic staple, bad therobaen anythinglifc# CD operation <"m tb* part of holders,probabiy pricas might have been bettersuauined, &t laast until gold dropped toa fi^ura which should have brought tbeforeign artiols into competition with it.Bat as the casoscaads, wool in relativelya ohaap commodity, and likely to bocheaper still unless the goods marketspeedily exhibits more positive signs ofanimation.

As regards the prospects of the-rairket,for tuts balance o£ tho season, there isconsiderable diversity of opinion amongholders, but all are agread upon thepoint that these mainly depend upon thefuture eourneof gold and military erects.There is no doubt but that all tho doine'tio wool in tho country will be need-ed fur actual consumption before tbenext clip. Even supposing the marketalready supplied witli a sufficiency oflijrht good* for the spring demand, thotime is close at hand when manufactur-ers must begin to turn out heavy fabricsfor the regular fall trade ; and with onlysi moderate preparation to meet its ra-qurements (to say nothing of the wantsof the army) ii is not possible there•prill be »ny balance of old wool left tocarry orer. The only question to ba•ettled, (and which no one it competentto nettla in adraiice- of the fact) is howlow will gold fall in the meantime ?\rhioh, to the very end, must continueto bo the great regulator of commercialvalues.

Bales of domestic* for the week foot upnot over 2:$,00 lbs., at u range of 80attoc for Sauce, and about the same forthe various grades of pulled. There aregome choice lots however, of both fleeceand pull«d which are firmly held at $1.Included in tho gales are lots of Illinois&' 80a, medium western at 85o, god NewYork, E intern and Michigan at 85a90«,fine Ohio at 83a95o, tub washed at$1 15, and seoured at $1 25.—COOT.Bulletin. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Despair at Richmond.A James Hirer correspondent say*:

liufu^ees frem Richmond report greati ili i h i

Petty 3pite-Thu journals of the House of Repre-

sentative of the State of Michigan, showthat on tho 11th day of March, 1865,Mr. Warner, ol Oakland, offered lh<>following resolution, which wasadopted :

WAeras, James Clements, a Repre-sent at ivs from the 2d Di^trit;t of Wa«h'ennw county, has without any justifia-ble oiu-o, and in violation of th« privil-eges of this Hoime, absei.ted himrell«ftliout loavtf, from attendance, at thedischarge of his duties us such represen-tative, during most of the present, k ilavive stswion; therefore,

Retolotd, That tho Clerk of thisHouse bo instructed, aud ho is hereb)Jiroctcd, to i*sue certificates to the«aid James Clsmonts, for per diem alUnvance as a member of this Houseonly for the time he has been in attendauce as such member, or absent in thedischarge of bw official dutiia iu oounection theie«itb.

I t is not the resolui on of whiob wecomplain, or to which we would call theattention of our readers. If Mr. &.IM-KNTS did not attend upon the sts.ious oitho House, and if he was absent fromany other cause than sickness, he «Mnot totiffed to pay, and we presumedid not expect to draw it. But whydid Mr.-Wi.nxEB confine tbe resolutionto Mr. CLEMKMS ? A reference to tbe

journals of the House has satisfied u<sthat a larg-e samber of members wereabsent from time to time, and for day^get te r , without leave, and probablywithout "justifiable- cause." If theirabsence was for any other reason thansickness, ^ o y were not entitled to payand Mr. WAKXKK, if Iff had only righ

and justice in view, should have included them with Mr. CLEMS.NTS.

The facts in the oase are, that Mr.CXEMHNTS vacated;' hid seat immediatelyafter tho decision of tbe Supreme-Court,,considering that he bad no right to it,and for daring thus to disagree in opin-ion with Mr. WARNER and his brother

nullifies, they seek rather to cover himwith odium than to gave tho State. I tis th* animus of the preamble whichdisgraoos its mover, if not the bodywhich permitted it quietly to pass. Itis a question with us whether the "priv-

Exhi'uti^n of tLe Uiiioa High CThe people of Ann Arbor are actually

interested in their schools, as was evi-dcut on Pl'KJuy evening,, tho 17lh inist.,from tho !ar#o audience gathered intbe Union School house. Notwithstand-ing the dark clouds and rain, Uho hallwas crowded full. Four students fiotn

i University furnished good vocalmusic, which, when the thuuder stormwithout permitted us to bear it, wascianniug.

After an opening pravsr by Rev. Dr.QATKN, tho fo'louiug programme was

carried out.Public Schoo) Edr.eation, (Declamatton.)

H Q IiHa.var Q.Now England, JOH.VF. EASTWOOD. !"AJau Yield* ID Cust m aa bo Buwa to Fate," j

ELLA M Ilitt. |Tlie Influence-of Art. SALLIB A. MITOBKLL. IJoan of Arc, Cthli. A. TAYLOR.!Xhd i*io»uet*s of the Republic, (Dei'lirraalion ) |

EABt J. K.MOIJl.* jThe Heroes of ihe Pre»eot War, (Declamation)

Rerer5e«, .Twista M KKLLIV.Vast People, JossruiSK A. CoNXOVM.Public Opinion, KlTTlK MITCHELL.The Present Age, FUKDKRIOK: A 8PABLB1HG.A Fourth of July Oration, HILSJUCTH THAYKR,What, is If! GORDON II. GlDBiNGS.Tbe Durability of Meutal Improssiond,

ETTA A. WAKK.Patchwork, K112A M. HILL-Modern Clliralrf, VII»LA B. PACK.American Conquerors, WALLACE WILLIAMS."Labor omniu vincit," Joscru McGuATH.

•Master KXIOHT was ill anrl MJCUJfod, andGEORGK FLAOU wm suti.sLit.iuerI, and spolte

The Irish Picket" in a liajipy uianner.The speaking was very creditable to

>oth pupi's- and teaohsru. Tho decla-nations by Hs.Nitr (I. BBKNETT aud

£-*£" Bolore udjournment, the Leg-islature passed a resolution providingfor the enlargement of Represen-tative Hall, and the refurnishing olthe same, at au expense not to exceodS5,0U0. It strikes us thut the Legiola-ture would have done tho State betterservice by providing tor reducing thenumber of members to tho accommoda-tions of the present Hall.

I £3T* KaporU fiom New Orleans in-' dicato that a movement on Mobile is inprogress, aud that an attack ou the city

1 was aulicipatud as early r.s the iiOthI inst. We do noc think the rebels cauhold it against a combined attack of the

' naval and military forces, aud prtauraeI that it id even now a captured city.

From Sheridan's Army.New York, March 21.

Tiie Herald s City Point correspondent, 20th, eays SJberidan reached theWbito House on the; l'j.h. He lost onlyfifty lueii and two officers. Nearly 200negroes came iu with him, aud ho had toturn back a l.irgo number, as be waawholly una bio to feed or protect them.

£;5g°" The Tuwnship elections takeplace Monday, April 3d. We shall ht) inreadiness next week to print, tickets forour friends, promptly and in good style.Be careful to spell ail names correctlygiving firtt names in full—aud we willwarrant atjainst mistakes.

Tbe Ypsiluini Commercial saysthat the Democratic State Conventionnominated Judge CHIUSTIA.NUY. Wheredid tbe Commercial get the news ? Wewere present iu tho convention unddidn't "see it" in that light.

J52E~The Draft at Kalamazoo hitEx Lieut. Gov, Mfcy, (TKO. A FITCH,

A WKJSU I> SAOEH, werti- npprupmt* and | Esq., of the Tokyraph, and a number of

broiblf, and brought out the sentimentof the authors finely. We should likdto commend wvwal of the original pro-ductions warmly, but as we have notspace to treat all the .speakers i::»par-tially, they nfll pardon ussion. we must, Ijowevorthe young ladies road with 0and a distinct artieulution,with v\lmt wa often hear iu

for tho ouiis-

other notables. They should uiovo intoa more patriotic town.

From tbe South-NEW YCKK, MAIICII 22.

Tho Richmond Dispatch of Monday

Latterly, however, ho could do better,aud tho negroes managed to procure theirown subsistence on the inarch.

Fortress Monroe, March 21.Advic s by mail state that Gon. Sher-

idan's troops are in the very best condi-tion, and appear lo have suffered littlet r nothing front the effects of their longmarch from Winchester. About throehundred rebel prisoners are at the WhiteHouse, together with some three thous-and negroes, who followed tho troops as ithey pa»sod throuph the country. Alargo number of prisoners were capturedduring tbe raid, but owing, to the rapid-ity of Sheridan's movements, many ofthem had to be abandoned, aud othersmade their escape, owing to the relaxedvigilance of their guards, who were gladto get rid of them. The entire cavalryforce has crossed tho south bank of thePnmunkey Itivcr, and is now engaged inrecruiting, preparatory to new move-ments. The rebel Gen. Longstreer,with his corps, is supposed to bo lurkingin the vieitiity of the White House, foron tho evening of the arrival of Sheri-dan at that place frequent skirmishesoccurred between his advanced picketsand uuknown small squads of the enemy,who appeared to be prowling about forreconnoitoristg purposes.

Order of Gen. Pope.An important general order from

Gen. Pope was published at St. Louis,on tho 20th, which is the 6rst step to-wards giving practical effect to the viewsof hi« recent letter to tbe Government.It directs that as soon as informationshall bo received from Gov. Fletcher oftha re-establishment of the Courts aud

From Canada-Quebec, Maroh 15.

Parliament last night voted a milliondollars for the permanent defence of thecountry, also throe hundred and fiftythousand dollars for the expenses ofvolunteers on the frontier.

Tbe Finance Minister, in n speech,said iho Canadian government were ofthe opinion that so long aa the Ameri-can war lasts, we nitist have a force onour frontier in the shape of police andmilitia, to support the civil authoritiesand fulfill the obligations we are underto act the part of good neighbor* to.wards tho United States.

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Temporary LoansReal Estate . . . "100 share* M«r. Y.% . Bank..(•overnnifnt SesurUiofl, value-.........ra*h on hand. . . ,Interest dimPremiums d u e . . . . . .

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threomile* North from tho City of Al n Arb^r, on tlieWbltmoM lake Rcxl. It in under » high »tato of cul-tiration, K<x>d Biiildingn, tlirea W*«tl» of Water, »ud »l)\rg(i variety of Fruit. i*'ur further particular!* call at

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remark that quotes from the Bajeigb. 1 rogrcu a ru-. , . . tU«t .11.u i.l ^liHi-innn'rt colliding IS

full vi.ice,compared

per-M ich

ileges" of such a House oould be vio-

lated.

£ 3 £ - At the lates-t news from SHER-MAN, his army had possessed itself ofQoldabor.t>, N. C, without opposition,although at this point tho rebels hadgiven notice that his progress would bechecked, a catastrophe now transferredso some other point. Goldsboro is one

of tho most important points in N^rtb

prevailing iu that cityThey say that the city has been for•otna time in co;irso of evacuation ia thowtiy of sending- government material*,machinery, etc., to Lynchburg and Dan-Yilic. Sheridan, tbey also say, has putt> stop to this in a great measure bydestroying the Richmond and Lynchburg c.iuul, tha main means ofeoiiiaiuai^ation left The Danville roadia almost worn out, with no material or111B11 t'> spare to repair it. Theso menthkik Davis, Lee a>d other leaders havelast all liope, aud already have theireyes ou Jlcxic'i as an anvlnm.

Tlik) Grand Haven Uniun sayshas becomo tho scone of u lit-

tio excitement recently, and perhapstame scandal. About six inotjtus ago11 young man named Jack Howard came1 here (Tom Chicago, and roamed withhis nuol1} Qoorgs riKward. JTe was; i.'hi*.;g of a fast lia.T, and flirted withri'i 'firl--, and stuck himself oa the end

tua street*in a true rowdy style. Tilingsad a inarria^fo bell" till Ju>ah Mi waihjrwowau and

out. JL was a

Carolina. It is at the junction of therailroads running from Wilmington toRichmond, and from Newbern toRileigh, thecapitslof the State, whichis 51 miles distant in a Northwesterlydirection. I t is about 80 miles Northof Wilmington, and about 70 south ofWcldon, another important railroad centre. Weldbn » about equally distaut—75 miles—from Richmond and Norfolk

Iu our last issue we expressed theopinion that ho had designs on Raleighand would dictate terms to North CaroUna from the capital. We now inclineto the belief that he' j a y leave Kaleighto his left—though wa are not quite confident—and PUSH for an immediate Junetion with General GRANT or a portion ohis army to the South of Richmondeither on the Weldou road, or at a poiuthat will command both that and thSouth-side and Danville roads. Thiopinion is strengthened by the announcemeut in the Washington dispatches, thaany present issue of passes to visit thArmy of theTotomac,haa been prohibited ; that the sutlers aud camp followers have been ordered to the rear, auare arriving, at City Point and FortressMonroe; and that extra surgeons andSanitary supplies have been sent to the ^Army. We also Jearn from private ad- ]

rices, that the Ariry of the Potomac, ora part of it, was under marching orderswith twelve days rations, and that a

formnnces. That is right, no gentle-man or lady should presume to addressan audience without making a propereffort to enable them all to hear.

The perft).mers, !*«• undorstand, wereselected from tbe Junior Class,.and cer-tuiuly they did great credit to them-selves aud their teachers.

The examinations oi the chisseswhich were held duriag tbe week, show-ed a good conditioa of tb* schools. Wehare tbe testimony of competent gentle-

len who attended them, tbat they wereondueted with great fairness and thor-ughness, and showed that the disciplinend instruction are of tbe best kind.

Strangers who visit our city almostuivorsally express an admiration of oureautiful Union School building androunds, and the citizens are undoubt-dly proud of our schools. They are'iberal, too, in their support. But we.vould suggest that more of them calln at some convenient time and fee thechools iD their daily working. If you

can syend but'an hour, visit some oneof the schools in which you are interest-ed. Prof. LAWTON, the able and devotedSuperintendent, aud any of tho teach-ers, will be glad to see you.

nior that one c;£ Sherman's columnsinoviug to cut the ruilroad betweenGreensboro and llaleifrh.

The Sentinel says $^0,000 in Confed-erate money, ai;d several Hatches andotlier trinkets, were found on the bodyof one of Sheridau's raiders, killed neurAshland.

The Ilaleigh Confederate of the 16thsays : The best information to day isthat Sherman is trying to find Terryand S -hoiiold. ltaleigh does uot seemto be in his path just now.

The Progress of the same duto con-taius the following: The career of

—o—

THIliTY THOUSAND

ROLLS OF WALL PAPER

LIABILITIES, $15,995.92,

SCKPLCS, $198,733.20.

Tlii.* Company will continue, u« htrtttufuri,respectable partiua ugaiust

DISASTER BY FIRE,»fc (irrrnd remunerating ratea ; axftencio^acceir^.lh» leruin ui\ ii-i PftMcioi, thu adv*ntage<(,f tit

Participation Plan of the Compa'ypuTAued by it for coveral jears past, withmchfrNUCCHKH and popularity, ami profit to iU GIMIUJL!!whereby

(.75) Seventy five Per Cent. (^of the Profit*, ingtead of being withdrawn frontsCornpHny in fiivi'jends to stockholders, is iorutedn t"SCKil* FUND," an.l halii for grualef protection of lt.Policy holders ; and tfc*ip, bearing iuturent-, in intrmiucustomers then-for ; thim, /iV THIS COMPANY th-«who furnish the buxiaesfr, AND PAY THE p^XMlIMS, derive the lar£t;»t aliare of adrantajr«; Mjwheu tho ttjcumalutSuus of tlie SCK1P ftfA*l/ih«l)exceed

FIVE HUNDRED THOUSANDDOLLARS,

taius the gSherman will be put a stop to. WevioJate no secret6 by sayiug he will boconfronted by a formidable force, com-manded by ablo and experiui>«ed officers. The same pipers say Wade,Hampton and Haidee, with only tneirbody guard, charged upon and defeated200 of Kilpatrick's men.

The Dispatoh reports a groat flood inthe James River, flooding the lower partof the city, stopping all repairs to thocanal.

The World's Washington special saysfresh rumors are received that the rebelshave evacuated Richmond. I t is thoughtthat a great battle must take place in afew days.

The Iribune's Beaufort, North Caro-lina special of the 19th, says of Sher-man's advunce at Goldaboro, that asthey left Faycttville, tho "Bummers" iuadvance, encountered the rebel rear-

tin they cameThere was

upno

But little more than a week in-tervenes Between this 3«f and an im-portant election. We say important, foru these days of unusual expenditures

and high taxes tbe Township electionstouch a vital cord. If ever compe-tent, faithful, honest Township officerswere desirable, they are note a necessity.It, therefore, becomes the duty of thepeople to cast about them, and press-into service tkeir best meo-. Let allcandidates be selected with special ref-erence to fitnes!i$*tad the time for ourDemocratic friends to attend to this is intbe prmary caucuses. And, here wehave a single word of advice; if younow have the BEST men in office, as Super-

junction With SUEKMAN was understoodto be the objoet. The country may,therefore, look for startling new sat anymoment.

£ ^ f The Legislature adjourned onMonday, or rather stopped business onMonday morning, and finally adjournedon Thursday, to which day the mem-bers drew pay, we suppose, notwith-standing the resolution of the House notto pay Mr. C I W N T S for tbe time he

was absent. A s soon as the list ofpassed* in published, we canter judge of what has been accompli*

£j^" SuKiuiJA.N has come out at theWhite House, and has probably joinedtho army of Gen. GRANT before this.Wo are disappointed at this terminationof his movement, for we bad anticipated

visors, Cerks, etc., keep them in officeyet another year, regardless of any sup-posed claims of those who would like toget in. On the other hand, ,if you haveuiiTTisn men out of office than the presentincumbents, men more competent to dis-charge the duties of office, call them toyour service and let the ins go out. A dueregard to this single £oint by both parties>

will give the Towns Supervisors whowill faithfu'ly administer the variousand important trusts now devolvingupon that office, will give them readyand correct Clerks, and will certainlytend to aid honest, honorable, and at

! tbe aaine time economical administrationof Township affaire.

guard, and drove itwith the main column,other fighting.

The Raleigh Conservative of the 10thsays: Wo pin our faith to Gen. Lee'sassurance that Sherman can be defeated,and await the result with patience. Weknow there is activity among tbe mili-tary ou our side, and efiorts are makingto arrest hia onward progress.

A private letter from Nassau, 19th,says 36 blockade running vessels are inharbdr with nothing to do, and fiftywarehouses full of goods, for which thereis no sale. Cargoes ordered from Eng-land three months ago are arriving.Their owners are sending them b^ek inthe same vessels.

War Items-A Western correspondent says there

are unmistakable indications that therebels are either massing their forcesfor a desperate battle, or that they arepreparing to evacuate Petersburg, and

civil authority iu any county or district,he promises that the exercise of martiallaw thou shall cease. Provost Marshalswill bo immediately relieved from allduties except tho.-,e strictly military; allprisoners in their custody charged withoffences amcuuble to civil tribunals,will bo surrendered to these tribunalsfor trial? military authorities reserving,however, the right to try by militarycommission such offenses as bashwhack-ers, guerillas, and other armed outlawswhen thuy deem it advisable Militaryofficers are to furnish assistance to thocivil authority in execution of processeswhenever called, boiog oarefuJ in doingBO not to supersede civil by military au-thority. All of£cer» aad soldiers areenjoined to do everything in thoir powerto promote the establishment of civil lawin that State, but without relaxing theirefiorts to bunt down and destroy guer-rillas, bushwhackers, and other outlaws.The commanding General admits thatan attempt to restore civil administrationafter tbe reign ef marsial law will beattended with difficulties, but he appealsto the candor and forbearance of thepeople and soldiers to make those diffi-culties as light as possible. I t regardsguerrillas, bushwhackers and armedrebels and outlaws, as enemies entitled tono mercy, and requires them to be treat-ed without taercy, but sternly prohibitsmilitary officers and soldiera to- becomelawless and tyrannical uuder pretence ofupholding law and enforcing justice,aud enjoins upon thorn respectful defer-ence to civil authority.

the excess will be applifd to PAY OW th« ScriplyCASH; in tbo order af its issue.

jgjr Tlie liberal and prompt adjustment of cllmfor I.o»s, WHEN FAJK AND SQUARE, ia » I;NI>L*1;with this Company.

NOTE.—This Company does not insure on thihimjof RIVER, l.AKK, or INLAND tf'AVIU \TION ; rait,inn itwlf strictly, to a- legitimate KIBE IMSCB1.VCI

BORDERS,

WINDOW SHADES,

CURTAIN FIXTURES,

PICTURE FI5AME3,

CORD- AND TASSELS, FANCY

ARTICLES

of oil descriptions Also a largo assortment of

MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS!AT KEDUCED PRICES.

PICTURES Framed to Older aiMheShortestNotict.

CJ1VE US A CALL!

JOHN F. 11ILLEK & CO.,

Corner H»in and Washington Ptreets. lmlOOl

ASHER TAYLOR, IH. P, FRIUMAX, Secftsi-.il.>-.

J. II BUHLESOIV, Agent

CELEBRATED

American Humorist,

JOSH. BILLINGS,(HKSBV W. 3HAW, Feughkeepsie, N. Y.)

cfure ta fliis Citjr at

HANGSTERFER'S Ull,Monday, Eve. April 10th.

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'"JPtitty and VarnisL*

Doors open at 7menoes at 8 o'clock-.

o'clock:: Leoture com-

TICKETS 50 CENTS.Commissioners' Notice.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, County of Washtenaw s«.—The undersigned having been appointed by th«/

Probate Court for said County. Commissioners to ru- !ceive, examine and adjust ail claimsanri demands of allpersons against the estate of .Jacob To^rgeobiir^er, late oftheCitjof Ann Arbor, in s;iid County deceased, here-by give notice that nix in' nth* from date, are allowed,by order of said Probate Court, for creditors to presenttheir claims against the estate of said deceased, andthat they will meet at the store of Mack if Schinid, insaid city, in said ccunty, on Saturday the seventeenthdaj of June ncxt.and Wednesday, the thirteenth dayof September next, at oue o'clock, P.M., of each of•aid days, to receive, examine and adjust said claims.

Dated, Mareh 15th, 1865; 1001CHRISTIAN MACK,FUECKKICK SCHMID,

Commissioners.

made. This will giveto nearly the whole

perhaps Kichmond.A special aays it has been decided to

pay Gen. Sherman's army in full to theend of March as BOOB as it arrives at apoint where it can rest long enough forpayment to bo I "six months' payarmy.

Gen. Sherman wrote several days agofrom Fayetteville, to a friend, that behad received his supplies from up CapeFear Hirer, aud was at the time of wri-ting, ready to move again. He had fol-lowed, with a slight exception, the pathlaid out before he left Savaniiah. Hestrtes that he had ordered the arsenalat Fayetteville to be blown up, as hethought tho Government would needno aiBcual iu future iu either of the Caro-linas.

Johnson's entire army was at or near

actsbet-

shod.

. ;c:i.... tii" secret v>

Woman. T«>thu kind

biti !•; tnarr;

that

ut-ary.',

LL

he would ninke a successful atI to cut tho Dtttrvitt* road, and per-t-tJe.it a juicti.»u with UUANT uud

The bill to give drafted nieu,

AU Blockade Runners to be Arrestedand Banished'DEPARTMENT or STATE,

WASHINGTON, March 14, 1865.

Tho President directs that all personswho now are, or hereafter shall be foundwithin the limits of the United States,and who have been engaged in holdingintercourse or trade with the insurgentsby sea, if tbey are citizens of tbe UnitedStates or domiciled aliens, be arrestedand held ns prisoners of war until tbe warshall close, subject, nevertheless, to pros-ecution, trial aud conviction for any of-fense committed by them as spies orotherwise against the laws of war.

The President further directs that allnon-resident foreigners who now are, orhereafter shall be, found in the UnitedStates, and who have been or shall havebeen engaged in violating the blockadeof the insurgent ports, shall leave tbeUnited States within twelve days fromthe publication of this order, or from;heir subsequent arrival in the UnitedStates, if on the Atlantic side, and fortydays, if on the Pacifio side of the coun-try. And such persons shall not returnto the United States during tbe contin-uance of the war.

Provost Marshals and Marshals oftho United Stales will arrest and com-mit to military custody all such ofien-ders as shall disregard this order,whether they have passports or not, andthey will be detained iu such custody

Estate of Horace Osborne.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, CoritTT or WASMTKNAW, S S —At a session of the Probate Court for the County o(

Wafbtenaw, holden at the Probate Office in the Cityof Ann Arhfjr, on Menday, the twentieth day of March,in the year oue thousand eight hundred and sixty-firs.

Present, HJRAS.I . BRAKKS. Judge of Probate.In the matter vf the listate of Horace Osborne,

deceased.On reading and ftling the petition, duly verified1, or*

James Osborne, praying that he or some other iu iiabktperson may be appointed administrator oi the ef Sof said deceased.

hereupon it is Ordered, thatTueiday. the eighteenthy of April next, at tan o'clock in the foronoon, be

assigned for the* hearing of said petition, andthat the widow and heirs at law of said deceased and all other Ipersons interested tin said es-tate, are required to appear at a session of said Court,then to be holden at the Probate Oflice, in the City pfAnn Arbor,and show cause, if any there be, why.theprayer of the petitioner should not be granted.

And it is further ordered, II »t said petitioner givenotice to the persons persons interested in said estateof the pendency of said petition, and the hearing thereof, by causing a copy of this Order to be published irthe Michigan Aryut, a newspaper printed and circulating in said County of Washtenaw, thxfce mccesaiviweeks previous to »»id day of hearing.

[Atrnecopy.J HIRAM J. BEAKES,lOOltd Judge of Probate.

substitutes for drafted men, aud repre-sentative .substitutes, half the bounty of-fered volunteers failed to pass tho Sen-ate. The Legislature has uot met thewishes of the people in this respect. Thedrafted man who enters service, or thesubstitute he puts in, ought-to receivetho same bounty as a volunteer, aud yetthe Legislature refuses to mitigate thehardships of the drafted man by allowinghim half the bounty. All wrong.

JC3T The Michigan Legislatureseems to be getting as corrupt as Con-gress, and the members bav« stretchedthe "usually traveled route" wonder-fully. The Free Jfret reporter say*members living within twenty miles ofLnnsing drew mileage for from 300 to400 miles travel. The "sober secondthougbv' will hardly upprove eueb agr-ftfc

Goldsboro. I t ismore than 40,000.

believed he bad not

A most pitiable state of affairsexistTllong the shores of the Mississippi,from Cairo to Memphis, in consequenceof the high water which is overflowingthe whole country. A steamer on herupward trip, was frequently hailed byfamilies along shore, who had been driv-en from their houses by tbe flood, andhad constructed rafts of rails upon whichthey had placed their families andmeagre effects, and were riding at themercy of a flimsy clothes-line or bed-cord. Often they found the family yeliu the cabin surrounded with water, audhaving a horse on board, they sent aman out ou horseback to bring of thewife and children, while the husbandwith a canoe, brought off the eflectsTho stock was wading in the fast-rising water, the poultry haviutr soughtthe roof of the hoube or stable, werequietly awaiting the slow process of starNation and the ftock, nearly the entirewealth of the poor people, had to baabandoned.

the ar, or untilorder of

until the end ofcharged by subsequentPresident.

WM. H. SEW AKD, Sec. of State

did-thc

Appointments by the Government.The following appointments have bean

recently made by Governor Crapo :Superintendent of the Sault Canal—

Guy H. Carlton, formerly of St. Clair.State Librarian—J. Eugene Tenney,

formerly of Marshall.Member of the Board of Control of

the State Reform School—TheodoreFoster, of Lansing.

Ageut of the State Prison—DavidWinton, of Jackson.

Inspectors of the State Prison—Thom-as F. Moore, of Adrian, (ta fill unexpir-ed term of Daniel A. Looinis, ofAdrian); Benj. F. Fiah, of Berrien, viceJohu Morris.

Trustees of the Insane Asylum—Joseph Gilman, of Van Buren, vice W.C. Edsell; Dr. 2ina Pitcher, of Detroit,re-appointment.

Adjutant General—John Robertson,i

Estate of Jacob Toggeuburger.ClTATE OF MICHIOAM, COFNTT or \YASHT*X*W, M.—l> Ai a se«»ion of the Probate Court for tho Countyof Washteimwjliolflen at the Probate Office iu ttie cityof Ann Arbor, on Thumday, tbe Mitxcnth day oMarch, in thu /ear oue thousandoighjhundred an(aixty five.

Present, Hl»i« 1- BKAKM. Judge of Probate.Iu the matlei of th« E«(ate of Jacob Toggeuburger

deceased.On reading and tiling the petition, dul j verified, o

Eatharina Toggenburger, .administratrix with tho Wiannexed of «aid estate, prajiog that «he lnaj be licensed to nel! certain real •state of which tiaid deceasedied, seized.

Thereupon it it Ordered, that Thursday, the twertjseventh day of April next, at 10 o'clock in the forenoonteassfgned for the hearing ol laM petition, and thathe heirs at law of said deceased and all otber personinterested in «ai I estate, are required to appear atsession of s«id Court, then to be holden at the ProbatOflice, in the City of Ann Arbor, and show cause,any there be, why the prayer of the petitioner shoulnot be granted: ADd it is further ordered , that saipetitioner give notice to the persons interested in saiestate, of the pendency of said petition, and the hearing thereof, by ciiising a copy of this Order to bpublished in the Michigan Argus, a newspaper prlnteand circulating in said County of Washtenaw, fousuccessire weeks previous to laid day of hearing.

(A truecopy.) H1HAM J. BEAKES,J0001 Judge of Probate.

Chanoery Notice.Circuit Court for th

jof Detroit.

QuartermasterK l

General—Ornn IN.H

QuartermasterGiddings, of Kalainazoo, vice Wm. Ham-mond.

Inspector General—James Ji. 1 »t-man, of Detroit.

Trustee of the Deaf, Dumb nndBlind Asylum-Johu P. Lor»y, ofPoutiao.

*•TOTICi: is hereby given, that the Board a1. Reriitn-M tion for the several Wards of the City of 1Mrbor, will be in session on

ATURDAY £t?EI&lst, 1864.mmencing at 8 o'clock, A. 11., aod doling it tclock, P. M., at the following placea .1st Ward—at the office of James B. Gott.2d " " " Store of Risdon & Hcudmra.3d *« " " Store of George W. Smilli-4th " " *( Firemen's Hall.5th " " " Shop of George H. RhodM.r the purpose of correcting and completing tbt Uf.tration of the qualified electors of said Vfara. i»>rson« who will at tho ensuing charter eleelioH:""eld on the 3d day of April next, be entitW to »ltniler the provisions of Section 1, Article Y1I, «>»onstitu tion, should register their names.By order of the City Board of Eegistralion.

JAMES B.UOIT.Chaimn-J. S. HS.VBKBSO.'C, Secretary.

Ann Arboj, March 16th, 1865.

ELECTION NOUCESaKRirr'sOrFiCB, Washtenaw Co., Weh.,

Ann Arbor. Feb. 15tn, V>n.To </>« Electors of SVaihtcnaic County :

Youareberebj notified that at th» mi lElection to be held on tbe first Monday of April Btftn the State of Micbgian, the iollowing « « « ' • • " "be elrcted, viz . One Associate Justice of tb . gufrtw

nil

eznira December 31itt.l866.PHILLIP WINKGAB, Sh«n».

Washtenaw Co., Miw

TO BUILDERS IrpHK UNDKRSIGNED respectfully announet «• JJ»i citizens of Ann Arbor tint they art pr«r"lO!»

contract for »I1 kinds of

tCARPEATER &on reasonable terms. Po«sessing a thorough knowl«l|tof 1he trade they solicit a share of public P«lr0"«'-

Planu, specilicationsand estimates m » u e °" "J;.,able terms. Cau be seen *t t h . new Frankl.n boiM*

G. F. FL1MIJT-Ann Arbor, March 8th, 1865, *«""

STATE OF MICHIGAN—TheCouuty ot Wsshtenaw, in Chancery.

At a session of said Court held at the Court Hon«in the City of Ann Al bor, on Tuesday, the twenty-fiday of March, A. D. 18M.

Prenent, Hon. Edwin Lawrence, Circuit Judge. In thlasa betweenOscar C. Spafford, Complainant, 1

T*. IMaria (Hillson, Elizabeth SpalTonl, I , p , r t l t j o nEdward Spafford. Susan Dean, fCaroline B. Spafford, David Pean, Iand David Stillson, Defendants. J

Itsatisfactorly appearing to this Court by the affldvitof Oscar C. SpalTord, filed in this cause, that tlDefendant .Edward Spafford, resides out of the Ktaof Michigan, anil is a resident of the State of Califoniii, and that he oannot be found in this State : Omotion of Mr. Beakos, Solicitor lor the Ctimplaiuant,is ordered by the Court, now here, that the paid EdwarSpallorrt and all other parties interested in the laudsand premises of which partition is sought by tbe Billof Complaint Hied iu this cause, do appear and answerthe said Bill of Complaint by the sixteenth day of Maynext, or tlwt such Hill be taken as confessed by himand them, which said lands and premises ara describedns follows r Situated in the City of Ann Arbor, in theCounty of Washteoaw, aforesaid, to-wit : Village lotnumber fiftseu, and the eaM.-rly three rods ia width offlot number f.urteen. iu block two, in Ormsb) andPage's addition to the Village of Ann Arbor accordingto the recorded plat thereof, the WM) line of th> abovementioned part of lot fourteen being three rods fromand parallel with the «nst line of said lot-

And it is further Ordered, that within ten days fromthi< date, the said Complainant cause this Order to b«published in the Michigan Arc/us, a newspaner printedand circulating in said Coun'y of Washteoaw, Bndthat HUeli publication beeontiruert in mid newspaper,once iu uncli n ill* •ueu<-sMv«lr, for four weeks Ir.iutU« Unit "I sunp Gist jmlihoalion tb<"-«>r.

(Atnifc uy.) V LAWRENCE, UiKuit .>'i'l«f.UutT W. RJO», £>»VUt} HtgskJ. 1001-

GET THE BEST.WEBSTER'S

UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY!'NEW ILLUSTRATED BWTION,

Thoroughly Revised and much Enlarged.

Over 3000 Fine Engravings-10.000 WORDS and HEANISGS not fou»u ' • »*"

Dictionaries.Over thirty able American and European sebols"

ployed upou this revision, and thirty ye»r»o>»expended upon it. _

.taong the collaborators are Dr. Mahn, of B.rl.«. " •fe'sors Porter, Dana, Whitney, I.yman, fai"»-»nd Thacher, Capt. Crai?hill, ot ">»' '" '£!,, ,«tary Academy, Judge J. C. Perkins, Fro"""Stiles, A. L. Holley, Esq., * c , &c.

Several tables of great value, one of th.mquaito pages, Explanatory and 1names in fiction of persons »nd inyme, &c, * c , as Abaddon, Acad..,- """-, ' l i t^gency, Mother of C»ry, Mason and W » "Mr. Micawber. *c. _...,rtlis»

Containing one fifth or one-fourth more m« »«any firmer editions. . . ; j , fnM

From new electrotype plates and tut RirtrsiO"and Bindery. «

In one Vol. of 1840 RoyalQuarto Pages.

" GET THE LA TEST." " GETBEST." "GET WEBSTER-'

Published bj O. *C . MERRIAM, Springd.ld, V'H.80I.n BT iLL BOOK3«!.r.MS.FAIRBANKS'

STANDARD

SCALEDOF ALL KINDS. ALF^j^ 1

Warthottse Trucks, Lettt* f*r&i<.\$A

FAIRBANKS, GREEEEAF & 0 u, ™ I.-U- Street. CHICAGO. e» 1T3 Lake Street, CHICAGO.

Sold iu Jetroif by t^fl

F&RRANP, SHKLBY A CO.eg- v* H N M »« buj ««iy th. (iw

Page 3: FEIDAY,media.aadl.org/documents/pdf/michigan_argus/michigan_argus_18650324.pdf · " Wi.ke up Miah ! there's a flood. It s got clean up in the chamber, and we J Pdllmd l;iid down his

FRIDAY MOKSING, MARCH 24,1865.

S. M. Pettengill &. Co.,No.31'P' l«"k R ° w , NewYork , & 6 State St

O.gton, »re our Ajenta for tlio Axocsin those citienil ar« Authorised t<> take Advertisements and Sub

jrjptioosfor us at our Lototit Rau$.

TOWNSHIP CAUCUS.Th. D.ni'Jcrnti ur the Township of Ann Arbor wfl

_ . , t at the fourt II"U«a, on Saturday afternoonH.rol' VJth, lit 4 o'clock, P. H . for thopurpu.o,Muiaaiiui: candidate lor Township officers.

By order of T U E COMMITTffi.Ann Arhnr,March SW.IMt. ^ _ ^

fTSE" This community was startled a»bout the hour of 4 o'clock, P. M., on Satur

d»r last, by the auuouuceiuent that two

loyt, sons of the Hoa. J A S . CI.KMKNIU and

JOBS P. DALK, had just been drowued in the

j.ond or sink hole near the old Cemetery, iu

lliu t'if»t Ward, and that help was wanted to

rocover their bodies. With a large number

ot other citizens we were soou at the place of

the iad accident. We learned that the two

lads, JOHMKIK BuntMf* au'l FKAKJCIJC DALK

#»ch about twelve years old, had been en-

gaged with a number of other boys in playing

up«n the ice which partially covered the

poad , that assisted by an older sou of Mr.

OL»MI«*I» they had detached a cake of ice

from the maiu body, and started for a sail,

juiuking it rare sport, and disregarding the

caution of passers by. The ice proved rotten,

loon went to pieces, and the three boys were

plungad into water some seven to ten feet

deep. The older CLEMENTS boy could swim,

and escaped, tlie two younger boys, fast

friends in life, together, despite of efforts to

r»»cue them, went down to a watery grave

The water was very cold, and a student who

irrired on the spot while the boys were still

floating and struggliug for life, attempted to

go to their aid, was taken with cramp »nd

obliged to retreat. Boats wore soon procur-

ed, and after a half or three quarters of Rn

hour's search, the bodies were taken out of

the water, and carried to the houses they had

id recently left.

The funeral of Mr. n-r ttft.'." was a t

tended on Monday after»oon;*and of Mr.DILB'S boy on Tuesday afternoon, and bothbv a Urge circle of sympathising friends.

£2J" The new Post Office rooms inthe Franklin Block are nearly completed andfurnished, aud within a taw days PostmasterTnOHFioH will remove from the old woodenconcern so long occupied, and commence(erring the public from the new office, AnnArbor may then boast of having the bestPost OlBco in tho State out of Detroit, andwill yield very little to any claims of superi-ority made in behalf of the office of that city,l'he new office Occupies two of the storesfronting Huron Street, and the cases of boxesrun around from one entrance to the other,giriiif boxes aud deliveries on three sides,with the business room in the centre. Thebox cases are new, handsomely numbered,—by CSABLII Blood—-and number over 1600.Betides there are 60 lock boxes. The interiorli well lighted and conveniently arranged,both for the accommodation of the publicmii tho Postmaster, Mr. THOHPOO.T is en-titled to the thanks of onr citizens for indu-cing the Governmsnt to rent the office, andfor the taste with which he has fitted it up.

£-jC" Iho January number of theRimlutfh Review lias the following papers;Sir F. Palgrava's History of England andNormandy, Dictionaries of the Bible (Smithicd Kitto), Life of Sir William Napier. Crim-lul Law Reform, Lord Derby's Translation oflh« Iliad, Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction of theOrowu, The British American Federation,Girduer's Memorials of King Henry VII.,8e«n per Cent., The Last Campaign inAmerica. $4 a year ; with the other threeKmnu and Blaekunod, $5. Address Lxo*AKDBcoit & Co., 38 Walker Street, N. X.

E3T Lectures at the Medical Col-!»p closed on Wednesday, and we supposeihtt tr« this the candidate! for the degree ofM. D., have either passed muster or been r««j«cl«d. The medical commencement will oc-wr on W«dnes<5ay next. The exercises will>»k« place at lfl o'clook A. M., in the Pres-tylemn Church. The address to theIttdnttM will be given by Dr. P I T C H K , ofDttroit, and w« may safely promise that itwill b« eminently initructive.

!?• b«lieve tlie graduating class number**l»ut eighty.

There came near being a fire at»* Franklin House yesterday afternoon.Cause—sparks from a »tove in the work room"tiecond floor, over the book store of SHOVE*4K«uir. Result—the loose shavings scat-•"•d around the room burned to ashes, the*»r badly scorched in a number of places, a'**' sn»oke, and more caution, we hope, into future.

. The quotas of the 3d, 4th anddnof this city, and of the Township

* *nn Arbor, have been filled, upon which!<ctw« congratulate our neighbors, " We are'"'f th« draft" one* more. The quota inwlrt and 2d Wards is fast being filled, and

'"•piobaule 'that district will escape thetilt.

£ 2 " Tho Commencement of the•*» Department of the University will takeWe. OQ the afternoon of Wednesday next.'WMercises will be held in the Presbyteri-

commencing at 2 o'clock. The-° 'he graduates will be delivered by

'•Dr. HAVSSI, President of the University.

t ™ Tl1* Lodiet' Repository for April is early

j ' 0 " t a b l e . with a table of contents covering

"•"Mge, and sure to interest and in-

'• The illustrations of the number arels«t after a Fog," and a portrait of Lady

"*l Russell. $3 60 « year. Address

Pos &, HITCHCOCK, Cincinnati, Ohio.

• 5 " The Circuit Court oormnenoed

"aft"" t(>rm °n T u e s d a y- T h» Calendar1, *Tery I i rKeone. but we think a less

- hare been

Iii,7i'1'tlfi S P r i n g and Summer term ofIVi < 8 c h o o I s ° f this city, will open onl / 1 1 " ' ' t h e 2 7 t h '»»*• Parents should

t? 1 hav* t h e i r s c b o l ' i r s b e 8 i n

h the term.

$: Exhibition of the Juniorl b " U " i v e r f t i t - V w ' » eome off on

s » « , in the Fiesb.ytoriaa flu.-,-

The Draft oa Dexter.The Township of Dexier in this county was

" drawn on" by Provost Marshal Barry on

Friday last, with the following result. The

LAVY family seemed to be especially fttvoiuii

by the " wheel of fate."

William H. Glein, Morris Flood,Sid. Thurston, Herman Backus,Wrn Smith, Spencer Force,Kichard Wheeler, Jr., Patrick Kabbet,Jas. Clark, Wm, Lavy,Mory A. Enston, James Alien, Jr.,Alonio David, Win. Conner,James Ueiley, Oeo. W. Jefters,James W. Doty, George Boydon,Henry Wilsey, Soloman VanFleat,A'iram Vorchis, John Galley Kaunst,Jiilm W. Lavy, Nicholas Karr,Hfiij. H. Glenn, Thomas Berkett.Edwin Conner, Chri»toph>r Lavy,James McConnell, Alfred Lavy,Addison Barber, Ward Tediw'orth,Lawrence Rabbet, Jlartin Clinioii,Zui.liariah Taylor, John Newman,Michael Dolau, Joseph MoUinnts,Michael Lavy, R. \v. McLaue,Cliri*. McGwire, Jr., John Lavy,Win. H. Arnold, Johu Welch,

I t is supposed that the other towns of thiscounty will all till their quotas without Gapt.BABBY'S help.

The luurkela are so unsettledthat we omit our usual report this week, I t

does not remain the same for twenty-four

hours. The teuduuey at all points is down-

ward, in Dry Goods, Groceries, and certainly

in farm produce. —

—Gold is still dropping. Closed at 154%

yesterday noon.

Opinions at Washington-The New York Tribuuit Washing.

ton correspondent says: A Senatorjust from the front says it is GeneralGrant's opinion that llichmond will beevacuated within the next ten days. TheSanitary Commission are sending largoquantities of stimulants to the Army ofthe Potomac. A number of surgeonsand nurses have left there for CityPoint.

The Herald's Washington specialsays: It is known by the Administra-tion that Stephens, Hunter and Lee areall hopeless of'the rebellion, and haveso informed Davis. Lee lo^ks uponthe arming of the slaves as a failure, fortho simple reason that Congress delayedthe measure too long. Besides, thefailure to make the negroes free, rendersthe plan useless. President Lincolndoes not believe there will be any moreserious fighting, but that the rebels willsoon surrender.

Expedition to St. Marks, Florida,A letter from Key West sajs the ob-

ject of Gen. Newton's recent expeditionup St. Marks River, Florida, was toclear out rebels, inflict as much damageas possible, and if practicable captureSt. Marks. Though not accomplishingall, he was greatly successful. Afterconsiderable skirmishing, he had a stub-born fight at Natural Bridge, where therebels were in Btrong force, and wellposted. Though in superior numbers,hey were driven from their position ;jut Q-en. Newton, owing to disparityof numbers, deemed it beat to return toKey West, which he did. without beingtroubled by the rebels.

MICHIGAN CENTRAL RAILROAD,Passenger trains now leave Detroit and the

several stations in this County as follows:

QOINO WEST.Mail Day Dexter Even. NightTrain Ex. Ace. Ex. Ex.

Detroit, 7 45 4.M10.45A M4-e0r.M6.S5 r i l l Ottt xYpailanti, 8.15 " 12.0'J M. 6.25" 6.50 " 12.35 J.MArm Arbor, 9.40 " 12 . '20FM6 5 0 " 7.10 " 1.05 "Dexter, 10-10 " 12.40 " 6 1 5 " 7.40 '•Jhelsea, 1030 " 12.53 8.00 " —

Ev«n.Ex.

QOISQDexter

Ace.

BAST.Night

Ex.DayEx.

MailTrain

DexU-r, 6,30 •».¥ 7.55 " S.50 <• 7.40 "Ana Arbor, 4.30 A. it 7.00 " 8'20 " 4.05 '• 8.OS "Ypsilaoti, 4.55 " 7 25 ' 8.40 " 4.25 " S.25 •'Detroit, 6.10 " 0.55 " 10 00 " 6.45 " 9 46 "

The Mail Train raus to aud from Kala-mazoo.

AVIHSKJ:I«S: WHISKEIRSIDo you want Whink«rj* or Moustachei-? Our Grecian

Tompouod will force them TO grow on the smoothestace or chin* or hair on bald beads, in Six Weekn.-'rice,$1.00. Sent by mail anjwht*re, clo«elv fealed,

on receipt of price. Address, WARNER & CO., Box133, Brookljn, N . Y. Iy999.

T H E B R I D A L C H A M B E R , an Etaaj- ofYarning and Instruction for Young Meo—published

by the Howard Association, and aantfr e of charge ined envelopes. A Idress, Dr. J. SKILUX HOUGH-

TON, Howard Association, 1 hiladelphia, Pa. Iy999

&- I'ROK. R. J. LYOiVti'Patients aDd all othersnterrested will please take notice that he will contiu

ue his visits at the Monitor House, Ann Arbor, during864 and '65 abd at the expiration of which he wilJdis-ontinua his viHits and open an Infirmary at Cleveland,

Ohio, for the treatment ot Lung aud Cheat diseases.

CHEROKEE CURE.WISBTO K.vow, BUT W J U K TO I>o. Th«re i no more

iliiable hltfht than tha t of a young man striokrn byweakness of wil]t yet posnenr*ed of sufficient knowledgeof«el the loss Wishing to do, but too enervate! in

will and in body to act. Heavy-eyed when he should•OSM.'SS the eye of an eagle, listle*s when every nervehould tingle with energy, dreaming in lieu of doing,earing marriage instead of seeking it , and fast sinkingt, and fast .sinking into a driveller and a warning to

others , aud al l through seminal weakness, due toover-indulgence, nutural or unnatura l , displayed inoathsome emissions t h a t humiliate and disgust him.'o nuch we say, take t h e CHEROKEE CORK, observe thelirections tha t accompany it faithfully, and i t will in-allibly bestow what nature meant you to nos^ess :trength, energv, heal th , a n l , i n lieu of impotency,

manly power. Read the advertisement. Sold \y allIruggiats. 4w998

A GOOD TREE IS KNOWN SYITSFBUIT.

So i« a good l'hvsi«i»n by hia SuccesnfuJ Worka.

# PROFESSOR R. J, LYONS,THE GREAT AND CKLEBKATEII PHVSIUIANOF T H t

THROAT, LUXGS AND CHKST,

Known all over the countr i an the Celebrated

I N D I A N H E R B D O C T O R !'Yom South America, will be at h\v rooms,

RUSSELL HOUSE, DETROIT,)nthelSth and 19th inst.,on the same date of andvery subsequent month during 1862 and 1863.

A NEAT PAMPHLETOf the life,study and extensive travels of Dr. Lyonscan be procured by all whodesireone, free of charge.

Dr. L will visit Aun Arbor, Jackson,and Adrian,Mtch., as follows :

Ann Arbor, Monitor House, 20th.Jackson,Hibbard House, 21stAdrian, Brackett H» use,22d and 23d.MODE or EXAMINATION.—The Doctor discerns disease

bytbeeyes. He, therefore,asks no questions nor re-q ures paHentu to explain symptoms. Afflicted, corooandbave your symptoms and the location of your dis-eneeexDlained free of charge

WANTED—Married Ladiee, Prof.Von Verae's Diamond Drop?, a never failing

and harmless remedy for all obstructions and irregu-larities. All married ladies will find this a never fail-ing preventive, for which It li wnrranted in every in-stancf, and are invi'ed tn send ft red stamp for s, cirm-Jar, or $2.25 for a bottle, to FREDERICK PTKARNS,wholesale druggist, arenf ral »gent for Michigan f<>r (hePmmon-1 Pmps, P. O. Drawer 445, Detroit. Dealerssupplied at proprietor's prices. 096mC*

HOUSE & LOT FOR SALE.r p H E Sl'n.^CR'BER olftr« for »ale chp.p hit HOUSK

1 nn.l LOT. on Hiacock Strept in HHcock's addition.Thf lot is 51,| rndi bv 10, and in stocked irith a finfvariety of Fruit*. The ROHM i> SS by 28, one story,with a good well nod cisttrn.

SAMUFX

. fc itt'SU.N jjj

• ^ - - ^ - — - '•- --•M*^

OUR CHINAMAN STILL LIVES,And uontinuHs to furnish th;i ' i:nrivaled quality of

1KA uhvuys t'>mnj a t th« i'eople'b Store.Lovers of good Tea will p ta t r t (ry a s-mi/Io

OF OUfi NEW TEA.UsVUKKST ^.STt

OROOIDRIESOf ill kind*. Fruits. Extracts, Snfoes. Pickles, 00n,Pmrfuia«i, A:c. fuie Liquors aud WinH for Mediciualj jur^u*ts tiuly.

& STEWART.

Sugar 1 Sugar 2A small lot of

LOW PRICED SUGAR.DKFOKEST & STEWART.

£ S T FISH.—Codfish, Whitefish,Trout, AUckerel, H t r r ing , &c.

DEFOREST 4 STEWART.

SYBUP ! SYRUP!A few barrels, extra quality.

DEFOREST A STEWART.

OIL AND LAMPIDEPOT!

KEROSENE OIL!The best quality

ONE DOLLAR

Per Gallon.

DEFOREST & STEWAKT.

HO! YE!Purchasers of CROCKERY.

GLASSWARE, LAMPS,PLATED GOODS, TABLE CUT

LERY, &c.For sale a t less than New York wholesale prices, by

D K K O R E S T & STEWART.

A Good Clothes Wringer.

Save* time! Savet money!Saves clothing! Savet strength!Sanes health! Savet hiring help!Saves weak wrists! Saves burning hands!

Woolen clotheH can be wrung out of boiling water toprevent shrinking, without injury to the machine.

DEFOREST tt STEWART.

P I L E S " A SURE REMEDY.Everybody is being cured, o

by Che use of

I>K. BILLING TOW'S PILE

wl«u thuHO say who hare used I t :

distressing Uivoaae

Dr. £, A. BXLLLYOTON :DearSir • For the good of tbe afflicted, I herewith

transmit to you a statement of the benefit which I harereceived from the use of your PIUS REMEDY. Foranumber of years I have been very badly afflicted withthe Piles, so much BO an to render meat times totallyunfit for business. I found no permaaeat relief fromtbe many remedies which I made use of. and almosttiio uiiiiiv remvuit'H wuicn J maue use 01. ana aimobtdespaired of effecting a permanent cure. I was atleogtu induced by your agent at Ann Arbor to maketrial of your remedy, which he warranted to effect acure or receive no pay. I cona'dered it like moat otherpatent medicines— a humbug, until I began to improve.With impovemeut, and at length an entire cure, 1 bo-came convinced it was a scientific and reliable remedy.L used ONK P.AOK.AGK ONLY, which, lam happy to aayen-tirnelycured me.

Trusting that all who make use of the Electuary forthat moat distressing di»easts— i'ilya—may realize theaarue happy results, T am

SMITH Af ACOMBKR.

For case,, call on the Agent and obtain pamphlet andlefftrence to a number of citizens of Ann Arbor whobare been curtd by tho use of tho Electuary.

DEFOREST A BTEWART.

115]treitrit Mdiral Circular

Ever Published!•^"Fifteen^a largeletter pages for two3 cent Btanjpa.

Young Men's Confidential Medical Advisers incaseof Sperm&torrhea or Semiua] Weakness caused byMasturbation, Genital TantaliEittinn, self-abuse, orsecret habits indulgacLin by vuulhs at the age of pu-berty-

DBS. J\CKSON, HERBERT k CO., Proprietor! of,e National Prspensary, establinhed at Ciuciuuati,

Ohi^.Jan. 1st. i860.Involuntury Emissions lead to I m potency, Consump-

:ion, Insanity and Iif*tb. Those who suffer in theleast from this baneful practice, should apply th«whole energy of the soul to the attainmentof healthand consequent contentment and happinosi. Kveryone, eilher sick or well, should have our valuable;reatir"e on this subject, which is tent free of cbarge.

We guarantee to cure Gonorrhoea,Gleet, Sjpbillis,iiupotency, Nocturnal Emissions or Self-Abuse, Diur-nal Emissions, Female Complaints, in phort, eTerypossible form and variety of Sexnlar Disease. Cures,-ip .1. thorouirb and perinaaent, and feei moder&ta.««Send Tor our Circular

DR. JACKSON'!? FEMALE PIU-S—81 per box—?pecial written replies, well sealed, sent with the Cir-cular, without charge. 3')0 pages, 100 engraving*.—'The Mountain of Light, or Medical Protestor and

Marriage Guide, and an Explicit Key to Lore andBeauty." it SATISFACTORILY reyeals various sub-jects never before fully txplftlnei] iu any popular workn the English language. Price 60 cento, or three for

Medicine and instructions aent promptly to any partof the country. Consulting Rooms of the Pmpeo«»ry,No. 107 Sycamore street, I'. O. Box, No. 430.

DR. JACKSON'S ORIENTAL LINIMENTRemoves all coldneni, and rejuvenate! organs whichhave lain dormant for many years Can be mailedwith perfect s%fely. Price $2 per bottle.

DR. JACKSON'S FRENCH PATENT MALE SAFE,It in the cniy euro and safe preventive Again** con

trading diaoase ever invented. Price $1 each, $4 perhalf dozen, and $7 per dozen, sent by mail. *flm996

PLASTER .'" To Whom it May Concern/'

The following letter frma the proprietors of tbeftrand Rapids, Michigan, Plaster Beds, touching thefact who has and who has not " Grand Rapids, Mich-igan, Plaster" for sale in the city of Ann Arhor, proresclearly that fone who claim to have it have not apound of it and hare not had for years.

(.BA.vi) RAPIDS, Mienir.AN, \February 17th, 1865. j

ToMeasr*. Goodale SL Henly, Aon Vrbor ; «nd J. B.Hincbman, E^q., f'etroit, Michigan :HIUBSIBS:—This i» to certify Hint P. DEFORBST, of

Ann Arhor Michigan, has not bought a round of PlaS'ter cf us, or either of us since Juoe, 18C3, and that acertain '• hand-bill" circulated by him, dated Feb. 2nd,

which states that he k<*pps the "only^wui'iGrind Rapids Michigan Piaster," is utterly false.

[Signed] WM. HOVEY, Agont.F. GODFREY.

JO" The Pure Orand Rapids Michigan Plaster, maybe had in any quantity at our Store, opposite Cook'sHotel.

BLAWSOV * POVinn Arbor, March l«t. 18B5. ?ir>99»'

U. S. 7-30 LOAN.Uy huthurlt> of the flccroUr/ t f tho T i o a s t r / , th»

uuik-ratgobd hug aisumoU tho '/ynci-ti ^urjioription

A«{wfic>' for tht* - i le of United, St*tM Treasury Not**,

tjKftrin^ 3eveu and thii*o t tu ths p^r *tui. Iuler**t, p«r

uuijum, kuun n as the

SEVEN-THIRTY LOAN.The8« Noted are i*>*ued under dat« of AuS *,,t 16tu,

l aw , und «re payable thre# yv*ritrom that timu, in

currwucy, or ui« convoinylu a t iu+ ftjiiiati >-* -"'-

huMur into

U.S.o-20 Six perceiit.

GOLD-BEAKLNG iiONDS.Thase boud* are now worth a premium of nine per

ccut., iacludjug sold intertjat from November, which

• makes the actual pr^ut ou tUe 7 -U loan, a t c u n e u t

i i u u , iaciuding iutere^t, tvbouc ten per cent. p»r uu-

ni.iu, busiden i u <t±*mj*iion j'rvm Stan and tAvni&pat

taxation, which add* Jror/i v.n* to ihr** jar*M£> aturt,

-^jicurding to tlw xuie lfeviW wa ulhgr ^ : u f « r t / . m »

. imoi'cai ia payable seaii-fcanutiUy b/ooupouM mtuwhvU

tu uucU uulti, WUich tun/ ijQ cut ulf kuu *uld II. itu/

1>M.UH. or bankur.

'itt<* iuitirest atuuunti to

One c«nt t»«r day on A <J*O not*.

Xwuccub " « " »1OO "

Ten * f5OO •«

A KNTARE PIAVO—cue of th« best

g j . . 4. 41 14 $ 5 0 0 0 U

Notes of all the denominations &HUI*<1 TVUI t>«

promptly furnished uuoa recvi^t of *U/t>«erlpUoaj,—

ThitU

THE O E Y LOAN B MARKETnow y£fyr«i by the Government, and it is confidently

expected that it* superior adra&tagtu will ui»k« It tb*

Great Popular Loan & PeoplaLess than $200,000,000 reiuaia unjotd. which will

probably be di&pof ed of within the next 60 or 90 da/s,

when the notes will undoubtedly command it premium

IU hat uniformly "been the case ea oloaiag tU»MUb

*criptious to othvr Lomut.

In ordor that citiMut of every town »Q<i lection ot

th« country ma/ bo afforded facilities for taking tho

loan, tho National Bank*, Stau Banks, aad Priv

Bank«M throughout th* country ha r t fea«rall/

agr»*d to raceivn gubacriptions at par. fiub«erih«ri

will select their own agents, ia whom they have oon-

Adtjaco, and who only are to be responsible for tit*

deliver/ of the not«» lor which they reoelve order*.

JAY COOKE,ScBacaiPTioir AOKHT, PlHiadtlphia.

SuBscairriosa w i n aa KKCKIVKD b / tha MUST N'A

T1ONAL BANK of Ann Arbor. »»8

BYSOTSEH,

THE N1NTJEINATIONAL BANK

OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK.

Capital, $1,000,000, Paid In,FISCAL AGENT OP THE UNITED STATES,

ASD S m i i L AUKM FOR JAT COOKI, 8vu*c&irtiQt<AOKNT,

WiU Deliver 7-30 Notes, Tt eo of Charge,by oxprees, in all parti of the country, and receive'lnpayment Gheckt on New York, Philadelphia, and Bos-ton, current bills, and al! ST> per cent, interest not----,with interest to date of subwjription. Orders sent bymail will be promptly filled.

Thin Bank receiver* the accounts of Bank* andBankers on favorable terms ; algo of lndirldualg ketip*ing New York accounta.

J. V. ORV13. Prtrtdmt,T. T HILL, Cothitr. 3m9d8

WAR MOST ENDED!CHARLESTON TAKEN I !

GUITERMAN & GO.B e i n g oon&ected w i t h o n e of t h n t a r g

New Vork« w h i c h b u UtU»r f l l t f

Selling Cheaper

t h u %aj cttiwr ho«M. An bou»J to b* aoi

by «n

ll»rtug tmplo/td »o «pwi«n«*4

dirort from NEW YORK CITY, who h u h»d long «T-pecioac« ia tutbuuuwi, »• gu»i»nt«e to girtttia bett

SATISFACTION

to oar numorom

CUSTOMERS & STUDENTS

of the Univenlty. Keeping 6a hind lh» Urgait stookof

CLOTHS, CASS1MBBES, VESTIAGS,together with the Ur^eil stock of

Keady-Madc Clothing,

GENTS'

&O.,& C ,

wbich «r« will nel) oke«per than liny o'hor i>«t«hllment in tho city. All w» auk j . th»t ourfriendi

and Studrnts <ri]l fin m a c»ll andsatisfy thenjselvan.

M. GUITEEMAN. 4 Co..

i a & S ULTIKOI f 8O.M

AND DIOBSTIVE ORCrANS,AUK OUftKD BT

HOOPLAND'S

GERMAN BITTERSTHE GHEAT STEENQTEEKIHQ

These BHUTS have perf»rffl«l more Cures

HAVE AND DO GIVKBKTTERSATISFACTIONHuvc niore Te<*tIluoi-> I

MOKE RESPKOfABLETO VOUCH FOB IHKMI

'i'bau an ; otUor article in th« market.

*uy ouo tu coutradictA.VU W i U P A V :>!*>»'O

rss..

CLOSING OUT

To any uuc *bo wil! prodtic*

B1TTEBSWILL CfRK IX EVKR1' CASK OKo or NmrouG Ocbuiiy, Uiu

of thu Kidneys , 9U.1 piaeiiaeaarising fiom difccu-

tloied btomacli .

Ofo*r*t tkt full"nine iivt;iU>witT*iittH'ng from LHM«/ i/.< Vigour! Orga*i:

Conatljmtlvn, Inwai .1 PIlM, Fat lnr l l of iiloud 'ii«ftU, Aoidily, ut tlio Htuuittch, NAUH««, H.'trirjD l ^ u i t for food, Fullness ur oight its tint StomMom- Eru(jt»Uo(i», ^inkiu^ or dutttriQif at llioof the Stomach, .Swimming nf the Head, Hur

rit»d and JIHtuiilt l»r^^lhiii){. Khutejji.g ui, C9>nk<Dg " r Suffocating a«n-

in a Ljrittggn l i e u iPostiirtf,

Uimoeiis uf Vi.sioo, Dotsgr Webs before the Sijcht F«ver and

Dull Pain In ths Hea 1, I)efldiene.y of rTos-piration, Yelluwaosj ofthe .Sklu ana Kyej, I>afn

lo tht i ida, back, chest,limbs, t c . Sudden flush-e» of Heat, Uurnini; lu tha FleiU, Cunstaoi

Imaginings of Kvil and Oroat Depression of Spirits,

THAT THIS BITTERS IS

NOT ALOOHOLIC,CONTAINS NO RUM OR WHISKEY,

AND CAN'T MAKE DRUNKARDS,BUT

ii« th, World.

READ WHO SAYS SO :

Kromth. Re?. Larl O. Beck, Pastor of th.. HaptintChurch, Pembertou N J., form.rl/ uf t i , . tionk Sap-tliltliuroh, Philadelphia. *

I hare known Hooliand'i German Bitters favorabl?for a number 01 years. 1 hav. used them iu my ownfamily,.nd have been so pleased with their effects thatI «ra» induced to recommend them to many others andknow that they have operated in a s i n k i n g beneficialmanner. J t»ko great pleasure In ihus j .ubl .X proolaira,nif this fact.and calling the attention of thoseafflicted with the disease* for which they ar« , . , „ „mended, to these bitter,, knowiu* frOm e/perience th"tray recommendation will besustained. I J o t h , \ „ " ,cheerfully a. HooSand's Bitter, is intended to be™eu.th»auliot»d,*ndis "nota rumdrink." oeneut

Your* truly, LEVI Q. BKCK.

From ReT. J. Newton Brown, 0. D, Edltorof thcFn,.*

Although not disposed to favor or reoommend PatentMedicines tn general, through di»truSt of the.r iner"dients and offects, 1 yet know of no suBicient r e ° . o n .r V l S " . " * ' " " " , ' 1 / " 0 th" benefits he beTieve

maelftohaveroceivedfromany simple preparationJf tm 1 " " ' m"} thU'0Mtlil"»"> to the benin"I do this mor» readily In regard to Hootiand's Ger-

man Bitters, prepared br Dr. 0. M. Jackson of thiscitr, because I was prejudiced against them for manvyears, uuderthe impression thai they were chieUt Inalchohol.c mixture. 1lam indebted to my friend, RobertShoemaker, Esq , for lh>. removal of this M-ftiadlceby proper teats, and for encouiagenjoat to h-Tth«mwhen suffering from great and long continued dobil tvThe use of three bottles ol these wtttrs at (he be nmng ofthe present year, was followed by erideat reliefand restoration t« a degree of bodily and mental visorwhich I had not for an months before, and had almn.ldespaired cf regaining. I therefore thank ciod »ud m.ftirnid for ilir«tiOK B* to the use of them

J. NEWTON ilROWN, Phlla.

Prom the R«T. Jos, H. Kenonxl, 1'Mtorer tu« lOluBaotist Church. "

Dr. Jackson :—Dear 8ir;—I have beon rreqnently re-jnested to connect my name with commendations o-different kinds of medicines, but regarding the niactic»as out of my appropriate sphere, I hare in all ca*cTdeclined; but with a clenrproof in various instanceand particularly In my family,of the usefulness of l°rHooSand's German Bitters, I depart for onc« from mvusual course, to express ray full conviction that 'o-general debility ofthe systom and especially for l'i>orComplaint.lt is a s»fe and mluablo preparation' lasoinecaepsitmaylail; but usually, I dou t not it'ivillbe »ery beneficial to those who auffer from the ' abort

V«ur», Tor/ respectfully, j . fj KKN.N'ARl)Kighth b«lo» Co»t,satr».t,Phiia

From R«r. Warren Randolph, Pastor of the b$ utistChurch,Oermantown, Ponn. r

Dr C M . Jackson:_D.ar Sir ~P«r.uiial.i»peri»nc.enables me to say that 1 regard tho Cerraan Wittersprepared by you as a inostexccl ent medicine In caseofsererecold aud generaldebilitr I hare been cr.atlrbenefited by the use of the Hitters, and doubt not Hit.;will uro-iuci. similar effoots on others.

Yours, ttuiy, WARREN' RANDOUH.German town, Pa

From B»T. J, H. Ttttnar, Pastor of Heading M EUhuroh,Phila, • "

Dr. Jackson:—Dear Sir ._ Hariog used your Germanflitters in roy family frequently, I am prepared to saythat it has been of great service. 1 believe th>< in mostcases cf general debility ofthe system it is the salestar.d most raluabU remedy of which I hare any knowi

"'"y. J. H.TURNER,No. 728 N. Nineteenth Street

From theRer .J .M. Lyom, forinorlr Pastor of the r,,lumbui, (N. J.)aadJIUl«town, (Pa. jl!aptistr;hurches

New Rocbolle, N. Y.Dr.C M.Jackson :-Dear Sir:—I felt it a pl.asirr..

thu*,«,Tmy own accord to boar testimony to the CTCI'1lence of tlif German BiHors. Some yea'rs » i u c . o t i n i r 'much afflicted with Dyspepsia, I used them with rervbeneficial resulu. I hare often recommended them U,persona enfeebled by that »onn»ntin«; disease, and haveheard from them tho most flattering tastlroonJali », t.>their great value, tn cases of general d.'billtr I be-lisre it to be atonic thstoan notbesnrpnMed'. '

J. M LYONS.

From the Rer Tho.. Wintl^Pastor of KoxboroughBaptist (jhuroh.

Dr. Jackann-— Dear'ir; -1 feel it d,ie to your excel-lent preparation, trooaamrnrj.rman Bitters, to add mvtestimony to the deserved reputation it hss obtained1 have foryoars, at times, beon troubled with great rlivorderin my head and nervous system. I was ndvisedby » friend to try a bottle of your Gnrman Bitterr 1(lid so and have experienced great and uneipMted reliof; my health has beon rery materially benefifted IconOdently recommend the article w ere I meet withcase, similar to my own, and hare beon assured b jmany of the'r good 'fleets.

Rfspectfully yours, T. WINTER, Roxborough Pa.

From Rev. J s. Herman,~o? the German ReformedChurch. Kntitown, Berks Co. Pa.

. 1>r1 .i^ i r 1 ; . ' " c k s ' ) n :—Respected Sir . - I have been

troubled with nyspopsia nearly twenty years and havnever u«ed any medicine that Mi me us much pood aHnoflan'l • Bitter.. I am very muoh improved in healthafter having takrn Ove hottles

Yours,with respeet, J. S-HERMAN.

L a r g . Site, (holding nearly dfu.hle quanti ty ,)• ' n0 P " bottle— haif'dox. *S On

6 m . 11 S u e — l i cents per Bottle—half dozen $4 00

BEWARE OF OOUNTEKFEITS.

Shoul'lyour nearest Pruirjrist not have the article. *<nnt he put oir by ipfoncatinpr prepsriiions thnt msv beoffered in its place, but send tou»,and we will forward.acutely packed, by enpress.

Principal Office ond MaDufaotory,

NO 631 ARCH STEE ETPHILADELFHrA.

Jones SD Evans.Successor* to C. M. Jackson If Go.

PROPRIETORS.F->r -U- hv Drmr,.itUinci r»es!etf in t m r tn

A JifLEiNDILl STOCK Cl»-

DRESS GOODS!

FURNISHING GOODS.

CASSIMERES,

Cloths, Sa t i ne t s , &o.

DOMESTICS,

Crockery,

GRO0EEIE8, &c,

Are 10 b« aoldatprikM t t a t wtlJifuarantoo th«ir

N- 8:—The larg»«t Stock of Calico and Brown CottonIn thu Citjr at lw* than Manufacturer's prices.

The highest price pai.i Ui XmUe or uattt for all kindsof rruiluce.

MACK & 8CHMID.

SEWING MACHINES,PHOT OGRAPH ALBtfMS,

PICTURES, FBAM3,

THREAD, SILK,

TWIST,

MACHINE OIL, S,v.

The undersigned now offers th« jmbllc TUE BEiX

SEWING MACHfiNEIN

DURABILITY,

BEALTYoJ STYLE, and

VAlilETYof WORK, it

"STANDS UP HEAD,"It needs only to beseim to be appreciated. Huns the

Wurk both waya. takes four kinds of stitches, hems,fells, gathers, (.raids, bind .quilts, leathers mid sewson a rum* at thu same time. .Se»» from thf thinnestt» the th^kest fabric witljout changing th« stitch,tension Or neodlc, or without brmkiuV the thread —It is

The Wonderof the World 1«lso a variety of the mrst be.-umful PHOTOOKAm

ALBUMS. PtCTTOES an.1 FRAMES in groat variety,and pictures tiainwd to order at short notice.

ANo. BARNUMVS SKI.F ?EWEFt or TUCKER, whichcan be adjusted to any Sewing Machine.

Pall at the sign of tho rTORENCE 8KWINO MA.CHINE, a few door« t a n of Ouok's Hotel.

StiichingNeatly Done to Order,Al«.>. on wchKiltron) Mw w h » u M - WBED SEWING

MA('Hi\K," whkh took tho premium at the MichiganStato Fair, of 1864.

W. D. HOLMES.Ann Arbor, Hco. »Stb, 1*"4. 9Hatf

THE ONLY 8URE THING.PHOTQQJRAPH:

OHEROKEE CURETUK QliKAI

Mi

KOOTS, BABKS AH D LEAVESAn unfaillui; «ure for Sf>eririalorrJ»ain. fitff»M.»

Weakness, 2f.>:th*t<tl tBmitttoni^ unU all (iis*. i» scaused by StM-JXimloHj a;k-h n« Lozt ij iffuor,,CniKTuif l/utitude, tvirnin " fum, DCnv^ie/KliiM, j;rm<ttmi 'Ji<i A<?t, »'••:- Xrr-i, IHffleu t,of llr W'iiTI'J, Tiu»H.in3t "" ' ' ' • f «' ' • ' • ' , S-r,.t4 ::11>«( .« H;ce, ruU. (hx'n'tirn:/*-, Ttliltlltn, < W u j •;•-I . M , ai,J all Hi.. MnSul tuiu|<i.tliiia tuusitj by Jx-pj.rtlru' fi-'in L), palll '>f oatuijc.

t # ~ ll i is uijjicli:.- ix H pinvpk rtSJvBablt '.'vrmct.aud out on wl.h-h nil can n l j , nJ !l <imIn our pratUce'for oumy j»art, and wHh tn'tnabemrst r e a t -d , It hiis n o t fWet l in it hlu^K' ijift. 'ij• *•• i : Jc u i n l i v * p o w e r s l i a r d Ijvsii . t n l l i t U u l to .^i.i vli;-toi y ovi i t t . e ni«M B t u N j o t a ftlW*.

JVJ^* T4 thow who Imvc ttX/fvd i'<"' ' '•"•' #*n;<-tutoTri, until they think tluul»ilvei lifybhu 0-r t - iRb of Mi.-ill';il klrt, «te w o u l d n a y , I H . - P - < .t l iL -CI IKI tOKKK C U K K .''.II i c - t • '. ya i ' d vlfr^r, m i l nfter nil <i n -tcK drict ii*i . i t.il ^^'

O ^ j P i i V F l « i ' U v U a r l in •• iHit i lc , '•'

t 1 " - I'rr K i / c R o I u i M , a n d f o r m i r d e O b y ; • : - , . • * > - ' ,

nil fl>« it» t i e - i . r l d .

f j f t - P a i u i ' l i l t t »eut ' ' J m^i l f i fu cf »c- : . . ; - . , ' - /

DR. W. R. WIERWIW & CO. . ,M Liberty it., New York, S U Prcffie^*!

r,;;. VilK i

Cures in from wie

to three daya.

CHEROKEE REMEDYCHEROKEE

Coinpouuded from Boots, Barka and Iiep RliMEDV, the grcU Indian Ptm^tU

eufel all .Hiesue* of th« Criotry Or-'Jim, weL uiDOonticienoe of the U>ine, Jnjl<tmin<'(>f>n of Ui*Bladder% trdtommatton v/t/u Kidnty*, Storu in thtBladder, Stricture, Or.trft, O'-iwrrhta, Oieei, *uJIP ?>ipvciH.lly rocuiilTiiolideis In tbow i'«<v3 of f*vurJfotts, (or VThltei In f'Timlca,) where all the ••«!naii*".'oui ujtfiii'tnci bav« f;*ilf<l.

{=g- It is prepared In a hlgU/ con^ntraUdfnnu, th« dose ouly befog from one to two teaij>o«»-ful.n tfkrec times per day.

J39'- It Is diuretic and aittni'ivt In It* act.gn :purifyiiif and eleaaatpjc t!ie bloyd, oat^ting It to UywIn all of it* •jriglnal purltj• uml vigor; thus remov-ing frum thi- y?t'.'iu all pernicious cause* whiubhare iuduct-il ilis».'aae.

<.llk';U0KK>'l<; I M K C T I O ^ It if.t ;adedas Rn ally or a^i-t,tnt to the ( h o r o k c e \ttu\mo d ) , aud should W use-1 In conjunction with t'"Umc'liciiif In ul! ca^cs of Gleet, Gonorrhc*. t'luurAlbUi, or Wliltes. (U^ffeqtfl art N-all'iy. fopth^ig,and dt-iuuli-'-ji' ; removing HII scHldlutr, ! • *t ftr.iipain, instead of the burning and aim .*t un^ndurabl*pain that la eXprrleoeed with nearly all th? cb«apquack Injfctions.

OT'By the use of the CHKHOKEE REMEDY,and CHKHOKKE INJUCTIOK—the two uudlctuoiat the »nm>- tine all I m p r o p e r dInelxi*r^<-« &r*rcTiiovci, and the W'-a'u tied ur^aniitrw H|>ecd!l/ r«i*torci to full vigor and strength.

JST" Trice, C h e r o k e e I t e i ncdy , 99 p*rboitln, or three buttlv^ f<-r *5.

tJP*lMc->, C b e r o k o e In jeo t lou , $1 p«fbi.ltlc, or \hrce bottles for $5,

Sent by KxprvM tuauy addreu&o rtcvijtt «f pritM.

S y T h e ChoroUeo I toruody, €h«r<Hkne In jo f i lou und C h e r o k e e C a r e . tw«told hy all enterprising Dr\i$g\tt* lu tbi- dfUIie4world. Su-ue unprincipled dealers, however, lr/ U•t-ll wort hit* w c^-iopoandt- In plucc of thpqe : UIOMwhiohthry can p m ^ t u * wt a chfap pr|c?, ttnil mak«more money uy w.liluif.tliJU1 tlje>' c a o UI i t1**** mwl-Iclne*. As yon r t l t u your heafth, iyc, the he*likof your future otr^pring, do Dot bv deceived by tuckanprlaolpled Dru^is is , tuk for V<txt n^tiioijus a*dta:t n<> ofier*. if the Pruggi*tB will not boy ti>«i«fur >uu, encloM the mout-y In a letter, arid we willi-iul tlmu to you by Evpre.w, »ecurely sc*J*4 »*dpacked frt-*-from obntfrvntlnn.

La tied or Gctitlcnicn can »• 1 <lrr»j u» Iu p«rf«dconfidence, stating fully and plainly tb'.lr iti^'iM*and •yuptonu, as flr*- trcut alt difeayiu uf & cluyni*uatunj in IUIIIC wr ffinale. Fatii.nta n?«d not Ne*Juu»because uf their Inability to vUlt u», a i we h»v#treated patiuuts auccetifttUj In all portion* of tUa clr>Uized globe, by correspondence,

Puilciiti HiMrt'Siiriir us will please »Ut<; pUlnlyalt the symptoms of their complaints, and writ* Ptni-oUic«, County, Slate and name of wriur, plain, tuulInclose postagd staiup fu r^p ly .

Wt semi u*r $i pttgt P<mphUt /<•** lo »ny §4-drcu. Addre«s all letters for Pamphlet* or advle« toihtf proprietor*,

Or. W. R. MERWIN A CO.,No. «S UWrty su-Mt, New Tar*.

Sold h] Wboleaal-! Drugji«ts in Detroit, a l l * k'TKBH1XS * WIIPON'. Vsn Arbor. 9 5 2 1

Mr. Mathoiv-i flrst preparod t h e VKN'ETIAN HATHT)YE ; fiinr-;' that timu it has been uted by tboo»»q«l<and iu no instance ban it failed to g i re «utlre la t i i f t c -l ion.

The VENETIAN DYE Is t h . cheapest In the wor ld™Irs prief in on\y Fifty Cents , and *ach lioitle contain*d ' ub l e the quantity of djro in tbos* u t u a l l j •*ld f»r

FTIAX DYE ft warranted not to lnj«r« tti»t h ^calp in the slightett df^r«e.t> r.TIAN" DYST wurk« with rud.Jity UM\ t a r ,11 hafr ruquiriujf uo ^rppfii-as'-'U winterer

{£ tTIAN' l>Yi: produce, oav shade thmt m*j- o u t that will not f.uv. cr( ek <ir»*a*hnut' J u |n-rmuaont BJ* t he hair Itie'f. For i a l *

ric" fiQ cont-j.A . I . UATMBrw.-?, t J eoora l i j en t ,

1*2 «o»d Streft. .Vew York.Vlso, iiiiHufiieturer of MATHKVJ' A mrrc* li^ik-

O L ts i . the beat hai r df«*iiiag in m e . In I*Vy« buttUa,

^ *

Tlh a i l

t e l

h.— <JM>

bj aii

bought before the recent

GltKAT KISH I S GOLD ?Aft t h « un- o i n d i r . n t f t j . >tAn th« »«ir.» Indir.ntt-K. »t r i i bnlj H E : W the

growth ct the hftir when tl.in and falling pfl, but ItpottUiTtly BTK- ws :BK fo io i ('• ii»t rr^ ' i^a) shflric whenit in turning gray or whi t e , whether cauted by dipeRi*1,grief or old JIRP

ug ggrief or old JIRP.

It will c*i talnly do wh.ii ifl c'»rnifd ff>r :t . a fart tnwhich hiudrfd*, nay , tho mi rt^t v l o 1 (ivt* i »<d it »reready and willing to t^at:f_T. W ber*1 OCg bottlo in fairly ot#d,tn Any cfioniitnl1 y itf i*-pi;Ui;oii " tp read*like wild ftrt>," ait'l in the t#Kt arivfrtififineni anrt reoi"nm,>ji'':vtkm w< rtoB.ro In %he FA?tern Ftatcs, wheret h e " HENBWHR" origin aUn . it IK u**d by all YounfrLndiPK^Nn pre^King, ftnfl id t<- 1 e found (nthtf toUtttablfls of Younp Men, (JII m »' tlulr tarbcrn ; (whileOlder Men and Women will rot he irrchatif it. a« »ren^w^r an*l r* bforntiv« for flistr grf; locki and baldheads. " hi cl' it chartpf • ti> thf ir entiro n»' IPfaction.

We i-f- rellirg in thti cify of R*»t4ki) ».loce, upwardgof ID 000 botMcj per m t n i h t t l ^ dealers Riving th*>RFNKWE K th© yrtttTevce over All other Uairl ' repar-»ti«rw.

If not sold by nrnpRintK to 3 o-ir toirn, A tri'jj hipUwill hi- *eat jo you by Kxpr*-ri, upon roc»ipt of anfdollar by ma.ij~-tjtuagivji.fr yoa an oitporturUty a t onaflfur f'Rtinp it-exc»«llent Tirtiif*.rfj- Orders for Trial Buttles, must be adrtrfcinedto

otirgrn.r»l Aprfnt for t h e \<>rthirrit<*rn StntPs- C , A .C O O K . B o x 0 5 2 4 , C h l r n g o , 111, A!l nuch or-ders will rnorivp pronifit Mit^ntjon.

K. P. HALL* CO-i PmprtetAM, Nashus. V. U.The. trade Rupplipd al Manufacturers' prirat by H J t -

M-U, FINCH & F t LLEH, \Vhole#ateI*ruggi-ts (Mnr»(rof

. Sls-dllTii'S

PRESCRIPTION £ DI[[T6 STORE!In th* plac« to buy yoog

MEDICINES, PERFUMERy,W r i t i n g Paper , h.v the R^m o leHi,

&nA all fhfr ,irti<-]rF m our lino

up Prescription*, »1 th« Kipn n) (,.ehani;*'HI'vk.Ann ^rb^r, VJrhljfun.

Which will

FOR OA8H OISTLT",

THE

LOWEST MARKET PRICES i

Call and See!

Aun Arbor, January, 1865.

Rifle Factory!

nAins awl p o « i n tl.n MOHTAi< Bi>

.ndcfl to 1 Y9B0 '

W

Beutler & Traver,Minufoeturers of and Ueolere in

Guns,Pistols, AmmunitionFlasks, Poifthes Irani Baft, aud

Everjother ^rtirl*- b. that Line.

' mana*p.

1 m*d««rA*r

tiViitf

f a t I. it A ^ h o r t H . t u n t i e * , i - n - m l .

nlwayf In j.i i•r M»inai.(l »-«, iirji .

Page 4: FEIDAY,media.aadl.org/documents/pdf/michigan_argus/michigan_argus_18650324.pdf · " Wi.ke up Miah ! there's a flood. It s got clean up in the chamber, and we J Pdllmd l;iid down his

-iHu* ~s*"•*?

f thk jTI1K iil.OOD, ,the

HOOTS AND TH V, LKAVESB- WILL be iuz tku HcaliLg oi ihe Nations .

Bible.

x^xor. m. *r.i , . . : , : .. : : ISRATEU flltfSiC

:, i : :u. ,- . , : .LS' , ' . IlKAK'I IJVtrt AN!1 TiKnown all over thecountrj

OHLKIIKAT::1)USTDI-A-TST I5E£1S DOCTOB 1

Uf *SJ Superior Street, Ciisveluuu, Ohio.W'-iivisif the fallowing places, viz

Al'fUiN'n.'KS i> FOK 1802, 1868IWKI JS6*I'rof. K. J . Lyons cttn be consulted at the. followingAlices every mouth, vi^:

Detroit, Kussel House, each month, 18th and 19th.Ann Arbor, M on it ur House, each month, :il)lh.Jaok.ou, bUbb&rd Houssj each month, 21.Adrian; Brack.))) Bouse, each month '-"Al a mis! 3d.Toledo, Ohio,Collins House,each mouth, 24th, 25th,

•AUU l i t j lh .HUUdale, Mich., Uill^lnle House, oach month,27th.(TeMmtoz, Mich., Southern Michigan JIuu.su, «nch

month, 38si.t.lkhart. Ktktari V.*,*ie, -ic-ft innntb . li'Jtn.Smith Ht'niirif>cii., Si. JO . Kj'el, each minuh, 3t>,l.aporte. Ind., Tee harden AIL 1st', each month 31st.Wooster, Ohio, Craudoll Kxchunge, oach ^oon.Li, 7th

and 8th .Manttlic-iu, Ohio. Wiler Houst each month, 9th and

10th.Mt. Vernon, KonyoB IIOUSJB, tach month,11th and

IStb.Newark, Ohio, Holtoti House, eaeh month, 13tb and

14th,1'iiucriviUe Ohio, CowlenHou.se.each month . 4th

" " OHIO. RKSIW'.NDK AND

'flr.w P-Qjrcleum is

"'•'h-. PitUlnir^ ;"..; tificfe, Bpec.uf; tingou thc>.toniiiifioii of jiutrulwiin, BUJS :

•' Pi?tif)!cu:n :.• known to bo a hydroojtfboii, compufud of two gasos. Tho^egi^es ftre primary elements, indcsiruuti-: !e aud oahtms'.lessnu quautity. One ofmcin, hydrogen, is H constituent in all.•egetablo forms and iu many ol ourrocks. One hundred pounds of lima-ftrue, wheu burned, wiFl weigh but sixtypounds. The part driven off by burn-i»i '» carbonic acid Underlying the' Oil Rock" is a Btrutun of limestone, ofiiiiktiown thicknesses, know to bo upward of one thousand ieet in depth. Thewater falling oa ihe surface, ai d , 0 C0-lating through the porous sand stonethat overlies tho oil rock, becomescharged with sa!i, potash, saltpeter andutiier cbeuiical iugredieuts, and finallyreaches the limestone rock aud decoin-po.es i t - the carbon in the rock and the I OFFICE, ?82 SUPERIOR STREET,hjdrogen of the water uniting forms theoil, while the oxygen is act free to as-cend to tho atmosphere, or unite withruinsrals and form ojdes. The reverseof this process is »een in bisruiasi; tl*e oiliu a lamp— the oxygen iu the atniosphoreuniting with the carbon in the oil, form-ing carbonic ooid, and with the hydrogenforming water—thus completing thecircle."

A New Material for Letter Paper.The editor of the Birmiugham Post

publishes tW fi>!lowfr)g letter :"In the number of your paper, dated

October 1, 186-i, there is an article set-ting forth that John Brown & Co., ofthe Atlas- Works, Sheffield, had suo-oeeded in rolling a plate ol iron thirteenand a half inches thick. I beliove thatto bo th* thickest ever ro!Lcl, I send*you this apeeiiaen of ironr made at theSligo I'rofi Works, Pi'tsbufg, Peu s»yl

SEAWEED TONIC,

JULIUS BAUEH & CO.Great Piano Forte k Melodeon

CJSIICAUO, lUL.

Wholesale Agents for

icory Notice.rth Judicial C'irciiit,

AND

HB-;

flic

•on ever rolled'.me, which in n

iurpsM for |::, I believe,.

ever

t ol the public square, opposite the Fuslolhce.d:ija each uionth, 1st. :>d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 15th.—Lnjurs trcm 'J A. M, to 12 M, and from 2 I*. M. tot. Ur.Su,ii!a;, Ironi 9 to 10 A M.,ivi)d 1 to 2 P. 11.

ri'cilv adhered t o - .I Rive such balm as ha-«e rvo strife.With nature, or t)v l.r»h .-:' EEIQ,With blood rov ban-is 1 never .stain,ts"<n-poison men toease theirpain.

Fie if « pKym'ian indeed, who Cures.The indian HerL Doctor. R. J . LYONS, cure* the fob

lowing complaints in the most obstinate stages of thtirexistence, vii:

Ui«ea»*»ot the Throat, Liiu&p, Floart, Liver, Btom-:ich , Dropsy in the Chest, Rheumatism", Neuralgia, F'its,or Kail inn SicknMfl,addaHothGr nervom* derangements.Also all diseases of the blood, such ah Scrofula, L'rysip-t V s CaBMVB .t'evfev Sores, Leprosy, anil all other com-Muiteii clirouiccomplaints.

Ail forms of female djfiteuHits attended to with thehappiest results.

Ii is hoped that no one will despair of a cure untilthev have j^iveil the Indian Herb lioctor's Medicines afairand faithful trial. t s . l )ur ing the Doctor1! trav-els in Europe, West Indies, South America, and theUnited States, he has been the instrument in God'nhand, to restore to health and viftor thousands whljwere given up and pronounced incurable by the mosteminentold school physicians; nay, more, thousandswho were on tho verge of the. grave, are now livingmonuments to the Indian Herb's Doctor's skill ands...i«3af«iHf5a\»?nt.aud are daily exclaiming: "Bias-

" d partook of thedian HerbSatisfactory references of cjres will be gladly and

cheerfully tjiv'cn nhenevor required.The Doctor pledges his word and honor, that he will

in no wise,directly or indirectly,induce or cause anyinvalid to take his medicine without the strongest prob-ability of a cure. , ,

g ^ ; Mode of examination, which is ontirelydirTurentfrom thefaevsHj. !>)•• Lyon professes to discern di-seases by the eye. He therefore a.'ks iioquestionn, nordo«Bliereauiropati»flt8toexplainsymptoAs. Calloueand all. Hid have thosymptoms and location of your

' i i ' I f * ?

s.i«3 y'<i".:brthe<S»T wbeu first «e saw anIndian Herb Doctor's medicine."

f f

'• • ; p i >

""his lottes,. w'. '"u » . •> renswkijbie ••coitn-n of n?anafa(3luri"g skill, was!

written on a bheei i/i; iron eight inohua 1I :ng by five a <u a tj.,arter broad, amiof •xoeedingly fine quality, rolled HOthin that its weight, was only twice thatof a simiiar sized sheet of ordinarynote paper. Paper-makers hare littlefear, h"\vtver, that iron will ever provea substitute for paper, even at the pres-

b'S[h . rii >-a aad the deuiiii of mator-iai t''ir e lati'tifaclure

free of i. ihirtl be libt-rally considered.e»ddres« ,box 2iif>3.

R. J . LYONS, M. T<Cleveland, Ohio. Nov. 25,1862 I r 8 t

Tiie above is a correct likeness of Dr. Pchenck. ju^t

after l-ecoverinj from Consumption, mnny years ago

Below is a likeness of him as ho now aprearii.

When the first was taktn he weighed 107 pounds • at

the present tinie his weight is 220 pounds.

li : •: ii ;ll P'JTKID SOEK TUBOAT.y prevalent disease has

ru f:i>ir. -he paratiial lay many ftbabe; and to prevent further

-vurfi-K among th« little innocents•Uould be the earnest object of fathersand mothers. A friend has handed usthe i'oliovMug recipe, which we takepleasure in giving to our readers: Apoultice made from the yolk of an eggand fine salt, of a paste like consistency,to be put on th9 throat, and kept onthirty minutes unless soonsr dry. If aohjld be very fererish the poulticen'bould be repeated. Awash or gargleshould alfc.0 be prepared and used, coniiif.ting of equal parts of fiuo salt andalftw mitad with vinegar. For a very

uae, make a wash for tho throat

The largest Stock and best assortment of

€ABISfET FURNITURE ?

ever brought to this city, inoluding

SOFAS,TETE-A-TETES,

LBED ROOM SETS

LOUNGES,

CENTER TABLES,rjs, CHCHAIRS,

Giit Frames and Mouldings

. '• •: ' ., : n - : o l d e n ,<:• . kaHi ; ; n ! v c rlZcd iayborrj. We are credibly in-formed th»t in crery instance where

di h b l id hyrrjmedie? have been applied the

ditLaa recovered.—Dmeret News,

J3^* Gongrsve was disputing a^pointof fact with a man oi'a very positive dis-position, but one who was overburdened«rih sense. The latter said to him, " If.hi- foot is not :is I have stuted, I'll givewiu ruy head" " I accept it," said

;. " for trifles ehow respect,"

METAL1C CASES, etc., ' c ,atid all otbtr tjood« kept in the best and largest housesi h i W ep no econd hand ur lituie orin the oour.iry.Auction goods.

d

o pWe Keep no second handCuffinrt kept coustnntly ( a

d ffd t

ituie orand, andAuctio g p y

made to order. 11 j goods are offered at

THE LOWEST CASH PRICESN. B. I must h»vp monoT, and respectfully request

those indebted, to call and" fix up their old matterswithout delay.

O. M. MARTIN.Ann Arb«r,Oct.6, 1863. 925tf

MELODEONS,WARRAKTIOD VOK I'lYE YEARS.

J7i« Oldest JixliMixhineiit hi. t/w Uu'Ued Stales !

THIRTY THOUSANDOf tlif-RL' inttrttnVnft* tfre now in us.- niostlv in t.lif>

Bnlted States and Canada, also In Eurouc. Asia. Africa,Buutfa America, and the Wt-at Indias, aha from ;ili WU-HZquarters w« have the mop.t fhiUc-rii)^: testUuQnifus of tin;hlKh estimation in which they are held. At. ;ill Indus-trial Exhibitions, tdjey have iir/iii'iably boeu

Awarded the Highest Premium!whenever exhibiting in competition with others. Weshall take pleasuru in forwardlug l»y mall (>it our owiiexpense) our Ulusfrated Catalogue, in which* everyInstrument we raaouCuctui'e, is fully described und illus-trated by elegant c-nymvings.

CAUTION!!We daily see advertisements of some new reed] in-

strument, (with sti'jiftjfe natne,1 purporting to be supe-rior to Melodoons and School Organs. A new exteriorand a new name will naturally attract attention; butthe public will bear«iu rointi that nil Reed Inttitunents,HOW mannfacturetl in wi^'^nited ptates ^nd Cftnada,we as near as they can be mnde without in/ringingour patents, copies of our own.

CEO. A. PRIXCE & €O.

DR. SC1IE.NCK'!*Principal Office and Laboratory is at the N. £. cornerof SIXTH and COMMERCE Street!, Philadelphiawhere all letters fur advice or husinfjss chould bo <liroc ted.

He will be found there every SATURDAY, prufi-nsionally to examiue hujgH vritb the Rospirometer, forwhich his fee is three dollars : all advice free.

In Ne* York at No. 32 BOND Street, every TOSSDAY, from 9 A. M. to 3 P. M.

At the MARLBORO' HOTKL, Boston, January 18 and19, February 16 an.i 10, .\Uich IS and .6, April 19 and20, May 17 and 18. June 14 and 15, July 19 and 20.

The time for my being in UALTI.MOKli .vml 1'IT'K-BVRG, will be seen in the daily papers oi those citiea.

BANNER

S3 The Mendota, III., Preu, saygthat two citizens of that town have re-centlj lo^t their wives by elopement,and that the customary salutation iti thestretttu, instead of—" How do- you do*ir ?" has become : " la your wife Safethis morning ?"

HAT STORE!

MICHIGAN CENTRAL

INSURANCE COMPANYICalarnazoo

GOTO

Iniures agata«t L.oss oi Damage by Fireor Ijightuiug.

CHARTER PERPBTUAL..

Ouirantee Capital, by State Authority,

8800,000<0O.DIREGTORS:

J . P. KENNEDT, MUESH OIDDIKOS,A. P. MILLS, SSO- W. SNTDEE,8. D. ALLEN, GSO* W. ALLKK,

OFFICERS:J. P. Kennedy, Pret. T. P. SheWon, Vice- P+Qeo. W. Snyder, See., A. P. Mills Treas.,H. E. Hoyt An't See., S. D. Allen, Gfcn. Agt.

C40tf

Before you bsry.Sprinj und Summer styles ot

^

F NOT, CALL

Ag,, '' elau Companios:

Home Insmauce of New York,

;C»sh Capital over $3,500,000.

CONTINENTAL INSURANCE CO.OF NZW YORK.

r»piul orer $1,500,000. ID this Company the Insarad participate in the profits.

CITY FIB.B I3STS-, CO.,OF HARTFORD.

Capital oror Ttrei; Hundred Thouawd Dollars.

C. IT. MILLEN,\<r?\t Mniaitreet, Ann Arbor.

STRAW GOODSGEISTTS'

Furnishing Goods, &c

i nn Arbor, April 20th, 1804. 3m953.

A LECTURETO

YOUNG MEN.Just Published in a Sealed EuvclopePrice Six Cents.

A LECTUKKontheNature, Treatment, and R*dicaCur** of Spermatorrhoe or Seminal \Ve&kn«s», In

voluntary Eintrssronn, Sexual Debility, jind Imped imentito Marriai;o Koncrally. NerTouftness, ConsumptionEpilepsy, and Fits ; Mentai and phynie»1 Incapacityr«nultin(tfrom Self-Abuse, fcc. Ily KOB'T J. CULVERWKI L, M. !>., Author of the "Green Book," Ate

The world renowned auilior, in his admimble I.ecture, clcarlj proved from his own experience, that tinawful consequences ofSfell-Abuw maybe effiictually rei»OTt'd without medicine, and without daogftrousmirj;:cal operations, bougies, instrumenti, ringB,or cord.alipointing out x mod« of our© at onco certwin and effectual, by which fvery eufferer, no matter what his condition may bo may cure himself ehe»ply, privately*nd raflicHlly. This lecture will prove a (loos to tbousandp «.nd thoufiandfi.

Sentamlov Real, to any addronn, in a plain, ifale<wnvelopf.on therpcipt of aix cents, or twostamps, bya-dilrenslag.

CTTAS. J . C. K lW7 Bowery, K«w York,Po»t Office1 U

a,Dd

mmTlWST

Mi l a r o imiu' i

JE3

NCI*. Ml I) .

itAOv i-sNOTICE 1

S :"• r tho latest «tylei »f

• U»«h.1

|b<) f.tiilr.l w i t h e q u a l i t y , ^ t \ l e n n

Ihe UUtory of Dr. Schenck's mm Case, and how he wascured of Consumption.

Many yeais ago, whilst residing in Philadelphia, Jhad progressed gradually into tlie last stage of I'ulruonarv Consumption. All hopes of my recovery be-inst dissipated. 1 was advised by my physician, Dr. 1'ur-nfcii to remove into the country. Moorestown, NewJersey, being my native place, l was removed thither.My father and all his family hud lived and died there—aud died of l'ulinonary Consumption. On my arrivalI was put to 1 ed, where 1 lay for many weeks in whatwas deemed a hopeless condition. D». Thornton, whobad been uiy father's family physician, HIT. had at-tended him in his last illness, was called to see me. Hethought my case entirely beyond the reach of medicine,and decided that I must die, and gave me one week toarrange my temporal nfuiirs. In this apparently hopeless condition, I heard of the remedies which I nowmake and sell It seemed to me ihat I could feel themworking their way, and penetrating every nerve, fibre,and tissue of my system .

My lungs and liver put on a new action, and the morbid matter which for yeara l id accumulated and irritated the different organs ot the body, was climiu : ed,the tubercles on m. lungs ripened, and I expectoratedfrom my lungs as much as a pint of yellow ollemivematter every morning. As this explorat ion of xnat-

v subsided, the fever abated, the pain left me, dieugh ceased to harass me, and the exhausting night-/eats were no longer known, and I had re:re«hingieep, to which I had long been a stranger. My appe-te now begon to return, and at times 1 found u diffi-ult to restrain myself from eating too much ; withis return of health, I gained iu strength, and nowi fleshy. 1 am now a healthy man, with a largealed ticatrix in the middle lobe of the light lun^ aud

ic lower lobe hepatjzed with complete adhesion of theeura. The left lung is sound, and the upper lobe of>eright one is in at'>le:ably healthy condition.Consumption at that time was thought to bean in-irnble disease, by every one, physicians an well as

hose who were unleai nedin medicine— especially suchases at were reduced to the condition I was in. Thisiduced many people to believe my recovery only tem-orary I now prepared and gave the medicines to •onsuniptives for some time, and made mimy wonder- Jul cures • andthedemand Increased so rapidly that 1 ;eteimined to offer them to the public, and devote myndhi.ied attention to lung diseases, in truth, I wasi\t to foreed to it, for people would tend for me far

n'dnear, to ascertain whether their cases were like

"or many year3> in conjunction with my piincipalfflcein I'hilarlelphia.Ihnve been making regular pro-

ional visitB to New York, Boston, Baltimore, and |

'For several jeaTs past I hnve made as many as fiveuudred examination weekly with the "Respirometer."'or sueh examination my charge is three dollars, andt tnabln me to give each patient the true condition ofis disease, and tell him frankly whether he will get

The great reason why physicians do not cure Con-umption in,that they try to do too much ; they giveaecicines to stop the cough, to stop the n ght sweats,ectie fever, and by «o doing they derange the wholeigestive system; looking up the secretions, and event-ally the patient diea.The Pulmonic Syrup is one of the moat valuable

medicines known. It is nutrient, powerfully tonic,andhealinj in itself. It contains no opium, yet loosenshe phlegm in the bronchial tubes, and nature throwstoff with little exeiUion. One bottle frequently euros«n ordinary cold; but it will be well arst to take a dose3f Schenck's Mandrake's I'ilis to cleanse t'le stomach.The Pulmouio .Syrup is readily digested acd absorbeduto blood, to which it imparts its hiding properties—tisonoof tl>e besl preparations of iron in use ; it is ajowerful tonic of itself; and when the Seaweed Ionicdissol'Csthe mucus In the stomach, and Is tarried offby the aid of the Maudfjie I'ilis, a healthy flow ofKaBtricjuke, good appetitfTaud a good digest ion Follow.

The Seaweed Tonic is a stimulant, and none other isrequired when it is nsel. It is pure and pleasant; nobad effects line when using Bourbon whisky, which dis-order* the stomach, torpors the liver, locks up all thesecretions, turns the blood into water, dropsy sets in,and tho patient diessuddenly.

Bourbon whisky is recommended now-a days by al-most every physician. Many patients that visit myroom;, both malt and female, are stupefied with thispoison. The relief is temporary. If tbey cough theytake a little whisky ; if they feel weak and feeble theytake a little whisky ; if they cannot sletp, they taie alittle whisky; and they go on in this way, requiringmore ana inure until they are bloated up.and imaginethey arc getting (loshy. The stomach, liver, and di-gestive powers are completed destroyed, and lose theirappetite for food. No one was ever cured of consump-tion by this process, « here cavities have been formedin the lungs. A titt'.e stimulant is frequently beneti-cial to consumptives, such as pure brandy or good»ine« • in many cases London porter or brown stout inmoderate quantities ; but Bourbon whisky hastens oninstead of curing consumption.

The Seaweed Tonic produces lasting resutes, thor-oughly invigorating tr.e stomach and digestive system,ami enabling it to eliminate and i. alee into healthyblood the food which may b used for that purpose ~lt is so wonderful in its eliects that a wineglass lull

.11 digest a hearty meal. and a little of it taken beforebreakfast will give a tone to the stomach which lewmedicines possess the power of doiug.

The MANDRAKE TILLS may be taken with entiresafety by all i ges and condition!, producing all thenood results that can be obtained from calomel, or anyof the mercurial medicines, anc". without any of theirhurtful or injurious results. They carry out ol theSYHtem the feculent aud worn out matters loosened anddissolved by my Seaweed Tonic and Tulinonic Syrup.—It will be seen that all three of my mediciues are need-ed in most ca»es to cure Consumption.

JULIUS BAUER & CO.P AVholesule Agents for

WM. K1VABE &, CO'SCELEBRATED

Gold Medal Piano FortesAlso, for

SOEBBLER & S3IITH, BOAEDMAN &, GRAY,

And other First Class l'ianos.

Manufacturers and Importers of

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS,STRINGS, ACCO11DEONS,

VIOLINS, CLARINETS,DRUMS, GUITARS,

BRASS INSTRUMENTSAnd other Musical Merchandise.

The SII-VBR and BKASB t»8TRUMBNTS, of our manu-facture and importation, and used by all tho beatb&Dtli in tlic Uriited States, and whenever exhibitedhave always vecuived tho Gold JMedais and muuiitSTPBKMIUMS,

g^^Having conneotion with Manufacturing HousesIn Berlin, Leipsic, Dresden, England and Paris, we areprepared to furnish DEALERS, BANDS and INDIVID-UALS, with every article in this line, at the lowest man-ufacturers' pi-ices.

Remember the Place.Address

JULIUS BAUER & CO.WHOLESALE WAREROOMS,

99 S. Clark & 89 Washington Sts.CUICAUO, I U .SEND FOR A CIRCULAR.

PRUR1GG LOTIO.

AGENTS.

BOSTON—Ocorge C. Goodwin * Co.NEW YORK—Demas Barnes k Co.BALTIMORE- S. S. Hance.I'lTTSBl'KO- Dr. CieorgeH. Key«er.CINCINNATI—F. K. Sniro ft Co ., aud John D. I'ark.CHICAGO— Lord & Smith, and H. Sco\il.8T- LOUIS—Collins Trothers.EAN FItAXCISCO—Hostetter, Smith k Denn.j ifa afV hi aM»O»TUilH*rt« undJI'eali-r*. lyMlj

WIZARD OIL!

© TOOTHACHEIn Three M-inutes

U-Bi^RlOlIlS1H Fiv.e Miuutes.

OBA-MF C0-L10Ln Ten Minutes.

SOKE THROAT1* a Few llvors

LAME BACK.

I

CliTS AND BRUISES

CORNS.

B

9 NEURALGIA HfIn Ten Minutes.

EARACHEIn Ten Minutes.

DU'THEKIAIn a Few Hours.

KHEUMATISM.In a Few Days.

BPRAINS.

BURNS JK1) SCALDS.

CHILBLAINS.

R EMOYALI

. 13. COLE,ban removed his STOCK of

^ Chancery.

1 Liza M, CUSt,

The great Itch, and Humor Killerof tlie 19th Century!

T\in new preparation possesses most wonderfulproper ties, aad is

For every species of the ITCH, PRAI-RIE ITCH, BARBER'S ITCH, WABASHSCRATCHES, HXIK0IS MANGE, CCTAiV-E«rS EBIPTIOXS, PIMPLES ON THEFACE, SALT KilEl'H, SCALD HEAD,RINGWORMS, &c.

The PKUHIO0 LOTIO Is a new unit certain curefor all kinds uf Itch, ami being H fluid preparation ItIs free Brom all the gummy, disagreeable qualities ofthe ointmeiitri in general use.

ThePKURlGO LOTTO is safe to use under ALLCIRCUMSTANCES ; will not irritate the most tenderskin, and CONTAINS NO MERCUiiY. Don't failto try it. Bfanufactured by

E. T. & W. T. MtFARLAND,Sole Proprietors, Lafayette, Ind.

PRICE 50 CENTS.

LORD & S3IITH, Chicago, Wholesale Agents.Sold afWholesak-in Chicago by FULLER, FINCII

4FULLKR; CHARLES G. SMITH ; BUUNHAMSA VAN SCHAACK; W. D. HARRIS A CO.;SMITH & DWYBR: J. H. REED & CO.. and H.8COVIL,

THIS SPLENDID REMEDY CURES

ciiw;

Pn'l pending in the1 !ir . Court for tlieCoiuii.s ofWa«ht«

. Chancery,

oi TkouMfl (1. Bicknell.

S UK \ I 1 C 1 I I U A N . C o u i . t y (.! Wa.- ln .Mi;AI " it uf tKt- ProbatvJDourt for tl

.';isl.rf haw, hol-v-n ii n n A i - l n u - . i i i , ,

C o u n t y oit Ih • r iM| , ; t i , Office7, in Mi^Citv- cf ,I the- Itt. 'utv luuriJi C:iy of F r b - |

tTiuiisand e i g u l h i i u d r e d a u d s i x t

;; :J t .

It

Ji:l»iiijiai .

j

r'r,)v- in ti.dJi ! i] N i.

i (lark is. •

llu; 4 th day ofJ Feb. A. D., V 0 5 . .

sati.-fnrtiun ol tbia Cour t by tlieoi t. Sol ici tor for I he C o m p l a i n a n t ,

n o t a re, i<ien1 c*f I fie Ska te o lresit i ill <>f t h e SX&tt) pi Ohio, be-

j ' c t id t l i t juEMtUicitou oi this <')urt. ;On uaetiiiu oi J « b n N CfoM, !5olicrftor for Co!tnplai4-

• d t»y *» "I f ' ' ' i i r t t h a t ftaidlant , Jehfel ( ' I H T ^ , cAUKe fiis appea r ft a e e to bte

i-utyfR*] in this cau*je, HIU! ttuticu tbeipoi iser ~v<\ on r :icriAiit'g Bolicitor within two »nonth*| ftom t h e

date oi' Lfcis wrdi-T, ;n i in . i i ,• Dfifeutiant c*1

.: p |jta u s 1 . • his answer to

. nn t ' « Jlill, (Hid a eojjy iln-r^ot' be g(*rvod on th*j1 • iriplaiuauf, ivifljia twenty days a f t e r

i • •. of -:.iii. Bill, n r in defaul t t h e r e o f• ' ; M ' i l . ; , • • < U J ! ' n - l - . l \,V - l j i | [ > f ! ( M l . i u 111:

and it \n furl her ftriiered, that within twenty fays thei,U\ C ruplyiuunt riiw« a, coj y oj tbiaotjler toUep«b--•!• il hi ! ii.' • ; • • r .'u-s, a fiublJC new s p a j n rrmi«Ml j tn ' l p u h r h6*f «l t h e W t y of A n n AI-I.KH-, in s a i doy • > ' • ' • . . . w, in e a c h j»e#fc, I'or s ix s u c c v . j i v e, • ••}• JJ, o r tl iu1 l ^ c a u i t i a B«py "i" MU.I i p l e r t d Ue « r -

; D u l l y . n t i e : i M t i \ s i i i ' , I . •

;<• Hefend^nt'a appeaij-:i i' « J o n a* id • i •, • ;.'i • :i

)Gfore {he • ini» pr t aui ;i- in t h i s 6» i • .

ROBERT E FIUZERt'i • • • • • - . - . V- a s b t e n a w C o . , Mi<;',i.

d X U S l i i t U f C i l f <

^eHerft'lTh a I ' oUte.ln t h " m u L U ' r ° ' ^ « fciWW) of Thomas C. Bicknell,

deceased*( ) l l r e s o 1 n g a n a ftlina the petHIon, duly vtr i i ied. of

.Kdin c I U'liiii.'!!, pray nig that hf or Rf>me otliei* *tuitu-• • pointed Administrator of tLo es-

tate if i»id ilecfi'.-i (I.Thereupon it is brdoved, ihat Monday, the STtliday of

March next, at ten o'clock in the fun qoon, be; lorthe h<?Hrinir of said petition, and thut the

heirs ;tt law oi' aftld deceased. and n.11 otl^tr|)t•r^oIi^ inttrc^tovl In eaid esiatP, are r^rjnii cilto appfifl i • (inof aaid Court,tUttB to i>eliold«n attl • Pi&oaia oiiicu. in the City of Ann Arbor,and Mvt.w eausB, if a-ny thers b«. wliy the praytr>n lli o \» ;.', i ;.,(,< ;• :-ii. mid not be granted:

And it \& further ardered. tlmt ,said petitionerh\\c no*ticeto rhf pfVradils interested tn said esiale, of

.ii nai«l petition, and tho hearing thereof,• , f Uii« Order to bepublinhed in the

Mihftigan Ar$w} a ueV spapbf printed ami cir-cul;itinp in said Countj of Wa^litenaw, three tiucct-a-biva w.-fks prevkiua to aaui day of bearing.

(A u-uecopy.) HIRAM J. HKAKKP,988 Jodge of I'robate

Estate of Lot Wilcox.STATE OF* MIC'IIIOAN, Cui VJY uf WIUUTUVA1

At a session o( (lie I'robat« Court \'w ilu-of WasbtenaWj holdeu at tli.' Probate Office iu iof Ann Arbnr, oa Wednesday, the ifiWmthMarch, in tha year OJIB th'jusau'.! ei^kt liund

dy

Pit.^Bt, IIIBAM J. BEIn the matter of the

, Judge of ProbatfEstate ol Lot W

decea-atd. i

On rtading and filiug the petition duly verifloi ,Nathan Phillips, praj ing that ha or.wxbi olh«"^ >jtb1^ person may be appoiutud Administrator t>f the. 'Uteof BaM deceased: e**'

Thereupon it Is Ordered.that Tuesday, the skySAiday of Apriljuext, at ten o'clock in the forhShi; asHignecl Tor tb.; hearing of naid p*-tition *n\that -the heir« at Ixw of MI id deceased ' .,all other par«011.4 interested in said estntft, are

J to apintar *t a session of said Court, the

down X. Uorr,plaioaat

Soli:itor anU ofCouncil for < <>m-996M

Sheriff's Sale,TATE OF MICIIIGAN, <.'i)V*<rr OF Wi*BTB!»V,«*>—

• tachmeni issued out of t h iI • • ! '"u; ; for .tLo-Co»atj of Wu-iitt-naw, to me di-

• i thje goods ami ohaitcls andrff Lucius F.

Mull, Tefeoaatn tl lafed February27tbi1; (•."», ( bave levied ' ;!• '• th'e [Mlfi.wiug Jescr^bed real

. . to wit ' : A certainp , , • : of land m the City of Ann Arbor , in.s.vid (Jounty o!' Wiiylitonaw, and State of Michigan]k HQWJI and described as follow* : Beginning a t the cen-ter if section twenty-one, C'il,) township two south

i oavr. fT^en'ce south on the quarter section line. • I fourteen links to the nor th line of the

I >i\b..n> Road, thetlCC north tifiy six degrees cant alonglifte nf BSh'iH load three chiiinHJtnd l^lMy linkslifte nf BSh'iH load three nks

This invulujble prcpiiration only needs a trial toreronituend itself to every household in the land.Use one bottle iinrt you wLtl ahvaya keep It on liandagainst the time of need.

Price 8(ir.ontij and fb cpnts per bo*-tie. The largebottles contain nearly three times a« much as thesmall weft. M&nafacturu} by J. A. HAMLIN ABRO., 10^ \yft*})*mgton atreet, Clucago, and for saleby drny^isttjg.-iKiiUiy.

ffl) » 1 Ohic»g«.

y ,tbanct ' I.I • • . • : nd westquarter ' . as I of the center of saidLI etion, thenc west to tt« ;;!acc of beginning, cohtain-

; move or 1«83. Alsoj a piece orparcuitif l*e^4n said City CteSOTttHRTSs follow.., viz ;—Beginning on tiie north Bide of tho 1) i\bow> Koad one

•. fouv linl.a captward fnni tlie south-eaf^iprly coraei nf lot No. (2(1) twentyiui-!ition ti) tbe Viihigc now XXty of Ann Arboi, thencenorth tkirty-riix decrees west parallel to the ftorth-Bastlj lineuC saidletawmbffl to Mill Street,abouj twd '.•.h;iins ;md ninety nine links to the quarterline running north anil south through said sectiontwenty one in towoRhiptwo south lange six east on said

line four chains and fifty-six links to 8aid Dix-• nth fifiy-Omr degrees west along

laid DixboroRoarl fifty links to the- place of begioniijg,oontaining about fifty-live one hundredth of svnacrtj olland , w Moh 1 shall expose for tale at public auction orvondiio, nt the front door of the Court House, In saidCity of Ann Arbor, on Saturday, the twenty pecondday of April, A />. 186S. W twelve o'clock, (noon,) ofeaid day. Dated at the City of Ann Arbor, this 9th dayof March. 1SG0.

P. WINEGAR, SheTtff,Washtena>w County.

Estate of Mary Summers.TATK Ol" MICIUOAV, County of VasMen*w, us.—

At a Beaslon of the Probat* Court for the Countyf Wa.sht nrt-.v, liolden at the I'robate Office in the

city of Ann Arbor, on Krid;i\7 th* twenty fourth dayof February in the year one thousand eight hundredand si; ly firr.

Present, Hiram J. Beaken, Judge of Probate.Ir the matter of thejtgt.at« of Mary Summer*, de-

ctas«d. John Hoffman,executor of the last will andt^-LiHi''!:! offlaad deceased, comes into Court and rep-resents ihat ho is now prepared to reader hid finaluccoatftaB such executor.

Tlierpupon it is Ordered, that Monday, the 27thdky of Jlarcb next, at ten e'clock in theloivm ^n, be asnifqiec) tot exjimi>iirrfj and atiowinjc strtbaccount, am! th«t the ]:oirs at law of sa;A deceased,and ;iM otli fer \<i L'.SOTI.S Interested in s'vid estate, are re-quired to a ppear at a session of said Court, then to beholden at the I'robate Office, in the City of Ann Arbor,in .s;iid County, and .-bow cniihf, if any there be, whytlie saidaccount should not be allowed: And it in fur-ther ordered, that said Executor give notice tothe persona interested in paid eVtate, of ihe ptndencyof said acaount, aiid the h taring there f, by can sins acopy ot this Order, to be pubiithea ' u t h l - - v ' r ' l i -

."•.*, a nt'WKpaper priuted aud ehviulatiajf in saidCounty nl' Wa htoiiiLW, three Huccesaive vreekis previousto sn.nl day of hearing.

(A triu/copy.) HIRAM J. EEAKES,mid Judge of Probate.

Heal Estate for Sale.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, COUNTY CF W-AHHTKN-iW, is.In the matter ot the estate ot Sylvia Lowry, (oow

Sylvia St John.) Mary E Lowry, Mark A. Lowry,tmd Mariha K- Lowry, pjLaora : Notice iis herebygiv«n, that in pursuance of an or dp? granted to theundersignefl, guardian of tlu.1 estate of said minors,by th.u Hon. Judgu of Probate for the county ofvVnalitf naw,on tiit: twenty-soventii finy of Februnrv,A.D. 1885, there will be ,-x»ld at Public Vendee, tothe highest bidder, at the south door of the Cuurtrjuust;, in the <itv ol Ann Arbor, in the coonty otVv aslitennw.in said State, on Tuesday, the eighteenthday t,r April next, at one o'clock in the afternoon ofsaid <i;iy, Bubj&at to all enGuinbi"iint*ee by loortgageor otin'r'.vis?, the f'l'iiowing dercriied real estate,towi t : The north west quarter of section fourteen,and the south east quarter of section fourteen,andthe north-east quarter of the fouth-west quarter of

• . n fourteen, iu township four south and raneofour t-urit, beinff in the township of Bridge water, iatb« county of Washtensw, containing three hundredan'i ^ixty acres of land , subject to the right of dowerol Clwi#ia Lovvry, a» widow of James Lowry, de-

CLARISSA LOWRY, Guardian.Patt-a, February 28th,1866. 998td

RISDON & HENDERSOiX

Estate of Amos Mead.

STATK OF MICHH.'AX—County of AVashtvnaw ss—Atis 0O6iiQA*>f the Probate Court lor the County

of Wash ten I vv, liolden ;tt. the Probate Office in thecity of Ann Arbor, on Mutidnv ,fche twenty-seventh day ofI' bruary, in the year out thousandei^ht hundred andsixty iiv?.

Present, Hiram J . Eeakes, Judge of ProbateIu thematjer of the estate ol Abjojj Stead, d«6*affed.Ofl" reading and 6ling the petition" duly venfled,of

_^1VRJQ Billings, praying t)'nt a certain InHsruniPBt nowon Sic in this ton: t. purpi.rUng to b« the la»*t Wj:l andTo-itament of ,4aid deceased ma; be admitted to Probat*.

Thci.-itpon it iw Ordered, tti«t Friday, the 24tlifliy of March riext?, r.t ten o'clock in toe foienoon,btv assi^/ied tor the hearing of mU\ petition .and ttiat tbedevisees j legatees, and heirK Bt law of Raid decea^erl, and all other persons interested in"jt»id estate, arerequired to appear at a senior, of said Court then to behoklenat tbel'robatfi Office,iu the city of Ann Arbor, andnhovv cause, if any there be, why- the prayer of the pe-titioner should not t e granted; And it is further or-derefl, th»t said p^tHtionfr ' ive notice V-> the pernons in-terested in said estftte, of the pendency o f said prtition,and the hearing thereof, by u4u«lmg a copj-of 2his Or-der to be published in the Afichigan Argits. a newspaperprinted and circulating IB Paul County of Wasfctfenaw,three successive week* previous to said day of hearing

(A true copy.) HIRAM .7. BKAKKS,&93 Judge of l 'robate.

tlie

3B XT O SSL 3E3 1E3

GRAIN DRILL,and

Grass Seed Sower,Manufactured at Springfield, Ohio.

TIIK VERY LATKST IMPROVEMENT, and' betterthanall others; adapted to sowing Wheat, Rye, Oats,

Barley andUrass Soed.

1st. It has a Rotary Feeder.2d. Will sow all kinds of Grain

and Grass Seed.3d. Never hunches the GrainUK. Never breaks the Grain.oth. Sows Grass Seed broadcast be-

hind the Drill.3th. Has high wheete and long Hoes.1th. lias long and wide steel points.8th. li has a land measure or Sur-

veyor.9tA. It has double and single rank

drills.10th. It has a self adjusting shut off

slide.It is neatly and substantially made.

Tliore U hardly a Itrilloirertdin the market but canboast fit" rnore or k'.s.s

"FIRST PREMIUMS"They are about as indiscriminately bestowed a the titleof " rofezsor,',' which is sometimes applied ta the' fiddler'3} oj il bootblack," They cease to convey tlie.lea of intv //.Tlie BuckeyoDrill has been on Exhibition at quite a

number of State and County Fairs, and without seekingfavor at tlie hands of any Committee, lias received itsfull share of Premiums •

TESTIMONIALS :TVe give the following names of a few Farmers in this

vicinity wao have bought and used the Buckeye Drill;

Estate of Smiths

STATE OF MICHIGAN, COTXTT cv , S

At a session of the FrobaU Court for the County ofWashtenaw, holtien at the l'robate Office in the Citybf Aim Aibor, on Saturday, the fourth day of March,in the year one thousand eight hundred ami sixty live.

Present, HIRAM J. BRAKES, Judge of I'robate.In the matter of the Estate of Marinda Smith,

and Jeunetta Smith, minors.Ou reading and filing the petition, duly verified, of

John MOGTP, Guardian unto said minorg, praying thathe may bo ficen.sed to sell certain real estate belonging to said minors.

The*eu-pOB it is Ordered, that Ti»e3Ja77 the fourthday ot April nest, at ten o'clock iu the forenoon,be apsigaen for the bearing of said petition, aud thaithe vext ol fein of saidininor«, and all other personsintere-itorl in said estate, are required to appear at asesaioa of Baid Court, tbea to be holtlen at the ProbateOffice, in the City of Ann Arbor, and show cause, ifany there be, why the prayer of the petitioner shouldnot be granted: Anii it in further ordered, that paidpetitioner give notice to the persons interested iik.fefrfdestate, of the pendency of Baid petition, and the hear-ing thereof, by CftuBing a copy of lh\n Order to bepttUMMA in the Michigan Argus; a newspaper printedand circulating in said Count/ of Washtenaw, tbxeesucrc.-.5ive weeks prt-\ious to said da.) of hearing.

[A tnif copy] HIRAM J. BEAKER99^ia Judge of Probate.

perpr inted and circuJjitirig in fcaid CfVunty of W »»]teiiftw, three aucceaaivt* weuks pievious to said dui" '*•heariiii;.

( A t r n e c o p y . ) HIRAM J. BEAKESlOOQtd *JudyeorProbKt«

Estate of Helen E. Wolcott,

huudred atd1

P'rjek&nt, HIRAM J. BRAKES, J u t ^ e of I'roljnio.In the uiattc-r of the BeWte of Iloleu £. Wulcott i

minor.On reading- and tiling t l ie petition, dul_r verified of

Thomaa Gray, Guard inn , pi 8-yiog tliat he may be licet,-sed to selVcertalij reaJ estale belonging to naij minor'

Thereupt/n i t ia OcdiSred, t l ia t Monday, the 10th3ay of April uftxt, ivt tou o'clock in the fyrcaooabe ugeigneil for ttoe >ioarin^ of said petition, and th»r•h<-iie\t, of kinof hnU\ minor , and a)i oiher pera^jnterehted in -wiul pstfttp, ure required to appear at a

nen>ion of * aid Cour t , tllen to be holden at the Prob«uOilict1. iu tlie City of Ann Arbor , and bbow cause,ifany there be, why the prayer of the petitionershould not he g r a n t e d : And it is further or-dered, t h a t sa i l petitioner give notice to thepersoBfiflterest'ivl in said es ta te , of the pendency of faid pH^tion, a lid Klie hearing thereof, by eam-iuga copy of ibisOrder to be published IB :)ie Michigan Argus, a news-paper printed and circulat ing in said County of Wash.tetuiw, th ree au/jce^sive weeks previous to .'aid dajofnertl iiiL,'.

(A Lrue^opj .> HIKAM J. BEAKED,lXiOOtd Judjfe of Prolate;

Estate oi Julia A. Goodyear.

STATE OK MICHIGAN, Cot-M-v oy Wjsamjw, ».—At a session of ihe Probate Court for the CountT

of Wanhtenaw, holden at the Vrobflt* Oflice , n ^ 0City of Ann Arbor, on Thursday, tht iUt:ei4b dayei" .March, in the year one thousand «igiit buu^rtiand .liity-fire.

Prescntj HIUAM J. BEAKEJS, Judge of Probate.In tHe niatter of the Estate of Julia A. (

deceased,Onreaoingand fllinp the petition, duly _._

Benjamin F. Sutton, prajiny that a certain InstiQO)«tnow on fiie i& tbis Sovirt, 'purporting to be thtlmWill andTestaiatufc1 of said deceased, may be ato I^roftate

Thereupon it i> Ord^red^ tliR.1 Wedneidaj,tti#J2tbday of April a«xt, at ten o'clock in 1hefur(nw>n,be assigned for the hearing of said petition,, tad tfe;the legatees, devisees, and neirfc a1 law of said deceasdand all other perMinn Interested in mid estate, mttt-quired to appear at a aension of haid Court. ;btcto be hnldt-n at the Vrobate Gflice, in the C]\y of AnaArborrand HIXOW C:UI ->*•, if any there be, why theprajfrof the petitioner should not be gra.nt<finther ordered, that said ])elitioner pi\e notiw to U,«persoDs interehte«l in Raid estate, '-fthe pendcncjrfsaid petition, and the hearing thereof, by c*iC('pj of Ibis Order to he publi-stifd in the MvttyjtKArgus, a newspaper printed aud circulmii.jj iuu:&County of Wnshtenaw, three succejeive weekspmiouito naid da v of hwuing;.

[A true'eopy.] lilEAM J. BEAK IS,lono Judge of Probate.

Estate of Eli

STATE OF M*CBK!AN,CorNTY y>- \VjsHTiexiw',E8.—At a session of the I'robate Court for the County

of WashtenSw, bolden at the Probate Office in the cityof Ann Arbor, on Saturday, the twenty-fifth day ofFebruary, intUe year onw tiujusaiid eight hundred andsixty five.

Present, HIBAII I; RBAK?:;, Judge of Probate.In the mattei of the EaUteef 13] Kigg<. deceaeed.On reading and fifing the petition, duly verified,of

Andrew W. liiggs, praying that he may be appointedAdministrator ot the estate of said (leeestse-d

Thereupon it IB Ordered, that Saturday, the twenty-fifth day of March n^xt, at ten o'deck in tho forenoon,te assigned for the hearing of said petition, and thatthe heirs at la»' of said decease*! and all oilier JHT>OH-interested in fc&id e&tato, are required to appear at asession of said Court, then to be holden «t the ProbateOffice, in the City of Ann Arbor, aud show cause, ifany there be, why the pmyer of the petitioner shouldnot be anu'd And it fefifft&er ordered that said

y , y pnot be granu'd: And it

tit i i

pordered , that sb g

petitioner giveiiotice to the persons interested in aidestate, of th« pendency of t-aid petition, and the hear-ing thereof, by causinu- a copy i f this Order to 'bepublished in the Michigan Argus, a newspaper printe-!and circulating in said County ot WufchfJenaw, threesuccessive weeks previous to said day oi' hearing;.

(A true copy.)998td

lilRAM J.' BEAKES,Judge of Probate.

Godfrey Miller,JacoblJolhemusJacobTremper,Thomas White,John Brokaw,Christian Kapp,Edward Boyden,Jsme-fi Treaduell,Danit'lO'Hara,JohnG. Cook,O. A. Marshall,L. Edmonds,George Cropsey,

Scio.

Northfield.

Webster.Ann Arbor

(1 41

Lodi.

Saline.Greun Oak, Liv. Co.

We are also Agentn for the

Ohio Reaper & Mower,

acknowledged tobe the very best in use.

"We are just in receipt of

100 Grain CradlesWliicli we will sell Clieap.

Also a large assortment c

G-rass Scytlies.And the largest and best selected stock of

BENT STTJJ^FFOR CAKRIAGESever before offered in this market

We also keep a large and full

Estate of Sbubal T. Moore.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, COINTY ot WISHTESIW, MBAt a session of the Probate Court for the County of

Wusht'Miaw, holdeu at the Probate Oifice in theCit'ynfAnn Arbor, on Saturday, the 25th day of February,iu the > ear one thousand eight hundred and fctxty five.

Present, HIRAM J. BEAKED, Judge of l'rob;.U'.In the matter of the Estate of ShubalT. Moort.de

ceavcil. Hi-nry Hall, Administrator said estate, comesiuto Court and represents that he is now prepared torender his final account as such Administrator.

Thereupon it is Ordered, that MoiuUty, the "27ih £of March next ? at ten o'clock intheforenoon, be assignedforexamining and a 1'.owing such account, and thatthe widow, and heirs at law of -said de-ceased, and ftll other person* interested instdd estate,are required to appear at a session of aaidf Court, theutobe holden nt tho Probate Office,"In the City of AnnArbor, and ahow cause, if any there be,why the saidaccount should not be allowed: And it in fur-ther ordered that said administiatorgive notice t<> the per-sons interested in said estate, of the pendency ofisaid ac-count, and the hearing thereof, by causing a copy of thisOrder to be published in the Michigan Argvs, a newspa-per printed and circulating in said County of Washtenawthree successive weeks previous to said tiny of hearing-

(A true copy.) BIKAM J. BEAKES,998td Judge of 1'iobate.

Estate of Isaac Lovejoy.

STATE OF MICHIGAN—County hf VYjwtH**** .At ft gessioa of Die Probate Court for Ue CODBQ

of W.-ishtenaw, holden at the 1'iobfite !fflo*in thtCrt?of Ann Arbor, sn Tuesday, the seventh <Uj a\ IKrch,in the year one thousand eight htindrefi Bnasixtj-fivti

Present, Hiram J. Ueakes. Judge ot I'roliatc 'Tn the loastor of the Estate of Isaac Lo«joT,di,

ceased.Oh i-ea^i^g »B(t filiag the petition, duly veritied,

Minerva A. LovojoV, praying that slip mayVtpyoiBtdadministratrix of the est;;v of said Oecea (d.

Thereupon it i« Ordered, That Tnendaj .tbMlhjhjof April next, at ten o'clock iu the foVtaooir b#i*signed for the heavuig of sjtjd jjc-tc^n, w,>. m".the heirs at law of ^ai i di-etfastd, and ai*other persons iuterefttttl in . airi estate, nre r*-quired to appear at a' *&*• ion of said C«utt, listDto be holden at the Probate Office, in the Cfty of hiiAi bor, and show caufic, if «ny tjjer* bf. wtjthe pray.es ®f the petitioner should a«t be $TinltA:And it is further ordered, ibat caid YttftiowrpHnoti^eto the persons iijiei e.-U-d in haid'tfllfiip.o! ihpendency of said petit!f,Ti.and the hearing tbeucMjcausing a copy of this oitlfr to bf published in tb*Michigan Argii*, a newspapi-r printed and cijcuUtitfin &afd County of WashteBtnv, tbret stt%ces!',Tf *tf«previous to said day of hearing.

(A trupcopy.) BIKAM J.BEAKES,999td Judge of i'robit*.

Estate of Geddes—Minors.* . w -STATE OF MICHIGAN. <"O[NTYOKWJ

At a session of the Prcbate Court for tlie CooutjcfWashtenaw, hold«n at the Probftte dffice. In ttrfitrof Ann Arbor, on ^alurdfcy, tht fourfh d»y ftMarcli, in the jear one tLoutand eight bundred »•!,ixtv-fire.

Present, I{IRA>I J. BRAKES, Judge of Vrcinie.In tlie mntter of the Estate of DaviJ X Ot<ii»,

Charles A. Geddt-s. and Henry A. tiitddes mmon.On reading acd filing the ptti tion, duljrtritei-of

Rebpcca Geddes, fiuard-an unto said minors.pt»jt»Sthat license may be granted to her lo aeiV certiiaw1*estate belonging to r-aid ratnoTs.

Tliereupon itis Ordered, thai T .esriav, tlw mmday of April ne\t, at ten o'clock in ihe fjHtaMfcbe assigned for the he«rin? o sai^ peuUon.auc that the' next of kin of mid minois, »nd. iBother persons interested in saM estate, are r*qww-'appear at K se^Ioii oi *aid Court, then to he 1-oUrti»wProbateOffice.il) the Citv of Ann Arbor, and show <»*if any there be, why the praver of the P ^ n ' ;should not be gi-Mited : And it is further ordered. tWsaid pe'itonergivenclketothepLTsonsiutere.-tHMD!!--estate, of the pendency of said petition, aud i"«£ing theretrf, By causing a copy cf tliis OMWJJpublished in the Michigan Argus, a newspaper printsand circulating in said County ofWarfrt«i»,tW»successive weeks previous to said i av of hearing.

(A true copy.) HTBAM J- BEAKES,

Minor*

BOOTS $c SHOES,to the fttoro of A. P. Mills ^T CO., on "Main Street, whprehe will be glad to wait ou his old customers and thepublic crn«nillv.

sGIVE IJIH A

Estate of Kiggs—Minors.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, COUNTY OK W\SUTKNAWI SS.—Ata seBsion of the Probate Court for the County of

Washtenaw, holden at the Probate Office in tho City ofAnn Arbor, on Saturday, the fourth d.vy of March,injthe year one thousand eight hundred and sixty-five.

Present, HURAM J. BKAKKS, Judge of ProbateIn the matter of the Estate of William H. Rigga and

Matilda J. Kiggs, minors.On reading ani filing the petition, duly verified, of

Mary Riggs, Guardian unto said minors, praying thatBhe may i>e licensed to sell certain real estate belongingto said minors.

Thereupon it is Ordeied, That Tuesday, the fourth dayof April nest, at ten o'clock iu the forenoon, be as-signed for the hearing of eaid petition, and that thenext of kin of said minors, and all other persons inter-ested in said estate, are required to appear at a set si onof haid Court, then to be holden at the Probate Office,in the City of Ann Arbor, and show cause, if any therebo, why the prayer cf the petitioner should not begranted : Aud it is further ordered, that said petitionergive notice to the persons interested in said estate, ofthe pendency of said petition, and the hearing thereof,by causing a copy of this Order to be published iu theMichigan Argw.t%a newspaper printed and circulatingin saidCounty of Waslitenaw, three successive weeks,previous to said day of hearing.

[Atruecopy.] ' I1IRAM J. BEAKES,&98£d Judge of Probate .

NAILS, GLASS,PUTTY, PAINT.and LINSEED OIL.A conipleteassortmentof

STOVES, TINWAKE,

ANDEAVETROUGHSalwaysonhandand put up ^ theshortestnotioe.

R1SP0N & HENDERSON.Ann Arbor, June29th,18fl2. 869tf

ifoWARD ASSOCIATION,PHILADELPHIA, PA.

Diseases of the IVcrvous, Semlnnl ,1 ' r lnarya n d Sexual Systems—new and reliable treat-

ihe HOWARD ASSOCIATION—Sent by mail in Healed Idler ejivelopps, free ol'charjre-Addrsaa Dr. J- rtKII.l.IX liari;i{T0\\ Howard jaaa*c^«tioft,Ko.a South KiathSlrMt, rhiladeLphia. £*nn-sjlvanin, ly'.'^a

Estate of Michael Walz.

STATK OF MICHIGAN', COUNTY OY WASUTKNAW,3S.At a session of the Probate Court for the County of

Washtenaw, holdt n at the Probate Office in the City ofAnn Arbor, on Tuesday, the twenty-eighth day of Feb-ruary, in the year one thousand eight hundred andsixty-fiTe.

Present, HIRAM J. BRAKES, Jndge of Probate.In the matter of the Estate of Michael Walz,de-

ceased.On reading and filing the petition, duly verified, of

Aaron L. Feldkarnp, Administrator of the said estate,playing that he may be licensed to sell certain leal es-tate, whereof thesjiid deceased died, seized.

Thereupon it is Ordered, That Monday, the seven-teenth day of April next, at ten o'clock in the forenoon,be assigned for the hearing of said petition, and thatthe widow and heirs at law of said deceased, Mid allother persons interested in said estate, are required toappear at R session of said Court, then to be holden atthe Prnb.tt© Office, in the City of Ann Arbor, and showcause, if any there be, why thepr&yer of tht petitionershould not be granted: And it is further ordered,that said petitioner give notice to the persons interes-ted in said estate, of the pendency of said petition, andthe hearing thereof, by causing a copy of this Orderto be published ic the Michigan Argust :i newspaperprinted aud circulating In s«id Counly of Wafcbtepan ,four successive weeks, prf. IOUR tn paid day of hearing.

[A truftfiryvj 11IRAM J. BEAKES,M$td Judg* ot rrvfcal*.

Estate of Krllinger-

STATE Qf MICHIGAN. County of TFashtfn**.''--Ata se?8ionof the l*robate Court fortheComii;t|

Washtenaw. hoiden at the Probate Office in tttflffjAnn Arbor, on Wednesday, the eigbtb day mw»in they«ar one thousand eight hundred attfliBXty*"*

Present, Hiram J. Beakes, Judge of Prolate- ,Tn the matter Of the Estate of John I.udwij ?••

linger, Matilda KilHnger, William Henry 'Elizab©fn Killinger, minors.

On reading and filing the petition, dulyCharles Miller, Guardian, playing that hecensed to sell certain real estate belonging t0"13

minor*. ,Thereupon it is Ordered, that Kondar, thf <&v

day of April next, at ten o'clock in the frffM*be assigned for the hearing of said pttiw>and that the next of kin of said minor-', »3

al'other persons interested in saidestAte,anTeqii^-jappear at a senBion of said Court, then to bebol«>the Probate Office, in tbe City of Ann Al»jJand -show cause, if any theie ^ J_the prayer of the petitioner should not be frrin»d:*And it is further ordered, that said pelitwnnJi •notice to the persons interested in ""^, . Jof the pendency of aaid petition and

of this Ori« »

Mortgage Sale. „,,piKFAULT haviDgbeen made in the con*" y^V certain mortgage, executed by Chr»ti»°T||W.and Barbara Breisch bis wif*. of AnnArOor^ ^

1861, in the office cf the Register of Peedil"' '"'Couutyof Waahtenaw, in the StatK of Mlf"fj[i',Liber 28of llortirages, on pagr 558 upon " ' ' I J j fgage there is claimed tobe due, at the date « " . ftice, the sum of ninety-two dollars, anil »° ' ^proceeding at law or in equity having been ®~' mto recover the same or any part thereof, ftfld i ^of sale in aaid Mortgage contained having ^ . ijjitcome absolute. NOTICE is therefore heieby gi«»' gon Saturday, the thirteenth day of May «>';*' tll!ithe clcok in the forenoon, I shall sellat P»»"f MIto the highest bidder, at the Soutli »OOT cf'J ' u,.House in the City of Ann Arbor, (being •• \ ' . , t

w ith the costs and expenses allowed by law; »sl ^ises being situated in said County o! WaiW™ Jj Jdescribed in paid mnrtgHge as follows, to wl''..,di-lou No. twelve sn.l thirteen in Wia. S. Saw<f ,„»•tion to the City of Ann Arbor, according to'»ded plat thereof.

Dated, Februnry 15, 1865. ,W1UJAM S. SAUNDEli3,»

A. FKLon, Attorney for Mortgagee.

Commissioners'Notice. £O T A T E OF MICHIGAN, Cor.vTT OF w-*""T',f.VrPi

O The undersiirned having Wen appnin'e" "•' ..^t.bate Court for said County, Commissioners wexamins, and adjust all claims and 'persons againit the estate of Jonathanof the Township of Bridgewatrr, In siceased, hereby give notice that six morare allowed,by order of said I'robate.Cojuitors to present th«Mr claims against thedeceased, and that tliey will meet at tlof said deceased in the Towushijt <ilsaid Countj of Waehtenaw, on Patiday ot May, and Saturday, the fifth u V ^ H p inext, at one o'clock in the afternctn "days, to receiye, examine, and adjust ^J^ L1

Dated,tebruarj 6th,lB66. ..,.,• PAVITIW. PAI.MKn.t,..

S9\UrtvmESWIK t-MlIU.