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PUBLISH! pKvr.itv 1'KIMT MOKSIM;, In the Third Storyatl&eBtiafe Block, corner of Main and Huron EtrWta
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For mile on mile lhe line of warExtended; and a .-teady roar,As of some distant stormy sea,On the south-wind came up to me.And high in air, and over all,Grew, like a fog that murky pall,Beneath whose glonm of dusty smokeThe cannon flamed, the bombshell broke,And the sharp rattling volley rang.And shrupnell roared, and bullets sang,And fierce eyed men, with panting breath,Toiled onward at the work of death.I could not see, hut Knew too well.That underneath that cloud of hell,Whiob still grew more by great iegrees,Man strove with man in mods like these.
But when I lie sun had passed his standAt noon, behold ! on every handTin- dark brown Tapor backward bore,Anu fainter came the dreadlul roarFrom the huge sea of striving men.Thus spoke my rising spirit then:"Take comfort from that dying sound.Faint heart. ',he foe is giving ground! 'And one. who taxed his horse 8 powers,Flung at me "H ! the day is ours!"And scoured along. So swift Ins paceI took no memory of his face.Tl.eu turned I once again to Heaven;All th.rigs appeared so just and even;So clearry from the highest CauseTraced I the downward workii.g laws—Those moral springs, made evidentIn ihe grand, tviaoapb crowned event-So half I ehouteS and half sang,Like Jeptha's daughter to the clangOf my spread, cymhal-striking palms.Some fragments of thanksgiving psalms,
Meanwhile a solemn stillness fellUpon the land. O'er hill and dellFailed every sound. My heart stood still,Waiting befoiesome coming ill.The silence v/a< more sad and dread,Under that canopy of leadThan the wild tumult of the warThat raged a little while before.All Nature in her work of deathPaused for one last, despairing breath ;Anc cowering to ihe earth, 1 drewFrom her strong breast my strength anew.
When I arose, I wondering u fAnother dusly vapor draw,From the far right, its sluggish wayToward^ the main cloud, t'.iat. Irowning layAgainst the wTesiward sloping sun;And all the war was rebegun,Lie this freBh marvel of :. y senseCaught from my mind significance/ n d then—why ask meV Uh! my God!Would I hud lain beneath the sod,A patient clod, lor many a dayAnd fr6m my bones and mouldering clayThe rank field gra68 and flowers had «j tung.Ere the base sight, that, struck and stungMy very soul, confronted me,Shamed at my own humanity.0 happy dead who early fell,Ye ha«e no wretched t le to tellOf causeless fear and coward flight,01 victory snatched beneath your sight,Of martial strength and honor lost,Of mere life bought at any cost, ''Of the deep lii.gering mark of shame,Forever scorched on brow and name,That no new deeds, however bright,^hall banish from men's loathful sight!Ye perished in your conscious pride,Ere this vile scandal opened wideA wound that cannot close or heal;Te perished steel to leveled steel.Stern votaries of the God ot war,Filled with his godhead to the core !Ye died to live ; these lived to dieBeneath the scorn of every eye !How eloquent your voices soundFrom the low chambers underground !How clear each separate title burnsFrom your high set and laureled uras !While these, who walk about the earth,Are blushing at their very birth;And though they tails, and go and come,Their moving lips are wo.se than dumbYe sleep beneath the valley's dew,And all the nation uio'.'.rns for you;So sleep, till God shall wake the lands !For angels, armed with fiery brands,Await to take you by the hand.
The right hand vapor broader grew;It rose, and joined itself untoThe mam aloud with a sudden dash.Loud and more near the cannon s crashCarnc towards me, and I heard a soundAs if all hell had broken bound—A cry of agony and ftarStill the dark vapor rolled more near,Till at my very feet it tossedThe vanward Iragmeuts of our host.Can man, Thy imago sink so low,Thou who hast bunt Thy tinted bowAcross the storm and raging main ;Whose laws both loosen and restrainThe powers of earth , without, whose willNo sparrow's little .ife is sJl l?Was fear of hell, or want of faith,Or the brute's common dread of deathThe passion that began a chaseWhose goal r u rum and disgrace?What icngue the fearful sight may tell ?
What horrid nightmare ever fellUpon the restless sleep of crimeV hut history of another time—What dismal vision, darkly seenBy the stern featured Florentine,Can give a hint to dimly drawThe lik.-ness Df the scene I saw?I saw. yet saw not. In that sea.That chaos of humanity,No more the eye could catch and keepA sing.e poirt, than on the deepThe eye may nark a "ingle waveWhere hurrying myriads leap and rave.M'-n of all arms and all costumes,Bare headed, ilecktd with broken plumes;Soldiers and offioeri and thoseWho wore but civil suited clothes;On foot or mounted—some bestrodeSteeds severed from their harnessed load;Wild mobs of white topped wagons, carsOf wounded, red with bleeding scars;The whole grim panoply of warSurged on me with a deafening roar.All shades of fear disfiguring man.Glared through their faces' brazen tan,Hot one a moment paustd, or stoodTo see what enemy pursuedWith shrieks of fear and yellsof pain,W'ith every mu6cle on the strain,Onwarrl the struggling masses bore.Oh! had thefoemen lain before,They'd trampled them to duet and gore,And swept their lines and batteriesAs autumn sweeps the windy trees!Her* ono cast forth his wounded friend,Acd with Lie sword ornioeket end
Urged on the horses; there one trodUpon the likeness of his QodAs if 'twere dust; a coward hereGrew valiant with Ins very fear,And struck his Weaker comrade prone.And struggled to the front alone.All had oi.e purpose, one sole aim,That mocked the deoency of shame,To fly. by any means to fly;They cared not how, tliey asked not why.1 found a voice. My burning bloodFlamed up Upon a mound I stood ;1 could no more restrain my voicThan could ihe prophet of God's choice." Back, animated dirt!'' I cried." Back, on your wretched lives, and hideYour shame beneath your native cla^ 1Or, if the foe affright>- you, slayYour own base selves; and, dying, leareYour children's tearful cheeks to grieve,Not qnail and blush, when you shall come,Alive, t.-their degraded home !Your wives will look askance with scorn;Your boys, and infants yet unOorn,Will curse you to God's holy face IHeaven holds no pardon in its graceForeowards. Oh! -uch as yeThe guardians of our liberty?B:iek, if one trace of manhood stillllav nerve your arm and braceyour will 1You slain your country in the eyesOf Europe! and her empirics!The despots laugh, the peoples groan,Mini's cause is lo>t and oveithrown 1I cur e you, by the sacred bloodThat freely poured its purple floodDown Bunker s heights, on Monmouth's plain,From Georgia to the rocks of Maine !I curse you by the patriot bandWhose bones are cruu.bling in the land !By those who saved what those had wonIn the high name of Washington !"Then I remember little more,As the tide's rising waves that pourOver some low and rounded rockThe coming mass, with one great shock,Flowed o er the shelter of my mound.And ruiaed me helpless from the gr und.As the huge shouldering billows bear,Half in the sea and half in air,A swimmer on their foaming crest,So the foul throng beneath me pressed,Swept me along with curse and blow,And bore me where, I ne'er shall know.When I awoke, a steadjr rainMade rivulets across the plain;And it was ark—oh! very a!ark.I was so stunned as scarce to marki h e ghostly figures of the irtres.Or hear the sobbing of t he biee/.eThat flung , he wet leaves to und fro.Upon me lay a dismal woe,A boundless supj [human griefThat drew no promise of reliefFrom any hope 'I rren 1 arose,As one who struggles up from blowsBy unseen hands; und. as 1 stood,Alone I th tight, that God was good,To hide, in elonds and driving rain,Our low world Iroin the angel trainWhose souls filled heroes whea the earthWas worthy of their noble birth.By that dml instinct of the mindWhich leads aright the helplePS blind,I struggled onward till the dawnAcross the eastern clouds had drawnA narrow line of watery gray ;And full before my vision lay'1 he great dome's gaunt and naked bonosBeneath whose crown the nation thronesH r queenly person. On I stole,With hanging head and abject soul,Across the high embattled ridge,And o'er the arohoa of the bridgeSo freshly pricked my sharp disgrace,I feared to mutt the iiunian faceSkulking, as any woman mightWho'd lost her virtue in thu night,And sees the dreadful glare of dayPrepare to light her homeward way,Alone, heart-broken, shamed, undone,I staggered iuto Washington !
Since then long sluggish days have passed.And on thu wings of every blastHave come the distant nations' sneersTo tingle in our blushing ears.In woe and aghejs as was meet,We wore the penitential sheet.But now 1 breathe a purer air,And from the depths of my despairAwaken to a cheering mom.Just breaking through the night forlornA morn of hopeful victory.Awake, my countrymen, with me IRedeem the honor which you lost,With any blood, nt any cost!I ask not how the war began,Nor how the quarrel branched and ranTo this dread height. The wrong or rightS'ands clear before God's faultless si»ht,I only feel the shameful blow,1 only see the scornful foe,And vengeance burns in every veinTo die, or wipe away the stain.The war wise hero of lhe West,Wearing his glories an a crestOf trophies gathered in your eight,s arming for the coming fight,
Full well his wisdum apprehendsThe duty and its mighty ends;The great occasion ot the hour,That never lay in human powerSince over Yorktowns tented plainThe red cross fell, nor rose againMy humble pledge of faith 1 lay,Dear comrade of mv school boy day,Before thee, in the nation's view;And if thy prophet prove untrue,And from our country's grasp be thrownThe sceptre mid the starry jrown,And thouand all thy marshaled hostBe bafll-'d and in ruin lost;Oh! let me not outlive the blowThat seals my country s overthrow !And lest this woful end come true,Men of the Nort h , I turn to j'ouDisplay your vaunted flag once more,Southward your eager columns pour!Sound trump and fife and rallying drum;From every hill and valley c me.Old men. yield ap your treasured gold;Can libery be priced and sold?Fair matrons, maids, and tender brides,Gird weapon* to your lover's sidej;And, tho your hearts bruak at the deed,Give them your blessing and God speed;Then point them to the field of fame,With words like those of Sparta's dame.And when the ranks are full and strong,And ihe whole army moves along,A vast result of care and skill,Obedient to !he mas er's will;And your young hero draws the sword,And gives the last commanding word
That hurls your strength upon the foeOh I let them need no second blow.Strike, as your fathers struck of old,Through -ummer's heat and winter's cold;Through pain, disaster, and defeat;Through matches tracked with bloody feet;Through every sir-that could befallThe holy cause that bound them all 1Strike as they struck for liberty IStrike as they struck lo make you free!Strike for the crown of victory.
G H BOKEE.
THE FIIIST SAW MILL.—The old prac-tice iu making boards was to splitup the logs with wedges; and iu-convenient us the practice was it waa uoeasy matter to persuade tho world thatthe thing could be done iu any betterway. iSuw-imlls were lirst used iu .Eu-rope iu the fifteenth century; but solately aa 155fc, an English cmbiissador,having seen a saw-mill in France, thoughtit a novelty which deserved a particulardescription. It is amusing to see howaversion to labor-saving machinery hasalways agitated England. The firstsaw-mill was established by a Dutchman,in lGUii, but the public outcry againct thenew-fangled machine was so violent thatthe proptietur as forced to decamp withmore expedition than ever did Dutchmanbefore. The evil was thus kept out ofEngland for several years, or rather gen-erations ; but in 1798, an unlucky lim-ber merchant, hoping that after so long atime, the public would be less watchfulof its interests, made a rash attempt toconstruct another mill, The guardiansof the public welfare, however, were onthe alert, and a conscientious mob atonce collected and pulled tho mill topieces.
_ Noble spirits rejoice in the con-sciousness of u motive—base ones dêlight only iu a pretext.
Letter of Hon. Robert J. Walker to theUnion Meeting at New York
Hoboken, N. J. Sept. 19, 1861.GENTLEMEN—I have received your in-
vitation to address tomorrow the peopleof the city of New York in support ofthe Union State nominations. I regretthat it will not be in my power to com-ply with your request, but cheerfullycommunicate my views on this question.Long befora tho rebel assault on FortSumpter, I expressed my opiuions in fa-vor of its reinforcement and the mainten-ance of the government aud the Union.When that fort was captured by tho rebels, on the call of the people of Ne\yYork, of all parties, I addressed thogreat meeting at Union Square againstthis wicked rebellion, declaring thai anypeace or compromise was impossiblewhile the rebels were in arms against thegovernment. Until the struggle iuwhich we are now engaged for the exist-euce of the government is terminated allparty questions must disappear. Whenwe shall have settled this question, whenour flag shall float again over everyState, from ocean to ocean, and from thelakes to the Gulf, we may then considersubordinate party issues. Until then,no patriot shall know any party but thatof his country. Most fully, then, do Iapprove the proceedings of the greatUnion convention at Syracuse by whicha Union ticket, composed of patrioticmen of all parties, was nominated.
If we would maintain the governmentaud perpetuate the Union, tiie people ofthe loyal Stales must be united. If weexhibited to our foes at home aud abroadat London and Richmond, the noblespectacle of a whole people surrendering all past divisions, aud uniting as ooeman and one party iu defense of theUnion, before the close of this year wewould surely crush this rebellion. \\ hoasks now whether Scott or McClellan areWhigs, Democrats or Republicans?—Who goes into the ranks of the noble ar-my now defending the Union, and inquiresto what party those patriotic soldiersliave heretofore belonged ? The President is the " Commander m Chief of theArmy and N.ivy," aud who will askwhether he is a republican or ademocr.itof aiding tho government in perpetuating:he Union.
And here let me say that the Union isto bo maintained, not only by cordialsupport of the government and of ourarmies in the field, but by crushing•reason wherever it appears among us.—Whether we look to ancient or moderntimes, to monarchies or republics, in for-eign or iu civil war, especially the latter,we will find that the public satety demandshat all who give " aid aud comfort " to
tho enemy, whether through the press orotherwise, should be deprived of theirrower for evil. As well might be de-manded, in the midst of a battle, thatcivil process should arrest the movementof our troops, as that spies and traitorsduring the war, or their auxiliaries,should be exempt from the stern neces-sity of martial law. Let those who love-he safeguards of the constitution firsteeure the government from overthrow,
and then military law will expire, andpersons and property be secured from
danger. We can only accomplish this bymost vigorous prosecution of the
war, aud by giving to the administra-tion for that purpose a full, cordial, andunfaltering support. I thauk God thatat all times, and under all circumstances,whether in public or private life, whetherresiding North or South, I have alwaysearnestly opposed nullification and .sion, aud supported the cause of theUnion. In a public address over mysiguature, published in the WashingtonCity Daily Globe of the 3d of February,1844, will be found this sentence. " Ihave ever regarded the dissolution ofthis Union as a calamity equal to a secondfall of mankind—not, it is true, introdu-cing like the first, sin and death into theworld, but greatly augmenting all theirdireful influences." And is this not true?Would not the fall of this Union be thelast experiment of republican govern-ment ? If the mere attempt to dissolvethis Union has produced such diseaseshere, and such convulsions aud dreadforebodings throughout the civilizedworld, how infinitely worse would bo thoterrible reality ! The fate of our couutry and of the liberties of the world isstaked upon the perpetuity or dissolutionof the American Union, and if we shouldnow permit its overthrow, we would com-mit the most stupendous crime ever re-corded in tho annals of the world Ifour fatten fought through seven long jyears of gloom, and poverty, and trial, to ,establish this Union, amid every sacrificeof blood and treasure, with their homesand principal cities often occupied byhostile arms, shall we, their children, re-fuse to encounter equal or even greatersacrifices to maintain unbroken this groatand glorious Union ? But thanks to a jgracious Providence, this is not required, jThe war has not readied a singlo north- !ern State or city, and by prompt actionwe can suppress the rebellion within thenext few months We can replace theAmerican flag over every acre of Ameri-can soil, open every port to our ommeroe,and then only will the prosperity of New 'York and of our whole Union be re-os- 'tablished All who would now separarethe country into distinct parties, untilthe empire of the Union, undivided andindivisible, is restored, are the enemies oftheir country and oi mankind.
With my most cordial wishes for the Jsuccess of the great Union war tieket ofNew York, I am yours, very respect-fully.
R. J.WALKER.To Messrs. Bradford, Dug-inneand Tttllmadgo
Republican State Committee on the War_Albany Sept. 24.
The Republican State Central Com-mittee met here to-day. Tho followingresolutions were unanimously adopted :
Resolved, That in the opinion of thisConvention at least 500,000 men shouldbo enrolled for the war at the earliestpossible day, and that this Stato shouldfurnish at least 100.000 of that number.
Resolved, That the Executive Commit-tee be instructed to adopt tho the mostvigorous measures by public meetings,through the press, aud otherwise, to arousethe people to the importance of support-ing the (jovcrinnent with men and moneyiu the present emergency.
Resolved, That we earnestly recom-mend to tho General Government thopropriety of giving to each volunteerhereafter enlisted, either 20 dollars ofthe bounty promised to tho soldiers atthe termination of tho war, or onemouth's pay in advanco at the time ofhis enlisting.
Wellington Facing A Mob-One morning in February I noticed
threatening crowds near tho Pull Mullgate, not far from tho statue of Achilles.This statue was cast from cannontaken in tho Iron Duke's various but-tles, and was ded.cated "To Arthur,Duke i>t Wellington, ny the Womenof England." I determined to watchthe Duke, and see what was f?oing tobo done. Punctual to tho in niont, hodescended the steps < f Apsley Househis res-idonce. Iiis appearance \v:;simposing. He waa at the head of theCabinet, Premier ol England, and bewas par excellence the first man inEngland.
It was a dtiatly morning. He worea blue frock emit, buttoned rp to theoii:!i, u military stock, and brown pan-talooDe. Ilis falcon oyo surveyed theexcited groups about tho Park gatewith a sort of pleasant contempt. Themob were either awed by bis appear-ance and prestige, or they had not yetscitwed their courage to the insultingpoint. The Duke passed on horse-back, attended by his faithful valet.Nobody molested bim till bo reachedhis office. There tho mob bis.-ed him;but when be turned around and facer]them, the hissing ceased. He thenquietly entered hi.s office. As I knewthe hour ho would leave DowningStreet to return to tho Park, I Wasthere in uue season. The neighbor-hood of tho Horse Guards probablydeterred a good many of the excitedlunatics from gathering about the offli e,but numbers were gathered. TheDuke, who \V!is punctuality itself, cameout at tho appointed moment, :ma has, as yet, begun to coltiy \only a few bunches, and will utterlyfail to ripen its crop. Next, to Hart-ford Prolific and To Kalon it isbearing tho heaviest crop of anyvariety on the writer's grounds. Itlost more than half its wood.
Grapes as well as all othar fruits, arenearly or quita two weeks later thanusual at this season.
T. T. LYON.-riymouth, Sept. 15th, 1801.
Hon Oeo- M. Dallas on the War.At the celebration of the adoption of
the Federal Constitution in Philadelphia,on Tuesday lust, the Hon. Goorge M.Dallas, the orator of the day, said ;
1. In the firat place, then, fellow-citi-zens, frankly bo it said, there cannot befound iu the sacrud instrument on whichmy comments have been made one wordgiving warrant by any process for its ownextinction. It was not born to die, Nofunctionary, no Stato, no Congress nocombination of communities or individu-als, is authorized to mutilate the Union,or kill the Constitution. That ii a crimewhich, like parricide in Solon's day, istreated as inconceivable. We hear ofconventions, consultations, conferences,and compromises: they are tho vagueand fiutteritio; devices of anxious philan-throphy; but, unless tho fifth article hadbeen strictly pursued, which we all knownow to be impossible, these expedientsare utterly inapplicable and fruitless.—Fdr, remember, this provision—not, infact, designed to destroy, but to strength-en—enunciates the necessity, before theslightest alteration can be attempted,that, first, two thirds of both houses ofCongress shall unite in proposing it; or,second, that the Legislatures of two-thirds of the several States shall applyfor a general convention ; and, third, thatwhatever change may bo contemplated,whether by two thirds of both Congres-sional chambers, or by two-thirds of thoState Legislatures, must wholly fail, unlessit be subsequently ratified by the Legisla-tures or convention* of three-fourths of theStates. The mere recital shows tho fu-tility, if not impracticability, into whichthe tempestuous coarse of events haveparalyzed thw uriiole. No I fellow-oitizens, you have not t!is power to abandonyour constitution.
•2. But, if you had that power, whatthen? Need I say that, without beingrecreant to all your antecedents, its exer-cise is precluded by the boasted attitudeand armor of those who derated it ?—The towering front of armed and contu-melious rebellion ii not the presence inwhich conccs.iion is possible. Give upthe constitution, rupture the Union, burntho archives of your glorious history,and open wide the flood gates of disas-ter upon tho country, if such can boyour choice, but never do it in subser-vient meekness to envenomed opprobium.or while listeninc; to the row of our enemy's cannon. The stigma of an act sogroveling, dastardly aud degenerate asthat—so utterly un-American—wouldcover us for ages as with a poisoned pall !Fellow-citizeus: There are formidablebatteries frowning at Manass.is; behindthem gleam undiscrimiuating hatred andscorn, sharpening every sword and speed-ing every bullet; we would cviaie to bemen if we crouched to either.
3. In this war, then, there is really noalternative for loyal constitutionalists.In the explicit language of the unani-mously adopted resolution of Mr. Crittcuden, it was forced upon the govern-ment of tho United States. Retrospec-tive narrative, therefore, would be aliketedious and useless. It is on our hands.VVe see it, hear it, feel it. Our fathers,brothers, and sons are fulling in heca-tombs, sacrificed to its fury. Everybreeze comes laden with its changing in-cidents, its alarms, its hopes, its gloom,its Launts, its cheers, its covert slayiug,and its open struggles. The gates ofJanus are expanded wide. No roomnow left for diplomacy of any sort; nouefor soothing words of remonstrance.—Fh/ht we must; fight a Voutrance thosewheu wo have heretofore fostered andtaught how to fight, drive them fromtheir infatuated and parricidal purpose ofdestroying their own country; andpausfl only when that country, its Unionand Constitution, are inaccessible to out-rage.
A New Triumph in Photography.Photography has achieved a new
triumph in England. t is veil knownthat drawing on wood for engravingrequires peculiar skill and tact, whichcan only be acquired alter long prac-tice, tfinco wood engraving has be-come tho favorite mode of book illustration, drawings from ot.r emineni,artisls uro much in request. But ithappens that tow painters can Huoceea-folly place their design* ai the wood.Consequently another, and,, in most!oa ies, an inferior artist, hue to bo em- '•ployed to tmuifer the original drawingto the greut lo«a of the vigor and deli-cacy of touch peculiar to the painter—as in all transitions there must betome sacrifice ;;f the truthfulness oi'the original. But hare photographykindly stops in to our assistance. Byan ingenious process, perfected by Mr.Tboraaa Bolton, the wood-engraver,the artist's drawing tpay be transferredto the wood b»aok with micraacoj ic ac- jsuracy and fidelity. This result haslong been a desideratum, a r ! frequent-ly Attempted, but is only now carried,to successful issue. It required acombination of the practical knowledgeof tho wood-engraver with the skill oftho photographer; arid, these happily |have met in the person of Mr. Bolton, jto whom artists und publishers mustfeel under great obligation, inasmuch :as the ony can now have bis most com- Iplex de.-.igi)8 transferred to the woodas faithfully as he could draw themhimself; while the advantage to thepublisher consists in his being able nowto obtain drawings on wood at a com- jptiratively triflmg cost, thus renderingmany works of art available whichhitherto have, from their complexity,been debarred from use.—London Ar-tisan.
Happiness is promised not to 'i the great but to the good.
ADDRESS OF HON. G- V. N. LOTHfitfP.Delivered at the State Fair, Detroit, on
Thursday, Sept. 2Glh, 1861.
The Hon. II. G-. Waits, Presidentof the Society, having introduced Mr. L.as the substitute of the Hon. ANDREWJOHNSON, he said :Fdrniiirs ;into autuallillers of the soil indi1'cat* the meanness and degradation cfhis position;1 it was peasant,-serf, slave,and tho very deed that transferred theland transferred the' laborer on it.That method has ceased, and to-'day inevery great country of Europe agricul-ture is fretted at one of' the greatinterests ot tho nation. It has itsdepartments mid biir'eaus, as has w'irand police. Why,'luok and see h*>.wall tho industrial pursuits.grww out ot/and ppting from, ag^icul'ur ;; lookabroad, tho manufacturers' are butworkers iu litu products of the soil, anilthey are interwoven throughout thesocial system; they are in everything;;commerce ;isists hmgi.lv in trun*pnrtihK thorn from oneSrate or countryto another. It was a s'.riking remarkm ide at an agricultural festiv.il, byDaniel Webster, that the destructionof ihe tu.ri.ip crop in England mightproduce a revolution. Ik; was kistitiedin saying this, for .so important a plaotJdoes this crop hold that its failure con-"vnlsed* the most s. 1 .! g .vernment ofBuropqto its centre. Just look onominut- at what the results of tho entirefailure of one si-nglo plant might pAi-(iuce; let universal blight fall on thowheat plant, and what significance hasu? It has the significauco of an over-whelming famine. ,
Agriculture has also risen not 6iSyin social position but in its intrinsiccharacter. Formerly it was almostpurely manual. Now, had it remainedthere if must have become relativelyretrogade. But it has advanced byuniting intellectual activity to manualindustry It! you add a bushel of grainby an hour or a days' addtaknau} wo-Hfcyou increase the BUIII total of product*',and, this is all. The method-of modernagriculture is to make the farm produo-omore without the additional labor.
We now aim to alleviate the burdenof toil. We aim to work more withthe brain and less with the hand,"-.Ilenco come the improved implemeRtsof husbandry. So he who improvestho quality of a domestic ;v:'unal or ofa grain worker in the true spirit of,scientific agriculture, the result is im-proved with a diminished cost. Buthe who only adds to tho number of hiaherd or to, hia bushels of grain by a-r>increase of toil has really done nothing— it is the old way. But he who. givesyou an improved breed of cattle, whofurnishes more and better beef at lesscoat; who gives you a horse withgreater speed and endutance; or agrain of superior product or of greaterwoight in the measured basher, hasmoved in the right direction. Suchhas been the result in our owr» State,Look at it. There are men bore whoaro older than any real, agriculture inthe Stato of Michigan. But a shortperiod ago the State was a wildernessbut now it is covered with peacefulhomos. The farmer has brought t isabout because his brain b/is workedwith h'\3 hand. Look bicli, only sixyean ago, and compare cattle andhorses then brought with those whichStand hero today. The farmers of thoState may be .veil proud of thuir pro-gress.
You have wisely established theseannual meetings to footer and oicour-age this progress. These festivals nrjyour great exchange of ideas and opin-ions; and you have como her© tbi*year as ia your wont.
But there iaone thing that has made-this year's gathering different from anyother. To-day you sea tho spectacle.of your churches open, and your fel-.lo v-citizens meeting tointercede for themercy of Almighty God on our land.A largo area of our oonutryis shaken^by the tread of armed men. I should)be untrue to myself, untrue to you andto the great man who should have-stood in my place, if I did not saysomething on a, topic which now over-rules all others.
Something like eighty years ago, our-fathers, your ancestor.-; and mine—-who had been tried by one of the-fiercest struggles that men ever went,'through and had tested their patriotism,by their blood, founded with grwvt-euro a government. Tho govern.Tiwt'they !
V e have lived under, is a government w i l 1 a t lust huH on it. a force whichtl,i.t,-in il'e history t f tW\UnM, is mi- ahull utterly wnitei« down. rApphiuse.]» with every part of I " ' " ^cngniso seees-sion. l o tienttbd>oj'Id, cur politic 1 instiiiitiontishcj wit*« a n Miutui enemy is to accept hidint-ir liclit ul! over. So intimately snd P*»sil«;n- ^ ! l l i lu ' ; : r1.DEAR BitoTiiKii : —
As you know we left Detroit on Mon-
Curreapondonou of tin- Philadelphia P reu .
The Great Forward. Movement\Vns\iiiLjlon, Sept '2i5.
Without ntlempting to disvbtee then:ovi! i.' n's oi the army and tho Maw,1 fuel live to speak of the operationsy M ,ree to speak of the tl.v holoeuust of the politicians. \ \ e
This wâ bur condition one year ago.To day eleven States are urging n parri
mve none until we prove to thevyorldthat there is bravery in the heitrta
v.«». warasainsttiiogoFermueTit! Why < ! l l l l t Northern pc pie 1 have
i s t h V We may well ask why] for | third-reftonn why ihe war should go for-wieh a spectacle I think Uie world never W!»id: If y. u had pjjnce to day youpbefore sawthe ?uuth?and I respect revolulion.
l h l i
r y j y yWhat is this movement of could not tewp it, for it would makeIs it a revolution? Vou ( v v " r«pt»blic« nrorth of the Gulf oi
You and I i t « » q . N.MI twrt rivtU republics cand*Trs tRtjgLt that revolution is a sacred n"1 e s : s ' vv l l ! l
right But revolution is only justifiable Dixon1* line.
boundary at Mason &Von could not have
Potomac and thewhen government fails to ansvve'r the ends your capital on me rotoinuith it as an actual fact
This qves'icn at opce arises. Whythis attempted secesfion?
I^ut'that question I neither proposeto put or answer here to-dav. This isr.ot th • tima I T it. I have no doubt but
military necessity. .She must lio apart of us or we n part of her Therep pis no middle gwiund. And we musthold Virginia, even if we have t • driveeve y :.!!i.I'pi'av fro:n her border andrazo every house on her soil. Just soof Missouri. She commands the. o'H-let of the Ohio, and shu hold-* the path-way toall the territory -vest of her ownlimits. We must hold her or abandonour whole Western Empire.
Airaln, such a rival republic wouldhold us entirely at their mercy in themost important attributes of nationality.They could absolutely con rol our commerce and revenue policy—we -shouldbe ci'inptlled to regulate our policy bytheirs, or have our trade a::d iudusiv,both [oFeigu and domestic, prostrated.Such is the inexorable necessity! And
Y bI r e | > e a t l h a tf
ymust, become a
part of us or we a part of b»r.Our duty then is plain We must
stand unflinchingly by the government.Every interest must lead to this end.We. must not ask uh>, or of whatpariy arc our rulers — we must only askwhere th y are. It they ur« at thehead of tho column, we must let themfuel tlie energy of a whole people p;;l-.s.itinir liehind tnem Wo must givethem, if necessary, tbe lasi dime andthe last man. A n d if that will not do,we must tako the nursling in the cradleand coflxecriito it to the pr.jsecu'ion iUiia war lor cttnatjtulio'niil liberty.fAl.plaus,..]
j iu t v\hilo wo thufl patriotically sup-port m:r leaders we must ho.'ii them l° "'? '•* a s t n ' - " ' ( l f w i ; i l ! and rain raged in check; and it is to I,. hoped that b«.
i o p p . i with considerable force, the vessel rolled t o r o t l l e »itm« ! '1 ' I1IH1 ^ e m o n l v.,,I h.-.ve
• t l rB- , , , , , ,, musiered an arniv sulhcient to thrash• • and tumbled, amUhook a fellow up some. , h o t n i u m i n Vhe neighborhood ol
Early in the-morning we were called up Springfield, and then, it he choose, lofor rations, marched around a table, took attempt his expedition fur the descenta canteen ill ooffedj' (thwfe who were for- '̂f the Mississippi. The shores ol the
officers,
d—William XI. Fenton.JJculenattt Culonsl—Frank (inives.Major — Ainasa 13. \\ atson.AiljiUdHl—Daivid J>. Harbaugh.Qiiin--i:rina>,'cr— Asa GregorySurgeon—li. 1! Shauk.A$»uani Surgeon—S K. Wooster.('iri/>!rii)i—\\Qiia'tennimterComnisiary
ggeffiu to resign.
In Noitlifii-1.1, Get 1st. of Consumption,EMILY, wifg of JAMES COY.
Hundreds loaicking the progress ofDadiJ L'cents I I
l i c Federal Army again Victorious!
MRS. NASH,IVTXJSIC TEACHER.
must boC rn -rnf F.itli :tn '. I. i
l Rev. Mri !v Street*^ Dftftrl; opp >si'e thernfliun. 8.!I.W;Jlunate enough to have canteen, which I F^T'Wi ""'Sl "° • "' "V" ' V 1 -
• . , , i i « hostile batteries anu, in order to effect . . , _ — , __ „ .wa? Lot,) some baker's bread, and some ,hi^, tbe gun boatd will p.ol.ably eo- 200 Corde WooU Wanted !
"The Union must and shallbe Preserved !"
li^x" On the 2t-.i. ««•>, ^^.. ^ . ^ - p . - v v . . . . v - . . , . . . , , ^. ""•""•6'—-j conh.'eil to Major General fremont .UEAS, of'the First Michigan Cavalry, is- j ohor orders were giveu, ' 'Co. A suing Thogreat battle, in any event, will havesued a regimental order prohibiting blankets! Kali in, in two ranks fall in I begun along the whole line from the C H O I C E N E W G O O D S 'negroes wearing the uniform of the rcgi- • ' '• '" -•« ' ,„.,„.. .u^ !-Ulautic to Kansas by tho middle of
nieut. We give it :quota shall have been furnished. We The commanding officer it surprisedvisited tho (Jump on Friday last, andfound officers and men anxious to move.Col. BRODQKAS has gathered a fine
and inottified to Learn that negroes, theservants of officers, have d nvd to paradethis camp in the miiforin of soldiers.
Thu honorable distinction which the•king, in!ellige.it healthy body of j soldier's uniform confers, and of which
nfi'l wbeD they BHIIII be armed,
i .Miaiiiic to a a lisas ov mo mKRiie oiForward, march I and we landed on the •,, , . .... ;. . . .
3 October. • ilitarv authorities enumntewharf, lfere we were detained two t i , ; l t we shall theii have three hundredhours, waiting for the baggage to bo un- and fifty thousand men under arms,loaded, when we were supplied each with exclusive of i-'-serves and of the Homoa can, plate, spoon, and knife and fork; | S ^ . t s !" KlMltud'> Maryland andand then the order was given, a each
Cheap f*r Cash.
II ssouriAt every point attacked, therefore,
truo a .Idier is justly proud cannot | t\irtiC ,jay8 " w ] l e n w e received hard breadman supply himself with rations for | we oughl to out-rmmber tho enemy
equipped, mounted, and take the field, a/KJ- »• th»_-wmmmA,^ thaBtut be so j
.ie predict that they will give d g.account of tlienisi;lves Col. 1> ims
had military tfxp«rionoo, and is exceed-ingly popular with his men. He will£o where the enemy is, and whereverho goes hid command will follow; markthat.
On Saturday trorning the Hon. IIT. iJACKi'.-, in an appropriate speech,
disln:nored and degraded.The negro hereafter found wearing the
uniform of the soldiers of this regiment,will be stripped at once, and, if withinthe encampment, summarily ejected.
By orderjbf T F BBODHE&D,Coimiol ' onimuudiiig.
J J. Duni. Is Acting A.ljutant.
and in behalf of many friends, presen-ted the Regiment »ith an elegant silkbanner, which C\>1. li. accepted withthe following neat response.
SIB—With hearts lull of gratitudeto Hie gwner us donors oi this flag wencrept the gift.
In ihe hands of this regiment, I fee'well assured, tliat the gl< rioufl ensignof our common country will never bedisgraced
The gallant men whom yon seearound lluru, have left homes andfriends to meet lhat stem and bitterarbitration which, forced upon us, canonlv be decided by the mailed andgauntleted hand of war. That theywill dc their whole duty you may bewell assured.
It is
mutter l l"-v : ; n ' ! '"'wrong-, so.ro enevances, w o e 1 . . , . ^ ? - /provocations have exUed, for such "d«Ma«d io U.e paM-the count,y is atgreat movements do not take place•wholly without cause. But we see nn'lknow that there was nothing to jistifvfceoasion nnd plunging the country incivil war. That is suffio;eflt now. Whenorder i« restored, loyalty renewed, andthe government reaffirmed, I shall be.ready to con.-idtr that question
To-day I have other rjtiestiou toconsider. They nre these:
Where- do we now e'and?And what i.s < ur i!:i!v?And I am glad Hut on these topics'
I can apeak to you o day. Now, aftertho experience of six months what I•ay will be bolter tinde stood than whenthin terrible strife began.
At the outset many supposed thiscntbreak would bo transient—easilyeoppressed. I was not of that number.From the first I thought it was to be adeath struggle. I expected this.—Hence, though from "the first, after theattack on Sijmpter, I accepted this warHK an absi/Iute necessity; I accepted itwith inexpressible agony; I foresaw itwlorn; train of suffering, mii«ery and dis-RSto". Now, after th« teachings c>f sixmonths, I am glad t--> speak on thissubject again.
And where do we now stand? Weall now know that wo arc- plunged in aHorrible civil war. Wo all now knowthat it is a war to be waged to trie ex-trernity. And we alj know that it is awar that will not end to-day.
We have also, by disas er, learnedinmo other things;
First— We havi learned what "se-cession" ia We know now that it iscivil war! We know that it un| orts adestruction < fall the Stute governments,
fFor it is an idg
ufutely inoo.isistenlywith permanent government. Al thebeginning many pei>ons supposed itws9 a harmless political theory. Mowwe know it is a political cancer whichmust be remorselessly rooted out of thesystem or its end will be death.
$ end— We have learned to valuerightly the magnitude of this c. ntest.And I am rejoiced that this estimatehas come at last. And I say to youthat for this reason, I have more hopesto-da>, despite all the disasters whichhave befallen, and are st.i:l befalling us,than I had *hen I heard the openingguns at Surapter.
We understand now that we under-valued the resources, of the rebels —We said they have no food and '•
S id
must bo unsparinglyswept aside—it the leader is not nowat tbe head—the rosistlesH weight* andmomentums of war will soon place himthere. If lie. is t.ol now beneath epall-lert- he i.s down in ihe ranks some where,and at last he will come to tlie head,and then the path of victory will unfurlbefore him. [Applause j (After-ome•Mustnitiona druwu. frwm Cromwell andLord Cline tiie seeker continued.)
I do not protend to predict the result(.f this terrible war. JJut I hope fortho best. 1 believe, uo can at lastovercome thi.s armed rebellion. Andwhen this, is done ue can then honor-ably take up tlic question of grievancesund wrongs, tairly consider them, aidon the safe basis of tho constitutionufiord any redress that j istice or ex-pediency may require [AppUuse.]
A; any rate we must do our wh »leduti/ now. tinder God that «ill le:idii.". to the 'jest attainable result, what-ever that may be. That resi.lt my bo'all wo hope—by the blossi.ig of Provi-dence it may bo more than we hope.
You may remember that it was thoeloquent invocation oi the H-A.CH ofAlmshfield, that when ho should turnhis last look to tho heavens hu mightbehold oar glork us flag with no stardimmed and no stripe erased with nosuch miscrab.e inscription as "Whatis all this worth? ' but with that otherinscription, "Liberty and Union towund lorever—One and Inseparable."
By a resolu'.e discharge ol ourduty,may wo not still IHJH: that this sh ill alsobe our privilege? That the dream olour bclte:' day* shall bo restored, andthat we shall agtiin behold a UNION" O N E A « D l.NSEi'AKAUi.K? ' ['.''romeiuloiisapplau.-c ]
i tw s moved that tho thanks of thoState Agricultural .Society U; extendedto Hon. i-i. V. N. Lothrop tor his able,eloquent and patriotic address. Thomuiioij was unanimously adttpted.
ensigna glorious flair, sir—that oldof American liberty. I have
often wondered how the armed traitorsfighting beneath another banner (eel asthey seo tho soldiers of the Unionmarching under that starry banner —"crimsoned with tho record of athousand victories."' The tlag beneathwhich their fathers and ours togetherI allied.
Our soldier* believe, sir, that theycan maintain the honor of our nationalbanner. They intend that from itsHashing folds re star .-hall be erased.
In conclusion, I can only Fay, sir,that unless the green bosom of ourcommon mother shall receive us. thisdug shall be returned with its; foldsuntarnished by dishonor.
We append a list of tho Regimentalofficers:
Colonel—T. F. Brodbe'id.Lirut. Cn/'/r/rl—T. J. Copeland.Sf/nor Major—William T. Atwootl .Major—Angelo Pfjldt,Acting Adjutant—?, J Daniels.Chnp'ain—Jonathan Hudson.Surgeon—-George K Johnson.As*islant Surgeon — George Nash.Qwtrt'-r/nnsti r—J J. I) ivid.Qii'irtcrmnbli/- Serg't—M. A Barry.Oomm'isn/ >) Sergfattl—I', fiallveij.Forage Matter-*-Eraneis DorochesQutrtermastrr^g C'l1 Avenue Church, Detroit.five kilted, and seventy iive woi'nded.
Tho M. E Conicrence-The Detroit Conference of tho M. E.
Church, closed its annual session onTuesday; Fho following appointmentsweie made for this d'wtri«t.
ANN AKBOUDISTKICT—E. II.PILCIIKR,P. B.
Ann A-hor—Y. A. B lad . - .l> .rl/'iro— \\. \l. \l\tnnghainT. C (Gardner, Agent American
Bible Society.D. B Tracey, Chaplain in the ArmyRev. Gi:o. SMITH, of this City, was
made Presi ing Elder 0p tho Adr'andistrict. R v. ,f. M. ARNOLD was
Wood-
's£" Wo know thai Hon. GF.ORGI: V.
N. LoTiiuor lias many warm friends amongthe Democrats of Wash ten aw County,and wo know that sonao of them have al-most been inclined to censure us, andto even taunt us with abolitionism, be-cause we have so readily and zealouslyendorsed the efforts of the NationalG iverninent to put down the great re-bellion We hope that all such will
and bacon, which was deposited in ourhaversacks, and we were marched to the
jood passenger car--, at least thoseoccupied by Company A. On the plat-form of the ear was fastened u barrel ofice water for the convenience, of theBoys. While seated hero I saw theMichigan First, which left Detroit a lit-tle ahead of us, pass on the Lake ShoreRoad.
Soon the cry went forth, "All aboard,"the whistle sounded, the cars moved, andwo were off for Washington. FromCleveland to Hudson, 2'> miles, the roadwas lined with people who sont up shout
Our ur;. ii'.s will be Mell supplied, wellpiovi.-ioMcil, will (billed, wi-il equipped iand >ell commanded. Under suchc rcuiustsinces it is not extravagant toexpect sucefis, nor is it rea-oiiablo to
.•• • t i i a t H i e i i f b e l t r o o p s I r o m t l i o
(4ulf States will lemairi patiently under
IIuvo just opem.-tl a
FULL AND CCMPLKTE STOCK
of
arms in Virgmw while liii-ir homes aro 77 \ T T C, W T V T i n ? r n O I l Qbeing as.a.led by expeditions irom l b e | * A L J j " » l-> ̂ L l i KJUU !. '•>,g y pN'-rih. ,'Itiey are notoriously deficientin equipment*, clothing, shoes, arms,medicines, and gei.eral su| plies. IIowthen, can they contend on ujuai u-iuiswith a force profusely provided with allthese necess.:iic:.v Let us rememberth-it it vrki proved ut Bull Kun thai,whenever northerners and nouthernersII.et in a lair lii-hl, tlie former were thobetter men Is it likely, then, that aninferior southern force will stand
embraoing
Dry Goods, Groceries,
and
EVERYTHING A FAMILY WANTS.
after shout amidst the waving of flags, ! against a superior northern !«>rce? 1 T h e y Were T o u g h t for Cash,handkerchiefs, b»quet«, &e. Girls hand-1 think, therelore, tbitt the plan of the
who think more of party than countrymay talk differently, but th'-y are the
along md gave the boys boipiets with
notes attached, one of which f. 11 to mv
demogogues who only cling to party for j l o t w i t ! l t h o following note :. . . i-i •••.; e f e a d ,
:cei)t this bpeisonal ends, and who clinging to it aresure to ruin it, even in times of peace.
There is nothing of any definitemViveaientH either at Washington, inK ntucky, Missouri, or on ihe coast.—At Washington it is hardly deteirainedwhctlior the rebels are feintinff,scatter-ing or what. We hope it w.ll be found
jfrom .i 1-ioa I
ADKIJA AM |i, fhv I.i11-_'. Ohio.
carefully read Mr. LOTBROP'S State Pair ed boqugtjs to the Boys on sticks; and I «"_mpa'8f'» renders success morally cer- j
speeel.. I t is the language of off true smaU boy»onions and other vegetables of ';"." U' ""\ ^ " ' " ^ " u r " l - ^ 1 i s . u > !
= ° I ,, , . , , „ , , . . . , defeat and disperse the rebel armies re-Democrats, of every true ctiken. Those ; all kinds. At Newburg the girls went now. owerruojiiing lh« Southern Sia ea.
find
That done, our work is achieved.—U ii " u " • " • • « " * • " " ' ' '
BACH A PIEKSCN.
Am Arbor.Oc-t , 18G1. 820tf
lUSD&N & HENDERSON'S
THE GENUINE
STEW/ RT'S
" Thtr- was a man in our fown,lie icus 60 vjoadruus wise,"
But with all his wUdom, he was noi so wigsus that 'other man,' who when he waul-
ed to buy the
Thi cheapest and lest
C L O T H I N G !in tii Is market always jumped into
G V ITE li MAN* m
HEAD QUARTERS!For there he knew lie nlwoys got his money'sworth. S .e in£ is taliPTing ami y.ui thatwish U> 9--e c-omr W and buliuvs. ThuM lli»tcon't 4-.- OAN I ti:i.. Mini 88 We »Iw«y« makoout-ciHNiiu r̂ I..-! ^uo.1 ovL-r L'IHJ'1 bargain*.tl i .y arc i-jp, t-i .1 iy invii.cd to our anxiousSeal that t l;i-y lo« nniy realize how ' goodit is lor tin tn lo I.e wit., us," iiml Imw inucttpleasure CM baobtained in the cnjuymi-nt ot
SPLENDID BARGAINS I
'Come nil ye lhat ore weary and henvy la-d i n " - w i l l ) I I C K S a n d w e w i l l do our best t orvli 'v.' \ o u — g . inir HHI in r e u r n t h e Jimtlhind of Guods a (AP loiceitjigurea.
Great Lotties nre hourly taking place in theCluthii g li nt—wlj< ie regiments of Jassiineres,1 < ft; iii's itc are being slaught reJ by Gen,SoxnitKiM — to fit I lie groat ru*h of recruitathat a e louring in from every direction, allanxioud to havj their ii.-iia.--s enrolled for u
NEAT AND TASTY SUIT7
—such as can only be had at tho
Head- Quarters of Guiterman i |ili-as!int term, -md eluill tver buglad to me.-I you ut the Old
Head-Quarters, i>'o. 5.
ity prcpnr-Hory to .myching on Lex- On the mon.ing of the 18th we met with p ^ " ^ " ' ^ ; "rH ^ A l i " r e , " ' ' ^ " ^gton, and in bolh Missouri and Ken- rather a serious accident One of the ceived from Lexington corroborate the
tui-ky sk :-mi.-hr.-i o>« frequent. We j boys got upon the top of the cars, and a opinion already expressed tnat theiy look for hot wnrJi r>n short notice, b'ijge hit him on tbe head and hurt him rebels intend to keep their main force
• - « < - — — I very seriously, so that we had to l,ave *"»">• hiU;\.^ 8 t a . ^ ll'^ *>v«™ h ^ ». . , r . . , . , , jot from 200 to -J,0J0 have Ictt therebun at Uams.mrg. which pJMein read, j w t l u a feff (J ;(>.s p a s , f o r ̂ ^ ^ ^
The ex« rt i es iii !|.e several de«pnrtn.eit6 if ih« Univerrt'y were re-Mimed on Tiiwdny, h::-t uros and reci-ta'ion.s coiuineiK'iiii; prnrnptfy. ^re.-i •terday morniug 'liQQ 8tuJot»ts had re'jfu-tered tbeif nuinys v i ' i the Steward,classed :i?< follow.-" :
Iri LiteraryIjc'piirttneol, l">0In Medical " 15GIn La 51There aro mnny for the several de-
partments prpsent in town who huvonot rearularly entered, and the prospectcl full departrnentf is enoouraging.
OUR CRISIS PAEAGRAPH3.
— James B, Clay, with sixteen men,
ed lute in the afternoon of Wednesday,the 18th. That night ijie whole regi-ment was quartered Lu the depot, and youwould have laughed to have seen usstretched upon the floor. Of coursethere was no sleep, for the cars were arri-ving and departing all the night.
Late in the foreuoon wo found our
STOVE!Whi (b is he only perfect stove made. It will
(!.> n ore • us n< ss wil li on* t hlrd li«s Padthan any othxr STOVE madx FVota
tist iuio: v iriw.n by the personaret', rrfeu U> In-low on account
of its uu abil ity and
fiJ' Onr former ctudoinpra, we feel nssurud,will call Puusagmn To yoo who cun.e asS'pir.giis we Ronld say a few words w*3widli you to c.-tll and look ;it our fine Coatd.i'.-oiis an.I W>is we e m .lo better by youili;ui ai y etber li use in ilie City and if youca I and i x inline . nr poo Is. ami try their fits-,
, y o j will purchase nowhere cls«.\
DON'T FAIL, T O
& T1 r. w i,l i i . i . W l M h e l l ,Prof Doug a-s
i Felt*,The opinion is becoming generally ' Job,*HS^S?1 '-'
prevalent that tlie seeessioi:ibts at Lex H>n.B F Uraagn-,'11 • | . . . u . ! J . ) Mai i.iirrt, ",• no ineaus despicable, but j F. L. swbtxos.wasarrestod-on t!ie 25tb, said to have f people were to bo seen. We were M"St0!' aI"e . . . . , ! , . „ , . . ,been on the «ay to join Gen. Zollieoffer. „». -hed in front of a hotel seated and ! ' T ' Wl-? **? - ^ T ! I ^ i ' » ? T ^ . "'
Mi-u III num. ui .i i i u i o , . | aniuiuuifciuu, their contldeuee and cour- [ Mm, K T. WIIIIUM,"uolfee served out to the regiment; after-wards were marched to the depot, and
age, tliL'y will maku a powerful and des-pii.ite resistance.
The pickets of Price'sthis time found ourselves in passenger I . x " e , P"iKuts o f »ioo|* army exteuU, , - , i - I Irom Lexington to within about ei};ht
o ' i r a f i i u l t l i . T f t i v . . i w r . f . u n t i l f l . A m r t r i i l n o r ! . . ..cars, and there wo sat until tho morningot Friday, the 20th, when we started for
miles of (ieorgetown, They are sta-tioned very near to each otl.er, and thus
! way to join— J o h n C. Breckinridge was with the
party, but escaped.
— Secretary Cameron has forbid draft-ing in Iowa.
— Pol. l i lair was released from arreston the 2Gth uit.
— Gen. L;me routed a large rebelforce at Pupmsville, Mo., on the t i ls tSppt. Rebel loss large, with all theirtents, wagons, and supplies.
— I I . J . IJartsteii), late of the D . Snavy, is said to command the rebel bat- jtery at Fre ts tone Point. i • - . - • • - - - ' • • — - - - r - Sfeeipi QUpttl«a (o tb« Cim-iuiui.i CJuzette.
—Gen Meigs haa advertised for 60, . I Res t , " a building fitted up for the recep- £'rom Kentucky.000 bushels of oat-. l(i(),000 bushels 1r e a o l u t i o n woi k ilnni;at tlie Slmrtifcl Ndtice
K1.-D0X 4 HENUEKSON.Ann Arbor, l tUl .
BOOTS
DIl. IIOOFLAND'SBALSAMIC CORDIAL,
For if:.- -q-eedy cure of
Conyhs ColJs. Jujluenza, Croup, Hoarseness,Bronchitis Pneumonia. Distaaes of Lht, Bow-
els art*iny from Lolit, Incipient Covi-suvipVon, and for the relief and if
>t allptn*tbtr) cure of Patientsin adtanctd stages of t.'ne
tatttr uxstasi1..
rpIlKCiilsamicCcri1i.il ia entirely a Vegetable produc-X nun comb iiiii;' Cite healiog properties se«», noci«t,>. a.s thorvmedlw oi Pr. I [•>• Aaud, prepared byUr. r. JI.Jii Li* r. \ Co., of PhUadclpbta.
TaeGortM î i"^i»' 1 for a oUdd ut d l iw#w mor«g ijt-i ;ii ;i:i(f itioi e-latftl thuB any other to which thopeople i;i tli it* outintrjr u e sabjeci—those spiingingIrouj a ''slight riAit." 'I1, at i*mi»eul authority, Ur»litn,f-avs; >«i will i..ii>;iy that Coins are tuour Inhab*ilanis wbal Ibe V'ajxu aud Ydlote Ftver are to those-oi other countrit-s; bat I can »vi r cynUdeutlj that tliejUshet i>i t' of gi\';aration.
DR. II OKLAND'SCELEBRATED
GERMAN BITTSRSI re| ;ncd hy
I)R C M . JACKSON & CO., PhiU-lr-lphia, ?*.Will effectuiilly cure 1.1VKK COMPLA1VT, DYtiVEPSU,JAUNI l( I.,('I',, < utc isiast.->ol thoKi'iiii)-, atri al. ui.-uir-oa Hnsiog (rum a disorderedL i V c r (>r M - I T l r l l .
s tcfa i • C 'nstipatlon, Inwar \ PHea Tnlness or Bloodt o t • i . . ; i < , A c .! [ n - S n m u c h , X j i i i ^ o a , H e a r thuro, 1 l̂ jfUftt Cor Food, l-ulm-s^ ci weight in the Stomach . oui Kt'iictalioii-, l -I'.X -riug .it thu i'itof tlio -t-.ID n-ii, -wimmiog i>1 the Head, Hurried andliffficuli Ki*«thiDg Hu tiering at the H.-;i t. Chokingor -- t-fl .::t 11:4 .-vur-ati' i i ' wiifu ii t lvin^ posture, l>inanf>s ol V^imi Uota ol webs tK'fvretho 8ight, PtTor ii.idhull I'Jim .n ti.t- .liM.t, UeUolency t Pbritp.rAtion, Yel-lowntws nt t . c -k inau- l t^e-, ta;u in tneSitft, Uuck,Chi 'i L v.i ". fcc. t*uddt*c Fiusheaof Heat, Burningta
li b, t i lasikut [inugiuiDgs of evil, ana great i, BB4 to he had gratiaof any ol iii, ir Agfsu\n, cannot out b*,tisiy the most>it-(tii-:ii tbatth « remed.7 id really deserving tho gre^tcelebrity it ha«ob>aiued
llrnd Ilie KVKUHCC/ n m / . Newton Br*mn !>. n . Editor of tke Encyclnptdicb
of Ri-tigiou* KntKiv-fte.A l t h o u g h i" t •.;>!>• -••': t-> l a y e r pr r e c - m n i ' - n d P a t e n t
.i diatrubt "i tbe ir Ingr%>k n o w MI qo pufflpient r e a s o n w h y
the cotton bolt, f"Od grows ui.h ;>luxuriance unknown to our colder
Wo'woro also taught that tho socialinstitution of tho Sout'i was a greatwi.-akne**. That the South stood on :ivolcino that would ut once belch forth|H la-.-a nnd wrap its people in de-true-tion. We have now learned something!*on this question And whatever mayb« the ullimato efl'oct of slavery on therobul Stateit, wo n >w know it to be aeourco of immerisa Btrength. We setsit furnish people nf quick military in-stincts—ready, and able ulinqst to amnn, to tako up arm.-; and a peoplemouilizqd into an active inilit.iry furcewith facility.fj y
N".>w that we kfio.v these thinj?^, weftlial! sternly prepare to meet them.We vvilll cull s round us our resources,
«ur reguueiitt ot other St.tos;—Tho Kentucky Afleembly ban pasaed obliged to stop twioa for drill and once ;"' :1 also forbidding all citizens of Peun
a vote nt thanks to Ohio. Indiana, and for dinner, J P l i hiIllinois, for prompt aid. j "
; " ' 1 also f o r b g nBylvauia from enlwtiug in or attaching
l h i t ithemselves to any buch or^iinizatmii.-',—The Common Council of Cincinnati ' GENKRAU PRICK. There nre twn and warning all peraoos tliat^ in disobey
u h o n n ' s u e r ' T o i n . L ' t h i s | T M e h i m a t . o n , H i e y w i l l b e . i i s r e -Ai.i'iiKD ULS^KLL, li.-q , of Do- ! Iir.s ordered works built for the protection General* in .Mi---nnntroit, tins becu-iij.j.o.iiLctl acting Uuitdd 1 ofStatus District Attoi'Dey, in place ofW. Ii. BlQUghton, who i?» LieutenantColonel ofMii^'n Eegiment, now ren-
iiri.lei-stfxid here to havo beun placuJ in I dezvoused at White Pigeon. A goodCol. tfulligau's baads (or 8ufo keeping. | S D r , , i n t m e n t .«pp>i. i i i . i i t h e ; fferfl o h l e f l j m\ . u r . i,u\:icmixture I am indebted to my friend Kobert Mioe-m tl.< r, 1 **[..!
f RIDAY KORNIKG, OCT. 4, 1861
We Want.40 l.i>lity began on
Wednesday, at Ypsilanti, and will close to
day Judge L.W.UUNCE delivered the an
fcual address yes erday
Jg^jg" Wo have received tho Octobernumlier of i lie Ecict.c Magazine It has aportrait of JIOTLLT. just, now the piv eminent -1\ j c| ulur historian and a list of papers 20in number, selected wit li good judgment from(he foreign qu iitorli. s and monthlies. Thehclect c maki'S t iit'eo fine volumes a vear. $5a year with a beau iful preiijiuni plato Ad-dress W H Btmrr t c N. Y.
Blac&toood * EAingtiurg Magazine,for September has the following pipers :
Scotland and her Aceuscr.Tl'.e Ifector.Meditations on D y s p e p s i a - N o 1. The
V ilady.liorton's Aiiatomy of Melancholy.rl he 1'ei-i.in War of lti.ili .">7'I h Meiiiory of Monboddo—An excellent
new song.A 1'ay at Antwerp. — Kubens and Huskin,Plan thon.The Art Student in Potr.e$:i a year ; with the four Rcviucs $\0 Ad
dress L. Soon it Co , IS1 Y ,
n TuexUty BYRON GREKN
fent off th i r ty hoses purchnsed for ColKT.LLOG'S Cuviilij' I•i-f.'irisi nt, and they wereall fine looking animals Tbrj were t o bedelivered and inapt cted a: F. nl onville, fromwhich pluee ih-y will be forwarded In GrandKopid> l-v mil . The soldier who gets one ofthem may consider himself well mounted.
THE ECONOMY CF HEALTH. —Thisbusy nalion of Americans have 12.001100Uworking p*-o[>li, \\ hose services may be esti-mated at i'i a day and their annual loss byaiekiir. $1.
Miss Aiasada Morton, Ypsibmi. largestand beet cuikctiuii of (uibn.ijrry, \>y 0 ] ) eperson, $5.
Chas. Fleming Vptilacti, lumber cieaeurer,diploma.
Chas Fleming, Ypsilanti, improved moul-ding plane, dip.
A, Wordm, Ypsilanli, Congress gaiter
Our streets have presented du-ring 1 he we*k a continual procession of Wheatwagons and it takes until late in the eyening to receive the wheat at the l ' ipot.Prices have been variable, and yestirdnyOi"rning the imnkct opened at 9J for red and9a for white
siu of Hospital Stores-Our fellow ;itiz: n. C. A CBAPIH Esq , h-is
banded us the following note which we, giveplac ' in our columns :
OFFICE OF SANITARY CI'MITS-MOX )Washington, D C , Sept. 7th. letil . J
SIR:
I have the honor to oVknowledge thereceint in good condition, ot Si lbs I bospitnlsupplies as per vour f-ivor of the 7th nit., inbehalf of the ladies of Ann Arbor Michigan
Tlu articles will ba devoted, as intended,to the r lief of the sic'-: and wounded aoldiweof the U" S Volunteer an 1 Mill ia force*, inwhose behalf and that of the Commission,!moat cordially thank the donors.
The Surgeon of the 2,1 ami 4th MichiganRegiments, hare been notified of th'e arrivalof lite .-iliovo.
I am sir very respect fi l ly.yoorobedient servant,
FRLD. LAW OMSTEAD,Secretary.
by ALBERT J BLOSSTo CHARLES A. CHAPIN, Esq., Ann Arbor
Michigan.
We would ,-i£ain remind ourcitizens that the exhibition of the GraduatingClass of I he Union School, takes place thisvening in the Union School Hall. J h e
Detroit Sti ing Band has been engaged forthe occasion, and will discourse, sweet music.i lie a mis-ion fee of 13 cents is for defraying
expenses, the balance to be appropriated to-wards s tar t ing a Library for the SchoolDoors opv n al 7 o clock; exercises to commence.at 7 ' j o clock, P JI.
(JLJTHINQ STORK—Tinsextensive establishment is now filled wilhthe most fashionable goods ever brought toI bit m;irk.t . 'I hose wishing a cheap andF.i-hionable suit will do well to give thismammitli establishment a call b~e iheirad . • rtisement in another column
Gen Fremont at Washington.The W tuhiugtou city Star, the semi-
official organ ot the adiuiuistrstion, has alengthy ur.iele ou Gen. Frouiont s liiilitary operations in Missouri The srtiolecloses 111 the following not very coinjili-meiitucy style:
" Gen. Fremont is no soldier by educa-tion or experience. Ere entering thearmy as a Second Lieutenant of Topo-graphical Engineers, he was a sclioolmaster ot very limited edreation and attaiu-luCi.ts. While in that corps he nevereoimnanded a Corporal's guard in arms.H's duties there were wholly those of asurveyor and explorer, not those of asoldier in the field. After resigning, asa favor from the government to his fath-er-in-law, Colonel Btiiton, he re enteredthe service as a Lieutenant Colonel ofmounted rifles, and remained in it lessthan a year, in the course of which timelie was tried for mutiny and sentenced todismissal from the army. That closedhis military career, until recently made aMajor General
" Perhaps the most remarkable fact ofthe history of his brief career in com-mand of troops was the character ofthe accounts for the subsistence of hiscommand, while, according to his printedrepresentations, they were for the mostpart living upon dead mule fare. Theseaccounts, over which the government had
much subsequent trouble, it will beremembered, fooud up about an averagecost of a beef per man per diem.
" The army of the United States didnot contain an officer, "hen he left it,who failed to realize that he was utterlyunsuited for military eotDUUUid—wiir.sethan useless in the tick!, and as uiicon-tro.lable by his .superiors as unsuited tomanage his inferiors in the service for thepublic good.
'• We submit that his current utterfailure as a military mail in Missouri isbut the quod end demonstrandum of thehistory of las previous command iu thearmy of the United States. "
)GiF* Fancy runs more furioulsy whena guilty conscience, drives it.
•
l..i.Luil 'I'.iuliiabui ton L libruwu .>aijih JBart 111 i'e Cei.iUunuer -i uiiuaHash jawAd1 urn^ \\ i . lutBl^ul.er j o u ui; y\ KVidBiuun -u>aali.u in ,\' 'I iniiiiLai i- liumeLL
Jonah 2
List of LettersREMAINING in tua fu»l UJica at Ana Arbor, Sept
llau i l iu JUXKI MeKen.-iie DouglassMLUIU JulmAler.\ uy AndrewMiller oeorgi; WMurray -Hit>.> Uttoi 0 ili»a f liO'tfuly JuliaPbe.ji.1 H.u.el1 t i i j C V1 ero bravmui M1'uHi 1 u . r1'i.ltei U 111 orivr KJVU\eKfehVOa A JHuaaw i.ubei-L WUevi Qultlri iiKivtiKiuiid LCichard A
KI i . u
l. i B) vi.
r ill* s u
: .ttU IA C
h U
*.... b UuaCurtis \\ tiCliuiu; 1 JamesDoUL.^U 1,1.
Uean UrofuriaeHi-'fii.-ou LtiaacaL> r,i: faster
• i v i « i 2
• -^ l niuy 'i,
twiujf tt Ui rtivtiwaxtl* . .Miaht ' l . u i i . n i i A
i>eor^e(jiiuct- iUuuuui Luutwrt lv i i
ji.iioiini-n.jj iv* IAttwul u ii •-• t .v 2flu. 1111.' JuitnU u o n Ml*«u.u uuU*in.ii .a nu James
Bagauo bUw.i Murbhall1̂ *--' p —frfyLeiavuur xifber.Han Ut« M be careful in avoiding unneces-sary vexatio.i and cost by seizures notwarranted by law
[Signed] B. P . CHASE.Secretary of the Treasury.
i
05
- 4020
- Al22 28
3 0
J i l ' i-jlV HELMED Y.CK'S
male Pill*.
LBinsrfXOTEC IED j f \ JK. PATENT
Prtpnr'il from a prrwrtj'Uon of Sir J. Clarie, J/!>., /Vtys/cian Extraordinary to tks Queen.
EtTftIa»bl« medicine w wv,*.\i\y^ in tbe car© of aU
•'lose j>'ie i« ma I enouRh 1" negl tt
or in,I1.. • I th ixual Irhgulsrittes to which two-if her»ex »r© more or loss stilijcct.
DR. CHEESEMAN'f&FILM, pwpare-i from tlie i»meformal* which the taventor. f»EM [JUS L. CUEESE-M \N M. P.,o! Xcw-fink, has tor twenty yearn usedsuccessfully in an extended private] n ctici—immrelieve without pain, all dint irbances i E the :
dlsoharj-o. whether arising I'I I relaxation urBlon. Tli.'.v ,ut like a clnirm in removing !''.>' pains thaiaccompany diftcult or immoclerale menstruation, HIKInre the : ol, safe and bee, sickSeadacbe, Paiua in the Loiss, Baokand si,Ua, Palpitationof the Heart Nervpua Tremors, Hysterics, Ppasms,Hrola.n Sic-ji n:i 1 other unplcaetantanil danfrerou Hof an unnat iral coaiiifion of the wxu»l functioaa Inthe irorei cases of Fluor Albus or Whites, th«y effect aspeeeetl, bu . .II.i.v, ton, .U'IHII. per cord, -Cranberrta. bapeel, hind qr. -
•' foreqrcwt.
Matte n. lb. -l'url,i> s, lb. -Cliickeon. -
. d o t . -Cl iiM-. lb. •I . iu l . lb -Trillnw, lb. -Butter, II). .Potatutt, per l>u.onion- , per tm.l'urnliis, .Apples, green, -
" dried,re;u:hr>, dried, lb.
Si ECIALNOTICB3
I T Refer to t he advertisment of HOOF-l.AN'DS Gl-.UMAX B1TTEUS, in anothercolumn. Tilr88 Bitters nre the beet remedyknown for the :ure of Liver Complaint andHilious discuses. 820\v2
"5
2,38
1 fit!
3004,(10 4 5D
6,00 8,002,003 0
04oa04070c
0 ( j
8
l,ai)0504
3,0.)
OS07
: us07
S 9111
10 1928to
• 25
80yg• . i l
bS1,00
15
MOTHERS READ THIS.The following is an extract trora a letter written by
t h e patitnr t\ *A ' 0 Pilla i'. • ' T . an Iwhen desire I will be tent by. mail prepaid by amy ai ive itist'il Au frdera answered with cure anddp patch, by 1- xpresa, Ce l l ed on delivery. te;.d ft iCirculur.
PALMER3 &BATCHEDKKS,8:9fl-3 10-J fffish*nptf.o S t . , Boston.
•^EYS and HAB.1)1 F. A. CADWELL,
^ ^ g S ^ OrEH\TOK ON 'illK I-YK AND KAR,Piu- Dcaftiesut. BUudneas, an i l all • >ituQ a utful tertiic* $
Uilwauka«, Chicago. Burl Quincy—\orthWe it Ruilwa . ton and St. Louib,Centra I and South.
tfflr Trains n • time, which U 2 0 min-!•• Iu \ [me.
..I : • ,'.ng- (;ii-s Accompany th* Kic-lilTrains on •
) e i . r a r e u p 1 o n Li 1 ! ' . • •.
« y Time and Faro the same as by any other Rai;EoadKoure.
J>0. V. PAMPEHi.
Great deduction in the Price cfSINGKU & CO.'S
Standard Machines.II i.V known to be the Belt /or Man
ujactunny I'urpotu*,
No. 1, S^uidard Shuttl'o Machine, for-iiterly sold a'. $'J'J, reducefl to §70
No. '1 of same kit;d uf Machine, fortin 11 v sold n\ $100, reduced to S75.
SlNGELi'S LETTBJS A MACHINE. i i ; ] . < • w i i I d i1 i i . . i n
inuring Piivp >•>. .1 : •u-tl'i. Hammer,) and.. . d S60.
The No«. 1 au*l - ilachinea are of great capacity and• . ' •
u..r N. j M . • !L i1 pted t o a l l k l idsi.i ligut and l.*av\ Lentlier Vork, in Ciu^ria^e Triro-ining, Bo iln usual quantitylol thread. The largemnchine woi .vs.;i.-. fasta» suiail onea.
Wo B'oul I ••--• I'1'' "i r t - i t t t v A Machines, the 8p6-cialuttei • * ••!.!.. r • ;m>dir the ht*i machinealutoet usdes^.
(ttlr ciiHiuANra may rest assuredlhAtalloTie Branch1 , •• Lfimiiu'acticie "
In cast* f»f Kin • (he ni nej may be sent in. •
pondtnto will plea«« write their names distinct-ly, it : iM t u . t we Bhould, meac&ease ,know the ] ' >} Coun ty , and I
SHr A I persons requiring information aboncs tliei*-1 sixe, prices, working capacities
heBt methods of pirclm >••:-. canobtaii i\ b-y d«ndipg toout B anch Olnce^ inn cf»py of
I. H. Slas'sr £t Co'.- Oaiette,Which i> rt OcHufifu] PJc'orial 1'a^-cr efitirety devoted to
• 1 ct— U wUL bewttt gratis.
« S * We have made the a l x n e Rl BUCTKJNIN PEICE-3with the two-f«ld vi&vr «I \x publieaadourgi lve »purioun ma-
1 ' our-. T c metal ...lrf>m thu iron casting t" the >ma 0 poorquality. Th< :r mHketfi bavt not the meant* 10 dn their
• • , - . - : « • (• .1 -• • « h i r c i t
woul i bf impOHfible to Imve ;> iil be the means of inducingKi ' ri} to a topi your Pitta »a ! heir family rucdicini-.^.
I remain, dear sir, with many IJIJVour (jb • ; . • • ? : . .Herrlok's J upnr Coated Pilli anfl Eld T i;î 1< rf- i re cold
m- I r . ta iii all part* of the F^nifced, HtriaHa and Pi , :intl m a y be obtained
• bam ; • '' air full n ime.int. L. 3.UERKTCS; >VC".
I • • ; / . V - Y -
ASHTENA "W—MfD—
ADJOIMNG COUNTIES 'AIK] their nurccrons ques'ions ansvorcd.
Why in Everybody tradiny at Ihe "BANNERSTORE? '—Bccauit
ILLS,the Proprietor ot tliat Establishment has just
returned lium tKu Eatlero Citieswi;h thu
LarytU Handsomest, Cheapest, anaMud Attruatiwi tiluck of
STAPLE AND FANCY
GOODS';over brought Vo tbikpart uf tbe Stuta.̂
Why is Everybody pleased with his Slock?
Recntioe his styles :ire more beautlral, qniriity bei
pi ices lower than at any otker store in the county.
Why has ht always Something New and Cheapto Show?
Because h» has a frieod connected with one of the lar•• in S'ew York, who ia continual}
" BOBBING tiOUM)" for choa^ I. nd tnthft wn-
,i H - •• \\ an I coaaequ^nt!t eu-• n a i i ] .•. ••;•• B n a I 1 ••••.\ 1
IsEW CHEAP an.-l DESIUABLLWlrj doss he sell so much Cheaper titan Ihs rest?
Because he has a buyer in the city all ihe time to tabadr&nt&ge of the continual ehangu ol th< 1;,, thai »ai i ' • Ui 1 1 dteap(^than uthct.can, anil tnei hfl markrf Ehera 3own to the
DOCTOTtS gen. rally j reti nd that Conaumptlov L*iSwUrable, be . Lire i t thL jmb;b u t ttlla U ' . r . -n l QUtkti .t l l ' u e .
V 11. .1 • cl I •! •• • il] •• : . • on K j o b all d a y a n d ttf-' r •.. n • no i ,u •• b 1 - ;•" 1 t b e roatferml they, wi l l t»3 e i ii ii"-v. r c,,;, [•• 1:. j ! " ,11 t h e way y o u w a n t i t . 1'u
• • .n on ft Uo t J i i . ruugUly(TOU will g e t y u u r Wbrk aw-
1
In this r< ). Efcrence t» befound in ojl tr .1 . 'lhc bi;n^Ur« iu
• 0 , a m i ii». • !'!.• d o n e . And it ^*
.•• II101 a w e r e l i lu \ bvm^I . n.i U'ly t l i f i t ' :s a in the r cia^K uf OJI n ,
e ta l iao i l , flo tl.wuhasyouwanl it, or restore you to health, according0 de ire. \\ e have < nly t-> 1. m. mb< i tl is aet t«
1 Bkeuld pvoncuDce tbnt.
: by s posiestUiar meaas, l-> some Dew hivtiitit D, lfor • • id.
South sUe of Public Square, a few loon wwtofCook1
A. P. MILLS.JUB> 18. »%n.
Mr.-.'.ti e x j .i t • " L • • • ' NOT \2C$
N O a H i t i Ki-Jl'l.lCI-S { J--rn-l vm ff nufli r n ; ChllOff
ni : erelieJ tbafwil] 1 l->. AB y l . L i l . l . Y -to follow t'i" • I Bl ' ""'- if ;'m ptrftMtm.and ibeald b« used toaplher in averj case, Tlwir mj e n o r i ^ove.- otber nodos of t?«abaten6 uiay be L-rioHy stMN iu twt-Iow9, via:
JK3" They diminish tho violence of cextial exciroDi-tnt.1&~'L*htiy k&mvijtAity arrost iiacL-iruai aud diurual * « b i
stons.j ^ ^ T h e v remove lne.il w^akne^s, causing tha ar^aaj t»
assume t Ii ei r natnrai tone aod vi ;or.i t ry 'They strengthen tlw eouscitutiw by ovar^mlas at****
•us debility au-1 general weakuesB. *#3~Tiiey enliven thfl K are DMIIHJ liiproaew^
by expeUiog all exoitin^ oatves fmtn tbe systein. ,jjf^* Bv tlwir in viz-' ruling prwpertiaa they restore Ui«
patient tr< hia natural !H-:I'L!I QJ(^JJ" They cure «rh«Q all other meaM li»v« fiii:«d. .JKS"'i'ho'v oontara no Mercury, no Vjiu»t, nor an* lUing
that can in any event provs iu;j^5"Thev are easy and pleasant to use, ami will not tut«»»
fere with tbe patient'a a ' pi' u n n .4E3J- They can bo used without suspicion, or knowledge stf
•Ten a rouin-ni;ite.That they in | '1 of sJI, we Imve flxM
Hie prioe of the Pastel* at $i p*t box, and the /'i^> at Meents per box each. In ordering bv mail, in »ddil on lo Inlprice, twelve oeata in starapa s&ovld b« iuclocod fox r d a r u
S in want nf a pufe and effectH;4
er a•arvringtV
D. L. WOOD & CO,
• ATI JUIT OriN'XD 4,
LARGE & WELL SELECTED
STOCK OF
Seasonable Goods,
L . l l l l l 1 ^ Ml u : u a " I 11 >:! .•• n u n O I I T I L H nremi ly for TrrequtttriGe-i, Suppression of kh«Menses, or any disease peenliaT to their »ex,Rlioitld ace Du. GATES'S t'UiALB Mo.Tin.t"11 LS, l*rioe, by ioaU, SI and one itmrnpC
C i n o v . - rhese Pills shoirid nut b« IIK«*4• 1 ', ad miicivriiigc will I** U»
I.ADH'iS who, from iH-Ti"^Hl». ^pf^rmit.f,iy other hnraano and v •, de«*Q it ne«o*-to a\ iid an increase of fftn • without infiiir-daaeer to bealU >r constitntion by the use o f * / . J ,
.r'« /'i-.-.-i 7i Preoentia Potedet's, Price, Ly ui&;l, 51 amit«'> BtamM.
TheM Powders onn only LG obtained by aiiare>fm^ theQeneral Agents, n* b«l*»w. • •'
Send for Dr. OAIKS'S PricaU ifadiool ZVttKiM OM 5ftrt«JDtiws*». PEIOB T*N CINTS).
Addrsaa,II. O. AiILLi:Xl 1 CO., Otiwral Ajtents.
LouisTilltt, Kf.'
yT88i» Ann Arbor, Mich.
PROK I. MILLER'S
ITAIH INV1G0KAT0)
For tho SPRING i SUMMER Trtde «f
Having purchaaeJ their stock nt aiucli
than tha usual prieos, they (ire prepared to
offer
GREAT IXDUCETtfENTS
To Cash & Ready Pay Buyers.i
Thankful for pnal favors tlicy will bo over
ready to ehow their Goods and by fair and
liberal dealing'hope to receive their full i&a e
of tho public pntronnge.
West sile of public square.
Ann ArWT Ann' 18tt.
/Iyer's ChOTry Pectoral
• r n E^SAFE AND & ON HUCAi COMPOUN^lor Wiyilf
. turuliig gray.
KOii PRKVLNT1N« BAlJjNKfc t eui • i .when f-iero*U LUa leartt piuticte uf citnlHj ot recuiJt-iattT* entc^j
tiintr.
FOKRI •••• P AND DANDRtJFF, aii.1 all - - *•• the tkailp.
FOR 1 ; K A ; . ; U K \ 1 N ( . I H L HAIR, i m p a r f t n p W i i » " »rfji M>ft atidailfejin it- . . .The ;,T»'.I ; celebrity a :• tujtnd fur Kbii
•• i it toi tha t 'Miatrial w unly w ee-*s»o i • npj>ublicof it*sujseriof | . i a.t j reneoiin use. Ii i iinvd-ruf a\
s. t au»< N il.i' hair to gfynvr h. \1 • ; ibl« ;• p .
i" arance , • i: g and thfn-oiag, it wi I auU vigoi t« tji* ruoif-, and
• Ijccoma• fit fir.
I la lies a id H'entifniei] in New,• tha rjsp ofj
tbi« Lnvig ns h»fl f.-i:ln\: al : irfafra
i1 i ol |he lovi^ora'ior*.• . , p i^Bp i t
• • r
• • i1 is p n r t i o n l . . r.P"-n4kVk 'tl B ^reftt fac . ' i i i . - i t
• ' ' ' • • • . • • " * \ i h t h e
be iiu'--ul io aioy Pequircvj form «r. n . ito prew rve Us : ' . . . or it) curi>- b f n o *
dard M'Vcihnut, as the price'
I tt within the iwe l ] of a'l, b
ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTSper bottle, to be ha I at all reh(je«Uihle drug^Uta' andperfumer*.
1 Mll.LKH wi ien •] rari^nts and( ; u t i r . t i ; ' i i - *n '.]•!• ii , . , . ; • : , ; - . ; , . - . . , , ( . , l s , . s w h e r e
The TISC of it• . liaix nsil n m o v n
. v- 1 ;• \ e heooiuo connected -,\:lb• I yr'nirjilf- c+oefl m botfi for th«
heal thuf the child au I earohec oi ita
CAFTION.—\ • i ,.*-., r < : n . , \ F.0VI8^ 1 l-EUbi • . - • • ; • . I.. M I I J 1 H'3UAIK 1NVH ORATOR, N "i
I • > Rt. and .-.>!•' !^-^li \bc uri] ' ' • ' ' ' • ' • ' •• h i .
. . , | , • ) • ; : . . , . r s ( . - , " I ! , * • , , , ; - ( j M
! '•• m y
New & Improved InstantaneousLiquid Hair Sye
ifte'r year)! ef iMiicnfifo exferimfntinp I linrpbrought '., perffC-.inn. .. or brown in«lBBl>vitin'ut iiinirv tn tl.i- lf«irori-kiti ivarrauttd the t n . t
r < • • - .
PRICE oxr.y FIFTY CKKTS.30 D^Y ST.,
Jirps." Husbands, Love Your Wives."
O . i l y l e t a W ' i ' i i i i i be.; s u r e t h a t s h o i s
j reuious to her husbarcd—-not useful,not valuubJo, not convenient, simply,but lovely and beloved; let ber bo tlmrecipient "f h:M polite and hearty atton-tbfns; Idt her U I tbnt her cure andluvo are nutiu.-d, a|v;i] sought, sind lior judjfmo trespected in matters of which a.iu isongniznnt; in short, let her only botovod honored and cherish*, d, io fulfill-Nieri! of the murriago vow, ;,IKI she *iill>e in her iiu.sb.iii'1, an I hi r uhildrun,and society, a Meli-.riii£* uf pleasure.She « ill bear p..in, and lull and U.iXloiy,lor her husband's love is to ber a tow.-rand a fortress Shielded and sheltered(herein, adve s::y will have lost i s8tin^j. She may suffer, but sympathywill dull the edge ol her Borrow. Ahouso wiih lovo in it—.md by love, Imoan luve expressed in words, and1 ok?, and deeds, for 1 have not oneKpurk of fuhh in the love that neverdrops out—i.s to a house without love,sis a person in a machine: the one islife, il.e other a mechanism.
The unloved ui,::i;ii) may have breakj w t a s K g h t , a licuso as tidy as theother, but the latter has a spring abouther, a jfsyousnesg, an degressive, amipenetrating, nnd pervading brightness,to wliich the i'orrner is a stranger. Thedeep happiness at her heart s-iiities outin her face. She w fl ray of sunlightin the hi-iiso. She gleams all over it,It is airy, and gay, and graceful, andwarm, artd welcoming with her pre'-Bence. Hie is full of devices, and j.lots,and sweet surprises for hor busband»ilid her family. She has never donewith the romance nnd poetry of life.She is herself a lyric poem, settingherself to all pure and graciousIBel< dies. Humble household waysand duties have for her a golden signi-ficance. The prize makes the callinghigh, and the end dignifies the means.Her home is a paradise, not sinless, norpainkss. but s;ill a paradise; for 'Loveis Heaven, and Ile.'Vcu is love."
"We i lust Save the Country, and notMake Candidates New "
A Lieutenant Colonel of a westernregiment (now promoted to the Coloneloy oi a new regiment) relates thefollowing conversation with GeneralMcUlollan, under whom ho serves.
Alter transacting m n e officialbusiness, the General remarked uponthe distracted condition of the country,nnd asked the Colonel where he thoughtit would all end?
"In your being President," theColonel replied.
"Ah," said the General," '-I thoughtyou a better soldier than that."
"Why so, General?" inquired theColonel, somewhat embarrassed.
''Because you look too lar ahead,"replied the Uenerul; lLa soldier mustti.ke care of to daj ; to morrow has noexistence for him. We must save thecountry, uud not make candidatesnow."
There is so much patriotic wisdomiu this sentiment of our young Generalthat we wish it inscribed upon the heartof every man in the nation. "We mastnave the country, and not make candi-dates now.1' Let that bo lh« mottonf every man, woman and child in thenation. Let it especially be the begin-ning and end of the creed of thegenerals of the army. If every bodyentertains tfa\s sentiment we will savethe country, and have ample leisure tomake candidates afterwards.
A New Article of Dress-Goods.A pleasant Paris letter in the Coarrier
• des Etas Unis tells this story :" A paper manufacturer Jias just inven-
ted a kind of impermeable paper suitablefor dress goods. Its manner of employ-ment is bjih simple and ingenious. I t
• consists in replacing by small frames thehoops upon which are ballooned the petti-coats of our ladies. These new tangledengines are covered with packing-canvass,mpon which you have only to glue, as ona common screen, the newly-invcuted pa-2>er.
" Thanks to the invention, when a lady•wants a new dress, her husband has uolonger to distress himself with the disbursement of five or six hundred francsfor tweat.y yards of velvet or thirty ofmoire antique; all he will have to do willbe to buy five or sis rolls of twelve souspaper and send for the glue iran. Thisis as simple as all grand ideas.
" The father about to marry his daugh-ter, will not be obliged a long time be-forehand to bother himself about hertrousseau; ho will limit himself to askinghis wife on the day before the wedding:'• What paper shall we glue on to ourEmily ?"
" 'Mon Iiieu, my love,' the mother willreply, ' do whatever you think proper—it seems to me that some twenty-twocent paper—with a pretty border youkuow'
" Then a man will take a wife withoutdower and the marriage contracts willstipulate that the father in-law engages topaper hang his daughter—(faire iapissertafilk) for the first three years."
A JUDUE tx A " Fix."—An awkwardaffair once occurring to one of our judgesof the Western Circuit has boon the subject of much mirth. I t appears thepious judicial, baring finished his labors,and having east off his forensic wig at hislodgings, had retired into the next roomto wait for his brother judge, whom be•was about to accompany to some of thelocal aristocracy to dinner. The femaleservant of the house had entered thebed chamber by a side door, and notknowing the judge was in the next room,inafroiic arrayed herself in the judge'swig. Just the moment when the fairNopsy was admiring herself in the look-ing glass, the judge unexpectedly enteredthe room; and poor Nopsy, catching asight of the stern counteuance lookingover her shoulder in the glass was soalarmed that she fainted, aud would havefallen to the ground, if the learned judge,impelled by humanity, had not caughth"r m his ;:r us. At this critical momenthis brother judge arrived, and, openingtho dressing-mom door, with a viow tosee if he was ready, discovered his learn-ed brother wilh tho fainting maid in hisarms. Not wishing to interrupt what hethought to Lie an amour, ho quietly at-tempted to withdraw, when his brotherjudge vociferated :—" For heaven's sake,stop and hear this matter explained 1"—'•Never mind,jmy dear brother, the matterexplains itself'—and ho left his learnedbrother to recover the fainting maid ashe could.
FIRE!
WESTERN MASS A CUUSF.TTS
O snip any
CASK CAPITALS SURl'!.'.' .
•o•v:E2 fii 3200,00o..
VV. rs". STRONG, Agent
Ann Arbor, Marsh, 2", 1S61. 792tf
LIFMThe Connecticut Mutual Life In-
surance Company.Accumulated Capital, - $3,500,000.\\T I WSURK IVKS fin anv amount n"! •:\ V SlO.OOOfort a whole terniofLiCe otibc.».term of
years, on tho mod avorable terms.S . j , mpuiy la puevty mutual and the policy
lie surplus over Ehe exact cost ot in-.ur-• in the settlement ot
lh ii iremiumti UK UFB POLICIES, if desired, by takingfor one half the amount, bearing interest at Hi
por i-ent, JILT annujaj
Dividends are Declared Annually!\\\ fnow amount to nrrr per cent on the pro-
; , ii, i jash anj •. nnd are rtlcreastog-thejr may be.. I t!;.- note*.
0f She raten ot | reaslow as any other, re-..-:,: ....ii,iany,Catiital, with a lar(te surplus, •
1'eoria Marino 0Qlaaa Kerosene Uunp complete fVom 3~l/z to 6 2 ^Marble Kerosene Lamps complete from SO to 10 00Fln idtampi from 16 to 6 2 #
H of .all kinds altered ami repaired.
Summer Hill Nursery.
THEODORE R. DuBOIS,
PROPRH?TQE OF THE BUMMER HIIX NT7RSERT,ANNArbor, .Micii., i- now ready toreceire orders forFall and ^ priiig Netting,
Jlin arden for FruM and Oroamental Txee*, Vines,BhrfctA|Atc< (will be filled from tbe be»l Eastern Nui erles,and biftporsonal attention will be given to i!'he is oonfldent that with promptand close nttontion, an-1 strlol booesty and Integi .tv. liewill be able to give Katisfaction to every one ootheir orders to htm.
All farmers of"Frnit growers will do ̂ ell to give him aeallbefon I her parties.
He wo of the City inil Coimtywho pur* m the past Spring for the quality oftrees brought on by him, as wr-11 HS fox tfie good order inwhieh thfty x«*rerecel^4 aaddehvwrM S 0 4 «
"We v/anl Money !
.I H ill make
Great Sacrifices OH A n y i li I ii«
v.-c_i:;ivi t o o b t a i n i f , n o i e x c e p t i n g
OLD NOTES AND ACCOUNTS
Wfl cordially invito
ALL CASH CUSTOMERS
to call and examine our Cy expresfl it y \-:u\ ol the United State**, ftl SI2.(lfi ,$L8, $24, & c , ̂ e . t perdozun. No order forwarded: i•'• : •;, : n l f - a - d o * n s l u r t s .
Also. Importers »nd Dealen in HEN'S FURNISHING«O(I1)S.
4g^ Wholesale trade supplied on the atmal terms.EALL0U BROTHERS,
fOOtf Ju.i Broadway, New Fork,
MOO1E & LOOMISHave Removed to the
STORE RECENTLY OCCUPIED BY C.MACK, PliOJiiix Block,East side of Main St.,
AND ^ ^ fr . HAVE
STOCK ̂ - '
BOOTS * SHOESOf every description which will be
SOXiB O H 23 ̂ k. I* 33 Ft
THAIS! CAN BE BOUGH'/ 7A:
Thin City. .*lso a largo assortment o'
HOME MANUFAOTUE E,
Of all kinds made in tho niest
F a s h i o n a b l e S t y l e
BY GOOD AND
EXPERIENCED WORKMEN,
FRENCf l CALF BOOTSare NOT 8QKPA8SID this vide of New York City, and arewarranted not to HIP. Our
P ^ O G A S A N D K i P S 9are made of the betft materials Oar stock of
M o r o c c o B o o t e e s
for L&dtoe is the tho best in town, with heels orwlthoulWe M a k e .hft next ninetydays »t V"ur
0 W N V It I 0 E S !Persona buyini; ahvthlnir at this w l l known e8t»bHai.ti;'- lit can rely upnDget t lng .goods e x a c t ' j afl (•-•,re»»*nt'd, or tht'in'M^-y refunded, f'rtltcarly a n d - *cure the bes t bargain* e v e r offered in tbii i ' i ty
One word in regard to Repairing :We are prepared to make an y repair.1- ouflne or com !moo Watehes, even to in Unto/er tbe entire watchif nocf^gnry. Repairing «•(' rioi-kR and Jewelry H° 'n. « MMI the manufacturing al KINGS, H I K I O C I : - .II» 'iiyhini' desired, from California Gold on short no !'«•*> Engravfoa in all It* braDchesexcvnted win orali «w *•») dispatch.
j r WATTSAou Ubor, J»n. 2Sth !*">!). "Hw
HORACE WATERS,A G E N T
3 3 3 B r o a d w a y , S I M V Y O P 1.Publ i sher of 31i; u- ft>n to $200; :;ic«i:il Hand Melodeonefrnm $a0 to S80: \\; icandre Organs, witb flvefttoj
. .'ami S-J->5; tliiittcii stops. S'JSO, SU76 anil$300; fifteen stopn, $320 and S 7 5 ; A liberal • :to Clergymen, Churches, Sabbaui Sahools, Saminarieaurn! Tsachers. Tlic Trade sujiplitd at the usual trade I
' t v s t i i i i o n l a l s of t h e H o r a c e W a t e r s P i a n o sKIKI Mclodeon* .
John Hewett, of Carthage,