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Grand Traverse Herald Friday, December 03, 1858,
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Grand Traverse Herald Friday, January 21, 1859,
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Grand Traverse Herald Friday, February 18, 1859,
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Other Editions from Thursday, March 03, 1870

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Maine

Delphos Herald Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Ohio

Edwardsville Intelligencer Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Illinois

Fort Wayne Daily Democrat Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Indiana

Indiana Progress Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Pennsylvania

New York Times Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
New York

Kingston Gleaner Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Kingston

Indiana Democrat Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Pennsylvania

Gazette And Bulletin Thursday, March 03, 1870 ,
Pennsylvania

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Grand Traverse Herald
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Grand Traverse Herald

   Grand Traverse Herald (Newspaper) - March 3, 1870, Traverse City, Michigan                               GRAND HERA WITH WITH IN THE VOL. ORAND TRAY ERSE MARCH 1870. 10. Che c IS AT verse Grand Traverse O. AND 1'KOrUIETOK. JOB Two Dollars a Year In inserted for One Dollar per square for the und thirty cents for Yearly SlO for one square for two for three squares for half column and STo for one advertisements at the by seventy cents per folio of 100 for tho first ami thirty-five j cents for each Kvery ligure counts n Figure work without figure double All legal advertisements to bo paid fur ly in A OF COUNTY JOB The Publisher of the happy to an- to the Public that he has added one of Gordon's Job And a large quantity of W. or K or Co. or tiv OK 1. v C. C. 1'OUTKR. W. or J. New To Stock POINTING And that he i prepared to execute all kinds of COUNTY W. UK W. M. Coi ur h. PLAIN ORNAMENTAL Y or op UNTY Co. Oil OK N. A. S 1'. W Co. it. COUNTY C. or C. 11. 1'llOH. J. K. OK A. H. A. J. men A an 01' M. OK 10. COURT Cost K. S COUNTY L. W. UNITED AT Assistant Grand lit Mich. C. 2. Agent of the Traverse Notary Public mid Attorney lit Notary Real anil Insurance 01. BIX Traverse Mich. 1'urticulnr attention paid to Operative A Attorneys and Atit i. J. H. and Mich. Attention given to sale of 18-ly A. at and Insurance Titles Investigated und Wexford Law Hist vlT Traverse r. 4-ly o. u. Vi unit fort B. 1'V.ink A good house and good Every attention paid to Charges 50-ly Merchant Front Traverse All work neatly mid promptly A choice of cloths on fi Front Traverse Mich. Particular tion given to the of teeth inserted with all the late im- 1-ly Attorney at Law and corner of 8d and ly 3U-ly OFFICE and residence two doois east of Post Kept in person Mondays by E. 5-1 y. S Agent for the Insurance of Home aud the Conn. At the Post 23 D A. and Now York Medical of tUu anil Into assistant geon in tho U. S one door cast of 21-ly K. II known us the East 170 of J. Traverse May In a manner that will satisfy the most The wagon wanting denizens of the Grand erse Region will do well to CALL EXAMINE A SPLENDID OF HONESTLY MADE AND WELL ONB AND TWO HOUSE 3NT JS READY FOR SALE AT ID S O WAGON BLACKSMITH S O 1-1 y Maiu Mich. LEACH Railroad to Sel tiers on 1 J Grand 1869. as far as amongst to the value ot to those have made them in to prevent the claims from liy sharpers ami settlers are notified that they proof of their settlement nnd file the Loach of Traverse City state on oath the time of going on the li the and value of their aird whether any person rap le any claim to the same At the time of 111 each bottler mil pay to Messis Bales the expense this of filing and sending the same to Commissioner We are to take and pi oof of settlement in dance with tin above make nr abstract of all and Hie samo in a 1o bo kept in our book of abstracts will at all times be open to inspection by settlers on without Our charges foi tii King ding and foi ing evidence to the will in nary be one LEACH Nov. OJF BY G. It. BUSINESS AND Off on abort i PhotograpH oan be had at Henry L. Miller's On am now prepared to Uko Photographs equal to the bust All kinds pictures lioin the smallest to tiie PHO TO on By of the Land of Com- His Grand and have A. of ol of nnd of KIU to of blanks have liccn foi tlie of the u of Tux Titles we hold from Ihu will Quit at low to to we to communicate original of the iu to a compromise Wo our claims to nt very 01 j in In tin's matter of Tax Wo Old Pictures Cj Of o I sw f Lot 1. of ncf sej of n wf u of f si of 1 of sc so o I se J of sef of of Lot No. ol set neI of Sec. 1 I 1 I 10 rj 4- T. N. 28 27 23 R. 9 II 11 Jl 11 11 lt Jl ri M M 1 I HO 10 JO in My voice is bold and strong and brave iCy song is the sowg ot the fierce and lice And the with brea Are tlie of the forest I roll my bass along Tim nuked locks and dnik ravines And I In the tops of the 1 fingers On laughing tongues of the mountain rill And check then mirth in my And silence tlie flow ol then I dance in the schoolboy's curly As Dies along on his painted And 1 saucily nip his Ami her with a i osier I whistle my tune in time With the ringing tones ol the And 1 in a IMCC the sturdiest pace Of the limb and the swiftest I waft the wedding boll's peril In to wailing many a ballad of pleasure and Is bo i tie on the swell ol my When tlie ef is And the sky la filled I with a whip of a thousand Hying ol the For T love to hainess the Anil sweep the stats fiorn my stoimy Till tlie heavens me clad in the curtaining gloo follows the tiack of my fill ions I A for the a for Poi Plenty nnd Poverty both 1 I I'm ihe In the hut ot tlie I'm king is and bold and brave And is the play ol my pulse to But I long for the And laugh of the Free Versus am our 1. Good in 1 Cloudy or Particular attention paid to takin Children's A good assortment of on 39-6nl L' And all kinds ofj WORK j With neatness A RARE AN EXTRA Y 0 Do M T tie Brokers Land given to and State and Journal In the Country he first clubs double column pages devoted to mid Slock containing regular departments for the Stock Wool aud with numerous jn handsomely tinted paper will find this monthly a very aid in nil the departments of Funning and Stock It hast a Veterinary Department under the of one of the ablest thei to tlie In- Swine AVe have also facilities for by any establishment in Northern to Tor purpose of peeping with the of tho our oss men to secure all the trouble aud at ending We shall continue to froin seem to determined to keep ace with the onward of aud e development of or or Thus every a and Cattle Doctor aie to offer the STOCK free to hll ibers or the to iu a rare op- the intelligent people of our section will no doubt duly Hand in your subscriptions ut once and secure STOCK JOURNAL dec for a V V f t 4 publisher Grand The thousand copies of Ts published to scud It is printed on with 200 Government i D Till r Jib i -X J J i. T. T. Notary and Licensed i O V U REVENUE On and Lot Block 12 of tho Village one story 20 20 will kitchen Al. n. con testing the expediency ropea ing or essentially diminishing our several ivill come amle and must bo considered cor jointly i 1. Can a people whose imports ally and greatly exceed its b permanently prosperous 2. Can a people commence ing goods for their own use without a pro or build ii with another people of ti goods Vur all 111 world 3. Can it be permanently and profitable a people to pay for the man they in thai arc exhaustible such as anr lhat til soil by exporting the elements of duct ion i. Is it profitable lo raw and fi cost of 1ml their value foi to be fact 11 icd bj receiv in return the th them a flf part of their 5. Is not of lorits beneficial to all daises of people except is it not client lo a tarif enable our owe to es every C Is it profitable lor a in to confine their to so few pursuits that only a part of them can employment lo their ly and 7. been tlie of or trade under a nominal on such as adopted boun forced into S. Is it always and permanently fo purchase yd f buy with a given amount of lars and cents WITAT js TirR 131'1'RCT wirres OK A NATION ITS Tim rs made erse City by and CO acies story and 11 10 x Frame 'M x and Us All ol small flints in A location at once convenient En- balance on tine wood Engravings of Flowers and a beautiful Colored Plate consisting of a fine BOUQUET Of is the most as well as the most in- giving tha J Culture of Flowers The Guide is published lor the benefit of my to whom it is scut free without but will be forwarded to all who ply by Ten which is not the Address N. Y. GRIDLEY 1ST St 3Vt I DONS AT SHORT in n We have for sale a splendid capable of running or any kind of of a rich farming yet in close of The tion is one of the very best in the whole Tr Traverse tlie and will be in connection with the land is good The whole will he sold at n low firm if disp JO very person knows that IN hen Ins ex- penses exceed his financial awaits him sooner or laler and no sane person will dispute the same waits every whose in buy more of foreign nations than they sell to So during any of the average of our uniformly exceeded our und we have paid for Ihe goods consumed by our people with the und out Rut this off tlie evil day and it is manifest in our posterity will ultimately bo sunk into every philanthropist to liis best avert 'the only means of is to for j aud nation face of the earth is so blessed with aud facilities for as are the people of the is tlie and but latter for- mer imports nei 21 12 101 acies choice fanning land Cuu ntv Lino on Soil A No. 10T.J Being j sec. town 27 north range 12 is of First sandy acies balance in lj 2 and S yea is. I No. 35. A good lot of farming about six miles south of Price j 000. balance I and 2 at 10 per cent. So. 103. f f i -j Price of the with 75 Vf Mnp alone 50 the of our was shipped across the ocean to pay ohi 5T9S ered in making exceed our imports by pf bonds these hare been sent for goods in enormously at the present the informed that by foreign increased lo 000 dollars the amount of State and bonds lield by for- is noi less than f lars four hundred millions of which nine as sayed we had count now stands the above immense to be dug out of our mines aud extracted out soil the next forty or fifty years for we are still running into importing and ing more goods than onr exports will pay It is high time for us to consider it be ultimately profitable to ex- haust our mines and our agricultural the pauper laborers of other tions for manufacturing our clothing and and by doing so make pauper laborers of own In the omission of rotation with and particularly with root tobacco and wheat probably exhaust the soil er than any of those mineral ments that arc not supplied by the aud cannot bu replaced by cial In Virginia thousands of acres of the richest virgin soil have been so totally exhausted by repeated tobacco that a crop would not pay for the The Montreal Witness of June stated that in Upper wheat formerly yielded more than 20 bushels per acre but the census of 803 returned only and of 1SG4 an average of only bushels per Our own last census Virginia nnd rlo nol show increase notwithstanding the great mentation of acres and an abstract from the Agricultural Report of years the wheat duct of Now and was four or five bushels per annum per head of the entire population now it is two and a half and the A. Report 1807 states that the average yield of wheat in the United States has been gradually reduced to twelve bushels per From it appears evident that our soil is being rapidly exhausted of the ments which are to tho duction of and these elements can not reproduced by artificial It is also manifest if our people con- to export as they have done less than u. tury will so far exhaust the soil of our our posterity will to look for something else than bread and our gold are being more rapidly as statistics of California So is it to person to reason from a series of that exportation of which every scientist admits can not be reproduced by Unite must produce ultimate ex- and irremediable that statistics would seem unnecessary to con- firm the Superficial ute average reduction of wheat from 20 or 23 13 bushels per lo shallow ploughing when the former average was ploughing was done much shallower than it is while now great quantities of j ano are imported to stimulate its growth ploughing true and only cause of the decreasing with ai inferior soil to and by importing from other the elements we ex has raised her average per acre to The cause vorks both Tho best agricultural onr covin try is already nt least partially under cul Our population increases gigantic and in less than a century vill exceed hundred hero must necessarily be a proportionate augmentation of with his eyes wide open and of active can con former and lilie i nad mna rushing to impending to exportation of the lie i its that indispensable to supply a population food The only cease exporting rapidly are o national for or fur any besides the of our here is another cogent reason why to export And manufacture our own a's j i M as they arc is the creating of markets or exported o a the cost of trans- of sent t is manifest that the intrinsic valtie of beef is the ame this value to price where these products are con- but is madei to on demand ar aj surplus and the of trans- deducted from this intrinsic the of and the to pay ho can he receives po less for of his labor as e ur to cars or and amount and of iis the producer would of manufactories whoso his surplus iats I for the producer would value the liis fact is i of Dec. 29 of wheat at 85' and ic V. Tribune of the ait 1 40-per In late President of the f i j o 1 j oard of the price wheat t the producer in the Valley and in the astern it sells at and manufactories wherever facilities arc tird they wonld diminish the number of cultural laborers till labor became re- while the operatives in the factories would consume the reduced plus nnd the products now exported would evidently riso ro their intrinsic Assuming the annual exportation of wheat to Europe at at one and tho value of the to bo half as and wo have an aggregate of value of exported annually from tho guess is probably far be- low the for the Agricultural Re- port slates tho exports for at for all the if thib sum weic annually expended in ing manufactories in tho grain exporting states of the the would soon be dotted with that would give profitable suiting every capacity and taste of men now and to women and children who are wasting their precious lives inactivity of which arc indispensable lo the ment of vigorous bodies and But only a moiety of the advantages would lo society the general establishment manufactories have yol been now pay for our imports almost solely in tho and with grain extorted from our both in of speedy while tho north western Stales urc supplied with an of raw materials and moans of ducing when judiciously be manufactured into kind of fabrics that may bo needed by a prosperous We possess water and mineral roal in to propel machinery of any amount and during successive ages if manufactories numerous to our own over ing once fully every producer of raw and food for a continually augmenting number of every person employed in delving and cultivating the would find a ready market for everything he could at its intrinsic and near his own Thus every kind ol labor would bu amply would be an unlimited choice and of suitably employment foi person nnd pocket and murdering for gain would soon become less profitable than enticing suitable and fruits of every which now din bo generally raised only the family consuming except ncai large would at once find a readily cessible and profitable at the lorie's the places of Not till manufactories become throughout the can hope to that rotation of grain by which the British people have in raising the average crop above the primitive do per while by continually raising and exporting its elements have our From A tlie One cold in a bright-eyed little named Willie came to our He not warmly clothed neither were the clothes of the neither tho clothes whole but here and be seen little patches neatly sewed it is but patches Can you guess what sort of reception we gave Uo you think wo took him into our or gave him a bite of bur or tried to make him feel If you are sadly at I am ry to say we could sec nothing but his Those coarse and the did our so that we couldn't sec what a good-natured follow All ihc noontime Willie sat by himself munching his dry while we were eating our delicacies witli a sellish relish and 1 fear that wo mndo some rude es that have been very At the end of the our feelings bad undergone a change strange as it we had And of what Not of his for they not of liis dinner but of every study he took the were the his Tn and try as wo and were not a for Punim the time our teacher had been watching and 1 think he was well us outstripped by thia little child of whom wo Imd scarcely at He said but gave Willie ihus atoning for our At the end of the second there was yet another From there had grown just n little it is always so. J never knew So look for This haired would not allow us to let him and wo began to tease lie bore so felt justified in bearing oh a little 1 should we felt secure for 1 do not believe of thought we were doing On of the third we had planned lo tease him enough to hiat over lo the next morning j so at it wo Kow a schoolboy's mind is one of the most prolific sources of petty torture in the known and to say we teased Willie does not convey n true of our tormented him until he endure it no forced him to defend a braggart found his match that and received condign ai the hands of patient It was Wo had ourselves that was no in We were heartily and just a for we siny the face at one of the one that consoled if we were also and were many exultant when Willie called to the I you prompt aud Uo j on know that is against my rule Siid the 1 it should but your rules do nof i protect said the about the school in 'a mariner that wa's cot encouraging to But it pen J will not punish I must i on account of our more was greater than to an average of only twelve Minister of the a who from A certain ban school n. few months since wil Ii report of scholarship below the said this yon .si Tow did it happen Don't The knew if the son did I fe had a of dime novels about but had not to say anything fitting opportunity offer bosket of stood upon the And he fa id take Uio basket nnd bring il me of nothing And those back into tlie they roll off. can't 1 1 them of course you jpo you expert to fill a I and it up with apples said you didn't know yim school and like that rl bold more than And jero you've tlie past filling t up with chip Tlie boy on his see tho that there seemed 316 Other way for you to but 1 do it said I shall try very i J there not a boy in the did the future ho would lot Willie and after us called up and received so strokos with our view so that thought it to make friends with little patched i We never forgot this extra lie was treated civilly ever for grew to like lie ped us nil and in wealth and social tion he as boys looked down us iic Mien in and true nobility of I lie the with a holy beauty of its own which nothing can mar. Never yet was female without Steady of dark in tlie brightest divine throws her soft beam and making twice glorious Deemed all loveliness is very or in in wealth or never outer sick chamber of tlie but music seeins to on and burden of is we look into thousands 10 11 where fights ly with wo should find the cause of of iu And in places of in fruit of in Ki ligion on thy throne thou anS ex- Not above clouds come never between and truly pious thee is opening through a road of exceeding AND Ib is greed that glass windows are lo health in diminish The glass is to about par i Jf feeble n. novel seen in the I health practice of day dungeons of bur parlors light crypts of sleeping The only i of the fearful that of- under the A healthy is of more value thaii 13ut glorious Paul thought it a choosing the modest it in him a fiery have eal that is yet shining with ior MO damage think t for the words which it ii in A college lini It cannot bo that and thought it geology class to collect and one day they deposited a piece ed and with their Hives of devotion to it ing to he world will let their names i Xa t and hung lied oil scaffolds the for liberty of thought Taking up tho the professor t cannot be that men who have burned is a piece of baryta from and the Cheshire holding up this is a piece land and is a piece of impudence froin some for nothing aith in the life could have led hem through the Red Sea their made them summits of glory a's ve tbo darkness of the that ve hear the pillar of member of ment in the person asked n clerk for leached cotton cloth for  

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