The Spirit of the Times (Pontotoc, Miss.), 1841-05-15, [P ]

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Spirit of the Times (Pontotoc, Miss.), 1841-05-15, [P ] any well regulated commuai -1 i mam f^nIv requires to be pnbliciy stated to j lw ttARSHAL’9 SALK. •Mit ice, I * 'üjclv condemned. Bui if there Le | COMMERCIAL. Boram and company vs. K. Clark and co. URSUANT to a Deed of trust executed to Robert Hyslop and son P me as trustee, on the 8th day of May 1 hers opposed to the j*yment by the vs. samq. 1838, by John Wightman to secure the payment M• ° iiut desirous that the debt should bo REMARK«. J. Bo ram and company of certain sums ot money therein mentioned, to ! *|pj I desire to remind them that a vs. same. J. D. and B. M. Bradford, I shall proceed to The Intelligence by the steamer Great Baker, Johnson and company sell to the highest bidder for cash, at the court ,o pay by thc^t- : - r Western, does not seem to indicate any vs. same. house door in the town of Pontotoc, on Monday [iben for stock In the l nion Bank Mil V virtue of the above stated cases to the 24 th day of May inst., the following descrifia change in the English cotton market. On “b*Crall obligation to f»ay ; mortgages me directed from the District Court tracts of land,viz: »Sections 19 and 20, township lie 1st May the Liverpool classifications in 7N range 7 west; section 10, town 13, range 5 east OID executed by the subscribers tor efnck of the United States, for the Northern District I New Orleans were as follows: ordinary and section 20, town. 12. range 6 east. All num­ W^y the State against loss; if the of the State of Mississippi, I will expose to pub­ '){ q 9$ ; middlings 1(1$ ; middlings lair bered from the basis meridian of the Chickasaw K? can successfully resist the payment lic sale at the Court House door in the town of surveys. Sale within lawful hours. lUjt a 10|; fair 11$ a 11$; good fair Pontotoc, on the " h day of June 1841, the May 6 1841. * B’up bonds and sutler no loss, then no following Lands, and Lots: undivided 1 of the B1' ding can bo had on t he mortgages, ll| a 12; good and fine 12$. These J. G. ENGLISH, Trustee. east $ of section 27, T. » R. 8 east; and north May 1,1841. 2-ins. fee #4 00. K. condition being complied with, they rates exhibit no change. $ of section 20, T. 9 R. 8 east. South-east qr. of In the Memphis market a slight decline sec. 18, T. 9, R. 6 east; lying in the Chickasaw This is the course the interest e void. took place last week ; market inactive. survey. West f and soulh-east qr. of seclionl4 •-hose concerned in the Union Bank, and north-east qr of section 23, T. *0, R. II THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI. Pontotoc County. j dictate, because it settles the quca- east, in the Choctaw survey, cast 4 Lot 3, William Webb % PONTOTOC MONEY MARKET. block 8, south $ofIret 7, block 14, Lot 9, of of their individual liability; at any block 14, Lot 1, block 18, Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4, vs. Injunction Bill, |M the effort u> convert a very delicate Corrected weeklv vor ‘the Spirit of the of block 7,1 Ait 1, of block 8, Lots 1 and 1 of Christopher Cheatham . On motion of the Plaintiff by his Attorney, is:er!| question into a political question, Times. block 9. Also Lots 3, 4, 5 and 6, of block 8. Lot 3, of block 9,and 8, 9 and 10 of block 8, lying it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court - the subscribers for stock another Specie 8 a 10 prem. that the Defendant is no» a citizen of this State, n > TENNESSEE. in the town of Fulton. Levied on to satisfy' the e jo get released from liability, and above stated cases, and all cost, sale during but a citizen of the State ot Alabama. It is lirefure operates exclusively for their* Agricultural Bank, (Columbia) fraud lawful hours. therefore ordered by tire Court, that publication rLft, I am aware that many of the Bk. of the State of Tenu, (Nash ville) closed be madejn the “Mississippi Intelligencer and A. G WEIR, .Marshal of the Genera£Advertiser for the New ( aunties,” a Do. do. (Knoxville) closed Northern District of Mi. -erIbers for stock believe they are not ALL OTHERS PAR By HENRY DUKE,his Deputy. newspaper published in the town of Pontotoc iu ■ Bd fur the redemption of the bonds May 8th, 1841. H ' this State, lor the space of two mouths succes­ ALABAMA. sively, requiring tire said defendant to make his L,rt;ofore sold : but they have no right to 5-ins. Pr’sfee #9 00 City Bank, (Mobile) fraud personal sppearance at the next term of this 3(1J n summary rejens** from the Leg. Commercial Bank, (Enterprise) fraud Court, on the 3d Monday after the 4th Monday L's'ure; il their ere not hound, the judicial Planters & Merchants' Bk. (Huntsville) closed in April 1841, then and tltere to plead, answer frbuna'* of the country are open to them, Tombeckhee Bank, (St. Stephens) failed FRESH GROCERIES! or demur to ttie said bill, otherwise the same ALL OTHERS ______ PAR |BbU. Brown Sugar, 5 do. ofloaf 30 sacks will be taken for confessed, and be set down for .. .||Pv cnn defend tlwm^olves ns oiher g hearing ex parte. LOUISIANA. * • 9 9V Rio. Coffee, UK) do. of salt, 13 bbls. of . d' * tid against an ulijust demand. Molasses, 2 Tierces of Rice, 4 boxes best James A copy from the witnesses, Attest JAS. W. DRAKE. Cl’k. at charter Exchange Si Com. Bank, (N. Orleans) fraud River Tobacco, 15 do. of Sperm Caudles, 5 do of JioD'll March 20 35 2-m prs fee $9 00 ‘ ythel’nion Bank was pas-red lb conformity Planters Bank, (New Orleans) fraud Tallow. 15 do of Raisins, 3 pipes Cog’. Brandy, one do. Ma’d. \\ ine, 3 boxes brandv fruits 3 do. Mb** requirements of the Constitution, Clinton &: Port Hudson R. R. Co. (Jack- i son) no sale Claret Wine, 5 do of Muscat; 2 bbls Onions, 5 that « tailur« by tin* next succeeding do of Irish Pototoes; Garden seed's, 8 boxes of ALL OTHERS ’ PAR THE Mature with a>l the facts before them, Rossin t?oap, 10 bbls. Flour, 1 do. of Crain be ries, L NORTH CAROLINA. 2 casks best Goshen Cheese, 1500 lbs. Bacon, arrpudiat^■ the execution and sale of the c? t:-:s Tinas. Bank of Newbern, (Newbern) closed 15 bbls rectified Whiskey, 15 kegs nails ‘JO do/,. j.. ^created at least a mûrit I obligation Weeding Hoes, 10 Grubbing do.,Iron Castings State Bank, (Raleigh) closed ' the State that nil disinterested perrons ' All of which has just been purchased in New toI^cTrs"'^ chiefly* 1 rn ALL OTHERS PAR recognize, Wld that the best interests tn WBt SOUTH CAROLINA. »obsenber tor cash Agriculture, Literature and Commercial intel- gfthccnnimonJy requires ns to redeem. Ban« of C'heraw, (Cheraw) no sale tn lo’m/ hv »I»#. for ,ns,^auc‘:: ligencc. Custom requires that a detailed ex- I hivs raid more on this subject than I I to i \ the hbl. ( oiree lb and a half to le position of the objects of tire paper should be ALL OTHERS PAR S jrs; ftuded, but I have not done so from piveu; and in this tire undersigned would not GEORGIA. I k to e5 per bbl., Spenn Candles at 60 to6o per designedly disappoint public expectation, abeiiei that there are mauy opposed to Be- Merchants’ k Planters Bank, (Augusta) closed : to.U per box, naiis JOto 12$ ! keying that the Home Interests of North Mis* de payment of the Suü« Bonds, but hav. Agusta Bridge Company, (Augusta) failed j Pel *‘en»-a” 5,50 too.lU dollars per sack. • sissippi arc, at ibis peculiar juncture, of para- ,j, :ajjen the ground since my nominal inn Bank of Macon, (Macon) failed I .. , J. N. W1LIE. mount importance to every other consideration the State is morally hoc».I to redeem Belfast Mining Company, (Dalonega) failed | fllarcb 30-1841___________________________ foreign iu its character, the “Times" will en­ herB^nds, I have u desire that my true Farmers’ Bk of Chattalreochie (Columbus) failed I ,, , . ter upon its new career with a full and firm de­ Bank of Darien and branches no sale J1 ,*l> aad for sa,e b>’ tbc termination to investigate, without fear or fa­ • «•iro may In* known. Bank of GawkinsviUe, (Hawkinsvillc) no sale ‘-LBhCIllBLR vor, the causes that have produced the preva­ [-bait entertain the highest regard for Bank of St. Marys. (St. Mary’s) no sale Jî10’ an*- .avf,?.na, ^ odS^; lent embarrassments of our citizens, aud to Bank of Milledgevillc, (Milledgcvillc) no sale Boston Nails, 10 »,6 s aod4*, point out the accessary remedy. lb renewed expression of the confidence Central Bank of Milledgevillc. no sale h>erm C amJles, Raisins, ha 11 and qr. boxes, r'aty liieiiik. | have only to regret that Central Bank of Georgia, (Milledgeville) no sale I^>af sugar, AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT. Jcaunni serve them- For the very kind Chatlahoochie H. R. Banking Com- Madder and Copperda, pany. (Columbus) no «ale Pne. *'ocVa* , . In this Department will be noticed all the Ruiner iu winch you have boon pleased, , , Monroe R. R. k Ranking Co. (Macon) no «lie l ( aps’ fluted* important improvements throughout the Uniou b commun! ’ate rny nomination • J" rmi Ocmulgec Bank, (Macon) no sale ! Onèbbl.
Recommended publications
  • A Story for All Seasons: Akhil Reed Amar on the Bill of Rights
    William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal Volume 8 (1999-2000) Issue 2 Article 6 February 2000 A Story for All Seasons: Akhil Reed Amar on the Bill of Rights Michael Kent Curtis Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj Part of the Constitutional Law Commons Repository Citation Michael Kent Curtis, A Story for All Seasons: Akhil Reed Amar on the Bill of Rights, 8 Wm. & Mary Bill Rts. J. 437 (2000), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj/vol8/iss2/6 Copyright c 2000 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmborj A STORY FOR ALL SEASONS: AKHIL REED AMAR ON THE BILL OF RIGHTS Michael Kent Curtis* INTRODUCTION The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction,' by Professor Akhil Reed Amar looks at our first national Bill of Rights (drafted in 1789) and at our second, the Fourteenth Amendment (drafted in 1866). It shows how we moved as a nation from a vision of states, by and large, setting legally enforceable citizens' rights to the vision of a truly national Bill of Rights. Though others, including myself, have studied how we achieved a national Bill of Rights under the Fourteenth Amendment and the role that the battle over slavery played in defining American rights, no one has told the story of the Bill of Rights with more beauty and elegance than Akhil Reed Amar. Application of the Bill of Rights to the states, long championed by Justice Hugo Black of Alabama, has received strong, though qualified, support from a distinguished Professor at Yale Law School.
    [Show full text]
  • William Faulkner and George Washington Harris: Frontier Humor in the Snopes Trilogy
    WILLIAM FAULKNER AND GEORGE WASHINGTON HARRIS: FRONTIER HUMOR IN THE SNOPES TRILOGY by Hugh M. Stilley B.A., University of Southern California, 196l A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of Engli sh We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA October, I964 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that per• mission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the Head of my Department or by his representatives,, It is understood that copying or publi• cation of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of English The University of British Columbia Vancouver 8, Canada Date September 3. 1965. ABSTRACT The influence of the pre-Civil War Southwestern humorists on the work of William Faulkner has long been hypothesized. But it has received scant critical attention, much of it erroneous or so general as to be almost meaningless. While Faulkner's total vision is more than merely humorous, humor is a significant part of that vision. And the importance of frontier humor to Faulkner's art is further substantiated by the fact that many of his grotesque passages derive from ele• ments of this humor. Frontier humor flourished from I83O to I860, and while a large group of men then flooded American newspapers with contributions, it now survives in anthologies and the book- length collections of its most prominent writers — Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, Joseph Glover Baldwin, Johnson Jones Hooper, William Tappan Thompson, Thomas Bangs Thorpe, and George Washington Harris.
    [Show full text]
  • A Brief Overview of the Civil War from the Perspective of Genesee County
    A Brief Overview of the Civil War from the Perspective of Genesee County by Michael J. Eula, Ph.D. Genesee County Historian On the fifteenth of April, 1861, The Daily Republican Advocate of Batavia, New York proclaimed in its headline “War! War! War!” Informing the public of the Confederate attack on the federal installation at Ft. Sumter, South Carolina three days before, the reader was told that “reports up to Saturday afternoon” suggested that . the besieged forces might yet hold out some time longer, although the barracks and other wooden material were in flames. We hoped that the gallant band of heroes would ultimately be able to hold their position, but the odds were fearfully against them. Nearing its conclusion, the article reported that Without waiting for a single hostile act, without waiting (for) the arrival of the unarmed vessel, the bombardment of Sumter was commenced, and the war opened. What its end will be, God only knows. Throughout this article we see a stress on uncertainty from the Union perspective that combines with a concurrent emphasis upon odds stacked against the federal forces. While this perspective is understandable within the context of the early stage of the war, hindsight reveals that such a vantage point proved to be unwarranted. Indeed, the odds were clearly stacked against the Confederacy from the beginning. It was the Confederate States of America that took the enormous gamble of a military insurrection against the North – one that proved to be, at least in military terms, a disaster for the “secesh” by 1865. What made the commencement of hostilities such a risk for the South? To begin with, the entire southern population – including African-American slaves – totaled about nine million people.
    [Show full text]
  • Finding Aid for the Southern Humor Collection (MUM00417)
    University of Mississippi eGrove Archives & Special Collections: Finding Aids Library November 2020 Finding Aid for the Southern Humor Collection (MUM00417) Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/finding_aids Recommended Citation Southern Humor Collection, Archives and Special Collections, J.D. Williams Library, The University of Mississippi This Finding Aid is brought to you for free and open access by the Library at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Archives & Special Collections: Finding Aids by an authorized administrator of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Finding Aid for the Southern Humor Collection (MUM00417) Questions? Contact us! The Southern Humor Collection is open for research. Finding Aid for the Southern Humor Collection Table of Contents Descriptive Summary Administrative Information Subject Terms Biographical Note Scope and Content Note User Information Separated Material Arrangement Container List Descriptive Summary Title: Southern Humor Collection Dates: circa 1950s-1980s Collector: Wood, Richard C. Physical Extent: 3 Paige boxes (3.0 linear feet) Repository: University of Mississippi. Department of Archives and Special Collections. University, MS 38677, USA Identification: MUM00417 Location: General Special Collections Language of Material: English Abstract: The collection chiefly contains research material on the subject of American humorous writing, particularly Southern and Southwestern humor. Administrative Information Acquisition Information Donated by Richard C. Wood, 1994 Processing Information Collection processed by Kathryn Michaelis, June 2012. Finding aid encoded by Kathryn Michaelis, June 2012. Additions No further additions are expected to this collection. Subject Terms Humorists, American Humor in literature Local color in literature Southern States -- In literature Formats research notes clippings (information artifacts) journals (periodicals) papers (document genres) Biographical Note Richard C.
    [Show full text]
  • From La Pointe to the Falls of St. Anthony in 1846, Edited by John T. Flanagan
    La Pointe, Wisconsin 3^ in 1852 From LA POINTE to the FALLS of ST. ANTHONT in 1846 Edited by JOHN T. FLANAGAN FROM 1831 unta his death in 1858, Wil­ some of Porter's most prolific contributors — liam T. Porter was associated with sporting for example. Lieutenant J. Henry Carleton magazines which chronicled events of the and Captain William Seton Henry of the turf, fishing and hunting episodes, and ad­ United States Army, both of whom wrote ventures in the Southwest and the Far frequently about hunting and punitive ex­ West. Contributors to Spirit of the Times, peditions across the western prairies. And the weekly that Potter edited from 1831 to it is well known that from 1842 to 1857 1856, included army officers, lawyers, edi­ Henry H. Sibley furnished eleven articles tors, missionaries, fur traders, and devotees to the Spirit and its sequel under the pen of sport in all its forms. Most of these cor­ name of Hal — a Dacotah. But many of respondents were amateur writers who de­ Poiter's tvriters remain unidentified, and clined to sign their real names so that one of them, Rambler, was the author of Porter's columns were filled with such pseu­ three interesting letters dealing with a jour­ donyms as Acorn, Obe Oilstone, Falcon- ney from the Sault Ste. Marie to the Missouri bridge, Azul, and N. of Arkansas.'^ River in 1846? Research has established the identity of ^ For a study of Porter and his paper, see Norris Mr. Flanagan, a frequent contributor to this W. Yates, William T. Porter and the Spirit of the magazine since 1935, is professor of English at Times (Eaton Rouge, Louisiana, 1957).
    [Show full text]
  • HISTORY of PUBLIC SCHOOL EDUCATION in ALABAMA I by STEPHEN B
    UNITED STATES BUREAU Of EDUCATION. BULLETIN, 1915, NO. 12 , WHOLE NUMBER 637 HISTORY OF PUBLIC SCHOOL EDUCATION IN ALABAMA I By STEPHEN B. WEEKS OF THE BUREAU OF EDUCATION WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1915 ADDITIONAL COPIES THIS PUBLICATION MAT BE PROCURED FROM T11 SUPERINTENDENT Or DOCUMENTS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D. C. AT 20 CENTS 1'E11 COPY In The same series: Bulletin 1912, No. 27.History of Public School EduostIon in Arkansas. In preparation: History of Public School Education In Tennessee. , '2,90 9 (e, ktAN 11 19i5 ^ 1915 CONTENTS. 12 -23 tags. Letter of transmittal 5 ('hapter I.- Evolution of the State 7 Growth.of population of Alabama, 1800-1910 9 First centers of American settlement 11 The lines of travel and the influence of roads on settlement 12 The distribution of incoming settlers 14 Chapter 11.-Private schools before the CivilViiar 16 Schools supported from private sources- 17 Schools supported in part out of public funds 23 Chapter 111.-Administration of the sixteenth sections, 1819-1914 26 The laws of the thirties and the failure of the State bank 27 Judge Porter's bill in 1847-48 30 Proposed comnlidation, 1852-53 33 Transfer of trumagement to State superintendent, 1854 35 Auditor Reynolds's strictures, 1869 36 The law of 1881 lays foundation of a State fund 4 38 The act of 1899 and the case of Alabama r. Schmidt 39 Principal of the sixteenth sectidls fund, 1851 and 1912. 41 Chapter 1V.-The rise of public schools in Mobile.,1826-1865 42 Public schools reorganized, 1852.
    [Show full text]
  • Racial Dynamics and Johnson Jones Hooper's Twin Tale of Swindling Indians
    Writing with a Forked Pen: Racial Dynamics and Johnson Jones Hooper's Twin Tale of Swindling Indians Shelia Ruzycki O'Brien Much Old Southwest humor isn't funny. Readers may occasionally chortle or chuckle, but the genre reflected and encouraged a racist social order in which the law of "claw and fang" was sanctioned by a pre-Spencerian version of Social Darwinism. Although Herbert Spencer did not coin the term "survival of the fittest" until the mid-1860s, Southwest "humorists" were building on a related political-ethical tradition already well developed by the early nineteenth century. Before Spencer, proponents of this tradition relied on a Biblical justification, claiming that God had planned this winnowing process for his creations. During the nineteenth century this religious legitimation of social inequality was rein- forced-by a resort to science, as the work of such men as Louis Agassiz, Samuel Morton, Josiah Nott, George Gliddon, and, finally, Charles Darwin provided what appeared to be a "scientific" rationale to undergird existing beliefs in inequality.1 This article examines racial dynamics in the humor of the Old Southwest in order to illumine the cultural and social significance of this genre, particularly in terms of how it reflects the intellectual and political impact of mid- nineteenth century scientific concerns about the nature of social hierarchy and dominance. Southwest humor, which flourished from the 1830s until the Civil War era, was set in the southwestern frontier as it moved through the interior of the Carolinas and Georgia and then westward through Tennessee, Alabama, Missis­ sippi, Arkansas, Missouri, and Louisiana.2 The genre focused on life in the semi- 0026-3079/93/3502-095$ 1.50/0 95 * Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Horse Racing During the Civil War: the Perseverance of the Sport During a Time of National Crisis Danael Christian Suttle University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
    University of Arkansas, Fayetteville ScholarWorks@UARK Theses and Dissertations 8-2019 Horse Racing During the Civil War: The Perseverance of the Sport During a Time of National Crisis Danael Christian Suttle University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd Part of the Cultural History Commons, Social History Commons, Sports Studies Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Suttle, Danael Christian, "Horse Racing During the Civil War: The eP rseverance of the Sport During a Time of National Crisis" (2019). Theses and Dissertations. 3348. https://scholarworks.uark.edu/etd/3348 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Horse Racing During the Civil War: The Perseverance of the Sport During a Time of National Crisis A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History by Danael Suttle University of Arkansas Bachelor of Science in Agriculture, Food, and Life Sciences, 2010 University of Arkansas Bachelor of Arts in History, 2016 August 2019 University of Arkansas This thesis is approved for recommendation to the Graduate Council. _________________________________ Daniel E. Sutherland, Ph.D. Thesis Director _________________________________ _______________________________ Patrick Williams, Ph.D. James Gigantino, Ph.D. Committee Member Committee Member Abstract Horse racing has a long and uninterrupted history in the United States. The historiography, however, maintains that horse racing went into hiatus during the Civil War.
    [Show full text]
  • Tennessees Greatest Stud Belle Meade
    TENNESSEE'S GREATEST STUD--BELLE MEADE WILLIAM RIDLEY WILLS, II With all the political, social, and economic ties between Ken- tucky and Tennessee• it seems normal that Belle Meade, Tennes- see's greatest stud farm, had close Kentucky connections. The Belle Meade Plantation began in 1807 when John Harding bought 250 acres of land and an old station located six miles southwest of Nashville on the Natchez Road. This trail, which had long been used by the Indians, was a route for boatmen, mail carriers, preachers, soldiers, and settlers traveling between Tennessee and Kentucky on the north and Natchez on the south. Harding was one of those tough farmers who periodically took slaves and produce on flatboats down the rivers to Natchez and New Orleans. The Belle Meade Stud dates to 1816 when the imported stal- lion Boaster stood at John Harding's. By the end of the decade such prominent Tennesseans as Sam Houston and Felix Grundy were boarding horses and ponies there. Grundy had moved to Nashville a few years earlier from Kentucky, where he had been chief justice of the state's supreme court. During the 1820s imp. [imported] Eagle, imp. Bagdad, and Sir Archy, Jr., stood at Harding's stable. 1 In the 1830s Harding's interests turned to cotton plantations in Louisiana and Arkansas. Accordingly, near the end of the decade he turned responsibility for managing Belle Meade over to his thirty-two-year-old son, William Giles Harding. The young- er Harding, who was already a brigadier general in the Tennes- WILLIAM RIDLEY WILLS, B.A., has served as president of the Tennessee Historical Society and is currently a trustee of Vanderbilt University.
    [Show full text]
  • The Spirit of the Times (Pontotoc, Miss.), 1841
    From the New Orleans CresceRt City. THfe COUNTERFEIT DETECTOR. THE MILFORD BARD. GPXF.IT OP TS3 TIIIEO. CORRECTED Weekly from Bickaells Rtr’ I I JI LY 1st läy •. Nothin# extenuate nor aught sit down V» • The undersigned propose publishing at Pon­ A in malice. totoc, Miss., a paper to be devoted chiefly to TENNESSEE. Allsup Daniel We know tha im^iuûate subject of this Agriculture, Literature and Commercial intel­ Bank of Tennessee at Nashville. Ayres T S SSB&.N ligence. Custom requires that a detailed ex­ Alexander S Ii Kuuey Thotuj, article—teu years ago he was theceatreof position of the objects of the paper should be 10s let. A dated 23d June, 1838. payable at 1 2 Arnold William his native months date, whole appearance bad. Lockhart Dr u the nu t brilliant circle in State given; and m this the undersigned would not Anderson Wm M ‘an* IW f — now a degraded drunkard, ha is thurst designedly disappoint public expectation Be­ JOs let A. dated April 9, 1839, Henry Ewing Allen Dr. R L lieving that the Home Interests of North Mis­ cashier, (written Euwng,) M. Nie hol President Allen Dr. ■•'Pscotnb Gtn. in society of alms-house paupers! His Any person the least acquainted with bank notes Cawley \Vm *** sissippi are, at this peculiar juncture, of para­ li story is soon told, he was young, rich and mount importance to every other consideration can detect them at a glance. Baker Thomas D J-eftwich ( 0| , Cawrtuce tol '» generous, possessing those strong impulses foreign in its character, the “ Times” will en­ Farmer's and Merchant s Bank.
    [Show full text]
  • The Redemption of the Arkansas Traveler
    The Redemption of the Arkansas Traveler LOUISE HANCOX The term “Arkansas Traveler” is ubiquitous in popular culture within the state of Arkansas. It calls to mind a university newspaper, a baseball team, a certificate bestowed upon famous visitors to the state, or even a tomato. Many Arkansas residents are not familiar with the history of the expression and the equivocal opinions it has produced over the past 150 years. The story behind the expression is one worth telling, one worth reclaiming in the history of Arkansas. In the 1850s, Arkan- sans knew that the “Arkansas Traveler” was a story, with musical ac- companiment, popularized by Arkansas native Sandy Faulkner. By 1858, another Arkansan, Edward Payson Washbourne, had produced a painting based upon Faulkner’s tale. The story and this painting en- gendered excitement and optimism in 1858. Yet less than thirty years later it produced shame, embarrassment, and despair. The painting, at first a source of state pride, was, by the turn of the twentieth century, blamed for sullying the image of Arkansas and discouraging immigra- tion and investment. One early twentieth-century author noted: Perhaps no other State in the Union has been so misrepre- sented as Arkansas. She has had much bad advertising, and the ignorant beyond her borders have wrong ideas of her and her people. By such people she is supposed to be the home of shiftless squatters, robbers, and cutthroats, who make the bowie-knife and the pistol the law of the land . The story of Louise Hancox is a graduate student at the University of Arkansas, studying southern history.
    [Show full text]
  • A Wit Looks at Old Fort Ripley, Edited [By] Philip D. Jordan
    A Wit Looks at Old Fort Ripley Edited by Philip D. Jordan THE WIT AND HUMOR of frontier America bubbled spontaneously from the lips of countless travelers, hunters, politicians, and army officers who found time to record their laughing impressions of the pioneer West in the columns of the New York Spirit of the Times. One of the nation's great sporting journals of the nineteenth cen­ tury, the Spirit, as it was familiarly called by thousands of en­ thusiastic readers, welcomed tales of the turf, Yankee witticisms, stories of bear hunts in Arkansas and buffalo hunts on the great plains, yarns of American ingenuity and exaggeration, and timely local-color jokes. The result of this liberal editorial policy soon made the Spirit, like Yankee Notions or Brother Jonathan, a rich deposi­ tory of folklore. Only a few years after the reservation at Fort Ripley was set aside by President Zachary Taylor, the Spirit of the Times printed a humorous article describing some of the post's activities and com­ menting upon men and affairs in the Territory of Minnesota. Who "Yorick" the author, was no one now knows. Perhaps he was an officer stationed at the fort; perhaps he was only a casual sojourner. He might have been a trapper, trader, or sutler. Certainly "Yoricl(' was alert to much that was going on in the North Star country. His contribution was pungent and penetrating as well as humorous. In­ formal and breezy, it supplements Mr. F. Paul Prucha's serious study of Fort Ripley, published in Minnesota History for September, 194"].
    [Show full text]